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'
· I~The Daily Sentinel. M1ddleport· Pomeroy, 0 .. Wt'!lnesaay, Nov. 9, 1977

Hospital News

~-----A~~~-De;th~-- -- ! Attendance policies
I

GLEN R . PAULIN

the Roeb Funeral Hom e

fv\eigs County r es1den t who

Sylvani a a t 1 p.m . on Oct 18
wi th the Rev . Et ..... ood L. Rose

d ied i n Toledo Oct . 26, wa s a

off1C1a t 1ng

Glen R. Paulin, 80 , former
son of the late Melvin a nd

Ma vy Paul in. Besides his
parents. he was preceded in

death by a brother and sis ter
Surviv ing are h1s wife
Elva ; a daughter , Zed a Ja ne

Bea m; two grand chil dren a
brother , Ernest, in Daytml ,
a('td a sister . Mr ... James
Weber
Lakeland,
Mr. ,Paulin
wa s aFla
me m ber
of the Ra,ine Masonic Lodge
and a veteran of World Wa r l.
Funeral serv ices were held a t
Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5.75 per cent pa id on
90 day Certifica tes of
Depos it .
$ 1,000 . 00
Min imum.
Interest
Payable Quarterly .
1

I

I ~ at MHS explained

A sub sta nt•a l penanv 1s
in 'lloked o n all certif 1cate
accounts wt t hdrawn pnor
to the date of matu ri ty

Meigs Co. Branch

..@
Th e Athens Cou nty
~

Sav 1ngs &amp; Loan Co

296 S econ d St.
P o m erov . Oh io

iii:'

Buria l was

Toledo fv\emor ia! Park

One

in

ured ffi
,

i.n.J•

aUtO acciden.t
Damages were heavy and
one person was il)jured in an
accident near the East Mam·
Nve Av e. intersection in
Pomeroy at 8 p.m. Tuesday
night. Pomeroy Police satd.
A car driven by Cecil
Maynard , Jr .. Racine, was
headed east on East Main at a
high rate of speed, police
said. and applied hi s brakes
upon coming onto a lane of
traffic . Police said the
Maynard ca r sktdded 210 feet
an d went left to center
clipping off a u!llity pole. A
passenger in the Maynard
car. Betty Foley. was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Pomerpy
Emergency Squad.
FOUND INNOCENT
BROOKINGS , S. D. (UP! )
- Don ald McCusker , 52 ,
former ly of Westerville ,
Ohio. has been cleared of
manslaughter charges in the
1973 death of Alexander
Onassis. Onassis, 23, the son
of shipping tycoon Aristotle
Onassis, was killed when a
light amphibious plane
piloted by McCusker crashed
during takeoff at Athens
Airport in Groece . McCusker,
who suffered serious injuries
and five Greek ground
technicians were accused of

manslaughter.

Approximate])' 40 parents

necklace
for mothers
and

PAT meeting at the high Kennedy during which Mrs.
sc.hool.
Peg Harris reported on Open
YoWJg, who is in charge of House plans.
Open House a1Me1·gs ,High
att en d ance recor d s. explained the forms used, School will be held Tuesday,
records kept , and proeedures Nov. 15, beginning at 7:30.
followed by the school in the After introductory remarks
effort to keep track of student by Principal James Diehl,
absences.
guests may take guided tours
Taylor, assistant principal, of the building conducted by
. discussed the three kinds of student council memb.e rs .
absences
excused, Teachers will be in the it
unexcused , and truant and rooms, and tea chers and~r
••a rious attendance rules in students will demonstrate use
the student handbook. Mr. of classroom equipment.
Crow list ed the seven legal Refreshments will be served
reasons for absence from by PAT.
-~ 1
.,...,ose
present were invited
~ "oo .
"'
The speakers stressed that to jom PAT (Parents and
both parents and students Teachers) for $1 membership
should oo aware of the Ohio dues. The December meeting
compulsory school at· was rescheduled for Monday,
tendance laws, and that both December 12, to avoid con·
parents and students with flict with a basketball game.
problems or questioos con· The meeting ended with an
cernlng excuses or absences invitation to the public from
should contact the school PAT President Kennedy and
office.
M.H.S. Princtpal Diehl to
Toptcs discussed following attend Meigs High School's
the program included the Open House on Nov. 15.
personal day of absenre.

Notices, local briefs
RACINE _: The Southern

time ; however, it has been .

local Band Boosters w ill hold

postponed until Dec

cafeterra preceding the
Southern-Eastern game .

There w ill be a · dance at
Southern
High
Scnool
follow ing the Eastern-South ern game un111 midnight.
Admission is Sl .SO . Tony

a soup supper from 4 to 7 p.m .
Saturday in the high school

Nellie Burford, formerly of
Meigs County, is confined to
Good Samaritan Hospita l in
Dayton , Ohio, room number
114L with a leg injury . Meigs
County friends are asked to
send cards to her.

Harrisonville Lodge 411
F&amp;AM will meet in special
session Saturday at 2 p.m.
There will be work in the
entered apprentice degree.
All master masons are Invi ted .

grandmothers

work~study

tendanre problems and PAT business session was
d ed bY p res ld en t caro 1
policies at the November 8 con uct

The annual elect 1on of the
M.elgs County Agricultural
Society will be held from S to
9 p.m . Thursday in the office
of the Me1gs County .comm issioners in the courthouse.
The five incumbent d 1rectors
are the only candidates for
the f ive seats to be filled on
the society's board this year.
However, residents are asked
to turn out and vote during
the
designated
hours
although there are no races.
The board Is Informally
known as the fair bQard and
annually stages the JY.eigs
County Fair.

Not just another
pretty necklace .. .
but a thoughtful and
loving gift.

work permits and

and teachers heard Earl programs, and parent~school
y
~
T
d lt' abt'lt'ty for students who are
oung, r en 1on ay1or , an
Sam Crow discusS Meigs absent from school.
Hrgh School st udent at·
Alter the program a brief

There will be a fall festival

Reeder

from

1

WADC ,

Parkersburg will provide
music . The event Is being
sponsored by the senior class
Ohio Valley Grange 2612
Letart Falls w ill meet Thursday at the hall at 7: 30 p m.

Avanelle Holliday will be a

guest. Potluck refreshments
wi ll be served ,
·
Preceptor Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Soror ity will mee t
at 8 p.m Thursday dt the
home of Margaret Follrod
with Lucille Williamson as
co-hostess .
Mitz i Ann McClintock ,
Route 1, Racine, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospita l

by

the

Middleport

Emergency Squad at 12:25
a .m . Wednesday tor injuries
received In an auto acc1dent.

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
Admitted - Esta Roberts,
Pomeroy; Phyllis Blake,
Middleport; Jesse Swa n,
Langsville ; Bessie Barnhart,
Pomeroy; Patricia Hysell,
Pomeroy : Jessie Ferrell,
Pomeroy ; Mary Bissell,
Chester ; Lucr McCune,
Middleport : . Mabel Tracy,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - Bridget
Jacks, Helen Frank, Betty
Williams, Margaret Bissell,
Velma Winebrenner, Frances
Williams, Melanie Pullin,
Eber Gillilan, Norman St.
Clair, Della Proffitt.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED : Mrs.
Robert Lyon , Pt. Pleasant :
John Benefderfer, Mason :
Mrs. Eugene Pearson, Pt.
Pleasant : Patricia Huddleston, Pt . Plea san! :
Dreama Marcwn, Gallipolis,
Ohio ; Mrs. Ronald Zirkle,
Letart; Mrs. Charles Jeffers
and son, Southside ; Nellie
Cox, Middleport, Ohio; Oden
Herdman. Buffalo ; Mrs. Raft
Young and daughter, Pt.
Pleasant; Matthew Grulie,
Gallipolis, Ohio ; Amy Grube,
Gallipolis, Ohio; Benjamin
Anderson, Hartford ; Samuel
Thompson, New Haven ; Mrs.
Harold Sayre, Pt. Pleasant ;
Russell Roush , Hartford ;
Robert Shamblin , Henderson ; Richard Harris ,
Grantpa ss, Ore. ; Ronnie
Ohlinger Sr., West Columbia.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Nov. 8)
Mrs. Jack Basil and
daughter, Audrey Bessell ,
Catherine Bostic, James
Brown, Tracy Cade, Evelyn
Davis, Donald Douglass,
Daniel Erb, Clifton Fouty,
Mary Gardener, Albert
Gilley, Joseph Grogan,
Richard Hansen, Chad Hill ,
Ginger Leedy, Paul Lewis,
Nona
Massie,
Rodney
Mooney, Mrs. David Moore
and son, Linda Moore, Nellie
Robert, Pauline Starcher,
Cora Stockmeister, Carol
Sturgill, Ruth Webb, Aifred
White, Paul White.
{Births,Nov. 8)
Mr. and Mrs. David Hill, a
daughter, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs . James
Hysell, a daughter, Mid·
dleport.

Mr . and Mrs . Stephen
Maynard, a daughter,
Mlddleilort.

Middleport pollee said she

struck a .parked truck , owned
by Car! Platter, on S. Second
Ave ., and then continued
north on Second to Mill Sf.,
wt1ere she t11t a utility pole.
Damages were heavy to the
car .

NOW YOU KNOW
President Calvin Coolidge
did not use the telephone at
all during his five years in
office.

al Salisbury School Saturday.
Nov . 12 with serving of food to

begin at 5:30 p.m. The menu

A beautiful 14 . gold necklace
ng a
birthstone for each member of the family
(up to 10) mothers and grandmothers will
wear with pride ..$34 .95 with one stone. $6 .00
for each add itional stone set in a prec ious
sterling silver setting .

CANDY'S CLASSIC
COLLECTIONS
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport,

The c1tizens advisory board
to the Athens Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
Center will meet Nov 15 at 10
a.m ., in room 206 in the admtnisfrat ion building at the
center .
Evangel ine Chapter , OES,
of Middleport will hold in·

The New Addition To

INGELS FURNITURE

includes hot dogs, pizza.
potato chips. chili and
vegetable soup .
•
At 6: 30 p.m. !here will be
featured a country store, a
bazaar shop, jail , sweet show
and games and from 7 to 8:30
the spook house will be open .

o.

stallatlon of officers practice
Thursday at 7 p.m . Refresh ments and a product sale will
follow the session . Initiation
previously was set for this

LAYAWAY NOW FOR
'

CHRISTMAS

'·

Complete

Betz .unseated ·
•

In Gallia's county -wide
election for Municipal Judge
Tuesday, Atty. James
Bennett unseated incumbent

Judge RobertS. Betz, 3,708 to
3,481 .
•
In the Gallipolis City School
Board race, J ohn C. Wickline
WJseated mcumbent board
member Katherine Williams
and president Dean Circle
was reelected to another four·
year term.
Gallia voters also approved
lire lev ies in Addison, Clay

By L.,;E LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
voters, apparently fearful of
losing more control over state
government spending, turned
thwnbs down at Tuesday's
election ·on a pair of constitu'
·tiona! amendments altering
the state's financing of
housing and its debt
Umitation.
State Issues 3 and 4,
permitting government
financing of low and
moderate-income housing
and eliminating the stale's
$750,000 debt ceiling, failed tll
gain approval in a single
county.
With 12,830 oc 97 percent of
the state's 13,168 polling
places reporting, Issue 3,
housing finance, had 1,089,949
yes votes or 39 percent, and
1,711,761 no votes, or 61
percent.·
Issue 4, providing for a
flexible debt limit, had
737,180 yes votes, or 28
percent, and 1,928,416 no ·
votes, or 72 percent.
Only in Cuyahoga and
Sununit counties was the
housing assistance issue
close to passing.
The housing issue had
failed by a similar margin in
1975 when it was oart of Gov.

James A. Rhodes' package of
worth of bond

$4 billion
issues.

Opposi lion to I.Sues 3 and 4
was based on the premise
that uncontrolled
government assistance to
private housing developers
and an end to voter approval
of capital constructioo bond
issues would lead to a "New
York" style deficit financing
situation and ruin the state's
credit rating.
Supporters claimed the
amendments, approved by
the Ohio General Assembly,
would
spur
housing
construction and facilitate
borrowing, with debt pegged
to the stale's ability to repily
it.
State Issue 3 permitted
stale and loeal goverrunents
to make direct loans for low
and

moderate-income

housing, and to issue bonds or
notes to assist private
ocganizations or individnais

anv

and

t)(am !nation

all

b_lds .

of

the

and Boots

Great with your
jeans, cords and khakis.
They look great with what you're wearing today.
The unique one-piece action. sole is topped with
rich rust suede leather . Get a pair today!

'24.95

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy, 0 .

Elbert Murray, Sr., of
Middleport has been arrested
and placed in the Meigs
County jail on a complaint
filed by juvenile officer Carl
R. Hysell charging excessive
and cruel punishn1ent to his
14 year old child.
The youth was reportedly
beaten with a knotted hickory
stick about the back and
shoulders leaving. numerous~
welts and bruises in that part
of the body.
Murray told offict:&gt; tbe
punishment was ho!Cause the
child had been truant from
school and that he had lied to
him. Murray appeared before

above.

ca ll J . a . O' Br ie n, Attorney at

Law , Pomeroy , 6U-992-21l0 .

Nease playing
at tight end
for Pioneers

Easy

(11) 9 , 16,

;z tc

For Thur sday . Now . 10, 1977

ASTRO•GRAPH.
Bernice Bede Osol

~YJ~~I]

W

lJOl!I]J)rltl\1
Nov . tO.

I

n•s

C'() fll trlO

1977

yp;u you m e ltkely

tt 11nq s on a fur {J r a • ~ dCf
sc alt• than 111 Ul C pct s t fhr S

SCORPI O lOci. 24·Nov. 221
Tr eat o b s lt~ c le s that bl ock tt1e
pdlh IU YO UI unaf S With hurnor
!Od .:ty Orrce yo u sec ~1ow ndr culous

fll ~ Y

;u e 11 w•!l defuse

po l c nltal flu Sirdl•ons Hav1ng r
tr o uble st•lec tmg a career?
Se nd tor your co py o f As tr a-

Graph LC t! t' l by ma1hng 50
cent s lor &lt;:acr1 and a long , s e ll ~
addr osscU. sta111ped enll etope to A s t1 o · Grap~1 . P 0 . Box 489.
Rad •O Ctl y Stali() n, N Y 10019
Be sur e to s pec rly you• b11lh •
srgn

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

23·Dec.

21) The tess demil nrl1ng you a1e
toddy , the more wtlhng oth ers
w•!l be to help you Lett he 1dea ,
o•rgmat c w1th them
_.

CAPRICORN (Dec. ll·Jan

19) '

Reta l io ns tups imponan1 to you
should be &gt;~ery entoyabte
today . Th e only

thmg that could

spoil 11 would be your po ssessi&gt;~e beha1110f

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 191

Today. a1m only lor your big-

ge st and most worthwhile tar ·
g~ts

Above all. don' t lei any

detra ctor d1st1 ea nen you
PISCES IFeb. 20·March 201
You 're a tar better closer today

th an you are an opener E11en 1f
you get oft on th e wrong l oot ,
you won 't have any trouble
makrng the sale.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) A
prorn 1s rng s11 uauon looks like rt
Will come off as both part•es
•hope . Just keep the risk-t aking
to a minimum .
TAURUS {Aprll20-Mey 20) Doc•S IOr iS

made hastily or under

pre ss ure are apt to be erroneous today . Where you stu dy
your JUdg · .

issues , carefully
m ent IS superb

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Coo·
d1tion s relating to yo~ur earnmg
power are ex trem el y benef icial

toda)' Look around lor ways to
latten your pay check through
some unique IW IS I

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
possess the abilit y to do th in gs
rna big way today. Succes s IS
l•kety, but 11 ma y cos t a shade

more than yo u anticipated
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Persons
pe rtinen t to you r spec 1al ne eds
today can be led , but not
push ed or cajoled . If vou keep
thi s in mind you 'l l mee t no ,
re sis tance

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Asso·
ciate s In general. and friends in
particular, are· eager to be
helpful today . However, don ·~
expect someone you 've haq
troub le Wtlh to tall into thi S:

categor y
,
LIBRA (Sepl . 2J.Ot1 . 23) If you
let event s run the1r natural
course today you 'll be quite...

tucloly Keep buttmskis out of

th e picture. They mig ht dera il
th e gra\ly tr afn
/ Nf!,:WSPA PE R ENTERPRISE ASSN. l

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SALE! KIMBALL PIANOS

oung
The first full day of denied by Wood County
testimony in the first degree Circuit Court Judge Arthur
murder trial of 33 year-old
N. Gustke. Attorneys for
John Lewis YoWlg, accused Young attempted to have the
of murdering Mary Berry of testimony of Young 's alleged
Mason, last Dec. I, ended 17 vear-old accolllolice .
with a motion calling for a Terry Lee Brainard, stricken
mistrial early Wednesday from the record.
evening.
Brainard, who was on the
This motion, however, witness stand for nearly two
like a motion submitted and a half hours, was the
before it, to have testimony prosecution's key witness as
stricken from the record was it presented ihe first part of
its case to a 12-meinber jury.
Other witnesses called by
Prooecutlng Attorney W. Dan
Roll
and
Assistant
Prosecutor Bill Woodyard
were Mrs. Flora Board, the
mother of Mary Berry; Mrs.
Sherry Hollman, Mary
Berry's daughter; Carol
Proffitt, who wao one ol tbe
Rio officials taking part in last friends to see Mary
the ceremonies besides Berry aUve; Nell Frieder,
President Hayes were Dr. C. Point Pleasant Register
H. Shek, Dr. Clyde Evans, pbotorrapher, who took
Dr . Sam Smith, Tom plctnres, which were oubMeadows, assistant coach
mltted as evidence and Sgt.
and Larry Lee, secretary· N. E. BeDBon of the Mason
treasurer of the Rio Redmen County Sheriff's Department,
and Joe Young, chief of
Boosters.
Dan Bise broke the scoring Mason pollee.
ice with a Up-in shortly alter
The testimony presente&lt;f
the opening Up .
by Brainard, which at first
The score was tied at 2-2 was elicted by Roll and later
and 4-4 before GU Price's long from cross-examination by
jumper (17:49) put the attorney John G. Anderson,
Redmen ahead lor keeps.
who is representing Young,
At one point, Rio built up a placed both Brainard and
17-poinl advantage, 41-24, Young at the Berry home in
with 6:11 remaining in the Mason on the morning of Dec.
I. 1976.
1Continued on page 7)

...

A standing-room only
crowd watched Rio Grande
College defeat a visiting
Republic of China National
basketball team, 92-39, at
· Lyne Center Wednesday
night.
.
Coach Art Lanham 's
Redmen led aU the way in the
exhibition encounter.
It was China's fifth
exhibition contest of the
-season. The loss dropped the
visitors to ().5. China arrived
in the United States on Nov. 3
for a 10-game schedule
against United States College
teams as part of an exchange
program between the NAJA
and the Repbulic of Chma.
Tonight , China will take on

the ~' indlay College Oilers at
Findlay.
Rio Grande will open its
1977·7~ campaign at home
Nov. 25 by hosting the second
annual Rio Grande Lions
Thanksgiving
Holiday
Tournament.

Prior to Wednesday's
game, officials and players
exchanged gifts at mid-eourt
following the visitors' official
welcome by Rio Gram\e
College-Community College
President Dr. Paul Hllyes.
Bob Leith served as master
of ceremonies. Sen. Oakley
Collins and Rep c Ron James
spoke
briefly.
James
presented the China coach,
Lo Chi-jan, an Ohw flag.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1977

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 147

Redmen edge Republic
of China team, 92-89

CO uld t1\t1 &lt;tl) J ht{HJ C! I t CS I
den ce tono• •r 1rrp s Jnd d wrder
r.,Ul~ C' o f d CqU J tnl drl CC&lt;.

with housing construction

or uther offtcers.
I

VOL. XXVIII

to du

and rehabilitation.
Supporters said 100,000 new
housing units could be
provided within a few years
under the plan, adding that
tax-free bonds for housing
could be sold at rates up to 4
percent
lower
than

Judge Robert E. Buck of the
Meigs County Court and
entered a "no contest" plea.
Judge Beck sentenced
Murray to six months in the
county jail, suspending all
but . 15 days, and placed
Murray on probation for one
year and ordered juvenile
authorities to check the
family's home conditions
periodically.
Hysell said his office or the
courts in no way want to
discourage parental
discipline. Only unreasonable
discipline or cases of abuse
will be looked into by himself

WASHINGTON (UP I) ~ Althougb the country has
already officially saluted Its veterans and war dead
once thla year oo 0.1. 24, the origltiat - and soon to be
official agllln - Veter... Day Is Nov . 11.
The holiday reverts to Its original day of
observance in 1978, but most slates are jumping the
gun by a year to celebrate It Friday.
On Nov. 11, 1918, at 11 a.m., the bugles sounded
"cease Hring," and World War I ended. In observanoe
of the cease-fire and as a salute to those who gave their
llves durlnc the war, Armistice Day was de&lt;lared by
the United States, France and Great Britain tu be
observed on Nov. 11.
,
After World War II, Armistice Day was broadened
to Include the war's dead, and in1954 , after the Korean
conflict, the name was changed from Armlotlce Day to
Veterans Day and designated as an occasion for
bonorlng veterans and dead of all wars.
Ia 1971, Veterans Day aloug with Washington 's
Birthday, Memorial Day, Labor Day and Columbus
Day, were moved to designated Mondays to create
extra three-day weekends. But opposltlou from
veterans organizations persuaded Coagress In 1975 to
decree that beginning In 1978, Veterans Day would
return to Its tradltloual date.

For

•

•

•

mistri

en1e

would be admissable iti court. may stay up · the entire
In th e leiter, Yo ung evening. He said they went to
another person's residence
by Anderson, that he was allegedly admits his guilt to and made several calls but
testifying on behalf of the the slaying of Mary Berry were unsuccessful in the1r
prosecution as a result of a and states Brainard's in- attempts to obtain the drug.
successful plea bargaining nocence .
So, instead , Brainard
According to Brainard's
effort between his former
said
that the two went to
attorney, Charles Hyer and testimony, the letters were to Pomeroy, 0 ., where they
Roll, in which a charge of be sent to the Point Pleasant obtained three joints of pot
burglary would be dropped in Register. The contents of one and a jug of Thunderbird
exchange for his testimony of the letters states:
"1, John L. Young, on the Wine."
and a plea of guilty to second
According to Brainard,
degree murder. Brainard , 30th of Nov. did kill Mary the two returned to fllason, •·
earlier in the year, pled guilty Berry and any other charge I where they went to the
and was sentenced to five to know that he had nothing to
residen ce of Brenda Collins,
18 years in the stat• pen- do with them. This Is regards who he said was not home,
of Terry L. Brainard."
titentiary.
In Brainard's testimony, and smoked one joint bet·
Brainard's teslimony
ween them and drank the
was marked by sudden given when questioned by
Thunderbird Wine. Brainard
outbursts of profanity and Roll, he related that he said that Young drank 10 cans
name
ealllug,
mostly borrowed $20 from a relative of the beer while he had the
dlreded at Anderson, during to buy fleer. He said he one remaming can of beer.
purchased 12 cans of Strohs
his cross-examination.
"I crashed and then went
Beer
for himself and Young's
. The jury was removed
to s1eep,'' stated Brainard. At
when he first began testifying consumption. He next said approximat ely 3:3D a.m.,
to determine if letters written that they decided they needed . Dec. I, Young awoke him,
by an acquaintance and then ''speed' ', a narcotic used to testified Brainard.
. allegedly signed by Young stay awake, in order that they
It was noted by Brainard,
during the cross·exammation

"Want to rob Mary Berry
for some hot money,"
Brainard told the court, is
what Young said to him.
He said they both went to
the Berry home and at·
tempted , but were unsuccessful in trying to enter
through the back door. They
went to the front door where
Brainard said he rang the
doorbell.
He then testified that
Mary Berry came to the door
and opened it slightly and
John jumped in on her and
held a blade to her throat."
Brainard then testified ihat
she screamed and then she
became quiet.
He next alleged that
Young took Mary Berry
upstairS1 while he remained
downstairs to look for money.
The witness said he went
upstairs twic~ during the
ordeal. He said that one of the
(Continued on page 7)

'

fiVe=:~~ Jobless offer·
tough problem
By United Pressluteroatlonal
WASHINGTON - CHAIRMAN ARTHUR BURNS OF
THE Federal Reserve Board said Wednesday the nation's
economy shollld grow at a strong enough pace next year to
reduce unemployment. Burns, whose second tenn as
chairman expires Jan. 31, testified before the Senate Banking
Committee that the "d&lt;lminant view" among the board's
members is, "ecooomic expansion will ~rsist well into 1978,
]X'Obably at a poce sufficiently strong to result in some further
reduction in the WJemployment rate," which currently stands ·
at 7 percent.
.
"The collective belief is that the reduced rate of mcrease
in •real' GNP (Gross Netional Product) in the third quarter is
now giving way to quicker expansion ." B~ns appears on
Capitol Hill four times each year to offer his VIews on the
economy and oo monetary growth .

