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                  <text>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

\

..••

~ \~

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~

•• ~"
•
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••
••

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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.''

·'

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SALE PRICES!

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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

• •
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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

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SIZES 2-4, 4-6X,

conservationists

Allah beseeched

•

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.•

I

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

•
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&lt;
•

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS

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01

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•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)

)

-·' -

�...

3-The !Ydily Sentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fr1day. Nov. 18, 1977
0.

~~mlu~. ~ll \'

lS , 19i7

INDIANi\POI.IS tUPI) Warmng
agatnst
the
· l·ronomi&lt;• donmsayer. · ·
General M0tors Cllmrman
Tho mas A Murphy said
today the naunnal e(·onomy is
"' better shape than the
Amencan public has been led
to behe1 e
"All m a'l. lookmg at our
l"\:{lnOnly,"' he sa 1d, ' " e see

dred Indianapolis civic, business, professional and
educa llonal leaders at a
luncheon sponsored by GM .
Murphy sa1d his' oplurusm
was based on the gross
national product 's 3.8 percent
annual growth rate in the
third quarter, attitude of
conswners. record levels of
employment , and an inflatiOn

no Signs of the t )'PI' of
exC"eSS(&gt;S or unbalan('eS that
would presage an econom1r
do~nturn.''

Murphy said the economy
has ecnsiderable underl)1ng
strength and ISm a pennd uf
"!nderate but enMurag1og
growth which th£' automaker
expects to extend into 1978
anct beyoud.
Ht&gt; .uirlrPssPd

~rvPr l'll

lmn-

Assembly delaying decisions

FOR THE FIRSf TIME sel'\'\Ce pms were p1 esented to supem sors of the Me1gs Sn1l
and Water Conse1 \'a Uon Otstnct. Re&lt;.·eivmg the sen tee pins \\ ere I tll r. Da \ td K(lb len tz.
Roy M11ler. both 10 year pms; Rex Shenefield. 15) ears, and Thereon Johnson . 2V years

J..
'·

practlces to Don Mora. Route
3, Pomeroy , b} Roy Miller ,
the tree farmer a" ard to Ca rl
Morris and Drexel Cochran,
by Frank Toth. the b1g tree
eon test award to Thad Dye by
Davtd Gloeckner ; the land
judg1ng contest by Ca rl
Webster to Eastern H1gh
FFA, first place, and Rocky
Van Meter, top mdtvtdual
pnze , oulstandmg farmer
awards by Roy M1ller to
Dav1d Koblentz and Leonard
Huf£man , and supervtsor
service ptns by Leota Young
to Dave Koblentz. Roy Miller,
Rex Shenefield and Thereon
Johnson.
Oa\·ld Gloeckner was
elected to another term on the
bo ar d of supervisor

'
/

1'.
1-

001\1 MORil, ROUTE J. Pomeroy, left, was presented
the Goodyear Award for outstandmg conservatton
pract1ces W1th Mora IS Roy M1ller, a member of the
di st n ct's boar d oI supervisors

Delta Queen has lady pilot
CINCINNATI i UPI ) Greene m 1949
She graduated m August at
LeXIe Palmore started
workrng on the Delta Queen the top of her class at the
National River Academy in
four years ago as a ma1d
Toda) she becomes one of Helena, Ark., and recently
the p1lots of the magmf1cent passed a U S Coast Guard
nverboat that churns along · exarnmatwn to qualify for the
the Ohio an d MISSISSIPP I first-class pilot's license
A nverboat pilot IS ·
Rtvers
Th e' 30-year-old Ms
responsi ble for navtgahon m
Palmore is one of the few so metimes tncky nver
women 111 history to hold a currents.
first-class nverboat pilot 's
Th e Tyler, Texas native , a
bcense In fa ct, she' ll be the former !ree~ance art 1st. took
first female ptlot on the mers her first crmse on the Delta
Queen several )ears ago. She
smce the death of Mary B

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Vitamin E unproved
By Lawrence Lamb
DEAR DR. LAMB-I have
recently read that v1tarrun E
IS used to treat many problems of the heart II gave no
further details. My questiOn
IS, can v1tarrun E help 10 the
treatment of tachycardia 1
DEAR READER--The
sta tement you have read 1s
correct m the narrow sense
that VItamin E has been used
to treat many problems-but,
unfortunately, there 1s no
va hd evidence that such
treatments for heart conditions m man have any
benefiCial effects at all It is
useless mediC\Oe for th1s purpose
We have heard about the
supposed nuraculous cures
from VItamin E now for over
3D years, and t hey remam
JUSt unsc1entif•c testunonials,
sunila r to those you could getfrom your fnendly snake 011
peddler o! the old-f ashwnd
medical show
A very recent study by Dr.
Dennis G. Carahs of Johns
Hopkins Umverstty and the
US Pubhc Health Hosp1ta l
at Baltunore, confmns that
vttamm E ts not useful m
treahng patients w1lh chest
pam from heart d1sease. Dr.
Carahs and h1s colleagues
st ud ted patients w1th
documented heart d1seasc
from X rays of the artenes to
th e h eart (coro na r y
artenograms J. and gave
th_em large doses of vtt8min
E for SIX months. They gave
1,ROO umts 1 a large dose ,
cla1med by enthusiasts to be
effed1ve m treating heart
pam. The same patients were
then given no mechcme for
two months, fo llowed by stx
months or a placebo (nonmedical substance).
Commenting on the results,

•

\

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Staleh,.use Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP I) - The
Ohio General Assembly has
adJourned for the weekend,
sa\ mg some of 1ts toughest
deciSJons on prune legislation
for a pre-Thanksg1v1ng

le g •slale additt'on al
borrowmg powers for the
Cleveland school board ~·
free money to keep schools
open for the rest o! the year .
- Tax incentives for industries to modernize th e1r
plants, delayed because

sessiun next '"'eek

House Democratic leatlers

Pnor to adJournment late
TI1ursday, the House agreed
i7-lOw•th Senate changes m a
maJor state energy pohcy b1ll
and sent 1t to Gov James A:
Rhodes for signature
And both the Senate and
House ad~pted and sent to the
governor
legislation
reqwrmg a limited amount of
financial d isclosure by
members of state boards and

Awards
(Continued from pace I)
by Dave Fox Boyd Ruth and
Tim Moore presented several
strmged selectiOns" 1th Ruth
handhng the vocals
Awards presented mcluded
The Goodyear Award for
ou tstandmg consen·atton

Moeller's big gun tonight

Nation is r~ally in pretty goo~d shape

sa1d she fell m love w1th the
nver and grabbed the first
opemn g availab le on the
nverboat - as a matd.
Then tt was on to the
academy and a mate ' s
hcense. then a hrst-dass

license Her st mt at the
Natwmil R1ver Academy ~&gt;as
sponsored by the Delta Queen
firm.
"You have to learn the
nver, and I don 't thmk you
ever st op learnmg," Ms
Palmore sa1d · I don't think
1t's somethmg that w11l grow
old w1th time There's always
some thmg new. always
someth ing to be learned ''
All IS not peaches and
cream for Ms . Palmo re
on the nverboal, how·
ever. Some resentment
has surfaced from t he
men on the crew. "Some
don 'l l1ke it
t hey
haven't smd anythmg to me,
but wPrd gets around /' she

explained
But sh'e added a stem
warmng to any malcontents,
saymg, "They know they're
gomg to have to toe the mark ,
whether they hke 1t or not "
The
Delta
Queen,
recogmze d by the U.S
Department of the lntenor m
the Nalwnal Reg1ster of
H1storic Places, IS the last
ove r n 1g ht sternwheel
steamboat

Dr. Carahs stated that he
believed that 1l was unlikely
that v1tamm E would have
any beneficial effect on coronary artery disease, and
that he believed that v1tamm
E ts mact1ve He also pomted
out that 11 was unhkely that
any longer penod of treat·
ment would be of any benefi t
e1ther
Dr Evan Shute, o! Canada,
LOTTERY WINNERS
a leading proponent o! the
This
week's "lnolng Ohio
rruracles of v1tamm E for
Lottery
numbers:
over 30 years. was quoted by
Gold
numb er-3.
Medtcal World news as sayWhite
oumber-85.
mg that the ef!ect of vttarrun
Blu
e
numb
er-1 64 .
m treatment or angina was
E•tra Cash 756685.
margmal '' But With an effective d ~et, 1t's better than
HILO TEMPS
anything else."
NEW
YORK (UP! ) - The
The role of d1et m treatmg
highest
temperature
reported
heart d1sease has long been
to
the
National
Thursday
esta blis hed, and 1f you took
Serv1ce,
excludmg
Weather
distilled water Instead of
v1tamm E, w1th proper Alaska and Hawaii, was 87
dietary the rapy, you would degrees at Br ow nsv•lle,
get good results m many Texas . Today's low wa s
cases. I personally cons1der seven degrees at Havre,
the highly adverttsed Mont
rnarketmg or Vltamm E for
TilE DAILY SEN1'1NEL
heart d1sease as a pubhc npDEVOTED TO TilE
off
I'
INTEREST OF
ME IGs-MASON AREA
V1tamm E may have some
CHESTER L TANNEHI LL
uses-as m the treatment of
EJ:ec Ed
ROBE RT HO EF'LICH
leg cramps, mcludmg those
City Editor
associa ted wtlh artenal
Pubi1Sht!d Wuly exl~pt Satu rday
disease and anemias tn newby The Ohio Valle) Pl.I UI.ishin,K
Cornpany:·Mullunecha Inc,
Ill
born mrants-but for the most
Court St . Pomeroy. OhLo 45769
pa; t, It remams a v1tamm m
Bu.s~ness Off1cc Phone 992· 2156
Ed1tona l Phone992·2l57
search of a disease. To gtve
Se('ond class posl&lt;!ge p.a•d at
you a better understandmg of
Pomeroy, Oh•o
,
f' alional ad\.rer tiSI!l!o( rcpresen·
v1tamm E and 1ts rea l role Ill
ta\LVC W~;~rd · Grlff1th Company,
health , I am sendmg you The
Inc !tuum cliJ und C"Llllighcr DLV ,
Health Letter nun1ber 4-12,
757 Third Ave New York. NY
1001 7
V11&gt;Imm E Miracle or Myth.
Sull.'$cnpt10il rates Delivered by
Others who want a rev1ew of
ea rner where !lvailWble 75 ce nLs per
week 8} Motor Route wh ere camer
the real sta tus of vttamm E
serv~te not a\aLiable, One m011t.h,
can send 50 cents w1th a long,
SJ 25 By ma1l u, Oh1o ynd W v .. ,
One Year. $2200, SIX month5,
stamped, self-addressed
Ill .so
1hrec months 17 DO.
envelope for it to me In care
F:ls~ " hf.&gt;re S2600) CIIr , Stx months
of this newspaper, P 0 . Box
$13 50 , Three months, S7 50
Sub:!icrlptwn pnce mcludes Sw1d.av
1551, Radw C1ty Station, New
Tunes-Sentmcl
York , N Y. 10019
'

I

were sllil seekmg an
o!
acceptable
method
replacmg lost revenues to
schools.
- A charitable bingo bill.
sent to conference committee
81-5 when the House objected
to a w1de variety of Senate
changes

mankind ," he said. "But as
With any technology, there IS
good and there is bad . What
really concerns me 1s the
potential for social abuse in
such seienh!1c research ."

By ROBERT SANGEORGE"
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Ted
Howard asked the questiOn,
"Who should play GOO ?"
Hts answer: ''No one. or
everyone ''

Genetic research encom.

~:

MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Churches
of Christ Men's Fellowship
meetmg at Pomeroy Church
of Chnst , 7:30 p.m Monday
for observance of family
mght; speaker w1ll be Danny
Evans ..
SOUTHEASTERN OhiO
Garden Tra cto r Pull ers
Monday 7 30 p.m. at coon
hunters bmlding at 1\letgs
Co un ty Fairgrounds. W1ll
discuss rules Meeti11g open
to the pubhc.
TWIN CITY Shrme Club
spec1al meetmg Monday 7.30
p m. at the club house. All
members urged to attend to
transact important business.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Auxtllary of Drew Webster Post
39, w1ll meet Tuesd~y at the
hall for a jomt junior and
seniOr meeting. There will be
a covered dish dinner at 6
p m with dessert to be served
by the umt. The meetmg wtll
be held at 7: 30 at which time
charter membe rs gold star
mothers , and 30 year continuous memberships will be
honored
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BENNETI' P ost
128, Amen ca n Legwn, 7:30
Wednesday mght allhe hall.
AMERICAN Legwn Auxtliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7 ·30 Wednesday night at
the hall, Middleport.

passes a broad range of
high ly advanced sc1entific
study. centered on the idea
that the actual str ucture of
hving cells can be altered
though genehc engineermg.
The most feared results of
such study mclude the
possibility -of creatmg '1esttube bab1es," or cloning creating exact duplicates of
people or animals.
"We are within 10-to-15
years of bemg able to do
clonmg, or creating a womb
in a steel and plastic tube,"
Howard argued. "And we
only have 5-to-10 years to
determme the course of such
research."
In addition to the problem
of setlm g moral guidelines to

THIS
WEIRDO WORLD
By Uulted Press International
NEW YO~K - NEW YORK CITY authorities today
announced the arrests of flve teenagers who allegedly broke
into crypts and took skulls from corpses entombed for more
than 20 years w1th the. ,mtention of selling them . to . cult
worshippers
Queens County Distl'lct Attorner ·Johi\"' Salllllc'C. sa1d he
was mvestigatmg the possibility the youths were runnmg a
body-&amp;~atching rmg that catered to religious groups who made
use of human skeletons m their cult rites. Santucci identified
the suspects as Ricky Lee Dalla, 18; June Ann Gallagher, 18;
Edward Came Glowaski, l9 ; and Robert Blankenshtp, 18, all of
the New York City bourough of Queens.
A 14-year-old boy whose name was withheld was alSO
arrested.
HIGHLAND PARK, IlL - FOURTEEN DEFORMED
hwnan fetuses that traveled m a carnival freak show until last
swnmer have been removed from their bottles of
formaldehyde and buned in baby collins.
"We wanted to msure that these babies were fmally put to
rest," Lake County Coroner Robert Babcox said of the bunal
services Thursday. The fetuses were confiscated from Chris
Michael Christ, 29, Gibsonton, F1a., July 29 when he was
conducting the freak show lil Lake County. They were among
2V such exlub1ts in the show. The other SIX were donated to a
medical school in the Chicago area
Christ was charged with transportmg human bodies
without a permit, but the charges were dismissed by a Circuit
Court Judge who said the fetuses did not const1tute human
bodies.
CLEVELAND- ROBERT HARDEN, 23, Cleveland, was
convicted Thursday of rapmg his estranged wile, possibly the
first such convicllon since the Ohio law was reVIsed in 1974,
accordmg to prosecutors. A Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court Jury deliberated four hours before finding Harder guilty
of kidnapmg, assault and rape. Judge Harry Jaffe referred
him for psychiatric evaluation before sentencing.
Harder could be sentenced to ~0 years. Ordinarily, a
husband may not be charged with rape of his w1fe, assistant
prosecutor Robert Housel said, but the rev1sed law provides
for such a charge if a divorce action is pending.

restrict

such

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sp..rts Writer
Mark Schweitzer had snme
b1g shoes l&lt;&gt; fill
Schweitzer, a ~foot-4, 19&gt;
pound semor , l"'k over the
C 1nc 1n nat i Moe II e r
qu'lrterback job tins year
from Class MA back-&lt;•f4heyear Tim Koegel, and
h&lt;~ndled ll hkc a veteran
"He's really come on," sa1d
M&lt;&gt;ellor Coach Gerry Faust.
" He 's gotte n better and
better each week . He had a
lot of pressure on him. lie had
~·replace Koegel and he went
out and th1·ew three
to uchdown passes the first

General Motors' optimism
about the economy, he said,
prompted its decision to increase this year's capital
spending ro $3 5 biUion, with
stmilar amounts projected
for the next two years.

research,

fed eral gu1dehnes are
completely madequate."
Howard ,
a
former
legislative ass1stant for a
US senator, called for a
"t hree or four
year

Howard. charged that maJor
corporatiOns are planning to
develop products · fr om
genetic . research " whtch
could turn mto a multibillion
dollar mdustry by the m•d1980s." Such products would
mclude new forms of food or
drugs.
"ThiS whole question of
genetic research ts t oo
unportant to be left to the
scientific com munity," he
asserted. "They are too
insulated . And as far as I'm
concern ed, the proposed

moratoriwn" on laboratory

work m genetics, to allow for
a compreh ensive natlonal
diSCUSSIOn of the questiOn
" We're talking about an
ultimate tech nol ogy changmg three bllhon years
of evolution," Howa rd
commented. "We must have
a moratorium , a stepping~
back penod ."

Quarterback
play key to
Buck victory
CHI CAGO (UP! I - For the
mnlh tin1e m the last 10 years.
th e Oh1o State·M 1ch1gan
clash Saturday w11l decide
the B1g Ten championship
and the Rose Bowl berth
The B1g Ten closes out the
football season With fiv e
games,
but only the
Buckeyes-Wolvenne battle at
Ann Arbor carr1cs any Importance.
Ohio State, lead1ng t he
league with a 7.{) record
compared to M1chJgan's 6-1,
has the edge 10 figures
head10g mto combat
The Bucks can take an
un d asputed

champwnsh1p

peopletalk

and the bgwl berth «lth a w10
or a tie
ThE&gt; play of mal quarterbacks Rod Gerald o! OhiO
State and R1ck Le~ch of

By KENNETH R. CLARK

M1Ch1ga n should be decastve

United Press International
CITIZEN CHARO: She'll vent her famous cry of "cuchi
cuchi" as an American citizen now. Charo - tbe Spanish
bombshell - is legal. The 26-year-old entertainer was naturalized Thursday, with 41 other candidates. Says she, "ThiS IS
the happiest day of my life. I am so proud." Charo married
ban\l]eader Xavier Cugal when she was 16, and recently flied
for divorce or her newly acquired citizenship· "America has
been good to me and I'll be good ro America. I'll pay my taxes
and obey the law "

m Saturday's game
'I'v e go ne duwn their

KISS AND A CROWN : Sweden's Mary Stavlns got a title and
a k1ss Thursday. She's the new Miss World - crowned in
lnndon over 67 other national beauty queens. Smger Andy,
William s handled the coronation, planting a winner's kiss o~
2D-year'&lt;Jld ¢larmt:r's c;heek. Miss Holland, 2)-yearold lneke
Berends, was runnerup, and Miss Gennany, Dagmar Wlnaler,
23, took thu-d place.
UTfLE OLD LADY: Her political opponents called her "a
ltttle old lady in tennis shoes" - but the joke died when she
won . Thursday, Raleigh, N.C., mayor-elect Isabella Walton
Cannon showed up at a Harvard University seminar on
transillon and leadership for newly elected mayors with a grm
oo her face and a patr of sneakers dangling from her wrist At
13, she's the oldest mayor-elect ion the natloo.
ONE-ROUND KID : Edward Bruening won't need Dr.
Spock to tell him not to spank his son. The Cleveland father
learned the hard way that understanding and diplomacy are
the better part of valor . He'll have his broken jaw wired shut
for the next six weeks - the result of a roundhouse right
thrown by son Jamie while they were Iymg on the bed "tickling
each other." Jam1e is 17 months old.
GUMPSES : "The King and I" - costarring Yul Brynner
and Constance Towers m its second Broadway run - is a
smash at the box office, grossing $6 million so far in its 16-week
run ... Chief Justice Warren Burger is showing signs of
improvement after two days in an Arlington, Va ., hospital
where he's under treatment for a back ailment ... Actor
Michael Landon broke his ankle playing tennis, so scnpts for
his TV senes, "l..itUe House on the Prairie," Will be rewritten
to explam the cast and the limp ... Chuck Connors - baseball
player turned actor -will do the presenting when the annual
Weatherby Trophy for big game huntmg is awarded Dec. 1 ...
Richard J. Durrell, publisher of Poeple magazine in Chicago,
has been elected five 11,resident of Time Inc. .. Don Dewitt,
executive producer of CBS-TV's "60 Minutes,"· an4 Gilbert
Grosvenor, ed1tor of National Geographic, are winners of the
University of Southern California 's Distinguished
Achievement in JonrnaliSlll Awards ...

~r,sonnel

man against man ,"

sa1d Nort hwestern 's retumg
coach, Johnny Pont, who lost
to both Ohio State a nd
MIChigan. "a nd they're about

even everywhere, even at
quarterback It comes down
to which one of them plays
the best game Saturday."

decided by seven points or
less
Ohto State leads m five of

Hunters advised
to :.:·sharpeH'-"aim
United Press lnlematiooal
Ohio's gun season for deer
opens Nov. 28 and hunters
who, pl,"'' \O be lil the , held
then would do well to start
sha rpening their sktlls now.
Whether yOu use a conventiOna l sh otgun 01 one of those
specifically adapted for the
nfled slug, you need ro be
able to place the shot where
you want 11. Many state
wildlife areas have a target
I range
wlth premeasured
· target distances which will
help YOU do th iS.
A 12-guage shotgun using a
2"'+ mch, shell and ,shooting a
one&lt;Junce rifled sl ug will
shoot only apout a half~nch
low at 25 yards, a shade over

lfz%
INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Deposit

Nm cty da v 1nterest penalty
1f
w tfhdra 'wn
befor
matunty date
'

..

Center St. &amp; 2nd Avenue
Mason, W. Va.
Phone 773-5536

Small 10"

Medtum

I 95

Plain
Pepperon i
Sausage
Mushroom
Green Pepper
Bacon
Ol1ves

...

Banana Pepper
On10n
Mushrooms
Each Additional Item
Th•ck Crus t

12"

3 50
4 20
4 20
4 30
4 20
4 20
4 20
4 20
4 20
60
70
70

3 tO
3 tO
3 20
3 tO
3 10
3 10
3 10
3 10
70

2 35
2 45
2 35
2 35
2 35
2 35
2 35
50
40
40

~0

60

BAK~D LASAGNE (To Go)
BAKED SPAGHETTI (To Go)

All 1tems above tn clude

Larg e 15"

2 50

2 35

Baked

Itali an

), _f!j)

Bun

The Athen s county

.... .

.... ...

Made JUSt l1ke a P1~za on ly on o ur 9" Italian Bun w1th P1zza
Sauce and Pro ... olone Cheese (20c eKt ra each additional
1tem - Pepperon i, Sausage, Mushrooms, etc.)

MEAT BALL SANDWICH .

9" Italian Bun
6" ltaltan Bun

Sliced Meat Balls Simmered m our
spaghetti sauce, le tt uce, on1on

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6" Italian Bun

Genoa Salami , Provo lone Cheese, Ham ,

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&amp;

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Pomeroy , Oh10

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PIZZA BREAD SANDWICH

ITALIAN SUBMARINE

Sav •ng s &amp; L..oan Co

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lettuce
6" Italian Buo
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With si1ced tom ato , on1on, c nsp lett uce

65

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HOT HAM &amp; CHEESE

1 65

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On j3aked Golden Brown Italian Bu n
w1th sli ced tomato, onron, cr~s j:

2 75
2 75

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All lngred1enls Processed In Our K 1tc hen

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Large llal1ao Bun

Generous port1on of Sliced Beef wtth ltal1an

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1 29

99

THERE'S ONE
NEAR

YOU I

Moeller marched through
the playoffs last year while
barely breakin~ a sweat with
48-0 and - 43-5 wins over
Young s town Car d1n al
M"oney and
Gahanna
Lmcoln .
" 'don't Uunk we'!! have the
se1,res we had last year,"
said Fau&amp; "The i&gt;all ju51
bounced our way You gel the
momentum and boom. I JUSt
hope we wm 1t"
Toledo Central lost its
second game of the season to
Fremont Ross, H-12, and won
1ts last e1ght, mqluding a
closmg 13-12 dects\On over
Toledo Wlntm er m a game
which decided the Region 2

playoff berth
St. Joseph alsn had lu wm
its fmal game of the season tn
get into the playoffs, Coach
Bill GutbrOd's team rallytng
from a 13-0 halftime def1c1t 10
a saow;1orm to down Mentor
Lake Cathohc. 14-13
St Joseph 'snnly lc.ss was to
Warr en Western Reserve, 9J, the fourth game or the
year
Canton McKmley didn 't
have those la st m1nute
wo1 nes. The Bulld&lt;•gs of
Coach John Brideweser wnn
their first mne games and
were ranked No 2 to Moeller
the enllre seasnn, only to get
a 21.{) shmer put on them by

two mches low at 50 yards
and almost a root below the
am1 mg p01nt at 100 ya rds.
A good startmg pomt would
be to pick up a handful of
shells, head for the range,
and s1ght m the gun at 50
yards.
Thus sighted, a 25-ya rd shot
will be a half-i nch high and
one of 50 yards w1ll be nghl
on target Rarely w1ll a n Ohio
deer hunter get a clear shot ·
beyond this range, but even a
!DO-yard shot will need to be
held over by only about eight
1
mches .
ThiS sighting-in process has
anoth er advanta ge which
ca nno t be overlooked It
allows the hunter to become
£am1liar With his weapon.
Distances may be difficult to
estimate through the thick
early mornmg haze. If you've
been shooting at a standard
distance on a target range,
th1s may be less of a problem.
For example, tf you're
accustomed to the 50-yard
distance. you don 't need ro
worry about anything less
than that At most your shot
would be only a half~nch
high It's eas1er to delermme
whether a shot is more than
50 or less than 50, than it
•s to determine the ~xact
distance, especially under the

e1ght stallstical categories 111
the Big Ten a nd Michigan
leads in two. But Ohio State
Coach Woody Hayes IS not
Impressed by numbers
"Statistics always remmd me
or the fellow who drowned 10
a nver whose average siepth
was only three feet," he said.
But M1ch1gan Coach Bo
Schembechler has noticed the
statistics and he 1s workmg
on the assumption that Hayes
wtll continue to use the game
plan wh1ch has been so
successful for his club.
"If I were leading the
nation in rushing, I'd hesitate
to do anything different,"
Schembechler said, noting
the Buckeyes lead t he
country with an average of
332 6 yards per game. "I'd
hate to think I had to do
anything different
•
"But any htlle thmg you do
differently is greater than it
really ts m a game hke th1s
because you know ·each other
so well. You know what to
expect , th ere fore ever y
cha~ge IS magmfied."

The loser of the Michigan·
Oh1o Stale game will likely

Tech 1s a 10-pomt favont e
over HouStQn ; and 19th·
ranked Iowa State IS favored
by seven over Oklahoma
Slate.
No . 2 Oklahoma, No 3
Alabama, No. 8 Penn State,
No 9 Pittsburgh, No 10
Nebraska, No. II Amona
State and No. 16 UCLA are all
1dle.

receive an mvitation to the
Sugar Bowl, where it will face
third-ranked Alabama.
. UCLA appears on 1ts way to
becoming, the Pac!hc·Elght
representative at Pasadena,
but Washington and Stanford
are still in the running A
v1ctory for UCLA over USC
on Nov . 25 will put the Brums
lil the Rose Bowl.
Elsewhere in the Top 2V this
Saturday. No. I Texas IS a 2Dpoint favorite over Baylor;
No. 6 Notre Dame faces Air
Force; No. 7 Arkansas takes
on Southern Methodist; 12thrankedJexas A&amp;M IS heavily
favored over TCU; 13thranked ~'londa Stale hopes to
wrap up a Tangerine Bowl
berth by bealmg San D1ego
State; 14th-rank ed North
Texas State plays Loutstana
Tech ; No 15 Clemson IS a 4'hpomt favonte over tradlltonal
r1val South Carolina ; No. 16
North Ca rohns is favored by
6'h over Duke; No. 16 Texas

Spurs on
•
VICtory
streak
a lot more.
In the fourth quarter In
Thursday mght 's game, the
Spurs tra iled the Buffalo
Braves by 13 pomls, but
rebounded for a 111-108'
v1ctory

Saturday 's Games
Boston at Buffalo
lnd •a na at N ew York
Milwa ukee a t Philade lphia
New Jersey at Atlanta
New Orleans a t Houston
washington vs Kansas C1 t y
at Ornaha
Detro1t&gt;at Golden State
Cl~~lalfd at Portland

uwe were fortunate, but we

made ourselves fortunate,"
W L Pet . GB
San Antomo Coach Doug Moe
New York
8 5 615
. ._ Phl la
a 5 615
sa1d, after the Spurs ran up
Bufla lo
7 a 467
2
thm
f)fti) S(ra ight win by
Bos lo n
4 a 333 3'19
New JE&gt;r sev
2 10 167 S' 1
Slnkmg six free throws m the
Central OiVISI OM
last f4 s'econds. '"We hung m
W L
Pet. GB
NHL Standings
ba k
Clev eland
9 3 '150
By un•ted Press lnt e rnt~tional
there and battled c ."
San Antoni
10 6 ll25
1
campbell conference
San Antonio, m second
A t lanta
~
5 61~
0 •~s,~n T Pts . place tn the NBA Central
j:
~
Patnck
New Orlns
7 B -167
Houston
6 7 462 J' 1 Ph Jiadelph •a
9 J 3 21 Division, upped lts record to
u wasl'l lf"'9fn • 'i ' S&lt; 6 · -iSS • · 3 1'"' '' 'NY lslaTiders
2 ·1106; while Buffalo, third m
7
5 •
15
Western Conference
5 6 5
Atlanta
MidWeSt DIVISIOn
-tf"t''RBI'Igers
1 9 1 15 th't '" r~Atlantlc , DIV•ISIOn ,
''
W l
Pet. GB
Smythe Onns ton
dropped to 7-8.
Denver
9
5 ' 643
W l T Pts
5 5 7 11
In the only other National
Ch •cago
7 6 538
1•.2 c h 1cago
Detro•t
6 6 Sob '1
Co lorado
5 6 3 13 Basketball Association game
Mdw ,
7 7 500 2
~ ~ ~
Thursday ni ght, Leonard
Ka nsas C1tv
6 9 400 31 2 ~~~~~~~te;
lnd 1ana
5 B .385 31 1 st Lou 1s
a 11 J 11 "Truck" Robmson scored 33
Pacific Div ision
Wiiles Conferenc,e
pomts:and Nate Williams and
W l Pet
GB
NorriS DI VIS IOA
w L T Pis J1m McElroy com bined for 43
Portland
10 3 769
Pho en•x
6 5 545 3
Montreal
11 3 3 25 more to lead New Orleans to
1
Golden St
7 7 500 3 ,
5~~r~7?eles
~ ~ j l ~ a 127-116 victory over the
Los Angeles
6 7 462 4
Seat tl e
4 13 235 8
Pil tsburgh
5 9 2 12 Seattle Supersomcs, sna pThursday ' s Results
Washington
2 11 3 7 pmg a stx-game Jazz losmg
New Orlns 121, SeaHie 116
Adams O• v •ston
San Anton•o 111 , Bf lo 108
w L r Pis streak. Pete Maravich, the
Fnday's Games
Toronlo
10
3 2 22 NBA's No.2 scorer Wllh a 26.9
Ph ila delphia at Bos ton
Buffalo
10 4 2 n
lnd•ana at New Jersey
Boston
1 5 4 18 per game average, attempted
New York at Wash1ng ton
Cleveland
5 9 '
12 JUst live held goals and made
Ch1cago at Phoen iX
Thursday 's Resul1s
.
San Anton•o at Denver
NY Islander s 4, Ph1la d
four for a total of etght pomts.
Cleve at Golden State
va n co uver 4, Bos to n 4
Maravich, who played 37
Detro •t at Los Angeles
Toronto 2, Buffalo 1
minutes, had 15 assists.

°

United Press International
Wittenberg Coach Dave
Maurer IS wondermg what he
Ci:tn du for an

enC(Jfe.

Maurer 's Tiger s travel to
Berea Satu• day mornmg for
Ohio
Conference
the
champwnsh1p game agamst

Baldwin-Wallace, a team
they beat 24-13 the fourth
game of the seaso n

At the t1me of that game,
Wittenberg (9&lt;1) was and still
IS ranked No. I among the
Divtsion Ill NCAil teams and
B-W was No 2
Now, Maurer and t he
T1gers have to do 1t again 1f
they want the ll' second
stra~ght OC lltle.
"It ' s a very d1fflcult
coac hing
r hore ," sa id
Mau'fr. "It w1ll be a much

different game up there w1th
thetr artifiCial turf. We'll
have to do the adJustmg."
Baldwm-Wallace,
which
hasn't lost smce the hrst
Wittenberg game and is now
ranked No. 5, bnngs an 8-1
mark mto the championship

Merntt , Wittenberg's a ll-

time leading rusher, romped
for 217 yards m 29 carnes last
week agam Muskingum in the
showdown game for the Red
Divtsion title
Meanwhile, B-W, wtth the
Blue DiVISIOn crown locked
up a week ear her, got some
rest for

1 29

seaSI'n, 1s the defendmg Class
A champwn and the No. l
ranked team , but Roughrider
C~&gt;ach Gene Keel feels St.
John is the team to beat.
"There IS WJ questiOn m my

mmd that Ashtabula St John
Will be m the finals, "
predicted
Keel,
" and
whoever has to play them us "' Crooksville - ISgomg to
have thetr t~mds fu ll "
St . John Coac h Paul Kopko
has 17 sta rters back f1mn the
team wh ich lost 21 &lt;1 to West
Jeff m last yea r's !mals. 'l he
Fightmg Herald's only lo ss

wounded m a :'3-12 wm over
Mount Umon
Quarterback Joe Surmak
didn't suit up and fullback
Roge r And• ach1ck played
&lt;&gt;nly half the game, although
he gamed 183 yards.
Saturday's OC title clash
highhghts the rmal weekend
or college football actiOn In
the state.

Uus yea 1 was an 8--7 dectswn

t.n AAA Geneva w1th regular
quarterback Bill Tag~ert out
wtth a n InJUry .
" We're a much betler team
thts year ," satd Kopko " Our
kids have a year 's more

Other ga me.s lnY olv1 ng

Oh1o teams fmd Ohlll State at
Michigan , Bowling Green at
Hawau , Ohw University at
Not thern lllmms, Cmcmnatl
at Vanderbilt, Alabama A&amp;M
at Central State and Kent
State Ht Tnledn m a night
contest
W1th M1am1 already havmg
the
Mid - Ameri c an
conference t1Ue locked up,
the rest of the MAC teams
w1ll be playmg mostly for
pnde thiS weekend, although
second place IS sti ll at stake.
Bowhng Green, which embarks on a two-week western
swmg w1th the hrst stop m
Hawan, is 5-5 after last
week 's wm over Ohw
Uruversity
The Falcons meet th e
University · of Hawaii (3-5)
Saturday mght , then \elurn ro
Ca lifo rma t he followm g
weekend to take on Long
Beach State
Kent State and Toledo Will
both be trying to fin1 sh

expenence and are much
more conftdent "
Although Kopko says he is
"not lookmg past Pat11Ck
Henry," VtlU have tu beheve
he and his team would llke
another crack at West Jeff
Crnoksv11le, wh1ch edged
out
perenma l
playoff
part1c1pant Newark Catholic
the final 11eek of the season,
lost both of tts ~ames to AA
Muskmgu m Valley League
members TnVall ey and
Philo
The Ceram1 cs downed New
Concord .John Glenn 2~ the
fma l week o! the season to
ga in the playofff berth
The on ly blemish on
Patnck Henry's Plherwtse
perfect record was a tte wi th
Montpelier, a nd the Patr10ts
blanked LeipSIC 21 .{) the rmal
week
For ali vour home
l:nterta mm ent and

Appliance Need s

fr:ustrattng seasons on the

upswin g.
Kent ( &gt;5) has lost three m
a row and four of Jts last fiv~"
after being a prune MAC IItle

DOXOL
SERVICE

contender early tn the season,

RIDENOUR'S

while Toledo ( 2-i!) would hke
ro rebound under !lrst-year
Coach Chuck Stnbart from
last week's 44&lt;1 drubbmg by
Central M1chtgan

TV &amp; Appliance

Gas Serv1ce
Ra c1ne, Oh1o

rne'i.ter ,...., .. .,

a couple of 1ts

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Runni~g ar~und a lot

over the holidays?

g

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The Cool Pleasing
Atmosphere 'of

Ttrestone
smooth-riding, long mileage
tires for holiday travel

'~ little bread buys a lot of gravy"

4-ply polyester cord
Deluxe Champion

c1rcumstances you're likely
to encounter.
On t ~e other end of the
scale, if you estimate your
shot at 75 yards hold over by
four in ches and d1scover later
that 1t was really a 100-yard
shot, your pomt of unpact IS
st11l only about four inches
low. This should still be
within a lethal radius.
Uaiess this 1s to be your
first .deer hunt, you know lt\Bt
you don't get any shot very
often. As little as an liour on
the target range can help
assure that you're able ro
make 1t count 1f you get
luckv.

West Jefferson, lied ~ by
Hc•lcy Uw fourth week of the

Tigers have. to
beat B-W again

contest
'
"Preparmg for Wittenberg
ts tough no matter what the
cu-cumstances," observed BW Coach Lee Tressel.
"TI1ey've gotten a htlle better
United Press International
since we pl ayed them,
The San Antomo Spurs partiCularly m passmg. And
have won 10 games so far this our scouts have us wondering
season and 1f they keep how we're gomg to keep
playmg hke they did Thurs- (Dave ) Merritt out of the end
day night they surely will wm zone."

Pro Standings
NBA Standings
BV Umted Pres s International
Eastern Conference
AtlantiC o .... lslon

Massillon m the season's
fmale .

95

'

'

5 -rib destgn

A 78 -13

Black wall
PlusS 1 72FE T
ancJ o lr! t1re

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3 Pc. Group, Fairborn, 0.

Size

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TONIGHT &amp;SATURDAY
All pnces

10:00 til 2:00

pi L ~S

1a)( and o ld !Ire

.99

8 78 -13
C78 t 4
D78 t4
E78 t4
F78 t 4
G78 t4
H78 t4
G78 15
H78 t 5
L78· 15

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Black
522.95
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24.95
26.95
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FET
$ 1 82
2 01
2 09
2 23
2 37
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2 59
7 79
3 09

Whitewall add S 2 to S 3

SNOW TIRES ARE IN

1 49

THE MEIGS INN

style peppers (C hees e 20c extra)

FRENCH FRIES
•(Golden Brown)
55c

By SHERYL FLATON
UPI Sports Writer
For the ninth time in the
last 10 years, the confrontation between Mich1gan
aod OhiO State will decide the
Big Ten's representative 10
the Rose Bowl game.
The
filth-ranked
Wolvermes hoSt the No. 4
Buckeyes th1s Saturday at
Michigan StadiUm w1th Ohio
State assured of at least a tie
for their sixth straight con·
!erence title. Both teams are
9-1 on the season, but the
Buckeyes are 7.{) m Big Ten
play while M1ch1gan IS ~1.
However, a Michigan
victory would g1ve the tea ms
Identical records and a lle for '
the top spot 10 the conference,
as well as a trip to Pasadena .
"For a football player, thiS
is what It 's a ll about," said
Wolverine quarterback Rick
Leach "This week is fun.
Everybody 1s mentally
geared up and ready to play.
The Sltuataon for us ts very
s imilar to last year ...
anythmg but a v1ctory keeps
us from wmning the champiOnShip and gomg to the
Rose Bowl "
Last season Mtch1gan
defeated Oh1o State 22~. but
thiS series has been noted for
tradahonally low scores and
the prevtous fiVe ga mes were

1 Yr. Term
GINO'S MASON

With defending champion and
No I ranked WL'SI Jefferson
( 8-0-1) playing No
15
Crooksvi lle
(8-2)
at
Groveport-Madison H1gh
Sch1&gt;0l, and No. 5 Ashtabula
St. Jrlm ( ~I) and No 5
Hamler Patrick Henry (9-0-1)
meeting at Lorain's George
Damels F1eld .
The Class AA semis will be
played Saturday night with
Elyna Catholic (10-0),
another lop-ranked defending
champwn, meetmg No. 4 St.
Marys Me mona! ( I~ ) at
Baldwm-Wallace College and
No 2 Wyommg ( 9~ ) facing
No 6 Canron Central Cathohc
( ~1-1) playing at Dayton .

hweitzer.

Mark

Rose Bowl is top prize in Ann Arbor

suoo Minimum

PIZZA BAKED TO YOUR ORDER

game."
Schweitzer has compleled
81 of 130 pass attempts for
1,2 11
yards
and
11
touc hdowns going into
tonight's Class AM playoff
game against tenth-ranked
Toledo Central CatholiC as
top-ranked Moeller guns for
1tsth1rd stra~ghtlltl e.
While Moeller ( I~ ) and
Ceno·al Cathohc (9-1) meet
lunight at Day~•n, Canton
McKinley (!J..l ) and Cleveland
St. Ju,;eph (9-1) colhde m the
other AAA semi in U1e Akron
Rubber 131lwl
The Class A semifmals are
alsn scheduled (or tomght,

years ago ''

Micro-biology near .breakthroughs

The subject was genetic
experunentation
Howard ,
comnusstons servmg wtthout
co mpen satlon, such as who has been active Wlth a
Washmgton-ba sed .public
college trustees.
But further action was put mterest group, has written a
recently published book on
off on:
- A Democrat1c.&lt;Jrawn what he perceives ro be the
ecngresswnal redist ricting com01g cnsts m genetlcs
Its title : "Who Should Play
bill a!fectmg mamly Frank 1m
God?"
and Han1illon counties, as
"The f1eld of micro-biology
House Democrats failed to
1s
one of the most
raise enough votes to pass it
tantalizing
,'' smd Howard ,
-A collective bargammg
addressmg
a Umverslty of
bill for pubhc employees,
Cmcin
nati
audtence late
although alter Thursday 's
sesswn a Jurnt conference Thursday. " It's like the tune
committee approved a report just before the atom was
which mcludes elunmatwn o! split.
"There 1s the potentia l, m
the nght to strike for public
genetic
research, for creatmg
safety employes.
new
wonder
drugs, new food
-A renewed attempt to
supplies
and
other things or
,_..,..
_.•,,,,,·.---~--·-.:.q_,~~~~);&lt;!
.-.~-.-...-......-..Y&gt;A..........-v
b~iO(::.~;
fa
ntastic
benefit
to
·:·:

Ii Calendar
Social

have fallen VlCUJn to the
gossip and the economic
doom sayer."
The GM chairman sa1d the
jobless rate was still too high,
but 11 has been droppmg and a
greater proportion of the
population is now employed
before in
than ever
peacetime.
H~made simtlar comments
about the 6 percent inflation
rate, agreeing it is too high
but "1t too has been coming
down. Today's f1gure stands
m sharp contrast to the
double.&lt;Jigit levels we were
experienCIIlg only two short

rate that is down from the
double.&lt;J1g11 figures of two
years ago .
Murphy said the third
quarter upswing in the gross
national product was due
almost entirely to consumer
spending He said conswners
are "remaining in a
favorabl~ fr~me of mmd" an attitude shown m recenUy
mde&lt;es
of
published
consumer confidence.
"The trouble 1s, the pubhc
too rarely hears such
enco uragtng reports . The
emphasis IS too emphatically
placed on the negative. "
He asked how many knew
jobs have increased faster
tlmn the population m the
past 10 years and at a rate
higher than 111 the so-called
golden decade of the 60s.
" If you didn't know thiS,
then it is my guess than you

•IS

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'
:;-..The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 18. 1977

Public health, safety.forces oppose newest bargaining bill

Meigs High honor listings
ROCK

\

SPRINGS

-

Landers , Anita Lee . Ed
Lester, Beckie Long , Mike
Miller. Carol Ntorris, Doug
Neece , Steve
Ohlinger ,
Angela Payne , Elizabeth
Perrin , Joseph Powell . Steve
Pullin5 , Andrea Riggs , Joan
Roberts. Lori Rupe , Tom
Schoonover , An~ela Sinclair,
Cindy Smith, Michael Smith ,
Theresa
Starr , Camille
Swindell. Barbara Thomas ,
Cynthia
Weaver.
Jena
We lker , Judy Well , Darla
Wil cox, Bryan Wilcox, Davld
W i lkes ~
Linda W i l liams,
Darla Wi lliamson.

Pr incipal James Diehl has
announced the first six weeks
grading period honor roll at

Meigs High School.

Named to the ro l l were :

FRESHMEN -

NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

BEN
STARTS
·MONDAY
VALUABLE PLAYERS - Tw&lt;&gt; senior linebackers on the Wahamjl White
Fale&lt;&gt;n Football team, Greg Blessing, left, and Brett Holbrook, were chosen as the Most
Valuable Players for \97i. at the school's sport banquet Wednesday evening.

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·COACH HONORED - The Wahama High School F ootba ll tea m presented its coach
Marcus Rice, left , with a pla que in appreciation for helping to lead them to a n 11-2· record this
year. Sh own presented the plaque is senior linebacker Brett Holbroo k at .the foot ball
banquet Wednesday night.
·
·

Stick
Pin

(!rom left

lfORELCO

Inside frosted . Each
package contains 2 each :
60,75 and 100watt bulbs .
.

NEW YORK (UP!) -The
big question in the National
The Return
Football uague this week ls
what effect will the Dallas
of the
Cowboys' firSt loss of the
season have on the club.
The Cowboys, who suffered
their fir st defeat Monday
night when they were beaten
by St. Louis 24-17, are in
Pitlsbw-gh this week to face a
Steeler club that is fina lly
showing signs of life. The
Steelers bounced back in tn a
tie for the AFC Central lead
with Cleveland last week by
holding off the Browns 3:'&gt;-31.
Dal las Coach Tom La ndry,
Fash ion
whose club st ill owns a twoonce agam
game lead in th e NFC East, ,
remembers the has made one 'big change in
importa nce of the announ cin g that Heis rnan
Stick Pin . For Trophy winner Tony Dorsett
both Men &amp; Women . will make his first pro starl.

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nold. Carin Bailey, El~i n e
Barnhar1 , Ga r y Basha m, Joy
Beaver ,
David
Blake.
M a r ve lea
Brown.
J ana
Burson , J ulie Byer Bruce
Carm an, Tammy Charl es.
Ma ry Col well , Joyce Coo k.
J ua nit a
Corb itt ,
Ruby
Cu nd if f , D iana· Dav idson,
John Davis, Linden Dunn,
I

Patl y Oyer. Bil l Elk ins,
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Mar y
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Brett Jones, ·Kev in K ing,

J ulie

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Keit h

Kr au lter. Dianna Lee, Tanya
Lightfoot , Daleanna Li tt le.

Keit h

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Mark

Magnotta, Valeri e M atson •
Ron n ie M cG rat h. Beverly
M clain, Donna M ethene y.
Tina , M il ler , Shari M it ch,
Jam es M orri soon , Todd
Morrow91 Vince nt ~ ss m a n ,
L isa Nash. Sher r ie Osborne,
Kimb erly
Pay ne , Vi ck i
P ic k en s, Robert Pi cke t t.
Ruthanna Plants , Toni Pope.

Gary Pr idd y, Rick Pr iddy ,

Denn is Pucketf , Stephan ie
Rad fo rd , Rh on da Reut er ,
Ri t a
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Sm i th , Nancy Smi th, C\hir iPy

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Col li ns,

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Corsi.
Je f f r ey
Co uch , Ta m mie De Board,
Robert
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Ka r en
DeM oss. M ar cia Di ll ard,
Dora
Ooerfer,
Dennis
Donohue, Ci ndy Dor st. Vicky
Eppl e, Sal l y Ervi n, Pam
Evans, Ter ri Fife. Pa tr icia
Fitch, Jacqueline Freeman,
Becki Fry , ·Denise Garnes,
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Ca rl Gheen Jr ., Peggy
Girol a mi.
Keven
Hall .
Thomas Harper . Kelly Hawk,
Fa i th
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Mar ci a

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Ray Janey, Susan Kenned y,
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Montreat at Los Ang

c onference

safety forces by a three-fifths
vote, unless both sides had
agreed to binding arbitration.
In the event of such a
rejection, the matter would
be resubmitted to arbitration.
Safety forces would not have
veto PO\Ibe r over an arbitration award. Penalties
would be imposed for illegal
strikes.

assey-Ferguson lawn/garden tractor

Spinks favored over Righetti
LAS VEG AS, Nev. (U P! )Heavy weight boxers Leon
Spinks and Alfio Ri ghetti,
who meet in a nationally
televised IO·round fi ght
Friday night, may have more
than each other on their
minds.
The winner of the fi ght be·
tween Olympic champion

Randall Roach , Terr i Rob·

son, St ephannie Rought, Pau l
Rupe, N.ila Rusche!, Steve
Schn e ider , Loree Sisson ,
Al ici a Smith, Qiane Smith ,
Mel ody Snouffer , · Rob in
Snowden, Jimmer SouiSby ,
Darlen e Spang ler , N·a ncy
Stanley , Steve Stout , Velvet
Sw isher , Sherry Ta ckett ,
Paula
Thoma s.
Gina
Thompson , Darlene Thorn .
ton , Don Tillis , Terry Tobin ,
Te r esa Van Meter , Pat
Vaughan , Terri Vining , Jill
Walburn , Scott Warner , M i ke
Wayland , Jennifer Wi se .

Spinks, 541, and the 27-ll,
ninth-ranked contender from
Rimini, Ita ly, has been
promised a Feb. 15 title shot
at Muha mma d Ali by
promoter Bob Arum ..
Spinks, 24, a Wl·pound ex·

Marine from St. Louis, is a
solid favorite to hand the 21 7·
pound Righetti hi s first loss.

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Football
..
. Kansas Ci ty - Placed rookie
guard Darius Helton on in Iurea
reserve and added offen si l.le
lineman Tom Wicker t.

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Ch icago Wh i t e Sox -

Signed
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Blomber g and righl .handed
pitcher s J im Hughes and • Ron
Schueler , all free agents .
New York Mets - Released
shOrtstop Randy Rogers and
a s s i gned hi s contract to
Tidewater.
Basketball
Ka nsas 'City - Plated guard
Louis Nelson on wai'o'ers.
Hock·e y
Los Angeles Optioned
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NY Rangers Returned
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Good int entions are no THIS, that is until April 8 of
substitute
for
good this year. On that date, the
judgement · in public policy CPSC baruiCd TRIS, saying it
making. Yet 1ogic and reason caused cancer in rats and
oft en have litt'le to do with the therefore wa s potentially
creation and coordination of a dangerous for hwnans.
,
vast body of regulatory law.
Curoqsly, the r fSC took
. Fireproofing. c hildren ' s the action without the benefit ' :
sleepwear is a ·. classic of public hearings . With TRIS
example of how government taken off the approval list,
often leapa before it looks. pending the outcome of legal
Under the 1967 Flammable suits by the manufacturers,
Fabri cs Act , Congress CPSC had to approve another
required the children 's sleep- sleepwear treatment that
wea r be flame retardant - a
would be as effective as
. popular, well intended goal. TRIS. The only thing the
But how that goal was to be Commission has found to
a chieved and enforced approve to date is Fyrol. But,
became the responsibility of use of Fyrol is in doubt
the bureaucracy. It was up to because inconclusive tests
the regulators within the show it as a poSsible cancer
Co nsumer Produ ct Safety causing agent.
Commission (CPS&lt;::) to ban
Caught on the horns of a
po tentially hazardous dilemma, CPSC fwnbles for a
materials and set the time way out, even if it means
frame for manufacturers to accepting the lesser of evils.
meet the safety deadlines. Meanwhile; · manufacturers
Tiie solutions it came up with do not know what they can
now create a new set of make and consumers do not
problems.
know what to buy. One law
To comply with the law, the says that the child's sleepnati o n ' s
garment wear must be protected from
manufacturers came up with fire ignition. Another law
TRIS ( 2, 3-dibrom opropyl says that substances used in
phosphate ), a chemical that making the apparel fire
effectively met the Com· retardant must not also pose
miss ion' s flammability a health danger to the child.
standard
for
acetate, The outcome may be that
· triacetate, and polyester little synthetic sleepwear will
fabrics . Proceeding in good be made at all in the near
faith that TRIS was both future .
effective and acceptable to · Logically, there should
the
government,
the have been some assurance
manufacturers began that sleepwear, in fact, could
treating sleepwear .with be safely and effectively
firepropled before regulatory
standards were set in con·
crete. But, logic and
prudence are often un·
characteristic
of
the
regulatory process.

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Pomeroy, 0.

Clon ch,

Fnct ay·s v1 m t&gt;
Oetro 11 at Atlanta
Sat urday's Gam es
NY Range,.s at Pitts.bgh

legislative

committee,
fearing
a
backlash over st rikes by
public safety forces, agreed
late Th ursday on a modified
collective ha rgaining bill
gi'.'ing public employers a
stronger hand in arbitration
proceedings to solve labor
disputes.
.
But re prese ntatives of
poli ce and firefi ghting groups
loudly denounced it as "one·

open for pressure for further
changes.
Under the latest version,
a uthored by Sen . • Ha rry
Me s hel, D·Y oungs to wn ,
chairman of the conference
committee and the original
sponsor of the bill, a city
council or other legislative
body could rejett an ar·
bitrator's a'Cfard for public

sided arbitration" and said it
would lead to more strikes.
Democrats on the six-man
committee pushed the con·
ference report through on a 42 vote after the legislature
had adjourned for the
weekend . Repu~lican
members opposed the plan.
However, the report was
~ot signed, leaving the door

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Majority Democrats on a

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Representatives of public
health and safety workers
may .be hard at work this
weekend attempting to put
the skids to an agreed con·
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Stout , Craig Swick, Randy
Tackett, Frederick Thomils.
Melba Thomils, Nicki Vi'lln
Meter. M ark Venoy , Rita
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CHICAGO . (UP!) - Bill
Veeck
be lieved
he
" improved " his Chicago
White Sox· by signing three of
the 42 free agents the dub
drafted, but said he planned
" to improve it even more."
Veeck made a package
announcement Thursday of
the signing of right-handed
pitchers Ron Schueler and
Jim Hughes from the
Minnesota Twins and slugger
Ron Blomberg from the New
York Yankees and indicated
it would be ''a reasonable
asswnption that we 'll sign
on e or two more."
Veeck said he was
"delighted"
with
his
additions, even though "we
spent more money than we

can afford."

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CI NC INNATI - Archie
Griffin gets his first start in
. three weeks Sunday when the
Cincinnati Bengals entertain
the Miami Dolphins.
Th e two-ti me Helsma n
Trophy winner from Ohio
State had given way to u nvil
Elliott the last couple of
games . But Ell io tt is
currently suffering from a
minor illness and the Bengals
wa nt to shake their offense
out of the doldrw-ns in the
wake of las( weekend's 42·10
loss to the Minnesota Vikings.
In Griffin 's last sta rt.
against Houston Oct. 30, he
ran 10 times for a grand total
of three ya rds. Admittedly,
he did not get the greatest
blocking in the world.
"Archie is going to get right
back in the saddle ," Bengals'
off ensiv e Qackfi eld coach
Jack Dona ldson sa id of
Griffin 's sta rting assignment
Sunday . "Archie has been
No. I since the start of the
season. I know he has been
disa ppointed a t n6t starting ·
'recentl y. But 1-&lt;:r•vil played a
couple of games and we won a
couple of games. We make no
apologies for that."
Griffin recalled his sideline
role the past couple of games
a nd sa id, " It's tough just
sitting and watching a game.
I feel I'm not contributing.
I'm not bitter and I'm not
complaining, but it's still
hard to take."
Starting alongside Griffin
. in the backfield Sunday will
be fullba ck Boo bie Clark, who
had given way to Ohio State
roo ki e Pete Johnson in
several games this season.

Veeck likes
free agents
he's signed

Tonia

Ash, Julie Bi r on, Da n Ca r man , Joy Edwards, Mar k
Hood, Jenell Kell y. Robert
Klein, Rena Lefebre, M ike
Mt:Guire, Scott M cKinney,
Joe Qulvey , ~a th le Quivey ,
Shelly Roush, Tina Smith,
Gena Snowden, Da n Thomas ,
Cindy
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Kim
Warner , Lynetta Whittington ,
Terr.i Yeauger .

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I

Veterans to be remembered by• Legion

:!~~-::..~~'*"~~~-:-.~-...'!·:~:*~:..;.-::~;;:$..;.~":~~~~~~,

j Helen Help

Star Garden Club
meets at Ogdins

Projects of remembering
veterans during the holiday
season were planned during a
1
meeting of the Past Presi·
j!!
By Helen Bottel ~
d e nt · ~
Parley of tho
I
• • •
A111encan
Legion Auxiliary
8\· Waoena Radtkin
door pme
AHAIRYQUESTION ...
ofllrew
Webster
Post 39,
POi:-IT ROCK - The Star
Arran ge ments of mums DEARHELEN :
Wedn~sday night at the home
Garden Club held it s wer&lt; judged by Stella Atkins
Here's a pet peeve. 1 am reminded of it daily when I watch
of Mrs. Rhoda Hackett.
~o vember meeting at the
and Lulu Le•is with Neva hair being combed in such places as:
A monetary contribution
home of Mrs. Anna Ogden Ni cholscn placing first and
1. Church before servtces (even during servtces ).
w"s
made to the Miller Cot·
with de\'olions of dtsetpltne m Wanetta Radekin second.
2. On the train going to work .
of Ohio Soldters and
tage
the form of "lo\'e and lo1·e is
Grace Turner volunteered
• 3, At the table 10 a restaurant,
Sailors
Home at Zenia .
kind" "ere read by Mrs. to serve at the. refr&lt;shmen~ _, 4. At lunch counters.
Veterans
in the conununity
Ogdin Ele\'en members table at the Chnstmas flower·
5. At cocktall parties, or in a hostess's living room. I find it
wtll be remembered Hiso dur·
answered roll call.
show.
.
nauseating when I am right next to the offender. Then these
~- mg the holidays.
The president, Mrs. Avanel
The hostess showed "shdes women plop their combs back loose in their purses, not even in·
REBEKKA
MciNTYRE
The Tuesday night meetin~
Holhday re port ed nine of her trtp to Haw au and to makeup cases. People seem to think thett'own dirt is dean. ·
TURNS
ONE
Rebekka
of
the Auxiliary was announc·
members vi s tted ~atur e' s served refreshments 'at the ELEANOR
;.
Dawn
Mcintyre
celebrated
·fed.
•and it was noted that
Garden Club at the GSl and close of the meettng. The next·
1
DEAR ELEANOR : It 's a hatry problem: offenders should
her
first
birthday
recently
..
charter
members, gold star
assisted their members m meeting wtll be at the home.of be stripped of their combs. But don't forget men are guilty too.
with
a
famUy
celebration.
mothers,
and World War
making swags from pop rom , Martha Chapman, when In fact. I'll bet more males than females comb in pubhc. Wan·
Rebekka
is
the
daughter
of
wives
and
widows,
as well as
pine cones and nbbon. for members wtll have a $1 gtft ta do a head count?. H.
Mr.
and
Mcs.
C.
D.
Mrln·
members
who
have
had con·
exchan gP.
their therapy program . Mrs
tyre
of
Dexter.
Maternal
tinuous
membership
for 30 or
Hollidav thanked St a r Club
DEAR
HELEN
:
gran
dparents
of
t
he
moreyeacswillbehonored.
A
Mr. and Mrs . Don llums
members for thetr help and
1
recently
joined
a
local
women's
group
that
is
dedicated
to
youngster
are
Mr.
_,.d
Mcs.
gift
will
be
sent
to
a
veteran
entertained with a surprise
refreshments .
l)elping battered wives. Often these women need places to stay Kenneth Malson ofiRulland
who is now hospitalized.
The president also reported aJ1Iliversar; dinner for her
for
a
few
days
until
they
can
find
new
homes.
My
husband
and
and
paternal
grandparentS
Mcs. Pearl Knapp presided
that the Star Club was parents. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. I have a spare room and live in a secluded area, so our horne ar~ Mr. and Mrs. Herb
at
the meetmg which opened
Radekin . Present were Arlin
represent~ at the regional
would
be
ideal.
Mclnyre
of
the
Five
Point
with
a Thanksgiving prayer,
meeting at Galltpolis by four Radekm. ·Albany; Mr. and
However, he has come right out and refused to partictpate in area of Pomeroy, Route 3:
the pledge, and a silent
Mrs. Robert Holhday, Judy, the host·home program, even though he has always been
members.
tribute for
deceased
Neva Nicholson distributed Gary and Floyd, Dexter: socially concerned. (Our first experience was unsettling· kids,
memhers. Mrs. Iva Powell
schedules for the Chnstmas Neva Nicholson. Rutland; hysteria, etc. · but I don 't think it would happen again.)
had the devotions using scripDorothy Johns/on. Pomeroy;
Flower Show.
Our house ts desperately needed. There would be little
ture from Psalm 2. There was
The tra \•eling prize was Audrey Swett. Middleport; danger from an irate husband as our address wou)d be kept
LAFF A DAY a poem. "Ten Little Chris·
furnished by Stella Atkins Nancy Hartley, Athens, and confidential, and we have the cooperation of a local detective.
·
•
tians" and another. " Now is
and bought by Grace Turner. Mary Bums. Radcliffe.
We're raising funds for a halfway house, but meanwhile I want
the Time "before the closing
Wanetta RarlE'kin won the
to actively help. Any suggestions on changing my husband's
~
prayer.
:;r=·:-~-:-:-::::~::::::::::: .·=:::::::::::-:==·==:::::::-:::=:=:=:::::=:::::::=:::=:::;:::;:::=:::;..;:~-~:«:&amp;:~·:S:~~~~
mind? · W.H.
I
Thank&lt;g ivmg read ings
DEAR W.:
I
were given by Mrs. Grace
Concentrate on fund raising and don 't push your husband tn·
Pratt, "I'll Thank Him Once
to a role he isn't equipped to handle. I think you'd soon resent it
Again", Mrs. Eulalie
1Webs ter ,
if he hUed your spare room with displaced men. So give him
"Thanksgivi ng
the
same
consideration.
I
Day"
and
Faye
Wtldermuth,
. By Charlene Hoeflich
Keep his castle secure and let him be socially concerned in
!"Thanksgiving on the Farm
in Meigs County '' written by
meeting Kim Sayre was other directions.· H.
SY RACUSE JUNIOR
Miss Ne lle Bing. Mrs Veda
welcomed
as
a
new
member.
TROOPI204
DEAR HELEN :
Davis read "The Covered
The
scouts
were
remmded
to
A candlelight rededication
I'm 25, married and have a wonderful wife. But I'm at· ~::d!:t1 ~~~~::.]~~. Bridge" and Mrs. Knapp,
get
thetr
regtstration
m
right
ceremony htghhghted the
~
"Thanksgiving."
tracted to younger girls, like about 16 to 18. You know they 're
Tuesday night meeting of the away . For roll call they nam· pretty available these days. If my wife finds out, all our "You may exhale now. Mr
A dessert course was serv·
Syracuse Junior Troop held ed thetr favonte food.- Work dreams are down the dram. What can I do ? - DIRTY OLD Waters."
ed
by the hostess.
was started on flowers made
at the school.
MAN
Each of the girls lighted a of material and p1pe DEARDOM:
ca ndle and recited the gi rl cleaners.
Repeat 25 times a day, " I'm a happily married man," and
Becky Amott led tq the don 't rise to temptation. · H.
scout law, and then gave an
explanation of tis meaning. Lord's Prayer, Veronica the
The ceremony concl uded pledge, Lori Michael. the girl
With taps. Following , the scout promise, and Regma new member and invested in·
TESTS GIVEN
ceremony, Veronica Provo Nance in songs. Sherri Sisson to the troop.
REEDSVILLE
Ap·
Mrs. Pat Philson, leader, proximately 100 students of
served sno\.\&gt;men ice cream served the refreshments for
' read a thank you note for the the Riverview Elementary
stickS,. Attending were Becky that meetmg.
SYRACUSE
BROWNIES
ll20
toys which the scouts donated School were uwolved in a
Amott, Lort Mtchae ls, Jtll
Work
on
Chrisunas
count·
to
Veterans Memorial recent tuberculin skin test
Nease, Reg1na Nance,
The Annual Fall Concert present duo-guitar and vocal
down
hangings
was
started
at
Hospital.
Veronico Provo, Paula
conducted at the school
presented
by the Glee Club of selections. They are Patncia
the
recent
meeting
of
the
Lori
Grueser
led
m
the
recently. Jane Brown,
Wtnebrenner, and Sherri
the
Holzer
Medical Center Ha ynes, a member of the
Syracuse
Brownies
.
Jt
was
pledge
to
the
flag
to
open
the
Sisson. Kim Sayre was absent
tuberculosis nurse, reported
but will be rededicated at the decided that the girls will meeting. The promise was good results. Mrs. Grace ·school of Nursing wlll be held secretarial staff at the Schoot ·.
Monda y
evenm g. of Nursin g and J enni fe r
ma rch in both the Pomeroy led by· Tracy Hubbard, and Weber , principal, extends on
next meeting.
November
21,
at
8
o'clock
in Byers.
the Middleport Kim· Adams and Sarah thankS to parents, students
Last Saturday the girls and
the
Main
Lounge
of
Davis
Twenty members of tile
ha d
the and school personnel who
went to the football game in Christmas parades. Lori Philson
Hall
at
514
First
Avenue
in
;tudent
body .at the School of
Athens. At last. week 's Qrueser was welcomed as a refrestunents.
took part to make the
Galltpolis.
N,,~ r s 1 g •'.I ~ n (' l ~ ,d~ l1 ~
program successful.
Due to the dosing of the . representatives lr om all
Fall Quarter aLthe,sthool on t~ree cla'S.es, mi:k'e up the
the day before Thanksgiving, School's Glee Club. Mrs .
t he Monday evening concert Anne Fischer ts t heir
ROCK
SPRINGS-After noted that the RC Company membership committee November 22, at 7:30 p.m., will
feature
both director.
a half hour of room visitation, had provided a new clock for chairperson Mrs. Darlene for parents of fifth graders Thanksgivmg and Cpristmas
The concert is open to the
Salisbury PTO members the auditonum . Mrs·. Susie Casto. The second grade wsa intereetid iii band.
public. Refreshments will be
,, ,,
selections.
were sho~&lt;11 a film entitled, Pullins, Ways and .Means leading In membership on a
followi ng · thi s
To impfovt commUiiication
As a special attractia,n served
· ' Accidentally Yours ," Committee cha irperson , per centage basis, she between school 'and homes, during the concert, two young delightful evening of holida y
witnessed the presenta tion of thanked everyone who helped reported . Memberships will Mr. Lisle announced the ladtes fr om Jackson will music.
th ree · trophies , app roved with the Fall Festival. She still be accepted through formation of a Salisbu ry
purchase of several ttems for noted that all prizes were Wednesday, November 23, Community Council . Th e
the school, and learned of the paid for by the group, rather and J.ldfents were reminded council will consist of two
CLEVELAND (U PI J formation of a Community than soliciting . from mer- that only members will be parent representatives of
Second
baseman Dua ne
Co un cil to improve com- chants, and reported a profit permitted to vote during the each
classroom ,
the
HUBBARD PROMOTED
Kuiper,
a
.T/7 hitter , was
mumcatwn between. th e of $634.80 from that project. elections next spring.
president and secretary of
RACINE- Marine Private selected as the 1977 Cleveland
school and homes at a regular
Eighty·seven persons have
Mr. Lisle announced a the PTO,. Mr. Lisle, and First Class Richard L.
Indians "Man of the Year" by
meetmg Nov. 15.
joined the PTO, according to meetin g
on
Tuesday, another staff member. Each Hubbard, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Brownies and Girl Scouts of
section of the area from Larry R. Hubbard of Route I, the Cleveland Chapter of the
Salisbury led the pledge of
which Salisbury draws has been promoted to his Baseball Writers Association,
BBWA . announ ce d
the
allegiartce to the flag, and
ljludenls will be represented. present· rank while serving at
Tuesday
.
Mrs. Kathy Corbttt began the
· In further announcements, Marine Barracks, Roosevelt
Clubhouse attendant Cy
meeting with Thanksgiving
it was noted that Wednesday, Roads , Puert o Rico. He
Buynak
was awarded the
devotions. The fiim depicting
November 23, will be the last joined the Marine Corps m
annual
Frank
Gtbbons "Good
home accidents and ways to
day of school before Thanks· February 1977.
Guy"
award
.
prevent them followed.
giving, and that students will
Don Hunnel, on behalf of
not return to class until
the Pomeroy Youth League,
REEDSVILLE - A recent percentage of patents in Tuesday, November 29. Also,
presented Jo hn
Li sle, