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                  <text>!{)- The Da1ly Sentml'l. ~1Jddl eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda) . Dee. 5, '19i7
Capehart. Janet Crabtree ,
Mrs. Denms Dodrill and son,
Rodney Grueser, Mrs .
'
('remeans, a daughter . Michael Jenklns and son ,
\ 1eterans Memorial Hospital
C'oo l\'ille, Mr . and Mrs. George M c K enzie~ Daisey
Saturday AdmiSSions Marie Custer. Pomeroy: Jamos Day, a daug hter , Osborn.
Th omas Bing , Rutland : Gallipolis. Mr. and Mr s.
1Births. Dec. 41
Donald Gumther. Pomeroy. Larry Howell , a daughter ,
Mr. and Mr s Willi am
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cundiff . a daughter, Pt.
Saturday Discharges Valerie Jeffers , M mme Napper , a daughter. Ham- Pleasant.
Cla'tk, George Zeigler. Delma den .
PLEASANT VALLEY
1Discharges. D•c. 31
Ka'rr . Ray Wat son. Paul
DISCHARGES
- ; Mrs.
Jerry Cain, Kim Canaday,
Clay, Nellie Hanson.
Vern
on
Little
an
son ,
Teresa Church, Willis
Sunday Admissions Mrs. Ora
Middlep ort:
Rolland Smith, Middleport : Cooper, Linda Damewood. Durham, J ackson; Clara
Oma Hy sell , Syrac~se : Mr s . Robert Eynon and Harmon , Point Pleasant ;
William Clonch. Middleport , daughtrr , Vi olet Gerla ch. George Mora, Portland, 0.:
Herschel Gilbert, L1ili GreenSunday Disc harg es
Mrs. Allen Co&lt;, Gallipolis ;
Rolland Smith . I.oshla lee, Darvln Harris, Terry Keith Neal. Polnt Pleasant : Mitchell , Lela RoBinson, Helmandollar. LouiS Hoch- Mrs. James Stewart , West
berg, Arthur Ho)1. Tammy
Gladys Nicholson.
Hurl ey, Glenna Ja ~john, Co lumb ia ;· Riley Swartz,
Holzer Medical Ctoter
Gallipolis Ferry ; George S.
Chloe Kelly. Carol Krebs.
(Discharges, Dec. %I
Love. Pomt Pleasant ;
Lynda Adkins. Jewel Clark, Mrs. Cha rles Llntner and Kenneth Ashworth, Ashton ;
Roscoe Co zart , Lo well dau ghter, Judith Uvingston, Brady Duncan, Apple Grove ;
Dickason. Sharon fox. ·nora J oh n McMackin , Monta Granville
Hill,
Point
Hash, Joseph Higgins, Ralph Metzger, Sharon Mont- Pleasant ; Robert Van Meter,
Lea ch. Luman Louden, gomery. James Polcyn. Betty Mason; William Searsman,
Ri chard Long, William Ragllnd , Olen Smith. Harold Point Pleasant ; James Ball,
Marting. Andrew McCarty. Swartz, J ames Swingle. Apple Grove; Mrs . Carl
Raymond Mull en. Jame s Mark Van Sickle. Patricia Rairden , Hartford; Will
Richard Workman.
Nelson, Billie Provens. Williams,
Johnson , Bidwell; Carry
t Births, Dec, 31
Th om as Ragan, Mi chael
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Card· Johnson , Bidwell ; Glen
Rawlings, Howard Samples ,
McCarty. Pomt Pleasant;
Shirley Sn oddy , Edison well. a son. Wellston. Mr. and Gary
Cochr.an,
Point
Spriggs , Harry Swartz. Mary Mrs . Dougl as Duhl , a Pleasant; Mrs. Okley Willet.
Thomas. J ason Tu cker . daughter. Chillicothe . Mr. Cheshire; Parry Casto, Point
and Mrs. Gregory Grover. a
Record Tull , Mrs . J ohn
Pleasant ; Mrs. Freddie
Vance and son. Rita Walker, daughter. Pomeroy. Mr. and Lemley, Gallipolis; Lloyd
Mrs . Th omas Skinner, a
Marlene Whitman . Debra
Edward Haynes, Point
dau~ler. Gallipohs.
Wood .
Pleasant; Stephen Johnson ,
!Discharges, Dec. 4)
(Births. Dec. 21
Mary Akers, Russell Point Pleasant: Mrs. Leo
Mr .' and Mrs. Marv in

HOSPITAL NEWS

Special of the Week

TACOS
29~

This spectalts offered to you to acquaint you with

the goodness and economy of our homemade •

f

Mextcan food .-

Medica l Center Hospital after

Notices,
local briefs
The Harr ison"Ville Senior
Citizens Clvb will hold a
Christmas and , birthday
potlvck supper and S2 gift
el'.changebn TV'esday, Dec. 13
at 6 p.m . at the Harr lson Yille
Elementar1 School. ·Persons
are to bring their own table
service.
The Sal'olatlon Army , in
need of new or used toys to be
given to needr children for
Christmas wil accept same
at 115 Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy . Also canned goods
and other food products will
be accepted to help with the
Chr istmas baskets . All
donations
w ill
be
apprec iated.
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge
164, F &amp;AM, will meet for
Installation of officers at 7: 30

p.m. Wednesday . All Master
Masons are invited .
Women w ish ing to make an
appointment for the fre e
cancer clin ic to be held all
day Wednesday at the
basement .of Heath United
fv\ethodist Church in Mid ·
dleport are asked to call 992 ·
5832 ·this evening . There will
be only one clinic this month
and this is the first t1me that
the cervical clinic has been

a period of ia !ling hea lth of
several years' durat•on. Her
cond ition was ser ious the past

week .

She was born Apr il 26, 1903,
i n Ind iana to George and
Emma Williams Swain . and
she marr ied John W. Waugh
Aug 5, 1924. He d ied Aug . 10,

1973.

The ir surviving
are Mr s. Roger

Crump, W. Monroe ,

Jp

No limit to quantity of purchase. Offer good for

Drive-In or Carry-Out Service Only .

.·

La .;

Waugh ,

Ray ,

Oh io;

16

grandchildren and t hree
great-grand chil dren .
Three brother s and a s1ster
preceded her in dea th , but
five sisters surv ive: Mrs.
Retha Finley and Mrs. Ada
Carter , Gallipoli s; Mrs. Iva
Johnson and Mrs. Audrey
Haffelt , Cr own City ; Mrs .
Laura Jackson, Springf ield.
Ohio.
She spent most of her li fe in
Gall ra County . She was a
member of the Mt. Zion
Baptist Ch'urch and the Gallia
County
Sen ior
Citizens
Center .
Funera l services will be
held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at
the
Waugh - Hall ey -Wood
Funeral Home , the Rev .
Charles Lusher of fic iating ,
and burial w ill be 1n Mound
Hill Cemetery .
Friends may ca\14-6 and 7.9
p. m. Tuesday at the fun eral
home

her In deat~ . They had no
children
The followi ng brothers and
sisters surviv~ : Louis W.
Cennam o,
Anthony
D.
Cennamo. Mrs . R . V . (('l.;uilll
Wagner ,· Mrs .
W ill iam

(Gloria ) Withrow , Mrs. P. B.
{Ma ry ) Wiles. Mrs . Carl W.

!Josephine ) Raub, Mrs D. J .
IAnni Bonzo and Mrs . M. J .

(Lucy) Tully , all of Colum .
bus. One sister, Mrs John
(Conce tta) Fabbro, pr'eceded
her in death
She was the former owner
, of Joy Togs m Gallipol is and~
former employee of Pau l
Oa\l ies Jewelers .
She was a member of t he
Catholic Women ' s Club ,
treasurer
of
the
GSI
Volunteers Association ,
treasurer of the ParentsVolunteer Association, and
Sheltered Industr ies of the
GSI . She was past president
and past treasurer of Un it 27,
Amer ican leg ion Auxiliary .
She was La Oemi Chapeau
Prem ier of Gallla County

Will1am H. Walker
Will iam H. Walker , 75 , a
res ident of 84 Lucust St.j
Gall1polis, died Saturda y at
8: 30 p, m . in Holzer Medic; a!
Center.
Son of Samuel S. and
Blanche Weigle Walker , he
was born Jan . 2, 1902, at
Elizabeth, Pa . He married
~ry AAargaret R1chards on
Feb . 14, 1936, In Parkersburg ,

CConUnued from pace I)
apparent
landing
but
suddenly pulled sharply
upward, followed by a
bllndlng flash and a loud
explosion.
It was at least the second
crash of a hijacked aircraft.
On Sept. 15, 1974 a hijacker
demanJing to be flown to
Hanoi seized an Air Vietnam
Boemg 7'rl jet en route from
Danang to Saigon and set off
a grenade ln flight. The plane
crashed at Phan Rang, 175
miles northest of Saigon,
killing all 70 persons aboard .
The au-line said 1t was
investigating reports that
Malaysian Agriculture
Mlnister Dato Sri Ali Haji
Ahman and the Cuban
.ambassador to Japan, Mario
Garcia lnchaustegui, may
have been aboard.
Most of the passengers
.were reported to be either
Singapore or Malaysian
citizens.

1

on Jan , 23, 1942 . He preceded

•

(Mary )

l

Holzer Med ica l Center .
She was born in Columbus
on July 9, 1906, daughter of
the late Dominic and Pia
Cennamo .
She marr ied Ph ill ip Hecker

Children

Cl ifford Wilugh , Gr~nwich .
Ohio; I~Ja n Waugh, Frank ·
fort , Ohio ; Carrol Waugh ,
Gall i polis , and J ohn F .

Jetliner

AIJ. BEEF TACOS

REG. 55'

! Area Deaths

held in Middleport.

Monday, Dec. 5 thru Sunday, Dec. 11

SPECIAL
PRICE

---------------------------,

Plants, Point Pleasant :
Kenneth Robinson. Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Kenneth
Coleman and son. Point I
Pleasant ; Richard Grin·
stead , New Haven ; Mrs.
GOL 0 IE J . Waugh
Charles Eshenaur, Logan. W.
Goldie J . Waugh, 74, Rt . l .
Va ., and Mrs. Herbert King. Crown City t Swan Creek
community ), died at 11 :30 a .
Letart .
m . Su ndav in Ch i llicothe

W. Va ..

Salon No . 612, Eight and
Forty . She was a member of

St . Lou1s Catholic Church .
Funeral serv ices will be

held at Sl. Lou is Catholic
Church Wednesday 10 a .m.
wllh
Falher
A.
J.
Golubiewskl
offic iating .
Bur ial will be in St. Joseph
Cemetery, Columbus.
Friends may call from 7.9
p.m . Monday and 2·4 and 7-9
p.m .
Tuesday
at
the
Warehime Funeral Home

GINO'S
OF MASON

in ta iling health tor about two
years .
For 20 years he had been a
bri ck
mason
In
the
fabr ica t ion
maintenance
department
of
Ka iser
Alum inu m Corporation.
Ra ve nswood ~ He was a
member of the br ick masons
local 52 and of the U. S.
Steelworkers local 5668,
Ravenswood.
Born Oct . 1•. 1902 , In
Geovlnazzo. Italy , to Michael

m. Tu.. dav.

Albany , who was killed In

will be held Tuesdoy at 2 p.' ,
m. at the Albany Baptist- ~
Church with the Rev . Donald ~
Shue oft lcl atlng. Burial will •
be In Temple Cemetery .
'!
Friends will be received af• •
the Jordan Blgony Funeral ...-;
Home In Albany today ......
Graveside services will bP ~•
conducted by Albany VF~
Post 9893.
,.
Mr . Stout was prKeded ln .. ~~

survived by his wife. Esther
Scherel ; two daughters, Mrs .

(Marla)

Tuesday at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers the family
reciJests dona tions for St.

Jude Children 's Hospital,
Merrlph ls, Tenn .

LILLIAN CONLEY

lillian Conley , 74, Lower
Rl\ler Rd, Gallipolis, died at
5 a. m. Sunday In f.,hrcy
Hospital, Portsmouth . She
had been In failing health for
about two years.

ANTHONY ALTIERI
Anthony Altieri, 75, Klneon
Drive, Gallipolis, died at 2:15

o

m.

Sunday

at

Holzer

a~

automobile accident Frlday1 ·:.

and Mar la Altieri, he Is
Ron

Breed ing,

Columbus, and Mr5. William

(Mary) Bennett, Chillicothe,

and f1ve grandchildren .
He had lived over 50 years
in Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p . m . Tuesday at the

death by his lather, Orville. ·. ,

He Is survived by hi ;
mother , Velma Eastman, .-.

Albany ; his wile, Betty Bobo-.
Stout; one son, Steven ; ~ :

Waugh -Halley-Wood Funeral

brother , Charles, Albany ; a •
sister , Anna lee Gibson • .,.'
Albany ; a nephew. A.

Home, the Rev. Arthur Lund

offlclallng, and the body will

several aunts and uncles . -.
He was a member ot •

Albany Baptist Church, VFW.;
Post 98'13 ; Albany Masonic ·'
Lodae F&amp;AM 723. and Albany ':

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born Sept. 8, 1884, she was

ar:.

LAURAJ . EISELSTEIN
night

Order of Eastern Sters, 558.. ,.
J\\ason lc and Eastern Star ..
Services will be tonight
7: 30 .
" ;.

ot

the daughter of the late

..

James and Ethalinda Stone
Moore . She
was
also
preceded in death by her
husband, Delbert J a son.
Orval ; six sisters . and three
brothers.
She is survived by two sons ,
Cecil and James, both of
Pomeroy ; three grand ·"'
children,
five
great grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Mrs . Eiselsteln was a
member ot the Pythian
Sisters and the United

•'
. •

E·R CALLED OUT
~
The Mlddleport·E·R squad:
was caned lo VIUage Manor :
Apartments at 9:22 p.m. '
Sunday lor Gary Hart who..;
was ilL He was treated by tM.:;
squad. Middleport pollee, •
reported a traffic aeeldent 011,,
Page St. Saturday when a car 1driven by Denzil F. Proctor,..
Middleport, struck a utility_.;
pole. There was medium,!
damage. He is charged wittr•
leaving the scene of an ac- •
cident, pollee said.

Methodist Church,

Funeral services will be

Robert Hayden and the Rev .
Robert Bookman officiating .
Burial will be in Beech Grove

News .. in Briefs
(Continued !run pace 1)
crime. A court in Cleveland this fall struck down the stale's
organized crime statute and Flynt has appealed his conviction.
"Next week I intend to go back into the streets of
Clncinnati and sell my magazine to force them to arrest me,"
F1ynt told a Speech Communications Association meeting
Saturday. "l'mdoing this because I tl!ink the country is aware ~
enough of who I am and what took place·down here that maybe
I will have an opportunity to get a lair trial ."
PALMDALE , FLA. - COLONEL, THE WAYWARD
elephant, headed home to the circus a~ "his people" today
after discoverlng the wilds of south Florida can be very
lonesome lor an 8,0IJO.pound pachyderm. "We found him really
scared and freaked out," said Cliff Vargas , owner of Circus
Vargas. "It's difficult to believe that a big elephant can be
afraid, but you have to understand Colonel had never been by
himself before. He's used to being around 'his people.: "
The pilot of R state Game and Fresh Water Commission
search plane s)JO\ted the It-year-old Colonel in a heavy thicket
west of Lake Okeechobee Sunday mocning. A ground posse of
20 men ran to the spot and surrounded him, That ended silt
days of freedom for the center ring star. He escaped Tuesday
lnto the 400,000--acre Lykes Brothers ranch and game presetve
when he was unloaded from a trailer-truck, which caughl fire
while transporting him to a performance in Miami,
-

.

COLUMBU&amp;-THE AMERICAN FEDERATION of State,_
County and Municipal Employees of the AFL.CIO responded "
Satu•day to Gov. James A. Rhodes' veto of a collective :
bargaining bill for public employees by criticizing Ferguson ·
law . Thomas E. Morgan, director of the .federation, said the ,
governor's veto leaves Ohio's :;oo,ooo public employees ~
"saddled by the Ferguson Act, the only state law on the books in Ohio that pertains to public employee labor relations."
•
He said "After 30 years, the Ferguson law has proven to be
a failure, from the employers' standpoint, the employee•'
standpoint, and the taxpayers' standpoint. Morgan said public
employees aren't "strike-bappy" and have struck in the past .
"only in their frustrations over poor wages and working
conditions which forced them into the streets'. ''

GIFT SUGGESTIONS FROM THE HOUSEWARES DEPT. 1ST A.OOR
WEST BEND

NEW!

a

. , where cra ftsmen sltll care•

CANISTER
SET

a
wesreENo
~®
where craltsmen sll lt ClUe•

FRYETIE'"

• Conveniently·
sized canisters with
decorative
mushroom motif.
. • Saamless
aluminum

electric
DEEP FRYER
• Perfect size for couples, singles,
students
...._t
• Uses just 2 cups of oil to fry one
or two servings in just a few minutes
• No-Stick surface inside and out
• Includes slolled spoon and plastic

construction;
durable
polypropylene
covers.

cover

..

WESfBENO ® automatic
.

where Cl al!smcn st1 ll c are~

Self-Buttering
Corn Popper

11" BUFFET SKILLET

~

. wl\ere crallsmen sU11 care®

• Porcalain-on-alumin11,mpan
spntads halt evenlY-to roast
or fry foods to perfection.
• Fired-On No.Stick

Board of Public Affairs, $30 per month ,
Miscellaneous en'lployces, ~c~ctary tn Mayn r , less than

six month s service, $2,408.40 6 mos . and after six months
service, $5 ,356.80 per year .
·
Council also heard a presentation from a represen l.attve uf
the Columbus and S/Juthe~·n Ohio Electric Co. suggesting
changing present mer cw·y vatx~r hghts 111 the duwntnwn
section to low sul phur lights. cenerally. tile recommended
lights would be of smaller wattage but they would crea te more
illumination . A representative will complete a detailed plan
and costs on the changeover fm council un Ja n. 3.
Acom plaint was received from OSby Martin about a dead
tree on village property which is endange ring his property on
1Continued on page 12)

e
at
en tine
Ohio coal industry shut down
'

Fiftt&gt;l'n Cents
Vol. 2K. No. u ;~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesdav. December 6. I!J77

·:•: :;: :;.: : :-: : ;~::~·~· · :!~::·· ·~::::·· · '· · ·:_.:_·
~:;:

'f\

-•
.\

nationwide at 12: 01 a.m. :::;:·
United Press bJlernatimwl
A nationwide strike of coal miners began a minute

and thousands of non-union

::::.

after

continuous

miners in the Buckeye State
ashlso. stadyed thorr tthe johib,
uttmg own e en tre 0 o

.·.• :. •
.;
..}
·.·.
:·,•·,:',·
:
\
::;:

to produce a
The coalfields remained peaceful dunng the early
hours as 130,000 members of the United Mine Workers
launched their lOth nati onwide stnke m 35 years. UMW
President Arnold Miller, who stormed out of the talks
five hours before the actual strike deadline, accused
the Bituminous Coal Operators Association of "trying
to break this union."
Even with the mlners gone from their jobs, the
walkout thiS year was not expected to cnpple U. S.
lndust~y, which has been stockpiling the coal in recent
months. Also, half of the nation's coal is mined by non-

:::
by the UMW
::: members will cost !he state
/ at least ·$2.5 million a week in
::·: lust wages alone not counting
:;; . the variety of wages paid the
:••: 3,000 to 5,000 non-union
·i miners in Oh10 and the
) millions of dollars more in
... local purchases made by Ohio
} coa l compa nies .
:-:
The state has 32 deep mines
_::: and 352 .Strip mmes which,

midnight

this

mornin g

when

·_:.~· :ft~!:~~~~s spannlng four days failed

':::
:;:~

}
._._
:_,:_,:_,.:
}
..
)

·..
:.,:,;,:
·~;~;

:::
_.,:_:.•

Hy JOHN T. KADY
United Press International
Ohio's 10,000 union miners
today joined a. nationwide
United Mine Workers strike

co~!"~~~~~-

union workers who are not on strike.

::;:

com bined ~ produced nearly

Federal med iator Wayne Horvitz scheduled a
resumption of contract talks for Thursday at 3 p.m.
ESf in Washington . Miller tol d reporters he would
"return to the nego.llations when there is so me sign of
real progress." Horvitz said he expected Miller to
attend Thursday's session.
In West Virginia, where nearly ha U tile nati on's
union mlners are employed, there was talk of shulhng
down non-union mines and disrupting coa l barge

(
·-:·
(
-:-:
·:·:
::::
::;:
:-':

47 million tons of coat last
year . The majonty o1 the
str1p mines are non-union
faCilities and they were also
shut down today.
William Spiker. board
cha irman of the R&amp;F Coal
Co. which is headquarted in
Cadiz, said his firm employs

:::0
traffic.
:;::
Local union officials were predictin g a strike of six to ·~;:

about 350 nonunion miners in

over 40 strip mmmg
;.;~ seven weeks
:;: operations and all were
.:,,·:.:-:•:-:::::::::.::·::.. :·.:·:· ::::•··:•·:-.,. :,.,. :: -.·.;-::·.; :::-:•&lt;· :• -'·:-:-:-'-:-·- _. ._.; ,.. ,,_._.;:: ·:';: :,:,: :, :,·-: :- _. ..'-', closed.
"They are not open and I
would say they will not open"
Post'sdu~lng
the d~ation of the
·
stnke, sa1d Spiker.
Spiker and other operators

Cook named G-M

'Trooper-of-the-Year'
Gallipotis Ohio State Highway Patrol Trooper Rodney
C. Cook has been selected
197'1 "Trooper of the Year" at
the Gallia-Meigs Highway
Patrol Post.
The award was presented
to Trooper Cook, 30, in
· recognition of outstanding
service during 1977 at the
Gallta-Meigs post, Selected
by fellow officers stationed at
the Gallia·Meigs Patrol Post,
the decision to choose
Trooper Cook was based on
leadership
~bilities,
professional ethics, courteous
treatment of othe~s. en,
thuslastic work attitude, and
cooperation with supervisors,
peers, and the public.
Trooper Cook is now in
contention for the D1st;-iC1
Nlne and State Trooper of the
Yeat awards to be announced
at a later date.
Trooper Cook joined the
Highway Patrol in 1971 and
has served at the Ironton and
Gallipolis Posts. Originally
from Gallia County he is a
graduate of Southwestern
High School. Trooper Cook
served four years ln the U. S.
Navy. Other patrol awards

of non-union mines shutdown
rather than risk problems
with roving UMW pickets.
The Carter administration

has said enough coal is mined
by non-llllinn miners - about
48 percent - to meet the
nation 1S energy needs during

a lengthy strike but Spiker
laughed
at ·
this,
acknowldgmg that if they are
not working they are not
mining coal.
"! think he should come out
to the real world and see what
it is like 111 said Spiker.
The UMW does not have a
strike fund and its members
will get no strike ben eli ts but
will qualify for food stamps.
In addition, the UMW stopped
1ts med1ca l benefits and
miners will have to pay their
own doctor and hospital bills
durlng the work stoppage.
" We will just have to make
RODNEY C. COOK
received in the past include a
five-year safe driving award
and Past Patrolman of the
Year at the Ironton Post.
Trooper Cook and his wife
Charla Rae (Gooch) Cook
live at Rt. 2 Gallipolis at
Centenary. They have one
child, Melissa Rae Cook, age

5.

do the best we can/' Ken

Wagnild , Shadyside, an
official of UMW Local o497 at

the North American No. 1 in
Powhatan Point, said today .
"I don't have any other plans
for work during tile strike.
" We'll just have to get by ,"
said Wagnild, who \1&gt; married
and the father of five
children. "I personally don 't
think the st rike will last very
long . I don't know why I feel
that way. It's just a gut
feeling , I guess. But we are
ready to stay out until it is
settled, however long that
takes.'
Sheriff's departments
throughout eastern Ohio said
there had been no reports, as

yet, of rovmg pickets .
The UMW traditionally
sends out roving pickets to
close
down
non-union
operations , includmg both
mines and coal loading docks
along the Ohio river, during a
union strike.
•
" It IS extremely quiet this
mornmg," sa id Belmon t
County sheriff 's deputy John
Foy in St. Clairsville .
" Everything shutdown at
midnight.· I haven't had any
reports of any roving pickets,
at least not yet .''
· Mike Ott, a deputy with the
Harrison County sheriff's department in Cadiz, said it was
also quiet in that area, which
is peppered with non-union
strip mimng operations.

•

'il""
~t\
'

YOUNG AND OLD alike enjoyed the open house.
Sitting on Archie Griffin's lap is K. C. Arnott, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Arnott, Syracuse.

Archie Griffin

" I doo 't know whether all

popular
guest
No one charged
(Continued on page 12)

in 2 accidents
No one was charged in two
minor traffic accidents Investigated Monday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The f1rst occurred at.11 :14
a.m. on US 35, four tenths of a
mile east of milepost 2 where
an auto operated by Timmy
R. Saunders, 19, Galena, 0 .,

struck the rear of a vehicle
driven by Agnes C. Evans, M,
Oak Hill . There was
moderate damage.
An unidentified truck was
lnvolved ln an accident at
1:45 p.m. on SR 338, south of
RaCine. The patrol said the
truck flipped a stone that
b~oke the windshield in a car
driven by Larry F. Eakins,
18, Racine.

•
Three killed m
McArthur blast

MCARTHUR, Ohio (UP!)
According to area fire
- An explosion ripped departments, the company
through the Austin Powder has pnvate lire fighting
Co. plant here Monday night. facilities and does not require
Authorities said three assistance from public
~~
:~ persons were killed in the forces.
Law enforcement agencies
blast in the jelly dynamite
By United Press International
of
the
plant.
in
the area reported "very
section
Egypt today enforced its break in diplomatic relations
The
Vinton
County
sheriff's
tight
security at the company
with five hard~lne Arab states by posting riot police around
office
said
today
compound,"
tlleir embassies in Cairo, as U.S. officials rushed preparations
The company, located on
for Secretary of State Cyrus Vance 's tour of Middle East identification of the victims
was withheld pending Ohio 677 aboutrour tniles east
capitals this weekend.
of here employs between 250
The influential Lebanese newspaper An Nahar predicted notification of relatives.
The
e&lt;plosion
occurred
at
and300workersand
was used
Egypt's President Anwar Sadat will follow his move against
p.m.
Monday
in
one
of
lor
the
production
of
military
6:15
Syria, Libya, Algeria, Southern Yemen and Iraq by severing
75
structureS
separated
explosives
during
the
about
ties with the Scviet Union.
by
large
moUnds
of
earth
on
•
Vietnam
conflict.
It
now
Cairo's ambassadocs to all five Arab countries, plus the
ambassador to Moscow, already have been recalled. Squads of the company's 1,300acres in produces 1ndustrial
explosives.
riot police rlnged the live Arab embassies in Cairo, whose staff central Vinton County.
An
employee
said
the
buildAn explosion at the company
members were given 24 hours' notice to leave the country 'in
ing
that
exploded
was
about
compound
on Dec. 29, 1975
the expulsion order Monday .
40 feet wide by 60 feet long. killed one person.
Officials
from
four The victims were David
CAIRO, EGYPT - EGYPT'S RUPTURE of -diplomatic
hospitals
and
medical
centers
Jarvis, Roger Ervin and
relations with five hard-line Arab states plun ged the Middle
in
the
Vinton
County
area
Steve
McVey, the company
East into turmoil today and undercut U. S. efforts at
no
accident
victims
said
in
~ brief statement.
reported
·
reconciliation in . the region .
in
their
facilitiess
.
The
statement
did not give ·
· The move against Syria, Iraq, Libya, Algeria and South
Ken
Price,
planl
·manager,
tile
ages
or
the
hometown
of
Yemen -all critics of President Anwar Sadat's campaign for
said
one
employee
was
the
victims
and
tile
company
peace with Israel - appeared to bury chances lor an overall
further comment.
Middle East settlement any time soon. The state-controlled "slightly injured" in the refused
41
explosion.
An
investigation
is
Cairo press said today the decision was taken in retaliation for
Sheriff's
deputies,
Stale
underway
to
try
and
a "freeze" on ties with Egypt which was declared by the
Highway Patrol officers arid getermine the cause of the
radical Arab states at a summitin Libya Monday.
company officials refused arcidenl ," the cn mpany
LONDON- PRIME MINISTER '!enahem Begin of Israel late Monday to gJve out any statement concluded.
details about the ac-cident.
(Continued on page 12)
:::::::::::::::::~~=~::~:::::::::::::.:·!·!·!·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::·:·:·:::::::·:::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

INews. . . in Briefsl

itt completely

•
tnos .; alter three mont hS serv1ce, $5,860.80 per year .
Dispatcher, less than three months service, $1 ,2ii1 20 3
mos.; After three months service, $5,356.80 per year .
Extra Patrolma n or Meterman, $2.45 per hour .
Extra Dispatcher, $2.45 per hour.
Water and Sewer Dept., W,atcr 'and Sewer Distribution
System, Superihtendent , $3.85 per hour ; Assistant Plant
Superintendent, $3.30 per hour; Uti lily Trainee and Opera tor
in training, less than three months service, $2.45 per hour ;
three to nine months se rvice, $2.65 per hour ; nine to twelve
months se rvice, $2.75 per hour; and after twel ve months
service, $3 per hour .
"
Laborer, Office Clerk Bookkeeper, $5,822.80 per year ;
Assistant Office-Clerk Bookkeeper , $2.45 per hour ; Clerk of

•

Gibson Ill, of Albany, on&lt;t•;

Laura J . Elselsteln, 93, of
653 Osborne St., Pomeroy.

Sunday

Pomeroy Village e111ployes were given approximate six
Street and Cemcteary Maintenance, Assistant Supervisor,
. pet. pay increases effective Jan . 1, 1978 by village council in One to six months service, $2.55 per hour · Six to twelve months
regular session Monday night .
servic'e, $2.93 per hour.
'
Council Suspended the rules and gave the new ordmance
Laborers, Less than three months service, $2.45 per hour ;
three Jreading!f under emergency measures so that it will Three to nine months service, $2.55 per hour · Nine to twelve
become effective the first of next year.
·
monU15 service, $2.67 per hour.
'
Following is the new pay schedule for employees as
Pollee
approved Under the new ordinan ce:
Chief of Pollee, Less than three months service, $1,543.20 3
'Street and Cemetery Department :
mos.; After three months service, $6,746,80 per year.
Street Supervisor
Captain, Less than three months service, $1,465,20 3 mos. ;
One to Ulree monltis servk-e, $1 1680.60 per 3 m o.
After three months service, $6,438.80 per year .
Three to six montlls service, $1,813.20 per 3 mo.
Pa trolmen, Less than three months service, $1,417.20 3
Six to nine months service, $1 ,969.20 per 3 mo.
mos.; Alter three months service, $6,172.80 per year.
Nine to twelve months service, $8,188.80 per year .
Meterman, Le&lt;s thon three months service, $1 , 33~. 20 3

c, •

be cremated. Friends may
call at the funeral home 6·9 p.
m . today .

died

Council raises village employes' pay

SAMMY STOUT

funeral
services
for
Sammy Stout, 43, of Route 2.

• Wednesday at _1 p.m. al
Rosary will be held 8 p.m. Ewing Chapel with the Rev.

She surv ives. alonQ , with
two sons, John Ru:ahrd
Born April 13. 1903, In Boyd
Walker, Mansf ield, Pa ., and
County, Ky. , to John and
James Blaine Walker , St.
Virginia Dickson Hart, she
Paul, Mrnn . Two grand - married William Russell
daughters surv1ve .
Conley Nov . 9, 1922, in
Two brothers and tw o Catlettsburg, Ky ., ond he
sisters preceded him in died Apr.il 24, 1968.
death.
They are survived by three
Mr . Walker was a pur - daughters and two sons : Mrs
chasing agent for the Terin 1 James (Cieoral
Egner ,
Construction Co. before Galltpotls ; Mrs . James
retiring .
During
h is (Virginia) Swain , Black lick ,
association w1th that firm, he Ohio ; Mrs . Charles (Bar ·
and his wife and family bara) Thomas , Casey , S. C ;
traveled to South Amer ica
Bill Conley. Columb•a , S, C.,
where they resided for five and Donald, Fairfield, Calif.
years. They also resided in A daughter and two grandSt. Calhannes . Canada for children preceded her in
five years
death, but ten grandchildren
He was a member of the and two great-grandchildren
Presbyterian Church in survive .
Elizabeth, Pa., a 32nd Degree
Two brothers and a sister
Mason and a member of the survive · Henry M . Hart,
GallipOl is Shrine Club.
Roanoke. Va. ; Paul Hart, los
The remains will be Angeles ;
Mrs .
Eugene
cremated . Graves ide ser - { Hazel) Hall, Huntington
vices will be held Wednesday Beach. Ca li f. A brother ,;~~nri"
at 2 p m . at the M t. Zion sister preceded her in death.
Cemetery, off R t . 35 , with
Private funeral services
Rev. James Frazier of - will be held at 10 a. m.
ficiating .
Wednesday at the WaughThere will be no call1ng Halley -Wood Funeral Home,
hours
the Rev . Chalmer,s Conley
The family requests no and the Rev . Alfred Holley
flowers.
officiat ing and burial will be
Contributions may be made in Centenary Cemetery.
to the Gallipolis Shrine Club. Friends may calf at the
Funeral arrangements are funeral home 7-9 p . • m.
under the direction of Willis Tuesday .
Funeral Home .

