<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14901" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14901?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:19:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47678">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c1936ce3ec45e93218a4666e038ad768.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3998b9883a3cd78fab8a0508cb26d5c8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47903">
                  <text>'

,

10- Tbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pometoy, 0 ., 'Qlursday, Jan. 6,1977

SCIENCE TODAY

Prospectus .for space·colonists
•
By ARNOLD UmBLE
from which we could extract· tion, O'Leary said flatly :
of Earth to manufacture
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) material to build the shell of "A key feature of this concep,\ space solar power stations
'!be pioneeN!Olooists in space the modules, 30 per cent Is that it is technically which could supply the Earth
will find llQ trees to build log silicone from whic!h we could possible to draw 00 resources with virtually unlimited
ca.bins, but eventually they make glass for windows, and aimost. entirely Independent energy by the early 21st
COI!Id llve in communities 30 per cent oxygen which we
Century."
with streains and maybe could use for breathing," he
even a golf course,
said.
The first space colonists
" We
could
have
Steve Hagey ' Staphanje and
might tend solar power communities of several
""
Brad, Mrs, Howard Russell:
stations which could light the hundreds ·of people several
Mrs. Iva Orr. "
ByMrs.HerbertRoush
world, by the year mJ for a miles across with streams
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri
Cindy Roush , .• Edward
top price of $100 billion, and lakes and even a golf returned home . Wednesday Hupp, Sharon . Roush were ·
enabling the the United course. Why not?"
after spending the hollday~ New Year's Eve guests of Mr.
stales and all oth~r countries
To refine and smelt the with Mrs. Erma Wilson and and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
to CIJ\ themselves free to a metal, he said, "We could, in family.
Mike and Mandy at Wolfpen.
great extent from fossil fuel. effect, hang up a big
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
David Fox, son of Mr. and
"This is not scieQ.ce magnUying glass and let the Roush attended church Mrs. Bill Fox is staying with
fiction.1t
said
former sun do the work."
services at the Fr~edom his parents while taking over
astronaut Brian O'Leary,
The project to supply
his new employment at the ·
~~u~s
practical.
It's Earth's electrical power Gospel Mission Tuesday . A.S.C.offlce in Pomeroy. Mr.
'reasonable. And perhaps, U would cost less than Rev · 0 · G. Mcl&lt;inney who Fox has been employed in
the political decisions can 'be America's satellite program wa s at his home at Washington County.
.
. worked
out,
it
is thus far "by a considerable Maplewood Lake for the
Mr. and·Mrs. Jim Connolly,
inevitable."
holidays was the speaker . Shelly and Brian were
degree." O'Leary said.
O'Leary, a scientist and
"We'd hang up our solar Rev· and Mrs. McKinney wlll Suoday dinner guests of Mr.
author as well as a one-time power energy producing sta· leave Thursday morning for and Mrs. [;ester Rouish.
astronaut, is presently on the tions at the equaror. The sun Mobtle, AI~ . where he will be .. Mike, Vi cki and John
faculty of the Pttysics depart· would work 24 hours a dsy - evangeliZing durmg the Roush visited Monday till
·
men!
at
Princeton no cJouds and no darkness/' Winter montha.
· c· d R h Ed . d Wednesday With
Mr. and
University. He apJl&lt;!ared at a
He .estimated that once in R '"h y . 'tedousM'
war
Mrs. Don R'ffl
t I,ucasvll, Ie.
d
M
1
e
a
two-day symposium on position, the . solar power
ous vtst
r. an
rs .
New Year's Day guests of
"Space Colonization and generators would be far Rog ~r
Rousb Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp,
Exploration" at the Science cheaper than fossil-fueled· evemng. ,
.
Rocky and Edward were
Museum of Minnesota power generated on Earlh . . New Years vistt~rs of Mr. Megan Manuel, Racine ,
recently.
He said America's power and Mrs. Lewis Pickett .and Sharon Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
The fascinating prospects companies are planning to Tracy were Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush, Mr. and Mrs.
of establishing space spend $87 billion on expimSion Max Pickett •. daughter Lynn Kenneth Bass Kenda and
communities and high orbital and new facilities compared of Crown Ctty, Larry and
.
'
. PhT
d
ht
Comnne , Mr. and Mrs.
manufacturing facilities with his top estinnate of $1110 C
1
Tonnte
ldpsM, acug ler Charles Hupp, Tina and
which would make use of billion for solar statiorui.
~nya, Mr. an
rs. har .es Micky, Marengo : Don
materiais mined from the
If all other considerations M1chaeis, Chuck and Becky, Manud, Donna and Billy
moon and asteroids were a are resolved, he said, lhe first Mr. and Mrs. Roger ~oush, Manuel Canton
Jo
concept first propounded by solar power station could be Mr. and Mrs. Don Fmdley, Charles,'Jr.,Denny,' Jane:~d
O'Leary's
P;lnceton In place in the early 1990s and Matt and Angle of Columbus, Jill Manuel, Steve Riffle, Jim
colleague, Dr : Gerard the full system in operation Lmda Strong, Rob10 and /ohn Hupp, Mr. - and Mrs. Tom
O'NeilL
'
by the 21st Century.
·of Charleston , Wtlma Grady, Manuel Te i and To
,
' . rr
mmy,
O'Leary, youthful in a
He admitted that political Racme
tbe Hopps during the
turtleneck sweater and a decisions weighed heavily on
Mr. ·and Mrs.. 'ct· arence hvisited
I'd
M
d M J
1
0
Roush of Winfield were
ays. r. an . rs. oe
tweed
sports
jacket, the project.
explained that the first space
For instance, it was posed, Sunday visitors of Mrs. Till Manuel, Tlm and Std.
modules would have to be could the operators of the Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Kearney Donohue,
launched from Earth.
Marlm Ha~den, Butch
110lar system cut off energy to Pearson and famlly .
IS f M
Donohue, Marton , 0 ., Sandra
Then, he said, all the enemle.s or
potential . Christ
guesH ·o
r. Burtoo of Columbus visited
manufacturing materials enemies? Would it be an and MrsmaGs
. eorge upp were M
d M
V
could be mined from the international operaiion or Mr. and Mrs. Ted Wilford,
r. an
rs .
erno,n
Donohue New
Years
moon and the .asteroids.
under the sole control of the 11·88 a d Kl be 1 1
'· •
n
m r y, .ong
k d
d
tt d d
11
The moon's soil cooter•, is United States?
Bottom, Mrs. Ray Pl'l&gt;i·lll, wee en
a~
a en e.
made up of 40 per cent metals
.Whatever the final disposi· Karen and Tommy of Canton , funeral servtces for their
Mts Lei d Cl h Lo i
uncle, Clmst Badgely at the
. andan
'
r ' Ewlng F unera l Horne sun·
. Kristi
Johnnyone
of Rutland,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wilford, daMy. M -·,. , Gl k
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp, Mrs. M' rs . Sargare Gl ock ner.
Grace Knighting, Mr. and
rs .
a 11 y
oc ner,
Mrs. Clarence Hupp, Nor· daughter Came were Sunday
walk 0 M
G d
mght guests of Mr. and Mrs.
,
.,
rs .
or on H rd P k
t Ch t
Proffitt, Dooneita and Greg,
owa
ar er a
es er.
Portland' Mr. and MrB. Wolf They were enroute home
Belt, Long Bottom.
. from Parkersburg and roads
Mrs 1''ll
w
bb
became dangerous and they
. · 1
•.
was a stopped at the Parker home
STARTS THURSDAY, JAN, 6
Christmas Eve dtnner guest
d th
. 't d th
t
of Mr. and Mrs. James Fife, an
ey tnvl e
em o
Cheshire, a,nd was a ChriSt· spend the mght,. They
mas 0
t
M
d returned home Monday
TO
OFF
ay, gues o1 r. ~n morning .
Mrs. Juruor Salser; Racme .
Mrs. Mildred Donohew,
ON All WINTER STOCK
Mr. and Mrs . Hoyt Mrs . Margaret Gloeckner
Ferguson, Pt. Pleasant visited Mrs. Ada Norris at the
~~~~r ~~r~nd p~~;j ~~~r~~ Anchorage Christian Nursing
Sunda
d th
d d and •. Rest · Home; . Inc. at
Y an . ey a11 a 11 en e
Manetta Tuesday.
funeral servtces for Clmst
Robert' 8mt'th Sr. re1urned
.
Ba dgIey at the Ewmg
hor!le
fr om
Veterans
Funeral 'i_ome Sunday.
Memorial Hospital Friday.
Mrs. Pearl Norr)s was a M
d M
J
.
t M
dM
r. an
rs.
ames
dtoner
gues ~1 r. an
rs. Freeman, children Jinuny,
Darrell Noms .and Tracy.
Renae of Irwin, Pa., Mrs.
SHIRTS
Christmas dtnner guests of Dorothy Johnson, Valerie
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold. Hupp, Johnson, Steve Wilson visited
JUMP SUITS ·
Edward and Rocky were Mr. the Smiths during the
GLOVES, HATS &amp;
and Mrs. Kenneth Bass, h lid
Kenda and Corrinne, Mid· 0 . ays.
,
.
SCARVES
dleport , Mr. and Mrs.
.Rtck Rose of Pittsburgh IS
All GREATlY
Clarence Hupp of Norwalk; visiting Art Hill at Racme.
Art has started mto. the
, H
Mr · and Mrs. J un
REDUCED!
upp, Fl
G · B I
Jimmy and Billy, Mary Lou
, ower rowmg us ?ess on
Stewart of Point Pleasant, his f~•ther, Dallas Hills farm
Rosemary Hubbard of alll.! •• oey also ~ISJted Mr. a~d
OPEN FRI. Ttl 8- SAT. TIL S PM
.syracuse , Sh a ron, c·1n d.~ , VISit
Mrs. H11i dunng Mr. Roses
Edward and David Roush .
·
New Year's Eve guests ~~
Mr. and Mrs. _David Kerns
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell , son Brad of C!Uton, W. Va.
Mandy and Mike at Wolfpen spent the weekend with Mr.
were Mr. and Mrs. Ru...,:! and Mrs. Jim Young.
Roush, Cindy, David, Ed·
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spencer
,,
ward Melba Thomas of spent Monday till Thursday
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. at Cape Hatters , North
175 N. SECOND AVE, Ml DDLEPORT, OH
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Carohna.
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. , ~nd Mrs. Frank Dines
4 5 7 60
Dan Russell Mr. and Mrs. and
werechildren
Sunday ofguests
of Mr. ·
Parkersburg
' ·
and Mrs. Butch Wtlson, Mrs.
Kathryn Hunt. Robin Wilson
accompanied the Dines home
for a visit during the
holidays. .
... Mr' and Mrs. vernon Cady'
Jerry and Lori, of West
Jefferson, Mr . and Mrs.
LartyO'Brien,Jimmy, Linda
and Carol were Christmas
Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams and
Raymond.
Mrs. Stella Jarrell, son
Archie Jarrell, Mrs. Ruth
Grindstaff. were New Year's ·
ON EVERYTHING
weekend guests of . Mrs.
IN STOCK!
George Ball at St. Albans, W:
Va.
Mrs. Frankie McKelvey of
Belpre was a New Year's
weekend guest of her sister,
ALL SALES
Mis. Betty Carpenter at
MANY SPECiAL
Dorcas and they both at·
ITEMS ~EDUcED
FINAL tended Sunday School at the ·
MORE THAN
local Methodist church.
NO RETURNS
The community was
saddened by the death of a
, good neighbor and .friend,
Clolst Badgely whose funeral
was Sunday wfth Interment In
SEE OUR FINE SELECTION TODAY!
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Mr. an,d Mrs. • Larry
Groggle anil children of Port·
land visited ' Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall
Adams
tind
N. 2nd Ave.; Middleport, 0.
· 992-5627 ,
Raymond.

disaster.

-····~~· ~·mr~~~~;:~:;.;;"
O~VAL

1ST FLOOR ·

BRAIDED RUGS

• Men's dress shirts . knit shirts leisure
. shirts . sport shirts, Save 30 Per Cent.
• Men 's Double Knit Dress Slacks sizes 29 to
42 waist. Good seleclion. Save 25 Per Cenl.
• Men's and Boys Winter Jar:kets. Entire
Stock included. Save 30 Per Cent. ·
• Entire Stock Boys' Sweaters· slipovers and
cardigans. sizes 3 to 20. lf2 Price.
• Boys Blue Jeans and Fashion Jeans- sizes
8 to 18 in regulars. sli!llS and huskies. Sale
Prices
.
• Special Sale Entire Stock of Boys Knit,
Sporl &amp; Dress Shirts - Save 30 Per Cent.

e~cel!ent selection ot colors : Rust, Gold, Red,
Brown ar Green - comp!Ptc selection of sizes. All at

An

special sale price·s.

Reg . $3.99 Size 2Dx30 inches
Reg. 55.99 Size 22x42 inches
Reg. $9,99 Size J'x5'
Reg. $18.49 Size 4'2"x6'6"
Reg. $43.49 Size 6'5"x10'1"
Reg, $78.99 Size 8'5"xll '1"

$3.19
$4.79
$7.99
$14.79
$34,79

$63,09

Also special sa le prices on all the other are _a rugs- big
selections of colors and sizes - Save Now.

TOY SALE
1ST FLOOR
Arranged in two sale groups for your
easy selection - dolls · games
crafts . footballs - basketballs ·
trucks - guns .

I

VOL XXVII NO. 186

.

'

EVENING WEAR

HENDERSON, Ky. (UP!)

..

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

~ . s~~~!~~S~~~_Y~~~c~2?~~

patterns. Regular price $2.99 to $4.99

!

Womens . Juniors and Missy sizes.

l

SAVE 40%

FOUR-YEAR.QLD SEAN JACOBS is proud of this
seven and one-half foot snow man whic;h wears a World
War I heimet. Sean had a wee bit of help from his parents,
Mr, an&lt;j Mrs. Jack Jacobs, Pi~eville, Ky ,, in creating this
"blggle". The Jllcobs are guests of his parenlj, Mr . and
Mrs. Clifiord Jacobs, Laurel Cliff Road,

yd .
Yard Goods- lstfloor

• JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE 'SALE

$1.39 COTION FLANNEL
PRINTS

BARBARA MURRAY, Left, and her daughter , Joni,
with the sculpted type snow woman they created b•hind
their hQII)e on Wright St. in Pomeroy .
'

.

I

REG. 12.39

I

· I

1ST FLOOn

112

YARD

~----------

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

I .

n
Odds and ends· including Christmas
Cards · Napkins . Paper Cups . Seals
· Desk Pads . Yarn Tye . Novelties .
etc .. etc . Your choice.

--

•]84
...

--·----_..---..--T~· --------

~,Ec•AL SALE TABLE
NOTIONS DEPARTMENT

COATS
SLEEPWEAR
INFANT WEAR
DRESSES·
JEANS

90 inch width - bleached snowy
white. Buy what you need during
this sale . .

l

YARD

..

Pool manager at
Syracuse hired

l

Take advantage of the tremendous
savings on Living Room Suites, Bar
and Steel Units, Upholstered Chairs,
Di.n ing · Room Furniture · and
Bedroom Suites.

,.

SAVE 30%

9:92:·:3:58=6=====~-B!o:b~R~uss=el~I,~M:r:.~a~n~~~M:r:s~.
:
:
:
:
========
~

LINGERIE DEPT.
SAVE 20%

TRACY LYNN. MANLEY, 5, and Crystal Dawn Manley, 7, daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Manley, 50 Riverview Drive, Middleport, show off their snow woman created with a
bit of help from "Uncle Steve".
•
·

ON

GLIDDEN PAINT .
OUR COMPLETE STOCK

IS INCI.UDfDI

WOMEN'S
COORDINATED SPORTSWEAR·

20%0FF

Includes our entire stock of slacks,
skirts, vests, blouses and jackets in
large and regular sjzes.

25% OFF

20%

CHILDREN'S DEPT.
GIRlS DRESSES, SKIRTS,
SLEEPWEAR, WINTER COATS,
lOPS, JEANS.AND SlDS

SAVE 25%

'OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. 10 5 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

· heritage·:house·

'

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ON

WOMEN'S. WINTER ROBES,
GOWNS AND PAJAMAS

~undred

million dollars If fertilizer use.
Baske tt community near
ERDA approves funding for
At the completion of Phase Henderson, would produce
all three phases of the I, U it is determined that , 1,200 tons of ammonia a day ,
project, the Kentucky among other fac tors, the utilizing some 2,300 tons of
officials said. The first phase plant is econom ially and western Kentucky coaL
is scheduled to be completed environmentally feasibdle ,
ERDA also announced
within 18 months.
ERDA will then decide Thursday Phase I approval of
The plant will convey coal whether to continue its a gasification plant proposal
to produce medium-BTU fuel Involvement in su bsequent submitted by Memphis Light,
gas to be used in producing phases of the project, they Gas and Water in a project
ammonia for industrial sa1d.
· . expected to use 2,800 tons of
The plant, to be bUilt in the . western Kentucky coal daily.

l

I

~I

I

.,~

.

-~

. ~~
FISHERMAN OF THE YEAR - Jim Crow, right, vic"ilresident of the Big Bend Bass
Anglers Club, received the traveling trophy and a plaque Wednesday night from Bill
Grneser, center, president, for the greatest total weight of fish caught in duo rournaments.
Jim Anderson, left, secretary-treasurer, was last year's winner. Members have erected a
clubhouse on the west hranch.of Shade River that will be ready for their next meeting at 7:30
p, m. on Wednesday, Feb. 7. They previously met at the Grueser Block Pian,! at Forest Run .
The club held its annual dinner at the lzaak Walton Lodge on Dec. 18. Anyone interested in
joining is invited to attend any of the meetings,

SYRACUSE · ~ Town
council Thursday night hired
Jesse Brownlng as manager
of the Syracuse swinuning
pool. Bro"ning, instrumental
. mu~lc instructor at Southern
High &amp;chool, is qualified as a
water·safety instructor, Red
Cross lifesaving and has a
pool operator's . certificate.
MARIETTA - A District •
In ,other business council wide public meeting on Jan . contents which, in fact is a
increased garba ge rates from 18 at the Washington County summaryoutlineoftheeittlre
$2.50 to $3 a month except for Courthouse here will discuss process of developing a
low income senior citizens, how the Ohio Department of transportation project from
agreed to advertise for bidS Transportation develops inception to construction.
' A preliminary draft of the
for a sewage disposal system transportation projects.
Transportation Development
for the swimming pool, and
Up
for
discussion , Process
is
presently
, authorized Mayor Herman be the public response to the
available
for
public
review at
London to enter lrito a con· department ' s newly
The
Ohio
Department
of
tract with Ohio Power designated, "Transportation
Transportation
District
Company to provide three Development
Process,"
phase power service for the renamed from last year's Office in Marietta and the
ball park and swimming pool . 'jActioil Plan," whirh was offices of County Engineers,
Council approved a blanket found to have several City Mayors, County Plan·
appropriation untll the final ·deficiencies with respect to ning Commissions and at
Public Libraries in County
(Continued on page 2)
chan~lng interpretations of Seats.
environmental law as well as
Distrlct 10 of , The Ohio
too much bulk and com· Department of Trans·
plexity.
portat ion encompasses
The name was changed to Athens, Gailia, Hocking,
reflect a truer image of the

Public invited.to take part
in highway planning process

PRICE. . .--------+......._..__
SALE. _.. . _PRICES
!
.__..,___,______.
!
.

WAREHOUSE

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

..

:;,;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;-:.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;•: •:•:•:•: ·:O :O: •:•:•:•:•:•:•:• :•:•;. ;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.

---------~-·------

'

sn~w.

W!th schools dismissed there is plenty of
time and with Mother. Nature providing plenty
of snow, building snow people became an
activity for many Meigs · County youngsters
and adults Thursday,
Needless to say, the activity brought out
the creativity of··those taking part. Pictured
here are so me of lhe snow people which made
the scene Thursday,

'

•

three companies has received
a $5 million federal grant to
design Phase I of a coal
gasification ~emonstration
plant near this Ohio River
, ·city in western Kentucky.
Announcement of the
award from \he Energy
Research and Development
Administration· (ERDA) was
made jolnUy Thursday by
. Gov , Julian Carroll and U.S .
Sens . Wendell Ford and
Walter "Dee" Huddleston
both Kentucky Democrats:
The consortium includes
Ebasco Services, Inc., W.R.
Grace Co., and Texaco.
Total project . costs are
expected to be several ·

Creativity irt

BLEACHED QUILT LINING

36 ind1es wide - 100 per cent cotton,
excellent pattern selection : .
For This Sale

FRIDAY, .J8NUARY 7, 1977

- A consortiwn comprise'd of

DOUBLE KNIT

GOWNS - BLAZERS
- LONG_SKIRTS
•
- DRESSY BLOUSES

for New York City , spearheaded a national boycott of coffee
and called for a 50 per cent reduction in consumption to drive
down prices,
·
Christine Sullivan, Maasachusetts' top consumer alfalrJ
official, asked consumers to cut coffee drinking iii lujlf for the
next !oar months to protest prices.
Supermarkets jumped on the boycott bangwag·
on,.exhorting consumers to switch to tea , cocoa., or natural
juices. Major retail grocery c~ains in Chicago announced a 4~
day price freeze on coffee.
Housewives in Michigan and Connecticut , who led a revolt
against high sugar prices in 1975 and the meat price bulge in
1973, declared war on coffee by launching a national "coffee
brake" to Ioree down spiraling prices.
Some consumers, however, were prepared to pay the price
for their coffee craving.
(Continued on page 2)

Pilot coal to gas plant
going to W. Kentucky

COMPLETE STOCK OF WOMEN'S,
JUNIORS AND .MISSES SIZES ON SAL£. .

-----------·-------·--t-----------------~

_..-.. . --.--..-.. .

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

40% OFF

I
I

SAVE 40% AND 50%

WOMEN'S

'

·

The branches of his 300,000 trees were frozen and killed
.. during the night by severe winter frost. Then he discovered
that worse still,.the trunks were hit and entire trees would have
lD be replaced.
That one night o( freezing weather damaged or destroyed
all 900 million coffee trees in the southern,Brazilian state of
Parana where Schauff's farm is located.
The fr,ost affected 73.5 per cent of Brazil's 1976 coffee crop
and slashed the harvest to 6.4 million sacks of 132 pounds each
from an expected 28 million sacks.
The1oss was total, and was the major event in a series of
natural disasters and political turmoil that would reduce the
1976 world coffee supply by roughly 14 per cent and make
Schauf! and his fellow grower·• very rich men.

- The war in Angola, a major supplier of the U.S. Instant'
But now ,vith coffee approaching $3-.11-pound, there is talk
of a "'!lsumet t 9ffee boycott and some countries, notably -'coffee market, led lD a ban on its exports to the Free World .
Colombia ,fear that a boycott may hurtthelrfarmers.
- The February 1976 ear!hquake in Guatemala disrupted
The frost in Brazll, the largest producer of coffee and delivery to suppliers.
- Coffee shipments from Uganda are hampered by transsupplier of 60 per cent of all U. S..coffee imports, disrupted
portation problems, and leaf rust is threatening 10 pet. of
~nternatlonal coffee markets and triggered an almost instant
rise in American coffee prices.
Nicaragua's crop..
·
The heat was :.rln the kitchen, the supermarket sheU, and
Ten days after the frost , General Foods, the largest U. S.
coffee wholesaler, boosted prices on ground coffees by 20 cents the restaurant. F.ach new round of price hikes made the
a pound. Other processors promptly brought their pricing in morning coffee mystique more of a luxury. U. S. consumers
line with the industry trend setter ,
...
grumbled but continued to buy even when wholesale prices
On the' heels of the Brazilian frost, Mother Nature and broke through the $2-ai&gt;&lt;&gt;Und mark in July 1976.
By late December, the U. S. consumer, finding coffee a
human nature joined to shrink the 1976 world supply of coffee
to an estimated 45.5 million bags from 53.3 million in 1975and hard habit to kick, learned prices would top the $3'il-jl0und
push coffee prices to record levels.
mark in early 1977.,Breaking the $3 barrienpparently was too
- Rains and floods destroyed roughlv 20 per cent of the much for the psyche of the nation 's coffee drinkers.
coffee crop in Colombia, the worl&lt;\'s second largest producer. , Elinor Guggenheimer, commissioner of consumer affairs

JANUARY SALE PRICES
WOMEN'S .
FALL &amp;WINTER COATS

SAVE 40% &amp; 50%_

20% 50%

.

· Uolted PreoslliternaUonal
At dalm July 18, 1975, Brazllian farmer Marcos Schauf!
walked through his coffee plantation and knew at once it was

Special Clearance Sale Prices now on ;~II three floors of the Main Store - at the
Home Furnishings Annex and the Warehouse on Mechanic Street.

ANNIVERSARY CLEARANCE
SALE

I

and
ROBERt E. SUlLIVAN

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

SAVE!

KIDDIE SHOPPE

ByROXlJSTON

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

Apple Grove
News Notes

·'

·30-cent cup ~f coffee traced_to disasters, political turmoil

ELBERFELDS ·1N POMEROY -

NO BABY YET
As yet there have been no

applications flied In the
Dally ·Sentinel's " Baby of
the Year" contest.
By United PreosiDternanonal
OOLUMBUS - IT'S BUNDLE·UP TIME for the 7,400
Some 33 gifts from
students attending ll)e nearby Upper Arlington School system
business houses or the areu
which iB trying to save ita gas supply by lowering thermostats
wlll be given, to the parents ·
to 60 degrees.
.
·
.
and Meigs County's flrlit
&amp;lpt. Homer Mincy said thermostats in the system's nine baby of 1977.
buildings were lowered from 66 to 60 degrees in an effort to
Under lhe rules, parents
stretch the district's gas allocation and provide maximum . of the first baby must he
clasa days thil winter, T1 \Jpper Arllngton system is one of
legal residents of Meigs
many hit by 'cutbac~ In nli tural gas ordered ~Y Columbia Gas
County and present a
statement from the at·
Co.
lending physician showing
CLEVELAND - A COOPERATIVE OF NEARLY 00 the Ume and date of the
tomato growers In Medina, Lorain and Cuyahoga counties baby's birth.
I
tblnka Columbia Gas of Ohio,. Inc., has overstepped lawful
boundaries In imposing Its latest round of natural gas cut· ,,,, ,, ,,,,;,,"i':ti~:;s:~\.,
backs. "Legally," said C12veland Greenhouse Growers
Cooperative President Calvin Kraushaar, "I don't think they
Cloudy, cold tonight, lows
can do this to' us. Certain growers that don't have· substitute
near
10 .{minus 12 Celsius).·
fuel fac:e crop 18llure,
•
·
Chance
of snow Saturday,
"There Ia no way you can grow tomatoes colder than 60
higha
around
30 (minus one
detJreel and e~peet to bave any productioo," Kraushaar said,
Celsius).
Probability
of
whoae members have under gjau between 180 and 200 acres of
precipitation
90.
per
cent
croP*. DlOIItly !Dmatoes.
·
today, 20 per cent tonight, 50
WASHINGTON - AN INDEPENDENT PANEL of per cent Saturday.
experll tllld today that "an unfortunate" desigt{ ' and
NOW YOU KNOW
Inadequate -Ung of cracks caused the collapse of the Teton
New York City's boarding
Dim In ldabo, The earlhfill dam, built by Ute U. S. Bureau of house owners made a pact In
Rllcliul!atlon, failed last June at the cost of II llves and more i824 to serve their tenants
than $1 billion In damages.
just four prunes each for
'!be panel, headed by Los Angeles entdneer Wallace L. breakfast because of the high
cost of living.
(Continued on page 2)
,!
'

Lack of money
closes health
office one day

accomplished through the
Wood , Washington, Wirt
Interstate Planning Com·
mission and its working
agency - the Mid·Ohio
\'alley Regional Cou ncil
(MOVRC).
The public . is urged to attend this mee!ing which
starts at 7 p.m. and voice
concerns for improving the
process of developing trans·
portation projects. If attend·
ance is not possible, written
comments w•ll ,be accepted if
received at the District
Deputy Director's office, P.
0 . Box 6.\8, Marietta, Ohio
45750, before January 25,
1977, said Glen A. Smith,
district deputy director.

...

Ice, snow cause nine accidents

Due to the lack of funds, the
offices of the Meigs County
Department of Health, East
Bad driving conditions
Main St., Pomeroy, will be were blamed for nine traffic
closed on Saturdays, Mrs. accidents lnvestlgated by the
Gene Lyons, admlnlstratlve Gallla-Meigs Post, Ohio State
assistant, said today,
: Patrol. Thursday,
.
The office in the past has
The first occurred at 8:15
been open each Saturday a.m. Thursday one tenth of a
from .8:311 a.m . to 12 noon.
mile north of Melgs County at
Mrs. Lyons also announced Meigs Mine 11 where Ben·
the 'appointment of Mrs. jamin L. Wigal, 23, ·Rt. 1,
Pearl Scott, Pomeroy, as Athens, lost control of his ca r
depw registrar and deputy which slid on ice sideswiping
clerk by the Meigs County an auto operated by Dennis
Board of Health. A part-lime Tlllls, 21, Rutland.
employe, Nali\:y Byrd, has
Terry Layne l!upp, 20,
been named to assist with Gallipolis, suffered abrasions
record maintenance ·in the and la cerations in ·an achealth nurse office .
ctdent at 12:20 p.m. Thursday
\\

Meigs, Monroe, M o r g an ~
Noble,
Vinton
and
Washington Counties. In
addition to the above coun·
lies, The Ohio Department of
Transportation, the cities of
Marietta and Belpre and
Washington County are in·
volved with the West Virginia
Department of Highways ,
Parker.s burg, Vienna ,
Williamstown, and Wood and
Wirt Counties in West
Virginia in a Metropolitan
Planning Organization as a
. result of being designated a
Standard Metropolitan
Statistical Area (SMl\j\). .
This designation . requires
an Urban Planning Process
lin contrast to the remainder
of the District) which is

on White Hollow Rd. seven
tenths· of a mil• west of SR
'n5. An auto driven by Loren
D. Stumbo, 36, Rt. 2, Patriot,
slid left of center into Hupp's
westbOund car. There was
moderate damage.
Two persons were inJured
In an accident at I : 15 p.m. on
SR .248 In Meigs County, two
and two tenths miles east of
SR 7. Willhim A. Connolly, 67,
Rt. I, Reedsvllle, lost control .
of his car on the snow cuvered
highway. The vehicle ran off
the highway striking an
IIJIIbl\nkment. Injured were
two passengers, Erma M.

Connolly; 63, and Erma Jean
Connolly, 12, both of Rt. I ,
Reedsvllle.
A three-vehicle accident
occurred at4:45 p.m. on SR 7
north of the junction to SR 35
where an auto driven by
Kenneth W. Hughes, 48,
Vienna, W. Va. slowed in a
line of traffic for an unknown
vehicle to make a left turn .
Kimneth L Wise, 45, CheShire,
attempted to stop but his
truck pulled off the highway
onto the berm. to avoid an
accident,
Charles C: Jones, 33, Rt. 2,
Barboursvllle, W. Va.

traveling behind Wise, was
unable to stop. His truck
plowed into Wise's truck,
then struck the Hughes car.
There were no Injuries. Jories
was ·charged with failure to
stop within the assured clear ,
distance.
Melba M. Sheets, 54,
Eureka Star Rt., Gallipolis,
was taken to the Hol•er
Medical Center for treatment ·
of . Injuries suffered In a
collislonat6:25 p.m. on SR 7,
two tenths of a mile north of
SR 218.
'State troopers said an auto
(Continued on pa1e 2)

�,
•

GAME IN DOUBT
Mrlgt High Scbool • i"
clpel Jomtt Diehl If •
',
a m today II " \I'll IIIII uv iD
the olr whether or nol the
Mtnuden would play al
Jtckloa tolllgbl "
Coodltloas of the hlj;bway&amp;
wUI be checked agaiD al 1
p m ud afler thai Jackson
offldal1, as host school, will
decide what to do In a
lelephooe confereoce with
Diehl
Southern High School,
wblcb was to play Wahama
has cancelled liB game
1

Sinatra's mother in lost jet
PALM SPRINGS, Calif
(UP! ) - The elderly mother
of entert.amer Frank Sinatra

was a paaaenger aboard a
Lear jet that diSappeared
during
a
snowstorm
Thursday night shortly after
takeoff
Authorities feared the
plane may have crashed Ill
the rugged San Gnrgonlo
Wilderness Area, about 30
miles southeast of San
Bernardioo, and a Sheriff's
Department spokesman sa1d
a search would begm at

daybreak today
Natalie Dolly" Sinatra,
82, was en route to Las Vegas
Nev , for her son 's operiing
performance at Caesars
accordmg to
Palace
Smalra 's spokesman, Lee
Solten lWo pilots and an
unldenUfled passenger also
were a board the twin~nglne
Charier plane owned by Jet
AVl8 1n Lao Vegas
Sollers said Sinatra was
told of the
plane's
diBappearance shortly before
showllme but deetded to go

ahead Wlth his scheduled two which rilles from the desert
performances Sollers said no floor to the snOWY 12,~oot
other fanuly members were peak of San Gorgonio
aboard the jet
MoontaiD, has a heUuva lot
The 61 year-old entertalller of snow m the area '
was descnbed as 'pretty
• A ground search is
shaken up, but was gomg to fruitless at rught," Burnam
do the show anyway because said
It 's an incredibly
hlS mother would have rough area to search It lB
wanted 11 that way
very rugged and there lB
Ashowroom ma1tre d'hotel nothmg that can be done m
S8ld Sinatra made no menlloo the dark m an extremely
of hlB mother durmg e1ther of rugged area "
his two performances
The FAA regional duty
Mat Frank Burnam of the officer Ill Los Angeles sa1d
Civil Air Patrol sa•d, • Wlth the tel left the ramy Palm
the snow sltuatJOn and Springs MuniCipal Airport at
continumg snow, anything 4 55 p m PST en route to Las
that went Ill thiS afternoon Vegas's McCarron Field and
would be covered by vanished from radar screens
daybreak "
four ffilllutes later
He said the search locatiOn
was lllltiated after studying
expemnces m Canada and
Australia
11
ln Canada' II said MtUer'
they SWitched over about a
year ago all at once, Wlth
(Contmued from page 1)
httle
or
no
pubhc
preparauon Australian of- Chadwick, sa1d the dam design ' did not adequately take mto
foclals had tried to giVe both account the foupdation conditions and the characteriBllcs of
readings after the cutnver the soil ''
and ran mto much difficulty
PORT AO PRINCE HAITI - A JAPANESE promoter
' We trled to compromise
between the two expenences says he has the approval of PreSident Jean-Claude Duvalier to
and failed," M1ller said It stage a 'duel to the death between a Bengal t1ger and a black
appears ll wtll be best ooce bell karate champwn Conservallomsts from aroond the world
Congress sets an offiCial have protested but promoter Yoshw Ko sa1d Thursday he w1ll
cutover date to JUSt do 11 all stage the match between man and beast ms1de a cage Feb 5
Ko sa1d he had s1gned e•ghth-degree black belt champwn
at once - cold turkey •
'Mr Kamamoto of Japan to fight the Bengal tiger, an
endangered speetes mternationally protected Ill SylV!o Calor
stadium,
H8lli s mam soccer held
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday,
WASHINGTON
THE FOOD AND DRUG
snow Sunday and Monday
and fair Tuesday Continued Administration says 1t will crack down on an alleged unpunty
cold with highs about 23 msaccharm but w1lllet the artifiCial food sweetener remBill on
(minus five Celsius 1 north to the market Saccharm the last artificial sweetener st1ll
about %8 1minus two Celsius I allowed m food has been under fire since 1972 when reports
south Lows will be near eight f~rst came to light that anunals led the substance developed
(minus 13 Celsius 1 north to bladder tumors
near 14 (minus nine Celsius)
MONTEGO BAY, JAMAICA - FOUR bandits robbed and
south
raped the mece of the late Slr Wmston Churchill and shot a
London fpsh10n des1gner vacat1onmg at her country estate
outside Montego Bay on Jama1ca s north coast
UNIT CALLED
Lady Sarah RoubanlS, w~ose maiden name was Lady
The Ra cme Emergency Sarah Spencer Churchill, said the gunmen k1cked down the
Squad was called Thursday dool'at 3 45 am Thursday and held the household mcluding
at 10 30 p m for Sharon servants and houseguest Mi chael Szell at gunpomt for an hour
Crouch, Racme, who was while they ransacked the bulldmg Szell, a London fashion
InJUred 1n a sleighing ac
