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- The Daily Sentinel. Mkldlepori·Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, Feb. 16, 19n

Council will
push highway
ATHENS - Over the nut
three
month!
the
Soutbeutem Oblo Regional
Council w1ll bring all poalble
pnuure to achieve COlli"
pletlon of !be llt.lte'a 1111"
flniahed Appalachian High-

way.

From Marcil to May the
SEORC w1ll seek increued
public support for ac·
celeratlng the highway's
construction by a $5,000
campaign that Includes the
boldine ol dinner meetings
and the dlltrlbution of a IDIP
and brochure describing the
highway and the SEORC's
campaign.
SEORC repreaentatl~s
are contacting Chombera of
· Commerce and local boards
of trade In communities
throughout the counties along
the Belpre-Cincilllll!tl high·
way corridor, apecting to
schedule at least three
regional meetings open to the
public coordinated by Carl
Dahlberg, SEORC executive
secretary.
G. Kennor BUBh, chairman
of the council's highway
users committee, said the
I!Xpended lobbying effort was
conceived· after a recent
meeting lVith representatives
of the state's transportation
and development depart.
ments when early completion
of the highway was linked to
the n~tlon's energy cr18iB and
the federalgovornment's new
expansion of the Goodyear
Corp: nuclear fuel enrich·
ment plant at Piketon.
Some 37 miles of the high·
way west of Piketon remain
to be placed under contract,
while two project&amp; in the
Athens area alao must be

completed, Bush sa id,
"before the highway will be
effective as a development
tool for tile region."
"This view takes on greater
IIIIJ!lflcance," BUBh added,
"with the aiUiounced $4.4
bllllon expansion of the
uranium enrichment plant at
P!ketoo and renewed em·
phaals upon greater and more
efficient coal production. Any
assessment of national
energy ·requirements has to
include Soutbeasler'n and
Southern Ohio as a major
pctentlal enorgy exporter.
Completing this vital regional
highway artery sooner could
significantly speed coal
production as well as im·
'prove .access to Piketon from
Cincinnati during con·
struction of the atomi c
energy plant addition. "
BUBh said the SEORC's
goala Include:
- Timely eompletion and
federal approval of the En·
vlronmental Impa ct
Statement encompassilig the
37 ·mile-gap projects in
Brown and Adams Counties.
- Supplementary funding
from the Appalachian
Regional Commission,
coupled with earlier ear• ·
marking of state matching
lunda.
- Continued efforts toward
equal fimdlng . of the Appalachian Highway in
comparison with Interstates.
"To be successful," Bush
said of the camaign, "this
must be a comprehensive
regional effort with strong
support , participation and
leadership by local Chombers
. and boards of trade."

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Sharon
Kuhn, Minersville; Margaret
Davis, Langsville ; Doris
Bailey , Portland ; Mary
Rumfield , Pomeroy ; Rosalee
Clarke, New Haven; Kathryn
Rou sh, Middleport ; Viola
Edwards, Middleport ;
Corbett Cleek, Racine ;
Marjorie Gibbs, New Haven;
Martha Chambers, Mid·
dleport; Ermalene Johnson,
Reedsville ; Vivian Jones,
Racine ; Clarence
Longstreth , Middleport;
Hattie Barringer, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Richard
Dea n, Anthony Hudson,
A) bert Rousb , Holly McCoy,
Hoger King, Victor Diehl,
Roland King, Loretta Atkins.

Private road
change wanted
A delegation of persons the new multi-purpose
from the area along SR 7 just buDding reviewed progress
beyond Five Points met with · made thus far: Keske said he
the county commissioners would recommend a site for
Tuesday night to aak that the build,ing within three
their private roadway be weeks.
classified as a township road. Jim Page of Fleming,
in order to keep it main· Page, Stolte, discussed the
progress being made on the
talned.
The group was advlaed to house numbering, housing
meet with the prosecutor to rehabilltation program and
see if thla can be done.
the environmental assessAlso meeting with the ment on the new road to the
commlsalonera was Common multi-purpose buDding.
Pleas Judge John C. Bacon
Adecision was made by the
who uked (or repairs to the commissioners to advertise
heatlng system ln his. for bids on county public
chamber that was damaged funds. Attending were Henry
by recent bad weather. The Wella, Richard Jones, and
commissioners agreed to look James Roush , and Rick
into the matter.
Crow, prosecutor.
Ron Keske, architect for

GaJJians upset Logan
Gary Swain's layup following a steal of an in·
bounds pass with 31 seconds left gave Coach Jim
Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils a stunning 48-47
upset victory over Scott Fitzgerald's Logan Chieftains in a Southeastern Ohio League makeup
contest on the GARS hardwOod Tuesday night.
Swain, 5-ll senior forward and Blue DevU co·
captain, had tied the score at 46·all on a driving
layup with 41 seconds left.
Hla steal and winning
bucket came alter the 115-Q2 beating at Logan on
Ollef!IIIN had called time out Dec.10, left the Blue Devils In
with 37 leCOillll remaining. third place in the league
With the GalliaN on top 48- standings with an 11-1 mark
46, Logan called another time and upped the IJevlla season
·
out wttb 30 seconds reeord to 10-ii.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Linda L. Bentz, Kathy Bias,
Carolyn D. Cra btree, Fred L.
Dauber, Mrs. Albert S. DuM
and infant daughter, Gifford
F. Egnor, Mrs. Richard
Cameron Farley and infant
son, Leta E. F'etty , Gregory
S. Fields, Hattie Fredrick,
Clara J . Gillespie, Alene
Head, Gladys M. Hill,
Tamara L. Hoffman, John L.
Hood. Bernice C. Houck,
Jason M. Kenklns, Keitb J.
Malone, Keith A. McGuire,
Artha L. Peoples, Dana G.' '
Reyburn, John H. Reese,
Sharelle L. Rhea, Richard E.
Snyder, Jr ., Nancy A.
Ste..,a ri , Mrs. James E.
Swisher and infant daughter,

Mary A. Thornton and CarlL.
Van Norma. Shelill Blanton,
Betty L. Denny, Chester A.
Dickerson, Delia Ditty, Mrs.
Mathew Donald Gardella and
infant daughter, Mrs. Patrick
A. Hill a nd infant son,

Elizabeth A. Jones, Mrs.
Troy Miller and infant son,
l&lt;lla M. Napier, Joe K.
Reece, Nancy L. Reed, Mrs .
James H. Roof and Infant
daughter , Shar-on Ka y
Templeton and Deborah J .
Thmopson .

1

Area· Deaths

I
1
1

JANICE WILSON
Janice Sheets Wi lson. 30.
died unexpectedly at her
home in

Freeburg .

around 10 p.m. Monday.
in

Ill.,

She was .born March 1, 1946,
Lawren ce
County,

daughter of William and Opal

Hineman Sheets, who survive

ind reside In Mercervil le .
She Is survived by her

husband. Capt . David L.
Wilson, and one son , Will iam

Wilson, at home. Mr . Wi lson
was born and ra ised In

Cham pa ig n, Ill ., ano Is

currentl y stationed a1 Scott
Air FOrce Ba se in llll,al s.

One brother. William P.

Sheets, GallipoliS , survives.

One brother preceded her In
death In Infancy .
Memorial services will be

held

1

Scott

p.m. Weonesoay at

Air For ce Base ,
Bell ville, Ill. Friends may
visit at the Kurrus Funeral
Home in Bel lville from 6:30
p.m. unt il 9 p.m. today .,
Funeral services will be

held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
Willi~

Funeral

Home in

Gal lipolis. Burial wi ll follow

in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens.
Friends may call at the
Witl is F.uheral Home from l
p.m . Friday unti l the time of
the services .

BESSIE STEVERS
Bessie C. Sievers. 87, a
former resident of 620 First
Ave., Gallipol is, died at 6:30
a.m . Wednesday In Holzer
Med ical Center. She had been
In ta il ing health the past eight
mooths.
She was a. retired employee
of the Gallipolis State In·
stitute.
She was born July 1l , 1889.
In Harr ison Twp .. daughter ot
the late A. H. and Alice Cla rk

~h~

married Bert Stevers

May 6, 1913. He preceded
her in dea th in 1941.
One daughter. Allee M.
Nibert. preceded her in death
In 1973. One grandson , Arthur
A. (Pete) Niberl. surv ives .
Two great grand chi ldre n

·on

survl\le.

She spen t most ot her lit e in
member of th e First Baptist
Church .

Ga ll la County. Stie was a
Funeral services will be

he,l d I p.m. Friday at the
Waugh ·Halley -Wood Funeral
Home with Rev . Charles
Lusher offici ating . Burial will
be In Pro\lldence Cemetery.
Friends may c~l l at the

Births
tuneral home tram 2-4 and 7-9
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Scott, p.m. Th urs day .
Jackson; a daughter; Mr. and
Mrs . Paul Yoder, Point
NO DAMAGES
Pleasant, a daughter and Mr.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - No
and Mrs. Max HIU, Racine, a persOn would be liable for
son.
-civil damages for any breach
of promise to marry,
alienation of affections or
seduction of someone 18 or
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. older under legislation
Nelson Jones, daught er, introduCed in the Ohio House
Point Plea sa nt ; Everett Tuesday.
The measure was offered
Thacker, Point Pleasant;
Donald Dye, Gallipolis ; Mrs. by Rep. Virginia Aveni, DJohn Stone, Bidwell; James Lyndhurst, who said civil
are
rarely
Young, Pliny ; Mrs. Donald damages
Workman, Point Pleasant ; recovered in those kinds of
Russell Holland, Point court actions.
The same hill was proposed
Pleasant ; Mrs . Timothy
Mayes, Henderson; Mrs. last session but was not
Effie Turner , Apple Grove; enacted.
Granville
Hill, Point
Pleasant, and Evelyn Mont·
INSTANT LOTTERY
gomery, Gallipolis.
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Two
state senators Tuesday lntro·
duced. a bill to prohibit
"Instant" lottery games.
CHILD SUPPORT
Sen. R. Kinsey Milleaon, DCOLUMilUS (UPI) Freeport.
one sponsor, said
Legislation aimed
at
he
had
complaints
from
Improving lhe record of
wives
that
husbands
were
collecting child support
spending
their
whole
money from absent parents
was offered Tuesday In the paycheck on the "rub"'!!
winner" games.
Ohio Senate.
Sen. KeMeth R. Cox, DThe bill, sponsored by Sen.
Barberton,
C0-6ponaor, said
Marigene Valiquette , D·
he
had
received
complaints
Toledo, would require each
about
the
"Instant"
game
county in Ohio to establish a
from
retail
store
operators
bureau to administer
compliance with court- who ·seU lottery tickets and
ordered support payments. had seen people spend up to
In the event of a default , the $100 al one time. A similar
agency would seek civil bill was Introduced last week
remedies to ensure pa;•nent. In the House.
"The avallable studies
Indicate that the majority of
child support orders are not
honored ,"
said
Sen.
Valiquette. "With this bill, we
hope to reverse that trend."

Meigs County. The anlrrial
Two persons wer'e c~arged ran off the right side of the ran into the path of a car
LEE DRENNER
highway striking and operated by Pearl Hutchin·
Lee Orennel", 14 , Fort with DWI, two deer were
My ers, Fla .• formerly or killed and slippery road breaking off a light pole. son, 48, Wellston. There was
Pomeroy, oled Sunday at cuhdltions were blamed in There was heavy damage to· minor damage. Another deer
Fort MyerS Community another accident report,ed his car. HIU was only slightly was killed at 8:50 a.m. on SR
Hospi tal. He was bor-n Jan. today by the Gallia-Meigs injured.
7 north of SR 113. II ran Into
18. 1903, son ot the late
Johnny R. Newlun, 19, Rt. the path of a car operated by
William and Mary Bell Carrie Post State Highway Patrol.
John D. Hill, 31, Point I, fAng Bottom, was also John M. Digity, 26, WoodsDrenner .
Suro.Jivlng are hi$ wife, Pleasant, was charg ed charged with DWl following a
Garnet Sellards Orenner ; Tuesday with DWI following traffic accident at 7:30 p.m. field.
A single car accident ocfour sons. Avery. St. Albans.
W. Va .; Adrain. In Califor- an accident on the entrance Tuesday on CR 32, one and curred at 7:t5 a.m. on SR 7,
nia ; Darrell. Homestead , ramp to the Silver Memorial nine tenths miles east of SR 7. south of Gallipolis. R~becca
Fla .. and Don of Pipersville, Bridge. Troopers said llill Newlu n lost control of his car Ours, 20, Crown City,
Pa .; a daughter, Nelda lost ci&gt;ntrol of his car which which ran off the lefi side of
traveling north, lost control
Mockey , Raven , Va .; a
the highway striking an af her car on a patch o! ice.
brother. John. of RuHand ;
embankment . There wa s The vehicle ran off the high·
three sisters. Mrs. Lou ise
Epperson. South Charleston,
moderate damage.
way into a guardrail which
W. Va .; Elizabet h Adkins,
A deer was struck and prevented the vehicle from
(Continued
from
page
1)
Pu npa Go'rda . Fla . and
Haney Adkins of East Lynn, called Rafshoon to ask him kiliedat8 :40a .m. Tuesday on going into the Ohio River.
SR 124, east of Rt. 325 in
W. Va.; 12 grand and twa something.
great·grandchildren .
He said then and again
Funeral services will be
held at 2 · p.m. Friday from Tuesday that Caddell and
ti'le Ewing Funeral Homeln Rafshoon related to Carter
Pomeroy with Rev . Lloyd
Grimm off ici ating . Burial "not in any official way." It is ·
will be in Miles Cemetery. known, however, that •
Frlenos may call at the Caddell, at least, has security
= ·
Just Received- Another Shipment
funeral horne anytime Thurs. clearance to the Willie House.
day and Fr.iday morning:
Powell said he did riot know
· who
initiated
the
O~EY (BUSTER) ELLIS
MINERSVILLE - Oley Investigation. He said when
Wilburn (Buster) Ellis, 69, he called the White House
Min ersville, died Tuesday
evening at the Holzer Med ical counsel to inquire, he was
informed the
Justi ce
Center .
Mr. Ellis was born Sept. 25, Department was looking into
1907 at Madison , W. Va., the it.
son of the late James W. and
Attorney General Griffin
Pol ly Stal lngs Ellis. He was
also preceded in dea th by a Bell said Monday that Kirbo,
daughter , two sisters, and his a former long-time law
first wife, Ida Pearl Baisden partner, was a "special
Ellis.
under
the
Surviving are his wi fe , employe"
Virginia Buckley . Ellis; two defmition of the 1963 law.
daughters, Mrs . Charles
carter also:
(Mary! Vance. Patterson, N.
- fin ished two days of talks
C.. and Mrs. Thomas (Molly) will: Mexico President Jose
Bontrager of MI . Joli et ,
Tenn .; four sons , Walt er Lopez .Portillo, and sent the
Lewis , Lebanon ; Charles Senate a bill to permit the two
Edward, Gallipolis; Will ie nations \0 swap several hunRay. Sandusky ; Joe Howell dred prisoners held · in each
Ellis, Cardington ; a sister ,
Mrs. James (Brook ) Bartley , other's jails. A communique
Chapmansville , W. Va ., two on his visit with Portillo will
brothers,
Clarence
of come Thursday.
Chapmansville and Lonnie of
- directed his Cabinet to
Columbus ; a stepdaughter,
Mrs. Beulah Ann Horne. Bay lay groundwork for "zero
City , Texas. 17 grandchildren base budgeting," und er
and four step-grandchildren. which every governmental
Mr. El lis was a member of agency and program ,must be
the Chapmansville Church of justified anew each year, for
Christ.
• Funeral services will be ihe fiscal 1979 budget.
held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
-gave 's warm sendoff to
Ira C. Hahdley F~neral Home Clark Clifford, his special
at Oano.Jitle , W, Va., with
Save on the Piano of your choice.
burial to be In Ellis Cemetery envoy to L'yprus , and said he
a t Chapmansville. Friends will stay in close touch "day
.
Spinets,
Consoles, .Studio Uprightsmay call . at t~e Rawlings- to day" while the former
Coat s Funeral Home in defense secretary is on the
Cherry, Walnut. CoiQnial Pine,
Mlddler,ort from 2 to 4 and missian.
Maple and Pecan. ·
fr om 7 o 9 p.m. Thursday and

Aides

Elberfelds In Pomeroy -

SALE PRICES

at the Handley Funera l Home·

from noon Fr iday until time
of services .

DONOR OMITIED
Dorothy Sayre was omitted
as a two gallon blood donor at
the Bloodmobile Mond ay
MORE SURVIVORS
Vernon
Nease, blood
Additional suovivors , program chairman, said.
nieces and nephews of Seth
Nicholson who died Tuesday
morning, are Pat Wood,
Pomeroy; Orville Bratton,
Cheshire; Owen Bratton, and
Kermit Epple, NelsonvlUe ;
Bill Nicholson, Lakewood,
Ohio; Hazel Oliver, Byes·
ville; Pbyliss Alfrey, Utica,
· Ohio; l&lt;lls Green, Heath,
Ohio; Alma Hein, Hillsdale,
Mich., and numerous great
and great-great-nieces and
nephews.

eoun.

CENTER CLOSING
Gallia • Jackson-Meigs
Community Mimtal -Health
· Center wUI be closed Monday, Feb. 21, in observance of
President's Day.

WEDNESDAY-tO A.M. TO 5 P.M.

IIJen' teeead attempt
nd KeY Jaebn, f.ll
anler B..e Devil l••nl,
lelpellldP ... .,...... tile,
nil aM' .ladiHa came dollll'
wltll tile •11t lmportaat
ear om tf lllo eareer,
p;ottele41 tile baH IIIII belore
tbe Clllefl eeald 1et It back,
llale elapeed. Tile erowd went

----------·lsave$25
I
I
I
I
I
I

" WITH
COUPON!

onthepurchaaoofaGiboan

at y
VOL. XXVII

.

Pomeroy,

12 cu. fl . Frasi·Cioor with onorgyl
,saving sillier lining . Rat~rslble door.·l

JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - THE ROMAN
CA'l110UC Church has refused a government order to expel
all black and mulatto students from Catholic schools or face

Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, o.
Slore Hours- 9 a. m. to s p. m.
Monday thru Thursday
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Night TiiB
Saturday 9 a.m. til S p.-m.

CLOSING MONDAY
Offices In the Meigs County
Court House will be closed
Monday In observance of
PrMident's Day.

Racine to ·further explore
.·
I
.
community house proposal
A bright side of the recent
energy crlala was respomllie
reports nationwide that
juvenile delinquent acts
tlroughout tha time period
tbat the achools were sllrt
down had lor the most part,
belli re~d.
'11111 1Pp81'ently Is a reault
ol lhe eNidren hlvlrill 110
11111:h fill alecldlna, aiding,

.

llld imolvl~ In~ lporta
tbat they ' b~lll 't had that
llllll!b lime wWI over energy
to etlllllllt delinquent acta.
'11111 reetlll report confirm~

. Clll ~

106

NAMED DEPUTY
Don Mullen was appointed
deputy . sheriff of Mei gs
County according to an entry
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

odfuotoble.glldo·out ahelvos.

HARTLEY'S SHOES
o.

en tine

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

2nd Ave.

o.

JUST ABbUT READY - Syracuse swimming pool is
almost completed for use this summer. The L shaped
Olympic design pool will accommodate approximately 400
persons. Village officials wUI me&lt;!t soon to set the cost ,of
adn:tission and will probably offer season tickets at a
special price.

Plea renewed
to President
USe from Rhodes

PRicE FIFTEEN cENTs

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. James A. Rhodes said today
sub-zero temperatures and storms have cost.the Ohio economy
about $1.2 billion this winter and again asked President Carter
to declare the Buckeye State a disaster area.
Rhodes made hill request In a letter to Robert E. Connor,
regional director of the Federal Disaster Assistance
Administration in Chicago which was released today.
meanwhile, has purchased Robert S. Ryan ; C. Luther
"The impact of the winter storm upon Ohio and its citizens
another 12 billion cubic feet of Heckman , chaiman of
has
been devastating," said Rhodes.
Canadian natural gas, · but PUCO;
and
Sta te
indicated Wednesday that the Development Director James
"Approximately 77,000
businesses have been cioaed of milk has been dumped,"
additional purchase will not A. Duerk.
be available for immediate
for two or more days/' said said
Rhodes.
"The
In a related development,
Rhodes. "The number of Agricultural Stabilization
distribution.
East Ohio Gas Co. President
In Charleston, Thomas Dudley Taw said Wednesday
Ohioans out of work for one or and Conservation Service has
more.(lays as a resUlt oi the advised us that 92,934
Ryan of . Columbia Gas lhe energy situation In this
winter storm is now animals have perished In the
Transmission, said the country will remain unstable
supplier ;vould consider for years and will produce a
computed at 1,361,7117 .
winter storm representing an
"During January, 1977, immediate loss of $3,887,440.
holding much of the gas in lower standard of living by
10,519water mains ha,ve been
"lAss of farm production
reserve to build up its 1985.
broken in Ohio as compared as.a result of lack of feed and
reserves which have been
"This winter is a glimpse of
to 2,600 water mains broken water, dumping of milk and
depleted by about 70 billion the future," Taw said in a
in Ohio during January, other storm related problems
cubic feet because of the speech to the .cleveland
1976," said the governor. has been computed at
extremely cold winter.
Englnnering Society. "It's
"Agricultural losses to Ohio's $7,418,628," said Rhodes ..
Gov. James A. Rhodes, already too late to avoid the
JONW. BUNCE
farmers
(and eventually our
"We now estimate that the
three of his cabinet members disruptive effects next
consumers)
have been total et'ODomic impact of the
and Mllan Marsh, president winter."
substantial.
storm in Ohio, including loss
of the Ohio AFUIO, were
Taw blamed the federal
"Millions of dollars worth of revenue, increased cost of
scheduled to fly to Houston, government 's pri ce
unemployment compensation
Texas, for more gas.
re ~ulation• , policies
lor
and welfare, busi ness
Also accompanying Rhodes contributing to the na tural
were Ohio energy Chief gas shortage .
interuption losses .. . ~ould .
well approach $1.2 billion,"
said 1\hodes.
Rhodes said he underatood
Jon W. Bunce, 9M Maple
that
fed eral
disaster
St., Middleport, has been
evaluation teams are In Ohio
today and Friday to seek
appointed to the President's
Club of the Ohio Institute· of
verification of the reported
Technology, one of the Bell
damage .
a~d Howell Schools.
"I lind that the &amp;ituation is ·
Bunce ls the son olthe late
beyond the capabilities of the
affected local governments
Wendell Bunce of Middleport .
111d Mrs. Roger Adkins of
and of the State of Ohio to
Theodore, Alabama, and lhe
effectively alleviate the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Meigs County Sheriff existing disaster situation,"
Walter Bunce, Cheshire, and James J. Proffitt said todfly siud Rhodes.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reeves his department is 'fn"I anticipate need lor'Sinall
of Portsmouth.
business
loans, disaster
vestlgatlng a breaking and
The appointment d. Bunce entering of a stable owned by unemployment assistance,
to the dub was announced by Leo Kennedy, Jr., in Tuppers eco nomic injury disaster
President Richard A. Plains. The incident occurred loans
for
business
Czerniak who reports that late Sunday night or early interruptions, assistance for
ooly those students wbo bave Monday morning.
reconstruction of roads,
attained a 3.5 or better grade
A hasp was broken ofl a highways, bridges and other
point average are accorded door leading to the stable's public facilities as well as
membership
to
the tack and saddle room. economic assistance to both
President's Club.
Saddles valued at $2,300 :tate and local govem'ment,"
Ohio
Institute
of owned by Kennedy, John said Rhodes.
GLENDON FAULK of Middleport, right, whose
Technology is one of the Cline, Rt. 1, ReedsvUe, and
slogan, ''Safety's Neglect is Tomorrow's Regret" won
foremost colleges
him the $25 gift certificate being given him by Charles
Anderson, Pomeroy. ·n'"'mJIU...;,.J
specializing
in electronics Bill
Pyles.
wer~ stolen.
u •• --e eu
engineering technology and is
The sheriff also ·reported
accredited by the Engineers the arrest of Winford Rogers,
Out
Council for Professional 40, Valley Fork, W.Va., who
Development, New York, and
the National Associatim of was charged with shopliftin g
r~
Tbe Safety Program and with his family at Middleport. Trade and Technical Schools, at Kroger Store in Pomeroy.
'
Roge rs, taken before Meigs
Activities Committee of He worl&lt;s in lhe Shipping Washingtm, D. c.
Coonty Court Judge Robert
Some 200 pieces of
Foote Mineral Company is Department as a Crusher
''
Dune e graduated from
pleased to announce the Screen Operator. He has not Meigs High School In 1973 and Buck Monday, pleaded guilty damaged mai I addressed to
'
'
winner of the Safety Slogan had an accident at the Plant is enrolled in the technician's to the charge, and was sen- patrons of the Pomeroy Post
tenced to 30 da ys con· Office . have been received :
· &gt;
Contest for the period since 1973.
(right) · was program at Ohio Tech. fmement. Twenty-five days her ~, Postmaster James · . .
February 11, 1977 through · Faulk
Czerniak extended
Soulsby said today.
March 10, 1977, Glendon presented a 125 gift cer- congratulatloos to Bunce and were suspended.
Faulk for his slogan Safety's tificate by Charles Pyles, his family and to the high
The mail was damaged In a
, '
plane crash. It is wet and · ,
Neglect is Tomorrow's Shipping Superintendent,_and school staff and counselors
burned around the edges,
his slpgan has been posted wbo provided the background
Regret.
Soulsby
said. Pomeroy Postal . ' '
lind
·displayed
around
the
Glendon has been em·
training
lor
Bunce's
employes
will begin drying ·
plant.
ployed at Foote Mineral since
academic achievement.
out the mail today and
Olt,qber 15, 1955, and resides
probably will hllve to read·
dress all of it before delivery
can be made.
Soulsby said the Pomeroy
Post
Office will be closed
Slxty-lwomen
representing
'
M
onday
in obse!'Vance of
lll
area
fire
departments
In
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In recent such an Investigation affects people, Pike
President's
Day. The normai
the
Area
Volunteer
Fire
and
years, a party invitation from Suzy Park said Wednesday Mrs. Thomson uked him
holiday
schedule
will be
·
Emergency
Assn.
(Meigs,
.
Th(IJI8()n was a treasured item in for a job last week, but he didn't have "the
observed
lor
,
outgoing
mall
Gallla
111d
Athens
Counties
in
guts" to hire her.
Washing)on .
and
there
wm
be
locked
box
CJUo,
and
Mason
and
Jackson
A111embel: of then-Speaker Carl Albert's
"It wouldn't be politic," he said.
service.
There
will
be
no
Counties In West Virginia )
staff, Mrs. Thomson was an influential
Pike wants the air cleared, or at least
rural
or
village
delivory
on
met at the Ripley, W, Va., lire
boaleas wboae parties often Included the cloud dispelled ovet thoae who are
Monday.
!ilation Ibis week.
congressnen and pnminent South Korean innocent but "arneired" by assoclatioo In
Use of a duck, an am·
1
the probe.
·
dlpl00111ts and businessmen.
(llliblo111 type vehicle was Memorial planned .
Today, she finds benoelf IUlemployed,
~ ·Suzy came to me for a job lasl week
diiCU8Sed and there was a
avoided , and "smeared," as one congresa- and under that ancient political max1m
1
talk by w
1 III
The Meigs County Piooeer
man put It, because of her Korean thai a person is presumed guilty W1W
altor Smltt e ' and Historical SoCiety ls
state fire marsltaU of West
proVl!d innocent, I told her I didn't have
connections.
VIrginia. Two fllrns, one establishing a memorial, In
The Justice Department is probing the guts to give her a job or even
dealing wllh the work of the memory of Seth Nlcholion,
Korean lnfluence-peddllnR involving recommend her for one. It wouldn't be
.
noale man and the other on Rutland, an active m. .ber .
C01181'elllllll!ll· Mn. Thoolson was one of politic," Pike wrote In h1a monthly report
the
care, mairtlllance and • o! he societf's bo,ard. ThOle :
thoee eaDed to testify.
to c:onstituenta.
proper usage olladders were wlahing to contribute to the ·
Th!t, In Itself, was enough to scare away
He said Mn. Thomson "probably knew
llilown
'
memorial may send their
prospective employers, aC~:Drding to Rep. half the people in the House but most of
The
meeting
will
be
on
contribution
io
Mn.
Otla Pike, D-~ .Y.
them now pretend !hey never knew her.
March
15
at
the
Middleport
Margaret
Parker,
Rolte
S,
In an unusual public disclllibiun of huw
Fire Statim .
Pomeroy·
.
Ji
II
•••
.

latest emergency gas

New Spring Shoes now in stock. Shop
early for good selection. New
shipment of Hip Boots now in stock.