NOW OPEN

Cemetery. Friends may cafl
at the funeral home after 10 • ·

Med ical Center . He h&lt;ld been

\

RACINE - Dave Diles of
ABC Sports and Archie
Griffln, running back of the
Cincinnati Bengals' and
subject of Diles' latest book,
helped the ~acine Home
National Bank show off its
newly remodeled facilities
Monday from 1 to 6 p.m.
While Diles - native of
Middleport and SQn of a New
York Central Railroad
engineer ~ and Griffin
welcomed hundreds or guests
to the open house, they had
their own thing going signing
copies of Diles' latest book,
"Archie."
Youngsters
crowded into the bank with
footballs, autograph bonks, in
some cases just scraps of
paper, for the two-time
Heisman Trophy winner
Gnflin out of Woody Hayes'
football department at Ohio
State University in 1976 to
sign.
,
Archie had one of his be!lt
days since JOining the
Bengals Sunday in defeating
the Kansas City Chtefs 27-7 to
stay alive In the playoff
chase.
The bank has added a new
drive-through facility , all
new accounting department,
new walkup teller windows,
and quarters lor a doctor's
office.
They also have a new off.
the-street parking area.
David Parsons wa s the
general contractor.
A dinner was given at the
Meigs Inn Monday evening
honoring Diles and Griffm.

COOKIE SALSER was in charge of selling Dave Diles
and Archie Griffin's book "Archie" along with other books
that Diles has written. Shown with Mrs. Salser is Tom
Wolfe, president of the bank . The books sold very well and
all were auwgraphed by the two celebrities.

DAVE DILES AND ARCHIE GRIFFIN, seated, and Tom Wulfe, president uf the Ra cine
Home National Bank, who made Diles' and Griffin's vi sit possible. Tours of the new
facilities were given, refreshments were served, and gif~ hanrled to everyone

Rural grocery robbed
More than $2,000 worth of
merchandise was taken in a

'breaking and entering early
Monday
at
Howard
Lawrence's Grocery Store
located at DeWitt's Run in
Lebanon Twp. '
Meig s County · Sheriff
James Proffitt's Dept. said
entry was gained by breaklng
Schools of the Meigs Local a glass. Missing were an
School
District
were undetermined amount of
dismissed two hours early on cigarettes, coffee, jackets,
Monday due to flood threats boots, shoes, knives and
in rural areas due to the meat.
The robbery , occurred be·
heavy _raijis which fell Sunday and Monday.
Southern Local Schools
conducted a normal day
Windy and colder today,
schedule on Monday as did
the Eastern District with the two to four inches snow by
exception of one school bus evening and ending thi s
which was dispatched earlier evening. Lows tonight 5 to 15.
than normal due to lhe nood Cloudy and cold Wednesday,
threat in the area where the chance of snow by evening.
bus had to travel.
Highs in t he low 20s .

Meigs schools
let out .e arly.

Weather

,.

tween 2:30 and 8:30 p.m.
Anyone having any in formation is requested to
contact the shenff's office.
Roger T. Klein, 29, Rt. 2,

Klmn car attempled to pHss
just as an auto driven by Mrs.
Vonderine Wilhams, Rt. 1,
MmcrsvJIIe, started to make
a left 1urn No one was ln-

Pomeroy, wa s ci ted to Meigs

jurcd . 111Cre wa s moder ate

County Court for improper damage to the Williams car
passing following an ttccidenl and no damage t o Kl ein's
at 4:45a.m. Monday on SR 7: veh1cle .
According to deputies, the
GOLD STAR DRAW
Winners Monday ln the
Christmas Gold Star GiveAway promotion sponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commer1•e were Sarah
Yonker, Sumner Road,

Pomeroy , $10 gilt certllicate at Nelson's Drugs
and Carol Ann Webb, Box
317, Syracuse, SID girt
certificate at Stllners. No
purchase Is necessary to ·

participate,

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

•;.

�2 Tht&gt;Dai)Semn I ~tdUtlxrlP

er

U 1\ sit

Ol

:-_T~e_,?ally Sentinel Mtdilleport P meroy 0 Tuesday Dec 6 1977

6 19

--------~

I

Public School financing by taxes on

Dolphins snap Colts win streak, 17-6

: Pro
:
:Standings:
I

NFL Stand ncn
By Un fed P eu lnterna ona
A mer can Conte ence
East
W L T PC!
Mom
9 J a 150
Ba mo e
9 J a

property unconstitutional in Ohio
CINCINN ATI UPll - \
judges ru ng that Oh
t ethod f f nanct g pub!
schools s unconst tt on s
the f rst s ep n a ion~
JOur ne o\\ ard er; ba II
needed refflrn
sa\ s a sup
por er of t h(' dec s on
Bu t co pia ns a detractor
\\'ha v. e ha e he re are the
" rnng pa nt ffs ha l g ng

the r g I f nda t.s n the
r ng f rw
The ru l n~ spa
~ he
deba e \\ as VtS II g H'l!l to
( ur I r I
"" Pleas Cour
Judge Paul E Rt e s f a
de larat on Monda 1 a he
tax b sed
Sit e s pr pert
1 e h ld
f f nan tng publ c
sc hools was
unconst
tut onal

s
stands up
St e Edmat on De pa rune t t
the ta c l o~ sla tur w II ha e " uld n osl I kel) appeal
n e up " I a d rrere
Alt h&lt;&gt; U~:I he sa d 1e had not
t
t st udted Ue wntlen c urt
sch • I ft na c ng eth d b\
Jul 1 1978 he lat e R le) s rul ng he d d 1 t beheve 11
or de beco 1 es effe I e
Muld ha e an nunedia te
1 Colu 1 bus Asststa r t effect
r "' uld t ha\ e a
Sta te Super e n de t
f
n pa c t o a nu nber f
SchO&lt; Is Roger I ulo callecL...._,;p&lt;&gt;=l sch tO!-lcvtcu tp..for a
ti e dec s on on! tl t' r rst
vote n mtd Dece nber
I p t on s nee t1 e
St ate legislators \\ho ha ve
step
If I

It

be&amp;'l.lll Uus sess1 n tu look

Nation hit again
by heavy storms
Un ted Press International

Sn o\Ht orn s
cont nu ed
early toda) over the Nor
theasl and Gr eat Lakes
regtot fier ce cold covered
the northern Plams and a new
storm S) stem pron sed as
much as e ght mches of snow
m the North\\ est
Rams contmued m parts of
the South "here tern
perature r ecords t umbled
and rornadoes accon pan ed
ramstorn s Monda}
Snow contmued earl) today
over much of the Great Lakes
reg on the lower Oh o Vallev
Ne" England and the East
Coast
Rochester N Y reported
accumulatiOns of 11 mches
early today and Buffalo N
Y had 10 mches of snow on
the ground The Nat onal
Weather Servtce predtcted a
foot -&lt;ieep cover n several

parts of Ne" ' ork and
Vern ont
A storm system brought
ram and snow today to the
Pactftc North\\est where
ram spawned noods caused
mtll ons o! collars m flood
damage to Washmglon and
Oregon last \\eek
The Natt onal Weather
Sen e pred cted four to
e ght nches of sno\\ toda y
from northeast Washmglon
nto western Montana before
the storm moved nto the
eastern Montana Wyommg
and the Dakotas tomght
Belo" zero readmgs were
reported n th .,:ll&lt; northern
Plams and upper Mtss sstppt
Valle) It was 20 belo" zero
early toda) at Glas1ow Mont
Travelers adv sor1es were
ssued across the northern
half of the Un ted States as
snow or freezmg ram fell

t

a lt ern a t ve fundt ng pl ans
\\ ere rep rted o surpr sed
b\ the dectston Most belteve
new f nan ce S}stem w l be
ena ted
th s b1e n1um
-------~~---

NOIN YOU KNOW
Adolf Httlcr was neither a
house
painter nor a
paperhanger nor was hts
real name Schickelgruber

aln ost e er) where north of

the Mason D &lt;on L ne
A\ alanche adv1sor1es were
up agam m the mountain
areas of Colorado where h gh
wmds "h pped snow nto
stmg ng projecttles
Kansas fanners sa1d the
htgh wtnds snow and
freez ng ram wouldn t cancel
the r tractor-&lt;:ade to the
state Cap to! The tnp to
Topeka was planned to
protest low crop mces
Rains contmued early
toda) n parts of the South
where the mtxmg of warm
and cold atr brought rams
and htgh wmds
Tornadoes and severe
thunderstorms swept through
South Caro l na ID)urmg
three persons damagmg
build ngs o&gt;erturnmg mobtle
homes and trees and bat
ter ng towns w th gusty

¥~

nds
Bown an Pohce Chef M L
South satd a tornado npped
carrted debrts as htgh as 100
!eel m th s South Caroltna
town Spartanburg County
ofhctals satd a tornado and
htgh wtnds damaged SIX
mobtle homes 111 Spar
lanburg S C but there were
no mJunes
In much of the Sauth warm
was too mild a word Monday
as at least stx cttles
reg Slered new record htghs
The temperature reached 94
m Brownsv lie Texas 8S m
San Anton o and 77 m
Galveston New Orleans
reached a record 84 A record
of 79 degrees was recorded m
Mobtle Ala and Athens
Gal reached a record 77

Farm strike assured Dec. 14
By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGlON UPI - A
farm protest leader savs C:J
lliJtlo w de farmers str ke
beg nnmg Dec 14 agatnst low
prices s now a certa nty
wtth at least iO percent of the
patton s growers taking part
of
George
Boucher
Rf!venna Neb to d a news
co fe en ce Monday th e

protest Y.ould have a maJor
unpact on farmers buymg
fr om agr busmess supply
co mpan es w1thm two to
three weeks
Tit ough a boycott of
agnbusmess we II have them
work ng s de b) s de to get
pr ces up So we can hve
Boucher old a conference at
the Cap tol arranged by Sen

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb M D

Develop walking habit
By Lawrence Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB I would
be mterested m your com
ments on JOggmg tenms golf
or other rorms of exercise for
a person w th an rregular
pulse and palpttalwn I am a
male 60 years old 5 feet 11
and we gh 183 and have no
other medical problems
Other than a da ly dose of
Inderal phenobarb tal and
Lanoxm 1 take no med ca
lion My work s fatrly seden
tary but I plan to ret re n Sill
months
DEAR READER
It
depends enbrely upon what
causes the palpttatwns or r
regulant es If they occur n a
healthy person and a
med ca l check up shows no
problems such an mdtvtdual
can develop an cxerc se program gradually
You may be tak ng the
I anOJ&lt; n to control tr
regular t es or you may be
tak ng t because your doctor
thinks vour heart muscle
needs strengthenmg S nee
You equ e heart medtcme
you should not engage 111
phys ca C:J d tv mle s ; our
own doc tor app av es oft! He
wtl have add twnal mfonna
t on that w II he p m makmg
the deCISIOn
1 wou d approve of your
develop ng a da I) Walktng
hab t Start gradually if you
bave been sedentary and try
to but d up to three m les a
day You can walk the
distance '" d v ded amounts
rather than all at one !lme I
would not recommend Jogg
mg tenn s or even golf uoll
your doctor says t ts 0 K for
you
INhen the heart s already
overworked bee use o!
disease tt ts not a good tdea
to work 1t even harder That
ts why some people wtth
heart d sease have to restr ct
fhetr phystcal acttvtty For
the person who does not have
such lunttattons a sens ble
exerctse program may help
to forestall or even prevent

•

heart dtsease What IS good
for one s not good for all
To gtve you more nforma
t on on palp tat ons I am sen
ding you The Health Letter
number 6 12 Heart Ir
regular ttes Sk pped Beats
Tachycardias Others who
wsnt th1s nformation can
send 50 cents w th a long
stamped
se lf addressed
envelope lor t to me m care
of thts newspaper P 0 Box
1551 futd o Ctty Statton New
York NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB
So
many women these days are
plagued w th facta! ha r Can
you enltghlen us as to the
cause how to avotd tt what to
do about tt when t s ex
cess ve and what part do
synthetic hormones play n
t11s embarrass ng and
agon zmg problem
DEAR READER The two
mam fa ctors nvolved are
famtl ar character sites and
the balance between male
and female hormones Men
and women have both male
and female hormones 1 he
balance s what counts In
women "hen the ovar es
stop fund on ng the adrenal
gland remams as the rna n
source for both male and
female hormones
Some women have a htgher
ratio of male hormones
wh ch thtckens the facta!
ha rs Addtttonal female hor
mones often help but when
that s not a good tdea for
med1cal reasons or 1s other
wtse not feastble then the on
ly thing left s to phystcally
remove the ha r Thts can be
accompltshed b~ professiOnal
electrolysiS Your doctor can
help you fmd a qualtfted one
m your area A dermatologtst
usually knows wh ch ones are
reputable n the commumty
Of course you can pull them
out
ouch
but they w II
come back whether you use a

wax preparatiOn or tweezers
And you can often unprove
)ou
app~arance
b)
bleachmg them

•

Carl Curls R Neb
The Nebraska farmer sa td
gro\\ers were trymg to help
the JSelves by planmng to
barter American grams to
fore gn buyers He added
they were askmg the
government for a 12-month
morator urn
on
loan
pa}ments for hard-pressed
farn e1 s and for actiOn to
channel part of a current
gra n surplus mto alcohol for
mo or fuels
Boucher sa d he d d not
expect any qwck mcrease m
consumer
food
pr ces
because of the stnke whtch
many nat anal farm leaders
at d off c als have satd s
unl kely to have much
unpact But he added the A
m e r I c a n housew fe s
go ng to have to learn to
afford
the
Amencan
farmer
Boucher heads a group
called Nat onal Farm Stnke
Inc He satd t ts mdependent
o! a more wtdely pubhctzed
movement called Amer can
Agr culture wh ch s aiS&lt;J
callmg on farmers to stnke
14
unless
the
Dec
government takes act10n to
push farm commod ty pnces
w 100 per cent of the federal
farm panty standard
Amencan
Agriculture

leaders have urged farmers
to stop all farm product sales
as well as non essent al
supply purchases [lee 14 and
to refra n from plant ng until
the r demands are met
Boucher sa d h1s orgamzat on
IS urgmg grrun farmers to
hold thetr crops back fron
market But he sa d the group
ts not asking producers to
stop sellmg tlems like cattle
or hogs and s not pushmg a
no-plantm g pledge
Farm part! y pr ces are
des gned to gtve commodtl es
the same buy ng power they
had m the theoret cally fa r
1910 14
pertod
Pnces
currently average less than
two-thtrds of the panty level
Boucher accompamed by
Georgta and Iowa protest
spokesmen satd they were
also planrung to seek barter
deals swapp ng Amer can
gram for otl and othe r foretgn
products Efforts are bemg
made to arrange a barter o!
I 4 mtlhon pounds of gram to
Trm dad he satd and other
countr es nclud ng ~a ud1
Arabla have shown nterest m
the dea
Unless somethmg ts done to
Improve the farm economy
Boucher added :&gt;.'i per cent of
the nation s farmers may be
out of busmess next year

an

wa

R IO) ISSUed h S di'C StOn tn
a &lt; se flied aga nsl the stale
F. luc tt on Depart• en! b) the
r n r \iJI sd {)( I b tard
It s ver) clearly the ftrst
s ep n 1 long JOurney t ward
'er) badly needed reform of
fm a c ng of pubhc educatton
m Ot 10 but how nm ediate
the rehef s depends on tl e
appea s pr cess
sald
C nc nnatt sc hool board
pres dent Henry Kasson
The rul ng certamly wtll
go a long way toward sol vmg
so 1e f the long ..-ange I nan
eta! problems we have but
"hal l s gong to do fo us u
1978 s hard to assess at th s
JX tnt
Asstslant Ohto Attorney
General DaVld Beaver who
represe ted
Ue
state
educat on deparunent m the
ase sa d he was surpr sed
by the dec s on
Bea er had rna ntamed
U at the current f nancmg
S)stem was fatr and was
work ng
Alth ough
he
acknowledged there were
staggermg problems m
educat on he cautl oned
agamst JUd cal mtervenuon
m a eg slatn.e area
What we ha' e here are the
wrong plamttffs challeng ng
the wrong defendants n the
wrong forum he sa d
R ley s dec1s on ca ne
exactl) one year to the day
after Cmcmnat had started
tts case attackmg the state s
school funding method
Rile) a Vlsttmg JUdge from
Cl mton County declared
Oh o s presern. school fundin g
system
establtshes
mvtd ous
class f cat ons
an ong school ch ldren whtch
are netther supported by any
compell ng state nterest nor
predicated upon an rattonal
basts
Cmcmnatt school offtcta)s
had complamed that students
m wealthter school dtstncts
recetve~ better educa t on
than studen ts m poorer ones
The Ohio Canst tut on re
qu res that the state
leg slature
provtde
a
thorough and efftctent
S) stem of common schools
Ctncmnatt school b oard
attorney John Lloyd cttmg
fmanctal
the
current
problems of many Oh10
schools satd m hts f nal
arguments JUSt mmutes
before Rtley tssued ht s
dects ton that the Ohto
Supreme Court has ruled that
a thorough school system
could not be one starved for
fund s
Lloyd argued that rehance
on property tax - m wh ch
school dtslncts pay 62
percent of educational costs
has utterly fa led and
repeatedly fatled and can no
longer be relted upon
I felt the answer already
sa d Rtley m
was there
expla nmg why he dtd not
wrut any longer addmg the
general public reqmres that
such a f nal order be made
now
However Rtley d d delay
the eflecttveness of h s order
unttl next July 1 to avo d
cnpphng the School system
th s school year

Car became sidewalk killer
"Y JULIANNE HASTINGS

NEW YORK (UPI) -A 19year-&lt;&gt;ld man commandeered
a car from a honeymoomng
Ve mont couple Monday
n ght and took t on a roar ng
JOyr de down a s dewalk n
Ttmes Square killmg one
pedestr an and njur ng a
dozen others pol ce reported
Wtnesses sa d the au to
reached speeds of 60 m les
per hour as 11 careered doWn
Wesl42nd Street from E ghth
to Se\enth Avenues along the
south s dewalk - past a row
of X..-ated movte Ueaters

and massage parlors
str k ng unsuspecttng
pedestnans '" tts path
Pollee arrested Harvey
Collms of Manhattan as he
tr ed to escape !rom a
vengeful crowd of 100 persons
who gathered around the car
once 1t came to rest agamst a
f re hydrant
OffJctals sa d he would be
charged w th grand larceny
and veh cular homtctde
The dead man was
tdenttfted as R A Whtunore
70 Stx men and stx women
were InJured
Among the mJured taken to
St Clare s Hospttal were four
teen age gtrls from Lodt
N J who bd come mto
Manhattan to see th e
Rockefeller
Center
Chnstmas tree I ght ng
They were tdenlifted as
Manlyn DellaBadta 15
G Ida Anendalogme 16 Tom
Ann Mollo 15 and Susan
Gambmo 17
Pol ce tden!lhed
the
Vermont couple as 26-year
old Jerry Jenkms and h s
bnde of about 12 hours
Marlene ~I of Burlmgton
The couple had come w
Manhattan after
thetr
weddtng at 8 a m
n
Vermont and Jenktns left hts
wtfe m the car while he went
to see I they could get a oom
for the mght at the New York

Sheraton Hotel
Collms walked up to the
car a 1970 green blue Bmck
drew a gun and told the
worr an tu get out pol ce sa1d
She did as she was told and
Collms drove off author t es
sad
The car JUmped the
s dewalk at 42nd Street near
Etghth Avenue and began
httt ng pedestr ans pol ce
satd
Sl Clare s Hospttal satd
seven persons were taken
there
whtle Roosevelt
Hosp tal had three vtct ms
and Bellevue Hosp tal two
others Wh unore s body was
taken to Bellevue
One pedestnan m the busy
street Stephen Brown of
Brooklyn satd ThiS guy
takes off up the street He
goes Up on the stdewalk do ng
60 maybe 70 nules an hour
He h t people at one end and
when he gets near Seventh
Avenue he htt a lady who
flew up m the atr and he hit
her agam when she came
down
Sandor Maraczt who was
workmg at a newsstand at the
corner of 42nd and Seventh
satd I heard screammg and
I heard the car htt the
hydrant If tt hadn t htt the
hydrant tt would have run
nght mto our newsland

New E ng and

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S L ou s

MIKE SALSER Racme bagged a 12 p mt buck Sat rday n tl e Hacme arc 1 lie g I a
to pomt buck last year 111 the same area

Dissenters
upset wiih
collegues
By CYNTHIA MILLS
WASH!NGTON (UPI)
Tl reed ssenters are as upset
about the qutck procedure the
Supreme Court used for han
illmg a pol ce search case as
they are about the actual
ul ng
The stx man maJority
dec ded Monday a pol cen an
who stops a motortst for a
trafftc
v olatton
may
routinely order hm out of the
car
The JUS! ces sa d the need
to protect the offtcer s safety
outwetghs the mere neon
veruence to the dnver They
reversed a Pennsylvama Su
pre ne court ruhng ordermg a
new tnal for Harr) Mtmms
who was conVJcted m Ph Ia
delphta of llegally carrymg a
gun that was spotted by
pol ce after he was stopped
for a trafftc Vlolat on and
rout nely ordered from t 1s
car
As far as I can tell
Phtladelphta pollee are abso
lutely ecstatic about the
rul ng
Deputy Dtslnct
Attorney Steven Goldblatt
told UP!
He satd t was fa rly
standard pol ce practtce to
ask drtvers to get out of thetr
cars durmg a traff c stop and
the Permsylvan a Supreme
Court rulmg was one of the
ftrst that satd they couldn I do
that
But the rulmg was
cr tic zed by Just ces John
Paul Stevens Thurgood
Marshall a nd Wtlham
Brerman who \\ere equally
upset about the procedure
used for handhng the case
Stevens sa d the rulmg
elun nated any requ rement
that an offtcer be able to
expla n the reasons for hts
acbons (and) leaves pol ce
dtscret on utterly wtth out
lun Is
Same ctttzens wtll be sub
jected to th s mmor ndigmty
11hile others perhaps those
with more expens1ve cars
may escape t ent rely he
sad
He accused the maJortty of
almos t
casual l y
tntroducmg an tmportant
nnovatt on mto the law
govermng searches wtlhout

By KENNETII R CLARK
Umted Prl'SS I ema 1 nal
PERIL OF LOVE To fo mer Israe l Prtme Muuster G Ida
M~1r n e 1 u rr age sa grea cr tt reat
U ~Jews U C:Jt't all tt e
guns of Ara by Ne1.1 York M gaz ne quotes her as say ng
So ne pe ople th nk It s a errtble h ng to !)() ga nst
nten ar age but
ten the e a e cluldt e and they re not
Je\1 s an) more Mrs Me r told nterv ewer Marilyn Berger
U e stat st cs akc ht&gt; r bl • I ru
ld Savs sh e
I ve
al\\ays sad that Jews become less and less e ther through
I ve or througl ha e
MISS LILLIAN SININGS The prestdent s n other stepped
out Monda; t gil '"'' g ng at a New Yo k Ctl) dtsco wtll the
I eadhners f II e soctal set The ccaston - a $5()-a cad
benef for UNICEF dubbed II e Roy Ja pur Ball It
carr ed an Indtan mot f flo\\ ers live doves and a strull ng
pea ock - and Ulllan Caner felt r ght a hon e She rece 'ed
the lnd oA1 e Hn Peace AwC:Jrd for he1 w rk seve al years
ag as a Peace Corps volunteer m Indta Jom ng her at the
Stud 54 part) were ra sh on des gner Halston Catherme
Den&lt;uve Altd; Warh I M ruque \at V reo and Dtana
Vreeland
TASTE OF STARDOM Margaret Trudeau estranged w fe of
Can.ad an Prlllle M rustu P1erre Trudeau laun ched her
!le
career Monday n Montreal a Jd foun I I erself Ire tied as

th ugh stardom alread; were hers Danlelle Sau&gt;age
produ clton C&lt;Kirdinator fo II e f lm Ku gs at d Despe ale
Men cane to her resc ue as reporters mobbe t Mrs Trudeau
at the hotel whe e the t ov e s to be sh She c sta s w th
Pa rtck MeG han
MARLBORO SALAD fwo Los Angeles esearch sc e ltsls
have gone tl e Surge on Generals c garette package warn ng
me better Tl e) sa; tuba oaddicl' shou d stop smok ng he
stuff and start eatmg t Drs SamueiiNtldman and BenJamm
Ersh ff sa) they vc sola ed a v tal prote n called fract on
1 from tobacco leaves and l sUe n osl abu da vegeta
ble pr ten on earth with four I nes the) eld of soy beans It
sill has to be tested for safety the hut and el bu t1 ey say
potentially t can feed the worlds n alnour shed populat on
and they predict tobacco wtll be a n a1or fo d crop n 10 t :&gt;.'i
years
GLIMPSES The stram of car ng for her cance str ket
husband ha s put Murtel Hwn phrey w fe of Sen Hubert
Hwnphrey D Mmn n tlte Wash nglon H sp tal Center
where she ts suffer ng from exhaust on Gen Daniel James
Jr - U e nalton s on ly bla k general - s be ng replaced as
commander m chief of the North An1encan Air Defense
Command n Colorado Spr ngs Col o for reasons of health
Farrah Fawcett MaJors took a day off fron the f lmtng of her
new movte Monday m New York Ctty to go shoppmg for n ore
than $100 wort! of Cl n slt as ee ornaments President and
Mrs Carter wtll attend the weddmg of his nephew S;dney
Sc t Staple! n - the son of carters evangelist s ster Ruth
Carter Stapleton
even ordermg argwnents on
the case
He note(j that before the
court dec ded a lamous
s1opand frtsk pollee case
n 1968 t cteltberated for s x
months heard lull argwnents
and recetved fnend-ol-the
court bnefs from groups such
as the Amertcan C vtl
Liberltes Umon and National

D1str ct
Attorneys
Assoc alton
In th s case the JUS!lces
recetved bnefs only from the
distr ct attorney and Mtmms
and as they occastonally do
tssued an uns gned surmnary
rul ng
before
even
announcmg they would
revtew the case he noted

La Cosa Nostra accused of

·k illing of Greene, Nardi
CI EVELAND (UP!) Cleveland rackets figures
Danny Greene and John
Nardt were ktlled m born
bmgs ordered by leaders of
La Cosa Nostra or The
Outftt federal author ltes
charged Monday
The r deaths were ordered
m a war for control of the
Cleveland underworld and
both dted when bombs m cars
adjacent to thetrs were
lnggered by remote con
trol Greene a former
long shoremen s union of
ftctal dymg Oct 11 and
Nardt head o! a Teamsters
umon local last May
Seven
men
!rom
northeastern Oh o and one
from Cal forma have been
charged tn thetr deaths
federal aulhortt es sa d the
federal charges tncludm g
Inter state racketeer ng
mcludmg loan sharkmg and
!her cruntnal activity m
northern Oh o
and to
commtt vanous cruntnal
acts
nclud ng murder
threats mvolvmg murder and
cohsptracy to murder
The etght were 1dent fted as
Alfred Alhe Calabrese 34
James Licavoli or
Jack
White
73 and PasQuale

Butch e Ctstermno 38 lhe U S an organ zed crune
1Cieveland John Calandra consptracy exts1s wh ch ts
68 Cleveland Hetghts Angelo controlled nat ona lly by a
Lonardo 66 Pepper Ptke memberslttp wl ch
ts
Ohto Thomas J Simla 39 exclustvely !tal an wtlh the
Garfteld He ghts Ohto nat on bemg appor!toned nto
Ronald D Carabb a 38 designated areas for different
Poland OhiO and James parts of the organ zallon
Weasel
Frattanno 65
At the top IS a p I cy group
Moss Beach calif
known as the cornm1sswn
Raymond J Ferntto of whose members are actually
Erte Pa who surrendered the vanou s bosses or
last month on federal and
capos of the lamthes
county charges m Greene s and under them are solto
death told authorthes he was capos or underbosses wtth
a Jongttme assoctate of
cons1gl er or coun selors to
Frallanno tdentifted as a ad vtse them and also
member of La Cosa Nostra
caporegtmes or captains as
or The Outftt accordmg to was descr bed n the novel
th e a!ftdavtt !tied w th U s
The Godfgther
Magtstrate Herbert Maher
At the meet ng more than a
Some of the mformation m year ago they dtscussed the
the alftdavtt came from f ght the Cleveland LCN
Ferntto and some from a Famtly and James L cavoll
wtretap
on
Ltcavoh s also known as Jack Wh te
telephone
whtch
he was havmg wtth the John
dtscovered several weeks Nardt Dame! J Greene
ago federal author ltes sad Group the aff davtl filed
More than a year ago wtth U S Magtstrale Herbert
Ferr tlo and Fratiaruto met m Maher charged
Clevela nd
to
d scuss
Greene died Oct 6 when a
problems the Cleveland bomb was tr ggered m a car
Famtly of the La Cosa Nostra adjacent to his m a suburban
were havmg m controllmg the parkmg lot and Nardt was
town
killed m a stmtlar remote
The afftdavtt satd wtth n control homb ng earlier thts
year
J

1

J

'

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•W

R • se ve It Lea ks fu nbl e '"
the end Zl ne end ng a C It
dr ve that hrea te ed w tun
the ~an e around
Tl e surpr s ng D lphu s
who started ft ve f rst year
pia) ers of defense now are
the f IV r tes to Win the AFC
Ea stern Dn IS on cr own
1 hey are t ed wtth Ball more
at 9 3 and r they rema n t ed
they
would
ge l
th e
c)lamptonshtp because of
the r better record wtth n the
divtston
The New England Patr ots

4 a d f they beat Mtat
Su lay and Ball rn e o
f na le II ey Would get he
ttle
[);I pi m C ad Dun Sl u a
c ngratulated Hams for h s
run tt e longest fr r
scr n n age tn
D lphtn
history - say r g he did l on
hts wn But that tS only n
character for the stumpy 5 9
220 1 und
ke
wh
bVl usly has a mu d of s
wn
711trant g- cam p last
sun 1er dur ng the r tua l of

are a!&amp; ba k n l P rf-1 r

rlc n n t nl! h

R

w

kP

It's 'do or die' now

833
583

SBJ

• 7

a

L T Pet
&lt;~ o 66

CINCINNATI UPI) Even tl ough the C111c111na t1
Bengals have won I ve of
the~r last s1x games a loss
Saturday means t s all over
The Bengals season has
come dow to a do or die
matchup
aga111st
the
Pittsburgh Steelers
Like the Super Bowl s
he way Bengals defenstve
end Coy Bacon descnbes the
game

Sport Parade

Paxson is
leader of
high Flyers

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

PHONE 773-5536

'1 00

00

Don't Sbck
Your Neck Outl

TRADE-IN

INSURE
and BE SURE

On All LiVing Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon Tues Wed &amp; Sat -8 30 ttl s 00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773 5592

Herman Grate

Mason W Va

The prem um w II not break you-but the loss m ghf
Wtth msurance t s be Her to have and not need than to
need and not hil!ve

Davis Insurance Agency
Across trom the Court House m Pomeroy

992 5120
8111 Qu ckel Roy Sheperd Jeanne Starcher

A Notarv Serv ce &amp;

r~""plete~o Bont4

"t:J &lt;;erv 1ce

tl c

tl

sd • I ~ 1 ~ H(l r s w::~s
1 a p nd a n I n a

wn

s"