can go to the House and
Senate
with his full support.
. WASHINGTON (UP!) Unemployment
has been
President Carter said today
hovering
around
the
7 percent
there is no easy answer 00
buckle. Show,lof, are Ray Manley, secretary-treasurer of
level
for
seven
months,
PRESENTATION OF AWARDS - Ivan F.ife,
high unemployment because
the FOP and a security guard at Athens Ment~ Health
Gallipolis, and Holly Hudnell, Athens, were honored on
it is ''a tedious, slow process" despite Carter's pledge to try
Center also reserve officer for Pomeroy Pohce Depa
their retirement from pollee work at the annual Galhaaffected by· a worldwide to have joblessness down to
rtment, Fife, Hudnell, and Larry Hudson, presi?ent of.the
Meigs Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) dl~ner held
economic slowdown. He about 6.~ percent by the end
FOP and a Pomeroy Police officer. The dtnner was
WednesdaY night. Fife has served With the Gallia County
repeated his support for the of the year.
pre~red and served by the ladles auxiliary of the
He
told
his
twice-monthly
Sheriff's Department lor the past 15 years. Hudnell was a
concept of the HumphreyMiddleport
Fire Dep~~rtrnent. The event was held at the
news
conference
of
his
security guard at Athens Mental Health Ce~ter lor four
Hawkins full employment
Middleport
Fire Station.
employment
efforts,
"We
years and was with the Athens Auxiliary City Pohce 2!i
biil.
believe
that
this
will
have
a
years . Each was presented a plaque and a brass belt
Carter said he would have
announcement
on beneficial impact on the
SPRINGFIELD, OHIO - A WEEK-LONG STRIKE by an
non-teaching employees of the Springfield Board of Education Hwnphrey-Hawkins "within unemployement rate, but it
the next few days," and hopes certainly won't solve the
ended roday.
About 280 members of the Ohio Public School Employees a final agreement will problem."
Carter said that whatever
Associatioo ratified a new three-year contract Wednesday contain an anti-inflation
is
done to hold down
night. The board of education approved the contract today in clause as well as full
joblessness
must have "some
employment provisions.
time for the non-teaching employees tll report for work.
He said he hopes the White fle~ibility to accomodate
MARYSVILLE OHIO- OHIO HIGHWAY Patrol troopers House and Congress can changing times in the
and guards "from the Women's Reformatory today captured hammer
out
some future."
''There's no easy answer,
two young females who escaped Wednesday night. They were differences in the bill and it
of
course,
to
the
ooly a mile or so from the refonnatory near a farmhouse on
unemployment
questloo."
Union County Road 72. They ran into some buildings, and
"We will by next June have
officers had to flush them out, said prison Superintendent
725,000
jobs under the
RACINE
Proposed
Dorothy Arn.
comprehensive
education
annexation of property to the
- CaPtured were Margo Davie:', the 21-year~ld Worth·
training jrogram. This is the
village was a chief topic when
ington mother coovicted early thiB year of murdermg ber
highest level ... since the New
Racine council met in regulnr
three daughters and dwnping their bodies in trash bags, and
Deal days. I think the
~--·'
session this week.
Mary Ashford, 2'1, South Zanesville, convicted of murdering
worldwide economic slowown
l
According to recomthe husband of a woman friend.
is causing this problem tll be
mendations · made, property
felt in all nations."
considered lor annexation
LONDON - LABOR REACTED WITH ANGER to Queen
''
He
noted
that
would be as far as Yellow
Elizabeth's $522,000 pay raise, one union leader warning it
l
unemployment
had
fallen
'
Bush Bridge and around the ·
made "Us·aU a bit more bloody minded."
I
COLUMBUS (UP!)
from 6.1 percent in December
near side of Pine Hill to the
Despite the government's adament defense of its 10
1smugglers will be to about 7 percent this spring
end of Vine St., across to
percent wage ceiling, &lt;;llancellor of the Excbeq~er Den1s Cigarette
in f&lt;r a rough time under a
1
' i
Southern High School, inHealey Wednesday amounced the 18 ~c.ent r~~e in. the new stale law which takes "and remains at about that
level.''
cluding Route 124 to the
queen's pay from $2.9 million to f3.42 million, cttmg rlSmg
Friday, according to
OFFICER OF THE YEAR - Chosen officer of the year Wednesday night at the annual
Carter was asked about the
corner of the Bashan Road
costs. But Willie Hamilton, a member of Parliament fr~m . effect
state Tax · Commissioner conviction of former CIA
Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) was Harry Lyons, left, Racme, a Pomeroy
and all property on the
ruling Labor Party, attacked the action, saying the pay r"!""
Police Officer. With Lyons is Ray Manley, secretary-treasurer of the FOP who presented
Director Richard Helms for
"is thwnbing a nose at wocking·dass people who are bemg Edgar Lindley.
Racine side of Greenwood
Lindley said Wednesday his lying to a congressional comLyons with a 38 Smith and Wesson revolver.
Cemetery Road.
asked w tighten their belts."
agency will be authorized to mittee about CIA activities in
As soon as owners of the
::::::::::::::::·:;.;:;.;:·:;:;:;:;::·::::::::::;::::·::;:;:,:;:,:;:.:;:,:;:,
pay 20 percent of the value of
. property are located, a public
A SURPRISE BLIZZARD swooped down on the Plains and any confiscated untaxed Chlle . Helms' attprney,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Edward Bermett Williams,
the upper Midwest Tuesday, burying a five-state area under a
meeting will be-held when
cigarettes
up
to
$10,000
for
Satur~ay
through
called the conviction ''a
petitions may be signed and
shroud of snow that stranded hundreds of motorists. Howling
Monday, a chance of snow
the
proposal
further
winds piled the heavy snows into towering drifts in portions of any information leading to ' (Continued on page 7)
Officers for 1978 selected by
flurries Saturday and
discussed.
South Dakota and spread through Minnesota, Nebraska, the apprehensloo. of smugglers.
the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal
He said people with
showers Sunday and
Council decided to send a
Dakotas and Iowa.
·
Order of Police are Larry
information
about
illegal
Monday. Highs wlll be .near
committee
to Belpre to lriAt least two persons were killed and two others were
Rudson, Pomeroy, president;
40 Saturday and in the 50s
spect
a
used
truck needed by
missing in the storm. "It caught everyone with their drawers transportation or sale of
Bill Mitchell, Gallij&gt;olis, vice
the
by Monday. Lows wlll be In
'
the
town
·and
Marshal Allred
down- us included," said Sgt. Jerry Thomas of the Wo~bury ' cigarettes , or
president; Ray Manley 1 the mid or upper 20s early
Lyons
expressed
hjs ap·
County Iowa, Sheriff's police. "My squad car's s1ttmg m the counterfeiting of the state's
Middleport, secretary- Saturday and In the mid or
predation
for
the
"good
ditch n~t to my house. I slid into a bank and couldn't move. I cigarette tax stamp should
telephone .the department,
upper 30s by Monday.
A new dimension has been treasurer lor the fourth
behavior"
of
young
people
rode in with the wrecker driver."
which guarantees added to the ·Meigs County consecutlve year; Bill Miller, ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::·:;:;:::·:·:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:
during
the
Halloween
season.
AORTA
,
the
"heart"
of
Senior Citizens Center ser- Middleport, guard; Edward
It was voted to give the
RICHMOND, VA.- ALENGTHY STRIKE by coal miners anonymity.
Southeastern Ohio, has anBell, Pomeroy, chaplain, and
Lindley pointed out the law
street
commissioner, Tom
would help coal producers because it would lead to higher coal bas been strengthened to deal vices.
nounced
a
ribbon
cutting
The position of a Public Steven Hartenbach ,
Wolfe,
a
week's vacation at
prices, according to securities analyst John F. Kawa. Kawa of
to
mark
arrival
of
ceremony
the
increasing Benefit Specialist was Pomeroy, conductor.
the
end
of
.November. Randy
First Securities lilc. told a national semmar on coal with
the
latest
wheels
to
its
bus
Three new members in the
involv~!Ilent of organized designed by the Ohio ComPyles
was
appointed to serve
Wednesday that despite the reswnption of contract talks, a crime
fleet.
organization are Don Stivers,
~ in
the lllegal
the
unexpired
term of Doug
national strike is Ukely because producers caMot afford to transportation of untaxed mission on Aging to aid with Pomeroy; Milford Hysell of
The
bus,
a
new
26
The staff of the Meigs
legal problems, public
Johnson
on
the
water board.
passenger
International,
is
offer higher wages.
housing, social services, the Meigs Sheriff's Depart· Community Health Center at equipped with a wheelchair Johnson resigned recently.
A long strike would deplete inventories that utilities and cigarettes into Ohio.
He said any individual who welfare and food stamp ment , and Don Roach of the 236 W. Second St. in Pomeroy
Council voted to pay oneother miljoc coal conswners built up iri'anticip@tlon of a strike,
smuggles more than $60 programs, .health benefits Middleport Police Depart· is inviting the public to see a lilt to aid handicapped per· half the cost · of live
giving producers the Opportunity oo pass on higher w~ge costs worth of cigarettes into Ohio
hall-hour film entitle.d, sons and an AM-FM radio for
ment.
emergency squad members
w customers as demand rises: Some produoo,-s "pro'!&amp;bly in one year faces a jail term and conswner problems of
"Transactions"
that deals entertainment of passengers.
the
elderly.
If
one
has
a
legal
wouldn't mind a six-month strike" the securthes specialist of six months to five years
The ceremony is to com- who are taking a paramedic
with kinds of communication
case to appeal or have
said.
styles between people Friday mence at 2:15p.m. Monday, course. Fines collected were
E-RCALLED
and a fine of up to $2,500.
reconsidered there is help
Nov. 14th, at the Blue and $200.46 lor the month.
In
addition,
anyone
The
Middleport at I p.m.
Attending the meeting were
NEWARK, OHIO -AN AMENDED package of wages ~d convicted of transporting available.
The free film is recom- Grey Restaurant in Pomeroy.
For more information on Emergency Squad was cailed
Mayor
Charles Pyles, Clerkbenefits filr police officers who ended a three-day strike more than $60 worth of
State and local officials will
services available contact to 137 S. Second Ave., at 11 mended for everyone having attend. The general public is Treasurer Mae Cleland, and
WednesdaY will be ]resented to City CouncU tonight.
relationship troubles. It is
Details ofthe new coo tract, which police officers agreed to WJtued cigarettes in a motor Martha Geyer, Public p.m. Wednesday for Mrs. part of the series being of- invited to attend so as to show council members, Maline
Audrey Theobald, who was
vehicle faces a license
WednesdaY, were nof: released. The atrlke started Monday suspension and coofiscatlon Benefits Speclalijt, Meigs ill. She was taken to Holzer fered on the general theme of support for the service Wingett, Albert Hill, Harry
County
Senior
Citizens
ni8ht after the council failed to act on a wage packag~ for of the vehicle.
Willford '\I'd Ben Petr~ .
provided by A~TA .
transactiol\.11 analysis.
Medical Center.
Center,
992·1311.
'
policemen.
By WESI.JEY G. PIPPERT

Annexations

~·

proposed

in Racine

Cigarette
smugglers

!

are warned

I

i

t

New bus will

Police order
names Hudson

be accepted

Sr. ci&amp;ens

Father jailed on
cruelty charges

line of
Jarman Shoes

of all wars is repeated

enttne

at

e

Official salute to dead

Saturday, Nove mber 19, 1977

•

•

Nettle Smit h utate will be

sold to t.he h ighest reeson able
b i dder
at
10 : 00
a . m ..

the fror'l 1 steps of the Meigs
and Green Twps. and named on
County
Court
House,
Dick Cremeens, Mr. David Pome roy , • Oh i o.
Said
as
Carman and Jinuny Hill to propert y described
rottows : 3.35 carat di amond
the county board of in
platinum r ing , appra i sed
education . Two incumbent lt"atue sa .soo .oo: 1..40 carat
In lll&amp;t tnum rlne .
county board members, diamond
appraised v a l ue 11 ,850 . 00 ;
Bruce Stout and William 11 .00 gold coin , appraised
value SlO.OO ; 2 go ld wrist
Carter, were unseated.
wat c hes w i th bands , ap Gallia had a record 8,621 pra t!.ed vat ue S125 .00 ; one
turnout using the new voting wild m ink cepe , llppralsed
$300 00 .
machines . Final results were V.tliiUI!!
The executor of the estate
reserves tl'le r ight to reject ,
all in by 9:45 p.m.

AGREEMENT REACHED
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UP! )
A tentative
agreement was reached early
today in a contract dispute
between local 217 of the Ohio
Public t5chool Employees
Association
and
the
Springfield
Board
of
MARIETTA - Manetta Education which has resulted
College junior William Nease in a strike by 2IKl non·
of Racine has been playing academic workers.
the tight end position on the
college's football team which
has a record o12-l in the Ohio
Athletic Conference, wtth two
games to play, both on the
(Contlnijed lrllm pqe 1)
road .
leg
islature last May.
Htghlight of the season so
The
secretary of state and
far has been the team's ~
OPHE
had tll fight court
homecoming victory over
battles
w
retain the language
MoWtt Union 20-6. Nease, a
on
the
ballot.
1975 graduate of Southern
Brown had clalmed half the
High School, is the son of Mr.
day registrations at
election
and Mrs. Wtlliam Nease of
the
Cleveland
mayoral
Racine.
primary in October were
improper, and opponents of
Issue I said that was highly
THREE FINED
exaggerated.
Fined in the co urt of
"The Supreme and federal
Middleport Mayor Fr ed
Hoffman Tuesday night were courts okayed the language,
Grover C. Booth, 53, so why is everybody finding
Charleston, W. Va., $2!i and things wrong with it?" asked
costs, disorderly manner ; Brown after the results were
Rex L. Roy , 21, Middleport, m. "The election system is
$20 and costs, speeding, and like a finely-tuned machine,"
Donald L. Dailey, 24, Mid· he said. "You play rough with
dleport, $15 and costs, it and it doesn't work.
"The biggest thing was
speeding. Gary W. Phillips,
39, Newport, Tenn ., and people don 't want their vote
William
Barron ,
46, tampered with," Brown con·
Columbus, were released tinued . "It 's tune the legislaafter having spent three days tors realize the people elkt
in jail, both on petty theft them ,.and they should listen
charges. Forfeiting a $25 to what the people want."
He also said the "nwnerous
bond posted on a charge of
lawsuits
and the way the
failing to have his vehicle
General
Assembly
rammed
under control was Michael D.
the
bill
through"
led to
Davenport, 18, Middleport .
passage of the issue.
"We think election day
registration
was working,"
FIRE LOSSES BIG
said
Baker.
"About 250,000
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
Ohioans
did
register
tll vote.
fire in downtown Columbus
Tuesday night destroyed a If they had seen how well it
six-story building and heavily worked, they would have
damaged two adjacent voted to keep it. We think the
buildings. No injuries were misrepresentation of what
reported. The four-alarm fire 1happened in Cleveland was
destroyed a building housit)g very &lt;.'QStly to us.''
''Fraud was not a major
Office ·outfitters. The owner
concern
tll the people, but
said there was $;00,000 worth
they
were
reached by an
of office equipment inside.
appeal lor responsible
voting,"
said
Arthur
Peterson, executive director
of OPHE.
.
Peterson acknowledged
that big business had
contributed to OPHE's
conventional interest -rates.
campatgn for Issue 1, "but we
They said 39 states already
also had hundreds of private
have such programs.
citizens giving money as
Opponents warned that
well ."
Issue 3 would "create a
He said labor's campaign
jumbo state agency with
against
the issue failed
authority to sell unlimited
because
"followership
millions of dollars of revenue
doesn't
always
agree with
bonds and then make direct
leadership
."
loans to individuals."
Peterson attributed the
State Issue 4 called for
replacement of the 126-year victllry to "true blue voters
wbo voted responsibly. We
old debt limit with a
must stress ln America
"floating" ceiling based oo
income from state revenues . responsibility ," he said. "We
need reponsibitity to have our
freedom."

Big spenders slapped

FOR SALE
The penona l property of

'November 14th

service added

Film showing

is on' Friday

SALE PRICES

NOW
An excellent selection of stvles and wood finishes benches to match.

all with

Select the piano you want for your family as a Otristmas
present. Use our convenient payment plan to budget vour payments
or we'll lay away the piano you wanT ana deliver it· in time tor
Christmas giving- Pianos on Jrd floor.

..--------------------------.,;""';;;.•·~''-1

�2-The Da1l\ Sentmel

~hddlePQrt-Pomero).

3- The Datly Sentmcl , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov . 10, 1977

0 . Thursday, No' 10. !977

Marauders shoot for first division

Coilective bargaining bill is ready
for Senate, ho,u se actio·n next week
By LEE LEONARD

UP! Stai&lt;'h.. use Reporter
COLUMBUS t UP!l - A
comprehensive
empl o ) e t&gt;

public

c cdlectt\

t'"

bargammg b1ll IS ready to go
to the Ooor of the Ohio Senate
and House when the
legtslatureo r econvenes next

We€k
A House-Senate conference
comrmttee qUickh reached
agreement Wednesday on

terms of the bill, shadmg 1t
heavtl} tO\\ard the more
conservatne H0use \erston

wruch passed late last July
Th e ' ole was 4·2 , w1 th
Dem0&lt;'rats favormg the btll
and Repullhca ns opposed
The rom rmttee has been
wrestlmg "1th the proposal
sm ce August
MaJ ority
Dem o&gt; rat s
delayed
conferenC't' negottatlons after

a firefighters ' stnk e IQ
Da) ton received adverse

pubhctty
The fmal settlement was
then put off until after
Tursda\ ' s

elmmtate the
r~usmg

l"ue

t."lect10n

to

JXl~Sibtht)

nf
tm

partasan uve rt~mes
I, "h1 ch repealed

elec u on
registratiOn

day

voter

The b1ll. sought by pubhc
employee groups m Ohio for
at least a decade, repeals the
state's 3().vear old Ferguson
Act proh1b1tmg stnkes by
pubhc emplo) ees
It sets lor a sertes of unlatr
labor pra et 1ces for both
pubhc emp lo)•ers and
emp loyes, and es tahlt shes
bargatmng procedures to
take effect July I. 1979,

foli o" 1ng
a
lengthy
mdoctrmallon and tramtng
pertod
The b1ll establtshes procedures
fo r
selecttng
barga1mng uruts and calls for

medmtwn. taet-fmdmg and
\olwltar.) bmdmg arb1tratwn
tn

r~.sulH:'

labor disputes

percent of the election reform
law we passed, and that 's
somethmg we've been trymg
P ost m ortem s cont mu ed to get for years.
"To say that everytJung •s
Wednesday on Tuesda) 's
s tatew1de e le ctton, wlt h gomg to stop JUSt because we
opponents of State Issue I lost thts 1ssue ts not true,"
advancmg posstble reasons Rtffe contmued. " Evtdently a
lor the demtse of electton day maJOrtty of the people of Oruo
belteved
electto n day
voter regtstratton
"Thls was an 1ssue that the reg1strat1on ts not needed at
people d1d not fully under- tilts ume "
stand," sald House Speaker •o ppon en ts, rna 1n ly
Vernal G Rtlfe Jr , O-Ne" Democrats and orgamzed
Boston "Not that one group labor offtctals, blamed
m1sled another , but tt was the confuston at the polls and a
wording on the ballot Some campa tgn agamst electton
people thought they 'd have to day regtstration the) saw as
re-register and others fraudulent
Supporters of the tssue satd
th ought they'd hav e to stand
the results showed "people
m !me '
Nearly complete &gt;ole totals don't want thetr vote
showed Issue I, repeal of tampered wtth "
An obvtously pleased Gov.
electton day and permanent
voter regtstrauon, cleared by James A Rhodes refused to
a 3-2 margin Proposed be drawn mto making a
constttuttonal amendments comment "The people have
banrung the leghold trap, spoken," was hts terse and
provtdtng for government customary reply to a questton
asststance to housmg and about the electton results.
Republtcan State
hftmg the state's $750,000
Chatrman
Earl T. Barnes
debt ce1hng "ere all
could not be reached for
defeated
Although R11fe's home comment
" There was a lot of
county of Sctoto voted to
repeal the electton day confuston out there," satd J.
provts1on he had helped the Pa tnck Leahy. executtve
legtslature enact last sprmg, dtrector of the Ohto
the speaker was unwilling to Democrattc Party wh1ch,
coneede Issue I would hurt along wtth orgaruzed labor
rum or any other legtslators took a beatmg w1th the
clearance ol Issue I by a 3-2
up lor election next year
"The people wtll be margm
" People thought they were
thtnktng about somethmg
else by then ," he satd, adding votmg 'yes' to keep electton
that "We sure would have day regtstratton ," satd
hked to have had election day Leahy
But he added that
reg1strat1on, but we've got 80

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence Lam'b, M.D.
tell IS by obtammg an elec·
DEAR DR, LAMB-I am 73 trocardiogram durtng the at·
and wtth the exceptlon of ar· tack and with mfreqUent at·
thritts am m good health The tacks such as you have this IS
other thmg ts a fe" years ago often almost tmposstble,
I began expenenctng Ahnost everyone has some
eptsodes of raptd heart beats. palpttaltons at tunes or what
Usually these come on at people descn be as the heart
rught, I awaken wtlh a sensa· skippmg a beat, but a much
tlon of labonous beats wruch smaller number actually
go mto palpitations and !mal· have attacks of raptd heart
ly become so raptd I wonder actton. I am sending you The
how my heart can take them. Health Letter number 6-12,
My doctor tells me he can Heart lrregulartties, Skipped
fmd notrung wrong wtth my Beats, Tachycardias, to gtve
heart He prescrtbed Buttsol you more informatlon, Others
wruch seems to work all who want mfonnatton on
nght, but the palpitations these can send,50 cents wtth a
have to run thetr course, long, stamped, •self·
lastmg probably three to ftve addressed envelope for this
JTUnutes These attacks are ISSUe to me m care ol this
tnlrequent, but occur every newspaper, P.O Box 1551,
three to four months
Radio Ctty Slatton, New
DEAR READER--Some York, NY 10019
people do have attacks ol
The ButiSol IS a sedaltve
raptd heart actton and do not and helps you tolerate the
have any heart dtsease You short attack better. There fire
would be unusual at your age medicmes that can be used to
not to have some changes m control the attacks if they
your artenes, but any change become more severe or freyou have may not be related quent and are needed.
to your attacks
SPECIAL TO READERSPalpttattons or extra beats In my column of September
often precede an attack of 'll I referred to the drug
raptd heart actton The tr· ctmettdme (Tagmet) as not
ntable spot m the heart that bemg available for prescnpcauses the attacks first tions m the Uruted States.
causes exira beats or palpila· However, the US Food and
tion, then the SPQt takes over Drug Adrnimstrat1on approv·
the electrical aclton of the ed the drug m an unus~ally
heart and may cause the ' short penod of tune Dr
eptsode
Marton Fmkel ,of the FDA
These may be of short dura· stated that tt usually takes 22
tion as m your case, or they months lor approval of a new
may be more sustamed drug But, "good foretgn data
Some reqwre medtcal treat· allowed the drug (Tagmet) to
ment, and others stop SJXln· be avatlable here earlier
taneously as tf notrung had than usual," she satd. Hence,
happened
Tagmet ts now available to
II makes some dtfference the pubhc as a prescrtption
where the SPQt m the heart ts Item The pnmary use of this
located that starts the drug ts tn the treatntent of
palptlalton and the attack of peptic ulcers
rapid beats. The.ooly way to

"

fl'rbld them to JOin a labor

peru'&lt;! , could be sough t Thts

--Se par ate barga1n1ng
un1ts for poltce and hre

prnvtsion. a maJOr concessiOn
by the Senate was kept by

In the eve !'It of an tmpa5se,

the conference comm ittee

supervtsors The conference
also
gave
committee

Also kept m !me w1th the

separate umts to school

Sta te
Empl oyment
Relattons B o.~rd (SER B)
would la&lt;'lhtale settlements
Pubhc safety emp loyees.
such as pollee off1ce rs.
firefighters , pnson guards
and health 1nst1tutwn
emp loyees.
\\ OU!d
be
a

reqwred to go to mandatory

bmdmg arb1tratton as a last
resort t fl break an Impasse
unless the publtc employer
chose to allo" them to stnke
The conference comnuttee

amended the b1ll to make thiS
option available only after
the pubhshm g of the factfinding report
If a pubhc emplo)er determmed

that

a

strtke

endangered the pubhc health

allegattons of elecuon fraud
were uppermost m voters'
mtnds when they knocked
down "mstant

registration

mall but 17 Ohto counues
"That fraud thing, " satd
Leahy, "they tissue I supporters ) were able to put that
over, and 1t san out-ando{'lut

he I'd like to see Ted Brown
follow that up and see how
much there \\as I bet he
would ftnd not a smgle case of
fraud "

Sandra Rowland, CO·
chatrman of the Ohto
Commtttee for Humane
Trappmg, sa1d her group
would try agam to ban the
leghold trap tn Ohto desptte
the defeat of Issue 2 by
almost 2-1.
"The results show voters m
86 of Ohto 's 88 counttes
overwhelmmgly supported
the elf orts of wtldhfe experts,
health offtctals and ctvtc and
sportsmen's organtza,llons
agatnSt the proposed amend·
ment," satd Dale Haney.
chtef of the d•vtston of wtldhle
wtth the Ohto [)eparlmetlt of
Natural Resources.
"The people of Ohto have .
proclatmed thetr conftdenee
m professwnal wildlife and
na t ural
resources
management," satd Robert
W Teater, department
director "Ctllzens have also
defended thetr Conslltutton
agamst tmpulstve and
emotiOnal encroachment
"It ts qutte dear from thts
vote that Ohioans have an
mtense

tnterest

1n

and

concern
for
wtldhle
resources. Now, we must all
JOin together to protect and
properly manage these
resources "
There were no mdicallons
that any tmmedtate attempts
would be made to tmplement
government hnancmg of
housmg or eltmmatmg the
state debt lurut 1n the wake of
defeat of Issues 3 and 4

House

versions

were

prOVISlODS for

- An "agency shop" under
which employees would be

assessed a se rvtce fee
whe ther nr not they were
umnn

members

The

cnnference
ro mm1ttee
dropped an exempuon for
tltose " hose rehgwus tenets

By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauders wind
up the~r 1977 grtdtron campatgn Fnday mght travelltng
to Wellston to tangle wtth the
ce llar -d welltng Golden
Rockets
Meigs, at 3-3 tnside the
SEOAI., wtll have a chance to
ftntsh etther above or below
.500 mstde the league II
Metgs should win , the

grnup

Stnkes w..u!d be perm1tted as
a last re~~~ t

Ballot words blamed
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slateh.. use Repurter
COLUMBUS t UPI )

nr safetv , a 60-day court
tnjunctwn, or "coolmg~ff ''

admm1strators

- Umttmg negollattons on
wages, hours and working
condtllons wbere extstmg law
prevatls. But the commtttee
broadened the scope of
arbttratton
to tnclude
personal,
funeral · and
matermty leave, and holtday.
severance and longevity pay.

The sttuatton IS confusmg.
In the 16,352-•tudent Canton
C1ty School Dtstnct, for
example, two cructal levtes
for a combtned 8 8 mtlls were
defeated. Off1ctaJs had satd
the money was needed to
a vo1d a clostng date,
approved by state offtc1als of
Dec 19
Wednesday. a dtstnct
spokesman satd schools
would not have to close then
because of a state adJustment
m atd to btg ctty schools. He
satd the loss of the levy
would, however, delay the
problem until next fall. In the
meantune school offtctals are
"exammmg tlle alternat1ves"
and
uwlll
make

recommendattons to the
board of educatton."
Schoo l offlctals were
s1m tlarly
engaged
m
Columbus,
Cmctnnah,
Parma and Dayton. None of
those maJor c1t1es won voter

approval lor new levtes
school olflctals say are
needed to msure classes
through all of next year or the
next
Levtes dtd pass m the
lndtan Creek Local Dtstnct of
Jefferson County and New
Rt~hmond Exempted Vtllage
Dtstrtct of Clermont County
giVIng new life to systems
scheduled to shut down later
thts month
December closmgs were
alSO" averted m Ashtabula,
Greenvtlle and Oberlm ctty
schools
The Sctoto-Darby distnct of
Franklm County did not fare
so well A 4.16 null levy was
defeated m that 4,437-student
distrtct expected to close
Dec 15. Despite a projected
Dec. 8 closmg, Sylvama
voters reJected a 5 9 mill levy
asked for that 7,825-student
system
Morrow County voters m
the Northmor dtstnct
rejected a 13 mill levy, the
largest m the slate. The 1,541&gt;student diStrtct 1s awattmg
111ord from the stale audttor's
offtce about posstble early
closmg.

TiiE DAILY SENI'INEL

DEVOTED TOniE
INTEREST OF
MEIG8-MASON AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
EJ.ec Ed

RQBERT HOEFLICH
City E4lttr
Published daily except Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
Cml pafly·Mul timedla, Inc ,
lll
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio '15769
Bwnness Off1ce Phone 992- 2156
Edltonal Phone 992--21~7
Second class post....ge pald at
P&lt;:~meroy Ohio
National advertlslllg represen
tative Ward • GMff1lh Company,

Inc, BotuneiU and Gallagher OJV ,
7$7 Third Ave , New York, NV

1001'1

Su't.l!lcr•ptlon rates Delivered by
ca rr1er where available 75 cents per
week Bv Motor Route when~ CHrrler
servtce ·not avaUHble One monlh ,
$3 25 By mail 111 Ohio and W Va ,
One Year $22 00, Sil monUlS,
111 50
Ihree months, $'1 00,
Elsewhere 126 00 year , Sut mon~hs
'1 3 50, Thr..ee months, S7 50
Subscnption pnce mdudes Sund.ay
Time~en tinel
..,

Ohto
(CHEAO),
the recruttment techmques with
American Associatwn of Ann Fugate as the mstructor,
University Women (Athens Fugate,
formerly
the
Branch ), the Athens League execu!tve director of the Ohio
of Women Voters, the Ap- Valley Health SerVIces
palachia_n Development FoundatiOn, recently jomed
Offtce of the Ohio Depart· the Oh10 Umversity College of
ment ol Economic and Ostoopathic Medicine as the
Community Development dtrector
of
Federal
and the Health Education Programs
Alliance
through
the
Vic Cocowiteh, one of the
Untversity ol Cincinnati six members of the In·
(HEALTH-UC).
terdisctplinary health team
James Stelski, a physictan tn Portsmouth this past
assistant; Kathry.n Johnson, summer, will lead the
a pedtatrie nurse, and her ,, discussion on the use of
physician husband, Dr. students in tmprovtng
Robert R Johnson, will pnmary
care
deltv·
direct the workshop.
ery systems The Ports·
Sielski and Terry Holland, mouth
student
health
M.D., conduct a mobile clinic teant worked with the
m Adams, Brown and commumty to design a
Clermont Counties near master disaster plan lor that
CinciMatl and have been city.
active at the state level in
Cocowttch wtll be assisted
promotmg changes m state by Paul Haupt, a second-year
laws to permtt more effecttve student m the Ohio University
health servtces by phystcian College of Osteopathic
assistants.
Medicine and a member of
The Johnson husband-and· the sununer Pomeroy health
wt!e teannllve and practice m team wh1ch conducted a
Coshocton and have used multl·phasic screening clinic
phystcian assistants in thetr for Meigs County. Haupt has
practtce, losing two of'thent also been acttve m organizing
because of restrictive state the Appalachia Student
regulations
Health Association (Appal
In addttton to the use of Corps).
phystctan asststants and
The
" Primary Care
nurse practlttoners, Management" session will be
workshop sess10ns wtll also led by Stephen Wilhtd,
offer a1d 1n physician executive d11 ector of Ute

•

always hard to beat on tis
home turf.
Last week at Athens, the
powerful Bulldogs just edg'ed
the Rockets, 1?.·3 Meanwhtle,
Metg s wa s busy giVIng
league-leadm g Logan all tt
co uld handle before bowmg
21.0
The Rockets have at least
two sol1d nlfen&lt;~ve •hreats

Jeff Montgomery has qutte a
toe, that week after week
boots the p~gsktn through lhe
upnghts Last week he ktcked
a 28-yard fteld goal for the
Rockets' only pomts Runnmg back CurtiS Jayjohn ts
the other scormg threat Last
week he got 46 yards m 16
carr1es

Titles on line Friday

.

•

MRS PEGGY HilL admtres a stgn recogruztng the late Elvts Presley near a
restaurant m McKenzie, Trnn, whtch he frequented

Mrs Peggy Htll recently
toured \he South wtth her
husband, Max, a tractor·
trailer drt ver
The couple's ftrst stop wsa
m New Orleans where they
saw the Superdome, the
French Quarter, and Bourbon
St. From there they went to
Memphts, Tenn , where they
stayed three days stght·

seetng Among the places
they vistted was the
nattonally
kn own
"Graceland" home of Elvts
Presley There they talked
wtth two of Presley's
bodyguards, one of whtch
presented Mrs Htll an
arrangement of flowers taken
from the grave of the smger
The couple also met a cousm
of B1lly Graham tn Memphts

Jennings Beegle has an·
nounced the ftrst SIX weeks
gradmg period bonor roll at
Southern Jumor High School.
Makmg a grade of " B" or
above to be named were ,
seventh grade, Kathy Baker,
Ctndy Evans, Tammy
Meadows, Lort Warden, aU
A's , Zane Beegle, Tyrone
Brtnager, Angle Glenn,
Bruee . Johnson, Becky Lee,
Kim Maynard, Clatr Morris ,
Kun Morrow, Terry Patterson, John Porter, Tracy
Riffle, Tonja Salser, Kittte
Sellers, Lori Sprouse,
Melame Weese, Jer.y Wolle;
etghth grade, Rtta Sloter, aU
A's, Sam Buckley, Melodi
Cundiff, Jenny Manuel, Lisa
Roush, Melinda Salmons,
Randy Tucker, Ann W1lhams,
Laura Wolfe and Kent Wolle.

-

Outstde Memphis they
stopped at a small restaurant
where a large stgn was PQsted
tn memory of the famed
stnger. Mrs. Htll IS ptctured
above bestde the stgn.
Mr. and Mrs HiU plan a
return trtp to the Mentphls
area later thts year when
they wtll vistt Presley's grave
and see the troph1es and
awards he accumulated.

Supermtendent of Pubhc
Instructton Frankhn B.
Walter, happy wtth the
statewide school votmg
results, satd "I am genumely
pleased w1th the general
pubhc 's overwhelmtng
response to !mane tal needs of
Ohto schools These electton
results reinforce the shared
responsbthty concept as the
underlymg basts of fiSCal
support, whtch ts essenttal to
all Ohio school distncts."

....