deSigner was shot m the left shouliier
cident She was taken to
Veterans Memonal
Hospital At 9 45 a m
today they transport ed
GARNES WAS ILL
~CIIOOI.S CLOSED
Jean KISer , Racme to
The Pomeroy Emergency
For the th1rd straight da y
VMH
schools of the Ill elKS Eastern Squad was called to 101 Ne"
and Southern l.oc1l hool St at 4 p m Thursday for
01 rl
tl
du to Peter August Garnes who
AIDMEN CALLED
ir• Ud
0 trnt •'• was 111 He was taken to
The Middl eport T vr
r .!JI• ~· Veterans Memonal Hospital
Emergency Squad answffl!d
Ill
I IIlli ~here he was admitted
a call to 892 S Second Al't , at
10· 17 am Thu rada1 '""
Margaret Justice, a ITif'dinlll
patient who WI t.lk
EW YORK (UP! ) Veterans Memorial II
It tilt World Football
II juat a memory, a
18 &amp;mOllllt of offlclal
U. ren\aln and are
Cllflered as souverurs by
!din«. their man-

'Celsius readings out
United Preas IDteroatlooal
A four-day Natwnal
Weather Service regwnal
experunent In g1vmg both
CelSius and Fahrenheit
temperatw;e readings ended
today 311lld confuswn and
technical problems
Marvin
Miller,
meteorologiSt Ill charge of the
semce's Cleveland Forecast
Office sa1d that effective at 10
a m today he ordered the
elunmatlon of all Celluus
temperature readmgs tn
fore casts ISsued by his
bureau Surular action was
taken tnday m all eastern
NWS reg1on offices which had
started the expenment
Mooday
The NWS eastern reg1oh IS
composed of New England
New York , Pennsylvama ,
Ohw West V~rgm1a, New
Jersey ,Maryland, Delaware,
V1rg1ma No rth Carolina,
South Carolina and the
Distr~ct of Columbia
'It caused techmcal
problems here m attempting
In mclude both Fahrenheit
and CelsiUs fi gures, • M11ier
said ' And we also rece1yed
complamts from broadcast
stations and other busmesses
usmg our forecasts "
Miller sa1d Congress has
set no offiCial cut-over date
l or the compile converswn to
the melnc system, wh1ch
would mclude converting
temperature figures to
CelsiUS

Ice, snow

Celsius readmgs differ 1n
that a zero-degree figure
represenls the freezing pomt
mstead of the 32-degree mark
as Ill Fahrenheit readings
The scale also differs, so that
a degree m Fahrenheit
covers Ieos spr.,.d than a
degree m Celsius
Miller sa1d the experunent
begal\ when New York C1ty
based televiSIOn network
metorologists began giVIng
both Celsius and Fahrenheit
readings Local news media
representatives requested
the same service The

serv1ce 's eastern reg1on ,

which covers the New York
Clty area, compiled
"We received many complaints from users when they
saw the forecasts become
unmanageable as far as
space and time reqUirements
m newspapers and for w1re
services, Miller sa1d And,
most unportantly, we got
many calls from the pubhc,
in&lt;hcatmg an mability m
understanding the CelsiUS
readings
Miller said the experunent

ADC CO JilES
The office of State Auditor
Thomas E Ferguson an
noun ced the January
diStribution of $34 344 709 II\
Ald to Dependent Children to
$552 046 recipients In Ohw's
88 counties Me•gs County
received $56 685 for 94~
rwp1ents

E·RCALLED
RACINE
- The Racme
(Contmued from page I)
Emergency
Squad
was called
dmen by Kenneth A Hlxon
JUSt
after
mldmghl
Thursday
IB Ironton went out of
for Rubv Watt Racme, ...who
control on ICl pavement and
was having difficulty breath
skidded mto the Sheets auto mg She was taken to
Ther e was
moderate Veteran s Memorial Hospllal
damage
No charge was filed after a
rear end colhswn at 5 15 p m
on SR 160 m Green Twp
where an auto driven by
Roger L Puckett 31 Rt 2
Bidwell shd mto the rear of a
car OJI"rated by Debra A
Nibert 22 Rt 1, Galhpohs
A smgle vehicle accident
occurred at 4 45 p m on SR
588 where James A Bennett,
36 Rt 2 Vmton , lost control
of his vehi cle on the 1cy
pavement then struck an
embankm ent 1 here was
mmor damage
~nother accident occurred
at 5 35 p m on SR 7 m
Galltpolts Twp where an auto
driven by Betty Jane Massie
19 Thunnan lost control on
the slippery pavement then
skidded mto a truck operated
br David M Ball 26, Rt 1
Ga lhpohs
Th ere
wa s
moderate damage She was
taken to the Holzer Med1cal
Center for treatment of mmor
lllJUraes

News •• in Briefs

Brinks guard's

ltlurtr

hinge is over letter
SAN FRANCIS()) (UP! ) A Brmk s guard who
vamshed wtth $500,000 from
hiS armored car last year
spent nearly all the loot on
women night clubs, horse
race bets and lavish gifts,
according to columnist Herb
Caen
The
San
Francisco
Chromcle wnter today sa1d
he received a 17-page letter
several days ago from
Richard C Rees 26, who
disappeared after the Feb 12
1976, heiSt
The FBI authenllcated the
letter, posbnarked Kansas

City Mo , from fJnaerprlnta,
according to Caen Reea told
the columnist In turn the
letter over tn FBI agents
Rees squandered the
$500,000 oo Texas women
Fort Worth night clubs,
$2 OOIJ.a-pop horse race beta,
cars, trucks, motorcycles
and lavish gifts," Caen sa1d
Rees li now almost broke
and 'staying no more than
two days In any town," Caen
S8ld ' Ahit man hired I one
of my ex-women and the FBI
are bOth clOSillg m on me, and
I hope the FBI gets me first,''
the letter said
11

DR. LAMB

-

IUm hlmlel!

o\rolrding to Richard M
Gel1ler , president
of
!iPIIdllll! WFL balls have
betn bid for prices rangmg up
lo 11,000 at charity auctions,
but now are bemg offered at
for
first-season,
palommo-gold game balls
and ISO for flrst-6eas0n gold
practice balls and second
season convenlwnal brown
game balls

m

,,

•

You can ll!le Tyleuul as It
does not contain any
sahcylates found In aspirin
It wlll be useful m rehevmg
mild pam It will not reheve
mflammatwn Medtcmes to
relieve mflanunatlon should
be presmbed by a phySICian
The amount of aspirlll 1t
U.kes for thiS effect lS too
much to take on your own A
phySI Cian may WISh to
prescnbe Motrm It also 1s
usefulm rehev1ng pam, but II
lS no more effective than
aspt rtn treatment In
eqUivalent amounts
DEAR DR LAMB -I am a
16-year-old girl and have an
mhmate sexual relatwnship
With my 17 year old
boyfnend
I am concerned as to
whether I can become preg·
nant If my VIrginity Is not
taken We use the withdrawal
techmque Is there any
possibility that I can uon
ce1ve If the hymen IS not ruptured I
My boyfnmd ts tonfidcnt

'

that no spenn ccm IIIUJJ&lt;.Iatc
the ovary If the hymen IS shU
mwct Persorullll" I tend to
believe tins too but I am havmg apprehensions I hope you
can allay my fears
I don t want io fat-e the emharrassment and heartbreak
that an unwanted pregnancy
would brmg on my family
and myself
DEAR READER- First of
all, the Withdrawal technique
IS one of lhe least reliable
forms of birth control and it
IS the most conunonly used
method In active youngsters
·lllcluding those who should
know better It only U.kes one
sperm cell umted wllh an
ovwn to mduce a pregnancy
A small amount of sperm at
the vagmal opemng can
result In pregnancy
No, the hymen does not
have to be broken for
pregnancy to occur This
membrane like structure
already has a hole m 11 or IS
to1n at the tune a Mlrl bcgms
menst1 uatmg I hel e IS uo

three seven )

Winning color - Green

snow covers
Ohio in
new stonn
By
United
Press
International
A new storm left up to two
more mches of snow
throughout Oh1o early today
and forced the cloSillg of
numerous schools
Schools were reported
closed In the Cleveland,
Columbus and Eastern Ohio
areas
The Nallonal Weather
SerVIce said a cold front
passed through most of the
stale early today and
mcreased west to northwest
wmds 15 to 25 m1les an hour m
higher gusts
The Wlnd has caused some
blowmg and driftmg of the
newly fallen snow
The Weather Serv•ce sa1d
the steady snow would end
from the west later today
with
httle
further
acetunulaUons expected
By 6 a m temperatures
had fallen mto the upper
teens behmd the cold front
w1th west to northwest wmds
brmgmg m colder a1r,
temperatures around Ohio
will stay around 2tl to 25
degrees
The extended outlook for
Sunday through Tuesday
calls for snow Sunday and
Monday and fall" Tuesday
Continued cold wlth highs
about 23 north to about 28
south Lows will be near e1ght
north to near 14 south

Pleasant Valley
DIScharges
V!Vlan
Mayes Pmnt Pleasant otho
Wood Galhpohs Mrs Jerry
Mullin, Point Pleasant, Ruth
Bonecutter, Pomt Pleasant
Eumce Beller, PI Pleasant,
Henry Oliver, Jackson, Ray
Nettles, Robertsburg DaVId
Dewhurst Letart Edward
Jackson, Galhpohs Mrs
Gerald Hlggmbotham, Red
House Russell Howell Pomt
Pleasant Mrs Larry Myers,
Galllpohs Ferry, Harold
Adams, Gallipolis, and Roy
Supthm, St Alhans B1rtb- A
son to Mr and Mrs Robert
M1ller, Pomeroy

30- cent cup

•2

-

I

Piece of cheese
report is issued
By CIWG A PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The governJllenl today
rei~ a report so heavily
cen10red It looked "like a
piece of Swills cheese,"
covering an mternal probe of
alleged abuses In 123 mtlllon
worth of federal alcohoUsm
grants
The report was made
available by the DePJrlmenl
of Health, Education and
Welfare lo UP! under the
Freedom of Information Act
But It consiste~ almost
whOlly of blank pages, and all
the panel's llndmgs and
recommendations were
deleted.
Yet the complete report
wUI be published when it goes
lo Congress shortly
The
report s many

Incomplete sentencea and
blank pagea contained
oplniolll and judgments or
privileged financial
Information exempt from
pubUc dlicloaure under the
act, said HEW'• Freedool r:l.
Information Oftlcer Russell

Roberts

Rain may hamper play- in 1977 Super Bowl
By JIM COUR
UPI Sports Writer
lOS ANGElES (UP!) - It
has been rammg here a lot
and If rt rains some more
dunng Super Bowl XI Fran
Tarkenlon Of the Mmnesota
V1Kmgs thmks It wlil favor
Oakland Raider Coach John
Madden and quarterback
Ken Stabler aren 't so sure

®

BASKETBALL
College Ba,ketbalt Au sutfs

B't Unit ed Press lntl' rn~l•ona l

Harry Bell, Information

chief lor HEW's Natlortal
Institute on Alcobol Abuse

and AlcalloUsm, aald "It's
not a question of somebody
censoring It's following the
letter of Freedom of
Information as to what you
delei! I realize 1! rnal&lt;es It
(the report) lbok like a piece
of Swlsa cheese."
Asked whether HEW
coosldered the spirit of the
act, Bell replied, "If they'd
thought about the splril of
FOI they wouldn't have
released any of it "
Congress had asked HEW
In mvestlgate the award of
123 million Ill gover~llllent
(Continued from page I)
grants
to
national
budget ls approved They organiZBiions for prevention
appropnated $2,000 for the and treatment of alcohol
village and $2 000 for the abuse and to "determine
water board
whether each should continue
Pohce Ch1ef Milton Varian to receive federal support "
submitted the following
The House Commerce
report for )976 104 arrests, Committee said Ill a report
answered 115 complamts, last year It was "distressed
Investigated 16 accidents, by the nature" of some
received 2M phone calls, alcoholism grants and listed
ISsued 130 warmngs and grants 11 S8ld did not appear
collected S5 ,382 55 m bond to have prevenllon or
forfeitures, fmes and costs
treatment as their main
used 830 gallon of fuel at a objective •
cost of $504 79 , oll and lube
The censored HEW report,
$23 34 m1sc , 117 20 total which lS bemg prepared for
expense, $545 33, and drove Congress, SBld a task force
the cruiSer 6,0113 2 miles Investigated 16 grants to
Council commended Chief natwnal organizations
Varian for a 'tob well done
Including the United States
It was brought out that Jaycees, Boys' Clubs of
people are abuSing the one America, Airhne Pilots
way street at College Road It Association and the National
was- noted that if caught Congress of Parents and
persons will defm1tely be Teachers (PTA)
cited to couct
The report said that "In
The Mayor appomted general the task force has
standmg committees for the determined ' The rest of
year
the sentence was deleted
Attending were Mayor
It mentioned ooe activity
London Robert Wingett
that ''was discontmued un
Eber Pickens, Barry McCoy
me(bately" but offered oo
Jimmy
Joe
Hemsley, further e~phlnallon
Kathryn Crow counc1l
Panel Chairman Irving
members, Mary Chancey, Wolf of HEW's mslltute on
clerk, George Holman, alcoholism declined
treasurer and Ch•ef Vanan
comment but asserted that
none of the gr.an!s was
awarded tnegaUy
An appendix to the report
- also partially censored said the Jay9ees sought funds
'to
develop
Citizen
Holzer Medical Center
parllcipallon
1n
the
!Discharges, Jan 6)
awareness and resolutioo of
Wllma Bahr
James commumty alcohol abuse
BIShop, Mrs
Wilham problems,' the Boys' Clubs
Buckley and son Dov1e for alcohol ablllje prevenllon
Church Ernest Cornwell Sr , among club members, ALPA
Frank Denney
Megan to deal with drmking
Gardner Mrs Jack HaD and problems among piluls, and
son, Emma Hammond
the PTA to deal with
Bonme Hunt, Lew Kmght, alcoholism as "a family
Mrs Jerry Lambert and son, affair "
Alma Lesser, Bfrlelgh Oller
Wilham Rowland Mary
Russell, Fanny Sayre,
William Short, Terry Ward
(Births, Jan 6)
Mr and 'i'• George ADen,
daughter RIO Grande, Mr
and Mrs George Wicker
Fred Btrlcher, 75 , of 708
daughter Gallipolis Mr and
WestMalnSt, Pomeroy, died
Mrs Harold Skeen, son
Thursday at the Salyer
Galhpohs Mr and Mrs
Taylor Miller, son, Patnot, Nursing Home in Centerburg
He was preceded Ill death
Mr and Mrs Herman
Roberts, son, Pomeroy Mr by hiS parents, Lemuel and
Ahce Brandon Birtcher,
and Mrs Marshall Roush
daughter, Racme, Mr and three brothers, and two
sisters
Mrs Larry Henry son
Mr B1rtcher was a retired
Galhpohs Mr and Mrs
Aaron Brewer son Vmton meat cutter In Pomeroy and
Middleport
He lS sumved br his wife,
Catherine
Scott Blrlcher and
Veterans Memorial Hospitalseveral
nieces
and nephews
Admitted - Ruby Watts,
Funeral
services
win be 3
Racme, August Garnes,
Saturday
at
the
Ewing
p
m
Pomeroy, Daniel Rundell,
Funeral
Home
where
fnends
Syracuse
Discharged
Mary may call any tune Bur~al will
be In Gravel Hlll Cerqetery,
Marcinko, Fhonda Wood
Cheshire
'

Pool manager

HOSPITAL NEWS

11117 have
lD do
with a ICI'lbbled P.S to the
letter - ·coke is the evil in
my heart "
Roes vanished after be
allegedly stuffed $500,000 mto
a champagne box while h1s
armored car was parked m
San Mateo, Calif He told the
driver that he was delivering
some champagne to a fmnd
and would be 'right hack "
H•s last message was
(Continued from page 1)
scrawled m the dust on hls
'There are two thmga I can't do without- my coffee and
ahandoned car
toilet paper," S8ld Nan MorrlBon of Atlanta 'The pr1ces are
'Look at me I m r1ch •
dlscouragmg, but I buy "
A cup of coffee now is 30 cents or higher Ill 1118llY
restaurants, and owners are keepmg a sharp eye on the
compelltion for the first move to charge for refills
All seems to he quiet on the coffee front abroad, but aU S
congressman charged the State Department lS encouragmg a
coffee cartel to maintBill UID'easonably high export taxes and
mllk U S coffee drinkers of billion more a yeer In mdtrect
foreign subsidies
Most industry observers Ill the Umted States debunked the
VIew that a cartel has been formed If there lS a coffee cartel
at work," said one market watcher, "Its been kepi pretty
qu1et ''
other way for normal
Beyond dispute, however, are the record proflta rolled up
menstrual discharge to oc by the maJor coffee-produetng nations
cur 1 he OJI"nmg that per·
ln Rio de Janeiro, the Brazilian Coffee Institute said
m1ts passage of blood also Brazilian coffee export sales for 1976 are expected to lop $2 3
will pe11mt passage of sperm billion, over dlluble the $900 million In grou export. sales in
~
cells
Before the frost growers like Marcos Schauf! received $33
You might ask yourself
why you and your family tn $44 for a 132-pound sack Today they are getting $200 And
would be embarrassed or each tune the world price of coffeemcreuea by one U S cent,
have he;lrlache If you were to ll means $8 rnlllloo more for Colombia, sources aald
U S Deparlrnenl of Agriculture economists said world
become a mother I susped
you will say that llls because coffee production lS unlikely to returnJo normal utnllthe 1979your parents would not ap- 80 season and predicted retail coffee prices will set new
prove of your hfe style I recorda In 1977
Camillo Calazans, president ri the Brazilian Coffee
can't make yoUI dec•s•uos for
you, but you should resolve Institute, said coffee prices would remain high through 1977
your feelings ahout thiS "because Brazil's harvest lS goJna lp be smaD and because
before you run the mk of Brazil's stocks are rapidly dwindting"
The ooly near-term solution to the coffee crisis rests with
pre gnanc y Your own
responses, your parents' U S coffee drinkers, who consume about 42 2 per cent of the
responses, your partner's world's traded coffee
Even before the me(e(lrl~ rise In coffee prices, coffee
responses, and what happens
to an unwanted haby are all drlnkmg was dectining gradually In the Unlled States withe
thmgs eve1 y girl should Pepsi generation shoWing araded coffee
&lt;llristme SUllivan, Masaachusett.!' top consumer affairs
carefully cuns1de1 1n
dec1dmg what hfe style she official, asked consumers to cut coffee drinking in half lor the
Will choose It IS better to COO· next four months to protest prices
Supermarkets jumped on the boycott bandwagon,
front these illlslc facts while
exhorting
consumers lo SWitch to tea, cocoa, or 1)8tural juices
one shll has a choice 1alhe1
Major
retaD
grocery chains In &lt;lllcago announced a ~Y
than aftm Ills tUiilate
price freeze on coffee
UJ

Aspirin substitutes are available
DEAR DR LAMB - f h•ve
never been abl e to U.ke
aspirin Is there any other
mcdicmc as good Io take the
place of aspirin'
DEAR RE ADER - A
mediCine should be chosen
for a pa!"lwular purpose
Allpirm IS u:;eful m both
rellevmg pam and m decreas·
mg mnammahon
I do not know why you can 't
lake aspmn but accepting
your sMement I would sug
gest that you avOid any of the
available medicines you' can
buy without a prescnp:wn
that also contam ast&gt;mn To
glve you a hst of these 1 am
sending you The Health Let
ter nwnber IHI , Aspirin and
Related Medicines others
who want inforrnahon about
these mediCines can send 50
cen~' with a long, sU.mped ,
• 1 .1ddressed envelope for
' Jll!lt send your request to
me in care of this newspaper
P 0 Box 321l, San Antonio
TX78209

WITERY WINNERS
TbiJ week's wiDIIIDC Ohio
l.ottery numhen
PotO'Gold
Three-digit number - 737
lseven·lh,....seven I
Three-digit number - 015
(zero-six·hve )
Flve-&lt;llglt number - 1m3
ltwo • six·two • zer~&gt;-three)
Double Play
Three-&lt;llglt oumber - !N9
(nine-four ·nine)
Five-&lt;lfgll number - 86791
(efiiJI·six - seven-nine • one)
S~lgll number - 14!113'1
(seven • four-nine zero

3- The DaUy Sentinel, MiddlePQrl-Pomeroy, 0 Friday, Jan 7 1977

l'ournam e nl $
( Ftnal Round)
FC~~•rll e td Class tc
IChampu'tn sl"t tp }
Fa rt e d 10 1 Hol st rct. Ql
( Consolo1hon 1
Sl Fran P a 85 Loh ph 8:1

P otomac St 91 CeCi l Md 60
Shepherd B.a Edmbo ro 79
Slen&amp; 87 Un v of Bflo 76

Wheeling 10 1 Monmou th 86
South
F urman BH Jack son v li e 7

Geor ge tow n 89 Un ton 88 of
74

Cent ena r y 7 1

Ky St 73 Carson Ncwmnn f,?
Me mphi S St 82 Ok C l y
Stetson 74 M ar sh a ll 6:1
M1dwest
Ashlnd 59 Fr nkln Mr st1 1 'iO
Copp n Sl 96 Shaw 6'J
DePauw 88 S! Edwarq s 65

n

IllinOIS 89 Oh to St 72
L mcoln Mo 87 M o "' L 83
Mt chl(lan 102 Northwes tern 65
M ch 1gan St fl 4 Wtscon s n 6
Mo Ro lla 87 Cent Mo 71
Musk ng um 83 Oh o Wesl eya n

70

NE M sso ur 87 SE M •ssour 87
0 Dom ncn 511 M ! V rnon Nell
)7

Pur due 80 lnd1an a 6)
SW Mt!&gt;SSO Urt 76 N W Mo 70
St Jo s lnd 81 W s Pit v i
Tn ~ tat e lOB H ll5da lc R?
w lm ngt on 78 Bl uff ton 71
W s Rvr F ll !&gt; l.Q1 Carlton 111

South wes t
Ab1ICne Cl1r1 S 67 Tar leton 60
Ar kansa s Tec h 66 0 1ar ks 6$
Arlol Coli 80 A rlol M ' ' c li O 78
Ark LR IIJ E II nots 75
ALJSI n Col i 80 E Tcx Rap 79
Houston 111 Houston n -'p l 79
Jot1n Bro wn 90 N E Okl a &lt;:;1 RR
NE La 10 Tcx i1 S Art nq on W
Southern Ark nnsas B~ Har d nq

"

W l C)( (IS li t

77 Nf'W Mc x li t

"

Wes t
Anzona 80 " an Dtcqo s t n
Grand Canyon HI C &lt;"~l s n ~7
Lng Bcl1 St- n UC Sl a f\r b 61
No Ar 11 96 M on tana &lt;:; t ~ ~~
Or e Tec l 75 Warner Pile 70
S&lt;Jn Fr anc sec 9$ PortiMd n
san Jose St 9l 'i ;,cto 'i t 81
Sealll e U 7J &lt;;an! a CIM a 6
U ah St 7 ~ Cal li t N rdfJC fl1
Wa sl1mg ton 85 Cat for n a 75
Wash ngtn Sl 80 ~~ ~nl or d loR
• Weber St 83 Montan(1 71

Oh10 H 1gh Sch oo l
Gtrls Basketball Rr s ull s
Un1ted Pre ss lnt ernnt on ill
Upp er San dusk y J } T ff n
Ca lvert 70
Lan cas ter
~=" shcr

la kew ood 3 1
R1 ve r Va lley 66 Bu cy r u5 ) 6
Andrews Sc h oo l JJ'"O ran gc 37
Rtdg emonl 119 R vc rd a le 56
Clc Glen v IIi' 58 Cl e Hay 3 1
Cle Ad am s .:1 8 Cl e Ke nn ed ~ &lt;~ 7
N Ol ms ted 29 Columb ia 11
R oc k y

R1 ve r 36 B ro ok l yn 73

Oh•a Coll eq e
Ba sketball Re sult!.
Un 1led Press lnlerno1honal
Il l inOIS 89 O h o S tat (l 71
Mu s k n9v m 83 Oh10 W('slc yan

70
Oh o Oo mm can 58
M t Ver non N &amp;7iH r nc ~~
A shland
59
Fr3nkl l n
Marsh al l P'a 50
W tl m in glon 78 8 tull ton 11

Fred Birtcher

died Thursday

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sporn Writer
If Eldon MIIle1 c• n survive
what happened to hiS "'",
State basketball team
Thursday mght, he can
surv1ve anythmg
The Buckeyes, Ill their first
Big Ten game under Miller,
were bllsiered 811-72 by an
lllinoiS team which shot 84 6
per cent from the floo r the
first half and 69 3 for the
game
' lllinms IB a pretty good
basketball team and they
played a great game
tomght," understated Miller
They beat us badly But
we ll llve to play another
day"
Defense, what Miller has
been preachmg
smce
practiCe began last fall, was
the Buckeyes' undomg
Our mab1hty to stoR
them,' Miller said m
explammg th~ one-sided
game How many times
before have you beard me
talk about defense bemg a
problem for us' Every
game'
llllnms Lou Henson said
the contest remmded him of
Ohw State s 19611 NCAA title
game w1n over Califorma at
San Francisco
The Buckeyes Ill that game
hit on 16 of 19 for 84 2 per cent
Ill the f~rst half enroute to a
7:;.55 Win
Dlino!S hil22 of 26 Thursday
mght With no lllllll player
m1ssmg more than once from
the floor the f~rst half
Aud1e Matthews a 6·5
tumor forward was the mam
problem for the Buckeyes
w1th 28 pomts, 18 m the
openmg 20 mmutes, but he
had double "f1giire sconng
help from four teanunates,
mcludmg 18 by freshman
Lev• Cobb and 16 by tumor
R1ch Adams
We're pretty good
shooters; said Henson, but

Dom m•cn N Y 77 N J T ech 67
Massac husct ls 110 DuqueSn e' 97

St

111EDALVSFRI'1Nt:L
DEVOTED ro nn
INTEIImOF

MEIGS-MA.!JON AREA
CHF.8TFJI L TANNEHill.
Eu&lt; E4
HOBERT IIOEFIJCH

CIIIW.

Pubhllhed da ly

tt~

SMtunt.ly

bytht Ohio VaiJcy PubfistdnKCt~~n­
I:Ul)'
~ 169

Ill Court St POIOI!roy Ohi o
BU.'ilneSS Ofrll-e Pboor 992

21561ldllori&gt;1Phune9922157

Se£ond cla!lS poHLilge pauJ 111

Pomeroy Ohio
National •dvt'rtb &amp;nti

reprNn-

lallve Ward Gri!CIUt ComJNlnY In

C 8otUoeUi and Galliigher Dlv
757 Third Ave New York N Y

carrier whtre avalblble 75 cenb per
week By Motor Route whert ct1rr1er

IIUVICi: nol 1Yaibtble One mooUt
$3~

By mat! In Ohio and W Va
Sil monLhs
Ill 50 Three monlh9 $7 00
Eliewhert' $26 00 year Stx months
113 50 Three monlha 17 50
Subscription price Includes Sunday

One Year 122 00

flmee..SenUneJ

NB.A St a nnd1nq !r.
8'1' U ml ~ d Pren Internal an ill
Ea\ ter n Conf eren ce
Atl a nftC DIVI SIOn
W L Pet
GB
P! hi M~Iphlol
70 IJ 588
H Y tt'n c ks
18 17 51J
7
Rn,ron
17 111 ~96 1
nvllalo
15 n ws
7
N Y NI'I \
I ] 2t JJJ
9
Centra l Otvt~•on
W L Pet
GB
Cll'vCIMd
71 1J 6l
Hous ton
10 lJ 606
O:.an Anton o
~ 0 17
5J1
1
Nrw Orlean!'. 19 11 5?B 3
Wa!!h onq ton
17 \7 500 1
/ltlnnt a
13 77 315 11
W e!~ le rn Conf r rencc
M CIW N f 01v SIOn
W L Pet
GB
Df"nv('r
11 1~ 661
Dr lro1t
'l l 15 58J 1
lnd ann
19 70 -187
6
K ~n sa !'. C11y
17 70 459 1
Chtc aqo
17 ?1 36 1 10
Milwaukee
1 77 ?8 9 11

Pac ftc
Por land

"Dinner Dates"

•

65A
J

5
B

roast

fned
beef

hamburger steak arid
ham

for FAC_fe~ti~ijy

ns

7

13

SUNDAY
JANUARY9th

cht c ken

'

'
hours
will he Greg llane at
the plano Jlnd Blll. Cannon
with hl8 b{JijO I , n
In keeping with lradllion,
lhe 'l'Welfth Ni~hl Characters
Will ''(ll'es'en! tlh!l~ , riddles
tbrpi,lgb~ut ~ ~venl,ng with
Hugh P Klrkel u Rid·
dlemaster
Alot of fun for aU members
of the French Art Colony who
attend IB promlled for the
evening Members who come
are to brtpg tiJelr (:hrislmu
leftovers lo make a potpourri
smorgasbord of cookiea
cheese, relish, fruitcake,
candl~ al)ll 1119re
• The
ftr tile evenin1 is
casual Adiiilssion Is 12 · per
per10n Platuilng the evening
are Carolyn ~nd Don Hippen·
alee! and Bess Grace

GB

'lS
21

MEAT
Flounder fish

•

Special music and en·
tertalnment Is planned for the
'Twelfth N1ght Plus Two"
party for members of the
French Art Colony Saturday
evening at Rlverby at 8 p m
Twelfth
Night,
or
Epiphany, Is always 12 days
after Christmas, which would
have been Thunday evening
but the celebration by the
French Art Colony Is "adding
two" so that the big evening
at River by for members only
will be on Jan 8
Acting as wandering
troubadours throughout the
evening wiD be the "Homtgrown" who are Matthew
Griffin and Ross Moore from
Athens wllh guitar and 10ng
Also a~arlng during the 9
until 11 p m entertainment

DI V ISIOn

W l Pel

LosAnqeles
14 611
Golden S!a le
19 16 ~J3
Seal le
20 19 513
1&lt;1 19 JIJ
Phor&gt; n ~~:
Thursdays Results
tnd ana 103 All a n Ia 95
Cleve and 1i9 Golden 51 100
M !wa ukee 11 9 Buffalo Ill
COnly gam e~ scheduled )
Fndav !&gt; Gam e s
Los Ange les a l NY N ets
Cle vela nd ut Phtladelp11 ta

Entertainment :set
' '

that was a case of everything
we threw ~P gomg m I really
thought it would be a clo&lt;•
game, but not when one team
shoots hke that "
Henson sa1d that ev en
w1thout the fantastic shootmg
from the floor Il was hlS
team s best game of the year
'I thlnk overall It wa s our
best game • he sa1d We
made fewer I!Ustakes (ei ght
turnovers) '
Fresluhan Kelvm Ransey
led Ohio State's scormg with
15 pomts with
Jim
Elhnghausen and Larry
Bolden gettmg 10 each
Ohw St.te tra1led 53-38 at
halfhme got to w1thm e1ght
pomls after tradmg by 19 on
several occasaons m the
second half but ran out of gas
m 1ts comeback attempt
In Thursda) mghl s lone
Ohw Conferen ce game
Muskmgum had to come
from behind m the second
half to beat Ohio Wesleyan 8370
The Musk•es led by Marvm
Smalley with 18 pomts and 17
by Larry Hall, trailed 50-44 at
halftime but grabbed the
lead m1dway m the last half
durmg a surge m "h1ch Ohio
WE:Sley an went e1ght mmules
Without a pmnt
•
At Ashland JoJo McRae
scored 19 pomts and Fred
Graham 15 to lead the Eagles
to a 59.00 Win over Franklin &amp;
Marshall ( Pa )
In the mght s other two
games, Oh10 DommiCan
edged Mt Vernon Nazarene
511-57 and Wllmmgton clipped
Bluffwn 78-73
In tomght s light college
schedule
Franklin &amp;
Marshall VISits Oberlm
Cumberland (Ky I lS at
Central State while Case
Western plays Cleveland
State and Kenyoo takes on
John
Carroll
m
a
doubleheader at Cleveland
State

VEGETABLES
Ltma beilns. peas and

POTATOES
Baked home fnes and
mashed
''I'm tired of my diet! I was

going ovar lo tht Slumboat Apple
Inn for 1 bitt hleal when I got poach

PIE
therrr

and

il

llf'l Vf' f

PI ocn

11

H~~n

a ~)l ~HJ I O t

TosMCI, sl!tw1 cottage
chHSe, appltlauct and

pooches

WHkdays6o m to7p m Sunday Ia m to2p m

CSteamboat In11
'Reuf ()ld·Fa,hwllr &gt;I Hum e () ookw~

Oral 949 2515

8avas1

a l Detr o 1
N ~'W Or t ~;a n s at Por tl'\n d
&lt;; ~n /lnt on oat &lt;;c&lt;t iHc
ro n v qa nus scnedulcd 1
Saturday s G;,m cs
Ro ~ ton "' P.u!Ja lo
Phoen • at N 'f KntCk !i
wa~h nq on d1 CtevC'Iand
N Y N c s a1 l "d ana
Ho &lt;; I On aT K ansa!'. C ty
PI L adt I ph a at M waukC'C'
(I ciiQ O at [len vrr
NPw Orlea n ~ a Goi(.J cl "I
0 v qam es s cl1 rdu lcd l
lwaulol c~;

"'·

NHL St ~ 11 ~~1
\ ~
B v lJ n1tcd Pres !'. lntcrnat 10 n ~l
Ca mpbell Confer en ce
Pat r Ck OtVt'iiOil
W L T PI!&gt; GF GA
Ph In
? 1 8 9 57 5 lDR
NY lsland rs ?'J 9 6 50 79 97
/\ ttanta
tv JJ 7 ,., 130 111
NYRnnq cr !i l6 1511 13 t~ t 111
5mytl1 e 01 v15ion
W L T Pis GF GA
&lt;;;t LOU tS
)7 19 5 39 116 II
Ct c ~qo
1 10 6 )d 116 t5
Mm cso a
9? 1 9 71 11J159
Co lor ado
0 13 6 76 111 Lt ?
Van couvu 11 28 ~ 'lfl
11 170
W il iC's Conf erence

NEW YORK (UP! ) While the World Football
League Is JUSt a memory , a
llnuted amount of official '
footballs remam and are
hemg offered as souvemrs by
Spalding,
the~r
manufacturer
Accordmg to Richard M
Geisler,
pr es ident
of
Spalding, WFL balls have
been bld for pnces rangmg up
to $1 000 at char~ty auctions
but now are hemg offered at
$75
for
first-season
palommo' gold game balls
and $50 for f~rst-season gold
practice balls and second
season conventional brown
game balls

NorriS 0 VIS IOn

W L T Pts GF GA
Mon trf'a
JO ':i 6 66 70 97
P IISburqh
6 16 8 J0 117 13~
Los Anqc lcs 3 18 10 36 130 133
C'1 0t r o t
1J n ~ Jl 11 7 148
WaSh ltlq n 11 73 6 78 106 157
Adam s DIVISIOn
W l T Pt s GF GA
Ruffalo
?.t 11 d 57 U 7 101
Ao~t on
74 11 3 51 151 111
Tor on lo
19 16 6 I ~ 155 137
Clevela nd
II 1J 7 19 116 lJ1
Thur!lday 1 Res ults
Pht l ad elph1 a 1 St Lou o; 1
P ll tsbur qh 3 Wash J 1 e
M nncsot a 7 Detr011 7
M o ltreal 9 Buffalo 1
!Onl y ga m es Sched ul e d 1

Fnday ~ Gam es
al Color a d o
NY Is lander s al Atlan ta
Vancouver a Cleve la n d
!Only Qam eS !&gt;Ch CdU IC(I l
Satvrdav s G a m e~
1\lla n a a t N Y Islander s
Los 1\nq cl us at P11tladt lpht a
Wasn nqt on at M ont real
Ch •cago a l P ttsbur qh
Vllncouvcr al &lt;;t Lou s
Bo!'.l on at Mtnn e sola
Buffa lo a t Tor onlo
COnl y $1mcs schcdu l(' d 1
Ra n~e r s

tangled in these ropes!"

SALAD &amp; FRUITS

Ry ED SAINSRUR Y
UP! Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Natwnal League IS 1n
accord
that Base ball
Conumsswner BoWJe Kuhn
had authority to ca ncel the
13 5 nulhon sale of three
players by Cha rles 0
Fmley s Oakland A's last
June,
The comnusswner should
be a super urnptre " smd
Wa rr en Gil es 1\ho was
scheduled to resume tcs
limony tod ay He said
th e commiSSIOn er tn hts
~erstandmg had
broa d
powers, very well defined
' It IS very ne cessary
Giles said Basellllll 1s a
complicated busmess We
are a partnership of
competitors and we h"'e to
have a referee an umpire a
supervisor to keep us
stralght, to make dec1swns
He s a super ump1re
BavaSI test1!Ied that the
Natwnal League met after
Kuhn s deciSion vmdmg the
sales, and ,,greed Kuhn had
the aulhonly to do what he
did •
The league voted 11 1 Wllh
St f Ollis the only club
opPQsed to mdemmfy Kuhn
should Fmiey wm the SUit
The Amencan league took
sumlar actwn so that Kuhn
would not be liable to pay
damages personally should
Fmley wm
Fmley charged that Kuhn
exceeded h1s authonty m
voiding the sales and ll,uhn s
attorney, Peter Bleakley has
attempted to produce
Witnesses to testify th at Kuhn
acted w1thm hlS nght.•
In my thinkmg, player
ass1gnments are subJect tb
the approval of the
l.esllfled and when asked
whether he believed Kuhn
could vmd a sale even If Il
conformed to the rules he
replied absolutely '

N V Kn c k s at Ch ca uo

M

NY

tarrots. noodles

3rd St., ~acme, Oh1o

Su nday at the Rose now I 10
Supe r Rowl XI
But f.Irk&lt;ntun c1nph dsmtl
t11.1t bad we,Hher "'"
llefm1tely IJc to Oakl.tnd s
.1dvu nt 1ge
' Were not " ' lu g as
Oakland and were ,1 quiCk
tc.&gt;m said th e Mmncsot.I
qu.1rt l rha&lt; k 1\ b.rck like

Chuck Foreman rehes on hJS
qu ickness and nilves and
must have good footmg We
trapanddo ,IIotnf thmgs that
lcqlllre good fnnttng Wed
ralhci have 1good track and
a clear day
Unless It rea II) pours
the Oak land coach continued
1t rea lly shou ldn t hurt our
exerutmn I don t thmk f'tthr&gt;r

team Will have an advantage
l l 11 ra1ns

Bud Grant of the V1kmgs
agreed with his Oakland
&lt;.:ountcrpart
Wet fi eld wo uld slow do~n
some aspects 0! lhe game
he offered bull don t thmk
thalli wauld senously affect
e~ther one ~f us

Testimony to resume today

COIDISSIOner "

STANDINGS

10017

SuiwcrlptiOn rate!l Delivered by

posSibihl) of &lt;ow st bu l 1
• ouldn t want to blame the
results of the ~a me nn the
&gt;am
Madden adm itted t hr
Ra iders aren I exposed to the
harsh ele men ts t hat the
VIk ings have to pla) 1n at
Bl oom mgton but Said he
doesn t expect either clu b to
hav~ t~n advantal!f' tr • r ll"

Hot-shoOting Illinois tops OSU

East
Ade lph 95 St J os Me 63
Aldr sn Brddus 91 La Rorhr 90
Bee kl ey 78 Salem 76
Blue fld w v a 93 R adf r d Va 7!1
Conne&lt; h c ul 52 St Pc t ~ r s 50

tnd

The ram came down by the
bucketful Thursday - three
days before pro football s
bi ggest confrontatiOn - and
more wet wea ther was m
prospet1
I guess people sayojj wli l
beca use we have a big strong
offensive lme and we run
nght at people" the bearded
Stabler sa td
There's a

lnt ernattonal
Hocl4 ey Leaqu c
Unttcd Prll u lntc rnillt onal
North
W l T Pts GF GA
ttal amazao
19 13 ] It ltd 1?7
\ ag naw 17 I S 7 J 1.5 8 145
r im!
18 I S 4 •O 158 131
Pnrl H uron
' "' 19 4 ~6 1)6 151
Mu skN! On
1 ~ 18 5 JS I JJ 1,1&gt;
South
W L T Ph GF GA
D ny ton
19 11 1 w 1 5~ l 'i t
TOI ~" II O
17 H 5 19 I SY 1M!
Colu m iJt.J s
tQ 17 7 19 1 ~8 ~ ~~
r nrt Wnytlf
II ~ U f.. 1 1 l!lf II~

Ttw n. dav

~ Rl o. ulf o.

No t;ttml''\ " ' h r O\ ll'd

FndolJ' s G am C&gt;s ~
For t Wa yn e a t Mu!) k euon
P ori Huron at F l nt
Daylon a l Ka la m o;HOO
Sa q naw a t T aled o
Sat urda ys Gnm es
F I nt a MLJs k t:oqon
T o l edo a Po ri H ur on
Ka la m azo o a t Sag m a w
Day ton a l Co l u m l:;l us

The off1ce of the cumm1s

swner shoult.l ha ve ~ bsolu te
~mthonty m &lt;til phases of
baseball on or off the f1eld

Bavas1 testified
F ormer
Comtmsswnet
F'ord Fnck, he satd, fe lt and

wrote m hls book that the

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW !'OR f BEACH Cahf IUP[) - Football pla) crs are
different from other athletes Most of U1em are so brg and
strong, thev don t have to bolller puttmg up any false fron t
They don t try to snow you with wo1ds
Usually they tell )OU exactly what they think and how they
feel For all the brute fm ce they re ca pable of exertmg they re
still mere Oesh and blood as huma n as anybody else and
given to certam Situa tiOns whe re lhe bottom of their backbones
Will even tighten up on them sometunes
Yes football pia) ers arc fng htened now and then over be ing
part of such a pressure filled spectacle as the Super Bowl
ga me G ene r&lt;~ lly, the) get 01 er It pretty QUickly but mev1tably
U1e memory of that fear or apprehensiveness slicks Wllh them
a lon g tune
In the eases of wide rece11 er Fred Blletrukoff and runrung
bac k Pete Banasza k of the Oakland Raiders, who 11 be gomg up
aga1nst the Mmnesota V1kmgs m SUper Bowl Xl Sunda y at
Pasadena that memory stllllmgers rune )ears after the fact
They can and