1 ng
p ol
"
n ecut c
g l ts
f r
efu ng t s r g F Ill) r
ll c r It ght I e resp ded
1 tl
J g l Be lls s n e he
sl I a n I e e 1be th e
I e
r Arkansas State s
ftgh S&lt; g
u h less the
Iyn es
Tac kle M ke Cur en sa d
Ba l mo e s Fred C .o k blew
r gl t by h n n II e play a n I
lad aclean shnl at Hans
but the bea rded ru bac k

'd ff a xl started

s

w y

M a t had taken a 10-ti lead
a li e ha lf l ut
l d qua rte1
he~ rtn
an
1press ve
ell od a l dr ve n v ng
f r ts 34 ~ the Mtam four
On f r st I wn h w ve r
ful back 1\ seve lt I eak s
fu 1 bled o a burst up the
ddle a dU e. ball JX IIl'&lt;i to
tl e eat f the end z ne whe e
1 h na s r ec ver d g v ng
M a rn new hfe-

We d do t c e Ul w tl
ll e btg play ll "'tsn 1 as
nu I the n as we d dn t get
execu t n a th ugh they
I ' e a g d deie se
Ba lu or e quarterba k Bert
J ncss~ d

C It runmng back I) dell
M t c hell
wa s
n re
c pl mc tary
Th e) JUSt p H)rd a
heckuva f •I ba ll ~ e But
wn
orst
we were ur
cne

y

-

c up e

f

ALL STARS COMING
The Ohio UP All Slate
football teams will be
anooune~d

IN e dnes~ay

Thursday and Friday
The Class AAA team will
move m the news report for
PMs INednesday The Class
AA learn will be trans
nutted In the news report
for PM Thursday and the
Class A team the follo1.1 lug
day

turn vers urt us b d

ng

Steelers s the only way C111cy Stadmm
can even m&lt;Jg ne makmg t
That s all we re th nk ng
a
75058J
to
the
Super
Bowl
th
s
se~son
about
now says Bacon s
De o
s 7 0 .4 7
A
loss
wtll
el
mtnate
col
ort
at
the t1 er defens ve
G een Ba y
L 0 0
67
Tampa Bay
Cincmnah !rom the playoffs end sl t Ga y Burley We
0 70 000
West
A P ttsburgh v ctory clinches know what s at stake If 1.1 e
W L T Pet
:oc.
os An ge es
the AFC Central d vts on t tie kn ck ff Ptltsburgh I s a
'
J
0
75a
A an a
6 6 0 500
for the Steelers and sends sure sh t to the playoff s
San F an c sco
s
o 4 7
then In the play ffs
All these years and no
New 0 ean s
3 9 o 250
11 c nched d \1 s on t t e
So thts week n the play offs
bec au se
of
Mondily s Resu t
Ptl
sburgh
We
ve
got
to
beat
camp
there
ts
Bengals
M .!l m
7 Ba 1 more 6
Saturday s Games
noth ng to look forward I
e
P sbu gh a c n c
beyond
Saturday
s
1
p
m
,
Cmcy f mshed "' tlh a sol d
Washng n a S Lov 5
duel at sold-out R verlront 10-4 record last year but
Sundily s Games
A an a a Los An g
m ssed the playoffs rna nly
Bu fa o a NY e s
because of a crural Ia e
De o a Sa mo e
G een Bay a Ch cago
season 7-J loss to Pittsburgh
Ho s on a C ev e and
The C nc nnat Pittsburgh
M am a New En g and
val ; t a always been
M nneso a a Oak an d
NYGansaPha
ntcnse but the Steelers ha\e
Sea e a Ka n C y
won the last s1x games n a
San 0 ego at Oenve
Tampa Bay a New 0 ns
row
Monday s Game
While Pittsburgh can cl nch
Oa as a San F an n Qh
he
d1v swn 1tle Saturday
NBA Stand n11n
With
a Vlctory - no matter
By Un ted Press nternat ona
By MILTON RICHMAN
Eastern Confe ence
how shm the marg n
AI ant c D 11 son
UPI SporiJJ Editor
C ncmnatl needs at least
W L
Pel GB
HONOI Ul U (UP!) - Top pr orlly with most ballplayers a seven
Ph a
6 6 7'l
po nt wm and
Nl'W Yo k
((day s securtty Tl a sUe one w rd y u heat ll e ta k ab&lt; ut t.t ~ a v clot y over Houston
500 5
B fa o
0
4 6 5
all the one
Boson
743338
n the season f nale to be
The r rst thmg ever) ktl startmg out n baseball wants s to guaranteed a pla1off sp l
New e sey
3 20
6
3
s..Cen at o v son
reacl tl e na]Ors No sooner does he get m 90 days then he
Sh ould Ptttsburgh and
W L
Pel GB
begms th nkmg m terms of the long haul tl e mult pie year C ncm a t1 e for the d v1s on
Wshng n
13 7 650
Cevend
3 8 69
t:
tract I e sees everyb Klv ~lse gett ng
!tlle the team wtlh the best
A a a
2
9 57
Iff
r some rea son that should happen to sl p hts mmd trust po nt dtfferentlal between he
San An on
4 0 583
New Or ns
500 3
Its wtfe to re n nd h1m f tl Early and often Secunty two clubs would gel II e
Houston
9 12 429 4
secur
ty You gotta gel t1 at secur tly Some players are so playoff nod And Pittsburgh
Weste n Conte ence
secure " th tl e c ntracts they ve s gned they re guaranteed a Iread) holds a s x pomt edge
M dwest o v s on
W L
Pet GB u be pat! for U e next :&gt;.'i yeat s
lot g after II ey ve f n shed n that department thanks to
Denver
6 a 66
pia) ng
Ch cago
1
9 57
2
a 20 14 wm earlier th s
M w
3 1
542 J
That s perfectly f ne f r tl e players But what ab ut the season
Kansas C 't
9
3 .409
6
n ana gets H w nuch secu ty do the} ha e? Helat &gt;ely I ttle
Oeo
83386
In P ttsburgh Monday
tf 1 y Tl at s why vnu hear f cases I ke Btll; Martm s th s S eeler s Coach Chuck Noll
nd ana
8 14 364
Pac f c 0 v slon
past season when he pushed so hard to gel so e ktnd f cuttmg hiS weekly meet ng
W L
Pet GB
ex ensHm f h s contract
Po and
3 850
wtth the sports medta sh ort
Phoen )(
9 550 6
F r 23 )Cars Walt Alsl n n anaged the D Jdgers and 1.1as sav ng he had work to do
Go denS
1
500 7
never g1ven anyth ng more than a one year contract at a tm e smce Our backs are to the
Los Ange es
B 14 364
0
Sea e
9
346
H s successor Ton ny Lasorda s workmg under the same wall
Monday s Game
arrangement and that doe sn t make h m uruque among the
Sea e 99 A an a 88
He was asked s nee C nc n
anagers n the naJ rs
Tuesday s Games
naltts
tratl ng wouldn t there
New 0 eans a Bu ra o
Bob I em on d d suc h a ltne JOb 1.1 tlh the Chtcago Whtte Sox be more pressure on the
6os on a New York
last season he was ha led m many quarters as the Amencan Bengals
Po and a c eve a d
Wash ngton a Ch cage
League Manager f the Year )el all he has ts a one year
Well maybe thetr backs
Phoen x a Kansas C y
Don Z mmer has Ute same lhmg with Boston Joe are to the wall too he sa d
contract
Hous on a Go den s
M waukee a Los Ang
Altobell wtth San Franctsco Jeff T rb&lt; rg w th Cleveland and
We cons der oursel es
Wednesdays Games
Dave
Garcta w th califorma
hav ng our backs to the wall
Kansas C y a Bos on
Bobby W nkles has even less secunly than that He hasn
San An on o at New
sy
Maybe the game
w II be
Po and a Ph ade ph a
heard yet wl ell et I e I be back a Oakland ext year If wall-to wall football
C eve and at Wesh ng on
Cl arl e F nley keeps the A s and does br ng Wtnkles back you
Phoen x a De o
The coach 1.1as asked about
New 0 eans a nd ana
t:a bet t 11 be for nly ne )ear- or ess How about that for vanous poss1b1hlles that
A an a a Denver
secur ty?
could result tf he rrught f nd
NHL Stand ngs
Ballplavers can play out thetr options and then sell them h mself n Jeopardy of los ng
By Un ted Press nternat onal
selves to the htgl est b dde pocketmg all the 1 oney Wtth the 'Ben gals game by seven or
Campbe Conte ence
Patr ck D v son
~
managers I tsn t that easy Sometimes they can t eve n go to a more pomts
W L T P s club w1lhng ti g ve Ulem more money
Ph ade ph
6 4 3
35
The only nterest we have
A perfect case of that was Gene Mauch The Angels were ts m wmmng the game Noll
NY s ande s
2 6
3
NY Rangers
0 2 3
23 after him as thetr manager a lew weeks ago but the Twms
A en a
7 o a
22
srud
wtth whom he ts under contract for another year refused to let
Smythe D v son
W L T Pts him go unless they were properly compensated They weren t
Ch cago
6 0 8
20
so Mauch had to rema n w1th Mumesota
Vancouver
8 0 5
2
Co o ado
6 0 5
17
When the) couldn t get Mauch the Angels turned wward the
M nneso a
6
4 4
6
Red
Sox and mqmred about Zimmer Buzzte Bavas the
Slous
563
3
Angels new execu!tve VlCe prestdenl and general manager
Wa es Conference
Nor s 0 v son
asked Haywood Sullivan the Red &amp;lx new boss about htm
W l T Pts
Mon ea
16 5 4
36 and II e con versa! on went somethmg ltke lhts
LosAnge es
1
8 5
27
How does Zunmer stand w th the new ownersh p? Bavast
Dero
9
3
2
wanted
to know
Ptsbugh
81 5
2
Wash ng on
2 1 5
9
He has a contract for next ) ear and e s our manager but
Adams o v son
I d never stand n a man s way to better h t;nself answered By
United
Press
W L T Pts
~os on
15 S 5
35 Sull van
bite
rna
!tonal
Buffa o
6 6 3
35
Bavast had Ztmmer as hts manager at San Dteg 0 and hked
The Dayton Flyers are
Toran o
13 6 3
29
the
way he handle players Alter talkmg with Sull van he breezmg along w th an
C eve an(!
8 13 J
9
Monday s Resu t
called Z mmer !ell htm out a b t and told hun he d get back t
unblem shed record after
A anta 2 Mon ea 2
hun 1n a few days
Tuesday s Games
fo ur games this seaso n
Next day Sulhvan called Ztmmer askmg htm about some of thanks n part w the sure
M nn at NY sander s
Vancouve at Washngtn
the
Hed Sox players
hand of JUniOr guard Jtm
P tsburgh at Coo ado
By the way the Cahforn a Angels are mlerested m you Paxson
Ch cago a De ro t
LOS Ang a Sf Lou s
managmg the r club Sullivan satd and I t ld them you re
Paxson who has htt on 70
Wednesday s Games
our manager you re the man
Ph a at NY Ranger s
percent of hiS shots from the
NY s ndrs a Ch cago
Z mmet I stened then satd
f eld dumped m :&gt;.'i po nts
Vancouver at At en a
Wtth the new owners the new thts and the new that you ve Monday mght to lead the
Wash ngton at Cleve
made changes and you ve let some people go Where do I ftt n Flyers to a 83-70 Vlctory over
MinnesOta at Toronto
m all tlus ?
Eastern Kentuck;
Don l worry about noth ng Sull van assured Zm mer
Paxson htt on 12 of 16
Everyth ng IS good
attempts m Monday mght s
Oh sure everyth ng s perfect Somewhere along the I ne
game whtle addmg one free
Sullivan obvtously cha nged hts mtnd a bout lettmg Ztmmer go throw
to Ue Angels
The Flyers opened a 19-il
Zunmer did a superlat ve JOb manag ng the Red Sox last lead early m the ftrs\ half on
season brmg ng them nght down (o the wtre neck-and-fleck three layups by PaxSon and
wtth the Yankees before ftntsh ng 2 »ga 1es back of the best held a 39.J4 advantage at
team that money could buy
hallttme
Alter the All .Star break at a lime when the Red Sox were n
The Colonels who pulled to
the mtddle of a 9-game los ng streak the front olftce gave Don w thm four pomts m the
Ztmmer a vote of coni dence It dtd even better extendmg hts second half before the Flyers
conlract through 1978
pulled away dropped to I 3
Now that s what you call real secur ty
on the seas n
M nneso
Ch ca go

peopletalk

'

a
a
aa

s

Cen

T Pet

2
5
5

1

Wash ng ton
NY G an s
Ph ade Dh a

l

MIAMI t UP! - lt wa s
only ftttm~ for a team as
) oung as the Mtam Dolphms
t1 at both game ba lls went to
rfN k es aftet the r btggest
w n m two years Monday
n ghl
Fullback Ler y Hams got
the offehstve ball for h s
gan ebreakmg 77 yat d run 1n
the fourth quarter that made
the fmal sc e - M an 17
Baltt n ore 6 - and broke a
ftve gat e Ball more wtn
str ~ak over the Dolplliiis.Cornerback N rrts Thomas
g L h s f r recove r n..:

Chisox
take on
new life
By FRED MCMANE
UPI Sp rts Wrtler
HONOI UI U UP!)
Cance that o der for a
t mbs one Th e Ch cago
Wl te Sox at en t dead yet
Not by an) means
Tl e r fulu e " ch )()(ked
so bleak only last month after
they lost the1r two top power
hitters Oscar Gamble and
R chte Z sk m he free agen
draft suddenly as turned
br ght agatn wtth the acqu s
l on of slugg ng ulf elder
Bobb) Bonds from the Ca
forn a Angels n a s x player
trade
Remember
hey also
s g ed free agents Ron
Blomberg and Jun or Moore
and thev rc not f n shed ye
N w the) re shoppmg for a
pttcl er and f hey get hun
thev expect to cl allenge fot
the d VISI On I tle n the
Amer can l .eagu~ West C:Jga n
next season
They re offer ng out! elder
Ralpl Carr and second base
nan Jorge Orta for a start ng
p tcher
Arr ng
Ue
avatlables are Bert Blyle en
of Texas J m Barr of San
F a c sco and Hudy May of
Baltimore Tl e oldy trouble
s th se p t hers are also
bemg sought by other clubs
Next to the Bonds trade the
btggest news was made by
Montreal wh ch stgned free
agent left ha nded pttcher
R ss Grunsley to a s tx year
co n ract for $1 1 m ll on
Gr msley won 14 games lor
Baltimore last ) ear and was
hotly pursued by several
clubs
Tt was a toug dec s on
but the dectding factor was
the ctty and the fact that my
wt!e and l know man) people
on the club sa d Gr msley
I n I • k ng forward to go ng
back to the Nattonal League
agam
1 o ge t th e 31 year-old
Bonds the White Sox gave up
24 yearold r gl t I ander Chns
Knapp
ca tcher
Brtan
Down ng and 25 year old
pttcher Dave Frost But
Ch cago got a bonus n
addt! on t B&lt; nds n 21 year
old out!telder Thad Bosley
and 18 ; ear old pttch ng
pt ospect Dtck Dotson
It was the ftrst major trade
f the annual w nter baseball
meet ngs

Meigs places
fourth in 4
Saturday at Athens Meigs
placed
fourth
n
a
quadrangu lar m gymnast cs
meet The final talhes were
Athens 94 40 Zane Trace
78 0 Logan 75 09 and Metgs
74 0 Gettmg th rd m team
compett!ton for Me gs was
Terr Yeauger wtth a 6 1
Terr a lso got a second on the
Wleven bars on a scot'e of
8 75
Others co mpel ng for
Metgs
were
Rhonda
Southern Nancy Wallace
Mar a Legar Lor Rupe
Tammy Blake Judy Sargent
Shetla Sargent and Sandt
Harrulton Next meet ts thts
Saturday at 10 30 a m at
home wtlh Wellston

Kentucky pounds
Indiana, 78-64
B;
U ted
In cma 1 nal

Press

Kentucky s Ja ck G ver s
U ks the home-&lt;:ourt advan

ta ge alm ost worked n
ev rse Mu day mght
I ne ver heard the crowd so
loud as th~y were at the stat t
of the ga 1 e satd G vens
af er s or ng 22 po nt.s to ead
Kentuck) to a 78-64 ctory
o er Indtana
It probably
got us a I tie t gil at the
start
The
p ranked W d ats
we1 e he avy fav o le s to
defeat Ind a na bu needed
some line befn e hP fY'
f

vete a s
becan
apparent G vens sc red 16
potnts n the ftr s I all as
Ke tuck) t ok a 33 28 lead A
7 2 purl to end II e ha f put
th e
W leal
a
c mmanding pos ton they
never rei qu shed
The penods that hurt us
the most were the last three
m nutes of U e first ha f and
the f r s hree tn nutes of the
se nd half sad I d a a
Coach Bobby Kmgl I
We
cnmm tted som e fouls hat
put us m a bmd part cularly
to M ke) Wood so n and
ts

SVAC action to
resume tonight
As the second maJor week
The team has good stze n
of htgh school basketball forwards George Wtl s 6-3
begms four SVAC contests semor and Fred Helms 6-4
are 01 tap th s evenu g and sen or but lacks overall
two others w II be played th s expenence part cu arly at
weekend
the guard post! ons
League game ftnds Sym
Coach Wayne Bergdoll s
mes Valley 0-1 at Eastern 0 South\\ estern Htghlanders go
2 and Nil th Gall a 1 2 for the r th rd stra ght w n
playmg at Hannan Trace 0 2 agamst a lways rugged
In other games Kyger Fatrland
Creek wtll open tts 1977 78
So uthw estern owns v1c
season at Coal Grove and tones over Ironto St Joe
Fatrland vts {s Southwestern and Symmes Valley The
Fnday mght Coach Wayne Htghlander offense has been
Bergdoll s Southwestern led by sen ors Ron Jackso
H ghlanders v1s t Kyger and I arry Carter and JUntors-:Creek and Southern goes to Greg Nelson Gene Layton
Synunes Valley on Saturday and I Jordan
Coach Ed Hard) s SV
SVAC CAGE
STANDINGS
Vtkmgs lost a 63-61 encounter
.ALL GAMES
last Fr day to Southwestern
TEAM
W L P OP
Offens vely the V kmgs are Southweste
n
2 0 50 6
led by 6-6 semor center Ralph Southe n
0 62 60
0 0 00 00
Ingles He was aided ln the Kyge Creek
2 85 211
H ghlander game by JUntor No h Ga a
Sym Va ey
0
63
forward Terry Payne who Hannan T ace 0 2 61
28 48
canned 18 pomts
Eas e n
0 2 17
8
SVAC ONLY
Coach Duane Wolle s
W L P OP
Eagles
were
soundly TEAM
No h Ga ll a
0 73 33
trounced by North Calha last Sout hwes e n
0 63 6
week but bounced back to Kyger Creek
0 0 00 00
0 0 00 00
just lose amp and tuck battle Southe n
Han
nan
Trace
0 0 00 00
Saturday n ght 45-44 to the
Sym Va ey
0
61 63
Federal Hockmg Lancers Eastern
0
33 73
The Eagles are fa rly young Totals
2 2 230 230
SVAC RESERVES
aga n this w nter
TEAM
W L P OP
Coac h Ron Twyman s No h Gall a
0 44 33
North Galha P rates seem to Syrn Va le y
o 38 JO
be unpredtctable squad The Kyger Creek
0 0 00 00
0 0 00 00
P.trates have lost btg to Southe n
Trace
0 D 00 00
Eastern of P ke and Mtller Hannan
East ern
0
33 44
They defeated Eastern 73 33 Southwes e n
0
30 38
North Galha s offense ts led Totals
2 2 145 145
by sen ors Calv n Mmms a nd
Rex Just ce
At Mercerv lie Coach Dan
Cornell s W Ideals 1.1 II seek
the r ftrst wm of the year
fo llowmg non con fer ence
losses to Rock Htll and
Chesapeake
HTHS s led by sen ors
Dave Swam Dave Campbell
Steve Beaver a nd Frank
Mooney
Coach Ketlh Carter s
Kyger Creek Bobcats open on
the road aga nst Coal Grove
of th~ Ohto Valley Con
ference
The Bobcats have JUst one
return ng letterman from last
)ears 9 11 sq uad Jon
Thorn pson 6-6 Jumor s that
etterman

Gle Grunwa I
Ke tu ck&gt; s H c k ! obey
scored t4 of h s 20 po nts n
I e s nd half and ed a ll
reb und et s w th 13 He
sta red as KcJ ut'ky pe e l a
liJ.jlo111t lead 1 the opemng
n nutes of tl e second half
I wa s fo tu a e to get
some goo t passes f on our
g a rds sa I the 6 f o l 10
f rwa rd
Ind ana railed b cfl) t
pu I w tim e ght w t 2 23
rema mng
We see eel t red ear the
end wh1ch surpr sed ne
satd Kentucky C&lt; ach J e
Hall
I dtana played real
well The) dtdn t look I ke an
nexpet enced ballclub II ey
t lO k he game to us
Notre Om e ranked N 3
outed 1 afayette 76 42
Kansas oiled over Mun y
State 106-71 Ka sas State
beat Vanderbtlt 69-55 a d
Alabama down I 1 ennessee
1ech 94-66
n other key
games
Otl er sco e~ were Adelpht
101 CCNY 80 Leh gh 78
Ge tysb g 61 Me unack
81 Stoneh ll 66 Appalachta
St 71 UNC.CI a otte 64
Ge o g et o wn
84
Campbellsv li e 77
New
Mex o 126 Kentucky State
Texas 82 LSU 66 and Nevada
Las Vegas 117 Peppet d e
90
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GMAC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Even ngs t 16 00
Tl5pmSat

992 5342

Insured?

NOW YOU KNOW
Adolf Httler was ne ther a
a
house pamter nor
paperhanger nor was hts
real name Schrckelgruber

00

It Could All Go
Up In Smoke!
A v01d a total dtsaster
get
complete protection wtth one
of our full coverage Homeown
ers poliCies Don t hesitate to
play 1t safe
for your fam
•ly s sake Get the faces

DOWNING CHilDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

�-4 - The Datly Sentmel, ~hddleport- l'omen&gt;) , 0 ., Tuesda) . Dec·. 6, 1977

Campbell named
player-of-year
· Ry FR 1.:0 DOWN

tmll'.

U IJlS~1rts Writ t•r

Criss is smallest man in the NBA

Modell
•
sayzng
nothing

JUST ASK

c

Seattle wins fourth
in row on home court
SEAITI.E CUP! I -Lenny
Wilken s
br ough t
the
r eb o undi ng S~atlle
Supersonics home for the
first time since he took the
helm and his team did not
disappoi nt the cr owd.
Wilkens posted his 200th

career coaching victory and
his fourt h straight win
Monday night as the Sonics
whipped the Atlanta Hawks,
99-88, in the only National
Basketball Ass oci ation
scheduled .
" Ir wasn't a picture perfect
game," Wilkens said. " But
we won it.' '
Seattle ran off to a 33-24
lead at the end of the first
quar te r . Playin g without
sta rters St eve Hawkes and
John Drew , both on th e bench
\\'ith ankl e injuries , the
Hawks tied the game once at
35-35 and then at 88-88 with
1:45 remaining.

Wayne Rollins led Atlanta
with 17 points a nd Ron
Behagen and Ollie J ohn son
had 16 each.
Seattle tallied the last 11
points of the gam e. Gus
Wilhams scored two baskets
and assis ted on a third with a
behind-t he-back pass to lead
the Sonic attack in the final

minutes.
· Wllliams scored a gamehigh 26 points, stole the ba ll
five times and had six assists.
· " Gus Williams is playing
with as much confidence as
I've Seen him in this league,"
Atlanta Coach Hubie Brown
said .
•
Seattle out-rebounded
Atlaf\tll, 53-40, led by Marvin
Wc~stc r who pulled down
19.
" We' ve improved in a lot of

areas, in our attitude particularly," Wilkens said.

Gerard pleads innocent
MINEOLA , N.Y. (UP! ) Long Island ve terina ria n Dr.
Mark Gerard has pleaded
innofent to a nin e~co u n t
indictment charging him with
sw itc hin g
a c hampio n
r&lt;:~ cehorse for a much slower
animal at a Sept. 23 race at
Belmont Park.
He was held in lieu of
$100,000 bail Monday and
ordered _by Nassau Coun ty
Court Judge He nde rson
Morrison to sw-render his
passport.
Gerard's a ttorney, Jan1es
M .. Merberg, a member of F.
Lee Bailey's Boston law firm,
surrendered the passport in
court.
Gerard, 43, posted the b"il
later Monday .
The Sept. 23 race was won
by a horse listed on the card
as Lebon, which ran at 57~o-l
odds. Gerard won $77,920
after placing a $1 ,300 bet on
the horse.
The New York State Racing
Board says the horse actually
was Cinzan o, a Uruguayan

Rt. I

Middleport, 0 .

RINGS .... .. h PRICE
1

ALL

CONCRETE
ITEMS .•••• ,
.ALL

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GLASSWARE 20% OFF
Large selec:tion of pots and
macrame ropes on special.

. Open 10-6 P ..M.

.
'
. Monday thru Saturday

Murray Olderm~n

Cal bell"
"P
s

se s
"
a &lt;~ n CLEVF:LAND iU PI )
l"EWYORK i UPl l-F:arl
sta u stu· s show that he Cleveland Brc1wns nwner Art
campbell. unbeaten Texas earricd tht• ball 267 times 111
MndC'll is not issuin u u \mtt• of
Uni\'rrsJty 's 220~pnund
11 ~-ot
"I
s
nd
g
·
ed
17"
o
me a
am
· .,., l·nnhdem·e h1 head
coath
r unnin g bark wIth an ~ants fpr an a\'ent ~·~ nf 6 5
·
d
ff
.,
cF
1•rre
s
t
Gregg.
e
hoosing
.fi\xp 1(1S IV C' "secon e Mt
yards:pt'r (·arry and 158.5 per
reminisci'nt
of
Jimmy
instt•ad to wait until th~
g.:.wu• while seoring 18 team 's di sa p'" • intin~l St'aSo.m
B
_ r n wn.wotslwnon~dtlxlayas tL' Ut· h"" n ' \" n·:s.
C'harle.s isowr.itwasreportedtoda\.'.
"'
o
the
Umted
Pr ess AI exa ndern f 1,outSJana
· ·
s. _ tate
·· [ will sa)' nulhin~' ·tbout
ln tt•rnatiunal 's cu ll eut!
unt\'t&gt;I"Sity
· r·1ms
· 1lru.
--" secon d ·m next \'e ·:. r Our goaol ' IS to
c- -- football·
p·J arer
·..._!\·''-'~us
_
h mg'
-· -·
- ·iblto- as
.
· -t&gt;f the .-vearo
·
~ 1w
t 11 Tid•
fun·. sh~·ts
rc sped
1 he :?2·year old na m ·e of stHtisties with an a\·eragc nf
'bl ' · · 1 8-6'
d ..
1\•Jer , Tex . wh nse relentless 153 3 Yards per "allle and ~l·nd
ss~ e. wllll&gt;ahn c'I"C('Oir .d
· ct ·
· 1 ·
· •
~
•• eu to c t e · r n~ un
poun 1ng at m ·a
lmes Oklah&lt;'lll il Slate's Miller w:ts PI · ~-- 1
Th
1 ' II
enabled Tcxn s tn fin fSh tllr third withan·lver·Ju-enfl527
I Hm ut:l!-1 er ... f eJ~
WI
.
1
f
&lt;
~ t· ·
li:lve pen tv o tune to
seawn as the on Y pE"r ert··There are two big factors .refleet...
·
re&lt;.·ord team 1n the coulitry you'll find in Earl Campbell's
He llaS been critical of the
· and made him the favor itt• tn hnme;" said Darrell Royals.
tean'I'S plav the last two
win U1eHeisman Trophy, was the _Te xa s co_arh, ":ho weeks as the Browns, who
a nmaway winner in the r('{'rulted and s1gned h1m . ha\'e last four of their last
annual p(lst--season voting by ··one is pride and the other is fi\'C' ganws, have lnst 9-0 to
sports writers and sports lovl'. Th'tlse are tw o stro_ng
IA)S Angeles and 37 _14 to San
casters around the eountn·. faetors to sta rt . any basics Diego , all but falling out of
Campbell received 36 votes [rf'nl an d t11ey ve.. got an
playnff contention.
romp&lt;o~red to hve for running ab undance of both .
But
he
has
denied
ba r k Terry Miller of
Hoy;Jl . also_
reealls speculation that his criticism
Oklahoma State and tilree for
ampbe 11 s rear t ton w.hen the
was specifically aimed . at
ti g ht end Ken McAfE"e of roac ~ was atten~ptlng to Gregg .
recruit th£&gt;, Tyler H1gh School
Asked abo ut a ··rift"
Nntre Dame .
star - the bestknown hi gh between him and his coach,
1 Similar in build to former
star Jlmmy Bmwn , the 6- school footOOII pla,vei- in the
·
c
b II
whose eontract runs through
f oo t.
1-wch
amp e
statt:&gt; .at tho' t1111e .
next season. Modell said .. I'm
displ8yed the same "bilily to
"I told him 1 didn'l want to not going to comment. There
'·nm kt:&gt; a second effort•· 1n the
bu\. hjJII ," recalls Ro_v&lt;:~ l. ··1 ha \'e been enough comments
Ianguage of f oo t b a.
II He loldh im l )usthopedhewoulct
already made. I'm not goin g
mact e some of hi s most come to Te xas Universit.v . to confirm or deny."
spec~1cu Iar and unportant
'·He J(J(lked me right in the
G rcgg, f nr h'IS part, said ·'[
IY b eing e_ve, ' 1 Ro)•al r•ontinues, ··and
runs a f ter seeming
·
'
don't thin k there' s a rift
.
f
stopped at th e Ime o scnm~ said . 'M)' 11eople were bouuhl
o
between us . We ha ve not had
mage or for a short gain by and sold ·-hen the)' di'dn't
"
i.l disagreement &lt;:~tall :" and
maintaining his balance and hav e tl choice ... nobod)· is
·
· It
f
d
d
general manage r
P e te
Jll mg or war a secon
"n
ing
to
bu)·
Earl
Campbell."
o
Hadhazy sa id " We have to

stakes' winner.
.
Gerard voluntarily s urrende red to detectives of the
Na ss au Cou nty District
Attorney's offi ce at 3:30 p.m .
Monday.
Merberg req uested th"t
Gerard be released without
bail, stating t ha t he had no
previous arrest record and
that he was "a n established
veterinarian of considerable
r eputat ion" who was at one
time 11 personal veterinarian"
to Triple Crown winner Secretar ia t.
Gerard was escorted into
U1e county court in handcuffs,
and.made no attempt to cover
his fa ce.
However , once inside the
court he compla ined the cuffs
were " ruining my image.''

Allensworth
in copter unit
NEW HAVEN , W. Va. Marine Corporal Charles R .
Allens worth Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles R. Allensworth Sr., New Haven, has
departed for an extended
deployment in the Western
Pacific. He is a member of
Marine Medium Helicopter
Squadron 266, based at the
Marine Corps Air Station,
Kanoehe Bay , Hawaii .
His Wlit is scheduled to
·participate
in training
exercises with .other Seventh
Fleet units and with uni ts at
allied nations. Port visits are
scheduled in Hong Ko•g,
Taiwan , Japan, .Okinawa ,
Sin gapore, Ind onesia and
j{orea. He joined the Corps in
September, 1975.

JOHNSON ASSIGNED.
Private Robert E . Johnson ,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Simon
Johnson, Hill St., Pomeroy,
has been assig ned as a
riflema n with the 25th Infantry Division at Schofield
Barracks, Hawaii. H,e en -

•

work toge ther. to solve the
problem. There is harmony ."
On the field , meanwhile,
Gregg is pulling the team
thro ugh snowy practices in
preparati on for Sunday's
final home game of th e year
ag ainst the Houst on Oilers,
an AFC · Central Division
rival .
Modell earlier repeated his
observation the situ ation
calls fo r a re-evaluation.

