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•

10--The Daily Sentinel. ~hddleport- Pomero)' . 0 ., Monday. Nov. 14, 1977

·----------------------- HOSPITAL 'NEWS
BEIRUT, LEBANON - ISRAELi AND CHRISTIAN
rightist artillery shelled south Lebanon overnight and Beirut
newspapers today headlined Israel's warning of further
retaliation in case of more attacks on its settlements from
Lebanon. fnitial reports from the south said two persons were
killed and seven others ~·otmded in the owrnight shelling,
which lasted from Sunday afternoon until4 a.m. today .
For the first time in three mooths. rockets fell on Hasbaya,
a predominantly Druze to1011 in the Arquob area known as
Fatah Land . Meanwhile, Beirut newspapers reported Israel 's
warning that it would take all necessary measures to protect
its clti%ens and cootinue immediate and strong retaliati011s in
the event of furth er attacks, such as the Katyusha rocket
salvos oo oorth Israel that provoked last Wednesday 's air raid
oo _the Tyre area.

A.rtj.\ A.CAU.IN YA~

Veterans M•morlat Hospl\81

Betty Brinson. Roger Coates.

Saturday Admissions Marvin McGuire. Pomeroy ;

Ruby

Cooper ,

ool, BIG (jf_.{{

James

Craycraft, Ethan Davis, Dale
James Allen. Portland; Durkee, l.avonne E\•ans. Sue
Louise Burbridge. Albany. Ellen Fultz. Elma Goodnite,
Alene Head. John Henderson,
Saturday Discharges Ruth
Higginbotham. Charles
Ruby Brinager, William
Morris. Shirley Bishop, Jeffers, Mable Jewel. Gary
Agnes White. Robert Bishop, Lane, Cora Miller. John
Nibert, Gerald Patterson,
Patricia Collins.
Ethel Rainey. David Roach.
Sunday Admissions Settle.
Cory
Georgie Di'ehl, Pomeroy ; Marilene
Alvin Smith, Pomeroy ; Seymour. Doris Shook. Rosa
Elmer Althouse, Minersville; Spence. Jeni Stewart. Clair
Nancy Anderson, Mason; Turner. Heber Van Fossen,
Ethel Moo re. Letart, W. Va.; Ruth Vinson.
,-----.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I Daniel ThomBs , Point
tBlrths, Nov.llJ
Mr . and Mrs. James
Pleasant; , Ruby Leap,
- Proctorville; Foster Leap, Steinbeck, a son, Gallipolis.
tDiscbarges, Nov. l2)
Proctorville.
I
Lewis
Blake , Donald
)iunday Disc harges Bumgardner.
Mildred Clark,
Richard Baile'y , Dennis
EBER 5. GILLILAN
Wilbur , and Joe . al l Of
Goldie
Dobbins,
Trudy Hall,
Clark,
Marie
Watson.
James
.CHESTER - Eber Stanley Canton ; Rov of Chester . and
G•l l1lan , 85 , of Chester , died
Jacl\ of Reedsville- ; 28
Arn ol d, Esther Roberts, Darlene Hill, Paula King.
Saturda y
at
Veterans
grandch i ldren ; 18 great · James Allen , Travis O'Brien, William Lewis. Raymond
Memor ial Hospital. He wa s grandchildren , and several
Mrs.
Steven
Bertha Zamorano, Lucille Lieving,
pre-ceded in deatt1 b)' t'l i s
nieces ~nd nephews..
Maynard
and
daughter
,
Mams.
Dora
Smith.
Earl
parents , Francis Ma r i on
Funeral ser&gt;Jices wiU be at
Gillilan and Eli za Belt Hall I p .m . Tuesday at the Ew ing Van Meter.
Samuel McKinney, Barbara
Gillilan ;
two bro t he rs , Funeral Home with the Rev .
Rainey, Henrietta Saunders,
Wesl~y and Glen , clnd a son ,
Fret;Jand Norris offic iat ing .
Mollie Saunders, Mable
Holzer
Medical
Center
.
George , killed in WWII .
Bunal will be in Me igs
Shirley,
Ca rl Sibley, Jessica
(
Dlseharges
Nov.
II)
SUrviv ing are his wife ,
Mem ory Garden . Friends
Deborah Ann ; a daughter, may call at the funeral home
Jami Addis, Bernice An- Silvers. Lugi nger Slagle.
any t ime.
Freda Holsi nger , Chester ;
. derson, Priscilla ·B levins, Amy Stanley. Mary Wamssi)( sons, Francis , Ralph ,
Patty Boggs, Cathy Bowman, ley , James Waulk , William ·
Wheatdon, Betty Wheeler,
~ 1&lt;111'&lt;:0 ""' l'&lt;:l M 1&lt;01"" f&lt;&gt;l""' ""'1'&lt;:0 """l:l::l: IS::II:l::l: l:l::l: 1'&lt;:0 l'&lt;:l r&lt;:ll&lt;:i! ""'""' ~ r;;:&lt; I&lt;;&lt; I&lt;&gt; l&lt;:l&lt; ""' B::&lt;j Mrs. Richa rd Wiseman and

Area Death

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Smithson , John

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Smithson , Mrs. Charles Ward

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M (BdlrMths,NRov.l3) bo
r. an rs. oger Ab tt ,
a son, Porrieroy. Mr. and Mrs.
John Bush , a daughter,
Mason . Mr . and Mrs. Michael
Lieving, a son, The Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. James Shafer, a
daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Stewart. a
daughter, Middleport.

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Being Broke during the holidays may not be the
ideal way to get into that joyous spirit •• .SO don't
be caught red faced next year. Stop in and open
a Farmers Bank Christmas Ouh today.

tl:!

Thomas Nichols, New Haven,

~

and Willard Barnette, Point

~~~~~ -

~

Births - A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Bush, Mason,
~ and a daughter to Mr. and
~ Mrs.
William
Blain,
11. Gallipolis Ferry.

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Pay 5()4, $100, $21Xl, '300, '500, $1()00 or $2000
A Week For 49 weeks and we pay the
50th week for you.
Stop In Today and open vou.r Farman
Bank Christmas Club and Don't Be
·caught In the Reel Next Year.

John .Young
(ConUnued from page 1)

ii

~

ii

member jury, which consisted of seven women and

five men, held out during the
approximate six hours it

deliberated for a verdict of
~ second-degree
murder. The

ii source noted that the
ii majority of the jury was in
w· favor of a first-degree conviction.
.
Roll ~id that if Young iS
convicted on the · burglary

Farmers Bank

According to Roll, a person
is penalized if they have been
·convicted on . two felonies.
Young previously served
time on an armed robbery
charge.
The prosecuting attorney
expressed his gratitude
towards the West Virginia
State Police, the Mason
County Sheriff's and Mason
Pollee Chief Joe ·Young, for
their inVestigative work,

MP.mber Federal J)eposit Insurance Corporation

.
"

•
•

•••
"I've got him this time . Loan me some chips."

which resulted in the con·
viction.

•
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•

Notices, local ,.riefs
RACINE - The Southern
Athlet ic B.oos ters will meet at
7: 30 ton igh t at the high
school .
·

BOWLING
PomeroY Bowling lanes
Sunday Miners
Standings week of 10-30-77

-

w.

Country Bumpkins

L.

52 28
49 31
45 35

Hoi Shots

Sunday Duds

Alley Cats

40 40

Team No . 5
36 44
Team No. J
18 02
M~n · s high game Rick
fv\art in 17 1; Charles Searles

160 ; Jeff i\1\artin 153.
- Women 's high game Sheryl Gibbs 141 ; Rhonda
Gibbs 133 ; Ann Morris 132.
Men 's high series - Rick
Mart in 457 ; Charles Searl es
428 ; Jeff Mart in 386 .
Women 's high series Rhonda Gibbs 357 ; Sheryl
Gibbs 355 ; Ann Morr is 347 .
Team high game - Hot
Shots 282 ; T.ea m" No . 5 279 ;
Alley Cats 266.
Team hi gh series - Team .
NO. 5 763 : Team No. 3 738 ;
Hot Shots 731.

Sunday Miners
Standings week olll -6-77
w. L.
Hot Shots
55 ' 33
Country Bumpkins
52 36

Ser ies

High

-

Howard 483 ; Pal Betz
Jenny Whitlatch 406.

The Meigs County Human
Resource Counci l wil l ho ld ' a
noon
luncheo n
mee~ing
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn
beginn ing ~ ~ 12.
The 'Area Volunteer Fire
and E"me1'9ency Assn . wil l
meet Wednesday , Nov . 16 in
Pomeroy at 7: 30 p. m . l loyd
W . Ka czm areK . Tr a i n ing
Coordinator f or the Ohio
State Firemen ' s Train i ng
Academy . will present an
update on the Ac!ldem y and
possibly a demonstration of
the state's portable arson lab
and 1978 offlcers wi ll be
electecj .

RACINE - The Southern
Junior High School PTO will
meet at 7:30 p , m . Wednesda y
at the schoo_l_
._
I '
The

staff

at

Sou ther'n H i gh School i s
tak i ng or de rs t or 1978
yearbooks . Cost w ith name on
cover Is Sfl.50, without, S8. A
down pa yme nt of $4 Is
requ ired . Students are to
pla ce their orders wi th f'!'ors .
6aer, yea rbook adv isor , by
Wedne!iday .

ASK TO WED
•
Marriage licenses have!
been issued to Carlton Gene:
Petty, 46, Columbus, and;
Daisy Daugherty, 44, Rt. 1,•
Shade, and to Larry Roger1
Hoschar, 35, Pomeroy, an&amp;
Wilma
Hoschar,
29,:
Pomeroy.
·
SHOOTING SUSPECT
WAHREN, Ohio ( UPI) _ ;
Raymond
Black,
31 :
Centerville, was held at t~l
Warren County Justice :
Center over the weekend •
under$10,000 bond on charges••
of voluntary manslaughter in :
the fatal shooting of Matt !
Jones, 20, at his home on Ohio '
48 ~orth of Centerville.
~ :
The
Warren
County ;

APPEALS COMING
BOYS TOWN, Neb. (UPi j
- Boys Town is shipping out
2.5 million Christmas appeal
letters in hopes it can avoid
dipping into its endowment
coroner said Jones was dead :
lund.
Saturday
night when he :
William Ramsey, deputy
arrived
at
his hWle. Police •
director for development,
said
Ule
shooUng
resulted :
said the letters stress "our
new services - the ··research 'from an altercatioo, and thecase
remained
under
center and the institute."
investigation.

r..-..---..-..--..-..----:----------_.--..-----..---·
ve a r book

1

ELBERFELD$ .

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Open

Monday ,

Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday 9:30 to
5 p.m. Friday 9:30
to 8 p. m.
Saturday 9:30a .m . to
5 p.m.

a .m.

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Lena
428 ;

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed

1

League
Nov. 6, 1977
Standings

Team '
Tom's Carry Out
Jack's Dalry Bar
Town Kiln
·

Cl ine 's Cons t ruct ion

Pis.
56
55
48

40
39

26
Gibbs' Grocery
High individual game
Men, Ed Voss 205. women,
Marlene Wilson : men, Ed
Voss 191, women , Lena
Howard 176; men , Larry
Dugan, women. Betty Smith
175 .
High series - Men, Ed
Voss 565. women, Betty
Whitlatch 500 ; men, Larry
Dugan 528, women , Marlene
Wilson 486 ; men, Darrell
Dugan -499, wori'len Max ihe
Dugan -470.
Team ~lgh game - Cline's
Construction 699 .
Team high series - Town
Kiln 1982 .

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SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR ON
THE 2NO FLOOR- GOWNS, PAJAMAS, ROB~S.

l ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
~-----_.._.,___.._.,_.._.._._...._

COURT SUITS FILED
Two suits asking divorce,
for partition of real estate,
and one for dissolution of
marriage have been filed in
comrpon pleas court.
Filing for divorce were
Kenneth Reed, Racine,
against Lakie · Reed, Long
Bottom, a~d Ellen K- Bussey,
Coolville, against Robert E.
Bussey, Springfield. Robert
A. HuMel, Middleport, filed
for partilion of real estate
against June Safranek,
Pennsville, Ohio, et al., and
Gary Johnson, Racine and
Sandra Johnson, Racine,

filed lor dissolution of their
marriage.
''

State and local elected
officials were on hand in
Pomeroy Monday to help
send off the first new transit
vehicle acquired by;; the
Appalachian Ohio Regional
Transit Association AORTA )
through a grant from the
Federal Highway Ad·
ministration (FHW A) .
The
1977
Carpente.r
"Metro" bus, powered by an
International
Ha rvester
engine and chassis, features

high-back seats, and wheelchair lift. The vehicle seats 25
passengers and has ample
room for freight.
A brief ribbon • cutting
ceremony was held at 2::W
p.m., Monday at the Blue and
Grey Restaurant in Pomeroy.
The bus then left the
Pomeroy bus terminal for
Athens on its scl\eduled af·
ternoon public service routes.
Restoration of public bus
service between Athens and
Pomeroy was started in late
July of this year. Usin~ a 12

passenger van, AORTA, wlth

the help of the FHWA Rural
Transportation

Demon·

stration Grant and the con·
tribution of driver's wages by
the Meigs County Commissioners, began four dally
roundtrips betw een Athens
and Pomeroy.
AORTA's efforts to expand
Its Pl!bllc service through the
FHW A grant was heavily
endorsed by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, the
Meigs
Co unty
Commissioners. the Meigs
Ministry, tlie Middleport •
Pomeroy Rotary Club, the
Meigs County Welfare
Department
and
Co ngressman Clarence
Miller's office.
The bus system will .be
expandfng its public service
to Gallia. Jackson and Vinton
counties in 1978. A total of
seven other new vehicles will
be acquired by AORTA
through the FHWA grant.

r-.._._~-'~'"""'~'""'·~'@;:~-,:,:,:,._~~_.-,,

_ _ _ _ ,._,__....____.,_..,._~---·-.J

By United Press1nteroatloual
LONDON - BRITISH . TROOPS TODAY FOUGHT . A
series of small Loodon fires alone a day after striking
fU'efighters left tbeir pi~ket lines to help them battle a hospital
blaze. More Ulan 100 patients, many of them elderly and bed·
ridden, were evactiated Monday night from St. Andrew's
hospllal in east London when fire broke out in a basement
storeroom. No me was injured.
Adozen strikers responded to a police request lor belp by
rushing to the hospital in their private cars, taking special
breathing equipment with them. Alter helping :W S&lt;J!diers put
out Ule fire, tbey resumed their pickeling outside Uleir fire
station. An 86-year-&lt;&gt;ld man died in a fire at his home in
· Scotland Monday to become tbe first fatality since Britain's
35,000 firefighters began tbeir first official nationwide strike.
LONDON - QUEEN EUZABETH'S ONLY daughter,
Princess Anne, gave birth today to a 7-pound, 9 ounce sonftfth in line to the the British throne, the first grandchild of a
ruling sovereign to be born a commoner.
Buckingham Palace said Princess AMe - Mrs. Mark
Phillipa - was '1ine" and resting comfortably after giving
birth at 10:46 a.m. at St . Mary 's Hospital in the Paddingtoo
area of Loogoo . The 27-year-&lt;J!d princess' husband, car.eer
army officer Capt. Mark Phillips, was present at the delivery .

MANILA, PHILIPPINES - RESCUERS today pulled
three more bodies from the rubble of one of the worst hotel
fires in the Philippines' history, pushing the death toll to 47,
officials said. The fire broke out in the early morning hours
Monday at Ule seven.,story Filipinas Hotel across the street
. from the U. S. Embassy. while Manila was being battered by
Typhoon Kim wiUlliO mph winds. The typhoon itself killed 21
people.
Rescue wockers today searcbed the gutted structure of the
hotel m Manila Bay for more viclims while medical specialists
worked to identify the recovered bodies, most of them believed
to be foreign tourists. Amang the dead identified by the
Philippine Red Cross were an American, Kenneth Charles
Eccleston, Riverdale, Md. and three Australians , Police said
many of the bodies were charred beyond recognition and there
may have been a number of pocple in the hotel who bad not
registered.
, WASffiNGTON- THE AIR FORCE ACADEMY doesn't
mind if its women cadets are pregnant or not - just·lls long as
they're not married. A new regulation issued Monday by !be
office of Air Force Secretary John Stetson is a departure from
Ule rules for the other military academies. It will still bar
woman cadets from gettingmarried while in school, but if they
become pregnant they still may finish their education and
become officers.
There's a catch. Because of tbe regulation against a cadet
having any obligation to dependents; she would have to give uP
her Infant for adoption to remain at tbe academy, a spokesman
said. The spokesman .said the change was made because of
charges the academy failed to give women equal opportunity
with male cadets, who could father a child without being in
jeopardy of losing their status at the academy.

Monday, Nov. 14 thru Sunday, Nov. 20

ALL BEEF MEXICAN

BURRITIO.
REG. 95'

SPECIAL
PRICE

49~

Preacher, cold sober, was
eyeball to eyeball with
a great, hairy creaf:ure
OCALA, Fla. (UPI) -

A 67-year-&lt;J!d Baptist

minister who says he hasn't had a drink in 40 years

This special is c:IHered to you to acquaint you with
the ~oodness and economy of our homemade

Melucan food.

No limit to quantity of purchase. OHer
Drive~ In or· Carry-Out Service Only.
'

good tor

answer questions from at·

NEW BUS IN SERVICE - Attending the ribbon cutting ceremony
held Monday afternoon to inaugurate the use of the new AORTA bus
were, I tor, Christopher Custer, representing Cong . Clarence Miller;
Theodore T. Reed , Jr., GleMa ·Rurrunel of the Salvation Army; Glen
Smtih, director of the Marietta Division of the Ohio Department of
Highways; Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews 1 and Clyde Bronson,

IJVews. ~ H~.i~ Bri~f~

ASHFORD, W.VA.- A SQUIRREL HUNTER stalking
game in woods near this Boone County town Monday
discovered the wreckage of a plane and the body of a man
(Continued on PIP 11)

Special of the Week

COVINGTON, Ky. (UP!)The owners of the Beverly
Hill s Supper Cl ub have
claimed Fifth Amendment ·
rights
against 1 self·
incrimination in refusing to

tells how he stood eyebell-to~yeballlor 30 seconds .with
a great, hairy creature in the Ocala National Forest.
The Rev. S. L. Whatley, pastor of the Fort McCoy
Baptist Church, ~id he spotted the thing out of the
corner of his eye while he was cutting wood with a
chain saw three weeks aKo.
Whatley recalled Monday ; "It was standing
'upright, in the middle of some palmetto bushes, and
that sapsucker was at least -7'h, maybe 6 feet tall."
The minister said the creature "had dark, lighter·
than-black hair on Its head and chest, not much on its
anns, and none on its face. It had kind of a flat face, a
flat nose, its eyes were sunken in its sockets."
Whatley said he quickly and quietly went back to
his truck to get an ax because "me and that creature
was going to mix It up," but by the time he returned
from the truck the Creature had disappeared.
He hastened to add thai he hasn't had • .drink in 40
Jyears:

at y

e
VOL. XXVIII . NO. 150

Athens Couhly Commissioner and chairman of the Boa rd of Trustees of
AORTA, who cut the ribbon; Meigs Commissioner Henry Wells; and
Fred Crow, president of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. Holding
the ribbon were Daniel Jindra, owner of the Blue and Grey Resta urant;
the local agent for AORTA, and David Vaughan executive director of
AORTA.
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LOS ANGELES - FOG ROUJNG IN FROM the ocean
ca.me tD the aid of firefighters battling a brush fire, believed
set by an arS&lt;Jnist, which flared through woodsy Topanga
Canyon Mmday and destroyed six homes.
The billie burned through more th811 600 acres, forcing
evacoaiion ofhundreds of residents, many leading tbeir horses
- commoo in tlie canyon n!'llr the Pacific Coast west of Los
Angeles - to safety, Firefighters expresaed optimism they
, could control the blaze tQday if the winds, which diffiinished at
nightfall, remained light. They were helped by the blanket of
moist fog !bat began rolling in from the ocean, five miles to tbe
south, during the night.

Boys ond girls ore
making bedtime their best
time in these cuddlesome
sleepers in eosy care
fabrics! Stock up nowl

charge, he could receive a

two to 10 year sentence. In
addition, he ""id his office
would file a repeater statute,
which could add five more
years onto the burglary
conviction.

$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor .·

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R. C. Bottling Co.

I

POMEROY, OHIO

'

Pleasant Valley Hospllal
Discharges Robert
IS! Smith,
Point Pleasant; Sunday Duds ( ti e)
52 36
48 40
U Amanda
Jefferson, Alley Cats
Team No . 5
38 50
~ Pomeroy; Evelyn Litchfield, Team No . 3
19 69
R Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Clyde
Men 's high· game - Jeff
~ Asbury, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Martin 169 ; Rick Martin 165 ;
Charles Searles 164.
Garland
Mayes,
.
Gallipolis
111
Women 's high game ~ Ann
~- Ferry; Harmonica Gerlach, Morris 147 : Ann Morris 139 ;
u Buffalo; Mrs. Garfield Sheryl Gibbs 127 .
Men's high series - Rick
~ Blazer , Gallipolis; Lydia
tr Arnell, Apple Grove; lola Martin 4.56 ; Jeff Martin 426 ;
11. Conard, New Haven; Mrs. Charles Searles 424.
Women 's high series - Ann
~ Bobby Kinalrd, Southside; Morris 403; Sheryl Gibbs 373 ;
R Mrs.
Clarence Logan, Sue Searles 323.
Team h igh game - Hot
71 Henderson; Mrs. David
Shots
281 ; Team No . 5 279 ;
tr Hindy, Point Pleasant ;
Alley Cats 261.
~ Walter Buntz, Cheshire; Dr.
Team high series - Alley
u . Ahmet Lengerll, Bluefield; Cats 762 ; Team No . 5 747 ;
~ Rebecca Winter, Ripley; Country Bumpkins 744 .
ii Angela Saunders, Bidwell;
Wednesday Afternoon
li Christopher Young , Mason;
League
tr Harry Estep, Jr., Mason;
November 2, 1977
u Uoyd Darst, Cottageville;
W L
50 22
ii Gilbert Buzzard, New Haven; Farmer'S Bank
Ed's Cr. Gro. No . 6 50 22
ii Dorothy Bush, Gallipolis Ruth's
Beauty ShoP. 37 35
11! Ferry; Ronald Clendenin,
WMPO
' 35 37
~ West Columbia; Joyce Whitt, Fraley's Logging Co. 26 46
u Point Pleasant; Glendora Ed's Cr. Groc. No . 1 18 54
High Game
Lena .
ii Grimm, Point Pleasant; Howard
187 and 158; Selby
W Pearly Bradley, Letart; Manley 154
. .
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Pennington , Brian Preece ,

g Jillian

W

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Binion ~ Lillian Bumgardner ,

Mrs. James Hysell and
daughter , Mrs. Charles
U -Johnson
and daughter ,
71 Victoria Larck, Alice Mayes,
~ Sharon McCallister, Wanina

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(Discharges, Nov. 13)
Harlan Bailey, Robert

)i and son, Barbara Witt.

~

~

~~~~~-s~~:,~~allon.

so:,
~ a daughter, Gallipolis. Mr.
f,{
and Mrs. James Knight. a
~ ~ughter, Ravenswood, W.

~

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Owners
take 5th
rights

Send-off given
new AORTA bus

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

torneys representing victims
of the May 28 fire at the
Northern Kentucky nightclub.
In response, the commi!tee
of lead counsel for the fire
victims have asked federal
and state court judges to
compel testimony from the
Richard Schilling family .
Th e panel of lawyers
complained to the courts of
their inability to take
depoSition s from Richard
Schilling Sr. and his sons
Richard Jr. , Ronald and
Raymond . " Each of the
(Continued on pqe 12)

•

enttne
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

::::;:;:;:::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, falr Thursday
and Friday and a chance of
showers Saturday. Highs
wUI be In the 50s and lows
wUI be In the mid or upper
30s.
:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;::::

Weather

Sadat eager to begin
holy Israeli mission
United Press lnternatlonal
Egyptian President Anwar
Saat said today his proposed
trip to Israel is "a holy job"
and he will make it as soon as
possible after receiving an

Chance of showers tonight .
lows between 40 and 45.
Showers likely Wednesday,
highs to the upper 50s.
Probability of precipitation
10 percent today, 50 percent official Israeli invitation
tonight , 60 percent Wed- through Ule United States. He
~id he would not fear for his
nesday .
safety in Israel.
But he empbasized he will
be speaking for Egypt only
and not for other Arabs when
he addresses the Israeli parFREE CLOTliiNG
liament, the KneSS!!!, and the
The GaUia - Meigs Com- ~im of the visit will ·be to
munity Action Agency free explain his views and not to
clothing day for low income negotiate any agreement.
persons will be held Thursday
Sadat spoke as Israeli
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Premier Menahem. Begin
agency's center located in the took the first steps toward
former high school building inviting Sadat, swnmoning
in Cheshire.
the U.S. envoy to Israel to

discuss the relaying of a
formal invitation to the
Egyptian leader. He ~id he
would address the parliament
today on the proposed Sadat
visit.
The Egyptian president
told a 14-rnember delegation
from the U.S. House of

do the impossible to break the'
vicious circle in which Arabs
and Israelis have been
moving for 30 years. This is
for the sake of our future
genera lions. Hence the
holiness of the mission. If I do
not try to break this vicious
circle , God will bring me to

Representatives he views the
visit as part of preparations
for a reconvened Arab-I$raeli
peace conference af Geneva.
"I consider the visit a holy

Asked whether he would
fear for his personal safety in
Israel, Sadat sn apped

job," Sadat said. "We must

account. · and so .will future
generations."

Sadat's offer to visit Israel
He said " Whenever the for peace talks and said be
invitation arrives I shall be. would greet Ule Egyptian
ready to go because we leader at Ule airport.
should not lose time on
Today, he sununoned the
procedural arrangements U.S. ambassador to discuss
(for
the
Geneva relaying a formal invitation
conference).''
to Sadat. Both leaders said
Israeii Premier Begin said they would rely on the United
Monday he would send a Siates to convey such a
"Never."

formal , written invitation to

request,

Sadat through the American
ambassadors· in · Israel and
Egypt.
Begin Monday welcomed

countries are still techniCally
at war and do · not have
diplomatic relations.

