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a_ 'ftle Dally SenUnel, Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. II, 1977

~ Three

life·sentences
given kille~ of three

DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) murders occurred oo Nov. I
Margo Davies, 20, when she left her home in
Worthington, Ohio, today Worthington, a Columbus supleaded guilty In Delaware burb, and "drove north into
County CCIIllllOII Pleas court Delaware .County with my
to the deaths. of her three three children north of the
daughters and was sentenced Columbus Zoo.
"! parked next to the Scioto
to three · termo of life in
River,
tied up my youngest
prison.
.
child,
placed
her in a plastic
Prior to ·sentencing, she
bag
and
in
a
trash
can;• fte
described how she killed the
said. •
girls.
Mrs. Davies described how
Mrs . Davies had been
charged with aggravated she took Christine and "did
murder in the deaths of her the same thing" in anotherdaughters Laurie Jo, 18
months, Christine Lela, 2 and
Tanya Anne, 3.
The bodies of Laurie Jo and
Christine were
found
(Continued from page I)
wrapped in garllage bags and
employes,
$8,300;
found in trash barrels along retirement, $1,100 ; ma inthe Scioto River In Delaware tenance of equipment, $6,000;
County on Nov. 5.
miscellaneous, $3,000; street
, The body of Tonya Anne repairs by contract, $13,900;
was fo\md with her head equipment, $1,000: gasoline,
wrapped in a garbage bag in $8,500; materials, 15,000;
a Delaware County field on buildings, $1,500 ; traffic
. Nov. 9.
lights, $500. Total: $48,800.
Mrs. Davies said that the . Meter Deposit Fund from Middleport, $2,400;
Pomeroy, $100. Total: $2,500.
·Tbey11 get
Anti-recession Assistance
well laster
Fund - gasoline, $2,000. .
Council, after reelecting
with flowers.
Kelly Its president approved
the report of Mayor Fred
Hoffman showing receipts of
$1,524.70 in December.
It was agreed to amend the
payroll ordinance to include
the village haD custodian.
Bernard Fultz was reappointed viUage solicitor.
Mayor Hoffman said he
expects to appoint a successor to James Brewer, who
resigned from Council in
.
December, by the next
A.beautiful bouquet
meeting.
Mayor Hoffman reported
of flowers
that street department
workers. wh·o were commended by village officials,
help any patient
have so far used 90 tons of salt
in combatting the snow and
get well faster.
ice this winter. For the whol e

area .
"1 drove from there to an
area north of. Sunbury and
tied up my third child the
same way and placed her In a
eomfield," she said.
The sentence was Imposed
by
Delaware
County
Common Pleas Court Judge
Henry Shaw.
Mrs. Davies will be eligible
for parole in IS years.
She has been held in the
Marion County Jail at Marioo
under $1.!i(I,OOO bond.

Appropriation passed

can

let us speed your

;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;.;.;:;.,.:·:·:·:

.get well arrangement
on its way. ·

Stop in or phone
us today.

Diana Jarvis, Rt.l, Vinton,
filed suit for divorce against
Franklin Jarvis, same address, in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
A suit for parti~on of real
es(ate w.as filed by La•·•rn W.
Jordan and Mary Kath:N!r
Jorqan, Rt. 3, Alban·;
against F. Dorsey Jordan
Pansy Jordan, Rt. 3, Albany
and the Me igs County
Treasurer.
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59 N. Second Sl
Phone 992-5560

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;:;;;.·.··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•,•:·:·:·:·;·:·.··

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We're quick-change art'ists

· AT CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

of last year only 60 tons were
used. The mayor said the
supply of salt Is running low
but a truckload Is expected
this week. He .al!o asked
council to think about purchasing a two way radio so
!hat !he street department
can be contacted easily when
members of the department
are on the job.
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate, and Councilmen
Kelly, Carl Horky, William
Walters, Allen Lee King and
George Meinhart ..

Hospital News
Veieraas Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Dorothy
Harley, Middleport ; Wilbur
Jean
Whaley, Shade;
Koehler, I;'omeroy; Clarence
Hayman, Racine; Brenda
Taylor, Fostoria; Bernard
George, Middleport; Anna
Ebersbach, Middleport;
Gertrude Woods, Middleport;
Daniel Humphrey, Mid·
dleport. ·
DISCHARGES - ·Mary
Derenberger, Ella Payne,
Augusta Potts , Winifred
Naas, Ruth Cairi.
Holler Medical Center
~Discharges, Jan. 10)
Mrs. George Allen and
daughter, Kimberly Angel ,
Patrick Brown, Emily
Cantrell, William Davidson,
George Dillon, Jr .. John
Evans, Donna G!'e!!r, Mrs.
Taylor Miller and son, Mrs, .
Harold Moyer and daughter,
John Sch ri chtkrull , Susan
=Impson, Betty Slnlnger.
Mlo.""V Sparks, Ruth Steele.
John Steinbeck. Oliver
Taylor, R..~ald Topping, Mrs.
George Wicke. :l!d daughter.
!tl.rs. Harvey WooiUI!I and
da.:ughter.
1Birlbs, Jaa.ll)
'.\ lr. and Mrs. David Smith,
db•1ghter, Wellston; Mr. •;;d
Mrs. iJ~yid Fetty, son.
Hende1"8011; Mr. afld · Mrs.
Michael · Ca!'n~~cll, son,
Bid.,ell.

¥

'
PRIMAL SUIT
. LOS ANGELES ·(UPI) Psy chotherapist Arthur
Janov has filed a $7.1 million
iibel suit against Psychology
Today becalise an article In
the magazine said Jtmov's
primal
therapy
was

"jabberwocky."

.

The suit, filed Monday m
Superior Court, asks for $6
million in general and
punitive damages for Janov
and another $1.1 million in
general and
punitive
damages for his Los Angelesbased Primal institute. -

'
ON IMAGE-MAKING
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
The news . media tends tn
build public figures up, only
tn tear them down again,
neWsman Edwin Newman
says, citing Henry Kissinger
and J ohn Kennedy as
examples.
" I hope that news orginizatiOns will be sem:ihlf' .:1 hnut

mental health and retardation, $20,099.04 ; real estate
assessment lund, $30,416.10;
motor vehicle and gasoline
tax lund, $900,026.97; soil and
water conservation special
fund,
$4 ,800.33;
bond
retirement funds, (hospital)
$24,742.74; sanitary revenue
funds (landfill) 121,153.61 ;
special levy fund, tuber·

mission, Rick W. Crow,
~Rcutlngattorney; George
l0.1.JCollins, treasurer, and
.
.
Howard Frank, auditor • m•
culosis, $59,093.85 ; mental · act, $8,931 ; federal revenue Friday morning to compile
the ligUres In the severo!
retardation , 158,281.35; .sharing funds, $106,842.73.
crippled children, 1641.68 ;
Members of the com· funds.
federal funds lnchgjing
Economic Development Act
for County Road I in Salem
Township, $193,301.35;
C.E .T. A., $46 ,332.60;
C,E ,T.A. VI, $65,715.92 ;
juvenile probation, $6,691.30;
anti recession public works

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from pa~e I)
cut joblessness. The labor federation issued a bitterly worded
statement Monday cbarglng that Carter's proposal for tax cuts
and jobs is "too small, takes too long and is too ill-advised to
give the economy the stimulus it needs."
Labor officials said Carter's program would not even
reduce unemployment to 7 per cen t~ "We consider !his a
retreat from the goals which we understood P~ident-elo:rt
Carter to have set during last year's campaign, they sa1d.
Issued belote Inauguration day, the statement was a
culmination of the growing antagonism between Carter and
the labor leaders who helped put him in office. Carter's
spokesman In Plains, Ga .. declined comment.

WALK-UP TEu.ER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OP.EN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.
"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

Visit Our Salad Bar
Stuffed Shrimp
·• " .
French Fries
Coffee. Tea or Milk

· WASHINGTON - A NATIONWIDE COAUTJON of
.consumer groups is urging Americans to cut their coffee
coosumption by 20 tn 30 per cent m order to reduce pnces by 50
cents to $1 per pound. The groups said they feared that pnces,
now hovering at $3 a pound, could go as h1gh as $4 if bu}'lng
habits do not change.
11
We believe conswner s can make this effort without a
boycott action," the groups said at a news conference which
featured tea instead of the usual pot of coffee. "Rather , a
modest change in the amount of coffee consumed daily , either
by drinking one or two fewer cups per person on the average,
or b)i" shifting to other beverages, such as tea, should he
sufficient to reduce consumption."

Jimmy Carter, " Newman
said Tuesday at an NBCsponsored l~ncheon . "I hope ·
that he will not be followed
minute-byminute, inch-byInch. I hope we will not find
Amy irresistible and that she
will be allowed tn be herself." · ·

Plus

Pomeroy,

VOL XXVII

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

CHESTS &amp;RECORD CABINETS
by Lane

RALPH W. HAWK
Ralph W. Hawk. 57. for -

merly of M~i gs County, died
a t the U. S. Naval Hospital in
Philadelphia , Pa., Tuesday

Regular $134.95 Maple Cl)est .
Regular $154.95 Oak Chest
Regular $154.95 Walnut Chest
Regular 5199.95 Maple Chest
Regular $209.95 Cherry Chest
Regular $289.95 Tulip Wood Chest
"Regular $299 .95 Pine Chest
' Regular $149.95 Maple Record Cabinet
Regular $149.95 Walnut Record Cabinet
Regular $159.95 Pine Record Cabinet
S219.9S Oak Record Cabinet

Sale $108.00
Sale $124 .00
Sale $124.00
Sale $160.00
Sale $168 .00
5r'le $232.00
Sale $240.00
Sahi $120.00
Sale $120.00
Sale SI28.00
Sale $176.00

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1

BAVE7¢
u •BNE COUPON PEA fUflctiA$E

••
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CUT ALONG DOTIED
LINE FOR 7; SAVINGS
OR SOLID LINE FOR
15¢ SAVINGS

WHEN YOU
BUY ·

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MEIGS lHEATHE
CUlSFD FOR
VM'.ATION

MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO
\

·Mtmller Federal Dlpolit lnsui'IIICI Ccrpoiatilr .
'-DIPOIITI INSUIID T9 ."40,000

·-

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ra s.

a GAMBLa

BAVE15c
-

WATQf FOR
OPFNING ~TE
'

PROCTER

STORE COUPON

'. ,,

BOXES

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

By LEE LEONARD
UP! State House Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes said today
he would submit a balanced
budget for the next biennium
which will · require np new
taxes and challenged
members of the Democratic
controlled Ohio General
Assembly tn put a JX"ice tag
on all spending bills th ey
introduce.
Rhodes, in a State-of~heState message tn a joint
session of the General
Assembly in which he called
for cooperation~ between the
executive and legislative
branches, said his budget
''will be balanced" and "it
wUI
require no new taxes."
'
. 'fiRST MEIGS BABY OF 1977 - Ryan Daniel Buckley, held here. by his mother, Mrs.
"We can provide a high
W1lllam (Twila Kart) L. Buckley is lhe winner of The Daily Se ntinel's first baby of the year
level of services for our
COil lest.
•cltluns without additional
taxes " uld Rhodes. "But
you a~ 1. mtdl be coounitted
meal to the par e~ts at to l.mp&lt;~~~lnl realis!lc
Co untry
Co ·usl ns spend +. 11.
"PPI11Ilc lldence dictates
Cookshoppe; $10 gift cer·
that lhe . COli ol every bill
tificate from Elberfeld's.
lnlrOdlired ln the General
Two · cases of baby
Assembly be revtaled to the
food from Waid Cross and taxpayers, " said Rhodes .
Sons; $5 gift certificate from
the Heritage House; a case of
ca nned milk from Krogers; a
Ryan Daniel Buckley, son prese nted Ryan and his package of diapers from
of Mr. and Mrs. W!Uiam L. parents include:
Stiffler's Stores, Inc. ; a
Buckley, Route 3, Pomeroy,
A baby pl anter from battery operated loUi·clock
has been named winner of Francis Florist ; a $10 savings and two cases of soft drinks,
The 'Dally Sentinel's · 1977 account at the Pomeroy Royal Crown Bottling Co.; a
Baby Derby.
National Bank; a case of one-piece snowsult from the to be sponsored. by th e
Chamber of
Ryan was born at 10:19 baby foods from Mark V Racine Department Store; a Pomeroy
Commerce,
will
be Jan: 20 at
a.m. on Jan. 3 at the Holzer Super Market; a brown bear baby bunting from Land6:30
p._
m
.
at
the
Meigs 1~ .
Medical Center and weighed from Moore's Store; a free mark; a $10 savings account
PreSident
Fred
Crow sa1d
six pounda, 10 ounces. As. meal to the parents at Crow's at the Racine ilome National
Monday's
regular
meeting
at
. winner of the first baby of the Steak House ; $5 off · on Bank ; a $3 gift certificate •
Wingett,
Charles
Robert
year contest, according to anything ordered from Sears' from Th~ Fabric Shop; three
registrations provided to The Catalog; · a $10 savings ac- boxes of pampers from the Legar and Pete Shields will
Daily Sentinel, Ryan and his count from the Citizens Racine Food Market ; a be honor~d guests. Richard
parents will receive a National Bank; a pair of planter from the Pomeroy Jones Will be master of
number of gilts.
. shoes from Hartley's Shoes; Flower Shop; a slip for ceremonies.
Tickets to the dinner will be
Maternal grandparents are three·boxes of pampers from mother from the L. and Z.
available
first to members of
Mr. and Mr.s. Horace K"arr, ViUage Pharmacy; 10 gallons Dress Shop; three boxes of
tbe
chamber,
then to the
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Mr. of gai!Oiine fr~m Welker's pampers from Swisher-Lohse
public.
Those
wi shing to
and Mrs. Joseph Turner, Service Station; a feeder Pharmacy; one case of baby
make reservations are to call
Jamest.own, Ky. Great- spoon with rattler from food from Twin Cities
grandparents are Mrs . Goessler's Jewelry Store; a Gateway Supermarket ; a cut on Barba ra Chapman,
Denver Holter, Minersville; free meal for the parents at flower arrangement from
Mrs . Purley -Karr, Long the Meigs Inn ; a $5 gift Dudley 'a and a three-piece
Bottom, and Ben Buckley, certificate from The Kiddie feeder set for K. a l!ll C.
Reedsville. Mr. and Mrs. Shoppe; a crib toy from Jewelers.
Buckley have another 8011 Western Auto, Middleport; a
Jeremy William, 19 months: flO gi,ft certificate from
Gifts provided by Big Bend • Powells Super Valu; a free
area merchants to be
Proffitt began

"Therefore l will propose
legislation tn require that aU
bills introduced in the
· General Assembly contain a
cost impa ct statement.
"The days of passing
Unfunded legislation with a
fa lse hope that it will
somehow be funded must
end," said Rhodes in his
prepared text.
Rhodes told the legislature,
which has enough Democrats
in both chambers to override
his vetoes, that General Fund
revenues are expected tn
increase by $1.5 blUion over
the next two years.
"With this increase in rovenues and better management
In government, we can do the
job tlle people elected us to
do," said Rhodes: ..
. Rhodes said his new budget
would Include proposa ls tn:
- Increase state aid tn
public schools by $250 million
which averages out tn a 23 per
cent increase per popil.
- An increase of 27 per cent
In state support for colleges
and universities which will
amount tn an increase of
more than $250 million than

the amount allocated for the
curren t biennium. Rhodes
said no tuition increases
should be necessary.

i_a:~~~~stu~~~t ~~~~e;~

- A 25 per cent increase in
the funding of mental health
and mental retardation pro·
warns which will amount tn
~
[.ncrease of about $210
nullion.
. -Modernize the Bureau of
Motor
Vehi cles
by
. computerizing its operation
and distributing license
plates in a manner more
convenient to Ohio's drivers.
- Provide a n expanded
progr~m for Ohio's senior
¢itjzens through ~lqiport for
local programs and increased
statewide service~ .
Rhodes also reiterated a
theme he haS espoused for the
past two years calling for tax
credits for business and
industry to
stimulate
expansion and relocation in
Ohio, with emphasis on inner
city areas.
"! want jobs for Ohioans(Conlinued on page 16 '

•
A Ho r. ney zn
a' uto mishap
&amp;, &amp;,I

· ·

GalliJIOlis attorney James
Bennett, 36, Rt. 2, Vinton, was
injured in 8 traffic accident
at5 :35 p.m. Tuesday on CR 3
one and eight tenths miles
north of SR 325.
The Gdllla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Bennett lost control of" his
vehicle on the ice covered
road. The station wagon slid
intn a .ditch and field. There
was minor damage.
Atty. Bennett's injuries
were reported of a minor

·" -,

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nature.
(
Qma M. H ysr!r..,...~~...,,
Sy ra cuse, had minor ln]ur
as a ·result of a thrt•Hf'IUt i•
accident al 12 ~~ p m
Tuesday on Third Sl In
Syracuse . She was a
passenger in a car driven by
Lu~dy L. Deitz, 71, Syracuse,
The Deitz car turned left into
tbe path of a vehicle operated
by Clarence E. Hill, 28,
Syracuse. Following Impact,
the Hill car struck a parked
(Continued on page 18)

Smith reelected

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with no records

f.News. • •in Brief:,a or any supplies
By UDite4 Press!ateruatlnal
.
COLUMBUS, OHIO - REPUBLICAN STATE
CHAIRMAN Kent B. McGough was to announce today whetber
he will formally enter the contest for the RepubUcan national
:chalnnanship. The Ohio party cbairnian planned to Issue
'statements simultaneously In Columbus and Washington
according to hla office.
McGough contlooed Tuesday to test sentiment among
par\y pros to aee If he could capture the chalnnanahlp at
. Friday's meeting ol the 162-member RepubUcan National
Conunlttee. McOough acknowledged that activity ln his behalf
had stepped up ''consl~erably" since the weekend, when
James. Baker, President Ford's campaign m.."llllger, took
himself out ol the contest.
HONOLULU - 'tHE CITY MEDICAL examiner's office
today •awaited results of laboratory tests expeCted to
determine how Clark Gable's llepaon died. Anthony . B.
Splecbla !D, 'II, Beverly Hills, wu found dead In a friend 's
Sulllll Beach home on Oahu's north lhGre last Friday.
Investigaton said Tuesday ~ was no evidence of
violtllce In the death at the home ri Charles B. Sneath.
Sprecktla lui was ee,en aUve at about daim Friday after a
hotel party. SpredleLI wu the son ol actor O.rk Gable's
w!OOw and the lat. sugar heir Adolph B. Spncbl.lll.
.

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THE SI'ATE'S 'I.'(JP water
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SACRAMENTO f:AIJF. .· (Continued on page 18)
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cbamlier, or Crow. Tickets
are $5 per person.
Crow also announced that a
dinner will be" held for old
tune ball players with Gordie
Coleman, former player for
the Cincinnati Reds, now in
the Reds' publications
department, wlll be guest
speaker. Coleman will also
show a film of a world series.
It was announced that the
Christmas promotion showed
a profit of $278.24. The Christ·
mas lighting fund has a .
balance of $1 ,557 .52 with
chamber members still

Thanks were extended to
Ed Kennedy and Jim Frecker
EAST MEIGS - Oris Smith
for assistance in the Christ- and Doug Bissell were
mas li ghting program.
reelected president and vice
Named to the lightin g president,
respectively,
committee were Frecker,
Tuesday night by the Eastern
Crow and John Anderson .
Local School District Board
Crow commended merol Education when it
chants for their generous orga nized.
dooations toward the lights.
The board set the second
Frecker asked if the chamber Tuesday of each month, 7:30
would consider having a new p.m,, for regular 'meetings
Ssnta Claus suit made. No . and voted to join the Ohio
decision was mad e. At- School Boards Assn. It was
tending were 'crow, Frecker,
also agreed to purchase
Scott Lucas, Anderson, N. W.
liability Insurance for board
Compton, Bill Grueser, Jack members.
Carsey , Derman Moore,
The board then moved into
Thereon ' Johnson, Richard
regular session and at the
Jones and Barbara ~;hap- request of several parents
man.
and teachers it was agreed to
have Supt. John Riebel check
with the Ohio Department of
Education on the possibility
of having a learn ing
disability class in the district
u.
.starting next fail. One
student, Rachel Hunter, was
• small way the thousands of
granted permission to attend
dedicated individuals whose
Eastern High Schon! on a
efforts make Ohio the
TUPPERS PLAINS - The hall-time basis with the
nationalleaderin Agriculture Orange Township Volunteer remainder of her time to be
Fairs participation. Ohio bas Department has named spent as a special student at
more agricultural fairs than administrative and line Ohio University.
anyotherStatein the Union," officers for the new year.
Supt. Riebel was named the
Stackhouse said. " Ohio's
Line officers include Larry authorized representative to
fairs offer not only good E. Millhone, fire chief; Bob receive federal program
wholesome family en- Tripp, assistant fire chief; funds. It was decided to start
tertalnment but also exhibits Keith Miller, captain; Tim the new breakfast program at
that help to provide a means Spencer, first lieutenant ; the Riverview Elementary
for understanding the im- J,amar Lyons , second School first with · others
possibly to be started at other
portant cobtributlon of lieutenant.
agriculture to today's
Administrative officers schools next fall. The
economy . The fairs em- elec1ed include James Riverview program will be
phasize community Involve- Watson, president; L. L. started as soon as the
ment that is excttlng and Lyons, · vice · president ; weather permits the forming
. rewarding ," Stackhouse Charles Weber, secretary; of the proper organization lor
stated. "We are optimistic Ron Loschar, ·assistant operating the breakfast
that the record attendance secretary , and George , program. Some students will
set In 1976 will be broken this Collins, treasurer and news receive free breakfasts, some
summer."
reporter.
will pay 10 cents and students
Durin g
1976;
the who can afford it wlll pay 2S
Attendin g the tliree-day
meeting from the Meigs Fair department answered nine cents. The cost for adults will
Board were Mrs. Leifheit and calls with 117 manhours be-40 cents.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace spent. Fire lossea . In !he
It was agreed to hire the
Bradford, president and township totaled $35,150. The assistant cook for an adsecretary, respectively, of department meets at 7:30 ditional hour each day and
the local boa rd.
.. p.m" onJhe second and fourth the elementary secretary at
Wednesdays of each month . ·. Riverview for an additional

Fair h'oard
recognized

Melli County Sheriff
Jame1 J. Proffitt preseated
a letter to tbe Meigs Couaty
Commiuloners al their
meetlq Monday and asked
It be made a part of lhe
official record.
Tbe 1eller
11ld:
"Pleau be advtaed •• of
Jaa. I, 1177 tbe date oa
wbleh I aSBumeil my duUes
11 -ly elected lhertfl of
Melc1
Couaty,
the
aforementloaed office wu
rendered me!fectlve due to
tbe ab,eaee of aD reconk,
crtmlaal, oeeldeat reperll,
et al, ao weD 11 aU olflee
IUpplleo lnd fwiiUI ~lad!
aU flllq cab!DeU Wert
empty.
"Althoup I cauot be
held ~spoaslble for the
abav.e; I lalelld .10 baadle
and be respoulble for such
willie ID olflee."

COLUMBUS - Director of
·Agriculture John M. Stackhouse presented · the . Meigs
County Agricultural Society
with a "Certificate of
Achievement" at the Ohio
Fair Managers Convention In
Columbus
durlrtg
the
Director of Agricultu•e
Breakfast and Meeting on
January 6.
The aMual Director of
Agriculture Breakfast was an
Integral part of the convention which Involved 1,500
people . Stackhouse addressed · the convention
delecates and commended
them for their progressive
anCI outstanding leadership In
preaenting 15 Independent
and county agricultural fairs
ln 1971.
Acttp!lng the awafd lor the
Meigs County Agrtcultul"f!l
Society was Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit, delegate to the
conventioo.
,
'
"We hope that in the
presentation of these certificate.,, we ca n recognize In

Firemen name

• ._ati've,
adminis

line officers

(

. .

~~!" =~~~-~!~~r..~et board president

Choose Puff~ and you'll
have the softest
.facial tissue money
can buy. Beautiful
decorator box, too.
Now choose your
savings. Cut arou8d
the dotted line and
save 7¢ ontwo-boxes of
Puffs, or cut around the SQU.d
line and save 15¢ on three boxes of Puffs.
.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 19.77

Buckley infant
first in 1977

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

STORE COUPON

,

WASillNGTON (UP!) - Unemployment fell to 7.9 per
cent at the end of 1976, still slightly higher than when the
year began, . the Labor Department reported today.
December's decline from the year's· highestlevel of 8.1
per ce'nt in November brought some relief for Jimmy
Carter as he prepares tn assume the presidency. But the
year-end rate was still only 1 per cent below the 1975
recession peak.
·
The report also heralded' a full year of virtual
stagnation on the American job ma.rket. The December
rate was 0.1 per cent higher than last January.
In a related developmen1 wholesale prices increased
0.9 per cent in December to quicken the pace of bu~ine ss
inflation in 1976, according tn tlle Labor Department. The
report said wholesale prices rose 4.7 per cent for the year
compared with 4.2 per cent in 1975.
All of the increase was in industrial corrunodi lies such
as metals, building material and energy. The Labor
Department said the industrial section of the wholesale
price Index increased 6.4 per cent from December, 1975.

Rhodes promises
balanced budget

..

~:::.---·-~-·I"

·POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

o:

Area Deaths

Tuesday morning .
·
Born in Gallia County, she nighl.
M r . Hawk was precedec:f. in
and her hu sba nd , the la te
Charles E. Watters , operated death by his parents, Mr . and
a grocery store in M iddleport Mrs. Pr ice Hawk ; a brolher ,
for several years . ·
Grover and a sister , Mr s. Ada
She was a . member of the Slivers.
Norton Church of Christ in ' Su rviving are his wife,
. El sie and two SOllS , Ra Iph ,
Col umbus .
Survivors Inc lude three Jr ., and Gregor y of Vinera nd,
daugh ters, Clara Boyd. N. J. ; a _granddaugh ter ,
Louisiana ; Kathryn Tuttle. M eredith ; a br other, Marion , .
Columb us , and
Nell ie Minersville ; foUr · si sters, •
Ballard, Largo, FIa .; "three M rs. Dorothy La wson,
sons .
Kenneth,
Belpre ; M inersville ; Mrs. Fr ances
Jan.es A.• Spokane , Wash .. Sm ith , Sandyville, W . Va .;
and Artt:ur, Thornv i lle, Ohio ; Mrs . Ka .t hryn Neutzli ng of
and
Mrs .
15 granc:khlldren, and seven Middleport
great.~,. .tndchildren.
Florence Wa rner of Syracuse
Fur~ral services wi ll be 1 and several nieces and
p.m . Thursday at thf! Evans nephews .
Funeral services were held
Fune.-,al Home, 4171 East
Llvlfll!Ston A.e., Columbus. c;~t the Pan coas t Funeral
Fr ier"ds may call 2 to .4 and 7 Home in Vineland , N. J., and
ttJ 9 Wednesday . Buria l will burial w~~ in New York City ,
be In Asbur y Cemetery , A11endi ng services from here
Columbus.
were Mrs . Neutzli ng and Mrs.
La wson .

NO. 189

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
C~pAR

kept as low as tlley can possibly be kep't.
He pointed out tbat there has been damage to some
buildings due to the low temperature, and the cold weather. He
particularly poinU!d out the Meigs High School where an
inspection has unturned 14 broken heat radiators.
Orie such radiator flooded the cafeteria and another has
caused an overhesd leak witll water entering the cafeteria.
Steps are underway to have the radiators repaire-d and a
representative of the heating firm which iiLStalled the system
at Meigs High School was due here tnday to inspect the
problems at the high school and make recommendations.
Morris pointed out, however , tbat some of tlle problems at
the high school was caused by improper maintenance of the
radiators.
LONG RANGE PLAN
During the ·three hour session, the board again discussed
the need for an overall !mig range program of improvements
within the district. It was decided that priorities shou ld be
assigned to the projects which would be carried out over the
(Continued on page 16 )

company had informed him that the allocations of natural gas
for all of the schools can be combined but if the district goes
over the allotted amount, the district l1 given a live day notice
and can appealto the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
II no relief is given. by PUCO, the gas service will he cut
off. Morris said he has been advised that ibe district wiD not
know how.it has done em the allocations until the end of the
current heating period which is the end of March and started in
November.
He said the district was all right through December. He
said should the diatrict have gas service cut off because ·of not
meeting the allocations then the schools ca nnot be reopened
until the overage is repaid.
Board Member Robert Snowden asked the administra1ors
to contact local gas compa ny personnel and ask tllem tn read
the meters frequently so that how the district is doing with the
allocations can he learned.
It was believed that some gains might bave been made
over the past six days because schools have been closed due to
snowandice.Morrissaidthatbuiidingtemperaturesarebeing

'"x

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304 ·

1--------~-----------------I
I
I

KATHLEEN WALTERS
Kathleen M . Watters , 18, of
685 Westphal, Whitehal l, Oh io
died at MI. Carmel East

bave a 50 percent reduction in the amount of g~s used and an
additional 10 percent for the smaller buildings, which would
include the junior high structure. Tbe·letter recommended that
schools transfer tn other fu~ls, close in January or February,.
or reduce the school day to f1ve hours a day .
The State Department of Education will approve a five
hour day for high schools, the letter stated.
Dr. Essex urged that Meigs Local administrators assess
promptly their problems. It pointed out also that schools must
be completed by.the end of June with the 182 required days put
in and that teachers are entitled tn unemployment benefits
after the first week of being off due tn schools being closed.
Supt. Charles Dowler said that AS!t. Supt. Dan Morris and
junior high principal John Mora had figured the gas used In the
districlaad believed that the district cannot make it with the
curtailment.
Asst. Supt. Morris said ~ had been in touch with lhe gas
company and had learned that the curtai lment on !he six
elementary buildings in the district , which .counts the junior
high building, can ·he increased to 30 percent. He said the

s.z95'

THE MEIGS INN
992-362~

A &lt;emporary budget of $3,300,785 was adopted and gas
heating CUrtailments reviewed Tuesday night by the Meigs
LOcal School District Board of Education .
. Meeting In regnlar Session, the board adopted the
temporary budget until the new clerk, Mrs . Jane Wagner can
prepare the reports needed and amoun.ts to be received from
the state are shown. The full budget for the year must be
adopted by AprU 1.
1
Appropriations set up in the lmDOrarv bud~et include:
l!dmlnlstration sa!llries and wages, $82,900; instruction,
, $1,865,870; coordinate activities, $1.!i(l; auxiliary agencies,
' $164,000; operation of plant, $104,000; maintenance, $16,000 ;
special services, $20,100; suppiies; $229,300; materials for
maintenance , $57 ,600; equ ipment repl ac~ment, $98,500 ;
coo tract and open services, $4,000; fixed charges, $518,615;
cootingency, $20,000; capital outlay, $4,000. .
The board discussed at length the new cutbacks announced
by Columbia Gas Co.
A letter from Dr. Martin Essex, state superintendent of.
instruction, said a building ~uch as Meigs Hlldl School will

Unemployment falls to
7.9%: wholesale is up

'

TO PLAYBOY

CHICAGO (UP!) - Lee
Templeton, viCOi&gt;resident for
marketing of the Knight, Ridder newspaper chain, will
become
a
Playboy
Enterprises, Inc., senior vice
president
and
group
executive effective Feb. I.
Besides responsibility for
all International publimlng
and distribution operations,
licensing, franchising,
product merchandlllng and
~orporate
research ,
Templeton will carry overall
the
responslblllty for
company's new business
development, Derick J .
Daniels, Pllyboy president,
announced Monday.