tell you vividly how they fel t the first
time they ever played m the SU per Bowl and ha~ to face the
m1ghty Green Bay Packers m Miami m January of 1968
Says B1letmk off
I was scm ed witless
Oh wltlesSisn t U1e 11 01d he uses bu t It s close enough
They were so gahdam lug says Rlletrukoff lalkmg about
Vm ce Lomba I dl s Packers who mauled lhe Raiders all day
long and demolished them 33 14, befor e 75 546 m the Oran ge
Howl
I was m a daze when I walk ed out on Ihe held and I still
remembc1 Herb l\dderley picking off a pass right m front of
me and runmng 1t 60 }ards for a touchdov,:n ''
Banaszak goes mto grea ter detail
"The first llme they hned up aga mst us I looked at them and
s8ld to myself Us oh we re mfor It today " says the 32-yea r
old Oakland veteran f saw (Ray ) Nitschke w1th no teeth m
his mouth, and Adderley and Willie DaviB beside hun To me
lh ey were awesome
I was playmg halfbac k that dal and had lo block Dave
Robmson Hewnlt Dixon was our fullhsck, on the fir st play I
got off the ball real well and went for Robmson as hard as [
could I tried to get my shoulder mto him and I don't think I
touched his Jei sey
He gave me a forearm and Hewntt ran right over me 1 got
Nitschke s cleat marks on my bllck The play I thmk gamed
s1x mcfies Right there I knew we were m trouble I sa1d to
myself Look Pete try to get yourself together but I II tell
you the truth,! could ve used a pillow between my legs to keep
lhem from knockmg
1
Nearly a decade has gone by now but Banaszak says he ll
never for get the way he and all the other Raiders were com
pletely mtumdated by the Packers that afternoon
Old you ever feel like someone tied you up and kept hlttmg
you with a club all day long? he asks That's how the
Packers made us feel By the lime the game was over I felt
hke some kld ~ ho had been spanked by his father 1 hey put us
over their knee and spanked us was what 1t amounted to We
were JUSt whipped by a far stronger team •
Apart from Blletmkoff and Banaszak, the only other present
Ra1ders wlth the club that was blown out by the Packers that
day are defenSive back W1lhe Brown and guard Gene Upshaw
They remember, too
Banaszak comes from CriVllz, WIS , a little pla ce Wlth a
population of approximately 1,000 located 40 mmutes by car
from Green Bay Ever smce he can recall, the Raiders' tough ,
little bread and-butter run rung bsck was always a Green Bay
rooter
' I thmk the Packers of that day were the greatest e1er; he
says They dHin t have1much to say to us the day we played
em Ill the Super Bowl They were good and they knew 11 '

"'11

~
-

----

---

..

OUASAit

corrurusswner had the nght
In cancel dea ls
I don l thmk there s any
rule that sa) s he can t cancel England and d1d not plav two
.,.,eek s q~o r.~g;:un s t Prtts
dea ls
burgh
He sugg ested the Oakland
fans had the nght to demand
the ir mon ey ba ck had they
bought llckets to see Rudl,
Fmgers and Blue play and
lhe) were not on the fi eld
He said that once 1n New
York he had bo ught t1ckets to
an Elhel Merman musical
and when the star could not
appea r due to Illness we got
our monty bac k
Fmley s altorne) Nei l
Pap1ano pomted out tha t
7 Pel per yea r on a 4
Bavasl h 1d traded numerous
y ear cer tific a t e of
pla)ets and then asked Did
de posrl
vou give all that money
S l 000 00
m1mmum
back?'
d
e
posrt
In
terest
pa rd
Giles Ide ntified a letter he
qu
ar
ter
ly
wrote when a Natwnal
I eag ue co mm1ttee \Ht s
A subsld nlinl pe n tllf'r' IS
lrymg to define lhe po wers of
n vo ked on all ce r t ft c a le
a&lt;cou Is w 1f hdr ;&gt; w n p nor
the cornmlss toner It satd I to
l t'l e d1lf l of n atun t v
do
not
llunk
the
commissw ner s aut h on ty
should be curta lied m tiny
way
I feel that e\ en more
strongly IOda) G1les said
1 here arP transactiOns
The Al hc ns Countv
tha t co me across the
Sav q ~ &amp; LO&lt;'n Co
comrmss10ner s desk whtch
296 S1 co nd S t
are not covered m the rules
P omeroy 011 o
and "hie" he ought to have
the authon t) lo deal 1\lth If
m hiS Judgment It IS not m
the best mterests of the
game he can make a decision
on tha t

%

Meigs Co. Branch

-@

ftrestone

AND WINTER
/

I

I,

II

•lll

!t il

I

II ..,1 I

_t I

\ !I

I I

l 1!1

I

..,
h

I

t \( "

1-! \ h

" I I ' II I I{ti l \I I I)
l llll IS
I

I.

1 1 1 ~1

I'"

1

til ( ll

$

AS LOW AS

95

12 val l

exc ha

Put the

F 2 2F

FOREVER

batt ery 1n your
car you II
neve r have to
buy another
batte ry for
that car'

EXTRA

LIFE

New Year
Special!

Oakland 1o 1, will go Into
Il' second Super Bo)l'l as a
4Y,· pomt favorite
The
Raiders have won 12 In a row
smce bowmg to New Engl and
m the fourth game of th••
regular season
I don t know 1f we re the
best Oak land team ever
Madden sa1d But we have
achieved tho most and that
co uld posSib ly make us the
best I do know we re the
mo st determined We ve
acc omplished so mu ch under
adverhsy and f think that s
made us a stronger team
M1ke S1an1 Oakland s
backu p w1de receiver to Fred
BI Ietmkoff and Cliff Branch
still were questiOnable
although Branch worked oul
"Ith Ius team 1hursday He
su ffered a !:ip ramed knee m
the f1r'1 rou nd of the NFI
pla yo ffs agams t
New

WARRANTED
36 MONT'HS

LIMITED WARRANTY

MOTOR
KING®
WARRANTED
24 MONTHS

(see above)

Assembled Metal

UTILITY

SHED
(I Only)
Weathered Bam
Senes.

lOxlO

QMX•1 13" doagonal
Solid State Portable Color TV
{Includes Tax &amp;
Delivery)

Reg mo Unassembled

Quasar QMX 1 ch assts With micro
circUit technology We1ghs 35 lbs
Uses less pow~r than a 100 w att bul b
Qwnlnx 1n lin e Matrix Pt c lure Tube

One Button Colo r Tumng AFT

BAUM
TRUE VALUE
STORE

.__,.;C~r.O

WERNER RADIO
Middleport, o,.._ _ _..

$
MK22F M K 24 M K 24F

FREE!
Brake Serv1ce Front End Ahgnment
600 E. Maul St
992 2094
Prrneroy , 0

�4- The Daily Sentul1, Middleport. Pomeroy, 0,, ~'riday, Jan. 7, 1977

Purdue

' .

~nds

CHI CAGO (UP! ) - Has opened the league season
Indiana's era on top of Big with an overwhelm_ing 102-05 .
?en basketball !inally come decision over Northwestern,
doing no harm to its No. 3
an end ?
·
On ti1e basis of the perfor· national rating.
Purdue ·tripped the·
mam!es on the opening nigHt
of the conference season, the Hoosiers 80-63, ending ·a
record
string of 37
aru;wer is yes.
Perhaps it 's Michigan '.s C&lt;Jnsecutive conference victoturn to tak e over. The ries for Indiana and inflicting
Wolverines, runners up to the second home loss of the
Indiana for the NCAA season for the Hoosiers in five
championship a year ago,

Indiana string in loop play
perhaps a darkhorse in the

games. That indicates how
far the defending champions
have fallen, since they had
won 35 straight games before
losing to KentuckY earlier
this season and have woo 61
of the last 65 games at home.
Three Purdue starters ,
headed by Walter Jordan
with 20, scored in double
figures, but the defense of the
Boilennakers, rated as cinch
first division

title

race,

was

us, especially when we think
of the way they rubbed it in
two years ago when these
kids were freshnien. We have
to give credit to these
players, the way they wantect
this ball game and the way
they e;tecuted."
The Wolverines had six

equally

important, forcing key
turnovers.
,;We had two periods where
they really dominated us,"
Hoosier coa(!h Bobby Knight
said. "Other than that I
thought we played pretty
well."
·
PUrdue's Fred Schaus said
"it was a real juicy win for

BOWLING

,.

•.

POMERO Y LANES
Sa 1Un:1 a'y Afternoon Leaqu e
F irst H a ll Final
0('C. 24, 1976

SUpe r S tar s

Ph

Nile Ow!5
Bo wl i no Sr or1es
Road Runner~

9.r
R6
7.r
60

Red Barons
Gutter Busiers

..17
lfi

H roh ln d Ga nrc
Cli tf
l&lt;ennedy 16Q Cra iq N irrns ky·

166

The victory snapped In- credit to these players, the
diana •s Big Ten-record way they wanted this ball
winning streak at 37 games. game and the way they
It also broke Purdue's six· execUted ''
game losing streak against · Walter. Jordan SC&lt;Jred :zo
the Hoosiers, who have won points, Wayne Walls 19 and
at least a share of the Bruce Parkinson 14 to lead
conference title the past four · Purdue, now 7-3. But it was
years and were undefeated the Boilennakers' defense
and NCAA champion a ,year which forced key Indiana
turnovers during the 61'.!_!!go.
.
"It was a real juicy win for minu te burst near the end of
us," Purdue Coach Fred the first half when Purdue
Schaus said. " ~specially se~~led the victory.
"We had two periods where
when we think of the way they
rubbed it in two years ago they really dominated us,"
( 104-71) when these kids were Knight said. "Other than that
freshman. We have to give I thought we played pretty
well."

Bob H&lt;1qqy 150

Hiqh Series
Cl iff t&lt;rt'}.
nedy .:Ja Bo b H;:~qqy 395 J
R Wamsley J97

Team H ioh Gam~ and
Sci r rcs
Super S tars. 856 &lt;~nd

1.289

Meig.s
- Property
·Transfers ·

United Press Inlernallooal lead.
.
Carr took over lor playAustin carr shifted into making guard Jimmy
high gear Thursday night and Cleamons and. immediately
the Cleveland Cavaliers swished a 20-footer.
cruised back into first place
He followed with five
in the NBA's Central straight baskets, added four
Divisiim.
.
foul shots and, when the
"My timing is back and I halftime buzzer sounded, the
_feel much better," smiled Cavs had outsco re!l. the
carr, after he tossed in a Warriors,·211-10, lo take a 63season-high 28 points to spark 44 lead.
the Cavs 129·100 NBA
carr wasn't the oiliy Cleve·
triumph over the . Golden land player with a hot hand as
State Warriors. Cleveland eight players hit for double
took a half-game lead over figures. The Cavs sent a
the idle Houston Rockets.
sizzling 43 of 67 play ·action
carr, who flipped in six shots through the hoop over
1st-period points as the Cavs the first three periods and
grabbed a 29,22 . lead, finished the game with a 56.7
returned to the bench· at the shooting mark.
start of the second quarter
Rick Barry, the Warriors'
but got back into action with leading scorer with a 21.7
7:25 left in the haH and the average, was held to four
cavs holding a slim 35-34 points on two of 10 from the

.

Kent Benson scored ·19
points to lead the Hoosiers.
The University of San
Francisco, the nation's topranked team, pulled away in
the second half ' to beat
PorUand, 95-73, and riln its
perfect record to 16-ll. Thirdranked Michigan routed
Northwestern,IOU5, and No.
10 Arizona edged San Diego
State, 80-77.
In other games, Michigan
State defeated Wisconsin, 8461, Illinois beat Ohio State, 8972, Washington State topped
Stanford,
80-68,
and
Washingt,on topped
California, lla-75.

!eBm.in the leai\leJith a 9-()
reC&lt;Jrd, were iQV'l'buraday,
but play each other Saturday
at Minnesota in one of the ·
highllghts of a five game Big
Ten schedule.
In other Saturday games
Michigan will be at home
against WI.sconaln, Purdue
will travel to Ohio State,
llllnois plays at !ndlan.i pnd
Northwestern wlll be at
Michigan State.

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

STARTS TODAY •• • •
BUY NOW-

COMES

BE PREPARED

LATER!

•

AREA ·

BIG BEND

Perhaps you weren't prepared
for such an opportunity ; hadn't
planned on investing at this
time . These values and savings
are rare and you don't want lo
pass it up so buy now and we
will hold your purchase in our
layaway (for 60 days only) and
install .it when you are ready.

•

All of the folks at Country Cousins want to thank all of the residents of the Big
"" Bend ~rea
your support in 1976 and welcott:~ing us into .the community. We
ap_prec1ate 1t and for three big days we want to show it by offering old fashioned
pr1ces!

!or

CHEESEBURGERS........................................... 1 FOR 30C OR 5 FOR s1.25
DOUBLE HAMBURGERS.................................. .1 FOR 45$ OR 5 FOR s2.00
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGERS ........... : ................. ~ 1 ft&gt;R ·5(r OR 5 FOR s2.25
HA)1BURGERS ........ ::: .... :............................... .l FOR 25$0R 5 FOR s1.00
TRIPLE.TREATS ........................................... ~.;l FOR 50* OR 5 FOR s2.25
CONEYS ........................................................ 1 FOR 30C OR 5 FOR s1.25
REGULAR FRENCH FRIES................................ .1 FOR 20C OR 5.FOR 'S(r

BIRD -FEEDER
We stock many
sizes and styles
Choose one soon!

MODERN
SUPPLY
399 W. Main St.

Phone 992-2164
POMEROY, OHIO
The Store With
. "ALL KINDSOF
STUFF"
For Pets - Stables Large &amp; Small Animals

Lawns - Gardens.

•

.,

-....
-

·~·
,~J4;;-1 ..
:.:·
·~
(
;...ft 'I - •

-~

INClUDING SHAG • SAXON · KITCHEN
PRINTS. THESE ARE FANTASTIC CARPET"
BARGAINS.

MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM.

$fi99SQ YD.

•

•

INSTAlLED OVER PADDING
INSTAllED INSTAllED
OVER HEAVY PAD

DELUXE QUALITY CARPET OF THE
FINEST NYLON YARN. 10 DENIER YARD .
1

NOW

·

SQ. YD.

INST~ll£1)

SAVE

••

fl'.

CASH &amp; CARRY

. .

We have thousands of yards of
these special groups but'
· because of the savings all are
subject to prior sale.

~t FIXINS 10 t~
'

$1'499

•

c0Dksb.ot't"
0

ALARGE SElECTION OF OUR CARPET

OVER HEAVY PADDING

~~\tY
.
~
~~
-~
• (?;_ ~ . ~~

,.~
~

100% NYlON CARPET. WE HAVE TAKEN

100% NYLON SCULPTURED SHAG.

Please no specials during old fashioned price days. If you want specials order
inside "without" fix em your way at our sandwich bar. Offer good Thursday,
Friday, and Sa!urday, J_
an. 6th thru 8th, 1977. No coupons necessary.

~~\~
'

Even though these are speCially purchased values, you still receive
Waysi d e's wear warranty . If within 6 or 10 years from purchase date ,
your carpet reveals more than normal wear from normal use ,
Wayside 's will grant you an allowance on a pro-rated basis ..

INSTALL

11/t~i;
Buy a "HEATH"

5 and 10-Year.WEAR WARRANTY ~
In Writing!

WE WILL

scored seven of his team's

next eight baskets and _the
Bucks pulled away to lead by
17 points at the end of the
third
quarter . Junior
Bridgeman had 16 for the
Bucks, and Swen Nater and
Brian Winter rl4 each.
Adrian Danlley led Buffalo
with 23, Randy Smith had 22
and Don Adams 16.

savings but you haven't selected yet because you
don't want. to sacrifice quality and beauty ... come
shop this event. We have hupdreds of yards but we're
s ure it will go fast so don't delay.

MEIGS lHEATHE
CLOSED FOR
· VACATION

SAVE NOW-

Bucks 119, Braves Ill:
Milwaukee led by on ly.
three points, 63-ro, with seven
miim tes left in the third
quarter when Dandridge

WHEN

• Suet Seed Cakes
• Wild Bird Seed
-; • Sunflower Seed
• Cracked Can

field in 23 minutes of playing
time.
campy Russell chipped in
with 18 points for Cleveland
while Jamaal Wilkes and
Charles ·Johnson topped
Golden State with 22.
In the two other I'!BA
games, Billy Knjght scored a
season-high 41 points to lead
Indiana to a 103-95 victory
over Atlanta and Bob
Dandridge came off the
bench to score 27 points and
pace Milwaukee to a 119-111
triumph over Buffalo.

We were in ~the risht place at the right time! We
purchased several rolls of fine quality carpet from
mills who were forced to liquidate their surplus stock
before their invenlory . If you have been looking
around for the best possible value and ·for sincere

~sola, the Of\IY unbeaten

Pacers 103, Hawks 95:
Knight has scored 80 points
in his last two games while
nelping the Pacers win four
straight. In the third quarter,
he scored 14 points, as many
as the entire Hawks team
could muster during the ·
period. By early in the last
quarter , indiaQa
had
exJianded its lead to 19 points,
its biggest margin of the
game. Lou Hudson had 30 for
Atlanta.

Marion K. F~ga te to
Eleanor C. Fugate, Lot,
Middleport, 2A. \60 A. Lot
1161 , Olive.
·
Roy Proffitt , Lillian
Proffitt to Berna rd La valley,
Bernice Lava lley, .03 A.,
Sutton
I. Ca rsml Crow, agent, J. D.
DETROIT CUP!) - Detroit
Foley, Ruth Poley, aff. for
Red
Wings' Coach Alex Del·
notice of pres. of int. in land,
vecchio
·was forced to miss
Ohve.
Thursday
night's home game
Juanita Wilkinson , Gerald
against
the
Minnesota North
, D. Wilkinson to William W.
Stars
because
of a death in
., Harris, Lots, Pomeroy.
the
fan'tily.
Russell Cline, Leona Cline
Delvecchio's mother-into Jerry Dou gla s Smith,
law,
Mrs. John Plotko 63
Herbert Edward Rece Ill ,
died
Thursday in Thu'nde;
Parcel, Olive.
Bay , Ont., shortly after.
funeral services were held for
Delvecchio 's father, Frank;
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
.75,
who died Monday.
Baltimore Colts' quarterback
Bert Jones, who led his team
into the playoffs as the AFC
PIULADELPHIA (UPI) East BUist, Thursday was
New
York Yankees' catcher
voted the National Football
Thurman
Munson, the
League's Most Valuable
American
League
Most
Player by the Professional
Valuable
Player,
has
heen
Football Writers of America,
named
pro
athlete
of
the
year
in a near-landslide vote.
by
the
Ph\]adelphia
Sports
Other players -who finished
close in the balloting were Writers Association.
Munson, 29, will he honored
Chuck
Foreman
of
at
the aSsociation's 72nd
Minnesota ; Walter Payton of.
annual
dinner Monday night,
Chicago ; 0 .J. Simpson of
Jan.
31.
He hit .302 with !7"
Buffalo ; Ken Stabler of
home
runs
and 105 RB!s for
Oakland;
and
Roger
the
American
League
Staubach of Dallas.
champions.

·Purinal

Matthews' 14 of 15 free ·throw
conversions leading to a
game hikh 211 points, took an
89-72 win at Ohio State, and
the Spartans, , with Greg
Keiser scoring 20 and Bob
Chapman 18, trounced
WiSconsin ~1.
,
Both Iowa, 11-1, and 'Min-

Cavs ·back in first place

team and

'R.eal juicy win,' says ·schaus
By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Writer
Coach Bobby Knight 's
first ~eason at Indiana, was
his worst - until this season.
"fhursday night , Purdue
scored 16 straight first-half
points on its way· to an ~
victory at Indiana , the Hoo·
siers' fifth loss in. 10 games.

players ·in double figures,
including every starter, with
Rickey Green the leader with
20, in coasting to the triumph
over the Wildcats. U was
Michigan's ninth win in 10
starts. Illinois and Michigan
State also got off with a win.
The Olini, sparked by Audie

Attention Car·p et Shoppers I

•

:\

RUBBER BACK. PRINTED CARPET.
GREAT FOR KITCHENS. FAMILY ROOMS.

Use · Wayside Budget Credit
Terms. Of course, you may pay
cash or arrange your own
·financing :

DON'T·MISS OUT
ON THESE OLD FASHION
'
PRICES NOW·· AT

..--

COUNTRY.COUSINS
COOK.·SHOPPE

.-.
.·

,.

'·

�8-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pol 1eroy, 0 ., Friday. Jan. 7, 1977

New program

i~·,SOciafu~ Local news highlights for 1976
~~ Calendar
Medic~!

I

~

''

'.

FRIDAY
JAN. 10 is deadline lor
· reservations for Meigs
Chapter of ihe Women 's
Aglow Fellowship, 7 p.m. at
Meigs Inn, with Rev. William
Morris of Marietta to be
speaker. Reservations may
be made at $3.~ per dinner
by calliilg Gloria Johnson,
992~5 ; June Baker, 9492723; Joyce Hoback, 949-2325,
or Judy Jones, Gallipolis
area, 446·0946 . · Dinner
is
non-demeeting
nominational.
POMONA GRANGE, 8
p.m. Friday at the Rock
Springs hall with Hemlock
Grange as host.
RUTLAND GUN Club
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at club
house on New Lima Road. All
members urged to attend.
SATURDAY
THE
POSTPONED
meeting of Harrisonville
l&lt;&gt;dge 411 , F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30p.m. Saturday at
the temple.
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411 F&amp;AM Monday, 7:30 P· m.

.' '
'

1

I' ,

J:-

''~..&amp;..

,-·

SUNDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange degree team practices the first degree at 2 p.
m. Sunday at Rock Springs
Grange Hall rather tha n
Hemlock Grove. All participants reminded to commit
their parts to memory.
Anyone unabie to attend
please contact another team
member or Mrs . Lu cille
Leifheit, captain.
MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER Order
of DeMolay Monday, 7:30 P·
m. at Middleport.
.
.

FLOWERS
for All Occasions
We Wire Flowers

Ever&gt;rwhere
;.

•

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs, Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992-2039

Ph. 992-5181

JULY
July 2 _ A parade was
staged'in Middleport to mark
the opening of Railroad
Festival Days under the
direction of Paul Gerard.
July 3 - Another excellent
parade was held in Rutland
which went all-out in a
biceniennial weekend headed
by Joan•Stewart.
July 4 - The Racine First
Baptist Church float won the
best theme trophy in the
Racine holiday parade.
Large windows were broken
out at Meigs High School by
vandals.
July 5 - Duff Craig and
Tony Brannan, Middleport,
won first in the adult diVIsion
and Jeff Morgan, McArthur,
first in the teen division ofthe
annual
Rutland
Fire
Department talent show.
July 6- Pomeroy Village
officials reported the street
department funds were low
and county commissioners
were warned that $250,000 in
matching state money for
construction of a school for
the mentally retarded could
be lost.
July 7 _ Mr. and Mrs.
Russeli R. Bailey announced
a college scholarship in
memory of t~r daughter,
Barbara Jean)!)iley, killed
in a traffic accident on May
26, 1969.
July 8 _ Mike Magnotta
was awarded . the Eleanor
Gilford Memorial Scholarship at Ohio University.
Membership tickets for the
Meigs County Fair went on
sale. Sheriff Robert Harten bach conducted another
marijuana raid near Rutland.
The Eastern Local Board of
Education transferred
students in two areas from
Chester Elementary School
to Rl·vervl·ew.
J I 9
W k .
uy . or . was underway m remodeling below
the Meigs Inn for a new pizza
parIor. M
. r. an d Mrs: Gary
F1f~ rece1ved many p:tzes for
havmg the b1centenn1al baby
m a contest held by the
Chester Young Wives Club.
Dr. J~flrey Weaver restgned
as Me~gs· Jumor H1gh School
Principal.
4. .
July 10 - Three . medical
doctors announced openmg of

general practice 'services In
July 22 .:.. Meigs Band
Aut. 12 - Workers of the
the Meigs
Building, Boosters made an excellent Ohio Bridge Co. put a new
Mulberry He1gh\s, Pomeroy. showmg. on the construction bridge over S!lade River In
July II :- Power outages of : new food stand at the Chester Township. Picnic
occurred m Me1gs County fairgrounds.
tables were installed at the
resulting from a heavy
July 23 · - Edward G. Meigs Jaycee mini-park in
thunderstorm. .
Moore, formerly o~ Mid- Pomeroy. Four vehicles were
July 12 - M1ke Gerlach, dleport, a State H1ghway heavily damaged along with
Meigs Local history teacher, Patrolman · was -killed in a a Pomeroy busines.i building
reviewed the history of plane crash near Mount on W. Second St., when a car
Pomeroy lor the Pomeroy Vernon.
. .
went out of control and failed
Chamber of Commerce.
July 25 - D1ymg and to make the turn from
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence swimming competitions were Mulberry Ave., onto Second .
Andrews was presented ~ hel~atthe Mtddleport Pool as
Aug .. 13 - Non-certified
membership plaque by Fred a bicentennial ev~nt. .
employes of the Meigs Local
Morrow, chamber president . July 26 - Rovmg ptckets School District were awarded
July 14 - Stanford Stockton Idled Metgs Mmes,l, 2, and 3. pay increases .
.
.
was honored lor 29 years of The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
1\ug. 15 _ The Rock
NOW IN HUNTINGTON - Ginny Turner, with
WMPO two years,' is employed at WGNT,Huntington as a .
service with the State High- opened ..It 6: 40 p.m. having Springs Fairgrounds hum·
disc jockey featured on a program from 7 p.m. to•
way Department in Meigs been closed since March 31 med as preparations . wer~
midnight week nights , According to an article in the Dec.
County.
for repairs. Middleport made for the 1976 county fair.
28 issue of TV Spotlight Ginny was hired not because she
July 15 :- The trailer home Council awarded the Shelly
Aug. 16 - Meigs Com·
was a girl but because she is good. She proved herself at
of Davtd Shuler was ConstructiOn Co. a contract missioners decided to build
interviews of such "country" notables as Conway Twitty,
destroyed by all" apparent lor street resurfacing the school lor the mentally
BU!y "&lt;;rash" Craddock, Freddy Fender, Johnny
~rnado. ;:;et lt~;nperature in materials .. State HighOwha_y retarded.
Rodriguez
and C. W. McCall .· A graduate of Career
omeroy
·
Patrolmen from all over 10
Aug. 17 - Perfect weather
16
Academy
in
Columbus, she is the daughter of Aaron
July
- Edison Hob- gathered in Middleport to greeted the opening day of
Turner,
Racine,
and of the late Mildred Powell Turner.
stet~er, president of Pomeroy attend l~neral services lor the Meigs County Fair with
NatiOnal Bank, welcomed Edward G. Moore.
lair goers getting their first
Walter J. Robb,. II, who was
July 'll .-:- Andy 'Lyles . glimpse of a demolition
::::::::::::::~::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:...~-:;_..-:;$::::!.'*::·
to begm hts duties as a. VICe became Me1gs County s new derby.
·
Ne~
preSident at the bank on July game protector replactng
Aug. 18 - Tragedy struck
19.
Greg 'l'eylor who was· Iran- as two young men, Timothy
New officers of the
July 17 - Sen. Oakley sferred to Monroe County.
w. Wickersham and Ricky K.
Pomeroy Seventh-day AdCollins announced that the
July 28- James C. Allen, Rowe, lost their lives in an
ventist Church performed
Pomeroy-Mason Bndge Distri? 13-K Govern~r, spoke auto accident in . Letart
their new duties New Year's
would reopen on July 30, -~ the Pm;neroy-Mtddleport Townships. Brian Windon ,
Day
. ..
~-:;
morethanfourmonthsaheao Lions Club.
.
Charlot~ Wamsley, Debbie '·'
First elder is Robert Lipsof schedule.
.
July 29 - The Metgs Windon·and Mary Mora were
comb, Joseph White is head
July 19 - Pomeroy Council County Health Departmen! named achievemen! award
MONDAY
deacon; Mrs. Joseph White,
learned that tt would cost through new administrative winners at the Meigs Junior
SALEM CENTER PTA head deaconess with two
$150,000 to convert the old assistant Gene Lyons an- Fair.
Monday, 7:30 p. m. Third assistants ; Adalene France,
Pomeroy Semor Htgh nounced plans lor swine flu
Aug. 19 - Mark Mora and grade of Rebecca Triplett is reelected Ch.urch Clerk;
building into a village hall. vaccine clinics.
Tony Carnahan excelled in will present program and Sarah Drake is Community
James L. Wilhelm, Jr. , was
July 30 - Dignitaries cattle showing at the Meigs Mrs. Caro l Evans will Services Leader; sabbath
named new tnstrumental ga the_red at Mason ,for Fair.
present
travelog
of school su perintendent is
muSic mstructor at Eastern. rededication of the repatrO!I
_.Aug. 20 - Another junior California.
Clara 'Mcintyre and Rita
July 20 - Dr. and Mrs. Pomeroy-Mason Bridge alter livestock sale at the Meigs
UNITED METHODIST White is press secretary
Lewis Telle, Pomeroy, which Bill Branscome, vice Fair was successful.
Women Monday, 7:30p.m. at a·gaiJ.l .
presented a scholarship to the president of Conn Con·
Aug. 21 _ Mr. and Mrs. Heath Methodist Church.
Appointed t e a c lie r s
Ohio University School of struction Co., hosted a lun- Clarence Nichols, Tuppers Prayer and self-denial ser'
Osteopathic Medicine.
cheontomark the occasion at Plains, married 69 years vice will be hem. Program urged io attend.
July 21- It was announced the Meigs Inn.
were honored at the Meigs leader, Mrs. Nan Moore;
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
that Michael 0. Roush, son of
AUGUST
County Fair.'
devotions, Mrs. Pauline Boosters, 7:30 p. m. Monday
Mr. and Mrs. _Pat Roush, .
Th
. C
Aug 23 The murder trial Horton.
in band room to make final
Racine had been named an
Aug. I e Metgs ounty
. TUPPERS PLAINS plans for a jitney supper to
econo~ic advisor lor U.S. Fair Board members rolled of Mary Hendricks got
up their sleeves to ready the underway
in
the Boosters Monday, 7:30 p. m. meet current expenses on
Senator Dewey F. Bartlett, 1976 f ·
Meigs Common Pleas at Tuppers Plains Elemen· ne w band uni(orms; an.
Oklahomc
~·
.. ~ .
Aug.atr.
2 _ Pomeroy Village Court. I t was annou nc·. tary School.
parents urged to attend.
officials placed a street light ed that · the menta llv
POMEROY BETHEL 62
RUTLAND PTO Monday, 7
levy before voters to avoid a retarded of the county would International Order of Job's p. m. at the elementarv
blackout in the' community. not be provided with Daughters . Monday , 7:30 p. school.
,
The Meigs !.&lt;&gt;cal Board of schooling during the current m. at the Temple.
CHESTER PTA, 7:30p.m .
t
Education hired Mrs. Paige .year.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Monday at school with
Hunt to teach vocal music at
Aug. 24 - A guilty verdict · Boosters, 7:30 p. m , Monday father's night to be observed
the high schooh
was returned against Mary at Racine High School. All and wildlife film to be shown
Aug. 3 _ A senior friends Virginia Hendricks.
persons interested in any by game protector, Andy
Veterans living in Ohio who program got underway in
Aug. 25 ·- Syracuse of- sports program of the selrool Lyl es.
are insured under govern- Meigs County.
· ficials o~ened bids on a
ment life insurance policies
Aug. 4 _ Fire struck the · community swimming pool.
' ... '
''¥.
,_,;_,..,/&lt;1-,.'1-;'"
l~" , , :
•
issued during World War I,ll, new apartment· complex on
Aug. 26 - Tony Lewis, 4,
·
~
·
:-t~"··-~
A
:&lt;•.,-~·-·~f'i
'
"1.
-'ili
- ~~r·-~.;
&lt;~...,
•
and the Korean Conflict will Pomeroy's Mulberry Avenue. and CHad Lewis, 2, met tragic
receive $17,851,000 in
Au g. 5 _ Racine and deaths in a mobile home fire
AKER FURNITURE'S .
· .
dividends during 1977, L. M. Syracuse agreed to seek 100 in Racine.
Merritt, director of the percent ·sewage funding.
Aug. 27 - Pomeroy twins,
Cleveland VA Regional Office
Aug. 6 _ The Youth Con- Freda Lieving and Beulah
announced today.
servation Camp in Meigs Utterback, received the
The dividends are being County with students working Meigs County Outstanding
paid to holders of World War I in conservation practices was Citizens Award at the Ohio
li. S. Government Life In- explained to Sentinel readers. State Fair . with the Meigs
surance {USGLI), World War
Aug. 9 . _ Stiffler's was Methodist Ministry receiving
II National Service Life In· given the right to remove the eight-county Community 11
Featuring the very finest in
surance (NSLI) policies and walls left standing following a Service Award.
Veterans Special Life In· January lire so that the store
Aug. 27 - Middleport· .\ ~ Home Furnishings and Major Appliances ~
surance (VSLI) policies.
could be rebuilt without Pomeroy Rotarians hosted ·
Merritt explained the additional problems.
their first exchange student,
at low cost to you.
·
record $403.4 million in to'!'!
Aug. 10 _ Attention was Fumiko Iwasaki of Japan.
1977 dividend payments is ca lled to Mrs. Kathryn
Aug. 28 - Young people of \
HOOVER
ONLy
·
attributed chiefly to higher McKinney of Middleport as a the Middleport Pentecostal
CELEBRITY (Cannister) •
interest earnings on the VA $10,000 winner in the Ohio Church despite rain hiked \
administered insurance Lottery . Meigs mines miles lor missions.
AIR-RIDE VACUUM
.~
funds.
remained closed.
Aug. 29 - The new St. Paul
The national average
Aug. 11 _ Niese! Duvall United Methodist Church in
dividend being paid to 114,452 and Lester Jeffers were Tuppers Pl ains neared
World War I veterans with named Meigs Junior Fair completion.
participating policies is $202. queen and king and !-H , Aug. 30 - The new housing
I
Some 3.5 million World War champions in clothing were development at Morning Star
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
....
I! veterans will receive named preparatory to the by builder, Archie Lee, was
dividends averaging $104. annual fair. Parents objects announced .
Korea li Conflict veterans to the transfer of students
Aug. 31 - Meigs 'County
with current policies total from Chester to Riverview schools opened for the new
554,382. Their average School.
school yea_r.
·
dividend is $22.
- - -- · ·- · .. The average SGU dividend
g·
for 3,973 World War I
·veterans living in Ohio is
·
·
$216. NSLI policyholders in
Ohio 'total 162,083. ·They will
receive dividends averaging
·(
$101. There are 25,018 VSU
Congressman Clarence laws are concerned.
policyholders in Ohio. Their Miller introduced two bills ' The loth District lawmaker
average dividend is $22.
Tuesday which would take said, "As I travel across the
" Veterans expecting the Department of Health, loth Congressional District
checks need not contact the Education · and Weilare and and talk with people' in all
VA,"
Merritt
said. the federal government out of · walks of life, I lind a deep
"Dividends will be paid local school musical and concern about' too mu ch
automatically on anniversary social affairs and gym class federal regulation and
dates of the policies."
as far as sex equalization Washington red tape,
especially
in
areas
traditionally left to local
control and discretion . One of
my duties as a Represen- . ·~· ~
En~
lative to Congress Is to help
people get around federal red
tape and to eliminate It when
possible."
Miller said he has received
complaints , liom
southeastern Ohioans, mostly
students and · parents, who
object to the federal government forcing co-ed gym
.
classes on local schools.
Miller feels that if local
·schools want co-ed gym
OFF
classes, that is their
prerogative, but such classes
should not be forced upon
unwilling echool districts.

~.

Calendar

''

~

.

.'

PlANNING APillA PARTY

(

•·
'
••

"'

t'''

.,1:

.,'
'·
'~

''

,.
•'
·',,
·'
'
1:'
'
'I
r

'
'r

,r
I

I'
;'

.'.tf

r
I

l

PHONE
'THE ALL NEW

~EIGS

INN PillA SHACK

-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In 6r Carry Out
:
Phone
992-6304

SEE-US
FOR
ALL YOUR

ART
UPPL

'

'
I,,,,
.,

brushes ana c.tn¥11, to name a
fe:w. Al1o viiU our .store for all

•

••,.

·• C1ndlotm.1kin1

,I;..

• and, m1ny morel

I

'.'.

,.,.

.:·~,
I

••
••

•'
"''·

!·

·''

~
,,•'
t:

You ' ll flnd eurvt~lnt you
nnd In .art 5Upplles Wtltn YOU

vi1it Amer lc~n HandlcrafJI ...
u:ryliCI, oUt, w.attrtakul,
kindl Of 1:r1fh IUCh

U :

• 0tCOUPI91

• Cogper Tooling

AMERICAN
HANDICRAFTS
CHAFfY
LADIES

GJM Center
A newly created program
known as ''alternatives" wtll
be offered through the GalliaJackson-Meigll Community
Mental HealtlJ Center lor
those with drug abuse
problems in this area.'
According to Steven
Dawson, .director, the
program's aim is toward
treating those individuals
who have already developed
drug or drug related
probltims as well as working
with the community in
heiP.ing p~ovide prevention
services.
In order to get community
input, a substance abuse
orientation session is planned
lor 7 p.m. Jan. 10 at Rio
Grande . College;s cafeteria.
Community members ages 13
and over may participate.
Another orientation session
is planned lor Jan. 17. Fihns
