<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15280" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15280?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T04:53:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48402">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/c1e9812617ca565affe9360a40b3ba04.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c08724a5c5d1e06a83a6b1edbf40d4ba</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49048">
                  <text>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

�I

3- The Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 . Wednesday, Dec 7 1!l77

2- The Da 1 I ~· Sent mel. ~hdd lepo rt - Pomr ro) _0 .. Wednesday , 1"1«•. 7. 19ii

Judy , Joe and the Ho-Ho-Ho

Ohioans qrg~d to save energy
during expected long strike
B) JO H:-.1 T. 1\.AD\'
l 'nit ed P r('Ss ln tt•r mHitutal
Thr dtrt••r t('lr t)f the Ohtu
Ener ~~
and Rrsnu r {'i.'S

Dl' \'C'Inptll(' nt

0f America.

t'nt'rgy

Agenc y I S
Oll toa n s to save
clur tn ~
what IS

b' t.he United Mine Workers

urgmg all
t' X ~·l't t•d

tu bt&gt; a long strtke

OhtP's 10,(X)(J urunn coal
mim.• rs Tuesday joined the
n d lt {lll Wide
st nke
and

peopletalk
ll) KENNETH R. CLARK
Un.i h.-d Press lntt•rna tiunal
· X" :oi l XED '\ev. Hampsh ire Gov Meldrim Thoma s say s
t.he term " Xmas" lS a · pagan spellmg of Chnstmas .. X-mg
out Chr1s1" - and he " a nts It stopped Thomsnn's louring
Tatwan noY. - but a release fn1m his ConcOrd offt('€' has
declared Thursday Keep Christ m Chnstmas Da) ." sa)ing ,
"Our children should know that Christmas IS not onlv the
excitement of Santa Claus. pr-esk'nts and snow. bui the
celebration of t.he birth of Jesus Cilrist. .. Actuall) , the term
' ~as " IS dern t.&gt;(J from an earlr Chnst aan sn nbol for Christ
- the Greek letter · Chi ... prmteci as an · X " UPPE R.CRUSTY : lt'sa long \\ a) fr om Plams. Ga, to lhc
snobbish ly ranf1ed a tm ospher e of U1e So&lt;o1al Reg1ster , but
Jimmy CartPr fmall) is therE' He and first lad; Rusalynn
Carter made thetr debul Tuesday In the exclusn:e New York
"Soc!ely Btble." which tgnored ttis prt!ferent'e fl1r ·' Jimmy."
hsung hm1 as Ja mes E Ca r ler
MARSHALIKG AN ANGEL· Ma rdi Gras IS two months
away but 1ls star-studded foundations already are being la1d m
New Orleans Y.: herr two maj or parHdes ar e slated Cheryl
Ladd , of "Charlie's Angels:· will serve as grand marshal of
the End) nnon parade tln Fe b 4 The other Mardi Gras parade
group - ll estia - will crown actor George Peppard king of its
event on Jan 29. End)mJOn also \\ Ill feat ure Doc SeYeriosen
and Fa ts Dommo.
·
LOTS OF LAURELS The former fi rst fa m1 l\ still tends io
be fir st 10 the av. ardsdepartment Gerald and Be'tty Ford were
in New York Cit! Tu esday to receive the Charles Evans
Hughes Award of the Na twnal Conference of Chn st1ans and
Jews The For:ds - cited for "courageous leadersh tp an
goverrunent , ct n c and hwuamta n an affatrs" - are the f1rst
husband-ware team ever to be so honored , and old fnend Henry
Kissinger - who won It himself 10 1973, did the be stowing
THE PRICE OF BATTLE : Soldier-for41Jre Keith Nelson IS
home fr om t.he war - w1thout hiS legs . but wtth a RhodeSian
fiance and a ftrm convactton his persona l battle against
comrnumsm was worth the pnce. The 26-) ear -o ld mercenary
served as a medic in the Rh odeSian army until J une , when he
S\epped on a mme Mar) Wmship, t.he g1rl he found at the front ,
was wtlh him Tuesday at a Washin gton press conference
GLIMPSES Comedian Bob Newhart and w1fe Genny have
a ne" 10hild - the1r fourth - a g1rl born Fr1day 1n West
Hollywood, to be named Courtney Quum .. Bob Hope w1U be
the only master of ceremoni es for the Oscar awa rds tn
Hollywood next year - the f~rst time 111 to years the show has
had only one emcee, th ough Hope has soloed e1ght times m 22
previous appea rances ... John Wayne, who reportedly felt hke
gJvtng some ad executives until sWJdown to clear out of town
over the way he appeared m teleVision commercials for a
headache remedy, w1ll return to TV to pttcn a Califorma
savings and \oan company with a name that hts his tmage Great Western ... Spanish sportsman Valenti~ de Madariaga y
Oya, who lists 101 k1lls in the b1g game re&lt;:ord books , was
presented With the Weatherby Trophy - equivalent of the
Academy Award for b1g game hunters - Tuesday m Los
Angeles by actor Chuck Connors.

lh ousands

..

nf

non-unt nn

nuno rs a lso stayed off the
JOb . shu tJing down the state 's
t:'nttre cnal mdustr) .
Swte
F.ne rgy
a nd
HeS0Url..'es Dtrector Rnbe rt S.
Rvan saHI. "Then•'s nu wa v
oi predictmg ho \&lt; long the
strike \&lt;1 11 last or how cold I
thi s winter will be. Saving
energy at h \)Jlle and at " ork
can st~ ve jt1 bS .
" We leilr ned how t0
conserve natur al gas last

wmt er because of t.he supply
short age and the severe cold
tem perat ures," sa1d Ryan

" Now we need to apply those
same conse rvation mea sures
lo electricJtv and e&lt;&gt;al "
Ryan sa1 d. a prolonged coal
stnke "could affect as many
as a qua rter milhon worke rs"
ill Ohio

Ryan said should the strike
continue longer than three
weeks. plans have been deve loped for assuring adequate
coal for public health , safe!)
and welfare uses
' ' We a r e aware of CW'rent
~t at e coal mventor ies and
th ese

can

be used

r esp onses

to

coal

I&lt;CALLY

\~ ADE l'HE

n"\j

CHRISTMAS .5Et6CN

'&lt;,'UK'' 1b JUc:y
AND J OE ...

~~

0•., which IS lleadqw.trted in
Cadiz, said hiS ftrm employs
abnut 350 lll•n-Wlion nuners Ul
ov e r ~ 0 s t rip min i n ~
operatao ns and all were
dosed.
"They are not open and I
would sc1y they will not open''
durmg the duration of the
strike. said Spiker
Spiker and other operatClr s
of non-wunn mmes shut do\\11
rather than n sk problems
Unil r d Press lntematiunal
Wllh ro\1ng UMW pickets .
The Carter admini stration - Utah pollee escorted nonhas said enoug h coa l as mined unwn coal miners to their
by non-wnon nuners - alx&gt;ut jobs today followmg a mght of
48 percent - to meet the sporad1r violence touched off
nation's energy needs dw-ing by st nk1ng Unit ed M1n e
pi ckets,
but
a lengt.hy stnke but Spiker Work ers
la ughed
at
that. oth enH se coa lfields were
aclmowldg10g that 1f t.hey are quiel m UJC second day of a
not workiQg th ey are not natwnal strike.
()[flcJa ls satd rocks were
mming coal
" I thmk he should come out thrown and nails were strewn
to the real world and see what on the road lo Plateau Mme 10
Wattis. Ulah, late Tuesday
It IS like," sa1d Sp1ker.
Rovmg UMW p1rkets tradi- mght and this mornmg Ill an
tionally attempt t,o close all appar ent effort by so me
non-wuun operatiOns dunng a UMW members to keep nonwuon strike but the non-union tmion mme rs from enterin g
manes 111 Ohto clo sed the mine.
Ca rbon Cowlly Sheriff AI
voluntaril y thts tun e.
Passic led one bus-load of
nonunwn min ers th ro ugh
THE DAILY SENTINEL
picket lmes this mornmg

Police escort
worke., to job

-·

DE\ O'TED TO TilE
INTERESTOF

·--wAS 11-jAT

AND fv'OTHER ~I D
SAI D ALL THIS ~TA
HEI&lt; A~LYST TOLD
AND HO-HO+ O 8 U51NE5S HER THAT 11-1E SANTA
WAS MEMJT dUSI
Cl All5 I='ANTAS \ '
TO S EL L 5 TUI=I= ...
WA5t1T G:JC:;Q
!=OR
CHILDI&lt;'EN.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

sperm count
By uiwrence Lamb, M.D .
DEAR DR LAl'v'IB - How
about a little adv1ce to those
of us who have a problem gettmg preg nanl ' My husband
and I have been marned for
four years. I have been off the
pill for over two of these
years. I'm 24, and he IS 28
I have been pregnant
before ranother man 1 when I
was 18. I had a legal abortiOn
My doctor says I am perfectly healthy and should get
pregnant The year I was of[
the p1ll, he sa1d 1t would take
time ; now he says there must
be something wwng I used
the temperature charts for a
while to no avail
A few months ago, my husband went for a sperm count.
The first lest came out low, so
he had a repeat. When I called hiS doctor about the
results, the doctor said the second test was JUSt as low as
' the f1rst. My husband went up
for a physiCal. The doctor
asked him how many hours
he worked a week 165 to 75) .
Then he told h1m there was
nothing wrong w1th hun, JUSt
tired, and that he had read
the second test results wrong.
M'y husband does work long
hours, but they are not
physical. Th1s has only been
for the past eight months.
Before thiS, he d1 dn 't work at
all for etltnust a yea r , and
before that just a normal 40
hour week
I've tned to ask the doctor
questiOns about th1s, but he
acts as though 1t's none of my
busme.ss, and won't tdl me
much of an;thlllg. He 1ust
says to Walt J thmk I've
wa1ted long enough , espcc&gt;ally w1th no informatiOn on the
SUbJe&lt;:t.
DEAR READE R - I agree
t!lat you have wa1ted long
enough. Your letter suggests
that you and your husband
h;lve d1fferent doctors. If so, 1
nught suggest that you brm;:

•

•

I=!W TA5V

WHAT'S AN
PNAL.vST~

Driver charged with_DWI
John M. Flint, 32, Rio•
Grande, was charged w1th
DWI follo"mg a traffic acc1dent at midnight Tuesday
on SR 7 at the JUnction to US
35.
The Ga tlia-Meigs Pos t
State Highway Patrol sa1d
Flint , goin g north, lost
e&lt;&gt;ntrol of his car which ran
offthe leftside ofthe highway
mto a ditch. There was

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Gary Lee, Elyria,
form erly Dorothy Howell of
Pomeroy, is a patient at Allen
Memor ial
Hospital at
Oberlin, Ohio. Cards may be
sent to her m care of the
hospJtal. Mrs. Lee is the
daught er of Mrs . Betty
Templeton.

moderate damage.
No charges were filed in an
accident atJ :34 p.m. Tuesday
on the Herman-Northup Rd
south of SR 141 where Gerald
W. Fellure , 35, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car which ran
off the roadway into a fence .
There was mmor damage.
An accident occurred at
9·20 pm. on SR 7 m Meigs
County Tuesday when an auto
driven by Eileen Strauss, 60,
Minersville, struck a car
dr1 ~en by Melody D. Redmond, 18, New Haven, W Va
There
wa s
moderat e
damage. No charge was filed
A smgle vehicle acc1dent
occ urred at 10 .30 a.m .
Tuesday on SR 648 , e1ght
tenths of a mile north of SR
143 in Meigs County The
patrol sa1d Robert M. Allen,
21 , Albany , going south. lost

cont rol of his car and went
mto a dit Ch. There was minor
damage,
Two persons ha d appa rent
minor hurts in a n aeci dent at
9.15 a.m. Tu esday on SR 7, at
the junction to SR 248 m
Me1gs Cou nt y. An a ut o
operated by David E. Lacey,
26, Zanesville, struck the rear
o[ a cardnven by Thomas E.
Holter, 57, Racme. Ther• was
mod era te da mag e lJ ter
and a passenger , E' , I) n
Holter , 54. complained of
mjuries , none serious.
A fmal accident occurred at
7·40 a m Tuesda y on SR 141
where an auto dnven by V1ck1
L. McG uir e, 26, Northup ,
attemptmg to pass. shd mto
the side of a ear operated by
Jam es A. Wa ugh . 40,
Gallipolis There was mmor
damage ; no cha rge was fl ied

Es:« Ed
ROBERTHOEFUCH

c•, Edl&lt;o•

Published daJI) exctpt Sa turday
by The Ohio vaUt&gt;~· Publ.ishmg
Com p~~.n~·Multunedla Inc
Ill

St . Pomeroy, Oh1o -4S i69.
Buslnt"SS Off1re Phone 992· 2156

Court

EWtun al Phone 992-'Z t:i7

reqwrements, a nd we wtll not Porn
Second· clAss postage pai d a t
er o) Otuo
mterfere wtth the contract
Nauonal advert.LS11ll!l represen·
negntiattons. " said Ryan
t.atl\'e Ward · Griffith Company,
lne Bomnelli and Galbgher Ow.
One strtke offictal said a 757 rturd o\ve . New \'ark , N r.
prolonged strike could cause 10017
the la)·off of 250,000 Ohtoans earn
Subs..: n pt10n ra tes Oeh\ e red by
er ~~o ne rt avat.ht ble 75 c.rnts pt'f
In related industries.
week By Motor Route where c~:~ rne r
The UMW was apparently ser.'K'e nol available , One month ,
s;J z:; 8) mail 10 Ohio and W. Va ,
succe ss fu l Tu esday
m
One Year. S2200. Stx months,
shuttin g down non-union SI I 5o. Three.. months S7 00.
F.lsewheN' S2fi 00 yea r, Stx monlhs
mmes .
JJJ 50 , Thre e mon t hs , S7 50
Willi am Sptker , board Subscription prKe tn cludes Sunday
chamnan of the R&amp;F Coal t....Tim_•_s-&lt;;_._"_""_•_1-----.,..J

1---------------------------,
1
Letters of oplulon are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
1
I
I
:
1
1
I

:

less than 300 words loag (or be subject to reduction by
lhe editor) aod must be signed wtth the slpee's ad·
dress. Names may be withheld upon pubUc.ollon.
However, on request, names wiU be dlselosed. Letters
should be in good . taste, addressing Issues, not per·
sonalltles.
~

..d~.

.

: ... ?Jtt.~:
I
I

Dear S1r ·
l wish to take lh1s tune, durmg our joyous Chnstmas
season, the celebration of the b1rth of Christ, to el&lt;press my
feeltngs.
We , my family and !, have lived in lhe VIllage of Racme
for a period of 10 consecutive years m the same locatiOn. We
ha ve tned to not only work with the youth 10 our community.
but also ha ve tried to enJOY some of the pleasures as sled
nding , baseball, and even halloweening w1th them . I have
tried to enjOy t.he youth as I know 1 was, at one lime, a ch1ld
myself and I have three children of my own, and I wtsh to do
nobody any harm, but to help them if I can.
But, for the last 10 years, we have as others have , tr ied to
decorate our home to fit t.he seasons, such as outside
Christmas lights, pumpkins, etc.
For three r&lt;&gt;nsecutive years I have had pumpkins stolen
from my front porch and smashed on village streets and have
also had exterior light bulbs stolen and broken. One year, I had
six bulbs shot out and 26light bulbs stolen and broken in front
of my home.
I don 't know why I am bemg treated sn, but 1f my
d~corat10ns are not swtable or elaborate enough for you, then
please come to me and tell me as I paid approximately 25 cents
per light bulb for each one, and I would no longer put them up.
I urge each parent Within the Village to know where their
ch1ldren are and what t.hey are domg.
Curfews can be mvoked so that nobody will be permitted
on the streets after dark .
What prompted this letter is that loday we came home
from the Chnstmas parade in Pomeroy, only to fmd that this
year IS not out of t.he ordinary
Approxunately 15 bulbs were stolen and who knows what
else is tn stor e for us as my decorations have been erected for
only six days,. Only 21 more days till Christmas. Thanks for
hearing me out . - Smcerely, Earl E. Cleland , Fiflh Streel,
Racme , Oh10

1
I
I
I
:
1

THE

I

:

:

BIONIC
WOMEN

I
I

h

~
NOW

Sport Parade
HONOLULU t UPI 1 - Nobody at these baseball meetings
appre&lt;.'Jates the warm. swmy breezes , the ma jestic wmdswept
pc~Jm trees nr the inv atmgly rnol, rolling surf Lhat makes tins
piH('e a tow-tst ·s yem·-1·ound delig ht a ny more than Teq Turner .
Po.s1bly thai 's bceausc tTc's freshly liberated and feels as I[
he was sprw1g from Ja il only five manules ago,
T u11ther baseba ll people, thi s is simply Pea rl Ha rb"r Day .
To Ted Turner, the energetic, mipat ient Atl.:ult.a Braves'
nwn et, tlus is more like gct-utHICiy , the day they open. the ga tes
and Jet him out.
"It 's {1nly a te mpuaary reprieve, though,'' he says, talkm g
about how Bowie Kuhn, the baseball conuniss1one r , liflL&gt;d his
m e-year suspensaon s1mply s11 he ('ould pu rllc1pate m these
mcclmgs '' As 5411 111 ;1s Lhry 'rc nvcr , sn is my rcpncve. ''
'1\trner was set down mne month.$ ago for " ta mpen ng' '. as a n
outgrowU1 of hts signmg free-agent ou tfielder Gary Matthews.
Ong10ally, Turner was hned $10,000 for throw1ng a pa rty fnr
Mal thews In Atlanli1 while Ma tt hews st ill technically, belonged
to UJC San Francisco Gaan ts .
When Turner gnacled Gaants' owner Bob Lw te by lelhng hun
he 'd st1ll get Matthews following the f111e, Ku hn ilnposecl the
suspcns1o11 wh1ch wun't be up untt llatc IJ1 Mm ch.
Two years have gc,ne by nnw Sl rtce 'furne r bnught the Bra ves
for $10 million , and U1e; hav en't been good onps as far CIS he's
cflneerned He has spent huge sums of mon('y to get a nd salisfy
such players as AIHiy Messersnnth , W1 1l1e Monta nez, Jeff
Burrnughs and Ma tthews, but he hasn't been a ble t~1 get the
Bra ves out of last place.
Ted 1\Irner w:1s gmng tn show ·em all how to (lpera te when
he tonk ewer th e Br ave s H11w cou ld he possably miss? After all ,
wasn't he tile world's greatest salesman and pronwter ·~ He
had fr esh adeas and was wtlling to spend money, too
But so far , he has, and he knows It
" I'v e obviOusly not shown a great deal of wtzardry as em
owner the past lWOyears," he appraises lumself candidly . " If I
had l(l sell my serv1ces as an nwn er, I wouldn 't even been t.~bl e
to get a Job "
Sa ying that, Tw-ner snules , then turn.c; sertou.s a_gC~m .
,,-It's been Cl v~r y rough expenence ,'' he says. ''We 've lnsl a
ton of money and a ton of games. I've got myself suspended,
branded a bad person, who broke the rules. I've learned I have
1o be extra cautiOUS I didn't mean W break any rules by telling
Lune wha t I told hm&gt;. 1 had QUite a few dnnks and I told 111m
I'd get Matthews no matler what There was no pre-thought. no
malice, in what I sa1d to hun . I th ought It was pretly funny The
press t.hought it was ftnmy . tun But 1t la1d an egg "
Now that he has Matthews, Turner is saddled with his $2 ~
millmn multiple-year contract. Sumla rly, he's committed to
paymg Messersrmth another $333,333 on the third year nf his
contract next season althuugh there's a questiOn whether the
32-year.o•ld n ghl-hander ca n even pitch agam Fnming off an
arm nperation Mort:!over. Mont.:tnez gets $330,000 a year and
Burroughs is looking t0 t enegnuatc his $175 ,000 co ntract
Turner appa1 ently IS Jnok1ng lo unload either Matthews or
Mnnt..anez, maybe even bnth If he can, but he doesn't say tou
much &lt;1bf•ut that
D&lt;ckcd nut tn a peppernunt colored sport shirt, wl11te sla cks
and white sh&lt;oes. the man who successfully defended the
America's Cup for the Umted Swtes by capta10ing the Coura geous. slays prett) much m the background at these me etings
and loo ks as if he's about to go out nn ~orne yacht mstead of mto
a meeting
He has h1mse:lf a new manager m 8(lbby Cox, and he like s
!11m H1s team Jnsl96 ga mes last )ear a nd IOl.this year, but he
Insist s he isn 't disenchanted nor will he qUit
" I started out fl ghtmg for a pennant and I now find myself
ftghting for sun.wal, " he says "We're gmng to have to gnt our
teeti1 and play out of1t 1f we can If we can 'l, we 'll be relegated
to the ranks of the losers , there to stay , until we play out our
· opt1on on this earth and s1gn wllh the big franchiSe m the sky ' ·
• He lhinks over what he has JUst smd and laughs.
• "You know." he says. "When 1 first bought the team, I d1dn 't
know whal a balk was . Still don't. I know 11 has something to do
with when Ule guy moves around.''

~ Warren Wes t ern
Champ1on 54
• Warrens v 1lle 66

ONLY
Six Million
DollarMan

Blazers make it eight in
row for new club record

? --

CHESTER L TANNEHIU.

up' the problem w1!h your doctor. He should be able to talk
(o your husband's doctor and
get some straight answers
with numbers attached to
them. He may suggest that
your husband have additiOnal
tests done, or perhaps checked by another doctor.
When a man has a low
sperm count, there are things
that can be done . There have
even been studies that show
the sperm count can be
boo.&gt;ted by the male taking
the same fertility pills women
need to take when they don't
ovulate Both, the ovaries and
the testicles are stimulated
by hormones from the
pitUitary gland under the
brain.
Some men improve by givlllg them thyrmd hormone, or
improving th ei.- genera l
health Your doctor may
want both of you to go to a ferllhty clime.
The chances of pregnancy
can sometunes be unproved Parents advised of service
by having sex every third
rught. That ensures the best
chance of a larger sperm D&lt;ar Sir .
I feel t.hat there is a serVIce available through the Me1gs
count, and eventually the
third night and ovulatiOn oc- County Health Department t.hat more parents need to knQw
about Th1s past summer there were numerous children who
cur at the same t1me .
From the rest of your let- became VIctims of ammal bites Many of these children have
ter, I apprectate that your scars as the results of the dog or cat bites and some of t.hem are
husband is sensi!lve about on the face and very noticeable.
this. Many men are. There is , These children who have facial (on the face) scars can have
nothing to be ashamed about, emotwnal problems as the result of the disfigurement . Many of
and even if he were not pro- these scars can be rev1sed sn that t.hey are less noticeable and
ducing sperm at all, that less of an embarrassment to the child, girls particularly.
would not mean that he is less These children can be seen by a plastiC surgeon at a free·
cliniC sponsored by the Bureau of Crippled Children's
mascu line.
Services, Ohio D&lt;partment of Health.
The .Plashc surgeon would look at the scar and tell you, the
parent, 1f the scar can be unproved. F10ancial assistance 1 ~
ava ilable to those who can not afford to have any
ONE TRIAL
CINCINNATI (UP!) - AI· recommended scar revisiOns . The clinic is for children under
th ough all 16 remaining the age of 21.
Other chi ldren with scars due to accidents burns cleft
defenda nts indicted in
connection w1th an alleged ,l&gt;alate ~nd chit lip scars can also be seen at Uns cli~ 1 c for
drug and Stolen property ring evaluation .
For more information call me at the Meigs County Health
were scheduled to go on trial
Department, phone 992-3723. - Opal M. Grueser, R N., Meigs
Monday, only one case was
brought before U.S District County Crippled Children's Nurse, Meigs County Health Dept
110 Mechanic St., Pomeroy.
'
Court Judge Timothy Hogan.

•

W&gt;-ib.TS A

mnttbu lor to the Ptwtlaml
By IRA KAUt'MAN
layup ell' ill , as he dished out 10
UPI Sports Writer
With 19 of 51 field goals . assists
" A."i f nr under the baskets
cc•m tn g on lay ups, the
Portla nd Trailblazers rolled sh11t.s, that's our ufferL'ie ,"
~· an easy 116-94 Na twrla l smd WuJtcl n, who has been lht'
Ba s ketbHl l Ass nl' iilti on Impetus belnnd the '11 a1l
victory over the Cleveland Bla1ers' siz1.l ing 18-:1 record .
Bub Grnss scored mne qf
Cav ali er s Tu esda y mght ,
Ius
gmnc-hig h 27 puin ts in a
setting a club record With
first quarter, wh wh fea tu n &gt;d
.
c1ghl strw ght Willi .
Cenler Bill Walton, who seven Portla nd Jay u1&gt;&lt; that
scored 22 p011nts and grabbed shol the de fe nd ing N BA
10 rebounds, was the main ('hamps mlu ill 36-26 lead

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor

Only 21 more days to Christmas

HEALTH

~~

MEtG~tASONAKF.A

f or

hardship cases." Said R)'an .
Th e St ate eneregy Chief
srud he hoped far
an ea rly end
J
to the s trtke a nd qutck
reswnptmn of coal dehvenes .
·we will be j'udicious in our

~IJ~AT

by lour and Pastoral

North 65

(9531

•••

I 3" f•gure w/B•on •c Gn
Wears red NASA -sty le soi l,

'
••

•"

Rsv

72

Young s

Revised schedule
of athletics set
EAST MEIGS - The
rev1sed ba sketball schedule
[or 1977-78 due t o early
closing of school for Jack of
money :
Dec. 7, Symmes Vall ey
iGlrls J, Away 5:30 p.m.
Jan 3, Wahama (Boys),
Home.
Jan 5, Wahama (Junior
H1gh \. Away, 5 p.m
Jan 5, Southern (Girls I,
Away
.Jan 6, Southern tBoys J,
Hom e

Jan 27, Wahama (Boys ),
Away
.
Jan . 9, Ky ger Creek
rJ umor H1ghJ, Away.
Jan 9, Symmes Va lley
rGlrls ), Home
Jan 10, Waterford !Boys) ,
Away
Jan 12, Federal Hockmg
(Junior High 1, Home.
Jan . 12 , North Galila
JGlrls ), Away
Jan . 13. North Galila
!Boys), Home
Jan . 14, Synm&gt;es , Valley
(Boys ), Away
Jan. 17, Belpre (Jumor
High ), Away , 4:30pm .
Jan . 19. Southern (Jumor
High l, Away, 5 p.m
Jan . 19, Kyger Cr eek
(Glrls), Away

Jan 20 , Ky ger Creek
IBoys ), Home .
. Jan. 21, Federal Hockmg
(Boys\, Away
' Jan 23 , Kyger Cre ek
(Junior H1gh ), Home.
Jan. 23, Hannan Trace
(Girls), Home.
Jan . 24, Hannan Trace
!Boys), Away .
Jan. 25, Southern (Junior
High), Home, 5 p.m.
Jan . 26, Southwestern
(Girls I, Away .
Jan 27, Southwestern
(Boys), Home.
Jan. 30, Hannan Trace

West Branch 59 Unlfed Locpl
Westlake 81 Strongsville 77

Youngs Wilson 48 Girard 38

OFFERS

PART$PLU$·

YOUA

E

•

~·

•

••
•

•12.95

•

•

sggg
•
Ace
Wagon

( 95 \ Toy
Guitar

Steel construct1on, rubt&gt;ell
tires . Red ename led f 1ntsh .
Stmuloted wood ftmsh
nylon stnngs, plast1c pegs

Pluicer Brothers
l~llo~1opoly Game ( 95~21

••
•

•

•
•

FREE
500 ')
( 95557

Many differenl themes Ma
ther Goose, Thumpelmo, elc

THRU 12110177
U XOVII!T CO.. "'

Hardware
Delivery Van

( 3704 ) ICuddle
95083

653 )
( 95415

All steel. Rear doo&lt; opens IO II ~.Io ush20" •nchbeor PerI delmled •ntenor ·It W'
for coy ch1ld to cudd le

'

----------------

MEIGS PLAZA
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
•

knll1 Hill I uUI!ty CliP lncl

....,
1

sktnn~ng

blede. Bc lh

m1d1 ol hlth·urbo!1 loot

LENGTH CLOSED 3 718 '

YOUR'S

WHEN YOU PURCHASE ANY DELCO "FREEDOM"

OFFER

OFFER
BEGINS
NOV. 21st
1977 ·.

+

'ill

••

[ji

\__....i

•••

Assorted
Coloring Boo~s

HUNTER 5 &amp; TAAPPFR 'S

Fret·free.

