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                  <text>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

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Omis ~i ons

&amp;

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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

'

•
'
:
•
•

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
.

•
'
'

•

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.::: : :: : ::::::::::::::: : :: !:\ : :::::::::::::

�"

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Nov. 16, 1977
J - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Pnmer•&gt;Y. 0 .. Wednesday . Nuv. 16. 19i7

.
!977 ALL-SVAC FOOTBALL TEAM
NAME, SCHOOL
HT, WT. YR.
Mar cus Geiger. Kyger-&lt;: reek
5· 10
175
t2
Mike Casey, Kyger Creek
5. 5
140' t2
Darrell Jooes, Kyger Creek
5~ 8
225
12
Claude Cornelius, Kyger Creek.
6·2
180
t2
M ike Hendr ickson. Kyger Creek
6o
200 t2
Martin Bu sh , Sou thern
6-3
195
12
Scott Souder , Southern
6~ 2
185
t2
Kelly Winebrenner, Southern
6·2
185 12

Objections raised to bargaining bill
By LEE LEONARD
UPI

Slatt&gt;h~tUSt'

11rms m d1sarray
as
me1nbt•rs raised nbJt'l'tiOJlS

Rtp1 1rt rr

COLUMBUS I UP i l
Sep arate legtslat t ..e
committ fl'es
studywg
coll ective bargammg for

publir employees and tax
abatement for mdustries
modernizing their faciltiPs
were to meet t oda\· t 11 det:ide
how to dear new ·hurdlt&gt;s.

At the same time. the Ohio
Senate was to vote at a 1:30
p.m . floor

session

House-passed
lTeatin g

a

1'tn on

measures
nfw

state

Department of Energy and
revising

Ohi o's

cbaritable bingo.
The
House

.Ja w

was

on
to

ret'ilnvene at 1 p .m .

A Sen a te
· eauc us
on

Democ ratic
colle ctive

bargaining TUesday left those

Th,• result was that the
thn'f' ..day lrgJslativc

planlll~

be
exp;:mdt&gt;d int o nrxt week to
cnm pIt&gt; t e
N o ,.t' m be r
SCSS!nn

may

busmt.•ss.
A number

ha\'e

to

senators to1tk
vnl'al t' Xreplitlfl m the Demucrauc eaucus tl• a plan to
grant reductions in tht'
tangible personal property
tax
fur
Cll lllpanu:·~
muderntzlng and t&gt;xpandi ng
thetr plant.s.
That H n u se- pa ssed
propu's atts before the Senate
Ways ond Meqns Committee .
A hnal decision tm the form of
a bill ,nrwhNher there will be
ont&gt; at all, may be made later
1lf'

this week.

Tht&gt;re also was some sentim ent in t he ea ucus for

renstng thr rn ntrrc-nd.•
co mnntter
report
un
l'1l llrcti\'i' bargain ing ltl
remtl\"(.&gt; tJw nght.t.P-strikt• for
publi(' safety Pmplnyt't'S .
Alth&lt;1 ugh tht• ('unfcrence

eom mittee
report
has
already bet&gt;n appro\'ed, Sen.
Harry
Meshel.
DYoungst0wn. tht&gt; prune s~on­
sor and etmferen('e chairman
emerged ff(\JH the C'a ucus

intt•nt nn makirn~ some last minu,te chan~es.
Meshel said he still hopes to
submit a report to the Senate
and Hnuse nH•mberships

lat er this week .
He was silent on his plans,
ot her than to say Oe wan ted to
"('hange tll.e treatment or
publi c safety forces" tc1 " lry
t(l improve on the f1W1lber o£
m tes. "

Huwevrr ,

snid a

so un.\"~

tnj•\'l' "'a s ~r111.1t t1 1. rclll1 1\'(' tht&gt;
prm"tsion ~ 1\" lng polleE'

It was rt•pnrted that Dayttln
le~aslators

hospit-81
pers,~mnel and ill hcr healti1
and saf~ ty employees the
right w strike.
The reaSI&gt;n given for the
ctwnge was an atmosphere
against a strike clause which
nu~ht endanger approval of
the report b); a veto-proof

from a firefighters' strike tn
that c1ty last su mmt~r .
In additi nn, it was nnted
that
c•.mservativrs are
talking abnut trying tn repeal
the cnlledl \'e ba rgaining
proposal if it bef.'o rnes law .
State Issue 1 was cited , in
wh ic h voters rep ea lr d
election W1y registration a

mar~tn .

Wl'f.•k

Mfieers,

ftrefi~ht e rs,

~

''Some people a re not in

60vott&gt;s in the House and 20 in
the Senate to pa ss th e
collecliwe bargaining bill by a
margin to ranee! out a veto
by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Th ey
hav e 62 rep·

favor of a limi ted right to
strike lor publi c safely employees, so we're trying to get
around it, '' said Senate Presi·
dent Pro Tempore Oliver
Ocasek. D·Akron. " I ' m
lookin g for a co llective
bargaining bill that people
can live wi th and tha t will not
tear the state apart.
·•1 predicl with the pi!ssa ge
of Issue 1 that you're likely to
see more efforts tu repeal
laws
pa sse d
by
the
Democrati c maj ority," said
the Senate leader.

resentativ es

and

21

SE"natnrs. but several were
reported ready to boll on the

issue, a nd Republicans are
solidly opposed.

··rct

rather see collecti\'e

bargainin g taken to the
people without the right to
strike for safety forces.
because if that's in there, it
will make the vote on Lssue 1
look silly." Issue 1 passed by
a 3-2 margin .
If the right to strike were
removed, bindin~ arbitration

llhow.

SERVICE RECOGNIZED - West Virginia National Guard Capt. Larry Boyer of
Gallipolis, H~adquartersand Headquarters Co., West Virginia Selective Service, presents a
certificate of recognition t~ Chester Tannehill, executive editor Of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. for patriotic service in public information that supported the National Guard
program during 1976. Capt. Boyer is assistant to the publislter o f The Gallipolis Dailv
Tribune. Tannehill resides in Middleport. Th e certificate was signed by West Virginia
National Guard Brig . Gen. Robert Childers.
would be the final step in
breakin g an impasse between
public safety employees and
their employers.
The Cleveland Board of
Education continued to press
for legislative action to
alle\oate a $15 million deficit

which is being carried to keep
city sc hools open for the
balance of the year.
However. Ocasek said he is
still opposed to "bailing out"
one sch ool district while
others are in financial
difficulty.

Meanwhile, the House Fi·
nance Committee repOrted
out and readied for noor
action a ju&lt;jges' pay raise bill
costing the state $5.2 million
over a two-year period, and
local

t

governments

additional $2.5 million.

T 0 wn's

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

SkipJ!ed heats common
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB-My pm·
blem is cardiac irregularity.
I:have many extra beals that
occur all at one time with the
feeling that the heart is strug.
g)ing to beat regularly, but
cannot come out of it. It is
most frightening when they
occur that way.· An occa·
!lonal one I can tolerate, but
this scares me a lot.
They occur at any time,
even at night while asleep . l
work hard at trying to put
them out of my mind, but
then I'll read where they can
mean sudden death and I'll be
very upset.
Is it true they can mean
sudden death ? My clinic has
lle\'eral doctors, and one tells
me to rest when they occur,
another one tells me to exercise, and I have a feeling tbe
others would tell me
3011lething else. I'm confused
an to what is the solution and
cause. Can you tell me?
I'm 48, in the menopause, 5
teet 10, weigh 155. I don't
smoke, drink coffee or liquor,
mly about three cups of tea a
day.
I'm on a very tiny amount
ol thyroid that my doctor
says is not really ·needed ac·
&lt;'Ording to the test, but might
prove helpful anyway. My
doctor says he has no idea
what causes my extra beals.
Can you shed some light on it
pleuse '
DEAR READER--Extra
beals, skipped beats, flip
Rops or Whatever you want to
call them, are rather com·
rnon. You have to judge their
importance by the rest' of the
patient's health status. In a
person such .as yourself, who
apparently has no evidence of
hea r ' disease as you would
·;ee ,,ith abnormal heart
sounds, heart pain or high
blood pressure, they may
have little significance other
than the discomfort they
1
causefou.

I saw a lot of these in the
young health men in the U.S,
Air Force Dying personnel.
Our group studied over
120,000 records and such ex·
tra beats were corrunon.
We know that they are
caused by a spot in the heart
that is overactive . Sometimes
it is because a person is born
with an '·extra sparkplug" so
to speak to run the heart. and
every once in a while it gels a
chance to fire in between
regular beats and upsets the
normal rhythm .of the heart
beat. Such a spOt can also be
caused by inJury to the heart
muscle.
An injured spot
takes on the characteristics
of an extra sparkplug.
We know that when they oc·
cur in people with no other
evidence of heart disease,
they arc not harmful. But
those that are caused by in·
jury to the heart such as arecent heart attack may herald
the onset of a dangerous irregularity of the heart. So,
they can be ··unimportant
from a health pOint o" view,
or life threatening . Let me
emphasize again that most
people who have these do not
have serious heart disease
and arc not going to suddenly
dropdead.
·
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 6-12,
Heart Irregularities, Skipped
Beals, Tachycardia, to give
you more details . Others who
want information on such
problems can send 50 cents,
with a long, stamped self·
addressed envelope for ,it to
me 'in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551 , Radio City Station, New York, NY 10019.
We also know that riervousness can make matters
worse. Tea containS caffeine,
and you might as well stop
that. Coffee, tea, colas ,
cigarettes, anything that
upsets the digestion can in·
crease the frequency of these.
v

$29,839.42.
The council's obligated
funds remained at $31 ,521.70
with no receipts and no
disbursements.
Obligated funds of the
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs as of Oct . 31 totaled
$192 ,2 63.75 . Receipts ,
disbursements and the
balance in each of the funds
making up the total include~:
sanitary sewer, $6 ,26 0.04 ,.
$6,681.61 , $33,267.60; sanitary
sewer escrow, $840 , no
HAVE GUESTS
Mrs. Willi;un Kowallis and
. ter, Caroline Sto.ne,
her da~
North untington , Pa. were
here ov the weekend for a
visit
cousins, Clara
McMast r, Mr . and Mrs.
ruese~. and Mr. and
M . William Russell,
· n "'ville. Mrs. Kowaltis is
the great-granddaughter of
the late John and Mary
Grueser and Mrs. Stone is
their
great-gre·at·
granddaughter. While here
they visited their aunt, Mrs.
Hilda Schmoll who is the last
living child of J ohn and Mary
Grueser.
RETIREMENT AGE
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State
Sen. Robert D. Freeman, {).
Canton, introduced a bill
Tuesday abolishing the
mandatory. retirement age of
70 for public employees.
Freeman's bill also forbids
any public employer to dis·
criminate in hiring, compensating , promoting ,
classifying or discharging an
employee solely on the basis
of age.

disbursements, $140,680.09 ;
water, $7,282 .82, $6,825.71,
$11,020.04; water meter
trusts, $165, $150, $7,296.02.
Receipts for the month
totaled $14 ,567. 86 while
disbursements
totaled
$13,657.32.
DINNER SLATED
The second annual
Thanksgiving dinner o( the
Rutland United Methodist
Church will be held at 12:30
Sunday at the church. The
Rev . Gerald Erler, district
educational director, will be
the speaker at the worship
service and will be present
for the dinner. Turkey, dress·
ing, mashed p0tatos an,d
gravy will be furnished, and
members are to take a
covered dish and their own
table service.
ntE D.4.,LYSENTINEL

DEVOTED TO 111E

INTERFSTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
OIESTER L. TA.NNEHIU.

Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEfUCH
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66

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Rod
Carew, the Minnesota Twins'
first baseman whose .388
batting average en route to
his sixth batting title
matched the . highest in the
major leaguts in 20 yea rs,
was named the American
League's Most Valuable
Player Wednesday in the
most diversified voting in the
history of the halloling.
The 32-year.old native of
Gaton, Panama, winner of
five batting titles in the last
six years, won the prestigious
award by a decisive point
margin of ..273-217 over AI
Cowens of the Kansas City
Royals.
Carew received 12 of the
first-place votes cast by the
C&lt;&gt;n_&gt;mittee of the Baseball
Wrtlers Assoctalton of
America but no fewer than 10
other players got at least one .
No. I vote . Under the potnt
system , a first-place vote is
worth 14 points a second'

PR.

BtJston ( 1), Larry Hisle of
Minnesota (I) and Cart
Yastrzemski of Boston ( 1).
Singleton, a .328 hitter for
the Orioles, was third with 200
points, followed by Rice at 163
and Nettles at 112. Lyle,
Munson, Jackson, Fisk and
Bill Campbell of the Red Sox
rounded out .the top 10.
Aclassic line drive hitter in
an era of free swingers,
Carew made a strong bid to
become the major leagues'
first .400hittersince Williams
hatted .406 in 1941. He carried
a .4JJ average into late July
and then &lt;~sJumped" to the
.370s before coming on strong
in the last few weeks of the
season .
" I feel thrilled," said
Carew when he learned he
had wort the award ...1 was
afraid I niight not get it in

Other nonunet:s receiving
votes were Randy Boston, 6-l ,
218 pound senior from
Eastern; Martin Bush, 6-3,
19~ pound senior from
Southern and Matt Bokovitz,
6-1, 218 pound senior from
Symmes Valley.
Carter, the league's top
lineman, caught 32 passes
good lor 610 yards while
scoring nine touchdowns and
four extra pOints. On defense,
he compiled a 19.4 average ·
~nder
the
Highlander
defensive point system.
Eastern's Joe Kuhn,
although injured daring the
season, edged North GaUia's
senior running hack Rex
Justice and Kyger Creek's
Marcus Geiger, another
. speedy runner for that
award.

view of the Twins' third-place
finish (in the AL West) and I
know other guys had super
years. I'm just happy I won
it. I'm very happy for
myself."
The only players who have
won more hatting titles than
Carew were Ty Cobb (12),
Horius Wagner (8) and Stan
Musial and Rogers Hornsby
(7 each). All .are in the
Baseball Hall of Fame.

During the year, Kuhn
rushed for 670 yards, a 5.2
avg., had l1 touchdowns and
, two extra points: He alsO
caught ll passes for 206 yards
good for three touchdowns
and two extra points. Kuhn
also kicked a 32 yard field
goal. That, according to his
coach Joe Mitchem, was
accomplished in eight games
due to a knee injury on the
third play in the Kyger Creek
game causing him to miss the

I

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entire Southwestern game.
Justice rushed for I ,165

yards in 10 games. He also
collected 201 in the air while
scoring 13 touchdowns.
Geiger, injured in the
season's first game against
Wahama, completed the
season with 705 yards in 104
rushes, a 6.78 average . He
scored nine touchdowns.
The MVP's will receive
trophies presented by the
Sunday Times-Sentinel and
Radio Station WJEH during
the annual All Sports Banquet
in the spring .
Participating in Tuesday's
all-league selection were:
Jim Sprague, Kyger Creek;
John Dudding, Southern;
John Blake, North Gallia;
Bob Ashley, Southwestern;
Joe Mitchem, Eastern i Joe
Bokovitz, Symmes Valley
and Larry Crerrieens, Hannan Trace.
instead of through private
insurance companies.
"Experience elsewhere
show that for
large
employers such as the state,
self-insurance provides the
potential for more effective
cost control, and we should
have the ability to pursue that

INSURANCE CDliTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislation to help the state
co mbat rising insurance
costs for its employees was
introduced in the Ohio Senate option," said the
TUesday.
Sen. Harry Meshel, D· .
Youngstown, proposed the
bill giving the state the option
?I providing health and life
msurance benefits directly

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Friday

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up slwrt,
it marked the
first
long 35-31,
pa~s in weeks tq
Warfield and fellow wide
receiver Reggie Rucker. The
question is whether the
Browns will drop their
conservative attack even
with the larger and stronger
Mays at he controls.
"The more ·r think of what
Mays did Sunday, the more
impressed I am," Rucker
said. "Pittsburgh was in a
situation where they could
just tee off on us. And yet
Dave attacked them. I mean,
there was some ingredient
there.
"What I'd like to see us do
is go into New York ant!
attack with the same fervor

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~
Ohio State can win the
undisputed Big Ten title and
MISSION, Kan. (UP!)- A
the Rose Bowl berth with a tie devastating ground perfor·
or a win. Michigan must win
mance Saturday by Big Eight
for a share of the powers Oklahoma and
championship and would get Nebraska has moved the two
a Rose Bowl berth with a schools into second and third
victory. Thus Michigan must place respectively in NCAA
play for a win io earn all the Division I team rushing this
prizes while Ohio State can· week.
settle for a tie and still win.
Oklahoma rushed for 430
Whether Ohio State will go yards in pasting Colorado, 52for a tie, Hayes said, "we'll 14, and Nebraska set a school
decide in conference before single game rushing record
the game."
with 550 yards in hwniliating
The loser _ or the team Kansas, 52-7. Those yards
that does not earn the Rose helped the Sooners up their 10
Bowl berth -will be invit\!(1 game average to 320.1 yards
to the Sugar Bowl to face on the ground ;while Nebraska
Southeastern Conference jumped to 313.8.
champion Alabama, the New
Ohio State, which rushed
Orleans States-Item reported for 368 yards against Indiana
TUesday.
last week, maintained its lead •
in rushing with an average of
~
332.6 yards in 10 games.
Brigham Young, with
Gifford Nielson and Marc
Wilson combining to throw
for 34 touchdowns this year,
again leads in passing
offense with an average of
340.4 yards per game and
we did in the second half. We . Grambling is again tops in
did it aU. We threw short, we
scoring offense with an
threw long, we ran inside, we
average of 41.3, points per,. ·
ran outside.
game.
Colgate is the total offense
"I hate to see Brian have ,
. such · a serious injury. I've
leader for the fourth straight
been there myseU," Rucker
week with an average of 501.8
added. ''Being the competitor
yards per game and a nation
he is, 1 know how he feels not
leading 49 touchdowns.
being able to contribute. But I
know, too, he'll help Dave. .
· "I think the guys will rally
arotind Dave. We got to witi
five in a row. But it can be
done ."
Terry Luck, a second-year
man whose experience has
been limited to pre..season
scrimmages, will be backing
up Mays. Should both get hurt
the job would fall to wide
· receiver Dave Logan, who
spent some time working out
at quarterback during
training camp on orders from
Gregg.
Greg Pruitt is listed as
questionable for Sunday's
game with a bruised Achilles
tendon but defensive end
Mike St. Clair, who rpissed
the Pittsburgh game with a
W M PO
similar injury, may be ready
SA TURD A y 5
for the Giants. '

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99

place nine and so M down to
oQe for a•'lllth·place ballot.
It was the first MVP Award
won by Carew, who compiled
the highest batting average in
the major leagues since Ted
Williams batted .388 for the
Boston Red Sox in 1957.
Carew ls the 16th player from
a nonpennant winning team
to win the AL award and the
third member of the Twins
honored.
Cowens, who had a .312-23112nffensive performance for
the Royals, got four first·
place votes and others who
received at. least one were
Ken Singleton of Baltimore
( 3), Jim Rice of Boston ( 1),
Graig Nettles of New York
(2) , Sparky Lyle of New York
( 1), Thurman Munson of New
York ( 1), Reggie Jackson of
New York ( 1), Carlton Fisk of

.
CHICAGO (UPI) - Mt· year ago.
chigan's Bo Schembechler
"I don't think Gerald and
wants to guard against the Leach will be the whole
" little things" when his offense. They've got guys
Wilmingtn~
Wolverines play Ohio State who can run, and we do too .
Saturday with the Big Ten co- But on offense neither team is
op probation
championship and a Rose going to move if the
Bowl berth at stake.
quarterbacks don't inove the
FINDLAY, Ohio (UPI)
"With two teams as close ball. "
Wilmington College Tuesday · as these are, any little thing is
Ohio State's Woody Hayes
was placed on two years vitally important," said described ·r..each ·as ''a real
probation by 'the Hoosier· Schembechler, speaking to threat" but said his own ·team
Buckeye
Collegiate the weekly football writers is "one · of the quickest
Conference following a luncheon TUesday.
defensive teams we've ever
meeting Monday of the
"The unexpected turnover, had.
conference's Mediation the kicking game, a mistake ,
"We're mighty happy to
Board .
the little things add up. Both have Gerald, and I hope he
In a prepared statement teams want to win it very makes quite a bit of
released Tuesday through the badly."
difference. Leach · iS most
HBCC office, the Mediation
Schembechler, a victor dangerous
with
his
Board said, •·•we find over Ohio State last year, versatility, his running, passevidence of the following said the Buckeyes this year i~g, the option and the keep
violations of conference were better than a year ago . on ihe option ,"
regulations: Students are
"The difference · is their
receiving financial aid in the offensive line is better than a
form of campus employment year ago and their offense is
who have not file&lt;\ a parents better," he said. "[ don't
c()nfidential statement; know if Michigan is any
institutionally-controlled gift better."
resources were used to
He agreed with other
exceed tuition and fees; and analysts that the difference in
institutionally-controlled re- the game could hinge on the
sources as part of the aid performance of the rival
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) package were used to exceed quarterbacks. Rick Leach lor
Cleveland Browns fans can
stated need ."
Michigan and Rod Gerald for
picture Paul Warfield orice
the Buckeyes.
again loping beyontl the
"Gerald is dangerous," he
' a 1ong
coverage to hau 1 m
said , "He can run and he's · scoring pass. now that Dave
quick . He's the type of Mays has taken over for
quarterback who can make a
Brian Sipe ·at. quarterback.
But the fans might have to
bad play into a good one.
Leach runs when the defense content themselves with
dictates for him to run, but he merely dreaming, Although
doesn't have as much · Mays is a proponent of the
yardage this year as he had a long strike, coach Forrest
Mr. H. W. Mattingly
Gregg may not be thinking
Will Be At ·
along those lines. The answer
should
come Sunday when the
Meigs Inn
Browns
visit the Giants in
Pomeroy, Ohio
New
Jersey.
On
The Browns chugged
Thursday, Nov. 17
through the first eight and
From
one-half games with Sipe
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
directing a "nickle-anddime" short pass offense.
Then Sipe went out with ·a
To repair and service
broken
shoulder
in
hearing aids.
Pittsburgh Stlnday and Mays
came in w,lth the Browns
Batteries
and
trailing 28-3'to dlrect four late
supplies for all makes
scoring drives.
for sale.
· Although the effort carne

These are stlght Irregulars, from a
famous jeans mtgr. Some are prewashed. Navy blue denim. 4 pockets,
basic, heavy weight. Save $4.00 pair.

$

150

155 pound senior and Kyger
Creek's. Darrell Jones, 5-l!,
225 pound senior.

Rod Carew AL's Most Valuable

MADE IN U.S.A.

Values To 123.99
Black, Brown or Tan

$
On TheT
In Middleport

\

~~ 1jllIft l'lil

Give her holiday warmth
.. sweaters! We hove a neat
collection of the · most-wonted
styles just for her ....... tloJ
cables, cardigans . . : see I

s. JQ

Southern Valley Athletic
Conference (!()aches Tuesday
night named Larry Carter, 61, 190 pound senior end as the
league's Most Valuable
Lineman for 1977 and Joe
Kuhn, 5-9, 155 senior running
back as the Most Valuable
Back for 1977. Both players
were on teams which finished
the league season with 3·2
records.
By virtue of winning their
fifth straight league cham·
pionship, Kyger Creek placed
five men on the All-SVAC
team. Southern, the second
place squad, had four; . South·
western, North Gallia and ·
Eastern, three each, Symmes
Valley, two and Hannan
Trace, one.
On the system used by the
league 's seven football
coaches to select the MVP
Lineman, Carter edged North
Gallia's Curt Nolan, a 5-10,

·NOV. 18th
FRI.-9:30-5:00

Browns may .go J.Or
mor~ long passes

Will Not Shrink Out of Size.
Asst. colors, many that
women will want. Sizes S·

month'!

an

Mike Warner , Southern

Larry Carter, Southwestern
6- 1
190
12
Mark Carter, Southwestern
6·0
165 12
Gene Layton , Southwestern
6· 1
160 11
Matt Bok ovl tz. Symmes Valley
6· 1
218
12
Mike Galloway . Symmes Va lley
6·2
215
12
Frank Mooney , Hannan Trace
5·1 0 155 12
1
HONORABLE MENTION
. KYGER CREEK - Sam Cort ias and Randy
lucas .
SOUTHERN Mike Huddleston and Dan
Dudding .
.
.. ,
NORTH GALL! A - Joon Swisher and Tim Dav is.
EASTERN - Mike Haymand and Rusty Wigal.
SOUTHWESTERN - Sherman Potter and Barry
Jenkins.
SYMMES VALLEY - Mark Wi th row and Jack
Hunt.
HANNAN TRACE ·- Tom Wright and Jeff Halley .
MOST VALUABLE LINEMAN - Larry Carter,
Southwestern .
MOST IIALUABLE BACK - J oe Kuhn, Eastern .

ago.

Democrats need to sceure

"Spirits of the Dar: : a
table picture of the exhibition
type depicting a Christmas
fat ivity. in some pan of the
United States, is a class in the
artistic designs division of the
Meigs County Garden Clubs'
annual Christmas fl ower
The show will be staged
Dec. 3 and 4 at the Pomeroy
Elementary School with the
theme being "A Currier and
lves Christmas,"
To clarify a ''table picture"
and its requirements for both
elthibitors and viewers, Mrs.
Middleport
Village
Bernice Ca rp enter , show
Council's
expendable
funds
dlaim1an. explains it this
$51
,246.06
as
of
Oct .
totaled
way :
31.
according
to
the
monthly
"Christmas, to many
persons , is the foremost time rep ort of Clerk-Treasurer
ol the year for thtnking of Gene Grate submitted to
adding beauty to our homes council Monday night.
Receipts and disbur·
In the way of decorations.
' fll&amp;sonal greenery, and en- sements from each fund and
tertaining. We enjoy bringin g- the balance. respectively, at
out these treasured articles the end of the month in·
(perhaps something used at eluded : general. $7,056.85,
the first Christmas in our $13 ,074 .08 , . $26 ,413.65;
home I and let them bring cemetery , $620, $722 .66,
t.ck memories and· add that $828.48 ; fire equipment,
special warmth to the $1,300, $1 ,324.71. $85.82 ;
holiday . It was with these swimming pool, $4,300,
thoughts in mind that the S8,JJ9.02, $1,612.84; planning
cOmmission, no receipts ,
~edule committee of the
$111 .24; street
Meigs County Christmas $13.07,
!lower show incltided a class maintenance, $3,206.55,
which should be interesting to $2,057.89, $9,771.l2; federal
aU and perhaps give some revenue sharing, $3,848,
new ideas lor using these $4,459 .65, $11,238 .97; anti·
treasurer items. This class ts . recession assistance, $194,
''Spirit of the Day" and is $68.34, $1,183.94.
Receipts for the month
dolined as a Table Picture,
totaled
$20,425 .40 while
exhibition type, depicting a
disbursements
totaled
Christmas .festivit y in a

fear a backlash.

Champion Kyger Creek
dominates ·dream team

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�Sports
•
transactions

Blazers nip Bucks
' Bv FRED UEF

114-9:1. \\'ash mgron l'hpped
.5t:attJ£t, l l l-}(19, S31l AJ1h •OII I

L"PI Sp~~rts Writrr

Bill Waltl'll

of- st&gt;n'" n- f ou l

sht' ts

: j!rabl.x&gt;lll Orl'lJ(lumb
: p 11Jn\

bt.•;1t Kart'i il s City , 11 3-- Wi,

l'l l!l H•r ted Slx -

and

dumpt..-&gt;0 Dt'trNt ,
~~ :~2-~ 11:1. ami (' J~\'l'iand t• Hlk

f 1lf

l:'&gt;\' fl\'t1 r

1 2:~Lu~

t hat

p t• r f,, nl HI Il Ct'

l"'lpt'd carr) the Pc•rtland
Trot! Blazt•rs

~ Buc.:ks. 'l\n'"sday rug hl.