'Th(' l'eltu:s have bt.•t•n suffcnn~ from the s horllll'SS nf
taknt (.'Otmn.t.: off the benrh. which has previously bct•n u
Uoston forte . On top of that , the-ir forwurds, Shlncy Wl(."ks
and ('urtis Howe , havt! gotten off to faltenu~ start!). And
their \'enerablc sc11iur eitizen. John tla vlit•ek. jus t l:au'l go
like he used to. Cowens. rid or h1s personal doubts ai.Jout
playing a littlP boy's gnmC' , has b(•t•n pedorming wdl.

By Murray Oldt•rman

The tipoff:
Dcsp1tt.· all tht~ hullabaloo about extra TV rE-venue
•.:umin~ to &lt;:til tht' pro football teams the new
t'ontracl will ~ivc lht~m ju!lt UJldcr $5 milli on each £or
, lhc next four years
six of the NFL dub!&gt; will wind
up Hl th(• red this year.
f.-

Who is tht• smalh•st playe r in tht• National Bas ke tball
Asso&lt;'ial ion'! With Monty Tow~ no longt"r l''ilh Denver, I
sa)' it 's Ca h •iu Murph y again . - G.J .• Pasadena. Tt•x.
ij.

•
Q. llow maU)' frt•e agt.•nt s art" playing a~ startt.•rs in tht•

National FvutbaJI Lt.•ag u.- ·? - .J.T., ( 'inrimmti. Ohiu.
l wouldn 't venture to nautt• all of them, but 1 t:an point
out some prom111ent NFL stars wl1o we re nev e r draflt•d out
of college OIIH.l y d have hml productive pro cart•en; . Anlu ng
them arc a t•uuplc of bona fide all-pros from Hit• I hdlas
&lt;"nwboy s, safety Cliff ll ~1rris ami wide rc&lt;'eivcr Drew
Pearson : ren'fcr Mick Tingelfioff ancl ti ght l'rtd Bob Tuekt•r
t~e Mi.nncsota ,Vikings; ~c~cnsivc end Coy H~t·o n of
Cmctmwu : defensive baek W1lh e Brown a1H.I drfcns lVL' end
Otis Sistrunk of Oakland ; guards ,lirn ( 'Ja('k and Sum
Ernvis;-safctit""S Glen F.dwttr-ds und - Donrii.O-----Shcll of
Pittsburgh ; ('enter Jim l.an~er and guanls I.Hrry I.ittlc,
Bob Kucchenbcrg of Miami . The re's so me fine talent
there.

Q . l-lu\\ is the Ne. I college football te-am in lhe country

ph- ked '! - H. F., Columbus, Ohio.
1'hi'rc ts no official No. I team . The Associated Press
wee kly poll is compiled from votes of its sports writers
around th e country. United Press Inlern&lt;:~ti ona l polls the
major football roac hes around the na ti on. Neither. despite
what you hear from schools like Tex as, Oklahoma and
Al&lt;:~bama. is t o be taken too serious ly . They're a little Hkc
All-America team s - tHee but inconclusive .
Q. What's the troubl e ~· ith the Boston Celtics this
sea son't How has Dave Cowens been doing '? - G.N.,

Quincy . Mass .

def~tive

g lass beads in the
manufacture of 3M 's Scotch~
UP! Business Writer
NE W YORK (UP! I - Th e lit e reflectin g sheeting .
ca r you buy in 1985 will ha ve They spoiled the retroflec·
to weigh nearl y 2,000 pounds tivity ·of the sheeting. Setting
less than pre- 1973 models in out to preven t th ei r oc~
order to meet the govern- cu rre nc e , JM e ng in ee r s
m ent's edict of 27.D miles to accidentally discovered their
the ga llon , a nd Detr oit is hi gh st rength in ' relation to
co unting on air bubbles to weight and their potential
help .
usefulness in other plastic
The au to makers a lready m ixes. This probably wasn'l
have begun the swing to too big a surp rise. Hollow
a ut os. glass spheres h"ve ha d m a ny
small e r , lighter
General Motor s has taken uses almost since the
nearly 1,000 pounds off the beginning of the glass inaverage weight of its full~size dustry . Fishermen-have used
models : Chrysler estimates it f!1illions of' tliem, for
NEW YORK ( UP I) :_ has shaved an avera ge of 300 exam ple, t o float nets
North Carolina is off and
because they are ~irong a nd
pounds off it s entire line.
rwming with four stra ight
The weight saving is being ' don 't ·become waterlogged
vi cto ries but Kentu ck y: accomp1i shed in many ways, like cork floats .
winner of one game, is the
So ihe 3M engineers set to
with a bi g c~ntr ib uti on
chOice of the UP! Board of coming from high-strength work to malie the hollow
Coaches as the No. 1 college
low-density glass beads intentionally in a
comparatively
ba sketball team in the
plastics being substituted for number of s izes a nd den~
country.
metals to light~n such auto sities.
North
Carolina
and
Their ·Use in sheet molding
components: as gas tanks,
Kentucky were tied in the
front end panels, hoods ,
pre-season ratings of the
ro ofs, doors , instrument
coaches a nd the former
panels and seat frames.
s ports an impressive · 4-0
P la stic drive shafts and axle
r ecord. But Kentucky, which
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .
h~us ings, as well as parts for
walloped Southern Methodi st ,
(
UP!
) - A guaranteed purse
eng ine, transmi ssion a nd
1!0-86, in its only game, took
eleclri cal sy stem are plan· of $82,000 was announced
over the No. I spot in the
Monday for the 24-hours of
ned .
weekly ratings by a margin of
Even lighter plastics are Daytona auto race, Feb . 4, at
320 points to 298.
Internati onal
needed , however, and this is Day to na
Kentucky received 20 firstSpeedway .
where
the
air
bubbles
come
in
place votes with 10 going to
The 17th running of the
- tiny, low density, hollow '
North Carolina, two to Marglass
bubbles,
called nati on 's only · 24 hour
quette, the defending NC AA
endurance
test
will.
champion, and one each to microspheres, developed by inaugurate the FlA World
3M Com pany.
Arkansas and Indiana State.
Wbil e air bubbles in a Challenge for Endurance
Ranking in order behind
metal castin g or forging Drivers a nd continue the
Kentucky and North Carolina
invite disastro us wear and traditional r ole of being the
in the ratings were Notr~
opening roiUld in the Camel
Dame with 251 points, · breakage 1 plastics can be air- GT Challenge Championship
Marquette with 212, UCLA bubbled without " loss of ser ies and the World
strength.
with 172, Arkansas with 100,
Manufactur~rs'
Champ- .
Acco rdin~ to 3M, adding · 8
Cin cinnati with 91 ~ Indiana
ionshlp.
percent of the holl ow glass
State with 59, San Francisco
beads
to the plastic mix for
with 52 and Syracuse with 42.
sheet moldin g compound
NE W YORK (U P I) The
30 percent
U n i I e d Press International produces a
Board of
Coac hes'
col lege reduction in weignt. This
bask etball rat ings with won -lost
r ecord s ·through
games
of single item will save only
Sunda y. Dec. 4, and number of . about one tankful of fuel over
first -pla ce votes in parentheses : the five-year life of a car but
(F irst Week)
Team
Points multiplied b y the many
1 Kentucky (201 (1 ·01
320 millions of cars on the roads
2 North Carol in(l0J(4 -0 J
298
3. No tre Dame (3 -0)
251 makes t he potential fuel
4. Marquette (21 (2 01
212 saving significant.
5. UCLA I 4-0 )
172
According t o 3M, the value
6 A rkan sas ( 1) (.d -0)
100
7 Cincinnat i (3 .Q)
91 of the microscopic hollow
8 Ind iana Sta le (1) (4 01
59 balls in plastic mixes was
9 San F rancisco (2-1}
57
10. Syracuse (.d -1)
42 discovered severa l years agO
11. Mich igan (3 .0)
39 when they turned up as
12. Mary land (4-0)
32
14. Utah f2 -0l
27

Bearcats

seventh in

UPlpoll

co mpo und that goes into
many part s of ·automobiles
m~y be just the beginning of
the use of these a ir bubbled
plastics. 3M. said. Thev h"ve
a low heat transfer ;ate so
t hey a ppear to be especiall y
suited for inSulating vessels
t o handle such substances as
liquid
nitr oge n,
which
liq uefies at 325 below zero,
and liquid oxygen.
They also ma y improve the
effectiveness of some in·
sulating materials.
1
And they appea r to hav e' a
future as Carriers
of
deut e rium
and .tritium
isotopes of hydrogen in ex~
perimental laser born bardment to pro duce fu sion
energy, a lthough that is way
down the ro.a d.
But their use to s~ve weig!lt

and fuel in vehicles already is
s ig n if i c a nt
a nd
rev oluti onary. Until . the
hollow beads were studied

Stop In
and Order

EXPECTING
COMPANY?

••
•
••

•

Any

J

Hoover•
HEADQUARTERS

Note: By ngreement with th e
American Basketball ~ Coaches
Association, teams on proba tion

by

lhti

N'CAA are ineligible tor

top 20 and nationa l champion ship consider at ion by the UPI
Board of Coaches. Those teams
curr ently on proba tion for 1977
are: C e n t e n a r '{ , Clemson,
Hawaii , Minnesota , N evada -Las
Vegas, Western Caro lina .

tered the Army in June 1977
a fter graduating at Mei gs
lligh School in 1977.

•

~

CUTUP

FRYERS . ..... '"""' 45'

FOR

•..
•

-

••
...••
•••
•

AU PURPOSE

.·

.

U.S. FA NCY

REO DELICIOUS

APPLES .. ·-·-·-· .. ..,.~ .:~:.

79

C

MONARCH

-

FRESH -FLORIDA
WHITE

OAK PAliK

TOMATOES .. .

8 ,.., ·99C

SWEET RELISH ... ... ·~~:·

DAN DEl

DELMONTE

NAl l S CO

DELMONU

POTATO CHIPS .......... ':~~· 1 J21

CARDINAL

59•

6

10-oz.
Cans

89'
CiREEN BEANS .................................... 2 '~;:: 79•

'

125 E. Main Street 992·2111

SAFEGUARD SOAP ................................ t.~·-

1

129

fe{e}ij :;tel:l

r§l\1 ~fU R lS • CARDINAl IDOD S!OR!S
::-,
CHICKEN OF THE SI.A - - - • - ·--

BATH TISS'I:JE

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

TUNA

89C

WHITE

6 %· 0Z.

Can

KRAFT
•••..
SINGLES .. :.......... ., ..... •••

.

MARGARINE ........................... c'~~:~ 59'

89C

'jl
•

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .. .::;~ 89•

Ct.
Pkg.

i• _
•

u

TUNA

-· ... ..........-.
lom" •-

wit~ oc~-

...

• •ooo .... cno.. ,.......,..

,..

o~• •..,.""" "''

11_,

GV.-or.

c'"

59~ .

l •mit one with coup on and
S1000 purchare .. eluding
bu1. wine end cigarette•

BORD~NS

TRO~ I OAN A

EGCi lOCi .................. ,';~-::, 79'

CARDINAL

HO!"'OCiENIZED MILK .......................... ::~:: 1 1 n

BOROENS

OlD FASHION ROUNDS

CARDINAl
FRESH
HAMBURGER

ICE CREAM .......... ....................~::, 5 129
FIDZEII FODII

--

ORE IDA CRISPERS................. .... . . •:,;;~
NIEW YOIUI

12·Ct .
Pkg .

ot SAIIIAQI

8UffE1.11

VICKS VAPDRUI

~ ~~ ·

' ICE CREAM

SANDWICHES ..........................................':;;· 89•

~

- - ..

-

1'
31 -oz . $
,
1
CHERRY PIES

SARA LEE APPLE OR

79'
Pkg.
CiARLIC IIEAD ..................... ,...... '~.;:~ 79•
l"t:I"~EIIONI
........... ...... ~·;: SJU
TOTIItOS PIZZAS ................................. ':;:: 79'
CiORTOit PERCH
NEMTN I IEAIITY A i l S - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VICKS 44 COUCiH SYRUP .
. .. :;;.~. 121'
69 'CURAD BANDAGES ....... .. . .........':'.;' 79'
MAMIIUI'I QEI'I , CHUIE ,

•••

••

49~

•

AMERICAN. PIMENTO or SWISS

•

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

30-oz.
Can

SJ
MARDI CiRAS NAPKINS.................... .';;;• 29'
RENUZIT AIR FRESHENER ................ :;;~ 39•

32 -oz.
Bottle

USE
OUR

00!00,

C A RDI N Al~

'hosrD AtS

FISHER CASHEWS ........................ .'~~:: 1 1"

~~

ASIORT£0 iiCENtl

'

On d .t ~ • orol lln ''"'''

O'll\1100

KAL llAN DOli FOOD .....................3 ·~;::

DEL MONTE

.'

$·1

2"

1 ...... \JftO/ H

-:.

AUORUO VAIUITIE$

STEWED TOMATOES ................ ..... 2 ~;:::

C HIFF ON

.... .......... .... )~~·.~: $

CRANBERRY JUICE

KIDNEY BEANS

5

Umil 10 ple. .e

1511-oz .
Can a

99'
KlAn DRESSINCiS....................... :;~·. 49'

JOAN OF ARC

16-oz.
Cans

SWEET PEAS

. 2 ;:;

C UCUMBER o• fRENC H

FISHER MIXED NUTS .................. .'~~:: IJ"

. :!;;.~ 65' ·

SILVER BAR

li88V S

SMUCKERSGAAPE

JAM OR JELLY .... ..... .. .

Fiiiiii COCKTAIL·s;~~~· $1

...... ';;;• 89'

PRUNE IUICE .... . .. ..

ELFWICH COOKIES ......':;;• 99'

SNOBOWL
28-0!
Botti.

OCEAN SPRA Y

Tomoto O&lt; Chkkon Noodlo

XIJt•liJ 4•1: I

1

'~·~'

89'
............ 3 '~;;:: 11

SEEDLJSS RAISINS

89'

C~E AMY

b~r) SOUPS

,.

Pkg .

~"log

$119

fU Oil SIO AI s

DILL SLICES ..................... ·~~':' 69•

OVAL TINE REO or lOW CAl

NILLA WAFERS ............. ':.~·

""' 89•

AUNT JANEl

COCOA MIX . .. .

Bottles

•.. ..

1 - Lb .

~~~~~~~~ UINAI

AUNT JANE$

Can

~

BEEF FRA

-----

-

Unout one w•th coupon •nd 110.00 pun::he"
ncluding beer . w1ne lfld c•preites

.COKE

OR

ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY FRUIT BASKETS NOW.
+

39

WIENERS

GRAPEFRUIT.... ,.. .'..~~:. 99•

Lb.

~

KAHIIS

.

; Poia'coRN

SHORTENING

HAM

••

RADISHES ..,., .....,~.~~.'.'. 39•

CELERY.... ......... :.~~L~ .. 39•

(CASES

VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL
FOOD STORE

.SLICES

CHIPPED CHOPPED

RED BUTTON

FRESH -CRISP
CALIFORN IA

•

•

HAM

~

.

ONIONS .. .,,:., ..,., .... 49•

•

••
••
••
•
·••
••

COOKED

79

U. S. NO. I

:
••

-•••

Pound

FARM FRESH PRODUCE--~~-~

..••

CITY LOAN
COMPANY

69'

Pound

ROAST

LB.

DEl MONfl wt-i OLI

CARRY·.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

QUANTITY RIGHTS RE SE RVED

..•

· When you need money for a new kitchen, other home improvements ~
or for any good reason, call us. We'll handle your loan quickly and witJI
consideration. Amounts up to $15,000available.
:•
We find ways to help ,
:

BRAUNSCHWEICiER .............. ,, -" 59•

SALE DATES
DECEMBER 7-1 0, 1977

GIVING.

CONVENI

OCEAN PERCH FILLETS ..........., IJ11

Superio~

69

CHRISTMAS
•

SMOKED SAUSACiE ........... .. '"""" s Jl'

- ~- ~ -

I

FLORIDA

i-11LlSHIRE

~~:~ w;ENERS-.. .......... '.'.::~ .. 69'

KED PICNICS

LEGS ... . ... ...... 69'

SHORT RIBS OF BEEF ...... . .,,., 89•

SLICED BEEF LIVER ················'""'49•

~ ~I! ~r'! '&lt;J'&gt;

limit 2 Please

IU EBLUI

pol icy has been ln effect for longer than 60 days, the
com pany must gi ve you a 30 d&lt;~y wri tten notice of the ir
int ention to terminate the policy . The only way an
existing pol icy tan be cancel led -immediately
(provi ded it meets th e 60 day requirement) is for the
cancellation to be mut ual ly agreeable to both the
company and the insured ~
·

meroy, 0 .

Pound

BONELESS BEEF STEW ...... ·~"" 5 1
BEEF CUBED STEAK ......... , 5 159

YELLOW

CITRIS

Not immed iatel y, unless.the pol icy is new and has been
-in ef fect for' le ss th an 60 days. In m ost cases, if the

992CSIJO

SLICED BACON....... .-..... !:.~~~~-K.G~. gge
39

Plus Oeposit

Our son , a_~e 16, has received several traffic citations
for speedmg. Can the company which writes our
fa!'llily AUtomobile .Policy cancel the coverage at their
own discretion?

·

ARMOUR

THIGHS ........ '"""' 69'

FOR FRESH

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

214 E. Main

WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

00,.,

NOW

,Cook uP.
a neW kitchen
JISUR·MITIOI RB ·at City Loan. !

The Insurance Store

our

POTATOES ....................~~-L-~·

PHONE 773-5536

Reno.

l:~RRY

GROUND BEEF ..... .. ........ ·~"' 89'

:. PLACE YOUR

OF MASON

15. (tiel St . John's (4 0)
24
15. (tiel Ka nsas fJ -0 )
24
17 . Providence (J .QJ
23
18. Pie) Louisvilie (1-1)
13
13
18 . (tie l• Hol"r Cro ss (2 -0l
20. New Mexico (J-0)
1
Others r e c e i vi n g votes :
Kansas St ate, Alabama, Vi r gin ia, H ouston, Dayton,
DePaul. Creighton , Arizona ,
Vermon t, U tah Sta te, North
Carol ina State and Nevada-

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. - ON 'THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT

WHOLE

Sp~cial

Cuts Of
Meat You
Desire,
Stop In
or Call
and We'll
Cut It
To Your.
Satisfaction

~...................... e

GINO'S

26

MON. niRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
___:___.S.a~UNDAY 9 AM.JO 9 PM__

FRUI·T
BOWLS
and
BASK

and improved the very idea
an air bubble getting into :
plastic
mix
h orrifie4·
Chemists a nd engineers. . •

NOW OPEN

l-4 , Purd Ue (2-11

FIIENDLJEST SEI~J(E IN TOWNI

FRYER PARTS

••

·.

STORE HOURS

Lf:AN ~lUSH

A thought for the day :
Joyce
Kilmer wrote, '' I thi)ll
In any othe r sport , wit h a ny. kind of leader figur e.
1
shall
never see, a po~•C
tilat
Woody Hayes of Ohio Siate would be s lapped down
lovely
as
a
tree.''
The klst tw~
for his boorish , hysterical condu c~ on the s td elin es, as
lines of that poem say.t
ev·idenced by his a ttacks on individuals 'bf t he media
just trying Lo do their JOb~ .
"Poems are made by fooil
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - ' like me , but only God ~
make a tree ."
:

Parting shot:

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA.-·

FRYERS

.
Piel

.---------------------------------------~

Air bubbles w.i ll help lighten future cars
By LEROY POPE

•HAMS
•VEAL
•SALT FISH
•FRESH
OYSTERS

slush fund .
Wright. a partner
pr estigious fiml of Ec·ke~1:
S
Ch i &amp; "'e,lloltt;
canums ,
ern . n .
~llso lolilau:-S. Otstntt
JUry he was unaware that
IHS superv isor who •PIJrovec
the document tfl
use it to kill an invcst1·1~at iOII
mto ille~al earnpaign
tribulions by Gulf.
The testim ony came at
trial of Fred W. Sl•mdlefe&lt;r;
Gulf's \'ice president for
administrat ion, accused
paying for five vacations for
IllS superv isor Cyril J;
Nicderberger ~
:
Wri ~ht , whose Jaw finJI
w"s retained
by
thl
pctrolcwn giant in its leg!!!
dealings over the slush fun&amp;;
said Niederbcrger ignore4
11 .8 mil lion in domestie
(Xllitical contri butions whicQ
Gulf admitted
makins
through a Bahamas basei
s ubsidiary from 1960 througD
1972.
:

like Rich Go:)sage severa l million dollars, ;a s tht• \'ankt•t•s
havt• done '! And why do they need him , with Sparky Lyll'
in the bullpt•n'! - S.K ., Sacramento. Ca lif.
Gossage's deal is repu t edly for $3.5 million spread on•r a
number of yea rs. The way th£'y ' r e put together. those .big
contracts don't call for huge cash out lays imnt(•dit:atcly. so
some future owner is going to inherit the burden of puyin g
them off . Unlike some of thl! othe r free a~cnts. Gossuge ;tt
lea st is a rela tively you ng 25. In tod&lt;ty's brand of ba.scball,
you can 't have too many good guy s for relief .

FCJDD STOR&amp;S

COUNTRY CURED

ti.JUltimilllon-&lt;~ o Uar

Q. How can a baseball team afford t" pay c1 n•lief pit&lt;·ht•r

inaI

N'S

AT OUR
STORE

PITTSBURGH 1UP I )
Pittsburgh attorney Th ...., . ,
0 . Wright testified Mc&gt;nda)
hQ wrote all but
f
paragraphs 0 an
Hevenue Service .
which a bso lve~l c ,u_lf Ot1
~ of Hny tax habihty for

o!

•

AVAILABLE

IRS

Q. Who is th r m os t in.fltH"ntlal spor ts Hgurt· in Anlt'ric·a
toda)•'! - N.T ., Fountain Va lley, t.'alif.
It used to be lashionablt&gt; to sc.~y Pete Hot.t~llr, but the pro
football commissioner ha s had his powt~r curtailed in
recent year!i . A case l:Ould be made fo•· AI Davi s of the
Oakland H.aiders; but he's an it·onot:lastie sort who bu&lt;· k~
the aulhoritieti. f 'm reluctant to say so, but my ( (•elin~ IS
that the man with the ·g rcHtcst impact on ~ports tod&lt;Jy 1:-:1
that st oop-shouldered. s hrill-voiced rt&gt;itome of r)()mposity,
Howard Cosell, bcc ~wse thi s is th e Age of TV and he is the
No. I evangelist.

No. It's Cha rli e Cri~s. the 28~ year-&lt;Jld rookie or t he
Atlanta Hawks. He 's !»·feet~ . Murphy of the Houston
Hot·ket~ i!i 5-feet-9. T owe, who was c ut by the Nuqgets this
y~&lt;-~r 1 was listed at 5·feet-7 but actually standS 5-feet-5 and
one-fourth . Criss. seven yea rs out of New Mexico State. has
been H revelation for the revived Hawks a ft e r starring ii1
the Easte rn League in recent seasons .

NOW

Gulf
wrote

IIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWNI

Ji{tlfJ:Zel:l

CAROlNAlfOOOStORIS

TENDER LEAF

TEA
BAGS
y..,.,_...,, _
•

-·...._,..

-~,

100 -Ct.

"'

.................................. ';::· 1

1"

. CASHMERE BOUQUET ...

Q

~

..............·~.:.' 69'
-.

~

'

$1''~
•

'

·~~ ~~

••

�l

7- The Dmiy Sent mel, M

6 _ The Dati~ Sentinel. ~liddlrport.Punwro y , 0 ., Tl..h~sctar, lNl' . 6, 19i7

Americans renting about everything

~-------------------------·

Ohio socked in.
by heavy snow

Control board backs off
buying extra school buses
8) J.K .

hm t' tt\, but !hey jus! lwl'p l lfl
dnnng ... sa id JOne~ . ··Th"'
A late ;mtumn snnwstorm strl't.'lS are bad and th('
has blown mto Ohw. lt"a nng lnterstatt.·s are vpe.n but
act·urnulatJons of up w t:J ha-,anh•us. We are also
relll0 \'3l
mches
1n areas
of hCI\ ' IIlg · Sl10 W
pn1blt•m
s
1111
tht•
side
rwrth.westt.•rn Ohio and
~tn&gt;t.•ts.
·
·
rausm~ haardnus drl\' ing
In findlay. P1\liee Sgt. Dan
n)nditions 0\'er many- parts 11[
Routzon said the city had
Ute state . "
At lt"ast tl ll~ wl'atht-r rt'('l't\'l'd 10 Inches nf Snnw.
"BUt there arc no rPal
relatNI dealh wns reported
~1 D nday when a ear9'5kldded pn\blems that l k.Jww of," he
through smne tr-t.• on a pond m said ... Really. it's bt'en pretty
Putnam County. killing tht&gt; lltlrmall'xcept fur S0lllt' prob·
lt~ms with s.nuw rem1wa I."
dri\·Pr .
Th e :"J&lt;-ltional Weather
;, It is rf'ally supt'r bad." IS
Servil:r
sa\·s tran:•lers'
the way Col umbus Police Sgt .
HdvJstJries
ha've been posted
Bub Dou~las described
dn\·tng conditi,1ns in the for the entire state ex('ept for
norUu~astern ('Ounties which
state 's capital city.
Ot'lu~las said a blanket of are w1der a heavy sno w
snow fell nn ice rnvcred warning.
The Weather ser\'icc has "
streets.
snow
" lt".S just like somebody prt"d i(' ted .. llE'\Y
putting powder o\·er the tup of accumulations of up to SIX
· a newly waxe-d fl tMir." sa1d inches in northeastern areas.
Douglas. ·•We hHcl nne chain ~md e\'en more in Lhe snow
reaction wreck with eight or belt region. east of Cleveland.
nine car . They just kept by t&lt;might. Accumulations 0f
banging mtu each other . We between twu a nd fou r inrhes
are currently forf"Cast for the
ha\' C so many accidents we
don't k.Iww h\)W many we rest (If the state today .
A strong low pressure
have . We're not e\·en taking
accident reports . We just tell center C(lntinued t0 mo\'e to
nort heast
early
the drivers to exchange the
information and co.me to us toclaycentered o,·er western
New York state.
later."
A large mass of cold H ir is
Police Offi ce r Casey Jones
beginning
to spread over Ohio
of. the
Tolodo
Police
from
the
west, along with
Department said the city has
inc
reasin
g
win ds. Hea·vy
received about 13 inche:s of
sn0w
squalls
are expected to
snow since ecarly \1ondy.
de\'e
lop
southeast
of Lake
'" We have a drivers
advisory nul, we don 't want Erie later todav as winds
people dri\ing unless they over Ohio reach 3o miles per
hnur nr higher.
Tenlperatures will be drop·
ping int("l the teens or lower
tomght. with cold weather ,
snow or s now flurries

·oF MASON

snow or snow flurries each

PHONE 773-5536
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

..

day . Highs wlil be range from
the 20s to the lower 30s, and
overn ight lows will be mostly

in the teens.

WhNhN } uu n(•ed a peanut
\'emiin~ madtine for the kids
p&lt;trty nr n hnspH&lt;-l \ ~ bl'l1 tn
n•rupt.•rate rrnm the. party,
almn~t anything ean b~ and is - rentl!d nuwadays.
'I1ll' n.•ntal industry has
grnwn by lt&gt;;tps a1Hl bounds as
Amerieans are rea!iz.ing that
they can have use 11f bt'th
everyday and exotic items

··u "'"

that ordinarily woulg be
ix')'i\nd Un~ir pnt·kethi'l(lks.
Annual revenues for the

million t&lt;' purchase an additional 213 buses for the
Columbus sch0ol system und up to 362 buses for

thousands of rental stores in
the COWltrY are l'Stimucd iit
$2 billion and industry
experts say lhc industry is
gnnving al a rale of 15 tn 20
per cent a ~· ear.

Cleveland .
Both cit\· school systems i.H£' w1der federal cou rt
()rders tt• desegn•gate schools .and in both cases.. the
state S('hool bflard was fow1d equally liable for schol'l
desegregat inn .

Sirmlar cases are pendmg in Cincin nati, Dayton,
l .ima and Ynungstown.
"The rHmificatlons leave sor~·t of US trembling,"
said Meshel. "The implications are so great that they
must be burnt&gt; by the Legislature and the governor.

Rep . Myrl Shoemaker. DBourneville, su~gested .that
Cleveland and Col umbus could solve their pupil
transpo rtati on
problems
by
c utti ng
back
transportation sc hedules for students in grades nine
through 12.
State law, noted Shoemaker, requires t.hat only
students in kindergarten throug h the eighth grade be

offered free transportation to schooJ. Buses for
students in grades nine through 12 is optional.
Of Ohio's 2.2 million public school students. aooul!.J
million a rr bused.

· Shoemaker suggested a second alternative: ·
utilization of public" transportation systems in
Columbus~ Cleveland. and any other urban area whil'h
may be ordered to desegregate public sch0&lt;1ls.
The Columbus public b us system. COT A, could

purchase additional buses under a 100 percent
federally-funded mass transit program .
COTA has so far refused to take on the burden of
busing Col umbus public school students because their

transportation needs would oc..-cur at COTA "peak"
rush hour operation.
"1 contend that we didn't (entirely ) create these
problems . No\1' they (local school districts) wa nt

someone else tu bai l them out. Don 't expect my vote,"
said Sh oemaker.

PRAGUE ( UPI J ~A Czechoslovakian hockey team,
Considered the second best in
the country, will depart for
the United Stales and Canada

news agency said Monday .

Tuesdf.I.Y tn play nine matches·
against teams of the World
Hockey Assocalion. the CTK

Hl!llt · Aii.
tltl'
bjggl'St nf twu fn1nc.·hisc
l•pt.•r;Htnn;-; in the n•untry, has
125 frmu·his.:~d .stt\1'(."5 in ttw
Unitt·d State:), · and has
n·t.·cntly ~ ex paneled
its
nperallnn til Japan.
The li:-;t of items Americans
ci.ln n·nt is seemin~lr ('n(Ucss
l'hit\ rs and (';irtl tables rnr a
part),_ nf 100. a truilcr for a
t.:al1lping trip, a small
purtnblr er\tU.' l'l'te mixer l(l
repair y11Ur sidewalk, a
chainsaw to r ut up a dead.
tret&gt;, a ga rden tractor, an

extra

long bl;tde hedge

ciipp(-r , a fl rt~) l" sCinding 111&lt;1·

ehine _
··One

ow· stures at
Valparais.', Ind., tlrdcred a
nu111ber of ..:antiCS to rent
out ," says UnitNI Hent-All
President B••b Feinstein .
''This mystified us be('ause
11f

College results

"This could be the forerunner of the corltrolling
tx1ard assuming a1l 0'\e costs 'tO rnake any changes
forced upon 1school districts ) by the courts."

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

1\l~IMINS

The state Cnnlnolling Board
t41ld tJ1e Ohin [)(•parunent of Education l\ltmday that
Ohw cnuld Wit mlmffhatt·ly afford to ptrk up the cc)st of
purch asin~ hundrlods {l( extra schclol buses to
unplrmL'llt cnurt -t ,rcJert"&lt;l dese~rega ticm rulings .
d1tl that, 1hen we wt•uld implidtly accept
pll' kin g up the cost of sdKwl desegregation down thr
hrw," so.ud St•n . Harry ·Me-shel, D·Y(' WlgSt(lwn , after
lht- board refused ta wah·e lts rules und plt.~ c~ lht.•
m~ltter on its a~enda .
The Ohio [)('partment of E"duecation has requested
that the br,ard ('(Insider a request tu alilwate over S4

In tr mati1mal

probably lingering through
the end of the week .
The Weather Service's Ohio
extended
outlook
for
Thursday through Saturday
calls for continued co ld
Weather, with a c hance of

Tuday
Ry (,,• ROY I'OI'J,:
Ul'l Husint·ss Wrill'r
Nf:W YOHK 1UP I )

\'OI.U~IBUS 1UP! I -

t.:niu·d

B)

Unned

Rusim·s~

The learn includes such '
wellkn own
p layers
as
gnaltender
Vladimir
Dzurilla, a longtime member
of the Czechoslova k A team,
and forward Fra ntisek
Cernik .

College Baskr- tball Ruu lts
B~ United Press t ntern~ t ional
•
East
Adelph i 101 , CCNY 80
Albrght 73. Del. Va l 65
Al lg hny Colin. Rchstr .~5
Brande i s 75 , Babson 65
Buclc.nell 99 , L~coming 8J
Clark 93, Trin i t~ 74
Post lO.S, Kings PI 87
Gannon 89, Geneva 71
Gro ... e C i ty 55 , Th 1e1 51
Jona 109, Buffalo 79
Leh igh 78 . Getlysbg 61
Penn St . 86, Oe! 84
Pt . Park 95 Wheeling 91
St. Fran 82, No'eastrn 63
Sc uth
Ala. 94 , Tenn T~ch 66
Appy St . 11. UNC Char 6J
Ark St 78 , 5 M iss 65
Ciladel 88, Wofford 59
Oi'!VidSn 83 , ROlli OS 77
E . Tenn . 72, E . Mont . 63
)cksnvl St. 88 , St10rlr 67
Kan . St . 69 , Vandrb ilt 55
KE'ntucKy 78. lnCi ian a 64
Mmph is 5186 W. Ky . 80
M Har11ey 74 , Marsh II 71
NE La . 89 , M 1ss . St . 78
VMI 81 . Tenn Cha it 72
W Librty 82, Sleubnvt 77
Mi dw est
Cent Mo . 93 , Mo . K.C 90
Dayton 83 E .Kentuckv 70
Kan . 106 Murray Sf. 71
Loyola Il l. 78 Bu tle r 51
MO .- Rolla 6J, Ark . PB 56
SE Mo . 89. Westminstr 67
SW Mo 79, Mo .-St .L 74
Sou t hwest
H Payne 81 , Wylnd Bapt 55
New Mex . 126, Ky . St . 10d
No Texas 85 . McMurry 71
O .Roberts 89, W. Te:~~as 78
s.w . Tex . 70 Te)C Stt1rn 61
St Mrvs 6&lt;~ , S.F . Austn 58
Sui Ross .92 E . N .M . 80
Te)(aS 82 , LSU 66
Wes t
Ar i z. 76, No . Ariz . 65
Montana 7L Denver 64
Regis 75 S. Colo . 66
Gonzaga 68 Prtlnd St. 52
Alaska Anch 82 Idaho 7·1
Ore St. 79 Wyom ing 69

Pac Cal 77 N Oak 65
Nev LV 117 Pepprcline ?0
Lg· Bch St 105 uc Rv r sde 71

TOP GOLFERS
CINCINNATI (UP I I ~
Tnm Watson· and Judy
han~

Rankin

been chosen the

1977 golfers of the yea r in the
annual pnll of the Golf

Writers Association uf
America .
Watson, the PGA 's leadj ng
money winner with $310,653,
won in a lands! ide over Hale
Irwin, La nny Wadkins.
amC~teur champiori John
Fought, Hubert Green and

tht'l't.' is 11u IIU\'lgai.Jle !-.trca 111 ..f AI Lapin 's lntcmutiunal
ut· lake at Valpara\Sil, \V(• ~ ...lndu:-;trie:-~, hw .. which al~ ''
!list•m·ered peuple were ran ca dwin (•( franehised
lt~k.ing the t·anoes hundreds of pam·ake rt&gt;staurants.
nnlcs tn w&lt;.~tt.'r att1p thC'tr
Fl'.lllStl'ill
jnincd
the
l'ars; it didn 't make st•nse w t'nmpan) 111 1968 and bnught
nwn a ra ni~ if you lin~ so f~r cuntn'l 11f it in 1974. He has
frnm water ."
t'X J&gt;Hildl•d tts dt, mestic
Lawn and ~'1rdcn tnnl s, upcratillllS and recently ·
butlding tnols, mC&lt;Iit:;:alcllll'r- ubwined pt:r111issiun l)f the
gcncr equipment and part)' ~o\'t;'nuncnt tn start a fran·
(.aquiprucnt are the bread· dlised rent-all business iil
a,ndbutter business of Unitt'&lt;! Japan . ·
" I think the .JapanclU! will
llcntAit's 125 stlu-cs. But.
thrnugh t;rlnta('ts with tf.th:nt be t'\' l'H tnnre pleased tlmn
a~cncil'S
and
t1thl' f AmcnL·ans tl' lx~ ablt' tu rent
businesses. a UrliteU Hcnt·Ail thiuJ4s,.' ' ~aid Feinstein .
slnre c.:an get you prac:tically . '' Stt~ragt1 spate is ~~t a
anything you want to rent if prt•tnilUII in J~pan and this
Y1'u gin~ them cn1)U!-\h notice . sh,,uJd make rental nf large
··Our Be\'er ly Hills store items uwrc preferablt~ thar1
om·e rented the late Elvis nwnin~ I11Ctll ."
Presley's Rnlls-Hoyte and a
"l tJ1ink they willr·enlmuch
lot nr other things tx&gt;]ongin~ the
saml'
thing:-;
as
to big stars for a customer 1\mcric:ws,
plus
large
who wanted t(' make a big. lug ;..t ag&lt;• ft1 r travel and
name-drnpping splash at a ceremt~nial l'ost um es f(lr
Hollywood party," Fcinsteut tradititlllHl festtval s."
said.
In the UnitL•d States, a
The Taylor chair1. the olher Unitl'd HcJ\t -All f1·anchisee
nat i(•n ft ll y fr •., ilc h l sed usually has .a $50,000 per$(mal
equipment rental finn. invt..'-.'it ment t he doesn't have
nperall'S through dealers ":lw In pa y lh;Jt IUU('h clnwn 1 in a
are primarily sellers of tools busint•ss with an inventory (If
and
~quiJmlent .
· But perhap s $125,000.
llHIUSillHis
uf other in·
The awrage gross rental
deperulcut
too l
and \'Plwnc will be fr('tn $100,000
equipment dealers also a rr in tn $)50.000 a yea r and
the rental business.
Feinstein figures the profit
Fe.intein's company was from that is equal tn U1c profit
founded in Uncoln, Ncb., in frc,m c1 typkal retRil stnre
194:8. For a ti1ne it was a part with sales $500,000 a ~· l:! ar .

LPGA's

winner

leading

for

Install tigh tly. If you don t have them.
use plastic sheeting well
I
taped around the edges.

Install water-saving showerheads.
They can cut water use by half, and
you can't feel the difierence.

29/0pen windows.

35/Bulbs.

Just f1ll ou t thi s order form and mail 1t with a check tor $2 85 ,
whiQft--includes postage and 10Q: Sales lax. Jo Cotumb1a Gas
of Oh1o. PO Box 117 Depar1ment A, Columbus OhiO 43 216

8
SHOULDER ROAST. .............. ~~~ 8
CHUNK BOLOGNA ..........'.......... 48¢
SLAB BACON.............~~~~~~-~~:!L. ...L.~-. 88¢
ROUND BONE LEAN

GOLDEN ISLE

•

r

·•

rJI Jf (;(t,er

©~W~[ID[Jffi':, I

GASDFOHIO

.1

local q&lt;l&lt;&gt;

o1hce

ArtCarved

BANQUET

I
I
I

2 LB. BOX

I
I

______________ ,
--

Christmas Selection

COUPON

3LB.
CAN

$}49

COUPON .

~ ::

Coupon Expires Dec- 10 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Kt-y

.

~~·' '

I' .

•nit

Kromtx GHt Items .

Goessler's Jewelry Store
POMEROY
' '

:~

. ~.
·.

~I

,

22 OZ. BTL

69¢

NO. 125
.24 OZ. BTL

r : . , , .~.~·''
r;

-:'--. ~--::_: . , ;-,

I' . -

&gt;

~~ ~

c oupon Explr
. es De c. 1e• 1977

CAKE MIXES ·

59e

19 oz.

59~

box

MASHED POTATOES

.$}79

100 CT. PKG.

W/C

.I

W/C : : ~
. ·~
·· J
: .&amp;

Coupon· Expires Dec . 10 , 1977
TWINCITYGATEWAY

C~u~~~~~~~~A~~~~~

977

. .I

69t .

NO. 205
13 OZ. BOX

79t

: ::
:

:1

~./;.. ..::-.... ~.z..,-;-.
..:v.~
. ']

COCOA OR

FOR DISHES

~: : :

NO..ZOS
50
BOX

0~

: .J:

·

.•w.v..w.w.r~.J

= ~~
.~I
~

·~::

: :r J:.
W!C

'

1: :·

Coupon

FRUITY

::

$}39

::
W/C

E ~pires Dec. 10,1977

::
:I

PEBBLEs

69t

NO. 105
11 OZ. BOX

: ")

~.· ~:
~

W/t

Co~pon Expires De c. 10,1 977

t::.-Jil ~;

S

~·~.~~.~~~~:..:~~~!.!"!.~·~ ·~~. ..~.~ ~:: ,~· ......
n~&gt;'t.N.C~~Y. ~A.T.E~A: . .
. ::l~~~~T~W~I~N~C~t~
T~
Y G~A~T~E~W~A~Y~~~-3~
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·· · · · · · · · · J

~-~~~ ·•', :~

W/ C

DUNCAN HINES

TEA BAGS

·1

:::

·c o upon E xp ires Dec. 10, 1977

.;.1 ,

DISH DETERGENT

49e·

LIPTON

&lt; I)

PANCAKE sYRUP

.. . I

-:---;--,
. -;--:-'-;--,-.-.
!li'!l~l

JOY

I&gt;

Clocks.

Sllverpl•t• ·

W/ C

STALEY

-

COUPON

cans

COY PON ,-

.~. m~

,Lr::. -:-:-':'-:-~ ;-.:,

can

can

~ :~~.-:-_ ~·:: :- ~.11 ;I);.·
.,.~ ~ ~

~

J

W/ C

Tees. 'rit a.,i end

.

46 oz.

,·~;·~·:~; :·~·~~·~~·~~·~~:·~:·:~~·~:·:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:.:~::;;:,;
CALGONITE . :::

:
:i'

811Hords,

PKGS.

Counon Exnires Dec. 10, 1977
T\oVINCITYGATEWAY