THE MEIGS INN

NO. 215

Unlied Prt:~~slntel'!llltir""l
WASHINGTON - A PAIR OF PUBUSHED neWilpaper
reports say an Interior Department study concludes producers
lnlentlonally withheld one trillion cubic feet of natural gas
during the January energy crisis. But the findings of
Investigations by the Interior Department and a House
Interior subcommittee have not been made public.
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus received his department
By JOHN T. KADY
report Tuesday. OHiclals immediately said they were United Preas lntel'!llltional
uncertain how much of the report would be made public and
The Columbia Gas Co. of
sources indicated it might be just the first step of a more Ohio has asked the Poblic
wideSiltead Investigation . According to a syndicated report Utilities Commission of Ohio
Wednesday by coltunnlsts Jack Cloherty and Bob Owens and for permission to use its
another report In lhe Washington Post, . the Interior latest emergency allocation
Department document shows producers withheld enough gas of over four billion cubic feet
tohaveavertedtheshortagea that hurt the nation's economy in of natural gas to aid large
January.
. industrial and commercial
users - including schools.
WASHINGTON - THIS MONTH'S. "Golden Fleece
-A Columbia spokesman
Award" recipient Is the Law Enforcement Assistance told the .PUCO Wednesday
Administration for Its study to determine wby prison imnates that conllnued ·cooservation
want to escape, Sen. Wllllam Proxmlre announced today.
would provide enough gas for
The Wisconsin Democrat called the $27,000 study a priority-one customers"crime " and said "if those responsible for it were tossed in residences and hospitals jail l'U,bet they wouldn't need a dime of taxpayers' money to for the remainder of the
de~ide why they wanted to get out." Pt'oliinlre's monthly winter.
"Fleece" award is given to what he considers the biggest or
"We're trying to piny God
most Ironic waste of tax dollars.
and get the most favorable
impact on the limited amount
ORLANDO, FLA. - INVE;STIGATORS SAlo Wednesday of gas &gt;that m\ght ., be
up ·to a third of the food stamps handed out in Florida are available," said Jamea L.
fraudulenUy obtained, lhen uaed to buy ailythlng from guns Fullin , an atlorney for
and booze to sex. State Attorney Joseph D'Aiesandro said In Columbia.
' Fort Myers investigations In South,Fiorida ·lndicated "fraud Is
However, PUCO member
Involved In about 25 per cent" of emergency food stamp cases. David Swe&lt;!t wants another
Investigators took a supply of food stamps into the streets look at the situation.
11
early last moolh and found they were negotiable for nearly
1 want assurances
anything.
Columbia can meet the needs
"We bought a gun, marijuana, an automobile, and a pink d. its residential and priority·
teddy bear with food stamps," said one lnveatlgator. He said one customers before I
an agent talked with a prostitute about usinl! food stamps to approve the proposal," said
buy sex. "We didn't buy It, but we dl!cusaed it," Eagan said. Sweet
"We could havemadethedeal with food stamps."
The over four billion cubic
feet of gas, which Columbill
FOREST FIRES RAVAGED parts of Alabama, doud will get, comes from its chief
seeding was considered for drought stricken Oregon and supplier, The Columbia Gas
. Washington and children frolicked In 'the snow at Kitty Hawk, Transmission. Corp. of
N. C., .,.hlle the national shiver continued oYer most of the Charleston, W.Va.
naUon. Wanner temperatures were heading ~!ward today,
Columbia
Gas
pushing toward a cold front which had necessitated new freeze Transmission Corp.
warnings Wednesday night over northern Florida.
· Overnight lows dropped below zero In the Nortbeut, with
highs In the teem expected again today In that region. It
remained hot and dry in Alabama, whore widely scattered
Cloady tonight and not so
forest fires claimed one life Wednesday. W. D. Morrla, 72, an
cold,
with " lows near 31.
Odena, Ala. farmer suffered a heart altack while watching a
Chance
of snow Friday, highs
fire sweep toward h1a barn. Ironically, the fire he feared never
between
35 and 40.
reached h1a barn. The firea, which began Feb. 4, have burned
Probability
of precipitation
43,989 acrea already and officials say rain Is the only thing that
can stop the flamea. But no rain was expected until Saturday at 31 per cent tonight, 30 per
cent Friday.
the earliest.

SATURDAY-10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

Plus Tax

Fadley. "That gas is feeding
the fire and we can't get the
gas shut off because the
turnoff valve$ are frozen
over."
There was between 18
inches and three feet of ice In
the area behind the buildings,
Fadley said.
"The electricity is still on'ln
some of the buildings as well
as the gas," said Fadley.
"There may be some smaU
explosions but nothing to get
(Continued on p~e 12)

•

FRIDAY-10 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Crab Patties
French Fries
· Coffee, Tea or Milk

store adjacent to the card
shop and to a wig shop and
newstaJI!I.
Firemen , hosed down an
adjacent building ln an
attempt to stop the fire from
spreading.
The fire area was a block
north of lhe state capitol.
"The lire started In the
basement of this buDding
(housing the tavern and card
shop) then spread to this one
(the apparel shop) and
burned off a gas meter," said

NAPLES, FLA. - RICHARD HARKNESS, one of the
natioo's best known broadcast news reporters for nearly 30
years and a vetoran correspondent for United Press before
that, died at h1a Naples borne Wednesday. He was 89.
Harkness made the first network tel~vision news
broadcut from Washington for the National Broadcasting
C«npany in 11H8 and for a time was anchorman on the late
evening ne'W!l on Washington's NBC station.

' modeiRT1 2F3

THURSDAY-10 A.M. TO 5 P·.M.

wild.
'l'be vic:1orJ, iUth in a row
fvr GABS, lvtllled Gallla'a

MEIGS 1H£ATRE
ClOSED. FOR
VM'ATION
WATCH FO~
OPENING DATE

By JAMES R. CARTER
OOLUMBUS, Oblo ( UPI) A four-alarm lire, led by a
lroken natural gas main that
llrep!en were unable to tum
olf, raged out of control In the
downtown area today. More
than 100 firemen fought the
blaze in near zero weather.
Columbus . Fire Chief
RaytiiCIId Fadley said lhe fire
started In an underground
tavern, spresd to a Hallmark
Card shop directly above the ·
tavern, a wanen 's apparel

Weather

CLIP COUPONS FOR BIG SAVINGS!

TUESOAY-10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

m[

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

MONDAY-10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

THE INN PLACE
Thursday Ni!/ht Special

Pianos Loca ted
Furniture Dept.-Jrd Floar

E-RCALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to the Harrisonville Road
area at 7:09p.m. Tuesday for
Mrs. Lewis Smith who was
taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

The Chlef1 worked the ball

LHS guard Jan
Myers was ' fouled with lour
second&amp; left.
MJII'I sank the flnl of a
onHiilekne to m~e It 48-47.
Gallipo!ll eslled two coosecullve time outa.

Fire rages near
capitol building

PIANOS

remalniJIC.
u~

Two arrested for DWI ·

•

"Alllmatl-" major
prapaaal• wbldl II, to olfer
realdanta In the Ga!Ua·
Jaclllon- Melli area alter·
natl'lll to 1~ abuse
' through recreation, aoclal
.

~

clu6i. or community bousea.
In keeping with lhe spirit of·
Ilia "Aitematlves" policy,
the Racine Town Council
recently held a meeting
where It was proposed that
the council, In cooperation
with "Alternatives", a
aubalance abuse program ol
the Gallia-Jackson•Melgs
Community Mental Heslth
&lt;Rnter, !wther· Investigate
the poelllilitJ of creatlng a
Co111111111lty Houae.
:Ibla was an Idea originally
conceived at a public meeting
thrateb the cooperation li
local ~~b and adults li the
Racine area. This Comllllftlty Houae would be a
(llace where ~lth and adults
rniRht be able to more

creat1vely utUiie their lei•ur•
time.
Mrs. ~ne W~ett Ia lhe
temporary chairman of the
pr()ject. Further deliberation
abolt the poalll~lity of the
formation of the Racine .
Cunmunity Houae will be
held at. a public meethig
acheduled for Monday,
· Fell'uary 21 at the Racine
aty Council Chamben at 7
p.m. All Racine community
members are encouraged to
Cllllle, In particular lhe ~uth.
It II hoped IIlli this will be the
flnt step to possibly
orpnldng more of these
bo111ea throughout tile GelllaJaclllon-Melgs area In an
effcrt to further promote
alternatlvea to substance
abuse.

Jon Bunce
in institute

honor Club

K ennedy
stahle
robbed

mail

drying
r'n nnst orffice

Faulk ha(l.-best slogan

Firemen meet
in Ripley for

Unemployed, smeared, avoided

discussions.

;,.xt

,

.

�2-~ DauySenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,Feb. 17.1977

&amp;-TheDaiiySentinel,MlddleDOrt·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb.l7, 1977

Freeze-Out

House votes Corps jobs
. By LEE Ll!lONARD
· UPI 81alobllle Reporier
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Houle, with the bleulng
of tbe admlniatration of Gov.
· Jamea A. Rhodes, has
· lreatbed new life IniAl a
· clvWan job corps program,
.voting to gl"'! It a four-year
. trial pctod.
ADd.Jiouoe lllerJibers ha"'!
!1111de their first outward sign
of approval f1r tlle "sunset"
· concept
of
cutting
bureaucracy.
The
actions . were
simultaneous with
Wednesday's 76-17 passage of
legislation creaUng an Office
of Civilian Conservation
witllln tlJe state Department

of Natural Resources, but
making il expire after four
years ll!lleaa renewed by tl1e
legillature.
The so~alled "Civilian
Conservation Corp•" blll
cleared lbe leglsla lure
nverwllelmln8Jy last seuion,
only to be wtoed by tl1e
gowrnor on grounds private
Industry could better provide
pennanent and meaningful
jobs for youth. It now goes to
the Senate for.further action.
Slxteen Democrab! joined
35 Republicans In securing 51·
45 approval of the
amendment limiting tbe life
of the program to four years
after Rep. Richard G. Finan,
R-Cinclnnatl, reminded them

they campaigned against
expending bureaucracy In
govenunent.
The Department of Natural
Resources said the bill Is
acceptable thia time. A
apokesman for tlJe governor
said the four-year limitation
would probably make tbe
measure more attractive Ill
Rhodes. If It doesn't,
Democrats have enough
votes to owrride his veto.
"The original civilian
conservation Clrpll program
under President 1\ooeevelt
w~a program that w&lt;rked,' '
said Rep. Arthur R.
Wilkowski, qroledo, chief
aponaor. "Perhsps it Is ilrne

Tougher strip mining laws

{

needed says Schlesinger
By DREW VON BERGEN

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter's chief
energy advisor says passage
of a federal strip mining
reclamadon law Is necessary
for a national energy pollcy
geared wgreater use of coal.
: "Negatlw argumenls have
characterized the strip
mining debate for too long,"
presidential assistant James
Schlesinger said Wednesday
·In a letter to House Interior
Cornrnlttee chairman Morris
Udall.
"Adequate safeguards of
the land are not In conflict
with a policy of expanded
· coal production,"
Udall, 0-Arlz., read the
leuer at a subcommittee
hearing on surface mining
legislation.
Schlesinger said America
can't expect to Increase its
reliance on c·oal unless

mining and burning of tlJe
mineral can be done In a
healthful
and
environmentally sound
manner.
"The passage of clear and
effactlve sttip mining legislation is therefore a
prerequisite wgreater use of
coal as part of a sound energy
policy," he said.
The energy adviser said the
coSt of reclamation "should
not noticeably Inflate fuel
prices," and predicted more
jobs will result from
expanded underground
mining and reclamation
efforts. He said he was eager
to see a bill passed "to create
a sense of certainty about tl1e
rules by which coal strip
mining can take place.
A similar theme was advanced by Aubrey Wagner,
chairman of tlle Tennesaee
Valley Authority, who

testified, "One of the
)l'incipal factors that haw
stalled the nation's coal
production Is the uncertainty
surrounding proposed federal
legislation.
"We must remove this
uncertainty and remove it
now," Wagner said, "50 all
coal mine operators and
potential coal mine operators
can plan tlleir futures with
the certainty necessary to
increase production and
finance the opening of new
mines."
·
Ben Lusk, president of a
West VIrginia mining
association said small
operators "couldn't poisibly
stay in business" if the bill
were passed. The Udall
measure requires stripmined lands to be returned to
their approlitnate original
contour and sets standards
f..- reclamation.

t·
\

·.

.·
..

"
1 h
u
peop e w o do ve together
and are oot married have a
benefit In Income tax." He
said
.....the original economic
pa,.,...ge would have provided
a $2,400 standard deduction
for single people and $2,800
f
led
p1
or marr cou es.
"We have changed that
proposal and we hsve given a
$2,:100 standard deduction to
smg 1e people, S3,000 to
married people," he said.
During tl1e meeting with
HEW workers, Carter said he
intends to move toward
national health care In
""ases
,..
· He said he plana by
the end of IWI to have a
schedule In mind for "a year
by year progression toward a
complete comprehensive
health care system."
·
On
other
Issues
Wednesday:
_Carter said he would like
. to mow toward normalizing
relations with Angola, Cuba,
Vietnam and other nations.
One roadblock to full
diplomatic relations with
Angola has been the presence
of Cuban troops there, bul
Carter said he has learned
througb "lnditact sources"
_,_....
Cuba haspr......... loremow
the troopa.
,
- White House Press
Secretary Jody Powell said

·· By~ E. Lamb, M.D.

J

infuriates GOP

Robert Walters

conservation areas, each

WASHINGTON - With Democrats firmly in control of the
White House and Capitol Rill, the Republican party is In
danger of becoming Invisible at the ruttionallevel - a developmen! which has GOP leaders fretting and fussing .
President Carter has skillfully commandeered the airwaves
and headlines from the "bully pulpit" of the White House whiie
his Democratic supporters and antagonists In Congress are
soaking up whatever time and space Is leftover.
The result has been a vittulli freeze-out of the "loyal opposi·
tion" at a time when Republican political fortunes are already
at their nadir. With some justification, GOP leaders feel they
are.belng sllghted by the press.
Senate Minority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R·Tenn.,
House GOP Leader John J. Rhodes, R·Ariz., and fonner 8en.
BW Brock, R·Tenn., the new Republican national chainnan,
bave joined forces to combat the Indifference of the media.
Rhodes and his staff aides have privately complained to
several reporters and at least one major newspaper editor that
important policy statements by House Republicans are being
virtually ignored. Baker says he will "scream to high heaven"
if press coverage of GOP positions doesn't pick up soon.
And the congressional leaders plus Brock are acheduled to
sit down within the next few weeks with officials of the three
major television networks- CBS, NBC and ABC- to plead for
guarantees that the GOP will have a reasonable opportunity to
respond to President Carter's fireside chats and other televi.r
ed reports to the American people.
.
When Carter's first fireside chat was announced, Brock fired
off telegrams to all three networks requesting equal time, He
didn't get-it, but he was invited to appear on NBC's "Today
Show' ' and ABC's "A.M. America" the morning after the
President's address.
"I think tlJe petworks are sensitive to the fairness question,"
Brock told ils. "The fireside chat approach is so subject to

a·buse that I think they are going to bend over backwards to
avoid problems.
"We're prepared to go to tlJe FCC (Federal Commll!llcatlons
Commission) if necessary, but I beliew something can be
worked out amicably."
Aspokesman for Rhodes said Republicans have fared better
on television than they have In daily news coverage by print
journalists.
"Because we are a minority and a badly reduced one at that,
i' is patently obvious to the press that whatever we W&amp;nlls not
going to happen because we don't have the votes.
"Therefore, what we do or say apparently isn't news. To us,
that's a potentially insidious type of bias even though It's quite
unintentional," the Rhodes aide said.
.
Rhodes [ Co. may be ste)ving prematurely. Because the
Carter administration is still in its formative ·phsse and
because the President himself remains an enigma to much of
the public, he press is indeed temporarily mesmerized by the
ruling majority.
The real test, as Baker told us, will come two or three mon·
ths from now when the shine is off the apple and the ad·
ministration gets down to specific legislative proposals and ex·
ecutive decisions.
"We want 19 make sure tlJe country gets a glimpse of what
the alternatives to Democratic programs might be. if we're
frozen out of the news, we're going to be In very hsd shape in·
deed," be said.
The press, of course, has no obligation to provide artificial
respiration to a failing GOP. But the Republicans are entitled
to something better than benign neglect. The founding fathers
guaranteed freedom of the press to Insure that Americans
would be exposed to the clash of competing ideas. People are
entitled to he informed of the views of lhe minority party as
wellasthegovernlngmajority.

Relief proposed
for marrieds

'----=·=--=-=-

.-'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

Saturday tbr_oucb
Monday, a cbaace o) rain
or snow Saturday and
Smclay. Highs wm be ill tl1e
301 Satunlay ud In tbe 14111
SUnday ud Iowa will be
aear !8 Saturday and aear
30 Sunday. Colder Molllay
with a cbaace of snow
flurries. Highs wiD be In
lbe ZIB aad lows will be
aear !8.

and $2,800 for couples. However, Carter changed those
figures .to $2,:100 and $3,000
Wednesday, he said, to take
· away some of tlle tax advantage "sinners" get by
remaining single and living
·together rather than getting
married.
OFICER RESIGNS
The end result Is wcharge
ClEVELAND (UPI) -Ad·
higher taxes to single persons dresaograph .• Mulllgraph
who now claim the maximum Corp. president Chsrles L.
standard deduction. Under Davis has resigned, Roy L.
the
current standard · Ash, hoard chairman and
deduction someone making chief executive officer,
$13,750 would get a standard announced Wednesday.
deduction of $2,:llll, and tl1e
Davis, who was stripped of
maximum · $2,4110 standard the chief executlw officer
deduction goes to every title last Sept. 20, Is to
single person making Sl~.ooo. C&lt;llltinue as an executiw
None of the changes made consultant and a director of
py either the committee or the corporation. He came w
Carter Is yet law, but If Addressograph -Multigraph
enacted. the changes would in 1971 to assume the top jobs
tend to shift the rebate and after 16 years at HoneyweU.
specl~ $50 payments more
Acompany spo~esman said
toward lower Income further word on tl1e corp(l"a·
persons, and would give a lion's management sltuatlm
somewhat larger permanent would be forthcoming within
tax cut to families at tlJe a few days.
expense of middle and upper
Income single persona.
PleasantValleyllospltal
Discharges - Okey Sim·
pklns, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Frances Carr, Gallipolis
Ferry; Kimberly Roush,
Mason: Mrs. Joseph Johns,
Veterans Memorlol Hospital Point Pleasant; Michael
Admitted - Brian Taylor, King, Leon; Johnny WarnMiddleport; Jsabeile Cozart, sley, Point Pleasant;
Racine; Eugene Roush , Rebecca Wamsley, Point
Mlp'ddleport; Emily Lewis, Pl~asant; Merrill Clark,
omeroy; Dawn Greene, P01nt Pleasant; Norman
Racine; Salim Yates, Laudermill, Mason ; Mrs.
Racine; James Durbin, West Gary Rudolph,
Point
O&gt;lumbia.
Pleasant; Margaret Syare,
Discharged - Charles Masoo; Mrs. Joseph Ellis,
HW!phreys, Jack Oller, Alice Cotlag ev llle; Mlcha el
Wamsley, Anna Crislip, Merica!, Mason; Mrs.
Wyatt Radford, Martin Manford Bauer, Point
Mollohan, Myrtle Harrison, Pleasant ; Gilbert Neal,
Carol Dailey, Allee Lezotte, U!on; John A. Wilson, n,
George Meinhart, Macle Point Pleasant, and Mrs. Oris
Priddy.
Lacey, Point Pleasant.

By GENE CADDES
with No, 3 Elyria and No. 4
UPI Sporta Writer
Leba
OOLUMBUS (UP!) _
non, also both unbeaten,
There Is only one week left for each receiving one.
their challen
. gers Ill ..-·at
Ridgewood (14-ll), which
~~
look over the top spot in AA
Barberton, West Lafayette last week, has llttle breathing
Ridgewood and Morral room In its battle for the top
Ridgedale from their No. 1
1
positions In tlJe United Press sporhe Generals, although reIntemallonal Ohio High celvlng 14 first place votes to
School Board of Coaches three
for
runnerup
basketball ratings.
Tiltonsville Buckeye South
Barberton, with a 17-0 (16-0), have only a 240-232
mark this year and with 43 margin going IniAl the fmal
strsjght over the past tw
. o · wee.
k
seasons, came witllln four
Col b
Mlffl' (1")
polntsofbeingtheunanimous whichurn
us
m
"''
climbed to second
last
choice In Class AAA this week and posed a threat to
week, as the Magics of Coach Ridgewood, lost both Monday
Jack Greynolds were voted and Tuesday night and fell to
the No. I team by 34 of the 38 third with 211 points,
voting e&lt;iacbes.· The other
In Class A, the battle for the
four voted them second.
top spot Is strictly a tw~eam
The 376 of a possible 38(} affair between Ridgedale (I~
points gaw tlJe defending 1) and Indian Valley South
AAA tournament champs a ( 14•2) . with the Rockets
64-polnt
spread
over holding a 243-212 lead going
runnerup Columbus Linden Into the final week. Ridgedale
McKinley (16-0) going Into also led In first place votes
the last of eight weeks of this week 17-4.
voting.
Unbeaten Archbold moved
Linden received two of the into third In A, but Is over 1110
other four first place votes, points behind Ridgedale ,

Rio to host

No cure for MS

speech as well as paralysis. It
. DI!;AR DR. LAMB - I can be disabling and fatal. On
: would like some help. I am 40 the poaitive side IIWIY pa·
· and my doctor told me I have tlents with the disease llve a
,: multiple sclerosis and that long · time with minimal, if
: tbere Is no cure or treatment any, disability. Hopefully you
for it. I have seen two will faD Into that group and
: nt~W'Il8lll'geons who agree will live long enough for the
:: that this Is my problem.
entire picture of multiple
.· With a wife and four klda sclerosis to change.
·; you can see why I am upset.
In one study of MS patients
-; Not one &lt;i them gave me any 74 per cent were alive 25
· help In tlJe line of whit to do years later compared to 86
·: about ll Is there nothing I per cent of a population of the
· can.do?
same age who. did not hav~
,. DEAR READER - You MS. AI !hi end of 25 years
•: can't make reali5tic plans for two-thirds of the llli'Viving
: yout family or for youraelf patients are still ambulatory.
: wilhoul knowinl tlJe truth - Some patlenlll have lm.: even if ~ tMh Isn't very mediate and even fatal out- ·
·. pleuant. IIIII true that there ' comes, others Uw for years,
•· Is no lrealn!ent for multiple · often with remlaslons and llt•. acleroalll ()IS) thai will really tie, if any, evidence of the
,-• cure it. I am optimlstlc that disease.
,
. ;. medlcalldence will hsve an
Which will you be? It is dlf·
to mul!lple aclel'OIIls flcult to predict because of
1 • : • In the near future.
the nature of the cllsease to
; • MS is 1 diaeue that affects have complete remlaslons
'· wldelp eaJ areas of tl1e ner· and aevere relapees without
VOUI ·l)'stem. It can cause warning.
II'OII!lle with 111sion and
While llf6i is still clasaified

as a disease of unknown
cause there is now considerable evidence that it Is
caused by a "slow virus."
There Is evidence that the
body produces antibodies to
the virus. Also there Is
evidence that some people
seem to be resistant to the
virus Infection and others
susceplible. 1bat may explain the dlffernces in
geographic diJtrlbution of the
disease.
U the virus evidence holds
up and the virus Is Identified
there is hope that a vaccine
can then be found to prevent
MS. At present 350,000
Americans have the disease.
Also It llllggesta that there
may be new ways of lrellinl
the disease. Investlgators
think an exposed person produces antibodies to the
mysterious virus. The MS pa·
!lent then develops an
allergic reaction to the a&amp;
tibodles formed.
Meanwhile the most that
can be offered is1really sup-

'portive care If you should
need it. Steroid hormone
treatment is sometimes
helpful. There have been
several diet treatments auggested but none has proved to
be really useful and the best
dietary approach Is a well
balanced 'dlet that meets tl1e
· nutritional needs of the pa·
tlent. Remember, no matter
how had things are, there are
remlasi0111 and you have good ·
percentages on your side for
your overall outlook for 25
yean!. A lot can happen In
thatlength of time.
Strokes are tlJe third most
conunon cause of death In all '
Americans. They can also be
crippling and affect a per·
son's persorutllty. To learn
more about strokes and how
to prevent them send 50 cents
for The Health Letter number
~- Send a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
!llllillng. Write to Dr, Lamb In
care of this newspaper, P.O.
.Bux15:i1, Radio City Swtion.
NewYork,NY111019,

Today's

first game

Sport Parade

\

of tourney

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Rio Grande College
Athletic Director Arthur W.
Lanham announced today
Rio Grande College will host
tl1e first game of the 1977
post...,ason Mld.Ohlo Conference Saturday night at
Lyne Center.
The Redmen, 20,3, will take
on Tiffin's Dragons, 11·15, at
7:30p. m.
In the other . semifinal
contest, Malone, 15-9, will
battle Walsh, 13-10. That
game will be played at
Canton.
·
The two wlnnen will meet
81; the sl\e of the team with
the best record for the
championship game on
Monday, .Feb. 21.
Coacb Laabam said
ev,..yone must parcbaae
tickets for post·••••••
play, laeludlng beooten,
seaoon pall boldero,
llladmlll, laeolty •Ill\ admlnlslntlve offldall:
Admission Is Sl.50 for
adulb! and $1 for students.
Proceeds from the MOC
tournament are used by the
commlaaioner for conference
expenaM.
Rio . Grande, by capturing
tlJe regular season chsm·
plonshlp, has already
qualified for the · NAIA
District 22 post-season
playolf. H a MOC team other
than Rio wins the conference
tourney, that team will al110
take part in t11e District 22
playoffs.
The District 22 NAJA dates
are Monday, Feb. 2a and
Wednesday, March 2.
n Is poaalble Rio Grande
will host this year's Dlstrld
22 meet.

