<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15264" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15264?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T04:49:41+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48386">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/086b75b2d4e20764d0e94e831361e002.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f8318b7bb884e9caddfe9b99529141bb</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49000">
                  <text>'

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

�•
2- The Da1Iy Sentmel.

.

~11ddleport-Ponwro~

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov.l7, 19?7
0. Thursda~. :--.: o\'. 1;, 19&lt;7

HOSPITAL NEWS

All-state candidates
tie for most valuable

'
MRS :'&gt; ETT!E HAYES. left. at bark . 1 olunteer cha~rman of the Women's Atmhary of
.Yeterans Memonal Hospital, presented aux 1hary me mbers with sen tee p1ns at the husp1tal
l'uesday mght Recemng awards " ere, back, I to r, Jesste White, 3,000 hours; Jestte
Molden. 2, 000 hours, Bertha Parker. 2.000 hours . fr ont row, l,eona Karr. 13€tt)
Chmtopherson , and Alma Newton, each 1.000 hours. Absent but ea rni ng a 1,000 hour pm
was Ruth Morns.

T" o potent 13) all-staters
from Wahama High School
tied for the IItle of Most
Valu•bte Player, Thursday
e-.mng du r~ng that school 's
annual Football Banquet.
Greg Blessmg and Brett
Holbrook. both semors, tnca ptams a nd lin ebackers,
received that honor for their
performance in leading the
fa Icons to a I uw 8--2 record as
11ell as 10th in the state.
Also honored with trophies
for their efforts "ere
linebacker Kurt Sane. for
Best Sportsmanship; and
cen ter Ted Swartz, Most
Improved Pla ye r on the
team
One of the highlights of the
evenmg was Dave D1les,
te leVISIOn sports co m·
mentator for ABC.
for Head Coach Marcus
R1ce the banquet was h1s last
off iC ial functiOn for that
schoo l as coach He recently
announced his res1gnatwn.
wh1ch takes effect wnhin the
near future .

Besides
receaving
numerous gi ft s fr om his
players. the coach ll'as
greeted with a stardi ng
ovatiOn

when he

was

ln·

troduced
It was pointed out dunng
the banquet, that the three
Wahama football teams
amaSI!ed a l!Hi-1 record
BeSides the 8-2 record
accomplished by the varsity ,
the 7th and 8th grade team
had a 4-2-1 record ; and the
juniOr varSity finiShed With a
S-2 record.
SUtteen semors played their
f~nal game last week and
were so honored at the
banquet They mclude ; Bob
Bamuz, Greg Blessmg, Jeff
Colher, Dav1d Elias, Rick
Buzzard, Phil Hobbs, Bret
Holbrook, Kelvin Honaker ,
M1ke Phalen, T1n1 Rawhngs,
Buddy Rose, David Roush,
Kurt Sayre, Ted Swartz, Rick
Stafford and Dewayne Wlute.
Cheerleaders were also
honored at the banquet, Including seniors Diane Abel,

"

~--------------------------,

DR EDNA ARUNDEL
Funeral serv1ces for Dr .
Edna Arundel
Iron t on ,

former Rto Grande College
dean , were held Nov 7 from
the Tracy Brammer Funeral

Home
Or

of

Arundel, ret1red head

the

Department

of

Georgra phy at the Unn1erstty
of North Carol1na at Greens

boro , N C d1ed at 51. Mary's

Hosprtal, Hunt•ngton , W Va
where she had been a patient
She ha d been Ill the past two

years

TIIESE MEMBERS of Veterans Memonal Hospttal Women's Aux1hary re cetved
serVIce pms for 100 to SOO hours serVIce at the hospital TUesday rught Front, I to r, are Joy
White, Kathryn Metzger, Sherne M1ght , 100 hours each; back, Short) Wnght, Janet Jeffers
and Kat1e Anthony. SOO hours each . Earmng a SOO hour p1n b•t not pre sent was Carne
Kenned) The SO hour patch went also to Sherne Might and Kathryn Metzger.

Born and reared m Ironton ,
she was the daught er of the
late W•lllam A and Mary
Edwards Arundel
She
graduated
f rom
Iron ton H1gh School m 1916 ,
rece tv ed her B A Degree
from Ohro Universtfy In 1921 .

her Masters degree

•

Corps looks at servtces
ATHENS - An expanded
program to improve health
care services m under-served
Appalachia , OhiO was approved when the Appal Corps
met here late m October .
Appal Corps, a student
ba sed

assoct atwn

( state

wide ) of student health
professionals dedicated to
improving the qualit y of
health care m rural Oh1o

HEALTH
Lawrence

Scalp needs treatment
By Lawrence Lamb, M D
' DEAR DR. LAMB-I am 33
years old and have been havmg a notuleable scalp problem for the last three years
My scalp gets very greasy ,
little sores like punples appear at different parts and
sometimes my ha1r 1s very
sore at the roots
My half IS corrung out. I
have used such medications
as Denorex, Tegnn , Selsun
Blue-all to no ava1l I also
have washed my hair every
rught, but the very next da;,
the mhness returns. Can you
help• What ts sebum ?
DEAR READER-I would
strongly recommend thai you
see a dermatologist Home
treatments for orly scalp
often do 11 ork and are helpful,
but there IS always the exceptwn when other measures are
required . I suspect from your
descnpt1on and questiOn that
you have very a ct1 ve
sebaceous g lands These are

the mly gla nds that form a
naluml skm ml They are
common over the face and
sca lp. The oily secrelwn they
produce IS called seb um
In s9me people, the mly
secrctwns cause acne, and Jn

others, 1rnlallon of the skw
fdermaht1 s) called seborrheic dermatitis. Th1s can
spread somewhat

hkc an

eczema to other parts of the
body The skm 1rntatwn , If
not controlled, can damage
the hair and cause t1a1r loss

I am sendtng you The
Hcallh Letter number 8--2,
Acne Can Be Treated, to g1ve
you a better understanding of
acne and sebum. What you
have is something more, but
you w11l get some benefit
from this •nformation. Nevertheless, you will need to see a
dermaoolog1st to really get
some useful help for a complicated problem like yours
Others who want more m-

•

from

Col umb1a m 1929 and her Ph .
D '" 1941 f rom Yale

Dr

Arundel

began

her

teact11ng career at Hangmg
Rock and

later

Ktngsbury

School m Ironton She served
(Student Teams Encouragmg as d1rector of the Lawrence
Manpower ) Committee al- County Normal School at Aid
Wheelersburg for six
success of a project m Metgs tendmg were Paul Haupt of and
years
Ohi o UniverSity; Bryan
County last summer.
She served as dean of
The orga mzatwn was Thatcher and Dav1d Pasek of women and teacher at Rio
formed followmg the suc- the Umvers1ty of Cmcinnatl; Grande College for nine ye ars
cessful summer health team Marty Geyer of Middleport; and spent 22 years at
the Univer sdv of North
project sponsored by the Vic Cocow1tc h and Dr. Carol ma as head of the
Robertson
of Geography department.
Co rporation for Hea lth Thomas
She was •listed 1n " Who 's
Edu catwn in Appalacll•a CHEAO.
Coco w!lCh , a student in Who of Amencan Women ,"
OhiO ICHEAOI.
was a member of the
Members of the S T E.M health admmlstratwn at the Assoc1at1on of Amer1can
UmverSity of North Carolina, Geographers , nntlonal
of
Geography
at Chapel H11l , has taken a council
Amer1can
one-year leave of absence Teachers ;
Assoc1afion of the Ad
fro m hiS st udies to work w1th vancement of Sc1oto and
the Appal Corps • ·
pr.es1dent of the Amencan
The S.T.E.M . Committee Associat1on of Un1vers 1ty
members diScussed the Women , International
Re l at1ons of Greensboro
statew ide growth
and Counc1l
of Wor ld Affafrs
E.Lamb, M.O:
development of the Appal
After her ret~rement as
Corps They elected to par- professor emer~tus , she
ticipate m the Conference on returned to Ironton where she
the
Ironton
Rural Health 1n Appalachia supervised
Elementar'y Teachers and
here on December 1-2.
student teachers for Oh1o
Plans were developed for a Un1vers1ty Branch She was
formati on on acne, black summer health team proJect act 1ve 1n the Lawrence
heads, and 1\hite heads can m Appalachia Ohio, penod1c County Retired Teachers
Assoc1a t 1on and con t1nued
send 50 cents w1th a long, rural health fatrs, main· her
Work 1n the A A U.V''
stamped, se lf-addr esse d tenance of an tnformatton
She attended the F .rst
envelope for Il to.me m c&lt;Jre clea rmghouse for students Un 1ted Presbytenan Church
of this newspaper. B 0 Box and for placement of health m Ironton
She"' •s surv 1ved by two
1551 , Rad1o C1ty Slatton, New professionals in rural areas s1sters,
Mary ArundeL a
York , NY 10019
DIScusSion of possible fun- ret~red teacher and Emma
DEAR DR LAMB-Can you dmg so urces was mcluded 1n Ed1th Arundel, at home and
suffer a heart attack w1thout the plannmg sesSion as well several cous1ns
Funera l serv1ces were 10
tt showmg on a electrocar- as strateg1es for identifymg charge
of the Rev . John
diogram • Could 1t happen mterested students
Rogers , pastor of F~rst
more than once?
Everyone interested m the Un1ted Presbyterian Church.
DEAR READER--The Appal Corps shou ld contact Interment was made I n
term heart attack can be used V1c Cocowtlch, P.O. Drawer Woodland Cemetery
for several diSorders of the 825, Athens , OhiO 45701
heart. mcludmg attacks of
rap1d heart rate, traflsttory
heart penns and for serwus EVANS NAMED
By Untied P..-ess lnte..-nahonal
tllimage to the heart muscle
COLUMBUS IUP!) - Gov. LAND CONVEYED
unyocard1al mfarctwn ) To- James A Rhodes Wednesday
COLUMBUS ( UP!) The
tilly , 11 seems to be used appomted Robert L. Evans, OhiO House Wednesday passed
and
sent
to
the
Senate
mostly for the last cond1t10n
PI es1dent of Bob Evans emergency legt~latton autht~r 1 z
1ng con.,eyance of 260 acres of
If you mean myocardial m- Farms , In c
and
its land
Counly to Honda
fatctl on, the answer to both of restaurant subs1d1a ry, to the MotorinCoUn1on
for con!)lructlon of a
your questions IS yes. People Ohin Board of Regents
motorcycle assembly plant
The bil l was appro'Jed on an
do have the severe chest pam
Evans succeeds Marvm L 83 -.4 vole The land, adtacent to
of a heart attack and may' not Warner of Cmcmna t1 now the the OhtO Transportatton Re
have electrocardtog raphiC US ambassador to 1Switzer- se arch Center •n Allen Town
sh1p, 1S to be sold for not less
changes for several days, and land, who resigned Oct 31
than $750 per acre
The btll also authonzes the
sometJmes not at all In other
board of dtrectors for the
cases, the changes do not
center to ,agree to prov1de
last, and IIJe eleclrocarwafer and ~ewer serv1ces for
tt-~e Honda fadlif tes
dtogram may return to
niE DAII..V SENTINEL
normal--even though we
DI&lt;.:VOTEDTOTIIE
AMUSEMENT RIDES
INTEREST OF
COLUMBUS WPI ) The
know the d1sease m the
MEIGS.MASON AREA
Ohto House Wednesday passed
arlenes that caused the proCIJFJ.iTF: KL TANNEHILL
unantmoustv a:"ld forw&amp;rded to
J.:xer.Ed
the Senate a btll mcreastng the
blem 1s still there. Finally, we
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ll~bd1ty 1nsurance llmtiS
for
have people who have a heart
City Editor
opera tors of traveltng portable
attack and never know 11 The
PubiLShed dcl1ly e:tce pt Sa turday
amusement r 1des to $500.000
The bill. sponsored by Rep
changes are ftrst noted on the by The Oluo V::~Uey Publishing
C:om~XtnY Multtmedla. Inc .
111
Rtchard H Fman, R C1ncmnat1 ,
electrocardiogram, and that Court Sl , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
atso reqUires an Inspection and
Uu.~liii!!L~ Off1rc Phnne 992· 2156
11cens1ng of the r 1des at least 10
IS the first anyone knows that
Phonc992-2157
days before the f.rs t scheduled
the person had a heart attack. F:thtohal
Se(.;oml cl&lt;t !;.~ posl.&lt;!ge paid e~t
operation m Ohio
About one-th1rd of all Pomeroy OhnJ
Nat i o n;~] illh t!rl l.'i !n ~ represenUNRULY CHILD
myOC&lt;:.~rdwl mfCJrctwns are
tative Ward • Gnff1th Company,
COLUMBUS (UP I ) The
stlent, or cause so few symp- Inc Bottmclh arHJ Ga!Uighcr D1v,
Ohto House Wednesday agreed
757 1hlrd Avt• , Ne ~ York, NV
Wtth Senate cHanges and sent to
toms that they go unnoticed
10017
Gov James A Rhodes a blll
And you can have several
Subs.::rlpUun rates Delivered by
perm1tting the expungemenf of
tuven!le arrest records after a
attacks of chest pam from ccu 11cr 'A here &lt;IV~ttle~b le 75 c ent!~ per
week By Mutor Houle where carrier
fmdmg of 1nnocent or dtsm1SSal
heart disease w1thout severe sem
ce not UVIHII:I bit: One month.
Of charges
muscle damage The shortest S3 Ui By rmul u, Ot11o and W Va ,
The bill , sponsored by Rep
One Vt!llr Sl2 llO SUI months,
Edward F Fe1ghan, 0 Cleve
ones of these we call angina Sll
50 Jhrcc months, S7 00 ,
land , also requires the court to
pectons These heart pains ELsewhere S~ .OO vt•ar Stx months
seal the record of any child
$1 3 50, Th?l!e mon ths, 1150
who IS ad [Udlcated as an unruly
may not always produce elecSuUscnpt1on pnce mcludes Sunday
chtld, 11 two years have elapsed
trocard•ograph•c c hanges Tunes-Sentinel
stnc e the uncond1t1ona! disCha_}9 e of the ch ild from a
and may occur several tunes.
areas, resulted m part from
the apparent h1gh degree of

!

Area Deaths

!

GEORGIA ETTA DIEHL
Georgia Etta Orehl , 83,
Route 2, Pomeroy , d•ed
Wednesday
morntng
at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mrs D1ehl was born Nov l ,
1892 at
Bailey Run . a
daughter of the late M 1tchell
and Alv1ra Archer Russell
She was also preceded m
death by her husband , Lew1s
0 1eh l, a son , Charles 01ehl 1n
1972, a daughter m mfancy, a
s1ster, and two brothers
Surviving are two sons,
Paul Archer , Columbus , and
Ivan D1ehl, Rosenburg , Tex ,
a brother, Guy R. Russell ,
VVarren , three grandsons , a

granddaughter . eight great
grandchildren , three cousins,
and several nieces and
nephews
Funeral serv~ees w1ll be at
2 p m Saturda y at the
Rawl1 ngs Coats
Funeral
Home w1th the Rev Floyd
Shook offiCiating Bunal will
be in Rock Spnngs Ceme-tery
Fr1ends may call at the
f uneral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p m . Fr1da~
Mrs D1ehl was a member
of the Laurel Cliff Free

MethOOISI Church and the
Laurel

Club

Cliff

Better

Karla Richards and Lisa
VanMeter .
Diles who began his career
"tth the Pomeroy Sent mel
and the Gallipolis Tribune ,
told the people present th•t
there ts no ~ubstitute for
w1nnmg. He noted that there
is nothmg worse than a coach
11ho has to make excuses for
losmg , such '!,S blammg it on
the officiating-: However, he Military brass
also satd •t was just as bad to
'
gloat over winning .
won't object
" At 46, I only now realize
ho11• •ntelhgent my teachers
" ere and hm~ right • my to lady publisher
parents we're "
Throughout h1s talk the
WASHINGTON (UP!) nationally-known personality
referred back to htS youth m There'll be a tw1tch or two,
Middleport a nd w1th the perhaps some grunts and
snorts at the Army and Navy
Tnbune
He also talked about the Clu b on Farragut Square
vanous sports personahlles when the retired generals and
he has become friends With , admirals get the word
MAHWAH, N. J . !UP!)The venerable Armed
such as New York Yankee
The
Ford Motor Co., wh1ch
Forces
Journal,
a
114-yearpitcher CatfiSh Hunter, who
ha
s
been
buildmg cars and
old
magazme
that
IS
the
became
an
overmght
for
more than 70
trucks
nation's
oldest
military
milhona1re D1les noted that
years,
rolled
1ts
100 m1lhonth
journal,
comes
out
m
Its
when Catfish was st1U m high
auto
off
the
assembly
!me
1ssue
next
week
December
school he dreamed of leaving
Tuesday.
w1th
a
woman's
name
on
the
his farm and becommg a
Some 300 Ford and local
maJor league baseball masthead as publisher
offlctals
were on hand as a
She
IS
LuAnne
Levins
player. "Today he dreams of
sh1ny
gold-and-eream
1978
leavm g
baseball
and pretty, blonde and a former
Fa1rmont
Futura
marked
a
Army ''brat" of an act ive·
retunung to the farm "
milestone
for
the
company
.
Approxunately 300 people duty m•litary doctor with no
Plant
manager
Robert
attended the banquet, which fear of the brass
" I don't expect any flak,'' Murphy drove the $4,044 twowas held at Kmfolks
Restaurant John Hankinson. she sa1d. "l get along w1th door sports coupe past one of
president of the Athletic generals and admirals I even the oldest and rarest cars at
Boosters, the orgamzation hke them. After aU, I was an .the plant, a two-passenger
that sponsors the banquet, Army brat and hved on Ford Model A butlt m 1903,
was
the
master
of practically every po•t m the the year the company was
founded .
Un1ted States "
ceremomes.

100 millionth
car produced

**

JAY HALL, SR.

* * * * * * * ** *

DUE TO RECENT RECORD NEW CAR SALES, WE ARE SNOWED
UNDER WITH GOOD, CLEAN TRADE·INS. AS A RESULT, RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP WILL BE HOLDING A SPECIAL 2 DAY SALE ON ALL
USED CARS. PRICES ARE GOOD ONLY ON THESE DAYS. FRIDAY
&amp; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18th &amp; 19th

Extra Special

Extra Special

74 Chevrolet

75 Jeep

Monte Carlo

Cherokee 'S'

NOW

$2695

NOW

styled whee ls, v1nyl mt..
roof rack, local one owner

Fl10n, and Patty Eggleslon,

Calhy Ba iley, Pomeroy , 21

2 door Runaboul , aulo .. 4

grandchildren , two great
grandchildren, and several
n1eces and nephews
Friends may. call at the
funeral home anytJme.

NOW

JOBLESS COMP
COLUMBUS IUPII The
Ohto House Wednesday refused
to accept Senate amendments
on legisla tion expandmg unem
ployment compensatton cover
age to br1ng the state 1nto
con for m i I y w1th fep eral
requ 1rements
The btl!, adopted by the
Senate Tuesday , was sent to a
101nt conference com m tftee for
negoflat1ons
Ob tect10ns were r &amp;iSed to a
prov 1S10n allow1ng state and
foca l · government agencies to
be com e "contnbutory em
players" for benef1ts

76 V.W. Dasher
Wagon

Local , one owner, 4 W 0

Auto , A. C., cru1se control,
fue l 1n 1ectton

SCHOOL AID

COLUMBUS (UPI J - Legts
lq.t,on was introduced 1M the
Ohio Senate Wednesday author
IZing the Cleveland School
bOard to refmance S15 m tllton 1
worth of notes and pay them off ~
by Dec 29, 1978, tn order to
keep schools open
The bill was sponsored by
Sen M Morns Jackson , 0
Cleveland It also requ~res the
Cleveland school board to fde a
plan wt th the state aud1tor and
supenntendent of public 1n
struct1on cert1fytng 1f wdl. be
able to keep schools open
through 1978
•

PAYMENT MADE
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
the SIXth advance distribution
of motor vehicle registration
taxes for the 1977 licensing
year totaling $5,007,885.79.
Meigs County's share of the
total was $4,014.27.

'3195

Prix

75
73
72
72
71
72
72
72

77Chevrolet
Monte Carlo

75 Chevy
Camaro

A.C , P.S.

EXTRA

Auto .,
rad1o

'5395
~5

'4995

'4695

A C , p x., p b., radto Was
$5595 00

'1699

NOW

77 Jeep
CJ·5

76 AMC
Pater
$3495

$2699

NOW

Aulo . A C, P 5 , 302 V B.
Was $2195.00

'2299

P.B..