Ice faulted in
two accidents
'

Gavin men win
cash for ide'as

West Virginian
loses contest
"th Ji
po ceman

the

two

Paid-up hospitalization plan
offered Middleport workers

A new policy under which agreed to advertise for bids but no changes are being .
hospitalization insur.ance for on the insurance program. made In the river part of
village employes will be paid
Mayor Fred Hoffman in· the facility . Council
from 1978 revenue sharing dicated that at least 10 out of charges lhat the dust and
funds was approved by 13 village employes are in- nolso from the facility
Middleport Village Council in terested in the insurance would be detrimental to
regular session Monday coverage. Several have other Middleport.
Mayor Hoffman said
coverage and a plan will be
night.
·
worked out to provide Some • Middleport is eligible for a
Co~ncil President Marvin
ice caused two traffic
Acoal truck driver escaped Kelly
proposed
the other benefit for those whb do new HUO program caUed
accidents this morning at the injury in an accident at 11 hospitalization insurance for not wish to be covered by the "Urban Development Action
same location on SR 325 and a.m. Monday on SR 553, two village workers and it was plan adopted by the village. Grant Progra m " which
554 near Rio Grande.
miles qorth of SR 7. State
Bids from companies in- provides funds for villages in
The Gallia • Meigs Post troopers said Kenneth R.
terested in providing the which industry is interested
FINAL PICKUP
State Highway Patrol said BraMen, 25, Crown City, lost
coverage are due by Nov. 30. in establishing plants. The
Final week of leaf pickup
the first occurred at 7;10 a.m. control of his truck when the
Upon the suggestion of grants would provide money
Is being held this week In
when Charlotte A. Beach, 42, rear axle broke. The vehicle
Councilman Carl Horky it · for ·services the cornm unity
Middleport. No regular
Vinton , going east, lost loaded with coal, ran off the
was also agreed to spend would have to have in order to
schedule Is being followed.
control of her car when it road and overturned. There
$1,200 of federal revenue help attract the industry. ·
If residents have leaves to
struck a sheet of ice and was moderate damage.
sharing funds for plat Applica tions can be filed
be picked up, please rake
slammed into a bridge
Debra Wilkenson, 25,
plaMing on property which is every three months under the
them to the curb and call
abutment.
-Peebles, was eited to
being considered for an- program and applications are
99%-3145 or 992·5711 between
One-minute later, an auto Gallipolis Municipal Court
nexation to Middleport and . to be filed by Jan . I, the
driven by Gregory B. l~acs, for failure to stop within
8 a.m. and-4 p.m.
$700 for a lour-way portable mayor said.
16, Rt. 1, Vinton, went out of assured clear distance
Mayor Hoffman also an· ·
radio for the water depart,
control on the same ice. His following an accident at 2:40
noun~ed that a represenment.
vehicle also struck a bridge p.m. on SR 588, west of
Council went on record
tative from Columbia Gas of
abutment.
Gallipolis. The patrol said the
as protesting coal tipple
Ohio will be present at the
Wilkenson vehicle ·struck the
next meeting to discuss a new
and coal loading facilities
· right side of a car operated by
contract with the village . The
al CUlton, W. Va., and wlll
Vernon Simms, 26, Gallipolis.
notify the U. S. Corps of
mayor said the Farm Home
CHESffiRE - Four em· Engineers of Its protest. II
Administration has advised
p!oyees of the General James was reported lbat ad·
that Middleport is now
M. Gavin Plant have received juslments are being made
eligible to file a full apcash awards for contributions In the piai!B for the faclllly
plication for a grant on the
in the "Operations Im'
• provement" program of the
American Electric Power
WI
System.
. The four ~re Ralph L.
A young _ motorist, ap· , Matthews, assistant yard
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt again today parently attempting to elude supervisor,
Pomeroy; invited area residents to stop a pursuing Rutland police Donald
L.
~rstman ,
by his office to pick up free officer, lost control of his car production superintendent,
pamphlets made available at 10:53 p.m. Sunday and Point Pleasant; Michael D.
through \he Operation Crime crashed athwart a ditch .
Kamman . performance
He was registered as Jack engineer, Gallipolis, and
Alert Program administered
Black sa id his company
by the Department of H. Shiflet, 21, Rt. 2, Letart, W. David A. Eads, maintenance
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
would
continue to burn Ohio
Economic and Community Va., who, officers said, was supervisor, Point Pleasant. executive of the Ohio Power
co
al
under the state's
traveling west out of Rutland
Cash a warda are given to Co. said · today fed eral
Development.
proposed
sulfur emission
Protection
"an especially valuable on CR 13. He went into a employees by AEP for ideas Environmental
plan
but
pointed
out that the
private
driveway,
lost
conwhich improve safety, im· Agency sulfur dioxide
pamphlet is the Inventory
plan
has
not
been
accepted by
trol,
and
hit
the
ditch,
prove operating ·conditions, emission standards would
. Record of Valuables," s,ald
the
federal
EPA.
damaging
his
radiator.
or reduce operating ex- for ce
it
to
import
the sheriff. ''The pamphlet
Ohlo Power is the state's
Police cited him on charges penses . These inn'ovations "substa ntial " amounts of
has space to record all In- ·
largest
user of Ohio coal and
of
reckless
operation
and
often result in financial lowsulfur coal from other
formation on property in the
in
Ohio,
owns the Gavin Plant
fleeing
an
officer.
The
case
is
·home, IIBting make, mndel,
savings being passed on to states.
in
Ga
llia . County, the
docketed
for
Rutland
William A. Black, vice
the consumer. These ideas
and serial number.
Mlllikingum
River Plant near
mayor's
court.
are published in a system· president of Ohio Power ,
"This information is of
Beverly
and
one
of Ulree units
wide magazine so other made th e stateme nt in
tremendous assistance in
NOW YOU KNOW
Plant in
at
the
Cardinal
time of a burglary. II can be
Until the 17th century, facilities in the system can remarks prepared for
.
Jefferson
County
:
uselul in case of a theft in the European hosts seldom benefit from them. The cash delivery to a bearing on
Black said if the fede~al
home immediately to locate provided table knives to their awards were presented to the suifur emissions held by the
EPA
standards are imposed
recipients
by
J
.
w
.
Lizon,
Ohio
Environmental
and identify missing ar· dinner guests, wh~ brought
it
!'luld
back t¥ company
Gavin
Plant
manager.
•
Protection
'!'.gency.
ticles," he sB.i(l.
their own utensils. .

Valuable
pamphlets
available

since

Powell St. sewer project and
that an application for an
additional $60,000 for the
project has been filed with
the Appalachian Regional
Commission.

A public meeting on Nov . 29
was aMounced at Middleport
Village Hall to discuss flood
insurance and flood maps.
The report of Mayor
Hoffman for October showing
receipts of $1,006.50 in fines
and fees and $101 in merchant
police collections lor a total of
$1,167 .SO was accepted.
Council agreed lo place an
additional light in the Mid·
d!eport Community Park to
make policing it easter and
discussed again a danger
area on Middleport Hill.
Council members will meet
at the location Saturday
evening to de\ermine what
steps can be taken to provide
a safer situation for
motorists.
Attending tlie meeting were
Mayor Hoffman , Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate, and
council members, Kelly.
Horky, William Walters and
Allen Lee King.

Ohio Power may have
to import_clean coal
into a compliance corner
from which the only
alternative would be to
import '' substantial''
quantities of low.,sulfur coal.
"If the Ohio EPA does not
move quickly to finalize its
emission standards and
promptly seek federal EPA
approval, " said Black, uwe

and other utilties and
industries will 'Qe required to
make irrevocable
commitments of millions ol
dollars within the next
several mooths on the basis
of the
federal
EPA
.,.
standards.ll

..

�•

2-The Dati)' Semmel, \hddlepon-Pomer&lt;•) 0. l'uesd,t) ;.;,,,._ 15, 1977

'tfl

Carter welcomes Shah for oil, weapons talks
By JOHN F. BARTON
WASHINGTON \ !:lP! I
Wtth moce than 1.000 lraruan
demonstra tors
&lt;'hanl!ng
outside the Wh1te House.
Prestdent Ca rter toda\'
welcomed !ran 's • Shah
Mohanuned Reza Pahlav1 for
talks on " eapons and 011
The Secret Sen 1ce and
DIStrict of Colwnbta Pollee
bra ced
for
possible
con fr ontati ons between
cnllcs and supporters of the
shah's ~ron control of h1s min ch countr) and his qll&lt;'st for
s o pht st l rated
U S

fan•tte

across

Penns' h·a ma A\ enue m fr(lnt

of the \\'lute House The)
earned s1gns and chanted

"do"n w1th the shah"
Across the street. r1ght
out.s1de the ~ron Whtte House
fence . a few hundred shah

•

Assassinations continue
at hot pace in Ethopia
NAIROBI, Ken) a (\JP! )- The assassmation of a
member of Eth10p1a's nuh lar) counctl one dav after
the exe-cuUon of the nauon's No 2 man has deepened a
Marmt po" er struggle !hal lS threatenmg to tear the
rap1 tal of Addis Ababa apart
Etluop1a RadiO sa1d Monda\ that "antl-r., olullonartes gunned down Lt Solomon Gessesse, a
member of the provu;tonal militar} adrmnistral!On
counc•l. oc Oergll&lt;' the prenous rught
A bitter struggle hes ahead Imposters must be
ellffimated. ' tbe broadcast sa1d, adding that the
mil•tatl bourgeois class" must be "cleaned up wtth

weapona r y

The shah has bought
btlltons of dollars m U S JNS,
radar and other weapons But

Senate Democa ll c Leader
Robert B)rd and ot her
lawmakers have demanded
that Carter keep tus pronuse
to cut down exp orti ng
weapons to !ran and other
countrtes
An hour befoce the m•d·
mornmg meenn g more than
1.000 chantmg ) oung anti shah demonstrators- many
exchange students and man)
masked - marched m La-

Square

the 1 re\'olutiona rv sword "

The k1llmg came I be da) after Lt . Col Atnafu
Abate the No 2 man m the Oergue. "as executed for
antl-re\ oluuonar) actlvttLes, diploma tic sources m
AddiS Ababa reported
It was unclear If the two deaths were related , but
the sources predicted more killings and poht1cal
assass1nauons - already regular occurrences m
Ethmpta

Hospital News
Holzer Medical Center
I Discharges. No. Ill
Eva Barcus, Floyd Bennett , Fan Blackburn, Mrs
Dand Brtsker and daughter .
Sara Clark. Stella Clark,
Lloyd Dea rm g, Harol d
D•llon. John E1 ans. Charles
F1tch. Avonelle Hammond,
Kathr yn Jenkms Ne llie
Jordan, Sharon Kno pp ,
Donald Rees. Mabel Sh~e!ds,
Lavad a S"mdler, Bet sy
Weaver, Thomas Yeartan
(Births, Nov . 14)
Mr and Mrs Charles
Waugh, a son Crown Ctty

Milton, a nd James Hamnck,
Pomt Pleasant

suppor ters held a more
demonstratiOn
subd ued
Many were elderly persons
The diSSldent.s satd the
masks were ·'to protect us
from tdenllflcatlon by the

Sava k" tlrantan secret
pollee ).
The cr~tics point to what
they call the shah 's
preoccupatiOn with nuhtary
hardware, nuclear power and

,

·Cards wrn

3- Tbe Dati)' Senune, M1ddleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Tuesday. Nov. 15. 1977

other costly projects they
claun he has solar failed 1n
spendtng billions of dollars to
change relatively pruntllve
Iran

into

lndust nalized,
power.

a

By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
IRVING, Texas (UPI )
One of the nasttest, bttterest,

maJor

edu ca ted

cussmgest

' li~tle

thriller '

'The Mousetrap' turns 25
By Arturo Gonzalt&gt;z. Jr

LONDON

- &lt;NEA l-

When
1'11 ~
Mousetrap"
slipped almost unobtruSively mto London's West
End thea ter world Pxactlv a
quarh.• r century ago this
month . Bntam 's Ehzabcth
\\ d~ JU~t a Wt'C s !Jp of ,1 g1rJ
not \ Ct ofr 1 ~1d ll \' t.•ro wn rd
and Ha rr,:. Trurl1an was a
ld me duck Pn•s 1dcnt
Th1s November 25. "The
Mousetrap · turns 25, mamtcHmng 1ts Unl' ha llenged
re1gn as the longest eontmua ll~ ru nn mg Eng hs h l~ln­
g uagt• play 111 h 1stor) The
previous champton, a Lo:s
Angeles Theater Mart pro-

ma) lead the

nation, but on a stroll

around the Wlute House
grounds 1t seems to be
prestdentlal grandson
Jason Caner who shows
the way.

~

'

""r\

ductiOn called 'The Drunk·
ard · folded up a ft er 9, H7

hterans Memorial Hospttal
performan ces
· Th e
Adrnllted - Anna liar- Mouse trap · Zipped by thts
•
tenbach, Mmersvtlle. Walter prev1ous record- holder alAsbury, Rutland , La wrence most h" o years ago. Thus
Donohuer Pomero&gt; : Patncta fa r tts viewers have perused
160 tons of programs . eon- ..
Hysell , • Pomeroy. General sumed
mort" than a null!Oil _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _.;__ _ _ __
Hall , Rac1ne , M1Idred IntermiSSIOn tee cream!':i and
Barne tt. P omero y. Be rile guzz led a lmost 600 , 000 months lt s prov1ded him
The play ha ~ turned no
Wyatt, Middleport : Goldte glasses of lemon and orange "'th a healthv hveh hood ~erformers mto cclcbnllc~.
Denney. WilkeSVIlle , Edtth squash
ever ::; mce. arld JObs for mtercshngly Only lheha rd
" The Mousetrap· may go seven consecutive d1 rectors
Blevm s, Dexter, Charles
AttenboroUgh, the recent ell'When VISitors - most of rector of A Br1dge Too
Htlt on, Port land, Myrtle on foreve r, " smiles Peter
\
Hayes , Pomeroy; Earl Saunders . the play 's now them Americans - come to Far." s tands out a s recoggray~ ha1red prod ucer W1th
mzable
among
the
a
I
mos
t
London
.
"
Saunders
says,
Cla rk , Reedsville ; Bessie
only ft ve yea 1s' yo uthful the- 'theJ- have a s1mple hst of 140 performers who have
Musser, Middleport.
atnca l expenence m 1952, he
must-sees' that Includes the over the years, stepped mto
' DIScharged Belva took the as&gt;~gnment of put- Changmg of the Gua rd , the play's e1ght spea kmg
Moh ler, Ketth Searles , tmg on a 'httle thnller" by Westmmster Abbey, the pa rts The longest s urvival
Wilham Stevens, Nettle Agatha Chmtte whiCh he Tower - and ou r play record by any smgle perPLEASANT VALLEY
expected would run about 14 We're sold out at mos t per- former has been 11 years
DISCHARGES - George Randolph
forma nces, except for some Saunders reg ularly r ecasts
McCoy, Glen wood; Nellte
rare mid-week matmees m the play to keep the perfprBennett , Pomt Pleasant,
wmter ' · Two hundred thou- mances fresh
Elbert Hall, Mt Alto , John
sand people see the show
" The Mousetrap 1s · No·
Albright, West Co lumbta.
each year m London
vember 25 btrthday party
William Br o wntng ,
Another person "ho 's promtses to be a ghttenng
made a very mce ltv mg out affat r , w1th 2S candles on a
Ga!hpolts , Thelma ,Wat·
of th1s seemmg ly mdest r uc- huge ca ke for more than
By KENNETH R. CLARK
terson, Apple Grove; Mrs
ttble detective s tor y I S 1,000 g uests T V cameras
United Press International
Ann Legg, Pomt Pleasant.
Mathew
Prichard , Mtss and poppmg flash bulbs wall
DEVIL MADE HER DO IT: Comedian Fhp Wilson 1s the
Mrs Charles Buck, RobertsChn
s
t1e'
s
godso n The
what wtll look verv
burg, Cla rence Bater, latest to run afoul of Call forma's so-ealled "Marvm dectston," world-fa mous writer or 80 record
much hke a gala opemng
Mason; Kenneth Ashworth , which proVIdes fanner gll'Jfrlends and mtstresses' wtth thr111ers never made a cent mght , rather than the
Ashton , Edison Putney , Pomt aluno ny and property nghts
from her play , s 1gmng over. 10,400th performance of
Rosy lin Taylor IS sumg Wilson m Los Angeles- for $12,500 a before the first mghl, all her what the London Times m
Roger
Pleasant , Mrs
Shamblm and daughter, month and half hts property She says she' gave up a weekly proceeds to the young Ia d 1952 s a td was an ·•elaHar\[ord. Wilham Gygax , teleVlslOn show and newspaper column tn Mtanu to move m He now hves elegantly wtlh borate ly s ktllful scheme to
Pomt
Pleasant ,
Enc w1th hiiD and fill hiS "domestic., emottonal and economtc his family m a Glamorga n- keep us guessmg "
The g uess mg has co nhn ~
CWSE MATCH for ber own fme ha~r , the fme strands
Thacker , Pomt Pleasan t , needs" tn February, 1973 The arrangement ended m 1975 The shire m a nor ho use buill m
the
1700s,
ratsmg
sheep
ued, non-s top as after each
Cookie
Wegman ts exatnll1mg are actually plated w~res
deciSion
lS
named
for
actor
Lee
Marvm,
whose
former
Guy Gamson, Robertsburg ,
F'or both Saunders a nd f1nal cu rtain the character
which
are
the baSis of the memory system ofthe computer
won
the
smt
that
set
the
precedent
mistress
Angela Powell, Pomeroy
Prtchard, there tS the ha ppy of Detective Sergeant
used
in
the
Space Shuttle mam-.,ngme controller Each of
Keith Ferrell , Ga lllpohs
prospect that tf Dame Trotter always steps stagethe
pictured
memory boards con tams 272 of the 002-mch
JAIL
FOR
EVEL·
It's
stx
months
m
Jail
and
three
years'
Ferry. Cy nthta Fletcher,
Agatha 's perpetual malton front and urges the audtence
diameter w1res Space Shuttle engine computer is
probatiO n for Eve! Kmevel, who adrn1ts he used a basebaU bat money-makmg machme to leave \Uth 1ts hps sea led
produced m St. Petersburg Fla., by Honeywell's Aviontcs
to cnttc1ze a book wntten by Sheldon Saltman Knievel says ever does begm to slow down as to whom the klller IS
DivtslOn for Rockwell InternatiOna l.
"Eve I Kmevel on Tour" lS "pornography" and ·•a vtc1ous he n (wh1ch seems htgh!y unlikeWmston Churchill had no
But Supenor Court Judge Edward Rafeedmg calls IU:uevel's ly ) there's sttll one more trouble solv1ng the plot,
retahauon a vtolallon of "all precept.s of ctvilized soctety. " He maJor pa yday to come. " I though · We had ham backsays he adrmres the stun !man's candor - Kmevel refused to wrote Into the play 's ongmal stage for a drmk between
offer a defense - and he'll recommend a work furlough c ontract ,'' Saunder s ac ts,'' Saunders reca lis.
·and over his cigar a nd there's a crashmg plot flaw around It No one wtll ~ vcr
reveals, " that 1t c an be sold
program for the sentence .
to the films only a month brandy, he told me whodun- m the play One of the actors nottce anyway '
How nght she was More
E. Lamb, M.O:
after the fmal pe rfo rmance It Lady Churchill InSISted he a long lu11e ago ~potted lt
JIJMP SHOT · Bill Bradley ts movmg from the jump to the has been g1ven on the West was wrong But he wa sn't '' When I asked Dame Agatha than four million peop)e
stump The former New York Kmcks basketball superstar has End " Walch out. ' Star
There 's even a mys tery about 11 , she adm1ttcd 'I have seen the play and to my
filed papers to form a campatgn commtttee Hts goal - the IJ. Wa rs," 1f th1s class ic ever withtn a my.\':itery ' I've sel- know th e error's there, but knowledge, that actor 's the
S Senate seat held by 73-year-old Repubhcan Clifford Case. does get mto Hollywood 's dom mentwned 1t before," the re was no way to wnte only one who 's spotted the
mistake '
confesses Saunders , ' but
The 34-year-old Bradley was ali-Amencan at Prmceton and a hands
causes of gas, gas pams and Rhodes scholar before joming the Knicks
what" vou can do about 1t
A BIT OF BLARNEY· The president's mother surprised
Others who want llus tn·
the
walter
at the Lord Mayor's banquet m Dubhn wtth a btg
formatiOn can send 50 cents
11
With a long, stamped, self- kiss, but Junmy Blower was unruffled I'd like another/' he
Endangered Spectes Act, case.
addressed enve lope for 11 trne sa1d, and he k1ssed Miss Lillian back. Satd Mrs. Carter, • ho IS By CYNTHIA MilLS
Little Tennessee Rtver was m
In Oetrmt, law professor progress.
WASHINGTON (IJPI ) - A which bars federal agencies
m care of this newspaper, tourmg Ireland m a llklay fnendshtp Vlstt, "He was such a
P 0 Box 1551, Radio C1ty Sta- darlmg little man , I couldn't help myself. " Blower returned 3-inch-long ftsh called the from damagmg the habttat of Zygmunt Plater, a plaintiff m
TV A transferred 700 snail
11
tion , New York, NY 10019. By the complunent. "I'll never meet another hke her, he told snail darter ts about to wm a rare creatures, and multi- the sutt to stop the dam, satd darters to the Hiwassee River
place in the natton ' s million dollar public wocks court review gives his side in Tennessee, but sc1entists
followmg a few siiDple rules, startled dinner guests
law books
pro jecls already under way "an opportunity to make tt are uncertain about the
you may be able to help
WHERE
THE
HEART
IS·
It
was
one
of
those
wartiiDe
The
Supreme
Court
agreed
wben the act was passed m absolutely clear from the success of the transplant.
yourself You can tdentify
highest trtbunalm the land ._, Legislation also is pending in
romances
The
Amencan
GI
and
the
Bnt1sh
gJrl,
m
love
,
but
Monday
to
rev1ew
a
lower
1973.
whether or not you swallow
that
a federal agency must the House etther to exempt
torn
apart
by
D-Day
-he
to
fight
and
she
to
bear
his
child
court
ruling
that
barred
the
TV
A
says
the
law
should
auJ, and perhaps break the
obey
federal law "
Tennessee
Valley
Autbonty
to
see
each
other
ag3lll
Well,
not
qwte
"never."
Former
never
not
apply
to
project.s
already
habtt.
the Tell1co project or exempt
The
snatl darter, a member
Pfc.
Eddie
Walls
and
Joyce
Lathan
are
honeymooning
at
last
from
closing
sluice
gates
on
m
progress.
Its
appeal,
The loud noiSes you
all projects started before
of the perch family, feeds on 1973 when the act was passed.
by
descrtbe m your stomach are - 32 years, a baby and two marnages after that World War II 1t.s nearly completed $116 opposed
caused by forceful contrac- scenano They were married last week m Bnstol, England, fuilhon Tellico Dam because environmentalists who fear a snatls in shallow gravel
In any case, the snail
tiOns of your d1gest1ve where they ftrst met. Thetr son, Peter, now 32, was on hand to that would wtpe out the only Pandora's box of exceptions shoals above the dam ana darters may be wiped out
system. The whole tube from meet his father for the frrst tlffie Walls marned twice in the known natural population of to the endangered species needs the plentiful oxygen even tf the sluice gates are
the tiny endangered fiSh .
act, lS the ftrst of tis kind to created by rapid r1ver n~;tver closed because the dam
mouth to rectum contams a mterun Joyce remamed smgle.
current.s.
Lawyers for both sides told reach the high court
nuddle layer of muscles that
keeps the ftsh from gomg
The bottom-dwelltng fish upstream to spawn. Their
GUMPSES Shirley Macl..atne and ballet star Mikhail UPI they were pleased wtth
TVA General Counsel
contract and relax to move
Herbert Sanger Jr said tn was discovered m 1975 after population has dropped to
the food along for d1gest10n . Baryshmkov were among ftrst-mghters, Monday at the New the deciSion to review.
York premiere of their new film, "The Turning Point" ...
The case ts a cl asstc Knoxvtlle he was "dehghted" construction on the Tellico only a few thousand sinee the
digeslton
The over-acttve bowel Imogene Coca 1s rehearsmg "Twentieth Century" m New York confrontatiOn between ,the the court will consider the project at the mouth of the dam was built . ~
sounds suggests that you may after a Las Vegas appearance With Sid Caesar . Vernon
have some element of a Presley, the father of the late EIVls Presley, has obtamed a
spasttc colon When the colon divorce from htssecond w1fe, Oavada ''Dee'' Presley, endmg a
goes mto spasm from the 17-year mamage .. SWedish ch!ldren 's author Astrtd
over-c ontra ct iOn of the Lindgren, creator of "Pippi Longstocking," celebrated her
muscles m 1t, the spasm shuts 70th birthday Monday tn Stockholm wtth famtly and fnends ...
off the opemng The food, IJ. Actor-sin ger Theodore B1kel has been named by President
qutd, and gas behmd the Carter to serve on the National Council on the Arts .
h
spasm IS hterally trapped,
and nothing w1ll happen untll
the spasm ts reheved This
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
BUS PAYMENTS
OEV(YfED TO THE
can cause severe pam either
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
INTEREST OF
from the spasm whtch acts
MEIG&amp;-MASON AREA
Oh1o Board of Educatton
\
CHESTER L TANNEHilL
like a muscle cramp or from
' '
dec1ded
Monday
that
the
_...
'
'
Exet. Ed.
••
d!ste nt10n and stretchmg
&gt;' •
state w1ll pay for buses used
ROBERT HOEFU CH
Ctty Edttor
caused by the trapped gas It
by distrtcts to desegregate
daLly exe1!pt Saturday
doesn 't matter whether the byPubhshed
schools. The board also acted
The Ohio Valley Publishing
gas 1s from swallowed a1r, Gompany-Mulhmedw, Inc, 111
to mcrease reimbursements
Sl , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
fennentat10n or both It hurts Court
g1ven all school dtstricts for
Busines.ot Office Phone 992· 2156
JUS\ as bad.
Editonal Phone992-21:;7
transporttng
ch1ldren
Second class postage paid at
That suggests that you may
Will
be based
Retmbursement
Pomeroy, Ohio
need some treatment for
e1ther on the number of
National &lt;tdvt:rti.Sing representaUvc Wa rd · Griffith Company,
spasllc colon One of your
chtldren transported or the
Inc Bottrne lli and Galla gher D1 v •
best helps here IS to add bulk 7:;7 Th1rd Ave , New York. NY
amount of miles buses travel.
m the form of cereal ftber as
10017
Sub5cnptJOn rates Delivered by
found m bran foods. Also try carr1
The desegragat10n rule w1ll
er where available 75 cenl.!: per
to estabhsh regular hab1ts I
11eek By Motor Route where earner
htke retmbursement for
serv1ce not available dne month,
am sendtng you The Health
buses needed for racial
CJ 25 By rruuJ IlL Oh1o and W Va ,
Letter number 2-Y•, Spasttc
balance transportmg to 100
One Year S22 00 , Stx months.
$1150 , 'fhree months , 17 00
or lrntable Colon, to gtve you
per cent of the ceiling price,
Elsewhe.g: $26 00 year, Sill: months
more mformat10n on what to
whtch
lS $1~,086. The board
UJ ~0. \Three months, I? 50
do abo ut an ~ver-acbve colon • Subscr1p ton pnce mcludes Sunday
now pays 35 per cent of the
T1mes-.Sentmel
•
ce!lmg pnce.
.,...;~;:,..

\

Snail darter is going into lawhooks

~

\

L

·~ l /

.''

"

.. t

\

Northwestern

•

~

games over ftve seasons.

Pont, a coach for 22 years
m which IS teams at Mtarm of
Ohto, Yale, Indtana and
Northwestern won 97 games,
lost 121 and tled ftve, will
remam wtth the Wildcats as
athletic director
Hts acttve coachmg career
Will end Saturday when hts
Winless Wtldcats entertam
lllmms, seekmg only thetr
second v1ctory m the last 21!
games
Pont, who spokeas athlet1c

Hayes looks for
low-scoring tilt
By GENE CADDES
COLIJMBUS, 01110 (UPI J Was Oh10 State·Coach Woody
Hayes trymg to get a pomt
across Monday when he
dropped a p1ece of hiS "beat
Michtgan" cake?
Probably not, but th e
veteran Buckeye mentor was
quick to jump at th e chance to
talk about his favonte subjed
- history - and tt could have
applied.
,
"That remmds me of the

time that Wtlham the
Con querer , back m 1066, fell
gettmg out of hiS mvas10n
boat," Hayes told hiS weekly
media luncheon as he ptcked
up the ptece of cake,
decorated With roses " When

he got up, he had both hands
full of sand and he said, 'see,

Bengals
have no
excuses
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cmcinnati Bengals were

mmus the servtces of four key
•tarters 10 thetr game agamst
Mtnnesota Sunday. but when
you're clobbered 42-10, excuses can sound pretty lame
- so they dtdn 't make any.
" They were commg at us
and that's the difference.
They were the better team,"
said Bengal strong safety
Tommy Casanova
Cincmnat1 played Wllhout
defenstve end Coy Bacon,
cornerback Lemar Parrish,
defens1ve tackle Eddie Edwards and star wtde receiver
Issac Curtis.
Surprtsmgly, constdertng
the outcome of the game,
Curtis' replacement,• Btlly
Brooks, turned In a stellar
performance, fallmg just
three yards short of breaking
a club record for total yards
gamed receiving in a game
by catching seven passes for
198 yards ·
,
Brooks set a club record by
scormg on the longest passrun play tn Cmcmnatl
history, 94 yards for a touchdown .
that spectacular play was
far overshadowed, however,
by the one m which VIking
quarterback Fran Tarkenton
broke his leg and was lost for
the season
Cincinnati's intense
defenstve end, Gary Burley,
who sacked Tarkenton on the
play, described the actton
frorrr hts vantage pomt. " I
was m the atr," Burley said.
" He
(Tar kenton)
was
crouched over and had his
foot planted like he was
gonna turn and sneak away
like he does. He's too httle
and quick "
The Bengals are now 4-5,
but trail Central DtvlSton
leaders Pittsburgh and
Cleveland by only one game,
wtth ftve games left tn the
season. Cinc1nnatt's next two
contests are at horne, against
the Miamt Dolphins th!S
Sunday and the New York
G1ants the followmg week.