NEWYORK(UPI) - They give you fair warning before you
go ln. "Certain language may be too strong for children." No
question about that. The kind of language you hear in "Slap
Shot,'' a movie about pro hockey with Paul Newman, is the
kind you won 'I even hear In pools halls , massage parlors or
houses which aren't elllctly homes,
Myself, I thought the movie wM one of the funniest I've seen
Ina longtime. Jcan'trememher when I enjoyed one more . The
lady sitting on my left felt the same way. She laughed so hsrd,
she almost toppled out of her seat although she was a little
sensitive about the language. It was so blue, she lowered her
eyes self consciously and avoided my gaze when the theater
house lights came on .
Paul Newman portrays a rapidly graying player-coach
putting I what could he his last active season with a minor
league · ·key team that isn't going well in a small industrial
mill t
Tue team Is so bad, it's on the verge of being
disbat
..r sold.
8epar• •.J from his wife, Newman Is looking to win her back.
One of the ways he feels he can Is by making something of
himself after she tell:l him there's nothing left to their
marriage and what's more, he's a lousy hockey coach.
The leain picks up tbree new kids, brothers, eacb more nearsighted than the other. They're so juvenile, they still play with
their toys, but when they get out on the Ice, they're like Murder
Inc., they're so violent. Suddenly , the team begins winning and
everything starts turning around.
,
Led by the brothers, the team becomes the most violent in
tile league and uJ[i'TUltely wins the championship.
Among those at the same special media screening of "Slap
Shot" was Steve Vickers. He plays for the New York Rangers,
and since tl1e Rangers had the night off and the movie was
about hockey players, he took it in.
He found tlJe picture entertaining, but he 's young yet, 2S, and
the language got him a little, too.
"Everybody swears/' he said. 1'1t was very oOOcene. I've
heard all tlJe words before so tlley didn't embarrass me but the
movie put us in the light of animals. It depicted us as if all we
think about Is sex and drinking, and I'd like to think there's
more to us hockey players than just that. I played minor
league hockey, a year In the Central League with Omaha, and
It was nothing like that. Oh sure, we used rough language, but
oot that much. To tell you the truth, I had trouble looking at the
picture objectively. Probably because I am a hockey player,"
Everything ~onsidered, Stew Vickers said he enjoyed tlJe
picture, and so did a couple of members of UPI's .sports
department who write hockey, Martin Lader and Rick Gosselin.
"II showed what a mockery all this violence In hockey Is,''
said Gosselin, "how goorui could win by beating the devil out of
people."
.
The acene that made me laugh the hardest had to do with a
sbowln
I
g
half
shed d king
rlvaI PIayer
g up lr a arne
-ama
an as ·
Newman not to check him too hard or he wouldn't be
responalble fir tlle consequences. Somebody else does hit him
hard and sitting there In the tlleater, you can't help but laugh
seeing the consequences out there on the lee for yourself.
The movie was written by a woman, Nancy Dowd, who went
to achool at Sllch places as Smith, UCLA and tl1e Sorbonne In
Paril, and whoae brother once played with Johnatown In tl1e
North American Hockey League. Nancy Dowd did a good
writing job, and aU that tl1e language In the picture proves Is
that girls know all tl1e bad words boy!l do, and maybe even .
some they don't.
GeorBe Ray Hill, tlle director, deserves credltf1r turninll out
a profeaalonal sports picture with a remarkably high degree of ·
realism despite Ita owr-G8ggerallon In lpo!s.
· Newman sat In the back row durtng the screening and
seemed pleaaed with the general reaction. Someone asked one
of the Universal Pictures' people how Newman felt saying aU
those terrible words.
"I don't think he said anything that wasn't in the script,''
was the reply. . ,

Charles P. Taft
resigning from council seat

CINCINNATI (UPI) Charles p , Taft, 'It-year-old
son of President Wllllam

11IE DolLY llEIIriNEL

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c., BoWooW llld (loll•- llt;.i
757 Third A.... New Y'on, N.Y.
10017.

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carrier ..hero 1\0illlblo 71 - por'
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a..

Howard Taft, is realgnlng tlJe
Cincinnltl City Council aeat
he has held nelll'ly 311 yean.
"I'm realgnlng because m
Sept. 20, 1977, I shall be 80
years old," Taft announced
Wednesday. "I,I's high time
for a new generation to take
over kr me."
HO\feYef, Taft added he
will remain available for
·~.comment and advice."
Taft Ia the brother of tlJe
late U.S. Sen. Robart A. Taft,
and the uncle of Robert Taft
Jr., wbo loll his U.S. Senate
reelection bid lalt November,
Tati'o father was the 27th
pruldent of the United
Slalel.
Although from 1 wellknown Republican family,
Taft Is neither Republican
nor Democrat. He Is a
Charterlte - a member of
Cincinnltl'a 111lque Charter
Committee which was
formed more than 50 yean
ago to drive corrupt
poUticans out of the city.
Extremely popular and one

~~lod-Bundoy;

' of the city's most
reeognlzable figures, Taft
won two-year council terms
15 of the 18 times he ran. He
illao Is well-lmown locally for
delivering free-swinging
opinions on : a variety of
topics.
,
For the past eight years he
has purchased flw minutes of
time five days a week on a
iDeal radio ltatlon, which he
admits he u. ''prlnclpaDy
for political purJJOiea."
He says his Jlrolll'IID "is
sufficiently controversial to
avoid attracting a JpOIIIOI',"
but adds, "II Is a lot of
unrlllrlcted fun."
An .-dent Cincinnati Reda
buebaU fan, Tift IOIIletimal
listened to gamea on hll
trllllliltar radio while city
council meetinp Wt1'1 going
on.
He
occaalonally
Interrupted debate to
announce
the
~eore,
~ thai the games
sometime• were more
intereatlng than council
I;

.
Taft gnduated second In
his clau at Yale In 1118,
became a lawyer and then
llamllton County Proaecutor
at age 28.
.
He first ran f!)t ctty COUI)C)l
In 11137 and 1nll' 1111 only
council electi011 1ae1 wa In
lMS after he had been out of
the city several yean
working
In
federal
govern01~nt
joba
In
Walhlligton during World
Will' Two.
In 1112, Tift 1n11 tile 01*1
Republican aubernitorlll
nomination but clldn't pt tba
full support of tbt party In tba
Nonmber ienenl e1acttau
and loll 00 Frank Lauache.
He '11'011 ra election oo citJ
council in lllllnd bu bean a
councilman - alnce.
He aald he Ia ~ hll

topics.

councll•t e~ree~~n Feb. 11
and Ill liking that 'l1lomu
~. I

defutld CCIIIIIcil
candidate two )'111'11 ago, ba
ap[IGinted to nn out bll term,
wllicb enda Nov. 311.
I

while Versallles (14·1)
jumped Into fourth and Ada
fell from third to fifth.
Rounding out the A list is
Soutlleastern (Ross) in sixth,
followed by Cardlngwn, Stry.
ker ,Oak HiD and New Riegel.
Cleveland St. Jgnalius
made ils first appearance In
the AAA top ten, replacing
fellow Clevelander, Easi
Tech, which lost twice the
past week and tumbled from
fourth to lith.
The other AAA tesrns this
week were Springfield South
In fifth, followed by Dayton
Roth, Wa rren Western
Reserve, Newark, Oncinnati
Elder and St. Ignatius,
The AA list hsd one new
face this week, Coshocton,
which moved back Into the
lop ten after a three-week
absence, with Elmwood
dropping to 11th.
After Ridgewood, Buckeye
South and Mifflin In AA came
Bellefontaine, Akron South,
Cleveland Cathedral Latin,
Wheelersburg, Columbus St.
Charles, Coshocton and Mill·
bury Lake.

Boys' ratings

.Free·spiri~

DR. LAMB

•'

...

Ma!1ha Angle and

Under tlle bill, tlle state
would be divided Into

By DON PlillLIPS
WASHINGTON (UPI)- H
you make more than $25,000 a
year, you may not get as
much out of President
Carter's tax reba~ plan as
you thought,
And if you're single· and
make m1re than $13,750, you
may actually get a tax
increase under a last-minute
revision Carter made In his
own program to prevent jt
from benefitting unmarried
couples.
As the House Ways and
·
Meana
Committee began reCarter "fully supports the 16writing tlle tax aspects Of
month test period for the
Con cor de In the terms gownunent. Now Is the time Carter's $31.2 billion
· 1na 11Y proposed ' , and wFalling
bite that
ortg
wasbullet."
an amendment economic stimulus program,
trends
quickly
-will not Interfere with lt. by Rep. William G. these
emerged :
Powell said Carter relayed
that message to the French. Batchelder, R-Medina, to
-Upper income people
d Br' ·
transfer the pro!P'am to the ·would lose. The committee
an
ltish gowrnments.
olllce of the adjutant general,
- Carter told Cabinet where he claimed the needed voted 17 to 9 oot to give tlJe
members he will hold them machinery, heavy equipment full $50 per person rebate to
"personaUy responsible" for and
personnel
were those making more than
carrying out his orders to cut available. That amendment $25,000. In fact the rebate
woUld "phase out" gradually
down the number of unneces-: met defeat by 28 to 67.
until those making $30,0110 or
sary government forms busi·
nesses and Individuals must
Meanwhile, the Senate ap- more wouldn't get anything.
fill 1
proved 29 to 3 and sent to tl1e
ou ·
House a proposal creating a (Under the phase out,
-Carter said as part of his joint legislative committee to families and Individuals
"zero base budgeting" pia
. n
study Ohio's "urban crisis" would lose S1 of the rebate for
for fiscal 1979, federal and recommend solutions. each extra SlOO of Income
employes will be .asked to
Under _the resolution spon- above $25,000.)
-Welfare recipients would
write a onepage description sored by Sen. William F.
of their job, along with ideas ilowen, J&gt;.Cinclnnati, a l6- gain. The committee voled to
on how it could be improved.
estend the program of $50
member committee would rebates and payments oo
meet on a continuing basis approzlmately 11 million
LAFF • A • DAy
during tlle current leglslatiw ~ecll'dplentots offathemllprleogrsamwltofh
r--=.!!...!-.:...~~!:!..!~-, seulon and file a report by
Dec. 31, 1978.
dependent children.
Among the areas · of
-Many single people would
investigation would be get a tax increase under a
unemployment rates, change proposed by Carter,
declining property values, who revised his own proposal
substandrd housing, poor
•fl,.....!!:!!:-:-1health care and lack of to set a flat standard
deduction.
""'""""~~~~-:-...
adequate nutrition In the
Under the lriglnal plan,
dties.
,.
everyone
could claim tl1e
The Senate was to
present
maximum
standard
1 1'1
•-•reconvene a
a.m ........y deduction of $2,400flr singles
.:::··-=-=-=--"'"'' ~~r, the House two hours

.Carter calls in lawmakers
By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter today
invited tl1e congressmen who
are rearranging his s:n.2
billlon economic package to
&lt;!lscuss their views .at the
White House.
The meeting with members
of the House Ways and Means
Committee was another
Indication the President
Intends to stay In close touch
' with Congress, especially
' when
his · legislative
programs are under review.
During Carter's first weeks
in office, congressional
leaders complained they
, were not .being consulted on
Important issues as Carter
had promised. He pMDptly
apologized and stepped up his
schedule of meetings with
them.
The economic stimulus
plan, which the Ways and
Means Committee began
rewriting Wednesday, calls
f..- changes In the standard
lnccme tax deduction and
Carter said his first version
. was off-base on that subject.
, : He outlined the problem
· · during a question and anawer
·:. session wltll federal workers·
at
the
Agriculture
~· Department Wednesday,
~· noting with a grin that

II

to take a page from the past."

witll a pro!P'am, by the Office
of Civlllan Conservation.
Individuals between 16 and
24 would participate In the
program for at least six
.months, receiving housing,
lodging and clothing In return
for work at the minimum
state wage.
Projects would include
strip mine reclamation, tree
trinunlng, erosion control,
highway beautification,
waterway construction, flood
control, park and recreation
area development, drainage
control artd wildlife work.
During debate, three
amendmtnts were defeated
but seven others were
adopted, Including several
designed to gain support from
the Oepartrqent of Natural
Resources, which already
hss a summer conservallon
program for youths.
The department expects
full federal funding of
Wilkowski's proposed job
program. In fact the House
went along with an
amendment forbidding the
spending of state money
unless federal funds are
provided.
Other amendments:
-Prohibit polltical activity
by the young employes.
-{)pen the program to
college grad._tes and nonresidents of a conservation
district.
-RA!quire work programs
for tlle. physically disabled,'
But the key amendment
was Finan's, putting a fouryear limitation on the
program
unless
the
legislature votes to continue
it.
"Unless after four years
this
legislative
body
reaffirms the success and
cootinuation of this pr91P'Bm,
it dies, that's It," said Finan
In explaining his amendment.
"H we , do not pass this
amendment, we are letting
the public down," he
continued. "We told them
during our legislative
campaigns last fall we were
In favor of simplifying

Leaders all but
have it tied up

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
- The Los Angeles Lakers
have •lined e..e· forward
Cornell Warner, 1 free agent
waived by the, club earller
thll - , to rm a spot on
. the roO: VICited by Injured
forward Kermit Wllhin&amp;lon.
ot11c1a1a ukl Warner, 21,
wiD be tliJlble to play In the

' N8A pllyolra.

'

·

BOYS RATINGS
COLUMBUS (UPil - This
w ee k 's Unlted Pres s In t ernati onal Ohio High Schoo l
Board of Coa che s' basKetball
ratin gs with firs t-pla ce votes
and won -lost re cords in
p ar ent hese s :
Class AA
Team
Points
1. Barberto n 343 ( 17 -01
376
2. Col. Linden 2 (16-0J
312

3. Elyria 1 (16•0)
.4. Lebanon 1 Cl5 -0l
S. Springfld. S. I 13-11

263
177
164

6. Dayton Roth ( 12-1)

145

7. War . West . Reserve ( 15 1)

118

B. Ne wark ( 13-2)
96
9. Cin . Elder (l2 -2 J
80
10. Cleve. Sf. Ig natius 06 -0 54
Sec&lt;md ten : 11 . Clevel&amp;nd
East Tec h 46; 12 . Canton
Tlmken 3:4 ; 13 . Bay Village
30; 14 . Middl etown 26; 15 .

Columbus Marion Frenkiin
2S ; 1.6. Cinci nnati LaSalle 24 ;
17 . Toledo Scott 12 ; 18. ltl el
Canton McKinley and To l edo
Dev i lb iss, 11 each ; 20. Cin cinnati St . Xllvier 9.
Class AA
Team
Points
1. Ridgewood 14 {J.I-0)
1&lt;0
2. Buckeye S, 3 (1 6-0l
132
3. Col. M fflln 4 C14-3l
4, Bei'tefontaine 1 03 -21
166
5. Akron South 4 (IJ. J J
151
6. Cleve Cathedral La tin
1 114- "
138
7. Wheelersburg 1 (1 2. 1)
131
8. Col. St. Charles 1 (10 -21
94
9. coshocton (12 -Jl
54
10 . M i llbury Lake (1 4-21
53
Second ten : 11 , ~1 m wood
50; 12 . Wastllngton Cou rt
House 40 ; 13. Ottawa Gl an dO rf {2) JS .; 14 , Ironton D l 26 ;
IS . Tri -Valley 25; 16. (fie)
Ken t on and Warsaw River
V iew, 23 each ; 18 . Ge noa 22 :
19 . Elyria Catholic (Jl 20;' 20.
Eas t Palestine 18 .

,,

Class A
Team
• Points
1. Morra l Ridgedttle
17 (1 3-1)
243
2. In dian Val. s. 14 ( 14-2 )
212
3. Archbold 5 flS -0 )
137
4. Versailles (l~ . J )
121
S. Ad a(12 -2)
114
6. Southes tn . Ross2 ( U - 1) 103
1. Cardington (11 -2)
67
8. Stryker (14-2)
60
9. 0akHII I C14 -1l
so
10. New Rlegell15 ·2l
49
Second ten : 11. Ri..,erdale
48 ; 12 . Mapleton 39 ; 13. Mans f iel d St . Peter 's 36 ; 14 .
Patrick Henry 28; IS . (tie l
Windham and Cuyahoga
He ights, 18 each ; 17. N ew
Bremen 15 ; 18. Ole) Peebles
and Antwerp 12 each ; 20 .
Southern !Me igs) 11.

advance. ~~

ST. LOUIS (UP!)- The St.
Louis Cardinals said Wednesday two rig ht-handed
pitchers with no major league
experience had signed 1977
contracts.
The pitchers are Johnny
Sutton, who had a llh'i record
in the minors last year, and
Bill Caudill, who struck out
140 hstters In 140 innings at
Arkansas last year oo lead
Texas League pitchers.

CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Cincinnati Reds and Chicago
Cubs made a trade on the
minor
league
level
Wednesday - the Reds
giving up outfielder Dave
Schneck in exchange for
oulflelder.first baseman John
"Champn Summers.
SUmmers, 28, will be placed
on the Reds' Indianapolis
farm team roster , while
Schneck goes on the Cubs'
Wichita roster. Both clubs
are in the Class AAA
American Associalion .
PITISBURGH (UPI )
The Pittsburgh Pirates
announced the sig nings
Wednesday of utilityman Ed
Kirkpatri ck and minor
leag11e third baseman Ken
Machs to contracts for the
IWI season.
Kirkpatrick, who played at
all three outfield positions as
well as first base and catcher
for the Pirates in 1976.
Macha, a candidate for third
base in Pittsburgh thi s
season, played the entire 1976
season at Charleston, W.Va.
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - The
San Diego Chargers have
hired Larrye Weaver, former
New England Patriots
defensive· back .coach, as
defensive backfield coach,
the National Footbail League
club announced today.
· ·
Weaver, 45, will be reunited
with head coach Tommy
Prothro, whom he served as
assistant at UCLA In 1969 and
1970.
Proth ro charac ter ized
Weaver as ~~ a most
exceptional, fundam ental
and strategic coach" and said.
his appointment gives the
team its complete coaching
staff f..- the coming season.

Ualled PreSjl Internallonal
To Xavier Co"c h Tay
Baker, the little things meant
a lot .
"I think we played about as
well as we have all year,"
said Baker after hi~
Musketee rs fell 77-68
Wednesday night to 12th ranked crosstown. rival
Cincinnati. "But, they did a
few little things better thsn
we did. They shot their free
throws a little better, handled
the ball a little better and got

After giving up 47 points in
tl1e first hall, Coach Art

Lanham's Ri o Grand e
College Redmen clamped
oown on the Tiffin Dragons in
the finalal minut es of play to
hand the visitors an 8&amp;-69
Mld.Qhio Conference setback
be fo re a good-sized crowd at
Lyne Center Wednesday
night.
Coach George Janson 's
Dragons were blistering
hot from the field In the
first half, hitting 61 per·
cenl
It was a different story in
the final half as Rio , psced by
Dale Royse 's outstanding
defensive play .on Tiffin's
Keith Hunter, outscored the
visi tors, 44-22 to capture its
2Jlth victory against three
setbacks.
· It was Rio's final regular
season contest. The Redmen
finished MOC play with a I:&gt;-I
mark.
·
Tiffin, who will be at Lyne
Center again Saturday night
in the first round of the MidCtJio Conference toW'nament,

dropped to11·14 overall and B6 inside the conference.
Hunter canned 17 of hi s 21
points in the first hsll as
Tiffin, after falling behind 4~
early, zoomed to a quick 12-4
lead .
Rio, behind Greg James,
Mark Swain, ailing Jimmy
Noe and Gil Price, battled
l&gt;lck to kn ot the count at 14al l. Jim Huff's goal with 9:02
left in the first half put Tiffin
ahead to stay the remainder
of the hll\1. The Dragons
games, are only 14,000 short
of the million mark.

(UPI)
Robert ('leper, 22, pleaded
guilty Tuesdsy to throwing a
bottle onto the field during
the
Dallas
Co wboysMinnesota 'vikings National
Footb all Leag ue playoff
game in December 1975.
NF L offi cial Armen
Terzian was struck in the
forehead by the liquor bottle,
which was thrown· from the
end , zone stands· of
Metropolitan Sta dium ,
in
suburban
loca ted
Bloomington .
Judge Eugene Farrell gave
Pieper,
a Mankato State
HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI )
University
student, a choice
The New England
of
a
$100
line
or five days in
Whalers, one of the more
jail.
Pieper
chose
the fine,
solvent franchise s in th e
World Hockey Association ,
ATLANTA (U PI )
expect the one-millionth fan
Atlanta
Falcons' Coac h
to pass through their
Leeman
Bennett
has hired a
turnstiles Friday night.
new
defensive
coach
- Jim
The Whalers moved Into
Champion,
an
assistant
In the
the Veteran's Coliseum of the
NFL
for
years
and
former
Hartford Civic Center Jan.
11, 1975, and after 108 head coach of Vancouver in
regular-season and playoff the Canadian Football
Laague.
MINNE~POLIS

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Box score:
TIFFIN (69) :_ Hvft , 6-0-12;
Hunter , 8·5- 21; Haralson , 9-2·
20; Bo ccieri. 7-0- 14; Cbke , J.Q.
2; Sprowl , 0 -0-0. TOTALS 31 ·

7-69.
RIO GRANDE (861 - Noe ,
7-2-16; P r ice , 9-3-21 ; Jam es 1
7-5-19; Swain, 9-0· 18 ; Roy se,
4- 2- 10 ; F llzpatri c k , 0-0-0 ;
Bise, 0-0-0; Vi c kr oy, 0·0-0;
Gibson , 0-0·0; Robinson , 1-0·
2; A. Pr ice, Q. Q. Q; Lu s he r , 0-00. TOTALS 37- 12-86 .
Score at h alf : T i ff in 47 Rio

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' Soulll Third SlrHI
Mlddltporl '

margin.
converted 19 free throws In
"They did a nice job the ~~~t three-and -a-hall
prepsrlng for us," Catlett minutes in upsetting Virginia
said in praise of Baker and Tech 82-TT.
his team. uaut, we weren't
Virginia Tech, which
very emotional."
trailed by as many as 10 In
The victory was the 59th in the secood hall, rallied to tie
a row at home for Cincinnati, the gsme with 3:28left.
But, five seconds later,
here ~"
said fifth -yea r which did some halftime
Cinci nna ti coach Gale switching of its game plan to Ohio's Bub Leon hit two free
Catlett, "almost every pick up its 19th win in 22 thrpws to put the Bobcats,
now S-13, ahead to stay,
Cincinnati-Xavier game has starts this year.
"We started running our
Tim Joyce led Ohio with 22
gone about the same way . We
ca n't seem to get up by 20 but guards inside,'' said Catlett. points, and Steve Skaggs and
we can . keep a comfortable "We have more size in our Buckey Walden had 18
guards than they do, so the apiece.
key to it was us getting the
Central Michigan ' s
ball to our guards in the low Leonard Drake hit two free
post area.··
throws with two seconds left
And, it paid off, with UC's oo give the Chippewas a 57..'i6
pair of · 6-4 guards, Steve MAC win over Bowling
Collier and Gary Yoder, Green.
scoring · 23 and 12 points
Bowling Green led ~
respectively.
with seconds remslning, but
Bub Mlller and Brian Wil- Drake was fouled under the
liams added 14 apiece for Central hssket, setting up the
liggest lead was six points, Cincinnati, while Gary Whit- winning free throws . .
Drake led Cenlral with 18
44-38, with I: 31left in the hslf. field had 21 and Dale
Dale Royse's goal with Haarman 14 oo pace xavier. points while Tommy Rarris
Daywn, struggling for the had 16 for Bowling Green .
13 :04left tied the game at 55At Muncie, Ind., Toledo
all in the second half. Royse's last month, got a chunk of
two charity tOBses with 12:51 revenge Wednesday night, kept its Mid-Am hOpes alive
remaining pit Rio on !Dp to handing Miami a 72-W loss at with a 68-64 decision over Ball
Oxford.
State, boosting the Rockets to
stay.
The Flyers, beaten 79-70 at ltM&gt; overall and 7-4 in the
With Rio leading 62·59 at
home earlier in the season by conference .
lhe 11:51 mark, the Red·
Miami is still on top the
men ripped off 10 unan· the Mid · American Con·
swered points on goa Is by. ference leaders, took the MAC with a 9-2 mark,
Swain, Jam eo, Royse, Noe lead for good with six seconds followed by Central Michigan
and Northern Illinois, hoth at
and Price. Thst made II 7Z. left in the half at 3&amp;-35.
Dayoon then scored the first S-2.
59 with 9: 23 left. It was all
six points of the second hall
In other games Wednesday
over.
and
Miami,
now
15-5,
never
night,
it was Akron 91
Rio Grande placed five
catch
up.
Dayton
is
now
could
Kentucky
Wesleyan 64;
men in double figure s. Gil
1:&gt;-10.
Kenyon
72
Mount
Union 67;
Price led the way with 21
"W
e
gained
a
lot
of
confiOhio
Northern
77
Wooster
73;
paints. Greg Jaines added 19,
dence
tonight,"
said
a
happy
Youngstown
State
77
Maine
Mark Swain 18, Jimmy Noe
16 and Dale Royse 10. Noe Dayton coach Don Donoher. 68 ; Findlay 86 Earlham
played despite a severe cold. "The locker room hasn 't been (Ind.) 67; Rio Grande 8ti
Tiffin 69; Steubenville 66
The Redmen hit 37 of 68 this·noisy -all year."
Jim
Paxson
led
the
Dayton
LaRoche
(Pa.)
64;
field golli attempts for 54
win
with
18
points,
with
Wilberforce
74
Thomas
More
percent. Rio was 12 of 16 at
the foul line for 75 peicent. James Wells and Doug Harris (Ky .) 73; Wilmington 68
(Ind .)
63 ;
The Redmen picked off 31 chipping in with 14 and 13 Anderson
points
respectively.
(Pa
.)
80
Carnegie-Mellon
reboiDlds, 10 by Price. James
At
Athens,
Ohio
University
John
Carroll
72.
snagged eight caroms. Rio
had 19 turoovers .
Tiffin hit 31 of 60 fiel d goal
attempts for 52 percent. The
Dragons were seven of 10 at
the foul line for 70 percent.
Tiffin had a! rebounds, ll by
Mike Boccieri. The visioors
hsd a! costly turnovers, most
of them in the second hall
against Rio 1 ~ def.ensive
pressure.
Keith Hunter's 2-1 points led
Tiffin's attack . Hunter had
only four po ints in the second
half. Two of those came in the
PHONE
closing minute of play. Steve
Haralson had 20, Mike
THE ALL ·NEW
Boccierl14 and Jim Huff 12.
a few. more rebounds."
Although Xavier dropped
its eighth straight game to
fall to &amp;-13 on the year , the
heavily favored Bearcats
could neve r put th e
Musketeers away.
" Ever since I've been

Defense shines
in Rio victory

loam to play In Jersey City
was a Triple A affiliate of the
Cincinnati Reds which was '
transferred !run Hevana in
the early 1 •. ·

WlllllliDCtan ton I taldon In

I•

years in

Bearcats a little hit better

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (UPI)
- Professional baseball
returned to Jersey City after
a 16-year absence Tuesday
when It was anoounced the
Williamsport, Pa. farm club
of the Cleveland Indians has
signed an agreement to play
at Roosevelt Stadium.
The Double-A Eastern
League club, to be known as
the Jersey Indians, will play
Its 70 horne games In the
sta~~ organized basehall .