NICE

'5195

·

'3395

By Greg Bailey
All three Meigs County
schools start thelf basketball
season Frtday mght, and fans
Will gel a unique chance to
see all three for the pnce of
one simply by attendinJ.l the
SVAC cage preview at ltyger
Creek.
Meigs H1gh School ts the
only non-SVAC team participating m the p, ev1ew, as
there are only seven teams in
the SVAC and Me1gs was
111vited to fill the slot to make
four 'games
Hannan-Tra ce vs. Symmes
Valley Will start the even111g
off at 6·30, and then at 7·30
the first Meigs County team
will be shown In that contest ,
the Eastern Eagles of Coach
Duane Wolfe Will go agamst
the North Galha Ptrates.
That should be an mterestmg contest for both
teams as Eastern opens Its
season on Novem ber 29

agai nst those very same
Ptrates at North Calha. The
Eastern schools will be closed
on December 8 due to
fmanc1al difhculties, so the
schedule may be revamped .
Coach Wolfe has nine boys
vying for a spot on the varSity
squad, and three of them are
returning lettermen. Those
lellermen are juniors Dan
Spencer and Jeff Goebel, and
scm or Dave Brown.
The youth and ~nexpenence
of the Eagles are ev•dent as
one reads on down the roster .
Two sophomores, three
juniors, and one other semor
make up the squad. Those
other boys are sophomores
Brtan Bissell and Don Eynon;
jumors Rusty Wigal, Keith
Wolfe and Joe Boyles, and
senior Ed Cheva lier Coach
Wolfe says all ten boys w11l
see actwn Friday night to see
who will get the starting nod
when the season opener

Redskins
MAC pick
'
Hedrtc, starting his eighth
PERRYSBURG , Oh1 o
(UP!) - Mtmm UniverSity's year i:Jl Miami, sa1d, "Don't
head basketball coach do us any favors .. don't vole
Darrell Hedric asked them ll!; first. While we have a
not to, but wnters and large number of return,ing
broadcasters at the annual starters and lettermen, you
M1d-Amer1can Conference JUSt don't replace a Chuck
press prev1ew went ahead C&lt;"dyear."
l'ut, com1ng back to the
and tabbed the Redskins as
Redsktns
are
the heavy favortte to wtn favored
the conference's basketball sta rters Archie Aldndge,
Randy
Ayer s,
J oh n
htle this year,
The
writers
and Shoemaker and Bernard
broadcasters named the Newman
Aldridge averaged 19.1
\ Redskins first on 66 of 81
ballots cast Wednesda) . po1nts and 8 6 rebounds last
Toledo was a solid second , yea• 1n earnmg all-MAC first
bemg named ftrst on 13 team laurels Ayers averaged
ballots, followed by co- 12.8 p0111ts and 8.1 rebounds
champion Central M•chtgan, and Shoemaker averaged 9.5
which got the f~rst spot on two po1nts a nd Newman 8 9
pomts.
ballots.
Toledo Coach Bob Nichols
M1ami got 794 pomts
overall, Toledo, 711 , and gave the other coaches a
warmng saying, "We will be
Central Mich1gan, 641
The rest of the teams and better offenSively and we 'll
a
httle
more
their votes were · Ball State, have
firepuwer
_
''
573; Oh1o U., 392; Western
D1ck Parfitt, Central MIMichigan, 341; Northern Illinois, 315; Ken t State, 285; chigan's mentor, bemoaned
Bowhng Green. 205; and the lack of a big man and of
semors.
Eastern Michigan, 194 .

comes.
following the 8·30 contest
between Kyger Creek and
Southwestern, fans w1ll gel a
chance to see two teams
pitted against each other for
the f1rst ttme m their schools'
histories. Meigs and defendtng
SV AC champion
Southern tan gle for 16
m~nutes at 9:30 to wrap up the
evemng
Me1gs County fans have
often wanted to see these
two teams play, but this will
be a first , Although a preview
IS often no tndlcation of what
the polished teams Will be
like later in the season, fans
will at least get a look at the
prospective players
Me~gs has only two lettermen returning from last
year's squad, semors Kenny
Young and Chuck Foll rod
Young will probably be the
ball handler lor Coach Ron
Logan's Marauders wh1le
follrod will see ·some action
at a forward
Others who will see some
act1on Friday wtll probably
be juniors Raymond Andrews, Greg Becker, B1ll
O'Brien, Dave Blake, Tom
Hawley, and B11ly Elkms, and
seniors Tim Coats, Gene
Halley and Brent Stanley
Coach Logan says his team
1s young and lacks varsity
experience, but has overaU
good quickness Th1t:. vf':u's

squad IS relatively small, and
w11l play a fast-moving type
of game, run , press and

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Cincinnati Moeller , Elyna
Cathohc and West Jefferson
proved themselves the best
football teams m thetr class a
year ago Now, the Umled
Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
wants them to do it agam.
The three defendmg slate
playoff champions were
selected No. I 111 thetr
respective clasSifications
Wednesday by the votmg
coaches and will ',set out
tr ymg to prove It this
weekend when the playoffs
begin again.
For Moeller, which now has
a 34-jla me wmmng strea1&lt;, the
Class AAA poll crown was 1ts
second m a row and third m
the last five years and t he
Crusaders flmshed No. 2 the
other two
Moeller took a healthy lead
the first of the eight weeks of
volmg and never really had
any challengers, fmishing
with a 307-186 margm over
runnerup Cincinnab Elder, a

OPENING

$1099

SOON

GINO'S

PIZZA
MASON, W. VA.

LIMITED TIME ONLY
Sale Begins 8:30 A.M. Friday, Nov. 18th and Ends
promptly at 5:00 P.M. Sat., Nov. 19th.

team the Crusaders beat 14-8.
Canton McKmley, which
had chased Moeller from afar
from the second spot the
whole year, fell to fourth the
fwal week after dropping a
21~ deciswn to Massillon,
wtlh M1am1 Trace edgmg mto
third.
Centerville,
laking
advantage of a wave of upsets
the last week of the regular
season, JUmped all the way
from tenth to fifth in the final
ballolwg , while Gahanna
Lincoln and Cleveland St.
Joseph fin ished in a tie for
SIXth.
Massillon, Mentor Lake
Catholic and Toledo Central
Cathohc rounded out the top
len in Class AAA.
Fnday mght's AAA
playoffs p1t No I Moeller
against No. 10 Central
Catholic at Dayton and No. 4
McKinley agamst No, 6 St.
Joseph at Akron .
Elyria Catholic (10-0),
wh1ch
had
gotte n
considerable pressure from
Wyoming most of the year,
ended up w1nnmg the AA
crown by a fairly comfortable
margin, 212-185.
The Panthers, thanks to
Bryan Thomas' 89·yard
touchdown run, beat H•lliard
H m its regular season
finale, a win which locked up
both a playoff spot and the
UPI Coaches crown.
Urbana finished third m the
AA voting, followed by St.
Marys Memorial in fourth,
Orrville in fifth and Canton
Central Catholic sixth.

Tbe first sporls banquet
of the year will be this
Saturday Ill Eastern High
School when EHS has lis
annual
Fall
Sports
Banquet Guest speaker for
this year's event 101U be
Jerry Kellican of James
Wood High School In
Winchester. Va.
Tlckels are $1'.50 lor
adults and St for students.
Tickets may be purchased
at the door or lo advance
from any player, coach or
cheerleader. It will be
potluck.
·:· •' :· .: ':: :- ·: ·-··: :. ·:: :: : :. ,: : :· ., : ·. •' ·.·'

Time "rawing near for
Woody and Bo show·
'

· Unlled Press International
As the hours lick awa y
Logar&gt; says aU w11I play
before the lOth an nual Woody
Fnday m preparatiOn for
and Bn show, Ohl" State
their season opener at home
coac h Woody Ha ye s ha s
against Vmton County on
scrapped
one uf hiS mo!:;t
Saturday, November 26 Last
s coachin g
no
\
Oriou
night Me1gs scnmmaged at
maneuv
ers
Warren
Hayes ha s done away w1th
Southern Will once agam
the
sound effects - the
field a team that has lots of
canned
crowd nn1se he used
depth w1th fuur relurnmg
to
p1pe
mto the Ohio Swte
lettermen and lot~ of players
stadium to help accustom hiS
commg off a ftne reserve
playe rs to the 105,000
squad. Last year's defendmg
dellnous fans who will Jam
champs went J&amp;-(1 during the
the Michigan arena
regular season.
We're not lLSmg the SOW1d
,Back from thai squad will
thiS year because the
be seniors Richard Teaford,
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The quarterback has to yell so
Steve Baker, John Sayre and
Kelly Winebrenner Two - DivisiOn of W1ldhfe of the loud that by Saturday, he's
other seniors expected to see Ohtn Department of Natural hoarse,'' the Buckeye ma ste r
lots of action are Perry H1ll Resources sa1d Wednesday tactician explamed "And It 's
first day bag check results so hard to coach w1th."
and Scott Souder.
B•g Ten Conference buffs
Juniors making this year's indicate Oh10 hunters are
know
that Saturday's clash
having
a
harder
time
finding
varSity squad are Todd
Ohw State a nd
between
game
this
year
than
they
did
Commins, Tim Brinager,
M1ch1gan
will
be fough t for
in
19?6
Dwight Hill, Dave Flindley
the
likes'
of
honor,
glory ,
The
upland
game
season
and Jim O'Brien. Coach Carl
apple
pie
and
the
Rose
opened
Tuesday.
Wolfe will be playmg
The dlv1s10n said rabbits Bowl. The team that comes
everyone Fnday night, but it
looks like there w1ll be 11 were the only spec 1es wh1ch up short will go to lose rs
players all season who will showed an increase in the ho11l, this year reportedly the
game bag per hunter with a Sugar Bowl to face No 3
see lots of action
Southern scrimmages 25 percent increase over last . Alabama.
Both teams are 9-1 overall
today at " Alexander in year.
but
Ohw State ts unbeaten m
Opemng day pheasant
preparalwn for lhelf season
seven
co nference games
opener on December 3 at hun ling success dropped 50
while
Michigan
has lost once
percent
form
last
year
and
Trimble.
hunters reported spending The Buckeyes will also ca1ry
over 25 hours in the held to the memory of last season ~s
22-0 shutout at home mto the
bag one btrd.
Qt!all showed the b1ggest game,
"We had ow last hard
drop w1th a decline of 71
Buffalo at San Antomo
percent fr om la st year's workout yesterday and today
Frtday's Games
we'll pohsh everythmg offenfigures, the diviswn said
Ph il adelphia at easton
lnd 1a na at New Jersey
Opemng day huntmg SIVely and defens1v ely,"
New York at WaShington
coach
Bo
pressure was light to Mich1gan
Ch icago al Phoen 1x
moderate wtth ram and Schembechler said. "All our
San Anton10 at Denver
Cleveland at Golden St
overcast weather conditi ons ta ilba cks ran a gam and that's
Oetrott at Los Angeles
mfluencmg openmg day a good sign ''
It means JuniOr Harla n
ftgures, the division said_
WHA Standmgs

defense-iJrtented.

Game harder
to find in
Buckeye land

11

Pro Standings

N BA standings
By Un1ted Press tnternat1onat
Eastern Conference
Attanttc D ~~tnslon
W l
Pet GB
New York
8 5 615
Phila
8 5 .615
Butta to
7 7 500
P 2
Boston
4 B 333 J' ,
New Jersey
'1 10 167
S111
Central 01\'tslon
W l
Pet. GB
By Un1ted Press lnternatron~l
Cleveland
9 3 750
W L T P1s
Allanta
8 4 667
l
13 1
I 27
San Antonio
9 6 600 ·p,, New Eng land
11 5 I 23
Houston
6 7 462 3''? W1nn1peg
8 6
1
17
washtngfn
5 6 ,455 31 ? Quebec
Edmonton
6 B 1 '\:1
New Grins
6 13 .429 4
tnd•anapol1s
5 6 2 12
Western Conference
Houston
5 8 0 10
Midwest Oiv1ston
4 10 0
8
W L Pet. GB cmclnnatt
B1rmtngham
2 10 2
6
Denver
9 5 643
Wednesday's Results
Ch1cago
7 6 538 p r,
B1rmnghm 2. W1nn1peg 2 ot
Delrotl
6 6 500
2
Edmonton 6, Cmctnnat t 4
Milw
7 7 500
2
Thursday's G~mes
Kansas C1ty
6 9 400 3 1 2
( No games schedu led J
lndtana
5 8 385 31, 2
Frtdav's Games
Pacifrc Ot\·is1on
Quebec at Houston
W L Pet GB
8trmmgham at ln Jpls
Porfland
10 3 769
W1nn1peg at New Eng land
Phoentx
6 5 545 3
Cmcmnaft at Edmonton
Golden 51
7 7 500 3' '
.Los Angel es
6 7 .462 4
Seattle
4 13 .235
8
Wednesday 's Results
Sports TrilnUct•ons
Boston lJL Atlanta 105
By Untted Press International
M•lw 1l6, New Jersey 106
Wednesday
Ph tla 101. seattle 96
Hockey
lndtana Ill , Portlan d 104
NY Islanders Ophoned
Buffalo 101 , Houston 97
go~llender
Goran Hogosta to
Fort Worth of central Hockey
Thursday's Games
Seattle at New Orleans
League

· Moeller, Elyria Catholic,
West Jefferson poll c~amps

Chevelle Malibu. A.C., tilt wheel, radials... ..............
$3195
Matador, auto., A. C., P. S., P. B. Was 52895 ................ Now 52399
Chevrolet Nova. 6 cyl. Was $2295 ........................... Now $2099
Chev. Impala, 4 dr., low miles. Was $2195 ................. Now $1899
Chev. Nova SS, A. C.• auto., P. B. , was$2195............... Now$1895
Chrysler New Yorker, "loaded", 37,000 mi Jes ......... , ..
51299
Chev. Nova, 6 cyl. Was $1695 ............................... Now 51199
Pontiac Catalina, one owner. Was $1495 ................... Now 51195
Plymouth Satellite, auto ., A. C. Was $1595 ................. Now 51099

71 V.W. Super~ Beetle - As Is..................................

;:;:;.;:·.;:;:· ;.·:·: ;:·.;.·:·.;. :· ·&gt;::·::··:·:··: ::. :,:; : :-:
FIRST BANQUET

Meigs teams in P rev lew

one owner . Was

Maverick

NDW

Auto , A C , P S., custom
stnpmg, bucket seats. Was

Local
$2995 .

Pinto

Sieler ,

Pottstown , Pa , Chn st 1ana
Fay Wilkmg, Columbus, and

Beetle

73 Ford

cylinder Was S2695

'3695

both of Columbus, Phyllis
Juan1 ta Stewart, Chi ll• cothe;
Sandra
Neal, Addison ;
Wanda Lee Tyo, Toledo ,

$4999

v.w.

75 Ford

76 Sportabout
Station Wagon
Aula , AC, PS, PB ,

Extra Special

75

Auto ,
A C , radials ,
chrome wheels, tilt wheeL
4 wheel drive . Was $5495

Was $2995.00

R 1Pete I Hall , Langsville.

'

ARE

SNOWED UNDER * * *
L* * * * * * * lie * * * * * *

Legislation in briefs

•

*

* * *

and Jerry Hall, Add iSOI'); nine
daughters, Zdtha Sue ~ Bur
nette, Kanauga
Lo1s Ann

Reg ina

WE

Health

Funeral servtces tor Jay
HaiL Sr , 68, Cheshire , who
d1ed Wednesday morntng at
St
Mary 's Hospital in
Hunhngton , will be Friday at
2 p m at Ew1ng Chapel w1th the Rev
Arthur Breeder
off1c1a tmg Buna1 wi ll be 1n
Nle !QS Memory Gardens
He was born Feb . 27, 1909, a
son of the late Greenberry
and Margaret Hall He Was
a lso preceded m death by an
mfant daughter , two brothers
and a s•sfer
Surv1v1ng are h1s wife,
Earthel Adkins Hall ; four •
sons, Jay Hall, Jr, Cheshire.
Ja rnes E. Hall, Felicity ; Billy

Dorothy

Veler:ans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Lowell
Halfhill, Pomeroy: Phyllis
Stone, Pomeroy; Glennie
Lillie, Middleport ; J1mn11e
King , Minersville , Hamson
Rood, Reedsville , Joyce
Bing, Middleport; Martha
Mustain, Pomeroy, Tommy
Lane, Jr , Pomeroy ; Mary
McAllister. Middleport .
Discharged - Carl Tennant,
Linda
Stewart ,
Fl orence Hannay , Mabel
Tracy ,

PLEASANT ViLLEY
DISCHARGES ~ Jamle
Caldwell , Callipohs; Mrs.
Ray Bush, Mason ; Mrs. Gary
Collrill, Mason : Keith Anderson, Hartford ; Kimberly
Anderson ,Hartford; Amy
Glassburn, Bidwell; Leshe
Stders, New Haven; M8l
Hanney, Henderson ; Tracy
Hupp , Mason , Delores
Purdum, Lakin; John Burdette. Pomt Pleasant ; Mrs.
Lona Jones, Point Pleasant;
Barbara Johnson, New
Haven : Elmer Martm, Point ,
Pleasant , Belva Wol! ,
M~ son; Th omas Fellure,
Poml Pleasant ; Mrs. Kelly
Marcum , Point Pleasant;
Chrlstme Freeman, Point
Pleasant; Stella Neal, Point
Pleasant,
Mrs
John
Brumfield, Pmnt Pleasant;
Aniase Hunt, Evans; Michael
Proctor , Gallipolis, and
Robert Warren, Calllpohs

e

Rounding out the hst were
London , Loveland, Brookf~eld
and Hanulton Badm, making
1ts first appearance.
Four of the top SIX AA
teams will be in action m the
playoffs Saturday rught, No, I
Elyria Catholic taking on No.
4 St. Marys at Berea, and No.
2 Wyoming and No. 6 Canton
Central Cathohc tang ting tn
Dayton.
jlest Jefferson ( 8·0-1),
whose only blemish was an
early season t1e with Bexley,
also led in Class A from wire
to wire.
The Roughnders ended up
with a 172-132spread over No.
2Dalton m the final vote, with
South
Charleston

-

Southeastern (127) and
Sullivan Black River (125)
close behind m third and
fourth
Ashtabula St. John and
Hamler Patrick Henry, a pair
of playoff tean\s, edged mto
·fifth and sixth, with West
Liberty Salem, Newark Cathollc, Twin Valley North and
Beallsville rounding out the
top ten.
West Jeff opens defense of
its playoff ttt!e against No. 15
Crooksvtlle ( 8-2) Fnday night
at Groveport-Madison High
School, while No, 5 St. John
and No. 6 Patrick Henry meet
at Loram's George Daniels
Field.

-

BICYCLING
.HUFFY BICYCLES
e10·5Deeds
e ·Motor Cross
• llragsters
Layaway Now For Christmas

Turkey Day game
feature alumni
Th1s year's alumni football
game on Thanksgivmg Day
again is featuring grads from
Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Rutland and Meigs High
School.
The game 1s sponsored by
the Me1gs Athletic Boosters
Associatton. II is known as
the Ben Gay Bowl game.
The past three games have
been rece1ved well. This year
enthusiasm by the players at
sign up and practice ind1cates
that another good game is
assured for the fans.
Coaching the Middleport
team wlll be Dave Ashley
with assistance Erom Charles
Marshall.
Guiding the Pomeroy team
ts George Nesselroad and
Bub St1vers who seek to
avenge last year's 13-0 loss to
Middleport.
Some of the Pomeroy
players hop in g to blow
Middleport off the held are
R1ck and Mick Ash, Pat
O'Brien, Mike and Bob Werry
and •AI McLaughltn (last
year's MVP).
Hard-nosed Bob Stewart
and John Wolfe will be an-

I

Hucklcby w1ll probably start,
with suphomore Ro()sevelt
Smith ready for action at the
t!rop nf a football freshman
Stanley Edwards wouldn't
hurt tile Wolvenn es if
mjunes keep the other two
ta~lba cks out.
"l expect Ohio Slate to
pound the ball at us ." sa1d
sophomore linebacker Ron
Snnpkm s,
who
leads
M1ch1gan m tacktes with 138.
"I th1nk the key to the game
15 stoppin g I qu arterback
Rod ) Gerald"
Elsewhere around t he conference , defens1ve ta ckle
1"'1' y Bethea of Michigan
State, the best of the rest,
says the n]&lt;&gt;tlvatton to settle a
scor e wJlh Iowa IS Important
to the Spartans. As unportant
as the chance to ftmsh second
1n the Big Ten if Ohio State
&lt;;lefea ts M1ch1gan
Last year, Iowa spo1led
Mich1gan Stale's chance for a
5-5-1 season 11 hen th e
Hawe ve s beat MSU tn
Spartan Stadium 3().1u. Th•s
year, the scene sh1fts to
lowa 's home turf for the
st!ason [ma le.
"They came up here and
beat us on our own turf, and
that's probably our mam
mobvat10n, " Bet hea sa id
" Iowa 1s always tough, but
th1s year I think we're more
prepared both physically and
mentally."
MSU IS 5-1-1m the Big Ten
and 6-3-1 in all games, while
boasting a 4~ame wmrung ,
streak ,
Lameduck WISCOnsin coach
John Jardtne descnbed Wednesday 's practice as " a
lackluster day "
"They JUst went through
the motwns," Jardme sighed

choring the defens1ve umt,
Robert Qualls, Jtnl Anderson
and M1ke Wright are also
returning.
Newcomers are
Ray
Willford, Stan Starcher, Alan
Stewart, RICk J ohnson and
Dan Buffington .
Some of the Middleport
players out to even the series
at 2-2 are M1ck Childs, Perk
Ault, Charley Marshall , Lou
McKinney
and
Ch1p
Haggerty.
Middleport graduates
expected to play are B1ll
Halley, Maooing Bumgardner, Fred Robtnson, Charles
Bush a nd Larry Taylor John
Lehew and Tom Mowery
will more than likely anchor
the defensive unit.
As mentioned , the Meigs
Boosters are sponsormg the
game The association does a
lot of good deeds for the
athletic program at Meigs
High School so a good turnout for the game would be a
greal way to s•y "thank you"
to thiS fine, hard working
group of volunteers.
Game time will be 4 p m.
at
Thanksgiving
Day
Marauder Stadium.

"They got things done that
they wanted to do but they
lacked a little bit , of the
enthus1asm I would expect
them to have going iuto th1s
game."
The team worked on the
pass and th~ rush in
preparatwn for Saturday's
ga me agatnst the MiMesota
Gophers

S"E
U" TO

600/

/Q

oN NOME
MEA riNG

COSTS

(011111 lOUt l ..l'lAU II TIUIIIICI(II -II(U(

'lktter' 'I\ l}en·~
THE FIREPLACE STOVE
Ttu s u"•oue ~; omb nilttoo ""ooa S!o~e
ana l•leptac: e co ~et panel u"lsl alls ' "
m'"ules w•thoul mnonry a!l1'!1at ons
II burru, s.•asont'O wood throughout
th e n•gnt w ttl neat vou1 nome and
cook ~our meals Also great !or
camps c:a b.ns sk• l()dges and u an
emer'ilency un11 •n case o l po wer •••• ures t=11eD o ~ 18 n1gh 18 w•de . 2-4
dee p OoorOcen•no 9 • 13 Wa~ght
15Q ibs Back Panel Su:l J• v, htgh .(
-42 w•ae OIM er Stlll$ avat!ab!e

~~
GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

L

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Oh1o
__9:..:9.:.2·..:2.:.:92::5:___.J

BE PREPARED
FOR THE FIRST
SNOW!

