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•

l-TheDallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,Jan. 24,1977

Cars slipped, slid on
snow·slick area roads

Serious crimes
being reviewed .

Tami L. Weiher, 19, RodWASHINGTON (UP! ) - handle on an individual casePresident carter says he by-case those who have ney, was cited to GaUipolis
probably
will
decide committed more serious Municipal &lt;Alurt for fail ure to
individually on Vietnam crimes involving drugs or stop within the assured clear
distance following a traffic
deserters guilty of serious 'violence.
The President said the accident at 3: IS p.m.
crimes, .and hy categories on
the fate of most of the 437,000 military already has a Saturday on US 35 at the
recipients of bad discharges syste_m for reassessing tbe junction to SR 588.
The Ga ll ia-Meigs Post
and deserters.
less-thanhonorable
Garter Friday pardoned aU discharges, but that he might State Highway Patrol said
Miss Weiher's car struck the
Vietnam draft reSisters and seek to speed the process.
ordered a study tD determine
He has no inclination to rear end of an aulD operated
what to do about deserrers upgrade the 30,662 bad by Marlin W. Wedemeyer, 36,
and those with general or conduct or dishonorable Rio Grande. There was minor
WJdesirable discharges.
discharges, Carter said, damage.
No charges were fil ed after
He said in a wire service adding "they have been tried
interview Sunday that in a military court, they have a he adon collision at 4: 1~
categories for dealing with been convicted of a crime." p.m. Saturday on KUeker Rd.
Of the reaction to. his
them
might
include
alcoholi c s , m e ntal pardon order, Carter said:
incompetents, those who
" I don 't reaDy think there
failed to support their was any surprise about the
CLIFTON, W. Va. - Eva
families and others .
. reaction one way or the other.
V.
Varian, 77, ol this village,
"They might very weU be It is a proper thing to do. It is
died
Sunday in tbe Pleasant
considered as a bloc, if !hat is one I feel very much at ease
Valley
Hosiptal. Born Sell'
their Qi:lly violation of the with. It is sometl\ing that
.
tembet
6,
1899, in Letart, she
military rules or laws ," should have been done. I was
was
the
daughter
of the !.ate
Carrer said.
very grateful to be the one to
E.
H.
and
Ella
Stewart.
He said it was his do it."
She was united in marriage
inclination to let the military
to Charles G. Varian on July
14, 1922, in Hartford by the
Rev. Elkins.
Surviving besi des her
Un ited Press Interna tional
Wil berf orce at West Vi rg inia
Monday
Slale
· hu sba nd are four sons,
Michigan at Ohio Sta te
Thursday
Charles A. , Hartford; Harry
Ohio Domin i ca n at Rio Oh io Sta te at Iowa
and Eddie, both of Clifton ,
Gra nde
Louisvil le at Day ton
and Franklin, Columbus ; six
Wi s consi n · Pa r k s id e
a t Wr ight State at Clevelan d
Cen tral State
State
daughters, Lora Anderson,
Steubenville at Poin t Park Mt. Vernon -. t Tiff in
Clifton; Rose Dills, Colum·
Frida y
IPa)
bus; Joanna
Council,
Robert Mor r is (. Pa l at Wr ight LaR o,he (Pa. ) at Dyke
Langsville , Ohio: . Laura
State
. M innesota at Ohio Sta te
Tuesday
Duqu esne at Cinc i nna ti
Cla rk, Kirkland , Ill.; Ida
Kenyon at Baldwin.Wallace Toledo at Bal l State
•
C
ouncil, Benton, Ky., and
Marietta at Capi tal

two miles east of SR 141. The
patrol said vehicles operated
by Gerald M. Fellure, 35,
Northup, and Lewis Clagg,
35, GaUipolis, colllded on the
snow covered road. There
was moderate damage to
both vehicles.
No one was Injured In a
· headon collision al l:45 p.m.
Sunday on Jessie Creek Rd.
five tenths of a mile west of
Story's Run Rd. where cars
driven by Stephen L. Ran·
dolph, 18, Pomeroy. and
Wesley Wise,. 34, Middleport,
collided on a bridge. There
was moder.~t~ damage.

Eva Varian of Clifton dies
34 grandchildren, 17 great-

grandchildren, five sisters,
Evelyn Ehle and Melba
Icenhower, Mason : Wilda
Bl_essing, Coolville; Dolly
Sbarie, Syracuse, and Maxine
Kirby, Vienna, W.Va., and a
brother. Henry Stewart,
Point Pleasant .
She was preceded in death
by one daughter, Pearl, in
1942, and two brothers, Edgar
and Thomas Stewart.
Funeral services wiU be
conducted at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Wednesday at
I p. m: with Rev. Ira C.
Wellman of Kanauga , Ohio,
officiating. )!urial will fol)ow .
in the Clifton Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2to 4 p. m.
and u to 9 p. m. Tuesday.

This week's college games

Wittenberg

at

Musk lngum

Oh io Wesleyan a t Otter.bein
Mal one at Cedar vi lle
Kentucky Chr istian at MI .
Vern on

Spr in g Arbor (Mi chl a t
As hland
Wedne sday

Wic hita State at Cincinnati
Mi ami at Bow ling Green
Ken t Sta te a t Toledo
Wes tern M lc h at Ohio
Universi ty
Southwestern Louisiana at

.Dayton
Arkon at Detro it

Bowl ing 'Green a t Western
M ichigan
Central Michigan at Ohio
University
Eastern Mi chigan at M iam i
Nor thern Illinoi s. at Ken t
State ·
Da yton at Memphis State
Transy lvania ( Ky ) at XaVier
Eastern Illinois a t Akron
Ashla nd at Poinf Pa r k ( Pa l
Tennessee State at Cent r al

State

Wright State' at You ngstown

Sta te

.

.Capita l a t Baldwi n·.w allace

No. KentuCky a t Young stown

Sta te

Oh io Norther n at Heidel berg
Case Wes tern a t Mount Union
Wooster at Ober l in
Wc3 1sh at Ohi o Dom inican
Ur bana at Rfo Grande
Tay iQr ( lnd ) a t Wilmi ng ton
Bluffton at Hanover (l nd )
Oef iance ·at Ea rlham ( lnd)
lndiana . Purdue a t Findlay

Point Park I Pa I at Dyke

Hiram a t Al leqheny

Ober li n. ai Heidelberg
·
Wooster at Kenyon
Ohio Nor the rn at . M ount
t.lni on
Deni son at Wittenberg
Marietta at Otterbein
M usk ing um a t Oh io Wesleyan
Cedarvi lle at Ohio Dom inican
~lon e a t Urbana
MI. Vern on a t Kentuck y
Chr is tian
Rio Gr ande at Tiff in

Wal sh at Shaw !Mich l

Ander son (I nd ) at Bl uff ton
Defian'ce a t Ma nchester
lind l
Hanover ( lnd) a t Bluffton
De f iance at Ma ncheste r

lind)

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

Hanover ( lnd) at Findlay ·
Wi lrlli ngton at Ea r l ham ( lnd )
Carneg ie Mell on ( Pa l at Case
Wes tern
Bethany ) w va) at Hirma
W &amp; J I Pa l at John carroll
Wilberforce at Steuben vill e

WATCH .FOR

Ok l ahoma 62 Colo r ado 55

Okta Chr is 7A Okla . S&amp;A 12
Ok la .City 67 Cr eigh ton M
Pan Amer ican ~ 8 L amar 73
Phi ll ips 6.1 Be th any Na 7 62

OPENING DATE

Breaker! Breaker!
FOR HELP WITH
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For safety ,
convenien!:'e or just' plain
ftin , you nee d a 2-way

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And we have a complete

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installation in anything

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Carol Lee , Lancaster, Ohio;

Evalena Lemley died Saturday
Mrs. Eva lena Foley
Lemley, 70, Rl.l , Middleport,
· died Saturday afternoon at
the Pleasant VaUey Hospital.
She was born Aug. 28, 1906 in
Middleport, the daughter of
the late Wiilliam a.nd Nancy
Ohlinger Foley. She was also
preceded in death by a
daughter, Wanda Johnson: a
brother and a sister.
Survivors include her
husband, Andrew Fred
Lemley : three daughters,
Miss Betty Lemley, Mid·
dleport; Mrs. John (Mildred)
Lambert. Middleport. and
Mrs. Charles (Bertha June )
Wheeler, West Columbia, W.
Va.: two sons, Charles R..
Fayetteville, N. C., stationed
withthe the U.S. Air·Force at
Ft. 'Bragg , and F r~dd i e

Lemley, Jr., GaUipolis; three
sisters, Mrs. Cecil (Eva
Belle) Kauff, Rutland; Mrs.
. Alva · (Hazel) Rife, Rt. I,
·Middleport, and Mrs. Russell
(Elizabeth ) Young, West
Columbia; a brother, Charles
Foley, Rutland ; 13 grand•children, three great·
grimdchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at t~e
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev. Charles
Rogers .officiating . Burial
will be in the Riverview
Cemetery.
She was a member of the
Baptist Church. Friends may
call at the funeral home at
any time.

Enna Heilman died Monday
CHESTER - Mrs. Erma L.
Hellman, 84, Chester, died
Monday
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She was born April lB. 1892
to the late Len and Elizabeth
Wickham Wolfe. Besides her
parents she was preceded in
death by her husband,
WiUiam; a daughter, Iris.
Iren e; a son , Alvah ; a
grandson, Alvah John ; her
stepfather, James Wickham ;
a brolher,.Edison Wickham,
and a sister, Edith Bryant.
Surviving · are a grand·
daughter , Shirley Coga r,
Minersville ; a grandson ,
William Heilman, Naples,
Fla. : a stepson, Roy
Hellman, Joseph, Ore. ; a
step grand son , J ames
Heilman, Joseph, Ore.; a
sister,
Mrs.
Pauline
Ridenour, Chester; a brother,
John Wickham, Chester, and
nine great-grandchildren.
Mrs . Heilman was a
member of the Chester
Church of God.
Funeral services wiU be 2
pm. Wednesday atthe Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Michael Soulhaod officiating.

Burial will be in the Mt.
Hermon cemetery. Friends
may caU at the funeral home
any time alter 7 this evening.
KENNEDY DEDICATION
CHICAGO (UP!) - Sen .
Edward Kennedy and
Sargent Shri ver were In
Chicago Satl!rday lo dedicare
the new twin-towered AP'
parel Center, owned by the
Kennedy famlly, and part of
the largest .buying complex ill
the world. ·
The 2.Zroillion.aquare-loot
wholesale buying center is
locaood across the street from
the Merchandise Mart, which
the Kennedys also oWn.
BAB.Y TAYLOR
LOS ANGELES (UPl)
Singer early Simon has given
birth to. a nine-pound, twoounce baby hoy , the second
child for her ·and atng~r ­
composer James ·Taylor, a
spokesman for the couple
disclosed
during
the
weekend.
The baby, Benjamin Simon
Taylor, was born at New
York Hospital.

from a comp act car to

an lB~wheel~r.

CPBRA.19 MOBILE
Super+compact. Weig hs

only 2-l14lbs. All 23· .

. chann!3ls. Maximum legal ·
p o w ~r.

THE INN PLACE
TuesdJJy Night Special

'69.95

"•

Times ·just to keep warm and read
By Mra. VUma Plktoja
Dlreelor, Melgo-Jacbon-VlaUlll Boollmoblle
How many young people bave really learned the meaning
of the word, ''winter" in the last couple of weeks ' Or how
many have seen so much snow before?
Even older folk in our southeastern Ohio counties don't
recaUsuch a winter, with such snow, ice, freezing of pipes,
power outage and what-have-you.
With slippery roada and problem cars, what could be more
inviting than to take a break and bundle up in a warm blanket
]Vith a good book?
•
Many Meigs Countians seemed to appreciate the service of
the Meigs-Jackson-Vinton Bookmoblle . which has been
delivering the books practically to the doorstep.
We couldn 't make aU the roads and had tAl stay on the more
traveled ones - hoping that books-by-mall reached the farther
corners of the county. OUt of 12 days, the bookmobile was out
on nine days and circulated 1,629 books during this period.
Reedsville, Long Bottom, PorUand, Success Road, Tuppers
Plains, Racine, Chester, Rutland, HarrisonviDe and others

Allies told
(Continued from page 1)
the mission by how weU he
relays Pre~ident Garter's
desire for the "closest
possible cooperative relationship" with friends and a!Ues.
overseas.
Mondale's 1lklay trip also
Includes stops in Bonn,
Rome, London, Paris, Berlin,
the Vatican and Tokyo.
On arrival in Brussels,
Mondale
said
Carter
"supports the tnoogration of
Europe and a productive
diai&lt;Jgue between the United
States and the European
Community, and with our
NATO partners as well as
European friends not in tbe

community."
He said Carter believes the
security · of nations and
preservation ·of democratic
values ''rest upon a strong
Atlantic alliance" and ideas
must ''flow both ways across
the AUantic with all involved
in l!llidership."
He said prompt attention
should be given to the
Strategic Arms Limitation
Talks and multilateral trade,
areas that he said have been
staUed for some Ume and are
"waiting there ticking. ,.. ·
The.1rip .alsO is expected to
focus on energy, European
troop strength negotiations,
Cyprus and the Middle
East.
Mondale, who said early
consultation and cooperation
tD solve mutual problems was
the "essential theme" of
Carter's foreign policy, said
it was "unprecedenood !or ·a
vice president to depart on
this kind of diplomatic
mission so early in a new
administration.' ,
He and carter were sworn
in last Thursday.

-

..

Columbia cutting off more gas for businesses

ll8wusamhrewei'I!KI•oJIII,~~t~~ . • ' ,
·
Many people bave ~~~~ mtjttlrpnent. Yea, I gave

my letoor of reaigna'tioo fo 'tile OVAl: cllrteWr In Noveml!er
with the effective datAl in .June :- to 1allow time to find the
replacement Ia- our wlit which has been my wort and home
lor II years, with prelimln8ry work~ in the faD of 1964',
the.lirot bookmobile arriVing lh 1965, 1111d.tbe ..,cood replacln&amp;
the oclginal In 1972.
•
The system change from StatAl Ubrary Service to the Ohio
VaUey Area Ubraries Service waa bandied .by the local. ·
Pomeroy·Mlddleport Ubraries very effectively without
interrupting the service and aUowing us to pass 100,000.
circulation again in 1976, as it was In 1975, bringing !lUI' totalcirculation w over a mllllo)rl bOiikl •. · ~." ;.;z.
Our staff ~!Alnds thanks tD the "'411Y Di'ltona. Makb1NiPthe current stall are Loulae Brewer and- Robert Picll:eft;;
drivers ; Sharon Bullingtoo,ollicemanager; EU.dene Wataon, Donna Bunch, Fae Reibel; reAder aasi$11U ; Mn. Lula ~
HamptDn, RSVP hospital setvice, 'an4 Barbara Nash, •
maintenance.

News •• in Briefs

scHOOLS HONORED
. COLUMBUS (UP I)

(Continued from page 1)
restaurant, but he was in the process of opening a new bistro
shortly before he entered the hospital Dec. 13.

BARGAINERS FOR 7,700 UNITED AulD Workers at two
General Motors Chevrolet plants in Saginaw, Mich., haVe
agreed to extend a strike.deadline until Thursday, avoiding a
strike that had been scehduled lor n a.m. EST today.
Members of Local666 were scheduled tD walk off the job at ·
the two metal casting plants but a GM spokesman ll8id the
strike deadline had been extended and negotiations were
continuing.

.

Wakeup a

li1Jtle ~ri~IIeJ; ••
0

Holzer Medical Center
(Birtbs, Jan. %1)
Mr. and · Mrs. Randolph
Blackburn, daught e r,
G·alUpolis; Mr. and Mrs.
!Wnald Stevens, daughter,
Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Newman, son,
Hamden : Mr. and Mrs.
Charles E. Masters, son,
GaUipolis.
1Blrtb1, Jan. 2%)
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Curtis,
daughter, Jackson ; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul E. Spencer, soq,
. Pomeroy.

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A' 1

POMEROY, OHIO
•
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S4o,ooo.oo Maximum lnsura11ce tor Each • •
Depositor. l,v\ember Federal Deposit ... '
Insurance Corporation.
•·

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THE MEIGS INN

INGELS FURNITURE
t06 N. 2nd Av• .

992-2635

Middleport

•.,

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30% OFF SA·t ·E'

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Phone 992-6304 ·
PIZZA SHACK Phone w.!-6304 .

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Buckeye Beef Congress opens
a twiH!ay session 'Friday,
saluting the stale's beef lJI.
duotry. Participating In the
opening ceremonies will be
former U. S. Ambanador to
fndta WiUiam B. Saxbe and
Ohio State Unlveraity loetbaU
coach Woody Hayts, A trade
show with more than 100
exhibitOrs will be part of the
session.

,

,

f

\II!' 11 ff,.

fl ''fl /" 1'-'

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fit J(tHl ;h tot '!

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Includes entire stock - 'Spred Satin~ .,Gft~f.IO,' ,Outside
Paint, Latex Enamei•Spray Paint"·· · Enamel,. Porch
1'· :~..
Paint.
~····- ,.:." .1
Main Store, Warehouse and Home Furnishings ·Annex
open Monday through Thursday 9':,30 to'S P.M. i" fr,~n
9:30to8 P.M. -Saturday9:30to5 P.~. . · 11 •• •

ELBERFELDS MECHANIC.stft£tf;fiAREHOUSE

•
\

INDIANAPOIJS - ELI Ln.LY, 91, WHO PLAYEO a key
role in the development of insulin and other drugs taken ahnosl
for granted toda'y, died Monday at the Indiana University
Medical Center.
The grandson of Col. Eli UUy , who founded the
lndianapol!Hased pharmaceutical and agricultural products
firm, UUy worked for the company for more than 80 years and
Is conaidered the person most instrumental in turning it into a
worldwide enterprise.

Patrolman Miller
placed in Meigs
Ohio State Patrolman CoWJlY as soon as housing
Patrick E. MiUer, 25, four can be found .
yean out of the Patrol
Academy, ellective Monday ·
replaced Patrolman carlos
F. Caato on the staff of the
GaUia·Meiga Post in Meigs
County:
Officer Caolo, who has been
assigned the past slx years In
Melaa
CouQIY
with
Patrolman Ezra . J.· Sheet.l,
hal been . tran1ferred to
Marietta Poilt. Casto has
resided with , 111' family on
CondO!' St., Pomeroy. He wiU
be moving to Marietta.
Officer Miller, a native of
· Jacklon,ls tra111ferring I!VIIl
Wllmlncton to the GaiDa·
Mtlp Pollatbla own request
10 be nearer bla hometqwn.
He Is married to the former
L..on Wimer of JacksOn.
ThtY ba ve two childr~n.
Cbrlllina, age 4, and JuUe, 2.
PATRICK E•.MILLER
They wlU move to ·Meigs

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET
I

Visit .Our . Salad Bar
Fish
French Fries
Coffee. Tea or Mil k

'
'
PIDLADELPHIA
- WITNESSES TO AN EXPLOSION
and fire at an Atlantic Richfield Co. refinery in South
Phlladelpl!la said the blast was so loud and the smoke so black
and thick "tt was !Ike a bomb."
.
. The el!Ploslon and lire Monday injured four persons, one
crUlcaUy, rocked buUdings as far away as 10 miles and
shattered windows or nearby structures.

CINCINNATI - THE CLEVELAND SCHOOL
desegregation order of U. S. District Court Judge Frank J .
Battisti is "clearly erroneous" and should be tossed out;
contend the Cleveland Board of Education and Superintendent
Paul w. Briggs.
Lawyers lor the board and Briggs lllled a 67-page "brief" in
the 6th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals Monday, seeking to
overturn Rattlsti 's finding last Aug. 31 !hat they fostered
school segregation. The appeals court is to schedule a hearing
on the caae later tills year, with no decision expec!Ald for
aeveral months.
.
r
Moat of Monday's appeal was based on the conrention that
Battlal had no grounds tD find the sch9ol board and Briggs
gullty of "segregation intent."

Eve~rydayJ
Now that's what we call "getting a good
night's sleep!" By opening one of our high
interest savings accounts with dally
computing, you'll wake up to real profits!
We put your interest to work as well as your
savmgs. So you can sit back and watch your
money grow!

cubic feet a month and cannot use alternaoo fuels will be
curtailed 85 per cent. This curtailment started at 10 per cent on
Nov. I, went tD 2:i per cent on Dec. 16then to 50 per cent on Dec.
30.
-Conunercial customers who use more than a million cubic
feel a month will be reduced hy 85 per cent. These customers
began with 411 per cent curtailment on 'Nov. l then went to 50 per
cent on Dec. 30.
-&amp;naU eommercial and industrial custDmers who use !rom
200,000 to one million cubic feet a month will be curtailed 30
per cent . They were curtailed !or the flrst time on Jan. 6 at 10
per cent. ·
ColUmbia officials expect a large number of business
custDmers will have service cut off because of the new
cutbacks, but they do no know how many at this time . If the
businesses can't find additional supplies of natural gas or
alternate fuels, they wiU be forced to close.
The company sald 19 industrial customers have had service
ended and another 24 will soon follow.

11

MADRID,SPAIN - IN ASPIRALING SERIES of revenge
right-wing extremists opened rare with
suilmachlne guns Monday night on a meeting of left-wing
lawyers, killing four persons.
Seven peraons were injured, many critlcaUy police said.
Government sources said the . attack apparently was in
retallatio• for the kidnaping early Monday of the senior army
general who heads the military courts system, Emilio
VUI.aescUil8 OuUes, 64 •.
~ce SWKlay, slx persons have been killed in attacks and
counterattacks by right \lnd lelt-wing groups. In the latest
PRICE FIFTEEN. CENTS
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1977
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
shooting, two young gunnlen walked up to the third-floor law VOL. XXVII NO. 198
olficeabout10:4Sp.m. andbeganfiringassoona s the door was - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - . , . - - - - - -- - - - -- - - -- - - - - - -- - - - -opened, pollee said.
The group has demanded the release of Spain's remainilig
171 poUtlcal prisoners in return lor Oriol's freedom .

Plan to imp:rove roads
in Meigs·to be revised

·of river flood

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
ASK TOWED
A marrl.age license was
issued to William Trent
Knittel, 18, Pomeroy, and
Debra Marie Brooks, 18,
Portsmouth.

Labor sources Slild the strikes, caUed by the Communist·
led Workers• Commillliona and other underground groups,
paralyzed several plants in the industrial belt of Madrid as
20,000 walked off their jobs. The news agency Europa Press .
reported that the stoppages spread to Barcelona and shut down
Spain's bl@gest industrial plant, the SEAT aulD factory, which
employs a~ 30,000 people.
.
The walkouts came only hours after two men believed to
be right-wing ·eltremists burst into a meeting of left·wing
lawyers and opened fire with submachine guns.

concern grows

(Blrtbs, Jan. 23)
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E.
Myers, daughter, Galllpolls.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges - Maggie
Pa!sons, Henderson; Mrs.
Timothy Lewis, Point
Pleasant: Rebecca Carter,
Lakin : Richard Adams,
Wellston , Ohio ; Wllliam
Robbins, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Lester Hall, Galllpolis
Ferry: Roy McCoy, Point
Pleasant : Jerry Colburn,
GaUipolis; Florence Skinner,
Arbuckle: Gary Treadway,
Point Pleasant: James
Buttrick, Southside; Lucille
Moreland, Point Pleasant;
Michael Arrington , GaUipolis
Ferry; John Donohue, Point
Pleasant: Mrs. Michael
Garrison, Eleanor: Granville
HUl, Point Plea,.nt: Mrs.
Terry Searles, daughter ,
Bidwell; Mrs. Ernest Collier,
Ripley : Patricia Woomer,
Point Pleasant: Nancy
Bowen, Ashton: Mrs. Marshall
Slayton,
Point
Pleasant: Melvin Freeman,
Sr., Cheshire; Jack Oliver,
Leon ; Jackson Edwards,
Gallipolis Ferry; Misty
McDaniel, Point Pleasant;
!Wy Shobe, Point· Pleasant,
and Mrs. Danny Palmer, son,
Cheshire.

extrerm.ta.

That part of a progress report on capital improvements
th at had to do witll roads was pretty much torn up Monday in
the annual meeting· of the Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission.
Meeting in The Farmers Building in Pomeroy the
commission heard James Jennings of Jennings Assoc.,
Columbus (professional planners retained by the commission )
make his firm 's third progress report on capital improvements
capabilities. Included in it. was a section on projected road
·improvements in !he county.
That's where newly~let:ted coWJty commissioner Richard
Jones made suggestions.
Jones said the county commissioners have worked for the "
past several weeks with Engineer Wesley Buehl on a road
RADNOR , PA. - TV CRIME PROGRAMS such as program for. the next two ye ~r s . .
"Jennings' report does not coincide with the plans for the
"Kojak" and "Baretta" are teachin$ prisoners how to be .
better criminals, according tD an lrunlite serving a life term at road improvements hy the county commissioners, not only in
.
the Marquette Prison in Michigan. In fact , writes convicted priority, but in roads included," Jones said.
Jennings retoreted the progress report was comptled
armed robber Grant H. Hendrick in the latest issue of TV
Guide, trui prisoners take notes as they watch and keep them through interviews with 16 county officials and !rom other
reports or roads in the county over past years.
for future reference.
Jones said he had not been asked for an opinion and
• Hendrick said a "surprising nine out of 10" prisoners he
interviewed "!Did me that they have actually learned new Commission Preside'nt Henry Wells said he had not been called
tricks ami improved their criminal expertl.ae by watching on either .
Jennings admitted he wanted the report toreflect the ideas
crime programs." The article q119ted one convict as saying:
of
the
commissioners rather than be on ly an unworkable
"lt'sllke you have a 'lot of Intelligent, creative minds ·- all
"piece
.
of paper.''
.·
.,
· thll!~ Hcllywood writers - .working fOr you ."
So it was agree&lt;l tllat Jennings, Well.a and Jones wtUmeet
LOS ANGELES - HEALTH AUTHORITIES Monday to discuss road.! tD be added and tD remove roads listed in the
declared an outbreak of potentlaUy fatal measles an epiderplc. report. Blakeslee aiso will meet with the group .
Opening the session , Thereon Johnson was reelected
Oue death has been blamed on measles, authorities said, and
the number of cases ls running•seven times as high as in the
years before 1976.
"I would caU It an epldrnlc, without quibbling," said Dr.
~irley Fannin, chief county communicable disease control
officer, noting that the peak measles period Is still more than a
DlCXIth away. Since Oct. 15, tile county has registered 350 cases
of measles, including 1~1 cases In the past three weeks of
rubeola - the "10 day measles" that is more dangerous than
the "3-day" or rubeUa variety. ·

HOSPITAL NEWS
VeleraDI Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Mary Searles, Cheshire ;
Edward
Martin ,
Jr.,
Pomeroy; Everett Gilkerson,
Middleport: James Lowe,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges Sherry Sayre, Gregory
Tyree; Jean Sheets, Marcia
Capehart , Lima Wolfe,
Jamison Proffitt, Doris
Kiser, John Bailey, Pearl
Hoffman.
Sunday Admissions ~
Christopher Wolfe, Ironton;
Clarence Adams, Racine ;
Marie Pickens, Racine ;
Gladys Barber, Reedsville;
Rita Hughes, Minersville;
Pauline Hysell, Minersville.
Sunday Discharges Timmy Chick, Dale ConnoUy,
Rita !fughes.

By Ualted Preaalnlmlatloaal
MADRID, SPAIN- TIIOUSANDS OF WORKERS went on
otrilte today tD protest the submachlne-gun slaying of four leftwing lawyers Mooday night_hy a suspected gang of rlghC-wing

WASJUNGTO'N - WATERGATE BURGLAR E., Howard
Hunt's quest for fr eedom today was in the hands of the U. S.
Parole Commission. Hunt is serving a sentence of 30 months to
• eight years for his role in the burglary which led to a scandal
that toppled a president.
Ills case was to be considered today during a meeting of
the fuU commission - three "national commissioners" and
fotir regional conunissioners. Most cases are decided either bY
smaUer groups of commissioners or a single member. Hunt
has been eligible for parole since Jan. 10.
While his case was on the work list for the first day of a
two-day meeting, a spokesman said, any announcement of the
decision might be delayed until Wednesday.

E-RCALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency'
Squad was called tD 315,
Mechanic St, at 10:15. p. m.;
Sunday for Mrs. Irene Baxter .
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. AI ~ a. m.
Monday, the squad went to
Danville for Helen Hershman·
· who was laken to Hotzer'
Medical Center also.

RIVERA NAMED
TIRE OF MARRIAGE
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Two couples who have flied
Rev. Fernando L. Rivera , a for dissolution of marriage in
native of Puerto Rico, has Meigs County Common Pleas
been asked to work with the Court are Altina R. Crisp and
Commission on Poverty and James J. Crisp, both Langs·
Economic Justice within the · ville, and Edward Elton
Ohio Council of Churches.
Sigler and Joyce M. Sigler,
Rivera will be responsible both Tuppers Plains.
for Interpreting the needs of
Ohio's poor and nellr poor and
serve as an advocate in the
area of expanding , em·
ployment, financial subsidy
and supportive services for
Ohioans below the state's
minimum standard of living.
For the past six years, he has
been the program manager
for the federally funded
Gary, Ind., Model Cities
. Program.

•

The cutacks wiU affect 1,650 industrial customers and 13,300
commercial customers who use more than 200,000 cubic feet of
natural gas a month.
.
About66,000businesses using less than 200,000 cubic feet and
residential consumers wiU not be curtailed under the new plan.
Owens-ntinois in Toledo, one of Columbia Gas Co.'s largest
lLSers, said the situation is very very serious."
"It could lead to significant layoffs at plants both in
Columbus and Toledo," said an 0 ·1 spokesman.
Columbia repeated Gov. James A. Rhodes' call for all
residential customers tD set their thenilostats no higher than
65 degrees and for aUbusinesses to reduce gas consump!Dn by
setting back thermostats and reducing hours of operation .
''Although the reviSed curtaUment levels are scheduled to be
in effect untUt.larch 31, changes in available gas, colder than
normal temperatures or changes In the amount used by
custDmers could result, in more changes in curtaUment," the
company said.
The new curtailments are :·
- Industrial customers who consume more than a million

kllllnt!a, suspected

Thirteen Ohio schools have ·
been singled out to recelv~
the amual Krecker Awards
for outstanding science
education programs during
the 197~76 academic. year.
The 'winners ,are Ashland·:
Ayersville ; Bellevue ;;:
Cambridge ; Dover; Cantow
Glenoak ; Delphos .Jefferson:~
Lake Catholic In Mentor::.
Mount Vernon : Toledcl'
Rogers ; Cincinnati Ste
Xavier ; Chillicothe Smith
Junior High School : and
Columbus Walnut Ridge. ;
Each school will rec.eive' ·
$250 from Battelle Memoriaf
InstitUte, which C(Hiponsors
. the awards along wlth 1M
Ohio Academy of Science.