:;·:
'•'

Coustn John FeU, Jr of Burbank, Calif , son of the late
John Fell, Sr of Pomeroy, told me tn a recent letter how
Hollywood 's fake scenes are made
In a scene from a ptcture, "Swarm" by Warner Brothers
now bemg filmed, styrofoam pellets dyed brown are used Ill
Slmulale bees swarmmg attackmg the cast of the ptcture They
are tossed m the atr and blown by fans through caMon like
tubes about 15" m d1ameter. Some live bees are used, but these
are "de..stinger'd" by bee people tn a closed, very cold room
According to cousm John, now and then they nuss a stmger
and someone on the set pays for tt. They are usmg billions of
the styrofoam pellets and several hundred real bees.
Sinee he has had parts m movtes such as Adam's Rtb and
Wyatt Earp, perhaps he was m this one I'll try to rmd out
Anyhow, he has offered to furrush any information we
mtght like to know about - Hollywood stuff - lor the column.
He satd, " Just ask your West Coast correspondent and I wiU
supply."
Walta you want to know• I'll try and ftnd out and relay
John 's information.
NEW HAVEN - Dr. Emerson Wood, Huntmgton District
Superintendent, will be present when the Upper Mason Parish
of the Umted Methodist Church has a group charge conferenee
at New Haven United Methodtst Church on Sunday, Novennber
13 at 7 30 p.m. Parish coordinator is the Rev, John Campbell,
pastor of New Haven Umted Methodist Church The nneeting
will open with a worship service
Each charge conference w1ll be held In a separate room at
the church where eacn cnarge wtll receive reports and elect
olfleers
WOMEN OF BOTH the Mason Untied Methodist Church
and the Hartford Uruted Methodist Church met Tuesday mght,
Nov. I, at 7.30 m the Mason Umted Methodist Church for the
first sesSion of the B1ble Study entttled, "Women and the
Btble." Miss Esther MacKnight led the ftrst sessiOn With
women of the Mason Church hostesses.
There will be four more sessions, one on the l1rst Tuesday
of each month. The next sesston will,be led by Mrs. Maxine
Arnold on Ttiesday. December 6, 7:30p.m. at Graham Uruted
Methodist Church. Rev . Evelyn L. Martng ts coordinating the
studies.
Present will be low- more sesstons, one on the first
Tuesday ol each montli. The next session wtll be led by Mrs.
Maxine Arnold on Tuesday, December 6, 7:30p.m. at Graham
Uruted Methodtst Church. Rev. Evelyn L. Marmg IS
coordinating the studies
Present were Esther MacKnight, Edna Waylaod, Sybil
Knight, Nellie Smtih, LOts Ann Gibbs, Nellie MacKmght, Addie
MacKnight, Besste Snuth, Mary Ann R1chards, Brenda
Memtt, Erma Roush, Esther Brown, Maxme Arnold, Frances
stewart, Margaret Ptckens, Ltlah Zirkle, LaVera Yeager,
Sarah Spencer, Evelyn Proffitt, Gladys Thomas;· catherme
Slmth, Helen Barton, and Reverend Evelyn L. Marmg,

Southern Ohio Health Ser·
vices Network, based in
Wtlliamsburg. Wilhide has
. PERSONAL MENTION -Recent visttors of Mr. and Mrs.
been responsible for settiitg Robert Roach and family were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R.
up and managing lhe network Wolfe and Timmy, Miss Allee Roach, Letart; Mr. Lester
of primary care clinics in Keaton, Tuppers Plams, 0 .; Mr, David Roach and Mr Robert
Brown, Clermont, Htghland Keyes, New Haven.
and Adams counties
Mrs Hester (Heaton) Mees, formerly('~ Mason , recently
In addttton to the precedmg Wlderwent surgery and is living wtth her dallghter, Joann. She
top1cs, sessions will also be would like to hear from relahves, frtends and neighbors. Her
offered on the fmanc1ng of address IS Hester Mees, 7112 Pine Lake Rd., Las Vegas,
pr1mary care progranns, Nevada 89~.
public and private resources,
and
program-project
resources
A total of etght toptcs will
be offered at the first work·
shop seSsiOns on Fnday,
Decent ber 2. The same top1cs
wtll be repeated later the Hy KENNE'lll R. tLARK
same day to give conference Unlled Press International
FLYING HIGH: Mary Reppard celebrated her 102nd
participants an opporturuty
btrthday
Wednesday with two ltrsts. She rode m an airplane
to explore a mmintum of two
and she took a drmk. She liked the flight - says It was
workshop toptcs in depth.
InformatiOn on the con· "smooth" -but satd the champagne poured in a toast In her
ference can be obtamed by honor tasted "bt!ter." And why did she want to fly, after 102
calling DoMa Pope at (614) years'lvtth her feet on the groWtd? Says she, "I decided to fly
593-5526 m Athens or (614) just!or a change, I guess.! wanted to do something different."
439-4948 m Cambndge, or by
BRIDE OF DRACULA: The cast of the Broadway show
wrlttng to the Rural Health
Conference, P. 0. Drawer "Dracula" produced a black and white wedding c11ke- with
just a tasteful touch of red - Wednesday m_ght for Franll
825, Athens, Ohio 45701 .
Laogella,
who plays the bloodthirsty count, and Ruth wen, hlJ
Regtstratton fee of $30
bnde
of
two
days. Among those congratulating the couple were
covers dmner Thursday
Dom
Deluise,
wno attenu.a a matinee ol the show and stayeo
evening, lunch, breaks,
for
the
party
at
Marttn Beck Theater.
matenals, general and
special sessions. Student fee
CAFFEINE BLUES: Agnculture Secretary Bob Bergland ·
of $15 covers the same ttems.
Dormitory accommodations says cutting his 10.CUp.a-day coffee Intake is tougher than
are $6 extra. Registration kicking the tobacco habit -which he accomplished two years
should be received by ago. But, says Bergland, "l'nt oil coffee,., for my health." He
;·
(Continued on page 7)
November 21.

peopletalk

NBA Standmgs

B~

Honor students j~"~"""~-::::;::·:&lt;,.~,,,,,,. ..,.,,. ,,.,.,&lt; ,.,.,., ,.,.,., ,..... «····:·.·.·.::.::,&lt;:&lt;'' ' ,·.:,:,.,,,,.,.,,,.,.,..:,
are announced t Mason County News Notes : ~: .
~
::::
...
RACINE
Prtnc1pal
f
By Alma Marshall

Ohio U workshop will explore
using doctor and nurse aides
"Alternative Methods of
Rural Health Care,'' whtch
means using phystctan
asststants and nurse practttioners , w1ll be one of
several workshop toptcs at
the first Appalachia Ohto
Rural Conference on the
Athens cannpus of Ohto
Untverstty Dec I and 2
The two-day meetmg will
brmg consumers and health
provtders together lor the
ftrst ttme on a reg10nal basts
The meetmg 1s SPQnsored by
the Corporation for Health
Educatton tn Appalachia

Marauders would have sole
possess1on of fourth place,
ftntshtn g four spots above the
expect au on of t he area
sportswnters and coaches
Wellston at ~ mstde the
league, and 2·7 overall,
compares to Meigs at 3.0
overall Although the Rockets
haven 't had much success
over league foes, Wellston IS

r------------,
:I
Pro.
lI By GENE CADDES
Spurts Writer
Is
d"mgs Il UPICOLUMBUS
1 tan
(UP!) - II
they can hold on for one mnre

Athens County Peggy, Max Hill visit
school reopens Presley's 'Graceland'
By ROSEMARY ARMAO
Uruted Press lnlernatiunal
A near three-week vacalton
brought on by a money
shortage ends today for
Nelsonville • York school·
children to Athens Coun·
ty , but Sesame Street
and home tutormg remam the
only recourse for students of
West
Musklngum
Local,where no levy passed
Tuesday to bat! out the
distnct
The 1,946 Nelsonvtlle-York
students will hear school bells
agaiiiS thanks to passage of a
5 mtll emergency operating
levy They jom the 52,000
students tn the Toledo Ctty
School dts!rtct who went back
to classes Wednesday, one
day alter passage of a 6 I mill
emergency levy
West Muskmgum School
Supermtendent Earl Bardall
SaJd Wednesday he beheved a
levy vote now would pass m
hts 2,400-studenl d1stnct
because people Tuesday
" really dtdn't thmk thts
would happen .. no more
school We got over 150 calls
from people today saytng
they would support the levy
now. ''
Bardall satd whether a new
levy is put to the vote next
month must be dectded by the
distnct 's three newly elected
school board members But
he predicted that after a
campatgn based on the need
for program and budget cuts,
they would not call for a levy,
even 11 tt means keepmg
school closed until J~nuary.
Across Ohio 53 6 percent or
156 of 291 school-related tax
ISSues were approved by
voters Tuesday.
Includmg Toledo and
Nelsonvtlle-York, 20 of the
school distncts seen by state
educatton ofltctals as the
most crtltcally low m funds,
won reltef wtth levy
passages.
Eleven other dtstrtc!S lost
levy btds and are now
debating whether to close
early, thts month or next, or
call for spec tal elections hrst.

fourth place into a tie.
Gnlltpolts goes to Logan
Friday, and Waverly 1s at
Ja ckson .
The way the delenstve untt
But the Marauders appear ol the Marauders has been
to be ready for the Rockets playmg, look for Metgs to
All the starters are healthy come home tn fourth plaee
except J ohn Stout who has
Go Marauders'
been alternatmg at an end
spot The defense pleased
Coach Charhe Chancey last
week, except for a few
senous lapses One of those
SA¥£
U"
TO
/0 HEATINQ
COSTS
eold hmes was ·at the 2 00 etllf[JI fW IW.I'!JU •tt lllffCNif•n
mark of the f1rst half when
Logan scored two touch·
downs to break a scoreless
tie
Other than that. the
Chteftatns' offense was kept
m check
Chancey smgled out Dave
Blake and Dave Wtlhamson
'Better' 'I\. ~en~
as having excellent games on
fiRErL.ACE HOVE
defense, along w1th the rest of n"s un THE
ove comb,nat1on wood slo-.e
the defenstve umt. Chancey and l.re"r.ace COYer oanel •nstalls '"
Wl! ho ut masonry attera/ JOnl
has pratsed h1s defenstve IIm ,nufes
Durns seasoned wood lhrougho~o~t
crew an season
1ne rugnt w 11 neat vour nome and
The offen se also drew some cool!. your meals .111so gretl ror
cao1ns Sltl lodget and as an
pratse from Chancey, but camps
emerga nc~ u n11 ,.., c.aae of po'#ltr 1111
he's sttll concerned about the ures F lreoo• 18 n1gh II! w1dt 2•
eostly mental mtstakes the d"P OoorOpen1ng 9 ~~:13 Welghl
1!W:l lbs BackPanel Std J&lt;il "" hlgn•
offenstve untt makes. At 42
wu;le Olher 1 zes avaltaore
tunes, the umt moved the ball
well, but penalttes and
mtssed asstgnments, both by
the !me and backfield, has
stalled Metgs drtves.
If Meigs should wm, they'll
wmd up wtth a 4·3 league
record and fourth place.
GaUtpolts and Waverly each
are at 2-4 as of now, and a wm
204 Condor St.
for etther team, coupled wtth
Pomeroy, Ohto
a Metgs loss, would throw
992-2925

THIRD IN THREE - Charles Brewer bagged hts
thtrd deer m three years wtth bow and arrow on Oct. 17
when he ktlled thts 100 pound button buck m the Stiver
Rtdge area

Un1ted Press International
Easfern Conference
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
W L Pet GB
New York
6 4 600
1 -1
Phil&lt;!!
S 4 556
Bu ffal o
5 5 500 1
New Jer sev
1 a 11 1 41 1
Boston
1 8 Ill
41 1
Central DIVISIOn
W L
Pet. GB
Atlanta
7 1 875
Cleveland
7 3 700
1
New Or lns
6 4 600 2
H ouston
5 5 500 3
San Anton 10
6 6 .500 3
Washmgtn
3 4 .429 3' 1
Western Conference
MidWeSt DIVISIOn
W L Pet GB
Ch•ca go
7 .4 636 Den ver
7 ~ .583
1,
' \1\llw
5 .4 556 1

Razorhacks season t~~s ~Crt?

~ j ;t~

0

nd• ana

W

biggest .surprise
By

~'RED

McMANE

UPI Spurts Wntcr

NEW YOnK (UP!)
There s little doubt the
success of the Umverstty of
Tex as ha s bee n the b1ggcst
story tn college football th1s

The Midwest
MIChigan 35 Purdue 21 Wnlvcrtn es'

befor c

the

fmal

Ohto

tu neup

State

Sh{mdoY.n

Wtsconstn 24 lo"a 16 Badge rs wm one for uutgumg

}e,lr, but the comeback of the

Coach John Jardme
Longhorn s'
Southw est
Ohto St 23 lndtana 13 Con ference nval Arkansas ' Buckeyes aren't hkel) to get
1sn'I a bad sequel
c.:aught lookmg aht!ad
When Lou Hol tz took over
Mmn esn la 20 llhnots 12 as head fo otball coach at Gophers get a lead and hold tt
Ark ansas thts year he tnok for a cha nge
one look a t hts roster and
The Midlands
satd " I'm not peSSIIlliSIIC by
Nebra&gt;ka 28 Kansas 7
na ture, but on paper l don t Cnrnhuskers should run at
see how th1 s team ra n be as Will
good as la•t year 's "
Oklalwma 30 Colorado 18 And stnce last year's Sooners' offense has been
Razorback s wer en t very chckm g m recent weeks
good, th at was n't ve ry ' Oklahnma Sl 20 Mtssoun
compltmentary
13 - Terry Mtller's about
Th1s year, 1l's been like ready to break !O(lse
ki ssmg a frog and gettmg a
Iowa St 25 Kan sas St '6 prmce m return The Razor. Cyclones sl tll a bowl
ba cks have lost only one posstblitty
ga me to date - to Texas -'the Southwest
and thetr sevent h-pla ce
Texas 42 TCU 0 - Not as
rankmg makes t hem one of close as the score md1cates
the most sough t after elubs
Texas Tech 30 SMU 20 for
post-season
bowl Red Ratders shouldn't have
competition
trouble sconng agamst
We hke the Razorbacks to Mustangs ' defense
whip the Agglfs, 24-14, and go
Baylor 27 Rtce 7- Rtce has
on to meet Alabama m the an appropnate mckname Sugar Bowl
Owls sleep tn the dayttme
Here's how we see the key
The Rockies
ga mes around the rest of the
Ar!Zima St 31 Brtgham
country,
Ynung 27 - Sun Devtls
The Eusl
surv ive Mark W1lson 's
P1ttsbw-gh 35 Army 10 passes
Matt Cavanau gh out guns
ArJzona 26 New Mex1co 21
Leaman Hall
- Doesn t anyone play
Yale 27 Harva1d 8 - Eh s defense tn the WAC•
have the Ivy League's best
Texas-El Paso 22 Utah 6 offense and defense.
Even a
htgh
school
Syracuse 28 Boston Colle ge qu arterback could pass on
21 - Orangemen's Btll Utes
Hurley may be best
Wyommg 23 Utah St. 9 quarterba ck tn East.
Cowboys bounce back from
Georgta Tech 22 Navy 13 last week's humthatton at
Engmeers can move ball on hand' of Anzona State.
gro und agamst Mtddies.
The FarWesl
The South
Suuthe1 n Cal 'll Washmgton
Alabama 37 M1rulll (Fla ) 7 ID - Looks as tf Trojans wtll
- Crtmson Ttde ts home free be gmn g to Rose Bowl alter
unttl bowl contest
all
Kentucky 27 Flonda 14 UCLA 22 Oregon St. 13 Wtldcats second only to Ttde Brums lookmg stronger
m SEC
every week
Notre Dame 34 Clemson 17
Caltforma 24 Oregon 13 - Insh believe they 're the Golden Bears practice for
best now
Stanford
Flonda St 23 Memphts St. 7
Stanford 27 San Jose St. 10
- Sentmnle• rlmeh howl b1d
- Cardtnals regain thetr
potse
1

Sp~rts
'
av

transactions

Sports Transactrons
Un1ted Press lnternatronal
wednesdav
College

Montana Sta te Un versrty Head football
Coa ch Sonny
Holll'lnd announced hrs retrre
ment effectrve at the end ot The
season
Football
Crncrn nalr Clar med w rde
recerver Steve Hol den from
Cleveland on warvers
Cleveland - Rel eased defen
srve tackle Steve Okonr ewskr
and SH:med krck return special

rst Lawrence Willtams
Gr een Bay Srgned tree
agent lr nebac ker Jtm Cheyun

;,2
3

J 6 333
Pa CifiC DIVISIOn
L

Pet

GB

Portland
8 1 889
Golden St
7 S 583 2 1 2
Pho em,.;
4
5
44.4
4
Los An geles
4 t:i 6 400 41 2
Seattle
2 1o 167 7'•'2
Wednesday's Results
San AntoniO 129, Boston 114
Buffalo 12.4 , New York 113
Detro.t 127, Houston 107
Ph ri a 130 New Jersey 107
Denver 115 New Orlns 112
Golden 51 132, lnd 129
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at Houston
Mrlwaukee at Washmgton
New Orleans at Phoenrw
Fnday•s Games
Buffalo at Boston
Chtcago at New Jersey
New York at Phlla delph ra
Porlland at Atlanta
Sa n Anto n1o at De trorl
Clevelanc a,t MilWaukee
Kan C1ty at Golden St
N e w Orleans at Los Ang
tndrana at Seat11e
NHL Standmgs

ly Un•ted Press lnternattonal
Campbell conference
Patnck Otvtston
W L T Pts
Phrladelphra
8 2 1 l7
1 NY Islander s
6
A 3 15
A tlant ~

4
6

NY Ra ng ets

4
7

Smythe DIVISIOn

W l

Chic ago
Colorado
M1nnesota

5

~ vanco uver

5
1

T Pts

2

6

16

5 3
4 8
3 a
2 10

3
1
2
2

13
9
B
6

Sl LOUIS
Wales Conference

Norns
Montreal
Los Angeles
Oetrort
P11tsburg h
Washrngton

13
13

Orvtston

W L T Pts
7. 3
2 "16
7 4 3
5
4
2

d
B
B

2
1

12
9

1

5

AdamS DtVISIOM

W L T Pts
Buffalo
B 3 1 17
Toronto
7 2 2 16
Boston
4 5 3
11
Cleveland
5 7 1 11
Wednesday 's Results
NY Rangers 8 Buffalo A
Prttsburgh 5 Cleve 3
Toronto 4, Atlanta 0
Wash•ngton l Detrort 1
Mmnesota 2 Ch •cago 2
Sf Lou rs a, vancouver 6
Thursday's Games
Montreal at NY lslenders
Buffalo at Phrladelph1a
Los Angeles at Boston
Frtdav's Games
Toronto at Washrngton
Minnesota at Vancouver
51 LOUIS at CoiOr.!!dO

WHA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International
WL TPts
Wrnn tpeg
11 '2 0 22
New England
10 l
1 21
Quebec
6 S 1 13
lnd1anapolrs
5 :l 2 12
Ed monton
.4 7 0
8
Houston
.4 8 0
8
Crncmnatr
2 8 0
"
Brrmmgham
2 10 0
.4
Wednesday's, Results
C 1nC1 2. B.rmmghBm 1
Wrnmpeg .4, Houston 3,
Thursday 's Game
Edmonton at New Eng

Frtdav's Games

Edmonton at C•nclnnah
lndranapolls at Houston
Quebec at Wtnn1peg

·

week, Ctnctnnatt Moell er ,
Elyrta Cathohc and West
Jefferson can add another
champt onshtp trophy to thetr
collectwns
The three leaders have held
the No . I spots m thetr
respective classtftcat10ns all
year tn the Untted Press
lnternatwnal Oht o Htgh
School Board of Coaches
f&lt;Mltball rahngs, wtth the
exceptaon nf Elvna ('::.thnhr
"hich held the rurmer-up
pos1bon to Wyommg 1n Class
AA lor a couple ol weeks.
Moeller. wh1ch now has a
33-game wmnmg streak
dahng back to lhe 1974
playoff semifmals, has a 342288 margm over Canton
McKmley gomg mto the lOth
week of the season
The Crusaders of Coach
Gerry Faust close out the
regular season Frtday ntght
agamst Cmcmnab St. Xavter,
wtUle McKmley wmds up 1ts
regular play Saturday alternoon wtth tis tradtttonal
game agamst Masstllon Both
Moeller and MrKmley are g.
0

Ctnctnnatt Elder, whose
only loss was a I~ deetston
to Moeller, edged mto the No
3 spot thts week tn AAA
dropptng undefeated and
highsc01mg Mtaml Trace to
the fourth postbon.
Barberton and Gahanna
Lmcoln remamed ftfth and
s1xth, but once-beaten
Sandusky, 11th a week ago,
JUmped all the way to seventh
as some consac1Prable

shuffltng htt the lower part of
the AAA ratm gs thts week
Cleveland St Joseph , a 1413 wmner over Lakewood St
Edward la st weekend , moved
• tnto etghth, while Mentor
Lake Cathohc returned to the
top ten m mnth place and
Cen tervtlle, seventh last
week, fell to lOth
Elyr1a Catholic's margm
over Wyommg m Class AA
tilts week w•s 163-160, ftve
more- t:han a week"; wh1le
Urbana, whtch had' moved
mto contention last week,
rematned tn th&gt;rd but polled
only 122 pmnts
Orrvtlle Jumped two places
to fourth pla ce, dropptng
Cantnn Central Cathohc and
St Marys Memonal to ftfth
and stxth respectively, whtle
Brooklteld , London , Belmt
West Branch and Ltma
Cathohc Central ro1111ded out
the top ten
Elyr1a Catholtc wmds up tts
season thts weekend agatnst
H1lhard , wh1le Wyommg
lmtshes agamst Cmcmnatt
Sycamore
West Jefferson, whtch has
completed tts season w1th an
8-().J mark, holds a 165-141
margtn over No 2 Dalton m
the Class A votmg this week,
wtth Sulltvan Black Rtver
th&gt;rd wtth 131 , South
Charleston Southeastern
fourth at 127 and West
Ltberty Salem ftlth at IDI
Ashtabula St John retatned
the stxth posttton , wtth newcomer Beallsvtlle, Hamler
Patnck Henry, Newark
Cathohc and Sandusky St
Marys roundmg out the top
b:n.

Computer rated
Reg1on 1

Massillon

1 Hamler Patnck Henry,

71 75 , 2. Fremont St Joseph,
70 25
Region 12
I West Jefferson , 66 75, 2
Lewisburg Twin Valley
North, 66 56

St

11 1.37,

Washington,

parentheses )

Team

Class AAA

Pomts

Ctnc1nn Moeller 30 (9 0) 342
2 Can McKinley 2 (9 0) 288
3 Ctn Elder IB1)
184
4 Mlamt Trace (9 OJ
180
5 Barberton (8 I)
150
6 Gahanna Lmcoln (8 1J 96
7 Sandusky 1 t8 11
76
8 Cleve Sf Joseph tB 1)
71
9 Mentor Lake Cath (8 1) 69
10 Centerv llle 1 (9 0)
65
I

Second fen . 11 Ltma Sen tor

12 Toledo Wh1tmer 45 . 13
Garfield He~ghts 42 , 14

64 .

41 , 15

Mass rl lon

Dayton

Meadowdale 25 1 16

(lte)

Loga n, Loursvdle and Akron

Spr lngfteld , 23 each . 19
Lakewood St Edward 16, 20
Youngstown

Cardtnal

Mooney 13

Others w1th 10 or more

poi nts

Claytoo Northmont

Ellf

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

and Toledo Central Catholic

Class AA
Points
'ream
1 t.tyrla Cath 7 (9 0)
168
2 Wyom tng 5 (8 OJ
160
3 Urbana 2 (9 01
122
4 Orrville I t8 0 I)
lOB
5 Can Cent Calh 1 (8 0
1)
103
6 51 Marys Mem 5 t9 0) 90
7 Brookfield 18 11
57
8 London (B 1)
33
9 Beloit W Branch 18 11 30
10 Lima Cent Calh (7 I) 26
Second ten

11

BE PREPARED
FOR THE Fl RST
SNOW!

Lo-vel8nd

2• . 12 Trenton Edgewood 23 ,
13 Maosfteld Malabar 21 ; 14
St Clairsville 20 . 15 Minerva
19. 16 South Point 16, 17
(tie}

Milto n

P ic kerington

Unto" ,

and

Tuscerawas Valley, 14 each ,

20_ Marion R1ver Valley 12
CtauA

Team

Po1nts

1 W Jefferson 7 IB 0 I)
2. Dalton 3 t9·0l
3 Sui I Black Rtver 4 t9 0)
4 Southeast Clark 2 (9 O)
5 W Llbarly Salem 3 t9 0)
6 Ashtabula St. John 18 11
7 Beallsville I (9 01

165
141

131
127
101
95
75

WE HAVE
ACOMPLETE
•
STOCK NOW
OF MUD AND
SNOW TIRES

2 (8 0 I)
57
9 Newark Calh (6 1·1)
~
10 Sandusky 51 Marys (7
21
43
Second
len
11

STOP IN &amp; CHECK OUR PRIC

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

Newcomerstown 39 , 12 Tlffrn
Calvert t I) 30, 13 Cory
Rawson 29, 14 Hanoverton

Umted 26. 15 Fremont St
Joseph 24, 16 tile) Shadys1de
1 and 51 Henry, 23 each , 1B
Lancaster FtSher 20 , 19 (l1e)
Crooksville and Montpelier,
16 each.

Others wtth 10 or more
potnts Gatron Northmor and

NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHI045760
PHONE: 992-7161

BIG PRICE
EXPLOSION

\\

Marys Memorial,

\•/

I

2. Bellevue, 88 00.
Region 7
1 Can!on Central Ca!hollc,
106 87, 2 Mtnerva , 76 62 ' 3
Phllo, 76 12, 4 Plckennglon,
70 75' 5. Hebrton Lakewood,
70 311 6 St Clairsville, 69 00:

7 (tre) Zoarvtlle Tuscarawas

Valley and L outSvllle Sf
Thomas Aquinas, 67 50 each,
9. Portsmouth West, 63.84, 10.
Cadiz, 63 00
Reg1on B
W • I • 107 43 2

OUR BALLONS ARE
INFLATED BUT OUR PRICES
ARE ROCK BOTTOM.

BICYCLING
HUFFY BICYCLES

ARE BUSTING INFLATIO
WIDE OPEN

elO-Speeds

• Motor Cross

•

e Dragsters

THREE BIG DAYS

Layaway Now For Christmas

THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY
MANY EXPLOSIVE BUYS LIKE THESE

sk•

Tampa Bay - Srgn ed free
agent t. ght end Charles Waddell
and released quarterback Par
nell D rc kmson

Baseba11

Crncmnatr - Frrst baseman
Dan Drr essen S1gned h1S 1978
contract
Soccer
Fort LaUderdale (NASL) the contrac t of
Purchased
Denny Va nlnger frorn St L ouis

Board of Coaches football

ratrngs (wrth ftrst place votes
and won lost record s In

Twtn Valley North

117.50, 6. Youngstown !Car
d1na l Mooney, lOB 00 , 7.
Logan, 106.62' 8 Marietta,
105 14, 9 Wadsworth, 103 37,
10 Zanesville, 102 62
Reg1on 4
I
Cincinnati Moeller.
161 1!4 , 2 Centerville, 146 00
CLASSAA
Reg1on 5
1 Elyria Catholic, 96.' 2. 2
Orrv ille, 90 00
Reg1on 6
1

ternatronal Ohte H1gh School

B Hamler Patrrck Henry

COLUMBUS IUPI) - Th 1s Loveland, 102 78
week 's Oh1o Htgh School
CLASS A
Athletic Assoc1at1on com Regton 9
putenzed football ratings
1 As~labula St John,
wtth point totals
83 87 , 2 Dal ton, 70 81
CLASSAAA
Regaon 10
1 Mentor Lake Catholic,
138 18 , 2 Cleveland St
Joseph, 133 31
.
Region 2
1 Sandusky, 13391 , 2
Toledo Whitmer, 128 00.
Reg1on 3
I Canton McKinley, 158 00,
2. Barberton, 138 so, 3 ;&lt;&gt;,kron
Springfield,
126 75,
4
LouiSville,
121 -50,- 5

COLUMBUS IUPI I - Th is

week's Unl1ed Pres s In

600/ '"""'"

USED CARS SPECIALS
1973 CHEVY·

1977 NOVA

'A Ton 4 wheel drtve ,
auto., 37,000 m1les

4 door, auto., extra
sharp car
"

$2,995

. $4,195

1975 DODGE
CHARGER SE

FORD

STATION WAGON

Auto , atr, P S , P 8

Auto , atr, good
condtlton

3,287

$995

1972 IMPALA
4 door, under
50,000 mtles

$795

�4- The Datly entuwl. 'ltddleport=l'omeruy, U., TltursdH) . ~ o,·. 10, 1971

Two oldtimers
die Wednesday

Dr. J leads 76ers to victory
R~

SHERYL FLH\1\1
UPI Sp&lt;&gt;rts 1\'rtter
PhtlHdelphta &lt;6t·r' Julius
Er\111!-! and :\t'\' .lt•rse~ ;\t&gt;t1-o
Km~

standt,ut Br.1 JHtnl
h~ad-hl-lwad

\\t'nt

W ~llnc:--tl.r~

mght , but ·Dr. J t ~.to.\ k i.'h;.lrtJ.t~
wtth 19 pntnt..;. as- ht• h.•d
Ptnladelphta lil an t'as~ L3()..
107 nctnn 11\'L'r ius 11\d 1t'am
MorE" hnportant. Er\'ln g
nnd Jnc Bryant hl•ld Klll t!. ' '~
just H po1nts.

"We made a t'tlnCt" ntr:ltt"'d

eff nn

stnp hml

t(l

t!llllght."

Ening s~ud .. " JB 1 Hr~allt I
and I WPk the ch.:lllt•n.l.! t' :md
Wt'

preventt&gt;d

till!

t~ f.Jt'

,,f

nfftns e tlw ~ t tht.· ~\ t' IS 1
wantt:&gt;d to run .
It was a stn,ng ~tll-.around
effnrt ftlr Philaddphta. whtch
has no" · W (lfl all thrt't' 11f tts
games Wld~r nt&gt;\\ l.'llal.'~.
Bill\' CUnnin gham . 1\\ ~l uf

17 D.uT\ I lla\\ ktns
had 16 p.ttnt"' and t :l
rt•buund"
:\t' \\
Jt•r..; t·~ ":ot
(;t'i•q!t' .lnhrl.,.dll was tu~h
tn.m 111 tht• gam t' \\ uh 20
Eb1'\\!1~re
Buffa! &lt;~

bt•;tt

115-112. S;ttl r\nt ump
H11:-.tnn. 12!1-114, am!

(; 1•\dt•n StalL' t11Pk lm.ha n; t,
\:!~- 1~1 .