:

~

THE INN PLACE
. Wednesday Night Special

'

PLEASANT VAI,.LEY
DISCHARGES - Rose
Goodwin, ·Point Pleasant ;
Michael Gleason, Point
Pleasant; James Anderson,
Radne; Mrs. Dennis Drlles,
New Haven ; Mrs. Matthew
Handshaw, Point Pleasant;
David Reynolds, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Bernard Lamp,
Point Pleasant ; Rachel Bush,
Lakin; and Myrtle Chorech,
Lakin.

· ... where drive-up banking lets you
complete deposits and withdrawals quickly
between 9:00a .m. and 3:00 p.m. J\1\onday
through Friday. Don't forget we're open 5 to
7:00 p.m. Friday evenings and from 9:00
a.m . until noon on Saturday. · Drive, up
banking was created for your convenience!

'\

m ill • ·
\

,

Resources exceed $2¥2
The Meigs County Budget
Commiulon has estimated
resources totaling
$2,674,190.04 in the fiscal year
beginning Jan. I, 1977.
The commission has
prepared @ breakdown of the
resources which will be used
by the Meigs County Com!llissioners In preparing their
annuai appropriations
resolution for !he county this
year.
Making up the total are :
gemiral fund , $1114,389.99; dog
and kennel fund, $9,399.20;
district board of health,
$46,385 ; food
service,
$1,394.87; ,public assistance,
$2S6 ,701.'!r,"" com munity

•
•••
•

.

one-half hour da ily because of ·
the additional work involved
with the breakfast program.
The board pa sse d a
resolution aothorizing the
clerk; Mrs. Eloise Boston, to
exclude listing the biiis in the
minute book and a second
r esolution

was

passed

authorizing Mrs. Boston to
ask for an advance draw
from the county auditor on
Jan, 19 in prepara tion for the
Jan. 20 payroll.
The board agreed to ask the
State Department to approve
Jan. 5, 6, and 7 as calamity
days. Those days make the
five calamity days permitted
by the state in a school year.
Make-up days .which will be
necessary were discussed but
no decision made on them. It
was agreed to check with the
Meigs Local Distri ct officials
on their make up days since
Eastern does have some
vocational students attending
in the Meigs District. It was
agreed !hat Monday, Martin
Lutheran King !'lay, will not
be a make up day .
It was agreed that the
policy wiD be to· ask all
persons or groups wishing to
appear before the board to
contact Supt. Riebel on the
Friday preceding a regular
meeting so that they can be
placed on the agenda.
However, it was painted out
that any happening taking
place Jrom the .Friday until
the Tuesday meeting can also
be discussed even though the
individuals Involved are not
on the agenda of board
meetings . Bills were approved for payment.
Attending were Supt.
Riebel, clerk, Mrs. Boston,
Chester Gooding, high school
principal, and boar~ members, Oris Smith, l)oug
Bissell, Dorothy Ca law•y,
Dan Smith and Dorsel
Larkins.

....

. i

�·-~ - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.'. Wednesdav. Jan. 12. 1977

2- Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 12. 1977

Soda pop war fiz.1.es out
MATTOON , nl. (UPI)- Tile Great SoWi Pop War has
gone flat.
•
Prices of eight-packs of Pepsi-Cola and Coca Cola, d'ow.11
to lows of 39 and 49cents before New Year's, have climbed
back up to 99 cents per carton m Mattoon, Charleston and
tlle west side of Shelbyville, Dl.
The war started Dec. 20 after Pepsi raised its pnces in
tlle central Jllin9J.• cities. Pepsi bottler Norm Schuchman
said tne htke was a "much needed one, " but Coca Cola
stayed put, and Ute war began.
'
Demand staggered area grocers, and tlle bottlers ran
out of bottles.
IGAstore manager Dave Lincoln said the lack of bottled
soda over the New Year's holiday weekend was somewhat
upsetting.
"It's frustrating to see customers walk out of the store
because you don't have sometltmg they want," he said.
The prices reported Tuesday m the now demilitarized
zone sllll were lower than tlle $1.29 per carton before the
:-var. But Lincoln adds that sales ftgures indtcale that the
great soda pop bubble has burst lor coosumers.

SVAC teams try again Friday

Criminals
.
on notice
or

prosecution
activities

in

Sport Parade

criminal
workmen 's

compensation.
- Increased efforts to rid
the welfare system of fraud
and abuse.
- Rem oved over 40 ,000
ineltgible rectpents from Ute
Aid to Dependent Children
cormrutted."
program at a savings of $40
Rhodes said ln the last two million .
years his adminstralion ha d:
-Cleared out the "agents
- Im p osed
f ir m of special' Interest who
management controls in the worked against the public
Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
mterest " in the Department
-Started tnvestigation and of Industrial Relations and
Ute Division of Safety and
Hygiene
" You can help me
era dicate
fraud
and
corruption
in
state
government," said Rhodes.
Dana V. Johnson, c~nter, for his 29 years of ou!Btanding
VETERAN SOLDIER RECOGNIZED - Captain
"As a permane nt deterrent
military service.
William
Hockenberry,
left,
and
Sgt. Charles Henson,
I wtll subm1t a bill Uta! will
right,
participated
in
weekend
ceremonies
honoring
Sgt.
life.
Most of the letters said deprtve a pubhc ofhctal of hiS
"In tile mam, they're from Rhodes, deal wtlh risin g pensiOn
ngh ts
upon
people who believe an utihty bills and public school convtctlOn of cr imt nal
injusttce has been given financmg.
activity m the abuse of state
tltem. We'll refer all of them
And one correspondent had office," satd Rhodes.
to the appropriate state a simple message : "If you
Rhodes also satd the state
department for a reply."
don't give us the things we losP.s $22 million a year
About 50 letters came from need we won't vote for you." because of the bootleggmg of
students m other states
\{bodes said response to his cigarettes into Ohio.
asking for autographs, maps proclamatio n warran ted
"This ts an acttvity of
and brochures.
makmg on e week a year or gan ized cnme," sa1d
"I can't find your name m _ " Write Your Govern or Rhodes. "I will propose that
my encyclopedia. Please Week."
you enact legislatton to g1ve
By LEE LEONARD
send me a ptcture and all the
the
tax
departm ent UPI Statehouse Reporter
additional powers to fight tlt1s
information you can find ,"
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
wrote
on e
studen t
criminal activity."
Ohio General Assembly. has
researchmg a class project
r ece ive d legiS lat ion
on each of the 50 United
proposing revisions in the
States.
motor vehtcle registration
Another satd she was
system and requtrements for
collec tilig autographs of
a periodic review of state
famous persons, and asked
agency performan~.
for Rhodes ' signature on a
Those ~tlls were submitted
picture.
ln the Senate Tuesday as both
One request was for
chambers prepared for
"information on the govern·
CLEVELAND (UP!) - In·
!Way's joint sesston in which
ment or anything else of dustrial customers of East
Gov. James A. Rhodes was to
mterest in,.regards to
review his own performance
' Ohio." OhiO Gas Co. we re told
Tuesday to expect "sharply
and chart a course for the
COLUMBUS 1UPI) - Stale next two years.
higher curtaibnents" of gas
HIGHER PRICES
Rep.
Thomas J . Carney, •Dsuppltes beca use of a colder
The House and Senate were
Boardlnan,
chairman of the to reconvene at 10:30 a.m,
TOLEOO, Ohio (UPI )
Ulan normal winter .
The price of Owens-Illinois
The new cutbacks included House Energy and Environ· today, one-half hour before
JOHNSON HONORED - Sgt. Dana V. Johnson, a member of 3fi64tlt Maintenance
Inc. plastic containers will a lOll per cent CW'taibnent of ment Committee, has asked Ute governor's "State of the
Company (FDS) West Virginia Armory National Guard, Point Pleasant, was presented a
nse by 4 to 6 per cent after gas supphes for large volume Gov . James A. Rhodes to State" message.
Meritorious Service Medal this weekeod by MaJor Kennetlt Morris. Sgt. Johnson was
Feb. 15.
bmler custom ers effe ctive declare an "energy emergen·
Several bills introducM
recogmzed for 29 years of outstanding military service.
Wilham J. Graham, vtce Feb I and a 30 per cent cy" withln the Columbia Gas Tuesday called for vehtcle
prestdent of Owens-IUinms cutback on March 15 to about distribution area in Ohio·
registration by mail, an
Ca rney was !h e. ch1ef increase in license plate fees
and general manager of the 300 customers in East Ohio's
sponsor of legisla twn from $10 to $25 and the Life Light 'plan
Plast1c Products Division, second highest priority.
satd Tu esday the · pnce
A spokesman for tile gas empowermg the governor to issuance of one plate instead
mcre ase is necessary company explamed that the declare an energy emergency of two Another blll called for is introducr d
because of con tinwng cost botler fuel cutback would or cri s1s if con ditions county auditors to take over
lncreases in labor, energy aflect "12 or 15" customers, warrant, and to take steps to vehicle regtStration.
for Ohio J;_Qads
and genera l operating costs mcludm g steel mills in t'Onserve fu el.
A
"sunset"
bill
reqwring
"The shortfall of natural Ute abolition of state agencies
since tts last pnce increase m Cleveland. However, he
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Gov.
April, 1976.
gas
pred icted for the which do not justify their
added that only botler fuel
James
A. Rhodes today in his
would be affected and . the Columbia Gas diStn butwn ex1stence
also
was State-of-the.State mesSJ!ge
doldrums, Carter sa id : "!
By HELEN THOMAS
customers indicated they had area IS a serious economic mtroduced, as was a proposal announced the inittation of a
setback
to
Oh1o's
economtc
don 't ha ve any criticism to
UPI
White
House
Reporter
alternative fuel supphes.
requirlng agencies to submit Life Light program for state
recovery,"
carney
wrote
to
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
_:
make of tltem. They wanted a
East ohio said heating fuel
more detailed information in highways.
Ute
governor
Tuesday.
$30
liillion pubhc works
Pr es td ent·elect ~Jtmm y
requirements are runrung 30
Ute lrudge ting process.
"Under this new program Ca rter began a day of program. In my opinion it's
Rhodes
IS
awa1tmg
a
report
per cent above normal for the
Rhodes told a bipartisan high mtensity reflectors wtll
with not feasible.n
winter and its principal sup- fr om the Publtc Utilities group of state legislators mark center and edge lines in maratho n ta lks
C
ommtsswn
and
the
Energy
members
of
Con
ss
by
He said Labor Secretary.
plier, Consolid ated Gas
Tuesday · that if th ey dange rous sections of 14,000
Resource
and
Development
tellmg
a
group
of
new
House
des
ignate Ray Ma rshall
Supply Corp., dicated the
expertence any difficulty in mtles of rural roads and 2,600
Agency
on
fuel
avat!abihty
members
this
morning
that
"feels
tile program adopted Is
latest curtalbnents.
obt.auung information fro m
and whether there lS a cr1sts. stale agencies, they should narrow br idges ," sa id he, hke them, lS a freshman the maximum fea sible
"The most valuable and
Accordlng to East Ohio, the
Rhodes.
and will need titetr help.
amount and I agree with
come tell him personally.
abundant fuel avatlable to us severity of tile winter has
"Tius program will save
Carter
was
greeted
by
Vice
him ."
The mvttalion applied many Ohioans from needless
m Ohio is coal," said Rhodes. substantially drawn down
Prestdent
-e
lec
l
Wal
te
r
He predi cted orga niz•d
spectitcally to the sta te mjuries and death as a result
"Our coal reserves could storage reserves and
Mondale
when
he
arrived
at
" e v~ntuall y
will
laborDepartmen t of Public of reduced night time auto
provide fuel for the next six adversely affected its abtlity SERVICES SCBEDULED
the
Rayburn
House
Office
agree."
hundred years.
to
meet
peak day
WEST PALM BEACH, Welfare, Rhodes said, adding acc1dents," said Rhodes.
Building shortly after 8 a.m.,
When told 'that NAACP's
FLa (UP!) - Services were he would lake the necessary
"We must flnd ways to use requiremen ts.
and
the pair spent a little Was hin gton
dir ec tor
Some three montlls ago, to be held IAJday m Pabn steps oo gel the information
more tltan half an hour with Clarence Mitchell said
Olti~ coal while P~~ectmg East Ohto told its industrial Beach for Cha rles M. White, desired by the lawmakwers. Fire rages out
47 fr eshmen congressmen President Ford would have
our d: nvtronment , sa td customers there would be no 85, former president and
"If you have any trouble
over
a breakfast of been elected if it had been
Rho s.
· furth er curtaibnen t for 1976, ch81rman of Ute board of wi th any of the cabin et
of
all
control
The governor also asked but a 10 per cent cutback Republtc Steel Corp .
scrambled
eggs, link sausa· known that carter would
offiCials, you come tell me
the ~neral Assembly to help would go into effect Jan I.
ge,
quail
aod
grits.
nominate Bell, carter said "I
HtS body will be flown to about it and we'll get you
Rep.
John
him m urgmg tile federal The latest cutbacks affect all Cleve land for in te rn men t fixed up," Rhodes was quoted
Cavanaugh
of
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - A
don't think that's an accurate
governme~t to develop the industnal customers who Fr1day.
multiple-alarm fire of Nebraska said carter told the analysis." He repeated that
as sayi ng.
depositstoh shale gas m Ohio have beenunder a lOper cent
Whi te, a native of Oakland,
The occasion was an hour· undetermined origin at a new House m~mhers that he is confident he made the
and o er Appala chtan curtaibnent since tlle end of Md , dted at Good Samaritan long meeting witlt a group of disco night club downtown Mondale will be an extension right choice when he picked
states.
the yeer.
Hosp1tal Monday.
legislators officially calling raged out of control during of himself in every way and the former federal judge.
on th e governor and tlle morning rush-hour today, will be "fully informed on all
informing htm th e 112th according to firemen , who matters and ... able to speak
General Assembly was were hampered by high for him."
The freshmen described
and
near-zero
convened and ready to do wind s
tempera
tures.
Ute
meeting as purely cordial
business for tile next two
and
social with no
The
blaze
broke
out
at
years
Rept.1rt
Issues discussed.
substantive
Meeting with the governor UtoPia Light and Power, 125
were Sens . M. Morris S. Main St., then spread to an Carter, according to Rep .
Jack son , D-Cleveland ; adjoining structure , forcing Allen Ertel of Pennsylvania,
Galllpolia, Oblo,
Kenneth R. Cox, D· authorities to block off S. said they were all starting as
freshmen
together
Jan.
20
Maln
St.
from
Mill
to
Bowery.
Jaa. 8, i977,
Barberoon; and Sam Speck,
and
they
would
need
each
No
injuries
were
reported
Sale•
Report of
R-New Concord; and Reps.
add more space-occupying your dtet first. If you get
DEAR READER - Blood Harry J. Lehman, !).Shaker and the cause of Ute fire other.
Ohio Valley Llvestuck Co.
food at that tune.
along all right and your colon pressure wtll riSe any time
Then carter and Mondaie
remains undetermined.
STOCKEl\ CATTLE During the rught you don't function seems pretty nor· the small arteries constrict. He1ghts; C. J. McLin, D·
went
a
few
blocks
away
to
the
STEERS
- 250 to 300 lbtl. 24
awallow air' and your mal, then you should talk to The same ampunt of blood lJe.. Dayton; Francine M.
Smithso
nian
ln
s
tlt.~tion
to
31.50;
300
to 400 !btl. 24.50 to
digestive system is fatr!y your doctor about your status mg pumped to the body Paneh al , D-C leveland ;
"castle"
building
for
a
day32;
400
to
500
lbs. 23 to 34.50;
empty of gas So you don't and whether it would be all through smaller arteries Richard F. Maier, R·
long,
round-table
discussion
500
to
600
lbtl.
21 .25 to 33.7~;
notice the gas after breakfast right for you to relax some of results m the mcreased Massillon ; and Claire M.
on
questi,ils
of
peace
and
war
600
to
700
!btl.
21.50
to 32; 700
Ball, R-Athens.
or lunch.
your other dieta ry restric- pressure.
witlt semor members of con- lbs. and Over 21 to 32.50;
The gas is probably Ira~ tions. Dun't try to do too
Holzer Medical Ceater
The small arteries contract
gress involved with foreign HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
TIIEDALY SENTIN EL
ped because of spasm of yoW' much at one time.
(Oischargea,
Jaa.
11)
or dilate m response to
affairs.
DEV&lt;m:D TO mE
300 lbs. 18 to 24.50; 300 to 400
colon. ThlS commonly goes
INTEREST OF
Meanwhile, I am sending se vera l fac tors , some
_ Paul Angles, Benjamin
Traveling
from
Plains,
Ga
.,
lbs. 18.50 to 25; 400 to 5otllbtl.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
along wtth diverticulosiS you The Health Letter chemical. others as a nerve
Blackburn, Elizabeth Bobo, late
Tuesday , Carter 19 to 28; 500 to 600 1bs. 18 to
CHEFrERL. To\NNEHIU.
Many specialists now think number IHi, Diverticulosis, to reflex response. When a musAnn Carroll, Mary Cox, defended his economic 27.50; 600 to 700 !btl. 19 to 29;
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
tlle pockets are small ru~ give · you more informati~ . cle IS ftrmly contracted and
James
Darst , Stephen package from critlci.sm by 700 lbe. and Over 17.50 to 31.
CltyEdHor
lures through tile wall.of the Others who want this . . held in that state momentart· " Pu bll~ dally except Saturday Donahue, Hugh Gillum, Jr., the AFL-CIO and his
STOCK COWS II BULUI
by n~e Ohio Valley Publishing Com·
colon as a result of colon formation can send 50 cents ly - as a sunp!e firm hand·
Nona Gunther, Magg ie appointment of Griffin Bell s ~By The Head)- Stock Cows
any, l1l Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio
spasms. The spasms are with a long, stamped, sell· shake - 11 triggers a reflex
llaUleld, Beverly Hoff, Mrs. Attorney General-designate 120 to m; Stock Cowa and
4S768 Business Offtce Phone 992thought to be related to a diet addressed envelope for it. response. The arteries con· · 2158 Ed!toria1Pbone 9924157.
Robert Jones and son, Linda from attac~ by the NAACP. Calvea130 to 270; Stock Bulls
Second clltss po5 tage paid at
that doesn't contain enough Just send your letter to me in s1rtcl and he blood pressure
Jones
, ~gela Landers, Pearl · "I'm looking forward to !:Ill to ~; Baby cables 4 to
Pomeroy, Ohio
care of this newspaper, P.O. goes up. ThiS IS only momencerealfiber.
N11t!ooal udvertlslni repraenutUe, Azlle Long, Patricia becoming president," carter 39; (By Tb PG'IIDd) Utllve W1rd • Grifftth Colllpllny, InThe only reason for not Box 1551, Radio City Station, tary, soon the arteries relax
Marcinko, Catherine Miller, told reporters aboard his canne~si&lt;CuttersCowst7.50
c , &amp;ttinelU and Gallughli!r Div ,
eating seeds, nuts and skins is New York, NY 10019.
Oscar Morgan, Dayid plane. "I am not nervous. I h&gt; 23; Hollteln Cows 23 to
7$7 Th1rd Ave, New York, N.Y.
and the blood pressure
10017
the concern that one of these
DEAR DR. LAMB - In one re turn s to normal.
Rinehart, Mrs. Marshall look fOrward to It witll a great 24.40; Commercial Bulls
Subscription rat~ Delivered IJ)'
may become impacted in one of your columns you mentipn· Sometimes the arteries dilate
Roush and dau ghter, Wayne deal of antlcipation . l think 1 (1,000 lbtl. and Over) 27 to 32.
carrier where av aUablc 75 cents per
week Hy Motor Hoole where e~ rri ~r
ol the little pockets, block it ed that Isometric exercises to a size hirger than before
Russell, Kay Sayre, Gladys have done my homework and
PIGS - 9 to 18.
serv1c!! •not avall.Mble, One month,
and cause it to act like an raised the blood pressure. As the refl ex response. In this
Stiffler, Tammy Waugh , I feel prepared for it as much
13 25 Hy mailm Ohio omd W, V11 ..
VEAt CALVES - Toi'S '".&gt;0
acute appendix. A good plan an exercise teacher for preg- case the pressure may
On~ Year, $22.00; Slt monlh:,,
Geneva Wolfe , Dp·othy as I can be . I am ready."
lbtl. to 210 71.50 to 80; Medium
' ll flO, Three months, 17.00;
is to try to modify your diet nant women, I am interested momentarily be lower than it
Wright.
Responding to criticism by 200 lbs. to 300$7 to 71 ; Culia 52 •
F..lscwhere 126.00 ye.r j Su[ monlhll
by adding whole wheat in knowing about the was before the museu Ia•· con(Birth, Jaa. ll)
U35!J, . Thtee months, $7.50 .,
tlle AFL.ciO who felt his tax down .
Su!J&amp;•riptll\11 pl'lcc Includes Sl.lndll)'
cereals and bran foods to mechamsm thai causes the traction.
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Mitchell
cut-jobtl
program was lnade·
SOWS - 350 lbs. up 28 to
I Ullts..Senlliu.:l:.
·
in crease.
Harrison , son, Oak Hill.
quatc to cure the economic 32.50.

Advised to write letters,
hundreds have, to Rhodes
By J . R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI )Last year, Ohio Gov. James
A Rhodes complained about
paperwork m government.
Last week, he crea ted some,
wtth a ''Write Your
Governor '· mvitafion that has
generated hu ndreds of
letters.
Three of the letters have
suggested where Rhodes
could go.
One seventh grader in Troy
asked RhodeS "What kind of
skills are needed to become a

governor?"

Another man asked about
his pension. A third man , a
corp orate pr estdent ,
complained about delay in
receiving payment on a btll
for state purchases.
One Columbus letter wrtter
had an answer to the question
on how to improve state
government m two sentences
and a postscript:
·•The best, quickest and
easiest solution to improved
government ln Ohio is for you
to resign, move to Florida ,
play golf and forget it. Warm
regards
''PS - and soon."
Rhodes says his office
usually gets between 50 and
lOll letters a day. Monday and
Tuesday, he satd, 500 letters
were recetved and put into

about 40 categories for
rephes to be drafted by the
appropnate state agency.
"We 'll answer all the
letter s," sa id Rhodes .
"Constructive cnticism has
never hurt anybody in public

Assembly
•
receives
new laws

East Oh1•0

facing gas Ohio facing
cutbacks emergency
•
m
energy

Freshmen hear
Ca~er request

Coal favored as
energy alternate
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
Ja mes A Rhodes, in his
Stateof-the-Sta te message
today, outlined several
proposals to help deal with
energy crtSis including
one
tllat
would encourage the
I
use of fuels other titan natural
gas- mamly coal.
"To further encouraJ!e the
increased use ol alrerna te
fuels, I will propose _that
industnal and commercial
users of na tural gas be
provided a tax exemption for
the facihties 'necessary to
convert to alternate fuels,"
Rhodes said.

'l'e

~

'

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sport.l Editor

NEWYORK ( UPI ) - Now that tile Oa kland Raiders are the
world champs and nobody can give litem anymore flak about
not being able to wln the big ones, you'd think that maybe AI
Davis, tile organizational genius who has taken them from the
bottom to the top in tlle past 14 years, wouid sit back and enJOY
all the hurrahs and Ute ba ckslaps, but not AI Davis.
He has sometlting on his mind, somethmg he constders every
bit as important as the decis1ve Super Bowl vtctory his Ra iders
regtstered over the Minnesota VIkings m the Rose Bowl lust
&amp;mday, maybe even more so in Ute long run, and anytime AI
Davis has sometlling on his mind, he usually gets 11 off pretty
qutckly by saying what he feels should be said.
AI Davis Is upset ove r the fact the NFL still doesn't have an
agreement witlt the Players' Assoctation.
He isn't crtlicizing anyone or second-guessing Pete Rozelle,
but from Ute way he talks, you can tell he 's distressed over the
breach between ownersh ip and the playe rs. What's more, you
can also tell by listening to him he feels he could settle the
matter. lf anyone could, it would he someone like AI Davis.
''The most important thing we have to do now is reach an
agreement wttlt the Players' Association," said Davis Tuesday, tile sense of urgency in his voice coming all the way
through tile phone from Oakland. "We've got oo gel that
straightened out in the next few days so professional footba ll
can keep on being the greatest sport in the world."
AI Davis ftrml y believes that. He is completely dedica ted to
the proposition there " nothmg else in the world that can
compare with profcsstonal football.
What pleased AI Davis more than anything else about
Oakland's Super Bowl vtctory was the new image it automatically created for John Madden The Ra iders' am1able,
outgoing 41).year-o ld coach ha d guided them to seven AFC
West titles, includmg Ute last five in a row, but unlil Sunday,
Madden wasn't regarded much more than an easy-going,
modern day Aody Devme.
AI Davis has always made 11 a point to see John Madden was
g1ven credit for the Raiders' success on I he fie ld. He made it
such a point, aod d1d it so often, that some suspected hlS
motive.
"Why are you always stumping for John Madden'" I asked
Davis. "The way you do it sounds ousplctous "
"I do it because he deserves it," Dav1&gt; said. "Everybody got
to meei him and find out what kind of coach ~·IS when we won
the &amp;tper Bowl game. John Madden 's ar. excellent coa ch. I
wouldn 't say tt unless he understood lc.otha ll. The last guy 1
had, John Rauch, didn't Believe me, I'm not lfy ing to
downgrade th e man, I don't do tllings like that, bu t Rauch
needed help That 's the truth.
"We went into Ute Super Bowl agamst the Packe rs m 1968
and they're ahead , 13-7, with a mmute to go before U1e half.
They 've got the ball on the1 r own e1ght , it's fou rth down and
Iiley have to punt. Would you beheve 11, they gel a field goa l
before the half ends' Tha i broke the game open, and 11
should've neve r happened . It wouldn't happened w1lh better
leadership .
"I was shook up last week when l read in the. papers Uml four
of our present players, Pete Banaszak, Freddte Bllelmkoff,
Gene Upshaw and Willie Brown, actually were scared when
they played Gree n Bay m the Super Bowl. W1th .grea t
CINCI NNATI (U PI) leaders' &gt;,we shou (dn 'l have been scared Who's afraid of the ·n m tee n players, mchldmg
gahda· 1ckers ? They were only mortal , same as us. What seven
p1 tchers ,
four
was t
) uc scared about ?''
oulf1elders, one shortstop and
AIL
not only talks tough, he played tough and coached an outfielder - ftrst baseman
tough. As a kid growmg up m Brooklyn, he hked baseball, the were picked by the Cincinnati
Yankees particu larly, not necessarily because they had the Reds Tuesday in the winter
baseball draft.
best players, either
Lefthanded pitcher Gregg
"The Yank ees probably were the best-orgamzed tea m m
baseball," said Davts "I'd read Slll pa pers every day and alii Lorenz , 19, of Harvey, N D , a
read about were tllosemagic Yankee pm-stri pes. You put them &amp;.5, 205.pounder who attends
on a player and he became an immediate wmner Well, now lnd1an Htlls Junior College
tt's a little different. You put tha t Sliver and black Oakland was the Reds' lop chmce of
Raiders' umform on a lot of penple who were 'reJects' and they Ute 12 players taken In the
regular phase of tile draft.
play football. Snpcr football."Anothe r soutltpaw pitcher,
AI Davts is pruuu of that
'
.
Jack Hobnes of Arlington,

Reds call

13 players

thru draft

Tcx , a nd Temple Juruor

PlANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW'

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorit~
pin as.
- Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite sud.s.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

Market

Swallowing air causes gas

' '

College was chosen second in
lhe regula r phase.
Other selec(1ons tn the
regular phase mcluded nght·
hsnded pitcher Davtd Hanna,
of Prescott, Ariz.; ouUielder
Kevin Knu th, R och esl~r .
N Y ; ou tfielder Walter
Pa lu ch, Chtc ago; n gh l·
handed pitcher M1 ke Schultz,
Yakima, Wash ; outfielder
Robert Potts , Seattle, Wash.;
left-handed pitcher Ronnie
Driver, Pased ena, Tex ;
outfielder-fir st baseman
Kevin Williams , Seattle ,
Wash.; outfielder Norman
Walker, Deer Park. Tex ;
right./tand e~ pitcher Michael
Gouch, Brooklyn, N.Y ; and
shortstop Robert ·Dernier,
Raytown, Mo.
The Reds' lone pick m the
secondary phase was left.
handed pitcher Wtlham
Scherrer of Spring Hill, Fla.,
previously selected last June
by the Cleveland Indians.

with us!