~~~W·~-~

·Gents' ;Anson Tie'·

Do&lt;oraliYO

3

TOMATO JUICE

17 oz.

30 oz.

-~:
il
BATHROOM TISSUE ~:
:: ,
2 ROLL $}00
·I
NO. 285

W!C

GLAD

Ntdclaces,

cans
;_.,--+--GO-LD_E.:.N-IS-LE_ _ _ __

KIDNEY BEANS

SOFT WEVE

Coupon Expires Dec. 10, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

. -

4

e

JOAN OF ARC

~~~·Z"'7 ~,

COUPON

CRISCO
SHORTENING

FOR HER

Protectors ,
Speidel
Watch
Bands, Laditt ' &amp;
G•nh'
Lad l es'
Dtamotlll Ptndlnh &amp; ,
Ear Rings. 8. David
Pin &amp; Ear Rinvs.
Pierced Ear Rings,
·Cultured Pearl

3

BUFFET
SUPPERS .....

~

PrinCe &amp; Princess
Gantner

VEGETABLES CREAM
STYLE CORN, W. K.
CORN OR SWEET PEAS
11 oz. $100

TOMATOES

Delightful
To Give .
Wonderful
To Get

I
I
I

-

&lt;;i!vln~

GOLDEN ISLE

HOME STYLE OR
BUTTERMILK
8 oz. BISCUITS

Selections

I
I
I

¢

.

L.B;.

~ orlh .

In Beautiful

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Address

.

,

3

CELERY•••••.••~~~~.~~A.L~•• 9~

Jewelry

-------y-----------~-~
m , ,.,.I
Fmcrq
1os tmte your
co rnpany
1

CRISP CALIFORNIA

Costume

.. ________ ,

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

L.

TOKAY GRAPES••••••••••••• ~~~ 29~

Finishing second was U .S.
Women 's Open champ Hollis
Stacey. Debbie Austill, Beth
Daniel. J oAnne Carner, Jane
Blalock and Kathy Whil-

now and choose tor the
mimes on you r gif t list. Every
Bulova Acc:utron has the
famous etectronlcal ly·drlven
tuntng fork movement.
Gueranteed accurate to
within a minute a mont h.

You can do a lot lo save money this w1n1er - and we want to
help .

.

FLAMING RED

Evel)lone wants a Bulova
Accutron watch. Come In

These can be extra insulation . So are
draperies on the windows .

I

69~

money

Bulova
Accutron®

36/Rugs.

There are 1h1ngs that you can do 10 keep your energy costs
1n line . These conservat1on tips are way s that you can save
energy and mQney now. All of Jhese I ps imd more are from a
book calied The Homeowners Energy Gwde. by John A
Murphy. The book normally costs $6.95 But you can get 11
from Columbia Gas fo r what the book cost us $2 50

:71l1Miu!4t&amp;uf4in TOwn

3LB.
BAG

sec(•nd
straight year with $122,890 .

Accutron

Replace high wattage bulbs with
lower powered ones where you can.

I
I ~s
II ~~
...
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

APPLES

the

Bulova
and

28/Storm windows.

we·re do1ng our besl to see that nalural gas rema,ns an energy barga1n . A recent st ud y shows Jhe average family
spends abou t the same percentage of 11s budgelloday lor e~­
ergy as 10 yea rs ago, Dunng the sam,e penod. the cos t of nalural gas to Colu mbia more than doubled

• •

1

34/Showerheads.

' , _______________

REOOR GOLDEN DELICIOUS

,-

Most heat loss 1n any home is th roug h the roof. Take showers instead of baths they use up to 50
Install attic insulat1on or bring your present in- .percent less water
sulation up to recommended starr~da rd s - thats 32/Shaving.
R19-R30 standards
Don t let the water run while you're shav26/Unused room.
ing . Just turn it on when you need it. Close it ott from the rest of the house.
33/Faucets.
27/TV's.
Check for leaks and replace washers if
needed .
Don t leave on when no one 1s watching .

L1ke all energy bill~. gas bills are gomg up There are higher
costs for materials and la bor. for purchased gas. for taxes.
msgu1ded national policies also f1gure 1n I he equa11on

'
Quantity
Rights Reserved

tube
GOLDEN ISLE

31/Showers.

'-T--.-..J

Open Sunday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

... TO CHERISH .
CHRISTMAS AFTER CHRISTMAS

Here's a checklist for the upstairs part of your home.

Weatherstrip all windows and the door to
the atiic.

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Rankin, who also won the
aw3rd last year. was the

Now is the time to get ready for cold weather. Here are more
things to do that save money by saving energy.

30 /Weatherstripping.

NO DEALERS PLEA SE!

•

What You Can Do Now.

If youl1ke to sleep with the window
open. sh ut your bedroom door.

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

Jack Nicklaus.

Even More Ways to
Save onw·
Energy

25/Attic insulation.

USDA CHOICE

PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 10

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OVEN CLEANER
N0. 205
16 OZ. CAN

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COUP ON

Fami~ Size

1- .

13 lb. 9 oz. box

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OXYDOL DETERGENT

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Coupon Expires Dec. 10, 1977

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a_ T~ Dally Se nt m~l. ~hddlepMt -Pomero), 0 ., "1\tesda) , Di&gt;r. 6,

Jaycees to .work
·with toys for tots
Agatn thlS year the MetgsCount)· Jaycees w1llea rry out

a " toys for tots"' a~d
Christmas food basket program for the needy .
Used toys. non-penshable
food items. and mont&gt;t-ary
co ntnbutions ar e bemg
solictted in an effort to
bng hten the Christmas of
less fortunate families tn the
area .
To)s and non-penshable
food items may ~ placed in
collection boxes at t he following businesses : The Ractne
Home Natinal BAnk, the Tuppers Plains Branch of the
Pomeroy National Bank.
Meigs_ Plaza Hard ware,

LEGAL NOTICE
The Pubhc Ut1ht1e s CommiSSIOn of Ohio has set lor
publiC hearing Case No
77·380-EL.fAC to rOYlew lhe

fuel procurement practices ·
and polic~s of Oh1o Power
Company. the operations of

DON'T BLAM E WEIGHT ON 'PAST'
RAP :

When I was four years old, I ale some of my brothers pills,
thinking they were candy. They were to mak e ltm1 fatter and
have better blood.
Now I'm 30 pounds overweight. I guess I hey t•hanged me into
becoming a fatty . Mom won 't buy me reducmg pills How
come she's always giving my brother pills to gain wetght , but
she won 't help me·~ - STARTED OUT WHONC.
DEAHS.:
I've heard many excuses fur overweight, but yours l&lt;lkes the
cake (literally. no doubt ).
Look, S., a few tonic pills gulped at age four, ~&lt;·on' t tum you
mto a ltfelong fatty anymore than se&gt;called rl-ducing pills will
keep you pennanently thin . Of the two groups, the latter is
much more dangerous .- HELEN

Powell's Super· Vatu, Sears,
WMPO Hadio. and Southern
Otu o I nsuran&lt;.'t&gt; Sen: tees.

Cash donati ons may be sent
tu Metgs Jaycees. Box 603.

Pomeroy. ~5769 .

Jayt-el-s ~s a

eharar ter

butldmg orgamzation for
Yuung men, age 18-35,
dedtcated to bettering ' the
Meetmgs are

COI TUHUnll)' .

held at 8 p.m. on the second
and fourth Mondays of each
month in the Meigs Inn
meetmg room

Son born
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn W.
Meeks . Sr., the former
Sharon Romine, of Athens,
are announcmg the btrth of a
son, James Ivan. Nov. 16 at
the O' Bleness Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Meeks have

11s fue l cost adJUStment

clause. an4 related maners

NOW OPEN

Th1s heanng IS scheduled to
begin at t 0.00 A.M.. on December 12. 1977, af the of·
fices of me CommiSSion, 180
East Broad Stre&lt;t. Columbus.
Ol!io. All mterested persons
will be g1ven an opportunt!y
to be heard. Further Information may be obtained by

•

GINO'S
OF MASON

contacting the CommisSion
TtiE PUBLIC UTILITIES

PHONE 773-5536

COMMISSION OF OHIO

a., Randall G. Applegafe.

SONIA WHITE
Sonia
ELECTED While , daughter of Mr. aod
Mrs . Grover G. White, Jr ..
Long Bottom, a senior at t
Eastern Hlgb School, was
named the school 's "Girl of
th• Month" lor Novembor
by
tbe
Future
Homemakers ol America.
Miss Whlte bas been In the
F.H.A. for four y•ars and Is
now serving as president of
the group. She Is also
captain of lh• flag corps
and Is president of
Eastern's Student Council.
Miss White Is a member of
the Church of Christ.

Lyn, six, a nd John W. 1 Jr.,

age four. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. John H.
Homme, Athens, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm A. Meeks , Shade.
Great ·g randmother

is

NOTE FROM SUE : Why not ask for the return of your $3- to
make doubly certain you 'll "forget" about tlJetr attempted
blackmail'- SUE
P .S. Wtse parents wouldn 't listen to tattling, especially if it's
based ot a stolen diary. Right, Mom?
... Right, Sue, but they might be tempted. - HELEN
DEAHRAP:
What do you think of a girl who wears aT-shirt saying. "' A
woman's place is in the house ... and the Senate '"- TRADITIONAL
DEART. :
She gets our votes! -HELEN AND SUE

_Give A Gift
That Keeps On GiVing

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Clean stained baby clothes

The Daily Sentinel
_,. ,. -

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'

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'{'cation
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'

Looking
just the right gift for that certain someone?
How about a present that will be good at all seasons of the
year'? A subscription to the Daily Sentinel and Sunday
Times Sentinel.
·
A coupon containing subscription information ne·cessary
for your gift giving is contained in this ad for your
convenience. Fill'it out and send it in together with your
check .

OHIO &amp; W, VA ....................'22.00 YR.
ELSEWHERE..... ~ ...................•.. '26.00 YR.

't·Q~~~~~~~~~~~

!A
~

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.~~.

City ................ State . : ........ Zip ..........

~

From..............................................

Name ..•••. .••••. •••• •••••••••• •• •. •• ••••••.••••••••••••••• •

Street ..................................................... ·~

'

We Will Close For The Season

'

SUNDAY.
DECEMBER 11th

m
~

· MERRY CHRISTMAS&amp;
HAPPY NEW YEAR
See You Next' Spring

~~~.~~~~~~~i$Ji-s:·tf.

ADOLPH'S

WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CARD

DAIRY VALLEY

( .c.

lfiC

'

•

.

WITH EACH GIFT SUBSCRIPTION

reclamation of property in
the Racine-Letart area which
has been damaged by ex-

Soc aI
1
' Calendar

I

ed al the meeting -Zith Mrs.
Ruth Barnitz giving the deYotions entitled '"The Blessings
We Try to Avoid.'" Mrs. Gruss
read " Live to Give and Give
to Live" and members for
roll call gave a Thanksgiving
memory.
Mrs. Buck reportl'l on the
recent regional meeting: held
at Hio Grande. The annual
• was se t for
Christ mas pa1ly
6:30p.m. at the Meigs Inn on
Dec. 12. There will be an ex·
rhange of gifts and Mrs. Ben
Philson will have Christmas
devotions . Mrs. BcrLGrinun
wtll present the program,
"'Christmas is for Everyone ."
The dub voted to sent $1 fur
each member to the Meigs ..
County Assodaton of Garden
Clubs for ChrtStams flower
show expenses. Mrs. Wilson
Ca rpenter, show chainnan,
noted that the club had
charge of staging with Mrs.

11JESDAY
Cross as chairman.
SOUTHERN Local School
Board special session
Tuesday at 7 p.m. in cafeteria
at high school.
LADIES AUXILIARY of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Christmas party Tuesday
6:30 p.m. in east-west diningroom. Potluck with $2 gift
exchange.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter
OF Beta Stgma Phi Soronty.
Dec . 6, Co lumbus and
Southern ·Ohio Electric Co.
There will be a cookie sale,at
the meeting . The cultural
report will be given by Mrs.
Carolyn Satterfield and Mrs.
Ij bby Sayre. Kathy Fry and
Texanna Well wtll be the
hostesses.
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
LODGE, 363, F. and A. M.,
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. with work
in the entered apprentice
degree.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America , 7:30
Tuesday, at the hall. Nonunation of officers, quarterly birthdays to be observed, am!
refreslunents to be served.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7: 45 p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
Trustees meeting, 8 this
evemng at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.·
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164 ,
F&amp;AM, regular meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday with installation of officers to be
held; all Master Masons
invited .
~
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
_, • f
LODGE 363, F and A. M
~~
Wednesda y, installation of of12 FOOT STEEL
ficers. Open to master

..
~r:·

TAPE RULE

HRS.: to :oo A.M. tit n .oo P M. &gt;un . Thurs. 10 :00 A.M.
lii _!!'OO P.M .. Fri~ay and Saturday.
_ j
See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge ·

' 'Ma;es
• t:y ' ' revzewe
.
d ;:.Fruit
:. :. .____
baskets

f
l
b
b~ zterary c u

Fot· the program, Mrs.
Carpenter used th~ topk .
"Things to Gt·ow lo use "'
Flower Arrangemenls." She
statl-d Uta! !lungs easy to
care for and grow should be
chosen as well as those thmgs
which look good 111 the garden ·
and are useful for arrangement.s. Slm mentioned
U1e Bells of Ireland. clamatis.
11Ut
gra s s.
hedge ,
"pussywillow, fantail willow ,
euonymous. hoSta , yarrow ,
aliwn , and DtJtrh ins
Each of the members then
mentioned various plants
which they had found useful
and practwal for fres h and
dril'&lt;i arrangements . • Mentiunc-d were the milkweed,
dock. thistle, iron weed, fox
tail, and the wid...Jeafed
plant..
Mrs. Buck received a ribbon for her Thanksgtvtng arrangement. Refreshments
were ser ved by the hostess.

"'Majesty " , a story of
Royalty, wa s
reiewed by Mrs. Ruth Euler
at a recent meetin g of the
Middleport Literary Uub
held at the home of Mrs. M. L.
French. The review was
prepared by Mrs. Ilernard
t' ultz who was unable to attend .
Mrs. Euler read some opinions of the book by promiEn~land' s

nent

reviewers,

mosl of

whom considered the affairs
and lives of tire royal family
as v~ry ordinary. It was
noted that Queen Victona
was the great -g t·catgrantbn other of both Queen
Elizabeth II and -Prince
Phillip , and lhat George V,
father of Elizabeth I, was the
first eommoner to rule
England George VI was
Eli zabeth 's father. It was
pomted out that Edward Vlll
abdicated to Mary Wallace

Simpson, an Amenccm.
The reviewer told of
Elizabeth II and Plullip who
were marril~l in 1947 and of
their apparent devotion to .
each other. She satd that the
ltves of the roya l family are

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

PROFESSIONAL MITRE BOX
WITH 4'' .o: 24" II PO/Nf BAOCSAW

SALE
PRICE

5988
• E1ght odtu stoble steel

PHONE 773-5536

ww

7.79

l

to be prepared

routin e wtth a typtcal day being meeting people, visiting
hospitals, and taking care of
business affairs. She noted
Uta! they really have very littie to do with the affairs of
government as this is done by
Pe~rlimenl.

Fruit basket!! for 12 shutins
. wtll be prepared by the SewHite-Scwing Club members
Hccording to plcms made at a
rec~mt meehng held at the
home of Mrs. Mildr~d Wells.
The annual Christams dinner party was set for Dec. 14
at 7 p.m at the Meigs Inn
Will] members to go from

SHOWER PLANNED
A house shower for Mr. and
Mrs. James Ferguson whose
home at Route 4 Pomeroy,
was destroyed by fire on Nov.
28 will be held at I p.m.
Thursday at the Dwight
Haley residence, 108 Pearl
Sl. , Middleport. All items are
needed and all persons
wishing to help the family get
reestablished a;e Invited.

CEREMONIAL SET
Mary Shrine 37. Order of
the White Shrine of
Jerusalem will hold a
ceremonial Friday at 8 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Members are to take
a covered dtsh for potluck
refreshment s followi ng the
meeting.

Mrs. Hobert Fisher, presi- there to the home of Mrs. Flo
dent, led in the club collect. It Strickland for -a gift exwas reported that Mrs. R. M. change .
Shennan and Mrs. G. H.
Mrs. Pandora Collins
!.asher are ill . For roll call ' presided at the meeting and
members commented on also gave the treasurer's
what it would mean to them report. Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore
to be queen for a day. Next gave the secretary's repm1.
meeting will be at home of Tl1ere was an auctwn of
Mrs. Arthur Strauss Dec. 14. homemade tte ms . Mrs .
Refreshment;; were served Shirley Baity furnt shed the
REVIVAL GOING ON
by the hostess.
mystery pri~e which was
SYRACUSE - The Rev .
guessed by Mrs. Lenora ,
Nelson Perdue, Pioneer.
McKmght. Games were
OhiO, is evangelist for revival
played with prizes going to
services being held at the
Mrs. Baity, ~rs. Nettie
Syra
c use Church of the
Boyer, Mrs. Lucy White, and
Nazarene
through Dee. 11 at 7
Mrs. Betty Wehrung . Mrs.
each
evening
and at !0:30
Wehrung will host the next
a.m
on
Sunday.
The Rev.
meeting. Sandwiches and
Dale
T.
Bass,
pastor,
invites
salad were served by the
the
pubhc
to
attend
.
EXTON,. Pa. - Foote hostess to those named and
Mineral Company has ob- Mrs. Ma rtha Hoffman and
CLINIC PLANNED
tained $20. millton in long Mrs. Jont Hoffman .
Meigs area women have
term financing from three
this evening left to make an
insurance companies. Aetna
appointment for
Wed- '
Life Insurance Company and
nesday's free cervical cancer
Connecticut Genera l Lif e
clinic. The clinic will be held
In surance Company will hold
Wednesday at the basement
$1 5 million parti cipations in
of Heath United Methodist
the' private pla cement of materials used primarHy in
Church. Women wishing to
senior notes due 1992, with the the steel, al ummum , foundry make an a ppointment should
balance held by B~nkers Life and ch em ical industrie s.
ca ll 992-5832 tonight .
Company.
Major project s ·include
Proceeds of this Issue will ferroalloys and lithium
NAME RESTORED
be used by Foote to rettre products. Newmont Mining
The former name of Violet
bank debt incurred to finance Corporation owns 63 percent Lucassa Canary has been
ca pital expenditures.
· of the voting stock of Foote restored to Violet Caudell
The company is engaged in Mineral. One of its plants is according to an entry ftled in
the mining , processing, and loca ted at Graham Station, the Meigs County Common
.
marketing of specialized raw . W.' Va.
Pleas Court .

Foote borrows
$20 million to
pay off banks

by Baur and itastoret "

Judy, Joe and the Ho-Ho-Ho

IT Wt6 VERY
DI~i=lCULT

I

7'77-r:&gt;en.-- . .. 10

BCUEVC ALL
\\liEN 'f.JERE WAS·
riG C'-IMNE'!--A"JC) ~
11-lAT S TUI= r: A!::O lT
&gt;iOJ\ CCULD •.,.
SANTA (OvliN' Wt.r I
THE CHIM~JEI .'- .
~TA FOPCIJT
o= THE ELECTI&lt;IC ·
·
;:,TO\ E? "

..-~~­

!=OR

..JUDV AND ..JOE ...

.. .W&gt;iO LIVED
A .
RISE AFART"MENT. ..

Storys Run
'

BY GLENNA SHULER
Hecent houseguests of Rev .
and Mrs . Otis Chapman were

Mrs. Fay, Mrs. Sharon LewiS
and Mrs. Conni e Grounds and
son, all from Florida. They
were here to attend funeral of
Mrs. Margaret Allen. Burial
took place at Rock Springs
cemetery. Mrs. Allen was the
mother of Mrs Fay.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Leach
ca lled on Mr. and Mrs.
Adolph Smith a day recently
in Jackson .
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Hife
were dinne r guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Charle s Young and
family on Thanksgiving.
Spending Thanksgiving
w1th Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Coen Sr. were Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Coen Jr ., Robin a nd

Christopher of Brewster,
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. John
Porter, Cuyahoga Falls, Mr.
and Mrs . Hobert Taylor ,
Rusty, Lori, Lisa and Jeff,
Rt. I Gallipolis. Calling in the
evening were Stan and Sharo
Petry. Missy and Davtd and
Tom Gtvens of Tara Apt .•
Addison and Mrs. Helen Rife,
Roush Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Brehm, Lancaster, spent a ·

,.
day recently with Rev. and
Mrs. Otis Chapman.
Spending a day recently
with Hev . and Mr.. Haymond
Ftfe were Mr . and Mrs.
Roscoe E. Fife, Rt. 1 Bidwell,
Mrs . Marie Keefer and
daughter, Leon, W. Va ., Mrs.
Delores Riggs and Pam.
Letart, W. Va., Mr. a nd Mrs .
Buddy Fife, Brenda and
Linda, Turkey Run, Mrs.
Nonna Keefer, Leon, W. Va. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Keefer,
Leon, W. Va
Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires,
Denise, Julie a nd Stephen
called on Mr. and Mrs. Junior
White a day recently.
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Taylor
of Utah are visiting re latives

and friends 111 Galha and
Meigs counties. They were
dmner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Veith and sons. on
Georges Creek .
Luther Hafey and ' Doug
Rowland, Columbus, spent
last week with Mr . and Mrs.
Bob Conkle and did some
deer hunting.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Carruthers, Matthew and
Eden, Mr. and Mrs. Bernie
Carrut hers, Mi chelle and
Peggy Sue, Belville, spent
Thanksgiving with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie

Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires

,.nd chtldren called on Mr.
and Mrs. Ca lvin Caldwell and
Johnny a day recently .
Others calling there were Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Sizemore,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jones and
Ronnie, Kevin, Donene ,
Connie and Rodney .
Recent callers on Mr. and
Mrs. Marlin Rife were Mr.

lo..-------------------..1·

Mr. and Mrs. Denny Spires&lt;
and children called on Muriel,'
Spires and Irma Bales a j
recent evening. Mr. and Mrs.I

George Markin and Jeremy1
were there.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha,rles
Baker, New Boston , Mi ss Kay
Baker, Columbus. Mr. and
Mrs . William Larkin, Hanniba l, spent Thanksgiving
with Mr . and Mrs. Alex
Shuler

and Mrs. Joe Rife, Mr. and

Mrs. Dallas Rife and Mr. and
Mrs. Ha y Hife, a ll of
Wellston , Hev. Clyde Ferrell,
Mr . and Mrs. Alva Rife, Rt. I
Middleport.
Joe Dummer of Millersport
was recent overnight guest of
Rev and Mrs. Otis Chapman
Gregg Browning, Rt. 3
Pomeroy, was Thanksgiving
guest of the John Veith
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenn eth

ENTEHTA!N GUESTS
Mr. a nd Mrs. Chester
Kmghl enterta ine-d t'riday
evemng with a dumer party
hononng Mrs. Bill Matlack
on her birthday. Attendmg
were Mrs . Matlack and her
husband, Chester Hoad, Mr.
and Mr s. Dick Knight,

Searls, Co lumbus , Mr. and

Mrs. Alvin Searls, Diana and
David of Chicago. Mr. and
Mrs. Asel Searls of Dayton
vtstted recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Searls.
Mr. and Mrs. Jay McGhee
and child ren, Rt . I, Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Leach, Chad and Chris, Ht. I
Vinton. Mr. and Mrs. Don
Leach and children, local ,

•

.&lt;~ "

Bcllwre, who have s pent the

past week here visitmg
relatives . Oth er recent
vtsitwn; uf the Knights were
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Kmght
and son, Steve, Caledonia.

h1gh steell eQ s

ong les

•

••
••••••••••••
BENCH
SHARPENING
STONE

LARGE SIZE

,.; ,
1

MEASURE

• SI.Jper fine grit

• Long weari ng
''Pawerlock' '

• 4")( 1718"
• In hardwood case

se&lt;:ures lfJ'' blade

OR

DIET RITE

WALNUTS

OR

TAPELESS

RC

ENGLISH

COKE

·-·-

SPRITE

9.95

9.95

THURSDAY SPECIAl.

