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;. ,

•·

~77

.

10- The Daily Sentinel, _Middl!port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 3, 1

J-anuary sale
'

OF SHOES
·: BEGINS TUES., JAN. 4

.BROKEN IZE - AU SAlES FINAL!..
.

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES.
1 GROUP REG. '15"
' 50%0FF
AND 114• ·
1 GROUP REG. 116" · 115"
40%0FF
• 113" • 110" .

,,

,1 GROUP REG. 1!~ · 1 17~ 30%0FF
. '12" . '9"
"
'

~- ~~~UP REG. .W • '14" 20%9FF
1

MISSES SHOES
50%OFF

1 GROUP REG. 111"

~ ~~~~UP REG. '12:- 'Ill" · 40%0FF
11 GR.OUP
REG. '1~ , '111" · 30'tOF~
1411 • '15"
/(,

CHILDREN'S SHOES
1 GROUP REG, '9"

killed last Saturday in
another apartment fire on
Chicago's Near West Side and
five others died Sunday in a
second blaze in the Pilsen

.An Evanston w'oman also
died in a house fire, bringing
the 11-day toll to 32 dead , 'tl
injured lind more than 100
homeless.

1~

.

f(,

10
30%OFF

. '16• . .

1.GROUP REG. 1'8"
1

·BOYS' ·DRESS SHOES
1 GROUP REG. 115!1) · 113!1)
1 GROUP REG. '11" . s10 79
I

30%0'FF

S4

1 GROUP MEN'S ..... ~.. ~~~-~~~ 99
1 GROUP ~EN'S ..... ~-~-~~~~-~ $599

THE SHOE BOX
.

.

992-3770

N. 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT

Mrs. Frances Lutz, Uttle
·so.cking, and

Mrs. !::dLy

Corn~ll,

fvfincral Wells, W.
Va .; one sister, Mrs. Lula
Belle !jjlockey, Akron; 20 ·
gra nd children, 24 great- .
grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews. 1

She was preceded in death
of her husband, Thomas W.,
in 1970, four brothers and two
sisters.
.Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the
White Funeral Home here
with the Rev. Carl A. McPherson officiating. Burial
will be in the Torch Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time.

,
.
a son, Robert W., of
Rosemont, Ill.; two brothers,
Walter Curtis of Granville
and Dale P. Curtis of Heath ;
three grandchildren, and one
great-grandchild.
Funeral services will
be held at 2p.m. Wednesday
at the McPeek Funeral Home
at Granville with burial to be
in the Welsh Hills Cemetery.
Friends may- call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
·Monday and from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
'

,Grove Road.
._Surviving are her husband,
James; a daughter and son·
in-law, Virginia and Cecil
Heilman of Canton; a
grandson and his wife, Allen
and Jean Heilman, and their
children, Mark and Debbie,
all of' Columbus; a brother,
David J. Morgan, Pomeroy;
a niece, Gladys,Riggs, whom
she helped rear· in early
childhood, and several
younger nieces and nephews
and their families.
Services will be atl :30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Roger
Watson, minister at the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church, officiating. Burial
will be in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time
Tuesday.

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People
.

,,

....

~

0

NEW CONSTRUCTION - This addition, 216 E. Second St., Pomeroy, houses the new_
quarters of the Teaford Realty Co. Virgil Teaford piirchased the structure at 214 E. Seoond ·
which formerly housed General Telephone Co. in 'Pomeroy for a number of·years and
has had these new quarters built for his office. Occupying the 214 E. Seoond address is 'the
Cbateau Beauty Salon. Teaford Realty Co has been located on Mechanic St., Pomeroy, the
past several years.
•

At Farmers Bank '

EXTENDED oun.ooK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of rain or
snow Wednesday and a
chance of snow Thursday
·and Friday. Highs around
10 14 C) Wednesday and
around 30 (minus I C)
Thur;day and Friday.
Low• near 25 (minus 4 C)
Wednesday and near 15
1minus 9 C) Thursday and
Friday..
· ·

MEIGS THEATitE
CLOSED FOR

•VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPFNING DAn

'

UNWANTED HONOR
COLUMBUS (UP! ) William E. Summers 20
Columbus, became th~
capital city's first homicide
of 1977. Police said he had
been shot in the head and was
either thrown or fell doWn a
40-foot embankment where
his body was foun11 in a
raVine on the city's west side
New Year's Day.
'

I

I

JUSTICES SWORN
COLUMBUS (Uri) - A.
WilHam Sweeney and Ralph
Locher became the two new
justices of the' Ohio Supreme
Court this weekend. Sweeney,
56, Cleveland . succeeded
Justice J. J. P. Corrigan
while ·Locher, 61, Cleveland,
replaced Justice Leonard
Stern.
,
"
Both won their seats in the
November · electioh.
Sweeney's six-year term
began Saturday; Locher's
six-year term began Sunday.

Murder of 25 by arson
.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admlsslolh'l
None.
·
saturday Discharge
Thelma LeMaster.
sunday Admissions . _
Ernest Stewart, Minersville;
JuanitaFerrell Middleport ·
Harold Jones, Dexter; Ebe~ ·
Gillihin, · Chester; Mabel
HennesSy, Pomeroy.
.
Sunday -Discharges --&lt;
Richard Baker
Clyde
Hubbard
·
'
·
HoberMedicaiCenter
I·Birlbs, Dec. 30)
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Saunders, dRughter, Gallipolis ;
Mr. ·and Mrs. John Albert,
daughter, JacksOn; Mr. and
Mrs :
Calvin
Wright,
daughtet, Jackson: Mr. arid
Mrs.
Howard
Kisor,
daughter, Wellston ; Mr: and
Mrs. Robert Rlmmey, S r.,
·d w v
son, So uths1 e, . a.
(Births, Jan.!)
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie

is charged to two

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, January 4, 1977

m~n .

·
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two in !he ·second-Btory' Puerto .
men ,have been charged wl~ Rico Club. Merola called it
arson and murder m "the wrst. mass murder by
• connection with_ the burning arson ever to occur In the
of a Br.onx soetal cl~b that United States."
.
killed 25 persons and mjured
li ~as also ·lbe worlj! fatal
24 others.
.
. fU"e m the . Clly .since 't1
The suspects, Antomo Cor· perlllnswerelrilled,ina blaze
dero, 40, and Hector Lopez, · at a textile fa~tor!! in lower
17, were arrested Saturday ' Manhattan lri ..J958.
night ?4ld ·charged Sunday
Cordero, 8n unemployed
with 25 counts of murder and salesman, and Lopez both•
arson.
pleaded innocent at !heir
A third suspect is being arraignment in Bronx
sought and Bronx District Criminal Court. No ball was
Attorney Mario Merola said · set · and Judge Willlam
his arrest is "imminent." H . Holland adjourned tM
convicted, all three co_uld get hearing until Jan. ~· to allow
up to life in prison.
the suspects time to get
Merola said Cordero, Lopez lawyers.
·
and
!he
third
man
started
the
According
to
Merola,
f
ire Oct. 24 to avenge an ~ero was angry because
.
C d
h d lth
de him
argument or ero a )I'
Sanchez persua d. · ,
his ,16-year-old girlfriend, against his will, to drop her
Diana Sanchez, who with her off at a dance at the cfub. He
Bowllrig, daughter, Jackson; sister was killed In the fire: ·· roii"-..ed up 1 npez and atleast.
Mr. and Mrs . Jackie
"&lt;"
Twenty-four others were ooe'"'other man
to firebomb
Harrison; son, Crown City.
injured by jumping out !be the club, Merola said.
(Births, Jan. 2).
windows to escape the flames
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Dilley, daughter, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lambert,
son, Patriot i Mr. and Mrs.
J
•
Darrell Nickels, son, ·oak
HUI; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
RACINE - Racine Chapter County Common Pleas Court
Stinson, daughter, Cheshire. 134, OES, will mee11n regular . by F....,ces Adams, Sunny.
session at 8 p.m . Monday at vale, Calif., agalns1 Guy
the Masonic Temple with Winfrey Jo hnsOn , Baton
PLEASANT VALLEY
Qbligation night to be served . Rouge, La .. et al. Bel1¥
DISCHARGES - Mrs._
Ferguson f iled for dlvQrce
Gaybert Bechtle, Henderson;
EAST ME lGS - The against Jerry Ferguson, and
Leland Bonecutter, Gallipolis Eastern Band BOosters wlfl the merr laqe of Robert R. ..
Ferry ; Carolyn Long, mee1 at 7:30 this evening In MuSse r ar\d Debra Ann
the hi gh school band- room .
was d ~ss olved and the"
Gallipolis Ferry ; MrS. Edwin All band parents are asked to Musser
petitioner was restored to her
Fowler, daughter, Mid- attend .
fOrmer name of Debra Ann
dleport; .Mrs. Charles Smith,.
Priddy .
RACINE -. The Western
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry; Bopl
CB Clu b will meet at 7
Mrs. Johnny Caldwell and this evening at the Roush
son , Crown City; John Landing in Racine.
Chapman, Gallipolis Ferry;
Pomeroy Lodg e 164,
TElCHERS STRIKE
. Ollie Legg, Leon; Carolyn F&amp;AM,
will meet at 7:30p.m. . NAPOLEON, Ohio (UPI)
Montcaslle_, Apple Grove; .·Wednesday at 1he 1emple. All
Larry Whittington, Arbuckle; Master Masons are Invited. - Teachers in the Napoleon
School District went on strike
Mrs. John Carter, Pliny ;
·
The
Letart
Township
Granville
Hill,
Point Trus1ees will meet at 1:30 early today In a contract
· Pleasant; Mrs. James p.m. Wednesday at 1he Le1art dispute. with the· board of
educatioo. The district has
Beaver, Gallipolis; Carl Falls Comm un l1y Hall.
137 teachers 1 arid ,3,000
McDade , Point Ple~sant;
A
marriage
license
was
'studento
at schools here and
Mrs. Mervin Norris, Lakin; issued 1o Wayne . Virgil
In
the
nearby
villages of
Sara Rainey, Point 'Pleasant ; Barnell, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Florida
and
McClure.
. Mrs. Mervin Norri~. Lakin; and Sharon Sue Mi lliron, 19,
The old contract expired
Sara Rainey, Gallipolis Racine .
Dec.
31.
Ferry.
A suit to partition real
Charles Litchfield Jr., estate was filed _ in Meigs
Henderson ; Mrs. Robert
Roush, Point Pleasant; John
Crudum, Point Pleasant ; daughter, 'Southside; John
ROUSH RESIGNS Mrs. Roy Huffman, Clifton; · Dereilberger, Mason; Mrs.
Effective today Manning K.
Mrs. Bernard Goelling, Robert Byers, ·scottown , . Roush reslgn_ed his position
Gallipolis ; Betty ·Durst, Ohio; Mrs. Delbert Powell, as peputy sheriff of Meigs
Mason; Mrs. Elmer Wood, Gallipolis; Bernard Wilson, County. Roush worked as a
New. Haven ; Stephanie Oiler, Point Pleasant; Otis Parson~. dispatcher for three years
VIJ)ton; Mrs. Donald Blazer, Gallipolis.
and 16 years as a deputy.

.

)

with us!

Free Checking "ccount For Y~u
,.

We Invite you to use this pr~ferred service with no
service charge . All those 65 years and over are
welcome-to open an account any time. Stop In and
see us now.

'

'

PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
. THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
POMEROY, OHIO

,S4o,ooo.oo Maximum Insurance For Each · DePOsitor
Member Feder.a I Deposit Insurance Corporation

•••••••••••••

Mrs. Wagner
is
.
new board ·,c lerk
.

-E njoy three sizes of' your favorite
piuas.
-Try our delicious subs While you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304 ·..

.

At the Home Furnl~hlngs Annex get big Mvlnis on
sheets, towels, bedspreads and blanket..
l '

f

.,

Shop EvetY Weekday 9:30 1D 5 p.m.

.

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I

Friday 9:30 ID 8 p,tn.,- Saturday 9:30.. 1D 5 p.Jii.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28, No. 183

j

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of rain
or · snow Thursday with
lows around 25 and blghs
near 35. Colder Friday and
Saturday wltlt .a chance of
snow flurries. Lows will be
around 15 and blghs will be
near 25.

Weather

&gt;

on council 1•acated by Charleg'Bartels who resigned due to
out of town employment.
.

SWO!l.N IN - Larry Powell, left; was sworn in as a
new member of Pomeroy Council Mqnday night by
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews. Powell fllla the seat

jfJV;;;;,::,,, ,,,.:,:,,,,:,i;'' ' ' Jj;i;j;J iii~ch holds Werry reelected council president

~

'·

~

~

up polio ·

By United Presslnteruatlolll!l
DETROIT - DOUGLAS . A. FRASER, a Scottish
Immigrant who nise·from the "line" in Detroit's auto plantolo
a vice presidency in the powerful Uitlted Auto Workers,
appears cet:tain to become president of the 1.4 million-member
ll!lion in 1\lay:
.
.
All that remains Is the formality of an official endorsement
by the UAW leadership next Tuesday and election by delegates
to a national convention in Loa Angeles in mid-May. UA W
President Leonard Woodcock, who at 65 has reached
mandatory retirement age, announced Monday that Fraser's
principal opponents told him 'they would not seek the
presidency:
·
As head of the union's Chrysler Department and director
of the UAW's Ctllllllunity Action Program, Fraser, 60, has
become a power. In both the state and national Democratic
parties.

r"

program .
Ahitch has developed in the
sc hool Immunizati on
program against polio of the
Meigs County Department of
Health.
Mrs. Mary Myers, R.N.,
county health nurse said the
S~:hedule for lmmuliization at
the .various schools was
announced bul because of
lechnicaliiies on the state
level, the local department
has been unable to secure the
vaccine.
As a result, the schedule for
visiting the schools to provide
immunization has not been
followed . In some instances
parents already had signed
consent slips for the Immunization 01 their ·children.
Mrs. Myers said the visits
will be rescheduled as soon as
vaccine is received.

WASHINGTON - MAJOR LEAGUE basebell's blanket
antitrust exemption hasn't gone down SJiflnging yet but
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and the owners have been picked
oil base and are trapped IIi a congresa!CI!lal !'Widown. ·
A special ·House Conunlttee :&lt;1 Profesalonal Spor~
approved a final repor,t Monday declarl'l&amp; baseball's unique
court-ordained gnm\U)Ity "unjullllfled" aTld urging that the
95th Congress corislder ending it. The 1:1-mtmber House group,
however, wllli only ooe opposing vote, dMI.not HcrAIUIIend that
baseball be stripped lnunediltely ol the pro~tion It has
enjoyed under a 1922 SUpreme Court declllon. n.oe panel said
such legislative action lltould await a further .study by a
succesaor committee to. see U a general prolesalooal sporti
antitrust biU might be needed.
·

'

Pomeroy Council Monday Pomeroy Cliffs Ltd., closes
nigh_! reelected Ralph Werry off a mine in the area as·
presldent ·of council and Fred agreed .before the ordinance
Crow, Jr., . was retained as was offered.
village solicitor.
R. c. Glasgo, surveyor,
Counc-il rehired Jack told council' that Pomeroy
Krautter as street com· Cliffs Ltd., had material on
missioner and gave .Lihe the site to close off the area.
second reading to an 'ltdi,
Council ·also approved a
nance that con veys 0.146 · first reading to an ordinance
.acres along Osborne St. by related toR. c. Glasgo, Ohio
Pomeroy Cliffs Ltd. , to surveyor, locating the centerPomeroy Village Council. line o!'the storm and sanitary
Final passage could be held sewer at the site along
up because councilman ··osborne St. where Pomeroy
Harold Brown Is not in favor Cliffs Ltd., will erect apart·
of passing the ordinance until menl buildings.

Buying policy under fire

.

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - State Rep. Michael P.
Stinziano, ~lun bus, today caUed for an Immediate
state investigation into !he gas purchasing ' and
·curtallmeilt policies of Colwnbla Qas of Ohio. Stinziano
said the Public UUUties Commission of Ohio should
begin an Inquiry, and if it falll 1 the legislature should
step in.
:
The Columbus lawiDaker charged Columbia Gas
would not have had to issue !lrastic industrial an4
commercial rationing directives If it had purchased
fuel when it was available last fall ..
Colwnbia ordered full wrtatlment of gas tQ any
firms wltich can con~rt tQ alternate fuels, and 50 per
cent cutbacks in supplies to beavy induStries and
schools, effective last Saturday.
"The whole gas curlallm~nt scheme Is a wellplanned plot in which the gas company purposely did .
not buy Industrial gas that It lme)V II would rleed this ·
winter," said Stinzlano.
•·
He said Columbia
only gas conipany IIi Ohio
to ·request drastic cutbacks; that othel flnns
anticipated winter needs and made the industrial
purchases last fall.

. ·· ''WASHINGTON - RICHARD NIXON, WHO was not ~yre
tnv'lied - or more than mentioned - at the national convention
. '
of his own Republican party, Is lrivlted !0 the lnaliguralion of
Democrat Jimmy Carter Jan. 20.
.
The 1977 Inaugural Conunlttee said invitations were sent
to NIIDn and hil family, and to the four surviving first ~dies Mrs. Jobn Kemedy, Mn. Harry Truman, Mrs. Dwight Elsen- .
hower and. Mrs. Lyndon Johnson. "It's protocol to invite
RACI!iE - Robert Sayre
fonner pl'lll!Jideall and fCII'IMI' first ladles to an inauguration,' '
was
elected . president/ and
· a apokenroman for the C&lt;llllllllttee said. She said Carter was
Dennie
Evans vice president ·
consulted before the lnv11811cln was sent.
·
by
the
Southern
Local School
It was not !mown If the Nimnl would accept.
District Board of Education
HALIFAX, NNOVA SCOTIA - CANADIAN AND In ito organizational spsslon
American olliclals ..-nbled all available aircraft and ilsed · Monday night at the hlg~ i:if:i~:;~:i!it~!irrtft!~!!i!!i!i!~i!~i!~!i!i!!!!!i~!!ii!:itirtmt:~:t:t:!:itttt:!:tt:t:::t:t:!i!:!t''f!::;::t::i!i!:
computer-drawn mapa to hWlt today for a.PIIIUimanlan timker s~hool.
. .1
•
milling for Ills days IIi the Atlantic Ocean with 38 Chinese crew
Th.e board set ll;S regular
' Q
members and
of heavy oil aboard.
. meetings tor the third Thurst.
The Grand Zenith, owned by Zenith Navigations of day of each month at 7:30
l?anama wu bound from Europe to the United States. It was p.m. at the high school
MASON, W. Va . ...:. A letter water office. Pickup will be
)1st reporlect last~ lbout 50 mUeuouth o Cape Sable, cafeteria. The clerk, Jane of credit was'read to mem· · held Jan. 6 aad 7 between 8
1fn the soulheilUIIO• tip of Nova Scotia. Offlclals said no Wagner, was given a four bers of the Mason Town a.m. and 4 p.m.
dlllreull&amp;nal- recelnd 1rom the ohlp and there was no year contract. However, Mrs. Council Monday evening , Present at the meeting ·
. ~ion why 11 was mllttlnc~
Wagner was last night em- wllen the group met In were Mayor Fred Taylor,
·
ployed by the Meigs Local regular session. '
Recorder Carl Cline and
TEL AVID, ISRAEL .-·'niE DRAAtATIC stiiCIDE ol School Board as clerk and
The letter, from Housing &amp; members Catherine Smith,
ltaulbli Minllter Avraham Ofer rocUd llrlel'a troubled Indicated today that lite' will Urban Development, Charlotte Jenks, Lawrence
Labor party today and dellla- blow to Premier Yilzhak accept the job as clerk· a~thorlzed spending of · Roush and Ed Perry.
lllbln's cimpalgn to stay In power. Th&lt; 56-year-old cabinet treasurer In the Meigs f239 ,000 In federal grant
PLACE CHANGED
mlnilter, qne of Rabln'l clolell Ctlllfldartll, lbol hlrnle1l to District.
·funds for ·a proposed
The location of the meeting
death 1n h1l car aloq a duwl8d beach Monday In the lace of.a
The board joined the Ohio renovation oi the town wale~
'lridelp'tlld ~Uon acandal thai hu tthaken Israel's School Boards. Aaan. and syale!Jl and storage tank of the lnternatlooal Union of
• Operating Engineers . to be
ciomJMnt poUticsl .-rtf. ,
•
renewed )laj)lllty Insurance . construction in Mason .
.
"Ihllveno dollbt that lise truth wtUcome out," he &amp;Bid·ln a for board members. The Council agreed to have a · held at 7:SO p.m. Thursday
auldde liOtlfoulld by bllboiiJ. "I did nottjllbtllle Cl' atea1. It regular mettlng in January Christmas tree pickup. baa been changed to. the
Ia aU alancler and 111111. IIIII 01111C11 lib UIIJJDIOI'I." The will be held on Jan. 1~ ralher ~Yeryone wanllng trees Junior fair buUdlng on the
(Otlnu..l on paga 10)
!han on the thin! Thunday. plc:ltectupshouldcallthetown Athens County Fairgrounds.

·

elected

()()() , d b
Town can go ""239,
m e

a.zlhUIIon caUona

Vlilt the Furniture Department on the 3rd 'flooi for
.ale prices on living room suites, soto's and ch~lrs.

' . .....

en tine

isfhe

SpeCial clearqnce sale .prices,. too, on men'i and
boys' shirts, lockets, sweaters and trou~&amp;rs. . ·

'

.

school board

Save plenty_~n_women's dreue~, coati, sportsw~ar,
and sweaters. - Girls' .a nd pre-Teen sleepwearand
sportswear - Women's. robes and gowns.

.

.

president of

Storewide January Clearance Sale .

at y

Mrs~Jane Wainer, Racine, Wagner repla ces
John attend professional meeting&amp;
was employed as clerk· Triplett who was not rehired during the year. Supt. ·:'''''''''''''''''''''''''::::::::::::;::':':':':::::::::':':':':':':':':':
treasurer of ihe Meigs Local ' recently at the end of a two- Charles Dowler was named to
School · District . Board of year contract. Mrs. Wagner serve as agent to receive,
Cloudy .to night, lows
Education . inlts-:'las given a two year con- expend and account for
around 27; chance of rain or
organizational meeting at th~ tl[act.
federal funds .
snow Wednesday, highs near
junior high school IIi Mid·
The board agreed to hold
The board agreed to ask for 39.
Probability · of
dleport Monday· night.
regular meetings on the a cash accounting and an
preciplta~ ion is 40 per cent
, Mrs. Wagner has been second Monda y of each audit by the state auditor's
employed as clerk of ·the month at 7;30. p.m. at the office, a normal process in today, 20 per cent tonight and
Southern Local l!oard of junior high building. The the changing of clerks. Board 50 per cenl: Wednesday.
· Education the past two years. regular January meeting will members salaries were set at
She will, how!)Ver, llegin her be held, however ,~ Jan. II , $20 for 'regular meetings.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
new ·duties at once. Her next Tuesday.
All members were present,
The Letart Township
starling -salary is $13,000 per
The board purchased a being Hoover, King, Mrs. Trustees will meet on the
year.
·
bond for the new clerk and . Jennifer Sheets, Dr. Keith second Mon day of each
The Meigs Local Board renewed liability insurance · Riggs and Robert Snowden month at 7 p.m. at the Letart
reelected Wenden · Hoover · for its members. A lund of who served as temrrary Falls Community Hall. In
president for this year and ' $300 was set up to provide clerk. Rick Crow, th new January, however., the group
reelected Virgil King vice expenses for members to prosecuting attorne also will meet at 1:30 p.m. this
presldenl. As clerk. Mrs.
·
attended as did Supt. Dowler Wednesday.
'
and his assi stant, Dan .

'

ELBERFELD$-IN ·POMEROY

•

check on the exact cost and that possibly one of the courthouse
custodians could cover the windows.
.
Newly elected Sheriff James Ri-offitt asked for a budge! of
$1~7,580, abnost a 100 percent $crease over last year. Last
:z:ear's budget ·was approximately $83,000. Proffitt explained
!hal be would Uke to have six full time deputies and five
dispatchers. He stated he was relying heavily on the federal
PrOgrams to support the dispatchers. Proffitt also stated that ·
he intended to have all mille dispatchers around the clock.
One of the programs listed by Proffit! was the
''Furtherance of Justice" program which would cost _one-half
of his salary plus $6,000. This would be used for the purchase of
radios, TV for prisoners, informants and transporting
prisoners.
'
Frederick Crow, Ill, newly elected prosecuting attorney,
said the sheriff could use the money for about anything he
wanted.
.
·
The llterlff's.salary according to the appropriation, was
set at $13,000, deputies, cook, dispatcher and detective, ·
.. $68,500; six deputies, $43,680; collk, $5,000; jailer, $1,000, and
two dispatchers at $2.50 per hour ($10,40/i) .
Proffitt disclosed he will not live in the Sheriff's quarters
and that he was seriously consider~ havin~ food catered to
(Cq_ntinued on page 10)

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

Local news, in briefs

BRINGS YOU EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS

.Because We Furnish A

e

0

Hospital News

garbage containers are ln. a disgraceful condition.
Wells pointed out that township trustees are supposed to
clean up around the containers and Jones asked if the matter
had been d~ with the trustees. Wells admitted "not as a
group."
·
. •
•
Dave Spencer of the cdunty highway departineni
discussed the existing contract with Ohio Civil Service
Employes Assn. and informed the commissioners that the
engineer is responsible for negotiating it.
Spencer also discussed the budget which last year was
$750,000 and this year $950,000. Spencer said the highway fund
has a balance of $67,000.
Bill Wickline met with the commissioners In regard to the
grant of $80,000for housing rehabilitation, of which $18,000 was
received today. Of the $80,000, $16,000 •'ls to be used for an
environmental study which Jones questioned. Jones asked
what the $16,000 involved as It left "only $64,000' for the
project." He as](ed if the $16,000 is dictated by the governmentor by the engineering firm of Fleming, Page and Stolle.
The commissioners adjourned for lunch imd resumed the
meeting at I p.in.
Afternoon business included:
Robert Bowen, county superintendent of schools, told the
commissioners thst· the fonner Children's home had been

m

Margaret Smith dies on Sunday.