N BA Stand.n q s,

By Um t ed Press lnt ernar.onal
ea sTern ContE'r enc{l
Attanf•c D•~•s•on
W l
Pc: t G B
Nt' w "Y o r k.
8 5 t-1!1
Ph dA
7 5 58 3
BuHtt iC'
6 7 J 6l '1
Boston
J 8 71]
J

Walt on dnm mated the \a.-.t

, penod by srnr mg 10 po nnts.

· but ht s turrwvers nt&gt;arly
' nullified t' \'t•r~· ttung .
. " I madl• Stl tnt&gt; rt-ally bad

New

• p\a \'S," l1e S3Jd . " II WtlUldn't
hal.i

t he

f i' Ur
-

stra1 g ht

lhilt '::;

t&gt; q.!hl

: IJi lints." '

: It wa s am1ther W(llt on • Uord Walton - wh o almost
: pushed tJw Bud~ &lt;'ver the
•• 10p .

• With Milwaukl'&lt;' dnwn. 95; 68, lhe slipptot·y Bucks ' guard

ror

: set up Ernie Grunfeld
IWfl
• (&gt;~l i nts and made fClur free

: lhrnws. He lhen stole the ball
. : from Bill Wall on and raced
• d 0w nrourt where he

fed

· Bnan Wint ers and put the
: Bueks back on tt1p, 98-97.
But lhen Bill hlok nver.
Pnrlland . tops in lhe
, Pacific Division and lhe NBA
• with a 10.2 rrcord, got tough
. games
fr om
forwa rds
· Maurice Lucas with 18 points
· ! and lO · reb0unds and Bob
: Gross with 13 p&lt;lints .

: The Bucks. who fell under
• the .500 mark fnr the first
: time this season . were led by

: Dave Meyers, wh0 threw in a
• careerhigh 32 p01nt.S. Brian
· ; Winters had 16 and Uoyd
' Walton 10.
' Elsewhere in the NBA.
· Indiana defeated Buffalo. 100; 94, :-lew Ynrk sloppt'd New
• Orleans.
108·105.,
Philadelphia look Atlanta.
r~---------,

The Return
of the

Stick
Pin

once again
remembers the
importance ol the
Stick P in. For
both Men &amp; Women.
(from /elf ro

'J.

9

1B'}

5

W

0('nvcr
Ch tcag o

9
7
6
6

o (.~ t r o o t

l

Pet .

5
6
6
7

6 J. )

G• '

538
500
J62

,,

,'
' .

Mol w
K an sas C i t y
6 9 JOO
3,
ln d tana
..t 8 333 '
PactfiC Oi\·•s1on
W L
P e t . GB
Port l and
10 1 8]3
Phoen 1-.;
6 5 5J5
J '.
Gol den St
7 7 500
J
t os An Qetes
6 7 J62 J '.
Se all le
J 17
250
a
T ue -.da y ' s R es ult s
l nd 1ana 100, Buffa lo 9.J
New York. 108. New Orlns 105
Pn il ade lph i a 11 4, Atlanta 93
San Ant on •o 113, Kan City 107
Wash ington .111 , Seatt le 109
Portl and 109 M il waukee 106
Dt.&gt;n \l er 12 3. DNrO II 11J
Cl eve 102 . LOS Ang 95 . Of
Wednes day' s Games
An anta at Bost on
M dwauk.ee at New Jersey
St&gt;altle at P htl ade lph la
8 ulfa l0 at Houston
Port land a r Ind iana
Thurs day ' s GamE's
Sea ltle at N ew Orleans
Bullalo at San An ion ic

N H L St andings
By U nited Press Inte r national
Campb£1 11 Conference·
Pafrick Division
W ~ L . T Pfs
Ph.tadelph ia
9 3 2 :20
NY Islander!;
1 S S 19
Atlanta
5 S S . 15
NYRangers
6_ 9 I
13
Smythe Oi\' IS1on
W L T . Pts.
Ch icago
5 4 1 17
Color ado
5 5 3 13
St Lour s
J 10
3 11
v anc ouver
5 8 2 1'/
Mmneso t a
4 9 '1
10
Wales Conference
Norris Oi\"iSion
W. L. T •. Pts .
Montreal
10 3 3 13
LOS AngeleS
7
5 3 i7
Detroit
6 5 3 15
P i ttsburgh
5 8 2 12
Wash ington
2 tO 3
7
Ada m s Div ision
W. L. T. P15 .
Buttal o
9 3 '
70
Toron to
8 J
1 18
Boston
7 5 J 17
Clevel and
5 9 I
II
T uesda y's Result s
Cn icago 1. NY Islanders I
Washington 7, St . Lou is 2
Vancou"ller 5, Cleveland J
Wednes day ' s Games
Chi r: .ago at NY Rangers
Bu ffalo a t At l anta
Mo ntrea t a t Colorado
washington at Toron1o
Pitt sburgh at M innesota
St ·Louis at Detro it
Cleveland at Los Angeles
T hursday's G am es
NY Isl anders af Ph il a
Vancouve r at Boston
Toronto at Buffalo

t~ ghf I

D 1amon d Ou e,st1on
Mark $99 .50
Cultured Pear l.·
Gol dfllled $12.50
14K Gold Krss . ·
1 01amond $49.95

~11

J N ~ t&gt;v

Central 01\·is.on
W L Pet . GB
(l ('v("l&lt;)nd
)' 3 750
A tl nn ta
8 3 727
Sa n Anton ro
9 6 600
11
H o.uston
6 6 500
3
~\.l Sh ~ nqtn
5 6 .J55 ) 1·•
Nf' w Orlns
6 8 4'19
.J
We-.tern Conferenc e
Mtdwest Di -.· iston

• lla,:l' bt--en s11 close tf I hadn't
IUfll (l \'t'r S

P:1nr~

102-9&gt;

wnn 1ts f1rst • gamt• t'lfl the
road. Handy Smirl1 had 22
pn1nt s fur BuUalu.
Knit-ks 108. Jazz 105:
B"b '.lt·Ad•"' sc,red 3l

100. Kran•s 94 :

Ht&lt;'k1 S&lt;•bt•rs sewed

23

))l •ll lts ~lntl haml t.'&lt;l nut st.~\'t'll
as:;J sts as Indiana sna pped a
s ix-canw l o~ in !' -: rn•n k .mrl

E . MAIN . PO M EROY

W H A Stand ing s
B y United Press International
w. l T . P ts.
New En g land
13
1 1 27
Winnipeg
11
5 0 22
Quebec
8 6 1 17
lnd ianapol ts
5 6 :2 12
Edmont on
5 8 1 11
Houston
5 8 0 10
Cihr: i nnal i
.&lt;1
9 0
8
Birmingham
:2 10 1
5
Tuesday ' s Res u lts
New En g 6, Indianapolis 4
Quebec 7. Winn1peg 6, 01
Wednes da y's Gam es
Cincinnati at Edmonton
Bir"rtli ng !l am at Wi n npeg
ThUr sd ay's G am es
f No gam es sc heduled )

THANKS FOR YOUR
SUPPORT AND VOTE
IN THE NOV. 8th ELECTION

.CECIL ROSEBERRY
LEBONAN TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Johnson
confident
By ROBERT SANGEORGE
CIN CINNATI (UP!) - ll 's
been a to ugh National
Football League season for
Cincinnati Bengals Olach Bill
Johnson . and it could get a lot
tougher .
But J ohnson said Tuesday
he isn't thinking about
whether his ' status with the
Bengals may be growing
shaky.

.

"I'm rompletely confident
in
myself. "
J ohnson
declared .
Th~ 51-year...,ld coach has
cnme under increasing criti·
cism
for
his
club's
disappointing 4-5 showing this
season, after the Bengals had
been picked by many as a
strong Super Bowl contender.
"I lhoughl lhal question
might come up," J ohnson
said al his . weekly pre'!S
briefing when asked about his
status as head coach. " I'd
rather not even gPt into this
damn thing ,
" We are flounde ring . yYe

are ha;ing problem~. and the

Sugar BOWl
'

wants Big

J) l!rlls as New York st"nt tiR.·

ru ns ct.·uti\'i' lo ss

.JH1.1~

llawks . Jcohn

fin ge r is being pointed al
me ," Johnson acknowledged.
" I'm too busy lo think
abuul anything ot~.er than·
preparing the football le~m
for Sunday," the coach sa1d.
"I'd jusl like lu impress on
yuu that the on ly thing m our
'
. •t
mind is playing M1am1.
Cincinnati faces lhe
Dolphins
Sunday
al
Riverfront Stadium.
The Bengals, who have
have been unable to revive
their once.p&lt;ltenl offense of
pasl seasons, were clo~l:l!red
42-10 Sunday by the
MiMesota Vikings.
"I have been in football 30
years and I've never se~n
problems like we've had lilts
seaoon getting lhe leam to
score, " Johnson admitted:
. '' Frankly. I'm slumped. T hat
doesn't mean w~ 've g1ven up , .
though." ·
Except for the Minnesota
conlesl , . lhe Bengal defense
has held the opposition to 24
points or Le~ eac h g~me. But
in only one game this season
has Cincinnati scored more
lhan 20 points , and that came
against the expansion Seattle
Seahawks .
"You've jr...-.t gotta say it 1S a
season-long slump," Johnson
com m ented. r'Our over a ll

Havwmd added 18 for lht•
Krueks while Truck Robin$&lt;•n
and Hich Kelley had 20 each
for the Jazz.
76ers 114, Hawks 93 :
Ju lius En•ing t11ssed in 23
points and Doug Collins 22 as
Philadelphia pulled away
from

Ten loser

SUGAR ·

5 lb.

99~

With $10.00 Purchase
or more .

MARGARINE ........................

SHOW BOAT

2;;-2'12

PORK &amp;·BEANS ...................~~~~·· ·

Monday thru Friday

KERR

.

ONIONS

39~

CINCINNATI (U P!) - CinEddi e Edwards, who was
ho6pilalized lasl week afler
complaining Qf chest pams,
has been released frohl a

Cincionali hospital.
''They made me stay in the

hospital until this morning,
When my cardiogram was
normal," Edward said Tuesday . ,\They let me go, but I'm

·.

.

Jib. bag

..

Spurs 113, Kings 107 :
Larry Kcnnn fin"(l
. m 24

Thompson

nnnounced

Tuesday .
To make room for Marinaro
un the rost er, the Seahawks

placed rookie light end Fred
-Rayhle nn U1e injured reser.ve

Huuston

fnr I llS

Angeles.

pit cher Osc&lt;:tr Zamora, the

club's No. 1 choi ce in the
recent

IN THE NOV. 8th ELECTION

DON R. HILL

Zamora, 33, a right-handed
relie\'er , earned a 7-2 record
with 17 saves with the

LETART TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Chicago ·c ubs ' Ameri can
Associati on farm cl~b at
Wi chita..

Pd. Pol. Adv.

DO·IT·YOURSELF SALE

'

:
:
•
:

i

WALNUT
PANELING
Mill Seconds

250
79~
Count

·

businesses t o th e state's

Limited Quantities

ferent ," Moody said of his

letter to Sohio Board
Chairman Charles Spahr .
"The word that I get is that
bu sinessmen a re ve ry
concerned in Cleveland ."
Sohio employ s 2,000
persons in its corporate
headquarters here.
"My information coming
fr om Cleveland is that

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W.VA •.

:I
:
;
:

•
Z
%
:
•
:"
•
:
•
•·
:
:
•

•

~

:•

E

•

i
:

Beef

·.

capital · city because of
Kucinkh's opposition to a tax
abatment plan for Sohio
which has been approved by
Cleveland City coWlcil.
"I don't think '! would have
sent it (the letter) if the
election had come out dif.

•·
:'
:

8 oz .

·

' c oLUi.'tBus &lt;UPI &gt;
Mayor Tom Moody has asked
Stan&lt;lard Oil of Ohio to move
(ts corporate headquarters
from Cleveland to Columbus
and said Monday he would
also ask Diamond Shamrock
Co. to make the same move.
Moody said he look the
action after the election of
maverick Democrat Dennis
Kucinich as ma yQr of
Cleveland.
.
Moody said he decided to
attempt to lure Cleyeland

sheet

CANDY
We Package Our Own

$239

White .. •

·

·

.

·

·. :

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU NOV. 23, 1977

··

7
TURKEYS •••••••~:~~~ •••L!·
4
SWin BUTTERBALL
ENDS &amp; PIEC-ES

i•
:
•
:

KEEP CROWN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen.
Donald E. Lukens, R·Mid·
dletown offered a resolution
Tuesday urging President
Carter to abandon his recent
iu(gestion that t~e Crown of
!:C Stephen be returned to .
Colnmunist HWlgary .
Lukens s'*' Carter 's
decision to r erurn the !,()()().
year old crown to Hungary
would be . an "insult" to
Hungarians who fled to the
United States during a
Communist overth r ow of
their country.
Lukens urged passage of a
resolution in Congress
requiring
cohgressi9nal
approval before the crown, a
symbol of Hungary's origin
as a Otristian nation, could
be returne'd.

certain persons would like to
make it more difficult and
more costly for business to
operate In tha t city," Moody
said in his ' letter to Spahr.
" ln. Colwnbus, business is
welcome and we do
everything possible to
encourage and enhance it,"
Moody's letter con tinued.
"! invite you to move your
corporate headquarters to
Columbus,'' said Moody. "I
offer you a friendly environment, a good labor force, tax
abatement
and
other
substantial inducements.
"Your company has been
good for the state ~f Ohi? and•
1 wish to recogmze this by
offering cir~tances which
malle. it· desirable for you to
estabish headquarters in a
city that believes in private
enterprise and business
success," said Moody.
Andrew M. Juniewicz ,
secretary
for ·
media
Kucinich said, "[ don't think ·
'
. .
lhe business commumty 1s
afraid of Dennis.
"His position against tax
aba tement is very well
known, but never in his whole
campaign did Dennis position
him self as anti-business ,..
said Juniewicz .

Ohio. All Interested persoos
will be given an opportunity

to be heard. Further Information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission.
lliE PUBLIC UTILmES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By Randall G. Appltgate,
Secreta!)

lA
PORK

FRESH

CRANBERRIES .•• ~.s.u~~••
ARGO
PEAS••••••••••••••••••

.,

THANKS
TO THE VOTERS OF
POMEROY VIUAGE FOR YOUR VOTE AND
SUPPORT IN THE NOV. 8 ELECTION
VILLAGE COUNCILMAN
LOU OSBORNE ·

i ~----~-------Pd_.•Po-I.A-dv~:~

· .

18¥2 oz.
MIXES
CAKE
••••••••••••

JIF

oz.$1 ~

11
CAN

JENO'S FROZEN .

DUNCAN HINES

13 Ol

EAt:H

PIZZA •••••••••• ···~· ·······
GRADE A EXTRA.

$199
PEANUT BUTTER ••~.o;.... . · LARGE EGGS ••••••• ~~~

. . .

l

COUPON

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

~

··

COUNTRY STYLE

lEGAl NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission o1 Ohio has set lor
public hearing ·case No.
77·380-EL·FAC to review the
fuel procurement practices
and policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operations of
Its fuel cosl adjustment
clause, and relallKI matters.
This hearing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 A.M., on December 12, t977, at the of.
fices of the Commission, 180
East Broad Street, Columbus,

.

.BUDGET BACON ..... ~s~.

.

Moody in'vites
Sohio to move

$299

773-5554

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0. •

The 10 top network television progriiiJIS for the week ending
Nov 13 a~ording to theA .C.Ni elsen Co , were:
,
J· ·.. ~verne &amp;Shirley·" 2: "Happy Days;" 3: "Love Boat ; .
4· ;,Godfa ther " Part 2: 5: "Three's Company;" 6: "Ltttle
House on the Pra irie;:: 7: 11 Eight is ~,nough 11 (two-hour
special ); 9: (tie) "GO Minutes" ard "Aspen Part 3.

CALIFORNIA

I1

Mon.-Sat. 8 am·10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

"Busting Loose" aoo "Betty Wbite" have t&gt;,een _canceled,.two
new situa lion comedies and a second mov1e rught are bemg
added to the schedule, and four CBS shows will be given new
lime slots.
·
·
'II
The new movie night is Friday, and its first presentation.wt
be "The Four MU$keteers" on I;lec. 2, 9-11 p.m., Eastern time.
The two new comedie' ~ re "l&gt;zysutyk,".starring Ned'Beaty,
scheduled to go or\ tqe air -Wednesdays; 8!30-9 p:m., E~,~Stern
lime, . replacing "Bust;pg· Loose" on. Dec_
: 7, aoo. ''Anolhet.
Day,': starring ·Dav id Groh. (Rho.la's e_x-htisband) an?. Joan .
Hackett which bows in Jan. 9; 9:3(1;!0 p.m., replacmg Betty

-

PANELING
SPECIAL
'

Store Hours:

•
·The.sharp-eyed schedilie watchers·m ay notice that "Betty
: White" is not on from 9:30-!0p.'m. ,- butil will be as of Dec. 12. ·
·
. . :
·
• · That 'sone of the sWitches.
:
On Dec. 12 ••Maude" and 11 Betty White,.. will change places,
: with "Maude" moving lo the ~ : 30 slot .
.
"Switch,'' which is being shoved out of its Friday night slot
:
: by lhe new movie night, wiU move to Mondays, J().IJ p.m.,
• Eastern time, on Dec. 5, replacing ' 1Rafferty. 1' .
: . Two CBS standbys that have slipped badly in the ratings are
:: changing places in the hopes that new time periods will help
both On Saturday Dec. 10, "Kojak" moves into the "Carol
Bu~ett " spot 1 1.0-i t p.m., Ea stern time, 'Yhile ...Burnett.,
sl ides into "Kojak's" 1().11 period the followmg mght. . .
"The Fitzpatricks" remains on the CBS schedule despite 1ts
consistently l&lt;&gt;w ratings, apparently because the brass hkes
lhe show and hopes it will prove a sleeper .
. ..
ABC is expected to aMounce its ~hanges Wlthm the week,
but they ·are not likely to be extens1ve.
·

(i;\11

I

~THANKSGIVING ~

UPI Television Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - Not even "The Godfather" could
muscle in on ABC's territory , which is first place in the Nielsen
·
ratings.
The best NBC 's "Godfather" could do was finish fourth,
behind three ABC comedies in the Nielsen ratings for the week
ending Nov. 13, the week In which the first two parts of
"Godfather" were shown . The three. were "Laverne &amp; Shlr·
ley." "Happy Days" and "Love Boat."
While tile Sunday night segment of "Godfather" rinished
fourth, the opening segment, shown on Saturday night, didn 't
even make the top 10. It finished in a tie with "All In The
Family " for 13th.
The IUimbers were a dlsappoinlment for NBC , which had
hoped to set some re&lt;:ords. NBC Research now estimates 100
inillion viewers saw some parl of lhe lour segments, not lhe 110
inillion orlginaUy estimated. That [lgure will be confirmed (or
eootradicted) after this week's Nielsens are in.
n ''Godfather" didn't put NBC in first place, it did assure the
network second spot for the week, which left the .cellar for CBS.

In view of Its poor ratings situation, it comes as no surprise
that CBS has begun juggling its schedule. "Rafferty,"

of Home Improvement leeds

' I I

~~6~,~97~7~-----~·-••••••••••••••llllli•~•-•••••••~••~~tp•••~---••••••••••-

By JOAN HANAUER

v"",

SUPPORT AND VOTE

baseball free--agent

TV•.•in Review

sv united Preu lnternallonll
TueSdAY
Basebtll
Hou~ton
Sign~
r ight
hancted relief pitcher Os ~ar
l ,1 mora . the c l ub 's No. 1 Ct"l0 1Ce
111 the uee &lt;tQtmt dri'lfl .
Hockev
Detr o II
Traded dE-fensemen
and
Dave
St eve
Ou rbano
Hanson to Bi r mingham of the
WHA
tor
r1ght wino
Tim
Sheehv
and c~nter 1/aclav
Nt.&gt;domansky
,
Hou ston (WHAI
Acqu1red
qoalfender Ern ie Wakely from
c .nc.nnal i tor fut ure consi der&amp;
t.on s
,
St Lou is
Signed right w•ng
Tom Sundberg
F oofblll
Ph !l adelpn ia
Signee place.
k•c ke r Ove Joha(lsson to a
series of t.nree one year · con .
tra c ts
.
New
Orleans
Stgned
torm er Mtam i safety Wade
Bosarge
sea ttl e
Signed tree agent
runn ing back E_d Mar ina ro .
Socctr
Oakand CNAS L J Signed for
ward Jado HasanbeQovic ot
Vugos lavi.a and reached agree
ment
1N1fh
go alie
Eugen e
Ouchatcau and m I d f i eIder
,Roman. Ros_ul
Both pta
prev1ousty w 1rn fhe c onnec 11 cu
s 1cen tenn 1a1s

THANKS FOR YOUR

Astros Tue sday

ALL KINDS BULK

1 Qt.

39~ NAPKINS.·····························

sent Ot!nver pw.tsl Dctrml.
•
In the third qu~trter . Denver .s
Mack calvin pwtched Chrts
Ford nf Detroit to trig ge r a
benchcmptyin~ scuffle. T~
Pistnns were lt&gt;d. _by Enc
M{tney with 22 JXtints.
CavaliNS 102. J..akers 95:
Jirn Ch nnes lHHI BU l CI1
Walk e r scor ed four points
·
· · f
each in overtun(' to wm It or
Cleveland-, Tile Cavaliers got
· ls ... e"Ch fr om Campy
16 pom"'P
u
•
Russell and Bingn Smith .
Kermit Washington scored 16

HOUSTON IUP!) - The

draft .

CINCINNAT I (UP! I - The
Cinci nnati St inge rs have
traded veteran goalie Ernie
. Wakely lo the Houston Aeros
for (!future considerations,"
t he Stingers ann ou nced
Tuesday . ·
The 37-year-old Wake ly
was signed during lhe off ·
season in a move to stabilize
Cincinnati's goa llending, bul
his early season play was a .
major disappointment to lhe
club.

2~

list after he suffered a wnsl
injury in Seattle's 17~ vict ory
over the Jets Sunday.

CHICAGO
I UP! I
Defensive end Jeff Sevy was
hospitalized Tuesday with
lonsillilis ,
lhe
Bears
announced . .
Coach Jack Pardee. said
·Sevey would be released
WedneSday, but nothing was
definite about his condition .

99~

For

NORTHERN
·

at the end t hat wnuld have
lit.'&lt;! it.

' not supposed to practice. I'm
supposed to go back on
Friday to be checked."

25 lb.

.

{ICSJX'I"atlon 25-fu·Jt jump shut

signed minor league relief

99~

59e
10MA10 JUICE.. .......................:..
3
$1
COOKIES .................~.~~?..~~~..

CLIFFSTAR

ASSORTED

LB.

thi rd

cinnati Bengals rookie tackle

$349
DOG FOOD.................... ~~~- ..
SKIPPIE

ERRIES
CARROTS

Doz .

QUART JARS .......................

CLOS ED

the

l)l•ints. - indudmg 20 .in the
SCt'( •nd hulf _ tn help hft Sran
Antoni u tu its f11UI'lll win in a

..n•w . r.cnrge Gervin uud
F:ld n H ~yes .srn•·ed 22 Mark O!Jcrding addt'&lt;l 16
points fnr U1e Spurs. Hnn
pn1nts, Kevin Grcvcy 20 and
llub Dandrid~e 19 as lhc · S.tunc led the Kings with 18
Bullets staved off u late points.
Seattle rally . Gus Williams, Nuggt•ls 123, Pisluns 113 :
David Thompson ·S ga me Wllh a gamC-high 23 points fnr
lhl' Snni rs . miss('d a high 33 pomts and Dan I sse~ ' s

Sports zn briefs

JELLY. ................~ .................... .

9 :00til7 : 00

ln the t.hird

r\tlanta with 19 points .
llulll•ts Ill, Supt"rSunirs 109:

•

.
69~
18 oz. '

KRAFT APPLE_BASE
· Assorted .

Satu rday 9 : 00-9 :00

in

for the
Drew l&lt;•d

VALU

2 lb. Bowl

BI,.UE BONNET

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Atl&lt;:~nta

period,

fee ling is one of deep
disappointment.
Bul the 51-year...,ld head
coach attempted lo lake some .
NEW ORLEANS (UP! ) - of the bla me for Cincinnati's
The Sugar Bowl, una ble to misfortunes away from the
LONG BEAC H, Calif.
interest Notre Dame in . a offensive line. "Anytime a n
(UP!
) - The lils Angeles
pos tseason match aga inst offensive team is having
Rams
beat the Green Bay
Sout heastern Conf erence problems, th e bulk of the
Packer
s,
24-6, with relati ve
cham pion Alaba ma , will blame will be thrown at the
eas.
e
Sunday
bul the high
invite lhe loser of SaturdaY:s line . Bul it's a little unfair to
Michigan.(Jhio Slate game, Jay all ,e blame on one point of the ga me, according .
to Rams Coach Chuck Knox,
the States.Jtem reported segment.-;
Tuesday.
"ll's very difficult, once was a "supto r hil" linebacker
The newspaper said sixlh- you gel behind, to contain Carl Ekern made on running
ranked Notre Dame, which those big people up there," back Erie Torkelson carrying
defea ted Alaba ma , 24-23, in Johnson sa id. " I don't put any on fourth and one al lhe Ram
the Dec. 31, 1973, Sugar Bowl, more blame on the offensive !-yard line in ·the fourth
.
.removed itself as a Sugar line lh an 1do on the rest of the quarter .
Knox
showed
game
f1
lms al
Bowl candidate and plans to tea m."
his
weekly
media
breakfast
Des pite lhe Be ngals '
accept a bid to lhe Cotton
Bowl in Dallas.
record Johnson noted the and said :
"Everybody went bananas.
The winner of the club is' only one ga me behind
ll
was an outstanding hit ,
Michigan.Ohio Slate game Pittsburgh and Cleveland in
will represent lhe Big Ten in the race for th e 'Central · super. · Walch closely. You
lhe Kose Bo\'11. Ohio Stale will Division title, and argued his may nol see another hit like
receive the · Rose Bowl learn st ill is in the race with lhis in io years."
invitation if the ga!lle ends in five games left. "llhink il's
TERRE HA UTE , Ind .
a lie.
remarkable lhe way things (UP! ) _ The new president
Ala bama, t he nation 's have shaped up at this stage of lhe Indianapolis Molor
third-ranked tea m, obtained of lhe season," he said .
Speedway Co rp . doesn 't
its Sugar Bowl bid by winning
Giving the Bengal injury expe.ct any major changes in
lhe Southeastern Conference report ·Johnson said he didn 't operation of the 500-mile race
title.
know ' whe the r . r ookie track in lhe near future.
Ohio State is ra nked fourth defensive tackle Edd ie
Joseph R. Cloutier was
and Michigan ranked fifth in Edwards would be able to named last week to succeed
lhis week'spoll by the United play Sunday.. Edwards has the la te Anton " Tony"
. Press International Board of . been hospitalized since last Hulman , with whom . he was
. Coac hes . .Both · have -9· 1 week 'with chest pains.
. · associated for more lhan half
recor ds.
.
·
Defensixe end ·Coy Bacon a century. .. .
· .
Alabama also has a 9:-1 a nd .. cornerback · Leinar . · "Hopefully, the track will
· record and is . idle Saturday Pa rrish also a re doubtful for . be able tO con tin.ue the way il
when bowl invitations can be .the Mi&amp;mi game , while safety . has been goin g,: · · sai d
officially offer ed.
Tommy Casanova and center Cloutier .· "! haven't heard
The choice of Michigan or Bob Johnson probably will be about any ~hanges."
Ohio State, if either accepts •. . able .f.o play.
wi ll
mark
the
fir st
·
SEA'ITLE (UP! ) - Free
appearance by a Big · Ten
agent
running ~ack Ed
team in lhe Sugar BowL It
has been signed by
Marinaro
also will be . th e first
In 1933, tiie U!!ited States
the
Sea
ttle Seahawk s,
encounter between Alabama establi shed diplomat ic
1
.GenPral
Ma nager John
Coach Paul 'Bea••• Bryant relations with the Communist
and a Big Ten squad.
Soviet Union.
·
DOMINO

OH EBE' STORE
T h ursd ay , Nov . 17 thro ughSatur day, ·Nov . t9
Right Rese rv ed To limit Quantities

tu their sixth strai !-! hl

defeat. The Kno cks, in fn·st
pla('t" Ill tltt• Allantil' Diviswn.
11Ulst'! l ft:.'&lt;l Nt&gt;w Orleans, 32-16.
m the third quarter. Spenc:cr

a 109-106

It\

n\ er U1e ~11 l wa ukrt&gt;

\ 1l'tt1n

An~dt':\ ,

5- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport·Pomeroy, O., Wednesday,Nov.

