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·~:::~-=~::;.&lt;;.'&gt;'1~::;.; :;,,:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:::::::·&lt;:::·:::::::;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~

Gallia ambulance service certified
COI.t:\IRl'S Dr John H
Ackerman. l1Jr('l.'tor ,,f tht&gt;
Ohio Depnrtmrnt of Health.
announct'd Saturday that the
Galli&lt;l Coun tv Volun trt•r
Emergency Squad has been
awardt&gt;d State CertifiCation
of its emergency ambulanrr
system.
Th e
Depa rtm ent's
Emergency Medical Ser\'ires
Coo rd inauon
Pro gram
1Emergency Medi cal Ser\' irt's l

conducti ng

is

a

,·o luntnr~

-

SAND USKY.
Albert Har-

ding . 49. Eau Clam?, WtS,, a
driver fo r Pre Fab Transit
Co., Fanner City . Ill .. who
had been missang since Dec .

wa s fo und Thurs day .
frozen to death m the sleeper

5.

compartm~nt

nf his truck at a

truck stop. '
Wya ndut County Coroner

f'llll' r).! t'IH"!

ambulant'l'

sN\'IL'('S
~~rder ht quahf~

In
cfrtlh L·a t nnL an

r,)r tl1b

t'lllt'rgl•nc.·~

ambulunt'l' sen' aa

must

1.'11\l'r.gt"nq

·:'\l.'l'urdmg
nwn . tht•
purpllSe ts
t'lllt'r!!,rnn

J)l•partm('nt'~

to

up~radl•

ambulan&lt;'r

Department of HealU1. Thrs
IS 111 accorda nce with the
Natmrtal Ha ~hway Sr~fl'tY Act

S('r\'\C'('S WhiCh lake pilrt In
tht• soluntary program an·
l:!,t:ttmg a hl•adstart m till·
pruving the tr oprration!).
!.t·gishltion has aln.• ady bct•n
passed t•stablishing trHinin~
:-;t;Jn tla nls fur a lllbUli.tncc
IX'rsonn£&gt;1.
Donald Cuffin. f.!lll'rgcncy
'1erhcal Senices le r tificattnn Of fleer fur the Ohio
DE•pa rt ment uf H('t1lth , sa id

111

Dr

hi ~

cab

Herschel Rhodes satd

Hnrding appan•ntly Wl'nt lil
slel'P 111 the truck and wh rn n

got too warm. tumed off the
ignit ion, then went back to
sleep and froze to deat h
Harding was rnro ut c to
Jack.son. Ohi o. with a lo~d of
C'C' iling insulation whrn ht&gt;
appa rentl y stopped here for

the night.

By Ualted Pressloteruational
COLUMBUS - FARM ACREAGE IN OHIO HAS
decreased by 10percent 1&lt;M' about two million acres since 1960.
A study by Scrlpp6·Howard newspapers published today shows
that OhiO lost 1,000 fanns and 100,000 farm acres last year to
urban development, larger farm operations or retirement.
At the same time, however, the study showed that net
income per fann is about double what it was in 1968 and
agricultural sciences have helped increase yields, making
each acre farmed more valuable.

Dr . Al"kt:&gt;r·

tu

mert certaan emerg('nc~·
mL'&lt;hral srn·ices· program
requlrPments S('t b\' tlw

of 1966 ~,· ha ch r(\Quin•s ~1~1tcs
to develop laws rt•gulatin~

;News. . •in Briefsi

atnbulaucr

St1 r\'I('('S .

Sl'f\'il"l'S through a vul unt.ary
~._•rruhca twn pr ug ram lit•
suid thot emergency !ll('dh:al

l\1 is sing driwr froze
UPPER
Ohi o 1UP! I·

n'rttfa• ;tta~)n

for

pro ~ram

-

\\ •
I

.,_ ' '

·,: ""~
!hi.' ~ .

spt•l"t,11 Tlh'rlll \ll '\.
IH,ll\'1 1,11 J)IP \IIl h l ,~.
Ill!' lflSll lcl l t\111.
, \ ·,,'
IlLli ht•t•p~ \ H•)&lt;..,
•
Wdrr.J1l'\" l 'li 111

n1hh•s! \'.'t'a !l ll'l
VVIIlh 'J \',Pill hi

roluntary certifica tion
program gives a mbulance
se- rYH.'f.'S throughout Ohio
time ttl upgradr servires ~md
the

m rrl'ct deficiencies so that
they will be in compliance
with na tional standards
should a law pertaLuing to
cert ifi ration of \'chides and
rquipment bP passl'd .

HONG KONG - CHINA TODAY REPORTED ITS grain
production did not rise in J9n , only a year after a grain
shortage forced the world's most populous nation to go on one·
of the biggest grain-buying sprees in history . A report by the
official New China News Agency blamed the worst weather
since the Communist takeover in 1949 - droughts, cold
we~ther and Ooods - for the poor crop of rice, wheat and other
grams.
It was the first time in recent years that China reported no
groWth in its grain harvest, and economists specializing in
Chinese affairs said it would probably lead to large-scale
wheat purchases abroad . China 's 1976 grain output was 290
million tons, 2 percent higher than 1975. But dW'ing the last 'two
harvests, China's population of about 800 million people grew
by an estimated 35 million .

r- llllil •d 111 ..
p LKI\I'h lrl

GALflA COUNTY VOLUNTEER Emergency Squad officers. left to right . arr Juc
Voreh. vke president; Fred Wheeler, EMT·A: Joe Burger. president and Randall Podoll ,
squad chref

lull~!:-. tl'\.l'~llrt
dlld dtd\VI'I~
drt\ I.Jt•rf t ·~·tlv
w,~sh,\hlt· ,111d

shr ll'h

I t"~IS L\ 111

IH',ll

WASHINGToN - JUST HOW EXTENSIVELY DID the
CIA get involved with the news media - and what is the
situation now? That is the double-barreled question up for
answers today in a series of House intelligence subcommittee
hearings to run at least through Jan. 5.
The opening witness - William Colby, who told news
executives when he took over the CIA in 1973 that the agency
had been using news correspondents overseas as paid and
unpaid informers, and the namesoflhelr organizations used as
a cover . Colby said the agency would never name the
correspondents, but there have been published reports on
90me of the alleged activities and their participants.
And although the CIA insists it has stopped soliciting
media help abroad, many questions remain. They are being
examined in public session by the subcommittee, headed by
Rep. Les Aspln, D-Wis., at the prompting of Rep. Edward
Boland, D- Mass .. chairman of the parent House Intelligence
Committee.
·

rt• SI~ t . lr\l

L'U ff s k t'L'!) thtlt

.

!lCi;lt !If

50 p et. cotton
and
50
pet.
pol yes ter
Size s : Small
Medium . Large
and
Extra Large .

Tuesday , Dec . 27 thru Saturday, Dec . 31

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS

Shirt -

.... .

$339

American Dog (Slaw Dog)
Meat Sauce &amp; Slaw
Reg . 60c

SPECIAL
PRICE

40e
60e

EXTRA
WARMTH WITH IE .
THERMAl BOY'S
WINTER· WEAR

Footlong American Dog
Reg. 95c

SPECIAL
PRICE

This special is offered to acquaint you with the
goodness of our Government inspected wieners

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to e;"~~;prcss our
hearlfelt thanks anC1 d('ep
gra11 TuQe for the many

and our homemade sauce .
No limit to quantity of purchase. Offer g~d ior
Dr ive-In or Carry-Out Service Only .

cards
and
other
c~~:
pressions of s mpathv at
the time ot t.he de&lt;'!Th of our

b rot her and uric l e, Mer l e J
Carson , of Galena , Ohio
May God Bless you!
The- Carson Families , Ru ll,

Tucker

LEXINGTON,N. C. - LEXINGTON INVESTOR Mitchell
A. Harb has a special interest in the success of the "Mitch 1"
tire cutter, a process Myers Industries Inc. of Akron, Ohio, will
begin in the next few months .
liarb invented the machine, received a patent and sold the
rights to Myers, a tire&lt;~upply giant and a supplier for tire
r!!Capping firms . He is getting a substantial royalty for each
machine the company produces. The " Mitch I" will be able to
slice used tires into any desired width, and ca n cut two tires in
just eight seconds. He said the machine will make it easier to
bury tlres in landfills because whole tires tend to rise to the
surface when buried. The machine also wiU cut rubber strips
from tires for use as doormats and sandal soles.
COLUMBUS - WITH THE START OF post-Christmas
sales, Attorney General WiUiam Brown advised shoppers they
should know how a rain check works. A rain check permits a
conswner to buy an item ai a sale price at a later date even
though it it was sold out dW'ing the sale.
When slores advertise sale prices on items, they are
required to have enough stock to meet demand. Unless the
slore has a limited number of items for sale and lists that
number in its ads, it must give consumers a rain check if It
runs out of the item. Brown warned consumers Monday to be
wary of mer
Is who advertise bargain prices on items to
lure buyers o the·store without letting the consumer know
that there may a very limited number of these Items to sell.

Also men's thermal shirts in sizes S, M, L, X l for S3 .99
and men 's thermal drawers S, M , L, XL for 53.99.
Men ' s .ln d Boys Dept. - 1st Floor

Auto &amp;.ll!!r

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1969 z . 2a CAMARO Fo r more
in t orm al ion , call 9-19 '1377

*

*
1977 BUICK LIMITED
DEMONSTRATOR

IS YOUR GAIN

1

On Jan. 1 we have to pay personal property tax
on all cars in inventory. RCI!ther thCiln do this we
are closing out our inventory and passing the
•
savi s to you.
.
WAS

295

IS

1670

74 Chev. Vega

WAS

IS

1977 GMC VANDURA
controL

8 tra ck

stereo. luggage ra .ck , 4 ca ptain
chairs , sin k. ice bo- , citizens ba nd
radio . Driven only 5,134 miles .
WAS S II ,78S

Sta. Wagon

AM- FM

NOW

"9000

Fully E(!uipped , demo deal.

Retail Price Sli759.8S
Sale Price

A~;o~c·~~~~ ~plentv 1295

lu xury ca r . AM. fM , sp l it

Radia l t ir es,

trailer tow

auto. trans .

PICKUP
Suoer Cab, 6 cyl en gine, topper , seats

si1c

'3795

$3470

On ly 20 . 170 miles

1975 CHEV. MALIBU CLASSIC
51. Wagon , qir , rad 1al tires .

$2670

'

AUSTIN MARl
2 Dr., low mi les , bright red fin ish .

'3295

$2680

vinyl roof.

LeSabre 4 dr.

Chesnut fin ish . paisley interior . one owner .

'995

Light green , vinyl top, air tond ,, only 41, 000
miles .

EASTERN AVENUl

71 Olds Delta
s510 4 dr.
Brown

viny l 1op.

basic transportation

Light green.

'2495

71 Pontiac
s270 Catalina 4 dr.
·

$1970

'2995

$2490

'2795
'2195

1

78.5 1973 PONTIAC GRANDVILLE

'1795

Yellow with
black top .

tr,ansportation ,

4 Dr .. air cond.r viny l rooL light blue. One

295

'897 S48Q

$875

1973 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR HT

'1795
'1495

Burgundy t inish , new Pont iac trade .

'1995
Air , P.S., P. B., vinyl top .

•49

$370 1972 OLDS DELTA 4 DR SEDAN

'1495

One owner , light green., good condition . .

Cadillac
4 dr.
Local doclor's
trade . New rad ia l

t ires.

"Come In And Browse Around"

sassinated Hamdi ai-Qadi,
a Palestinian Arab working
in the education department
In the town of RamaUah on
the Israeli·oecupied West
Bank of Jordan .
Israeli authorities later
confirmed al-Quadi, who
West Bank 90urces said had
made no secret of his pro·
Israeli sympathies, was shot
in the head Monday outside
his home in RamaUah and
died instantly_
Waf a reported the orders In
kill al-Qadi and Olher Israeli
collaborators were issued

"after the revolution had
given them several warnings
to stop dealing with the
enemy's intelligence
service.''

Pilot, reporter
•
copter
killed m

'495

I ~'" '" more.

See i t Now.

2 dr. HT

fini sh ,

72
sggo Polara Sta.
Wagon

72 Malibu

1974 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR.

595

Full power, Rollye wheels, one toCat owner .