124, Knit'ks 113-:
Buff Hlnt'\'t~nt'&lt;ltb rt'l'!lr d at
5-5 as BtU W!lloughb) camt'
Rr~tH':r-

nff till' bench tn spark a Uurdquartt•r nlll~ wnh _ rhn•e
s tratKhl JUlllpers. Btlly

Knigh t led all st.•nrrr.s wtth 30
j.)&lt;)l!lts a nd .Jnhn Shumate hit
&lt;1 sC' a Stl nlu ~h 26. Spen cer
l!oyWiltld , and n1olpt• Ray

Williams had 19 points !Dr the
Pi s t on~

pereent fr om everybody and

that' s what I wanted ."
Stx Philadelphia pla)-rrs lut
double figures , With reserve
fllrward Stevp Mix puttmg m
18 points and Du u~ Collins

~t'\\

tht" !\'BA ,
YPrk , 124-

Orlt•:tn~.

agains t the Nets. whn have
lost eight or nine .
" We
play ed
f.! rt"at,
0J1mi ngham said. " I gPt 150

bt•at

m

llJ. !)~•tf'lllt (IW.lk H llU St t~ll.12710i. DL·m·t•r ddeatL'&lt;i 1'\t'\\

Knu.:k.'i.

\ 'iCt fl rtt' S ha\'t'