I

Umvers1ty ,

whete his teams lost 43 of M

BOB CHAPPELEAH, :HI and 165 lbs. a sophomore
th1s past football season, played on the Marauder grtd
squad as a guard on offense and lmebacker on defense. He
ts the son of Mr and Mrs Bruce Hofhnan of Pomeroy No
photograph s have been avallable of Billy Elkms, running
back, who has been mentiOned earher, and of two
sophomores, Todd Snowden and DaVld Hysell. Snowden,
at &amp;-1 and 178lbs., ts a guard, the son of Robert F Snowden
of Rutland Davtd Hysell, who played end, lS 5-9, wetghs
152, and lS the son of Mtlford Hysell, North Third Ave.,
Middleport

BUSINESS END of the Orbttal Space Shuttle
"Enterpnse" "checked out at Dr}den F11ght Research
Center , Ca lif Th e "Enterpnse '' has l'Ompleted a series of
trtal atmosphenc f11ghts a nd landing and is being
pr epared oow for 1ts f1rst orbttal nuss10n

Gas can be controlled
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR LAMB-l've
had trouble wtth gas on my
stomach for about a year
now. My doctor says I eat too
fast.
I have always been a slow
eater I do not have a problem
With const1pallon but do ha~e
trouble passtng gas and havmg a bowel movement , 1
don't think 1t's what I eat; tt's
anything, about an hour after
l eat anything It's very uncomfortable, and my
stomach makes very loud
nmses which are very embarrassmg
I've told my doctor thiS,
too My stomach doesn't hurt,
JUSt swells until I do have a
bowel movement Is there
anything you can tell me that
will help' '
DEAR READER-This IS a
fa~rly common complamt.
Every one has some gas or
rur m the ldigestive system
You can't eat or drmk without
swallowmg some atr. The
way a person eaUi can add to
swallowing a1r Most people
pass the a1r they swallow
readily and they a re not even
sware that 1t has happened
Others have real problems
With 1l- at least 10 percent of
the populatton
FermentatiOn 1n the
digestive system IS another
cause for gas. The classiCexample here 1s mature bean
seeds They contam a tnple
sugar that cannot be broken
down by digeslton and this
carbo hydrate ferm ents
releasmg gas Thts also haf&gt;'
pens m people who cannot
digest lactose, the dou bl e
suga r m trulk . These people
f1nd that milk
1mlk pre&gt;r l"'. are
111 J' r ca uS( of
i
and stln . . umcs more
o essmg symptoms
1 am sendmg you' The
Health Letter number !HI,
Controlling Gaseousness,
whi ~:h will g1ve ll'ou a complete revtew of the varwus

the

EVANSTON, IlJ (UPI) Johnny Pont restgned
Monday as football coach at

#

HEALTH
Lawrence

10

whip the previously unbeaten
Cowobys, 24-17
Several small sktrm1shes
broke out during the course of
the evemng and one maJor
fight occurred late m the
game and resulted m the
eJection of Dallas' Benny
Barnes and St LoutS' Lee
Nelson
·:There was a lot of
mouthmg gomg on out
there ,"
defensive

sa1d
Cowboys'
end
Harv ey

Martm, m a btt of understatement.

Pont quits

I

peopletalk

GRA~1PS

feuds

Nat10nal Footbajl League has
been fought to a draw m 1977
and tf the St. Louts Cardmals
and Dallas Cowboys meet
agatn m the playoffs there
may not be enouglt liniment
and bandages to go around
St. Louis pulled off tis
b1ggest vtctory of the season
Monday ntght , comtng from
behmd in the final quarter to

EDITORS · For release prior to November 25

Dame Agatha ' s

ight~scarred

'

,/
I

director m announcmg his

retirement as coach, satd he
would "speak for both of us
Tuesday at the weekly Btg
Ten med1a luncheon."
He sald " thts was Coach
Pont 's dectston . He IS well
quahfied to dectde for himself
when a coachmg change IS
needed or helpful
"Coach Pont wasn't
'pushed' by anyone, and he
made tt clear that he ts not
gomg to reconsider hi s

England lS ours already ' "
Hay es' fourth-ranked
Bucke)'es tnvade Ann Arbor
Saturday for a nat10naUy
televtsed Big Ten showdown
wtth M1chtgan .
Both teams are 9-1 overall,
but Ohto State lS unbeaten tn
the B1g Ten and 1s already, dec1ston," Pont satd. ' 'He
assured of a share of 1ts stxth knows all the problems and
stra1ght champtonsh1p.
A Mtchtgan vtctory,

Pont'~ anno uncement

came

Longhorns
top poll
NEW YORK ( UPI I - The
Un1ted Press Internationa l
Board of Coaches top 20
tea ms after the lOt h week of
th e col lege football season
w1th f1rst place votes and
record 1n parentheses

Po1nts
m the midst of a new flock of Team
395
rumors that Northwestern I Texas (351 (9 01
2 Oklahoma (1) 19 I)
314
ofhctals. are constdenng 3 Alabama (l) (911
313
wtthdrawmg from the Btg 4 Oh•o St ttl (9 1)
209
Ten 'conference. North- 6 Notre Dame ( 1) ( 8 1) 204
7 Arkansas(81 )
159
western ts a prtvate school 8 Penn Sf \9-1)
121
and by far the smallest m the ·9 P•lfsburgh ( 11 (8 1 1 I 89
co nfere nce ,
otherwise 10 Nebraska (8 21
66
13
compnsed of huge state 11 Ar1zona 51 ( 8 1)
12 Texas A&amp; M (&lt;I 2)
10
umversthes
13 Flonda St (8 1\
8
"Coachmg has been my 14 No Texas Sf IB 21
4
professwnal hfe and love for 15. Clemson (7 2 11
J
2
half of my hfe. Walkmg away 16 (Tiel UCLA (7 3)
2
from coachmg as a direct 16 (T1e ) No Car (7 2 11
16 (T1e ) Te xas Tech (7 2)
2
actiVIty and responstbthty lS 19 Iowa Sf 17 3)
1
more than a httle dtfftcult
Only 19 teams r ece1ved
But I have great hopes and votes
Note By agreement w1th
plans for Northwestern. I'll
th e Amencan
Football
JUst have to learn to let Coaches Assoc•atLon , teams
someone else do the Saturday on probation by th e NCAA are
afternoOn s1dehne sweatlng " Lnellg•ble for top 20 and
c hamp 1o n sh 1p
Pont was the second B1g nat1onal
cons1deratmn by the U PI
Ten coach to announce he Board of Coaches Those
would ret1re at the end of the tea ms currently on probat1on
Kentucky ,
season Two weeks ago for 1977 are
W1scons1n~s John Jardme Mlc h1 gan State, Redlands
!Cal1f ), Wes le rn State
announced 'he would rettre (Colo ) Houston
after the last game
Pont sa1d he would begm a
search for a new head coach ·
G'AME SOLD- OUT
unmed1ately.
LONG BEACH, Calif.
(U PI ) - The Oakland-Los
Angeles NFL game at
Memonal Coliseum Dec 4 IS
a sell-out with 71 ,039 hckets
and Dan Dumoul in
gone, the Rams reported
Football
Monday The game wtll be
Green Gay - S•g ned televiSed locally as well as
quarterback Bnan Dowlmg
as a free agent
nationally because 1t lS sold
Philadelph ia - Dropped out

Sports transactions

however, would give the

stxth-ranked Wolvermes a
share of the tltle and, under
the Btg Ten 's formula for
dectdtng tts Rose Bowl

Un1ted Press lnternattonal
Monday

Basketball

Atlanta ~ Placed guard
Claude Terry on Injured

representative, a second

stratght tr1p to the West
Coast
Hayes satd he looks for a
typtcally low-&lt;~eormg game
"They are usually pretty
close to the elbow ball
games, " Hayes satd, "both
teams usually have good
defenses . Last year (22-0)
Michtgan) was an exception
"Our tnJUrtes are quite
rmmmal," Hayes satd
"Oefenstve end Paul Ross
ankle was not as sertous as
we ortgmally thought "
Hayes satd h1s practtce
plans thiS week would be no
different from usual, that IS,
working hard on Monday and
Tuesday and then tapermg
off on Wednesday
"We wtll work mto the
wmd ," said Hayes, the
perfectwmst, "because, thiS
time of the year it is always a
factor. We Will put m a few
new thmgs, like we always do
for every game. And I'm sure
our opponent will do the

reserve Waived guard Tony
Robertson

Buffalo -

Placed

~uard

Larry Johnson on wa1ver s
Cleveland

P:laced

swingman Terry Furlow on
the 1n1ured reserve list
Houston ~ Wa1ved rook1e

guard Phil Bond.
Milwaukee -

Cut center

forward Kevin Rest an 1
NY Kn1cks Traded
reserve center Tom McMillen
to Atlanta for a 1978 secondround draft cho1ce

Ph •ladelph•a -

gua r d M1ke
wa1vers

Pla ced

Dunleavy

on

Baseball

Cincinnati ~ S1gned righthanded pitchers Mario Soto

Athleflc Association com
puterized football ratmgs

w1fh point totals
Class AAA

Region 2
1 Toledo Central Catholic,
148.42 , 2. Gahanna Lmcoln,
146 66

Returned defenseman Floyd
LaHacheto Hampton

Reg1on 3
1 Canton McKm ley, 16J 44 ,

2 Massillon , 160.27

Reg1on 4
1
C1ncmnatl Moeller ,
206 77, 2 Centerv1lle, 176 00

Class AA

Region 5.

1 Elyna Catholic , 12.4 72 , 2
Orrv I lie, 11a 00
Reg1on 6
1 St Marys Memor ia l,

131 25, 2 Bellevue. lll.1l.,

Reg1on 7
·
1 Canton Central Catholic,

117.75.

making like
Tony Dorsett

B6 72 , 5 Sf Cla~rsv!lle , 85 77 ,
6 M1nerva, 83 61. 7 Hebron

SUDOL RETffiES
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ed
Sudol, the senior umptre in
the National League, has
announced his rehrement
after more than 20 years of
servtce, it was announced

Monday by NL President
Charles Feeney
Sudol, 58, Is scheduled for
hip replacement surgery this
week. He umpired his {jrst
Nat10nal League game on.June 29, 1957, and during hts
career he worked three
league championship senes,
three All-8tar games and
three World Senes, mcluding
the most recent one

sa 1d Landry.
With Dallas lead tng 14-3,
the Cowboys' Rand; Hughes
mtercepted a Jtm Hart pass
early 1n the thtrd quarter and
rumbled to the Cardmals' 17
A touchdown there and 11
mtght have been all over. But
-two plays later Bill j oe

were never the same

Dunng the last quarter and
a half St LoutS ·
- Marched 9~ yards With
the a1d of a 43-yard pass m·
terferen,ce penalty to produce
a touchdown on Wayne
Moms' !-yard run
- T1ed the score on a 49yard pass from Hart to Mel
Gray, who has caught a
touchdown pass tn each of hts
last etght games agamst
Dallas

e

- Went in front wlth3 .10to
play on a 3-yard pass from
Hart to tight end Jackte
Sm1th.
Dunng that stretch Dallas
could manage only a 21-yard
held goal from Efren
Herrera, turned the ba ll over
once a nd failed to make a
sertous threat 1n either of 1ts
two possesSions foll owmg St
Louis' go-ahead touchdown
Dallas, although tt d1d pot
dommate the first half, sllll
led after two quarters

Wolverines' offensive
unit somewhat ouchy
United Press International
Forget the rest of the Btg
Ten season. It all botls down
to War No 74 Saturday between Oh10 State and
Mtchtgan, thiS year's at Ann
Arbor, M1ch.
Woody Hayes satd Monday
he looks for a typtcally lowscori ng game in the
nallonally televiSed Btg Ten
showdown for a berth ll1 the
Rose Bowl.
"They are usually pretty close - to - the - elbow baU
games," !:!ayes satd " Both
teams usually have good
defenses Last year (22-0
Ml chtgan) wa s an exception "
The fourth-ran ked
Buckeyes and the stxthranked Wolvermes are both 91 overall, but Ohio State lS
unbeaten m the Btg Ten and
Is already assured of a share
of 1ts SIXth stratght champ10nsh1p.
Hayes ' counterpart, Bo
Schembechler, satd Monday
he was begmnmg practtce for
Saturday game wtthout being
sure who his starting tailback
wtll be.
The pecking order is junior
Harlan Huckleby, sophomore
Roosevelt Smtih or freshman
Stanley Edwards. Huck!eby
has a pulled hamstrmg and
Smtth a stramed knee.
" We'll have to wait and see

unttl Tuesday and Wed-

n e s day
p r act 1c e s,
Schembechler said, addmg
that h!S fifth ranked
Wolver~ens are the healthwst
they've been 1n several
weeks
"The defense lS healthy. "
he satd. " On offense, JUntor
t1ght end Gene Johnson lS
doubtful "
The fever tsn't as high m
the rest of the converence fur
Saturday' s season final es
But for tradthon nch
Mtchtgan State, a victory
over Iowa would gtve the
Spartans a 7-3-1 season, equal
to thetr best performance
Since 1966
Last year, the Hawkeyes
were too much for an tnjurypla gued Mtchtgan State
squad that had JUst been
embarrassed 42-21 by
prev10usly w1n! ess Northwestern.
" Everybody has pulled
toge ther
more
tightly
because of the wtnning
season and the luck we've
had," sophomore tight end
Mark Brammer satd
Iowa Coach Bob Commings
satd his team wtll have a lot
to play for agamst Mtch1gan
State.
" There
are
many
mottvating factors for thts
weekend, wtth pnde bemg the
most unportant," Commings

somethmg tt deserves Thts
team has played much better
than 1ts record mdtcates "

Iowa 1s 4-6 on the year By
wmnmg Saturday, Owa
would match last year's 5-&lt;i
record, whtch \\ as the best m
seven seasons

Ind1ana Coach Lee Corso
satd hiS Hoo sters w1ll be m
good shape for Saturday's
"Old Oaken Bucket" game
agamst Purdue
Rtc EnlS , th e Indta na
tailback who fell out of the
Btg Ten rushmg leadership at
Oh10 State when he sat out
most of the second half w1th a
brutsed hand, was back m
practtce Monday Lmebacker
Doug Sybert was expected to
be back on full duues today
Lame-duck

Wtsc onstn

Coach John Jardme gave his
weary Badger team the day
off Monday
The Badgers have lost five
stfatght games, mcludmg a
24-8 declSton to Iowa last
Saturday Jardme sa id he
hoped lhe extra day of rest
would g1ve the Badgers a hft
fo r thetr ga me agams l
Mtnnesota Saturday
Sophomore warnor Carooq
Taylor sprained his n ght
ankle m Ilhnots' 21-0 stom·
pmg by Minnesota Saturday
and may m1ss thls week's
Northwestern game, Illinms
sa1d. "Winmng the [male Coach Gar} Moeller sa1d
Moeller satd senwr Rtck1e
would •••• this team
Mitchem co uld replace
Taylor

e

•---------"'"""

THISWEEK'SSt"ct...•

Beaudom from Cmc1nnatl on

wa•vers
New York Rangers INHU
- Ass igned ce nt er Greg
Holst to •New Haven and
recalled left w1ng N•ck Fot1u
College
Po~~rt~~s~~tne;R as /o';,~g~rr
coach effecflve af the end of
the season

Amos~nce

NEW YORK (UPI)
Amos Lawrence 1s only a
freshman but people around
the \Jmversity of North
Carolma already are compartng him to Tony Dorsett,
the Heisman Trophy winner
from Pittsburgh
And Lawrence IS giving
them good cause. On
Saturday, for instance, the 5foot-10, 170-pounder from
Virginia Beach, Va., broke
Dorsett's NCAA smgle-game
rushing record for freshmen
when he carrted 35 tunes for
286 yards in a 35-14 vtctory
over Vtrgmta .
Lawrence broke the record
set by Dorsett m 1972 agamst
Duke by 21 yards and his
performance was seven
yards better than the Atlantic
Coast Conference singlegame mark set by Don McCauley in 1972.
Lawrence, who scored on
runs of 21 and stx yards
Monday was named to hea•
UPI's Backfteld of the Wee~ }·
Joining htm are runnin
backs Kent Kitzman '
Mmnesota and Myro
Hardeman of Wyoming ar.
quarterback Jack Thompson
of Waslnngton State.

breathtng room In thts league
you're going to get burned,"

DuPree fumbled , St Louis
recovered and the Cowboys

burned by Roush
h '3 qmck touchdowns
Cl:,'~';dn~~fe';,'sem~~ASerge· Wit

Reg1on 1

1 Cleveland St Joseph,
173 55, 2 Mentor Lake
Catholic. 149 00

" When you gtve a team

sl:~::~k~::~~~kv~~~:~""~ Crusaders

Final computer ratings
COLUMBUS (UP II - The
f1nal Oh1o High School

away early 1n the thtrd
quarter and didn't - allowed
a little more actd slip mto hiS
vo1ce than ts normal.

k1c ke r Horst Muhlmann and

,I

same."
Hayes called the Wolves "a
typtcal good Mtchtgan team .
U anything , they probably
have a little more varted
attack "They are passmg a
little more."
In a stgmftcant switch,
Hayes said freshman Tom
Orosz would do the Ohio State
punting Saturday Orosz, the
Buckeye ktckoff man all
season, earned the job for last
Saturday's 35-7 win over
Indtana, but got to punt only
once, that one going 43 yards.
"That 43-yard average will
probably keep htm m there,"
joked Hayes "He was a great
punter m 1\tgh SChool," Hayes
S8ld of the former all-Ohio
quarterback. "That's why we
recruited him."

all of the potentials of
coaching. If he wants out
from under, I respect and
accept his deciSion."

The Cardmals won for the
ftrst ltme in Texas Stadmm
(It was opened 1n 1971 ),
closmg to wtlhm two games
of Dallas m the MFC East
e~nd moving,lnto good poSition
for at least a w1ld card
playoff spot
·
"I've never been happter
about a wm than I was
tomght," satd St. LoUis Coach
Don Coryell
Over on the losmg s1de,
Dallas Coach Tom Landry furtous because hiS team had
a chance to put the game

game, 24-17

2

Lou•sv•lle St

Thomas Aqu1nas, 94 50 ; 3

Philo. 92 02 , 4 Pickenngton,

Lakewood, 80.77 , B South

Pomt, 80 55 , 9 (he ) Zoarv1lle
Tuscarawas Valley and
Ironton , 80 00 each

Regton a

l. Wyom1ng,
Loveland , 122 83

137 03 ; 2

Class A

Reg1on 9

t Ash tabula Sf John ,
100.86 , 2 Dalton, 91.04 '
Reg1on 10
1. Hamler Patr1ck Henry ,

89 19 , 2 T1ff1n Calvert, 85.833
Region 11
Crooksville, 87 69 ,
2

Newark Catholic, 82 77 , 3

Beallsville. BO 12, 4. Shady
Side, 70 55 , 5. New Albaoy ,
70 06 ; 6 Newcomerstown ,
62 oo , 7 Lancaster Fisher ,
60 75 , 8
Mmgo · Junction ,

51 62 , 9 Columbus Ready ,
49 .44 , 10 Glouster Tnmble,
47 03

Reg1on 12

1 West Jefferson, 79

Sou th

41; 2

Charle~ton

Southeastern , 74 75

Kevm Roush scored three
fir st quarter touchdowns
Saturday night to lead the
Wahama Whtte Falcons to a
25-6 season endmg rout of the
Parkersbur g Catholic
Crusaders
The vtctory brought an end
to the h!Jlh school careers of
17 Wahama semors and
marked the final game for
Head Coach Marcus R1ce who
recently announced his
reslgnallon from teachmg.
The Whtte Falcons at 8-2
sport the best record m a
decade at the Bend Area
Sehoul by matchmg the wonlost slate of the 1967 team led
by All-8\ater Ralph Batey
which also was 8-2, Josmg
only to Metgs and Ravens·
wood . ThiS year's local squad
fell vtctun to Wayne m their
season opener by a 13-7 score
and Wmheld by a 34-16
margm .
DeWayne Whtte, Brei
Holbrook, Greg Blessmg,
Kevtn Honaker, Bob Barnttz,
Davtd Elias, Rtck Stafford,
Phtl Hobbs, Jeff Collier, Ted
Swartz, Rtck Buzzard, Dav1d
Roush, Kurt Sayre, Buddy
Rose , Tom Anderson , Tim
Rawlmgs, and Mtke Phalen
all fmlShed their high school
football careers. All made
excellent showings m the
season endmg contest.
Wahama took the lead on
the first play from scrtmmage when Roush skirted
around the left stde for a 13yard score, wliich was set up
by a blocked punt by Mtke
Kmg. The converSIOn attempt
fatled and Whama Jed 6-0 with
just two mmutes and ·21
seconds gone.
Roush thrilled the crowd on
the Wh1te Falcons' next
possesSion when he broke
away for hls second touchdownmfourmmutes, onea64

yard scamper Aaam the
pomt after conversion failed
and Wahama Jed 12-0
The fmal score of the
quarter came seconds later
when Greg Blessing tn·
tercepted a Vmce Nowell
pass to gtve Wahama a ftrst
down at the Catholic 18-yard
hne Two plays later Roush
went •n from etght yards out
for the third ttme of the
evenmg.
David Elias split the
upnghts on the PAT 10 make
it 19-0 as Wahama threatened
to roake tt a runaway but
Catholic had other 1deas for
the remamder of the game.
The Crusaders cut the
margm to 13 mtdway through
the th~rd per10d with thetr
only stx-pomter of the mght
when their 6'9" 190-pound
fullback rambled 33 yards for
the score. The converston
attempt falled to make it 19-6
wtth 19:35 left to play.
A fumble recovery by Jeff
Collier enabled the locals lo
score one last time by givmg
the bend area II a first and
goal at the Parkersburg
etght. Jack Smtth capped the
etght-yard drtve by bulltng
over the fmal three yards on
first play of the fourth
quarter. For the thtrd tune m
the game the PAT attempt
fatled and Wahama led by a
25-6 score.
The
annual
foo tball
banquet comes Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. to pay tnbute to a
successful season with wellknown Dave Dtles of M1d·
dleport and ABC Sports TV
sc heduled as guest speaker
STATISTICS
Wah Cath
First downs
,
7
I
Yardsrush
34-233 44 148
Yards pass
9 16
Total yds
242 I~
Passing
2-8 4-11
InterceptiOns
1 3
Fumbles
5
5
Fumbles lost
2 2
Pena !ties
11-142 6-67
Punts-avg
4-27 2 4-19.7
Gff plays
48 60
Score by quarters.
Wahama
19 0 0 6- 25
Pkg. Cath.
0 0 6 0- 6
Scoring·
Wahama - Roush 13 yd run
(ep fa tied )
Wahama - Roush 64 yd run
(ep fatled 1
Wahaf!l" - Roush 8 yd run

(Ehas kick )
.
Catholic - Ostronskt33 yd
f 1 d)
run (ep ate
Wahama - Smith 3 yd run
(ep fmled )
Indtvtdual stattsttcs :
Rushmg - Roush 16-149,
Smith 15-74, H~nkinson 3-10,
Ostrowskt15-79, Nowell 21-66,
Joseph 4-2, Deem 3-2, Huxley
1-(-1 I
Passmg - Hanktnson 2-6-9
yds, Barnttz _o-1-0, Roush 0-1D-1 mterceptton Deem 4-8-16
yds- I mterceptton Nowell o3-0-2 mtercepttons
Recetvmg - Barnttz 1-6
yds, Hobbs 1-3 yds, Nowell3-5
yds, Huxley 1-11 yds.
Interceptlons - Swartz,
Honaker, Blessmg, Starkey
all one
Fumble . Recovertes Holbrook, Collier Wegmann,
McFarland

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,.llliliiiliiiiii-;;;;,;,;,;;;~·~
~ ::::,:•~port- Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, N.ov. 15, 1977
4- The Dally Sentinel. Midltleport-Pc•meroy, 0., 1\tesday ,1\n1·. i5, !911

24

32

BEREA. Ohio (UP!) - The
doc1ors decided stra t c~y for
the
Cleveland Browns
Monday, announcing that
quarterback Brian Sipe has a
fractured collarbone and will
be uut of action four to h\le
we-rks.,
Sipe
was
inj ured
Cleveland's 35-31 loss at
· Pittsbu rgh Sunday, a loss
·that dropped the Browns into
a tie with the Steelers for first
place in the AFC Central
Division
at
5-4.
His
replacement was Dave Mays,
who a !most pulled nut a
victory , and Mays will start
for Cleveland against the
Giants in New J ersey next
Sunday.
·'It hasn't really sunk in
yet," Sipe said aft er learning
the na ture of his injury. " I'm
numb. I'll try to help the team
but I don't know how I'll react

undefeated Dallas Cowboys
safe passes.
next
wee kend
while
"Dave deserves a lot of
" I've never missed a start
Cleveland visits the Giants,
credit,"
said
Coach
Forrest
in my life."
who are 4-5. The Browns
Mays, called the " Mad Gregg . "lie put the points on .
believe they m ust win all ffve
the
board.
Every
tin1e
Dave
Bcmber" by his teanunates
remaining
games and hope
Mays
has
been
in
a
situation
because of his preference for
someone else knocks off the
to
lead
the
team,
he's
done
long passes, led the Browns to
it,
Steelers.
four second half touchdowns.
" It's hard for me to believe '
Mays
,
28,
a
practicing
Three came through the air.
we're
still in the race," Gregg
dentist,
was
acquired
as
a
Although he a nd his
said, having watched his ,
frc'e
agent
in
1976.
He
had
teanunates c~me up short he
had the respect of his pl ayers. played in the now defunct team lose to Cincinnati the
previous week.
Asked if he thought f.he World Footl!all League.
The L'O ach is hoping he gets
The
Bro
wn
s,
actu
all
y
Browns have been too con- .
better
news on Gregg Pruitt'
trailing
the
Steelers
in
the
servative. wide receiver Paul
foot
than
he got on Sipe '~
conference
because
of
t
wo
Warfield said;
"You said that, I didn't. losses to them this season, all shoulder. Pruitt, who burned
Look, it's obvious Dave was agreed their comeback from the Steelers for 108 yards in 19
impressive. You tlo have ta a 28·3 halftime de ficit sof- tries, suffered an AchilleS'
ten don in jury when he dov(
keep a defense off ba lance so tened the blow of losing.
Pittsburgh must face the fur a Josoe ball.
they can't read you.''
Sipe , playing most of the
I!O:&lt;~~!UO&lt;RI,
year witn an injured throwing l~~ ~' ""'
arm, hao been criticized of
~
late for sticking with short,. ~

Coach Karen WalkPr. Pe~gy Girolami. Kathy Howard,
Pat Vaughan. Vicky Epple, Tracy Burdette .

Noll's.
Steelers
on track
By KAREN SOUTHWICK
PITTSBURGH (UP!) •Pitt sburgh Steelers Coac h
Chuck Noll cautioned at the
weekly luncheon 'he was not
r-eady to make predictions
about Sunday's game aga inst
the Dallas Co wboys.
Noll first wanted to review
the' crucial 35-31 win over
Cleveland t hat snapped a
two-game losing streak and
moved the Steelers into a tie
with the BroWns for the AFB
Central Division lead.
'' It's just a step in the right
direction,'' he said of that
victory. " !I we put five more
good games together we' re
all right. "
Winning their remaining
ga mes would give th e
Steelers, currently 5-4, the
· AFC title and a playoff berth
since they've now beaten the
Brown s. who have an identical record, twice.
However, one big obstacle
next Sunday will be the undefeated Co wboys and former Pitt star Tony Dorsett,
who will be playing in Pittsburgh the first time as a pro.
"We're going to have to
play to the best of our
abilities because they are an
exceptional football team in
every area ,n No ll said of the
Cowboys.
'No ll said the Steelers'
biggest problem, has been
consistency. '' Mistakes a re
the thi ngs that have been
hu rting us.
''We have to play the way
we did in the first ha lf against
Cleveland for every quarter
and every gal,lle the rest of
the season ."