40%0FF

ARCTICS

~

Jones asked Martha Chambers, clerk, to prepare a ·list of pla~d by Columbia Gas CO., oo a gas allotment and asked if.
aU CETA employes ·ullder jurisdiction of the commissioners .. plasttc could be bought and placed over the windows at a co~ '
and the job each Is doing. Jones obServed that the county m the area of $25 to $30. The commissioners advised him tQ

The Meigs County Colllll1bllonera, in an aU~y meeting
Jones said he would ask Buehl what roads he intends to
Monday, approved 20 perctnt of last year's budget 10 cai'ry Improve, If there will he ·any major project in 1977, and what
. lhro\18h !he coming January.
·
.
equipment will need to be purchased in 1977.
tuchard E. Jone~, newly elected commlasloner, argued
He indicated lhat he will ask Buehl to assist the
against approving the budget for 1977 until he had time to · commissioners In develOPing a five year overall program for a
review all funds and lhe. coun1y'a financlalotructure,
hard surface road building program.
.
He suggested, and-the other comrnialoners, Henry Wells
Jones, stressing that It Is Important that expendib!res ·be
IU(d James Roush, agree!~ that 20 percent of the !9'18 general discussed with the engineer before the budget is approved,
fund budgetlltould be appropriated to pay billa and wages said, "We must have a concrete proposalfor 1977, and over !he
until i final appropriation can be made.
.
next five years."
·
The general fund in 1976 was $855,512.55, 20 per cent of this
Jones asked Wells foc more information on the agreement
la $131,102.51,
between the Bureau of Unemployment and the county in
Jones slated that any lrio:ease in salaries should be made locating in Pomeroy.
retroactive to Jan. 1 when the budget 1s approved. He also
Wells advised that the old commission had worked over a
r~ended that appropriation Information be kept 1n !he year to relocate the offiCe in Pomeroy but thai a large room
COIIU!lissloners' office at all times for review as necessary.
was needed. They intended at one time to use one of the rooms
The organizational meeting, according to the Ohio Revfse9 in the senior high building, but since the grant did not go
Code, will be held on the second Monday of January, Wells was . through for the VillaRe of Pomeroy to remodel the building,
president of the board last year.
they had agreed upon ·h building on Sycamore St. owned by
Bids invited for two pickup trucks, two dwnp trucks and a George Hobstetter.
passenger. car by the old commission al!o ran into a hitch ,
The rent is $200 a month, with the·county to pay half.
County f;ngineer Buehl w11J. be asked to Justify them.
HoweveF, Wells pointed out, this will have to have fmal
Jones-a~ that he would direct a letter today to county approval of the Bureau of Unemployment. Utilities are
engineer Wesley Buehl advising him that llie commissione~s included in .the $200 figure. Jones thought the Issue a very
wish to he Informed what Buehl had in mind on resurfacing Important one.
""
and repairing of roads
1977 as this plan will affect the ·
The proposed nursing home merits attentioo of the
appropriation for the county highway deparln].ent.
commissioners, it wd agreed.

Elsie Gorrell died Saturday

Arts, crafts
classes will
·MEN'S DRESS SHOES
begin Jan. 22
1
GROUP
RE_
G
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'21"
·
'18"
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4007
OFF
1
1 GROUP REG. '1219 • '9"

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~rea .

Mrs. Moreland dies in Newark .

50%0FF
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4o

children of a suburban Kenneth Fanta, 41, the
!koolifield family died in · father, spent an hour at the
Uleir be&lt;jrooms early today in h!&gt;spital after he was notified
a fire only five blocks from of !he fire.
the t.Qwn 's fire station.
It was the fourth multipleTireir .deaths brought' the death fire in the Chicago area
l!-&lt;l:ly toll due to fires in the since Cliristmas Eve. Twelve
, Chicago area to 32.
were killed in an apartment
· The Cook County medical house fire on Christmas Eve
examiner's office identified in Chicago's largely Spanish·
the dead as Michael Fanta: ~peak ·ing Pilsen
17, his sister Theresa, 13, and neighborhood on the Near
brothers Ronald, 16, and ·
twins Kevin and Michael, ll.
Firemen said the children,
apparent smoke inhalation
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Elsie
victims, were found in M. Gorrell, 83, of 609 Cross
bedrooms on the second floor St., Belpre, who died
·of Ule single-family unit.
_Saturday evening 8t the
Mrs. Yvonne Fanta, 33, Camden Clark Memorial
described by a spokesman at Hospital in Parkersburg
Loyqla Community Hospital following an extended illness,
in Maywood as ·the mother, was born in Jackson Cqunty,
w.as in serious ·t:ondition with W. Va.,a daughter of the late'
burns over 50 per cent of her Henry H. and Sarah C: ·wilson
body.
. Finch. Formerly of Coolville,
Brookfield Fire Chief she was a· member of the
Edward Gorniak said the Torch United Methodist
woman reported !he fire on Church and a resident of
Uie 911 emergency number Belpre the past six years.
about 1:30 a. m. and
Surviving are three sons,
apparently tr.ied to fight the Homer L., Litile · Hocking;
blaze before She jufnped from Howard H., Coolville and S-M
a window. When firemen Sgt. Kenneth E. , of Lompoc,
found her, her hair ~ntl C~ lif. ; three daughters, !)Irs.
clothing had been burne&lt;l and Florence Slm111ons. Coolvill•.
she was screaming her
children were still in the
house.
Hospital authorities ·said
LONG BOTTOM- Gladys
Moreland, 72, of 2669 Sharon
Valley Road , Newark, died
Sunday at Licking Memofial
H9spital in Newark.
She was born here Dec. II,
19Q4 a daughter of the late
Daman E. and Florence
Ridenour Curtis. She was a
member of the. Welsh :Hills
Baptist
Church , Granville
Arts and wilts classes
Grange
and
the Welsh Hills
taught by Tricia Adleta for
Garden
Club.
eight weeks will begin at the
Surviving are her husband,
Meigs Museum on Jan. 22.
~ade
A.Moreland, Newark:
Mrs. Adleta, a certified art
·
teacher, will offer adult
macrame, Monday 7 to 9
p.m.; adUlt arts and crafts,
· Tuesday , 7 to 9 p.m.; adult
Mrs. Margaret Ann Smith,
·drawing and painting, Route 3, Pomeroy, born Feb,
Wednesday, 7 to 9 p.m.; 7, 1882 at Minersville, died
junior and senior high Sunday at O'Bleness Hospital
drawing and painting, in Athens.
Tuesday, 4 to 5:30 p.m.;
Mrs. Smith had been a
junior and senior high arts patient at the Kimes Conand crafts, Satur.day, 10 to valescent Center in Athens
noon, and children arts and since suffering a fall "t
crafts, Saturday, I to 2:30 proximately four months ago.
p.m. ages 5 to II .
Her parents were · the late
A genera l meeting of David J. and Letitia Williams
persons interested is planned Morgan. A member of the
for the second week in Hemlock Grove' Christian
January. Additional in- Church, she also was a
formation may be obtained charter member of l{emlock
from Mrs. Adleta, 992-6040 or Grove Grange.
992-0651.
Preceding her In death ·
,besides her parents were two
sons who died in infancy; two
sisters, Mary, who died in
· early childhood,. and Blanch
Mercer, and a brother,
William A. Morgan.
'
Mrs. Smith was married
June 18, 1913 .to . James A.
Smith. They lived from th;l!
date until her recent illness at
the family home on Hemlock

•

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County budget held ·for -m ore review

--

' the parents were diVOrCed. Southwest Side. Nine were
CHICAGO (UP!) - Five

't

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Children die in fire.

"•

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Brown asked what was
going to be done ~bo~t the
cinders on !he streeto. Mayor
Andrews replied that since
councll turned down the $5
permissive tax the cinders
wouldstayonthestreetsunlil
spring. If businessmen sweep
up the cinders in .plies the
town crew will pick them up.
Chief of Pollee Jed Webster
issued the following report
for his department in
December:
The department.
investigated 22 accidents,
made 43 arrests, issuing ~55

parking tickets, collected
$3,~81 from the parking
meters drove 4,338 miles and
had !he car serviced twice.
Named lo the volunteer
fi.remen committee were
Ralph Werry, ch~irman and
Brown. Davis suggested that
Christmas tree pickup be set
for Thursday, Dec : 6. Council ,
also agreed to advertise for
bids for the pu rchase of a 1977
diesel engine-driven trador
loader-backhoe.
' Charles Legar, fire chief,
presented his report for the
department from July I

.
through Dec. 31, 1976.
In town calls, 10 and out of
town calls, 24.
Losses (Julyl thru Dec. 31)
totaled$!!6.B20onoutof town ;
$76,125 in town.
• Total miles driven each
vehicle, 239 out-of-town , 12 in
town.
Prime Buiiders Apartment
Fire loss was estimated at
$75,000 .
Total number of calls for
the year, 89 ; out of town, 59;
in town 30.
Total loss for the year
(Continued on page 10)

Deeper curtailment asked

by .Columbia Gas in Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Columbia Gas .of Ohio la
readY to Impose natural gas
curtailmenlo of up to 30 per ·
cent on about 10;000 small
industrial or commercial gas
customers. ·..
The 'firm is only walling for
permission fnnn the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio

396 small Industries that
would be affected . They
would be eatabllshed for the
9,~74 commercial users, he
said, on the basis of each's
highest five -month winter
comsumption and highest
seve n-month summer
consumption between 1971

~~~p~~~ayfor ~hat Middleport E·R
Affected would be all users
of 200,000 or more .cubic feet
of gas a month with tbe

unit called oui

,
exception of such customers
T h e Mi d d I e Por t
as· apartment buildings, Emergency Squad · went to
hospitals and n~ homes; the intersection of CR 5 and
that usegasfor human needs. SR 7at 10:11 a.m: Monday for
Last week, Columbia Susan Hughes; Cheshire, who
ll)lposed SO pef cent was Injured In an auto accurtallments on large cident. She was taken to .
commercial users including Veterans Memorial Hospital
schools that cannot use and later to a Parkersburg
alternate· fuels , Industries hospital. At 11 :09 a.m., the
that can COR\'ert to oil or fire department )l'ent to lhe
propanewerehltwlth-JOOper home of Mrs. Otho Karr,
cent cuts.
· Leading Creek Road, where
Columbia further asked smoke had filled ber house.
Monday that the P.l:JCO However, thete was no• lire .
reconsider curtailment .At 11.:21 a.m. Monday the
exemptions previously squad went to the Silver
granted food Jrocessoi's and Ridge Road for Fred Little,
bakeries in the state:
who was taken· to Holzer
Marvin E. White, chairman Medical Center.
of the board of Colwnbla Gas,
•
Slid the plan would go into
ASK TOWED
effect Immediately ·after
A marriage ·ucense was
PUCO granted afl!lroval and
customers were off,lclally issued to Keltb · Herbert
Petrie, 21, Pomeroy, and
notified.
He said natural gas alloca· Connie Kay Musser, )8, Rt. 2,
tioos are already aet for the Pomeroy.

and 1974.
· Thus, customers that have
conserved volunljlrily will not
be penalized, White said.
Under the latest plan, Columbia would cut back small
itidustrial and commercial
users a maximum of 30 per
cent in the winter and IP per
cent in the swruner. And no
curtailment would be
imposed
until
,large
commercial customers are
curtailed in exCess of 40 per
cent.
White said Columbia is not
now seeking to curtail..
supplies to ito 58,000 lndutrial
and coi1Jilercial customers
that use less than 200,000
cubic feet of gas a month. He
said the volume of gas
involved In supplying !hoses
customers was small and the
grolip is already conserving
voluntarily "in excess of 14
per cent ··
.'
UNIT CALLED
The Racine ER Squad was
called Saturday at 12:30 p.m.
for Beverly Powell, Portland,
a me&lt;llcal patient, who was
taken 'to Veterans Memotia)
Hospltai ..Sunday at 5:02p.m.
TI1elma Kiser, Racine, was
takep to Holzer Medi cal
Center and Monday at 10 :23
-a.m. Nellie Lemley, Racine,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

.

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2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pcrneroy, 0 .. l'llesdav. Jan I. 1977

Riffe calls for cooperation with_Gov. Rhodes
lly LEE LEONARD
UPI Stllteboaoe Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Bostoo, hu
keynoted the start of the 112th
Ohio General Assembly with
a call for cooperation With

vellled by Rhodes Ill 197~76,
Including consumer, labor
and voter registration bills
and legislative oversight of
govenunent agenCies
"As Speaker I appreciate
the s1gnlhcance of a
Republican governor and a

Republican Gov. James A
Rhodes
But at 'the same time the
Speaker, re-elected to a twoyear term at Monday's
opening sessioq, has served
notice
that
majonty
Democrats Wtll pursue Items

Democratic legislature, "
sa1d Riffe after the
Democrats formally took 6237 command of the House and
21-12 control of the Senate margw great enough to
overnde any gubernatorial
vetoes

New Congress primed for business
By GENE BERNHARDT

WASiflNGTON (UP!) W1th a new president ready to
move Into the Whlte House
and 1ts own new leaders
eager to take over, the 95th
Congress today laced the
need for qwck action on a
number of\pational problems.
The unusliBl hour of 2 p.m.
was set for the formal start of
the new Congress Most
openmg days beglll at noon
As soon as the new

CHRisTMAS GUESTS
Chr1stmaL[)ay guests o'
Mrs Edna SUlnmerf1eld were
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Parker, Syracuse, Mr and
Mrs Robert Parker, Bobby
and Kelll, Manetta ; Mrs
Roger Adams , daughter,
Lon , Ractne , Mrs Cec1l
Caldwell , Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Caldwell, Mr and
Mrs Rexal Summerfield, Mr
and Mrs Robert Murphy,
Amy Jo and Tracl, Reedsville , Mr and Mrs Jerry
Carter, Jeff and Jon, Rocky
Mount, N C., Mr and Mrs
Vernon Swartz, Tena, Rena ,
Robtn, Rex1e and Roger,
Coolville , Mr and Mrs
. ' Gerald Summerfield, Amber
and Michael, ·Parkersburg,
W Va andMr and Mrs Tom
Summerfield, Candi and
Wendy , Sandw1ch, Ill
TOP SERVICEMAN
WEST COLUMBIA, W Va.
- Coast {luard Boatswalll'S
Mate Second Class Jarold P.
Nickless, whose wife Ruby 1s
the daughter of Lorena Blake
of West Columbia, has been
selected as the Coast Guardsman of the Quarter aboard
the Coast Guard cutter
Chilula homeported at
Atlantic Beach, N C Nickless was chosen from among
all the enlisted personnel
assigned to the command,
and was Cited for his out·
standmg performance of
duty, profiCiency, leadership,

m11Ia!Ive and military
bearmg durmg the third
quarter. He j01ned the Coast
Guard m March 1969

Coogress gets under way, the
work
of
orgamzing
comnuttees m the House and
nnakmg new assjgnments to
on-going comrru!tees ln the

Mike Mansfield and his GOP
Senare will begin
Senate Democrats and counterpart, Hu,gh Scott, both
Republicans were chOOSlllg of whom retired.
The House has a new
new leaders today to replace
Massachusetts
Democratic Senate Leader Speaker,
Democrat Thomas O'Neill w
replace the ret~red t;arl
Albert of Oklahoma, and a
new Democratic leader, Jun
Wr1giit of Texas, to replace
O'Neill
.
Members were ready w
tackle pressmg ISsues
Junmy Carter's [I'Oposals lor
reorganiZing the
shares of Rich's, Inc, an government, hearl!lgs and
Atlanta Department store, dec1stons on Carte r ~s
and 956 shares ol Advance anticipated tax cut-robs proInvestors.
gram w boost the econom~ ·
'-Carter Farms, Inc , com· whether to veto Pres1dent
prislng all farm land owned Ford's order lifting gasolme
by members of the praci reilmgs - an order,
lmmediate family, will be which goeslntc effect m t5
retsmed by the trust but days unless overturned by
rented for an annual fixed House and Senate - and
amount The annual aftertax confll'lllll1g the new cabmet
Income to carter will not secretanes
exceed the amount he
The lawmakers also
receives durmg the first year, awaited Ford's final budget,
calendar 1977.
covermg proposed fiscal 1977
-Carter's Warehouse, a spending, and the outgomg
partnership cons1s11ng of PreSident's assessment of the
Jmuny carter, hiS brother State of the Umon
Billy and hiS mother Lillian,
will be e1ther leased for four
years for a f1xed amount, or
sold at the discretion of the
trustee
Coff~e too high
-No reports Will be made
to Carter from the trustee or
any tnvestment advisers says supermarket
other than rrununwn tax
Information and an annual
DAYTON, Ohlo (UPI)statement of the net asset
Liberal Markets Inc., one
value of the trust Such
of Southwestern Ohio's
Information, when received,
largest supermarket
will be made available to the
cbalns with 40 stores In the
public.
Dayton and Cincinnati
- All salanes, profits and
areas, Monday urged lis
direct or mdlrect benefits
customers to quit buying
from the farms or warehouse
coffee
will be terrrunated as of Jan,
In 300,000 flyers to be
20, 1977, e~cept as described
distributed to residences
above
Monday and Tuesday,
- The trust agreement will
Liberal called for con·
reqwre that mvestment deci·
sumers
to •~ llch to tea,
swns be delegated to an
cocoa,
natural
juices and
mdependent mstltutwn 1!
"anything
but
coffee "
l!lvestment assets,.at~Ier than
The
flyers,
whlcb
wlll
land, exceed $200,0J)Il.
also
be
reproduced
In
- An 1n d e p e n d e n t
ne\lspaper
ads,
said
that
char~ta ble foundatiOn will
l!laliagemenl of
the
receive
contr~but10ns,
supernuirket
cbaln,
con·
outright ownership of a book
sldered coffee prices to be
of speeches soon to be
"
ridiculous " but added,
published, and royallles from
"we
will continue to sell
"Why Not the Best," hiS
colfee
at the lowest
autobiography. The prunary
possible price but we would
purpose of the foundation will
Uke you to help us bring the
be to establish a future
price down by refusing to
library to house pres1denual
buy It "
papers, documents and
memorabilia.

Peanut business
goes to trustee
By, HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
PLAINS, Ga (UP!) President-elect Jimmy
Carter announced plans
today to transfer to a trust his
mterest Ill the family-owned
peanut farm and warehouse
and sell hiS 1,056 shares of
stock before the l!lBugural.
Carter's arrangements to
turn hiS holdings over to a
trustee were des1gned to
msulate hun from any
financ1al gain or loss from
any of the peanut· company
operations and av01d tbe
appearance of a conflict of
-l!'lerest while he IS [l'eSldent.
lJnder the plan, the trustee
could lease or sell the
warehouse but only rent the
fann Press Secretary Jndy
Powell explamed that carter
"was not willing to g~ve the
trustee the nght to sell h1s
fannland," which has been m
the family more than five
generations
•
At the same time, the
pres•dent..,lect announced
str1ct
gu1dehnes
for
disclosure of sources of
mcome and divestitures to be
made pubtic by hiS top level ·
appointees shortly after the
ln8uguration
The appol!ltees a1J;o must
promiSe to refram for two
years from takmg a poSlllon
m private Industry m an area
tn which they had jutimlictwn
while m government, or to
make any conta.ct related to
their government serl'lce.
The President..,lect said he
is taking the folloWing steps
- All hiS .mterest m
Carter's Warehouse and
Carter Fanns, Inc , his
father's estate and all
property except h1s private
home and personal items will
be transferred to a trust With
mcome or prlllClpal available
tD Carter only m cash
-All common stock 1s
bemg sold, cons1stmg of 100

SCHULTZ IS READY
RACINE - A1nnan Paul
D Schultz has graduated
from the U S Alf Force's
a!fcraft maintenance
SJl€Cialist course conducted
by the Air Trammg Com·
AUNT IS DEAD
mand at WIChita Falls, Tex
LATHRUP VILLAGE ,
LONG
BOTTOM - Mrs
The son of Mrs Shirley
Mich (UPI) - Jmuny Carter
Schultz of Rt 2, Racme, he IS Ralph Keller, Rt 3, Pomeroy ts lD - and so, tts creator
a 1976 graduate of Southern and Floyd D. Weber, Long hopes, 1s the ''Goober cut "
Bottom, rece1ved word on
High School
•
The "Goober cut" IS the
New Year's Day of the death
bramchild of Frank Agosta, a
of thetr aunt, Mrs J os1e suburban Detro1t men's half
Wolle, Kl!lgston Mrs Came
stylist, who hopes the peanut·
ENJOY FLORIDA
.Swartz, East Mam St ,
Mr and Mrs Tom Kelly Pomeroy, IS her only sur· Inspired style will set· a
and children Janel!, Tom VIVlng sister. Half brother,
and Lori Jean, Middleport, Garrett Worthen, Ca nton ,
spent Christmas m Largo, and Mrs Garnet !ornes, cut" " shapea like a peanut
Fla with her parents, Mr Loughman, Fla , a half· - specifically, a J1mmy
and Mrs Vmcent Dabo The Sister, also survive Funeral Carter peanut
Agosta, preSident of
Kelly farruly returned home sernces are to be held today
, Creative Ha1r Replacement,
Saturday
at Circleville
sa1tl he came up with the new

Goober Cut has arrived

na~;~~~r~:~~~~:i~et;~!ber

style m honor of peanut
rarmer Carter's upcommg
lllauguration
"It will g1 ve Amencan
males an opportumty to
express

what the y

seekmg -

are

a new, better

deal," satd Agosta

"And

show confidence m the leader
the nation has chosen "
The "Goober cut" made lis
debut on Carl Steger, a
Detroit area sm~er and
p1arust who agreeably went
through a 30-mmute styling
session m Agosta's Lathrup
Village salon

DR. LAMB

Skin condition is chronic

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By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB -I have
seborrheic dermatitis All of
a sudden, four years ago, my
face broke out tn a rash It's
between my eyebrows, but
mostly on both Sides of my
nose
At that tlll1e 11 only broke
out occasiOnally Lately It
bothers me a lot I can tell
before 1! starts to break out
lyly fa ce •tches, and the nen
thing 1t gets red With oily $Ca·
ly patches My family doctor
sa1d 11 was hereditary and
gave me some cream for 1!
The cream doesn't seem ID
help much now. Please leU
me wbat can be done about
this. At times I hale IQ even
go out because of my red
face. 1 " ash my scalp
rEW •hrl, othS.•lsun
~ rt&lt;;ADER - This is
" uruc condition, and your
rcatment will have to be
urected toward controlling
&gt;e problem rather than cur·
ng It permanently!

It ts caused by overactlVIIY
of the sebaceous glands, w1th
an excess produchon Iii
sebum The term seborrheic
means this, and denrutitlS
merely means inflammation
of the skin
The les1ons are as you
descnbe them w1th red or
scaley spots m the areas lllvolved These spots can be
qwte troublesome•. They may
extend to tiie eyebrows, the
s1des of ~ nose, over tbe
ears, behind the ears and
may mvolve the scalp Ac·
tuaUy, dandruff IS one type of
the disorder. The reddened
spots of inflammation may
be over the center of the

breast bone (sternum) ,'
under the arms, between the
shoulder blades or m the
grotn area The spots may be
covered w1th yeilpw1sh,
greas)' scales. And they do
ltdi
Tbe d1sorder may be
assocwted With acne, but 1! IS
different m that 1t 1s more
chrome m some Instances.

The greasy scaly lesiOns are
dlStmct as opp osed to
blackheads, whiteheads and
pustules To g1ve you a better
1dea about hqw sebaceous
glands work, I am sending
you The Health Letter
nwnber 11-2, Acne Can Be
Treated It deaLs with the rest
of the problems not covered
here - the common acne
without the dermatitis
Others who want this ln·
formation can send 50 cents
With a long, stamped selladdressed envelope for 11
Just send your letter to me m
care of this newspaper, P 0
Box 1551 Rad1q City Station,
New York, NY 10019
The treaunent must be
directed toward the areas of
mvolvemenl Try to prevent
01ly half by frequent sham·
poos. Selsun 1s used for this·
purpose 1! there Is any
evidence of dandruff. If 11
doesn't do the JOb you can use
a f&lt;Ir shampoo such as
Sebutone, Polyear locon If
the scalp Itches, you can usc

a hydrocort1oone m a llqwd
base such as Barbseb or 'l'ex·
acort Scalp LotiOn. Do not
use any greasy substances on
your hair.
' You should dehmtely NOT
use any greasy products on
your face Your problem IS
too much grease m the form
of sebum That salve your
doctor IS giVIng you must be
In a waler base or 11 w1ll not
help
ll&lt;rnot use any greasy or oi·
ly make-up preparahon
whatsoever Keep your face
clean With frequent washing,
and try to keep 1t dry and free
of grease or s~m oils. In fact
you will be better off not to
use anything Oil your face but
nuld soap and water - two or
three tunes a day and a water
based salve that yollr doctor
may prescribe for you ..That
!nay be what he Ls g1Vtng you.
Tbe Ill eas of mvolvement
may be treated With
Hydrocortisone salve, but a
nuol'lna ted one should not tiC
used on the face

"I do not accept as
accurate the ootlon that thiS
legislature 18 per se vetoproof. I do accept the notion
that the governor and the
l~glslature
must work
lilgel.her wpromote the com·
mon good."
Riffe sa1d enaclment of a
state budget ''will be the
Stngle most important" task
of the session. 111e said the
budget would be "responsible
and responsive to Ohio's
needs "
Riffe said the budget would
emphaSize support for public
education. "It will also
"r"enect a requirement that the
"''lxecuti ve carry out the
mtont
ol
legislative
legislallve enactments.: be
said.
The Speaker sa1d otheL
Democratic priOrities would
be collective bargaining for
public employes, an energy
policy for Ohio, liberalized
voter ._, regiStrahon and

Fellows_hip
-.
'to meet
' Chapter of the
The Meigs
Women 's Aglow Fellowship
will hold 1ts monthly meetmg
Thursday, Jan 13, at 7 p m
at the Me1gs Inn
Speaker Will be the Rev
William Morr1s. pastor of the
Assembly of God Church m
Manetta. He will be ac·
comparued here by h1s family
who will present mus1cal
numbers

Reservation s for the
meetmg, open to all area
women, must be m by Jan 10,
to Glor1a Johnson, 992-5345,
June Baker, 949·2723, Joyce
Hoback 949-2325, or Judy
Jones , 446-0946, m the
Gallipolis area
Dmner, at $3 25 per person,
will be served at 7 p m with
the public mv1ted to the nondenom inatiOnal meetmg
Doors Will open at 6. 30 p m

Radfords give
holiday party
Mr and Mrs Wilham
Radford entertamed with a
New Year's E've pa'rty at
their Pomeroy R D home
Games were played with
prizes gomg to Harold
Blackston and Judy Radford
Attendmg were Mr lllJd Mrs.
Wendell Jeffers, Tracey and
Jun, Mr and Mrs. Edgar
Abbott, Mr and Mrs Paul
Rice, Miss Judy Radford,
Barry Marshall, Mr and
Mrs Roland Radford and
Sally, Mrs. Lucille Leifheit,
Mr and Mrs Bruce Zirkle,
Rhonda and Susan, Mr and
Mrs Jim Conkle, and Mr and
Mrs Harold Blackston, and
Mr and Mrs Donald PullliiS,
Amy and Kim of Columbus,
who were weekend guests of
the Radford

Carel~ne
mterventlon,

•

•

In·

formation and referral
telephone hothne servmg
Me1gs County, will begm 1ts
wmter tra~n~ng program for
new volunteers on January
12 Careltne IS a place people
can call at any hour of the day
wtth problems, concerns or
just to talk CitiZens can also
use Carehne for general
mfonnation and as a place to
fmd out about soc1al serv1ces
available tn Meigs County
People Interested tn taking
Carelme tratmng should call
carellne at 992-7502 The cost
of thi' mtensive sixty-hour
course will be $5
The Carellne trammg
course takes six weeks and
will meet Wednesday
evemngs and some Satur·
days The course consists of
two parts , a series of large
group lectures and a number
of small group role-play
practices
Lectures, wh1ch are glvim

seSSion

The other two early bills
proVIde for acqulfl!lg motor
vehicle license plates by mail
and protect homeowners
from double payments m
home unprovement and

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RlafMAN
UPI Sporll Edltcr
ws ANGELES (UPI) ~ He sat all alone on a beat-up
wooden bench near lhe door of the dressing room, completely
despondent emotionally bankrupt, not wanUng to talk to
anyone aoo'ut the enormous empuness inside him.
Al Davis looked as II he had lost his best friend, only it was
worse yet for AI DaVlll because hls team, the Oakland Raiders,
had gotten murdered in a football game. not just any game,
either, but the Super Bowl game
Vmce Lombardi's Green Bay Packers'had taken apart the
Raiders and groWld them mto small pieces, 33-14, in Super
Bowl II m Muum and as AI Oavls sat utterly depressed now ln
his team's Orange Bowl dressing quarters, an acquaintance df
his tried to cheer hlm up a UtUe
•
"Your ream played as good as it could,'' be sald to Davis. "It
isn't the end of the world, There's always next year." .
A1 DaVIS knew the guy was trying to be sympathetic, but he
still wouldn't buy what he had said
"What was so good about 1t?" the Raiders' boss wanted w
know. "Next year IS a long way off."
A1 Davis never dreamed how far off lt would turn out 1D be
Nine years have gone by since the last time the Raiders were
ln the Super Bowl and now that !hey're back in 1t again, as
fa vorites this time ovet the Minnesota Vikings in Supe; Bowl
XI At Pasadena, Al DaVlll isn't so sure this is the culmination
of his team's long Wilt.
"Right now, .we're 15 and I for the season and- we've
dominated professional foothalllll terms of games won ever
the'past 10 years but if we don't beat Minnesota Sunday, what
have we actuiilly' accomplished -&lt;~othing, " he says.
" I don't feel that confident I'm not saytng I'm pessimistic
about our chances, but Mmnesota 1s gomg to be very tough for
us. The Vikings aren't like the Steelers, whom we know much
better We've only played the Vikings twice before. They're a
team we haven 'I been exposed to the way we were the Steelers
They have certam strengths we don't like to see and they're
golllg to present a pro~lem. Nobody has to tell you about their
quarterback, Fran Tarkenton, and Chuck Foreman IS one of
the best runntng hacks you have around today.
"I'm oot trymg to say they have a better team than we have.
We have a ftne ream. Not a great team, but a courageous one
We're not emotional We're more a hard-nosed team. John
Madden does such a tremendous job With all the players. If we
play our game, we can beat anyone, but I'm nol going to stand
here and tell you I know how Sunday',s game IS going to come
out Nobody does "
If you read some degree of frustration m what Al Davis has
to say, you are reading hlm right
•
The Oakland Raiders pr1de themselves m bemg one of tbe
finest orgamzations m professional football Nine times m the
last 10 years, they have won either thell' division or the AFL
title and over the last 14 seasons they have won 141 games,
which averages better than 10 every season, yet as Davis says,
they haven 't really accomplished anythlllg because they've
never won the world' chlimplons\np
"We 've passed every poSSible test but one, the b1g one," he
says "In 1974, we had an outstandlllg team. We really thought
we had the best ream Ill football, but we played Pittsburgh,
they beat us m the champiOnship game and they go on to
become the Super Bowl champs
"We f1gured 'We'll get 'em next year,' but the next year"""
got to Three RIVers Stadiwn, the flOld IS ley, they beat us, u;.
10, m the champiOnship game and Oakland goes home again a
loser
"We wilt for 'em agam m 1976 We opeo the season and It 's
our first chance to play 'em on a dry field. We beat 'em, 31-2ll,
and we don't even have 24 hours to enJOY the victory when
we're accused of 'd1rty play' . of havlllg a 'criminal element."
"Well, we stopped all that talk m our last game with them a
week ago. It was a good, clean ball game and the best team
won 11
--It won't ltll'1an anythl!lg, though, if that same team doesn't
beat the Vikings SUnday

remodelmg contracts
Rhodes 1s expected to g1ve
a "State of the State"
message Wtthln the next two
weeks - an address m which
be WtU chart h1s hopes lor
leglS!al10n m the area of
industnal· dev elopment
l!lcentives
The House was ID
reconvene today at 1p m. and
the Senate one-half hour
later

by professions ls 10 the
commuruty, deal with such
top1cs as cnsls intervention
and
listening
sk11ls,
alcoholism, drugs, sexuality,
Interpersonal problems, legal
con cerns, depressJOn and
suiCide Small groups consist
of Six to e1ght trainees who
meet "eekly with two ex·
penenced Carehne volun·
leers for role-play practiCe of
possible Carelme calls
Tramees then work an mtem·
ship answering the phones
With an experienced volun·
teer before takmg a regular
Carelme shift.
Careline IS funded by the
Gallla · Jackson • Meigs
Commuruty Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
Services 648 Board. Carelme
volunteers are ready ID asSist
callers With the1r concerns, to
provide up to date lnformahon .al&gt;put available
services or just to talk. The
service ls entirely free and
confidential. The Carehne1
number Is 992-7502

mEDALY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO'I11E

, INTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHF...8TERL TANNEHILL
Esec Ed
ROBERTHOEFLII,;H
Cl1y Editor
P!tltlished dally except Saturday
by The Ohio VaUey Publishing Comany, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
4f.t71l9 Buslne.u Office Plxme 9922156 Editorial Phone99'2. 2157
Second class p~JSlage pa1d at
Pomeroy, Oltio
NKtiorw~l advertislll£ representative Ward · Grilftth Company, In·
c , Bottinelli and Gallagher Dlv,
~7 Thfrd Ave, New York, NY~
10017

1·- - - - - - -..
SOMETIMES
WORDS SIMPLY
AREN1 ENOUGH.
BUT FLOWERS

SAY IT ALL

They are umversally

••

understood and
always appreciated.
The memory
of flol'(ers
lasts and lasts.

·fRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE .

773-5592

4.

Hermln,CJtate

Mason, W.Va.

I

II
\I
I

~

L~ --... --,
r-----.-

~nUntJ , L:lldW~p!JI ••rvdl.:J V1 1v ., .. u~otua.j , ,~e,u. 1, -''' i

Dons top UPI cage poll! 51,.:~\ ;,;_~~cet?::~r:~!:.~~:/:;:~~
•

NEW YORK (UPI) - Tbe
last time the UniverSity of
San Francisco achieved the
nallon's top basketball
ranking it's center was
named Bill Russell
Unbeaten (15.0) San
FranCisco achieved Its first
No. I raUng ln 21 years
Monday
tn
balloting
conducted by United Press
International The Dons
picked up No I votes from 21
coaches on the UP! raUngs