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 have
divertictilosis. Many years
ago my internist showed me
the X rays wtlh a number of
pockets coming out of.my col·
on. At that time the doctor
said I could eat most
.anything but to stay away
from seeds and f\Uts. Three
swnmers ago I started eating
corn on the cob again and
haven't had any new pr&lt;&gt;:btems due to the corn. can I
eat seeds, nuts and tomato
skins again ? I am going to try
usmg All-Bran for bulk.
I hsve gas some days. It is
always worse after dinner,
but 11 doesn'I Iiother me after
. breakfast or lunch. Why?
DEAR READER - A certain amount of gas '" the
digestive system - and m
some cases most of it -comes
from swallowing air. Since
this goes on all day, the
largest amount of gas ac·
cumulates by evening before
your . evening meal. So you
notice the gas more when you

Weat.~:~.... permitting, four
league contests and a non· ·
league affair are scheduled
this weekend in the Soutltern
Valley Athletic Conference
Smce last week's major
'Snowstorm, several cage
games have been postponed,
causing a deluge of make-up
games on future dates.
Friday night, the league
leadmg Southern Tornados
will go after their seventh
straight win against the
Southwestern Highlanders, 3·
4.
In other ga mes, North
Gallia visits Kyger Creek;
Eastern sitU looking for 1ts
ftrst win of the year goes to
Hanna n Trace 'and Fatrland
Is at Symmes Valley.
Saturd ay mght, Kyger
Creek travels to Eastern in a
make-up game postponed.
from Tuesday night.
As of last week, Southern's
Chip Brauer was the leadmg
scorer in the SV AC wtth a 23.3
average.
Kyge r Creek 's Ra lph
Baylor was second with an
18.7 average. Ralph Ingles of
Symmes Valley has a 16 point
average tn three league
ga mes.
Offensively, Southern with
its h1gh scormg cl ub, is
ranked second in area point
production wtth an average of
82 pomts per outing.
Kyger Creek, with the aid
of its 100 plus points agamst
Hannan, W. Va. ts seventh
with a 68 point avera ge
Hannan Trace is ninth with a
64 poi nt av erage; So uth·
western is averagmg 62.3
pomts m seven outings. North
Gallia has a 59.4 average in
five games, Symmes Valley,
a 54 point average m six
ga mes and Eastern, a 45
pomt average m six contests.
Defenstvely, Southern is
third with a 56.5 average.

'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
James-A . Rhndes today in his
State-of-the.State message to
th ~ Ohio General Assembly,
said he would work to
''eliminate crime, corruption
and fraud
in
stale
government wherever tt is
found and by whomever It lS

'

· -- ~---- -

QI!NIJIA I.
fltiVI!NUl

.-

8MARtNQ

BEDFORDTOWNSHIP

"'

TWP CL ERK

MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO

•S169

.'

'
41l 00

Thirteen minute
freeze won game

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Southe rn
6 0 491 339
Hitnnan Tra ce
Sym . Valle y
Sout hw es tern
Kyger Creek

3

TFAM

4 &lt;~36 447

1 4 408 416
1 4 307 365
0 6 171 394

North Gallia

Eastern

J 1 31? 333
J J 37&lt;1 355

VARSITY

TEAM

W L P OP

Southern

3 o

Hannan Tra ce

7 0 1?. 4 211

Sym Valley
Nor th Gallia

7 1 18? 181
I 1 179 118

?n

184

Southwestern

1 2 188 176

Eastern
Kyger Cr eek

0 7
0 3

TEAM

By
United
Press
lnlematlonal
It's difficult to look good
agamst Prmceton and Its
"we 've got all Ute t1me m the
woild" offense.
But Penn Coach Chuck
Daly went the T1gers one
belter Tuesday night with an
absolute deep freeze for the
fmal 13 mmules to g1ve the
Quakers a 43-39 vtctory and
first plac€ in Ute Ivy League .
" It was a must-wm g:pne
£or us," Da ly saul (l ft pr Hw

11 116
232

1n

RESERVE
W L P OP

Nort h Gatlla

2 o 92 51

~oufhe rn

J

1 t4.'l uJ

Sy m Vn ll ey

?

1 130 131

South wes tern
Kyger Creek

7 1 114 110
1 2 106 124

Han nan Trace

0 2

n

81

Eastern
0 2 61 100
Fn day's games - Nor th
Gall ta

at

Kyger

Monday puts on
Dodger uniform

Cr ee k ;

Ea stern at Hannan Trace,
Fa trland at Symm es Va lley
So uthern

at

Sou thwes tern

Saturday's gam es - Kyger
Creek a t Eastern (ma~e up )

r-----------,

I

~ ' "" ~•AoioU ed~t&gt;tr&gt;rliO'II• """• I N Ahl l

I

~ S&lt;o lfl fl/ loto l ~ 1 4
~

l uoolllo 1"'1"' "'"' ~~ OilS !H AN~i

I ' '" ' ' I " '"'

-·

,,

~""'~""

1,722 GO

gap to 24·22, by halfume
Willis sank two free throws
wtth 14 :2ileft in the game to
gtve tile Quakers the lead
and, after anoth er basket
mer eased the margin to 34·30,
Penn went mto a four-corner
stall against Prmcetnn's z.one
defense.
Penn mcreased 1ts lead to
fiv e pomt.s, :tll-34, on McDonald's tliree'flotnt play wttlt
2 33 remaining , but the
Tigers closed the margm to
one, 41).39, with 39 seconds
left.
Quaker guard Mark
Lonello made the hrst of two
free throws wtth 15 seconds
left , but miSsed l)Je second
and Prtnceton had a chance
to t1e. But Lonetto stole the

LOS 1\NGELES IUPI ) _ on a one-year contract for an
The Los Angeles Dodgers esttmated $00.000.
fma lly landed R1ck Monday
Kennedy sa1d the JJ.yea r
but tliey had to g1ve up Bill veteran, a product of Sa nta
Buckner to get him.
Momca, caiU., who went to
In a five-p layer trade Tues· Arizona State, asked for · a
NB A S!a ndtngs
day, the Dodgers obtained muluyear contract.
By Un ti ed Press l nt er naf to na l Monday, 31, to play center
"I had not asked to be
Ea stern Confer ence
fie ld next season and also traded and I never would
At lantic DI VISIOn
W L Pet
GB obta med 21-year·old rehef
sim ply because of my
Philade lphia 'l7 15 595
pttcher
Mike
Ga
rman
from
appreciatwn for the way the
80S10,f.1
19 18 51d 3
N'( Kn1cks
19 19 500 31
the Chicago Cubs.
Cubs treated me an•; because
Bu lf,li O
15 b l 385
8
They
dealt
Buckner,
who
of my regard for fr:ends and
NY Ne ts
12 26 316 10
hit .301 last season , along teammates m Chicago," sa1d
Ce ntra l D•v •s•o n
W L Pet
GB wtth uttltty shortstop Ivan
Monday
Cleveland
'lJ 16 590
"At the same ltme, si nce I
Hou ston
20 16 556 1• . De Jesus. 24, and minor
Washmglon
19 18 5LI 3
league p1tcher Jeff Albert. 22 ha ve the rtghl of approval
San Anlon•o
20 19 513 3
The Dodgers said tlley have over any trade, i had told the
New Orl eans 19 20 &lt;1 87 .s
A tlant a
13 28 317 lt
so ught Monday for four Cubs that l would not
West ern Co nference
years. According to ChiCago • d1sapprove of a trade to the
M ldWe5 1 DI VIS IOn
Manager Bob West Coast to the Dodgers.
W L Pet
GB General
Denve r
26 12 684
Kenne
dy,
Monday
became
" I . don't believe m
Drlro•l
23 16 590 3
too expens1ve for the Cubs negoltaltng through the press
lnd •ana
20 20 500 7
Kansa s C•ty
18 21 &lt;162 8 1
"R•ck was Slntply asktn g and all l will sa) about what I
ClliCQQO
14 2:? 389 11
for
more than we were abl e t.o
am lookmg for IS that I ca n't
MiiW i'IU kCC
17 29 ?93 151
pay, Kennedy sa1d "We thtnk of any player who Is not
Pi'IC iflc DI VISIOn
W l Pet
G B traded hun stnc tly as a
mterested m a mult1year
Portland
28 13 683 matter of dolla,rs and cents." con tract."
Los Ange les
25 14 6·11
2
Golden Sl a te 20 17 54 1 6
Monday played last season
Monday hit 272last season
S('a!t le
27. 19 537 6
and
had career h1ghs of 32
Phoen •x
15 22 ·105 11
homers
and 77 RBts
Tue sda y' s Resul ts
Boston 105 Houston 101
New
)Jodger
Manager Tom
Los Anq 101 Cleve 99 , ot
Lasorda
sa1d
he probably
Ch •c aqo 93 Phoen •x 90
Phlladelph•a 117 I&lt;. an Cdy 11 5
wo~ld put Monday stxth m a
Wa shmqton 120 M•lwaukee 109
Ime up readmg Davey Lopes,
Detro•l 119 (;otd ('n Slate 121
Portland 131 NY Kn tcks 111
second base, Bill Russell ,
fOnty games sehcdul cd l
shortstop, Regg•e · Smith,
W ed ncsd&lt;w 's G.1m es
GRANVI
LLE:
Ohio
(UPI
)
right fteid , Ron Cey, third
•
lnd•ani' a t Bos f~n
- Gary Hursey dropped tn 24 base i Steve Garvey, f1rst
A tlan t a a 1 Buffalo
Houston at P~ •l adclph1a
pomts and Tom Sowers added bsse ; Monday, center held,
Mrlwaukee at San Anton1o
another
20 Tuesday night as Dusty Baker, left f1 eld, and
Ch 1ca go at washmgton
New Orlea ns at Den ver
Mari ett a wh• sked past Steve Yeager, catcher.
Dclro•t at Sealtl e
Demson 73.j)7 m an Ohio
"The hard part is givmg up
ronly games sc hedu led I
Thu rsdil'( s Ga mes
Conference So uthern Divisjon Buckner,'' said Lasorda . ~·we
Golden St at Kan sas C1ty
face·off.
came up through the system
Del r OI I 01 PhO en• )(
Demson 's Todd Harris was togethe r and he's been like a
tOnly games scheduled )
game·h•gh sco rer with 31 son 4&gt;Jle. He's a tremendous
1 pmnls.
competitor who should give
N H L Sl and1n g s
The Btg Red led 35·34 at the the Cubs a lot of good yea rs
By Un •t ed Pr ess ln ternat•onal \
Ca m pbrll Conlercncc
haU but were pushed around He's a bona fi de .300 hitter."
"P.1tr1ek D IVISIOn
by Manetta throughout the
W LTPts GFGA
Phda
25 9 9 59 166117 second half The Pioneers
N Y tslandrs 25 9 6 56 . 148 107 shot 52 per cent from the held
A tlan ta
19 16 7 45 1)7 13A
NY Ri'lnqers 16 16 12 44 102 157 compared lo 39 per cent for
Smyt he D •vis 1on
Denison
W l T P IS G F G A
The win gives Marietta a 1·
Sl L OUIS
17 20 5 39 118 149
Ch •caqo
1 ~ ?2 6 34 IJ7 153
2 in the conference and is 4-41
M.nnesot a 10 21 9 ?9 117 160 overall
vancouver 1?79 J 7H t23 180

lI . Pro
II
lStan,.:Hngs l

WINTER

s
A
L

1 }

1 ,.

11

Pioneers slip

past Dennison

BURTON'S SUNOCO
773-9524

MASON, W. VA.

Co lor ado
10 24 7 27 11 5 157
Wa l es Conl er ence
No r r l ~ DI VISIOn
W L T Pt s G F GA

Monlrcal
37 5 6 70 214 94
P•IISbUI'qh 17 17 8 47 1]1 139
L os Anq ctes 14 19 10 38 136 143
Detr o•l
1373 5 Jl 117150
Wash •no tn 17 25 6 30 112 167
. Ada m s DI VISIOn
W LT Pts GF GA
Bull a to
?6 11 4 56 153 108
Boston
16 13 J 55 l'i9 12R
Toronlo
20 17 6 &lt;~6 159 14 1
Cleve land
1? 24 7 31 l?B 158
Tu es day '$ Results
Bo ston ;J washmgton 'l
Toronto 2 P1IISburgh 0
M ont r ea l 6 Col orado 0
(Onl y games scheduled)
Wednesd ay ' \ Ga mes
NY Rangers at :A II an la
NY I sl ander s at Ch1cago
Mon lr E'a l al St Loui s
De tro•! at Cleveland
Los Ange les al Toron lo
Minneso ta at Vll.n couver
fOnly games !'Kheduledl
T h ursday 's Gam es
NY Range rs at Buff a lo
Detroi t a t Colorado
Los Ange le s at B(Jston
(On ly gam es sch ed uled)

RIO TO PLAY
'tonight 's Rio Grande
Co llege-Walsh Coll ege
basketball game at Lyne
Center will be played as
scheduled. Tipoff time of
the Mld.Qhio Conference
game Is 7: 30.
Oh10 Htgh Schoo l
Bask etball Results
United P ress InternatiOnal
MagnoiJO Sandy Val ley 78 E
Can ton 49
Canal Fu lton NW 71 Unton .
town Lake 59
Am herst 74 Verm 111on 55
F at r por t 7J Kirtl and 62
Mentor 76 Wes t Geauqa 59
Tol Macom ber 74 Tol Start 56

Tal Devilb iss 72 Tal Wai te 54
Tol

T ol

l tbbey 75 Tol Roger s 67
Bow sher

F ra ncis
WHA Standings
By U n1ted Press lntcrn altonal
E ast
W L T Pts GF GA
Quebec
25 15 1 51 185 l .t5
Cl nc mna t• ~0 17 2 42 175 137
tnd lan apl s 20 17 2 47. 1'17 131
Mmnesol a 16 11 5 41 124 110
New E nglnd 17 23 A 38 1&lt;14 1M

87 Tol . St

78

Ollovil le 80 Van Wer l 78
Ottawa Ht lls 64 Pettisv i lle 58

(of )

Cle St Joseph 8&lt;1 W• ck lilfe 78
Gro-...-:p or t 57 Wes ter vil le

S 48

Kenmor e 83 Ak r St VIncent

54

Coven try 67 Htg hl and 64
u 29 1 19 145 176 Rever e 65 H ud son 64
Wes t
Gr een 63 Copley 54
W L T fits. GF GA
san D 1ego 24 15 2 50 138 116 Norlhwest 71 Lake 59
Wi nnipeg
n 15 1 &lt;t5 174 133 Sand y Val ley 78 E Ca nton 49
Houslon
20 15 5 &lt;15 138 125
Edmonton 16 23 I 37 112 1.t6
Calgary
16 20 2 34 116 119 RESIGNATION
Phoen•x
15 73 2 3'1 13? 182 ANNOUNCED
Tu esda y' s Resulh
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) Ctncmnal• 8 New E'ng 2
Harold W. Oyster, 62, has
Wlnn• peg 9 Phocn l)( 1
"

Bi r mngh m

· lndp ls &lt;~Calgary 3, ot
EdmMton a t a ue , ppd , snow
San Diego at Houston , ppd
M armers' snowbound In Que
fOnly games schedU led I
W edn e!da y's Gam es
Birm ing ham at M mnesota
H(Juston at Ph0en 1x
(Onl y games schedu led!
Thursday 's G~m es
New E ng a t Ind iana poli s
Cmclnn atl at S&amp; n D iego
(Onl y ga m es sched uled \

I,J IO 00
3 lnh"ell '*""~
':' Cr.,Mo!f i.U, 1 ~~~~ • • ~ )I 19111/

Quakers tmproved their Ivy
League record to J.1J with the
vtctory over the defending
champtons. " It was a critical
win ''
Keven McDonald led the
Quakers with 17 potnts and
sophomore Bobby Willi s had
11
Princeton 's slow and
deliberate offense buill a II).
pomllead early in the game,
but the Qualiers resorted to a
pressure defense to close the

ba!J at midcoW't and clinched
tlle victory w' ~ 1 dunk
Frank So" .ski was high
scorer for Princeton with t8
pomts.
Glen Gondrezick scored 25
pomts to lead seventlt..-anked
Nevada-Las Vegas to a 132-90
rout of Northern Artzona as
Ute Rebels improved their
remrd .to 14-1
Ninth.f'anked Marquette
had only slightly mo re
trouble tn registermg a 74-56
\'lctory over A1r Force as
Butch Lee scored 33 poin iB for
Ute Warnors.
Providence rolled to Its 12th
victory in 14 games with an
86-71
triumph
ove r
Conne cticut. Bob Cooper
scored 22 points and Joe
Hassett 18 for the Frtars
Injured Steve Puid okas
came off the br nch to score 12
pomts In U'le f1 nal lO mmutes,
1nclud1ng a game-w11Jn1ng
layup with fiv e seconds left.
.to gtve Wash mgton State a 64·
63 dectston over Montana
State
In other games, Holy Cross
defeated Yale, 84.'/J, and New
Mexico State defeated 'l'ul ~a.
82-69.

Ohio Col leg ~

Basketba II Scores
United Pre ss International
Kenyon 68 Heidelberg 67
Musking um 74 Capit.;tl 59
Mar ietta 73 DeniSon 67
Ashland 63 Olterbeln 59
De!i(llncc 107 And er son ( lnd )

98

H1ram 97 John Ce~r r o!l

n

announced he will resign Feb.
28 from his $37,856-a-yearpost as vice chancellor for
community liaison with the
Ohio Board of Regents.
. The retirement wlll end 35
·years of stale service.
In 1950, Oys ter, a
Washington County native,
succeeded' C. William O'Neill
as a state representa tiv~
fr om that co unty, whe~
O'Neill was elected state
1
attorney general. He went on
· to serve for 14 years in 1hr
leg isla ture
He IS. a former ,\i ce
preNident of the Umversity of
Akron and of the Uruvorslly
uf l't,](•dn

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t ::-The DaUvSentinei; Middleoort-Pmneroy, u., weanesilay, Jan. l2, 1977

o

Bullets subdue Bucks at home
in a 1 ~109 'trlwnph over the
By CHRIS SCHERF
Bucks.
UPI Sporll Wr11er
Bob Dandridge SCIII'ed 28
In the National Basketball
points
for the Bucks.
Association, where visiting
George
McG innis, who finteams are renowned for their
inspired efforts, the home isbed with '!I points, scored 10
tea m bas won the vast points and had two assists in
ma jority of ga mes this the final six minutes to lead
the Philadelphia 76ers to a
season.
In fact, Tuesday's results, H?-115 vic tory over the
in whic~ three of seven Kansas City Kings.
Henry Bibby had 28 points
*tsitors won, should be
bronzed as a living for the 76ers, while J;lrlan
monwnent to the courage and Taylor had 34 points for the
fortitude of NBA players in Kings.
The Detroit Pistons, who
the fa ce of wearyin g
schedules and the non- own one of the best road
recOrds in the NBA at ~12,
comforts of the road.
.The Washington Bullets capped the memorable
pr ove d Mi l wauke e's evening with a 1~121 victory
homecourt advantage was no over the 'Golden State
detriment to their recent Warriors. Reserve guards
string of su~ss as reserve Ralph Simpson and Eric
Larry -wright and Elvin Money ea ch scored eight
Hayes each scored 2S points points in a 4P,Poinl second

Star search on
of a total ot 211 over 16
NEW YORK (UPI ) Baseba ll owners searched for rounds. Eleven of the
the stars of · the future pitchers went ' in the first
Tuesday in the annual winter round.
The new college rule
draft but the · chances of
finding them were slim with a permits the signing of
recent rule change limiting collegians, who still have
selections to mostly junior their senior year of
college players and college eligibility, but those signings
are permitted only between
dropouts.
·
Montreal, which posted ihe school years. Thus, most of
worst record in the major the four-year college players
leagues last season, picked will not be taken until the
first in the ·regular phase of annual' June draft.
"We selected Adams
the draft and look Ill-year-old
ca tcher-third baseman because be has major league
Ca lvin Adams of Corpus home run power potential,"
Christi, Tex., who hit .484 said Daruiy Menendez, the
during Central Arizona 's fall ·Expos' director of scouting.
semester baseball program. "No question , his forte is his
Th e Ameri can League's bat. That's a rare tool in a
worst club, the Chicago White young ballplayer. Usually,
Sox, went for 19-year old hitting is a deficiency. "
Following · the regular
outfielder Ja!lles Glenn, Jr.
phase
of the dr'aft, a
of Navasota, Tex. , a
secondary
phase was
defensive specialist.
condu
cted
whereby
teams
Pitchers, however, were
could
select
players
the main object of the clubs'
attention \vith 101 chosen out previously drafted bill not
signed .

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BASKETBALL

:Bsu~k when nobody

by MAC
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI ) - ·
Matt Hicks of Northern
Illinois, who scored 45 points
and pulled down 2S rebounds
in two games last week, has
been named the&gt; Mid American Conference basketball Player-of-the-Week, it
was announced Tuesday.
The 6-4, 192-pou)ll1d senior
scored 28 points and picked
off 11 rebounds in Northern
IDinois' 50-4$ loss to Western
Michigan and added 17 points
and 14 rebounds in the
Huskies' 81-&lt;i!i victory over
Ohio University.
Also nominated thiS week
were Western Michigan's
Mary Murray, Dick Miller of
Toledo; Steve Sksggs of Ohio
University; Archie Aldridge
of Miami University ;
Leonard Drake of Central
Michigan; Norvain Morgan
of Bowli!lg Green and Randy
Boarden of Ball Stale. ·

Frankfort Adena 'A' l~ader
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPl ) - Defending stale champions
Columbus Bishop Hartley
and Frankfort Adena and
Columbus Bishop Watterson,
the Class AAA tournament
runnerup, head the .first ever
United Press Interna tiona!
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches girls ' basketball
ratings.
Walterson, which finished
second to Toledo Woodward
in the Cl ass AAA sta te
tournam ent last April,
grabbed off the No. 1 spot lri
the big school voting with its
6-lJ record, while Hartley, the
defending
AA
state
champion, claimed . the top
spot in that classification
with a 3-2 mark, its two losses
coming to Watterson and No.
4 ranked (AAA ) Gahanna
Lincoln.
Adena, the Class A leader,
won the small school tournament title behind 6-foot-4
Cindy Noble, who has led a
veteran group of players to a
4-ll mark so far this young
season.
Cincinnati Sycamore ( Hl)
and Struthers (3-1), two other
AAA state tournament
semifinalists of a yeat ago,
finiahed in second and third,
respectively, in the first of
eigh\ weeks of voting by a
board of coaches , while
Gahanna, unbeaten in two

rating
over
Warren
Champion , another sta te
tournament team of a year
ago, while Warsaw River
View
and
Bellbrook,
runnerup to Hartley in the
tournament, finished in third
and fourth respectively.
Unbeaten Campbell
Memorial (:HI) and oncebeaten Cortland Lakeview (61) deadlocked fo'r 'fifth,
followed by Dresden TriValley, Akron Our Lady of
Elms, New Concord John
Glenn and Oregon Cardinal
Stritch, also a semifinalist
last April.
Convoy Crestview (t-1) finisbed in the runnerup spot in
the small school balloting,
followed lri a third place tie
by Russia (3-1)) and Minster
(6-0).
-The rest of the Class A top
ten consisted of· Delphos St.
John, Rocky River Lutheran ·
West, ruMerup to Frankfort
Adena last spring, Lancaster
. Fisher Catholic, New Riegel,
West Unity Hilltop and
Tinora.
Snow has played havoc
. with schedules the past
. couple of weeks, many
coaches reporting two or
more games having to be
.reslated.
COLUMBUS IUPI) - The
first 1977 United Press In·
ternational Ohio High School
Board· of Coa c hes ' girls
baske tball ratings with firstplace · ,otes and won -lost
record in parentheses :

Colwnbus Walnut Ridge fifth,
also at 2-0.
Woodward, which has yet
toplayagamebecauaeofbad
weather, claimed the No. 6
· ·
- II ed b
spot m AAA , to ow
Y
Cincinnati Mother of Mercy
(1-0), Kettering Fairmont
Eallt (2-0), Middletown (3-0)
· and Bowling Green (2-2).
Hartley took the No. 1 AA

Class AAA
Team
Pts .
1. C.olumbus Watterson • (6.
01
.
61
2. Cincinnati Sycamore 1 11 ·
01
'
54
3. Struthers 1 13-1}
•6
4. Gahanna Lincoln 12·01
38
s. Columbus Walnu t Ridge 12·
O)
34
6. Toledo Woodward IO·OI 30
7. Cincinnati Mother ot Mercy
1 (1-01
2)
8. Ketfer inQ Fairmont East

25 14·0)
16
24 10. Oreg on Cardinal Stritch
14 X
14

12-01
.
9. Middlelown 1 1301
10. Bowli ng Green 12·21
Class AA
Team

Pfs.

Class A

ream

Pfs.

1. Col umbus Hartley 2 (3-21 48 1. Frankfort Adena 514-0) 87
2. Warren Champion (4 -1) 36 2. Convoy Cr estv iew (4-ll - 53
l . Warsaw River View 1 {33. tie Russia 1 (3-0l
49
0)
35 3. tie Minster 16·01
49
4. Bellbrook 1
28 5. Delphos St. John 315-01 45
5. tie Campbell M emoria l 2

6.

S. tie Cortland Lak eview (6 1)
•
20
7. Dresden Tri Va lley 11 ·01 18
8. Akron Our Lad y of Elms (31)
17

7. Lancaster Fisher Ca tholi c

(5-0)

20

9. New Concor d Jnhn Gl e&gt;nn

Roc ky

West 1 (1·0)

River

Luthera n

Mason, W. Va .
C"pen: Mon.-Thurs. &amp; Sat. B-5:30
Friday B-8

1 12·2)

19
17
9. West Un ity Hill top 14-11 26
10. Tinora l3-11
21
8. New Rl egel1 17·01

Indians draft 7 pitchers
CLEVELAND (UPI ) The Cleveland Indians took
seven pitchers, including top
pick lefthander Mike Elliott,
18, of Bishop, Calif., in the
January Free Ageri! draft
Tuesday, selectlrig 12th in
each round.
Elliott, 6-2 and 180 pounds,
attends West Hills (Calif.)
Junior college. Taken by the
Indians in the fifth round of
the regular phase of the draft
was outfielder Bob Costa, 19,
of nearby Wickliffe.
Other Indians selections in
the regular phase were
outfielder Jerome Earl of
Clairenton, Pa.; outfielder
Bobby McCormick
of
Bakersfield, Calif . ;
lefthanded pitcher .James
Norman of Tampa, Fla .;
righthanded pitcher Kendall
Driggers of Jacksonville ,

College Basketball Results
Val dosta St . 94 Flit . Slhrn 70
W .Va. St. 79 Beckl ey 71
Midwest
Ashland 63 Ot ter be in 59
A vila BO Tarkio 79
Be th el 71 Mar:ian 65.
Cndia Lulh 77 Ft .Wavn e Bib 73
Defiance 107 Anderson
Empori a St. 89 Benedctne 66
Friends 87 McPher son 75
Hiram 97 John Carroll 72
Hunlington 80 Marion 77
Kan . Newman 65 Washburn 67
Kenyon 08 Heidelberg 67
Mar ie tta 73 Den ison 67
Mo . Sthrn 89 SW Bapt ist 70
Musldngum 7.4 Capilal sq
Ollaw a 82 Mi d -A m Na z 16
SE Mo. 100 New Haven 79
SW Mo . 72 K y . Wesleyan 63
Southwest
Cent Ok. 71 Bethn y Na z.64

qa -

Fla. ; first l&gt;aseman-eatcher
Aurelio Cadallia of Hialeah,
Fla.; infieide~ Don Hubbard
of Hamilton, Ohio; lnfielder
Steve Robbins of Colwnbia,
S.C.; and shoristop-outfi,elder
Ernest Gibson of Rome, Ga .
Taken in the secondarY
phase were leflhan~ed
piicher Frank Ferroni of Mill
Valley, Calif.; outfielder Tim
Knight of Holly Hils, Fla.:
righthanded pitcher Peter
Alfano of Birmingham, Ala.;
righthanded pitcher James
Harris of Boosier City, La.;
righthanded pitcher Thomas
Underhill of Bristol, Wis.;
and shortstop Jack Lopez of
Jacksonville, Fla.
·

Aorida Oranges

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Mljll·
taches and long hair willlbe
banned on the 1977 St. Louis
Cardinals' baseball team.
New Manager Vern Rapp
said Tuesday his players will
have clean-shaven faces,
neatly trimmed locks and
proper apparel while on the
road.
"We just see this as a new
team image," Rapp said.
"I'm trying to build an image
of players who are diSciplined
and dedicated to their
profession _a.nd team."

Cottage Cheese
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24'oz.

Boston Butt

Wagntr

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LB.

Drink

carton

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32

at.

33~

Tomato
"Juice

had use for poodles
By Erae'sl Lyoaa
Noted the other day thai the poodle is the most popular dog
in America. What happened to the collie, the airedale, the fox
ierrier and if you Will pardon me, the houndd&lt;ig~
•
Southerners, of whom I happen to be one, are fond of hounds
and bird' dogs. They earn their keep. A good hound pays for
itself 11)8ny times over in rabbits, coons, posswns and wildcats
- if you put a value on such creatures. ·
A bird dog lh\lt .r¢ally knows its business is a jewel beyond
price. It tells you where the partridges are -pardon me agalll,
thequail.
.
·
HOWids have always been an Important part of my Ufe.
There was my old Walker foxhound Mack, who accompanied
me on my first visit to Lake Okeechobee along about 1918.
Mack haled cows.
1 was camped in a tepee tent on the ridge, down below the
Hole in the Wall along with Mack when he started _chasing this
cow. 1beard his baying a long way off and then, as 11 got closer,
I realized the certainty of disaster. There was not room for the
cow to pass the tent.
·
I stood aside. The cow hit the tent and carried it off. Old
Mac)! came back, wagging his tail, asking to have his ears
scratched. J scratched. He had done a good job.
Old Mack was nobody's fool. He was a(raid of alligators. One
time the Old Man and I were camped on a creek bank when Old
Mack pushed himself into ·the tent. Dad grabbed him by the
loose skin of his neck and threw him outside. He barged back
in.
Dad reached back down to pick up a shotgun loaded with
buckshot aild delivered hoth barreis to a !~foot alligator just
outside the tent door.
Hounds are most remarkable for their ability to trail and
tree. Old Man Roebuck was a little blind beagle that could tell
you whether a fox squirrel was stiU up the tree, where the wild
turkeys were, or how to follow a deer across a slough just by
smelling the maiden cane.
Hounds can be both good and .had. I once owned one who
would bay a coon until he had it treed and the.n would fall
asleep llfldenieath the tree. n was up to you to find which of
I,000 trees he was sleeping underneath.
The most unnervingjhing about any sort of dog is what, for
better definition, must be called ESP. You are sitting with
your dog in the quiet of a camp at night when suddenly its
hackles rtse, it faces an unknown and invisible intruder, and
you see nothing.
My favorite dog, in a lifetime of owning many, was big old
red Pudge, a golden retriever, I used to take her out into the
ocean in a 14-foot boat. When we were just about out of sight of
land, Pudge would cmne hack to me, pUt a paw on my sholllder
and beckon with the other paw landward. Pudge did not have
much sense about alligators. She thought they were just
another sort of dog . When we w.ould go fishing lri the back coun•
try, I had to keep Pudge tied up to keep her from becoming too
friendly with the galors.
One time I remember, out on St. Lucie Canal, Pudge jwnped
loose and swam out to greet a friendly alligator. It snapped at
her and she showed the good sense to swim back. I had lo
bounce rocks off the head of the gator before it gave up.
Poodles? No, we didn't have any. Our dogs were tough dogs.
The country has changed.
Ernest Lyons is retired editor of the Stuart, Fla. News.