He pra ised the offense and
the special teams, which
have been plag ued with
problems in past games, for
their performances in the
crucial Cleveland win that
snapped a two-game losing
st reak .
"We have a lot of things
going for us Sunday. We ran
routes, got the pass protection and threw the ball very
well.
"Jim 'smith's returns of
punts and kickoffs wa s
something we needed."
He also cited the Steelers'
top draft choice Robin Cole,
who returned against the
Browns after sitting out most
of the year with a broken
ann , for a ggr essive play on
the speci al teams.
l.£lren Toews was another
"who did an ex .;e pt ion~l job".

on .special tea ms and "played
his best game of the yea r
defensively .''

No ll sa id the Steelers '
coverage on the kicking game
also improved, but "we've
got to do the same thing of. fensively. ''
He noted quart erback
Terry Bradshaw, who called
· most of t~e signals Sunday,
suffered a bruised shoulder
when he was sacked ·in the
fourth quarter but wo uld be
ready for the Dallas game.
The calls previously came
from the bench whe n
Bradshaw fractured his wrist
earlier this yea r.
'
"It 's taken us awhile to get
untracked offensively thi s
year,' ' Noll added, calling the
Cleveland game "our first
•sur_ge offens~vely."

MEIGS JUNIOR VARSITYVOLLEYBAI.L TEAM -Overall,~. League &gt;2. front, 1-r,
Carol Morr is, Jena Welker, Vicki Pickens , Judy Elk ins; standing, Kath y Elkins, Anna Wi les
and Freeda Chapman.

By RICHARD L. SHOOK

UP I Sports Writer
ANN ARBOR ( U~I )- Be
Schembechler beg in s
practice the week of the Ohio
stateMichigan game unsure
who his st arting tailback will
be Saturday when the Big
Ten 's
Rose
Bowl
representative is decided.
The pecking order is junior
Harlan Huckleby , sophomore
Roosevelt Smith or freshman
stanley Edwards. Huckleby
has a pulled hamstring and
Smith a strained knee .
"We'll have to wait and see
until ,
Tuesda y
and
Wedn es day pract ic es ,"
Schembechler told a throng
of writers Monday at his
week ly pr ess luncheon.
Othe r wise , he s-a, i ~, the
Wolverines were at their
healthie&amp;t in several weeks.
"The defense is healthy, "
the already exc ited coach of
the sixth-rated Wolverines
said. "On offense, (junior
tight end ) Gene Johnson is
do ubtful.
.
The loss of Johnson isn't
critical since junior Mark
Schm erge and sophomore
Doug Marsh are capable and
healthy replacements .
" As for Huckl eby a nd
Smith, we'll see who can run
Tuesday a nd Wednesday .
Ever ybody will run (through
practice) 'fuesday. We've got
to get production out of our
tailbacks, that's for certain .
Th at's the one thing that's
different from a year ago for

~

11

~
~
~

·~

11

w
w

11
11

~
~

Michigan won.' 22-0, at
Columbus, Ohio, a year ago to
earn a Rose Bcwl trip with
Ohio State go ing to the
Orange Bowl. This year 's
loser is rwnored to be headed
for the Sugar Be;.·! and a
game with Alabama . . ,
"I'd go to the Rose Bowl if I
had to play Adrian," sa id
Schembechler, who was
disappointed when Southern
California got beat to spoil a
possible rematc h of last
year 's game. " Hey, don't put
Adrian in - they 're my
friends."

Though Michigan and Ohio
State are bot h 9-1, the
Wolverines' defeat came in a
conference game (at Minne5ota) while the Buckeyes
lost a non&lt;onference tilt to
Oklahoma. So Coach Woody
Hayes' squad has a share of
the Big Ten title and can win
it '"¥tright by beati ng
Sche_'l'bechler 's team .
"The team that plays in the
Rose Bowl is generally
regarded th roughout th e
nation as the champion of the
Big Te n," Schem bechle r
bristled in his only display of
agitation thoughout th e
session .
"I sat at home several
limes with a learn that had a

share of the Big Ten title and
nobody out side Michiga n
knew it,' ' he said. "That was
the crime of the Big Ten
conference.
- '

71

THA.NKS TO MY SUPPORTERS
AND VOTERS IN THE NOV. 8th
ELECTION

DONALD L. MOORE

.

No. If ther e was coll ision insurance on the car '
da maged In the
. ac ci den t tha t is the policy which myst
be used. Regardless of v.our l,lncle's desires. y~u r
company shou ld pay only if the owner of t he car has no
Insura nce. So. if he ref uses to use his insurance and
your ins\Jrance wd l not cov er the damage In · th is
mstance, obviously you will be faced wi th the problem
o! paying th e cos ts out of your own funds or tailing Into
di sfa vor wi t h your relative.

REIITER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
SALISBURY. TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Pol. Adv. _. L,...:.;.,;..;:.:.:.;;::.:;::_
The lns ur a nce Store
E. Ma ,·n
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and Order

PLACE YOUR
ORDER NOW
FOR FRESH
FLORIDA
CITRIS
~
FOR
5. THANKS
::: GIVING
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OR
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E· GIVING.

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GROCERY CARRY OUT

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

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LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

STORE HOUR$
MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

~

MI NNEAPOLIS (UP! ) An NCAA subcommittee has
ruled . Mmnesota basketball
players Dav1d Wmey and
M1kc Thom pson mehg1ble fo r
th ree a nd seven ga mes ,
resp ec ti ve ly, en di ng the
controve rsy wh 1ch ea r h er
caused pr~ bation for all ofth e
umvers1ty s sports programs.
All pa rties involved expressed disappointment Wit h
the decis ion an no un ce d
Monday night by the NCAA
subcom mittee on ehg1bil1ty
appeals.
Winey and Thompson were
declared ineligible by the
NCAA lor alleged rules infractwns when they were
freshm en . Thompson, 6-10
se ni or ce nt er wh o hold s
Mmnesot a .a nd B1g Ten
scoring reco rds, was accused
of selling his complimentary
season tickets val ued at $i8
for $180. Winey , 6-10 senior
fowa rd , wa s acc use d of
spending two holidays at the
home of a basketbooster.
Co ach J im Dutcher sai d the
two have alr eady pa id

mi ne work as well?

•HAMS
•VEAL
•SALT FISH
.•FRESH
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FRUIT
Nobody
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...,
tells you the time ! .. BOWLS
and
in as many ways ~
w
: BASKETS
asBULOVA.
w
Stop In

fi
fi
II
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II

Gopher cagers ruled ineligible

IISUR·MITIOI RB

COUNTRY CURED

...•

us. "

McCovey wins Hutch Award

AT OUR
STORE

II

for tailback

" plenty of penalties and have case
for
imm ediate misses.
been chastised" locally and · restoration was strong and
Both · playe rs sa id t hey
natwnally.
.
we had hoped for this relief," pla nned to be on the bench
After the NCAA fir st ruled Kegler said.
during their suspension and
ag~ mst the two players the
Kegl er said he an d "cheer the team on every
umverslty contended their Magrat h will di scuss the minute."
violations were minor and possibility of an appeal to the
" We are glad it's over,"
refused to declare Wmey and NCAA co uncil. He added a Winey said. " We are sick and
Thompso n ineligible.
dec ision ha d not been made tired of the legal hassle.
But the NCAA then placed wh ether to with dr aw a Neither· of us will carry on
the ent ire
men's in- university petition totheU . S. . with any further legal suit.
t erco l leglate a thl e ti c Supreme Court concerning
"I think I could become a
program at t~e university the matter .
lawyer aft er all we've been
under indefinit e probation.
Thompson , who tu rned through. But alii want to do
Th at suspensiOn was hfted down a million dollar con- is play ba sketball, go to
last week on all tea ms at the tract with Buffalo to return to school and get the rest behind
sc hool exce pt basketba ll Minnesota , said " If I knew ·me. That's what I came her e
aft er the university reversed la st su mme r th is would to do play basketball go to
itself an.d deda red the two happen, I'd have accepted the schodt and be part ~f this
players mehg1ble. Probation profe ss ional offers given gr eat Minnesota team.''
for the basketball team will me. "
·
Winey will be eligible to.
end Oct. 28, 1978, according to
Thompson will not be off play Nov. 30 against Loyola.
the NCAA ruhng.
the bench unm.Dec. 30, but he
Sta nl ey
B.
Keg ler, will be eligible to play against
HIT BOTH HARD
un ivers ity vice pr esid ent , the Air Force Academy in the
MILWAUKE E (UPI )
sa id he and President C. annual Pillsbury Classic on
Kevin Resta ni and Scott
Peter Magrath regretted that that date.
im me diate eli gi bilit y for
"I'm very diSappointed I Lloyd a re good friends a nd
Winey and Thom pson was not cannot play in the game at Monday's announcement that
Restani was being dropped
granted.
Southern F lorida Dec. 21
"G iven the nature of the against my young brother," by the Milwaukee Bucks hit
violation we both felt that ou r Thompson said. "I was really them bot h hard. The Bucks
placed Resta ni, a third-year
lookin g forward to that, for
player, on waivers, to get
both myself, my brother and
down
to the 11-man roster
my family. " That g~me will
manda
ted by the National
. '
be the last game Thompson
Basketball Association.
du ring Jhe season He had to
DAYTON·, Ohi o (UP! ) Willie McCovey , veteran fi rst win his job in a spring
basema n of the Sa n Fran- training tria l with his old
cisco Giants, is the · 13th team after being by-passed in
winner of baseball 's Hutch ba se ball's. first re-entry draft
because of hi s age an d
Award.
•
McCovey
broke
th e questionable knees.
"REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
The awa rd honor s t he
Nationa l League career
'
record for grand sla m home memory of Fred Hutchinson,
Whi le dr ivi ng my uncle's ca't I had a minor
runs by hitting his 19th, and ma nager of the Cincinnati
accident. Although we both have insurance •
passed th e 2;000-hit milestone Reds ·who di ed of cance r in
he
, doesn't wa nt to use his coverage. Will
1964.

AVAILABLE

yet .

Bo looking
MEIGS VARSITY VOL LEYBALL TEA~I - League
4-3. overall 1().9, front. l~ , Marcia Holcomb, Sonia Ash,
Cherie Lightfoot, Beth Bartrum. Tonia Ash; back row.

NOW

Sipe has fractured collarbone ·

7• UP

''

'2"
;a.••. g·g~
Bottles

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

8

F•~h

Plut ~l

.
'

~-

�•

- The

Mixed bag of reasons for schools ' money' ills
I

HY LEE LEONARD
t;P t Statehouse Repol'ler
l'OLUMBUS 1UPl l - The
G~1 vernor's Council for Cost
Control said toda} there is no
sm~le

fact or

totally

responsible for th r financial

Ohio's 22-page report to Gov. Ja.mes
A. Rhodes. "Each has con·
S&lt;.'hool distrit•ts.
·· Jt would bt~ an extreme tri buted to the overall
m·t•rstrnplica tion to cite in- situation .
" Howevrr, the actual
suffil"ient funding. le~islative
fa ci n~

prob lems

milndatE'S

or

dtrect
management as a primary
cause ," the Coun cil sald in a

Montpelier man to get
award for river work
Ohio October issue of October Life
COLU MB US
Nat ural Resources Director magazine. The story entitled ,
Robert W. Teater and Gov. " Mak e the Riv r Do the
James A. Rhodes will par· Work :' was written by Ben
ticipatr in a conservation
awards ceremony honoring

East , veteran conservation
writer .

impact of these elements on
individual districts varies.
Therefore, the c ircumstances

confronting a specific school
di,irict must be analyzed to
identify a co urse of action ,"
the council sa id.
lbe ~oimcil said some 80
school districts throughout
the state are already facing
se vere financial problems
~nd several may close before
the end of 1977.
Compounding the problem
IS the fact that although
student enrollment
in
primary

and

secondary

&lt;ore

education has declined b)c 8
per cent between 197t and
1975 the cost of education will
have increased' by 16 per ·ccnt
down ward

t rend

being experienred in primary

and secondary st·hools is
expected to extend to eo llegt~s
and universities. in thA ....... ~ 1
..
futur e," said the Councl .
''Thus Ohi o is and will be
spending more dollars to
edueate fewer students."
"At this point , we can

- reduc in g

Lander s and Glenna

Rumm~l.

Ja ck.It' attends Syracuse

Elementary School and loves it.

taxes to relieve pressure on

the real ••tate tax which is
used for local ftulding of
primary and secndary

year's Outdoor Life Con·
se rvation Award, . is being
honored for his work in
directi ng a unique river
improvement project to clear
log jams a nd othe r ob·

- Adjustment• in the
millage credit which would
permit tax: r evenues to
increase at a rate parallel to
·rising pr opert y values ,
resulting in fewer tax
referendums .
"Seve ral po&amp;Siblities for fi.

along 80 miles of the St.
Josep h and Tiffin rivers in

Will iams County in 197~ and
1976.
" The Outdoor Life Con·
servation Award is one of the

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
.
NO DEALERS PLEASE !
'

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Open Sunday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

nancing
primary
and
secon dar y education have

been outlin ed in this
docwnent," the council said .
"1lle alternatives offered are
not all-inclusive .•
"!t i• unlikely that any
single option will resolve aU
or the problems in an area as
complex as education, " the
council said. "Nevertheless,
a reali,tic combination of
approaches could improve
the
overall
situation
dramatically.''

reductio n in the s ta te's
in com e
and
corpora te
franchise tax:es in order to
encourage spending a nd
business growth . " The end
result alight be an increase in
tax revenues," the co unci]

st ru etions causing flooding

JPRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, NOVEM BER 19th

education .

financial problems of most
dbtricts, it would pruvide an
immediate
sour ce
of
r evenue, '' th e council said .
'"!l1erefore, Cash flow clif·
ficultes e&gt;C}lerienced at the
end of the calendar year
could be avoided.' '
- A new system of taxation
wh ic h would advocate

resident. recipient of this

CARR IER OF THE WEE I' - Jackie J ustis, 10,
a earner for The D&lt;ulr Sentinel in the
\l llage of Syracusr. Jadtir lin:' s w1th ·his aunt, Shirley

- Increases in local powers
to impose sa les or income

permanent solu tion to the

expenditures and increasin g
revenues. None are n~w nor

of

greater
num ber
businesses .' '

- More eonsolidation of
school di•tri cts or a program
of m ult-dis tr k1 eooperation .
- Relaxing of borrowing
r estrictions which. is now
being L'Unsidered by the Ohio
General Assembly.
" Althougil • uch action
would no t repre sent a

George Pa lmiter of Mont·
pelier Thursday at Bryan.
The William s County

~hners,·il!e IS

tax on businesses with a

single business tax which
" wuuld eliminate possible
inequities by spreadng the
financial burden among a

greatl y."

identify some options for
co rrec ti ve action, " th e
council said. "These fucus on
tw o broad ca tegorie s of

alter'nati\'e s

- Heplacc rnent or the
tangible personal property

•pecific

The suggestions, whi ch tl1e
coum•il said t·ame from a
variety
or so url'es,
included :
- The repeal or delay of
mandated slate progra ms
which would
"'reduce
antici pated expenditures

over the next two years.

"The

they

rN..·mmnendatinns . ·•

said.

Quantity Rights Reserved

FRESH

OYSTERS

1
SLAB .
89¢
BACON •••••••.•• :.
1

most respected citations in

the field of natural-resource
awa rd is presented annually
by Outdoor Life magazine.
Keynote speaker will be
Robert He r bst. Assist a nt
Secretary for Fish, Wildlife
and Pa rks in the U. S. In·
terior Department.
The event. sponsored by th e
Williams
County Con·
servation League and teh
Will iams Cou nt y Com·
missioners, will .begin at 6

p.m . at the Brya n 1 Moose
Lodge, with dinner at 7. p.m.
Both the St. Joseph and
Tiffin rivers in the northwest
comer of Ohio are prized
recreation a l st reams, ex-

cellent for canoeing, fishing,
bottomland hunting and other
outdoor activities.

WELCOMING units of the Somali Liberation Front to
her viJlagE' in the Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia, a
cl ub-&lt;;arrying woman balances pa triotic militancy with
fam ily duties . Baby remains fi rmly strapped to her back
\durin g.the festivities.
'

Carter sets goal of 4%
unemployment by 1983
WAS HINGTON iUP I I Presi dent Ca rter Mon day
um•ei lcd a compromise full
employment bill esta blishing
the "ambiti ous ... very dif·
fic ult " national goal of
red uci ng
unempl oyment
from 7 percent to 4 percent by
1983
The
measure , whi ch
requires no specific act ion by

the pres ident to reach that
goa l. has been endorsed by a
coalition of 32 labor, civil
rig hts and oth er grou ps
concerned about the nati on's
current hi gh jo bless rate.

Carter' ' who never fully
su ppor te d the ori ginal
measure proposed by Sen.
Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn .,
and Rep. Augustus Hawkins,

E step returns
r
from cruise in
Mediterranean
Navy Aviation Boatswain's

Mate Airman Rona ld R.
Estep, son of Mr and Mrs.
Ronald R Estep Sr. of Route
4, Pomeroy, has returned
fro ~n

extended deployment in

the Mediterranean Sea. He is
a crewmem ber abmird t he
aircraft car ri er USS In·
dependenee, out of Norfolk ,
Va ., a unit" of th&lt; U. S. Sixth
l'leet.
buring the seven- m unth
crui se, he participated in
seve ral traini ng operations.

including the major NATO
exer cises " Dawn Patrol '77,"

"National Week XXII! " and
'' Display
Determination .''
Additionally, he visited the
Spanish cities of Barcelona ,
Mala ga and Rota and the
Italian citi es of Na ples,
·Br ind isi, Bari , AlasS io ,
Rome, Florence and Pisa.
The Independence is a 1,046
foot '· Forrestal" 'ol;JsS airera ft carrier. She carries a

crew of 2,790 office rs and
,enlfsted men , plus 2,150
personnel assigned on an
attack aircraft wing. She
carries85 jet aircraft a nd can

travel at speeds of up to 35
knots. Estep joined the Navy
in F,ebruary 1973.

D-Calif., noted the com·
promise has been altered t6
em phasize the governme nt 's

commitment both to jobs and
price sta bility.
·
·
Th e pre sident asked
Congress to Pass the comprom ise.
" Thi s is

FRESH &amp; LEAN

&lt;vx~~-:fy~
fJ:

ADOLPH'S

·WHEN DOES A DANCER establish a record that has nothing to do with dancing? When
he 's a "gandy dancer". Mike Bonacci, 24, drove fi ve spikes into a railroad He in 67 seconds )
and pulled them all out agam m 11 seconds to set a new record recogmzed by the Guines$
Book of World Records. His 78-second exhibition of the traditional s kills of the •·gandl\
dancer"-railroading slang for tra ck worker-broke the old record by 19 seconds.
Bonacci, a machine operator at the Omaha track department, was the Burlington North·
ern's entrant.in the 1977 National Gandy Dancer Contest.

I

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

D41BT\ (i)

7 FOODS

·DAIRY VAllEY

~

re quire new jo b-c reatin g
prog r ams of the ad·
ministration. The bill sunply
r e c om m e n d s
so m e
programs, most of t hem
alrea dy undertaken by the
administratlon.

The bill does not specify
what procedures Congress
must take to review the
economic goals and blueprint
it receives from the
presid ent.

Ca rt er

said

Congress should write its own
'procedures for review.
Ca rter sa id th e bill
"establishes as a nationa l
goal· the fulfillment of the
right of all .Americans able,
willing and seeking to work to
· fu ll opportunities for useful
pai d em ployment at fair
rates of .compensation."
Offic ials
sa id
t his
statement of " r ights" would

not - as some had fea red allow unemployed persons to
sue the government for a job.
Carter emphasized the bill
creates
no new ad·
min istrative apparatus. All
. pu blic service jobs created'
under the measure would pay
.
The comprom ise measure the preva il mg wage, and no
was a d isap poin tment to less than the minimum wage.

Insur-mation feature

HAMS ~·

"(

A regular feat ure, "Insur- members ol the insurance
m.ation '' sponsored by local industry are working nation·
In surance agent Larry wide to provide more in·
Borgan began iri the Monday format ion a nd increa se
edition of the Daiiy Sentinel. pu blic un derstanding of in·
surance.

"Special attention will be
give n to many of t he
changing aspects of the in·

sa 1d the feat ure, designed on
a qu est-i.an and answer format, is intended to provide dust ry," said Brogen , "as
straight-forward and com· well as answering questions
prehensive answers to the .about insurance that many in ·
questions people most oft en the business take for gran·
ask about insurance.
ted." The series will appear
Brog an ,sa id respons ible each wee k.
I

HALF

...............
.................
•
FRESH
LB. PKG. 39~~ SWEET
AN BERRIES
~ POTATOES ...~.L~.s~ •••

LB.•1.59

See Us At The Pome r oy Bend Bridge

'

LB.

went out and never came
back ."

whose resignation is effective

present," t he young woman

a! the end of the season, as
head coach.

told the committee. "He put ·
his foot in my face and kicked
rne.''
·

'1 00°0

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon ., Tue s., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:lOtil 5: 00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
77 3-5592

'1.69

CENTER SLICES

The yotulg women provided·
a vivid glimpse into the New
York-Minnea polis
prostitution pipelin e th at
co mmittee
on
crime years ago led police to dub
Avenue
" The
inves ti ga t ing t een -age Eighth
11
prostitution, was not uncom- Minnesota Strip.
Jane said she started as a
mon .
hooker
in Minneapolis, where
Another witness, Mary, 16,·
said her pimp picked her up she worked the streets for a
at a bus stop in Minneapolis month befo re her · pimp
and drove her to New York . brought her to New York
She worked as a prostitute, because, as she put it, it ''was
she said , "because I really his dream city, with plenty of
mo ney ror pros titu tes t o
make.
" When we got her e, he put
me on Eighth Avenue and
McMILLEN TAKEN
44th Street and said : 'Work
ATLANTA (UP! ) - The he re . " 1
Atl a nta Ha wks Mond ay
Charging $20 a tr ic k,
pi cked up fo r wa rd To m working six nights a week,
McMillen for a draft choice, Jane said , sh e made $100,000
·released
gu a rd
Tony betwe en Jun e 1976 and
Robertson and put guard Oc:tober of this year . All the
Claude Terry on the injured money went to her pimp, who
rese rv e li st. Atl anta got supplied her .with clothes,.
McMiUen from the New York foo d and a place to stay.
Knicks iri exchange for the
She also got two mink coats
Hawks' second·round draft and was "slapped around
pick in 1978. As pa rt of the from time to· time.''
deal New York will pay some
·Each night, Ja ne said , she
of
McMill en's
sa lary, ·had to earn $1~0 or she
although the amount was not ~'couldn ' t come home." She
mentioned.
·
was arrested 50 times and
paid fines ranging from $50 to
$500. She always used fal se
HE'S INTERESTED
identification, she said, and
police never questioned her
MILWAUKEE (UP! )
about
her age,
The Milwaukee . Sent in el
When
she decided to return
Monday quoted Paul RoaOh,
to
Minnesota,
her pimp broke
. offensive backfield coach of
th e D ~nv e r. Broncos, as her nose·.
1
"He said the beating was
saying he was interested in
succeedin g J ohn J a rdine, going to be my going-away

•

is all about insurance

'1.49

LB.

OUARTER

liked him. It was a way to
prove to him ! loved him ."
Anne, 14 , came for much
the same rea son , and she
suffer ed much t he same
abuse. She decided to .leave,
she said, after her pimp
broke her jaw : " I got dresse~
up like I was going to work,

Herman ·Grate

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'1.79

LB.

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WHOLE

TAVERN

HRS.' 10; 00 A.Motil ll ;00 P.M. Sun . · Thurs . 10 :00 A. M.
·
·
t il 12 :00 P .M. Fr iday and Saturda y .

GROUND BEEF. •••••••L.B;.

. ·· .. ·...

• ,'

mean·with ·g irls

those wh_o expected it wo uld

Br oga n, or the Re ute r Brogan Jns ura nce Services,

LB

Pimps get real

an ambitio us

Th e presiden t's first
preport to Congress would
require him to set a goal for
reducing unemploym ent by
1983 to 4 percent for all
workers over age 16 and 3
percent for those over age 20.
Unemployment has fallen 2
percent since the recession
peak of 9' per cent in May 1975,
and administration officials
now concede their origi na l
project ions fo r 6.6 percent
joblessness by the end of ,1977
were too optimistiC.
Some 7 million persons
currently are unem ployed,
although the economy has
gener.ated about 3.~ mi llion
jobs over the past year.

SANDWICHES

Using a grant of fed eral
funds, Palm iter put small
crews of out-()f·work men to
work with chain saws, axes
and other ha nd tools to open
up jams and obstructions that
were sever ely aggravating
high-water pro blems for
JOSEPH
fa nners in the flood plains. By
GAMBARDELLO
No heavy equipment was
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jane
used , cha nn e ls were not
her· pimp brought her to
said
dist ru bed and bottoml a nd
brush and timber were left New York from Minneapolis
when she was 15 because it
untouched.
was
his dream city. When she
Fa r mers
a nd
condecided
to leave, he kicked
se rvationists a lik e were
her
in
the
nose as a farewell
hig hly pleased with t he
gesture.
results, and supporters of the
In her 16 months as a teenproject believe the same
age
prostitute in New York ,
· methods cou ld be used on
Jane
said she earned $100,000.
ot her small r ivers. ..
Her
story, told Monday to a
The story of th e acstate
Sena te
se lect
complishm ent is told in the

obj ective and one that may
prove very difficult to
achieve, but setting our sites
high challen ges us to do our
best ," he sa id in a statement.
Th e bill estab lis hes a
f ra m ~ w o rk , for eco nomic
policy making requiring
t he president to submit to
Co ngress his five-year
projection of goals for em·
ployment,
unemployment,
production 01nd income.

LEAN

TRY OUR DELICIOUS

.,protection," Teater said. The

~~A~~A~~N••••••~

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••

�•

8 _ The Daily Sentmel. M1ddleport-P"neroy. 0 .. TUl'Sday, Nnv. 15. 1977

Racine .OES plans for
officers installation

Winding Trail Garden Club
hQsted by Mrs. Wilma Terrell
Fall cleanup of the civir
planting at the Meigs County
Infirmary was scheduled
along with holiday activities
at the recent meeting Iii the
Winding Trail Garden Club
held -al the home of Mrs.
Wi~na Terrell.
While dis&lt;;ussing the fall
C'leanup work, it was noted
that Jean Wholerey of thf.&gt;
Odds and Ends Shop, Middleport, had donated a frog
figurine for the bird bath
there.
The Christmas flower s how

was

~ussed

along w1th the

.• classes in which the d ub
members ~'ill exhibit. Each

member donated Sl toward
expenses of the .show to be

held Dec. 3 and ~ in the
Pomeroy Elementary Schoo,!.
Mrs . Roher! Thompson 1s
horticulture chainnan and-

will be assisted by Mrs. Dale
Walburn. Mrs. Robert Lewis
is food chairman and will be
ass1sted

by

Mrs.