and speakers will be
available.

·CLEARANCE

f~

SAL~ :~~

L
1i

f .
:t.

i
I~

·Tbe Odds &amp;

$38

BA;~R·~;~~~RE

:

j

:.'

\

.
•

SOMETIMES
WORDS SIMPLY
AREN'T ENOUGH.
BUT FLOWERS
SAY IT ALL

•

ON ALL MERCHANDISE

Located on Rt. 7 below Middleport.
Open Noon til 6 p. m. 'Tues. lhru 5,at .•
Sunday 1-6.

804 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Just Below .The Jones Boys in Pomeroy

. . VISITING HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Curnutt
and children, Paige, Parriah
and Jill, of Irvine, Ky., are
~pending t~e week here with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs~
Me)vin Boneculter, High St.,
Pomeroy.

'

••

•

. They are universally

'•

understood and
always appreciated.
of flowers

Ohio, former residents of

BOARD TO MEET
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Local Board of
Education will organize at 7
p. m. Tuesday at the high
school and at 7: 30 move into a

•

lasts and lasts.

•
•

regular business session .

59 N. Second Sl

. STOREWIDE
••

January Clearance
BEGINNING FRIDAY 10:00 A.M.

•••

FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE

••

REDUCED

'I

••'
L

&lt;

•

•

•

••

..
..
Me~s ·Inn

••
•

•

n

••

·INCWDING COATS, SNO-SUITS,
SLEEPWEAR, DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR,
PANTS, SHIRTS

•

•

·•
ALL SALES
•

NO
LAY-A-WAYS

PINAL

'•

.•,
•

992-3629
•

VISITED IN MEIGS
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Cundiff, Wallbridge,

Engagement and wedding i
Syracuse visited friends and
relatives here recently.
trios by Keepsake are outstand ing
beauty and quality. Choose from our i
Keepsake collection of 14K gold
VISIT IN SOUTH
designed by master cratl&lt;rMr1 I
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Cundiff and Mr.
and Mrs. Sherman Cundiff,
Syracuse, recently returned
home after a visit to Mobile,
Alabama .·

'

~

•
7

Trussell.
Flagbearers : Goldie
Frederick with Letha Wood
as her assistant; and Dorothy
Myers with Doris Grueser as
her assistant.
Pianists: Helen WoH and
Ada Morris.
Kitchen committees lor the
year were named as follows :
Dorothy Ritchie , Doris
Grueser and Marcia Keller,
January; Thelma White,
Juli.e Rose and Mary K.
Holter, Febr~ary; Sadie
Trussell, Margaret Tuttle,
and Charlotte Grant, March ;
Mary Showalter, Helen Wolf,
Inzy Newetl, April; Erma
Cleland, Ada Morfis and
Ethel Orr, May; Joe Bissell,
Ada Bissell, Leona Hensley,
and Mae McPeek, June; Betty Roush, Laura Mae Nice,
and Ada Van Meter, July;
Elizabeth Hayes, Esther
Ridenour, and Jean Sun'unerlield, August; Goldie
Fredfrick, Mae Spencer, and
Mary Newell, September ;
Doris Koenig, Dorothy
Myers, and Zelda Weber, October; Dorothy Lawson,
Letha Wood and Eileen Mar-.
tin, November ; Opal Hollon,
Ada Neutzling, and Goldie
Wolfe, December.
!twas reported that Hattie
Frederick and Laura Mae
Nice are both confined to the
Holzer Medical Center.
Thelma Call is home from the
hospital. Mrs. Ridenour
thanked members who sent
sympa thy cards at the death
of her husband's grandmother.
Also extending
Utanks was Mrs. Tuttle for
cards at the death of her
father.
The auditing report given
by Mrs. Wolf was accepted. It
was announced that the Past
Councilor's Club will meet at
the home of Mrs. Esther
Ridenour on Jan. 12 at 7:30
and that Mrs. Summerfield
will be co-hostess. The
change of hostesses was due
to the · death of Dorothy
Lawson's brother in New
Jersey.
Twenty-lour members at·
· tended the meeting.

The memory

TONIGHT &amp; SATORDAY 10 TJL ,2 .,

The

One love
Two hearts
Three rings

'

4 PIECE (;ROUP
FROM WTI..LIAMSTOWN, W. VA•

20 • 30 •. 40%

\

'

•

MANY UNUSUAL
NOVELTY ITEMS.

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE·

/

·

SOUND

Shop

.

RETilkNS QOME
Mrs. Marie Steilier has
returned to her home in
Middleport after a three week
holiday visit in northern Ohio
with her sons, Ray Steiner
and family , Cleveland, and
Earl Slelner and family of
Warren.

· BACK AGAllV AT THE INN

Miller· bills would et
HEW ou.t .of gym· cl'ass

CHESTER-Installation of
Ways and means: Leona
new officers highlighted the Hensley, Mary K. Holter,
Tuesday night meeting of julie Rose, Mary Sho.walter,
·Chester Council 323 , Thelma White , Dorothy
Daughters of America, held Lawson, Dorothy Myers,
atthe hall .
Doris Koenig, Letha Wood
Installed by Esther and Mary Hayes.
Ridenour, deputy state counGood of the Order : Marcia
cilor, were Mae McPeek, Keller, Opal Hollon. Helen
councilor; Eileen Martin, Wolf , Ada Mm·ds, Goldie
vice councilor; Doroth y Wolle, Sadie Trussell and
Lawson, junior past coun- Jean Sununerfield.
cilor; Thelma White,
Home and Orphans : lnzy
associate junior past coun- Newell Lam·a Mae Nice
cilor; Ada Bissell, associate . Eileen 'Martin, Mae Spencer,
counCilor; Char!'otte Grant, Charlotte Gra nt , Mary
associate vice councilor; Newell , Erma Cleland, Opal
Julia Rose, warden; Leona Eichinger.
Hensle·y, conductre ss;
Delinquent : Ada Van
Margaret Tuttle, recording Meter, Ethel Orr and Zelda
secretary; Ada Van Meter, Weber.
financial secretary; Dorothy
Resolutions: Ethel Orr,
Ritchie, associate recording Opal Hollon and Erma
secretary; Zelda Weber , Cleland.
assoc,ate
finant:ial
News reporters: Mary K.
secretary; Opal Hollon, Holter, Margaret Tuttle.
trustee; Ethel Orr ,
Team Captain: Dorothy
treasurer; Ada Neutzling, in· Ritchie.
side sentinel; Thelma White,
Council Captain: Mary K.
representative to state ses· Holler ..
sion.
Flower committee:
Mrs. McPeck announced Margaret Tuttle, Doris
her committees for the year Koenig, Goldie Frederick,.
and they are as follows :
Ada Bissell and Sadie

..

~JANUARY.¥

11.

..

directing the Bible study
class are, adults, lnna Bales;
Youth class, Fran Seton and
Rita White, PrimaryKindergarten teacher.
Pastor of the church,
located on Mulberry Heights
, Road , · js Gerard Seton .
Services are held each
Saturday afternoon with
Sabbath School at 2 p.m, and
worship service at 3:15. All
services are public.

Gl insurance
fa
is paynig
1976 dividend

1

,:_,:_;,_,:.-·'~--·::G
::&gt;.:::·:::::·l~:;r
. ;:::::·l
.:;.:::::::s
:;::::::c
::::;::o
::::::::u
::::::;::;t
:;::::::&gt;;;:D,
;:;::&gt;::'l:l~a
~~:».:
ry'~!
.:.

Chester Council installs new ~~ Helen Help
i ~ ,,,
officers .at Tu~sday meeting I' us. . . By Helen Bottd ;_~-~ !li

officers on job Jan. 1

1 Social

•
i{::::::i*~~:::::::::::::::&gt;.::&gt;,:;~:&gt;.:;,,.,.,.,,::::~;::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;;::*:;,:;:;:-,:;:;;5':'::*';;

7-The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 7,1977

underway at

.•

with us!

•

SILVI!R IRIDGE PLAZA

..

Cruel Goodbye or True Coneern?
Dear Helen :
1went with this guy lor two years. Then he left town, and I
was sad. A year later he returned. ·1 asked him if there was
anyone else and he said "No."
We took up where we 'd leftolf.l believed Jim when he said
he had to leave for a while, but he'd be back, and we'd 11et
married.

A week later he wrote, sending me some money, and told
me to see a doctor, as he was afraid I might have got VD from
him. That really froze me out. I was true, while he'd been
running around.
My doctor said there was nothing wrong with me.
Was Jim lying to get rid of me? Should I write and tell him
"Don't come hack?" I think I've stopped loving him. - DIS.
Dear Sir:
'If you've stopped loving Jim, why write at all?
Let's hope you really have, as this olf-&lt;Jn relationship
(whether he's lying or not) may bring you nothing but more
trouble. - H.

+++

By Charlene

r

I scheduled .

Hoef~ch

Another in the series o'
workshops on " Mental
Outlook, Death and Dying"
will be conducted Jan. 21 at
the Senior Citizens Center.
The mornlng Session enlitl·
c'&lt;l "Understanding Grief and
Loss" will be held from 10 to
11 :30 a.m. and is geared lor
senior citizens as wen as
representatives of agencies.
The afternoon session from
12 :30 .to 4 p.m. will be on Uie
topi c, '· Mental Outlook on

The cookie poster contest is on and rules specify the posters
must be completed and displayed by Jan . 21 . At thll end of the
order-taking period (Feb. 6) the posters are to be picked up
from wherever they've been displayed, judged in the troop,
and then the winner sent for counly judging, probably to Mary
Dorst, cookie chainnan.

The brownie and junior leaders training program, cancelled
a few weeks ago by inclement weather, ha s been rescheduled
for Jan. 27 at the Middleport firemen 's lqunge, !O a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mrs. Pat Thoma, service unit director, considers the tr-aining a
vital part of quality leadership.

Aging. ''

SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204

The workshops are made
availa ble through the Corporation on Health Education
through the Appalachia
Regional Conunission. The
wo1·kshops are taught by per· •

A .bowling party was planned for Jan. 16 at ihe Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes when the Syracuse Juniors met Tuesday night
at the school. The group also discussed the COS! Camp-In in
Columbus and the various places they want to see and visit this
year.

sunuel from the Parkersburg

Shari Cogar led in the pledge to the fla'g , and Kim Morrow in Co mmunity
the Lord's Prayer. The girl scout promise was recited by all.

Dear Helen: '
Reading about inner city crimes against old people
(..crib jobs" they're called because ripping off a t~ttery
elder is like taking candy from a baby) , I wonder why off1c1als
don't tear down those fieabag ·hotels used lor "old people's
homes " and relocate these sad folks in safe government
housing' out in the suburbs.
Sure, it takes money, but there will be some savings in a
By Ruth Larkins
reduced inner city police force . Besides, we owe the older
Visiting the Richard
generation a decent life. Some of thes.e poor souls are so fearful Hayman family lor Chr istthey starve {or commit suicide) rather than venture out to get mas Eve dinner were Mr. and
mugged. (And some are even beaten up and robbed in their Mrs. Mike Marl o, Marla and
rooms.)
Mikie, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
They have "Save the Trees," ''Save the Children" etc., Johnson and Jeffery, Mr. and
etc. campaigns.l'm for a "Save the Oldsters" drive , Even if it Mrs . . Tom Hayman, Paige,
raises my taxes. - CONCERNED AT .35
Beth and Ginger . and Ernestine Hayman.
·
Dear Con:
Mr. and ·Mrs. Steve SallisSo ami! Let'shaveatit! -H.
P.S. Not that we've completely ignored our elders: most bury and Adam spent
cities proVIde SOME government housing, but unfortunately; Christmas holidays with Mr.
and Mrs. Dorcel Larkins and
not enough and often no longer in sale areas.
family.
·
+++
Visiting Ernestine Hayman
PERSONAL to "Can't Understand the Directions": Who
over
the holidays were ·Mr.
can- when they 're written in governmentese? Ask a clerk in
and
Mrs.
Elbert Fitzpatrick,
your nearest branch office - and h~pe he or she isn't a LAW
Steve
,
Linda
and Cathy from
clerk !
Lancaster,
Ohio;
Mr . and
Here's a quote from Belinda Jellilfe that may cheer you:
Mrs.
Robert
Fitzpatrick
,
"The Lord's Prayer has 56 words ; Uncoln's Gettysburg
Lori,
Robin
and
Ja
son
,
address, 297; the Declaration of Independence, :100. A recent .
Lancaster
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jim
Government order se[ting the price of cabbage has 26,911
Walls, Travis and ' Jamie, .
words."- H.
Carroll, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Hayman, Paige . Beth
and Ginger, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Hayman, Mike and
Greg, Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Ridenour, Floyd, · Matthew
and Kellie Ann, all local, and
Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Nessel road.
· Vi~iting .Christma s Eve
'~~ I
with Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Larkins were their children:
By Polly Cramer
•
Jlaymond Larkins and new
Polly 's Problem.
ment has no balcony so there wife , Nancy, Aberdeen , Md.;
DEAR POLLY - Do you or is no ·way to go outside to Mrs. Vera Weber. Mrs.
any of the readers know ho.w shake the dust out of small Donna Bogard and Denise·
to remove colored crayon throw rugs. I find that shak- Hauber; · Mr . and Mrs .
marks from wood paneling? I ing them mside of a large Howard Larkins, · Brent and
have tried everything I can . shopping bag works line. The Cheryl ; grandchildren, Mr.
think of, buf nothing has rugs are free of small par- and Mrs . Terry Proffitt ,
worked. -FRAN.
ticles and dust thai would be Jamie and Chris, Mr. and
DEA'R FRAN - The finish carried throughout the apart- Mrs. Keith Weber and son
Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
un the wood may have ment before laundry time .
something to do with the
The large plastic freezer Weber and son Jimmy and
results, but I have just tried b&lt;Jgs from lhe supermarkets Mr . and Mr s. Douglas
using toothpaste on crayon work well and look good to
marks on wood with prac- wear if you give your hair an
tically no finish (the inside of oil treatment at home. The ·
a drawer) and they rubbed b&lt;Jg, preferably the large
right off.- POLLY.
size, makes an attractive.hat
DEAR READERS- J .W.'s pinned up like a chef' s hat as
recent Pointer about putting air goes into it to make it
extra seeds in foil packets in stand up and out. Will really
the freezer to keep for the shape any way you like. following year needs a cor- M.K.
rection. By mistake we
Polly will send you one of
printed the letter as saying me.' They said why not ? I
"about tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the cards, ideal for framing or
seeds will lose their produc- plocing in your family scraptivity but the rest will pr&lt;&gt;- book, if she uses your
duce good as new" when it favorite Pointer, Peeve or.
should have read that two to Problem in her colwrut
three percent would riot Write Polly's Pointers in care
carry over. That would be on· of thi s newspaper.
ly a few seeds. It certainly
would not be worth the trouble should one lose tw&lt;&gt;-thirds
of the seeds. Sorry. Our
apologies, J.W.-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- To save a
Don't Count
little tifne and some footsteps
The Year.....,
while making a bed, mark
the center of your sheets, at
Count The
the top and bottom with a liFlowers.
quid embroidery pen .
Blan1&lt;ets can be ma1:ked with
, colored thread. By doing this
you can see at a glance the
center of a sheei or blanket
and know when it is in th~
proper position on the hed.
Really is timesaving when
just one person is making up
abed.
Washing dishes is not my
favorite chore and it seems.to
'take me so long. I lind that if
I set my timer for approximately the time I think it
. will. take me to do them I
have an incentive to hurry.
Otherwise I take my time and
. feel .resentful all the time I
am doing them. It really
gives me a good feeling if l
beat the timer.- MRS. G.D.
Cal.l or come in today
DEAR POLLY - When
to see our complete
preparing stuffed peppers I
cut off the tops bf the peppers
selection of meny .
and use ·a serrated grapefruit
spoon to scoop out the seeds
. birthday flowers.
ana membrane. This works
20%off
perfectly and does~ neat ]&gt; ·I·
I also eut olrthe bottoms of
Cash Cany.
plastic bread wrappers to Ute
size of small bags and use lor
sandwiches tluit go In the
lunch boxes. The top part can
alSo be cut apa11 and be usecl
59 N. Second St.
to wrap other things.- v. ~ .
Phone 992-5560
f)P.AH POI.LY- My apno I·

Long Bottom

News Notes

POMEROY JUNIOR
TROOPI276

badge work. Table

Co lleg e.

Spencer led in the pledge to
open the meeting and the
gi rls gave the scout promise .

Formal and informa l table
settings were discussed at
the Monday night meeting of
the Pomeroy Juniors. Mrs.
Pal Thoma conducted the
discussion o'n how to set a
wble which is a part of junior

NOTICE
Middleport Church

manner~

were etlso discussed. Ki:iren

of the Nazarene
is now being supplied
pastoried by Erie
Cox . He may be
reached by calling

Hauber, Tim and Kim.
Mike Dailey has returned
home from Holzer Medical
Center after eme rge ncy
surgery. He's feeling much
Improved .

446 -2929 .

.

MEN'S
LEISURE SUITS
LEISURE SHIRTS
SWEATERS

Polly's Pointers
Tackle crayon marks
with toothpaste

~

w0 rkshoIL _

AND

WINTER OUTERWEAR
.

~

1j3 OFF
NEW YORK
.CLOTHING HOUSE
KERM'S KORNER

POMEROY

.Cet this s1895 value mobile TV cart
FREE I with the purchase of this

J.Z~~ compact
portable TV
The PLAZA • G3850W
Dramaht decorator .styl1ng 1
:-oab1 not fln1shed ·m Simulated

wood-gra1n Amer1ca n Walnut.

Sot1d·Sia1e Su per V1deo
· Range Tun ~ng System w1th
Synchroma t1C 70-Posl tiO n UHF
Channe[ Selcc10r Aulomatoc
T1nt Guard VHF and UHF
Antennas .
1OO't• Solid-State Titan
260V Chassis
• Patented Power Sentry
Voltage Regulating System
Brilliant Phromacolor
Picture Tube

Say
''Happy Birthday"
Wdh Flowers

'n

·-------

~

only·

Hurry!
Come ~n today!

lnge'ls Furniture .
0.

.
•

.

992-2635

.'

�•
'•

a- The Deily Sent~l, MldcDeport.Pameroy, 0., Friday, Jan. 7,1977
'.

SOllTH DP
THE.Sl\HHRt\

TR : ~IIV CHURCH Rev W H
Perr n1 pas tor, Roy Moyer !,url
day schoo l supt . Church School
9 15om worsh1p ser111ce 10·30
a m Chou rehearsal Tuesday
7 30 p m under dlreclton of Mrs
Paul Neose

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE

Does he long for 'the ~ot breezes .and w1de spo&lt;:es 10uth of
the Sahara? Con he remember the feeling cf- free ai; rushing
post, as he ran with his fellowa?

NAZARENE Corner Umon and
Mulb&amp;rry Rev Clyde V Hender
son pa stor Sundov school 9.30
a m Glen M cClung , supt ., morn ·
lfl Q worsh1p , 10 30om. evttnm g
serv1ce , 7 30, m1d week se rvice
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCbPAL rhe Rev
Herold Deeth reel or. Chu rch ser
111ces 10 30 o m. Holy commu
n~on hnl Sundo~ ot month. chur·
ch sc hoo'l. IO&lt;JO o m for nursery
throug h 12.

Oh , it's a lovely zoo, wide and airy. T.he giraffe's home
duplicates his nat1ve habitat But, as he nibbles among the tree·
tops, I wonder. Ooes he wish for a quiet stream?
I know what it's like to feel displaced. When first I ca ~e to
~ .. this country, I was not at home with the language and unfamiliar
wirh its custon:'l! · Often I felt confused and bewildered,

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST

The one place that was no stranger to me was my church .
Here, ahnough the words were foretgn , I recognized well·known
melodies and litanies and the sure j eelrng of God's love. ...
, If you feel disturbed and disorit!!nted by events m your life,
turn to tht!! one place that knows no alit!!ns . Your church has a
welcome for everyone God 's love is uni\lersol.
Sunday

Hebrews
10:12-22

..

Monday

I Corinthian•
1!:12-21
Tu£•day
II Corinthian•
~ : 1-7

Wedne1day

II Corinthian•
~ : 8-18

Thunday

P1alms
liS: I- ll
Friday

Psalm•
118:1~·29

Saturday

htliah
~9 : 5 -17

Coo~••sll • 1't11
II.I'"IPr A ftVtrlllll\8 5 PFVI{ f

11\f , )trnburs \'rr!ll\11

Richord Evonso,n . poslor R•bl e
schoo l 9 30 a rll worship 10 30
(l " 1
ad.. !' .·.o11&gt;h1p ~ ... lVI\.~ •md
young people 's meettng 7·30
p m Comb1nec( Btble study and
prOye r meet•n g . Wednesday 1•30
p m.
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy
~oy W W.nmg , off1cer 1n char ge.
Sunday
10 a m
Hol1ness
meehng, 10 30 a m
Sunday
School Young Peoples Leg1on 7
p m Thur$doy 1 to 3 p m
Lad1es Home Leagu e 1 p m. Prep
closse\
,

BURLINGTON SOUTHE RN BAP
TIST CHAPEL , Route 1, Shade Pastor Bobby Elkms. Sundoy
schoo l S p m . Sunday wors h1 p
5..45 p m . Wednesday prayer ser
VICe , 7 30 p m .
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sts Pomeroy . The Rev Will1om
M1ddleswor th , Pastor
Sunday
School at 9 ~5 a m ond Chu rc h
Se r &gt;~ 1 ces 11 o m
SACRED HEAR T,. Rev Fother
Poul 0 Welton , ,I.Jslor Phone
992 2825 Saturday evenmg Moss
7 30 Sundov Moss 8 and 10 a m
Confess ion , Sotvr doy, 1 1 30 p m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST 100 W Mom St . Jerry
Paul m1n 1ster . phone 992 7666
Conservot1ve, non·tnslrumento l
Sunday worsh1p 10 om B1bl e
stud y 11 a m worsh 1p, 6 p m
Wednesday B1b le study , 1 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHU RCH
Rev Rolph Sm1t h
pastor Sunday schQol 9 30 a m ,
Mrs Wor ley Fronti\, 1 su pe rml en
dent Preoch1ng ,;erv1ces f irst &amp;
th 1rd Sunday s fo llowmg Sunday
School

GRAHAM UNITED MElHODIST .
Preachmg 9 30om f~r ,; t and se·
cond Sundays of eoc h month
th trd and four th Sundoy5 each
~-~~~~ month, worsh1p serV 1Ce at 7 30
~:::::::~E:~=~:::~:;:~ p m Wednesday evenmgs at
•
7 30 Prayer and B1ble Study

SEVENTH DAY
.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp;SERVICE, INC.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
Ph . 992.2101

FI NE ST IN MOB ILE HOME S
1100 E. M01n
Pomeroy
Ph. 992·7034
IH~

John F Fultz

.•

Pomerov

.

SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

Serv1ng Me1gs, Mason

Mtddleport, O~io

And Gall Ia Ar~a
Phone 992·2156

'
LINDA'S lADY FAIR BEAUTY SALO~

RACINE PLUMBING &amp;HEATING

-

Call949·2838 For An Appointment

" HElL" DEALER
Ph. 949·2882
Racine

Third St.

Ractne, Ohio

REUTER·BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
714

E

Matn

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open 8 to 5- Closed Thurs.

Ph: 992.5130

Po1meroy

0

ELLIS &amp; sONS SOHIO

GROCE RIES&amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE
Racine
Ph. 949·2550
.

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech St!. MtddleportPh. ltl·l921
.

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nat 1onwtde Ins. Co of Columbus, 0 .

804 W. Mam

BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Mtddleport
Ph . 992·3030

Ph . 992·2318

Pomeroy

,,,

HEINER'S BAKERY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS

Huntington, W Va .

992·2955

Pomeroy

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

DUDLEY'S

TWO LOCATIONS
39 N. Second si. \.
Middleport, 0 .
46 Court Sf.
Gallipolis, 0 .

LOU IS W. OSBORNE
Pomeroy
Ph. 992 .2178

220 E . Matn

Middleport, Ohio

•
I

GOEGLEIN SAND .&amp; GRAVEL
' Ph . 992-3284

Middleport, Ohio
WE .HANDLE ONLY
U.S .D.A. CHOICE MEATS

.

FRESH
o&amp;PLANTS
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS
Pomeroy,

I For • real auction call lhe Real McCoy)
1.0. &lt;Micl McCOy
. .
915-3944

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

MIDWAY MARKET Ph . 992 .2!82
Mason .•
[_mM,
Ph . 77J.l721
lHE DAILY SENTINEL
Oedlcaled lo the Interests of
· Meigs. Mason Area
Phone992·2156

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO. '

.

Pomeroy \

P~.

9'12.ml

ROSEBERRY'S PEN NZOIL

Racine

-

JEWELERS

Keepsake Diamond Ring s
21 2 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
PI). 991-]715

~GSCOUNlrBRANCH

296 W. Second

Mtddleporl, Ohto

K&amp;~

Ph. "'·9130

RACINE FOOD MARKET
THE STORE WITH A HEART
llaclne
Ph. l49·2t2t

SALEM STREET MARKET

Gerald &amp; Me)wa Elbln, Owner
Open8fo7dally : 12·5Sun
Rutland
Ph. 742·2424

RACINE~- MIU
Syrecwte

RIDENOUR

.=

8APTIS 1

Gore , sup!
Sunde~ Scho ol , 9 JO o m morn
mg worsh1p I 0 4S a m
THE HILAND CHAPEL . George
Cosio , past or Sunday School.
q 30 o m evenmg wors h1p , 7 30
Thur sday evenmg prayer service
7 30p m
POMER O Y FIR ST BAPTI ST. Rev
Relph Zundel pas tor Wd!1 om
Watson Sunday schoo l supt .
APPLE GROVE. Sunday S&lt;hool
Sunday sc:;hool. q 30o m BVF , 6 9 30om Wor sh1p 7 30 p m 1st
p m B1ble sludy Wednesday 7.._ ond 3rd Sunday s Prayer meetmg
p m chou proct1ce WedneSday
Wednesdoy 7 30 p m Fellowship
supper ftrsl Solurdoy 6 p m UMW
a30pm
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , 2B2 2nd Tuesdoy 7 30 p m
EAST l ETART Chruch School
Mulberry A ve . Pomeroy Poul J
Wh 1te Pa sto r. Gory Ba sham Sun
1st, 2nd , 3rd Sun dovs 9 30om .
doy school sup! Sunday school
Four th Sunday 10 30 om . Wor
q 30 · am , mornmg worship , shop 2nd Su nday 7 30 p m &lt;th
10 30. evenmg 'o\lorst·u p 6 30 p m
Sunday 9 30 o m Prayer meetmg
UMW l st
M1 dweek praye r serv1ce 7 30 Wednesday 7 30 p

Dexter Rd •. longs 111 l1e OhiQ,' Rev
Clyde Ferre ll Pa stor Sunday
School
11
o m
Soturdov
preo chmg serviC,es 7 30 p m
Wed nesday evenmg 81bl e study
ot 730pm

FAITH

TAB~RNAC L !

CHURCH

Ba1l ey Run Rood , Rev. Emmett
Rawson pastor Hondiey Dunn
supt Sunday sc hool 10 am Sun
day evenmg service 7 30. B1ble
lea&lt;hmg , 7 30 p m. Thursday.
DYESVIUE COMMUNITY CHUR·
CH Roger C Turne r pa stor
Sunday school. 9 30om .. Sunday
mormng worsh1p , 10 30, Sunday
evenmg serviCe 1 30

THE SALVATION ARMY . 115
Butlernut A ve Pom eroy Envo y
and Mrs . Roy Wmlng, oll1cers 1n
charge Sunday holm ess mee tmg .
10 o m . Sunday school 10·30
o m Leader YPSM Elo1 se Adams .
so l..,at •on meehng
7 30 p m
l od tes Home League 12 noon to 2
p.m Thursday. proyer meet1ng
ond 81ble stud y Thu rsday 1.30

pm

MIDDLEPORT
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Corner

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE -

Middleport
.

•

FIRST

Fourth and Mo 1h , M1ddleport .
Rev Henry Key , Jr, postor. Sun ·
day School. 9 30 o m , Mn . Erv1n
Baumgardner
!iupl , Mornmg
worsh1p , 10 -45 a m

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

MARK VSTORE

RUTLAND

C HUR C H ~ Drewy

pm
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER

Racine, Ohio

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

ADVENTIST ,

Mulberry He1ghts Road Pomeroy
Pas tor GerOrd Se ton Sabbath
School Supermtendent
Cla ro
Mcintyre Sabbath ~hoo l Sotur·
day afternoon at 2 00, w1th Wor·
sh1p Serv1ce followmg't:ll3 15

Ph. "2-3971

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
. GAS. SERVICE
AI cine
949·2020

o m ..
Sundoy
e&gt;~ongehst. c
moe t tng, 7.30 p.m
Pray er
meet.ng Wednesday. 7 30 P·"'
UNI ,TEO PRESBY TER IAN
MINISTR Y Of MEIGS COU NTY.
D""'1ght L ZavltJ . d~rector
H A R R I 5 0 N V I "L l E
PA:ESBYTERij\N , Rev
Erne•r
Stnckl1n , pos lor. Sunday church
school 9,30 am Mrs. Hamer
Lee , sup t , morn1ng worship
10.30
,
MIDDLEPORT Sunday schoo l
9 30 a m R~ehord Vaughan sup!
Morningworsh1p, 10.30
SYRACUSE Morn1ng wors h•p. 9
o m . Sundoy school. 10 o m Mrs
Sampson Ha ll , supl
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOD
Rev James D. Guynn pa stor
Sundov sc hoo l, 10 o.m . Sunday
worsh1p 11 am . Sundo~ evenmg
serv 1ce 7 p m Wednesday war·
sh1p service 7 30 p m
HAZEL COMMUNIT Y CHURCH
Near l ong 8allom Ed sel Hart,
J:jostor. Sunday school. 10 a m
Churc h, 7 30 p 'm .,, pr ay er
meelmg, 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDl EPORT PENTECOSTAl
Th1 rd Avo , the Rev . Wtlltom Kl'lll '
tel, pastor Ronald D4!Ban Sun
day School Supt t losMrs for oil
age s evenmg serviCe , 7 30, B1bl e
Stu dy Wednesday , 1 30 p m ,
youth serviCes , Fndoy , 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEy.Jill BAPTIST Cor ner Ash and Pl um Noel
Herrman pas tor Saturday e&gt;~e n ·
tng serv1ce 7 30 p m Sunday
School 10 30 a m
MEIGS
COOPERATI VE PARISH
METHO[;)IST CHURCH
Robert T Bumgarn er
D1rector
POMEROY ClUSTER
Rev Rober t Ha yden
Rev . James Corbi tt
CHESTER Worsh1p 9 I S om
Church SchoollO om .
POMEROY Worship 10 30 o m
Church Schoo l 9 30 om UV!YF
6 30 p m
ENTERPRI SE Wor sh1p q a m
Church School lOam
ROCK SPRINGS. Wor sh1 p 10
om
Church School 9 15o m
UMVF 6 30 p m
FLATWOODS Wo rship 11 o m
Church Schooi l O am
MtDOl EPOR T CLUSTER
Re¥ Robe rt Bumgarn er
HEATH , Rober t Bu mgarner
Pastor
Worsh1p 10 30 om
Church Schoo l 9 30 o m UMYF 6
pm
RUTLAND. W1lbur Hil l Pastor
Worsh1p 10 30 o m Church School
9 30om
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev R1 chord E Jar v1s
ASBURY Worsh1p 10 40 om
Ch urch School 9 30 o m UMW
l 1rst Tuesday S1ble Study Thurs
7 30 p m
FOREST RUN , Worsh1p 9 om
Church School 10 om
MINERSVILLE Worsh1p 10 om
Chur ch Schoo\ 9 o m
SYRACUSE Chruch Schoo l 9 30
o m Worsh1p se r&gt;11Ce 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
~ev l1mothy Sm1 th
Clu ster Leader
Rev Sle&gt;~en Wilson
Assooote
BEl HANY {Dorcas) Wo rsh1p
9 30 o m Church Schoo l I 0 30
am
CARMEL . Chruch Schoo l 9 30
o m Worsh1p 10 30om 2nd and
4th Sundoy s

CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
Lawrence Manley pastor. Mrs
Ru,;sell Young , Sunday School
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a.m .
Even1ng
wonh1p
7 ' 30 ,
Wedne5day prover meetin g 7 30

pm

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Rocme Route 2. the Rev James.
M Muncy pastor 'Sunaoy school.
9 ~5 a m , mormng wor5hip II
om
e11en1ng wor~h1p , 1 30
Prayer meehng Tuesday. 1 30
p m Young peop le's meeting ,
1 JO p m Thun doy.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST ,
Corner Sixth and Pa lmer th e Rev ,
Peter Grondal pastor Danny
Thompson . super1ntendent Sun ·
day School WMPO Rad1 o pro
gram 7 ~5 a .m . Sunday S~hool
9 IS o.m , Morning Worship
10 15 om Youth Oc livihes and
fellowsh1p for 1~ni or ond seni or
h1gh students .. 6 p.m Sunday
vvening worsh1p 7 30 p m. Mid·
week
prayer
~e r l/icvs ,
Wednesday. 7·30p m

CHURCH

OF CHRIST

Mid·

dleport, 5th and Main &gt;George
Glou, minitfer, M•k• Gerlach,
su pen ntenden f Ter ry Yankey ,
youth minister 81bl e sc hool , q 30
a m . morn1ng worsh•p 10130
o.m , evenmg wpr•h 1p, 7 30;
. prayer
service
,1
p m
Wednesday '

· MIODLEPOIH CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Don Cole,
po!.lor. Mr~ M~ry lo they ~unday
!.chMI sup t Surt~ ~c hool q 30
um
mc:..1nmg worsh1p , 10 30

m

Tue•day 7 30 p m

CHURCH Sunday School &amp;er&gt;~ice .
10 a .m ; Proy &amp;r moeting , ThufS·
do~ . 7 p.m ; Sundoy even1ng ser
~1ce 7 p m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST .
Pomeroy · Homton&gt;~llle Rd . Don
t&lt;cnnf'dV pastor : B1 ll McElroy.
Sunday school sup!. Sunday
~c hool. q 30 am, mornmg wor ·
ship and commuRion . 10.30 o.m :
Sunday evening youlh Christ1on
Endea ... or. 6 p m , wocsh1p ser
vice. 7 p.m. Wedne,;doy even1ng
pr oye r m . .tmg and Bible study ,
7 lOp m.
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
Pine Grove. Tt]e Re¥ Wi111om
Middle1worth, Pp,;tOr
Church
se rv tces q 30 o m Sunday School
10 30a .m .
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF ,.
CHRIST Kim Cole. pas tor , Ke vtn
K1ng Sundbysc~oal,;upl Sundcfy
nhool, 9:3'0 am , worship ser·
vice 10 30om ; Sundoy se rl/lce!i,
7 p m youth meetm g, Wednes
day, 1 p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev Earl
Shuler pa stor . Sunday sc hool
9 30 am , Church ,;erv1ce, 7 p m .
youth mee,lng, 6 p m Tuesd ay 61·
ble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev . John A Coff·
man. postor Sunday School 9·30
om Gerold Wells . sup! Morn·
1119 worship , 10 30 a.m., Sunday
evemng wors h1 p 7 30 Pro~er
mee tmg , Wednesday 7 JOp m
RACINE FIR ST BAPTIST , Oon L
Wa lker Pa,; tor , Ronme Sa lser ,
Sunday school su pl . Sunday
school 9 30 am . mornm g wor
sh1p , 10 40 a m . Sunday even1ng
wor sh1p, 7 30 Wednesdoy .-?ven
•ng Btbl e study. 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN . Rev
lefon Glosure , pastor Sundo~
Schoo l 9 30 o m
youth and
1Un1or youth se rv1ce 6 ~5 p m
evemng wors h1p , 7 30 p m
prayer and pro1se, Wednesday
7 30 p m
SIL VE R RUN FREE BAPTIST
Mil es Trout , past or
Sunday
sc hoo l lO am Stevel1it le, sup!
Evemng se rviCe 7 p m . prayer
meetm g Thursday. 7 p m
CHF. STER CHURCHOF GOD
Rev Bobby Porter pastor Sun
day school 9 30 om worsh1p
serv~ee 11 a m . everting serv•ce
7 30 you th se rv1ce, Wedn esday
7 30p m ~
LANGSVILLE CHRI STIAN CHUR
CH, Ted Jones , pa stor Sundoy
sc hoo l 9 30 am , Roy S1gmon
supt
mornmg wors h1p 10 30
Sunday even1ng se rv1ce. 7 30.
rmd . week serviCe , Wednesdo~ .
7 30 p m
SYRAC USE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE . Re v
Dole Bo ss ,
po slor
Bob M oor e, Svndoy
School su p!
Sunday schoo l
classes for all ages 9 30 om ,
mornmg worsh1p , 10 .45 a m ,
NYPS, 6 30 p m evongei 15I1Cser
&gt;~ I Ce
7 30 p m
Pray er ond
fo stmg , Tuesda y
10 ' a m ,
M1dweek
pr ayer
se r v 1ce ,
Wedn esday 7 30 p m . mens
prayer mee t1ng Saturday 7 p m .
m•ss1onory mee ttng , second
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
UNITED
F AITH
NON
DENOMINATIONAL Re&gt;~ . Rob ert
Sm1th pastor Sunday School
9 30 o m Closs leader, leo H1il ,
wor,;htp serv tce \ 0 30 o.m chur ·
ch7 .30p m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Eld en R Bl oke poslor
Sunday School 10 om Howard
McCoy sup! . Morn mg sermon
11 om . Sunday m9h1 serv 1ces
Chnslton Endeavor 7 30 p m ,
Song serviCe, 8 p m Preoch mg
8 30 p m
M idweek Prayer
meehng , Wedne,;doy , 7 p m Roy
Ad om,; loy leader

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH 26 N

l oc ated at Ru t land on New l1mo
Rood nex t to Forest Acr e Pork ,
Rev Roy Rouse, poslo r Rober t
Musser Sun day School supt Svn
day ,;choal 10.30 a m , wo rsh1p
7 30
p m 8 1b l e
Stud y ,
Wedt ~d ay 7 30 p m .., Saturday
nigh t ~r oy e r se rvice 7 JO p m

Secon d . Middl epor t. pastor , Cur
l1s Steph en Church S(hool, q 30
om . preochmg s er&gt;~l c es 10 30

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN ,
9·30 a m

Sun

INDEPENDENT "OliNESS CHUR· ,

CH. INC - Corn•r Four th and
lincoln Sts., Middleport Re&gt;~
OOell Manltty, pa,;tor, Sony Hud.
•on, Sunday School suptrlnten·
dent Sunday school 9.30 o.m ,
e&gt;~enmg worship, 7 30 p m ;
proyer and pro •s• service.
Wednesday . 7:30p.m.

~

eyear

YC

Or

ness.

CAPTAIN EASY
AN IDL~ HOP~ IF I E\IE-~
HEAR D ON&amp;, ~A 5COM' IT
50 HAPPo~S THER.$ A
~/I. fAT f&gt;EAL W~ O N G ~

OF JESUS CHRIST Thomas l
Holmes , pastor
B1bl e stud,Saturdoy, 7 30 p m . Evongells tiC
p m.: proye r meeting, T u esdo~ .
7·30 p m , Btble Study , Thundoy
7 30 p.m

2nd, Jrd Sunday s 9 I S o In ,

Eugene

r

MORSE CHAPEL Wo"hp II
a m . Chu"h S&lt;hool9 30 o m

mon , 10 30 0'" ' Sunday evenmg serv1ce 7 p m

.

7

HAT tS REA'LY SOME·
I: . . .

John Douglo•
Assoc•o tes
JOPPA Wor sh1p lOam . Chur
ch School 9 am Prayer Meetmg
Wednesday B p m

LIITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LIT'!'LE ORPHAN AMNIE-NOTHIN G
ANCIENT WRITINGS - THE
MINE WAS WORKED SV TilE
INDti\NS -- TIIEM CAME THE
SPANIARDS TO L.OOl IT AND
ENSLAVE TllE RED MEN ---

BUT OWE OIW T"E COt&lt;;IUERED

ONES AROSE · - 11 WAS A
BLOODY BATTLE- WHEN IT
WAS DONE THOSE lNOIA"'S
WHO REMAINED WA LI..ED
UP THE MINE -

BORN LOSER

V::::::::-.:..

COMMUN I!Y

011

He orta'!

like

4er
papa
a
awful

hou!&gt;e 1
" lfn.,r.. co,....l•~""'1"'"'-

LILABNER

OUCH~
-NOT 50

'U-&amp;'

HARD'!!

0

y.

Nota spectacular happening to be sure butlamsure it will
'

makes hiS

1 "'

4"'

Pa ss

Pass

8,10, Mtster Rogers 20
9 ~Scooby Doo 6, 13, Bugs Bunny- Road Runner 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10. Sesame 51 20

contract