La.79~

4 QUARTS

hand" measure
ments
• Compocf ; f1ts 1n
pocket or purse

a-16 oz. aonLEs

••••••••••••••••e
REG

2.69

•••
••
•••

BOLT&amp; SCREW
ASSORTMENT

• Bright z1nc-ploted
assortment
• Popular SIZes In
separate comportments

e
e
e

e
e

•
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HEAVY DUTY

GUN KIT

REG.l 188
16 .95

• Great for home &amp; workshop protects
• Includes staples, clips. oose , ond
"T1ps for Tacking" booklet

FIRE STIX

BAMA

BONUS

ALL WEEK SPECIAL

DR.
PEPPER

SALAD
DRESSING

DETERGENT
KING SIZE

DISPOSABLE

FAVORITE

LIGHTER

BREAD·
3 LOAVES

•

CHEWING

••·~~
•••

COCA-COLA

1

•••

:

!'

..,,•
l

•'•
•

TOBACCO

8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

J

I

c

s...:16 OZ. BOffiES

..'
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ONLY

89~

VALLEY FARM

: SAND &amp; SHINE KIT
e

• Make your electric dri ll o

sonderlbuffer
• Sands &amp; buffs-on wood,
REG . metal , fi bergiCISS

CRTN.
DIAMOND
SHELLED

• 8.89

E-R CALLED
The Racine ER Squad
Saturday at 7:40 a.m. transported Edgar Taylor, Rt. I,
Racine, a medical patient, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

giving.

• Soppo n s- work iullv 01 all

• for fa st ''one-

.:
· SING SCHEDULED
There will be a hymn sing
Sunday, Dec. 1·1, at 1:30 p.m.
at the Hazel Community
Church, Long Bottom.
Featured will be Dan
Hayman and the Hymn
Timers.

.Joey Leach ncar 11 to Grande .
vistled Mr. and t-trs. Joe
Leach and Arth ur, Thanks,l

Carruthers.

gu•de ro llers
• Eosy to read 5tole

REG.544 REG.688 REG.688

•

~

m

environment, m~mbers
agreed to work toward

mixture once tt IS discolored
but pour it out and make up a
fresh batch. This method was
sent to a top chemist in
Washington and he replied
that they found this a most effective way to remove stains
and whited garments . In
every case tested the fabrlc
was either lightened or completely whi te ned.---MRS.
D.M.
DEAR POLLY -1 ha ve a
truly great help for mothers masons, their wives and
ed many versions of pra c· whose sons play football and friends.
tically the same method so wear white uniforms. I put LETAHT FALlS United
will give you one of the more full strength liquid detergent Method1st Women, annual
right on the soiled spots and Christmas dinner to be held
comprehensive answers .brush with a soft scrub brush. at the home of Mrs. Ernest
POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -To remove This does not hurt the Shuler, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
fonnula slams from baby material and really gets to all THURSDAY
clothes put one gallon of very the dirt and stains . Throw in
GALLIA
County Human
• hot water in a plastic, enamel the washing machine and
Counc.il
meeting
Services
or statnless steel container. they come out Iooktng noon at Community Mental
Do not use aluminwn. Add beautifuL-JOYCE J,
DEAR POLLY-A helpful Health Center. Tour and
one cup of an electric
lun ch. Call 446-5508 for
dishwasher compound and hint to know when we are try- reservations.
one-fourth cup bleach and stir ing to conserve water is that
EVANGELISTIC services
well: I put my 100 percent soap and detergent suds do
now
in progress through
white cotton gannents in this not mix so with a large or
Friday
at the Alfred United
and let them soak lor half an small amount of detergent
Methodist
Church. Services
hour and then wash as usual. suds to dissolve quickly get
are
7:30
p.m.
nightly. The
I use one-half cup vinegar m rid of them by swishing a bar
pastor,
the
Rev
. Richard
th e rinse water . The of.soap through the suds and ·
w!U
be
the
speaker.
Thomas,
garments come out snow there is no need to run water
There
will
be
special
music.
for
long
p'
e
riods
of
time.white. I have also used this
The
public
is
invited
to atMRS.
R.B
.Q.
lor stained pillowcases and
tend.
DEAR
POLLY--I
save
mattress covers that were
FRIDAY
small plastic medicine botyellow and badly soiled.
RETURN
JONATHAN
When using this for white tles and thoroughly wash
uniforms that contain nylon , them to use in ba g lunches for Meigs Chapters, Daughters
etc. do not put them in hot carrying catsup, mustard or of the American Revolution,
water as it sels the wrinkles ' salad dressing to go on the I :30 p.m. Friday in the social
United
Heath
Pour hot water over the sandwiches so there are no room,
Methodist
Church,
Middishwasher
compound soggy sandwiches at lunch
dleport.
Program
by
Mary
granules and let it cool before time.-MARION.
Polly will send you one of Morris on Allan Keller's
adding the nylons . Do not stir
while the clothes are soaking. her stgned thank-y ou article, " I Remember
(Some readers suggested newspaper coupon clippers if Mama" dealing with the
that only a plastic or wooden she uses your favorite Christmas traditions of the
spoon should be used when Pointer, Peeve or Problem in Elberfeld family . Hostesses
stirring granules in water.) her column . Write POLLY'S will be Mrs. Emerson Jones,
Do not keep reusing the same POINTERS in care of this Mrs. James Brewington,
Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs.
newspaper.
Irving Karr , Jr.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY -Please tell
me what to do to remove formula stains from baby 's
clothing that is made·of cotton and polyester. Washing in
the normal way and spraying
such stams with stain
remover does not help.JUNE .
DEAR' JUNE and SUSAN
who asked the same question- This question was asked
some time ago and we receiv-

Holiday weekend blackened
hy ice and snow last night

Commentaries on the good
and bad effects of nuclear
energy plants in a conununity
were given by members of
the Bend 0' the River Garden
Club at a recent meeting held
at the home of Mrs. Eileen
!luck.
In their discusston on
eco logy and preserving the

DEAHS.:
ISting companies .
Why blame your brother's pills when they evtdently haven'I
Mrs. Andrew Cross presidmade him gain wetghl?
Stop wasting time on cop-outs and start counting calones.
For further wetght-loss hints, send us a stamped, self- ~~'"~&gt;o:mo&lt;i~o&lt;i"~"Oil.:l'l&lt;:om~:~O~llll~llii:D:I!l:ilil
"' ~~·
addressed envelope. -SUE
\i:~
I.

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I hid my diary in a real safe place, but my brothers found lt.
They threaten to tell Mom about my girl fri end and me cutting
school last week. I already gave them $3 to forget it , but now
they want $10 more, and that's my whole allowance for a
month.
There are some other little things in my diary I'd rather my
folks don't know. How can I save $10 and still not get in trou·
ble ? - BROTHER-MAILED
DEARB :
Tell you mother about cutting school. Things will go easier if
she )!ears it from you for honesty almost always lessens
punislunent . Besides, even if your brothers don't blab,
parents' tadar wtll hnd you out.
Then infonn the boys you'll keep quiet about thetr threats if
they'll " forget" the rest of your diary. After all, blackmail is a
two other children, Patty
· serious offense.- HELEN

Howard Hoover. Columbus.

Secretary

(l

Nuclear energy topic for
garqen club meeting

9- The Datly Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Dec. 6, 1977

'

••
LARGE GRADE B

-

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO.
THE DEPARTMENt STORE OF

EGGS

SUPER MMKET- OPEPI DAILY 910 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10
Federal Food Starn

The

PEAS

4

CANS

DOZ.

~$1

ENGLISH
WALNUTS
VAC. PAK
LB.
CAN

••;

�11 - The Daily Sentinel, Mtd&lt;Uepurt-Pumeruy , 0 ., Tue•day, Dec. 6, 197;
!;liCK TRACY

Tht• D&lt;uh St.•ntlnd, ~ll ddlt'f"~ri·Pi\lllt.' rP ~ . 0 .. Tucsdn:. {)._•t·. 6, IY77

10

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
!i " ur d.' t&gt;~" l

m.J~

r
t h.&gt;n.;o

l'.t,h

l t.l

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Ud~l- '4 !1! bt_. l h.iq,:t"&gt;.f ,1( !h i' \ , ]H\

r:.u.•

In )lt"IUOr f

Wanted to llu r

IN '-I~MOR\ ot Fr o•do f fo.\onu.:- 1
'&gt;'~&gt;h ~ po..,.,rd Dt'l£'mbt&gt; r ~ J Q7 j

LA)H po td lo1 all

Sadl y 11 w.~('d by Paul Monui! l
Mt ar1d Mrs lelolt:- r Morlut&gt; l and
d :wghrer or\d Mo and M r ..
R ~:~ bp r t R ou ~h

end Sons

In uwrnur\ . C.ml t'i rh.&gt;ak • .mJ
6 ~·t'n~ il'r ' 'tl t•rtl. $.! \~'

llllllutir~

Mo c ~rH'

GUN I.,HQOI

\1 ubllt' H &lt;tiJk' Silo•:. !H'.I.l. \1trd ,lk•

•m• lh'Lt&gt;ph "'.! .ml) v. 1th

t• ~ (' r )

101\ h

( h lll "-

t.ordt'r ~ t'o:&gt;nt eh.tr.;t• f••r 111h ,·,trl"\ ·
ul ~ llo.t,\ :II ~mbo•r In (\;rt• uf Tht• S&lt;'ll•

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urwl

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&lt;11.1:. dt't'ttlt'll 1Jlr
.1~·dmr~l The Pubh:Jk'r v. 1ll nLI\ l.k·
r-.·:opuns•bl&lt;' ft~r ln&lt;lrt' lh&lt;ln !lilt' llll'l•T·
Ph'--"'t&gt;&lt;N"~~2 156

l' • CCpiiOilS

Voluntt&gt;£&gt;1

\vo ll

F11 e

sp on ,or o gun

BUHHDAV

ar,d

be happy and a-n1oy

othe r ha lf

for

you

con

Brofhprs

ol

mo bil(.'

homt~"

lielp Wanted

Ult' d a ~ befun• pubhl' .tttun

Sunda\

EXP ER IE NCED REFRIGERA fO R and
appliance sennce111on Paod
" ho l od oy~
,ocoltons and
hos p1to lt lOI 10n
Go ll• o
Relrog erotor Co bll-3rd A ve .
Gall1polts Oh1o
SOMt:ONE TO stay ntght s wi!h
man Contact Morvm Do rst at
Veterens Me mono! Hospotol
Room 113

~1

aftt•rnt&gt;VIl

Auction

S1.ar1 no"' 10plan to• ~ pr oi OUKJnal c ~
d ~&lt; v 'f\9 ~ D•Q R1g 0..11 P1• ~ a te
tr~"' "'!l ~chQQI o Her~ compeJen l •n

reer

Jtndchal

leilq ll'.li iHIIIIIIII held! K.,..ll ¥00' toll

and Ha•n on part tome Das o~ SJI a
S i.&gt;O or attend OUI 3 wee• tu lllol'lt!
resooenttfa•nmg
no ... tor tull
on tormat.on

r---- ------

=:- "_-£-=-

sx 007

Pomeroy landmark

9._
6ill.

--

-

PARKERSBURG '
304-4 22-4080

The Almanac
By
Unite d
Pre s s
IJ nlted Press International
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 6,
the 340\ h day of 1977 with 25 to
follow_
The moon is a pproaching
its ne w phase.
The mo rn ing s tars are
. Mars, Venus , J upiter and
~t urn.

is

Merrur y.
Those born on th is da te are
under the sign of Sagittarius .
Ame ri ca n ·poe t J oyce
Kilmer was born Dec . 6, 1886.
On th is d ay in histor y:
In 19 17, a total of 1,630
person s die d when a Belgian
relief ship and a F rench
munitions vessel collided and
exploded in the har bor at
Ha lifax, Nova Scotia .
In
1933.
Am eric a ns
crowded iilto liquor stores,
ba rs and c afes to buy their
fir st
le gal
a lco ho lic
beverages in 13 years.
In 1941 , President Fra nklin
D . R oose velt m essag ed
Japanese Premier Hirohi to a
hope that ga t herin g war
clouds would be dispe lled .
Japan a ttacked P ear l Ha r bor
the following da y.
In 197:&gt;, the U .S . Senate
a ut hor ize d_ a $2.3 billi on
em er gency loan to sa ve New
Yor k. City from de la!ll,t.

CO NTROL HUNGER and lose
wetght wtth New Shope Doer
Plan and Hyd rex Water Ptlls At
Du lton Drug Mtddleporl
LOVE HOUSE flowers? Coli
7.47 ·2430 All ktnds from 50 '
up. Ntce for Chr is tma s
MEN 5 IN SUL ATED bools S26 95
Suste:r Brown and Str.de Rtte
childre n s shol'!s SS.BB 6o)l5
rubber tnsuloted boots S7.95 &amp;
S8.95 . Boys .Wes lern boo ls
Factory Ou tle t Store Save
money her!'!. Bailey s Mtd·
__dlep? rL

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

Ill'

Dave Parson s
Owner
11 75 1 mo

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

JIM KEESEE

Re si d e ntial
and
commerci al . Call tor
~ timate , 24 hour seryice.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 985-3806

Ce llulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Sa ve 30 pet . to SO pe t.
on heating cos t
Expe rience and
fu tty insured
Free Est .
Call661-6419
11 JJ . J mo. pd .

CAPTA IN 8ASY
LIKE L 5AID-·
IT'S HI6 H TIME
~OU

LEAI&lt; NED
A FEW FACTS
OF LIFE:

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Bo x 34

~OU WANT TO SELL. MI L- ITAR Y
HARDWARE- TO THE PENTA&lt;30 NL.
OKAY. TH IS 15 O&gt;.i t= WAY IT'S DOi&gt;JE ..
BY cAVI5H ENTER TAII&gt;IME NT~

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c

SWAIN
Automalic
Transmission Service

PARTS -LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES 378-6250
Reeds'l'ilte. 0.
Ph.

5 17 TFC

Let The Opening
OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

Be the o'Pen ing of the in ·
door season for you Wi th .
vour old , furniture re upholstered in beauTiiul
warm colors &amp; pane rns
from Bob ' 5. If you a re
looMing for sa..- ings it will
pay you to pay us a . - isi t .
Located in back of fhe Sew
N ' Sew Out let on Main St .,
Rac ine , 0 .
11 10 1 mo .

Kingsbury

Home Sales

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Appalachian
Stove Company
A complete selection
of Coal &amp; Circulating
Heaters at low prices.
Fully stocked .

FOR SALE

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pomeroy Landmark

- ---

Special Orders or Showing

General Contractors
Phone 94t-2801
or '49·:ut60
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please
1121-1mo.
ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYl SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CEliNGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
by
Easy
step
step
instructions .

ACE HARIMARE
located In

l'f:I1Ii-ml

Service

from !looe .,.,,.,, Tr\.ldi or •wtl._,.,.

htUotor

to

tho

C.r• ,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pome1o,

Superin1
Steam E•traction

.Young's

Carpeting

Middleport, Ohio

Not The lmitam11

''The 0rtl11tll011
? H I "'&lt;&lt;

FREE ESTIMATES

I

Hartford
Henderson
882-2115
61S -1582
UNION OPERATED
12-2-1 mo.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

9 ...

HOBSTEITER

REALTY

I)

.;

HOME SITES fo r sole , 1 acre om;!
up . Middleport . m~ or Rutland.
Coli 992 7481 .
NEW 3 bf!droom house , 2 bo th!&gt; ,
all a lec ., 1 acre. 'MiddleporT ,
close 1o Rutland . Phon!'! 992 7481 .
SMALL to rm lor sole ,· 10'% down .
owne r fina nced . Monroe Co.unty, W. Va . Phone (30J) 7723107 or (JOJ ) 7 72 - 37~ 7 .
COUNTRY lorml ond with se cluded woods. water end good access in Monroe County, W. Vo .
$1 ,0CIO down , ca ll {304) 7723102 or (304 ) 7n3227 .

TEAFORD(B
A.UOR

VIRGil B. TEAFDI!i:l, SR.
REAlTOR
216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-lJ2S
RESTORED - 3 bedroom ,
2 baths, all city ut ilit ies,
near shopping, and other
conveniences . $15,000.
A
VIEW OF RIVER family
home
of
4
bedrooms, all City ut ilit ies.
large
garden ,
near
p layground and store .
Want .$16.500.
NEW liSTING - Country
home
and 6
acres .
R'emodel ing 2 bedrqom s,
bath, Leading Creek water .
Near town . $19,500 .
ATTRACTIVE - Litfle 2
bedroom frame home with
bath,
ci stern
wate r,
firepla c e, porches and
basement . Nearly one acre
lor $7 ,SOO.
NEW liSTING - 1 4
bedr oom , brick home .
Conven iently located near
schools
and
stores .
Porches, , basement and
al lcity utilities . $23.500 .
ADVANTAGES - With 2
bedroom home in town for
an older couple. All city
utilities . Walk to the stores .
A good buy at only $11.000.
FAMilY SECURITY - ln.
this 45 acres in the country .
Use nature' s heat. wood,
L.C. water , electricity and
septic tank . Will -sell tor
$13,500.
Helen l. Teaford
Gordon B. Teaford
Associates

KJ

A • • ..,., . _ • ..,

DARNB
[)()

[j

lHARTHSI

WAS ADAM MAKING
FUN OF EVE'5
ORIGIN WHEN HE
DID THI£.'l'

I KJ

s.

1

S:30---0dd Couple 4; Ne ws 6; Eiec . Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
6:0o---News 3,4,8.10, 13.15; Zoom 20.
6:31l---NBC News 3,4, tS ; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Now arrange the circled leners to
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
ORPHAH AJIOOE-IIEAR MISS
form the s urprise ans'fVe r. as sug7:QO----Truth or Cons . 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Sha
gested by the above cartoon .
Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan' s
.---,,HJ--- 1\lLIS ASI LEFT IT " '
WHEW r niERE HE GOES TO
is
. IS ; Daniel Fos1er, M.D. 20 ; Big Green Magazine
HIS ROOM ,, 'THAT WAS CLOSE
IT IS WELL NEVFR TO TAKE
33.
"' t' l L JUST STAY HERE TILL
CHANCES · " I AM SAFE
7:30---Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
I HEAR HIM SNORIN '·-AMO tlG THESE STUPID
(Answers tomorrow)
Fam ily Feud B; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.33; The
AMERICANS ....
Jumbles : lUSTY . PlUME JAilED OPAQUE
Judge 10; In Search of 13; Wi ld Kingdom 15.
Yesterday's
.
.
,
B:Oo---Fiintstones 3,4.15;
'Twas the Night Belore
I Answer . What you mtght find at the printers Chr istmas 6,13; Good Times 8,10; Nova 20.33 .
ALl TYPES
8: 3Q---Szysznyk 8. 10.
9:0Q-Mac Davis 3,4, 15; ; Charlie' s An"gels 6,13; Movie
" Uptown Sa1urday Night " 8,10; Greal Per formances 33 ; Concord S1rlng quartet Plays BartOk
and Haypn 20.
!O :OO---Bet1e Mldler 3.4,15,' llaretla 6•.13 ; News 20 .
' to :3o---Wodehouse Playhouse 20 ; Book Beat 33 .
by THO.MAS JOSEPH
11 :Oo---News 3,4,6.8, 10,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
ACROSS
5 On a
11
:
3Q---Johnny Carson 3,4 ,15; Starsky &amp; Hulch 6,13 ;
1 Glabrous
turnabout
Hawaii Flve-0 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie "Com 5 Bishops
6 Close by
pulsion" 10; 12 :QO----Janakl 33 .
and knights , 7 Lodge man
12 :41l---Myslery of the Week 6,13 ; Ko iak 8; 1:00--game
8 J{eep one's
Tomorrow 3,4 ; 2: 1G-----Ironside 13; 3:1D-News 13.
10 Medicinal
place: 2 wds.
Movie Channel 4 .plant
5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Flying Deuces I G)
9 Arranged
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Bound tor Glory I PG)
11 Woman's
~~ inarow
Cable Channel s blouse
12 Criticized
6:30P .M. - Testimony Time
13 Stitched
16 Camelot
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
14 Turkish city
lady
Yesterday's Answer
7:30 - Marshall Basketball
15 Wrath
. 19 Road for
9:30
- Consul(a11on
16 Purpose
a chariot
26 FlotillF
32 11 Tempest" 10 :00 - 700 Club
17 Pup's cry
22 VoiCllniC top 28 "Rapid
sprite
18 Threadlike
23 Scrape
33
Large
Robert" of
20 Tasteless
24 Street sign:
spoon
baseball
Tuesday, Dec. 6
2 wds.
GASOLIN E ALLE Y
__.-------,-,--~ __ food
38 Egyptian
----~-------~--------30
Extra
25 Antonym
king
~~~~~~~~ ~-..,--------:-----:--:----:-------:-.. .----:-:-:-:-----7'"--...
Affiliation
of prose31 Make
39 Also known
.
~;::.-==?:;-;-.&lt;::Attractive
'These are the most I ~nows
Increased
cution
melT)'
as : abbr.
families,
this lady'
26 Famous
Oswald
Bottled
brew
28 Rooter
29 Churchill's
6 ' the red s uits. There was
"so few"
dummy with king-jack dou-~OH Til
Quite a few
bleton in each one . There
49 5 4
American
was South with three hearts
• K J
hwnorist
and two diamonds.
•· K ,J
You readers can see that
Work at
4A97 6 54
Eas t holds the a ce of -dia-·
Period of
mends and queen of hearts.
history
WEST
EA ST I D )
If South guesses correctly in
Cll1l111' 37 Of cuspids
• 8
• K2
e
ither suit he is home . Is
• Q86:&gt; 3
39 Athirst
• A 10 2
South a 3-1 favorite or does
•
Q
10
7
5
t
A643
2
41.Ship's
FRANK &amp; ERNIE
40
Guarantee
he have a sure thing ?
.K
• Q J 10 a 2
He has a sure thing ass urn ·
SOL'TH
backbone ·
ing
East is a reasonably
4 A Q J TO 7 6 3
normal
bridge player. East
• 9 74
has already shown up with
• 98
43 Auk genus
king-deuce of spades and
.3
-00~
king of clubs. He also has 10
East-West vulnerable
I
1 Premise
red cards. He would surely
2 On the ball
have opened the bidding
Wtsl .\'orth East South
with both red aces . Hence all
Pass Pass
Souto
has to do is to lead
Pass 1 t4lt
Pass 4 A
~S
toward both red kings. One
Pass Pass Pass
Will win his lOth trick .
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it: Opening lead - Q •
G~ MANGU:D.
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
By Oswald &amp; James Ja_coby
()1911hwii!A it1c llolRrQ USPatOII
We aren't going to get into
One letter simply st anc-h; for another. In this. sample A is
A MissOuri reader wants
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters. the merits and demerits of to know if we ever pass as
apostrophes, the le ngth and formation of the words are all South's failure to open with a
dealer with 13 high-card
hints. Each d&lt;~ y the code lett ers are diffe rent.
preemptive bid of three
points .
spades or his rather optimis·
The answer is that we do
CRYPTOQUOTES
tic jump to four spades in so about once every year.
7'1'15 lEG MUST HAVE BEEN
response to his partner..'s We must have 4-3-3·3 distriI'IV\CTU RED IN A OOZEN
LNA
DHPA
V J_U
ZYHTHL
WP club opening .
PlACES. NOW ID 6EE
bution and no decent bid .
HOW WELL I 'VE
In any event he did bid it Maybe :
LNA
VIATHSVJ
ASWJWIQ
HZ and was fortunate enough to
I?OCTOI?EO
•QJxx •Kxx •KJx
oloQJ x.
get a queen of c lubs load
MYfJELF!
YTWOTAZZ
VJU
AKYVJZHWJ
from West.. He rose with
~ N E W S PAPE H E NTEH PH !Sf. AS.~ N . J
dummy's ace and Eas t
NVTTQ
Z.
LTCIVJ
dropped the king. A success·
(Fo&lt; a copy ol J ACOBY MOO·
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: I WILL STUDY AND GET ful spade finesse enabled
ERN, se nd Sf to: "Win at
South to pick up East's king
Bridge." care of th is ne wspaREADY, AND PERHAPS MY CHANCE WILL OOME.of
trumps
and
now
South
per.
P.O. Box 489, Radio City
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
was faced with a problerh in
Station , New York , N. Y 10019)

I IC J
Answer:

Blown
lnsulllion Semus
Finlncin&amp; Auilabte
B~wnlnlt Wollo &amp; A"ks
STOIIM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOIFITI
GUnERS.AWNINGS

'TIIIIXJ'[XIJ

Athousand

LARRY LAVENDER
S11'iiCUH, Ohio
Ph. 992-l993

BRADFORD Auc tioneer , Com·
plete Se rvice . Phone 9A9-2J87
or 949-2000. Rocrnc . Ohio , Crill
Bco:=d:'lo:-''"d'-:.·-~-·
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR S weep e r~ . to os t ~ r s , irons, all
small appliances. lawn mowe r.
ne)( f to Stole Hig hway Gtiroge
on Route 7, Phone (01J ) 985 3825 .
REMODELING, Plumbing , heating
and oil types of general repai r.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience . Phone 992-2409 .
SEWING MACHINE Rl'!poirs . ser·
vice. oll .mok es . 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomer o y .
Author ized Singer Sates and
_2_erv ice~!:_~ horpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING . dozer . loader end
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and to-boys fo r hire: will haul
fill dirt . to soil , limestone end
gravel. Coli Bob or Roge r Jet·
fers . day phone 992 -7089 , night
phpne 99:i-3525 or 992- 5237.
EXCAVATING . dozer , back hoe
cind ditcher. Charles R. ·Hot ·
field , Bock Hoe Ser ~,ri ce ,
Rutla nd , Ohio . Phone 7-42-2008.
WILL do roofing , co nstruction ,
plumbing ond .heating . No tob
tao 1orgl'! or too small . Phone
742-2348.

__._

HOWERY AN D MARTIN Excava ting , sep tic sys tems ,
dozer , backhoe , dump Truck,
limestone. grove l. blo cklop
paving, Rt. 1-43 . Phone 1 (614 )
698-7 331 .
BA THROOMS AND t'; itch ens
remod eled . 'eram ic:: life, plumbing , c::9r pentry, and gene ral
ma intenance. 13 yea~ s e xperience . 992-3685 .
YAMAHA. HARl EY-DAVIDSON &amp;
Con -Am Motorcycles. Ca mple19
soles and lantostic service !
Hours M-T. T 9-6: W-F. 9-7 ; Sot .
9-5. "The Motorcycle People of
Southea stern Ohio " Athens
Sport Cycles. Inc .. 20 W. Slim son A"e .. Athens, Ohio. Phone
(614 ) S92-1692.
PULL( NS EXCA V~A:-T;:I:-N::G:-.--:C:-o-m-p-,l-e1-e
Serv ice . Phone 992-2" 78.
COUTURE QUALITY Dress Making
&amp; Alteralions . ll's na t too lole
lo hove your Christmas &amp; Ne'w
Year's outfil cus·tom mode .
992-3283.
- - -~--

MOBilE HOME , 10 • SS. 11.800.
- ~~)': !!.&lt;:ck m g . !8!:_27~.: -

BRIDGE

Are

need4
Miss Melba!

= ·- '-

I I

~

Routt 3 Pomtr.,, 0.
Carpet &amp;Uphoisterr
Phone Mike Young

AI

WETHERALL CONCRETE

' " " " • '.,. , . . . . _ , ,....._

WEDNESDA Y, DE CE MBER 7, 1917
S:45-Farm Repor1 13; 5:5o---PTL Club 13; 5:S5-Sunrise Seme~ter 10.
6 :QO---PTl Club 15; 6: 25-Christopher Closeup 10;
6 :36-News Conference 4 ; News 6 ; Sunrise
Semester 8; 6 ·45--Mornlng Report J .
6 :5o---Good Morning , Wes1 Virgi nia 13 : 6:55--Chuck
White Repor1s 10; Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:()()---Toda y 3,4,4, 15; Good Morning Amer ica 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Builwinkle 10.
7: 3D----- Schoo lies 1O; 8 :00--Capt. Ka ngaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St . 33.
9:QO--Merv Griffin 3: Ph il Do nah ue 4, 13, 15 ; New
M ic key Mouse Club 6; Fa m ily Affair 8.10.
•
9 :31l--- Edge of Nlgh1 6; Andy Gr iffit h 8; Pr ice is Righ t
10.
IO:Oil--'--Santord &amp; Son J: 4, IS; Big Valley 6; Pr ice Is
R ight 8; Mike Douglas 1:.
10:30---Holl ywood Squar es 3,4,15; J oker's Wild 10.
11 :00---Wheel of Fort une 3.15; Happy Days 6,13;
Marcus Wel by, M.D. 4; Match Ga me 8, 10; E lee . Co.
20.
ll :31l--- Knockout 3,15; Fam ily Feud 6.13; lo ve of Li le
8.10; Sesame S1. 20,33.
11 :55-C BS News 8 ; Loving F ree 10.
12 :0G-----Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; To Say The Leas t
15; Di vor ce Cour1 8; Midday 13.
12:31l--- Ryan 's Hope 6,1 3; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Sea rch for TomOrrow 8, 10; E lec. Co . 33.
1:DO-For Ric her , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 ;
News 8; Yo ung &amp; lhe Restless 10: Not For Women
Only 15.
1:3o---Da ys of Our Li ves 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
a. 10; 2:QO---S20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:30-Doctors 3, 4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
ligh1 8,10.
3:0Q--Another World 3,4,15 ; Ohio J ournal 20.
3: 15-Gen era l Hospital 6, 13; 3: 3Q---Aii In The Family
• 8, 10; Lilias Yoga II. You 20.
4:QO-M ister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals-Our Gang 4;
For Richer , For Poorer 15; Bew it ched 6; Gill iga n' s
Is. 8; Sesame 51 . 20.33 ; Gomer Py le, USMC 10;
Dinah 13.
-4 :3o-My Three Sons 3; Afterschool Spec ial 6; Partridge Famil y 4; Brady Bunc h 8,10 .
5:DO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Miste r Roge rs' Neighborhood 20 ,33; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Afterschool Speci al 13; My Three Sons

BANACA

992-2206 or 992-7630

"Get A Load Of This"

&lt;,t?tlR ll.v.E'l ~

Radiator~

MEIGS PLAZA
11 -9-tfc

TILEE

~~~

EXPERIENCED

Bissell Siding Co.

-,---~-:---

&lt;;T,ijJ()If.l0l\-lt;RE

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons.
Owner
11 25 1 mo .

l

j
rJ r

YJIN m I{OIJ JUST

Only .

Storm Windows
Call Professiona I
Builders

-- --- --

Unscramble these lou r Jumb!6s.
one lener to each square, to form
lour ordmary wor.ds.

of Carpets bv Appointment

We' re in Carpenter just off
Rt . 143. Phone 698-7191 .
J:J. l -1 mo .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum ·
Siding

\tft~1.\.ft ~1} ~THAT SCRAMBlED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~t!.!l ®
by Henri Arno ld andBobLee

CLOSED FOR WINTER-

Pomeroy Landmark

DAY

remnants of the

Third Street
Ra cinE', Oh io

CAU US

---

Franco regime against
deJIIan~s for more from th e
resurgent left.