boards
The Dons took advantage of
defeats w Michigan, last
week's leader, and Notre
Dame, No. 2 last week, to
climb atcp the rankings as
they beat St. John's (NY.),
Arizona Stale and Houston to
collect 369 pomts from the
coaching board.
Kentucky, wh1ch upset
Notre Dame, 102-78, moved

from seventh place to second,
receiVIItg 14 first,Place Yotes
and 319 points. Michigan,
after losing to ProVIdence ln
·double overtime, collected
three first'9lace votes, but
dropped to third place with
278 points.
Cincinnati received tile
other four first-place votes to
climb to No. 4, replacing
Alabama, which dropped to
UCLA moved up two places
Into sixth place, replacing
North Carofina, now seventh.
Notre Dame slid to No R,
Nevada-Las Vegas remained
No 9 and Arizona moved intc
the No. 10 spot
San
Francisco,
a
sophomoredomlnated team,
ranks .among the top 10
offenSive teams in the
country, but does not have a

j'

~ .4...outs.vtll e

t

United Preoslillerllatlonal
No one could blame Tiffin
coach George Janson if he
refuses to take his Dragons
back to bayou country for
awhile.
- The Dragons wound up a
three-game tr1p acrosk
Lllulsana Monday night,
dropping a 107·79 decisiOn w
Southern University.
On Sunday, Janson's squad
was beaten 11().92 by xavier
(New Orleans) and last
Wednesday the Dragons lost
to Nicholla State of Louisiana
11Hl4.
However, Janson must of
known before the trip the
Dragons, oow ~9. would have
the1r work cut out for them
smce Southern Univer~ty
sported a nifty 11-1 record,
Nicholls State hado't been
beaten at home ln 15 previOUS
games and Xavier had lost
only SIX of 13 starts th1s
season.
Janson brought hiS squad
home today and after a day o!
rest the Dragons were scheduled to take to the road
agam, playing at Def1ance
Wedilesday mght.
Frankie Sanders was
Southern's big gun Monday
mght, scormg 29 points In the
shootout Sanders was helped
by guard Tommy Green and
forward Coll(e Davis, who
scored 19 pomts each
Tifftn was led by Mike
Bocciern with 20 pol!lts and
Steve Haralson With 12
Southern, now 9-1, was
slugg1sh durmg the operung

m
"

7 NortH Car Oitna (6 l l
8 No tre Dame ~ 7 l)
9 Nevada Las Vega s ( 10 1)
10 Arizona ( 10 1)
1 t Marquelle (7 21
12 M mnesota (9 0 1
13 Wake Forest (9 1J
u Prov1 dence ( 8 2)
Clemson (9 1)

63

60
56
28

1;

(7 2)

13

i

17 M1ssourl (9 21
\8 (!te l Maryland 19 1)
18 Ote l Purd.pe (6 Jl
20 Utah {9 3)

1

9
6

CHICAGO (UP!)
SAN DIEGO ( UPI) Khalilah Tolona has been ' Agent Michael Trope said
granted a d1vorce from Monday he will represent
heav. ywei ght boxing Ricky Bell a Heisman Trophy
champion Muhammad Ali by 'from the University of
Cook ~unty Circwt Court. Califorma and ''there's a
Under the decree Signed good chance BeU could end up
last week, All's ex-wife will at Tampa."
receive custody of the
Trope, who has represented
couple's four children, the four of the past ftve HelSinan
family home, two cars and an Trophy winners, also
apartment building on the "represents Tony Dorsett ,
city's South S1de.
Pl ttsburgh ' s Re1sman
She also is to receive an Trophy winner, and Marvin
undisclosed amount of Powell, Southern california's
alimony for the next five offens1ve tackle He said he
years She listed desertion as will offer their serVIces as
th~ reason for seeking the
free agents to the highest
bidder among NFL clubs
divorce

fll SO

Three months
Ebewbere $2111 00 year, Six
fl3 ~ "Three months,
Subscrlpt.lon price Incl udes

Times-Sentinel

~·

0

$7 00

months
$7 50
Sunday

The Odds &amp; Ends Shop
MANY UNUSUAL

By Greg Bailey
The annual FISh and Game Heanng for
Wildlife Distnct Four IS scheduled January
30 at I p m. That's on a Sunday , the place 1s
the district office Ill Athens
Local sportsmen's clubs will receive ·a '
copy of the 1977 law proposals There are
very few changes from 1976, but one maJor
one Is this (and lthmk it 's a good one,) "All
deer must be tagged and checked by noon '
the day after the deer was killed." For those
of you who don't know the purpose, 11 will
stop hunters who kill a deer the f1rst or
second day of the season, hide 1t, and con·
tmue to hunt the rest of the week
Crossbow season came m on Jan 1 and
will continue through January 22 Game
profector Andy Lyles ii rges cro ssbow
hunters to be careful as these weapons are
very dangerous By the way, the season
came about by havmg no opposition at last
year's hearing So plan to attend this year's
and vo1ce your opm10n
Andy also wants to express his all'
preciation to landowners and hunters for a
safe deer season Only one minor accident
• was reported, and that 's amazmg considering the record number of hunters who
took to the field.
Beaver trapping season comes lh the
15th and contmues one month ' You're
limited to three traps The season llmlt on
the rodents is three. One proposal is to ra1se
next year's llll111 to slx
Speaking of trapplllg; Afldy and the
SIAlre men assure me that 1977 will see an
antl·trapplng bill on the statewide ballot
Now's the tune for sportsmen to begin

Ph GF GA

" 18 s 37

" ' 134

13 20 6 32 126 144

n

Colo,.do
10
6 26 107 136
Vancouver 11 27 3 25 111 164
Mmnesora
7 :n 9 13 101 ISS
Wales Con ference
Noms DIVI&amp;~on
W l T Pts GF GA
Monl real
79 s 6 64 192 90
Pd lsbur gh 16 11'1 6 3B 122 130
Los Angeles 13 11'1 ~ 0 36 125 124
Delrod
13214 30 113 139
washing In 11 23 4 26 101 152
Adams D1..-ts1on
w L T Ph GF GA
Buffalo
24 9 4 52 139 91
Boslon
23 12 3 49 1&lt;1 8 119
Toronto
18 t6 6 42 149 133
Cleveland
1112 7 ?9 114 144
Monday ' s Results
Montreal 6 Phil&lt;ldelphta 4
\Only game schedul ed)
Tuesday's Games
Detro1t at Washmglon
Van couver at Ptllsburgh /
Los Ang el es at St Louts
(Only games scheduled )
Wednesday's G&lt;tmes
Ph! l&lt;'ldelphta at NY Ranger s
Van couver al At lanta
Los Angeles at Mmnesot a
Buffalo at Ch1c ago

ml!lutes but pulled away to a
57-37 halftime lead and con·
trolled the game the rest of
the way.
In ,another out-of-state contest, Western Illinois edged
Akron 88-84 ln a close game
marked by 41 turnovers.
Guard Brad Bainter hit five
of seven free throws ln the
last 1 18 of the game to
ensure VIctory for ,Western.
Western's David Morgan
scored 26 points to take game
scoring honors while Bamter
added 22
~~;oand~,a~~:~~~~~~
Akron was paced by Jolul
(Only gamE-s schedu led } .HarfiSOn With 18 points and
lnternat•onat Hock ey
VIC Butler With 14.
L eague Standm gs
The losing Zips cnrrurulted
Untted Pnoss tnt ernaltonal
North
14 of its 22 turnovers durmg
w I .t pi s gl ga
the llfst half But the team hit Ka lamazoo
19 13 3 41 161 127
on 47 per cent of its shots
17 15 1 d 1 15E 145
from the field, to take a 41-40 Sagtnaw
Fl1nt
18 15 A 40 I SB 133
lead at the mtermlsston
Port Huron
16 18 4 36 1]6 14 5
In other games, Point Park Muskegon 15
17 5 35 140 15?
( Pa ) whipped Steilbenville
South
w 1 I pi s gl ga
88-78 and Malone downed Dayton
18 17 I 37 151 15 1
croSstown rival Walsh 711-71 m Toledo
16 11 5 37 153 165
the flfst round of the Canton Columbu s 15 17 7 37 ld9 155
14 19 6 34 136 169
Jaycees Hall of Fame Tour- Ft Wayne
Monday 's Re sult s
~ No games sch e elul ~ d
nament
Tue sday 's Games
Host Malone timgles w1th
No ga m es sch edu led
Pomt Park for the champiOn·
Wednesday's Games
ship tonight alter Walsh and Mu sk egon at Day ton
'(!. avn e at To ledo
Steubenville meet for Fori
Fl• nl at Ka ta m a1oo
P or t Hur on a t Columbu s
consolation honors.

.

BASKETBALL

The new 1976 tax law .1s full of changes
New credits . new deducttons new
rules that affect you and every taxpayer
But Block people are ready to H'elp save
you money by tak1ng every allowable
deduction and credit.

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 EAST MAIN
I) '

pPen t A M 6 P M Wee1ulays, 9 l Sat
Phone 992 379l
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

PHOENIX, Arlz. (IJPI) Funeral HI'Vices wW be held
Thuraday in San Mateo,
Calif., for DMny Frlltlla, a
relief pitcher for tile
Milwaukee Brewers ldiJed in
a weekend dune buggy
accident.
Frisella, 30, led the
Brewers ln saves with nine
last seaaon He bad _a ~2
record and a 2.74 earned run
averaae.
He started the seaaon with
St. Louia but wu traded w
the Brewers in June. Before
joining St. Loul.l, FrileUa wu
with the New York Metl, the
Atlanlll Brave~ 111d the Sin
Diego PadrM.
Frisella
was killed
Saturday when the dune
OOU&gt;' in which be wu ncJinC
overturned on a street nortb
of the city ilmita. Maricopa
County sheriff's deputill 11ld
the driver, JameaWeiley, 34,
Phoenix, loat control of the
vehicle. Wealey waa not
seriously Injured
Survivors
Include
Friaella'a widow, Pamela; a
son, J11on; hia father,
VIncent FriaeUa, and a
brother .

Its

time.
Elsewh ere , Syra cuse
In other games by top- downed Cornell, 9l-61, South
ranked team s, No 2 carolina beat Nebraska, &gt;IKentucky edged Georg~a , 64- 49, Tennessee defeated
59 m overtime, No 5 Vanderbilt , 73-69, Florida
Alabama beld off Auburn, 7''11!.' topped Mississippi State, 97·
· 71, No 9 Nevada-Las Vegas 75, Washington State beat
beat Colorado, 113-91, Mar- Idaho, 110-66, and Vlf~"
'"
eo-·
quetw downed Georgia Tech, routed Davidson, 67-41!

ftrst defeat last Thursday.

102-78
I d
" sru tomght that there 's
a lot of magtc m Notre

Da~w : s name,·; Pr;mceton
Coach Pe•·
Carr'il said ""u"[
,...
o
Ulere's some real mag1c m
Prmceton's name too The

way we handled the press
With a mmunum amount of
turnovers (16 compared to 26
for Notre Dame ) was tt And

defense - we've always
~yed good defense"
Prmceton broke a 23-ZJ tie
by outscormg Notre Dame,
12-2, m the last seven mmutes
of the first half Prmceton's
defense, which held Notre
Dame 23 pomts below 1ts
seaso n scormg average ,
forced 17 turnovers m the
fi~ half
•
~~ we have no excuse for the
loss," Notre Dame Coach
Digger
Phelps
sa~d
14
Seventeen turnovers m the
first hall-you can't do that
on the road Obvwusly they
outplayed us .. "
Forward Bob Slaughter
scored 19 potnts to lead a '
balanced Prmceton offense
that mcluded five scorers m
double figures
Frank
SoWlllSlti, who made all SIX of
his pttempts from the held
and
converted
SIX
consecutive free throws ,

wtn
the
nallonal
championship was Syracuse
Ill 1959
The P1tt Panthers, 12-0 for

Final grid ratings

®

Block should do your taxes.

-

There is something special
about the tradition of :O.otre
Dame But there was notliing
spooal about fhe way the
lr1sh played basketball'
Monday mght at Prmceton
Prm~ton
used its own
... ,...
tradition of strong defense
ant!i good ballh••Idling
to
""'f
upset eighth-!'anked Not~e
Dame~ 76-62, handmg the
Irish thetr second stratght
loss after seven VlctDnes
K t k g
ep uc y ave N otre D arne

Dame with 15 point:I, followed

by Toby Kmght with 14

Pro gridders
prepare for
Super Bowl
By JOE CARNICELLI •
UPI Executive Sports Editor
WS ANGELES (UPI) The combatants have arnved
and the stage IS set for the
annual hoopla known as
Super Bowl week
The
AFC champion
Oakland Raiders and .the
NFC champion Mmnesota
Vi~lllgs arrived Ill Southern
California Monday rught and
will take to the field lc.day ln
preparatiOn for Sunday 's
Nallonal Football. League
title game at the Rose Bowl m
nearby Pasadena
But 11le the Raiders and
Viklllgs ere en route, the b1g
news w bemg made by a ~
year-&lt;&gt; ld
Los Angeles
attorney who has Issued a
direct challenge to the NFL
power structure
Michael Trope, who rose w
national prommence two
years ago w1th h1s

Pitt captures UPI grid crown

-

waythenew
tax law can
save you money,
we'll fmd it."

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Sunday 1·6.

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NHL Slandongs
•v Un•to•
P•monoernotoonal
Campbell Conterence
Patnck oo m lon
Ph oiO
~ T P;: ~!'. ~e~
NY''''""", • 68 50 '" n
Alla nla
18 1&lt; 7 43 126 112
16 15 lO' 42 150 139
NV Rangers
Smythe DIVI
SIOn

NEW YORK (UP!) - In overwhelming selection m
the end, there was no doubt m the final VOilllg by the UPI
board of coaches
the coaches' ml!lds
The last Eastern team to
Pittsburgh is No ' 1 ln
college football
'l'he
UmverSity
of
Pittsburgh, a national power
m the 1930s and 1940s which
feU on hard times, became
NEW YORK (UP I J - Th e
the first Eastern team to win tmal Unt ted Pr ess lnternat 1onal
orgaruzmg agamst this movement Keep the national coUege football Boar d of Coa ch es top 20 coll ege
•earn s wtt h l tr st p lace
your eyes and ears open as I'll be havmg champiOnship smce 1959 football
votes m par enTheses
Pomts
more mfo on th1s topic.
Monday when 1t was the Team
1 P1ll sburgh (391 (1 2 OJ
416
A major problem ls developmg ln the
1 Soulhern Caldorn a (3) ( 11 1J
376
trapping circle. Due to the high pr1ces o( fur
• 3 M 1ch1gan ( 10 1 )
258
and the trap! themselves, the number of
4 Hous1on f 10 7)
24 9
College
Ba
sketball
Re
sulh
163
5 Oh10 Sta te ( 9 2 1)
trap thieves IS mr.reaslng Shame, shame'
By Un•led Press tnternat1onal
6 Oklahoma {9 2 1)
•
158
That's I~S\ anotll&lt; r spea1· the anti people can
Su~na r ournament
7 Nebraska (8 3 1J
112
( FTtrst Round )
throw A ~'Uy whl legally goes after a fur·
B Texa s A&amp;M (10 2J
99
Ok la C•IY 76 Amer1can U 68
97
9 Alabama 19 Jl
bearer deserves our respect
North easlern 78 Siena 76
10 Geor gta r102 1
B6
East
But another problem that really burns
II Maryland f 11 I)
80
De tro t 103 Bu ffal o 74
77
12 Notre Dam e (9- J t
me t:I you guys who call yourselves trappers Penn
Sl 98 Colgat e 59
and give the rest ol us a bad name I'm Pnnceton 76 Notre Dame 6'1
I sl and 70 La Sal le 61
speaking of you who don't lfap legally My Rhode
51 Fran Pa 55 FDU R ld 53
dog had been missing for two days, and as I Syrac.use 93 Corn el l 61
suspected , he was ln a trap The trap d1d not W Va 11 2 Buck nell 71
South
have the owner's name , and judgmg by the Alabam a 74 Auburn
71
tracks tn the snow, the trap hadn 't been Ctla del 67 Sle tson 65
Coastal Ca r n N c Meth 6'1
checked for at least three days.
Eck erd 63 Haverford 62
I found another trap, this llme a path Flortda 97 M1SS1Ss pp1 51 75
Kentucky 64 Georgta 59 ot
· set The law distinctly states that the trap La
Grnge 73 Auburn Mntgmry
must carry the owner's name and address, 67
path sets are lllegal, and trap must be LOUISV! 78 Flonda 51 75 ol
NBA Standings
LSU 75 MISS SSIPPI 68
Bv Untted Press lnternal•onat
checked at least every 30 hours. Whoever McN
eese St 68 New Orlean s 64
Eastern Conference
and whatever you are, don't call yourself a Mem phts S! 82 Sthrn M•ss 78
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
Mtd Tenn Sl 59 Mrcr Ga ~ 5
W l Pel
GB
sportsman.
N C St 107 N C A&amp; T 46
Phtladelphta
19 14 576
The final Meigs County deer tally was N chlls Sl 11 3 Lew1s Coli 74
NY Kntcks
18 15 545 I
Car Wllm 88 New Ham p 1'1 8 Boston
1,177, way, way up from last year's 683 N
17 16 ~ 1 5 2
NW La 81 N E La 67
Buff alo
15 ' 21 .417 51 1
Quite a season, and the State people say the 51 ThOs Aqns 9Q Md Belt 95
NY N ets
12 22 353 7 ''
herd lS still not at zero population growth Sho rter 83 Columbus Ga 82
Central DIVISion
South Ca rolma 54 Nebre ska 49
W L Pet
GB
For those of you who think your buck South ern 107 Ttffm 79
Cle veland
71 14 600 might make the B1g Buck's Club, contact Tennessee 13 Vanderbilt 69
Houston
J9 13 594
1?
Ch at! 92 Samfor d 11
New Orl eans 19 17 528 211
George H1ll, 120 Janet Road, Mar1etta , Ohlo Tenn
Transylva nia 88 Berea 68
San A'ntonlo
19 11 526 2 1
45750 Your rack must score at least 140 Vtrgm•a 67 Oav•dson "8
Wash1 ngton
16 17 ABS t1
Commonw lth 79 W.. Car 66
points, but there IS a 60-day drying pariod va
Allelnta
11 26 316 10' 1
Vtrgm1a St 93 Roanoke 79
Western
Conference
before II can be measured Thls year's club
Midwest
Mtdwest DiVISIOn
mduchon and banquet t:I ln Marietta Good Ball St 66Butter59
W L Pet
GB
Be thany 79 McPhrsn t&lt;an 65
Denve r
2&lt;1 10 706 luck'
lll tnois St 89 Brad ley 66

"If there's a
59 N. Second St.

trymg to lead h1s team w Its
first ·national .championship
smce Russell's 19~5-56
triumph

,Tiffin drops
r
107-79 tilt

fifth.

Basketball ratings
NE W YORK (UP I ) - Th e
U n I I e d Pr ess lnternatJOnlll
Boar a of
Coa ches
college
basketball raf ng s w th won lost
recor ds through gam es of
Saturday Jan 3 and n um ber
ot f trst place votes n par en
the ses
flh wee k )
Team
Potnts
I San ran c,sco (21 ) (15 OJ 369
2 Kent uc ky I 14 ) (7 1)
319
3 M tch tgan f 3) (6 11
27B
.s Ctn cmnatt 14) (9 OJ
273
5 Alaba ma (9 OJ
201
6 UC LA (9 11
161

player ln the nation's top 25
scorers. Tbe Dons' balanced
attack Is led by Bill
cartwright, a Uoot center

Subocnption rutes Delivered by

EVERYONE
Mon., Tues., Wed .'~ S.t.-i:30til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
•

Ij

I he uauy

earner wt\He avaU.ble 75 cents per
week By Motor Route where carrier
ternce not av•UabJe One month,
S3 25 By mall ln Ohio and W Va ,
One Year, $2100 Six months,

9

•
•

vtgorous manner/' he sa1d.
Three bills were offered m
the House , inc1udtng the
b1enmal bill correcting
techmcal errors m laws
enacted m the prevwus

-

training begins January 12

Carelme, Inc , the 24-hour
crtsts

consumer
protection
legislation
"Past efforts vetoed will be
the predecessors of future
efforts enacted lntc law,"
said Riffe.
Almost all the lawmakers,
Including eight new senators
and 10 new House members,
were on hand to take their
oaths of office lronl Chief
Justice C Willlam O'Neill
and Justice Frank- D
Celebrezze of the Ohio
Supreme Court.
F1ve House members had
been sworn ln earller at
home, Including Rep George
D Tablack, D.Campbell,
whose father, a formet stare
representative, dled durmg
the weekend.
•
The Senare session was
particularly brief, as
members were sworn m and
leadership was elected
Senate President Pro Ternpore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
was re-elected along with
(\sslstant Pres1dent Pw
Tenipore M Morris Jackson ,
OOevelarid
Senate Mmority Leader
_Michael J Maloney, RClnclnnah, and AssiStant
MUIOrity Leader Pauli E
Gillmor, R-Port Clinton, welt
re-elected, and Sen Thomas
A Van Meier, RAshland, was
chosen mmority wh1p,
succeeding Sen. Donald E
Lukens, R-Middletown, wbo
did oot seek the office.
The House spent more time
on ceremonies, Including
nommallng speeches for
leadership poSitions
Retal!led by acclaun along
with Riffe were Speaker Pro
Tempore Barney Quilter, 0Toledo, ~'•jomy !l'..llder Wil·
ham L Mallory, DCmcinnaii; and Assistant
MaJOrity Leader Patrick A
Sweeney, D-Clevelaod
Taking over as Democratic
whip w1U be Rep Thomas
Fr1es of Dayton, replacmg .
Rep. Thomas J Carney of
Youngstown,
who
IS
replacing Fries as Chairinan
of
the Energy
and
EnvlrOIUDentConrrruttee
House· Minority Leader
Charles F . Kurfess, R·
Bowling Green, was re·
elected, as were Assistant
Mmori!Y Leader Norman A
Murdock, R-CinCIMati, and
Mmonty Whip Alan E.
NorriS, R-Westerville
Riffe sa1d he had been
entrusted with leadership
powers by the people of Ohio
and members of the House
"I mtend to exerciSe' the
political power entrusted tAl.
me m a responsible and

3

lnd St IO• E..-ansvllle 68
lnd Ctntrel U St Ed s 67
t..oyol a 111 87 St Mr (' S 14
MacMurray tO Principia 57
Marqutt1e 61 Georol t lech 45
McMurry 59 E Cent Okla 51
Okle Chrt5 60 Tlbor t&lt;tn 49
0 ROIU!rts 1~ Wl[hlla 51 6.1
SO Ill 100 Bnedc:t l(an 51
West ern 111 88 Akron 14
Southwtst
Cent Arkansas 74 Hard ing 70
New M~• 79 w Ntw MeJC 66
Pan Am 100 Texa s Lulh 61
Soulhtrn Ark 80 Hendmt 71
Texas Et Paso 83 Doane 66

Oetrotl
20 15 571 " ' 1
tnd1a na
17 20 .(59 B1 •
Ka nsas City
17 20 459
Cht &lt;:ago
11 20 355 11' 1
Mttwaukee
9 27 250 16
PaCJftC DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB
Portland
24 13 649
Los Angeles
n \3 1'129 1
Galden Sta te 17 15 531 .41 •
Sea tt le
19 19 500 51•
14 17 452 1
PhOenl•
Monday 's Results
San AntoniO 142 Bf lo 109
( On ly game scheduled )

av,

ilie season after ilielf 27.:1
VIctory over fourth-!'anked
Georgia tn the Sugar Bowl,
received 39 firstiJlace votes
from the 42 coaches
par!Iclpatmg m the ratl!lgs
Southern Califonua, which
beat Michigan m the Rose
Bowl, fuushed second Wlth

13 Texas Tech ( 10 21
56
14 O~ l ah o m&lt;~ S tal c (9 Jl
22 376pomtscomparedto416for
I S U CL A (9 2 1l
~~ Pittsburgh M1ch1gan was
16 Colorado (8 J J
thtrd m the baUotmg With 258
7
17 RuTger s (ll Ol
18 \owa Slat e 18 ) 1
5 poUltS
3
19 it o,e 1 KB •en
y 1ourc k(y8 2 11,
Roundmg OUt the top 10
3
1
18 ~ 1
19 110 1
Note By agr et" ment w111l the were Houston, OhiO State,
A mer can
FooT ball
Coae hes • Oklahoma, Nebraska, Texas
Assoc 1atton teams on pr obat iOn
&amp;M AI b
dG
by the N CA A ar o meltq tb le for A
, a arna an
eorg1a
top 20 and na lt onal champ ton
·•nus 15 the best team I've
sh tP constdera t on b y the UP I ever been assoclated Wlth "
Boar d of Coa ches Tho se t eam s
•
on probatton for 1976 wer e
srud Coach Johnny Majors
M 1ss ss1pp1
Sla te
Mtch gan after the Sugar Bowl game.
Sl ate Long Beach Slal e and "
Sou thwestern Lou1 s ana
Maybe I should JUst qwt

CORAL GABLES, Fla .
(UP! ) - New UmverSity of
M1anu football Coach Lou
Saban, Monday named Elroy
Morand as a defenSive coach
and picked Paul Massey to be
his adininistrabve aSSistant
and handle the Hurricanes'
scouung
Saban, who was picked last
week to replace fired Carl
Selmer, did oot specifY wh1ch
phase of M1ami's defense
would be handled by Morand.
Saban has now named s1x
of hiS eight aSSistant coaches
antl sa1d he hopes to name the
rest of hiS staff later this
week

Tu esdays Games
Go lden St at NY Km cks
Denver at Atla n ta
NY Net s al Ch•cago
PhOen tx at Milwauk ee
Boston at Portland
(Only games sch r dul ed )
Wedn esday's Game s
Golden Slate at BuHal o
Los Ang at Phtladelph a
NY Km cks at Houston
Denver at san Anton 10
NY Nels at Wa sh ngton
Phoentx al Det r ott
Ch•cago at lnd•ana
Boslon at Se attl e
(Only games scheduled )

while I'm ahead I don 'I know
how four years like th1s can
be repeated "
• Pittsburgh, wh1ch opened
Its regular season with a 31-10
VIctory over Notre Dame and
fimshed 11 wlth a 24-7 triwnph
over Penn State, outscored Its
oppoSition by 354-130.
Superstar Tony Dorsett
became the first collegian to
gam 6,000 yards rushtng
while leading the nation Ill
rushmg ( 177.1 yards per
game) and sco rm g ( 12 2
pomts per game )

negollations for UmverSlty of
Southern Califorma runrung
star Anthony DaviS, first
a nnounced that Hetsman
Trophy wmner Tony Dorsett
of Pittsburgh and R1cky Bell,
the Southern Cal star who
was runnerup m the HeiStnan
ballotlllg , were open to bub
from the league's 28 teams
Trope then announced t~e
Signing of another He1sman
wlnrn!i', Johnhy Rodgers, the
former Nebraska star, b~ the
San
Diego Chargers
Rodgers, a No I draft pick a I
few years hack, had turned
down a Chargers' offer and

elected to play m Montreal
until thiS year ' o
Dorsett and , Bell will
directly challenge th~ NFL's
opposition to a ~eder a l
rudge 's
dec~on
In
Washmgton last mt that the
NFL draft was Illegal
"If I hadn 't made the
announcement, then there
would be a SIX-month lunbo
Wtth nothmg belllg done,' '
srud Trope "Now I !eel
there'll be a settlement
Wlthm four weeks I've sent
Wlfes to all 2B teams asking
for bids on the sen1ors we're
representmg All we need
now 1s I or one club to s1gn one
player and we're off dead
center.''
Trope said several clubs
mdicated to hun that NFL •
Comnussioner Pete Rozelle
had warded clubs they would
be fmed for tamperlllg With
college players without a
draft
" Some clubs have told us
that thelf only reluctsnce IS
that they have rece1ved a
memorandum from Pete
Rozelle that they would be
fined ," added Trope

Th1.s Week ' ~ Soec•al

USED CAR.S

'76 GRANADA
2 DR.
V8 , automatic, power
steermg, 3,000 m1les

'4695
M onday ' 5
Oh1o College
Ba ske1ba ll Result s
Un 1ted Press lnternahonal
Wes tern Illin OIS as A kr on 8d
Soulll er n Un 1v er st1 y (L a ) 107
Ti'fftn 79
Canton Jayc ee s
Hall of F am e Tou rn ey
Park
CPa )
88
Po tnt
Steub en v 11le 78
Mal nc 78 Wa lsh 71

Karr &amp; VanZandt
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West

Ca l Rvrsde 75 Cai-Dvls 70
George Fo• 100 Whitman 95
Ida Sf 88 Cal Sl Bkrsfld 13
Nevada LV 113 Colorado 91
No Te K Sl 108 S 0 Sl 100
Ore Coli 72 West Wash 70
Sta Clara 73 Sal)_ Jse St 69
Seallle 101 Seatlle Pac 79
So Oregon OS Wstrn Bapf 75
Wastungton St 80 Idaho 66
Wyommg 93 Adams 51 67

with us!
PlANNING A PIZZA PARTY

MONTREAL {UP!) Johnny Rodgers, self·
described "ordinary
Sllpel'star" and one of tbe
canadian Football League's
IQp attractions, ended a
stonny relaticnflllip witll tbe
Montreal Alouetts to join the
NFL San Dte&amp;o Olargen.
Rodgert Monday signed a
aerie&amp; of one-year con~
with the Olar&amp;en
details were not relea the
financial packaae waa
reported the richJII awarded