BILL FLETaiER

' 1U kMe In laal Friday's
I Lllkll good ntlthbor,
: pmt aplmt Dennr and
S!ato Farm lsllltra.
will be lldellned f&lt;r the rwt
of the ..uon.

Sports Briefs
lly · United
Preu
JnteraaUonal
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Gov .
Hugh Carey says he would
like New York City to bid for
the 19114 Summer Olympics.
Carey and his fiscal
adviser, Felix Rohatyn ,
chatted about the idea
casually over lunch Tuesday ,
but the idea is still very much
in the discussion stage,
Carey's
office
said
Wednesday.
urn no way is there a major
effort under way to get the
Olympics here," said Carey's
presa secretary, Jim Vlasto:
"We haven't talked to city
officials about it. It's still In
the talking stage ... and it
may be too late altogether as
Mr. Rohatyn has pointed out.
Olympic decisions are made

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POMEROY

�1-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pom..·oy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 17, 1977

Reds will he stronger
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - De·

aplte the departure of Tony
Perez and Don Gullett, the
187'1 Cincinnati Reds will be
"as ltrong or even strooger"
than the Red!l' 1975 and 1976
world championship clubs,
says major league RBI ,king
George Foeter.
"I know oome CinciMati
fans lhlnk the team may be
weaker because we don't
have Perez or Gullett, but
maybe that's because they
don't know much about
(Dale) Murray and (Woodie )
Fryman," Fosler said
Wednesday.
The Reds acqu~ed Murray,
a righthanded reliever, and
Fryman, a southpaw starter,
from Montreal in midDecember for the slugging
but aging Perez · and lefty
reliever Will McEnaney.
Free agent Gullett, a lefty
starter, signed with the New
York Yankees.
"Murray and Fryman
mean we will have depth on
our pitching staff," figured
Foster. "Both of them are
proven veterans. I think some
people who are worried about
us losing Perez and Gullett
are overlooking these new

guys we got.
" Perez was tra deQ mainly
to make room for (Dan)
Driessen and Driessen has

Basketh~

teanunat.e Joe ~Morgan in
sportswrt'ters• ballo1·mg for
the league's most valuable
player, he won the Sporting

shown he can hit. We're going
to miss Tony a lot because he

News' National League MVP
award, which is decided by
WBS such a gre&amp;t guy, but I feUow Players.
don't think. the team is going - . " This winter ha~ been
"" hurt offen!ltv
· · eJy. Like. dlfferen
· t for'"" than ow"'
-•"'-•her
to ·ue
.
·
Perez, Driessen also is hard ·· -off~s'e asons ," said Foster·.
hitter and can hit 'in the "It's bem more comfortable.
·
clutch.
Coming ·. off a . good ·.year
11 That•s about the Qnly real
makes me feel real confident.
·
11
personnel turnover we've had
An d I've bee n domg more
from last year, and from things this winter too. More
what I see, we're going to be people know who I am now
as strong or even stronger and I've been invited~ more
than a year ago,' ' Foster banquets and autograph sesdecided.
sions."
As for himself , Fosler will
Foster has not yet signed
6e trying to duplicate or even hia 1977 contract, as llis
improve on 1976 - which was agent, Tom Reich,ls trying to
by far lhe best season he's win him a much bigger pay
had in nine years of pro ball.· raise than the Reds have
Atone po inllast season the offered .
28-year old leftfielder was a · But the wiry, muscular
legitimate' challenger for Foster says he has worked to
' .·
. 1e er own honors, and stay in peJ1ect shape thiS
Tr1p
even though hia hitting tailed winter and ls ''prepared" for
off near the end of the year, spring training.
he stiU won the major league · "I won't say I'm gung-bo
Riil crown with 121.
for spring training, bllt I'm
·
The soft-spoken, devout prepared for it, ready for it,"
Baptist also finished fourth in W8S the way he put it. "I've
the league in home runs with 1earned to pace myself . I
29 and was 11th in batting know how to tUi"n it on and
wt'th a .306 average. Although turn l·t off. '· you get older,
· more wisdom."
he· was runnerup to you gam

College ISI!kttblll Rtsulls
Bv United Press lnternationilll
E•st
Atbanv st . ~1 l&lt;tttsbgh 60 ·
Atbrigt1t 81 Drew 62
Americ.!'ln u 70 Ne&gt;vv 68
Army 62 lono 56
Baruch 7B Medgar Evers 73
Boston U . ?5 Norfhestern 7A
Br idgeport 68 F. Dlckin 5 on 67 '
eutfato st. 10 oswego st. A9
Canisi u 12 Colgate 70
Carn .:Mellon 80 J,. Carroll 72
cat it. Pa. 67 Slippery Rock 60
Ch~ynev 76 E. Stroudsburo 61
Clarion 117 Gr.ove City 89
cor tland St. 68 Binghmtn st. 61
DickinSon 76 Montviah 60
Frnkln&amp;Mrshl 93 Muhlnbrg 70
Gettysburg 79 lebanon vat 72
Haverford 83 JohnS Hopkins 15
t!n%hy~r :~ cuk. n~~~ ~~ffa to 87
MIT 10 Suffolk 69
M , HMi.ley 84 w.va. Wslyn 74
NPw Hrnnn u 78 Mass . 76

ro
I
I Stan cJ mgs
•·.
.,
·
I

I

I

1l

Marquette taken by 1 at buzzer
Detroit to withln one point.
With two minutes left,
Marquette went into a stall,
but Detroit's Terry Tyler
stole the baU from Bo Ellis
with 32 seconds tQ go and
Detroit began its own delay·.
Just before it was too late,
Boyd, who had 14 points, took

BOWLING

Eirly Wednesd•y Ml•ed
Fob. 9, l9n
Stondlngs
Team
Points
Smith Nolson Motors
46
Young 's Super Market
3S
Zlde's SJM!rt Shop
36
Oilers Four
28
Tenth Framers
24
Nelson Drug Co.
24
High Individual gamo Russ Carson 244 Hoi., Phelps
lJIQW,"
,
.
192; Bill Porter 220 Carolyn
The victQry improved De- Bachn&amp;r 187; A. L. Phelps Jr. ·
,troit's record to ~I and was 2U Holen Phelps 183.
High series - Bill Porter
'lis 21st straight triumph.
551 Helen Phelps 5.0; A. L.
l For Marquette, now IS-6, it Phelps. Jr . 549 Carolyn
iwas the third loss in its last Bachner .t9.tl ; Russ Carson 531
!five games and McGuire, who Betty Smith 478.
T!lllll high series - Oilers
retire as the school's Four 670.
.coach after thls seaoon, said
Team high series - Smith
~ he believed it ruined the Nelson 194A.
!Warriors' chances for an
Monday Nile Ml.,d
&gt;NCAA bid. Marquette, an
Fob. 14, lfn
j.independent, rellea on
Sta!MIIntl
!bulldlng a good record to win Team
W. L.
31 9
~an invitation to· the naUonal 5
2
29
11
.~ent .
4
2020
1 "[ gueu 1 turnabout la llllr 1
16 24
:play," McGuire llld. "We 6
14 26
10 30
:heat them like that last year. 3
Team
high
series
Team
•It's been a nice year, bot now 2231; Team 6 20!'3; Team 54
:we've become ilpoilers. It's 2083.
'over ."
Team high game - Teem 4
• Marquette led 113-68 with 78.t; Team 4 763; Teem 6-751 .
Men's high serln - 8111
,!ell than throe minutes to Marcum
525; Mole Norm1n
1
~play when~eff
WhiUow and 509 ; Raymond Rooch 474.
;Boyd bit Jump
ts to pull
Mon 's high game ..- Mole

i

'
J

'

J

\

~~·k~tF~~!!'rfJnD~":i~s~ 68

1

Wash&amp; Lee 101 N.CG'boro"
Widener 71 Wash . Md . 53
William &amp; Mary 86 VMI 84
Midwest
Akron 91 Ky · Weslevan 8~
Augsburg 76 Gustavus 61
Cent M;ch. 57 Bwlno Grn Sl
Cincl 77 xav ier Ohio 68
72 Miom; Oh io 69
Dayton 64
Detroit
Marouette 63
De Paul 93 e . Michigan 75
Eastrn Ill. 81 Wls .. Pr ksde 79
Il l . St, 70 No. Illinois 66
Kansas St. '7A Ok.la . St. 67
Kenyon 72 Mount Union 67
Loyola Ill. 84 W. Mich . 76
McPherson 86 Bethel 83
Mis~uri 101 Colorado 74
North Park 64 Elmhurst 59
Ohio U. 82 va . Tecta 77
Ohio Nortt1ern 77 Wooster 13
Rio Grande 86 Tiffin 69
St. Mary's 101 St. OICif 97
S'wstn K~n . 6(Bethny I&lt; an. 62
Steubenvill e 66 Laroche 64
51. Thos. 82 St. Jno . Minn 79
Wayne St. 101 Midland 86
Wilm ington 68 Andersoo 63
Wilberforce 74 Thomas More 73
Wi ll iam Jewell 60 Baker 59
Winona St . 7A SW St. 67
Youngstown St. 17 Maine 68
Southwest
Ok lahOma 12 Nebraska 62
k
SW0 Ia '83 NW Ok la 70
Oral Roberts 71 St. Louis 65
Prarie Vw 137 Paul Quinn 110
West
Denver 75 No. Colorado 74
Hawaii .Hilo 83 AlaskiJ·F'bnks 47
Pugel Sound 63 Cent Wash . 57

MASON PURNITURI

STORE HOURS
Mon.,T'ues.i Wid. ·11 $at.-tiJOtll s:oo
THURSDAY

TIL 12 NOON

FRillY UNTIL I PM

MASON .FURNITURE
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Trl County League

1977
Stilndings

Fob. 8,

Tum

Pts.

,Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

40

H. &amp; R. Firestone
34
Cllno Construcllon C&lt;&gt;.
30
Eagles Club
2&lt;
Strikers
22
Computers Services
18
High . Individual game
Lou Sauer. 213; Ray Roach
210; Bill Radford 205.
.
High series Dove
Peterson 563 ; A; L; Phelps,
Jr. 543; Bill Radford 538.
Team high game - Cline
Construction Co. 871.
Tl!!am high series
Strikers 2441 .
Early Sundoy Mixed
Fob.6, 1!77
Standings
Team
Pis.
Cl ine ConstrtJctlon Co.
41
Jack's Da iry Bar
36
Town Kiln
24
Pomeroy Flower Shop
23
To(!l 's Carry Out
22
MIJrk V
16
High indiv idual game

FINAL

f&gt;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 17, 1977

Forget the thermostat: just put some more wood in the stove

As announced earlier,
quarterback Steve Koege~
the
United
Prell
International AAA back of
the year , and apllt end Dave
Coodeni, both signed with
Notre Dame.
Offensive tackle · Jlm
Brown, a 11-4, 27~111111t and
the UP! llneman of the year,
signed on with Penn State,
while premier placekicker
Ken Naber selected Sllnlord.
John Budde, anolher of!enJerry Cline 215 ; Lena slve tackle, signed with Vlr·
Howard207; A. L. PhelpS, Jr. ginia Military. fUMing back
212 Helen &amp; MIJry 201 ; John
Tyree 201 MIJrlene Wilson Steve Givens with Wlsconlln,
guard Rob Lockwood with
197.
High series - A. L. Phelps Toledo and wingback Bob
Jr. 536 MIJry Voss 537; Jerry Masaong and linebacker Chip
Cline 532 Lena Howard 513 ;
Jeff Wilson 518 Helen Phelps Fry both with ClnclnnaU.
51J7.
Another linebacker, Karl
Team high game - Tom's Woods, ls expected ·to slgn
Carry Out ?69.
Toam high series - Tom's Thursday wlth either
Marshall or Cinclnnatl.
Carrv Out 'lfY/7.
CIJ)O\,U\ ..rtll (UPI) - Col·
lege football recruiters
dipped Into the ranks of C1asa
AAA
state
champion
Cincinnati Moeller
Wednesday, signing nine of
the all-;Winning Crusaders to
grant.s-in..Ud.

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I•

OPEN NIGHTS

WASHINGTON (UP!) The
Federal
Trade
CommiSsion today ordered
two big credit card
companies, an oil company
and two major department
store chains to refund more
lhan $3 mlllion to consumers
who have overpaid their bllls.
Subject In the action were
Diners' Club; Carte Blanche;
the Atlantic Richfield Co.;
City Stores Co. of New York
abd 10 of its subsidiaries; and
Federated Department

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-

WEDNESDAY-tO A.M. TO. 5 P.M.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

THURSDAY- tO A.M. TO 5 P.M.
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What to do
.i fthe
gas goes

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FRIDAY-10 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

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The coldest winter in more than a hundred years has caused massive
use of gas and more winter lies ahead with its continued threat of additional extremely cold weather. Columbia Gas is doing everything it can
to prevent the loss of gas service to residential customers. However, since
a gas outage is a possibility, here are the things _you should do in that
event.

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WE CAN1
TELL AUE

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1HESE ARE

REAL
BARGAINS

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LADIES

2 &amp; 3 Piece, Solids &amp; Prints

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SALE

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All-STARS

PANT- SUITS

Values 512,95 to $19.95

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ONE RACK

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Wednfsday's
Ohio College Basketball
Rtsulh
United Press Int ernationa l
Cinc innati. 77 Xav ier 68
Centra l Micf1 57 Bowl ing
Green 56
OhiQ u. 82 Virginia Tecf1 71
Toledo 68 Ball State 6A
Dayton 72 Miami 60
Akr on 91 Kenlucky Wesleyan
8&lt;1
Kenyon 7'2 Mount Uni on 67
Ohio Nor the rn 77 Wooster 73
Youngstown St. n Maine 68
Findlay 86 Earl ham , ln'd. 61
R:lo Grande 86 Tiffin 69
Steubenvi lle M LaRoche, Pa .

High School Girls
Basketball Results
United Press International
Wednesday
BlOOmfield 42 Lordstown 40
Br lstol AO Map! ewood 29
Canfield 51 West Branch 38
Lake Perr y 93 Fairport
Harbor 16
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Lowellville "5 Mineral Ridge
26
Perrysburg 46 Wh itmer 41
P.o land 59 Liberty 57, ot

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Results

Ohio

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1. Turn off the valves ahead of each gas appliance if possible.

FISH GO ASTRAY
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UPI ) - Jack Ford should
have found his frozen fish by
Mr. and Mrs. Barney now.
O'Brien and grandson, Jason
Ford,
the
former
O'Brien of Junction Clty, president's 24-year-old son,
Ernest Clark of Racine called boarded an a irliner in
at the home of Eunie Brinker Sacramento Monday afon Saturday evening.
ternoon , bound for hi s
WDiiarn Carleton of Racine parents' new Paim Springs
called at the home of his home, with a bag of frozen
mother, Betty Van Meter and flsh.
Apparently he did not know
the Arthur Johnson family on
the plane was to make a
Sunday.
Melvin Circle, Columbus,. stopover to Ontario, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, Most of the passengers got off
New Haven , were at the home and Ford went along . Then,
of Mary. Circle over the the plane took off wlth his
flsh , heading for Palm
weekend.
Rev. Steve Wilson visited at Springs 90 miles away. Ford
the home of Betty Van Meter called friends there to come
and the home of Eunie and get him.
Brinker on Monday afternoon.
,
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Joonsonand daughter, Sheryl
LeAnn, spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
SMALL LOANS
Joonson of Racine.
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Sen.
Anthony J. Celebrezze, Jr.,
D-Cleveland,
Tuesday
introduced a blll to conform
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Ohio law on small business
Basketball Results
loans with a standard
United Press International
Wednesdav
developed by the American
Cle East Tech 70 Cte Marshal l
Bar Association.
Akron Fi restone 67 Ma ssi llon
Celebrezze said the bill
56
would
generally broaden lhe
Berea 68 Parma 55
type
of
collateral needed tn
Clea r view 7.4 verm ilion 70
North Olm sted 6A Fairview 57 secure a small business loan.
Cle St Ignatius 70 Cle Ada ms
69 , Of
Badger 62 Pymatuning
Valley 52
Wyntord 7.4 Mohawk 54

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Maroon , black,
bi ue and green.

SALE sl()IB
WINTUK
_ YARN

PRICED
LADIES

WINTER COATS
1fz PRICE
FOR MEN

OXFORD
1

white, gold .

DuPont orion
MIJchlne_ WISh
30 fashion
cho&lt;&gt;se lrom. 3111 oz.

:;________
JUST

$100

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

IN

Junior Dresses
· FOR

1~95

SHOE
'11.95 '
BOOTS
Sl2.95

SPRING

lntern•tlonal
Hocky Lngue
United Prtss tnternatlon.al
w. L. T. ph gf ga
Kalamazoo
27 22 10 6• 248 223
Flint
28 22 7 63 262 225
Sag inaw 26 :n 9 61 237 219
Muskeoon
22 2s 1o s• 221 m
Port Huron
22 30 5 49 198 231
South
w 1 t pts at a•
TOledO 21 25 6 60 235 2SS
Columbus
22 2s 12 56 233 238
Dayton 26 27 3 55 237 230
Fort Wayne
23 25 8 s.. 214 234
Wedntldly's Results
Fort Wayne 1 Ka lamazoo 1
Toledo 1 Columbus 6
Thursd1y's G•mes
No gllmes sct1eduled
Frida y•s Games
Port Huron at Musktgon
Saginaw at Toledo
Dayton at Columbu!l.
Fort Wllyne at Kalamazoo

trapping raccoon and foxes,
gets a chuckle from the effect
of the cold winter on those
wilh gas heat.
dGas is clean and it works
line when lhere is enough of
it,'' he said. HBut you can't
beat lhat wood heat. And food
tastes better from woodburning stoves. There's
nothing like it."
.
" We seem to be doing very
good," Hart said. "I got my
wood before it got cold, from
a friend who owns an old saw
mill. It didn't even cost me
anything ."

water from wells.
•'Actually, I kind of enjoyed •
it," Hart's wife Grace said.
"It reminds me of the old
days before we had indoor
water ."

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WINTER

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,1[[,.\flANa(
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NOW IN PROGRESS

WOMEN'S SHOES
VALUES TO S24 .SO

BY MARTHA HOI..'l!NGER
Attendance at Eden Sunday
School Sunday was 47.
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Bigley
and Mrs. Martha Holsinger
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Win Holsin ger
and Douglas.
·
Mrs, Dawain
Durst,
Charlotte and Bret spent the
weekend here at their home
. In Reedsville.
Martha Holsinger. Fannie
Bigley, Virginia Carter and
Carrie and Gillilan visited
Saturday with Mrs. John
Robinson Jr. who just came
home from the hospital after
having surgery.
Mrs. Sandra Gillilan visited
Tue8day with Mrs. Geraldine
Holsinger .
Mr. and Mrs. Orval Blake,
Greenfield, visited recently
with Rev. Elden Blake.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie L.
Bigley visited Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Bigley and sons
Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Sol Bigley
celebrated their 30th wedding
anniversary Mond ay,
February 14.

NOW

INCLUDES:
EXERSOLE
CASUALS
AND

DRESS

OFF
ONE GROUP

MEN'S SHOES
VALUES TO $21.99

SALE $800 PAIR
We Have Just Received A New Shipment of
American Made Hip Boots &amp; Artics .

heritage house
Middleport, 0 .

N. 2nd Ave.
Stor~

Hours Due to the Energy Crisis
10 A.M . to 5 P.M. Doily
Unlil Further Notice

WE ARE HOLDING OUR ANNUAL

Vikings slip
by SW five
Trailing most of the game,
Coach Gary Salyer's Symmes
Valley Vikings . put on a
fourth-quarter surg e that
carried them to a 58-53 victory over Southwestern
Wemelllay night .
Despite winning, the
Vlklngshad to overcome a:.point effort
by
the
Highlanders' Ron Jackson. ·
Larry Carter, jWJior forward,
also had 14 points for Southwestern.
Pacing the Viking attack
was Jl&gt;ltin Miller with 17
points. Ralph Ingles dwnped
in 16 while Nick Geswein
udded 12.
The victory pushed SV's
season mark to lD-5.
The VIkings have sewed up
second place in the SVAC
standing behind the Eastern
Eagles. The loss left South·
western with a IHO .overall
record, 4·7 in the SVAC.
Symmes Valley wlll play
Chesapeake Friday and
Green next Tuesday ln the
Class A Sectlonal Tour·
nament at Ironton High
&amp;hool.
Southwestern is at North
G_alUa Friday.
SYMME"S VALLEY (58) Miller 17, G . Estep 7, Wilson
"· Geswin 12, Engl es 16, B.
Miller 2.
SOUTHWESTERN (531 -

Carter 1.4 , Layton 4, Bran.ton
3, Jackson 30, Mlller 2 .
BY Qulrters:
s. vaiiiJ'f
7 16 17 18-58
Southwest.
10 16 15 12- 53

Starts Friday, Feb. 18th at 9: IS and Ends February 28th
No Lay -Aways- Ali Sales Final-Cash Sa les
MEN'S

WINTER JACKETS
Wool s, Vinyls ,
Leathers

REDUCED 30%
1 Rack

Men 's Long Sleeve

MEN'S PANTS

SPORT SHIRTS

By Haggar
&amp; Hubbard

REDUCED 30%

REDUCED 30%
1 Lot
Men's Sleeveless

SWEATERS
Vz PRICE
Me~~'s

TOP COATS AND

SUITS &amp; SPORT

ALL WEATHER COATS

COATS

REDUCED 30%
MEN'S
SWEATERS
Cardigan &amp;
Pullovers

NAVIGATE OVER TO
BAKER'S FEBRUARY

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Men's

a.EARANCE PRICES

Oft
QUALITY.MERCHANDiij!

~vrNc.

But the cold h•&gt; !'aused
some problems in 1-"•rtlow.
• "".. mer of underground
pipes froze , leaving residents
wittmut indoor water for a
few days. Many had to draw

Eden News

O.dMiMIM

ONLY"$399

BAKER

RJRNilURE
MlddllpoH.

LEISURE SUITS

Long Sleeve
Colored

Sizes 36 to 46

DRESS SHIRTS
REDUCED 20%

REDUCED 30%

ROOM SUITE

o.

STORE HOURS
Monday. Tues .• Wed .• Thursday and Sat . 9:15-5: 00
Open ·Friday 9 : is TiiB : OO

BAHR CLOTHIERS
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Clip and.save this information!
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But as with the Johnsons,
lhe state of emergency hasn't
been . much of a bother to
Julia
and
Coleman
Thompson. Mrs. Thompson
has an eleclric stove, but for
heal she depends on her wood
heaters and woodburning
stove.
" PeOPle around liS have
had lt pretty tough, bot we've
been making it real well,"
she said.
Curtis Hart, 68, a retired
maintenance worker w.ho
bpends most of his days

Carmel News,
By the Day

Approximately 350,000
Americans die each year
from heart attack before they
reach the hospital. Know the
warning signals of heart
attack and what you should
do - it could save your life.
Ask your local Heart Wilberforce 74 Thomas More ,
Ky. 73
~elation .
Wlt'mlngton 68 Anderson . Ind .
63
carnegle.Mellon , Pa . 80 Joh n
Carroll 72.

Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy. 0.

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New Spring Shoes now in stock. Shop
early for good selection. New
shipment of Hip Boots now in stock.

HARTLEY'S .SHOES

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It. was the second time in
less than a year that the FTC
has acted against stores that
failed to let customers know
they had money coming. The
agency settled a similar case
wlth another group of stores
last June.

SATIIRDAY-10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

Keep this information available for handy reference. Additional
copies are available at your local Columbia Gas office.
The above message is in accordance with the order of the Ohio
Public Utilities Commission dated January 26, 1977.

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The five companies agreed
as part of the settlement to
make periodic statements to
aU costomers who have a
credit balance to remind
them of that fact; to notify
each customer of hia or her
right to a cash refund, and to
automatically refund such
balances after a certain
period of time.