19 JlPI!IL;;; and Hal ph Snnps1•fl
lt;.td 18. ~1 PSt'S !\.1ah"IW ~l"'l ft'&lt;i
:!2 .md Hudy "1\•mJ&lt;IIlnytl'h
all lh'd :!0 f t•r I h •tt~t nfi'.
~~~J.!~t'l!' 115. Ne\\ Orl ea ns

t)lllllh

t;O tllt'

th11Se

.

addm~

12i, R 11&lt;'kt'IS 107 :

M.L. C'wT Sl'llr £' d 25 pt1Jnt5
and s~vl'n l"tht&gt;I' Pi~ton:::; hit
d1'~ ublt~ figw·t·:::; as
Detn1il
nvCn:ame tin.· absenct• of
centt'r {311b l.an1er - nut with
a bruts~d nghl knee - to
defeat H1•U.St1•n . It was the
ftfth ~trcught n1ad l(ISS for the
Buckets . F.n e :'.h111ey added

Grid
standings
OVERALL SCORING
TO P-A Pis Avg .

112:
Da\'td Thompson S('Ored a
~a me.htMh 31 poml'i and hts

O!!nn•r lf'ammates held
lt&gt;a gue le ading S('orer Pete

Maravich to 10 to defeat the
,Jazz. Dan Issei scored "
.s easnn·hi ~ h

26 prHnts f or

whlle Lennard
Hobinson seured 24 for New
Denv(•r.

Orleans.
Spurs 129. Celtics 114 :
Larr; ·KtHwn scn'rf..d

2i

pt•ints ami Gc1wge Gervin

0

0

114 12.7

addt'&lt;l 20 as San Antonio

14

84 10.5

handed

13
12
Sommer , PP 13

2

80 10.0
76 8 . .4
78 7.8
70 7.8
66 7.3

defeat in nine games. The
Ce lt i&lt;-s were led by Curtis
Rowe's 19 points and Sidney
Wicks' 18.

Kemper , L

19

Casey, KC

Just1ce, NG
Ku hn , E

Dorsev . M

1l

M&lt;CI 'nd, T

J

0
4

II 0
11 0
9 8

Bostun its

ei~hth

66 7,3 Warrh•rs 132, Parr rs 129:
62 6.9
Rick Barry scored 45
Ge1ger , KC
8 .0
48 6.0
points,
39 in U1e second half,
Carter, SW
8 4 52 5.8
tn spark Golden State to a
5 EOAL SCOR lNG
TO PA Pis Avg. victory over Indiana. The
Kemper , L 12 0 72 12.0 Pacers pulled to within one,
Boykln. I
9 0 54 9.0
Arms trong . L 6 0 36 6.0 !22-121 , with just 2:24 left in
Jenkins , J
5 3 36 6.0 the game and the lead then
Hallett , L
5 0 30 5.0 went batk and forth until the
Flet&lt;her, I
2 15 30 5.0
0 27 27 ..S Warriors pulled ahead, 13().
L. Smith, L
Wayland. M 3 o tB 3.0 129, with just &lt;•ver 30 seconds
left.
Smathers , A
3
0 1B 3.0
Hol bert. T

Schan' ba c:h , I
Thomas . I

3

0

18

3.0

3

0

18

3.0

United Press lnternaUona l
Baseball lost a velvet glove
and a sulphuric tongue a (ew
hours apart Wednesday with
the deaths of Bucky Harris.
81, and Fred Haney, 79.
Harris - the velvet glove
- was a one-time breaker
boy in the coal mine region
around Wilkes-Barre, Pa.,
who married the daughter of
a U. S. Senator and became
as much at home at a White
House cocktail party as in the
rough and tumble of the
baseball field.
Haney was the sulphuric
tongue

"""":"

a

native

of

Albuquerque, N. M., who
after a modest seven-year
playing stint enjoyed a long
career as a manager and
front office executive and
was always ready with a
quip . He coined the phrase,

Hruns

make

good

managers," and once told his
general manager that a
young second baSeman,
"looks so good because
everybody else on the team is
so bad."

Miller promises
new Bucks' look
name a startmg lineup, with
By GENE CA ODES
enmpetitiun keen at all five
UP! Spurts Wrih·r
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UP! l - pos1tions.
What a diffcn·nce a )'ear . Williams. hnwPwr, would
makes.

Twelve IIIOI\ths ago, Ohw
State basketball Coach Eld&lt;~t
Miller was looking for volun·
leers as he tried to put
together his first Buckeye
squad.
Now, after recruiting the
most highly-publicized group
of players at Ohin State since
the Jerry Lucas and John
Havlicek era, Miller must
fight the battl e of the fans
expecting too much too soon.
··ExperienCe," says Miller,
" is the biggest thing we don't
Unfortunately, experience
very importa nt in the game
of basketball .
But that will come, as
Miller points out, and he has
never denied tha t the talent is
there.
"A year ago, we did not

Athens

Jackson
We llston
Logan
Team
Waverl y
Ironton
Meigs
Gallipol is
Wellston

Athens

Jackson
Logan

Decorative, Useful and Easv -to. lnstlll Anr!lhtre.

FRANKLIN FIREPL~~!~.ns •n~·
vaca t ion homes.
the F rankl in is a
fireplace wllh the

*

STOP IN TODAY

WILKINSON SMALL ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
L-:49~8~L~o:c:us:t~S~t~·----------~M~id~d~le~p~o-rt•'•O~-~~·-,
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Local owner, 350. V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes , r all y wheels , chrome equipment, Interior
paneled and insul ated. carpeted, ready to add VO!Jr
own camping equipment.

Jackson
Athens
Gallipolis
Iron ton
LOgan
Meig s

Wa 11erl y

. Team
Ja ckson
Gallipolis
Athen s
Ironton

Logan
Me igs
Waverly
Note :
opponents

Eastern
132
Hannan Trace 123

19"

Southwestern 122
Symmes Valley 98
Athens
102
B3
Jackson
Nels.-York
73
Wellston
Bl
Vinton County 72
Gallipolis
74
Waver ly
72
Alexander
57
Meigs
53

d1agona1

non

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• Automatic Color Contro l keeps colors consistent
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• A-utqmatic Fleshtone Correction gives you _
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VAWE PRICED AT ONLY

(9}
(9 )

14.7
13.7

T .,

l.;

Symmes Valley

(9)

27 .7

225 (B) 2B.1

This Week 's Schedule

Friday

S~OAL

Athen s at Iron ton

Gallipolis at Lggan
Wa11erly at Jackson
Meigs at Wellston

SVAC

Symmes Valley at Hannan
Trace

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
AT 391 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

Kyger Creek at North Gall ia

Others
Federal Hocking at Tr imble
Vinton County at Miller

Saturday

Eastern at Southern
Wahama at Parkersburg
Catholic

FINAL GAMES OF REGULAR SEASO •.

4

speed trans.

S1495

CAB PU

,.

77 NEW CHEVY TRUCK
CLOSE OUT
2-8' FLEETSIDE PICKUPS
3-8' o/4 TON 4 WH. DRIVE
PICKUPS
2-SHORT SPORT PICKUPS
1-% TON 4 WH. DR. SUBURBAN

Larry Hoffman. Waverly
John Jefferies , Logan
Da11id Burriss, Waverly

::r $15\~1

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"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy

Open Evenings Until&amp; P.M.

SJ2.99

. JOGGING

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Strips
• Aluminum Door
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•
• Felt Weather
Stripping '
• Self-sticking Foam
- Weather Stripping
• Vinyl Foam Tape

16:36

OPEN MEET
TEAM CHAMPION: Athens (18 - points) ; points not
compiled IOf" other teams .
John Stump!, Athens
15: 13
Curt Geerin, Athens
J5: u
Norm Sydow, Jackson
15:49
Greg Nickunas, Athens
15:52
Bob Williams, Athens
16:00

'

16:09
16:24

Be&lt;ky Dorril l, Alhens
Scott Houk , Athens
Mary Downey , Athens

16 :32
17 :02
17 :15
l7 ~ 27

Leslie Campbell, Ironton
Sharon Finlay , Athens
Dudnf~ Clark . Ja cl(son
Derin Atkinson, Waverly

Jay Jones. Waverly
Ken Chonce, Jackson

• Mortite Caulking

16 ~ 02

Joe Warmke , Athen s
Andy Stenson , Athens
Mi ke Leach, Jackson

17:46
17:57
18:38

'

19:47
20 :52

'14.95

BEFORE WINTER ARRIVES

16:49
16: 51
16:52

Dave Waddell, lron(on

Social
Calendar

- --

HURRY IN FOR A GOOD DEAL

992-2126

Power sources

topic for ladks .

Final Cross Country standings

(9 ) 13.6
(8 ) 12.3
(9 ) 11.3
(9) 9.2
1977 SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLE.TIC LEAGUE
(81 9.1
_ CROSS -COUNTRY MEET at Jackson (Oct. 17)
(9) 9.0
VARSITY MEET
(8) 9.0
FINAL TEAM POINTS : Athens 27, Waverly 41. Jackson
(9) 8.2 88, Ironton
98, Logan 98 (other tel'lms do not compete),. Ironton
(9) 8.0 placed fourth
and Logan fifth based on placement of Sixth man
(9) 6.3
e-ach team.
(9) 5.9 on
12 :54
Rob Topping, Athens
Federal Hocking
13:13
Gary
Towler,
Wa'llerly
51 (9) 5.7 Randy Johnson , Waverly
13: 23
Warren
38 (9) 4.2 Mark Mathewson, Athens
13:43
TEAMS RAIIIKED
14:06
Mark Maple, Waverly
DEF EIIISIVEL Y
14: 10
Nos Irani, Athens
TEAM
Pis. (G) AVG . Neil
14: 12
Brad
Henry.
Athens
Logan
49 (9) 5.4
14: 13
Proctor, Logan
Southern
35 (6) 5 .8 Kelly
14 : 14
Bill squibb , Athens
Point Pleasant 62 (10) 6.2 Larry
14: 19
Arnett
,
Waverly
Kyger Creek
60 (8)
7.5
14 :28
Bruning, Athens
Wahama
77 (9)
B.6 Mike
14 ;32
Ironton
78 (9)
8.7 Dave Schoener , Ironton
14 :44
Mark
Henry.
Jackson
North Gallio , 76 (8) 9.5 Kevin Eberst, Logan·
14 :51
Trimble
101 (9) 11.2 Mike Brown, Jackson
14:55
Athens
103 (9) 11 .4 Dave Baldridge, Ironton
14:59
Nels' -York
99 (B) 12. 4 Rob Atkins, Athens
15:00
Mil ler
113 (9) 12.6 Terry
15: II
Ben'tley,
Jackson
·Meigs
ll7 (9) 1M
IS : 12
Lon
nie
Falls.
Ironton
.
Alexander
124 (9) 13.8 Bill Rosel Jackson
15 : 13
Federal Hock ing
15 :14
Dixon, Waverly
\'
, 126 · (91 14.0 Dan
15 : 16
Dave
Burtrand,
Jackson
BeiRre
liB (8) 14.8 Kelly Helber, logan
15 :16\
Gallipolis
153 (91 17.0 Dick
15 :24
Fuller
,
Logan
Eastern
161 (9) 17.9, Greg Schoener, Ironton
15:38
Soulhweslern 16B (9) · 18.7 Brilln Beckett, Ironton
15 :38
Vinton County ISO (81 18.7 Tim Grillo, Jackson
15:46
Wellston
18B (9 1 20.9 Tim Thomas, Ironton
15 :52
Wa verly
191 (9) 21.2 \ Joe
16 :29
Chambers,
Logan
Warren
200 (9) 22.2 Howard Reed , Jackson
16:32
Ja&lt;kson
228 (9) 25.3
, Ha nnan Trace 2.49

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1971 FORD CREW

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1975 CHEVROLET 60 SERIES s4395
1974 SCOUT II

:;.,

BY PAM RIFFLE
POMEROY - 1 want to tell
you a little about the people
who make up the Senior
Friends Program . We now
have nine Senior Friends:
Wilma Sargent, Vida Green,
Olive Smith, Lula Hampton,
Jewel Welch , Zetta Ritchie,
Elizabeth Clay, Lawren ce
Stewart and Norbert Neutzling. Each one of these Senior
Friends have a special
quality that makes them easy
to work with. They always
have great ideas on how to
bMghten the spirits of those
who are less fortunate The
Senior Friends Progra~ has
grown and become a special
program to (he elderly by the
performanc~ of these nine
friends. I give aU credit for
the success of the program to
our past coordinator, Kathie
Filsinger, and the Senior
Friends . We lost our coor·
dinator September 9, she
returned to school to get her
degree in psychology. We
miss her very much, but the
Senior Friends have carried
on beautifully with hardly
any supervision.
The Senior Friends work at
Athens Mental Health Center
in Athens , and at Arcadia
Nursing Home in Coolvill e.

WHY
PAY

'5495

1976 CHM VAN G20

1977 SEOAL golf standings

TEAM

doors open , an
en ergy
saving ·
wood heater w ith
the door s closed .
You can even
cook on 11 with the
swing out beanpot
and
gril l
ac .
cesso r les!
Tht
f i re
Is easily
cont rolled with a
damper on the
fl ue ven t for !he
en iovment of a
roaring f ire or
modest ly glowing
coals .

'

B~ Charlene Hoeflich

'

eHeatTape

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
'

Ebersbach Hardware
MAIN ST.

•

PH.

.

The patients really look
forward to the day that these
very special fri ends come to
see them . You would be
surpri sed what just a smile or
a little conversation can do
for people who have no one
else. This is what the Senior
Friends Program is all about.
We also have community
tontacts in which the Senior
Friends go out into the

SALEM CENTER BORNWIE TROOP 1112
A halloween party was held recently by the troop at the
home of Missy Black. The pledge o£ allegiance led by Missy,
the Lord's Prayer by Angie Wright, and all of the Jlrownies
reciting the Brownie B's opened the meaning.
Games were played and dancing enjoyed during the evening. Refreshments of cupcakes, Kool-Aid, j&gt;opcorn, andcaramels were served by the troop leaders, Barbara Black
7\ T
and Paula Haynes. Sue Shenefield assisted with the decorating
tC '(Jfl 1
and Wells Orchard donated the apples .
At another recent meeting held at the home of Angel
,
,
.
McDaniel: plilns were made for basic first aid to be taught as
part of the badge work. It was decided that the troop will
1-U
march in th~ Christmas parade at Mtddleport later this month.
Art pictures were made by the girls, and refreslunents were
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
served. The Nov. l5 meeting will be held at the home of Missy
Nease,
married on June U at
Black. The meeting opened with the Lord's Prayer led by JenSeattle,
Wash. were honored
nifer Carter and the pledge led by Angel McDaniels.
Monday
night with a
SALISBURY JUNIORS UOO
miscellaneous
shower at
Work on the hospitality badge was continued during a
Trinity
Church
with Debbi
meeting this week of the Salisbury Juniors. Plans were comBuck, Eleanor Blaettnar,
pleted for the scouts · to go to Athens S;tturday for the Ohio
Mary Stewart, Genevieve
University football game . .
Meinhart, Rose Ginther,
MEIGS CADETTE TROOP
Stella
Kloes, and Erma Smith
Challenge~ were distussed during a meetlng of the Meigs
as
hostesses.
Cadettes this week. Several activities to be carried out were
The couple recently moved
planned, and final plans made for the trip to Athens for the 0.
to
Pomeroy is residing in
U. football game Saturday.
Village
Green apartments .
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOP 1276
Mrs.
Nease
is employed at
Meeting Monday night at the Pomeroy Elementary School ,
Data
Processing
Co. in
the juniors left on a hike out Beech St. They .explored a cave
Belpre,
and
Mr.
Nease
has
area before returning to the school. Members sang " Happy
accepted
a
teacl)ing
position
Birthday'' lo Carolyn Casto. Calendars are still being sold. The
at the Kyger Creek Higp
troop will go to Athens Saturday for the football game. Those
&amp;hool.
scouts coming without a permission slip will not be permitted
A pink umbrella decorated
to go on the outing.
the gift table while the
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
.
1
refreshment table was
Participation in the Syracuse PTO program Tuesday mght decorated in yellow and
at the school was planned during a recent meeting of the green carrying out the pastel
Syracuse Brownies. toM Davidson led in the pledge, Wendy color scheme.
Fry, the girl scout promise, and all of the girls enjoyed the
Attending the shower were
movie, "Follow Me Girls."
Refreshments were served by Becky Winebrenner and Amy
Patterson. Mrs. Diane Davidson is the new troop assistant
leader.
Friday at Meigs Museum,
Butternut Ave., 1:30 p.m.
Film on Home and County
will be shown. Hostesses are
Mrs. Cla~a Lochary, Mrs.
Everett Hayes, Mrs. Charles
Get professional
Lewis, and Mrs. Robert D.
Craig.
results at a
!MARY SHRINE 37, Order
fraction of the cost. ·
of the White Shrine of
" The Powers that Are in
Je~usalem, regular meeting
the Source of Power" was the
Friday night, 8 p.m. at the
THURSDAY
topic of Mrs. Joyce Sauters
LAUREL CLIFF Better Pomeroy Masonic Templewho spoke at a meeting of the
Ladies AIIXiliary of the Health Club Thursday, 7:30 Practice will be held for the
America's No . 1
United Pentecostal Church, p.m . home of Madeline ceremonial in December.
Hamrt Carpet
SATURDAY
Chafin, 168 Mulberry Ave.,
Middleport, Tuesday.
Clean ing
MARVIN
Kinnard of PortsPomeroy.
Members met at the church
System
mouth
,
Ohio
will be the guest
POMEROY
LODGE
164,
for a covered dish luncheon
caller
Saturday,
November
F&amp;AM,
special
meeting,
7:30
followed by a business
12
for
the
French
City
p.m.
Thursday
;
Master
meeting during which time it
-------·
.....
Swingers Square Dance
was noted that Christmas Mason degree.
SPECIAL MEETING, Club's dance, The dance will
· wrap is available for $2 a
Racine
American Legion be from lollS p.m. at the Tripackage,
and
praying
hand
..
t•HOUR_,.I
pens for $1 each. Homemade Post 602, 8 p.m . Thursday to Grande Square Building at
peanut brittle is also for sale finalize plans for Nov .. 13 1622 Eastern Avenue. All
Veterans Day dinner ; all post area square dancers are
at $1 a package.
Mrs. Ruby Spurlock won members urged to be invited to attend.
the prize for the game. Mrs. present. __ _
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
949-2525
MEIGS
COUNTY 411
Spurlock closed the meeting
F&amp;AM
Saturda;r
Racine, 0.
with prayer. Attending were HUMANE SOCIETY meeting 2 p.m. Work in enttred apto be held Thursday 7:30 p.m.
22 women and four children.
prentice degree . All master
at Athena Acres, home of Ma- masons invited.
jor Joyce Miller and Miss
FALL FESTIVAL SaturMarion Crawford.
day at Salisbury Elementary
ROCK
SPRINGS &amp;hool beginning at 5:30.
GRANGE, 7:30 p.m at the Country store, baiaar shop,
hall. Refreslunents will be jail, sweet shop, games and
s e r v e d
spook house. Menu includes
PRECEPTOR Chapter, hot dogs, pizza, potato chips,
Beta Sigma Pttl Sorority, 8 chili and vegetable soup.
this evening at borne o£
SOUP SUPPER in the .
; Margaret Follrod; Lucille' Southern
High
School
----- Williamson, co-hostess.
cafeteria from 4 to 7 p. m. by
Black. White, Maroon.
OHIO VALLEY Grange the Southern Band Boosters
Gold, Green, Blue
2612 Letart Falls, Thursday· preceding the Southernat hall at 7:30 p. m. Avanelle Eastern ga!lle.
Size 2-11'12
Holliday .will ,be a guest.
DANCE Saturdsy- :at
Potluck refreslunents.
Southern
Hi1h
School
EVANGELINE Chapter, following Easte - Southern
Middleport installation game. Music by ony Reeder
practice Thursday 7 p. m. from WADC. Admission
Refreshments and products $1.50. Sponsored by senior
sale following meeting. class.
Initiation previously set for
MONDAY
Thursday has been postponed
POMEROY PTA, Monday
until Dec. 1.
night at the school,_ 7:30p.m.
GALLIA County Salon 162, Room visitation wtll be held
Navy &amp; Brown
Eight and Forty, Thursday and Carl Hysell, Meigs Coun·
night, 8 p.m. at the home of ty juvenile officer will be the
Mrs.
William J. Brown, speaker. A nursery will be
Size 4-11
Gallipolis.
provided. The stxth grade
FRIDAY
and special educatton
HAPPY Harvesters Class, mothers will be hostesses and
7:30 Friday at the Trinity greeters. National Educabon
Church.
Week will be observed wtth
PTA to
serve
DAUGHTERS
OF _the
Open Fri. and Sat. tillS p.m.
American Revolution Return refreslunents on Wednesday.
&gt;.Wm&lt; &gt;&gt;rom.W.&lt;;Woi'i;lMXmWW:.'
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
RACINE Chapter OEW
Monday, 7:30 p. m . for
initiation. All new members
urged to attend. Potluck
refreshments.

offense ,

IS

-

«

appear to be a fixture at
center, with Scott holding "an
advantage" at the wing
guard spot in Miller 's 1-2-!

have."

SEOAL volleyball standings
Team
Wa verl y
Ga l li polis
Ironton
Meigs

:~:
:~

'

Tu&lt;&gt;er, L
3 0 18 3.0
SVAC SCORING
TO PA Pts Avg
have a center ,·' Miller told a
Justice , NG
9 0 54 13.5
1917 SOUTHEASTERN OHJO
preseason media luncheon
Casey, KC
9 0 54 13.5
ATHLETIC LEAGUE STATISTICS
. Ge iger , KC 6 0 36 12.0 . Wednesday
. ''This year, we
(Includes games through Nov. 4)
Kuhn , E
5 2 32 6.4
plan
to
field
one:·
TEAM
STATISTICS
(6
GAMES
)
Carter, SW
5 0 30 6.0
FIRST
DOWNS
PASSING
SCR.
PLAYS
And,
it
will
most
likely be 6FINAL STANDINGS
Lucas. KC
5 0 30 6.0
Team
T A'!JI ._ O_P Avg CMP-A Int. T ciP 11 Herb Williams of
VARSITY
5 tied with 3 ..0 Averages
At-hens
.2 12 .0 4~ 8.7 25-75
9 330 28s
Matches Games
OVERALL STANDINGS
Gallipolis
56
9.3
55
9.2
20-58
282 180 Columbus Marion Franklin,
W L W L Pis OP Avg OP
TEAM
W L T Pis. OP Ironton
95
15.8
52
8.7
24-55
5
33 1 276 '; the franchise," who was one
7 0 lol 0
6
9
213 96 15.2
Logan
9 0 0 333 49
67 11.2 74 12 .3 21 -54
4 307 281 of the most sought after high
6 1 12 3 223 153
lJ .9 lO 2
Pl. Pleasa nt 9 I 0 237 62 .Jackson
103 ' 17.2 55 9.2 47 '85
3 337 284
192 136 12.8 9.1 Southern
5 2 1t '
school center in the nation
5 1 o 124
35 ~ Logan
51
8.5
73 12 .2 16-62
10 276 333 last year.
4
3 8 8 205 185
12.8 11.6 Ironton
7 2 0 217 78 Meigs
Waverl y
51 8.5 80 13 .3 26-63
9 289 304
3 4
6 9
I5 I 211 10. 1 14 . 1 Wahama
7 2 o 213 77
Miller not only landed WilWellston
44
7.3 9B 16 .3 21-66
6 243 352
2 5
5 11 . I 46 217
9.1 13.6 Trimble
7 2 0 209 101
liams,
he also reeled in a
I 6
3 13
166 216 10 .4 14 .1 Athens
7 2 0 102 103
RUSHING PASSING NET OFF. NET DEF . supportihg cast which has led
0 7 3 14
163 235
9.6 13.8 Kv oer Creek 6 2 0 249 60
Yds. Avg . Yds. Avg. Yds. Avg , Yds. Avg
Team
RESERVES
Belpre
5 3 0 128 118 Athens
695 115.8 382 63.7 1077 179.5 893 14B .8 collegiate scouting services
Matches Games
Nort
h
Gall
Ia
4
3
1
131
76 Gallipolis
775. 129.2 203· 33.8 978 163.0 989 164 .8 to - label the Buckeye
W l W L Pis OP Avg OP
M i ller
5 ~ 0 154 113
Ironton
1334 222.3 520 86.7 1854 309 .0 1006 167 .7 yearling s as the No. I frosh
7 0 14 0 214 86
15.3 6.1 Eastern
B25 137.5 304 50 .7 1129 188 .2 1500 250 .0
6 1 12 3
204 B9 13 .6 5.9 Southwestern 5 ~ 0 132 161 Jackson
Logan
1171 195.2 902 150.3 . 2073 345 .5 828 138 0 group in the country .
5 2 10 5 186 162
12 .4 10 8
4 5 0 !22 168
It also includes 6-8 forward639 106.5 141 23.5 780 130.0 12BO 213.3
3 4
7 8
184 175 12.3 11.7 Nels-York 3 5 0 73 99 Meigs
center
Jim Smi th of
Wa
verly
746
124.3
298
49
.7
1044
174.0
1613
26B
.8
10.9 12 2 Vmton Count~
3 '
7 8 163 183
Wellston
523 87.2 353 58.8 B76 146.0 1702 283.7 Cleveland East Tech , 6-2
3 4
6 8
163 183
8.4 12.2
3 5 0 72 150
1 6 2 13
131 212
8.7 14 . 1 Wa verly
guard Carte r Scott of
3 6 0 72 191
IIIIDIVIDUAL LEADERS
0 7
1 14
95 216
6.3 141
Barberton, Ohio, 6-3 Kenny
Meigs
3 6 0 53 117
RUSHING
Yds. Car Avg . Page of Staten Island. N _Y.,
Federal Hock ing
' ' 2 6 I 51 126 Kemper, Logan
-572
105
5.4
Thomas, I ron ton
457
82
5.6 and !h'i ·Marcus Miller of
Ha nnan Tra ce
2 7 0 123 249 Dabney , Ga Iii polis
4.1 Columbus St. Charles and 5-3
417· 102
376
100
3.B Todd Penn of Co lumbus
Jackson
2 7 0 83 228 J. Jenk ins, Jackson
303
61
50 Linden McKinley.
Wellston
2 7 0 81 1B8 Deeds, Ironton
Cmp-Att In! Yds TO
Gal
lipolis
2 7 0 74 153 PASSING
1977 SOUTHEASTERN
Thos e six, a long with
44-79
2 815
9
Warren
2 7 0 38 200 Gasser , Logan
OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE GOLF
holdovers
Kelvin Ransey,
Wester
,
Wa11erly
26-56
9 305
I
Alexander 1 7 1 57 124
FINAL STANDINGS
Walton , Athens
24-66
6
371
3
Jim Ellin gh ausen, Terry
Symmes Valley
REG .SEASON TOURIII. OVERALL
1 7 0 9B 225 M. Jenkins, Jackson
20-53
4 29B
3 Burris, Fred Poo le and Tony
W L W T W L
Wil lis, Gallipo lis
19-52
5
195
2
SEOAL Standi nos
11
I
4
2
15 3
Yds. - No . Avg . Hall. all of whom started at
W L T Pis OP PUNTING ( 12 or morel
9
3
6 0
15 3 Logan
526
15 35 .0 various times last year , now
6 0 0 22B
39 Gasser , Logan
9
3
5
l
14
4
530
16
33 .1 give Mtller the stze and depth
Ironton
5 1 0 150
47 Deeds, I ron ton
6 6
3 3
9 9
425
13 32.7---j he desperately lacked when
Athens
5 1 0 68 54 Simms, Gallipol is
4
8
I 5
5 13
819
26
31.5 the Buckeyes finished 9-18
Me igs
J 3 0
47 67 Crace, Jackson
3
9
2
'
5 13
657
21
31.2
Gallipol is 2 4 0
42
48 Adams, Athens
0 12
0 6
0 18
No . Yds TO and last in the Btg Ten.
Wa verly
2 4 0
34 119 RECEIVING
REGULAR-SEASON ST 1\N 01 NGS
21
470
6
The Buckeyes open their
Jackson
t 5 0 60 138 Armstrong, Logan
W L Sir. Avg. OP Avg.
Wayland ~ Meigs
13
113
0 · regular 27,gall1G season Nov.
Wellston
0
6
0
31
,
148
11
1 1349
42.2 2152 44 .8
Conger, Jackson
- 12
176
2 25 against Cal StateSVAC Standiogs
9
3
1125
40.2 2123
4.4.2
Schanzenbach , Athens
11
255
2
W
l
T
Pis,
OP
9
3 1306
40 a 211 B 44.1
Hayward , but Miller and the
Hallett, logan
11
2 10
4
Ky.
Creek
4
0
0
172
24
6
6
1233
A.J .O 2132
44.4
KO RETURNS
Yds. No. ;r o anxious fans get their first
No.
Gal
lia
3
1
o
7B
42
4 8 1489 46 .5 2114 44 .0
170
9
0 look at live competition
Eastern
3 2 o
77
76 Jayjolln , Wellston
3
9 1492
46 .6 212 1 J4.2
Brown , Waverly
151
8
0 Saturday when ·the Athletes
Southwes'n
3·
2
0
74
102
0
12 1587
49 6 2094
43.6
J. Jenkins, Jackson
141
8
I
Symmes Val.
Well st on does not compete in golf. Team and
Wayland , Meigs
134
5
0 In Action invade St. J ohn
0
4
0
40
108
strokes based on team scores.
98
8
0
Arena at 7:30 p.m .
Ha n. Trace 0 4 0
40 130 Waugh, Jackson
PUNT RETURNS
Yds. No. TO
x.s: Jthe r n
The AlA group, which
115
5
0 brin gs a 4.{) record into the
X X X
XX XXX Thomas, Ironton
77
7
0
x-Not eligible for league title Kemper, Logan
game, is paced by 7-2 former
Robinson , Gallia
61
7
0
Teams ranked
Walton . Athen ~
58
6
Q_
UCLA - center
Ralph
OFFENSIVELY
Hallett. Logan
47
1
I
5-10
gtiard
Drollinger
and
TEAM
Pis (G) Avg ., INTERCEPTIONS
No. Yds TO Brad Hoffman, who played
Logan
333 (9) 37.0 Walton , Athens
5
22
0
Kyger Creek 249 (B) . 31.1 Gasser. Logan
his high sch ool ball in
4
72
0
Ironton
217 (91 24.1 Soulsby, Meigs
4
27
0
Columbus (South and Walnut
Pl. Pleasant 237 (10) 23.7 Robinson, Gallia
3
58
0
Ridge) before goi ng on to
Wahama
213 (9 ) 23.7 Montgomery, Wellston
3
55
0
Tr imble
209 (9) 23.2 Schanzenbach , Athens
3 30
0 North Carolina.
Southern
124 (6) 20.7 NeaL Jackson
Miller satd he could not yet
3
15
0
Miller
154 (9) 17.1
North Gallia 131 (ill 16.4
Belpre
128 (8 ) 16.0

Conference statistics

-&amp;&gt;.&amp;,:, Senior Friends Program
~l Gtr1 Scout -Dtary ~~
~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Thursday, Nov. 10. 1977
:f'""'·'·'~_,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;:;,,:m:::::·~'":"

MEN AND WOMEN
eWraps
ePullovers
•Sleeveless
•Sweater Vests
·.
•Turtle Necks
GIFT
eCrew Necks
CERTIFICATES
An Excellent

R • h d veases honore
· d
.
Wt th mtscel''-ne' ous shower
-"
Alice Nease, Peggy Harris,
Norma Jewell, Lucille
Swackhammer, Ada Holter,
Margaret Blaettnar, Linda
Mayer, Pauline Mayer, Ida
Diehl, Thelma McMurray,
Dorothy Karr, Kathy Blaettnar, Ula Matlack, Twilil
Buckley, Marie Hauck, Mae
Mora, Pat Wilson, Helen
Neutzling , Geraldine Layne,
and Edith Lanning.
Sending gifts were Beulah
Ewing, Marcia Keller, Sarah
Gibbs, Sybil Ebersbach, Lois
Burt, Melanie Burt, Mildred
Gibbs, Wilma Terrell, Sandy
Preece, Joy Russell, Olive
Weber, Martha Struble, Ella
Emith, Lillie Hauck, Donna
Karr, Carolyn Thomas, Nelle
Graves, Rosemary Keller,
Tonya Davis, Clarice Krautter, Gertrude Smith, Carrie
Kennedy, Audrey Wood, Lori
Wood, and Lilah Zerkle.

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Vinegar removed okl glue
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY-! would
like to know what will take
what looks like clear glue off
a window glass. I have tried
several things that did not
work. -RMAUMDAEU. D" y
DEA
.,.... ou
-,ugh\ soak _a pad or sponge m
10\ whtte vmegar and tape It
Jver the glue so it hasbme to
soak through: Also nat! polish
remover mtghl work all
depending on what type of
glue tt ts. Some glues sunply
cannot be removed after they
have hardened. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY-I have
news for those who have wntten tham they cannot get rtd
of the odor of cat urine. I had
this sa~e proble~ a~d after
scrubbmg _and rtnsmg the
odor remamed. Fmally I folded newspaper over the spot,
left it there and changed to
fresh paper every other day
and after about a week the
odor was gone. A very cheap
cure. (Polly's note- Do pr()teet your carpet or whatever
·from the newsprint. as it
might rub off to leave other
hard to remove stains,) MRS. K.
DEAR POLLY-My Pet
Peeve is with people like Mac
who think they are qualified
to judge other people
-specifically healthy people

Birthday party
held recently
·Miranda Nicholson,
daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Bill
Nicholson, Rutland, was
honored on her fourth birthday, Nov. 4, with a party.
A clown theme was carried
out in the decorations and on·
the cake which was made by
Mrs. Nicholson. The cake was
served with ice cream, potato
chips, punch, and coffee.
Games were played including
pin the tail on the donkey and
a ball()l)n game with. prizes
going to all the children.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Nicholson, Ryan
and Bridgette, RuUand; Mrs.
Larry Lemley, . Ryan and
Ami, Rutland; Angie Elliot of
Rutland, and Ms. Debbie
Maples, Rio Grande.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Betty Brown, maternal
grandmother, Piketon; Mr.
and Mrs. Dale · Nicholson,
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Phillips, greatgrandparents, Vinton, Ms.
Ann Borders, Gallipolis; and
Mrs. Ethel Nicholson,
Rutland.

who park in spaces reserved
for the handicapped. I am a
very healthy looking person
but I cannot walk very far
because of heart and circula\ion problems but I do keep
trying and going to the store
is something I can do if I park
close to the door. Remember,
Mac, everyone does not
"show" his or her handicap.
-F.D.T.
DEAR POLLY-My hus·
band carries a thennos of tea
or coffee with him to work
and the inside becomes badly
stained and often there is
even a deposit left inside. I
now wann his thertnos and
put in water, drop in a couple
of aenture cleaning tablets
and after about fifteen
minutes the stains wash right
off with a bottle brush. I
usually do this just once a
week.- MRS. T.K.
DEAR
POLLY-- -My
Pointer is that it is most
helpful to make a list before
visiting the doctor's office.
Include any symptoms you
may have, ·medication you
are taking or any questions
you may want to ask. Many
people become very nervous
and are unable to think clearly when visiting the doctor so
such a list may facilitate any
diagnosis the doctor may
make. -MARGARET.
DEAR POLLY-Many pe()ple are annoyed by the
presence of ants and find
them difficult to get rid of as
poison traps are dangerous
where children and pets are
concerned. Tr.y using whole
cloves in the corners of the
shelves in your kitchen
cabinets and even in corners
oo the floor. They have such a'
nice scent and are non·
poisonous. This has worked
well for me and I live in the
country where ants are
steady visitors.- OLIVE.

Head for

Hea lth -lex clothes play as
lively as their owners, and
do impressive stunts in the
washing machine and
dryer from which they
come out totally fresh and
cr isp without ironing .
Come in and choose jeans
or sets or shirts or dresses
or overalls or whatever ,
For boys, Sizes 3 months to
Size 8, and for girls, Size 3
months to Size 6x .

THE
KIDDIE SHOPPE
992-3586
2nd St.

· Pomeror

Special Buy

MIRANDA NICHOUION
suffragette demonstr~tions .
American women won the
right to vote three years
later.
tn 1-975, despite strong U.S.
opposition, the United
Nations General Assembly
adopted an Arab-inspired
resolution defining Zionism in
the Middle East as a form of
racism.

A thought for the day:
Martin Luther said, o1There is
no more lovely, friendly and
charming
relationship,
HOSTING A PARTY
communion
or
company thail
Mrs. Vazie Lee of Racine
a
good
marriage."
entertained Tuesday night
with a Thanksgiving party.
Following refreslunents, a
program was given. Fifteen
friends from the Racine Baptist Church attended.

THE ALMANAC
Unlled Press International
TodayisThursday,Nov. IO,
the 314th day of 1977 with 51 to
follow:
The moon is approaching
its pew phase.
The morning stars are
Mars, Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star is
-Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Scorpio. 1
Martin Luther, founiler of
Protestantism , was born
Nov. 10, 1483. This is actor
· Richard Burton's 52nd
birthday,
On this day in history:
In 1871, journalist Henry
Stanley found missing
&amp;ottish missionary David
Livingstone in a small
African village and a~ked:
"Dr.
Livingstone, · I

For
Christmas Sewing
I;~'Tr7r-~:~~)
COLORFUL KNITS
IN PRINTS &amp;
MATCHING SOLIDS
DIFFERENT I
BEAUTIFUL!

$298YARD
THE

SEWING
CENTER
On llteT in Mlddl e(&gt;•rt

"M~ compliments
to ~our tailor"
'' With classic sty ling and all that stit chihg,
your shoes h ave to be custom ·made ... my
compliments to Connie for f ind ing tail or·
mad e looks at strictly o ff-th e· rack prices"

F

preswne?"
In 1917, 41 women from 15
In 1919, the American

FOR
1-

cummunity and take their
friends to the grocery store,
doctor . visits , pick _up
medtcatton, general shoppmg
and then home to have a mce
visit. Th ~se people count on
our Semor Frtends eve ry
month to help them.
The Semor. Fnends are a
very spectal kmd of people
and I'm proud to be
associated with them .

Legion held its first national sta~ were arrested outside
convention in Minneapolis. the White House for

Layaway Now
For Christmas or
.

Choose AGift

~--LA-YAW_A_YS----.~

I

I

I

Selection of Clothes

J

I

BAHR CLOTHIERS
.
RT

'

I

I

Certificate

heritage house
OF SHOES
Open Mondly thru Thursdoy &amp; Sllurday 9:30 to S: OO
Friday 9:30 to 1:00
MIDDLEPDRT,O .
N• 2 NDAVE •

�•
6- The Da1lv !'entmel, M1ddleport-Pomero1', 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 10, 1977

1

Sanctioned and obed_ience lr~~'~"~(;~';;~;~~i;;;''i;~p"&amp;.,»~·:·x,~~
match slated b11
club
i
Bv Helen and Sue Hottel
~
J
~

The Huntington Kennel
Club will hold an All Breed
Sanrttoned Match and
Obedience Match Sund~y,
Nov . 13. at the Air r-.'. ational

Guard Arm ory , Tri·Statr
Airport .
Obedienee judging w11l
begin at 11 a .m .. followed by
confomtation judging at l
p.m. Any dog ~ligible for
registration
with
the
American Kenne-l Club may

. be entered.
Obedience entries will be
aecepted the day of the match
from 9 to 10 :30 a.m . and
conformation entries will be
handled from 9 to noon .

Dogs may be entered in
advance . Advance entry
fon ns may be obtained by

calling Mrs. Nora Elberfeld
at 736-&amp;186 . The entry fee will
be $2 for advance E-ntries or $3

per

do~

at the door.

Juni or

sho wman ship

classes will be judged at

~

SMOKE AT YOUK OWN RISK
RAP
:
•
nnon A .. Pilradt· ur Cham·
I
know
you
think
toba('('O is unsafe, but I wish you 'd make tl
pions" 1s scheduled for 12 ;45
stronger.
Second-hand
ami side-stream smoke is almost aS
p 01 .
dangerous
as
inhaltn~ cigarettes yourSelf . It 's magnetically
Dt!gs fnun twu months uf
al-le un ma~ be entered for drawn to a non-smoker, aecurding to an American I.Wlg Assn .
t'unftmnatlon judgmg, ~· hile bulletin.
Having: been married to a flight crew member or Ak Forl'e
thP m'immum age fur
planes,
I know how seriously the Air Force takes llus. 'The
nbedience competiti on is 'six
m onths In conformation Aerospace Safety Magazine published a report.! from a doctor
co mpetitiOn. puppl£"S and in aerospace medicine) that there is a cwnulative factor in
adult d o ~s will be judged carbon monoxide , eliminating oxygen from the blood. Flight
personnel have to go on oxy~en regulators at 10,000 feet to
separately.
assure
their brains functio ning properly. This doctor staled
John P. Smith of Hunthat
if
a
pilot had a malfwtction in his oxygen regulator at
tln~ton ~· ill be the obed ience
2~ .000 feet, the non-smoking pilot had approximately five
JUdge . The conformation
judging. panel inrludes: Mrs. minutes to make corrective action. However, the pilot who had
Irene Strapp of Columbus, had three ciga rettes before takMff had only 45 seconds!
I've at last become vocal about second-hand smoke. When
Ohio: John Green of Carrollpeople
blow it in my face, I blow up (politely) . Am certainiy
ton. Oh1o: Joe Israel of
·
glad
airplane's
no-smoking sections are immediately behind
Canton; Ohio: Mrs. Doris
,
the
passenger
plane
cock pits.· TIME TO GET SMARTER
Lilli eo of Jackson. Ohio; Jack
Austin uf Canton: Mrs. Kyle
fishe r of Huntington. Mrs. DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
You said women with thesmoking habit don't quit as readily
Kimber!)' Benson of Hunas
men do. How right you are! My dad stopped. Mom still slays
tington will judge junior
with
her near two packs a day. Please, maybe she' lllisten to
. showmanship .
you
:
Give
her some good reasons why she should quit.- WORSpectators will be admitted
RIED
DAUGHTER
free.
DEAR DAUGHTER :
Here is our list· and the reasons we don't smoke :
1. Why risk ea rly death' The American Ca ncer Society
reports women smokers suffer nine times more deaths from
coronary heart disease than do female non-smokers . Their
death rate from emphysema is five limes as !ugh- 7.4 tin1es as
high if they smoke a pack or more a day, ·or have smoked at
least 10 cigarettes a day since age 25. And we all know how the
incidence of lung cancer in women has increased • 400 percent
Chrismons which have since 1930! It's been reported that women smokers are twice
bee n decorated we re as susceptible as men smokers to this type of cancer.
displayed and a discussion on
2. Why risk damaging an unborn cluld ? Three highly toxic
their completion was held . A substances: carbon monoxide , nicotine and carcinogens are
~e porc was given on the re-inhaled in cigarette smoke and transmitted by the mother to
eent Girl Seoul luncheon · the embryo through the placenta. Results: possible stillbirtha,
served by the group.
birth defects, perhaps even heart trouble and cancer in very
Mrs. Jeanne Braun led the young . children.
Bible discussion ·on the topic,
3. Why risk premature aging ' Oxygen is the basic elemenl of
"God's Hand Stretched Out.'' all living cells. Displacement of blood oxygen by carbon
Mrs. Blaettnar presided at mono&lt;ide in inhaled smoke can affect nerves, digestion, sexthe meetlhg with Janet ·Hill
ual health and appearance.
· ,
giving the secretary's report.
Says Dr. Harry Daniell of Redding, Calif., who did an exten·
Others attending were Mrs. sive study of the visible damage of smoking : ;,The association
Elva Cotterill, Mrs. Virginia
between cigarette smoking and wrinkling was striking .in both
Thome . Mrs. Jean Coats,
sexes soon alter the age of 30. It was related to the duration
Mrs. Barbara Fry, and
and intensity of smoking. Smokers in the 43-t&lt;&gt;-49-year age
Pastor William Mid; group were likely to be ·as prominently wrinkled as nondleswarth.
smokers 20 years older."
If death doesn't frighten your mother, W.D., maybe the mir.ror will: Good luck with your campaign. • HELEN AND SUE

Lutheran church women
.plan for holidays
~Irs. Veda Davis and Miss

Ema Jesse were appointed to
buy blankets for Lutheran
World Relief at the recent
meeting of ·the American
Lutheran Church Women
held at St. Paul Church in
Pomeroy.
Members were reminded
that thank offering boxes will
be turned in during the
church service on Nov. 27.
The annual Christmas party
for women of both churches
was set for Dec.· lJ at the
home of Mrs. Margaret
Blaettnar. At that lime trays
will be prepared for shutins of
the church.

Plans made final
Plans haye been completed
for the open church wedding
of Miss Susa n Lanning ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lanning, Pomeroy;
and Jerry Well, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Vern Well, Shade.
The wedding will be an
event of Saturday, Nov. 19 at
6:30 p.m. at the Trinity
Church, Pomeroy. Music by

Stiversville

News Notes
Mr . and Mrs. Tim
Wilkinson, Shawn and Kevin,
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Wells , Long Bottom,
were present at a family
gathering on a recent Sunday
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ruda Durst in celebra tion of
Kevin 's second birthda y.
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
Birch, Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Lipps and Gale,
Vincent , and Clint Birch and
LeCiat, loc al , were in Racine
Sum 'r~y for the opep house
honor:nw Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Wallace on their 50th wedding
anniversary .
Mr . and Mrs. Harold
VanMeter a nd Chris Bissell,
Columbus , Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Evans and family, a nd·
· Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fitch,
and grandchildren, Tommy
. . and April Fitch, Portland,
were callers of Mrs. Ada Van
Meter on a recent Sunday.
Visiting Mr. and Mr8. Louis
DeLuz
on
Wednesday
morning were Rev. and Mrs.
Earl Gentry, of Birmingham,
Ala., who are attending a
Ministerial Convention at
Cedar Lakes , near Ripley, W.
Va. Other callers during the

Mrs. Julia Vaughan, Canton,
organist, and Mrs, Lois Burt,
Pomeroy, soloist, will begin
.at6p.m.
The ceremony will be performed by the Rev. W. H.
Perrin. Miss Connie Lanning,
Pomeroy. will serve as maid
of honor for her sister, and
Dawn LoewenStine, Cinclrr
nati will be the flower girl.
Dick Well, Fredrickstown,
will be best man for his
brother. Ushers will be Fred
Wolfe, Rutland, Guy Sargent,
Pomeroy, and the ring bearer
will be Clint Loewenstine,
Cincinnati.
A reception will follow in
the church social room.

week were Mrs. Ruth. Blackwell, ·Charleston, W. Va.,
Mrs·. Lurlene Evans , Vienna,
W.Va., Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Abels, Mrs. Harry Richard,
and Mrs. Gene Congo, Long
Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy
Cornell and Sherry, Industry,
Pa., Lee Lewis, Liberty, W.
Va .,
Jack
Talbott,
Steubenville, Mrs . Joan
Pickens and family, Mrs.
Barbara Talbott and Mrs.
Violet Ritchie, Portland,
were recent guests of Mr\ and
Mrs. Bill Bryant and family .
Mr. and Mrs . Denver
Curtis, Mt. Hope, W. Va.,
visited Mr . and Mrs. R. R.
·Durst on Saturday.
Mr . and Mrs . Harold
Roush, Portland, and Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Roush and
son , Charlesto.n, W.Va., were
supper guests of Clint Birch
and daughter Leota on
Saturday evening.
Mr. a nd Mrs. W. S. Long
called on Mr . and Mrs.

Meigs gardeners plan
Curriers and Ives season
A sweepstakes award will ticul ture cha1rman, exhibitors may make as many
in the Christmas Oower show enlnes as desired in the hor·
of the Meigs County Garden ticultur classes. Spctlmcns,
Clubs AS!&gt;'OCia tion displaying however 1 rnust be correctly
the most ribbon winning Identified with the name writ·
specimens m the horticulture ten on a card. A point system
division.
will be used lo determine the
The show, " A Currier and sweepstakes award.
lves Christmas", will be stagThe divisions are dried or
ed Dec. 3 and 4 at the treated plant material .with
Pomeroy Elementary School. classes for roadside material
Aeeording to the rules of {one specimen), fa ntail
the show headed by Mrs. Ber- willow, one branch, and seed
ltiee Carpenter with Mrs. pods or nuts for use in ar·
Alice Thompson o1s hor· rangernents, a collection of
three. In t he houseplant diviSIOn there are classes for
fl owering eacti, hanging
plant of Ute foliage kind,
hanging plants of a flowering
LUNCHEON SLATED
Mrs. Ethel Guthrie of kind, cacti or succulents.
Marietta, the president of the lar~e variety, s1nall cacti or
Ohio Retired Teachers succulents, not to exceed six
Association, will be the inches high, flowering plants
speaker atlhe Saturday, Nov. tu include African violets.
19 meeting of the Meigs Coun- and la rge folia~e plants to inty Retired Teachers Associa- clude fern .
There is also a section for
tion lo be held at the Meigs
Inn. All retired teachers are jw1ior exhibitors. The classes
invited to the Juncheon with . are pine branch, not to exreservations to be made by eeed 16 inches, broadleaf
miniumum
Thursday with either Ira evergreen,
Wolfe , 742-2036 or Mrs . leng th , 8 inches ; and
Patrick Lochary , 992-2802. ' houseplants, one or more to a
be presented to lite exhibitor

container.
The public is invitt.'ll to ex-

by

~ Hush

~W ••ua»piPs·

~'\let,
· ~~'

For the cold winter ahead,
now is the ti n)e lo
purchase a pair ... Stop in
now while the selection is
still great .

•

LAYAWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS

PAIGE SMITH
Kim Baley, Brenda Boyles and Paige Smith are entered in
Ute 1978Southeast Ohio Junior Miss •' ina Is to be held Nov. 20 at
Ute Meigs Junior High School auditorium in Middleport
beginning at 3:30 p.m.
Miss Batey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Batey,
Route I , Long Botlom,lsa senior at Eastern 1-ligh School and is
being sponsored by the Pizza Shack, Pomeroy. She plans a

•BROWN
•BLACK

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

-- -----------------1

$

Wayne Denney , 67 , a
former resident of 7'12 Second
Ave .. Gallipol i s and a
resident of Bradenton , Fla ..
died at 1: 30 p.m . Wednesday
at his home, at 6820 26th
Street West, Bradenton .
He had been in fail ing
t1ealth several years . A
retired employee of the .Qhio
State
Department
of
Highways, Mr. Oehney was
born July 23, \910, in West
Virginia, son of the late
Stewart and Mattre Mulford
Denney .
He is survived by his wife,
Marzella Wall Denney . Ten
brothers and sisters survive :
Stacy , Ma rion, Ohio ; Mrs.
Hazel Blo se , Ri sing Sun ,
lnd :; Lorain , Lancaster ;
Mrs . ' Thelma
Saxton.
Gallipol is;
Mrs . Macel
M cDade, Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs .
Okey Hudson , Sout hside ;
Way de, Westmorland . Tenn .;
Mrs. Jewell Burns, South side; Mrs. Sylvia Lambert.
Leon and Owen Denney .
Vinton. Three sisters and one
· brothe r preceded him i n

.95

ONLY

Party enjoyed
RUTLAND-Mr. and .Mrs.
Robert Sisson entertained
recently with a party in
celebration of the birthday of
their son, Robbie.
Garnes were played with
prizes going to Robbie Ea.ds
and David Lambert. Gifts
were presented to Robbie,
and refrestunents of cake 1 ice
·cream, and koolaide were
served.
Attending besides those
named were Todd Doczi,
Howie Jeffers, Ricky Wise,
an and Joe Hall, John Good,
Mike Roush, and John Sisson.
HAVING GUESTS
Weekend visitors of Mrs.
Walter Cleland were Allen
Cleland, Weirton, W. Va. ,
David Cleland and children,
Belpre, and Mr. and Mrs.
Buzz Sloler and daughters,
Racine.
Charles Hilton last Sunday.
Troy Boggs, Long Bottom,
visited' Paul Dean Evans on
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Ada Van Meter was
hostess for a tupperware
party at her home on Thursday evening.

We're Just
What You're
Looking For

death .

•Mobile Home
Underpinning
• Roof Coaling
• Tie-Downs
• Awnings-Carports

INSURANCE
REPAIRS

wood , W. Va , Sep t. 16, 1916, •

WAYN.E DENNEY

Mr. Denney was a member
of the Beach Hill Methodist
Church . He was ~;~ World II
veteran 1 having served with

the U. S. Army .

:~y&amp;!ANNEL. BASE STATION ••• ~ •••••••••••~~~.~!~..~ 14995

Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m . Saturday at the
Waugh- Hal ley -Wood Fur:"~eral
. , Home: Burial will be jn
Mound Hill CefT)etery .
Friends may cal l at the
funeral home from 6 until 9
p.m . Friday .
Military graveside rites

will be held by VFW Post No,

•
•

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

4464.

•••

RUTH HENRY

.

R~th Marie Henry, 61 1 a

re si dent of .Parkersburg, W.
Va ., ~ied early ' Wednesday
mornu·111 at 1he Camden .. Clark Memorial Hospital ,
Parkersburg .
She was born in Ravens -

1100 E. Main

••

Pomeroy, Ohio

Redmen

992-7034

(Continued from pace I)

and
bni1ding materials

lARGE SELECTION OF ELVIS JEWELRY
.lARG.E DISPlAY OF ART PICTURES

CASH&amp; CARRY
PRICES

WE
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923-s. Jrd Ave.
Middlepqrl, 0.
992-2 709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00to5:00 Mon : thru Fri.
7:00to3:00 Saturday

-

PAT'S MARKET
SYRACUSE, OHIO

• first half.
The visitors, with a 10--point
•' outburst late in the first half,
' narrowed the gap to four, 46• 42 but Ron Burrell's long
! jumper at the buzzer gave the
• Redmen a 48-42 halftime
•• advantage.
:
A driving layup by Tien
Hsi-ho with 16:49 left in the
• game cut Rio's lead to two
. •• points, 52~50. Consecutive
: goals by Mark Swain, Gil
: Price and Don Glbson pushed
• Rio's up to eight points with
• 14:53 remaining.
:
Rio maintained a 10 to ' 16
: point spread until the final
: minutes of play.
The Redmen placed slx
• players in double figures.
· • Mark Swain led Ute way
with 22 markers. Gil Pri~e
• added 19, Dale Royse II,
· Vincent Phelps II and Don
• Gibson II. Dan Bise finished
with 10.
Hsu Lung -hsing · led the
visitors attack with 21 points.
Tien Jisi·ho and Chung Chih·
' meng each had 18 points and
• Tang Chih·chiang finished
with 12, . •
Here's last night's box

.

•

•

=
•

... meng, 7-4-18;. Hsu Tung -chia ,
~ 1-2-4; Wang Chl -hsien, 2-0-4;

• Hsu Lung.hslng, 9-3·21 ;
WanChing .hslung , o.o.o; Tien
Hst -ho , · 9·0·18; Lo Kuangchlen,

1· 0-.2;

Tang

Chih -

: chiang, 6·0·12. TQTALS 39-11•
RIO GRANDE (92) - Bise,
• 5·0-tO ; Gibson, 5·1·11;
:

Johnson , 2-0-4; Niday, 0-0-0;

• Phelps, 4-3·11 ; Price, 0·1 ·19;
• Purcell, Q.Q.Q; ~urrell , 2·0·4;

:

Hal ley.

She was a retired employee
of the DeMuth Glass Co . In
Parkersburg .
She is survived by her
father , formerly of Gafl ipplis
and one son , James F . Henry,
Lake St . Lou is, Mo.; one
sister, Mrs . Leonard {Grace)
Dolson, Vienna ; one brother ,
James Edward Halley, Coral
Gables, F Ia.
Four grandchildren sur.
vive .
Funeral services will be
he ld 1 p.m . Friday at the
Vaughan Funeral Home ,
Parkersburg, with Rev·.
Arthur J . Hadley officiatin9 .
Burial will be in Ravenswood
Cemetery .
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home all day on

· Thursday .

AUDREY HOLLEY
Mrs . Audrey Holley. 65 , a
resident of ~8 Mill Creek St. ,
Gallipolis, died at 10: 17 a . m.
today in the Hol zer Medical

Center .

_Surviving are a son, James

!Jeep) Holley , Gallipolis, and
daughter,

Mrs .

Jerry

tJudy) Dillon, Gallipolis. A

son preceded her lh death.
Fu rther
details · and
arrangements wi ll be an nounced by the Willis Funeral
Home.

HOBART VINEYARD
REEDSVILLE - Hobert

Viheyard, 70, died suddenly
on Wednesday afternoon at
his RD 1 Reedsville home .
He w~s born rn Roane
County, W. Va ., a !)On of B.
Delaney and Florence Smith
Vi neyard . He 'f'aS also
preceded In death by two
sisters a;hd a brother . He was
an active ~ember of St,

career in physical education and for her talent she will do a
vocal solo and play the guitar.
Miss Boyles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Boyles,
Tuppers Plains, is being sponsored by Frances Florist of
Pomeroy, She is a senior at Eastern High School. For her
talent she is going to give a demonstration on different kinds of
breads, tell where they originate and what occasions they are
Paul ' s United Methodist
Church in Tuppers Plai ns and
~longed to Carper:1ters Local
899 In Parkersburg 26 years.
Surviv ing are his wife, Mae
Osborne
Vineyard;
two
daughters , Mary Frances
Vineyard , Columbus , and
M rs.
Edward
(Janet)
Gilland, ' Lucas; three sons,
Charles D ., Bremen ; H .
Keith, Belpre, and Ernest
{Bud), Little Hocking ; four
brothers, James ~ of Torch;
Raymond , Columbus; Harold
G., Dayton, ·and Ernest 0 .,
Talmadge; four sisters, Mrs .
Helen Damewood, Syracuse;
Mrs .
Dona l d
(Rosalie)
Weekly , Columbus ; Mrs .
Paul (Li la) · Ri chardson ,
Brookvi lle, and Mrs . Kenneth

!Mildred) Collins, Canloh; tO

grandchildren , and Several
nieces and nephews .
Funeral services will be at
1 p. m . Saturday at the St.
Paul ' s United Methodist
·Church with the Rev Rict1ard
Thomas and Rev . Walter A.
Frost officiating . The body
will l!e in state for one hour
preceding the service . Burial
will be in the Christian
Cemetery at Tuppers Pla ins.
In lieu of flowers friends may
contribute to the St . Paul 's
Un i ted Methodist Church
building fund in care of Rev.
Thomas.
Friends may call at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville after 7 p. m , this
evening .

CHARLES WARTH SR.
Charles Wi l liam Warth ,
Sr ., 55, Hartford, died
Tuesday I n the Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Born
March 6, 1922, in New Haven,
he was the son of the la.te
Harry and Hilda Anderson
Warth .
, r He was a coal miner and
construction. worker .
Survlvin_g are his wife,

Dorothy .Lee Warth ; three

daughters , Mildred

Jean

Grinstead, Mason : lola Ann
Collins, Tupper .Plains , 0 .;
Darra Lynn Warth ~ Hartford ;
two sons , Charles William.
Jr. !.. Pomeroy ; Anthony

peopletalk

'
'
(Continued from page 2)
says coffee was wrecking his sleep - that "I woke up tired, , I
was rundown just sitting still ,, I quit coffee Saturday and I
feel better !han I have in six montha." He admits he cheats a
tittle. He still downs one cup in t?e morning at home, one more
when he gets to work.

Wayne, Hartford ; one sister,
lola Mae Conner , New
Haven i and seven grandchildren .
Funeral services were held
Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev . Clyde Fields
officiating. Burial followed in
the Graham Cemetery .

Notices,
local briefs
The auto license bureau
office located in Gibbs
Grocery in Pomeroy will be
closed Friday in observance
of Veterans Day. The grocery
wil) be open, however.
Don R. Hill, Route 2,
Racine, received 271 votes in
his bid for election as a Letart
Township Trustee rather
than 171 as reported earlier
by the Meigs County Board of
Eleriions. Hill led .the vote
'count among the four can·
dictates running for the two
trustee posts filled this year.
The Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department
· was called Wednesday night
at 10:28 p. m. to assist the
Coolville Fire Department in
fighting a crude oil tank fire
at the Harold Hamilton
residence on county road 57 in
Athens County, The fire was
extinguished with no loss of
property.
Practice sessions for the
Pomeroy-Middleport .alumni
football game to be held
Thanksgiving Day will be
held Saturday at 4 p. rn.
Pomeroy will practice on
theMeigs field at Meigs High
School and Middleport will
practice on the junior high
field in Middleport. Players
who have not signed up may
do so Saturday.
·
James E. Watson, Tuppers
Plains, has been granted . a
divorce from Deborah
Watson, address unknown.
The mai'Tiage of Marian Gale
Varney and Franklin Delano
Varney was dissolved.

PRINCELY PUCKER : Britain's Prince Charles arrived in
Adelaide, Australia, Wednesday, and promptly stunned a
pretty girl with a big kiss. As Charles left his plane, he walked
up to 28-year-old Sylvia Cresnar, took her hands, and kissed
her- once on the cheek and once on the lips. Said a flustered
Miss Cresnar, ''I feel terrific, I'm still excited. I would like to
have iJ!viled him home for tea but I didn't get Ute time."

The
Meigs
County
Tuberculosis Clinic offices
will be closed all day Moo·
day, Nov. 14 and all day on
Wednesday, Nov. 16, at which
time the staff will be going
into the schools of the
THE DURABLE DURANTS : Norman Cousins, editor of the Eastern Local DiStrict to give
Saturday Review, was dinner host in Malibu, Calif.,lo Will and tuberculin skin tests.
Ariel Durant - in celebration of their seventh book "A Dual
TWO ACTIONS FILED
Autqbiography." The new work, unlike previous v~lumes of
Two suits .for money have
historic~! philosophy, is the story of their own 64-year love
been filed in Meigs County
affair.
·
Common Pleas Court. Mary
· ·GLIMPSES: Shirley Jones and Marty Ingels, a commercial Parker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, filed
producer, will be married Sunday in a private Hollywood suit for damages as a result
ceremony, in which ShaWl Cassidy - her son by Ute late Jack of an accident on June 6, 1977
Cassidy - will give the bride away ... Miss UIUan President in the amount of $2,400
Carter's mother, is in Ireland, staying with a Oubli~ family for against Charles C. ·Amott,
a llkl&lt;ty vacation ... Russian chess grandmaster, Victor Coolville, et al. City Ice and ·
Korchnol, has a broken hand, suffered in an auto accident in Fuel Co., Point Pleasant filed
Switzerland, ' and he'll have to postpone his world suit in the amount of $2,351.87
championship challenge semifinal against Borla Spassky ... for money due against John
Actress Marfsa Berenson, wife of Los Angeles industrialist H. Turner Trucking Co., Inc. ,
Ja\lles H. Randall, has a new baby- a 6-pound~unce" girl­ Lancaster.
named Starlight Metod}' ... Actress Kathleen Nolan, the first
woman
ever to hold the post, has been re-elected to another
score:
•.
two-year
term as pre;lident of Ute Screen Actors Guild ...
REPUBLIC OF CHINA
(891 - Hu Tsal -ling, 2-0-4; Lin
TaJ. jan. 2-2-6; Chung Chih- \

• It'

OPEN TIL 6 O'CLOCK EVERYDAY'
CLOSED SUNI1AY·s·

daughter of Edward Stanley
Hal ley. Vienna . W. Va . and
the late Corrinne Deaton

a

BRENDA BOYLES

KIM BATEY

Area Deaths ·i
ROYCE
40 CHANNEL
C-B RADIO

bsdget of honor," but Carter
said, " It is not a badge of
honor, and a public official
dQes no\ have a rigM to lie."
Carter said the decision by
the government to permit
Helms to plea bargain rather
Ulan face a trial was "the
be~t judgment we could
I make ) oo the security of the
natiot'l. It was Ute right
decision and the best
decision . It does not condone
lying. It does uphold Ute law
and I think it does uphold as
best we cuuld the security of
Ute country,"
Carter said the recent
flareups on the IsraelLebanon border "show the
need
for
a
Geneva
conference" as soon as
possible .
" The loss of life is deplora·
ble, but the situation is never
going to be improved in my
opinion until those nations
involved there are going to go
beyond
debates
and
squabbles ... and start dealing
with the real issues~" he said.

THE "REGENr'

SEE \JS .FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL Al
REASONABLE PRICES.

ALSO HALLMARK TABLE
DECORATIONS

(Continued from pqe I)

DRESS BOOT. ••

-aJILDING OR 'REMODEUNG?

By HALLMARK

Jobless

WOMEN'S
WARM LINED

THANKSGIVING

Be thoughtful ... be
festive! Share your
holiday wishes with
everyone by sending
out beautiful, ••pressive
greeting cords. Big group!

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. tO,l9i7

lubit in the show. Entries are
to be placed bcf ore 12 noon onSaturday, Dec. 3 and must be
Jell in place until 4 p.m. on
Sunday.
One blue, red, yellow and
white ribbon will be placed in
ca&lt;·h class cxeept in Ute
juniors where the judge may
place as l)lany ribbons as she
desires.

Royse, 3-.5-11: Swain, 9-4-22.

• TOTALS 39-14-92.
:

Halftime Score -- Rio -48
China 42.

:

I

used lor. She plans to be a beautician.
Miss Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith,
Pomeroy, is a senior at Meigs High School being sponsored by
the Me1gs Inn of Pomeroy. Miss Smith plans a career in
interior design and Art Educatibn. For her talent she will
present a trumpet solo.

r-----·-l
!

FEEDER CALF SALE, STATE GRADED,
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER .lOTH
AT · 8:00 A.M.
800·1000 HEAD, ATHENS, OHIO
AT THE ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE.

K1c k up yo ur 11cels. li &lt;·rc·s a
casua l s h oe in whl 11 you
can spend hours and I l Ou rs
wi thou t a ca re' Fee l tlt e ri c l1.
na tura l lea the r a nd tl1l' g rea t
elastic ized fit . Aclcl til e 1dSSe lS
and you've got a perfectly 1 "
p e rk y litt le run ·ctbout. ,. '

-'-&gt;0&gt; ..41

NATURALIZER. .
Shoes

Anderson .a sissy. "Anderson 1

responded by saying that he,
meaning Brainard, had killed
Mary Berry and not Young.
Fol;lowing objection
made by the prosecution, the
testimony was stricken from
the record.
The prosecution was to
continue its case today and
possibly tomorrow. The trial
is expected to last at least
into next week .
Meanwhjl~ ,

the

COLORS:
BLACK

and

im-

WINE

paneled jury is being
sequestered during the entire
trial.
Jurors are being kept
under guard in a motel in
downtown Parkersburg .

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES ·
BETTY OHLINGER
Main St.

f

GIEl
WIEILIL

·

fltJIWu.- .

L

· FLORIST

•

I PH. 992·2644 ~·

'1 00°0

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE

Jerry L. Ashworth, were
admitted as evidence.
Apparently,
Anderson
was attempting lo establish
the fact that both Young and
Brainard were heavily
intoxicated and that Young's
faculties were not as clear as
Brainard alleged them to be.
One
of
Brainard's
statements indicated that he
obtained 24 cans of beer, a
fifth of whiskey, pills,
marijuana and the Thun·
derbird wine.
"l drank the beer and it
knocked me cra2y, stated
Brainard, in one of the two
statements.
The statements also
allege that the two hitchhiked
to Corning, 0., which contradicts his earlier testimony
which said his stepfather took
them to Corning.
At this point in the crossexamination, Anderson
accused Brainard of being
·a liar. Brainard said he was
not a liar and then called

Your "Extra Touch"

Florist Since 1957

352 E. Main,

Pomeroy
YourFTD Flor ist

1

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

The very spec ial way to remember ...

TRA~E-IN

On All Living Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon ., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sai.~:30tiJ . 5 : 00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
!73-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va .

•

Holzer Medical Center
(01schargesNov.9) .
John Allen , Ginger Bobo,
Boyd Burnette. Rinard
Ca plingler , Mrs. Robert
Crwnp and son, Mrs. Richard
Gilbride and son, Oelpha
Harper, Smith Henderson ,
Kenneth Herrell , Alma
Hesson, Susan Hutchinson ,
Grant James, Jeffrey Miller,
Mellsso
Mltler,
Doris
Painter. Sandra Roach.
Herman Shambli, Mrs.
Michael Ward and soil, Roy
VVard .
·
(Births Nov. 9)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Johnson, a daughter, Oak
Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wiseman 1 a son, Jackson .

Looking for
the most popular
run-around in town?

Young denied mistrial (Continued from page I)
times he went upstairs he
took a white sweeper cord up
but later brought it down .
"Later, Johnny came
down with the bloody knife.
He found a rag, wiped it and
threw it down," said
Brainard.
After leaving the Berry
home, BraiD,ard stated that
they went to her store, the B
&amp; B Markel. From there they
went back to the Collins'
h0use and changed clothing.
He said that Young placed his
shirt, a heavy flannel shirt,
and boots that he wore in the
Berry home, as ,.,en as the
knife, in a plastic garbage
bag.
lt was at the Collins'
residence that Brainard· said
Young first indicated he had
done something to Mary
Berry.
" He kep saying he was
holding the blade in and
watching the blood gush,"
stated Brainard.
From · the
Collins'
residence, Brainard said they
went to his stepfather's and
woke him up and asked him
to take them to Coming, 0 .,
which he allegedly agreed to
do.
Enroute to Corning,
Brainard said they stopped
and threw the garbage bag
· containing
Young 's
belongings in a creek. Also on
the way, he said they stopped
in AthenS, 0., where they
purchased more beer.
While in Coming, 0.,
they allegedly stopped at the
residence of one of Young's
- sisters, where at the time
Brainard alleges Young
confessed to his sister and
said that he did not want to
implicate Brainard becau se
he is too young to go to the
penitentiary.
From the sister's home,
t)le two went to an
acquaintance's home where
the confession letters were
. allegedly · written.
Brainard and Young
later went to another
relative's home in Pomeroy,
0., where they were ap. prehended later in the day.
During cross-examination
by Anderson, two statements
that Brainard admitted
giving following his capture
on Dec. I, to former Mason
County Sheriff's. Deputy

Veterans MemorfaUiospltal
ADMITTED - Mitziann
McClintock, Racine; William
Stephenson, Pomeroy;
Pamela Lawrence, Minersville.
DISCHARGED - Ruth
Barr, Ronald Carr, Dorothy
Earles, Aida Faudree,
Harvey Ours, Beatrice Price,
Hattie Armes.

Kenneth McCullough; R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon . thru Sat. 8:00a .m . to 9 p.n, ,

Sunday 10;30 Ia 12 ;30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992·2955
Friendly Service
E. Main

Pomeroy,O.

Open Nights titl9

'o.

�8- 'the Din )) Se nunel , Mtddleport-Pomeror. 0 .. Thursday, Nov 10.1977
For Ftui.all Noll

II

19!7

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash -...
,

OPPORTUNITIES

I;, Y. vn.b t•l t: nd d

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Nov_ t 1 1917
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NOTICE

10-Feb

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
I

19)

:\ vo.Ji ll•ll~lun.J a~

. rnb ! lOPS dr t'

d udabl t:
CcHt"" ful tod &lt;I Y

sh .H e

ru.

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t i11U F 1 1da\
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PISC ES (Feb
20 Marc h 20)
Chan s ar P thiS '' 'll n o l hf'
one c.f ~ nu r mo re pr od uCtJVC
da ys be Cdu.,n o f fO ur rrnor ac t1
: al app1 oac r Kcco vo ur head
::&gt;u t ot thl? clouds
A.RIES (March 21 Apnl 19) Be
doub l ~
c r;~reful
,, buSHlCSS
today a s f O U d re a p t to Se"]
lh1nqo; ' ro m a J€1 y naqo u p ro
&lt;:.pec11ve T tll'~ o uld c ause yo u
d1ff1cu t es

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or vou lll J Y lus t• d J,l lu,l blf' al ly
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NOTICE OF SALE
Byv 1rlu eofanORDER OF
SALE IN PARTITION 155ued
out ot the Cou rt ot Common
Plea!. , 1n the case Emmooene
Edwards Holste1n vs Mary
Crook!. Turnbu ll, et a l, btt1ng
TAURUS IAP'o120 May 20) Ma ke case no 16 421 . 1 will offer for
sale at publtc auct1on at the
no agreemenb o r ba 1garns to
door of the Court House of
da~ 'Jtth onf' •• ho e}(pe c t s you
Me1gs County on the Jrd dey
to make all thf' con c ess tons
of December 1977 . a t 10 00
H1s o r he r atr ttude w111 no! o ' clock A M , the folloWing
lands and tene ments
so ften wrth 11rne
Par cel No 1
GEMIN I (Ma y 21-J une 20) II
The foltowmg destr1bfd
!here 15 a health mat ter you ve real estate s1tuate m the
bN~ n negle ct1ng ro do ~orne·
County of Me1gs m th e State
th 1n g ab out co rrect 11 toda y It of Oh10 , and tn the TownshiP
Of Ol1ve, and bound ed anel
~n 1 1!-.ely to onpr o\l e by 1gn or
descr1b ed as foll ows VIZ
ll Q 11
B~•ng a pert of to't numbered
CANCER (Ju ne 21·Ju l y 22) Sta.,. three (3) o fthttsub dtv Ston of
d iJ ay trom chancy . . en tur es
the E st ate Of Ma1or Reed.
today E¥ en a fr1en d ty p e nny De ce ased , beg1nnmg at the
ante gd1ne could ge t ou t o f Northeast co rner of a part of
s.a• d estate belong1ng to A w
nand
Cowdery and m the South 11ne
LEO {July 23- Aug 22) It ma y be o f lands of L ydta K Pa ckard
ne cessa ry to d1sca rd so me· •n the •ntersect1on of the
thtng toda 1 tha t has o ut lived li S roads lead 1ng fro m Reed!.
usel ul!less Lelltn g go won t v•lle , to Forked Run and
Tuppers Plams , thence E ast
be e d S) but 1! II he bet te r fo r w1th South li ne Qf sa1d L ydlct
) OU 1n the tong run
K Pac k ard land 129 feet to a
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) st ake thence Sou1h 99 feet to
So meth 1ng thdt yo u ar e learf ul a Stl!ll&lt;.e . thence west l52112
to 1he west sfde of sa1d
e: 1 could oe hold 1ng y ou ba c r teet
Forked Run and East l1ne o f
from p u t\1ng n e v. plan s and A W Cowdery 's land , thence
1deas Into pl aC!tce Do n t c;ul t w it h Sl!lld Cowdery's l1ne 1n a
Northerly d1rect1on to the
befo r e..yo t,; ~tart
LIB RA (Sepl 23-0ci 23) Before pl a ce o f beginn i ng , con
t am i ng one four t h (If,.) of an
assu m1n g an y n ew f1na nc Jal acre. more or tess
o tJI1gat 10ns'" yo u would be w1 s e
Parcel No 2
10 f1.r -; t w 1pe the slat e cl ean o f
'The f ol lowmg descr1bed
reat esta t~ s1tuate ,., the
old tle lil ts
Township of Olive · m the
\.I \\ SP\I ' ffl f' \:ff Hl'h\ SI ,\S,'j ~
County o f Me1gs and State of
Oh10 to w1t Bein g a part of
L ot N um ber Three (3) of the
Sub d1vlsl on Of the E st ate of
Ma1or
Ree d
Dec eased ,
begmnmg at the Southwest
co rner of tot deeded by Sl!ltd
Marta Hoyt to sa•d Dell
Arnott (de ed bear1ng date of
July 15 , 1901 ), then ce East
w1th the South line of sa 1d tot
1521f7 teet to the Sou theast
co rner of sa1d lot , th enc e
Sou th 71111 teet to a stake .
thence West 184 feet to the
By Clarice Alleu
West s•de of the Forked Ru n
Mrs Davtd Tysmg er and Road and East line of A W
Cowdery's land , thence w1th
daughter Tara are guests of sa 1d A w Cowdery's I me m a
Mr and Mrs Ross Cleland. Northerly dtrec1mn to the
ot beg•nn 1ng , con
Mrs Tysmger and Tara have place
ta.n mg one fourth (1/,.J ot an
returned from Hawan wher e acre more or less
Par cel No 3
she has hved for two years
T he followmg real estat e
wh tle her husband has bee n Situ a ted 1n the County o f
station ed ther e Her husband Me1gs , 1n the State Of Oh !O
and 1n the Townsh1p of Oltve
wt ll JO in her tn ea rly bounded and descr1bed as
December a nd then wtll be foll ows Bemg Lot Number
F 1fty three (53 ) rn McCole
sent lo Georgta
and Torrence Add1f1on to
Mrs DoriS Betz, St Joseph, Reedsville , Me1gs County ,
Mtchtgan. spent several days OhiO
Reference Deed Vol 224.
'"th her mother, Mrs. Allee Pag e 151 , Me1gs County ,
Dodson. She came espectally Oh10 , Deed Records
Ter ms of Sale
Cash tn
fo r her mother 's 89th btrth- Hand
Cannot be sold for less
day - anmversary
Mrs
th an $2 ,000 Al l three parcels
Dodson apprecta ted her sold as. one

Otester
News. Notes

many gtfts and ca rds
•. 1 Mr
a nd Mrs . Darrel
Weber, Fort Wa yne, Ind , and
Allen Weber, Akron, were
weekend guests ol Mr and
Mrs Ralph Keller
Mtss Luctlle Smtth spent a
week wtth h er cousm, Mrs

James J Prof fitt
Sherrff
Me 1gs County
111 1 3. 10, 14 , 24 ( 12 ) 1, Sic

LEGAL NOTICE
FORSAL.E
6 1d S for t he
personal
property of the Nett1e Sm tt h
estate Will be rece1ved at 10
am Satu rda y November 19 ,
1977 on the fron t step s ot the
Me1gs Coun ty Court House ,
Porn eroy
Oh 10
Sa rd
property
des cr1 b ed
as
follows 3 35 carat d1amond
m p laf tnu m rtng, appra1sed
value sa.soo oo , ). 40 ca rat
d 1am ond rn pla ftnum rtng ,
appra 1s ed va lu e S1r85 0 00 .
51 00 gold co 1n , appra1sed
value 510 00 2 gold wnst
watches with band s ap
pr.!lHSed value 5125 00. one
wdd mink cape, eppra 1sed
value S300 00
The eJ~ecutor of the estate
r eserves th e nght to relect
any and al l b1dS
For
exam1nat1on of the abo ve.
call J B O' Br1en , Attorney at
Law , Po meroy, 614 992 272 0
(II) 9, 10, 11, 13 , 14, IS, 16, 7tc

Allee

home f or a v1stt
~

IF YOU hove o serv1ce to otter CO AL l•mestone and colcn.~m
wont to buy or sell somethmg
chlonde and colc •um br .ne f01
qe looktng for work
or
dust (ontrol and speCiol m1xmg
whalev•r
you II get res-ulh
soh for formers Exc•ISio' Soh
faster wlfh o Senhnel Won! Ad
Works Mo• n Street Pomero..Coll992 2156
~~~~pllo~em J891
PORCH SALE Nov . 10 and 11 from CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
10 to 6 701 Beech Street M•d
tro1ler $~50 PhonfiP {614 f 698
dleport Antrques ond m1sc
32'10
GARAGE SALE Frr
Sot 9 2 30 ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all at
469 F1s her St
Mtddlepol 1
lo chments Ltk.e new osk1ng
Oh10 W2 364 7 or 991 2931
$2250 Phone (614 ) 698 32q()
Watch f or $1gn beh 1nd Mtd
dleport Post Otltce
Items APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchards
Stote Route 669
Phone
lamps
table and cho1rs
Wrlkesv•lle b69 3785
trunks , desks cho•rs
cr•b
stroller
co lor TV
some RUGS
WALL Hong1ngs and
~lorhmg , all kmd5 of 1fems tor
ofgons N1 ce for Chnstmas
you r kome
R90sonable Coil 992 2214
GARAGE SALE Rear 3bB N Thtrd FIREWOOD All red ond whtte
A11e
Mrddleporl
lodtes
oak S40 o , cor d split and
mens and boys wmter coots
dehvered 8-43 29'33
and clothing. sport coot5 ond
pants drapes, toys and gomes A GOOD used leer camper top
for on 8 truck bed Brown and
d15hes booh Fr.dol'
whtte 985 3560
SIX FAMILY Porch Sole Sot only
1966
HONDA TRAIL 90 S150 Pt
12
10 3
Croche ted
Nov
Pleasant 304 675 1118
Chnsrmos Items ond lots of 10 1
and ~5' 1tems Grab bogs Von 10', FT TRUCK comp ~n self
Cooney 522 Grant St
M1d
conlo tned ov en propane floor
dleporl Oht o
heater
gaS
electr•c
relngerator SSSO ~2 6398