SEATTLE (UPI ) - For the
first time in its 27-year
history, the National Football
League's Pro Bowl ls a
sellout. The Seattle Seahawks
announced Tuesday that all

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By Helen Bottel

~

Some Kind of Christmas Present?
DEAR HELEN:
I've owed my father $50 for quite a while. He said when I
started earning more. than he does, I no Iunger got freebies:
and that's fatr. He's onSocial Security and a pension.
Butl confess I forgot. It's been almosllhree years.
For r;ru-tstmas, he sent me a small hotile of cologne and a
note tn his card. It read. "My Merry Christmas gift to you, is
$25 off your payment due,"
·
Somehow I feel bur.\. It 's like he's dunning me. I'd looked
forward toa nice gift.
I immediately sent him the other $25 and haven't written to him since. Do you blame me' - GROWN DAUGHTER
DEARGROWN:
,
I blame you for letting a loan run three years overdue.
(You'd owe some $251nterest had you borrowed from a finance
companyl)
. Perhaps your father wasn't very tactful , but then, he
might have been desperate. It's not NICE to conveniently
forget repayment, just because it's for "good ol' dad , the handoutman.''
Write him a friendly letter and enclose a sma ll check. He
probiJblyneeds it. - H.
DEARHELEN:
·
The tJest word for "live-togethers" ? What's wrong with
concubine' (Maybe "concubub " for males' )
We bear so much ilhoul the great amount of sex activity in
the country today. How about in Biblical times when one great
patriarch had "seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines'' And that wa sn't unusual. Muat have been some
highlyhyper-sexed meniri those days. Only 365 days in a year: .
three women per night If each was tobe served ONCE a year!
I am 115 years old and I can remember "way back the"
there was plenty going on. (And we·didn't have telephones to
make dates with, or cars to gel over to see our girls within a
f~wminutes. )

night, you might try a baked tuna casserole and an Apple Betty
Pie. They ca n be baked allhe same time, thus saving energy
and while the recipe for the pie calls for 375 degrees, we find it
bakes. just fine at the 3511 degrees called for i~ the tuna
casserole. Just give the pie 20 minutes before you put in the
casserole
BAKED TI!NA
·4tbsp. butter, 4 tbsp . nour, 21k cups milk, 1c. flaked tuna,
juice of % lemon, 1f.1 c. sliced m'ushrooms, and 1 3 OWlCe
package pptato chips, crushed.
Melt butter in saucepan; stir iri fl our. Add milk ; cook,
stirring, untiJ thickened . Rinse tuna with hot water; drai n.
Sprinkle w,ilh lemon juice. Add mushrooms and sauce , mixing
well. Reserve 11.: CUP. potato chi ps ; stir remaining potato chips
into tuna mixture. Place in shallow square ba king pa n,
sprinkle reserved potato chips on top.
Ba ke at 350 degrees fo r 30 minutes, cut into squares and
serve.
I

APPLE BETTY PIE
4 c. sliced tart apples, 14 c. orange juice, 1-:· c. sugar. aM c.
·nou r, 1)-, tsp. cinnamon, 1 fl tsp . nutmeg, dash of saJt, 1,4 c.
butter.
Mount apples in ,center of greased 9 inch pie plate, sprinkle
with orange juice. Combine sugar, flour, spices and salt, cut in
butter wlth ,fork until mixture is crumbly. Sprinkle flour
mixture over apples. Bake at 37&gt; degree~ for 4&gt; minutes or
until apples are done and topping is crisp and lightly browned .
This can be ga rnished with twisted orange slices studded
with cloves, served warm with a pitcher of light cream, or with
scoops of vanilla ice cream.
For those who love strawberries, here is a recipe for
Strawberry Cream Pie you might like to try . Sollflds delicious.
STRAWBERRY CREAM PIE
I pk g. frozen sliced strawberries, 1 10 ou nce package
marshmallows,. ! c. whipping cream, whipped and 1 baked pie
shelL
Thaw strawberries ; drain , reserving 1,:. cup juice.
Combine marshmallows and reserved juice in lhe top of a
double boiler. Cook a.nd stir over hot wa ter until smooth. Cool.
Fold in whipped cream and strawberries. Pour into pie
shell and chill before serving.

Belinda Lou Zerkle
ENGAGBD- Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Zerkle of New
Haven are announcing the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Belinda Lou, to Lonnie Lynn
Newell, son of Mrs. Belly Newell , New Haven, and the late
Aubrey V. Newell. Belinda is a senior at Wahama High
School. Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Wahama High
School employed with the Sou:hern Ohio Coal Company. A
June wedding is being planned.

When son asked Dad for the use of the horse and buggy,
__!lex! morning Dad usually noticed footprints on the dashboard,·
upside down.
,
Then there were "bundling boards" so the boy could slay
overnight ·with his girl, if he had too far to !ravel. Sometimes
they came twnbling down .
Where did we learn about sex in those days? From the Bible. Nothing was left out, including incest and bestiality. The
chapter on Lot and his two daughters (who seduced him after
they got him drunk, so they could become pregnant). Really!
That was much spicer than Uncle Billy's Whiz Bang which
\
came later. We boys woulll gel the girls to read choice bits in By Polly Cramer
the Bible before we took them out. - HENRY
DEAR HENRY:
DEAR POLLY - During
You've kept your spice, Hank. Thanks for a true.look atlhe years of use black spots have
"good" old days. And do write again.- H.
appeared on the back of my
bathroom mat. I asswne they
arc some sort of fun gus and I
:·:·;·;·;·;·:·;·;·;·;«&lt;•:
" .....
1
'.t' '·'·'·'·' ·'"'..-.;-,-..•.:.0·····
..-.:~~~ . •;1.'1;.
~ :.:.:
have tried pure bleach ap~·
plied with a cloth, but with no
res ults. Would appreciate
some help. -ALICE.
DEAR ALICE - If the
bleach did ruil work the situaHoliday guests of the Rev.
tion may be hopeless. If the
and Mrs. David Wiseman and
spots are mildew, try amWEDNESDAY
children of Woodsfield were
monia suds OR. lemon juice
HEIMLI CH MANEUVER and salt. Then put in.the sun
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy demonstr ati on, Seni or to dry, and rinse off l wo or
Wiseman, Harrisonville. and Citizens Center, 10 :30 a.m. three times with clear water.
Mrs. Margaret Parso ns; and 1 p.m . Department of If the '111bber IS very dry,
Health representative to anything might cause i.l to
Rutland.
Mrs. Vera Crow visi ted demonstrate at both sessions. crack, so·gi&gt; into it with that
over the holidays at Fort Open to the publi c.
innlinci. - PQLI.Y.
POMEROY · MIDDLE·
Laudirdale, Fla. with Mr .
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
and Mrs. Mike Morrison, Mr. PORT Lions Club, noon Peeve is not only with those
and Mrs. Rod Gilkey, and Mr Wednesday at the Meigs Inn. drivers who do not signal .
and Mrs. Danny Crow and POMEROY CHAPTER 80, before changing lane~n. the
Royal ·Arch Masons, stated highway but who leave their
granddaughter, Danielle.
convocation
, 7:30 p.m. signal lights on afterwards.
Mrs : Ferne B. Hayman,
followed
by
Bosworth
Council This is illegal and can
East Letart, is recuperating
at home following treatment 4ii, Roy and Select Masters, mislea d other drivers, caus·
at the Holzer Medical Center. Pomeroy Masonic Temple. ing accidents that might
WHITE ROSE LODGE, otherwise have been avoidc'&lt;i.
Mrs. Hayman celebrated her
76th birthday Jan . 7 at the 1:30 Wednesday at the
- JANET A.
American Leg ion hail in
hospital.
DEAR POLLY- Do tcll lhe
Mrs. Mildred Spencer of Mirlrllenort.
lady who ruined her good
.
THURSDAY
Antiquity spent the holidays
while jeans in the alwninum
PRECEPTOR
BETA Beta boat to forget about trying
with her grandson and his
family, Mr. and Mrs. Darin Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi things to remove the stains Jackson and son, Matthew, Thursday, 7:45 p.m. at the just gel a box of whi le dye
and Billy Jackson, Leetonia, hom e of Velma Rue.
and dye them. Aller they are
FRIDAY
0. She was returned home by
dyed do not throw a way the
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Jackson
who remained overni ght for a of White Shrine of Jerusa lem
visit before returning to regular 1neeling, 8 p.m.
Friday at Pomeroy Masonic
Leetonia .
'
Temple if weather permits.
SPECIAL MEETING,
' FAMILY ENTERTAINS
Harrisonville Ledge 411,
floliday visitors of Dorothy F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Friday at
· McGuffin and family , Mid- the temple with work in EA
dleport, were Mr. and Mrs. Degree ; all Master Masons
Harry McGuffin and Tabitha, invited.
Moundsville, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Hanning and Mrs.
BIRTHDAY FETED
Bessie Ashley, Middleport,
The
birthday of Mrs. Mabel
and Horace Gilmor e ,
Moore
was celebrated SunReynoldsburg. Mrs. Ashley
day
with
a family turkey dinalso visited at Shade with Mr.
ner.
Cake
and ice crecnn were
and Mrs. William Snow and
served
to
Carl Moore, Mrs.
sons, TimandJayM oore.
Unda Jett and daughter,
Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Wilson
and children, Kelly
CANCELLEJ;I
and
Terri
Jo. Mrs. Moore
The business meeting of.the
received
a
telephone call .
Pomeroy First Baptist
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ollo Mortfrom
Church scbeduled for Thurszfelt
in
Kenosha,
Wis,
day night h~s been cancelled .

Polly's Poi.nters

II

pomeroy
Personal Notes .:

Calendar

dye, but run any dingy yellow
looking white sheets through
it. They will look like new. LYDA .
DEAR POLLY - My sisterin-law gave me a neat idea
for freezing apple pie without
the crust. Line the pie pan
with foil and put in all the ingredients for th e pie hlling.
Cover with foil and freeze. If
you have va rious-size pie
pans, label which size each is
for. When frozen, remove
from ihe pan, put in a freeze r
hag and return to the freezer .
When ready to bake lhe,fie,
remove the foil and the frozen
filling is ready to go in the
crust. It does take longe r to
bake, but the crust does not
gel soggy and I add a little extra flour , too. I also freeze
green tomato pie this way. VESTA.
.
DEAR POLLY - When I
use de cora ted pap er
tablecloths for my children's
birthday parties, usually only
the center . of a cloth gets
soiled. So I cut off the clean
sides and later use them as
gift wrapping paperfor birthday gifts the children take to
their little fri ends. - MRS.
F.O.
DEAR POLLY and Lynne I use a len or twelve-inch
hacksaw blade that cos Is less
than. fifty cents for culling

. Notice To The-Pnblic

ALi MEIGS COUNTY BANKS

9 til 7
Moii.·Sat.
10 til 5
Sunday

- Will BE CLOSED
MONDAY, JANUARY 17th

NEW HAV EN, W. Va. The youth of the United
Methodist Subdistrict met at
the New Have n United
Methodist Church recently
for their meeting.
The New Haven you th
presented -exchange student
Christian Souderberg as the
gu est speaker, who showed
slides of Sweden. After the
business meeting all went
skating and enjoyed refr eshments.
Approximately 166 at tended
the
meeting,
representing the follow ing
churches : Ma ,.on. New

Have n, Bellemeade, St. Paul,
Creston, Good Shepherd,
Heights, Krebs Chapel and
Beech Hill. The youth !rom
Creston won the baMer.

plastic foam. I slick one end
into a pi ece of corncob, add a
dab of glue and ha ve a handle
on une ~iJd. Or, one·end could
be wrapped with tape if you
do not have a corncob.
-CATHERINim
DEAR POLLY - When
hanging drip dry clothes on '
an outdoor line, use two coat
hangers that are alike and
reverse one of the hooks to
form a closed loop over the
line. Hang these between
other clothes to keep them
from sliding or blowing off
the line. - MARY M.
Polly will send you one of
her " peachy " thank-you
ca rd~. ideal for framing or
placing in your family scraphook, if she uses your fa vorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Wnte Polly's
Pointers in care of this
newspaper.

NO MEETING
The m~eting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, "schedul~d for
Friday has been cancelled
due to the weather.

Martin Luther King Day

SLICES

~t;.~·

Pomeroy- Rutland- Tuppers Plains

~NE
\

.,'

HOME NATIONAL BANK

~BRiGHTER

TOMORROW
A MESSAGE
FROM THE PEOPLE OF

The Meigs lire Center. Inc.
We are beginn in'g a new year .
Th e 1977lh year since the Christ
was born in Bethlehe m . Will
this yea r be any better than the
othe r 1976 years .that ha ve
pass ed? If they are better day s,.
you a nd l and God will have to
work together to make them
better . Let us determine, now .
to make this the best year ever
for all people by giving our best
to the Ma ster in all way s. Each
one going out to wiri ·bne for
Christ, e ach on e he lp ing
another along life 's way can
ke a di ll,erence.

CARDS REQUESTED
James A. Smith of Hemlock
Grove area will observe his
89th birthday Sunday at the
Kimes Convalescent Home,
Albany Road, Athens, Ohio. A
card shower 1s bein g planned
and cards may be sent to the
convalescent home.

-

BULK WIENERS......... ,................... ,, ........... _!~:..99~
French City
·
·
JOWL BACON-· ... ,_, ................ ~~. ~~.~. :.i.~~~.~ ......·~·,. 39$
.

lb

$

......................... ~~: .. 99~

M
5-lb. Florida

WHITE
·
GRAPEFRUIL ....~~~

/lo
~

79

~~BAGE ...... ,....1.~: 25FR01EN
~ MARGARINE .......
1-lb. Teen Queen

Righ i now . th l'

Si ng~&gt;~&lt; s~w in g

m;1t hilll' you 'w always w;tn1l· d

is o n sale. Whil'11 llll'a ns your
foi· scw1ng r~.111 now be

L l lt· nt

n1;d chcd

by your !b ir f or ~ aving .

~69 95

.

Banque~ 2 lb.

•

•

2/79~

Box

$239

10 P1ece Frozen Ch1cken Dmner.............:

12 oz. Armour Corn Beef................... 99c

17 oz. Argo Peas .•••.•..••.•.••.••.•••••.•••.3/79'
19 oz. Duncan Hines
Reg. Cake Mixes •••••••••••••••••••••••• 65c box
.

.

10 oz. Nescafe Instant CoHee •2.89 Umlt 1
.3 2 oz. Karo Syrup (light pr darlc) 99c bottl«a
32 oz. Aunt Jemima

••

Buckwheat or Reg. Pancake Mix ••• 79c box

Krait-American

CHEE:.,, - $119

Shipment

HONEY LOAF OR PORK N REEF LOAF, .... ,............. :... l.69

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
FARMERS BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

·BOOTS·

French (:ity .

A $60.00 SAVING AND THE
LOWEST PRICE EVER FOR
THIS FREE ARM MACHINE
REG. $239.95
Our STY LIST* machi ne helps you
sew hard to rcll&lt;: h p![u:cs like t:uffs _1
ncckba nds thanks In the co nvcnien
free arm . And h3 s five b uilt -in ut '
and fa shion* disl: patterns. Canying
c :.~sc or ..:abi nct l!xtr~.

In Observance Of

Call your local Red Cross
By a statement issued by
the White House last week , center, sub-center or chapter
the month of January, 1977 for donation details.
has
been
procla imed
National Blood Donor Month.
President Ford has said he
urges "Every American to
join in b uildin~ an allvoluntary system of blood
donation ," "It is in the finest
American tradition of
humani tarian co ncern for
those In need ," he added.
Ford went on to say that
"Blood donor month gives all
JUST RECEIVED
Americans an annual opportunity to honor the fellow
citizens who have voluntarily
given blood so that others
might live. Their gift is easy
and painless . Yet it
represents one of the
supreme acts of human
compassion and generosity.
I
It has earned them the thanks
'---..---of many grateful recipients
and of a nation whose wellBoys &amp;
being they have served."
To honor this month, TriMens Boots
Sta te Red Cross Blood
Center, which serves this
county and 51 others, invites
the public to its center' subcenters and bloodmobile
visits, with a special invitation to a II first-time
donors.
Red Cross asks that your
New Year's resolution in·
elude your commitment to
give blood so that another life
can be saved.

Subdistrict holds meet

Mildew marks mar
rubber-backed mat

i

Blood Donor month
..declared in ]anWJry

U you're looking for a good combination on a cold winter

·:·:

OPEN

Sunday

'

LB.

64,752 seats had befn sold for
the Monday night game ,
assuring the largest crowd
ever under the NFC-AF!C
format. ·

HARTLEY'S

IOIIN HOOD

Pure ·

I
~

WE WELCOME

Stokely

Grapefruit

" iJi~i;;:·:,:,ii:;i:p
~:~::::~~=&lt;~:::::::::::&lt;,

I

Broughton's .

PORK
SHOULDER STEAK

42

DETROIT (UP! )
Outfielder Raphael Hampton
Hendri x 97 Ha rd ing 87
New M ex. St. 82 Tul sa 69
signed a contract of
Pan Am er ica n 86 La mar BO
undisclosed terms with the
So . Ark . 82 Ark . Col. 66
Detroit Tigers Tuesday
.
West
Biola 6d Wes tmont 57
immediately after the team
Cal Poly -Pom 9q Pt. Loma 84
made him .their No. 1 choice
Cen t Wash. 90 St . Marlin 's 71
Fr esno Pac 69 Domngez Hill s
in the free agent draft.
61
The Tigers, who chose fifth
Idaho St . 86 Utah St. 8.4
Lewls&amp;Ciark 125 Warner Pa c 86 · in the first round, were so
Marq uette 74 Air For ce 56
confident nobody else would
Mont. Tech ,93 W . Montana 71
take the fleet 6-foot-1, 17iiNev .-LV 132 No . Ar izona 90
St .MrY' s 93 Cal SI.-Bkrsfd 91
pounder they had the !~year­
Seattle Pa c 66 Pa c Luth 61
old Hampton and his iather
UC -Sta Barb 73 Fresno St . 10
1 wash . St . 64 Montana St . 63
on hand for the draft.

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

5- The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Wednesday, Jan .

I

Hicks horwred One vwwpomt.

with two minutes to go, then
scored on a layup, and
Charlie Scott scored seven
points in the closing seconds
B y Uni ted Pre-u I nter nationa l
to carry Boston past Holl!lton.
East
Rudy Tomjanovich scored 28 American u . Bl Temple 64
Bentley 85 St. Jos Me . 79
points for Houston.
Bloom sburg 68 Dickenson 66
Trail Blazol'll 131, Koicks 111: Cas.e 65 FDU Madison 62
Del. Vall ey 91 Eastern 67
Mauri~&gt;! Lucas scored a
E . Naz. 86 R. Wil liams 66
season-high 36 points and E . Strdsbg 68 Muhlenbg 60
grabbed 16 rebounds to pace · Holy Cross 84 Yate ·71
' s Pa . 69 Del. St , 55
Portland's rmnp over New LKing
ock Hayen 85 Ba'pt B ible 44
York as the BlazerS&gt;Von their M aine 9B u . of Bulfa to as
N .H . Colt BO New Eng Coli 46
fourth· straight game. Bob Penn
43 P r in c~ton 39
McAdoo led the Kn icks with Pro\iic;lence 86 Conn. 71
Rider ·52 Geltysburg 42
31 points.
Rutg r s -Cmdn Bl L incoln 77
Bulls 93, Suns 90:
York (Pa.l 92 M essiah 91
South
The Bulls' Wilwr Holland
Alba ny St. 73 8ethvne -Ck mn 64
stole the ball from the Suns' Armst
r ong St . 75 Augusta 74
Paul Westphal and scored a Atlan tic Chr is ti an 93 MIT 62
layup with '23 seconds left in Biscayne 92 Loras 73
-Nwmn 111 Tuscul m 86
the game to break a 91).90 tie Carsor1
Chrls Newpt- 101 Va . Wsl y n 86
and give Chicago the victory. E . ·Carol ina 51 Davi dson 49
Fair mont 125 Aldrsn -Br ddus 91
Mickey Johnson led the Bulls Geo
. M ason 69 L oyo la Met 68
with 21 points, while Glenv ille 6J W.Va . Tech 58
Gr eensbor o 8.11 V a. Coli 69
Westphal had a game-high 31 Hamp
. Syd ne,y 78 B'water 56
points.
Towsn St . 78 Rn dl oh-Macn 76

quarter for the Pistons, who
were led in scoring by
Howard Port er with 24 . ·
Jamaal Wilkes had 29 points
!o lead the Warriors.
In other games, where
form prevailed, Los Angeles
edged Cleveland, 101-99, in
overtim e; Boston topped
Houston, 105-101 ; Portland
defeated the New York
· Knicks , 131-lll, and Chicago
beat Phoenix, 9:1-00.
• Laken 101, Cavallen 99 :
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar ,
who scored a season4Jigh to
points, sank a hook sbot with
four l!fCOnds left in the game
to gtve Los Angeles an
overtime victory over
Cleveland. Lucius Allen, who
finisbed with 2S points, sent
thegamelntoovertimewith a
layup wlth five seconds left in
regulation time .
Celtlcs 105, Rockets 101:
John Havlicek stole the ball

o

20 oz. Heinz Catsup •••••••••••••••••• : ••••••• 71'

The Fabric Shop
McCall's, Kwick -Sew,
Simplicity Patterns
115 W. Second
Ph. 992-2284

'

.
Pomer~y

7 oz. Kelloggs StuHing Mix •••••••••••••••• 49•
37 lz. Wagner Gn.pe Juice ••••••••••••• 2/89'

Approved Authorized Deil!ler '

'

'