Aaron

Kelton and Mrs. Cora Beegle.
The annual Christmas party of the cl ub will be held orr
Dec. 13 at6 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Dollie Hayes. It will
be a covered dish dinner With
the meat to be furnished by
the club. There will be a $2
gift exchange and a prize will
be awarded for the best
decorated package.
Mrs. Lewis thanked
members for helping at the
counly meeting held at Trinity Church. Mrs. Terrell pr&lt;&gt;vided decorations for the

chur ch , Mrs. Marilyn
Wisecup made the name tags,
and all ol the members took
cookies.
Thank you notes were read
from Pat Thoma of the Girl
Scou ts
than kin g Mrs.
Thompson for providing a

to act as the gardener's first
nower arrangement tor the Rio Grande.
Area 3 Girl Scout meeting.
.. Attracting and Feeding notice that spring is on the
and from Mrs. Janet Bolin lor Wold Birds" was the program way. She spoke of attracting
hostmg the t'Ounty meeting topic of Mrs. Kelton. She said birds by giving them food and
Both county and state dues that birds are so much a part water as well as suitable
have been paid.
of the garden that the cooling nesting places. She suggested
Mrs. Terrell's devotions of the robin in March seems suet tied to a tree limb,
were on the theme, '· Thank
crumbs and tablescraps
make good food for the birds,
You. God." There was a
and emphasized the need for
reading from the 'Daily Word
OPEN HOUSE
water around the feeding
followed by the dub prayer.
Meigs
Junior High School center.
For roll call, members
As lor nesting places. Mrs.
brought deeorations- tree or- will hold an open house
nanwnts. pine rone or- Wednesday from 7:30 to 9:30 Kelton emphasized the need
naments. candle holders, p.m . in conjunction with Na- for keeping them a distance
nash cube ornaments. and tional Education Week. from the ground lor safety
bread dough characters. The Parents are invited to attend from their natural enemies.
traveling prize brought by · and meet the staff. She spoke of using metal
Mrs. Beegle was won by Mrs. Refreshments will be served guards around trees and
in the cafeteria by the poles to discourage cats, to
Wiseeup.
Mrs. Margaret Pa rker ParentTeacher Forum of the remember that birds do not
gave the garden club calen- school.
like newly painted houses.
dar noting that chrysan. and they like somber colors.
themwns should be cut dqwn
She said that nesting
materials should be placed on
as the)' die, that cold frames
LAFF- A - DAY
the ground in the open.
·
should be covered to keep
them Iron! freezing during
Birds and the kinds of
the winter, and that mounds
houses they like were discussof dirt should be placed
- 'I _
ed and the garden club
around the roses.
·'
i •Jy,._
members were reminded not
Members were given ·
1&gt;-.:•
to destroy such things as the
.,. I
\\'~'
' '\
seed heads of sunflowers,
samples of rose petal jelly
made bv Mrs. Kathryn
cosmos, marigolds, since
, '$ ..., these are used for food. She
Spencer of Florid~. daughter ~ , 1JI · _ ...,J
also suggested . building a
of Mrs. Terrell here for a ~"!, ' " ...::/~' __::, ' i r
' &gt; • ._,_ ~ -.: &gt; / 1 •
CHristmas tree for the birds.
visit.
\-'· .· ...;; ·( _.\? , Mrs. Terrell seryed a
Flower arrangements were
judged by Mrs. Beegle.
;;. dessert course with the table '
Receiving blue ribbons for .
• · · - -~-- • - - - "1 \
decortiodecorationscarrying
"Shine on Harvest Moon" ar- "One more decision before we out a fall motif. Emma
rangements were Mrs. Ter- adjourn, gentlemen- who gets Carleton was a guest.
rell and Mrs. Thompson. Also to take home the centerpiece?'' ~
receiving ribbons were Mrs.
Terrell for a mass arrangement , a blue ribbon: Mrs.
Parker for a crescent arREVIVAL SLATED
rangement. a red ribbon ;
The Bradbury Church of
Mrs. Walburn for a mass ar- Christ will bold a revival Dec.
' rangement, a white ribbon.
16, 17 and l8 at 7:30p.m. each
It was noted that Mrs. evening with Dave Lu&lt;;as as
Thompson, Mrs. Wisecup,
evangelist. Music will be proand Mrs. Terrell attended the vided
by ''The Watchmen •·
fall regionalmeeting held at

- r--,r::::j

~~.'.t ,- \,'' x~r~}:
-[0

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1'ueSday, Nov. 15, 1977

Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Petty
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Daisy Daughterly and
Carlton Petty were married at the Syracuse ·Church of
God on Nov. 12. The private eeremony was solemnized by
the Rev. George Oiler. Guests at the wedding were
Edward LeMa•ter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hoschar , Mr. and
Mrs . James LeMaster , Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs . Raymond
Snider, Racine . Areception honoring the couple was held
at the home of Mr. a nd Mrs. Larry Hoschar. After the
bride and groom cut their cake, refreshments were served
to the 2tl guests by Liza Lilly, June LeMaster, and Rea
Roush .

Plans were made for installation of new officers on
Monday, Dec. 5 at 7:30 n.m
when Racine Cahtper, Order
of the Eastern Star, met
recently at the temple.
Naoma Brinker wiD be installed as worthy matron,
and J esse Brinker as worthy
patron of the chapter.
The charter was draped for
Ferne B. Hayman and a short
memorial service was held
by the worthy matron, Lillian
Weese. One candidate was initiated with two more can&lt;lidates to be initiated at a
special meeting scheduled for
last night. Invitations to attend installationswere read
from New Marshfield, Beverly, Stockport, Lowell, Marie!·
ta,
' McConnelsville,
Macksburg, Gallipolis,
Pomeroy. II was announced
that the new deputy grand
matron for District 25 is Miss ·
Nancy Riley of Marietta .
Thank you notes were read
from Rachel McBride, Loe
Tisdale, Grace Swan, H..el
Carnahan, and June Wickersham. Get-well cards were
· sent to Loe Tisdale and Carroll Teaford from the
chapter. An Eastern Star
baby spoon was sent to Anesa
Kay , infant daughter of Eddie
and Connie Van Maire.
Mason,
· Potl~~k refreshments were

Polly Cramer

Smoke stains are a problem

season.

Final plans
announced
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Michael areannouncing the
compleiion of wedding plans
lor their daugliter, Tammy,
and Sammy Lee Little.
The wedding will he an
event of Sunday, Nov. 20, at
2:30 in the afternoon at the
Hea th United Methodist
Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Sherry Snyder will be
the matron of honor, and the
bridesmaids will be Marty
Krawsczyn, Middleport, Mrs.
Mary Price, Syracuse, and
Beverly Smith, Point Pleasant, W. Va. Tammy Jo
Miller will serve as flower
girl. Jimmy Mc Clure ,
Pomeroy, will be best man,
and David Krawsczyn, Middleport, John Krawsczyn, Jr. ,
Minersville, and Steve Little,
Pomeroy, will be the ushers.
The
Rev .
Rob e rt
Bumgarner will officiate. Th~
gracious custom of open
church will be observed. A
reception will follow in the
church social room.

•

POLLY 'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I recently
purchased a lovely home but
the flagstone fireplace is
stained with smoke, some apparently spilled .liquor and
seems greasy where someone
probably roasted franks in
the fireplace. I hope you or
some of the readers of your
fine colwnn will tell me how
to remove these stains
without damaging the
flagstones .- Mr. G.G., Jr.
DEAR MR. G.G., JR. You really have problems.
Some authorities suggest
cleaning smoke stained stone
fireplaces as follows. Add
four ounces yellow laundry
soap lo enouch hot water to
make a quart of soft soap .
Heat until soap dissolves,
cool and then stir in one-half
pound powdered pumice
stone and one-hall cup
household ammonia. After
mixing well use to scrub
stones with a stiff brush. Use
a clean brush to apply
another coat and leave on
about fifteen minutes, scrub
off with brush and clean
warm water. Rinse with
more clear warm water. Test
first just to be sure of effects
on your particular stone.
Perhaps this wiU also remove
those various other spots. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - N.M.B.
wrote how she stores her ernbroidery noss in pill containers so I want to tell the
other readers how I keep
mine in a small manual type
book, about five by seven and
a half inches, that has about
75 pages in it. Each color is

-::!r:t.~~~a:J:~ec~l~~

Dale Evans to appear
at rv:.beneftt rally
husband Roy Rogers have
appeared in almost 90 feature

featured in a rally November

motion pictures. and in their

18 at the Huntjngton Civic" own television series. Both
Center, beginning at 7:30 are highly respecte&lt;! lor their
p.m. She is appearing on clean, wholesome;type
behalf of the development family entertainment, and
drive underway fo r a family- their careers have included
oriented television station to over 5,000 charitable appearances.
serve the Tri.State.
'Dale Evans has received
The .free rally is open to the
public. Dale Evans will numerous honors and
present a concert of religious citations from many groups,
music and old favorites, ·including being named Inalong with her personal ternational Orphans, Inc .,
"Woman of the World" and
testimony and witness.
Her appearance follows as "Church Woman · of the
another by Anita Bryant in Year" by Religious Heritage
Huntington during July , Both of America. Together with
events are sponsored by non- Roy Rogers, they received a
profit Tri-State Family national citation from the
Television, Inc., applicants American Legion .and were
Life
for WTSF-TV .. The slaton is named· Honorary
expected to b~ in operation by Members of the American
Bible Society - the only two
fall, 1978.
Pr· •ular with people of all stars from the entertainment
ages. Dale Evans and industry to ever be so
~::: :;: ; :;:;:;: ; : ; : ;: ;:;:;:; :;: ; ::: ;: ;:;:::;:; :;:::;:;:;:;:;::: :: ;;; :;: ;: ; : ;:;:;: ; :;:;:;: ::;: ::;:::;:;: ;:;:;:;:; :; :;: ;:;: ; :;:;:;: ;: ;: ;:;: ; :; : ; : ;: ~;:; :; :;:; :

I

'

:j

Daughwr born to Youngs

Mr. and Mrs. Randy A.
Young, Route 1, Minersville,

::

Minersville and the materna)
grandparents are Mr. and

Mrs. Maurice Reed, Reedsville.
·
theor first child, a daughter, ... Paternal
greatl...a.uren Renee , born Nov, 7 at grandparent is Mrs. Milly
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Cunningham ,
Tuppers
Point Pleasant. She weighed Plains, and maternal greateight pounds live and one-half grandparents are Mr. and
ounces and was twenty-{lne
Mrs. Alvin Reed, Reedsville
and Ada Kibble, Parkersinches long .
Paterna ) grandparents are
burg.
the former Rosemary Reed,
are announcing the birth of

Mr. and Mrs. Reid Young,

FUNNY BUSINESS

By Roger Bollen

.. THIS 9::'12E'ENPLAY IS
VUL@AR TASlt::lE5S 1
.Af\ID /!j/RC0T lHE:
9..1GHTEST. TRACE OF .
SCCIAL VALUE .. . IT
HAS kEA'L PJTE,\JT/AL /
1

success.

Mrs. Julja Norris had
charge of the"program which
was a pledge service on the
theme "Lord, What Can I
Do]" Scripture was taken
from John 21, 15 through 17
verses, and the progratn
dealt with use of money at
home and abroad.
Attending besides those
named were Edith Manuel,
Annie Alley, Patsy La~der­
milt, Alice Balser, Shirley
· Ables, Dollie Wolle, and
Eileen Buck. Mrs. Balser and
Mrs .
Ables
served
refreshments.

•

•

WOMEN ON THE MARCH in Taipei, Taiwan, participate in the Nationalist Chinese
"National Day" observance. The militiawomen from the offshore island of Kinmen.

D of A group marks 65 years
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie,
The tilith anniversary of
Theodorus Council 17, . district deputy of District 13,
Daughters of America, was was a guest and was
celebrated recently with a presented a gift on behalf of
potluck dinner at the IOOF the Council by Mrs. Edna
Reibel, district deputy. Mrs.
hall in Pomeroy.
A Thanksgiving theme was Ritchie spoke briefly in apcarried out in the table preciation of being invited to
decorations and included an the celebration. Other guests
arrangement of fall flowers were Mrs. Mary K. Holter
flanked by tapers with turkey and . Mrs. Marcia Keller,
replicas on either · end. members of Chester Council.
Mrs. Ethel Smith was given
Thanksgiving napkins were
also used. The anniversary a welcome having · been at&gt;cake baked by Mrs. Eva sent for several meetings. It
Dessauer was topped with the was reported that Eula
Odegard's mother is in
nwnerals, "65".

By JOANNE WINSHIP
NEW YORK (UPI) ·Danae Mori, the only
Japanese designer to achieve
fame in America, turned out
two good spring-summer
· collectio ns today for the
many fans of both her readyt&lt;&gt;-wear and couture, modeled
for the semi-annual New
York showings for American
fashion editors.
She is known for her

recommended by th e noted

Here

are

more

facts

about the common co ld
!rom the Health Insurance
Institute :
- The average adult
catches hyo colds a year .
But a typical child under
four years o ld may suffer as

many as eight a year.
-The peak cold season
runs trom the end of Seplember to mid-Apri l.
- A col d normally lasts
from (wo days to a week no matter 1'/hat you do .to
fight it.
-

This year, Americans

will suffer an estimaled 70
million colds, which will

as
seen on
national
Wall Mount

PRICE SLASHED 26°/o
'
With holoday decorations.
ca ndl es. trees, portable
heaters and the many other things ,that s train your
electrical s ys tem this time of year. you need the
added protection that an Archer Smoke Alarm can
give you and your family! Constantly m.onitors the air
m your home for even mvi s ible combustion part i.c les.
Special circuitry that tells you when the battery
needs replacement! UL listed . Save NOII,J!

.Reg.