Dark bl~e ,

'495
$1880

IS

~~~-i-~--~----~~+-~~~

'2295

'2695

4 Dr., air con d., power.windows, v inyl top , one
owner .

Gold
finish .

595

.LESABRE 4 DR

WAS

low

72 Buick
Electra 4 dr.

73 Chrysler
Newport Cust.

~19=-=7-=-4==::-:E::-LI:::TE:--...;;..--+---+----4 72 Buick
Chestnut finish , wire whee l covers, low mi les.

'5500

miles .

2 Dr . H.T.,a ir cond.,

'3295

pkg .~

By DAVID D. PEARCE
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)
- The Palestine Liberation
Organization says it has
assassinated an Arab official
who cooperated with the
lsraells on the occupied West
Bank and issued death
warrants for other Israeli
•'agents.''
"Out of concern for the
security and interests of its
masses , the Palestinian
revolution has issued orders
to llqtidate a number of
agents inside the . occupied
homeland," the of!icial PLO
news agency Wafa said
Monday.
Wafa said one of the PLO's
''revolutionaries"
as-

•

sggo 1973 CADILlAC COUPE DEVILLE
1977 CHEV. 1f2 TON PICKUP
r7n2~PiJiy~m;;o~uUth~t--t--~77:2fiilA!E!matiiOn~--~--~ Fully equipped . brig hi red t;oish , white interior
11.000 m i tes .
OLDS 98 4 DR
:;;-;:~:u;----+-.3-89-5-+-$-3_4_8_0-i fury I 4 dr. 1295 SBso I~~\~ll,rans
EXTRA LOW Ml
Dark blue, GM offid.a l's car .

Assass· at1on
orders iss ed

1977 PONTIAC
CATALINA 4 DR

This van ha s it aiL Fully equ ipped
wi th air con di t ioni ng , tilt wheel,

cru ise

•

GALLIPOLIS, O .H IO
'

QtnNCY, Mass. (UPI) The traffic -scouting
helicopter of a Boston radio
station crashed into a
apartment house early today
killing the pilot and a
reporter.
Four residents of the threestory apartment building
were injured in the three
alarm fire that followed.
Police said pilot Richard
11
Red" Banks, 50, and
new11111an Clllp Whitmore, 29,
of station WEE! were
trapped In the downed
aircraft. The two victims
were substituting for the
regular pilot and reporter .
'fl!e helicopter was on its
usual morning flight to
broadcast traffic conditions
as the morning highway
crush hegan when the pUot
radioed that he was going to
try for an emergency
landing. He apparently was
beginning a turn when the
helicopter hit the building at
7:32a.m.
Part of the bubble cockpit
sheered off and the aircraft
plwruneted to -the gro~md .
One rotor blade remained
sticking out of an apartment
window, eyewitnesses said.
Many of the residents at the

I

.

apartment house at 71-A
Station St. in West Quincy
rushed outdoors in their
nightclothes . . Flames. ~ere
rising from the roof as the
first of some 30 flre trucks
arrived at the scene.
The injured were ldenUfled
as Ronald E. Michel90n, 28,
his wife, Lynn, 26, and thelr
11)-week-old daughter Dawn .
The parents were listed at
Quincy City Hospital in fair
condition and on the danger
list as a precaution. There

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 252

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

ai•crHft.

•·

consumer to llllderstand each other," he said " We're

not trying to rip anybody off, we're just trying tu make
a living."

Michigan farmers seeking higher prices for their
produet s hav£ staged several " tractorcades" including nne to the state capitol in Lansing - to show

their outrage with federal agricullW'al policies.
Anumber of farmers also used their tra ctor~ to sta ge
short blockades at several large food warehouses.
The Michigan demonstrations have been peaceful

and farmers plan to keep future protests non-violent,
Harrington said. But he said farmer s will not wail for
their fiscal plight to improve on its own.
"We do not mean t.o scare peo~le with our act1ons or
our tactics, but we are going to carry throuKh \\ ilh our
prumises. ~~ he said.
"Our whole society has gotten so th;ot the guy who
screams tlle loudest is the one who · gets till' most
attention . It's a damn shame but that's the wa) 1l is."

en tine

at

PRICE FIFtEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27. 1977

Palestinians
block accord
Cairo Peace Conference, primarily on whether to
By MAURICE GUINDI
Alfred .Atherton , will go establish a Palestinian state
CAffiO, Egypt (UPI)
directly
from Egypt to on lands now occupied by
Israel and Egypt reached
virtual agreement at thelr Warsaw to meet with Israel.
Begin said on his return to
Christmas swrunil on an President carter about the
Israel
that " additional
Israeli withdrawal from the Middle East peace moves. momentwn
,, had been given
Sinai but did not announce it Poland wiU be Carter's first
to
the
establi
shment of
because they could not stop on his toW' .
Middle
East
peace.
West German Chancellor
resolve the Palestiniim issue,
But Sadat said he was not
Egyptian officials said today . Helmut Schmidt arrived ih
sat
isfie d with Israel 's
The officials saiu President Coiro to demonstrate his
response
to his breakthrough
country's
support
for
Sadat's
Anwar Sadat did not want to
journey
to Jerusalem five
show agreement with Israeli peace moves.
weeks
ago.
Begin
and
Sad
at
ended
l
wo
Prime Minister Menahem
" There
was
a
Begin on Sinai because it days of talks in Ismailia
disagreement
in
vieW]X)ints,''
Monday
with
a
joint
news
would appear as if Israel and
Egypt made a bilateral conference acknowledging Sadat said11 at the news
settlement and igi)Ored the that crucial differences conference. Mr . Begin ·may
(Continued on page 12)
Palestinians. But the two remained between them.
leaders agreed to keep on
talking.
.
Sadat must have something
to show to the Arabs, particularly Jordan and Syria, that
he was able to win
concesSions from Israel
regarding the occupied West
Bank of Jordan and the Gaza
Strip, the officials said.
over and that miners would
Egypt wants · a Palestinian
Ualted Pressl.oteruatiooal
·
state in those areas.
Welfare offices ln. West renew efforts to sh ul down
working mines, coal docks
In Damascus, · Syria said
Virginia and other mining
the Christmas summit with states prepared today for an and processing plants.
"I expect the pickets who
Begin was a "total fai!W'e" expected flood of food stamp
were
out before Christmas
and called on Sadat to step applications from
the
will
be
back," Robert carter,
down from power.
families of the nation's
president
cif UMW District 30
The governnient-controlled striking .coal miners.
.
at
Pikeville,
Ky .. s aid
Damascus daily 'rishrin said,
In Washington, negotiators
Monday.
"Begin did not make any for the United.Mine Workers.
"I'd like to see aU the non·
eoncessions to Sadal that union and · the soft coal
union
mines shut down - it
approached Sadat 's visit to industry were to resume
would
be good for them as
Israel ."
contract talks today as the
well
as
for us ."
In Jerusalem, Begin nationwide strike by 183,000
said he had heard of
Carter
briefed his cabinet and the miners in 22 states entered its
no
plans
for
additional motorU.S. ambassador on his talks foW'Ih week."
from
Ohio or West
cades
with Sadat and prepared for a
· West Virginia Welfare
Vlrginia
into
Kentucky,
such
tough debate in parliament Commissioner Leon Ginsberg
on the latest moves toward said the state's welfare . as last week's, ·which resulted
In the arrest of one yoWlg
peace.
offices would begin mass
"The discussions
in application procedW'es for Ohio miner .
The contract talks stalled
I.smaiUa were constructive/ ' miners and their families
early
last week - reportedly
Ambassador Samuel Lewis needing food stamps.
over
contract language to
said after his meeting with
Food stamps are the only curb wildcat strikes - and
Begin at the premier's office. form of assistance available
the
In calro u.s. Ambassador to striking UMW members. were reduced to
subcommittee
level.
Hennann F . Eilts met with The miners became eligible
Picketing was at a vlrtual
Sadal, who returned from the after receiving thelr final
standstill
during the long
Suez canal city of Jsmallia paychecks.
holiday
weekend , with
where the summit was held,
Ginaberg said he expected
strikers
taking
a break from
for a briefing on the talks thousands
of
new
picketing
activities
and
with the Israelis.
applications this week.
celebrating
the
Christmas
The head of the U.S.
Union officials vowed that
deleg~tlon to the recessed
the "Uttistmas truce" was with family and friends .

"ON THE SIDEWALK, CITY SIDEWALK"- As in the song, Maxine Griffith of the
Pomeroy National Bank, wearing a red and while haJ and cape, was stationed on the
Sidewalk Fnday servmg hot coffee, hot chocolate, and cookies to customers at the walkup
window. One was Mrs. William Clark.

Miners asking Five injured in 11 mishaps
for food help
'

Unlike the rest of the
Buckeye State and nation. no
traffic fa ta liti es were
recorded by the Ohio State
Patrol over th e long
Christmas Holiday period
from 6 p.m. Friday through
midoight Monday.
The Gallia-M eigs Post
investigated II traffic acciden.t s in which five persons
were injured : Th e patrol
made 33 traffic arrests and
assisted 47 motorists.
'111e first traffic acciQent
occurred at 11: 23 a.m.

Saturday on SR 124 in Sutton
Twp. Meigs · County where
vehicles driven by William P.
Rizer,

28,

Raeinc,

and

Charles H: Theiss, 58, Rt. 3,
Racine, collided . Rizer was
charged with driving left uf
center.

A three-vehicle accident
was investigated in Eureka at
I: 10 p.m. where an auto
driven by Mary H. Collins, 63,
Ironton, lost control of her
car striking a parked ca r
owned by Delbert Cisco, 23,
Eureka Star Rt. The impact
knocked the Cisco car into a
parked . auto owne d by
Michael L. John so n. 27,
Lower River Rd.
Mrs. Collins was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center by
a SEOEMS ambulance.

Family loses
everything in
fire on Monday
A two story frame home

its contents were
destroyed by fire about II :53
p.m. Monday:
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department was ca lled to the
home of Larry Barrett near
Danville at 11:53 'and
returned to the station at 2':30
a.m. Tuesday.
Fire Chief Legar said the
fire started in the ceiling of
the kitchen , apparently
because of faulty wiring. All
of the family's possessions, ·
the house, and two oul·
buildings were lo: l. ·:· :
house was o.wned by Eileen
Gordon in Arizona. Loss of
the structures and the con·
tents was set at $5,000. There
and

was nc word on the condition
of the baby.
·
The foW'Ih Injured victim
·was identified as 62-year-old
Julia Virga. She was
transferred to University
Hospital in Boston with burns
over 50 percent of her body.
Massachusetts Aeronautics
Commission Director
Richard Hodgkins s~id
Banks, a resident of
Marlboro, Mass., had more
than 7,000 hours flying
experienc~
in
both ·
helicopters and fixed wing
aircraft.
Hodgkins said that there
had been no Indication prior
lo the crash that there was
anyth;ng wrong with the

farm price supports would affect relil il (ood prices
have been fostered by the media and •re keeping
consumers and farmers apart.
·
"l thin k·that the whole key is for the farmer and

Sdid. " The American farmer isn't a radical. He's a
good sense mdividual who 's been backed into a
corner. "
President Carter still doesn't reeognize the fin cmcia l
plight of the nation 's fanners, Harrington said , and his
recent expressions of sympathy for them are
worthless.

W,\t•,ti,,Hl·,ll~

l'iil~\I C f~ lbilvU

Specjal of the Week

No planting
down on-the
farm could
double food
prices by fall

Harrington said misconceptions about how higher

f)]MONDAI.E , Mich. I UP! I - Food priees wrll
duuble by next fall if the nairon's farmers ,·;orn
throu~l1 on the1r promise not to pla nt in the sprinR , ~
spokesman for str iking Michigan fa rmers predH.·t•&gt;d
Monday .
" We've ~ot a time bomb ticking, in effect," said
Leonard Harrington . " If they think they've seen
anyUling at all in the cost of food, wail until next fall if
the farmer doesn't plant.
" Prices are going to double by fall ," the Eaton
County farmer said . .~ Farmers will make more than
they will by working ....
Harrington said farme rs refusing to plant in orde r to
dra.w attention to their financial problems are not
trymg to hurt consumers, but have no choice oth er than
to lake such a tough stance.
" We're being c&lt;:~Jled radicals and other things,'' he

· TillS ATI'RACI'IVE HOME on the corner of S. Third Ave., and Garfield Sl In

Mid~eport is being razed. The home , occupied years ago by the late Dr. and Mrs. Delbert
llartmger, is owned by their daughter, Mary Elizabeth Slone, of Boston,. Mass. Another
smaller house just behind tills structure located facing Garfield St. has also been razed .
Unconfirmed reports indicate a monument will be placed at the corner.

A short in electrical wiring
was blamed for a fire in an
auto driven by John R.
McGin ness, 27, Gallipolis.
The investigation began at
4:30p.m. at Kerr. There was
heavy damage to McGinness'
vehicle. The fire was ex·
tinguished by the patrol and
Vinton volunteer firemen.
Michael A. Bolin , 22,
Middleport, was injured In a
single car accident at II :40
p.m. on CR 3, five tenths of a
mile west of SR 7. The patrol
sa id Bolin, going east,
swerved his car to miss a
deer which entered the highway.
His car ran off the road
overturning in a field. There
was heavy damage.

A

broken

windshield

resulted in an accident at 3

p.m. Saturday on SR 141,
seven tenths of a mile west of

Gallipolis.
The patrol said a vehicle
driven by Phillip D. Alley, 23,
Patriot Star Rt., flipped a
stone breaking the windshield
on a vehicle operated by
Floyd H. Hill, 41, Rt. 2,
Patriot.
Virginia C. Halley, 36, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, was taken . to
Pleasa nt Valley Hospital for
Injuries suffered In an accident at 10:15 p.m. Sunday
on Mill Creek Rd. eight tenths
of a mile north of SR 7.
State troopers said the
Halley car ran off the left side

Weather
•

Cloudy and cold tonight,
low 5·10 above; mostly sunny,
a little milder Wednesday,
highs in ·the middle 20s.
Probability ·of precipitation
50 percent today, 20 percent
toni ght, 10 percent Wednesday. ,

Nellie Haggy is
named defendant

An action at law asking
judgment of $20,154.50 has
been filed In Meigs County
Cumrno n Pleas Court by
Benny R. Wolfe and Robin M.
Wolfe, Rt. 1, Rutland against
Nellie Haggy, Rt. 1, Rutland.
The suit is for an aUeged
was no insurance. The Vinton assault and battery upon
F'ire Department sent' a Robin Wolfe on Sept. 26, 1976
tanker with additional water in front of Salem St. Market
to the scene .
in Rutland.

of the highway striking a
utility pole ca using heavy
damage.
No one was inj ured or cited
in an accident at 4: 10 p.m.
Christmas Duy on SR 681, one
and six tenths miles east of

sin

The patrol said cars driven
by Virginia D. Kimes, 20,
Reedsvill e, and Clifford
Longenette, 41. Rt . I, Reedoville, sideswiped. There was
moderate damage.
A deer hit·skip occurred at
12 :20 p.m . on SR 7, one tenth
of a mile south of Eureka.
The animal ran into the path
of a vehicle driven by Grover
M. Sheets, 69 , Rt .. I, Crown
City, then contin ued on. ·
Slippery pave ment was
blamed for an accident at •
7:49 p.m. Sunday on SR 160,
one tenth of a mile south of
us 35.
The patrol said Betty J.
Belnap, 21, R10 Grande, lost
control of her car _on the snow
covered slippery pavement.
Her car $pun arour:td ~nd was
struck by anoutu operated by
Rebecca D. Welsh, 22,
Gallipoli s. There was
moderate damage. No one
was injured or ci ted.

Frm machines'
licenses need
renewmg soon'

..

Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today reminded
businesses in Middleport who
ha ve
coin
operated
amusement machines that

their · license for these
machines expires at midolght
December 31.
-Licenses for amusement
machines are requlred by·
village ordina nce and
violations of this ordinance

are subject to fines of up to
$200 per day .
Cost of the license is $50
each for the .first three
ma chines and $25 each for
·each machine thereafter,
Juke bo&lt; licenses are $50
each . Fees from these
licenses are used for
recreation equipment at the
municipal park.
Ucenses are available at
the Mayor's office between I
a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday
through F'riday.
I

''

�3 fhe Datly Sent nel MiddlePOrt Pome1 ov 0 Tuc•tlav i.lt!L &gt;7 1977
2-TheDa l)!ienunel M ddlepurt Ponm 01 0

I ut •Ia\ o,, '

No failure, no success
WASHINC.TON 1UPI 1 - In Uw &lt;Ia &gt;r ""' "' n hfr
says Sen S I Ha) tka"a R Cahf
n entl\e
disappears" hen peopleare told ttl&lt; 1 are d tng 11 ' b&lt; st
the' can
ln 41n arllrl e m the Januan ssu
r H trpt'l s
rnagazme the former ed JCator sa1d ' u destro) n t
on!) education :ou destr 1 sortNI b1 g 11tn ~ \ s to
ever) one Thts IS a phtlosophllal ns derat n that
tx'lthers nt€' \en tll.U( h as 1 sn m the Umted States
Senate and see t&gt; ~real budget all &gt;&lt;a uons gmng
through
Draw1ng on h1s I on~ expenenet: t~ an 'tlu at r
Ha)akawa concluded
When til '" &lt; r laz:
students could get an\ 1\frage g d students st pped
stud) mg
What happen&gt; m tbe sch&lt;X Is s n t unhke "ha t
happens m SO{' t'l\' at !Jrgt' "h~n the pt&gt;nalt es r
tmpr0\'1dence laz nPss r agnflrance ar(' not JUSt
softened but ren 0\ed
When there ts no such thmg as fatlure there s n
such thmg as success e1ther Mouva on the des1re to
excel the urge to accompl shmen - all these
disappear
Thts I m afra d ts the dtrecllon m ~&lt;h rh our
soctet) has been gomg steadtl) for man) &gt;ears

A mature male gor lla mav
be sax feet tall and ..etgh 400
pounds or more has enor
mous arms can span mght
feet

The ftrst European VISit or
to the popular Car bbean
resort tsland of Grenada v.as
Chr Stopher Columbu s n
1498

Midwest, Plains shivering in cold

B)
Un it ed
lntt&gt;mat nal

Press

Mtd~&lt;csterners md Plams
restdents 11 hu ha 1 f.-~ ~ten
lasa 11 mter s &lt;OII11 err ~ 1e1
ablterrenundert oda) "'U
temperat ures fall g i&gt;elo\\
zrro m man\ are ts
On the Wes t Coast

I

tr&gt;p ca l storm centered I 000
m le:s mto the Pm:tflt Oee~m
sent ra tns that batt ered:
Southern C tl forn a bttn~tn g
mudslides
that
&lt;losed
high\\ a IS and n ade tra1el
hazardous
Tempera turl"s ft'll bt&gt;low
zero earl\ toda; frun the
Northern Plams to th e Great
Lakes - droppmg as low as
2.1 bel w zero at Warroad
Mtnn - and reached no
higher than the teens fron
th• Central Rock es eabt to
the nud Atlantic states Frost
and fr eeze warmn gs wert"
ssued for northern Flortda
Snow added to wmter woes
near Ute Great Lakes and
tra velers adv tson es " ere
ISsued for th e lakeshores tn
lol'er
Upper M chtgan
Mtchtgan and New York
Sault Ste Mane M ch

rt'&lt; Pllt d
su L ze r

6

u1 hes of sno" u

ll'llpt!ratu t' 5

&lt;~lllll~ht lea1 mg a &lt; tal
f 28 111 ItS n U1e gr unci
Buffa! N \ &lt;n the sh rr
of Lak&lt; Fr e g I an th et J
u he• md Muskegon an d
Hougl tor I akt Mtch l"ach
\1 or

ft'{{'l\ Nl an 11 I

r

srlO\\

Monda) tght
let Ja ns on th e Mtss sstpp
n\l'r bdween Hlmm s at d
lo11 puslt ed the r 1er level to
fl x d stage up&gt;l rea n of
M ntpel er lov;a But the
Natwnal Weather Sen ce
satd rt\er l \ erflo\\ w0.1sn t
se1 ous
On th&lt; West Coabt rants
p unded
at
Soul I ern
Cahform t for a second da)
;tretchtn~ mto Nevada and
Ar wna Ra n and snow vere
expected to contmue through
Wednesda) u the south11 est
C&lt; rnrr of thE" nation
Heal'\ snu" " as expected
m mow1ta n areas of Ne\ ada
and travelers ad1tsor es were
tn effect for the ent1re state
Reno rece ved more than 2
tnches of snow Monda) mght
A stret ch of Cahfornta 39
between Cn stal Lake 111 the

Two men suspected copycat killers
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Two men have been arrested
m susplcton they strangled
two women 10 copy cat
ki!Ungs alter the !ashton of
the Htllstde Strangler or
deliberately dtsgwsed as hts
work
to
confuse
tnvesttgators
Detectives all but ruled out
any connection between the
two deaths and the strangler
the elUSive rape-51ayer who
has kllled 11 women tn less
than
three
months
terrormng the htllslde
restdenttal
area
of
northeastern Los Angeles
We don t believe there IS
any connection between the
kllhngs and the Htllstde
Strangler at this time but we
always have to leave the door
open satd a Los Angeles
pollee spokesman Lt Dan
Cooke There s always a

remote possabil!ty
Detectiv es arreste d
Thomas Davts 24 and
Stephen d Orsey DeveZtn !0
They were • held on
susptcton of murder m the
deaths of Paula Glen Ward
18 and Carolyn Tanya
Wilhams 21
Davts was arrested late
Sunday mght when he
returned to a car staked out
b) pollee on tnformatton
obtamed by televtston
reporter Warren Wilson
Wilson learned that a motel
employee told frtends of the
dead women he saw a man
carrytng
Mtss
Ward
wrapped m a blanket Ui the
auto The employee noted the
bcense number which the
frtends passed on to the
reporter
DeveZtn was arrested by
offlcers who wPnt tn h s

apartment wtth a sea rch
warrant Monday
Mtss Ward " hose partially
clothed body was found near
the Rose Bowl 10 Pasadena
Saturd ay ongtnall) was
bsted as th e strangler s 12th
vtctun by Pasadena pohce
The body of Mtss Willtams
a prostitute wa s found
several hours later m a
parking lot 12 miles away m
the Wilshtre Dtstnct
Both had been strangled
But Mtss Wllltams death was
constdered unrelated to the
strangler or to the slaymg of
Mts s Wa rd unltl 1t "a s
learned the two women were
last seen together Fr day
when frtends srud they " ere
gomg to meet a man at a
motel
Pasadena detecttves had
been operatmg on the theorv
Mtss Ward rna) ha ve been a

VICllnl of the strangler based on unrevealed deta Is
of the killmg and ts general
sunil ar t' to the 11 prev ous
stranglmgs - and thus Mtss
Will ams also was connected
s nee the l\\O women " ere
apparently ktlled togethe r
Los Angeles poltce dectded
howev er
that
manv
dtsc repa nc te s from the
earl er killmgs showed Mtss
Wllltams was deflmtely not a
'tct m of the Htll s de
Strangler - so netther was
Mtss Ward
M1ss Ward s body wa s
dumped on a htllstde 10 the
same area where the Hillsttle
Strang lers vtctlms ha\ e
been found but the bod)
may ha ve been deh berately
pl aced there tn an eff ort to
confuse
the
polt ce
department Cooke satd

Disability soon won't count anymore
By CRAIG A PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI ) The government ts preparmg
to
tell
mtlltons
of

handicapped people Your
dtsabtltt y doesn t count
when tt comes to school10g
Jobs and health care

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M D

Scars on liver stay

I

Lawrence Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB At one
ttme I had ctrrhos1s and was
hosp tahzed trea ted and
released I was told tf I eon
t10ued drmk ng I d never see
45 I m 51 now but I sttll ha\ e
some quest1ons
I hke beer (no hard hquur
and I eat pretty well Is there
any medtcatton one can lake
to prevent deter orat on of
the hver' S10ce the hver ts a
regenerat ve organ how lung
does tt take to regatn a
healthy sU.lus' Also I have
heard of successful
transplants
s tha t a
possl bthty,
DEAR READER
You
have to understand that ctr
rhos1s reaiJy means scarrmg
of the hver The scars wtll not
go away The hver does
regenerate but not tn a
perfeclly order!) !ashton
The scars and change 10 the
regenerated hver wtll be wtth
you for the rest of your hie
Your hvertunctton has obVIously unproved but you
can never run the rtsk of ad
ding addtttonal nsults to your
vtlal rema n ng lover cells
Alcohol ts a tox10 to the
liver cells There s about as
much alcohol10 a ean of beer
as there 1s n the average
nuxed cocktatl I can t approve of your us ng beer m
any amount wtth your
history I can t recommend
that you use any alcoholic
beverage for that matter at
any tune
I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnber 7-ll
Livmg Wtth Your I ve r to
gtve ydu a better 1dea of how
yo•1r hver works and vhat
vou have Others who want
thllj ISSUe can send 50 e nts
"lth a long stamped self
addressed envelope for tl to
me 111 care of this newspaper
P 0 Box 1551 Had• 1C ty Sta
lion New York NY 10019
1 tver transplants shoulll&gt;c
regarded as eXP"I uncntal I

...

wuuldn t t:O UI t on then as a
solut on lu ) our problem
There IS no nedtciOe that wtll
rea lly help more than a good
well balanced dtet that 10
dudes the nonna l amoun ts of
v tamms and mtoerals If you
st II have evtdence of abnormal hver fundttm }OU
nught mcrease your v tam n
nU.ke by us ng an ordt tary
all purpose vttatmn tablet or
capsule that you can pur
chase on your own Don l get
rat and leave the alcohol
alone
DEAR DR I AMB - M)
husband ts worned about dy
tog before I do He says
bachelors out!'" marned
men because they gave up sex
all the1r hves
He satd he d dn l \\ ant me
to tempt h m so he ea forget
sex and hve longer Is thts
true that nen hve longer I
they gtve up sex earher 10
hfe'
DEAR READER- Well t
rmght seem longer The facts
are that marr ed men as a
group I ve longer than smgle
men although there are m
1 divtdual exeepttons
Also people who are actt ve
and mvolved and that tn
eludes a nonna l sex hfe
usually I ve Iunger than those
who are not
F10ally how dues your hllli
band know that bachelors
gtve up sex I Most people hnd

some manner of sexual ex
presswn whether they arc
truJrned s10gle or dtvorced
Has bas c prcm se 1s wrung
If your husband persists to
want ng to avotd sex: eve1
though tt wtll not decrease hiS
bfe expeeU.nc) or affect h s
health adversely tn any way
then he may need to dtscuss
his responses wtth a profes
stonal counselor He may bt!
concerned about hts eon
tmued eapae ly and not
" '"' zt tt or therecould be at y
nuJ 1bcr of uti et easnns fm
I IIIJ.! mtcrest 111 sex

•

•
1

~~-

The message w 11 be d s
trtbuted to Engltsh Spantsh
and Brmlle pamphlets
explammg that new laws and
regulatwns offer to the hand
!capped
CIVIl
rtghts
guarantees Similar to those
prevwusly extended to
mrnonlles and women
Intended rectptents among
an esttmated 28 mtllton
phystcally and menta lly
handicapped adults and 8
millton handicapped ch ldren
are deaf and bltnd persons
vtcums of cancer and heart
disease the mentally ill and
retarded alcohol cs dru g
addtcts and people wtth a host
or other dtsabtht es
If you are otherWise quah
fted - for a job college
welfare or other acllvtty or
servtce - yo ur disabiltty
doesn t count sa) s a pam
phlet called Your Rtghts As
A Dtsabled Per!on be10g
prepared by the Department
of Health Educat on and
Welfare
Federal law 1s on yowSide tt says Your nghts
1f yoW'
are protected
employer school co lleg e
hos pital or oth er se rvt ce
provtder rece \ es fed eral
asststance That means
federal money servtces or
property

It also tells parents of
phystcally or mental!)
disabled children they have
the r ghtto demand tha t your
federally asststed local pu b! c
school system pro1tde a free
education appropr ate to your
ch ld s needs
HEW earl) next year " II
distrtbute 1 mtllwn coptes of
the pamphlet
It alsu IS pr eparmg pam
phlets for scho ols and
co ll eges and for soctal
serv1ce agenctes hosp1tals
and other health care
facthttes to explam two laws
- one barrmg dJscrunmat1on
agatnst handtcapped persons
and th e other assurmg a free
public educatton for all hand
tcapped chtldr en
The pamphlets bst th ese
handtcappm g condtttons
among those covered by the
laws alcoholtsm cancer
cerebral palsy deafness or
heann g unp a trment
dtabetes drug add ct on
ep1lepsy heart dtsease
mental or emot onal 1llness
mental r elardatton multiple
sc lero s i s
mu s cular
dys tr ophy
orlh op ed t c
speech or \ 1sual unpa1rment
and pe rceptual hand ca ps
suclj, as dysleXIa mmunal
bra n dysfunctwn and
developmenta l aphaSta

Salisbury honor roll noted
The Salisbu ry Elementar)
School honor roll for the
seco nd SIX weeks per iod
mcluded
Ftrst grade - M chelle
Taylor Jody Tay or Kathy
Hess Melodt Carl N ck K ng
Mary B ttrher Joan S mp

THE DAILYSI:o.:N11Nt..L
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGs-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHIU.
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLI CH

City Editor
Publt.sh~ da Jy except Satu day
by The Ohio VaUey Publishing

Company Mu tuned a Inc

I

Court St Pomeroy Ohio 45 69
Busmess Off ce Phone 992 2156
Ed.itonal PhoM992-21&amp;7

Second cli!ss postage pa d at
{'o{l oy Ohio
National adver LSlllg epresenWtlve Ward
Griff th Company
Inc Bo lme li and Ga laghcr D v
7'il7 Th rd Ave New York NY
0017
Subs r pt o a es De l ered by
carr er wht! e availab e 75 cnt.s pe
week By Motor Route where u. r e

serv1 e not avuil ab e One month
J1 25 By rna 1

Oh o and W Va

One Ye&lt;1r SZ2 00 S x mon th.'!
$11 50
Th ee nonth s
$ 00

Elsewhe e $26 00 .) l!!lr S x nonths
fl SO
Three non h!i S7 50
Sut:i5 pUon pr e
u de~ Su du y
Times-Sen inel

son
Second grade - Davtd
Beegle Btlly Brothers
Mtchele f olmer Sue Ellen
Fry Audra Houdashell Artte
Hunnel Kevm Donald King
Ke\ln V clor Ktng Shannon
Slav n Angela Sloan Tamra
Vance
Thtrd grade - Ltn Chase
Aprtl Clark Alethea Colhns
Heather Cullums
Todd
Cu llums Harley Ebhn Mt chl
Kt ng Phtlhp Ktng Mtk e
M ll er
Sa lly Radford
Brenda S ncla1r Jeff Smtth
Rhonda Ztrkle
Fourth grade - Rose Barn
house Jodt Harr son Rod
Hamson Barbara Hatfield
Ang1e Patterson
Sc ott
Pullms Cmdy Sauters Ttm
Sloan Amta Smtlh Davtd
Warth
Ftfth grade - K m Eblin
Ruth Ft y C.'harlolle I yons
James Parker Teresa Pratt
Den se Stegall
J ackt e
Welker
Stxlh grade
Btlly Cars
well Rh 1 da Jeffers M ke
Kennedy Rob n Mtll er
Angela Pratt Cra g Stncla r
f aula Sw ndell

Sat G ,. el Muuntatns and
Cd£ornn 2 was t:l st&gt;d
betause f mud and rock
sll&lt;i&lt;s Mudsl td&lt; s alS&lt; dosed
C lhforma 18 the Rtn f th&lt;
Wo ld Htgh\\a)
bet""""
:;. 11 Vallev and Rt~ Be tr

Dam
F1oodmg of somelan es wa s
reported on the Ventura
Freeway at Topanga Canyon
Boulevard 1n Woodland Htlls
Onedeath wasatt nbutedto
the &gt;torm Jonathan Weber

22 Malibu lost control of hts
car on ramshck~d Pactftc
Coast Hl~hway tn the Malibu
area cr osse d the center
div der and strl!Ck two autos
head-&lt;&gt;n

Veterans have this week to file for bonus
!'he Ohto Department of t he hied for the bonus Those who
A.n rr can I eg10n rcmmded served honorably from Feb
V etnam era vetera11S today 28 1961 to July I 1973 and.,r
the) have on!) the rest of thts who served 111 the anned
11 ec k to apply for the Ohto sen tees from Au g 5 1964 to
bot us The deadhne ts Vee July I 1973 and whose home
31
was an Oh o one year prtor to
The Ohto Bonu s Cum entertng the service are
n ISSton satd that of the el gtble for the bonus
500 000
"' o
esti mated
A maximum cash bonus of
q tal h onil 371 000 he • $500 or $1 000 educational

assistance bonus will be paid
lo eligible veterans Similar
cash bonuses "Ill be paid to
next of kln of dereased or
th ose listed as missing In
action or killed In action
Further mformatton may
be obtamed by contacting the
Oh o Bon us Comnusst on 79
East State St Columbus
43215 telephone 614-466-7050

RUSSELL LANIER

Lanier
Promoted
Rural water users advised
At Sporn

to check faucet purifiers
Cflr..STER - 1 he Tuppers
Wa ter
Dtst rtel n a yea r end
statement thts wee k adv sed
ts patrons to re\ ew m
format on pro\lded tn the
Env ronmental
Protect on
Agenc) Jo urnal on the value
of so &lt;a iled h ome wat er
punflers that fa sten to the
faucet and supposed!&gt; punfy
and remove rmnerals from
tap "ater
The matenal sa td dtstnct
off cers ts tm el) because
there presently a re se\!eral
sa lesn en and compames
promotmg sa les of such
appl ances n the d1stn ct
The follow ng u format on
o th s sub1 ect was f rst
pnnted n the Etvtronmenta l
Prot~ct on Agency Journa l
and later repnnted m the
Oc tob er 19
tss ue of
Overflow
th e offtctal
publt cat on of the Flortda
Section of t he Amertcan
Water Works Assoctatwn
Improved taste IF the
cons umer ltkes the taste of
has y, ater after tt pa sses
through a punfter then any
cha rcoal h iler Will remove
the chlor ne taste and un
prove the taste of hts coffee
tea frozen JUtces and thmgs
hke that A person ra n buy a
cha rcoal f It er for less than
$10 whtch he JUSt holds under
the tap and allows the water
to pass through mto hts glass
or coffee pot
Matnta mn g th e Treat
ment IF the ben eftctal ac
lwn of the devtce ceases then
tt s not worth the money
Most consumers do not
real ze that the purtfler IS
s mply a small r It er thai wtll
clog and that tt must be
rep1 aced or rejuvenated
Charcoal (titers whtch IS
what most pun! er ktts are
work by absorbtng chcmtcals
onto the mtcroscop c honey
comb surface of the charcoal
The orgamc chemtca Is that
wtll adhe r e t o a nd ac
cumula te on the charcoal
cannot be flushed or blown
away They can be dmen
away by heal and the char
coal made ready aga10 to
I ! a nt s Ches t er

absorb unwelcome odors and
tastes but th s cannot be
ace m phshed at home The
consumer wtll have no wa) of
knowmg when hts sma ll filter
ktt has ceased to remove
chloroform or other volattle
organ cs Very few con
sumers "tll know when their
filters need regeneratiOn or
replacement
Bactertal sect on IF all
home punf1er kit s tend to
collect bacter a (and they
do I there n I es a dange r No
water svstem n the Mrld
can posstbl) be 100 per cent
free of bacterta You as the
operator of your c1tv s v.ater
suwly go to great lengths to
rrduce the bactena count m
your water You can assure
any consumer that the ctt)
suppl y IS safe to drtnk
because the bacter a count IS
below a certatn level as a
result or your treatment
procedures at the plant
You backwash the ftlt ers
through wht ch the Clll s
water passes But "hat
consumer can backwash h1s
small ftlterm g devtce on hts
water lap? As bact ena
become entrapped on h1s
punfymg ktt along wtth the
organtc matertal that they
feed on they can multiply
tremendously After a "htle
tl ts posstble for a batch of
bactena to break away from
the filter and yteld a glass of
water wtth a very htgh
bactenal count Chances are
that the consumer would not
notice anythmg the water
would taste all rtght but tt
could be harmful
To prevent bacterta butld
up some manufacturers use
stlver m thetr ftlters The
s lver does not kill the bac
tena but 11 tnhlbtts thetr
growth The Stiver tons
adhere t o th e mtcro
orgamsms
and
stop
them from growmg Thts ts
called bactenoslattc a c
t10n Sctenttsts do not yet
understand fully h ow tl
works
Bactenostatlc actton hke
filtration has a lun1ted tune
of errecttveness and wtll vary

TV•• .in Review
Hy JUAN HANAUER
UP! Televtslon Wnter
NEW YORK (UP!
The Untied Church of Chnst IS
propos ng tha t the Federal Commumcattons Commtsswn
gra nt broadcast licenses to statwns for an mdeftrute pertod
Thts ts not an example of Chrtslmas chanty gone berserk he churchs offtce of commun1cal10n also wants the FCC to
pe rm l ftltng of publtc petttlons to revoke statton licenses at
any ltme for action by the FCC
The not on beh10d the proposal s sunple - the present three
year hcense renewal now reqwred ts a waste of hme and
mone) for stations that fulfill lhetr responstblliUes and three
years s too long to a llow a statton that tsn t actmg 10 the publtc
nterest to stay m bus ness
The Untied Church of Chnst ts one of the most acttve and
aware m watch-doggmg the telev son mdustry and tt has JUSt
put forth a draft btU of proposed reform of the Com
muntcattons Act of 1934
Wha l ts remarkable about many of the proposed reforms IS
thetr sunphctty It seems the hetghl of reason to ask the FCC to
spectfy the standard b) whtch a broadcaster s performance 10
the publtc tnter est ts measured
As Ute legal memorandum prepared for the offtce of
rommum catton by I ewts J Paper of Lowenstetn Sandler
Brochm Kohl and Ftsher expla10s
All too often 10 the past the FCC has fa tied to arttculate the
crtterta tl ha s apphi:II..Jr wtll apply m evaluatmg a broadcast
I censee s performan~ lid&amp; tl:ontc ambigwty on the FCC s
part makes tt dtfftcult for the public to assert tts nghts n
comrrusston proceed10gs because the public ts often unsure as
to what tl has a nght to expect from llcen&gt;ees The FCC s
a nbtgutty here also creates problems for the licensees who
may suddenly fmd themselves subject to a standard
prevtously unknown to them
The proposed reforms also would allow license challer ge rs
pre-hear10g access to statton records and requtre broa rlcast
crs hl make a public record of thetr performance on an annual
basts so tt can be wetghed
The Church of Chnsl s reforms nclude a sectton of pub! c
televtston that ranges from msunng these statwn s adequate
funds to gtv ng them the nght to edttorlallze
In the area of cable televtston whtch of course came long
"fter the fact I the Federal Commurucatwns Act the maJor
ref rm w uld be I&lt; spectftca lly grant the FCC powe r to
re~ulale cab!
tclev st n and to cod fy e&lt;Stlng FCC
regulat ns c.: ncernmg cable

'

for d fferent dev res and
dtfferent rates of use Well
before that ume per od
lapses
th e
stlver
unpregnated f11ters must be
replaced l'hts ts somethmg
wtth whtch th e average
customer IS totally una Yt are
EPA regtstr atton Any
devtce that 1s adverttsed to be
e ff ec ttv e
ag a n s t
mu;roorganlstns must be
r egtstered wtth E PA s
PestiCide Office becau se
bacteria quallf) as pests
Co urt deciSIOns "ere held
that mere!) ca lhng a dev ce a
punf1er 1mphes an a1
ttpest claun Reg tstrattons
are Issued only for pest cades
that are effecuv e and
properly labeled wht ch m
eluded mstructtons for timely
replacem ent At the end f
1976 about 30 home ~&lt; ate r
treatment dev1ces had .been
regtstered as pesttctdes by
EPA and about 40 ap
pllca t10ns were under con
stderatwn
When no bactenol og tcal
act ton ts m olved that s
when the devtce ts destgnated
to remove only nonhvm g
substances such as dtrt then
tt does not have to be
registered wtth EPA
At the present tune Mr