CRISCO
3LB.
CAN

$}49

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell' s
Offer
res Nov. 23. 1977

\

HYLAND CHUNK

DOG FOOD .
25 LB.

W/C

COIJPUN

BAG

$299

W/C

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
· Offer Expires Nov . 23, 1977

COUPON

1

COUP[JI\I

J

CORONET

CORONET

FACIAL TISSUE

TOILET TISSUE

200
CT.

2/89t,

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 23, 1977

PACK

59~

W/C

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 23, 1977

�l

7- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Nov.l6, 1977
6- The Dati) Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Wednesday, Nov 16.1977

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Cover girl blues
B) Karen Blaker,Ph D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER Durmg the past year I started usmg a lot more make-up,
espectally on my eyes I often
atlend make-up sermnars
gtven at department stores
and l spend several lunch
hours each week m a shop
where I can experunent wtth
make-up l look great-not
mousey like before-but why
have I changed' I feel sad
about thiS tum of events I
don 't understand those feelmgs etther-if I look great,
why do IIeel depressed '
DEAR READER
You
\\Tile that you feel depressed,
so let s start there llts posstble. as you suggest. that vour
newly dtscovered good looks
have somehow caused your
depressiOn II sounds as
though yo u never exp
erunented much w1th make-

up before and now you fmd
that you can look better than
you ever had unagmed The
repercussions of the change
may be hard for you to handle Are you gettmg more attentiOn , but enJoymg Jt less 1
It rrught surpriSe you to
learn that depresston can
follow what seems like a
posttive change In fact,
depresston can set tn when
there IS any kmd of change
that reqwres a person to alter
his or her self-unage For mst.ance, a promotion lS usually
a happy event But tf 11 means
a promotion to a posttlon of
authortty that the person

Who carries clout? Anita,Rosalynn
and Billie jean tq name a few
YORK I UP!J - Anlla
Bryant made tt. but
Jacquelme OnassiS dtdn't
Maggte Kuhn of the Gray
Panthers and Btllie Jean
Kmg of the tenniS eourts were
there, but Betty Ford and
G\ona Stem em were rrusstng
It was the World Almanac-'s
latest list of the nation s 25
most tnfluenllal women, announ ced Wed nesday wtth
publication of the Almanac's
10th.anruversary 1978 editton
Ftrst Lady Rosalynn
Carter topped the list of a
dozen newcomers of those
who pack the greatest soctal
and political clout
Along wtth Mrs. Onassts,
Betty Ford and femmist Stetnem , others dropped mduded
Lady Btrd Johnson , Anne
Armstrong, former
~EW

feels ts undesen&gt;ed. tl can
create a depresston
lf thts explanation sounds
eorrect to you, you may ha••e
to gtve yourse lf more time to
feel comfortable wtth your
new unage Those frequent
trtps to make-up serrunars
and make-up stores may be
unconsciOusly sen&gt;tng Just
that purpose Each tune you
look in a mtrror you wtll be a
little less surprised
On the other hand, let's suppose that your sudden " good
looks" have not brought on
your depressed feelings
There IS another posstble explanation Maybe some
upsetting event occurred tn
your life a year or so ago
ThiS may have been qwte
depressmg but at the tune tl
happened you could not (or
did not want to ) fe!'l the
sadness. Usmg thiS mter·
pretation, you may have
started to- use more make-liP
to cover-JJp" the pain . Some
depressed women apply
heavy eye make-up as a
preventive measure-crytng
would cause such a mess
These are Just two posstble
explanations. But m your
search for the answer Just
remember-you look great
Wnte to Dr Blaker tn care
of this newspaper, P,· Box
489, Radio Ctty Slatton, New
York, NY 10019 Due to
volume of mail she cannot
reply personally, but questions of general mterest Will
be discussed m future columns

Social
Calendar

ambassador

to

Great

Bntam . Shirley Chtsholm,
DemocratiC congresswoman

from Ne " York, and another
femmtSt leader, Betty
Fnedan
The 12 new addttwns to the
list, comptled by a panel of
news media and women's
magaune edttors, mcluded
the first lady, Patncta

Grasso, Connecttcut
governor, Nancy Hanks,
outgomg cha trman of the
tjattonal Endowment for the
Arts ; Leonore Hershey,
edttor of The I..adtes Home
J ournal ; B~rbara J orda n

Houstng
and
Urban
Development ; Juantta
Kreps,
secretary
of
Commerce and rormer vtce-

preStdent
UruverSlty:

of

now at Stiffler 's
ThanksQI\nng Sale

from Texas, and Barbara

Pre

Walters, news anchorwoman

CARDS

GIFT WRAP
A package of f1 ve rolls of

Spectal sale assorted of
boMed Chns1mas greetmg
cards Take your chotce
now and save 1

FUUY DRESSED
TEENAGER

SET OF 20
MINITURE

holiday glfl wrap Super
value( Slock up now at
Sttffler's

DOLLS

TREE LITES

'•

Mlssle, The Pretty Doll,

A decoratrve set of 20
mm1ature tree lights wtfh
colorful ptast1c retlec1ors

ll'/1 inches

tall ,

dressed. rooted hair.
Thanksgiving S.lel

Save(

fully

Pr•·

for ABC televtston
Se lecttons were made by a
panel of nine Judges - seven
women and two men
,•'

a

Polly Cramer

Duke

Amta Bryant, entertamer ,

author and an\1-gay nghts
campatgner , Maggte Kuhn ,
who m 1970 orgaruzed the
Gray Panthers, a politically
powerful semor cttizens'
group ; Marabel Morgan ,
author of two books on
women 's hberat10n , 1 'The

Flour bugs shun bay leaves
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Please
help me. I need to know how
to get rtd of "flour weevils " I
have had them for years and
cannot tell you how much

nour, meal, cereal, noodles,
nee and so on that I have had
Joy"'
to
tbrow away I have even
Eleanor Holmes Norton 1
found
them m papers. books
chatrman of the Equal
and
napkiris
We have had the
Employment Opportumty
extermmator,
lrted sprays
Co mmtsston ,
PhylliS
and
so
on
but
are
only free of
Schlafly, chtef foe of the ERA
them
for
a
few
days
and they
amendment; Shere Htte,
are
hack
agam
Please
- '
author of the bestselling "The
need
help.
MURLENE.
Htte Report ;• a survey of the
DEAR MURLENE-Have
sexual expenences of
you
tried bay leaves' Of
Amen can women;
eourse,
one must be nd of the
Opera diva Beverly Stlls;
Eleanor Smeal, prestdent of pests ftrst but they really
the Nattonal Organization fQr keep them away Destroy all
Women, and Ltla Acheson packages of affected food and
Wallace, owner and co- transfer all new or unfounder wtth her husband , eontammated things to sealDeWttt Wallace, of The ed Jars Scrub all your
shelves and then spray wtth
Reader's Dtgest.
Repeating from the 197611St an tnsectictde spray that says
were. Bella Abzug, former tt ts for such pests Drop a dry
Democrattc congresswoman bay leaf mto each unopened
from New York, Helen package or each cantsler or
Gurley Brown, edttor of contamer wtth food tn 11
Cosmopolitan, Katharme ' Good Luck. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- Those who
Graham, publisher of the
are
troubled Wllh weevtls m
Washmgton Post. Billie Jean
flour,
etc , should put a bay
Kmg , lenms star and
leaf
or
two m any contamer
publisher of Women Sports
when
11
IS opened, as this wtll
magazme; Coretta Scott
Kmg, ctvtl right.s leader and repel them wtthout harrrung
wtdow of the Rev. Dr Martm the contents at all
Those who use steel wool
Luther King;
pads
mfrequently wtll fmd
Mary Wells Lawrence,
the
rust
can be deterred by
chau-man of the advertismg
placmg
them
m an atrttght
agency of Wells Rtch Greene,
contamer
such
as a small
Margaret Mead, author and
empty
glass
rar
or
an empty
anthropo\ogtst, Charlotte
plastic
marganne
contarner
Curbs, assoctate edttor of
The New York Times; Ella -EMMA
Total Woman" and "Total

D0111Jtions made

-·Why should you, take
Myadec?

'

f./len's popular whrte stnpe
top tube socks Stock up

FIVE ROLl PACK
FANCY HOLIDAY

POLLY"$ POINTERS

Mrs. Bolin
hosts party

..&lt;
••

TUBE SOCKS

ASSORTED BOXES
CHRISTMAS

-Stiffler's Specia._

- Stiffler's Special-

Roberts Harns, secretary of

Gardeners discuss tree
shortage in America

-,

MEN'S WHITE
STRIPE TOP

Democrattc congresswoman

- Stiffler's Special-

- Stiffler's Special-

.·:

WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN Jumor Htgh
PTO. Wendesday, 7 30 p.m
at school
' TWIN CITY SHRINETTES, Wednesday, 7 30 at the
soctal room of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electnc
Co
MEIGS Juntor Htgh School,
open house, 7 30 to 9 30 p.m
m obsen&gt;ance of National
Education Week. Wednesday
Parents mvtted to come and
meet the staff. Refreshments
wtll be served m the cafetena
by the Parent-Teacher
Forum
THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW
GARDEN
CLUB
meets
Thursday,
Nov ,
A holiday party for the Georgta Watson, a message
17
at
the
Wtlha!JlS·Balderson
restdents of the Metgs County from North American
lnftrmary was planned at the Women Mrs. Mana Foster ' home wtth Mrs Donald
Thursday rught meeting of read letters from women tell- Putnam as co-hostess. A
the Mtsswnary Soctety of the Ing about thetr observance of Chrtstmas workshop wi\1 be
Pomeroy Ftrsl Bapltsl Women's Day of Prayer and conducted by Mrs Balderson
tis Slgruftcance to them The and Mrs Gene Wtlson
Church
The party wtll be held on program was closed With a Members are to brtng gtfls
Dec 8 wtth a program to be rededication and prayer for for patients at Athens Menta i
Health Center.
gtven, refreshments sen&gt;ed, women.
and gifts presented to the
MEIGS GIRL Scout
restdents Mrs Audrey
meeting, 7 30 Thursday at the
Young IS chatrman The
Columbus and Southern Ohio
scholarship fund was taken
Electric Co. off1ce All troops
and Mrs Ellen Couc h
to have a representattve at
dedicated the love gtft
the meetmg Baby sttlers wtll
A potluck dinner preceded
be members of the Metgs
the meetmg wtth 13 women
Cadette Troop Plans wtll be
and four men attending Mrs
made for Thinking Day and a
Phyllis Skinner opened the
workshop on songs and
meetmg wtth a hymn.
games wtll be held
Women's Day of Prayer
ANNUAL PUBUC turkey
was celebrated wtlh Mrs
dinner of Rutland Ftre
!lanett Sterrett as chatnnan.
Department, Thursday,
·'The Future and the
servmg begmmng at 5 p m. at
Amertca and the potenltal value and she satd that conHope"was the theme With
Rutland Elementary School
tree
was the pro- trary to popular belief, the
Mrs Betty Wtles reading
cafetena, advance ttckets at gramshortage
theme of Mrs. J. M. brilliant foliage of fallts proscrtplure, Mrs Edna Slusher,
New York Clothmg House, McMurray, program leader, duced by an act of chemiStry
an arltcle on European
Dutton Drug Store or Semor at a recent meetmg of the and the frost has little ~o do
women , Mrs Young, a
Ctttzens Center, Pomeroy
JENNIFER LAWRENCE
Pomeroy Garden Club at the wtlh tl She satd too that the
message from the prestdent
REVIVAL now m progress home
of Mrs Han&gt;ey Van western stde of a tree will
CHILD 'BORN- Mr. and
of the Baptist Women, Mrs
at Mt. Olive Churoh, Long Vranken
have the deepest color
Caryl Cook a letter about life Mrs. James R. Lawreace,
Bottom through Nov 27 at 7
Syracuse, lhe former
Mrs McMurray said that because tt recetves more sun
taken from Jeremtah, Mrs
p m nightly D. Adams, there should be tbree trees
Mrs Margaret Blaettnar
Bw1on Snuth, an arttcle on Barbara Crooks, are anMartella
evangelist
Spectal
conducted
the meetmg wtth
for each person on earth to
Afncan women and how they nouncing lbe birth of lbelr
stngmg each evemng use the carbon dtoxtde members exchangmg pla~t.s
first
cbUd,
a
seven
pound,
obsen&gt;e the day of prayer,
Lawrence Bush, pastor generated by the people, thai for roll call Mrs. Van
four ounce daughter,
Mrs Couch, a message from
Gospel
Tones from Chester there should be 10 tree• for Vrank en had devoltons The
Jennifer Rochelle, on
the Astan women
Will
be
featured
on Tuesday, every 100 cars, and 100 trees ChriStmas flower show to be
Mrs Margaret Batleyley Sunday, Ocl. 30 al Holzer
Nov
22
for every truck,. She noted held Dec. 3 and 4 at the
Medlcal Center Maternal
presented a message from
EPISCOPAL Church that trees are dymg at the Pomeroy Elementary School
Ew-opean women, Mrs Cad- grandparents are Mr. and
Women of Grace Eptscopal rate of a mtllion every year was discussed and members
Mrs.
John
Crooks,
die Wtckham, one from Latin
Church, at 12 ·30 p m Thurs- Apart from producmg ox- agreed to pay $1 a member
Columbus, and Mr. and
Amencan women, and Mrs
day, luncheon at home of ygen, Mrs McMurray satd, toward expenses. SandWiches
Mrs. Clarence Lawrence,
Mrs. Grace Etch, Lincoln Htll they can reduce room and cookies will also be furPortland, are the paternal
Road, Pomeroy.
temperatures as much as 20 niShed. The County Assoctagrandparents.
Malemal
MAGNOLIA Club, 7 30 degrees, and sen&gt;e as wind tlon by-laws were reviewed.
great·grandmolber Is Mrs.
p.m Thursday, home of Cora breaks which can cut heating It was dectded to remember
Lura Crooks, Syracuse,
Beegle, Racine
btlls by as much as 30 per- Lydia Ebersbach who ts til at
and Ray Ward of East
'
FRIDAY
Liverpool Is lbe palemal
PAST MATRONS of cent As for nmse, trees can ChriStmas
As for gardenmg lips for
reduce thiS by 70 percent. She
great
grandfather.
Evangeline Chapter, MtdThe Rutland Roadrunners' Palernal greal-greatNovember, Mrs. Geneva
satd
that
for
each
100
foot
dleport, OES, Frtday 7 30 wtdth of trees, six to etght Nolan suggested cuttmg dead
4-H and Jumor Garden Club grandmother Is Mrs.
p m home of Mrs Marton
members were guests for a Frances Hawthorne of
dectbels of sound lS absorbed. perenntal stocks, watting un·
French.
party recently at the home of Portland.
til the ground IS frozen before
. MEIGS County REACT Highways can generate 72 applymg wmter mulch,
Mrs Janet Boltn
dectbels of sound and 11 only
Team special meetmg, 7 p.m takes 76 dectbels to be harm- watertng heavtly any newly
Asstslmg Mrs. Bobn wtth
Fnday at Metgs Semor ful to human ears
the party were her coplanted evergreens as long as
Ctttzens Center m Pomeroy
adviSors, Mrs. Margaret EdThe beauty of trees was the weather perrruts.
Donattons to the Chillicothe All members , espectally also mentiOned by Mrs
wards, Mrs Marvel Qwllen,
Mrs. John Reuter of Clifand Mrs Juaruta Lambert V A Hospttal birthday party charter ones, urged to at- McMurray as an astheltc ton, N J was a guest.
Mrs Joan Eads, Mrs Joanne to be held m December were tend, 1978 dues now payable
Fetty, Mrs Sharon Barr, made at the recent meetmg of
Barbara Welsh, and Ellen the Amencan Legton AuxPrices Goodthru Nov. 20, 1977
Rife were also present and iliary of Lewts Manley Post
While Quantities Last
263, held at the home of Mrs.
assiSted
Quantity Rights Reserved
4-H cert tftcates were Ernest Bowles.
The Auxtliary also made a
We are not responsible for typographical
presented to the c1 ub
members, and each one donatton to the muscular
errors!
recetved a gtft from the distrophy prorect of the naRutland Fnendly Gardeners, llonal prestdent this year
the sponsormg club Wmrung Fmal plans were made to propmes for games were .Kim vtde slaw for a dinner honorBu-chfteld fo r nammg the mg veterans at Racme. A
most trees , and Demse past prestdent' s pm was
100 W/30 FREE
Lambert for tdentifymg ordered for Mrs Zueleha
garden seeds The door pnze Smith
Mrs
Allen Hampton
was won by Jan Rtfe Tma
Vttamtns are
prestded at the meetmg
Goode wa s a gues t
essential for good
which opened in rttualtsltc
Refreshments were sen&gt;ed
health and nutnlion
Club members attendmg form A report on cards was
gtven
by
Mrs
Hampton
who
were Miss Btrchfteld, Miss
High-potency
Lambert and Mtss Rife, and appomled Mrs. Arnold
Myadec contains
Nelson's
Richards, Mrs Bowles and
Shawn Eads, Robbte Eads,
Mrs
Smtih
to
make
out
the
9
tmportant
vttamtns
Rick Edwards, Danny DaviS,
new consttlulton and by-laws
Chad Williams, Clml and
Reg.
and 6 mtnerals- an
Mrs Ruth Brown was
Dentse Turner, Davtd
tdeal formula for
Lambert; Jeanrue Welsh, authortzed to prepare a
1 5.29
Chrtslmas gift for a veteran.
Cratg Bobn, Junmy Qutllen,
acttve peop le on th e go. Take care of yourself
Followmg the clostng
Davtd Barr. Unable to attend
wtth Myadec Capsules or Tablets
ceremogy, Mrs. Bowles servwsre Tamm:j; Black and
ed a luri'i!heon
~nya Wtse

Holiday party held

- Stiffler's Sp!!cia!-

DON TODD
TO HOLD KEV!VAL - The GalbpoliS Chrtsttan
Church at SR 588 and Mtlchell Rd. wtll be holding a tbree
day revtval startmg Frtday, November 25 through the 27
at 7 p m and 10 ·35 for the Sunday mormng servtce
Spectal guest speaker wtll be Don Todd, prestdent of
"Mustc Ctty Evangelism" of Nashvtlle, Tennessee In
recent years, Don Todd has travelled the enllre Umted
States and several !oretgn countnes wtth hts brother,
Cecti Todd, well-lmown evangelist He has become a noted
soloiSt and speaker spectaltztng tn youth work. Denny
Coburn IS mmiSter of the Gallipolis Ci)l'tsllan Church and
Jack Perry, assoctate mmiSter An attended nursery will
be provtded for all servtces On Sunday there IS also a
"Wee Church" for 4 and 5 year olds and a Tiny church for
6 and 7 year olds Sunday School begtns at 9:30 a.m
rnornmg worshtp at \0 35, and evemng worshtp at 7 The
pubhc IS mvtted Transportallon IS avatlable by callmg
446-1863 or 446-1318

DEAR POLLY- We have a
wlute pamted frame house
wtth black house numbers on
the front. Every spnng these
house numbers looked very
streaked from "chalkmg" of
the whtte pamt Two years
ago I repamted the house
numbers and then when I
natled them back on the
house I put one-fourth mch
spacers; behind the numbers,
on the natls as l pounded
them m No" the ' chaikmg"
washes down behmd the
numbers ]eavmg them ruce
and clean and very easy to
read agamst the whtte house
-MRS MC.
DEAR POLLY- My grandchildren had so many cute
stuffed toys but were
outgrowmg them so l
wondered what could be done
With some of them I ptcked
up a cute yellow felt duck and
placed tl on a ptece of cloth
covered styrofoam for a base
and had a great pmcushwn. I
use the body for stratghl ptns
and the head for needles
Most such toys have the nght
stuffmg lor rustproof ptns
and needles and can be put to
good use a~am - MRS J R
DEAR POLLY - Batlung
the dog becomes easy and ts
tun if you let the dog shower
you Al"ays keep the dog 's
head covered when drymg
him and he wtll never gtve
you a shower. Drop tee cubes
mto hard-to-reach flower
pots The meltmg tee wtll
water evenly and make no
mess (There are some
gardeners who object to this
tdea but I have seen beautiful
plants that had always been
so watered 1-JUNE II!

MEN'S CREW NECK
FLEECE LINED

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
PLAID FLANNEL

SHIRTS

Spec tal sale group of ladles' higher
priced fall and winter dresses
Values to S22.99 Jr , mtssy, half
stzes Save now•

/:1.., r .-r{ ,,•

;-

,

Lyons, Gene Lyons and
Alana, Jean Johnson, Mary
Slater and Tina, Chris Shain,
Ruth Sham, Lou Delong, Robbte and Jeff, and a guest, Emma Jean Cornell. Kmves
were ordered for sale by the
Auxthary.
Mrs Janet Bolm, Joe Struble and Larry Baker were m
Columbus Sunday for an
emergency medical techni·
c1ans' mstructors conference.

In 1953, former Prestdent
Harry Truman

went

on

nallon-wtde radto and
televiston to deny charges by
the U. S Attorney General
that he had appomted Harry
Dexter White to higlt
government offtce (Director
of the International Monetary
Fund) knowing that Whtte
was a Russtan spy

-Pre- Thanksgiving SaleSELECTED SALE GROUP

~~

Greet holiday gift selection a!
ladles' laney II annette gawna

't

and pajamas

I~ _..

LEVIS JEANS

$

'1.19
BOL~NA ..............................~!i.~~~..~-~: .. •1.29
By Pc. lb.

GUT
HOME MADE HAM SALAD........... ,........ ~~:. 9'
Golden Isle Vac Pak

PAIR

Amencan or P1mento
Shced; Singles

=~~ES ........~~~-~~19

1 lb. Frozen Booth Perch Allet

$1.49 pkg.

oz. H1lton

OYSTER
SOUP•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/sl
20 oz.
HUNTSVIENNA
CATSUP•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 69e
CHILl with Beans ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/99e
6'1• oz.
STAR
KIST
TUNA
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
s1.19
4 roll WHITE CLOUD
TOILET
TISSUE ••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• ccr
24 oz. WELSH
GRAPE JUICE .................................. 79'
103/• oz . CAMPBELLS
T(fMATO SOUP. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 3/69e
SLICED
PINEAPPLE.:~::~.~~~.~~~!.~ •••••••• 59'
28 oz. TEEN QUEEN
Cut Green Beans &amp; Shelly Beans ••••••. 2/8'
28 oz. CHEF 2
'
$1
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CHEESE
09

Large selection of pre washed
blue denim teans Choose
from several popular styles
our choice! Shop and save
durtng Stiffler's Pre Thanks
giving Sale!

$ 88
PAIR

EACH
' '

-Stiffler's Special-

SALE GROUP
BROWN JERSEY

MEN'S BffiER
PLAID FLANNEL

MISSES WARM
KNIT PULl-OVER

LADIES' POPULAR
POLYESTER KNIT

ROBES

SWEATERS

SLACKS

Gift selectton of 'men 's
fanc'i pla1d flannel robes
Pre-Thanksglvtng
Value

-STIF£.LER'S SPECIAL-

MEN'S LINED ·VINYL

MEN'S PERM PRESS

GLOVES

PAJAMAS

Men 's plain and fancy
permanent press patamas

Great gift Idea 1

$ 59PAIR

$699PAIR

...
Assorted Printed
RANEI.ETTE
Mill assortment of new fall

- STIFFLER'S

STIFFLER:.U,~ECIAL-

UNDERWEAR

Your choice of ankle l en~1h
drawer or lonr sleeve sh rt
Heavy wetgh

79
$3
EA.
-·
FLER'S SPECIAL-

MEN'S POLYESTER
KNIT DRESS

SLACKS

Great Sf'IP.ction of men's
polyeste~o doubleknt1 dress
slacks in a wtde
selection of fasl1ion colors

$10~!1R

COATS

36" Bleached'
HOPE MUSLIN
Stock up nowt 36 Inch wtde

and wmter printed
nelette

genume Hope bleached
muslin

sweaters

" Ladles'

$12~A.
-STIFFLER'S

"

flan

TABLE &amp; atAIR

EA.

SETS

BLANKETS

'

2'h'' SIZE
FANCY VINYL

PLAY

66

s1488
$15!
79!

ICE CREAM
26" ROUND

GUM BALL BANK

Thanksgiving Sale!

KNIT SLACKS

Ladles' better polyester knll !all 1nd
winter slacks. Terrific money .....-.
Choose !rom the season's best fashion

kn1t

style

colors and patterns.

$3~AIR

-STIFFLER'S SPECIAL-

-STIFFLER'S SPECIAL-

CHIFfON HEAD

PANlY HOSE

SCARFS

ONE SIZE FITS AU

Ladtes' sol1d color chiffon
head scarfs In your choice
of fash1on colors

One s1ze fits alP Ladtes'
ftrst qual1ty stretch nylon
panty hose

2

19~

,PAIR
FOR

-STIFFLER'S SPECIAL-

-STIFFJ._E_g·~

$1

SPECIAL-

STRETCH NYLON

JAKE YOUR CHOICE

TOYS

KNEE-HI HOSE

SaleGIFT SELECTION LADIES'
LEATHERLIKE VINYL
-Pre-Thanksgiving

Firsf qualify' Ladles'
stretch nylon knee hi hose

Take your choice of a b1g
asso~tment of toys for boys
and gtrls

Stock up now t

4

HANDBAGS

PAIR$

BillS

EMPIRE~TOY
RIDING

$500EACH

MOTOR CROSS
MARX THREE WHEELED
SPEID CYCLE

BIG WHEEL
TYCO SUPER
OVER &amp; UNDER

RACE SET

1

styes

I.AY·A·WAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS-BIG SAVINGSI

lARSON
COIN OPERATED

mch size Cannon
castel
colore d
sheet
lankets Save · now Pre

MISSES POLYESTER

ljeauflful gift selecll011 "or !lilieS'
new fall and holiday loallllr lib
vlnr.l handbag• In the season'ol11ftl

70"x90" SIZE
CANNON SHEET

70K90

polyester

slacks. Pull on
Sltghtly tmperfect

•

Always po~ular t Men's
Mavertek
lanket l i ned
overa ll coats Savel

$3

Great sweater looks Pla in

and fancy pull pver style

'
-Pre-Thanksgiving Sale-

$2~AIR

-STIFFLER'S SPECIAL-

All sizes

-Stilfler'{Speciai-

pair $ 1
for

G1ft selection of warm
lined leather like vtnyl
dr.ess gloves

BLANKET LINED
DENIM OVERALl

-Stiffl"r's Special-

-Stiffler's Special-

GLOVES

-STIF

CABBAGE
..... !~:.l5~
10 lb. IDAHO

A very special selected group of ladles '
branded fall and winter sportswear
Moe and match Shop early while
selection 1$ complete All fl'om regular
stock'

-~-

HEAVYWEIGHT
MEN'S THERMAL

6 oz. Kraft

FASHION JEANS

$ 99

SPORT SHIRTS

!:ACH

.