CINCINNATI - WILIJAM FOSTER FOSS Hopkins,
defense counsel in more than 700 murder trials in 50 years,
died SWlday alter a long illness. He was 77. Hopkins had been
inactive much of the past three years because of his falling
health. He wrote his own obituary in a book entitled "Murder Is
My Business" published in 1970. It said:
.
"All lives I suppose when reduced to nolations are simple.
Mine Is. I knOw that only too weU. Example : I waa bocn in 11199,
lived in Norwood; Newport, Ky. ; Cincinnati and Indian Hill In
that order. Went tD Hughes lligh School, tllen to the University
of Cincinnati. While in a Saturday night crap game In the
Army,! won a banjo. Mastered it. Passed the bar, became a
lawyer. Became a bridge champion. Married. Have purchased
a crypt. Some day will die. But are these notations me ?"

"''~
ews. . .in Briefi

COLUMBUS .(UPI ) - Columbia Gas of Ohio announced
Monday it will have tD take away even more natural gas from
1~.000 business custDmers beginning Feb. I to make sure one
million residential consumers will have enough fuel tD heal
their homes for the rest of the winter.
Columbia said the fourth roWKl of cutbacks in six weeks was
necessary because frigid temperatures this month caused
homeowners to use exceptionally large amoWJts of natural
gas.
The worst cutbacks ever imposed by Columbia, which serves
;i6 of Ohio's 88 counties, will lead to more job layoffs, plant
shutdowns and school closings in the territory that runs from
Lake Erie to the Ohio River.
Neither Columbia nor business officials could immediately
gauge the seriousness of natural gas supply reductions.
The.stale's largest gas utility had hoped to avert tbe latest
·curtaUments by acquirin g emergency ~upplies form the
Midwest and the Southwest. Tbe company said arrangements
to purchase from three to seven billion cubic feet of natural gas
fell through last year.

•••
•

COLUMBUS (UP!) Warned that Ohio may be
confronted with a natural
disaster in the form of major
Ooodlng thls spring, the state
Controlling Board has

declined to use any
emergency funds for police
and firemen 's death benefits.
The
board
Monday
deferred action on a·request
for $970,000 to flUid the new
death benefits program until
the state Disaster Services
Agency (DSA) can leotify as
tD its potential needs.
!Wbert F. Howarth Jr.,
president of the board, said
Robert Coffee , 23, and the DSA has warned the state
Wendell T. Derricks, 36, both wiU need every bit of the $3 . ~
of Belpre, arrested in con· miUion remaining In the state
neclion with the armed Emergency Fund if a sudden
robbery of the Thomas Zano thaw unlocks Ohio's icebound
residence Rt. I, Rutland ' on rivers.
Saturday , Jan. 1~ , were
"This is the only discretionbound over to the grand jury ary money we have until July
Monday by Meigs County 1, "· said Howarth . He
Court Judge Robert E. Buck. explained that if the money
Meigs County Prosecutor runs out, Gov. James A.
Rick Crow · and assistant Rhodes would hsve to make
prosecutor Carson , Crow spending cuts in other areas
dismi ssed the charge of to free funds for a
aggravated robbery against supplemental appropriation
Randy Dawson, 23, Parkers- hy the legislature .
burg, who ·was arrested with
The death benefits tD surYi·
Coffee and Derricks. John D. vors of policemen and
Mankin, 30, Belpre, also firemen killed in line of duty
arrested in conneciion with were promised by Rhodes
the Zano robbery lacking during his 1974 gubernatorial
proof of venue, had his case campaign. They were
also dismissed by Judge approved by the legislature
Buck.
last year , but were not
funded .
Normally, the state
maintains an emergency
lund large enough to take
care of unexpected dis8oters
such as wrnadoes, Oooding
and storms. But most of the
money has been spent for
Schools of the Meigs, other purposes this biennium.
Eastern and Southern Local
Also put in limbo for the
Districts remained closed filth time in two mooths was
today as additional snow fell !he Department of PubUc
overnight and
roads Welfare's request for
remained dangerous. Only approval of a new formula lor
approximately a half Inch of reimbursing nursing homes
snow fell overnight , but for expenses Wider Medicaid.
Tuesday morning it wa s Althou g h
three
continuing,
and
ac- Republicans on the sevencumulating.
metnber board voted for the
This Is the third week for department's request to get it
schools of the county to have out of the way once and for
remained closed, with all, the four Democrats were
Southern Schools havin g not satisfied and defeated the
operated two days more than morton.
thoae in the other districts.

Pair bound
to grand jury

All schools
are closed

president and C. E. Blakeslee was reappointed executive
director for this year. Other officers selected were Orion
!Wush, first vice president : Henry Wells, second vice
president: Edison Baker, secretary, and George CoUins,
treasurer. The next meeting was set for 3:1~ .p.m. on Feb. 28 at
the ba nk building.
' In other routine reports Blakeslee gave a brief review of
the commission's work over the past year. The group paid
$1,500 as the first haD of the costs on the study by the Jennings
firm and $500 to the executive director.
He said th e commission had conducted a nursing home
study which included a Middleport hOusing study and the
Charles Blakeslee
Thereon Johnson
commission assisted the community development block grant
and the committees in working out the overall economic
Clearing house items discussed include the Meigs County
development plan. Ten meetings were held durin g the year.
Jennings said 51 projects are reflected in the capabilities Community Block Grant application for $500,1100 ; applications
for the same amoun t through the &lt;Almmun ity Block Program
study which were estimated to cost under $11 million.
WeDs announced a meeting with the arthitect at I pm . by the viUages of both Pomeroy and Middleport; an
Wednesday on the mental health buDding to be constructed on application by the Meigs Council on Aging for new buses, arid
Mulberry Heights. It was announced that one firm has been the family planning grant request for some 46 counties.
It was reported that the commission will pay $i',500 for
issued a certificate of need for the construction of a nursing
home in Meigs County and that a second would be eligible for a second, half charge on the capabilities study and $150 for a
cel'tificate since it has been determined that two homes are locked filing cabinet provided !WJds are appropriated by the
county commissioners fat the conunission.
needed.
Attending were E. F. !Wbinson, Eleanor Thomas, Ray
It was agreed to approve, subject to review of the
commissioners, a resolution to be passed through Pickens, John' Rice, Rev. Robert Bumgarner , H. E. Shields,
Richard Jones, Jeffrey Burt, David Fox, John Stutzlein, Orien
recoll\l)l~qding to the State Department of Transportation a
fo,mal study of corridors tD link State !Wute 33 with State Rou:41, Henry Wells, G&lt;!orge Collins, .James Jennings, Jr .,
!Wute 7 at Five Points and the planned Ravenswood-Ohio Blakeslee , Boyd 'Ruth , Johnson and Mrs. Naomi Brinker.
River Bridge;
,
::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursda y lbrough
Saturday, a chance of snow
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday and luning
colder. Hlgbs Tbursday
wiU be from 25 to 30 bul
· dropping into the teens
Friday aud Saturday. Lows
will be In the teens early
Thursday and about 10
early Saturday.

Beware highways

Hazard ous driving cqn·
ditions prevailed throughout
the tri-count y area thi s
morning as a res ult of
Monday's two and one half
inch snowfaU plus a drop in
temperatures before th e
· freezing mark.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The Gallia-Mei gs Post
State Highwa y Patrol
Monday investigat ed ·six
traffic accidents, three in
which there were injuries. In
Meigs vs. Wellston basket- addition,
there
were
ball game scheduled tonight numerous fender-b end er
at Meigs has been indefinitely accidents being investigated
postpooed. No make up date at 9 this morning.
has been set sa id Coach Ron
There were. two or three
Logan.
wrecks Monday night
following the Rio Grande
Awards dinner scheduled basketball game near Lyne
Wednesday at Meigs Inn for Center.
Legar, Wingett and Shields.
The first injury accident
occurred ·at4 : ~0p.m . Monday
A meeting of th e on SR 7 at the junction to
Middleport Liteary ·c tub Polecat Rd. in Addison Twp.
scheduled for Wednesday has
been canceUed.

Postponed

The Federal Hocking
Eastern basketball game this
evening has been postponed.
No make-up date has been
set.
TOni ght's Gallipolis at
Athens basketball game has
been postponed due to bad
weather. The GallipolisAthens game has been
rescheduled Feb. 19. The
1{yger Creek·Hannan Trace
game has been pootponed,
and rescheduled at Kyger
Creek Feb. 18.
The baton, gymnastics and
dance classes of Gloria
Wallace to be held this
evening have been cancelled
due to weather conditions.

Weather
Cloudy tonight and Wednesday, chance of nurries
tonight. Lows 15 to 20, highs
Wednesday mid to lower 30s.'
Probability of · precipitation
70 per cent today , ·40 per cent
toni ght , 20 per cent Wed·
nesday.
'

.

State troopers said an auto
driven by Barbara White, 26,
GaUipolis, pulled into the
psth of a northbound vehicle
operated by Oliver Michael,
65 , Pomeroy. Steven White,
age 3, a passenger in the
White autohad minor injuries
but was not immediately
treated. There was minor
damage.
Sandra K. Johnson, 20,
Racine, was cited to Meigs
County Court for driving left
of center following an accident at ~ : 15 p.m. on SR 124,
one mile west of Syracuse.
Johnson lost control of her
car on ice. Her vehicle slid
into an auto operated by
Leander Moore, 62, Parkers·
burg . There was heavy
da mage to the Johnson car
and moderate to ·Moore's
vehicle .

JohnsOn was taken to
· Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad for treatment of in·
juri es.
Another injury accide nt
occurred at8 :55 p.m. on SR 7
at the junction to SR 35 near
the site of the old Silver
Bridge.
Officers said a northbound
a ut o dr iven by Ga il L.
Drummond , 21, Addison,
turned left into the path of an
auto operated by Terry
Criner, 20, GaUipolis . Both
drivers were taken to the
Holzer Medical Center lor
treatment of injuries by the
Gaili a Co un ty Voluntee r
Emergency Squ ad. There
was heavy damage.
·
Drummond was charged
with failure to yield right of
way when turning.

Dewey
Hort~n
named
on Middleport council
,'

Dewey M. Horton was
welcomed as a new member
when Middleport Villa ge
Council met in a brief session
Monday night.
Horton was appointed by
Mayor Fred Hoffman when
council failed to exercise the
privilege within 30 days of the
resignation of James Brewer.
Hortor., who resides on S.
Third Ave. with his family, Is
a teacher at the Buckeye
· Career Center, Rio Grande.
Council approved the ap:
plication of the " Royal
Flush" to be located at 748 N.
Second Ave. for a 1).2 license
filed with the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Control .
Mayor Fred Hoffman ll8ld he
was informed the license Is a
transfer from the Golden
Nugget.
In conJnnctlon witll the
appeal of Govenor James
Rh,.. lo regard to the
elilergen~y ener1y crisis ;

Mayor Hoffman declared house .
that
a natural
gas ·•· Councilman Kelly also
emergency does exist in suggested that in future years
Middleport and he ·asked arrangements be made to
residents to follow lhe
(Continued on page 10)
recomm endations of the
Governor In lowering tllelr
thermostats lo 115 degrees at
nlgbl and 65 degrees during
the daytim e. He asked
residents needing help to caU
lbe pollee department.
Bob Clark, superintendent
Councilman Marvin Kelly
of
!he Meigs County State
referred a complaint of one
Hi
ghway
Department, ad·
home owner who reported
vised
rural
residents to move
that his .water meter froze
cars
from
al
0ng the highway
and as 6 result his water lines
inside his house froze . while trucks are out wotklng
Council discussed th e so that berms can be cleared . .
Clar&lt; said residents a~
problem but pointed out that
th e same situation has parking cars in driveways,
happ ened all over tow n but encroaching onto the
during the current cold wave highwa y so as to hamper
and it was pointed out that the workmen.
Clark said road.! were in
villa ge officials, although
usea
ble condition Monday
sympathetic, are responsible
and
that
crews were working
only lor the lines to the meter
on
them.
and not from the meter to the

Cars too close
to highways

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesda), Jan 25, 1977

Record but b~l~Jnced budget ~ffered
By!EE~NARD

UPI Statebo1111e Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov JamesA Rhodestodayproposed
a record but balanced budget for the nell two years whtch
calls for no new taxes, but looks to a "healthy" economy that
wili enable the state tD increase expenditures by $1 3 bilUon m
· the fields of education, mental health and welfare.
"For the nell two years thts budget anllctpat.ea a healthy
state economy that will produce a substantial growth m state
revenues," satd state B1dget Director WilUam Willtlns, who
skid the budget provides for total e~penditures of nearly $14.5
bllllon.
However, Willtlns was qwck to point out that the Impact of
any potential energ) shortages bad not been figured m the
projections and "that Impact could be drjUDatic "
Wilkins said the state's General Fund Is npecled to grow
from'$7.20 billion m the current btenmum tD $8.77 billion In the

nell two-year pertod, a Rrowth of nearly 22 per cent
"The cost of liVIng IS eipeCted to be only about 5 per cent
each year over the same pertod," satd Willtips.
The mam ttems m the budget for the 1977-79 btenntwn In·
eluded
- An mcrease of $297 million to prliiUlry and secondary
education tD brmg the !Dial up tD $2.46 billion.
-An increase of $288 mil11011 to hlgher education to brmg the
total up to $1.3 billion
- An mcrease of $211 milbon to mental health and mental ·
retardationtobrmgthetotalupto$836million.
- An incr~ae of $516 3million m welfare tD bring the total up
to $2 7 bilUon.
.
Wilkins S8ld the money 10 finance the mcreases would come
from several sources, mainly·
-Sales and Use taxes which are eipeCted to mcrease by $552
million

- Personal income ta1es which are e1pected to Increase by
$399 million.
-Corporate franchise tRies which are npected tD Increase
by $202 rrullion
"Wtth an efficient use of the new moneys, the state can
proVIde adequately for alltts essential services; and It can
alford for the first time tD fund many of the new laws,
mandates and regulations set down in recent years by the
federal government, the courtJl, or previous General Assem·
blies," Willtlns satd.
"And it can proVIde for growing enrollments In higher
education and mcreased Inmate populations in the prisons; 11
can for the first hme meet the accreditation standard&amp; for care
and treatment of the mentally ill and the mentally retardedand make unprovemenb in other state services as well,"
W'llklns said
Wilkin&amp; satd the !Dial erJ10ndltures of nearly $14.5 bilUon

Utilities have gas, Rhodes doesn't
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov
James A. Rhodes satd
Monday the power to
preserve dwmdllng supplies
of natural gas lies wtth the
utility industry - not wtth the
governor's olftce
"II makes no difference tf I
declare an emergency, a
crisis or a catastrophe," satd
Rhodes. "The real power tD
preserve fuel IS wtlh the
utlhtles. They have the
natural gas, I don't."
Rhodes statement ratsed
the question of who has the
ultunate authonty tD rallon
natural gas supplies If the
governor declares a cnSlS

gas to about 300 companies
and another 2,000 shutoff
notices are supposed to be
matled this week.
Under curtatlmenl plans
approved by the Pubhc
Utihties ConumSSion of Ohio
(PUCO ), utllllles have
authority tD cut off supphes tD
mdustrial and commercial
users whtch surpass theU"
aUotmenb. The purpose ts tD
make sure there IS enough
natural gas tD heat homes
and essential serVIces such as
hospitals.
Michael R Szolost, first
assistant attorney general,
agrees wtlh th~ governor that
the law Jacks a penalty
section, but S8ld 11 could still
be eflecttve
" H the governor would
declare an energy criSIS,- he
would have extraordinary
powers, but IS not requU"ed to

eXJsts

The att-orney general's
offtce says the law Is clear
that the governor has the
authority m a criSIS s1tuatwn
Rhodes, however, says the
law IS so weak that he could
do no more than plead wtth
the pubhc to turn thermostats
down and to authorthes to
close schools and cut down
the work week
"!can gtve all the orders I
want," smd Rhodes

"But

there are no penalties m the
taw The utilities know they
have the power to cut back
nght on their fmger lips "
HWe have no teeth, even m
a crlSlS," smd Rhodes. 14 The
only retaliation is for the gas
comparues to shut them off "
Colwnbta Gas of Ohto has
sent shutoff notices to 33
comparues and more are on
the way East Ohto has not
ended servtce to any,
customers lhts wmter
Day!Dn Power &amp; Light Co
has stopped pt~mg natural

exerCise all of them," SwloSl

said.
He said under an enera&gt;
criSIS, the governor could
order drasllc rallonmg of
natural gas and could appeal
to the cow to enforce hts
order.
Szo!oSI also satd the
governor could mstruct the '
PUCO to force a utility to"
shutoff natural gas supplies
tD a busmess that disregards
an order
Rliodes Sunday declared
the state to bema natural gas
'-"'"emergency," and asked all
consumers of natural gas to
drastically cut back.
"Since it ts only an energy
emergenoy (and not a criSIS),
people as well as busmesses
can choose to dlSI'ORard. hts

•

Probe ordered into gas
finns possibly holding
back some production
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Prestdent Carter has
ordered an mvesttgallon by the Interior Department to
delermme if some natural gas companies are holding
back on their production, Sen Howard Metzenbawn,
D.{)luo, satd tDday
"I have JUSt been told the Prestdent has Jusl ordered
an investigation by the InteriOr Department to
determme If some natural gas companies are holding
hack on their production," Metzenhawn told UPI "I
support him m thiS The gas comparues credibility ts
still suspect
"In fact m the midst of this shortage, tlie head of one
of the maJor companies m Ohto, East Ohio Gas, IS
caUmg for the deregulation of natUral gas and thts
makes tl all the more suspect," S81d Metzenbaum.
"I have learned to doubt the word of the gas
comparues," S8ld Metzenbaum, "and I feel that most ·
Americans queshon theU" credibility.
'
"! say they are suspect m bolding back," he satd
"On the other hand I have no proof that they are
holding back."

recommendations," Szolosi
smd. In one recommendation,
the
governor
asked
restdentlal customers to
reduce thermostats to 65
degrees durmg daylight
boors and 55 degrees at rught
The next step would be to
declare a criSis and thts
would open the way to utiliZe
the full authonty of the law,
which went into effect Aug
26, 1975 The law m part

states

1

"The govern.lr shall issue,

amend or rescind rules de·
mgned to allevUIIe or manaRe
. the energy crisiS whtch
rules shaU have the full force
and effect of the law "
The law Szolosl satd, also
gtves Rhodes authority to
order the PUCO '1o issue
such orders as are necessary
to regulate thell" (gas and
electrtctty) allocation,
conservation and use durin~

WASHINGTON (UP!) The government, reacting to
the severe wmler freezing
much of the country, has
taken emergency stepa tD
make avatlable more of the
fuelS needed to heat homes.
Acting Federal Energy AdmliUstrator Gorman Smtth
announced Monday hts
agency ·
- Was ordermg five
refmertes to make more

prtortty users of propane,
such as homes and hospitals,
to get all they need through
the wmter;
- Wtll help natural gas
ullhties get enough propane
to fill the gap at peak
demand , for the htghesl·
priority users
"Protection of the pubhc
health, safety and welfare
reqwres these measures,'~
Srmth satd, 11 even
'" at the
expense of some mconvemen·

home heating otl , at the
expense of Jet fuel ce."
production ,
The heatmg 011 order
-Wtll allow htghest- applied to "No I oil," which

- 6v R 08~ Ma ckenzre &amp;Jf'ff MacNf"ll y l ~tl!m Unned Feature Syndlcute

;

"Translated lntD terms peop~ can comprehend, that means
tile average Ohlo family (four persons) will be making an
Investment of more than $2,500 each year In the programs of
state government," said WI!Ina.
"With these klnda of dollars at stake we believe the people of
Ohio need tD be well Informed about the buaine11 of state
govenunent," said Wilkins. "It's their buslneas and It's a bJg
business."
,.
Rhodes, In hls "Stat~f-the State" m~e had already
indicated where most of tile Increased expenditures would be
made.
The DemocraUc-controUed General Aaaembly will have
untU JQ!y I, when the new fiscal year beglna, tD study 1he
budl(et and make changes.

---------------------------,
are
Lelten of oplldoo
welcomed. ney uoaltl be
leal thai! SOD wonlllong (or be nbjed to~ b)'
the editor) and 1111111 be •flued wllb the ....... -'·
dre11. Namea may be withheld ..,_ pUllealilll.
However, on requeat, 1111mea wiD be dllellled. Leaen
lbeuld be In good lute, ltltlreaflll ..._, aat persooallll"'.

,.,,

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More aid
I set for
schools
1

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I COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Gov.
I James A. Rhodes' budget for
I the next biennium called for
an increase of $2811 million in
atd to higher education whlch
Facts do not lie
will provide for a 5.4 per cent
near Sir:
per popU increase without
Afew days ago I read a sobering and alarming set of facts, any student fee increaaes.
found in a 1976 pubUcatlon' of the American Cancer SOCJety
The proposal for hlgher
What !found had tD dowlthlungcancer.
education also called for
The first words that caused me to stop and think were
-$19.4
l)lllllon
for
these: "Cigarette smokmg causes at least 80 percent of lung enrolhnent growth.
IS kerosene-used by many cancer deatha. The article went on to say that thts kind of
~1.6 million for making
homes m the coldest parb of cancer IS the "Number One Site of cancer deaths among men." the University of Cincinnati a
the country
Last year 11 was estunated that there would be 93,000 new full state university
Smith said the mttial orders cases of lung cancer m our country, and that there would be
-$60.4 milUon for Ohio
for more production of 84,000 deaths (estimated). That meant that 230 persons would InStructional grants-up 38
kerosene were gomg to die every day m 1976
per cent.
refmenes m Michtgan,
Another glarmg truth that I read was this - Smoking
-100 per cent student loan
Wisconsin, North Dakota and habtb, m so many, many cases, are begon and become goarant.ees.
Minnesota, the slates most established when one IS a teenager
~.2 million for research
hurt by dwmdllng supplies of •
Amatter of compariBon and rapid growth are revealed in and services.
kerosene
the quoted words "In 1968 only half as many teenage girls
~.25 million for remedlsl
The agency also arranged smoked as boys " SIX years later ( 1974) girls between twelve education.
to make more propane and etghteen years of age were smoking only a fraction of a
Health Education:
available for natural gas pomt below what boys of the same age group were smoking
_,41 4
million
for
utlltties, if they show they (15 8 pet )
developlllll medical schools
have curtailed aU therr lowThiS represents a great increase, and that was three years
-till 7 million for clinical
priority users first
ago.
teaching facllltles
What can be done to help people who want tD slop smoking
~1.7 million for primary
Watch for my article next week. You will fmd something thatls care residencies.
workable and can prove rewarding to all who are looking for a
-$500,000 for general
solution. -Rev. Lirison H Stebbms
practtce dental residencies
-l4.6 million for family
new readmg matertal, and
prachce subsidy.
!Did classmates a gbost story
about the Whtle House.
Grtb, first of nme pupptes
In a htter born elect ton day,
was offered to Amy while the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - one m the country outside of
Carters were sitU m Plains, President Carter wants his govenunent IS driven to and
BOX SOCIAL SET
and the young gtrl quickly , IDp atdes tD feel the same from home m chauffered
The Preceptor Beta Beta,
wrote a l~tter acceptmg, ,tdrs
frustrations most Anierlcans cars
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
11
1t 1s an anachromsrn Soronty wtU hold a box soctal
Meeder satd
experience m getting to work
whose tune has come to an Saturday mght at 8 p m at
on tune.
So he is calling a halt tD the end," the senator sa1d. "Now the home of Mrs Lillian
tradttlonal practice of I hope the remaining 780 big Moore It ~ be a couple's
provtdmg chauffered shots who are drtven tD and affair There will be no
limousine service to the top- from home will drop the Thursday rught meeltng of
level White House staff, and practice "
the Chapter.
'
suggesting ' hts cabinet
offtcers follow his example.
Toronto. Ohto , 24 grandRichard Nixon and Lyndon
children and 20 great· Johnson ferned 20 atdes to
grandchildren, brothers and and from their White House
~isters, Chester Htll, Pen- JObs Gerald Ford provided It
sacola, Fla ; Howard. Hill, only for 17.
Ashland, Ohto, Hugh Hill,
Sen. William Proxmire, )).
New Trenton, lnd , and Mrs WIS , has tried for years tD
Calvm (Mabel) Lane, Mid· have the transportation pracdleport.
tice curtailed. He S8ld In a
She hved m Galhpolls most statement today that Carter's
of her hfe, and attended the order "sets a fine example,"
By BERNARD BRENNER
from $76 an acre In New
Church of God
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mexico to $2,852 in New
which he hopes will be
Funeral • servtces will be extended
Farmland values increased Jersey.
conducted at I p m. Thursday
But officials noted that not
Proxrrure noted almost no 17 per cent nationally last
at Mtller's Home for
year and a new regional aU areas shared In last year's
Funerals wtlh the Rev. Alfred
record was set' when average land prtce gains. No inHolley officiating. Interment
land prices In the Corn' Belt creases at aU were reported
NO CLOTHING
wtll be tn Pme Street
leaped 33 per cent, the in Mlsalsstppl and Nevada,
Free clothlng day will not Agriculture . Depa~ment and hikes Umlted to 10 per
cemetery. Friends rna~ call
at the funeral home 2 to 4 and be , held this week at the says
r
cent or less were reported In
Salvation Army due to
7 to 9 p m. Wednesday.
Officials said the increase New York, New Jersey,
weather conditions
in five Corn Belt sta't.ea · - Vlrglma, North Carolina,
Ohio, Indiana, lllinols, Iowa South Carolina, Georgia,
and Missouri - was the Flonda, Alabama, Louisiana, •
largest amual hike for any Oklahoma, New Mextco, '
region in records going back Arizona, Utah, Oregon and
to 1912 The figures covered Calliornla.
the year ending last Nov. I.
Spokesmen said local real
Illinois land values rose 41 estate e1perta replying to a
per cent to $1,497 an acre survey said the demand for
That was the largest per· land tD enlarge farms was the •
~tage gain for any state
prime factor in the Corn Belt
and tied an aU·tlme single land price boom last year
state record set in South
strokes and hear\ attacks. want this mformallon can Carolina In 1920, spokesmen They added, however, that
the presence of coal depoalts
However, I do not believe 10 send 50 cents with a long, reported.
was a factor In some parts of
bemg herotc about 11 unless stamped, self-addressed
The 17 per cent national Dllnols, Ohio and Indiana.
•
the pressure IS truly envelope for 11 Just send
Increase boo~ the average
In
the
southeast
and
Delta
•
stgniftcantly beyond the nor· your letter to me m care of
value
of
all
American
far·
states,
galna
were
held
back
mal range of 140 over 90 Wtth this newspaper, P.O. 8os
mllind from f380 an acre to
modest elevations I am con· 1551, Radio City Stallon, New f445, Values on Nov. 1 r&amp;nRed by the depressed cattle •
market and other factors
vtnced that the best form of York, NY 10019 Your blood
including
uncertainty about
treatment m most cases IS pressure IS !me for your age
the
future
of govenunent ,
wetght r~idu~tion. Even if a buill you want It to be a UIUe .
THEDALYBEHTINEL
support
programs
for •
1
person has only a few pounds lower I would eliminate any
D!VOitiD 'lO TilE
lN'IDl!ft
mr
pea
nub
and
tobacco,
experts
of excess fat around the waist detectable budy fat you nught
IIEIONWONAIIEA
said.
these pounds can make the have wtth diet and exercbe
rnmaa~~
The report ahowed II states
difference
Some of the more powerful
ROBEKTHOIPUOI
now
have average fannland
Beyond adequate wetghl medicmes used tD treat blood
~,!Ak
values
of fi,OOO or more an
control - that means gettmg pre8sw'e have powerful stde
by":,~
Vdl
~'bC.t.,~
•
acre.
8e¥en
are In the urban '
1
rtd of ALL the fat - the next effecb, Including causing
Ill)', m Court 81., "-"'f, 0111o
Nortbeut
where
lind Is Jn
step IS the use of water ptUs, depression, drowsmess, loas
O!llce l'l1one ..,. " ~~'i&gt;: ~nd for ho~
2111Edltoriii,_IIW,17
those that eliminate excess of sexual capacity and other
~ &amp;:!' l&gt;OIIa!.• fllld ~! , f,q~ ?l~er n,opJgrlcullural ,
salt And, of course. the per- changes. The best way to
Nauw.:t advorllaln&amp; . _ ,
uses, tiut o~U noted the- ,
son should !lnut salt mtake.
avotd these rtsks 18 to do first
IIUve Want- Grlfllll&gt; ~. ,,.. , .otblr..fa!lt.- jowa, Dllnoll,
More strmgent measures things ftrst. That means gel·
•· BoWnolll anct O.Ualhor DI~,
'""'•naa""Ohlo-are'inthe
,
717 'l'll1rd Ave , New Yorlt:, NY
-:-·~
·~'( :t..
that requtre powerful tmg rtd of yout excess fat
11011
Com
IWt
wnere
agricultural
medic10es should not he used before the doctor starts you
Su-m rolal. DeUnttd bY
demand II more Important In
unlll wetght control, diet, salt on such medicines Frankly I wrier
when ..-ltlabte ~-pel' I ..... ~. ' - '
-·~.,.'Ia,., values.
restriction and water pills " thulk.too much reliance IS put - By Motor RooW """'" canior
Compared to November of
lwve been used to the fullest
on these sll;ong medicineS' ......,. not avllllabte, OM PJI
By
IIllO
In
Ohio
ud
~
,'f&amp;~·
)071
Ohe Y11r SbOO, SiJ
•
; ·:1 •the r~ noted lind
I am sendmg ypu The rathe~ than correcting liVIng
~Three
monthl,
11
10;
values
lUt ovember were
Health Letter nwnber 1-8 habtls that cause the high
up lit per cent in Dllnola, 111
Blood Pres:&lt;ure to gtve you a blood ptessure m the ftrsl 111 10, r~ ':'n=. ~
Pl'f&lt;• lnctada ~
I!"' ~) in IOWI lnd 100 per
~cqera. undcJ s!andmg or place.
ei.
~ ,
.. cenlli\ Minneiota.
~lood pressure. Otlters whu
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By PAMELA REEVEES
WASHINGTON (UPI) Amy Carter, who "ftl m
beautifully" her first day at
Steens school, had a cuddly
new friend waitmg for her at
the White House after !Dday's
classes
His name lS "Grtts/ 1 a 12-week-old black and white
puppy born the day JIIIUfly
Carter won election as
preSident
Grtts, part Sprtnger
Sparuel and part unknown,
was presented to 9-year-old
Amy Monday m the
Dtplomallc Room of the
White House by Mrs Verona
Meeder, her new fourth grade
teacher.
Mrs. Meeder, her husband ,
Andrew, and theU" three chil·
dren, carrted the 17-pound
dqg m proudly, havmg
eqwpped him with a new
collar, a supply of crunchy
dog food and a multtcolored
sleepmg pad
Amy was eipeCling the
dog, but when she saw 11 her
face bghted up m a grm that
matched her dad's She gathered the dog in her arms, and
Grtts happily wagged his tail
and tenlattvely bcked her
hand
While swatting Amy's ar·
rtval, Mrs. Meeder satd her
star puptl dtd not have a

disruptive effect on other
students her first day of
school Monday
"II was perfectly natural,
she fit m beautifully," the
teacher said 11She 1S very
mdependent She Just doesn't
reqwre any attentiOn~~ ·
Mrs Meeder satd Amy
ptcked out a book on ghost
stories when gtven a chOice of

Same old frustrations

Nettie Oark of Ga11ia is dead
Nellie Almeda Clark, 76,
died Sunday at I a,.m at MI.
Carmel Hospttal m Colum·
bus
She was born Feb 16, 1900
m Galltpohs to the late
George W and Alberta
Serena Dtggms lhll She
attended school m Ga!UpoUs
and marrted LewiS Henry
Clark of Galhpolis m 1916 He
preceded her m death m 1968
SurvlVlng are etght
children, Harry L. and
MorriS H., both of Peebles,
Ohio, Ned E., George R and
Charles H., all of Xenia,
Phtlltp, An soma, Ohto; Mrs.
Clyde (Marjone) Flint,
Columbus, wtth whom she
made her home, Mrs James
(A lb erta) Etselsle tn ,

Farm land values

up 17% nationally

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Edl!Dr

1

NEW YORK (UP!) - One basketball tea m m this ctty IS
losmg tb slnrt The other one has spent all kmds of money for
!alent but ISn't domg much better As far as professional
basketball :s concerned, New York tsn 't the Btg Apple
anymore, Its the Btg Lemon
When the Nets are at home m Nassau Cohseum the pla ce
gwes you the unpress10n of some huge deserted ba;n because
the team that won a champtonshtp and played before notsy
much fuller hollSes only etght months ago, doesn't draw fites
now
In the NBA for the first tune m theU" exiStence after havtng
won the ABA champtonshtp two of the last three years the
Nets had hoped to play at least on a par wtth the "btg ~ys"
thiS season, but they haven't come close They're dead last m
the Atlantic DIVISIOn of the Eastern Conference The Nets are
mthe cellar stnctly on merit, and when they fmally snapped a
13-game losmg streak wtth a 95-36 wm over the Chtcaeo Bulls
Sunday rught, Tim Bassett, one of theU" forwards, was moved
to comment, "Now maybe people won't talk about us like we
were dogs' '

..