by Sali Diego Iince they
al&amp;ned quarterlllck JobMy
Unitaa in 1973 for an
estimated .-oo,ooo.

PHONE
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4- The Daily Sentinel, M!ddleport·P,meroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan: 4,
t:::::::.-::::~~::-~:..;::.o;;;:::~::~o:•:;:.-:~;;!s-~:*-~:~~:x.-::::::x~=x:::::;:::;;::::%.~:&gt;-~o;:::::::;:?.:!!~~

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ti

Generation Rap

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

lj~

Nosey Roommate Nl]ll Romauce
Rap :
I've liked this guy for seven months , and I've had a room·
mateforslx. But is she nosey ! With a capitalN.
She even picked the lodt: on my diary. If I hide It, she ftnds
it. I can tell because she ·knowa as much about me as I know
about myself - 8lld in my own words, yet. .
. .·
· g,e doesn 't like this fellow I want and it would he just like
her to teD hlrr! everything l've.written about trying to get him,
· That would really queer my chances!
Not only is sh:O nosey but she's trying to "save" me from
booking up with what she caDs an ugly, ignorant loser.
I know she means well and I really like her otherwise. I was
brought up to he polite, and I hate embarrassing people bu~ I
hate snooping too . ·
g,ould I bl!wl her out, thi-ow. her out, or what?
PACKING FOR THE LOONYBIN
Dear Packing :
aet this problem out 1n th.e open _ and that doesn't
necessarily mean bawling or throwing Ylllll' roommate out..
Diacuss the gift of privacy, an exchange that brings
-"ed distanc T 11 he
· th
frl ds CIoser because tt· giVeS
n=don't need e.a snoopy
e
r
youenappreciate
her coocern, butemyou
caretaker. If thl$ doesn't work, consider "throwing. "
HELEN AND SJ.IE ·

+++

Dear Helell and Sue :
1just reached adulthood a few months ago and now finally
realize· I don't know everything, and !hilt mothers. are right
once in a while.
.
.·
·
PUtting myself In my mother's place, this, 1believe, is the
letter she woUld have written to me when I got on my ''know it
all" highhorse,and endeduplnresentfultears :
"Dear Janey :
.
"Did !teD you today how much !love you?! wish I had , I
wish you were a little girl, bringing YOW' little-girl problems to
me; but Instead you're a big girl with big problems I 'don't
understand.'
"I wish I C&lt;luld change, bull still want to share everything
with you. I'm selfish :·I don't want to be~ ·out qf yoW' life.
You've grown up, but I can' t - I'mstillamotlier.
"I want you tO be happy because when you're sad a part of
IJ!e.dies. I know I hurt you by the things I say and do. I worry
because I love you, but the word('C&lt;lme out wrOng. Parents
aren't always right, but often we err because we care so much.
- MOM''
P.S. I'm sure she would have taken the blame, because
that'smy Mom, and I love her. - 21 AND STO..L LEARNING

'•

Polly's ·Pointers

Dear 21:
Isn't it sad that you had to compose a letter your mother
probably '1elt" many ttmes but never wrote ?
Had she expressed herseH so movingly during those
. resentful teen years (when you BOlli felt cloSed out), much
friction might have been avoided. - Hf;LEN

+++

.

AWORD FROM SUE : You brought outa good thought : U
parents and children C&lt;luid express how they FEEL, rather
than react explosiVely to sudden angry words or resentments
or misunderstandings, those growing-up years would be easier
all the way around.
And sometimes a letter is the best way- it can be reread
when you get the ''nobody loves me blues.''

sO.C•iaI. '

'ii~~~:~'*-""»-~.:::.mc~
,.,

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1."-: .Cale·' nd.ar
TUESD AY
POMEROY
CHAPTER,
O.E.S. U5 p.m. Tuesday
night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Tem ple.
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MID~E~~~w:v Firemen ' s · Auxiliary, 7~30
Wednesday at the ' firfhotise.
· Mrs. Kate Bachner, Mrs.
· Euvetta Bechtle and Mrs.

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-wed tn

Hill
Pomeroy, and Mr. ·and Mrs.
Kerr Gooch , Gallipolis.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs: Vern Hinerman,
New Haven, w. Va., and J. A.
Ord, Akron . Mrs. Pearl
Sa,unders, Gallipolis, is the

great-great-grandmother.

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..•

'159
'

..•••

••...

••
•

25 LB. BAG

$ 29

$ 29
KEEBLER

PURE
'

~ G&amp;N CIBTON

TEA
BAGS

VANILLA
WAFERS
'

5gc

48 COUNT BOX

12 OZ. BOX .

. 59~

All Week

COCA COLA

.SHRIMP N BAlTER
16 OZ. PACKAGE

e FRIED

·

BAN9'!ET

F-RENCH
· FRIES ::·

2LB.

BOX

'

49

'

$

16 OZ. BOffiES

CHICKEN
-------

, I

GALLON

•,

GALLON

SEA PAK

.CAKE_MIJ..........~~~-~~- ~~.............. :.. 59'

_·

49
$
••••••••••••••••••

' VANILLA

UJCI(Y LEAF (REUSEABLE CANNING JAR)
APPLESAUCE ........................ -~~..W-:JA~. 59'
DUNCAN HI"ES ALL flAVORS EXCEPT

DISH DETtRGENT. .... ;............. Jt~... 69'

FOOD

.h

BIG VAWE

wx

DOG

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

DR•
PEPPER

~~!+.9-~ . 1'1

COFFEE
MATE

TEnEY

TOILET
ORANGE
TISSUE JUICE
'

Jewelry Store .·

JIF .

$ 29
SUN BORN

EDON

SUNSHINE

16 OZ. JAR'

~

one as a gift.

1

32 OZ. BOffiE

32 OZ. BOffiE

!
I
!'

ERA

IVORY
LIQUID

COUPON
CLIPPINGS
SAVE BIG

'
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy'
· (_.._...._ _ _ _ _ ,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_.._ _

RIEGEL
SMOKED

WIENERS

''

$
DOZEN

in·- man, an _Independent_~ge~.t

I

BOLOGNA

'' '

LB.

Featuring the'VeiJ finest in
. ' ' Home Furnishinat
and MaJO
' r Appliances ~
the
mo." . suitable of the _2. Heo . . Yailable day and . !·
fr"
several tnsurance co m - mght to r_espond to your
1 These bright, new, round·the·clock 1aahlons
'
t 1o cost lo
\I
panies he deals with.
needs.
.
•
n
a
w
you.
~
Many people make the . 3. He handles all type~ Df
· suit today'a active woman. And ihey go beautl·
\i
I ! co Sf IV mistake of assuming 10surance, and ~eals
fu.lly . .. with precision jeweled accu~acy. : :
\
I
that insurance polic lu are throu9~ str~ng, rel11ble
wtth everything s~e wears. ·s he'll love the
'
3;1PIE.CE
•thlleyfh0ere~~motNTo~~~[uu~o;! ·,co~o.P':n"~~~ sure you have
1
\, "
•
d
d
t
1
1
Interesting shapes, the clean, crisp lines, and
~ I
A the qual ity of co 11 2rage an tn epen en . nsurance
l f.
BEDROOM. SIIIT"
vary trom policy to policy, agent.on your sod.e, to,k for
the
easy· to· read full·flaured dials. Give her
. 'r.
but th e cost often yaries lh ts symbol or consu1t your

TASTEE

9:0010 7:00
to9

USDA CHOICE
'BLADE CUT

insurance company . He his customers In
key
)
works tor you . Which are_a s .
.
.
.
means . he can plan the
1. Me provtdes the best

~

......

~....;_----

MIDDLtt'ORT, O.

STEAK

he Is a __seH-

!
~ •\. ! ~::r:~~ l~:~ ~;::~ctt' :i~~ ::~u;.~·!~~:~~~;·t~· v:~ the

,

Meigs County Treasurer

BACON·

SAUSAGE

••• •• ••• • •• • ••••• •• ••••••

We Ciadly Ai:copt Fed:· Food $t1mpi
Mon.day thru F~lday

09

~,:~ l ;::~:"d::A:~.o;·J!i.:~:~··:1 :~:~~~hi·:~:::;,::}!~~·:7J:
~ -- I:JT
r~..J9U~O
- "~
thr~e

CLEARANCE SALE

GEORGE M. COLLINS

M
y

·CHUCK
TENDER - . WASTE
BUCKET

' That's why it's ·a good em ploy ed local bu Stfless

idea

'

GROUND

Prom,ptly .
Because

The Tax Books are now opeq for the
. December of First Half Colle.ction of
ttie 1976 Real Estate -Taxes . Also for
delinquent tax . Closing Date will be
Jan. l. 01 1977.

CHUCK
ROAST
'

mapos.t•onto,_uppo~tyo~tn.

.

Meigs County
Real Estate Owners

-

We reserve the right to limit quantitie;,

GROUND $
ROUND LB.

To _be on your s td ~

JANUARY

_ Jan. 4 • Jan. 8

Mill and Second Sis.

LB.

payme.nt ts cnttca l.
.
. And_' 1 vou halle a clat
rour - '"~~pendent agent s

practical f"r you to check

Cl~~ ~~~~;.t ~u~~YN~~ r~l f~'

Right t&lt;eser-ved to Limit Qvant1nes

PHONE 992-3480

!::~n'.';ses, ~~~·it i~~~ ~:~~:~~byl~u o~t:~~i:~~~t; I ·CfiRfi~E· L~E®'
each and eve ry one .

:Jd~~!~:::~YT!~E 'irt~

the Sacred Heart Church.
Ann Colburn, Teresa Collins,
Catherine Welsh and".Susan
Baer wiU be hostesses. New
officers .Will be instaHed
during the Mass at 7:30p.m.
preceding the meetingi
. now
REVIVAL SERVICES
In progress at Syrachuse
Church of the Nazarene. Rev.
FRIDAY
Parker Husselton, guest
RUTLAND GUN Club . speaker. Services nightly at
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at -club 7:30 p,m. Services through
house on New Lima Road. All Sunday. Public is invited.
members urged to attend.

•

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
M. w
Sun. 10 to 10
H H
Y Y We Accept Federal Food Stamps y y

1 ,.

bargain on insurance is to
shop for it . But ther e are
more than three thousand
~compani
es s1'!11ing in sura nee policies ·to protect

1
,..:-.;

w.

.
'V

st
Your
Monev ~:~~~~t·~o~~pc:t~~;:r;.~
The best w•v to get a tru e se r v tc e . a n_d .
cIa tm
fs

l

______

LEGAL

~

.. .
1
surance Buy for

I the

~

FAMILY VISITED
Visiting Mr . and Mrs.
r&gt;orsel D. Biggs, Janet. and
l.Jenver, Christmas Day were
Mr s.
lrie~
Ril.ndolph,
P o meroy : Margaret
Province, Middleport ; Mr.
and Mrs. John Schl~terlieck,
Jr., John RaY and ArmlniHa,
Mr. and Mrs. Ed McPherson,
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar R.andolph, North
Ca nton ; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Randolph , Coolville; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Randolph, Jr.,
Chillicothe. A guest of Janet
Biggs on Sunday was John
JQseph, Marietta.

. ..

.

r-=.,.----===
----------1
·
~
·~~"
-~ JM&lt;"'-·~'"
· . -.
·
•
.

Dailey will be

Allme'mbersaskedtoattend,
tlnd dues are now payable.

How to Get.
Be In

!I

Spencer, Mrs. Weber, Mrs.
Whitehead , Mr s. Gcn•
Wilson , Mrs. R. H. Hannum ,
Mrs. Claremont Harri s and
Mrs. l.ylc Balderson: The
Mrs. Donald " Putman door prize went to Mrs.
answered by members made to have an atfction in
conducted games with prizes · Hannum.
naming their favorite carol. February.
For
the
program,
Mrs.
awarded.
She also presenied
A Christmas card was signed
Denv
er
Weber
assisted
by
each
member
a gift.
and sent to Mrs. Bess Larkins
Mrs.
Ernest
Whitehead
Delicious
refreshments
in
who was unable to attend.
presentejl
·
the
int
eresting
·
keep
in
g
with
the
holiday
'It gift was purchased for
Miss Naomi Pickens, · a article, "Christmas Around/ se~son and favors of Christ·
YULE VISITORS
patient at a nursing home at the World ," which describes mas ornaments to hang on
Christmas
guests of Mr.
Portsmouth. Mrs. Ronald the customs . of different the tree were served by the
and
Mrs.
Allen
Downie and
They
also hostesses to Mrs. Frank Bise,
Cowdery delivered the gifts countries.
daughters,
Debbie
and
for the Athents Men- presented a film ·s tr ip, Mrs. David Chadwell, Mrs.
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Elizabeth,
11
tal Health Center pa· Christmas in Folk Music," Co w~ery , Mrs. HarJ iss
d o"nie, Pomeroy, and
tients. The business meet· with the members joining in Frank, Mrs. Herman Gross·
Mr.
d Mrs. Edison Baker,
ing was conducted by singing favorite Christmas nickle, Mrs, Roy lfann um ,
eport.
Mrs. Putman, Mrs. Thomas
Mrs. Young when plans were songs.

'

Simple facts everyu'ne who
o.w.ns a home, car or business _sh_ould· know

1

•,

· TREAT YOLJf! BUDGET TO THESE

r-----------------l

!·

.

·· ~~-----------.....;...

REEDSVILLE - The
Reedsville United Methodist
Women enjoyed their annual
Christmas party af the home ·
of Mrs. Pauline Brewer with
A beautiful bouquet
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery con·
of flowers can
dueling the program, in·
eluding the singing Of carols.
Mrs. Vivian Humphrey
help any patient
conducted · .the business
meeting , A gift exchalll!e was
get well faster.
held when members revealed
their secret pals, and drew
Let us speed your
new ones for 1977. , The
Brewer home was beautifully
get well arrangement
decorated in keeping with the
holiday season. Delicious
On its way.
refreshments were served
from 8 buffet to, Mrs. Leona
. Stop in or phone
Ruth, .Mrs. Dorotha Reibel,
Mrs. Darlene Reed, Mrs. ·
US today.
Sandy Cowdery, Mrs. Nell ·I---...
Wilson, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal
and Beverly, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Ruth Dillon,
Mrs. Penny Price and Tim
Brewer. The next meeting
will he with Mrs. Vivian
Hwilphrey.

New arrival

R;c~!f~o?i~y~~st:'o~'Mr;, and
~~:t!~:~~p~::~tss~~~c~~:
Mrs. E. J.
of

REEDSVILLE - Mrs .
Donald Myers wasitostess for
the annual Christmas party
of t)le Ri~ervlew Garden
Club. Co-hostesses we're
Mrs. Gene Voting and Mrs.
Walter Brown. The Myers
home was decorated for the
holiday season with the gift
exchanges placed under a
lighted decorated tree.
Devotions were conducted
by Mrs. Brown who presented
a reading, "Let's Forget
,Christmas.'' Roll call was

Church women
enjoyed}art_y

a

EVANGELINE CHAPI'ER
172 0 d
f th E st

VISITS - .Glen . Ray
Robbulon II, llve-montlHtld
son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Ray Robinson of Louisa,
· Ky. wasamong tbe·vlsltors ·
over tbe boltdays of . his
· graodparenls, Mr. and
Mn. PaUl Harris, Miners·
viUe. Mrs. Robbuloo Is the
former Sberry Harris and a
former employe of Nelsoo
Drugs. Tbe family spent .
Christmas here.

jacket burn presents
patchwork problems

'

Mrs... Myers host to Riverview ladies

RACINE - A family Pickens, Mr. and Mrs.
Christmas party was held Chester Rose, Brent and
· Dec. 26 · at the Firemen's Jeffrey Rose, Brenda, Jay,
and Joyce Pickens, Mrs.
·Awdliary haD In Racine.
A ' potluck dinner was Kathy Anderson , Mr. and
followed by a gilt exchange. Mrs. Darell Taylor, and Paul
Mll!lc was played during the Jones.
•afternoon by Leo Taylor,
Robert Taylor, Darell and
V!SITE~RE
Carol Taylor, and Frank
Mr. and Mt . Howard
HudSon .. Several 'Christmas · Snyder of We Lake, 0.,
carols and hymns were sung. returned ho e Thursday
Officers elected · were "after )lelng here to celebrate
Chester Rose, president, and Christmas with her mother,
Bondena HudsOn , secretary· Mrs. Bernice Grueser ,
treasurer. Tentative plans · Middleport.
were made to have a family . .- - - - - - -. .
reunion on July 17,
They11 get
Attending were Mrs, Velma
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
well faster.
Rose, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
'j'aylor, Robert and Jan
With flowiUS,
Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hudson, Gene Hudson , Toni
Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Shelby

Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Paxker

Uoyd Williams were Mrs.
• Cl'f
He, 1en W'll'
1 1ams,
t ton;
Reece Williams and Mrs.
Sarah Willis, both of
Pomeroy, and Mrs. WiUiams'
daughters and their families,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake
and Mr. and Mrs. Rich'ard
Gilkey·.

Yule party ~njoy~d · ,.,

g:,

DEAR POU.Y - I have a for holding the tots' small
· brown sllp-oJl willned nylon toys. They love to dig in them
jacket. About a year ago I and stay fascinated for quite
burned a good sized .hole in a time.
one sleevewith a \~hot iron.
My dinette chairs needed
I cut a piece from the inside recovering so I decided to put
lap by the zipper and put it on my scraps of knit material to
as a patch using a gauze type good.use. I used a piece of old
iron-on adhesive . patching cloth to r,ut pieces the desired
material. It looks very shiny, size for the new seat covers. I
stiff and si)Jeary looking, and . then placed and pinned odd
the more I iron it the worse it ' scraps in a crazy quilt pat·
looks. The only consolation I tern on the cloth pattern, and
have is .that the patch•is on theq stitched them in place
.
the underside of the sleeve using odd colors of leftover
where it does not show too thread. I have made good use
badly,butlstillwanttoknow of those scraps of knit fabrics
if there is any way I can lm· as we!! as thr~ad. Everyone
.
~ moti~
loves the way the chairs look.
.•
proveit.-M.S.
The
children would even enDEAR M.S. - Some pro.
joy
pinni!tg
the scraps on for
blems have ·Do ideal soluMom
and
C&lt;luld
lise their own
lions. In a case such as yours
ingenuity
in
making
patterns
some co,mpromi se is
and
designs.
··
· ·
·
necessary. If this patch is ln'a
My thirteen-year old
GROVE CITY - The and Mrs. George Predmore, pl~ceonthesleevewhereyou
wanted
me to tell you that
wedding of Margaret Ann · Marion, is a graduate . of might apply a large elbow
when
he
loses the plastic end
(Peg) Predmore and Edward Pleasant High School and type patch of another fabric
on
a
~hoe
lace he makes a new
Charles
Parker
was received X·ray technical anp thim put matching one
one
by
wrapping
the end of
solemnized Dec. 4 at Salem training at Marion General on the other sleeve, it might
ihe
lace
lightly
with
adhesive
jleights United Methodist and Mansfield 'General look more as if it were made
backed·
plastic
tape.
Chqrch, Grove City.
·Hospitals. She. is presently that way.- POLLY.
ISABEL.
The double ring ceremony employed
as
X-ray
DEAR .POLLY - My Pel
Polly willr send you one of
was performed by Rev . Terry technician at Central Ohio Peeve is when I buy a blouse
her
"peachy" thank-you
M. Thompson, pastor of the Psychiatric Hospital , orsweaterandthesaleslady
cards,
·ideal for framing or
church. .
Columbus.
· does not even take ttme to
placing
in. your family scrapThe bri~e wore an empire
The groom, son of Mr. and fold it l!ut"just stuffs it, all
book,
.
if
she uses your
style dress and jacket In light Mrs ,
Wilber
Parker, wrinkled, Into a bag. I con·
favorite
Pointer,
Peeve or
taupe and carried a pink rose. Pomeroy Rt. 3~ is a graduate sider this an , insult to the
Problem
in
her
column.
, Miss Ka~ Johnson , brides· of Meigs High . School and store, the blouse and to me.Write
Polly's
Pointers
in care
maid, wore a black print attended Ohio !Institute of N.O.T.
of
this
newspaper.
dress and also carried a pink Technology, He is employed
DEAR POLLY - Those
rose.
at Lightning Silk Screen, Inc. who do crewel embroidery
Eric Parker, ca mden, as a prjnter.
knowhowmuchleftoveryarn
M(ch., was best man ·for his
Mr. and ,Mrs. Parker are at one accumulates. I use this to
home to their friends at 107 ,cover hangers for planters.
brother.
Mrs . George Predmore, Tarryton Court West, 'i'his looks very colorful and
j
mother of the bride, wore a . Columbus, Ohio, 45228.
the extra yarn does not go to
·.
rust polyester princess style
waste. Just keep wrapping .
HOLIDAY VISITORS
dress. M!'S. Wilber Parker,
the yarn round and round .the
LlF
the groom's mother wore a
wire. When you co.me to the · an~ Mr;:~· ~~~VaBe-;;-n~~:
blue print polyester dress.
end of a piece tie on another. Christy and Gail of Indiana,
Both mothers wore white
-A READER.
visited during the holidays
spray· carnation corsages.
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Ord,
DEAR POLLY- Some bot'til
Immediately, following the Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, ties that hold cosmetics are ~ive~r. ~nd~~-on~est~~
wedding , a reception was ' are announcing the birth of very hard t~ hold ·iii one's
held In .the church hasement. their first child, a nine pound hand, particularly hand or Christmas Day the group,
.The bride's. table featured a daughter, Jamie Renee on cleansing lotion~ So 1 slip . which Included Mr. and Mrs.
two-tiered cake decorated Dec. 11 at the Holzer Medical such a bottle in an old stretch Luther · Tucker and family,
with maroon rosebuds. Sue Center.
sock that I have cut off to the Mason; Mr. and Mrs. Chester
~aternal grandparents are
1,e gth Thi If ds
Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Chappel presided atthe table. Mrs. Janet Nease, Miners· f'
proper · n · sa or a Be.nnett, Chlrsty and GaD,
The bride, daughter of Mr.
Inn gr1p .
ville, and Robert Gooch ,
Those shoe bagswithrows weredlnnerguestsofMr.and
Point· Pleasant, and paternal of pockets that hang on a Mrs . Robert Oliver and
GUESTS ENTERTAINED
grandparents are Mr. and closet door are ~reat to use family In Pomeroy.

TJruRSD~Y

•

I

By Polly Cramer

' S- The llaUr Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, Jan. 4• 1977

PRODUCE SPECIAL

·oRAN.·GES ...·..•...........
.~

~

16 oz.
btls.

SlB.BAG ·

'

\

'.

.

,•

�It

'
•'

8- The Dilly Senllnei,MidcDgx&gt;rt-Pomeroy,O., Tuellday,Jan._f, 1977

AStroGrapM
•

·

Bernice Btde Oaol
For Wld.-or. J•!'· s, 1171
ARIES tMorch 21 ·Aprll 1f) Cpndltlons look hopeful where your
material Interests are concern~
ed , but yoU could .. experlence
some domestic frustrations to·
day.
TAURUS (AprH 20-llor 20) If not
carefu l today, you could be
pressured mto doing something
aga1nst your better judgment Do
nothing IQ oppose your best sell·
mterests

s

·

,

.. ~~~~~~~~\N · .~'or · F'ast

P M.
Dey
Publication

Cancellations,

Before

correc

Ilona accepted first day of

=---~

ln.M ,.,...,~?
REGULATIONSzmcif ·

The Publisher reserve-s

to

tdlt or reject

any tds deemed ob ·
lectlonal. The pUblisher
will not be responsible for

more than one incorrect

insertion

UT.ES
For Want Ad Service

5 cents per word one

insertion
·Minimum Charge Sl.OO.

l&lt;t cents ptr word three
consecutl'¥e Insertions.
26 cents r,•r word six
consecutive nsertlons.

Results Use The Sen.tinel Clatsifieds:·,

'

- -.~

'

~

IN LOVING memory of my husbc:lnd, Ralph Spencer who
deport.d this IUe, Janua ry 3,
1972 How many trmes I longed
to set hlm,
.
To hear h1s klnd voice and'" his
sm11ing foce.
God alone knows how much I
m1ss him,
In a home rhot 1s lonesome today
~ly nlined by~~~f!:__':t ~rnet .

-

--

2 SIGNS
.Of

QUAUTY'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

197SCHEVELLE
$4195
Estate Wagoo . local l owner car·, while radial tire•, air
conditioning, V.8, aufomatlc, power steering and
brakes, radio, dark red finish. black vinyl Interior

~~--- ; __-~-;:-~~~ ~

, 25 Per cent Discount on
Plld IdS lnd IdS paid

..

Jl.tt

•
•

........

0~-

NOW accephng p1ono students,
197SCHEVY ELCAMINO
53995
beg.nnert , mterm~rotes , ad·
Classic, 350. V 8, automatic ... power steering and
CARD OF THANKS
vanced students Coli 9'12·
&amp; OBITUARY
2270
brakes, rally wheels, radlo, black and very attractive.
••
U 00 for
SO
word
PERSON's BODY Shop 26 Ra ilroad
~,.l nlmJ,!m
1974
AM~
HORNET
5379S
· EaTh aadlflonal word 3
St., MidcU.port would like ro
Sport about. · 6 cylinder. automatic, power steering
cents .
rttmtnd customers l~ol Dec 31
CANCER (Juno 21 ·Julr 22) Be
II LIND ADS
delu)(e equipment, white wall tires, luggage rack, dark
•s
the
lost
day
to
take
ad·
ready to make some reasonable
Add itional 2Sc Charge
Ji 3 1 mo .
vantage of the pCIInf jobs all
green fmlsh, less than 9,000 miles, showroom clean .
concessions today Nobody will per _Advertisement .
over
in
t
color.
$100,
2
ron&amp;
OFFICE HOURS
bene fit unl e ss e veryone IS
"
$125 Without body work Slop
8. 30 e.m te) 5 00 p m
cooperaiiYe
in or phone 985-411A for Op·
Dally , 8 : 30 a.m to 12 00
pomttnen_t __ __ _ _
_
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Your Noon $aturdey .
~hone
tod•Y
992
2156
responslbtlitms are apt to be
NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt
rather heavy today. but you
(Pleasanton Meat Proceumg
could also get an ass1st from an
Inc.) Custom sloughterrng, and
NOTICES
ANY PITCH
ATTN,, II
uneKpected quarter Press yo~r
,_ 1111 ....t-t....
processmg Retorl wholesale
ALL HOUSEWIVES
advantage 11 th1s occurs
No oppomment necessary Call
ANY
SIZE
AI! Yard Sales. R.ummage,
(61 4) 593 8655, hours , 9·00 till
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) A PorC'h and Basement Porch
~b.~~;·~=t-:-~-::__.:-"'
6:00
7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens
long-t1me pal may oppose you and Basement Sales , etc .
--. -----------Oh,
today Try not to Judge this per- must be pa id In advance . .
1%9
J""OiiO
,
extra
sharp
new
'OAL
lrmestone
and
calcrum
Gef yours in early by
THERE will be. no gun shoot Dec
so n ha rshly There are 81( - stopping
Located in Langsville
potnt buckel seats atr shocks .
chlorrde and colctum brtne for
by our office at
25th or Jon 3 at the Rocrne Frre
tenuallng clfcumstances.
The Cally Sentinel , 111
dust control oncf'spee~ol mr;ocmg
mags Phone 949-2480
Box28-A
~ept B~d!n_g ~ n_B ~~-a_n _
St or Wr tt lng BoK
salt for former s. Moln Street . 1969 CH(VROLri e;squaino, 1'166
R
ufland
, Ohio 45775
"We
Care"
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Unless Court
729, P'Omeroy , Ohio 45769
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992 SPECIALS AT the D &amp; J Houu of
Ph . (614) 742 -2409
you keep the rewards m mind to- w ith your remlttann
Work Gu.r.
BUICK Electra 225, 2 Rokon Free Est .
Wt Deliver
Fabrrcs, Lorge blanket pieu11s ,
3891.