Tinkertoy
Jr. Architect Set ( 9~~~4)

World's most popular gameo!J Al l wood conslru cl •on Fun ,
for all, qge Sto odull
educahona l. W /d .reclions

®

~'f~
Cllllcliell1 WITH
UNCONDITIONAL
WRITTEN GUARANTEE
AGAINST LOSS FOR
ONE FULL YEAR
RIIAIL ltRICI

ENDS
DEC. 21 sl
1977

we have some peace of mind lor you. It's The Delco Freedom Battaryloaded with cranking power. And that power's sealed In so you never
have to add water. Freedom ' s designed so that you shouldn't have to
check or sen ice it. Get Freadom on
side. You ' ll be
did.
You'll Find This Special Va Iue

AftA.•r the Cavs ralhed in the
quarte r. the Trml
lllai'ers htl 15 of 20 from the
f1eh.l m lht~ thtrd pcrt od tn
blvw the g ;~n1 e op••n
"Waltun JU St kills you witt1
~t::oud

apaece tu p0::1 ce Cle veland~

playmg w1t1wut Walt frazi er
and Fuuts W(Jlker . who were
s 1tlm~ fi Ul
with ankle
mjun es

Elsewhere in the NBA, New
York defeated BoSton, 122aduun ng Cavalier Cnach Bill 119, in overti me, Buffa l0
Fttrh ·'lhs tca111matel) JUSt topped New -Orleans, 113-90,
Ch t c a g o
whtpp ed
t'Wl an•un d hke (in end 1n
football Th ey tm n at 11WlCJ Wa shington. 116-108, Phoenix
beat Kansas C1ty , 103-92.
omd the b,t!I ts n ght there
Aust m Ca r l- and Jtm Golden State mppcd Houston ,
Chonc* senr cd 18 pni nts 10~ - 1 05 , a nd Los Anue les
thi iSC

pt! SSC S, "

saHJ

&lt;HI

Vikm
• s
g overcome Eagles 65-51

52

R e~ul t s

College Bas lc t'fbalt

By Un tie d P ress ln l £'rna l tona l

~ .• •.,•"u•' l&lt;uto Pa&lt;IS Slo&lt;es.
At Th ese ..

iJumor H1gh l. !lome, 5 15
pm
Jan 30, Hannan Trace
(Girls ), Awa y
Jan . 31 , So ulhern iBoysJ ,
Away

Feb. 1, Wahama 1J umor
H1gh ), Home , 5 30 p.m.
Feb. 2, Federal Hockmg
!Junior H1gh), Awa y, 5 p.m .
Feb 3, Harlem All States,
Hum e.

F eb
4, Southwe stern
(Boys l, Away
Feb 7, Waterford !Boys \,
Home.
Feb. 8, Southern rGirls l,
Holl)e, 5!30 p m.
F eb 8, Hannan Trac e
(Jumor H1ghJ , Aw ay, 5·45
p.m
Feb. 10 , Ky ge r Cree k
IBoys I, A" ay .
Feb 14, Waterloo 1Jun10r
~h gh J, Home, 5 p m.
Feb 17, Hannan Trace
iBoys J, Home.
Feb 20, Gallia Academy
!Girls\ , Home
Feb. 20 -25, Secti onal
IBoys )
March 1-4, Sectional
(G1rlsl.
March 1-4, D1stnct !Boys 1.
Ma rch 6-1 1, Di strict
(Girls )
•
March

6-11 .

Regi ona 1

!Boys ).
March 13-18, State !Boys \
March 13-18 , Reg10 nal '
1 Glrls j.March 20-25, State (Girls) .

By Greg Bailey
E AST ME IGS - Th e
Eastern Eagles had another
gu od shot Tuesda y a t
breakmg their losmg streak
but a hul second periOd sent
the VISiting Symmes Va lley
V1kmgs home w1th a 65-51
win
In that secund canto the
VISitors scored 22 pmnts to
!!:astern 's 10 lu overtake the
Eagles who had led 12-8 at the
end of the first pen od.
The V1k10gs got the lead at
2 40 on the clock m ihe second
qu arter wh en Brett M1ll er's
held gual ga ve the V1kmgs a
21-20 advantage. By the ha lfway mark the VJ~it ors were
up 30-22, and the closest the
Eagles cam e from thal point
\\ as minus 9 m the thitd and
last periods
The V1kmgs ' b1 g Ralph
Ingels poured m 26 pomts,
most of them In the second
half M1ller also h1t double
figures 1n the foul-mfested
contest Wllh 16 The vas1tors
canned JUSt 7 o[ 13 fr ee
throws
The V1kmgs managed to
dominate the boards with
the1r supenor height , but
Eastern wa s hotter at the foul
line, s1nkmg It of 16 attempts
The Eagles' floor shootmg
percentage was just about as
cold as the weathet was
outs1de as the hosts hit on 20
of 60 attempts.
Rusty W1gal had a fme
mght for the Eagles as he
netted a nne 19 points to go
w1th h1s team~leadmg
11 rebounds ·The team had a

a\on~

tot al of 31 carom s With Dave
Brown and Br1an Bissell
gett111g 10 m1 ssed shots
ap1ece. Brown a lso hit double
figures In the scorebook w1th

Modell concerned
with 1977 finish
CLEVELAND· t UPI ) Owner Art Modell of the
Cleve la nd Browns was
noncommital when asked
about Forrest Gregg 's status
as head coach - even though
the NFL Hall of Fame
enshrmee has a year to go on
his current contract.
" I'm not gomg to consider
next year unt1l the end of this
year," Modell sa1d tersely
Tuesday "I'm not gomg to
say anything from wh1ch
people can infer or 1mply ,
thal can be misconstrued or
be overreacted lo.
"All I am concerned with is
how we can fimsh 8-6. We
have a great group of football
players wh o are proud
enough to do it, and I expect
them lo finish the season m a
,professional style."
The Browns, now 6-6, can
a1m for Modell's expectations
begmning Sunday, when the
club hosts the Houston 01lers
in Cleveland's [mal home
game of the sea so n at
MuniCipal Stadium. It 's an
AFC Central Division battle
that w1ll not be telev1sed
locally.
Cleveland does have some
players whose status for the
Houston game remams questionable . Defensive ta c kl e
Doug D1eken has a suspected
bone spur, defensive end
Mack Mitchell a lso IS hurting
and m1ddle linebacker D1ck

h1 s 16 wh1le Da nny Spencer
sank 12 pomts. W1 gal got 15 of
h\s 1n the last ha lf
Th e rese r ve
cont est
belonged to lh e visitors, 45-25.
Benny Taylor Jed the wmners
v.1th 14 while the tea m sank 7
of 11 f1 ee throws.
Br elt Matthew s cann ed
nine markers to lead hiS t eam
as th e Eagleltes sank onl y 9
of 21 from the fo ul line
Ell stern ts · now 0-3. The
Eagles next contest isn't until
January 3 when they host
Wa hama Eastern is closing
tts doors Uus week , a nd a
revised schedule of the rest o[
theu basketball games (g irls,
boys, and jumor h1gh) appears elsewhere on this pa ge

EOJst

[}c,n St 96 T,,o•. 91
H"in Colt TV

edged Milwaukee. 109-108
Kniek.&lt; 122, Celtics 119:
Butch Becu d's tutnat &lt;•Wld
Jumper put the Knid&lt;s ahead
wtth 1.49 left m (•vcrtlme and
Ear l Mo nrfl~ scnrcd seven
pomts tn tlw added sessaon to
.srtap t he Kmcks' three-g ame
losing streak . Bob McAdoo
paced New York w1lh 40
pmnt s while J o Jo White led
Boston w1th 27.
llraws ll3,, J azz 90:
Bill y Kmgh t sco red 32
points a nd Randy Sm1th
added 24 a s the Braves
dom matcd the J azz Forward
Mar vtn
Barnes
was
suspended by Buffalo after he
fa tled to shn w up fnr the
game .
!lulls 116, Bulle Is 108 ·
Mickey J11hn.':ion scot ed 21
nf his gamc41Jgh 27 prHnts 10
Uw secu nd half tu help snap
rhe
Bullets' fi ve -g am e
wmmng streak It wa s the
Bulls' third st ra ight wm
Suns 103, Kmgs 92:
Rnokte Walte r Davts
scored 29 pmnts and Alvan
Adams Hdded 28 to end the
Suns' t h r eegam t:! los mg
slreak. . Scott Wcc~na n tnppc&gt;d
Kansas City w1th 22 pnmts .
WarriMs 107, Rti Ckets 105:

Sports transactions
lnternatton;~l

Tuesday
Baseball
Tor onto ~
Tr ad ed r 1gh t
han ded pitc her Pete Vuc k OV ICh
ro St LOUI S for left handed
p1 t che r Tom Und er wood an d
m mor league p1f ch er V1 ctor

Cruz .

New Yor k Met s -

Ac qu~r ed

l ett handed p1 t c her Ke\/ln Kob el

tram Spo k ~n e
to T 1dewater

~nd

as'S 1gn ed

h~m

Hockey

New Yor k Rang er s -- R 1ght

wmg Rod Gil ber t announced h1 S
ret,remen t.
saY1ng
he
will
accept a pos1 110n w dh Ma dtson
Squar e Garden , call ed up n g ht
w mg J err y Byer s fr om New

Hav en
Soccer

Detr OII I NAS L ) S1 gned
K en Furphy ro a rwo year
contr act as hea d r oi'l ch and
d1re c.t or of plaver p er sonn el

'

North
w I I pis. gf ga
Flont
14 6 1 29 104 96
Port Huron 10 7 5 25 79 67
Sagi naw

9 10 4 22

Muskegon

7 15 2 16 76 99

Kalamazoo

3 13 5 11

61

Se ton Hall 88 C.Jit't' 73
Srenna 75, 1\m In ti 6..1
So r •nQ tld 78, B &lt;~b&lt;:; Orl 69

Bonny 6L Cornet! 51

~~

s t John o; 73. Armv 60
St Jos P il 91 R tdc r BJ
Vill anov a 61 Rttlqf'r"i 'i.t
Wa!&gt;h&amp; Jeff 66 , W'5 1mnstr 64
West l! d St 65 , Silhn ')I 59
South

AU'&gt;StC' Olymp 71. G Ma sn 69

Avcr('l1 61 va Wrstey~;~n 56
Cf'n t W&lt;; ty n. 79. Lmstn~ 77
Hmpdn ~ydny Y6 , Lt b B a pt 80
Jac ksn 111 89 , Vlds t a Sl 13
Nr llok St 63 . BOoN IC St 17

N C A&amp; T 89, W CM 66
S W L a 105. Fl a So R~
S C Sl 108 , Ch r lstn 97
Tenn 92. E Montana u,
w Va S l 77 , Cnc r d 68
M 1dwe st

Cen t 77 , G r nnl t 56
Coe 78, wa rtbur g M
HI 96 , MISSOU r i 85
Ill Coli 80 . Knox 78
111 Wslyn 81 , Whcatn 69
Rck t rd Il l 79, ObQ Ut' 55
w m Penn Bl. Neb Wslyn 65
SouthWt'S f

Anglo 51 76, Tr 11 n 51 55
Ba yl or 75. Okl a hom~ 69
L el rneau 80, A st n Colt 7,1
N W Okl a 75, J Br own 1t.
S W Tcx 64 , 5 1 Mry':. 03
l r x A&amp; I 101. Tr in !ly 75
Tc x A&amp; M 9S, S Hous S t 73
U TE P 63 , N ew M r:x 51 60
T e}( Sl hrn 68 , S F A&lt;;tn 67
W est

Ca r roll 87 ,

w

Mo n t 85

Cent w ash 7? , Wntwrth Q6
(o to 75. San Jose St 6:'
SeCIIIIC' 55. Wo21"&gt;h St 'i-1

Tu es da y ' s

Oh1o College
Basketba ll Results
Umted Press (nt e rn at•on.al
C•nc mna l i 61 M lttml 60
M uskmg um 75 He idelber g 70
O ll erbe 1o BO R1 o Grande 60
Oh1 o W es l eyan 82 Oh10
Dommt can 56
Mount Un1 on 90 Htram 53
W oost er 9 4 D yke 73
Mt. V ern o n N alar e ne 89
Bl uf ft on 87 (ot)
John Carroll 71 Walsh 6'1

F1shing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
Guns and
Reloading
Ball Gloves
Camping
EqUipment
Archery
Indoor Games
We

Gill

ha\l e

Cerlilicales

.I

NOW OPEN

601Ma inSt .
Pt . Pleasant, W.Va .
I

VISA '
Across from Courthouse

.OF MASON

PHONE
675-2988

97 84

73 94

9~

H awthor ne YO N "'W Enq 13
Harltord 77 Sulfot io. 7?
MiiS.'i n Bo'iton U 61
N taqar_, 77, Hot st rn M
Pr ov CQII 79 r~c:,smrt on 70
Quecn5 NY 90, flrtt!l 17

GINO'S

ln1ernational
Hockey League
United Press lnterpational

( ;m•&lt;;&gt;lll~

DQU(&gt;!&gt;n£1 81

Ph1l Smith a nd R1ck Barry
combined for 56 pm nts tu help
Golden Slate im pn &gt;ve therr
horne r~curd to 10-1 w1th lhen·
t.h1rd stra ight victory. Sm1th
scored four of ht s gm ne-lugh
By Quarters
30 poi nts m the d os ing
SV
8 JO 51 65 moments to rum a Rockets
12 22 42 51
E
EASTERN - Jeff Goeb el 0 comeback
2-2, Dan Spen cer 6-0 12, Brtan Lakcrs 109, Bucks 108:
Bi ssell l 0-2, Da ve Brown 6-4
Lou Hudson's short JU mp
i6, Rusty W1gal 7-5 19 Total s, shut w1th th1ee seco nds Je[l
20 11,51.
SYMMES VALL EY - Ed gave the Lakc rs a thnlling
VICtory aft er the Bucks had
Dav1 s 4-0 a, Ralph Ingels 12 2
26, Ted Payne 2-3-7, Robtn outscored Los Angeles, 17-5,
Ela ck 3-0·6, Brett Miller 7 2 m a fu no us la te ra ll y
16 , Tey Wi se ma n 1 0 2.
~r e cm Abdul-J ,lbhal Jed the
Totals , 29 -7-65
Laker s w1th 26 pomts
•

By Untted Press

F lllrtld 16

Bt to &lt;.,t ~y Gnt'"&gt;f'O S l ~3
(rnt Con r\ 110 KN'n(' St
user. 61 wcc.tcy~h s~
Cor&gt;n 81, Nrw Hitmp 68
Orc)(t!\ 78 LIU l6

PHONE 773-5536

Open Sunday 1- p .m . 6 p.m .
Monday thru Saturday
9a . m to8 p.m

South
w I I pis. gf ga ...__ _ ___, ......................... !.
10 6 7 27 82 78
Ft Wayne
Toledo
10 7 6 26 88 76
Dayton
10 10 3 23 72 82
Milw
7 6 7 21 62 59

Ambrose ha ;, d ~c v e re
shoulder bruise.
Greg g said rookie Bob
l.ingeruelter will start aga m
Tuesday's Result
m place of r~ght tackle Barry
Sagi na w 3, Mtlwaukee 1
Darrow, who has a lmee
Wednesday's Games
"The Guys With The Buys"
mjury "but he would never Sag 1naw at Mtlwaukee
say anythmg - he's that type Muskegon al Fort Way ne
Geared To Save You Plenty
Thursday's Games
o[ k1d "
No games schedu led
Gregg has made it clear he
V1and Street
675-3375
wants h1s team ready for 1ts
Pt.
Pleasant.
W
.
Va
.
last two games with Houston
and at Seattle, and wants to
Tuesday ' s
Centra I Collegtate
wm them - not look at new
Hockey Assn. Resu It
people.
United Press ln1ernat1onal
~~ we
will
not make Bowling Green 6 Western
changes," Gregg said. "We Mich 4
do not mtend to cxperiment. 1'
" We a re gomg to do
evcrythmg in our power to
gel t.h1s team ready to play .
We will prepare the111
mentally and ph)sically and
we will appea l to the1r pnde
and character. We have some
guys who will battle you until
there 1s nothing left. Every
man that holds down a
posation should have some
prtde. He should wanl to wm
for that rea son if for nothin g
else
Also, he said , all plays Will
be ca lled by the coaches,
even when expenenced Brian
'
S1pe returns at quarterback.
With Any New or Used Car Purchased From
"When we call the plays,
we find that 11 gJVes the
quarterback more time 10
Smith Nelson Mqtors During Th~ Month of.
concentrate on executton,"
the coach smd . "He won 't he
'
thmking about what to call
December
next."
I

Mason County Motor Co.

NOTICE

So COME ON IN &amp; BUY A NEW OR USED CAR
THIS MONTH AND LET US BUY YOU A TliRKEY
•

••

•

G &amp;J Auto Parts
144 West Se'c ond Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

G &amp; J Auto Parts
Route 33
Mason. West Virginia

•'

•
•..

FOR CHRISTMAS 'DINNER

•

Also Fmd Special Value at Participating Independent

'i,.: P~~t: Service

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO

500 E. MAl N ST.

•

•

I

..

�-·
$-The Daily Senlinel, Middleport·Pumeroy , 0 ., Wednesda y, Dec. 7 1977

•

Ott t'r b(• 1n han dl~tt
1\.w l:nmdt• t\11lrgt•

Host

ftdd g11ill. 26-~5 At tht•
hlullHH'. Ot!t.• ri)(•m hll :!8 or 4fl

llfl t'

\ 1~111ng
an 8(}..60 Sl'tb~lt'k at \\'estl'r ·
\ tlle Tut.. ~da~ m~ht
It \\3 ~ tht&gt; flr~i lllSS m ruur
s.ta ns (or l't•al'h
Art
Lanham's Ht•d nwn . Tht•

11w · Hedml·n ~u l 25 uf 65
flt~ld L;!ual Jltt•mpts fur 38
pt'ffl'llt and j{l or 15 fn•e
thrtnn~. h1r 56 pt•n·rnt . Rhl had

Card1nals picked up thm

~~

first &lt;.:A~e \'H'h ~r ~

m thrt't'

,,uungs .
The entlrr startln~ ft\'C ftlf
11 w Grande. plus a SIXth
playe r. foulrd out brforo thr
fmal ~un sounded.
The Cards outscor£'d Rio b~

MIDDLEPORT
THURSDAY
DEC. 8
SHOW TIME

7:00 P.M.
At

MEIGS J.R. HIGH
SCHOOL

.. ~ ·
~~1Ji~
~

. l't
-~

\ •~,-~
~·.

"}

.

'\

'

~

MAGIC
HOLIDAY
FANTASY
presented by
Middleport Vol.
Fire Department
Child

'1.75
1
2.25

C.: hi ld .

Ad v~ nc e

TICk e ts
Show Da y
Pnce

I

Adult

'1.75
'2.25
Adult

f~1r

t'l~ht

by G tl

hit 26 ~~ f 53 ftl•ld \.!ll &lt;tl :t tt l'lllPt~

.CIIUIU&lt;tl

\\aS tugh " 1th 17 pm_nts. Grc~
Jo:un£&gt;s added mne .
W1lhams paced the\\ inners
22 points .

'll1e Redmrn will take t1n
\\'llbr rfor ce University on
Sutu rday . It will bo Hio's

Long delays ~een
in buying Bo'sox
BOSTO:&gt;: 1UP I J - 1'11(' lu~h
btddrr f,lr the Bt1stnn Ht•d So\;

In ;1 i\rllte n .sta lt'!llL'Ill
f~ 1 1\ll\\ Ill!-! tht' loWt'l"-l'~1U r t

nught ha\'t.' trl wait as 11111~ a:;
18 nuHHhs fm ;,t ht:armg mt Its
nppeal to bltwk the salt• 11f thl'
d ub t tl a !{r oup hei.ldt•d by
Gt'r'lt.&gt;ral :\lanag~r Hayv• tlt'd
Sui I!\ ~Hl.
1...1\\~l' rs fr•r A-T..Q I nc .
ftlt'd the ap pt•,tl Tuesday
after Suff olk C'tlW\ ty Prob&lt;llC'
f&lt;'urt J udgt• Jt\S~ph P .

rul1ng. A-T-0 satd . ·· we
tx~ht&gt;n' that th('rE' are scno us
lt•gal

.....·•

OTTERBEIN

( 80 ) -

Miller

0 .a J ; Clay J l 7 · Wohlhele-r 1
01 Phil li ps 3 4 10 : Benson 3
1 8•
Williams
6 10 21 .
Farhrbn ch 101 . Biff le 1 02 ;
a roug h 8 7 73 TOTALS 26 -28 80 .

Ot ter bein 47,

Ha lft ime
Rio 29 .

llyGENI::t:Ailllt:S
IJPI Sports Writrr
t'OI.UMB US iU PI J - Arl
Sl.: hlil' htc-r. th~ dt't i'll at t'f' ,,f
Mtullll T r~u·c's r xpl41Sive
ll'&lt;Hkr nf Ci nd mw ti Moeller 's
awl'SHill l' dl'fl•nse , heHd up
tht• 19i7 Umled Press Cla ss

AAA

aliOhil~

•
routme

•

IS

.

that wa rranl
re\"it&gt; w nf thi:s dreisitlll by an
:\ppellatt&gt; C~~urt, and we dn S0
in the interest of the baseba ll
t'omrnu ititr as wr ll as our

an.DOUD.Ced
NEW YOHK 1UPil - The

•

nam('S nf top vutL• getters · in

f&lt;1ot bo.lll team .

,•""(_···ilil.l'ilt"l',
... ,·1 "
u--.,'', I''••&lt;
oo ~-' •UJI&lt;I
quart erbal'k. whu was voted
b.c:ll"k of the

Heisman

Bnb Cra hle,

Htt;ll' k , :md

)'~Cll" ,

led l\:1iami

Tral't' tn a. 294-1 rel'nrd in

ill'&lt;' 6-6, 24S·p, untl Milr k
W&lt;lrth 1•f Z..tnes\'lllc and 6f&gt;&lt;• t , 200-J&gt;•und Dr,•w Squire•
~ ·f Mansfield Madison Hnd tlw
n'nt c r J(•(f 1-\• Itun, 1)...3, 215. pf
Cl•ntervi.llt"' .
J ni ning Sc:h lic:hte'r in ti l('
batkficld are rwlll ing ba C'ks
Tim O'Cain of Gatwnn.a Lin ·
(•nl n. Hick Asberry of Ccml un
'1
" c K'm Iey &lt;HKI 'I
'" arn I&lt;1 ll rHwn
Hf Kelll R r ~ lSe \·elt ,
O'Cai n, 5·9 ~llld 172 po unds,
rushL"(l fnr

t. :t62 y~1 rrl'&gt;

m

thrt'e yt•ars as the Panthe r s' Ga hanna's
8· 1 seasnn,
st&lt;trling quarterlxtek and a av('rag in~ rwarly etght ya rds
10-() m &lt;.~ rk this SI.'&lt;JSiln .
per l'arry.
" Ert• rything is in super Ia Asb\'rry. f)..fu 1t, 195 J)l lUl d S,
th·es wh{' n }'I'U talk c\U.1ut · was U1e top rusher in a

lti nJ," Trace Cnae h Fred
Zf.'c·hmnn said in describing
his star signal caller , ·•from
cha racter tn hard work ri~ht
1111 dnWJ1' the line ~ He has
tremendous atl1letic ability
and he wt1rks his tail c1ff . He

talented MeKinlev backfieltl,
ga inin g 1,006 )·a rcl s a nd
scoring H w uc hdowns fcw
Coa c h John Brid eweser 's
Bulldogs.
Bt·own, a 6~3 . 195-pounder
earned a fi rst team berth
despite bein g ser iou s ly

six l'.ategnries of CJwanls to be .doesn't l.niud Wnrkmg U1reto
presented by the OowntllWn or f1•ur h11urs a da y., se\'en injured in his t~ a m' s scvl'nth
Warnl'r dismissNi the sw t
Athle tir Club in conjWlction da)'S a week perfec'tiflg it. " game n[ the seas1m.
S c h 1 i C' h t f.' r . b e in g
Brown, who sufferN! a
wit h Thurs day's Heis ma n
fi led "''"· I. .~·T·O hil d
personally
r
e-cruite
d
by
such
bn1ken
neck in a game
offer eO $18. i5 m!lllnn f t~ r Lh()
Tr ophy
dinner
were
name
coll
ege
coa
ches
as
against
N(lrdnnia,
gained 975
r-lub ~d1 il e the Sull!\·an gr•'UP the !-:.U lt . the Oh io firni. said
announced Tuesday .
Woody
Hayes
of
Ohio
State,
yards
in
the
six
plus
games
the ::;a le tn Heel Sox
bid $15 milium
The H£'isman winner will
of his played, averaging 8.4
Sche mbec hle r
Am r rican l..ea ~ ut• li Will 'rS A.s&amp;,cJates was not ··to the
be &lt;•ne of the 17 players Bo
wen ' tu ta kt.&gt; up the nwtter of bes t adnwtage" of the
na med. thre e from each Michigan, Joe Paterno 0f yards per carry, and sc(1red
Y.awke\· estate.
the Red SPx sa le Thurstl&lt;H
categMy . and will be made Penn Sta te a nd J ohnny 12 touchdowns .
of
TPnrte ss e~.
Despite the injury, which
The executnrs of the esta te, public on national television Maj nr s
durin g winter meet tn gs til
Hm olul u. T he sale can 't gt' a tlm.:~c-member group that
1CBS l 10 p.m . EST Thursday accnunted fnr 34 loul'hdowns will keep him out or football
thrPugh unl"Pss 10 { I f the ntlwr ind udes ·Mr s. Yawkey , said
night . Ken MacAfee of N0tre the pi:lst seaso n, throwin ~ 21 fnr at least a \'ea r, Brown is
the
intt•rn
of
Yawkey's
will
is
13 AI , nwnc rs appr vv~ the
Dame is in the runnin g for sc.:.·ori_n ~ passes and l"ushing , still being hew:•y recruited by
major cnllege cnHchcs ,
tht•
clu
b
be
S{lld
to
the
group
·
trarisft&gt;r t)f owner sh ip lrntn
tw o awards , ofre ns iVe f1w 1~ 11 H1re .
He
hit
nh
108
(If
190
pass
'· I dnn'l think U1ere's a
be
st
able
to
run
the
team
.
the estate nf Tht•mas A.
lineman and offen,sive end'.
attempts
{
J7
perre
rit
)
fn
r
better
nne anywhere ," sa id
Her husband 's will rrads in
YawkeY to the Bostt"•!l Hed
Named a lphabetically . bul
1,794yard
s
and
rushed
f(lr
539
Ronse,;l'Jt
Coal'h
J nhn
S.•x AsStlCta tes - headed bv part: ''lt is my desi re thaJ
nnt necessarily in order
in 74 carries.
Nemer.
Sull t\·an
a nd
Ed wa rCt these inYeS tm e-nts and are :
"He 's the reason we were
Ben Lee , anllther Canton
·Buddy"
LPHnux
and in te rt&gt;s ts pf mine 1whi ch
Offensive lineman ~ Mark
indudmg Jean R . Yawkt'Y. ind ude tlw base ball team ) be
Dt1nahue , Mi chigan ; Ke n so expJ(Isire. '' said Zectunan. McKinley produ ct. teams
liqui d at ed to the best
w1dn w nf tlle late nwne r.
Mac Alee, Notre Dame: Chris whose Pantherspui 600 points with Upper Arlingt on's Bill
nn the scoreboard in 10 Wilson as the ends on the first
~dvantage that my executors
A br1cklog pf caSL'S i n !he
Ward, Ohio State.
M cls~m·h u se lt S
Court nf sha ll not be required to deal
Running back - Charles games. ··Without a dnubt, defensin w1it .
The tackles are 6-3 , 225·
Appeals cnu ld cause the lnng precipitately with the same."
Alexancler.LSU : Earl Camp· he 's a game breaker."
Crable,
a
6-3,
21&gt;-pound
pound
Frank Kolencik nf
Warner
ruled
A·T
.()did
not
de ILly. ~a iel Ia wyers fn r A·T·
bell, Texas: Terry Miller,
linebacker,
the
linema
n
of
the
l.akewr(ld
Sl. Edwa rd and 6·
e
a
contract
,.,·ith
the
h,:n·
0. I ric .. a \\'illnughby, Ohin.
Okl a h ~ma State.
year
WCl S th e hea'ft nf .H
3,
260-pound
Ed Cha\•ez of
c:nngh1me rate th at (lW!\S Yawkey estate solely be cause
Offen ss ve end - Wes
H awlin~£ Spp rtin~ 'Gnr ,ds.
it was 11 ig h bidder . There f0re , Cha nd ler, Fl orida; Ken Mnliler de fense which Lor ain Sr. , while tnugh little
the s uit did '· not ha \'e
Ma cAfee, Notre Dame; allnwed nnly 22 txJin ts in its 10 Mark Sullivon nf Mentnr
. ~' Lake C.ath0lic is t he midcUe
Sta ndi ng with the rr urt ." he
Olzie, Newsome, Alabam3 . regular seaspq games .
" That N11. 40 (Crable ) re· ·guard.
SCiid .
DefenSive lineman - Ross
J n inin~
C r ~ b le
at
Brnwner, Not r e Dmne ; Brad minds lne of a big tree
are
Ak r on
Shea rer , Texas; Art Still , standing out there,' ' is the lin e backer
Tuesday's
wa y nne op posing c oach Springfield'::; Bob Crites and
Kentucky.
Ohio High School
described him.
Wafik EISanadi of Cle1•eland
Linebac
ker
Tom
Cousi·. Basketba II Resu Its
Split
en'd
Bill
Hanners,
St.
Joseph, while Ted Hall of
nea
u,
Ohi
o
Stato;
Jerry
United Press International
and
Ak ro n Hoban 77 Akron
Robinson , . UCLA ; Gary Schlichter 's fa\'orite passing Gahanna .Li ncoln
Kenmore 67
target with SQ receptions and Centenille's Bill Price join
Spani. Kansas Stale.
Ba y 65 Oberli n 55
Defensive back - Luther 12 touchdowns nn the year, L" ng in the secondary .
Bea llsvil le 81 Woodsfield 63
his battery mate on the .
Bradley , Nf"1t r e Dame; Zac jnined
Br ookfield 6\ Liberty 49
.
k
COLUMB US ( U PI) - The

NO.2 PRE.CUT STUDS

A-T-O lll' iginally · fi!NI s uit
in Suffolk )Co tmty Prubate
('nurt , SL'l'kmg to rest rain the
l'Xl'l'UtHr s· fn1111 se lling the
d u b tn Su lli \·an 'S group. In

Brook lyn 66 Cle Holy Name 53
Buckeye Tra il 69 Sky vue 49
Bu ckeye NOrth 82 Stanton 49
Caldwell '77 Shenandoah 43
Centervi lle 8'6 West Carroll ton 40
Ch illicothe 58 Lancaster 53.
Cin Taft 53 Cin La Sa lle -49
Cin Elder 47 ( in Woodwarc:l44
Cin Savier 43 Cin Roger
Ba con -42
·
Cl e Kenned y 81 Cle East Tech
61

Cle West Tec h 96 Cle South 58
Cl e Ma x Hayes 74 Cl-e Rhodes

6()

Cle John Adams 102 Cle John
Hay 59
Cle East 81 Cle Collinwood 76
(of)

I
'r ,

. Cie John Marshall 66 Cle
Lincoln W 53
Cl e His Lutheran E 62 Rich mond His 59
Cl e Cent Cath 92. Rocky River
Lutheran W 81
Cal Mifflin 76 Col DeSa les 56
Cal Northland 84 Col Wat terson 45
Col Centennial 65 Zanesville
54
R os e c ra n s

He nder sn n, Oklahoma;
Dennis Thurman , Southern

California .