Bell of EPA says that EPA
does not recommend the use
of home filters because of the
unknowns EPA advtses that
tt ts usually safer and
cheaper to relv on the public
water supply Thts ts the end
of th e quotatton abo ve
However 11 mt ght be po nted
out that
the
AWWA
(Amen ca n Water Works
Assoctahon) IS made up m
membership of thousands of
water personnel from coast to
coast Thts orgamzatton ts to
water11orks personnel what
the AMA ts to doctors The
AWWA ISSues books pam
phlets reports etc They
momtor all btlls and
regulattons passed by the
congress and keep thetr
members mformed of new
and dtfferent methods m
water pur ftcatwn
The
Tuppers Platns Chester
Water Dtstnct ts a member of
thts organtzatton

RUBSell E Lanier Assistant
S&lt;lres Supervisor at the Philip
Sporn Plant In New Haven
West Vtrglnta was recently
promoted to Stores SupervlsQr
at Ute Appalachian Power
Company Project 1301ln New
Haven
Lanier was born In Nitro
West Vlr&amp;lnta and attended
Center College In Charleston
He served 10 the U S Anny
until 1967 His emolovment at
Philip Sporn Plant began In
1970 when he "as hired as a
Clerk Typtst Later that year
he was promoted to Plant
Stores Record Clerk In
January of this year Lanier
was promoted to Assistant
Stores Supervisor and served
10 that posttlon until his recent
promotion and transfer
Lanier and his wile reside In
Pt Pleasant West Vlrgtnia

President is
preparing for
TV questions
WASHINGTON (UPll Prestd ent Cart er today
turned hts attentton to the stx
nauon trtp he embarks on
Thursda) and a nationally
broadcast mtervtew on the
eve of hts departure
Carter back at the Wlute
House from a famtly
Chnstma s ce lebration at
hometown Plams Ga also
was expected to take a (mal
loo k at the budget for fiScal
year 1978 go10g to Congress
next month
The spending plan for the
pertod start10g Oct t was
reported to total around $500
btlhon
The prestdent ke pt ht s
schedule hght to work on
and
news
speeches
conferences planned for hts
overseas tr p whtch will take
him to Poland Iran lndta
Saudi Arabta France and
Belgtum He ts due back m
Washmgton Jan 6
Hts more tmmedtate
prorect was preparatton for
the hourlong Wednesday
rught broadcast startmg at 8
p m EST m which network
correspondents wtll questton

him

peopletalk
By Uruted Press InternatiOnal
SAUDI MEETS THE PRESS Ghalth Pharaun the Saudt
Arabtan who ts after some of former U S Buaget Dtrector Bert
Lance s stock to the Nattonal Bank of Georgia planned to
lunch toda) wtth the bank s board and then perhaps parley
wtlh the press The 37 year-&lt;Jid Harvard..,ducated tycoon has
agreed m pnnc1ple to bu: a chunk of Lance s 16 percent
share 10 Ute Atlanta bank and hopes to get more from other
stockh olders
WELCOME BACK
Jtm Kirk got a ruce Chnstmas
present thts year - his memory The youtll showed up 10
Sprmgfteld Ill about three weeks ago wtth no tdea who he
was or where he came from and "as taken 10 by the Rev
Wtll am Peckham Just last Saturday he fell unconsciOus and
woke up wtth hts memory back Actually he IS 18-year.(lld Lon
McGmness who rwts a mmmture golf course wtth hiS two
brothers 10 Janesvtlle Wts He lost hts memory Dec 4 when he
was hi t on the head wtth a golf cl ub by robbers
SWINGING TEENS It was JUS! someth10g to do Said
teen agers Matt Gonzales and Pia Andersson - and they dtd 11
for 182 hours whtch they say IS a ne\\ record for non stop
sw10gmg - playground syle The old mark accord10g lo the
Gwnness Book of Records was 170 hours set by a Canadian
youth last year The 17 yearolds mounted the sw10gs at a
Torrance Cal I school on Dec 16 and kept go10g unttllast
Saturday takmg only !i-m10ute breaks every hour Matt
wouldn l even stop to celebrate h s 17th btrthday - he
munched his cake on the fly
GLIMPSES Lady Bird Johnson heavily guarded by U S
Secret Servtce agents 1s sp e ndm~ a few days 10 Acapulco
Mextco Bngllle Bardo! IS vacatton ng m Sa10t Tropez on the
French Rtvtera R Kidy McD wall leaves New York Jan 2
for the Wesl Coast where he wtll tape the Carol Burnett Show
then he s off to Fort Lauderdale Fla for a four week stmt 10
the play Oth erwise Engaged
Bunnie Franklin star of the
TV senes One Day at a Ttme wtll co-host the live CBS
tele cast of the Tournament of Roses Parade 10 Pasadena
Cahf
1

t:U nc rn MinneSQll :s f rst ftens1vr possess n as the V k.in~ s
dr ve 70 yards 10 11 plays f r a 7~ lead (huck ~ retlm
ca pped the nardtwtth aft c :a tdlouchdownrun 19 17 fthe
open ng quarter
l.ec lncd only ftve passes after that anu JUst three n the
second half All " ere 1c mplcte but the Vtk ngs ground o I a
•ecund touc hdown wtth a 40-&gt; ard 10-pla) dm e tha t came n
Samm) Johnson sone )ard plunge from 1 01 gone m the fmal
qua1 ter
In the se&lt;ond lutlf the Vtk n~s controlled the ball f 1 20 3l
11 e Ram s I ad tl 9 27
Playmg catchup PaL Ha&lt;len wa&lt;= mtcrccp ell t11ee t n cs
twll'C m the f10 al quarter On a f rst-and ftve sttu atton on the
Mnmesota ftve n the second quarter Haden had a pass ptcked
off by Nate Allen tn the end zone
Paul Krause and Jeff Wngl t had the r na liJC II Jdmtercep
t10ns the one by Wnght end ng the ~ame
Haden threw a one vard t uchdown pass to Haroll Jackson

By JIM CUUR
Ul'l Sp rts Wrlttr
IJ)S ANGELES (UP! l - Wtth a btg asstst lron a n old all)
the surpns ng M nnesot Vtk ngs are m the NFI s ftnal round
of lour of the annual Super Bowl derby
The weatl erman ca me up w th a lithe n ght mgredi ents for
the supposed!) decreptl Vtkmgs Monday a nd the) responded
wtth a 14 7upset mer the Los Angeles RaniS
That put Bud Gr nt s bunch f venerai&gt;le veterans 1111 the
NFC champlonsh p g m cat Da llas on New Year s 1) ty where
they undoubtedl y wtll be even btgger und erdogs t1 a n they
were m thr ram i:J !1 u I a t l •s AI gelcs
I hope 11 snows 10 Da llas sm tled MtnneS&lt; ta C ach Hud
c.rant n ashm~ il rare smile
Wtth quarterback Fran rarkenton on the s dehnes "tth a
broken ankle 32.\ ear--4 ld Bob Lee a mne year pro fr m
Uruverstly of Pac ftc d reeled the V k ngs t the r fourth w10
over the Rams tn four playoff neetmgs
Lee completed nl) ft e passes for just 57 vards but thev II

Pro Stan dings

w th 56 seconds left a nd H ld Phtll ps ret we red n ons1des ktck
th &gt;3 sccu U&gt; tu ~ Baden got the Rams to the 30 wttl seve n
Se&lt;'finds lo g butthrowl s th rd tn lCrccptton ftl e da: zs tme
ran &lt;ut
11 e Ra ns Rafael Sc pttcn mtsscd a 33) rd f1eld goal
a ten pt n tt t: set.:ond quarter
A~ b1r as H dt&gt; n was l'Once rned All en s mterceptt on was the
key tlay of U1e game
I c&lt;ept a lith e blan e Haden sa td I dtdn l execute nd
our ffcns e dtdn t move
It was a p trl!cularlv bitter defeat smce the Rams wmners or
ftve NFC West Itties under tl1&lt; formet Detrmt !Jons ass slant
have never made t to a Super Bowl
The f eld cond t ons were ternble Hams Coach Chuck
Knox noted But we can t blame the weather We have no
excuses Mmnesota played on the same h e ld " e dtd They won
a d the) dc&gt;serve all the cred l

Bears at rexas Stad tum
Monday was such a high
quahty performanc" tt had
Cowboys
honestly
the
bel ev 10g th s s the1r year
I hiS ts tl e best tea m I ve
pia) ed on n four or ftve
vea r s
sa td
Cowboys
ffenstve tackle Ra lph Nee ly

who last week satd he would
retire at the end f the
season
rhe lean Dallas w II ha1 e
to be ready f&lt;r next Sw day ts
M nn esot::~ a surpnse y, nner
over the Los lngeles Rams
Monda) The game wtll be
played at Texas Stad urn
Dall rs w 11 be trymg for Its
fourth tr p to the Super Bowl
Mmncsota ts f fth
Quart erba c k
Roge r
Sta ubarh was sh rp and
Robert Newhou se and ron:
Dor S&lt;tt both r n thr&lt; ugh
huge holes for 80 and 85) ards
rcsp~ct \ ch Dorsett sc red
t v1ce Efren Herrera made
good on a II II ree of h s fteld
goa l at t empts and the
CowbO\ s had a chan ee o rest
Preston Pearson " ho had
been bothered b&gt; 1 pulled
muscle
D1lla s ca n e up w th seven
J.u rnove rs ftvc of t1 em n t1 e
Bears n ~ htm re th rd
quarter Bob A ellm thre"
fm r I er e pt OS thl l'C f

Rams fail to advance in NFC
playoffs fifth year i('l row
8) JOE ST AMANT
LOS ANGELES (UPI )
Coach Chuck Kno x of U1e I os
Angeles Rams seems snake
btt n the Nat onal Football
Conference playoffs
Durtng hiS I ve years as
head man of the Ram s he s
won the NFC West f ve tunes
and for Ute ftrth tm e M nda)
he and the Rams were kayoed
early In the ra ce for the Super
Bowl
The Mmn eso ta Vtk ngs
beat the Ratns b) a 14 7 score
m the NF C senul na l ound
on a ramy day 111&lt;!1 made the

NO nMI LIMII

Pill III'LACIMIN

GUAD4NTEEI

SAYRE
HARDWARE
882·2525

Col sewn turf a mudholc
We got some M nnesota
weather sa d V1k ng Coach
Bud Grant who sends hts
tea n aga nst the Cowboys at
Dallas New Years Day 10 the
NF C tttl e game
I hope tt snows m Dallas
Grant deadpanned Were a
bad weather team
Knox too k the loss hard but
would not blame the weather
The Rams roach eyes red
and vmce qmvermg w1th
cmotton was closeted n lhe
dress tn g roo m wtth h s
players for 15 mmute s be fore
he fa ced reporters
The held condtt wns were
terr ble for both teams
Knox satd In that ktnd of
s tuat on t s a quest ton of
who can stay up and who
can I But 1 can t real!) say
the weather "as an cq ualtzer
- we ca n t blame Ute defeat
on the wea ther We have no
excuses
The V kmgs pial ed JUSI
abou t m s tak e free ba ll
ag 1 nst the Rams and Allen
ft gures they II have to do the
same agamst Dallas
We JUSt have to play good
ball
he sa td
We can t
make any mtstakes or the)
Will take advantage O( US
1 hey ate a !me football
team

COl UMBUS - Crossbo"
ent husiasts are r em ndc I
Ohw s se&lt;.: 1 tl an al deer
cross bo"' season pens stat e
"tdc ex ce pt at Kell ey s
Island on Dec 31 and con
I nues through Ja n 21 1978
Crossbows used to hunt
deer must ha ve a Yt ork ng
safet) and ~ one p ece stock
more th a r 25 mches lo 1g
Deer of etther sex nay be
taken The hunt n~ pe 1 d s
one half h our before sunr,se
to one half hou1 afl cr sun~el

Sport Parade

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

126 Mam

OF MASON

NEW HAVEN,
W.VA.

PHONE 773-5536

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.~~~

---~--

Insured?
It Could All Go
Up In Smoke!
Av01d a tot;;! I disaster
get
complete protectiOn w1th one
of our full coverage Homeown
ers pohCles Don t hesitate to
for your fam
play 1t safe
1ly s sake Get the facts

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI SDOrll Editor
IRVING lexas UP!
It a 37 7 nogg ng such as Dallas
ke) ed up Cowboys mfl cled upon Cl u ago s Sad New s Bears
tt s someltmes diff cullt ftn Ill e t uung pn nt but the Bears
say there was one faarly earl) and that Yt as the pom t v hen
they realized the nil vay they \\ ere ~mng to see the the Supe r
ll&lt;&gt;wl was on TV
I he moment of truth f r them l'CI 1e on the first ser es of
downs m th e second quarter wllh the C wboys m front 7-0 and
n possession or II e ball on lhetr o"n 41 aftct Rnger Staubach
had connected on Its stxth slratght pass bv lu lmg Drew
Peat son f r 3 yards
Now Da llas had the ball on the 28 and wtde 1 ece verB lly Joe
DuPt ee took ff for the end zone wtlh Gary Fenctk the Bears
exceptiOnally able strong s de safetymat a 1d Vtrgtl I vers
thetr qutck-mov10g n ght cornerback both staymg on top of
him wtth the same sheer doggedness that a blood hound follows
a scene
Dupree sudden!) turned around 111 tl e end z r e to see tf he
could see tf could ptck the ball m ntght and tmn edtately was
almost completely blmded by the ntense sun! gltt s h mng
directly m ht s eyes through the roof of Texas Stadmm
Purely on lnstmcl DuPree reached up fo r he ball and
grabbed tl someh w held on to 11 and the C wb vs h d hen
second touchdown
The Bears agreed that was the turmng pomt f Mondays
ball game nght there
Most of the 62 920 fan&gt; on hand co uldn t belteve there was
any possible way for DuPree to catch lha t pass from Staubach
The Cowboys lanky 27) ea r-old lt ght end d dn t really belt eve
1t either

Kent St at M etr o Class c

Wa sh a t nd ana Sl Tourney
Cap ta a Red Ceda r C ass c
Mount
Un o
Ho day
Tau ney

l

OPTOMETRIST

WednesdaY 5 Games

nd anapo sa ! C nc
Sov e s a Hous on

NHL Stand ngs
By Un 1ed Press ln1 ernat onal

54J
452
429
406

GB

W l T Pt s
22 6 4 48

Ph ad e ph a

NY s an de s
NY Ra ge s
A an a

8
2

" '
9

2

5

7

6

9

en caqo

4 {)

0

4 8

GB

7
I
2
1

28

Coo ado
8 l 'i 6
M nneso a
8 2 4
S Lou s
7 22 4
Wale s Conference

'1'J

W

L

But a o

2

Boso
To on o

2757
~0

W l T Pts
2
8 3 45
2
2
4)
'

&gt;

7 5
8

4

4

0 20 J

73

3

Tor en o a Ch cago
Boston a C eve and

Wi!sh at P t sbu gh

Ph a a NY Range s
NY s nd sa Los A g

Bradley leads
•
Houston wzn
United I,»ress lntcrnatwual

1he Houston Rockels had
heen kind enough to take
Alonzo Bradley undet thetr
collect ve wmg and he
figured he should do the same
for them
I really wasn !.;nervous at
all Bradley satd Monday
rught after scortng 15 pomts
to lead Houston to a 113 99
vtctory over the Kansas City
Ktngs I fell I would take the
n ght shots at the nght tune
Bradley was stgned Sunday
afler play10g wtth Athletes In
Actwn
He wa s one of many
Rockets play ng def en se
Houston took the lead near
the end or the first quarter
and never relmqutshed 11
The Rockets led 52-,16 at
halfttme and had an 86~
advantage at the end of the
thtrd quarter
Moses Malone and Calv n
Murphy each had 22 pomts to
lead the Rockets
Ot s Btrdsong was htgh
scorer for the Kmgs w1th 22
pomts and Rtch Washmgton
added 21 before foultng out
late m Ute fourth quarter
In
other
games
Washmgton npped Atlanta
11 3 106 Detrott handled
Boston 122 100 and Denver
stopped Phoemx 127 lOB
Bullets 113 Hawks 106
Former Atlanta gua rd Tom
Hender so n haunted the
Hawks w th a team~ gh 21
pomts Reserve guard La rry
Wnght scm ed 17 and reserve
center Steve Hawes had 25
pomts

Pistms 122 Cclttcs 100
Et c Money score I 23
po nts and Detro l cont nued
ts v.;mnmg ways undc1
General Manage
a nd
mterun Coach Bob Kauffman
With ItS ftfth stratght VICtory
Boston sufEe r ed tt s stxtl
stt a1ght loss
Nuggets 127 Suns
Davtd Thompson and Dan
Issei each lut 24 pomts and
teammate Bobby Jon es
chtpped m With 15 as Denver
snapped a f ve game los ng
strea k Wal&lt;er Da vts led
Ph oemx wtlh 23 pomts
THIS WEEK S SPECIAL

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December 26th thru 31st

...ornp

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$225

T

Monday s Resu
P sbu gh 5 To on o 4
Tu esd ay s Gan cs
Coo a Def o t a
NY s nd sa Vancouv
Ch cago a A n a
C evP an a Mon ea
Bos o a Wuo;h g o
S Lo s a M
eso a
WednesdilV s Games

WHA Stilndd ng s
By Un t ed P ess nt ernat o n a

L1ke a good netghbor
State Farm ts there

l

8

72

C eve a d

"Call me for
life insurance!'
'M

20

Norr s 0 v son

Det ro t

Quebec

"'

30

wash ng on
6 20 6
8
Adam s D v s on
W l T Ph

New g a d
W nn peg

s

4
3

10

M1dd leDilrt.O.

Saturday
W m ng on at Be ea ( Ky )

8 8
5 7

10 J 0 30
Smythe 0 v s on
W L T Pt s

4
5
6

van ouve

w

f

Campbel Conference
Patnck 0 v 5 on

992 llll
149 S Th"d 51

Ho day Tourney
Ak on Ho day Tourney

OFFICE HOURS 9 JO to 12 2 to S (CLOSE I
1 AT NOON ON THURS J - EAST COURT J
I ST POMEROY
I
L-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••·----~
:

Tu es day s Games

Mike Swiger

Def ance

:r·-----------··-------------------,
N. W. COMPTON. O.D. 1

6
7
6
9

9 4

(No games schedu ed

Los Ang e es
P sbu gh

Sl

M am at All Co llege Tourney

6
7

9

Monday s Game~
W nn peg q Quebec J
B n ngham 6 Sov e s

Mon ea

lost but not ut1 aged not
unrulj
and QOt m a l elmet
IRV lNG Texas (UPI ) In
defeat the Mons ers of the I mg ng mo8d
Ch cago ( oach
Jack
M1d" ay we e nuld gl"d t
Pa dec qua rle rba ck B b
have part c pa led 10 a post
season ~a Te su ry t o I 1ve Avelltn t and I nebacker Doug
Buff one sp ke f prtde and
expe n e nce an d m a tu r t y
tra ts the Bears adm red n
Oh o College
the Da ll as Cowboys and
Ba ske tba I Schedule
Un ted Press lnternat o a t
predicted would &lt;.: har&lt;Jcten ze
Today
Chtcago m Ute future
For da S at C nc nnat
I m JUSt proud of our
M am a AI Co ege Tou ney
tea m Pardee satd after the
(Oklahoma C lyl
M d Ame r ca n
Na za r ene
Bears 37 7loss Monday to the
Tourney Mt Vernon J
Cowboys
Wednesday
Avellm sad Dallas could
Me mph s 5t at Day on
advance to the Super Bowl f
Me rcy hurst Pa) at Dyk e
Oh o Sf a I L ou sv I e
U1ey pia) as well Su nday
v a ona
agamst Mmnesota as the) dtd
Bow g Gr een a Tanger ne
1ga mst the Bears
Bow Tou r ney {0 ando
They rea good team one
Fa
M am at A I Co lege Tourn ey
of the best tf not the best he
He d e be g a t Fa men St
sad
( W Va ) Tou rne y
Buffone satd the young
B ad e Gl ass C l y C ass c
Bears
benef tted from
!Toledo
Mar etta
ln v tal ana
playmg aga mst t~e post
Tau ney
season savvy Cowboys
Musk ngu m Ho da y Tourney
fhe best th ng th at could
Keny a Hoi day Tau ney
ha ppen to a oung team s to
Woo ster Hot day Tour ney
F nd lay Hoi day Tourney
gel em m the pl ayoff s a,nd let
Youngs own S Cl ass c
em play a team ltke the
M d Ame can
Na za en e
Cowho)s
he sa1d
Dallas
T our ney
You
re
U.lking
abou
t a learn
Thursday
Oh o St at Lou sv I e n
Chtcago) that was nowhere
v ta t onal
fou1 years ago But we r e
Bowl ng G een a Tanger ne
better and gonna ge t better
Bow Tau ney
Payton held to 60 yat ds m
Ken Sl at Metro Class c
8 nas Mont
19 carnes struggled through
M am
at
AI Co l ege tl1e dress ng room scene w th
Tou ney
a poundmg headache and loss
Blade G ass C y Class c
Cap tal al Red Ceda r Cla ss c of memory as a result or a
crushm g
Stou W s )
fourth quarter
Walsh at nd ana St ( Pa ) U.ckle uy Randy Whtte
Tau ney
I got hit to the head he
Mo un t
Un on
Ho day
explamcd apolagettcally to a
Tourney
M are t a
ln v tat ana l Utrong of reporters
1 don t
Tou ney
remember what happened I
Musk ngum Holiday Tourney
have a headache I feel rea l
Kenyon Hoi day Tou ney
bad Rtght now I JUSt hurt
Woos t e r Hoi day Tourney
He de be g a t Fa rmon Sf
Tau ney
Def iance Ho day Tourney
Ak on Ho day Tourney
F nd lay Ho day Tourney
Youngstown St Class c
Fr day
West V rg n a at Cleveland St
W scons n Oshkosl at Wr gh t

9
4
2
J

Pet
594
58

5 2
13 5 2
12 18 1

nd anapo s

n Conte ence
on

Po t and
PhOen x
Go den S
sea tt e

8y STE\ EN R REED

Today's

9

406
387

Pac f c 0

proud of team

I a nd owners and the ar
t.: htldrer
te (:l rJ t s
u
ma nage s hu t ng "lth
cross l.Juy, ~on land ~ hcrt! they
restde and cert fted d sa bled
ve tera ns exe1 pt fr o n
purchas ng a deer pern t
must att ach a tag bea nng
the r name and add ress to the
deet where tt falls at d all
deer sltll must be taken to an
offtctal deer checkmg stat on
for In spec t on an d f na
taggmg

2

K an ss Cty

Pardee still

Crossbow season opens on 31st

Hou s on

M dw es 0 v 5
W L
9 3
8 3

at the half md n the opemng held goa ls of 31 and l7 yards
play of the th d qua rter
Ch tcago ftna lly scored n
Dallas I nebackcr D D Lc wts th e fmal pertud Jl1 a 34 ya rd
nterccptcd an Avel hr 1 pass pass from Avel! m to Steve
Do sett J l un ptly sc ed. n Schube rt
a 2' yard run and before t1 e
1 he Bears
nd e t the
penod was ver Avell m ha J leadcrsh p f Coach Jack
thrown
two
1 1 re
Pardee had won thetr lasts x
I ul h t
nler ce pt u 1s
~ rr cs l&lt; make the pla) offs
Waters - and the Cowboys ror the first tJme tn 14 yea I s
had reco\med t" fu mbles
I m st1ll proud of our
one by Avelh 1 and anothet team satd P dee
1hey
bv llgl t e1d B I I la
st ycd m h re and played IS
Om sc tt scor ed a!jam 11 the hard as the) could We were
th dquatc n t 7jar11Un JUSt playtng a very good
and He1 re a ktcked two more team

Uem gong t strong safely
Cl at ! e Waters who equaled a
IJf st se 1son record n that
departn en t And Cl ca go
fut bled the ball aw y three
tu 1es
I he ftnal fumble was b&gt;
Waller I ayton Cl teago s tal
ented runner who ga ned
I s:;2) ards duung the regu lar
seaso n but Mond a) wa s
lm ted o 60 ya ds tn 19
carries
Pay tun \&lt;a s su beat up after
the gan e he satd he cou ld not
remem bet all uf l
1 hurt he sa d I ve got
a headache
1 he Co " boys drove 79
:a ds ale n the f st penod
and scored on a 2 )ard run by
Doug Denms n They dt 01e
74 lards n oments later and
Slaubach hit ltghten I Btl!)
Joe DuPree YJth a 28-ya d
to uch lo" pass on wh ch
DuPree mad e an exce llent
catcl 1x ktng mto the sun
Efren Her er s f rst fteld
goal a 21 ) at Je 1 a le l 17 0

9

We~t e

Dallas eliminates Chicago, 37 •7
By MIKE RABUN
UP! Stmrts Wrltrr
IRVING t exas lUPl i
The Dallas Co" boys played
\1 ell enough to wm the Super
Bowl Monday
1he 37 7 dillS 0 a! pia} ff
whippmg D tllas Ia d on ll e
) Outhful and O\e n a ched

3

29
28
28
25
22

13

c nc nnat

W l
P et GB
Ph Ia
20
645
NewYo k
H l 553 1 3
Bu a o
13 7 433 6
Boson
10 27330 7
New e sh
8 25 242 J
Cent a D v 510n
W l
Pet GB
Wshng n
9 1 6 1
C evelnd
8 7 600
San An on
8
5 545 1
A an a
6 7 485 4

New 0 ns

a Hi

Ed non on
Hou s o
B r m nqham

N BA Stand ngs

By Un ted Preu nf e r at on a
Easte n Conference
At an c D ., s on

Try Our All New

Hot Cider Drink

Locust 51

~~:::::::M:t:dg:~:~~::r:l::::~
'

l

�I

4- The Da1l\' Sentllwl. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tur&gt;&lt;la) . [\.~·. 27, $9;;
c

========== =====

l:ll:le:::IC I:I O C 1:11:1=

1

T'ELE VJSI()1l l\.1T

VIEWIN(J'

3,4,8.10.13 .1 5; ABC News 6. Zoom 20,33 .
6·Jo-NBC News 3,4, 15: ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Fr iends 6. CBS News 8. 10. 0\"er Easy 10,33 .
7· oo-TruthorCons J, Cross W1ts4 ; UarsC iub6 ; Pop
Goes The Country 8 News 10 To Tell The Truth lJ i
Gilligan' s Is. 15: French Chef 10: Image Makers :
Environment of Arnold Newman 33 .
7: Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4; lei ' s Go To The Races 8;
Woltman Jack 6; MacNelllehrer Report 20 ,33 ;
That's Hollywood ! 13 ; Music City 15 .
•
8:QO-Movie " Pine Canyon is Burning ·: 3,4J5 ; Happy
Davs 6, 13; CBS Reports 8. 10 ; Portra i t of a Nurse
20; Cinderella 33 .
8: 31).--Laverne &amp; Sh irley 6, 13; Sneak. Previews 20 .
9 · ()()- Three 's Company 6, 13 , M~sh 8, 10; Greenpeace :
Voyages to Save the Whale 20 . Movie " The Bells of

10 00

10 .

n'f}iJN}fe}~ ~ntATSCRAIIILED-GAIIE
byHennArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Junibles.
one leiter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.
·
·

SINBO

I (J

[j

"[IIIJ"

(Answers tomorrow)

I

Jumbles: ROUSE WAKEN . EXHORT MATRON
Answer: What makes a bit player busier !han
usuai?-" EXTRA" WORK

NEW -JUST OFF PRESS! Jt.J MBLE BOOK 1 11 wllh 110 puzzles Is avail·
able lor 11.36 postpaid ! rom Jumble, Cia 1hls nttwspaper, P.O. Box 34 ,
Not'Wood , N.J . 07648. Include you r name, address, 2ip code and make

chKks pa yable to Newsp aperbOOkl .

33.

film

Yesterday's Allllwer
Z6 Color
28 Verbatim
30 Condescend

32 - du
Iieber
33 Got down
3(.1!\,rd of yore
35 On naval .

37 Sea

of 38 Puncture
39 City of

Mannaseh
UBoy
4Zlri511

maneuvers

Z9 Created
30 Disgust

rebel
group

o;--r;-~~..--,
;;-+-f-+~

31 Shabby

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Whiff s IPGI
9 &amp; 11 P.M.- Alex and lhe Gypsy IRI
Cable Channel 5 7:00P .M . - Pau l Gaudi no Fa mi ly F i tness
7:30 - M ar sha ll Baske t ba ll

For W edne sda~ . Dec. 28 . 1977

accompl i sh w1th ease .

ASTRO •GRAPH

VIRGO 1Aug.23-Sept. 22) In a

film

36 College In

'

10 :00 - 700 Club.

~DeanM~b-~~_j_J_J
\!J
1 ~

. ,l

Si t uati On wh ere you have a
ve sted mterest. tak e a detached role. but keep an eye on
thmgs to make sure all ihe
gears are meshing

LIBRA (Sept 2J-Oci. 2J) There

V,.0/. .!Jl(

Iowa
37 Gotcha !
ttColman
film : 2 wds.
l3 Concept

Ar ka nsas,
whic h
received one fir st place vote ,"

a nd

.

11:3()-Joh nn y Car son 3.4, 15i Sta r sky &amp; Hu tch 6.1 3;
Hawaii Five·O 8; A BC News :33; M ov ie " Or .
Gol dfoot an d t he Bik in i M ac h i ne" 10.
12 :00-Ja naki 33; 12 : 4Q-M yster y of the Week. 6. 13;
· Kojak 8; l· oo---Tom orrow 3.4 ; 2: l ~N ews 13.

coarse

19 Famed
M.G.M.
star
20 Not her
21 - pro nobis
2% Like a
hatter
24 Diving
seabird
25 Before :
prefix

1

Charlie' s A ngels 6,13; Mov ie "Tarant ulas: The
Deadly Cargo" 8, 10; Cinder e ll a 20; Dance in
A m er ica 33.
10:0()- Pofice Wo man 3,4,15 ; News 20; Snow Wh ite 33
10 : 30- Wodehouse P layhouse 20 ; 11 : 00- News
3,4,6.8, 10,1 3, 15 ; D ick Cavet t 20 ; Lil-ias•. Yoga &amp; You

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
7 Kind of
I Subject
check
6 Region
8 To be : Lat.
10 Hostile raid
9 Pale
1% Colleen
11 Small
U Wrasae or
napkin
guppy : 2 wds. u Trouble
15 Siamese
18 Less
16 River: Sp.
11 French
marshal
18 - mignon
ZO Com
product
Z3 Spellbound
Z7 Teheran
native
28 Preminger

NEW YORK (UP! I - Kentucky's competition for the
No . 1 spot in college
basketball continues to
decrease.
The . undefeated Wildcats
too k all but two of'the 38 votes
cast in the week ly United
Press Internationa l Board of
Coac hes ratings released
today and opened a 119-point
lead on Uleir nearest r iva l ,
North Carolina.
Kentucky s
rise
in
popularit y amo ng. the
coac hes res ulted from
Ma rque tte. last ~· eek's
runnerup, suffering its first
loss of the season - Gl~. 10
Louisville. The Warriors, who
help the No. 2 spot last week,
dropped three places to No.5
as a result of the defeat, while
Louisville's victory enab led
the Cardina ls to advance four
places to No. 6.
North Carolina moved up
one place to No . 2 after.
running its record to 7-1 Willi
a rout of Tulane in its on\y
gam e of the week .
Notr e Dame a nd Arkansas
also m oved up one place each
from last week. The Irish
routed Sl. Joseph's (Ind.) and
climbed one notch to No. 3

20;,33.
8:3()--Szyszynk 8; 9:DO-Biack Sheep Squadron 3,4,15;

~~.,r

twin

at the top

4:3Q-M y Three ~o n s 3; Partr idge Fam ily 4; Brady
Bunch 8, 10; Li ttl e Rasc al s 15.
s: oo--Bonanza 3; My Thee Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8; Mi ster
Rogers' Neigh bor hood 20,33 ; H ogan's Heroes 10;
E mergency One 13 ; M y T hree Sons 15 .
5:3()--Qdd Couple 4; News 6 ; E lec. Co. 20,33; M ar y
Tyler M oor e 10; Hog an ' s He roes 15.
6:00-News 3, 4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6:3()-- NB C News3, 4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
F ri ends 6; c"E~S News 8. 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:QO-Truth or Cons . 3; Cross-W its 4; Liars Club 6;
News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gil ligan 's I s. IS;
Daniel Foster . M.D. 20; Big Green M agazine 33.
7: 3Q-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4 ; Match Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; M acNeil-Lehrer RepOrt 20,33 ; The
Judge 10 ; In Search of 13; Wi ld Kin gdom 15 .
8:oo-G r izzl·y Adams 3,4, 15; Eigh t is Enough 6, 13;
Good Times ·a; Sugar Bow l Preview 10; Nova

Now arrange the circled leners 1o
form the surpr1se answer, as sug·
ges1ed by Jhe above cartoon.

Print answer here:
Saturday's

near alone

USMC 10; Dinah 13.

IN Fi::OM E!

I

Kentucky

2:QO-S20.000 Pyram id o, 13; Movie " The Bel ls of St .
Mary ' s'' 33 .
2:3o-Ooctors 3,4,15 ; One Li fe t o Live 6, 13; Guiding
Lighl 8. 10.
J:t»-Another Wor ld 3,4,15; Ohio Journal 20 .
3: 15-General Hospital6,13 ; J:Jo-AII In The Fam ily
8, 10; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20 . .
4: 0Q---M ister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals -Ou r Gang 4;
For Richer , For Poorer 15 ; Merv Griffi n 6 ;
Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame St . 20,3J; Gomer Py le,

b

.

may be fact10n~ in you r Circle
today_th_at seem destined to s tir

I' JRlfJ Iol ' ! l[l!l] up In chon . You auloma lically

~ij

U.i..!..J ..!.J

Dec. 28. 1977
Sound prospects Ire ahead tor
f -+ -t--1--+--J ybu 1n (he bu sr ness world thrs
commg year T1ps on Investments Qr oppo rtu nr tre s should
be foll owed up 11 th ey come
fr om so urces yo u know are
re l1 able

"Turn loose
l5 Frog

" TeMl.s ace
DOWN

I Exhaust ·

act as a buller or arb1tratc r

SCO RPIO (Oc t.

24-Nov.22)

Goats of paramount importance
to you are attai nab le today
Therefore . pUll out all the stops
m order to accomplish every·
thing you can .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec.21 )

Be philOsop hi cal in all thi:•gs
today . You will be able to keep
CAPRI CO RN iD ee 22-Jan.19) yo ur coot. knowmg that very
- + -1!----l You ·re e)( tr a-s harp at any lh 1ng tr ttl e •s worth gelling upset
about.
that ha s to do wrth busi ness
..-t -- l f -+ - t --+- l today ReturnS Can be gratrfyI NEWSPAPERENI E ~PRISE A.SSN 1
- . - + -t - +- +---l mg 1f you "ll concen1r.:i te on old
¥1
or new c ommerc ral ventures
Find out rnore about yoursel l
-..1..-L..;,.J.._J...,,.,! by send 1ng tor yOur copy of

Z Judah's son
3 Bluenose
!Subatomic
particle
5 Amertcu
saint
6 Nickname

1936

Aslro-Graph Leller · Mad 5o

1975, Ricahrd Welch,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to .wo rk it : cents for each and a long . sel f- CIA chief in Athens, Greece
addressed . stamped envelope was shot to dea th by hooded
AXYDLBAAXK
In

to Astro·Grapn . P.O. Box 489 .. assassins
Rad10 Crty Slal10n. N .Y. 100 19.
·
One letter aimvly st ands for ano ther. In this sample A is Be sure to specify your birth
used for t he three L 's , X f or the t wo O's, etc. Si ng l e l etter s, sig n.
apostrophes, the length and f ormation of the word! ar e all AQUARIU S (Jan . 20-Feb.19) Allow your mate to" take the
hin t~ . Each day t he code letters are di fferent.
leadrrig role 1n t11 tngs v1tal to
dome st1c well-bemg today Be
CKYPTOQUOTES
there as a bac k-up . but reta•n a
rote
secondary
ZCJ M 0
P B J 'D
MYME O DTPJW

Is

LONGFELLOW

cinnati Cooperative Milk
Sales Association at Cincinnati, Ohio; Miami Valley
Milk Producers Association
at Dayton, Ohio; Wa yne
Cooperative Milk Producers
Association at Fort Waynt&gt;,
Indiana: and MILK , Inc. at
Cleveland. Ohio. An olficc
building now under construction in Strongsville,
O~iO, a s~burb of Cleveland,
WtlJ be the headquarters of
the Association upon completion of the building next
::.1Jring.

8,10

.1 "'' .. ""' ~ ...- · - .. _ _ _

tJ

700 Club

10:00---Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6; Tattletales
B; Joker ' s Wild 10"; M i ke Douglas 13.
10:30--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15 ; Pr ice is Ri ght 8, 10;
Showdown at the Hoedown 33 .
11 .oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Happy Days 6, 13;
Mar cus Wfby , M .D. 4; E lec . Co. 20.
11 3()-Kpockout 3, 15; F am ll y Feud 6, 13; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame SL 20.33 .
II :55--CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :()().-Newscen ter 3; News 4,6, 10; To Say The Least
15; Di"Yorce Court 8; Mi dday 13.
12 :3o-Rya n' s Hope 6,13 ; Gong Show ·IS; Search for
Tomorrow B. 10.
1:oo-For Richer . For Poorer 3; Young &amp; the Rest less
IOi Not For Women On ly 15.
I :30---Days of Our lives 3,4,1 5; As The World Turns

Time 8,10: Mary Tyler Moore 13.
\ O:oo-Family 6, 13; Lou Grant 8, 10; Ne,vs 20.
10·31)-Biack Perspective on the News 20 .
1\.QO-News 3.4.6,8,10, 13 1, 5; Dick Ca\lett 20 : Over

LEEXAH

CLEVELAND
F1ve
dairy farmer &lt;.'ooperati ves,
four bases in Ohio and one in
northeastern Indiana. have
decided to pool their
resources and form a new
combined cooperative und er
the name of Milk Marketing,
Inc.
The five Assodations which
are combining arc as follows :
(:e ntral Ohio Coopera ti ve
Milk Producers Association
at Col umbu s. Ohi o: Cin-

WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER28, 1977

51 . Mary·s." 33

I I I

Tomt. rrow 3,4, 1· 30-News

5· 45- Farm Report 13. 5:50-PTL Club 13; S:SsSu nrise Semester 10; o: DO-PTL Club 15.
6 25- Chr i stopher Closeup 10 ; o · 3~ New s Conference
.s , News 6 : Sunrise Semester a. 6: 45-Mornlng
Report 3. 6 5()-.Good Morning , West Virgiiila -13,
6 · 55-Chuck White Rports 10; News 13 .
7:0Q-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning A,merlca 6, 13; CBS
News 8: Bu!lwinlde 10; 7 . 3()--Schoo!ies 10.
a:oo-Cap t Kangaroo 8, 10; SeSame S. 3J.
9:0()....-Merv Gr i ffin 3, Ph il Donah ue 4, 13,15; Fam ily
Affa ir 8; Match Game 10; Once .Upon A Classic 33 .
9 )[}-Edge of Night 6. An dy Gritfit~ 8; Family Affair

9 : 3~Mov ie " Terraces " 3.4. 15 ; Soap 6; One Day At A

FREGI

Hand" 10
11 DO- J I)nak i JJ ; 1 00

Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 7 PM - Mr Billion ( P 1 Gl
9&amp; 1\PM ~ AStarlsBorn ( R )
Cable Channel Five 1, 00 PM - Paul Gaudino Fam i ly F i tness

6 ~ (1()-.-.-News

\9 ~~ ®

Would No! Die" 6,13 ; Movie " Somebody Up There
L1kes Me" B ABC News 33. Movie " The Upper
13

TUESDAY . DECEMBERl ~l~7

~

Ohio d~iry Co-Ops in
new marketing group

Easy
JJ
11 30
Johnny
Cdr son 3,4, 15. Movie " The Man Who

remained unbeaten in eight
games with a pair of victories
to move up one place to No. 4.
Despite winning both of its
games, UCLA dropped one
pla ce In the rankings to No. 7
and Indiana State, idle last
week , fell one notch to No. 8
despiterreceiving one firstplace vote.
Holy Cross, running its
record to tHl with a victory
over Harva rd , moved up two
places to No. 9 wh ile
Syracuse fell two spots to No.
10 after an idle week.
NEW YORK {UPI) - The
U n it e d Press Internat ional
Board of
Coacnes college
basketball ratings with won -lost
records through games of
Sunday, Dec . 25, and number of ,
firs t -pl ace voles in parentheses :
Team
Points
1 Ken tucky (361 {7 -0l
37B
2. North Caro ti n~ {7 .1)
259
3. Notr e Dame (7 . lJ
232
4. Arka nsas (l) (B -0)
230
5, Marq uette (5 -ll
1B9
6. Louisvi lle (6. 1) .
174
1. UCLA (8 -0
163
B. Indiana St . ( 1) (7-0)
130
9. Hol y Cross (6·01
65
10 Syrac use (8-1)
&lt;11
11. (f ie) Ci ncinn ati (6-1)
34
11. (t ie) Indiana {6 -ll
34
13. Provi dence (6-0l
19
14. Maryl and (7 -1J
15
15, Flor id a St. (8 -0)
13
16. Utah St . (8 .1)
12
17, V ir gini.a (5 -0l
9
18. Kansas {7-3)
8
19. (fie) san Fran (6-3)
J
19. Oie) Nebraska (9 -0l
1
Note : By ag r eement with fhe
American Basketbal l Coaches
Association , teams on proba tion
by th e NCAA are inel igible lor
top 20 and national cha m pion .
shi p consideration by t he UP I
Boa rd ot Coaches . Those teams
curren t ly on proba t ion for 1971
ar e : Cen t enary , Clemson ,
Hawaii , Min neso ta, Nevada -Las
Veg as, Wesfern Carolina .

The new combination came
about in part as a recommendation of the Famter
Cooperative Service , an
agency of the USDA, which
conducted a study of the five
area cooperatives. The study
pointed out that a new single
l'Qoperative equid more efficiently and 'effectively
market the mil k of the
combined membership.
New officers were selected

Southern High
honor students
are annoWJced
RACINE - The second six
weeks ' honor roU for
Southern High School has
been announced. Names in
capital letters made all A's,
while the others made a
grade of B or above in all
their subjects.
Seniors - Lois Ba iley,
Steve Baker. SHELLEY
CHEVALIER , Sheila Crouch,
DONN I E D U D DI NG ,
LARR Y F ISHE R.· Okey
Kiser. Teresa Meadiws, Tim
Nease , Joy Neigler . Mike
Nort on,
J AYE
ORD.
IV AUNNA POWELL, Danny
Riffle , Jea n Ritchhart. John
Sayre, Scott Souder, Richard
Teaford. Ba rb Theiss, Tim
Th or en, Rexan na Walker.
Ba rb White. Myra Woods.
J unio rs - Tom Allen.
Ta111my Brad ford, BARBA RA BUCHANAN, Lori
Chapma n, Te r esa E r vin ,
BRICE HART, Don Hendricks, SETH HI LL, Sharon
Hill , · Loyal
Ho lman.
JEANN IE JOHNSON , Julie
Nance.
BRENT
PATTERSON, Debbie Pickens,
Curtis Price, Danielle Smith,
Ma ry Kay Deeter . TERI
ZIRKLE.
Sophomores - Meg Am·
berger, Br enda Ash, Tom
Bass, Cri cket Carpenter,
Steve Coffman . J ack Duffy,
Amy Fisher, Dave Foreman,
Edna Green, Pam Harden,
Rosemary Hubbard, Toni
Hudwn, Melissa lhle, -BRIAN
JOHNSON, Cindy Lee,
Carm en Ma nuel, .Tr oy
Ma nuel, Mike Nance, Steve
Norton, Donna Rice, Amy
Souder, Kent Varney.
Freshmen - Crista Beegle,
Bonnie Boso , PEGGY BUSH,
Paul Ca rdone, Steve ·Circle,
Eddie Duffy, Jody Grueser,
Sonja Hill, Della Johnson,
Bob Lee, JANET MIDDLESWART , CARL MORRIS ,
Mary Beth Obitz, Charlotte
P ickens, Becky Rhodes,
Mary Simpson, Mary Beth
Slavin , Tammy Smith, Danny
Tal bott , Julie Thor en,
JACKIE WOLFE, Melissa
Yonker.

TMGFB

BDMHNO

DTM

'100

00

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tue5., Wed. &amp; Sat.8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

'

Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ln-

CAN CER !June 21 -July 22) II
ther e ·s sOme thing you 've been
working on where the ret urns
ha&gt;~e been sl ugg rsh, don 't give
up the ra ce now. You could be
rn the nome stretc h.

LEO (J uly 2J-Aug .22) Don 'l be
S(Hprtsed today i f you get com·
p11ments for doing th ings in a
way that c omes na turally to
you . Othe rs admrre what you

~

--- -

'

PRICES GOOD THRU
SAT., DECEMBER 31ST

Russia
medieval
traders
probably
word for

·.......

.

~

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

was named for
Swedish merchant
known as Rus,
from teh Finnish
Sweden. '' Ruotsi."

Open Monday thru Saturday
9 am to 9 pm
,__.,__Open Sunday 9 am to 6 pm

wes tern Pennsy lva nia 1
northern Kentucky, so uthern
Michigan . West Virginia,
western New Yor k, and
western Maryland.
The new orga nization
should provide the vehicle to
more efficiently move milk
from members' fanns to
satisfy the Quctuating daily
demands of consumers. The
consol idatio n s hould also
provide t he necessary milkhandling facil ities for
memhers at less total cost1
concludes D. G. Fatchett,
president of Milk Marketing,
Inc.

1

COUN T RY ST YLE

$}19

.

THIN CUT

''

$}59

.

SPARE RIBS .....:~·..

BREAKFAST CHOPS

RIB HALF

FRE S H &amp; L EAN

$}29

PORK LOIN .....~.~ ·. .
~

LOIN HALF

.

.

LB .