day your amb1110ns w1ll be poortrrolbrkes . Phone 9A9·2432
Rutland 12·9·1 mo. 742·2328
t.......,;,;...,;;._ _
"'
12 22 4 mos .
regular $1.50 lb., naw $1.00 lb. 1971 HONDA CL-450, 12 000
ly served Don'tlose sight of your
1q6B CHEVROLET Camero . black
large
j:ueces
of
crushed
velvet
target
miles , SI SS )' bar . crash bars
e.:terior and intenor , V·B. 4
preces , reg $2 50 lb now
'
pull back handle bors new tire
SCORPIO {Del. 24-Nav. 22)
speed , mag whet Is, very ntce
$2 00 lb Real nrce TObie of poand seals Scrom~ler srde
cor , Phone 742·'1516.
PROFESSIONAL ·
Don't be too proud to admit your WE WOUlD ltke ve ry much to
ly knit reg $2 49 yard . now
prpes $650 Call 9~9- 2480
tharlk the Foglesong Funeral
$1 ,39 yard on S.R. 7, I mrle
PLEASURE
HORSES
and
pono"'
m1stakes today Others will ad1'16A CHEVY '6 ton prckup. good
POTATOES and pumpkrns C W
also will buy horses and
Home Btssell Bro for srngmg ,
mlfe you all the mo re 1f you're
belo_w_Mtd~lepo~t , Oh· ~
5hope tn good runntng condiProffrrt
,
Porflond,
OMio
Phone
ponies. Phone (614) 6qe-329Q
Re
...
.
Chester
Tennant,
S)lrocuse
the f1rst to laugh at yo ur bootr
on
New
lrre
s
Phone
SPECIALS ot 0 &amp; J House of
Aerial
AIJ~o;rllory , Syracuse Ftnl Atd ,
843-2254
Ruth Reeves
boos
'
Fabrtcs large blanket p1eces ,
992 ·3'194
-- -~-·- Racine~ Ohio
Commercial
Syracuse frrends , ne1ghbors
'
COAl
for
sale
Open
6
days
per
RISING
STAR
KENNEL
boarding
reg
51
so
lb.
row
51.00
lb.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
1965
FORD
MUSTANG
.
289
V·8
and anyone who helped in any
Schools
Crushed velvet preces reg.
week ond evenrngs. For further
1ndoor and outdoor Grooming
21) A close assoc1ate ma y come
automatic, needs alternator ,
way , during the death ol our
$2
.50
lb
now
$2
00
lb
1
table
rnformolron
call
(614)
367·
7336
all
breeds.
complete
somtory
Weddings
to you today tor f1nanc Jal
$125 Phone Tuppers Plall''ls ,
beloved husband and fathe r
of poly kntt reg $2 49 yard.
foci
litres,
Chesh1re
Phone
(614)
assistance It would be better 11 Sadly mrssed by ~m wrfe and
667 ·3031
FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
I'
now $1 39 yord I m1le below APPLES,
367·0292
.
you could aid h1m other 'han W1t h
sons tva Pearl, Strrl rng , Samuel
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE 1971 FORO 1/ 1 ton. automatic ,
~--·--::--:-·
Mrddl!port
on
.
s
R
_
7
,
the checK book
Rayburn We loved him Yes.
WILKESVILLE . (614)6b9 3785
TO good ~~mes , small white
Ps , excellent r;;ondition. Coli FREE
SEWING AND Alteratrons ,
, we loved h1m
lemale
ctog.
house
Squort Ya_rd Instal ltd
after 5 p m. {61.tl) 667·3334
FULLER
Brush
Products
for
sole
.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 11) Bulthe angels loved htmm more ,
broken ,. very. otlect1onate, and
reasonable 572 South Th1rd
Phone 992-3410
There s a poss1bll1ty that you And they hove sweetly called
David Per"!ns, Owner
1614) 915·4155
Ave ., Middleport
Phone
11171 AMC Matador. • door
playful. ! hon..!.992 3283._ _ .
could have a senous disagree'
automotrc. p s , ond p.b , V-8,
Chester, Ohio
CAMPER . $6(X)
Also horse
hrm ,
9'12-6306
949.2114
'
ment w1th your mate today To ~nder s~11n r ng &amp;hore
tro1htr , $450 Phone (614} 698
new front t~res and battery SIBERIAN HUSKY , male, 2 yrs .
10·17·1
mo
(Pd)
11-4-1 mo.
LOOK TRIM I Take. Algrness diet
old , $30 Shots up to date.
However. thmgs could be talked The Golden Gates were open,
Make good work car $550
3290
pion
and
Aquovap
"water
p1lls"
Phone
992-62-'4
out ' m a pleasant atmosphere And a gentle 'I'Oice said ,':Come ·
Phone 949-2660.
'
Village Pharmacy , 271 N. 2nd PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sta ·
w1th soft lights and mood food And with farewel ls unspoken,
li on Phone 247 -2684 after 5 1969 FORD Tonno G.T 2 door BEAGLE PUPS and tro rned
Ave:.:,
~_rddle_por~
Beag~s__~ ~.ne 742·2521 :...... _
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11) He. calmly entered !'lOme
hardtop wrth scope Phone
p tn
REVIVA~ NOW rn progress. thru
You ve been reluctant to tackle
949·2589 $600
Jon 9 at Pomeroy Wesleyan FENCE POSTS , Sl 00 A~a .
BRADFORD, Aucftoneer , Com·
certain tasks due to diftJcOities
~ bedrooms. 1% baths, large liv
frrewood three . fourt~ to n
Hohness Church on Fh U3
plete Servrce. Phone 949·241
arit1cipated Your road 1sn't easy,
tng room, dming-room and ~1t
Speaker 1S Rev Wm Owen
prckup loads del rvered $25
or
949-2000. Racrne, Ohio, CriU
but 11 1sn t as hard as you thmk
chen fully carpeted. Phone _ Bradford
w1 lhrn 25 mrles
Phone
Drs! Supt Spec1ol s1ngrng each
....,......--~992·3129, or 992·Sof3.4.
985-4197
e ... emng. Postor Rev Dewey
IF YOU hove o servrce to offer,
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) You NOTICE OF A PFtOINTMENT
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR - •
FOUND
HUNTING
or
btrddog
King rnvrles the publ1c .
wont to buy or sell somethm~ 59 ~res , 6 room ~use, both,
may expenence some unex Case No 22 .000
Sweepers . toosten, irons, oil
Found
rn
v1
crnrty
of
Mtddleporl
oe
looktng
for
work
or
pected social pressures today Estate . of Steven Eblrn , GUN SHOOT ot the Roctne Gun
portly carpeted, two outsmall appliances Lawn mower,
Call 992 -31b5 ond rdentrly
who re ver
you II get results
j from an acquam tan ce you're not Deceased
bu il dings dug basement .
' Club every Sunday 1 pm
next to Stote H1ghwoy Garage
faster
wtlh
a
Sentinel
Want
Ad
.
Notr
ce
rs
here
by
grven
tha
t
one
·th1
rd
trl
loble
.
mln&amp;rol
overly f6nd of tp begm w1th
REWARD FOR the retur n of l od le~
Assorted meats
One good used Rem1ngton
on Route 7 Ph6ne (61.t!) 985·
Call992
2156
Frank w Porter . Jr ct R D
purse and contents lost in
nghts located neor Danville.
Shru 11 olf
Chatn Saw
f
sso
3, Rac ine, Ohro has been dul y
3825.
:--c7"~
Reduced lor quick sole ,
Rocme area Phone 949·2540 .
One
good
used McCullough
appointed Admin ist rator of
REMODELING. Pl~mb ing -h-ea
- ling
$23
500.
Phone
7-'2·2766
.
Cha1n
Saw
S7S
the Estate of Steven Ebtrn ,
LOST· Beagle, mole, brown head.
and
all
types
.ol
general
repair.
One
good
used
Homelite
deceased . late of Meigs WAITRESS WANTED 35 or ofder
HOUSE FOR sole near Eastern
white top on toil . answers to
Work guaranteed 20 yeortre-•· •
Cha1n Saw
SISO
County ,, Ohro
nanie
of
'Wheeler
·.
lost
on
H1gh S~hool , 3 bedrooms , 2
Old Uberty , apply In person
penence. PMone ~-2AO!__,
New Co -Op Water Sot
HOMESITES for sole 1 aero and
Cred rtor s are requ tred 10
11B W Morn St· Pomeroy , o.-uo
Sumner Rood, reword Phone
baths, full basement . 2 car
leners
up Middleport , near Rutland
file th ei r cla rms with sa1d
SEWING
MACt-liNE Repairs , s.-:Fred Karshnel', 985-3874
afternoons
garage Phone 985·3867.
Jan. 5, 1877
model VC -XVI Only $179 .'95
fidu cra ry wrthrn thr ee mo nthS
Call992·74al
vlct
all
makes, 992 221W . TM
Da ted lhis 21nd day of GUARANTEED JOBS LOCATION
One good used G1bson SidePLAINS - three bedroom
Unusual Circumstances th iS December
Fabr iC Shop , Po meroy.
NEW~ J b;droom house , b1oth7. TUPPERS
1976
$374
40
smgle,
$502
.80
mor·
by·S•de
Ref(lgerator
S200
house, 2 baths, living room ,
commg year will draw you closer
Authorized Smger Sales ancl
Man nrng D Webster
s ...-41"
- ~SB.ft - ~ ~
all elec , 1 ocre, Mtddleport,
fom1ly room ftreploce , carpet , _ Service . We sharpen Scluon.
ned Army Rocru,hng Call Col
to several 1nt1uenMI contacts
Judge
~~.'AJYtii_:HJE:
-~-:::.:::::.::=::_
close to Rutland Phone 9'92·
lect (614)593·3022 385·6318.
•v1
d"hwosher, disposal. range .
They II be helpf ul m lurtherlng
court of Co mmon Plcil s,
7481
Iorge lor . $26,500. Phone (614) EXCAVATING , do1er loader and ·
Probate
DqtiS
to
n
Commerc1a1
property
O!;~prpx
.
•
17
'
J
!
-:&lt;
•
"
,_
,.
"
•
¥
.~
_
·-·~·
your amb1t1ons
1
backhoe w!)rk, dump trucll1 ~:
County ,
Oh1 o MAN NEED!:O thai can do body ·~- · Jack W. CArsey, Mgr.
Me tg s
6b7
acres,
level
land
,
located
at
SMAll
farm
for
sale
'"!o•t.
down
.
(Are you a Capncorn? Bermea
repoir work . Contact Harold L..:Ai&amp;=:::,;....;P~ho:;n:;:e.:,9:.:.92:;;·2:.;1::,81:..,_...J
- 6304 .
11?) 28 ( 1 f 4, 11 )IC
and lo.boys for Mire, will haul 1
Tuppers
Plo1ns
on
Ohro
Route
owner
financed
.
Mon
roe
CounHysel l,
Rut land
Phone ·lARGE HOUSE on o good s11e lot .
Osol has wntten a special Astrafill d1rt, to so1l. limesrone ond
7 Phone (614) 667 ·6304
ly. W Va . Phone (30-' ) 7727.t!2·3154 after 5 p m
Out of hrgh woter , dose to
-Gra ph Letter lor you For your,
gravel . Call Bob or Roger J.t,
3102
or
(304)7J2.3227
.
NEW AM·FM Stereo·rod1o Bfrock
shoppmg oreo Pnced to sell
copy send 50 cents and a long
fers . day phone m -1c.9.
tape combmot1on $1~ 95&gt; or
COUNTRY farmland wrth seclud"hone 992·5766
sell-a ddressed. stampe d
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
terms Phone 992 3965 .
ed woods water and good ac- HOUSE. 3 8 R , botM , I r .. dmlng
envelope to Astro-Grap/1, ,p 0 1
-5232__....__
_........
:
cess 1n Monroe County , W Vo
OLO furniture , rcti bo..;e11 , bross POLOROID S)( 70 camera, $100.
Bo~ 489 Red10 City Sla tton. New
and k1tchen , gas heat , lxite EXCAVATING, do2or backhoe c
$1 ,000 down . coli (304) 772
beds, wall telephones ond
Phone 991.7354
·
York , NY 10019 Be sura lo ask NOTIC E OF APPOINTMENT
men!, 2 car garoge , Iorge lent·
ond dltcher Charles R. Hat3102 or (304)772-3227.
Case
No
22
,001
parts.
or
complee
households
lor CapricO rn Volume 1 )
ed
yard with garden spot . See
-held , Back Ho&amp; · Service,
, E stat e ol Mary Eblm ,
Wrrte M D Mtller, Rt -' • GRANO PIANO, whtte frntsh . ·"'!'~.,~~~
at 242 Condor St ., Pomeroy,
good octron also Ratoliller .
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2001.
Deceased
Pomer~ Oh1o_ C~-~ 992 77~
Ohro
Phone,949-2202
No t rce rs her eby given that
SEPTIC Systems installed by
Fr ank J Porter , J r , of R: , D CASH pG~id lor all makes and STEREO AM FM FM slereo-rodio,
3 BEDROOM home , breezeway
lrcensed · installer , Shepard
3, Racine , Oh10 has been duly
models ' of mobrle homes
and garage around 1 acre
a track . tope combmollon .
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
Contractors. Ph6ne 742·2..a9.
appointed Ad m1nr st rator of
Phone area code 61 4·.t!23-9531 .
The Almiii&amp;C
located in Arbaugh Edit1on Tup· ~PTK TA_N_K_
Balance due $1o4 20 or terms
the Estale of Mary Eb lrn,
S -cl-oa
'ne_d:"-M
_adetn
216 E. Second Strtet
I!IIIER VIEW - 3 large
Ualled PresaiDiemadOIIIll
pers
Plo rns,
Ohro
Phone 992-3965
deceased . la te of Me1gs TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
bedrooms.
bath
,
dining
Sonllofion , W2·3954 or 992'$15 ,500 Phone992-7292.
• ducts Top price for slondmg
:
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 4, c ounty , Ohto
TWO NANNYS .J' 1 billy goat $20
·-~
Phone 9'12·3325
room , large kitchen ,
242a
sawtimber
Call
Kent
Hanby
Cred
rtor
s
are
requ1rcd
10
NEW 3 bedroom hoUse, bullt·ln -the fourth day of 1977 with 361 frl e lher r cla ims with sjt ld
each Phone 94CJ-2739 .
basement, nat~ral gas
I 446·8570
kitchen bolh and 'h, Phone WILL do roofing, construdion ,
to follow .
DEXTER - Large
frdu c,ary wtl hrn lhree monthS
-- - . - - - - - , ' USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
furnace, hardwoOd floors
plumbing and heating. No lob
742.2306 or contact M1IO B HutCOINS.
CURRENCY.
lakons
,
old
Da
led
lhr
s
'nnd
day
ot
small
brook,
3
bedroom
The moon is approachinl!
ASKING ONLY SI2.SOO.OO
pocket watches and chams ,
Belo113008 Sktdder, Timberjock
too large or too small . PhOne
chison.
Rutland,
Ohio
Decem ber 19 76
mobile horne and garage
its full phase.
BRICK - 2 bedrooms.
srlver and gold We need 1964
360 Grapple Skrdder John
742·2348.
Mannrnq D Webster
with '12 bafh
-:::'c---:c----c--'
Judqe
ond o!der ff!ver corns Buy sell ,
Deere 360 Crawler loader wog
bath, dining room. finished
The morning stars are
CARPENTER , flooring. celllnt.
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
court
of
Common
Pleas,
or
trade'
Coli
Roger
Wamsley
,
forks
,
Bush
.60'
Metollurgrco!
back
porch.
natural
gas
Mars and Saturn.
pan•hng Phone 992-.:.
Z7:;c5,;,;
9·' --- ,
Probate Drvrsron
modest home, Nice bath.
1-42 2331
Ch1pper Contact Don Groves
furnace , garage, love :,'
The evening stars are JupiMt'lqs County, Ohro
~--- -· --·-·-wor lyons Equipment Co 1 Inc
kitchen. full basement and
NEED
CASH?
Turn
that
old•r
furDOZER work ond welding. Con level J ot. $8,900 00
( 1'l1 78 l 11 I, 11 31 c
CASH! t1 for junk cars Frye'$
Circleville . Ohio 43113 Phone
ter, Venus and Mercury.
niture mto tosh today . We poy
gas furnace $5,500.
tact James Par~ons . At. I ,
NEAR
VETERANS
' Truck ond Auto. 2.t! HOUR
(614 ) S96-47b9.
the High est posstble prices on
Those born on this date are
Rotlne, on Carmel Rood.
HEMLOCK
GROVE
3
MEMORIAL HOSPITALWRECKER SERVICE! PhoneAntrque Furmture ond Collec·
bedroom s wit h closets ,
under 11le sign of Capricorn.
742_2081
MENS USED clothtng tOr sole
New lovely split entrance
trbles Ask about our complete MOBILE Home Repatr, ElK. ,
modern
bath,
eat -In
---- -Open 4 tdl 9 everyday Proffllt's
Sir
Isaac
Newton,
plUmbing ond heating. PhdrMo
home,
4
bedrooms,
2
bofhs.
ouctron
and op'pratsa1 servrces
NOW BUYING Scrap Pomeroy
Recreot1on Center Porfland
klfchen and tull basement
992·5858
discoverer of the law of
sewing room or den. dining
Call collect, Athens. (614) -- --~--Auto Recyclmg, h1gh prtees
Oh10 45770
$20,000.
gravity, and actress Jane
ELECTRONIC T V CLINIC. Now
592
-'143,_??2 -4~9 evenmgs
room. util1ty room , large
poid. auto bodies . motors. REFRIGIOAIRE ELEC. range, top
NEAR ROCK SPRINGSTV . shop, Eleelranlc T.V. Clink
scrop , rron , metals, botterres ,
Wyman were born Jan . 4 recreation
room.
garage,
One floor 3 bedroom home,
ovens, bottom cabtnets, pullout
Service call. $5.95. Color. II W
open B trll 4.30 Monday thru
carpeted
,
located
On
double
)le In 1642 and she in 1914.
burners Also , antique chester
nice bath, , gas, F A '-~~~~~
antenna sy&amp;tems stereos, etc.
Saturday , Old 33 tusr above
tot $40,000 00
· Also on this day 111 history:
drawe rs wrth m1rror on top
furnace and level lot i
572 South Third, Middleport.
lorrgrounda, Pomeroy Oh1o
MIDDLEPORT
Corner
PhOI'Ie 142·2116
In 1885, Dr. Willlalh Grant
Will do odd lobs , roofmg, painPhone 992-6306. Corry In and
snooo
Wdl also pickup cars Phone
lot, 3 bedrooms. dln;ng
ting gutter work. Ph.one 992SYRACUSE - A lois, 3
save money
of
Davenport,
Iowa,
TWO 900 ib steen. 2 mi xed
, ' I
992·6337.
room , 2 baths, utility
bedr'oom all electric home,
Hereford
heilers
to
freshen
performed
the
first
2~~·':c'--,---, - - - - HOWERY AND MAR fiN b ·
WANTED . CHIPWOOp polol
space, natural gas furnace,
around Feb. '1, rear wheel
nice ki tchen and dining,
WILL DO plumbmg, heating , roofcavotlng , stptlc syst.ms , !
ap pendectomy. The patient
mo;ocrumum diameter, 10 mcher
carpeting. exira building
we1ghts for Formal I A tractor.
bodacious view of river,
Ing,
remo deli ng , free
dozer , backhoe, dump tnf(l , l
on Iorge e'hd , $8 00 p•r ton
• madi a complete recovery .
used f9r office or storage.
Phone EM3· 2353
est imates
Coli
Charles
537,500
llmt~tone ,
gravol , bloddap ~
Bundled
slobs
$6
00
per
lon
In 937, about 10,000 Italian
S22.000.00.
LINCONL HTS, 2
_S!~~~Oir 'cJ 85·4:.:1.:,
21:;.-_,_ _ __
paving, Rt. 143 Phon• I (61•h
de lrvered to Ohro Pollet Com
troops landed in Spain to help
R UTLANO - &lt; acres with
pony , Rt 2, Pomeroy . Phone
bedroom home with n1ce
GUN STOCI&lt;S re-fmished . Phone
THURSDAY REJECTS
698·733~71
older home , 3
the natt'o nalist forces in that
992·2689.
bafh,
dining,
basemen
t
and
992 7168 .
. EXCAVATING ,
BACKHOU, '
Week of Dec. 23, 1!76
bath,
dining
room
,
eountry's civil war .
furniture . $12,900
PROBLEMS?
DOZER . TRENCHER, lOWIOY, ,
End of tst Half
~mt~
~~=-~~~.io,_=;;
"aluminum siding, out
GALLIA·MEIGS LINE- 6
In 1948, Burma be(ame an
DUMP TRUCKS. IILL PULliNS,
Standiii!IS
-=.... • .::.... : • .=-...:r.;;:.7.:::===- -=:;:::;,...:=::;:;.
Let Pomeroy L•ndmorli
cellar. storage building,
,rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
PHONE 992·2478, DAY 011 ,
Independent nation after Team
soften
&amp;
condttlon
your
3 AND 4 RM . furmshed and un
trailer hookup to rent .
NIGHT .
~
nice
kitchen,
gas,
F.l\
.
Team
4
80
56
centuries of influence and
furnished opts; Phone 992
water with a Co-op wale~
WICK HOMES i&amp; e»r:pondlng to all ,_
'
m.soo.oo.
Team
I
78
S8
furnace
,
and
rurar
water.
5434,
area of Ohio NO FRANCHISE CHRISTMAS SPECIAL' Stwlrlg
control by Great Britain.
softener, Model UC·XVI.
- _....,.........._
Team 2
72 6.j
$22,000.
FEE Big money opportunity,
Machin•• cleontd, oUed ..,
, In 197t, Prealdent Nixon TeamS
COUNTRY
Mobrle
Home
Pork
,
Rt
Only
60 76
WANT TO SEL\.1 tTIME
RUTLAND Garden,
ho~M~ merchondleed from
adjuttld , $5 98 . Sewlni
33
tan
mrles
north
of
Pomeroy
reluled to r e i - any more Team6 •
56 80
IS MONEY) LET US SELL
uflllfy building, garage and
your model home For free
Center 1 Mtddleporr, Ohio.
large lots with concrete potk)s,
54 82
l., Ul test ... your ·WIItr
of the ~00 documents Welkers Ashland
YOUR
PROPERTY NOW.
2 bedroom home with both
dealer
pockets,
send
to
WtCK
OIL
AND GAS furnac• tervk• airMI :
sidewalks
runners
and
oil
Team Game - Team
Frtt.
subpoenaed by Ute Sanate 4, High
!SERVING
f&gt;IEIGS
and gas heat. $11 ;000.
HOMES PLANT, 125 South
j5ortl. Trailer and homes, ~ r
__ slr!IIJf pork~ng :_P_hone 992·?_..-??
296; Team 6, 263 ; Team I,
COUNTY FOR SEVERAL
LOTS- Nice large wooded
Mich1gon Avenue , Coldwater,
hOurservic• Pl'lo'l• a..J-2165. :
Watergate Committee.
246
••
FURNISHED two bedroom opt ,
__Mtch1gon .t9036
~- ----- - - - ,
YEARS! '
and cleared ones. $2,500.00
High Team Series - Team
adult5 only No pels Mid·
HENRY
E.
CLELAND
up
4,
768
;
Team
6,
730
;
Team
I,
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr .
'
A thought for the day : lrillh ·
dleport Phone 992·387.. ,
BROKER,
- .
Phont 992-ZIBI
poet James Stephens said, 6&lt;3
'I
HJQh' lnd , Game - P.:~ttl ONE BEDROOM Apts at VILLAGE
'NOW IS THE TIME TO
1
APPRAISER,
'Women "are wiser than men Will iams . 202; Mary Crisp.
., , ' I
MANOR In Middleport lor Sl~
- PUT THAT PROPERTY
CO!lSULTANT.
mon
lhly
plus
elec
or
$130
in['
because they \mOw less and 1~3; Laura c..arpenter, 148.
INVALID WALKER rn good conc!lON THE MARKET. CALL
dudrng elec LOWER RATES for 1 t,on bench hos converts rnto
H1g h Ind . Series - Patti
understand more!'
992·22S9 or 992·2568
992-!325.
&lt;.SEN IOR CITilENS Convenient
Engineering firm desires to employ one or
Will iams 484, Laura Cartub, General Electr•c lloor
to shopprng on Thrrd ond Mdl _f?l rsh~r P~':.n ! 992 ·32~"..:.._._._ y
penter 374, Mary Crisp 356.
two
Meigs County residents to provide field •
Sis th Middleport Brand new
work lor county-wide house numbering
htgh quality oportmenfs See TWO 878 w 15 snow tlret, $25 .
THU~SDAY REJECTS
Phone 247 3895.
project. Applicant _must be able to lrilerpret
the manager at Apt. 28 or call
Week of Dec. 16. m6
- ~ FOR sole . Phone
m 7721. An Equal Housing HONEY
Standings
and scale mapping.
Opportunil)l
Tum
985·3555.
'
·-Team2
so 48 '1 BEDROOM
troiler, real nice. SCHOOL SEWING Moch ln~ts
The person must be willing to 111,1tt the
TeamA
72 S6
Phone 992·3324, adults only.
m wolnut eonsofeue
-- Singer•
Team I
70 S8
public.
A car will bit required. The _.k
~ISTEN
$«&gt;. Phone 992·5146
TeamS
60 68 5 ROOMS AND both, Iorge yard, ~
'
-·
duration
will W limited to the project
also garden 1pot In Pomeroy. SINGER GOLDEN Touch N' SEW
Team 6
4.1 80
completion
(estlml!edllme I months to one
tdeol
for
children.
On
dead
end
Welkers Ashland
46 82
does •t alii Zig-zavs. MWI on
street Phone
year).
·
knits . .outomotlc buttonholer
High Team Series - Team
moktt design~, mon,. 'other
5, 720: Team 6. 707: Team 4,
ftolures Phone w :rS!46
,6al.
Starting salary $2.50 to $3.00 per hour (plus
'FRBGHT
'
High Team Game - Team
DAMAGED. OctQber 1q
6, 271: Team s, 267 ; Team s. GOOD EAR coni, $2.00 bushel.
mil!!agel
depending on quallllcalions.
1976 Z1g rag sewmg •Trachlnes,
243.
Phone 742-1359
bu ttonho le ~ monogiO'Tl , etc
High lnd Game - Laura
Orlgmally Sl79.95 will.~••ll for
WOOD for .sole Phone
~
~44-12~2 after January 1 lor
Carpenter 159, Charle-ne FIRE
$59.95 cosh or totml Phone
742 2131 .
Occzl 148, Charlene Doczl142 . .
Interview. ·
'192-5146.
High Ind. Series - Laura HEAVY GAUGE I Booms and H
Equal opportunity employer:
,., Carpenter 412. Charlene
Beams for 1ole, 8. 19, 10 lnch. FIREWOOD PHONE .~:t- 2131 or
985·3813
Phone 992 7()3.i
Doczl «!1 , Flora Murphy 319.
"BR-R-R-R-R"
GEMINI (Mer 21-JUM 201 COntinue to be eXtremely prudent
where your money and
r~sources are concerned
Wrong moves could prove to be
exceptionally costly

wllhln 10 dns.

WIN AT BRIDGE
The safe play for 3NT.

•'
UM M, 50 I

DID.. WELL, WHAT
15 ITZ l 'M

'

LI5TE NI~6!

._·····....

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

NORTH

ARE YOU SURE Y6U
REAL.t.'T WANT TO

~

--

5H~Fr0&amp;!

AL TROMM CONST.

WEST

EAST

.8 7
• Al0853
. 92
olo i0842

• JI053
" J94
• J7S3

-

Wesl

,.-------P"'---...,...-.. .,.
TESTIMONY

PDI SO~

Kllll tf 15 ONE THING r
6UT POISOI'I GAS!
At&lt;ID DROWN IN' ! YOU.
MURDERED 'EM! I'll
TELL TH ' WHOL E

GAS?HM " " '

YOUR
PAL
HE.R
E sr:ws
HE'LL TELL.

THE WHOLE
STORY ~

STOR'f.'
.

-~/

--

Pomemv Landmark

-..----

_

---

__

------·

TEAFORD

-----

- - - - ------

- --·- ----------

BORN LOSER

"'
too'~~
(;O(,Ta'&lt;\ . P

I

tXJt.I'T &lt;£T
~'WTW...

'wi~Biifi.FGU~

n~~

WJJK A
~OL.~

:

SorTt..~

CDF

RlbHT

OIJl'R .

I~K!

l
&lt;

,,

•

.
G

!lW
·-~

•
{lj\SOLINE ALLEY

•

___

~------.-

----

Now

can't
~tall
{

p~e.
MISS

Melba?

ULABNER-

'

.

.AN'THAAS NICE: FI&lt;ES!-1
Alf&lt; ARt.::UND- 22-HOW IN
CRS'AT/ON DID THEY ~~

':-'-- d g j MI\NA6t= TI-IAT.

-- -- -

LAFF·· A. DAY

--

~-~-

- - -·

-~

m-3090

f_.__ .... __

-

----------

BUY, SEU OR TRADE?

.

TO THE

SWAP SHOP

7 PM- WMPO • 92.1 FM
92 in the Counby
I

Cc:: :::

.

counted 50 pomts from 1925 to
1930 when they were reduced

to count 20 for minor suit and
30 for maJors and notrump
(Do you have a question
lor /he eKperts? Wnte "Ask
the · Jacobys" care of th1s
newspaper The Jacobys w11t

wtll have a lot of dtamond

answer tndMdual questions
II stamped . self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most 1n terestmg quest10ns
1
wtII be use d m IhIS column
of a sudden our ca refree~ and writ rece1ve copres o(
declarer can only score eight ,JACOBY MODERN)

w

ACROSS
41 Gardening
I Fade out
1tem
' 5 Archt tec·
42 Abr11ded
turai style 43 Ctty of
11 Olive genus
Manasseh
12 Pilot
DOWN
13 Box
I Concern'mg
14 African
mall
wtldcat
2 Lofty
15 Bit of
3 Orphan
advice
Anme's cry,
16 Neighbor
(2 wds.)
of J ordan
4 Vase handle
· ( abbr .)
:• 5Wmdbag
ll Annex
6 Mamfest
18 Black
7 French
cuckoo
shooting
19 Mount, as
match
a gem
8 Outclass
20 Aunt (Sp. )
( 4 wds )
21 Loan shark , 9 Roma is tts
for one
capital
23 Smge
10 Place for
24 Recline
wme
25 Haggard

Yeste rday's Answer
16 Seer's
28 Become
phrase
funous
(2 wds.)
(2 wds.)
29 Contented
22 incline
(2 wds,)
23 Oriental
30 To the tea
25 Religwus
born.
•
32 Too p_roud
body
for
26 Kttchen
gadget
38 "Let 'er 21 " Ivanhoe" 39 Shinto
temple
heroine

"

b-+---+---+--

31 The late
MISS
Russell
32 U.S. power
agency
b-....J...-1-~
33 Actress
Hagen
34 Milkflsh
35 Play the
ponies
36 "- of
Harlech"
( Welsh
anthem )
37 Fright
39 Airplane's
wing length b-+- 1-....J...-If.""-+-48 Salad
green

is

1}&amp;~1} ~ THATSCRAIIILEDWORDQAMI

AXYDJ.BAAXR
I . 0 N G F E ·L 1. 0 W

One le tt-e r s1mply sliiiHls for .111uther In th1s sample A is
used for tlH' thn•r t:s X for the lwo O' s, etr Single letters.
apos t rophes. the length :m d formatt on of the wnrds arc all
t1 mt s F.ad1 d.1y the code letters arc dlffel"&lt;'nt

8o·'MNNIE t
l!i'JoKATiHE

13RIGH'f

EliDE ...

ElECOMING DOWNt

!Jt/T !T/5 MAK!Mj
WAY RJR A LOWCOST R(OJECT!

THINK OF HOw IAANY
PCOR PfOPLE WILL
BE HELPED WITH

DE&amp;PERATELY
NEEDED

I'D L//(£ W BE '
CHARITABLE; r;&gt;TAN ,
BUT RIGHT fON I
FEEL 'THAT ALL OUR
DRE'IMB ARE OOING
UP IN
!

OHI.

DHZELUS

ORL

HFNI.Z ,

NHO

UHO

vz

l:IIFOLZ

NI S

0 RL

NHO

RL

YHO

N IS ,- 0

OLSDTUSD.

IFMIZLX

e 1977 KJnl Feii\UU SyodiCIIC, lne.

I PREDICT THAT SOME
DA&gt;&lt; A CEREAL SOX WILL
WIN THE f'\JLITZE~ PRIZE !

SEE,
MARCIE'

I DID IT !

I'M FLAT AS A PANCAKE ,
PAW·-~E'LL HAVE TO FIND
~ORE t::ARD·PUNit\l'MONEV.
SOMEWHAI&lt;S ELSE !!

tHINGKT

) I I

*-

tly Henri Atnoklond Bob L.at

.

•

(]
WHA'T 'lOU'~ APT TO

BUHSIL

UHO

Yesterday's Cryploquote: A GOOD RESO(,UTION FOR
M~T PEOPLE WOULD BE TO SWEAR OFF BREAKING
THEM. - AUTHOR UNKNOWN

•

I CUNDE

6Ei WHEN YOU PAY

I I I

( 'RYPTOQUUTES

CUR BUILDING IAAY