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Stores Inc. of Cincinnati, and C})ases."
The complaints charged
15 of its affiliates including
such big names as that the flrms dld not take
Bloomingdale's of New York, sufficient steps to advise
FUene 's of Boston, I. Magnin thelr customers that they
of San Francisco and were owed money .
Under consent orders
Burdine's of Miami.
signed with the companies,
The companies were
cua!Qmers who h~d credit
accosed of keeping on their
balances of more than $1 due
books "substantial dollar
them any time during the
amounts of credit balances
past three years wlll get the
which belonged to their
money back .
customers but which had not
The money wiU be sent to
been claimed by the
the last known addresa of the
customers or offset by pur- customer and if the letter is
returned the companies will
try to trace the consumer
through credit bureaus if
amounts of more than $15 are
involved.
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2. Turn off the gas shutoff valve immediately ahead of the gas meter.
3. Use all auxiliary methods of heating such as electric heaters, fire places, etc.
,
4. If there is a possibility offreezing, drain all water lines. To do this,
turn off the water supply valve for the house, and open all faucets and
drain water heater, leaving drain valve open at bottom of heater. ·
5. Take precautions so any standing water in drain lines or bathroom
fixtures will not freeze.
6. Drain hot water or steam-heating equipment.
7. Stay at home, but if you must leave your home, provide entrance
for the gas man who must have access to the meter and appliances. Leave
a note on the front door or gas meter, telling him where you can be
reached, so that gas service can be restored to your home as soon as
possible.
8. Help your neighbors. If a neighbor is unable to turn off his gas or
.· does not ·have the tools, give him a hand. The Gas Company may be
unable to respond promptly to each individual request.'
·
·
9. Call the Gas Company only if the odor of gas is ·detected and you
are unable to turn off the main gas valve, or if gas is detected outside
the home.
10. Stay tuned to your nearest radio or television station for up-to-the· minute information bn the situation. ·

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plantations in the area. Some offered another reason for
old plantation hou ses using the wood stoves.
switched to electric or gas
" Food tastes best on a
heat while both were cheap woodburning stove. Those
and abWJdallt.
new electric and gas stoves
Bul now they are much cook food too fast,'' he said.
cooler than the Johnson home
The gas shortage and cold
or the others heated by wood has had severe effects. in
stoves. "We haven't had any Virginia, shutling down blnenergy shortage, " Mrs. dreds of schools and
Johnson sald . "Wood is industries. Gov . Mills E.
aplenty and our wo0 d, Godwin declared a state of
, burning stoves and heaters emergency last month. For a
work just fine."
time most businesses were
Slipping a supply of wood not allowed In stay open for
into the stove , her husband more than 40 hours a week.

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. The ·elderly co~ple, their
families and neighbors are
surviving the cold and energy
shortsge just fine, keeping
warm by burning wood in
their stoves and heaters.
"We're as warm as we can
be," Mrs. Johnson said as she
fried chicken wings atop her
white stove. "We haven't had
to turn our thermostats back.
We don't even have one .
Most of the people who live
in Partlow are black, many of
them descendants of slaves
who once toiled on

Giant·corporations ordered

ALL FALL .AND WINTER MERCHANDISE
•COATS
•SNOWSUITS
•DRESSES
•SPORTSWEAR
•SLEEPWEAR
•HEADWEAR
•SHIRTS
•SlACKS
•GIRLS KNEE SOX

PARTLOW, Va. (UP! ).In this sprawling and
generally
poor
ruraL
community midway between
Richmood ~nd Washington,
most of the families years
ago rejected electricity or
gas for heat. They were
happy with their wood stoves.
And while the rest of the
nation fought to stay warm
and still conserve fuel during
the big freeze in January,
Roosevelt and Angeline
Johnson were warm and
comfoctable.

to reimburse customers

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Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w L
GB
Phlladelph'ie 34· 20· Pet.
.630
soston
21 28 .491 1111
NV Knicks
25 29 .• 63 9
Buffalo
llf
JS .352 15
NY Nets
17 38 .309 17 111
Central Division
w. L. Pet. GB
washington 32 22 .593
Houston
30 23 .566 111,
Cleveland
29 24 .547 2,11
Sa n Anton io
30 25 .545 2,11
New Orleans 24 31 .436 8,11
Atlanta
22 35 .386 1; 112
western conference
MidWest Di vision
debot as Buffalo's coach.
w. L. Pet, GB
Uoyd Free added 24 points Denver
35 19 .648
33 2.4 .579 3.l/1
for the Atlantic Division Detroit
Kansas City 29 78 509 1 v2
leaders, while Adrian llidiana
26 30 .46A 10
u 33 . 421 1211,
Dantley !Qpped the Braves Chicago
Milwaukee
18 A2 .JOO 20
wlth 27.
Pacific Division
Pistons 125, Trail Blazers ·
w. L. Pet. GB
118:
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los Angeles 35 19 .6A8
35 23 .603 2
Bob Lanier's 25 points led Portland
Golder'\
State
31 2A .,56.4 A11,
seven Detroit players who Sea ttle
29 28 .509 71 1,
x
25 29 .463 10
scored in double figures as Phoeni
· We~nesday •s R!sutts
Portland feU to its fifth NY Knicks .123 Chicago 103
straight loss. The Pistons now Philadelphia 117 Buffalo 11 3
Houston 12ASeatt le 95
have won 22 of '!/ home Washington
1 ll BoSton 92
Detroit
125 Portland 118
games this sea&lt;on.
Indiana 1n Pnoenix 93
Pacers 111, Suns 93:
Denver 116 NY Nets 102
Billy Knight's game-lligh 2'i
Thursday's Games
points sent Indiana In an easy Boston af Kansas City
Houston at S~n Antonio
victory. The Pacers, who led Golden
State at Milwaukee
Friday's Gam es
by as many as 30 points
at NY Nets
before clearing their bench, Seattle
Phoeni x at Ph iladelph ia
also got 24 points from John Portland at Chicago
at Detro it
Williamson and 16 from Dave washingtOn
NY Knicks at Milwaukee
Robisch.
Golden State at Ind iana
Rockets 1.%4, SuperSonics 95: Atlanta at Los Angeles
Rudy Tomjanovich scored
24 points and Moses Malone
NHL Standings
totaled 20 points and 18
rebounds for Houston. Calvin · Bv UnitH Press-•ln1ernational
cam.pbell Conference
Murphy added 19 poin~ for
Patrlcll Dlvisian ·
WL T Pts. GF GA '
the winners , while Tom Pnila
3.4 11 12 80 231 157
Burleson and Willie Norwood NY l s lan dr~ 3.4 16 8 76 198 1.43
Atlanta
2.4 22 11 59 187 186
had 13 each for Seattie.
NY Rangers 21 2.4 13 55 206 207
Nuggets 116, Nels 10%:
Smythe Divisian
Dan Issel had 24 !JOints and
WL•T Pis. GF GA
. Lou is
25 21 6 56 176 200
Bobby Jones 23 for Midwest St
Chicago
21 29 10 52 184 208
Division-leading Denver, Colorado 18 31 9 45 176 213
while Bubbles Hawkins and Minnesota 13 30 1.4 40 168 230
16 31 6 38 160 230
Mike Bantom paced New Vancouver
Wales Conference
Norris Division
York with 27 and 26 points,
W l T Pts. GF GA
respectively.
Montreal 42 7 10 94 285 138
Pittsburgh· 25 23 10 60 182 1B ~
l os Angl'!les 20 26 11 51 183 183
washingtn 16 32 11 43 157 233
Detroi t
15 ]A 7 37 IA.ol 208
Adam:~; Division.
W-L T Pts. GF GA
Buffalo
3A 11 6 7A 210 157
Boston
.]A 19 6 7A 226 189
Toronto
28 23 1 63 221 19ll
Cleveland 18 30 9 45 169 203
the shot that won the game
Wednesday's Results
Montrea l 4 P i ttsburgh ~
for Detroit.
Buffalo 3 Chicago o
John Long paced Detroit Toronto 5 Cleveland 3
7 vancouver 3
with 20 points . and Terry BostonThursdiV'S
Ga..,es
Duernd added 16. Ellis topped NY Rangers at Flhiladelphla
Marquette with 21 and Butch Washington at Minnesota
Toron to at Detroit
Lee had 18.
Atlanta at Los Angeles ·
Fridfly's G1me
Elsewhere, No. 9 Wake
Co
lorado
at Cleve land
Forest edged Davidson, 7~.
!'i&lt;rth Carolina beat South
Florida, 100-65, Cincinnati
topped Xavier, 77-QI, and
VIrginia upset Clemson, 71·
WHA Standings
Bv United Press tnttrnatlonal
65.
Elst
In other games, it was
W L T Pts. GF GA
Misaouri 101 Colorado 74, QueMc · 34 21 1 69 2_.6 204
28 26 2 58 25.4 208
Kansas 91 Iowa Slate 89, Cincinnati
lndlenapts 26 25 6 ,58 194 213
Kansas Slate 74 Oklahoma New Englnd 72 32 6 50 196 231
State 67, South Carolina 65 Birmngt1m 22 35 I 45 199 217
18 5 .43 136 129
Duquesne 61 , North Carolina X·Minnesot 19West
·
W L T pts , GF GA
State 92 Duke 74, and Ohio 82
Houston
32 17 6 70 208 160
Virginia Tech 77.
San Diego 33 23 2 68 200 193
Winnipeg JO 22 2 62 253 199
Edmonton 23 32 2 ~8 159 209
Calgary
21 29 5 47 173 189
Phoen iK
22 32 2 A6 192 258
X• Telm diSbiRdtd
Wedn•sday's Results
Norm on 207 ; Bob Southern Cincinnati 1 Ca lgary 3
Birmingham 7 PhOen ix 2
205 ; Richard Shuler 198.
Quebec A Sen Di~o 2
Women's high seriH Chmes '
Myrtle Norman 467; Naomi Phoen i)(Thurtdly's
at New England
Floyd 428; O.bble Dobbins Indiana at Winn ip•g
-¥!7.
Frldly's G•m•!l.
Women's high gar)le Bir!Ti ingham at New England
Myrtle Norman 176; Naomi San Diego at Houston
Floyd 167; Bess Hendricks Cincinnati at Ca lgary
Winnipeg at Edmonton
154.

Bullets warming .up

By GREG AIELW
UPI SJM!rts Writer
The ball went up with one
second remaining, just like
last year . And It dropped
through the basket for a lastsecond vi~tory, just like last
year. But unlike last year, the
winner this time was Detroit.
Al McGuire thinks it wlll cost
Marquette a bid to the NCAA
tournament.
Dennis Boyd sank the shot
from the top of the key that
: gave Detroit a M-6:1 upset
· over sixth-ranked Marquette
Wednesday
night
in
Milwaukee. The finish stirred
the memory of last year's
game at Detroit when Uoyd
Wal!Qn made a similar shot In ·
give Marquette a 68-66
· victory.
"Al (McGuire) pot hia arm
·around me last year (after
,the game) and said it was
:cold in Detroit but that the
jsWJ is shlning in Marquette,"
,Detroit Coach Dick Vitale
1sald . " But it's about 95
degrees in Detroit rlght
1

Niagara 66 La S&amp;lle 64
Poly 6S Cc'ltht"dralcNY n
PPnn st. 81 west Virg inia 69
rM Textlle 62 DrtlU!I 38
Pi tt . J'twn 97 Frdonia Sl. 66
R IT 80 Alfred 67
RPI 79 Brandols"
Rutoors 112 Geo. Wash. 90
S~ lem 72 Da~ls &amp; Elkins 69
Southampton 98 Hunter 69
Sprtngfld so western. N . E ..49
Spri
Grdn 95
Rtgrs ·Cn'!dn 81
Stonvng Br'oo•
" 66 NV Mor.·t·,me ss
c:.t . Bon-aventure 91 Gannon 6S
St . Vincent 87 Geneva 63
Temple 7:l'VItlanova 66
W. Chester St. 90 Ride,. 73
Cortland 68 Binghamton 61 ·
Wm . P&amp;trsn 88 f=DU ·M&amp;disn 57
York NY 99 Nwrk.R:utgers '65
Ball '96 Md .· B~~ut~. 8A
Barber scotian Shaw 57
Chatt anooga 89 w. Car. eo
Clark Ga. 8? Fort Val St . n
E . Ken tucky 81 Marst1al l 79
Fla. !)outhern 68 Rollins 67
Fla. A&amp;M 111 Atoboma St. 100
Furma n 7ot E . Ca rolina 66 ·
Gu ilford 80 All . Chr;st;on n
Morehouse 63 MHes 12
No. car. 100 So. Ftorodo 6l
N.C. St. 92 Duke 74
Plollfer s• High Po;nt 83
Piedmont 85 Berrv n
Pl. Park 80 Frostbg Sl' 67
Roanoke 76 Sl. Fron Po. 69
Shorter "' La Gronge 62
So . Cor. 65 Duouosne 61 ..
StetSI)n
86 Jocksonvt 68
Vlrg;nia" Clemson 65

NBA soandlngs

• U 'I d p
I I
vY "' e
rns n ernatlonal

Results

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which ·they turned a nineBy FRED UEF
point deficit intQ a 56-51
UP! Sports Writer
The Washington Bullets, halftime lead.
Wes Unseld, the Bullets'
struggling to reach the .500
mark in December, have left mainstay in the pivot through
winter behind and now are the years , gra bbed 12
while
Tom
seni:ling heat waves across rebounds,
Henderson had II assists.
the league.
Wednesday night they Rookie Milch Kupchak,
reeled off their 19th victory in coming off the bench,
the last 24 games with a lll-92 provided 14 points and nine
victory over the Boston rebounds .
Jo Jo White had 15 points to
CelUcs to retain their grip on
first place in. the NBA's top Boston, which had a lourgame winning streak broken.
Central Division.
Elsewhere in the NBA, the
" We're playing well
because we're enjoying what New York Knicks blasted
123-103 ,
we're doing," said Coach Chi~ago,
Dick Motta , in his first year Philadelphia edged Buffalo,
with Washington . " We're 117-113, . Detroit slopped
playing hard but we're not Portland, 125-118, Indiana
afraid to lose and it's no ripped Phoenix; 111-93,
longer a business to us. It's Houston dwnped Seattle, 124fun, it's a game and that's the 95, and Denver took the New
York Nets, 116-102.
way it should he."
Not according to Elvin . KDicks 1%3, Built 103:
Bob McAdoo scored 28
Hayes, who finished with 34
points on 12 of 19 shots to go points, Walt Frazier 27 and
along with elght reboWJds Earl Monroe 23 as New York
handed Chicago its fourth
and four blocked shots.
"Any time you play the stright loss on the road. Tlie
Boston Celtics it's a war of Kilicks lroke open the game
sorts," said the 6-foot-9 in the third quarter when the
forward now in his nini!J trio combined lor 32 of the
season. "They were the team's 34 points. The Bulls
league champions last year were led by Mickey Johnson's
and no one has a good time 26 points.
76ers 117, Braves 113:
playing them."
.
Julius Erving's 25 points,
The Bullets, who also got 25
points from Phil Chenier, put including a key three-point
the game away with a tlh\ play with 56 secoods left,
second-quarter burst, in helped spoil Joe Mullaney's

Nine Moellers sign grants

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

••

II

•I

I)

�Bird feeding program given
POINT ROCK - Ruby
Diehl (l'esented an article on
'-'w to attract blnls to a
Ieeder when the Star Garden
Cl ub held its February
meeting at the home ol Rllby '

She Feels Chealed By Fashion
Rap:
lliy sisters were in high school when the mini and micro··
mini got popular. They had a lot of trouble with our strict dad,
but they still wore short skirts that showed their legs.
(Sometimes they hid lbese skirts in their lockers so cll!d
wouldn 't kllQw.)
Now I'm 15, styles are "long," and I hate them. I've got
good legs and I want to show lbem ! But dad's got "fashion" Oil
his side, so I don't have any chance to wear miniskirts. (He
won't even let me buy a bikini !)
I'd like to be lbe girl in my school to bring back the mini and I bel I could do it, if you could convince my lather. Please
help. - AIN'T FAIR TQ BE SHORT-CHANGED

Party fetes ·
Rev. Casto

COUPLE TO SPEAK- Rev. and ~ - Berge Najarian of Jordan wiD be the .guest
speakers at a special mlaslonary service at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene on
Wednesday evening; Feb. 23 at 7:30p.m. In November t960 the Najarlans began their
missionary career in Beirut, Lebanon where they kept busy in language study, preaching
and teaching in the Bible School. The following year they moved to Jerusalem, Jordan,
where they have lived for the last 15 years, preaching, buDding, and supervising the 13
churches and preaching points arid two day schools on the Jordan-Holy Land District. All
are welcome to come to this special service.

A.F .:

Why not settle lor shorts 011 weekends• Those micro-mini
skirts caused many problems, net the least was what happened
when you bent over.
Yesterday's lashion is today's street-girl look. Sorry, I
.can't help you. - HELEN
A.:

+++

,

But I'll put in a word lor bikini swilnsuits.
happening often gets blocked, This is "negative praying" Look, Ain't Fair's dad, loosen up.
They're attractive, comfortable and not too startling, you doo 't really believe.
Once you relax lbe anxious search, that special peraon
because almost every girl (who's built that way) wears them.
isn't
nearly so elusive, probably because you become easier to
- SUE
know.
- HELEN
•

•

ARLINGTON, Tex. (UP! )
- Left lielder and designated
hitier Gene Clines will go to
the Chicago Cubs or the
National League to complete
an earlier deal which brought
relief pitcher Darold Knowles
to Texas, .the Rangers said

.

+++

today.

• For bigger j obs arou nd

home

REG. 1209.95

MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

Polly's Pointers

Pt. Pleasant and Mason only

';:;;;; 114 '3
~1411:

[;}'Y

•x··········.

;.o···· .. . .. . ................ ....-.!~o:-··...

~t·X·:•:O:•X«.,-.:-:-:•.•:•;-;o-X•.v,, .-.v.~ .·~·~·!•:·:~:

For Friday Thru Sunday

$4° :~y
0

PAIR

WORK BOOTS
OR .

RK SHOES
WALKER or
Ranger BRANDS

MENS

NOVELTY FRONT$ ·122
T · SHIRTS ·
1" Newest Prints
TOILET BOWL

DEODORANT

·5 $1 oo
FOR

WOMEN'S

SCARFS
NECK OR HEAD STYLES

lh

1 Social ·.
I Calendar .
§

MENS

Entire Stock

Let aluminum pots
soak with cleans~r

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POU.. Y - Is there
an easy way to remove burned on cooking oil from
aluminum cooking uteruils?
·Elbow grease ,is not too successful.- MRS. C. C. W.

Price

THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club, Thursday , 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Doris Grueser with Mrs.
Gladys Cockier, co-hostess.
MIDDLEPORT Child Con·
servation League,' Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
CoMLUNG Workers Class,
7:30 Thursday night of the
Enterprise United Methodist
. church, at the apartment of
Mrs. Cordelia Bentz, Meigs
Inn.
DEMOCRAT Central
Committee Thursday, 7:30 P·
m. at the Meigs Inn.
REVIVAL THURSDAY
through Sunday, 7:30 each
evening at Guysville Com·
munity Church with Rev.
Merlin Teets speaking :
public invited.
SUNDAY
MEETING TO establish
Meigs County Council on
Alcoholism, 1:30 p.m. Sunday
at Trinity Church, POmeroy.
Richard Davis, Oliio Dept. of
Health,
division
of
alcoholism, and Sharon
Elliott, director of Region 8
Council on Alcoholism, wiD
pe present to conduct
meeting with Rev. W. H.
Perrin serving as local
chairman. All persons concerned with · any alcohol
problem invited.
COUNTY-WIDE prayer
meeting, Hiland Chapel, 2
p.m. Sunday: Glen Bissell,
class leader.
!l'loNilA y
RACINE Elementary PTO
Mmday at school at 7:30 p.
m. Boy Scouts In charge of ·
(l'ogram.

UQUOR SALE
COLUMBUS(UPI) - State
Rep. Chester T. Cruze, RCincinnati, apparently does
JlQt Uke to see good liquor go
to waste.
Cruze offered leglslatloo ·tn
the Ohio House Wedne!ldly
permittlng the sale, rather
than
destructi011,
of
marketable iUegal beer or
liquor setzed by the state.
HEARINGS EXTENDED
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
House Wednesday pwed and
sent to the Senate a bill
extending to next Aug. 1 the
deadline for holding hearings
to review the statics of mental
patients. The vote was 18 to 1.
The leg isla lion appties to
patients committed before
last Aug. 26 for lndererminllte
periods or time. 'I"

Of the Bend

DEAR MRS. C.C.W. - I
have always had success
removing most any burned on
food from aluminum pans by
soaking in h~t water with
cleanser in it add then scru!r
bing with a soap-filled steel
wool pad. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
volunteer hospital worker
and frequently forgot to wear
my name tag until I came up
MODEL-186
with the idea of sewing a con·
trasting color thread on the
place on my uniform where
the name tag belongs. This
thread reminds me to put on
the tag as the thread is never
removed. -MRS.J.B.S.
DEAR POLLY- Since one
usually has a limited number
of materniiy garments a
Ra d1C Shac k bough! the re main ing inve ntor y of
sleeveless blouse with an
Regency s C R ~I86 mob1l e 23 channel CB ra dio
elastic . waist and slit neck
to ge t you mt o C111 ze n Band at an amm mgly low
makes a nice vest to wear
cost 1 Heres. performance you ca n measure with
~yer a regular bleillSe wilb the
a b1 g 1llun11 nated S &amp; RF meter. Lets yo u tell th e
last two or thre&lt;i; buttoru left
world w1 t11 th e bu1 ll ·1n PA amp Complete w 1t h
unbottoned.-PAULA.
power co rd mou ntin g brac ket and mike hanger.
DEAR POLLY - You can
make yout own Whipped sort
Twe lve vo lt s DC operation . Positive or nega t1ve
gro un d Ask for 2 1·41 86
margarine by whipping in the
Re gul ar Re gency Faccor y Limit ed Warranty.
·mixer until fluffy. Old panty
hose are good to use lor stuff.
S p o•(. ll ll .t !oo•n•. H t •• I'IY\'1 l. o, :,t, LI t torllfod h ·otl h ,,. , ,,.. r.. I :• 1
ing pillows. Cut off the elastic
~ o ·h '.o l o ·,d V '• "' " rrr~&lt;rll•, lo" \lh UJ :.; N N "' ''\•• i l r vll ·~ t ol\ l l t " I olh
at the top (this wiD make
lhlWil fl.dt,r r 1•11 1 C t1,1un r•l ':-i r• l l' II I VII ·~ hllr llr '' ltrK tl/ ~•IIIJ • •Io h
S_&lt;'ll!i&lt;\IVIf )' I l o '•UU llllllov.. ll·•. uii U'&gt;l.rlJio · !\ruin • OrllpHI •I ' l wll l l b
waistbands for children's
l r!lll'oOi l l lll'l
(' rvo,t: ll CullllllliPII I ;•:t I olrll f ' l I " 'tll &lt;(:n• y "' ' ' jH]Ir y
pants you may be making ) as
' O(l!:i ' · M rti OJHl&lt;"W 'ol ill tr lllll i l~1 1 ii!l ln 1!1 ! '.,o\11· 1 IJ., II " ' .1 ~ .. Il l '&gt;
ll:&lt;.lo l l m;,_ rlllii!IJ
well as the seams and toes so
there are no lumps in !hi!
pillows. Such pillows · are
washable and dry very last.
ANOTHER
To keep your house dog !rom
making a mess at night shut
· BIG CB
him in a small room as a dog
will riot use the bathroom
BARGAIN!
where he has to sleep. JEANINE.
DEAR POLLY - Rather
Aeg. ·
than have to lind a remedy
lor discolored nylon
79.95
garments I have round it is
easier to prevent such
discoloring. To avoid
discoloring which occurs
'·- '_, -'&lt;
after frequent washings
foDow the following simple
The Real,stic , TRC-11 1s a m1niature 6 channel mo bile
rule. "Keep the garments
rad•o at a give-away pnce 1 Swit chab le ANL . light ed
away from the heat." Wash in
SECURITY ON THE ROAD! channel 1nd 1c at or. automatiC gain control Ready to use
cold water and do not place
such things In a hot dryer.
on Ch 9 add crystals for ANY of l ive more, channels'
Use the air dry cycle or let it
drip dry away from the heat.
TWO SALE-PRICED
I have several white nylon
ARCHER " CB ANTENNAS!
blouses that I have always
I
la!l"dered this w~y and they
, still look as white as when
they were new and some are
"SHORTY"
several years ?kl·
.
ROOF MOUNT
When washing curtams I
Reg . t 6.95
uae vinegar in the rlnst\ cycle
as it removes the soap fibn
but leaves the curtains crisp
ahd fresh looking. Often con·
ventional fabric rinses leave
• Eas y Snap·m M ou,tinfil
curtains limp and sqft ao I
• Arljustable Top Wh ip !
Uke the vinegar better. P.M,L.
'
5
0
DEAR POU..Y • I have a
different use for worn panGUTTER
tyhose. I cut them in strips
CLAMP MOUNT
round and round the leg going
~ or down and making ~
Reg .•17.95
strips about two inches wide.
I use these strips to crochet
around wire coat hangers.
,,
Gamienll do not slip off
TA C-452 puts you 111 touch wilh 40
• Ea sy C•r·to·Ci:tr Trtmsfer l
han!!ers so covered and the
• AdjuStilb.Jt Top Whipf
· ch annel s of act 1on! Power and features
clothes hang properly. backed by R. S. s 16 years of CB
MARTHA.
·
leadershi p!
Polly will send you one of .
her "peachy" thank-you
cards' ideal for framing or
WITHIN 1%0F OUR LOW 1975 PRICII
.
placing In your family scrap- RADIO SHACK'S 1977 PRICES ARE ON AVERAGE
book, if Sbe uses your lavorite
Polnter, Pe.••·e or Problem in .
1\or colwnn. Write Polly's
Pointers In care or lhis

l

By Bob Hoeflich
.You can look fpr a volunteer worker to be calling at your
doer for a ccntribuUoo to the Meigs County Heart FlUid drive
any &lt;1-r now. C:O.,hairlng the drive are Mlck Childs
M1ddleport, and Bill Young, Pomeroy.
'
YOU AU!O HAD BE'ITER watch where you 're driving.
The long, hard winter has left highwars and streets In
deplorable ccnditlon. The resulting potholes can not only ruin
your car but could cause you to have an accident. I wonder oow
111111y dollars Worth of dl!mages the winter has caused to
streets - certainly a great many.

•

PHONE
992-3092

I
Lellen of opilllon are welcomed. They ohould be
1 le11 t1um 300 woniiiOIII lor be oubjeet to reduction by
I tbe editor) ud mut be olgoed wtlh lhe olgnee'• adI dreu. Names may be wflbbeld apoa pubUratlon.
However, 011 requell, umes will be dlacl01ed. Lett en
should
be In good lille, addreulng luues, not per1
1 sonalttles.

IJe.at. ' •

q

• Automatic chain oiling
• Powe1•fu l 3.1 cu in engtne

•

SAVE62%

NEW!

~

}

SAVE 2°

·REALISTIC 40 CH MOBILE
CB RADIO

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n~wspaf

h:r.