WE WOULD l1ke to express our
thonks and apprec1ahon to Rev
Uo11d D Gnmm Jr Rutland
Sunday School ond Church of
the Nazarene Walker Funeral
Home all lnends relottves and
ne1ghbors whose co mfo rt and
help helped U$ through the
death o f our 1nfont son
The John W Trll •s Sr Fam1ly
I WANT to thank all my fne nd1

ond nerghbOI'"s for the beoullful
flowers that were sent on
behalf o f rhy fa ther James N
who
passed away
Word ,
November l st Also for the
k. md words ond prayers May
God Bl ess ~ou all
lee and Bea Wood

trade or tra 1n New and used
saddles Ruth Ree"es Albany

(61') 69B 32'10
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Socrety ,
Corel me and adoption ServiCe

9&lt;117680 7•13161 9&lt;11 5•27
BEAGLE PUPPIES A ll Ae sonoble
From $20 up Runnmg ond olso
well tra•ned 742·2521 ,
AI&lt;C REGISTERED BrrHony Spon1el
male b mo old $75 Pt Plea
sont304 675 1118
MALE PEEK ·A POO 1 year old
Very tnendly $100 992 3844

Roc 1ne Gun Club
e11ery Sun afternoon Foetor
cnock guns on ly Assorted
meots

TO GIVE away to good home tn
the coubtry o male dog Very
gentle hcellenl wilh ch1ldren
Housebroken
742 2b4B
anyt1me

THERE W il l be no hunting , no
trespasst ng and no el(cepttons
on my property Bob McGrow

TEN WEEK old Beagle puppies to
g1ve away Father 1s excellent
rohb1tt dog 8.43 29b 1

THE RACINE
Voluf"!lee r Ftre AKC IRISH Setter puppy 6 wk.s
Deportment wrll sponsor o gun
old
Phone
1 304 882 2397
shoo! every Saturday ot 7 p m 1 after 5 pm
o! th etr buddmg m Soshon Foe
tor y choke guns only
TWO FREE pup s 6 wks old to
good home Port coc k a poo
FORMER MEMBERS of BANDITS
and w1re ha1red femer and
Baseball Teom please coli
also cock o poo dog almost 2
843 296 1 IMPORT ANT
years to gtve owoy to good
POMEROY TWIN CITY Cob tem
home See at 1672 Lincoln Hts
poronly opens 8 om Closes 5
Pomeroy
pm Sun B · 12
ONE AI&lt;C reg1stered male Apmol
SLUG SHOOT Sunday November
toy p oodle 11 weeks old
13 lzo ok Wolton Farm near
985-41 11
Chester
12 30
Hams and
turkeys os pnles

o:'c:-='=C-5"------.,---';--.....,-,--·

0 &amp; J HOUSE of Fabr iC S New sh1p
menf of second sheets $2 o lb
Blanket p1eces $ 1 50 lb 1 m1le
sou th o f Mtddleport on SA 7

1966 CORVETTE Very good cond1
Iron 304·882 2040

19'73 BUICK CENTURY LuKuS 1970
Chevelle Mol1bu Call after 6

pm 949 21•9
LOST OUT of co r Lo C
ire$ glasses
around Ftve Po tnt Statton Fn
mght Tom Haymon 985 3509

1974
CHEVROLET
CAPRICE
Closstc Block wlfh black 111nyl
top New rod 1ol tt res Excellent
cond1t1on 992 2987
1975 FORO CHAT EAU Va n A C
P S P 8 985 4277 offer 6 pm

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR ond
Po1d
apphonce servrceman
holt da ys
v a cot 1o ns
and
Mos pltal tz o tJon
Goll 1a
Refngerotor Co 611 3rd A "e
Golllpol1s Oh1o
TEXAS REFIN ERY CORP offers
PLENTY OF MONEY plus cosh
bon uses l nnge beneftts to
mature md1v1duol 1n Pomeroy
or9o
Regardless of e"
penence
wr1tf! , C l
Pa te
Pres
Texos Refine r~ Corp
Box 71 1 Fort Wor tll Texos
7610 1
l PN NEEDED 3 11 sh1ft Good
wages Arcod1o Nursmg Home

(614) 667 31%
IMMEDIATE OPENING for RN 11
pm to 7 om shrft Please call
Nancy Van Me ter c o Pmecrest
Center (614 ) 446 -7112

1972 OLDS DELTA 88 A door
sedon AM FM A C Good con
drhon Mu st sell 992 2787 olter

Spm
1973 MONTE CAR LO A C P S
P8
AM. tape Good gas
m•leoge Excellent cond•hon
742 2020 offer 6

ST ACRAFT FALL Sole
M1ro1
motors 20 and 22
TraVel
Tr otters 18 5 $3,799 25 7
Bunkhouse $4 B75 Fold down
$1 700 up We se ll ser..-1ce and
quality Open Sundays Camp
Conley Storcrofl Soles Rt 62
N o t Pt Pleasant

1976 TRAVEL TRAILER

20 It

tandem
L1ke -new
Se ll
contamed Bath w 1th shower
Reasonable 949 2().12

CASH pa1d lor all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 614-423-9531
TIMBER
Pomeroy
ducts Top pme
sowtr,mber ~all
Kent Hanby 1·-446

Forest Pro
lor stondmg
992 5965 or
8570

COINS CURRENCY tokens old
pock et watches and cho1ns
s1 lver and gold We need 1964
ond older Sliver coms Buy sell ,
or trode Call Roger Wamsley
OlO FURNITURE ICe boKes brass
beds Iron beds , etc , complete
households Wnte M D M11ler
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh1o or cal l
992 -776()
NO ITEM TOO Lo rge or too small
W11l buy I ptece or complete
hou seho ld New used or anti
ques Ma rlin's Furmt\,J re 20 N
2nd St
M•ddleport Phone

992 6370
CHIP
WOOD
Po les rna"
d1ameter 10 on largest end $B
per ton Bundled slob $6 per
ton Oeh vered to Oh1o Pollet
Co At 2 Pomeroy 992 2()Sq

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 2l211
Est•te of Kel1h Allan Douglas
aka e.zelusniale Deceased
Nottce IS hereby g1ven that
Ted Cze l u sn1ak of Brook
Park , Ohio , has been duly
appointed Adm lnlstrator of
the Es ta te of Keith A ll an
Douglas ako!l Cz elu sn,ak ,
d eceased, tete of Me t gs
Coun ty , O~io
Cred1tors are requ~red to
I d e t hetr clatms w ith sa1d
f lduc 1ary within four months
Dated th1S 4t h da y of
No~Jember 1977
Mannmg D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Plea s,
Probate D1vJStOn
( ll l 10, 17 , ~ 4 . 3tc

3 A~D 4 AM furn 1sh&amp;d and un·
furnished opts Phone 992

FOUR ROOMS and batll
only No pets 992 -5908

Adults

~ves

10 pet to 50 pel
on heat1ng cost
Expertence and
fully Insured

Free Est
Call667-6479

Rtt&lt;!slillt, O

10 141 me pd

Wood Stoves

'h 37U250
~17 TFC

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

696 I 072 $6 BOO

10-20 -1mo

THREf HOR SES 1 1s Western
Pleasure 2 mores I IS 112 ond I
1s lf. Arobton 9'92 7084

9912759
WOOOFOR~ole

985 4103

FOR SALE 16 dresses me 16 18,
some ore new
f1ve po 1r
women s shoes
s1ze 5 5 '/ 1
some ore new Ho v' some
other good thtngs V\'tll sell lor
$20 Cotl949 2679

2

STORY 3 bedroom frame
ll ouse F A , furnac e storm w1 n
dows #1reploce 1n M iddleport
Phone 992 3457 or ~2 5867
LARGE THREE bedroom 2 11, Doth
spl1t foyer w 1tM fireplace and
acre lot $44 000 992-2492
HOUSE AND 18 acres along blo ck
top rood Tuppe rs Plom s water

9B5 3946
HOUSE FOR Sole 1n Pomeroy
large lot 992 7074 or 992 3465

23 CHANNEL SBE Typo 11 CB T BRICK
S1debonder Mobtle CB ex
celle[lt condltr on 23 1n Zemth
co lor co nsole TV e"cellent con
dltlon 992 7066
WOOD AND coo l burmng stove
ond 20 ft;oel of 6 stove pipe
$175 Phone742 2003

HOME
Two bedroom
Iorge lt"rng room w1th stone
ftreploce both w1th shower
modern k1tchen and dm mg
room ut th fy room wrth washer
and dryer o1r cond111omng and
gas furnace 30&lt;4 773·5161

SHENANDOAH WOOD or coal
burnrng
sto"e
Bnck -lrned
Very
econom1cal
$140

ESTATE
FOR SALE

949-2042

1955

INTERNATIONAL

TRUCK

Good lor houltng Second veht
cle Th1s truck can be restored
George FranCIS 18 Ann9 St
Pomeroy Oh1o 992·7-492 or

9&lt;12 3716
1973 CHEVROLET '!J ton p1ckup
w1th camper lop l ow mrleoge
Good 11res 949-2042
JONES MEAT Proc"essmg freezer
beef ond pork Custom process
rng o f beef pork and deer
Retail cuts l1ttle Hack •ng (614)

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy

soften
water

let us test your water Free

'279,95

FOR SALE

TEAFORD(H
f?EAITOR

sso.oo

VIRGIL B. TEAFOIIID, &gt;R.
REALTOR
216 E. Secon~ Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
NEW BRICK -

New Co-Op water and 1
softeners, model VC-SVI.