~~~~~

over East 's

10·0o-Speed Buggy 3,4,15, Tarzan 8, 10, Once Upon a
ClassiC 20
10.3G-Monster Squad 3,4,15; Krafft Supershow 6,13,

Th e bidding has proceeded
1 • Pass 1 • Pass
2 .., Dbl. Pass

Shazam . l sts 8,10
_ l l . O~Space Ghosts Frankenstein Jr

B 1g Blue Marble 6; A r k II 8, 10; Consumer Surv1va l

Ktt 20.
'
12.0o-Land ot the Lost 3,4,15, Hot Dog 6, Fat Albe rt

The answer is no Once your
opponents have b1d three su ols
all doubles are pnmanly lor
penalty

8.10, Action News lor Kids 13 ; Crockett ' s V1ctor y
Garden 20

cl o

th 1s

Movie "Green Manstons" 10 ; Infinity Factory
33 1·Jo-Oavid Niven' s Wor ld 6, Nex1 Genera11on

newspaper. P 0 Box 489
Rad10 C1 ty Sratron. New Yo rk
N Y 10019)

4 110-College Basketball 3; Hula Bowl 6, 13; Col lege
Baskelball 4, 15. t?olf 8,10: Bit with Knit 33
4 JG-Inslght 33
5·00-Sporls Spectacular a.10. Catch·33 33.

.•.

5 Jo- Doc umentary Sho wcase 33
6 DO-News 3,4,10; Space · 1999 8; God Has the Answer

•

15.
.
6·3o-NBC News 3.4.15. CBS News 10, Ltl1as Yoga
You 33

••

11

ntE

1:2:E5TA.IJRANT

SOSINES6· . .

8.3o-Bob Newhart 10.
9 00-Mad. Mad . Mad, Mad World ot the Su,er Baw l
3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13, Allin The Famtly 10,
Tell Me II Anyth tng Ever Was Done 33.
9 3G-Super Ntght at the Super Bowl 10
10:0Q-Mosl Wanted 6,13: Movoe " Bri an's Soog" 8.

School Supt , Morning Worsh ip ' • - - - - - 9 30 o m . Sund.oy School 10 20'
am Wednesday Proyer and. B1·
NICE 10 SIT
ble Study 7·30 p m , Sunday DONN N-1' EAT ·
evening wonhtp 7:30p.m ., Cho1r WilE II IIIJ61N ES&amp;
Prochce Thursday 7 p m
SI.O!YS DONN..
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Russell , Sr ., mmlster :
R1ck Macomber , sup! Sunday
schoo l, 9:30 om , wonhtp s•r·
'IIU
10·30 o m. B1ble Studv,
. Juesdoy. 7.30p.m .
•11'REQRG.tiNIZED CHURCH OF,.,_,, . . 1
)ES'US ·· ~ HRIST OF LATTER DAY
SAINTS , Portlon:d Racine Rood
W•llu;Jm Rou,;h , postor. Denny
Evon•. Sundar Scl'IQDI D•reclor
Sunday Schoo 9·30 a m , Morn·
mg worship 10 30 a.m.: Sunda,e..-en i ng
service 7 p . m
Wedpesday evemn g prayer •utr
&gt;~ I ces , 7·30p m .
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev Earl
Shuler , pos tor . 'W orship servke
9 30 am. Sunday school , 10.30
om Bible Study arid prayer set
vice t hurtdoy 7:30pm
CARLETON CHURCH K1ngtbury
Rood G ory Kmg , pastor Sundoy
school , q 30 am •. &amp;~~ening wor ~!~~~~~;:~~!!
ship. 1 30 p .m Prayer meeting,

.. "

"'" TO RING, :t ,..r.:;~7TI'1ff,

F MJ Q. _ F DQ

oF z

•

'

.,

•
''
'

Vistons 33.

n ·oo-News 3,4,10,13, 15,8. ABC News 6
11 .15-News 6; PMA Pulse 15.

••

11 3o-MaryHartman 3. Saturday Night 4,15; Freedom
Classic 6; News a. Movie " The Rat Race" 10;
Movie "Modesty !liaise" 13
.
12 oo-Peter Marshall a; Janak! 33.

Jlrgwrn

•

•
I

j
\

13.

'

•'
'·'·
•
•

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAM!! •

~~

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

four ordinary words.

JSXz
Qz

~

'

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,...
one letter 10 each square, to form
..

I WOYNS}
I KI ::1

I I TIARj
I v v
I ( Xj

form the surprise answer, as SUQ· ·

. LJ~J::...LD..LL.......L-....J

geste&lt;l by .Ihe abOve canoon.

,~R~A~~~:...J-!7'-.;]f\.:,.E;;;;'E'
~

.

~
~ ~

CAU~E~Pyi-IER'E
__, v "'"'

used for the three L's, X fqr Lhe 1wo O's, etc. Single letters, L_J_ ..J.._ J:'....::!._J..:&gt;...:J
apostrophe s, the len gth and formation of the words are all ,__ _,;,;__ _...,
htnls Each day tho code lr!lors Me dtflrrenl
CRYPTOQUOTES
.
1. y z

•

'·

31

\l

i,.._;!i.....J..,..J_,..,!

MX

.,

•

8 oo-Emergency 3,.4, 15, Wonder Woman 6, 13, Co llege
Baske1bal l a, Mary T y ler Moore 10, Kenya Runner

I)

~e;i~)

M J X 1. M J T L

'•

Haw 6,a, S128,000 Question 10: Let 's Ma ke a Dea l
13. World War I 33
7 3Q-Dolly to . In Search of 13, Jeanne Wolf With 33

One lellcr simply st an ds f or another. In th1s sample A is t-

IN FACT, I EVEN DREAD GOING
IN ANYMORE IT'&amp; LIKE
SIITING 'AROUND WAITIN0
FOR THE DEA1H KNE-LL

'•

7 oo.-Mustc H ~ ll America 3, Lawren ce W elk 4, 15, Hee

1.3o-News 3; Movie '' The Frozen Dead"

AXYDLRAAXR
Is t. o N G FE I. I. oW

• OWER J1iNAN75 OF,THE 80N!\i'l Z
.&amp;//LOft/6' 5~41 ?Cl'/fllVE FOUND
HOMES RJR THEM6EL14:8 ....

•

&amp;

R'U8BING.

FELDIE

nAPPY HOURS

•~

2 oo-Movle "Aifw In Trinidad" 3
3 00-ABC Ney&lt;s 13
3 3Q-Movie " Dance Hall " 3
5 oo-Salnt 3
6 00-FBI 3

))AlLY· CRYI'TO&lt;!UOTE - He~e'' how to work it:

St. Paul Lutheran Chui"ch, Pomeroy\

·=
·-

J . JG-Urban Leag ue 10

( 2 wds )

'

.,..,.'
'

13, Zoom 33.
2 oo-College Basketball a. ARA's Sports World 6,
West Virginia Heritage 13, Nova 33
2 30-Pro Bowling 6,1 3
3·QO-Wtldllfe In crisis 10. Fam oly at War 33

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Ed1tor's
I Roman
mark
DOWN
statesman
s Cap
I Hub ; focus
W Kiln
2 Hold 1t 1
11 'La - "
1naut. )
12 Bluster
3 Extra
13 Not vege·
mmng
table or
4 Precise ly
mineral /
(3 wds. l
Yesterday's Answer
14 Lover of
5 Curse
beauty
6 Samuel' s
18 Before
28 North
16 One 1Fr.)
mentor
dinner
Dakota
17 Usual
7 Slayer of
dnnks
city
lunenck
Remus
21 Mollusk
29 - nous
start
8 Proceed
22 Fare (2 wds.) 31 Japan's
18 Arkm
from
23 Forsaken,
legiSlature
19 Negat1ve
9 Forte
poetically
32 Capricorn's
20 GoU stroke II Plate used
24 Defens1ve
symbol
21 Freeman
at Mass
obstacle
34 LongGosden .role 15 Cupid
25 Exhaust
tailed ape
23 - majesty ,.........,;._,,_.,.......;

38

12 3Q-Marshall Basketbal l Htghlights 3. Amerocan
Bandstand 13; Muggsy 4,15, Soul Train 6. Way Out
Games 8, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Crop Game 20.
1 ro-Senlor Bowl 3,4,15; Children's Film Fest1va l B;

(For a copy ol JA C:.&gt;B Y
MODER N se nd $1 IO W'n
811dge .

3,4, 15; J eanne

Wolf With 20
.
11 ·3o-Big John . LtHie John 3,4, 15, Superfroends 13;

A Canadian reader wants to
know t[ the two-club double
was for takeout

ut

!•

SATURDA~ JANUARY 8,1977
6 oo-Sunme Semester a.10.
6 · Jo-Matte r s of Life 6; TV Classroom a, Treehouse
Club 10; Kentucky Afield 13
7·00-Saturday Report 3, Dusty' s Treehouse 4, Eddte
Saunders 6, Treehouse Club B. U S Farm Report
10. Gi lligan 13.
7· 15-Davey &amp; Goliath 6.
7·30-Bullwlnkle 3, Children's Theatre 4, Valley ollhe
D 1nosauh 6; Dusty' s Treehouse a: Man From
C.O.S.I. 10, Juntor Almost Anything Goes 13.
Sesame St 20
a oo-Woody Woodpecker 3,4,15; Tom &amp; Jerry 6,13:
Sylvester &amp; Tweefy a.10
a· 3o-Pt nk Panther 3,4,T5 , Jabberjaw 6.13. Clue Club

24 Down with! ~ ~-1---1-+-­
(f'r I
12 wds )
25 Composer,
Fernando - ~-+--1--+26 Cook
27 Grade of
beef
30 Tavern
tap
31 Defacmg,
as a fender
33 DeCe1ved
(2 wds.)
35 Division
word
36 Habituated
J7 - song
1cheaply)

know

little from a book of poetry or short stories 01' better still God's

pas tor Worsh1p serv1ce, 11 om

Wodnoldoy , 7 30p.m.

P•l

ml.l

postor: Lloyd Wright. Sunday

SI IVl RSV ILLE

u ~

lot
about

Chu" h S&lt;haol9 om .

preochmg on f~r sl ond th ird Sun·
day olmon th by George P1 t kens

~!

Seem

where
I hide

CHRIST. Jock Perry . mlmsttr: l un
day School 9.30 a m mornmg
church 10 30 am . Sunday even
i ng
ser&gt;~ICG ,
7: 30
p m
Wednesday servlce, a p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHOOISl
CHURCH Re&gt;~ Floyd F Shook .

TUPPERS PLAINS . Wor,;hip 9
a.m . Ch urch School 10 o m
KENO CHUR CH OF CHRIST,
George Fredenck , sup t l ServiCe
week l y, 9.30 om on Sunday .
Preoch11'1g ftr sl and th1rd Sundays
of mon th by Cl1fford Sm 1th. 9 30
a .m .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION ,
Dorre ll Doddnll , po,;tor. Sunday
School . q 30 o m . leonard
G ilmore ftrst elder . evenmg ser·
Wednesdoy
v1ce, 7 30 p m
pray er meeting. 7.30 p.m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Racine Route 2 The fte&gt;~ . Charier.
Ho"d . pastor Sundoy sc hool, 9.-45
~ m , mormng worship , 11 o m
hentng ~ervtcas Tuesday ond
Friday 7 30p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH ·
OF CHRIST
Doug Seaman.
m1n 1\ tcr 81 lole study. 9 30om
mornmg worsh ip 10.30 om ,
evenm g wo1ship1 7·30 p m
Wedn e1doy Bible study 7;30 p m
KENO CHUR:CH OF CHRIST
George Fredemk , supt Sunday
morning wrvi&lt;.e , 9 30 o m with

WORTH.