SILVER B'RIDGE PLAZA

i •••~•~=
e~..t~Y=~I
I
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1

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Those big green boxes
Dear Sir :
This Is In regard to the green bous that Joe Alley has
placed throughout Gallla County. This a)'Biem may have been

started with good intentions but the green boxes are abused
more than used. What I see daily sickens me.
, . ,MRS. MARGARET LEHEW of The Daily Senlinel staff
I can look out my front window and see the green box in full
·had a nerve-wracking ezperlence In Bexley last Sunday. She view, as It's only about 50 yards away, and see people drive up
II'U In a grocery store at the time ah armed robbery took and throw out bogs of garbage without even trying to put them
place. Margaret gavellQ seeood thought to the command of the in the box.lt's just thrown on the ground. ·
robbers that she stand sWI. Boy, did ahe ever stand sWI. The
Since each green bo1 is placed In the CO\Uitry, ooe can only
robbets had their faces covered with scarves and made an
Imagine what a good time the neighborhood dogs have tearing
1!11)' nit from the store leaving a jot of frightened cUstomers
up the bags and carrying everything from the whole bag of
and store personnel. The robbers took only the cash from the ' gsrbage to the smallest tampa• back to each yard. My yard is
~e aDd did not attempt Ill rob the patroniJ, too.
alwayscoveredw1thpaper,parnpers,an4kotex. Now, I can tie
up my dog butnotall the neighbors' and besides why should we
' WE NOTED A FEW MEIGS Countains at Sunday c:ooflne our pell, that's ooe reaaon I prefer the country.
My_~o~rty taxes are $242 a year for less than an acre of
afternoon's final presentation of "Showboat" at Memorial
Auditorium oo the Ohio Universiiy Campus including Mrs. land. Now to get to my house one has to go right by this green
Lucllle Swackhamer, Mrs. Claude Husted, Chester King and box.
I have called Joe Alley and complained about the location
Keith Aahley. The mustcal was dooe by the Schoolf of Theater
and Music of the university and it wu tremendous. The of the bo1. Everyooe in this neighborhood has a garbage
unlvenlty olfers a great deal in the way of entertainment to service, so why should we be abused with other people's
the county. It's, 111 the other hand, quite a chore to get body garbage.
I wooderif Joe Alley would Uke this mesa of garbage, dogs,
IJld soul together to drive to Athens.
.
rats, birds, and stink so close to hia house. How about it, Joe?
• INCIDENTALLY, IN Meigs County last year there were How would you feel when close friends and relatives came to
247 deatha. Of this total, 149, or 60.3 per cent, were caused by visit you and saw this horrible green box right acrQSS from
dlleases of the cardiovascular system, according to the Ohio your house?
.The double green boxes near Holzer Medical Center are
Department of Health.
'
1!1\ra scenic as any tourist passing through gets a good view of
MRS. GEORGE NESSELROAD, Sr., Pomeroy, was our "Beautiful Ohio." Right near these green boses is a sign
dellghed with a surprise birthday party given in her honor at reading '''GalllpollB Business District." I call thia very good
the home of her sonanddl!ughter-in~aw, Mr. and Mrs. George advei1ialng for GalllpciUs.
Is Joe Alley saying the country people are too stupid and
Nesselroad, Jr,, Roc!te 3, Puneroy.
. Later In the evening after a big dinner, cake, ice cream, poor to have their garbage hauled? I also thought open
pie and coffee were served in hollQr of the birthday. Uke the garbage dumping was not legal. AU dumps have been closed
. rest of ua, Mrs. Nesselroad jusl "ain't" gettln' any younger- and pollled "No dumping .... How then does Joe AUey get by
with hia open dwnps.
llld, too, lt'salwaysnice to be so well remembered.
Also, the wind blows garbage onto State Routes 7 and 35.
Attending the party in additioo to the honored guest were
Since Joe Alley will not correct this ~·Uy situation I am
lbe oosts, Mr. andMn. Nesselroad and son, Michael; Mr. and ·
~- Gerald Rough and daughters, Gerri; Stephanie ,and contacting Federal officials. Where will au this end? Probably
Kellee; Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Jenkins, Danny Roush, Tresa and In the garbage! - Name withheld by request, signed,
Disgusted T~~~payer.
Sherr! Roush.
By the way, Sarah Gibbs, a real gem in the kitchen, haked
lbe pies for the event.
·

BRENNER
UP! FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UP!) Government spending on
milk price supports may rise
substantially if Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland
grants datry Ianners the
support hike they're asking
for oo April I.
"But we're not ashamed at
au of asking f~r It," Patrick
B. Healy, sea-etary or the
National Milk Producers
Federation insisted in an
Interview.
"I think the taxpayer and
the consumer will have to go
along with this so we can end
the tremendous volatility
we've had In milk prices
aince 1972," Healy said.
Both consumers and
lalpayers would benefit in
the long run, Healy lnaisted,
because a hike In support
prices - even though it would
By BERNARD

. JURY DIITY

COLUMBUS(UPI) -State
Rep. Harry J . Lehman, [).
Shaker Heights, introduced
legislation Wednesday
limiting nonmilitary jury
duty exemptions.
Under Lehman's bill,
exemptioos from jury service
would be limited to public
officials, physicians,
attorneys and Jlflrsons over 70
· who requested exemptions.
tnlisted national
guardsmen on active duty
would also be exempted.

TAX EXEMPTION
COLUMBUS (UP! ) -State
Rep . Don S. Maddux, [).
Lancaster, proposed
The individual is important
leglsla"ti.on Tuesday
Dear Sir:
exempting from the estate
Many thousands of concerned and dedicated people across tu: the first $250,000 worth or
America has been busy for weeks, preparing for the annual farmland passed on in a will.
Cancer Crusade: Plans for our County-wide CruSIIde in April
Maddux said surviving
are being flnallzad.
!arms are large ones which
This same kind of planning and preparation was done for often require lbe beneficiary
the March of Dimes in January, and the Hearl Fund during to seD part of the land to pay
this month.
.
the estate tax.
We need to remember that oo the level of the County Unit
the people who make the financial campaign successful are not
paid, but volunteer their time and energy. They see to the
sec:Uting of worker&amp; wbo canVUII definite territory, and ask
0
people to contrlbute to a Rre&amp;t cause.
I Uke to believe that ev.,.Y person, and group who in any
way relates to the cure, ~d hopefuUy the eventual eradicatloo
of Cancer, Is an bnportant part of an ArmY- the doctor, the
nurses, the scientists, and every concerned and loyal solicitor
of fWlds for Cancer. Each Is a very Important part of a great
team
.
We trust that all ellorts will result in the greatest financial
support yet. - Rev. Linson H. Stebblna.

s159oo

-THE SHICK' MAKES CB

Higher milk price supports
i
asked by U. S. dairy farmers

~- - - ------------------------ ,

Halliday and daughter, collect were repeated In
Pauline Atklru, with Alle!n'a llllson and nine members
Will as co-hostesses.
llllswered roD call by naming
Acommunlcatioo was read a Iamon&amp; person born In
!rom th e Athens lol ental February . Valentine
Health Center extending arrangements were provided
thankS to the club for table by Pauline Atkins and
arrangem ents provided Wanetta Radekln. The
during the Christmas season traveling prize provided by
lllld a letter of thanks lor a Allegra Will and door prizes
inoney contributlon was read ·were won by Virginia Nelson •
from the Good Luck Garden and Wanetta Radekln.
Club.
Refreshments were served
The club prayer, creed and by the oostesses.

Note From Sue :
Knowles was purchased for
(Give 'God credit t~o . Mom: He knows what He's doing. )
cash and a player to be
But remember, readers, "everything comes to him who
named later. The Rangers· waits" just isn't ao: II gets lonely on the sidelinea after the
said they believe the left· parade passes by. S. W. and others Uke him have got to give
handed hurler will !ill a void God a little help.
in the Texas buDpen.

By Polly Cramer

Reg. 39·

High blood pressure is
silent. It usually has no
symptoms and its victims
olten don't know they have it.

A dinner was held Monday
,. the home of the Rev. and
Mrs. GeorJ; c \.usto , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, in honor or the 70th
birthday of the Rev. Mr.
Casto which was Feb. 15. ·
The honored guest received
gifts and flowers from his
family. Atten~ing were his
wife, Lucille, and osn,
Jimmy ; his daughter, Ruby
Eynon and family, Donnie,
Dana, Tim and Debbie; his
daughter Eloise Layne and
family, Lar'ry Snyder,
Kenneth and Sherry Snyder:
his granddaughters, Barbara
Snyder and Charlotte Smith,
and great-granddaughter,
Crystal Dawn;' Donnie Casto,
Marcella Hartman and Jim
Eynon.

.

?- The Daily Sentinel, Middletl91'1-Pomeroy .0 .. Thursday, Feb. 17.1977

the preoent state income tax
School Money Option
COLUMBUS - Despite return and at no cost to the
lncreuing state 5upport for school district.
In any event, we shouldn't
public education, over ooekid
~urselves Into thinking
half of school operating costa
·are funded by local tu:es. that voters who have been
And the only local source of turriing down property tax
funds Ia the property tu: on levies will clamor to tbe poDs
rul estate, tangible personal to support an income tu:.
Too, It's possible that If
property, and publlc uUIIty
schools
are given the local
property. In addition,
property taxes fund the Income taJr: as an alternative,
construction and main· the passage of either kind of
tenance of school huildlngs. levy, property or income,
With property tues might be jeopardized. Some Their seroice appreciated
becoming .an ever-increasing voters may lind It easier to
burden, dlscuulon of an oppose either form of tax, Dear Sir:
I wish to publicly thank the Melga County Commissioners,
· alterni.ttve local school tu: Ia claiming to favor the one
· mce again bell)g heard In and which is not then before Prosecutor Frederick w. Crow ma!llj au others resporullble
for obtaining Federal flood insurance for the remainder of
outside the Legislature. them .
Meigs County. Whether necessary or not, the availability of
While reasons for rejection of
fiood
tnaurance Ia an important uset to any conunuruty.
school tu: levlel vary among
The
cltizenl of Meigs County ahould appreciate very much
the 118 school.dlstricll across
the
tremendous
amount of time and effort put forth by these
Ohio, Increased property
individuals,
for
this effort and time allOWI protection not
taseala certainly one reason.
heretofore
available
in urdncorporatad areu of the county.
The Legislature should
Sunday School attendance
Although
pursuing
and obtaining eUglbillty status
consider permitting a local lXI Feb. 28 was 28. Attendl!nce
coocemlng
flood
tnaurance
and any other benefits pertaining
Income tu: for schooll but the oo Feb. 13 was 56. The of·
to
the
people
of
Meigs
County
Ia part of the job lheae people do,
publlc lhould recognize that fering was "9.48. WOI'!IIIip
there
!a
nothing
that
states
they
have to do it. FUrthemiore, we
there are many Important services were held at 10:45
should
all
be
aware
of
the
!act
that
these pubUc offlctsls care
questl0111 to be CO!IIIdered, with Charles Domlgan
about
the
cltlzem
of
Meigs
CoiUity,
and
In so doing we have a
auch u:
speaking !rom John 15:1·2'1,
better
county
In
which
to
live.
-C.
B.
Mullen.
- Should the tu be at a "He abides In me and I in
uniform rate, like our Him." Jeanie Flanders was
municipal Income tu:e&amp;, or pianist and Eleanor Boyles
should It be graduated u our gave a special number, "Ten
state Income tu: Ia?
Thousand ' Years." At- Should the tu: be levied tendance at this service was Columbus, 0., were visiting fiurTy of thia busy world, but
their brother, Clifford Rayes those who chored and !ired,
on indivlduall only, , or on 58.
corporate lncllme u well?
The Auditing comml~. and famUy on his blrthdl!y a stiU didn't get any rest - just
Can we expect corporat10111 consisting of Uoyd DiUJnger, week ago even though the a change of work? !
There wiD be Wednesday
to apportion their Income Randy Dillinger, Thelma mowy-icy roads prevented
among the lchool districts In Henden10n and Helen Woode them making a personal visit, evening prayer services at
wblcli they do buslnela, or met at the Follrod-Roblnaon they visited by telephone. So, the church here again this
lhould any corporate tu: for home last Thunday evening you see the weather had a few week and lollowing thls week
IChooil be part of the state'a . and audited the church books. good polnta even though some - the first Wednesday In
corporaUoo franchlJe tu:! Another tnember, Dan o1 us were feeling abut off February, had a very small
attendance, due to the
. - Should the i..e&amp;IJiature Moore, was unable lo be from the world.
Perhaps
we
all
needed
a
weather.
~et the rate of 111ch 1 tu: or
praent but othera present
OWe
rest
from
the
hurrypennlt the local diltrlct to asalltad.
eatablllh Ill own rate, and
Mr. and
andConnl
Mrs. of Clair
lhould we requln a portion ol Woode
Clr- . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
any 1acallncome tu: revenue clevllle, 0., came last
to provide I radactkll In the weekend 1o help observe the
.. IChllal property tu•?
SOih weddinC amlversary of
3 Days On~ Fri~ Sat., Sun.
~
Wblll tbe Leglllature hal Robert and Hilda White oo
::, • the authority to eatabllah Sunday and Clair and Conn!
=: auch 1 lal ltaell, It MDII called on .. r. and Mrs. We are making room for Spring Plan!~·
:;. clear It ll'ould only permit Charle&amp; D. Woode Slltnrday
Foliage and Cacti in pots and hanging
:· auch I tu IUbjeel to l.ocal evening 1n oblervance ol
baskets
must go.
their blrthda)'l, Connl, Feb. I
• • IJIPI'V'Il.
•
If an lncGme tu II on a and Clllr'e on Feb. 9.
Sale 3Sc
3" Pots, Reg. SUe
aehool dlllrlct bull, It . will
Mr. and Mra. Wilber
Sale60c
produel much more reveaue Parker ..:elvad 'lllll'd that
4111" Pots. Reg. 75c
Sale suo
per .tudent In II'UIIbler their dau~w. Mrs.
6" Pots, Reg. $1.50
aehool dlltrldl tban Ill u- Eddie Parlier, ,had been
6112'' Hanging Baskets. Reg. S2.75 Sale $1.75
• wltll loii'W u.-. ....... bolpitallled twO weeD from
10" Hanging Baskets, Reg. ss.so Sale S3.75
wtMIII If It..,. ..ul ind I back lnjllr)'. 8lie Ia nported
Combination Foliage 13"x6"
coiiiclttll Gil a Olllllll7-widl mach batter, ~~ II lllll
Reg. ss.oo
Sale S3.00
bUll, !l'llb lilt proceldl lllllbiiiO Ill back 10 .... job.
Gloxinias in bloom $2.50. Many more
dtitrlbutlll to tbe ICbOOI
Elollt Ardler hal allo
Specials.
•• dlilrlcll on a tlll't!llllll or IUffend I bad back Injury
othlr baall, the llfteflta from ehoriD&amp; Ill the nnnt
,, il9llltl be .... tiiVeHwt badllorm:r-lher. Thlahal
11111111 the IChool dll!fldlln ._. a bad month oo 1111111
. JIIGP(e, -lblnllle. .
the OOIIIIIJ.
Helen Woode received a
telepl!oM
1mn MldSyracus•• o.
992-5776
0
10 be tlnaP clleport, 0., wbere her two
,,. tile Illite tu: dlpiMnllll on !IIHI, HUah IJld Bealllh or
"

produce a temporary boost In speclaUst said.
taking the equivalent of an
federal spending - would
The e&lt;pert declined to estimated 2.1 bUIIon polmdl
stablllze milk production and speculate on potOntlal costs, of milk off commercial
(l'ice levela.
however, because he said markets under the 111pport
Eventually, aupport costs much depends ·on fu ture program. Healy said
would go down and weather conditions.
dairymen estimate that ill
consumers would be spared
U droughts continue in the 1977.78, this could rile w
the sharp price peaka which west, for example, milk between 3.3 bUIIon and U
have alternated with (l'oductlon in that part or the billion pounds II supporll are
''valleys" of low farm prices country would fall below raised to 80 per cent of.pority.
in recent years, lbe datry current foreca s ts. Government analysts think ·
leader argued.
Midwestern milk products the purchases would lle even
Administration ofllclals would then (iU lbe gap oo higher.
formaDy opened the process commercial markets, and
Healy added, however, he
of considering possible potential government costs found in talklng to Bergland
changes In milk supports this lor buying up surpllll'"" would recently that in _spite of the
week with an announcement be lower.
prospect of aome hike In
asking lor written comments
Healy said dairy industry government support
by March 4 m where supports leaders agree that if wea!her spending,
the former
should be set for the 1977-78 conditions are normal this Minnesota coogreuman wu
marketing year which begins sumrtier , government "very sympatheUc" to
April 1.
purchases of surplus dairy farmer arguments that
Currently, supporta are at products would rise In the higher supports are needed to
$8.26 per hundred pounds lor year beginning April I.
offset recent and coming
manufacturing-grade milk.
In lbe current year, the increases in production
This price was equal to 80 per Agriculture Department is costs.
cent ol the '1air" parity
standard when it waa set lastlaD, but it wiD equal only
about 77 per cent of parity in
April, officials estimated.
The milk producers federation ts asking Bergland to
conlinue using the 80 per cent
of parity rate for the year
beginning April I, and to
make automatic quarterly
adjustments to keep the
dollars-andcents price tied to
80 per cent of parity
therealter.
Settlng the support at 80 per
cent or parity' government
and industry experts agree,
would mean a dollars-and·
FOR AU YOUR BUILDING NEEDS
cents rate of about $8.61 a
hundredweight aa of April I
- an increase of 35 cents per
hundred pounds, or about 3
cents a gaDon, above the
current support.
Agriculture Department
experts said that even if
supports are not raised,
lederal costs of taking
surplus dairy products off the
commercial market in the
&amp;
year beginning April I would
992-2709
probably top the current
923 S. 3rd Ave .
Middleport. 0.
year's estimated $317 miUlon
cost. U support prices are
HOURS:
raised to about 18.61, a
7:00to5 :00 Mondayt. hru Friday
further "substantial" cost
7:00to4 :00 Saturday
hike would be likely, one

LUMBER, HARDWARE &amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES

I"

~~IUII.DM'

mws

&lt;~~

~r_:r---·-.

VALLEY WMBER

·sUPPLY Nl.

L

•

Announcing

Ford Dealer

Limited Edition

Sale.

Buy now! Its a better idea.

Special models, special features. and special prices
on this best·selling lineup of 1977 Ford can and trucks.

..

Alfred
Social Notes

WINTER PLANT SALE

JfJ:!''::r:L=~.

:z:u;

1:

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

can

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VOU GET all Grana&lt;la standard
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lnd Docklld
Ptlnt Striptl

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Sweet sale prices on sweet-handling
Limited Edition Mustang II 2·Door.

YOU GET standard Pinto

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..

- '""'
lltllll
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Now get major dtscounts on
Edmon Explorer PiQcups
specially eq1.1tpped . $200
disoounl pa&lt;:kage includes:

•c.-lodJlU-TOM
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Pllnl Strlpn • Dlluao

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atanc1ltel !eatutas ...

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on

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Pll"'tt 2·Doot lncl VNgon mod*a.

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Condl- • Tlnlld
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lf1d Mofdlngs • SpeclaiMNIIIc Pltnt with
lodyslde end Hood Strlpel • Unlqu• Color·Keyed 'Min ttefftl
lnc:tudl"l C1rpetlng and Selt hnt • Front lumplr P:
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lease
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Pinto 3-Door Runabout. A best seUer
with special features at sale prices.

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~

'•

••
•

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::
•

'

�~The Daily Sentinel Middl

'-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 17.19n

Mason County

Chrysler into new market

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

REV. CHARLES REYNOLDS
The Reverend Charles Reynolds, a native of northern
Ireland, and a fcnner missionary to India, will speak at
Mason, Clllton, Bellemeade and Trinity United Methodist
Churches during the Huntington District Mission "Saturation"
event scheduled February 20, 22 and 23.
He has abo scheWled meetings. with the Kiwanis and
Rotary clubs. He has written two documentary films and
Pllbli.shed two books.
Hla schedule Ia as foUows:
Sunday, Feb. 20 he will be at Mason United Methodist
&lt;llurch at 9:45a.m. and at Clifton United Methodist at 1i a.m.
and from 2:30-1:30 p.m. a workshop on Missions will be held at
Good Shepherd Church, Point Pleasant. Peraons from all
churches are invited to attem. At 7:30p.m. he will be at the
Bellemeade United Methodist Church in Pt. Pleasant.
On Tuesday, Feb. 22at 6:15p.m. he will visit with the Pl.
Pleasant Kiwanis Club, a!ld at 7::1! p.m. he will be at the
Heights United Methodist Church, Pl. Pleasant.
Wednesday, Feb. 23the Rev. Reynolds will speak at the Pl.
Pleasant Rotary Club at 6 p.m. and at 7::1! p.m. at Trinity
United Methodist, Pl. Pleasant.
Rev. Reynolds joined the Royal Air Force in 1941 and
served throughout the war period until1917. His service took
him to the lndla·Bunna theater where he mel Mlas Maud M.
!Dbbard, an American missionary, and they were married in
India in 1916.
.
Following his release from miJitary service, they came to
the United States where Reynolds ccmpleted his education at
Afrian College (Michigan), Drew University (New Jersey),
and HarUord Seminary Foundation (Connecticut). He was
ordained in the Methodist Cllll'ch in June 1952.
A period of miasionary service in lndla then followed with
appointment as DiBtrict Milslonaries in Sironcba DIB!rict. This
proved to be a very laolated Juncle dlatrict covering about two
thousand milea of thick forest in Central India. In 1951i, Mr,
Reynolds was appointed District Superintendent, and served
in thla capacity until 1957 when they returned to the United
. States on furlough.
After serving pastorates in Connecticut and
Ml!Jsachusetts, Mr. Reynolds was call.ed to be Executive
Secretary of the !1Jdhiana Christian Medical College Board in
June 1965.1n 1972 he was appointed Jniernatlonal Secretary by
the Board of Gcvernors.
.
During this time he wrote and directed two documentary
l!hns, "Free Indeed," and "The Widening Circle." He also
publiahed two booka, "Punjab Pioneer," (Wotd Boob, 19611),
and "Mandate for Mercy (Friendship Press, 19'12). The !()filler
is the biography of Dame Edith Brown, founder of Ludhiana
&lt;llristlan Medical College; the latter deals with medical
rehabilitation projects in India . Ludhiana is one of the major
medical institutions of Asia, training more than 300 doctors
and liOO nurses annually. The 600 bed hospital treats over
l!OO,OOO patients each year and offers full range of medical
specialties, the latest being a cancer treatment am research
center.
Rev. Reynolds vialts India each year, conducting tour
gro~ and introducing Americana to a new understanding of
India - Its people, problems, programs, and the church at
work in that nation.

MASON- The Helping Hand Eztenalori Homemakers met
Feb. 9atthe Mason City Hjlltorical Home. Mrs. Earl F. Ingels,
Sr ,, president, presided. The meeting was opened by the leader
wllh the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag and was followed by
the lad's Prayer.
Mrs. lucy Johnson presented the devotionals, II
Chronicles 7:H, Matthew 6:33. After a short business meeting
the group enjoyed a potluck dinner.
Following the dinner the group exchanged patterns and
some crocheted. The club is working on items to sell at Mason
Coqnty Fair. Each year the Homemakers council sponsors a
booth at the fair and each club contributes Items.
Attending the dinner meeting were Mrs. Earl F. Ingels,
Sr., Mrs. De!mat Aleiamer, Mrs. Delwon Roberts, Mrs.
Margie Grinstead, Mrs. Lois Young, Mrs. Addie Mae Brown,
Mrs. Lucy Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Foreman.

Cllttoo

DETROIT (UP!) - Chrys·
ler will Introduce its first two
entries into the subcompact
market this !all and the
vehicles, the Plymouth
Horizon and Dodge Omnl,
reportedly will cost under
$4 ,000,
according
to
Automotive News.
The two models will be the
first U.S.·buut small cars
with front-wheel drive.
The Horl!on and Omni are
based on Chrysler's highly
successful French Stmca 1307
and 308 models and will share
AGREEMENT was reached today between Holzer Medical Center and ·the Gallipolis a common body with two new
City Board of Education, with approval of Columbia Gas of Ohio, to permit the city schools Chrysler cars that will be
to share In the hospital's natural gss supply in order for the schools to remain open. Signing introduced simultaneously in
the transaction above are Don Staggs, left, GaWpolis superintendent, and Hugh P. ~kel , Europe.
president of the Holzer Medical Center.
The new models wtll also
debut as five-door vehicles
and the No. 3 automaker
plans to produce 100,000 of
· them in the first year. ·
·
Ford, American Motors
and General Motors have
been In the subcompact

I

'

MASON - MemiMn of the Mason City Historical Society
dined Cll chicken Saturday evening at the J.ewii..Roua.h home
here. 1'lblla were !leconted in red and white, 01ing a
valeniiDI tbllne.
Atliendlnc were Mr. md Mrs. Landon Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray ProfllttamNancy,Ma)'OI'amMn. Fred Tayt«, Mr. and
Mrs. Delmlr Alaander, ¥f. and Mn. Earl Ingels, Mr. and
Mrs. Del-. R*tl md Jill, Mr. and Mrs. John Marahall and ·

Mrs. R.u..n BarWI.