-I

WEDNESDAY , JANUARY S, 1977
6 DO-Sunrise Semester 10.
6 15-Farm Report 13.
6 2Q--Not For Women Only 13.
6 JD-1\G · ~SA 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester B;
Chrlstooher Closeup 10
6.45-Mornmg Report 3.
6·So-Good Morning, West Virginia 13,
6 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13
7 co-Today 3. 4.15; Good Morning . America 6,13, CBS
News 8; Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
7·05-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10,
7:3D-School les 10.
8 DO-Lassie 6: Capt Kangaroo 8.10. Sesame St. 33.
a· 3D-Big Valley 6.
9,01).-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
9:3D-Cross-Wits 3: One Life to Live 6; Good Day 8.
10·DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15, Pr ice Is Right 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
·
10 1.&gt;--General Hospi tal 6.
10 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15
11 OD-Wheel ot Fortune 3, IS ; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6: Double Dare a.10; Morning with D.J. 13.
Elec Co 20 ·
11 .3D-Shoot for the Stars 3,4, 15; .Happy Days 6, 13;
Love at L1fe 8,10; SesameS . 20,33.
11: 55-CBS News a: Ms . Flxlt 10 ..
12'lit1- News 3,6,8,10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; Name
That Tune 15.
12 3D-Lovers &amp; Fr iends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6.13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
I DO-Gong Show 3, All My Children 6,13; Con.
centratlon a. Young &amp; the REstless 10; Not For
Women Only 15
1·3o-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Family Feud 6, 13, As
The World Turns 8, 10
2 D0-$20,000 Pyramid 13 . Dinah 6.
2 3().....Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to' Live 13; Guiding
Light a, 10
3.0D-Another World 3.4.15. All In The Family 8,10: On
Aging 20
3·15-General Hospital 13.
3 3().....8ewltched 6, Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20
4.QO---Mister Cartoon 3; Marc:us Welby, M.D ., Gong
Show IS, Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame St 20,33 , Movie "Scalplock" 10: Dinah 13.
• ·3D-My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6; Partridge
Family a, Flintstones 15.
l :DO-Big Valley 3. Merv Griffin 4. Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33, Star Trek 15
5.Jo-News 6; Family Affair 8; E lec . Co 20,33; Adam .
12 13.
6 DO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; BC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6 3o-NBC News 3.4,15; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News a.IO, Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33
7 DO-Trulh or Cons. 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
for Dollars 6, Pop Goes the Country 8, News 10; To
Tell the Truth 13 , My Three Sons IS, Consumer
Survival Kit 20, Amer icana 33.
7 3o-Dolly 3, SIOO,OOO Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6. S2S,OOO Pyramid 8. MacNeii ·Lehrer
20,33; The Judge 10. Break the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
a·oo-NBC Reports 3,4.15. Bionic Woman 6, 13; Gun.
smoke a, Nova 20,33; Good Times 10,
a 3().....Jetfersons 10.
9 DO-Barella 6.1 3; Movie "The Deserter" 8, 10; Dance
1n America 33, Soundstage 20
IO .DO-Charlle's Angels 6, 13 ; Shakers 33, News 20.
10:3D-Montage 20: Book Beaf 33.
11 00--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeii. Lehrer Report
33, Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 ·30--Johnny Carson 3,4, IS ; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
" Santee" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :DO-Movle "Party Gir l" 10, Jannakl 33.
12:&lt;().....Mystery ot the Week 6, 13.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4
2 !().....News 13

~
II ~
Unscrarnble these tour Jumbfes,
one lener to each square, to form
four orchnary words.

llAILY C RYPTOt!UOTE - Here's how to work it :

HELP WANTED

-

c,9unted 50 pomt.s
Tl\'e answer IS yes . They

tncks But West shows out on
the th~ea d1amond lead so
South goes after the spades
Agam est show s out an d aII

28 "- Blues"
(2 wds.)

•279.95

'- ~ ~

A Utah reader wants to
know 1f overtricks ever

classtc

= --:-:-:==-=-'

· Pomeroy Landmark
~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South analyzes West's lead
as fourth best of hiS smt With
two lower hearts mi sSing
there is a good chance that it
was fourth best of five or even
SIX Ali this doesn't affect
So~th ' s first play He puts up
dummy' s queen and 1s
dehghted when it holds
The carefree rubber bndge
d eclarer goes ~1g ht after
diamonds Should th e suit
break 3·3 or the Jack drop he

26 Vahse

BOWLING

HARD WATER.

tricks

by THOMAS JOSEPH

______

~-

win th e rubber , not over -

~

W0miT · :·

2

So uth
IN T
Pass

Opemng lead - 5 •

-

ITl~tMlJj]arv

North East

Pass , 3 N T Pass

·-~-~

~

How should a match point
declarer play th1s dummy'
Probably he should not try the
safety play on the theory that
he needed overtnc ks, but the
rubber bndge player needs to

Pass

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

'6.95

rubber bonus

North-South o.; ulnerable

PHOlOGRAPHY

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

heart and a dub and a niCe

o1o A J 7 6

,,

-- -------

diamonds, th ree spades, a

• A8

~:..J

IOCINE
CARPET SHOP

A careful declarer m1ght
well give the hand a safer
play ·He leads a diamond at
trick twa, but plays hts e1ght
when East follows low . West
takes h1s mne, but can't lead
any thing to hurt South , who
w11i now co lle ct four

o!oK Q
SOUTH iUt
"A 9 6 2
¥ K 72

_..........,.
--

Truss Rafter Co.

~

enough for h1s contract

• KQ1064
• 9 53

EXPIRIENtiD
Radiator: ...--..
Service

SouthiiStem Ohio

1

., Q 6

HEAR THIS? IT C'O /IJ ·
CERt.J5 ONE OF YOUR.
EMPL OY~S - A GIR.L.
NAMED 5HlVAUN

....,......

tncks wh1 c h 1sn ' L qu1te

4

• KQ4

•

6:3D-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grllflfh 6;
CBS News 8,\0: Birth and Oeath ot a Star 33;
Vegetable Soup 20 .
7 DO-Wonderful World of Mag ic 3; To Tell the Truth 4;
Bowling tor Dol lars 6: Let's Go To The Rctl 8;
News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15;
Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20: Amerlcon
Issue$ Forum 33 .
7 .3D-Hollywood Squares 4; Let' s Deal with It 6; Molfch
Game Pm 8; MacNeil· Lehrer Report 20,33; In The
~nol" 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Nashville on the Ro.d
IS
8;DO-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4; Happy Days 6,13;
Wonderful World of ,Magic 15; Who's Who 8,10; Tell
Me If' Anything Ever Was 00f1e 20,33.
•
a 3D-Laverne &amp; Sh irley 6, 13.
9 DO-Pollee Woman 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Man 6.13;
MASH e, 10; Mark Russell 20.33 ; Opening Soon at a
Theatre Near You 20: World War I 33. ,
IO .DO-Police Slory 3,4,15; Family 6,1 3; Switch 8,10;
News 20 ; Fight to be Remembered JJ. '
10 3D-Black Perspective onhhe News 20.
11 DO-News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15; MacNeii ·Lehrer Report
33.
•
"
11·30--Johnny Carson 3, 4,15; Movie "Crossfire" 6,13, ·
Kojak a: Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33 .
12 DO-Movie " The !fallon Brigands" 10. Janakl 33
12 3o-Mpv!e ' 1Change of Mind'' 8
1·00-Tomorrow 314; Ne.w.s 13.

s -oo.-B;g Valley 3; Merv Gr iffin 4 .~ Brady Bunch 8;
M1s ter Rogers 20,33, Star Trek 15
5 30--- News 6, Family Affair 8; Elec Co 20,33 1 Adam I 2 13
6 DO-News 3.&lt;.a.IO,l3,1l; ABC News 6. Zoom 20.JJ.

,,'
'

easy viewing
'

TUESDAY, JANUARY ~.~977

'{

............ .
D

I

•.

Business •·Se"'ices

*

Television log for

IS THE TYPE THAT ENJOYS
6EINCi TORMENTED-BY A MAN, 'tHAT tS.

••

-

4,1977

IF YOU ASI&lt; M£, PERFUME

I

publlcellon
l he rlgl'lt

The Daily Sentinel Middlepo t p
DI'CK'TRA:CY
.'
r • omeroy, 0 , Tuesdav. Jan

9-

I

Print an'"""-:

iOO MUCH FO~ AN UM·
l!RELLA THATPOESN'T
WOR'K ~PE~Y.

''t XI I XX Y"
(Anlwftlcmo&lt;!OW)

Yesterday's

Jumbles: VIPER RAVEN PLOWED WEOOED

I

Answer: What alo!&gt;g hlll'd day.,., at a nUdlll camp
Is nof likely to be-"WIYIRING"

�•

\

.

10-- ~~e 0.0•: Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., TU~ay, Jan. f , lm

Women students hurt

Air Force
has Brown
...
m new post
NEW HAVEN; W. Va. Air Force Clptaln Edward
M. Brown, son of Mrs.

Frances Ohlinger, 616 Fifth
Street, New. Haven, hal been

assigned to Air Force
RecruttJni Servi~ as Chief of
Advertising and Pjlblielty for
JllrU of three states, In··
eluding 52 of Ohio's 88
eowtties.
A 1968 graduate of Wahama
High School, Clpt. Brown
holds a BS degree in radio
and. television broadcasting,
a MA degree In broadcast
management, and a MS
degree In public relations
from Ohio University.
In his new position Capt.
Brown will be responsible for
managing Recruiting Service
advertising and publicity
effortS In 52 counties in Ohio,
six In Kentucky and four in
Indiana. His headquarters
are In Columbus.
Clpt. Brown entered the
· Air Force in 1972, after
winning a regular comJnission through the Reserve
Of(icers Training program.
Prior to this assignment, he
was stationed at Laughlin Air
Force· Base Texas as an
Academic Instructor and
pilot•on T-38 trainer aircraft.
Captain Brown is lllllrried
to the former Dortha
· Wilcoxen of Racine in Meigs
County, Ohio. The couple and
their 8-month-old son, Teddy,
will reside at nearby
Rlckenbacker AFB, Ohio.

Lawyer charges
computers amok
STEUBENVILLE , Ohio
(UP!)- The.genersl counsel
for District 6 of the United
Mine Workers Union ssid
today regulations governing
suUur dioxide emissions were
based on a "vertiable host of
computers r.unnlng amok."
H. 'John Rogers testmed at
an Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency hearing
today.
He caUed.for another series
of studies to determine
''proven emission of sulfur
dioxide" from coal burning
plants before the EPA takes
any actidn on n~w emission
regulations. The hearing was
the third In a series held by
the EPA. Earlier hearingS'
were held In Cincinnati and
Cleveland and a fourth will be
held in Columbus.

~

Two Gallia County women
injured in a t .Ire&lt; vehicle
a""ident Moncay morning on
SR 7 at the junction of CR 5
(in Bradbury ) in Meigs
County are on critical lists
today.
Sue Ann Hughes, 19,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Hughes, Rt. I, Gallipolis, was
listed in critical condition at
St. Joseph 's Hospital In
Parkersburg where she was
taken for severe head injuries
after receiving emergency
treatment at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A passenger in her car,
Diana L. Moles, 20, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton
Moles, Cheshire, was also
liSted in critical condition at
the Holzer Medical. Center.
She suffered fractures of both
CAPT. BROWN

Nathaniel 8armon
dies in Florida
Nathaniel Harmon, 62,
· husband of the former Beulah
Lee Smith of Mid\lleport, died
Christmas Day at Bay Front
Center Hospital, St. Peters·
burg, Fla. Besides his wife,
he is survived by three
children and · nine grandchildren . Mrs . Harmon 's
address is 3455 JOist Street
Terrace,• North , Pinellas
Park, Fla . 33565.

BOND~ITED

One defendant was fined
and four forfeited bond in
Syracuse Mayor Herm'an
London' s court Monday
night. Police Chief Milton
Varian was the arrestirig
officer. Fined were Darrell L.
Dugan, Racine, $13 and costs
for speeding . Forfeiting
'bonds were Larry S. t,r.t·
terson , Racine , $21.70;
Rhonda F. West, Racine,
$19.70, and Donald E. Fin·
dley, Columbus, $25.70, -all
speeding, and Dennis M.
Lavender, Middleport, $12.70,
stop sign violation.
·

One Man's Family

made a

ni~: e

Otristmas ·

legs, an ann, and multiple the Holzer Medical Center for
~her injuries .
.
t~eatment
of
Injuries
State troopers said the· following a headon collision
Through the help of many
accident occun;ed at 10 :10 . ar2:30 p.m. Monday on Coa l
in
d I vi d u a 1 s ·and
a.m. when a Chesler town- Valley Rd. three tenths of a
orga
nizations,
the
15
ship truck driven by Hobart mile east of the Jackson
residents
of
the
Meigs
County
NeweU, 59, Chester, sliding . County line.
oo ice at the intersection,
The patrol said cars driven lnfinnary had "one of the
rammed into Miss Hughes' by Helen F. Potts, 40, Rt. 2 best Christmases ever."
foreign car.
Vinton , and Martha J ~, Responsible for making the
It was reported that she Brewer, 26, Rt. 2, Vinton,' hohday season il time to
remember for the residents
was thrown from her car and . collided in an icy curve. Both were:
Miss Miles was pinned In the drivers were ·injured as were
Reedsvil le
Methodist
wreckage. Newell had minor Ronald W. .Brewer, ag~ f, a Churc h Lad ie s , Feeney
injuries but was not treated. passen ger in the Brewer , Bennett P os l 128 , Feeney
Benne!t Po st Jr . Unil No. 128 ;
A car 'driven by James auto, and two ,passengers In Amcri.ta
n Legion Aux . unit
McCune, :11, of Charleston, the Potts car, Eli~abeth E. 39 , Mrs . Paul Casci Chair
ma~ ;
Eastern H igh FFA ,
was following the Hughes Young, 41, Rt. 1, Vinton, and M
CI QS Hig h Sc hool F FA
ca r. Police said McCune Bobby L. Young, ageS, Rt. I, Bradford Church of Christ '
Young Ad ul! Class ; Eagle~
swerved to avoid a coilislon, Vinton. There ~as heavy Club
of Pomeroy , se . . ent h
but his car struck an em.· damage to both vehicles. No Day A dventist of Po mer oy
laurel Cli ff Chu rc h. Eagl ~
bankment. Newell was cited charges were filed.
Ridg e Communi t y .Church ,
for speed in excess of road
Ray
Fairchild,
38, Mr
s Elve Hudson .. Rock
conditions.
.Columbus, was charged with Springs Methodist 'church ,
s·. Arlee Abbott·; Bradford
Both womeni graduates of failure to stop within the Mr
Churc h Of Chr ist , M issionary
Kyger Creekl".tiigh School, assured clear distance Circle . Brad for d Church of
Ady lt Class No. 1;
were enroute to Ohio following an accident at 2 • Christ,
Br ildford Church of Chr ist
University. Friends said bOth p.m. Monday on US 35 at the Youth Group , Mike Way land ;
(continued from page I)
were going to Athens. to junction to the Adamsville- M id dl eport Fi r st B ap t ist
Chur ch ." J une Klo es; Rutl and
$549,370; out of town $158,770, complete enrollment in Ohio Cora Rd.
C ~ r i s t ian Chur ch , L eno ra
University where Winter
The patrol said Fairchild's Mrcheal s Leifh ei t , Mr . and
in town, $390,600. ·
. Richard Gru eser , Mr .
Total Man Hours spent for Quarter classes bega n vehicle struck the rear end of- Mrs
and Mrs . Purl Van Meter and
Monday.
a car driven by Cheryl Ann "f ami l y ; He m lock Grov e
the year, 1,9(10.
,
Chr i stia n Church. Adult
OTHERS INJURED
Swain, 19, Rio Grande.
Legar reported that it was
Class ; Middleport Chu rc h ot
.Five persons werP t11lr'"" to
"not too good year" for the
Christ Loy a l Men &amp; Women
Class.
F ranc es
R oush 1
fire department in that there
M i ddl ep ort Fi r st Baptist
were large fires. Legar also
Churc h ,
Etecla
Cir Cl e;
Pomeroy Ju nior Girl Sco uts
reported that the contract
No :
1 tao , Mr s _ Patt y
with Salisbury Township will
Woor;lyard ; Ba ld· Knob Youth
be increased from $300 year
Gro up , MI . Moriah Baptist
otracted illnes s." Signers Churc h , So uthern Baptist
PALO ALTO. Cal if. UP! - pr
to $800.
of his obituary incl r; de(.:l Church of Pomeroy , Knig hts
Mrs .· Gertrude Tem pl e, S.t,
Mayor Andrews appointed mother
Templar No. 24. Pomeroy
of U.S. Protocol Chief Com munist party . le-aders. Communrty
Act ron Com .
A part y m em ber Bolfinsky
tbe following committees: Shirley Temple Black , died at
_mittee , RC Co la company ,
received
the
Order
of
Lenin
,
· BUILDING - Osborne.,. a hospi tal after a lengthy
Me~gs· · H igh
School Band ,
Stalin and State prizes · and Mergs
Hi gh Sc hool · sen io"r
Brown, Powell, Chairman. illness , i1 was announced was
named a Hero of Bus~ness Offi ce Edu cation .
FINANCE
Brown, Monda y .
Soci alist Labor . ,
Se nr o r
Class of Uni t ed

Werry

a

a

Chairman, Davis, Werry.

Mrs. Temple dies at 84

Mrs. Temp le died Saturd~y , her 6dth wedding an ntversary Her hl,ls band ,
George , was at her s"i de a I the
hospi ta l.
Other s u ~vivors include two
sons, John Tem pl e, San
Pedro, Calif ., and George
Temple Jr ., Laguna Hills ,

O!lDINANCE - Werry,
Chairman: Osborne, Davis.
STREET
Davis,
Chairman, Osborne, Werry.
SAFETY AND PARKING
- Powell, Osborn~. Chair·
Calif.
.
man, Globokar.
ORINDA.
Ca
lif
.
UPI
&gt;· UpL!TIES
AND Mi chae l T . Mann , 57, a
SANITATION - Globokar, professor of German at the
Chairman, Brown, Powell. UniversiJ y of Californ ia Berkl ey , and son of the late
MOBILE HOMES
German novel i st Thoma s
Globokar.
Mann , has died at his home .
A native of Munich, Ger ·
Attending were Mayor
man
y , ' Mann
was
the
Andrews, the ' Rev. William you nges
t of the novelis t's six
Middleswarth who opened the chi ldr en . He died Jan . 1.
meeting with prayer, Werry ,

Mann began his career as a

Davis, Lou Osborne, Powell, musician , playing t he.viola as
soloist and with the San
Brown, Donnie Ward aFrancisco
Sy mphon y or Charles Legar, Chief We~ chesl ra . He swi l che d hi s
ster, Glasgo, and Jane interest to German literature
and is the author of si x books.
Walton, clerk.
·
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;.;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

REVIVAL PLANNED
Rev. Parker Husselton will
be the guest speaker at the
Church of the Nazarene In
Syracuse, 7:30 each evening
· Jan. 5·9. Rev . Husselton is a
scholar in' the doctrine of
Holiness and Prophecy . The
public is invited.

..

This one likely
to be shot down
·too by Congress

including a biogr aphy of hi S
father
_He is surv ived by hi s
widow , Gret. two sons living'
in Europe an d an adopted
daugh ter , Raju .
Ther e will be no funer al
ser v ices.

MOSCOW. UPI ~ P;of.

Vasiliy
Ni ko laevi c h
72 ,
an
i nBoltinsk y,
t er natio n ally kn ow n
specialist in agricultural
mecha niza tion, .who made the
s tudy of tractor s in l.o a
scientific school. has died , t he
Tas s news · agency sa id
Monday .
.
·
Tas s and Bolti nsky died In
Moscow afler " a gra\le and

WASHING TON I UPI) President Ford was ready
today to send Congress a
plan for removing federal
controls on gasoline prices
while protecling con·
somers and Independent
'!112 .
dealers against sharp
changes later In market
conditions.
Ford's proposal would
CHESHIRE
Fred
take effect if neither House
nor Senate reject II within . William Little, · 76, Rt. 1,
15 days- a deadline falllng , Cheshire, died suddenly this
just before the Jan. 20 morning at Holzer Medical
Inauguration of President- Center.
Mr. Little was born Feb. 24,
elect .Jimmy Carter. The
1900
at Cheshire to the late
Ford plan appeared to face
Samuel
and Flora Manley
stiff opposition even before
Little.
He
was also preceded
:11 was unveiled - likely
In death by his wife, •Jewell
today or Wednesday.
MuUord ·Little, in 1965; one
::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::iii:::::::::::::::::::::::: daughter, Betty, in infancy;

STOC KHOLM, Jan. 3 UPI

County budget ·held up~
(Continued from page I'
flle (l'lsoners at a cost or'~ per day per prisoner. He said this
would eliminate $5,000 a year for a cook and the cost ()I
electricity or gas.
·
Proffitt argued that unlesa he could·get a man and wife
team as cook and jailer, he favored catering food. He said he
would like Ill have the Jiving room in the building converted
Into an office and two rooms upstairs u rooma where officers
could rest.
'
Jones wanted a oonclusion made on bow to feed the
prisoners, to which Proffitt answered he would "definitely like
to have the meals Catered."
'
Jones asked if he had Included janitor service, and Proffitt
sta!ed he had not, and Proffitt wondered If one of the court·
houae custodians could handle the work. Mrs. Chambers
Informed them that 0ne of the custodians had IJi,en·cJeanlng the
office area.
Proffitt stated that he would like to have prisoners In
coveralls to save members of the priaontn' family . from
bringing In clothing which they have Ill search. He said they
would be Issued one suit a week, He also Indicated that the jail
portion needed attention. However, he stated that he had not
inspected it thoroughly alnce be jU81took over at 12:01 a.m.
Monday.
.
Proffitt suggested that teletype service be added which
would help eliminate long distance phone caUs. He stated that ·
they could send and receive ·measages by the uae of the
teletype. He suggested that to cut d!ll"'l on gasoline cost a gas(
tank be placed at the county garage. Proffitt stated that 12to If
cents a gallon can be saved that way. Wells thought this was a
good Idea, and recaUed that it had been discusst!d previously,
but nothing done about it.
·
The oommissioners also interviewed Jbn Carnahan, head
custodian, who listed his duties. Carnahan said he did all the
'purchasing of suppUes.
.
Alao meeting with the co11ll11issioners was Alfred Frank,
county dog warden, who was asked by Jones if be was willing
to be reappointed. Frank said yes. Jones 88ked Frank just
what hts duties are and Frank replied that he piclt:s up stray
dogs, fills out animal claims, and goes to the dog pound every
day. He told the commissionerS it was aupposed to be a part- ·
time job but he could very easily make it a lull time job.
Attending were Henry Wells, Jones, Roush,
co11ll11issioners, and Martha Chambers, cierk.

.

I

(Continued from page I)
!Jody was found slumped in a white car near Tel Aviv's plush
seaside suburb of Herzliya a few hours after the prbne
minister issued an emotional appeal to the public to prevent
turning the police Investigation of Ofer into a witch hunt.

Chu r ch
of
Pomero y , Pom eroy Easter n
Star , Porn er oy Church of fh e

·-· -.
BREAK IN THE COLD - Workers took a coffee
break Tu~sday from .their cold job razing this large
storage buildlllg on Umon Ave. in Pomeroy. The building
belonged to the Pomeroy Motor Co. but was purchased
r«;ently by Prbne Builders, Inc., CQiumbus, which wiD
build 30 apartments to he known as Pomeroy Cliffs LTD
This is the · company's second building venture i~
Pomeroy, the other being on Mulberrry Ave., where four
buildings are near completion .

..

~;;:'"·:··]~~
By United Ptessllltemational
A POWERFUL WINTER STORM LUMBERED ACROSS
the Midwest early today after dumping welcome anows on
mountain ski areas of the West. By early today, the heaviest
snows extended through Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, though
portions of Kentucky, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, the
Dakotas and eastern Montana also were hard hit. Snow also
clogged portions of Iowa.
·
Seven to eight .inches of fresh snow ~it ·southeast of
Lincoln, Neb., and Mexico, Mo., reported 61&gt; inches. Kansas
City, Mo., reported five Inches and St. Louis had thr~ Inches.
Five-inch snowfalls clogged the Illinois communities of
Springfield, Decatur and Quincy, while Peoria reported three
inches. Scores of high school bask@tbail games were postponed
or canceled Tuesday night because of the storm.

. DETROIT - BOLSTERED BY THE BEST December in
eight years, U. S. automakers built nearly 8.5 million cars In
1976 - a 261&gt; per cent gain over the previous year and the best
sln~e 1973 - the yar the Arab oil embargo threw the Industry
into a two-year slump. .
The report from the four companies Monday represented a
strong come~ck from the worst slump alnce the Great
Depression. The . automakers plan to start 1977 with the
production of about 813,000 cars, a 21
cent gain over last
January and the
In four years.

IN THE SIXTH L!BERIAN·FLAG TANKER ACCIDENT
in or near U. S. waters since mid-December, the 824-foot
Universe Leader ran aground in· the Delaware River Tuesday
night. No spillage of the tanker's 2i-million.gailon oil cargo
was reported.
·
· Abarge pumped oil from the Universe Leader today in an
. effort wlighten flle load and get the vessel jlfloat once again.
1 The accident occurred off Salem, N.J., at;&gt;out 20 miles down·
river from Marcus Hook, Pa ., where another Liherianregister• I tanker, the Olympic Games, ran aground Dec. 'l:l
and sp' I 133,500 gaUons of oil.

TilE INN PLACE

8\
i - A WINTER STORM CRAMPED plans today
to se~.r-. for the Panamanian tanker Grand Zenith,
mysteriously missing In the North Atlantic for six days with 38
crewmen and 8.2 million gallons of oil aboard.
U. S. and Canadian aircraft Tuesday scoured a 34,000.
square-mile area for the ship .;md reported "not a trace,"
Coast Guar,d spokesman Richard Griggs said. A Coast Guard
search vessel spotted patches of industrial'oil, but their origin
was uncertain.

Wednesday Nigh~ Special