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERV.ICE

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

CARTER

Dorcas
News Notes

from

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

ASTRO•GRAPH

Pomeroy landmark

VIOLENT backlash in
Spain's experJment with
democracy st~uck home
for Prime Minister Adolfo
Suarez with a bomb explosion at his offic-ial
resideoce in Madrid .
Suarez; gradually Inlroduciog democ rati c
procedures
Into
the
government, has had to
balance rightist opP.,sition

, I

AUCTION SAlE e ... ery lues , and
Fr 1 at 7 prn New and used SfARCRAFT FAll Sole. Mtnt ·
ml'!rch ond1.se at Ohto Rtv l'!r .Auc·
motors 20 and 22 TraVel
t•on Me tgs Plaza MiddlepOrt
Traders 18 5 S3 799 25 7
Ohto
Home Phone (30J )
Bunkhouse S-&lt;1 875. Fold-down
773 5471
S1 700 up We sl'!ll servtce and 3 AND 4 RM lu rnts hed and un ·
furn•§hed opts . Phone 992quol•ty . Open Sundays . Camp
5434.
Cofl ll'!y Storcroh Sall'!s Rt o2
N. of P!. Pleasant.
FOU R R00MS or1d both. Adults
only . No pe l!&gt;_:_ 9~2 - 590_! __
1976 21 FOOT lerry Travel
Tratl'e r
equtp ped . Phone COU NTRY MOBI LE Home Pork .
992 -7066
Route 33 , nor th Of PomerOy
Lorge lo ts _Cal l997-7479 .
Home·
•Mobile
.
FIVE ROOM furnis hed apa rtment.
Underpinning
For Wednesday, De~ . 7, ~977
Ne ..... ell's Sunoco . Ches te r . . 1977 DODGE 1 • ton Club Cob .
•
Roof Coating
98 5-3350.
·ME IGS COUNTY
Aut o . ;" Prtcl'!d re oson obl y
AGRICULT-URE
•
TieDowns
!il49-2601 .
HOUSE FOR le a se on LtncOln Hill
SOCIETY
tn
Pomeroy
.
5
bedrooms
.
•
AwningsCarports
inancial Statement
Dl'!postt- required , 992-3489 • .,rr:r.o=
Bernice Bede Osol Rec:eFipts
•Insurance
Repairs
alterSpm .
Adm •SSions
$ 16 ,706 .50 --·---------,·
Membersh ip FeE-S
7,696 00
See us at 1100 East Main
Sea son Ticket Sa les
24 4_00
Street. Pom~roy , Ohio or
Concessi ons
12 ,870.25
Let Pomeroy landmark
Cl ass Ent r y Fees
49 1.00
Phone 992 -7034 . 10-29· l mo.
soften &amp; condition your
3,29 5.00
Soeed Rece ipts
water and Co-op water
Sla te Aid (J r . &amp; Sr . l 22 ,526 .00
We Are Now
softener , Model UC-SVI.
Cou nt y Aid
5,000.00
Sates
276 .75
Taking New
Oec. 7, t917
Now Only •279,95
Adve r t ising
1,421.00
Customers For
Gt'le free rem to yo ur secre t Sl"lort Ter m Re ntals 3, 19 5.00
Let us test your water Free
23.9 93
amb•l•ons thts coming year. If ln!erest
tl"lere tS a proje c t yo u wa nt to Savi ng s &amp; Rede posil C-D
16 ,870.00
develop req uirtn g captta l or Ref un ds
New Co -Op water and
),812 58
talent th at yo u don '·t poss e ss. Mi se:. Inc ome
softeners , model vc .SVI.
6 19 25
OnlyS279 .95
B~ l. Begi nn ing of y r . ~
loOk a ro und lor a partner .
( 12-1.7 61
307.0 1
Save sso .oo on a new
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
$95 ,172 . 27
to1at
300 Main St.
Hotpoint Refrigerator
21~ Un lorl unately you ma y lind
Pomeroy, Ohio
1 New 20 cubic tt . Chest
yoursel-f tn Sit uat ion s today E 11 pense s
Pomerov 992-6282
Freezer
$25 .00 Discount
S: 1,500 .00
where you are unab le to run Sala r ies
or 992-6263
7.964 .83
( 1) Good Refrigerator 5150
tl"le s how. II yo u don" t gel Laborers
Busi ness &amp; P rofessi onal
8
A.M.
to 4:30P.M.
Upright
Freezer
$225
a-Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
upttght , things wtll work out
Ex p ,
3,993 . 23
~
Phone
992
-2181
BJ0 .75
1ust' as tf you were the pro· Judg es
1 Good Used Hotpoint '
SALES AND SERVICE
929. 1d
ducer Find out more abou t Orec tors Exp.
11 -9-tlc
Refrigerator
S125
Admi n ist ra tive E xp .. 13 6.76
yourself by send ing tor yo ur Social Secur ity
1
Lancaster
Chain
Saw
S75
303 .65 WIL L CARE for the elde rly in our
copy of As tr6·G rapl'1 Lette r. Dues
as.oo
hom!'! . Phone 992-7314 .
M"ail 50 cents lor each and a Premiums (S r . Fai r l 5.75-4 .22
Pr
em
iums
(J
r
Fa
ir
)
5,
602.39
PIANO TUNING · Lone Daniel ~ .
long , self-addre ssed , s tamped Raci ne Purses &amp;
W. Carsey , Mgr .
New pho ne num ber , 992-2581 .
enve lope to As tra- Graph , P 0 .
2 t~ . 6s s· . s o
Ex penses
Phone992·218l,
If
no
answer',
co11992-20B2.
Com mercia l prope rl~ opprpx . 17
Box 489 . Ra d10 Ctty Stat io n , Public Utilities
1,A04 . 17
acres . le\lel land . located ot
Gra nd Stand
N Y. 10019. Be s ure to s pec ify
WILL DO typ ing . Manuscri pt s,
Tuppe rs Plains on Oh io , Rou1e
Att ractions
6. 100.00
stol
is
licol
,
resumes,
e
tc.
Call
your btr lh sign.
San ita tion
250 .00
7 . Phone (614 ) 667-6304
991 -3827, l'!ventngs after b and
CAPRICORN (0ec . 22·Jan . 19) Adve r tising
669 .08
VA-FI-iA . 30 yr : finan ci ng . h el.ond
weeke::_
nd::c'::·~___ _
Friends will appreciate yoU Sound Sy's tem -Te nt
Mortgage . 77 E State . Athen§.
2,239 .51 MOBILEHOME repairs. 992-5858 . HOUSE. FOR Sole . 3 bedroom. 1
Ren ta ls
mo re today if .you don' t pry too
Premi
um
Book
s
&amp;
cor
.
ga
rage.
1
years
old
ph one {614 ) S Q2 - 3~ ---dee pl y into their private affairs .
Pr intin g
803.26
S27.500.
Rustic
Hill
s,
Syracuse
.
2.
SfORY '3 bedroom !rome
Open no closets where there Ma in tenan ce Repa irs &amp;
992 -5541.
Supp l.,es
2, 644 .88
house . F.A. furnac e . storm winma y be hidden skeletons .
dOws, fi repla ce in Middleport:
1.3 ACRES ON Lead ing Creek
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 19) Capi ta l Im provemen ts4,252.0J
Phone 997-3457 or 997-5867.
Rood.
Phone
992-7066
.
This ca n be a day of s ub sta ntial New Equipmen t
1,650.00
accomplishmen t. provided yo u Loan~ Int. Pa yment 4,650.00
SI X ROOM house . all e lectric ,
1,870.00
ke e p no nproducti ves out of !_he Savings Acco un t
c01 peted. cor p ort. S16,000. Ar ·
k c D bo ught
15 ,000.00
ro w Campe r,'$600. 992-7885 . 10
act. Have doe rs only on your San
Bal. en d of yr . ( 11 JO -H l
We have enlarged our
om to 6 pm. No Sunday calls .
team .
2,383.7 6
senlice department· and
595 ,772 .27
PISCES !Feb. 20-March 20) Total
72 ACRES . 8 rooms. 2 baths wi Th
will service Hotpoint and
Your tudgment is really quite
shower. Com pletely reniodoel ·
other brands .
( 12) 6. ltc
ed . Fuel oil furnace. All mineral
keen toda y, but there i!l a
rights . 2 boy cor po rt. Even ings
poss ibilit y you 'll b e O'lerly c~r i.l i­
ohl'!r 5 pm 7-42-181 9
ca l of your own conclus ion s .
MAIN
Don ··r tr y to second-guess
yo~r self
,
POMEROY, 0 .
_Jac~ W. Carsey. Mg~.
ARIES (March 21-Aprii 19) Re...
Phone992 -2181
MAYBE IT'S TIME 1o
s pons ibilities no t of your makmove to that home that you
ing could be s hifted to your
have
been
promising
stro ng s houlders today . You 'll
yourself. 3 bedrooms, bath ,
do the job admirably .
gg~~~~
fo rmal dining, garage, J/.ll
TAURUS (April 2G-May 211) Toacre .
In
e xcellent
COAL . li mes tone . e nd calciu m
GeorgeS. Hobs1eHer Jr .,
Franklin
Longsworth
and
day vou are a hail fellow . well
condition
.
$19,500
.00. ·
and
ca
lci
um
brine
lor
chloride
Broker
me t in dealing with outs iders son , Tom , of Cleveland spent
BUDGET HOME 4
du~ t control end special mi xing
112 Sycamore St .
107
and associ ate s . However , yo ur several days with his sister,
soli lor far l"f1ers , Exce lsior Sa lt
rooms,
bath.
porches,
nat.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Works, Mat n Strel'!l , Pomeroy .
family may feet the accolade is Esther West and brother,
gas heat. BUy this fOr less
PHONE
992 -6333
Ohio or phone 992· 3891.
unearn e d.
John Longsworth. They
than rent. $5,400.00.
OHice Hours : 9 A.M. to 4
OVER
3 ACRES
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) This vis ited with friends and CAMP ER, $bOO
Also , horse
P.M.
Recently rem o deled , 2
could be a very rew arding day, relatlv es and went deer
trailer , $450. Phone (614 ) 098·
Close
Thursdays and
bedrooms , bath , ·F .A.
pro vide d yo u roll ·up you r hunting . Frank shot a ten
32q().
Saturdays at noon.
furance ,
porches ,
slee ves and go to wo~k . Tac kle
point buck which he viill be ECONOMY TRACTOR with ·all at New 4 bedroom ~ 2500 sq . ft .
basement . barn &amp; ot he r
task s, don 't talk pbout them .
ta chme nts. l ike new. as king
living space, 21 '2 baths, 12
buildings . $11 ,500.00.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) En- taking home lor his freezer .
_!_2~5~ ~n eJ6")698 - -290 .
room
ran ch bri ck . Located
INCOME PROPERTY Bill and Patsy Cornell and
joy yourself today, but select
APPLE S. FITZPA fRICK Orchards ,
3
m
iles
fi'"om
Rt.
7,
up
West
Walk
1o
shop .
2
daughter,
Jennifer,
Stationed
activ ities that won 't cost you an
State Rout e 689 . Ph o ne
Shade
Ri
ver
.
Call
for
an
apartments
,
porches.
with
the
Army
at
Fort
Bragg,
. arm an'd a le g. Re mo rse wilt set
Wilk esville', 669-3785
ground, 2 car garage, all jn
appointm ent.
in if you blow the budget on Ill. are visiting his parents ,
--~------good cond itlon . $13.500 .00.
RUGS
,
WAll
·
Han
gings
ond
one day' s fun.
·
Bill and Bea Cornell, friends
6 ACRES - p;, year old
afgons , Nice for Christmas.
1112
Acre
Lot
Sur
ve
yed
,
LED (July 23-Aug. 22) we have and rela tives.
double w ide , 2 large
·Reasonoble. l oH992-2214.
approv e d for se wage ,
been taug~t it is more bless ed
bedroo m s
(wal k
in
wood e d and s e c luded ,
1970 FORD f: .2SO Custom . 17.50 x
10 give than rece ive. Recall th is
close ts), din ing room , bath ,
14.00
tires
·
winch
.
Only
14,000
located
.07
of
a
m
ile
off
of
toda y il you 're tempted to s lice
large
living
roorn ,
mi . He9ders CB. Tope dl'!ck .
Summerf ield road near
an e .:tra wedge for yo ursell
all
li
ke
new .
carpeting,
Q~,rc-r 53 .000 in ex tras. Serio us
LAFF
A
Tuppers P la in s, Oh io .
when cutting up the pie .
Garage and other bui lding .
co il s ~ only
oi ler 12 noon :
Pr iced to go a t $4,000 .00.
VIRGO (1\ug. 23-Sept. 22) You
517,000 .00 .
696-1072, $6_800.
are grateful for the help ol
NICE CORNER lOT - 2
B &amp; 5 MOBILF, HOMES, Pt. Plea Plenty of acre lots a t the
triends today , yet at the same
or 3 bedroom s, bath ,
sant . 'w . Vo. beside Heck's.
Wildwood
E s tate s
carpeting, nat . gas F.A.
lime ju s t a bit rese ntful. The
1973 Broodfno re 14 x 6-4 2
Addition,
Flatwoods
Road ,
furnace , porches . All this
Iarme r be&lt;;omes you , the latter
be-droom
zoned and all ut i II ti es
for just $13 ,900 .00.
·does n 't.
· 1973 Dor ian 14 x 60 2 bcd roorn
availabl e. $.2500 per a c re.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Don 't
·
1972 Vi.ctorion' l d ~ 67 3.bedroom ,
lET US SHOW YOU SOME
ne glect y.our responsibilities
2 bath
..
OF OUR NEWE_R HOMES
We ·have need of listings,
. . .-,.---dU...l..._ 1972 Coventr y 12 11: 65 3 bedroom
cafee rwise . The rewards c ould
- JUST CALl OR DROP
.
1969 Stotesman t 2 )C 60 2
all types, homes, land,
be larger than usuaL Make th is
IN .
it
bedroom.
com mercia I, etc.
a payda y, not a playday.
HENRY E. ClElAND
Cheryllemley
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) It
IRE WOOD. A n y lenglhs or any
REALTOR
Associate
you 're congenial today , all of
----a mount. Delivered or may
HANK, KATHY&amp;
Home Phone 741-2003
---pr ckup Phone 949-1563.
yo ur e ncounters wil l be pleaslEONA ClElAND
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
ant ones.Caustic actions will '---''"''"'-''~--~-=-=-.o--'·:-===----,------'--',__.~ IRE WOOD: spIt I on d del iv e red .
REAlTOR
Associate
" How sweet! A sympathy card S45 0 cord . All ha rdwood .
evoke a similar response .
ASSOCIATES
Home Phone 949-258'
from your teacher to me."
843·1933
! NEWSPAPE R EN TERPR ISE ASS N I
992 -2259 - 992 -6191

-·

CaU.,gnr

Business Services

ROBYN C.B.

$79.95 -:-

lOSl AROU ND Lo ng~v o lle C.N·
man Shor t Ho ~red potn ter
Reword 742 7870

~1

s ta r

M01y

Lo•l a.od Found

Jut•SdH I
thru F n d·H.I

Til e • eve nin g

and no

no

mo lo. pn
Yo u r

.\ t unJa1

struc tors modetn !XIu•Dmenl

hunltng

rn otc- !he- f rrst hall rs rhe

ro ughe~t

the

:-o.ll.ln tJnS.u lmlu~

lp

lH~
RAC INE
Ot:!po r tml;'nt

man~

. WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Frtdd~

r~ a

on ru~ pr o pt&gt;rty Bob '-.\( G row

HAPPY

NOTICE

p

Fa, tor

A ·h QriPd

~ h oo • C"'~-i'' ~ So rurdov 01 6 p m
or rh~ 11 bu •id1119 ,., Boshon Fo c
tot, cl-l ol.e-guns onl y

n'l.:t lll1&gt;t'rt10n

~

c n ly

b~

JHt i-U \\r iLl

Gun Cl ub

oi•Pll1f'O il

ltf' i&gt; POi&gt;~ll19

Tilt! Publt.Sht&gt;r rto:.t'r.'t':.

makE&gt;~

and HOOF HOllOW H o •w~ Buy -.,-. 11
'•ode of t10111 New and .uJ.('d 0 Nl U~~ 0 tool lutnO&lt; ~· p t p;.· ~ 011d
tl•q t-.1('1" S300 Call bl'tW('PII
Phon €' Oll'O cod!'! 01 4 413 9531
~odd'tJ~ Ruth Rf•ev~s Albany
I l o•n and tl pm 99i })6 ,
l01
4
696
3790
liM S~A
Poo nE&gt;• oy fot(&gt;'&gt; l Pt O
Nl-W .WOODond (oal buo '""q
duct'i f o p p• •ce lo• l&gt;tond,ng Mt:IGS COU NT V Hu•:nanP Socoe ly
-, tove Ootd 70 lr of -.t ~w~· P•Pt.'
o;owt tmb(l• Co l~ QQ1 5965 or
Caraltnt." and adopiiOtl Sc'"(C
Jlhon t~ 7.t 11003
-~~~~~ H onb~ I H b 8570
O~J 1680 74'13162 QQ') 5J77
COINS CU RREN CY 10~Pns old ~O R SlUO
Scrvoce
AK C 1075 YAMAHA ENOUHO 100 AJ.l
p• o
I 300 mdo:--. Cornt''&gt; wllh 1
pot lo.et wotd"'tc&gt;S and chamt.
'ego\ h:-' ' ed cod•e• "ponrel
holtHt't - S.t OO ltl.e n~w Coli
~tl v e• o~&gt;d gold VVe need 1Q6.t
Bloc !. ond
ton Cla rksda le
betwt~en 11 om and 8 p111
and a ide. sdve• com~ Buv &gt;;.ell
l ones Showquohty J &amp; 0 Ken
QlrJ. 2501
.
01 trodf' Call Rogto• Wonn.ley
ne ls ! 4)31b1
747 '1J31
AKC REGISTE RED pe~ onges. e pup COBRA )35 CB rotl•o 1011 0l'llo
tadto'- Ph one 991 ,706b
OlD FURNITURE tee bon.·~ b•os'&gt;
ptes Phone (304)881 168J
beds oron beds e tc comp le te
,
1Q77
PASSE NGER VAN A C c ~
hov,.cholds Wrtte M D Mtlle• RIS ING S1 AR K_.tmel Boo•rlmg
rro sea l 4 000 mdco~ 997 5770
lndoo'
'
and
ou
tdoor
•vns
R1 .t Porne·ro )l Oh•o of' ro ll
C•oom111g all brt"',.ds ClPon IWO JO HN Oeete • 1odol H !ann
OQ2 7760
sot11ta1 y locdn .es Che~h11e
II octo•'&gt; 1 itl good rum1mg con
NO IT t:M TOO lat ge 01 too small
Phone 101 J ).307 02q1,
dotron S300 fo• bolh Ph0 110
\Vtll buy 1 ptere 01 romp le1e·
6 43 2I!Oor 985 3M07
ho'u~e h ol d New used or anti · J 8. D Kennel s all b1 eed dog
groomtng
Mak
e
appQtnlmenr
0
ques Morr m s Fum!lu•e 10 N
now lor Halt dO'f' Sea son Colt
7nd St
M•dd leporl Phone
7J2 3162
992 0370
SPAYI:D
ENGLISH Sheepdog lor
CHIP WOOD
P ol es mo o:
sole
$10
Paul Bu clo. ley Rt 'l
doometer 10 on lorgesl end sa
CooiYollt'l \01 J )607 -b361
per 1on Bundled slob S6 per
1on Deltvl'!red to Oh•o Pall et
Co R1 1 Pomeroy 991 -7689.
CASH FOR Ju nk Cars. Frye s Truc k
Comp let e
with
a ll
and Aul o W r e c ~e r Sen•oce 1977 GMC HEAVY Hallton equ•P· accessori es Yes, we will
Phone 747-1081 or Pl'!nntotl
pl'!d PHS Hornl'! t Sportabou t la yawa y for Christma s.
Rutland 741·9575
Wagon Phone Q91-7066.
WANJED OLD ptanos any condt I976 FORD GRA NADA b cyl
16 OCtO mtles E&gt;Ccellenl shape
t1on Paying S10 and S25 each
_Jack W. Car sey , Mgr .
Phone 2J f . '} 142
Ftrst lloor on ly b . pert movtng
Phon e 992-218 1
Fu lly msured com pany Wnte 1973 PONTIAC GRAND Prt )( .
gtv on g d trecnon~
Wt!t en
997 5866
Ptanos Box 188 Sardts Oh
VEST .GOLD Conw,g Elec
43Q46 Ph on e61 ~4 - 48 3 . 1605
1903 DODGE DAR T Runs good 30 IncHARsmoo
th top range Sell
Good It res 5175 991-7565
cleon tng ovc" Storag e drawer
1971 CHEVY NEW motor new
E..cellenl conddoon 5750 Paul
Buckley . (614) 667-b361
tores 5900 1970 Chevelle
S800 . 1971 Super Beetle CHRISTMAS TREES lor sole Morn
IF YOU ho ve o serviCe to offer
992 7987 '
wont lo buy or sell somelhmg
'S1ree1 Ru tland . '
oe look•n g lor Work
or 1972 CHEVROLET VEG A wolh 'l
FOR
SALE- J9b8 '1 Che wo le-1
whatever
)IOU II gel res ults
new snow t•res Run s good
Ptckup
S350 . Vrcto r A. Bohr .
fo ster wtth ci Si'!nttnel Won I Ad .
5350. 1974 Green Pont iac
985 ·42JO
Ca119927156.
F treb~rd . 48 000 mtles . $2 400
Coli 742 211 1 or 742-2103 , aft er HAY FOR sole . Ph one
bl4·6b7 -3890
5 pm .
mQde iJ&gt;

TUESDAY . DECEMBER 6, 1977
a :oo---Man From Allantis 3.4,1 S; Happy Days 6,13
Fitzpatrlcks 8; In Pertormance at Wolf Trap 20;
Listen, 'fihat' s Love 10; Piccadilly Circus 33.
8 · 30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 .
9 · ~ Mul li gan's Stew 3.-4,15: Three's Company 6, 13;
Mash 8,10; Portrait of Jamie 20 .
9 : 30---Soap 6; One Day A1 A Time 8.1 0; Mark Russel
20; Mary Tyler Moore 13; Chr lsl mas In The Val ley
33 .
•
10 ~ 00-- Police Woman 3,4,15 ; Barbara Waltt:rs 6, 13;
Lou Gra nt 8, 10; News 20; Equal Justice Under
Law 33 .
10 : 30---B iack Pe?spec11ve on l he News .20.
11 ; ?0--- News 3, 4,6,8,1 0.13.15; Dick Cavel l 20.
11 · :m - John nv Carso n 3,4,15 ; M ovie " Oui1 1er : P r ice of
Vio lence" 6,13: Movie '! Housto n, We've Go t A
P roble m " 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Where the
SP.\es Are" 10 .
12 :00-J a naki 33 ; 1: Oo- Toniorrow 3.4 ; 1: 10-- lronsi de
13; 2: 10- News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M - Vig ilante Force ( P GI
9 &amp; 1l PM - Tax i D rive r ( R )
Cable Channel s 6 :30 P .M.- Tes11mony Time
7:00 ~ P a ul Ga ud ino Fami ly F itness Show

t'or&amp; le

L

nununwn l'HSh Ul ddl dllH'

I•• t"d1t

TELEVIS/lJN
VIEWIN(;

-THE GOVERNOR
REACHES FOR

7·30 - Happy Place
8 ·oo - Celebrity
9;00 - Cable Spo11 ight
10:00 - 700 Club

East's pass has meaning

;..:::.:::..;:=-::..:..::_:.:;;;._-:-__________________________

1l
l

fllNlf HAS A
MIND LJICE II 9rEEL.

TRAP- -t:vt~¥ft.41N&amp;
TftA'T"

~~

! ~~;;:;sulk

IN!f"o ••,.

(t 19'7'7 Km&amp; f' t uure s S1'nd!ea le ,lnc.

BARNEY

THAR !!
'(OU LOOK SMALLER
TODAl/; SIR, AND 'IOU
SEEM QUIETER ....

AREN'T I10U ~
FEELING WELL,S!R?

WHAT KIND OF ILLNESS

MAKES ~OVR BOO\-' SHRINK
~OUR NOSE .GET 616GE~?

I GOT MY
CARROT SEEDS
ALL PLANTED

THAT SHORE 15

WAY TO SPELL.'.CAf~Ro-rs"l!

THAT'S TG FOOL

TH'DADBURN
RABBITS

�1~

---------------------------1
HOSPITAL ! Area Deaths

Tht&gt; Dad~ .&amp;•num•l. \ tuidl(' pnrf .Ptlfll("rlly, 0. TucsdH~ . Dt.•r. 6. 19i7

Notices, local briefs
SALEM

CE NTER

Southl'rn Oh io Coal Co Mme
T\\0 IS on stnlo.e with the rest
of the nahan s &lt;oal m1ners

th£&gt;

Thursday

RA CINE

p m dmner

a re

emergency
operat.ng levy t'll three .rprent
mill

Jlotline ar'ili[;,b /e

(Continued from page 1)

Tht•

Office uf th~ Consumers'
Counsel has installed a toll·
fr et&gt; hotline to beoe fll
rcs Jd entJal utility con·

tho rw n-umoi1 rm nes a re

dll wn ," lw sa id . " I just
h;n·en't tward."
The m os t im rn e d i a tl~

som ers throughout Ohio.
The hotline numb&lt;r " Ill
consumt'rs l o co ntact ·
th e off ice. re r t'i\'t' in·
lorma tion and voice thrir
ro n1plaints about utilit y
st'rYi{'(' free of chargt' .
Thr hotline numbt'r Is 1·
allow

800-282-9448. It wlll b&lt; oprn
for ra lls from 8:30 a.m.
until 5:30 p.m. Monday
througb Friday. Anyone
calling !orally from the
Columbus area should
('Ontinue to caD 466-8574 .

lavoffs in related industries
will probably be by the la rge
C(lal t' arryi ng ra ilroads- lhe
Norf,,lk &amp; Wes tern Railroad
: 'mel the Chessie System,
Thr N&amp;W said it. would lose
$J million a wee k during any
U ~1W strike an d would
cut back accordingly_
La rge coa l users. includi ng
electric utility companies cmd
steel mills. started preparing
f or the s tnk ~ la t e last
summe r a nd have a la rge

stockpile on hand .

" Ea rly bird " walkouls
shutd(lwn nine Ohio mi nes
Mon&lt;lliy, hours .b&lt;fore the
contra ct expired .

HUBBARD'S .
GREENHOUSE
991. 5716

\ 't•tt·rans Mt"morlal Hospital

ADMI TTED
Hart£'r1barh.

Frank

Any last minute hope that
the contra cl would be
extended ended at 7 p.m .

Sy,.acuse, 0 .

Monda y when negotiations in
Washington we re suspended .

Now open lor the se ason
Choo se from ove,. 15,000
Po inse"ias
75 c to Sl O.OO
Foliage Plants 7S c to 512 .00
Hangi ng Baske ts
S1 .25 1o
S4.50

· Federal Med iator Wayne
Horvitz said negotiators for
the union and the soft Coal
industry would meet i::lgmn

Anna
Mme rsville;

Wolfo rd.

Vin ton;

Bernard Bairden. Ha nford ;
Am os Leona rd. Pomeroy ;

Mrs. Larry Howel l and
da ughter, Mrs. Siephen Cauff
an d da ughte r. Charlotte
Mar:&lt;s,

Betty . McCormick.
l.y m uel M ea d o~s , Onei da

Jami Renee Addis, 2, Rt . l.
Crown City l Ha nnan Trace
Rd . l d i ed a t 1: 30 p. m .

Monday in Holzer Med ical
Cen ter .
She was born Nov . IJ, 197S,
m Ga llt pol ls, da ughter o f
Ja mes and E lien Bur nette
A dd is.

She is surv ived bv three

brothers : M ark . 11; Mat.
thew , 9 and John, 6. all a t
home.
Gran d pa re nts are Mr s .
El i zabe th R. Woods, Crow n
Ci t'Y Rt. 1; Mr . and Mrs. Lee
Montg omer y. Crown Cit y .
G rea t~ grandmother Is Mrs .
Irene Wh ite, R io Grande .
Funera l se rv ices wi ll be
held 11 a .m. Thursday at

Wa ugh-Ha lley -Wood Funeral
Hom e w i th Rev. Ed Keel er
officiat ing. Bu ri a l will be In
R i dg e law n Cemetery ,
Me rcer vill e.

Fr iends may call at t he
fun era l ' ho me from 7 unti l 9
p.m . on Wednesday .

Mullens, Mark Nappe r, Daisy
P att on , Clarence Rai ney .

Marj ori e Robinson. Dessa

Shook. Penny Smith. Troy
Sinun ons.

JOHN C. CIRCLE

Joh n C. Cirs:l e, 76 , Il l N .
Lowell Road , Col un:J bus, died

Le mle y, Fos tor ia . Tw o
brot he r s and one sis ter

preceded hi m in death .
He was a member of th~
Pop l ar Ridge Free Will
Bapti st Church.
Funera l ser v i ces wil l be
held at the church 10 a.m .
Wednesday. w i th Rev . John
Jeffers off ici at ing . Bur ial will
foll ow in Poplar R idge

Cemetery .
Fr iend s ma y call at the
M OCoy.N\oore Funeral Home
in Vinton fr om 7-9 p.m .
Tuesday .
.

LILLIE WICKER

Li ll ie Mae Wicker , 67, a
resident of Thurman , died at
10 p.m . Monday in Holzer

Medical Center . She had been
hosp italized the past three
weeks .

..

She-was born June 22. 1910,
in Pike County, Ky . daug hter
of the late Milla rd and Pearl
James Harvel.
She was one of four
chil dr e n. One brother ,
Charles, Mad ison Heigh ts,
M ich. su rvives. One siste r
and one bro1her preceded her
in dea th .
She a ttended sc hools in

Sunda y.
A forme r Me igs· Co\.)nty P ik e Coun t y, Ky . She
residen t. Mr . Circl e was a marr ied Orville Wicke:r in
retired brakeman and con. 1935. On e son su rvives, Oliver
ductor for the Pennsy lvania Donald Wicker , Ba ltimore,
Ra ilroad . He was a member Md . Two dau ghters by a
of the Neoaeacha l odge, prev ious ma rriage survive :
Free and Accepted Masons. Mr s. Ma ry Chisler of
Su r vi vlng are his wife. BaUimore a nd Mrs. Geneo,.a
Beula h ; a daughter , Mrs. Webb. Haze l Park , M ich .
El eanor Necks , Columbus . a Seven grand and two great.
sister . Florence Circle a nd grand chi ldren survive.
two brothers, Dou glas a nd
She was a member of the
Garrett Ci rcl e, a ll of Racine. Free Will Ba pt ist Chu rch in
Fri ends ma y ca ll at the Pike County , Ky .
Schoedi nger Ea st Chape l .
Funera l services wi ll be
Columbus , from 7 t o 9 ton ight . held 2 p.m. Thurs da y at the
MEET THURSDAY
Pri vate funera l serv1ces w ill
home in Thu rman
The board of directors of be held and buri a l wil l be in Wick·er
with Rev . L loyd Frye of·.
!he Ga llia - Meigs Com- Fores t La w n Ce met er y, fici ati ng . Buria l wi ll be in
munity Act ion Agency· will Columbus .
Cal vary Cem eter y .
F'r iends may ca ll at the late
hold their ann ual meeting on
res
iden ce Wedne sda y af .
Th ursday, Dec. 8, at 7:30 p.m.
ternoon and ev ening .
·
FRANK
JONES
in the centra l off ice at
Ser
vices
are
under
the
H. Jones. 70. a direc ti on of Miller's Home for
Cheshire. All regular and new resiFrank
dent of Rt . 1. Sidwell. was Funera ls .
boa rd
mem bers
a re found dead at his home
request ed to attend. Purpose around 10 a .m . Monda y fr om
of the meeting is to establish an apparent hea rt atta ck.
w as born Au g. 18, 1907,
the governing OOard mem- in He
Chesh ire Twp . son of the
FREE CLOTHING

!Births, Dec. 51
Mr. and Mrs. La rry Arthur,
a son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Cannaday. a son,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Timothy Coil, a son. Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Theiss,
a son, Bidwell : Mr. and Mrs.
Alden
Wedem eyer ,
a
&lt;lliughter, Northup.

bership fo r the ensuing yea r,

to conduct any ncessary
corporate business, and to
Thursda y.
execute a pUblic hearing
It takes the UMW about 10 du ring which visitors may
days to ratify a contract once offer opinions and comments
agreement ·is · rea chd . concerning the functions of

Open Da ily 9 ti l 5
Sun da ys 1t il ,c.