....

Some say the Neb need a doctor , like the Dr J they twd
Others claun even tf the Nets by some mtracle could gel Julius
ErVIng back from the Philadelphia 76ers, whtch ISn't at aU
likely, he wou ldn't be able to turn around the team as 11 ts
made up now
That probably IS true because the Nets were practtcally
custom bwlt around Jultus CrVIng before he dectded not to
play wtlh them because he felt they weren't paymg him
enough Nets' owner Roy Boe felt Ervtng had a contract and
should abtde by tl He dec1ded not to renegollate tt and then
made a deal for ErVIng wtlh the 76ers It was a personal
vtctDry for Boe, but another VIctory like that and he may not
have a basketball team anymore.
To make the Nets respectable agam, Boe wtll have to try to
ptck up some free agents who will be available at the end of the
season That wtll not only cost him some of the money he got
for Ervtng, but he also wtll have to compensate the team or
teams he gets those players from wtth other players, so he has
a long, uphill road m front of htm
Wtth the Kmcks, the problem IS altogether d~ferent.
Where the Nets have so httle talent, the Krucks have so
much. Too much , 11 seems at ttmes They went out and patd
Buffalo $2 5mtlhon for Bob McAdoo and Tom McMtllen, glVlng
up John Gtanellt m the deal, after haVIflg purchased Jun
McMillian and ptckmg up hiS enormous contract from the
Braves earlier The addtllon of McAdoo to go along wtth such
other high-prtced star performers as Spencer Haywood, now
recovermg from an m}ury, Earl Monroe , Walt Frazier and

McMillian proVIded the Kmcks wtth an All..Star type line-up
Part of the trouble IS these AIIStar types have forgotten the
fundamentals of the game and another part of the trouble IS
they sometunes concentrate too much on those
fundamentals
All of them want to show they're pros, that they 're not selfiSh
performers playmg only for themselves Instead of shooting,
they're passmg the ball off Everybody's passmg to the other
guy You never saw such good looking passes m your life. But,
nlght alter mght, you see all of them wtth perfect 10 or 12-fool
shot opporluntltes m front of them, shots most of them can
make wtlh thell" eyes cloSed, and what do they do' They pass
off, tD someone maybe ftve feet m front of the basket
Maybe they 're passmg brtlltantly, but they 're not sconng a
ruckel 's worth, and all you have to do to conftrm that IS look at
the standmg.s 1,You'll fmd the Krucks m third place m thetr
diviSion, the same one both the 76ers and Nets are m The 76ers
have a fat seven game lead When they ftrst got Ervmg, he,
George McGmnts and Doug Collins had some difficulty
adJustmg to each other also, but now they have all Jelled to
make Philadelphia the powerhouse everybody ftgured tl would
be
The Kmcks say It'll take tune They're sure they'U adJust
also Probably so, but meanwhile, you've never seen so much
passmg and so little scormg mall your lifetime

All-Star game
set Feb. 13th
NEW YORK (UP!) - Stx of
the 10 startmg players m the
National Basketball
Assoctaliofi AU..Star Game
will come from two teamsthe Denver Nuggets, who
have the leagne 's best record,
and the Phil!idelphi;l 76ers,
who have the best re&amp;'hrd m
the Eastern Conference
In voting by more than I 25
rrullion fans, the ex-ABA
Nuggeb, crwsmg at a 71Jii
pace and ahead by six games
m the Mtdwest Dtviston,
placed
guard
Davtd
Thompson, center Dan Issei
and forward Bobby Jones on
'

Blood ~ressure range varies
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - People
and even doc,tors have dif·
ferent opmtons about , high
blood pressure. I heard on
HoUywood Squares that low
blood pressure IS better than
normal blood pressure. I
don't believe that. What could
be better tham normal' I,
heard we can have as much
as 100 plus your age. I am 69
and I think 169 would he too
high I read in a German book
m 1955 that for people 60 or
over, 140 over 100 Is normal
What ts your optruon, Dr
4rry' What should my blood
pressure be? Here In Montana 11 IS 180 over 80 but m the
wmter 10 Arizona it IS 135
over80or90
DEAR READER - Yes,
there are a lot of different
statemenb about normal
blood pressure The confusion
beg10s wtth the meanmg of
the word normal It '" often
tL'ed 10 a staltsltcal sense to
mean ·mosl t:ornmon ''
However, somt1 1Hrtg t11.11 '"'
1
'most common" may not be,

optimal or even' destrable. It
1S

11

most common" to have

heart diSease m our soctety
but most people would prefer
not to be no\'mal "' that
regard: They would rather he
optimal m tet!ns of health
and not have a heart attack or
a stroke.
In general illS satd that any
pressure below 140 over 90 IS
normal Ho.Jever, we know
from population studies that
even lower ~lood pressure IS
associated wtth a lower m·
cldence of fatty - cholesterol
deposlls lp artenes and hence
a lower rate bf heart attacks,
strokes and other comphca·
lions of arthy disease. In·
divtduals wiJh blood pressure
of 100 over tit) Are less prone to
heart dtsease or strokes Yet
these low pressures are not
most common " r should
mentwn uUit we do accept
pressures vf 90 over 60 as still
Wllftin the nohnaJrange
1 agree that elevated
pre&gt;Sut·e should be II eated 10
the 10terelit of prevcnt10g

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Amy's new friend, Grits, waiting

A Chronicle of America

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We Hold These: Truths ...

Followtng hts January 3 vtctory at Princeton, Washington
orders General Wtll1am Heath - m the Hudson Highlands
- to take Fort Independence guarding the northern
approach to ManhatJan Island , the purpose Is so to alarm
the Brlllsh that they will not remforce their armies tn New
Jersey Heath's sortteJS a ltasco Wlth3,400men, headvan·
ces on the tort and demands the surrender of the 2,tJOO.man
garnson The Brttlsh respond by shelling the Americans,
and thereafter advancing out of the fort ap(!,lllsperslng the
attackers For hts efforts, Heath wi09 a rebuke from
Washtngton and mockery from the British Writes
Ambrose Serle, secretary to British Admiral Richard
Howe "One Heath once a butcher, now a rebel general,
has left the army In disgust. . He blamed his men, and his
men him , vtltalns and cowards altogether!"

would be an Increase of $12:1 blllloo from the current blennl·

Emergency steps ordered

DR. LAMB

January 17-25, 1777:

the crisis."
Szolost said the law,
however, does not delme
what is an energy emergency
or energy crisis.
Before declarmg an energy
CflSIS, Rhodes must confer
with ERDA to determine If
health, safety and welfare of
Ohto's citizens are threatened
by a gas shortage and that
speedy aclton by the state
government Is needed.

.Garland promises

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an error on your taxes,
~ewpay t?e penalty.
And the mterest~'
Reason No. 14 why H&amp;R Block
should do your taxes.
H&amp;R"Biock doesn't make many mistakes.
Our people are tratne.P not to But 1f we
should·make an.ermr that costs you
addttibnal·tex·. yo'll pay only the additional
tax. B(ook' pais any penalty and interest
We sta'l'ii;:,''~fitnd
ourII work.
l~ ~
,

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HIR"BLOCit
:·THE INCOME' TAX PEOPLE
i

j

1"1

,, ~14

11••

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"618
. 'EAST MAIN
.
Qpon t A M ,, P..M. lllleekdoys, t.s Sot
PI!D!!~ .m 1m
~I) .('pi\\~JiNTI\fENT NEU,SSA RX

I thlnk the btggest thmg ts to
go out and try to wm 20
games"

Garland, 26, and hts wtfe,
son and daughter wtll he
liVIng yea~ around m the
house he purchased m nearby
Chagnn Falls. Buytng the
house has been hiS only btg
purchase smce wmmng the

lucrall ve contract from the
lndtans
Although he hatls from
Tennessee he's anythmg but
a country hoy He hkes to
hsten to jazz "or anythmg but
country and western" and
reads "anythmg I can get my
hands on "
"I wanted to go some place

that would gtve me a chance
to go out and pttch every four
days," He S8ld " II I don't
rwm 20), I hope the whole
burden doesn 't fall on my
shoulders"
lndtans manager frank

"hardnosed , a bulld og," and I'll take hun out of the
a possessor of 'ba ckbone," rotatton and maybe put htm
he srud he conSiders Garland m the bullpen Look what tt
among the best, .11f not the dtd for Dennts Cckersly last
best" pttcher m the lea gue year
'To me, he was the best
' Gar land ' s
c ontra c t
pitcher at Baltimore and doesn't bother me "
that 's no knock on Jtm
But Robtn~n doesn 't look
Palmer ," the manager send for Garland to get mto tbe
Robmson added tha t kind of trouble that gave
Garland can expect to be Eckersley a poor start and a
handled the sa me as any st1on g f1msh as a sophom or e
other Cleveland pttc her last year
despite hiS 10-year contract
"When I ftrst saw htm he
' Whateve r he got more threwfast er, but now he's got
power to htm ," Robmson four pitches tlwt he can get
srud I'm happy for hun But over the plate He has pnde
now It's my JOb to handle h1m
He's a battler and he 's got
' U he's not p1tchmg well conftdence m his abtlity "

Robinson
remember s
Garland as a somewhat

chunkte rookte when they
were both wtth the Orioles
"Sure
I
remember
Garland I liked him then,"
the manager satd, notmg that
Garland has smce shnuned
down
Robinson S81d he "couldn't
beheve II" when the Indians
got Garland m the free agent
sweepstakes Ca llmg htm

Garland advance d to
starll!r stalllS last season
after wmmng four games and
loSing none as a reliever He
went on to become one of only
three 20-game wmners m the

Arpencan Leauge, compiling
a 2 68 earned run average
Hew as asked about playmg
out hiS option JllSt m ume to
cash m on the free agent

OOom
' I would do 11 agam Sure !
was lucky If I'd had a bad
year, where would [ have
been now? H

' I'd rather be lucky than
good Luck sa part of life We
took a cha nce and we won 11

Wellston coming in (uh, maybe) to play Meigs
By Greg Bailey
Weather permtttlng, the
Metgs Marauders can go
above the 500 mark and cop
thetr fourth wm m a row
tomght when the Wellston
Golden Rockets come to
Mornson Gynmasmm The
Marauders agam surpnsed
area fans wtlh !me basketball
Frtday mght when they
handtly whtpped favored
GaUla Academy 69-52 and
raiSed thelt overall record to
4-4 and 3·3 In the SEOAL
The Marauders have
scored upsets m thetr last

three wms over htghly-touted
Jackson, Vmton County, and
Galhpohs, respechvel) One
of the keys In all of those
vtctortes has been the fact
that for the hrst time thts
year, the
Marauders
outrebounded all three opponents Also Coach Ron
Logan's crew has cut down on
the number of turnovers,
especially m the Gallipolis
game when they committed
JUSt mne mtscues
Another key has be en
outstandmg performances
from dtfferent mdtvtduals m

Stabler named
top athlete
NEW YORK (UP! )- Ken
Stabler won the 27th annual S
Rae Htckok Award Monday
as the "ProfessiOnal Athlete
of the Year," but the Oakland
Raiders quarterback
professes to have an
amateur's love for the game
of football
"I can't see professiOnal
football being called a JOb ,"
Stabler satd "To me, tl's a
grown-up gny playtng a ktd's
game and getting patd really
well to do tt and rrnikmg a lot
of other people happy wtth
the thmg that you do."
The left-handed Stabler
made thousands of Oakland
fans happy last season by
leading the Ratders to the
Amertcan Football
Conference season. Earlier
this month, he gutded the
Ratders to a 32-14 Super Bowl
VIctory over the Mmnesota
Vikmg.s
"I am really content and
completely happy wtth how
thmgs have gone for me thiS
year," satd Stabler.
The 31-year-old Stabler wtll
recetve the dtamond..studded
Htckok belt, valued at $20,000,
at the 42nd annual dinner of

the Western Conference
squad
Phtladelphta had forwards Pete Maravtch of New
Julius Ervmg and George Orleans complete the
McGmrus and guard Doug Eastern Conference team
Thompson was the leading
Collins named to the Eastern
vote-getter
wtth 319,047 votes
Conference startmg team
.
while
last
year's top voteThe 76ers lead the Atlantic
getter,
Rick
Barry of San
Dtvision by seven games
FranciSco,
finished
third
The All..Star Game IS scheamong
Western
Conference
duled for Feb 13 at
forwards.
Milwaukee
The closest race was for the
Pabl Westphal of PhoeniX
second
guard spot on the
and Norm Van Lter of
Western
Conference team
Chtcago complete the
where
Van
Lier beat out Shck
Western Conference starting
Watts
of
Seattle
by only 4,200
hneup while Bob McAdoo of
votes
the New York Knlcks and
The remamder of the
conference squads will be
selected by the II coaches
from each conference The
AII..Star coaches wtU be from
those teams who have the
best conference records after
next Sunday's games,
VIrtually assurmg II wtU be
Larry Brown of Denver and
Gene Shue of Philadelphia.

"If we make

Jilll

By JOHN SPETZ
CLEVELAND (UP I)
Wayne
Garland
tsn 't
promiStng he'll hav e hts
second straight 20-game
season m 1977, but he vowed
Monday to gtve tl hts best
shot for the Cleveland
Indians.
Garland was 20-7 wtth Balltmore last season, but
rec-ently stgned a $2 milhon
contract wtth Cleveland
"I thmk I can win here ,"
satd the &amp;-foot, 195-pound
righthander "I'm a grountl
ball pitcher and we've got the
defense
"I JUSt want to be a
consistently wlnnmg pttcher

shot'

the Touchdown Club of
Washmgton , DC , on
Saturday evenmg, Jan 29
It was one of the closest
ha llotmgs m the htstory of the
award as Stabler edged base- ·
hall star Joe Morgan of the
Cmcmnati Reds by only
seven pomb. Morgan was the
first National League player
m 17 years to wm hack-to·
hack Most Va luable Player
awards.
Stabler recetved 31 ftrst·
place votes and 135 pomts
from the 155 voters
parttctpatmg m the balloting,
while Morgan got 28 ftrst·
place votes and 128 pomts
Voters were asked to select
three athletes m order and
votes were diStrlbu ted on a 32-1 baSIS
Chrts
Evert,
who
dommated women's tenniS
last year, ftrushed thU"d In the
vohng- the ht ghest ftmsh
ever for a woman Evert
received 25 fll"stplace votes
and 108¥, points.
Rookte pttcher sensation
Mark Ftdrych of the Detrmt
Tigers was fourth, followed
by tenms star Jimmy
Connors and the National
Football League's leadmg
rusher, 0 J Sunpson.
Roundmg out the top 10
votegetters were World
Series hero Johnny Bench of
the Cincinnah Reds, pttcher
Randy Jones of the San Otego
Padres, quarterback Bert
Jones of the Baltimore Colb
and golfer Jerry Pate.

off 10 rebounds Dun ng
another game tt was JUmor
Kenny Young 11ho came off
the bench to spark the

dtfferent games Last week It
was 6'3" semor Alan Dod·
son's turn as he scorched the

nets wtlh 26 pomts and ptcked

Marauders, enough to earn a

startmg berth Senior Da le
Browning has played very
conSistent ball and usually
scores m double figur es
Ptvot man Allen Stewart
has Improved tremend ously
smce the begmmng of the

Co lleqe Basketball Results

By Untted Press InternatiOnal
Ea st
Alltance 79 Genev a 65
Columt:&gt;ta 9? F ord ham 77
Conn 67 Boston U 65
Coppm St 11 5 Fed C ! y 89
DJv 5&amp; E IIc. n5 J4 Whre!mg 61
Duque!'tne 91 Gannon 90 (o t)
Geo wash 104 Brandets 88
HOUQI"'!On 81 Medall!e 63
Hofst r a 80 l ona 68
K nqs PI 98 N J Tech 63
Loyola Md 80 Amertcan u 79
Mame 74 New Hampsht r e U 63
Manhatt an 69 St Fran NY 63
M~n s tlr:t S r 93 Gneseo &lt;; t 6 3
Mans! 69 Romapo 57
M H arve y 88 Wes t L tb er tv 75
Muhlent:&gt;erq 61 Kutz town 58
NY Mardtm c 68 Cath edr a l 56
P t Park 87 steub env l! e 8 1
Prov •dence 86 Can StUS 69
Shepherd 80 Ceoroc Ma so n 79
Sltppery Rock 7~ Cal Pa 68
Sy ra cuse 91 Bu tl alo 71
S E Mass 58 E Conn St 5J
T uf! s 81 M IT 69
Sou th
AI ClhClma 78 Geor&lt;] ta 74
ltuburn M Qrnrv 75 Belhavn 6&lt;1
A Peay 63 M tdd!e Tenn 6'2
E K v as Tenn Trch 65
E Tcnn 76 Marched 51 71
F DtCkmso n 50 N C A&amp; T d7
r ur man 100 Ea!&gt;T Carol tna 89
John!&gt; Hopk ns 5~ Wt d en cr 53
Kentucky 100 M tSS 1Ss pp1 73
Laml:Juth 8J D e!! a 51 BJ
L enor Rhyne 107 U NC A v i 83
L tv.nqslon 80 N cholls 79
l OUtS\II ll e 107 l l U 68
M ss Vi! I 91 Jac kson 51 79
Murray 89 We!&gt; tern K v 87
N C (hrl tre 9! Rollt ns 76
Newberry 90 voorh ees 71
NE La 89 La T ech 8'2
Rnd Ma cn 7'1 Mt St Mr y s 63
S! P au l s 87 J C Smtih Bl
Samford 49 M erc er 46
Sheph erd 80 Gco Mason 79
S E La 66 M SS Co!l 57
SW La 116 Texas Arl 97
T en nesse ee 68 Mt SS 51 Sll
T ex Sthrn 9() A lcor n 9J
Tu ltm e 100 Texa s Chn!'t 81
Vander btl! 68 LS U 67
VM l 104 Cent wesleyan 97
Wnstn Sal em 106 f::l z Cty 79
Wm&amp;Mary 61 Cd ade l 53
Wm Ca~ e y 60 Hu ntt nqdon 59

season and Js ,gettmg stronger

with us!
PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA StOCK
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorrte
piuas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
stp your favorite sUds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

P\aymaker

one of th e three 6'3"

!S

startmg Junwrs The othe r
sta rt ers are JUniOr J oh n
Martm who IS noted as bemg
perhaps hiS tea m s best
rebrmnder a nd 6'3" Dann

den talk

Doing something,
not just talking

Mrdwest
Bellarm tne 79 E sn lll 77
Ccnl St 8d WtS Pk StdC 71
Cen l M o 60 SE Mt!isourt 58
De Paul 93 Br adley 73
Fe rr1 s 97 Sag ma w vat 81
Grand Vall ey 93 Northwd 65
l l ltno ts 71 Norlhwestern 68
Il l W van 8? Auqustana 60
Ltn co ln i Mo ) 66 N W Mo 51
Lovola I ll 78 VI panso 65
M 1ch tqan 9? OhtO S! 81
M nnesota 75 M tch St 70
Mo Wslrn 101 NE M o 81
No M tth 58 La l&lt;.e Suor tor 54
Purdu e Bl Wtsconsm 71
SW MtSSOUrt 80 Mo Rol la 6J
St F ranc s 80 Nrl es 75
W m 1ns1e r Mo 103 M ri'v! 95
Wrtqh t St 80 R Morrt S 76
Southwest
Arkan sas 72 Te)(as A&amp;M 58
B shop 96 AUS i tn Col 79
E TcJC 75 S F A usltn 7?
Houston 11 1 Baylor 89
John Brown 115 Jarvts 8d
Lamar 95 Sou th ern Mt ss 78
Mtdw strn 97 Wayland Bap t 64
0 Roberts 87 West Texa s 67
Pan Amencan 9:2 Bap!t S! 77
Sui Ros!'t 87 Trntly Tel( 76
Texa s Tec h 58 SMU 5~
T c:o:as 71 Rtce 68
Texas A&amp; l 78 Tarleton 75

West

LONG BEACH, Cahf.
(UPI) - The Long Beach
Grand Pru Assoctat10n came
up Monday wtth a sponsor for
Its Formula One World
Cllamptonshtp race April 3 First National City Travelers
Cllecks
The Long Beach Grand
PriX ts the fourth round of the
1977 season Final quallfymg
for the 2kar field will be
held April 2 along With a 75mile motorcycle road race.

one step out of the cellar of
guard Steve Ranqolph JS fa st the league wtth a t-5 record,
becommg res pected as l·B overall, but they ha ve at
perhaps the fmest guard m tunes played some strong
the leag ue, a nd m the basketball They are noted as
Ca llipolts game to&gt;Sed m 13 a strong reboundmg club wtth
pomts Those five wtll be the fou r sta rt ers over s1x foot
ones startm g agamst the l hey are a lso very qUlck
The two semors on the
Golden Rockets, bu t the
startmg
lineup are 6'1" Ron
be nch of Co ach 1 ~gan has
Hudson
and
5'8" playmaker
also been contnbutmg when
John
Royster
Along w1th
cou nted upon
s
strong
shootmg
wtll
Hullson
The Golden Rockets are
be JUntor Ray Gilhland's. who

on the mstde

Carro l! Mont 77 No Mont 71
Cent Wash St 68 E Wa sh St 66
Lmfleld 11 2 Whtlworth 93
Pa ct ftc Ore 85 Wh ttman 68
Pa c L Uih 78 IdahO Coli 70
Weber St 86 Stansla !i SJ 57

mgle

The Maraud ers are' on a
\Hmung streak and have
momentum gomg, so they

ill be fav ored and naturally
thev w1ll be anxwus to play
I'

By Greg Batley
Please forgtve the lateness of thts wt!ek 's colwnn l have

been m contact wtlh Andy Lyles trymg to get some mformatwn
so that I can slap you mthe face I am tired of the sportsmen m
Metgs County JUSt talk mg and not actually dmng an) thing
Now let's talk about some of the thmgs you con actually do
tf you really are concerned sportsmen

For one thing, habttat planting stock IS stt ll avatlable free
of charge from the DtvtSion of Wildlife This mcludes trees
grasses, and other thmgs But th e deadline for applicatiOn IS
February 1 Contact Andy for more mformahon on th1s

program
Another thmg that I see no one domg m Metgs Co unty IS
clubs sponsormg hunter safety prOb'l"ams for the youth I am
sure you all agree that thts ts a \ illltable pro J ect ~ so an y spm ts·
men's clubs or even other orgamzatwns need only contact

Andy to help set thiS up
Thtrdly, there are NRA safety mstructors needed m the
atea - there 1s only one 10 Metgs Count) n ght now It takes
little effort on your part. and lots of you sportsmen would make
good Instructors Once aga m all you need do ts contact Andy
and he will, m essence gtve you the necessary trammg to
be&lt;ome cerUhed
One last th10g tha t you m1ght keep m mtnd ts wha t wtth the
severe weather we are ha vmg, our wildlife IS really feeling the
pam Deer, rabbtts, sqUirrels, game btrds , song btrds, and
other amrnals are suffer mg a severe scarctty of good I found a
btrd fr ozen to death Justa little effort pe1 haps JllSI wa lkmg 50
yards belling yo ur house and throwmg out some wble scraps,
some extra corn you m1ght have 1 or even some commerctal
btrd seed would help Immensely
Don't forget about the Wtldhfe heanng to be held next
Sunday , January 30 at 1 p m at the Athens Dtstrtct Office on
State Street Attendan ce at thiS meetmg IS one of the few things
that wtll probably do some good if there IS enough support on
any one tssue

Your sportsman 's groups shou ld

be

represented Some of the things local sportsmen have been
talking about concern the early squirrel season,the question of
usmg rifles for deer, among other things
Some tidbtls - rabbi t season went out last Saturda) and
fox season goes out February I If you are lucky enough to get
a beaver , don't forget Jt must be tagged by our local game
protector
Here s a note I found on mr pollutiOn standards Volv o IS
the,only auto maker to meet the 1977 emiSSion standa rds dead
hne
I wtll,end on a humorous note The Bavartan Mtmstry for
the ProtectiOn of Ecology lws recently completed constructiOn
of a tunnel along the htghway near the town of Forchhetm to
help atd toads m crossmg the street safely Appar.en tly a large
number of toads have been killed while crossmg the busy
highwayman attempt to reach a fa\ortte spa\\mng stte - a

nearby pond Tunnels have been planned 10 several other
crttical areas Ha, what next '

Fur sale date set on 29th
By Greg Bailey
The Southeastern Ohto Fur
Takers (SOFT) wtll hold one
fur sale on January 29, 1977 at
County
the
Morgan
Fatrgrounds, McConnels·
vtlle Sellmg wtll be done by a
professtonal auctiOneer by
auction begmmng promptly
at9 am
Only members of SOFT
may sell through these sales
Non-members upon payment
of $3 yearly membership dues
wtll be stgned as a memb'er,
and thus may sell.
Before coming to the sale,
count each kind of fur and
make a Ust of thts to turn m
when registering. Each seller
wtll be signed In and given a
tag wtlh hts posillon number
upon arrtval Startmg wtth lot
No I, each sells th order of
his number
While one lot Is bemg sold, '
two following lots will be put
out and readted for sale No
other lots wtll be put on sa le
dtsplay until the number ts
called The seller will he In
the sale rtnR when hts fur IS
•old He wtll have the
priVtl~~e to reject offer tf

S \\

together wtth a strmg to
avotd mtxmg wtth your good
rat s They wtll be sold
separately to save ltme and
make money

Any btdder not known by
SOFT must produce poSitive
proof of hts abthty to pay for
thetr purchase upon request
from SOFT Due to payment
of rent, the sale butldmg and
grounds wtll he under control
of SOFT durmg the sale
dates Thus no outstde sellmg
or buytng of fur
be
allowed wtthout hrst obtammg permtsslOn of SOFT
and payment of 2 percent
sales commiSSion. A 2 percent SOFT commtsston of
sellmg prtce wtll be charged
each seller on all fur sold
Sellers shall be responsible
for their futs until sold, at
whtch tune buyer becomes
responSible for hts own
purchases
SOFT wtll be takmg furs
startmg January 28, 1977 at
noon unttl 3 p m on January
29 For further mformalton
'contact
Kash Jewell,
Chatrman of Sales, 5 South
16th Street. McConnelsville,
prH•t• 1~ nnt su itu blf'
Ohto 43756, telephone (614)
Onh rtP 1! 1nskr ~'t" r&gt;" k nu t 'lli2-2989
cuUs, damaged ktts. Tie them

College ratings
NE W YOR K W Pi l
The
U n 1 t e. d Pr ess lnt ernat onal

noud ot Coai hes col l£'g c
basketl:Jnll rattngs wt! h won lost
reco rcl s t hrouqh
oam cs of
Sa turday Jan Tl and numb er
of f tr st pi&lt;Jce vo t£'s m par en
theses
{Ei ghth w ee k l
T e.l m
Po1nt s
\ San F" ran ctsco O i l {!9 0l 389
1 M cht qan (61 113 1)
31 9
l North Caroltn J (3) 1112\ ? J~
~ Alabama ( 14 1)
18 /
5 Nev ada La s Vcgs ( llllJ I J 172
6 T ennessee ( 13 ? l
155
~ Kentucky i 111)
IJ1
B .Va r qu(' tt e (13 21
1d1
Q UCL A 113 It
136
10 lOUI!i Vd lt• ( 111 1
90
11 Wa lo:. e F ores t ( 1.l 21
60
J7 ( nCII"'n ill
11 /)
4J
13 Ar zonp ( 14 2l
.1 3
t lM tnnesota (1111
~6
1&lt;; Pr o ... tdence ( 15 ? 1
20
16 Arkansa s ( I ~ ll
18
1~ Purdve ll14\
17
18 Or eq on ( 12 J l
8
19 l ndt an n St ( 16 11
5.
70 M t!i50Vr ( 11 31
4

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

USED CARS

13 OLDS CUnASS
S. CPE.
Green wtth v1 nyl roof
bucket seat s fadory atr

good f tres

.\ '2795
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'lll•ke Our Qual tty

Wav Of Do1ng Bu s1ness
GMAC FINANCING
99'2 ~342
Pomerov
Openmg Eventngs 'ttl6 00
Till p m Sat

If your tnsurance agent can't gtve you
"worry free" servtce, fire htm and hire
Mtck .
r

~

"let Mick Do It!"