2995
275- 451

- ~~~~ ~~

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

THERE'S ONLY ONE PLACE YOU CAN FIND
IT- RADIO SHACK!
.

SEE TELEPHONE DIRECTORY WHITE PAGES
FOR THE RADIO SHACK NEAREST YOU
N

PR ICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

Mostrtems

also bvarlablc at
Aadro Shack
Dealers
Look lor thts

srgn m your
nerghborhOod

Etatlle
lhaek

ton,

Dyesville;

amount to 2U percent of all
acu te illnesses .

- Those cbtds will result
in the loss of 58 million
school day ~ and 40 million

fabulous prints, which she
designs herself. Everything
is soft, feminine, and ladylike
- but for today's lady. An
enormous range of colors and
textur.es epitomizes her
ready-t&lt;&gt;-wear from a thin
silk knit basket weave in
beige or purple that are very
handsome, to cotton voile,
silk pongee, crepe georgette,
a cotto.n-linen mix, silk crepe

cords, are channing .

de

Leland Nelson and John, Mr.
and Mrs. Geoffrey Wilson,
Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Mrs.
Mary Bacon and J~hn. Mr.
and Mrs. James Drake and
Carol, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hysell, Mr. Kathy and
Jackie, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Woodyard, Tammy and
Michelle, Mrs . Ellen

Mori includes a mini-group
of prints on DYlon jersey, very
packable, from the demure
school girl dress of tiny white
dots on black with white
Peter Pan collar and black
bow to a sophisticated
blouson in deep lave~der
dotted in black.
For her couture -collection,
Mori runs the gamut in both
fabrics and style for rich
clients who can afford her
opulence. She covers up the
older ones, uncovers the

Johnson,

younger.

chine

and

checked

Radio club holds dinner

The Big Bend CitU;ens Band
Radio Club, IQC. held Its anwork days .
·
nual Thanksgiving dinner
- America ns will spend Sunday at the Rock Springs
more than $550 million this Grange hall.
year on 35,000 products that
Families attending were
claim to provide relief from Mr. and Mrs. Harold Will and
runny noses or stu ff ed-up Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs.
heads .
Clarence Jordan, Mr. and
According to Dr. Francis Mrs. Eddie Nelson, Mr. and
C. Lowell of Harvard Medi- Mrs. Randall Gibbs, Gina and
cal School, bed rest and Rhonda, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
drinking liquids are as good Aeiker Penny and Mr. and
as anything e lse in fighting Mrs. David Pratt, Treasa and
colds . Sir William jus! might
have had something, Angie, Mr. and Mrs. AI
White, Mr. ad Mrs. Harry
there ....
Krautter, Mr. and Mrs.

organ.a.
There ate no seams in
shoulders and lots of
detailing, such as smocking
-and soft sashes double
wrapped around waists.
Special touches, such as silk
cords strung with wooden
beads worn over one
shoulder, or little puffed
purses dangling from silk

Mrs.

Margaret

Wyatt, Mrs. Barbara Offutt,
Mike Capehart.
After the dinner an appredation gift was presented
to Clarence Jordan for his
work as president of the club.

.

There is see-through lace
and a black silk tissue taffeta
with a demure ruined top and
big sleeves over a black lace
skirt. The top is really a
jacket which comes off to
reveal a sexy black net
bodice with black pailletles
Little straps crisscross the
back. It's the kind of dress
Rita Hayworth used to wear.
It's happy. It's gay and
luxurious. Hanae Moori fans
should have a field day.

Jason

Black, Rutlaod; Cassie
Barrett, Roseville; Desi
Columbus,

and

Teresa Barrett, Rutland.

CLUB TO MEET
The Magnolia Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Racine.
AT CONVENTION
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dutton
and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Kelton were in Dayton Friday
and Saturday to attend the
103rd convention of the
Episcopal Church held at the
B[ltmore Hotel.

• •

covering strategic points.

ARCHER® SMOKE ALARM
• Protect Your Home and Family - Day and Night'
• Early Warning - Defects Smoke
for Ample Warning of Fire Danger!
• Battery Operated' Independent of House Wiring!
• Includes Battery, Mounting Hardware. Complete
Fire Security Manual with Instructions'
• Extra Insurance for a Safer Christmas!
•

critical condition and that
Kristen Shato, daughter of
Mrs. Donna Shato, was injured in a fall. The death of
the husband of Mrs. Mabel
Bearhs and the death of Mrs.
Nancy Walker, a charter
member, were noted.
It was announced that' the
deputy club and the district
past councilors of District 13
will combine lor a Christmas
party this year at the Chester
hall. It will be held on Dec. 4
with a potluck dinner.
Inspections announced
were Kyger and Belpre.

Fashion
makes
women
look
...
well •
-

unlil .you see

Canadian-American phys iCian , Sir William Osler 1t8491919).

DANIEL KENNEDY
TURNS SIX - Daniel
Scott Kennedy, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Kennedy,
Route I, Rutland ,
celebrated his sixth birthday on Nov. 5 with a sur·
prise party at his ~ome.
Games were played with
favol'1! being given to all the
chlldren. Cupcakes were
served with · ice cream,
potato ehlps and Kool-Aid•
Attending were Heather
and Joshua Wood, Middleport; Mark Howard,
Harrlsonv.llle; Renee
Young, Dexter, David Hu""

Barrett,

two hats .
That was the cold remedy

TV

· APPLE GROVE-Holiday
activities were planned during a recent meeting of the
Apple Grove United
Methodist Women held at the
church.
A Thanksgiving dinner lor
the church congregation was
announced for Nov. 19 at 6
p.m. at the community hall.
It will be a potluck affair with
members to take a covered
dish and a dessert.
The annual Christams party of the UMW was set for 6
p.m. on Dec. 13 at the home of
Mrs. Donna Hill. It will also
be potluck. Plans were made
to make fruit baskets for the
elderly and shutin members
of the church. It was reported
that the rununage sale was a

smallicecubes.-NANCY.

'

Hang your hat on a bedpost. Get into bed Drink

honored.
She has also written nine
bool&lt;s, contributing the
royalties to various charities.
Roy and Dale Evans
Rogers have raised nine
children, including sev~ral
adopted orphans. The couple
is involved in a multitude of
projects that continue to keep
them quite active.
The November 18 rally at
the Civic Center will mark
the beginning of an area-wide
campaign to generate public
support for the ielevision
project.
WTSF-TV
transmitter
facilities will be atop Rotary
Park Hill in Huntingto. Studio
facilities are plaMed nearby
in the 2800 ~lock of Eighth
Avenue, just South of the
Chessie System Repair
Shops.
Plans are to combine local
and syndicated religious
programs with a variety of
others that will provide
wholesome entertainment
with the entire family.

Ladies plan
for holidays

on the adjoining pages. I
store this book and its contents in a candy box in which
I also put my embroidey
needles with the needle most
recently used stuck in the corncr of the book. If the box is
large enough embroidery
hoops and scissors can also
be stored in it so everything is
quickly available when one
wants to embroider. -HAZEL.
DEAR POLLY-When running bath water for my small
daughter I always make sure
I tum off the hot water first
and then let enough cool
water run to cool off the
faut-el. This prevents the
chance of an accident should
. the child grab the li!Ucet
when moving about out of
curiosity. This is for those
tubs with adjoining faucets
and for those with separate
faucets I suggest keeping a
small plastic cup of cold
water to pour over the hot
faucet. Most families with
children have such cups in
the bathroom anyway . A
child's bath water should be
cooler than that for an adult
so that extra cup or so of cold
water wiD not be really
wasle!f as it goes into the bath
water. -JEANETTA.
DEAR POLLY - I open up
empty waxed cardboard milk
cartons, fill them not quite
full of water and then freeze.
I usually have several on
hand and use them to line th.e
bottom of our cooler when it
is used for a picnic or on the
boat. This keeps the food nice
and cool and such a block of
ice lasts much longer than

What's up with
the common cold

whiskey -

Dale Evans - "The Queen
of the West" - will be

Social
Calendar

POLLY"S POINTERS

enjoyed in. the dtmng room
which wa~ decorated w1th
turkeys, flowers and candles
in keeping with the hohday

THURSDAY
• turkey
ANNUAL PUBUC
dinner of Rutland Fire
Department, Thursday,
serving begiMing at 5 p.m. at
Rutland Elementary School
cafeteria; advance tickets at
New York Clothing House,
Dutton Drug Store or Senior
Citi•ens Center, Pomeroy.
REVIVAL now in progress
at Mt. Olive Church, Long
Bottom through Nov. 27 at 7
p.m. nightly. D. Adams,
Marietta evangelist . Special

TUESDAY
XI GAMMA MU Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
TUesday at the home of Mrs.
Karen Stanley with Mrs.
Judy Crooks, and Sandy
Sargent, c&lt;&gt;-hostesses, 7:30
p.m. Mrs. Linda Riffle will
present the cultural report.
GROUP II, Middleport
United Presbyterian Church,
will meet TUesday night at
the Kin Folk Restaurant in
Point Pleasant for a
Thanksgiving dinner._ After
·the dinner -they will go to the
home of Mrs. Lewis Sauer for
a meeting. Mrs.

Frances

Anderson will be c&lt;&gt;-hostess.
Mrs. Sauer will be devotional
leader, and Mrs. Anderson
will have the Bible study.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
Refreshments will be served.
ANNUAL Thanksgiving
dinner, Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, 7 this
evening at post home
followed
by
business
meeting.
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN Junior High
PTO, Wendesday, 7:30 p.m.
at school. •
TWIN CITY SHRINET- ,
TES, Wednesday , 7:30 at the
social room of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co.
THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW
GARDEN
CLUB meets Thursday, Nov.
17 at the Williams-Balderson
home with Mrs. Donald
Putnam as co-hostess. A
Christmas workshop will be
conducted by Mrs. Balderson
and Mrs. Gene Wilson.
Members are to bring gifts
for patients at Athens Mental
Health Center.
MEIGS GIRL Scout
meeting, 7:30 Thursday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. office. All troops
to have a representative at
the meeting. Baby sitters will
be members of the Meigs
Cadette Troop. Plans will he
made for Thinking Day and a
workshop on songs and
games will be held. ·

singing

'

evening .

Son born
to Abbotts

.
lt"ke women

gauze dresses are soft and so
with . it, embellished by tiny
tucks or unpressed little
ruffles at the edge of collars
or for finishing sleeves.
This designer has long been
known for his fluid and body
conscious evening dresses
and this collection is no exception.

each

Lawrence Bush , pastor.
Gospel Tones from Chester
will be featured on Tuesday,
Nov. 22.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Abbott,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a son,
Saturday night at the Holzer
Medical Center. The seven
pound infant has been named
Travis Jay.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . James Soulsby,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.

Horace Abbott, Pomeroy R.
D. Great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Jed Will, Sr.,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.

Arlee Abbott, Pomeroy, R. D.
SUPPER PLANNED
SYRACUSE - The Eagles
Class of the Asbury United
Methodist C)lurch will hold a
soup supper at the church
basement Saturday beginning at 12 noon. Soup, sand·
wiches and pie will be

available. Those wishing
take-out service are to take

containers.
WOMEN TO MEET
Episcopal Church Women
of Grace Episcopal Church,
Pomeroy, will meet for the
12 :30 p.m. luncheon Thursday at the \lome of Mrs. Pau~
Eich, Lincoln Hill Ro~d.
HOME AGAIN
Allen Eichinger
recuperating

is

from eye
his Mulberry

surgery at
Heights home. He underwent
the surgery at O'Bleness
Hospital in Athens.

Food -service law changed
in law effective Nov. 4th
seating capacity of 75 to 99
persons.
$12 for . each vending
machine location.
Churches, schools,
hospitals, and government
operations wlll pay a fee of $3
for food service operation
licenses.
Dr. Blazewic&lt; explained
that the purpose of the fees,
as described in the Ohio
Revised Code is to administer
and enforce the law relative
to licensing and inspecting
food service operations. ''The
new fee schedule more
· or less.
$50 for an operation with a closely reflects the costs to
seating capacity of 50 to 74 our department to conduct
this program," Dr. Blazewicz
persons.
$70 for an operatin~ with a
Major changes in the Ohio
food service law that became
effective Nov. 4 were explained today by Salem J.
Blazewlc., M.D., health
commissioner of the · Meigs
County Health Department.
He said the three major
changes in the law pertain to
the license fees, the date for
license renewal; and late
payment of license fees .
The new fees for food
service operations will be:
$37 for an operation with a
seating capacity of 49 persons

Jr. High honors listed
Principal John Mora has
announced the first six weeks
grading per iod honor roll a,t
Meigs Junior High School in

Middleport.

.

Making a grade of B or
above In all their subjects to
be listed on the rol l were :
7th Grade Rowena
Averion , Robin Barrett~
Karla Brown, Karla DeMoss,
Faith Dickens, Brent Finlow,
Elizabeth Gloeckner, Tracy
Harding, Scott Harrison ,
Stephanie Houchins, Jim
Hoyt , Bill King, Suzan
Lightfoot, Rodney Manley,
Adaril Martin, Keith Scott,
John Smith, Linda ~mi th ,
Kri s Snowden, Greg Taylor,
Mike
Tromm,
Angie
VanCooney, .Renee Willis,
Susanna Wise, Mike Wyatt .
8th Grade -:- Terry Adkins,
Kristen Anderson, Teresa
Basham, Ji mmy Boyer , Jack
Braley, Dale Brickles. Greg
Bu sh, Mark Cline, Pam
Crooks, Phyllis Davis, Vicky
DeBor d, Melan ie Dillard ,
M ike Edwards, Tammy
Eichinger, Dav id Hoffman,
s·te ve
Hood,
Brent
Houdashelt. Tim Jarrell ,
Tony Jewel I, Duane Jones, .
Dick King, Robin Kitchen,:_
Eric
Lipsco mb,
Mark
M cGuire, Jeff Nash. lynne
Oliver , Kathy Parker. Kim

OPEN WITH PADRES '
SEATTLE (llPI) - The
Seattle Mariners will open
their 1978 spring training
exhibition season with two
games against the San Diego
Padres March 9-10 at Yuma,
MEETING SLATED ·
A county-wide prayer Ariz. , Mariners officials
meeting will be held at 2 p.m. announced Monday. The
Sunday at the Hobson Church Mariners will conduct spring
of Christ in Christian Union ' training at Tempe, Ariz. , for
with Glen Bissell as class the second consecutive
season .
leader.
·

Patterson, O"pal Pugh, Lori
Roush, Helen Slack, Curtiss·

Smith, Edna Smith, Laura

Smith, Mary Smth. lorri
Snowden, Greg Thomas,
Dennis ThOrnton, Deni se
Tur.n er , Jeff Whittington,
Troy Willis, Fred Young.

sai&lt;l. "The previous fee
schedule
was
totally
inadquate to meet these

costs."
"The second change In the
law was made lor the benefit
of food service operations",
Dr. Bla•ewlc&lt; said. ''The
final date for renewal of a
food service operation license
has been changed from
January 1 to March 1 of each
.year. This removes the
renewal procedures from one
of the busiest times of the
year for food service
operators, and places it
during one of the slowest
periods.' '

·

The third change adds a
penalty clause for late
payment of license fees. Any
food service operator who
does not renew a license by
March 1 of each year, or who

does not obtain a license at
the proper time in relation to
a planned new opening of an
operation will be required to
pay a penalty ol twenty-five
percent of the license fee.

Berry's World

CD

1977byN[A

Inc ~~

" HEAVENS TO BETSY!"

�10-T~~:;::l. Middleport·r;;· lu Th~977 Want
CHARGES

Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

•

11 - The Daily Senhnel. Middleport-f'mner oy, u.. "!uesday. N•w. 15. 1977
DICKTRACY
.

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MAYBE l S HOULO DROP
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NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISJNG
DEADLINES
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For Wednesday , Nov. 16, t977

ASTRO·G.RAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Nov 1&amp;, t977
Don ' t be drsmayea thrs comrng
year If you get all to a few
unproductrve starts rn proJects
that you u nderta~e Your llnrsh
wr ll be strong That rs what
really counts.

SCORPIO (Oct

U-Nov . 221

Palience. pace and second
effort are rmportan t words to
~e ep rn mtnd today Thrngs you
do haslrly are apt to go awry.
Frnd ou t more about yourse fl
by sendrng for your copy of
Astra-Graph Letter Mall 50
cents for each and a long. selfaddressed stamped envelope
to Astra-Graph . P 0 Box 48g,
Radio Crty Statron , N Y 1001g
Be sure to speCify yo ur birth
srgn

SAGITARRIUS (Nov . 23·Dec.
21) You cou ld be rn lor some
heated ObJeCirons today !rom
people wh o usually go along
,with your way of doing thrngs .
Meetrng frre wrth frre rsn ' l the
answer

CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jan . t9)
Be secunty-conscrous today.
Don ' t leave valuables lying
about to tempt the ligh tfingered

AQUARIUS (Jan . 21J.Feb. t9)
Faux pas you ma~e today Will
lin ger in tti e memory of others
Conducl yourself so as to leave
potenlral detracto rs wordless

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
There are no shad1ngs m the
way you do 11"\ings today Certa rn afla1rs you 'll manage w ith
ease and excellence In other
areas . the oppos1te rs true

ARIES (March 2t-Aprll t9) It's
most importan t today that you
have the n ght people 1n yo ur
corner, rf you get rnvo111ed 1n
somethrng that you know l 11tle
aboul.

TAURUS (Aprii21J.May 20) Your
chan ces for getti ng w ha t you
stnve for today are only farr ,
You mrghl have to s tep on too
many toes in the process

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Take
the responsrbii 1IY fo r your e rror s today Don ' t took for a
scapeg oa t or try to ra trona lrze
them . Al1b rs won ' t ma~e
amends

CANCER

ForSale

l'tldl ~·

l'ul&gt;h
I tl,;}

(June 2t·July 22)

There 's a poss tbtl rty today you
could sutler a hnancial o r materrat toss through an arrangemen! wrth another Avo1d unreliable t ypes

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You 're a
pretty good JUdge of people
that oppose, you compet rll ve ly ,
but today you tend to underestrmate your opposition Thrs
Qllles them the edge

I W ISH IO thQnk lhe Pme ( r e!)t

197 1 SALEM 12 " 65'J bedr oom CASH potd l or all mo"es ond
Nvrsmg Home stall all !he
models at mobile hom~
Fronl den m-odel Fr vtmhed
l rtends .
reloltves
a nd,
Phone or eo cod8 614-42'3 -9531 .
Hook ed up 10 ullhfle\ or Coun·
tr y Mobde Hom e Pork
mughbors who gave food .
TIMBER Pomeroy Fote'5J Pro ·
!lowers and other ktnd
Ever.,th,.,g ,, tn th den ready lor
ducts Top pr1ce lor stond1ng
r emember,ences dur1ng the tl
a hreploce or wood burnmg
saw tim ber Coli
sq65 or I
Jness ond death of my mother
sto ve $6 00 l ~t m Call 992 .70J4
Kent~onby_1 -~46 - 8570 .
Maude Bless1ng Roush
A
or 9'92· 767 1 alter b
spectol rhonk s to rhe Foglesong
COI NS CURRENCY tokens old
TWO BEDROOM tro•l43!r
tn
Funeral Home. the Boord Bop
pocket watches and chains
Pom.ero., [ 614 ) ~157
I1ST Church Cho1r and Ptan 1s1 .
s1lver and gold. We need I~
the pollbeo rert Re..,. Bud Hoi · 12' :w.: 52 two bedroom Schuhr
and o lder s.l.,.er cotns . 8uy , sell ,
held Rev Dor rell JohMon ond
or trade Call Roger Wamsley,
mobile hom e Ph o., e 985 3820
11-le Re v Joe Hammock Son
742·2331
--.-~
Ce&lt;d Bleu ong and fpm l) y
OLD FURNITURE , ice bollleS , brou
Akron , Oh10
beds . rron beds . etc compl ete
households . Wr~te M D. M1lle r.
Rt. 4 Pomeroy Ohro or colt
992-noo
AUCT ION SALE every l iJ es ond
GUN SHOOT Roctn e Gun Club
Fr1 at 7 pm. New ond used
ITEM TOO large or too small .
~very Sun
afternoon Foetor
merchon drse of Ohto R•ver Au c·
Will biJy 1 piece or complete
Chock guM onl'r'
Assorted
lion Mtugs Plaza , M•ddleport ,
househald . New used , or anti·
me-ats •
Oh•o . Home Phone (304)
ques Morfin s Furniture, 20 N
773· 5471
'
2nd St , Mtddleport Phone
THERE Will be no hunl1ng no
tnupo$Sing , end no e xc epl 1ons
991-6370
on my properly Bob M t' Gro~
CH IP
WOOD
Po les
mo"
dtomeler 10 · on largest end $8
THE
RACINE
Volunteer f.re
per ton Bundled slob , S6 per
Depo r tment wi ll sponsor a gvn
shoot every Saturday at 7 p m
ton Oel•vered to Oh1o Pollet
01 the rr butldmg 1n Bashan Foe ttOOF HOllOW Horses B1Jy . sell
Co., Rl , 2, Pomeroy . 992 -2689
trade or tro•n New ond used
tory choke guns on ly .
saddles RIJth Reeves , Albany
TIMBERLAND OWNERS Oa you
(o1A ) o98 -J2q()
need help rn managing your
woodlands and morket1n g your ME IG S COUNTY Humane SoCiety
lf YOU hove o serv1ce to offer ,
Coreline and odophon Sen.. ce
l•mber? Mead's staff of profes wont to buy or sell somethmg .
992·7680,
742·3162.
992-5427
s•onol forf!sters •s avo1loble 10
oe look.ng tor work ... or
offer you on•stonce ot no cost AKC IR ISH Serter 'puppie'5 , 6 wks
wholever . . you 'll gel results
Meed con assure you o~ d1v,!:
old . Phone 1-30-4-882 2397 ,
taster. 'filth a Sentmel Wont Ad .
s1fled markets , comp l ete
alter 5 pm .
Coll992 2156 .
limber uiii1ZCll10n
mdud1ng
ENGLISH
SPRINGER
Spaniel
pvps
THR EE FAMILY Garage Sole . Nov .
whole -lre1:1 ch1pping CJ nd SIJper·
992 7313
14. 15 l b. 1126 E Mo1n Street ,
v1sed
harvestmg
programs
Pomeroy neor M•nersvHie cor ·
dtn1gned to prated you r lands NINE WEEK old Beagle pups Rob
pQrotlon
and promote limber gro wth
brt dogs Slor ted ond tromed
For deta1ls . coli collect or wn te
$15ond up (614) 7-42 -2511
MEAD
PAPER
Wood
&amp;
Woodlands Dept. PO Bolli 3';tl .
Jackson
Ohio
-456-40
Telephone · 614 -286-2868 .
ATHENS, O HIO business for sale
Small 4000sq . ft . Supermarket
FLEA MARKET Nov 19th and 20th
close to Ohio U wrth beer and
Roc•ne leg•on Hall
Tables 1966 CORVETTE Very good cond i
w1ne corry out license domg
rent ed for $2 peor day Call
11on 30-4-BB2 20-10
good business on heavy I ravel I·
949 -2773 or 949·2428
1972 OLOS DElTA 88 At -door
ed Athens Street . Lorge pork ·
sedan AM·FM , A C Good con·
lng loT w \11-r room tor othe~ out ·
d•llon Must sell 992~2787 after
door business. Perfett bu'5mess
Spm
l or two people Selltng because
of ab sen tee owner Terms for
LOST
BIG red lnsh Setrer . 1976 FORD GR.A.NAOA , 6 cyl. ,
Answers to name of " Duke"
r•ght person For more in formo
automotu:: , tn 90Qd candrtron
Rac ine area
992-55.45 or
11on coli or write PO Bo ~ 5301.
""2-5792. $3,25Q.- '---:c-9.49 2116
V1enno, We'5t V.rg rn•o 26101 or
1974
328 Camero . Phone
1-304 295·9352

-

m

----

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) There
rs ncth1ng wrong w rth your
JUdgmenl or rns tghts today , ye!
yo u may rgnore them completely and do something erratiC and costly
·
\ NF.:WSPAPEH ENTERPRISE 1\SSN. J

THE ALMANAC
Unlled Presslnleraalfonal
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 15,
319\h day of 1977 with 46 to
follow.
The moon is approaching
its first quarter.

1-304-882-3108 ·
1973 CHEVROLET ' • 1on. V 8

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and
appl•once S8P11cemon
Po1d
hol•do.,s ,
"ocot•ons
and
hosp •to l •zot1on
Gollio
Refr,gerotor Co , 611 3rd Ave.,
Goll •polis , Oh•o

Saturn.
The evening star is Mer·
cury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Scorpio.
British Prime Minister
William Pitt was born Nov.
15, 1708.
On this day in history : .
In 1492, the first recorded
reference to tobacco was
made
by
Christopher
Columbus. He noted in his
journal the use of it by In·
dians he had found in the
" New World" of North
Atperica.

auto ., P S , P.B For sole or
trade for I ton truck 992 2-47B .

1937 CHEVROLET SCOTISDAlE 2
tone sl•d•ng glass w1ndaw.
rear step bumper 305 , 3speed 992-5671
1972 PONTIAC CAT ALINA . Sear s
'Stereo
recorde r
Phone
992-7 453.

FOR RENT OR SALE ,' two bedroom
mob1le home outs•de Rocme
Phone 949 -2182 after six

1969 FORO VAN SI OO. Needs
wor~ . Phone 992-J-462 after 6
pm
1975 AMC PACER X New steel
belt r od rols 2B 000 miles . Ex ·
ce llent cand1tion $2 ,000. (61-4)
675 -5701

ELECTION LEGAL NOTICE
The Ohio Soi l and Water
Conser11 a tr on
Com m isslon
Jc;I70 CHRYSLER 300. Good condi
Will ca use an elect ion of
tion . Priced for qiJick sale
supervrsors of the Me •gs S011
$750 Call 992 5323 after 5 pm
and W a ter Conservatron
Distr•ct to be held m ac
cord a nce to chapter 15 15 0 1
14 of the Rev rsed Code of
Ot'1 10 , a t Chester E l ementary
School on · No11ember 17, 1977.., STARCRAFT FAll Sale Mmi
a t 8 : 00 p m In C0r 1unCf10n
motors 20' ond 22'. Tra Vel
Vt:•th our 34th annual meetrng
Trailers 18' 5' $3 ,799 25' 7"
N omtnees
ere ·
Curt•s
Bunkhouse $4 ,875. Fold -down ,
Bal1haser, Route I , Lang s
$1 ,700 up We sell servtce and
v i ll e, Oh10 45741 , Da11 id
Gloeckner . Route 2. Racine l
quoltty Open Sunda.,s Camp
OhiO 45711
Conley Sta rc raft Soles Rt 62,
Nom ~nations will be ac
N of Pt . Pleasant
cepted fro m the floor at the
t rme ot e1ect1on
One (1)
1976 TRA VEL TRAIL ER 20 ft
sup&amp;PI I!Or will be elect ed
tan d $m .
l•ke-new
Self ·
You may cast you r ballot at
contotrred . Both w1th shower.
the annua l meeting or on th e
Reasonable . 949-2042.
day of elect•on at the Meigs
SW CD office , second f loor of
1969 BANNER 18 ft . camper . self
the Farmers Bank, be tween
con tomed, furnace , stove .
a·oo a.m and .t ·oo p .m
refri gerator, sleeps six . ex
celle
nt co ndition. Can be seen
(11 } l , 15, 2tc
at 328 Sycamore St . Middleport
or call992 -7276 .
LEGAL NOTICE
FOR SA.L E
B 1ds tor the p ers onal
property of the Nettie Smith
estate will be recei11ed at 10
am . Saturday, November 19.
1977 on the tro nt steps of the
Meigs County Cou rt House,
Pomeroy,
Oh 10 .
Said
pr operty
d escr1bed
as
follow s 3.35 ca ra t diamond
in plat•num r ing, appra ised
va lue S8 .500 00 : 1.40 ca ra t
d •am ond 1n pla tinum r.ng,
appraised value Sl.BSO 00 .
$1 .00 gold coin , appra1sed
va lue $10 00 ; 2 gold wnst
watches with bands . ap
pra1sed value S12S .OO ; one
wild m ink cape, apprar sed
va tue S300.00.
Th e executor of t he estate
reserves the righ t to rejec t
any anCJ al l bids
Fo r
examinal ion of the above,
ca ll J B O'Brren, Attorney at
L aw. Pomeroy , 614 -99 2 2720
(11 ) , , 10, II , 13, H, lS , 16, 7tc

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

Case No . 22,1S 4
Estate qf SHIRLEY D.
CUSTER , Oecused .
Not ice Is her~by given th a t
Hugh P custe r of R: . D . 3.
Pomeroy, Oh1o , hi!IS been duly
appointed Executor of the
Estate of Sh1rtey D C t.JSt~r.
deceased. late of Meigs
Cou nty , Ohio .
Credi tor s are required to
file therr clltrms w it h sa1d
ftduclary within four months .
Dated this Jrd day of
Novem ber 1977
Manning D . Webster
Judge
Covrtof Common Pleas,
Probate D llliSion
(11) a. 15 , 22, ltc
'

The morn ing stars are

Mars, Venus, Jupiter and

-

NO

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Try
not to le t work sta ck up over
tne ne.-t few days You ' ll feel
too rushed rl you fall behrnd

--

In 1920, the first assembly
of the League of Nations was
called ttl order in Geneva,
Switzerland.
In 1972, the United States
and Cuba agreed to discuss a
curb on airllne hijackings.
A thought for the day:
British statesman William
Pitt said ·after the American
colonies had won their independence
· in
the
Revolutionary War, " I Love
Americans because they love
liberty." He also said: "You

caMot conquer America. "

'

1975 CAVALCADE TRAVEL Troi ler.
roll-up
sel f-contained, A C
awnmg 992 -2794

THREE OR FOUR room opt or
small trotlar in Pomeroy or Middleport ar&amp;o 992-7189.

3 ANO 4 RM. furnished and unf urnished opts Phone 992-

5&lt;34
FOUR ROOMS and both
on ly . No pets 992-5908

Adults

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots Call992-7479.
Incredible I Why pay high electnc
bills this winter? Let us pay
them for you! One bedroom
from $130 now available .
Vi llage Manor. Th1rd and Mill
Streets , M iddleport T&amp;lephone
992-7787 Equal Housing Oppor tu nity

HOMEWORKERS $85 week lv oddrEtSsmg, '5tuff rng envelopes .
Storl
•mmed•otell . Detrols ,
rush 25 1 and se !-addressed
stomped envelope
6estco,
32()q N W. 75 lh Terra ce , Dept
C981 Hollywood Flo 33024 .

OPPORTUNITIES
$8.100 for educat ion .
75 per cent of your
College tuit ion free,
College
Level
E x amination
Free,
An Associate Degree
through
the
Community
College
of the Air Force, 30
days paid vacation, 7
paid 3 day weekends,
good starting pay and
much
more.
Interested?
Contact me, Vernon
Zeger, your Air Force·
Representative.
For an appointment
in the Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592 -4592 Collect.
Order No . 9-ct-86

HOUSE FOR rent 4 rooms. Fur·
nrshed . Adulfs . 949-2597

THREE HORSES 1 1s Western
Pleasure 2 mar&amp;$' 1 •s '/, and I
1s '!. Arabian 992-700....

APPLES FlfZPATRICK Orchards
Stole Route 689
Ph one
Wtlke'5v rll e, 669-3785
RUGS , WAll Hongmgs and
ofgon'5 . Nice fl)r Chnstmas
Reasonable . Coll992-22 14.

--FIREWOOD

--

-white

All red and
oak $4 0 a co rd, split pnd
delt\lered S-43 2933.

N-.:c . R. m Bookkeeprng machine
Mtll nten o'n c e
con tract
ovruloble Pr ogram med to do
So l es
Reports .
A cc ounts
Payab le, Payro ll . Gover nment
Repo rts . W-2 forms and wnte
chec k s Con be programmed lo
do General Ledger and Account) Receivable . Contact
Carol W1lkes at 304 ·'195·9391

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
let Pome.-oy landma.-k
soften &amp; condition your
wate.- and Co-op water
softener, Model UC-SVI.

Now Only

Let us test your wate r Free

FOR SALE

New Co -Op wale.- and
softeners, model VC -SVI.

Only 5279.95
Save SSO. OO on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator
1 New :ZO cubtc ft. Chest
Freezer
S25.00 Discount
(t) Good Refrigerator St75
Up.-ight Freezer
S225
1 Good Used Hotpoint
Refrfgerator
Sl25
1 Lancaster Chain Sirlw 575
1 Good Used Hotpoint
E lectnc Stove
S8S
1 Good Used U nico
$99
Washer

P~eroy

Landmark ·

9 ..

_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
. . . . . Phone99Ht81

1955 INTERNATIONAl TRUCK.
Good lor hauling. Second vehi cle Th1s !ruck con be restored.
George Franci s, 18 Anne St.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 992 7492 or

m -3716.
)ONES MEAT Processing , fre eur
beef and pork . Custom process·
mg of beef, pork , and deer
Reto•l cuts L1 ttle HOck mg , (6U)

667-6133
TRO MBONE AND flute .
been uSed 992 -7621

Never

1967 FORDVAN Carpeted , ponel •ng, rod•o ' mag w heel s,
Daytona Sport 70 fires . $600.

GOOD CLEAN 55 gol otl drums
6$ each . 5 gal cons , 501 and $1
eoch. Used 2 inch gas p1pe, $3
per 20 foot jolnt .•992-2478
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES, Pt. Plea·
son! , W. Vo . bes1de Heck 's.
1973 Broodmore 14 lll 64 2
bedroom
1973 Oanon 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1972 Vict orian 14 x 67 3 bedroom,

2bo1h
1972 Coven trv 12.-65 3 bedroom
1969 Slot&amp;smon 12 lll: 60 2'
bedroom

FOR SALE or Rant 197~ Schultz.
Mobile Home, 12 x 65. 20 x 8
sl•de-out. Total -electric. Pri vate

1970 FORO F·250 p1clwp. V-8 , new
tire'S P'S., P.B.. auto. l ow
mile age . Good condition

985-355&lt;;___

L __ _ _ _
ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELLNGS
GUTTERS&amp;DOWN
SPOUT
by
Euy step
step
inslructions.

ACE HARIMARE

I

Located In

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport , Ohio
11 -9-lfc

Excellent'

LOWREY GENIE organ , Model 4-4
Ho$. 2 keyboords w1th ac·
com pan1ment plus bu1ll· •n tope
recor der . bench and book$ .
Would make mce Chnstrnas
glh . Call 9 6 . (304 ) 713 -5777
After 6, 949 -1185 . ask lor Jo e~ .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding,
Storm Windows &amp; Insulalion.
Call Professionals

Bissell Siding Co.
Aloul contractor
Phone 949-2801
Of 949-2860

9 .. - Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.

.....

Phone 992 -2181

30~'- yr .
M ortgogd~

VA-FHA ,

tmoncing Ireland
E. State. Athens .
phone (6 14 ) 592-3051.

2.

n

STORY 3 bedroom frame
haus&amp;, F.A furnoc'e , storm win dows, fireplace in M1ddleport .
Phone m -3457 or 992 -5867

SEVEN ROOMS ondboth plus 2
rooms o ... er was hhouse and
bosement Three f~reploces on
2 acres Close to schools on d
churches on Old Rt . 33 . Shown
by appointment only . 992-7513 .
'!1 ACRE LO T wtfh garage and

cellar. l ocated in Langsville .
$6,500 Phone 742-2965
103 ACRE FARM . . 7 room house
and bo th. All mineral right s
Tobacco bose . More details o n
request
742-2542 or write
Ro lph McCune, Rutolnd, Oh1o
SEVEN ROOM house 1n M1d·
dleport Woll·to· woll carpeting
2 cor goroge Good location .
l ow prrce of $16 ,000. 992-2498.
FOUR BEDROOM house w1th both
and 'IJ. Central heat mg. Fu ll
basement .
In
Pomeroy .
992-7074 or992-3-465 .
SEVEN ROOM house , Fully
carpeted. Fireplace. 1'/, acres
of land. Rt . 35, Rio Grande.

(614) 388 8572.
REA~

ESTATE

FOR SALE
Good
Busineu
Bldg .
located 11 60S w. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Presently
occupied tv
a
going
business . Bldg . has deluxe
apartment
overhead
brlnarlnt in good Income.
Priced an i'n spectJon only .
Can bt seen any time rrom
10 a .m . to 6 p .m . Inquire at
605 w. Main St., Pomeroy ,
OhiO 45169 .

0

RNR

773-5~5
LJkin, w. Va.

l•llj,P~O.

WIIIDCIIIS
ALUMINUM

Carpet Uph tery

SIOIIIG-SOffln

Phont Mike Yoonc

t:umlts..IWNIMGS

At
992-2206 01 992-7630

SrrKitSI, Ot11a

"Th Oriltltitoll
Mol Tltt IMitators

'

Bdrm .
home
has a
basement . nice kitchen,
carpet)rg, other featu r es.

ASKING $18,000.00
JUST LISTED - Appx. 19
Acres, mostly woods, close

to
Pomero y.
ONLY
$5,000.00
FREE GAS - 2 a cres, 3-4
Bdrms , newer ranch type
country home , carpeting,
paneling, br i ck &amp; frame
construction,
other

buildings.
ALL
FOR
$35,000 .00.
HELP WITH - VA or FHA
f inan cing . Th is 3 year old
spac}ous ranch can be
yours tor less than you
think. Many f eatures, over
1 acre, close to Pomeroy.

"CALL TODAY $37,300.00.
OLDER HOME - This 2
story frame has more to
offer than you t hmk , nicel y
remod eled. 3-4 Bdrms .,
modern k itc h e n , fully
equi pped beauty salon to

.
'
THt'3 COUNTRY lEl S
AttY GUY f:ARN Al l
HE'S GOOD E~O U (iH
TO fARN ... 50 HOW 'S
MAX DOIN'~

Ph.l71-62;
&gt;27 TFC ''

TRIM SHOP IN

YEAH? YUH

HE SAYS
THE Df.\Y WILL
COME WHEN

KNOW, HE

Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992-'2'3

B A.M. Io4 :30 P.M.

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9 trc

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths ,
all elec , 1 acre, Middl&amp;port ,
close to Rutland Phone 992 -

THOUGH NO'T 'lACTL Y TH'
WI"W HE. FIGGERS '

HIS. ,_

~p~e~d~e~
nc~e~P~
ho~n~e~~
~~-2~•09
~~~ ,

RFALTOR

SEWING MACHINE Repolfs , '5eJ·
v•ce all makes , 992·2284 T~,;
FabriC Shop
Pomeroy .,
Au thoriZed Smger Sales and
Serv1ce . We sharpen Scissors . _;

and all m i nerals. $31,500

NEW LISTING - 9 room
older home in Racine 4
Bedrooms, bath , natural
gas furnace , garagP and
~

bedroom

gas

bree zeway,

garage, and lot 150x200.
Asking just $17,500. '

57 ACRES- Racine rural.

roa d

Only

byHBnriArnoldandBoblee

General Hospita l 6, 13 .

m4 mop!

,."'''"'"'· Melba "

tridge Family 4; Brady Efunch 8,10.
Mlsler

·I

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 's Heroes 15.

6·0Q-News 3,4,8,1~.13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3()-NBC News 3.4,15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy· 20.

J I I

f

33.

MIRAPI

7· JG- Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
Now arrange the arcled leners 1o
gested by the above cartoon.

JJ

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles · WOMEN

I Answer

SPURN

MEASLY

PAUPER

.
What the valet bJmed politician attrtbuled hiS

10· 30--Me &amp; Stell13 33; Wodenhouse Playhouse 20.

11:30--Johnny Carson 3, ,., 15; Starsk y &amp; Hutdr 6,13;

Hartman 10; 2: lG-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 l; ~
5 &amp; 7 P .M. - The Front ( PGI
~ &amp; 11 P.M. - I Will, l Will For Now (PG)
Cable Channel 5 6:30 P .M. - Testimony Time

7:00 -

Tuesday .

EXCAVATING , BACKHOE. dozer 1
trencher, low boy,
dump
trucks, septrc systems. Brll
P ulli~s. phone 9'92 -2478 , day or;
nrght

oF 'rHE PINS.
•·
' WINNIE
WE JUST I=ELT IT Wll5
IN YOUR ~EST INTEREST.
HE HAD A i&lt;pVIN6 EVE .

November

15

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

15
~ORTH

oto A Q !0 6
• 43
• A Q 10 7
• 985

WEST IDI

EAST
• KJ 8
• 86
•KJ9542
• 10 7

• 9732
• 72
• 6

otoAKQJ63
SOLTH

• 54
• A K Q J tO 9 5

as a flag

MY SoWLING
AVfRAG.E IS l-&amp;0 • •
$ J(.NOCfC, DOWN
&gt;

Paui ' Gaudino Family Fitness

7:30 - Marshall University Football
10 .00 - 700-Ciub.

24~:b.;..Y_,......,..3S_,~,...:....~:,...b..,When all fineSSeS fail

• 83

... 12

36 Balanced
37 French
river
38 Adjust
anew

Neither vulnerable

39 Gaze

We st

North East

Pass

I•

Pass I ¥

2•
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

So uth

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

We don ' t remember the
name, but someone
AXYDLBAAXR
wrote : ~The man who is
Is LONGFELLOW
worthwhile is the man who
One letter simply stands for another . In thfs sample A is can smile, when all hts
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, finesses go wrong ,•
That is if he makes his
apostrophes the length and forma tio n of the words are all
contrac t with them all
hints Each day the eode letters a.-e different
wrong. Not if he smiles after
CRYPTOQUOTES
g oing down .
West cashed two hig h
KCHBMB
VA
MVHM
VFB clubs and shifterl to the s ix of
poet's

ex

dia monds. South rose with

FB

WFYA

MVA

Q C M H • dumm y's ace and thought

BABYSITTING IN my home n~r
Veteren's Mernroral Hosp1t~ l

992-5792.

MVA

.

KA'BM

CX

VFN

FB

PTJAS -

things ov e r . He decided that

East surely held bolh missing kings. How could he k eep
one

C) 1977 Kbq Features Syndicate, Inc.

WAlCH O UT fER THAT
SPOT ON TH' FOOT LOG, PAW!!
I

We have enlarged our~
service department and '
will service Hofpoint and t
other brand s.

Pomeroy Landmark
"''•- Jack
...

i

w:Carsey, Mg;,

Phone99:Z-2181 •

1

WOULD L{OU CARE TO
SEE A MENU?

SP ILT

SOME- -

from takin g a

trick against him ?
Hts first thought was to
run off all his trumps and

BARNEY

APPliANCE
SERVICE

or them

to ace-qu een

of

spades and quee n of dlamonds in dummy . East
would be down to a slngle ton
king and a guarded king and
aU South would have to do
would be to guess which was
the singleton.
. .
South found a better play .
He ruffed dummy's last
club, played a few ro.unds of

trumps, led his last diamond
to dummy 's 10 and left East
on lead with no way to do
anything but give up.
Of course, West could
have beaten the hand if he
had led his diamond at trick
two, but West was not look·
mg at aU the cards.

4•

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - ,Here's how to work it :

JABGATM

come down

Opening lead - K "'

DOWN
1 Uttered

$5,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 room

$7.500.
NOW IS THE TIME TO
SELL. FOR LITTLE COST
AND TROUBLE CALL 9n .
3325.
HELEN L.&amp;
GORDON B. TEAFORD
REALTOR
AS SOC LATES.