~~~~-~-~...~~- 89~

$}39

HOMEMAD E

PORK LOIN.....~.~: ....

LEGAL NO TI CE
The Publ ic Uu lities Com·
mission of Ohio has sched uled fo r hear ing Case N o .

17-545-EL-AIR, being in '
t he ma tter o f t he appli ca·
tion of the Colu rn bus and '
Southern Ohio Elect ric

Company for au thority to
change cerrain o f its f i led
schedu les fix ing rates and
charges for elec tric ser11 ice .

On January 19, 1978, a
public hear i ng wi ll be he ld

in 9 .30 .A .M,, ;J"t the o f·
! ices o f the Comm1ssio n , ·
180 Eas t Broad St ree l,
Columbu s, Oh io . A t th at
time interested parties will
be afforded an appor tu n i·
ty to present pu b lic state-

ments.
THE PUBLIC UTILITI ES
COMMI SS ION OF OHI O
by Randall G. Applega te,

Mi x 'e m or Malch 'em

Secretary

CANADA DRY MIXES

IIIIVR·IITIOI RB

7-UP OR PEPSI COLA
-

3 QUARTS

REUTER·BROGAN INSURANCE

Our t eenage son qu ite often rides with se~eral of his
friends in their car s, and then in turn often ride with
him in our car. What is the best way we can be
protected in case of an acCident?
If an acci dent occurs. and if i s decided by a cour l th at
the d r iver of t he vehicle i~ a t favl t, then his Insura nce
com pa ny wi ll provide cove rag e for any in jur ies
(prov id ing t he policy makes adeq uate pr ovisions).
Many people lind it beneHc ia l to carry Med ica l
Pay m ents covera ge wh ich ca n be added to an
Automobile Li ab il ity Poti c_y f or a min imum fee. This
wil! pa y medica l pa yments. up to designated lim its, of
passen gers who may be inj ured, r egardless o f I iab ilit y.
As a passenger, your son wou ld be covered by your
standa rd Autom obile Pol icy. w ith Medical Pa y ments
Cover age. As in al l cases covera ge falls f ir st w ith t he
autom obile being used, a nd your pri mar y protecti on
·woul d come from the pol icy covering the veh i cle.

.REUl'ER-BROGAN .INSURANCE SERVICE

DEWEY FRESH
CRISP

LETTUCE
3
. LARGE HEADS

992-5130

WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT

CABBAGE

FORTIFIED
MILK

5 LB. BAG

29~

••

COUPON

FOR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS

$'449

10 OZ. JAR

ALL STAR

FRENCH
ONION DIP
oz.

.

8
CTN.

W!C

39~

99¢

W/C

49~

.SOLID DEODORIZER
6 oz.

- 79~

SIZE

· -~--. -~-

-EASY OFF
OVEN CLEANER
16 OZ. CAN ,

35 OZ. BOX

46 oz.
CAN

GLADE

TOMATO
CATSUP
26 oz.
BTL

..

ALL FLAVORS

HEINZ

COUPON f"

CALGONITE

INSTANT COFFEE
••
"•

RYE
BREAD TOMATO JUICE
46 oz.
16 oz.
.LOAF 49~
CAN 49~

• COUPON

FOLGER'S

Pomeroy, O.

.,,.

GALLON
CTN.

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH

DEL MONTE
ZIPPY FLAVOR

H&amp;F

ALL STAR 1%

2 LB.

The Insurance Store

214 E . Main

'100

FRESH
GREEN
SOLID
HEADS

43e

COUPON

NATURAL SUN FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE

59¢

12 OZ. CAN

W/C

Coupon Expi r e s Dec - 31. 197•
TWIN ClT·YGATEWAY

Coupon Expires Dec . 31. 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.

Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price of license .

•

.

.I

TOWNSHIP~-----------------------------------------

Ag e

into a beaut ifu l, litll e a larm clock with a rel iable
30-hour key-wound movement. The decorative,
embossed coin cover swive ls, aside to reveal a
regal Roman -faced clock, hand:&gt;onne l·y 9
housed in a four-co1n case.
gold fini s h. 3'/,." d iameter,
1 '14" deep . $24.95

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
STORE
POMEROY

Sex

Yr. Mo. M F

COLOR
Blk White Gray Brindl"e Tan Brown Ye llow

'

Breed
long

Short

If
Known

Fees

Paid

"
••••

Li~e nse must be .obtained not later than Jan. 20, 1978 to avoid pa In
lh•s date penalty will be $2 .00 for_single tag a~d ss .oo for kennellice~se~ peniilty. After

W/C

NO. 145
50 CT. BOX ·

69~

Coupon Expires Dec.) ·t. 1977
TWIN CITY GAT~'WAY

Coupon Expir e s Dec. 31,.1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

••
,•"

SCOlT ASSORTED

GOLDEN ISLE

PAPER TOWELS

SAUERKRAUT

NO. 405

NO. 605
W/C

W/ C

2 LB. CAN
Coupon E xpires Dec. 31 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

100 CT. BOX

$}49

W/ C

Coupon Ex pi res Dec. 3 1.1977
TWIN CITY GA TE WAY

=·1~~~~~~~~~~~7~
-~
~
.-- ~~s:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CO UP ON
COuPO
N
r
COU P ON
:" ln~!i;ij~M~ CO UP ON
DYNAMO
SNOWY
'

County Auditor of Meigs County

59

¢

TEA BAGS

:',.
•

..•

Howard E. Frank

NO. 155
QUART JAR ·

.

TENDER LEAF .

MAXWELL HOUSE

SPIN BLEND

SALAD DRESSING

ADDRESS -----------------------------------------

BULOVA converls a re pl ica of a $20 gold piece

COUPON

COUPON

OWN ER'S NAME -------------------------------------

99 -2920

-

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

DOLLARS tS2 .00 ) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE
TWO DOLLARS (Sl.OO) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE.

' you ' ll still have fun . You gen·
era te good times wherever you

voiYe yoursell in creatrve en·
deavor loday . You might try
pa1n ting . decorating or a new
gourmet rec 1pe

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

,4.

M a le Dog S2 .00- Spayed Fem ale S2 .00- F emaleS2.00- Kennel License S10

Condl! ron s relat rng to your
work or ca reer are very favorable today Shoul d you need
allies , they wr ll be avar lable

so me so rt of en tertainment
toda y, e~Jen rf it "s an improm ptu
gat herin g It wou ld be an excel- '
len t \1me to ful fill some out·
standing obligations

for

commission

To obtain license by mail, fill in and mail this form to HOWARD E FRANK,

go .
TAURU S !April 20-May 20) Plan

••••

lott ery

operating costs .
Since the start of the
fiscal year, gross ticket sales
deposited into the general
fund has been $18.6 million .

COUNTY AUDITOR, MEIGS COUNTY, POMEROY, OHIO.

JMEVMB
I CM
M.
G MAPB
Yester,day'o Cryptoqaote : AN UNBREAKABLE TOY IS ONE ARIES (March 2t-Ap ril 19) AlA CHILD USES TO BREAK ALL IDS OTHER TOYS.- _t hough you rno:~y no t ha'Je definrte sacral e ngagem~nts today ,
SANTA'S HELPER
(1 1977 Ki.Da Fea\wes Syod ice lc, Inc .

at an organization meeting un
December 20. They are : D. G.
Fatchett of Blissfield,
Michigan. president: Ralpl1
Baumgardner, New Carlis le,
Ohio, first vice president ;
Charles
F:
Coope r ,
Mechanicsburg 1 Ohio. second
vice president ; Leslie 0 .
Fishbaugh , Uniondale, In diana , secretar};; and Carl
Johnston. Waynes bur g,
Pennsylvania , treasur er . J .
Gordon Riehl was selected as
general manager of Milk
Marketing, Inc.
In addition to the officers,
the following 34 dairy farmers have been elected to
serve on the Board of
Directors : Norman D. Alger,
Mantua, Ohio; Kenneth C.
Brill, Wellington. Ohio; Dale
E. Cook, Mansfield, Ohio ;
James T. Compton, Clarksburg, Pa.; Wayne Dalton,
Wakeman, Ohio; Charles E.
Hardesty , Wapa koneta,
Ohio; Calvin M. Henry,
Wattsb u r~. Pa.: Ha rry M.
Homer. Lo uisville, Ohio;
Ken neth Howells. Salem.
Ohio; Dale Ka uffman.
Shreve, Ohio; and James V.
Kemp, Jersualem. Ohio.
Also John J . Miller,
Defiance, Ohio : Jack N.
Scott, Fredericksburg, Ohio:
J . William Shultz, Berlin,
J;'a .; Leon W. Sweatman.
Vena ngo, Pa. ; John.E . Teets. ·
Eglon, W. · Va. ; Galen 1..
Yoder, Lingoinert Ind .; Max
Favo urite, Pleasa nt Lake,
Ind.; Robert Good. Belelvue,
Ohio ; and Clarence Bru.:' .. i ruL
Versailles, Ohio.
And
a lso
He rman
Bruba ker West Alexandria,
Ohio; Mearl Crowder , North
Lewi sb urg , Ohi o; No rbert
DeLoye, Ft. .Loramie, Ohw:
Thomas M iller, Winchester,
Ind.; Urban Seger, Minster,
Ohio; . Paui W. Boerger.
Ma rysv ille, Oh io; Roland
Higg ins, Sunbury, Ohi o;
Harold Rawn, Canal Winchester, Ohio; Frederick c;.
Bern ing, Minster, Ohio ;
Lawrence Dean, Wi lmington.,
Ohio; Mye rs R. Dee!,
Williamsburg, Ohio ; Hardin
Lowe, Spa rta, Ky .; Dunca n
LeCompte, Shelbyvill e, Ky. ;
arid Russell Weber, Vevay,
Ind.
Milk producer members of
Milk Marketing, Inc. are
located in Ohio, Indiana.

the Dec. 6 drawing.
~·erguson said the rest of
U1e money in the state lottery
fund is distributed between
prize payments to winning
ticket holders and e&lt;pense
paymenl5 incurred by the

l .&gt;'DLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1978 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. TWO

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

PO

gross revenues received f or

Attention Dog Owners

TIME IS MONEY

SV D

0 .. Tuo•sd"y , !Jer. 2i,l9i i

MONE't' TRANSFERRED
COLUMBUS 1UP!) - State
Auditor Thomas Fergusoo
Munday transferred $897,807
from the Ohio Lottery Rotary
Fund to the general fund ,
representing 30 percent of the

-·

""
"

••
,.•
w

"

"

JUMBO ROLL

49¢

27 OZ. CAN
W/C

Coupon Expires Dec . 31, 1977
TWIN CITY GA1'EWAY

25~ W/C

Coupon E xpires Dec. 31 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

POWDERED BLEACH
NO. 105

16 OZ. BOX

59¢w;c

Coupon Exp ires Dec . 31 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

NO. 85

64 OZ. BTL
Coupon E xpires Dec - 31 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

�•

•

Christmas program Berry's World

:.11·:::::;,,,,,,&lt;:~G~;;;;~i~riil;;,.,.,.,.,.,.,.:·&gt;:~~

~\[

B, Ht·lcn and Sue Bottel

~\

The ~mnual Chri s lma~ program of Tht.' HeorgHnized
Church of J esus Christ of l.a t ~
tt&gt;r Samts was held n•ecntly
w1th Bub Hartley and l.uuli-1
E\'i-lll!:i Ull'harge.