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I

You may never have to worry about
insurance again.
1

DOWNING CHILDS G1§3
iNSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Mtddleport, o.

992-2342

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 25. 1977

STANDINGS.
East ern Conferl'nc£'
Atlantic D•vis ionP hilitctelphia

w

L Pet.
15 65 1

28

Boston

11 ?3

489

N Y KniCk$

20 13

465

Butta to

16 30

'M i lwauk C'e &lt;t l Autfa lo
GOlden St .,r Wash mq!on
Cleve land a1 ChicaQo
GB NY Nels at Dr rroi !
~os t on a ! lnd l"na
Nr w Orl eans atK an Cily
7
Port lan(l at Denver
8
Los Anqeles ar ~£&gt;a !lie
131:

J J8
795 151
Central D i vi si on
W l Pet . GB

NY N ets

13

25

HoustOO
Wasl1ing ton
San Antonio
N ew Orlean s
Atl anta

2.:1 19 558
24 19 5Sfl
23\22 .511 ? 1
'i'l '13 489 3'
17 31 J 54 10

19

W L

Pet .

31 13
15 19

n

568
478
45 7
409
286

25

Ch icago

18 /6

M it wo uk.ee

IJ

league

United Press International

North

35

Pa cific Division
W L. Pet.
Lo s An geles
79 15 659
P orlland
) 1 17 646
5JS

w I t pts. gf ga

Kalama zoo

16 ' 54 201 163
Flint
23 19 5 51 211 178
Saginaw 11 19 8 SO 197 181
Muskegon 19 21 7 45 183 191
25

GB

705

'24

21

International Hockey

568

Western Co nfe r e nce
Midw est D i~ision
Detroit
K;ansas Cit v
Ind iana

Rio Grande College built up
a commanding 51-23 halftime
advantage , then coasted to an
easy ~9 Mid-Ohio Confe rence basketball victory
over v)siling Ohio Dominican
al Lyne C~nt er Monday night.
The victory left Coach Art
Lanham's Redmen in second
place in the MOC standings
with a 5·1 record. Rio Grande

31

CIC"ve tand

Denver

Rio ·rips Panthers, 9

Wednesday 's Game s

NBA Stan din gs

Bv United Press tntPrnational

6
10
tl
lJ
19 1 ~

Por t Huron

10 13 4 411 168 178

South
w t t pis . gf ga

Columbus

Gold en St ate

2-1 20

25 22 .532

51

5

P hol"n ix
20 23 465
Monday ' s R es ult s
D enve r 127 Buffalo 10?
Tuesday 's Gam es

8

•

1 •

D etr oi! at Boston
C.h ic ago a ! N Y Kni cks
sea tt le ar Los Angeles
San Antonio at Phoen i x

RIO GRANDE - Coach
Diane Lewis' Redwomen ran
their season basketball
record to 6~ here Monday
night with an 82-liO victory
over glenville College (W.
Va.) women.
Five-foo t ten Denise

18 23 7 43 177 207
Monday 's Results
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
No games schedu led
Wednesday's Games
Kalamazoo at Fort Wa yne
Flint a t Dayton
Musk eg on at Columbus

•

New spirit
.
d
h
fiOun Sout
of border
·

.

.

By JOHN VIRTUE
speeches and fewer contacts
MEXICO CITY (UP! )
with the press. The vast press
Operating with a low profile, office which Ec heverr ia
, M~x ica n President Jose maintained has
been
Lopez Portillo is instilling a dismantled and the president
new confidence in the and his top advisers have
governmen t , shattered kept themselves aloof from
during the last 90 days under reporters.
fo rm er Pres ident Luis
This has been a distinct
Echeverria.
change from Echeverria's
The most tangible sign is style of preside ncy.
the recovery of the peso, Echeverria made numerous
which was floated Sept. I impromptu speeches and
after being worth eight U.S. sought out the press.
cents for 22 years. From a
One· of the factors which
low of 3.5 cents just _before ca used the peso to twnble in
Lopez
Portillo
was value in Novernber was a
inaugurated Dec. I, it-quickly spate of rumors that
jumped to five cents before Echeverria planned to deny
faltering slightly in the New Lopez Portillo the presidency
Year.
by remaining in office under
: . Lopez Portillo has won time a state of emergency.
to solve the most explosive
Despite assumptions that
issue facing his goverrunent: Echeverria would try to
land exp r opr ia tio ns. influence Lopez Porlillo, a
Peasants threatened massive close friend since student
seizures of private land after days, the former president
Echeverria had increased has dropped out of sight since
; their expectations by leaving office and has made
• expropriating 240,000 acres no public statements.
' as one of his last official acts.
The
validity
of
Echeverria ,s expropriation
• decree is now before the
; courts, while peasant leaders GIenn Fields is
have given Lopez Portillo
their wore! that they'll keep
their followers in check for
· the time being.
Airinan of year
He also won the support of
business, which had been
.
.th t
RAPID CITY, S. D. Ieary of E' chevema,
WI wo Special recognition in hi~ unit
actions. Shortly after taking at Ellsworth AFB, S. D., has
office, he met with business been arrorded to Airma n
' leaders to work out a pact for First Class Glenn D. Fields,
:: futur e investmenl in the so n of reti red Master
~ economy, hurt bythree yea rs Sergeant and Mrs. Glenn
·• of severe mfiJ!tion.
Fields of Mason W. Va.
r~
Then, the goverDqtent anM
t! n ced that the rrilntmt!m·......-:AI':"an Ftelds, a secunty
;f oun
specialist , was selected
,, wage would only go up 10 per Oulstanding Flrst Term
cent m 1977, a figure Airman of lhe Year. in
" buSinessmen thought could
..
,, he
.1 bsorhed without recog niti on of exemplary
,.
easi Y a
.
h
conduct and duty perform~
worsenmg Inf1atwn that as
H .
· .., t th
~ been running at an estimated ance. e Is as.stgnv o , e
rate of 30 per cent a year.
44t h
Secu nty.
Pohc,e
'
Lopez Portillo, a 56-year- Squadroq, .a part of the
' • old ·economic expert, has Strategic Air Command . The
i' done all of this with a amnan IS a 1974 graduate of
,: minimum of publicity, few Wahama Htgh School.
0

O

'

1

1:

•

upj,ed its season record to 12·
3.
The Panlhers dropped to J.
6 inside the conference and 511 overall.
•Three Redmen scored In
douqle figures. Gil Price and
Jimmy NIMJ. each netted 20
markers. Doh Gibson added
12. Noe snagged 15 of Rio's 57
rebound, . Price had 12

· raroms.
Mike Lang pared ihe
Panthers with 14 markers.
Ken Raucl, added 12 and Jim
SteRner II.
The Redrnen hit 43 of 82
fiel~ goal attempts for 52
percent. Rio was 13 or 24 at
the charity line for 54 percent . The Panthers were · a
cool22 of 72 from the field for

percent . OD was 26 of 38 at
the foul line for 65 percent.
The panthers picked off 27
rebounds.
Weather permitting , Rio
Grande will host alwaystough Urbana College at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in · L:yne
Center . Saturday, the · Redmen will play at Tiffin in a
conference outing, weather
permitting.
3()

Radcliff scored 15 points, had
the most assists, 4, and stole
the ball eight times, tops In
that department.
Only Margaret Hammond
with 16 scored more points.
Deb Seay and Terri Koster
had 15 and 14 respectively.

"

OHIO I)()~INIC~tiiJ), _ _11 ~F DB TP

PLAYER

• • ~0--- If ' ...
1-2
2
0
1-6 . 2-2 2 5
4-13 ,0· 4 · 2 3
1-9 1-2 0 4
3-1 0-0 2
4
, . 1-7
1-2
5
1

' .4.

' .1&gt;'2

Benson Fox

Massie
Ken Tumblison

Dave

Mike Nash

Jerry Kitt inger
Eric Fenner
t&lt;en Ra uc h

..

M ike Lang

•.

Paul Wil son

• I·

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))

TOlALS

'

2-l "

9-17

Jim Noe

challenger hopes to avoid the
congestion and bustle of this
histotiQ city's wa lerfront
next swruner.
Sweden plans to moor its
12-meter yacht Sverige at
Fort Wetherill in nearby
Jamestown because it offers
security and independence.

3&lt;'10.- *~:0. ~

3-ih

·91

J _:(

~

9-15
4-8 .
3-7
1-3

Gi l Price
Greg James
Mark Swain

Dale Royse
Dean Fitzpatrick
AI Robi nson
Dan Blse
Don Gibson

4-7

.2· 4
2·4.
6-6 '

George Vickroy
Dan Purcell

Steve Lee
TOTALS

.

1-3
1-4
1-1
· 43-82

Halftime score: Rio 51 OD 23.

2·4

2-3
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1-6

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11

'Dissent brewing
in easf Europe

14

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12 20

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name "Ballplayers of Yesterday, " and one of the club's
main activities is an annual
dinner.
This year's shindig at tbe
old and elegant Netherland
Hilton hotel in downtown
Cincinna ti attracted 900
persons who paid $12.50
apiece for a roast beef dinner
· 1
b with a big helping of baseball
BY HOWAR D A. TYNER
Intel ectuals reacted Y talk on the side.
The " Ballplayers of
. · MOS&lt;X&gt;W (UP!) - Dissent establishing a "Committee
Is bursting out all over the for Workers Defense" to Yesterday" decided to honor
Communist wo"rld.
t th
· the do k d
suppor ose m
c an
the
world
champion
In Poland, it is the Workers aid their families. The Cincinnati Reds at the dinner
Defen se CommItte e. committee issued statements and it seemed to he a wise
Czechoslovakia has its alleging police had beaten choice hecause apparently all
Charter-77 human rights and tortured workers to get 900 guests were ardent Reds
manlfeslo. East German confessions.
intellectuals rallied to
Mernhers of the much· fa~~orge Lee " Sparky"
support an exiled protest publicized committee have Anderson, the 42--year old,
singer and scores of been criticized by official whitehaired manager of the
tllo1111111ds lire seeking to newspapers and hara ssed by · Reds, and Robert L. "Call me
leave the country. In the police with detention and Bob" Howsam, the president
Soviet Union police are searches of their holl) es. of Cincinnati Reds, Inc., both
cracking down on vocal oppo- Several were pelted with eggs received standing ovations
nents of the system.
and manhandled recently when they carne to the
So far the tightly controlled when they attended a speaker's podiwn .
regimes In Ro'""nia and worker's trial.
But the most applause after
Bulgaria have not been affec.
But support has grown to a speech was for Karolyn.
ted . Nor has Hungary, with the point where Gierek is Hose, who pinch-hit for her
its high standard of living and faced -with a broad coalition husband Pete, away in Dallas
. relatively open society.
of disillusioned workers, addressing yet another
.But officials in · Moscow, intellectuals and militan t baseball dinner.
Prague, East Berlin and church leaders who presenl a
Karolyn likes to gab a lot, it
Warsaw - whose countries genuine opposition to party seems, especiaily on radio
comprise the traditionally policy . Gierek rnusl win them and television talk shows.
more turbulent northern tier . back without touching off
"I want my own TV
of European Communis! more strikes. Yet by statiqn," she said at the
states - have had their hands nego tia ting
with
an Ballplayers of Yesterday
full.
opposition - something not dinner . "I've also written a
The causes of dissenl usually
tolerated
in oook that you should buy
caMot he packaged together Communist states - he could when .it comes out.
neatly, norcanitbesaid thai be setting an unhe althy
"!go to all the Reds' home
dissident activities have been precedent for lhe rest of baseball games," she told the
cOOrdinated from country to Eastern Europe .
crowd. "You should come
country.
EAST GERMANY
and talk with me when you
In
Poland's
case,
Perhaps
the
most come to the games. I sit righf
economics lies at the root of surprising center of active behind home plate.
the problem. In East dissidence. The usually
"My husband's picture is in
Germany and Czechos- orderly and reliable East People ma gazine," she also
lovakla promises of greater Germans enjoy the highest said. "He's just wearing
freedom contained in the sUmdard of living in the shoes and socks and carrying
final document of the 1975 Communist world.
a baseball bat."
Helsinki securily conference
Yet an increasing number
She paused.
PI!! a rnalch tO simmering of East German citizens "Oh, and also wearing
discontent.
some put the figure ai!OO,OOO jockey shorts," she added.
. In the Soviet Union the since rn id-1~75 - have "The picture was. for an
police took llie Initiative...,. by applied to leave their advertisement for shorts.
tightening up on the dissident country, citing provisions in
"Women ask me if r mind
community .
•
the Helsinki final document my husband being seen like
Andrei D. Sakliarov 1Nobel that call for freer movement that. 1 say, 'Eat your hearl
Peace Pr iz e-winning of peoples and the reunion of out, girls."'
.
physicist, says the Kremlin families split by international
When Mrs . Rose left,
wants to tesl the resolve of frontiers.
master of ceremonies JO'l
the new U.S. administration
Young East Germans, mil· Nuxhall shook his head and
on the human ..rlghta issue.
lions of whom can keep up muttered, "That's Karolyn ."
''Aiithorlties in each country with trends in the West by
As the guests swigged fr.orn
have had iD tread lightly, picking
up television bottles of Hudepohl beer that
however, knowing .that their . broadcasts from neighboring had been chilling in
handling of dissent will come · We st Germany or West cardooard buckets of ice
in for close scrutiny next Berlin, also have beco~e placed on each table,
summer in Belgrade at lhe Increasingly testy about their oldtimer Gordy Coleman told
follow-lip conference to the g o v e r n rn e n t ' s
t i g h t some jokes about when he
Helsinki meeting.
restrictions on foreign Ira vel. was playing for the Reds and
A Slll!1lllllry of dissident
What
focused
lhe wasn't a very good hitler.
situations In the various discontent was the forced
"You 've heard of hitters
countries :
exile in November of Wolf going ().for-4 or ().for-5, " he
POLAND
Biermann, a dissident said, "Well , 1 once went ().for·
. Perhaps the moat serious political poet and folk singer. July . One season I had to lose
problem In th&amp; long run for Writers, artists and other 10 pounds , to hit my
Moscow and Its Conununist intellectuals protested the weight."
allies. Faced with growing .decision in what many
Sparky AnderSQn , who has
indebtedness both at horne considered the big gest a poem about smiling on his
and to the West, party First outpouring of public dissent office door at Riverfront
Secretary Edward Glerek in the country In more than 20 Stadium, also talked about
abruptly Introduced in June years.
The
publicity smiling in his speech.
lll8ASive i.ncreases on the surrounding the case as well
"When you see people not
prices ofbaslcfoodstuffs. The as the sharp government smiling, they're not only mad
volatile Poles reacted with reaction to the protesters at others, they 're mad at
strikes and demonstrations rebellious authors were themselves," said Sparky,
as they had in December, warned they would .be his rich crop of white hair
1970, when the goverrunent expelled from the party if gleaming like the snow
last tried to hike prices. In they did not recant - only outside.
both cases aut!Jorlties backed served to generate more
Before
becoming
a
down.
interest In the affair among manager, Sparky played for
'Then last August officials East
Germans
who 11 seasons, 10 of them ..\n th~
began to try the strikers. prev iously thought litlle minor leagues.
T ':'en t y promInent aoout dissent.
"My dream was . to be a

RB TP

.1

0-0

By RICK VAN SANT
group of old baseball players
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A . have a club with the lovely

3
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Q
27 "

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2-3
b.o

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8

6

4

4·6 3-4 0
0-1 0-0 0
• • .• 22-7 5 -~· , 27
RIOGRANDE i-~~:A FT-~ PF

Jim Stegner
Joe Ehbar

DETROIT (UPI) - Red
Wing General Manager Alex
Del'l!ecc hio Monday sent
leftwi"ller Mike Bioom to the
Rhode Island Reds of the
American Hockey League.
Fred WiUiams, Detroit's
firstround draft choice in the
last amateur dra ft, was
recalled to replace Bloom.

900 attend old ballplayers
shindig hi Queen City Monday

\

PLAYER

Redwomen wiD another AtNEwroRr.
R.r. 1uPn leasl one Amenca 's Cup

19 21 9 47 189 194
22 23 1 45 190 107
GB Day ton
T9tedo
20 22 5 45 181 203
Forf Wa yne

Sea til e

_5-;-111e Daily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Tuesday. Jan. :15, 1971

l
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0-0 0 0 2
13.-24 26 57 "

Michigan shades OSU five, .92-8!
By
United
Press
"I'm just happy to gel out
of here with a win, 11 said
Michigan coach Jotmny Orr
after his second-ranked
Wolverinesescapedwitlia9281Big Te~ conference victory
over Oh10 State Monday
night.
.
"Against Indi ana lh ey
(Ohio State) were very

impatient. Tonight they were
But a free throw by Phil out with 3:02 left, led Ohio
very patient' and they made Hubbard tied il at 81 and State with 21 points, while
some great passes towards reserve guard Dave Baxter, Ransey had 19. Ohio State is
the end," said Orr.
. who SC&lt;11"ed 16 points, put the now 2-4 in-the Big Ten and 7-8
· Ohio State, paced by the Wolverines ahead to stay 83- overall.
longrange shooting of 81 with a driving layup.
When the game got tight at
freshman guard Kelvin Michigan then pulled away to the end, Orr inserted Steve
Ransey, had an 8)-liO lead its 14th win in 15 games as Grote back into the lineup
with 2: 16 to play and had put they kept their conference and nole afterwards, ''Grote
a scare into the much bigger mark unblemished al 7-ll.
is a real cornpetitior. I like to
Wolves.
Terry Burris, who fouled have birn in there at the end

of a tough game.''
Phil Hubbard, 6-8 former
Ohio Class AAA player of the
year at Canton McKinley, got
in foul trouble early in the
second hall and sat out about
10 minutes.
"He is a strong reboundet
and we missed thaI;" said
Orr.
·
Ohio State coach Eldon

Hall's success story hard to believe

By GENE CADDES
UP! Spom Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)Tony Hall's success story is
1even hard for him to believe.
·&gt;"·Hall, a soft-spoken 22-yearold ex-Marine, has risen from
an unbeard of walk-on to a
starting forward on Eldon
Miller's first Ohio Sta te
baskelball team.
. One of 60 who tried out,
Hall, a native of New Jersey
who graduated from Ahrens
High &amp; hool in Louisville,
Ky., was the only walk-on to
make !lie grade.
Delayed in entering college

HARTFORD, Conn. (UP!)
- The New England Whalers
Monday sent defensernan
Doug Roberts to the Rhode
Island Reds of the America n
Hockey League.
Roberts has appeared in 42
games for the Whalers this
season with one goal and 17
assists for 18 points. He is
subject to inunediate recall,
· a Whalers spokesman said.

by "a personal conflict at

horne," Hall spurned several
scholarship offers and joined
the service. He spent most of
his time, however, as a
member of the "leatherneck "
basketball team which
traveled the country.
While at Cherry Poinl,
N.C., Hall met his wife, the
former Deborah McLean of
Cleveland, Ohio, and after his
discharge in July, she
persuaded him to enter Ohio
State.
·
He played some summer
ball in Colwnbus with Ohio
State captain Larry Bolden
and had a chance to talk to
Miller about trying out.
" He (Miller ) didn't
discourage me.'' said Hall, a
6-4, 184iJound forward with
great leaping ability and a
Shot as soft as his speech.
"They (the coaches) made it
sound like a challenge, which
l accepted."
It took him only six games
to crack into the starting
lineup and he has started
every game since.
"I was confident about my
playing ability," said Hall. "I
played against' some pretty

decimt people in the Marines. .
1 was. just worried whether I
could fit into his (Miller's ) ·
style of play ."
Belying his rather slender
build, Hall is an aggressive
player and credits the
Marines for a I least some of

athle te," said Miller, the coach, "but probably more as
former Western Michigan a person. As •long as he's
·here , he 'll be an Important
factor in our program."
SVAC
STANDINGS
Hall's statistics areth no\
ALL GAMES
TEAM
w L p OP overly Impressive. In, e I 3
Southern
8 o o34 437. games he's played, eight as a
Sym. Va lley
3 3 324 355 · starter, he is averaging 6.1
Ha nnan Trace 3 4 '29 472 pointsand5 rebounds. He had
Sou lhwes lern 3 5 '77 508 .
hi h · bolh (14
Kyger Creek
2 4' 1108 416 his season g m
. •
North Galli a
2 ' 370 425 points and 12 reoounda ) ill
Eas ter n
o 6 273 399 last Saturday's Buckeye win
·, SVAC ONLY
over Northwestern.
S
NoourtlhheGrnalt ·•a "25 o, ',l2'
His outstanding mark is_l8
, ·'1 8882 ' .
Sym . Valley
2 1 1a2 181 of 20 from the free throw line
Hannan Trace 2 I 241 350 for a fine 90 per cent.
Southwestern
I 3 229 242
Hall 's tip-in wi th two
Easlern
0
2
71
116
· ing in the
Kyger Cr.eek
o 3 112 134 seconds re~m
SVA( RESERVES
game gave OhiO State a 60-:iB
TEA M
w L P OP Big Ten victory over
Norlh Gallia
3 o 136 81 Wisconsin but he doesn 't
Southern
193 consider
'that his bigge'st
Sy m. Va lley
24 1I 258
110 131
.
Southwes tern
2 2 14&lt;1 170 thrill.
Kyger Creek
I 2 106 120
"My biggest thrill since
Easternl.
. o 2 61 100
coming here?" Hall repeated
Hanr:an
142 178
thequesti'on. "When
Th s Trace
eek •s0 4games
· 1 started
Tues~ay .:_' H·a nnan rra ~e a:t my first game /' he' quicKly
Kyge r Creek ; North Ga lli a at
replied.
Soulhern ; Symmes Valley at
Southwes tern and Federal
Hocking at Eas lern .
Fr iday - Southwestern at
Kyger Creek; Eastern at
North Ga llia.
sa turday - Southern at
Symmes Vall ey and Roc k Hill

that.
' 'You have to be aggressive
in the service," he said. " If
you're not, you just gel
gobbled up."
· Despite his con f.d
I ence, h.IS
rise to a starting spot is more
than he expected.
"I was surprised to move
up that fast,~' he said. "I
thought that if I worked hard
1 might he able to work up to
sixtfi or seventh man by the
middle oft~ season.
''But, its easier to get there
than keep it. When you're a
starter, they expect you not to
make mistakes. I just do
what they tell rne to do. That
works out real well."
One of Hall 's bigges t
boosters is Miller, who said
he had never seen an
unknown prospect contribute
as much as Hall.
"I'm impreSsed with him
as a person . and as an at Hannan

REUTER-BR.O GAN

Tr a ce .

"The Insurance Store"

Issei nets 32 in Denver win

1. Auto Insurance "

2. Ho me Ins ura nce

3 Mobile Homes
4. H.ea!fh lnsu.rance
S. Lit e Ins uranc e .

6. Boat Insurance

By JOHN J. SANKO
DENVER (UP! ) - Center
Dan Issei received a sta~ding
ovalion Monday night for
being selected to the National
Basketball Association's AllStar ga me - theh showed his
thanks on the baske tball
court.
The 6-9, 240--pound lsset
responded with a 32-polnt
performance and grabbed a
.season-high 18 rebounds to
lead Denver in a 127-102
victory ove r the Buffa lo
Braves.
"It felt awfully good," Issei
said of the ovation. "I have

them (the fans) to thank. I
guess some people in other
NBA cities didn't take the
voting too seriously."
The victory, in the '"only
game in the league Monday,
improved the Nuggets'
Midwest Division record to
31-13, including 23 victories
on their horne court against
one · defeat. The Braves
sliPPed to a 1&amp;-30 record and
now have lost 10 of their last
11 games.
Although the Nuggets led
throughout most of the game,
the .final score was their
largest margin . The Braves

trailed only by seven, 95-88,
with 9:47 remaining in the
game.
Guard Randy Smith scored
24 points for the Braves,
while John Gianelli, George
Johnson and Bird Averitt
each scored 16. Johnson, who
fouled out with 3:04 to play,
also led his team with 18
reP,unds.
.
Nuggets' Coach Larry
Brown said he was pleased
with tile victory, adding he
"didn't tllink we were going
to get beat with Smith and
Averitl shooting those long
jumpers.

Miller, said, "We played with
much more intensity and
unders!;!nding .. than we did
Saturday against Indiana,"
who handed the Bucks a 79-66
loss.
''We handled the ball, well
against ·their quickness and
pressure .i::!:cept for early In
the •game: Michigan!is a fine
basketball team, no question
aoout that. · But there Isn't ,
·murh difrerenre between ~
teams in this league."
:
"We're not far from being a •
pretty good basketball :
team," said Miller. "If we
don'l have confidence that we :
can play the game now , we 'II
never have it. We ran on a
team that runs pretty well.
"! think we can run any ,
tlme we •ran get tile. ball," :
Miller continued. "I'd like to . '
put that with a guy getting )8 ~
relxiunda a game.- When We :
get that big man we're going ~
to win a few mOre."
In other games Monday ''
night, Central State &lt;WhiPPed '
Wiscqnsin-Parkside . 84-72; ,
Rio Grande thumped Ohio •
Dominican 99-69; Wright ,.
State edged ·Robert Morris •
!Pa.) 8().76; and Point Park :
1Pa .) defeated Steubenville . :
•
87-81.
Ohio •. Confer~nce actjon '
highlight. toni&amp;Ws . seven· :
game schedule. Baldl"in- '
Wallace entertains Kenyon;
Marietta plays Capital at
Columbus; Muskingum hosts
Wittenberg ; and Ohio
Wesleyan plays at Otterbein.

7 . Mo1orcycles

"As for Dan (Issei), he's
· been playing super lately,"
Brown said. "I think making
the all-star team has had
something to do with it."
Buffalo Coach Tates Locke,
under fire with Braves' CO·
· owner Paul Snyder for his
team's losing record, said he
thought his team played well
for three quarters.
"Then we ra n out of gas,"
he said .."I thought right until
the end of the third quarter
we were pretty much still in
the game. I thoughl our guys
played well until then."

8. Jew,lrv and Oth er
vafuabtet
9. Business Package

, Policies

tO . Liabllltv Insurance

11 . Fitrm lnsyranc e

"If You Have. It, We Can Insure It."
PACKAGE POLICY - Put your auto, hdme, health
and l ife Insu rance into ONE policy. Save money and
have one premium _due date for aJI yovr insv.rance . .
Some Of Our pther Services:
Copy Service-Notary Ser.v ic:e-C.r Lusing
Se rvice
, d! .&lt;:1~ 1!..! ~.t J1'!·

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
" The lnsurar,ce Stone"

214 E. MAIN

Election would ·have been

I

PH. 992·5130 _

,.;..

,.

12 ~. 69'
LUNCH MEAT.. ..................................
. DINTY MOORE
24 !l:l:.89'
"BEEF STEW ................................ .......

r:

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3-DIAMOND CRUSHED• .SLICED OR CHUNK
PINEAPPLE ..........·.....................~~·..U~~- 49'
PETER PIPER
·
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t.
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DILL PICKLES ...............................~~.~~~ 79'

~

'•
t•
~

1:

Jan. 25 · Jan. 29

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monda Ythru Friday

9:00to7:00
Saturda y9to9
CLOSE D
SUNDAY

'
I

;

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i
f

_DA RY

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VALLEY BELL

·BUTTERMILK
Vz gallon carton
l

1¥: lb :Bo
COOKIES ................................... .~ ... :.....~. 7910
GOLDEN GRAIN MAcARONI &amp; CHEESE
FIRESIDE .

~ i gh"t ~eser ved to L 1m ft Quantities

I·

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PRINGLES ................................~1.~..~~~. 79'

PHE6E'S STORE

•'

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swung with 15,000 switch

..

SAVORY

.,

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DINNER .. :............................ 7~..w...3/11.00

FRESHLIKE CREAM 'STYLE

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_ ...

PRODUCE SPECIALS

YAMS
2 LB.

39¢
...

.LETTUCE

;~STRETCH YOURFOOD.DOLLAR$
n

HERE!

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FRENCH CITY

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TASTEE

Boiled
·Ham

"

BOLOGNA
2 LB. TRAY SLICED

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Beef liver
29~
SLICED
. 'LB.

FOR SOUP OR STEW

39~

BY STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!)- If
loWer than 15,000 peraons had
switched their votes In Ohio
anjj HawaU, Gerald Ford, not
Jtquny Carter, would have
•Inaugurated Jut Thurs·

•

BOltiNG

I

FRENCH CITY

1~rd

·

would have beaten
210-:1111 in electonl
• vd!es whlle losing the popular
• vlite by 1.7 million.
the 1976 election
'
1 backers of · a
uUQIIA! alillndment
:,.,. ·
fpr _direct popular
•
do!w of presidents are
ldnchin&amp; 1 new effort to
, .bollall :, the Electoral

carter

i

,

Cdlt~.

·

"kh 8afll,

!).Ind., tiMi

11101i1br, Nld, "I

~

:!trulthat the Congress will
a11t . favorably upon the
aibendrnint'tbil year."
'ibe anltindrnent would ll'O,' vide 101' tile direct electioo ,of
pruldenta
and
vice
pruidentl . II neither
•· OUdldatt nc:elwd 10 per
• t ollht vote, t!Jere would
' • be 1 lllllolr !~'tween, tile top
~ !tip llllilhllri.
.
·
Bayh, chairman of the
' S ~ nate conat!Lutlonal

..