Cortland Lakeview 46 Newton
Falls 40
Crooksville 63 Morgan 49
Elyria Catholic 76 Clearview 61

Elyria West 74 Southview 69
Emmanuel (japtist 86 Erie
(Mich) Mason 53
Ke f Fairmont East 89 Day
Carroll 47
Fort Frye 57 Waterford 52
Gahanna 66 Upper Arlington
54

•

Georgetown 86 Lynchburg 73
Gilmour
Academy
70
Bratenah l 43
Green 67 Woodridge 60
Groveport 57 Frankli n· Hts 48
Hiland 65 Garaway 62
Hil liard 63 Grove City 62
Independence 61 Tr inity 54
Indian ValleyS 101 East f(nox

each

--

~

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN .
MATERIALS CO. '
773 -5554

MASON, W. VA.

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE

77~5536

f1rst team , ma ing Trace the . 1977 Un ited Press In only sc hool with two first ternationa l Class AAA' All .
team nffensive se lection s.
Ohio Footba ll Team :
Moeller, however, also had
First Team Offense
defensive back Bill Long
SE - Bill Hanners. Miarni '
Trace, 6-3, 178, Sr .
named to the first defensive
T.E Dean Masztak,
squad a nd added ce·nter Toledo Central Catho lic. 6,5,
Vince Sylvester to.the se'cond

Ja ckson Milton 52 Minera l
Mart ins Ferry 78 Buckeye
Sou th 76
Mathews 66 Maplewood 63
Me.adowbrook 79 Frontier 47
Meadowva le 93 Trotwood 65
Middl efield Cardina l 71
Berkshire 6e
MldC!Ietow n 62 Day StiversPatter son 51
Midl and 75 East Li verpool 53
Miner va 57 Lake 45
Newark 53 Mt Vernon 48
Newbu ry 63 Hawken 5G hool
4&lt;1
Nordonia 66 Bedford 56
North College · Hill 71 St
Bernard 52

North west 45 Fairless 39 12
Olf
Nor ton 74 Coventry 62
Pa inesv ille
Har vey
8d
Fai_rport 55
Parma 67 Pa rma Val ley
Forge 63
Reading 75 Finney town d6
Revere 68 High la nd 63
River View 70 New Concord J

31b.
•

Steve Reichenbach,
Findlay , 5 11. 170. Sr,.
RB
Tom Wea ve r :
Napoleon. 6 0. 100, Sr.
R8
Wil lis
Befl:
Gr6vepor t Madison. 5 9, 160,'
Sr .

R6
R~y
Anger stlen,
Akron Spr ing fiel d, 5"·11, 1751

Sr

,

Second Team Oefense
E Gene Perry , Ketter in'g
Fa ~r mont Wes t, 6·4, 192, Si~
E
~e f.l
BarTi e mav .·
Youn g stow·ii Ca rd i n.:).(
Mooney, 6-1, 212, Sr .
T Pe te Humphre., ,
Cincinna ti Moelle r , 6-1, 11 0,·

Sr .

Sr

T

T
Ed Ch avez , Lora in Sr ..
6 J. 160, Sr.

Joe Smllh, Colerain ,

TOMATO
SOUP

"

"

~~.: ·;~

..

-

·\- y

·- l -

Twin Pak

KEEBLER

PRINGLES

VANillA
WAFERS

senior

North Gallia (62)- Justice

IIJ&lt; ·

8-1-17 : Minnis 4-0 -8 ;

',,'·;.

(~

"-

.·t"'~~ ~

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

"

4f I
"

Featur tng top entertainment. dancing , o-t
~ noisemakers and more. Buffe t dinner and buftet ..,
::. breakfast. ,One tow pnce! SlS JM!r couple. Dress:;:
..- wi ll be fornial with reservations only which must ~
~ - be accompanied wtth paym ent . Hurry and make ~
~ your reservations now . Dcil dline 1s Wednesday, ~
-,_ December 21.
~

,

PT. PLEASANT INN
. Rl . 61 Nor th

"
'
:-

:~

"
1

"

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .
304-675 -62 76

~~

'

Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek Bobcats may
have lost the battle but they
won the war Tuesday night in
a "true grit" showing against
Coal Grove Hornets.
Coach Gary Salyers'
Homels won the ga me, 56-SQ,
bul the Bobcats did a lot of
" growing·up, " displaying an
almost unbelievable effort,
playing the fourth quarter
with just four players and
: finishing the game with
: lhree.
, The SVAC Bobrats have
: just six players on th'e varsity
• squad. Those si1 played their
: hearts ou! during the 48
: minute contest
, Kyger Creek. behind the
: ohool ing of sophomore guard
• Greg Smith, senior forwards
: George Willis and Fred
: Helms 'jumped into a 14-10
: lea d be.fore Coal Grove
• knotted the count at 14·14 at
: the end of the first period on
: two goals by Keith Brarruner.
: The Bobcats forged ahead
; in the second period on three
: goa.ls by junior guard Vo'n
, Taylor, two baskets and two
: free throws by Helms and two
goals by junior center Jon
Thom\&gt;son . The 16-polnt ef·
fort gave KC a 30-22 halftime
lead.
Howeve,, Coal Grove took
charge in the thfrd period
behind the shooting or center
.John Fields and subs Keith
Bare and Keith Markins .
::ISrger Creek's offense began
hitting midway through the
period. Helms was the first
Bobcat to leave as he
collected his fifth fouL
Thompson connected,..- for
six points, Smith and Taylor
had two each to cut the lead to

•
•••
•
••
••

NOW OPEN

favontes. Nearly an hour of
line stereo listening.

GINO'S

••

,•••.

STEREO

Ormandy bring you 16 holiday

OF MASON

••

-

Campbell 10-&lt;·14; Neal 2-0-4;
Beaver 3-0-6. Totals 28-13-69 .
Br Quarters : .

NG
HT

11 16 16 18-62
17 16- 69

10 16

PHONE 773-5536

With

7 : 43

IS oz.

Jar

$109

Thompson took game
scoring honors with 16 points

on lour baskels and eight foul
shot s. Smith a nd Helms
finished with nin e points
each. ·
According to the charts,
Coal Grove sa nk 24 of 75 field
attempts a nd eight of ia foul
shots.
Kyger Creek hit !5 of 69
from the Ooor and 20 of 30 at
the charity line. The Hornets
held a large rebounding edge.
In the preliminary contest,
the Little Hornets stung the
Bobkittens 74·20 .
Kyger ·Creek 0.1 wjll host
Southwestern Friday. ·
Box score :
Kyger Creek llOl _:__Tay-lor
&lt;·0-8; Smith 1·1·9: Willis 4-0·

2

Size

gg~

15·20·50.

WIENERS

69~

2 lb.

20 count

$1

'

SMOKED
PICNICS ••••••••••••••••L~

YELLOW
3 LB.
ONIONS •• ~ ••••••••••• ~c••
JOY
DETERGENT•••••••• }~.~~.

1·0-2; Vaughan 1-1-3; Bare 2.
0-4 and Mark ins ·2-0-4. Totals
24·8-56,

By Quarters :

14 16 10 JC)- 50
14 8 20 14- 56

·•Yards &amp; Ye~rds of New Garland.._
*Chrislmas Arrangements
&lt;live &amp; permanent)
* Door Wreaths
*Swags
*Candles &amp; Candle Rings
* Poinsettias
Polled Plants

*
*

LB.79¢·

can.

69¢

1

Terrarium~

LB.'139

••
•:•
:

Mrs. Millard VanMeter
106 Butternut Ave.
Phone 992-2039
992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
,.

................__ ......

:_

FLAVORITE

7

1(..

FLAVORITE

20

We accept all major credit cards and we
wire flowers everywhere.

2LB.

oz.

NU MAID

oz.

80Z. MUG

;~~ ~.M:~:R

••

COUPON

-.

...

COUPON

SUNSHINE

POMEROY FLOWER ·'sHOP

CHEESE'

99
$1
5/$1
FRIED CHICKEN ..,.......
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE ••
$1
BREAD•••••••• ~ •••••l~~ / . MARGARINE ••
BANQUET
.
'

MANY EXCELLENT GIFT ITEMS
LONGHORN

1

.•

3-9; Butler 2·D-4; Brammer 4-

.. ~!:..".
__,,_,-w-.