By JAMES RJU)JlE'J1f
WASHINGTON (UPl)
The nation 'a tupayers are
1110\'inj! toward a pair of
J .

r-::::=::~----~2'

National Guard unit

CONTINUES
New Spring Shoes Arrivilig Dai~

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

can accept 30 more
•

Agreement was reaehed
today between the Holzer
Medical Center and the
Gallipolls . City j!oard of
Education, with the approval
of the Columbia Gas of Ohio,
to permit the Gallipolls City
Schools to share in the
hospital's natural gas .supply
in order for the city schools to
remain In session.
Hugh P. Kirkel, president
of Holzer Medical Center, in
commenting on this transaction with the Gallipolis City
Schools, said, "We are

pleased to be able to share
our supply of natural gas so
· that the hundreds of students
who attend our city schools
will be able to adhere to a
more stable schedule of
classes. The hospital wtil be
using fuel oil for heating
purposes along with a lesser
amount of natural gas to .
achieve this cooperative
arrangement."
Kirkel further stated that
should the weather suddenly
become extremely cold,
resulting in the reoccurrence
of an acute shortage of
natural
gas,
·this
arrangement would be
renegotiated
for
the
average refund sent to ·protection of both the patienls
.taxpayers who already have at the hospital and the
filed 1976 return~ was $456.34. students.
It's the highest ever and
During the recent cur·
probably will climb even !.ailment of natural gas · for
more before all returns are · this area, the hospital
processed, it said.
voluntarlly went to fuel oil
The tax-collection agency, consumption for heating
however, is alarmed about purposes, with the assurance
another of its findings. After of cooperation by the local
processing 1.8 mUilon returns distributors providing fuel oil
at the 10 regional service to the hospital.
centers, IRS fo111d one in
The hospital is able to
every 10 early fliers made operate for approximately
mistakes. .
I It to 2 days, depending upon
Officials said they don't the severity of the weather
know if thla year's error rate from the fuel oil supply that it
will seta new record, but they can keep on hand. However,
are sure some taxpayers are should an electrical .power
confused by tax law changes outage occur, the fuel oil
Congress psased last year. supply must be used to
The IRS said the two most operate the emergency
commonly mad~ mistakes In- generator so that the hospital
volve computation of the new can properly function , in·
general tax credit and the eluding
provision
for
standsrd deduction.
essential electrical power.
Last year, 8.8 per cent of Should fuel qjl become
the 1040 "long" fonns and unavailable the hospital
1040A " short"
forms would of nec'esstty return to
contained mistakes, the IRS the full Ule of natu~al gas for
said. So far this year, 7.4 per • heating purposes.
cent of the I~ contained
Commenting on the
errors and 11.5 per cent of the cooperative agreement beIO!OA's bad mistakes.
tween the school system and
The general tax credit is the hosplt.al, Don Staggs,
causing the most problems, 'Galllpolls City Schools
offlC18ls satd.
Superintendent said, "On
This year it can be behalf of the board of
COlllJ)Uted in either of two education and our entire
ways : as $35 for each person staff I am elated at the
in the family or as 2 per cent gene~ous offer of the hospital
ollhe first $9,000 of taxable With such cooperative effort
~orne. The IRS said some between these two primary
taxpayers have taken less of users of natural gas, we will
a deduction than allowed.
all mutually benefit."
"Our best advice," an IRS
The city school system will
spolreiiiUUI aald, "is to read compensate the hospital for
tile instructions carefully on the additional expense in·
the standard deduction and correct by the hospital from
follow the form to the letter heating with fuel oU as fuel
on the general tax credit and oil heat costs con;iderably
you won't go wrong. "
more than natural gas.

bistoricalflnts thla year. One
Ia good, tile other Ia not.
The Internal Revenue
Service aald Wednelday the
I

' POINT PLEASANT folnt Pleasant W. Va .
ljational G~ard No. 3664, in
llte mid st of a winter
riecruiting
drive, has
citenings for approximately
~ more enlistees according
to com pan y commander
e&amp;pt. William HoCkenberry .
' The West Virginia Guard
Jiresently ha s 185 men and
women, officers and enlisted

and Dance •.. Just
Goodness

.. personnel, on its roster. The
company is assigned to li ght
maintenance duties in the
State's military prepared·
ness operations. Its roster is
about evenly divided between
Ohio Lild West Virginia
personnel.
The accompanying photos
taken by Gua rd's Captain
Larry Boyer suggest the wide
range of skills learned as a

b · AWARDS RECEJVED-"The captain" (Capt. Hockenberry) assisted
&amp;SG Charles Henson, presents awards during a regularly scheduled drill

rf"')to SP4 Charles Saunders, SP4 Charles Eluna n SP5 John Johnson SPS

John Sager, SPS James Steinbeck, SP4 John Upton: SP4 Mike Hudnall' SP5
R•cdkSKiPng, SP4Raymond McFarland, SP4 David Neutzling Sgt· Mike Terr)·
an
5 Brarry Cox.
, ' ·
ENGINEER EQUIPMENT REPAIRMEN troubleshoot a Huff endloader.

member of the Guard.
··· Interes ted persons may
Interested high school telephone 675·3950 (8 a.m.-5
seniors can join the Guard p.m.) and come to the ar·
now and go to weekend drills mory from 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
once a month lor which they Monday through Friday.
draw four-regu lar army
Recruiting personnel will
paydays each weekend. They be at the armory Fridays,
are required to go to camp for Sa turdays and Sundays
two weeks in the summer. through Feb. 28 from 4 to 9
The enlistment period is six p.m. The recruitment period
years. Prior service people ends Feb . 28.
can enlist for one year.
The unit wa s not called up

CONTAC
CAPSULES
10 tnt plrg.
REG. $1.95

98~

ONLY

BOX OF
100
TISSUES

CEPACOL
14

during the Vietnam Wa r. Its
last active duty was during
the fall of 1960 through the
summer of 1961 during the
Berlin crisis. The y~ar wa s
spent at Fort Pope, La .
The company goes an·
nua lly - usually in May - to
the Guards ' rifle range at
Camp Dawson, W. Va .. near
Morgantown. Its two week
camp each July is a fi eld
exercise at Fort Pickett,
Virginia , about 40 miles
southeast of Richmond.
For,! Pickett, up graded
from status as a "camp"
during World War 2, has all
necessary facilities for men
to tra in themselves in
modern warfare.
The Guar ds company is
administered thr ough five
sections. These are Company
Headquarters, Operations,
Supply,
Service
an d
Recovery, Automotive
Repair, and the General
Equipment Repair sections.
Four subsections Inside the
~ n~ral Equipm ent Repair
Section are CommWi ications
Artillery, Generator and
Engi neer Sections. Its ~fficer
complement is one captain,
the commander, five first or
seco nd lieutenants commanding sections, and five
warrant officers .

r

.,

MOUTHWASH/
GARGLE

CAPT. HOCKENBERRY accepts for re-&lt;lnlistrnent Sgt. Larry Meadows, center, and John Mooney .

•
''

·

YOU LEARN HOW to trouble shoot electronic eq uipment of all kinds in the Guard Left
to right are SPS James Steinbeck, SPS Barry Hamm, and Boyd Hodge.
·
·

oz. REG. $1.66
Y"';l
""
~
...,_,____,_,
~

I •

BIC

AYDS

REDUCING PlAN

UGHTERS

.CANDY

REG. '1.49

24

ONLY

oz.

REG. $4.50

79~

.

ICY-HOT
ANALGESIC BALM
3'1t oz. '
REG.$3.00

'

'

''
'.

KELLING
DRY

•

·ROASTED

"Even if you

·ronn, it
could pay you to
Reason No. 15 why H&amp;R Block
· should do your taxes.
Even the short form is more complicated
this year. So to be sure you pay the
smallest legitimate tax- it could pay you to
see Block. And if switching to the long
form will save you money, we'll show you
just how much.
·.

PEANIJI'S
71ft oz.

VITAMIN E
BY, REXALL

use the short
see us."

400 UNITS

100 CAPSULES

. REG. f5c

ONLY

.,

$7!1

·gg~

l
•

~

ACHPALLENGE - That's what the art of correctly joining metal to metal is to Guards
man 8 4 James Upton.
•

••
••

59~

•"
••"

1 PAIR
REG. $1.49

oz.

WOMEN CAN JOIN the Guard also. capt. Hockimberry swears in Diana Davis and
Catlly Adams.
·

•

•&lt;.
•
•

ONLY

ODOR-EATERS
12

~
SGT. ROGER HOFFMAN demonstrates that welding
; Ia a skill acquired in the West VirginiB National Guard.

•

ONLY

COMFORT
TOP INEE·

VASB.INE
INTENSIVE
CARE lDTION

HIIQSE
REG.69c

ONLY 41'

•••
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••• l
•••
•

•••

lOOZ.

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618 EAST MAIN

·K-.. McCulllllll!, I. I'll. Clllrlltlllllll, I. I'll.
..... IIMftlftl,lt. I'll.

Open 9 a.m .. 6 p.m . Weekdoys, 9., Sal.
Phont 992-3795

.......,,., ... ,.•• a....... , .....

NO/IPPOINTMENT NECESSARY

l

.•'

•

REG. $1.69

More taxpayers
making .mistakes
;/

market since 1970 and~ lnchea longer than ihe
ler needed a 111111ll, fuel· Chevrolet &lt;llevette. They will
efficient model to offset Its be powered by a 1.7 Uter fourlarge cars . Federal fuel cyllnder Volkswagen engine
economy standards al•o and foUMpeed manual transrequest 'an automaker'a fleet m!Mion.
to average 18 miles per gallon
An automatic traiiiDiilllon
and a Chry•ler.fluilt engine
in 1978.
The Chrysler caro wlll are due some time after the
weigh about 2,500 pounds and start of the 1978-model year.
at 182.2 lnehes will be ei~ht

City school system to
share HMC gas supply

Mrs. Denver Blake of Cllftoo took her Sunday School Class
of Cllflon United Methodist Cllll'ch to the PIDa Hut at
Gallipolls recently. The event was in honor of E5ther Estep's ·

!i

·
eport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, l' eb. 17, 1977

with HQrizon, Omni models

PenaDal Note~

blrtllday.
.
Those attending were Mlas Eltep, Kim VanMeter, Valerie
San Antonio, Debbie YOUI1fl, There~~ Smith, Jackie and Dawn
Blake, Darin YOW!g. Mrs. Blake was accomp11nled by Judy
Young of Clifton.
Mrs. Jl!nmr Coleman and children, Brenda, Aaron and
Olris of Columbus vialted her mother, Mrs. Thelma Henry at
Cllflon, over the weekend.
VIckie Ueving and da118hler, Valerie of Letart have
returned heme lifter a two weeki vial! with Mr. and Mrs.
Demls' GueM at Lo(!an, W. Va. ·
'
Mr. am Mra. Kenneth Ault of Columbus were here to
attend the funeral of Mr. Olear Johnlon.

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'

Mill. tin .... ........... , ''"''

.,.

I'IIICIIPTIOHI
Prllllllltrllrvlce

'UaLM,AUL

's

I'N. tft.lfll

W II "It .
.

••

. .

.

••
•"•

,, ....

...=
HUFF ENDLOADER, in need of ~epair, receives tbe attention of

•

1'

SP4 .Olenn Staley, Pre,. Gre g Saunders and SiJI. Terry SIHrlcy. left to right. They
are CD&amp;meer equ t~me nt repatrmeh.
.

:!:,~AL f'IVE COPIES - Records keeping is an integral part of the administration Of a
r,:~ SP~r!mainwtenadnce cunpany o.utfit. Left to right, SPS Clarence Rule, SP4 Leon Oxley
ven

~

ar process requisitions for parts.
...

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"'

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�--

1, - ~ ~e Oally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy o. Thursday Feb 17 1.,.,.,
D1viCTRACY
.
' '
•
· , .,.

Television log for easy viewing

'

'

'

!ol/en

Cancellltlons,

... AIIID I SAY, IF 'tOO POT

!Ions ec;cepted first Cll't' or
REGU~ATIONS

~s C»:l it:: ~Atre" ...

Tht _ Publiahtr reserves

lflt right to tdlt or relect

A BOBBLE BA.Tt-1 FOR.

anv

ads

more than one Incorrect

insertion .

• lt'f\1..1 L'( •

Pomeroy
~OF QUALITY otor Co.

RATII

,

Minimum Chir;e Sl.OO.
I .a cents per word three

1 owner, good tires, tustom cab. I " Fleetslde.'

Insertions .
cents r,•r wotd six

c onsecuti~e

26

consecutive nsertlont .
25 Per Ctrlt Di&amp;c ount on

paid IdS tnd ' IdS Plid
w ithin 10 d,ys.
.

lt74 CHEVROLETI'IIHit)dt
$3295
V-8, std . frans. , radio, mirrors, R. step bumper, less

u .oo

tor

so

taCh - aCidlflona l word 3
cents .

ADS

B~IND

· Additional

2Sc

Charge

per Adyertlsem '"' .

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
.

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

ATTN . : II

HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales, Rummage.
A~L

• Bernice Bede Oool

(Julr 23-Aug. 221 Someone

you k now rather well will see+&lt;
your help. Do what you can, but
don't be drawn Into their com-

Por~h

l[ld easement Porch
and Buement SaleJ, etc .

must be paid in advance.
G~t rours In elrly by
5topplng by our offlcr at
Ttle D•llv Sentinel. 111
Court Sl . or wrlflno BOK
129 , Pomeroy , Ohlo .S769
wit.h your remltt•nce .

plicated finances.

For FrldiJ, Fob. 11, 1177

be a bit flirtatious today, but be
careful. Clandestine activtties
could brew a heap ol reper-

'

.
MEM,ORV of Mn . Anno F. Harris who pantd away I year

fone from

You 're f"'Ot too go()d at disguising
Ing for a short cut to the stars Is a your true feelings tOday. Try
biting your tongue a few times.

GEMINI (Moy 21-.luno 20) look-

you 're likely to react could cause

Inability to Stick to your original
an e11en higher read ing on the
plans cou l d cause some
Richter seale.

CAPRICORN (Doc:. 22.Jon. 111
In con versations wiih others.
yo u're likely to rattle skeletons.
There's nothing to be gained, so
try a fresh approach.

Tbe .Ainwlac
'Pren
By ·
United
IDte1118doaaC
Today is Thursday, Feb. 17,
tile 48th day of 1977 Witll 317 to
follow.
'!be moon is new.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
VeDUB, Jupiter and Saturn.
'!bose born on tllis date are
Wider the sign of Aquarius,
American novelist Dorothy
canfield Fisher was born
Feb, 17, 1878.
On tllis day in history :
In 1801, tbe U.S. House of
Representatives named
'lbomas Jefferson as the
third president of the United
States. Aaron Burr, who tied
with Jefferson In tile
Electoral College, became
vice president.
In 1817, Baltimore became
tile first American ctty to
have gas-burning street

tights.
In 1972, President Nixon
left on his historic trip to
Peking,

1
1

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fib. 11)
Think of your purse as a con·
tainer today, rather 1han a sle11e.
Plug up the leaks. Don't punch
new holes in it.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 201
Allempting to be all things to all
people is more fallacious than
usual today. Be true to your own
principles and the rest will be
easy.

~1(1[00)~

ing year whose viewpoint Is frestl
and Inspiring . This person could
open new 11istas lor you .

tile team, replacing tile
injury-plagued Damy Grant
Polonich, 24, playlllc hil
first fuD wilh DeU'olt,
is the club's !ourtll-leading
scorer witll 15 goall and 15
IIWOII.

bJ Joft P• t eriOft

~

\

GRACE EPISCOPAL
P~RISH HOUSE
East Mlln SlrHI,

SALE, SATURDAY. Fob. 191h.

Pamwoy,O.

Homemade • soup and chili.
Please bring contoinera. Meigs
County Humone Society thrift

locCJttd

Shop

ocron

Everyont Welcome

from

_P~~eray Post Office .

MEIGS COUNTY Fish and Game
Assn. will hold a mHting ot
Coon Hunter's Club Room , Feb. A. CANE lost Friday , Feb . IQth , in

17ttl at 7:30 p.m. ElectiOfls of
officers will be held . Memben

the vicinity" of Elberfelds . Will
identify . May hove left it by
only .
electricity pole. Keepsake.
Phone 985-3952.
AUCTION, FRIOAV. lots of new
and used merchandilt at the NEW BED mattren, twln size. Lost
Auction HouH. Horton St. ,
in street near (row's. Fell trom
Moson,

W.Va.

Phone

(304)

n3-5m .
SHOOTING

MATCH ,

truck . Phonem·3265.

·

'i'
~

Legion Hull . Every Sunday. 12

noon.

OF POMEROY
. ORDINANCE NO . 410

VI~LAGE

·

I VE BEEN Tl-\\ NK.\NG-

A@OUT \.I
"'-'-lNG" A W"'
0
vvn.::r
""'
ACt'\INST OBEst"tY, euT
TH~ 1!1\(:r""\N, Wl-\0 w~
1l:) ~A~ A r\~1'?
'

s,racuse Area!
Free Prizes.

Phone 992·2156.

NOW , THEREFORE, upon

m&lt;!Uon duly made by Ralph
Werry and uconded by Louis

Osborne, BE IT ORDAINED ,
that the Village accept the

dtdlcotion Ollht 0,146

OLD furniture, ice bo)(et, brass
beds, wall telephon•s and
ports , or complee households.
Wrile M. 0 . Miller, Rt. • .
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 991·7760.
-----~--------

pocket watch•• ond chains ,
sll11er and gold . W• nHCI 196.1
and old•r snlltr coins . auy . s•ll .
or tro&lt;M' Call Roger Wamsley.

7•2·2331.

CASH I ! I far junk cors. Frye'•
acre
stripofforOsborn
Improving
and
widening
Street,
o1
Truck and Auto. 2• HOUR
public thorouohtne In the
WRECKER SERVICE I Phone
village of Pomeroy .
742·2081.
This Ordinance shall take
effect from and after the WOULD LIKf to buy 350 bales of
earue" period au owed by 10w.
hoy. P11ono 742-3182.

Jel}e Walton

ing

Clerk

m•tols, bott•ries , •tc.
Open
Mor~day ,
Tu•sc:!ay ,

(2) 10, 11 , 2tc

W•ds., Friday, 8:00 - 4:30: .

Solu•day 8:00 · 12:00. Phone
992-~37 . Old Rl . 33 iuol oc•ou
Grueser·l Chipper ,

···--·-- ..
NOTICE .

In compl llnct with S«tlon

121 !bl Ill of tho Sllte and

Local Flsul Assistance Act of
lf7rl,
the
go.;ernmlfnfll
•uthorltl!l rul)onslblt for
prepartnv • budget wlll hotd 1
hUrlno on how tht revenue

---·--- ~-

tf YOU hov1

a ••rvke

. . -- ···-·
to offer,

want to buy or Mil something,

ae looking far work . . . or
whate11er •.. you'fl pt result•
foster with a Sentinel Want Ad.

Coli 992·2156.

shartna funds are to be uard In

the 1917 epproprlatlon . Thla
hurlng wilt be held at the

Meigs Cou,..tv Commlsslon•n
Office In the Court House In
Poml!'roy , 0/'llo, al JO:OO a.m .
on March 1, 1917.

Howerd E , Frank
s to n• ture of
Ch ltf t:ucutlv~ Officer
I? ) H , lit

t

OFFICER O F McKEE

tires andcar
battery
. Make
good
work
. $550
. aPllone

I NDUST~IES!

SIDtll&amp;-samTT

WEST IDI

PH()TOG.RAPHY
Aerial

"" s• .. Middlepo•l.

Commercial

·running condi·
lion , $300. Can be seen ot 1"'9

J9?.-J -FOROLTD~~.- "onditio-;;~Q. ·
Am-Fm radio in good condition.
Phon&amp; 949·28t45 or phone

NonCE! ! !

Automatic
Transmission Service

REASONABL£

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC,
1815 Woshinglon Blvd.
Belpre, Phonel614l423·
7564 day, or 992-6039

Schools
Weddings

Blown In flbergloss wollo
ond anics. 20 Pet Savings
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
R,e placement and storm
windows. 33 YHrt lctUII

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Finonclng Avolloble '·"·
·1-25·1 mo,, pd .

•

p'l'I'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

..ITTLE ORPHAN

'

d/1 01' MY WAY!

SHE '6 M.Y ProiFNT,

llElAY MAY COST
"(!IE LIFf. Of
THI6 CHILD!

0~

MAC~ TAKE tARE

A MOMEMTS

l t\f C111SELING

BU SYBODY ,'

Kingsbury fbne
Sales Inc. ·

ACROSS

dition.

. 992-7084.
·:-'7-.:.,...,-_ __

EAR Qf( shtlttd corn. Phone
Elmer Newell , 985·3537 before

I 0 o;::·m
:::,...,...,

RISING STAll Kennel loo•ding,
Indoor -Outdoor runs , grooming
all brllds. cMn sanitary
fa cili ties . CMshire. Phone (614)

367 -112'12.
HOOF HOllOW. Buy, ,••ll . trode
or lroifl horsft . RUrH f&lt;EEVES,
trainer , Phone (61-t 1 69fl ·3290.

celltnl co~itlon , Phone {304)

8n-23'-:4!:.
o._ _ - - · 525.00 PER Hund•od 11ulflng

••If·

tnvtloptl . S1nd ·
oddrttttd, stomped envtlope.
Edroy Mills , Boll 188, Albonr.

_Mo _
l&gt;l~ -----1 BEAMS ond H loomo. 8, 9, ond
10 Inch. CGN 992·7CGI.
.
~IIIJr,

I'.AliR ,l'illt-1111
ut ""morwr Lllldllllrk
softtn I Clllldltlon your
""'" lftd I Co-op Wlltr
oon-, Motlol UC-XVI .
Naw Only

'279,95

Ul uo tnt your wlllor
FrM,

~~~Co~~~
.....,. Ht-2111

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Rultor
216 E. Secend Slreol
Pomoroy, Ohio 417"
!!hoM "2·3121
Rl. 7 I 33 - I• near this
one. Has 3 bedroom&amp;. bath.
gas furnace . city water
neor ~chool .22 . M,
4 LOTS - New river Iron!
property. 3 bedrooms, nice
kitchen, dining room. 2
baths, and double garage
.35-M.
NEW LIST I NO - 2'h
acros, 2 bedroom houst
with bath and furnace. Aloo
a 2 bedroom mob IIt home
unfurnished. Only II·M:
IRICK APTS. - 3 units.
one furn)shed ond l
g~~ragea

near

stores

In

Mlildlepcirt ,20-M,
ON THE LINE- Of MeigsGall Ia. A 3 bedroom !ramo,
bath, furnace end ovor 2
IICrOI of land , 22-M,
KENO-IASHAN RD. - 3
bedrooms. 7 room houM,
furnace, baoemenl, T.P.
water , carpet and garage.
25-M.
WATCH THIS AO TO SEE
THE NEW CHANOE,

Veterans

Hoapllal.

acres,

Memorial

approx .

almost

4'h

level,

utilities available. lllst

SB,2SQ,IJO.

STOP PAYING RENT You can own this newer

lo&gt;mo, 3 nice bedroom&amp;,
b!tth, utility room, garage,
carpeted throughout, about
1 aaa of ground. very low
financing to qualified
persons, 521,000.00.
tOOK - lOUT 5 acres In

Pomeroy, aomt

woods 1

nice ~ bedroom house,
b!tth. large kitchen ~11!1
plenty
ol
cablnofl,
slalnloll
· ·teal &amp;l,nk,
porchos, natural IllS liM!.
Just $7.900.00,
BUYING OR SELLING THE ANSWER TO·YOU!l
PROBLEMS CAN
PROBABLY IE FOUND
WITH US- LET US SILL
YOUR HOME NOW. J
SALESMEN
AND
A
lllOKER TO HELP YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND
IROKIII
f92.225f·f92·2HI

HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATI
115-4112

5232.

agents
wds.l
II Coming
(2 wds,)

15 11 Dowrt

under''
bird
16 Turmeric
17 Doze off
18 Irish sea

GASOLINE ALLEY

Some otthe
commercials

whll do ~ou
lwaste lJOtJr time

·

are

new~

god
19 Sailor
20 Geometric
shape
21 Peach of :

a-

'

Yesterday's Aaswer
27 Turkish
SLaniey city
Juvenile
Z8 Fragment
Craftsman 29 Choice
Waiting for
30 Famed
tile - boil
financier
(2 wds,)
33 Concerning
24 Extras
gramps
25 Certain
35 One
West
(Ger.)

19
20
21
22
23

Allegia~ce

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation , 992-3954.

do rooUng , construction

plumbing and heotlng. No lo'
too Iorge or tao small . Phorte

b-++-

12 :0G-News 3,4,6,10; Don Ho 13; Name That Tune 15;
Divorce Court 8.

12:3()- Lovers

&amp; Fr iends 3,15; Ryan's Hope
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

The World Turns 8,1 0.

2:0!1-S20,000 Pyramid 6.13.
2:30-Docto" 3, 4,15; One l ite to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3,oo-Anolher World 3.4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
3:15-General Hospllal6,13 .
3:3()-Malch Game 8,10: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; Mi ckey Mou se Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Mov ie "Voyage lo the Bottom of the Sea" 10;
Dinah 13.
·
4:15-litlle Rascal s 4.
4,3()-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4;
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntslones
15.
5:DO-Big Volley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20.33; Star Trek IS .
5:3()-Adam-12 4; Nws 6; Family AHalr 8; Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:DO-News 3,4,6,8 ,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andv Gr iffith 6;
CBS News8,10 ; Vegetable Soup 20 ; Villa Alegre 33.
7 : 0G-TruthorCons . ~ ; To Tell fheTruth4 ; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Sl28.000 Question 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal 20;
Marshall University Report 33.
7:3()-Porler Wagoner 3: Gong Show·4: Candid Camera
6; Treasure Hunt 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
the Country 15.

8:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Code
R 8.10; Washington Week In Rev iew 20,33 .
8:3D-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:oo-Rockford Flies 3,4, 15; Movie "Dirty Mary Crazy
Larry" 6.13; Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10; Documentary
Showcase 33; lowell Thomas · Remembers 20 .

9:3()-The Way It Was 20 .

four ordinary words.

~Here's how

to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

", ... ., .... c....,,,- . ........ - .....

I K)

RASTIE

MOBILE

IF WE CAN OOME 10 '!ERMS
ON "!HE A1HENA FASHION
1!1UILDIN_gi1 r!LL MAKE

J.V. shop, Efectronlc T.V. Clinic
S.rvlce call, $5. 95. Color, 8 &amp; 'fl
antenna 1ystems ttertot, et,c.

512 Soulh Third, Middlopo•l.

Phone 992~. Carry In oM
sovt money.

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

covatinQ .

septic

limestone,

grovel 1

Ex.

systerp ••

dozer, bockhoo, dump lrUok,

I'M ... r!M
REALLY PRE&amp;i'iED
R)( TIME . BUT ILL

'TELL YOU WHAT. ..

'TIME! "THAT'LL GIVE US
AN EXCU&amp;E'IO

CELEI!lRATE 1HE
CL061NGOF
1HE DI':AL.,I_£-,;:;;IV

I DON'T' "THINK iHERE'LL
BE ANY PJ&lt;l:JeiLEM.J MRfJ.
WRIGHT, A5 I IOU! 'rOU 1
I {)() f!AVE: PONER OF
ATTORNEY 10 Dlf&gt;POBE OF '!HE

"!HE NAME OF
eoNNA'Z
FA()HION51

PROPEIZTY'

blockft&gt;D

-

OIL , GAS FumocM, oil bu~.
ropok, ond port. for lrolliro
ond hom., 24 hour oorvtt..
Phontl843-2165.
::
HOUSl PAINTING, lnlorlor and

truckt.

Mptk

trlttmt .

IIIII

Pulllno. Phone 992·:1471 cioy or

--~lfht ·---~---

QIO

VIKYOUON
XRSOJA

RG

BRFFROAIOAI

QR

KXXVZ

uQ .

-

XIYAUKO
XYRTIYD
Yesterday'• Oryptoquole: WE ARE ALL SO HAR)).UP
NOWADAYS THE ONLY PLEASANT TIIINGS TO PAY ARE
COMPUMENTS, THEY'RE THE ONLY THINGS WE CAN
PAY.- WILDE
Clttn Kiaa: P"•hiNIIrllldiaatt, lac,

I tJ
WHAi' 6Hi~KE~SPE.~l&lt;'tti5\

II

VIL.i..AGE MleH'T

HAVE SE.EN.

III

rJ

Print~~~·-~:

A

Now arrange the Circled tenets to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the ab011e cartoon.

'rr xr r::r y
(Answers tomorrow)

I

Jumbles: JOllV GUILD CHOSEN BAMBOO
Yeste•day·s Answer: Hyou're lhla, you'r' nol Ukalr,lo be
succeatlulln l~e rei race-· MOUSY"

BARNEY

••terlor. Quality work at
reotanablt rotes . Phoae .

742· 7.128.
..
FROSTY'S C.l . ltodlo Equip .,
ovorythiog In lwo·vvoy Rodlo'o,
Ant..-.nas, lind acces. Phone
Portlonci.II43-2Til.
EXCAVATING, llockhMo, O..,j,,
trtncher, low loy, dump frvdt,

YICSUYIA

RG

HAVElODOIN

poving, Rl. 1&lt;13, Phone I (6i:C)
6418-7331 .

X R S0 J

OHL eQOTHER !

1Ht:: 1HING:7 I

l::;;;-;~ft-~

I I I

KECHO

One leiter simply stand&amp; lor anolher, In thi1 aample A II
used lor the three L's. X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo&amp;tropheJ, the Ienglh and formation ol the words ore all
hlut1. Eoeh da~ the eode leiters are illll'erenl. ,}

R0 I

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

YAGIL

II

• WINNIE

on the News 33.

j'jl THAT SCRAMB~ED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to aach square, to form

· CRYPTOQUOTES

992-5858.
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC, N-

Hunter 8,10; News 20 ; Paul

20: Black Perspective

~'j}jlf.\hl ji;}\1

paneling. Phone 992-2759.
Homt Repair, Elec .,
plumbing and heating, Phone

6, 13; Bob

I :110-Gong Show 3; All My Chllldren 6,13 ; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :3()-Days ol Our Lives 3,4, IS ; Family Feud 6, 13; As

~ ~ ~~ 18

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE

742·2348.
CARPENTER, flooring, coiling,

Continues 10.

ll :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Double Dare 8;
Morning Sl1ow 13.
11 :3()-Shool tor the Stars 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
Love of life 8; Family A flair 10; Sesame St. 20,33 .
II : S~BS News 8.

Janak! 33.
12 :4()-Mod Squad 6; lron•lde 13.
I:DO-Midnlghl Special 3,4,15.
1:4()-News 13.
2:3()-News 3,
3:!10-Movle " The Big Heal " 3.
4:3()-Movle " Looking for Trouble" 3.
6:00-Saint__;!.

look

!

Controdon . Phone7-t2·2~09 .

Continues 6; Mike Douglas 13.

10 :3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4 ,15; Winter School

Me. Kill Me" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33 .

:II Unfriendly

///

Systems Installed by
licensed ln1taller. 'Shepard

Continues 10.

IO :DO-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15 ; Schools Without School•

12 :()0-Movle " The Vengeance of Fu Manchu" 10;

38 Medicinal
herb

SEPTIC

9: DO-A.M. 3; Phil Donanue 4; Schools without Scnools
6; Andy Griffith 8; Phil Donahue 13,15.
9:3D-Cross.W.its 3; Concentration 8; Winter School

Circus

(Sp,)

and dltcher. Charlet R. Hatfield , Bock Hoe Service
Rutland, Ohio: Phone 7~2-2008.'

Sesame St . 33 .
B : J~Winter School Continues 10.

II :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; SWAT 6,13; Movie "KIS$

, 37 Lawsuil

I

6:4&gt;-Morning Report 3.
6 : ~Good Morning , West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Tri State 13.
7:DO-Today3.4.. 15; Good Morning America 6.1 3; CBS
New• 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:3()-Winler Schools 10.
8 :DO-School• without Schools 6; Capi.Kangaroo 8;

10 :3()-Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20,
II :00-News 3.4,6.8,10, 13, 15; Monly Python's Flying

31 Late

992-3525 Or 992-

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1977
6:oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.
.6 : 15- Farm Report 13 .
6: 2o-Not For Women Only 13 .
6: 36--Columbus Today 4; NeWs 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Overseas Miss ion 10

Nuchlms 33 .

Golf stroke
Right on!
Explosion
Coss,et
27 High ( mus.'
Z8 - green
b--l----4tycoon's
nickname
32 Minutiae
:U Take in ·
one's stride
(3 wds .)
31 Arlhuria ..
lady

12 :•()-McC ioud 8.

liiE AIJTHOR'5
IN WRITIN6

?"

MA'feE HE NfEDEO
TI-lE MCH:I/ !

•
''

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

IO :oo-Qulncy 3,4,15;

.

23
24
25
26

EXCAVATING, dozer, bockhoe

WILL

Syrian
city ·
I Without
chaser
5 Discharged
6 Some .
7 Lerner
and Loewe
musical
8 Iron. zinc
or nickel
9 Occupancy
11 Turbulence
13 Subchaser's
weapon

(2

gravel . Call ~b or Roger Jtf.
lers , day phon• 992·7089,

NEW LISTING - 2 or 3
bedrooms , kitchen hu
range and rei.. bath,
carpeting. full basement,
storm doo" and windows,
alum , siding, porches,
Asking tust 510,500.00.
NEW LISTING - On old
Rt. 33 lustS miles out. 10,7
nice laying acres. Good
blacktop road, close to
schools, utilities availoble.
NEW LISTING - Near

T~e answer to this question

DOWN

II End
12 Federal

fXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work: dump trucks
and lo-boys lor hire ; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limeston• ond
nlght phone

A Florida reader asks who
wins lhe rubber. The side with
the greater number of points
or the side that h~s won two
games,

1 Congrega- '
I Bustling
lion's response 2 French
river
5 Aspect
10 Identical
3 Ancient

Service. We sharpen 5cllsors.

MA!_N
POMEROY, 0.