' I

wnendmenis subcommittee :
has scheduled hearings
beginning Friday in hopes the ·
amendment could be in effect
for the 19Sl elections.
But the amendment
which has never cleared
Congress despite numerous
attempts - faces difficulties.
It must be passed by twothirds of the Senate and
House and ratified by three
fourths of the states. .
It faces strong opposition
from lawmakers who fear
that direct elections could rob
small states of their power,
and hence they would he
totally Ignored by candidates
during the campaign.
j The last attempt at change
wu made In 1970. 111e House
approved the amendment
339-70but a fillruster blocked
it in the Senate.
Three alternatives are
certain to be offered duril18
what could be a Se111te battle.
One would el)minate
electors but keep electoral
votes, eliminating the
poltlllbillty that a renegade
elector could change lhe
outcome of the election.
Another would divide a

'

state's electoral votes. Under
this plan , the state-wide
winner would get lhe two
votes and the wiMer in each
district would get Its vote.
The third would allocate
the state's' electoral votes in
direct proportion to lhe
popular vote in the states.

OPEN
MON. THRU SAT•.
9 AM TO 9 PM

OPEN

l(llljor leaguer and although l
played with the Philadelphia
Phillies in 1959, we really
weren 't in. the major
leagues," he decided. uwe
finished last in lhe National
League and we really didn't
have a major league team ,''
Over the past seven years,
Sparky has mana ged the
Reds to four National League
pennants and two world
championships, "but this is
the first year in my
hometown of Thousand oaks,
Calif., that people recognize
me when I walk around in my
jeans."
Sparky is a strict disciplinarian, forbiddin g hi s
pl ay~rs to grow beards
during the season. Sitting
next · to Sparky at the
Ballplayers of Yes terday
dinner was his ace relief
pitcher, Rawly Eastwick, ina
full beard.
"How · do you like my
heard '" Rawly asked the
crowd. But he glanced at
Sparky and said, "I don'l
think I'll have it in the spring ,
though.' '
Eastwick gave the most
serious speech of the night.
Or, as he put it , the
"heaviest" speech.
"I'm going to get a little bit
heavy with you now,t' he said .
"I read. a lot and I've been
read ing
lately
about
converting your dreams inlo
reali ty . That's what I did .
When Sparky firsl saw me he
said, 'That kid will never
pitch for me.' But my dream
was to pitch in the major
leagues. I locked it in my
mind and I made it happen.
" And " he added "it was
'
no surprise
to me '·tha ~ the
Reds won the World Series
!lie last two years. I had it
locked in my mind ."
Rawly paused .
"And I've got the Reds
locked in for 1977 ·too," he
added. "So don't worry."

SUNDAY9 AM TO 6 PM
QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY .,~!,· 1977

SUPERIORS BONELESS

. RUSSELL ENiiSTS
MASON, W. Va. - Randy
Russell, who has enlisted in
the U. S. Anny, is the son of
Josephine Rhoades. After
training he wlll be assigned to
Ft. Knox, Ky. as a tracked
vehicle mechanic.

BAKER FURNITURE'S

WHOLE

LB.
HALF

$139

LB.
QUARTER

$

LB.

149
BONELESS

HAM
SLICES
LB.

ESH MADE

HAM LOAVES......
PALMOLIVE

-DISH
22 oz.

LIQUID ."..........~~t~

••

PUFFS - WHITE OR ASSORTED

FACIAL
TISSUES ......

200$
cl.
pkgs.

LARGE·

TEMPLE
ORANGES
DOZEM

89¢

,APPLES

·gg¢

1
1
I
1

I
I

GRAHAM COOKIES
No. 105
79~
·
oz .

1
1

131,2

Coupon

.

Featuring the ¥e1J finest ·in home
fumishHlgs and major appliances

at low cost to you .
SEE US TODAY I

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

•

Pkg .

MAXWELL HOUSE

1

1219

I
:

I

FAB

SOAP POWDER
25
Gian~~iz~
sox 99~
Coupon
1977
.
.

Expires· Jan . 29,

No. 125

PRE-WASH LIOUID
~5·~;s~ize 69~·

CITY GATEWAY

·------

II
I
I

I

-----1

255

1

Coupon Expires Jan. 29, 1977

-----4- -------!:..W..!.~c.!.l.!~~~I'!..A! _______

PA~~~- K~:rRuP
1
..
I
Coupon !xpiresJan. 29 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

ROLLS
Coupon Expires Jan. 29,1977
TWIN CITY GATE WAY

I
HEI NZ
I PORK &amp; EANS
II .No.. 4 16 oz. Cans ~ 100

MAGIC .

Co upon Expires Jan. 29.1977

I.•:

II BOUNTY TOWELS 1I
I
2 JUMBO 99~
I

E~~:pires Jan .

I
I
I
I

t

____ .:._ ~-- -----_2~~~~Y_t&gt;~:;~~y-------1
.

3 14 oz. Cans 69 ~
1
Coupon
29, 1977
I----- TWIN CITY GATEWAY -------J..-----~~

2BAGS 29e

TWIN CIT YGATEWAY

AJAX CLEANSER

1
1

RED
RADISHES

I
I

EK:p ires Jan. l9, 1977

------r---·- --

Coupon EKp ires Jan . 29, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

FRESH &amp;CRISP

I

COUPON

10 oz. Jar

r-----

----.,

DELUXE

- Instant CoHee
I

4 $1

YOURBt/IJGET

r---

RED DELICIOUS

-----

CUCUMBERS
FOR

- - - - - - ""'GOOf) FOR YOU &amp;

31b.'
bag

LARGE
SLICING

FRZ:.BH. ..................... .

-

CLEARANCE SALE

$}49

HAM STEAKS .... ~~·..•

JANUARY I
.

$1 49

. BONELESS
EXTRA THICK

L___

'

•

1ti~"' ,

TAVERN
HAMS

Job categories
opened up in
West Virginia
CHARLES TON, W. Va. The West Virginia Civil
Service System i's accepting
applications for lhe followin g .
job cat egori es : Associa te
Wa rd en, Bioslatisti cian,
Certification Officer , Community Organizational &amp;
Pl an nin g Specialjst;
Director , Bureau of In dustrial Hygiene: Director,
Division of Maintenance &amp;
Equipm ent.
· Also, Director, Insurance
Licensing; ElectrQnic Data
Process ing Mana ger II,
Indust rial Development
Repre sentative III , ·In·
formation Representative IV,
Mana gemen t Analyst I,
Mana ger of Systems, Nursing
Educator, Personnel Officer
II , Rehabilitation Hou se
Supervis or , Research
Analyst &amp; . Examiner I, and
Volunteer Services Coor·
dinator.
No written examination is
required. Applications must
be postmarked not later than
Wednesday, February 9, 1977.
Application forms and
additional Information may
be obtained from any Em·
ploy"!ent Security office or
by calling the toll-free
Federa i·State Job In·
formation Number : 1-B00-&lt;&gt;42·
!1027 or lhe State Civil office in
Charleston: 348-7830.

•

,

NO DEAl£Rs PLEASE!

I

B.

c.

1

~~~su~~~.SHi~~Rs

I'

Coupon Expires Jan. 29, 191?
TWINCITYGATEWAY

I

I
I
I
1
J

I

I

1
I
I

------+-------:---1
CHEERIO' ' !
FCOFFEEC ' I
No. ss
10 oz. Bo •

49e

.

coupon Expires Jan.l9, 1917

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I
I
:

'469

No. 405
2 lb. Can
Coupon Expires Jan . 29, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·-----------------------------L_

JI

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Jan. 25, 1977

Minidresses return to fashion

r==~=~:~~G;;;;;~~i~;~~Ra;~~~~ - Public

=
·&lt;

fund drive-underway

B H1
dS 8
1
~
Apublic fund drive for Mrs. a severe ankle and leg injury Bayles, George Quillen, Mrs.
red belt and pale yellow silk
:;~
Y
t! en an
ue
Otte
~ Flora Bailey's medical ex· in a fall at her home on Dec. Lu1a M. Lynch, Mrs. Dorothy
top.
penscs has reached $302, Ml')l. 26, 1975. She was taken to the Evans, Mrs. Nancy Morris,
The general silhouette was
Sanford Thomas, 315 Broad· Holzer Medical Center and Jack Hawley, Mrs. Nan
narrow below with baggy
' - way St., Middleport, reporls. has been confined there Moore, Mrs. Mildred Hawley,
Today's Sear&lt;hers - Not Drop Outs
tops, cowl
necklin es, Dear Generation Rap :
Mrs. Thomas is heading the several tiJines over the past Ben Rife, Mrs. Bessie Ashley,
enonnous sle ves and otber
Where have aU the flower children gone? Today's "young drive for funds whl'"h
c
are to year. ·
.
,u•ze!Va
.,
n Cooney,
· Mrs. R. E..
top fullness. The collection and displaced" are a different breed. They may be broke and be used fot medical expenses
Mrs. Thomas has establish- Smith, Bernice M. Hawk, Mr.
from the cute pleated minis JObless,-but they 're not spaced out. They 're in there trying !
only.
ed an aecount for contribu· and Mrs. Harold Evans, the
with ruffled armholes ·to
Here's the story of Karol and Mike . They say they've met
She reports that from the lions at the Citizens National Rev. George Oiler, Dorothy
slinky long black ballgoWM many like them alon~ the way.
·
· ·
money she has received she Bank. Contributions .may be and Wlllie Davis, Lois
was so applauded that Cardin
Marned nght out of high school, they lived with Mike's has sent$100totheColwnbus sent to Mrs. Thomas at ber McF.:ihinny, R. G. Bailey,
came out for a bow.
folks a while, got odd jobs lhat finally dwindled away then Orthopedic and Appliance Co. liome address. The fund drive Nancy Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Desi gner Jean-Louis (ook their last $85 and boarded a bus headed south where a . on a brace and shoe which willendinFebruary.
Ed Evans, Eirna Holter,
Scherrer's coUe&lt;:tlon was not relative tllought he could get Mike a j~b. They arriv~ with $2 Mrs. Bailey needs in order to
Mrs. Thofll!lS has received Edith Sisson and Mr. and;.
as dramatic as Cardin but between them - and tbe relative had moved !
walk again. The balance of contributions from Mrs. Mrs. John Hawkins, Colum·
wearable by all ages and
They slept in a wooded area whose tall grass offered some the cost of the brace and shoe Margaret Martin, Mrs. Violet bus.
sizes. Here is where fashion protection ; stretched their $2 over three days ·and finally went wi)l be taken care of by
writers would shop if they to ~ Salvation Army kitchen.
'
Medicare. Mrs. Baily Bailey
"I earned a little as a dishwasher," says Karol, "We found .
" non·sleeves" that turned could afford It.
will go to the Holzer Medical
Scherrer stuck to rni&lt;k:alf an old mattress, and got coats at a thrill store for almost Center in February for final
into flowing panels or looked
hemlines for pleated full nothing, so it wasn 't that bad. "
like long gloves.
When they beard fruit-pickers were needed in Florida fittings for the brace and
Another theme was an skirts with blazer jackets in
shoe.
ultrawide band slightly below navy and white. Pleated they hitchhiked farther south, but the jobs were gone Mor~
The balance of all funds
·
the waist on dresses or suit chiffon evening dresses in red · sleeping in open fields.
contributed
will be used on
"We. didn 't want to take charity, but we were hungry.
or lime green with matching
jackets.
the
hospital
bill which is ex·
Pure Cardin was a series of floating jackets looked Really kind people at a Christian mission fed us and said there peeled to be several thousand
dresses cut miraculously on perfect for Mrs. Valery might be a cle•l's job at the Goodwill store." '
,Yes, Mike got the j'!b, ~t $1.50 an hour, and Karol thinks dollars. Mrs. Bailey received
the bias to fall beautifully Giscard d'Estaing, wife of the
from a v-neckllne. The French president who is a ~e. II soon start work as a ma1d at a motel. They will enroll at a
JUruor college "to )earn trades" lis soon as they get squared
audience also applauded a Scherrer client.
away.
.
wide, divided kneelength
The ·style parade went into
They've
made
arrangements
to wateh a used car lot at
. skirt, like wide shorts. in stiff its second day today with
night
in
return
for
sleeping
in
an
old
van there.
pumpkin orange linen with a showings scheduled by the
Discouraged'-Not at all. These kids are greatful for the
houses of Courreges, . help that's been given. They think Florida is "super; hnve
Special services will be
Emanuel Ung"aro , Lavin, called the1r parents and told them "We're doing fine."
held Friday evening at the
Jean Patou; Chane! and Ted
'Middleport
United
And they aren't even 19 yet!
Lapidus.
Why am I wtiting this? Because Karol and Mike aren't .&gt;entecostal Church with the
The prestigious house of unique. They're like many good young people who need breaks ·Rev. May as speaker.
Dior threw five above-knee and w11l offer value received if hired. Too often prospective
The Mr. May is
1968
smock evening dressea into employers see them as stragglers from the 196tl dope crowd graduate of American Bible ti ·
the · show plus a couple of and tell them to get lost.
e and ls presently assistant
·
Turkish bloomer outfits of . Please, everyone, give them a chance because a lot are pastor of a United
draped silk jersey that ended JUst VICtlffis of unemplojrnent. - MISSION WORKER
Pentecostal Church in Texas.
at
the
knee.
He
will be going to Indonesia
'MARIETTA - A weekend
The movie " Weaving,"
Dear
Mission
Worker:
soon
to labor in the mission
Printed afternoon crepes in &gt;
of spinning and weaving will demonstrating t~'ch niq ues
fields
there.
Thanks
for
your
fine
letter.
May
it
influence
employers
be featured Jan. 2lJ and 30 at and methods, and "Weaver." mix-match prints just barely
The
public is iRvited to at·
wben
those
other
Karols
and
Mikes
apply
for
work.
HELEN
Campus Martius Museum, Showing the use of unusual covered the knee, but then
Paris
often
shows
shorter
AND
SUE
tend
tbe
service as well as the
Second and Wa~hington in materials to create unique skirts for summer wear than
regular
World Missionary
+++
Marietta.
patterns and textures, will be ' for winter.
Rap :
Service
which
·will be held
The planned activities will first shown at 11 a.m.
Pierre Cardin displayed a
"Sitting On It" whose teacher hassled her about the Wedn esday evening in
include demonstrations of Saturday. The films will then raft of· mm·I. dresses WI' th half
· on her~
way pornograph'tc patch she wore
·eans : you two preparation for the Frillay
spinning and weaving by Mr. be shown aIt·ern a t'Ive 1Y porn
' ted hems but some Par1's should have come down ha rd on the teacher !
t a student · evening service.
and Mrs. Ancil B. Cutlip, t hroug hout the afternoons fashion. crl'tlcs branded those
. fl uence how he o~ she is graded. When the
. .
wears should n't m
showings of the motion begmmng at 1':30 p.m.
outf1"ts
"for
young gtrl sewed , "Ce nsored bY Mr . J ." over the offending words,
Th
· ·
h
pictures "Weaving"_ and
e
sptnnmg
mate
·
is
nymphettes"
and
l·g·
nored Mr
SAYRE PROMOTED
hed I d I
. . .J . .actu aIIYwon! so whYIS he houn ding her? He sounds
~ ·weaver ," and even a
sc u e or 2 p.m. on them in favor of Cardin's vtndiCIIve and not r1ghl for the teaching profession.
Airman
Oliver E. Sayre
sp innirig match , once a Saturday · Any amateur longer and more classic
I had th
k"nd
"f tr bl · hi h h 1
1
1
Jr.,
whose
mother is Mrs.
e same
ou e m g sc oo some years
popular activity in Colonial spinners are invited to bring models.
_ago, only my ostracism by a couple of teachers came because I Charles P. Bailey of Rt. 1,
America as an expression of their own wheels and
Dior blazer jackets went decided to get married and stay in school. (II wasn't DONE Port.land, has' been promoted
opposition to the British materials to compete in the with trousers or s!tirts ending back th~n!) I hnd to work twice as hard for my grades, and yo~ to airman first class. He is a
taxation of imported wool match .
almost at mid-calf, indicating wouldn t believe the gulf I took. But I stood up to it and won pavements maintenance"
yams.
·
.All ~pecial events during Paris really does not care my diploma.
'
specialist at &amp;colt AFB, Ill.
The exhibits and craft this weekend will be included about decreeing one hemline ·
You told her to shed the "unimportant patch" so she could Sayre is a .1970 graduate of
demonstrations of spinning in the. normal Campus any more. ·
gel dec_ent grades in history. r say she should make a test case Southern High School. His
and weaving _will open at 10 Martius admission of $1 for
The general look at Dior out of 11. - G.T.F.
wife, Connie, is the daughter
a.m. on Saturday and 1 p.m. adults and children 12 and was soft and supple with lots
of
Chester E. Wells of Rt. 1,
on Sunday. They will remain under will be admitted free . of fullness on top draping Dear G.:
long Bottom.
open till 5 p.m. each af· with their parents.
over the waistline.
We agree with rou on principle - the teacher, according to
temoon.
SOl,
IS a moralistic stuffed shirt.
·
Billowing, waistle ss
.
But
we
still
say
an
all-&lt;Jut
c~nfrontation
takes
more proof
evening dresses could hide a
lot. The most smashing was a than SO! has, and why nsk "gomg down in history" when a
skintight jumpsuit of printed simple rip job would solve the problem?
A test cause that threalens an educator's job should
chiffon worn under a flowing
concern
something more vital than seat-&lt;Jf·lhe-pants
transparent long gown of the
pornography.
- HELEN
same· color.
The waistline was much
more marked at the
STARTING WEDNESDAY 10 A.M. AT AI! STORES
collection of Philippe Venet.
Frozen foods, correctly
Should com mercially A two-piece white wool crepe
prepared, are great, but canned foods freeze and even dress with a pleated skirt
A IIIOT OF SAVINGS/
JACQUARD
when food freezes by accident bulge, they are still con· sported a wide, draped belt of
or as a result of too cold sidered safe to use provided brilliant red leather.
temperatures in storage one is certain that the bulged
A long red crepe evening
FU_ll .BED SIZI
areas, there can be problems. can is a result of freezing gown bad a wide inset belt
4 COLOflS
Some of the foods which expansion and not of act'ual finnly cinching the waist.
WE RECORDERS TOO
\
122.99 VALUE
may cause problems are · food spoilage. If in doubt, it is Venet also showed a white
Not
a big group, bur
By
Polly
Cramer
home canned foods and foods always wise to throw the food organdy evening dress with a
-bargains
nowl
stored in glass jars. If out! Commercially' canned stiff two-tiered skirt, . long
Panasonic and Emerson
Handwork of all sorts is en- pinching one on each end of
brands .
.adequate head space has not foods in which the can is ballooning sleeves, double joying a great revival and the two pieces to be sewn
been left in the jar, as the leaking should definitely be middy collar and wide black each worruin seems to have a together and placing a 'few
. End of Month Savings- Get Your Share!
food freezes it expands and thrown ouL_
sash pulling in that favorite type - knitting, others in between to ease the
can cause the seal to break or
Foods whiclr-have been waistline.
crochet, needlepoint, crewel · fullness 1did a better job than
the glass container to crack · frozen and thawed may taste
Sunray,
knife
and work and so on. Many have. with pjns that often slipped
or break. If the vacuum is and look different from the accordion pleats are rippling discovered little tricks that ou1.
broken but the container is same foods which have not aU over Paris. As Jean Louis make the job at hand easier
DEAR POLLY- 1 love to
5 DAY SAI.II
cool class rooms.
still intact, the food can he . been frozen . The texture and Scherrer's program virtually or more professional looking. embroider, but my thread us'Sizes to 14. Save
refrigerated and used irn· quality of the food will not be sighed, " There's nothing
monev , dress heT
DEAR POLLY - Before ed to get so tangled. Now I
.
.
mediately upon thawing. If as good , ,especially with more feminine than chiffon, you start to knit with two wind each color into a small
warm . ·
•
VAlUES ·ro '3.99
the glass cracks or breaks it fleshy fruits. The nutritive tiny pleats, thin waists, high- balls of wool, run the ends ball and put each of these into
is best. to dispose of the f.;.d value will remain about the heeled sandals, pastel through paper straws to pre- an empty pill bottle. Ahole i.s
Ctnmic POit, plnti~
pot\, toam ptll, glut
as it is nearly impossible to same unless freezing and shades, fluffy hair sprinkled vent tangles as you work.
punched in the plastic lid so r
poh with rol)ts, chlint
PRICE
assure that glass particles thawing has occurred seve~al with flowers, large sunhats,
or 'llrious nanurs .
DEAR POLLY - When can pull out the length needEntire tlock on u lt are·not contained in the food. tunes. Fleshy foods hke frmts parasols, ruffles.n
knitting it is often necessary ed.
, ..
need IPictl
and tomatoes should be
to
join
a
new
ball
of
yarn
in
DEAR
POLLy
To
keep
:· ~~-.et~ .,. n:omtbb •.l!Ll .cmrn" combined
With
other
IRONING BOARD
the rniddie of a row. To make the various colors of thread
ingredients and cooked or
a neat job, unravel an inch on or wool to be used in doinc
baked,. (or example, a fruit
each end of the pieces to be neediepoint or crewel work
sauce, jam or cobbler.
AND .
AlHI.l
joined.· Moisten both with separated, plate the various
Special care should be used
forefinger and roll the ends colors between pages in . a
REGUlAR '10.99
COVER
in thawing food unexpectedly
S.Sgt. Kenneth H. Hoffman together in the palm of your magazine. Put in one ·color,
61" and 84" lengths
frozen. It is recommended has been here visiting his hand. The result is a firm skip a few pages and put In
SET
that they .be thawed slowly. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry joining with no unsightly knot another and so on. Let the
HUY'f
Wlithl ,
v
..
,
••"
m•do.
TUESDAY
Rapid thawing may damage Hoffman, Locust St., Mid· to mar your knitting. Of ends hang out so colors are
Fits
Uonl1 or uenic
Slandard
·
dtMgns.
Not
11
MEIGS County Chapter, the containers.
Boards
.dleport, his brother, Frank course, the same can be used easily spotted and removed
1hown tht~
PR
Ohio University Karate Club
Thawing food in the Hoffman, and his ·brother-in- when crocheting.
dfaw to c:lost.
'
when needed.
. starting a new beginning refrigerator is the preferred law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
DEAR POLLY - When
DEAR POLLY - I had my
·umon Scented
. FOAM AilED
class, 8 p.m. Tuesday at method of thawing, however, E.:ugene Hunter.
. mending a knitted garme!ll, husband take an old
26 Gallon
Meigs Junior High, Mid· il the seal Is not broken food
Sgt. Hoffman recently place the torn part over a hair bathroom tissue holder and
.TRASH WS
dleport. Everyone is welcome ca n be thawed at room graduated from the U. S. brush with the bristles up. screw the bracket into a
to the free beginning class. temperature or if time is of Marine Non-Commissioned They will hold the material wooden block. I put niy ball of
011
PILLOws·
ANNUAL INSPECTION, essence, products could be Officers' Training School, and prevent the yam from crochet thread on this and it
thawed under running cold sixth in a class of 200 al stretching as you mend.
TAl!
unrolls easily as I work it. It
Full Size
SIIAI.I.IDT
' Pomeroy Chapter 80 • R.A,M., water. Never.use hot water.
Printed
Coven
Quantico,
Va.
He
will
no~
at·
DEAR
POLLY
.:
I
used
to
is
as
simple
to
put
on
as
a
roll
KITatEN
CM
· 7' 30 Tuesday, Pomeroy
It is best to use the tbawed
CANNON IRR.
· tend school at Paris Island pin together the P.ieces of a of tissue and can be put
Masonic Temple. John T.
TRASH BAGS
' Jarvis, district deputy grand food as soon as possible. N. C. for two months. He i~ sweater I had knitted before wherever it is handy.
• high priest of the 12th district, Shouid you have a quantity of currently stationed in ~wing them together. By DEAR POLLY-! never knit
. McArthur, will be the in· goods frozen, you might Washington, D. C. Sgt. Hoff· chance I picked up some or purlthe first stitch of a row
TOWELS
; spectlng officer . Dinner consider keeping them frozen man IS a 1970 graduate of metal pinch hair clips that but julit slip it off and on to the
: reservations are to be made by placing them in a freezer Meigs HighSchool .
were close by. I found that by other needle.
• with Clarence J . Struble, until ready to use.
Morning
Products sud! as pickles,
' Pomeroy.
,
fruits .and tomatoes will be the potatoes to a warmer
1rrldesc1nt
MASON F"RNITURE
Bjlue, limeor Gold
, MORGAN
CENTER soft and should be served place for a week or more
MY IRR'S..
Gospel Mission rally , • with Ice crystals still present before using again . The
Fill
out
your
WASH ClOtHS
collection •• great
: Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. The in the food . Be aware that the original flavor should return.
STORE HOURS
..vings. Eec:h piece
church is located on Vinton.: food will be a totally different If your potatoes have actually ·
Sollcls·Chtck-Sirlpes
boxed.
·, Eno Road. Rev. David Scott product but still safe and frozen, you may end up
OFF will be the speaker. Pastor!" nutritious to eat. You just throwing them out. They are
Mon., TUes., Wed .• Sat.4:30tll5:00
REG.
PRICE
Theron Durham , Public might di,scover or develop a not harmful to eat but the
THURSDAY TIL
12
KOON
I
.
invited.
.
taste for these new foods '
quality is so poor, the texture
'· WEDNESDAY
Have the potatoes you've is soft and mushy, tbat few
Dur Sbt IIIJ
I'LIAIANT
,lloMEROY • Middleport prepared lately had a dif· people will eat them.
Bt Coale!
· Lions Club; Wednesday noon, ferent flavor? If the tern·
Should you have more
IIIII D.ur
: at the Meigs Inn.
perature where they are specific questions about
•MAJON
.......
NGrmll
. OHIO VALL~Y Com· stored has dropped below 4Q problerns arising as a result
· mandery 24, Kmghts Ter11· degrees F. il is likely that the of the extended cold, the
.Wt're Dainl Out
.SILVII 111001
plar, stated conclave Wed· starch contained in them has' Coop~rative Extension
S..ID .
Herman (;rate Meson. W.Va.
773-5592
'LAlA
nesday, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy begun to change to sugar. To Service can provide ad·
Masonic Temple.
reverse this process, mov• rtitif)nal information .
By AUNE MOSBY
PARIS (UPI)- Knees long
banished in Paris made a
comeback Monday in the
.!!Pring-summer high fashion
collection of designer Pierre
Cardin.
Minidresses, in cottons for
day and even black satin for
evening, swamped lhe
nmway at the show for
International buyers and
press. "Let's hope Cardin
meaM this only for resort
wear,'' munnured some of
the fasllion writers.
But even city dresses and
suits ended at the top of 'the
knee or just below. Only for
city evenings did Cardin go
back to longer lengths which
many women are just gettiJig
used to.
II the reaction of the
fashion writers Is any
indication, women are not
ready to start chopping their
skirts short just yet.
The Cardin show again
displayed the designer 's ex·
traordinary talent for so
many ideas that one gives up
trying to describe them. One

theme was a slanted hemline
dropping to a point on one
side, or both sides or to
several
points . Some
minidress hemlines ended at
mid.IJjp on one side,and at the
ankle on the other.
Cardin did odd wonders
with sleeves. For strapless
long dresses he added open
panels attached to the upper
arm with a hand. Other
sleeves bared the shoulders
or turned into floppy loose
bands on the backs of evening
goWM. Then there were capelike sleeves, batwing sleeves
ending at the hip, and other

7- Tbe Dailv Sentin&lt;ol, Middleport-Pome;oy, 0 .. Tuesdsy, Jan. 25, 1977

TOM TIE~f:
yOU

••

••••••RUN
TOOlJR

JANUARY

WOVEN BEDSPREADS

• ALL RADIOS
•8 TRACK PLAYERS

$}QOO

GIRLS' PANT TOPS

~:e~ft ~~~~vef~r t~~~

$}88

;f)'

Social
Calendar

Hoffman here
visiting family

PAD

.HANGING PlANTER POTS
AND TABLE PlANTERS

lf2

FIBERGLAS DRAPES

88!_,

$ 88

4

BED

BATH

:""So.. so~

lQFpR 77e

CARNIVAL GLASSWARE

40%

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM ·

MASON FURNITURE

•liT.

man

ed to fill outthe second.
sions for fines remain.
Rickenbacker had no
But the intent of the law
little known and seldo~ quarrel with the first form.
debated; still stands. CitizeM He said it was a fair extension
do not have the right to refuse of the constitutional in·
census information. If the sistence that Americans
form asked how many toilets regularly counted, so that
one has, one had damn well · s~ats in the House of
better count them. It takes Representatives may be
time, some of it seems silly, apportioned according to
but the alternative to com- population. A conservative,
' pliance is a rebuke from a Rickenbacker feels the
judge.
founders were wise In this as
This is somehow unjust. in other matters.
But the founders made no
And yel the only test of the
law in recent memory ended provisions (or counting
in failure. Defendant was one toilets, Rickenbacker in·
William Rlckenbacker the sisted. He ·said the second
writer son of the Iege~dary fonn, the longer and more
World War I pilot. It was 1960 meddlesome of the pair, was
and Rickenbacker was an invasion of his privacy. He
among the select Americans believed he was on ground
who received not one, but provided by the Fourth
two, census forms. He refus· Amendment (the right of peo-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Tax
"Insulation material would
incentives should he given include such items as storm
homeowners who install .doqrs and windows, siding
insulation to save fuel, state and asbestos sheeting."
Auditor Thomas Ferguson
He said a third suggestion
said Monday.
· that should be considered by
"What I am proposing is the Ohio General Assembly Is
that No. I, an income tax one to gi~e the Ohio·Board of
deduction equal to the cost of Building Standards authority
installing building insulation to require installation of
be allowed on federal and adequate insulation material
state income tax payments in new structures, including
and No. 2, a prohibition be one, two and three family
imposed against counties dwellings.
assessing ·homeowners lor
"! believe the Ohio legislathe value added to their ture should· call on Congress
property through installation to move swiftly in the area of
of fu el conserving insulating fuel conserVing ·measure's,
materials," Ferguson said. including my suggested
income
tax
federal
deduction," he said. "While I
it could take some
Lyons to enlist as realize
tiline for Congress to act, It
should not take the Ohio
legislature more than 30 days
airnum June .6
to do it's part."
Randall Lyons, son of Mr.
Ferguson said he believed
and Mrs. Charles R. Lyons of the legislature could speedily
Route I, Shade, has· enlisted enact measw:es to allow for
In the U. S. Air Force's the deduction benefit on state
Delayed En)istment income taxes and the prohibi·
Program. Randy, a senior lion against the increase in
attending M~igs High School, · home
value
through
will enlist 1!\ the Regular Air installation of insulation.
Force June 6 and upon
Ferguson
said
the
gr~duatlon-from the' six-week legiSlature should also give
basic tt.a lning course, is consideration to a program to
scheduled to be trained in the allow · for · Immediate
mechanical aptitude area. installation
of
home
He will be earning credits insulation among low Income
toward a Career Education families.
Certificate through the
"This could take the fonn
Community College of the Air of low-interest, long-term
Force while attending basic loans, Si1Jlllar to student
and other•Air Force t~chnical loans," said Ferguson , "Or,
training schools.
perhaps,
the
Ohio

to be demonstrated

Knitting needn 't be
too wild and wooly

CP.RSuS

Tax break urged
-~ for insulators

a

•

SUPER
MAR

.

'

Spinning, weaving

· Polly's Pointers

.

Can't S~y no to the

By Tom Tiede
WASIDNGTON - In 1970
when Congress author:
ized the first United
States ceMus, it also assumed the enumerators would
have collection problems.
Citizens in the ·young naUon
were not easily parted witll
personal and private in·
. formation. So Congress
decreed censlllj coop&lt;;ration
on pain of criminal penalty.
The mandating law has not
been used much over the
years. The Census Bureau
believes there were only four
cases in the courts following
the 1970 count. And too, the
law is not as severe
anymore; last year Congress
revoked that part of the
statute dealing with irn·
prisonment, and only provi·

Services are
slated Friday

Problems result from
accidentalfood freezing

1

Development Finance
Commi~on approach could
be uaed.
"II is geared to make loans
to locate and expand
businesSes in Ohio through
loaM secured by . property
liens," he said. " Why
shouldn 'I !)orne ins~latlon
loaM be made to low income
homeowners and secured by
second morlages?
"The tax write-&lt;Jffs are not
new,"· he said. "The ·oil
comapnies get them for the
purpose of exploring for oil,
for ~xample. Why not give
them to ·homeowners wbo
want to help out in this
emergency by putting llfOper
insulation in their homes and,
thereby, create a permanent
fuel conservation measure?''

Ahourezk
•

not
·
•
runnmg

•

pie to be secure in their per·
sons, houses, papers and ef·
feels).
Rickenbacker used $7,000
of his own money to defend
himself. He says the cost
could easily have been many
times that. In the end he was
· found guilty of violating
federal law, fined $100, given
60 days probation, and lee'
lured by the judge concern·
ing the responsibilities of all
AmericanS and especially
those who are educated.
Today Rickenba cker
remembers that the final ad·
monishment was the most
ironic moment of his trial. It
was because he was
educated, and because he
was responsible that he
refused to cooperate fully
with the census. " I'm for
liberty," he says, adding
that if he gets the longer census fonn in 1980 he'll ignore it

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10
SUNDAY
10 TO 10

'"

. NO WASTE

MINUTE
STEAK

again.

Undou~tedly
many
Americans agree with the
. Rickenbacker view. Millions
have refused to cooperate
with some census questions
in ihe past, and there is some
early suggestion the numbers
may grow in 1980, Recently,
as example, enumerators
held a test census in Travis
County, Texas, and nearly 30
per cent of the residents
refused to be questioned. The
same thing has happened in a
test at Camden, N.J .
Not only were many of the
test citizens unenthusiastic
about counting their toilets,
they were infuriated when
told that their cooperation
was mandatory. Far from being cowed, hundreds of
citizens in Travis County instead complained noisily to ·
Congress; one enraged fellow
ran an enumerator off his
property with a shoveL
Is this a preview of 1980•
Census officials will say only
that they are looking closely
at test results. Meanwhile,
other government data
seekers are also coming afoul
of the new mood ; at !be in·
sistence of one angry plain·
til!, a court has recently i'ul·
ed that bureaucratic safety
inspectors must now have
• warrants to do their duties.

99~

LB.

PICNIC
HAMS

HAMS ..........................~~~
FRESH &amp; LEAN

BEEF
5MORE
LB. OR ·
LB.

ALL MEAT

BACON
ENDS

GROUND

69"'
'I'

LB.

WIENERS

49¢

79~

. LB.

DAIRY SPECIALS

IS

Attontey
will go
to jail

WASIDNGTON (UP!) Sen. James Abourezk, D.S.
Dak., announced Mnday ·he
would not seek re-election to
the Senate in 1976. Abourezk,
who has been in the Senate
CLEVELAND (UP!) since 1972, said in an an· Cleveland attorney Leonard
nouilcement made here and
· in South Dakota: "I came Saltzer has become the first
person to be given a pr!§on
into politics with the idea that sentence in the multi-million
I had a contribution to make. dollar State Workmen 's ComI never had the idea that I pensation fraud scheme
should perpetuate myself in case .
office.
Saltzer was given an 8 to 40-.
"! ~ealize that It has year
prison
sent~nce
becornenormalprocedurefor Monday, aU but six months of
~ .
tbose successfully elected to it suspended. But Cuyahoga
office to run tenn after term. County Common Pleas Judge
The temptation Is great, and loyd 0. Brown also ordered
few are able to resist it. But Saltzer to surrender aU his
I've never believed that I am financial holdings, including
By JOHN PRYOR
. state director was limited to a Indispensable.
a $90,000 suburban home, to ..
NEW YORK (UPI) - One $300,000 commitment and
"While I consider It the repay the state and to
of five defendants accuSed of that a commitment of the size public duty and responsibility Immediately give up his
fraud, supported by three alleged in the trial would of every citizen to .work for license to practice law.
other witnesses, testified. · have to come from the the benefit of others within
Saltzer pleaded guilty last
Monday that he did not forge national FHA administrator. pur society," he said, .~'I have NQvember to eight counts of
a $15' million federal
The letter concerned a another duty -a duty which I theft and fraud in the scheme
financing committment on contract for Slirling Homex have neglected - and that- involving phofty workmen's
behalf of the Stirling Homex to provide 800 units .of low-- duty is to my family.
compensation claims.
Corp.
·
cost housing for Gulf Coast
"I have had; to my sorrow, submitted through flctltloUs
Rubel · PjliiUps, a lawyer · victims of hurricane Camille to watch my children grow up companies. In all, 90 Greater
from Jackson, Miss., who in August, 1969. Originally It from a dlstaJICl!. I have seen Clevelanders were indicted.
was twice defeated for wllli valued at $100 million. my wife and my children
"I have known you
governor!of Miasissippi, did
The government also endure; in silence, while my personally lot a good nwnber
legal work for large modular contested Phillips' previoWi work has kept me from of years and I have heard you
housing firm that went testimony that had never · fulfilling my responsibilities lecture at bar association
bankrupt in 1972.
done any wqrk involving the .to my family."
meetings," Brown told
f'l'o,se_cutlon witnesS W.T. Securities and Exchange
Saltzer.
·
Richardson, a fonner acting Commission. Assistant U.S. Hoffman arrives
"You have used what was
director of the Fanner's · Attorney . W.
Cullen
given to you - your Ucense to
Home Administration in MacDonald produced a
practice, as a matter of
,Mississippi which funded the number of bills from Phillips in island state
privilege - and you have
'committnlent, testified ..to the Dixie National Life
abused it.
U. S. Air Force Senior
'earlier that PhiiUps admitted · Ins~l!llce Co. for biB legal
"Those who practice law
Airman
Ranald L. Hoffman, now suffer for your misdeeds
that be bad his secretary services.
trace Hicbardson's name on
These bills made severBI son of Mr. and :Mrs. Perry F. and we cannot hold our heads
the commilment letter.
references to such items as . Hoffman of tl63 iAicust st., very high."
Catherine Cusack of "research opinion for SEC ... Middleport, has arrived for
Nahant, Mass., a handwriting filed proxy statement for d~ty at Hickam AFB, Haw aU.
' ~WMIIIMIMIIMIII••
,expert, Sl(id the signature , SEC." Under redirect A cook with a unit of the · !ij':i:j
; was either Ricbardon's "or a examination,Phlllipssaldhla Pacific·Air Forces, Hoffman
• forgery done by a very sk!Ued work with lhe SEC was previously served at Fair·
forger,"· but there was no minimal, that the major child AFB, Wash. He Is 1 19'14
evidence It ha~ been traced. portion of the work referred graduate of Meigs High
Wlln~ Bol!.bY Jll$0beM of to was done by another law School.
: Corinth, Miss., a real es!a\e finn In Jackson.
.'
• tro~r, told tjii! lf!ljf In ,1-(,S. '.'."' Phillips and his co-defenTRIP ENJOYED
District Court -~ he ~Xed dants, including the brothers
Jane
A. Bobo, Rutland, hasnJESDAY
; @Jlf
Phlll\l"~in ~ormlh, David and William Stirling,
returned
fr0111
a
trip
to
Col·
MIDDLEPORT
Lodge 363,
! Mi8ll., the, ~rdao!l ' cofounders of the firm, are
oradoSprings,
Colo.
where
F.
and
A.M.,
special
meeting,
• sRearahe'JfSJI•Wing with accused of groll8ly inflating
she
visited
Sgt.
and
Mrs.
Tuesday
night,
7:30
p.m.
~ the defend_.; ~Jackaon; " earnings figures during the
Gary
R.
Haynes,
Peterson
Master
mason
degree
to
be
:MLI!I., 1.0 dlsciiiNi coverilllo~ two years Stirling Homex Air Force Base. Sgt. Haynes conferred.
: s.a. Wise,- former sold $40-miiUon of stock to the is presently completing his
TRURSDAY
: MIB8ialppl director for FHA;. public.
eighth
year
in.
the
USAF.
BIG
BEND
Service Unit Of
• lllld- he founi alumber ol \ . They
deceived
the
Jane
visited
numerous
placea
,
Girl
Scouts
will have a
~ discrepancies
In ,1 JIIe. ; CQIIIpany auditors and the
of
interest
Including
Vail
Ski
training
session
Thursday
' eommitromt,~ch, ~IJII," " hlvestlnfl
public,
the
Resort
when!
she
spent
a
from
10
a.m.
to
2
p.m.
at the
he was not aware of whin1he gqvernment
said,
by
weekend,
and
Colorado's
'
Middleport
Firemen's
, was witb .FHA.
· : ' repgtllng u uaeta the large
•• Wlae, now an o!lclal of~:, ,~1 of land and modules to Capitol, Denver, She return- lounge. The training will be
• u.S. AgtlCUltlll'l! Department · ' ihe~ corporations that hicked ed home by way of Continen· for .brownie and junior lroop
leaders and assistants. ·
·
in Mfallllln&gt;
. I, noted that the the funds to pay.
· · tal and Piedmont Airlines.

Fraud denied
in .Homex suit

Social
Calendar

w
. ith

*

VALLEY BELL

240Z.

COTTAGE CHEESE ................. ~ ...:~~!9.~.
BROUGHTON'S

BROUGHTON'S

2%

HOMO

MILK $139
PLASTIC GALlON

,·

59

BUCKEYE

POTATO CHIPS ...............................~!~.~~~
PURINA

LOW. PRICE

SALAD
DRESSING
QUART

SCOT LAD

TENDER
VITTLES

MIRACLE WHIP

ICE
MILK

REG. 39' ·

4

BOXES

ggc

$}

IVORY LIQUID

1

/z GALLON

69~

22 oz. 69~
BOTILE

RC
COLA
8 PAK
16 OZ. BOffiES

$}09 '

99~

COKE
8-16 OZ. BOffiES
99~

8-16 oz.
BOTILES
99~

DIET
RITE ·

SPRITE

8 PAK
16 OZ. BOTJUS

$}29

•

..

4 QUARTS

TAB

All WEEK

_,.r

'

'·

8-16 OZ. BOTILES

99~

MR. PIBBS

e

�- ·,

''

'

......•.................................
'

.

.

NEXT ONE WILL BE
FOR t&lt;ENO
VEGETABLE SOUP.

'.

.

·· ~ ·

Television log for easy viewing

DICK TRAcY

"

••

Bribes

in

the offic e ot fhe Village

Clerk. Second Street , Vi lla ge
ol Pomeroy , Oh io . until "

o ' clock noon on February 7,

1977 ,

•
cost. m

f ollo wing

For tl1e purchase ot a 1917

•-any POPE
By &amp;AinU
UPI Busbteu Writer

- Com-

panies that tolerate bribery
g· ·ng
andkk • kb k

s are lVl
away 20 times as much as
they realize
•
HJt takes $20 Werth of extra
lC

the

d i esel eng1ne dri ven rubber
ti red Industrial trll!ctor loader
backhoe complete with th e
manufacturer ' s
standard

billions
NEWYORK(UPI)
.

tor

proposal.

ac

salestopayloceverydollara
salesman crives to a dishonest
.,...
purchasing agent," said
management
consultant
Jules Kr91l, a former
pujstant district attorney in
~k.

New Y.....

Simllarlf, the company
that pays higher rrices for
r-

while · its
~.rchasing
~·tlves
ket
rex~w
poe
kickbacks has to get $20 in
additional orders to offset
every dollar in higber Prices
it is paying ~ppliers , Kroll
'd
sal ·
At this rate, it took $140
billlctn worth of sales to pay

merchandise

lorthe$7bUlloninbrlbesand

kickbacks the U.S. Chamber

of Commerc~ says was
siphooed out of domestic
•- last year. The
business a .wue
ratiO is based 00 an average
t of 1 f
profit of 5~rcen saes or
most industries.
This figure doesn't include
·ons of
the lnmdreds Of milli
dollars paid by American
firms in bribeS and improper
contributions abroad that
stirred up su~h a politica1
rnets' nest in the past two
ho
years. This ratio is harder. to

accessor ies . All components
and a ccessories shall be new .
unused . serv·iced and ready
·tor operation upon delivery . A
dealer 's representative ~na il
prov ide instruct ion In the
proper operation and main ·
tenance a t the time .of
delivery . One set of parts .
ma in tenance &amp;nd opera to r's
manuals shall te provided .
The dealer &amp;nO manuta c.
turer shall provide a one year
war ra nt y Including parts and
labor tor the tra (tor and at ta chments s uppli ed . Ttie
warrcwt period shall not limit
· operating hours .
1 . Further spec:ititations
will be .on file with the Vil lage
Cler k, Seco(ld . St reet , Vil lage
of Pomecov . Oh;o
i . For sa le by the Village of
P omeroy its 1969 Ford
Backhoe with a fron t end
loader and a 1959 wayne
Stree t· sweeper .
1 . The 'bidder may state either
what he will give for the 1969
Ford Backhoe wi th front end
loader and 1959 Street
sweeper or what amount he
will a llow as a trade In tor the
1977
lnQu s tr ial
Tractor
d esc r ibed above .
Each bidder may bid .tor
either the purch a se of the 1969
Fo rd Backhoe with front end
load er and 1959 Wayne Street
Sweeper or f.,r th e sale 10 the
Village of P&lt;lmeroy of a 1977
Indu st rial Tra ctor described
a bove or bClth Each bid must
conta in I he full name of every
per son or company interested
in the same , and the bid must
be ac companied by a check or
bond ;n 1he os um of .S10il'OO to
th e satis fa cti on of the Village
Council as a guaran ty that if
. th e bid is accepted . contract
w il l be ente red into and its
performan
ce .proper l y
secured
.
These checks or bonds will
be· rewrned at once to all
except the succ essfl~l bidder .
His checks or bond will be held
unti l lhe contract or bid Is
properly
by rved
him. to
The r ige){ecuted
h! is rese
reiec1 any a nd all bids :
Jane Walton , Clerk
VILLAGE o~ POMERO'!'

s

1975 CHE~ .• , oN

S4SOO
292 Engine, 15,000 lb .• 2 speed. rear axle. lOB" cab to
axle, clean cab. like new. B2Sx20 llres.
1976 AMC HORN.ET
$3795
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, power steering, deluxe ·
equipment, whitewall tires. luggage rack, dark green
finish. less than 9.000 miles , showroom clean .

cents ptr word one
Insertion .
Minimum Charge Sl.OO .
14 cents per word three
conncut lve Insertions .
26 ctnts r,er wore1 six
consecutive nsertrons .
25 Per Ctnt Discount on
pa id ads and aels paid
wi tnln 10 days .

1971 CHEVROLET 'h TON

S2.00

wln!m~m ,

Eec
cents .

for

50

aouu•on••

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

wordj

wu1

a j

BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge
per Advert isement .
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a .m. to 5:00 p.m.
Dally, 8:30 a .m. to 12 :00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992 -2156.

!slits.

. DIRECT, A
_J.RIC,reeSAJ..t
_ ES.
2• ..,. .. ,'~
Pt.llltiSinf
Ph. 675·3469
9:30·S:o0DaiiY
TIIIB :OOO Fridl s
1...-.l.lli~~~~~:l.l

1

A

Grap0-M PERSO~'s

speech

STRIPPING, REPAIRING

&amp;

furni~hed

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park, Rt.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concrete patios .
sidewalks, runners ana off
street parking . Phone 992 ·7479.
FURNISHED two bedroom opt .,
adults only . No pets . Middleport . Phone 992-3874:
ONE BEDROOM Apts. at VIllAGE
MANOR in Middleport far $104
montkly plus elec. or $130 including elec. LOWER RATES lor
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
to ~hopping on Third ond Mill
Sis. in Mi.ddleport. Brand new
kigh quolity op~rtments. s~
tlw manager ot Apt . 28 or call
992·7721. An Equal Housing
epportuilily . .
2 aEOROOM trailer, real nice.
Phone 992-3324. adUlts only .
AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts. 1
bedrm . apartment, SH&gt;O per
montk , 2 bedroom opts . $133
per montk . Equal Opportunity
Hou~ing . P.hone 992·3
;::2.:.:7.:.:
3·--,--HOUSE , 5 ROOMS and bath in
Rac ine area . Phone 992·5858.
2 bedroom unfurnis hed aport ·
rnent In Middleport. Phone
992·3129 or 992-5434 ,
HOUSE FOR rent, unfurnished , 2
bedroom ho~se , 1J;, botk, living room, din ing room , kitchen
and utilities . Completely
corpeter-L cherry wood, pon·
nelling downsfairs, elec'. heot,
must see to appreciate . PI-lone
(30&lt;) B83·3235.
NICE COMPlETELY furnished 1
~edroom oportment with large
pat io, porck overlooking river.
Adults only. Phone 992-2606.
.

AllOO Kerr 51.
Pomeroy , 0 .

Racine, Ohio
ASSORTED RUBBER

BACK

~89,

Ioneer.
i

•

StatiO~.

·cONT·CT·· IH.L .I!'LIILDI

( I

'

.

' I

'''

West

'·1

~

Sales

'

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Paul Soloway elected to
treat his fifth diamond as a
16th point and opened one
nolrump . Bobby Goldman
wasted no time laking him to
game and West opened lhe
queen of clubs.

""
LITTI.E ORP~N ANNIE

.

••
. ..'

Pomeroy, Ohio

'• '

m-7034
Hrs.I,OOa.m.
To Dusk

,1 ,,I'

Tt1E

t'

WATER

l'ic JUSi