$}39

49

~~~~E FRYERS.......~.45 ¢
CHICKEN
89¢
BREASTS •••••••••••••·•• ;s.

2· 10 ; Vanderhoof 1·0-2; Webb

arrangements for the
home. Artificial potted plants and
baskets.

'

;~·.

'

Christma~

CHUCK
ROAST

••••

CUBE STEAK .........~;~

Coal Grove (Sil- Will is J.
2-8; Williams 5·0·10; Fields J-

POl NSETTIAS

39

u

••

BUCKET

--------------

54 oz.

JOBO
DOG FOOD

SLAB BACON •••

~

8; Helms 2·5·9·; Thompson 4-816 and Westfal l 0-0-0. Totals

CG

....

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
2lf2

SPARE Rl BS ••••••••• ~B~

rema inin g,

Taylor commilted his fifth
foul. At that point, Coach
Ca rter inserted hi s only
substitute sophomore John
Westfall .
Al that point, however, th e
game was far from over. The
Bobrals went into a diamond
defense forcing the Hornets
with five players on the fioor
into numerous mistakes.
Despite the loss of Helms
and Taylor , the Bobcats
roared back lying the score at
4H4 with 6:36 left in the
ga me when Thompson hit two
of his eight foul shots.
Coal Grove was able lo take
advanlage of !heir extra
man, scoring six: una nswered
points during the ne xt three
minutes to pull ahea(j lo stay '
With 2: 18 left Thompson
co nne cted on two more
charity losses lo put KC
within reach at 52-50.
However , thai ended the
Bobrat scoring.
Jeff Williams and Keilh
Branuner led the Hornets in
their first win of lhe sea5on
with 10 points each.

5

PORK

42-40 going into the final
stanza.

KC

SLICED
JOWL

ORANGE
JUICE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE TliRU DEC. 10, 1977

Co"!'as 5-0- IO ; Winston 6-0-12 ;
Sm1th 6-1- IJ ; Phillips 1-0-2
·
Tolals J0-2·61 .
Hannan Trace (69) _
Swain 5-8-18; Mooney 8-1-17 ;

WAGNER

Showboat or Van Camp

39~ PORK &amp;BEANS

"

- ~

$}29

12 oz.
pkg.

Mooney,

Box score :

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

Hornets defeat Bobcats

-

DELICACY

',

"

L.-

~,.
, 1'
~. '
. ' &gt;. &lt;·j;' (~

Sheridan 81 Philo 57
Sout h Range 74 Crestview 65
Southington 54 Bristol 36
Steubenv ill e
77 . New
Phi lade Iphia 65

5

Frank

gua rd , finished with 17 points.
Coach
Hon
Facing
Twyman's North Ga!lia
Pirates were seni or Rex

Sr.

(ot )

lb.

nigh!.
The win gave Hannan
Trace a 1·2 season record
while North Gallia dropped to
1-3. HT is 1.0 in loop play. NG
, is 1·1.
Senior David Swain led the
way with 18 points and 17
rebounds . However. he did
not take game scoring
honors. That went to teammate Dave Ca'inpbell who
dumped in 24 points.

Lonn 1e Meridleth ,
Toledo Wh itm er , 6-1, 196, Sr .
LB - . Cra ig Newb urg,
Ctavton Nort hmont, 6-2, 20,,

..

GOOD).ryEAR

69~2

Justice with 17 poinls : Sam
Smilh, a junior guard, canned
13 and Stacy Winston, 23 and
Tim McComas, 6-3 junior,
had 10 points.
North Gallia won the ·
reserve game, 51 ·23 to
remain unbeaten against
leliiJue competition .
Harman Trace travels to
Southwestern Dec. 13. North
Gallia is idle until Friday.
Dec. 16.

•••L.Bsr

Shadyside 84 Bellai re 77 (at)
Shaker Hts 67 Maple Hts 65

No. 1
Cans

vit1ory or the season.

over North Gallia Tuesday

6·

LB
Frank Ko mar ,
Lora in Sr ., 6 2. 21 5, Sr .
Sr.
DB - Brooke Brumbaugh ,
DB - Ted Ha ll , Gaha nn a
Toledo Wh itmer , 6·0, 175, Sf'.
Lincoln, 6-3, 208, Sr .
08 - St_olt Gasser, logan,
DB ~ Bil l Price. Cen 6-1, .16S. Sr .
tervi ll e, 6-0, 200, Sr .
DB
Jeff
Reeve S,
DB - Bill Long , Cinc inn ati.·
Columbus Linden Mc Kiole y,
Moel ler , 6-0, 195, Sr .
6·0. 175, Sr.
'
Second Team Offense
Ba ck of-th e -year - Art
. SE Butch Huny ad i,
Schl ich ter , Mi&lt;HTl i Trace . .,
F1nd lay, 5-11, 175, Sr .
Linema n ot the year - Bob
TE - Ch r is Koehne. Cin Cra bler Cinci nnati Moeller'.
cinnati Elder , 6-6, 225 . Sr .
Coa ch-of the
Y e~r
T ~ Tim Daniels. Massi ll on
Gerry Faust. Ci ncinnati
Wa shington , 6-B. 264 , Sr.
T _.__,. Jim Sc humann , Moeller .
n

==

stanza enroute to its first

MG
Car l Dor sey ,'
Massil lon Washi ngton, 5-10,

MG
Mark Su ll iv an .
Me ntor Lak e Catholic , 5-9.
190, Sr
LB .:.__._ Bob Crable. Cin
ci nnal i Moe ller . '6-3, 1 15, Sr.
LB - Bob Cr ites. Akron
Spr ingf ie ld . 6 4, 215. Sr .
LB - Wafi k El Sanadi,
Clevela nd St. Joseph , 6-0. 21 0

.

Host Hannan Trace jumped
into an early eight point lead,
(2().12 ) at the end of the first

5, 245, Sr .

G 57

••

PEANUT BUTIER
ONIONS

QB

-

HAM

JIFF-Cream or Crunchy

Bunch

225,

Sr .

Perry Como and Eugene

Camp bells

s

T
Chuck Rowland .
Barberton , 6 6, 165. Sr
G
Mark Warth, lanes
ville, 6 6. 1-l5, Sr .
G
Drew Squ1res . Mans
field Madison, 6 1. :?00, Sr .
C
Jeff Felton, Cen ter
ville . 6 3. 215. Sr.
QB
Art Sc:hlich te r ,
Mia mi Trace. 6 3,. 188 , Sr .
RB
Tim
O'Cain ,
Gaha nna Lincoln , 59, 172 , Sr .
RB Ric k Asberry ,
Canton Mc K1nley, 6 O, 195, Sr
RB
Ha rold Brown , Ken t
Roosevel t, 6 J. 195, Sr .
Firsf Team Defense
E Ben Lee , Canton
Mc Kinley , 6- l, 200. Sr .
E - Btl l Wilson, Upper
Arli ngton, 6 1. 210, Sr
T Fra nk Kolencik ,
lak ewood St Edward , 6 3.

French City

DRESSING

ClOSED

171., Sr

"'

SALAD

"' HFR F'S T(lPF.
Thursday , Dec . a through Saturday , Dec . 10
~ight Reserved To Limit Quant iti es
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
9:00tit7:00
SatuqJay 9:00-9:00

f d MUransky , Youngs
town Cardinal Mooney , 6 7.
1

off ense a nd ta ckle Pe1e ·
Hu mphrey to the No. 2
defense.
The huge fir st team
offensive lin e is headed up by
a pair of gigantic tac kles, 6·7,
272.pnund Ed Muransky of
Youngstown Ca rdina l
Mr.oney and JH&gt;. 265.pound
Ch uck Rowland nf Barberton .
The tight end e&lt;1 the No. I
offense is 6-5, 225-pound Dean 1 ·
Maszlak of Toledo Central
Cathnlk , while the· guards

Hellmans.,;.Spin Blend

5th &amp; Pearl

Kettering Fairmont East, 6-1,
240, Sr
C
Rick Wise, Tr oy. 6-0...
217 , Sr
G
Paul Ap p&lt;mus, Ci~ ,
cinnati LaSal le. 6 2. 195. Sr.
C
Vince Sylves ter :
Cincinnati Moeller, 6 3, 205 ..

ns, Sr

46

Ridge 32

NOW OPEN

trips Pirates

gall\l'.

Phelps 1 1 3 Purcell 0 0 0 :
Swa!fl S 2 11
Gibson 1 1 J ·
Royse 1 o J
Niday 1 1 J ·
Pr i&lt;.e 7 3 11 James .a 1 9
F1t1patrick 10 4 Johnson 0
0 0 Burrell 0 0 0 Bise '1 0 .t
TOTALS lS- 10-60.

qu t•st i &lt;~ns

clien t ··

hurl\l'l'OIIIIIlg

Tuf.'sday 's bux
RIO GRANDE ( 60 1 -

Otterb&lt;'ln hrld a 42·29

hnlrtlmt• a1ha n1 age.
Ftl r thP Ht•lhm•n, Gil Prirt•

'~ ltll

Ottrrbei n had 39 rcbtmnds,
13 by Ed W1llwms. Thr Cards

Rio had 25

tUntlwrrs. Ottt'rlK•In 24.

l'h;1nh hl~.'"l'~

rt•btlUnds.
Prh:e .

49 pl'rt'rnt

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

Hannan-Trace

Miami
Trace
ace
heads
Class
Otterbein hands Rio first loss
AAA All-Ohio UPI grid sq.u ad

DOG FOOD
25 LB. $2~~

'E. .1 ..... -

limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Ex
Dec. 10, 1977

.,

COUPON

~ · .· .- ·f

~·
..
.m-- · .__ ,

c.:.~ - - -,

: ·t1

HI-DRI

· SUGAR

: :t·,

PAPER TOWELS

10

LB.

$}59

1 ·3/$1
·f

W/C :.

Lirnitl Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
ires Dec. 10, 1977
Offer

JUMBO
ROLL

I

~ERMANENT

ANTIFREEZE

W/C

GAL

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec . 10, 1977

.,

$299

W/C

Limit I Pe r Customer
Good Only ._t Powell's
Offer E
Dec . 10, 1977

~

,,

COUPON

ZEREX

Fl.AVORITE GRANULATED
'

.W/C

-

'

'

�7- The Darly Senttnel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 7, t977

,,

Registration ending on

Cincinnati keeps
home court
.
string alive with 61-60 win
l mt t•d Prt•,,lntt•rn\)lhlllal
l' ht• ~· \ t'nth -Lulkt."-l l'mnn'.&lt;1 11 p..._d.rt':H:-. app.in•ntl~
tu&gt; \ t.~ 111

ll\•-

kL·t·piU).! tht"1r fait" Ill

'-lL"Pt.'P"t' Ullttl th' flll;d i-.'1lll
Th· l:h'.lrL.H~ sqt!t~'/t'd nut
,flllt hL'r Ha t 1 '\\ 'll'\11!" \ Tu~o•s·
.:.:l~ m~ht. t•d..:ll1!2, tlw \h:mu
Hl'Lbk.iu~ 61~0 lt~ up tht'lr
I •ltlh'C!ltu't W\11 S!J t•ak {• 1 04
,U\d kt·~·p t hdr l'l'L'II I'LI

drbh•mis.J·;t•1

a flt.' l

f it Ur

....,·,\[' ~' ...

l'atlNt sanl
·· Funda!Jlt'ntalt\, Wt'' r e nnt
plll _\UIJ.! \\dl \\\; d1dn't pia~·
\\ t•ll lh1w11 ttw st r~?t~·h and I
was t'\tremt&gt;ly Ws apptl!Olt.~l
w11h tl ur pitt~ ~ thr last thrf't'
1\IIIIUtl'S , ..
Th~· gam!:',

uft en tied . saw
nn lt•ad gr~a ter U1an fh't'
p n int~. that beh1ng an ~ ltl
l'mt,_-mnatl at 58-53 with f (lUI'

I_L'ft i,lll tile d 0C'k.
CinL'lll!'Ui U li'ading S&lt;,'nrer

t\llllUt f' S

.;aml·:-.

fhe Rt•an ' . hild .ul{ttht.•r
dr :-t• ~:all .:i;,~ \h"titl(•srlm
'l!ht wht·n till'} t;dl.! t·~l
lUl!lt'raltit&gt;d ;&gt;., rrt~ L'.m~hna
.\&amp; T. 58,)~
CUl t'\-~

\lillt'r .

n•nlt'r B11b
tht• h\'rlltl'S
nit::ln. luttln~ a
tt--11

p;-.,, tdt•d

fut•..;dJ~
·prt'~:!-UfP tn.·t: tluw" ~ tth 1lll t'
~t;&gt; ...·t.md rf'm&lt;lli lHIU ttl ~·n:-un.•

t.tw wm.
i\•1iamt '..; .\r ehit.&gt; Aldnd(;!e
tird thl' ~:amt' nn a t!p-tn wilh
ll'.ss than 50 !'~'\.' tllltb
rt'maanltlg ,Jn d aftL•r d
:-.c-rambl~
.1r1 und
the
nt~t ~ uard J Pllll
stwt·m~i.kc r ftJul~"ll \lilkr tn

Llll L'Innan

up the

fu~al

shnt
n~spttt"
the
\'lt'[ ,l[' ~'
Bearcat L· ,~ acb .Gal~· l'rttlt'tt
w a~n·t
plt:&gt;asf'd
\\lth

SL't

{ 'mt'l!Jfl:.l 11 ·..,

pt•rfon nanl't' .

'' I wa sn't tni.i happ~ abo ut
.111,:. t.hm~ tonight. exc:cpt .the

Support prices raised
Secretary of Agriculture
!lob Bergland has aruJOWlCed
has department;s revision
upward of support prices for
1977 markct ings of shorn woo l
and mohair.
The incenti\'e price for
!:~ho rn wool is increased from
12 to 99 cents per pound and
the support price for mohair
is changed from 80.2 cen ts to
$1.498 per pound. The
Secretarv a lso announced
support pr ices for 1978 of
$1.08 per pound for » oo l and
$LIH 7 Jl&lt;'r pound for mohair.
The higher support prices
were authorized by the Food
a nd Agri culture Act of 1977
through an amendment to the
~at io nal Woo l Act. The
former support levels had
been in effect from 1970
through 1976. On December
22, 1976, the U.S, Department
of Agriculture hod announced
support prices for 1977 would
contin ue uncha'nged.
Pulled wool will continue to
be supported at a lev el
comparable to the support
price for shorn wool through
payments on unshorn lambs.
As in the pa st years. shorn
wool payments will be based

on a percentage of each
prod uce r's return s from
sales, The percentage will be
that requ ired to raise the
Natio nal a ve rage price
received by all produce"" for
shorn woo l up to the announced support price of 99
cents a pound for 1977 and
$1.08 for 1978 . Currently,

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDA YS

9 ti l Noon

Westinghouse
Two·SIIClld 18 Lb. CllCI3CIIY
Agllator Wasl)er with ·
Permanen1 Press Settings
Model! L.A495P
IJ Jllg r:~ " rw::~;cu .

::1

•I

-- -

.\ .~------ __/
.

1-.,14... y •;:1 ~~ual ramo

®

I

.'l':,:&gt;r
, \:] T ..., J •!]: C SOin !&gt;Pl'&lt;JO
.~
··~··-ldl ~"tJ
il

'G•!r1r"-'
0 p;~_t: nC 5 t•r::·~ wat~r ~.:Jver
lnCIJ...d1ng -pf'Sf!'Q~' ,
~':!Pm.~

tJ .: .... ocs ' ' )r .v:tr"'
._,.•-oeratun·~

~Jr

1"·'"

~ ~·

_,,

~ ~~

I

i

D L

tub

0

.1e; and wa ter

reC:or,.U:Jt•ol'l system

0 Loclt

·~"

"'at~rrc sotttme• Cltscenser
.O!tO" .i l accessory)

0

tHC ~ ""Cl

&lt;&gt;fl d

"Regular.· .. LO.,.,
A1r
Flu" r,.m~:f&gt;ra:u•n settoi1q9
3 C'/C:e oeler.lovr-s ::.•n t•rner
Extra- a•q" or.,nrng to

_,.,.,f·'

r

up~''OI"\l H'II

.

,..,. 'Jt

(

, • .,;,.ne lumct"'g
~:

:am: cooHJc.·1n
00

S.·r~:·r ~ ~

11\ bu·~.,n door

'&gt;&lt;l'':!ly so.1't'l
'Sta hon ary -~r(1ng shel '

Model
0~49SW

lcplional il,CCC'i60 ry)

- 6acked by Nat wn w1d~ .
Svre $e•v1C t!
•

Reg. '559.95 pair

.

SALE PRICED

•48995

)

·westinghouse·
Nationwide

~You can be sure,.
'

Southwestern's
Highlanders tasted defeat for the first
tlme this season Tuesday
night in a headon clash
against the Ohio Valley
Confe r ence
Fairland
Drag0 ns.
C&lt;&gt;ach Carl York's Dragons
went home with a hardea rned .78-71 victory over
Co a ch Wayne Bergdoll's
Gallia Count y squad.
In the hot-shooting contest,
Fairland sank 35 of 76 floor
shots lor 46 pet. and eight of
17 at the foul line. South·
western kept pace with 32 of
'(I for 45 pet . and seven of II
at the charity striJl&lt;'.
The Lawrence Countians
too k a 22·17 lead at the end of
the nrst period and were
never headed.
Bob Bragg and Tlm Nickeis
led Fairland with 24 and 23
poi nts respectively . Chris
Powell and Rick Love alsO M
double lig ures with lo. and 10
each.
Juni or forward Gene
Layton led the Highlander
attack with 26 points while
Ron Jackson, a senior guard,
kept hi s consistent pace with
23 points.
Fairland held a 37·32
reboWlding edge with Love
leading the way with 12.
Nelson and J , Jordon topped
Southwestern.
The Fairland Reserves
defeated the Highlander
jayvees 48,33.
Southwestern, 2-1 , goes to
Kyger Creek Friday night.

r

GIVE HER

She's Always
Wanted ·

Faust named
Class AAA
mentor
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Gerry F·aus t, who led
Cincinnati Moeller to its U1ird
straight state' football
cha mpionship the past
season, has been voted the
United Press In terllational
Class AAA Coach of the Year.
It ma rk s the second
straight year that Faust has
been selected the AAA coach
of the year by a vote of fellow
coaches and members of the
news media .
The Crusaders, a near
unanimous selection as the
No. 1 team in the final UP!
Board of Coaches ratings,
cllmaxed their third straight
!~ season with a 14-2 victory
over Canton McKinley in the
finals of th is year's state
playoffs.
Moeller. which has won 52
st raight regul ar season
games and just finished its
fifth straight IIJ.Il regular
season, hasn't lost since the
semifin a ls of the 1974
playoffs.
Faust, 42, a University of
Dayton graduate , completed
his l&gt;th year as the only head .
coach Moeller has ever had .
In those 15 ' years, he has
compiled a 1411-16·2 record, an
.892 winning percentage.

WINNERS NAMED
Tuesday's gold star win·
ners in the arutual Christmas
promotion program of
· Pomeroy merchants were
Debbi e Young , Route 3,
Pomeroy, a gift certificate of
Elberfeld's, and Dorina Carr,
Pomeroy, a gift certificate of
the New York Clothing
House. No purchast is
required for participation.

"A ll New"

DICK JOHNSON, AN ILLUSIONIST, will be arnong
tile featured performers Thursday evening when Magic
Holiday Fantasy is again presented in the M ei~s Junior
High Sch&lt;&gt;&gt;L Middleport , under the sponsorship of th e
Midd leport Volunteer Fire Department.

In addition to our
reaular menu we are

oHering a
BREAKFAST
BUFFET
6 :00 A. M.· rr ,oo A.M ,

Monday th ru F riday

'
ORDERFROMOURREGULAR

Magic show co:rlling Thursday
The all new edition of
Magic Holiday Fantasy will
be presented in the Mei gs
Junior High School in Mid·
dleport at 7:30p.m . Thursday
Wlder the sponsorship of the
Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department.
The show is one of
America 's circu s va riet y
stage shows and will feature,
th e Amazin g John son,
magician ; the Bobby Jane
Duo ; Juggling Supreme;
Rucker 's Jl&lt;'rlorming dogs;

MENUSATURDAY&amp;SUNOAY

Uncle Ralph 's Barnyard
Review and the Lang Family
comedy trampoline act The
show last s for an hour and 40
min utes.
Advance tickets are being
sold .at discount rates .

SPECIAL LUNCHES FOR
GROUPS ONLY
(Phone For Reservations)

: ~ .,

(Buffet Style Friday &amp; Sat. Evenings )

live Entertainment in the Lounge front 9:00-2:00
MondoY thru Saturday,

Now open for the season
Choose from over 15,000
Poinsettias
7Sc to S10.00
Foliage Plants 7Sc to 512 .00
Hanging Basket s
S1.25to

ASK TOWED
Miles Edward Cain, 05,
Albany, and Kathlee n Ruth
Caln, 47, Pomeroy ; John Lee
!loggs.. 25, Charleston, W.
Va., and Tammy Lee ,Cozart,
16, Tuppers Plains.; Ricky
Lee Deeter , 19, Route 3,
Racine . and Sherry Lee
Hayes, 16, Columbus.

.

.

J.,,

.

Prices Effective Thru Sat., Dec. 10th

Pomeroy, 0.

if it's Westinghouse

SAN FR-ANCISCO (UP!) pefensive backs Levi Arm··
strong of UCLA and Bob
Glazebrook of Fresno State,
running back David Turner of
San Diego State and five
players from the Big Eight
were named Tuesday to the
West team for-the o3rd Shrine
East-West football game at
Stanford Stadiqm, Dec. 31.
Defensive linemen Gary
Spani of Kansas State and
Tom Dinkle of Kansas , center
Tom Davis and offensive
t a' kie Stan Waldemore of
! .- ~ .Jra ska
and center Leon
White of Colorado were the
Big ·Eight players pi cked by
West selection chairman
Chuck Taylor.
The addition of t his group
gives the West 17 players
named to date, with the
remainder of the team to be
picked before the end of the
week.

B:&lt;YII J&lt;:&lt;r&lt;ol~.l7l:II~I\Cdf

INGLES
FURNITURE

_

~

79
$
29
VELVEETA CHEESE .. .,. 2

2 lb. KRAFT

Box

10 lb .

MAINE POTATOES~~?

89~

YELLOW ONIONS..~~?. 49

3 lb . Bag

·

\J~

s

Pkg. $1.99
ONS
HILTON
OYSTER STEW••••••••~ •••••••••••••••••••. 2/$1.09
GREEN GIANT PEAS ••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/79~ .
20
KETCHUP•••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••• 69C
HUNTS
ct. NORTHERN
WHITE NAPKINS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/59~
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE .•••••••••••••••• $5.39
PLANTERS
PEANUT BUTTER ............................ $1.09

FISH

Calendar

POLLY·s POINTERS

I

'
,~\c~·
.

Polly Crall_'ler

Dorothy Anthony , " 0 Little
Town of Bethlehem." ' The
group sang " It Came Upon
the Midnight Clear" and Mrs.
Searles had prayer. Dev&lt;&gt;tions were given· by Mrs.
Helen Boouner of the Dorcas
Circle who used the
Christmas story as her topic
with scriptures from John
and Matthew.
·
The love gift dedication
topic was "Sharing Our

such draperies myself but
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY-I have . know they · dry clean
thennal or rubber backed beautifully.-POLLY,
DEAR POLLY-My Pet
draJl&lt;'ries that are supposed
to wash but I wonder if they Peeve is with those shoe com·
wash well, shrink or pull in panies who only manufacture
any way, I have hesitated shoes in wide widths in sizes
about washing them and will six or more. I wear a size five
wait lor some information and cannot lind shoes · in a
from you or the readers.- wide width so have the choice
MRS,L,G,N.
. of a too tight shoe, a too long
DEAR MRS,L.G.N.-Did shoe or no shoes. Someone
any washing instructions please inform manufacturers
come with your draperies as that persons with small feet
you mentioned "they are suf&gt;- ca n have wide feeL···
pqsed to wash." If so, follow BARBARAK.
DEAR POLLY-I have an
those directions explicity. I
answer
for the reader who
have been advised that such
returned
home alter. a trip
curtains wash beautifully in
the machine if only lukewarm and noticed•an Odor from her
or cold water is used. One garbage disposal. Through
Source said they could be put years of use I found that in
in the dryer lor about 10 addition to putting lemon rind
minutes but not left until dry through the disposal that a
and then should be hung lm· bunch of fresh mint leaves
mediately, Auother advised (without the stems) really
letting the draJl&lt;'ries drip dry worked better than the
over a line without putting in lemon.-EVE.
DEAR POLLY-I only use
the dryer . II you do use the
dryer use extreme caution so my baby teapot lor brewing
they are not so hot that the the 4-.'i bag concentrate for
rubber backing could be making iced ,tea so naturally
harmed . I have never washed the pot turns dark · brown in·

'

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Christmas cheer
·By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DK BLAKER Last year our family sent a
mimeographed Christmas
letter to 30 of our closest
friends. We had fun writing
t!Je letter- reminiscing about
the year and deciding what to
include about each family
member. We even decorated
it together, We felt great u nti l we received an
anonymous complaint from
one of our "friends" who had
received our letter . In the let·
ter (typed neatly in an unmarked enveloP&lt;' ) the Jl&lt;'rson
accused us of "hav ing some
nerve flaunting our happiness
like t hat," and said that
mimeogra phed letters were
phony and . impersonaL
Needless to say we were

lun ch. Ca ll 446-5508 for
reservations,
EVANGELISTIC services
now in progress through
Friday at the Alfred United
Methodist Church. Services
are 7:30 p.m. nightly, The
pastor, the Rev . Richard
Thomas, will be the speaker,
There will be special music,
The public is invited to at·
THURSDAY
tend.
GALLIA C&lt;&gt;Wlty Human ·
FRIDAY
Services Council meeting
RETURN
JONATHAN
noon at Community Mental
Meigs
Chapters,
Daughters
Health Center. Tour and
of the American Revolution,
I :30 p.m , Friday in the social
Heath
United
side after a while. To clean it room,
Methodist
Church,
Mid·
I scrub the inside well with
d\eport. Program b~ MB.t'Y
comes out like new . I do this
a bout every six weeks.
I have tried every way in
the world to peel hard boiled
eggs and lhe only foolproof
way I have come up with is to
dip the thwnb repeatedly in
cooking oil so as to keep it
slick while doing the, peeling
and I get smooth eggs-every
time .
When folding freshly washed sheets I do the fitted bot·
tom sheet first and then the
top sheet and before I do the
last folding over of the top
sheet, so that it is the right
size for my closet, I insert the
folded bottom sheet inside it
artd then fold . This makes a
nea t little · sandwich-like
package and also helps
eliminate hWlting lor the pr&lt;&gt;per upartner" when time
comes to use the sheets.TILLIE.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clipJl&lt;'rs if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve o~ Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

::::&amp;;m;mimiiimmmi~~1

FY=:&lt;i:OOI\O:&lt;IOI!~-J&lt;:&lt;Yo&lt;I!&lt;IICBOI!O:!BOIBI&lt;IMIEIOI~l7l:II-!O:!

~
~ 'fhe .
~

FA2960 AUTOMATIC WASHER

FE3130

Ex tra-capacity tub handles the
biggest wash load s. Plus it saves
you a tot of water every year over
oth er major top-loading washers.

Rugged and durable . Dries big
loads quickly and efficiently. It's
got the features you want and
delivers the job you expect.

ELI~CTRIC nn ·v~&gt;n

~
~
~

BOOTS

Perfect
Gift
Solution

Boots For The
Entire Family
Styles and

Colors To

~
·~

Choose From

!

•

•ur~~ ~

3112 oz .

!

.
~ • Free Gift Wrapping • Layaway

24 oz.

~

i

oz .

1

,,

·Just Arrived
New Shipment
Of Boots
• Charge Accounts

CHA:PMAN
SHOES
Main St
·
To

.. .BIIBICl - ""'~'&lt;"

Next

Elberfelds

THE REGULAR DA V
meetlng Thursday has been
cancelled because of the Ill·
ness of Commander James
McQuaid.

Lin)it lhe letter to a couple
of. pages. U you find that you

are filling many pages with
details, make a New Year's
resolution to write your
friends more often - or to
start a diary !
Avoid the lofty tone of a
pr~achet's sermon (UJlless
you are a preacher ). A
Christmas eve church service
could end appropriately with
something like: " May all of
you exper_ience the peace and
joy of the universe in which
we all live- especially at this
Christmas time. '' However.
this would be rather pompous
in a newsletter to friends .
After looking over your
previous letter, do you think
your anonymous Scrooge was
really off base - or ,was his
respi&gt;nse justified by the way
· your letter was written ? He
might actually have done you
a favor - in a rather harsh
manner to be sure - if he
motivated you to rethink the
fonnat of your Chrisltnas
newsletter. You know old
Ebeneezer turned out to be a
goOd guy in the end .
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaJl&lt;'r , P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions · uf
general interest will be
discussed in future culunms.

?

En la•geo

s!

18 oz .

ROCK Springs Grange
meeting Thursday night with
a potluck dinner at 6:30p.m.
Meat to be furnished by the
grange. White elephant gilt
exchange will be held,
Delegate to state grange con·
vention will give her report.
SENIOR Citizens Holiday
Bazaar now being held at the
Center. 9 a.m. to 4 p,m, All
sorts of handcrafted items lor
sale.
PAST Officers Club,
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Easter n Star, annual
C)lristmas party at the Shrine
Club building in Racine
Thursday evening. Each
member to take a covered
dish for the6 :30 p.m. dinner.

events.

Why Not'
Genuine. natural , casual
jewelry, especially created with
your lifestyle in m ind . Wear
one , two or more 10K Gold &amp;
Diam ond ring s on ea.ch
h a11d . FL•n !

In Many

~

Morris on Allan Kelle r's
article, "I Remember
Mama " dealln g with the
Christmas traditions of the
Elberfeld family . Hostesses
will be Mrs. Emerson Jones,
Mrs . James Brewington,
Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs.
IrVing Karr, Jr.

shocked, If most people feel
like our anonymous writer.
we wouldn 't ever want tc
send them again. What do yoc
think ' Maybe there is a bet·
ter way to spread C hri s tma ~
cheer.
DEAR READER - Cheer
up ! I
s urvey ed m y
neighborhood and it was
unanimous - Christmas let·
ters are fun to send and
receive - eSJl&lt;'cially if certa in
trouble spots are avoided.
Look over your last year's let·
ter (before you write one for
this year) keeping in mind
the following guidelines :
Personalize your letter by
adding a few hand-written
lines expressing your feelings
about that particular Jl&lt;'rson.
A statement such as "Each
one of you is terribly dea1· to
us and we miss you so much
... " so unds insincere when
mimeographed for ma ny Jl&lt;'&lt;&gt;ple.
E ncourage each family
member to write and sign his
or her own sectiuu . Otherwise
the letter may read as if it
were ghost written. For instance : "Mary a nd John
celebrated their 20th wedding
anniversary, Sara won lop
honors at graduation, and
Eric got his first part-time
job."
Avoid an excessively OJ&gt;timistic - or pessimistic
-swrunary of the past year's

DIAMONDS
with your
DENIMS.

~

~
M

F'ret!dorn" by Mrs , Martha
Klein who also had prayer.
Mrs, Marjorie Walburn of the
EJecta Ci rcie had the pr&lt;&gt;gram on the theme " Faces
Around the Manger. '' She
spoke of the faces of Joseph,
Mary, Baby Jesus, and the
she pherds as Mrs. Anthony
played a medley of carols .
There W CIS a dessert
smorgasbord by the I .ove Joy
Circle members.

CHOICES

lemon juice and sa\t and tt

Wash drapes in cold water

•
•
•

10 oz .

Friday

SocIa• I

~

60

8 ; 00.-5 ;30

95

~~c\._~-~---

~

MY·T·FINE PUDDING •••••••••••••••••• ~ ••• 3169'
CRISCO OIL ..................................... 99~
17
STOKELYS
.
.
FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••. 2/99'

~.

$499

oz .

Mon. , Thurs. &amp; Sat .

.,

.

17 oz.

Masorl, W. Va.
HERE VISITING
Louise Conde, Pittsburgh;
Pa. is here lor a holiday,v.isil
with her sister, Bertha' Con·
de, Oak St. Pomeroy.

8 oz. PARKAY

'

ONLY

10 112 oz.

PICKENS HARDWARE

'---------~

FRENCH CITY

SOFT MARGARINE.. .. ,

•BICYCLES

. i'

FRENCH CITY WIENERS ... ., .. ., ..... .,~~.~~.~~: 69' .

2

•WAGONS
•TRICYCLES

~

THE

FABRIC

SMOKED CALLIE HAMS~.-~..~~--.~~~~~.:~......,.,'.~:. 69'
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD.., ..... ,............... ~.~:. 99~
FRENCH CITY
CASING BOLOGNA.,.,.,., .... ~~:. 99~.,.~~:.~.~:~:,~ $1.09

HE'S MARRIED AND HOMOSEXUAL
DEAR HELEN :
I thought we had a very happy marriage (two teen-age
children ) until two months ago when I learned by accident that
my husband has a homosexual lover.
1
I've found the courts don't give a wile any credit lor having a
firm moral code. In a divorce action, they won't allow me
enough money to keep the house and maintain our girls in their
accustomed way. Also, I couldn't stay covered by his health in·
surance and this is important as I have arthritis and am
Wla ble to work.
[want a total separation, rather than divorce 1 cts we will get
more financial support (he 'll still be responsible for us), but he
won't sign the papers lor a private settlement, allowing the
girls and me our home and all expenses paid. He says it must
be divorce or nothing , and he 'lllig ht lor drastic lowering of my
money requests.
Naturally, a messy divorce will ruin his standing in the com·
munity and he'll probably lose his job, which means I'd :get
even less support.'
I'
I'm being Jl&lt;'nalized lor my husband's inunorality, I may
have to go on food stamps and ADC (Aid To Dependent
Children ), so he can enjoy his various lovers .
I told him if he signs for ·separation, he can eat and sleep at
the house, provided he has a separate room and doesn't bring
his "friends" home, I meet with hostility, though I'm only trying to save him money ,
Lawyers say the only way I can get what I want is to remain
his legal wife (no formal separation), Must l choose between
my morals and financial security'· HEARTSICK
DEAR HEARTSICK :
Nowhere in your long letter (much condensed for the colwnn) do you mention exactly what percentage of your hus-' 'W~&lt;:'f.il&gt;'»m.&lt;Mt :::-:~:
band's salary and holdings you consider " lair "
~;
However,_I counted two dozen references to his immorality, '•
your morality, and the court's softness in not punishing him,
i.e., not giving a large portion of his money to you.
Look: No matter what his sexual bent, the man has a right to
live above poverty leveL Hurt pride is no excuse lor bleeding
him dry.
' ·
Let lawyers on both sides arrive at a workable agreement
WEDNESDAY
,(even though it means a smaller house for you and the girls),
POMEROY LODGE 164,
And lor their sakes, forget bitterness · at least hiqe it welL . H., F&amp;AM , regular meeting 7:30
p,m. Wednesday with in·
DEAR HELEN :
stallation of officers to be
We've been married eight years and I haven't conceived. I held ; all Master Masons
never told Mike how much this bothered me, but lately he's invited.
seemed unhappy, I think it's because he wants children.
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
We've never t.alked about a family · I was always embar·
LODGE
363, F . and A. M.
rassed about iny failure, Do you suppose he's stopped loving
Wednesday,
installation of of·
me beca use of it?- WONDERING
ficers.
Open
to master
DEAR WON:
masons,
their
wives and
For heaven's sake: CommWlicate l You 're eight years over·
friends.
due. Mike just might be unhappy because you're moping
LETART F ALill United
aroWld like a failure and he can't Wlderstand what's wrong. Or
MethOdist
Women, annual
perhaps he suspects you're blaming him .
Christmas
dlnner
to be held
Discuss your hopes for a family, Then consult a doctor who
at
tbe
home"
of
Mrs.
Ernest
may help the project. along .~ H.
Shuler, Wednesday, 6:'30 p.m.

~

Phone 742-2100

GINO'S
PHONE 773-5536

304-675·6276

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

NOW OPEN

OF MASON

Pt. Pleasant. W~Va
.
.

62 North ·

Daily 9 til 5
Sundays 1 t il .iO

i

A project of providing
Christmas for several needy
children was taken on by the
B, H, Sanborn Missionary
Society of ·the Middleport
First Baptist Ch urch at a
meeting Monday night at the
church.
Members turned in their .
Christmas stockings contain·
ing $ll3 for the project work .
On t he committee to handle
purchases were' Mrs , Mar·
jorie Walburn, Mrs. Mary
Brewer, and Mrs. Kathryn
Metzger.
Plans were discussed during the meeting lor the annual missionary tea to be held
in February. Mrs . Elizabeth
Searles, president and the
circle chainnen will serve on
the committ~e. Mrs. Bernice
Baker reported on the World
Day of Prayer and noted that
this year there will be gift
certificates of $3. $5 and $10
with the money being
designated lor the water pr&lt;&gt;ject in India ,
The meeting opened with
an organ prelude by Mrs.

~ CANDY CLASSES

~

PT. PLEASANT INN

Open

$17995 •

I

BUFFET ON SUNDAYS

Syrac;use10 .

992 ·5776

~

:."

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

if

I

5:30 to 10:00 .

:·'

Child born

l

DINNER SERVED NIGHTL\

suo

Players named
for West team

Model OESO OP

H;otno1y

over SW

"G lo'y to God in the Hrghcst" goal but Mrs. Louise Goodall
by Mrs, Pearl Knapp.
was presented an award lor
Mrs . Richards, chaJl&lt;'aU, her efforts. A certificate of
welcomed the members ami merit was presented, to Mrs.
guests, Sherri, Robin Ca mJ&gt;- Ha'zcl E lliott, nurses scholar·
bell, and Adam Martin , and ship. It was reported that ~06
Mrs. Dollie Hay es, a new beds have been endowed by
partner. There was a secret the Eight and Forty nationally, and plaques were
sister exchange of gifts .
It was noted that the Jan , 9 presented to Salon 33.1 for a