SPORTSWEAR

88

Outstanding gift select1on of men 's
new fall and holiday long sleeve
dress and sport sh1rts 1n your chotce
of white and assorted solid colors

. . !..

TANKER JACKETS
Three days only'

SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S
LONG SLEEVE DRESS

$599 .

\

LADIES' BRANDED
FAU AND WINTER

Men's warm qvtlted lined tanker
jackets Knt1 collar. cuffs and
\ waist band Good colors A whale .
a serv1ceable coat at a barga1n

2

Thurs., Nov. 17th thru Sat., Nov. 19th

PARKAY
79~
MARGARINE .. ~~~.~~~~~-

\ 'i-. ;

MEN'S WARM LINED
COTTON POPLIN

Low sale price on our most popular blue
denim leans Famous Lev•s blue den•m
jeans . ReQular $14 SO value 1 Shop early
and salf'er Pre-Thanksgiving Sate •

Tak• your

choice during thl5 solei

SPECIAL PURCHASE
MISSES POPUlAR
PRE~ASHED DENIM

REGULAR 114.50 VALUES
SPECIAL LOW PRICE
MEN'S FLARE LEG

Sale group of men~s brown
1ersey knit gloves Warm
and comfortable

Phone 742-2100

FRENCH CITY

G&lt;MNS &amp; PAJAMAS

~-

Plans made for party
RACfNE-PlaiiS for the annual communtty Chrtstmas
party wtth the am val of Santa were made when the
Ractne Ftremen's AUX!hary
met recently at the ftre
house It wtll take place at 2
pm on Dec 18
Those of the corrununtty
wtshing to help on the cost of
the treats which wtll be gtven
out by Santa are a•ked to
telephone Mrs. Jean Johnson ,
prestdent.
The AUXIliary Chrtstmas
party was set for Dec. 13 at
Oscars m Gallipolts It was
reported that ztp code books
are sltll for sale The btrthday
of Mrs Johnson was
celebrated
Refreshment.s were served
to Beulah Autherson, Maxme
Rose, Wanda Lyons, Mae
Cleland, Grace Roush, Judy
Btrd and Sonny, Jane McCloud and John, Jr., Erruna

Sale-

GIFT SELECTIQN
lADIES' FIMNELETT£

-"

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

151/4 Ol

DRESSES

Men's warm lined long sleeve
sweat shfrts w1th crew neck
Assorted colors S1zes small,
medtum. large and )( large

-Stiffler's Pre-Thanksgiving

. 't;·7
/V..fr· ~

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
FAU AND WINTER

SWEAT SHIRTS

One 19r o up of handsome
flannel sh1rfs in brtght colored
pla i ds Long ta i ls Stzes,
small. med1 um. large and x
large

IJi:i:i

-Pre- Thanksgiving Sale-

- Sttffler's Pre-Thanksgiving Sale-

- Pre-Thanksg1v1ng Sale--

EA.

$17 !
9

$12~

-STIFFLER'S SPECIAL-

CHilDREN'S BmtR
FALl &amp; HOUDAY

•'

INFANTS &amp; 1'0IJR EIS
WARM HOODED

JOGGING SUilS

DRESSES
Holiday selection of
children's better fall and
winter dresses In your

choice of style• I

-STIFFLER'S SPECIAL-

Your

choice

of

warm

hooded jogging suits. In·
fants and loddlers olltl.
Pre Thankoglvlflll S.lt

EA.
-Stiffler's Pre- Thanksg1vmg :&gt;ale-

MIU ASSORTMENT

60" POLYESTER
DOUBL£ KNITS
Spec tal mill assortfllent of 60
Inch wide polyester double
knit fabrtcs. Short lengths
Shop early for best selection

Full

-Pre-Thanksgtvmg Sale-

FUU BED SIZE
NEEDLE WOVEN

SPECIAL GROUP
CHILDREN'S FASHION

BLANKETS

DENIM JEANS

s1ze

need lewoven

blankets Slight trregular

Assorted solid fashton colors

Stiffler's
Sale'

Pre Thanksg1vlng

Special
sale
group of
children's fashton denim
1eans Shop early for besl
selection
Pre Thanksg iving
Sale'

':!.:lm....::::-· pr1e- Thar1 kSll iving Sa!Selected Group Children's

FALL AND HOUDAY

SPORTSWEAR

&gt;etec!ed holiday .. 1e group ol
children's branded !all IIIII
holiday oportswear of 111
kinds, otvleo and colors.

OFF
REGUIM
PRICt

�•

"

The Dail; S•mtLnel. Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednt:'Sday. No\ . 16. l97o
i·:·:::::::::::::::&gt;:~:::::::::::::;:::•:·:,&lt;:::-:·:·:·:-:-:·:· &gt;:::::·::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::0,::~:::~:::;;:-:&gt;:&lt;1 .&lt;·:·:· ·:~ e monUors at ~;:.• r b:.
8

: : Helen Help
:, Us. • • B,· llt'it•n Bottel
:::
:-:

;~

lor this .... k.nd .. m b.

::~
:~:

Mrs . R. D. Thomas and
Mrs. Gt•nr,·a Ho"·ell for thr

:,'·,' ,\_,

Happy Harvesters elect officers
Ulftt-ers for 1978 wen•
eleetL'I at the Friday night
meetinK uf the Happy
Harvesters Class uf Trimt)'
Church.
Eleded were Miss Erma
Smith. presulrnt: ~1 rs. Ella
Sm1th. \' ICC president ; Mrs.

·JOE' GETS HIS CO MEUPPANCE
OE.\H HEIE:"&gt; :
I wnlelh1s 111 oppos1tton to "Joe" who feels that women pr&lt;&gt;-

t•arly Sa turda} duty: Mr.
and Mn. Donald Slaggs lor
the 3 to 5 p.m . dul; . On
Sunday the 1 to 3 p.m. duty
"ill bt&gt; shared by Mrs.
Da,·ld Carman and Mrs.

llli.Ht&gt; rape b) their sexy dress and aetions, and men should not

F.:lsie Nn l: thi' late dut)• by

IJ,• t•ondonmed "for

Mrs. E. \'. Clarke and Mrs.

treasurer.

Forrest Oa\•is.

Plans were made . during
the meeting to serve the wed·
Wng reeeption of Susan !..ann-

:::
.·.

It

I$

doing something they were driven to do...
Jromc that in an era when many women are provin~ t~.ey

~r~s~~~~ :~~~~;~y·~~~~~:J. ~i:~.;Je~tl~ 0:~~~~ael;!";~ 1:~

: ':':':':': ·: ·: .:.·: .: ,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,·,: .: :':':':':':':':':'.

U1cir menwl faculties when expoSed to an arousing situation.
Should we pt ly men whose philosophy is " ! want. I take"
regardless of the consequences to another human being• Joe
t!egratles all males when he projects an image of a zombie in
llllndlrss pursuit of the female in tight pants.- MARTIN

ing and Larry Wells. wul to
aet as hostesses for tht•
Frances Florist open huus;•

on Dec. ~ - .
lt was reported that a new
supply of convalesccnl cards

lliiS bt'CII received and that
fruit cakes are alsu fur sa le. A
report was given on the World
c~mununity Day senrice held

Hose Ginther, secretiry : omd
Mn;. Gcncvle\'e Mt&gt;inhart,

playeu with prizes going ~~
Mrs. Spencer, Mrs.,,
Dessauer, Mrs. Stella Kloes~:.
and Miss Hines.
~;.

For Small

and also extended
n·elcomes were Mrs. Kathryn
Spencer of Anna Maria, Fla.
and Miss Jean Hine:;, Columbus. Plans were tnade for
remembering the sick i.llld
shutin members of the class
~less

Power" ,

~ave

ONLY

F.E.D. '1.98
992·21 07 Mgr .• John F. F~ lh Pomeroy_. Qhio

..'.,

many men (a nd women) with confused ideas and feelings

about sex.
rf for years men are provoked by women who look and act

\'Cry available but turn away in dlsdain, I can WJderstand their
hustility loward all women ... and we all share a responsibility
for it.

12

Fried Chicken I'I •

Pillsbury Flour

J

Consider the adolescent, scared by his developing .sexuality,
who is confronted on all sides with, as Joe says, see-throug ~
blouses, tight pants and no bras. "See but don't touch" can be
damaging.
We women don 't have to cover up and live as prisoners of
fear , but we should dress fair ly and responsibly, without lhe intent of titillating all men. If we don't want to be treated as sex
objects, we can't afford to act like them.- JAN
DEAR HELEN:
Joe said, "To a man who is turned on, then rejected, the pain
is probably greater than that suffered by a woman who after
rape and a shower, shows no evidence of hann,"
Uke most men, I've been turned on, then rejected. The pain
ts real, but a real man can curb his desires. I have two good
friends who were raped. Both went through physical and em&lt;&gt;tional traumas. They didn't just take a shower and forget.

I

II

5:;48c 2

I GET
I

I
I
I
I

89

-lb.
Bol

(UCLIDIIC IllS llll)

(UCIIDI.C IllS tnl)

LIMIT 0~1 COVIION IIU fAMilY

I Df

••••••

...
TO UMIT QOANTmll.

Crisco
Shortening
3'i!;. $1 29

~

Their pain was wor se than anything I've experien~d .

As a man,! wouldn't think twice about punching out a person
who talks or acts like Joe. Ahd that's my viewpoint on rape. LOOKOUT JOE

WITH COUPON

.\I em bers atte ndin g ·were

Alice Balser. Early
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
F&lt;oush and Mrs. Iva Orr.
The followi ng officers were
elected for' the year 1977·78:
Master , Ea rly Roush;
Overseer, Iva Orr ; Lecturer,
Mrs. Florence Smith;
Slewa rt, Herbe rt Roush ;
Asst. Stewart, Austin Wolfe ;
Lady Asst. Steward, Donna
Wolfe; Chaplain, Eula Wolfe ;
Treasu rer , Ear ly Roush ;
~Irs.

Sec retary , Mrs.

Herbert

Roush: Gate Keeper, Ali ce
Ba lse r ;

Ce res,

Bert ha

Robinson; Pamona, Barbara

Duga n; Flora, Donna Hill;
F.xecutive Co mmittee, Early
Roush, Herbert Roush, Alice
Balser: Women's Activities

• RE·OPEN I AM FRIDAY,
'llOZIN U.S.D.A. GlADE A llGUlAI ,
II·LIS. AND Uf' KIOG"'

Wishbone
Young Turkeys .... .lb.

67C

MAIVAl OF VIRGINIA U.S. D.A. GtADf A ·

ALLSIW

Country
Fresh Turkeys ...... .lb .

75c

FIOIEN U.I .O.A . GRADE A "KROGER

wr:ht;:~·P;e-Basted

Young Turkeys ........ lb.

69 C

MellOw. Roelt
CoH11

25th .

99c
99C
3 Sl

Kroger
Cottage Cheese Ctn .
M';~"."so.;wiiit. ·''"
• p·te ...... 2Pkg
..
Pumpk1n
.

,.

24 · 0 1 .

Kroger
Gelatin ........ .
Kroger"."'"•'·....
Pumpkin ... ..... .

,.3·

·01 .

Kro.ger 20-oz.
Wh1te Bread ...

3 · 01 .

_ •
20 01

Pkgs .

S!

WITH COUPON
- -M.ot.
PWCIMII
rn. Of-

Heinz
Ketchup

l6·oz. s 1
Cans

. .ur. ....,

L...

5

:

-

-•iiiiLII

1-&amp;I. WI'At~U

e

'
.JJ..l 8· ·. g· lance·. ~
t

Tail-Less
T-Bone St,eak

Tangerines .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

$ 99

Tlli1 d 11'fabll tit-Uil ''lfldJRr cff.m l"" '
ull 1lw ·b tm(, ,...,I~Jirrto:~ frunl dnip-111
boUm, e~ four·UtP ~•ull ·t " bwtrr~~clrr,

a~ IMIJI'IId/t tfalll&lt; l lftltlt 111/tlr ~11J

"'I OW~P" P1flltrJ~t. Cablrrfl or

Motk! 360.

Vo~noils Holida~ Fabrics Available
U~e Our Ch ristme s Lay -Away

~ !~E ~AI@!~ S~~~
•

•

; COLUMBUS

12 .

= ............. ,

i!I Kroger
'v~ri~ Pok
L•ncheon Milt

------~n.
lm
..att.,.....mllllllllliiD

IUIKPI.

~

.

SENATE
T
IILLS P·A SSEO .
Am . HB 762, C am ~ ra .

Ex-

••nds · unemployment compen .
~ etlon cov era g e fo brlt:'O s.tat~
~w
Into
conform lt y
with
federal law . Emergenc y: 29-0.

8111 : 2'1·0.

C1n.

119

Old Fashioned Dressing . .. . .. .. .,.. '" S

99
Golden Glo Turkey Brnat ............. ...5
Cnlnberry Salad ......... .
. ,. ..99c
Cooked Turkey Dinner ..... . ..!1995

2

M1Y1S

A

· ~eat inQ e f e!on y · of the fourth
degree on se cond offen se ~nd
prov ides for . cour f order s to
protect fhe -vict im .
• HB 958 , St in zi ano. Provides/
fDr .trebl e .damages aga ins
M edicaid prov iders who d e.J
fraud th e sta te.
~ - H B 959, L ehm an. Au thor izes
"'hool boards to ref inance tax
antici pat ion notes . wh ere a
eourt orcter . prec ludes· repay ment from 1917 revenues. .
·
1 H B 960, Aveni. Prohi_bit s
· school boards f rom allowi ng t he
sale of iun ~ foods tn . school s.
"

7)die.att44Ut ~It~~.

h~99~

IUPII

'J
•
•
• HOUSE
·
1
• . BILLS INTRODUCED
• H B 957, Stinzlano. Makes wife

;

p~:~.$119
Margarine

3 1-lb~l

l8th

day

·Nov. 17. 1971

w..............

M,

if at oil pouiOie. If due
condiflom btyond ~ur tontrol, we run out af 1m advt rt iud sptcitd, we subst~
tuft o camporob lt brand en
o similar saving or oi~• you
~ II:AIN C~.l CK for the lld'ltl'-'
t1~td 1pet 1al at th1 1ptciol
pnct any time wittlin 30
days. Wt ...,Wilh wt.t WI
1111. If yo u ore • ••r diuatlsfitd with a te rovn purcho••
wt wil l replou your lttrn ~
ref und your montr.

Pkgs.

-:

'
'
1..1

''

•u

,.o!

,

~111'101'1..1

b

"

'1\lo.....-.ariOI Hlf»t":GF~CO.\\PI!&lt;V

'\'

"
"

..

21) The storm ~~o~arnmgs are up

toc.tay rrga1dmg problems of
your own makmg Be c&lt;Jreful of
wh,lf you do cu1d also thcl!
wht c h you neg lect to do
F1nannJI dcaltngs wtth pals
today shou ld be conducted
aionq llle most amJCable hnes
possible. bY" all Sell•shness or
StlfHJIIlf"SS Will hurl the rel ai!On·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 191
Tal..e nothtng tor granted ca ·
ref' l 01 busmessw1se today ,
evPn tn Sl tuatrons where you

lrom under you
PISCES (Feb . 1D·March 10)
There s a c hance you can be
rtldtlii-JUiated to(la~ because oJ

age your assets w1th w• sdom
Thts tS not a day tO squanoer
what you havf' or assume lho
obiiQal•onR ot one who rs a
poor nsk

wrth utmost concern today mat ter s that cou ld 1eflec.t upon
your r.epulcilion Wr ong moves
cou ld leave sta1ns ddf1cuH to
~rase

LEGAL NOTICE
FOR SALE
eve ryo ne see m s to grve you a
B1ds tor
the p ersonal
har d ttme today 1t ' s poSSible property of the Nell ie Smith
the(re mere ly reac t tng 10 th e e5tate wi ll be rt;-celved at 10
way you treat th em Snar l. and am Sa turday , Nov ember 19.
you won't snatl atone Havtng 1977 on the front step s of t he
MCtQS Courpy Cour t Hou se,
tr ouble selec tmg a caree r? POmeroy,
Ohio .
Said
Send lor yoUI copy o t A s tra ~ proper ty
descr1bed
as
Graph Leiter by matltng 50 toltows J 35 carat diamond
cents lor each and a lo n9 . se lf- in platinum ring , appraised
addr essed. stamped envelope - value 58 ,500 00 . 1.&lt;10 caral
d 1a mond i n platinum ring .
to Astm-Graph, P 0 Bo._ 489 . appraised value \1 ,850 .00 .
Rad to Cily Stat1on. NY 1001 9
Sl oo gol d coin, ap pr aised
Be sure to speci fy .f'Our b1rlh va lue ·s to OO; 2 gold wrist
watches wit h bands , ap
praised value \1 15 00 ; one
wiiCI mi nk cape, appraised
CB .
va tu e $300 .00 .
~
Terms of SC~ t e : Ca sh in
The exec utor of the estate
Hand ..
rese r ves t h e r igh t to r ei etJ
a ny and
all
b i ds .
For
JAME S J PROt='FITT
el(a mination ot the above .
SHER I FF
ca ll J . B O'B1ien.Attorney a t
M e1gs c'o unty
Law . Pomeroy, 61-4 992 2720
( 11 ) 16 , tt c
(111 9, 10 , 11.13, 14, IS, 16, 7t c

Try lo be bentqn not bos s y

LIBRA (Sept. 13-0ct. 231 Man

TAURUS (Apr;t 20-May 101 Tr ea 1

SCORPIO lOci . 14-Nov . 21) II

PUBLIC NOT ICE
Pur suant to an ExC'cution
issued from the Me igs County
Co urt on the 1st day o f
November 19 77, being case
N o . s c 1832 , Joe's C B .
Mason , vs Ray Roush, J r . 1
witt o ffer for sale, at pub l ic
au c t ion at the frant door o f
the Cou rtho use ·at Pomeroy ,
Oh 10, a t 10 : 00 o'clOCk A M , on
Saturday , the 26th day o t
November t977 , to fol low ing
goods and chatie l :
l Pierce Si mp son C B rad i6 23
cha nnel , mod i fied to receive
&lt;~0 channel base station tran s
cei ve,r Ser ia l N o . 523194
1 0 104 m ike tor C B
The ab ove good s and
c.hattet t aken as proper t y o f
R a y Roush , Jr to sat isfy a
judgem ent in favor of Joe'!'.

&gt;(OJJ have the upper hand

ihe rug ro ulcl be pul1efl Ou l

your relu c tan ce t o make
wctve s Stand up lor what you
behPve 15 nqhl
ARIES (March' 21 · April 19} You
will encoun1e1 severe restS!·
an ce today rt ~au .nt~derc tn
Sltuat•ons outs1de your
balrw1ck Don ' t bull rn where
you re not IOVI Ied

shq)

Thts comtng year some
c hang es may occur not of your
own makmg Flow w1th Ihe 11cle
ralher than buck ~t . for 1! wt!l
car ry you to areas ot opportu·
My you would not have found
o t herwise

01

teet

-

CAPRICO RN !Dec. 22-Jan . 191

~ U~lNllir!JW\J

MannmQ Webster
Judge
Court o f
Common Pleas.
Probate D ivision,
Me igs coun t y, Ohio
till 2· 9 • 16, 3t c

PUBLIC NOTICE
P roPosa ls w ill ·be receiv.ed
by: t h e Vi l lage' of. Midd lep ort
to provicte hospltal i zali.o n
irisu r an ce · c.o vera·ge - for
\l (ll age
emp lo yees .· · A ll ·
prop osa ls· must b e . r ece i ve d
· by .o1 P .M . Nove m be r 30 , 1977
at the MayOr 's Office , 237.
Race · Str eet , Mi d d l ep ort,
Oh i O. F or· a dd;r; on a l ;n .
fo rm a t ion
.contac t
the .
Mayor 's Off ic;e . The \li lt age
· reserves t h e r i~ht to r e j ec t or
accep t any proposal upon
action by couric il. ·.
.

tta lice at activ itY T uesday in·
·{he Ohio Gen eral Assembly : .

I'!ITH COUPON

Fresh
. ·.
Cranberries ... .. .. ...... ~~~:
Wi;~nsin Russet 15 $149
Baking Potatoe ..... i~~ .

, .

~ . .

Glory
Rug Cluner ~
-

f'•3o•
OFF
5

each

·

L

14-0t.m.

,.. .at IIII'NCiaiiTITI I LKILT
n.••n

Fresh Baked
Pumpkin Pie
~

WITH COUPON

=-----•
......
.......................

5c
99c
~~!~ ......... ·......... 21b•.39c
39c

-~ .