~~~

by THOMA.S JOSEPH

ty.,.,

'

K¥

no

trouble at all .
Our hero cashed the ace and
king ol hearls and shilled to a
club .
South drew trumps and
even tu ally led a diamond
toward dummy . Our friend
ducked, but South went right
up with dummy's king and
wrapped up game and rubber
while if West had not op~ned
the bidding there is.a near cer·
Lamty that South would have
gone wrong in diamonds and
lost hiS contract

~

---------------·

Condor St . Pomeroy .

Pas s

Our answer was that we

-- ------------

LIVING ROOM Suite, chair , 3 3 BEDROOM, 2'1r bath bl, level ,
tables, $60. Elec . stove in good
WBFP in famil~ rOom, 2 cor
working
condition,
$50;
garage, dishwasher , nice locabreakfast bar with 3 stools,
tion on 1 ocra lot in Meigs
120. Ladie1 coot. size 12, $10.
County. Akslng $46,500. Phone
Rocker recliner , $50. See ot 2.o12
992·2492.

2•

Pass
~

that he was far too good a
player ID pass with thai nice

would open this hand as would is that the side that wins two
anyone who played any nor· games is given the rubber
mal bidding system. '!be hand bonus but il this leaves their
counts 12 points in high-card s · score below that olthe other
pius two more lor the side , then the· other side wins
doubletons. In addition it in· the rubber .
eludes three quick tricks and
(For a copy 01 JACOBY
the hand should be opened
irrespective or vulnerability. MODERN , send $1 to: " Win
Then we asked what calami· ar Br i dge , " c/ o thi s
·. ty befell him as a result ol newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
opening t he hand . We Radio City Station, New Yorlt .
., flattered him by remarking N Y 10019)

"""''rov,

Charge and Bonk Americord.

Pass

4•

The Unlucky Expert had
cornered us again . He showed
us the Wesl hand and asked if
we would open one heart if we
weren't vUlnerable and our
opponents were .

----·~----·--··----

---.-.-

Dbl.

Pass
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

•

s!r~~t ~~~~!..~ha~e_9_92 · 7~~ ·
salt t~r formers . Main Street , NEW 3 bedroam "ouse, 2 baths,
ONE BEDROOM Apls . at VILLAGE
' Pomeroy , Oh io or phone 992 ·
all elec .. 1 acre, Middleport ,
MANOR in Midc;llttport for $10-t
3891.
' close to Rutland. Phone 992[TIOnthly plus elec, or $130 in7481.
We hand It only tho boot In
cluding ele&lt;. LOWER RATES for COAL for sole, Open 6 days per
,SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
week and &amp;v&amp;nings. Far further SMALL farm for sole, 10'1. down,
mlnuf•ctured housint .
information coli (614) 367 ·7338.
to s11opping on Third and Mill
Double wldos &amp; modulor '
owner financed, Mo11roe CounSls. in Middleport , Brand new
homes by Skrllne &amp; Fuqua
ly, W. Va. Phone (~ ) 772·
APPLES, FiTZPATRICK ORCHARD.
hi igh quality apartments . ·See
Homos Inc.
3102
o•
(304)
772-3227.
STATE ROJJTE 689, PHONE
he manager at Apt . 28 or coli
1100 E. Main st
WILKESVILLE
,
(614)
669-3785.
COUNTRY farmland wltl1 sedud·
992-7721 . An Equal Housing
Ohio
ed
woods
1 water and good ac·
FUlLER
Br~sh
Products
f;-;;i;
Opportunity.
,
fn.t70J4
- --cess in Monroe County, W. Vo.
Phane 992 -~10 .
Hrs. f:001 . m.
2 SEDROOM trailer . real niclit .
$1 ,000 down . coli (30ol) 772·
CAMPER, $600. Also , horse
Phone 992-3324, adults only .
To Dusk
3102
ol
(304)
772·3227
.
.
-~ -trailer, $-tSO . PhDne (61-t) 698·
AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apls , I
Commercial property opprox . 17
3290.
1-9-n I mo,
bedrm . apartment , $100 per
ot res . le.,.el lol'td , locofed ot
month , 2 bedrQOm opts. $133 POTATOES. c. w. Proffitt,
Tupptt,rs Plains on Ohio, Roufe
Portia nd , Ohio , Phon&amp;
p1itf month: Equol Opporlunity
7. Phone (614) 667·6304.
1143-2254,
Housing. Phone 992-3273 .
3 bedroo'r!s. ,1'12 boths, Iorge If.,..
2- b.dr;-;-~~h-;nlshed -CI~Porting room , dining room and kitmenl in Middleport. Phone
chen , fully carpeted. Phone BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com· ;
992·3129 or 992 ·~34 .
992-312'1,o•992·54:14.
plete Ser'lic•. Phone 9-t9-2.ol87 ,
"'-·Will· do odd jobi . roofing , pain or
~..9-2000, Racine. Oklo , Crlt
6 ROOMS ANO bolh; corner lol in
ting , gutt&amp;r work. Phone 992· NEW 3 bedroom house, built-In
Bradford .
Middleport. New furnace .
kllchen, both and '/1, Phone
7.09.
pl1one 992-5J.oll,
·--·
7"2·2306 or contact MilO B. Hut · ELWOOD BOWERS REP"IR SEWING·AL TERATIONS ,
chiton. Rutland , Ohio.
Sweepers, toasters , lron1 , oil
2 SEDROOM hou!e In Rutland .
Uphol;'tering ,
drapes
tmoll Opplionctt . lown mower ;
Coli 992-S858.
ONE
LOT
In
Svracuse.
Phone
reasonable. ·572 South Third
next to State Mlghway Garoge
992-3714.
Ave ., Middleport. Phone
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·
992-6306,._ - ------· TUPPERS PLAINS. Ohio. New
3825.
three bedroom house . living
PORTABLE WELDER, large ond
room . large kitchen , ceramic REMODELING, Plumbing, hoaling
small jobs . Can also thow
STEREO , new am·fm fm stereoand all
of general repair.
both , carpeted , , ottoched
frozen woter pipes. Phone
radio combination $129,95 or
Work guaronteed 20 ytors t)(·
garage,
large
lot.
$22.900terms . Call992·3%5 .
. .!•9-2646:·-::7-c::---:- -'-....,-- . Phone (614) 667·6304.
perlenee. Phone 992 ~ 2.409.
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT. WILL DO childsitting In my home,
-------------...,_-..., SEwtNG MACHINE Rtpolr1 , serhouri~ doily or weekly. lots of
Timberjock 230D Skidder ;
..
vice , oil mok•s , 992·2284 . The
room , educational toys and'
Beloit Skidder Model 300:
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
large
yard.
Morning
snacks
and
Franklin 130B Skidd•ri
Avthorlr:ed Singer Solts ond
hot lunch, provided. Call
Deere 350 Crowler loader;

992·3382.
Morbork 636 Debarker; Contact
- =~....,.--,--.,.-­
Groves. Phone (61"') 596-4769. HAVE
YQUR tC.xes done by an acELECTROLUX AUTHOAIZEO Soles countant. Also , nqw accepting
bookkHping, Phone 992 · ~206
ond Service, 1977 Dudley Ave .,
or99'2-6173,
Parkersburg, W.Va . Phone
(304) -428-%61. Free home INCOME TAX Servlc&amp;, Wallace
demonstrollons . pickup and
Russell ,
Bradbury.
Coli
delivery str11lce, new ond
992-7228.
repossessed sweepers ond
shompooers. Complete flnonc·
lng ovoilable. Also, Master

l'

HOMESITES for ,ole, 1 acre and
up. Middl&amp;part , near Rutland.

Call 992·1481.

Soulh

• i

A local contractor
Phone ~49-2801
or 949-2860
Fret Estimates
No Sunday Calls Pleose
1-30· 1 mo.

C. A. Newm•n, Pres.

North East

Opening lead

," '

BISSEll SIDING CO. ·

expelrence.

COAL, limeslone, ar~d calcium
c111orlde and calcium brine for
dust control on'd special mix ing

t62
North-South vulnerable

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Ca II Professiona Is

3 AND "" RM . fyrnished and un fvrnished apls . Phon&amp; 992·
5434 .
.

1952 8N FORO tractor in good con·
With brush hog. Phone

• Q 8.3
410 752

West

12 :GO-Movie " The Bridges at Toko-RI " 10; Janakl33 .

with his horror and South

4 A8 6 4

AIIOO Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0.
1·17-lmo.

1-23-1 mo. Pd .

evenings.

(6141915-4115
Cites!or, Ohio
10-17-1mo1Pd)

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork Rt
33, ten miles nortl1 of Pome'roy :
large lots with concrete patios ,
sid&amp;walks , rynners and off

• A 9 75
4 93

..••

Phone
;;
MODERN c;HEMICAL '
614-992-2798
; :

RATESPh. 37S-62l0
Reed&amp;ville.

Showglr l Pageanl6.13; Kojak 8; Mary Hartman 10;
ABC News 33.

arrived at four spades with

.KQl087
• 93

STRIPPING, REP~IRING
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

0,

PROFESSIONAL

11 : 00-News 3, 4,6,8,10, 13,15.
11 : 31Hohnnycarson 3, 4,15, Unoff icial Miss Las Vegas

alithe cards you will see what
did h&amp;ppen . He bid a hearl.
North doubled. East passed

SOUTH

PARTS - lABOR
GUARANTEED

Rutland, ·o hio 4577S
Ph . (614) 742· 2409
We Delivfr
12 ·2:L4 mo 5 .

F~rd XL, o.c ..

992-2641. _ _ _
i9~C~i~ROLETChevetle Phone

SWAIN'S

'==========~
1

condilion Asking S250. 1967

•AKJ86

EAST
• 53
• 10 7 42

•H

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

1966 PLYMOUTH IN good running

News 20.

10 ,3()-Woman 20 .

aggregation of cards .
If you readers take a look al

• A 962

• Qs
• K J 10 t
4KQJ

Guaro~ntftd

Ttuss Rafter Co.

~- 9•9:2~---~---------

17

NORTH

IWIIINUII

TRUSSES
ANY PilCH
ANY SIZE

i9it-AMC-MArAOOft Fo:;

MOBILE HOME, 1972 Robel 12 x
50. Coll985·3531oho,~ p.m.
Claron co Andrews SQUARE OR •ound baled hoy . Coli
992·56611.
Mayor
FIREWOOD, phono 992-36511.
Ralph H werrr POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING, ONE SIDE -BY -SIDE Gibson
NOW BUYING SCR"P. Tu•n
refrigerator . 11/r yr s. old. tK ·
Prtlldentof Councl
junk autos Into cosh. Al1o buy -

PUI~IC

EYS ON COMPANY OPERATIONS " ...

'

John

COINS, CURRENCY, lokono , old

deed;

A!lest :

MIWIIIIEIIT

-------------

CASH paid far all makes and
Registered Surveyor : and
models of mobile homes .
WHEREAS, . Pomeroy
Phone area code 61•·423·9531.
Clirfs, ltd . desires to offer
said strip of ground to the
Village fOr public .use IS I TIMBER, Pomtroy Forest Products. Top prlc• far standing
public right of wey; •nd
sawtimber. Call K•nt Hanby,
WHEREAS, lho Village
Solicitor hn reviewed and
1-446-8570.
approved the form of 1ald

Offer Of

~

k~~
l
"-ROUSE&amp;8Aii~ ·~

1969 CHEVROLET 8isquoine; 1966
SUICK Electro, 225: 2 Rokan
triolbikes. Phone 949-2-432.
-d ;;-;_
·
outomofic, power steering,
power brakes, V-8. New front

Bow ling for

Opening bid tells all

... AND TO NAME cAPTAIN EA&lt;;Y
MTHE CHIEF EJ(ECUTIVE

.

Rutland

WHEREAS , ' fliomeroy
(Are you sn Aquarius? Btr· Cliffs, Ltd ., thf purchner of
the 3.556 acre1 at ttle south ·
nice Osol has writfan a spec/sf
west corner of Union A\lenue
Astro·Grsph Letter lor you. For and Osborn. Strtet. having
your col)y send 50 cents and • presented lis plans for the
se/f.addressed , stamped Improvement and w idening ot
en~e/ope ro AstroGraph, P.O. Osborn Street. whic.h plans
SO .If 489, Radio Cffy Station, New are lcceptabtt to the Village;
and
York, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to ask
WH EA EAS ,
Pomeroy
'or Aquarius Volume 4.)
Cliffs, Ltd. has uecuted and
delivered to the Meigs County
Recorder Its Qu lt .Cialm Deed
dlt~d Oectmbtr 10, 197&amp;,
convtvlno to the VIIIIOt a
\
0.146 acres striiJ along Osborn
Street, the legal des.crlptlon of
wh i ch was prepared by
Red Wings Mlllday named RIchard C. Glasgow , Ohio

\r----------------------,

l'

Tuesday, Fob, t5, T9n
7:30 p,m.

Wanted In

assists tlia

; MR , FLUGG'

Gun Shoot every Soturday night
6 p.m. at their building in
Bcshan , Ohio.

-.,.·---.---

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING

You will meet someone this com-

Dennis Polonich captalll It

excitement.'-'

RACINE FIRE Oept. will hove a

--------

Fob. 11, 1177

gence Agency.

A thought lor tile day:
Amerlca.n
philosopher
; WU!iam James said, "Man
' Uvea by habit, indeed, but
what ho lives lor is thrills and

(614) 593-8655, hours . 9,00 Hll

6:00 7 Pomero~ Rood. Athens .

'W illOrrullilflill\J

r:~orwn!.(l~nl.;~~~

•

processing. Retail, wholeso1e.
No appolnment necessary ~ Call

Sentinel tvrier

In 1976, President Ford
named George Bush to be
director of the Centrallnlelli·

l

NOTICE , . PtQtfs Meat Mkt
{Pleasanton Mtot PrO(essing,
Inc .) Custom slaughtering, and

------------- --·.--~-

sitive friends require the Kid
Yo.ur loving memories ore always
glOve treatment today. Failure to bind. In your rush to catch up.
n.ar.
you 'll only fall farther behind.
recognize this could result in
Mined by husband, Orris ond
some strained relationships .
Family.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

CANCER (Juno 21•Julr 22)

2270.

GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
Club every Sunday , I pm
Assorted m~tats . .

ogo, Fob. 17. 1976.
cussions.
LIBRA (S.pl. 23.0cL 23) II you
let your duties go until the last Though you hove been
TAURUS (Aprll2ti'Moy 2G) Sen- minute today , you 'll be in a real . us one year,

foolish approach for you todav.
Only honest - effort helps you SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
scale the Iotty heights .
21) Conditions at home are apt
to be unstable !oday. The way

NOW occeptlng plono students,
~lnners, interm~iotes . ad vanced ltudenls. Call ' 992 -

Oh.

VIRGO (Aug, 23-SOpt. 22) Tho
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) type
of person you associate
There's a possibility you could
with todsy has a 11ery definite Influence on your outlook. Seek
out positive thinkers.

WIIDOW$

CONTINUES -- "T HE WISEST
o~OIC&amp;. IN MY OPINiOI'J, 1? TO HAVE:
WA?H TU66S kEEP A CONSTANT

Wl-10001$

Southeastem Ohio

NOTICES

~EO

Qual.ityWork At
Reasonable Rates

HE

Free E&amp;limotes

Dally , 8 :30a.m . to 12 :00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992 -2156.

AstroGrapM

lllowllioww•uula

Work

OFfiCE HOURS
8 :30 a .m. to 5:00 p.m.

problems today . Last·mlnute
changes tend to work against
you .

,_... ._

Room Additions
Garages
Homes Bui~

742-2328

word

·

WIN AT BRIDGE

lllllllation Senices

Al. TROMM CONST.

1han 16,000 miles, moss green fin ish .

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUaRY '

' rr.Jnlmum

8'3()-What'• Happening!! 13.
9:DO-Be•t Sellers 3,4,15; Born~y Miller 13; Hawa ii
Flve-0 8; Clas.ic Thealre 33; Ten Who Oared 10.
9:»-Tony Randall 6,13; Jeanne Wall WIth ... 20 .
IO:DO-Streets of San Faranclsco 13; Barnaby Jones 8;

Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Almanac 20 .

Roofing &amp; Siding

mn

lf71 CHEVROLETV.TON

13; College Bo•ketball6; Wallon• 8.1 0; VIsion• 20;
M asterplec::e Theatre 33.

Dollars 6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell the

cfean cab. Like new 825x20 tires.

ln.sert lon .

Tra ining 33.

:oo--Truth or Cons. 3; To Te ll the Truth 4;

3,4; Ohto State Lottery 6;

B:DO-Fantastlc Journey 3,~, 15; We lcome Back , Kotter

Co. 211,33.
6:!l0-News 3.4.6.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Zoom 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Once Upon a Classic 20; Boy Seoul
7

lf74CHEV. 2TON
S:Utl
m Engine, 15,000 lb ., 2 •peed R. axle, 108" cab to ~xle,

For Wtftf Ad Slr¥1ct
S ce nts per :word one

Ct)&amp;N£'T'ICS
INC.. '

t:i\ 2 SIGNS

dttmed · ob -

iectlonal. The publisher
will not be responsible for

k\E~ WIL-L.. SELL I
•

,

correc

PUbii CII ion .

TRia-INS AAD COCK I-IQNTI'-IGI

"

Before

5: Jo-Adam · 12 .4, 13 ; News 6; Family Affair 8 ; Elec .

Business Services

DIAD~INU

s P.M . 01y
Publlcttlon .

~quares

Price I• Right 8; MocNeii -Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road t3; Dolly
15.

Mi ster Rogers 20,33 ; Star Trek lS.

I

r-------------------------------------------------~------~ ~
·"'

WANT AD$
INFORMATION

7 :30-H ollywaoo

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17 , 1977
HI~· Big Val ley 3; My Tnree Son• 4; Brady B"nch 8;

--AN' THEN
ZELDY SRVS
TO ME-·

HOLD IT RIGHT THAR
. LOWEE2V, WHILE I
GO STIR MV STEW

ZELDV SA'15 TO ME..
ZELDY SRVS TO ME-ZELDV SA'15 TO ME··
4ELDV SAVS TO ME ..

I'

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

Vance-Fah·m i talks opened
IIJ JIM ANDERSON

and Zlonllt powers, with the

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

.

.

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

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

THE
SHOE·

BOX

DO YOU NEED FLOOD

·uraace.

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

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

ARE YOUR INSURANCE PREMIUMS

TOO HIGH?
Try Lightning Rod Insurance
AI Davis Insurance Service

Phone 992-5120

114 Court

Pomeroy, Ohio

St.

·

I
I

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

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

at

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

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

Akron

and

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

Pallbearers are
named for
Seth Nicholson

cemetery . Friends may call

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

and six great-grandchildren .
Funeral serviCes will be 2

p.m. Saturday at the White

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

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

Friends
funeral

Friday.

may call at the
home afternoon

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

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

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

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

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

S!ephenson of Miami, Fla .; a

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

Wilbur Rose, Erie, Pa.

Funeral services will be

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

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

SPRING SALE
CORnEY CUSTOM MADE DRAPES

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

at

Veterans

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

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

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

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

daughters, Opal Van Meter,
Gahanna;

Angie

Roush ,

Portland ; Jessie Boggs,

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

IoNs. Fred Hoffner,

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

Chapel Cemetery . Friends

SAVE·

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

may call at the funeral home

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

APPEAL DELAYED

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

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

Bring in your measurements • Select the Pattern

Isaac and Matilda Mounts

Wallace, she married
Thomas T. (Doc) lambert

and Color you like - We11 quote J1111 a price and

June 2, 1922, who survives

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

you'll save 30%.

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

CLOSED FOR

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

ministrations

for

' 'mis·

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

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

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

NO. 216

•

•

enttne

at y

e
VOL. XXVII

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

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

Sharp price increases crimp economy

•

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

Protocol ignored
inS arov note

Utility should refund

$45 million says Brown

Housing ::
•
semmar
planned

Regents want colleges

VACATION
WAlCH FOR
OPENING DATE

to switch approaches

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

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

~

See us at the Pomeroy Bend Bridge

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

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

Israelis won't
get big bombs

MEIGS tHEATRE

Adolph's Daily Valley

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

Ord has
•
•
rruse
m
salary

af!er 7 this evening .

ALUMNUS ELECTED

Califano prepared to enforce
school desegregation again

Weather

late Ad and Angie Aumiller
Sarson , she was
a Iso

FebruaiY 18th

Davis Insurance Service

·

Memorial Hospital.
Born Dec . 20, 1900 to the

Fire rages .

CONTINUES

I

husband, Fran cis .

three accidents

SHOE
SALE

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

·'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

office: ·

,,

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