meeting will be l1eld al the grit in the name of Mrs.
Racine Legion Post with Mrs . Audrey Glaub ; lo. Salon 450
Boyd, Mrs. Joni Sellers, and for Mrs. Esther Edgar as a
Mr s. Ca thy Sayre as m~rnorial , and to Meigs
hostesses. Round-robin cards County Salon 710 for a plaque
were signt'!l for Mrs. Louise as ct memorial to Brian MarGoodall, l1ospitalized in Col- shall , deceased son ··or Mr.
wnbus.; and for Edgar Baker, and Mrs. Charles Marshall,
husband of Departemental Hemlock Grove.
It was also reported that of
second dcmi chapeau.
Plans were made for goal salons in Ohio, Gallia
visitin g Mrs . GLadys County was second, and
Mowery with a fruit basket Meigs County third . Material
!0:1 !0:1 !0:1!0:1 !0:1 !0:1 """ ,.,. ~~ and gift before Chri stma~. for the January bulletin is to
Candy and dishclothes are be sent in by Jan . 10. Next
~
pouvior will be held Feb. 25
still for sale by Salon.
Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs. and 26 at the Hospitality Inn
Pearl Knapp reported on the ln Colwnbus. The State conrecen t pouvior held at the vent ion will be at the
Neil House in Columbus. At Cleveland Plaza, July 16 and
that time the State of Ohio en- 17,
dowed its 27th bed at $1,000
each at the National Jewish
Hospital in Denver, Colo.
Among lhe distinguished
guests introduced at the
Greg and Linda Grover are
pouvior were Mrs . Violet
announcing the birth of their
Aichholz, Centra l Division
demi chapeau; Mrs. Mary fi rst child, a daughter, La·
Deana Viola, Dec. 3 at the
Martin, national children and
Holzer Medical Center, She
youth chairman: Mrs. Mary
weighed six pounds, 15
Jane Patro, pa st Department
ounces .
of American Legion Aux·
Grandparents Are Mrs.
iliary pr es ident ; Mrs.
Myrtle Grover, and Mrs,
Eleanor Heartline, second
Dorothy Thayer and the
vice president, Mrs. Billy
great-grandparents are Mr ,
Ploeples, American Legion
and Mrs . Solon Shayer ,
HEAVY SAVINGS ON THIS
Auxiliary Department of
LIGHTWEIGHT GENIE' POR·
Ohio president; and Mrs, Akron, and Mrs. Aletha
TABLE MACH I NE . Th is light ·
Thayer, Colwnbus. ·
Delores Kil gore state
weight ma c h1ne sews l ik e a
hea'.lyweight 11 includes' a
treasurer.
drop·ln bobbin . an ad justable
Mrs. Audrey Glaub, na·
elaslic stretc h stltch and a selt tiona!
pouvior member.
coil tamed carry in g case,
reported
on what Ohio won at
t,_M odel 35 4,
~
the national convention . e
ONLY
~ history placed second, the . A('TIVE IN MEMORIAL
publicity fi rst in the nati on.
Mrs . _Faye Wildermuth,
Partnership fell live under Mrs. Golda Roush, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Miss Enna
Smith , and Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart of the Gallia County
LAYAWAY
Salon, Eight and Forty, and
Two Hour Classes
Mrs . Pearl Knapp , Meigs
W
FOR
W
County
Salon, participated
'5.00
Tuesday
afternoon in a
You ' ll make over a do1 en
CHRISTMAS
memorial
for
Mrs. Dorothy
diff eren.l
candles ,
Hecker
at
the
chocola1e
COYered
Y1
~ cherries, coconut bOn.bons FWleral Home in Warehime
Gallipoli~.
and take it all home .With
Gallipolis members parrou .
ticipat ing in the Memorial
SHOP~-.~
Phone
were Mrs. Mabel Brown,
Mrs . Mildred Hamilton, and
Diana Boggs
\1l
Mrs. Inez Marchi.
446-7903

SINGER

Jorda n 2-0-4; Jackson 11-1-23 ;
10-6-26 and Blanton 1·
0-2. Totals 32 ·7-71.
By Quarters:
22 '9 63 78
Fairland
17335271
S. Wester n

Weslmgnouse
Heavy Duty Electric Cl othes
Dryer 'llilh p~rma nent
Press Select ions

dry~r·g

•
•
zs
w1nner

Sherri Marshall, Meigs
County 's cystic fibrosis chi ld
was guest of honor at the an·
nual Christmas dinner parly •
of, Meigs County Salon 710, ·
Eight and Forty, held Mon·
day night a t the Pointlnn.
· Daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Charles Mar~hall , Hemlock
Grove, Sherri received gifts
from the Salon and its
members including a handmade doll lamp from Mrs.
Marie Boyd, children and
youth chai rman.
Favors lor the party were_
Christmas tree replicas with
•candy canes. Readings inel ud ed
'' Ready
lor
Christnias" by Mrs. Florence
Richards, "It's Christmas"
by Mrs. Mary Marlin. and

Layton

by NaMnwtde
:il•rtSertr(.;IJ

Pe;•1lil·····~~ ;;&gt;r r :,~

Fairland

Hank Cleland Jr., is a 3 credit
hour class which offers an
overall view of real estate
practices and is an essential
course for anyone interested
in obtalning a real estate
S&lt;~les license. Tuition is $39
lor anyone living in Mei gs,
Gallia, Vint on or Jackson
Counties.
Both classes arc. open to
any resident of the lour
•c:ounty Community College
District and are part of Rio
Grande's con tinuing
education program in which a
series of classes , both credit
and non-credit, is offered
each quart er in area com·
munities . It is not necessary
to be a lull-time enrolled
student at RG C.CC to take
these classes.
Further information is
ava Hable from the continuing
education ·.office at Rio
Grande by calling 24&gt;-53.13.

-THE

Southwestern
(11)
Cader 4-0-8; Nelson 4-0· 8;

Sptn· · sa lett lid

:::J

Cna&lt;·h Darrel Hedric ,
" We chased them nut of the
·wne . We chase-d them out of
Uw znne press , We chasW
Uaem out of the .lnan-to-man . .
We chasl:'d them frnm one
thing to another ,'' he said.
, "Hedric said Jones' hot hand
was what hurt the Redskins
most.
"He hit some big baskets
a~cainst us ."
In other games Tuesday
rtight. it was Muskingum 7o,
Heidelberg 70; Otterbr:in 80,
Rio Grande '60; Ohio
Weslayan 82, Ohin Dominican
' 06; MoWlt Union 90, Hiram
53; Wooster 94, Dyke 73;
Mount Vernon Nazarene 89,
Bluffton 87 in overtime; and
John Carroll 71, Walsh 62.
Eleven games are on tap
tonight. The tnp games see
Temple at Dayton. Cleveland
State at Eastern Michigan.
Marietta at Ohio University
and Buffalo at Akron.

Fairland (78 ) - Ni ckels 11 1·23 ; Bragg 12-0-2• ; Loll€ • ·2·
10 ; Stuart 2-2-6: Powe ll 6-3-1.5 .
Totals 35-8-78 .

... .,ser

F'l t•n,p--,, 1 -~1'1

shorn wool pnres are
aver aging 70 to 7o cents Jl&lt;'r
poWld.
Meigs County producers
are reminded that they
should file lor the incentive
pa yment as soon as their 1977
wool and unshorn lamb sales
are completed . They will
need their sale bills for wool
and unshorn lambs and know
how many sheep were shorn
and what month the shearlng
was completed.

"'!1ns is the best game

Eight and Forty honor
Sherri Marshall at party

for 2 classes

RIO GRANDE - Thursday
is the final day to register for
classes in color slides and
real estate principles being
offered now in Pomeroy by
Rio Grande College and
C&lt;&gt;mmunity College (RGC·
CC).
Bernard Murphy, director
of continuing education, said
that space is still available in
both classes for those in·
terested. Classes meet each
Thursday from 7-10 p.m. at
Meigs Senior High SchooL
"Color Slides:) is a 3 credit
hour course which offers
participants a chance to learn
how to take, develop, mount
and present slides. Leo Hill ,
instructor for the course, said
lhe only requirement is that
students have a 35 rum.
camera. Tuition lor the
course is $44.
"Real Estat e Principles
and · PraM ices," taught by

we' \'e pl~· ed," said Miami

Box score:

f. ••rr·1l.-r· 0'&lt;;5&lt;;1
0 f- ' • 11

Mike Jones hit eight times
from the floor for 16 points,
eal'h timely in keepin g
Miami . now 1-2. from
breaking away early in the
l1rst hall and Miller helped
t'~1ntrul the blltlrds for the
Bearcats wrth , his 13
rebounds. Miller also st·ored
13 points on the night.
Handy Ayers picked up the
slack when Aldridge eouldn't
get the ball , scor lng I&gt; points .

~ Thursday

Missionary society plan
for needy children holiday

· Porn '

0.

'·':' ~l7l:IIJ&lt;:ICMIJS::&lt; !O:!l7l:IIBIIBIIlllll&lt;a1!Z lOllS::&lt;~ Yo&lt; Yo&lt;~ r...:I'S:! lil:j b- , _,;

t ':'

s t.ow oel&lt;t1!

1

�8- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomero). 0 , Wednesday , De&lt;·. 7, 1971
P"' O'· shed once ra ti'\ w~t&gt;k t or
s•x c onsecut ,..,e v.ee-lo-s PH•
li'ISI p u D ~t C.ll t On y, ,tl 0(' matt~
on Januar\· 11 19 18 and thl"
211 d"ys tor ans .... er "' i ll sta t !
on that da'e
In &lt; a~e ot your !allure to
t!WSwl'r or otherw 1se respond
as reQ~.n rea D\o rne On1o Ru les
of CPI JI Procedure 1uogmenr
ov detaulf w 111 be renaerrct
aQc\ tnst
you
torret•e f
drmandtod 1n thf' cortt p l., lnt

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PlEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
HELEN CARl CHAPMAN .
Pla•n11tt ,

.,.,.

•L. RUSSELL

MA:S
et

MOAFEY .

Oefend~nfs

No . ), , 2h
NOTICE FOR' SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION

'

To
Oor 1s Car l Healf's
whO§@ tast "- nown ~dctreoss 1$
W ll lco~
Ar .zona
Bo .. 742
and whos e e ~ta ct address. tS
,,m ll. "own and Citnnof w 1th
reasonable
d th 9en c E!
be
asce rt a 1ne ct
To
R ichard Car l whost
aCJdr ess is unkno w n a nd
c an no t
w tth
re~son i'! blt&gt;
dd1gence be ascertct '"ed
To
Martha Jean Carl
Burt on , whose address ts
unknown ana cannot w tt h
reasonJote
d H1 oence
oe
ascerta 1ned ;
To . Donald Ct"''f l. whose la st
known address iS . ~1 ~0 W
Broad Street , Columbus .
Oh io . and whose exact ad
dress is Unkno"'!,n and ca nnot
w i th reasonao le CJ il igence be
as c erta 1nect ;
To · Vi rge ne Melragon .
wt1ose last known add ress is
Fa.rtax Or , \le . Columbus .
Oh10 . and whose exact ad
dress is unknow n .tnd c annot
w i th reasonable d il igence be
ascerta ined :
To : Gold i e ~rcher . whose
adaress i s unknown and
cannot
with
reasonab le
dil igence be ascerta in ed
To ·
Myrtle
Ashworth .
whose last !lnown address is
Curren Dr iv e , AlMns . Ot1io,
and w hose ex.HI aDdress is
Unknown and cannot w itn
reasonable
d ili gence
oe
ascerta 1ned ;
To · W i lmer Carl . Jr ,
whose last know n address is
1800 Br inwood Ct , Columbus ,
Oh io, and whose e•act ad
dress is unknown and cannot
w i th reasonab le d itlgence be
ascerta ined :
To : W il lard Carl , whose
l ast known address is 6210
Brook lyn
Rd . ,
Jackson ,
Mich igan , and w ho se exact
address i s unknown and
cannot
w i th
reason.tble
dil igence be ascerta ined ,·
To : James Sowaras . wnose
last known address is 14
Lo is.iana . Detro it, M ic higan .
and 1111hose exact address .is
unknown and cannot yVifh
reason a ble
dil i gence Ce
ascertained ;
To : Sara Lou Merritt ,
whose lasr known address is
Giraid Rd _, Columtlus , Oh 10,
and whose exact address is
un known and cannot with
r easo n ab l e
d i l i gence be
ascerta ined ;
To · Helen Ashwo r th Hyne,
whose last known address is
Lancas~ter , on to. and wnose
exact address is unknown and
c annot
w i th
reasonable
diligence be ascerta ined .
To : The unknown heirs and
devisees of Donald Jeffers ,
deceased :
To ; T he unknown heirs and
dev is ees
ot
Paul
Ca r l.
deceased ;
.
To : The u nknown heirs .! nd
devisees of
Clyde Carl,
deceased ,
To : The unlo..nown he i rs and
de\lisees of JE!sse Ca rl ,
dece ased ;
You are hereby noti f ied
Th at you nave Deen nam ed
defendants i n a lega l act ion
ent 1tl ed Helen Carl Chapman ,
Pla int i ff , vs
Mrs . Russell
Morfey , et at. , Defe nd ant s.
Th is act ion h~~ been assigned
Case No . 16,296, in the
Common Pleas cou rt ot
Meigs County . Pome ro y.
Ohio, -4S769 .

The object of thf complaint
is ro partition the toll ow lng
rea l estate si tu at eq in Scipio
Townst'l i p , Me i gs County .
Ohio :
The following descr ib ed
prem is es situated In the
Townsh iP of Scipio, County of
Meigs, and Stare Of On i o, and
in the southeast quarter Of
Sec t ion No . 2,, Tow n No . 7,
Range No . u of the Ohio
Company's
Pur cha se ,
bounded a nd descr ibed as
follows , To-wit : Beg inni ng at
the southeast cor ner o r
Section No . 2 ; thence nor. th
a long sa id section li ne to the
cen t er ot the southeast co rn er
of Se c t ion No . 1 . thence west
49 rods ; thence south 1 rods ;
thence wes t 17 rods ; thence
north 7 r ods; thence west 16
rods , IS links ; thence sou th
along Mary A Oa\liS' east
. l i ne ; thence along said
se ction tine t o the p l ace of
beg in n in g , con ta in in g 40
acre s, more or less .
You are required to answer
!he Com.pla int w1tl'!i n 28 day s
after the IIJSt publ ic ation ot
th is. not ice , wh ich w il l be

La r ry E Spence-r
Clf'd, of Court
Common P l f'as Courl
Mt iQS CounTy, On io
il2 l 1 J,j 71

28 Cl l 4 11 , 6tC

hl 1ng ot i'ln , l'f'l t n
o t t on
f ormat oon of hll~ ,, ,~ , OVIIn t' r
or he"hol df'f of ,l p4\ rtel I1 SI C'd
1n !he compl&lt;t 1nl men r f'd rt'm
SV('h parce l b v tl'ndt'rln Q to
tne countv Trt'a &lt;.&gt;ll rt•r the
dmOunt Of 13Xt"$ CtSSt•SS
nH~nts penal! tPS cJnd ch arqt•s
due and unpd Jt'l 01' su ch
pet r ee-l togeHH•r w 11M a ll cost s
wh •ch have- bee" .nc urrct'l 1n
anv proceed •nQ 1nst t u l£'d
atQd lnSI such par cel ul"ld!:'r
Sect 1on 5711 18 ot the Rev s~d
COCIE' Upon lhP hl tnQ ot Ctn)
entrv ot cont 1rmar.on of sa lE'
there sha ll be no f u rther
equ•tv ol rtdfmpT IOI'I An&lt;;
person lhert'aller c ta .m lno
anv r 1ght hilt&gt; and •• ntt&gt;r£'ST
Hl , or l 1£'" upon a4y such
parcel sha l l be fort" ver
oarred an d tort•ctosed of ""V
such r •Qt1f 11!1t' miNE'S' 1"
11en upon . and anv eQuity o f
redempt1on ' " such parcel

Any p erson owning or
cla i mi ng an y r ight, t i tle or
In te r es t in, or lien upon , any
parce l o f rea .l property above
l1sted m!!y file an answer in
such . i!lCfion . setting forth the
nature and a m oUnt ot int erest
owned or cla i med and any
defense or OIJiection to the
fore closure. Such answer
must IJe filed in the office ol
the Unders igned Clerk of
Court. and a co p y t hereof
served
on
the
County
Pr osecutor on or befor e the
26th da y of January . 1978 .
If no answer i s fi le d on or
befor e the date specified as
tt1e last day for filing an
answer , a
j udgment of
foreclosu re wil l be taken by
defaulf as to any parcel listed
in the com pla int clS to wl'li c h
no answer has been f iled . Any
par ce l as
to
wh ich
a
fore c losure i s taken by
default shall be sol d for tl:le
satisfaction of th e ta x es ,
assessments. penal ties.
charges an d co sts in.c.u rred in
the f oreclos u r e that are due
and unpaid .
At any t ime prior to the

l'Sf.lt e o t

rred ,tors
I de· l h t&gt;•r

GradeA
Large Eggs .....

WEEK

ONLY

20~FFI

i

Gil .I IAN'S FASHION 1
. CENTER
·\.JI .· I

'''*
9
",
.
,
.
I
-0
~
•t--

. .
On The

T
In

Middleport

'.~·

"
v
.. /•

4.

.

••
"

J

H 1

M e QS

hPIP

those tess lor
you wtlt tnstS! on

P c

cmd

a

long ,

sell-

a dressed . stamped envelope

r{'qu trf'd

cl (1 11" 5 W i th

'it'l d

For Thursd•y . Dec. I, 1977

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Dec. 8, 1977
Pleasant surpnses are m sto•e
for you this co ming year . Several peopte hidden in the wtngs
Wtll be arra n gtng good things
lor you .

SAGITTARIUS (Now.

23-Dtc .

Astro·Grap h, P 0

Box 489 .

RAdto C•ty Sta t• on . NY t0019
Be sure to spec.tfy your buth,
SIQn
CAPRI CORN (Dec . 22· Jan . 19)
Havf' no Qualms about meettng
someone new IC'Iday
Vol) ' ll
make an excellenlllrst tlllpres·
s1on o.n both th e htgh and
rntghty and the lowly and hum·
- ble
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19! II
ma.,take a btt o f compet ttfon to
bnng forth your l ull potenttal
today When you hear the pack
on your heels , you ' ll realty

come on
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Barga tn s can be found among
goods of toretgn o11gtn today . lf
you have a little time . duck mlo
an tm port shop and browse .
ARIES (March 21 -o\pril U) Business St luat to ns are fle~~;ible
toda)l . Take advantage of yoUI
oppor tunitte s and you could
move ahead II you daydream .
the parade wtll pass you by .
·
T4URUS (April 20-May 20) You
.c an no longe r afford the luXury
of more deliberation regarding

shout~

you

h~e

You mav be SQueezed

tn to domg 1t today

GEMINI (Miy 21-June 20! Todav tt behooves you to use
updated equtpment Of methods
tn vout JOb Oon'l tear a tittle
eMpenmentatton - •t wtlt prob~
abl~ work out we lt

C4NCER

(June

21-July

22)

Bypa ss your usual haunts
today Look for some place
ct•lferent tor lunch o, coflee .
You stand a good chance of
meehng someone very mteresttng

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Wh•le you
give U'le outward appearance of
bemg self·assured today . you
may be very uncertam tnside .
Guard agatnst a foolish deci·
ston

VIRGO (4ug . 23-Sept. 22!
Brtght ideas from ou t of the
blue may flash through your
mind today _ Write (hem all
down for the future .

LIBR4

(Sept.

23-0ct .

23)

There ' s a poss1bllitiy you can
profit today- from some unusual
happenstance . You cou ld discover a forgotten article among
your possessions .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II
you wait' for approva t of your
ideas today . you could be the
tose r . Trust your own genius
for improvisation . ·
!NEW SPAPER ENlERPRISE

ASSN I

United Preulnternallonal
T&lt;iday is Wednes~ay, Dec.
7, the 34lh1 day of 1977 with 21

tn follow . This is Pearl
Harbor Day.
The moon is approaching
its new phase.
The morning stars are
Mars, Venus. Jupiter and
Saturn .
The evening star is
Mercury.
Those born on this date are
wtder Ute sign of Sagittariu~ .
Ameritan novelist Willa
Cather was born Dec. 7,
1876.
On Utis day in hihiory:
In 1787, Delaware became
the first state to ratify lhe
United States Constitution .
In 1931, President Herbert
Hoover refused to see a grnup
of
~o-called
"h unger
marche rs" at the Whito
House.
In 1941, Japan launched a
sneak attack on tbe United
States at Pearl Harbor in
Hawaii . Japanese air and sea
attacks spread to Ute Philippines, Wake and Guam
Islands - and tbe United
States was catapulted inlo
World War II .

LEGAL NOTICE
The PubliC Ullliltes CommtsSIOn of Ohio

Ice Cream , .·

tum. procurement pt"actices

aod policies of Ohio Powe&lt;
Company. the operations of
iiS fuel cost adjustment.
clause. and related maners.

This hearing is scheduled to
Deqin at 10:110 A.M . on I*
cember 11. 1977. a1 tile offlees of the Commissmn, 180

East Broad S~eet. Columbus,
Ohio All inte&lt;ested pe&lt;sons
will be given an opponunity
to be heard Funher infor·

mation may be oDtatoed tJy
contactmg the CommiSsion.

THE PUBLIC UnLITIES
. COMMISSION OF OHIO
By Randall G. Applegate,
Secreta&lt;Y

By JAMES HILDRETH
.
WASHINGTON (UPl)
The
steel
industry,
stee lw orkers and pnlitkal leaders fn1m steel produl'in~
areas welcnmed the Carter
plan to assist the ailin~
industry, but will awalt implementatinn before making
a £inal judgment.
The carter plan, outlined in
a 35-page blueprint approved
·· Tuesday, is designtd to
protect domestic producers
from unfair foreign ilhports.'
lt prmnised money to help
revive obsolete . mills and
pled~ed t" try to ease the
butden or stringent government regulation tl ( the
industry .
" We are t•nt._·ouraged by the
interest, whi ch President
Curler and C'1ngress have
shown," said David M. HoM-

ri ck, president nf United
Staies Steel ('nrp.
" The plan is a Vt' I'Y
Wl'knme t•unfirruatiun that
the
adniinistratiun
is
dedil'ated to a prngram uf
cffet'tive assistanl'e w the
steel industry," echoed
Gcur~r A. StlnSiln , C'hairman
of Natinnal Steel Cnrp. .
Bnth snid the price
mnnitoring system
for
foreign imports was the key
to the plan's su&lt;.·cess.
Till'
atlrninistratittn i s .
expected tu establish tltt~ so~
L'tl lled " trig~er'" pril'ing
system by the en&lt;! or the
mnnth,
accftrding
tu
administration nfficials. after
L'c1nsultatiun wlth Japanese
steel J&gt;roducers .

Treasurv

wldersecretar\'

Anthnriy • S11lomnn,
whn
headed the task force that

preparl'll the plar~. cstinwted ::c·cntt·rptecc" .. t th•: plan .
that tl the plan " effcl'ltve, !Ill· JJn'SHh•nt uf US. st&lt;•&lt;•l
between 18,000 and :l5,000 nli~c. ~l l~~t· tn g~(' r pl'l('l'~
ste~·lw_"rkt•rs, who have . lust ··cnw ·al. .
..
thctr ~~~bl':l, would be rehtred .
And. Stmson ag~et'tl. " ll~t·
Dw·mt4 tht• pnst year, itblt~t cffct'Livt•ncss of tlus plH~ w11l
60.000 wurkers havt• been latd depend nn how thr tng~.wr
·off' bt.·L'tllLSC St('e) mi~ls h.ctvc price is fixed ." .
.
shut down 1•1' .. pcratlons cut
Ju~cph Od nrcteh . ~u·c
b&lt;:1ek .
. .
.
.
prcsnleut of ~he U.mted
. i}(•lh admtntstr·atutn and tn· St~c.IWl•l'kers Un.mn, sa~d th~~
du s t r y
s puke .s 111 an pru..: mg sys.tem 1s the "key '
acknowledge the rmport tn . the ent1re plan. ·• [f the
pri&lt;'irll! S\'"-ft&gt;nl iR Ihe pncc rcft•n·nl'f' !ll;1kf"' '-111'('

tlwrc 's no benefit to buying
[on·t~n st&lt;•cL tl~~n tt WHI
1111'~111 sol!ll'lhmg . .
t ur~ently , s teel trnports
t'on.lpnsc about 20 percer~t uf
U.S. steel cunsumptwn.'
l'ompart"tl to an ~Jverage of l,,
J)('I'l'cnt bt•tw~en 1973 and
1976.
The new plan would ~ be
ai111etl ;,tl Sll'PPing illega l
"dumpin~ " 11f f.nrcign steel
by speeding up legal -;1ction
by the g~tvernrn LJJt.

SuspeCt held. for questioning as 'the strangler'
LOS ANGF:LES (UPII -

The lask force hunting lhe
Hillside Strangler, the rapekiller of 10 women, Tuesday
took into custody a young
man accused of driving an
auto D&gt;ade t~ look like a
police car.

peared . He was driving a
former police car which .had
been sold . Hco had a false
" police" sticker lor the door,
amber colored spotligh ts
similar to those used on real
patrol cars and several radio
units in the car, police said.

Legislators wrapping up
work in hurry sessions
By J. R. KIMMINS
('()!.UMBUS 1UP! ) - Sl&lt;lt&lt;•
legislators
remain
in
ColumbUs for one more day
today to wrap up their 1977
efforts, having disp11sed' nf a
major election bill and an
crncrgeney scluMt\ bctrruwing
bill in a series of "hurry up
;md w.&lt;tit" sessions Tuesday.
!.eft nn the lawmakers'
agcnd.&lt;t Was al'lion on bills tn
reduce some industrial taxalinn, revise th e slate's
charitable bingo law and
&lt;:onfnrm state wnrker's
compensation law s to feder.&lt;tl
1
standards.
All three were pending
be£nre
conference
eommittees, one of. which
worked well into Tuesday
night trying to ·find some
measur e 0£ compromise
a'cceptable to both chambers.
The major bill sent tn Gov.
.lames A. Rhndes during
Tuesday's series of floor
sessions was legislation to
allow schools which have run
out nf money to bnrrow
against next year's revenues
and stay open the rema inder
of this year.
The bill, sent to Rhodes
with bipartisan support in
both hou ses, was · chiefly
aime d at Cleveland, where
the state's largest public
schoo l s ystem has been
unable to pay teachers sin ce
Nnv . 22.
The bill would illlOW a
school district t~ pay off its
out standing
debts- by
borrowing against 1978

revenues , prnvidcd the short
term Juans were paid off by
Det . 29, 1978 and banks
aJ!,reed with the tempnrary
deficit financing .
Ten districts, including
Cleveland, would be eligible
to take advantage of the bill.
Language to a!low_:Fnledn
schools ln borrow was added
at the last minute, even
though Toledo voters passed
a 6.1 mill, five-year operating
levy last month .
Toledo's ballot langua ge
was incorrectly written ,
huwever, forcing a bonding
cumpany t41 refuse tn issue
boud notes against the
mill~ge increase.

Passage .. r that bill was
preceded by party caucuses
and lengthy recesses in each
ho4se as each chamber
waited "n the other to act on
some pnrtlon nf a bill.
"There's no way we will be
here
past
Tuesday,"
predicted Senate President
Prn Tempore Oliver Ocasek ,
D-Akr on, late Tuesday
afterm)( m.
Three ho urs later, he
agreed that the Legislature's
business could not be finished
and loday's ~ess ion would be
necessa ry.
Also se nt to Rh odes
Tuesday was legislation to
require g: ub e rnat or i~l
ca nd idates to · choose a
running: mate as lieutenant
governor and both of them to
run as a team in June party
primaries.
Thai bill , deadlocked in a

ermference l'O IIUlHttee fc•r
five mnnths . . c\earecJ both
chambers by w1de margins
with bipartisan suppor t.
·
In addition to the tandem··
pairing nf c"ndid"tes, the bill
removes the lieut en antgovern~ tr as presiding officer"
nf the Senate, leaving tha!
task to the President Pro
Tempore.
But it creates a special, 13·
111ember commissi1tn chai1·e(r
by the lieutenant gnvernor tel
serve as the liaison 'between
stale
and
!Peal
the
gnvernmenls .
A Constitutinnal
ame ndment adopted in mid
1976 required the joi nt
election of the gnvcrnor and
lieutenant governflf, assuring
Utat the state's two top public
officials would be nf the same
Jl"litical party .
The amendment, howeve(,
left the matter ,.[ party
primaries up
tn the
l..egislature.

NOW OPEN ·

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536"
•

...........
·-~. O.WM...

......

59c

oo •.

·;,-Go I.

2 $1
. . . . . ,. 3 ':;,~ - $1
$
1
2
5 SJ

;:~i:.. . . . .
Kroger
Catsup

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

Roll•

c:;;~;; WHOLE WHEAT

O'LARIYI

Mea I Bread ......

16

01

.·l·bv$57.9

WHOLI KI.NIL 01 COEAM

·~;~~-

2

~;::·

Can•

104 OFF
WITH COUI'ON
.....

6•0I,

Jlf

Ctn•.

..........
,_.. ...

U.S. GOV'T GIIIADEO CHOICE

,... ,_,
ti-L . ..

$159

Boston Roll .. ... ... .. . tb.

.

18 $1

Tangerines
or
t2511ZE
Tangelos .. .. " .. .,.

Vt~~!fUUA
S~Juiald-,'-'~--4-YI.
Auilablt l1 Slim Wltlt Dtli's
c.-.I•'N LIW'S FtiH

.,,

'""'..... ''

Looking for 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 nece~sary .
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.
EAOI6•

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , IEIF CHUCK

i;~;i:~;

~

_

C

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef ..... ., .. .,,b.

., ~

$1

3 17-• ·Sl.
el" .,. .-.., ..
6 $ . ,_._

Bright &amp;Cooloio• No
Early ... ?:"~~~ .J.~~!~·..

REGULAIII OR CHUI PAK

. ........

~;~~-

FttOZEN coNCENTRArt FOIWNTATIONORA.NG

....H

.c._'_•_· .._~~ . "'

Cans

Kroger
Cottage Cheese
Kroger
Sweet Peas. ,

•'_' .' ':.....: J

17-az,$1

Kroger
Golden Com .

MIOIUM

Tail-Less
T-Bone Steak ." .. ".

lb.

Plclloo

4 $1
~=:ra'.:ns . . 4~;~~·$1
41

Kroger Mixed
Vegetables ... ,..

·o•.
'"·

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast ..........lb .

. Th~- ri~ii';:'~g~~~i~:~i
,,
..

"'Mil l .... . . _

39c

lb,

~~t;j~ ~~J~ (!~:,~~ 21~~ '!~t1 ~~~~

25• OFF
,.,

WITH COUI'ON

LIMIT 10 CANS PlEASE

69C
79
69c
5139
5119

Holiday weekend blackened
by ice and snow last night

lOOSHElTS PER ROll ('' OFF LABELl

Spotlight
Bean Coffee ...
Kroger
Pork 'N' Beans .

Mixed
Fryer Parts

OneQnrter
.Pork Loin ., ........

Steel industry relief plan unveiled

..

\

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

INS,ECTED

lUCID INTO OtOPS

has set tor

public hearing Case No
77-380-EL-fAC to &lt;evtew the

•

c:.;,;cl;" ~ . . 8
. "'·-~~~· c

Rib Center
Pork Chops ., .., ..

I

&lt;H E'

9.

SLlCID ..• Ll. 79"

THIS

ot

f , Clu'c,tH Y
w i ltHn
t'h re£&gt;
months
0dl ed lh 1S 15Th d~Y ol
N o . ., ~;&gt;n:t bl'r 19 17
Mann 1pa D W('bST('r
Ju dea'
Co mm ~m. Pi e a~ co u rT
Probtllt&gt; D l\l oSIOI,
( .II ' 3 1111 7 , , Jt c

Ole Carolina
Sliced Bacon .. ,.. ,~~::

JEAN·S 1

taTe

Coun ty Oh to

KIOGII

I
I

I

ou ll

Q v('

C t&gt;nC'r a l

d ece a se a

Ctn.

II

.

mad~

IO'&lt;! ( mt~

Paper

13:1&lt;

Blue Buckle, Cheap
Jeans, HJ .S, Hang 10,
Faded Glory, Rumble
Seat, Peanuts and
Organical Grow_n

•s your hncs1 annbu 1P 1odav

H"' '' ot Rou
etly Having trouot,,o 11as bt&gt;t' n
tee 19 a c ateer 1 Send
·•Pvo • h t l~ d
Ad nw11str.-.1
your c opy ol A stro-Graph
"' •In Will l\nnl'litt'd of 1
'" "' - " tter b matlmg 50 cetliS tor
Jo hn

Gal.

=""' l'1

SAVINGS

w

deCIStons

A thought for the day :
Commenting on U.S. entry
into Wl'rld War fl , President
t'ranklin D. Roosevelt said,
" Never before have we had
so little time in which lo do so
much .''

Lowfat Milk

Kroger
Meat Bologna .... .lb.

·

N o t '( (' ' " h P r d JY

l1J Your unpulstve gcncrostty

The Almanac

HiNu 2%

IN THI "ICE

~lu--·

ot Gen er al J
Df'c cascd

ll2 l 1 14 . 21 . JIC

sns .n

•

.

E~tatc

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DRAWING
NOTICE
OF
OF JURORS
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS ·
To whom 11 may conc.:E'rn
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
On Tuesday the 13th dav o f
TAXES BY ACTION IN REM
BY COUNTY TREASURER ' December at I? o 'clock am at
the 0H 1Ct' Of ThE' Clerk o t
OF MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
~OUrtS Of ME'1QS Coun t y , Oh10 ,
tv rors w 111 be p ublicly drawn
Publ ic notJCe is hereby
tor th e J an uar y toerm of the
g iv en Th at on tne 5trl day of
Common P lea s Cou rt ol sa i el
December . 1977 , 1t1e County
coun ty
Treasurer of ME! •gs County ,
S1gned
Oh10 , f l lec;l a Compl a in t in the
Lawrence Hottman
Court of Common Pleas of
Freeland S Nor r is .
Me iQ S County , Oh io , at
Com rn tSs1o"e rs
Po m eroy , Oh i o , for the
o t Ju rors
f oreclosure of l i ens t or
(
12J
r
,
ltc
del in Quent taxes . assess .
m ents ,
penalt i es ,
and
cnarges aga inst certain real
property S1tuated in such
County as descr i bed in said
Co!11pla 1nt .
The ob i ec1 of the act to!'l iS IO
obtain from
t~e
cour t •
I Udg'Tlent toreclos tno the tax
liens aga i nst such real f'State
and ordering the salE" of such
real estate for the sat isfac .
l•on of the fa;,.: ti e"s thereon .
Such act i on is brought
agalnstlht&gt; real property only
and n'o persona l judgmf'n t
shal l be entered there i n.
. Tt1e descr i ption ot the
parcel , a statement of the
amount of ta)!.es , assesS .
menTs , penalties and charges
due and unpaid on such
parcel , and the name and
address of The las! known
owner thereof. as such ap .
pear on the general tax list ,
atl as more fully set forth in ·
Complaint . are
as
tn e
fol lo ws :
DESCRIPTION
Situated in the Townsh ip of
Orange , county of Me fos ,
Stare of Oh io , section 1.. ,
, T o wn 4. Range 12. Ohio
Company ' s Purchase} being
the southeas t corner thereof, .
cont a in g 3.65 acres , more or
less . REFERENCE DEED :
Volume 217 , Page 39 , Meigs
Cou n ty Deed Records .
NAME($) ANO STREET
ADDRESS OF OWNERS
Mary R . Cas tle , last ~nown
a dd r ess 1107 E . Marlette
Avenue , Phoen ix , Arizona ;
Jean Swee ney , last known
address 1107 E . M ar lette
Avenue , Phoenix, A r iz ona ;
J ack ie Haycook , las.t known
address I 106 Mulford ~oad ,
Columbus , Ohio ; ~o na ld M .
Castle. address unknown ;
Mich ae l C as tle , address
u nknowf'l .
AMOUNT OF To\ XES ,
ASSESSMENTS ,
PENA.LTIES ANO
CHARGES DUE

1'$¥1\0:1:

- ·~)!!.&gt;

cast' No

L arry E Spencer,;
Clerk o t court
of Common Pleas
Me 1gS Cou111y . Oh 10

NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COUflT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

9-The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday,IJe&lt;' 7. 1977

NOT ICE 0~
APPOINTMENT

w:o~~~~~IJ?!:~~~,~~~

·'••

~
Dessert
DIJh ",

Each

77c

WllliiACII " ·"., -

!A
~

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
P,omeroy, Ohio

*-

C't
~
• V... : . , ..... . . , .. State ... , .. .. ... Zip •..•...•.• ~

.

~?
~

m
f:} ,
~ :.::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~·· . .-.~: :~· ~
~

~

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

~

~~,b~~...l':.~-~·~~·-~.,;,-l'I';~·
~A
~ O~ ~~-~~....... ,..,..;r;,~·~it(l;,
l loCtl'ofl(

?

WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CARD
WITH EACH GIFT SUBSCRIPTION

�•
10- Tht&gt; Oa1ly Sent mel. !\.11ddleptlrt·l\lflwru~ , 0 ., WL•dne-sday , Dt'('. i, 1917

•

} ~5

,.\uetion

I•'

""
""

!~

J (\1

li dil.ys

::.Att r vPfy !ue!. ond
N•'"' onri uSf'd
m('tchond·~eo 01 Oh1o R 1~t'• Aul
.,..,, M~ · g s "'loro M•dd lepOrt
Horne Phone .304
Oh10

~UCliON
t t, at

J"

E.ih'h 11 &lt;Jtd m tor ~ llll!IUnwu I:I
... orlh Lli ~ &lt;..'t&gt;nb po't .. nro.l P,.r do.~
Ads runnm~~: vtho:-r lh.ln •"&lt;JI~ n· utl\ l'
WQ·s 1nll b.: ds.tr~.-d at tht- I dd•

"'"'In rtwmor\ , l'-Yrd 11/
ObltWII)

Th.tnk~o

f •·.. nu. J)t'r ... vru.

773

:wtlt'~o

lift' lll'l.~p l l'd llnl~

$J 1.).1

urder 25 n·nt
Ul~

IW.x

..,.1

drld \'itnJ :.otks

~lth

l't:bh

~

1\h

d&amp;&lt;tr~t'

for !Hb -'.'dtn •
~umUt&gt; r In Cart' u( Th~: &amp;·n·

Tht' Pubhsht&gt;r

ti!St'l"\'t'b

tht&lt;

n~tln

ur tl'}t'"l't on~ ads d~&gt;enwll !JbJt't' lHJNII Thl' PubiL'&gt;ho:r 11 1ll Otlt bo.•
fe§pon!&gt;lblr folr 11\Uft' th.iln Ollt' lnl'tH'"·
rt"'l'l lfiSC'rtlun
to t"'dlt

Sla!l ~Ill Ul~n lor • IJ&lt;QII)).!;&gt;o;"'"' C:tl
""''
li"•"~ ~ D•ll R g Ou1 ~mtare
I&lt; ~ "'"9 ~enool unc'' comPf"l'""' on
striiCIO&lt;t mcdelr\ C"quounlt'&lt;11 J 'ICI C"-'1
let19 &lt;oqltoiiiVI'II t1elth 11.1!1:1.1 YIJI.il totl
~~~ell • • ·" o~&gt;