~~~~~~~~ME
· THE Ml~E SO

..

HEARD ALL

.."..

OLIVER!
HE "LL ll£ PROUD

POOR

ABOUT YOU

0' YOU -··

1'1!0'-\ Tt1E

WHEREiER
HE 19 HOW

FAST THROUGH
THAT TU~~EL· ·

'

H -771 mo.

1"---..

.

INDIANS

played high, Paul would have
NOT' CASHED ducked in dummy and been .
IN YET!
sure of four club tricks. As it
HE'S AlltfEI was, Paul held the trick with
~--his nine and noted that East
, had a real problem discarding
WHY HE'S

TEAfORD
... . -

Vtrgtt e.. :.r., t&lt;ealfor
· 216 E. So&lt;011d Stree1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992·3325
TU PPEAS PLAINS
Large 7 room house In good
location on Rt . 7, 11!2 acr~
·level. Just $12,000.
· 12 YRS. OLD - 3 bedroom
trome home . Bath, · c!ty
water, nat . gas furnace &amp;
level lot . • Near Rock
Springs. $22,000.
3 YRS . OLD Brick
veneer 3 bedroom all elec.
home on lhe river with .c
lots. Copper plumbing &amp; 2
car garage. Now 135,000.
GALLIA-MEIGS LINE Ooler 2 acres. 3 bedroom
frame home, balh , Gallla
water, and garage. S22.000.
RUTLAND - 5 room
residence, 2 bedrooms,
bath, gas heat on corner
lot. $11 ,000.

-

'

1

BORN LOSER

vI, ~H

F,I.U..S OVeR THIO

~-=----:::::::;;;;:;:;:;::::---!

1.-1~

3
NJ'W LISTING bedrooms ,
bath ,
oil
furnace , full basement,
garage and 2 acres on
school bus and mall Rts .
T.P.
water.
Chesler
Township. 125,000.
WE HAVE A CALENDAR
FOR YOU. DROP IN AND
PICK IT UP.
.

'

1976 TRAVEL Troller,; 17'1t ft. fully :
contained. Will sell with 550 lb. •
Ret•• hitch ond iacks •
r.asonable . Pkone 992-9981. ' ' :

.........

auv, sELL oR~ :ruon

:, '

HIS O.UN

llP ~IS PVTT ...IF Hf'

MIIJD.

SIIJ&lt;S IT, H~'l~ reFO:-'T
.JW,K NILK~,I.l.IS FOR HIS
1\URO '/MSU::R'S~
C:::HAMPIOt.lS~IP lt..l M
I)..ST fOJR ~BARS!

/-:._-1-~

-t;,..,
. .,.,

D

'

GASOLINE ALLEY

lost m~ wallet

Your papa is ver4
sm.art! l quess

he can do

wee~! . Ask

him whe!re._ .----1
it is!

·

almos-t

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Kind of
I Fashionable
wolfhound
4 Midriff
5 Separates
11 Monk parrot
support
12 "Scarface"
5 Bearing
13 Arab
wound
chieftain
marks
14 Stimulate
6 Soiree
15 Dieter's
7 Military
laboo
address
11 W. Indies
8 Derring-do
export
9 Guaranteed
18 Wine
10 Wore the
19 Anagram·
appear·
of ear
ance of
20 "The Thin
16 God of love
21 Native of
Man " slar
21 Matured
Yerevan
22 Marsh and 22 Coastal
region of
Busch
24 Well-known
India
Scott
25 Forgotten
26 Comedian
De Luise
27 Danube
tributary .
28 Classes;
kinds
31 Equal
footing
32 Pouring
34 Took up
quarters
36 Andes
Indian
37 Type of

-~!Z~~~~~~::5j~~~~ 38 t~e

~~~~~~~~vr;F~~~~~,-I(Jr~~~~~~~~~~~;:~~~\7,~~~-,
mport
IT \'.OULD BE AN AWFLJL
5o TI-lEY LEAVES H IM ROT lHERE,
10 Not a bit

[

"'(f51E OF MONEY TO DESTI&lt;di A BILLION
DOLLAR 131J ILDIN6 ME'RSLY 1V 6EI M~
-SO.B'.- L I' L ABNrn

= our_
1·

AND IN FKDI.J[ Ti-lEY PLJT UP A
STATUE l.At3ELED • TH £;:

FIERCEST MAN ON EARlH ".

.,.,..IJ,I/(.,1/.J,._._...,.,

liot-t--+--1

DOWN

2 Reslde~ces
--1.-.L..~-;7,!;to~ur~o;rd~in:.ary~w~or:ds~.
, DAILY CRYI'TOI!UOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLRAAXR
Is LONGFEI. LOW
One letter simpl:y stands for another. In this sample A is

. CRYPTOQUOTES
LJ

KRGRHJW

RPFR

.
PTK

"
WINNIE
• I HATE A:;i'JNGANYON£
FOR MOIJEY ... WT rr&amp;

NOT FOR ME/ffi fOR
w.INAZ!

K R .G R H J W
LORT
RTER

PUMHMLMRF

K R G R ll J W
MT

LOR

CF'R

PTK

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

LORFR

PUMHMLMRF . - VOJKP
HPEOPV
Yesterday' s Cryptoquole; Ali ERROR GRACEFULLY
ACKNOWLEDGED IS A VICTORY WON. - C. L. GASCOIGNE
C) 1977 Kina Feature• SYJ'!dlute, Inc.

SWAP ·SHOP
., ---

LEETLE DAB OF
BLACK THREAD
AN' A NEEDLE ?

I BORRV A

•

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.AI.-:.,•••·•••tiil··.,,.~~~"''*'*••..,.lll.!ll!l!!••••·o~,..•···-"·-·· ··.•,.,.

SHORE

UH-- NOW

1../E CAN,

THAT '-IE
MENTION

ELVINEY-·

_~

WHEELED AJ:?.OAI&lt;D
t:&gt;HIP.

RQERHH·
JY

~ Ll

E J T·

BARNEY

': •

·92 ·in the coUOtu

I SAUME

used lor the three L's, X for the 1wo O's, etc. Single tellers,
apostrophes, the length and formati on of- the words are all 1. _::~~:;.:..:;:.-f.,..~hints. Each day the code l&lt;'ttcrs are diflcn•nt.
~ I
~

LOWEE"Zif·- CAN

92.1 FM

t
V:

$,,,..,. ,.. c.,..,,,,,.. ··•·r· •·-·..

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ytMPO ~ -

1}1}~1.\hffe})}
~THATSCRAMBLEDWOROGAME
~
~ !ll(l/.!)~~
® .
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
unscramble these tour Jumbles,
onele"er to each squa&lt;e, 1o torm .L'-'""

I Garbed

LISRM ....'IO·THJ
... -

'7 PM ....

WEDNESDAY , JANUARY 26, 1977
6:00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
6:20--Not for Women On ly 13.
6' 3!f-AG·USA 4; News 6; Sunr ise Semester 8;
Christopher Closeup 10.
6 ' &lt;5-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning , West VIrg inia 13.
6' 55-Good Morning . Trl State 13.
7 oo-Today 3,4, IS; Good Morning , America 6, 13; CBS
News 8: Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7 .30--Schoo lies 10.
8:00-Howdy Doody 6; Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Sl. 33 .
8:3!f-Big Val ley 6.
A Colorado reader wants to
9,0!f-A .M. 3; Phi l Donahue 4.13,15; Andy Girffllh 8;
know why we occasionally
Mike Douglas 10.
print hands from the early
9·30--Cross-Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentrat ion 8.
days or contract" in this
1O,O!f-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Mike Douglas 13.
column.
10:30--Hol lywood Squares 3,4, 15.
The answer is that we try to
11,oo-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday&lt;; Double Dare
interest all sorts of readers
8,10; Morning with O.J . 13; Elec. Co . 20.
and quite a lew have asked us
11'3o-Shool for the Stars 3,4,15 ; Happy Days 6,13;
to show what happened in lhe
Love of Life 8,1 0; Sesame ST . 20,33 .
_
1"55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
early days of contract. ·
12:00-News 3,6, 10; Dan Ho 13; Bob Braun 4 ; Name
(For a copy of JACOBY
That Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win
12:3o-Lovers
&amp; , Friends .3. 15; Ryan's Hope 6,13;
at Br id ge ," clo thts
Search for Tomorrow 8,10 .
·
newspaper, P. 0 . BoK 489,
1:llO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; Young &amp; Ihe
Radio Crfy Station, New Yor~.
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
N. Y. 10019)
1:3o-Oays of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; Family Feud 6,13; As
The Wor ld Tunrns 8, 10.
2'1l0-$20,000 Pyramid 6,1 3.
2:3G--Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to LiVe 6, 13; Guiding
Lighl B. 10.
3:0o--AnotherWorld3,4,1S; Allin The Family8,10; On
Aging 20.
3:15-General Hospital 6,13.
3,3()-Malch Game B.lO; Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4:0o-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8: Sesame St.
20,33; Movie " Handle with Care" 10; Call 11
Macaroni 13.
U !f-My Three Sons J; Afterschool Spec ial 6, 13;
. Partridge Family 4;, 8; Fllnts1ones 15.
s,o!f-B ig Valley 3; My Three Sons; ; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Slar Trek ·IS .
Yesterday's Answer
5:3o-Adam -12 4; New s 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co .
20,33; Adam.J2 13 .
23 Riding·
28 Part of
6' 0fl-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 : ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
position
Alexander' s 6,3!f-NBC News3,&lt;, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10 ; Vgelable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
title
24 aeyloh
You 33.
29
One
of
trading
7
,o!f-Trulh
or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth&lt;; Bowling for
"The
vessel
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News tO; To Tell
Beatles"
lhe Trulh 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival
25 GaUery·
30 -Elhow
Kit 20; Big Green Magaz ine 33 ,
.
showing
· 33 Measure
7,
3!f-College
Basketball
3;;
$100,000
Name
Thai
Tune
(2 wds.)
35 Prefix for
&lt;; Malch Game PM 6; 125,000 Pyram id B; MacNeil ·
meter
Lehrer Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break lhe Bank
13; Wild Kingdom 15.
B' llO-B ionlc Woman 6.13; CPO Sharkey 4.15; Gun·
smoke 8; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8:3Q--McLean Stevenson 4;15; Jacksons 10.
9:oo-Baretta 6,13 ; Sirota's Court 4, 15; Movie " Helter
Skelter" 8,10; Great Performanances 33 ; Sound.
slage 20.
9: 3!f-We Think You Should Know 3; The Pracllce ;, 15
10 O!f-NBC Reports 3,4, 15; Rools 6113.
10 ' 3!f-Monlage 20; Book Beal 33.
11 :llO-News 3,4,6,B, 10,13, 15; MacNeii .Lehrer Report
33 ; Monty Python 's Flying Circus 20 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,.4,15; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
" Zig .Zag" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :()()-Movie ''The Seven Hill s of Rome " 10; Janak133 .
33.
12,&lt;!f-Myslery of the Week 6,13.
•1 :OQ--Tomorrow 3,4.
2' l!f-News 13.

Expectant
39 One kind

'

DOZER , TRENCHER, LOWBOY, •
DUMP TRUCKS. BILL PULLINS,. ::
PHONE 992·2•78 , DAY OR" '
NIGHT.
.'I
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL' Sowing I
Machine~ cleaned , oiled aM....,.
adju•ted, $5.98 . Sewing
Center , Mid~leporl , Ohio. · w

~~IS Af'lW.t.tb£~D lf-1

"ALLI'R'1 AS THORI.\A.PPI..t:

~~~~~--------~-·
EXCAVATING.
BACKHOES , :

BUILDING LOT - · Rock
Springs area, water and
, electricity ava ilable.
$5,000.