/&gt;J.A}J/&gt;,l/S ..

papa
know

meellng Wednesday 7 45 p m.,
UMW 3rd Tue~da y 8 p m
REEDSVILLE, Sunday School q 30
a.m. Worship 7 30 p m Prayer
Meeting 7 30 p,m
Tuesday,
VISIIQIIOn7 30 p m l st Thursday
SILVER RIDGE Wo rs h1p 10 am

on

... I TCW HIM TO PUT ltJ
'
'lf{!;: l)';Ui\L- "'WW mt.-l)..RS

'THI:: 6A.S ~N'T CHEAf'I;R ...
IT COS\ TKE $I&gt;.}.}E AS

'JJW,T'S THAT rnCIC:KH.!6~ &lt;iOll
AAIJE'f.\'T ~fl ~lt.lb 'THI&gt; C.flf:AP
bl-5, HA%' 'IOU'?

~er

ond 7 30 p.m Sunday Sunday berecalledagalnandaga!n,atreasureoftheheart. ,
School 9:30 o.m. Rt&lt;hard Ba't.on.
Now Is the season to be storing these treBIItll'ed memories. ,
su pt
p,ayer me e ting , !tis winter,, .ltlscoldandaflreisnlceandsotoothefamily.
WeBdRnAeD.dFoOyR, 7D·30 pCmHURCH OF A worthwhilememmaybe?- Rev. WUUam
M,iddleswarlh,
- J
--

p m

Pass

South

hearts Can he accomplish
these two things'
Yes 1f he can trade hiS
heart ' loser for a diamond
loser So, South cashes his
king of diamonds, leads a dJa·
mond lo dummy 's ace and
returns the 10 of dia monds
East plays low and now South
jettiSons h1s Jack of hearts
West takes hiS jack of
d1amonds and can fmd noth mg
better Lo do lhan play ace and
another trump South wins m
dummy, leads the 10 of hearts ,
ruffs East 's kong , enters dummy w1lh another trump , doscards two of his three clubs on
the mne-e~ghl of hearts and

~

How come

Wedne•day•
NORTH BETHEL Wo"hop II
om . Chu"hS&lt; hool lOa m
ALFRED Sunday School 9 30
o.m .. Worship 10 45 o m Prayer

8

2"'

_ _,J.' ace of hearts

GASOLINE ALLEY

•hop 7 30 p m
·secret ilseH In your Inmost heart to be recalled ln the years
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE ahead 8S a wonderful night frmn the put.- A wonderful
NAZARENE , Rev Herbe' t G'ate, memory cberilhed and lre8111l'ed A worthwhile memory to

at

Pa:;s
'"'
Pass

Pttss

I" queen and stud1es the hand

•- "1![1 !9IID\'IItl llll IM

LONG BOTTOM Sundoy "hool
ot 9.30 a tn - Wo"hop '"""es ot
7 30 p m Boble study and Youth
mee t 1ng