1\,11' .
11\J.sn't popular·. Tht•n I fvund till' ~\i:l) . i.llld lk·L'anw ,,IJotl I
liMlght \\as tilt' popularity ktd . I had doth's t'\'t•ry ru~llt . Yuu
kJww, Hap, I ctl'lU(Illy tlwu~ln I wa:-:n 'l Hn~ dt fft• rt·nt fl'lllllllw
ullk• r )( II ' IS bt'i.'HUSt• e \'tr! l.xK.i) S4-iY!-&gt; lht•rt• &lt;ll ll' t IW \'ll'glllS Jdt.
Wl'll, I u\·erht.•Hd 1\\ u guy:, tulktng &lt;.tt&gt;out mt.·. Ont' ~· rrth·d .
·· And sht• dllt's/l' t l'\'t'll t hargt• f111' rt .'' Ttwtmght tht· utht· r· gu:
r allt-d &lt;Hid askt•d fur a datl' . I semi " No " ami hH\'t.•n 't bt•t•nuut
:-lilt:\:.
!VIy onl'y ~ n· lft' tPml 1! al wHy ~ thuught g1rb '''t•re jl'altlll~ of
lllt' 1 ~y~ tt may lx• tnu liik ttl (_'h&lt;-mgL' . ~ o IJu~ w1H go w1t h lilt.'
t'Xt'l' Pl for wh&lt;~t ht.• car l gl't Han.' I nurH•d ruy n·hult• hft.• l ·
FOH'.l i'H SLUT AGI' 1:1 DF:AH F S. ·
Of t'UUI"!&gt;t' you han·n 't ruuu.'d ~· u ur " holt• lrfe : ..\nymli.' e:trt
t'hartgl'. ll silt.• wum::. hi- ;md k1d~ \\ tll &lt;H'L't•pt th;t t l'ha ngl'. tllll'l'
tlrt· \· n ·alut· \ tHlllll' i.ll l 1t
\\IIH II a fl1;1l1sh g1rl dtll',S at agt.• 1 :~ lll'l'dn 'l !llrapt' twr futurt• ·
llllil'SS :-.:ht• kt.•t_•ps llll ~\ I'U ru ig ti111~L' round ht.•t•b . · Sl iE

lll-:.-\1( F .S
Uur ~U!-!!!i.'."J llun~ : Turn lili\m .11! dah' . . f11r u whl ll'. i-t ml gl'l llll'
\\u rd amuml that' tm· n .· l'l'\'11).-!l!lakd .. \ l't l:i. not 2:1. ('unt'l'll·

g1 rlfntl 11d~. ISl'llW w1ll put .\ olJ duw11. but
llliiY ~ t•agcr lu hdp.1
By thl' ttna.' yuu t~ ntt•r 111!-tll .scllt111l. yuur pot.st Wt,ll ' l lllCill l' r
ctny mun·. 1\l·ally. k1ds Hren't lll(t l ~\li ldt• nHIIIl~. tlll'.Sl' Uays .
HEI JF.:\
tr&lt;ll t• m1 wlmll ng

~-:

I Calendar
TIJESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary, Drew We~ster Post 39,
7:30 Tuesday night at the
hall .
-WEDNESDAY
MI DDLEPORT-POMEROY Lions Club. noon •
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

Annlntha Hulter. ami Steven

PO I.l.Y;S l'Hi:&gt;H LI' M
DEAlt POI .LY - ~ l tld•·w

Tlw t·ung r~g&lt;jhon jui nin14
with the dwir fur "Joy to the
World ." The choir t·onsistt..&gt;d
Tlw c hildren sang " Away uf thuse in the &lt;:andlelighl scr·
111 a Manger" and " We W1sh
v1ee and Sandy Lee. Cindy
You A Merrv Christmas." Lee. Sharon Russell , Eula
t'hnst1n&lt;:~s r~~ilatlo ns wert.• Proffitt. Linda Holler. Golda
gl \'l'n by Mu.: hael Evan5. Gilli lan. Linda Evans. Janice
Nick Adams, Melanie Lee. Russell Rarteli ff. and
Adams. Tom Stobart. Chad Tom Slobart. Helping with
Diddle, Mark Russell, Beeky the t._•ostwnt&gt;s were Anna
Koush. Sheri Roush. Shawn McHaffev. Betty Teaford.
Diddle. Becky Evans . Trisha and Phv-llis S!obart. Pastor
Roush. Kim Stoburt. Tinuny William· Roush offered the
Te&lt;i fo rd . Mi chael Sherr! o~ning and dosing prayers .
Russe ll. Lori Adams. Chrislmas treats and a gift
Hie hard MeHaffey. Teresa exchange followed lhe pr.,.
Teaford. and Angie Ours.
gram.
The Nativity
Pageant
began with a solo. "Oh Holy
Night' ' by Sharon Russell .
The children presented the
nativity with the choir act'Ompa nied by Freda Hartley
and the narrator. Denny
Evans. There was a solo,
" T~ ou Shalt Keep Him in
A family gathering was
Pt. I \ . · Peace" by Sharon
held Christmas Day followong
RusselL
services al the Bradbury
The youth then held a
Church of Christ a t the home
candlelight service wilh Ken· of Mr. and Mrs. William ·
ny MeHaffey, Robert McHaf- King .
Attending were Sherry
King. home from Bluffton
College: Rick Meclsl;trolh,
•
Huntington. W. Va.: Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Finlaw, Heather
and Matthew: Mr. a nd Mrs.
Hank Jolmson . Mr. and Mrs.
King. and son, Kevin, at
home. The group opened their
~ifts and then enjoyed a famiREEDSVILLE
The ly dinner.
Christma s parly of the
Later in the day Mr. and
Riverview Garden Club was Mrs. Johnson visiting his
held at the hom e of Mrs. moth~r Mrs. Ka thr y n
Donald Myers with Mrs. Johnson, Mason, and other
Waller Brown and Mrs. Gene relatives there for the day ,
Young as co- hostesses. and lhat eveni ng the King
Members enjoyed a turkey family, Sherry and Rick
buffet supper with each Mechstroth, and Mr. and
member bringing a covered Mrs. Jolmson went lo the
dish. Tabl es covered with home of Mr. and Mrs. F inlaw
green cloths were used and children for supJ)er.
throughout the living room to
seat the members and guests.
Each table was centered with
a lighted candle and handmade tree ornaments were
used as favors. Grace was
given by Mrs. Riebel. ·
For the program, Mr . and
Mrs. John Riebel of RD,
Youth of the Bradbury
Pomeroy presented . in- ·
Church
of Christ went caroiteresting ~!i des of the Holy
ing, participated in a live
Land. They also displayed
souvenirs which they had nativity scene, and lhen went
to the home of .Mr. and Mrs .
brought home with .them . A
Hank Johnson Friday night
gift was presented to the
for a Christmas party.
Riebels by the president ,
Refrestunents, including a
Mrs. ·Donald Putman from
Christmas cake were served.
the dub.
A gift exchange was held and
Roll call was answered by
William King read the
members having a Christmas
Christmas story. There was
ornament exchange. Mrs.'
also group singing of carols.
Ha rliss Frank had purchased
Attending were Desi J elgift s for Naomi Pickens and
fers, Rodney Bailey, Rita
Mrs. Bess Larkins which are
Bailey, Larry Ball, David
to be given to them for Christ- Cole, Kevin King, Catlly
mas from the club.
HeS.. Sherrie Barnhart, John
The door prize went to Mrs.
Blake,
Brian Wilcox, Don a nd
&amp;maid Osborne. A gift exThelia Raley, Bill and Noami
change was held with the
King, and the hosts. Ruth
gifts being placed under . a Ca rsey and Jay Carsey were
lighted lree. The Myers home
also in the group when they
was beautifully decorated caroled.
throughout for the holiday
season.
A dessert course was ·
served to the guests, Mr. and
Mrs. John Riebel and Mrs.
DINNER F.NJOYED
Okey Connolly, and mem·
Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Bailey
bers, Mrs . R. H. Hannum,
of
Darwin
hosted the annual
Mrs. R. E. Williams, Mrs.
family
Christma
s din11er
Donald
Putman,
Mrs .
Saturday
at
their
home
.
Thomas Spen ce r , Mrs.
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Denver Weber , Mrs. Ernest
Mrs.
Edward
Hedrick
of
Col·
Whitehead, Mrs . Gene
Wilson, Mrs. Roy Hannum, tunbus: Mr. and Mrs. Carrol
Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mrs. Teaford, Racine: Mr. and
Frank Bise, Mrs. David Mrs. Otis Bailey. Racine : and
Chadwe ll , Mrs. Ronald Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bailey,
Cowdery , Mrs. Harliss Portland. Unable to attend
Frank , Mrs. Herman Gross- were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
nickle, Mrs. ~ laremont Ma theny, Colwnbus, and Mr.
Harri s, and Mrs. Lyle and Mrs. Eugene Smith,
Pomeroy.
Balderson.

acnunuiHtt•s on tht• rublwr
seal that is a rouml tny
rcfr q~autur doors
Thl'
humidity has bl't'll h1 gh ~u till'
mildl•w is quite bni.\ and I had

tried St.:Vl'l'al tlu rr~:s but · nollL'
of them deHn it oil off. A u~
suggl.'S t!Ons wtll be ap·

predated. - IH I't\E.
DEAH IHEN E - Mildew
weakens anvthing and whl'll

stains are t.leeply il!lbt.•Lhled
th ev ll ll:t\ be tmpus.. , tblt• tu
r~:trwvc. · You m rght t ry

" Wh en! saw i r. I sa1d to myself. Th1s
-

1S

you·

J mean

Area BPW marks holiday
The annual Christl)las dinner party of the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club was held
recently in the socia l rooms
of Trinity Church.
The dinner was served by
lhe Happy Harvesters Clas.s
with decorations currying out
the holiday theme . For favor.s
each h1embcr ~as presented
with a handln&lt;Jdc Christme~s
trl;.lc orname nt made l.Jy Mrs.
Eva Robson. There were cis{)
fa\'ors from .several busine.s.s
ci:;ta bl i~hme nls .
Mrs. Alwilda

Werner
presided at the meeting
following the dinner. The
budget was adopted a nd il
was announced tht~t the
district Young Careerist conlest will be l1eld on Jan. 22
Mrs. Jan· Alkore Hill · will
represent the local club.
It was an nounced that
Loretta Jones, district direc-

tor, will attend tht• Ja11ui::lry
meeting .
Christmas remling~ were
presented by Mrs . Werner,
Mrs. Janet Kun1, Mrs . Wanda
Eblin, Mis~ Erna Jesse, Mrs .
Terrie Walker, and Mrs . Robson. Games were played with
severa l receiving prizes.
Gifts were exchanged and
members enjoyed a carol
sing.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Randy
Russell, the fonner Cynthia
Lane, are annolUlcing the
birth of their first child. a
daughter. Dec . 20. The seven
pound. one ounce infant has
been named Stephanie•
Nichole. Delbert and
Catherine Russe ll of Mason
are the paternal grandparents, and Belly and Ivan
Lane, Gallipolis. are the
maternal grandparents.

Youth active
for holidays i Katie's Korner

"

GINO'S

By Pull\' rrmm·r

Teaford pc~rt il' ipating :

hosts party

I Social ·

NOW OPEN

tcy. Jcr ck Jiis~r.s. Stanley

Mrs Myers

~:~:s::::-::::::.~~"M.: JJ _db-~~~:~~:·

The original dome of tile
Ca pitol in Washington, ol
wood covered with copper,
was replaced by the present
cast iron dome, completed in
1865.
,

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

King family
has gathering

oth ~rs

HAP:
I lJ£jd to ha rt&gt; an e:~burtrun . l t wos till' unly way . l r.lldn 't tlunk
rt would &lt;iffctl me bcco~c I'm quill' st.•n.stblc. 1Thl' guy ldt
tu wn and tny fu lks .sa1tl I cou ldn' t stay wtth llwm tf I went
thi'uugh w1tl1 my preg1rancy .1
But I c~n· t stup wa nlin~ my ba by. l don't m1S:; my boyfm·nd.
IJt• wasn 't much. But I nt'cd lo replan• wlr;.rt !lust.
Imct L~uTy &lt;t l junror college. He's 26 and Ius wi ft.• &lt;.h\'un:cd
lum for a nother ma n. She ami !u.s twu k1ds live 2,:JOO milt•::;
CI\\'CIYand he 11(:1\'t'r "S~l'S Ius etlildren whutn he IUVl'!i very much .
We got talk ing. What he and I bulh want most 111 life IS a
child. maybe s...:vL•ral. Wt! don't hJvt• t.·adl other. at lL·trsl not
yet.
Would it bt&gt; crazy tu ~t.· t marrll-'tl :.rnli start a family. hoping
luve will eume ' ·ENID AND LARRY
lli'AR EN Ill ANfll.ARRY :
You 're laymg ~ prett) heHvy tnp una chrld whe11 yuu m;e
hun or her as ther&lt;Jpy to sul n~ your ~rsunal problems. Both
yuu &lt;:rnd I.&lt;:rrry see hun &lt;:rs -a re pl~cement, .sm rwone who wrll
make yo u feel whole agarn .
If the marriage goes sour 1as it might without lOve 1 yuu
could as ~asily blanH:! the baby fur yuur wrung llct:IS!Un
Give yourselves more tune . Thi s mrght be· a gre&lt;Jt unrun.
once you re.a liz~ it's mort' lhcm just an hl'ir-r.a ts lng propo~al.
HELEN AND SUE
'

WANTED

enjoyed by church

Tht• Wurst Ruad tn Pupularit~

·

VELVET SWISHER
NAME TO WHO'S WHOVelvet Swisher, ·daughler of
Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Swisher. 571 Grant St., Middleport, has been selected for
listing in " Who's Who 1\mong
American · H1gh Schoo l
Students, 1976"77." Velve t is a
senior at Meigs Local High
School a nd is e nroll~d in the
scientific course. She has ap-ptied to lhe Holzer Hospital
School of Nursing for the 1978
a utwnn quarter.

EARLY BIRD

DEC. 27 THRU 31
STARTING AT 8 A.M.

50% OFF
~ O.FF
20% OFF

FROM
12:00 NOON

THRU .
5:00 O'CLOCK
ALL
SINGER
SEWING
MACHINES

NOW APPEARING

OPEN ·
ROAD
4 Piece Group

From

The Fabric Shop
McCall's , Kwick -Sew.
Sim;;:ocot y Patterns
115 W. Second
Pomeroy

..--•-------- ~n22B4

~

DEAH HEAiJP.RS - I
slightly tlampl•ncd such ll pad
before clcamng a bl'i-1.'3.S
kllLK'kcr th;1t had been very
hard to d ean.-POI .I.Y.

Birthday party
held recently
1\'lrs. liwuuue White entertained with a btrthdav dinm:r
!l!cently fur her tlusbcl!ld.
Charles.
Attendi ng were Mr. ~md
Mrs , How&lt;:rrcl Well -a nd
· daughter, Amber, Mr. and
Mrs. Emerson Well, grand·
son , Terrv Sn owden . Mr. e:tnd
Mrs . He;·bt::rt Gilke v. Mr:-i.
Beu lah While . .Mrs. Flor~nee
Hanna y . G ift ~ wer e
presented to Mr. Wlute by
those attending and Mrs.
' Doris Snowden.
HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Raymuml
Kloes . Kinuny and Kelly, Col·
wnbus wei'C pre·Ch ri!:iltnas
visitors of Mr, and Mrs. K&lt;:~f· l
Kloes. Syr•eusc.

By Katie Crow

~

wumlcrs .- Mrs . .J.S .B

By the time Y.ou read th is it may be after Christma s. but
whatever time it is I sincerely wish each and everyon~ of you
the merriest of ·Christmas seasor1s.
TiiE VILLAGE OF Pomeroy . in my opinion. is rery
·beautiful with the attractive lighted candy ca nes on Second
Street and Christmas trees on Ma in Street.
Hats off lo the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce for a job
well done ... it is beautiful !
Take time out durirlg the holidays to view the lights. You
will love the sight. ·
UKE TO SEND happy birtllday wishes to Tunie Redovian
and Lori Ann Crow .. . HAPPY BIRTHDAY.

GINO'S

DEJiil l'lJLLY -- My Pet
l 't•t•\ 't' l'OIIl'et·ns st orekeepers
who tn~ist on puttmg their
pnn.• :;tickers over tilt' tlireclluns

oil

~nm II p;u·kagcs
n1cdil'int's ~ as

lENGTH·······.· •••••• 6'4", 7 'B", 8'4", 11 ' and 12 '6"
PAY BY MEASUREMENT OR WEIGHT

. OF MASON

Thousand Ft. or Sl2.00 Per Ton
JACKSON PALLET CO.
2 Miles West ot Wilkesville on St. Rt . n4

____

SllO .OO Pe-r

PHONE 773-5536
...._

CALL66'-47J&lt; BEFORE MAKING DELIVERY

H·spt.·rrally
1n•ll as on the largt.:r unes,

WEDNESDAY THRU
. SATURDAY

10·2

THE MEIGS INN

ducwr .
Sir Char les. 88, who died in
his slee p Ch r is tmas Da y
surrounded by his wife. Oona,
seven of their eigh l eh ildren
and a son by a Previous
marriage , had alwa ys
insisted he wa nted no crowds
at his funeral .

Lady Oona carried out his
wish by pia nn ing a priva le
ceremony in the tiny
Corsier
ce metery
of
overloo kin~ Lake Gene.•a and
not far from U1e 2tl-l'oom
mansion in which tlley had
lived sin.ce 1952.
Swiss police said Lady

tilT

uftt•Jl hidden. Thank you

fur lr stcnin).( ami I hope sume
ur tlw ston•s will nutict• this
·1nU stup tht.· prcrcticc . - TE D.

DF:!IH POLLY - To makl'
!lung:; cas1cr for m y husband

durul).l.. the hunt111 ~ seHsttn-1
l'uuk alllu s mea ls ill advcmce
anti st.•&lt;tl &lt;•ach 111 t.•uukul ~
lx1~s . t\H lw has to do i~ boil
\\itll'l' 0 1! lht• l'U IIlp !ilUVl' and
he nl'\'er h&lt;t!i any puts or pans
t'' wa;-,h. This t'\'CI I work!:i with
stTan1bl ~d l'ggs. Also. a grcHt
rtll'::t for ~·a('&lt;.rt ion 1f yvu rs is a
t:am ping fmnily . - SIS.

DEAR POI.I.Y -Que vf lhe
tl.'&lt;1dcrs wrote that sht: spilled
j.:UHt.•C on her bt•igc rug and I

han..• neve r had the following
trl'&lt;-ttlllCilt fa il C\'Cll fur old
gruuml-in ,·offt:e st.-~ ins. Wet a
dean dulh idth water until it
t.'J satur;ttcd. Add some pcrox~
illc to the wet rag and lay
uver the stain .llo ld iJ hot-iron
ove r the doth and rub
JJ\.H TLI' baek anti fort h.
just ban•ly tuut:hing tht.· doth
tutti! the cloth gets dry (in
whic h case rcwc t 1L ur until
. l11e s tai11 i&lt; gone. If the opcraLJOII must be rcpt•crtt~d add
frt• .sh peroxidr each timl'. MRS. J.N.
DEAR POLLY - I want tu
~ h a rc a di ~co \• e r y with
e\:enonc. I hcr\' C foumh cu re
fur ti1o.sc pesky bits of lint and
thread !hat stubbornly ding
to a rug when vatu tuning .or
L'a rpct sweeping. I SWish a
slig hll)· dampened mop light·
lv u\'CI' the troub l c~umc area
~nd then these offenders
di~a ppear when I VCIL'UWn .
Apparently the St&lt;ltk elec·
tri&lt;:1ty CiHising the problem is
released . - f!ELEN .
Poll y will ~e nd you one· of
lll'r s ign ed
thank-y o u
Jicwspapcr roupon d ippers if
she uses '\'o ur fav orite
Pointer. Pcc,;c or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
PO!NTP.HS in care of this
ncw::; popcr.

AT YOUR KROGER

DELl

i1~ il rtQurred to tM! '"dlly
101 ...we in IIIKh Krog111 Stme , •- cept as
llOttd in th•• ad. If we do run out ot an achr8f·
tiled ttom, we W1M otfltf you your chOICII cf ;r, co inptnablt~
rtem . ~ avdable, reflfiCI.nljl lhll aame 111~1ngs o r a r11n
check wtloc h ..... ~1 entrtle you to P'JIChtsethe itd._.,,sed otem
11 1he ~vertrlod puce· wnhm Xl dava.

Eac:n of theM acJ\.'ef'liMd

-----

Davis Insurance Agency
the Court House in Pomeroy
Shepherd, Jeannie Starcher

With Deli Depts.

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef .. lb.

CUT l WRAPPED FREE IN ONE CONVENIENT
TAKE HOME PKO... I.· I7·LB. AVERAGE.

Whole Fresh .
Pork loin ....... lb .

..-c•f~lly

·Roll

39c

Pak

HOLlY FARMS , U.S. D.A. INSPECTED,

THE AMERICANA

Mixed
Fryer Parts
.... LIMIT.
lb. • .
.
,
PKGS . PLEASE

This superb tray includes roast beef, ham,
turkey, earned beef and your choice of saltmd~S.'-;
and a relish centerpiece garnis~ed with fresh
parsley.
_
Serves approximately 16 to 20.

Of

U,S. GOV'T, GRADED CHOICE

Tail-less
$199
T-Borie Steak .. lb

CONNOISSEUR'S CHOI
bur moit popular tray includes moist, pink ham
turkey, roast be ef, tasty corned beef, with
American, Swiss and Muenster Cheese. The
Con,noiliSellr's Choice.
Available in 3 Size Trays.
Serves 8-12 Serves 14-18 Serves 20-30
$21.95
$11.9$
$14.95

DEPT .

GRADED CHtOIC:E

. neless op
Sirloin Steak

$.

'9

I
~I

2

..:

-lb.

Pkg.

I liMIT 2 PKGS. WITH

....I
..olll

. . . OF

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

Van Camp's Al 16 _0 ~~
Pork 'N' Bean:t cans-

USDA

CHOICE
Alka
Seltzer

25-Ct.
Btl. .

Polar
Pak 'I2·Cal
,
Ice Cream . ctn . ·

THE TRADITIONAL

This cheese tMiy includes Swiu, Colby,
Smokee Bar, Pepper, Muenster and
American cubes with a chee11 ball
center covered with chopped nutmeats.
Garnished.
Stnes approximately 20 to 25·.

Serve ever popular Ham and Swiss
cheese accompanied by our choice of
salads and dessert. Made even more
perfect by a garnish centerpiece.
Serves approximately 8 to 12

$27.95

$19.95

58

\\.
,.._ ?

eulogies for the " Little
Tramp," the baggy-clothed
character with a button
mustacbe, cane and duck
waddle that was his
trademark .
Peking's official New China
News Agency agency praised
Chaplin as a "famous fi tm
star" 'whose " progressive activities in tbe cultural field
made him a victim of the
McCarthy wit c h-hunt
period."
,
Vatican Radio said Chaplin
had "attained unsurpassable
heights as an artist, creator
and director ," and news of
his death was plastered
across the front pages of
1early every European
newspaper.
The Hollywood Ulat was
uneasy with Olaplin in his
lifetime because of his leftist
politics and off-screen doings
had nothing but praise for lhe
man who revolutionized
comic movies by making
people laugh willl irony and
patllos rather than slapstick .
'' He was the odginal
perfectionist," sa id Bob
Hope, who appeared in two
movies witll Chaplin's third
wife, Paulette Goddard. "He
was a great producer, writer,
director and comedian. He
was a great original. "
Actors woo appeared in
Chaplin's movies said he was
a tyrant on tile set but always
had a ready helping hand for
actors down oo their luck,
perhaps a leftover from his
hwnble beginnings.
Born April 16, 1889 in
London to music hall
performers, who separated
when he was a boy , Chaplin
spent part of his childhood in
an orphanage.
"There were floggi ngs,
deprivations and · solita r y
confin ement ," he reca lled
years later. ''But even when l
was in Ule orphanage ... I
Ulought of myself as the
greatest actor in lhe world ."
Chaplin was the king of
Hollyw oo d - acclaim ed
aroWld the world for classic
movies like ' 'The Great .
Dictator," " City Lights" and
"The Kid" - when his slide
began amid scandals over his
teen-age brides, a paternity
suit and his leftist politics in
the heyday of McCarthyism .
Chaplin and Oona - lhe
daughter of playwright
Eugene O'Neill whom he
married when he was 54, she
18 - were in Europe in 1952
when the United States said it
would not welcome him back.
'jbe family settled into the
20-rooin Manoir du Ban
overlooking Lake Geneva and
Chaplin vowed . never to
return to America.
But he did return, in 1972, to
accept a special Academy
Award for "tile incalculable
effect he has had in making
motion picture the art form of
this century."

,..

c

WATER TANK REPAIRED
PLAIN CITY, Ohio (UP!)
This Union County
community was without
water for a couple of hours
Christmas afli!rnoon while
workers replaced some fuses
blown out Christmas Eve
when hit by tightning during a

7·8
.

storm.
After workers replace d
fuses, pressure began to build
up, but it look several hours
to get the pressure back up to
wbere it should be.
KROGER

GradeA
Large Eggs ooz.

Prevention is the

&amp;
· gc

best policy. • •
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

MAIKO IASKET SlllCY GlADE AA LARGE EGGS 71' DOl.

99c
5 99 C
$
2 579

INDIVIDUALL V WR"-PPED SLICES

'r,.J•.,4C'l~,."'-&lt;u OR SHAVED

CHRISTMAS
MERCHANDISE

·Smithfield
Cooked Ham

REDUC!D

....---..50%

69

$

Fruit baskets for shutins
were prepared when the
EJecta Circle of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society of
Ule Middleport First Baptist
Church met at the home of
59 N. Second St.
Mrs. Dale Walburn.
~~M;.;;,iddleport, 0 .

Kroger
Cheese Food ~~i.~~ .

PINEAPPLE WAlNUT DEliGHT OR

Tahitian $12
Salad ..... .tb .

79

French
Onion Dip ..lb:

M rs. Gwinnie White, Mrs.

. MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Alneriean
Legion Auxiliary of Dniw
Webster Posl39 sd1eduled for
Tuesday nigllt has been
cancelled .

tU&lt;"'"'""

LIMIT ONE COUPON PElt FAMILI/
~--Nr .Q:IIl12'-UitiMI .• tt1Ktll. !lll
MUCTTtut\JCAIUSURi lQL I.UU

MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YE AR

Wilson, and Mrs.
Roma Hawkins delivered the
fruit baskets.
Mtss Rhoda Hall had devotions with Mrs. White conducting the love gift dedidation. There was a report on
visitation of shutins for
Thanksgiving and it was
noted that a neck sca rf had
been sent to Mrs. Lettie
Roush who is in Coltunbus.
Miss Hall had a program concerning tile Haitian Baptist
Convention. Mrs. Walburn
served a dessert course to
tllose named and Mrs. Golda
Roush, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
Mrs. Janice Gibbs, and Mrs.
Texanna Well.

PEPPUS

Jiffy

THE

4

THE APPETIZER

~H.lfflO

EXCEI'T B££F
FOOM

MEAT

Bill Quickel , RoY

BRUCE HART, SON &lt;if Mr . a nd Mrs. Rober! Ha rt, Racine,
received his bachelor of s~ ience degree in computer science
from the College of Mathematics and Sciences at Ohio State
University Friday, Dec. 9.
Harl , a 1972graduale of Southern High School in Raci ne, is
employed at the. Ohio State University Human Research
Center.
_Attending the graduaUon at St. Johns Arena were Mr . and
Mrs. Robert HHrl , Brice and Beth. Mrs . Gerald Hayma n, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Bell and Lorna , Racine, Edward Hayman,
Westerville , a nd John Eichinger, Parkersburg.

79C
99 C

REGUlAR OR CHUB PAK

DIAUit$ .

, .... ,..blfr

Fond of eating cheese? Then eat your heart out
Whether it be Edam, Bonbel, Gouda, Bleu,
Muenster (to name a few of the fine selection)
they will be arranged and garnished for your '""' '&lt;~C.'
enjoyment.
Available In 2 Size Trays
Serves 10·15 Serves 15-20
$16.95
$21.95

SEE US FOR SHORT TERMOR
LONG TERM HEALTH ,INSURANCE

In Stores

WIIUEIVI THE liGHT TO 'LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOlD TO

TO BE WITHOUT .
--.;

Availa~le

COf'VliUGHT ltn.THE KIOGU CO . ITlMS AND ,.IIUS GOOD MON ·
~A 'I' . DKIMUI 26 , lt77 T'tiU SATURDAY . DfCIMIEI 31 , 19711"

GOURMAND CHEESE TRAY

TiiE RESIDENTS OF Long Hollow Road extend their
sincere . thanks to Salisbury Trustees for the recent
improvem~nt m ade ·to the road.

Baskets
prepared

Oona - Chaplin was knighled
by Queen Elizabelh II in 1975
- asked · them to keep out
eve ryone
except
the
immediate family , the
Chaplins '
doc tor
and
household members.
The eigh th of their
chil dren, actress Geraldine,
was away filming a movie in
Spain. In all, Chaplin had 10
children and foqr wives .
News of Chaplin's dealll
fr om old age brought
worldwide tributes and

l uo . Baklll.f.! inst ructions, etc .•

CAN YOU AFFORD

Across from

Hy JOHN A. CALLCOTI
CORSIEH , Switzerland
( UPI ) - The family of
Charlie Chap lin gath ered
today to bury the father of
modern movie eornedy in a
simple and private eercmony
attended only by family ,
household member s a mi a

Eloise

Parkersburg, W. Va .

Sorry. no lay a ways or charges.

~::;:~;:;:;:~;:;:;;;:;:;:;::~:::::::::i:·:~:::::::::::::·:·::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::·:·

wnshing with wa rm .s uds w1 th
two tH blcspuons pl'ro.xult• ~td·
dt:d to tlw water wul l11en
wip..! off, riJ tSl' and th1Jroug l1ly
dn•. BlcHeh in wali.·r w1!l
soint.!tillll'S work , tuu. or l-1
doth ju:;;t bctrt.'ly t.lampe11l'd
with den a htrL•d :.rlcuhu l.
Somet imcs tht• rub bl'r ts tOll
far gone for rea l lll'lp.PO LI.Y .
DEAH POI.l.Y -- 711y
(((•cort~lor told me to us t.• stt•t•l
wool dennsing t.wds un l.Jra~::i
li ght swttch plates and door
kn ob.s and t his worked

LOW GRADE LOGS
SIZE •• • • • •••••• • · • ••• ••• • • • ••• •••••••• , 6" thru :ZS"

'--::"t-~

ALL PIECE
GOODS
8: 00a .m.12 : oo Noon

...----,
NOW OPEN
Chaplin is d.e ad

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl·Pomoruy, 0 .. Tuesday . Dee . 27. 1977

8 The Daily Sentmd. MrddJ,cport -Pornt.-ru~ . 0 .. 1'ut.'::.lloty. Dl'l' . '1-i, 197i

You can help.cu t down on
crime losses ... losses that
directly
affec t
you,
whether they happen to you

or not .