'I

~

"

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com- ~·
plefe Service. Phone 9.49.2487
:
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio , Crit~ .;.
Bradford .
.... ~,·
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - " '•
Sweepers , toasters, irons , all "-- ~
small appliances . Lawn mower,
ne)lt to State Highway Garog4ii 1 1 '
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985· ...
3825.
•,
REM,ODHING, Plumbing, keoting
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex ·
perience. Phone 992-2409 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ~s8r ·
vice , oil makes. 992-228-4. The
Fobrlc Sho·p . · Pomeroy .
Aufhorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
EXCAVATING, do:r.er , loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
ond lo-boys f9r hire : will haul
fill dirt, to ioil, limestone and
gra.,.el. Call Sob or Roger Jef·
fers, day phone 9'92-7089. ;
night phone 992·3525 Or m- ~ I
5232.
EXCAVATING, do:r.er, backhoe
Ond ditcher . Ckorles R. Hatfield , Bock Hoe Service, ~ ­
Rutland, Qhio . Phone 742·2008. 1
SEPTIC Systems installed by
licensed installer. Skepard
Controctor~ . Phone 742-2409.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sonlfotion, 992-3'954.
• :
WILL do roofing, construction, ' '
plumbing and httating . No iob '
too Iorge or too small. Phone
.,
742 ·23•B.
CARPENTER ,' -flooring , ceiling,
pan~tling , Phone 992·2759.
MpBILE Home Repair , Elec.,
plumbing and h~toling , Phone
992-585B .
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC, New
T.V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic
Service coli, $5. 95. Color, B &amp; W
antenna tystems stereos, etc . •
572 South Third, Middleport.
Phone 9'92·6306. Corry in and
save money.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex ·
cavoting, septic systems ,
dozer, bockhoe , dump truck ,
limellone~ gro11el,
blocktop
:;;l):f:j ~t. 1&lt;3. Pho.nt 1 (61~ ~ :

Paul won with lhe king and

r• T L B
ted back the nine whereupon
•·
0 RPR AR A I( I( 111:-R Y DR A V L I C LIFT
Westmadetheunusualplayof
r--""'\7"___'1!
r-----.~--- ducking completely . Had he
L

...."'··

HOMESITES lor sole , 1 acre and
up . Middleport, near Rutland.
Coii992·7&lt;B l. ·
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 botks .
all elec ., 1 ocre , Middleport ,
close fo Rut lond. Phone 9927481 ,
SMALL farm for sole, 10% down ,
ov--ner fin.onced . Monroe Coun ty , 'W . Vo. Phon'e (JO.I) 772 ·
3102or (304) n2·3227. ·_ _
-.-=c=.:=.c:..:.::..=::.:..:__
COUNTRY' farmland with setlud,ed woods. water and good ac cess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
$1 ,000 down, call (30-4) 7723102or (304)772·3227 .
Commercial property approx·. 17
acres , level land, located at
Tuppers Ploins on Ohio, Route
7. Phone (614) 667-6304 .
3 bedrooms, I1/l baths, large living room , dining room and kitchen1 fully carpeted . Phone
992·3129, or m.c·S4
:.c3&lt;
=.- - -

Soutb
1 N. T.

3 N. T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead '- Q •

'I

~~-

We handle only the but In
.monuloctured hou•lng.
Double wldos &amp; modular
' homes by Skyline &amp; Fu.qua·
Homes Inc.
1100-E. Mlln 51.

North East

Pass

~

KingsbuiJ Home

[6141 985-4t55
Chester, Ohio
t0-17·1 mo (Pdl

:2~~.';! .....

\

''

ALLEYOOP

Rl!edsville, o . Pit . 371-6250

PHOTOGRAPHY

~~o;!t'fnn:. p~~~~~9e.s~t;d•

pOlft1111J

"

RATES

KEN GROVER

~2=n=d~A~v•~·=·M~;=dd~l=opo~r~t.==~

.,rwl

••

~

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

a

Go&lt;id

RraN\IIIDI

.P HOlOGRAPHY

61 1 9 3290

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
R dl 0 ShaCk Deal·' -LIP

$

PARTS - lABOR
GUARANTEED

PROFESSIONAL

MeiNE
CARPET SHOP

-=

WEST
EAST
•A 6 1
• ' J9S2
VJ I0 71
VA9 32
+ Kl
+10 765
.QJ 106 '
. 3
SOUTH (0 1
• K 83
v KS
tAQ9 8 3
• K 94
Both' vulnerable

'

;::::::::::::~:~~:1:·~~~----_-_-:::~·-·~2_3~·-l~m~o~.-~~~
·~

-=====::::.!..:.::!C:"--

-~;,.the auc~tt«s

Transmission Service

the deuce of spades .
Now Paul led a spade to
dummy 's' queen, returned lhe
jack of diamonds ~nd watched
it lose to West's king .
West led back lhe jack of
hearts . Paul played low from
dummy, East played the trey
and Paul was in wiLh tlie king.
He had four tricks in. dummy's ace of clubs was the fiflh
and he needed four diamonds
to bring home his contract.
It appeared to Paul that
East had been deaiL a 4-4-4-1
distribuhon Hence lhe odds
favored finding him with the
guarded 10 of diamonds.
He entered dummy with the
ace or clubs , led Lhe diamond ,
finessed his nine and made
three notrump to win the
board for his team .

25

NORTH
• Q 10 7
"Q 8 6
• J2
. A8752

1

-----

~

A~tomatic

Fittancit&amp; Allillltlo

WIRDOIIS _
IWfiiRUM
SIOI&amp;smm
GUmiiS-AIIIIIR6$

Free Prizes.
Phone 992·2156.

~
.

lnsuillion Semces

lARRIJe.~~DER

1-17-1 mo.

'-·,.

SWAIN'S

IEI'W.INT

Syraa5e Area.

QWJJJJ&amp;

r..,f
~__..~~-..-""'"
- ..
- ...-iii ':::
r------~--, ;::

.w1~1DOOIS

Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL
614·991-2798

Soloway plays tough 3NT

rUtz.%174
~:;,;;,;.;,;.

-inw-Unics

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted In

bloc'ka;nd~=~t,

1

l

NOTICE! ! .!

I

CAPTAIN EASY
MoKEE"fl WHEReABOUT,; ARE 5TICL.
A 1.\Y!HERY ON THE DAY AFTeR HIS
DISAPPEARAJoJCE.. .
'
VI'AAT A50UT
THIS .PHONE CACL.
HEGOn

SMITH NILSON ::
•
MOTORS INC. .....

...,..,.....-..

5.43&lt; .

°

prints,

J ..

IN MEMORY of John Proffitt wno
pouedowoyJon . 24 , 1974. '
CARPETING
A precious one frQm us nos gone,
A VOICe we loved is still.
'6.95
LOST · 2 BLUETICK PUPS ond I old
A place is vacant in our home ,
female
bluetiek
.
Lost
between
.Square
Yard Installed
Whichnevercanbefilled.
Brodbury and Rutland . Reword ,
Sadly missed by kis wife,
oa¥1ci
·ParSOns,-Owner
Phone 992·789•.
brother~ . children and grand949-2BI4
children
.
LOST
. CLASS ring lost Sot . night ,
_ _.;_;c..:..::__ _ _ _ __
1-17 -1 mo.
boy 's ring . Lost between
Wilkesville and Pomeroy with
initols O.R.S. · ' 1977 year.
Reword . Phone992·3141.
ECONOLINE HOME
NOW accepling piano studenfs, LOST · MALE long haired grey cat
iNSULATION. INC .
(l) 25. l tc
beginners, infermediote~ . adwearing red collar which
1815 Washington Blv~ .
vanced students . Call 992onswe'rs to tke nome of "MufBelpre. Phone 1614) 423·
~~
2210
fi n.." Lost seen lincoln Terrace·
7564 day. or 992 ·6039
.r -\\:)ll,
BODY Shop, 26 Rail rood
Buflernut Ave. oreo, Pomeroy .
evenings.
·Krollsaystheproblemisso
St. , M;ddleport would like to
Call 992·6066 or 992-2672.
Blown in fiberglass wa lis
ccmplicated that, for many
~
remind customers tkot De£. 31
Rewa rd ,
and aHits. 20 Pet. Savints
ccmpanies, it can be solved
is the last day to take odvantage of th~t point jobs · otl
on VInyl and Steel Sidings.
on1y b Y th e serv Ices oI
•Bernice Bede Osol
over in 1 color, SIOO, 2 tone
Replacement and storm
management consultants
For Wtclneodoy, Jon. 21, 1177
$125 w;thout body w&lt;&gt;rk . Stop ESTABLISHED
windows. 3l years actual
In·
who specialize in it.
In or phone 985-•17 • for ap·
expeirence.
surance Agency Is seeking o
An equally somber assessARIES (Morch 21·Aprll1t) Unpo;ntment.
sol~~ f;Mtr_
son . Good solory _plus
Financing Available
ment of the JFOble~ WU fortunately, persons who have NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkl. commiSSIOns , mony fr tnge
C. A. Newman, Prei.
rilade bl a
to ihe
the clout to grant you favors to(Pleasanton Meat Processing,
benefits , paid vocations , cor re1-25-1 mo., pd .
day are not inclined to do so.
Inc .) Custof"!l slaughtering , and
quired . Area Opportunltv for o
Harvard Business School
Don't embarrass yourself by
proc~tuing . Retail , wholesale
soles minded "person who
wants the bitst. Send resume to
Club of Philadelphia by John
asking.
No oppo;nmont nocessor; . Coli
80)( 672, Pomeroy·, Ohio 4576'9.
Biegler, senioc partner in the
TAURUS (April 20·M•r 20) It's
(6141 59J.8655, hou,. , HJ&lt;&gt; tal
national accounting firm,
best to avoid dealing wlth one in
6:00 7 Pomeroy Road . Athen~. ~ll ART ond design firm needs
fulltime or porltime book·
Price Waterhouse &amp; Co. whOse presence you t~ uncomOh.
IF YOU hove o service to offer ,
keeper , receptionist . typist.
wont to buy or sell something ,
l)leglersaidthedisclosures
fortable today . This person GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
Salary according to experience . COAL, lime~tone , and calcium
oe looking for work , . . or
of bribes and improper
realizes he has the edge, and
Club every Sunday. 1 pm
benefits. Send resume to P. 0 .
could take advantage.
Assorted meats.
whatever ... you'll get results
chloride ond cOicuJm brine for
Box 272 , Middleport , Ohio
foster with a Sent inel Wont Ad .
contributions
by
large
and
dust control and special mi xing
· i
finns
be
GENINI (May 21-June 20) Don't RACINE FIRE Dept . will ha11e o
.5760 .
Coll992·2156 .
.salt for farmers . Main Street ,
p-estig OUS
have en
kid yourself in business today
Gu n Shoot e11ery Saturday nigkt
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
or
phone
992·
Into thinking you're dealing from
6 , p.m . ot tneir
butlding in
"stunning"
and
•
both
3B91. •
uheartbraking" and the fact
strength when you're really not.
Bashan, Ohio.
1971
HONDA CL ·•SO. 12,000
only200companleshavebeen
Only you could be hurt by this AT STUD ' I. Phoebu5 , 16 IH. If
miles
, sissy bor , crosn bon . :'!
involved so far shouldn't lead
dec8ptlon.
you want a good performance.
pull back handle bars, new tire
to any romplacency. He said
CANCER (Juno 21.Julr 22)
Aholtercoltw- bloodHne•thot
and seals, Scrambler side Will do odd jobs , roofing, pain·
It'S necesaary to face up - You're not In the mood to fet
sell. 2. TRIBAL CHIEF. APHC.
ting. gutter work , Phone m .
.
pipes. $650 . C9119-49-2480.
.. that
otners do your thinking today,
15.2 H. has sired some of the
7.09.
C&lt;I!IJlletely to the fa ••
top perlo~onco and halter
COAL for sole, Open 6 days per
''public . confidence
In
buill could happen if you choose
hones , (Tr;bot w;n , Tribal Fool,
week and evenin91, For furthtr
American business has
the wrong comp&amp;nions. P'lacld , etc'.). Also, horses sold, troln·
information Celli (61-4) 367 ·7338.
types sult you b.est.
.
ed, conditioned , boarded.' Cole
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,
plunged to the lowest level
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have
Stobie• . Home ol Chomplon•,
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
since the Great Dep-essim." a tendency to mentelly Increase Box 25, Tuppers Plains , Oliio
WILKESVILLE
, (61•) 669·3785.
In consequence, Biegler
the magnituda ot work today and
45783. Phone (614) 667·3&lt;05. •
INCOM~ TAX Service, Wollaclt
FULLER
Brush
Products for Sole.
said, the Senate passed- by
end up mlnlmlzlng , the effort. HAVE ROOM for elderly tody In
Russell,
Bradbury.
Call
' Phone992·3410.
a vcte Of 86 to 0- just before You'll cry tomorrow.
private home who needs home
992 ·722B.
adjournment of the last
VIRGO (A•-.
;n,teod
o rest homo . Phone
-• 23-A•-.
~ 221 Don't
(•t4) 1..9of'1-v.&amp;:
CAMPER , $600 . Al~o . horse WILL 00 BABYSITTING , MONl&gt;AY
~
v•
---'on
an "~•erk!ll"
bill oo
pretend to be or have more than --'"=c.:~
=-·"~
=:_·
~;;::;;;;:=::;;::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::::-;} trailer , S.SO. Phone (61-4) 698 · THROUGH FRIDAY . Phone
imp-oper payments that is
you are today. Don'l play the old SKATE-A-WAY ANNOUNCES duo
3290.
949·2322.
to the energy crisiS,
will be
game of one-upmanship.
·
•t
t"
~-.
PEARCE
SIMPSON
C.B
.
base
sto·
a nd
Iose d We ds. nlg•• s nru 1 ne
Un W 0 r ka b I e
unenforceable. He S&amp;l.d the LIBRA (SepL 23·0cL 2.3) Steer· cmonth
of February . Open Fri· OlD furniture, ice baKes , braSs
lion. Phone 247 -2684 afte'r 5
new Cmgre~ probably wW ing the middle course destroys doy and Saturday nights .
beds, wo!l telephones and
p.m.
59 acres , 6 room house, both,
your eftectlveness today .
port 1 , or complee housekolds.
pass this overldllla
w or one Sometimes It's better to make a
portly carpeted, two · out, _....... ..1.Write M. D. Miller , Rt . 4, 1974
C STARCRAFT
·t•
· Galo)(ie
dR 8
much like it 1DlJaNJ
u~SS stand, eVen If It's the wrong one.
amper
wt n own•ng
on Suzuki
eese
bulldingt , dug basement,
Hftn roleasl
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli 99'1.·771:/J.
hitch
. $1200.
Also, 1975
one-third tillable, mineral
00
and the accoun~,.. P
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
CASH poid for oil mok•• and
.WO T.S. , IBOO miles . excellent
rights located near ' Danville.
act promptly and decisively
Kind words and gentle
model• of mobile homes.
condition,
$650 .
Phone
Reduced for quick sOle,
to clean bouse.
suggestions are a must In deal- FURNISHED room, studio or effi·
Phoneareacode614 -423·9531.
992·25l4 .
$23,500. Phone 742-2766.
Biegler p:"opoaed iJtepa to
lng with subordinates today. A ciency apartment by the fiht TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro- POTATOES. C. W. Proffitt ,
NEW
3 bedroom house , built-in
_._
........ •tlally
soH answer ~
~ets allegiance.
· Fe bruary. w n·te R. K.
p or tl on d , o•niO
· . p•none
"~ OUt oc Sw.wu
wee k 10
dUcts. Top.,.price for standing
1
kitchen, both and• 1/t , Phone
diminish klckbackl, bribes 8AOitTAAIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec. Russell , Route 3, Bo,. 148. sowtil'flber. Call t&lt;ent Hanby , S.0-2254.
7-42-2306 or contact MilO B. Hut76::9c.·_...;.:...c -c:•:.:·•:::-46::2·8::57:,:0::_. .,..--~--- STEREO·NEW Am·FM· stereo
and Improper conlributlona. 21) You're unlikely to handle _ Pcco:cm.:.ercar
:L.:.c0:::h.:.io:.•.::5:c
chison, Rutland, Ohio,
He
said
business
~our resources today with the
COINS, CURRENCY, tokens, old
radio combination, $129.95 or BUILDING SITES, 3. 11 acre! , at
asaociationa should adopt
same conservatism your friendly
pocket wotc~es ond chains,
t•rms. Coli 992-3965.
Boshon T. P., water top , ' gas
~
banker would . That's probably
silvor and !jOid. We need 196&lt; USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
top, minimum 1oil limitations.
11
reali.!tic insteadof vague, u.,.- why he has It and you don't.
ond older •liver coins . Buy , sell ,
John Oeere ••oe Skidder: Pet Phone 985-41 O:l,
service codes of ethics.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon. 1t)
or "ode Call Roger Wom•l•y .
tlbone Super B Cory lift ;
Internal accounting and
Avoid being too heavy-handed PLEASURE HORSES and ponle•,
7&lt;2·2331.
~a..
T;mber)ock 230 Forwarder ,
policy controls should. be
today 111 areas where you're In olsol wi~lh buy( ~o r!e •B o nd _CASH! 1! lor junk cars. FryJ;'
Case 600 Skidder;, Hydro
tightened stringently and
charge. Ease up or you'll create panes . one
'"' ·
· , Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
Sawbuck Model 1000-A: Conswiftl
a rebellious atmosphere.-.
Ruth Reeves.
WRECKER -5£RVICE! Phone
toct Don Grov~ts, phone (614)
'
y.
' of RISING_ STAR KENNEL, Soord;ng .
7&lt;2·2081.
S%·•769 .
The 811ditlng department
AQUA~IUB (Jon. 211-Fob, 1 1) indoor ·outdoor runs . Grooming _;c.::;.:.:._:.;_:____ _ _ _ 25 INCH COLORED RCA. Phone
every company should get
Though you'll find It hard to own ID&lt;i!;H•• wHI be closed from WANTED' CfllPWOOO, poles
mlslakes loday
maxiumum diomet~tr , 10 Inches
949-2131 .
Up to •our
higher position
in the
' them won't alter the· Jonuory
16. boarding
1977 unt;l Morch
I,
management
hierarchy
it defending
1977. Our
facilities
on laru••• end, $8.00 p~tr ton. EAR CORN . Contact Terry Life,
80
tact that you were wrong. Admit will remain open . . Cheshire,
Bundled slabs. $6.00 per ton
(614 ) 667-3S..• , Reedsville,
can ·IJI)ellk out at the highest 'em and forget 'em.
Phone (614) 367-0292 or
deliveritd to Ohio Pallet Com·
Ohio , SucceuRood .
POMEROY - Ranch .type
aa-'--' ab"pany, Rt, 2, Pomeroy . Phone
PIICES (F .... 20·Mit'ah 20) 367·.711 2·
9'1'2·2689,
ONE ·COU~H, motch;ng h;s and
level ..,..,.,.. ,.._;
home - 3 largo bedrooms,
The audit committee Your lnduatrloua Intentions and AKC COLLIE pups, sable and
.-'7:::::.-'':-:::-:c=---:-- ker ,hairs, matching cocktail large ·living .R., large
lhould be dominated by
hlgh-llown pllflll will go by llle white. $75. Phone 949·2571 .
WANTED TO BUY ,or toke over
ond ond tablet, 2 table lompt,
kitchen with dishwasher,
........._ ..........._ but ... _.... bO • t - wh a frl den
payment• on
· Dodgemarl• dinlng room furniture.
dining
bar, air cond., iarao
Oil__, """""""
"'""""
arvl ~•Y
on
on
· AKC REG Dobe
Good
Ch.vrofot·OR Ford Von. 1970
bl
living R., carpellng, full
include the chalnnllt of the tlcea you to dO aomethtng that's peditrM:
Hll
moe»!. Must run good. Phone
basemen! wltl1 shower, 2
board.
more fun .
reo10noble. Phone 7~2-2967 .
992-2917,
I
LOOK TR 1 T k AI
car
garaae : $19;500.00.
Audltoralho.uldberequlred
1
IM
.
a
•
glness
diet
plan and AqUO\/Op "water
MIDDLEPORT - Lovely
to CCliiiiiWitt in their report&amp;
I
plllt". VUioge Pharmacy , 271 N.
l'h story frame . 2 or 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs. dining
00 J1111188emelll'l intmlal
ill,•
. I
_
A., nice kitchen, N.G. tt.at.
1
accounting • and policy
l!JIJJ,UW-!J!Jlf
,-----------------...;
Small basement and
utility. Nice level lot In
them- .
. Jon. u,.1, 77
on.
good nelghbo~hood .
S22,00Q.OO .
I
lelves should develop a lot Persons you meel In social
by,side refrlgontor ... $150
Is
your
house
too
sma
II
or
more eenslllvlty to imll'oper '"uallons could be a big aooet
Q
New
Co-Op
water
1oo Iorge? Let u1 sell It and.
and Wegal .tra1118ctlooB.
this coming year. Make sure
Well Stocked-Doing
Business
softeners, model VC-SVI.
furnish you with wNt you
. . Blqler warned hia leUow your trlendahlp has a firm toun·
only 5279.95
need. We . have gn1t
IICCOIUltantl It
longer is dation before asking favors .
one good used Remington
110
555 00
illmond for new hom.es ·(Are you an Aquarius? Bor·
Wonderful op"porlunlty to own yo
o n
ChalnS.w"""''"' ·
.ru.1111etollke....,••eillthe
r • ,_
,_.,.
nice Oaol ha5 wr/Hon 1 apeclll
.Ur W
ono DGOd used McCullough
let •• 1111 roun todoy.
em-- ·lbat It nevll' baa Attro-Graph Lontr tor ,au. For
business. In fast growing ·field.
Clwtln Slw•• •· • • ••••110.00
HENRY ll. CLILAND
belli tbllr lin±• ltl deWct your copy 11nd 5 0 - Md 1
One good usod lltintlltt
IROKIIt
HANKCLiUND
. fnud"; Be Implied that long oell-odd~. oMm/»d
~IIIS.w.........
llJLil.
1
ASSOCIATE
' Co ·
d th
1
an•tlo~ to Attro-Groph, .1'.0.
..
"'"
;...,. ...1.
' nareu an
e peop e Box
Radio City
Ntw
,
YnuM••
-"2·2259 or ;n·.256i
1im111l' WCII't buy that . any lor
York, N. Y: 10019. s. sure " · Ilk
Middleport, Ohio
Jack W. Cllnoy, Mgr.
or915-4112
Aquarius Volume
.__.__ _ _ _ _ _ _..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
phone"Htll

figur~.

nylon

herculons, vinyl ~lids, and

UPHOLSTERING .

ATTN .: II

··

Located in Langsville
Box28-A
Rutland, Ohio 4577S.
Ph. (61,} 142·2409
We eliver.
.
..__ _ _ _12·22·•
_ _mos
....:..;..-..J

and ~,~n­
fur nis hed opts . Phone 992·

3 AND 4 RM.

'

..fancy prints, occ~ssarios.

REFINISHING
1969 Nova, edro sharp, new
paint bucket seats, air shock~ .
mags . Phone 949·2480,
1969 CHEVROLET Bisquoine; 1966
BUICK Electra, 225 : 2 Rokan
triolbikes . Phone 949-2432 .
1972 GRANO Torino, ps .. and
p .b .,
a ir cond itioned ,
automatic, ll&amp;W A-1 condition .
$1400. PI-lone 742-2008 .
1973 CHEVY PICKUP 1/ 1 ton. HSOO;
6 cylinder sfondard , Coli after
• ,30. 992·3663.
.
1973 JEEP CJ ·5. 304 V·B. 26,000
miles . P~one (614) 667-3759 or
667-3622, James Chadwell . ·

'·...

·SOiilheastein Ohio
Truss Ratter Co..

Velvtls,

WIN AT BRIDGE

.'

.):or . ~
slllor.i:
·m aHresses ; padding. lcltal
for compars. Varlo1y ol

TRUSSES
ANY PITCH

~
~

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OH!O

NOTICES
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales , Rummage,
Por&lt;:h and Basement Porch
and · ouem~nt Sates, etc .
m ust be pa id In advance .
Get yours In tarly by
stopping by our office at
The Da ily Sentinel, 111
Court St. or writing Box
729, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
with your rernlttance .

$1995

1 owner, good tires,' custom cab, 8' Fleetside.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OIITI/.ARY

·

k~
po~r.o~:~
~
· ~~
· ~~~
ANY SIZE

For Want Ad Service

'

'

Business Ser1Jice8
•

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINE$
5 P .M. Dflv
Before
Pu 6llcatlon .
cornc cancellations,
lions accepted flrs1 day of
publication .
REGULATIONS
The F!ublllhtr reserves
the right to edit or relect
any ads tlttmed ob .
ltcrlonal. The publisher
will not be rtsponslble for
more than one Incorrect
insertion .
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Issues Forum 33.
7 : 3!f-~ollywoocl Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4,
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20; Worl d War I 33.
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10 : 3~ Biack Perspect ive on lhe News 20.
ILO()- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS; MacNeii ·Lehrer Reporl
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11: 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Pray for tne
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8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33 .
12 :0D-Mov ie " The Matchmaker" 10 ; J anak i 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,.\.
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5,QO-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons&lt; : Brady Bunch 8;
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'

,.

PUBLIC NOTICE
.
Sealed b ids w il l be received

7: 00--Tr~lh or Cons~quences

TUESDAY , JANUARY 2l , 1976

IT-··

�.
.
cnsts i
•••
:

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday ,'Jan. 2li, 1971

Ohio Assembly meeting on natural ga

.:

.