Fred W. Little died at Holze~

.

.

{

Vacations Without Care
'

By making d'e posits in

u sa vings
accou.nt regul~rly, this family's
vacation fund IS ready when they
are! Start a savings account now!

W~LK.UP TELL~R

WINDOW AND
AUTO TEUfR WINDOW OPEN .
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.

. '

"THE
I

I.

"b

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
M_.blr. Fednl Depasit Insurance Corporatior
,
DIPOIII'IINIUIID T.O '40.000

Tender Oi1 The tnslde.

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
I,

0.

•

tax

THE MEIGS INN

a:

Pom'eroy I

PIZZA SHACK

Phone 992-6304

.

'

Save 20% on all curtains, dra.perles, tiers and
:.save on couch and chair throws, bed pillows
c:vnd toss cushlonL
·
Save ·a big 20% on all area rugi, runners, bath
. mat

~ts

.

and oval braided rugs.

VM:ATION
WATat .FOR

Now Available At:

Plus

Save QO% on our entl~e stock of sheets, pillow
ca..s, bath towels and towel enS.mbleL

awn FOR
Kentucky Frltd Chicken Now
Availa.ble .. . Crisp On The Outside
Moist ' oncl

Fish
French .Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Special January Clearance.Sale Prices
•
~OME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

MEIGS THEATHE
:'EXTRA CRISPY"

' $295

Visit Our Salad Bar

Elberfelds lnP_omeroy

MEETING SET
The Southeastern Ohio
Garden Tractor Assn. will
meet Wednesday, 8 p.m. at
the bome of Dale Kautz,
~er.
-

FRIENDLY BANK"

FAIRBANKS: ALASKA - SHOPPERS WENT BAREHEADED ami 11 ;;:,..,t gloves Tuesday as Fairbanks recorded
a record high 38 degrees for Jan. 4.
Two years ago the city was shivering at 56 below zero and
the record low for the day is minus 66 set in 1934.
Meteorologists said the 4th, ~th and 6th days of January
usually are the coldest of the year.
·

.

LAD CONFINED
Lonnie LeMaster, 8, who
underwent brain surgery
about two years ago, is a
patient at St. Joseph Hospital
at ParkersbUrg. He is the son
of Mrs. Bonnie LeMaster,
Darwin, and
Edward
l&gt;!Master, Kingsbury. Cards
be sent to Room t32.

OPFNING

DA~

Weather

...

AWINTER STORM THAT PUMMELED.THE WEST with
up wsix inches of rain and three feet of snow surged toward
!he Midwest today and the Southland glistened under layers of
Ice that turned roads Into skid tracks and feUed power Jines.
Trees toppled from raiJI.drl!lfched earth over wide areas of
California Monday and ski resort operators reveled In a wealth
of snow In California's mountain, where Scant snows had kept
ski .resorts from opening.
.. .
. _
Up wthree feet of anow socked Shaver Lake, CaUl., In the
Si~rra . Heavy snows also hit portions of Idaho, Nevada and
Anzona and schools Closed In Flagstaff, Ariz., after a one-foot
snowfilD. Motorists In Southern California abandoned staUed
auwmobiles in flooded intersections and hea\oy runoff left
some roads impassable.

DINNER PREPARED
Year's Day dinner at
death he was president ot .the the- home of Mrs. Grace
Hollywood
Community
. ·
Concerts 'Association .
Glaze , Mtddleport, *as
He leaves a nephew, Ross prepared by her son, VIrgil,
Stevens of SHoam Springs, here from Florida. Guests
Ark , and a n1ece , Mrs Lee
M
d M. G
Hass of LaPuente Cal li
were. f . an
rs. eorge
'
·
Glaze, Brett and Brian, Rock ·
Bridge; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Pullins, Amy and Kim,
Columbus, and 1\lr. and Mrs.
Bill Radford, Pomeroy, R.D.
two sisters, and a brother.
Amember of the Silver Run
Baptist Church, he was a coal
'
miner · and construction Veterans Memorial Hospital
worker.
. Admitted - Mary MarHe Is survived by two cinko, Tuppers Plains; Lucy
daughters, Mrs. Leon Spencer, Syracuse; Nellie
(Delores) Miller, Cheshire; Lemley, Portland; Okey
Mrs. Jackie (Freda) Little, Bennett, Parkersburg, W.
Middleport; one son, Bill, Va.; Pear!Jacobs, Pomeroy;
Middleport ; 10 grand· Harold Little, Middleport.
children, several great·
Discharged - Michael Van
grandchildren and several Meter.
nieees and nephews.
Funeral services wl lf be 2
p.m. Thursday at the Silver
PLEASANT VALLEY .
Run Baptist Church with the DISCHARGES .:._ Mrs.
Rev. Miles Trout offiCiating. James Holcomb, Point
Burial will be in Gravel Hill Pleasant; Mrs. Roger
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends Berkley, son, Gallipolis; and
may call at Rawlings-Coats
Nancy Barr, Leon.
Funeral Home Wednesday, 2
to 4 and 7 to 9' p.ni. and on
Thursday until 12:30 p.m.
when the body will be taken to
the church.
studio and at the time of his ,......---, New

, SPECIAL SALE PRICES - ·HOME AJRNISHINGS.ANNEX

Elberfelds lnPomero

Ralph
K.
Patton, • Ohio's utilities w meet tbe fore~ us tO do it, we'll do it '
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio
( lJPf) ~ State geologist Consolidation Coal Co : proposed regulations in tbe with western coal and you
coal miners in Ohio can 'go
Horace R. Collins says Uttie representative, predicted same manner," he said,
fend
for yotlrselves."
Patton said Consolidation's
. of Ohio's coal could meet Ohio utilities woilld turn from
W
ith
threats of high levels
strict Ohio Enviroomental Ohio's liigh suUur coal to low forecasts indicate 91.4 per
of
unemployment
circulating.
Protection Agency low sulfur sulfur western coal to meet cent of its sales in Ohio would
coal
miners'
wives
presented
compliance standards.
drop under the proposed
standards.
the
co11ll11ission
a
petition
of
" The ove rwh elm ing
" utilities in Michigan regulations are enforced.
1,408
signatures.
majority of Ohio's coal does which have no indigenous
Joe Jur czack, • UMW
If unemploYIIlent comes w
not meet standar&lt;\s," he said production meet sulfur regional c ooord in a tor,
the
area, UMW's BiD Schmel· .
Tuesday at the third in a regulatio ns in · the most attacked Ohio's utilities and
zenbach
fllreatened "in case
series of foil!' Ohio EPA ~ economical way possible and coatc'ompanies,asking, "Are
·
you
have
never seen 14,000
heanngs which were to I would fully expect the they installlng scrubbers and
unemployed
coal miners on
·continue today .
commission would re~te working to perfect that
flle
war
path,
I can assure
"The low sulfur coal has
technology s0 that they can
you
that
it
could
make
~:. 1~;!~~r=~~:u;~;f~ .. ::::.:::::.:::::::::::::&gt;::::::::::::::·:-·::·:·:::.:-:·:::·:':·:-::::::: · ~~~aticalgh:t. The/~=~~ pu;ter 's last stand look lik~ a
reduction through washing is
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
ssidineffect: We don't mve a cakewalk.''
not feasible."
.
Friday
through
Sunday,
•·
h
f
·
damn what the law requires,
·
Representatives from the · a c ance 0 snow Friday
we won't do it; and if you
Ohio Coal Operators Associaand · Sunday but fair
lion, the United Mine Saturday. Cold with highs
Cloudy, chance of snow
Workers, elected public
near 28 and lows about 15
NOW YOU KNOW
tonight
, low s a round 22.
officials and interested
Friday and Saturday. Not
Thomas Jefferson ' s
Chance
of snqw Thursday
private citizens all presented
quite as cold Sunday with
hi storic Vir ginia house
·with
highs
near 34 .
testimony to show relaxing
highs near 30 north and 40 Monticello, served as a cow'
Probability
of
precipitation
the strict standards would
south . Lows Sunday wiil be
barn and rubbish heap irl the
187ps until it was bought and !10 per cent today, 30 per cent
preve~t a major dislocation near 25 ·
of flle local economy.
::·,-::·:::::-::::: ::-. :' :;.:: :.:.:::...:.: ': . ·: :-:':::::::::::: renovated by a new owDer. tonight, 40 per cent Thursday .

··•!
.
I!'A

t

Mc Fee ters taught ·plano

.

.. ,

follow .

and voice in hi s Los Angeles

.

•

'

· News •. in Briefs

M et hodi s t

- Ernst Wigfors s, a leader of
the Social Democratic party N azarene , Feeney Benn ell
and
t he
Its
f ore mos t Post . Middleport ; Pomeroy
Ba pt ist Chu r ch , S" at\lation
economic lheor'e tician, died Army , E agle R idge Com .
Monday at Kronprinsessan m~ni ty Churc h. M inersv il le ·
Victoria
Hospital
. in tntl cpcn d cnt
Pcn tc cost.l 'l
of
Middleporf ·
Vejbystrand in southwestern Church
Disab led Amer ica n Vet eranS
Sweden . He was 95.
Wigforss was appointed Au x . . Mrs . A l ice Da\liS .
Finance Min ister for the first J&lt;;'y ne L ee Hoefl ich , Vick i
Frn~ , Re v . Roger B um~ ard
time in 1925. He held the post ner , Pau l· Sm ar t, Eleanor
aga in .from l9J2 until his Smi th , Et he l Ro.b in so.n ,
retirement from gover nment Ga ll ia Co unty Choru s; Earl
in 1949, dur ing which time he Frec ker , Mr s. Gla dys Parf i tt ,
Elva HudsQn . Mr . and Mrs .
l ai d the groundwork for
moder n Swedish socialism . Judson Whit e, Mr and Mrs.
Phil Wi se. Mr and Mrs . Jack
He was survived by his Hawl
ey , Mr , and Mrs .
widow, Eva , and one son .
' Charles · E . Bla keslee. D ick
HOL LYWOOD UPI ~ Karr . Ma r ion Eber sbach , Mr
Pianist Ra ym ond McFeeter s, and Mrs . Mike , Hammer ,
an accompanist for in - Evely n Gilmor e, Mr . ano ·
tern ati on all y ren ow ned Mrs Kennet h W . Wr lcO lC , Mr .
singers Lawrerice Tibbett , and Mrs . Wi ll ie Davis . C. F
Lily Pons , Marian Ander son. Hibbs . Phyll is s Hackett ,
Pomeroy Na tio nal Bank ,
John
Charles
Tho ma s. Mr s. Grace Eich , Jay Hall ,
Richard Bonelli and Tito Eloi se Mankin . Opal Kle es
Sc hipa , will
be buried Maxin e Coats Gas k il l. J ea~
Thursday .
Trussel l , Mr . an d . Mr s .
McFeeters , 77, died In his Howard Nolan . Merle an d
Mona Johnson, Meigs Avon
home last Friday .
Funeral services will be L adies , Asb ury Me t hod ist
Chu r ch Choir , Po meroy
hel d a t1 : 30p .m . Thursday in Elementary Grades d, 5, 6,
the Church of the Hills, John Arnot t .
A
Fores t La wn M emorial- Park r
Hollywood Hill s . . Burial will

-Ohio's coal too dirty ·for EPA's rules

.
'

~~

'When he does or does not

show his shadow , Henry
Werry is holding one that
made a big mistake in
coming early. Werry kiU~d
the animal near his home
Monday.

~. ·

at
VOL. XXVII · NO. 184·

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS .

Sm_a ller·. schools going cold
..

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
school energy crisis task
force assembled by Marlln ·
W.
Essex,
state
superintendent of public
instruction , has called for a

higher priority on school
energy needs in current
proposed allocations.
The task force said
Tuesday Columbia Gas'
announced r.eductions in gas

continued operation of larger
schools (in the same
districts ) during the past
several years ," Essex said.
He said the abnormally cold
weather this year has
depleted energy reserves.
· Columbia has cut supplies
to larger schools from 40 per
· t'ent to 50 per cent' effective
flle first of the year.
.of free public events,
The task for ce is composed
including fireworks, square of representatives from tbe
dances, symphony concerts . state's · major educationand an all-11ight jazz, blues related organizations and
and soul session.
school superintendents.
The big ceremon iai
Essex said the group would
evenis- box seats at 'the meet with Columbia Gas
swearmg m and a chance ~ officials· to find out if
dance a.t one . of SIX . emergency natural gas is
p~esidenllal . partte: that available, iftbe present criSis
mght - are by m ~t tat1~n could he repeated next year,
only~ and only If you ve pa1d how company offiCials . feel
$25.
about turning off gas to
But . the
ina ugur al sch ools as opposed to
con\m1ttee an n.ounc e d charging a premium for use
Tuesday fll~t startmg Jan. beyond allocations and why
~8~two days before the Columbia is having problems
maugur~tion~fllere w1ll be different from other energy
(Continued on page 16)
suppliers.
allocations of 30 per cent for
smaller schools will create a
nearly impossible situation.
"Conservation measures in
fllese schools has enabled the

Plenty of fun is free
By CLAY F. RICHARDS . invitation to Jimmy Carter's
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ inaugural, Americans still
Even without a special can come and enjoy hundreds

Three fined in mayor's court
Three defendants were
fined and two others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. · ·
Charles L, Kasee, 19,
GaUipolis, was fined $25 and
costs,
for . improper
registra,tion and $50 and costs
for reckless operation · Brian
W. Kizzee, 19, Middleport,
$100 apd costs and 30 days in
jail for a complicity (ac·
compli_ce) in commission of a

misdemeanor of breaking
wintlow glass; and Ralp~ J_
McDaniel, 31, Pomeroy, $200
and costs and three days in
jail · for driving while in·
toxicated.
Forfeiting bonds were
Donald A. Ash, 24, Bain·
bridge, $25 posted on a charge
of failing to yield the right of
way, and Dualle L. Sidders,
29, Middleport, $32, posted for
speeding charge. •

.Major improvements needed
in Meigs County described

There are 57 major capital improvements needed in Meigs children.
PLAINS~ GA. ~ JIMMY CARTER'S top appointees are
County Including 18 highway and bridge bnprovements, five .,
Provide day-care centers for children of working parents.·
pledging to serve as long as the President-elect wants fllem in law-enforcement needs, three social services projects, .five·,,.
Initiate s~ial education facilities for handicapped
· office. Carter Is requiring the appointees to sign the following
health program improvements, 10 parks and recr~ation persons.
't
,
..
pledge:
developments, and 16 otber services physical improvements
. Health Prote&lt;;tlon
•
"In accepting the position for which YOII propose to (such as for. the museum and library ), according to a capital · ,:2 Develop centrally4ocated sanitary landfill sites in eastern
nominate me, it Is my intention to serve tbe entire term for bnprovements study being made of the county.
and western Meigs County.
.
which you appoint me, and if my lerm is indefinite' It is my
Adetailed description of the 57 listed projects In this listing
Purchase at least two additional trash collection vehicles.
intention to serve as tong as you wish me to serve. The pledge follows :
Expand the office space available for the existing staff of.
Is designed to pu~ appointees on their honor not to leave to run
. Hlgllwaya and Bridges ,,
·
the Health Department.
for oHice or taM lucrative private industrY jobs.
Resurface CR I from SR 143 to the A\hens Co. Line in
Prov)de sufficient space for new Health Department
Columbia Twp.
positions such as Health or Building Inspection and Nuisance
MEXICO CITY - ANTS, GRASSHOPPERS and other
Resurface and bnprove the alignment of CR 1 from SR 124 COntrol.
.
·
insects are nutritious and also taste good, says the National w SR
325 In Salem Twp.
Construct a new 2,500-square foot Animal Control Center
University's Biology Institute.
.
Realign CR 3 to make flle By-Pass to the east of Rut~. on at least one acre of land.
Dr. Julieta Elorduy de Concon), an institute researcher,
Improve the intersection of CR 3 and SR 1 In Salis ry
,
Parts and Recreation
·said the grasshopper has up to 75 per cent protein per gram; Twp.
·
Develop a cooperative program with coal companies to
black ants hormiga chicatona up to 58.3 per cent per ·gram;
Resurface and realign CR 4 from Dexter to CR 3 in Salem acquire reclaimed"mlrface-miiled land.
and waterbugs up to 68.7 per cent per gram. Among the most and Rutland Townships.
Provide permanent structures (such as a lodge) at, or
commonly eaten in Mexico, the researcher said, are grass-,
Realign a portion •of CR 5 to JI'Ovide a direct access.from near Forked Run State Park.
hoppers which at adulthood m~sur~ about 1.2 Inches.
SR 124 to Middleport. .
Construct County Park facilities (such as cabins and
Resurface and realign CR 10 and CR 17 from Dexter to SR campgrounds) in the Shade River Forest Area.
COLUMBUS, OIDO - SEN. ANTHONY J. Celebrezze Jr., 143 in Salem, Columbia, and Scipio Twps.
Establish a County Park Board Office.
[).Cleveland has been selected by Senate President Pro
Resurface and realign CR 18 from SR lf3 to US 33 in Scipio
Acquire park 'site in western Meigs County.
Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, as chairman of the Senate and Bedford Twps.
.,
Develop more playfields and picnic grounds.
Local Government and Urban Allain Committee .
Resurface CR 19 from. CR 26 to US 33 in Chester and
· Provide 2*-6 acre parks at Racine, Chester, Tuppers
Celebrezze, 34, is In his third year In the Senate. He has Salisbury Twps. ·
·•
Plains, Rutland, Pagevllle, and Portland.
been active in the areas of judicial legislation and lobbyist ·
J;tesurfai:e and realign CR 26 and CR 34 from SR 7 wSR 124
~velop Ohio River recreation ~eas :with boat launches,
regulation, and he chaired a special ~mmittee studying small in Chester and Sutton Twps. to form an Outerbelt of Syracuse, calnpmg, o!Jiervation benches, fishmg , p1crucking, etc .
.bullnesS problems. Local Government and Urban Mfalrs will Pomeroy, and Middleport.
·
. Acquire the unused locks a !!&lt;I dama along the Ohio River .
be a new ciiiUllltt'ee, partlaUy replacing the Transportation
Raurlace and straighten curves on CR :Ill from Keno to ·
Increue the availability of hunting and fishing
and Local Government Conunittee chaired last session by Sen.
Racine
In
Cho;oster
and
Sutton
Twps.
opportunities.
Wllllam F. Bowen, !).Cincinnati.
Other Service•
Realign CH 211 from .Keno (SR 248) to SR 7 In Chester and
Develop permanent Meigs County Museum exhibits on
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT FORD, following through Orange l"AJIII.
history arid native sons.
Reaurfa\'e and realign CR ;JO plus TR 't26 and TR 127 from loonConstruct
oo a campaign promise, iti calling for major tax cuts In 1977
a viewing facility at the Museum plus develop
Including flO billion for lndlvlijuats· and $2.5 biliton for SR 7 to CR 28 in Sutton Twp.
media show that could also be used County-wide.
Resurface and realign CR 31 from Portland to CR 211 in
buslnesa. It's doubtlul they wiD be implemented.
Provide better Hghting and permanent seallng on second
•
He IIIIo is rec&lt;lmmending an increase in the Social l&gt;!banon and SUtton Twpi.
floor of Museum.
'Resurface CR 36 and realign TR 158 from SR 7 wSR 681 in
Security payroll las from the current 5.85 per cent to 6.15 per
Parchase a new bookmobile.
cent on both employer and employe in 1978, rising to 6.85 per · Cheater and Orange Twps.
Replace the esisting bookmobile.
continue CR 75 Jllsl the Hospital on a new alignment to a
bnprove library accessi!)lllty, energy conservation, and
cent by 11112.
junction with Old SR 7 In Pomeroy.
S)iace-us6 fleslbllity. .
r
Build an extenliion of CR 7li from SR 143 to SR 7 in
DETRbrr - DESPITE THEIR STRONGEST December
It Is anticipated that the final list of reconuneilded projects
salq In four years, domestic automakers have trimmed about Salisbury Twp~
wi)l be much aborter due to the limited lunda available.
Realign CR 24 and CR 3118 from SR. 121 Into Pomeroy.
This listing has been developed as the second step In a six
47,000 can from their January production schedules to keep
llllalkar lnwntorles from getting out ol hand. In addition,
part Meigs County capital bnJI'owments Program being
Law Eolormnellt
Gtn«al Moton' GMC Truclt: &amp; Coach Dlvlllon announced the
conducted currently by the James M. Jennings Assodates Co.,
Relocate
the
County
Sheriff's Office and Jail to a modern a Columbua firm of plannlpg conaultanta, working wlth 'the
·.llfoll of 2110 workers at ita medium-duty truck plant In
faciUty.
Meigs County Regional Plaming Commisalon (MCRPC). .
J""'!Int.t.c, Mich.
·.
Provide office 1p1ce for the Prosecuting ,4.ttorney, atleut
,
However, the addition of basic production for the hot·
· The f,iCRPC Invites Meigs County citlunll to review this
lelllnC llcht-dutY trucks wiD mean most wprkera wiD be · two autstanta, and clerical staff.
preliminary report that II available for readlni! at the CETA
Double the tirea allocated to the Clerk of Courts.
' olllce on the third floor of the Meigs County Court House. Any
recal1ad by sprlnc, 1poke1111en said.
Espand the IJliCf available to the Bureau of Support.
comments to be conaldered for lncluaion in the final report
Remodel the III!COild Boor of the Court House by lowering must be received by the consultant by January 17, 1977
OOLUMBUS-SEN. NEAL F. ZIMMERS, Jr., J).!Jayton,
wu named today u chaimum of the Ohio Senate Energy tllld the ceiling and lrnpt'9Vin(j the li&amp;bting. '
(~ available at Court Houae).
ledal Service•
.
Public UtWties Committee. Zlmmen, 34, wu vice-chairman
~ Establish a ll!la1l abuaeilfotectlon """ter for women and
1i
•(Contjnued 0/1 page 18)

l

••

•

.

GETS GROUNDHOG
Although the groundhog !s'not ·
supposed to be seen until Feb.

·''

Coffeegrowers content to
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL (UP!) - BRAZILIAN .
coffee growers earned record profits last year and
apparently are unconcerned over American attempts to
fight high prices with a boycott. The Brazilian Coffee
lns~itute was expected to disclose today gross sales of $2.3
b1lhon last. year, more than double the $900 million gros•J
export sales of 1975 and $1 btilion more than Brazil 's
previous record of $1.243 billion In 1973.
. Attempts at launching a coffee boycott w push down
the ,current (X'ice in the United States of nearly ~a pound
have been spearheaded by New York City's consumer
affairs conunissioner. Aspokesman said Coffee Institute
Presidept Camilo Calazans bad cofl(id~ to a small group
fllat attempts at boycotting Brazilia~ coffee "could be
good for Brazil."
The spokesma.~ SPid Calazans told tbe group : "The
fact is the Brazilian government isn 't interested in havil'.g
Brazil continue being responsible for the largest pli:'l of
international coffee demand . We cannot continue
exporting or we will exhaust our stocks In a few months."
U.S. Consumer groups are replying : If you persist in
this gouging of the coffee drinker our oncoming
generation will be totally economically psyched away
from drinking coffee. Reflect how your children-as adults·
will cope with that.
·" ''

Cadets return
By ROBERT KAYLOR
four to e1ght years.
WASHINGTON (UPI ) The blue·ribbon panel,
Army Secretary Martin R. beaded: by former asttonaut
Hoffman announced wday F r a n k B o r m a n ,
that cadets who have been recommended last month
dismissed or resigned from that the ISO cadets who have
West Point in a cheating resigned or been dismissed so
scandal will be readmitted to far ·as the result of
school.
.• collaboration on a takehome
And he.told a news confer- electronics esam last year be
ence he has decided to accept reinstated as · soon as
most recommendations of a possible.
special study panel to reform
Hoffman, saying the Anriy
· the honor system at the U.S. agreed . with
the
Military Academy.
recommendation, sal&lt;! cadets
Hoffman also announced "who apply and are accepted
that West Point's present after screening by the special
superintendent, Lt. Gen. rea!lmissions conunittee at
Sidney B. Berry, will be West Point will be admitted
removed in the next few in July, 1977." This will be
months and replaced by jl!l!~ alter the remaining
another officer who 1'/Ul members of their class are
undergo special orientatloo ' graduated.
for the post and serve from

Rou~eelected . The Meigs County Board of . representative to apply and
Education Tuesday night receive aU federal funds for
reelected HarQ.ld &gt;. Roush whichJhecounty board might
president and Gol\lon Collins biel'iglble. Attending were
vice president for the new Supt. Bowen, Roush, Collins,
year.
George Perry and Robert
~lllr meetings were set Burdette.
on the first Tuesday of each
month beginning at 8 p.m.
HANK SAYS THANKS
during the montha when DST
Henry Clatworthy,
Is In effect and 7: 30 p.m. chairman of the "Gift for the
when EST Is ln effect. It was Yanks Who Gave" program
agreed members wiD receive for Feeney-llennett Post 1:18
no a meeting, not to esceed American Legion, today
$240 a year, . and a service thhnked the Middleport
fund of fl,600 for expenses of community for its support.
members
and
their More than.f&amp;IO was raised In
representatives to · attend Middleport, The program
.professional mo:etings.
remembers veterans con·
The board approved a fined to hospitals.
$240,981 budget for the
calendar year of 1977 and BOARD TO MEET
voted to maintain liability
RACINE - .The Southern
ihsurance fcir 'Its members . . Local Board of Education wW
Bus driver certificates were meet In special -ton tbla
· Issued to Jesse Browning and evening at 7 to set a date
RandaU Gibbs.
when applications for clerk·
Supt. Robert Bowen was treuurw are to be ·BUbo
nll'(led
the
board's mitted .
,.

I

•

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