Sun

p..o&lt;t

•·me e.n •s Sao I

ot •lleod 01.11 l .. ~o lull

II!S&lt;!M;!nll&lt; J•&lt;H&lt;~ C;~ll

•ntorfl\;11 101"1

ugl\1 •&gt;O•

t.me

IQf lull

1

Rovco Trtetor

Trtilet Tnunrng. Inc

Ph&lt;._lilt' 99'2·~ I!"Jii

PARKERSBURG

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monilin
Noon on SatUrdi:iy
Tut'sdcn
t.hru Fn(icn
p M .

liw day twfore publ!n:itwn

SunWn·
~ P. ~f

Fndlly ~tflt'rnoon

IF YOU hove a ~erv1ce lq o!ler
wont to bl!y or sell somelhmg
Of' look1ng lor work . . or
whatever . . you !I ger resu lts
foster w1th a Sen tmel Want Ad
Co11992 -2156.

OF

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
LOU I RENE ROSEBERRY ,
Pla int if f,
vs .

HA RVE Y

E UG E N E

ROSEBERR Y,
Address Unknown·,
et a 1. ,
Defendants .

No . 16,062

- SER .V ICE B Y
PUBLICATION TO , THE
DEFENDANT
ABOVE NAMED :
You are hereby notifed tha t
a Comp la in! has been f iled in
the Cammon Pleas Court of
Me igs County , Oh io, Case No
16 ,662, demand ing part ition
of the fo ll ow ing descr ibed
real es tate , to w it:
·
The follow ing rea 1 estate
s it uated in the Townsh ip ot
Lebanon , County of Me ig s
and State of Oh io , and
bounded and descr ibed a·s
follows
I
The north ha If of the west
eightv acres ot tl"1e soutt"1west
quarter ol Sect jon J4 , Town J ,
Flange 11", of tt1e Oh io Com .
pany 's Purchase , be fhe same
mo re ar leSs .
Also e ight acres
(8)
descr ib ed
as
follo'ws
Prev ious l y
entered
for
t~:w:ation
in the name of
Sa m ue l Baker , Range 11 ,
Town J, Se~ li on 34 , Lot 640
No . 34, acres 90 value -100 ·
auarter E . part af southwest
one -fourth . The sa id e igh t
acres being a par t of the
above descr ibed lot to be laid
oft by metes and bounds in
the nor th wes l corner of sa id
tract in as near a sQuare for m
as practicable . Be ing a lso
two rods i.n w idth , beg inn ing
at th e northeast co rner of the
north half of · the southeast
quart-er of Sf'ct ion 4, Town J,
Range 12 , sit uate in Chester
Township , Me igs Coun t y,
Ohio , ana runn in g west to the
county road . leading from
Adams M i lt lo Rac ine,
supposed to co ntain about 28
rods be the same mo r e or
less .
Refef-ence Deeds · vot. ~68 .
Page Ui3 ~ Vol. 23 1, Page 327
and deed from Bonn ie Sue
Roseberry to Lou Irene
Roseberry , dated August
15th , 1977 , and Jeff t o be
recorded on December 2nd ,
You are notified that yo u
are reQu ired to answer the
Complaint W1fh 1n twenty
e ight days after the las!
pub li cation .
The
last
pub lication w il l be made on
the 18th day of January , 1978 ,
Larry E . sr:encer.
Clerk of Courts ,
Meigs County , Ohi o
(12) 7, 14 , 21 , 28 (1 ) d, 11 , 18 , 71

IN TH"E
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OH IO
MARY PARKER ,
Pla intiff ,
VS

CHARLES

5~71

C. ARNOTT , et

~ D e f e ndants .

No . 16,635
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

To · Dale Rawley, whose
last known aooress was 52
Main Street. Coolville , Ohio :
You are hereby ·notified
that yo u have been na meo
defendant in a legal a ct10n
en tilled
Mary · Park er ,
Pla intiff. vs . Charles C
Arnolt , et al. , Defenda nts .
Th is action nas been ass ig ned
case No. 16,635 and is pen
ding tn the Com mon Pleas
Court of Meigs County ,
Pomeroy , Oh io , -15769
The object of the complaint
is for damage s r es ulting from
an automobile accident .wh ic h
allegedly occurred in Me igs
County , Ohio, on June 6. 1977.
and the pray,f'r, is for $7 .400.00
and cos Is .
'~
You are required to answer
the com plaint with in 28 days
a fl er the last publ ication of
the notice which w i lt be
published once a week tor six
s u ccess ive w~?eks . The last
publicat ion Wil l be m~de on
December 21, 1977 , and the 28
days for answer will com •
mence an that date .
In case of yo·u r fa ilu re to
answer or otherwise responef
as re!quired by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure . judgment
by default will be render.ed
against ·you tor the rel1ef
demanded 1n th e complaint.
Larry E Spencer,
Clerk of Courts
( 11 ) 16 , 23 , 30 ( 12) 7, 14 , 21 , 6 t c

HOOF HOLLOW Hot~e~ -suy s~lt
trade or HOHl N ev. and u~ ed
~addle~ Ruth Re('"-.," Alban,.
614 o9B 3190
COU NTY ~tumone So&lt;1l' l)"
CoreluH:• and odoplla n SE't\IICe
Qq2 7b80 7 42 J 1 b2 qr:n 5J27

M~IG~

fO~

SIUD

Serv •ce
A KC
r eg • ~l£'1ed
codo. e1 ~pon1el
81ock end ron
Clorhdale
lrne~ Showquoloty J 8. D Ke11
11els 742 31t:t2

ltt•al

FtHIWOO D ~pll t and d£'ltv('l('d
&amp;.! ~ a n&gt;td
A, II hat.~.iw~•~xt

HOML~lll~

H.t J l 'I JJ

VIEWJN(J

CH I(IS1M,t..S lfH l ~ lot .,ole Mom
StrC'CI Rur ra,,d ,
t-OR

SALt-

P1 ckup.
q95 42 40
HAY

19b8
SJS O VICtor

Che vrolet
A Baht

bl.t 667 3890

ROBYN C.B.

sx 007

Pomeroy Landmark

9.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
.

GUN SHOOT. Rac- in e Gun Club
every Sun . aftern oo n. Feele r.
Choc k guns onll". As~ orr ed
mf'O I5
THERE WILL be no hu niHl Q, no
tresposs1ng and no excf'pt1ans
on my property . Bob McGraw .
THE RAC INE Volunt eer Ftre
Deportmen t wdl sponsor o gun
shoo t every Sa1Urdoy ol 6 p ., .
01 1heir bu ild in g 1n Boshon . Fdc·
tory choke guns onll"
~~

FOUND GE RMAN Shori -Ho ired
Po1nte r. Mole , Colt to identt fy
992.5881
FOUN D ABANDONED , small
prer·ry young female- dog . Mix ·
ed breed . Nice pet . Needs good
home . 742 ·3090 bel.ween 11 &amp;
12om . Ask lor Blanch!'!

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and
appl 1anc e servtcemon . Po1d
holidays
vocat io ns
and
hosp1toltzat1on
Gallic
Relr1gerator Co .. 611 Jrd Ave ..
?' ~111pol is . Ohio .

COU NTRY lo trnl ond w1th sedud ·
ed wood's wafer and good oc·
cess m Mo nr oe CoUnty W . Vo".
$1 000 down- co li (304) 771 .. . . _Jack W. Carsey , Mg'
31020' (3041 772·3227 .
~
Phone992-2181
- Commercial propf'rty opp rox. 17
ac res . level land , located ot
Will CARl: for the e lde rly 1n our
Tu ppers Pla1,ns on Oh1o Route
home Phone 992-731&lt;1 .
7. Phone (614 ) 667 630.:1 .
PIANO TUNING . la ne Daniels .
New phone nUmbe r 992-2581 . VA-F HA 30 yr tmoncm g. Ireland
Mortgage . 77 E. Stote , Athens ,
It no answer , coJJ 992-2082 .
phone j61 d) 592-305 I
WILl DO lyp ing . Mo nuscr1p1 s.
sloltshcal , resumes ere. Call 2. STORY 3 bedroom frame
992 - 38~7 . e .. enings aftt'H 6 end
house, FA . fur nace . slarm winweekends .
dews . fir eplace 1n Midd leport .
Pho ne Q92 -3d57 or 992·5867 .
M9B IL E HOME re pa 1rs ~- 5858
1.3 ACRES ON Lead in g Creek
Road . Pho ne 992-7066 .

Pomeroy Landmark .

WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark ·

9a ~Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.

~

Phone992-2181

SOMEON E TO sroY ntghrs with
man Contact Mor vm Dorsi at
Ve tere ns Memonol" Hosp1tal .
Room 113.
COAL ltmestone and calcium
ch loride ond calciu m br ine lor
TEXAS OIL company needs
dus t con trol and special mixing
mature pe rson l01 shari 1r•ps
sa lt for farmers , Excels ior Soli
surround 1ng Pomf' ro y Conlo&lt;t
Works
. Main Stre-e t, Pomeroy
cu~tomers .
We Train Write
_Ohio or ph~~ _3:::8c.
9:.:
1.-:-'_
K M Dic k. Pres .. Southwestern
Petroleum , Fr . Worth , TX .
CAMPE R $600. Al so, horse
-------tra ile r. S-450. Phone (614 ) 698·
3290.
ECONOMY TRACTOR wilh oil ot·
1ochmen1s. Like new . osktrig
$2250. Phone (61&lt;1 698·3290.

CASH po1d for a ll makes and
models of mobde homes .
APP LES, FITZPATRICK Orchard~ .
Phone orea code 614·423 ·9531 .
Stole Route 689 . Phone
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fo rest Pro·
Wil kes11l lle . 66q.J785.
ducts . Top pr ice for slonding
sow t•mber . Call 992-5965 or RUGS , WAll Hangings and
olgons Nice fo r Christmas
Ken1 Hanby . 1·446 8570 .
Reasonable . Call 992-22 14.
·""--'~
CO INS , CURRENCY tokens. old
1976 FO RD f .2SO Cus tom . 17 SOx
pocke t watches and ·ch a ins ,
14 .00 Iires · winch . Only 14 ,000
Sllvf'r and gold We need 1964
m1 Headers . CB. rope deck .
and older silver cams. Buy . sell .
Over $3 ,000 in ex tra s Se rious
or !rode' Co li R; ger Wams le y.
colts onl y otter 12 noon :
742 ·2331 .
6~.!_07!c_$6:.:.8:::0:::::-.
0
OLD FUR NITURE , ke bo .o:e~ . bra~ s
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES, Pt. Plea ·
beds iron beds etc .. complete
sant . W.Va . be side Heck"s.
hou~eholds Wr1Te M. D. Miller ,
Rt . 4. Pomeroy . Oh1o or call 1973 8roodmore U .o: 64 2
bedroo m
992 -7760.
1973 Dorion 14 x 60 2 bedroom
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too smalL 1972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom ,
Wdl buy 1 piece or com pleTe
2 both
•
hou~ehold . Ne w, u ~e d . or anll·
1972 (o.,entry 12 x b5 3 bedroom
ques . Ma rlins Furn iture , 20 N. 1969 . Statesman 12 x 60 2
2nd St. . M1ddlep6 rt . Phone
bedroom .
- --9n.6370.
FIREWOOD . Any lengths or any
CHI P WOOD
Pole s max
amo unt . Delive red or may
d iameter 10" on lor9es tsnd , sa
piCkup . Pho~!. 9~~25~3 . __ _
per lon . Bund led slo b. St.. per
ron . Delive red to Oh1o Pollet
Co_:, ~ 2, Pomeroy. ~689.

=-c

- - - --

CASH FOR Jun~ Cars . Fry~ sTruck
and Aula Wrecker Servic f' .
Phone 741·1081 or Pennzoil
Rutland 742 -9575 .

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Let
0 J1
I
•
I
soften &amp;
your
water and Co-op water
softener, Model UC. SVI.
Now Only ,

279 •95

Let us test your water Free
1977 GMC HEAVY Holfton eq U1 p·
ped 1975 Hornet Sportobout
Wogon ._ P.hone 992-70M .
1976 FORD GRANADA , 6 cy l.
16,000 mdes . Ex ce llent sha pe .
Phone 247-21 .42 ..
1973 PONTIAC
992.51l66

GRAND

Pm

1971 CHEVY . NEW mo tor , new
t1r eo;. $900 1970 Chevel)e ,
$800. 1971 Super Beetlf'
992-2987
1972 CHEVROLET VEGA wi th 2
new snow tires . Runs . good.
S3SO. 1974 Green Ponlloc
Firebird 48 000 miles , $2 .400.
Call 7.t2-2111 or 7&lt;12 -2103 , alter
~- ~m ,

FOR SALE
New Co -Op wilter and
softeners, model VC -SVI.
Only 5279.95
Save S50 . 00 on a new
Hotpoint R'e frigerator
I New 20 cubic ft . Chest
Freezer
S2S .OO Discount
( 1) Good Refrigerator 5150
Upright Freezer
5225
1 Good Used Hotpoint '
Refri9erator
5125
1 Lanca ster Cha in Saw S7S

Pomeroy Landmark

TEAFORD

IE
,, !..._ •

Phone

1oolo

fOR

S]9.95

Z: _c:~~~~

~

JIOlo• ~ 30.t ll7 / J'n 7

IN ,MEMORY ot Fran kl•n l Grunm
&amp; D K c~~ne ls all breed dog
grootlltflQ Mol.. e oppom tmeni
who le ft uto Dli!'&lt;€"111ber 7 19J 5
no w lo1 Hol• doy Season . Coli
Two yeo1s ego t-oda~ Cod collad
Complete
with
all
742 3162
you away
accessories . Yes. we will
In our hedrts you ve never le lt
us
layaway for Christmas .
And no onf' wdl e11er take your For Rent
place
3 AND 4 RM lurn1shed and un We wdl alwO)"\ love and mts:S yo u
lurn lshed opts Phone 992_Ja ck W. Carsey, Mg r .
Each do,. and each n1gh t through
5.t 34
~
Phone 992-2181
Althou gh )"OU re gone but no r
FOUR ROOMS or1d both Adults
targot!en
-anly No pels . 992·5908.
You w1ll always be on our m~nd l
Sadly m1s.sed by h1s w1fe Nf' voh CO.UNTRY MOBI LE Horne Pork CO NTROl HUNGER ond lose
h1s chil d ren and gra nd ·
we1ght wi lh New Shope D1el
Rou te 33 north o l Pomeroy
chol dren
Pion and Hydre ~ .Worcr Pt lls . At
Lo•ge lot~ Coll9q2 .7479
Dut1on D1 ug , Mrddlepo rl.
TRAi l ER SPACE for rent Country ,
HOU SE !lower ~? Call
4 rndes h or11 town . Rl . 7 N lOVti
7d2 .2430. Al l kind s from 50 '
Phone614 -247 -291 1.
up Nice lor Chr istmas .
1 WOU LD l d~.e 10 so~ rhonks 10 ell
1he rned1col and surg1"Cal doc ·
MENS JNSULAHD boots S26 95
tors or Ve terem Mem ona l ~nices~
Buster Brown and Str1de Rite
Hospttol
Pomeroy
Oh1o
ch1ld •en~ ~ho es , $5 .88. Bo ys
Pomeroy Em"e rgenq Squod Or
rubbe1 msulored boot~ S7 95 &amp;
VJIIoneuvo Dr. ~ 1 ggs a nd all
$8 ,95 . Boys Wesre rn boo t~ .
other doctors and nursP'&gt; my
Facl o r~
O utl et Store Save
pastor Rev Robert Brooks
money he re Bodey s Mld ·
olher mm1sler.s other &lt;hur·
dleporl.
ches relo11ons friends ond
1977 DODGE , , ton Club Cob.
netghbors tor rh~m prayer ond
Aut o
Pr. ced reosonob~y;
hf'lp m ony way . May God pour We have e nlarged our
949 2801
a ble5smg out on each
se rv ice d e partment and
Mrs Potty Hysell.
will service Hotpoint and
ot her brands.

Nfiti~

t a,,, \ , ond
Hurlo11d

llf'OI

Cotl QQ7 7lSI

•.t1-U21Je&gt;orQ1:153801

STAR Kennel Boardmg
Indoor ond outdoor run'&gt;
Gr oo mu1 g all breeds Clean
:.on1 ta1y to cill tiE'S Chesh1re
Pl1o"e b 14 ) 367 -0292

lnMetJIDrY

lo• :-01£&gt;

up Mtdd iC' p01 r

TUESDAY . DECEMBER 6,1977

COBRA IJ5 CB •odro lO l l O.•fln NHV J br:dt oom hou'&gt;'"' 'J l-oth \
1 ad10 Phone QQ~ 7Qbb
e~ll piN
] 0 { 1 P M1cidlf'p011
1QI7 PASS~NGUl V.A N A C L'll
do'&gt;e h). Rutland Phon"' 9Q")
1! 0~(!01 4 ()C()nHIN 99"] ~710
7.t 8l
f\·\'0 JOHN DN•Ic mofipl tt f_,l111 . SM All lo rm kt ~a l £' 10~ .. do wn
o v.nf•r l1nonced MOt)rQe Coun
t 1a c t o t~ 1 111 good 'un1Hng co n
1','
dtl tqr) S:KX) tor both Phone
W Va Phone (304 ) 77 1

}ll~ING

1977 .

a 1.,

GOVERNOR

E • lalt' for ~It'

For :;ale

AK C R~GISTERED pekmgese pup_·
ptC'S Phone 130-t l 882 2683

304-4 22-4080

~

I ptn

anJ

nununwn rash\n&lt;Hharwt&gt;
MoJbill! Hum.-

TELEVIS/(JN

I'vE KILLED THE

t 'hdi~t

I"'

I""'

2 dli}' S
Jdays

TUJ\(Y

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 ~ coni.~ 1\C l11o.it:r
r.nh

The Daily Senti nel , Middleport-Pon1r 1·oy, 0 ., Wednesday, D&lt;'&lt;'. 7, 1977

--

SIX ROOM house . all electr1c.
carpeted . co r port . $16.CXXl. Ar row .Comper , $600 . 992-7885 . 10
~- t P 6 pm . No Sunday coils .
77. ACRES 8 rooms , 2 bat hs wit h
shower . Complete ry· remodoel·
ed . Fuel oil fu rnace . All mineral
rl ghls. 2 bay car port. Evenings
alter 5 pm . 742-2819 .

---

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr .•
Broker
10!'12 Sycamore St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 99H333
· Office Hours : 9 A.M. to ••
P. M.
Close
Thursdays
am
Saturdays at noon.
New 4 bedroom , 2500 sq. ft
li vi ng space, 2 1!~ baths , 1:
room ranch bri ck. Locate&lt;
3 miles from Rt. 7, up Wes
Sha de River . Call for at
appointment.
We have need of listings,
all types, homes, land,
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hi !ton Wolle, Sr.
Associate
Home Phone 949.2589

VIRGIL B. TEAFO ~D . SR .
REALTOR
'216 E . Second Sfreef
Pomeroy , Ohio 4S769
Phone 992-332S
RESTORED - 3 bedroom ,
2 baths, all city utilities ,
rear shopping , and other
conveniences. Sl 5, 000.
VIEW OF RIVER - A
fami ly
home
of · 4
bedrooms, all city util it ies,
large
garden ,
near
playground and s tor e.
Want $16,500 .
NEW LISTING - Counlry
home
a nd
6
a c res .
Remodel ing 2 bedrooms ,
bath, Leadi ng Creek water .
Near town . 519.500 .
ATTRACTIVE - Utile 2
bedroom frame home w ith
bath ,
cistern
water ,
f i replace, porches and
basement . Nearly one acre
for 57 ,500.
NEW
LISTING
J
bedroom , br~ck home .
Conven1ently located near
schools
and
s tores .
P orches , basement and
allc1ty utilities . $23,500 .
ADVANTAGES - Wilh 2
bedroom home in town for
an o lder couple . All city
uti li ties . Walk to the stores .
A good bu y at only 511 .000 .
FAMILY SECURITY - In
th is 45 acres in the country .
Use nature ' s heaL wood,
L.C. water, elec tricity and
sep t ic tank . Will sell for
513 ,500.
Hele n L. Teaford
Gordon B. Teaford
Associates

Business Services
plumbing .
Elec .,
work,
carpenter
paneling .
pain1ing .
any iob that needs to
be done around your
home .

POMEROY.

0.

MAYBE IT'S TIME to
move to that hom e that you
have
been
p r omising
yoursel f. 3 bedrooms, bath .
formal dining , garage, 34
acre .
In
. e)(ce ll e nt
condition . 519,500.00.
BUDGET HOME 4
rooms, bat h, porches ,. nQt.
gas heat . Buy th is for less
than rent . $5,400 .00.
OVER
3
ACRES
Recently remodeled , 2
bedrooms , bath ,
F .A.
furance ,
_po r ches,
bc:t"sement. barn &amp; other
bui ld ings. 511.500.00 .
INCOME PROPERTY Walk
to
shop,
2
apa r tment s, porches,
ground, 2 ca r garage, all in
good cond ition . $13,500.00 .
6 ACRES - 11 ~ year old
d ouP ie wide, 2 lar ge
bedrooms
(w a lk
in
closets ), dining room. battl,
la rge
ll vi ncJ
room ,
ca rpet in9, all like new .
Garage and ot her building .
$17,000 .00 .
NICE CORNER LOT - 2
o r 3 bedro o ms , bath ,
carpet ing , nat. gas F .A.
furnace , porches. All this
tor just $13 ,800.00.
LET US SHOW YOU SOME
OF OUR NEWER HOMES
- JUST CALL OR DROP
lN .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY&amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992-2259 - 992-6191

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE Five
bedrooms, nice 11 ~ story house, large living room wi th
shini ng oak flooring , large kitchen w ith d in ing area . 2
full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs Comple tely
insula ted wi th F.A. nat. gas fur nace. Larg e por ches &amp;
garage . Loc . in Ches ter . Price $l9, BOO .
MIDDLEPORT·- SPAC IOUS HO ME TO FIT YO UR
B~DG~~ - 3 Bedroom , lovely carpeted l1v in9 room,
wtth s ltd tn g glass doors, family room with fireplace ,
nice d ining room, kitc hen with lots of cab ine ts . All
re rryodeled"mside &amp; out. Corner lot . Close to sc hool s &amp;
shopp ing area. A "stea I" at $21,500. Shown by
appoin tm ent onl y.
·
FREE GAS - Why worry about the hig h· cos t of
heating yo ur home. ou tside light s, heating you r wate r ,
drying your clot hes, etc . We 'll se ll you your own gas
well. Not on ly that we'll t hr ow in a good Jl t2 st o r y· house
and 3 bedr ~ms and bath, nice din in g room and full
basement , a lso over SO acres of land with a la rg e
beautifu l pond stocked wi t h fish . Ca ll for appointment .
fr iced for quick sale at $37 ,500.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT - 1112 ac res of leve l la nd , nice
12)(64 all carpe ted mobi le home with 2 BRs, li v"ing
room, kite; hen and bath , 2 room s built on, n ice family
room wit h fireplace, plenty of garden space, some fruit
tr ees. La rg e workshop and block cellar. Ci t y water and
septic tank . Ni ce coun try setti ng on Coun ty Rd . 28 .
Price $15,900 .
·
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house wi th
bath . Two more sma ll bedrooms could be finished
upstai r s . A lSo garageJ storag~ bUilding, s tr awberry
patch an d garden space . Or iv.eway is electric hea ted .
Nice Ohio River View . F ur niture can be bought ex tra .
Price for quick sale. House and Jot. $12.600.
CALL JIMMY DEEM AT949-2388

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pet. to SO pet .
on heating cost
EJCperience and
fully insured
Free Est .
Ca.ll667 -64179
1 I 14 1 rno. pd

PHONE
992-5705
12 1 1 mo .

Appalachian
Stove Company

SWAIN
Aut0!11alic
Transmission Senice

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
letd!Wie, 0.

Ph. 371.6250
1.27 lfC

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

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding
·

OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And
Be the openi"ng of the in door season for you with
your old furniture re ·
uph ols tered in b ea ut ifu l
warm Colors &amp; pattern~
from Bob ' s . tf you ar e
looking for ~a\lings if will
pay you to pay us a Yisit .
Located in back of th e Sew
N ' Sew Outlet on Ma in St .,
Rac ine , 0 .

NOT I&gt;Y WIIJING AND DININS
1HE PENTA6 0N BRASS'

Chester. Ohio
10 3o c 1

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

•

•
••

CLOSED ffiR WINTER·
Special Orders or Showing
oi Carpets by Appointment
Only .

.-

Phone 949-2814
Dav e Parsons .
Owner
11 25 1 mo

6

"karaoo'-en"

•

!i
~
~

.,

EXPERIENCED

Radiator~~
h~J.to r

to

ENCAP

I ICJ

the

l•tlielor

kTERLIP

JJTTJ.E OHPaAN ANN IE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

A ND I'D TIP M'( N\lTT

BY TA LKIH ' TO ANYONE ···

fometey

THEN A)(El WOULD GI'T
ME··· THER E'5 TIME ···

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
by
step
instru(·tions.

~~

Superior
Steam Extraction

THEY wOI'I'o DO AH'IT HING
TILL " THE DAY ",., I'LL KEEP
WATCH IN' •• , KEEP MY MOOT!"
S HUT ··· AND 5TAY
HEALTHY"'

t
J I I J

Answer:

I.

Carpel UpholslefJ
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630
"The Of1tin,lot1.
Not fhr Imitators

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
11 ·9·tfC

UJ t me

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown

"Get A load Of This"

Insulation Stll~IS
FinJncina A'11H1ble
Blown lntO'WIHs i Attin
STORM
~INOOWH DOORS
IEPIACEIIEN1

WETHERALL CONCRETE

.LUIIlNUM
SIDING·SOfFITI

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992-6263
8 A.M. to 4 : 30P .M.

I

Hartford
Henderson
882 -2175
67S- IS82
UNION OPERATED
12 2-1 mo.

SALES AND SERVICE
1\ .9.tfc

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
CONTINUOUS ·
GUTTER SERVICE
Third Street
Racine, Ohio
Dave Parsons
Owner
11·25.1 mo .

YAMAHA , HARL EY-DAVIDSON &amp;
Con-Am Motor cycles. Comple1e
~ so l es and
lontostic se rvice'
Hours M-T. T 9-6 · W-F. 9-7; Sot.
9-S. "The Motorcycle PtJople of
So ulh eo~ t ern
Ohio "" Athf'ns
Spor t Cyc les . In c., 20 W. Stirn·
son A11e ., Athen s. Ohio Phone
J.61&lt;l 5~ : 1692 . ~
PUlLIN S EXCAVATIN G . Com plete
Service . Phone 992-2478 .
COUTURE QUA LIT Y Dress Maki ng
8. Alte ra tions . If's not too late
to ho"'e your Chri stmas &amp; New
Veor 's ou tf it cus tom mode .
q92.3283 .
YAMAHA, HARLEV-DA VIDSON 8.
Con -Am Mol orcyde s Complete
sale s and fanlostic se rvice !
Hours M· T, T 9-6: W-F, 9· 7; Sot
9· 5. 'The Mo torcycl e Pe-op le of
Sout heas tern O hio ,"' Atheno;
Sport Cycles , Inc. . 20 W. Stirn ·
son Ave ., Athens Ohio . Phone
(61 592-1692

CROW EARTHWORMS lor profit .
Free Data · WORM WORLD ,
1810 S. Jose phine , Derive r, Col ·
orado 80210 or cell Mr . James
co ll ecl (303~~26.