I

Budget exceeds $1.5 million

'

•

and a
40.hour-a-week will be m~ndatory ·steps : : :;:;: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;: : : : : : : :;: : : : ~i.: : : : : : : : : : : : : :~:~:::::~:~::::::::::~:::::::::::~::::&lt;:::::~::::::!:::~::::;~:;::::::::: ~
dim or dark. Thermostats in mandatory conservation con- be implemented.
By J .R. KJMMINS
limitation
of hours of taken and widespread
trols
,
including
the
cloaing
of
The Ohio Energy and ReCOLUMBUS (UP!) - The Rhocies' office were turned
operation
lor
buainesses. It hardships will result. "
&lt;llio General Assembly was down to 60 degrees . The heat schools and lbnitations on source Development Agency
•
could
be
Implemented
II
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers, [).
(OERDA) scheduled a 2 p.m.
to convene today in 60-Cegree in vacant state offices was business hours.
~
.
Senate President Pro Tem- meeting today to "fine tune" Rhodes decided to again Dayton, chalrman of the
chambers In a special session cut off.
By Ualted Prtu lalt;i1ia1MII81 '
contingency
plan · upgrade Ohio's energy Senate Energy Committee,
••
to ratily Gov. James Rhodes'
But no one could estimate pore Oliver Ocasek of Akron Its
situation
to
a
crisis.
briefed
the
five
members
of
.
Gu,
po-w«
11114 nter ....,pee., dnjled by
presented
and
House
Speaker
Vernal
G.
by
its
staff
to
the
declaration of a natural g~s whether the public was
House
Energy
and his nlnemember committee
IDlrtleollag bitter cold, were d•. I lit~
lllllllQ'
emergenc!y and debate the heeding Rhodes request for Riffe, Jr ., of New Boston said board of the agency &amp;lnday
Environment
Committee
who
showed
up lor a session.
areu
today
ud
eilerJY
crllea
QIGIIIIIed.
closing
schools
was
last
on
morning.
•
state energy agency's plan to cooperation. Without
Power ud pa cutbeckl aDd allier -Iller
That draft plan called for chairman. Rep. Thomas J.
•
deal with the emergency if it voluntary cooperation, their list of mandatory
problem~ Idled aearly !18,0!10 worken Ia Temlenee,
Rhodes might have to order controls which may have to mandatory school cloaings Carney, DBoardman, told his
becomes a crlsls.
'"'
panel Monday about the
•
PeDDJylvula, Weal Vlrglnla,· ~, Jtorldll IIIII
Energy committees of each
CERDA contingency plan
Mlullslppl.
.
chamber were briefed by
•
and summarized the weekend
'l1le Federal Energy Administration said Monday
their chairmen Monday on
t.
meetings held by lhe
It will order live refiners to produce more iera~ene lor
borne heating, possibly reducing fuel aviilable for
•
governor.
. '
....
More than 390,000 bonus
this
all
amounts
to
Is
''What
airlines.
•
Rhodes' declaration Sunday
POINT PLEASANT, W. eluded in the curtailment are firm is being curtailed 100 that the governor and leglsla· payments have been made to
Gov. Odl R. Boftil declared ID "eael'JY
evening.
Va. - At least 164 j&gt;ersons Stauffer Chemical Co., percent on Its processed gas live leaders are making a Ohio Vietnam Era veterans
•
emergency
emts ID lbe stile II(, Wlu•" ud Ohio
In a separare development will be out of work In Mason Goodyear Tire and Rubber, and up to .0 per cent of Its
and
next-ol·kln
of
deceased
Gov.
James
Rhodes
called
lbe
leCJ,IIatare
Into
apeelal
lastdltch attempt ro convince
::
late Monday, Colwnbia Gas County as a result of Point Pleasant Marine Co. plant protection gas.
veterans since the first check
the
public
that
absolute
seaolon
lqday
to
deal
wllb
emerJeacleil
posed
by
the
The company has 184
of Ohio, the state's largest Columbia Gas Co.'s statewide and the Pantasote Co. None
voluntary cooperation Is was Issued two and one-half
worst energy crlll• ID lbe llate'l blllory.
natural gas supplier • curtailment of natural gas to was plaMing layoffs this employees, and most are required," said carney .
years ago, according to Ohio
1be Pblladelpbla Gila Worb Aid more ealbecb
expected to he laid off by Feb .•
a n n o u n c e d h i g h e r Industrial and commercial morning.
Vietnam Veterans Bonus
~'If we cannot do thi~. there
mtgbt be nece11ary despite Mayvr Jl'ruk llluo'l belief
curtailments to industrial users.
Malleable Iron has no 1.
commission director, Ran·
the city ·11 being ''ripped off."
and conunerc;ial customers.
West Virginia Malleable alternate source of energy, While Stauffer will remain
dall W. Sweeney.
Tom Green, a Columbia Iron Co. was one of live area Vitantonl said. He said the o!ien at the present time, its
In Gallla County, 648
general man~ger T. R. Friar
spokesman, said 2,763 schools industries to receive up to
clalins totalling $243,111,39
said this wiD depend upon the
In the utility's 62-county 100 percent curtailment in its
have been paid while 823
Holzer Medical Center
availability of fuel oil which
service area would "be in natural gas supplies. The
claims
amounting
to
(Births,
Jan.
24)
Is the company's alternate
trouble" because of the plant will begin laying of(
;!
$222,660.80 have been paid In
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Samuel
energy source, as well as lhe
higher curtailments. Green . employees Friday, general
Hurlow, son, Mason, W. \ja.; Meigs.
weather.
said those schools ''might manager Tony Vitantoni
Henry Rzemplouch, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold jivlden,
have to close."
'd
NEW
HAVEN,
W.
Va.
581 .
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
" I know Colwnbus and
The other comparues in- Carson Roush, 59 of New general manager at Pan· Mrs. Ronald Wright, son,
Toledo (schools) are in trouHaven was dead on arrival at tasote, said his company will Vinton.
.
.
A!J lor how the cookie
_Me1gs. County g1rl scoul3 "crumbles", each box costs
Pleasant Valley Hospital definitely remain open by
ble,'' said Green.
(Discharges,
Jan.
24)
The Energy Emergency
will begin. taking orders for 51 cents, 58 cenls goes to the
Monday. Born May 22, 1917 In sw_itchi!lll to fuel oil.
'Judy Bateman, Mary
Management Committee,
LOUISVILLE,
Ky.
(UP!)
.
cookiesFnday.
.
. Council toward general ::::
Letarl he was the son of the
Broyles, Elijah Estep,
which Rhodes created when
Barge
traffic
outnumbered
·
~e
the
sale
will
begm
operating expenses,. i5 cents .
late Ernie and Olga Roulsh.
Kathryn Grose, Ronald Hens·
he declared the statewide
pedestrian
traffic
on
the
Ohio
Fr1~y,
the
closmg
date
lor
.
goes' into the tri&gt;op treasury, ~
He was a bus driver for the
ley, Ida Householder. Elsie
emergency Sunday, began
River
Monday,
reversing
the
taking
orders
has
been
ex·
.,
and,
one cent is for adMason County Board of
King, Toldy Markham, Mrs.
operation Monday . t.o deal
tended
from
Feb.
6lo
Feb,1l
,
·minlslrative
costs, making ,
situation
.In
the
Cincinnati
Education many years. He
Charles Masters and son,
due
to
the
snow
and
co\d
the
total
$1.25
lor each box of ~
area
Sunday
.
with iocal energy problems
GRAHAM STATION, W. was a member of the Hustlers
Geraldine Mayo; Lula
ft
as they arise.
Safety officials hope it weather.
Bible Class and the New
CHARLESTON, W.Va . McGhee, Beulah MUls, .John
The committee off ices, Va. - Loss was estimated at Haven United Methodist (UPI) - Without a break in
Cookies
this
year
will
sell
cookies.
Ord, Edra Proffitt, Chad stays that way because they
within the regular offices of 110,000 from a fire at the Church.
~
the weather, officials say the. Saunders, Benji Shenefield, say the thin ice makesit very lor $1.25, the same as last
the Ohio Development Foote · Mineral
Plant
t
Surviving are his wife, specter of a production crisis Mrs. Ronald Stevens and dangerous to try walking on year. Delivery will be made
Department and its director, Saturday·
•
sometime
between
March
17
the
river.
James Duerk, will be staffed
A call was received by the Wilma .L. Roush ; one son, looms in West Virginia's daughter, Alden Wedemeyer.
1
In the Cincinnati area and April 9. Varieties to be
24 hours a day .
New Haven Fire Dept. at Eugen~ C. Roush, Parkers- coalllelds.
Sunday, there were so many sold are trefoils, vanilla and
(Continued from paae 11 ; t
burg ; a daughter, Gloria B.
"The· coal Is there, it's a
The committee was noon and when the depart·
pedestrians out on the river chocolate sandwich c00kies,
Roush, New Haven ; one problem of moving it/' says
directed by Rhodes to ment arrived, one corner of grandchild,
two sisters, Mrs. spokesman Dan Fields. of the VeteraiiS Memorial Hospital
that they were blocking a samoas, peanut butter sand- clear sidewalks. Mayor .:
monitor whether his call for the plant was engulled in Clara Parsons, Letart and West
Virginia
Coal
Admltted - ArthurTucker, tow, prompting the towboat wiches, mints, and peanut Hoffman said that Ia a good;.;
voluntary natural gas lames. ·
Mrs.
Chlorus . Webb, Association . "There's the Rutland; Sharon Bing, skipper to complain to police butter patties or Tagaiongs, Idea but pointed out that the. ;
conservation was working.
The lire was extinguished Westerville, and a brother, possibility It could reach Pomeroy; Helen Bartels, about it.
Mrs. Mary Dorst is Meigs town has a pr,oblem In'-'
Its first report is due Wednes- within 25 minutes, ·and there Clawson Roush, Letart.
County's cookie chsirman.
keepl!lll the streets clear, letit.
critical
proportions
unless
Syracuse;
Holly
McCoy,
Capt.
John
Beatty,
a
da
were no injuries. Four trucks
"Everything's Coming Up alone"sidewalk.s too.
··
Funerai services will be the weather cooper all'S very Racine;
Wilbur
Hilt, 1 Cincinnati river salvage
6ther state agencies and 22 men responded to the Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the soon.''
Attending were Mayor:'
Rutland; Sally Sauvage, operator and one of the Cookies" is the theme of the
responded ·· to Rhodes ' call.
Foglesong Funeral Home · . As many as 15,000 miners, Racine; Mary Marcinko, foremost authorities on Ohio cookie sale, the profits from Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Monday the department with Rev . John Campbell about one-fifth of the rota! Tuppers Plains ; Brian WIUis, River lore, said it was the which are used for troop ac- Gene Grate, and councllnlei!-declaration .- Corridors in
state offices buildings were . received a caU to Jane's officiating and burial to work force, were turned from Pomeroy ; WiUiam Russell, Hrst time in his halfcentury tivities, camp development Horton, Kelly, William ~
Amoco on Fifth St. where a
Walters and Carl Horky. ' '
follow in the Kirkland the pits in West Virginia Pomeroy ; John Sebo, river career thst he had ever andtroopserllice.
. .- - - - - - - . . . . small lire had broken out in · Memorial Gardens. Friends Monday due to the cold Pomeroy; Donna Lauder· seen pedestrians
the ceiling above the furnace.
· milt, Rutland; Marion Hall,
Two trucks and 14 men were may call at the funeral home weather.
after
3
p.m.
Wednesday.
Fle.lds
said
coal
began
Reedsville; Sandra Johnson ,
on the scene . Loss was
backing up at mines mainly Racine.
'
'
estimated at $400.
because of problems at east
Discharged - Carolyn
The department rushing to
coast ports and with rail lines McCoy , Mary · Quillen,
a house owned by Danny
that broke down under the Clarence Hayman, James ·
Sayre here Friday morning
weight of .the severe cold. Lawrence, Perry Carpenter.
found lire under the floor of a
Miners
in West Virginia have.
fireplace . Damage, kept to
an
estlnuill!d
$8.5 million
lost
the front room, floor and
PLEASANT V.,LLEY .
ln.
wages
sinte
Jan.
17, and
basement, was estimated at
DISCHARGES
- Mrs.
coal owners have lost
Ga!Upolls, Oblo,
11,500. Four trucks and 18
Charles
Ellis,
Vinton
, 0.;
1,175,000 rons of coal,
Jan. 22,1971
men answered the call.
Mrs.
Granville
HiD,
Point
according to Fields.
Sales Report of
Pleasant; Carl · Schultz,
Ohio Valley Llves~k Co.
Racine; John Laver, Hun·
STOCKER CATTLE tlngton; Mrs. Ira Potts,
STEERS- 250 to 300 lbs. Z4
Henderson and Thomas
TAKENTOHOLZER .
to 33; 300 to 400 lbs. 23 to
The Middleport Brown, Bancroft.
33.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 23 to 34;
500 to 600 lbs. 21.50 to 32.50; Emergency Squad answered
600 to 700 lbs. 22 to 31; 700 lbs. a cllll to 732 Sycamore St. at COP GIVF.S TOW'
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
I :44 p.m. Monday for
and Over 21 to 31.50.
'lliree youths suspecte4 ·of
Woodrow
Call,
Sr.,
a
medical
HElFER CALVES- 250 to
burglarizing
a borne near
Wrangler No-Fault Blue Denim, pre •
patient,
who
was
taken
to
3001 . 19 to 24.50; 300 to 400
Mansfield got stuck in the
washed - flare leg style' or straight leg.
lbs. lui to 26; .400 to 500 lbs. Holzer Medical Center.
snow in their · victim's
20 to 26. ,
to 600 lbs. 19 to
Waist sizes 29 to 36 -,-length 30 to 34. Stop
driveway and called for a tow
25.50; 600"to 00 lbs. 17.50 to
truck for assistance.
in the men's department, lst floor and
27; 700 lbs. and Over 17_to
The . tow truck operator
select your needs now.
..
27.50.
turned out to be a special
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
NO MEETING
deputy for the Richland
(By The Htad)- Stock Cows
There will be no meeting County Sheriff's Department.
125 to 215 ; Stock Cows and this week of the American
Take advantage, too, of the special
Deputies said neary $1,500
Calves 130 to 240; Stock Bulls Legion Auxiliary of Feeneyworth
of
gooda
were
taken
170 to 230; Baby Calves 7 to Bennett Post 128 due to the
sale prices durlf'!g our annual
from the Winston Q'ossno
39.50; (By Tbe Pound) weaiher. The. meeting was home near mansfield Sunday
l lt~rewlde January Clearance Sale.
.Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 18 to originally scheduled to be
night.
23.25; Holstein Cows 23.50 to held Wednesday night.
The S1JliiM!cls face charges
26; Commercial Bulls (1,000
of
breaking and entering and
lbs. and Over) 27 to 32.75.
grand
theft.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
·~
•
lbs. to 250 69 to 80; Medium
E-RCALLED
~lbs . to30051 to 68.50; Culls
· The Pomeroy Emergency
•
50 down.
Squad · was called to Salem
SOWS- 350 lbs. up 33 to 38. Center at 8:17p.m. Monday
It doesn't matter how you're
PIGS - 8 to 27 .50; Tops 90 for Wendell Barrett who
PHONE 992·5560
lbs. to 110, 46 to 48.50.
dressed, because you don't have to
refused treatment.

••

It's cold lots of.places_
. ..

The Meigs County Commissioners approved appropriations for the year 1977
of $1,647,054.48 in their first
regular night
session
Tuesday.
Included in the grand total
are CE TA fund s of
$127,720.82, TB 0 funds of
$40,000 and Mental Retardation funds of $43,121.74, all
provided by levi~s or Federai
grants.
General
fund
appropriations is $814,389.99
with ot her appropriations
coming from funds other than
the general fund.
The county highway fund
has not yet be en appropriated.
Meeting with the commissioners were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Win gett, Ra~ine.
who had submitted an animal
claim for the loss of a cow in
the amount of $300 which
Wingett asked to be tabled
until he could meet with the

.••:

:•

i.rr

•

~

k
184
·
t
f
=~~e:rto~~ud~~~r wi~
pu ou 0 wor .

390,000 bonus
payments made

~

.
•:

.:
~

::

J

Hospital News

"a

Carson Roush
died Monday

Ice hazardous .

t
Scouts to start
taking cookie orderJ

fire put out
On Saturd
· ay

ESKIMO HUT - Not really. This igloo was built by Lori Kloes and her sister, Lynne,
assisted by the1r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes and Mark and Teresa Davis. The
(approximately) six loot igloo is located in the Kloes front yard, South Secona Ave.,
Middleport. Left to right are Kathy Blake and LyMe Kloes. This Is only one of many built in
the county this week.
,
.

~

in Ohio River

Foote Mineral

commissioners.

Crisis possible
in coalfields

r

J

Horton

MEIGS THEATME
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

f

VOL. XXVII NO. 199

i ...

~ - ,;a,o,o,o.....o,o,

OPENING DATE

Pre-Washed Denim Jeans

OUR CONVENIENT
COME-AS-YOU-ARE

leave your car- so you can do your
banking at our drive-in window in
your curlers, when you're dressed
for housework or cleaning out the
garage, on your way to or from
shopping - or at any time during
our convenient - drive-in banking
hours from 9 a.m. til 3 p.m. Fridays
9 a.m. til3 p.m .. and 5:00p.m. til 7:00
p.m. and Saturday 9 til Noon.

.ELBERFELD$ IN

MEROY

SALE
30%

TO

50% OFF

FRIENDLY BANK"

5lh INCH

HANGING
BASKETS

$295

REG. '6
NOW

Plus Tax

CASH 'N CARRY

• Mem!Mr Federal Dt!posit Insurance Corporatior

.Pomeroy, o.

·'

DIEFFENBACHIA
AMOENA
REG~: . .

$18

''

USE YOUR CREDiT CARDS
AS CASH AT DUDLEY'S

, Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

· .DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

$3

QECORATOR SIZE

Sale Jan. 26th thru Feb. 5th

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

1

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

.:,....

I
'

II

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Icy roads were blamed for
six traffic accidents in veitlgated Tuesday by the
Gallla-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
• Mlchae"l L. Rosier, 20,
Fairmont, W, Va . was
charged with lallilre to yield
right of way following an
accident at 7:15a.m. on CR 5
In Meigs County al 'its junetion wllh SR 124. Rosier's
vehicle 11ld on Ice across the
intersection strlk.inl! an auto
oper1ted by Clarence Skeens,
65, Wellston. There was
minor damage.
•
A Bingle car accident occuiTed 11 7:3G..a.m. Tue.day
on SR 7
lhe Sllyllne
Lines Bo"ll"l Alley In
Kanauga · ·,.llert Oru J.
Stewart, · :11, Oalhjlolla, lost
cmlrol of hla c•r Of! ICil. The
vehicle ran off lhe left side of
t11t highway and overturned.

neu

•
·,,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Stare
Finance Director WiUiam W.
Wilkins said Tuesday a major
part of the financing of the
Rhodes administration's new
two-year budget is based on
an expected 10 per eent
growth in personal income in
Ohio.
Wilkins said the state is
anticipating a 35 per cent
grqwth In person·ai income
tax revenues and a 25.3 per

Would you believe
that ice is slick?

ON ALL FOLIAGE PLANTS

"THE

I

J

"'=:
~

entine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1977

n 0: 0

5TH ANNUAL HOUSE PLANT

.•.

MIDDLE.PORT, OHIO

i ,

CLEVELAND - A BUDGET REQUEST for almost $1
million to buy lottery ticket vending machines was submitted
Tuesday by the Ohio Lottery Commission. Lottery
Commission Director Gerald Patronite said the machines
could be set up to sell tickets In drug and grocery store chains
that have thus far refused to sell tickets. He estimated the
yearly income from such sales would be at least $10 million.
Despite the budget request,.Patronitesaid no firm decision
has been made on the machines. He said negotiations are still
going on with the stores that have refused to sell tickets over
(Continued on page 16)

59 N. SECOND ST.

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Night Special

Visit Our Salad Bar
Chicken Chow Mein
Hot Rolls .
Coffee. Tea or Milk

'S

ALBANY, N. Y. (UP!) - A CHARITY FOUNDATION
association with the Rev. Sun Myung Moon has lost Its permit
to solicit money in the state because practically none of the
money collected went to charity.
The Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation collected •
$1 .5 million In the year ending June 30, 1975, bul spent only 7
per cent of that money on purposes lor which It was collected,
the state Board of Social Welfare said Tuesdsy in announcing
it had cancelled the foundation's registration.

'

-======·

'''
•

COLT,JMBUS (Uf'l )- Gov. James A. Rhodes today asked
Ohio residents to pray this Sunday for an end to the energy
emergency. and took steps to end it himself by authorizing
mdustry to burn high-sulfur Ohio coal indefinitely.
"We're trying to keep every segment of Ohio pulling together in this," said the governor at a news conference with
legislative leaders from both parties.
The governor also announced a contingency plan is being
prepared for flooding on the Ohio River should the weather
suddenly turn warm.
"The Ohio River can have the most devastating flood s in our
history," said Rhodes, pointing out that thick ice on the river
and huge chunks on the banks could break loose in a sudden
thaw.
''We stand a chance of losing some bridges," he said, adding
that motorists may have to be kept off the spans.

cent growth in sales taxes to
.underwrite $951 million o{the
$1.4 billion increase in state
spending during fiscal 197379.
He warned that an
unexpected downturn In the
economy, or a · long-term
energy shortage, could
severely dama ge projections ·
by ,curtailing personal
income tax and sales tax
revenues, and boosting

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO ENERGY and Resource
I;levelopment Agency and the Energy Emergency
I
' Management "drnlmittee Tuesday set up five ''hotline"
telephone nwnbers which will be staffed by persons to answer
questions about the state's energy emergency.
The following numbers are to be used by the persons
CENTER CLOSING
MEETING TONIGIIT
specified and will be staffed 24 hours a day :
.
The
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
The Meigs Soil and Water
Mayors, 1·800-282-9433; News Media, 1·614-466-6660:
Mental
Health Center will
Industry, 1~14-400-7590, and Business, 1~14-400-7573.
Conservation District Board
close
at
3 p.m. for the
Members of the public can use the following toll-free · of Supervisors will have their
·remainder
of
this week due to
number, which will be answered between 8 a.m.-6 p.m. week- annual program planning
the
energy
shortage with
days, Public Hotline, 1-800-282--9234.
meeting Wednesday, Jan. 26
regular
hours
to be resumed
at 8 p.m. in the second fl oor
Monday,
Jan.
31.
CORONATO, CAUF. - TURKEY FARMER Robert conference room of the
Ryckebosch hurled a piece of dried cow manure 124 feet 10 Farmers Bank- Building.
inches Tuesday, defeated 50 other entranis for the right to Public ·officials have been
JURY CALLED
compete in the finals of the International Cow Chip Throwing . invited to 'attend and anyone
A
Meigs
County grand jury
else who is interested in the
Contest.
hss
been
called
to convene
RyGkebosch, of Lancaster, Calif., a 111ember of the program lor .soil a~d water
Jan
.
?:1
at
9
a.m.
in Meigs
Antelope Valley Fair Board, won the semifinals meet at the conservation in the county is
County
Common
.Pleas
Court.
Western Fairs Association meeting. The finals take place Aug . welcome. ·
· 4at the Montana State Fair In Great Falls.

WRANGLER MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

DRIVE· IN
BANKING

'

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE AVERAGE RET AIL cost of a
market basket of American-produced farm foods for an
""' -age family edged up to a record $36.44 a week in 1976, an
i,ncrease of one per cent ovel"1975, a preliminary estimate by
Agrleulture Department experts showed today. ·.
The retail increase was the smallest since 1967 when tlul
market basket cost dropped I per cent. It followed gains of 7.2
per cent in 1975, 13.9 per cent In 1974 and 17,3 per cent in 1973.

JUST RECEIVED
SHIPMENT ·

WATCH FOR

0 ;y,-.0°0°o 0°0°0:o: o~o~O:o:O:o:O .I. b::~:o:.:o~o:o~~.o,o:o,o:&gt;,

resolution to conform with
Gov . Rhodes request to
curtail energy in all county

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

1News. • .ln Bnef~ Growth expected in economy

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Market Report

..¥a'.0o0(0: .....'o'o'•'•'•'•'•'o'o'
o!•' o'o'&lt;;o;o•o•o••·•·•:o:• o·o·o·o;-.o-..u,:••
0

'•~•,w,..,..,.. ·,•,

last

commissioners adopted a

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

exception of the county In· Wells, Richard Jones, and
finnary which will he set at James
Roush ,
com·
65 at ·aU times.
mission ers and Marth a
Attending were Henry Chamb€rs, clerk.

The appropriations were as
follows:
GENE RAG EXECUTIVE
Board of Counfv Com ·

(Continued on page 16).

Rhodes invites prayer
to end energy crisis

night's meeting the claim
was "approved.
In other business i:he

•

e

At

'

buildings. Thermostats will
be set at 65 during the
daytime working hours, 55 at
night and weekends, with the

·on the idea - of reqwrmg
unemplo)'T)lent.
The state is depending on a accelerated corpor ation lax
25 per cent increase in payments. "We are not
recommend ing them this
corporate net income taxes worth $202 million over two time," he said, adding that
cash flow problems will be
years.
Wilkins
said
the solved ·by pooling resources
administration has given up from other stare funds to get
through low cash periods.
Th ese revenue growths
CALLED BACK
were
projected for the next
The Middleport Fire
two
years
on·which to build a
Departmen! started a run
major
portion
of the extra
into Galll:i County near
spending
:
Vinton at 5!15 p.m: Tuesday.
SALE.S TAX- Up $532
However, the lire was out of
million
.
the territory of the MidPERSONAL
INCOME
dleport department and the
TAXUp
$391l
million.
Vinton Fire Department was
CORPORATION TAX di spatched to the scene with
Up
$202 million.
the Middleport Department
PUBLI
C UTILITY
returni ng to station.
TAXES- Up $143 million.
LOTI'ERY PROFITS - Up
SCHOOLS CLOSED
$24 .3 million .
All Meigs County schools . FOREIGN INSURANCE
remain closed today due to TAXES-Up $30 million .
the inclement weather and
A,LCOHOLIC BEVERAGE
bsd roads. Most of the schools AN'D GALLONAGE
have been closed since Jan. 5. TAXES- Up $5.7 million.

The governor emerged from tus office where he had met
with legislative leaders and cabinet members in private.
He annoWJced a prayer meeting in the Statehouse rotunda
for Saturday at 11 a.m.
·
.
"We are going to pray for the strength to endure the coldest
days of our time," said Rhodes ·.
The governor sa1d he is issuing a proclamation calling lor
·prayer in church this Sunday .
"We're not praying for ourselves ," said RhOdes . ·~we're
praying for those who have to make sa crifices in this hour.''
The governor said an old oil refinery in Firidlay is bein~
reopened to process-high-sulfur oil. He added he is looking
around for additional steps to 1 ke .
. "The most devastating thing we could do in Ohio would be lo
close the schools, " said Rhodes .
" B~t we're not going to show our hand on everythi!lll we do,"
he sa1d . The governor said he had not asked permission of tht'
fede ral goverrunent to burn high,sulfur fuels.
"The federal goverMJent has no pr ogram whatever," h~
said . ''We're not worried. There 's no r isk."
Rhodes said the emergency rlirective to burn high-sulfu r
fu els is extended to •·a ny facililty that needs heat." He said it
would last indefinitely .
"The governor and &gt;he legislature will back anybody using
Ohio coal. " he said.

Rhooes said the state wanl'l the federal government to
fu rnish illore gas to Ohio. "We don 't wan t a redistribution of
gas," he said. "That way we would stand ro lose some.
The stare's uattle against continually decreasing energy
supplies was fought Tuesduy by the legislature, the state's
energy agency and th e new Energy E:mergency Management
Committee.
·
•
CQmpu nding Ute efforts was a below-zero weather prediction
for the end of this week by the National Weather Service.
The Ohio E:nergy and Resource Development Agency
( OE:RDA) was told by its staff Tuesday that to make it through
the winter heating season, Ohio's homeowners, industries and
commercial operations would require 297.5 billion cubic of
na tural gas.
Through last weekend, the OERDA staff computed thst only
244.1 billion cubic feet of natural gas was left from the Ohio 's
Original allocation of 454.7 billion cubi c feet.
"The picture is no less critical than what we were told over
the weekend," said OERDA board chairma n William
Ferguson of Colwnbus.
In extraordinary session, the Ohi o General Assembly passed
a resolution endorsing Gov. James A. Rhodes' weekend
declaration of an emergency natural gas crisis, and urged all
Ohioans to voluntarily conserve energy .
'
None of the efforts underway on various fronts were mandatory. Rhodes has decided to try.and weather the emergency
by tnaklng a plea to ci ti&gt;, cn~ Q.! the state .
.
Ferguson complained in an OE:RDA board meeting Tuesda y
th at the news media had not convinced Ohioans of the severity
of the crisis.
Before adopting an energy emergency contingency plan for
use by the governor, Ferguson said a public relations campaign was urgently needed to put the point across to the state.
Rhodes sent telegrams to President Carter, both of Ohio's
senators and all 23 congressmen. Rhodes asked the senators
and congressmen to assemble in his office at 11 a.m. Thursday
to meet with utility executives and state legislative leaders to
work on a solution to the state's energy crisis.
"I will hsve a state aircraft at Page Aviation at Washington
National Airport at 8 a.m. Thursday to bring you to
Columbus," Rhodes said.
'
. (Contlnu~ on page 16)

Ohio Power sees
worst temps past
PORTSMOUTH - "Winter set on January 6 and January
isn't over yet, but we hope the 13.
·
worst is behind us," Said W.
There is no question
A. Leuby, Jr., Portsmouth that our internal peak
Division manager for Ohio demand would have set
Power Company .
another record on January 17
Extept for p few locallzeci · if natural gas curtailments
cases where power was in- had not : hu t · down many
terrupted during the most factories l•flO if schools had
recent cold spell, he pointed not beer closed, " he said.
out that Ohio Power was able Temperatures that day, he
to keep electricity flowing to recalled, were in the neighmeet the demands of all its borhood of minus 20 degrees
customers.
through most of Ohio.
,;Our customers have been
-The manager stated that
using more electricity than the record low temperatures, '
normal since last October," which at one time stayed
be said, adding that tern- below zero for 54 consecutive
peratures were well below .. hours, will cause higher
in
, October, electric bills because use of
normal
November and De cember electricity was greater.
before dropping to record
He concluded , "This winter
lows in January.
·
emphasizes the importance
Twice during the past few of proper insulation and other
weeks, Ohio Power's Internal energy
conserv a1 ion
peak demand - that elec- measures. While these steps
trical energy supplied to won't make the temperatures
customers to meet their rise. they can help reduce
demands - set all -tim e energy. use and cost."
records. Those peaks were
· · '

•

11

Three accidents occurred
in minutes of each other at
the same location on SR 7 at
Hobson. The first was when
an auto driven by Keith
Drummond, ' 26, Cheshi•o,
struck the rear end of one
operated by Robert H. Hyselti
'50, Pomeroy . Donald L.
Siders. 21, Gallipolis Ferry,
attempted to stop his vehicle
but was unable to do so. It
struck the rear of · the
Drummond vehicle. Shortly
Orders are being accepted
thereafter, an auto operated in the 1977 tree and ground
by Frances Gibney, 24, Ad- cover plantln~ program of
dl8011, struck the rear end of the Meigs County Soli and
,the Siders vehicle.
·Water Conservation Service.
Another accident occurred
Orders, which must be
on US 3&amp;, east of SR 160 where prepaid can· be mailed to the
an auto drlven~byRonnle 0. conservation oflict located at
Johnson, 21, Pom~roy , 221 W. Second St.. Pomeroy.
f.i!!llllllled, strlkln~ a v•.·hio-\c There is no ~n lf',"i ta:r&lt;.
operated by Santlr• S, r 'ohb,
1l1e plantih~ pa&lt;'k•-t&lt; will
:11. of Syr~r.use. Thcrt were · Ill' received in the rlislrid
oo Injuries' or citations'
offite :II Pomeroy ubout the

TRACKS CLEANED - The monster grader brought
into Pomeroy TueSday afternoon by the Chesapeake and

Ohio Railroad Co., was used to clear the railroad tracks In
Pomeroy's business section of ice and snow which hsd
been loosened by the rising temperature.

Orders b~ing accepted for tree, ground ·cover .packets

'

first week of April where t~ey
Offered by the district this
1
can he picked up bY the yea~ are:
purchaser. Purchasers will
Assorted Wildlife Packet
he notified by phone when the flarge $16, small $8), White
pa ckets arrive. Purchasers Pine, 3 yr. seed ling·
should make sure their or- tra nsplants , 5-10"; Scotc-h
ders contain name. address Pine, 3 yr. seedlings. 10..16";
uno telephone number, There Norway Spruce. 3 yr.
is an order blank included In seedlings, 8-16"; Colorado
iodav 's edition· of The Sen- 111ue Spruce. 3 yr. seedlings.
lim•l whic-h nmv be filled out 1\-12": White Oak, seedlings,
;md 1Wdlrd. · Th(l . order R-t2": R~d rorlar. :1 vr.
seedling~ , 8·12", Whit e llir~h ;
d1•Mdli.r1t' is ft'rb.rofS·

2 yr. seedlings, 16-24"; Black seedlings, 8·10"; Redbud
Locust, seedlings, 8-12" ; (Eastern) , 4~" seedlings ;
Tulip Poplar, seedlings, 12- Bittersweet, 12-18"
18''; ,$weet Gum, s~edlings, seedlings ; Fl ow eri ng
12-18. Totai!JO"pieces large, 42 _ Dogwood,' 3 yr. seedlings, 12pieces small.
18" ; Mountain Ash, 6-10"
Ground Cover (in 50 crown seedlings; j?hlnese Chestnut.
lots ), Crown Vetch ft:, 2 yr. seed(ings, 6-12". Total.
Myrtle $10, F.nglish Ivy $10, H pieces.
.and Pachysandra, $10.
Quantity Orders (cannot be
"Song Bird Packet" ($7) mixed within the" order) 25 for
Red f,cdar. ~yr. seedlings, 8- $7, White Pine. F.RStrrn Red
12"; A\~mn .Olive, 3 vr. Ce&lt;jar, Autum'lo Olive . Black

•

Locust.
5 lor $4, Mountain Ash.
25 for $6 Colorado Blue
Spruce , Scotch Pine. Norway
Spruce.
5 for $6, White Oak, Black
Walnut, Forsythia .
10 for 16. Chinese Chestnut,
Tulip Poplar, Bittersweet, Sweet Gwn. White Dogwood.
Eastern Redbud, White
Birch.

'

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