a
'
k i n

~

Fl;;id;

~~~;•

GEMINI (May 11 -June 201 Evaluate your pnorttte S sens1bly
today so as no t tO was te ext;ess•ve e lton on th1ng s that wtll
pro.,.e to be ol sma ll co nse quence

CANCER

!June

11-July

111

Generally you ' re not prone To
tak1n g outlandiSh nsk s, but
tnvotvemen t s of thts ma tu re
may appeal to you today . Don ' t
let the lo ng odds lempl you .

LEO tJuly 23-Aug . 22) Unless
you and your mate are m
com plete accord regarding a
ma,or expendt lure today. post pone aclron !til a comp romi se
ts work ed out

(Aug .

tr YOU hove o servra• to JIIN
..... ant 10 buy Of \~II \OtnP !h Ulc:J
ne loo!.l 1ng !01 wo• I.
or
who1cvc-r
you II g~t r('\vtt•;
lo ~l('J wdh a Se-ntuu•l Wor.t Ad
Coll 9'n 715b

'\hWM'AI'Lit Lo.;Tt : IH'III!-.1 A. .......... 1

CARPORt SAll 1 hUJ., and f r r
Nov 17 and 18 1165 Vt~H' !)r
M ·ddleporl OH q 5 But,!&lt;\ or•d
rnosc:

(;arnping Equi)JIDPDI
STARCRAFI FALL Sole
M1m
motor!. 70 and TJ
TraVe l
I ro•lers I B 5 SJ 7q9 75 7
Bunk~ouse S4 ,87S Fold clown
SI 700 up We setl se rvr ce and
quoloty . Open Sunday!&gt; Cornp
Conley Starcrolt Soles. Rt b2
N of P~o Pleo\ont .

10

ft
tandem
L1ke ·new .
Self
con ta ined Both w1lh shower
Reosonoble . 949 2042 .

197b

TRAVEL

TR AIL ER .

19b9 BANNER 18 ft. camper

~ell

l'el6 lor :;ale
H o~&lt;;'-'~ Buy v•ll
trade or rro1n New 01,d u'J(:d
)addles Ruth Ri?e.,-e) A lbo11Y
(b14 ) b98 3790

HOOF HOlLOW

MEIGS COUNlY Hum on t• So'1€'ly
Corel me ond od op t1 on Servrte
992 7680 747 3167 9Q7 ~ 4 77
AKC IRISH SeliC•
old.
Phone
after S pm

pupp1C~

NINE WEEK old BtJagle pup s Rob
h•t dog:i Storied ond 1r011H.'d
SIS and up {61&lt;1 ) 74'2 2521

1975 CAVALCADE TRA VEL Tro•ler
self.conl oined
A .C.. roll Uf?
owning . 992 -2794 .

10 GIVE away 6 week old pup

1972 ARISTOCRAT 18 Travel
Tra iler. E.o:c.ellent cond1hon .
SVIOO. Col l 992 -3580.

fOR

SUFFOLK RAM S35 742 1753

Part coll1e

shah sTorted "(lnd
wormed Call Q92 3331

AKC
STUD
regi'&gt;lered cot: l.er s ponu-.1
Block and ton . Clotksdole
lme'&gt; . Showq.JOlity J 8 D K e •~
nels, 7-42·3161'

-

-

W~tnJt..,;;:t

tive day tor you depends
lar!=Jely upon t.h e way you deal
wilh h elpe r s and cowo rk er s .

THRE~

TO GIVE Away

OR FOUR roo•TJ opl . or
smolltrailer in Pomeroy or M1d
dlepor t area . 992 -7J8!jl.,...

Dog

1,

ON ntESE WESTINGHOUSE APPLIANCES. HURRY IN, SALES STARTS WED., NOV. 16th

~ Am . HB 646, H e~ iy . Al!o~s
ooun t y
c om m lss1on er s
to
manage a county t uberculosis
hOsp ital with the approv al of
the hosp itill t rustees . E m ergen c y : 29-0. Bill : 30-0.
Am. SB 324, Carney . ApthOr lzes sal e of' land in Lrberty
Twp, Trumbv ll Co unt y . Vot~ :

30-0.
BILLS INTRODUCED
.
S B 376, Freemen . R equir es
the stat e Pubt lc Welfare De partment to follow 'th e a dm inistrat i ve proc edures act.
SB 317, Fr eeman . A boli sh es
m andatory publi c
employee
retirement age ot 70.
SB 378, Bowen . A!l ows a laid •
off civil ser v ice emp l oy e~ t~
dis place ano ther emplo yee m a
lower classificat ion if he has
more r etention point s.
S B 379, Van Meter . Requ ir es
advance payment of n ext y,ear 's
st ate aid to Clev eland sc hool
d is tr ict .
SB 380, M eshel. A llows st ate
to provide heal!h an d li fe
insu r enc e f or state em pl oyees
thro ~gh self -insura nce.

· Fre d Hoff m an
·Ma yo r , Vi l'l ag e
of Mid'd l eport
· ( 11 ) 16)· 23, 2tc
l1
ltN THE
COMMON' PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OH 10
MARY PARKER .
Plainti ff ,·
·
-vs CHARLES C . ARNOTT , et

al. .

Defendants.
No . 16 ,635

. NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To : Da le Raw ley, whos e

wa s 52
Main Str eet, Coo lv i ll e, Ohi o :
You ·ar e h ereb y no tifi ed
that yOu h a v e been named
defe ndant in a teg·al ~ c tion
en t i tl e d . Mary
Park er ,
P la intiff , vs. C ha r l es c;:,
Arnott , et al., · D et .endants.
Thi s ac t ion ha s b een assig ned
Ca se No. 16,635 and, is p en .
d in g · in · th e Com m on Pl eas
Cou rt of Meig s c oun ty,
Pom ero y, Ohio, 45769.
T he obj ect of the com p laint
is to, dama ges re su lt ing f r om
an au tom obil e a cc id ent whic h
allege dl y occurred i n M eigs
Count y , Ohio, on J viie 6, 19 77,
and th e pr ayer is fo r S2, 400.00
and cost s,
•
Yo u ere r eq u i r ed to answ er
th e co mpl ain t withi n 28 days
aft er the la s t pu blica tion of
the notice wh ic h Wi ll be
pu bli sh ed once a week f or Si)(
su ccessi -v e weeks . The la st
publi cat ion will be m a cl e on
Decem ber 21 , 1977 , and th e 28
· days f or an sw er wi l l co m .
m en ce on t hat da te ,
I n case o r y ou r f ailure t o
an swe r or other wi se r espond
a s r equ ir ed by th e Oh io R ules
of Civi l Proce du re, judgment
by d efeul t w ill be r en d er ed
against yo u f or the re l ie f
d ema nded In the comp la in t .
l~st k nq,wn addre ss

Wesllnghoose
·
Two-Speed 18 lb. Capacity
Agitator Washer with
Permanent Press Settings

Mod el SC400P

0 Durable Micarta ~ lOP
0 2 pushbutton controls
0 Poiffer-DryTM Dryi ng

o ·· Amse-Hold" cycle
0 Cho11::e 014 COIOIS

" Gentle"

0 Plate Warmer

0 Sound insui &lt;.J \i on

d Porcelain-on-steel Interior
0 Built-In So ft Food Disposer
-ends pre-rinsing
0 Radiant Rinse dispenser
0 Silverware basket
0 Tilt-Guard Satety Door
0 Concealed easy-roll
casters
REG. '299.95
0 Power co rd and hose
comp artmen t
ANNIVERSARY
o Wat er retease bullon
0 Detergent storage

SAL£ PRICf

Wesllnghouse
"Conllnental"
Convenlbte DlshWas•I'IEhe~rn troll~i::;:::;;:;;;;~
wllh AK-Pustllullon C1

Model SC6SOP
0 Lllt·.olf cflerrJ hardwood

cutt1ng boar top
7 pushbull.on con lrols
6 cycle indic a,tor light s
"Power Soak'' Cyc le gives
an el!!ra·powertu l sc rub·
bing to the most he.av11ysolte'd pots, pans, ·
casserol es, try parTS .
bal&lt;ing'di!lhes ."

0 ··· s~nilizin " Cycle-·auto~ ·
me~ tica lly heal!! wale( to
assure you 61 1&lt;15' hot
wa ler in the final wash and
. f ina~. r inse
0 Power-DrytM Drying
System
0 Single and Double Wash ·
0 "Cai1cet" -button- all ows ·
you to change a cyc le once
it has beg un
0 Tri-Level Wastl Action
0 "{elescoping top rack
0 Glide-out bottom rac k
0 Conl lnenlal Shelt-can .be
raised or lowered to
accommodate ta ll glasses,
oversize piatiers, bu lky
casseroles- glides out for
- easy use; Includes
cutlery area ·
0 Al l Wh ite Porcela in·on·
steel interior
D Built-in Soft Food Disposer
-ends pre-rinsi ng
0 Radian t Rinse dispenser
0 Adjuslilble top rack divider
and cul!ery area
·
0 Cove red silverware basket
with handle
0 Tilt-Guard Safety Door
0 Concealed easy-rol l
casters
0 Power cord and hose
compartnient
D Waler·release bu tton
0 Automatic cord reel
n Detergent slorage

0 " Regular ,'' " Low," " Au

,F!ull '' temp erature sett 1ngs
L 3 cyc le selections on hrne r
C Extra -la rg e opening to
drying basket
0 Handy up-t ron t lin t
coll ec tor
fJ C ross··Vane tumbling
LJ Automatic cool-dpW1) ·
M od el
pe riod
0 Se1fety start butt on, door O E49S W
salety switch
0 Stati ono ry drying shell
. [ophonal accessory)
0 Backed by Nat1 onw1de

'

I

I

J

~

Sure Service

REG. '559.95 PAIR
ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICED
Check Ou r Special Prices On Sigle Pieces

Westinghouse·

Westlng~hoo;s~e~~-~~~~~=~~~~
14.0 Cu. Ft. Capacily
Model

RT14lil . ..

1~:) CompletelY FrOsHree ·
d Equ ip ped tor Automati c
Icc Maker (oplional)
0 Freezer door shell
0 lce·campartment with 2
quick-release trays
u Two adiu stabl e shelves
0 Tw in veg etable crispers
0 Bu tler server
D Bu1lt·in egg sto rage
·o Deep door shelves
0 Magnet ic door gasket s
[j Woodgrain ·handles
0 Separate temperature
controls

You can be sure ... if it's Westinghouse
Reg. '429.95

AnniversaiJ
Sale Price

WHln WESTINGHOUSE

REFRIGERAlOR
FREEZER
. CONVENIENCE

Reg.

FE ATURES
Reversible OOors
EQuipped !or Automatic
Ice Maker (opllonatJ
Freeler door shelf
Freezer interior shell
Two Ice trays
Twin, covered crispen
Twin dairy com parlments
Butter d!sl'l
Three cantilevered shelves
Slide-out chiller tray
Gtide.ovl rollers
Defuze door handles
Thlr\ -wa l! , foamed
ln'&gt;vlallon

'389.95

Anniversary

Sole Price

Automa tic Timing center with 60-minule
ti met' ,
·
" Timed " appliance out let (!use protected)
Three 6 " Plug.Qut CoroK su~face units
One 8" Plug-O-il Coro~t sur face un it
Two surf au unit signal lights
Infinite Heal Control belwtan " 011'' and
" High"
Por u!ain enameled no·dr lp top
Porcelain enameled oven and body
Llft·off oven door wllh seal
InTerior OVI!n ligh t
Oven si gnal ligh t
Tl!t-u p bake, tltt.down broiler elements
Broiler pliO with grid
Full-width storage drawer
Front leveling legs
Opti ona l ae:cenar.,. non-elec tric gr iddle .

Value Model KM350W
&gt;
With 15 Mlnule Timer, Automatic Shut-off
and Signal
Reg. '569.95

AnnivetsaiJ
Sale Price

~W~HI~n~W~E~~I~NG~~~US~E·_. . . . . .
30 inch Ranp wijh '
COntinuous Cleaning Oven
CONVENIENCE FEATURE S
Continuous Clettning Ov~
Automatic oven timer and clock
:;:~~~~i~~~ 60-m!n.,M!nvte
timer
with
signal units
Thr ee 6" Plug-Out
Coro
.. surface
One 8" Plug -CNt COro~~: surface unit
-....j . t
Two surface unit signal lights

)

Infi n ite Heat Control between " Oft "
and " High"
Bt.a ck Glass oven dOOr wllh look.in"
win dow area
Interior oven ligtlt with "peek ' switch
Lift -elf qven door with seal
Oven signa! lt!hl
Tm-up b.:rke e ement

· Broiler pan with grid

f'u!l ·wldth ~forage drawer

Front leveling legs
Ot&lt;tlona t acceuory :
NorHiedrj·c gridd!e-KAGR40

~

REG. '319.95
All NlVERSARY
SALE PRICE

Reg. '389.95
Annlvenary

Larry E . Sp en ce r ,
C l ~ r k of Co ur ts
( 11 ) 16, 23, 30 (1 2) 7, 1&lt;1, 21, 6 tc
\

Model DESOOP
U " Permanent Press" and

•

0 F1ve potntion water save ll''
including "Resetect'·
settm g
0 Five posit1on water
temperatures (lhree tor
Permanent Press)
0 Bleach dispenser
0 Porcelain enameled tu b.
to p and lid
D Lmt filler and water
rec1rculation sys1em
0 Lock 'n Spin'• satety lid
0 Fabric softener dispenser
(optionJI accessory)
0 Backed by Nattonwid e
Sure Service

Westinghouse
Heavy Duty Electric Clolhes
Dryer wilh Permanent
Press Selections

FrosHree
Re!Tigeralor·Freezer with
Twin Vegelable Crlspels .

Wi!stinRhouse
JO.Inc:h Electric Range wijh
· AutiHnatic Timing Center

JKAGR40)

®

.

Models LA49SP
0 Btg 18 lb. capacity
0 Heavy duty sp1ra\ ramp
agitator
0 Two agitat1on/spm speed
setec tl ons. " Normal " and

Sys tem
0 Mulli·Level Wash Action

0

L

'

$48995

• Two power settings with indica~or lights
• 500 walls of power lor normal coo ktng and
reheat ing
• 245 watts of pow er for defrosting and co_oking
delicate foods
• · Attractive si mulated wo6dgratned cabtn_et
See-through , slde-swlng o'.'en do or for easy
accessibility
• Separale pu sh-lo-starl butt on
• Easy· to-c lean , remo\lable glass oven tray

•

•
•
•
•

Automaltc inter ior oven light
Large 74 cu. ft . oven C&lt;lpacity
Automattc shut-off and signa!
Operates on separate ,120 volt , 60Hz wall outlet

• Shipping we ight , 64 lbs
• 13ft8" high. 20 V:" w ide. 16¥4" deep
• BaCked by Nationw ide Sura Sei'vlt:e

Rag. ' 299.95

(hu,~ &lt;,('

pug . •~ ch1huohuo ll mo. o ld
female wiTh 2 pvpp1m. Small
house dog , Pup s are , I week
old . 992 -251-4

liM &amp; RUBY GREENE HAS BEEN IN BUSINESS IN MASON COUNlY
FOR ntE PAST 15 YEARS AND WE WOULI) LIKE TO SAY THANK YOU BY .OFFERING YOU GREAT SAVINGS

Westlnghoose
Convenlbte DishWasher
wl1h 2-Pustllullon ConlrDI

6 wk'l

I 3'04 882 23~7

con to1ned , furnace , stove
reingerotor . sleeps s1• . eo~
celleril cond1110n . Con be seen
al 328 Sy camore St , Middleporl
or co li 992 -727b.

23-Sep l . 211
Wh ether thi s wtll be a produc-

VIRGO

\ ard :;ale

GREENE'S SALES CENTER

0
0
•

·t awm.
·· · . g.

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

i

~ Yil!JUJIJ

51Qil

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 2J·Dec .

a

AIIDnlf . . . . OfO.

i.
§

U.S. 'GOV'T GRADED CHOlet

OUR FASHION MATE"
MACHINE /SA GOOD BET.

m'i,n;,".~
Oclobec

•

5 Maxwell House
CoHee

!5

One Quarter
Pork Loin ...... .... ..

$129

:
The Mason City Historical Society is still accepting new
:members for 1977·78. Recent new members are Miss Lena
:Gibbs, Bliss Wilson and Helen and Russell Barton.
~
At the meeting Nov. 3 at the historic home on Brown St. ,
--Mrs. Fred Taylor presented devotionals from E&lt;odus 4: l.S
verses, and closed with or aver.
The sea-etary's report was g!ven by Lilah Zirk le and the
treasurer's report by Mrs. Doris Roberts. Mrs. Bessie Ingels,
vice president, .who presided, announced that a feature story
about the historic home will appear in "Wild Wonderful West
Virginia" magazine as soon as pictures of the bouse are taken.
' 'I)te group was to meet Nov, 14 at the home a t 9 a.m. to
clean it and enjoy a potluck dinner .
Mrs. Cecil Smith moved to order more stationery showing
a picture of the. former Virgil A. lewis home. The motion
passed unanimo,usly. The picture, which sells for $1.25, is much
mdemand.
Many visitors' at the home asked aboul dona tion box so
Mrs, Doris Roberts agreed to see about obtaining one in which
visitors may contribute.
At the next meeting of lhe society on Thursday, Dec. 1, a
date will be St:'t for the annual Christmas dinner.
Attending were Mrs. Dennis Harris, Mrs. Fred Tay lor,
Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Mrs. Addie Mae Brown,
Mrs. Coral Al~xander, Mrs. Doris Roberts, Mrs. Bessie Inge ls,
. Mrs. Helen Barton and Mrs.' Evelyn Proffitt.
, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon. Roush , Mason, spent a vacation
sight-seeing in PeMsylvania where they visited the National
demetery at Gettysburg, Independence Hall and Th e Libe rty
Bell in Philadelphia; the Statue of Liberty, World Trade
Building, RockefeUer Center in New York City, and in
Washington, D. C. Arlington National Cemetery, Smithsonian
Institution, National Archives Bldg., Kennedy Center for
Performing Arts and the Capitol Building. It was here that
they saw Senator Jennings Rlrndolph.
·
' They 81110 visited Mrs. Roush 's .aunt and uncle, Mr. and
l'rfrs. Joseph Demeter, Jr., at Harrisonville, Ohio, in Meigs

WITH COUPON

i

Bernice Bede Osol

,Administratrix ot the Es tat e
of
Vio!a
I rene Cundtft.
df'c.e ased, late Of SyracuSE&gt;.
Meogs Coun ry , Ohoo
. Cred i t.ors are required to
ftle !he 1r claims w•lh said
l,iducia rv
w11h 1n
three

25' OFF

!

!!

Famed America n Negro
composer W. • C. Handy,
known as the "Father of the
Blues," was born Nov. 16,
1873. American actor Burgess
Meredith also was born on
this date in 1909.
c

SUCID INTO CHOPS Ill HAlf OR

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

HI. CAll

,.IIC4o• oif

Smoked
Hams .................. .lb.

(Q")'l,., ra&lt;r tiitfl,

, . nil I'II!QIAIIOf IIIII ,

:-..__.I).IMUKin,liJJ
:L . .CT Tt ln'UCMll Jllll I tJC&amp; TUD
!YGWIIIJIIIIIIIII-

wtiOLE 11·1t·LI. AVG.

YOU CAN BET YOUR SA

Cranberry Sauce

CLOSED,..,..,,
THANKSGIVING
DAY.
........... 24111

J unior Yo uth Chairma n,

NOW ONLY
95

CUNDIFF Oeuu ed .
Notice •S hereby given thet

MASON PERSONAL MENTION
Mrs. Claudia Thomas, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Mrs. Maxine
~e r and Mrs. Salley Clark spenl Tuesday in Columbus
tbere they visited the Children's Palace and another place of
psiness.
·
• Mrs. Helen ~rker visited recently witlt her grandsons,
llr. Joe Barker, hls wife, and children at Marmet, W. Va. and
'lith Marvin Barker and his mother, Mrs. Bernice Harris in
~arleston .
.
• Mrs. Lucy Johnson returned from a vaca lion along with · 1
'"• son and wile, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson from Florida .
.tie visited a week with Mr. and Mrs. Johnson at Watauga
*"te Park where he is director .
• Mrs. leona Dudding of Nitro visited recently with her
!ister, Mrs. Helen Williams at Clifton.
: Mrs. Leone Jaques and Mrs. Eber Roush, both of Mason
1!isited Mrs. JaqUes' son and wile, Mr. and Mrs .. Malcolm
~yre and son , Randy at Marion, Ohio over lhe weekend .
• Roberta Burdette, St. Albans and Ivan Dudding of
Q.arleston spent Thursday yisiling Mr. and Mrs. Eber Roush,
flary and Robert Dudding.
~ Mrs. Hazel Hoschar, Mason and Mrs. Thelma Henry,
elifton, visited. from Friday until Tuesday with their
iaughters, Mrs. Betty Hoschar Davidson and Mrs. -Martha
fll!llry Coleman in Columbus.

ucetlln Spray
• YOUR
KROGER STORE
OPEN TIL MIDNIGHT WED., NOV. 23rd

ol

VI~~~ NIDR~'~': ASTRO·GRAPH

;.l\.~ g~~~~~a~g;:~~u~~ !~~~~~tseed

By Alma Marshall

,

Chair ma n, Mrs. ' Her bert
Roush ; Legislat ive agent,
Youth
Early
Roush;
Chairma n, Aust.in Wolfe;
Donna Wolfe.
Members report ed sick
were Berth a Robinso n,
Emma Wil son and Pe te
Shields.
Li terary program by
Lecturer Flo rence Smith.
Readings by Early Roush,
What the Grange Stands For;
Iva Orr, Summer Time; Mrs.
Her bert Roush, August;
Herbert Roush, J udge Not
and Grandma TeUs It As It
Was, by Early Roush. Garnes
were played by the group.
The Grange has cookbooks
for sale. Anyone may contact
the secretary, Mrs. Herbert
Roush or Ea rly Ro ush.
Potluck refreshments were
served.

~

Est•••

~unty.

Ohio Valley Grange
conduct.~ monthly meeting
LETART FAL'l.'i - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 Letart
Falls met at the Hall
recently. Deputy and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan were guests
and gave their ·reports.
Plans were made lo attend
Deg ree Day at Hemlock
Grove Grange. Attending
,were Early B.oush, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush. Officers
conference will be held Nov.
29 at Rock Springs. Ohio
Val ley Gra nge hosted
Pamo na Gra nge Friday
evemng at Rock Springs.

I
I"

liiiT1 101£1 1111 COIIPN m $1.51 Ulll11111l PIICUSI

liiiT.l LIC Will COINII Alii $1.51 UOtTIOIW. PIICIAS(

*

::·:
..

•

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.

"Thankfulness'', had another
hynm, ·'Come Ye Thankful

::_~

News .Notes ';: .

The Young Adult Class of Mason United Methodist Church
:Will have a ping pong match in the social room of the church
:with the Methodist Youth Fellowship on Friday evening at 7
. p.m. on Nov. 18. Refreshments will be served.
:
On Sunday evening Nov. 20, at :; p.m. the Young Adult
:aass will have a Thanksgiving supper, also in the social room .
:
It's good to see so many young people taking an active part
•in the leadersllipof their church. The jWlior choir and the MYF
:of Mason United Methodist Church are planning a cantata,
:"Mary Had a tittle Lamb" for their Cllristmas service
;Saturday evening, December 24, at 7 p.m. with Mrs. Jackie
:SJsson and Mrs. Cecilia Harris as directors.

560.13

an article,

Mason County

For Thursday, No~ . 17. 1977

A p~~~ ~CT~0:N T

:

at Chrishrn s. A remem·

THE ALMANAC
Unl ted Press lnlernallonal
Today is Wednesciay, Nov.
16, the 320th day of 1977 with
45 to follow.
The moon is approaching
its first quarter.
The mornipg stars are
Mars, .Venus•. Jupiter and
Saturn.

t

••

Size Cars

brance will be senl to Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Smith on their 50th
wedding anniversary.
The Lord's Pr~yer in
WJison opened the meeting
wilh Mrs. Eva Dessauer giving devotions. She opened
With the hymn, "All Hail the

·~·e:$:~~::::;:;::~:::::!-::::::r:::~:::::;.;.:.:•:·:·:::·::;;:::::x::::::;;;:~;;;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;::-;.: .;.:

-Th e Ufll'ted Method'ist Ch urches or lhe Upper Mason
2ari.sh are having a cooperative Thanksgiving service Sunday,
• ov 20 at 7•30 p m
1M
•
•
· •
:
The service, which will be held at the Bachtel United
, ='ethodlst Church in New Haven, will feature Louis HusSt:'ll,
:,oay speaker of the Heights Church in Point Pleasanl, as guest
.speaker.
:
Music will be presented by lhe Wahama High School (:hoir
:)tnder direction of Miss Kay Hoffman, Following the serv'ice; a
;fellowship hour will be observed. Rev. James Morrison is host
.pastor, and Rev . John Campbell of the New Haven United
:Methodist Omrch is parish coordinator.

SNOW TIRES

Mrs. Gladys Cuc kler was
welcomed back after, an il-

scout haU at Chester. Efforts
Hre being made to orgHnize
anolher den, but .both interested boys and adult
leaders are needed.

,.:J •. .
:;

at the Heath United
Melhodist Church, Nov. 4.

Boy Scouts pick project

Americanism projects will
be ca rried out during
llE \ H ~1ARTIN.
November by Pack 23:&gt;, Den I.
,\,..(.got hts lwnps from hWJdreds of correspondents. I'm ha!}' of
the Cl\ester Boy Scouts.
py to &gt;R) th:t t so far, only two or three have agreed with him.
Motto
of the pack is " All
Ht'aJ on:
Right" and lhe den mothers
are Pat Wilson and Jean Sim.
PEAR HElEN :
Th e 12 mem.,.,rs
"- are J aye
It sound:; as though Joe is just looking for an excuse to Neutzling, Andy Hawk, {!rent
;tSsault a" oman. This is an old ploy.
Norton , Billy McLaughlin,
During Puritan days in Salem. Mass., a certain "Joe" arcus- David Edwards, Lee Keney,
1~1 a pretty yoWJg woman of witchcraft because. he said, she Mike Sun. Mike Grant. David
floated through his bedroom window at midnight, cloth,ed ·in McLaug hlin, Matt Harris,
her long flannel nightgo~ and wafted around the ceilfng; .. R)·an . Oliver, and Junm)'
alw&lt;-l.VS j' ust bare))' out of reuch.
· .
Here's my advice to girls and women: If you would avoid the Wilson~ The scouts meet
dreadful doom uf too much Joe, too soon -_whatfl•er you wear. every Tuesday night in the .
wherever you go- don' t go with Joe! -GRANDMA
DEAR HELEN:
I am a feminist, but believe Joe is basically right. Although
n1pe 1s an angry. violent crime, it is also sexual , and there are

l'coplc. a poem by Mrs.
Cri..icc Pratt, und closing
prayer by Mrs. Dessauer.
Members 'lBilg "Happy
Birthday" for Mrs. Ada
Huller. To close the mL'Cling
members sang .. Blest Be the
Ttc" as they joineJ hands for
the benediction. H'&gt;Stesses
were Mrs. Pratt and Mrs.

Freda Duffy who .11so served
as pianist. A Thanksgiving
motif was carried out i~ the
decorations. Games were

-

9- The Daily Sl&gt;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov . 16, 1977

�10 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero), 0 ., Wt'dnesday , NM . 16. 19n

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
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II 11.11'

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" "'•l• L• i ~til lit! lu•ltiJII 1 d,n
',\ ,b I UllHIIL~ 1'1111:1 liL.•II I •10•&lt;

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doll"
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lr~t• l'lli.lll • l " l lt •&lt; lll' '
l"t'llll"li&lt;'Jt•l.ll.l,ol·

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~·

•V.

hill&lt;'

'''"'

)'•hn.il In• l' m•t.• ,, "'&lt;~'

,.,,,., ..

Wtll buy I pte&lt;e o. compl ~te
household New used 01 Qr11+
ques Motlm s Furnolure 20 N
2nd St
M tddfepoll . Pho,,e
Q91 b370
CHIP
WOOD
Poles
mo•
d+omelet 10 on larges t end SB
per ton Bundled slob So per
ton Dellverlltd to Qh,o Polle t
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy . 9tn 2~

kl ' ,,, ,, ..,, ,, .,

,II&lt;' &lt;iltt•pit• d ••IIi\ lt lfl' , t•l· ltll ll
••ltlo! ..'&lt;ltt'Jll&lt;l~ t lu /pt,tlh,,,,.,.

It '\ I fi/ WI IL·

NO ITEM TOO Lcuge o• too smell

• , '

I 1• I

... ..:•j .,.,

11HI SALEM 12

65 2 bedroom
Fr on t den model Frun1shed
HooJo.ed up to utiltt1es ot Co..,n ·
tr.,
Mobile
Home
Pork
Everyth1n9 IIi 1n lh den ready lot
o f ~r eploc e or wood -burnong
stov e So 00 f11 m Coli 992 7034
· or IN2-767 1 alte r 6
oo:

TWO
BEDROOM trotl er
Pom eroy (614 ) .... 6·0 157

NOTICE

12 • 52 two bedroom Schu lt ,
mobde home . Phone 995 -3820

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
~l ttU!I&lt;t~
\ uuf l 0'1. ,, ,t ill I oL t l

l'u, •!l.tl

ALICTION SALE , eYery Tues and
Fri . at 7 pm . New ond \/Sed
rne rc hond1se at Oh1o Rtver Auc ·
· tion , Meigs Plaza , M iddleport .
Oh+o
Home Phone (30.4)
773 -5471 .

\1

.

!J I ,\ , r~ 1" 1· lo jtUI•II• ,llldl

Er

.... llllli 111

~ I' \I.
~ 1ul d ~

RtN1 OR SAU. two be-dnxm1

mobde home ouhtd!i!- Ro one
Phone 9-4Q 2182 aher Slll

J AND 4 RM

I UfiHShed

lu rnt~hed

and un
Ph onv ~ '1

opl!t

5.. 3,

1966 CORVETTE . Very good condi tion . 30.. -882-2040.

•• r: . ·rtt•&gt;~ n

~~-

·~

1912 OLOS DHT"' 88 . 4-door
sedan . AM -FM, A .C. Good con·
dillon . M ust sell . 992 -2787 ofl•r

5 pm__.·~~~~--

REMEMBE~ I NG

liNDA
l ou
Stewart November 16 . 1977 on

her birthday
There com es o . ~tme for all of us .

When w~ must s.oy good .bye .
But fai,th and hope and love and

~-

1~76

FORO GRANADA. b cyl ..
outomot ic. 1n goad condition .

992-5792 . $3.250 .
Jqu
328
Cornaro .
1 - 304 ~ 882-31 08.

Phone

Con never , neve1 die .
Alth.ough the curlo tn foils at lost .

1973 CHEVROlET '·• ton . IJ.a.
auto .. P.S.. P.S For sale or
trade for 1 ton tr uck . ~7 - 2478 .

Is that o cause to grieve?
The future's fairer than the post .

1971 CHEVROlET SCOTTSDAlE . 2·

Hust ,

II only we be lteve.
And trust m God's eternal core

So when the Master calls ,
lt!l s soy that lt fe is still more lair .
A lt hough the curTain fall s.
Sodly missed by fa mily .

tone , sliding gloss window .
re ar step bumper. 305. 3speed . 992 -5671.
1972 PONTIAC CATALINA. Seon
slereo · recorder .
Phone

992 -7453 .

BUILDING FOR lease . 5700 sq . h .
• tore building. w ith full w +n·
dews and owntng 1n fron t 40
car porj,.; mg lot. A.ll on mom
thorovghfor• In Athens . Oh10
d ose to Ohio Unwersily . Can·
I oct H. Wilkes . PO. Bote 5301 ,
Vienna. West Virginia 26105 or
cofii .J04 -N5-9352 .

.

-~-

----

-

12 • 00 MOBILE HOME . Good con di tion. Lorge yard . 1 rnile
Racine . 992 ·58S8 ,

GUN SHOOT. Roc ilie Gun Oub
eve r )~ Sun . ofre rnoon . Foetor
Chock guns only . Anarted

meats.
THERE WILL be no hunt ing , no.

trespassing . and no exceptions
on my property Bob McG raw .
RACINE . Volunteer Fire
THE
Department w ill sponsor a gun
shoot every Saturday at 7 p.m .
ot their building in Boshon . Foetory choke guns on ly .
TIMBERLAND OWNERS : Do you
need help in monogtng your
woodlands and marketing vour
timber ? 'foeod's stott ot protes sionol loresler s is available to
offer you assistance at no cost .
Mead con assure. you of diver·
si l ied morlol.ets .. complete
tlmber utilizotiofl
indud1"ng
whole-tree chipping and supervised harvesting programs
designed to protect your lands
and promote timber growth .
For details , colt collec t or write :
MEAD
PAPER ,
Wood
&amp;
Wood lands Dept ., PO Box 391 ,
Jackson .
Ohio
456 .. 0 .
Telephone : 614 -286-2868 .
FLEA MARKET Nov. 19th and 20th.
Racine Legion Hall. Tables
rented lor $2 per day , Call
949-2773 or 949 -2428 .

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR ond
Qppl ionce serviceman . Po1d
holidays,
vocotion5
and
hosp i tolizolton .
Gallic
Refrigerator Co . 611 3rd Ave .,

_
G cl l~~oli,.:•:..:·O
: :h
:::i::::o:...- - - - HELP WANTED; Mole or Female .
M ~ -ilc 11 Tec.hnologisl
Accep·
tlng op~lkot ions for lul l- time
permanent . · t-e&lt;.hnolog i ~t .
Resumes or appliCations may
. be moiled to : .
Veterans Memroioi _Hospital.· Bo~
749.
Mulberry
He i9hl!i ,
Pome roy , Ohio .45769. (614)

992-2104 .

CASH pa id for all makes and
models Of mob il ~ homes .
Pho.-,e area code 614-.. 23-953 I .
TIMBER . Pomeroy ···Forest Pro·
ducts. Top price lor standing
sawtimber. COli 992 -5965 or
Kent Hant)y , 1-446-8570.
COINS . CURRENCY. tokens , old
pocket watches and chains ,
silver and gold . We need 19b4
and older sii"Yer co1ns . Buy , sell ,
or trade ' Call Roger Worf1sley ,

742·2331 .
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes . brass
beds, iron beds , etc ., complete
households . Write M . D. Miller ,
Rt . -4 , Pomeroy , Ohio or call
992 -7760 ..

pm ·--~~--~~----1975 AMC PACER X. New steel
belt radial! . 28 ,000 miles . E• ·
cel !ent condition. 52.000. {014 }
b75-5701 .
1970 CHRYSLER 300. Good condi tio"n .. Pr iced for qu1ck !Ole.
$750. Call9fol1·5323, after 5 pm .

'""

1974 SUNBUG VW. Gold . Special
interior , sunroof , radio . 28
mpg . Rad ials . 985 -4277 . after 6.

1973 VOtKSWAGON SUPER Beo·
tie . Runs good . Priced right .

949-2559.

ATHENS , OHIO bu!iiness for sole .
Small .. ooosq. ft . Supermarket
close to Ohio U with beer and
wine . carry out license d:oing
good bu5iness on heaVy travail ·
ed Athens Street , Lorge ·pOrk ·
in g lot with room for other out·
door business . Perfect business
for two p&amp;ople. Selling because
of absentee owner . Terms for
right person . For more in forma ·
lion &lt;.a ll or wr ite : PO Be• 5301 ,
Vienna , West Virginia 26101 or

1·304·295-9352 .

TWO BEDROOM trailer for rent.

Ch•\hire, Ohio. Conmuction
worl.eri only . (304 ) 773 -5873 .

--·--

----turnis"ed OP&lt;Jrt -

THREE .ROOM
ment . m - ~34 or 99;2 -3119 .

.

HOUSE · FOR rent . 4 roomli . Fur ·
nished . Adults . 949 ·2597 .
TO LEASE OR ~ent : ·old Prov1&lt;.0
.!_u~lding · 992-3677 .

FOR SALE or trade or land contract. 2 bedroom house in
Rutland . W:l-5858 .
FOR SALE or Rent : lfi74 Schultz
Mobile Home , 1'1 • 65. 20 l( 8
slide-out . Totol -elecliic . Private
lo1 . (614) 667-330S.

1976 FORD F-2SO Custom . 17 .50 x
14 .00 tires - winch . Onlv 14 .000
mi . Heoders . CB . Tope deck .
Over $3,000 in extras . Serious
coils only after 12 noon :
()96~ 1072. $()~·~
600~
. ---THREE HORSES.
is Westf!rn
Pfeo•ure . 2 more5 : I is '1 and I
ia '• Arobion . 992 -7084.

1955

INTERNATIONAl

TRUCK.

Good, for ho..,l1ng . Second vehicl~ . This truck con be restored .
George Francis·. 18 Anni!' St .
Pomerov . Ohio . 992-7e92 or

992-3716.
JONES MEAT Processin g .- t7;;;;;
beet ond pork . Custom proceu ing ot beef·. pork , ond deer.
Retai l cut~ . little Hocking, (614)

J%7 FOROVAN. Carpeted, panel·
ing, radio ' mag wheels .
Daytona Sport 70 tires . $600.

992-3319.

TICKET OF El..,is Presley to rhe
Civic Centvr. Good CQndition .

742·2288 . $500.

OPPORTUNITIES

1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON Super

$8,100 for edu·catioo,
75 i&gt;er cent · of your ·

GOOD CLEAilfs5 gal . ail ·drums ;
6$ each . S gol. cons . 501 and $1
. eoch . Used 2 il)Ch Q05 ·pipe , S3
per 20 foot joint. 992 -2478.

DEALERS AUCTION SALE
(PUBLIC WELCOMEt·
All new merchandise, many Christmas
items, will be sold the wholesale auction
way- by the piece and quantity to go.

'
This is a good way to do your Christmas
shopping. If you have never been to ,I
dealer's·sale, you're missing an experience.
Come and see what we have.

lHURS., NOV. 17, 11:00 A.M.

OHIO RIVER AUCTION
409 Pearl 51.
Meigs Plaza
Middleport, Ohio

. Glide . f - 30H82-~108.

RUGS , WAll
Hongmgs ond
olgons . N 1ce for Chflstm os
Reasonable. Call q92-2214 .

SOFTENER?

Com mer~ ool proper ty oppro:o. . 17
acres level land loca ted 01
1uppe• s Plains on Oh1o Rou te
7 Ph one (bl4) 667 -6304 .
VA FHA 30 yr linonC 1119 Ireland
M or1goge 77 E State Atkens
phone (b14) 5'n3051

Pomerov landmark
sOften &amp; condition your
water . and Co -op water

softener, Model
Now Only

UC-SVI.

'279,95

let us ~est your water Free

FOR SALE
Co-Op

water

'1

•M

8 &amp; · S MOBILE HOMES. Pt . PleCJ·
sant . W. Vo . beside Hec.k"s.
1973 Brood more 14 · • 6.4. 2
&amp;edroom
'
1973 Dorion 14 x 60 2 bedroom
· 1972 1/iclorion l ..· x 67 3 bedroom.

. 2 both

.

.

1972 COventry I '1• 65 3 bedroom·
1969 Statesmen . 12 x 60 2
bedroom ".
1972 ARISTOCRAT 18' TroYel
Trailer. Excellent condilion-.

$2 .400. Coli 992-3580.
1976 SUZUKI RM 125. Exnllent·
condition. 2417 -3861 .
LOWREY CENIE organ , Mod~l 44 .
Ha$ 2 keyboards with accompaniment plus built -in tope
recorder , bench and books .
Would make nice Christmas
gift. Call '9·b. (lOol) 773-5777 .
Aflvr 6. 949 -2185. ask far Jock .
TWO STEEL belled tires , si1e H78
14 in . Len than SOC miles. Sum -.
mer tread , SAO. (614) 698-5215.
WARM MORNING Coal Stove .
Like-new . b5.000BTU bottle gas
ond 11eoting stove . 992 -7253 . or
see WolterHaggy on New Limo
Rood after 12.
1977 CHEVY STEPSIOE pickup . 350
tu .in. 4 bbl. Porrly,.customized .
Asking pdc.e, $5,400. Coli

992·2912 .
UPRIGHT ADMIRAL freezer . 15 cu .
h . Leu than one year old . S200 .
9'92·6138 .
l970 VW BUS rebulh eng. Gas
heater . Radioltire5, some rust .
__2~_m iles per gallon . 992-5980.

YAMAHA , HARlEY-DAVIDSON &amp;
Con -Am Motorcycles . Comp_lere
soles and fantastic service!
Hours M· T. T·9-6: W -F. ~ - 7 : Sot .
9· S. "The Motatcycle People of
Southeastern Ohio "' Athens
Sport Cyc::les , Inc .. 20 W. Stlm·
.s.on Ave ' , Athens , Ohio . Phone

161&lt;)592·1692.
_:.:..:...:c=c...:.=;..::.__

~

--

1977 PASSENGER VAN . A .C. Extra
seat . 3.000 mile. 992 -5nO.
FIREWOOD . Any lengths or any
omounl. Delivered of pickup .

Phono 94..:.
9·_,2:::
563
=.----~·
II

o b i 1e

sas

1 Good Used Unico

Washer

599

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992-2181

SEVEN ROOM house in M1d·
dleporl . Wall -to -wall carpeting.
1 cor garage. Good location .
Low' pric.e ol $1 b,OOO . 992 -2498.

-

--

FOUR BEDROOM house with both
and ' 1 . Central heating. Full
basement .
In
Pomer o'r'.
992-707.4 or992·3465 .
SEVEN
ROOM house. Fuli'r'·
carpeted Fireplace . 1+;, aCres
of · land . Rt . 35 . Rio Grande.

(614 ) 388-8572.

3 bedroorr\

garage on corner lot .
4 bedroom

natural gas, city
water, fireplace , 2 car
· garage and e"xtra lot,
$14,0()0.
72 ACRES - New fences, 2
far.m pood1, old barn·, 8
room . house
( m adem
inside). 2 baths; garage

and all minerals . S37,500.
NEW LISTINt;; - 9-room
older" home "in Racine. 4
Bedrooms,

bath,

natural .

gas furnat'e, garage and ·
large lot . $28,000 . .
TUPPERS PLAINS Reasonable 3 bedroom
ho.me · with

furnace,
garage,

and

bath , gas
breezeway,
lot

150X200.

Ask ing just $17,500 .

·
57 ACRES ..:__ Racine rural.
Mostly
fenced,
small
stream . good gambrel roof
barn , 3 car garage, corn

crib, 3 bedroom house.
bath , 2 drilled wells, on
good gravel road . Only
$29,000 .
17S ACRES .PLUS - Gas
well for your heaflng. 4
bedroom modern home.
bath, furnace, old barn.
near town. Minerals. Need
S6S.OOO .
'
NEW LISTING - Old 9
room brick with natural
gas and city water jn
Syracuse with extra lot for

ss.soo.

. MIDDLEPORT -

7 room

frame house with fireplace,
natural gas furnace, bath ,
carpeting and 2 car garage

for only s 13 ,250.
NEW
LISTING

2

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

$7,500.
NOW IS THE TIME TO
SELL. FOR LITTLE COST
AND TROUBLE CALL992 ~
3325 .
HELEN L. &amp;
GORDON B. TEAFORD
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES .

-·

.,. ..~·· ~·

f1t1 htim~tn

EFEL
RNR

on he-ating cost
Experience and
fullv insured
Free Est.
Call667-6479
11 - 14-1 mo. pd .

Blown

6, 13; News 20 .
10 :30-Me &amp; Stella 33; Wodenhouse Playhouse 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 120, 13, IS; D i ck Cavett 20; Lilias
Yooa &amp; You 33.

·•

"'' I
''

REriACIMINT

rt

773-5955
Llkln, W . VA .

Steam Extraction

Young's
Carpeting

"The Or;ainators

"•

Sytltust, Ohio

Ph. 99!·!993

''
"'

W MF; W, bLAD'iS,

oic!Ot;, If OIJLY

litUSSI AiJ

3 Bdrm. ranch type home,
carpetihg,
paneling,
carport. ott:ter features.

ONLY $13,500 .
JUST LISTED -

Let The Opening

BOB'S UNRtiLSTERING
And
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

JUST LISTED - Nice II tile

Be the opening of the in door season tor you witt'! ·
your old furniture re upholst•red in beautiful
warm colors &amp; patterns
from Bob ' s. If you are
looking for s•vings It will
pay vou to pay us a visit.
located in back of the Sew
N ' Sew Outlet on Main St .,
Racine , 0 .

300 Main St.

This 3

Pomeroy, Ohio

Bdrrn .
home
has
a
basement, n·ice kitchen ,
carpeting, other features .

Or992-6263
BA.M,Io4:30P.M.

ASKING $18.000.00
JUST LISTED - Appx . 19

SALES AND SERVICE

Pomeroy m-6282

.

11 ~ 9-tlc

Acres, mostly woods, dose
to
Pomeroy .
ONLY

\fOU

Wf7f1 rof&lt;Z

CA\J T HAVB!

4:()0--Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals -Our Gang 4;

-

10-30-c

AFFABLE 50 AND

50 --·IF HE'S NOT

0~ , I HEARD
HIM SAY HE
HA S A JOB

t'APPY, WH'f
QUIT? TO DO HERE .

~ESN'T HE

A J06 ? SURE! DRIVIN'
MR. AND MRS. PUDDlE·-HELPII'I ' IM. TH' HOUSE: ·· ·
AHD HE ' S GETTIN '

GOOD DOUGH,

1.. - t DON'T
THINK THAT
WA"' TH ' JOB
HE MEANT"·

TQO •.•

'
Pnnt answer herB:

.

instructions.

'

Located In

Yesterday·s

'
'

ACE HARIMARE
MEIGS PlAZA

••
. .'

Middleport, Ohio

'

BRADFORD, Au&lt;.tioneer , Com plete Ser"Yice. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000 . Racine . Ohio . Critt
Bradford .

ElWOOD .BOWERS REPAIR

bu ildings. · ALL
FOR
$35,000.00.
HELPWITH - VAor FHA

Acres In Langsville
area, no buildings, land has

' 43

just been suneved. Price

equipped beauty sa loo to

sides.

·boot,

paneling, gas heat, city
water , attached garage, ·
has additional hook-up for
trailer, 12x60 mobile home
to be sold se"p arate. Price

MIDDLEPORT

$31,900.00.

-

Good

Street, 2-3 Bdrms. , 1
firepfaces, · 1 flOor plan,

carpeting CHEAP AT
$13,000.00.
NEAR HYDRO UNIT This 2 storv home ~auld be
just about what you're
looking for , access tO the
river. ONLY $6,900.00.

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
.THE R.IGHT PROPERTY,
LET
OUR ·
PHOTO
LISTING . SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU. CALL.
TODAY FOR DETAILS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
q92-2259 or 992-61'1

bath.

$30 , 000 .

carpeting.

Immediate

possession .

We need listings of all
kinds . Farms, vacant lend
and resident;al property.
Call us to s~ if we have
some~hing you might need.

Pomeroy

EXCAVATING , dozer loader and
backhoe work , d.u mp trucks
end lo ·boys lor hire : will houl
fill dirt , to soil , limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef fers , day phone 992 -7089, nigh!
phone 992-3525 or 992 - 5231 .
EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and ditcher. Chorles R. Hatfield , Bock Hoe Serv ice.
RUtland , Ohio . Phone 742 -2008 ,

HOWERY

l.ois Pauley

Branch M.,nager

beautiful 3 year old home and have a look at a nice
living room, dining room, kitchen with built-in stove &amp;
refrig . and lots of ca~ts. Large family room with
fireplace: 3 Bedrooms, plenty of closets &amp; 2 1f:~ baths .
Total electric with central air. One acre land. located
in 5 Points area east of Rt. 7. Shown by appointment.

$45,000. .
.
·• i':&lt;\IDDLEPQRT - SPACIOUS HOME TO FIT YOUR
BUDGET. 3 Bedroom, lovely carpeted living room,
with sliding glass doors, family room with fireplace,

nice dining room, kitchen with lots of cabinets. All
remodeled inside &amp; out. Corner lot . Close to schools ' &amp;
shopping area. A "steal" at $21,500. Shown by
appointmPnt onlv .

MARTIN

We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands.
.

. BATHROOMS AND Kit chens
remodeled , ceramic tile , plum ·
bing , carpentry, and. general
maintenance. 13 yeors e)( perience. 992-3b85.
EXCAVATING,
BACKHOE.
trencher , low
boy , dozer
dump,
lru&lt;.~s . septic systems. Btll

Pullins . phone 992-2478 , doy o'
night .
APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY
featuring Ashleys and com ·
plete selection of cool , ga s,
wood Cifculating heaters .
Carpenter, (61-4) 698-719 1.

'

well!

no, please!

..

es

''
'

r

'

___

.

. ''

.'

~ ~

. -:.. .

I

. / ... ,/

:

1 Hamilton bill
5 Solidify
News 13.
6 FeebleMovie Channel 4 minded·
· s &amp; 9 P .M. - Burnt Offerings (PG)
7 &amp;11 P.M. - Starpacker (G)
.7 Pulpit
terday.'a Alllwer
Cable Channel 5 talk: abbr.
6:30P .M. - Testimony Time
· 'l3 Swear to
30 Philippine
8 Judas __
7:00- Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
24 Italian
ISland
9 Chinese
7:30- Coach:s Corner
city
31 Watered
delicacy:
8:00
- Movie: "Flying Deuces'"
Z5 Movie
fabric
2 wds. 1
9:30Consultation
32 "-Venner"
12 Annual
preview
10:00- 700 Club .
3i Costly
11 Dock
of sorts
35 Wallaba
19 Man's
26 Nursery
Wednesday, November 16
nicknam~
rhyme king 39 Criminal

v..

22 Peso

•r

r

Oswald and Jim Jacoby ·

1 WISH yOU
DIDN'T HAVE
rt:&gt; LEAVE.

..
.

Thursday 8 til noon

FRIDAY Til 5

room with fireplace, plenty of garden space, some fruit
tree's. large workshop and block cellar . City water and
septic tank . Nice country setting on County Rd. 28.

Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

••
•

50 D0-1 P.&gt;UTOUR

&amp;HOW I;::&gt; OPENING
UPOUTOFTOWN ...

TI-IIS~L.? B!: .All.·:._y ~~\
.
. .-1

BIG BREAK!

-

Nar REALLY; MOM. I HAVE
Y0,!; I; ILLY? AI&lt;'E TO GET llA'-K TO TI-lE CDAST
Yuu HOME 1D IN A FEW !7AY5 . I HAVE A
NEW PROJECT I'D LIKE
STAY?
.TO START ON!

AND HOW ABOUT

'

.
•..............•.......•.. :

•

RUTLAND FURNITURE

e

742·2211

,.

ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND

•
• '

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:

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n
~

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+

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~

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

~orth

10 4

East
Pass

South

Pass 3 •

2'
Pass t•

Pass

Pass

1•
Pass

B R U N
N BQ

CB
J P Zp

K

J K

U v "'

zp

sY\r&gt; F P

~

K

R p V V

,
VP T K

z.. N

ror 3 long time. He wondered

z K CP

P R K X U

!l K N

KV

PV
YD

U Y D PC Y 0 P.

ms

., l9'7i Kina Fraturrs Sv ndint•, Inc .

BARNEY

MAW!! WHAT

•

HAPPENT TO OUR
. SORRI{... WE'RE
CLOSED FOR
REMODELING!

'~

SCARED l{Ou
DIDN'T I ?

SCARECROW?

I LENT rt
TO SILAS,

PAW· ··

solved his
rose with

led a low trump to his ace
and cashed the jack of
trumps to find both opponents following suit nicely ,
Then he took two of
dummy's high spades. When
everyone followed he was
ready with a safety play . He
ruffed a low spade, got back
to dummy with the queen of
trumps, discarded a club
and diamond on the last. two
spades and led a club toward
his king.
West won with the ace and
the defendants scored two
more club tricks, but th&lt;

rubber bonus was safe in
South's pocket.

Opening lead - 2 t

CRYPTOQUOTES

v..

:
:

I
·- f

., ,973
•KJ963
•QJ 10

Wt"st

V C p y R A Z B I R ,
0.
H,
T P C p Z
terday's Cryptoquote: HE 'fl:I,AT BOASTS OF
·POTATO: THE BEST OF IUM IS
DESCENT IS LIKE THE
UNDERGROUND.-THOMAs OVERBURY

'
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·~ I

•

• 82
!·
• Q 10 7 2
• A 97
SOlTH
464
" AKJ

• K 8 43
North-South vulnerable

hints. Each day the C'ode letters are different.

YC

4.

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l

F.AST
• J9

used for the ,- three L·s, X for the two D's, etc. Single letters, By ·
&amp; James Jacoby
_apostrophes."'the length ahd formalion of the words are all
South studied the dummy

:

..n... .

WEST
• 10 8 7 2

• 84 .

Then South
problem. He

dummy's ace of diamonds,

• A5
• 6 52

Is

I

~

Price $15,900.

16

Equal

,

• . il :

•

play assures contract

"iORTH 101
•AKQ53
"Q 6 5

;

Mon., Tues .. Wed,
8:001115:00

..-+--+-~Safety

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

. ..'"
.. .

..• .

BRIDGE

One letter simply stands for another. ln this sample A la L..-c-----,------__J