•

�•

_7;;;-.T~.!?!Er.~!!~l. Mlddlepori-P!)Oleroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan.12, 1977

~~~i:if:=~~~=~:~:~j:~:j:j~:j:~:l:l:1t:~:~=~tm~~~~~~m~l~ll~;1~@~~=~:~:~t~~~ri~~~~J;~~~~~jf~n:~;~~~~:~~~;;:~:~:~:~: ~:~ :~: . - - - - - - - - - - • • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

the Hwnane Society's

6:- The DaUy Sentlnel. Middleport-P,omeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Jan. !2,1977

animal advisory:

'

\

~--

I

I

Cold weather means extra care for livestock .
l. Make-Sure all stock has somewhere in whlch to take
shelter from snow, wind and cold.
2. A3 the temperature drops , more food is required Make
sure animals have sufficient food and water
·
.
3· Care should be taken to make sure that water is available
not covered by lee.
Those who own ponies, horses, cats and dogs, remember
th ese are hYing, breathing creatures.
They f~l hung~r, thirst and cold. Your pet wiD be your
faithful, wtlling fnend ~you treat him kindly and care for him
properly.
·
·
·

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 Second St
P4MEROY, OHIO
Prices EffectiveThru
..
Januarv
15, 1977 ·
,,

'•'

· Laurel Oiff

News Notes

'

from Washington, none o·f whose jobs or income are
.
'- .
tied to· Ohio coal, sit along. the sidelines and snipe at

quantities of coal. Naturally·, we would all -like for this
to be lower sulfur coal, the kind they mine in western
'

-

'

.

.

states. But Ohio coal generally runs about 2 to 4.5%
sulfur.
So, people with good Intentions, and at best,
bad information, want to pass federal restrictions to

...,.,

I

a75% loss in Ohio's coal production.

1

Team
Bowling Sfones
Nite Owl s

coal-about $35 a ton compared to about $16 a ton· ·
Ohio becomes addictel1 to outside energy sources.
Remember what happened to the price of Arab oil,

ptod uction!
The imoact of this u-pon Ohio's economy .

'

once America got hooked on it?
On January 1L 1977 at the State Dept. Build ina

staggers the mind!
HIGHER ELECTRIC BILLS.

. '·'

'

Room 2 in Columbus, there's an EPA hearing on this.

The wage earner, the average home owner, will pay 20%
. higher- electric bills-because about 95% of Ohio-produced
.

r

You know darned well, who'll be there in force.
Everybody with nothing to do, and nothing to lose.

1!lectricity is generated by burning coal. Annual ·electric
bills will climb from $100 to well over$800 -more than

Telling Ohio what it can do with jts own coaL
What can you dol Contact your U.S .. Congressman

you're paying right now.
15,000 OHIO JOBS. Some 15,000 Ohioans .
produce and tran.sport Ohio coal.· And these peop~e ,,

or U.S. Senator. Your state people don't lik_
e fea~ral

generate .a $700 million chunk of Ohio's economy. It

·write? Send us your opinion. We'll see to ifthat the

intervention any better than you do. But it might help
hot~

to also remind them of

you feel. Not sure·who to

doesn't take a mathematical genius to see that a 75%

right people hear.your voice. Loud and Clear. So, .come - .

loss of Ohio coal production would destroy the economy.

on, Ohio. Get off your butt and take a stand.

~ -C.L.U.B.

. Committee for Lower Utilitv Bills ..

OHIO'S BUSINESS IS OHIO'S MINING. OHIO'S MINING IS OHIO'S BUSINESS.

(You just might keep your
-

•

electrl~ bills

'

from going .up an extra 20%1) · ·,
'

rI ----------------,
·
·
COUNT ME IN! :·
T~l•
I
1
I
I

I •aree 100% I

II Ohio•• bualne••· Let•• keep elec_tric

I·
I

u~l.llty bill• DOWN whll• we keep Ohio'• employment_UPI .
City er tm .

- ~s .

Cli' • •II to: C.L.U.B., 1152 a. Btq., CIMiall, IIIII 44115

L----------------

.

Pts .
8
8

PliTSBURGJi ·'(UPl) Red Barons
4
4
BUI Robinson't Viho played aU Super Stars
0
three outfield positions for Road Runners
Busters
0
the pittsburgh Pirates, plus Gutter
High individ ua l game - J.
first and third blue last R. Wamsley 176, 166 ; Roger
season, was named winner of Riebel 155. ·
.
High series - J . R. Wams· ·
the ]Wberlo Clemente Award
ley 455: Roger Riebel 408:
by the Pittsburgh Chapter of Clifl Kennedy 400.
the
Baseball
Writers
Team high ga·me - Super
Stars 761.
Association.
Team h igh se rie s Robinson is the. fourth
Bowling Stones 2245.
winner of the award named in
honor of the Pirates' Hall-of·
. Tuesday Triplicate
Farrie outfielder who was
Jan. 4, 1977
kmed in a plarie crash in
Standings
Puerto Rico Dec. 31, 1972. The Team
' ·
Pts.
award is given· annuaUy to Shamrock M otel
20
. 20
the Pirates player who Royal Oak Park
10
exemplifies the sportsman· Royal Crown Cola
Shirt s, Ltd.
10
ship of Clemente.
New York Clothing
a
Ruth 's Beau.ly Shop

'
•

COUNTRY STYLE

4

SAUSAGE' •••••••• ;••••• ~~. -

TV •• -.in Review
'

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televia!4!11 W9.~r1 1
,•
'
-NEW YOJ!JG UJPI) - The latest Nonnan Lear television
series has closed out of town.
Maybe II was. hexed or otherwise dia~olicaUy scuttled.
The show is -'«1'88- "A Year AI The Top," the story of a
group of middle-Aged entertainers who sell their souls to tbe
llevil's daughter for a year at th~ top of show business. Tbe
stars inclu~~~d)tey ~orney, Viv!"n B~ine and Alan Aida's
'"
father, Rohflt-Aida.· '···
It was Lear, not CBS, who pulled the show, as his sUI tement
reveals: ~J, ,~ ~; .. , ~- ,
"We have·ast~eo• lbe ~,;1:1&lt;)&lt; Television Network to allow 'A
Year At The Top' to shut down in Phl]adelphla for repairs and
lhey have graciolj!I)Y granted us permission to do so. AfiA!r
alterations ar~ .llll~, ltf,wUl be back in, production In March
lor possible air'liig\rllhe !aU on CBS. We fell it wou1d serve the
show and the viewing audience better to close out of town and ·
take the ~r, llfne lq ·make 'j\'hat we feel are necessary
changes."JI i i ,_., ...., .1.\ot.
A spokesman for Lear said the television impresario was
dissatisfied with the two and a half e~s of the half-boor
comedy series so far in the can and dl!f'lded to yank it.
CBS wtlipul "The JacksonS,'' starring eight members of the
musical Jackson family, into the Wednesday slot reserved for
the Lear production, starling Jan. 26; 8:30.9 p.m., Eastern ·
Ume.
. .
.
NBC meantime has decided to dump '"l'be McLean Stevenson Show" and Danny Thomas~ "Tbe Practice.';,Starling Feb.
9 ''The Life and Tbnes of Grizzly Adams," starring Dan
Haggerty, wUl be on from 8-9 p.m., Eastern time, appealing to
the small-fry, followed by "Sirota's Court" and "CPO
Sharkey,'' the Don Rickles survivor.
· .
At 10 p.m., Eastern timt, WWlam Conrad will narrate a new
suspense anthology. Television audiences remember Conrad
as "Cannon," and If they 10 far enough back, aa the radio Matt
Dllloo in the original ''Gunsmoke." ABC baa three new entries lor March, but no specific dates
· tO.. their debut.. One wUl llll the only doctor. show left on
television, except reruns of "Marcus Welby.''
That's "Wesllicle Medical,'' an hourloog dramatic aeries
about three young doctors on the staff of Wellllde Memorial
Hoepltal, who have their private practice acrou the street in a
broWIIIIIooe.
.
The stars are Uncia Carl.ol, James ·Fioyan and Ernest
Th&lt;mpiO!l . How doea ABC come up with such h0111ehold
1111111!1? Oh weU, once only Mrs. Wlntler had heard of her aon
#

,

YELLOW
3 LB.
ONIONS •••••••••••~••
FRESH

·

17

]t/4

1
•

~o·n~oN __

L_

j

BANOUET

ZEST A
'

CRACKERS
•

. The other two new shOWI are "Ei8bl Ia Enou&amp;h,'' an hour·
canedy lel'iel liming Dick VIII Patten and Diana
Hyland as a e&lt;~~~temporary co,.,le ralllne elcbl kldl, which II
two men than "The Brady Bunch."
Finally, ABC 1u clecicled to 10 llbead with "Future Cop,"
llarrlnl Emut BoranJne. The pilot received hlch ratillp u a
televlllaaiiiO'Itt.Jul July. John Amol, who will be In
"Rootl," playl hll black partner and John Haven playa a thlnl
member ol the, team - a "carefully procramed biCJIYillheliC
android prototY!lf'." That'• mea111 lie'U go Lee Majora one
better and be a totally artlllclal 11110.
·
j

TOMATOES •••••••••l!~
ARGO
. oz.
P.EAS ••••••••••••••••
COLLEGE INN
uoz.
CHICKEN BROTH ••

KRAFT
oz. BOX '
-MACARONI· &amp; CHEESE ••

'loog

l·

GROUND
CHUCK •••••••••••••• ;~-.

RIB PORK CHOPS ••••L!·•• ,
CENTER CUT ·
· _ · $ 39
LOIN PORK CHOPS..~•••

PITTSBURG!i (UP!) _:
High individual game The Pittsburgh Pirates have Betty Smith 210 ; Susie
196; ·
signed catchers Duffy Dyer Pullins
High series - Betty Smlfh
and Ed Ott to 1977 contracts, 541 ; Pa1 Carson 530 ;
Team high game it was announced Tuesday .
. They are the seventh and Shamrock Motel 479 .
Team high series-: eighth Plllsburgh pljlyers to Shamrock
Motel 1340.
sign 1977 contracts: 1 ·

.

$ .29

CENTER CUT

Henry.

I

J

SLAB BACON ...... ~.7
FRENCH CITY
. 24 oz. $
19
WIENERS •••••• :~!!c; •••

Local Bowling

.

Think about that. A 75% loss in Ohio coal

I

healthy!
And here's something-else to chew on.
If Ohio becomes committed to western states'
. coal, which already costs over twice as much as Oh.io

And if these .regulations go through, we can all look for
about

'

.,.,

keep Ohioans from harvesting their own natural resources.
,

'

Ohio. And they put down the industry that has h~lped
make Ohio's economv a rarity in the country: it's

'

Property
TranSterS

Attendance at all services
Jan . 9th at the Free ·
£
Methodist Church was 79.
The Gospel-Aires will be at
the local ~-llrfll ~lurday . John M. King to Mary E.
evenfng. Jan :'1 29, 7:30. The Bentz, Lots, Minersville. '
public is inv1ted.
George J. Lowther, 1\my
_Mr. and Mrs .•,_Red Baker . Lowther to George Doyglas
were hosts to tlit L . and 'L. ' Lowther, April Lowther ,
Fellowship Thursday Parcels, Columbia.
,
evening, Jan. 13.
..
Geo. J , Lowther, Amy
Mr. Pearl tr!l,cobs 'remains Lowther to Gary E. Spencer,
a patient in Veterans Kathryn L. Spencer, 30 A.,
Memorial ~osplta~.
Columbia.
·
Mr. Hannoq~ox ~mains a ,• George J. Lowther Ainy
patient in 'HOtze~ Medical Lowther to George J.
Center. Mr. and Mrs. Fox Lowther, Amy Lowther, 51.15
were married 48 years Jan. A., Columbia.
12.
' ;
Charles E. Jones, Connie
Mr . and Mrs . William Jones to Roma J. Cremeans,
Jacobs spent the weekend Deloris J . Cremeans, 32¥• A.,
with Mrs. Jacobs' mother and Rutland.
visited her father, Pearl
Jacobs at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Phtli WIS.,
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Beverly, attended Sunday
Saturday Alternoon
,
morning services at the .local
Dec. 31 19"
church .
'
·
Standings

Out-of-state people, environmentalists and people·

Oh1o has been generously blessed with vast

NO SALES TO DEALERS·
QUANTITY RIGHI S RESERV?,t:.

· Meigs

PKG.

29~

W/f,

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Ex pi res 1· 15-77

BISCUiTS
soz.}Q/$1~
W/C
Limit l .Per Customer ·
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
1-15-77

,.

FRIED CHICKEN
2LB.
PKG.

$}69 W/C
. \

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
.Offer Expires 1-15-77

COUPON

~~

...

EL~

'

· CANNED POP
12 oz. cans

10cans$}

W/C

Limit I Per C~mer ·
Good Only At well's
Offer Expires 1-15-77

.,.
•

' '
'

�,.

• - Tbe DaUy Se~l , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda y, Jan. l2, 1977

·Local news highlights of 1976

Hovatter of Middleport is
new ·steelworker president
RAVENSWOOD - Richard South ~th St., Middleport, spare time.
Hovatter said he
H. Hovatter of Middleport, a although he IS' a native · of
ticipates
no ·changes In the
ClarkSburg, W. Va. He was a
~year employee of Kaiser
current
local
administration
Aluminum &amp; Chemical star athlete at Middleport
from
that
of
the
peat, or in the
Corporation's Ravenswood High School and is a leader in
.
offices,
as
of
the
present.
Works who is active in Steel· summer youth athletic
"The
change
from vice
workers Local 5668, has programs.
president
to
the
presidency
·assumed the duties of union
The local president Is
president. He succeeds manied, and he and Ills wife, this local has been a big one,"
former president Eugene GaD, a_re the parents of four Hovatter said. "~ vice
Richards who left to accept a children. The Hovatter president basically serves on
young~ers--are Drema, age the Executive Board and fills
union staff position.
Hovatter, employed in the 19; Rick, age 16; Heather, in when the president is
Hot Rolling department, age four; and Phillip, age absent, but the president's
responsibilities are greater.
began his union activities by three.
My
responalbllltles have
serving on a grievance
Hovatter is an outdoorsincreased
quite a bit In
type person who enjoys
committee.
assuming
the
post."
Following other committee hunting and fishing in his
assignments, Hovatter was
elected vice president at the
time of then-president
Richards' union promotion.
Hovatter resides at 391.

National Waters Act being

Churches saying

•

implemented this winter -.

COLUMBUS- A new state
program is underway which
thanks for help
wUI have an Impact on all
Ohioans. It could affect water
and sewage bills, Ohio's
MASON, W. Va. - The streams and waterways;
United Methodist Churches of recreation; employm~nt;
Upper Mason Parish this transportation to and from
week expressed ·appreciation work; and our health. The
for contributions and assist· problem Is dirty water; the
ance in their Christmas Food goal is to clean· It up.
Basket Program in the Bend
In 1972 the Federal Water
Area to Valley Bell Products, Pollution Control Act was
Heiner's Bakery, Purity passed by Congress. The goal
Maid Bakery, Betsy Ross of this Act Is to once again
Bakery, The Key C)ub- at - -flltke the waters of this
Waharna High ScHOOl, The country clean enough for
JCs of New Haven, Ben fishing and swimming. A
Franklin Store, New Haven sectionoftheActprovideslor
Super Mkt, Gregg's Key Water Quality Planning
Mkt and all other persons activities to be carried out by
who assisted in any way.
"piaMlngagenciesthroughout
Ohio, with the objectives of
preserving and protecting
Ohio's waters through good
Water Quality Management
The program's success is
dependent
upon- the citizens
Our Interest Is
of Ohio. The citizens know
Greater For You
where the problems lie In
their areas and can greatly
assist with solutions.
Open meetings will be held
throughout the state this
On 90-Day
month and next. The purpose
of \he meetings 1.9 to acquaint
Certificates
Ohioam , with the planning
process and offer the"' the
5.75 per cent paid on chance to bec9me a part of it
through actual "participation
90 day CertifiCates of
Deposit.
$1,000.00 in the decision making
process by serving on a .
Min imum.
Interest committee. The committees
Payable
Quarterly. will identify the problems,
develop possible solutions
A substantial penalty is
and vote on the decisions
invoked on all certifi cate
reached.
accounts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity.
"This Is not just another
planning group. It is part of a
natiOnwide effort to protect
our water . for the future,"
said Cart Wilhelm, Environ·
mental Planning Coordinator
f~r the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency (Ohio
The Athens Lountv
EPA),
sponsor of the
Savings&amp; Loan Co.
prpgram.
"We've sent letters
296 second St.
Pomeroy , Oh io
to people on our existing
mailing list, but the meetings

5.75%

Meigs Co. Branch

..@

are open to everyone. We
want everyone to attend. If
everyone works together,
dean water for our childreh
will be the result."
Severa I topics will be
considered, including : (l)
where the problems are, how
they can be solved, and how
future problems can be
prevented; (2) proper
management of existing
8ewage treatment systems;
(3)increasing soil and water
conservation ; (4) pollution
coming from agncultural,
mining and construction
sources, and how it can be
controlled; (5) who will have
control and responsibility for
Water Qaulity Management;
and (6) how these programs
can be effective.

Coffee is still favored
By
United
Press
Joternatioaal
"There are two lhlnp I
can't do without," wailed Nan
Morrison of Atlanta. ''My
coffee and toilet paper. The
prices are discouraging, but I
buy."
Across
the
nation,
thousands
of
other
Americans - as addicted tn
coffee as ever were . the
Brltlah to tea - espl'esaed or
displayed similar sentiments,
despite
a call
by
supermarkHs
and
government oflldala for a
boyebtt of the Increasingly
expensive product.
For most, It would amount
to a boycott on a necessity of
Ufe.
' ~I have to have my coffee,"
said Bonnie Watson of
Marietta, Ga. ·"The prices
can go to the ceDing, but I'll.
keep buying lt."
The prices already are

recent months , driving the "People just don't quit
tab to an average of 30 cents a drinking coffee ... they just sit
cup,
with
many there and pour it down like
establl•hmenli considering Hogan's goat."
an end to the traditional free
For Sam Izzo, . vice
refill.
president for Burger King
.In AUanta, however , the operations in Jacksonville,
Silver Skillet restaurant pre- Fla ., coffee Is bait lor
ferred to defer to the business, however dear Its
cuatomer.
price to ·the fast food chain .
"We charge 25 'cents per He said the beverage still is
cup, but give unlimited I~ cents a cup and that it
rP.fills ." said 8 spOkesman. should remain at that level.

Carpenter Personals

Mr. and Mrs. John David
Gillogly, Mark and ·David, Jordan and Joshua envacationed in Florida, tertained with a New Year's
viewing sights and visiting Day dinner for their parents,
relatives. Places of interest Mr: and Mrs. Clinlon Gilkey,
that they visited included Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Silver Springs, Busch Gar. fdendal Jordan, local, and
dens , Cypress Gardens and her sister, Miss Ka·ren
Gitke)', Athens.
Tower and Daytona Beach.
Guests of Lucy Thomas
They returned home by
during
the holiday vacation
bumping $3 a pound, retail, Plains, Georgia, to ·view the
and 3S cents a cup across the
.
were
the
following relatives :
counter
home of President-elect,
Mr. and _Mrs. Charles Leist,
Gen.;al Foocm, the nation's · Jimmy Carter.
Rosemary and Lorraine,
largest wholesale dlatributor
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gaithersburg, Maryland;
hiked the price to $2.91
Dale Sta~bury during the Wilene Smith , and son,
pound, and 00 Dec. 22, Folger holidays Included Mr. and Clayton, Hamilton, Ohio;
Coffee Co. priced their Mrs. Clair Stansbury, Clara Amy Caldwell, Jane Kimes,
produc!at$3.1J8.ai)OUIIII-an Mae and Bobby Joe, and Mr.
Paula
and
Thomas,
aclloo !bat triggered demand and Mrs. Bob Barton and son, Columbus,
and
Mr.
and Mrs.
for the boy~'Olt.
Gregory Alan, Groveport; ,
James Gaston, locaL
In Hartford, Conn., Mayor Mr. and Mrs. Larry StansMr. and Mrs . Michael
GeOrge Alhanson joined thoae bury and sons, Reynolds- . Lawson, Columbus, spent a
urging consumers to-kick the burg; Wanda Turner and Mr.
habit.
·
and Mrs. Jerry Stansbury, vacation here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
"A woman told me she Aaron and Reba, local.
Jeffers and family, his
ordered co!lee in a restaurant
Wanda
Turner
ac· mother and sister, Katherine
and when told It cost 35 cents, companied the Larry Stans·
she asked If she could keep .burys_ to their home in Lawson and Cheryl and other
.
Uie cup and saucer," he said. Reynoldsburg and they went relatives.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Cecil
Rife,
An informal survey by the on to Pennsylvania to visit
Connie
and
James
Lee
of
Boston Globe of 11 Mrs, Turner's daughter and
Marysville,
Calif.,
spent
a
restaurants In the Boston family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
week's
vacation
here
with
his
area Indicated aeven of them SChmidt and daughters.
had boosted their· prices in
Mr. and Mrs . Walter parents, Mr. and Mrs. 0. M.
R1fe and his brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Wooten and family,
all ind he Dyesville area.
They arrJved safely hack
home on thursday reporting
snow and ice along the routes.
IT'S FULL STEAM AHEAD
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Jeffers and daughters, New
FOR SAVINGSI
Boston, Illinois, have
returned home after spending
AT BAKER FURNITURE'S
several days here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Bailey and Mr. and Mrs.
Reed ·Jeffers and other
relatives in the area.
CLEARANCE PRICES
Mr. and Mrs. Denver
ON
Queen, Bloomington, Ill.,
QUALITY MERCHANDiSE .
· were guests of Ills slstera and
families, Mr. and Mrs. Thad
Dye and cl!ildren and Mr. and
Mra. Kenneth Ertckaon and
family along with other
relatives here.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Dwaine Jordan and family on
New Year's evening for a
turkey supper were Mr. and
Mra. Mendal Jordan, Mr. and
MidclltJICI&gt;rt, O.
Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree an&lt;!
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
and Joshua.
, Mrs. Penny .Malesk 0 and
daughters bavc returned to

-a:

'

Lumber and i ·
Butltlin; Svppl!es ·,.

NO.2 PRE·
CUT STUDS

DataMiMIM

JANUARY CWRANCE

SALE

HOOVER
WASHERS

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
PAATERIALS CO.
713-5554

w.

were closed officially for the program to find learning Homecoming Queen. Vickie
first time since a teachers needs of kindergarten . LyM Roach named Southern
Homecoming Queen and at
strike which began on Sept. 7. students continued.
Eastern
High, Jull Whitehead
The new Keno bridge in
was named the queen.
Chester Township was
Speaker of the Ohio .House,
dedicated in ceremonies.
OCJ'()BER
Sept. !5 - Frank W. Porter
Oct. 1 - Del,mar Davis, 13, Vern Riffe visited In
announced that the Syracuse- Langsvtue, was struck by a Pomeroy.
Oct. 24 - Eleven pledges
Racine Regional Sewer car on East .Main St.,
hOnored by Ohio Eia Phi
District had been awarded Pomeroy .
$112,725 on step two of their
Oct. 2- The Meigs County Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
sewerage plans,
Commissioners moved closer Sorority at home of Karen
Sept. 16 - Syracuse a_c- to elJtabllshlng educational Goins.
Oct. 25 - The Meigs Local
cepted Hornsby's bid on the facilities for .. the mentally
Board of Education refused
community pool.
retarded.
Sept.l7 - The Meigs Local
Oct. 3 - Syracuse VWage the resignations of seven
strike ended.
held groundbreaklng kindergarten bus drivers.
Sept. 18 - A great bicen· ceremonies lor Its ·swimming The Meigs Regional PiaMing
tennial celebration was Po o I · MId dIe Port Commission received a $6,000
staged by the Meigs Senior businessman Marlon ·L . grant for a capital ImCitizens Center.
.
. French died at lhe Holzer provements capability study.
Bill Kautz received a trophy
Sept. 19 - Mareii1 Dillard, Medical Center.
Pomeroy, was named queen
Oct. 4 - Employes were at · for Ills accomplishments in
of the Ohio Valley Horse their duties In remodeled tractor pulling events.
Oct. 26 -The Meigs County
Show Assn.
quarters of the Stiffler
· Sept. 20 - Fred Crow was Department Store on Court . Farm Bureau Federation elected pres ident of the . St. Members of Meigs County packed In a crowd for Its ~
Pomeroy Chamber of 4-H Clubs were recognized for annual meeting at the
Commerce.
oulstl!mling work.
Chester School.
Oct. '1:1 - Absentee ballots
Sept. 21- Members of Ohio
Oct. 5- Dates were set for
Eta Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Meigs County's swine flu poured In - 714 to this date lor the Nov. 2 election.
Phi Sorority, were tremend- clinics.
Oct.
28
Meigs
ous in their Wlzerd of Oz
Oct. 8 - Improved health
costuming at the annual rush care for rural areas appeared Republicans rallied at the ·
party .
to he forthcoming as plans for Pomeroy Elementary School.
Sept. 23 - Walls came rural health clinics In · Oct. 29 - It was aMounced tumbling down at the scene of Southeastern Ohio were that the Syracuse Nursing
the Stiffler fire to clear the announced at Veterans Home would close its doors.
Oct. 31 - The appointment
area for rebuilding.
Memorial Hospital.
Sept. 25 - The Meigs High
Oct. 7 - Meigs lost the of James Clatworthy, Jr.,
Band and the field director, Cplumbus and Southern Ohio Middleport, as dlestrlct ·
Susan Wright, won first place Electric Co. new power plant deputy ot the 12th Masonic
honors in their class at the to Belpre.
Lodge was announced.
Point Pleasant Band·a·rama.
Oct. 8 - Suzy Samuels was
TO~ CONTINUED
Sept. 27 - Ch.;rlcs L. named one of 1,500 semiDowler and Dan Morri s, finalists in the 13th annual
Meigs Local superintendent National Achievement
and assistant; respectively, Scholarship Program for
received salary increases. Outstanding Negro Students.
Sept. 28
Charlie
Oct. 9 - Residents were
Hamilton was named to warned that unless lm·
coach the county's American · mediate Improvements were
Legion baseball team.
forthcoming , free ttash
Sept. 29 - "Over 60 Meigs collection boxes about the
Countians had break(ast with county would be removed by
Governor James Rhodes at the county department of
the Meigs Inn. An extensive health.
Oct. 10 - Eight homes were
opened to the public for the
the home of Mr. and Mrs. annual homes tour of Ohio
Victor Perry after spending Eta Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma
the holidays with relatives in Phi Sorority, with over 300
persons attending.
the Dayton area.
Oct. II ·- Middleport
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Voreys (Lenore Darst) , Council made plans to
Columbus, visited her refurbish village hall by next
brother·in·law and sister, Mr. spring.
Oct. 12 -,. Carter's "Peanut
and Mrs. 0. M. Rife and niece
and family , Mr. and Mrs. llrigade" visited Pomeroy.
Oct. 13 - Dignitaries cut
Donald Wooten and family.
Joan Wooten accompanied the ribbon to offlcially open
them home and is spending a Meigs (;ounty's Democratic
Headquarters.
lew days there.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Reed Jeffers and Mrs. Beulah
Oct. 14 - David M. Strang,
Cordray during the holidays
manager
at WMPO radio,
included Mr. and Mrs. John
was
named
public relations
Dunham and family and Mr.
director
for
Rio Grande
and Mrs. Richard Jeffers and
College.
daughters, New Boston, IlL ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cordray . Oct. 15 - Republican
and Mrs. Munn, Westerville; candidates cut the ribbon to
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Lawson, open the party headquarters
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. at the Meigs Inn.
Oct. 18 - Eatil Gilman, 24,
Gene Jeffers, Marco, Lester
Langsville,
killed In an ac.and Robert, Mr. and Mrs .
cident
at
Southern
Ohio Coal
Lavern Jordan, Betty and
Mine
I.
Mrs.
Alwilda
Womer
Jerrie Sue; Mr. and Mrs.
and·
Mrs.
Dortha
Salser
were
Larry Birchfield
and
named
woman
of
the
year
children, Mr. and Mrs. David
and
woman
of
the
week
,
Starfire rings have
diaLewellyn and daughters, Mr.
monds at reasonable pr ices .
respectively,
by
the
Midand Mrs. Jack Jordan and
They're permanently regis tered
Jason and Mr. and Mrs. Dan dleport Business and
and protected against loss.
Jordan and Derek, all from Professional Women's Club.
Oct. 19 - Gamet Williamthe area.
son,
long time Rutland
Mrs. Robert Kuykendall
business
woman, aMOunced
and Kimberly, Alexandria,
her
retirement.
Louisiana; Mr. and Mrs.
Oct. 20 - Charles K.
Robert Peck, Nelsonville;
Marshall,
Hemlock Grove, .
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Leiving,
was
awarded
the EmUy C..
Letart, W. Va.; Mrs. ·Lulu
Murphy
Scholarship
at Ohio
· WUiiali!SOn, Albany and Mr.
University.
and Mrs. Nathan Brady and
Oct. 22 - Paula Eichinger
Renee, local, were guests oi
.
·
w
as
named
Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Peck
and Wanda. Mr. apd Mrs.
Don Williamson and family
were also callers at the Peck
home.
P~RESS
Paul and William c. Peck
were Christmas guests of
their niece, Mrs. Cecil Blackwood and~~

SEPTEMBER
Sept. 1 - The George Hill ·
home at Racine was the scene
of the HiD family catsup
making.
Sept. 2- The monument to
George Washington at Long
Bottom was rededicated by
the Daughters of the
American Revolution.
Sept. 4 - . Negotiations between the Meigs Local Board
of Education and the Meigs
LocaiTeachers Assn. through
an Impasse panel faDed to
progress.
Sept. 6 - Pomeroy and
Chester held Labor Day
celebrations and an Interesting caravan of Model A
Fords passed through the
IICB4tn B. BOVA'ITER county.
Sept. 7 - Meigs Local
Teachers went on strike. A
chemical tank car derailed at
Dyesville with reSidents
being evacuated. H. and P.
Sanitation was reinstated in
Pomeroy.
Sept. 8 - Ron Toler,
Middleport, was honored for
making a hole-in-one In the
annual Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club contest.
Some of the benefits
Sept. 9 _ Mrs. Helen
derived from an effective Boatright and her mother,
Water Qaulity Management Mrs. Cora Schartiger lost
Plan include increased their lives in a car-truck
property
value
and accident in Tuppers Plains.
recreation, better water, a Crystal Glaze, Mary Rusche!
~ore enjoyable environment, and Deborah Lynn Saunders
mcreased development In won nursing scholarships
sewered areas and less health presented by the Meigs
problems.
Chapter of .the March of
Dates and meeting places Dimes.
.
for the opening meetings will
" Sept. 10 _ Meigs teachers
he published in this news- and the board of education
continued efforts to settle a
paper.
Meetings in ' southeastern teachers strike.
_
Ohio will be'in Logan on Jan.
Sept. 13 _ The Meigs
26 at the Hocking County County Commissioners were
Youth Center on the threatened with court action
fairgrounds at 7:30 p.m. and for failing to provide
in Manetta on Feb, 2, at 7:30 · education for the mentally
p.m. in the City Building retarded.
Annex ,
City
Coun cil .. Sept. 14 _ Schools of the
Chambers, 208 Putnam St. Meigs Local School District

$199

BAKER

'
Of: FREE

PARKING

RY

:'1

f

Dinner Wmes

..

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... .

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•

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.

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f&lt;.

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BATES FIBER II

PILLOWS

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RIVER

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FALL AND

MUSLIN SHEETS

Fmhionab le, no iron mu slin ~heets . Available in pr ints and $Oi i d~.

WINTER

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SHEETS

•.1,.

Heck's Reg.

'2.89

CLO,..,r.

CAS£S

TWill-FlAT
&amp;FmED

HECK'S RE_G. TO 14.99

ClOTHING DEPT.

%

~l

''

As Shown

DAN RIVER

CLOTH/II'
DEPT.

$197 '

$189

Not Exactly

'3.99

CASES

TWINFLAT
&amp; FITTED

Cl (}THIN' DEPT.

. HECK'S REG.

SHilTS

CAIIIION 72"184"

OFF

WESTBROOK

Soft Care Birdseye

BLANKETS

DIAPERS

$297

'3"

Heck's Reg.

HECK'S REG. $4.99
CLDTNI/IC DEPT.

15.49
3-PAK

NOTEBOOKS
SPONGE MOP

PC.
STAIII.ESS STEEL tiXIG BOWLS
HECK'S.EG•

VJ.99

., ••

HECK'SRIG.
$2.09 .

HANDLE SCRUB BRUSH

$133

HECK'S REG.
721 .

HECK'S REG. '1.•60

..

uoz.

·LIQUID DRAIIO

imeriCi ...

Connie ...
Many Other

.F1mous
Names!

HICK'SIIG.
991

270Z.

FUtURE

sse

IIOfiSIWAif JgT.

MNSnrA·~-~T.~..........J~ ~~=

CLEARANCE'
DRESS
SPORT
BOOTS

.t

~

SHOE ·
Miss

.

"

RED LABEL
DACRON

~

~t

j
.

•

~;-. 1:

v· ·

CHAPMAN'S JANUARY

GREAT
SAVINGS

l ,; • • _.

.

NOW IN

ONE-STOP
CARRY-OUT
Ice Cold Beer
&amp;

..!· ..

70Z.

BEHOLD

FLOOR WAX

PUMP SPlAY

~' 129

58~
HICI('S IIG.
89 1

480Z.

RENUZIT
SOLID

VANISH

AIR FRESHDIR

69(

•

~FIAGUICIS

3FOP.

HECK'S REG.
471

. . .• •r.

lADIES
Shoulder &amp;
l)ress Style

BAGS

FURNITURE

CHAPMAN
SHO
Door lllllrftlll
~xt

,,

.•,

.

'

�,,

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov fl ., Wednesday, Jan: 12, 1977
·= ·:::::::::.::::~:·:·=·=·=·:::;=-:;:::;:::.:·:;:·s~:;::~;:::::~;,.;::.x~:::;~:.x~~~~~ i : j • ·I§

~;

t

_R

,•,•

ep0rt

According to U. S. Com·
nerce Department reports,
the economic recovery which
had slowed duPing the
~mmer and fall is apparently resuming. Key
economic indicators rose In
November for the second
month In a row. Industrial
production is up and so are
retaU sales. As a result of
this increased economic
· activity, various economists
predict an overall g1'Q wth
rate of a~ut 5 percent per
year lor the Nation's
economy. This is a moderate
non-inflationary
growth
pattern that is most en·
couraging.
.
•
I am concerned that the
new Administration and the
Congress will attempt to go
overboard with pump
priming techniques to push
for wUd unrestrained growth.
This action would upset
reasonable and sensible
growth patterns and result in
another round of high inflation. Moderation is
E&gt;Stential when government
injects itself into economic
matters.

While short term political
gains will be served by an
ephemeral faise government
- created prosperity, this is
not what the American people
really want or deserve. A
moderate economic growth
rate of an additional5 percent

I

By Clarence
Miller • ,.
to 6 per cent per year will
insure more ·pei'IlUinent joba
for those who want to work
aod economic stability for the
present and the luture.
We could expect increased
buying power because we
· would no loiiger be constantly .
assaulted by an unaeceptable
inflation rate. I will en- courage the new~ Administration
and
my
colleagues In the Con~ess to
refrain from unreasonable
tinkering wtth the economy.
A modest tax cut coupled
wtth a reduction In govern.
inent" spending is in nrder.
This course of action will
permit more money to
remain in the famUy pocketbook where it belongs.
Business will increase as a
result of increased consumer
buying power. More joba will
open up to meet the . new
demand for goods and ser·
vices. This is common sense,
productive economic growth.
I can not support the
economic policies of the past,
e.g. big government spending
and more make-work government jobs at the federal level.
These are superficial
remedies. The economy is
somewhat like a human
patient. The treating
physician ca nnot check the
symptoms without concentrating on the underlying
malady.

DEEP PRICE CUTS! ~LUS EVERYPAY LOW PRICES ON SHACK

SAVE

5 60

5 100 OFF!

~·

. By Alma Marshall

....

~

EXCLUSIVES!

:~:~~~T~~~~~~ .

Kroger Stores are
Open 24 Hours ADay.
Kroger trucks now
delivering fresh _
product to all Kroger
_Stores in this area.
Kroger regrets lastweek's inconvenience.
Kroger appreciates
your business and will
continue to cut your
food cost.

_/"'-'" \..

/'
~
·
~~,.
\_
) " lq. (
\ " ., fbrm5·

Reg. 199.95

\

CHICKEN

95
14·921

Big 30% savings make
Modu laire-8A an

t:E2i~~!§'=·~-~~~~~::~~~~

irresistibl
e bargain!
Play
pre-record
ed tapes
and record you r own at a
fraction of the costl Paus.e
control , Glide-Path ®
controls . There's only one
place you can find it
Radi o Shack

and you c an

CHARGE IT
AI Ric.lo Shack
Tnese twO credr l card ' ilre
R ad· ~

S h ac ~

h onu •l! d .~l

~ rores

n v a~e l:ll e De r a· r ~

Other cre dr t olans
ar vo~r nearD\' srore

par l •croatrng
ma~

also be

l Y FARM$ , U.S.D.'A. INSPECTED
GRADE A

An unbeatable 33% slashed off
regular pric e on our STA-77 A!
Wi th audi o component features
li ke ... FM mulmg , main/remote
speaker switch·,ng, pushbutton
tape mon itor ... in a genuine
walnu t veneer case .

Reg. 259.95

_Whole
Fryers

SAVE MORE! COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEMS!

Reg. Separate
Items Price

Reg . Separale

439.80

498.90

~~:::::::&amp;-:::::::::::::::~-::.-==~:::::::::::;:;:;::::=~:!:!::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::=::::::~:=~:=~:::::::::::::::;:::

News Notes

TM

AM-FM STEREO
S-TRACK SYSTEM

i. . .

_~ · M~n Q&gt;unty

13 - The Daily Senlinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday,Jan. l2, 1977

COPYRIGHT 1977- THE KROGER CO . ITEMS
AND PRICES.GOOD THURSDAY , JANUARY 13 .
1977 T.!iRU SATURDAY . JANUARY 15 , 1977 IN
POMEROY GAlliPOliS &amp; PARKERSBURG
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

Items Price

5 299 5 339

\1\1

.;~:.

• R•alistic STA -77A AM-FM S te reo Receiver , Realistic STA-77A
Stereo Receittt~i• Two Realis tic MC-1000 Speaker Systems • Two Rt~alistic MC-1500 Speaker Systems
• Re111istic Lab- 14 Auto · ~urnta bJs with Base , Realistic Lab-54 Auto-Turntable with Base

~

MASON - The Mason City Historical Society met on
Thursday, Jan. 6th in its regular meeting and discussed
THE ONE HANDER""
various projects such as getting the house Usted In the National
Reg~ and improvements needed In the wiring of the home,
MOBILE CB RADIO .
workshops and etc.
·
Mrs. Landon Smith presided and Mrs. Earl Ingels
presented devotionals : Daniel, second chapter and 23rd verse.
She closed with a reading and prayer. Mrs. Smith gave a
Reg .
reading entitled, "May You Have." The Constitution .and By
149.95
Laws were read
. aod the secretary's report which was
REALIST.IC ® STEREO
approved. ·
The group ordered 25 packages of Writing paper With the
HEADPHONES
21·1.61
sketch of the Virgil A. Lewis home. The package sells for $1.25.
• Every Contrails In The Sp'eaJcer / Mike H11ndutl _- ·A workshop is scheduled for Thuraday, January 13th at 10
Reg. 24.95
a.m. at the historic home. The group will start on a polyester
comforter. Ail a money-making project the group will also knot
two tops. For the workshop on Thursday the president asked
DETACHABLE
those attending to bring polyester pieces, thread, nfledles, aod
CB ANTENNA
scisSors. Homemade soup will be served at noon.
MOTORtiED A~CHER F
The g~:oup remembered Mrs. Addie Brown, a patient at
TRUNK MOUNT
33·1002
MOBILE CB ANTENNA .
Holzer Medical Center HospiW with a get.-well card. Apotluck
dinner w.. served at noon.
Discove r priva te ma gic of
Attending were Mrs. Ray Proffitt, MrS. Earl Ingels, Mrs.
headphone h1·fi with a
Cedi! Smith, Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs.
treme ndous 40%_di Scount'
Delmar Alexander, Mrs. John Marshall and Mrs. WU!lam
Big 10 coi led co rd'
Zerkle.
.
.
MASON - Don't forget to feed the birds - they are so ·
CB ANTJONNA
hungry they'll even eat dry bread. One of the prettiest birds to
~l
...,,, ~
visit our feeder is the Orioles. Their colors are orange, black
CONNECTORS
5
50
and white.
'·,;
.
Reg. 1.89 Pair
With aU this snow andice, news is scarce. People just don't
AMAZING Hl-Fl
Flip it s switch . it turns your
venture out ; ~
.
SPEAKER BARGAIN
PAIRCB on and extendsI Fl ip switch
. The Russell Capeharts just got back from Florida and
1
278-2os
again. it turns CB off and retracl s
according to RUSB they canle back too soon. Shortly after their
Reg . 79.5() Each
arrival by plane, the Charleston Air P!&gt;rt was closed because of
bad weather. Before going to Florida they visited their
REGULATED
daughter and son-ln~aw, Mr. and Mrs. John Troy and chUdren,
12V SUPPLY
Johnny and Timmy at Lexington, Ky.
DYNAMIC CB
While in Florida, Mr.and Mrs. Capehart visited his sister,
Reg . 25.95
MOBILE MIKE
Mn. Louise Rosenbaum, Mr. and Mn. Harold Lohse, Mr. and
• • GenuinB Walnut Vereer Enclosu ref
Mn. Charles Gibba at DaniS, Florida,
Reg .
Penoual Mention
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ccmpson are visiting his mother,
11 .95
5
Mn. Blanche Jones before going to Saudi Arabia. Mr. and
Mn. Com[IIOII spent one year In Iran where he waa employed.
3-PIECE STEREO
They also visited Mrs. Compson's parents, Mr. alii Mi'l.
FULL MEMORY
Olto Miller at West Columbia; their daughter allison-In-law,
PHONO
SYSTEI\!I
HITS!
Mr. and Mrs. William Zuspan, Billy and Rebecca; hil brother
CALCULATOR
aod famUy, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Compson, Mark and Timothy
aod his sister and fainlly, Mr. and Mrs. William Camp, Kevin,
O.vld and Usa.
Mrs. Harold (Frances) Yoling return~ home on·Sunday
from Pleasant Valley H08[lital where she waa hospilallzed
because of gas fumes from a hot water
at her home In
Cllftcrl. Her lllsband also became ill but didn't require
hospitalization.
UP TO 33% OFF SCIENCE FAIR AND ARCHER KITS !
Mrs. Lee Richardson is visiting her daughter and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Metcalf In COlumbus.
MaJ&lt;r and Mrs. Jack Stewart of Fort Harrison, Ind., aod
Jolle Kimberly and Mark visited his mother, Mrs. Evelyn
WINDOW/DOOR
BULK MAGNETIC
~ during the holidays from Sunday untU 'l'bunday.
! BATTERY
TAPE
e;:~~
ALARM
From Mason, they went to Cleveland, where they visited ber
· cHECKER
ERASER
parents before returlling home.
Mr. and 'Mrs. Harold Fry, Jr. of New Haven, ·apent New
11.95
Reg. 2.19
Reg. 6.95
Year's Eve with Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson and famUy.
· Chris and Todd Self of Columbus visited their grandparenta,
"DRI\IFR ~LERT"
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart, recently.
:_: : · I
AUTO IGNITION'
20-IN -1 ELECTRONIC
Mr. alii Mrs. Patrick Ryan and famUy of Roanoke, Va.
RADAR SENTRY KIT
SYSTEM KIT
44-210
;. -~ 'C".&gt;~
22-100
visited recently with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ryan
LAB KIT .
in Mason and from here went to Reedy, W. Va. where they
visited her parenta, Mr. and Mrs. John Bi-abham.
• Test "A··. "C ", ,"Dt and
Reg.
To'npo"'¥ or Per:manent • Erases Open ·R•el.
2 9·95
14.95
28·4002
B·
Track
and
Casntte
Tap_
e
sl
Mrs. Emma Ryan, Mr. and Mn. Edward Ryan, Mr. and
Attffchmentl
9V•Colis/
.
28-245
Mrs. Mike Ryan and two children, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Ryan
and two clildren were dinner guesta of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
OVER 4600 RADIO SHACK STORES AND DEALERS- THERE'S ONE NEAR YOU
Hayes at Pomeroy dl!ring the holidays.
Mrs. Thunna Love of Pt. Pleaaant, visited ber sister, Mrs.
Emma Ryan f&lt;r several days.
Robin Stewart aod Kim Knight are both •ttendln&amp; tbe W.
Va. Career School In HWltingiiJII. Pam Athey Ls attending the
HuntlngiiJII Eaat VocatiCJ181 Canier.
·
.
NI\W Year's dinner guell.s of Mra. Blanche Jonea were Mr.
and Mrs. Robert OompiOII, Mr. and Mn. Ernelt Cm~pson,
Most item, 111110 aveilebl "
Marli: and 11mothy; Mr. and Mrs. WUlilm ~.Jr., Billy
at Radio ShacM Dealers •
L" Ok for this sian
1111C1 Rebeccl; Frankie Coot of Pl. Pleuut, Mr. and MrL
In .your ne i&amp;hborhOOd .
~willllm (Jeame) camp and 110111, KeYin, David IIIII u.. 1111c1
granddaughter, carrie Camp. The birthday of Mn. Jlllllll
Camp waa observed at IIIia tlme.

KROGER

STEREO HEADPHONE PRICE SLASH!

$

SAVE510

Whole Boneless
Beef Rib Eye

.

NEW!

SAVE 55

'

I

$

95

::&amp;.l4·

159

SAVE16%

CHOICE

23~.~

SAVE 54%

no~

cos\ \':)

Valleydale
Sliced Bacon

$ 16

GALLON

l ~J
~~)...-~-----'"""
-·. -v~/!
.

SAVE 30

SAVE33% .

SAVE 52

Gallon
Paper
Ctn.

USDA

SAVE15% .

.

Lowfat Milk

~9

6~~

5~e:s 54~-~

Hi Nu 2%

U.S. GOV'T GRADED C_HOICE

~

.PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES ,
TAB, FRESCA ,

Sprite or
Coca Cola

Grade A
Large Eggs

SAVE 10

CB

ta'*

SAVE15%
Fa
r

588

SAVE!

.SAVE!

CI)T18%

,,

CUT17%

Vine Ripe_
Tomatoes

Reg.

1~5~4

'-·----

~;:s22~!8

Reg.·2495

.''

995

SILVER BRIDGE P

SONiloRN
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Burnette
of O.yton are announcing the
birth of 11011, Chance Adam,
Jan. 3. The baby weighed
nine pounds, seven ounces.

Ml'll. Burnette was the fonner ·,
Teresa Moore of Minersville.
They have a da1111hler,
Charisms. Mr. and Mn.
Charles Moore of near
Reedsville are grandparents.

oW Open 24 Hours a Day
Except Closed Sat. Midnight till 9 A.M. Sunday

. MA TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY .

!':!~:~..~

PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES .
I.

,'

.(.

'

•

TOTAL SATISFACTION QUARANTU
We loon wMI ,.. d•orlho, if ot oil possib~. If. due, lo rondltlon.•
beyond our control, we run out of on odvert11ed spec1ol, wt substitute o comparable brond ot o similar sovi~g or. givt yo~ o R~IN
CHECK for t~ e advertised 'pecml ot the spec1ol pnce any t~mt ~!th­
in 30 days. We ~oo ro nt ee what we 'ell. If you _ore ever d1ssot"fled
with o Xroger purchase, we win , replace your lttm or refu!d your

money.

-------. ----

.

�•

14 - The Daily Sentinel , Mtddleport-Pomernv n WednesdAv. Jan. 12, 1977
WANT ADS

For Thuredl), Jen U , 11n
ARIEI(Marcii21-Apri11)Jolnt
\lentures are very promising today. It your partner Is as ambltious as you are, the rewards
are greater.
TAURUS (Aptll 20-Miy 20)
You 'll be surprised what a few
well-placed tompllmenls will ac·
co mpl lsh· today. If a perSon
deserves recognition , make It a
point to do the honors .

INFOnMATION
DEADLINES
s P .M . Ou 8etore
Publice t ron,.
Can.cel.1atlohs,
correc
tlont accepted flrtt dey ot
publlutlan .
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves
the right to ·edit or retec t
any ads dtemtd ob te ctl one l . The publishtr
will not be rupon&amp;lble tor
more th a n one Incorrect
insert ion .
RATES
For WaniAd S.rvfu
S cents per ward anr
lnttrtlon .
Minimum Charve Sl.DO. ,
14 cents ptr word thrte
cor"~cutlve Insertions .
26 cents r,er word six
consecu ti~e nsert lons .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and · Ids pa id
wlt kln 10 da¥' .

~or

Fast Results - Use The Sentinel Classifieds -..
'fSIGNS

:XO furniture , ice bo•est brass
~ds

wall telephones and
parh: or campi" households
Wr ite M. D. Miller, Rf. 4 ,
Pomeroy . Ohio. Coli 992·7760.

OF

QuAurt

:ASM paid for oil mok•• ond
models of mobile hom..s.
TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro·
du::ts. Top price for stondlnQ
sawtimber . Coli K'enf 1-tanby .
1_446·8570.

Wolfpen
News Notes

-------

-·Racine Social Events
By Mn. FriiDcls Mortlo
Mn. FaMie Sayre Is

a

surgical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Mal'!lliret Houdashelt
spent Chrlltmaa with Mr. and
Mn. MOton Houdallhelt and
lamlly at Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mn. Edison Brace
and granddaugh\er, Tereua
Brace visited llonnl Brace at
Parkenbul'!l Friday.
Mn. Earl Powell of Torch
wu an overnight guest
Sunday of Mr. and Mn. Elza

Birch.
Mr. and Mn.

Jack Adams
visited Mr. and Mrs. Boone
·~t.dams New Year's Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Morris spent New Year's Day
with Mta. Anna HU!dore at

SyraCUJe.
Mr. and Mn. Edlaon Brace
and Clara Powell took ·
T - Bnce to her home at
Crown City Sunday af-

1ernoon. -Mr. and Mn. Brilce Simp-

son and Mr. Tom Good of
Seymour, Ind. spent Sunday
overnight with the former's
grandmother, Mrs. Gretta

FULLER Brusk Produc1s for
Phone 992-3-410.

CAMPER, , $600. Also, hone
trailer, S.CSO Phone (61~) 698Stmpaon.
3290
..
Mr. and Mrs . Chrlsie! PEARCE SIMPSON C.B. base staPowell were Chrlstmaa Eve
tion . Phone 247-2684 after 5
dinner guests of Mr.
Mn. p.m.
Elson S~ncer and famly and FENCE POSTS , $1.00. "lao ,
firewood three-fourth ton
apenl Christmas Day with
pickup toods delivered . S25
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Orr
within 25 miles , Pkone
and !ami~ at Gahanna .
985 ·4197.
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth
HEAVY GAUGE I Beams ond M
Turley and son Kevin went to
8eoms for sale, 8 . 9, 10 inch .
St. Albana, W. Va. Friday to
Phone 992·7034.
spend New Year'a with Mr. NEW AM· FM Stereo·rodio, 8 I rock
and Mn. Dale Ball and bring
tope combinofion. $129.95 or
ferms . Phone 992-3965.
their son Kenny home alter
spending a week with his STEREO: AM -FM-FM stereo-radlc ,
8 trade tape. combination .
uncle and aunt.
Balance due $10ot .20 or terms .
Phone 992·3965.

and

. You'll
tract It doiR
IIUCh f IS te r
II th I

WANT AD

SCHOOl SEWING Mockines .
Singers in . walnut consolette,
146. Phonem·51ol6.
SINGER GOLOEN Touch N' SEW
does It oU I lig·tDgl, MWS on
knih , oulomotlc buttonkoler,
makes designs , mony other
features . Phon• 992-51 ~6 .

~

-'

Recine. Ohio

ASSORTID RUBBER

. CAPTAIN EASY

~K CARPETING

'6.95

...

sauara Yord l~olallaol

-••

David P1r10n1, Owner

NOUTH

CAW'T YOU !!EE
$0RRY, SIR-iN CONFEREI\Icw,.,,.,,1HE CALLER WIL~
HAVE T~AT
ONLY SPCAI&lt; fO

VOU IN PRIVATE!

TRANSFeltRED

IT 15 50UNPED
VEf',V IMPRE551VE1 HE $AID,
"THI$ CA·~ COU&gt;D 1.\E;AIII

~--r

• . 6 52

MILLIDI/51"

WEST
• 52

w

S.l~

plus add to the value ol
your home. Trust lhose

1968 JEEP . truck 4 wheel dr!ve,
$2150. 1969 Rambler, 6 cyl
standard , good condition. $650.
· Pkone 985-4227 .

197-4 INTERNATIONAL truck
outomotic, V-8 p.s .. Rtckord
Fetty . Rutland or 742 -2818.
1964 Chevy % ton pickup. good
condition , new tires , ca ll
992·3994 .
1971 FORO XLT Ranger truck , ex·
cellent condit1on . reasonable
pr1ced Pkone 9•9-2545 .

For Sale
FREIGHT DAMAGED, Octabe&lt; 19.
1976 Zig-:r:og sewing mach ines.
buttonhole, monogram , etc.
Origina lly $179.95 will sell for
$59.95 cosh or terms . Pkone
992-5146.

BEDROOMS . UNFURNI ~HED
house or apartment. Close to
Pomeroy or Middleport. Pkone
. 992· 5327.

3 bedrooms, IIf, both$, large li v·
ing room , dining room and kit- '
chen , fully carpeted . Phone
~2 - 3129 , or 992-5434 .

PROBLEM S?
soften

Landmork

condilton yOur
water with a Co.op w1ter
&amp;

softener, Madel UC -XVI.
Now Only

~~

'279.95,

test

you~

wat••

· Pomeroy Landmark
. .. Jack W. ~rsey, Mgr.
Phone·992-2181

APPLES. FITZPATRICK Orchard,
Stote Route 689, Wilkes vtlfe .
Phone (61•1 669-3785.
USED FORESTRY Equ ipment.
Timberjock 2300 Skidder. Case
600 skid·l&lt;mg Skidder; Interna tional S7B Hough Skidder; John
Deere 2010 Wheellooder. Con·
tact Dar1 Groves or lyons
Equipment Co . Inc. Circleville,
Ot-t . Phone (614) 596·.11769 or
47• -6028
GRAVEL V TRACTOR and snow
blade for sole . Phone 992-5282 .
SINGER Golden Touch N' Sew m
walnut conliolette . Original
pnce. 5600. Must sell. Only
$134 .95 Ca$h or term s. Call
992·5146.
WHITE POODLE housetrolned.
Call qq2-3722 during tke day ,
9.C9-2.c98 offer 4:30p.m.

59 acres . 6 room house , be th.
portly carpeted, lwo out·
buildings . dug basement.
o ne -1hlrd tillable. mine ral
rights located ne:or Danville .
Reduced fo r qui ck sa le .
$23 ,500. Phone 742-2766.

PomeniJ Landmark

..

~.

•

~

.

.Jock W. C.rsey, Mgr. ,
Phone m -1111

"""

We hava MVtral buiiMII
properllae lor sole. call for
further lnlormall- . -

~·

to. EW.
• MllillPom.IO
Afllr ..;_rs

c."i,'

.

n
2 1

-

~-­

p~

!tl-1174

,_

~

.••'

We ltll'ltr

_

Np nh

Jo~a sl

establl sh South':; nine spot as
a wl nner

Sou th's s1 x spade contract is
nol a good one . Its success
depended on e 11he r a 3-3 hear!
break or a miStake by the

•

defense.
·
As you can see lhe hearts
didn ' t

break

bul

So uth

A Tennessee reader wants
to know tf any one can call for
[I redeal whlle the cards are
being dealt if no ca rd ha s been
exposed
The r ul es provJd e that once
the cards have been properly
cut the deal mus t t-e com·
pleted 1f no card has Decn exposed provided the right pe rso n is deali ng. You ma y not

broughl the slam home. Now
sec if you can figure where the ask ror a redea l as a wh1m
defense went wrong .

I614191S-41M
Otftttr,Oh6o

..

DOWN"

•::'

.. NCWI LET US

-10.

1--....,--....
.:0;,:
-3;.;
·'.:"':.;:0;.;.·...I • ....,..___.......1.._0-.._17-·lrnD (Pdl
· -· --··
-

11{~1

for the experts? Wr ite "A.sk
and South ducked . He d1dn't · the Ja co bys " ca re of this
fear. that a second cl uT.i wou ld newspaper. Th e Ja cobys will
be ruffed : he had no play al a il answer ;ndrvidual ques tions
for the 13 t ri cks a nd wan ted to if stamped. self-addressed
eslii bll sh a squeeze or pSeudo- envelopes are enclosed. The
sq ueeze press ure in case most inte res ting questio ns
hearts didn't break
will be used in th1s column
Now came t he~ defensive and w11i receive cop;es of

IS 5ET1ER

PRETI'ND Wt ARE

-

Will do roofing , construction , BRADFORD, AuctlonMr, Complete Ser\llce. Phone 9.C9-2A87
plumbing and heating No 1ob
or 949·2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt
too Iorge or toQ 5mell Phone
Bradford .
742-2348 .
NEW 3 bedroom kouse , 2 baths ,
ElWOOD BOWERS RePAIR oil elec ., I a cre , Middleport, CARPENTER, flooring, ce iling,
Sweepers, toost•n. irons, all "
.
p_a~!l
.
~n~-!_k~~·-~!:_._
close to Rutland . Pkone qq2 ~
sf1'!all appliances . lawn mower ,
7481.
MOBILE Hom, Repair. Elec.,
ne-.:t to State Highway Garage
plumbing and heating. Phone
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
on Route 7. Phone (1.1-4) 915992-5858.
3825.
216 E. Second Street
---.
.,..---,,--;--.
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC. New REMODELING , Plumbing , h•oting
Pomoroy, Ohio •l769
T.V. shop. Electronic T.V. Clin ic
~hone 992-332!
and all types at general r•palr .
Serv1ce coli, $5 .95. Color, B &amp; W
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex·
Ru 1 Lr4ND Large .4
antenna systems slereos , etc.
1
bedroom home with bath,
_P_~~!1-~!:!~e 992·2-409. ,.
572 South Tkird, MiOdleport.
gas heat, city water. 2 car
Phone 992·6306. Corry in and SEWING MACHINE Repairs . ••rgarage and garden. $12,800.
vtce, all makes, 992-2284 . The 1
s~ve~one_r . _
.. ~--- _ _
Fabri c Shop , Pomeroy .
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
WAY OUT- !acres and 2
Authorind Singer Sal.. ond
coveting . septic systems ,
bedroom unfinished house.
Ser\lice . We skorpen Scluors.
c
doze'r . backhoe. dump truck , - •• - ~ - - · - - -- - -Cistern, lull basem.o nt.
EXCAVATING, doter; loodar cind - ;
limestone.
grovel,
blacktop
Only $5.000.
backhoe work ;_ dump trucks ,
paving , Rt. 143. Phone J (614)
MIDDLEPORT Nice
ond lo-boys for hire; will haul
698·7331.
level
lot.
l'h
story
frame
INVESTMENT- Large 2
_UII dirt h? soil, limetlo~ and
home. 2 or 3 bedrooms.
EXCAVAT ING ,
BACKHOES ,
story
brick
with
3
Ovll. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
bath
,
basement,
dining
DOZER , TRENCHER , LOWBOY,
aporlmenls. All utilities
ers . da~ phone 992 -7089.
rm ., living rm., has
OUMP TRUCKS . BilL PUlliNS.
and 3 car garage. Only
night phoM 992-3525 or 992·
PHONE 992-2 478, DAY OR
flreploce wllh gas . unll, 2
$20.000:
5232.
NIGHT.
large porches. Excellent
EXCAVATING, doze&lt;, bockho.
loca110'1. ASKING JUST
WOODS - 29 acres with
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL: Sewing
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat514.000.00.
c lly
like waler and
Mocki nas cleaned. oiled and
, Back Ho• Senlce ,
field
POMEROY 2 slory
electricity . 516.000 . ·
adju s ted , S5 .9B
Sewing
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742·2008.
frame
with
new
alum
.
Center, Middleport, Okio.
SPECIAL.
siding, 3 Iorge bedrooms,
SEPTIC Systems ;,,.tolled by
licensed Installer. Shepard
1112 baths, dining rm., large
MIDDLE PORT
2
Contractors . Phone 7.C2-2409.
kitchen. Iorge foyer ond
bedroom home, bath. all
liv ing r m . Utility rin., full
utilities, and level lot .
~EPTIC TANKS cleaned. Mode'"
basement garage, storm
$16,500.
Sonttatlon, 992-39SA.
NEW 3 bedroom house, buill-In
, ~..., and window. new
kitchen
,
both
and
%,
Phone
, gas furnace, lots of
115 ACRES Orange
7.c2-2306 or contact MilO 8. Hutcarpeting. S1B, 500.00
Township with all minerals
ck~son , Rutlo'n~..._Okto __ .__._
MOBILE
HOME
and free gos with Income.
4
ACRES
UNDEVELOPED la nd near
Located on ~h acre. 2
Nice large fishing stream.
nunes
.
re du ced .
Phone
bedrooins
,
very
large
$30,000.
'
742·2867.
Will do odd jobs, roofing, pain- :
llnvlng
rm .
Dine - In
.,
.... -·
ling, gutter work. Phone 992kitchen .. Melol storage
HOUSE AND lot, 12B Lquret St ..
MIDDLEPORT- Modern
bldg
.
12x60
and
In
very
Pomerov
Ohio.
Contoc:t
Doc
4 Bedroom, nat. gas F .A.
7409. '-;--;-:--;-,-good condition. S7 ,500.00.
Eblen.
WILL DO plumbing , heating, roof.
furnace. Eat-in kll., birch
POMEROY- Trailer slle
tng ,
remodeling,
frte
cabinets, dlsposol, ond
HOUS~ FOR SALE. 5 rooms end
has concrete polio, water.
e1timotes . Coli Chorlea
level lot at $23,000.
both. ocre of land. Phone
clly sewer hookup, possible
Sinclair, 985-4121 .
742-2769.
natural go~ hookup. $2,000.
RUTLAND- Good 9 room
GOOO MOME for sale near shop· iNCOME TAX S.r'ilte, Either
TUPPERS PLAINS- New
house with 3 Brs .. 2 balhs,
Solnr, Salem' StrHI , Rutland
ping Or9Q, Complete finoncini
kit.
has
stove and . home ready to move Into. 3
or coli 7_.2-2662 offer 5:30
Ohio
to responsible party. Phone
bedrooms, modern . bath.
refrigerator.
Full
p.m.
lovely dine -In kitchen,
9!2.57·8=:.:.·-...,
6
----basement, lurnoce ond dbl.
9 ACRES OF undeveloped land, SEWING-AlTERATIONS : .
utility room, large goroge
garage.
Upholstering ,
drapes
jusl off Union Ave. in Poiner'oy.
with work area. Approx. 1
reasD!'al:i~.
512
South
Third
Doc
Eblen
.
Contact
acre. 123,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Nice old
A \Ia ., Middleport. Phone
WANT
TO
SELL?
(TIME
3 rm. house with 2 baths, all ·
For sale by owner. ne~ 5 room
992·6306.
IS MONEY) LET US 'S ELL
utilities, garage on corner
house
on
1
ocrelot
in
country,
INCOME
TAX Servico, Wolloco
YDUR PROPERTY NOW.
15 minutes from Athans , 10
lot 40 ~ 100. Only
minutes trom Pomeroy on Rt.
Auuell ,
lradbury .
Call ..
HENRY E. CLELAND
m -7228.-_ _ _ _ __
33. $18,500. Coli 992-523
_ 1._ _ c.;.c.::..:.::::;
BROKER
BUY, FIX IT UP,. AND
m-22!9or
SELL AT A fSROFIT.

(Do yo u have a question

Wes t opened the queen of
cl ubs . East played the se ve n

Real Estati!fot. - s.a.,; ': c ..· '":

HOMESITES for 5ole, I acre and
up . Middleport, near Rutland .
Call992- 7481 .

blunder. West contmued by' JACOBY MOD ERN.)

~

TEAFORD

by

THOMAS JOSEPH

AC ROSS

~~--

BORN LOSER

r.

'

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0

"~