FROZENAVONDAlE

French
·
•
Fr1es .... ...
VACPAK

Kroger
Coffee .

. '7/dida'l Sttvu '71~
ALL KROGER
• OPEN SA·TURDAY DECEMBER 31
TILL 6:00 P.M.

the crime of arson .
paying
an
Increasingly heavy subs idY
for deflberately set t ires
Take

~Q u 're

-lb.

Bag

~:~

.

" tl')fough your In su ran ce
P.r~m ium s.

.,·

In surance. cos ts
are
adversely affec ted by
burgla,. ies. robberies a nd
car the fts ... plus the count.
less CB radios and bicyc les
that turn up missi ng .

I

-

~cRoss_:_!

~

TIWIK

lorraine
Swiss Cheese

FOR
YOUR PATRONAGE
D
w 0 VER THE PAST YEAR
A
FROM
R

H
A
R

E

-

CPO~S
11 ~:.2 nd Ave .

69

Cocktail • 1·1b.
.Rye Bread .. Loaf .
Virginia
Baked Ham

. $289

Cheese
Balls

crime investigation e fforts.

You can also makP. it
toug her for c~ooks. Use

good, str011g lotks. Mark
possessions wi th yo ur

• OPEN MONDAY JANUARY 2ND
AT 8:00AM
I

88

social security number.
Our agency provides
fi nan cial protec1ion and
servke when cri me losses
occur ... but many can be

TOTAL SAT1SFACT10N GUARANTEE
Ev.rything rou buy.at Kroger is guaro,nt. .d
for your total satisfaction regardleu of

prevented. That's why we

say - prevention is the
besl policy.

monulodurer: If ' you are not satisfied,
Krager will replot• yo11r item with th~

.. lb.

programs

provid ing stiffer penalties
for
wrongdoers
a nd
proposals for strengthened

• OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY
SUNDAY, JANUARY 1ST
lO:OO.AM Tll7:.00 PM

same brand or a comparable brand or
r.tund your pt.trt:hase priu .

H•RDWARE

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9: 00 to 5: 00
Middlr ..&gt;ort

One thing you ca n do is to

su pport

DALE C. WERNER
INS.
992·2143

102 W. Main

992 -3831

••

l

•

Pomeroy

�Let The Wa.n t Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

•

\) Wocdsorl!n.kr

l'aih
I~'

100

ii dayl

300

Chlilr¥"

"'
190
,.,

I,.

~ d:l)·s
J Wt.ys

"''

3 ;~

E11lil ...-orU "'~ lhe mmunwn 15
...U"ds IS i L'enLS prr word 1?tf da)'
Ads

lllM~

other tNln l'OOSt't.'UII\t'

days ll"ill bt&gt; d wr!ll"d at Lhf' 1 d;~~~
r•~

In nwmory,

~rd

of Thamlu. and
~ won!, 13 00

Obll.WIT)' · 6 ~-enlS
nunnnwn . C.sh 111 ach·a rK't

MobiLe Hornt sa les 01nd Y oml~&gt;~~ l~
li~ ati.'t'ple\J 0111~ Wl\h CJt.ih Wl\h
urder 25 l't'tll d101 r~t' for a14 ''aUf) ·

U1~

BoK J'.i umbl'r In l'llrt' of TIW' Stoll·
Llnt&gt;L

Tht&gt; Pubhsht-r rt'St' I'Vt'S

~

n ghl

Lo e&lt;:ht or r t')ft'lllny 11ds dct&gt;ml"d IJb..)l'('liONli. Thto P'ubhsi'W'r wtU nul bo:

rt'Spoos tb!t' for mort' tha n 011(' mt·or·
l"t'li utSc'rtJOfl

Ptlone'm-21!16

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
,

Monllily
Nuun oo S.. t unl.a~

Sunda'·
~ P.M "

F nday after noon

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT

cue No . n a o

of

CHARLES

E.

BURDETTE Oeceued .

Non ce is nerebv g iv en ! h at
Beul a h B
Jones ot M i d
c\eporT . Oh i o . n a s bEien d u ly
a ppO i n t ed

.A dm in i s tr at r i x

of

the

E state of Cha r les E
Bu rd ette . deceased , la te ol
M i d d l e a;l o r t. Oh 10 , Me i g s
County , Oh •O
Cred itors ar e requ ir ed To
t il e t he• r cl a i ms · w ith sa id
t i duc 1a ry
w . th in
three
months
Da te d th i s bt h day of
Decembe r 197 7,
M an11 mg 0 Web ste r .
Judge
Co m m on P l eas Cour t .
Prob a t e D iv ision
[ 12 ) 12 , 19 , 21 , 3tc

Fo,. Tuesdav . Dec . 27

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Be de Osol

Dec . 27 ,1 917
Th d; com•ng ye ar you w •ll en ter
mto ah •n teres tmg' assoc tat mn
wtlh an o lde r and rep utab le
bu sme s s p.e.I..'ill.(l t hi s co ul d ne
a Yery pr a li table arran g ement
ma1 n ly, th ro ug h htS ett ort s
CAPR ICORN (Dec .22 -Jan.19) lt
may be b est d · bo th you an d
yo ur mal e lo.e ep yo u r han d s o ff
th e fam• ly c he c ~ bo o k today
E•trler o f y ou could do ' ' severe
damag e Fmd ou t w ho yo u re
ro mat ically SUi ted t o by send tng fo r y ou r co py ol P, su oGraph l e t te r Matt 50 ce nt s fo r
eac h ·and a long . s ell ·
a dd r ~ ss ed . stamped e nvel ope
to As tro -G raph . P 0 So • 489.
RadJO C 1t y Sta t1 on . N Y 10019
Be sure to Spee dy yo ur bHth
stg n

AQUARIUS (Jan .20·Feb.l91 Be
pra c ti c al today d yo u re n eg o tt almg an •mp ortan t rn alle r Yo u
ha ve a tende ncy to l nake larg er
co ncess •o ns th an n ec e ss ary
PISCES (Feb .20-March 20) Pe rso ns wh o pe rl orrn w o rk fo r yo u
tod ay sh o uld ho t be o ve rpa td
Too b tg a bon us Wi ll set a
prece de n t l ha l"ll be ha rd to
oreak
ARIES (March 21-April19) A'JOtd
the fi ne s of le as t res 1s ta nce
tod ay What wil l app ear si m ple
!S fraught wrth co mpl ica lio n s .
whrle _that whtc h appears d1fh ·
c ult will be slo wer but sure .

TAURUS (Aprii20-May 201 Te11 il
li ke it

IS

IN Ml:lv\O J.! 't' 1.~1 ,..._,, "'~'•tw 1,.\, ...
A- nno ~~~~ ~-..., ..., h~..~ ~"10'&gt;'-l'd u .., a ~
o•.• lb- 10.11
W tlOi'ol day'- O • o~ '&gt;Od Uf1l11('1"\.'ll
\'\ h ._~,. e-.. ~ · ~ lh mg g.~e .. ..., ro••q
I ~f&gt;e111 to hf'a r you ... ho ... ·po""'•
( h._--~, upn• •d lorr r on
A11d ..., he11 lll p g•• d g1o w ~ ho•Ch y
'!' .,u ~£'\'Ill loJ ~nul£' a nd :.0 1
Oon 1 cr v I Ill 011! y :.lt•cpiT'9
Wt• It Hl {' f&gt; l 090.111 :.OJI1C'dO)
Soci i, 111 1'&gt;'&gt;("d b ~ R,,llm ~ •tinC t' ~
ond Hl•l en('

IN

M t- MQRY

l•f.

.t'V'

POIL'II I:.

No&lt; haod and Rowl'" 0 No i'V e
II '" e (Ould '-,,,,.,. ~' "" lh{'l'"
Or 1hey &lt;ould ~, , 11 U\o
li .... e (ould -,, t a n d ~ ho1 c.., hoi('
Haw pleaSOilllha 1 woul d bt.~
Bu! $1nc e 1ha1 '", t pc ,-,,b:('
Per haps lhh l (&gt;m £&gt;m hi&gt;rao,{ (' .., ,It
do
Ia ~oa y n o ~ much lh.:o, I (' l ho.lugh •
abe&gt;u l
la&lt;h day 1h"'e wl'iol €' yPar th1ough
~o dly IIH~o ~ed
t-spN• o ll y dur•n g
th e HOIIdO"( sea !.OII by 1he
chdd•e-n o11 d rheor lon ul• e ~

'

l\iesdoi}
Lhru f nday
4P M
\he day before pubb t'lllJOO

Estate

ltt•al l : state Co r Salt·

toda y and yo u ' ll w1n

!he resp ec t o f yo ur co ntem p o rartes . G ild the l1l y and the y ' ll
have c au s e to do ubt yo ur fu ·
lure s tat em e nts .
GEMINI (May 21-Ju n e 20) Yo u
are be tt er at ma nag tng th e
reso urc es o f ot ller s toda y tha n
you are yo ur o wn Wtth you r s .
you tend to b e carel ess

NOTICE OF SALE
O fler s · w il l be r ece ived a t
the' O ff 1C I:'~ of F ull z ,:~ n d
Kn1 ght . t.,tlorn e rs at La w.
Po mer oy Na ll on a l Ba n k
B u il d i n g . Po .m ero y . On i o .
unt il Wed nesda y , OecJ m ber
29. 1971 at 10 00 O' Cloc k.
AM , tor tn e sa le of The
F r 1eda F aehnle r es iden c e.
loca t ed at SOJ S
Th.rd
A11enue . M idd l eport , Oh io
Sea led offers m ay bt&gt; sub
m ,n ed or off ers m a v be
subm i tted at t he r .m e set
for th ab o'J e The r ight is
reserved to re jec t a n y or all
Off ers The res iden c e is a two
story , t h r ee be dr oom , on e
and one ha l f b a t h f rame
ho u se . w ith ga s central nea t
and a separa te ga r ag e.
e er ;'l ar d-V Fultz
E )(ecu tOr , E state of
F"r ieda F aeh nl e .
dece ased
( 12) 19 , 20 . 22. '2 4. 27 , Si c

( 12 ) 27 ( 1) 3, 10, 17 , .41(

l lo. o• HI'~"
Sll~ Pl1olt\' t.I .J o'~H
APPl~ ~

I /;:d J :,\1j t;lf 4

IN
THE
MAT TE R O F
SETTLEMENT
OF
AC.
COUNT S,
PROBATE
COURT , MEIG S COUNT Y ,
OH IO
Acco un ts an d vouch er s of
the
toltow i1'19
n a me d
fiduciaries have been f i led in
CAN CE R (June 21-July 22) Be , the Probate Court , Me igs
sat•sfte d.to day w1th a s mall , b u t
County , Ohio for appro v a l
and sett lement :
la~r retu r n from a Sr tuati o n yo u
CASE NO . '21 27 5 Sec ond
don I co n tro l Pr essi ng fo r
Ar nu al Account o f Wi ll!am .J .
more co uld shut o il th e spigot
Hobsletter , Truste~ of the
LEO (Ju ly' 23-Aug.22 ) It"S pOS Si·
Tru -st Created by ttern Eight h
of
the
L ast
W i t t and
q,1e tha t you mi ght pretend
Tes t ament of Linni e B .
tuda ·y t~ a t you go t n o thing for
Tavtor . Deceased .
som_e th •ng that you d id for
. CASE NO , 22000 F irs! and
ano the r . while 1n ac tual tty y o u
F i na l Account ot Frank w .
re cetved SO rn e.comp en sation .
Porter . Jr . • Adm inist r .;.tor of
the Estate of Steven . Eblin ,
VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Sep t .22) 11 will
Dec eased .
oe ' er y dtsce rn• ble to d bs e rvCASE NO . 2'2001 Fi rst and
ers toda~· •f you are o nl y n•c e to
Final Account of Frank W .
a pe rso n you tee I co uld d o yo u
Porter . Jr ., Adm inist r ator of
s,o me good Slig h ts breed
the Es t ate of Ma ry E bl in ,
re sen tme n t
Deceased .
Unless e~&lt;eeption s are ril ed
LIBRA (Sept. 2J. Oct :23) Yo u
the reto , said ;:~ccount s w i lt t;:le
will attra c t ao m.re fs toda y by
tor hearin9 before sai d Co urt
en1ptla 5171ng your mo des t IJ tr - on
the 25th day of Ja nuar y ,
1l.leS Flamboyance hi) s Ihe e ~ ­
1978 , at w.hich time ~cc ount s
act oppo s• te e i! ~ LI
w i ll be considered and co n
SCORPIO (Oc t. 14·Nov.221 In tinued fro m da V to da v 1.,1n ti t
fina ll y disposed Of .
s :tual rons whe re you ve bee n
An y p erson interested m ay
l o rt ~m C~ !e be fore y ou r tuck 51,11
f i le writte n e)(ception s to s ,:~id
h altl s toddy , A r e d ~ whe r e · a c coun t s or to matt ers
yn u 'Jf' e sta blis hed n o tra ck perta ining to the e)(e cut ion of
th e trust, not less than fi ve
rt " ~· r d a r ~ dui.J1ous
SAGITTARIUS (NOY . 23·Dec.21 1 da ys prior to the· d ate set for
You r pro spe c t s f o r pe rsona l he a ring .

Qd ll\ are Qutt e goo d toda y. but
you ma y no t tull y de 'le lop
thc rn You ' ll know be tt er th r:
nn t tim e .
·
4 ~

Mann in g D . Webst er
JUD G E
&lt;. CM MON PLEAS COUR T ,
PR O BATE DI VIS IO N ,
M F. t GS COUNTY . OHI O
\ I .l .' 11C

HI ..: PA!~ I( l\

o~ f.. 111q

JNU

On hn•d-.

~ I nto'

Ro\J tl' to!:i ~
W• l h P...~IIIp oo-.r JJH).

P h('!\1'

WAll
ti1111g"1 g'- 0 11d
ol qc •,., N•C l • lv • ( h ' ' " t"·o ~
Ht.•a ... on~Jb l , , loll Qq'} JJ!J

)I.J i b .. ORU t J')U ( LI ~ I O I1 1 1 / ':lU •
I ~ 00 I•H'~
~" r ,th On ly I J LKXJ
" " ~ .,od •''" lH l op o' dP&lt;k
O v l' f SJ lOO "' L' • I IO'&gt; ~t' I ICIII'

lldp Wankd
WOM AN OR couple lo l1 1'f' w 11h
m1ddle ogf&gt;d lody "' Pl Plt.&gt;u
1&gt;011 1 'W Vo ~ o l o o y n ('g O t t obl~"?
Phone 1 JO ~ 61'::1 6'1 '-N

co lh

only

o l l t.~,

••~1{1 1 1

Il

llO M i: O N~

POMEROY
~ I ll

.. c ... .., 111 "'•l&lt;HOo' lul,on ly

51 UUU d1h-.n

()1-l

I PhlliiL'

VA IHA JUy1
I!J'"l~ ll'

Storm Window s
Call Profes si onal
Builde r s

R,,,rlt'

() OI ()JU~

fi i iU II\1119

I"! 1-

1(11 ~ 1

II

I111C1I•'d (I I

~ •or ,,

(fo'llll 'd
Arlr&lt;..•&lt;t"

'J'n JO'J 1

Genera l Con trac tor s
Phone 949-2801
or9i19 -l:d60

1 3 A C RI:. ~ ON l C&gt; odmq [ •l''-'lo.
Rood qrn IObb
WOOM ho u ~(' oil t•i o_•c 11 ~~
( 01 p t~ 1t•d c 0 1 po 1l 5'10 lXJU Ar
'" "' IC\IIIf.ll 'f SttUO li4 J / ijt;'J 10
o"' 10 t1 pm No ':&gt;u11 do y (Oil ...

~ lORY J be :J •u~)r 1 1 hon1t'
hou'&gt;L' ~A I UIIlOf f) '!&gt;lo•• n '" "'
d o w ~ fu ep toce 111 M •dd1Ppnt1
f-' h 99J j ~ ~ ~ 01 991 :,Ho t

~ MO BIU: HO M b
p, Pleo
son t W Vo be ~ ode HC'c k 1&gt;
l 91:J e. oad rmll e 1J .. 6J ).
bedr 00 111

B 1i.

J 9 f3 00!I O II 1 ~ ~ O(}Jb c d&lt; O OHI

f Cf/2 VJ{ IoriO il 1J • 6 / J becj,• oOI1'
"2 bo th
I Q/2 Co ... en I • v 1[ , b.~ J bed room
1969 ~ I O I '"srno n 11 x b0 'J
bedJ oom

~U RN ITU RI::

HHI::WOO O &lt;opl •t a nd del• ver cd
SJ5 a co rd A ll hord woCld
t:IJ3 J 93:J
( HNI~ l" MA ~ IN~!: ~ l o 1 ~ ole

NO III::M 1"00 la rge or IOO ~ mo ll
'N ol l buy 1 p• ec e or complE- te
h ou~ eh o ld Nf&gt;w used o • on t1
que!. Moflm s Fur n tTur e 20 N
lnd 51 M1dd le p01 1 Phone
991.o3 70

~ t r.E'e t

Mom

Hurlond

WOOD
P ol e ~
mox
d•am e ler tO on largest en d Sl:l
per ton . Bundle d slqb So per
ton . Deli vered ro Ohm Pollet
Co Rl 2 Pomeroy 992 · 2~1:1 9

OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE
Be th e op e ning ol the i ndoor seasof'! for you with
yaur old furnitur e · r e upholst e red i n b eaut i ful
warm colors &amp; patterns
from Bob's . If you are
looking tor sa ~J ings it will
pay y ou to pay us a v isit .
l ocat ed in back of the Sew
N' Sew Outlet on Ma•n St .•
Raci n e, 0 .
I I 10 t mo

IIMI!etor to rh•
C:.r• .

lardSak

279 .95

Let us test your water Free

IF YOU h ove o sen11 ce to oll er
won l 10 bu ~ or se ll" sorn ethtng
oe too k mg lor wo r k
or
whote11e r
you' ll gel result s
Ios ier w tt h o )en l •nel Won t Ad
Call 99~ · 2 1 56

Pcimeroy Landmark
Jack

W. Car sey 1 Mgr:

Pho~e

992 · 2181

J '1
H.P . r orot dle r
10 It
olurn lnum John boa I w11h troll ·
mg motor 949 2220 mo rn 111gs
HOOF HOllOW Hor se s B u~ sell
trade or rra.n Ne w and used
saddles. Ruth Ree ... e s . Albony
[t&gt;I 4J69tl·3190.

25

M i:I G ~

COU NTY Human e Soc ,ety
( orel tn e and od opt• on Serv t'ce
991 -7080 Ut 3102 992·54/7

co lor TV fl oor ;nod e! Tr ue·
l on e. 3 me ol d S215 Co rn
poun d bow regul ar S59 95 ~11 11
m bo" S30 Con be seen or \ 49
71h A ve . M•ddlep01 1

UPRIG HT DU:P Freel e r A l m a ~ r
new IO·speed G~rt s b• cycle 7
gallo n hu rn •d d,er 99'1 .';)327

AKC HEG ISTI::REO pekmges e pup ·
p1e s. Phone (304) 882- 2Ml3

B U RR OU G H ~

S I::N ~t

MATI C oc·
co unl 1r1 g mo t hme Hos beton
"under ser v•( e co ilir o ct ond 1n
good cond1 1101, . Con be seen ol
The Doily Senlmel , I l l Court
~ t . Porner o tl OH

Boor du1g .

Indoor and outdoor r uns .
Groomm g all br ee ds. Cl ean
son•lo ry fo ct ltt• es . .·ch eshire .
Ph one (01 4) 367·02'12
AK C R~G! S TER~D Bn t tony Spo~1el
b•rd d ogs
a w eek ~ o ld .
992 -3 126 C fl . R1fl le .

ANTI Q UE BA THROOM
Co ll 992 -7l23.

FOUR l O NG - HAIR~ D ki ltenJ&gt; .
port mt 11 ed beagle . ., , 1 mon ths.
PH 985.:J808

~niccs Offered

f,.c tur e.s.

l"uto :;...les
\'il76 DO DGI:: ASPEN 4 dr. A .C. .
fl . ~ .. P.8 . l ow m deoge . W11l
com ider older wr·. 992 - 57~0 .

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

1974 FORD PINTO Wag on . In good
co nd• tion. 992·6 134 ,

CALl US

€3mPing ~pDH!nl

Pomeroy Landmark
9. ~Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.

~T A RC RAFT

FALL Sole
M•n•
molon. . 20" ond n ·. TraVe l
Tro iler s. l tl s· S:J.799. 25 T
Bunkhouse $4 H75. Fold ·down,
S\ .700 up We sell servtCe ond
quol ity . Open Sundays. Camp
Conley ~ta rc rof t ~ol e~o Rl 02
N of Pt . Pleoion1 .

Aijjl;

Phone 992 -2181

ltWCK- CAPS $19q up Tt uci&lt;
cam per s? Oon "l
nH ss ou1 Will DO typ1ng M onu sc. nprs.
5 pec •o ls! ~ee thPm Toda r ot .
slol•s·li col re sumes , e tc Call
Cadner·s
Comper
s on Rambo w
992 ·3o
• "27. eVEJ'IIi ll 95 oi ler b and
k
1
•dge . Of Rr 7, tok e Meig s 28
weekend s.
to 32 to Bo shon o11d fo llow
signs. Owne- r Robert Codner MOBIH HOME r·epoir 5. 992 5858.
l on g Bollom . O h1 o

Jl FOO T Tt:RRY 1976. t:qUipp ed

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992 -7066

for .K&lt;!Jlt

WELCOME

IN ~

FOUR ROOM S on d bo lh . Adu lts
only . N o pets. 992 - 5 9 0~
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Por k .
. o ,to 33 . , o,th ol Pome ' oy .
Lorge lots, Coll991 --/ 479.

Pomeroy Landmark

Yilt
11i 'Pomeroy. 5 bedrooms. I
Depos d requir ed . W2·3489 ,
oft er 5 p.m .

9a _Jack W. Carsey

I~

•

•

ALLEYOOP
WELL , WELL!

HOW 010 '&gt;OU
CDM!&lt; BV "Tt&lt;E~E
1'\'.0, SOlDIER.

Young's
Carpeting

Mg t .
Phone ·992-2181
1

'-====-----------'

"lkal Estate fur Sale
HOMI:: S!TI:$ for sole , 1 o cr•J and
up. M iddl eport , ncar Rutland
AU CT ION SAU ever y Tues . an d
Coli
997 -748 1.
Fr1 a l 7 pm. New ond used
merc handise ot Ohio RNer Auc NI::W :.1 bedr oom house 'l bo lh!&gt;
lovn Mc 1gs Plmo M1ddl cport
all · elec. I oCi e M1ddle po.t
Oh1 o . Home Ph one ·' ] 04J
d o ~e to Ru T(ond Pho ne
'!'-/[
773· 541 1
74 H1

"Tl-IEY GAVE US QUf'TE
A CHASE BEFORE
WE CAUGHT 'EI&gt;I,
TOO !

BUT CA,.CH -n.IEM 'TOU DID, AND
10NIGH; "'THEY'LL LIVEN UP ~15
PR'EARY CAMPSI&gt;E OF OURS '

Route l Pomef01. 0.

Carpet &amp;Upholstery
Phone Mike Young

F

A HAPPY
A R !

992·2206 or 992-7630

J&amp;L

OHIO
HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE
Boilers, "F u r naces, Heat
Pumps &amp; Auto · Controls.
GA~OIL~COAL

PHONE
742-2570
J2.18, 1 mo .

Box 34

10-JO.c

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Blown
lnsulltion Sellitt5
Fin1ncinr•na1ble
Blown Into -'•lis I Alttu

rEAFORD[g

300 Main Sl.

SALES AND SERVICE

lARRY lAVENDER

Dav e Parson s

s,racuse, Ollio

Owner

Ph:992-3993

Uu~ss

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

New 3
b aths, 2

bedroom s, 2 1 2
porches . storm doors and
w indows ,
equipped
ki t chen , copper plumbing ,
2 car garage and 1.4 acres.

On Rl .

Hartford
882 ·2115

We' r e in Carpenter j ust oH
Rt. 14J . Phon e 698-1191.
12-1- 1 mo.

33 . A splif .fevel home of 3
bedroom s. bath , furni shed
kitchen . Leea)(
water,
garage. a nd 1.4 acr e f or
on ly $2 1,500 .
· NEED ACREAGE? .~ 145
acres of it . Old 7 room
house, 4 bedrooms, large
barn and fruit tree s.

I

Automatic
Transmission SerYice

PARTS- LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES Ph. 378-6250
Aeednille, 0.
1·1 /.TFC

-~

ELWOO D

HOW ~ R'I'

"

or

ANU MARTIN
Ex·
COI' OI •ng . se pti c.
s ~ s t em s .
dozer , backh oe , dum ~ truc k .
l tm e!. tOI)Ii! . gro ve), block·l op
pa vi ng . RT . 143 . Ph one 1 (6 14)
69{:!-733 1.

BA THROOM S AND Kll ch e ns
remodeled , cer ami c rile . plum b mg . carpent ry . and gener al
13 year s e x·
ma inten an ce
per ience . 992·3085 .

ond lo ·boys l or hire ; wdl hau l
111 1 di rt . to !&gt;o il. limes tone an d
grovel. Cal l Bob or Roger Jef .
l crs , doy ph one 992 -7089. night
992·3525 or 992· 5232 .

OPEN

332S.
Helen L. Teaford
C. Bruce Teaford
Rea Iter - Associates

• WINNIE I IZEALLY ENJOYED
&amp;PENDING Tl1 E HOLIDAY

RUTLAND FURNITURE

••
••
••
••:

ARNOLD GRATE

e

742·2211

•

RUTLAND

I· ·························=
I

l1aii· 0011nt pens?

O¢COJ1Wf, IT IIOJLD , OH YOU DIDN'T
HAVE ~EEN NICER
eEE WHAT /lON
IF &lt;tiE lVVINe&gt;
GAVE ME RJR
HAVE
CHR:I5TMAS

OH, 1311CDIE ... A

IT WAS Hl5 MOTHEI&lt;'S '
HE SA ID HE WANTED
ME 1D HAVE IT •. AS
A :n'M BOL OF HIS

• RON GAVE YOU A !?lNG
FOR 01R I5TW'.5 ?
DOES 11115 MEAN

RING .'!.'

F!lfENO$H!Pl

Y9U'QE £N6AGEOf

BUT. .(.S/i5H)

TI&lt;ERE! MY CANOC IS JUST
ABOUT FIN I:lHED. SOON I
CAN TEST IT 10 ~IND JUST
HOW SEAWOIZTHY IT IS I

ACE HARIMARE
Located

In

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
11 -9-tf c

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Tu esday. Dec. 21

NOTICE

"

JOHNIE'S BEAutY
SALON
Corner Union

Ave .

and Sl. Rt .
Change of

Wl'r'H
MU"I"UAL fuNOS.

Phone Number

Phone

99:2-7608

742·22 11

Rutlond

·-

+ AK .UI Y6
IU~J8 6

• ., _
+

+-

+

sot: Tit

I

wer e actually able to hold

I

(J.I I:l7:'1 4 2
,., 7:1

1700."

1 o ~ aler : b:ast.