OnlyS279.95

Save
on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator

1 New 20 cuboc It CMst
Freezer
$lS.OO DIScount
( 1) Good Refrigerator 1175

I

Home'
•Mobile
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tte- Downs
• Awnings- Carports
•Insurance
Repairs

Phone 991-7034 . 10 29 1mo.

HOMESITES for sale I acr e and
up M1ddleport near Rutland
Coll 992 7481
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths ,
oil e lec
1 acre M 1dd lepo rt
close to Rutland Phone 992
74Bl
SM Al l fo r m for sal e I 0% down
oWner f manced Monroe Coun
ty W Vo Ph one (304) 772
31 02 or (304) 772 3227
COUNTRY form lond w1th seclud
ed woods water and good oc
cess m M onroe County W Vo
$1 000 down coli (304 ) 772

3102 or (304) 771 3227
CommerC!ol property opprox 17
acres level lond loca1ed ot
Tuppe rs Ploms an Oh1o Route
7 Phone (61-4) 667-6304

C.ounlry

home
with
3
nice
bedrooms, master has a

lull balh &amp; db I closets. nice

kitchen with cook and bake

unots

Dining and fam ily

room, patio and one acre

$45,000.
SYRACUSE -

4 Bedroom

frame home with nat. gas
F A furnace, City water
and large garden 3 lots In

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
JUST LISTED - Lovelv
Ranch fype w ith about
acre . S years old. 3 very
nice bedrooms W large
closets
Modern bath,
dln1ng room , excellent
k itchen, stone fireplace , all
carpeted, 2 car garage and
storage S31,500 00

JUST LISTED- Close on,
3 33 ecres very nice Ranch
Type Home, 3 bedrooms,
bath, hardwood floors ,
dining bar 1n the kitchen ,

double glass doors to pallo.
N G forced air heat, new
Ben Franklin coal or wood
stove, 2 story bldg . for apt.

Approx 2Bx32
building wlfh

Another
garage

20x100 Lots of f r uit trees . A

LOVV $23,900 00 buys this.
JUST LISTED- Route 12A
Reedsville (overlooks the
river). 231.- acres
Clfv

Cham Saw
1 Good Used

$125
Homelite

YOU MUSTS E E $2,500 00
BEAUTIFUL Ranch
Type, brick and frame. 3

33. Good location for new
home Plenty of water , all

bedrooms,

FIVE ROOMS and bath Lorge
yard 1 m1le Rocme 992 5658

Chain Saw
1 Good Used

1120
Hotpoonl

fenced for just 116,500.
MIDDLEPORT

basement , double garage,
located on 3A acre, about 4

12 x 60 MOBILE HOME Good con
dlflon
large yard
I mile
Racme 992 5858

1 G1'od

NEWLY REMODELED 7 room Mouse
plus bathrooms 1 up and 1
down Has all utilities plus 10
acres of ground S mmu tes to
Pome roy
$:225 ptH mo
992 5970 or 992 6270

Used

S125

Hotpo1nl

EI@Ctrtc Stove
1 Good Used Untco

S85

VVasher

199

Pomeroy Landmark

'9. -Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Ail. Phone 992 -2181

TRAILER SPACE ot 247 Mulberry
A ve A vodob le Immediately
992 JO.u or 992 3736
~-=---

FOR SALE or trod"~ or land con
troc. t 2 bedroom hou se Ill
_R_
ul~ond_9&lt;1
_
2_
5B~B ~---

10 ACRES
Rural a reo near
~oone Su1tcble for bu1fd1ng or
fcrmmg J W Archer cstofe
81ds oc.cepfprl ron tac t Mrs L
_ Morns 9~9 ?._e 1 1 992 21 B6

b~droom modest pri ce d
home with nat. gas heat,
city water, bath , front

porch. back yard &amp; utility
lor $10,500
45 ACRES - Wllh leading
Creek water tap , electnc,
septic tank and mmerals

Asking $13.500.
POMEROY -

Old

3

bedroom frame house with
balh, nat gas , clfy water
and large garden space

VVanl only $7,000.
BEST BUYS ARE HERE
TODAY. SEE US OR CALL
992 3325.
Gordon&amp;: &amp;
Helen l. Teaford
R'•altor Assoc1ates

\'' t-10 l l... E'..!::
"S' -~ ~ ~ E-$T

::- _cr ~

I I

20,33
9 00--James At 15 3,4,1 5 Love Boat 6,13. Hawaii
Flve-0 B, IO , Best ot Famolles 20,33
10 011-Rosett l a. Ryan 3,4,15. Redd Foxx 6.13 , Bar
naby J ones 8, 10. I , Claudtus 33, News 20
10 311-Lock, Stock a. Barrel 20

•

'

~-·
~
~
~.

I

f!!J ~ ~~ e

''

'•
'•

fiBRe'S 'DJR

NJTO if!SUI&lt;At-IC.B
ftll.IO/, C:Nit.ilo '{).! FULL WJ!:-RAC£
It 'iOU ~DUS ,JLIST GALL US!

c::c..J'T WT\1BR ,

f,\t;W

2

baths,

fireplace. nice kitchen . lull
years old YOU MUST SEE
AT JUST $36,900 00
A BUY AT JUST $14.000.00.
Lots of remodeling , car-

pellng, paneling, elc . IV2
story frame, 3 bedrooms ,

bath. fireplace, N G forced
air heal, storage bldg .
50 OTHER PROPERTIES
TO CHOOSE FROM COME IN AND TAKE
YOUR CHOICE. YOUR
VVISH IS OUR COMMAND.
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992 2259 or 992-6191

I

byHenn ArnoldandBoblee

11 311-Ryan's Hope 6, 13, Bob Braun 4; Chico

Man 15,

l

(]

-

I.J'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

I

•

V\JH SEE ANNIE, HE WAS POOR ·
STEEL MILL ·· BUT HE HAD SO

,-----------1 "

TO OWN TW MILL ···

I

ALUMINUMSIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Euy
slop
by
step
tnstructfons

I·

''

ACE HARIMARE
MEIGS PLAZA

l

Mtddleport, Olloo
11 9 tic

HAVE.N 1T!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"

1110

L__.3::i~_l U..---'--'-----'

Hrs fu'st

Sorta''
Is it

qood?

:
1
:

vvife's

•

third husban' has jes
shoot his secon' wifes
half-sister's uncle'

r

market
place
. alf-, 30 Highway
s1sters
speed
uncle's
"detective"
cousin! 31 Ke~

h

HOWERY
AND MARTIN E x~
cavot1ng
septiC s~s te ms•
dozer bockhoe dump truck:
l1mestone
grovel
block to"
pov•ng. Rt 143 Phon e 1 (61-4l
696-7331
..

§tUJ0[1,[Q)0~®

Kllchenl

remodeled ceromtc tde plvm:
b mg carpentry and gener~
maintenance
13 years eK!
penance 992 3685
:

\

ALLEGATIONS

SUGGESTIONS

'•

EXCAVATING BACKHOE, dozert
trencher
low boy
dumd
truck s sephc systems
B ~J
Pulhns phone 992 2478 day ot
ntght
-:

21Pavmg
substance
22 In the past
23 Satlor
zs Greek
mountam

Yesterday's Answer
26 Machine part
27 Indian
title
29 Tunnertc
32 Tantalized
3.1 Neckwear
36 Donkey
37 Smger,
Jerry -

38 On the
brmy
40 Sum Fern
land
11 Man's
nickname
42 Dispatched
U Pronoun
45 Ftrst lady Thursday November 10

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby·- -- -

Excess causes score deficit

TO WAKE A &amp;IDP AT
THE F ISH NV\I(KET I

h""'"'u
rtvn

&lt;1.

ATHENS , OHIO bus1neu for solS:
~mall &lt;IOOOsq ft Supermork.e't
close to Oh1o U w1th beer 0 ~
wme corry out liCense do1
good bus mess on lieavy trove
ed Athens Street Lorge par
mg lot w1th room for other ouf·
door bustQess Perfect buslne'
for two people Sellmg becaus'\
of absentee owner Terms f~
ng~t person For more mlorma
hon coli or write PO Box 5301
Vienna West Vtrg 1010 26101 or

l

1 31).4 295-9351

0
AUCTION SALE . every Tues and
Fn at 7 pm New and used
merchand1se at Ohio R1ver Auc·
lion , Me1gs Plaza , Middleport;
Ohio
Home Pll one (30-4'
773-5471
I

D

~

SNOW DOES NOT
STICK TO A WARM,
CUDDLl( BOD'i I

HOW COME THE ROOF
IS COVERED WITH
SNOW, BUi HE ISN'T '
"

10

., 10 8 4
t J 10 .1
A A 10 " 3

4 K .15

SOliT11

II) I

., Q 5.1
I K6 2

o

0

a

0

0

he&lt;:~rt
11

c lub tncks and

"' 9 2

l

I'&gt; "
Pa ~"

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

Pa ),-.

r. s, -X

for

the two 0 s, etc Smgle letters.

24
1 '\

Operung

T P&lt;~ ~!i

expenence th at when yo u
b1d too much the defense IS

2~T

a pt to be too good for you

Pas:-.

lead - 4 •

L ----------------------'

hrs co mpl aint was a b ou t has

DI

DSM

Z IV G F

DSM opponents W e w11l l e t h1m

te ll hts st o r y m hts own
~
DSM w ords
pI J
LWF
SL 0 M
NMCD
"My p a rtn e r' s two-club r eD I sponse was a n overbad He
NLUT
U IE M
ZRGG
NMCD
sh o uld JUSt have r :u sed me
PIJ
ELFMGMRWM
NVRFBMC to two spad es I would have
pa~se d and made tltree r or a
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: WH(J NJ;:VER WALKS SAVE farr scor e Anywa y there I
WHERE HE SEES MEN'S TRACKS MAKES NO DIS- was m a most optlmastl c
•hree notrump ~
COVERIES - J G HOLLAND
~1 ro~e w1th d ummy's a ce
(f') 1977 Kin• Features Sy ndicate, Inc

LAVIN' THAR SPRAWLED
OUT ON I.JORE BACKSIDE
TH' LIVELONG DA'-1 !!
I.JE OUGHT TO DO SOME
JOGGIN;PAW

'-/O'RE RIGHT
AS RAIN, MAW

a plus score'

It was good d e fe nse , but
we have found by bttter

lA

So uth

\\ t'S I

work It:

I would h ave been home
w1th f1ve spades, two hearts
and two dwmonds Unfor .
lunate ly he hopped up and
led ht s JaCk o f cl ub s
Dummy's queen los t to

one

a nd the defense had le&gt;ur

North..So uth vulner ab le

•

BROM

a fmesse of the

East 's ace, a club back to
the kmg a nd anothe r club

AAKJ8 i

b+--l-+-+--1-

LOOK AT 'IOU !!
DON 'T UNDERSTAND.

¥ A972

• Q 7 s.

BARNEY

I

f.AST
• Q 10 l

r---------..,.---~~--------"....,""' .., apostrophes, ttie length anrt formati on of the words are all Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
~ECAUBE WE'I(E GOING m TELL
htn ts Each day the co do letters are different
The unluc k y expe rt had
caug
ht us agam Th1s ttme
171NO MR13ARIBI HOW WE FEEL
CR\'PTOQUOTES

MARKET? INA LANGt/AGE HE CAN
BUT WHY??? tJNpER.STANO!ff

f or

and a second

toward dummy's Jack

IH:sr

... 9.

u sed for the three

~UT FIRST WE'RE GOING

Ja ck

•11 West had ducked tha t

One l etter stmply stands for another In this sample A 11

1D -mAT DEN OF
INIQUilY DINO
CALL&amp; A"BINGLE&amp;
BAR"! '

of dtamonds, led a s pade t o
my kmg , a h e art bac k t o
dummy's kmg, a second

spade

"'Q864

Is

feotunng A shleys and com
plete selection of cool goi
wood cl rcu iot1ng heater s
Carpenter (6 14) 698-7 191

10

~OR Til
• 6s2
¥ KJ 6
t A 98

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to
A X Y D L B A A X R

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPAt-JV

.'

19 Ethtcs
20 Belgian
resort

Eag,es 33
10 311-Monty Pylhon's Flying Circus 20
11.011-News 3.4.6.B.10,13,15, Dick Cavett 20, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 311-Johnny Carson 3,A,15, Baretla 6,13 , Mash B;
ABC News 33. Movie "TrOg" 10
12 Oil-Monty Python's Flying Circus 33
12 .05-Kolak B; 12 3Q-Janakl 33
12 411-Lohman S. Barkley 6. Ironside 13
1 00--Midnlghl Special 3,4,15 ..

DOWN
1 Bwnpkin
2 Partake of
3 Currier's
partner
4 Principle

15.

Bernstein Conducts 33
9 3D-Treasures of TYtankhamun 20.
10 Oo--Q;\ncy 3,4,15 ; News '20, fa\\ o~

33 Friend
Fr
34- Rogers
St Johns
36Gardner
39 Evaluate
13 Wmdow
frames
46 Quote
47Gannent
feature
48 Algerian
port
49 Otate
500mar's
product

©@ ~@~§§§0@~&amp;[1,

Hogan's

Three Sons

Rvlew 20,33
B 311-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3.A.15, VVall Street Week 20.33
9 00--Rockford Flies 3.4.15. Movie "Nighl Moves"
8,10, Lowell Thomas Remembers 20, Leonard

muslcal

:

742 234B

ANN
DAILEY ' S Upholstery"\j
1
Portland Oh1o 843-2542

12 King
tinople(Sp.)
16 Hold back

It's the

EXCAVATING dozer loader on{! '
baCkhoe work dump truc:ks :
and lo boys for h1re w1ll ho6/~ I
f1l l d1rt to soil l•rnestone ond; 1 ,
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jet •
fen day phone 9&lt;12 7089 ntg~ t ;
phone 992 3S25 or m. 5232
~

AND

17
Beam
15 Forsake
18 Abounds

r---------~-----------~--------~~~--------Greek

REMODELING . Plumb mg heatm-,
end all types o f general repa ir
Work guo ronte ed 20 years ex
penenc.e Phone 992 -2409
,. .

BATHROOMS

5 Volcamc
depresston
6 Fate
7 Stamese
com
8 Agttate
9 Quarter
m Constan-

Zone

3825

SEWiNG MACHINE Repcms ser
v1ce all mak es 99:2 22BA The
Fobrtc
Shop
Po meroy,
Authonzed Stnger Sales ond
Serv1ce We sharpen Sctuors ::

ACROSS
1 Note
5 Embrace
10 Wash
11 Scoundrel
13 Pizzena
fixture
14 Garb

l~::£~ltl&amp;~S!IlLJJIJJ=J/i=:Jf:iJ:tfi~~f£~~~ 21
Destgnate
24 Torrid

20,33.

My

of 4, Wonder Woman 8,10, Washtngt on Week ln

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BRAD FORD
Auctioneer, Com·:
plate ServiCe Phone 949 2A87 1
or 949-2000 Rocrne Oh to Cntt :
Brodford
t
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -+ t
Sweepers toas ters 1rons af1~
small opphonces lawn mo wer~ 1
neKt to Stafe H1ghw ay Garage'
on Route 7 Phone (614) 9'85:,.!

I I I ] HIS rI I )

~

DONE IT
ALREADY? NO

Neighborhood

Emergency One 13,

Tyler Moore 10, Hogan s Heroes 15

'o

Louted In

10,

6 QO-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4,15. Carol Burnett a. Friends 6,
CBS News B.10
7· 011-Truth or Cons 3, Cross-VVols 4, Loars Club 6.
Muppet Show B. News 10, To Tell the Truth 13 ;
Gilligan's Is 15. Almanac 20, Making Things Grow
33
7 3D-Porter Wagoner 3. Gong Show 4, Candid Camera
6. Price Is Roght 8. MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
Family Feud 10. $100.000 Name That Tune 13, Pop
Goes the Country 15
8'00--U-'U &gt;nrkey 3,15. Donny a. Marie 6, 13, In Search

(Answers lomorrow)

1, I

the

5 3ll--Odd Co up le 4;lir.ws 6, Elec Co 20,33. Mary

VIRUS BALLAD MEADOW
Yesterdays
I,Answer What a man who d~nks tlke a fish should
'
-SVVIM. NOT DRIVEl
II 10

Rogers'

Heroes

Jumbles DAISY

h

a.

Beat 3J

5 00--Bonanza 3, My Three Sons 4, Gunssmoke 8 ,

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the !urprise answer as sug·
gesled by the alxwe cartoon

Print answer here{

'

Book

4 311-My Three Sons 3, Parlridge Famoly 4. Brady
Bunch B.. 10. Lillie Rascals 15.
Mister

IT . ._ HE WAS ON HIS
WAY UP WHEN HE
MEl HER ON HER
WAY DOWN ... .11:"~-;:&gt;..._.-_..

MUCH ON TH' BAlL THAT Hf GOT

llUT HE'S fOR Sl1 nN TO::.HT--·

WHA'T HE DID WHEN
HIS. 'TOUPEE FL..EW
INTO HIS. TUBA.

HJu~ F~~:; ~£~~H.

STARlED Al "THE BOTTOM IN A

lo4001EY? SURf ... Tit~ &lt;'ODD! ES

- cy..

r J

I I

8, 10,

Search for Tomorrow

00--Gong Show 3, All My Choldren 6,13 . News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not tor Women Only 15;
Equal Justice Under Law 33
311-Days of Our Lives 3.4.15. As The Wor ld Turns
8,10
2 011-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13. 2.3Q-Doctors 3,4,15. One
Lofe lo Love 6,13, Guiding Light 8,10. 30-Minutes 33
3 ·Oil-Another World 3.4.15 , Croc ketl' s VIctory Garden
20
•
3 15-General Hospital 6. 13. 3 3Q-AII In The Family
B, 10. Lilias Yoaa &amp; You 20.
4 00--Mister Cartoon 3, Little Rascals Our Gang 4 .
Merv Griffin 6; Gong Show 15. Sesame St 20,33,
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Dinah 13

\IJE:'RE'
Ut.ll.ISTW

I METOC
I I I

~ ~

15, Otvorce Court ~ M idday 13 .

Unscramble the$e four Jumbles.
one letter to ea~tl square to form
four ord1nary'\VordS

~

"'

20.

11 311-Knockoul 3,15, Famoly Feud 6, 13; Love ot Life
B, 10 , Sesame St 20,33
11 55-CBS News B. Loving Free 10
12 011-Newscenler 3. N,ews 4,6,10, To Say The Least

1fj"}\}ru} fi;}1t j'jl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

.'
'

10, Zoom 33

10 00--Sanfo&lt;d 8. Son 3,4,15 , Bog Valley 6, Price Is
R1gh l 8, Mtke Douglas 13 , Amertcan Short Story
33
10 311-Hollywood Squares 3.4.15. Joker 's Wild 10
11 Oil-Wheel ot Fortune 3,15, Happy Days 6,13 ;
Marcus We lby . MD 4, Match Game B,10; Elec Co

8 3D-What's Happentng 6, 13, Best of Ernie Kovacs

'

water avatlable Excellent
for Tra ller or Homes TH I 5

all Oily $16,500
50 ACRES - Near State Rt

Retr~gerator

- HE \\4' 1 \\ ..\Y :

Will do roof1ng conslrucl!on
plumb1ng ond heatmg No 1ob
too Iorge or too sm all Pllon'e

Upright Freezer
1225
1 Good Used Homellle
XLil Chain Saw
1125
1 Good Used Homellte

2

Tune6, $25,000 Pyramtd 8, Mac Ned Lehrer Report

20,33, That' s Hollywood 10. Nashville on the Road
13, Marty Robbins Spotlight 15
B 00--Chlps 3,4, 15. W•lcome Back, Kotier 6, 13 ,
Waltons 8, 10, Once Upon A Classic 20,33

EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d1tcher Cllorles R Hot :.
fteld
Bo ck Hoe Sar\IIC&amp;,
Rut lond Oh1 o Phone 742 2000 -

7/e

landmark
UC-SVI

KingsbUIJ
Home Sales

Pomeroy, Ohio. Presentlv

&amp;

conditton your
and Co-op water

'

Good
Buslnen
Bldg
located at 605 W MaIn St ,

667-6133

7 311-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 1100,000 Name That

~ 5K

I
I

HAvt: A LOT ··· SHf'O UHE TO LIVE

1 08 ACRE LOT Wtldwood Estates
off Flatwoods Rood 992 6276

occup1ed
by
a going
business Bldg hu deluxe
apartment
ove-rne-ad
bnngmg tn good mcome
Priced on mspect1on only
Can be seen anv time from
,. 10 a m to 6 p.m tnqulre at
60S W Ma1n 51 , fiomeroy,
Ohto 45769

INf'! OLI T-;:

t......:.::...}J

POMtrDJ , '

l'h. 992-2174

9923993

VA FHA 30 yr fmoncmg Ireland
Mor tgage 77 E State Athen s
phone [614 ) 592 3051

~EAL

. .. HolT.;; \\ H.l T
: \..r:i ~'E FOR g-.

•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

See us at 1100 East Matn
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or

fm Estimala
Jlfo Sunday Cals Pltast

~

GCTT A SE
"' IC'D N8 .

.:--= ,..•R C 4 P fA ir\:

c-.

Syracrse, Oh10

1976 FORD F 250 Custom 17 50 x
14 00 lrres wmcli Only 14 000
m1 Headers CB Tope deck
Over $3 000 rn extras Senous
coi ls only alter 12 noon

10

Wtth Ktds 20, Anyone tor Tennyson 33

"-.0.} \ f.

..... lor to ,,_

LARRY LAVENDER

Bissell Siding Co.

4/t..t D

10-30-c

CUTTER$-.IWNINCS

Pomeroy Landmark

T ~ .::,T

\~ C R"'.;'I \ \\.l J OI&lt; ,\&lt;\E, 0 \\~'1 '
~\' H~ /..10f 50C' " ..1R0L'I.J['

Chester, Oh1o

WINDOWS
IWMINUM
SIDIIIG-SOFfiTT

9a- Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Ail.' Phone99l -2181

l=. !t:i! 5 f FLt ....;14T

,~ .. L.: R4 L-" ·W'•

•~

STORM

Vinyl &amp; Alumioum Sidmg,
Storm Windows &amp; Insulat1on.
Call Professionals

Gon9' Show B. News 10, Gilligan's Is 15, • Coping
!T 3 5..:.HE ~UL. E f:'l ~O R 1rs

Radiator~
Service~
,..._ ._..., hudt. ar .... .,...•••.

fm1ntin1 Adillblt

CALL US

.

EXPERIENCED

Blooo lnlo Wolh llttks

-

'

6 3D-NBC News 3,4,15 , Carol Burnett &amp; Fr 1ends 6,
CBS NewsB, IO. As We See It 20, ABC News 13
7 oo- Truth or Cons 3, Cross Wits 4, Liars Club 6,

~·

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box 34

FREE ESTIMATES

p~

I

Hogan' s Heroes 15

1

Blo•n
lftsalabon Strrices

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

"

Sunnse Semester 10

6 00--PTL Club 1.i. 6 14-0verSeas Mission 10. 6 3DColumbus Today 4, News 6. Sunrise Semester 8
6 45-Mornong Report 3. 6 50-Good Morning, VVest
Virginia 13, 6 55-Chuck While Reports 10, Good
Morning, Trl Slale 13
7 00- Today 3.4.15, Good Morning America 6,13 , CBS
l'lews B. Bullwonkle 10
7 311-Schoolies 10
B ~apt. Kangaroo B.1 0, Sesame St 33
9 00--Mer v Grltfin 3. Phil Donahue 4, New Mickey
Mouse Cl ub 6, Family Affaor 9,10, Elec Co 33
9 311-Edge ot Nlghl6 . Andy Gnlf oth B. Pr ice Is Right

6 00--News 3,4,B,10,1 3, 15 , ABC News 6, Zoom 20

I

Phone 985 3806

,-

•We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

lncrechblel Why pay h1gh electnc
b dls d'IIS w tntar? let us pay
the m for yout One bedroom
from $130 now avotloble
V11loge Manor Th ird and Milf
Stree ts M tddle port Teleph one
992 7787 Equol Housmg Op
porturuty
store buddtng w1th full w 1n
dows and awnmg m front 40
cor porkmg lot All on motn
thoroughfare 111 Athen s Oh to
close to Ohto Unr vers1ty Con·
to ct H W1lkes PO Bo.w 530 1
V1enno West V1rgm•o 2~ 1 05 or
coli\ 304 295 9352

Residentia t
and
commerctal
Call for
eshmate , 24 hour service
Anyday. anytime

REPIJCEMEN1

softener, Model
Now Only

FOR Lease 5700 sq It

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

PARTS· LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Thermallnsulation

I

'

Automatic
T1ansm1uion Serv1ce

Cellulostc (wood ftber J

Tyler Moore 10

•

•

lUI1110.

SWAIN

Blown Insulation

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11,1977
5 45-Farm Reporl 13, 5 511-PTL Club 13, 5 55-

5 3ir-Odd Couple 4. News 6, E lee Co 10,33 , Mary

I

flllot Ttlt lmiUiuni

WINDOWS I OOORS

ONE NEW G7B x 15 f our ply tore ,
S30 One 678 K 15 6 ply !ruck
tue ltke new $40 1976 truck
camper u sed once $1400

5 ()()- - Bonanza 3, My Three Sons .4 , Gunsmoke a,
Mister Rogers ' Ne tghbo rhood 20,33 , Hogan 's

Phone Mike Yoan1
At
992-2206 or 992-7630
"Tilt O!ico"too&gt;

.

J&amp;L

FOR CHEVROLET or Pant1oc Twoi
14 tnch Keystone meg rt ms
Two 15 mch Keystone chrome
stett l
$ l ots
Phone
I 304 773 -5725

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33. north of Pomeroy
l arge lots Co/1 992·7-479

BUILDI~G

300 Maon sr
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomerov 992 6282
or 991-6263
8 A.M lo4 :30 P.M

1 QO-- Tomorrow 3,4, 1 JG-Mary Hartman 10; 2 loNews 13

THURSOAY , NOYEMBER1~1D7

~I

Young's
Carpeting
~"'"l '1:h:lso
Carpel &amp;Up
tery

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

11 311-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Pollee Story 6,13. Movie
" Sta lk the Wild Child" 8; ABC News 3:li Movie
" Cosco Pike" 10
12o00--Janakl 33. 12 40;-Academy of Country Musi c
Awards 6, 13

Heroes 10 , Emergency One 13, My Three Sons 15

Superior
Slum Ellraction

SALES AND sERvice
11 ·9-tfc

5434
AVAILABLE AT Rt versrde Apts 1
bedroom $105 per mont~ $150
secun ty depos1t 992 6098

CARTER

LET THE OPENING
of Bob' s UphOlst-ering and
Trim Shop '" R •elne b e the
open1n '
o f the i ndoor
season or you with our old
furntture re-upholstered 1n
beautiful Willrm co lor s &amp;
patt erns from Bob' s If you
are rooking fo r uvmgs tf
Wlll pay YOU to PlY us il
v•slt LocJiteCI 1n back of the
Sew N ' Sew Outlet on Matn
St , R ac.ne , 0
11 10 1 mo .

MAYTAG RINGER Washer Good
condtlron $35 992 6075

MAYTAG QAYER $14 1 10 Only
used tw1ce 7B model 742 3093

•
•
I

Mo1 ntenonce
con1r oct
avadoble Pr ogrammed lo do
Soles
Rep ort s
A cco unts
Payob le Payroll Government
Report s W 2 form s and wrtte
check s Con be progr ammed to
do General ledge' and Ac
counts Aecet voble
Contac t
Corol Wdkes ot304 295 9391

REDUCE SAFE and fost w1th
GoBese Tobleh &amp; E Vap wate r
pills Nelson Drug

'I
'

~

~

HOO~ HOLLOW Horses Buy sell

-·

Business Services

N C R 29'9 Bookkeep1ng mochme

7&lt;2 2331

Paul Sayre (Grace Geyer ),
· Iowa Ctty. Iowa
Mr a nd Mrs. Lloyd Moore ,
Torch. were recenl calle rs of
Mr and Mrs Arthur DeTray.
Dr and Mrs Btlly Robert
Allen, Colum bus, spent a
weekend wtlh Mr a nd Mrs
Clayton Allen
Mr and Mrs Ch arles
Etchmger and Suzannah,
Columbus, spent the weekend
wtth Mrs Opal Etchmge r .
Mr and Mrs E rroll Conroy
spent a weekend m Akron
'"th thetr sons and !a!Tllhes
Mrs Lucllle Sm tth was a
recent guest of Mr and Mrs
Ever ett Hayde n, Urbana
Mr and Mrs
Arthur
DeTray were ca lied to
Vent ce, Flonda by the sudden
tllness a nd death ol hiS Dodson
Vtrgtl Wood, Sprrngfleld,
mother, Gla d ys presch.
Memonal servtces was held was an overnight guest ol his
mother. Mrs Letha Wood
there Saturday
Mr and Mrs . Roland
D. D. Clela nd, Columbus.
called · on Denzel Cleland Phelph, Appomatto x, Va. ,
spent a lew days wtth Mrs
Wednesday
Rtce a cMrs Allee Fergeson and Fred Rtce Mrs
Mrs Roads, Huntington, comparued them back to thetr
were v1sltors o f Mrs
1

S8 , 100 for education ,
75 per cent of your
College tuition free .
College
Level
ExaminatiOn
Free .
An Associate Degree
through
t~e
Comrn un1ty
College
of the Arr Force, 30
days paid vacalton. 7
paid 3 day weekends.
good starting pay and
much
more.
Interested?
Contact me , Vernon
Zeger , your Air Force
Representative .
For an appointment
rn the Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592 - 459~ Collect.
Order No. 9-ct -86

'!'UUI

CAPRI COR N iDee 11 Jan 19 )
anti &gt;nu

&lt;00

I

l a n,l uf Th.mlh d li&lt; l
Uln tU.i i \ 11 ttllh ~~ "' till $.1lld
\I IIIUII IUI \1 Ca~l lll il lh .J n( t

t •'11 • ' I '
t

/, ...,,.

too to n

I

1 o It tl Ull

1,

1

J dII~
b ll l \ ~

l 11

, I II
I !, 1/ '

,,. q!
!\~

t

t' rlY !'IUpt• I

Bu ~

111

I' t '

I

I

'

\.O PV, If A "-1 1

lom1

I '11 ,

ltl! ' ' d

100

1&gt;0
180

v-.·t

I 1,

ol

lll.t\

~ · ·llb ~~ 1 \tilL&gt;
1\\.j l'\1 l&gt;l' d Ol l
\ d~ IUJllllllt! ll ikl Ul&lt;lll ~ I I B~dLIU \1•

n~ t

1

...