Rt . '2 , Ga lli poli s a nd Jess1e

JAM I ADDIS

Francis Hudson . Middleport ;
Dann Logan. Middleport .
DISCHARGED - George
Connolly.

Ohio coal

for CIIII S lllll l' r S

COL t:MB CS

l

' Naom a Br in ker . Gra nts
Admt n1s lra tor f or Me1gs
County announces 1h a1 the
C E T.A. Of fice will be closed
for bus mess Th ursday . De{:. 8
wh1 le the otl ice is bei ng
Holzer Mrdlral Center
move d
to
its
new ly
t Discharges Dec. 51
redecorated off ice , on the top
floor of the Me igs Co unt y
Ca rol Blak eman, Pat ty
Court House .
Boggs, Mrs. J ames Day and
da ughte r.• Kimberly De nt.
Yvonn e Donnett. Lisa Henr y.

Local

closing due to. the f1nanc1dl
tbndit 1on of the dl!tlnct and
fhe. re~usal of
Eastern
Otsfr.ct voters to approve a

ftve

Past Of t1cers

Cl11b Ra cine Chapter OES.
Chn stmas part y at !he Shnne
Clu b build1ng 1n Ra c1n!l: .
Thursda y Each member 1s to
ta t.. e a cov ered d1 sh for d 6

Schools ol

Schools

NEWS

Januarv 3

School
D•slnct v. il l close for the
rem~mder of the school year
at the closE' of achv rt,es on
E~stern·

are

schedule d to resume on

Gent&gt; Oller loca l Unded M111e
'v\oo r kers Un•on pres•dent
sa 1d NvJnday e .. entng Oller
Sit d that 111e m •ne" IS veq.
strong un•CV' '1\ISe and ,..-d l
honor al l of 1ts contracts

EAST MEIGS

Ll a sses

elections

the C.A.A.

t at e

Edward
and
Shoem aker Jones .
He never married .
Mr . Jones wa s a

Bel l

CHESHIRE - The GalliaMeigs Communit y Action

retired

farmer .
Three bro t h ers su rv1ve :
Cli nton Jones , Rt . 1, Bidwell ;

Willy Jones , San Dieg o,
Cal if.: Ferdie Jones . Eno;
t wo sisters: Magg ie Toppi ng ,

Program will hold its free
clothing day for low income
persons on Thurs&lt;lliy from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. allhe former
high school buildin g in
Cheshire.

Council raises
(Continued from page I)
Coal St. Council agreed to have the tree cut. Complaints were
received about cinders sprea d on village streets. Council

GO LD K ID

"u.
·,.
-

;:,~

. ..

I

&gt;I

Ccuncil agreed to pay a part of the expenses involved in
the attendance of an Ohio State Patrol Academy School in
Cclumbus with CETA to pay part of the expense for Rpger
Durst who is serving as meter patrolman , Durst will receive
training 'in a nwnher offieldsduring the 10week school.
The report of Chief of Police Jed Webster was approved for
the month of November. The report for the police department
showed 23 accidents investigated; 43 arrests made ; 1,425
tickets issued, and parking meter collections of $1,878 from the
parking lots and $1,927 from the streets.
Prayer by the Rev . William Middleswarth opened the
meeting, Council memb&lt;rs attending were Dr. Harold Brown,
James Neutzling, Harry Davis, Lou Osborn and Larry Powell,
along with Mayor Clarence Andrews and Clerk Jane Walton.

~

~

GOLD &amp; BL ACK
KID

~

11

~

~
~

~
~

BLACK &amp;

~

~
W

PEN

LATE

BEGINNING DfC.9th
WEWILLBEOPEN
EVERY NITE UNTIL
8:00. CLOSED SUNDAY.

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY , OHIO '

1at! '

ELBERFELD$

FAMILY SUES
W MARION, Ohio (UP! ) The Joseph Saunders family,
W whose Marion County home
was destroyed in an Oct. 7

~

~

~

u

!
II

exploslon. has sued

Now!

~

~
~

"THE

f,{

1,(

BANK"

Vi

w

!~-:~
·..~i
.=,·iiiiM
.-·- .,..-..-"..IIi·-w
IIIDIIi.ENIT, G.

.

--..- --

....... "'1111" '

w

DEPOSITS
Y,i INSURED TO $40,000

""':'"': .

I

l&amp; a:

'

'·- f

Y,i

~

' '

[II

warpla nes a nd fi ve midget submarines -

sank or

domaged 18 U.S. ships, including four battleships, and
destroyed or damaged 316 American planes.
The official U.S. report on the attack called it "the
greatest military and naval disaster in our nation's
history .'

1

The day after the attack President Franklin D.
ROQsevel\ denounced it as the "day , which will live in
infamy," and asked Congress to decla re war on Japan.
Three days later, the United States also was at war
wiUt Nazi Germany.

Veterans groups planned their apnual pilgrima ge
to Pearl Harbor tn lay wreaths at the alabaster shrine
resting atop the mostly sunken. Arizona. The Army
musewn at Fort DeRussy also scheduled a public
observance this a fternoon .

~:~~\..~~':::..~~'~'};;;::~·:·:o:-."'»:O:·:-:·:~:o!::~:::~~~'*-':-'::.0::::*-~0::~~'*'~-.:::

.IJVews • • •i_IJ Briefsl

Carl S. Morris, Kalhleen

II CUI 011111011

David

Shuler ,

t.

Shuler.
S.l acres,

Richa.rd Lee Butcher.
Yvonne Gl oria Butcher, Lot

Rlggscresl, Orange.
. Flossie Ragan lo Glen
Ragan, 12 acres, Columbia.
Roberl Du rs I, Or'etha

7,

u;

Ma~&lt;ine

w

Curt is,

~

Hibbs to Thomas D. Danner,
Beverly Danner W. lf2 of Lots

~

~

Durst to Denver 0 .
Neva Curtis, v~ acre,
lebanon .

C. Fred Hibbs, El izabelh B.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Less than four hours after John
Kennedy was shot to death on Nov. 22, 1963, and two hours after
Lee Harvey Oswald's arrest , FBI Dir~tor J . Edgar Hoo ver
told Washington officials Oswald "very probably" was the
assassin, ac'Cording tn FBI documents released today.
. Hoover said he would put Oswald "in the category of a nut
and the extremist pro-Castro crowd."
The memo reflecting Hoover 's thoughts wAs contained in a
mass of raw FBI reports made public to&lt;lliy by the ageney
Wider the terms of the Freedom oflnformation Aet.
The material - 40,001 pages in all - helpect lead the Warren
Commission to its conclusion Oswald "alo ne and without
advice or assistance" killed Kennedy.
·
Another 40,000 pages are to be released soon, probably in
January.
The FBI &lt;lli ta - enough paper to sta~ k twice from fl oor to
ceiling in UPI's Washington bureau - was based on more than
25,000 FBI interviews.
·

two hours a fter Oswaad had been taken

inlo custody

-

Am erica n citizenship, and then ca me back here."

Oswald had come to !he FBI's attention, he said, because of
his association with t~ e Fai r Play for Cuba Ccmmittee . The
FBI director said Oswald had been arr ested in Ne w Orleans
some months ago for distributing leaflets on behalf of the
committee ..

extremist pro-Castro crowd.' '

In a memo to his staff Dec. 12, !963, Hoover discussed what
he wanted included in the agency's ·report to the Warren
Commi:;;sion.
" I personal ly believe Oswald was the assasstn," he wrote ,

but added his great concern "whether he was the only man."
" ... we have several letters, not in the report beCau se we
were not able to prove it , wr itten to him fr om Cuba referring to

the job he was going to do, his good marksma nsh ip , an d stating
when it was all over he would b&lt; brought back to Cuba and
presented to the chief. "
But Hoo ver's memo said, ''We do not know if the ch ief was
Castro and cannot make an investigation because we have no
lnteUigence operation in Cuba ."
Hoover said this was the reason he " urged stron gly '~ to Lee

Rankin , speci"l counsel to the Warren Ccmmission, that no
conclusion b&lt; reached that Oswald acted alone.
He sai d a ll angles but "the Cuban thin g" had been cleared
(Ccntinued on puge 12)

Hoove!.

dictated a memo'telllng what he ltnew at that point.
' He was acting in respon se to a request by the Justice
By United Press lntemaUonal
A SPECIAL RIOT SQUAD was sent to a Utah coal .Department for information about the suspect that could be
mine to'day to see that tire-slashing and jeers do not turn into included in a proclamation by the new president, Lyndon
outrjght violence, but otherwise the seco~d day of the nationwide Unite~ Mine workers' strike opened quietly,
Sheriff's officers accompanied by the . riot squad were
called in late Tuesday night lo keep the peace at the Plateau
Mine in Watlis, Utah, where pickets slashed the tires on a bus
carrying non-union minerS. The union and non-w1ion miners
also traded insults and threats. Othernise, it was quiet along
the picket lines Tues&lt;lliy, the fi rst &lt;lliy of the strike by the
130,000 UMW miners.
parole next June.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Actually, two feder al
The U.S. Parole Commission
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA ~ TilE UNITED STATES and today
paroled
J ohn judges agreed w teduce
South Kor~a are drafting an agreement to let millionaire Ehrlichrnan , the No. 2 aide in
Ehrlichman 's concurr ent
Tongsun Park testify under immunity in Washington on the Richard M. Nixon 's White sentences for his involvement
Capitol Hill influence peddling scandal, official sources •aid House , who was convicted lor in a Pentagon Papers episo de
l&lt;lday.
taking part in the Watergate and in \h e Water gate
burglary coverup.

effective April 27, 1978.
Ehrlichrnan, 52, has b&lt;en

Sirica sentenced

an inmate at the minimum
security Federal Prison

conviction for his part in the

Camp at Safford, Ariz., since
Oct. 28, 1976, tending four
large boilers that provide

charges included conspiracy,
obstruction of justice and

NICOSIA, CYPRUS - AU. S. AIR FORCE U-2 spy plane
crashed today on takeoff from the Royal Air Force base on
southern Cyprus, plowed through several buildings and killed
or Injured several people, offi cials said.
A British spokesman said the spy plane took off at
Akrontiri on Cyprus but crashed, and , "I'm afraid it might be
bad news." The spokesman said there were 11 8 number of

steam for the camp.

He became eligible for
parole on Oct. 4 of this year
because of a reduction in his

original stiff sentence of 30
months to eight years as a
Watergate conspirator with
top Nixon aide H.R .
Haldeman and former
Attorney General John
Mitchell . Haldeman and
Mitchell will be eligible for

/
.•

Ehrl~chman

on Sept. 21, 1975, aft er
Watergate coverup . The
lying"lo a grand jury.
Sirica reduced the sentence '

Oct. 4 to one to four years in
response to a petition
Ehrlichrnan filed last June.
"l have resolved to live my
life in a very different way, ' '·
Ehrlichrnan said in a tape
recording played in Sirica 's
courtroom at the Ocl. 4
hearing. "1. went and lied ;·
and I'm paying the price for
that lack of will power,. And,
in fact , I abdicated my moral
judgements and turned them

I

' ;ri
'

·I

.

•
_lllikJi
.._~""
· ......, ~\} '

$8,000 RICHE&amp;- Dale Ellis, second from the left in
the photo, became $8,000 richer Tuesday afternoon when
he received his prize as a winner in the Ohio L.ottery's
Touchdown ruboff game. Ellis, a resident of Rutland who
operates a service station in lower Middleport, was a

$10,000 winner in the lottery game with $2,000 deducted for

Money lost by

Watergate Judge John

efforts, incl~ding alleged bribes to congressmen, to gain
favorable U. S. policies for Seoul 's government·in the early
1970s. Vance warned Tuesday the "Tongsun Park affair" had
angered most Americans. Nevertheless, he appealed to
Congress to approve $280 million in military aid for South
Korea - an increase of 77 per cent.

Barbara Grueser
ori Lincoln Hill
Barbara Gnteser while
on her Sentinel newspaper
route on LlDeolD Heights
Tuesday evening lost . a
while mailing envelope
wrapped In a plastic bag
eontalnlng approximately
$42. She had collected the
money lor candy sold by
Meigs Junior High School
while she was on her paper
route. There was no name
on - the
envelope.
The Iinder of tbe money
would earn a whole buneh
of Brownie points by
returning It lo Barbara,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

income taxes. From the left are Mrs. Carolyn Ba chner , ·
co"'wner of Tony 's Carry Out in Middleport where Ellis
purchased his winning ticket; Ellis, Betty Barnett,
representing the office of Ohio Auditor Thomas Fe rguson
and Bill Abdella, Athens, sales representative of !he Ohio
Lottery Commission.

Future of Meigs EMS
up for discussion tonight
The fi rst mee ting to
determine the future of the
Meigs County co untywide
Emergency Medical Services
will be this evening at 7
o'clock at the Rutland E.M.S.
Station .
According to Joan Stewart,
chief of the Rutland unit of
the
Southeast
Ohi o
E mergency Medi cal Services, lne. (SEOEMS) \he
meeting will_ have several
purposes:
- To decide who will be
recommended to the Comity
Commissioners to serve on

charge of all policy making Meigs Counly EMS."
Stewart said these reports
for Meigs County EMS.
· - To appoint the members are premature, "s ince no one
of the Meigs County EMS of a policy-making position
Medica l Advisory Board, has yet been named." She .
made up of one or more local added that at present, only
physicians and one or more the operating units, the Hfive·
members of each of the five year plan" and the recently
Life Squads (Middleport , passed levy are certain.
" The plan," she said, " is
Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland
ext
rem ely gene r al, and
and Syracuse ) who will be
responsible for setting up the alm ost eve ryth ing else .
standards of me.dieal care for remains to be decided. The
all Meigs Ccunty EMS patient plan only assures that the
levy money will be well-spent
treatment.
- To defin e \he job and the citizens of Meigs
description and qualifications Ccunty will receive excellent
of the Meigs County EMS emergency care."
Stewart did speculate that
Coord ina tor , who will be
hired to oversee the total one or more classes to train
operation· of the countywide new Em ergency Med ical
Technicia ns (EMT's) will be
service.
The Rutland Chief noted, held, starting in the winter or
"Ma ny rumor s a re cir· spring, since some additiona l
culating within the county personn el may be needed.
She said that persons in about whal is in the future fo r
t erest ed in such tra in ing
·::::;:::::::::;:::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:::::::::::;:::::;:::;:::;:;:: should contact ·their nearest
Life Squad Unit. Stewart also
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
· Friday through Sunday, noted that all Meigs residents
are enc&lt;&gt;uraged to attend the
a chanee of snow Friday
Wednesday night meeting if
and Sunday and · eloudy
I
they
would like to have input
Saturday. Unseasonably
to
the
future dirc'Ction of
cold, with highs In the 20s
Meigs
Ccunty
EMS.
and lows In the teens.

the EMS Citizens Council,
made up of one person from
U.S. District
Judge
Tom Grues er, Lincoln
each Meigs County township.
Gerhard Gesell had also
Heights.
These persons will serve,
se nten ced Ehrllchman on
according
to Stewa rt, for the
July 31 , 1974, to 20 mooths to ·:·:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::: fi ve-year period
during which
five years for helping plan the
the countyw ide EMS is
break-in at the office of
IS
scheduled
to develop to stateDaniel Ellsb e rg ' s
ce
rl
ifica
ti
on levels. Th e
psychiatrist, Dr. Lewis FielW
.
Citizens
Council
will be m
ding, in the Pentagon Papers
incident . ,
•
•
The senten ces were
AUXILIARY TO MEET
running concurrently but
Sgt. Randy 8. Becker, son
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Gesell's earlier sent en ce
stood in the way of an early of Don C. Beeker, Middleport, Middleport Fire [!epartment
parole . After
Sirica 's and grandson of Mr. and Mrs. will meet at the fir e station at
leniency, Gesell followed suit Delbert C. Becker , Mid- 6:30 this evening prior to
10 &lt;lliys later by reducing dl eport, ahs received an going to the Holiday Inn for
Ehriichrnan's sentence to 42 M.B.A. degree in economics the arutual Christmas dinner.
from Park College, Kansas Following th e dinner the :;:;:;:::;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;.;.;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ;:(!;&gt; ~ r -¢- ~:-.;.;.#r
months.
~
group will return to the fire
Ehrlichrnan was given an City, Mo.
' ~ -:..) ( - "t ·' , ··
A
1971
graduate
of
Meigs
foi
dessert
and
a
gift
station
initial hearing by a panel of
INFANT BURIED
parole examiners at the High School , Beeker rece ived exchange.
Funeral services for Brian ~
-1
his
B.A.
in
1976
from
St.
prison camp Oct. Tl .
Keith Briggs, infant son of Mary's University. He will
Dav id an d Gloria Riggs, ~ ' J
now attend Webster's College
~
•))J• l
lloute
4, Pomeroy, who die d
in St. Louis, Mo., where he
&amp;QARD TO MEET
Diminishing winds; very Saturda y at birth at Pleasant !;&gt;
will ma jor in procurement
EAST MEIGS - A special law.
eold toni~ht , snow likely by Valley Hospital, were held at ';_
meeting of the Eastern Local
morn in g; lows near 10 . 2:30 p.m. in the Wells ~
A six and one-half year
Schoo l District Boar d of veteran of the U. S. Air Windy, not as cold Thursday, Cemete ry . Besides hi s \
Education concerning the Force, Ra ndy.. now works as a snow likely. Highs in the low parents, Brian is survived by • ~ _., &lt;J&gt; ..J ' &lt;»..J 1 -0 •.:'
closing of schools for the rest computer analyst with the 30s .
Pro bability •
of several brothers and sisters.
of the year on Thursday will. research and development precipitation 30 pet. today, 60 The E wing Fune ral Home
cha rge · of
be held at 7:30p.m. Thursday team at Brooks Air Force perce nt Lonight , 80 pet. was
y.
·
Thursda
at the high school.
Base, San Antonio, Tex.

Sgt• Beck er •
a arded degree
m econonncs

Ah, Sweet Aomancel Vicky Vaug hn 's f hrty long.
Spaghetti -tied pleate d tie rs rrpple 'neath posy'd braid .
on top Satin-sashed waist gathers to a floun c~d swirl
with more posy braid . In pol y interl ock knit. machine
. wash-dry: Cream .3-13 $40.00.

'IS'

le sure to ' " all the other Items in tilt
Ready to Wear Dept. · 2nd floor . Holiday
Dresses - Sportswear - Sweaters - Coats Blouses. Excellent gifts for someone

Weather

'.

.
'

special.

Open Fridly and Satunby

Elberfelds In

Hoover said, "! thought very probably we had in custody the
man who killed the preside nt in Dallas, but this had not
definitely been established ."
"Lee Harvey Oswald," he told the J u,stice Department ,
"spe nt some years in Russia, although he was born in
America; that he tried unsuccessfull y to renounce his

th em fast ."
Fifteen minutes after the shoaling, Hoover reported to other
FBI officials he had telephoned the slain president's brother,
Attorney General Robert F . Kennedy, telling him :
"The shot was believed to be fatal. The attorney general had
not previously b&lt;en advised of this ." .
Then, at 5:15 p.m. EST - four hours after the shoot ing and

'

Bill 'jg, ea 'IS ~ p;i. i$1. ,t;;:: J--=::: ' ""' 1 "''

He said Oswald " would be in the category ot a nut and the

Johnson .

Communications Section letterhead, r¢ad :
11
Get everyone involved in shooting the president and get

&gt;.

•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 7, 1977

Hoover said he told the department the FBI knew Oswald
"w"s working in the building from which the shots were fired ;
that we have the rifle and lhree empty shells found in the
building in which the man was employed.
"I said Oswald apparently left this building and a block or
On.e document. - a message written less tha n one hour after two away two police officers moved toward hlm , and for no
the shooting in Dallas and lab&lt;led " urgent" from James good reason he opened fire on them and killed one."
Walsh , oth erwise unidentified, on a Department of Justice

over to somebody else."

35 and 34, Middleporl.

Bonnie Sue Roseberry to
Lou Irene Roseberry, Parz~~~--~~~~~~~~-~~=~~ ce ls, Lebanon.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Hoover quick to call Oswald guilty

Transfers

to
~ CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK ~- Carla
J.
Chester.

W

Slleak attack !hat brought the United States into Wor)d
War II.
Although memorial services were scheduled, they
are low-key and the day will b&lt; much like any other for
Hawaiians . Even Navy Secretary W. Graham Clayton
Jr. , who was passing through Hawaii en route to the
Fa r East , had no plans to stay for a memorial service.
As every year, the anniversary was to begin at 7:55
a.m. local lime with two blasts from a naval shipyard
whistle to signal two minutes of silence.
At thai minute 38 years ago toclliy, 353 Japanese
planes swept over Pearl Harbor and ne arby mililary
airfields, killing more than 2,200 Americans. At least
I,!()() of th e U. S. dead were aboard U1e battleship USS
Arizona .
The Japanese- who lost fewer than 100 men, 29

VOL. XXVIII NO. 165

Meigs
Property

W
~·

IVIor r is

w.

commemorate t he 36th an niversary of the Japanese

SAN FRANCISCO - TIIERE IS NEW EVIDENCE solar
(Continued on page 12)

J

FRIENDLy ~

w

enttne

w

'a

11

By RAY VUEN
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (UP! ) - The citizens of
Pearl Harbor planned no special events td&lt;lliy to

casualties" but "at the present moment we are unable to say lf
these casualties are deatlls or injuries."

~

CHRISTMAS CLUB
ACCOUNT .

•

William

11 wb&lt;n an employee of the
Davis heating firm used a
cigar.elte lighter to locate a
propane gas leak. The lighter
ignited a pool of gas that had
collected under the house .
'l'lte explosion killed 37-yearold Clyde Brewer.
Marion Police Court
records
indicates
the
Saunders are
seeking
damages for their lost home
tf! and for injuries suffered by
!hem and their infant S()n
f,{
~· Timothy in the accident.

night if the shooter (barely visible, at right ) misses. From left are Ralph
Ingels (55-SV J, Rusty Wigal (41l-Easternl, Brott Miller (16-SVJ. Brian
Bissell (14-Eastern ), Tey Wiseman (11-SV), Dan Spencer (42-Eastern l
and Ed Davis ( 15-SV l. The hot shooters for the evening \i•ere lngel• for
SV, 26, and Wiga l for Eastern, 19. The Vikings won 65-51. Sec Greg
Bailey's report on page 3_

POISED, READY - Free throw shooting as penalties for rule
. infractions are growing more important each year to a basketball team
ti1at expects to win, at whatever level of play . So is the rebound fr om the
missed free throw, as these players of Symmes Valley (black) and
Eastern High School show in their readiness to go after the ball Tuesday

Pearl planned nothing
very special today

~

'

CHRISTMAS CORSAGE
FOR EVERY
LADY
WHO OPENS A

United Presslntem atiuttal
bloc cultural centers and Jordon arived in Damascu•
Egyptian President Anwar Consulates - was because in an apparent bid to medial~ .
Sadat today expelled Soviet they had incited opposition to the bitter dispute between
and East Euopean off icials the Sa&lt;llit talks with Israel. Syria and Egypt, and as
who had criticized his peace . Two days ago Sadot broke Vance flew to Europe on a
inillatl ve. His surprise move dip lomatic relations with trip tha i will t ak~ him to the
came one doy after Secretary Syria, Iraq, Libya, Algeria Middle East for a we\!kend
,peace shuttle mission ,
of Stale Cyrus Vance threw and South Yemen.
Prime Mini~i.er Marndoull
his full support to Sadat 's
Sadal di d not break
Salem
told t he Egyptian
Cairo conference.
di plomatic relations with !he
Parliament
the sh utdown
The government said the Soviet bloc , however .
affected
cultura
l cenlers of
latest surprise move by Sadat
The expulsion order was
on
page 12)
(Continued
annnWJced
as
King
Hussein
of
- closing the Cornmun i ~t

The accord could help ease U.S.-Korean relations strainr j
cover-up.
over Park's refusal to discuss his role in secret lob.bying . The parole will become

OPEN FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

W Saunders home was ruined

It's Time To Jojn
Ouistmas Ouh 1978

Sadat ejects
Red critics

Ehrlichman goes
next April 27th

Davis and Sons , Inc. of
W Marion
for $1 million.
w Sheriff's deputies said the

each . club member who makes 49
prompt
weekly payments. the bank will
111
W make the 50th payment.

Special Store Hours
For Your Shopping
Convenience.

1

..

~

PLAN FOR

w
W For

,

"
WASHINGTON - SECRETARY of State Cynro Vanct;;
p!»ns a quick tour of Middle Eastern capitals In an effort IG'
influence the swiftly moving events and widen direct con tacit
!hal already have taken place.
"'
The Stale Department announced Mooday Vance wiU ny
to Cairo Dec. 9from Brussels, where he will attend a NATQ,
ministerial council meeting.
;

Ohio Valley Uvestod Co.
Market Report
Dee. 3,1977
Prices ta ken fr om the
auction of Saturday, Dec. 3.
Trends : Feeder cattle
stea dy to $1 higher, Veals 5 to
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO EDUCATION AMoclatlon l\ll.. ..
10 higher, Cows and bulls imposed stale protess!Ql unctions agalllal the WM!e~
$1.50 higher ·and steady.
City School district foP failure to engal!l In SOOd faith
Total Head: 1.01!
negotiations.
-'
Slaughter Steers 3 1 . ~7.
According to tl)e OEA sanctions no tice, the school boar4
Slaughter Heifers, 27-33. "rejected the unanimoWJ rec&lt;~nunendation pi an impuse
Feeder Steers, (Goo d- panel, thus , rejecting the concept of compromise and fair
Choice ), 250 to 300 lbs. '1:1- adjustment of dllferences." 'l'lte OEA said the Westerville
31.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 27.50- district has not raised Ita bese salary schedule since December
37.50; 400to5001bs., 28-38; 500 ,1975, and has fallen behind competillve levels with area
to 600 lbs. 27-37.50, 600 to 700 S&lt;:hools.
•
lbs. 28 . ~36 : 700 and over '1:135.50.
BLOOMINGTON, IND. _: BUND 'JAZZ · MUSICIAN
Feeder Heifers : )Good- Rah saan Roland Kirk, famous for playing two or mor~
Choice) , 250 lo 300 lbs, 22-3() ; instrwnents simultaneoWJly, died Monday afterooon. He wai
300 to 400 lbs. , 21.~32 ; 400 to 41. Kirk, who was confined to a wheelchair since suffering 11
500 lbs. 22-31.50; 500 to 600 lbs. - stroke last year, had been at the Indiana University campu~
24.50-32 ; 600 to 700 lbs. 21- Sunday night for two eoneert.s with hU group, the Vlbralion
28.50; 700 and over 18-24 .75. Society.
'
Feeder Bulls : (GoodKirk was stricken as he was leaving the eity by car and
Choice) , 250 lo 300 lbs. 25-31 ; was dead on arrival at Bloomington Hospital at I p.m., a
300 to 400 lbs. 28-34 ; 400 to 500 spokesman said. " It was a long-standing chronic condition for
lbs. 26-34.25: 500 to 600 lbs. which he was being Ireated at his hometown, Uvinpton, N. J.,
27.50-36.50: 600 to 700 lbs. 25- " a physician said. 'l'lte euct condition was not di.sclosed.
30.50; 700 and over 22-28.75.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
KANSAS CITY, MO. - THE ONLY SISTER of !he
lbs.) 24.~29 . 50.
President Harry S. Trwnan remained hoopltallzed in critical
Slaughter Cows : Utilities cnndition Monday night, following a stroke. Mary Jane ,
19-24.60; Canners-cutters, Truman, 1111, of Grandview, was admitted to the inlensive care
17.21.50.
unit at Research Medical Cenleraboul4 :30 p.m. Monday .
Veals : Choice and Prime,
Dr. Wallace Graham, Miss Truman's personal physician;
51.50-59 ; Standards and said she was hospitalized last year for treatment nf lnjurlea
Mediwns, 45 down .
" suffered in a fall. Dr. Graham also was Truman's personal
Baby Calves (by the head) physician and still cares lor his widow, Bess Truman.
15-50.
(Hogs)
PITrSBURGH - A NEW REPORT ON THE mysterr
Hogs : (No. I, Barrows- crack that shut down tlte $29 million Inte111tate '19 bridge over
Gilts, 200-230 lbs. 40-42.50.
the Ohio River at Neville Island only-five months aller It wu
Butcher Sows, 31.50-35.
opened takes the state Tran~port.tion Department to tu1t fot
Buteher Boars, 23-29.
its inspection standards. WhUe ruUng out negll8ence, a team c!(
Pigs (by the head ) 15-41.50. three college professors commissioned In February to conduct
(Sbeep)
·!he probe said the crack may have been caused by ail
Slaughter Lambs, 42-47 ; unreported repair of a weld in the fractured beam.
Feeder ·Lambs, 35-43.
The investigators called · on PerutOOT to consider
requiring documentation and approval of all repairs in which
failure could cause a bridge cnllaJl'IO. 'l'lte crack wa~
discovered Jan. 28 by a tugboat captain on the river and
PeMOOT officials ordered it cloeed, though ita oponing tho
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
prevlou.s
August was hailed.as the last lin)t in Pl!llnsylvan!a''
The Pomeroy Emergency
)lltknile
section
of tlj"-ltiiilflway.
Squad answered a call to 109
~ r •~ J'
Union Ave. at 4:07 p.m.
' !.... •
Monday for Penny Smith who
' -,
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. The squad went to the
Ewing Funeral Home at 7: 27
p.m. to treat Cannan Kiser
who was ill.

W

~ . CHRISTMAS '78 NOW!

BROWN

Market Report

~

Wouldn't it be
nice to think of
Christmas for a
change, instead
of the money
problems that go
with it?

?i
w

Th e Kenrroo r I mperial

(ConUnued from pa1e I)
was stricken with pains and vomiting todaY. and canceled aU
spow flurr ies ea ch day.
hU appointments.
Highs " 'lll range from tbe
"He hasan upset stomach and bouts of nausea," a govern·
20s to lower 30a aDd lows ment spokesman said. "He has canceled h1s appointments at
mostly wUl be In the teens. least for this morning." Begin has a hUtory of heart attackr
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::· but the spokesman said there was no reason to believe ht.ailment was anything roore serio!IS than an upset stomach.
'

FELL OFF ROOF .
'l'lte Middleport E-R Sq~•d
answered a call for Francis
Hudson at 4:43p.m. Monday,
who had fallen off the roof of
a building where he was
working. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted. At
I :44 a.m. Tuesday the fire
An eXecutive session concluded the meeting .
department went to SR 7
below Middleport where a car
~ ~ ~~~~~~-=~~= = == ~ ~-~ was reported on fire . No car
was fowtd.

11

Th e Miro

News •• in Briefs

' EXTENDED OUTU&gt;OK
Thu rsday tb r ouc b1
Saturday, continued cold
with a chance of soow er

'

~

concludes cinders during snow stor1J15 are a necessary evil .
The Mi r o

··:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·::;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:r.;:;:;:;:

&gt;iln•=-!!folt• !•·~

"

"

DEMOLAY INSTALLATION - George Knighting, senior councilor elect ; Dallas
Sayre, master cotmeilor elect, and 'Jeff Daniels, junior councilor elect 0 to r ), will be
installed to their offices in the Meigs Chapter, ()pier of DeMolay, at 7:30p.m. Saturday at
the Middleport Masonic Temple. Installing officers will be Edward Vogler, state master
councilor, Ohio SlateCouricil, Orde1 vf DeMolay, of Cleveland.

'

f

\
~ ..1 ~

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

~

I

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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>December 6, 1977</text>
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        </element>
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    <tag tagId="2453">
      <name>addis</name>
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    <tag tagId="7615">
      <name>harvel</name>
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    <tag tagId="63">
      <name>jones</name>
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    <tag tagId="5520">
      <name>wicker</name>
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