East protested so South
due to the 5-0 heart break,

., fi 4 ~

+

Openmg lead

Os wa ld : ·· Not too bad con· A&lt;:.:! o l dwmond s. ·
I Vulne rabl e·. Nort lt -!-)c,uth
. , sidering that at tab les where 1l
So uth st a y ed out of the bid- 1 Wt•!'.l :'\1o•·Lh ~o;a s t ~oulh
IJ(' al el-: E :l.o..; 1. Open ing lead .·
.
h earls j
Pa!'." l'a ~~
d ing E... a ~ t ma d e (1ve
Ace of hearl s.
\ for pl us 450 or minus
4•
5+
l'as... 5 •
7•
Pa ss Pass
~ Wt•!'.t
:\orth Ea!-. t !oioulh . depe ndi ng on whether or not 1-';ls...
4'
5t
a sla m was birl ."
Pass

I

I

50 1

IJou hli.· l' a ;-.:-

l ' a :-.~

BARNEY
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald : " Let 's finish the

year with some humoro us
hands, if th er e are any s u c h
things .''
.Jim :

" H e re · ~

one from the

Tu lsa reg iona t. It is r.totc worthy in tha t of lh!'! players wh o f elt impelled to bid

fi ve dwmonds over EalSt' s
fnur-hcart opening , practi cally everyone was in the top
expert c;ia ss. ApparPntly ordtna ry citize ns just passed ."
Os w (J Ill : " l.o.ok at the
Wt•sl hand . How oft en d o yo u

~ Uro\Sr ~~i.SIW§
A Califor nia reader wants
to know why South is always
declare r in our column. Or
at lea s t almost a lways
declare r.
The ans wer is that ~ ince
Milton Work wrote thf' first
colu.mn almost 70 ye~u s ago,
we write rs h (Jvc k ept South
as decl are r lo s implify
things for both wri ters and
readers .
1 S EWS I'o\

1'E ll l·;!"f rE Ul'U ISE ,\ SS~

I

By oswald &amp; James Jacoby

If we awarded prizes for
specia l hands, South might

get one for the worst hand
hold by a declarer, who bid
and made a grand slam. Not
just for 1977, but possibly for
all time.
.
Not that Sout h bid the

gnmd

himself. His
partn e r cue bid diamonds at
the five leve l. South did ha ve
a four-card spade suit and
bid it . We must con ress that
sl am

South's voice did not peal out

(For a copy oi JACOB Y MOO· like an organ , but sounded
ERN, send $1 to. · Wm at rather like a low-toned
Bndge . ' c~ re of /t!Js ne wspa· squeak .
per. P.O Box 489. Rad1o C1ty
Still he did bid five spades
SldtJon . N e w York , NY 10010. }

he claimed

followed

playe d it out .
It required a little care

G~ 2
West to three of his five
... 5 4 2
trumps . One the other ha nd ,
the defen se always manage d
to get two spade tricks so the 1
, ..
,.
,
,
.
penalty wa s e ither 1400 or · Vu l n~ t._J bl ~ . Norlh -Sou!h.[

KQ .l

• K ./6

•

nents

his grand slam.

+

+ ,\

.,

... /IW '/JORK OJ 1\\1\T LIMI'RICK I'M
'IJRITI~ ABOUT 'jOO!

SAVE ON
CARPETING

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

West opened the ~ing of
diamonds . South ruffed In
dummy, ~oted that he had a
pretty good play for his
grand slam and cashed two
top trumps. When both oppo-

NO HTil
. AKQ .I 7
'I AKQ.I B

+

Ot&lt;A"i, I'LL JUST HI\FTA STI\'1
f10MB 1\\EIJ .•.

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
~ARPET CONSULTANT

him to seve n.

get a chance to double an
eleven-tri ck vu lnerabl e bid
:&gt;lURTII
... .·\ K 10
with five a pparen t tJ·ump
. 8 75 4 ;!
WEST
EAST
tricks and two s ide aces and
• K 7 42
a bidding p artne r ?''
1
•
9"
•
to a
1
3
'I tO ~ 7 5 2
Jim : " Actually, no West 'I ... 5 4 2
K C
J.IIOH7 5 9 4
player managed to collect
EA~T
WEST
... A B 7~
five trump tricks. Every ... .! 9 6.
• (/ 2
• r\ t O 9
SOUT 11
declarer
did
manage
to shut 1
., QJll9865 :1
,.\
• 5 4 ~ 2
a t lea st one out. A couple 1

BORN LOSER

extra. to pay .

Coke hand is grand slam

South begs double trouble

h

30 roUs of carpet in stock .
Good selection all on sale.
lnsta lied with padding, no

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

&lt;

Pomeroy, Ohio

Closed Jan . 10
Til 18th, 1978

BRIDGE

Monday. Dec . 26

BRIDGE

'4.38 SQ. YD.

EVERY NIGHT

e

we brinq enouqh

returninq r114 morleu!l'=:7i1!:-\

instructions,

Reg . 16.95-not Installed

•••
•
:

So many? Did

I wantto repa4

.•..

12 and 15ft. width Carpet .
r:u_bber back .

room s

GET
R EAOY
FOR
SPRING, LIST YOUR
HOUSE NOW. CALL 992 ·

..' . . .....

Miss
Melbat

~ XC AV AT I NG . dozer . loader and
bqck hoe wo rk ; dump l r u c. k ~

on one

' water , c arpor t. fami l y
room and 2 lot s. $45 ,000 .

AN D SOME LEFTOVER

OH ,·· I GOT
HUNGRY•" I
KNEW YOU

CHIC~EI'I " ·

votces.

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

PULLIN S EXCAVATING. CompleteService . Phone 992 -2478 .

TIL 8 PM

A N D HONEST

TROUEli.E r

I know

·Regular 56.95
save 54.88 Sq. Yd.

$38,500.
NEAR RACINE ~ 6 years
old 3 bedr.oom hom e with
ba lh , F. A . hea t . T . P.

STI LL 60-,

I THOUGHT TH ERE
WAS MORE MILK HERE·"

nothinq of these people for

Candy Stripe
Rubber Back

fl oor , 3 bedroom s, 6
closets . 2 bath s, l a rge
liv i ng , equ ipped k it chen ,
in t er .com to al l room s.
na tural gas furna ce , and
fenced back yard . A rear
nice furn i shed home for .

A 'iEL --

YES'" SHE WAS
SO '5ELF · REl1ANT

ANI\! I[ ·

Henderson
675 -1582

UNION OPERATED
12-2-1 mo .

Will do roo fing . construction
p lum bi r1g and heal ing . No job
too ,la•ge
too smoiL Phone
742·2348.

I::XC A V,A TtN G . dowr . bockhoe
and dllcher . C h orlc ~o R HaT ·
l 1e ld , !:l ock Hoe
~~r v 1 ce .
Rvl"lo nd , Ohio Ph one 74::.' ,2008.

GoT RID O F

'l'E"A\-1 .. . BUT MAX
IS STILL HERE ··· I'V.E

WETHERALL CONCRETE

BR A OF ORD
Au ct1onee1. Com ·
plete Ser il 1ce . Ph one 949·2487
or 949 -2000. ROl ipe . Oh•o . Crill
8rodl or d

SEWING MACHINE Repa •r s. ser " 're . e ll m ak es. 992·228 4. The
Sh op . Po mero y .
Fa b rlc
Author ize d Singer Sates and
Service . We sh arpen So sso rs .

YOU SURE

"Get ALoad Of This"

-·---=-- --·-·
,-;·

Hl:MODI::UNG , Plum b•ng. healing
and ol t ty pe~ o l generol •repo 1r .
Wor k guor on teecJ 10 ye ar s ex ·
per •ence Phone 992·2409.

I GET 11 •·

Appalachian
Stqve Company .

Scni('c5

BOW ER S RI:: PAII-1
S w ee f.l er ~ . t oo ~ l e r s, nons oil
s•nol l o ppt.an ces . Lawn mower ,
11cxl to Stol e H•gh w or Gor oge
o n Roi.J1e 7. Phone (614 ) 985 ·
3!:125 ,

OltPHAIOI MII'IIE-THE UNSEEP( GUEST

ONLYONEWAY

11 -25· 1 mo .

11 ·9-tfc

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR

.~

MP.X. PICKED IT up ..

Third Strf.et
Racine. Oh io

SWAIN

Pomeroy. Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992 -6263
8 A.M . Io 4 o30 P.M .

- AL TOR

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
P.honc 992 -332 5

lHAl NOTE YO U
HAD M E DROP IN

GAMMY" ' " I COU LD NOT
6 EAR TO SA.Y G.OODB'(E ·..
HAVE. BEEN SO GOOD
t O M E --· 1 AM ( tN M'f "N(\'(
10 BLUNDtRVIL t E·., ALL MY

CONTINUOUS
.
.
GUTTER SERVICE

S10RM
WINOOWH DOORS
REPL.ICEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING·SOfFITI
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