~~~~IE-.~--------·
'
... AND WHO KNOWS ?

•

charge: sl.

28 Rust

·syUable

t3

,.

Rutland

"The Wrecklng Crew" 8 ; ABC News 33; Movie " AI

Capone" 10; 12:0Q-Janakl 33.
12:41)--Gulnness Book of World Records 6, 13; I :Do-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:31)--Mary Hartman 10; 2: ]I)-

3 Redolence

4Z Macaw

I

'

'

highlight

'

RUTLAND
FURNITURE '"

•••
•

.-

~

C.ll74l-2lll
TALl( TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

~ymbol

worth
movie
33 Silkwonn
34 Had lunch
35 Vintage
37 Deli item
39 Acclivity
10 Boring
tool
41 Opera

"
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•
'
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Installed with padding, _no
extra_.;....;,.
to pay.
.

2 Devotee

30 Rita Hay ..

Reg. 54.'1-not installed

Sioc:k·:

5 Rank;

~===~~~- :~~i~·
==

I

30 rolls of carpet in
Good selection all on sale.

I Patriotic

House:"

,

'4.88 sq. yd ..

DOWN

ACROSS
1 Motorist's
problem

23 Ensuing
26 Frizzy
27 Designate

~~:~.r:"r:;c.:.~.:" '"""·

12 and IS II. width Carpet _
rubber back.

News 20.

10: 31)--Lock Slack &amp; Barrel 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4.6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick Cavell 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Story 6,13; Movie

22 11 A -'s

,:-,.:

Candy Slrip
Rubber Back
Regular S6.9l
Save$4.118 Sq. Yd .

(Answers tomorrow)

21 Allow

~--~
- ~·~:.:
SAVE ON
.'
CARPETING

.

zo Craggy hill,.,.;.;..,...;...,._;,.,--

l

• •••••••••••••~"!"~~~~..- -....
Convenient Shopping Hours
'
"

EASTERN DISTRICT - 1'12 acres of level land . nice
12x64 all carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs, living
room, kitchen and bath , 2 rooms built on, niCe family

CALL JIMMY DEEM AT 94,:ma

ver~

~·

Answer 4es or

' i ..... l

Phone 992-2181

742-2211

heattng your home, outside lights, heating your water.
drying .your clothes, etc. We'll sell you your own gas
welL Not only that we'll throw in a good 1112 storv house
With 3 bedrooms and bath, nice dining room and full
base":lent, alsb over 50 acres of land with a large
beauttful pond stocked with fish . Call fOr "appointment.
Pr iced for quick sale at $37,500.00,

UPPER SYRACUSE -Good 2 bedroom house with

I knQw5 Mr. Muds lip

.' '
•

Pomeroy landmark ' '
IIJI. _Jack W. Carsev, Mgr. r+ ~ : .

Why worry about the high cost ot

bath . T_w o more small bedrooms could be finished
upstairs. Also garage, storage building, strawberry
patch and garden space. Driveway is electric heated.
Nice Ohio River view. Furniture can be bought extra.
Price for qu ick sale. House and lot, S12.600.

'

"'

Ail

I JrI I IX J

Jumbles : BUU.Y DOWDY SUBURB IMPAIR
-·•·
·-~from 10-.iP- "OPUS"
Answer: ...
rw~tg ht ..
_
m...-

station
10 Knowledge
11 Atomic or
solar
13 English
river
u Optical
illusion
15 Kind of
muffin
16 Fencing
dwnmy
17 Irish
rebel group
18 Wisconsin
city

1

Ex·

coveting , · septic - systems ,
dozer , backhoe. dump truck .
limf\!slone, grovel , bla ck top
paying. Rt. "143. PhOne 1 (614)
698-7331 .

0

Step Inside the split :..royer of this

AND

1.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

. WILL do · roofing , cons truction ,
plumbing and ·heating . No job
loQ la~ge or too small. Phone
742 -2348.

911112::3299

Aller Hours Call
092-7133
CO.NTACT:

CENTRAL REALTY CO

FREE GAS -

'

so4w. M.&gt;in

r-==--=:-:~:::;::~~-=;:;;;;;:;;;::::~
JUST LISTED -

SEWING MACH INE Repairs . !!&lt;er·
vice , all makes , 9'l2-2284 . The
Fabric
Shop . Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Sendee . We sharpen S&lt;.issors.

-- .
our ..~·

BABYSITTING IN my hOme near
Ve teren 's Mcmroiol Hospital.
99::t -5792

.• REMODELING . Plumbing . heating
and all types of general repa ir
Work guaranteed 20 years e)( ·
perience . Phone 992 -2409.

S6,700.
No.
200
Business
building, located on 1/1 acre
partlcal, street on three

etc.

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

1n

Tennyson? 33 .

7:31)--Hollywood Squares 3,4; S100,000 Name That
Tune6; S2S,OOO Pyram id 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
20.33; That' s Hollywood 10; Nashville on lhe Road
13; Marty Robbins Spotllghl IS.
.
8:oo-Superstunl 3,4,15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6. 13;,
Waltons 8,10; On&lt;e Upon a Classic 20,33.
8:31)--What's Happening 6,13 ; Best of Ernie Kovacs
20,33.
9:1)1)--Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii Five-0 8,10: Besl ~t
Families 20,33 .
9:3G-Carter Country 6, 13.
10 :0Q-Nell Diamond 3,4, 15; Redd Foxx 13; Countdown
to Michigan 6; Barnally Jones 8, 10; I. Claudius 33;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.'
''

PIANO TUNING · Lo ne Daniels_. ' '
New phone number , 992 -2581 _- ;
If no onswer , coll992· '1082 .
,,

3825.

story frame has more to
offer than you think , nicely
remodeled. 3- 4 Bdrms .,
modern kitchen,
fully
eft:.

-

Sweepers , toa5te rs, irons , all
small appliances. lawn mower ,
ne)(t to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985

WILL CARE for the elderly
home . Phone992 -73 1.&lt;il .

I

rI

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug geslea by 1he above cartoon.

~:

I

11 - 9 ~1fc

A DR'INI&lt; YOU MIGHT
iHINK 0~ WHEN
C::HOPPIN6 ONIION:5.

·1

$5,000.00 .
FREE GAS - 2 acres, 3-4
Bdrms., newer ranch type
country home, carpeting,
paneling, brick &amp; frame
construction ,
other

rJ
IWREABEb
"
I ()
1

r

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

!o

CARBIF

-

Chester, Ohio

Box 34 '

Gong Show 15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is. 8:
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4:31)--My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8,10; Little Rascals IS.
s:oo-Bonanza 3: My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5:3()--Qdd Couple 4: News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:0Q-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:31)--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7 :GO-Truth or Cons . 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6:
Gong Show 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gill.lgan's Is . IS; Coping With Kids 20; Anyone for

I KJ

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

s.n1rc

CARTER

CA~

1

,.'

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

Unscramble thes'e four Jumbles,
one letter to each square . to form
four ordinary words .

1\lH f..T BL'&gt;!:'

SlOP I'J1&lt;7H IIJ0
FOR WHAT '{C\J

1 HADA

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

RIM EN

Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3806

~b . l7Ul50

2l31 me.

'

LARRY LAVENDER

15; Divorce Court 8; M idday 13 .

12 :31)--Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp; lhe
Man 15 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 ,· E lee . Co. 33 .
1:oo-Gong Show 3: All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not for Women Only IS.
1:31)--Days of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Turns
8,1 0; 2:0Q-S2D.OQO Pyramid 6,13 .
2:31)--Doctors 3,4,1S: One Life lo Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8.10.
3:0Q-Another World 3,4, IS : Antiques 20.
, 3:15-General Hospital6,13 ; 3: 31)--AII In The Family
8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .

1}~\}Nl ~'\t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME ,.

~ ~ ~~ ®

. Residential
and
commercial.
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour service.

PARTS - lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
loodslillt, 0.

Jlol Tht lrnibttft

•,

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Automatic
Tram mission Service

992-2286 or 992·7630

WINDOWS
AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOFIITT
GUTTEIS.AWNINGS

10 18 I mo .