North East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We aTe mdebled to Terence
Reese and the Bndg e World
NEW UNDER , THE 5 UN
magazine for today 's hand
------....
• - - - - South gets to four spades after
AH· THEY ARI'O
a club opemng b1d by West and
~~~LT~~ ~~~A~
a heart response by East. He
DEPARTED
WinS the first lnck Wllh the
NEVER To RETURN -

~

J.

a

I.

West

to lead a club through the
kmg . Also South must find
some way to get nd of a co~ ·
pie of hts clubs on dummy s

.t,.

a

.A

..?
Obvtously the hand IS gmng
0- to collapse 11 East can get tn

give us a warm feeling. It's little things. It is tbe warmth of

Prayer Serv1ce, 7:30 p.m., You!~ W1
meeting , 6 30 p 11'1 Evenmg wor ·

SOUTll

"'K Q9732

Openmg lea d - 7 Y

Vlng room

II am , Young People's se"oce, Word, the holy Bible. Someone make a big pan of pop corn, turn
7 p m . Evemng serviCe, 7 30 off the T,V. and radio and spend a coeywann 30 minutes or so
p m : Wednesday M1d Week
'th God nd. f m11

t 965 3
41094

Neither v ulnerab le

pm

evening at home, Not a blg everung with company or great
excitement, just a quiet ~d peaceful evening with no great
stress or worry preaalng in 011 anyone. One way to make 11 a
goodca. lmandqulet"'..o.t
could be to have Mom or Dad read a
1

" KQ632

• QJ 8 2
"' AQJ72
.I

FAIRVIEW BIBl E CHURCH · '
Letart
W. Vo Rev Ch arles 1
Hargraves , pas tor Worsh1p ser • I
v1ce 9 30 o m . Sunday School II \l
a m e&gt;~e nmg worsh1p , 7 30 'p m
Tue5doy cottage prayer meel•ng
ond B1ble study, 9 30 o m Wor
sh1p serv1ce, Wedn esday 7 30

Wedne•doy . 7 30 p rn
CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO·
PHECY o J Whote Rood ott 160.
Rev George G'oyle. pasto,.

••

t K7
· ·K S J

SBC

am wo,.hop 1st and 3,d Sundays
10 30 o m
NORTHEASTCLU STER
Rev Rochord I homo•

EAST

41 A5

YESStR I OSCAIZ I il-115

Ch urch - Leland Holey . po slor
Sunday sc hool , 10 o m . evening
se r vtce
7 30 p m
Pr ay er
meeting Wednesdo 9 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOO of Prophecy
located on the 0 L Wh1te Rood
off h1ghwoy 160 Sunday Schoo l
10 om
Superinlendenl John
Loveday Fnst Wednesday n1ght
of month CPMA serv1ces second "'
WednesdaY. WMB mee llng th1rd "~'
through fifth youth ser v1ce
George Croyle , pastor
HOPE BAPTIST, CHAPEL - 570
Grant St , M1ddlepor1 Rev . Bobby
Elk 1ns Sunday sC hool . 10 o m ,
mor nmg wor,;hip , 11 eventng .,
worsh1p 7·30 p m , Thursdoy
evemng 81ble study and prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m. Aflil1oled w!!h ..

pianoorUsteningtoaomeonereadashortstory.
When was the last time you and your familv_spent a quiet

Trade heart-diamond losers
7

'

12:QO-Movle " The 40 Man " 10; Janak I 33
12· 4G-Mod Squad 6. Ironside 13.
1· 00-Midnlght Spectal 3,4, 15
2·3o-News 3
3 00-Movle " The GunltQhter" 3
4.3o-Movle 'The Family Secrel" 3.
6·00-FBI 3

WIN AT BRIDGE

" 74

pm
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST

pas tor , FloydNorns , su pt Sunday
sc hool q 30 o m . morn1r19 ser·
man , 10 30om Prayer serv1ce ,

News 33 .

WEST Ull

ALLEYOOP

~IN '.1

3,4,6; ,8,10, 13, 15; Ma cNeil Lehrer Report
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20
11 JQ-John ny Carson 3,4,1 5:
6,T3 ; M"'le " The
Spy with My Foce" 8. Mary Hartman 10, ABC

WAS IT SHE

WANTED ME
TO DO AI!&gt;OUT

,

11 · 00-News

WHAT

.10 9 8 5
t A IP 4
"' 6 5

LE1ART FALL S UNITED those around us and the peace and calm that runs among those
BRETHREN Rev Freeland Nw" JX'eaenl that is the good memory. Everyone singing around the

Sundoy School 10 om .. Arthur
Hehson, Svpt , Mormng Wors h1p,

WITH
HER 51L'Y DOMESTI C
PROBLEMSl

l hirsd.Y . 7 30p m.
SYRACUS E FIR~T CHURCH OF :

PORTLAND Worsh1p 1 30 p m .
Ch urch School 9 30 o m
SUTTON Church School 9 30

Pa stor
Duane Syden stncker

THoiR CONFOUNDeD '' QU I ~TZ
(lUE EPEI't" ~

Perspective on the N ew s 33 .
7: 3o-Por ler W agoner 3, Movie " Brian's Song '' ~ ~
Candid Camer a 6, Treasure Hunt 8, Mac Neil ·
Lehr er Reoort 20,33 ; Andy Williams 10 . Name

NORTH
"' J 10 8 6

4th Sunday 7 30 p m
pos tor . Howo'd Coldwell , J, . e~pensive or overly exciting. !I more often than 1101 is.a simple
MORNING 51 AR , Wo"hop 9 30 Sunday School Supl . Sunday everydaY. event that remains in our hearts and minds.
am . Chuoch School 10 30 o.m . S&lt;hool. 9.30 om . Morntng Ser·
In alllruth, it does not take great events or happenings to
Mtd'Week ServiCe Wednesday 8
pm

WITH AI..L. THAT HOT" AIR ABOUT'

WESL EYAN

aroun

or Cons . 3; Jenny &amp; Me .4 , Bowling lor

UPSErTI~G ME

HOLINESS ~ Harrisonville Rood
Dewe~
Kmg , pastor , Ed1son
Weo&gt;~er an•stont, Henry Ebl m,
Jr , Sunday school supt Sunday
~ hool 9.30 o.m., morning war·
shiP,. } I ,am . Sunday el/en1ng
se;r.,.,c,. .,.. ;1 30; prayer mee tmg

or in front of the 1V or around the kitchen table. It can be talk,

Under wood,

C UTTH~OATS

NAME;

doyschool 10 30 om , even1ng games Of just togetherness.
service 7 30 Wednesdo~ Bible
We aU remember things of the past, and the present that
Study 7 30 p m
will he he
da
thin
be
MT · UNION BAPTI ST Rev R. o
t past one Y· The
gs we remem rare most
Br ow n, su pply pastor I Sunday ~en sihlple thinss, warm things that secret themselves in our

CHURCH,

A~D ~OW C~RO"'" .. . . .

FIRST !T'$ THO SE- GUtNFZ.

MANUFA CTURING

THAT SH IVAU~
WHATSHER·

GOO - Not Pentecos tal. Rev
George Oiler . postor. Worsh1p
serv iCe Sunday . 9 45""" a m . Sun·
doy schoo l , 11 am . wor§hlp ser
v1ce 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meellng 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Umted Breth ren\
Chu rch Sunday School 9 30 o m
Worsh1p ser&gt;~tCe 10·i5 o m
Preoch10g serv~ees every Sunday
alternating w1th C E Wednesday
praye r meetmg 7 30 p m. Rev
James Leach
pos lor
Oov1d
Holter l.oy l&amp;oder
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 mile
eoSt of Rutla nd 1unct•on ol Route
124 and Noble Summll Rood {T ·
174) Sunday B1ble l ecture. q 30
o
Watc htower study
I 0 30
om · Tu esdoy . B•bl e study 7 and
a 1S p m , Thv r s do~ . theocrat•c
school , 7 30 p m
serviCe
meet1ng , 8 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant 51 ,
M1ddleporl Bobb~ Elkms, pastor
Sunday School 10 o m . worsh1p
serv1ce, 11 o m e&gt;~entng serv•ce ,
1 30 p m
Thursday
proyer
IT)eehng and . B1ble study, 7 30

Showcase 20,33

"'10 ro-Serplco 3,4,15; ABC News Closeup 6,13; News
20; Paul Nuchlms 33
·
10 3G-~ock , Stock &amp; Barrel 20
11 00-News 3.4.6.8.10.13 15. MacNeii ·Lehrer Report
33 .• Monty Pythor , Flying Circus 20.

Dollars 6; Andy Williams a. News 10. To Tell the
Truth 13, My Three Sons 15 ; Ohio Journal20; Black

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC GI'IURCH

1

oo-- Truth

7

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD -

LETART FALL S Chu"h S&lt;hool S&lt;hool 9 45 o.m.. Sunday even'"g hearts. The family at home on a COld winter'S night with a big
1st 2nd 3'd Sundays 10 15 o m wo"h•p 7 30 p m
bowl of pop corn and a dish of apples .. . 11111Ybe pizza and pop
4th Sunday 9 15 a.m , Wa"hop
TUPPERS PLAIN S CHRISTIAN in thta ,..esenl day and age. 'I isn't something that is costly or
l si

12 13
6.00-News 3,4,8,10,1l, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33
6 3o-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13. AndyGrllfith 6;
CBS News 8.1 0. Vegetable Soup 20; Vtl la Alegre 33

gos~l

Po slor Dennis Boles . Sunday
School, 10 am , Wors hip service,
11 30 a.m . and 1 30 p.m Proyer
meehng, Wednesday , 7 30 p m

00-B1g Valley 3, Merv Griff in 4, Brady Bunch 8;
M 1ster Rogers 20,33 . Star Trek 15.

5 3o- News 6, Famoly Aflatr 8; Elec Co 20,33 , Adam

THE PEOPLE'S CHURCH OF •

POME)\OV - Corner Mam ond
Court Sts 1 third floor ov•r •;
Lighthouse Restaurant . Henry
Cook , postor. Sundoy sc hool, 10
am , mormng worship , 11 a m .. ~;
evening
sarvice , 7 . 30
1
Wednesday evening serv1ca ,
7·30. lnterdenomlnoiiOnol. ful l

PO MEROY

Thai Tune 13; Pop Goes the Counlry 15.
a:ro-Sanlord &amp; Son 3, 15; Donny &amp; Mar ie 6, 13.
Lawrence We lk a, •Washington Week in Review
20,33 , Assault on Mt Everest 10.
8 .~G-Chlco &amp;the Man 3,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9.00-Rockfor d Flies 3,4,15. Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,1 3.
Mov1e " Man on a Swing" 8, 10; Documentary

FRIDAY , JANUARY?. 1971

Winter is a time for bemg ln by the fire at nlght. A season
f famil lose
S'lting
d the ll ·

th

Television log for Jeasy viewing"

o.m and 7 30 p m . Wednesday
e&gt;~entng 8ible study. 7:30 p m

the Sermonette

Roger Watson pastor Jessie
f
Wh1le Sunday school sup! Morn· O

lng wo,.hip

WESLEVAN (Roon e). Sunday
School 10 a m Wors hip 11 am .
Jr UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p m .
B1bl e Stud~ Thursday 7 p m Ch01 r
Pracl tc e rhursdoy 8 p m

LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN .
Bruce Smith , pa stor Wallace
Damewood Supt. Bible School ,
9;30 o m Preaching ••r&gt;~ice ,
10 -45 a .m No evening urvic&amp; _
HYSELl RUN FREE ' WTHOOIST
CH URCH, R e&gt;~ Herbert All •ng.
posfor Sunday School 91 30 a m ,
Marn1ng ser.o~ee, 10:30 a .m ,
~outh
se , &gt;~lce ,
IJ, ·AS
p m
E&gt;~ ongelisiiC ur ... lce 7·30 p m
Prayer mee ting. Thursdav. 7.00
pm
•
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot
Sold Knob . Rev . E. J Grltf1th
sup!. ol church
Rev l. R
Gluesencomp, pa stor; Roger
Wdlfred Sr Sundoy School svpt
Sunday 41c!1ool, 9 30 a.m., prayer
meeting Tuesday
7 30 p m ,
~outh meeilng. 6 p.m . Sundov
Leaders Ado Von Mete r and Grel·
to Suttle Sunday even •ng wor·
sh1p, 7 p m. through w 1nt~r man
th s.
'
WHITES CHAPEL , Coo lvi lle R01
Rev Roy Deeter po stor Sunday
schoo l q 30'0 m . wots h1 p se rv1ce
10•30 o m 81ble study ond p rayer
setyice, Wednesday 7 30 p m
• "'J
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Carl Peok pastor 8111 Brown,
Sundoy sc hool su pt
Sundoy
sc'hoo l , 9 j Q am wors h ip and
commun1on , 10 30 o m henmg
servtee 1 30 p m Regular board
meeting, Sotu,rday, 7 p m
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHUR
CH Sunday School . 9 30 o m
wor shi p servlce 1 11
a m
Wednesday prayer meehng, 7 30
p m youth ser11!ces Sunday 7
p m Sunday night worship 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE. Rev lloyd D Gnmm
Jr . pastor S.Undoy schoo l 9 30
a m worsh ip service 10.30 am
Broadcast i1 ve over WMPO . young
peo p l es
se r &gt;~ 1ce
6 45
evangeliStiC ser..-1ce 1 30 p m
Prayer mee ting , Wednes day , 7 30
p m . MISSionary meellng 7 30
p m ftrst Wednesdoyofmanth
MASON COUNTY
MASON FIR ST BAPTIST , Second
and Pomeroy Sts
Ston Cra1g ,
pastor Sunday school. 9.45 a.m ..
worsh1p servtce , 11 o m , trommg
um on b 30 p m even.ng wor ·
sh1p ser11tce 7 30 p m M1d Week
prayer ser11ice Wednesday 7 30
pm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P
0 Box 487 M1ller St Mason W
Va Sunday B1ble Study 10 am .
Worsh1p 11 om ond 7 p m Btble
Study Wednesday 7 p m Vocal
mu siC
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTIST, Cor·
ner of Second and A nderson
Ma son Pa stor Wo ll er Cloud
Sunday sc hoo l q -45 om worsh1p
serv tce, 11 o m. and 7 30 p m
WeeJ.;.Iy B1ble study , Wednesday
7 30 p m
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO
Duddmg lone, Mason W Va
Cflesler Ten nant Pa stor Sunday
School 9 45 om . Children 's Chur·
ch 6 45 p m Young Peop les Ser·
v1ce 6 45 p m Evongel1r.hc Ser·
l/1ce 7 30 p m Wom en s M1s
s•ona ry Council 10 o m f trst and
lh1rd Tuesdays Pray er and B1 ble
Study Wednesday 730pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev
W1ll1om Campbel l pas tor Sunday
School, 9 30om Jomes Hughes,
sup! evenmg serviCe 7 30 p m
Wed nes day evenmg
prayer
meeting 7 30 p m Youth prayer
serv1ce each Tue sday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE C HURCH
Leta rt W Va , Rt I , Rev George
Hoschm pas tor Sunday School
9 30 o m Proy er and B1ble study
7 30 p m Co ltag e Prayer Serv1ce
Tue sday 10 am Worsh1p Ser·
v1ce Thursday , 7 30 p m

'

SW

L

yz

·u M E o E Q M J

11

1

No' arrange the a rcled leUors

,

to;·

An•w•r here: u ,.,.[_,1..........,I="'""'I'T7"""'I:IT"'&lt;I:r,'"'"'X:T7"'"'&lt;IJ7"""'(]]'t

(Answers 1om0flllli
Yestenlay's Cryptoquote: WHAT YOU ARE 'rO BE, OR
Jumbles BLOAT SCARF PUNDIT ENZVME : :
BECOME, DEPENDS UPON THE CHARACfER OF YOUR • Yesterday's Answer Fnghtenad when it was tome to get up in the ~
RESOLUTIONS .~ WALTER MAITHEWS
mornlng-"~ED"
,.

I

() 1977 Ktn&amp; Fulurts S)l.ndluh:, lnc

'

'

BARNEY

IF I EVER GIT

0

Q

•0

0

A FEW SN~~FLAKES
LAt.IC'ING ON 'iOUF:
HEAD CAN'T HURT '10V .
0

"

(•

Q •

,,
0
0

"

'

B0RNED AG'IN- I · HOPE I COME
BACK AS A

FROG

AN' I'LL JEST SIT AN'
SNOOZE ON t-IN WA1ER BED
ALL DAY LON6

'

�•

lO-TheDaUv!ltntlnii.~Y.O.,Frlday,Jill ..7,lr77

"~ro~l

Grap h.
Bemtct Bect. 01ol

'

IN=~=~:ft~N

OUOLINIS
S PM . OIV
Befort
Publication

Canctllttlonl,

'orrtc

Uons 1ccepted first diV of
publ/cttlon.

Fast Results Use The S~ntinel Classifieds

~
~ 0
I r
1

0

1\ Nvticea ·

YaniSale

.~~:i~

..a

CENTRAL REAlTY CO.

r---··lllllill-MEIGS .
'I Equipment Co.
rn-m' I

.1.

I

IIIROOIIS
CIIIT[I$.AIIIIIKS

LARR1,~&amp;,!DER
~~ nz-ml

4 Dr, factory au~ PS PB

BRADFORD Auc t1aneer Com
plete Serv1ce Phone 9-49 2487
or 949 2000 Racine. Ohto Cntt
_____B_r~d--~- ,~--- •
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toes ter~ trans oil
small opplronces Lawn mower,
next to State Htghway Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (61-4) 985·

.

~

-~

TRUCKS

1973 Chevy, Deluxe .........12695
V a, automat1c , PS, P B. long w1de bed

REMODELING Plumb•ng heotmg
ond all ty pes of general repatr.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex· .
pertence Phon&amp; W2- 2#~
.....--.--.,..SEWING MACHINE Reporrs ser·
v1ce, oil makes , 992 2284 The';
Fobr1 c Shop
Pomeroy ,..
Authorized Srnger Sales ond ;l
Sen11ce We shorpen Sc1ssors
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and •'
backhoe work dump tn1cks
ond lo·boys for hrre will haul
ftll d•rt. to sotl ltmestone ond;
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jel
fers doy phone 992 7089
n1ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
~--------·EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and dttcher Charles R Hoi ·
fteld , Back Hoe Serv1ce,

Except Thu1 s and Sa t
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD
992-2196

Middleport

guests of Mr and Mrs Jerry

1973 Ford Custom ••••••••• 12695

--------

~-~

Open Evenmgs T1l6 00

6 cylm der standard , long w1 de bed 3 000 m1les

3825

~

Mr a nd Mrs Robert
G1bson and Robm, Columbus,
and Ray Alktre. Athens were
ChriStmas guests of Mr and
Mrs Robert Alk1re
Mr and Mr s La rry
McGr ath a nd chtl dre n,
Coolvtll e and Olts McGrath
of Lake Cttv. Fla were
weekend v tSit~rs of Mr. and
Mrs Earl MCGrath
Mr and Mrs Clifford
And erson. V1enna , W Va ,
Mrs Clara F rum, Athens.
we r e Ch ristm as dmn er

Save Now on d 1976 Pinto. Mustang. or Mavenck.
See: Pat Hjll , Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle

1976 Ford C-100····· ......13695

-~

Frum
Mr and Mrs Ronme Wtll
and son, Lancasler, spent
Sunda) wtth Mr and Mrs
F eltx Alktre a nd Slella A!ktns
and Ruby Dtehl
Supper guest s Wednesday
evemng of Stella Atktns and
Rubv Dtehl were Mr and
Mrs: Fehx Alkire, Mr and
Mrs. Dav1d Rtggs and famtly,
Mr and Mrs Danny Stanley
and son, Mr and Mrs Rodger
Alktre and children, Mr and
Mrs Bob Jewell and Ruby
Hall tday and Pauline Atkms
Mr a nd Mrs Bob Welsh
a nd family spent the week
vtstlmg Mr and Mrs K. C.
Welsh and Mr. and Mrs Joe
Ca rsey
Guy Boltn ts tn Velerans

V 8, autOmat ic, PS, PB , long wtde bed

P~.

1973

--

Duster .......... • 12195

2 door. 6 cylmder autonra11c

1973 Buick LeSabre Custom 2495
1

Factory a tr , PS1 PB

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
Motor
Co.
'

QUALITY

A

1973 Chevy Caprice Classic 2695
1

Factory A1r. PS . PB vmy l roof

Ru!lo_nd_ Oh•o_Ph~ne ?4~-

1974 Ford Grand Torino. ••••12695

SEPTIC Systems Ins talled br'
lrcensed 1nstoller Shepard
Coo tractors Phone 7-42 2-409

4 Dr fa ctor y a1r, PS , PB , vmyl roof

1973 Chevy Imp............12195

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern '
__So_mto_l,_
on~_2·:;
39;::
5~::·~-~
Will do roolrng , construction,
plu rn b•ng and heatrng No 10b
too Iorge or too small Phone
742·2:1-18
-· - - - - - -CARPENTER lloortpg ce1ltng
_ poneltng Phone 992·2759
DOZER work ond weldtng Con·
tact James Parsons Rt I
Racine , on Carmel Rood

4 Dr Wagon , factory a1r, PS, PB,

2 Dr HT

1969 Ply. Fury 4 Dr.......... 1395

501 NYLON
12 or 15 Ft.

Grten,gold, rH, blue, rust.'1
Do It y011rsaN, wlfh ped.
ding, 17.t5 sq. ycl. Willi

podding lnstollld u.u
squtn Ylrd .
Ce11742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPETCDNSULTANT

.
RUn.AND
FURNITURE

742·2211

Rut lind

located On

St. Rt: 7

~

fStiversville
News Notes
•
~ Mr. and Mrs. Ruda Durst
~~spent Chnstma s Eve m

..Columbus
w1th
thetr
:W.ughter, Mr. arid Mrs Ttm
::W1lkmson, Shawn and Kevm .
~ Clint Birch and daughter,
• Leota, were Chrtstmas Day
::guests o! :Mr a,)d J\1r.s. Joe
~'i.ipps and family at ymcent
: David Bryant, , Dunbar, W
~Va. , Mrs Odessa·P.roffitt and
• family and Mrs Debbte
~!smith and son , Portland ,
t:Mrs. Barbara Talbott,
:))onnette ' and DavJd , · local,
• "' iSited Mr. and Mrs. Bt11
:,Bryant, Debra ' and Dav1d,
"dudng the past week.. &gt;
:.. R . R. · Durst was a
Christmas Da~ visit?r at. the
home of Mr. antl Mrs Victor
"Durst, Si;Ott .. al!d .;I ~qn, pt '

.

.

Plaiha. ,...,.,.

t~

r

, ' c·

Lori Middleswart , In·
"'cinnatl, spent' t\ie hohdays
, with her pare nts , Mr. 1and
, ,Mrs . Jim Middleswart and
famtly .
" Mrs. Mary Greer: Limna,
,Leah and Flint, and Ruby
•Van Meter, hon g Bottom , and
&lt;Nicki Van Meter ,' local,
-vistted Mrs. Merle 'Evans and
Paul Dean, recently.
" Mr. and Mrs. ' Louis A
' DeLuz called on Mr and Mrs.
Richard Abels, 'l-ong Qottom,
on Sunday.
'; Rev . L R IOiue9ellljBIDP,
, bas returned from a t!lil ,week
, vacat1011 in Florida • •
Mr. aod Mrs. Gory Wells,

-- --

GOT AN EYE FOR ABUY?

'279.95

,,.,

GAS

'.

Chester, 0.

fi

~The

~

Kingsh.ury News

985-4100 .

HI-tO SHAG

'10,95

1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO
_
S3995
ClaSSIC, 350 , V 8 automat1c power steermg and ,
brakes rally wheels, radto , black and ~Jery allra chve

1971 Ford Torino ............ sg95

CARPniNG

Sq. Yd.
Evoryclay money saver.
Goad choice colort.

S4195
1975 CHEVELLE
Estate Wagon lo ca l l owner car' while radtal tires, atr
cond1 t10n1ng, V 8, automatiC , power steenng and
brakes , rad1o, dark red f mtsh , black v1 nyi 1nterror

HT factory a1r, PS, PB

SAVE ON

INSTALLED
Rogulor $1Ul

1975FORD TORIN04 DR .
52895
Local car clea n v1nyl1ntenor , green fm1sh . good t1res,
rad1o 351 VB automatic. power steen ng and br akes

1972 Ford Galaxie.......... 11395

----

Long
Bottom ,
vtstted
relatives m Cleveland over
the Christmas weekend.
Mr and Mrs. Lloyd Lipps
and Toni , Little Hockmg,
were Sunday dmner guests of
Clint Birch and Leota Su e
Lori Mtddleswart , Cin-

cmnati, Mr. and Mfs Jim
Mtddleswart and Janet, Mrs.
Luctlle Adams and Mrs.
Faruue Durst, local, were
recent VtSIIors at the home of
Mrs. Nell M1ddleswart.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Van
Meter and MISSY. Pomeroy,
and Mr and Mrs. Mik e
Evans, Alicia, Cindy and
Rylfn , loca l, viSited Mrs. Ada
Van Meter on Saturday.~ . .

Apple Grove
Sunday guests of Mrs. Eula
Wolfe ·and Aaron were Mr
and Mrs M Hopkins and
Heather of Akron, Mr and
MrS' Jerry Coughlln, Knstln
aod Matt, Ne w Hampshire,
Mr. and Mrs. V1ctor Wolfe.
daughter Vickt and fnen d,
Mr and Mrs Austin Wolfe,
Jerry and Amy of Ractne,
Mr aod Mrs. Kenneth Theiss
of Lancaster, M&lt; and Mrs
John Ord of Wtl~esv11l e , Mr
and M" .rack Ord, daughter

ll"Lh, J.lt ;\

· ·14u

Letart, W

va ~. Mr ~·· ~· ,wl t :,, Jim Le WIS,

Mr and Mrs. Stanley llurrlon
of Point Pleasa nl

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
992 -2174

Bess1e Gra ham

MANY MPREI

1974 P~. Fury Ill·· ••• •••••12495

Buy your next car from the friendly dealer. Don't forget
we have the sharpe£! pencil in town . See Ceward
Calvert, J . D. Story or Bill Nelson .

spendmg the week w1th Mrs

2 Dr HT, factory a1 r PS , PB, v1ny l roof

1-10.1

'

1~7~ M~~J~~o ~o~~~~." l :lt-w
; 7he:-:e71 a:-:nc:d:;;cr"'u"""e"'c::o"'nt"'ro"l - 14695

children of Newark are

1974 Ford Galaxie ......... 12695

Slt)II5-SOIRIT

1973 OPEL GT
'2995
4 speed, 4 cyl1 nder green w1th black 1nter10r', must be seen to be
apprectated

Mr and Mrs J umor Pay ne
and famtl) spent Chn st mas
wtth Mr and Mrs Bob Welsh
of Bell Center, Ohto
Mrs Darold Graham a nd

V 6, Automat1c

mileage

1974 CAMARO TYPE LT _ _ _ _ _ '3895
Blue w1th black vtnyl top, AM radto PS , P B

Harrisonville
Society News

lllllllNUII

.

i.... ,...

RIDENOUR

1974 Ford Mustang 11...... !2495

IEPUCQUT

SUNBIRD -~---:~':1

14495
1975 BUICK LeSABRE
2 br HT, Red w11 h white 11'1nyl top, AM-FM fape , cruise an d tilt
wheel Loaded
12995
1975 DODGE DART
2 Dr 6 cyl1nder Jspeed , brown buckskin mtenor e)(tra clean

Year's Day dinner guests of

V 8 auto ma tic, pqwer steertng and brak es air

IIIIIIIOWU 11001$

1976 PONTIAC

Mr and Mrs . Vern Story and
son John
Mr W1llte Qutvey VISited
Sunday wtth Mr and Mrs
Harry Stahl

1976 Chevy 2 ·Dr........... 3995
-~~~~·­
$111111

From

1 Dr Cpe , 5 Speed transmiSSIOn, one owner and e)(t ra low

1

1

lloloii!IOW... UIIia

These

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS

Bill Perry, Athens were New

4 cy lmder, .4 speed, AM FM 19_7 6 Chevy 2 Dr

1976 Pontiac LeMans .......14495

Used Cali like

Milan , spent a week w1th

1976 Ford Pinto ........... 12695
l1111llliDII Senicn

Is Bound To Be Better With Quality

thetr grandparents, Mr and
Mrs. James Gilmore. Mrs.
Sandy Dorst , Mtlan, spent
New Year 's Day wtth her
parents, Mr and Mrs James
Gilmore
Mrs. Georgia Otehl vtstted
recently wtth Mrs Nel lie
Tracy, Ball Run
Mr and Mr s Norm a n
Scha efer, loca l, Mr and Mrs

Metal li c blue tmlsh, wh1te v1ny l lop w1th blue
leather ~nten or , full power , rad1al tires , trlt wheeL
cru1se control AM ..FM ste reo tape, I owner

DI.RE~8JMnRSIICroe-

~nQ~~illffi\]

t

, [:r ~

1975 Uncoln Coupe

,~~Ti,WrM'

Was A Good Year But 1977

Mr and Mr s Ed Bauer ,
Manon , spent several days
With Mrs Bauer's parents ,
Mr and Mrs. Dtck Karr
Lisa .and Deann Dorst ,

A RfAL SfAUTY

'6.95

19'76

relatives m Colu mbus

::::...:::=:...--

ASSORTED

TEAFORD

held tn the basemen!
R~v
and Mrs Ht cks
tecently ca lled on Mr and
Mrs Dtck Karr and Mrs
Nelite Tracy.
Mr. Pearl Ja cobs ha s been
reported til.
Mrs Bertha Parker spent
Chnstmas and a week w1th

fP\1__&amp;'-l~

CARS

CARPET SHOP

,

Due to a faulty furnac e ;1t
the Free MethodiSt Church

DAN THOMPSON FORD

RACINE

AWrDrm

'

USED

CONST.

~

START .'77 RIGHT

News Notes

PI
,
MUST" ''"
AND
MAVERICK BUYERS HEkC IS
YOUR CHANCE TO 6WN A NEW
1977 GAS SAVER. COME IN AND
LET THE FRIENDLY SALESMEN
MAKE YOUR CAR BUYING EASY.
CHOICE OF MANY COLORS AND
OPTIONS AT -

RIGGS

7J

. . -,-

Laurel Oiff

Sunday, Jan. 2, servtces were

s~EetALS

I!

THE NEW

FORD

AT

Business Se;,ices,

, REGULATIONS

Tr•e ,Publitl'ltr reurves
the right to tdlt or reltct

THE ClOSER you ~00~.
THE BETTER WE lOOK

GREAT BUYS

I:

NOW accepltng prono students , ONE liEO'RoOi,iAph at VILLAGE IF YOU hove o service to offer
MANOR rn Mrddleport for $104
wont to buy or sell something
begtnners, entermed•otes admonthly plus el.-c or $130 1n
oe looktng for work •
or
any acu deemed ob .
vanced students Call 992·
fectl onat The publi Sher
eluding elec LOWER RATES lor
whatever
you II get rnults
2270.
will not be respons ible for
SENIOR CITIZENS Convenrent
foster wllh o Sentrne! Wont Ad
more than one Incorrect
to shoppmg on Ttmd ond Mill
Co11992 2156
I
at
D
&amp;
J
House
of
•nstrtlon
Sts. in Middleport Brand new
' Fobrt&lt;:s , Iorge blanket pteces
RATES
hrgh qualrty oportmenta SH
For want Ad Strvlct
J
reg Sl .50 lb now $1 00 !b,
lhe manager at Apt 28 or call
5 cents per word one ~ ! Ct , "hed velv&amp;t ple&lt;:es reg
992·7721
An Equal Housrng
tnsertion
: $2 5o lh now $2 DO lb I loblo
Min imum Charge Sl 00
Opportunl t ~
I
of
pgly
._.,,t
r&amp;g
S2
-49
yard
1~ cents per word three
now $1.39 yard 1 mtle below 2 BEDROOM trotler real niCe AUCTION START your new year
consecut ive Insertions.
Phone 992 332-4 adults only
76 cents per word siX 1 Mtddl&amp;port on!&gt; P 7
out the avct1on way tn 1977 Fr!
1
consecut ive Insertions .
day , Jon. 7, ol
m Auctror1
fii:EVIVAL
NOW
•n
prog
""SS , thru
AVAILABlE
AT
Rtvers1
de
Apt•
I
25 Per Cent Discount on
Hous. New on
used mer
1;
Jon
9
l't
Pomeroy
We
..
l•yon
bedrm
apartment,
tt
l):,
per
paid ads and ads paid
chan
idse
Consignments
I
Holmes.s
Church
on
Rt.
1"'J
month
1
bedr()('n
opts
$133
within 10 days.
welcomed Horton St , Mason
per month (qual Opportunr ty
CARD OF THANKS
Speaker 15 Rev Wm Owen
Located in langsville
W Va Phone (304 ) n3-5471
AL TROMM
&amp; OBITUARY
I: Otst Supt Spe&lt;tolslngmgeocll
Houstng ~hon e 992 3:273
Box 28-A r
12 DO
for
50 word 1 , evenmg. Pa51o• Rev Oewe~
HOUSE
5
ROOMS
ond
both
m
Rutland,
Ohto -4571S.
"We
are"
H.,.lnlmjJM~
•
I
Kmg IOVIfes the publiC
Ptf'. C61~) U2 -2409
Roc me area Phone 992 5858
Eecft aadltlonal ward 3 1
FrH Est.
Work Guar.
We &amp;ellver
cents
GUN SHOOT ot the Roc1ne Gun
Rutland 12 9 1 mo. 742·2321
12 22 4mos
I LIND ADS
Club every Sunday 1 pm VERY NICE 12 ~ 65 mob1ie home
for rent located tn Mason ,
Add.Jtlanal 25c Charge
Assort&amp;d meats
W Vo Adulrs only No pets
per Advert isement
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday
OFFICE HOURS
Contact Sondra CW2 5693 Mon
830 am to 5· 00 pm
Jcmuad 9, starling ot noon
day through Fr1doy 9 td l3 p m
J bedroom5 , I'h baths Iorge hv
PROFESSIONAL
Deily, a 30 a rn to 12 oo
Rutlon leg1on Hall
•ng room . dtnmg room and kttNoon Saturday
chen fully carpeted Phone
PHOlOORAPHY '
PMne today 992 2156
f . SHOOTING MATCH 1ust off Rt 7
992·3129, or'992·54lol
, by poss neor Rock Sprmg FurSale
Aerial
Cemetery Every Sundo y 12
59 acres 6 room house both
NOTICES
Racine.
Ohio
Commercial
COAL hmes!Gne, and calc1um
I noon
portly carpeted two out
ATTN :I I
ch lorrde ond calcium bnne lor
butldlrr
gs
dug
basement,
Schools
ALL HOUSEWIVES
RACINE FIRE Dept wrll hove o
RUBBER
dust control .and specrol mtxtng
one-third tillab le mm erol
All Yard Sales , Rummage,
Gun Shoot every Saturday nrght
Weddings
sa
lt
for
formers
Mom
Street
nghts
located
near
Danvtlle
Porc,h and Basement Porch
6 p m ot their br.u!drng rn
BACK
CARPETING
Pomeroy
Oh1o
or
phone
992
and Basement Sales, etc
Reduced for qu rc; k sole,
Boshon 01-tro
must be paid In advance
3891
KEN GROVER
$23 500 Phone 742·2766
Get yours· irt early by
1971
HONDA
CL450
12
000
HOUSE 3 B R bath ! r dtntng
stopping by our office at
Squart Yard Installed
PHOlOGRAPHY
m1les , itSSy bar crash bars
The. Daily Sentinel , 111
Loot and :l'ound
and kitc hen gas heat bose
Dav1d P~rsons , Owner
Court St or wntlng Bo~~:
pull bock handle bori, new lire
ment 2 cor goroge Iorge fen c
!6141 m.m5 ,
129 , Pomeroy , Oh io -45769
REWARD FOR the return of lodtes
ond seals Scrambler srde
ed yord with garden Spot See
949·2814
Chester.
Ohio
with your rem ittan ce . .
purse ond contents lost 1n
p1pes $650 Call 949-24BO
at 2-42 Condor St Pomeroy
11 -.4:.1 mo
10·17·1 moiPd)
Roclne area Phone 949 25-46
Ohro
POTATOES and pumpktns C W
LOST Beogle mole, brown head,
Proffitt Portland Ohro Phone 3 BEDROOM home breezeway
wh•te top on tori answers to
6&lt;3 ns•
ond goroge around 1 acre
nome of Wheeler Lost on
located In Arbaugh Ed1t1on Tup
Sumner Rood reword Phone COAL for sole- Open 6 day s per
PERSONs BODY Shop 26 Rodroad
per s
Plo1n s
Oh 1o
week
and
e"entngs
For
further
Fred Karshner 985 3874
St , M1dd leport would l1ke to
SIS 500 Phone 992 7292
rnformohon
call
(614
)
367, ~;)38
lleaH!l~jaMor SaJ¥~-~- For' ••J.AJ!'~•hlons.
rem rnd customers tho! Dec 31 LOST REO lmh Setter mole
NEW
3
bedroom
house
burl!
m
'
HOMESITES for sale 1 oue and
mattresses, padding. Ideal
rs the lost doy ro toke ad
vtc rn1ty of Hemlock Gro\le area APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
k1 tchen bath ond 1h Phone
up Mtddleport nea r Rutland
for campers. Variety of
vantage of the pomt 1obs oil
STATE
R
OUTE
669
PHONE
9 months old Coll992 2433
742·2306 or contact MtiO 8 Hut
Call992 7481
lsizes.
over m 1 color $100. 2 tone
WILKESVILLE I6U] 669 3785
chtson Rutland Ohro
$125 wrihout body work Stop STOLEN FROM Shade Ohto area FUllER Brush Products tor .sole
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths , Velvets , nylon prints,
No v
1
197 6 WoBc~ r
1n or phone 985.4174 lor ap
all elec, 1 oclre Mtddleport
herculons. vinyl solids, and
Phone 992·3&lt;t 10
· -4 ACRES UNDEVELOPED land near
Coonhound block .. ond whtt~
pomtment
dose to Rutland Phone 992
fancy prints, accessories.
mme&amp;
reduced
Ph one
brown ears brown spot bet CAMPER $600 AI so norse
742 28o7
NOTICE Pra ll s Meat Mkt
ween ears age 3 -4 years rtght
trader S450 Phone (6 14 ) 698
74SI
SALtES
(Pleasanton Meat Processrng
HOUSE
AND lot 128 laurel St
SMALLform lor so le 10'Yo down
m.111
eye waters hod surgery below
3290
Inc
)
Custom
slaughtenng
and
Pomeroy Ohro Contact Doc
owner fmonced Monroe Co un ~
Pt. EUeasant
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon. 1t)
the eye name Joe $300
processmg Retod wholesa le
Eblen
ly, W Vo Phone 1304) 772
Ph. 675·3469
reword for return of dog wrlh PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sto
Others rally to your cause today
No cppmnmcnt necessary Coli
Iron Phone 247 2684 after 5
3102orl30.1772-3227
9:30·5:00
Dotlly
rnlormolton that wtll convtcl
You present your case In an I n ~
3 BEDROOM FULL basement
(61.4 } 593 8655 , hours 9 00 till
pm
persons who stole htm Dog
lerestrng manner and you firmly
COUNTRY
farm
land
wrth
seclud.I---T.:,t::,ll:.;8:.;.l..000l:i
~F±rl;:d:::I!:YS~...;..ol
natvrol
gos
forced
otr
furnace
6 00 7 Pomeroy Road Athens
now belteved to bern Pomeroy FENCE POSTS $1 00 Also,
bel1eve m what you say
Iorge ponneled lr11mg room
ed woods water and good oc .,.
Qh
West Vrrgtnto area Contact
frrewood th ree-fourtn ton
trreploce woll to wall carpet
cess
m Monroe Count ~ W Vo
AQUARIUS !Jon. 20· fob. 19)
Roberf Webb Rt 1 Guysvrlle
ptckup loads d&amp;ltvered $25
e~cvpt hoil, modern k•tchen
$1 000 down &lt;all (304 ] 772
When 11 comes to old ~fashloned
or phone 1614)696 1263
wtthm 25 mile s Phone
lots of cobmels Steel srdlng
3102 ool30.1772 3227
horse tradmg , you're a tough
98S4197
Condor Street, Pomeroy Phone Commerctol property appro:oo: 17 MOBILE Home Repo1r Elec. ,
NOTICE
OF
cu stomer to beat Toda y,
plumbtng and heating Phone
m 3706
APPOINTMENT
H I w , ~...
HEAVY GAUGE I Beams and H
acres, level land !ocat e~ at
bargaining IS fun , a nd It's
992
5.858...:_
,
Case No. 22002
e P an""
Beams for sole 8 9 , 10 tnch HOUSE FQR SAL~ 5 rooms and
Tuppers Ploms on OhiO Route
profitable tor yo u.
Estate of FLOYD WAKELY ,
Phone 992 7034
ELECTRONIC T V CLINIC , New
both ocre of land Phone
7 Phone (61-4 ) 667 6304
SOMEONE NEEDED to stay wrth
.
TV shop Elec lronrc T V Chnrc
Pll\CES (Fob. 20· Morch 20) Deceased
742
2769
my mvohd husband and son
Nottce rs hereby grven that
NEW A.M FMStereo· rod to 8 track
Serv•ce
coli , $5 9S Color 8 &amp; W
Delegate authority at every op~ Fred Wakely of 3909 Clear
Phone 992 32541
:l
tope combrnotron S1'JC195 or GOOD HOME for sole near shop
ante nna systems stereos eft
portun1ty to day There's no wa te r Dr1ve 1 Colu mb us, Oh10,
terms Phone 992 3965
ptng oreo Complete fmoncrng
572 South Thrrd Mtddleport
reason not to s1nce others will has been dul y appoJnteod
to responstble party Phone
Phone 992 6306 Corry tn and
STEREO AM FM FM stereo rodro
resent 11 tf you don't let them Admm1strator of ihe Estate of '\\'mted to Buy
992 5786
Floyd Wakely , deceased , la te
8 track tope combmohon
so ~ e~oneL
hel p
of Me1gs County , Ohro
Balance due $104 20 or terms
HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex
Cred tto rs are requ rred to OLD furn iture te e hoKes brass
Phone 992-3965
beds wall telephones and
file the tr cla1ms w1th sard
covol rng sepl 1c system s
pads or complee households USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
ftduc1ary wrth1n thr ee months
dozer, backhoe dump truck,
Dated th1S 77th day of
Wn te M D Miller , Rl 4,
Belor t3008 Sk1dder T1mbeqock
ltmestone , grovel, blacktop
December 1976
Pomeroy Ohro Coll992 77f.IJ
pov1ng Rt 1-43 Phone 1 (bl-4)
360 Gra pple Skrdder John
Vtrgil
B
Sr.
,
Reallor
Manntng D Webster
o98
7331
Deere
360
Crawler
Locider
wog
216
E.
Second
Street
Judge CASH po1d for all makes and
.
M-=tto !l urglcol
~IVER VIEW - 3 large
court ot Common Pleas,
mode ls Or-mob e homes fork s Bush 60
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
EXCAVATING
BAC
KHOES
You've lea rne d some very
Chtpper Contact Don Groves
bedtooms , bath. dining
Proba te Orvtston ,,.,. Phone area code 61 423 9531
Phone 992·332i
DOZER TRENCHER LOWBOY
valuable lessons tn the past and
Me1gs Coun ty , Ohro
or lyons Equ rpment Co Inc
room , large kitchen ,
DUMP TRUCKS SILL PULLINS
TIMBER Pomeroy F rest Pro
th ts yea r you wtll put them to (1 2) 31 111 7 1.4 Jtc
C~rclevtlle Ohro 43113 Phone
basement, natu ra l gas
PHONE 992 2.478 DAY OR
DEXTER
Large
lot
on
ducts
Top
prrce
r
stondmg
16141596 4769
good use Because of thiS the
furnace, hardwood floors
NIGH T
small
brook
,
3 bedroom
sowftmber
Coli
en!
Hanby
months ahead co uld be very
TWO 900 lb steers 2 mtJO:ed
ASKING ONLY SI2,5DODO
mobile home and g~rage
1 446-8570
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL SeWtl'\g
rewarding
Hereford herfers to freshen
BRICK - 2 bedrooms.
with
'h
ba1h
Mochmes cleaned oiled ond
COINS CURREN '( tokens old
around Feb 1 rear wheel
(Are you a Capr~corn? Bsrmcs
bath , dln1ng room. t1ntshed
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
adjusted
$5 98
Sewtng
pocket
watches
ond
chams
wetghts lor Formoll A tractor
Osol has wntten a special Astraback
porch,
natural
gas
Nice
balh,
modest
home.
Center
,
Mrddleport
,
Ohr~
~
ver
and
gold
We
nee~
196-4
stl
Phone 8-43 2353
Graph Letter for you For your IN TME COMMON PLEAS
kitchen, full basement and
furnace , garage, lovely
COURT ,
ond older Stiver coins \uy sell
OIL
AND
GAS
lurnoce
serv1ce
and
copy send 50 cents and a lang PROBATE OIVt.culN
gas furnace $5,500
level lot. $6,9DO.DO
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley SCHOOL SEWING Mochrn e~;
ports
Tro1
ler
and
homes
2.4
self-addressed, s tamped MEIGS COUNTY ,OHIO
Sr nger&amp; m walnut consolelle
742·2331 .
HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
NEAR
VETERANS
ho ur servrce Phone 8.43 2165
envetope to Astro-Gta ph, P 0
$.46 Phone 992 51-46
bedrooms with closets,
MEMORIAl HOSPITAl CASH •• I for 1unk cars Frye s
Box 489, Radio C1ty StaNon, New IN THE MATTER• OF
modern
bath,
eat
m
New lovely spilt entrance
SE
TTL
EMENT
OF
AC
Truck and Auto 24 HOUR
York, NY 10019 Be sure to ask
~~ ~~;:~-kl1chen
and
full
basement
COUNTS,
home,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
WRECKER
SERVICE
t
Phone
for Cspncorn Volume 1 )
F
PROB AT E COU RT ,
$20,000.
742-2081
-:...
dmlng
sewing
room
or
den,
MEIGS CO UNT Y, OHIO
Wtll do odd JObs rootrng po1n
NEAR
ROCK
SPRINGSOne
good
used
Remtngton
room.
util1ty
room,
large
Accounts and vouchers of NOW BUYING Scr ap Pomemy
trng gutter work Phone 992
$50
One floor 3 bedroom home,
Chltn Saw
recreation room, garage,
th e
tol tow rng
na med
Auto Recyclmg htgh pmes
7409
•
One
good
used
McCullough
1 n1ce
bath
,
gas.
F
A
fiduciaries
have
been
filed
tn
carpeled,
located
on
double
pard auto bodres motors
Tbe Almanac
Chain Saw
S75
the Probate Cour t, Metg s
WILL DO plumbmg healing roof.
furnace and level lot
scrap , tron metals botterres
lot S40.000.DO
·One good used Hom elite
United Pre58 lnlenlaUoual
County, Ohro , for approval
rn g
remode ltn g, free
$22,000
op&amp;n
8
trll
-4
30
Monday
tluu
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
Chain Saw
set tlemen t
$150
est ima tes
Coli Charles
Today is Friday, Jan. 7, the a nd
SYRACUSE
4
lots.
3
Saturday Old 33, 1ust above
CASE NO 1.4 ,360 F1rst and
New Co ·OP Water Sof lot. 3 bedrooms, d.nlng
Smdotr
985 .41 21
forrgrounds Pomeroy, Ohto
all
electric
home,
bedroom
seventh day of 1977 with 358 to F1nal Account of Pa ul E
.
teners
room. 2 baths , utility
W1ll also ptckup cars Phone
Ktoes , Gua rdran of th e Person
n1ce kitchen and dlntng,
GI)N STOCKS re l1 n1shed Phone
model vc .XVI Only 1279's
follow.
space,
natural gas furnace,
and Estale of Onetda Ward , an
9'12·6337
One qood used G1bson S1de992 7166
bodacious view of nver,
The moon is between its full In competent Person
carpeting, extra building
lby-S1de Refttgerlfor 5200
S37,500
CASE NO 15,030 Ftrst and WANTED CHIPWOOD1 poles
WILL CARE lor elderly woman m
use(l for office or storage.
phase and last quarter .
' LINCONL HTS. 2
Ftnal Account of Sybil
mOKIUmum diameter 10 mches
my home Phone 9922.3_14
$22,000 00
The morning stars are Eber.sbach
Pome~ Landmark
, Trustee under the
on largest end $8 00 per ton
bedroom home with nice
RUTLAND4
acres
wllh
Mercury, Mara and Saturn. Will of William E Stansbur y,
Bundled slabs $6 00 per ton 9._ Jeck W. Corsey , Mgr.
balh. dining, basement and
older home, 3 bedrooms,
delrvered to Ohro Pallet Com
The evening stars are Deceased
lurnllure.
$12,900
Phone
992·2181
CASE NO 20,781 Fourth
bath ,
d 1n1ng
room,
pony Rt 2, Pomeroy Phone
Venus and J~piter.
Account or Paul E Kloes,
GALLIA.MEIGS LINE- 6
aluminum
sidmg,
out
992
2669
WICK HOMES ts expanding to oil
rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
Those born on this date are Guardra n of the Perso n and
cellar, storage building,
areo of Ohto NO FRANCHISE
Estate of Amy Esth er OLD TYPE peddl e sewtng SINGER GOLDEN Tou&lt;h N SEW
nice
kitchen,
gas,
F
A
under the sign of Capricorn. Gra ham , an In compet ent
FEE Brg mone y opportumty.
trailer hookup to renl.
does
tl
alii
Z1
g
zags
sews
on
furnace, and rural water
mochtn
e
type
used
1n
shoe
M11lard Fillmore, ,13th Person
homes merchondrsed from
knrfs · outomollc buttonholer
$15,500 DO
shop
Coll742
2656
CASE
NO
21. 097
2
000
5
2
your model home For free
president of the United Seconct
R U•T LA
makes de11gns , many other
. ND _ Garden ,
Current Account of
d&amp;Oier pockets, send to WICK
feotures Phone99:2 5146
States, was born Jan. 7, 1800. Robert J Lew1s Guardian of
WANT
TO
SELL?
!TIME
utility bulld.ng , garage and
HOMES PLANT 125 South
the Guardianship Estate of
IS MONEY) LET US SELL
On this day in history :
FREIGHT
DAMAGED
,
October
19
2
bedroom home with bath
Mtch1gan Avenue Coldwater,
Ltllra n Stteff
YOUR PROPERTY NOW.
1976 Ztg 1ag seweng moch.nes
and gas heat. $11,000
In 1789, George W881iington
M1ch1gan 49006
CASE NO 21 275 F tr St
!SERVING MEIGS
buttonhole, monogram etc
LOTS- Nice large wooded
was elected as the first Ann ual Accoun t of William J 1969 Novo , extra sharp new
Hobstetter, Trustee ot the
pomt bucket seats 01r shocks
Or.tginally $179 95 wtll sell for
and cleared ones. Sl,SOO.OO
COUNTY FOR SEVERU
president of the United Trust
$59.95 cosh or te1ms Phone
Created by Item Erg hth
mags Phone 949·2480
YEARS)
992·SI&lt;6
up
States.
of th e Last Wtll and Testament
HENRY E. CLELAND
1969
CHEVROLET
B
tsquotne
1966
of
L1
nn
re
B
Taylor
,
Deceased
In
1927,
regular
BROKER,
CAS E NO 21,581 F1rst and
BUJCK Electro, 225 2 Rokon FIREWOOD PHONE 742 2131 or 'NOW IS THE TIME TO
transatla ntic te lephone Fma l Account of Joe Lantr
trrolbrke5 Phone 9.49-2432
98S·36I 3
PUT THAT PROPERTY
APPRAISER,
PLEASURE HORSES and pon ies,
service began between New E ~~:ec ulor of Ihe Last Wil l and
also wrli buy horses and
196.4 CHEVY 'It ton prckup good NEW SNOW '"•• 7DO ' 15 ON THE MARKET . CALL
Testament
of
FrankE
Lan
ce
CONSULTANT
York and London.
Goodyears Custom ,extro grtp"
991-3315.
pontes Phone (614 ) 698·3290,
shape 1n good runnmg condt
Deceased
ply nylon cord mtertubes ore L.:~;::::;_______.J
992·2259 or 992·2568
In 1972, President Nil:m
CAS E NO 21 ,903 First and
Ruth Reeves
lion
~ew
t1res
Phone
steel and packaged v~ pnce
Fmal Account of Margaret
992·399•
announced his intention to Ella
RISINj"'"5lAR- KENNEL. boaodtng
Lewis, Admlnlstratrl)( of
S80 Cootoct r.2 2538
I1U1 for a second term. He the Estate of Charles c 1971 AMC Motodar. 4 door
indoor and ou tdoor Grooming
oil breeds. complete samtory
automatiC p s ond p b , V 8 CONSOlE STEREO ond albums
overwhelmingly defeated Lew1s, Oece.,sed
Ttlt bock rocker. gold w1th
Unless e~~:cep t lo n s are fil ed
facilities
Cheshrre Phone {614)
new
front
hres
ond
battery
Democratic Sen . George thereto, said accounts wil l be
vrbrotor and ~eat , 10 Cas'!
367·02'12
Make good work car $550
...::::.:..::.:::~----­
McGovern that November . for hea ring before said Court
pocket kntves btrdcoge on
Phone 949 2660
on the Sth day of February,
BEAGLE PUPS and tromed
LANGSVILLE- S. ecros modern 3 bedroom Ph slary
stand Phone 992-6021
1977. at which time said ac 1971 FORD BRONCO w'lh 302 V 6
farm house with fin place, sevenl fruit .trees,
Beo~f~s Pholl8 74"2:_:·2=
52::1'-~
coUnt5 w111 be considered and
auxi liary gas tonk fvll cob BIG DEAL DAYS SALE make your
epproKimalely 11 ocres tllloblo, belonce In )Mslurt.
5 WEEKS OLD whtte mole llny toy
co nl1nued from dav to dav
best
deal
before
January
28
Worron elec wmc h, Prrced
Locotod near longsvlllo. Price reduced lor quick sale
unttl flnll lly dts posed of
poodle pupptes S.lleng one
1977 on Moss.ey F&amp;rSJuson troc
.$2100 Coll9•9 W9
S22,5DO.
Any person tnlerested may
half pr1c&amp; wtthout pop•r. $75
tor• balers and Implements
file written e~~:cept!ons to said 1%8 PlYMOUTH small V 8
.ca~ ~()Oiville, I6U)667 3915 •
No 1 Cash Rebates SIOO to
accounts or to m a Hers per
orr
condrhonmg
SPECIAl.3
bedroom
and
attached
garoge,
ti&gt;rat
outomohc
$500.
No
2
Coih
Rebohts.
~0
tammg to the e)(ecution of the
ONE YEAR old wh1te mole
Vou won't tmd o cleaner car for
eleclrlc home under construction on '12 acre lot Owner
to $250, wtth no finance (horge
t.-ust, not less than five dllys
Ch ihuohuo, 3 yeor old mole
$495
Phone9'12·5169
ttll May 1 dependtng on pro
will finish In JO days for buyer or will sell " as Is". May
pnor to the da te sel tor
German Sheperd Phone
hearing
ducts No 3 No Ftnonce charge
take trade. Locatod near Chesler.
7•2·3162.
.
I
POMEROY. 0 .
JEEP truck ' 4 wheel dnve
MAANNING 0 . Webster, 1968
ttll July I on tractor Implements
1969
Ro
ler
,
6
cyl
1ton
$2'50
pH.
Judge
or Sept 1 on balers Come on rn '
dord, good condthon $850
Common Pleucourt
COOLVILL,E- Nice mod brick homo conlalnlngthroe
and make your best deal now
Phone
985
~227
Probate Division
:llnternational
bedrooms,
dining room, living room wlfh flrf!&gt;lece, full
Shinn's
Troctor
Sales
Leon
Metgs County, Ohio 1974 INTERNATIONAL truck
with
garage, large front porch, not. gas.
basement
I Harvester
W.Vo
Phone
(30•1•58
1030
(1) 7. 11c
.
automatic V8 p s.. Rtchord
furnace,
city
water
and well waler, a beOullful home1
POLOROID SX70 camera SIOO
Fett y Ru tland or 742 2B18
wllh approK. l 112 acros of land, lrull troes and shade
Phone
992·7354
'NN
ldta
E
q
u
:
:
:
J
MtCullol;ll
Chain
lrNs surrounding II. Plenty ol garden space: gllodJ
"
APPLES, FITlPATRICK Or&lt; hard
Saws
area close by, located In Coolville, Ohio. Priced
fishing
State Route 689. Wllkesvrlle
"iu'lreilto]\.;...:
132,000. Call now.
ot
only
Phone(6,.)669
3785
'
.
ONE BEDROOM apt furntshed
CHESTER - 113 acrn !arm. 80 ac,... tillable land,
Phone Randy Hunt, 992 6197
HARD WATER
nice 2 story ftrm houH, 7 rooms end bath. all
ofter6 p m
hardwood !loon end basement . Barn and other
PROBLEMS?
outbuildings,
2 ponds. A nice laying farm priced to go.
Gibson. Hardwick, Speed Queen and some
Located near Chester, call lor appf.
soften &amp; amdlllool your
Westinghouse.
.
3
AND
4
RM
furnished
and
un·
water with a C&lt;Hp wllor
Refrigerator$, Ranges, Washers &amp; Dryers.
CHESTER- - Evor drNm of owning your own
furntshed opts Phon• 992- sononor, - 1 UC·XYI .
gollcauroe? Hel't's your chan c. lorY"" or ycur lrlends
Brand new models, rtlrltfrotors, lrHzors, Wlsherl,
S.34
, lo own a nice rolling golf course, 50112 ocros, 9 gr-s.
Now Only
drvers, ranges. All lrt' felturt-p.lcktd lo ll'lt YOU
COUNTRY ~ob1le Home Pork , Rl
nlco modern club house. outbuilding with all spraying
work &amp; lime , Some unlls ere slightly screlchod. Allert
33 ten miles north of Pom•roy
L.,
us
lest
your
.wet••
and
-ding equipment, noeds some mowing ·and a
pncod to ..11. Set IMm toclty ol :
Lorge lots w1th concrete polloi
llftlt rop~lr - k on golf course. This could be
Sidewalks , runners and off
·TV&amp; APPLIANCE '
purchor.od will\ tho 113 acros listed abo ve and
street porkrng Phone992·7•09
developed
Into a beautiful 11 hole gotl toUI'lt, c.ll lor
'
SERVICE
FUR:NISHED two bedroom opt ,
eppf.
adults only No pets MidRecine !4,·202Q
Cltttter 91i-JII1
dleport Phone991·l874
.CALL JIMMY DE EM 949·23q
For SltUfd•w, J1n. a, 1177
ARIES (Morch 21·Apt11 11) Thl!
can be an Interestin g day,
because you get enjoyment cut
of whatever ycu do Vou even
have a way of doing your work sc
II becomes lun
TA URUS (April 20·MOJ 201
You'll be a lot better off today It
)"Uu step back from a project
w hic h has you stymied
Eliminating the pressure may
give you a fresh approach
GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20)
Others f1nd you dependable today and they know things will be
done properly You can make
many pornts
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Because you're not one to
overlook small amounts today,
they'll add~ up for you You'll end
up with a sizeable sum Others
may not
lEO (July 23·Auo. 22) Don't
behave In a selhsh manner . but
try to direct your efforts so that
you do reap some benefits You
must look out for No 1 today
VI~GO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) ,Be
patient today The clock rs In
yo ur corner You'll gain control
over things that seemed to be
slipptng away tf yo u re not lm·
petuous .
liBRA (Sopl. 23·0cl. 23) You
know somethtng that would Interest others m your circle Yo u d
be wise to keep tt to yourself
The mformatron cou ld cause
more harm than good.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nav. 22)
You r tho.ughtfulness delights
people today You 'll remember
to do little things always ap~
prectated but of1en neglected
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc.
21) There's a world of difference
m your outlook today When you
set out to do something, all the
pieces Wtll fall tnto place

11-The DaUySentlnel,1diddleport-Pom~roy, 0., Friday, Jan. 7.1~,.,

7\ TOleS
1 '~

Rodney and Trevor Calltng
tn the afternoon were Mr and
Mrs Dale Hamson. Scott
~nd Jodt
Vtstttng New Year's Day
wtth Mr ~n d Mr s Roy
Brtckles were Mrs PauleUe
Marlene
1 Harr1son and Mrs
Harrison
Mr and Mrs Eugene Smtih
had as Chnstmas vtsttors Mr
a nd Mrs. Roy Roush and
daughler , Mr and Mrs. Steve
Smtih and Mr and Mrs
Wa ll ace
Hatfi eld
and
daughters
Mrs Eltzabeth Murray had

The Ktngs bury MISSIOnary Mrs John Walter Dean wer e
Club of the Carleton Church Mr and Mrs Gary Saunders
had tis regular meeting at the a nd Sally, Mr and Mrs.
hom e of Mrs Neva Ktng Garold Gtlkey and fam1ly of
TUI!"sday The meetmg was Athens
opened wtth prayer by Mrs
Mrs Helen Oats who has
Yvonne Young and lhe been til is Improved Recent
ChriStmas Story was read visttors were J ohn, Amta and
laken from Luke Chap 2 Jeremy Dean, Mrs Elizabeth
Those members who en joyed Murray and Ra lph Carl ,
a wonderful Chnstma s local
dinner prepared by the
Mr and Mrs John Dean,
hostess Mrs Neva King were Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
Mrs Janeth Beal , Mrs Dean and Jeremy were
Dea n ,
Mrs Chnstmas dtnner guests of
Vtrgtnt a
EliZ ~ beth Murray. Mt s
Mr. and Mr$ . Kenn eth
Mary Lou Houdashelt, Mrs Markins at Racine Other
Karen Murray, Mrs Amta guests were Mr and Mrs
Dean, Mrs Yovonne Young , .Robert Retd , Mrs Vtrgmia
Yevete Young and Jeremy Smtih, Mr and Mrs Walter
•
Dean
Terrell, Btlly Kendall, all of
Vtsiltng recenl ly wtth Mr Pataska la , Mrs
Eddte
and Mrs Roger Young were Weekly, MISsy and Shawn of
Mr . and Mrs John Walter Kentucky, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Dean.
Spaun and Shannon of
Recent VISitors of Mrs P omeroy , Mrs
Donn a
Neva Kmg were Mr and Mrs. Young, Ala n and Dale of
Ernest Carr of Harrisonville Mmersvtlle
The Christmas progra m
Spendmg Chrtstmas wtth
which was presented by the Mrs Hazel Arnold and
youngsters of the Carleton Walter were Mr. and Mrs
Church was
pre sented Nathan Arnold a nd sons of
Sunday ntght and was well Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
attended.
McNally and daughters of
Mr Ralph Carr of Vtrgmta Athens . Mr and Mrs Patrick
Beach, Va. vts!ted recently WHiiams and famtly of
with Mrs Neva King enroute McArthur
to Akron where he visited his
Ch(i,l\mas guests of Mr
mother Mrs Jess1e Carr and und Nlrs. Dule Harnson, Jodt
hiS brottler , Mr and Mrs and SL'Otl were Mr. and Mrs
Paul Carr and family •
Farrah
and
Wtlltam
Mr . and Mrs. Norman daughler.
Wood and Ronnie had as
Mr and Mrs Olen HarrlsQ!I_
Christmas visitors Mr. and and Mr . and Mr s Pau(
Mrs . Kenneth Wo od and Hudson and Rhonda , Mr and
daughter of Columbus and Mrs Mark Hudson spent
Mr and Mrs Steve Brickles Chrtsltnas day with Mr a nd
Recent visitors of Mr and Mrs
Phillip
H a~nson ,

as Christmas vtsllors Mr and
Mrs Willtam Murray and son
of Columbus, Mr and Mrs.
Dana Murray , Greg and Ttna
of Rock Springs.

Mem ortal Hospttal
M r and Mrs Doug BIShop
and famtly spent ChriStmas
wtth her parenls, Mr and
Mrs Ray Hart of McArthur
Barbara Set ple, India na
and Bill Setple of Ctnctnnat t
were weekend guests of Mr
a nd Mrs Gene Young

VALUE
RATED

USED CARS
Langsville
Mrs Blatr Cad .,allader
and boys of Seaman spenl
Wednesday and Th ursday
wtth her mother, Elvira Barr,
a nd ca lled on her brothers
a nd famtl1 es, Mr. and Mrs.
Mtchael Barr and Mr. and
Mrs Larry Barr
Several of t he members of
the La ngsville Church v tstted
the rest home at Coolvtlle
Mrs Hazel Wnght, Potnt
Pleasant, W Va , and Rev
and Mrs Bro"n at Rutland
where lhey gave out frutt
trays and sang Chn stmas
carols t he Sunday afternoon
before Chnstmas Gomg on
t he bus were Mr and Mrs
Don Barn ett , Mr and Mrs
Carl Gorby , Mr s E lv1ra
Barr ; Mrs Joa n Council and
Paul Co uncil 1 Mtss Conme

and Came Adkms.
Ch nstmas vtsttors at th e
w 8 Ledlte home were Mr
and Mrs 01ck Rutter and
gtrls , Jult and Jodt, of Fort
Knox, Ky , Mr. and,Mrs John
Merrtll of Columbus, Mr and
Mrs Albert Woodward and
I re ne Barne~ ca ll ed on
Christmas eve
Chnstmas dmner guests at
the Larry Barr home were
Mr and Mrs Howard Thoma
of Pomeroy a nd Mt ss
Patnc1a Thoma of Lo msvlile,
Ky and Mrs Elvtra Barr,
local
Mr. and Mrs Larry Barr,
Dav1d and Mtchelle, and Mrs
Elvtra Barr spent Saturday
a t the home of Mr a nd Mrs
Duane Barr of Oak Hill. Mr

FUNNY BUSINESS

76 Olds 88 HT Cpe., air ................... '5795
76 Ford Granada, PS.. .................... '4695
74 Ply. Duster, PS, air ..................... '2795
7 4 Olds Cutlass Cpe . ...................... '3895

1

74 Vega .GT Cpe . .... ...... ...... ........... 1995
74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr.................... ... '1995
73 Olds 98 Lux. Cpe...... .. ........... .. .. '3495
1
73 Olds 88 Royal, air ...................... 1695
73 Olds 88 4

Dr~

power

&amp; air ........... '1595

73 Ford Galaxie 500 ....................... '2395
73 Buick ReRal HT Cpe .. ...... ........ . :. '3495
73 Olds Cutlass S Cpe., power

&amp; air ......'2795

73 Ford Pinto ............ ................... '1595

72 Olds Toronado, full power .............. '1995
72 Olds 88 4 Dr., air ....... : .............. 12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe ............... ...... '2495
2-72 Ford Torinos 1·2

Dr~ 1-4 Dr........ J

l395

71 Chevy Caprice HT Sedan ........ ....... '1795
71 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp; air ............ 11995
71 Dodge Swinger Cpe .................... '1495
71 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air........... 1795
70 Ghrysler New Yorker ............. Make Offer
70 Ford LTD 4
70 Cut

Ia"ss

8

70 Cutlass 4
69

Ford

68

P~mouth

Dr.,

power

&amp; a1r' .......... . '895

cpe., power ................
. .. 11295
Or.,

V8, Nice .... .. .......... '1495

LTD 4 Dr.,. power
4 Dr., V8

&amp; air............ '795
............. ...... '295

67 Cadillac HT Sedan, air ..................'995
See one of these courteous salesmen : Pflle
Burris, Lloyd Mclaughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business'
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6:00- Til5 o.m . Sat.

992·5342

. (IC.ME .
PEST

.com«CA-,

'
1

and Mrs. M1chael Barr were o! Athens and Mr . and Mrs.
Saturday evemng callers
Homer Wlnn of Dayton are
Mr and Mrs. Michael Barr helping her get settled in her
were Christmas day guests of new home .
ber parents, Mr and Mrs
Mrs. Hazel Wnght has sold
Harley Riggs of Pomeroy R her home and moved to Point
D. Other guests were Mr. and Pleasant near her son, David
Mrs George Brawley and Wright.
daughter , Annette, and Btll
Mr. and Mrs.. Noah
Rtggs of Niles, Michigan .
Chasteen of Middleport hu
Mrs Clara Wells has sold bought the Hazel Wright
her farm and home and property and ue having
moved to Middleport. Her some remodeling clone before
, ststers, M1ss Edna Kennedy moving into the hoUH.

�12- The DIUy Sentinel, MidcDeport-Ptmeroy, 0., Friday, Jan. 7, 1977

LegisJ ~tive leaders, ·Carter, discussing taxes
"Whatever the amount ot
the tax cuts, they must be
e a r t e r s u m m 0 n e d • sidering a pennanent tax completely compatible with
congressional leaders of both · reduction and a one-shot the administration's long parties to Plains today !or temporary cut to provide range goals," Carter said.
"[ think it will take until
consultations on a program of quick economiC stimulation.
tax cuts ranging from $12
·- next fall to work out a basic
biUion to $16 billion to give the
economy a shot in the arm.
The leaders were flying
here from Washington for a
morning meeting with
Carter, me'i{' bers of his
Cabinet and his economic
advisers.
•
A ·high official of the new
administration said Carter's
economic stimulation
address the conference about
. program ranged from $12 re::~se~t~~~~E fr;;-m ::,~~ .local and state laws which
billion to $16 billion, aimed Ohio Attorney General's staff effect senior adults' rights.
primarily at the lower in·
come groups. The official will join Gallia County. Topics to be considered. inProsecutor Joseph Cain ond rl!lde retirement , socia l
biggest tax reductions would United States Senate Com- welfare and emptoyment.
be for persons making $8,000 mittee on Aging Counselor
A question ' and answer
or less.
period
Is scheduled during
Families of .. four making David Affeldt in '!liscussing
the
afternoon
so participants
$6,000 a year would pay no . \he tights of older Americans
will
have
an
opportunity to
at
a
conference
this
Saturday
taxes under one option.
identif
y
special
areas of
9
4
30
Carter reviewed a series of from ' a.m. to ·p.m. on
the Ohio Grande · College. concern. Conference plansuggestions Thursday with Community College campus. ners stressed that the
Nina Hatfield and Steve sessions are open to anyone
Bell, both specialists in interestM in senior citizens'
matters concerning senior concerns.
The " Rights ol Older
citizens in Ohio , will spea k at
the conference according to Americans' ' conf erence is
John Allen, director of Area being sponsored jointly by
Agency on Aging District 7. Rio
Gra nde
Coll egeAllen said the one;:!ay event Communi ty College and the
is planned to help the aging Area Agency on Ag ing
understand their rights under District 7. The Agency serves
federal, state and local laws. senior citizens' programs in
He . explained - that many 10 southeastern Ohio counsenior aaults are not aware of ties.
the personal guarantees
A$2.50 registration fee will
given to them by law.
be charged for senior citizens
Sessions will begin at 9:30 attending;
others may
a.m. with a keynote address pa rticipate for $3.25. The fee
by Affeldt. He has served as Includes coffee and dough- .
counselor for the U.S. Senate nuts in· the morning .and a
Committee on Aging since noon buffet luncheon. ·
that committee was formed
ROYAL CROWN
undor the Kenn edy ad ,
ministration
is expected
BOffiiNG COMPANY to. interpret, and
federal laws
$35,036 PAID
Middl&lt;&gt;n.n•t
relating to older Americans.
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ca in , Hatfield and Bell will Ferguson 's office reported
public assistance payments
to Ohio's 88 counties totaling
$15,550,751.66 in November.

. PLAINS, Ga. (Ul'll _.. President-elect Jimmy

his economic advisers. Later
he told reporters he is con-

Rights of older

Americans topic

tax reform program. But if
"The jobs program has
there are some small alw•ys been my first
elements that obviously are priority," said Carter. "We
going to be a part of the want to go as far as we can In
overall package, one or two assuring that the jobs are
elements should be in- needed, assuming that they
eluded."
can be well ad[\linistered and
The ilresldent-elect made it assuming that they can be
clear he has been in frequent initial~ without excessive
contact' with Congress on the delay ; and what we can't do
genera l outlines of the • JVilh a jobs program, we'll
package to be submitted the make up the difference with a
first week in February .
tax ."
-·
Carter said the deficit
during the next fiscal year
will be enormous _...: as much
as $58 ' billion - but his incoming administration will
ha.ve only a minor effect on it. ·
He also forecast a balanced
budget by the end of his four
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A years in office.
Sources said Carter wsa
$2.85 miillon suit was filed
Thursday in U.S. District
Court. by a Cincinnati man
,whose wife died after taking a
birth
control
pill
. manufactured by the Syntex
Laboratory, Inc., Palo Alto,
Calif.
In the suit, Edward A.
Tenkotte charged Syntex
· with misrepresenting the pill
taken by his wife, Theresa,
who died in June, 1975.
RIO
G!lANDE
He ·claimed the. company
knew the drug, Norinyl, could "Registration for the courses
ca'"'e medical difficulties in we're off ering in area
women over 40, but did not communities has exceeded
our expectations," Dean S.
publicize the fact .
The suit said Mrs . Brown said. Brown, director
Tenkotte, who turned 40 Nov. ol admissions and records at
Grand e · Co llege14, 1974, .began taking the Ri'o
Co ll ege
drug May 9, 1975 under Co mmunity
prescription. Less than ~ (RGC-CC ), was referrin~ to
month later she experienced the seven classes offered for
clotting of a head artery and college credit in locations
required two operations.
within the four co unty
She died 11 days after the Community College district.
Brown indi cated that
second operation.
The suit seeks an award of response for the first sessions
$100,000 . for
personal of classes demonstrated that
damages and $750,000 for
wrongful death. An additional
$2 million is sought in
puniUve damages.

Millions asked

in pill suit,.

Shale gas

Meigs County 's share was
$35,035.75..

•

IS

• •

wrutmg

Rhodes

The Unique
Bible

Memory
System.. ·
memory expert Jerry
Lucas (Omes up with another winner REMEMBER THE WORD!
Jerry ' s accomplishments include All American at Ohio State, plus big wins at the
Olympics. He was a sports star with ihe N.
Y. Knicks. And he co-authored Tlie Memory
Book (SO weeks on N. Y. Times booklist) .
But now, as a Christian, Jerry has written
REMEMBER THE WORD and it's already
a best-seller- 100,000 now in priht (50.000
.sold in 12 weeks)!

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
'0.

.

reduction and tax incentives
for busi,nesS as well as an
ex pended public works
program. They said the
proposals could initially push
the budget deficit up to $75
biUion.
In other deve,lopments,
Carte r announced
nominations to fill eight top
positions in the State
Department, Including LutY
Wilson Benson, form·er
president of the League of
Women Voters to be undersecretary of state for
security assistance.
Press Secretary J ody
Powell said Ca rter would
name his White House staff
early next week.

GALUPOLIS - Under provision ol
Thus far, no claln~~ have been llled
State leg(lllallon enacted over a year ago, a with Gallia County ~1erk .of Courts Mrs.
comprehensive system has been LoulJe Burger.
establtBhed for the payment of com- ·
Fundi for compensation of crime
pensation lor economic loss suffered by victims are provided through a $3 tee
victlma of a crime.
cluirgtd !! part of court costs to traffic
The law alsjJ applies to perscM lt- offendtrs throughout the Slate of Ohio.
tempting to prevent a crinie or who try to
Amende() subetllute House Bill 82
apprehend a person suspected of engaging permll.l on av.ard ol. reparations to be
in criminal conduct, and dependents of made to any claimant, which includes a
such victims, and ,persons who are killed • crime victim, dependent of a crime victim,
as a re.!Ult ol crime.
:third person other than acollateral source.

•

Kr~ger strike.ends .

AT HEAD START - Santa distributed gifts of toy~.
&lt;;andy and fruit to Meigs CoWlty Head Sllirt children at a
holiday paf(y held at the Racine Fire Station for the
children and their parents. Glfis were made possible by
the work of several parents and through the generosity of
the Meigs County business conununity.
·

CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UPI ) Workers returned to the area distribution
center of the Kroger Co. in the Kanawha
Valley today with a new three-year con-,
tract, ending a one-week strike. Drivers
and loaders voted overwhelming Friday
night to raUiy the new pact which provides
them with an hour wage increase of 4.5 per

9'12-2641

.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes today
called on the federal
government to step up
programs to extract natural
gas from shale formations in
Ohio and other Appalactiian
states which he said would
provide an "ample supply" of
natural gas for the Eastern
half of the U.S.
Rhodes two years ago
urged a massive federal gas
resea rch project ·to design
ways to extract the gas from
Devonian shale formations.
He said the acute natural gas
shortage facing Ohio today
might have been averted· if
the government had moved
faster in this area.
. ::.There's a huge supply of
natul'nl gas locked in the
Devonian shale formations
that could provide an ample
supply for homes, schools and
industries in the entire
eastern half of the Untied
States for the next fifty
years," said Rhodes.
"All we need is additional .
research to determine the
best way to get this gas out of
the ground in commercial
quanti lites," said Rhodes .
''The Federal Energy and
Research Development
Administration is not doing
enough work in this area .
The governor said the
amount of federal dollars
going into shale gas research
is " ridiculously low."

days, 6:30 iB'B:30 p.m. in the
Vinton County COIIll)lunity
Building while "Real Estate'
Principles" meets. each
Tuesday evening from 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. in Meigs Jr. High
School.
·
Brown said the classes may
be taken by anyone in the
people were willing to take to 9 p.m. at the Jackson Community College district
advantage of educational Library; Wednesdays, 6:30to for $13 per credit hour.
opportunities when they were 8:30 p.m. in the Vinton
Two other continuing
made available close to their County Community BullQing education classes, which
and Thursdays, 6:30 to 8:30 carry no college credit, are
homes .
available;
" Un" It's still not too late to take p.m. at Meigs Jr. High School also
derstanding Your Insurance"
these classes," Brown said. in Middleport.
Two classes are being will meet for tbe first time
Those Interested may
register any time before 4:30 taught this · winter at the January · 10, 6:30 p.m. at
p.m., Monday, Jan. 10, by . Meigs Mines Administration Meigs Jr. High. Anyone in- ·
ca Uing the admissions office building, "Technical Math terested In that class · may
II" and "Elements of register at the first session.
at RGC-CC (246-0353).
"Dried Flower Arranging"
Courses heing offered in- Supervision. " An additional
11
ln· is offered each.Tuesday from
clude "Chair Caning" which business coursei
is heing taught at three dif- troduclion to Business " · 7 to 9 p.m. on the Rio,Grande
ferent location,s: Tuesdays, 7 meets Tuesdays and Thurs- campus.

DOG FOOD

8AMT03PM- SATURDAY

Pom~roy .

TOWNSHIPS

&amp;II

•

SUNDAY, JANUARY 9, 1977

MIDDLEPORT·POM EROY

Good things ·in
Ohio predicted

0

'

u

t.oc~t l

Meigs Locu l S.

S. D. __ 4,30 2.40

23.50

.I 0

.20 .~0
.20 .20

.40

.20

n. __ _4.:-tO 2.40 22.50 .10 .40 .20

COLUMBIA'

Alexander Loca l S. D. 4.30 1.50 • 2:;.on ·.,.lo

· ..to

.20
.2[)

.20

1.00

30.20

1.00

31.20

1.00
1;00

32.10
3LIO

1.00 1.70

33.30

LEBANON
Enf.ltern Local S. D. _ 4.30 2.50 23.50 .1 0
Sout hern LocalS. D. _ 4.30 2.50 26.00 .1 0

.40 ·.20
.40 .20

.20 1.00
.20 1.00

32.20
34.70

.10

.40

.20

.20

1.00

34.70

Eastern Lbc111 S. D.'_ 4.30 2.50 23.50 .1 0

.40

.20

.20

1.00

32.20

J..ocnl S. D. _ 4.30 2.30 23.50 .10

.40

.20

.20

1.00

82.00

RUTLAND
Meigs l...ocal S. D. ___ 4.30 2.10 22.50 .10
Ru tl und Village --~ - 4.30 1.00 2'l.50 . I0

.40
.40

.20

.20

30.80
5.60 35.20

LETART
So utlu~m

LocaJ ·s. D. _ 4. 30 2.50 26.00

OLIVE
. ORANGE
Ea~tc r n

And if you're wondering what Gallia
County's. all-time high is for a J a nua ~y 8
date, it's 72, recorded in 1937, the year of
the great flood according to the Ohio
Climatological Summary sheet.

.

.20

.20

1.00
1.00

.2Q

•20

1.00

.20

.20
.20
.20

1.00

.20
.20

1.00

.

5.20 34.10
5.70 34.60

.20

.20 . 1.00

80.00

.40
.40
.40

.20
.20

.20

.20 1.00
.20 l.OQ

·.zo

1.00

84.10
IO.iO 42.00

.10 .40

.20

.20

1.00

Locul S. D. __ , 4 .~0 2.20 22.50 .10 .10

1.00

80.20 •

80.20

7.90 . 40.70

1.90 22.50

80.60

~ cnl E:itate tu:-;es which hnve not been ,paid at the. close of each colledion 'carry
pcnnlty or ten pEtr cent. Tues may be puid at the office of the county treasurer or
by mail. Pl c1t~~ bring your ltt~t ta~ 11!cl!ipl and if you pay b~· mail be sun to locate
yo u.r Pl'operly Uy taxing·diMtrlctllnd cndo ~e 3bmped ~e lf nddreited, tnyelope;
Alwny~ ~xa minc yo ur la~ recelpt lo Kee th at It cO-vert~ ·an your p~rty. Offlee Houn
'Y:OO A.M. ln 4 ;00 P.M. daily exce:pi &amp;turday when offico clONI at Noon. Tax Books
will OP"' !Jccembcr 20, 1976 to JanuiU')' 20, 1977,
11

.

GEORGE M COLLINS, Molp Co. T-.. -

,.

I

recessioO, an Ohio Sta te University
economist predicts.
Consumer spending nationally in 1977

cent he said.

will be up 10 per cent from the year just
ended, according to Dr. Paul G. Craig,
professor of public administration and

goods will mean a better than aver age

economics.

economic stagnation .' ·

,

Fire loss by townships and areas
served was as follows :
City ol Gallipolis, 64 alarms, loss

$96,620, saved .$883,4t5.
Gallipolis Twp., 26 alarms, loss
$41,490, saved 1117,130.
Green Twp., 47 alarnlS, loss 111,455,
saved $268,570.
Addison Twp., 34 alarms, loss $99,430,
saved $379,545.
· Clay Twp., 20 alarms, loss 110,075,

Commissio,.ers 6n

CHES!DRE- Commissioners-elect of
Gallia and Meigs Counties were seated on
the board of directors ot the Gallla-Melgs
CommQII!ty Action Ageney In Its annual
meeting here Friday: '
. Seated were Paul Niday,and James C.
&gt;"-8alinders of GaUia County and James
Roush and Richard E. Jones, of Meigs
County. ,
Other new members elected to the board
were Jim Adams and Lucy Taylor, Meigs
Ccunty, and Teddy Berry of Gallla County.
Members reappointed to complete flveyj!llr terms were James Howard, Albert
Duroae, Helen Jenkins and Vlrgln.ia
Fisher.
·
Outgoing board members Norman
MltcbeU, Wllltam Northup, Lula Hampton,
1111d John Rice were awarded certlficatea
of apprtelaUon by Chairman Jam..
Howard lor their service to the community
-..d the apncy. Two members, Mitchell
· · and r,Jn. Hampton, served ·five con~eeuttve yeara, whleh Ia ~ mulmam
permlUed under Conunll!lhY Services
Admlnliii'IUOII guldellnea.
The board alao aet the organisation
meettnc for January 25 at 7:30p.m. In the
~~~ ofllce here.