CARTER
PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

ORPHANANNIE

~~~::~&lt;~ll~~~~~~~li~S;S~A~·~~l

Chester , Ohio

AT YOUR PLACE.

N D

991 -1259, 992 -2568 , 992 ·6191

~

Tank Service

"The 0riJinllol1

Not The lmitJIDrs

FREE ESTIMATES

Save JO pet . to 50 pet.
on heating cost
EK p erience and
fully ins ured
Free Est .
Ca II : 667 -6479 or 992 -3815
11 15 1mo .

NEW

A

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

THE AL LEY, RNNIE··

REMEMBER ~ WE 'RE
HERE TO SERVE YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
ASSOCIATES

$70 ,000 .
NEAR SHADE

Jack's Septic

At

12·7 I m o .

Year , in t h is cozy l ittl e
place . Only 5 room s to kee p
up . !deal f or si ng le r,.er son
or coup le. 111 stories, le .... el
lot . $11 ,000 .00 .
NEW YEARS SPEC.IAL ~
Jl 7 · story fram e. 3 Bdrm s .•
good
locati o n
1n
Middleport . $7 ,0QO.OO .

HAVE

Residential
and
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday , anvtlrne.
·
Phon e 985 -3806
commercie~l .

$36,000.

We ha ve e nlarg e d our
service department and
will servi ce Hotpoint and
other brand s.

992 .

PILOJ AJ&lt;:E
IN ITf;D!

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Superior
Steam Extraction

lhe New

MIDDLEPORT ~ 7

RM . lurn1shed and un

DfV IL- 11 AND ITS

11 ·25· 1 mo .

PHONE
992-5705

0.

STAR T - th e New Year
r ig ht in thi s wonde rfu l J
Bd rm . h om e! II feat u r es a
charm ing w . b. f ir ep la ce.
m odern kit c hen, and many
other f eatur es . 5 years ol d .
ran c h. $ 3 1 , ~00 . 00 .
1978 CAN - bt! you r bes t
ye ar y et , li vi ng on th i s 20
a c res in the co un tr y . 5 y r .
old . 3 Bdrl'n . ran c h t ype
home. Ca l l t oday , th is one
wori ' t last long . ONLY
$201500 .00.
RESOLVE - to see thi s
w el l kept o l der home. 3
Bdrm s., fo r mat d i ni ng .
garage wi th storag e spa ce ,
a l most an acr e w ith p lent y
of e lbow room . ON L Y
$19,500 .00 .

RT. 7 HOME
Will CARl:: for th e elde rly m our
home Phone 991. 73 t 4
PIANO TUNI NG
Lone Oon•els.
New ph one number . 99'2 -158 1.
II no Oll !&gt; wer &lt;all992·208/

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons,
Owner

992-!111

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Y

We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

I"'·

CRAFT IN THI'
WORLD TODAY!

•

Special Orders or Showing
of Carpets bv Appointment ·

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Elec ..
plumbing ,
car p enter
work,
paint ing ,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
hom e .

We ha ve need of listings,
all types , homes , land .
co mmercia I, e t c.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742 -2003
Hilton Wolf e, Sr.
Associate
Hom e Phone 949 - 2589

MAIN
POMEROY,

Now Onl y ,

~R· HOL D
IT, GEt.JERAL !
THERE SEE&gt;\~
TO 8E AN
TRUDEll I"' OUR
AIRSPACE!

CLOSED FOR WINTER·
O..ly .

Home Service

6 B E.
Let Pom eroy Landmark
soften &amp; co ndition your
wa t er with Co-op water
softener , Model UC-SVI.

mmBll

fr..., the ler•-' hudo CN ·lulllfa•.,.

Thermal Insulation

GOO D U ~ l:O
~ro c t o r
wllh
hydt aufl c 3 pt' hilch 141·301 4

HOU~E FOR lease on linco ln

Radiator~

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

··TH~ MOGTAD VA&gt;I C ~D
ATTA C ~ AIR·

LAD ISG AND GENTLEMcN OF THc
PRESG ! DIST1NGUI~HED· VI~ I TORG!
VOU ARE ABOUT TO WIT~ESS A
DEMON5TRATIOr.r 0~ I He FREMONT
"FAL.C0t-J'' - -

JUST A &lt;3UEGT
PA% TO THE
VIEWING ?TAND
BUT THAT OOE5 N'T
5AV THE "SHE ·

P.M .
Close
Thursdays
anc
Sa t urdays at noon .
New 4 bedroom . 2500 sq. It
l ivi n g space , 2 17 b&lt;l th s, 1'
room r an ch b r ic k . L ocal ec
3 mil es f rom Rt , 7, up W.es
Shade R iver , Ca l l f or a r
appOintm ent.

FO R Ju nk Car s. Fir es Tr udo;
and Auto Wre ck er ~e r1nc e
Phon e 74:7.2081 01 Pe pru o d
f!ut lond 744' -9 5.15

Phone

EXPERIENCED

p~

P.ELAl( , WA~H··
MAJOR MEDWAY
C..fARED M~ FOR
T H~ DEMON·
STRAT ION!

Phone 99l -7DJ4 . 10-29-l mo.

11 11 1 mo.

Cellulosic (wood fib er)

AU1 0 · BO Oil: S oitd scr ap melol
fl1 der s ~o t·, oge 992 -':l JOl:l

See us at 1100 East Main
Street. Pomeroy , Ohio or

" SINCE 1947

Service

1 STILl. DO..,'T GET IT,
eASY! TODAY'S AIR
SHOW IS FOR F RSMO~T~
FIGHTER .. NOT OUR5 !

Office Hour.s : 9 A . M . to .,

C A ~H

SlAR Kennel

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

Let The Open ng

GeorgeS . Hobstetter JrBroker
107 '1 Sycamore 51.
Pomeroy , Ohio

•Mobile
Home·
Unde rpinning
• Roof Coating
• Tie - Downs
• Awnings - Carports
• Ins ranee
Repairs

RACINE , 0 .

'INSULAnON
SERVICE

No Sunday Calis Plea se
11 2 1 t mo

CU SlOM FIMMI: h.1 t( h to ; loT t&gt;
model Chev(Oie T or G· M C
11uck 99'} 70bo

CHIP

i 'tl JUI

FREE ESTIMATE S

~ IX

Kingsbury
lbne Sales

RACINE
PlANING MILl

Bissell Siding Co.

REALTY

J,H k. W C.ll',i'Y Mqr.
Plwrw 99]] 18 1

COIN S CURIUN C'f Tokens old
po&lt; ket wa tches and cha1ns
~ li Ver and gold . We need 19ttJ
ond o lde r silver co• n:. B u ~ sell
or trade Coli Roger Wa msley
Ul -1331

'

IIi

Op P•• •

l ~;PI' ' ''~· I' Io1••~ t&gt;n Olu~1

fJh&lt;..'" "-'

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

Vn

\'\1

JUJ

PHONE 992-6333

Pomerc;&gt;y F ore~ t Pro ·
duCIS Top pr 1CE' fo r SIO!ld1119
~ ow T u nbe r
Coil 99') S 9o~ 0 1
Ker1r Ho nb.,. I ·H 0·8570 '

Auction

l,•.., t"l fond

l'\11 YDUI

TI MB ~ R

op t!:&gt; .

J

lUJ 1/JJl//

0.1.1 • '~

So~ 1,· P11tl ''•

po•d lor all mok t&gt;s a nd
rnodels ol mob•le home s
Phone area cod &lt;' tt l J-413-9531

4

lOll

(~1111111\.'lll\11 ~Hil f H'It J

,\ l id

( A, ~ H

h.n nished
5434.

Business Services

'll"

COUN tRY l o,onlcwd ~-.dh H'~lud
,.,j .....,od ... '"''' ~·· ond go..•ud ~"

G•·l11'1 .11 [II·( ftl(

Wanred to Bur

3 AND

Vo

L

PJ,,,,, , JU ~
JIOiot JUJ I l l Jill

H,dpoJrnl Appli ,Hl C•-' \

Rt ~I N G

W

, f u.,~n
II'

HOBSTETTER

LANDMARK

M!DQLE· AGW LADY 10 l1ve 1n
w1Th 90 'I' ol d lad y Room and
!ioor d l tg ht housel.. ceplll9 No
lou ndr y
In Rullo•1d
Co li
74'] 1071;1

,,

""'""r

IWO

640 I UU SO dliU

10 stay w 1th f&gt; lderl y
mon 111 ~yr o cu s c for home and
Wog es
W111e
Be • Jl 5
P t;nner o ~ OH ~ ~7 o&lt;i or ( Oil
f;' ll ei1H I9 ~ 991 6344

I ll H i ll( l'd

..... lll'l

M "'

~l;(. :,

] .f] JO~ ~

) V. AL l lu• "' h&gt;~ .,nl1• hl'

JIUJor

h~H hm o•nh

1969 Z-28 CAMARO . For more •n ·
formo l •oll . colt '149·23 TI

IN THE
COMMO N !"LEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DI VIS ION
MEIGS COUNTY . OtiiO

l 'n"l ' ''''"

j'"'

•ce bO JCI:..' s b • o '!&gt;~o
bed$ ~ro r 1 beds t&gt; IC co•11plete
h o u s eh ol d ~ Wr1 1e M D M.tle r
lol l
J PomE-r oy Oh, o o• call
991 77 b0

RO BERT W . TE A T ER
D ir ec tor

M 11111

phc"''' 'Ill/ J!;"'l

t'•

l l0 N0 M'f !R At 1LJH '"11h ull 01

LlJ::,1
'I mo ntd Oobe11nan
l0"9'vdl e o,•,t ('l Ci t ('(] ~ ra ~ lo.

OLD

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
T he Oh io Depar tme n t o f
Natur a l Resou r ces . through
the D ivisio n of Park s an d
Re cr,ea l ion . pur su an t to an d
1n a cc o rd a nce w i t h t he
p r o~J i s i o ns of Sect ion 1501.09
an d 1501. 091 o t the .Oh io
Rev ise d Cod e pr opos es t o
con tra ct f or t he ope·r at ion of a
m a rin e a nd mi scet .t aneo us
ref r eshm ent co nces sion at
Fo rk e d Ru n State Park
locat ed in M eig s Count y ,
Ohi o,
Off ic i a l bJ d prop os al s w i ll
be r eceive d in th e off ice of t he
D e pa r:lfT! ent
of . Na t ural
R esou r c es . D iv ision of Par ks
and Rec r e ation . Con cess ions
Un it , B uil d ing C. Th i rd Floor ,
un li t 2 . 00 p .m .• Jan uar y 20,
1978. B ids will be publicly
op ened f hE" r eaf t er by the
Chi ef or h is author i zed agen t.
Tfle r igh t i s re serve d to re ie' t
any an d a ll b id s.
Th e c ontra ct w ill b e for a
t erm ot . four ( 41 ye a rs an d
el ev en (1 1) mont hs lr'o m
F ebr u ary · 1. ·
19 78.
to
Decemb er ·3 1, 198 2.
The D i \l iSion of Parks and
Re cre at i on
w i ll
furn i sh
do c ks , one bu i ld i ng ap prox i m ately 32 t ee t b y 20 feet ,
15 rowb oars w i th oa r s ah d
one ref r ig erated ic e hou se .
T he Conc essi ona ire w i l l
f ur n ish a ll other eq ui pm en t .
merch andise .
mater ials .
u t i l i t ies ,
t abor .
etc . .
n ec es·s ar y to ope r a t e t h e
co n cessi on s to appr ove d
st anda r d s.
It shall be tn e intent ol the
c o n t ~:. a ct t ha t th e sea son o f
op erat ion t or th e m ·a r i na a t
Forked Run State P~rk w il l
be from A pr il 15 to' Oc tobe r 1.
Th e abo v e dates are i n
t end ed t o establ is h on ly
m i n i mum
gu i d e l i n es
r egard i ng
seaso n
of
operation
Certa ih
ci r .
cum st an ce s m ay n eces sitat e
€' llfend ing or shor t en in g the
operat i ng sea.sons tor the
va ri ous facil i ties . I n an y
ell en I , sea son and hours ·ot
operat i on w i ll b e subiect to
annu al r evi ew .
Req uest s for b id pr opo sal
for ms shoul d be m ake to t he
D e p a r t ment
of
N.;. t ural
R esou r ces , D ivision o f Par ks
and Recre at ion , Con cessi ons
Un 1t ,
Fo unta i n
Squar e .
B u i l d i n g C. T hird Floo r .
Co l um bu s,
Oh io
4J 224 .
Tel ephone : 614 -466 3'277 .

"''t''"'

~v . , k ~

l)h,,,

L AM I' I R
SDOU
AI..,P
IH'I ~~·
!•o.J,,f SJ"U PhPIIf' o l~ t.4!;

IH WAW O f v 1 h_.,,u lo_•
A \r~tcutltlm loll l: ,·-o-z,y l.o... 1 "'
~ou t hE&gt;r n
Alhep:. Co Coku
w ol h wh r t~&gt;
hlod• h o" ~~ d
w \'t 4h., oppto • J S lb Coli tol

~ (&gt; w Oi ci

b,,,.,. hu

diJ"I ({111111111.1111..1 •Po'\ 0\Jionl • lll\j
'-Oh l111 lo••Pt''" f -.&lt;•'h"u 'toll

S tJ~

Ot1ci ldrl

und \nl, '11'11

~ol'''""

,hf,u•d•• u11d

L oot and t 'o llDd .

I ~'(

lun,·~•••ltP

tO A L

ijA (I Nl GUN Club l1M d'"'on
1onul"'d qun ,/l,,,,tm9 unlll JO• I
tj 1QIH

and North promply raised

but South was equal to the
occasion. He cashed four top
hearts to di~card one club.
This left him with two
trumps to ruff the fifth heart
and third club.

~~ 'l.~SI~
A Michigan reader wants
to knnw the correct opening

bid with o
1111

!.;. -., \; ' .

\

. . . . \ KX X )i

The correct opening bid is
one club. Ther. is very little
chance that this Will be

passed
greater

while there is
chance that one

out

spade will be.
One spade is still

second

choice,

a

while

good

an

opening two would be a bad
call.
!Nt-:WSPAPI':It Jo:NTF.H I'RISF. ASSN. I

(Do you have a ques tion for
WAs~( rhe
Jacob ys ~ care of th is newspa·
l)e r. The Jacobys will answer
t nd1v i dua/ ques r ions if
stamped. self-addressed enve·
lopes are enclosed. The mosl
mteresting queslions will be
used in this column and wilt
receive copies of JACOBY
MODERN I

rne exp ert s? Wrlfe

••

�Meigs
Property
Transfers

Carnage on highways
is less than expected
l niled Press International
1

'llle great feast is

nt.l\\'

lefto\'ers. the football gmm:-s

are over. Lhe tinsel has bt•t•n
\'acuumed off the

:\J n~rh:a

returned tO work
today from tilt&gt; long ho liday
weekend .
Buses. tra ms and pl anes

fltHlf .

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 713-5536

knock out each other's entire
arsenal of long..-ange nuclear

weapons surh as ICBMs , seabased missiles and strategic
bomber s.
" As a r esult. the U.S.S.R.
woultl be deprived of weapons
that co uld reach United
Slates territory," he said .
.. At the same lime lU .S.
nuclear weapon's) ... would be
reta ined in ... close proximity
to Soviet frontiers ...
The general said the U.S.
forward bases in Ew-ope
should come into play in any
st rate gic armS limi tation
nego liations .
" Co uld one ... solve the
problem of limiting the anns
ra c e without tak ing into
consideratlon advance·bdse
nuclear fc'lcilities:" he ·s aid.
" Of course not. "
Simonya n
said
Washi ngto n's dec ision to
develop the cruise missile
was dangerous in itself. but
was aggravated by U.S. plans
lo ship the missiles lo Europe
"and to hand them over to
NATO member countries ."
Simonyan also criticized
U.S . deve lopment of the
neutron t&gt;Jmb - which kills
people but spares buildings but warned &lt;~ neither cruise
missiles nor neutron born bs

Hare ! L Barnhill. Parcels,
Orange .
Paul Ray , Ralph Wells,
Diana Wells to Bonnie Sue St
Cla 1r . one and 30 160 acre,
Ol i ve
Cla ude M
Rupe . Lena
Rupe to Willard Paul Adkin s.
Martha Louise Adk ins, 80

governm ent offices that
stayed closed Monday were
open a~a in .
For hundreds of families.
the holiday ended tragically,
in traffic accidents, fires and
plane crashes .
The
National
Safety
Council had predicted 380 to
480 persons would die oo the
roads during the wrekend .
which began at 6 p .m . Friday
and ended at 12 :01 a .m.
today.
or ot her ne w types of
Texas and California
weapons can mtin1idate the repocted 31 fatalities each .
Soviet Union."
Georgia had 20 and Florida
The article foll owed a and Misoouri 18 each .
st a te ment bv President
A truck driver involved in a
Leonid Brezhnev last week triple-fatality accident was
that MoScow is willing to charged "ith thrre co~mls of
nego tia te a U.S .-Soviet vehi cular
homicide
in
agreement on s:rategic anns . Georgia . Mary Brooks, 33,
limitation, but Washington and her sons - Olarles, 13,
should take more positive and Andrew , 2 of
rr.u. ~" toward a settlement. Savannah, Ga ., were killed
cr..: ... mev stressed one of Monday in the crash of their
his prime concerns was the car and a tractor-trailer on
development of the neutron Interstate 95 near Savannah .
bomb, which he called an
The driver and another son ,
"inhwnan weapon.''
Alvin,12, survived the wreck .

w1loaded thell' swarms of
holiday passengers, and rush
hmu· . . . ., only a phrase on
Momtav - was back to its
us ua l ·c rawl. Stores und

La ura Krebs to Columbus &amp;
:&gt; oulhern Ohio Elec. Co.,
Easement, Columbia .

ALFRED BIGGS
Funera l services were held
Monday at 11 a.m . for Alfred
S. Biggs . 59. of Pomeroy who
died Friday at St. ~rys
Hosp i tal in Huntington . The
services were held at Ewing
Funera l Home with the Rev .
W . H . Perr i n offic i ating .
Bur ial was in Meigs Memory
Gardens,
Mr . Biggs was born Jan . 2.
1918 . He was preceded in
dea th by his par.Ents , James
and Olive Pu ll ins Biggs ; two
si~ters and three brothers .
Surviv ing are his 'Wife;
Opal Birchfield Bigg. s ; one
daughter , Mrs . Char·les
Ba i le y ,
Pomeroy ;
t wo
grandchildren , Chuckie and
Sandy Bailey ; three brothers,
Na than and OorseL bot h of
Pomeroy . and .Norman of
Oayfon, and a sister , F ranees
Adkins of Pomeroy .
WALTER L . WALKER
Funeral ser vi ces were held
Monday f or Walter
L.
( Shorty) Walker, 81. of Route
J , Pomeroy , who died
Saturday mor.nlng at the
Arcadia Nursing
Home .
Coolville. at J p.m . at Ewing_
Chaj:&gt;el With the Rev . James
" Corbett otflclat l ng . Burial
was
in
Rock
SpringS
Cemetery .
.
He was born Jan . 6, 1896,
the son of the late W i lliam

and Anlll Tucker Walker . He
is survived by a sister , Mrs.
Ernest ine Triplett of Toledo :
t h ree brothers , Oscar of
Parkersburg ;
Lloyd · of

Keep passing the buck on

CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

to

Ga l l ipolis.

and

Ralph of

Toledo ;
a
half . sister ,
Charlotte Sayre. Gallipolis ;
one step .davghter, Edna·
Howefl of Columbus and two
step.daughte r -in ·laws ,
Thelma Dill of Syracuse and
Goldie Dill of Ra cine.
He waS a veteran 'ot WW I
and a member of the·
Pomeroy American Legion

and DAV .
JOSEPH WALL
Funeral
ser_.lces
for
Joseph Wall, 85, who died in
St . Nt.ary 's Hospital on Dec .
23, wereheld 10: 30a .m . today

.

Rupe. Parcels , Pomer\)y .
Edith Joanne Williams .

NEW C OF C DIRECTORS, PRESIDENT- Newly elected members of tbe Point
Pleasant-Mason County Chamber of Commerce board of directors are shown with 1978
president. Jimmy Joe Wedge , during a luncheon meeting last week . Pictured are front row,
from left, Mario Uberatore, Wedge and Richard Sayre. Standing , Robert Wingett, Jim
DeLooze and Mike Sellards. Absent was William Hockenberry, elected to serve as vice
president during the nert year. Other officers are Uberatore, secretary and Sayre,
treasurer.

HOSPITAL NEWS

I

at

Miller ' s
Home
tor
Funerals .
He was born May 30. 1892,
in Athalia, son of the late
David Monroe Wall and
Frances M i ller Wall.
He had resided in Ga lli polis
since 1957 .
His w ife preceded him i n
death in 1959. One san . Ear l,
preceded him in death in 1962.
Surviving
are
one
daughter . Mrs. Helen Large,
Proctorv i lle .

Several

grandchildren survive .
Burial was
i n Rome
Cemetery in Proctorville .
Max Cleveland , Hunt ington ,
officiated services .

RALPH P. BROOKS
TUPPERS PLAINS

Ralph P . Brooks, ll, Tuppers
Pla ins , died Su nday af ternoon at Camden Clark
Hosp i tal in Parkersburg .
Mr . Brooks was born at

Sparta, N. C. . Feb. 12, 1926, a
son of the late Tyree Books
and Faye Evans Galyean of
Galax, Va ., who survives .
Mr . Brooks was employed at
Mariett~ w tth the Oravo
Cor'p . as a crane operator . He
was a member of Local Union
168 , Plumbers and Pipefltters.
Surviving in add ition to his
mother are his former wife ,
Donna
Ha lsey
Brooks ,
Tuppers Plains ; three step·
sons ,
Thomas
Watson ,
Dether j a ,
.Ohio ;
James
Wa tson, Tuppers Pla ins ; Ray
Watson , Fort Knox , Ky .
(where he is stationed with
the Army) ; a step.daughter ,
Mrs . Reta Barr , Parkers burg ; his sfep. father , Ether
Galyean , and two sisters,
Mrs . Bla nche Ri·chardson,
and Mrs. Marie Choate, both
of Sparta, N. C.
FUileral services will be
held at 11 a .m . Wednesday at
the Church Funeral Home in
Sparta . Bur ial will be at
Laurel Glen Cemetery, also
at Sparta . Arrangements
were made by the Vaughn
Funeral Home in Parkersburg.

THE MONEY TREE

II ,:I

James F . Arnold. Ruth B.
Arnold to Richard Rupe , Ann

!

I

Veterans Memorlat Hospital
Saturday Admissions Dennis Clark, Pomeroy ;
Lucy Shultz, Tuppers Plains:
Kathryn Dennison, Middleport; Glenna Little,
Middleport; Larry Spencer,
Racine .
Saturday Discharges Deborah Whitlat ch, In ez
Stivers, Kenneth Stewart,
Helen Smith, Kenneth Keiser,
Annette Pierce, John Fry,
Jessie Young, Neva Grimm.
Mitchell Craycraft, Milford
Frederick, Roscoe Cozart,
Darien~ Barrett, William
Zerkle, Birtie Wyatt. John
Hinkle, LAlri Cornell, Charles
Cornell, Dennis Clark .
Sunday Admitted - Clara
McMaster, · Minersville;
Danielle McNeil , Shade ;
Carrie C. Judson, Hartford.
Sunday Discharged Allen Warden .
Monday Admissi9ns Julia Laudermilt, Mid·
dleport ; Joseph Stewart ,
Bidwell; Marie Custer,
Pomeroy: Lucy Spencer,
Syracuse! Anna Crislip, LAlng
Bottom;
Billie Bailey.
Rutland.
Monday Discharges Schultz ,
Bernice
Lucy
Mollohan:

Palestine
(Continued from page 1)
consider that, from his own
viowpoint,
he
made
concessions. But in my view ,
he has not. n
'
And
Israeli
Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan,
laking a far less optimistic
view than Begin, said he was
"very worried" by the wide
gaps that developed at the ·
summit.
HThe question is how tAl
avoid rwming aground or
hitting a dead end," Dayan
said on the flight home from
Cairo.
In Warner Robins, Ga .,
President Carter said Begin
called him Monday to report
that his talks with Sadat were
~&lt;very successful." Carter
said the United States would
do ''alJ we can" to keep the
peace momentum going.
Sadat and Begin had hoped
to annoW1ce an agrrement on
the "principles
peace n
during tbeir summit in the
Suez Canal city of Ismailia,
near the Egyptian president's
r""t home.
But Egyptian officials said
Sadat refused to announce a
surprise Israeli offer for total
withdrawal [rom the Sinai
Peninsula, because he
thought it dodged the sharp
differences that remained on
wider issues in a Middle East
settlement.
Key among these was a
Begin 'rejection of Sadat 's
demand for establishment a
Palestinian
state,
the
oUicials said . They said
Begin's Sinai offer also
masked refusal of an
Egyptian call for Israel to
withdraw
from
other
captured Arab territory as
well .
The two leaders did agrre
to establish two Cabinet4evel
committres to discuss the
military and political aspects
of a peace settlement. The
committres will meet Jan. 15,
one in Israel and the other in
Egypt .
Sadat and Begin also
agrred to upgrade the IsraeliEgyptian conference in Cairo
to the minis! erial level. The
conference has taken a backseat role to lhe talks between
the two ,leaders.

Holzer Medical Center
1Dls&lt;·harges Dec. 231
Mrs. Patrick Bailey and
son, Kevin Butcher, Jodie
Ferrell,
Roy
Gilkison ,
Melinda Howell .· Gladys
Huntington , Rosa. Jones ,
Nona Massie, Frank Mills
Jr., Larry Nanna , Callie
Roberts, Donna Ross, Harold
Russell, Reba Sarver , Helen
Saunders, Ester Wamsley,
Alden Wed e meyer . Byron
Williams, Paul Wyatt .
(Births, Dec. 23) ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Cheva lier , a daughter ,
Gallipolis.
(Discharges, Dec. 24)
Gene Boyer , Cecil Burnette, Olarles Burt, Joshua
Cardwell. Minni e Clark,
Mary Drurrmiond. Maggie
Freeman, Theodore Frey,
Hea ther Ha stwell, Jerry
Henthorne, Mrs . J ohn Henzmann and daughter, Lucina
Howard, John Jackson·.
Catherine LAlwery, Gladys
Miller , Virgil Roberts Sr ..
Caroly n Robinson, Mrs .
Randy Russell and daughter,
Randy
Taylor,
Minnie
Walker , • lrene )Yasmer,
William Whealdon , Torres
Williamson.
(Births·, Dec. 24)
Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Colwell, a son, Vinton. Mr .
and Mrs. James Waggoner, a
daughter, Sandyville, W. Va.
(Discharges, Dec. 25)
Nora Beatty, Catherine
Bowles, Treva Caldwell, Mrs.
Delbert Clark and son, Mrs.
Paul
Cremeens
and
daughter, Angelia Garrett,
Olristie Halley, Steven Hill,
Lora Knighting, Denver
McFann , Mrs . Chester
McGuire and son, Elsie
Pleasant, Mrs. Cecil Roach
and daughter, Charles Sheets
Jr .
(Births, Dec. 25)
Mr . and Mrs. William
Peck, a son, Cheshire. Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Strele, a son,
Wellston.
(Discharges, Dec. 26)
Paul Hall, Golda Helm,
Hilbert Hoff Jr., Mary Layne.
(Births, Dec. 26)
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Friend,
a son, Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs. William Hapney, a son.
Bidwell. Mr . and Mrs. David
Jeffers, a son, Mason, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Metzler, a daughter, Oak Hil).

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday
through
Saturday, a chance of snow
Thursday. Fair Frlday and
Saturday. Highs Thur1day
will be In the middle %0s or
low 30s, warming to the
middle and upper 40s by
Saturday.
Low
tem·
peratures will be between
10 and 15 degrees early
Thur1day and between 30
and 35 degrees early
Saturday.

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Letart Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m.
on Dec. 30 and on Jan. 2 at the
home of the clerk, Darrell
Norris at Letart Falls.

WALK-UP WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRIDAY EVENINGS 5 TO 7 P.M.

"THE

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FRIENDLY BANK"

Now you can watch your
money grow too, with
a Farmers Bank IRA.
(Individual Retirement Account)
II you're not covered by a Retirement
Program at your place of employment then
a Tax Free Farmers Bank IRA is lor you.
Stop in now and ask about the Farmers
Bank IRA Today.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporati on
DEPOSITS INSURED T0$40,000

(Fs)

Fanners Bank

t • , ,u

S40,000 Max1mum Insurance for Each Depositor.
Member FectPrttl OP.Dosit lr'!,surance Corporation .

formerly
Edi th
Joann
Ru ssell. M ick ey Williams to
Mel'll in R Van Meter . Nancy
K . Van Meter . Lot. Pomeroy .
Nell ie Tewksbary . Adrah
Tew ksbary , Pauline Bennet1 .
Eva B. Struble to Everett

Micha el.

•

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses have
been issued to James Keith
Ables,. 23, RD, Minersville,
and Edna Mae Stevens, 28,
Syracuse; Anna Crislip, Long
Thomas, 54, Rt . 2, Racine,
and Dorothy Y. Stafford, 61,
Rt. I, Middleport, and to
LAlwell Thomas Collins, 43,
Shade, and Jo Ann Lucille
Wolfe, 34, Syracuse.

CONCLAVE SET
Ohio Valley Commandery
24, Knights Templar, will
hold a state conclave at 7:30 .
p.m . Wednesday . All Sir ·
Knights are invited.

RIO GRANDE Rio completion a year from now.
Final action on the deed
Grande College's Board of
had
been held up temporarily
Trustees Tuesday night in a
until
the Ohio Attorney
special meeting accepted the
General's
oHice gave final
deed, as amended by the
approval
on
the
suggestion of the Attorney
General's office, which trims- . arrangement.
The Center, the first to be
fers land from Rio Grande
College to Rio Grande built by the Community
Colleg~. and the first new
Community College.
The trustees also approved building to be constructed on
all the necessary resolutions the Rio campus since 1971,
for the release of funds so will house 10 current and
technology
that construction can begin planned
irrunediately on the Com- programs offered by Rio
munity College's $1.8 million Grande College and ComTechnical Careers Center . munity College.
The 35,000 square foot
Paul C. Hayes, Rio Grande
building
will include classpresident, said that with this
room
and
laboratory space
action the Ohio Board of
for
accounting
, secretarial
Regents will release the
science,
electronics.
health
funds and construction will
te
c
hnol
og
les,
mining
,
start at once. Gro undbreaking ceremonies for the manufacturing, automotive,
Center Were held Dec. 14. The diese), food service and law
Center is scheduled for enforcement education
programs .

•

at

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 179

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sadat wants Carter to put pressure on Israel
United Press lnternallonal
Sadat said war between Begin and Sadat.
Israeli Prime Minister Egypt and Israel was now
"You can asswne 1t's sigMenahem Begin said today "unthinkable ." Earlier, be nifica nt, "
said in
there was " no chance" his ·predicted a Middle East . Jerusalem , noting that
army would pull back from peace settlement within two Carter and King Hussein are
the occupied West Bank of the wreks.
visiting Iran next week.
Jordan and the Gaza Strip but
An Israeli official disclosed Dayan's absence from a
Egyptian President Anwar that Foreign Minister Moshe cabinet meeting Tuesday
Sadat said be would ask Dayan flew to Tehran gave rise to speculation he
President Carter to put pres- Tuesday lo report to the Shah had left the country on a
sure on the Jewish state to on the Christmas Day secret mission.
reverse its stand.
summit meeting between
Begin, outlirting the peace
plan he presented to Sadat in
Ismailia, Egypt, told the

he

18 HOUJrCOMFORT

-.

---------- --·-

Style

11

Reg.
Retdil

·-.-~ - ~-,

20
21
651

41
43
220
201
9 50

23
2672

2678
2690
2693
2697
2629
2608
2616

$7.95
7.95
8 .95
7. Y5
8.50
IQ .95
10 .95
10.95
8 .50
19.95
20.95
9.95
16.95

16.95
12.95
22.95
25 .95

-Sdle
Price

-a~~"».~::~~O:::.~:::::o...::-:~,,. ~:~:i:::::::~:·:::::::~:::::::.-:::::..-&amp;.~,'::~~,~~

$6.95
6.95
7.95
6.95
7.50
9.95
9.95
7.95
7.50
17.95
18.95
7.95
14.95
14.95
10.95
19.95
.22.95

INews. . •in Briefsl~

~

By Unfted Press Internatlooal
ALEXANDRIA, KY . - KENTUCKY STATE POLICE
have not given up hope . of finding a 5-year-old Northern
Kentucky boy missirtg since last Wednesday. Conceding that
all leads in the case have so far proved negative, Detective
Philip Harney of the state police said authorities were
continuing an intensive investigation into the disappearance o[
Keilh Holliday .
Keith, a 4-foot, 45-pound boy with strawberry-blond hair,
was wearing a dark blue coat, blue jeans, ski mask and gloves
wben he was last seen. He had left home to watch workers
building a house nearby.

MEMPIUS, TENN.- A YOUNG COUPLE walked irtto St.
Jude. Children's Research Hospital Tuesday, plunked down
$11,000 in twenty-dollar bills and left without identifying
lhemseives or asking for a receipt. Carl Simmons, hospital
administrator, said the money immediately was taken to a
bank and verified. He said he did not try to trace the
anonymous donors.
"When someone gives you $11,000 in green money, you
don't argue with their motives," Sinunons said . 11 Knowing
they wanted to be anonymous, I didn 't pursue it. I was sort of
honoring their wish."
··.
"They just said St. Jude had blessed tbem with soine
favors," said Sandy Vogel, an ·actministrative assistant, who
had received the $550 $20 bills.

Tuesday, Dec. 27 thru Saturday, Dec. 31

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS

NEW YORK -SEN. WlWAM PROXMIRE, a frequent
.
critic of New York City's spendirtg practices who has hinted his
Senate Banking Committee might not approve extension of
federal loans to the city, paid a surprise visit early Tuesday to
swing garbage cans with sanitation workers. Sources said tbe
62-year-old WiSfOnsirt Democrat wanted to,investigate charges
that too many people were employed iii unnecessary tasks by
lhe Sanitation Department.
·
Dressed warmly in woolen Clothes, Proxmire caught three
sanitation workers by surprise at 7 a .m. They sremed
mystified by. the notion that aU. S. senator wanted to come to
New York to collect garbage in the cold.
"We didn't know what he had In mipd. He just loa&lt;led
garbage wllh us. He also took a ride to the dump and found out
how that worked," said Louis CardeUa, a truck driver, who has
collected garbage for lhe city for 24 years.

American Dog-(Slaw Dog)
Meat Sauce &amp; Slaw
SPECIAL 40~
PRICF.
Footlong American Dog

Reg. 60c

SPECIAL 60~
PRICE

This special is offered to acquaint yOU with the
goodness of our Government inspected wieners ·
and our hq,memade sauce.
~
'
No limit to quantity of Purchase. OHer good for
Drive-In or Carry-Out service Only.

~"'!;_~~~~l#JII#JL#it.:]l;Jl,;jl.:Jl:iC,"¥ ..·

'

December 1978, the Center will house the college's
technology programs and be located below Paul Lyne
&lt;lenter on the Rio campus.

'

.

Israeli
parliament
he is unthinkable ."
proposed autonomy for the
Schmidt repeated his
Arabs on the West Bank and unqualified support for
Gaza Strip but a continued Sadat's peace drive ""d said
Israeli military presence to he shared his optimism. But
assure security for Jews.
he sai~· Bonn - with close ties
"There is no chance we will both to Egypt and hardline
remove our army," he said. Arah parties opposiqg Sadat
"Let all who want peace with - thought it was crucial to
us hear this armoW1cement. bri(lg the holdout ' Arabs as
"With the close . of the well as the Soviet Union into
Ismailia mretings we have the current peace process .
done our part, and now the
"l believe that a meeting of
second side has the floor." • all parties involved in tbe
But the official Cairo daily conflict is rea~y necessary,"
AI Ahram said Sadat had the chancellor said.
enlisted Carter's backing in
In Beirut, two l eftist
reversing Israel 's refusal to newspapers said hard~ine
accept Egypt's key demand Arab leaders would hold a
for the creation of a second anti-Sadat summit
Palestinian state.
meeting in Algiers next
"It is for Prime Minister month to chart their strategy
Begin to tell his people to re- • against the Egyptian peace
evaluate the whole situation, mov~s .
especially after my (NovemBut Sajiat, in a broaqcast
ber) visit to Jerusalem and interview Tuesday, said
his visit to Egypt," Sadat said Begin offered to withdraw
at a joint news conference from Egyp\'s Sinai peninsula
with. visiting West German captured in the 1967 Middle
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. East War. The Israeli leader
He
added;
"l told confirmed that today, saying
Chancellor Schmidt war now the pullback would be

gradual, with some areas set
aside as buffer zones and
.others as " limited forces
zones."
Sadat said he beld off
accepting Begin's offer to
keep the pressure on Israel to
withdraw from the West
Bank of Jordan and ""'"w.~:reation o[ a
state.
Despite this
disagreement,
Begin negotiated "fairly and
openly" and predicted speedy
progress toward a full Middle
East peace .
" Premier Begin yesterday
said about three months,"
Sadat said in an interview·
with ABC. " I say two."

FINED $10, COSTS

Jaffies N. Morris 1 22,
Minersville, was fined $10
and co,ts in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night when
he appeared on a disorderly
manner charge.

TERESA BUCKLEY

New packer''·;;;:::'' ';;;~''' R~edsville
•
truck may in coal talks woman m
be bought
Rose Bowl
WASHINGTON (UPI)The head of lbe Bituminous
Coal Operators Association
appeared optimistic today
The Meigs County Comthat agreement can be
missioners Tuesday night
reached on a new contract
decided
to
draw
up
with 130,000 striking
specifications for a new
mlDers wbo walked off
sanitary landfill packer
tbelr jobs tbree weeks ago.
truck .
Josep.h
Brennan,
It was the consensus of the
president of tbe BCOA,
board that the old truck
showed up for tbe opening
should be kept as a back-up.
of the talks. He seemed ·
The landfill truck has not
optlmlslte that some
been operating for a week
agreement would even·
and wiU not be back until
tually be reached but told
Dec. 29.
reporteh It was "ImJohn Rice, county expossible to estimate" how
tension agent, asked the
long It would take.
board to provide fW1ds to hire
"We're going to get a
a 4-H agent. The matter was .
good
contract that wlll take
tabled for further study. Rice
Us
lllto
the next century,"
was asked to submit a breakhe
sat
d.
(aee Page %earlier
down of his departmental
report.)
operating budget.
Attending were Henry ;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Wells, Rich Jones and Jim
TRADE DEFJCIT .DOWN
Rnush, commissioners andWASIDNGTON (UP!) Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
The United States narrowed
its trade deficit with foreign
nations to $2.1 billion in
November, indications the
nation will sustain a record
deficit of about $27 biUion for
the
year,
Commerce
Department data showed
Retail and automotive today. The annual deficit will
fall below administration
sales tax receipts in. Meigs
projections of a $30 billion
County were both up for
deficit
and suggests there
November, according to tbe
may
be
further
immonthly report of Mrs.
provements in 1978.
Gertrude Donahey, state

Sales tax take
up last month

treasurer.
Retail sales tax receipta for
NEWARK, OHIO - LAST •WEEK wholesale florist
William Brun was running out of coal to protect his plants November, this year, totaled.
woril1 $150,000- one of the first victims of the current United $78,619 .56 cbmpared to
Mine Workers strike. This week, after an article appeared in receipts of $75,212.69 for
the Columbus Dispatch, Brun said he has had so many offers of November, 1976, an increase
a•·ailabie coal that be may go into the coal brokerage business. of 4.52 percent. Motor vehicle
"I've gotten about lOcallsfrom haulers, brokers and otber sales tax receipts for the past
people with coal available in Ohio and Kentucky," Brun said . November totaled $40,286.13
"I got so many calls I may set up mv own task force and pass . compared to receipts of
along tbe Information to the state energy office." Brun uses a $39,696.69 for November,
coal-fired furnace to keep several acr" s of grre!Jhouse plants 1976, an increase of 1.48
percent.
1
(Continued on Jl811e 12)
•

fOod food~

'lW

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1977

1=\..AYfi:: X

THE ARCHITECT'S DRAWlNG of the new $1 ,8
million Technical Carrers Center at Rio Grande College
and Community College. Scheduled for completion in

know how much longer it will be before it can be put into
operation again . Meantime , an effort is being made to
haul the accumulations o[ trash [rom the several
collection points to the land fill, using dump trucks .
However , the trash and garbage is winning . County
workers have been unable to keep up with the
accumulation using dump trucks .

en tine

LINGERIE DEPARTME8T - 2ND FLOOR

Special of the Week

"fllteie aie

UNSIGHTLY, UNHEALTHY - Dark Hollow Road
residents 'Tlear Pomeroy' are complaining about this
accumulation of garbage and trash near their homes :
Several large containers are full and this pile has
accumulated. Normally, the containers are emptied by a
lin-vehicle of the county. However , it lias been out of order
~nee Dec . 18 and is in Athens for repair . No one seems to

Careers center
deed is signed

Mabel Michael.

Par cels. Salisbul'y .
Mildred Van Horn, Frances
Parrish . Donald Parrish ,
Emma Elizabeth Lyons ,
Alfred H Lyon'S . Frances M
Pi cl\ens, Will iam N. Pickens.
R~na
Fi tch. Oscar Fitch .
Nel lie Tewksbary . Adrah
Tewksbary , Pauline ,Bennett ,
E va B Struble to E'lleretf
M ic ha.el. Mabel Michael ,
Pa r cels, Sa lisbury

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Reg . 9Sc

•

open ·and broke out some as no tools were stolen from
panes of glass.
the auto mechanics section
Desks and files were deputies said.
ransacked . If the cabinets
Serious damages at a
and desks were locked they Racine Service Station was
were forced open . There was · avoided Tuesday afternoon.
heavy damage to the locked The sheriff's department said
desks and cabinets.
Unda S. Parsons, Rt. 3,
In the main office area five Racine had been at a station
locked filing cabinets were and purchased gasoline. She
heavily damaged after being thought the attendant had
pried open .
taken the nozzle from the
Some money was taken . tank and she pulled out fro!"
Apparently the intruders the station, pulling the pump
w~e looking only fo~ money
from the island.
A deer was killed Olristmas eve when it ran into the
path of a car traveling south
on SR 7 near Five Points
driven by Judith Sargent, 23,
Pomeroy.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

or

.. . for the finest services offered
by any bank. Visit us today for
more information about our
checking and savings account
plans. We will be happy to serve
you .

Persons unknown - their
number also unknown wrecked and ransacked offices and rooms at Meigs
High School causing heavy
damage in an apparent
search for money Friday
night or early Saturday
morning, Sheriff James J .
Proffitt's Dept. disclosed
today.
The building was entered
through a double rear door.
After entry was gained the
Intruders pried other doors

acres. Rutland .

,-------------------------~1

: . Area Deaths

hit at school

Carl J Barnh ill. Hazel L.
Barnh ill to Carl J Barnhill.

Soviets cite presence of
nuclear weapons in Europe
By OOUGJ..AS STANGLIN
~IOSCOW (UP! l - Th&lt;'
&amp;met Union has the right to
question the presence o[ U.S.
nuclear weapons ln f,ur ope
beca use they give the West an
Wlfair advanta ge in the eyent
of nuclear war, a Soviet
general said toda y.
Gen . Rair Simonyan , H
OOctor of military science,
sa id in the officia l Pravda
newspaper that U.S . nuclear
weaponry in Europe - kn oY.'Tl
as ··a dvan cebase nu cle a r
forces" -- are " more than
enough lo raze the whole of
Western Europe ."
Simonyan
said
the
inequa lit y is cleat in a
situation where the United
Slates and the Soviet Union

Desks, files

TABLE COMPLE'I'ED
A recent explanation by
Meigs
County
Auditor
Howard Frank in regar!!. to
residents figuring their own
real estate taxes did not include the tax rate and the
reduction factor for Columbia
Township. That rate and
factor have now been
determined as $40.60 and
.!1521809.
.J

REEDSVILLE Miss
Teresa Buckley, Rredsville,
left today from Columbus by
air for the Rose Bowl with the
Ohio State Fair Youth Choir
Alumni Assn.
A student
at
Ohio
University and a graduate of
Eastern High School, Miss
Buckley toured last year with
the all-state youth choir and
Ibis year has been rehearsing
with the alumni group for the
California trip.
Miss Buckley and her
group will have dinner at the
University of Southern
California tonight and on
Thursday participate in the
NBC parade review. On
Friday, Miss Buckley will
tour Universal Studios . and
lunch there, then in the afternoon visit the Hollywood
Bowl,
Mann's
Chinese
.- Theaters, Beverly Hills arid
oth~r points of tou'rist interest.
On Saturday, Miss Buckley
will visit Disneyland and take
part in the Disneyland
parade. She will attend a New
Year's Eve party that
evening. SW1day will include
a rehearsal sesson, a tour of
the parade area mcluding the
area where ' floats for the
, Rose Bowl Parade are
ronstructed.
Monday Miss Buckley will
go to the parade formation
area at 5:45a.m. and will be
parading with the choir which
will use voice packs so that
their music will carry along
the parade route. Part of
Miss Buckley's group will
return to Columbus on
Monday evening and part on
Tuesday .

Officers Hawley (left) and Manley

No end is in sight
to Hawley's troubles
Robert Hawley , Pomeroy, employe of the
Pomeroy Police Department, retired from the U. S.
Navy, on July 29 this year was admitted to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. This was only the beginning of
Hawley's problems.
On Aug. 5 he was transferred to Riverside Methodist
Hospita.where he underwent surgery on Aug. 17 where
vertebrols in his neck were removed and replaced,.
He was sent home and on Oct. 28 was again admitted
to Riverside until Nov .1, for infection of the bone . He
was readmitted for the s;pne thing on Nov. 11 through
the 22. He now wears a neck brace and if the infection
reoccurs more surgery will be required .
All this hospitalization takes money and the MeigsGallia Fraternal Order of Police started the ball rolling
when they gave Hawley $100 to help on his expenses .
Ray Manley, secretary of, tbe Meigs-Gallla FOP
wrote to the police 136lodges in the state and told them
of the situation.
.
'
Thus far nine lodges have responded with donations .
They are Warren County FOP 103, Lebanon, County
Une Lodge 101, Mogadore; South Euclid Lodge 80,
South Euclid, West Lake CoW1ty 116, Willowick ,
Southern Ohio Lodge 55 , Athens, each with a donation
of $25; Austintown Lodge 126, Austintown, and Lake
Geauga County 16: Mentor, $50 each; Western
Cuyahoga Lodge 25, Lakewood, $100.
AB of this date Hawley's bills total $14,000 witb him
having to pay 25 percent. He is ever so grateful to the
Meii!S-GaUia Lodge and the others for their ponations .
~

'

'

1.~

S~sidy

is at
$200,000 plus
The three local school
districts of Meigs County
received $20,4,058 .96 , after
deductions for employes
retirement,
in
the
distribution o[ the State
School Foundation subsidy
payments for December.
'Eastern Local received
$47,281.41; Meigs Local,
$1!4 ,778.07, and Southern ,'
$41,999.48. In addition the
Meigs County Board of
Education received a direct
allotment of $14,478.84 .

ONE MAN FINED
Fined in the court of
Pomeroy May...,..Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night on
reckless operation charges
was Dennis Clark, Pomeroy,
$250 and costs. Forfeiting a
$250 bond posted on that
charge was John Jordan,
Parkersburg, while Basil
Haynes, Pomeroy, forfeited a
$5C bond posted on in·
toxication charges.

'

.

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