SWAIN

Superior

11 :31)--Johnny Carson 3,4; 15; Starsky &amp; Hulch 6, 13:
Hawaii Five'O 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie "Guri flght
at the O. K. Corral" ]0; 12 :01)--Janakl 33 .
12 :41)--Mystery of the Week 6,13 : Movie "Family
Flight" 8; 1 : 00-Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1 : 30 - Mciry

•

STOIM

-

6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; 6 : 51)--Good Morning,
Wesl VIrginia 13; 6 :55-;-Chuck While Reports 10;
Good Morning , Trl State 13.
7,0Q-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning Amer ica 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
10; ' 8:0Q-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10;
7:31)--Schoolles
Sesame 51 . 33 .
9 : OQ-Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6 ; Family Affair 8, 10.
9 :31)--Edge of Nlghl6; Andy Griffith 8; Price Is Right
10.
10 :01)--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Big Val ley 6; Pr ice Is
Righ t 8; M ike Douglas 13.
10 :31)--Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Joker's Wild 10.
11 :0Q-Wheel of Forlune 3,1S ; Happy Days 6, 13 ;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Match Game 8.10.
11 :31)--Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love of Lile
8,10; Sesame St. 20 ; Nova 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :oo-Newscenter 3; News 4,6.10; To Say The Least

10 : ~Big Hawaii 3,4, 15 ; Baretta

-......

ln11.1lllton Sel'fk:IS
fin1ntln1 Ati~iblt
Blown Into Walls ' AHits

, .

Sunrise Semester 10; 6 : 25--New World 10.
6 : 3()---0octors on Call4 ; News 0 ; Sunrise Semester 8;

20.

FREE ESTIMATES

·.

THURSDAY , NOVEMBER 17,1977
5,45-Farm Report 13: 5:So--PTL Club 13; 5:55-

Good T i mes 10 .
8 : 30-Busti ng loose 10.
9 :00--Charlle' s Angels 6, 13; Movie " From Noon till
Three " 8, 10; Great Performances 33; To Be A Man

.

,

. WINDOWS I DOORS

AI

CALL TODAY $37,300.00.
OLDER HOME - This 2

$17,500.
RUTLAND -

f'"Ut.ACII

lllllo l. ~-. 0.
Carpel a Uph01$tery
Phone Mike Youn1

RE~LTOR

frame on State Rt . 124.
Batt'! , natural gas furnace,
· city water, front pprch and

Alocal contractor
Phone 949·2801
or 949-2860

~
- ..

ITOYEI.lNO

Save30 pet. to 50 pet.

Bu5iness
Bldg .
at 605 W . Main St .,
Pomeroy , Ol'lio . Presently
occupied by
a
going
business . Bldg . has delu.e
apartmenl ·
overh.tad
bringing in good income .
P'riced on inspection only .
Can be seen any time from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m . Inquire at
605 w. Main St .• Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769 .

TEAFORD(B

SYRACUSE -

CUT IAON

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

Good

,.

Bissell Siding Co.

""
·"?'
'

llo'ICRF=

JIM KEESEE

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

'(

10- 20-lmo , ·

Blown Insulation

ACRE LOT w ith garage and
cellar . l ocat ed tn langsville
S6 500. Phone 742 ·2905 .

financ in g . This 3 year old
spacious ranch can be
yours for less than you
think . Many features, over
1 acre, close to Pomeroy .

VIRGIL B. TEAFOIID, &gt;R.
REALTOR
216 E, Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phont "2-3325

I

Wood Stoves

Upright Free1er
1225
1 Good Used Hotpoint

Holpoinl

~·

6 ,0Q-News 3.4.8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6 :31)--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8.10 : Over Easy 20 .
7:0Q-Tr u lh or Cons. 3; Cross Wils 4: Liars Club 6: Sha
Na Na 8: News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan' s
Is. 15; Daniel Foster, M .D . 20; Big Green Magazine
33.
7:3o--Funny Farm 3: Sha Na Na 4: Malch Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8: MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ; The
Judge10; In Search·ol13 ; Wild l(lngdom 15.
S:OQ-Hall ol Fame 3,4,15: Elghlls Enough 6,15: Julie
Andrews &amp; Robert Goulet i n Concert 8; Nova 20,33;

No Sundar C..lls Pltase

J&amp;L

and

S125

TrOid..,. ...,,"'-.....

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or
Phone 992 -7034. 10-19-1mo.

Hotpoint Refriger•'for
1 New 20 cubic: ft. Chest
Freezer
125.00 Discount
(1) Good Refrigerator Sl75

Used

the

Paul Gaudino Family Fitness

7,30 - Marshall University Football
10 !00 - 700-Ciub.

'

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding,
Slofm Windows &amp; lll$ul•
lion.
Call Professionals

NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

See us at 1100 East Milin

Save SSO .OO on .a new

Electrit Stove

to

the ..,....,

• Roof Coating
' .c-..
,• Tie -Downs
• Awnings - Carports
SMITH
• Insurance
Repairs

STORY 3 bedroom fram e
ho vse F.A . fur nace , storm wtn·
dows fi replace m M iddleport .
Phone 9'12-3-457 or W2-5667,

103 ACRE FARM 7 roo m house
and both . All mineral rights .
Tobo&lt;.co base More details on
requesl. 741 25-42 or write ..,.
Rolph McCune Rutalnd Ohio

•.,...,_,or
r-

J"

Under"l
· nnl· ng
t'

locat~d

home,

~ ---

..

Phone99l-l 181

1 Good
N.C.R. 299 Bookkeeping machine .
Maintena nce
&lt;..ont'ra ct
ovoiloble . Programmed to do.
Solei
Reporh ,
Accounts
Payable , Poyl-ofl . Gov•rnment
Reporb , W-2 forms and write
checks . Con be programmed to
do General Ledger and Ac counts Receivable . Contact·
Carol Wilkes at JO.c-2'5 -9391 "

LIKE·NEW Clarinet , case , begin·
ners books and stand . SIOO .
Phone [614)247-3471. ·

NOTICE

Ail.

Refrigerator

GROW EARTHWORMS lor profit .
Free Data · WORM WORLD ,
1810 S. Josephine, Den.... er , Col"·
or ado 80210 or call Mr . James
cOllect {303) 778-1026

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

COUNl"RY la rmiond w11h !&gt;eclud
ed woods water Ond good oc
cess 1n Monroe County . W. Vo
S I (X)() down call [304 ) 77'1·
3101 0( (30.. ) 77'2·3227

EXPERIENCED
Radlatorc::!::::.
H o m e· Service rmlm.l

7:00 -

WEDNESDAY , NOVEMBER 16 , 1977

'

Kingsbury
Home Sales

5 .&amp; 7 P .M . - The Fronl ( PGl
9&amp; 11 FI .M . - 1 Will, I Will For Now ( PG )
Cable Chonnel 5 6,30 P .M. - Testimony Time

VIEWING

'

SMALL form lor sole 10•. down
ownE:!t IH&gt;onc ed Monroe Coun
ty W 1/0 Phone (304) 772
3102or [304)772 3217

CALL US

Porn eroy Landmark
9,.- Jack W, Carsey . Mgr.

Business Services

NtW l, bedr oom hou:se 1 borhs
oil ~lee
I acre M +ddlepot!
clos e to Rutland Phone 992
7J8 1

2.

I Lancaster Chain Sa~ S7S

TROMBONE AND flute . Never
b&amp;-en used . 992 -7021 .

m a r e .

HO\,t:Sil ~S lor s.ol~ I oc• e o11d
up M iddlepor t near Rutlo r1d
Call 992-7481

softeners . model vc.svl.
Only 1279.95

HOMEWORKERS: $85 weekly od ·
dress ing, stuffing envelope\ .
Start
immediately . Oello!s .
ruih 25 1 and seff-oddrened
stomped envelope : Bestco.
3209 N.W. 75th Terroce. Dept .
C981 , Hol lywood , Fla. 33024 .

m .u c h .

FUR OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

New

667-6133 .

College· tuition free,
College
Level
Examination
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

CAMPER
Sb(X)
A li-a
horse
tra1le r $4 50 Phone (614 ) oQS
32'&gt;0

7 room house
plvs bathrooms , I up and 1 FIREWOOD. All red and wh 1te
down . Has all utilihes plus 10
oak $40 a &lt;.or d split and
acres oi ground. 5 mmutes to d'e hvered . 843-2933,
Pome r&gt;o y
$225
per mo .
;n.r..,.:r.:&gt;r=o
992 -5970 or 992·6270.
IVCCU A VVA ll:t'i

1969 FORO VAN , $100. NHds
work . Phone 992 -3462. after 6

FE

COAL ltnH~slone and colnum
chlor1de ond c;olctUm bnne lo1
dvs.f con trol and spc-c+of moxmg
soh for fQrmers hcelstal Soh
Wor .._ s , Mo on Str eet P o nu~ro~
Ohto or phone ~1 3891

KONOMV TRACTOR wt th all at
FOUR ROOM S and both Adults'to chments L1t..e new osJ..u1g
only No peh ~2 S908
57250 Phonv,(614 ) t~G18 - 32QO
COUNrRV MOBILE Home Pori. AP PL ES FHZPATRICf!i Orchar ds .
~ c ute 3J. north of Pomeroy
St ate
Aou te
689 . Ph o 11 ~
Large lots Call9'l2 -7479 .
Wdkesvtlle 669-3785
lncr ed1ble l Why pay h1gh efectnc
b oll s !~us w+nter? let vs poy .
WeAr!! Now
!hem l or you ! One bedroom
Taking New
lrorn $130 now ovmloble
Customers For
Vtll oge Manor Th 1r d and M ilt
Streets , M1ddlepor t. Teleph one
~2 7787
Equal Housmg Op·
partun1ty

N~Wl V REMODELED

111111 t'r h l.n

tl '

~OR

Hartman 10; 2 : l~News 13.
Movie Channel 4 -

TELEVISION

HE WANTS SOMEONE TO
DADE PLENTY?
ESCORT HIM 1U Da MILL'S
DON'T MAKE ME L.AUCi H,
STUDIO TO CHEO~ '"'~~~1.1 THE ONL'i ONE THE CiOV
DAOE PLENTY.
WOULD WANT
Da MILL's IS

v ·~ '·

,--------~---------------=------,· :. !

Hn.l E • tato for Salo

l:t \\ •••• l• •• lndt t

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov . l6, 1977
IU I

J

about how he could have
reached three notrump .
There were nine quick tricks
if spades failed to break ~nd
II if they did .
Ther-e would also be II
tricks at hearts if the spades
broke and maybe even 12 if
they didn '!. Bu~ South's
problem was to get 10 while
guarding against both a 4·2
spade break and a mis·
placed ace of clubs .

A New

Mexico reader
if there were
ever five-point scores possiwants to know

ble in contract.
The original scoring table
counted notrump at 35 points

a trick and it was some time
later that the current 40 for
the first· trick and 30 for

subs.e quent . tricks

was

adopted .
(NEWSPAPER ENTEIU'HISt: ASSN . I

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERfl4 , send Sf to: "Win at
Bridge," care of this newspaper. P.O. Box 489, Radio Ciry
Stalion, New York, N. Y. 10019)

�'

12 - The Oail~ Sent mel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday. Nov 16, 1977

Control Commission hears new tipple plans
jactllty proposed by Wtlliam
BY MINDY KEARNS
A second hearing by the l' Zuspan
Thts hearmg was attended
West Virgmia Air Pollution
Control CommiSSIO n wa s by a ma)Qnty of the Com·
roncluded for a proposed coal mtsston to hear thr reasons
loadmg facility ln Chflon for the denial, and to listen to
Tuesday evenmg al Wahama new plans. whtch have been
flied by Zuspan
Htgh School
The revtsed plans for the
The ftrst hearmg by the
Commtsston was held earlier factllty were submttted to the
this summer by Commtsston Huntmgton Dtstnet Corps of
Dtrector Carl Beard, who Anny Engmeers last "eek
dented the permtt for the under the corporate name.
Raven-Hockmg Coal
Reasons for the permit
demal as stated by Beard
mcluded

Fines levied
in three cases

Three defendants were
ftned and three forfetted
bonds m the court of Mtddleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday mght
Fmed were Benny R
Bryant , 32, umg Bottom, $25
and rosts, disorderly con·
duct , John D McCloud, 19,
Mtddleport, ~ and costs,
!allure to have vehtcle under
control. and Davtd F Han·
son, 22, Middleport, $50 and
costs, reckless operation

Forfeitmg bonds were
Tunothy L Hill, 20, Racme ,
$25, spmnmg tires, Ketth H
Petrte, 21, Middleport, $25, no

-- ---- -

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5 75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit
$1.000 00
Mmimum .
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.
A substant•al penalty •s

1nllolc cd on all cert1hcate
act:ount'ii Withdrawn pr.or

to the date of matuntv

Meigs Co. Branch

-@
The Athen s County

Sav1ngs &amp; Loan Co
1V6 Second St
Pomerov. Oh•o

· The permit application
spectfted that a pnvate
ratlroad road crossmg wtU be
constructed and used. The
applicant has not provtded
evtdence that the Chesapeake
and Ohto Ratlroad wtll agree
to, and construct. thts
crossmg. In the absence of
such new crossmg, trucks
haulmg coal would have to

Notices, local briefs
The 1977 sports banquet
wtli ~held Saturday, Nov 19
at 6·30 p m at Eastern Htgh
School
Speaker wtll be Jerry
Kellcan, head football coach
at Jameswood Htgh School,
Wmchester. Va
_
Advance tickets are now on

sale at the htgh school or
from any football or
volleyball
player
or
cheerleader Ttckets are $1 :;o
for adults and $1 for students

operator's license, and Allen

L Dodson, 19, Mtddleport,
$32, speedmg.

"Applicant refuses to take
measures to control loss of
coal dust durmg coal trans·
port , creatmg a new uncontrolled dust problem

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Pollee Chtef Milton Vartan
said today he has been
recetvmg romplamts of junk
motor vehtcles on village
streets and private property.
He warned thiS IS m vtolation
of vtllage ordmance 210 which
carTtes a maxunum fine of
1100 for the first offense.
All vtolators of thiS ordinance are advised that
court proceedmgs wtll ~
started agamst them unless
corrected by Dec I.
There wtll be a round and

to thetr homes by tllness
Names of such semor cthzens
are needed at the center by
Monday. Persons wtshmg to
submtt names are asked to
call 992-7886 Also any group
wtshmg
to co ntribut e
somethmg for the dirmers ts
asked to contact the center
Robert Hawley, former
Pomeroy Vtllage meter
patrolman, who had major
surgery 1n Columbus several
months ago, has been
returned to Rtverstde
Hospttal , Columbus, for
further treatment and
posst bly additional surgery
Frtends may send cards to
Room 514.
RACINE - The Southern
Local School Dtstnct Board
of EducatiOn will meet at 7:30
p m. Thursday at the high
school.
'

SPECIAL

i

Haines, Parkersburg, who
cared for her durtng her last
Illness
Funeral servtces w111 be
Thursday at 1 p m at the
White Funeral Home 1n
Coolv1lle w1th the Rev Frank
Turnbull off 1c1atmg Bunal
will be In Newbury Cemetery
The fa moly requested that on
heu of flowers donattons be
made to the Heart Fund

Friends may call at the

IRENE TALBOTT CROSS
Mrs Irene Talbott Cross,

85, Moddleport, doed Tuesday

evenmg at the O'Bieness
Memorial Hospttal •n Athens

after a

~rlef

ollness following

surgery to correct a frac

lured hop

Mrs. Cross had been
res tdmg at the Kimes Convalescent Center for the past
two years.
She was born on Aug 15,
1892 on Middleport, a
daughter of the late B E and
Ellza~th

Whole Talbott She

was also preceded In death by

her husband. Harry M. Cross
in 1973, and a SISter, MISS

Florlnel Talbott In 1970

Mrs Cross was a member

of the Middleport Forst
Baptist Church where she
was a cho.r member, a

member of the Sanborn
M1ss1onary Society, and the

Busy Bee Sunday School

She was a charter
member of the Ladtes
Auxtllary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion,
and recently received her 50·
year pin from Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
class

Star

She IS surv1ved by several
local retatll1es rnc ludrng a

nephew, Paul Smarl. Mid

dleport , two cousins, Judson

White, Middleport, and Dan
Whole, Middleport, and

several
relatives .

out .o f.county

Funeral services wtll be

held at 2 p m Thursday at the
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
Home with the Rev Peter

Kitche.nAiid~

DISHWASHER SPECIAL
This Is A Portable or Can Be
Built In Later ONLY '

SPECIAL

'39995

INGLES FURNITURE
106 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDlEPORT, 0.

causmg

unac-

ceptable
fugtuve
dust
problems
"Truck traffic usmg un·
paved haul roads tn the
proposed faclltty wtll ron·
tnbute to a stgntficant
fugitive dust atr pollutiOn
problem.
"Engmeering Judgement
tndtcates thts type of truckdump control methodology to
~ subJect to severe mam·
tenance problems and would
probably result 1n mabtlity to
control dust emtssions from
coal unloading "
Under Zuspan's revised

plans there w1ll ~ no change
tn the proposed rtver portion
of the factllty.
The apphcant proposed to
construct a coal loadmg
facthty, cons1shng of Silt

weed pile clusters, three steel
trtpods, and a steel structure
to support the walkway and
an enclosed conveyor, Thts
portion will be constructed m
the waterway and wtll ••tend
riverward a ma:umwn of 35
feet.
In addition, Zuspan plans to
construct a concrete Silo on
the bank to ~ used for a coal
storage and dust control
Zuspan stated at the hearmg
the stlo will ~ completely
atr·tlght The crusher will ~
located ms1de the stlo and
coal wtll be moved b)' an
enclosed conveyor from the

Grandal officiating Bunal
wtll be In Mlddlepo!'t Holl

Cemetery Friends may call
at the funeral home from7 to 9
ttus eventng

JAY HALL SR
CHESHIRE - Jay Hall,
Sr, Cheshire, died Wed
nesday morning at St Mary's

Hospital In Huntington, W
V• The Ewing Funeral

Home In Pomeroy Is makmg
arrangements

Gllla A
Mooney , 80,
formerly of 1421 Eastern
Ave, Galltpohs, dted at 3
a m Tuesday 1n Lawrence
County Hosp1tal. She had
been m fatlmg health tor tWo
years
I

Born Aug

1

10, 1897, on

In closmg, Zuspan stated
that ooal would ~ loaded
3,000 feel from the nearest
restdent onto the conveyor
~It and hts access road
across the ratlroad would ~
surfaced wtthm the ftrst few
months the facthty ts m
The Commtsston dectded
Tuesday evemng to request
that Zuspan submit a second
revised application wtth
structural and engtneering
details At that tune the
Commtsston said it "as to
dectde whether to uphold the
decisiOn of Beard or accept
the appllcatton permtt.

Aid runs made
Three runs were made by
the Mtddleport Emergency
Squad At 10:33 am Tuesday
the squad went to 221 North
Ftfth Ave. for Florence
Hannay who was taken to
Veterans Memortal Hosptlal
where she was admitted.
At 7:42 p.m, the squad
went to Railroad St for
Charles Boyles who had an
eye mjury He was taken to
Holzer Medtcal Center. At
12·04 am Wednesday, the
squad went to 795 S. Thtrd
Ave , for Mrs Davtd Ross.
Jr . who was taken to Holzer
Med1cal Center.

advance to

LETART FALLS - A
Halloween party was held at
the Letart Falls Community
Hall wtth !30 children at·
tendtng.
The party was sponsored
by Ohto Valley Grange 2612
Letart Falls wtth co-sponsors
Mrs. Ethel
Hart
of
Burlingham Camp 7230
Dtstrtct Representative of
Modern
Woodmen
of
America.
Prizes were donated by the
Modem Woodmen and the
Grange. Winners were age up
to SIX years, most ortglnal
was Larry Laudermtlt;
pretttest, Robtn Manuel,;
most comical, Heath Hill.
Over SIX years. prettiest,
Carnl9!Brien ; most comical,
Mtke Babies; most ortgmal,
Wendy Ransom Others
Winning pr\7P., wPrP Jan

regional meet

i

••=
••

AtTests total

•

33 in October •~

Thlrty-thre&lt;! alTes\B weri
made by the Mlddlepoil
Pollee Department durin~
October according to ~
monthly report of Polict
Chief J J Cremeans.
•
Of the total arrests 10 wer4
for speedlnl! and there were
three each for drivlnl! whil~
mtox1cated and disturbinl
the peace and two each lo~
failure to yield the right oC
way and spltming tires an¢
one each lor drivlnl! under
suspension.
reekies t
operation, hit-skip, passing m;
a no-pa!Bing zone, wrong waY:
on a one-way street, passmg:
on a yellow llne, auautt anct'
battery and telephone:
harassment. Two cues were":
transleJTed to county courC
and three cases were dro ~
ped.
•
The police ctuiser wu:
driven 4,877 miles during thr'
months and parking meter
collections totaled $787.50

ups:
can:

to:

ELBERFELD$

SNORKEL
PARKA

Myrta

Walters Smith.
She was a lifelong restdent

of Gallia Cou~ty and was a
member of the St Louis

L

" The" parka to be

Calholoc Church.

Trlebel. with whom she
resided and Mrs Merle
(Gertrude) Chase, Marion,
Ohio. Two nieces survive

Mrs William (Francis)
Beckey, Dayton and Mrs
Charles (Huldal Leedom ,
Marion One sister preceded
her In death .
be

held 10 a m Friday at the 51
Louos Catholic Church with
Rev A J Golublewskl ot
flclaflng. Burial will follow In

p, ne Street Cem eterr,.
Friends may call rom 2·4

and 7-9 p.m. Thursday at the
Cremeens Funeral Home

Rosary will be In the chapel

of the funeral home at 7 p m
on Thursday

'MlLVERINE '
8" DURABLES BOOT
• Tan muslang cowhide
leather
• Water and slam restslant

• Cushton tnsole and sleel
shank arch support
03388
• Non·shp, Otl prool sole
.
and heel
We have a complete selection of
waterproof and insulated boots.

HARllEY'S SHOES, INC.
Mtddle of Upper Block
Pomeroy, 0.

A constitutional amendment would set up a basic
education !WJd conststing of revenues from real estate
taxes on commeretal and mdustrtal property, tangible
personal property taxes on ut1lllles, state lottery funds,
and 95 per cent of the corporation and personal income
ta•es.
"I have been worktng on thts proposal since March of
thts year, because I am convmced that Ohioans have
had it with the present system of ftmding public
educatton whtch relies heaVIly on property taxes," satd
Johnson
''ThiS package will be self-execUtmg if the voters

'•:

become:

She 1s surv1ved by two
s1sters
Mrs
lydia K

and personal income taxes.
Rep. John E Johnson, ~JTvtlle, unveiled the
proposal at a news conference Wednesday.
He S8ld his plan would boost corporate and personal
mcome taxes but repeal the tangible personal property
tax on business and mdustry, and reduce real estate

Wolfe, Dma Sll,uler, Kevin
Whtte. Joe Pierce, Domlti
Manuel, Tina HUI, Damy
Thoma, Norma Jarrell,
Candy Milliron, Herbie Rose
Andrew Rose.
Refreshments of hot dogs,
cup cakes and Kool-Ald wert
served and each child ,..,.
given a treat.
=

Hospital News

and

tax revenues and more l.'Orpurate taxes, lottery money

taxes

Religious heritage

James

approve 1t. Because It IS a const1tuuona1 amenament,
every voter wtll have the opportumty to vote on it Once
11 is m place , 1! wtll run wtthout legiSiattve mterference. "
Johnson satd the plan would ratse average support
for elementary and secondary educatioro from $1 ,185
per pupil to $1,700 m 1979-110, the startmg date.
Under the proposal, 25 unvoted mtlls of real estate
tax would be levted, wtth IS rrulls earmarked for
education and the rest for local government.
Corporate franchise tax rates would go from 4 to 5
percent on small corporations and from 8 to 10 percent
on those earnmg more than $25,000 a year.
Personal mcome tax rates would go from a
graduated one-llalf to 3'h pet. to a graduated I to 10
per cent for mdivtduals earmng more than $45,000.
"My proposal restructures the tax system so that
property taxes are reduced," S8ld Johnson. "It wtll
produce enough revenue to provide every child with a
baste educational opportuntty. It wtll unprove funding
of local government and improve the economiC clunate
of Ute state."

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A state legtslator from Wayne
County has proposed a comprehensive new plan to
fmance basic education m Ohio, usmg fewer real estate

Grange holds children 's·party

Tighter

late

plan to pay for improved schools in Ohio

operahon .

Three are fined

Nine drivers

'

(Continued from PAl• I)
plant in Clennont County and a fl75 million expansion to flo
Ford Plant m Br\)Ok Park, near Cleveland.
The newspapers quoted a source who said, however, that
Ford IS closely watclling what the Ohlo General Assembly wW
do with legislation that would provide tax incentives to
industry that builds new factlities in Ohlo. That legislation is
up for constderation this week The course said if the
Iegistattoo passes, Ford may make an annpUncemenl within
two weeks.