Deputies.probing
. theft of saddles

SNOW SCENE - While Friday's snow was unpleasant to many who had to
continue to fWlction, it did create an attractive setting. This shrubbery was topped
POMEROY - Sherllf James J .
with a heavy coating of the snow which kept Meigs County Schools closed again.
Proffitt said Saturday deputies are Investigating the entry and grand theft of
saddles and tack from horse barns at Rock
Springs.
'
The property Is owned by Ed Humphrey, Mike Jones and Sherry Indestad. No
other details were disclosed.
· Michael Ray Stewart, 19, Rt. 2,
mu~cle
Cheshire, arrested on 1 warrant from the
Meigs County Juvenile Court charging
By Unl~Pre., intematlooal
contributing to the unruliness of a juvenile,
At least one record low temperature
RIVERTON, Wyo. (UP!) - A top
Is hehig held In jaU when he failed to post ·
for the date was set In Ohio early Saturd8y national Official of the Veterans of Foreign
bond of $100.
and a winter storm was expected to move Wars said Saturday he views the United
into the state. Weather forecasters , States' failure to keep pace with the Soviet
' however, were unc-ertain how J;nUCh Union'S military strength "suicide.' 1
"'ffwfall would occur. .
Single-diRII low temperatures were
"The VFW believes in peace through
recorded &amp;Cf058 Ohl~. with a rerord low of . stten~th.' ' said VFW Sepior Vice ComO'NEIL IN BETHESDA
WASHINGTON (UP!) - House lllx degrees below zero recorded at the mander-1~-Chlef John Wasyllk, Sandusky, ·
Spelter Thomas P'Nelll wu admitted to Greater Cincinnati Airport, located just Ohio. "We feel the moot dangerous thing
Betheadlly Naval Hospital today suffering across the Ohio River In Kentuclcy.
this country can do Is to continl(e tp cut
That was the coldest it has been in the dtlen~s to the point where someoae might
lrom Inflammation of the prostate &amp;Ian~.
An aide said he probably would be. Cincinnati area since Jan. 16. 1972, when It think they can take us on. To not maintain
was 13 deRreeS helow .
relealed Monday and retul'IJ to 'l'~rk.
our strength is suicide."

•

.

&lt;I

recovery in the short run, but in the long
run it is a major contributor to the state"s

'

GALLIPOLIS - Total losses in fires
were estimated at $259,070 in a record
number of fire runs made in 1976 by the .
Gallipolis volunteer fire department.
In his annual report releas~ here ·
Saturday, Gallipolis F1re Chief James A.
Northup said the ~ity fire fi ghters answered 205 calls, 47 more than the previous
record established a year ago.
The Gallipolis Fire Dept. serves 13,700
residents in a 96 mile radius where
property is valued at $237,987,237. Firemen
saved property va luing $1,735,585.

POINT PLEASANT - The accused which convenes
murderer of 58 year-&lt;&gt;ld Mary BeJTy of
Also being held .In connection with the
Mason was retumed to · Mason County case is Terry Lee Brainard, 16, Mason. He
Friday morning following a short ex- waived .extradition two days after his
tradition hearing In · a Meigs County capture on December 3 and' retumed to
Col'lllllon Pleas Court before Judge John 0. Mas.in County, where he was charged with ·
Bacon.
accessory to murder before and after the
John Ltiwls Young, 32, Mason, was fact.
suiTendered to .Mason County Sheriff Jim
· Both Young and Brainard were taken
Hall at II :19 a.m. by Meigs County Sheriff into custody by Meigs County officials In
James Proffitt.
Pomeroy, hours after the body of Mrs.
The suspect, charged with the murder Berry wsa d.lacover~. with five deep stab '
of Mrs. Berry, Is being held In the Putnam wounds, In the bedrdprn of her home.
County Jail. His case Is expected to come
That afternoon Young refused to ·
. before the Mason Counly Grand Jucy waive extradition In ~Mei)ls Court, and
extradlltl!lt-procedures .f~re begun.

'action agency board

He said, howeve r, that Ohio's heavy
commitment to the production of durable

Fire losses in ':76
exceed $ ~· million

M,onda~

,.'-'"
AND CORPORATIONS §

Eastern

low for a January 8 date. The all-time low
is a minus 16, recorded in 1942.

Young returned

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

production increases e~ght to 10 per cent.
Production of autos, machinery and
capital equipment should expand 10 per

The things tha! people don't buy when
Ohio has an underlying problem in
tim es are bad are cars arid appliances," that its industri es tend to be older and to
he said. "When things are good, that'.s. have a lower growth rate over the long
ru n, he said.
what they want ."
Craig said Ohio is second oniy to
"The old line industries (autos, apMichiga n in its involvement In the auto pliances, steel) are not where the high
industry and he said a predicted upturn in growth is," he said.
the auto industry wjll boost Ohio's
Craig predicts that wages will ineconom y in 1971.
crease nationally about seven per cent
He said the economy of Ohio will ex- with productivity gaining about three per
pap&lt;! slightly faster than the national ce~t and u~t labor costs rising about four
economy in the ~oming mo,nths as steel per cent.

years old and .younger, Saturday's minus
f9ur degrees Was no where·near the record

NO LACK OF SNOW HERE - With the lack of snow
making headlines at winter skl resorts oot west, Dr.
Arnold J. Sattler's family took advantage of this week's
snowfaU in Gallia County by skllne on the slopes of their
home on 0 . J. White Road. Pictured In their Alpine skiing
gear from. the left are, Dr. Sattler, seven-year-old
Andrew, nine-year-old Tanja and Gaby Sattler. The
Sattlers·haveenjoyed skiing in the Austrian Alps and plan
a visit to Vall, Colo. this winter. Andrew has been skiing
since he was five, and 'i'anja has been on the slopes since
age six. This is the first Ume the family has been able to
ski here. Another memher of the family who is pictured
but can't ski is Bianca, the family pet Samoyan .

&gt;

.40

PRICE 25 CENTS

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

to W~ . Virginia .

=====-=·=====~
=~==~-========~~=========

oround • ..

tntittt

tmts

GALLIPOLIS - It was 4 below zero in
some parts of Gallla County early
Saturday morning.
Later in the day as temperatures
climbed to a more "comfortable" 28
degrees, the Andrew Sattler family . enjoyed the winter ~ondltions by skiing on his
family 's farm, located off Oliver White
Road .
For persons new in the ::trPFI or 30

:-

Meig!l Locttl R. U. . _ 4.30

1•1$

+

COLU MBUS (UP!)- Ohio's economv

follows:

.40

1

should outperform the nation's in 1977 a's
the country recovers. from the recent

In pur:-~u ance of law, I, CL'Orge M. Colli n~. Treai\urer of M.eig~ County, Ohio, ao
hereby A"ive notice tha t the number of Mills levied on each dollar of property shown
on t he General T;ix IJuplit:aLc of Real E!tta tc, Public Utility and Personal Property
within said County for the year 1976 i11

The upstairs was gutted ; there was heavy wa.ter
damage downstairs. .Firemen were told there was
insurance. The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Dept. was
assisted by departments from Mason , W. Va., Middleport,
and Syracuse. Damage was estimated at $5,000 to the
houst\ $1,500 to its contents.

4 below recorded

SUTTON

... - .. . - - ~ · ·· - ·~ -·

(Continued on page 2)

iJ

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

SUTTON
Southern Loc~:1l · S. D. _ 4.30 .1.90 26.00 .10
Racine Villnge ---- 4.30 .60 26.00 .10
Sy 1:ncu~ e VillaKe . . 4.30
.60 -26.00 .10

' My· wife thinks I'm running

Applications must be accompanied by
a 50 cent filing fee and contain information

UPSTAIRS GUTTED - Winter 's hazards were never
more obvious than Saturday morning when this two-story
frame dwelling in Minersville caught fire from an
overheated wood stove. Occupied by the Curtis Roush
family, It is owned by Tom Wes(&lt;tn and Jero''" Goldberg.

:f;'

'

~{eigs

Mt-mber
FDIC
.
.
"'

claim occurred.

~~,,~:,,

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

SCIPIO

ALSO SURE WIN &amp;

reparations i• started by filing a form
within one year after the occurrence of the
criminally injurioys conduct that is the
basis of the claim. The application can be
filed either in the co urt of claims whose
commissioners are appointed by the Ohio
Supreme Court or th~ court of common
pleas in the county in' which the claimant
resides or if a non-resident of Ohio, in the
common pleas in the county in which the '

SEVEN:YEAR.OLD Andrew SatUerenjoyed Gailla Couii'ws recent ~nowfalls
Saturday by·skiing on.his family's farm. Looking on is Bianca, a family pet.

STORE WIDE JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
8RINGS YOU EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS ON
CLOTHING FOR YOU AND YOUR ; •
FAMILY AND FURNISHINGS FOR
YOUR HOME.

SALEM
,
. Meigs l.ocul S. D. ___ 4.30 1.50 22.50 :w .40
SALISRUHY
Meig, Local S. D. --- 4.30 1.50 22.so .tv AO
Middleport Vi ll o~e __ 4 .3~ .20 22."0 '·.10 AO
Pomet•oy Village _ _ 4.30 .20 22.50 .10 .40

Dog Nu~g~ts •
.Dog Meal

services loss . An award cannot be mode to
compensate no. n ~eco n orriic detriment,
defined as paln, suffering, .inconveneince
or other non pecuniary damage, uriless the
pain and suHering somehow ca uses
economic lOss.
Applications for an award of

.- -VO_L._l_l-N-0.-50-.---------'---:::GA~LL::;IP~
OLIS-POINT PLEASANT

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

cm:sn:n

Red Rosa Dog Food

F.conomle loss is limited to allowable

expense, work loss and repla&gt;ement

Elberfeld$·In Pomeroy

fllei.;!s l..ol'H! S. D. __ 4.30 1.50 ~2.50 .10
Ett.'!tern Local S. D. ~ 4,.30 ,1 .50 23.50 .10

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Brockert (Debi Schaefer),
Sidney, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a
nine· pound, nine ounce son.
Jonathan Andre, Jan. 4 at the
'Wilson Memorial Hospital.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Paul' Brockert, Piqua,
and Mrs . Nora Nltz,
Pomeroy.
Gr•atgrandparerits are Mrs.
Isabelle Brockert, Piqua, and
Mrs . Myrta Schaefer,

·Picket lines were withdrawn upon

or person acting on behalf of such a per- .
son ; the ·awMds do not include condu&lt;'\
iflvolvin~ thr u s(' . maintenanrP or
owner!hip \If a mvtor vehicle, unless uw:
offender intendL-d lo cause personal injury
or death.

unba

. BEDFORD

Red Rose

to McDonald Smith, president ol Teamsters Local t75 . Smith said the tally ol
votes showed 165 union members favored
the ct&gt;ntract proposal, while 70 voted
·against it.

ratification of the contract. The week-long
walkout had affected 18 stores of the food
chain the Kanawha Valleyand other parts
cerit.
-.,.
A 11 substantial" increase in mileage of West Virginia; as well. as portions of
allowances lor the warehouse employes adjoining Ohio and Kentucky, Including
also Is contained In the package, according stores In Pomeroy and Gaillpolis.

with response by residents

REMEMBER
THE
WORD

The Pomenrt National
Auto Bank on East Second Street
is Open 52 Hours
Per Week to Better Seive Our
Customers' Needs.
8 AM TO 5 PM - MONDAY
8 AM TO 5 PM - TUESDAY
8 AM TO 5 PM - WEDNESDAY ·
8 AM TO 3 PM - THURSDAY
8. AM TO 7 'PM -FRIDAY
•

reliate, a permanerit tax

College officials pleased

JERRY LUCAS

Kids in the car? In a rush today?
Our Drive-in Window is fast.
·
Wheel right in .
And meet our quick-change artist

Crime victims get relief

considering a temporary tax

One record low set

VFW belief puts

on Ohio's mercury

emphasis on

Mra. harl 8ctU &lt;I PDIIIOn)' bla
beeo aamed .,,.. dtpulf reatm- and
deputy tlerll II tile ... lp c...~)!
Ileparlmeot of Heallll. 1be beallll
depertmeat ol!lee '"' E. ~ St.,
Pomeroy, wiD be elooed all day
Saturday until lartber aoUce.
Formerly, tbe .tlllfee W. open ,...,
1:311 a.m. anUI 12 1100n .. SaiiiN!IYI·

saved $86,925.
Mutual aid or assistance to other fire
departments, 14, including two in Harrison
Twp. which were originally reported to
have been !Ires In Green Twp. Gallipolis
does not have a fire contract with Harrison
Twp.

Two persons were killed and five
others injured as a result of !ires In 1976.
· On March 19, Shirley Proctor, 30, and
her eight-year old daughter, ·Melissa
Meloid, perished in a fire at their rented
home on the Bulaville-Porter Rd. Michael
Proctor, Rt. I , Gallipolis, received first
degree bums in the same fire.
On Feb. 24 , John McGuire, age 8, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, suffered first degree burns of
his right hand .
Elton Sa vage, 934 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, suffered first degree bums on
both arms and forehead in a fire July 18 at
his home.
Rodger D. McClelland , Rt . 1;
Gallipolis, and volunteer firemen Nell
McMahon; 133 Third Ave., Gallipolis, had
first degree bums as a result of a fire Sept.
13 at the Mccielland home on Mill Creek
Rd.
.
On Oct. 28, Dale Russ, 34, Rio Grande,
suffered first , second and third degree
burns on his left hand In a fire.
Major fires occurred Jan. 5 in
Gallipolis, where loss was set at $71,500 to
the Gardner Building at the corner of
Third Ave. and State Street; April t8 In
Gallipolis, a $11,0oo blaze gutted Preston's
Restaurant, 39 State ·St. ; a $35,000 fire
occurred at John Foster's garage and
workshop March 17 In Kanauga ; a $5,500
loss occurred at the Thomas Reed home,
Bob McCormick Rd. on Feb. 3.
Other loss.., were $22,500 to equipment
at the Thelin a Coal Company, Addisqn,
last Feb. 28 ; $12,000 to the property owned
by George Stover, Rt. l , GaUipolls, Marcb
19! There was a $22,000 fire at the ~nme of
VIc Henderson, Rt. 2, GaUipolis, Aug. 22
and $12,500 lire Sept. 13 at the home of
Rodger McClelland, Rt. I, GaUipolls.
The GaUipalis Fire Department was
assisted by Point Pleasant Fh;emen Jan. 5
for the Gardner Building fire.
The department assisted MldcDeport
Firemen with a $250,111)0 fire Nov. 211 1t tbe
Jay Hall home north of Ch.,.;,•-· That loss
was charged to Middleport's ~· ... !'•pt.
WANTS MORE POWERS
COLUMBUS (UPI) ~ Ohio Attomey
General WIUism Brown is recominendlng
that Congress consider giving lllte attorneys general the power to file clalmalor
damages and cleanup costs caused by oU

spills.

"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="786">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11270">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47905">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47904">
              <text>January 7, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