Hawaii Flve'O 8; ABC News 33; Movie "'Gu nfight
a t the O.K Corral" 10; 12:0Q-Janakl 33.
12 :4Q-Mystery of lhe Week 6,13; Movie "' Family '
Fllghl"' 8; 1: 00- Tomorrow 3.4; 1:30- Mary

~~~ -

carpet ing. CHEAP AT
$13.000.00
NEAR HYDRO UNIT -

bedmom remodeled frame
home. Fireplace. cistern
water, partial basement
and .95 of an acre. Only

20.
.
10 :0Q-Big Hawaii 3.4.15; Baretla 6,13: News 20.

suocess to - THE POWER OF THE
"PRJ;SS"
"

ISCPTJ . MVCNHB
CLASKPSO
Yeolerday'a Cryptoquole: LET EVERYONE MIND IUS OWN
BUSINESS AND THE COWS WILL BE WELL CARED FOR.FRENCH PROVE;RB

2

Andrews &amp; Robert Goulet in Concert 8; Nova 20,33;
Good Trmes 10.
a·Jo-Busttng Loose 10
9 . DO-Char l ie' s Angels 6,13, Movie "From Noon t i ll
Three" 8, 10, Great Performances 33, To Be A Man

I]"

PIANO TUNING · lone Oani.h.
New phone number , 992·25g,l.
lf no answer , call 992 -2082. ;..,

for only 513,250.
NEW · LISTING

Fam ily Feud 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report20,33, The
Judge 10; ln Search of 13_; Wild Kingdom 15 .
a.oo-Hall of Fame 3.4.15; Eight Is Enough 6,15 : Julie

form the surprise answer, as sug-

room brick with natural
gas and city water In
Syracuse with extra lot for

river. ONLY $6.900.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
THE RIGHT PROPERTY.
LET · OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU . CALL
TODAY FOR DETAILS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
- REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
~n -2259 or 992-619t

Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan's
Is. 15 ; Daniel Foster, M .D. 20; Big Green Magazine

FROM 50UP.

str eet, 2. -3 Bdrms ., 2
firepla ces, 1 floor plan,

frame house with f i replace,
natural ga s furnace, bath ,
carpeting and 2. ~ar garage

7.DO-TruthorCons. 3, Cross-Wits4 ; llarsCiub6 ; Sha.

MIGHT MAKE MUSIC

Old 9

This 2 stor y home could be
just about what you're
looking for , a ccess to the

Hogan's

15 .
5 · 3()--()dd Couple 4, News 6; E lee. Co. 20.33. Mary

MC :

boot, etc. etc 531.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT , - Good

Rogers" Neighborhood 2Q.33;

He.-oes 10; A f te r school Speci al 13, M y Three Sons

WILL CAR E for the elderly m o~r
home Phone 992-73 14
,

$65,000.
NEW LISTING -

.

5 : 00-Bonanza 3; M y Three So ns 4; Gunsmoke 8,

~~h

ONE •Aua~,.Eil

feoiiJnng Ashleys and complate selection ol coal , gas,
wood ci rcu lattng hea ter s
Carpen ter , (614) 696 -7191 .

Gilligan's Is. 8;

4:30--My Three Sons 3; Afterschool Special 6; Par -

t~ds.

APPALACH IAN STOVECQMPAN'I'
t

Bewitched 6;

Gong Show 15;

Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10; Dinah 13.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Fatigued :
ACROI)S
1 Starch I
2 wcj§ .
3 UMe.f"ed:
5 Hamlet and
3wds.
pthers
4
Siowi
10 Story line
5 The masses
11 Placid
'~ " Butterflies
12 Medley
~ Free''
13 Appear
'
7 Worrier:
14 Relative
2wds.
IS Fanfare
Yeslerday's Alllwor
8 Overfill
16 Erich~
9
Took
care
21
Noisemaker
25 Enticed
Stroheim
27
22
17 Hires
:!wwn
..etin:"'gm•
~----~..__ ,--"""'r-c-:--:-:-;---;--;-.' 19 Leftover
11 Jewish
28 Taunt
Not that one. but zo Pinafore
He sa4 it do
ceremony
23 Ibsen
21l Candle
he win enouqh 21 Fren~h
him irrep'able
15 Elderly
heroine
U Opposite
t imes so he don't no~elist
damaqe!
18
1. 1 22 Stnng
have l.'" wor...
23 Roman,
,.,......,,......,,....,._
lor one
24- Velez
25 Desolate
28 Silkworm
27 Carol of
comedy
30 Peer
Gynt's
mother
~~;:~~~::""'::!. 31 Pitcher's
stat.
32Grii8Siand
33 - Creed
35 Flutter,

BATHROOMS AND t&lt; r t c h e n ~
remodeled , ce ro mrc tde , plum.
b1ng , ca rp en try , and g&amp;nerot
marntenance. 13 years elll ~
perience. 992-3685
•

Gas

well for your heating , 4
bedroom modern home,
bath , furnace ., old barn,
near town . Minera ls. Need

He trip over

HOWERY AND MARTIN
h'
co'w'ofing , sept 1c sys te m'S :
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,a
limestone , grove l, blo ckto~
povmg, Rl. 143. Phone 1 (614)
'
698-7331

Inside). 2 baths. garage

bath . 2 dr illed wells, on

Actual,

he sue
Cit4 Hall!

do roofmg , constructro n,
plumbmg and heat mg. No ~ob
too Iorge or too sm oll Phone
742-2348,

farm ponds, old barn, 8
room
house
(modern

Mostly
fenced ,
small
stream. good gambrel roof
barn , 3 car garage, corn
cri b , 3 bedr'oom house,

Mr. Mudslip, the
l rll,~inj:··,lff sued

Wl~ l

72 ACRES - New fences. 2

large lot. 528.000.
TUPPERS PLAINS

' aASOUNE AU.EY

EXCA VATING , dozer, bock.
and d•tctler . Charles R. Hal·
f 1eld , Bock Hoe Ser.,.ice ,
Rutland, Ohio Phone 742·2008

4 bedroom

home, natural gas, city
water , firepla ce, 2 ca r
garage and ex tra lot .
$14, 000

good ·grav el

8,1 0. 2:0Q-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:3Q-Doctors 3.4.15, One Life to Live 6,13; Gui ding
Light 8,1 0.
3. 0Q-Another World 3.4.15. Ohio Journal 20; 3 15-

~'16td'

EXCAVAflNG, dozer loader and
backhoe work : dump true""'
on.d lo-lmys lor hire : will hau1
fi ll d1rl lo sot I lrmes tone ond
grovel. Coli ~ob or Roge r Jef- ,
fers . day phone 992-7089, night "
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232 .'• ~

Bath , natural gas furnace, .
city water, front porch and
garage on corner lot .

$29.000.
175 ACRES PLUS -

Young &amp; !he Resfless lOi Not For Women Only 15.
1 : 3D-Days of Our lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns

3.3()-AIIIn The Family 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Little Rascals-Our Gang ~.

I [J

I'M GLAP '&gt;OU

REMODELING Plumbrng. heo\1r&lt;j
and all types of general repoir
Work guaranteed 10 years e"·

TEAFORD(H·

furnace,

1:OQ-Gong Show 3: All My Children 6.13 ; News 8:

11 .0Q-News 3.4.6.8.120,13.15. D1ck Cavell 20; LILias
Yoga &amp; You 33

3825.

bath,

\9 ~~ ®

Yesterday's

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -'Swe"'pers , toos tea , 1rons, o~l
small appliances . Lawn mower.
ne"t to State Hrghw oy Garage
on Rou1e 7, Phone (6 1-4) 9.85

7481

with

12 : 00--Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10,· D ivorce Cour t 8; To

SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

,

BRADFORD, Auct•oh eer. Com·
plete Serv1ce . Phone 9.49-2-487
or 9-49-200) Rocrn e. Ohro , Cn1t
Bradford
,.,

HOMESITES lor sale , I acre and
IJ P Middleport, near Rutland.
Coll992-7481 ,

home

m11 ~THAT

COUlD 6E HALF RIGHT ...

HE'LL Gn

6,13;

Man 15; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec Co . 33.

tBRUBUS

,

RACIN~

Be tht opening or the In,.
door season for you with
vour old furniture re uphoJstered In beautiful
warm colors &amp; patlerns
from Bob ' s. If you are
l ooking for savings II will
pay you to PIIY us a vlsll
Located In back of the Sew
N' Sew Outlet on Main St .,
Racine, 0 .

300 Maln St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3

Say The Least 15. Mlddaay 13.
12 :3Q-Ryan•s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp; the

Print answer here: " (

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Reasonable

" Buck &amp; the Preacher" 10, 12 : DO-Janakl 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1·30-Mary Hartman 10; News

I WOODY
I rJ

•
•
•

CARTER

SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom
frame on State Rt. 124

ThiS 3

11:55-C BS News a. Loving Free 10.

1n

' I''

•'

Phone 992-3325

ONLY $13.500.
JUST LISTED -

11:3Q-Johnny Carson 3.4.15. Mov&lt;e "'The Legend ol
Valentino" 6,13; Columbo 8; ABC News 33; Movie

Happy Days

11 ·30-Knockout3Jl5 ; Famllyfeud6,13:; love or Life
8,1 0; Sessame St. 20,33.

BLYUL

\OOF!Ltx;!

•'

New

Marcus Welby , MD . 4; Match Game 8.10; Elec. Co.
20.

Unscramble these four Jumb~s.
one letter lo each square. to form
tour ordrnary words.

I'OSSI61. B

PARTS - LABOR ''
GUARANTEED •
REASONABLE
RATES
..
Rn&lt;IAil~.o

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

c arpet i ng ,
panel i ng ,
car port , othe r features .

OF At.l..

Donahue 4, 13, 15;

ll : Do-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;

~

I'M A I'!;$SIMIST. .
I'M AFI&lt;AI D
~OU 'I&lt;I:' Rlt&gt;HT.

1

VIRGIL B. TEAFOND, &gt;R .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street

3 Bdrm ra-nch type home,

l &amp; l.IE'VI' I'JB
Ll\11' I~ 11l~ E!!:ST

Phil

Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Altair 8,13 .
9·3Q-Edge ol Nighl6 : Andy Griffith 8; Pr ice IS R1ght
10.
10 :0Q-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Big Valley 6; Price Is
Right 8: Mike Douglas 13.
10· 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 10.

10 .0o-Family 6.13; Lou' Grant 8,10 ; Eyewitness 33 ;
News 20.
,
10 30--Biack Perspective On The N ews 20
11 :00--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; D i ck Cavett 20, Over
Easy 33

'ftft\frul

IQ.J.ll mo .

22l-l me

$17,500.
RUTLAND -

9 00-Merv Griffin 3;

I

LARRY LAVENDER
~h. !92· l99l

3,-t, 15;

S &amp; 7 P.M. - Relurn or A Man Called Horse lPG )
9 &amp; 11 PM-92 In The Shade IRI

'IT·~· -:

Autamatic
Transmissian Service

conclusion.

Fltzpatricks 8.10; Geor9la

13.

:.

SWAIN
I

Godfat~er' ',

Movie Channel 4 -

•

HEAT&amp;FUf

News 8; Bullwinkle 10; 7 · 30--Schoolles 10

a ot&gt;-Capl. Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame St. 33.

9·3()--()ne Day AI A Time 8,1 0; Mary Tyler Moore 13

~
·o· ·. ' ..

~

EFEL

Superior
Steam Extraction

II£PUUMEIIT

l.:.

FIGHrER!

''

Blooo lobi Wolls l ~Hies
STORM
WIMDCIIIS &amp; DOORS

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED - Nice little

GOTrA WATCH HIS
BLOOD PRESSURE! Olli~tJEitii_
5HE WASN'T TRY· WE[.L, AT LEAST
lNG T' 6 Uo YA!
SHE'S JUST GIVEN

ME A NAME FOR
OUR NEW

trWID"LACit

Young's
Carpeting

10 30-c

E(IS Y~

THE HECK
SHE WASI&gt;J'T!
~ !: @~ * l\-11 1 k . II

""·7

CAIY'"'*
IJOYII AICJ

6·55-Chuck While Reports tO; Good Morning . Trl
Stale 13.
7 oo,... Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS

O ' Kefte 33 ; Eyew1tness 20 .
B. 3o-Lallerne &amp; Shidey 6. 13
9·()()-Three ' s Company 6, 13 ; Mash 8, 10; To Be A Man
33; Men of Bronze 20.

Wood Stoves. ~

ll -14-1 mo. pd .

FinaftCiftl A.,.bll

Chester. Ohto

CAPTAIN

COOL IT, EASY:

A TEST PiLOT'!&gt;

r--~~--~~~----~,
~·,,

Call667-6479

lllo••
lnsuiltion Stmce

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoK 34

DAREDEV I ~ ·

......,

on ht1ting cost
Experience and
fully insured
Free Est .

FREE ESTIMATES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

YES .. YOU'RE
QUITE THE

~

Cellulosic (wood liberl
Thermal Insulation
SavelO pet. to lO pet.

Cross-Wtts 4; ; Liars Club 6,
Pop goes the Country 8; News 10; To tell the Truth

Happy Davs 6.13:

M

Sunrise Semester 10
6 . 25-Chrlstoph.er Closeup 10; 6 : 3G-News Conference
4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8, 6 :4s-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 : 50--Good Morning, West V i rginia 13

oo- Truth or Cons . 3;

8 ·OO-Mo11le ''The

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE -

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, t977
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5 ·55-

15

._.r..tor lo tM

Consultation

10·00 - 700 Club

13; Gil ligan' s Is. 15. French Chef 20. Parent Ef-

.......

J&amp;L

9 30 -

fectiveness 33 .
7 . Jo-Hollywood Squares 3, 4; Let' s Go To The Races 8.
Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20 ,33;
Price is Rtght 10; That 's Hollywood 13; Music City

cw

See us at 1100 E1st Main
Street, Pomeroy , Ohio o.Phone 992-JOJ-4. 10-29· 1mo

10 20 lmo

WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

Home
•Mobile
Underpinning
• Roof Coaling
•Tie - Down s
• Awnings - Carports
Repairs
•In surance

FrH Estimatts
Mo Sundly c.tls ~""'

7

EXPERIENCED '
Radlator~ l
Service Ff1lllll :
,,_ , ... a.&lt;WM' h,.d, awll._....

.

TWO STEEL belted t ires . sile H7S
14 rn Less than 500 miles . Sum· .SMALL fo rm for safe , 10% down ,
owner financed . Monroe Covn ·
mer tread , $.40 (6 14 ) 698 5215 .
ty , W. Vo Phone (304) 772. WARM MORNING Cool Stove
3102 0' (304) 772-3227.
L1ke-new 65 .000 BTU bottle gas
ond heot•ng stove 992-7253 , or COUNTRY farmland w1 th seduded woods water and good oc
see WolterHoggy on New l1m0
cess in Monroe County , W Vo
Road ofl er 12.
$1 ,000 down , co li (304) 772 1977 CHEVY STEPSIDE p1ckup. 350
3102 0' (30• ) 772-3227
cu .m. 4 bbl. Partly custom•zed
Asking pn c~ , S5 400. Colt Com merCial properly approx. 17
acres, level land , locdled at
992 2912 . '
Tuppers Plom s on Oh•o Route
UPRIGHT ADMIRAL free1er . 15 cu .
7 Phone (61-4 ) 667.6304 .
ft . less th ar} one year old . $200.
992 6 138

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

Kingsbury
Home Sales

8. 30 - Celebrity

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15,1977

-=====~====~ .

R e s tit e· n t i a I ~ a n d
commercial.
Call
for
estimate, 14 hour se.-vtce.
1972 ARISTOCRAT 18' Tro.,.el
Anyday, anyttme.
Trader
Excellent cond•llon .Phone 98S-J806
$2,400. Coli 992 -3500
1976 SUZUKI RM 125
condition . 247 -3861 .

r,L~~1 ~\ ~f'-=
B~
OYPERSONALLY?

Business Services ·

·•279.95

WOOD AND coo l biJrnmg stove
and 20 feet of 6 ' '51ove p1pe,
$175 Phone 742-2003.

FOR SALE or trade or land con·
tract. 2 bedroom house in
Ru t land. 992-5858.

lo l. (614) 667·3305.

ECONOMY TRACTOR wrth dtl at
rochme nts L1ke new asking
S2250 Phone (61 1_.698 -3290.

696-1072 $6 800.

2&lt;7 ·21.2 .

TMREE ROOM furniShed oportment . 992 -5.434 or 992-3129

CAMPER
S600
A l5o , har~e
troller $450. Phone (614) 69B·
J2q()

1976 FORD
Custom . 17.50 x
1-4 00 tires · wrnch Only 14 000
mi. Headers. CB Tope d&amp;ck.
011er S3 .000 in ex tra s Serious
calls on ly after 12 noon:

BUILDING FOR lflose 5701J'sq. ft
store build1ng , w1 th full w1n·
992-3319.
I
dows and own1ng 1n front 40
cor park1ng lot All on mo1n LIKE -NEW Clarinet case , begin·
ners books and stand. S100.
thoro ughfare in Athens , Oh1o ,
Phon e (614) 247 -3471 ,
dose to Oh to Umvers•ly . Con·
tact. H. W•lkes , PO . Bo x 5301, , DUO-THERM FUEL 01l heating
Vienna, West Y~rgmio 26105 or
stove No fan Phone 985-3803 ·
call 1·30-4 -295 -9352 .
TICKET OF Elvis Presley to the
12 x 60 MOBILE HOME . Good con·
C1vrf, Center. Good ~ond rt 1on
dition . Lor ge yard . I mile
7•2-2288 $500
Racine. 992-5858.
1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON Super
NEWL V REMODElED 7 room house
Glide 1·304-flS2·3108.
plus bathrooms, I up ohd 1
down Ha ! oil IJ tilitun plu s 10 1973 CHEVROLET PICKUP tru ck.
350 en gine , :Y. ton . 39 000 acacres of "ground S m.nu tes to
tua l m tles. New trres . Good
Pomeroy . $225 per mo
con dition . Harry Hill. Racine ~
992-5970 or 992-6270 .
TWO BEDROOM tra iler lor rent .
Cheshire, Ohio. Constructron
workers only. (304) 773 -5873.

COAL , lmHntone, ond ( OICium
d'rlopde and co lc•u rn br rne lor
dust control and ~pedal muung
sa lt for lonnet'5 Ellcels•or Salt
Works MOm Street . Pomeroy,
Ohro or phone m 3891

6· 30 PM - Test1mony Time
7:00 - PaUl Gaudino Family F i tness Show
7 · 30 - Cable Journal

TELEVISION
VIEWING

- AH .YES

'

'

Cable Channel S -

·'

We have had several ques·
Uons on party brtdge scarmg. There are n o definite

rules, but the s implest way

ts to score as in

rubber

bridge except tha t the first
game on a rubber get s a Joopoint bonus and the second
game a 500-point bonus
while if a player has a part
score at lhe end he gets a
fmal 50-pomt bonus.
t NEWSPA PEU F.NTI-:HPIIISE ASSN I

(Do you have a quest1on for
the experts' Write ~A sk the
Jacobys " care of th1~ new~pa·
per. The Jacobys w11f answer
IndiVIdual questions 1f

stamped, self-addressed e nvelopes are enclosed. The most
mterestmg questions wtll be
used m this coJumn and will
receive cop1es of JACOBY

MODERN I

•·
--BACON GREASE
ON 'ITTHIS
MORNIN' !1

�12 - The Daily Srntmel. M tddl~pMl ·Ptlll\t.'rt l.\ . 0 , Tuesday .

N,.,.. 15, HJi"i

:----A~e~-i)-~;th~----~
I

I

LOWELL A. CARPER

l owe ll A. Ca rper , 76 Rt 1.
Pomeroy . d ied M onday
morn1ng
at
Veterans
Memor ial Hospita l.
Mr . Ca rper was born Dec .
23, 1900. the son of the ta te
Bates and Alci nda Biggs

Carper .

Survi vors include his w 1fe .
Helen Gi lliland Carper : two
sons, Gei&gt; rge, Pomeroy. and
Charles , K irker sv ill e, on e
si ster,
Freda
Wag ne r .
Glouster ;
four
gra nd ch il dren , Dawn Carpe r ,
Columbus : Wendy Ca r per .
and Lowel l Ca rpter , both of
Athens , and George Car per .
Pomerov .
He Wl!IS employed by t/le V.
N. '"iolderma n Con str uction
Co .. was a member of the
0 P .C. M . carpenter 's Union ,
Modern
Wood m en
of
Amer i ca , Harr i son v il l e
Nwlsoni c Lodge 411 and Oh io
Farm Bureau .
Funeral serv ices wil t be

Bern1ct&gt; E. Morga n Fry ; two
son s. K.en neth W
Fr y,
Ga lloway . Oh 1o, and Jerry L
F r y wi th the U.S Ar my · one
step son, Oshe l 0 Edwa rds .
Ar l ee , M ont ana ; a step ·
daughter . M rs Haze l A
Stevens . Elk hart. Ind .; two
S1sters . Mrs . Gerald (Ar t1e )
Reuter , Pomer by , and Mrs.
Ron a ld
( Clar a
Fa ye )
HovaHer of Hi llard , Oh io ;
two brothers , Ja mes Fry .
Rutland , and Wesley Fry ,
Den ve r , Co .J: 3 grand
chil dre n, an
5 great
· grandchildren.
Fu neral ~rr ange m ents w1ll
be annou nced by the Crow Hussel Funera l Hom e.

Wednesday at 3 p.m. at

Ew ing Chapel w i th the Re v.
Freeland Norr is off iciating .Buria l wi ll be in the Hem lock
Grove Cemetery . F ri ends
may call at the Funera l
Home after 7 this even ing.
LEO~ARD

POINT

A. FRY

PLEASANT -

Leonard Alva Fry , 57 , of 2393
Lincoln Ave ., died Monday
evening enro\Jte to the
Un i versity
Hosp i tal
in

Columbus.

He was employed as a car
inspector for the Con ra il
Corp . in Columbus with 32
years service, and was a
veteran of the Air Force in
World War II. Born Jan. 20,
1920 In M iddleport , he was the
son of Mr , Ethel Da ily Fry of
Rutland and the late Jo/'ln G.

Fry .

Survivors include his wife ,

BESSIE MUSSER
RUTLAND
Bess ie
M u sser , 93, of Rou te 1.
Rutland , a former Alba ny
residen t . d ied Tuesday at
Veterans .Memorial Hospital.
Ar r angemen t s are be in g
made by the Bigony .Jordan
Funer al Home in Alba ny .

EDWARD C. JOROA~
DEXTER - Graves ide
ser vices tor Edward CrockeH
Jordan , 88, Dexter, who d 1ed
Nov . 8 at Hol zer Medica l
Center were he ld Nov . 11 at
the Bern Cemetery at Dublin
with the Re v Clay H. Turner
officiat ing.
·
Mr . Jordan, a ret ired
employe of The Amer ican
Electr ic Power Co.. is
sur vived by his wife, Helen
lawrence Johnson : a sister.
Anna Belle Walthal Hcirtley .
Houston . Tex.; a brother .in law, Joseph 0 . Lawrence.
Roanoke ,
Va . ;
two
grandch ild r en ,. Marshall
Sh ieH and Mrs . Betty S. Bolt .
and
three
grea t·
grandch i ldren .

Owners
(Continued~

Classified Ads

pqe I)

above-named defendants
continuously refused to answe r questions ... after
claiming the privilege
against self-incrlmination,"
documents filed by the victlms' attorneys charged.

~A

bring 10u
ext ra cash
I or
shopping sprees

Michigan to edge Ohio State;
Kentucky to take Tennessee
.

By Major Amos H. Hoople
Original Man In Motion
Egad. friend. do we have
so me dandies fo r vou this
wee k! '
..
fo r starters - heh-heh how a bout Mic higa n entertaining arch rival Ohio
St ate at Ann Arbor .
Or - kaff-kaff - this lineup
of tradit ional battles : Kenturky hosting rebu ilding
Tennessee ; Washington at
home against Wash ington
State: Stanford visiting
California; Oregon vs .
Oregon State. and Mississippi
meeting Mississippi State at
Jackson . Jove, 'tis a schedule
to delight any football
fibertr ! For Ohio State and
Michigan it will be the 74th
renewal of one of the nation 's
g r e a t e s t r i v a I ri e s .
Highlighting the rivalry in
recent years is the matchup
of the Buckeyes' Woody
Hayes and h1s onetlme player
and assistant , Bo Schembechler of Michigan. In his
first
eight
yea rs as
Michigan's head man, Bo lost
only II games - and four of
the 11 were to Woody's
Buckeye stalwarts . Also
during that period, Bo beat
Woody three tlmes and tied
him in the other contest. So
hold on to your hats, kiddies,
here we go again.
Both teams were upset
ea rlier in the year, -but are
now playing solid football and
will be sky-high for their
annual showdown . The
Bucks' Ron Gerald, Ron
Springs and Joel Payton will
grind out yardage all day and
put some points on the bQard,
but we look for the " Michigan
Magician," Rick Leach, to

utili ze his passing and running talents to the utmost as
he directs the Wolves to a 312l triumph - har-rumph l
Kentucky. barred from a
bQwl game this year, will cap
an eXL'ellent season by rolling
over Tennessee to the delight
of their Lexington fans . In a
closer game than you might
anticipate, the Hoo ple
System gives it to th e
Wildcats by a 2l-1 7 count.
The Washington Huskies
and t he Washington State
Cougars have bQth had so-so
sea ~ons , so winning on
Saturday could make it a
goo&lt;t year. In a free-scoring
fray the Huskies wiU prevail
by a 311-28 count. In another
Pacific Eight affair , the
California Golden Bears will
have one of their good days as
they down the Stanford
Cardina ls. 21-16. And in still
another Pac-ll contest, the
Oregon Ducks and the Oregon
State Beavers, battling to see
who finishes in the conterence cella r, will thrash it
out on the Ducks home field.
In a defensive struggle, our
choiceisOregontowin,U-10.
Mississippi and Mississippi
State have been to the wars
against each other 73 tlmes
with the Rebels holding the
edge 39-21Hi. Ken Cooper has
had a difficult season at Ole
Miss but we see his boys
closing it on a high note for
him as they beat the State
contingent, 21-10.
Some other important
contests pit Texas against
Baylor; Notre Dame against
the Air Force at South Bend;
North Carol ina at Duke, in a
back yard brawl, and Colgate
wrapping up a great yeill'

'

News •• in Briefs ·

WEEK

(Continued frcm page 1)
tentatively identified as a missing city offiCial from Lancaster,
Ohio. ·
An investigation was planned today to determine if the
pilot was Devon Tipple, Lancaster's safety director. Tipple
disappeared Sept. 14 after attending a conference at The
Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs. For several days, the
Civil Air Patrol, aided by scores of volunteers, conducted an
intense search in rugged molintains of southern West Virginia.
WASHINGTON - TilE AGR1CULTIJRE Department
Monday announced advanced rates for 1977-&lt;:rop burley
tobacco ranging from 79 cents to $1.29 per pound. The
department said the rates reflect an average support of $1.173
per pound, about 7.3 percent above last year. lncreases .over
1976 grade rates range from 4 to 9 cents per pound.
The department said under the poundage program now in
effect foc burley, farmers who certify that they have not used
pesticides containing DDT, IDE, toxaphene and endrin on
their tobacco can market up to 110 percent of their farm
poundage quotas. However, an,y marketing over a farm's
poundage quota will be subtracted from next year's quota .

Market Report

is ·all this little Ialiy
saved in her
•

CHRISTMAS CLUB
ACCOUNT
Now she has money to do her holi·
· day shopping. Do you? If you
didn't opeo a Christmas Club last
year ... don't make the same mis·
take thit! year. But do it now!

Christmas .corsage
For Every Lady Who
Opens A Christmas

Club Account
1\ I ULL

COLUMBUS (UP!)
ilrlday's livestock auction :
Market not reported last
week .
Slaughter steers: Choice 2490().!600 lb 38.51l43.50 mostly
41l42.90,good 2-3 90().1500 lb
36-38, standard 2-3 895-1300 lb

26.
Calves returned to farms:
Medium and large frame
holsteins 8().95 lb 25-32.
Feeder ca ttle : Choice
steers 300-585 lb 33-38.50 71().
30.5~5.50 .
1000 lb ,partly fattened 34.7!&gt;Heifers : Choice and prlme 37; good 300-540 lb :JQ-3~ 6oo2-4 85().1105 lb 38-42.60 mostly 800 lb :JQ-35; standard 300-485
39-41.25, low dressing 36-37; lb 28-30 ; 600-835 lb 28-31.
good 2-3 795-1050 lb 34-36.50;
Heifers : Choice 435-590 lb
standard 1-3 75!&gt;-llla lb 'J:/- 28-31.50; lot 435lb 35 600-715lb
32.25:
28-31.50; good 410-&lt;i95 lb 25Cows:
Utility
and 28.25 ; dairy replacement
commercial 2-3 825-1835 lb 23- heifers medium and large
26.85; low dressing 4 17-22.85; frame holsteins 455-840 lb
cutter 1-2 875-1175lb 21-23.25; 33 .5~8 .
canner 1-2 75!&gt;-975 lb 19.3:&gt;-20;
Hogs: Barrows and gilts 1-3
bulls, 1 1346-11160 lb 31.25- 206-250 lb 39.2()40; 246-250 lb
32.25; 1-2 97().141!0 lb 28-31.60; 38.10 38.90 286 lb 37.30 172-186
bullocks, good 2 960.1090 lb lb 35.5!1-38.90 323 lb J:l; sows,
35.1~5.25; standard 1-2 68.&gt;1-3 358-546 lb 32-33.25. 2-3 640
990 lb 24-29.
lb 32.50; .boars, 188 lb 32; lot
Vealers: Choice and prlme 399 lb 28; 34().780 lb 25.2528 . ~.
'
Sheep: Slaughter Jambs
choice and prime 81-102 lb
Are You
wooled 51..'i2.30; choice and
Covered?•
prime shorn with No. 2 pelts.
95lb 51, slaughter ewes utility
and good 110.168 Jb 1().12;
If Not.
feeder lambs choice and
fancy 60-97 lb 50.50-53 .90
See Us!
choice 90 lb 48.50.

\( f{VI([

DAVIS•

BANK

"THE
FRIENDLY
BANK"

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

INS. AGENCY
BILL QUICKEL OWNER
FOR
• Notary

Public

Omis ~i ons

&amp;

Errors
Liability

Insurance
• High Risk Auto Insurance
•Motorcycle Insurance
• Farm Insurance
•Home .OWners

Lightning Rod Mutual

DEPOSITS
INSURED TO $40,000 -

225-235lb 54-55 good 14().'1:/0 lb
39-45 75-115 lb 19-35 mostly 21,.

Western Reserve
Progressive
Foremost
Prudential
National Old Line

Major-

Hoople's

Football
Forecast
against Delaware.
We figure Texas to take
Baylor. but we offer Ferd
Akers' band a word of caution
- Baylor was good enough to
whip Kentucky, and that's
being very. very good, Givt it
to Texas, 28-18. The Irish
have won all six previous
meetings with the Air Force
and.figure to make it seven as
they win , 41-14. North
Carol ina and Duke always
save the best for each other
and play some wild and wooly
foot ball, as witnessed by last
year's Tar Heel triumph, 3918. In a repeat performance
we see North Carolina
knocking off the Blue Devils,
26-20.
Watch for Colgate's Red
Ra iders to tum in one of t heir

.

best games of the year as
they defeat Delaware, 33-14
- on the Blue Hen's field .
Now go on :wJth my
1
forecast .
Saturday. November 19
Arkansas 33, SMU 7
Ball Stale 23, E. Mich. 18
Boston Col. 28, Mass. 21
BYU 40, Long Beach St. 21
Cent. Mich. 25, West Mich. 22
Colorado 35, Kansas St. u
Arizona St. 42, Colo St. 28
Colgate 33, Delaware 14
No. Carolina 26, Duke 20
Florida 35, Utah 7
Houston %1, Texas Tech 20
Purdue 32, 1ndtana 28
Mich. St. 27, Iowa 14
Iowa St. 23, Okla. St. 17
Missouri %\1, Kansas ·6
Kentucky 24, Tenn. 17
No. Tex. St.· 38, La. Tech 16
Maryland 24. Vlrglnta 6
Michigan 31, Ohio. State 24