Fmed m the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
PLEASANT VALLEY
property to the Silo.
Andrews Tuesday ntght were
DISCHARGES - Charles
Zuspan stated he will ~
Rtchard Frtley, Pomeroy, $50 Slater, Pt. Pleasant; Crystal
both stnp and deep mtnmg
and costs. lnto•icatlon; Mark Blake, Hartford; Howard
land adjacent to the fac1hty,
Clark, Mtddleport. $25(1 and Roush, Racme; Charles Neal,
which ts owned by h1m, and
costs. reckless operatiOn,; Apple Grove , Troy Stewart,
Roy Boggs, Mtddleport. $50 Letart: Mrs. Gilbert Martin,
and costs, mtoxtcatton, and Buffalo; Mrs. Ronald Kin·
Nelson Benedtct, WaJTen $100 and costs. makmg a false naird, Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs.
DaMy Roush, Letart; Betty
Local, Ro~rt Boyce, WaJTen statement
Leonard, Pt. Pleasant;
bonds
1n the
Forfetlmg
Local,
Greta
Wtlson,
WaJTen
I
Local, Charleton Brown, court were Rtchard Oatley, Timmy Chapman, Lesage;
Manetta Ctty, Judy Kennard, Mtddleport, $50 fatlmg to Henry Chapman, Lesage;
Lawrence County to Ansel Logan Ctty, Donna Dantels. comply with an officer and Charles Adkins, Crown City,
and Laura Atk1son Whtte, she Metgs Local, Gary L Hedges, $50, flct1hous plates, Steven 0.; Mrs. Claude Thornton,
marrted Charles Mooney
Leon ; Russell Ptckens,
Aug 12, 1923, m Hunf tngton, Logan Ctty, Patrtcta Allen , Koch, Rutland, $25. speedmg;
Dunbar; Stanley Blake, New
and he preceded her m death New Lexmgton Ctty, and James Ferguson. Pomeroy.
Feb 19, 1972
Mary Bowman, Warren speeding,
$37:
Cecil Haven; Mrs George John·
She 1s surv1ved by a step·
Maynard,
Ractne,
$250, son, Pt. Pleasant, Mrs. Jack
Local,
have
been
named
son, Monroe Hall, Crown Ct
wtnners
1n
the
local
Area
8
reckless
operatiOn,
and Smtih, West Columbta;
ty A stepdaughter, Mildred
TAKEN TO VMH
Eads, preceded her m dea th
Potnt Rtchard Roush, New Haven,
School
Bus
Dnvers Ttmothy Smtth,
She Is also surv1ved by a Evaluation event held at
Phyllis
Stone, E. Second
John HaJTah, Mason; Mrs.
Pleasant, ~ . speedtng.
s1ster and a brother, Mrs Hockmg Techmcal College
St.,
was
taken
to Veterans
Ro~rt Huff, Patrtot, 0.;
Mar~e
Workman, Athalia
Hospital
at 7:16
Memorial
Mrs.
Roger
Cromlish,
and Chauncey Wh1te, At Saturday, Nov. 12
a
.m.
Wednesday
by
the
water
Galltpolis, 0., and Robert
These drtvsrs will now
She attended the Church of advance to the regional event
Pomeroy Emergency squad.
rContinued (rom page 1) Hatfteld, Leon.
Chr•st 10 Chnst•an Un1on on m the sprmg. Wmners of the
supporters of the shah.
Eastern Ave , Gallipolis
regwnal
meet
wtll
vte
for
the
carter and the shah were
Funeral servtces w111 be
held at 1 p m Thursday at the state championship honors in
virtually tgnormg the demonWaugh Hallev·Wood Funeral May.
strations and Tuesday f&lt;rged
Home, the Rev Jack Ftn
fresh promises of frtendship
Warren
Local
School
ntcum offictatmg, and bunal
distnct
recetved
the
team
between the ml nch nation
wtll be +n the Btg Four Church
(Continued from paae .1)
Cemetery
trophy Logan City was and its chief arms supplier. movement among both Protestants and Catholics to the In-;
Fr1ends mav call 6 9 p m
"Oile thing I can say about
second and Metgs Local
today at the funeral home
th1rd
the shah of !ran, he certainly dians.
The long, bitter struggle over slavery disrupted every area'
Thirty drtvers parttctpated knows how to draw a crowd," of Amertcan life including religion. By 1845 the nation's'
BESSIE MUSSER
m the event from Athens, Carter quipped at a fcrmal largest Protestant denominatiom-the Baptists, MethodistS
Funeral servrces for Bessre Hockmg, Metgs. Perry and
White House banquet for the
Musser, 93, Rt 1, Rutland,
and his wile Tuesday and Presbytenans-had split into northern and southern dlvl·
shah
Washmgton
counties
who d ied
Tuesday
at
sions. To the north, slavery was evil but In the liOUth it found
night
Veterans Memorlat Hospital
woll be held Thursday at I
Pollee lines at the Whtte ample support tn the pulpits, clergymen arguing tbttt slavery
p m at the Harrisonville
House were noticably larger had scrtptural sanction because the Bible did not forbid it.
Presbyterian Church wtth the
Once the war ~gan each stde claimed God's guidance.
today and, a mile away, snow
Rev Er:nest Stnckland of.
Abraham
Lincoln satd, "tt is possible that God's ]li1J'JlOile Is
flclatlng Burial will ~ In Veterans Memorial Hospital fences were erected on the something different from the purpose of either party."
Wells Cemetery
ADMITTED - George Capttol grounds where
Tbe wounda of the war healed slowly and some denomlna·
Fnends may call at the
demonstators began
B1gony Jordan Fun.eral Foss, Mtddleport; Florence
tions
have never united ~ir northern and southern branHome 10 Albany after 2 p m
Hannay, Mtddleport; Marvm gathermg late this mornmg ches.
for the shah's arrtval at mtd·
today
Darst, Pomeroy
In the penod after the Civil War the churches faced many
Mrs Musser was the
DISCHARGED - Linda afternoon.
mtellectual
challenges because of the growth of science,
daughter of late Jerlmiah
The lll'st van loads of antiand Amanda Douglas Got Lute, Mary Btssell, Pamela shah demonstrators arnved culture and philosophy. Then the struggle between funschall She was also preceded Lawrence,
Evelyn Me·
damentalism and modernism threatened the unity of many
In death by her husl'and, Caskey, George Ross, Foster at Lafayette Square at 7:30 denonunattons m the early part of the 20th Century(as it conHarley, one Infant daughter,
a.m., almost sunultaneously
Frances Jean , a brother, Leap, Ruby Leap.
wtth a busload of helmeted tinues to threaten tteven today).
Begmnmg m the 1870s spellbinding evangelist Dwight r....;:
Glenn Gotschall; one stster,
pollee.
Cathenne Rickey, and a step
Moody
stumped the cities and caused thoUsands to
Several police cars,
sister, Lena Chase
Holzer
Medical
Ceater
converted.
Later there was BWy Sunday who beld numerous •
She was a member of the
includmg an open Cadillac
(Discharges
Nov.l51
revtvals
1n
many mties. There have been many evangelists, :
HarriSOnville
Presbyterian
wtth agents standing on the
Connie Barnett, James seats foc a vantage pomt but the ~st knownis Billy Graham who, perhaps cause of:
Churth, Albany Order of
Eastern Star No 558, she had Blazer, Virgtnta Burdette,
•
from which to observe tbe teleVIsion, has reached more people than any other.
been a~ member of the Della
Dttty,
Cynthia crowd, preceded the shah's
Thus,
we
see
mterest
In
religion
has
had
Its
cycles
of
Eastern Stars for SO years,
and downs through the years of American history. Never-:
charter
member
of Drummond, Ollie Elliott, . limousine into the parkmg lot
Harrisonville Grange 1734, Della Henry, Deborah HUI, between the Old Executive the less, religious faith has retn81lled a vital part Amen
Golden Sheath member of the Pauline Hollburg, Roseanna
life
•
Grange, member of the Hughes, Wesley Jackson, Offtce Building and the White
We
must
hold
last
to
that
faith
even
though
It
oftentimes
:
House today.
Grange for 66 years, and past
Johnson, Mark
state deputy matron of Meigs Eugina
A group of shah supporters seems as if evil is so prevalent. We know that God ultimately •
Jackson, Peggy King, Nora cheered as his motorcade wtll triumph over all sin and wu:eligiousness.
,:
County Grange 12 years
She IS SUfi/IVed by a SISter, Lawson,
Mrs . Mtchael passed by them along
"Righteousness ewteth a nation but sin is a reproach
Oleva Cottroll, Middleport. a Ltevmg and son, Willa Miller,
•
Pennsylvania Avenue But any people "(Proverbs, Chap.l4:34)
n1ece , Mrs Robert ( Bessie)
••
Kong , Moddleport; five Damse Mitchell, Ltddle the supporters were located a
N1chols,
Ho~rta
Roach,
Kurt
nephews, Ivan and Owen
block and a half up the
Cottrill, Columbus, Raymond Rutz,
Patncta Shafer,
and Oon Cottrill, Harrison Rachael Smtih, Barbara avenue from the antt-&lt;Shah
demonstrators, who were
ville, and Paul Cottnll ,
Steinbeck, Mrs. Harry restricted to one half of
Albany
Ideal Christmas Gift
Stewart , and daughter, Lafayette Square.
Charles Wolfe.
The shah was continuing
AMY SMITH
Versatile!
(Births Nov. 15)
meetmgs w1th Carter after a
Miss Amy Francis Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert morning dtscussion with
77, a resodent of 930 First
Ave , died at 9. JO p.m. Adkins, a son , Jackson; Mr. Energy Secretary James
Tuesday tn Holzer Medical and Mrs Terry Napper, a
Center following a short daughter, Hamden; Mr. and Schlesinger. The !raman
leader
planned
an
Illness
She was born Sept. 15, 1900, Mrs. Harold Russell, a appearance on Capitol Hill
Insulated
In Galllpolos, daughter of the daughter, Bidwell
later in the day.

Funeral services w•ll

' Gl LLA A. MOONEY

the ooal w11l ~ taken to the
facility by a conveyor belt
Thts IS a great change ove r
on gmal plans to brmg coal by
tru ! ks from Hoc ktn g. 0 .
Ehnunallon of the trucks in
the transportation of the coal
Will stop much of the dust
The enclosed conveyor ~It
wtll ••tend from the crusher
mstde the silo to a telescopiC
chute over the barges moored
at the factlity
Zuspan has now applted to
the Chesste System for a
prtvate crossmg on state Rt
62 The crosstng IS proposed
about 180 feet downstream
from the public crossing now
~mg used at the upper end of
the stte.
It was stated by Zuspan
that dtrl roads now tn
exttence m Chiton would not
~used by htm, other than for
him and hts employees to
travel to the coal stte. Zuspan
has already recetved a
pernut to stnp the land,
which he owns adjacent to the
factltty. He estunated that 650
acres of the 1,000 owned by
h1m contams Pittsburgh
Nwn~r Etght coal.
The Commtsswn stressed
to Zuspan that tf at any tune
he dectdes to brmg coal to the
fa c1hty by truck from Ohto,
another apphcatton would
have to ~ subnutted

mine on the applicant's

Area Deaths

funeral home any t1rne

'

thereby

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

square dance at the Semor I
Cttlzens Center Fnday, Nov.
18 from 8 30 to II 30 Mustc
MRS EMMA BLISS
by the Strmgdusters The
LITTLE HOCKING - Mrs
dance IS open to the pubUc. Emma Bl•ss, 75, ot Route l,
Lottie Hocking, doed suddenly
Tuesday morn1ng at Camden
Rita L Smith, Langsville, Clark Hosp1tal m Parkers
has ftled sutl for divorce from burg ,
Mrs Bliss was born 1n
LatTy A Smtth, Ashland The
Waterford,
Ohio,
the
Ohto Valley Bank Co, daughter
of the late L B. and
Gallipolis, filed suit in the Hattie Rowland Angle She
amount of $1.238.98 agamst was also preceded in death by
Edtth M Woolard, Pomeroy. her husband, Dallas '" 1974,
two SISters and one brother
She was a member of the
The stall of the Meigs Presby1enan Church and has
County Sentor C1t11ens Center lived m the Little Hocking
1n
Pomeroy wtth con· area for tt1e past 15 years
Survivors 1nclude one
tributwns from the Chester nephew,
Robert l Ba•ley of
Young Wtves Club agam will Clmton, Pa. , three nieces,
be preparing Thanksgiving Mrs. Bonnte J Penn of
dinners for sentor ctttzens Wintersville, Ohio : Mrs
Miller of Allquoppa,
who are shut in and confined Oalene
Pa , and Mrs Alberta M

~f&amp;«ll~~~OOtiJ)

use the extstmg ratlroad road

Real estate would. benefit in proposed

News •• in Briefs
.

In! With fur trim zip

hood. mulll-pockols,
sizes 38 to 46.

Be sore to sto all tho olhor
styles - Men's Jackoll waist length and car coat
lentfhl, Sal oct youn now.

Mens and Boys

Dept.-1st floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'
• I

•

.

POMEROY MAYOR CLARENCE ANDREWS,
Charles Kurfess, Republican candidate for governor of
Ohto, and attorney Bernard Fultz, (l·r), chat at a
breakfast hosted by Fultz Thursday mormng at the Metgs
Inn. Kurfess asked local ctvtc and poht1cal leaders for
support m hts campatgn and for mput on how to tmprove
government The candtdate, mtnortty leader m the House
of Representatives, and tts former speaker, discussed

•

at y

problems In the schools, mcludtng quality ot tnstructwn
and real estate ta•es, parttcularly House Btll 920 whtch
requires m Meigs Cotmty that real estate valdes be
mcreased. Attendmg were Mr and Mrs Horace Karr,
Edison Hubstetter, George Collins, Howard Frank, Paul
Smart Rich Jones, Larry Spencer, B11l Childs, Clarence
Andre;.s, Dorothy Johnston, Barbara Knight, Maxine
Goeglein, Joyce Quillen, Eleanor Werry and DaVId
Herdman .

en tine
Arabs' unity opposing Israel cracked
e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. November 17. 1977

l _____________________

CAIRO, Egypt ( UPII - Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat today lurmally
accepled Israeli Premier Menahem
Begbt's Invitation to address the Israeli
Parliament and Begin said Sadat would
arrive In Jerusalem this Saturday.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahml promptly resigned In protest,
Sadat flew to Damascus Wed·
neadey lor day-long talks with Syrian
President Halez Assad but "as unable
to wbt the approval of his closes! ally
for the visit that will be unprecedented
in the history of Arab-Israeli relalloas.
Assad said he was deeply hurt but
Sadat said he would go through with bls
historic visit anyway.
''•

..

By SALWA USTUWANI
DAMASCUS, Syrta (UP!) - Egypt's
PreSident Anwar Sadat satd today he wtll
go on his htstoric vtstt to Israel despite
opposttlon from Syrtan Prestdent Hafez
Assad who sa1d the plan "deeply hurt me "
The disagreement ~tween the two most
unp)rtant "confrontatwn states" facing
Israel left open the extent to which Sadat's
tnp could sow dissension in Arab ranks
"I am go mg. I always mean what I say,"
Sadat told a Damascus news conference.
Assad did not attend the conference,
although he later saw Sadat off at
Damascus Blrport
"Thts tune we ended our meeting m
dlsagreement, unhke on previous
occastons," Assad told reporters followmg
Sadat 's departure to Call'o.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 152

. _,

• There Sadat will find a formal invttatlon
from Prune Mimster Menahem Begm to
VISit Israel - perhaps as early as next
week.
"Sadat's plan to vtstt Israel deeply hurt
me, because I was unable to convmce hun
of the dangers and far reachmg
repercussions for the Arab cause and Arab
nat1on," he srud
Sadat dtsmissed suggestiOns Assad's
opposttton spelled a new rtf! between
Egypt and Syria "Arab solidarity wtll not
gtve m to analyses and defeattst
reactions," he smd.
"Although we dtsagreed on tacttcs, we
will not disagree on strategy," he satd.
But when asked about this, Assad
countered, 11 1t ts not easy to separate
~tween strategy and tactic."
Damascus diplomats sat~ !Wrta feared

Sadat's VISit could foreshadow a separate
peace accord ~tween Israel and the Arab
world's most powerful and populous state,
weakening the bargamtng posttton of Syria
and rest of the Arabs.
Assad admttted that with Sadat's visit,
" We are now in a completely dtfferent
sttuatlon and tt ts 1mposstble to say what
the effects of thts move wtll be on the
future ptcture ''

Sadat, asked tf a military confrontation
was mevitable should the ' v1s1t prove a
fatlure, replied, "No, a milttary solution
will not be the definite outcome tn case the
VISit fatls."
The planned visit has caused a sensatiOn
tn the Arab world, smce Sadat will be the
ftrst Arab leader to VISit Israel smce the
Jewtsh state was founded in 1948

But surprtsingly, there has been little
outrtght crtttclSlll of the move except the
predictable tongue-lashings from such
hardline "reJectionist" countries such as
Iraq and Libya
Sadat may have gotten some unexpected
support from Palestme Ltberatton
Orgamzation chatnnan Vasser Arafat.
In an mterVIew p11bbshed today m the
lelhst Beirut datly AI Liwahed, Arafat satd
, he and Sadat "are m full agreement on all
subjects,'' although no spectfic reference
was made to the planned VISit
Sadat once agam descrtbed hts plaiUied
trip as a "sacred misston." He said he

dectded on the move after returnmg Nov 3
from a tour of Romama, Iran and Saudi
Arabta. "All durmg the tr1p 11 was cooking
m my mmd," he said

Oil price may (N;;:':~7:i~ Crooked trio cheated woman
hold at $14.50
'

&gt;=·

By JOHN F. BARTON
WASHINGTON (UP! )
The shah of Iran wound up a
rtot-marred state vtstt
Wednesday mght wtth a
promtse to Americans that he
will try "to gtve you a break"
on oil pnces next month
The shah, who wants to buy
140 sophisticated U.S. jet
ftghters, told a news
conference before he left for
France that he will press
other oil producing nations
notto ratse theprtce at a Dec.
20 meeting in Caracas
"We were neutral" on a
price hike prior to meetings
Tuesday and Wednesday with
Prestdent Carter. satd the

shah , who was dogged by
sometunes-vtolent protests
by young Iranians here
"But after perusmg the
world economic situation, we
dectded to come to the
conclusion to gtve you a
break."
If Iran, Saudt Arabta and II
other OPEC countrtes agree
to hold down the pnce of otl, it
would ~ a major victory for
Carter, who has pressed hard
to keep the ltd on. The current
world prtce ts $14.50 a barrel.
The shah flew to Orly
Atrport near Parts. He
scheduled meetmgs today
and Frtday with President
Valery Giscard d'Estamg.

•

ByUoltedPresalntemational
COLUMBUS - SUPPORTERS AND FRIENDS of Gov.
James A Rhodes Wednesday night kicked in about $400,000 for
some speeches, cauliflower, frutt p~~nch and a song by Miss
Amertca at a rally for Rhodes at the state fall'grounds. Rhodes
did not aMounce his candidacy lor a fourth term as governor
but mstead stressed his traditional theme of more •:obs for
Ohio
One of the rally organtzers estunated 4,000 persons
attended at $100 a ticket Sosan Ann Perktns, a former
Republican legtslattve atde and the present Miss America,
sang one song Breaded cauliflower and frwt punch were the
only refreshments served.

WASffiNGTON - INCREASED CHARGES by middlemen
and htgher costs for unports wtll boost food pnces for
Amertcan conswners as much as 6 percent in 1978, the
Agrtculture Department satd today.
And for the second year m a row, consumers wtll pay more
to get the food from the fteld to the grocery store than they pay
the farmer to grow it. Kenneth Farrell, head of the agency's
Econumtc Research SerVIce, satd fanners would- see ltttie
~neflt from the price Increases, recetving the same $56 brllion
for leedmg Amertca they have recetved each of the past five
years

THE SMOKING LAMP IS OUT. A 24-bour tobacco break,
voluntary of course, began today for an estunated 5 mliUon
Americans That's the num~r of people the Amertcan Cancer
Soc1ety predicted would put puffing astde lor the annual coastto-coast ''Great American Smoke-Out.' '
Events of the day ranged from "the world's largest
ashtray" for depositmg cigarettes - not butts - at San
Franctsco's Union Square to bonftres In DetrOit. Purpose of the
send results to Metiers.
campatgn, supported by federal health agenctes, ts to focus
A constttutional amend- national attentio11 on the health hazards of tobacco and to
ment, introduced by Bob encourage at least some of the natiOn's 54 mtllion smokers to
Shamp, Athens Htgh School kick the habit.
prmctpal, wtll ~ constdered
at the nelrt league meeting,
WASHINGTON - THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT
March I at Jackson High charged Wednesday that a truckers' assoctation has conspired
School. It would change the since the "early 1940s" to illegally fix interstate shtpptng rates
procedure of buymg trophles. for northeastern and central states. Ohio is one of 27 states
From tis adoption the league tnvolved.
will contrtbute $20 for only
The department, tn a civil suit, asked the U.S. Dtstrict
varstty sports
Court in Washington to void extstlng mterstate rates adopted
SEOAL trek meet was set by the Motor Carriers Tariff Bureau Inc. of Cleveland and
May 3 at Athens High School. permanently enjotn any futlU'e"illegal rate-ftxtng. The swt
Tnple Jump wtll ~added.
charged the MCTB set rates at non-competitively htgh levels
Schedules were distributed without ICC approval and deprtved shtppers and the public of
for vars1ty, reserve, and the ~nef1ts of free and open competition in VIolation of the
eighth and ninth grade foot- Sherman Antitrust Act.
ball; g1ris' softball ; and
haseball.
UNITS.CALLED
Gtrls' reserve basketball
FILM SLATED
The
Pomeroy Emergency
will start at 6 p.m Gtrls' soft·
"Warm Fuzzles and Cold
ball wtll start at 4. 30 p.m Brickties," is the subject of a Squad was coiled to Meigs
Baseball wtll be played on free film to be shown at 2 p. High School at 4:05 p. m.
Tuesdays and Fr1days only.
m Friday at the Commumty Wednesday lor Nancy
Health Center, 230 West Wallace, Middleport, who
Second St., Pomeroy, The was injured in the gymfilm ts a part of a color series nasium She was taken to
on transactual analysis and Holzer Medtcal Center. At
Low tonight in the low 30s explamsthe mdlvldual's need 10:55 a. m. Wednesday the
and highs Friday to upper to be touched and recogntzed ftre department was called to
40s.
Probability
of by other people.
entmguish a fteld on ftre at
the Steve Smith home near
precipitation 20 percent
today, 10 percent tomghl and
Kmgsbury
PARTY PLANNED
Friday.
The Ohioans for Wildlife
Conservation of Meigs
NOW YOU KNOW
County will have a party
None of the men and
ASK TOWED
convtcted
of
A maJTiage license was Saturday at the archery women
tssued to Charles Edwin building at Royal Oak Park witchcraft by 17th · century
Wilson, 20, Mtddleport, and ,beginning at 6:30 p m. All New England Purtlan courts
Cathy Ann McVey, 20, those who helped defeat Issue was burned at the stake; they
2 are invited
were all hanged.
Marietta

Logan will host
grid fete Dec. 1
JACKSON---The
Southeastern Ohlo Athletic
league, meetmg Wednesday
mght tn Jackson High School,
set Dec I at Logan as the
date and place for the football
banquet to honor the all-loop
team.
Every one of the eight
schools was represented, not
only by tbe pnnctpals but also
by coaches, athletic direc·
tors, and coaches of gtrls'

teams.
The league put the stamp of
ofltctal approval on the Chieftains as grid champwns,and
on Jackson and Athens as
cochamptons m golf and on
Waverly as girls' volleyball
~
champions.
There was a general discusston, Without action, of . haV·
ing one banquet for
volleyball, golf, and football,
the autWI)I1 sports lumped
together m one fete.
Assignments to draw up
schedules were made to Joy
Bentley, Meigs !Iigh Schoolvolleyball; Mary Jecouts,
Waverly High School,.-1978-79
girls' basketball; Nancy
Kibler, Wellston Htgh School-softball Track is WJdecided
until tt's deternuned how
many lellms will partictpate.
Tom Metiers, Athens
sports writer, was appointed
recordkeeper of the con·
ference, and the group decided that it is the responstbtlity
of the gtrls' home coach to

Weather

\

.

'

.

•

Metgs County Shenff main ofhce of the Pomeroy
James J . Proffitt today National Bank and cashed 11.
warned restdents to ~ wary
The victim of this
about contractmg for work by skulduggery said the men
were 10 a red and white truck
st~~~~:~day morning a wtth ladders on the sules. One
Harnsonvtlle wtdow was was descrtbed as heavy set,
approached by three men WI th dar k ha 1r a nd a p·
who wanted to trtrn trees, proximately 35 years old;
another had sandy hall', blue
quoting her a prtce of $85 She eyes and was approxunately
consented to the work, but·
after the men worked about 35, and the thtrd one was
an .hour they told her the JOb perhaps 26 to 26 years old
would cost $335 and
The shertff IS askmg area
demanded payment.
residents having any in·
Being alone the lady formatton regarding these
~came frightened and wrote persons to call the sheriff's
out the check. The subjects offtce at once.
went tmmedtately to the
Tuesday at 8 30 p m. on SR

ANN ARBOR, Mtch. (UP!) one gtgantlc, superdense
- A Umverstty of M1ch1gan
physictst says his discovery
of btlhons of prevwusly
unknown stars suggests the
untverse some day may stop
expanding and collapse mto

atom.
U that happens sometime
after the next 50 btlllon years,
it will be the end of Earth and
the known untverse. That's
the had news
The good news IS that
scienttsts also theortze such
an atom could explode,
posstbly creating . a new
untverse.
Dennis J. Hegyt, an
asststant professor of
physics, dtscovered the stars
tn
a sphertcal
halo
EAST MEIGS - Eastern surroundmg a galaxy 60
Local School District Supt mtlllon light years from earth
John Riebel is accepting by usmg a new lightapplicatwns for a part-tune measuring mstrument he
secretarial posttlon at the bmlt.
Chester Elementary School
The halo around galaxy
and a mamtenance job
NGC 4ti56 m the constellation
Although the board of Coma Bercmces could
education has agreed not to posstbly contam more matter
fill the posts unmedtately than prevwusly had been
~cause of the closing of the thought to ~ m the galaxy
district schools on Dec. 8, the Itself, Hegyi said
board expects to hire the
U thts ts a characteristic of
personnel at the Dec. 13 other galaxtes, he said, the
meetmg. The new employes halos mtght contain enough
will begm work 10 January matter to stop the present
when schools are scheduled expanSion of the WJiverse
to reopen.
The fmdtng , tf verifted,
Meetmg Tuesday night, the mtght help resolve dehate
board agreed to authorize among sctepltsts about
severance pay for Eleanor whether the universe wtll
Knight and Chester Goodmg, expand forever or tf the pull
botll of whom rettred on Nov of gravity among the galaXIes
I. Added to the substitute wtll stop the expanston and
teachers list were Madhu cause all matter to fall
Malhotra, Elaine Rouse , together mto one gtganttc
Sandy Luckydoo, Barbara atom, he said
DeYoung
and
Dtana
Accordmg to ,the wtdely
Wtlliams Two seniors were held " Btg-Bang" theory , the
given permtsslon to work m . universe began wtth the
the afternoons for the mental explosiOn of a superdense
health board.

Job and Y2
available

lt4 at Bowman's Run, Ray A.
Tucker, 20, Mason, was
traveling east when he lost
control m a curve going of{
the highway into a guardrail
and over an embankment.
The driver was not mjured.
Th ere was heavy damage to
the car. No citation was
tssued.
Wednesdav at 5:10 p.m.
~
near the doss Store In
Racme, Ray Proffitt, Rt. 2,
Racme, and Steven Htll, Rt.
3, Racme, coiUded in a curve.
Due to the narrow road and
lmpatred vision, "'ld slow
speed of both, no Citation was
issued. There was hght

atom and has been expanding

ever smce.
Under that theory the
galaxtes wtll keep gomg
forever, Hegyi ,said, like
rockets that escape the pull of
earth's gravity. But if there
are more stars than
previously thought, the pull of
thetr graVIty may ~ enough
to stop the e•pansion so that
the galaxies may act more
like baseballs than rockets.
"When you throw a ball up
m the air," Hegyt satd,

11

ll

reaches a maxtmum distance
and 1t stops and falls back
down agam."
Hegyi satd he ftnda "some
philosphtcal appeal" tn
having the umverse start at
some pomt and eventually
stop, preswnably to start
again.
"But nothing's going to
happen for at least another 50
bllhon ' years or so," he
satd.
Hegyt conducted his
research at the Kilt Peak
Nattonal Observatory near
Tucson, Artz , and published
his fmdmgs Tuesday 1n the
Astrophysical
Journal
Letters
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, chance of fiurrles
northeast Saturday, and
otherwlae lair through
Monday. HJsbs In the 40.
Saturday, warmbtg to the
50s by Mondey. Lows bt the
30s Salurday aad lOs by
Monday.

property
d damage
d
We nes ay .eventng
sheriff's
deputtes
m·
vesllgat&lt;:&lt;~ the theft of an
automobtle battery from a
vehtcle owne~ by Ro~r
Hysell, Rt 4, omeroy. e
car was
. parked ~~ the intersectton of SR 7 and 124.
Also Wednesday evening,
Charles Cleland, ~t. I,
h1
Racme, reported that w 1 e
he was coon huntmg on the
Oak Grove Road the battery
m his truck was taken . B~th
mctdents are under mvesttgatlon

Two more deer were killed
htghway traffic Wed·
nesday 1n the Gallla·Metgs
tn

area

The first fatality occuJTed
at 8·20 p. m. on CR 5, one
tenth of a mile west of M1d·
dleport. The Gallla-Meigs
Post Slate Htghway Patrol
said the animal ran mto the
path of a car operated by
Kenneth R Searles, 21, of
Mtddleport. There was mmor
damage
•
At 10 .55 p. m. on SR 124,
east of Rutland, a deer was
killed when tt ran mto the
path of a vehtcle dnven by
Roy L. P1erce, 24, Ractne
There
was
moderate
damage.
Bob Jones, 44, Rt. I,
Cheshtre, was cited to
. Gallipolis Muntctpal Court
for failure to yield the right of
way followmg an acctdent at
2 p m. on Gravel Hill Rd. at
the intersectiOn to Turkey
Run Road
The patrol sa1d Jones,
going east on Turkey Run
p11lled onto Gravel Htll Rd.
forctng an auto driven by
Michael R Meadows, 25,
Pomeroy, off the road. The
Meadows car traveled over
an embankment causmg
moderate damage.
A single car mishap occulTed at 12.30p. m. on US 35,
west of Rio Grande, where
James A. Rtchards, 18,
Jackson, swerved to miSS
another vehtcle. Hts car slid
off the rtght side of the htgh·
way strtking an em·
bankment

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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