~~~~ ~ ~~~~
GASOUNEAU~V

DOWN

1 R eve rberaI Impede
t ion
! Assig nment
5 Place to
3 Deslderarecuperate
tion (2 wds.)
8 Pers ian tiger · 4 Table scrap
·- 9 Workin g
5 Parti·
diligen tly
ci pated in
( 2 wds. 1
6 Newsstand
13 P e rfe ctly
purchase
Yesterday's Answer
(3 wds. I
7 Anagram
29 Publisher's
14 Respl'ctively
of rai d
21 Levanline
concern
15 Hockey
10 Like ( 3 wds.)
ketc h
great
II "Lights, -, 22 Cut a
30 Brazilian
16 Occur earlier
ca mera!"
figure 8
city
17 More in12 Plains
23 Oaf!
32 No rthern
sig nificant ,
abode
24 Scepter
Scand ina19 Kirby of
16 - Bluff,
26 Bottling
vian
the comics
Ark .
works
20 Regio n of
18 Mahjong
,28 French poe t, ·35 Pickpocket
P a kistan
piece
Alexis St. (sl.l
21 Plum
22 Edge a long
24 Batman's
a lter ego
25 Athlete's
vulnerable
spot
26 Ululate
27 Doll
28 Nebraska
city
31 Concl usion
(2 wds .l
33 By way of
34 Madden
·
35 Obligation

i.,---+-+---t-

-------

-- - -

1-:;-;---t-:--+-

36 Less
s ha llow
37 Virginia
willow
ge nus
38 Meddle

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AI-I'LL
e£611\J
A6 1N-

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os:v~~

-

GOT AN EYE FOR A·atm

KECHE

CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's h o w

SUY

·F'NNA

Roclnt 949-2020

SIJUNDS
JUST LIKE
OUR BUDGET

1

;:,•:;::;~"?,.:'{.~now.P~:O:~~t'~:!,-:~:. ":=

fllhlnglrN CION b~. lacatod In Coolville, Ohio. Prlcect
·o t only 132.1100. Cell
,
CHESTER - ·113 aerH farm, ID ocr• llllobla land,
1
2 t
f
hou... •' rooms ond bath, all
n ca . s ory arm
hardwood lloors and basamont. Born and olloor
bulbulldl ngo,
. ~ n Ice Iay Ing I1rm priced to go.'
Locatlll ntor
aetor, callloroppt.

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OVER 10 HER HOUSE FOI{
HOT CHOCOlATE AND 5/T
IN FA;JNT OF ~E FIRE ...

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ON THE OTHER H.-IND.
HALF THE FUN ISN'T
ALWA~S HALF THE FWN!

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Yesterday 's Crh&gt;toquote: THE FIRST OBJECT OF ANY
ACT OF lEARNING IS THAT IT SHOUlD SERVE US IN THE
FUTURE. - JEROME BRUNER

ATHOMB!