Minn. %0, W~consio 15
Miss. 21, Miss. St. 10
Wyoming 25. New Mexico 13
New Mex. St. 31 , Idaho 18
IUinols 17, Northwestern 14
Notre Dame 4!, Air Foree 14
Oregon 13, Oregon St. 10
Rutgel'li 21, Boston U. 18
Florida St. 28, San Diego St.
21
Clemson 16, So. Carolina 15
Syracuse 41, W. Va. 28
Texas 28, Baylor 18
Arizona 34, UTEP .%4
Texas A&amp;M 42, TCU 13
Kent St- 21, Toledo 12
LSU 32, tulane 21
Cincinnati Z3, VanderbUI 21
Villanova 27, Temple 22
VMI 30, Rhode Island 17
Va. Tech 25, Wake Forest 1S
Wash. 38, Wash. St. 28
Tulsa ~ . W. Tex. SL 8
Memphis St. 33, Wichita Sl. 11
Wm. &amp; Mary 11, Richmond 7

"

Two senators
are reassured
WASHINGTON ( UPI J Two Democratic senators
just back from Panama were
slightly divided today on their
feelings about the canal
treaties. One said he was for
them now, the other was still
not sure.
Sen. Howard Metzenbawn
of Ohi o said a six-hour
meeting his group had with
Panamanian chief of state
·Omar Torrijos had left him
"prepared to ratify, barring
some unforeseen, new
developments."
But Sen. Donald Riegle of
Michigan hedged.
" I'm still· reserving final
judgment but I feel much
better about aspects of the
treaty than I did before I went
down there. u
The two, in a group of
undecided lawmakers led by
Democratic Leader Robert
Byrd who went to Panama
. last week, were interviewed
on NBC's Today program.
Riegle said he was
re;~ssured "that the United
States does retain the right to
.come in militarily at any
future date if there is need to
defend the canal" and that
Torrijos
was " moving
rapidly to change the political
climate within the country to
give hllilli'n rights in more
ways to the people ... "

Notices, local briefs
Nancy Roush , Reedsville,
won best of show with her
Christmas ceke at a cake
snow held at Putnam County
libra~ at Wi nfield, W. Va .,
Saturday. She was one of •2
contestants .
She
was
presented· a trophy and

ribbon.

The rt9 ular meeting of
Bedford Township Trust~s
will be held Dec. 2 at 6; JO
p.m . accord i ng to Helen
Swartz, clerk .

Ael ker , secretary ; Minnie
Honaker. assistant treasurer
and
Sally
Gold~berry _
assistant secretary. Trustees
are Clarence Jordan ~md
Marlen Wilson.

The

Southern

::~r~~s,~;~~::~a: ~~~~~
at the hlgl'l school .
~

Officers and two trustl'!es
were elected recently ~Y the

Big Bend CB Radio Club.
I ~ey were David Pratt,

Husband file8
divorce action
Robert D. Williams, · Rt. I,
Rutland, has filed suit for
divorce agalnst Patricia E.
Williams, same address, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court . Paula Marie Myers,
Phoenix, Ariz ., filed for
support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act against
Dennis Eugne McKinney,
Rutland.
The marriage of Robert
Uoyd Birchfield and Linda
Diane
Birchfield
was
dissolved and Stephen Wayne
Williams was granted a
divorce from Vicky LyM
Williams.

RACINE -

:
~
I

The Walter •

Voss mentioned In the
murder trial of John L.

Young held In Parkersburg Is

not Walter Voss of Racine.

The Meigs County REACT
team will meet In 5peclal
session at 7 : Friday at
ihe senior citizens center In
Pomeroy . Old and new ,
members are asked to attend, •
especially charter members.
D\Jes are payable for 1978.

The

Jubilee

By Norma A. Lee
As the Thanksgiving season draws near it is fitting that we
think of the importance of our religious heriU!ge.
In no nation on earth is religion more diverse than in the
United States. The year book of American churches lists an
astonishing 223 sects, cults, and denominations. From
earliest times religion has offered strength and solace to
Americans. Religion has been an important influence in our
nation 's history .
We are familiar with the story of the Pilgrims' reasons lor
coming to this new country in the early pari of the 17th Century. We know they left England because they were
persecuted for their religious faith. But sad to relate, once
safely ashore, these same once-persecuted pilgrims became
persecutors in their own right. They established a modified
theocracy in .which only property-{)wning church members
were allowed to vote.
They became very strict and established paralyzing standards of decorwn. A body of stern laws baMed both labor
and frivolity on the Sabbath. On one occasion they went so far
as to keep a Boston mariner in stocks four hours for kissing
his wife in public on the Sabbath after an absence of three
years at sea.
They met in cold churches to listen to three-hour sermons.

TRAVERSE CITY .- Mich . (UP!) - Customers
make their own change at stacey's, a main street
eatery that puts trust at the top of Its menu.
The popular luncheonette has no cashier. Patrons
ring up their own bills, put their money in the cash
reg~ter and fish out whatever change Utey have
commg.
"I haven't been ripped off yet, " owner Julia
stathakts said. "We let our customers make their own
change because if you trust people they won't cheat on
you. The only ones people steal from are the people
they don't trust ."
.
"We've ·been doing this for mQst of the 20 years
we've been here," she said. "Once a mah discovered
he had shortchanged me out of a d oll~r . He sent me a
check and apologized. And 1 have the letter at home to
prove it."

Mrs. Stathakis said at the end of the day the till is
usually over instead of under.
"I think maybe it's because most people don 't
know how to ring up a sale," she said.

Christian

Center Is chang ing Its Su nday
evening !ervke and Wed ·
nesday prayer meeti ng to 7

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FAVOR TESTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Delegates to the Ohio School
Boards Association aMual ·.
business meeting voted
Monday to support minimal
competency exams
developed by local school boards,
but
rejected
statewide
competency
testing . The 380 delegates at
the four-day meeting also ,
approved a resolution
creating a permanent school
finance subcommittee to
make
recommendations •
about refonning the current ·:
structure of financing Ohio's
schools.

at y

_P lans for nursing
home is·reviewed
.

•
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•

e

Pomeroy-Middleort, Ohio
Wedne~day. November 16. 1977

' KEVIN PLEDGES
COLUMBUS (U,Pl )
Pledges have been pouring
into Children's Hospital to
help 11-year~ld Kevin Boyd
pay for a lifO-saving booe
marrow tr~plant operation
costing S50,000. Kevin, the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ray
Boyd of Cambridge, wiD die
without the operation to cure
aplastic anemia, a condition
he contracted after a. 28-day
bQut with infectious hepatitla.
The disease destroys the
body's blood-forming
capablllty.

Meigs Co unty's commissioners heard nursing
home opera!9r John O'Neil
of Cleveland tell his plans for
a 1IJO-bed facility in Middleport Tuesday night.
O'Neil, who owns a nursing
home in Bay Village and has
another near completion in
Delaware County near
Columbus, was accompanied
by Middleport Mayor F'rrid
Hoffman and Church of
Christ pastor George Glaze of
Middleport.
O' Neil showed · drawings
and sketches of the home he
has proposed to build at
Powell and Page St.. on land

he has under option from
pastor Glaze and Danny
Meadows.
The nursing home would be
operated by O'Neil and would
be com pletely financed by
O'Neil through HUD. The
commissioners had indicated
interest in the project by
inviting Mayor Hoffman to·
·discuss It with them.
O'Neil is pr esident of
Bradley Road Hospita11nc. of
Cleveland.
Also meetin g with the
commission was John Yates
ol
Southeastern
Oh io
Regional Crlme Lab and

·~(:::::=:::::::=::::::;:;:;:::;:;;;.;-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::~:::::::::t:

IJVews. • . in Briefsj
By United·Press International
CU:VELAND- AN ALLEGED SCHEME TO DEFRAUD
the U. S. Department of Labor of $500,000 during a Urree-yea~
period resulted in the indiciment of the administrator of
Cleveland's Manpower Training Center, an employee of the
Ohio Bureau ol Employment Services and a Euclid man, U. S.
Attorney William Beyer announced Tuesday .
Indicted were Richard Ubi of Euclid, Manpower
administrator · Dale Laux of Brunswick and employment
services bureau employee Joseph Martin of Lakewood. Three
men and Consortium Venture Corp. conspired to falsely bill
and defraud the Labor Department under the Jobs Entry
Program of the 1964 Manpower Training Act, the indictment
said.
It said tbe three invoiced the Labor Deparlment for
services to disadvantaged persons who either were not hired or
were not eligible for the manpower training progr81J1 .
LONDON - SOLDIERS AND VOLUNTEERS TURNED
out in force today to battle a fire at a power station in Tilbury,
east of London, when striking firefighters refused to answer
the caD. Nearby residents fled their homes as choking clouds
of smoke rolled across the area .
The fire sU!rted in a cable duct and troops and volunteers
rushed to assist employees of the Tilbury "B" power station ,
about 30miles from the capital. Police evacuated people in the
area when the fire was still out of control after five hours.
"Any blaze ala power station is very serious," a police spokesman said.
Thick smoke posed the major problem to troops fighting
the fire with their World War IT-vintage "Green Goddess" fire
trucks.as none of the soldiers had breathing apparatus .
COLUMBUS - TilE FORD MOTOR CO. PLANS to spend
$1 billion in expanding plants in Ohio that would create 20,000
new fobs , it has been reported. Scripps-Howard newspapers
said Tuesday the expansion would include a new $500 111illion
(ConUnued on page 12)

We Hold These Truths ...

Sheriff James J . Proffitt to
discuss local funding for a
crlme lab. The matter was
tabled.
Salem
Haley. Grate,
Township trustee asked for a
road in Salem Township to be
jm proved.
Grate
was
directed to meet ~th the
co unty engineer.
Two positions were filled
through the CETA program.
Hired were CAA Outreach
bus

driver,

Sharon

Icenhower, and county home
cook Barbara Sargent. ,
The

commissioners ·

authorized purchase of a 1978
Pontia c from Smith-Nelson
Motors on an emergency
basts to replace a cruiser for
the sheriff's department
which has a blown engine.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jlm
Ro.ush , commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

Tighter rein
clapped on
Shah rioters
By JOHN F, BARTON
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The shah of Iran 'and
President Carter met again
today while police clapped a
tighter rein on thousands of
chanting . anti-shah
demon st rators after
Tuesday's bloody battling
near the White House .
"The shah is a butcher,
down with the shah," shouted
an estimated 5,000 young
Iranians in Lafayette Square
across Pennsylvania Avenue
as the shah arrived in a
tightly guarded motorcade
for the midmorning meeting.
But there was no violence.
And
there
were
no
demonstrators on the nearby
EUipse, were 126 perS&lt;Jns
were"injured in a stick and
teargas fight Tuesday after
police waded in when antishah demonstrators attacked
(Continued on page 12)

October-November, 1777:

Toddler
Dress-Upsl

evacuates Ft. Mercer upon the approach of a heavy force

QUALITY
COLOR 't.V.

under Cornwal lis. T~e Delaware to Philadelphia now is
open to the British fleet.

You're in for o Foil
treat, toddlers . .•
oil yo~r fovolite bestin this new group!
Visit

our

children's

dePI!rlment on Hta 2nd floor,

see our line selection of
toddlers loll and winter
ciCIIhlng.

Across from
in Pomeroy
- By

R~! Mu~kenzi~

&amp;: Jefr MacNelly f CII977. Unltf'd Fr at ure Syndicate.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

one another . He said :

"God help us to forget party names and become christians
in deed and truth."
Though leaders of the American Revol ution were not
noU!bly pious , religion gave momentum to the struggle In
several ways. All denominations were divided by the Revolution. Anglican clergymen were almost all loyal to England,
yet in the South most Anglican laymen supported the
patriots' cause.
.
Quakers and Mennonites were against all wars.
After the Revolution there again was a waning of religioll.j
fervor. Conditions were changing ; pioneer s were on the
rriove westward . If people were to be converted dramatic
ways were needed. So there followed a camp meeting fever
which spread through the South and West. Soon it had doubled church membership. There followed a great missionary
(Continued on page 12)

•

enttne

EAST MEIGS - Schools of
the Eastern l.ocal School
District will close at the end
of activities on December 8
until January 3 according to
plans made by the District's
Board of Education Wednesday night . .
The closing has been

authorized by the State Office
of Public Instruction due to
lack of funds .
Eloise Boston, clerk, was
authorized to borrow money
from the district 's December's Foundation allotment to 1
meet the December 5 n::'l ''f"Oll •

' BIRTIIDA Y OBSERVED - .Harrisonville Elementary school pupils display a pair of
rabbits in oooervance of the 75th birthday of "Peter Rabbit" during National Children 's
Rook week. Pictured on the Bookmobile are 1-r, Strey Dalton, Anne Mashinic (head
Ulbrarlan), Scott Hanning, and Brian Carr.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 15t

The board authorized the
clerk, Supt. John Riebel, a
secretary a nd cu~1odian as
needed to be on duty during
the 10 day closing period.
Votersofthe district turned
down a five mill emergency
operating levy on the Nov . 8

election.
Eastern is the second
Meigs School district to close
for lack of funds this term .
Southern Local closed Oct. 6
and reopened after voters
approved a 6.5 mill levy on
Oct. 26.

JANM. WNG

Law student
Jan Long to
speak Thursday
Jan. M. Long , Middleport,
who
attends
Capital
University Law School, will
be speaker at a meeting of
Meigs County Democrats at
7:30' p.m. Thursday at Grace
Episcopal Parish house in
Pomeroy.
L.ong , a 1970 graduate of
Meigs High School, received
his BA degree in political
sci ence from Ohin State
University in 1974. He worked
in the state legislature from
1974 through 1976 . He
specifically worked as an
administrative assistant to
State Senator Douglas Applegate for two years and in
Washington, D. C. for Cong.
Applegate as a · legislative
assistant. The public is invited to attend· the Thursday
night meeting. He is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis L.ong,
South Third St.
OFFER MADE
CINCINNATI (UPI ) American Financial Corp.
has announced it is making
an exchange offer to all
holders of its common stock.

New bridge at
St. Marys has
been named .
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
(UP!) -The new bridge over
the Ohio River at St. Marys,
which will be opened tD
traffic Saturday, will be
named the 11 Hi Carpenter
Memorial Bridge," Gov. Jay
Rockefeller announced
ooday.
Rockefeller said the bridge
will be named in honor of the
late Pleasants County
businessman for whom the
old bridge was also named.
The new span replaces the
old bridge that was closed in
1968. The old bridge was of
the same design as the Silver
Bridge at Point Pleasant,
which collapsed a year
earlier, killing 46 people.
Carpenter's
twin
daughters , · Mrs. Ted A.
.Topper of Salem, Va., and ·
Mrs: Frank S. Hewitt of
Georgetown, Del., will take
part
in
dedication
ceremonies.

As two-year-&lt;llds in 1928,
the two cut the ribbon on the
original bridge and !Dok part
in ceremonies renaming the
bridge in honor of their lather
in 1967.

Town Meeting
set Thursday

(ZREET VISITORS - Stephannie Rought. and Cindy McKinney, seniors and the lirst
two girls to be enrolled in the electronics class of Meigs High School, greeted visitors to their
classroom Tuesday night when open house was observed at the school in observance of
Anierican Education Week attended by over 200 parents. Teachers were in their rooms with
students demonstrating. \he work of the various classes. Refreshments were served to the
visitors in the cafeteria by PAT, the high school organization for parents and teachers.
Students alS&lt;J served as guides for tours through the school facilities.

Broker office is
on full schedule

Pomeroy real estate broker
meet them. The issues that George S. Hobstetter, Jr.,
are considered are drawn real estate broker said today
from
the
participants his office located at 107'1.&lt;
themselves, instead of from a Sycamore St., is open on a
pre-determined agenda. ·
regular schedule from 9 a.m .
At the closing, each par- to 4 p.m. except on Thursdays
ticipant will take home a and Saturdays when it will
write-up of the day's close at noon.
discussion, including the
Hobstetter has been acproposals for action which tively in the " real estate
and citizen involvement have been determined by business since' 1953. He is a
thereby demonstrating that it those present.
graduate of Weaver School of
Town meeting· is a Real Estate, Kansas City,
is possible for persons or
varied backgrounds ana privately funded organization Mo. ·Associates in the firm
!Uflering viewpoints to work through the Department of are Cheryl Leml ey and Hilton
Creative Arts that has Wolfe', Sr.
together, to share concerns,
identify community needs, scheduled a workshop in each
and develop practical actions of Ohio's 88 counties this
NOW YOU KNOW
year.
for meeting t~ose needs.
Children
born in Italy in
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
said
The format of this one-tlme
1348,
the
year
of the Great
all
persons
of
all
ages
inevent is that citizens take
Plague,
grew
no
more than
terested
in
the
community
part in workshops to identify
24
teeth
,
instead
of
the norbeen
invited
to
parhave
the challenges for the com32.
mal
ticipate.
munity and develop plans to '

Everyone in Middleport is
invited to participate in a
town meeting Thursday, Nov.
17 at 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High cafeteria.
The "town meeting " is a
tlme for people to talk about
the future of their community. Its purpose is to
increase community pride .

BirthdJJy of Peter RabfJit observed

dreued styles are

BUY NOW
AND SAVEll

debated by h istoria ~s. It was one of the £irs! movements to
help unite·the colonists and it firmly esU!blished revivalism
as a technique for strengt hen ing churches ~~ America. It
created a demand for trained mintsters which resulted in
establishment of such institutions of htgher learning as
Princeton, Brown, Rutgers and Dartmouth universities.
George Whitehead tried to make christia ns more tolerant of

Eastern district
closing Dec. 8th

.

A Chronicle of America

The Brit is~ drive the Am ericans out of Ft. ·Mifflin on Port
Island on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River, and
-opposite it - Ft. Mercer at Red Bank on the New Jersey
Stde. On October 22, Colonel von Donop and 2,000
Hessi ansundertake to reduce Ft. Mercer. The400-mangarrison under Colonel Christopher Greene inflicts heavy
casualties on th e attackers- including a leg wound to von
Donop that •proves fatal. On the 26th1 Cornwallis with
anolher 2,000 approaches, judges the prospects of taking
the fort tpbe hopeless,and wilhdraws. On November 10, the
British beg in o~~ withering five-day bombardment of Ft.
Mtfflin that ends wilh the abandonment of the demolished
fort on Ihe 15th . On the 20th: the fall or Ft. Miffli n having
rendered reten1 10n of Ft. Mercer untenable, Greene

One tlme, on Jan. 24, 1686, tbe sacramental bread was frozen
so hard it rattled as it was broken on the plates. However,
this condition did not exist in the South for the church services were seldom over 20 minutes, but always made up of
S&lt;Jund morality.
Toward the latter part of the 17th Century nonpuritans
began streaming into the flourishing colony and gradually a
change came about. After the tragic events of the Salem
witchcraft trials, the political power of the clergy was
weakened. For a few years tbe pendulwn swul!g in the other
direction and many clergymen became alarmed at the waning religious ferv,or. Soon there were many local revivals exhorting people to mend their ways. There were four eKlraordinary preachers emerging as leaders of the "great awakening" of the 1730sand 1740s.
The £irst was Jonathan Edwards in New England who persuaded many to repent. Then there was the Presbyterian W.
M. Tennent and son Gilbert who performed slmilar work
among the people of Pennsylvania . The most celebrated of
this foursome was George Whitefield. He was so eloquent and
awe-inspiring that even the skeptic, Benjamin Franklin was
moved to empty his purse on the collection plate at one
revival.
, ..
The lasting effects of the Great Awakening are still

Americans

1

E-R, firemen
are called out

ELBERFELDS

~n

1

p.m. instead of 7:30 p.m .
effective at once.
."

RACINE - The Racine ER
Squad was called Monday to
Rt. 1, Portland for Charles
Bailey, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorl1!1 Hospital.
Racine firemen were called
Monday
at 10:05 a.m. to
ENROUMENT DOWN
Letart
FaDs
where a two
BOSTON (UPI) - Boston
public school enrollment has story house occupied by
dropped almost 20 percent in Barbara Buchaman was on
nine years, a private fire . The fire was in the upresearch bureau said today. stairs port ion which waa
The
Boston Municipal gutted. There was smoke and
Research Bureau said the water damage to the
downstairs. Cause of the fire
decline by 18,420 students 19.6 percent - since 1968 was is believed to have been
caused by a sharp drop in the caused by faulty wiring. The
birth rate ; migration of Syr$cuse Fire Department
families to suburb~ and a 4- assisted .
year-old, federally ordered
school busing program to
achieve racial desegration.

BUSINESS GOOD
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio
(UP! ) - Armco Steel Corp.
Metzenbawn said he was said Monday fourth quarter
concerned that a vote for the results for its manufacturing
treaties
might
help and financial businesses
perpetuate a dictator in which make up illl Enterprise
office, "and that bothered me .Group will be the best of the
year.
much."
"l can say I think the
D. C. Boone, Armctr
general moved in the right executive vice president, said
direction in regard to human the company expects 1977
rights," Metzenbawn said. results to exceed the reported
"Specifically, thai he would earnings for these businesses
repeal tbe laws that provide In 1976.
for incarceration of persons
without a fair trial, bring ·
• back deportees in part at the
present time and all of them
SHORTAGE.OF BABIES
at the tlme of ratification. "
WASIDNGTON (UPI)- A
As !Or U.S. intervention to still-unreleased government
proteCt the canal, Riegle said study says the shady world of
"in my judgment, we clearly selling babies gets great
have !bat right, tbe right to public exposure but little
defend and protect and keep official attention, and black
open the canal and go to the · market adoptions may be
head of the line in tlme of increasing.
Desperate
national emergency .' '
couples use desperate
strategems and pay · exorMORE CLOSINGS
School districts in Roots- bitant fees for children in
town and Garrettsville in what was called the seller's
Portage County face the market created by a shortage
threat of closing later this of healthy white babies
month after the failure of available for adoption.
levies in the Nov. 8 general
election, it was l&amp;rned today
by UPI . The Rootstown
district has about 2,000 pupils
and the Garfield district in
Garrettsville has about 1,200.
Both, however, have put
levies on the ballot for Dec. 13
special elections.

The Courthouse

PHONE 992-5120

Band

Religious heritage strong

Stacey's Diner mainlines
'honesty' as menu special

pres ident ; Will iam Jones ,
vice president ; Shirley
Gibbs. treasurer ; Cindy

is
especially
The Meigs-Jackson-Vinton mobile
Counties Bookmobile staff is . significant as the world
host to a most unusual visitor famous rabbit is marking his
this week in observance of 75th birthday this year. In
·National Children's Boo k honor .of the occasion the
week. The special guest of t..JOkmobile staff has plaMed
honor is none other than a week long celebration,
Peter Rabbit, hero of nursery complete with balloons,
tales by author Beatrix streamers and birthday cake.
Peter Rabbit's mischievous
Potter.
'Peter's visit tb" the book- personality was firs.! in-

troduced to young readers ln
1902 with the publishing of
The Tale of {'eter Rabbit.
Beatrix Potter wrote 23 other
animal stories and severa l
longer tales. Today, Potter's
characters are not only en·

joyed through her many
books but alS&lt;J through the
artistic forms of a ballet and
movie. ~

1-77 feeder road
.will be four-way
The Parkersburg News
said Monday th at short,
winding stretch of road from
Ravenswood to Silverton in
Jackson Cou nty which .
motorists now take to pick up
l-77 north to Parkersburg
will be four Ianes of smooth
riding this tlme next year . .
Cohstru ction ha s been
underway for the pqst yearand-a4Ialf on the
million
project and it should be
finished by August of 1978,
according
to
District
Engineer Kenneth 0. Webb.
The new express way will
begin at the Ravenswood
Bridge, also under const'ruction, a nd extend 2.5
. miles eastward to Silverton .
Webb pointed out that it will
replace nearly hall of old
Route 56 Which no w takes
motorists from Ravenswood
to the interstate.
Studies have indicated tha t

'10

m ost motorists traveling

north on Route 2 have been
crossi ng over to 1-77 at
'
Ravenswood
· to get to
Parkersburg, and "the new
four-lane will "':Jke it -easier
for them."

.

Webb sa id Route 2 wiD
to be a "feeder
route," feeding traffic both
ways . " The fou r-lane will
collect ' local (Ravenswood)
traffic to the interstate and
reduce the flow on Route 2."
He stressed that ~~ we ' re for
getting the traffic onto the
int erstate instead of Route 2
si nce i['s a faster and safer
route. And this four-lane will
attral'( motorists to 1-77 and
move them faster to their

continue

destination.''

The pro ject ha s been
contracted to a firm out of
Tennessee (McDowell, Inc.)
and is a part of the West
Virginia bond issue.
:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::;::;:::::::;:;::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
a ~hance of rain or snow
Friday, fair Friday and a
~han ce of rain again
Sunday. Htghs wtll he In the
lOs Friday ,and Satunlay
and in the 50s Sunday.
Lows wtll be In the 30s
Friday a~d Saturday and bt
the upper 30s or lower 40!1

·:: ~~~:~:~\1.::: : :: : ::::::::::::::: : :: !:\ : :::::::::::::

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