WE HAVE
ACOMPLETE
STOCK NOW

OF MUD AND
SNOW
TIRES
P'
STOP IN &amp; CHECK OUR PRI

~

\::=::7

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

NO~THSECONDAVENUE

MiDDLEPORT. OHI045760
PHONE : 992-7161

FOR THE HOLIDAYS, WE'RE ROLLING OUT THE

A

D

D

FAMOUS BRANDS! BIG SAVINGS!

Prices will be in affect during these times ONLY. No
exceptions.
Watch For Our Giant Clearance Sale Ad In Nov. 23 Sentinel

RIVERSIDE
VW

AMC

RACINE CARPET SHOP

JEEP
446-9800

Gallipolis. Ohio
I

••

'

�4- The DaJI)' Senllnel,l\11ddlepm1·Pom••ro) . U.,lhu rsdd). :'iO\'. 1; .19;7

Vote coming tod~y on
new redistricting law
COLUMBUS I UP II - The
Ohio House toda)' wa s to vote
on a scaled..&lt;Jown version or a
congressional redistricting
plan designed to produce two
n~w

DrmoC'ratic seats in

Franklin

a nd

Hamilton

For Friday , Nov. 18, 1917

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Richmond, .Heather Woods, Darrick McCloud and Danya
Gheen tl-r l at a table with food .

LARA HAL L, RICHARD RATHBUR!\'. He ath

At
Right
and
Above : Kind~rgart en
classes of ~ l ary Hose
:1t ~liddleporrs Pearl
Stre~t
Elementary
School ht'ld their
annual
Thanks giYinging feast with
all tht· trimmings
Wednesday . Childre n
of both morning and
afternoon
classes
helped pr~par~ serve
and ate the meal
which
inl'luded
pumpkin pie ·•mad&lt;•
from scratch."

Thistledown
r&gt;ORTH RANDALL, Ohio
UPI) - Dave Dover and
Ohio Vamp finished in a dead
~

heat

We dnesday

in

t he

featured eighth race at
Thistledo\m. clucking I :00 2.0
for the flve furlongs.
DaYe Dover. ridden b\' J oe l
McCulla r, paid $3.40, M and
S3. Ohio Vamp. ridden by
Danny Weiler. returned $5.80,
$6 .60. $4.60 . Sedgefie ld
finished third.
The 7-1-6 ninth race trifee ta
nf Pee Dee Jr ., Leahcim and
Naughty He nry . returned
$1 32. The 4-6 daily double of
Racing On and Ribot Bolo
was worth $!30.60.

TONY A BROWN , JIMMY Williams and teacher Mary Rose inspect a chicken in the
oven prepared for their Thanksgiving feast.

Lebanon
LEBANON , Ohio iUPll A photograph of the finish
was needed to separate the
first three horses in the
featured · $1.&gt;00 cla imin g
ha ndicap pare at Lebanon ·
Raceway Wednesday night.

The

winner, , Second
Avenue, was driven in 2:11 3·
5 on · a n off-track by Dale
Hileman and paid $5 , $3 .60
and SHO.
Hi Ike pla.ced. and Fuzzy T.
Direct showed .
The H nightl y double
combination of Rea Ray
Co nnie and Hobnobber was
worth $54 .
Attendance was i, 119 and
,the handle $ll5,557.

AFTERNOO!\' CLASS children display tom toms they made in keeping with the Thanksgiving theme.

Indiana stOps Portland
By SHERYL FLATOW
UPI Spol'tS Writer
For the first half it looked
as if the wor ld c hampion
Portland Tra1l Blazers were
on their way to another ea sy
victo ry.
But
Indiana
outscored ~o rtl and, 31-19, in
the third quarter to take a
lWOiJOi nt lead and held on to
beat the Blazers, 111-104 .
It was only the fifth victory
of the season against eight
losses for tl1e Pacers, who
were
led
by
Dannv

;I

Roundfield 's game-high 29
points , including 12 in the
fourth quarter .
Recentl y acquired J ohnny
Neumann came nff the bench
in the final period and hit
five-for'five to spark the rally
with Roundfield.
•·we just got a ggressi-ve in
the second half," Pacers'
Coach Bobby Leonard said.
" It gives us a thrill to heal
P ortl a nd
they' r e
mon step;.' '
Forward Adrian Dantley

R ed S P Ian

k

Wee en

d

•es
Wl•th
h
c
amps
Sen
~

·

iliYision winners in -....,~LJ uno

~

CINCINNAT I IUPI )..,.. The
Cincmnati Reds' 1978 home . and · !977, have a similar
scti~ dul e ,
announced schedule the weekend of July
Wednesday night, fea tures 28-30.
The Reds also have th ree
weekend se ries. with National
ot
her . tlo u b l ehea d ers
League division champions
uled - Friday nig ht ,
sched
Los
An geles
and
July
7
against San Francisco,
Phi la delphi a, each series
Sunday,
·May 7 against
beginning with a Friday night
and
Sunday, May
Montreal
doubleheader .
21'
against
San
Diego.
As previous!}' announced,
Arch-rival Lns Angeles has
Red s ,
bn se ba ll' s
the
traditional Ope nin g Day an early season visit tn
hosts, ente rtain the Houston Riverfront Stadium f11r night
Astors a t .2:30 · p .m., games on ,April 25 and 26 and
Thursday , April6, to start the returns fnr its third visit in
late September for three
season.
The Nationa l Lea gue night games.
There are 47 single night
champion Dodgers will be in
es . on the 76-date
gam
Cincinnati June 31).July 2,
schedule,
a trio of 12 :30 p.m .
with a Saturday night game
sta
rL•
and
a pai r of 5 p.m.
and a single Sunctay game
contests.
Jul
y will be the
following the Friday lwiat Riverfront,
busiest
month
rughter.
Easte
rn
with.
19
ga
mes
'cheduied on
The · Phillies ,
17 da les .

Many
will shiver
this winter

VOUBLE HATFIELDS
There Is publlc confusion
on the business under lbe
name of "Charles Hatfield ." There are two
Charles Halfleldo and bolb
live at Rt. I, RuUand.
One Charles Hatlfeld
d..s Insulation worll and
the other has the HaUleld
Backhoe Service. Letterlug
tu this ellect Is on his true•.

Thanksgiving dinner held
by Presbyterian church
The annual Thanksgiving
cllnner of Group II of the Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church was
held Tuesday night at the Kin
Folk Restaurant in Point
Pleasant. Later the members

Sm.'t hilS

-rrtaker of

NOW RENT

Pontiacs

1_

pUJ,n yut-e events .

--------------$100

·--------------STAR SUPPLY CO.

: ~--------------~

STYLISH BOOTS

::;;~:;:::!:§~!.(®'$~~

t.

Designed to keep

0

I

i

you warm and dry
by

.:_That GM take back the
. (;AMES ON AIR
autos and give purchasers · ·
All four games of Friday's their money back.
- That GM take back the
annua l SVAC cage preview
will be broadcast live over cars and replace them with .
WVPC-FM , 101.5 beginning new . Pontiacs with Pontiac '
at 6:20p.m . Bill Gray and Ed engines.
Wildermuth will 'do the play- That GM pay the buyers .
by-play.
triple damages.

auditions .
MA I)f'I N US A

•'

When bad weather comes, you want
0
boots to keep the elements out. We
have a mmplete se lection of fashionable styles-some short- some tall,
lined and unlined. You'll surery find ju st
the right style to help you through the
rain and snow and cold. See them now!

••

~

•"

•

•

.•

Your

~

Hearth . . . . the Homesteader!

•
•

•••
'
••

See It Today

*

.•

.

.

\

\

••

~

•

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. I

r

Lay-Away
Now For Christmas
••
•

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

•

•'

Main st.

•

ft
ft

BEFORE WINTER ARRIVES

the

• Aluminum Door
Strips

Drop in and see the
selection.

From

.

\

• Felt Weather
Stripping
• Self..stlcklng Foam
'
Weather
Stripping
• VInyl Foam Tape
• Mortlte Caulking

Betty Ohlinger

Pomeroy, 0.

Scene
.

PICK-A-PAIR

Sizes 141/o to 19
Sleeve Length 32 to 35

SPORT SHIRTS
IN ALL THE
,LATEST STYLES

"
"
'

&amp;MAT~RIALS
KNIT
PULLOVERS

Pomeroy
Ohio

MAIN ST.

Polly Cramer

Bleach whitens old playpen

POLLY'S PROBLEM
do wn into the glaSs.
DEAR POLLY - I have a
Those who live alone or are
mesh playpen that has elderly · should fake extra
become gray ·looking as when care when taking a bath. Get
it was used I often left it out- into the tub and then run the
doors. Please tell me how to water and then do not get out
clean and whiten this as I of the tub until aU the water is
have tried several household -drained out. If one should slip
On this day in history :
and used brush but there may be a bwnp or two
cleaners
In 1800, the U. S. Cong ress
to
no
avail.
I simply cannot but there is no danger of
convened in Washington, D.
get
it
clean
looking
. - JEAN- drowning.- E.P.
C., .tor the first time. ,
NINE.
DEAR E .P. and AUCE B.
In 1869, the Suez Canal in
I
DEAR
JEANNINE
The best way to get every
Egypt was opened, linking
would
try
scrubbing
the
drop
from a bottle of salad .
the Red Sea and ttie
mesh
with
a
laundry
playpen
dressing
or even ketchup,
Mediterranean .
In 1881, Samuel Gompers detergent that has a special hand lotion, etc., is when you
organized the Federation of brightener and hot water. If thil))&lt; the bottle is empty,
Organized Trades and Labor this does not do the job then secure the cap tightly and
Unions, forerunner of the scrub with diluted bleach stand it on its head or side lor
American Federation of . water, rinse and put in the a day, You will be surprised
sun to dry . I had great luck at the amount that is still in
Labor.
In 1969, the strategic arms doing this to gray looking the bottle and that would
limitation talks (SALT ) white canvas on a terrace have otherwise been tossed
out.- ULUAN.
between the United. States cbair. '-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -My Pet
DEAR POLLY-My hus·
and the Soviet Union began in
Peeve
is
with
.
t
hose
people
band
is disabled and has·little
Helsinki, Finland.
' who put a way coats and . use of his hands and this
...- - - - - - - - - . dresses with pockets and makes it hard for him to even
forget to remove handker- take his dog for a walk. I
OPENING
chiefs and facial tissues that made a circle of elastic (like
a re full of germs. When the a collar) to slip over the
SOON
clothes are worn again out dog's head and then this is
come those germs io start fastened to the leash and
colds and flu all over again. works very well. It is easy for
BURNICE.
my husband to remove the
DEAR POLLY - I am elastic collar by pulling it
answering Alice R who has over the dog's head when he
trouble getting salad dressing brings him in after a walk.
out of a bottle. I open the botTo fill small jars with jelly
tle, insert the neck down in a or jam and not waste any I
MASON, W. VA.
tall glass so tbe edges of the fold a large piece of foil Into
fourths for strength, shape inof
thewill
bottle,
into to a cone to go in the top of the
glass
hold let
the drain
wide part
glass and . find that by the jar and the jelly is poured
time I am ready to use it rightin. -JOANN.
,
GIFT
enough dressing has drained

GINO'S
PIZZA

CERTIRCATES
LAYAWAYS

••
'
I

.•
•

_____

'r

~;;.;.;;.;.;~

program

resource:

Mrs.

Mary Rinehart, membership
chairman; Mrs. Lettie
Young, public relations and
historian ; Mrs. Beulah .)ones,
mission coordinator ; a nd
Mrs. Horton, chairman uf the
nominating committee.

Taskforce
visits area

FRIDAY, NOV. 18TH

The Reorganized Church of
Jesus Cbrist of Latter Day
Saints,
Portland-Racine
Branch, was visited by a missionary task force Sunday.
.The morning was reserved
for instruction followed by a
pot potluck dinner at noon. An
inspirational service was
held in the afternoon Allending were Elder Harold W.
Eagle, Elder Cleve Crabtree,
Elder Robert L. Sargent,
Elder Evan W. Ervin, Elder
Nick N. Sununers, aod Pirest
Daron Lilly.
HAVE VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer
and family, Charleston; Mrs.
Jean Schwnaker, Pittsburgh,
·pa,, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Hlad, · Cambridge were
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. James Criswell, Middleport .

A thought .tor the day :
English satirist Samuel
Butler said, " Great actions
are not always true sons of
great
and · mighty
resolutions."

2.0% OFF
On

All Winter

•COATS
•JACKETS
•SNOW·

SUITS
· Sizes 0-14

TOBOGGANS
.. ...

20%
OFF

PREPARE

NOW
FOR

WINTER

Hours :

9: 30 to 5:00
Mon. lhru Sat .

9:30 to 8: 00

VISA'

F r iday

KIDDIE SHOPPE
Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street
992-3586
Pomeroy , 0 .

"Nobody puts leather together .like DingO:'

Yule potluck dinner planned
A
cornbinedChristmas Mr. and Mrs. Stewart and
potluck dinner and program Mrs.
Mary
Hys e ll.
with all classes of the Mid- Refreshments were served.
&lt;lle~oort Church of Cbrist was
Attending were Mr. and
planned for Dec. 6 at 6:30 Mrs. Raymond Cole, Mr. and
p.m. when the Homebuilders Mrs. Leonard Van Meter,
Class met Tuesday evening at Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs. Flo
the church.
' Grueser, Mrs . Dorothy
_ Mack Stewart gave the Roach, MiSs Thelma Boyer,
opening prayer and presided Mrs. Margaret Kincaid, Mr.
over the business meeting. ·and Mrs. Edward Evans, and
Hosts tor the evening were the hosts.
.~

I-

'1·0000

TRADE-IN
&gt;

On All Uving Room Suites
Mon .. Tues •• Wed. &amp; Sat.-8 : 30 til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

BAHR CLOTHIERS
992-2351
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
;· .....,.......,

with prayer. Mrs . Knight had
a poem about the new officers
and their responsibilities.
During the business
meeting , Mrs . Criswell
reported on World Community Day service held at Heath
Church. It was noted that a
Gallipolis women will be
speaker fo r the De.c ember
meeting. The annual baza&lt;:tr
was announced for Dec. 6.
Officers installed were
Mrs. Pauline Horton, president; Mrs . Belly Fultz, vice
pre sident ;
Mrs . Clara
Criswell, secretary;
Mrs.
Maxine Philson, treasurer ;
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, Christian socia l involvement ; Mrs.
Ruth Bwngarner, Christian
global concerns; Mrs. Grace
French, Christian personhood; Mrs. Nan Moore,

POLLY"$ POINTERS

MASON FURNITURE

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

Ebersbach Hardware

Personal Notes

Mr. and Mrs. John Reuter,
CliHon, N. J. have been here
for the past tWo weeks
visiting Mr. a nd Mrs . Harvey
Van Vrank~n and family.
Mrs. Roger Smith and Mrs.
Larry Smith, Chauncey, were
guests of their aunts, Miss
Erma Smith and Mrs .
Gene'vieve Meinhart, Tues·
day.

COLOR DRESS SHIRTS

eHeatTape

SIMON'S

Pomeroy

A GREAT SELECTION
OF SHIRTS
~yARROW and
CAREER CLUB

• Aluminum Door
Bottoms

Priced

..

Mrs. McKnight
hosts meeting

:::::::::::::;::::::~:::::::::~

~

Ladies New
Fashion Boots

.

Holiday activities were being thai\K!W ani! she used
The annual pledge service
planned at the Tuesday night scripture Irom the Psalms. and installation of officers in
meeting of Friendly Circle of The offering was dedicated a ca ndlelight ce remony
Trinil~ Church.
'&gt;y Mrs. Stewart who was at highlighted the Monday night
Remembrances lor the the piano for group singing of meeting of the United
elderly of the church both " Come Ye Faithful People" Methodist Women of the
locally and 'non-rei•dent and " Count Your Blessings." Heath United Methodis t
wrapped by MiSii Mary This was followed by \Ulison Church.
Virgit\ia Reibel will be prayer.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hibbs conMrs. Albert Woodard and ducted the pledge service takdelivered by circle members
early in December.
Mrs. Elza Gilmore served a ing members on a " mission of
The Christmas sock offer- dessert course .from a dollars." She demonstrated
ings were brought in and will candlelit table decorated in by a new and an old $2 bill
be used for benevolent pur- · the Thanksgiving motif. just how the money goes to
chases. A contribution was Favors were date books and the district, conference, and
made to the emergency bath cubes.
to New York where nine
squad and toys for the
million is neededfor world
children's ward at Veterans
and national programs.
Memorial Hospital will be
Mrs. Hibbs read "Open
delivered by Miss Enna
Mine Eyes that I Might See".
Smith.
to conclude the pledge serMiss Smith reported on
vice. Mrs. Kathryn Knight
world community day. She
had a Thanksgiving poem to
announced Trinity church
Mrs. Lenora McKnight open the meeting held in the.
women will be hosts for the hosted a meeting of the Sew church sanctuary.
May Fellowship Day obser- Rite Sewing Club at her home
The new officers were invance of Church Women Wednesday night.
stalled by Mrs. Mae Lambert
United of Meigs County.
• Presiding at t~e meeting · who used a candlelight
The Christmas meeting was Mrs. Pandora Collins ceremony. Mrs. Beulah Jones
was announced for Dec. 20 at with Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore as was at the organ, and Mrs .
the church with Mrs. Albert secretary and Mrs. Carolyn Wendell Hoover came down
Woodard to have the pr&lt;r McDaniel giving t h e the aisle singing " Take My
gram. A party to follow will treasurer's report. The next Ule and Let It Be" after
be arranged by Miss Reibel. meeting to be held at the which Mrs. James Criswell
There will be a $2 gift ex- home of Mrs. Mildred Wells read the names of the officers
change.
was set lor Nov. 30. Games to be installed as they aJ&gt;'
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart were played with prizes going proached the altar. Mrs.
reported on the Christian to Mrs. Betty Wehrung, Mrs. Lambert read the charge to
Women's luncheon meeting Mildred Wells, Mrs. Shirley' the officers and concluded
held in Gallipolis a nd noted Baity, and Mrs. · Carolyn
that the December meeting · McDaniel. An Avon party
will be on held Dec. 13. Mrs. was h~ld in conjunction with
Kathryn Spencer of Florida, the meeting by Mrs. Gilmore
a former member, was who displayed Christmas
welcomed.
items.
" Prai~ing and Thanking
BAKE SALE PLANNED
Pla ns were made for the
God " was the program topic annual Christmas dinner
. The Middleport Alumni
by Mrs. Stewart and Mrs. which will be held at the Association will hold a bake
David Russell. Mr s . Meigs Inn.
sale on Friday, Nov. 18', from
Stewart's meditation was on
A salad course was served 9 a. m. to 3 p,m. at the Columto those named and Mrs. Flo bia Gas Co. office in MidStrickland, Mrs. Lucy White, dleport . All local alumni are
Mrs. Martha Hoffman, Mrs. asked to contribute.
Joni Hoffman, and Mrs. Caddie Spencer, a guest and
former member of the club
now residing in Florida.

a

Today's way to use
Wood
or
coa l
ror
warm t h . .. a · ci r ·
Cu la ti ng heater with a
lully
~ u tomat i c
ther m ostat cont r ol for
winter ·long
warmth ,
hOuSed in a beautiful
cabinet that makes It
an a sset to any room .

498 Locust St.
Middleport, 0 .

invalids there.
For the Sanborn Missionary Society next month,
Mrs. Walburn will have dev&lt;r
tions. -Mrs. Freda Hood
presented the program entitled '' Women of Haiti" Mrs.
Rhodes served refreslunents
to those named and Mrs.
Janice Gibbs and Mrs. Ethel
Hughes.
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Mrs. Frances Smart was
hostess for the Love Joy Circle meeting held Tueseay
night at her home. A discussion on showing Jove and
friendship was conducted by
Mrs. Louise Davis. Mrs. Bernice Baker had the devotions
entitled "The Golden Bridge
of Praise." It was taken from
Catherine Marshall's book
" Something More." The love
gift dedication was by Mrs.
JuneKioes.
It was decided to send gifts
of money to the Rev . Robert
Coates, missionary and to
Mary Tilford, scholarship
student. Shutins will be
remembered with a gift at
Cbristmas and with cards at
Thanksgiving. The circle will
be hostesses for the Sanborn
Socie t y
meeting
in
December.
The white .c ross quota was
completd completed a nd
turned in. Mrs. Sarah Fowler
had the program using
material on the First Baptist
Ch ur c h
of
Haiti.
Refreshments were served to
t hose named and Mrs.
Alwilda Werner, Mrs. Leora
Sigman, Mrs. Harold Chase,
Mrs. Mary Hughes, and Mrs.
Ullie Hub bard.

~
i
.

consumer~ :

WilKINSON
SMALL ENGINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE

1

LOWER
.,RATES

r:ar

A Modern Woodburner to Warm

returnedtothehomeofMrs.
Helen Sauer for a program
and meeting. Mrs. Martha
Anderson was the assisting
hostess.
Mrs. Velma Rue had dev&lt;&gt;lions using "The Stoning" by
Marjorie Holmes . Each per-·
son related things lor which
they are thankful.
New officers elected for the
year were Mrs. Ethel
Lowery, chairman; Mrs .
Mildred Karr, c&lt;K:hairman;
Mrs. Anderson, .secretary
and Mrs. Kathryn Miller.

Heath UMW·install
for season time events · officer~ at ceremony

Missionary Society Friendly Circle plan

Holiday remembrances of
the shutins and elderly were
arranged iit the Tuesday
night meetings of the circles
of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society of the Middleport First Baptist Church.
WE'VE LOWEREir
Meeting at the home of
Mrs . Florence Rhodes, the
THE COST OF
EJecta Circle voted to give a
CARPET CLEANING
donation to the Baptist Youth
Fellowship for their special
project of remembering a ·
needy family at Christmas
lime. A gift of money will also
treasurer.
Mrs . Sauer anno\Ulced the be sent to a scholarship stu·
~ ~~:~~';: CLEANING
Women's Association to be dent for Christmas, and at the
AT NEW
held Dec. 8 at the church with next meeting fruit trays for
Group I to be hostesses, and shutins will be prepared.
Group II to have the pr&lt;r Booklets of Christmas verse
gram. A Bible study was held will be sent to out-of-town
on Chapter 4 and the group members.
Mrs. Freda Hood reported
sang Thanksgiving songs Jed
on
her visit with Mrs.
by Mrs . Dwight Zavitz. The
Frances
Bearhs to whom she
least coin offering was taken
arrangement.
took
a
floral
with the meditation on the
Booklets
of
poetry
were sent
· peace of God who grants it to
to
Mrs.
Lettie
Roush
and Mrs.
!
those who trust and love him .
Anna Grimm. Cards will be
'
sent to the shutins at
Thanksgiving. Get'well cards
: Do-ft-yourse/1
, and gel ptofeulonal
were signed for Mrs. Pearl
!" unufls
Hoffman, Mrs . Freddie
•
Houdas h elt, and Mrs.
ATI'END FUNERAl'; .
Florence Hannay.
For devotions, Mrs. MarMr. and Mrs. Edson Roush
IPT
and Mrs. Robert Warner jorie Walburn read from the
,_
PERHOUR
were in Columbus recently " Twelfth Man in the Huddle"
.•
14HOUR-I
for the services of their by David Diles. Mrs. Eloise
brother-in-law, William Cur- Wilson ~ad the treasurer's'
tis, who died unexpectedly of report, and the love gift was
a heart attack. Mrs. Warner , dedicated by Miss oda Hall
remained for several days to · who al'so reported on her visit
949-2 525
be with her sister before to the Mary Yo\Ulg Home in
Racine , 0 .
returning h01ne this week .
Pomeroy. Miss Hall, Mrs .
Roma Hawkins, a nd Mrs.
Tesanna Well took fruit to the

HQston .
Republicans now dominate
the Ohio co ngressional
delegation, 13 to 10.
The Senate-passed bill
:::::::::::::::::::·::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:
originally provided up to fiv e
new seats for the Democrats,
but the chairman was unable
to secure enough votes for it.
The committe e quic kly .
produced a substitute bill
dealing only with Fra nklin ~··
and Hamilton counties. and
voted it out on a straight
party-line
vote.
with
Democrats ln favor and
Republicans opposed.
CINCINNATI (UP! ) -Two
As written , the substitute Cincinnati attorneys have acbill reshapes Franklin cused the Generai Motors
County's two districts to Corp.
of · intentionlly
furnish a s ure Democratic concealing the substitution of
seat in the southern half of "inferior" auto engines In
NOTICE OF SALE
the county, now represented lale~nodel Pontiac ctirs sold
B'l' virttJeofanOROER OF
by two Republicans.
SA LE IN PARTITION issued
to thousands of American
our ot tne Court of common
The committee amended
customers.
Pl eas , in t he case Emmog en e
the bill to leave Rep. Samuel
The lawyers have filed a
Edwards Holste in vs . Ma ry
Crooks Turnbull , et al , be ing
L. Devme, R-Columbus, in
case no . 16, 421 , I w i ll offer for
the southern district.
class-action suit against GM,
sale at public auct ion at Th e
Originally,
Devine's
on behalf of all Ohioans who
door of the Court House of
Meigs Count..,., on the Jrd day
resident! a 1 area had been Wlknowingly purchased such
of Dec em ber 1977. at 10 ~ 00
combined with that of Rep. Pontpiac tautos e&lt;)uipped with
o'clock A .M .. the follow ing
.
Cha lm ers P . Wylie, R· non- o~ ~ac ~ng ~s .
lands and renem.enTs :
P~r ce t No. l :
Columbus, to give Columbus , The swl, filed tn Hamilton
T he follow i ng de-scribed
city councilwoman Fran County Common Pleas Court,
r eal esta te situate in the
County ot Me ig s, in 1t:le State
damages
to
Ryan a clear shot at the seeks
of Oh io , a nd in The Townsh ip
territory
in
the
compensate
the
buyers
of
the
Democratic
of Olive , and bounded an d
sout hern portion of the cars with substitute engmes.
described as IOIIows, viz :
Be i ng a part ot lo t nu m ber ed
count
Theactwn also asks the court
three()) of the sub .d ivi sion of
De~~rrats indicated that to stop Pontiac from selling
the Estate of Major R eed ,
Deceased , beg inn ing a T the
tacfic was no longer any more autos With ~onNortheast corner of a part of
sa ld estate belonging to A. w. necessa ry when Mrs . Ryan Po~t1ac engmes, without .li_rst .
Cowdery a-nd in the South li ne
moved to Chicago to take a tellmg cnnswn~rs Ill wntmg
ot lands ot Lydia K . Pa c kard
federa l job.
of the substitutiOn. .
in the intersect ion of tne
The suit was hied by
Hamilton County with a
roads leading from ReedS ·
·ville , to FIJrked Run and
distric1
and
a
lawyers
Gene Mesh and
Republican
Tuppers Pla ins ; thence East
" swing" district, wou ld be · Ambrose. H. Lmdh?rst. T~
w i th South line of said Lyd ia
K . Packard land 129 feer to a
provided with a ce rtain plam ttff m the swt iS Mesh s
stake ; thence South 99 teet to
.
t ' th ·t f w1fe, Elise, who bought a
1
a stake ; thence West 152 ,
Demorra t iC
sea m e Ci yo
P t. F' b' d
. thl
teet to the West side ot sa id
Cincinnati.
on tac tre tr _ear1ter s
Forked Run and East line of
Del Bane said the romthat was equip~ with a
A . W . Cowdery ' s land ; th ence
w i th sa id Cowdery 's l ine in a
subs~~tut~ a n&lt;l tnferlor
mittee gave up trying to draw
Northerly dire ction to the
a new Democratic district in e~gme built by another GM
place of beg i nn i ng , con ·
the Dayton-springfield area div 1s10n, court papers stated.
ta i n ing one.four1h (! .. ) of a n
acre , more or less .
Mesh sa1d the swt se~ks
and in Stark c0 unty.
Parcel No . '2
.one •f the
fo ll owmg
The follow ing described
alternatives
to
compensate
rea l es t ate situate in th-e

co unties.
The measure, drawn by
Democrats to enhanee \hei r
sta nding in the Ohio
cong ressi ona l delega tion
after the 1978 election. was
expected to pass on a partyline vote.
The House was to meet at
II a . m., but the vote was
expected to take place after
lunch.
The redistricting bill, holed
up In the House ' Governmental Affairs Committee
since last July, popped out
Wednesday on a !1).7 vole.
It was advanced at the
request of House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr .. D-New

No¥ . lB. 1977
Important. · long-range plans
w1H be ready to r reapmg th1 S
coming year . In addi tio n, con siderable travel fo.r pleasure is
likely .
SCORPIO {0c t. 14-Nov . 11l You
are held 1n particularly hig h
esteem tod ay by pe ople that
you know soc1ally . It' s no t
l1kel y they would deny yo u any
request vou make o f th em . like
to find out ·- more of what lies
ahead for you ? Send for your
copy of Astra-Graph Letter by
mailmg 50 cents tor each sign
and a long , self-addressed.
stamp ed envelope to Ast raGraph , B.O. Bo)( 489, Radio C1 ty
Station. NY . 10019 Be sure to
spec 1fy your birth sign.
SAGITIARIUS {No•. 23-Dec .
21} There are ra inbows 1n your
l1fe today Each co uld ha11e a
pot ol gold at the end o f them .
You may be lucky in two to ta lly
unrelated circurristances .
CAPRI CORN iDee. 11-Jan. 19l
The more you move around and
ml)( tod ay the better c hance
you ha\le of good things occurnng . Uniquely advantageous
con ta cts wilt develop.
AQUARIUS {Jan . 11l-Feb . 19l Be
watchful today for sudden
shifts that could mean more
dollars or advan ceme nt in your
fie ld . Someone in a key position may make il possible .
PISCES !Feb . 10-March 20l
You ' re extremely magnetic today to either sex . Your oppoSite gender will view you
romanti~lly, while your own
Township of Ol ive in the
will apprectate you as a fiiend . Coun t y of Meigs · and Sta te of
ARIES {March 11-Aprll 19l Oh io , to .wit : Be ing a part of
You're fortunate _today in that Lot Number Three (3 l of the
Subdivision ot the Estate of
people are apt to do nice things Major
Reed ,
Deceased ,
for you purely on impulse . This beginning at the Southwes·t
is especi all y true of those of corner of lot deeded by sa id
the o pposite sex who d ig you . Mar ia Hoyt to sa id De ll
TAURUS (April 20-May 10l Arnott ( deed bear ing date of
J uly 15. 19011: thence Eas t
Being able to get along with w i th the South ltne of said lot
JUSt about an yo ne ts what will 152 1 2 teet to The Southeas T
make thts a successful day . corner of s~id lo t ; th.ence
You ' re also lucky w tth grandi- South 11 11 feet to a stake ;
th'e nce West 18 d feet fo th e
os e plans .
West side of the Forked Run
CJEMINI!May 21.June 10l There Road and East li ne ot A . W .
,..• a_re-- unusually large opportuni- Cowdery ' s land ; thence w it h
ltes around. you today. finan - sai d A . w, cowcterv ' s l ine in a
. cially and caree rwise . Be alert. Northerly direction to the
lor your brea.ks cou(d come in a pta~e ot beginnin g, con ·
tain i ng one .fourth' (IJ,d o f an
un1que manner.
acre. rhore or less :
CANCER {June 11-Juty 11) If
Par cel No .3:
Dan Cupid seems to have been
The following real estate
1gnoring you lately, be of gOod sit ua ted in the County q t
cheer . He has sorneone spe- Meigs , in the State of Ohio
and in the Township of Olive ,
ci al in mind . l!'s poss1ble you bounded a nd described as
co uld cross paths today .
follows : Be i ng L ot Number
LEO {July 23-Aug . 21l Changes F ifty .three (53 ) in McDo l e
you are presently making ap- and Tor r·ence Addition to
pear to be very ' wise and Reedsville. Me i gs county,
Ohio .
promi!!.ing . It looks li ke th ings
Reference Deed : Vol . , 224,
will work out to your expecta- Page 151 , Me i gs County,
tions .
Ohio , Deed Records .
Terms of Sale : Cash in
VIRGO {Aug . 13-Sept. 11) Th is
is a good day to bring con- Hand . Cannot be sold for less
than 52.000. Al l three parcel s
tracts . agreements or legal sold as one .
matters to a head, for the odds
Ja mes J Proffitt
are stacked in yo ur favor .
Sheriff
LIBRA !Sept. 13-0ct. 13l This
igs Coun·ty
could be a day of outstanding ( 11 ) J, 10, 14, 24Me
(12 ] 1, Stc
achievement for you if you're
wi lling to work for it. So lid
effort will give you both fame
and fortune .

made up for the loss of John scored 20 poi nts.
Williamson - who wa !ked off Braves 101, Ruekets 97:
the floor at the halftime after
Buffalo also evened its
a n apparent disagreement record a,t 7-7, thanks to 38
with Leonard - scoring 26 points fr om Billy Knight and
points in three periods for the 29 fr om Randy Smith.
Pacers. Larry Steele and Bill Houston wasted a 36-jJOint, 29- ,
Walt on !\ad 21 and 20, .rebound performa nce by
respectively , for the Trail Moses Malone.
Blazers.
L.eonard had no comment
on · Williamson 's walkout
except to say , " .. .It's strictly
a team matter, but l'll have
something to say'l! ~out it at
practice Thursday .' 1
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Phi la del phia beat Sea~lle,
101 -96 , Boston del ea led
Atlanta , 13J.l05, MUwaukee
ByWILLIAMSILBERG
beat New Jersey, llli-106, and
DETROIT (UP!) - A
Buffalo defeated ·Hnuslon, University of Michigan
!0!-97.
researcher predicts miJli9nS
of the nation's elderiy will
76crs 101, SuperSurii.cs 96 :
Julius Erving 's game-high shiver t his winrer, and S()me
28 points and Doug Collins' 17 . may f~ce the grim choice of
helped Philade lphia earn a keeping
t'
warm or ea mg.
fl·rst-place t1'e w1'th the New
Based on a study of this
York Knicks in the Atlanlie
It •5 ld 1
y
e er y poor last
Di.VJ.sl'on. Sli'ck Watts and · cwinter,
Dr. Leon Pastalan
·' I ·vin Webste rhad 17points said Wednesd•y about oneJ,, Sea ttle .
fifth of America's se nior
Cell ics 131, Hawks 105 : . • citizens will have heating
Bosto n won 1ts th~rd . problems this winter.
straight . game and handed
Pasta Jan, head of the
Atlanta Its fourth defeat m .a university's Institute of
r ow, wllh r oo kie Ced nc Gerontology, said a smaller
Maxwell a nd Tom Boswell number would have "really
scorUJg ~ pomts ap~ece ~or 1 ,severe problems with money
the Ce ll1cs. Atlanta s John~ and heat," and S()me would
Drew led all scorers w1lh 23 ' be forced· to choose between
pomts . .
eating and paying utility
Bucks 116, Nets 106:
bills.
Dave Meyers scored 29
"!would guess that maybe
points and grabbed 12 I or 2 percent actually make
rebounds to help Milwaukee the choice between eating
even 1ts record at 7-7. It was and keeping wann," he said
the lOth Joss m 12 ga mes for in a telephone interview from
New Jersey, although Kevin Ann .Arbor. "That's just a
Porter had 26 pmnts and H stab in the dark. It may be a ..
;1ss ists, and Darnell Hillman , lot higher."

!;-The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;Jrt·POI!leroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. !7, 19'17

:::;.;: ::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;.;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;.

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason , W. Va .

Take il from O.J.
Simpson. He demands just
as much from his footwear
off the field as on the field .
So he wears Dingo. The
leathers are tough·stltchec!:&gt;
the design pure and
si mple. Casual leisure
boots, but with fla ir.
0. J. Dingo. A
specia l style of
boot for a
. special .kind of man.

heritage
OF SHOES
Optn MondaY fhrv Thvrs.c&amp;.y &amp; Saturd•Y f :30to S;OO
FrldiY ' :lO to 1:00

N. 2NOAVE .

'•,

MIDDLEPOR:T, O.

I '

�E P I S C 0 P A L C h ur c h
..... Wonum ,Jr Grac·t• Episrupal

~~~~:'~:..
u ..
:=.,•~..
n•~o!Olt&lt;l:iil&lt;~?~)lll"'~'·

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

Plans made
byD of A

Social
Calendar

·· !.'hurch. at 12:30 p.m. Thursday, lunC'h('t)n at hlllllt' ur
Mrs . Gral't" F:ieh, l.inrol n Hill

Road, Pomeroy.
MAGNOI.IA Clu b, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. home of fora
Beegle. Racone.
FRIOAV
PAST
MATRONS of
Evangeline Chapter, Mid·
dleport, OES,. Friday 7:30
p.m. hom£&gt; of Mrs. Marion
French.
MEIGS Count y 1\EACT
Team special meeting, 7 p.m.
Friday at Meigs Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy. ·

SATUKIJIH
H1\ ClNE Grange will host
1ts annua l Thanksgiv-ing
turkey donn e r, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the hall. Those
attending to take a Co\'ered
d1sh and own table service.
" Pig in a poke" auction will
follo w. Gift s will be accepted
fnr ~mnunl Christmas box for
Athens State Hospital.

Marjorie E. Cluff to James
Casey, Connie Casey, Lot ,
Middleport .
James J . Prof!ilt, Shf.,
Rona ld D. Thomas, Karen T.
l'hurnas to Athens County
Citizens National Bank to Savings and Loan Co., Lot,
Richard E. Jones. Donna Middleport .
Jones, Lot 9, Rock Springs
James E. Watson to Virgil
Sub., Salisbury.
Pme. Mac Price, Lots 6 and
· Goldie Lynch nee Goldie 1, Wrc•thermetn's Sub. D1v.,
Wyant , Carlos Lynch to Orange .
James L. Eberts, Terry R.
Cli fford R. Ha yes, AfEberts, Timothy H. Eberts, fidllvit , Middleport.
Parcel , Sc ipio.
..
Clifford H. Hayes to John
~· ran e es 0 . Young, afGregory Hayes. Clifford R.
fidavit , Scipio.
Haves. Lot. Middleport ..
Tina K. Ja(obs to Richard
Elouise !.. Hayes, dec. to
E. J ones , Donna W. Juues, Clifford H. Hayes, Ccrt. for
3.834 acres, Salisbury.
trans ., Middlepo11.
Donald Curtis Roush .
Cl ifford Hollin Hayes to
Diane Elain Roush to' George John Gregory Hayes, Cynthia
M. Gillilan, Linda L. Gillilan, Ann Hayes, Lot. Middleport .
2 acres , Chester.

Property
Transfers

TIIURSOAV
CHESTER-Holiday party
HONESTY'S NOT ALWAYS BEST
RIVERVIEW
GARDEN
DEAR HELEN AND SUE : Our daughter spent $30 to have plans were discussed when CLUB meet~ Thursday, Nov.
her hair frosted. and it looks like four-tone straw. When I told the Chester Council 323. 17 at thr W1lhams·Balderson
her it was horrible she ran out of the house and I had to chase Daugbers of America , met home with Mrs . Dona ld
her with the car. Now she sulks and won't speak to me. I was Tuesday night at the hall.
CLEVE LAND (U P! I
The district past c'Ouncilors Putnam as co-hostess . A
truthful and she knows it. Why couldn't she lake honest
Gary Sabourin , Ute Cleveland
Christmas
workshop
will
be
dub and the district deputy
criticism? ·NOT Al: FAULT
Hflrnns veteran right winger,
dub Christmas party will be conducted by Mrs. BalJlerson
DEARNAF :
11111 undorgP surgery Pn his
and
Mrs.
Gene
Wilson
.
When a girl wastes $30 on a mistake, she doesn't need a held on Dec. 4 at the Chester Members arr to bring gifts
lt•ft knee a t University
"truthful " mother 1who proba bly implied, "I told you so !"). Lodge hall with potluck din· for patients at Athens Mental
Hospita l Wednesday .
Bettor vou should have remained neutral, then later offered to ner at 2 p.m. There will be a
Tea m
offi cials
said
Health Center.
help her with hot oil treatments or whatever it takes to tame 12 gift exchang and any louge
All m e mbers. especia,lly Sabouri n reported at the
member is invited to attend.
MEIGS GIRL Scout charter ones. urged to .at· training camp . in good
the straw. · HELEN AND SUE
Mrs. Mae McPeek, . coun· meeting. 7:30 Thursday at the tend: 1978 dues now payable. eondition.
cilor, presided at the meeting Columbus and Southern Ohio
•
RAP :
My family and I have an urgent problem. My dad won 't take attended by 23 members. Electric Co. office. All troops
a bath! When he walks through the room or lakes his shoes off Reported ill was Mrs. Goldie to have a representative at
everyone gags. His last hath was seven days ago . Mom and us Wolfe. A sympathy card was the meeting. Baby sitters will
kids put deodorizers in his view but he doesn't get the hint. signed for Mrs. Ada Morris be members of the Meigs
How can we let him know without offending him? who lost her brother-in-law, Cadette Troop. Plans will be
Lowell · Carper, by death. made for Thinkin~ Day and a
DESPERATE
Word was sent to the council workshop on songs and
DES :
Why worry about offending someone who evidently doesn't · by Mrs. Wolfe thanking games will be held.
worry about offending you' Your mother should say, ' 'I'm run- members for cards on her anANNUAL PUBLIC turkey
ning the hath water for you, dear," when your Dad comes niversary . Mrs. Zelda Weber dinner of Rutland Fire
home each night, and if the hint doesn't take, then the Whole thanked members for cards Department, Thursda y,
and gift.s sent to her daughter
family hl\S a right to demand he cha~ge his habits. ·HELEN
serving beginning at 5 p.m. at
on her birthday.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes , Rutland Elementary School
NOTE FROM SUE : I'll bet if he disliked something his wife or
cafeteria; advance tickets at
children did, he'd shout it out. So do likewise· for his own good. · deputy state councUor, thank· New York Clothing House.
ed the members who went to
Belpte for friendship night. Dutton Drug Store or Senior
DEAR RAP :
Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
Even though Dick and I stopped going together, we were ex- At the Dec. 6 meeting of the . REVIVAL now in progress
ceptionally good friends . He 'd, call me and talk and we'd goof council, quarterly birthdays at Mt. Olive Church, Long
will be observed. There will
around.
Bottom through Nov . 27 at .7
A girl he doesn't like very much is sort of chasing him . be poUuck refreshments and p.m. nightly . D. Adams,
(She's fat and not very pretty. ) She drew me into a conversa· also nomination of officers.
Attending were those nam- Marietta evangelist. Special
tion last week and started talking about Dick. She said some
singing eac h evening .
pretty had things, but I didn't agree with her. It was more like ed and Mrs. Ada Neutzling, Lawrence Bush, past or.
. Mrs. Dorothy Lawson, Mrs.
I ignored her.
Gospel Tones from Chester
So she couldn't wait to call Dick and tell him all the terrible Mary K. Holter ,Mrs . Goldie will be feat ured on Tuesday,
things I said about him. I told him they weren't true, but Frederick, Mrs. Leona Nov, 22:
somehow we started.fighting, and now he ignores me. When I Hensley, Mrs. Dorothy Rit·
call, he's " not home." How can I explain• • FRIEND- chie, Mrs. Margaret Tuttle,
Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs. Enna
SHIPLESS
Cleland,
Mrs. Mrs. Zelda
DEAR F .:
Weber,
Mrs.
Ada Van Meter,
Why not write Dick a letter? Surely he's got sense enough to
Mrs.
Ethel
Orr,
Mrs. Doris
lake the word of a good friend over that of a girl who obviously
Grueser,
Miss
Julie
Rose,
want.s to make points with him. ·HELEN
Mrs. Thelma White, Mrs.
Jean Frederick, Mrs. Betty
F. :
Unless he's the world's most gullible guy; or she is a very Roush, Mrs. Mary Hayes,
persuasive talker. Why not ask the girl, in front of Dick, just Mrs. Sadie TrusseU, Mrs.
•Mobile Home
why she put her words into your .mouth ? • SUE
... Eileen Marlin, and Mrs. Mar·
cia Keller.
Underpinn ing
• Roof Coating
• Tie-Downs
• Awnings-Carports
Wyllis Davis, spent the
LAFF. A. OA 'T
weekend at his home. He Is
NEW HAVE N - Tim attending the Ohio Institute of •··-- · ,., _, --· 11~,
Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs . . Technology in Columbus.
~ .

MEN'S LINED BOOTS

530

INSURANCE
REPAIRS

•
•
•
•

1100 E. Main
~·J-never tan remember .. . is it

C before D except after E?"

the focus of ilie crime wave is
"severe ... management
involvement ln the battle to

cut losses is not sufficiently
aggressive.··

Acc;ording to the report,
within ::service
crime
industries alone cost $9.2
billion in 1976, and that is just

section to computer abuse,

the ~• tip of the iCeberg ."

which it said "is a potentially

Much of the criminal activity
goes unreported and some
crimes - such as bribery,
kickbacks and fraud - are
impossible to calculate in
dollar terms.
Employees get most of the
blame.
"Employee theft is a
primary ca use of crime
losses . .. although external

devastating Crime."

Pomeroy , Ohio

••

-

Wide-Range SpeaAers Deliver " Btg Sound " Stereo
Pushbutron TC!pe Progr'!m Change " Phon e Jad
AFC Locks -In FM Station • Compact
Input lor !OptiOnal) Record Changer

Reg.

12 -1404

12995

Reg.
'29995

1

my campaign and the voters who

THE
Jll.l•l~~~~~
SHOE BOX

supported me in the recent election.
Vt.sA o'v

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)

SAVE 26°/o
6-BAND
RADIO: UHF,
VHF-HI/LO
. AM, FM,
AVIATION

and

building ~rials

VILLAGE
PHARMACY .
271 N. 2nd Ave.
601 5th Street
Middleeport, 0 . New Hilven, W.Va.

.&lt;Or . and Mrs. Rod ne y
Holman , Log an, W. Va.,
announce the birth of their
first child , a son, Luke
Rodney on Nov . 7 at logan
General Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. Freeland Witt,
Logan . Paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and ·Mrs.

-------·-l

rPOA£~!
Your "Edra To.uch"
Flor ist Since 1957

George · Holman, Syracuse.

I

Maternal
great·
grandparents are Mrs. Vida
Witt and Mr. and Mrs. Jess
Workman, all of Logan and
paternal great-grandparents
are Mrs. Howard Roush,
Letart, W. Va. and Mrs.
Letitia Holman, Saginaw,
Michigan.

I

l

L

~

~

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E . Main ,
You~

Pomeroy

FTD Flor ist

I

!
[

..__,.._.._.,._.._.._._.]

REXALL

VITAMIN E
200 UNITS- 100 CAPSULES
\

~~:~

$.2 19 .

ONLY

•
•
•
•

Protect Your Family!
Wall or Ceiling Mount ·
Detects Problem Early!
Complete with Battery,
No AC Power Required
.

.

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICE,S. QUALITY ¥ATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.
WE
DELIVER

SAVE 26°/o

SAY~

Reg. 29 95

2

923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport,
992-2709 or 992-6611

·- MEMORY

open: 7:00 to5:00 Mon. thru Fri :
7:00fo3 : 00 Saturday

~:.~ 10!~ z:

• Mirrorer;l 5" Scale
• Overload Protection

SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY , •. MOST STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS 'Til

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
A DIVISION OF TANDY

!'

'

REG. '5.25,

WATCHES

HEAVEN SENT

SPRAY COLOGNE

STOCK

$]75

ONLY

BROWN DUCK
BLANKET-LINED
JACKET 6BLJ
81-swlng action back . Cuff and
waist adjustments. Sr1apS fo r
match ing hood, etc .

-....
--

SIZES Reg . 36-50
Long 38·50

cal"'l"lartt

BROWN DUCK
PILE-LINED VEST 6SV

ONLY

$24,95

' Most 11ems
also ava1table at
Raa10 Shack

REG.
1
1.98
FOR HIM

BRUT LOTION
3/8 Ol

69

~

CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP
JUMBO ROLL
REG.

\

'1.98

ONLY

REACH

mdterratrhan
twn l~;ltloll~

l~f

..

tootltbw~~es

TOOTHBRUSH

FOR SORE
THROAT
PKG. OF 18

10 Ol

REG.
$7.89

REG.
.ONLY

1.25

1

· REG.

ONLY

3.45

1

ONLY

$}89

P"-·--··-·-··-··-··-··-·-------~

I

I
·-I .
.I
I
I
I
I Kenneth McCwlough, R. Ph. Charles RiHie. R. Ph. I
I
Ronald Hanning , R. Ph
I
Mon . lhru5al. 8 :00a .m . to9p.m .
I
I

'

Sunday10:30to12 :30andSto9p.m.
1
I PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992-2955

•

••

••

'llllfe

1.25

30 FREE WITH 100

-

ne1gtlborh0od
PRICES MAY \/Afh'

CltallS
a·,...~y

· deu·r c~us•ng

1

FORMUlA WITH MINERALS

m

••

ONLY

.,,.

REG • .

H_IGif POTENCY VITAMIN

.;..

Dealers
l ook lor thiS
s1gn 1n your

BOX OF 40
AMERICAN
GREETINGS

COMPLETE

~

2· 39!~

• For Home. School, Office

o.

'

..••-·...

RADIO SHACK 4-KEY

• % Key, Sq. Root..Constant

• $259

O.NLY

THERAGRAN-M .

cal"'l"lai"'tt

21!!

.CALCULATOR

SUPPLY
CORPORATION

8 OZ.

REG.
11.25
......_...........ONLY

~·

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;

REG.

OTIS F. KNOPP

ARCHER ®SMOKE ALARM

M ob•le Us~,,. Some S! ale s and Local •t•es May be U nl awtul or
Reou11e a Pfolrrrut Cr1ec k w1lh Loc al A uJnor~t • c~

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?

ALPHA KERI
BATH OIL

TV

• Hear the Action AS It Happens
• Police. Fire, Airplanes • Weather

'

vice.

Son born·

MEN TO GATHER
The Meigs County Chur·
ches of . Ch r ist Men 's
Fellowship will meet at the
Pomeroy Church at 7r30 p.m .. ·
Monday for the observance of
family night. Danny Evans
will he speaker.

PRICES GOOD
THRU
SUNDAY,
NOV. 19

TO THE VOTERS OF
sunoN rowNSHIP

as
seen on
national

J~~-.g 59!~
CASH&amp; CARRY
PRICES

is "deadly serious, and the
criminal is highly skilled ."
There
are
110,000
computers used in American
business, the report said. It
estimated that for every

'3995

I

....

That's what we're h ere for!
We!re concern ed ~ilh your
good health. Trust u s to put
a personal touch in all we
do. R ely on our professional
accuracy in all prescriptions.

21 · 1562

• Get Extra Power and 40 Channel s
Plus 40. upper and 40 lower SSB
• Noise BliJnAer, Lighted SI RF
e PA Switch With CB Monitor

Middleport , Ohio

Consult Us For
Expert Advice!

conventional auditing.'' and

LAYAWAY
NOW
FOR HER
CHRISTMAS!

SEWING

I wish to thank MIJOne who helped m

Hush

FRIOAV
ROUND and square dance
crimes in progress and for
Friday 8:30 to It :30 at Senior
every five computer related Citizens Center. Music by
cri mes detec te d , four go St ringd usters. Dance open to
unr.ep4tfted.
public.
SATU RDAY
WILL BE SINGING
SPORTS Banquet
at
THE
BLACKWOOD East ern
High
Sc hool
Brothers Quart et from Saturday 6:30 p.m. Advance
Memphis , Tenn . will be tickets on sale at school, or;.
featured at t he North Baptist purchase from any member'
Church, 3109 Emerson St., of football or volley ball
Parkersburg, Friday, Nov . squads or cheerleaders.
18. The Rev . Richard Dooley Jerry Kelican, head football
is the pa_stor.
coach at Jameswood .High
School,
guest speaker.
MEETING SLATED
SOUP
SUPPER by Eagles
There will be a canClass
at
Asbury United
dystriper meeting Monday at
Methodist
Church
basement,
7 p.m. at Veterans Memorial
Syracuse,
beginning
at noon
Hospital. Anyone 16 years or
older wishing to join are Saturday. Soup, sandwiches
asked to attend the meeting and pie available; take
or call 949·2042 after 5 p.m. containers for takeout ser-

It described a com puter
crime as "subtle, invisible,
and
not
subject
to

THE

992-7034

GUY A. RUSSELL

...

detected computer crill)e
there are 100 undete cted

SWISHER LOHSE PHARMACY

CENTER

Layaway
For Christmas

threats such as burglary,
robbery, larceny , bad checks
and fraudulent use of credit
cards are also present," the
report said.
It said the single most
important action to combat
employee crime would be to
"set up a screening process
that will weed out obvious
security risks ."
The report devoted a long

TS

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

BRUSHED PIGSKIN
FOR WINTER WARMTH

ll suggested preventive
measures to combat severe
crime in each industry
studied, becauSe at pr~ent

Grueser and Susie Bess members, and guest, Bea
·
hostesses and th e room Wood.
beaut ifully decorated in·
keeping with the fall season.
President, Orpha Fields
. presided. Prayer was given
by Susie Bess.
Delores Taylor announced
the pre-Christmas Prayer
Vigil around-the-world will be
observed in West Virginia on
December 23. The local unit
will observe the hour from 910 a.m.
NEW HAVEN - The
It was announced the an·
Nehaclima Garden Club 's nual Christmas dinner will be
Thanksgiving dinner was held December 8 in the
Monday evening, Nov . 7, at Mi ss ionary Building
Mrs. Perry 's Bpunty Table in beginning at 5:30p.m. Sarah
Ravenswood . The welcome Gibbs was appointed to be in
was given by the pr~sident, charge of the Gift Exchange .
Mrs. Roy Jones and the in- Delores Taylor will furnish
vocation by Rev. David the door prize. Becky Reed ,
Fields, Jr.
Grace Cunningham , Kay
Following dinner, a short Grueser, Patty Maynard,
business meeting was held. Sharon Cunninghjam, and
Members voted to enter a Addie Brown will be in
float In the New Haven Grade charge of room and table
School Christmas Parade and · decorations and making
appointed to· the committee favors.
are Mrs.· David Simonton,
Roll call was answered by
Mrs. Dannie Harbour, Mrs: members bringing birthday
Harold Moxley, · Mrs. Sam gifts for a patient at Lakin
Longenacre, and Mrs. State Hospital.
Douglas Miller. Members
After the meeting , the
also voted to join other Mason program was presented by
FOR HER
County Garden Clubs to have Becky Reed, Missionary
PORTABLE
a flower show at the 1978 Education Director, on the
Mason County Fair.
theme , 11 Reach Out and
SEWING
Mrs. Jones announced the Touch ... " It was the last
, December meeting will be at program on the "Local
MACHINE
the Wahama Junior High Church in God's Mission."
PRICED FROM
School Home Economics The program closed with
Room when a candy ex- devotions gl ven by Delores
change will be held . Members Taylor; The scripture was
were reminded to bring their taken from Luke 10:3(1..37. A
Christmas Bazaar items to moment of silent meditation
the meeting . No gift ex- was held and then each one
change will be held.
repeated the Lord's Prayer.
Members and guests atAttending were Sue Erwin ,
tending the dinner were Mrs. Becky Reed, Delores Taylor,
Roy Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Norma Greene, Addie Brown,
Thomas Hoffman, Mrs. Fred Susie Bess, Bonnie Fields,
On The T
Batey, Rev. and Mrs. David Martha Grueser, Rena
Fields, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Graoe Cunningham,
In Middleport
William C. Gibbs, Mr. and Kay Grueser, Iva Capehart,
Mrs. James N. Roush, Mrs. Sarah Gibbs, Orpha Fields,
Donald Bumgardner, Mrs.
Phil Batey, Mrs. Mary
Divers, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Clarke, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Miller.• Rev. and Mrs. John
Campbell, Mr. and Mrs .
· David Simonton, Mr. and
I wish to express my appreciation for your
Mrs. Harold Moxley, Mr. and
- Mrs. Sam Lon gena ere, Mr.
: and Mrs. David Russell and
loyal support on Tuesday, November 8.
: Eric, Mr. and Mrs. Dannie
: Harbour and Wendy, . Mrs.
· Douglas Miller and Mandy,
and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
, Wiley.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Holiday dinner
held Nov. 7th
in Ravenswood

8-TRACK PLAYBACK SYSTEM.

VISITS AT HOME

By JAMES HIWRE'Ilf ,
In one case, a hank teller
WASHINGTON (UP!) stole $168,000 in a brown bag
.. Crimes against American by carrying It through an exit
business - ranging from J,'Uarded by a security officer
simple theft to sophisticated . whose duties included
computer abuse - cost an package inspection.
estimated $30 billion last year
"He told the guard it was a
and the No. I reason is pet rabbit," the report said.
dishonest employees, a
Another unidentified bank
government study said today . was defrauded of several
"Thefts committed by erri- thousand dollars, the report
plnyees are behind at least 60 said, when a depositor subpercent of crime-related stituted his coded deposit
losses,".a Commerce Depart- slips for the blanks in the
ment report estimated. "So bank 's lobby and "all
many employees are stealing !leposits subsequently were
so much U1at employee theft credited to his account."
is the most critical crime
The 124-page report titled
problem facing business "Crime
in
Service
today."
Industries" outlined criminal
In the sector of the report activity in such wide-ranging
on bank crime, some areas as cargo transpor·
~ elaborate and not so tation, schools , hospitals ,
elaborate - schemes were motels and hotels, banks and
reviewed .
insurance companies.

NEW HAVNE - Women of
the Church of God met in the
Mission ary Building with
Thelma Grueser,
Kay

SAVE
REALISTIC® AM-FM STEREO

Looking For

.E mployee thefts cost American business $30 b~llion last year·

Church of God women meet

•

We're Just
. What You're

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Nov. 17, 1977

I E. Main
I

••

-.....

Friendly Servic::e

Open Nighls tilt 9

Pomeroy , 0 .

I'

L-------------·- --··.J

....

'

�8- lhr Dali) Sl'ntmel. ~l lddkport-l'unwro). 0 .. Thursday. Nov . 17. 197i

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
\\ ' I•

...

:

,. ,,

..

'

~HOOt
o&gt;~.:Oit Sun

GUN

C.,~·~l..

Roc•1w Gur. Club

~lUG

cjtetnoon Foetor
gum; only
"'- ~~011ed

10

Tu ~.. o!~

~

·• I

''

;~

TH~Rf

"

'····.,

,_

' '
1- "

'.I
,' ,

"

"

·, '.

I

'I

,,

41 , · ...._, , •
~'

',,

.. ···'

'

''

.••

\\'Ill bt• no hunl1119 n~•
onJ no e - a~plt"rh
"''' 111' propel ry tkob McG rm'

•I

'

,

or rhetr buddmg '" Soshon foe
t()(y c ho~e guns only

\ ,,

''

' .... ,·, '' 1

1

TIMBERLAND OW NER S Do

"

'

'

I

• '

~·

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
. DEADLINES
\)

,1 ,1\

'·*'iJ; d.t \
Ill .. ,,, •.

'I

q ~ tJdo~o

'

\1

"'~ l'&lt; 1•

$8,100 for education,
75 per cent of your

Co llege tuition fr~ 9 •
Col l ege
Lev.&lt;el
Mead can os-.ure you of dtver
Examination
Pr'ee ,
SlftE&gt;d
ruor lo.ets
c-ompl ete
An
Associate
Degree
!Imber
utthrohon
tncludmg
whole uee (h!pptf'!g and ~uper ­
through
the
"'t\~d
horves tmg
program\
Com m un ity
Col lege
des•gned to prot ec1 your fonds
of the Air Force. 30
011d promote trmber growth
For dctods colt collect or wr1te
days paid va ca tio n, 7
MEAD
PAP ER
Wood
&amp;
pai d 3 da y weeken ds .
Woodlands Dept . PO Bo~ 391
good st a r tin g pa y a nd
Joclo..son
Ohio
4 56 40 .
Telephone · 61 4-186-1868 .
much
m ore .
FlEA MARKET Nov . 19th ond 20 th ·
In t e rested ?
Roctne leg1on He ll. Tables
Contact me , Vernon
ren ted lor ·s2 per doy Call
Zeger, your Air Force
949 '2773 or 949-2428. ·
WANTED . IN carpoo l to Par lo. er · Repres entative.
sgurg 7 3 30 om sl-uft . Calf
For an appointment
7.!. 2-2170.
in the Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592-4592 Collect.
Order No . 9-cl-86

,,

\ "

o~ pr t lf"~

.:~nd

Stonol fores Ter-. tS ovodoble 10
o ller ~au osststonce at no cos t

,. ·'
!"

't'OV

net!d ht&gt;lp 1n ''1iJnogu'g your
wOOdlands and marketmg your
ttmbe1? Mead s stolt of proles

I • '·

tvd,C'y!t

Hom)

OPPORTUNITIES

'-' • '

.ul•

17 30

DIAMOND
lmamPnt
t.ro11dpo Won d('r Pmli' 1or
Soap J- Gu1hr1e 3J Town~end
Athens Otuo

IHE
RA( INt
Volunl('t:&gt;r
F,,,.
Oepannwnt .... dl ~pon~or a gun
'&gt;hoot i'\'Pt \ Saturday at 7 p m

k

C h~)ter

KLA(I\

l r l''PO~~ ,n g

.,

SHOO I Svndoy No\embt.:•f
l1ool.. Walton J:o11n no"or

1U

"

.o' io

I

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

IN lOVI NG memory of our tius ·
bond ond lolh~r
Thomas
, Bu rke who 01ed 4 years ago to'
day
h1 my hpbrt you -.:-iff never keave
tn e

Oh how I long Ia see you a ga m .
Sadly rrussed by wile and
lhddren

We have enlarg ed our
se r vi ce department and
wil l se rv ice Hotpoi nt and
oth er brands.

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and
opplion&lt;e serviceman . Po 1d
holidays .
voco 1ions
and
hosp i taliz a tio n .
Gall ic
Refrigerator Co. 611 Jrd Ave ..
Goll,polis . Ohio .

Pomeroy Landmark

9_. _Ja ck W. Carsey , Mgr.
~

HELP WA NTED : Mole or Female .
· Med ical Techno logis t. Accep ·
ting applicat ion s lor full-time
permanent
tec h nolog i st .
Resumes or oppltco t,ons may
be moiled to :
Veterans Memroiol Hospi tal . So•
749
Mulberry
He igh t s
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769. {614 )
992 -2104.

Phclne 992 -2181

ROYAL OAK FARM
COMPLETE COW HERD DISPERSAL

SALE
NOV. 25, 1977
STARTING AT 10:30 A.M.

CASH paid for . all makes arid
;nodels of mobile homes,
Ph one area code 61 4-423- 9531 .

Farm loca te d J mil e s north of Pomeroy,
Ohio on old Rl . JJ.

TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro'
ducts . Top price for slandi ng
sawtimbe r. Call 992 -5965 or
Kent Hanby . l -446-8570.

OFFICE PHONE (614) 985-3341

COINS, CU RR ENCY , tok ens , old
pocket watches and chains,
silver and gold . We need 1964
and older silver t; oins Buy , sell.
or trade ' Call Roger Wamsley.
742·7331 .

FARM PHONE {614) 992·2671

OLD FURNHURE. ice b oMe~ . brass
beds . iron beds , etc . comp lete
households . Write M. D. Miller .
Rl. 4. Pomeroy . Ohio or ca ll

107 Spring cows with calves at side
45 Fall cows with calves at side
54 Bre d heifers
17 Open heifers
10 Ye arling herd bull prospects .
6 He rd bulls including '14 interest in S
· Gil e ad 115 -the 1976 National Reserve
Champion Bull .

991-771&gt;0 .
NO ITEM TO O Large or too sm al L
Wil l bu y 1 piece or comp lete
household . New , used, or ant ique~ . Mar tin 's Furniture . 20 N .
2nd St. . M iddleport . Phone

9'12-6370 .
CHIP WOOD , Poles
max .
d iameter 10" on lar ges t end.
per Ton . Bundled slob, $6 per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Polle t
Co ., Rl . 2, POme roy . 992-2689 .

sa

Th e re will be many excellent club calf
pr os pe cts s o ld off of their dam.

(OAL lunestone ond &lt;olctU"I
chlortde and colttutn br1no lor
du~l {0111!0/ and ~pNiOI n11 .o.111g
salt lor lolm £.&gt;ts E• c&amp;ISIOt Salt
1q74
318
Cnmoro
Phone
Wor~!t Maul Street Pomeroy
1 30-1 8ij'} 3108
Oh10 Qr phone 99'1 3891
1977 CHEVROLEI SCOliSOAlE 1 ( AMP ER
S600
Also
har!&gt;e
tonl! !olldmg glos~ wmdow
1roder S4 SO Phone (614 l 098
rem !ttep bumper
305 3
3290
speed on 5671
~CONOMV TRACTOR wrlh oil ot
1972 PONliAC CATALI NA . Sear s
torhmerlls ltlo. o new o~ll.1ng
~ t erea
recardCH
Phone
$2250 Phone (614) 6Q8·3290 .
9'i12 -7453
APPLES FJrZ PAlRICK Orchards .
1069 FORO VA N S100 N eed~
State Route 689 .
Ph one
work Phone 997 346 2 otter 6
WtlkeS'IItlle 669-3785
pm

RUGS
WALl
Hong rngs and
1975 AMC PACER X New steel
al gnn!i Ntce lor Chns tma s.
belt rad1ols '18 (X)() mdes. h ·
Reasonable Col i 992 221 -4
cellent con drttOn S7 000 (b l -4 )
N
C R, 299 Boakkeepmg mochme.
67S- 5701
Matntenoncp
contrac t
1970 CHRYSLER 300 Goad cond,.
ovotloble Programmed to do
t1on . Pnced for qu1ck sole .
Sa les
Repor t s
A ccount~
S750 Coli 992 5313 al ter 5 pm
Pay able Payroll Government
Reports W 2 lorms and wnte
197&lt;~ SUN BUG VW . Cold SpeCial
checks . Con be programmed to
mtenor
sunroo f
rod1o . 28
do General Ledger and A c·
mpg Rad,ol s. 985 -4277 alter b.
Contact
counts ~ece1 v.oble .
1973 VOlKSWAGON SUPER Bee Coral Wdk es ot304 -295 -939 1
tl~ . RuJs good . Pnced right. - -r=:::;:=-;-;-;~;7-.-;-:-----~
949-2559 .

We Ar e Now

1975 FORD VAN . Fully customiz ·
~ d . P.S. P.B. TV plus more .
S&lt;~ . SOO . Phone 99'2 -7'158 .

STARCRAFT FALL Sale . Mt nl·
motors 20 ' and '12'. TraVel
Tr aders 18 5 $3.799 25 7
Bu n ~house $4 ,875 . Fold,dowfl ,
$1.700 up We sell sen1lce andquality , Open Sundays. Camp
Conley "Starcro ft Sales. Rl. 6'1,
N. of Pt . Pl easant.

Phone 99 2-2181

I 975 CAVAlCADE TRAVEL Trailer .
se ll -contained
A .C. , roll -up
owning . 992 -2794 .

FAMILY MILK Cows . Guernsey .
Red
Heifers and calves . Don
Mora 992 77 65

IQ72 ARISTOCRAT 18' Travel
Tr ader . Ex cel le n t con dition.
52 400 . Caii992-35BO.
:-o-;-le- on
S
- ,-A-RC_R_A-FT WINTER CS
M 1nis. traders . and fold -downs .
Used units in sloe~ . Open Sun·
day. Camp Conley Storcroft
Sales Rt . 62 N o f Pt. PleQsOnt .

12 GA PUMP b shot with poly
choke . Goad slug gun . $125.
Also
hr ew ood and la&lt; uSt
posts . 742 -2359,_ _

(61 •I 698 -3190.
MEIGS COUN TY Humane Societ y .·
Coreline and odop11on Service.

992-7680. 742-3162. 992-5•27 .

----

sc r een .

1975 Ford Torino 4 Dr•••••••••• 2595

3 AN D 4 RM. furnished and unfurn ished opts Phone 9925434.

let Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-op water
softener, Model UC-SVI .

•279,95

SUFFOLK RAM . $35 . 742 -2753.

Save SSO . OO on a new
Hotpoint Refriger ator
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest
Freezer
$25 .00 Discount

FOR SALE

1

v.a, automatic,

P.S, P.B., wh. co ver s, rad io, local, 1 owner.

FO UR ROO MS Ond bath . Adults
only . No pets . 992 -5908.

1975 Dooge Dart Swinger ••••••• s2~95

COUNTR Y MOBILE Home Po rk .
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
large lot s. Call 992-7479.

6 cyl. std . tra ns .• g r ee n f inish , c lean inter io r , l ik e new
t i res. radio .

Incr edibl e! Why pay high el ectr iC
bi lls this w inter? Le t us pay
them l or yo u ! ·One bedroom
lrom $ 130 now ovoil oble.
Villo ge Manor , Th ird on d M ill
Slreets . Midd lepor t . Te lephone
9Cl'l· 7787 . Equol Housing Op·
portunity .

1974 Scout II .••••••••••••••••• s2895
Travel top , 258 cu . in 6 cyL engine, auto. trans., li ke
new t i res . radio. 2 w h eel dri ve.

1973 Vega Hatchback 2 Dr.••••• '1195.

BUILDING FOR Lease . 5700 sq . ft .
store building. with f ull windows and owning in I ron! . -40
cor park ing lot. All on main
thorou ghl ore in Athe ns, Ohio,
close to Ohio Unive rs ity . Con·
tact: H. Wil k es . PO . Box 5301,
Vienna , West Vi rginia 26105 or

Automatic tran s., P. steer ing , less than $20.000 m iles, '
GT equipment. ra dio.

1969 Chevelle Wagon •••••••••• _'699
Local car. au tomat ic, V-8.

coll l-30• 295-9352 .

1975 Chevy 60 ' Series •••••••••••s4395

12 • bO MO BILE HOM E. Goo d con d ition . Lorge yar cj . 1 mi le
Rac ine. 992. 5958

2 Ton, 102" cab to axle , ext r C~ good 825x20 ti res, 2 s peed ,

15.000 lb . R. axle, 292 cu . in., 6 cyl.

NEWLY REMO DELED 7 room house
plus bathrooms. I up end I
down . Has oil utili ties plus 10
acre\ of ground . 5 minu tes to
Po m eroy . $225 per m o .
992-5970 or 992 -6270.

.Hurry In For A Good DEAL
POMEROY MOTOR CO.

THREE ROOM furnished apartment. 99'2 -5434 or 992-3129 .
HOUSE FOR renT. 4 rooms . Furnis hed . Adul ts 949-2597 .
·

TO l EA SE O R 'Rent : Old Provico
bui ldin g' 99 2.3677 .

Chevrolet
·'Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126

REPLACEMENT
AlUMINUM

SlDING-SOfflTT
GUnERS-AIININGS

LARRY LAVENDER

It

C11 Good Refrigerator $175
Upright Freezer
$225
1 Good Used Hotpoint
Refrigerator
5125
1 Lancaster Chai n Saw 575
1 Good Used Hotpoint
E led ric Stove
$85
1 Good Used Unico
Washer
S99

PDI!'4lroy Landmark
•

9_. _Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.

THREE HORSES. 1 is Wester n
Pleasure . 2 IT10res : I is ' J and 1
is l • Arabian . 992 -7084.
TROMBONE A ND flute . Never
been used . 992 -7621.

TWO BEDROOM tr ai ler
Pomeroy . (614) 446-0157 .

1967 FORDV AN . Car peted , panel ·
ing . radio ' m ag w h ee ls,
Day tona Sport 70 ti res . $600.

I '2 x 52 two bedroom

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until8p.m .

TICKET OF Elvis Presley to th e
Civic Center . Good condi ti on.

7&lt;2-2288 . $500.

in

Schultz
mobil e home. Phone 985·3820.

AU CTION SAL E. e.very Tu es . and
Fr i. ot 7 pm . N ~"r and v ~ ed
mercha ndise at Ohio River Auc·
l ion, Meigs Plaza, Middlepor t,
O hio . Home Phone (304)

773- 5 ~7 1 .

197 4 HARLE Y DA VIDSON Super
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOM ES , PI Plea ·
sant , W , Vo . beside Heck 's.
1973 Bro odmore 14 x 64 2

197'1 AR ISTOCRAT 18' Travel
Tra iler . . h cellen t cond it ion .

$1.400. Coll99l -3580.
1976 S U ~U K I RM '125 . h cell ent
co nd ition . 247-386 1.
LOWREY G EN IE organ 1 Model 44 .
Has :2 key boards wi th ac·
companiment plus built -in to pe
recorder . bench an d books .
Would mak e nice Christmas

gd l. Coll 9-6. (30-41 773-5777.
Alter 6, 949 -2185 , as ~ for Jock .
TWO STEEL belted tires . stze H78
14 in . Less than 500 miles. Sum ·
mer tre ad , $40. (b14 ) 699-52 15 .
WAR M MORNING Coal Stove .
like·new . 65 ,000 BTU bolfle gas
and heati ng stove. 992-7253 . or
see WolterHoggy on New lima
Rood after 12.
1977 CHEVY STEPSIDE pickup . 350
cu .in . 4 bbl. Part ly cust11 mi ze ~ .
As~ i n g ' prtce ,
$5 ,&lt;l0C. Call

992-2912 .

1970 VW BUS rebur l t eng . Gas
FO R SAL E or trade o r land con heater . Rodioltires . some r ust
tract . 2 bedroom house in _ 2_4__~~~~ gallon . 992 -5980.:...__
Rutland . 992-5858 .
1977 PASSENGER VA N. A .C. EKtro
FO R SAL E or Rent: 1974 Schultz
5eo l 3,000 mrl e . 9q'} -5770 .
~.Mobile Home . 12 x 65 . 20 x 8 FIREWOOD
. Any lengths or an y
slide -out . Total-elec tric . Privole
' amount. Deltvered of pick up.
lot. ~6 1 4 J 667 · 33~5~. _
Phone 949·2563 .

-

------

----

'- ET'5 JU5T 5AV

I'LL KIJOW MORE

ABOUT THE. Pl.ANc
AFTER. I'VE FLOWN
IT PER50r.! AL.lY!

''

"'•

J

'or' ~

.-·'
'
...
...
~-

~EF\1£W

SWAIN
Automatic
Transmission Service

Phone 985-3806

HSJ&lt;E!S~

Bo x 34

BOB'S uNRbLSTERING
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE
Be ·the .opening of the in -

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6212.

or 992-6263
8 A.M. Io4 : 30 P.M.

GAfJC!:'L-

instructions .

door sea son tor y ou with
y our old furnitur e r e·
upholster-ed i n beautiful
Wa r m C!)lors &amp; patterns
f r om Bob ' s. If you ar e
look i ng for savings It will
pa y you to pay us a vis it,
Located in back of the Sew
N' Sew Ou t le t an Ma in St.,
Racine . 0 .

ACE HARIMARE
La&lt;:ated In

MEIGS PLAZA

HOMESlTES for sole . I acre and
up . Middlepor t. nea r Rutland .
Coli 997 -7481 .

2 ' ' acre lot wi th gar age and
ce llar. l ocated in La ngsvi lle .
SQ,500. Phone 7.4 2-2965

NEW J bedroom house . 7 baths.
oil elec .. 1· OCie , M iddleport ,
close to Ru tla nd . "Phone 992 7461 .

10

SMAL l far m fo r sole . 10D'• down.
owner financed . Monroe Co ~n­
ly . W. Vc . Phone (304) 772 3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
COUNTR Y farmland wi th sec luded woods , wa!er and good ac cess in Monroe Coun ty . W . Vo.
Sl ,OOO dawn , call (304 ) 7723 102 or (304) 772-3227 .

A OOMB KID···

••

sur&gt;rosE ~o u

••

1 Ell ME, MA'i!

..

auT YOU

ARE YOUNc; ...

Kingsbury

3 Bdr m . r anch type ho m e.
ca r pe t ing ,
pa ne l i n g,
c arpor t. other fe a t ures.

ONLY Sl 3,500.
JUST LISTED -

This 3

Bdrm .
hom e
ha s
a
b ase men t. n i ce kit c h en,
c arpeting, other fea t ures.

AS KING S18,000.QO
JUST LISTED - Appx. 19
A c res, m ost ly w ood s. c lose

to
Pomero y.
ONLY
$5,000 .00_.
FREE GAS - 2 acres. 3-4

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

Good

Busineu
Bldg .
located at 605 w. M a in St .,
Pomeroy, Ortio . Presently
oc cupied
by a
going
business . Bldg . tuu d eluxe
apartment
ov ~ rhead
bringing in gOod income .
Priced an inspection only .
can be seen any time from
10 a .m . to, 6 p.m . Inqu i re at
60S w . Main St., Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769 .'

Commercia l property opprox. 17
acres , le'.fel land , loc at ed at
Tuppers Plains on O hio , Route
7. Phon~ (61 4l667 -6J 04 .
VA -FHA . 30 yr. fin ant:in g . Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E. Slate , Athens ,
phone (6 14 ) 592·305 1.
2.

STO RY 3 bedroom frame
house , F.A . fur nace , storm wi n·
dows. firepla ce in M iddlepor t.
Phone 992 -3.457 or 992 -5867.

SEVEN ROOM house in Mid·
dleporl. Woll-lo-wa ll c o ~pe lin g .
2 cor garage. Goo d loc a1 lon .
Low price of $1 6,000 . 992-2498.
FOUR BEp ROOM house w ith both
an d t,, . Cent ral hea ting. Ful l
basement.
In
Pomeroy.
992.707 &lt;1 ar991 -3465.
SE:VEN ROOM hou se . Fullycarpe ted . Fireplace . l 1' 2 acres
of land_ Rt. 35 Rio Grande.

(61•I 388 -8572.7 - - -

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

I,

----·

build ing s.
ALL
FOR
$35.000.00.
HELP WITH - VA or FHA
fin an ci ng . Thi s 3 ;:ea r old
spa c iou s ran c h can b e
y our s for less than y ou
thi nk . Man y f eatur es, over
1 acre, c lose to Pam eroy .

CALL TODAY $37,300 .00.
OLDER HOME - Thl s 2
Stor y fram e ha s more to
offer than you th in k, n icely
remodel e d . 3- li Bdrms . ,
modern
k it c hen , f u ll y
equi pped beauty sa lon tg

boot .. elc. etc. S31,900.0if.
Ml OOL E PORT _: Good
st r eet , 2-3 Bd r m s . , 2
f irep laces, I flOor ·plan, ·

ca rpet ing . CHEAP AT
$13,000 .00.
NEAR .HYDRO UNIT -

be

Thi s 2 stor y home could
just a bou t what you ' r e
lOok ing for. access to t he

river. ONLY 1&lt;\,900 .00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
THE RIGHT PROPERTY,
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU. CALL
TODAY FOR DETAILS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELANO
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992-6191

quick sato

RUTLAND -

home. natural gas, ci t y
wa't er , firepla ce. 2 car
g a r a ge a nd ex tr a lot.

$1 •. ooo.
12 ACRES - New fenc es. 2
fa rm pond s, old barn. 8
room
hous e
(modern.
insi de). 2 baths, garage
an d all mineral s. $37,500.

NEW LISTING - 9 room
old er home In Racine. .cl
Bedroom s, bath . natural
ga s furnace, garage and

large lot . $28,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS

CALLED

HOW IT

IT CON -

HAPPENED!

STANTINOPLI:', AF"re~
~E EMPEIWR , AND
"THA''6 "THE NAME
"THI!rr eTUCK!

Re asonable 3 bedroom ·
hom e with bath , gas
f ur' na c e ,
breez e wa y,
garage, and lot 150x200 .
Ask ing just $17,500.
57 ACRES - Racin e rur a l.
M o stl y
f e n ce d ,
small
stream , good gambrel roof
barn, 3 car garage, corn
crib , 3 bedroom house,
gravel

r oad .

well for your heating , .4
bedroom modern h o me,
bath , furnace , old barn ,
near toWn . M l nera :-s. Need

$65,000.

Old 9

room brick with natu ra I
gas ana city water in
Syra cu se with ex tra lot for

$5,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 room
frame house w ith fireplace .
.natural gas furnace, bath ,
c arpeting and 2 car garage

Cor only $13,250 .
NEW LISTING

'im ...I'd saL!.
?::::::::::::}..... no !

4ou mean!

2

bedroom remodeled frame
~ hom e. F i repla c e, ci stern
water • . partial basement
' and ~95 of an acre. Only

S7.500.
NOW IS THE TIME TO
SELL, FOR LITTLE COST
AND TROUBLE CALL
3325.
HELENL&amp;
GORDON B, TEAFORD
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES.

•m-

M I6H"T 'TAKE \HE

I

I jes' feels sodL!

fer th' po' miser'ble
misq1.1ided critter!

MINER FABRIC BEWARE

Answer : A drink you m'Oht think of when chopping
. onlons - ICEWATER(e~eawater)

6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:31&gt;--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Br urn etl
1!. Friends 6: Mak ing Things Grow 33.
7 :31&gt;-- Porler Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; P rice Is Right 8; MacNe il -Lehrer Report 20,33;

Fam ily Feud 10; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop
Goes the Co11ntrv H

.

Search of 4; W onde r Woman 8; Washington ·W eek In
Review 20, 33; War o1 the Roses 10.

8:3G-Chlco 1!. lh e. Man 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:01&gt;--Rockford Fi les 3,4, 15; Movie "Mary While" 6, 13;
Movie " The Th ree Musketeers" 8,10; L owell
T hom'a s
Re mem ber s 20 ; Leonard Bern st ein

Conducts 33.
9:31&gt;--Microbes 1!. Me n 20.
10:0C&gt;--Oulncy 3,4, 15; Fll oC Eagl es 33.
10:31&gt;--News 20; 11 :01&gt;--News 3,4,6,8 ,10,13, 15; Di ck
Cavell 20: Lilias Yoga 9 You 33.
11 :31&gt;--Johnny Ca rson 3,4,1 5; Barella 6,13: Box ing 8;
ABC

Yesterday's Allllwer
12 Wear away
16 Prophet
2% Make lace

23 Ught unit
Z5 Noblewoman
26 Components
27 TeMis
champ .

29 City-room
employee
30 Fol'98ke
32 "Age of
Reason''
author
38 Uttle
Valerie
39 Swab

A singleton queen test .

\\' EST
AJ10 9
&lt;rl08 7 6
t86 2
Al0 32

r~:::_~;;~~~--~-------------------------------------------;------------~--------1 35Some
Law

--------- you'IZE JuST

•

.,.CHING

BATHR OOM S AND Kitc hel\\
remodeled , cer amic tile. plum·
bing , carpent ry, ond gene~~~
maintena nce. 13 years ~~ ­
per ience . 9Q2-3685.

&lt;

'b GE,.

"

8RCft. IN'I"O THE
OLD ilRT rlAcf:,

~A~P=PA~LA~C=H~IA~N~5~TO~V~E-C_O_M
--P-A-NY

You?!

featur ing Ashleys and cor:.
ple te se lection of cool , goS,
woo d ci rculating hea terf .
Corpen !er , (61 4) 699·7191.
,

•KJ4 3
tAQJ
A A Q8
Both vulnerable

name
41 Olfactory
sensation

.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEI.LOW

One l etter simply s ta nds f or anot her . In this _sa mple A ia

used for ihe three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Stn gle letters,
apostrophes, t he length an d format i?n of the words are all
hints. Each da y the code lette rs are d tfferent.

HE EVIDENTLY 1110UGHT
I GUESS IT
REALLY NEVE R I WAS A lDT YOUNGE!(
GOT 5TARTEJ:l. 111AN ;r: AM.Vv1-I EN HE ~
SAW MY "kiD~" IT
BIRDIE .

'
WILL CARE f or the elderly in Oti!r
home. Phone 992 ·731-4 .
'\

CRYPTOQUOTES

KBG . FSSOSBXV

13LEW HIS MI ND!

PIANO TUNIN G - lone Doni&amp;"' .
New phone numbir, 992- 2581.
1\
If o an swer , caH ~2 - 2082 .

SKTFGX

NOQV

SJFC

KBG

LKGV
_.

MKBCSR
FCMVRSGA .

BAB SITTING IN my ·hom e neQr
Vehfren 's Memroial Ha5pital.
992 -5792 .
I'

GKA

N.

RLOSJ

Yesterday's Cryploquole: ONLY AWARENESS ENABL!S

YOU TO LIVE EVERY DAY AS IF IT WERE A SEPARATB

'

Sou th

Pass

2A

Pass

1 N.T.
2,

Pass
Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Opening lead -

lo

WINDOW CLEA NING . Comm ercoil ' . Residential. New Cpnstru ct ion Cleanup. Real . Cl ean
Window Co. Phone 992-7018.

\'or th 1--: asl

\\' est

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

11 -q

t; AST
AAQ8 3
&lt;rQ
t 75 3
AJ974

SOL'TH ; l) t
• 654

1-::---+---t-

Force Base
39 Boundary k+-......t-10 Popular
theater

LJFETIME.-PETERSTEINCROHN, M.D.

Cr ea t ed

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

~O R Til

34 Matter :

" Frankenstein

BRIDGE
A K 72
&lt;r A952
t K 10 9 4
A K6

33Poem

lortune
37 - Air

Movie

Thu rsday, Novemoer 17

Turf

% ICNfW IT!··· .,

News 33;

Woman" 10; Monty Python's Fly ing Circus 20 .
12 :01&gt;--Monty Python's Flying Circus 33; 12 :31&gt;-Janakl 33.
·
12 :41&gt;--Lohman 1!. Barkley 6: lt onslde 13: 1:ooMidn ighl Special 3,4,15: 1: 41&gt;--News 13.
2:31&gt;--News 3: Mary Hartman 10; 3:01&gt;--Mov le "The
Whole World is Watching" 3: S:oo-Movie
"Tobruk " 3.
Movie Channel 4 51!. 7 P.M. - Seven Percent Solution ( PG I
91!. 11 P.M. - Dog Day Afternonn 1 RI

17

Spoiled
Neronlan
hail
Memo -

3C Prefix with

·

8:01&gt;--CPO Shar key 3,15: Donny 1!. Marie 6_. 13; In

Jones

HOWERY
AND MARTI N
E :o~ca vo tin g . sep tic system ( .
dozer , back hoe, dump !r ue ~ .
llmestone, grovel. blocktoJl
paving . Rt. 143. Phone I (6 1·4)

20,33: Hogan's
My T hree Son s 15.

Tyl er Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15.

FOLLOW HER!

U Papal name
ACROSS
43 Dessert
1 Spanish
wine
belle
DOWN
5Snake
1 Subjugate
8 Asian river
9 MissOurian's %Punish by
motto : 2 wds . fine
3 Rex Harrison
13 Psyche
role : 2 wds.
14 Picket
15 Threefold :
4 Sandy's call
prefix
5 See 10 Down :
18 Ursula And4 wds .
&amp;Diaphanous
ress film
7 Falstaff's
17 Taro root
18 Medieval
''window 1 '
shield
10 With 5 Down,
19 Suffix with
famous
maxim :
profit
4wds.
Pr..:..~lit~ 0t1u off
11 Red wine
One
reposing
Indian
II)oney·

Neighborhood

5:3().--&lt;)dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20 ,33: Ma ry

"TR'AIN AND

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug1 g est~ by the above car1oon .

Jumbles: TEASE

Rogers'

Heroes 101 Emergency One 13;

Actress

WILL do · roofing . construction,
plumbing an d heating. No •job
lao Io rge or too sm all . Phon'
742-234B.

J A

Bv Oswald &amp; James

Ja c ob~

Every South in the duplicate game op e ned one
nolrwnp . Ha ll the North
DIJyers just rai sed to game.
Men West opened a heart
they had no trouble tak ing II
lricks. whe n West opened
llleJack of spades the y wer e
Ml to nine tric ks . Tha t 's
the best decl•rer can do if
the oppone nts take th e first
four tri cks.
,
When North u'!id a Stayman ' two~cl u b r es pon se ,
South bid two hea rts . North
raised to four and now W es t

bed an easy spa de

open in ~

lead. The defense took three
spades and shifted to a club
which was won in durruny.
Some South players
cashed the ace of trumps in
case there was a singleton
queen. The re was, but It fell
from East a nd West made a
trump trick .
Smarter declare r s saw
that if West did hold a
singleton queen the re was no
way to make the hand. But If
East held her unguarded
ladyship, a low spade from
dummy would win. They led
the low spa de intending t o
finesse the jack . But when
the queen came up they took
th eir king, pla yed the jack of
spades', fin esse d against·
West 's 10 a nd ha d their 10
tri cks.

~~·~w~~
A Nebraska r ea d er wants

to know if a ny woman othe r
than the late Helen Sobel
Smith has won both the
Va nder bilt and Spingold
c ups.
Yes. Edith Kem p of Miami
won both in 1963.
'

(Do you nave a question for
ftl.e experts ' Wflte "Ask th e
Jacobys " care o f lh1 s new spa·
per. The Ja cobys wrll answer

rndi .VIdual

qu eSIJ OnS

AlH EN S, OHI O business fo r sp1ft.
Small 40CXhq . ft . Supermorkll
close to Ohio U w ith beer 'i:irld
wi ne corry out license dOirVs
good ~usines! on heavy tro ve if'
~d Athe~s S1reet. Lorge pori .
... mg )ot w rth roam for ather au:
door business. Perfect busin,.s
f or two peopl e. Selling becaUI•
of absen t ee o wner . Terms lor
right p erson. For more infarnta·ti on call or write: PO Ba M53()1 ,
Vienna , Wesl Virginia 2610 T1or
1-304-295-9352 .
:

mterestlnQ auest10ns will be
used m th1S co lumn lind wtll

rece1ve

cop1es o f JACOBY

MODERN I

BARNE Y
1

I FIDDLED FER
TH' BARN DANCE

I'M SORRY ...
'{OUR SUPPER
ISN'T

READ'f

WE'VE BEEN HAVINGA
.FEW PROBLEMSLATELI{

OUR
COMPUTER
BROKE DOWN !

HOMEWORK ER S: $85 wee~y __,d.
dressin~ . stut_flng en ve1op,s .
1mmedrotely. Oetial l,
Start
ru sh 25 5 and se tl -oddreued
stomped • envelope: Bes t ~a ,
3209 N.W . 75th Terrace, Oet~t.
C9B I , Hollywood, Fl a. 33024;:

-"

'

'·

LAST NIGHT, PARSON,
AN ' WHEN I
PASSED IH' HAT
I lOOK IN
TEN DOLLERS
IHUTW CENT

rf

src.imped.. self-addressed enve/O pe.s are enclosed The mosr

C 19, , Kia1 Feature• Syndicate. Inc.

I

..

does I hate

sure what

Onl y

$29,000 .
175 I&gt;:CRES PLUS - Gas

NEW L·ISTING -

400means

I isn't

bath , 2 dr illed wells, on
good

I I

_

Mister

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BRADFORD , Au~ t ioneer . Ca',n~
ple te Ser viC4J . Phpne 949· 2481
or 9• 9-2000. Racine , O hio , Cr~ t t
Br adf ord .
~...

698-7331.

-

Bunch 8,10; Little Rascals 15.
S:Oo-Bonan za 31 My Th r ee Sons 4; Gun smoke 8 ;

~-~t,(

sont.tmJ

.. . BUT "THE PEOPLE

EXCA V ATI NG . dozer . back hqe
on d di tcher. Charl es R. Hotfield , Bock
Hoe Ser v1r!e ,
Rutlan d , Ohio . Ph one 742-2008.

4 bedroom

_

Yesterday'S

EXC A VA TING , dozer . loader b'rld
backhoe work ; dump truck s
and 1o·boys l or hire; wi ll ~9 u l
f ill d ir t, 10 sa i!. limeslane .and
gravel. Co li Bob or Roger ~e f1
f ers . doy phone 992 -7089. n igh~
ph one 992 -3525 or 99 2- 5232 .

city water, fron t por ch and
Reduced to S16,500 for

4:3D--My Three ;:,ens :J ; Pa_rrr ldge F qt mil y 4; Bra dy

(Answers tomorrow) .

•Mobile
Hom~
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tie -Downs
• Awnings - Carports ~'
• Insurance
Repairs

SEWING M AC HINE. Repoirs , !i.er.,
vice , all mak es . 992-2284. The'
Fa bric
Sh op , P ame r ~ ;
Au ! horized Stnger Sales ood
~ erv i ce . We sharpen ScissorS : 1, '

Bath, natur al gas furnace,

·Gong Show 15; Merv Gr iff in 6: Gi llig an 's Is. B:
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pvle. USMC 10: O i n ~h 13.

a:A(IIIIXITII IJ

Home Sales

t&lt;EMOOEL ING . Plu mbtng . heafitlg
an d all types of gener al repa ir .
Wor k guaranteed 20 years e:t·
per ience. Phone991~ 2409 . ~;:

JIRGIL B. TEAFORD, &gt;R .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street

t: )

I

3825.

Phone 992 -3325
SYRACUSE - · 3 bedroom
frame on State R't . 124.
MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
JUST LISTED - Nice little

20.
3:15-Ge nera l Hospi tal6, 13: 3:31&gt;--Ail In The Family
8,10; Lili as. Yoga &amp;·You 20 .

"'"OU CAN BE. TAU GHT
T ~E TRUTH ...

~- ~

-RE ~ l TOR

~

OF THE 19TH CENTU RY...

AC RE S . Rural cre a near
Rodne . SU1tob l~ for bud'dmg or ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR . 1u:
form ing . J.W . A rcher estate.
Sweeper s, taostv rs, iro n.~ , 9U
Bids accepted . Con tact Mrs . L. ·
sm all a p pl ian ce ~ . Lawn maw• "i '
Morr is . 949 ·2647 Qr Barbaro
next to Stole Hig h wo~ Garage
Knight , 99'1·2 186 .
on Route 7 . Phone (6 14 ) 985·

TEAFORD(B

8,10.
2:0()-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; 2:31&gt;--Doctors 3,4,15: One
Li fe to Live 6,13; Guiding Li ghl B. 10.
3 : DO--Another World 3,4, 15; Croc kett' s Victo r y Garden

- - -You- - -.. IJORNAG
.,
SURE ' I'M JUST
STILL SEEM l Q BE
V'

:

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or~
Phon e 991 -7034 . 10-29 ·1m 0119

11 -9-t f c

M an 15; Sea rc h for Tomorro w B, 10; E lec. Co. 33 .

1:oo-Gong Show 3; Al l My Chi ldr en 6, 13; News B;
Y oung &amp; the R es tless lO; N ot for Wom en O nly 15.
1 : 3G-D ays o f Our Lives 3,4, 15; As T he World Turns

U ~1'7

See us at 1100 East Main :

Middleport, Ohio

Say The Least 15; Midday 13.
12 :31&gt;--R yan's Hope 6,13; Bob Bra un 4; Chico 1!. the

4 : ~Mi ster Cartoon 3 ; Litt le Ra sca ls.Qur Ga ng 4;

..'

SALESANOSERVICE
11-9-lf c ..

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

byHennArnoldandBobLee

I

•

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

~17-TfC

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

.' '

300 Main St.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Ph. 371-6250

Rttdsoillt , 0.

Free 10 .
12 : DO-N ewscen t er 3; N ews 4,6, 10 ; D ivor ce CoUrt S; To

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

R e sid e ntia 1
and
c ommercial .
Ca ll · for
est i mate, 24 hour servi ce .
Anyday , anytime.

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

12 :4o-Gu lnness Book of W o rld Records 6, 13; 1 :0oTo m orro w 3,4; 1 :Jo--:..M ary H ar t man 10; 2:1Q---.

News 8; Bu l lwinkle 10 ; 7:30-Schoolies 10.

PEm

~S ME.iiW .. , I

''Tht Ori&amp;inaton

CARTER

10 :31&gt;--Lock Stock 1!. Barrel 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; Olck Cavell 20: Over
" Easy 33.
11 :31&gt;--J ohnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13 ; Movie
" The Wrecking C:r'ew" 8; ABC News 33; Movie "A I
Capone" 10; 12 :0()-J anakl 33.

8:0()-Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
9:oo-Merv Griffin :!: Phil Donahue 4,13,1 5: New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8, 10.
9:31&gt;--Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffilh B: Pr ice is Right
10.
10:01&gt;--Sanford 1!. Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6: Price Is
Right 8; Mike Doug las 13.
10:31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Joker's Wild 10.
11 :0()-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Match Game8, 10; Elec. Co.
20.
11 : 31&gt;--Knockout 3, 15; Fami ly Feud 6,13 ; Love of Life
8,10; Sesa me St. 20,33: 11 :55-CBS News B; Lovi ng

UnscriJmble these lour Jumbles,
one lerter to each square. lo form
four ordinary words.

BRtJTU&lt;7. IIJfl:)

6: GO-PTL Club l 5; 6 : 151/• -Sfe-Overseas Mission ;
News 6 ; Sunrise
6 :3o-Columbus Today 4 ;
Semester 8; 6 :.45--Mornlng Report 3; 6 :55---Chuck

20,33 .
9:0Q-Barney Miller 6,13; Hawall Five-0 8,10; Best of

~ ~ ~~ .,

... A~D TONI'i

FR IDAY, NOV EMB E R 11, 1977
5:45- Far m Report 13; 5:51&gt;--PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester HJ.

While Reports 10; Good Morning , Trl Stale 13.
7:oo- Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS

'fl jJI}'iM"t ~'1}

Not fhe lmitltM

Ph. '92-1'193

1

10:00 - 700 Club .

S: oo-Superstunt 3,4 , 15; Welcome Bil!ck , Kotter 6,13:
Waltons 8,10 ; Once Upon a Class'ic 20.33.
8 :3o-What's Happening 6, 13; Best of Ernie Kovacs

Families 20,33 .
9 :3G-Car t er Country 6, 13.
IO :oo-Nell Diamond 3,-4 , 15 ; Redd Foxx 13 ; Coun tdown
to Michigan 6; Barnaby Jones 8,10 ; I , Claudius 33 ;
News 20 .

11 ·14-1 mo. pd .

SrrKuso. Ohio

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Bdrms •• newer ranch type
countr y home , c arpeting ,
panel ing, br ick &amp; frame
co n s t r ucti o n .
oth e r

Glide. 1.-30&lt;-882-3108 .

bedroom
1973 Odr ian l .cl x 60 2 bedroom ·
1972 Vic tor ian 14 )( 67 3 bedroom ,
2 both
1972 Covent ry 12 K 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 M 60 2
bedroom .

Ca 11 667-6479

10 18 - 1 mo . · ·

Phone 992 -2181

19.71 SA LEM 12 x 65 2 b ed roo m .
Fron t den mod'e l. Frun ished .
Hook ed up to utilities at Co unt r y M ob il e Home
Pa rle
Ev ery th ing is in 1h den ready for
o fireplace or woOd-burni ng
stove . $6 .00 firm . Call 992 -7034
or 992 -7671 alter 6.

LI KE-NEW Clarinet , case , begi n·
ners books and sta nd . $100.
Phone (6 14) 247 -347 I ,

7:31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,4; $100,000 Name Tha t
Tune6; $25,000 Pyram id 8: MacNeil -Lehrer ReporC
20,33; That's Hollywood 10; Nashville on the Road
13: Marty Robbins Spolllqhl 15.

-

ROlle l, ' '""""· 0.
Carpet • UphOlStery
Phone Mike Younc
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

MNDOWS

Tennyson ? 33 .

l!oELI EVE M E ,
THERE:S NOTHIIJG
El:SE LIK E IT IIJ
THE AIR.!

Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7: 30- Coach ' s Corner
8:00 - Movie : ' ' Flyi ng Deuces"
9 : 30- Consultation

I

Gong Show 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Coping With Kids 20: Anyone Tor

Only S179.95

9n331 9.

0

Blown lnlo Walls I Abies
STORM
WINDOWS I DOORS

·. :.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

New Co . op · water and
softeners, model VC-SVI.

Week End Special

Dark gree n fi n ish, blk . viny l trim , 351

I

on heati n g cost
Exper ience and
fu lly in su red
Fne Est .

Young's
.Carpeting

finJncin&amp; At~Ma blt

'·

.And

NINE WEEK old Beagle pups . Robbit dogs . Started and trained.
SI S and up . {614 ) 742 -252 1.

TO GIVE Away : Dog . 'J Ch1nese
pu g. 1 1 ch1huahuo . 11 mo . old
female with 2 puppres Sm all
house dog . Pups ore I week
old. 992 -2514 .

:rr=h.
·;:.

Let The Open ng

Let us test your water Free

Servi ce :
AK C
FOR ST UD
r egis t ered coc~er spaniel.
Block and tan . Clor'ksdole
Lmes Showquoli ty. J &amp; D Ken nels. 742-3162 .

CAST .,.ON

'I
"'
''
''
'

Blown Insulation
JIM.KEESEE

Superior
Steam Eltraction

Blown
ln1wlation Stnk:ts

7:00 -

Friends 6; CBS Ne ws 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7:0Q-Truth or Cons . 3; Cross-Wits 4 ; Liars C lub 6 ;

'

J&amp;L

FREE ESTIMATES

,,:;:?r

IVIOIABf'·

Wdh
Call

AKC IR ISH Setter puppies 6 wks .
old. Phone
1-304 ·882 -2397 ,
of!er 5 pm .

TO GIVE aw ay 6 week old pup .
Part co llie , shots started an d
wormed . Call 992-333 1.

Wood Stoves

12 5 cu bic lt . r efr ige rator , SlOIJ.
39 '' electric sta ve
Call
742 -2170 .

Now Only

Of 949-2860
frH Estin.1tts
'NoSun illy C.lh ' ""'
10"20- lmo .

7 1!.11 P.M. - Slarpacker (GI
Cable Channel 5 6: 30 P.M. - Testimony Time

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER ,l ), 1971
6 : 31&gt;--NBC News 3.4.15 : ABC News oJ; Carol Burnell &amp;

THi;

9'_.- Jack W. Ca rsey , Mgr .

f ~re ploce

Alocal contracl01
Phone 949-280 I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
n !!2-2174
Pomero,

Lak in, w. v~ .

1976 VW BUS Campm obde. 13,800
mtles Stdl under worrenty .
AM , FM ster eo casse tte player .
$5 .500. Coli 992'-5933.

HOOF ~OLLOW Horse s. Buy , ~ell
trade or tr ain . New and used
saddles . R ~th Reeves , Alb any

..., , ..." llfl'l
. ..... tor

773-5955

1969 8ANN E!l 18ft. camper , self con ta ined , furnoet• . stove
refr1gerat or , sleeps si x, ex cellen t co nd1110n , Con be seen
at 318 Sy camore St. , Middleport
or coli 992 -727b.

RIGHT PRICE
RIGHT DEAL
THREE OR FO UR roam apt . or
smal l tra iler in Pomeroy or Mid ·
. d lepor t area . 992 -7 199.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

YOU'LL. BE ON
EVERY TV SCREEN
IN AMERICA!

''

Ce llulos ic (wood fiber) .· '
The rm a l Insulation
'
' .
Sa ve 30 pct. lo 50 pe l.
.

Bissell Siding Co.

c..• .

::~ lri~·
HEAT&amp;FU~m
~

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

BEN FRANKLIN
gr at e
and
985·3979 .

.... t. tor

,.(PlACES •

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

....

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

Movie Channel 4 5 1!. 9 P.M. - Burnt Ofierlngs CPG I

' .

I

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Fibergl ass raised r oof, bunk s, screen , 12 v,' electric
refr ig .. furnace. Por ta Patt i. stove, d inette , 350 V-8
eng .. automatic , P .S .. P . B., ai r cond .• AM-FM stereo
radio and t ape, w -w ti re's, red and wh lte . Only 10 ,000
m iles and clean as new .

'

1

L---------------------------------------------------------------------~:

stovu •••

Taking Nf W
Custom e r s For

6il.,

Van Conversion .••• '7995

News 13 .

- ~

Business Services

147b }ORO GRANADA () q d
outomotl( 1n goorl tondduJn
QQ'} 570} SJ 250

AKC REG ISTER ED pekingese puppies . Phone {304) 882-2683 .

1976 Chevy G20

"'
I'
~·
.'

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursdal) Nov . 17,1977
H IA•I'V

for Sale

Auto Salrs

'

"
l· ~ •
\ •'

"

HOW'S ABOUT fiDD LIN'
FER MY CONGREGATION ·
S UNDRY MORNIN' ?

�l~TheOally S~ntlnrl, M iddl~drt·f'IIIWI'~~-l).l'ltur~bl) ~'lV 1 7,1~·;,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Health roorkshop is scheduled
ATHENS - Dr. Th"'""' A
Robertson , d!rech1r (1f lkalth

Manpower De\'rlopnwn1.
\' ictor

:mci

~taff

oco wJt &lt;'h,

mE&gt;mber. of thl' Corpuraunn
for Healt h Edu('i.tll un 111
Appalarhia Dhto ,rHE.\ llt.
ha \' e

~n

1n n t t&gt;d

b\

till'

American Soctet \" ftl r ·..\ lhrd
Healt h Professtoi;S tu cond ul·t
a worksh op at thr sorlt't) ·~
annual
c-o nv ent wn
on
Novembf'r 19·22 111

D~tllas.

Texas.
Roben s&lt;ln and CtH.'lm 'ltrh
will present the l'nnrept.
operation and evaluatltm ~· r
thei r first health 1eam l•x·
perience in Appala chia Ohw
at the conference,
CHEAO placed stx student

.

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT
(Uf'N O 21111
- Estate of K e1th Allan Oouglu
_ilk a C!zeh,1sn iak D ecease d .
Nor ice i s nerenv g 1ven t.nar
Ted C zel u sn i ak of Brook
Park , Oh io, has bet'n dvly
appoinled Adm -i nistra tor of
the E~ta te . o f K~ ith All a n
D ou g f as dka C~t~lusn.-'! k ,
de-ce a seo , une of MC' 1QS
County . Oh10
CrediiQrs ilre requ •red to
file the i r cl aims w 1fh sa rd
l1duci ary w ithi n four months

Dated This Hn
NoY em ber 1977

oav

of

Mann 1ng D Webster

Judql?
Co urt of Common P le a s,
PrObdl £' D iv1StOtr

( I 1 J 10 , 17. 1-l . ]IC

ht·~tllh

Ill 'IX ·\ p·
{ lh111 i 'll l!\lllUIII l ll'~

ll'dlll ~

~)l.l)ildll.t

PRE~HOLIDA Y

ft'r an t' h:. hl·\t ,• ,·k pl'l'h•d
dunn~ tht' !OUtnllh'r 11i 1917
'\~I!'&gt;

t·, ,,·,nnh·h

a nwmtJt&gt;r uf

PMhllhlUth
lt&gt;nhSnphllilf) hl10.1lth
tht'

\\ tu~·h lil'!&lt;ih,:m·d a disaster
plan f, ,r Srltltll t·,,unt) ;11 rtw
L\lfllll)UrHl) -~ ft'Qlll'S. t

H0\1 E 1\ 'Pl 1

F-•n nul.1

Olll' dtarnplill\ Z\1k1 l .:nHla Ll(
.-\ usmua br!ikt• til~· lap n'l'or\l
at \ 'alklun...:.a r;H't.' t•uurst•
'I'Ul'StlH\ \\IU!t• tt'Stl/U.!. tht.•
m.' \\ ur:lllh;n: l·r\ lfa H11 11lL'Il ht'
w11!

linn•

1ll

llt'Xt

l"'n\ :lu.t n

(;ra llll

)

SALE! REGULAR

TWO DAY SALE

1'1ll' l11!-!

BATTERIES
Buy now for Christmas toys,
fl_ashlights , popular size, 1.5 volts.

Buy

now l or Ch n slmas
g1fts , en t ire st ock inc luded .

nf HPIIlL'.

coat

swenters .

Sl 1povers.

29~

steeYeless swea ter s. t:rew
necks .

pet r t 1on

to

be

wd ~

be oy

filed rn sa11:1

Probate Court on or atter Th£'
17th day ol Deccmbf'r 19ll
Dalf'd lh 1S 15th day o!

Novf'ml:ler
ll l l 17

~

SALE
PRICES

OJ"I rO

Sa 1d applrccltion

a

trem endous
selec tion, reg~lar sires and
e)( tra lar ge, too .

PUBLIC NOTICE
N olr.c@-~· ·nereby q,vt'n that
lhe unde·fs •g,neo mtends to
ma ke. aoot C' dl10n to lhc
Probali:' .C ourt of J\.,e'igs
Cou nty Oh,o , lor an order to
change h rs nrtnH." to Frank.
Junror lo..no lts ·tron1 Franlo..
F isht&gt; r wnose addrt&gt;ss •s R D

1917
Fran!\ Jun1or Knolls
I! c

40~

SllE D FLASHLIGHT

MEN'S
SWEATERS

t•ar ·s

l..;lutlit. bn n~m~ tl)(' L'ar up
!1 1 110 rlll lt.'S an hnur. \\a S
duL· k ('(\ 111 a ltlllllllt' and 18
~t.'fl l tl d S an, u nd till' lht•
CLITUII l llL'ah:•d Ln a suburb

Pomeroy

.$ALE

..•..

-•
~

••

••
••
•

Regular price $2 .39 yd ., 90 inches
seamless width ,· bleached snowy
white .

SPECIAL· SALE

'1.29 CORONA.DO
PLACE
MATS
100 per cent Viscose rayon,

reversible, machine washable, no
iron, white and solid colors. For two
days .

9
BE AN EARLY CHRISTMAS SHOPPER:..

IAYl\YAY NO\Y

HALF SIZE

DRESS
SALE·
Excellent selection of
siyles and sizes from
12112 to 32 1/2.

BUY NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS GIVING

SALE
PRICES!
S

SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE

DUNDEE BATH TOWELS
Flora l pattern . excel l.e nt qva lity. dJ&gt;Gice of
colors . ·
,.

$3.29 Bath Towel... .............s2.49
s2.39 Hand Towel.. ..............sl.79
s1.09 Wash Cloth................... 79~
SALE I

BESTFORM BRAS

Discontinued st yles, limited quantity , ,not
every size in every st yle.

L SALE

REGULAR '3.00, '4.00, '5.00 BRAS

MEN'S FUR
TRIMMED
DRESS
COATS

Sale '1.00
REGULAR '6.00 AND '7 .50 BRAS
Sale •2.00

Sizes 38 to 40 in regulars and
longs. sma rtly styled, Zepel
water repetlant fin ish . B uy
now for Christ mas giv ing.

Men's 174.95 Dress Coats

'63.00
Men's '65.00 Dress Coats

'55.00

.Men's '49.95 Dress Coats
'42.00

Lingerie Department, 2nd Floor

CLOSE-OUT SALEI

FOXCROFT BED SHEETS
Permanen1 press, 50 per cent polyes1er, 50
per ce nt colton, f loral and striped pat1ern,
limited quantity.

'8.99 QUEEN SIZE FLAl OR FITTED ..........'5.79
'5.49 FULL SIZE FLAT OR FITTED .............'3.59
'4.49 lWI N SIZE FLAT OR FITTED ............ 12.99
'3.99 PAIR PILLOW CASES .............. '2.59 PR.

SALE I

••
••

Save during this pre hol iday ·sale, sizes 8 to 20 .

90 INCH WIDTH
BLEACHED QUILT LINING .

SALE
PRICES

~

••

BOYS'
.WINTER
JACKETS
woo l
pla i ds ~
den ims, polyester cotton
blends , e ntire st ock on sate .

CARL MORRIS , left, and Barney Cochran. right. were presented a tree farmer award

Nylons .

\ ,_ '

SALE
PRICES

\

JUMPSUITS
AND BIB
OVERALLS

YOU'LL
REALLY SAVE

~

••

MEN'S
SPORT
SHIRTS
Ent ire stock men ' s sport
shirts in sizes sma,ll , medium ,
· targe, big man siz es and tails.
Solid colors, stripes. florals
a nd
ex ce llent
pa t te r ns .
tapered and full cut styles.

•

•

CHILDREN'S

•

••

TWO DAY SALE I

SPECIAL SALE

&gt;

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

\

..••

~ \~

•

~

•• ~"
•
••
••
••

I~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday. November 18. 1977

(

e

t.
.••''•
.
•,.
.'

~.

I''

7-14

.,,,;,:
I

SALE
PRICES

'

'

PRE HOLIDAY SALE I

MEN'S
SUITS

CATHY BLAE'ITNAR. MEIGS HIGH student. inspects artisti~ work of Brian
Kovalchik, 4, Pomeroy , in a sampling of .activities to be offered pre-schoolers in the now
Meigs HiSh Sehool child development study program.
. ....,...,.. ~.. ...-....... ~" .

--

Three p iece vested suits, 100
per cent polyester . .excell ent
styles, sizes 38 to 46 in
regulars and longs.

A li ght-veined talk by ABC
television "Wide World of
Sport s" personality Dave,
Diles, presentation of awards
anrl a musi c"-1 pr(Jg ram
htghlightrd the annual
meeting uf the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
Thursday night at Chester
Elementary School.
Introdu ced by Thereon
John son of the district board
of supervisor, Diles, former
Middleport resident , com·
mented that he had "no great
message" for the evening. He
said th at he would not at·
tempt to comment on conservation but would leave
that to the experts.
Diles. however. did .entertain his audience with
anecdotes involving sports
world personalities and
fellow ABC commentator ,

•

Howard CosseU. Diles paid
high tribute 'to L. W. McComas, former Middleport
teacher
and
school
superintendent. and reflected
upon pleasant memories of
his parents. Mr . and Mrs. L.
D. DUes. Into these reflections he also injected some
pleasant humor.
Diles. who has authorzed
several books. reported that
he is now working on another .
The new book will deal with
the work of a doctor who
treats celebrities.
Diles credited Cossell with
bringing journalism stan·
dards into television sports
and opening the way for
asking sports figures im·
portant questions rather than ·
trivial ones which had earlier
prevailed .
The speaker presen.te!l

at y

Sale •79.89
MEN'S '89.95 SUITS

.

A riew program to provide direction of the home
educational experiences for ec onomics student s have
both Meigs High School home educational experiences
economics students and pre- disguised in the form of play.
school children of the district
Parents of the pre will begin in January.
sc hoolers will have th e
Mrs. Karen Goins of the responsibility of providing
home economics department the transportation for their
is in charge of the innovative children. However. parents
program through which her may , on occasion. observe .
junior and senior students proceedings of the class.
will study child development. Some 16 students will take
Pre-school age ch ild ren part and some 12 pre-school
from two to lou• years old children · will be accepted.
will be invited to participate Mrs. Goins will issue a .
in the program. They will registration form for the
report to the hi gh school for program in The Daily Senone and a half hours each day tine! in the near future.
- 1:45 to 3:45p. m. - and Special equipment for the
durtng this time under the program has been secured.

f

l

Sale •76.89

I .

MEN'S '79.95 SUITS
.."

Sale '67.89

WOMEN'S
BLOUSES
•Solids, plaids
and prints.

•Sizes 30 to 46
.

SALE
PRICES

.

emergency political meeting protested the visit and was
United Press International
joined by such traditional
Egyptian President Anwar was called in Cairo itself.
In Beirut a pre.dawn explo- moderates as Jordan and
Sadat prayed today in a
sion gutted the downtown Lebanon.
mosque in the Suez Canal city
of lsmaili for th e success of offices of Egypt's Misrair air
The only overi Arab
his 36-hour visit to Jerusalem line in an apparent prot~st · supp ort came from the
while crowds' chanted "may against the visit. No moderate North African
Allah grant you victory! " aild causaltie s were repor ted. states of Morocco and
"We are with you, Sadat, until Thursday a bomb explosion Tunisia. Sudan, one of
damaged the Egyptian · Egypt's closer allies, said it
th e very end 1"
An advance party of 60 Embassy in Damascus. also would not oppose the visit as
Egyptians arrived in Israel without casualties.
long as long-.-ange Arab goals
Libya warned of a possible were not subverted .
today and were cheered by
crowds of Israelis at Ben- diplomatic break and pledged
Presidimt Carter said in
Gurion airport. but Arab its full political and military Washington he spoke with
anger at his visit mounted by potential at the disposal of a Egyptian President Anwar
the hour and Libya warned it di spleased Syria and an Sadat today and expressed
would break diplomatic equally unhappy Palestinian hope the visit "will be
rel ati ons if Sadat went resistance movement. Iraq , successful in breaking down
through with
it. An · an other bardline nation. animosities in the Mideast."

He said Sadat was .. excited,
enthusiastic and · confident.''

·'

•
'

SALE PRICES!

'

~

ByU\]ltedPresslnternatlonal
NEW YORK - A FEDERAL GRAND JURY is
investigating the income tax returns pf reputed Mafia
chieftain Carmine Galante, it has been learned. Galante's
lawyer , Michael Rose, said Thursday , "A brother , sisters,
brothers-In-law. daughter - the entire family - have been
served" with subpoenas to testify .
Galante 's two daughters, Rosen said, were · served
Wednesday when they visited the Metropolitan Correction
Center where their 67·yeaHld father has been held for
five weeks on parole violation charges. Internal Revenue
Service investigators are comparing Galante's life style and
spending habits with his income tax returns during the past
five years .
WASHINGTON - "GONE WITH THE WIND," the 1939
epic of the Civil War and reconstruction in the South, topped
the American Film Institute's list of the 10 best American
movies Thursday.
Following .the Clark Gabie-Vivien Leigh hit on the list
chosen 'in balloting by some 16,000 AFI members were
"Citizens Kane,'' the 1~1 Orson Wells film about a newspaper
magnate, and "Casablanca," the 1942 story of intrigue and war
time rom~nce starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid
·
Bergman. ·
Named as the other top films were "The African Queen,"
1952; "The Grapes of Wrath.' ' 1940 ; "One Flew over the
Cuckoo's Nest.'' 1975; "Singing ·in the Rain," 1952; "Star
Wars,' ' 1977; " 2001 : A Space Odyssey," 1968, and "The Wizard
of Oz," 1939.

• •••
•••

..
I

• •
~

•

·,

carter spoke Thursday with
Israeli P rime Minister
Menahem Begin to wish him
well. ·
On Thursday Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmi
and Minister of State for
Foreign Affairs Mohanuned
Riad resigned in quick
s u ccession.
Today
Parllament Speaker Sayed
Ma.rei • s ummoned
representatives of Egypt's
three political parties and the
of
all
cha irm en
parliamentary committees
into an emergency Session for
Saturday morning .
The purpose of the meeting

'

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 153

WASHINGTON -UNITED AIRUNES AND the union
representing 8,000 flight attendants vowed to continue contract
talks today amid union threats of a midnight walkout that
would ground the world's largest airline just before the
Thanksgiving holidays.
The Association of Flight Attendants advised weekend
passengers holding seats on United's 1,550 flights a day to
consider switching airlines. A United spokesman said a strike
by flight attendants would ground the firm's 365 planes.
United employs 50,500 people and carries 93,000
passengers a day between 92 airports serving 110 cities, all but
two in the United States.

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

WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Carter spoke with
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat today un the eve of
Sadat's historic trip to Jerusalem and said he hoped it
"will be successful In breaking down animosities In the
Mideast.'"'
Carter said Sadat was "excited, enthusiastic and
cunftdent."
The president, who a!S&lt;J talked by telephone with
Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin un Thursday, ,
diselos~ the. Sadat telephone conversation . during a
plcturHaklng session In the White House Oval Office with
Dr. Haldan Mahler, director general of the World Health
Organization.
::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::;::::::::::

The Israelis hung out more
was not disclosed officially,
but it will obviously debate than 2,000 hastily sewn EgypSadat's upcoming trip to the tian flags , an army band
rehearsed the Egyptian
J~wislj~e.
~-"
anthem
and
Opposition to the tnp was national
diplomats
wrestled
with
expected only from Khaled
Mohieddin, chairman of the niceties of protocol for the
leftist Progressive. Unionist leader of a state officially at
Alliance
Party .
But war with Israel.
·Prime Minister Menahem
goverrunent officials said this
would be insignificant, since Begin summoned his cabinet
the party has only tw o into a special session to
deputies in the 360-member discuss Israel 's strategy.
Sadat will be the first Arab
parliament.
t o visit the Jewish
leader
The
Israelis
today
since
its founding in
state
prepared an unprecedented
1948.
He
is
to
address Israel's
security net for Sadat's 3&amp;parliament
Sunday
and pray
hour stay. surpassing
AI Aksa
at
the
silverdomed
protection given former
Mosque,
one
of
Islam's
President Richard Nixon and
holiest
shrines,
in
Pope Paul VI. An Egyptian
Jerusalem's
Walled
City,
delegation was arriving iv
coordinate
arrangements . captured by Israel in 1967.

•

TRACY BURDETTE , left, and Joni Murray, Meigs High School home economics
students, work with three-year.old Heather Goins on a puzzle which will be a part of the
learning ex~rience of children involved in the new child development study program at
Meigs High School.

~~ Eight girls competing
'~

DAVE DILES, TELEVISION personality on ABC's
Wide World of Sports, was speaker for the annual dinn er
meeting of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District
held Thursday night at the Chester Elementary Sehoul.
With Diles, wbo was born and raised in Middleport, is Rex
Shenefield, president of the district's board of
· supervisors. Shenefield was master of ceremonies.

en tine

Pre-schoolers
•
rn
new program

. MEN'S '95.00 SUITS

humorous material on "Ohio
State-Michigan" week, in
relationship to the upcoming
game Saturday and related
stories dealing with the appearance of Woody Hayes in
Middleport some years agu
as well as other sports
notables he helped bring into
the community for athletic
banquets.
Diles commented that he is
always happy to be invited
"back home" to speak at
local events. He spoke freely
of his love for this area and its
people.
Rex Shenefield, president
of th'e distri ct board of
supervisors. was master of
eeremonies and invocation
preceding the dinner by the
Eastern Band Boosters was
(Continued on 11111• 2)

Egyptians back Sadat

'

'
••
,' ...'

SIZES 2-4, 4-6X,

conservationists

Allah beseeched

•

l~ ~

.•

I

by Frank Toth , center. Their tree farm is west of Harrisonville.

•
•
&lt;
•

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS

I'

01

•'
•I

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19th
OPEN
FRIDAY
N
TIL
8
- --- ·-

St'rll'S

no~rtll

••

TWO DAYS ONLY

111l t'~Ull

DlsrAici.:.o: Awards made to

....•

for 2 Jr. Miss slots
by the high schools. Judges'
interviews will take place
Saturday following the con·
testants and judges luncheon
at the Meigs Inn. Both winners will advance to the Ohio
Junior Miss finals to be held
in Mount . Vernon, Ohio the
middle of January. Also, each
local winner that participates
in state competition will
receive a four-year partial .
scholarship to Huntington
College in Huntington, Ala., if
she should decide to attend
that coll ege.
· The J unior Miss committee
h:js announced that the Meigs
High Jazz Band will provide
music for the finals with Randy Hunt and Alan Hunt directing .
Tickets for the finals are
being sold by all Junior Miss
contestants and at the Mei gs
Inn. Advance tickets are,
students $1; adults $1.50.
Tickets at the door will cost
E·R CALLED OUT
.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;
$1.50 for students, $1.15 for
The
Middleport
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
adults.
Emergeney Squad was called
Sunday
through
to College St., Rutland at I :45
of
p.m. Thursday for James Tuesday, chance
showers
Sunday,
and
lair
Adams who was having ·
Monday and Tuesday.
difficulty breathin g. He was
Lows In the mid to upper
taken to VMH where he was
30s
and highs to .the 50s
admitted. At 7:55 p.m. the
Clear tonight , low about 30 .
Sunday. Gradually cooling
squad went to Mark V Store
Oouding up. Saturday, high,
by Tuesday to lows near 30
in u,e low 50s. Probability ~f
for
Louise
Johns on,
and highs to the upper 30s
Pomeroy, who had fallen. She
precipitation 10 percent today
to low 40s.
also was taken to VMH and
and tonight , 20 percent
admitted.
:::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::· Saturday.

Kimberly
Taylor,
Eight Meigs County High
School senior girls will com- Southern, act, ' 1Erna.stine the
pete for tbe two Junior Miss Operator," sponsor, Racine
titles to be conferred at the Home National Bank.
Mary Mora, Eastern, act,
Meigs
Juni or
High
auditorium Sunday. Nov. 20 Skit and Dance, sponsored by
City Loan and Savings Co.
beginning at3 :30 p. m.
Kim Batey, Eastern, vocal
Designated as the "North
Meigs County Junior Miss" with guitar, sponsored by the
and the '·south Meigs County Meigs Inn Pizza Shack.
Brenda Boyles, Eastern,
Junior Miss" the titles will be
awarded to two of the follow- Demonstration. Different
Br e ad s, sponsored by
ing eight girls:
Kathy Pullins, Eastern, Frances Florist.
Paige Smith , Meigs High
vocal. " You Light up my
Life;: sponsored by the School, act. trwnpet solo,
Racine Home National Bank. sponsored by the Meigs Inn.
Each contestant will be
J udi th Perry,. Ea stern,
Demonstration on Clothing, · judged in the youth fitness
sponsored by the Racine and poise and appearance
routines and creative and
Home National Bank.
Pamela Riffle, Eastern, performing arts on the day of
vocal solo, " Puppy Song," the finals. Scholastic judging
has taken place and has been
sponsored by the Meigs Inn.
based on the contestant 's
grade transcripts provided

Weather·

Reds linked to mmers
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. activists are a!S&lt;J members of W.Va .• are raised through
bake sales and other means.
(UP!) - A spokesman for the the party .
Site
said the party does not
.
"Some
members
of
the
Miners Right to Strike
receive
mon ey _from the
RCP
are
members
of
the
Committee is also a member
Party-USA.
Communist
committee
but
that
is
not
the
of
the
Revolutionary
35,
refused to deny
Branch,
The
committee
is
made
point.
Communist Party-USA, tbe
or
confirm
his
association
up
of
rank
and
file
miners,"
Huntington Herald Dispatch
with
the
Revolutionary
she
said.
reported today in a
"What the RCP fights for Is Communist Party.
copyrighted story.
"I'm not going to discuss
The link between the two exactly the same thing the
my
politics with the press. H
groups was es tablished rank and file (coal miners)
there
are any people - rank
through Judith Branch, want," she said, adding the
and
file
miners - that are
editor
of
the
party · RCP members want to "help
in what my politics
interested
publlcatlon, "The Worker," organize and help build and
and
beliefs
are, I'd be glad to
and wife of committee strength en rank and file
tell
tbem,"
said Branch, who
of
the
coal
industry
members
spokesman Mike Branch.
has
been
a
coal
miner for five
and
other
industries.'.'
Mrs. Branch, who writes
and
a
half
years.
Mrs.
Branch
said
funds
for
most of the publication, said
Branch. an Indiana native
her husband and a coUple of "The Worker," which is published
in
Wayne
C~unty
,
· (Continued on ~~~ee 12)
other Right-to-Strike

Celeste challenges Rhodes'
as governor for the past
BY LEE LEONARD
UPI StatehoUse Reporter '
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Lt.
Gov . Richard F . Celeste
today
announced
his
candidacy for governor,
issuing a direct challenge to
Gov. James A. Rhodes whom
he says views the future "as
though it were a rerun of the
last 20 years ."
"l am seeking the office of
goveroor because it is time to
face·the future in Ohio," said
the 40-year old Democrat.
"In political life . we seldom
get be.l'ond current partisan
and v :rsonal rivalries and
stal• 'logans from the past,"
Celeste told a cheering
audience of about 250
supporters who had paid $50 a
plate for breakfast.
"Unfortunately, that type
of politics usually is played at

a considerable cost to future
generations. I am ·not
satisfied with that . sort of
politics for Ohio as we move
into !he 1980s."
Celeste said the choice for
goYernor in 1978 Will be a
choice between futur e and
past.
" It will be between leadership willing to work with the
citizens of Ohio to face our
future and shape it, and the
P"esent governor who wants
to treat the future as though it
were a rerun of the last 20
years," said Celeste.
Although he has long been
viewed as the front-runner
for the nomination, he has not
made
a
formal
a nnouncement until now.
Celeste, a 1959 graduate of
Yale University, Is the son of
Frank Celeste, Clevelarid

housing developer and
former mayor of Lakewood .
A Phi Beta Kappa at Yale ,
he taught there and was
elected president of the
National Methodist Student
Movement.
At ·Oxford on a Rhodes
Scholarship. Celeste 'studied
economics, politics and
philosophy . When he returned
to Yale in 1962, he worked for
the New Haven Board of
Education ·and taught civics
part time.
He joined the Peace Corps
as a liaison officer in
Washington in 1963, and went
into the U.S. Foreign Service
later that year. He served for
four years as executive
assistant to a.ester Bowles,
U.S. ambassador to India.
Returning to Oeveland in
( Ccntlnued on J)lle 12)

)

-·' -

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="796">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11331">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49002">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49001">
              <text>November 17, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6746">
      <name>arundel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1107">
      <name>diehl</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