..••

a.

WINDOWS
GUnEIS..IWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER

GASOLINE A I .J.F.Y

SJracuse, Ohio
Ph. !9z.J!!93

h&lt;&gt;&lt;l•n here lonq
How does
4ou de ide enouqh to know the
deadbeats from t.he
who is
n · sir? r-----:;;::, need4'

l shal I qive $1000
to ever4 need4
famil4 in town!

ift4 dollars

that, sir?

r
each deadbeat .. just
.1n cas e .,r

BR ADFOR D, AuCi ionee r Com ·
BAT HR OOMS AND Kit chen s
plete Serv1ce . Phone 9d9."2d87
remodeled . ce ram ic ti le , pl umo r q49-2000. Re ci ne Oh1o Crill
bing, carpentry, and general
Bradford .
rno1ntenonce . lJ years ex: ELWOOD BOWERS RE,PAIR .peri~n ce . 99~2_,·3:.:6:;
85:.:·--'-Sweepers , toas ters , irons , all
o;mo ll oppl •once-s . Lawn rnower .
next to .Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) qas.
3825 .

SEWING MAC HIN E RepOir&lt;j , seri
vice , all rnokes . 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Po me roy .
Au th orized Singer Soles and
Service . We shar pen Scissors.

- EXCAVATING, dozer , loade r end
-

back hoe work , dump trucks
and lo-boys for h i r e ~ wi ll ha ul
fi ll dirt , to soi l, l1 me stone ond
gro\lel . Call Bo b or Roger Jef·
fe rs. doy ph one 992 -70B9 . night
phone 992-3525 or 992 - 5232 .
EXCAVATING . dozer. backhoe
and dilcher. Charl es R Hal ·
field . Ba ck Hoe Service .
Rut land , Ohro : Phontt 742 ·2008.
Wi l l do roo fing . construction . .
plumbing and heat ing. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
7.4 2-23&lt;18.
HOWERY AND MAR TIN Ex ·
cavating , se pt1 c systems ,
dozer , backhoe . dump truck .
li mestone,· gravel , blacktop
paving . Rl. 143 Phone 1 (61.:1)
698 .7331.

Candy Strip
Rubber Bilek
Regular 56.95
Save 54.88 Sq. Yd.

;

12 and 15 II. width Carpet .
rubber back.

'4.88 sq. yd.
Reg. 56.95·not insta /led
30 rolls of carpet in stock."
Good selection all on sale.
Installed with padding , no
extra to pay ,
Call 742-2 211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

742· 2211

noon

FRIDAY TIL 5
Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

TRUCK CAPS $199 up , Truck ~·
cornpers? Don't miss our •
Spf'c.io!s 1 See tj,e,n today at •
Codne• "s Cornpers on Rainbow •
R1dge . 011 RL 7, tok e Me igs 26
to 32 to Boshon ond follow e
S tg n~
Ow ner Rober! Codner ,
Lor.g Bo n om Ohio .

ARNOLD GRATE

••

RUTLAND

••

••e

t········~················~

~&amp;IV~ ~01{)~

--!--+--1f-+--l-

G"fJ /L/L

,.~. ~

MAI'f Sufl!
'f'HI!:Rf'S No
fouR •LEf'rfR
'

.

·• BIRDIE,
:t:D LIKE 10
·DICTATE
A FEW

&gt;

:

~

~

'( •RTH
• 74
• J 94

• J 85
"'AK 765

~

WEST
.AKQ 2
• 10 2
• Q96

•Q\0 98

2 Antonym of

~~'!mg

"'43 2

~&gt;-:---.-.-:-~~..~-7-.- .--:-- Tt&lt;.o.-IE$ lt-7
•

BERJRE. YOU eE61N1
WINNIE Til ERE'&amp;· · ·
THERES :;6METH IN0 1.
HAVE. TO TE LL iOU ···

Is

to

work it:

South '
I N.T .

Pass 2 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead - A •

AXl:DLBAAXR
LONGFEI&gt; L .O W

CRYPTOQUOTES
VOXVJO

A' P

zxc

FGX

GNSO

PGWAM .

PGWAM,

PG

0

AX

P W T 0,

PGO

TXKO

TXKO

PWTO

ZXC
GNSO . GOAKZ
IXKL
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: TilE UFE AND SPIRIT OF THE
AMERICAN ECONOMY IS PROGRESS AND EXPANSION . HARRY S. TRUMAN
(11977 Kinl F"taturu Sy ndi catt. Inc ,

really s ubminimum notrwnp so he passed al lwo.
North really s hould have bid
three , but it was well for his
side that he didn't jump lo
game .
West led out (our rounds of
s pades. South wa s o n lead
and naturally enough led a
club and ducked in dummy.
East was in with lhe jack
and led the deuce of dia monds to South's king .
Now South led a second
· club and d ucked in dummy

for th e second t irne. West

BAR NEY

TATER SHORE HAS GROWED,

THIS IS A f-lARD
TEST, ISN'T IT, SIR?

"orth F.aNt

One let te r simply sta nd s for ano th e r . I n .t his sample A ts
u sed f or the three 1/s·. X for t he two O's, etc. S in gle lette rs, ' - - - - - - -- - - - - - - '
apos troph es, the length and formation of t h e words are aU By Oswald &amp; Jam es Jacoby
hints. Each day the ("ode leltcrs arc different.
South held a minimum or

LX

'LETTEI&lt;f:.;··,...;~:;' '~\

"'J

Both vulnerable

coal

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how

..

EAST
• 853
• Q 8 6 53
• 10 7 4 2

SOL"TH 11) 1
• J 10 9 6
¥ AK 7
t AK 3

1 Quarrel
3

Safety play best at 2NT
7

m ;:Ef.

&lt;=&gt;o ·

;To

wiNN IE

••
•

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742 2111

r

••
•••
•••
•

8:00til 5:30

1976 21 FOO l Terry Travel
Trailer , equipped . Phone
992-7066.

CH~CIC eflNI~'$ ...._
RLPHIIB~ SOup .

.

Rutland

Mon ., Tues ., Wed.

8 til

:t ~WAYS

WoflD$ IN l'r.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

••

Thunday

blurb
27 Pelt
28 Nigerian
city
Z9 Merciful
33 Hailey
novel
35 Brown kiwi
36Seaman

· ~A~N~K~&amp;~E:R~N~I=E----------~--~~~--;=~----~---------=~~--~----~--------,37Dmfigure
r,;~~
38 Sbeathe

••··························-••
•

STARCRAFT FALL Sole . Mini,
motor s. 20' and 12'. TraVel
Trailers , 18' 5"' $3 .799 , 25' 7""
Bunkhouse $4,"875 Fold-down ,
S1.700 up. We se ll serviCe ond
quality Open Sundays . Camp
Conley Storcraf l Soles , Rl. 62,
N. ol Pt. Plca so_nt. ·

jac~et

SAVE ON
CARPETING

J;lEMODELING , Plurnb mg. heating
and oil type s of gereral repa ir ...
Work guaranteed 20 years ex ·
perience . Phone 992-2409.

I XIJ [XII I]

~

•
•

·•

CARTER

A[ I

I

Route 3 PomttOJ, 0.

Located In

j

~INFURA

Young's
Carpeting

ACE HARIMARE

THURSDAY , DECEMBER 8. 1977
5:&lt;5-Farm Report 13: 5:51l--PTL Club 13: 5 :55sunrise Semester 10.
6 · 01}--PTL Club 15; 6 :25-New Wor ld 10; 6 :31l--Doctors
. on Call 4; News 6; Sunt ise Semester 8; 6 :45Morning Report 3 .
6 :51l--Good Morni ng , West Virginia 13 ; 6 :55-Chuck
Wh ite Reports 10; Good Morning, Tri State 13 ,
? : ~Today 3,.4 ,1 5; Good Mor nin g America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwinkle 10 .
7 : 3Q-Schoolies 10; e :oo-Capta ln Kangaroo 8,1 0;
Sesame St 33 .
9 : ~Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,15 ; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6: Family Affair 8,10 .
9 :31l--Edge of Night 6; Andy Gr iffi t h 8; Price Is Right
10 .
10 :01l--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15: Big Valley 6 · Price Is
Right 8: Mike Douglas 13.
10 .31}--Ho lly wood Squares 3,4,15: Joker 's Wild 10.
11 :Oil--Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Happy Days 6,13 :
Marcus Welby , M.D. 4: Match Game 8,10 .
t
11:3o-Knockout
3,15 ; Family Feud 6,ll; Love of Life
\1))'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
8,10; Sesame St . 20: Nova 33 .
~ ~ ~c!.!)~~ ®
byHenriArnold andBobLee
11 :55-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10.
12 :oo-Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; To Say The Least
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square. lo form
15; Midday 13.
rour ordinary words.
12 :3()-Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15 ;
Sear ch for Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Elec . Co . 33 .
:OQ-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Ch ild ren 6, 13;
News B; Young &amp; th e Restless 10 ; Not For Women
Only .15 .
l :3D-0ays of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Turns
8,10 .
2 :01}--$20,000 Pyr amid 6, 13 : 2 :31l--Doctors 3,4,15 ; One
Lite t o Li ve 6, 13 ; Guidi ng Light 8,10 .
3 :00-Another World 3,4,1.5 : An)lques 20 .
3 : 15-Genera l Ho s p ital6,13: 3:.31}--AII In The F amily
8, 10; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4 :0D-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals -Our ~a~g 4;
For R iche r , F or Pooi-er 15; Merv Gnffln 6;
SOME/IME.$ CALLED
Gilligan's Is 8; Sesa m e St. 20,J3 ; Gomer Pyle,
IN TO E.STAe;Lie&gt;H
USMC 10 : Dinah 13 .
HAI&lt;:MONY IN
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Par tridge Family 4; Brady
THE HOMe·,
Bunch a, 10; Little Ra sca ls 15.
5 :0Q-Bon.;nza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke ~ ;
Miste r Rog"ers' Ne ighborhood 20.33; Hogan s
Now arrange the circled letters to
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15 .
fa rm the surprise answer, a s sug5:3D-Odd
Couple 4; News 6: : E lec . Co . 20,33 ; Mary
gested by the above cartoo n.
T y ler Moore 10 ; Hogan ' s Heroes 15 .
6 :0()--I'News 3,4,8,10,13, 15! ABC Ne w s 6: Zoom 20 .
6:31l--NBC News 3,4,15 : ABC News 13; Carol Burnett ll.
Friends 6; CBS News 6,10: Over Easy .20.
(Answers tomorrow)
? :·oo--Truth or Cons. 3;. Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Jumbles . ELITE BRAND THRASH . CABANA
G~ng Show 8 : News 10: To Tell The Truth 13 :
Yesterday's
An swer: Was Adam making fun of Eva's origin when
Gilligan's Is. 15: Hock ing Valley Bluegrass 20 ;
he did this?- "RIBBED" HER
Anyone for Tennyson ? 33 .
7:31l--Hollywood Squares 3,A; $100,000 Name That
Tune 6: $25,000 Pyramid 8: Ma c Ne/I . Lehrer Re port
20.33 : T ha t's Hollywood 10: Nashville on the Road
13: Ma rtv· Robbins ' Spotl ig ht 15.
8:0Q-Chips J. A, IS ; Welcome Back Kotter 6, 13; Waltons
by THOMAS JOSEPH
8,1 0: Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
4 Poor grade
ACROSS
a:3o-What's Happening 6, 13;: Best of £rnie Kovacs
5 Grasping
1 Cast off
20.33 .
9 : oo---Paul Simon 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6; Hawaii
5 Part of G .N.P . 6 - Newman
F ive -0 8 ,, 0 ; Best of Fami\\e'i '2.0.33; Focus on Water
10 Arrive
7 Bones
Pollution 13 .
8 Burned
UScalawag
9 :3o-carter Cou nt ry 6.
•
9 Glut
13Famed
10 :00--Ciass of ' 65 3,4,15 ; Redd Foxx 6, 13; He ls man
Goldberg
UHeavy
Trophy Award 8,10; I, Claudius 33 : News 20.
14 Sword-shaped 16 Go ·under
10 · 31l--Lock, Stock
Barrel 20.
15 Peer Gynt's
18 Kind of ·
11 :01}--News 3,4,6, 8.10.1 3, 15: Dick Cavett 20: Over
mother
powder
Easy 33 :
· ··'
' ·
Yesterday's ·Answer
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 : Pollee Story 6, 13!
16 Missouri c~y 21 Actress
Columbo 6: ABC News 33: Mov ie " The Great
Lynn
2S Baseball
30 Expunge
17 Breach
Caruso"
10.
tactic
31 Din
22 Wrinkle
of faith
12 :0o--Janaki 33 : l2 : 4~Aian King's Pleasures Of
23 Beaming
32 Made
19 Papa
27 Rodent
Rome 6, 13.
24 Way to
20 Some
hunter
docile
l :Oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 2: 1G-Ironslde 13 ; 3 :1 G-News
serve
34 Scheme
21 - noire
11
29 Nol
37 "Ascent Wednesday, Dec. 7
drinks:
22 Jar; pot
fastened
of-"
2wds.
25 Half a
Gennan
resort
26 Book·

'i1' ft)l\Ml

"AA , I'M RI0~T 1

Cere.

General Contractors
Phone 949-1801
or 949-4.d60
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please
I I 21 1 mo.

See us at 1100 East Main
Street , Pomeroy , Oh io or
Phone 992 -7034 . 10 29-1mo .

ILL DO IT BY 5 UILDINS THE
BEST POSS IBL E AI RC RAF T··

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Bissell Siding·Co.

lllClmo

-

and
R esi dential
Call . for
commercial.
estimate, 2.~ hour service .
Anyday , anytime .
Phone 985-3806

Bo• 34

WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER 7, 1977
5 · Jo-Qdd Couple 4 ; News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moo re 10 ; Hogan's He roes 15 .
6 :0D- News 3, 4,8, 10, 13, 15; Zoom 20.
6 :3G- NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CB S News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7 :QO-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross . Wits 4; Liars Club 6 ; Sh11
Na Na 8 ; News 10; To Te ll The Truth 13 ; Gilligan' s
Is . 15 ; Daniel Foster, M.D. 20; Big Green Magazine
33.
7: Jo-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
Family Fe ud 8; MacNe il -Lehrer Repo r t 20,33 ; The
Judge 10; In Search of 13 ; Wi ld Kingdom 15 .
8 :(){}- FUntstones 3,4, 15 ,:
' Twas the Night Before
Christmas 6, 13 ; Good Times 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
6 : Jo-Szysznyk 8, 10 .
9 :0o-Mac Davis 3,4, 15; ; Cha rlie ' s Angels 6. 13 ; Mo vie
" Uptown Saturday Nigh t" 8, 10 ; Great Per formances 33 ; Concord String quartet Plays Bartok
and Haydn 20 .
lO :Oo-Bette M idler 3.4,15; Baretta 6, 13 ; News 20 .~
10: Jo-Wodehouse Playhouse 20 ;" Book Beat 33 .
T1 :0o- News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15 ; Dick CaveJt 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .

Service
,,...,. th• ktre••t

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

Kingsbury
Home Sales

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

We're in Carpenter just o ff
Rt. 143. Pho.ne 698-719 1.
12· 1-1 mo.

Let T e Open ng

•Mobile
Home
Underpinning ·
• Roilf Coating
• Tie · Downs
• Awnings - Carports
•in s urance
Repairs

MAIN

J&amp;L

Home Service

-·

11 · 31}-- Jo hnny Carson 3,4,1 5: Starsky &amp; Hulch 6, 13;
Hawaii Flve.Q 8: ABC News 33: Movie " Com .
, pulsion" 10: 12:00-Janakl 33.
12 :•1l--Mystery of the Week 6, 13: Koiak 8: 1 :00Tomorrow 3.4: 2: 11}--lronslde 13; 3 : 11l--News 13.
Movie Channel 4 •
5 &amp; 9 P .M . - Fly ing Deuc~• I G I
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Bound for Glory ( PG)
Ca ble Ch~nnel 5 6 :30 P .M . - Testimony Time
• 7 :00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7 · 30 - Marshall Basketball
9 :30 - Consultation
10:00 - 700 Club

LOWEEZ\f ···IT SEEMS JEST LIKE
"'ESTIDDY I HELD HIM UP BV
TH'
RN ' WHACKED HIM
ONTH'5ETIER

held the trick with lhe nine
but now South was home
since dummy 's three clubs
were now good.
Usually safety plays of
this type a~e only made in
rubber bridge . This hand
was played in a matchpoint
game, but the safety play
was just as correct or maybe
even more correct in that

game.
The reason is thai South
was sure that practically all
declarers would be in three
notrump and would almost
surely make that contract if .
clubs broke 3·2. Hence,
South would just play safo
for the contract he was in.

~~·;,~~
A New

Mexico

reader

wants lo know what we bid
wilh:
4AKQJxx. ¥ - - •
Axx
4 Q 10 X X
in response to partner's
four -heart opening.
We just pass and hope that
our partner will make 10

tricks .
(NEWSl-'AJ&gt;t; H EN TE HI'IUSf: ASSN. I

(Do yo u ha ve a question lor
the e1tperts? Wr1te ·'" Ask th e
Jacobys ·· care of th1s ne wspa·
per. The Jaco bys will answer if
stamped, seff-address~d envelopes are enclosed. The n1ost
interesting quPs ticns will be
used in this r.olu .7Jn dnd will
recieve r.:opies of 1AC06Y
MOOERN.J

l

�••

--------------------------- 1Tandem voting
! ' Area Deaths l m pnmary .IS

12-The Dailr S.ntonel. Mldctlepvrt·Pomero), 0. Wednesdd) .lx'l'. 7. 197i

•

I

.

1952 .

HAROLD 0 . EVANS

Harold 0 Evans, 65 , Cole
St ., Mrddleport. died unex
pectedly Wednesday
Mr . Evans was 1n the
Dutton Drug S!Dre , No
Second Ave ., Middleport , on
busrness when he coll apsed
He was tak-en to Veterans
Memorial Hosprtal by the
M t ddleport
Emergenc y
Squad
where
he
was
pronounced dead .
Born

N ov

18,

1912

rn

Bradbury . he was the son ol
the late Shendan and Louise
Ohlinger Rrggs E'va ns . He
was also preceded In death by
two brothers , Clay and CarL
in fant twrn daugh ters, and
thre-e s is ters. Lena , Grace.
and Louise
Surviving are his wde,
Lovercr a
Ma rre
R i ggs

Evans .

UP, UP. UP FOR THE BALl, - Ed Davis, Symmes
Valley High Sehool fo1ward. who sco red 8 pomts UI h1s
team's 65-61 \1CtOr! 0\f.'r Eastern Tuesday mght at
Eastern . goes high m defending agamst a shot by

Eastern 's hot Rust) W1gal 119 pomts) - Greg Bailey
picture . See account of game ou page 3

Hoover
!Continued from page I )
up
'flle memo also sa1d Homer wanted no statement con necting
J ack Ru by and Oswald because "we have no proof they were

ever together.'· but he did no) want thl!- repml to be "100

UI

Dallas , and 1s what would be called a police buff

'-

Hoover al"' challenged reports that Os\\ald could not have
performed the assassmatmn alone, sa)lng he told Rankm
··He was a marksman and tt \\asn 't an)1hmg he could not do:
.. that ~.~. e have tested u em our nfle range and were a ble to get
shots off even fa ster than he d1d, that the re IS no quest ion m

daughter ,

Mrs

KATE SRANZ
Kate B Sranz:, 93, dted tn
the Qvaltty Care Nu rs mg
Home ,
Frem ont ,
Oh 10
Tuesday
She w as the daughter of the
late Wtii Jam and Mar y Bell
Bros w s, born Sept 22. 1884, 1n

Gall lpol"

She marned John H Sranz:
who preceded tn dea th lr:~

percent sure 0n that."
He sa id he to ld Rankm that Ruby ··ts a s.had~ character fr om
the hoo dlwn element of C1ucagtl, has a poor bac kgound, runs a

mghtclub

a

Wi lli am (Sharon) M cMill i on .
M rddle por t , a stepson , Brady
Huffman , M i ddleport , a
sister , Mrs
Bertha R1fe,
Route 1. Middleport , an!;~
several ni eces, nephews and
cous •ns , and ftve grand
chtl dren
Funera l ser v ices will be at
2 p.m
Friday at the
Rawl•ngs Coats J Funeral
Home w1th the Re v. Georqe
Orler of f tct atmg . Burial w tl l
be m Gravel Hdl Cemetery at
Chesh.re Fr1ends may call at
the funera l home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m Thursday

TWO DRAW FINES
Fmed tn the court of
Pomero y Mayor Clarence

Andrews Tuesday night were
George VarJu, no address, $50
and costs, intoXIcation, and

Max
E.
Lauderm1lt,
Pomeroy,
$100
and ctlstS,
m) mmd about1t, that we also found the fln gerpn nts and the
leaving
the
scene
of ~n acbullets so conclusively f1red from the gun; that we have all this
Cident.
ForfeitUig
bonds
were
and we ha ve all the photographs:·
Linda Harmon, Colwnbus,
$100 posted on a charge of
leaving the scene of an ac·
cident
and Richard Fridley,
(Continued from page 1)
1
activity affects Ea rth's wea ther. the American Geophysical Middleport, $30, left of
Umon was told Tuesday. and it could mean the current center.
Western drought has at least ooe ;ear to go Charles W

News •• in Briefs

Stockton of the Unh'er si ty of Arizona reported that maJor
droughts seem to occur evrry 20 to 22 )'ea rs near the low pomt
m the doubl e sunspot cycle
Th1S wa s established from stud ies of tree rmgs m the West
gmng back to liOO Prolo nged drough ts were found to have
occurred two ;ea rs after the low pomt , a h m mg that suggests
lhe curr ent dr ought will c:ontmu(! ano the r year or tw o. The
fmding was bad news for ca hforma where much of agriculture

and some mdustry w1ll have virtually no water at all if the
drought con tinues through the winter rainy season
COLUMBUS - EMPffiE METAL PRODUCTS CORP. I.Jls
Angeles, has acquired a 60,000 squa re-foot warehouse on
Columbus ' north side and \4-ill begin produ ctwn of weatherstnppmg, screen doors a nd stnrm and secunty doors, Gov.
James A. Rhodes announced Tuesday . Dermot G Coughlan,
president of Inda l Ltd , parent company of MPC, said centra l
Oh io was chosen because of tts nearness to the northeast

industnal part of the Um ted Stales and 1ts exce llent trans·
portatwn facil1ttes

"Columbus IS an 1deal locatiOn for the new branch
operatiOn. It 1s close to our maJor markets and it has a pool of
reliable la bor And bes1des that ills a good place to hve, " said
J oh n Teets, "tee presiden t and general manager. The new

manufacturing will be 1n full productiOn by February, 1978 and
wtll eventually employ 120 people.
' NEW YORK - THE PUBLISHER OF THE TRIB, a new
daily newspaper planned for New York , says he expects an
imttal circulatiO n of up to 300,000 Publisher Leonard Saffir
sa1d Tuesday the newspaper plans to hegm publication Jan 9

•

w1th a 72-page ed1tion and already the adverttsmg space m that
e&lt;ilhon IS sold out.
The Tnb will reverse lhe trad1t10nal ratio of adverl!smg to
news conte nt : Instead of 60 percent adverttsmg to 40 percent
news, the newspaper Will have 30 percent advertismg to 70
percent news The Trtb will be sen ous but not solemn.
TheTrib, w1th a staff of 80, w11l be an offset mornmg news·

paper Circulated Monday through Friday to 40 counties m the
tnelropolltan area, he said. Single copy pnce will be 25 cents.

THREE FINED
RUTLAND
Three
defendants were fmed for
speedUig and a fourth for·
feited a bond in the court of
Mayor Eugene Thompson.

Surv tvors
include one
daughter .
M rs
James
( Prtsc !11 a l
Rhiel.
Port
Clinton , Oh1o ; one grllnd
daughter . Mr s . Edward
(Barba ra ) Chalfin , Nor t h
Mad 1son, Oh1o and one
grandson , John Port Clinton .
One gre•f . g r andda ughter
survives .
She was a l i fe long member
of the Galllpolts Presby terian
Chvrch She moved to Port
Cl1nton 1n the early 1950s
atter ~the dell t h of her
husband
;
Tentative graves1de ser .
vices will be held at Mound
Hill Cen,etery on Friday at 1
p.m with Rev Frank Hayes
offic iating
, .,
Arrangements are under
the dlrec t ton of Neidecker
LeVeck Funeral Home, Port
Clinton
There will be no vis Ita fton
at the funeral home

Hospital News
~

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
ADMITTED
Lillie
Cunumngs . Pomeroy; Walter
Robinson, Rutland; Hugh

Racine.

FIREMEN CALLED
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department was called to
Bailey Run at 7·30 a.m.
Wednesday where a fire had
developed at the Forest
Products Co A building was
destroyed and the Pomeroy
Department was assisted by
the departments of Rutland
and Middleport The firemen
were still on the scene at 10
a.m
RETURNS HOME
Mr and Mrs. Dav1&lt;1Nease
have returned home from a
week's vacation in Miami
Beach, Fla and the Grand
Cayman Island, British West
lndtes. While in Miami the
couple attended lhe Natwnal
Milk Producers Convention.

Holzer Medical Cenler
(Discharges, Dec. 8)
Gene Boyer, Mary Card·
well, Myla' Conner, Ernest
Cook II, ·Mrs . Marvin
Cremeans and daughter,
John Cunningham, Arline

Cooking
Appliances
~

Our fHle sf co u ntertop . Microwave Oven wtth memory touch control
The Ui11mate tn .(; ooking canven1 ence and versattltty ... Calonc Ultramaltc
Mtcrowave Oven with a memorv bank . You make the selections; it does the
work Touch the controls and it doeS everythmg from memory . With unique
Ultram a fic Po we r Selector, you 're tn complete control
T1mmg - 0 to99 99 m1nu1es- dig1t;tl d1.splay mterior lighl
See through oven door. Automat1c d1gital clock - d1splaved 1n
Operates on ord m&lt;J ry IJ5 .volt household current.
•

Hl' J . R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
year and a half alter Ohioans
voted to pair party nominees
for governor and lteutenant
gov!!mar m the November

ge neral electiOn, lhe Oh10
G&lt;neral Assembly has
dec1ded to pa1 r Ihe 1wu
ca ndtdates in the pnmary as
well.
W1th Wide margms and b•·
partisan
support.
the
Legislature Tuesday passed
and sent to Gov. James A.
Rhodes legislation to require
that a gubernatorial can·
d1date choose a rUMlng mate
prior to the primary.
In Ihe 1976 primary,
OhiOans adopted a Con·
shtutional amendment to

Six defendants fined by mayor

Six defendants were fined
The Middleport Fire and two others forfeiled bond
Department answered a call in the court of Middleport
at 7:41a .m. Wednesday to the Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
apartment of Mrs Larry Tuesday night.
· Gardner, 127 S. Third Ave.,
where an electric blankel had
caught lire. There was mlnor
loss. At 9·07 a .m. Tuesday,
WILL GO TO MEETING
the E·R unit was called to the
Mrs.
Mary Marlin of
Leon M•ller home on Route 7
Pomeroy.
member of Me1gs
below Middleport where a
County
Salon
710, Eight and
woman refused treatment At
Furly,
and
national
cha1rman
2:20 p.m , the squad went to
of
children
and
youth,
will
the Dutton Drug Store for
leave
Th~rsday
mormng
Harold Evans , who had
collapsed: He was taken to from the Colum bus Airp&lt;Jrt
Veterans Memorial Hospital for Oklahoma C1ty for the
where he was pronounced Area C Natwnal Children and
Youlh Conference. On Salur·
dead.
da)' she will fly to Houston for
a visit with her san , Frank,
DANCE PLANNED
and then will return home
CHESTER - A square Sunday . Mrs. Martm was the
dance will be held from 8 to overnight guest of Mr. and
II :30 p.m Fnday at the fire Mrs.
Thomas Mitc hell
house In Chesler The public Wednesday
lS

to have vehicle under

8)' JOHN T.

Shots were exchanged early today between strikin g coal

con.. 1

trol ; Sheila A. Carsey, 24, :
Middleport , $18 and ctlsts, :
speeding; Bill Reeves, 52, ;

1\Jesday

The M e1 ~s County shenfr 's offu.:e 111 Pnnw1oy,sa td no one
was lut III the exd1ange 11f gw1f1re whu.:h occun ed when the
second shtH of foreme n and other supe rVI.sor y personnel
en tered the mming area.
"There were shots hred but no one was struck,'• said
Sheriff 's Deputy Gary Wolfe. " Be(ween 25 and 30 pickets were

~:~~~ry· !~M:~~ ~~~~:
M. Sheley, Middleport , $18 •
and L'&lt;"ts, speeding.
Forfeillog bonds were ,
L&lt;&gt;nme K Taylor, 19, Micl-"
dleport , $40 posted foiispeeding, and Denzil c..:
Proctor, Middleport, $150,'
falling to stop after an ac::cident.

CISSELL WANTED
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Ohio's DemocratiC Sllnl!tors,
John Glenn and Howard
Metunbawn, have .. r.ecom·
mended James.. Cissell,
Cincinnati, for the post of
United States Attorney for
the Southern District of Ohio.

''··

mcite opposthon to the
tmtiatlve," Salem said.
The order was tssued 36

hours after Egypt severed
diplomatic relations w1th ftve

CBIEFNAMED
hard-line Arab nations which
CLEVELAND (UP!)
had condemned Sadat's
Alton W. Whitehouse has peace overtures to Israel.
been elected chairman and The government-controlled
ch1ef executive officer of the press has accused t he
Slandaro Oil Co. of Ohio, Russians of orgamzing Arab
effective Jan. I, replacing the oppositioo to Sadat.
told
the
retinng Charles E. Spahr, it . Salem
extraordinary session of
was announced Tuesda)'.
Parliament that the Soviets
and the previously identified
East Bloc nations had
~::Ol5"0:0lo:Ollil:di:O:IPII
. J•IMIM1111eriet:IJ1181Jillli • JI"Ogressed

who marched through the
United Press International
J orda n's King Hussein ar- heart of Ca1ro lo U1e Abdm
r ive d today on a fence- presidential palace .
Addressing the throng !rum
mending nusswn to Ca1ro
the
palace balcony, Sadat
where throngs of cheenng
said
Egypt wanted peace
Egyptians ha1led President
Wit
h
Israel,
but warned "w~
Anwar S.1dat's efforts for
are
not
seekmg
peace at any
peace w1U1 Israel and heard
price
"
him denounce h1s hard -ltne
Arab critics as " Imposters
and pygmies "
Husse111,
see km g
to
medmte between SHdat and
Arab npJXments of has dnve
for a quack pca{'e settleme nt
wath Israel, a rnved fresh
fr om apparently fruttle ss
Damascus ta lks w1th S}nan
Prestdent Hafez Assad a
lea d1ng c nt1c of F.~:nl1t 's
peace dnve.
Th e J ord an ian mo na r ch
began hi s Ca 1r o mtssw n

A Gin ENJOYED FOR YEARS

against th e background of a
boist e r o us pr o-Sadat
derl\lm s trata on
by
an

Social
Calendar

of

l!: 1\.T

Intentions in the Middie East.

5.75%
Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit.
$1,000.00
Minimum.
Interest
Payable Quarterly.
A

substantial

penalty

Is

1nvoked on all cert1ficate
accounts wtthdrawn pr.or
to the date of maturity ,

Meigs Co. Branch

.-@
Ttu! Athens County
SHings &amp; Loan Co

---

at

pygmies heard and read what
I satd before the Knessel
! Israeli parliament ),'' Sadat
s::ud, referring tn Ius Arab
crittcs

President Sadal greeted
Husssem at the aJrpttrt where
the two leaders embraced
and kl sst•d and ap peared
!)1 01hng
Ofhc1als sa1d the aJm of
Hussem's Ca1r0's talks is to

heal the b1 each in the Arab
world caused by op[X)StUon of
hard-ltne sta tes to Sadat's

VISit to Israel last month and
Ius subsequent call for direct

closed at least tomorrow and

Monday.
The special meeting was
called because of the law
passed Wednesday which will
permit school districts to

Hussem went to Damascus

Wednesday for talks with
Synan Pres1dent Assad and
w1ll be traveling to Saudi

borrow money from next
year ' s fund s to co ntinue

Arabw fullowm g h1s Egypt
v1s1t
While the Jorda man

TOOK TOP HONORS - Paula Swindell , II , daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ned SwUidell, Shade, a sixth grade

monarch traveled to CaJro,

stude nt at Salisbury Elementary, won first place m her

operation for the rest of this
year

U1c Syrian pres1dent Oew to
Saudi Arabia today m a flurry
ol diplomatic m111at1ves to try

age divisiOn in the " Hoop Shoot" contest last Saturday at
the Elks Lodge m Gall1pohs. Paula w11l attend a banquet
at the Elks I.Jldge on Dec 19 to receive her trophy, and

Stale
Department
of
Education
Wednesday

to heal the worsemng rlft

enter state competition in January. Other pup1ls from

over Egypt's peace drive

Sahsbur)' who participated m the contest are Jay Evan s,

with Israel.

Den1se Stegall and Scott Pulhns . .

1J1e storm

mmed land under House Bill
244 1f the Boa rd of
Unrecla1med Stnp Mmed
Lands says so either at Its
meeting later thiS month or 1n
January, 1978.

sla~.

BRUSSElS, BELGIUM - THE UNITED STATES IS
asking its NATO partners if they want the neutron bomb and
assuring them 1t won't withhOld another superweapon from
Europe 's defensive arsenal - the crmse m1ss1le. U. S officials
sa id Wednesday they were wailing for a f1rm NATO request
before going ahead w1th further production and deployment of
the neutron bomb - a "clean" rad1allon device Ihat kills
people but leaves butldings largely mtaci
The officials said the neutron bomb would be useful only m
the defense of Europe and would serve httle purpose In the
event of a Soviei-American war . If there IS no NATO demand
lqr it, they sa1d, the United Sales would probably scrap the
program.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9th
.6:00 TD 7:00 P.M.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER lOth
6:00 TD 7:00 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Jordan IS steering a middle
course Ul the nft. It boycotted
la st week's anu-Sada t
swnmit at Tripoli. L1bya, a nd
IS a lSI• staying away from the
forthcomong Cairo talks.

proJect to reclatm strip·

the state w11l spend $500,000 to
regrade and revegetate 86
acres of state-owned land m
the Shade River area The
purpose of the reclamatiOn
project is to stop con·
laminated sed iment from
entermg the Shade River .
The Board of Unreclaimed
Strip Mmed Lands was
created by H B. 244 which
passed the Ohio General
Assembly this year The
purpose of the board IS lo

passage of the bill by the
House last April
Said James:
" I have written letters and
talked personally to the
members of the Board
descnbong the -necessity for
the project in Meigs County
and asking them for !heir
support Everything m my
power to convmce the Board

has been done. The final
decision ts now up to the
Board."

House Bill 244 also provides
state assistance of up to 75
percent for reclamatiOn
assistance
on
private

property

However, a check wtth the

showed that thP fnrmula to

I

-

THE 8,500 TEACHERS IN THE CLEVELAND and Toledo
public school districts returned to classrooms today followmg
the resolution of pay disputes m those two cities.
A combination of adion by the Ohio Legislature, Gov .
James A. Rhodes, two Cleveland banks and U. S. District
Judge Frank J . Battisti Tuesday and Wednesday ensured
teachers would be pa1d through the remamder of the year .
Leaders of the , Cleveland Teacher.s Union, which
represents most of the 6,000 teachers, late Wednesday told
members to return to work and school board offiCials sa1d
checks were bemg distributed to await them. On Tuesday, the
legislature passed enabling legislatiOn allowing the school
board deficit financing - not preVIously permitted under stale
law - and on Wednesday Rhodes signed it mto law.
BOSTON"- POLICE TODAY BEGAN ARRESTING 17
men m several slates 1n what was described as the breakup of
a major homosexual boys' prostitution ring operatmg in the
Boston area. Seven more faced similar charges in arrests
Wlrelated lo the rmg, believed to be operating since at least
1972.
Among those expecled to be forn.~lly charged today were
(Continued on page 2) c

Contract
talks
were
sc hedu led to resume In

Washington today under the
auspices

of

federal

Assocaatmn .

Seme

188,000

UMW

members officially began

their walkout 12 ·01 a.m .
Tuesday m a dispute over
health and retirement
benefits, the nght of workers
to strike md1vtdual mmes and

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, bitter cold
Salurday and Sunday, with
highs belween 10 and 18
and lows between five an"-

!0. Warmer Monday wllh
highs In lhe upper 20s or lhe
lower 30s and lows In the
teens. Mostly cloudy
Salurday with a chance of
sno" flurries north and a
chance of snow over lhe
entire state Sunday and
Monday.
:· ... ·. -:· ,:,: :-:,:,. :,::-:·........... .

Weather
Turnmg colder with ram

and snow mixed late lomght.
I.Jlws tomghl near 20. Wmdy
and colder Fr1day, chance of
snow. Highs to the mid 20s.
Probability of precipitation
near 100 percent this af·
ternoon and early tomght, 50
percent Friday.

Carbon County today as three
nori-UMW miries were
scheduled to reopen after
shutting down Wednesday
night to avotd further
viOlence.

The Swisher , Plateau and
Soldier Creek mmes were hil
by sporadic

State- tro.opers and sherUf's
deputieS 1n utah and
Pennsylvama stood ready to
mtervene in case there were

and one man hospttahzed.
Dale Peterson, a local

escorted , non-union miners

UMW offi cial, Wedne sday
blamed the Carbon County
sheriff, who led a high-speed

lhrnugh the picket lines
James Kelly, president of
UMW D1stnct 4 in i'ennsyJ.
vania' s so uthwe stern
coalfields, ha s vowed to

repeats

of Wednesday 's

rock-throwing

mediators. UMW President
Arnold Miller said the union
has presented all its' demands
and is waiting for counter~

work.

convoy of non-striking miners

proposals
from
the
BllWllUious Coal Operatprs

One-third of the 270-man
Utah High~ay Patrol was in

through the picket Jines
Tuesday night .

The farm strike movement,

led by a looselr,-orgamzed
grass
roots
farmer
movement ca lled America n
Agriculture, says 11 will urge
farmers lo stop plantmg and
sellUig crops and hvestock
rutd lo stop buytng supplies
liegonning Dec. 14 unless the
government takes act10n to

ensure full parity pnces.
Pa~lty IS a prtce which

nose out of it last night,
nobody would have got hurt,"
Peterson said. "We're gomg
to stop them from working."
In Pennsylvania's h1lly In·
diana County, locatiOn of
most of the stale's non-UMW
mines , some 25 roving pickets
Wednes day trapped coal
trucks and non-striking

and fighting late Tuesday
rughl and early Wednesday,
wh1ch left two miners jailed

confrontations

By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP!) The cost of proauclng a pound
of chicken will leap 34 percent
1! fann ers urgmg a natiOnal
farm strike wm the1r
demands lor full ~anty
pnces, a poultry mdustry
grouii sa1d today.

"If the sher iff had kept his

other 1ssues.

between

rovUig UMW pickets and non·
UMW moners attempting to

Chicken

overnight.••
Pnakov ich said tha l he fe el t here is " plenty of coal' 1
stockpiled by coa l users who have braced [or a long strike. He
also s~ud he did nnt Ulmk the stock piling figures wer e mflated.
He commented on a sta nd taken by the Carter admmistra ..
tlon t hat there 1s enoug h nun-uruon ·coal to meet the nation's

energy needs even If the stnke would last through the wmter.
(Continued on page 2)

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 165

~ost

relatiOnships more than half
a, century · old
m
comparison with the cost of
U11ngs they buy. In rnld·
November, prices for all raw
crop
a nd
' livestoc k
commud1hes averaged 66

percent of parity.
The National Broiler
Co uncil estimates thai if
pnces for corn, soybeans and
other farm commodities
which go miD poultry feed are

pushed to full parity, the cost
of producmg broiler chickens
will Jump lrom 36 5 cents a
pound to 49 cents - a 34
percent increase .

C"sts for turkeys will go up
J

worker s

at

two

mines .

Deputies and state police

(Continued on page 2)

may rise 34%

would give farm er s a
theoretically " fair " return based
on
economic

38 percent and egg production
costs will rise 32 percent the
group sa1d.
.George Watts , pres1dent of
the tr~de association, sa1d

any legislation guaranteemg
fanners 100 percent of panty
probably would apply only to
crops which get government
support
Smce poullry products are
not supported, Walts sa1d,
farmers producmg chickens,
eggs a nd turkey probably
wouldn 't be able to raise their
pnces enough t o recover the
mcreased costs.

But eventually, Watts said ,
the ex tra

product ion costs .
would mev1tably have to be
passed on to cons umers.
In a related developme nt.

follow

for

dtstri cts

1n

fmancwl problems to gel help
under the new law has not
been worked out.
'

Ills supposed to be worked
out at lhe slate level today
and, hopefully, Will be m the
hands of the Eastern I.Jlcal
Board by Fnday. If the board
can comply w1lh the formula
and secure a loan to continue
operations, It will be Monday
before it w1ll be in the
hands of the State Depart·
ment ol Edutatwn.
Due to the financial con·
clition of the district, schools
were scheduled to close for
the remainder of the year at
the end of activities today

provide some help for the
Eastern Dislncl and it may
have lo be closed only lor two
days, Fnday and Monday.
One
problem
is
a
req01rement m the law which
states distncts borrowing
money must agree that they
will keep schools operating
next year This might be
impossible for the Eastern
District to do Restrictions of
the new law may be too
difficull for Eastern as well
as some 10 other districts
involved to comply with.
The Eastern board will
meet agam in spec1al session

at 7:30 p. m. Friday at the
high school

However, the loan law may

Strike tensions flare

BRING THE KIDS TO
SEE SANTAI
.

296 Second Sf

EAST MEIGS - Despite a
special meeting of the
Eastern
Local
School
District's Board of Education
Wednesday mght , lhe diS·
tnct's schools will have to be

Organi1.ation .

DISGRUNTLED FARMERS - TRAVELING' IN
CONVOYS of tractors, combmes, pickup trucks a nd horses are flocking to state capita ls for ralhes supportmg their
I
planned nationwide strike. Thonsands of agricultural
producers are expected to attend rallies Saturday to press
By KAREN SOUTHWICK
their demand for market pnces equal to production costs.
Spokesmen for Amencan Agnculture, which is orga nizmg United Press International
Tensions flared Wednesday
the stnke scheduled to begm next Wednesday, said today the
·
at
non-umonized soft coal
boycott could mvolve up lo I million farmers and ranchers.
mmes
in two stales - forcmg
Farm bureaus 1n Kansas, New York, Arkansas and Colbrado
three
fa
ctlities to close - as
defeated resolutions endorsmg the stnke, but the Colorado and
sinking
Umted Mine Workers
Kansas groups encouraged farmers to decide for themselves
members
stepped up efforts
whether to w•thhold their products from the marketplace.
Govs J James Exon of Nebraska and Robert Bennett of In halt all production and
shipment of coal
Kansas said they supported the strike.

installed for the

Pomeroy, Ohto

Algena , Iraq , SouUt Yemen

and the Palestine Libe ration

,According to Stale Rep.
Ron James (D·92) will reach
its decision soon on the Shade
River project located north of
and envrronmental changes made at several of tts units.
Pageville. It 1s the newly provi de state money to
"It had nothmg to do with the cold or the coal strike," said
1
created
board's first project recla un unreclaimed strip
Jack Corns, media spokesman for the utilily . "We have a 100
mined land m southeastern
·
to
be
considered
day supply of coal on hand at th e present lime "Corns S&lt;lid the
Ohw. James ts credited with
cutback in voltage may be necessary agam today 1f the
If the project 1s approved, havtng been mstrumental m
changes have not been completed. ·

Parents and Grandparents would appreciate and enjor a new room

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

Syna 1s one of the prin cipal
oppone nts of th1s poh cy.
Oth ers
mclude Libya,

CANTON, OHIO - THE OHIO POWER CO. said today il
had to cutback 1ts voltage output to 53 Ohio counties for about
three hours Wednesday because uf mechanical malfunctiOns

•

.9:30 to 8:00 P.M.

peaee U.lks with the JewiSh

curr ently expected to track northeastward and across Ohtn
tonight. That will brmg even m ore snow l11 the state, especially
in north ern counties
"
Warmer atr IS expected to invade Ohio's southern and
eastern sections for a shorl time late today and tomght. That
may mean the snow muy nux with , or change to, rain for a
brief penod of time m those areas .
IS

Pnakov1ch sa1d he had no idea how long the strike would last.
"TI1ere is rea Uy no way to predict this, " said Pnakovich. "I
have seen contracts 1n John 1.. Lewis' day when he would say
there was nothing on the horizon and then shortly he would
have a con tract in hand. Sometimes these things ca n break

Eastern schools
may he reopened

sta te m Ca1ro The talks are
scheduled to open next week.

COLUMBUS
Meigs
County will have lhe first

onches of snow is expected over the rest of the

Large Selection of
Armstrong and
Congoleum ShinyiVinyl in 9 and
12 foot widths

STARTING FRIDAY, DEC. 9th

•

Snow IS expected to accumulate between four and stx
mches m northwestern counties, while between one and three

VINYL FLOOR COVERINGS

CHRISTMAS
STORE HOURS

:.:

not to mention the influx of gnevances or complaints about the
1974 contraet."

enline

counttes today

Holiday Season!

On 90-Day

•

servtce says a developmg storm system, now in the southern
plams states 1 wtll be (spreading snow into Ohio's western

Also Carpet By The Yard. Styles Include Sculptured,
Level Loop, Sculptured Shag and Plush

~

He smd the coa l mdustry IS "not very happy about the
sta bility " nf the UMW 1n recent years but refused to critiCize
UMW President Arnold Miller .
" I've known ArnMd for years," Said Pnak ov1ch. "But the
pa st thrc'e years have been quite devastating from the
standpoint of high wages and low produc11vity on the part of
the UMW and the number of ill ega l work stoppages. And this is

the northwestern thard of Ohio and a ltavelers' adVlsory ts in

9'x12'................................. !59.00
12'x12~ .............................. '79.00
12'x 15~ .............................. •89.00
12'x 18~ .............................~ 109.00
12'x21 !......................·....... ! 129.00

the floor. covering for their Merry Christmas. Have

Meanw lule, the executive director of th e Ohio Valley Coa l
A.sSOciatlon says lhe economy of eastern Ohw and the
Northern Panhandle of West Virginia could be devastated by a
long FMW stnke.
"Steel is down m the Ohio Valley and nnw cuaJis gm ng df•"n
and these are the two principal lndustnes m the area," s~ud
Leonard Pnakov ich. '·A prolonged stnke w11l have A

effeet for the remamder of the state. Th e NatiOnal Weather

of carpeting or vinyl linoleum. Stop by our Warehouse and choose

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

f.Jnakovlch, whn spent 26 years as a rmner, IS a former
pres1de11t o f UMW 01stnct 31 m F~ tnunnt , W.Va, and a !S(I
worked as a safet;- director nut of the UMW headqua rters Ill
Washmgton
·

ByUnltedPress lnternatiunal
HEAVY SNOW WARNINGS WERE ISSUED TODAY for

We Have An Excellent Selection of
"
Fint Q~llty Mill Ends In Five Sizes

Egypt."
W1th Egypt's latest move,
Vance ch1ded the Sov1els lot
condemnation of Egypt and
supporting Arab hard-hners.

there after we ree~ 1ved reports from the Ohio Highway patrnl
last nig ht that ptckeL'i were at the mme."
Wolfe sa1d the 1n ine's offices were s till r,pen and deputies
were at U1e scene

B
.
~.f. §
~11ews • • • zn . rze1 s1 Sh d R.
.
a e IVer proJeCt
can be first in Ohio·
"

from "criticizing

He said Moscow's actions
"rrused questions" about 1ts

''1 wish these Imposters

':::::~::=:-::~:::::::::~"";:::~~"}:·:·:···:-:·:·:·:·:·:-.":-:·:·:·;·:·:-:·:·:·:-:::::-::·:::·:·:·:·::::~:·~:~:::-::.-::::::::::::."":-."%~

in the intenml affairs of

Jerusalem

ceremonial Friday, 8 p.m. at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Members to take covered
dish for potluck refreshments
followin~ meeting.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
Trimly Church, annual
Chnsunas dinner party at the
church Fnday at 6 p.m.
There w1U be a program and
wft exchange.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING, Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at North Bethel
Umted Methodist Church,
two m1Ies from Tuppers
Plains, on Route 7. Music by
Dan Hayman and the Country
Hymn Timers.
PUBLIC DINNER by
Pythian Sisters of Wilkesville
at hall beginning 4:30 p.m .
Saturday; adults, $2.50·
children, $1.25.
'
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, Sunday, 1:30
p.m. at Hazel Community
Church with muslc by Dan
Hayman and the Country
Hymn Timers.

estimated nulhon E~yptians

the (Sadal peace) initiative in
their media and statecontrolled press, to a stage
that is definitely mterference

Ohl(l .

King helps Sadat'

CARPET·
FOR

One smt for divorce, two for
dissolution of a marriage ,
and one for partition or real

devastating effeet nn the echrHlmy nf the Ohio Valley. •·
PnakuvtC' h is a former UMW nffi cial who is now working
w1th the cnal mdustr}' w1th headquarters. tn St. Clairsville,

"We've had de pulles up there off and on all evening and
ea rly today ," sa1d Wolfe. " We started sending deputies up

e

Pomeroy-1\&lt;liddlcJlOrt. Ohio
'l'llesda) , Ucccmbt'l' ti, 1!177

of the state's lop public of·
bc•als, but Jell the matter of
the party primary up to the
Legislature

the Soviet Union, Czechos·
lovakia, East Germany and
Poland Consulates tn Cairo
will be allowed to remain.
lns1de and even. OUISide
their consulates and cullural
centers, they attacked the
Egypl1an people's unanimous
support of the inihahve and
ctlntacled local agents to

·

tnVited.

Actions filed
in Meigs court

e1gs mine

at the entrance. Supenrisnry person nel , sa laned persnnnel,
were going m a nd out or the mme Shots were exchanged.

miners and s upervisory personnel at the No. 1 mine of the
Southen~ OhiO Cmil Cn. m Meigs CnWlty in southeastern Ohin,
authonlles reported
It was the first rt'port nf violence in Ohin's l'n alfleld s s mce a
nat1onw1de United Mme Workcs uninn str1ke be~an ea tly

requtre the tandem election

Czechoslovakia and the
consulates outside ~ f Cairo of

KADY

United Press International

•

•

hots tra e

• ~' !ned were Larry L.
Drake, '[1, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, using profanity in
public; $25 and costs,
disturbing the peace, and $2:!
and costs. Issuing menacing ·
threats; Cha' rma Drake,
Pomeroy. $25 and costs,
makmg menacing threats ; .
Elizabeth Milton, 52, Mid·
dleport, $15 and costs, failure

Sadat

Shrtne

For every
fami~ and
budget

given approval

estate have been filed Ul
Me1gs County Common Pleas
Court.
L.
Bachtel ,
Diane
Pomeroy, flied for divorce
Davis, JoaJUle Evans, James from Ronald H. Bechtel,
Hively, Mary Hoffman , Pomeroy.
Larry Holley, Naomi Howell,
Filing for di~lutwn were ,
Peggy Londeree, James John Hudson, Gallipolis, and
Lunsford, Clifford Manley, Cheryl Hudson, Ch&lt;Shlre,
Wesley Meeks. Sandra Jess V1rgil I.Jluden, Rt . I,
Morgan, Mrs. Gary Napper B1dwell and Cynthia Lee
and
daugitter,
Dav1d L&lt;&gt;uden, same address. Lou
Ohlmger,
Roy
Payne, Irene Roseberry, Burton, S.
Virgtnla Qnickle, Robert C., filed for partition of real
Rankin, Wayne Setzer, Mrs. estate against Betty Lou
Thomas
Skmner
and Roseberry Caver, Akron, et
daughter, Timothy Spurlock, a!
Lelia Thomas, Bryan Wolfe,
Leota Young. , ~~ · n ,,
(Birlbs, Dec. • ,
Mr and Mrs. Richard
Perdue, a son, Wellston. Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Saunders, a
son, Scoltown. Mr. and Mrs.
Ward Sm•th, ·• daughter .'
(Continued from page 1)
Bidwell.
the Soviet Uni on, East
Germany, Hungary and

THURSDAY
WEEKEND SERVICES at
Faith Tabernacle Church,
Bailey Run Road, Thursday
through Monday, 7:30 each
evening with Archie Watts,
W.
Va. ,
Huntington,
speaking. Public invited.
FRIDAY
MARY , SHRINE, White

CALORIC
Microwave

•

•

Rousey, Pomeroy , Velma

Winebrenner , Syracuse ;
Myrta Schaefer, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Charles
Neal, Veneva Gillian ,
Thomas B1ng , Adrienne
French.

Fined were Terry Walker ,

Rutland ; Donald L. Hysell,
Rutland, and Mary Estridge,
Pomeroy. ForfeiiUig a $30
bond posted on the same
charge was Daruel Hensler,

•

I

Electric blanket
caught on fire

Rep Thomas Foley, DWa s h , cha irman of the
House
Agr1culture
Committee , introduced a
resolutiOn puttmg Congress
on recor d in favor of panty
pnces for farmers

The resolutwn, 1! passed by
the House and Senate, would
note that farmers have been
tn a severe econom ic squeeze

and that "it IS the sense of
Congress that full panty
remams the goal r•f Amencan
agnculture

ami 1s the

Store robbed
A robbery of a store and money was gone .
Deputies reported there
breaking and entering of
Syracuse Elementary School were sorne small footpnnts l.n
is being investigated by the snow leading from behind
Sheriff James J . Proffitt's the building to SR 124.
Wednesday evening lhe
department.
departmenl
investigated a
Approximately $150 was
breaking
and
entering at the
taken from the cash register
Syracuse
Elementary
School.
at the Coal Bucket Carry Out
Entry
was
made
by
breaking
at Salem Center, Sheriff
out a side window. Missing
Proffitt reported.
Donna Jean Stacey, Rt. I, was a TV sel, but 11 was
Langsville, said she had gone recovered on the front lawn
to her trailer next door and where it had been abandoned.
Some youngsters said they
was there only a few mmutes.
saw
a person with the TV;
However, when she returned
to the Carry Out and they yelled, and the person
proceeded to wait on a dropped the TV and ran.
Sheriff Proffitt said other
customer she discovered the
witnesses will be interviewed
today. .
The department is also
investigating a report that a
house owned by Nellle
Campbell, Rt. I, Galllpolis
has been entered . The house
is located in Rutland
Townsh ip

Discount
could
be late

Losses in

Columbia Gas of Ohio
customers who have applied
and qualified for the 25 per
cent
heating
discount
program will receive a
retroactive discount on their
January gas bill for the
months of November and
December if the discount
does not appear on their
December bill.

fire

::~e~:~~n~ ~~~id25 ·~~0~~~~

(j?

h~~vy

L&lt;&gt;sses are expected to run
approximately $40,000 from a
fire Wednesday at the Forest
Products Co. at Bailey Run,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar sa1d.
Pomeroy firemen were
called to the mill at 7:30 a. 111·
HSome customers eligible Wednesday and were on the
for the discount for scene until 2 p. m. They were
November will not receive tt assisteil with water supplied
on their December bill in fightmg the fire in the
because the elig1bihty lists approxunately 30 by 100 feet
were not furnished to the gas partially open wood frame
company in
time for structure by the departments
December billing," J . M. of Middleport and Rutland.
Koebel, Gallia·Meigs area
Chief Legar said that the
manager for Columbia said. fire possibly started from a
Koebel explaoned that the wood burnmg stove in a
utility compames are per- storage room, or from heat
mitted lo have 30 days in tapes bemg used on pipes 1n
which to apply the discounts the bujldlng The loss figure
lo t he eligible gas company includes equipment, although
customers .
Pomeroy firemen were able
"If the credit does not to save some before it was
appear on lhe December damaged .
·
bill," Koebel states, "a credit
There is some Insurance
for both November and coverage, Chief Le~ar said.
December usage will appear
on the January gas company
J'

&lt;1&gt;-··

&lt;l&gt;~iz

healing bill d1scount are 65 ' ~
years old or older or. per· ' •
manently
and
totally &lt;:)
disabled, and have a yearly '
mcomc not exceeding $7 ,000.
" llomrawn(!rs and renters

~

'.,
&lt;1&gt;

:

,

·•

1

¢
'
•
~

standard wh1ch represents a
fair return to producers."
Th• resolutiOn would not,

were eligible and will receive •
the d1scount 1! they qualified ('
and have completell an a(&gt;- ', ~ .J' &lt;i&gt; - ·' &lt;t&gt; _., &lt;i&gt; :&gt;'&lt;if_.,,

however , mandate specifi c
government aCtion to enforce

plication ."

a full panty floor under fam1
prices

Deadline for returning
applications was the end of
last month.

DAYS TO
(H RIST MAS

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="797">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11332">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49050">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49049">
              <text>December 7, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7617">
      <name>brosius</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="113">
      <name>evans</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7616">
      <name>sranz</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