U ld l u

~ d .J \ ~

~dill ,_ \t l \1 l l t'l

, T, I

1

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I )

to

H11 t1 ;

o\ ntJi d pr l ~•

fmll

I , ,,

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rn : 1

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It

24 N o v

4

ill h ' tl il'o Il l I, ,
I I1

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1•

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lht• rp 1"- 1 •, ;r

I of • If

I t ill

1

I

1r I

!1

.---------------------------------------------------------------------~ j~"

Lehrer Report 33

TELEVISION
VIEWING

C:OME TO THIN~ OF 11',
I'VE SEEN IT COMINO
!=OR A L.ONO TIME
- VE S - YES.

'

Osol

WANT AD
CHARGES
tlld

11 00--N•ws 3.&lt;.6,B, 10,1 3,1 5; Dick Cavett 20 : MacNeil

'"

~v:. -~:,~ -.:.iUX.)~w
An Arkansas reade r asks

If we

eve r lead an ace ! we
don't hold t he krng-) aKatns l
a slam r each ed by our oppon ents 1n non.compclltl ve btd-

dmg
T1Hf answer ts th a t we
ce rti:nnl y do It docs not
a!Yr&lt;.Iys work but ou r tr~ ck
record wrlh that lead h as
been pretty good
. -..,.v. st' AI'I H ~~~~ HI'Hi sl \S.'&gt;~ ,
1For a ro ny o f J A CO BY
M OD FR N sencJ $I (0
Wm at
Br100e
c o till!&gt; n ewSP c11Jer
P 0 Bo .. 48 9 Ra d10 c 'ry s ra rton
Ne.\ Yor ... NY / fl0 79 1

�-~~~~m~~- ~~~~~~~~.n.Th~~.N~ ~IO~·!g:7~7------------~------------~-~~~~-:~::~~~=:=~=~:~-------------,

Nobody hurt in
seven accidents

ELBERFELD$ '· IN POMEROY

No one was inju red - not

hea\'y damage.
At 4 p.m. on Sl\ 325. two a~d

even a deer hit in Meigs

one-tent h miles so uth of

County -

accident s tnv esllga l cd
Wednesday and ea rl y toda l·
by the Ga lli a-M eigs Post
State Highway Patrol_.

Dan.n llr. an a uto driv en by
Loren l'O olan. 42. Bidwell.
went left of the center. when
an a ut o operated by Wanda
Rav 30 Rio Grande . was

The first occurred at 9 a.m.

paSsing.'The Ray car ran off

Wednesday on SR HI . one
mile west of SR 775. where ·•!
tire ble~· out causmg Ja mr s
F . Denniston. 2J . Gall il}()liS.

the roadway over an em·
ba nkm ent.
There
wa s

m sc\·en t raffic

SPECIAL WEEKEND SALE.
FRIDAY I NOVEMBER 11TH· SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 12TH
.
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:00P.M.
-SATURDAY T_IL ,.._~~.!_.~~-----....
- - - - - - - . . - - - - - - - - - ·- ,_.._..._.___ T _.._I
'
-------··-mCiALSALe------T
SPECIAL SALE
I
SPECIAL SALE
~-

'olorful patlerns. long tails, two bulton,
through pockets , sanforized sh runk . S, M, L
and

XL

was moderate carnage.

siz f .l

!

o.99

__.._..._._...._.._.._.

~

Our Camillus brand . Regular price $6 .50 to

~,~,~;~~~'';~"~"

I

floo, ,

THROW RUGS

••

. '4.79

E
••
•

-

SCAnER RUGS

•••
•••
..•
•

Size 24x40 inches, oval or rectangular,
fringed and plain borders, non -skid back,
100 per cent Dacron polyester .

:'lm4':9s

Rechargeable

omlloot

battery.

made b.y

•
•••

••
•

~~~r f~~oi~~urExf~e~~~~- C~~~~st~~~

San yo,

I

100 per cent Dacro n polyester. 60 to 64
inc hes wide . Solid color s and patterns.

1

Discontinued style, multi -color stripes ,
fringed ends, reversible and machine
washab l e,
limited
quantity.
Home

SPECIAL SALE

•

•••
••
••"

I
REGULAR s3.49 YARD ... SALE s2.60 YARD I
7.99SIZE24x361NCHES ............... 4.80 ·1
· ·
·
I
'9.89 SIZE 24 x45 INCHES .............. '5.90 1REGULAR s2.99 YARD ... SALE s2.20 YARD I
furnishings , 1st floor

I

.

15.79 SIZE 24 x. 72 INCHES ............. '9.50 .

SPECif\L SALE

,RECLINER CHAIR

JOGGING SUITS_
Zipper c los ing ia,ket with matching
botiom . Natural with heavy blue t r im or red
with na vy trim. S, M, Land XL. 100 per cent
nylon for easy washing and extra warmth .
Special Sa le Pric es.

_

_.._...._..

_..

_..

Protection for JOUr valuable
dining room table at Thanksgiving.
Foam and vin~ table padding.
All standard siza

From '6.49

whose sacrifices are beyond words.

WE WILL BE CLOSED

j

Excellent Christmas Gifts.
SALE $}4 goo
----~_:~~:~:::~~~.:.---+--· _'!_~e o~:~.:_a~~.:.___ _
SAVE 20%
l .
BOXED HAUMARK
ON LONG COLD WEATHER
CHRISTMAS CARDS
S
1

- NIGHT GOWN •
DOZENS OF STYLES
TO CHOOSE FROM

l

I
1

FRIDAY, NOVEMQER 11th

CONSOLE T.V.
REG. '650.00

$

0()

SALE ·599·

-

A Home Bank ·

-·

I

!

l

.

MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS
·

From •2.50 ·

1

_

r ·---------------· , ,
~
I
SPECIAL SALE

I

Walnut or Maple Cabinets
Appliances, Warehouse,_Mechanic St.

ONE LARGE GROUP

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
AND KNIT TOPS

Y2 PRICE
'(iomen's Apparel Department
2nd Floor
.

ss.95 PANTS REGULAR SIZES

•7.95

REG. 139.95

SALE

r •

I

_..~-~~----~~~------- ~
'

1 ONLY

REG. '250 ·

SALE

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

.......,......

·- -

Dec. I.
Besides hearing that
testimony, the jury also
received two alleged copies of
the controversial note, which
states:
''I, John L. Young, on the
30th ol November did kiD
Mary Board and any other
charge I know that he had
nothing to do with them. This
Is In regards to Terry L.
Brainard.''
While Thursday was only
the second day ol testimony,
today marked the fifth day
the trial was in progress.
To speed up the trial, Judge

•

e
VOL. XXVIII'

NO

48
·I

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Arthur N. Gustke, with both
prosecution and defense
roncurring , decided to hold
co urt Saturday. It appeared
this move was made in order
to reliev~ the jury from
spending the entire weekend
locked in a downtown
Parkersburg motel.
Th e jury ha s been
sequestered outside of the
co urtroom si nce it was
chosen on 1iuesday .
One of the reasons the trial
has been drawn out has been
the removal of the jury each
time testimony or ev idence is
t o be introduced . Con-

More testi11Wny heard that
defendant Young wrote out
a confession that he killed
businesswoman Mary Berry
sequently, on a number of
occasions, two sets of
testimony have been given.
This first, which is done
without the · presence of the
jury, gives Judge Gustke the
opportunity to determine

en tine
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER II , 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gas lighting on
o-u tside· banned

Gulf fined for
political .fund

Nine oil, gas
permits issued

November 24th declared
official Thanksgiving .Day

..

___

._.......,...;...._..- ~

E

OPEN STOCK

TOPS
DOZENS OF STYlES AND COlORS•.
REDUCED 20 PER CENT THIS WEEKEND

••
•
•••
..

•:•

-·.•
•
••

Women's Apparel
2nd Floor

whether it can be admitted in
co urt .
This was illustrated when
Terry Lee Brainard, the 17year-old alleged accomplice
of Young , who testified
(Continued on 11111 10)

lit erally
"jawboning" - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - facilities va lued in excess ol a
half a million dollars without
using a si ngl e penny of
taxpayer money . Equipment
operators and earth moving
firms were persuaded to
permit the use ol their men
and equipment to move the ·
necessary earth to provide a
modern
football
field
surrounded by a cindar track
(to come later), a baseball
·field, ~ nd a la rge area set off
and already developed . for isy WilLIAM E. CLAYfON cleared away one of the final be banned immediately upon
pee,wee 'a nd little league
WASHINGTON (UPI ) controversies on the most presidential signing of the
baseball.
House-Senate negotiat ors complex section of the new legtlllation and existing gas
Nor was Chancey stingy today a pproved a ban on · energy legislation. - a lights would have to be shut
with his own time in the outdoor gas lights, including-· package ol laws destgned to off by 1982.
project, Childs sa id.
the millions that grace front swttch Amencans away from
The measure co ntains
Chancey
r esides
in ya rds across the na tion, natural gas and otl to such exceptions for areas such as
, Syracuse with his wife, Mary, despite predic tions their plenttM fuels _as ~oal. .
the New Orleans French
and their two sons. Rick a nd action would trigger a storm
W1th the hghtmg ISSue Quarter where commercial
Michael.
of protest.
settled, the conferees hoped gas lights are Ho f a
Attendin g fr om Me igs
But supporters ol the move to wrap up work on the coal traditional nature and in
ELAINE KEI'rn, GAHANNA, an officer in the Columbus Chapter of the Women's
County were Mr . and Mrs. said it would save the energy co_nve r sto n measure conformity with the cultural
Aglow
Fellowship, was speaker when the Pomeroy Chapter of the fe llowship held its first
Mike Barr, Guy Morris, equivalent of 30,000 barrels ol qu,.,kly.
pr architectural style of the
anniv~rsary dinner meeting at the ~eigs Inn Thursday night. With Mrs. Keith are three of
Fenton Taylor , John Bentley, oil a day.
Under the agreement, new area ." There ~lso w~s an
th.e male advisors of the Pomeroy Chapter, from the left, Robert Sayre, Horace Abbott and
Sam Crow, Mr. and Mrs. · The light ban agreement gaslight installations would exemption for memorial or
William Hoback. The Aglow Fellowship aims to help women praise and glorify God in every
Childs, Mr. and · Mrs. John
historic lights such as the
part of their lives.
Musser , Mr. s.nd Mrs. Fultz,
eternal flame at the John F .
Wendell Hoover , Lee McKennedy gravesite:
BELOW, ALL OF TilE original officers ol tbe Pomeroy Chapter of the Women's Aglow
Comas, Dick Owen, Mary
Under that compromiSe,
Fellowship
are still serving and attended the first anniversary dinner . They are , I tor, Dolly
Cha ncey, Mr. a nd ·· Mrs.
the deadline for existing
Mowery
,
Middleport,
president ; Edwina ScOtt, ~iddleport , vice president; Gloria Johnson,
JaflleS Diehl, Mr . and Mrs.
home gas lights was extended
Pomeroy
,
corresponding
secretary; Elaine Sayre, Racine, recording secretary, and Judy
Charles Gaskill. Bill Grueser
from 1980 to 1982. And the fine
Jones, Gallipolis, treasurer .
and A. R. Knight.
against gas companies for
Violations was reduced from
a maximum $25,000 per light
to $500 per · light for
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Treasury Department and residential installation · and
The Treasury Department the Bureau ol Customs to a maximum $5,000 for
said today it has lined Gulf ' encourage compliance with industrial installations.
By Unlted Press International
Oil Corp.
$229 ,500 in the Bank Secrecy Act."
There are an estimated 2
·
WASHINGTON - THE ADMINISTRATION, IN AN conn ection with a $10.3
The act requires a report to million to 4 million gas lights
optimiStic appraisal, estimated today the fiscal 1978 federal 'million slush fund operation
the Customs Bureau on in use across the nation. ~ost
spending deficit will be $3 billion below its previous forecast. used for iilegal contributions
currency in a mounts over burn 24 hours a day ,
"This is good news," said acting Budget Director James to \he political campaigns of
$5,000 either brought into or C&lt;JIIsuming up to some 70
Mcintyre of the now predicted $58.4 billion gap between Richard Nixon and influential
(Continued on 1111• 10) .
taken from the country.
government incOme and spending in the year ending next Sept. members of Congress.
30. "It is also more realistic_;,
The fine was imposed for
violation of bank secrecy
SIIIPPING ON 'mE GREAT LAKES BRACED FOR an laws, the department said.
early onslaught of winter today and the rest ol tbe nation into
"The amount equals 90 per
the Deep S&lt;Julh shivered under the effects of the season's first cent of the total of tbe
"Blue Norther ."
unreported currency believed
A winter storm warning was hoisted for Lake Superior. hit to have been brought into the
Thursday by the remnants of a bUzzard that paralyzed the
United States without proper
upper Midwest Wednesday . Gale warnings were posted lor reporting, " Treasury UnderLakes Michigan, Huron , Erie and Ontario. In Duluth , ~inn., secretary Bette Anderson
The Ohio Division of Oil and Adams, doing business as
the captain of the steamer samuel ~athers waited out the said.
·
Gas
ha s issued permits for Adams Drilling Co., Racine,
storm in port, observing the second anniversary of the sinking
Under federal court order,
ol the Edmund Fitzgerald. The ore-carrier broke in half during Gulf Oil ear tier reported that lour new wells in Gallia a permit for 95.98 acres in
a Lake Superior st orm on Nov . 10, 1975, killing all 29 crewmen. William Viglia, comptroller County and five in ~eigs Rutland Twp.; Roger Adams,
County.
dba Adams Drilling Co., lor
ol Gu!I's subsidiary Bahamas
117 acres owned by Jack
Gallia
permits
were
issued
WASHINGTON - A BATI'LE AS WEU. as beer is Exploration,
personally
brewing between two titanic U. S. brewmasters. Anheuser- carried or mailed checks and to H.S.D. Oil and Gas Co., Shillet, Rutland Twp . ; ·
Busch Inc . says Miller Brewing Co. is using unfair advertising . . cash worth more than $6 ~iddleport on 51 acres owned Charles A. Orwig, dba Orwig
Anheuser-Busch filed a complaint Thursday with the million into the country by Wa lface Rathburn in Oil CompHny, Logan, on 10
Cheshire Twp.; Altheirs Oil acres owned, by Lee 0. Wood
Federal Trade Commission, charging that Miller is deceiving between 1960 and 1973.
The animal kingdom fa red
'consumers by suggesting in its ads that Lowenbrau is
" The
Treasury Inc. for 68.97 acres owned by II in Rutland Twp. ; T&amp;H poorly compared to people moderate damage. She wsa 62, Belpre.
J ackie and Myrna Arrowood Drilling Co., Pomeroy, for
taken to Veterans Memorial
imported from Germany when it really is brewed by Miller in Department. has assessed a
The third dear death
the United States. The complaint asked the FTC to order civil penalty of $229,500 in Addison Twp.; Altheirs Oil, 10.35 acres owned by Guy Thursday on Gal!ia-Meigs Hospital.
came at II :49 a.m. on SR 248
A deer was killed at 9 a.m. west of Long Bottom. The
Inc. for 55 acres owned by Casto and John Davidson, roads. Only one person was
Miller , its parent company, Philip Morris Inc ., a nd their against the Gulf Oil Corp. for
Darrell and Gladys Ellis in Rutland Twp., and Brasel injured in five traffic miscpes Thursday on US 35 at the anima l was killed by a car
advertising agency, ~cCann-Erickson Worldwide, to halt the violations of the Bank
ads .
Addison Twp., and Altheirs and Brasel Inc., Columbus, investigated by the Ohio State Jackson County line. The driven by Margaret Brown of
Secrecy Act," ~rs. Anderson
animal ran Into the path of a Reedsville. There was minor
Oil, Inc. lor 68.97 acres owned for 109.4 acres owned by Patrol.
said .
Thr.ee deer died.
..
by Jackie and Myrna Ethei Nelson and Alica A.
vehicle operated by Harold damage to her car.
DE WITT, IOWA- AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Bob
"This action is part of a
The injury mishap oc- Patton , 52, Rt. 1, Hamden. - A broken windshield was
Arrowood in Addison Twp. Kitchen in Rutland Twp.
(Cltntinued on 11111 10)
con tinuing effort by the
In Meigs County: Roger
During the period from Oct. curred at 4 :15 p.m . on SR 124 There was moderate damage the result of a mishap at 12:30
13-19, the Ohio Oil and Gas at Syracuse where Bonnie to his car.
p.m. on SR 338, one tenth of a
The second deer was killed mile east of Racine. A vehicle
Association issued permtts Hughes, 26, Gallipolis, going
at 7:06 p.m. on SR 7, two operated by Tom Manuel , 36,
for 112 new wells, reissued si~ east, lost control ol her ca r
tenths of a mjle south of 24.8 in Rt. 2, Racine, flipped a stone
permits, made four location which ran oil the right side of
the
highway,
back
across
the
~eigs County. The animal
revisions,
reopened
one
well,
breaking the windshield in a
Contrlbutlons r~celved this Actio'n Agen cy IS tnvlted to
week for the Meig s REACT attend and participate in the
and made corrections on two left side, striking an embank- ran into the path of a car car operated by Charles
bus fund were by Ewing elections . Rev. Wil.liam
operated by Waite• Brown , Myers, 55, Racine.
ment and tree. There was
others .
Funeral Home, J . D. Dr itrlng Middleswa rth is ct1alrman of
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter today
Co., Adams Dr illing Co., the Gaiiia -Me lgs Com·munity
Howard Mull en, Ja y-Ma r
formally declared Nov. 24 as Thanksgiving Day
Action Board.
Coal Co. , Ford Broth ers
throughout tbe oatlom, with these words :
TrUcking Co., Pomeroy
A corrected report of an
" Although lhe first years ol America's slraggle for
Forestry Produ c ts, Mrs .' East Main St., accident .
Independence
were often dlsheartenlng, oar forebears
Kenneth
Delong , Paul Tuesday night has been given
Kenneth Lee Mays, 19, Rt. However, he admitted en- was taken, a ~parentl), of the
Tuesday at ~:au p.m. a deer
Pierce and Evelyn' s Grocery . by the Pomeroy Pollee
never lost faith In the Creator, In their cause, or .in
I,
Reedavllle, is lodged ln tering the house in September property stored there.
was
killed when it ran into the
Anyone wishing to contribute Department. The original
themselves. Upon learning of the American victory at
~eigs County jail today after by tearing a hole in a front
to the fund can send their report stated that Betty Foley
On
Nov.
7,
just
one
hour
of an auto driven by Gall
path
Saratoga In 1'1'77, Samuel Ailams composed the llrst
donations to the Meigs was a passenger In a car
admitting to entering several screen and entering by the prior to entering the Carson Arnott, 19, Rt. I, Long BotNational Thaoksglvtog proclamaHoo, and the Continental
County REACT Team, Box driven by Cecil Maynard , Jr.,
homes and a church in the unlocked front .door. He went house, Mays went to . the tom.
.
32455, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . Racine , who had struck a
Congress caUed UJI&lt;In the governors ol every slate to
Success Road area .
through the house but took St ·ess Church of Christ, a
are
investigating
Deputies
util ity pole . Pol ice state,
deslpate a day when all Americans could join together
Sheri!! James J. Proffitt nothing .
short distance · away. He a hitskip at Portland that
Elections for IY.elgs County however. that Foley was
and express ·their gratitude for God's providence 'with
said Mays confessed entering
representation to the Com· drlvir)g another car near the
Mays admitted entering the caused damage to a front occurred Tue"sday at apnnited bearts.' By their acllons they extended a revered
munlty Action agency board scene of the Maynard ac·
the trailer home of Yvonna David Chadwell residen ce storm ·door glass and screen
proximately 8:27 p.m.
of directors will be held on cldent when she struck a car
regional custom Into a nallonal tradillon.
Garten on two occasions, first Oct. ·13 by raisin~ a side but no entry was made .
Ra lph Henderson , Port·
Wednesday , Nov. 16, at 1 p.m. in the rear driven by
" Precisely two centuries have now passed since that
on . Oct. 3, then on Oct. . 11 . window. Nothing was taken,
Thursday at 6:40 a.m. on
at St . Paul 's Lutheran -Geraldine Varney , Long
land
, told officers that a
time. We have lamed a continent, established Institutions
Each time he · took a small howeVer.
Church, 231 East Second St . Bottom, who ha d stopped In a
CR 28 a large doe deer was hit
veh icle had stru ck a nd
dedicated
to
protecting
our
Uberties,
and
secured
a
place
In Pomeroy .
amount ol change .
lane of t raffic near the ac·
Mays sa id he used a screw· but apparently not injured
damaged a five-stran d
ofleadetshlp among nations. But we have never lost sight
Election s for Gailia County ci dent. There was medium
driver
Nov.
7
to
Ioree
intry
Mays
also
admitted
an
Whe
n
st
ruck
by
a
car
barbed wire fence along the
will be on Wednesday, Nov. 16 damage and Foley was taken
ul the principles upon which our Nation was lounded. For
enlry
of
the
Ray
attempted
a
vacant
house
on
Sucinto
traveling
south
driven
by
at 7 p.m. In the Cheshire to Vetera ns
lane
leading to-the cemetery
Memorial
that reason we can look to the future with. hope and
C.A .A. Office. Any person Hospital for treatm ent of
Young residence on Success cess Road known as the Michael R. Ryan, 25, Rt. 2,
Portland
and fililed to stop.
at
con lldence ...''
ellQible for .or receiv lng- injuries .
Road on Oct. 13. That time he "Carson property." Nothing Racine.
l
The
incident
is un~r Iniefvlces from t he Community
\
damaged a window screen.
vestigation•
''

.Notices, local briefs

12 STRING GUITAR
·'

The prosecution rested its
case at mid-morning today in
the murder trial of 33-yearold John Lewis Young of
~ason at Parkersburg .
The jury heard additional
testimony Thursday supporting the prosecution's
contention that Young actually wrote a confession
letter of his own free will.
This came in the second full
day of testimony in the case
Which is being held in Wood
County circuit court. Young
. is accused of m urdering
Mary Berry, a 58-year-old
~ason businesswoman last

Deer don't do well at all

BY WATER PIC

sg,95 PANTS EXTRA SIZES

•8.95

.

SHOWER MASSAGE

Pants in sizes 29 to 50. Shirts in sizes 14'12 to
20, so lid colors , Khaki 4 navy . dark olive ,
charcoal, forest green . Polyester cotton
blend, permanent press. Pants and shirts
match perfectly.

'6.95
'8.95 SHIRTS EXTRA SIZES
•7.95 .

•

In our new Hallmark Gift Center
on t~ first floor.

'7.95 SHIRTS REGULAR SIZES

G. E. 25" SOLID STATE

.

$52 tO $8450

~:.~~a:R HOME OR CAR

new Meigs High School.
Cha ncey was credited ' for

;Ne;~~~

SPECIAL SALE

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -~_..--~~----~------~
l
SPECIAL SALE

'

Our entire stock included In this sale,
regular and prewashed denims, basic and
fashion styles . Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Regular
prices $11.95 to $17.95.
.

Lay your choice away this weekend a_nd
save 20 per cent. We have over 100 styles to

Boys '4.95 Sport Shirts .................... '3.45
Boys '5.95 Sport Sh~rts .................... '~.1 5 !
Boys '6.95 spo
· rt Sh1rts ...... .............. 4.85 I

present and past. .

.

__
_________ _
'21.99 --·-:-;-:::~=~----------------~------s._~~.Y·-·_E~~-~.--0---~-.--.. -·~FOLK'
GUITARS
BOYS'
10 CHANNEL POLICE BAND
I

______

Cotton and polyester blends . Sizes B to lS,
solid colors. sfripes and neat patterns.

men.

•

BLUE DENIM JEANS
.

for Dad This Christmas

SPORT SHIRTS

..

-

+----HoWAbOOt,..fNN.
-· -· ,--·--1
. ---- .---------.

-·--,--~.._.--SPEc'7ALSALE-----

.••
•••
••
.

PRICE.

lL
72

1

1

'

Paper napkins, cups, paper plates,
table covers. Hollsewares, 1st floor.

1

•••

•

DISCONTINUED
1
.1

•

as head football coach and
athletic director ol the Meigs
High School, was one of II
out sta nd ing southeastern
Ohio men honored Thursday
night by the Southeastern
Ohio Regiona l Council during
its a nnual Awards Dinner at
the Ohio University Inn .
Amon g the honorees were
physicians . industrialists,
teachers and communi ty
leaders representing 10
counties.
Carl Dahlberg, executive
secretary of the Co un cil,
presided .
Outlining Chan cey's
achievements was · insurance
man William D. (Bill) Childs
of Middleport . Presenting the
award to Coach Chancey was
Attorney Bernard Fultz who
also made the presentations
to the other honorees .
Emersom:lEvans, Gallia
County industria li st and
busines sm a n, listed the
reasons why Dr . Thomas
Mor gan, surgeon ,
was
selecied to represent Gallla
·County.
Sp,e aking of Chancey ,
Childs stressed the coach's
outstanding contribution to
the
dev elopm ent
of
recreational facilities a t the

••

SPECIAL SALE

Council honors
Coach .Chancey
ATHENS
Cha rles
Chancey,endinghis lith year

•
•••

' ' w'SAli PRICES

COACH HONORED - Coach Charles Chancey, center, of Meigs High School, was
honored by the S&lt;Jutheastern Ohio Regional Council Thursday night. Bill Childs , left.
reviewed Chancey 'swork that brought regional recognition and Bernard Fultz, right, made
ihe presentation.

••

••

Save now on the Kimball piano of

POLYESTER YARD MATERIALS

BOYS' LONG SLEEVE

OHIO

~

KIMBAU PIANOS

t!

SPECIAL SALE

BANK

••
•••
•

-----'SP'Eoos'ALE-:----- ------------------------··--t---· -· -------------------·

SAVE 20%

HOME NATIONAL

"•

and

SPECIAL SALE

!j .BATTERY
OPERATED
ELECTRIC RAZOR

FINE QUALITY
POCKET KNIVES

Regular sizes and slims 8 to 18 plu s s tudent
sizes 26 to 30 . Regular and prewashed
denims .

RACINE

Regular

•
"

--·-·- ~~-c;~~~~:~----..,----·-·--:~J!.-----1

BLUE DENIM JEANS

RACIME

_

ON THE 3RD FLOOR
Really save on our entire stock of
toys for boys and girls. Fi sher Price,
Mattei , Playschool, Tonka.

SPECIAL SALE

.For
Meigs County
People

...--I
,. I

----~~_E_!~-~---

TOYS

Regular pri ce $2 .95 . School colors with
school names. Meigs , Southern. Eastern
and Wahama . One size fits all sizes.

University
women will
hear MU prof

America ' s~.fighting

dungarees, jackets, vests.
ex tra large sizes.

•1. 19 ASKEIN

_..._._...._...__.._.._._..

CARHARf BROWN DUCK

l b~~ksail~~~~~~~gt~~~~:v:;~~s~

variegated co lors , sparkle colors . Made by
Coats and Clark .

School name
toboggans

Clarence M. Williams, 68,

rJ salute

!

RED HEART 51.4'9

o!~~q~a~~ !!~~~o~~f~~!e~ in ~ ~~~~e~ ~~}t~~~~oi!A~~rs,

assured clear di stance
followin g an accident at 5:30
p.m . on US 35. six tenths of a
mile east of SR 325. Fellure's
car struck the rear end of a
vehicle dri ven by Nettle F .
Miller. 34, Oak~ Hill. There

Northup . was cited . to
Gallipolis Municipal Court
for driving left of the center
following an accident at 7: 10
p.m . on SR 775, three tenths
of a mile south of CR 17.
Troopers said the Williams
car sideswipeH a vehicle
driven by Cecil T. Clary, 38,
Scottown.
There
was
moderate damage.
A deer was struck ·in a
mishap at 7:45p.m. on CR 30
in Meigs County , one and .six
tenths miles east ol SR 7. The
PROF. MATZ .
animal ran into the path of a
car operated by Jimmy W.
Deem, 38, Racine. There was
minor damage. The deer ran
off as if unhurt .
A single car accident occurred at 12 :40 a.m. today on
the Fairfield-Centenary Rd.
where Robert R. Johnson , 19,
POINT PLEASANT Clair Northup, lost control &lt;Jf his
W. Matz, Jr .. Assoc. Prof. of car which ran oil the highway
Political Science at Ma rsha ll ilito a ditch . There was
U.'. will speak to the local moderate dama ge.
chapter of the American
A fina l accident occuiTed at
Ass ociation of Universi ty 6:48 a.m. .t.o day on the
Women, Monday , November Bulaville-Porter Rd . two
14, ,at 7:30 p.m. at Christ miles north of Georges Creek
Episcopal Ch urch . The pu blic Rd. where Joyce A. Bennett,
is invited .
25, Gallipclis, lost control of
His presentat ion , titled, her ca r while passing another
" Understandin g Glob a l veh icle on wet pavement. The
Hw1ger and What I Ca n Do." Bennett ca r st ruck a mailbox.
is part of the Mountain Issues utility pcle and light pole . :-lo
Forum , funded by the charges were filed.
Committee for Humanitites
and Public Policy in West
TAMPA. F la . lUPil
Virgima . The purpose of the
project is to enable schola rs Free. agent tight end Charles
in the humanities to lead Waddell was signed by the
discussions of public policy Tampa Bay Buccaneers ·
issues of concern to West Wedn esday and will be
available for Sunday's game
Virginians .
Everyone wishing to attend with the New York Giants .
Waddell
r e pla ces
who is not an AAUW member
qu
arte
rba
ck
Parnel l
should ca ll Mrs. Judson
Dickin:'l&lt;ln,
who
was
cut for
Brake at 675-3025 or Mrs.
the
second
time
this
year
by
Grant Stanley a( 675-2384.
the Bucs.

!

MEN'S 513.95

moderat e dama gE'. No charge
was file-d .
.,
Stant on Fellure. 73, BldweB, was cha rge d with
·
failure to stop
Wit· h'm th e

to l~se· rontrol of his ca r Th~
vehtcle ran off the hlgh\\a )
and overturned . There ""' ,

Prosecution rests in
Young's murder tria~

/

•"""
••
••

•

.Man confesses to string of entries

•

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