• ·

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RIDENOUI\

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.-----=---,

models, rtlrlflrllon, fnelll'l, ·,..llltrl,
ronges. All 110 feol......,.cltlll It ..,. YOII
work flmt. SOmt until 110 olltftlly ocntdMd. Alla10
prlcod lo Nil. 5H lhtm Ieday II:

1

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a

COIILVILLE- Nice mod. brick home containing lhrae .
bedrooms, dining room, living room with llrtplace, full '
. baltt'Tiant wllh garoge, large front porch, nat. gai. l
furnoce, clly watar and well water, a baotutlful home.

work

~ 1"10,

Is

.;,ut.n·and IIOmt

a

to

L

One letter si mply stands for another. I n this sample A is L...:.;:..:.::;:;.-.;
· i----+- r uscd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Si ngle lett ers.
apostrophes, the length and form ali?n of th e words arc all
hints. Eac h day t\1e cod e letters are d1fl'er\.' nt.
CRYPTOQUOTES

Brand -

', 1
i 1

HlrHAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenr'iAmoldandBob lee

lour ordinary words.

dryars,

·sPECIAL- 3 bedroom and attached garage, Toro1
electric home under conllrucllon on '11 acre lot . Owner
wlllllnllh In 30 cloys lor buyer or will Nil "as Is". May
taka lrede. Loeatod ntar Chester.

'i11tll1.\hl ID'it

~ ~ ~U;.}'-!l ®
Unscramble these four Jumbles,

AXYDLBAAXR

Refrigerators, R•.na!'•• Wallltrs 1o uryers.

LANGSVILLE -56 ICtal modtrn 3 bedroom l'h itory
form hoilsa wllh lire placo, Hverol lrull troes,
IPPni•lmalaly 15 ocrH llllable, balance In pollurt.
Locoled ntor Langsville. Prlco reduced lor quldc lilt
$22,500.

THURSOAY , JANUARY 13,1 977
6 :00-Public Affairs 10.
6: IS-Farm Report 13 .
6:2o-Not lor Women Only 13
6:3Q--OS U 0\/erview 4 ; News 6; Urban League 10.
6:d5-Morning Reporf 3.
6:50-Good Morn ing, We st Virgin ia 13
6:55- Good Morn1ng, Tri Slate 13
7·00-Today 3,4, 15 ; Good Mor ni ng, America 6, 13; CB S
Ne'f'IS 8; Chuck White Reports 10
7:05- Po r ky Pig 10
7:30---Schoolies 10.
a ·oo-Lassie 6; Capt. Kangaroo B, 10 . Sesam e St. 33.
8 :3()--Big Va lley 6.
9 :oo-A .M 3; Ph il Donahue 1l; Lucy Show e.- Mike
Doug las 10
- - ··
9 :30-Cross Wits3 ; One Li fetol ive6; Good0ay8 .
10:0f&gt;.--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Pric~ Is Right 8,10; Mike
Doug tas 13 .
10 · 15-General Hospital 6 .
10:30---Hollywood Squares 3, d, 15.
11 :0()--Wheel of Fo rtune 3,15; Weekday 4; Edge o l
Night 6; Doub le Dare 8,_10; Morning with OJ 13;
E lee. Co. 20.
11 ·3Q-Shool fo r th e Stars 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13 ;
Love of Li fe 8,1 0; Sesame St . 20.
11 ·55--C BS News B; M s. Fixit 10.
12 .00-- News 3,6,8, 10; Don Ho 13 ; Bob Bra un 4; Nam e
That Tune 15.
12:30-- Lovers &amp; Fri ends 3.15, Ryan 's Hope 6, 13 ;
Search for To morrow 8.10,
1:Of&gt;.--Gong Show 3; All My Chi ldren 6,13: Con·
cen tralion 8; Young &amp; the Re st less 10 ; Not For
Women Only 15.
1. 30--Days of Ou r Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13 ; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2 :0()...$20,000 Pyramid 13 : Dinah 6.
2:3Q-.Doctor s 3,4,15 ; One Life to L1ve 13, Guiding
Lig hH, IO.
3.0Q-Anothe r World 3.4.l l ; All In The Family B,IO ;
Antiques 20.
3. 15- General Hosp ital 13 .
3:3o-Bewi t ched 6; Match Game El 110 ; Li lias, Yoga &amp;
You 20 .
'
4·00--Mister Cartoon 3; Mar cus Welby ,M.O. 4. Gong
Show 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame St. 20.33 ; Movie " The Roa d Back " 10;
Dinah 13
4.30--My T hree Sons 3; Eme rgency On·e 6; Par-tridge
Family 8i Flints tones 15 .
5: 0o-B ig Valley 3; Merv Griff in ' 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mis ter Rogers ·20,33 ; Star Trek 15.
5 : 3o-~ews 6; Fami ly Aflair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33 ; Adam .
12 13.
6.00-News, 3,4,8, 10 , 13,1 5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Zoom 33.
6:3()--N BC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13 : Andy Griffitfio .
CBS News B.lO; Once Upon a Classic 20 : Boy Scou t
Tra ining 33 .
7 00-Truth or Co ns. 3; To Tell The Truth 4; Bowling
for Dollars 6; Muppet Show 8. News 10; To ,Tell the
T r ut h 13; My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tenny'son?
20.
7 3Q-Ho llywood Squa r es 3,4; Oh io Slate Lottery 6:
Price is Right 8; M cNei i.Lehrer Repo rt 20,33 ; WIId
K 1ngdom 10; NashVi lie on the Road 13; Dolly 1s.
8:0()--PIIot 3,4,15; Welcome Back, Kotte r 6,1 J; Wa llons
8, 10; Vis ions ~20 ; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
B·3o-Whal' s Happen ing 6, 13.
9:00--Besl Sellers 3, 4,15 ; Barney Miller 6,13 ; Hawaii
F ive -0 8; Vis ions 33; Ten Wh o Dared 10.
9:3()--Tony Randall6 .13.
10:0Q--Streets o f San Francisco 6, 13 ; Barnaby Jones 8;
Honeymoone r s' Trip to Europe 10; News 20.
10 :30--Woman 20,33.
11 :OQ- News 3,4, 6,8 ,10, 13, 15 .
11 :3D--J ohnn y Carson 3, 4,15; Por trait of Jac queline
Kennedy Onassis 6, 13; Koja k B; Mary Hartman 10 ;
ABC News 33.
12 :00--Movle " A Man Called Dagger " 10; Janaki 33.
12:3o-Mo vie " Puppe t on a Chain" 8
1 :00---Tomor row 3, 4; News 13.
Channel Five
6 :Jo-Testimony Time
7:00--Fami ly Fitness
7:3o-Coach 's Corner
8:0()--Home Digest
·9 :0o-celebration
10 :0()--700 Club .

one letter to each sqtJara, to lorm fiiffi"ili'ij;;;;;i!ii!r;ii&gt;;;:;;:;;:;:i:;;;~

39 Vox populi

m.ooo:

Gibson, Hardwick, Spe!HJ
Westing house.

LOok , c ashed his last trump lo
di sca rd dumm y 's las t club
and noted with delig ht that
Eas t had di scarded the 10 of
cl ubs on the nexllo last trump
a nd the king on the last one to

By Oswald &amp; James Ja coby

.:

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

............

ac.e of dia monds. came to hi s
hand wilh a third trump. ruff ed his jack of diamonds, led
dummy 's lasl trump , over-

'

12· 22·-4mos.

HIES CRAWLIN G
O!'i A WALL --

cONTACT:

ar!:~';:!!~.r

.

Ph . UI~J 742·24tt

--M

iMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. ·

tt2-71U

:....----~---

_,

Box2*-A
R Utllnd, Ohio 4517,_.

two leads, cashed durnrny 's

South
I ll
Pass 3 •
Pass 2 •
Pass 3 4
Pass· 4 •
Pass 5 •
Pass 6 •
Pass Pa ss Pass
Open m~ lead - Q "'"

West

Weddings

...

~~.:"o o~.·~~~;;ei~

Locatea tn un9svlllt

Aerial
Commercial
Schools

RACINE - Good 3 bedroom and dllilng room, low
utilities, even a garden spoce. Priced otonly $8,500.

No. 1M- 92 Acre larm on
poved road, lois ot rood

-

Sallth 1 '-1 Ollio
Tna Rlftli-rAI.,

. PHOmGRAPHY

CENTRAL REAlTY CO.
ttu. uw ...uu"", a .....re
and home, has 4 adjoining
loll, living quarter&amp; hu 10
roomo and all equlpmant
ond lnvenlory In olora.
undar preen! owner for 3S
yean, want• le&gt; retire.
Prlca S33,000.
No. 1t1 _ Apertmanl house
with 4 opartmenls and
lurnllhlngo wllhln walking
dlotonco to all storos, good
condition .

.•

•

r·~--~
sail&amp; 21&amp; . I ;:::::::::::;;:::~:
PROFESSIONAL
·-::~

--

. One oood used Remington
ChaiR SIW
S50
·.one good used McCullough
· Chain Saw
SJS
· · on~ good used Homellte
Chain S.w
S150
New Co -Op Water Sof · teners
, model VC -XVI Only $279 .95
One good used Gibson Side·
lby· Side Refflgerator no_
o:

a

"'.•

ANY PITI:H
ANY SIZJ.

1-9-n 1 mo.

.

HARD WA TE RPomeroy

AL TROMM CQNST.
Rutland 12-9-1 mo. 742-2328'

FIREWOOD . PHONE 742-2131 or
985·381J.

Lot

a

·oodltlon and remodeling
jobs lo your lrlandly.
neighborhood, qualified
builder.

"We Care'~
Free Es1.
Work Gu.tr.

SM.Alllorm for sale, 10"1. down
owner financed . Monroe Coun
ty , w. Vo. Phone (3041 7]2.
3102 o• (304)772.3227 .
.
COUNTRY farmland with seclud ed woods, woter and good a ccess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
$1.000 down, coli (304 1 7723102 0&lt; (3041772·3227 .
Commercial property approlt . 17
acres . le'iel land, located at .
Tuppers Plain$ on Ohio, Route
·
7. Phone (6141 667·6304 .

M

Wa handla only 1ha best In
monufoctured houolng .
modular
Doubla widtl
homes by Skyllna
FIICIUI
Homes Inc.
1100 E. Main St.
Pomoroy, Ohio
tn-7034
Hrs. t:ooo.m.
To Duok

.necessary fix-It, room
2

~

.leadi ng th e jack o f cl ubs .
There was no reason not to
lead th~ e1ght spot or to sh1ft
to a diamond or a trump. but
West ju st wasn ' t thinking
ahead .
So he led the Jack of clubs .

South won. drew tru mps with

¥ J9 B4
t K10 7632
+ Q 9 84
• QJa
• K1073
SOU1'11 IDI
A K Q J4 3
¥ K 73
• J5
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Both vu lnerabl e

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Kingsbury Home

Protec:l your inveslmen1

, EAST
• 10

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r-------------------~~ ~r---~~~~~~~~r -:

·:HOME
IMPROVEMENT..
'

12

• A9876
¥ A Q 62
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WHO~VER

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fol9-2tl4

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Plays for opponents' miscue

N

1969 Novo, eKtro sharp , new
paint bucket seoh . air shock s,
m~gs . Phone 949-2480.
1969 CHEVROLET Bisquolne; 1966
BUICK Electro, 225 ; 2 Rokon
triolbikes. Pkone 9.C9-2432.

7· 3o-Dally J; \ 100 ,000 N-ame That Tune 4; Match
G0 me PM 6; !2S,OOO P yrami d 8; Ma cNeii ·Lehrer
Report 20,33: All Things to All Men 10; Break ·t M
B-ank 13; Wild Kingdom 1l
B·oo-.CPO Sharkey J.-4 . 15; Bionic Woman 6,13; Gun5moke 8; Nova 20,33 ; Good Times 10.
8: 3tl-Mclean Stevenson 3 . ~ . 15; Je ffe rsons 10.
9:oo-Sirota 's Court 3,4, 15; Baretta 6, 13; Movie " Cage
Witho ut a Key " 8, 10; · Theater in America 33 ;
SoundslaQe 20 .
8 :30--Movle " The City" 3,4, 1l .
IO :Oo--Charl le's Angels , 13; News 20.
10 :3o-Mont age 20.
ll :Oil- News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1 5; MacNe ii ·Lehrer Report
33; Monty Python's Flying C~rcus 20.
11 .31)-Johnny Carson 3,41. 15; Rookies 6; Mov ie
" Sudden Terror" 8 ; Mary Hartman 10; College
Basketbal l 13; ABC News 33 .
12 :0o-Movle " The Angry Hills" 10; J ana&lt;l JJ .
1'2: 40-Mystery of the Week 6.
1:0o-Tomorrow 3,4 .
1 :30-News 13.

. WIN AT BRIDGE

~.

11 -4-1 mo.

COAL for sale. Open 6 ~ays per
week and a'ienings. For further
information ~o_ll i61_.}_36~- 7~ :
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
S1ATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WILKESVIllE , (6141 669-1785.

sale.

--

CARPET SHOP

197! CHEVY EL CAMINO
S39'/!
Classic, 350, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes. rally wheel. radio. black and very attractive,

-

---

O

.•

RACINE

1t75 CHEVELLE
c
S-4191
Eslate Wagon, local1 owner car, white radial tires, air
conditioning . v.a, automatic, power steering ond
brak,es, radio, dork red finish. block vinyl Interior.

.

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J

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12,1977
6 : 3()--NBC New s 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffit h o;
CBS News 8, 10 ; Vgetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
• " You 33.
1:00--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; lo Tell
I he Tr uth 13: My Three So ns 15; Consum er Sun ivai
Kit 20; Big Green Ma~ azine · 33.

••

1t75 FORD TDRIN04 DR.
' 12"5
Local car, clean vinyl Interior. green finish, good tires,
rodlo, 351 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes.

--~

[D~[1[J[Jill]\7

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Phoneare&lt;:t c ode614 ·4l3 ·~1.

~.:

•

Autos.J,.

Autos.Jeo

· 111' anted to Buy

COINS, CURRENCY, tokens, old
GEMINI (IIIIJ 21-Junri 20) Don't
pock•t watches and ckoin,t.
sit on lngenfous Ideas today
silv 8 r a nd gold. We need 196A
They can be of great \lllue to
CA: ~giTJ: : .;K 5
and older silver coins. Buy . sell,
you . They'll not only make your
S2 .00 for so word.
or trade' Coli Roger Wam sley.
7-42-2331 .
_
.
llle easier - they'll be profitable. ~.';~'";~u trl onal wOrd i
C,ANCER (June 21.-Julr 22) I ce~is .
CASH!!! for junk can. Frye's
I LIND ADS
Truck and Auto. 2.C HOUR
Someone new and exciting may
enter your life In the near future
Additional 2Sc Charg~
WRECKEII SERVICE ! Pho ne
The meeting wtll occur unde1 per Advertisemen t .
7-42·2Ml.
OFFICE HOURS
·-;_-- ---very unusual circumstances.
NOW
. BUYING Scroh. romeroy
8 : 10 a .m . to s : oo p .m .
LEO ~JUIJ 23~Aug 22) You are Dally , 8: 30 a .m . fa 12 :00
Auto Recycling, igk priclll
Noon Saturday .
pa1d, auto bodies . motors ,
ve ry reso urceful today, pa r·
Phone today 992 -2156.
!crop, 1ron , metals, batteriei .
ticularly under stress. You may'
open 8 ttll 4·30. Mondoy thru
e¥en surprise yourse lf with your
Sa turday , Old 33. just ob9ve
NOTICES
fairgrounds , Pom•roy , Ohto.
ability to maneuver out of trou·
ble
ATTN :: II
'·
p•
.
ALL HOUSEWIVES
Will olso plc"' up cars. , none
YIRQO (Aug 23·8apl 221 Be All Yard Soles , Rummoge ,
99H337 .
sponlaneo~.,~s if you have a
Por&lt;; h and Basement Por ch.
WANTED : CHIPWOOO, poles
and Bese me nt Sales, etc .
matter o1 importance to discuss must be paid in advance .
maxiumumdiomele r, lOtnckes
wttt'1 another today. The Ideas off Get yours In earl'r' by 1 an largest end , $8.00 P?{ ton .
the top of your head will be the sfopplno by our office at
Bundled slobs , $6.00 f)ef'&gt; ton
best ones.
The Dail y Se ntinel , 111
deli vered to Ohio Pallet Co mCou rt St. or wr iting Box.
pony , Rt 2. Pomeroy. Phone
LIBRA (S.pl 23-0cl 231 729, Pomeroy , Ohio &lt;5169
992-26139.
Something unusual may develop wifh your rem irtence .
today that will be of benefit to 1--------....,......;.~!1 WANTED OlD upright ptonos in
yo u fina ncially You must act
any cond1tion . y.till pay $10
qu ickly to take ad~antage of lt.
eock . First floor only. Write qiving directions to Witten Piano
SCORPIO (Ocl ·24-No• 221
Co ,. Bo• 188 , So•d,. , Qh;o
Perhaps you 've never thoug ht or NOW accepting piano stud ents,
43946
yourse lf as being Inventive , bul if
begin ner$, intermediates . od·
something happens today where
vcnced students. Call
992·
,,
70
you have to 1mprovise . the _2~ .:._ ~- - - -c:c~cc
, -: .
Ed ison in you will come out.
PERSON's BODYSkop, 26 Railroad
IF
YOU
hti11e
o
service
to offer,
St., Middleport would like to
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 ~D.c 21'
want to buy or sell tomelking,
'
rem ind customers tkot Dec. 31
Condi tio ns are very eKtraor·
is Ike lost doy to take ad·
oe look ing lor work . . . or
dmary for you today . Personal
van tage ol tlie point jo_bs . all
whatever , , . you 'll get results
ad\lantages can come In ways
over 1n 1 color, $100, 2 tone
fa ster with o Sentin•l Wont Ad.
yolJ'd ieast Imagine or 8KP8Ct.
$1 25 without body work Stop
Cal1992·2156 .
CAPRICORN (DIC 22-Jan 11) If
in or phone 985·4174 for opyou have the chance to go where -~~ ' "28_!1.!.:__ _
there are fresh faces and new NOTICE . Pratt 's Meat Mkt.
ideas. by all means go. You
(Piedsanton Meat Proce51iitng, PLEASURE HORSES tmd poni•s .
could turn up someone who 'll be
Inc. ) Custom $loughtering, and
also will buy horses and
\lery Important In your life .
~recessin g . Retoil , whole!ale .
ponies Pkone (6U) 698-3290,
No oppoinmenl necessary. Coil
Ruth Reeves
AOUARIUS (Jan 20-Fab 111
(6141 593·86S5 , hours, 9:00 IHI
RISING
STAR KENNEL , boarding
You'll be relatively successful In
6 oo 7 Pomeroy Road. Athens
indoor and outdoor. Groo~lng
Im portant endea't/Ors today , but
Oh.
all breed$, complete sonitory
the best In you won 't come out
fac ilities, Cheshire Pkone (614)
until the com petition stiffens. SPECIAlS ol 0 &amp; J House of
Fabrics , Iorge bla nke t .piec•s.
367·0292 .
You 're a flger the n.
reg. $ 1.50 lb. now $1.00 lb;
Crushed ... el ... et pieces, reg . ONE YEAR old white mole
PISCES (Feb 20-March 201
Chihuahua . J yeor old mole
$2.50 lb. now $2.00 lb. I table
Keep m touch wit h fr iends
German Sheperd
Phone
of poly knit reg . $2 ... 9 yard ,
separated from you by a con742·3
162
.
now
S
I
.39
yo
rd
.
I
mile
below
siderable distance A pal from
7.
ala r has s ome good news lor you - MiddleportonS.R.
-today
G UN SHOOT at the Racine Gun F&lt;&gt;r Rent
Clu b every S!Jnday , 1 pm
3 AND 4 RM . lurnished and un·
Assorted meats.
furnished opts . Pkone 992·
RACI NE FIRE Dept . wilt hove- o
5434
Gun Shoot e11Sry Soturdoy ntght
6 p .m . at the ir building In COU NTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Soshon , Oh 1o.
...
large lots with concrete patios.
Jan. 13, 1177
THERE WILL be o i-evivo/ at the
sidewalks , runners and otf
Mid d lep ort · Independe n t
street parking . Phone992 -7-479.
New hopes will be awakened rn
Hol iness Church Fourth and
you .tt11s year thro.ugh new con·
lincoln. Middle port . Sterling FURNISHED two bedroom opt .,
tacts. Be a joi ner Take more inadults only . No pets. Mid·
Sunday . Jan. 9 thru Jon . 16th.
tere st
in
clu bs
and
die port. Phone 992 ·3874.
Evangelist Re~ . David light .
organ1ZBt1ons.
Everyone welcome. Pastor , ONE BEDROOM Apts . ot VILLAGE
Rev . ~' dell Monle!' . . ___ ..
MANOR in Midd lepo rt lor $104
monthly plus alec . or $130 in ·
AT STUD : 1. Phoebus , 16 lH If
el uding e lec. lOWER RATES for
you wont o good performance .
SENIOR CITIZENS . Conve n~en l
A halter colt w- bloodlines that
PUBLIC NOTICE
to shopping on Third ond Mill
sell
.
2.
TRIBAL
CHIEF,
APHC,
Chester Town shi p Trustees
Sfs . in Middleport. Brand new
15.2
H
.
has
sir~
some
of
the
of M~!! i gs coun t¥ 'll(.ill conduct .
high qual ity apartments . See
top performance and ha lter
Regular Meet ing at Chester
the manager ct Apl. 28 or call
Town Hall et Seven Thirty on
horses. (Tribal Win , Tribal Fool ,
992-7721 . An Equal Housing
Seco nd Tuesda)' of every
etc . ). Also horses sold , train Opportunity .
month . For the year 1977 .
ed , londitioned , boarded . Cole
F reder ick M Tuttle
Stables, Home of Champions . 2 IJEDROOM trailer , reol nice.
Clerk
8o)C 25, Tuppers Plains , Ohio
Phone 992-3!324, odulh only .
45783. Phont! (b1.C) 667 -3~05 ~
( I I 12. li e
AVAILABLE AT Rtverside A~ls. I
bedrm . apartment . $100 per
--·--~
... ~-montk 2 bedroom opts . $133
per month. Equal Opportunity
Housing. Phone992-3273.
LOST , REO Irish Setter. maiQ,
vic inity of Hemlock Grove area HOUSE . 5 ROOMS and both in
9 mon ths old Coli 992-2433 . ·
Racine area . Phone 992-.5858.
-- -·
STOLEN FROM Shade, Ohio area VERY NICE 12 x 65 mobile kome
Nov.
1, 1'Hb . Walker
for rent loca ted in Moson,
Coonhound. black and white,
W.Vo. Adults only . NO peh.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knapp
brown ears: brown spot b.tContact Sondra , 992-5693 Mon·
and family of Columbus and
ween eon, age 3·-4 years. right
day through Fridor . 9 till3 p.m.
eye waters. hod surgery below
Mrs. Lena Knapp of Langs2
bedroom unfurnished aport·
the e ye name Joe . S300
ville were New Year's Day
ment in Middleport Phone
reword for return of dog with
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
m -31 19 or 992-S-434 .
in formo!lon that will convict
Doyle Knapp and family.
persons who stole Mim Dog
now believed to be in Pomeroy · For:Sah! ·
Mf. Earl Russell of Ken_
West
Virginia a rea. Conlod
tucky Is spending a few days
Robe rt Webb. Rt . 1 Guysvill&amp;, COAL. hme•tone. and calcium
with Bertha Russell.
chloride and colcium brine for
orp~o"n! ! 61-4)696·1 2~:..--~.~ ·Tammy Johnson was New
du st cont ro 1on d specia I mi xing
soli for fo rmer$. Main Street,
Year's Eve visitor of Peggy
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992Murphy.
3891.
Kall and Kevin Knapp TEXAS Oil COMPANY needs
depe-ndable persOn who can 1971 HONOA Cl·450, 12,000
spent New Year's Eve with
"miles. sissy bar, crash bon ,
work without super\llsion in
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
pull bock kandle bon. new tire
Me igs County area. Contact
and seals . Scrambler side
Charley Smith.
customen. Age unimportant,
pipes. $650. Coll949-~480.
Mrs. Howard Thomas
but maturity '1s. We tra in. Write
P. K. Dick , Pres ., Southwestern POTATOES ond pum~ l ns . C. W.
visited recently with Mr. and
Pet roleum, Fl. Wo rth , TX .
Proffitt , Portland, Ohio , Phone
Mrs. Harley Johnson.
·~--843· 2254 .

ia \(k)ITJ[1

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.

Television log for easy viewing

THE PLACE HAS BEEN
VANDALIZED AND
PERFUME IS
MISSINCi.

1

Now arrange Jhe circled le11ers to
fonn the surprise answer, as suggest~d by the abo\le cartoon.

Print the surprise a~swer here:

·I

Yeslerda¥'9

D a IJ
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: FORGO

KNAVE

UNLIKE

LANCER

Answer: Where one might find oneself an• robbing
a meatlreezer- IN THE "COOLER"

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16-The DllUySel!liJ!el. Middleport·POI!leroy, 0 ., Wednesday,o!_an. l2, 1977

.Petition will ask EPA to go slow
in rules limiting high sulfur coal
Steubenville, said Tuesday he
will present the Ohio
Envirunmental Protection
Agenc with a titlon toda
signedy by • of the ~
members of the Ohio House
asking for a .. 0 slow"
approach to im ~erne tin
federal suiphui dio~id~
emission standards.
"And I haven't even seen
the (Obio) Senate petition "
.said Bowers, who represeni.s
Jefferson and a part of
Carroll counties in Ohio's
eastern cool fields.
th The f1"tition ~ill ask that
?JObs of Oh1o s 15,000 ~oal
mmers- be . taken · ·~to
consideration m the decwon
on ~hether to ~dopt m total,
~ev~se or ~Cilld the li.S.
EPA poiMi~n standards for
sulphur diOXIde.
The pollutant is produced
when coal containing sulphur
is burned. The higher the
sulphur content, the more
sulphur dioXide is rod ed
in combustion
P uc
·
Last August, the federal
EPA enacted, with a 1978
compliance deadline, sulphur
dioxide standards . The
federal government acted
because the Ohio EPA failed
to draft and implement its

s:e

.,

...,..

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted .In
Syracuse Area.

Free P~
Phone 992-2156.

own regulations
.
·
doBowers. IS among sever~l

br 0 ught about 2011 Distrlct 6
Uruted Mine Workers ·to tile
~n Witnesses who .will open.lng day of the final
Oh. up the foorth and filial hearmg Tuesday.
• 10 EPA hearing on the
"U we had needed IS,OOO
standards, .
. ~I miners here to II'OVe our
COtherhearmgswere held m pomt, .. we would have been
mcinnah, Cleveland and here~ sa1d District 6
Steubenville,
P~esJdent John Guzek .
Eight chartered buses bnnging the miners to their

y 0 ung.

Sa~e

to

.

More lights
discussed
inlNewHaven

CANCEIJ.ED
The afternoon circle of

Temporary

Heath United Methodist
Church has cancelled its
Thursday meeting.

(Conlinued from page 1)
loog range plan. It was during this time that Snowden pointed
out that the Middleport Central and Junior High have more
students than Middleport ever had when it was an exempted
village school system, He suggested that junior high schools he
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. _
CLASSCANCEILED
reestablished in Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland and that
More street llghts in this toWn
Baton classes of Mrs. Judy the Bradbury School, which luis only 85stqdents, be closed.
were discussed during the. Riggs scheduled at Royal
Snowden said that much costly lruslng is taking plaee, He
regular bilsiness se!!Sion of ·Oak Park this evening have . spo"" of the need for more room at the Salem Center School.
the New Haven Town Council been canceUed due to icy He was named ~ head a conunittee to come up wiih a long
Tuesday evening.
roads leading Into the park. range plan and Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, also on the board was
Dick Roush of the Apadded to the committee. Snowden was authorized to ~arne
palachian
Power Co.
others to his committee.
TWO FINED
reviewed and proposed a
· FoUowing a discussion oo negotiations which will begin in
ccnlract for more street Two defendants were fined January with the teachers of the district and In February with
tights, mainly in the toWil's and one other forfeited a bOnd the non-eertified employes, Mrs. Sheets and Snowden were
new addition . Another in Pomeroy Mayor Clarence named to the negotiation team with the teachers. Also named
meeting was set for Feb. 8 Andrews court · Tuesday to. th~ team were Sup!. Dowle.r, Don Haning, Bradbury
with Roush to discuss the night. Fined were Vickie prmc1pal, and Mrs. Jean Warner, clerk. Dowler, Morris,
Harris, Middleport, 150 and Snowden, John Mora, junior high principal, and possibly Mrs,
contract further.
Council agreed to buy more costs, shoplifling at Krogers, Sheers will serve on the team to negotiate with the non·
sail for Icy intersections and a!teri~g prices; Marjorie certified employes.
to cover the dump behind Salser, Rt.l, Racine, $100 and
At the r"'!uest of head basketball·coach, Ron Logan, the
Allen·Dale Court within - 30 costs, petty theft at Krogers. board authorized Logan, Bob Oliver, Bruce Wilson Dick
Max Hill forfeited a $30 bond Roseberry and Mike Wilfong to attend the state basketball
days.
Organizing a police on charges of running a red. tournament in Columbus on March 25•
auttiliary for the town was light.
The board set a special meeting for Jan. 28 at which time
members will evaluate or. at least set up a pattern for
discussed with Chief 9f Police
Tommy Parsons named to
evaluation of the administrator. Mrs. Sheels has material on
check with the Point Pleasant
the matter which will be sent to other board members before
and Ravenswood auxiliaries ~
the meeting. Morris reported that s.everal holes in the roof of
l&lt;l see how they operate .
. the Meigs High School have been patched and a picture of tile
Present were Mayor . (Continued from page I)
roof was shown by Board President Wendell Hoover.
Charles Roush, recorder car owned by Marie
Board meetings for the year were changed irom the
Wendy Divers and members, DeVIctro, 50, Pomeroy.
secoad ¥on&lt;!ay of each month to the third Monday at 7:30p.m .
Harold Moxley, Bernard
Charles w: Samson, 35, and It was voted to join the Ohio School Boards Assn. Mrs.
Uevlng, William Bird, Virgil. Berea, Ohio, was cited to Martha Husted, English teacher at the high school, was given
Weaver and Donald Kay,
Meigs County Court for pe~ss1on to retire as of May 31 and Karen Goins was given
.faUure to stop within assured penrussion to serve on Feb. I and 2 with a North Central
clear distance following an Evaluation Team which wiD be working at an area high school.
aceldent at I p.m. on SR 7 in Martha Vennarl was authorized to attend a meeting on Jan. 19
Meigs County.
at Nelsonville on handicapped children and Jolm Redovian and
The patrol said Samson's Snpt. Dowler were authorized to attend a title IX meeting on
(Continued from page 1)
truck struck the rear end of Jan. 25.
.
an
auto
owned
by
Larry
E.
UPon
the
recommendation
of Asst. Supt. Morris it was
'lhe greatest need is among
.
Koenig,
33,
'Union
Funwce.
decided
to
seek
applications
for
two more maintenance men
young people and blacks "
A
single
car
accident
OC·
and
the
board
approved
the
closing
of aU schools in the district
sald Rhodes. "Too ~Y
curred
at
7:30
p.m.
on
oo
Nov.
29
and
on
Jan
.
5,
6,
7,
10,
II
and 12. Mrs. Sheel8 and
pe~le - too many public
Bowman
Run
Rd.,
300
lee!
Soowden
opined
that
they
doubt
if
schools
will be able to
officials - have given our
north
of
SR
124
where
Dallas
resume
at
all
this
week
because
of
the
icy
conditions
of roads in
cities plenty of sympahty but
·
Hill,
23,
Rt
2,
Racine,
lost
the
county.
.
.
•
no Jobs."
control of his car which · The board named Marvel Quillen, a substitote cook, and
skidded on the Icy pavement Gladys Barrett, a substitute custodian, Achange was made in
striking a,guardraU, then ran the bus discipline guide to the effect that a building principal
over a steep embankment. for misconduct "may invoke up to a 20 day suspension" to the
There was heavy damage. student's bus riding privilege. The earlier guide states that the
Barbara A. Weeks, 49, lruilding principal "may invoke a 2lklay suspension." The
Gallipolis, was cited for latter wording gave the principal no shorter period than 20
passing at an Intersection days.
following an accident at 2:30
. Atlendingthe meeting were Dowler, Morris, Mrs. Wagner,
p.m. oo SR 7 in SaUsbury Prmctpal John Mora, and board members, Snowden Mrs.
Twp. State troopers said the Sheets, Virgil King, Hoover and Dr. Keith Riggs,
'
Weeks car struck a vehicle
operated by Timothy J.
Beams, 19, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
Another mishap occurred
at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday ,O!)
Railroad St..in Bidwell where
an auto driven by Donald Ray
Mount, 17, Rt, I, Bidwell, ran
into a ditch to avoid an accident with an unknown
.vetiicle. Mount's cru· then
overturned.
A final accident was investigated at 6:45a.m. \oday
on SR 160, two tenths of a mile·
· n~h of SR 35 where a truck
driven by Jasper Coen, 63, Rt.
3, GaUipoUs, puUed out to
pass, slid on the ley pavement
and ~k a plck-11p driven '
· by Glenn E. Stanley, 41, Point I
Pleaaant.

Allomey

.THE INN PLALE
Tl,ursday Nigh.t Special

MEIGS lHEAlHE
ClOSED FoR
" EXTR" ~RISPY" Kenlirckr Fried CIJicktn .NOW
"•oilllbfe .. , Crisp On The Outside - Moist' ond
Tender On Tho fnsldt.
Now Av• i,.ble AI :

.GROW'S STEAK HOUSE

VACATION
WATaf fOR
'
OPF.NING IMTt

Visit Our Salad Bar
Veal Pattie
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy

Vegetable
Hot Rolls

Coffee. Tea or Milk

.

'$295
Pius- tax

· THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, o.

l&gt;hone 992-6304

A. ~et l ted employee of
American VIsCose Cor poratloft . Parkersburg, he

Ca~rlne

was

~receded

Nease Llevlng .
She was a retire-d employie _.

ol Elberfelds In Pomeroy, •

having worked there mO('e ~

In death by his

than so years, and a member "'

wife, Agnes F. Grimm, who

of

died November 16, 1976.
Surviving are a dau9hter.
Mrs. Roland 6 . CShorleyl
Karr, Owensboro ; three
granddaughter&lt;, Debbie,
Diane an~ Sandi, and several

the

United ~

Mason

MethodiSt Church.

Survivors Include one •
sister -In -law, Mrs. Callie 111
Lleving , Mason ; one niece; ~
Mrs. louise Roof, Manhaf· ..
tan, Kansas, and a nephew, c

nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be at

Robert E . Llevlng, . Hun - :

the Foelqesonq Funeral tln9ton .
Funeral services will be
Home Friday at 1:30 p.m.
with Rev. Georg! Weirick conducted ThUrsday at l p.m.
ofllclallng. Burial will follow at the Foelesong Funeral
in the Graham Cemetery. Home with Rev . Robert
Friends may call at the Maring officiating. Burial
fun eral ~orne after 3 p.n1 .. will follow In the Broad Run
~.m .

MEETING SET
The annual Wildlife
District Four Fisll and Game
hearing will be held on
Sunday, Jan. 30, at I p.m. in
the meeting room of the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources building, 260 East
State St., Athens. AU persons
Interested hi possible
changes in the hunting and
fishing regulations are Ul'ged
to attend.

OPENING MONDAY
Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge John C. Bacon
aMounced today that the
courthouse will be open
Monday, Jan. 17 for the
convenience of the public.
ON DEAN'S LIST'
Barbara Andrews, Route I,
~g Bottom has been named
to the dean's list of the
Hocking Valley Technical
College for the fall quarters
with a 3.5 grade average.

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Cemetery. Friends may call ••
af fhe funeral home after 4 ""

Thursday .

Comprising the grand jury
were Randal Blaine, Minor
Escue, Paul Nichols, Wilda
Blessing, Mary Lanz, John
Nibert, Eugene Steele, Shelia
Miller, David Derenberger,
Arden Casto, Gary Clark,
Vernon Roush, Randy
Jackson ,
Naomi
F.
Bumgarner, Norman Barker
and foreman Bill D. Campbell.

CASES ·SETI'LED

Mason County •. stle was the

\llallace and Carrie Vickers dilugiller of the late Alfred
Yonker Lleving and Sara~
Grimm,

is indicted in murder

•

he was ttle son of the lafe

died Tuesday In Our Lady of
Mercy Hos~llal , O.Vensboro,
Ky . Born here Nov. 14, 111'14.

.

Veterans MemoriBIHotipltal
Admitted - Robert Conkle,
Cheshire; Charles Boyles,
Middleport; Everett Ward,
Coolville; Shirley Jones,
Tuppers Plains ;· Erma
Heilman, Chester ; Nellie
Hanson, Middleport.
Discharged - August
Garnes, Arienne French,
Shirley Landers, Beatrice
Vining, Pat~icia Tbomas.

Grimm , B2, of New Haven,

EVA F. LIEYING
MASON - Eva F. Llevlng,
74, of Mason, died Tuesday In ·
the Morris Memorial Nursing
and Convale.scent .Home In
Millon. Born Jan. 2. 1903 In

OTTO W. GRIMM
NEW HAVEN - Otto W.

CommtSSIOn
. . of Ohio,
' sald the
.
"Sulphur in coal
has
stringent federal fl'gulatlons · become a way of life for !be
would boost an average Ohio coal industry " said
eleclric bill of $42.40 by $2.80 Rep. A.G. Lancio'ne D·
a mooth by 19115.
Rellaire.
'
"I ask you to step back and
_In !97S, Ohio's Slid mines
look at what you're doing," produced 46 million tons,
said Heckman. "You could about 98 per cent of it
very well price energy eosts classified as "high sulplmr"
out of the market."
coal averaging $l5.71l a ton.

POINT PLEASANT 14 for misdemeanors.
Leach was also indicated Southside, obstructing an
Three felony counts were for driving under the in· officer.
John L. Young, 32, of Mason,
accused killer of Mary Berry, ·filed against Michael An· • fluence ; obstructing an of·
- Raymond AUen Lathey,
was indicted for first degree thony Legg, 18, Point . fleer and assaulting an of· %1, Leon, contributing to the
murder and burglary Pleasant, for burglary; one a fleer.
delinquency of a minor.
Tuesday afternoon by the grand tareeny count.
Others indicted for
- Harold K. Byus, 20,
Mason County Grand Jury.
Two counts of arson were misdemeanors were :
Point Pleasant, contrilruting
With Young's indictment returned against John
- James M. Stewart, 61, to the delinquency of a minor.
.
.
' Worth~ Folden, 23, Apple Henderson, two counts of
- Donald Walker, 31,
came another agamst 16Grove.
DWI.
Henderson,
obstructing an
year-old Terry Lee Br.~lna,rd,
Indicted
for
misdemeanors
Bandall
Lee
Neal,
311,
;
officer.
also of Mas.~n, for aidmg
- Samuel L~ Copley, 23,
and abettmg of Young. The was Worthy F. Leach, %1, of Point Pleasant, DWI.
2118
N.
Main
St.
He
is
being
Millard
Lee
Greenlee
Bidwell,
one count of
original charge against
charged
with
the
involwatary
Jr.,
%1,
Leon,
OW!.
possession
of a controlled
Braman! was accessory to
manslaughter of Dreama L.
- Johnny R. Bright, 26, substance.
murder.
In 0
. .
AU those indicted are to
a , 22 md1ctments were Smith, 18, Point Pleasant Henderson, obstructing an
Dec.
24
m an automobile officer.
answer
the indictments
handed down by the Grand accident on Jackson Ave;
Thursday
morning.
Cline
E.
Erwin,
64,
Jury, Eight were for felonies,

•••
•
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•
•.•• Now In Progress ••
IN &amp; •
•• COME
•
BROWSE I ••
••
••
•• Not Just A ••
••• Place To Shop- •••
• But AShopping ••
••• Experience! •
•• OPEN ••• Rhodes
•• 11 A.M. 5 P.M. ••

••••

feet m
· a sLand'mg ovallon.
·.
All ~ut one of the witnesses
teslifymg Tuesday urged ~he
state to relax the regulations
to enable .the eleclric utility
industry and other comparues
to ·use Ohio's high-sulphur
coal.
. . .
C. Luther Heckman, chall'·
man of the Public Utilities

Util~ty· opposing connector road

! Area Deaths '

•

COLUMBUS
) - State
Rep
Arthur R(UPI
Bowers
. 1).

'

loday.

Checker at work
Meigs . County Auditor,
Howard E, Frank, slad today
Charles Karr (Sr.) Deputy
Sealer of Weights &amp;
Measures, checked 162
gaaoline pumps, 26 meters on
gas trucks, 4 meters on bottle
gas, 121arge platfonn scales,
68 large !!Cales and 151 small
scales during 1976.

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CALL ANSWERED
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a caU to 60\2 Coal St. ill 2:52
p.m. Tuesday for Nellie
Hanson who was having
difficulty breathing. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted. At 6:29 p.m. '
Monday evening the squad ·took Dan Hwnphrey, 1262
Powell St. to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL He w.S
also admitted.
~·

Two defendants were fined
and two others forfeited
bonds in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Jeffrey D. Friend, 2!, Long
Bottom, was fined '150 and
costs on reckless operation
charges, and James A. Wiles,
23, Pomeroy, $50 and cosls for
leaving the scene of an
(Continued from page I)
accident, and $50 and costs,
reckless_ ...D_~eration. official says California could be headed for its worst drought
Forfeiting bonds were Mike year on record In 1977 unless It gets some "substantial stoims" ~
~ - Bolin, 21, Middleport, $50 · soon .
Water Resources Director Ronald B. Robie · told the
posted on a disorderly
manner charge, and Kenneth . Assembly Water Committee Tuesday California needs 80 per - •
D. Mohler, 38, Middleport, eent of normal rainfall this year to "take uS out of the woods." ::
$100 po.sted on charges of However, he said there Is only one chance in 10 that California Illegal hcense and disorderly . will receive that much rain. "But we're looking to the point •
manner.
now where :;o per cent would he a pretty good deal," he said.

planned to
Projections by the Columbus and Southern Ohio Eieelric
Co. incol~ing 1200 acres in Great Bend as a future power plant
site colluled headon Wednesday with plans of the Ohio
Department of Highways to build a connector hi~hway to the
new b~idge across the Ohio River at Ravenswood.
. Michael L. Elkins, manager of the Environmental
DI':~Slon of th~ Ohio based utility, which services paris of
Me1gs and Gallia Cowaties, appeared at a hearing in the Meigs
cou~ty courthouse where Glen Smith of Gallipolis, District 10
engmeer, Oh1o Department of Highways, was moderator. He
w~ assisted in· presenting the state's proposal by Homer
Gifford and ~alter Smith, also of the department
In a nutshell, according to Elkins, C&amp;soE has acquired by
!"'~chase
or option 1200acres of land at Great Bend upon which
,
It mtends - sometime - to build a fossil-fueled· or nuclear
power generating plant. Great Bend is presently rated as an
alternate. s1te to another near Belpre in Washington County
upon which a coal-fired generating plant already is under
construction by the utility.
Elkins said the state's pUrns wooid seciously reduce the
yalueofGreat Bend as a site for a future plant which "we fully
mtend .to build."
The Ohio Departnlent of Transportation 1ODT ) is
proposmg the rerouting of SR 124 in Lebanon Township, the
· unprovement of rerouted SR 124 in Lebanon Township, and
proposed add1t1on w the state highway system a road
designated as SR 824.
.
·
The proposed changes would connect SR 124 to the new
bridge that would span the Ohio River at Great Bend, Ohio and
Ravenswood, W. Va .
·
· Elkins said his purpose in appearing at the public hearing
was to present Information which has a direCt bearing upon the
plans presently proposed by the Ohio Department of
•
').'ransportation for the connector highway to the new brid ~e .

R~venswood bridg~
Basically, we understand the proposed ooor action will
involve the following ," he said:
I. Relocation and improvemenl of State Route 124 in
Lebanon Township, 1/fri ~ Coun ty, to overlap 5.71 miles of
State Route ·338.
2. Construction of a 0.57 mile connector highway to lhe
proposed bridge. This connector would he add ed to the sta te
highway system as Route 824.
·3. Abandonment of those 'portions of existing Routes 124
and 33ll which would he by .passed by the improved sections.
· Elkins believes the State of West Virgirus has already
obtained Federal Highway Administration approval of the
bridge as well as the necessary permils fr om the United Coast
Guard, and is now ready to lot the contracts for pier
construction.
·
· A representative of the West Virginia DeMrtment of
Highways confirmed that bids for three river piers will he let
today.
•
Elkins made these other points:
- The utility does not oppose the new bridge. It is in
opposition to the plans proposed by the Ohio Departmenl of
Transportation.
- In 1972 the C&amp;soE initiated ail e&lt;tensive statewide study
to identify and procure suitable sites for future generating
units. The studies, completed in 1976, cost over $450 000
identified a number of potentially viable sites. Among J,.,.;
sites, lhe Grear . Bend site was identified to be a prime
candidate for the placement of electric power generating
facility .
- The Great Bend site following the study proved· to be
highly suitable for development as either a nuclear or fossilfueled power plant site.
- The C&amp;SOE presently either owns or hfls under option
about 1200 acres within the area and the compo\ajl fully intends

,...;'~-....

VOL. XXVII NO. 190

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Southern schools opened
Schools of the Southern
Local School District
reo~ned for classes today
alter being closed for the past
five days due to weather .
&amp;hools of the Meigs and
Eastern Local School
Districts, however, remained
dosed.
Supt. Bob O~d olthe Southem District said that two of
the buses in his .district did
not run at all Wednesday and
some of the buses could only
make part of their routes.
Classes of the Southern
Districrare one day over the

five calamity days pei'DJitted
by the Ohio Department of
Education. Supt. Ord sa.ld
that the one dar will he made
up next Monday which would
nonnaUy be a holiday. He
said Monday is about the last
da Ystudents can make up tile
day and stilj-.remain within
the school calendar. The only
twootherdaysrernainingare
Apr. 7and.8, Easter weel&lt;end,
Ord pointed out: He indicated
that there . coilld be easily
morebadweathertoclosethe
schools and if Monday is not
used as . the make-up day,

then It passes as a boliday '
and creates- a problem .In
make-up time .
Supt. Ord stalld that attendance in his district was
running about 65 percent
toda y,
Classes in the Eastern and
Meigs Local Districts were
not In session today and there
were indications In both ,
districts tha~ schools mighl
not open untU the llrst of the
·week since road condlticins 1n
the rural · areas are
. dangerous.
·

THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1977

Three young Meigs County
men have . been arrested as

the result of an investigation
of an armed robbery at about
II :30 p. rn. Wednesday at the
Five Points Grill on Route 7,
, :10111&gt; t,&gt;l Pomeroy.
,
Meigs Sheriff James'
Proffitt said that at about
II :30 p. m.; two men wearing
ski masks entered the Grill
carrying a pistol and a rine.
At gunpoint they ordered all
of the customers to give them
their money and they·took the
money from the grill's cash
register . The amount of
money taken had not been
determined this morning .
Arrested three hours later
near Crow's Steak House in
Pomeroy were Kim Hayman,
21,
Racine: Keith Pickens, 21,
HECEJVES CERTIFICATE - Mrs. Lucille Leifheit of F:omeroy, a member of .lhe
Pomeroy,
and Brian Bass, 20,
Me1gs Cowily fairboard, receives a certificate of achievement from Ohio Direclor of
Syracuse.
Officers
said one of
Agriculture Jolm M. Stackhouse at the fair managers' convention recently in &lt;;olumbus. ,
the suspects was inside
Grow's and the other two
were nearby . The arrests
were made on the basis of
identifications by patrons and
at the grill.
Ice caused four traffic when a car driven by Grover also slid on the ice, striking others
Assisting
Sheriff Proffitt in
accidents investigated C. Klein , 57, . Pomeroy, Klein's vehicle.
'
Wednesday by the Gallia· skidded on ice then went into
John R. Klein , 29,
Meigs Post State Highway · a ditch. While Klein was Pomeroy, a passenger, was
waiting for a wrecker to taken to Veterans Memorial
Patrol.
Two accidents occurred come , an auto driven by Hospital for treatment of
near the entrance to Meigs David A. Wilder, 22, Athens, injuries suffered in the acMine II, thefirstat8:30 a.m.
cident. No charge was filed.
Slippery streels caused an
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'-'-'No.."o."rb.."L"Y\AbNY!!
accident
at I :45 p. m. in the
~ ···~·······~·······::~.:·:.,.:.:.;.;o:;·:·~~~:.: ..:.~.:.: ...~·;.:. . -.. :..;.................~
village of Racine where an
auto driven by D~vid K.
Schools of the Meigs and
SnodgraSs, 20, Raelne, turned Eastern Local School
left, skidded on ice, and· Districts remained closed
By United Press International
struck a parked vehicle Thursday, the seventh
COLUMBUS, OHIO ~ TilE OHIO GENERAL Assembly owned by Steve~ M. Hen- consecutive day.
·
haS adjourned until February, and ils members may need that dricks, 18, Racine.
Makeup
classes
will
be
long to digest everything pr~ented to them Wednesday by
Catherine J. George, 22,
in both districts
Gov. James A. Rhodes. In his "State of the State" message to a Latrobe, Pa., was charged scheduled
since
they
are
over the five
joint legislative session, the governor pledged conciUation with wilh failure to yield following
calamity
days
permitted
,majocity Democrals, proposed a variety of new programs, an •ccident at 12:15 p. m. on during a school year
by the
gave • broad ·OUtline of his planned· two-year budget and Railroad St. in Kanauga .
Ohio
Departmenl
of
challenged the Democrats to spend the taxpayers' money
The patrol said the George Education.
wisely.
car slid Into a vehicle
It is doubtful if 'classes wiU
Most 'lawmakers reacted positively as the House alld operaled by Robert E.
be
resumed tomorrow even if
Senale.appointed standing committees, lhe House adopted its Gardner, 26, Gallipolis.
weather and road conditions
rules and both chambers went home until Feb. 1. Rhodes
permit since it would be
pledged to work with the Democrats "with . a spirit of
necessary to ~eat the
~peration toward lruilding a better Ohio in every way." He
lruildings for classes for only
asked the lawmakers to do likewise to accomplish his No. 1 Clinic planned
one day. Monday, a holiday in
objective - jobs. ·
·
both districts, will be obo
"Government is compromise, that's all it iS," said Rhodes·
served.
in his J8.mlnute speech, "We lay open to you today an open against smQking
&amp;hools of the Southern
mind and an open heart."
Jaoe Brown, . Meigs
Local District were open for
the second day foUowlng
CHARLESTON, W. VA .- HARRY PATRICK, secreJary- Couoty,.Tubereolosls aurse,
closure of several days due to
lteaauror of the Unl~ Mine Workers, was expected ·to under tiKi sponsorship of
weather condlll~ns. Southern
announce at a news conference today that he is a candidate for · the Seventh Day Adventist
has one day to make up at this
president of the 27b,OOO-memher UMW, which is ridden by Cburth, bao aonouo&lt;ed a
"no smoklag clinic''. Dr.
lnlernal strife.
'
·
point which will be made up
next Mdnday.
Pairlck, a Marion CoUnty, W. Va., ~ative, was to arrive in Lewis Telle wiU work wllh
Supt. Bob J. Ord of the
the West Vir&amp;inla capital from Washington, accomparued by a tbe program according to
Southern District reported
slale of candidates who will campaign with him lor the Mrs. Brown. She also
th&amp;t attendance . for the
!l'esidency. Paltick, 46, has long been viewed' as a potential reported that· It will take
second day of opening In the
candldale for presidency of the UMW, now headed by his one- approximately six weeks to
district was up to 92.5 percent ·
time aUy and friend, Arllold Miller, a Charleston area native. get lhe program anon Thursday, Wednesday'•s
A third majcr candidate In the race is ~~ntucky strip dr""'Y· ·
Everyone lorerested In
attenda.nce was about 65
miner Lee Roy Patterson, a member of the union's governing
otteodlog the clinic is
percent: . All buses of lhe
board.
asked to call Mrs. Brown at
district ran Thursllay but
some could nnt make an of
CINCINNATI - THERE MAY BI•J A HJo:I .U&gt;:F in sighl for 119%-3722.
their routr~.
(Continued on page 8)

Cars collide at entrance of Mine II

Schools closed

Elberfelds .In Pomeroy

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Suspects held in
armed robbery

News •• in Briefs

..

to develop Ill is site for the generation of eleclric power. In thL•
mteresl, Jt 1s opposed to any development within the site area
which would jeopardize these plans. ,
- The relationship of the Great Bend site to the actions
presently proposed by the Ohio Department of Transportation
os that much of the proposed action will occur within the site
bowadaries, the net effect of which would be to reduce the
ultimate site capacity\ '' which is presently estimated to be
around 4000 MWE."
·
- TheDOOT plans. wou ld re-duce site capacity by ,preemptmg_land are~ reqmred for exclusion area considerations,
by placing constraints upon the layout of the plan t and
associated facilities, and by creating site access problems.
The fossil-fueled ca!"ici ty would be reduced due to the creation
of layout constraints and potential site access difficulties .
- It can be seen that lhe ODOT plani;, if implemented as
proposed , will seriously jeopardize the company's plan for the
Great Bend site and will effectively negate a $3 200 000
investment incurred for the conduct of the siting studles :.0d
for purchase of the required land.·
- This figur e does not begin to indicate the economic loss
which would accrue to the area should any action be '
implemented by OOOT which would compromise the site
developmen t plans.
- For example, some 2,000 to 3,0(10 construction jobs would
be created from the construction of the several hundred
million dollar faCility and about 300 to 400 permanent jobs
operatin g. and mainten;mce personnel, would be created i~
order to man the facility .
- A.most preferr~ solution would he either to retain the
existing SR 124 alignment and improve SR. 338 between the
bridge connecu&gt;r and SRI24, or relocate SRI24 somewhere to
the north and west of the Great Bend site boundary,
c;
(Continued on page 8)
'
.

his investigation, which is Attorney Frederick W. Crow
continuing is Prosecuting Ill .

Board job filled
RACINB - ·Mrs. Lind~ Wagner,

Spencer, an employe of The·
Racine Home l'&lt;ationai Bank,
was employed as clerk·
treasurer of the Southern
Lo&lt;:al School District, when
the district's board of
education met in special
session Wednesday night.
Mrs. Spencer is to start to
work immediately. Her
starting ~alary will be $7900.
She replaces Mrs. Jane

who oompletetl )ler
duties with the board at last
night's session. Mrs. Wagner
is now clerk-treasurer of the
Meigs Local District. The
board employed Ann Boso as
a substitute cook and agreed
that there shall be no
smoking at board meetings.
All board members were
present along with Bob J.
Ord , superintendent, and
Mrs. Wagner.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RUHMAN
UPI Spor11 Editor
. NEW YORK (UPI ) - La bellj! France should hide her eyes
m shame. Not only are her skirts dirty , her hands are, too.

What the French goverrunent has done by arbilrarily releasing Palestinian terrorist Abu Daoud is demoostrate to the rest
of the world not only how spineless and mindless that
goverrunent is, lrut also how converuently it forgot this is the
human monster who premeditated, planned and implemented
the infamous massacre of II Israeli athletes at the 1972
Olympic Games in Mwaich .
One of the reasons given for Daood's release was that the
French police had no concrete proof of his guill .
Good Lord, they must've been looking down the wrong
sewer!
Daoud was so proud of his .Munich murders, he went on
television several years ago and boasted about them.
The French didn 't fool anybody with their shameful charade .
Everybody was fully aware of the way France was doing a
knee -jerk for the Arab countries, obsequiously kowtowing to
them, hoping to be paid back in oil.
Under their own law, they could've held him for two weeks
on extradition requests by Israel and West Germany.
The French court, however, said the ISI'aeli request did not
apply and ruled that the West German request was incomplete
and was not filed in time .
I In Bonn, the West Germany Foreign Ministry said that
while exltadition tr,eaties formally require action within two
days in such cases; accepted international practice normally
allows more flexibility.)
So, the French quickly hustled Daoud onto a plane to
Algeria. They were so considerate, they even bought him a
first-dass ticket.
One of the myths perpetuated down through the years is that
-sporls and politics don't mix. Like hell they don 't. Sports and
politics go together as naturally as lettuce and tomatoes, only
they never seem to come out as well.
The action by the French in turning Dauod loose so he 'D he
free to plot how to kill more people was so unspeakably
outrageous that it drew condemnation even from the French
press. Le ·Figaro called the entire proceeding "a puppet
show." Another newspaper, Franee-Soir, said the Arabs will
show ' 'n~:ither respect nor consideration'' for what the French
did for them.
From my own personal experience with the Arabs I have to
boy that. At the same time, I have to wonder at h~w narrow
minded the French could've been in letting Daoud go. It's one
thing for them to have buried their heads in the sand over the
atrocity at Munich five years ago. Mter all, those weren't
Frenchmen who lost their lives, but didn 't they pay any
attention to the markings on the plane Arab terrorists hijacked
to E~tebbe only seven months ago ? That was an Air France
plane .
·
No matter how long I'm on this earth, I don 't think I'll ever
forget that black Septem\ler day in MUruch, Sept. 5, 1972.
Daoud had planned well. It was about four o'clock in the
morning when Arab terrorists climbed over a fence into the
Olympic Village, and a short time later, armed with submachine guns, they broke into the Israeli compound and killed two ·
of the Israeli coaches.
For the next 22 hours, they held nearly two dozen Israeli
athletes hostage. One of tl\e terrorists in the Israeli compowad
paraded a hostage in fro~! of him at gwapoint for lhe West
German officials to see . The hostage's hands were tied behind
his ~ck and his eyes -:"ere blindfoided:-The terrorist kept
prodding the hostage w1th his submachine gun continually
poking it in his back.
'
I di~'t read this; I saw it. with my own eyes, from the
-balcony -i)f a nearby compound in which the Puerto _Rican
Olympic athletes were quartered. I remember the endless
negotiations that went on that day and how it all ended in a
· shootout with nine more Israelis dying at a military airport 15
mrles away .
Back in 1894, Baron Pierre de Coubertin called the
"Founder of .the Modern .Olympic. Games," felt the games
would he mstrumental in "creating international respect" and
thus "help construct a better and more peaceful world. "
Baron Pierre de Coubertin was a Frenchman. He has been ·
gone 40 years now, but I doubt he'd feel proud over his
country 'sreleaseof an avowed terrorist who openly boasted of
masterminding such a horror as the Munich massacre.

C&amp;SOE wants input to power plant plans
RACINE - The Columbus
and Southern Ohio Eleetric
Co. will hold a public meeting
at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 18
at the Southern High School
in Racine fo discuss the
company's intention to build
a plant housing two 375
megawatt
coal
fired
generating units along the
Ohio River.

The primary site for the luive been placed in area
two units is in Washington libraries, including the
County. The alternate Pomeroy Public Ubrary. ,
A detailed environmental
location is the Great Bend
area, acrosit the Ohio River impact study is necessary
from Ravenswood, W. Va. In before an application to buDd
order to advise residents of the plant can be prepared. To
the surrounding area of the this end, the company is
company's Intentions, copies Interested in pubUc input
the
community
of the work completed to date from
as well as the letter of intent · residents involved. Members

ofthe ColumbuS and Southern
Ohio envirorunental staff as
well as representatives from
consulting environmental
firms will be on hand.
Besides the Racine
meeting, an earlier sessiOn is
planned for 7 p.m. on Monday
at the Little Hocking
Elementary School.

seventh day

in two districts

i;vo. . . . . .,... . . . . . . .

~

'(&gt;..,.._,"6.".~~··-.·~············· ··· · · · -

~News . .. . zn Brzef~

Special SavingS on
One Group
of
..
Airway Molded Luggage.
In charcoal, plum,
blue; green, gold,
red or brown.

'59.00 21" ' PULLMAN••••••••••••·~· SALE '41 95
!52.00 28" PULLMAN·····••••••••••• SALE ,36:95
'51.80 26" PULLMAN ......... ~ ••••• SALE '36.95
'44.00 CQMPANIO~ •••••••••~ ...... SALE ,30 tS
'39.00 COMPANION ............... SALE .,_; 95
'36.00 22" WIEKIND•••••••••••••••:SALI '2StS
'31.50 TRAIN CASE ......... ~••••••• SALE .,_ 2:011

Elberfelds In Pom

·

.

,
•

\___

ll '\'OHIO Residents here saw•ice in the Ohio River this
wc.ek for 1he first lime in several years. In 1939 the river wa$
rro7.t·n so S41lid t ~l Jlf'ople t.alkl·d - even drove cars - across

it. The last tiem the river was frozen solid, but not enough to
pennlt people on it was the winter of 196U3. Picture by Katie
Crow.
·

•

..•

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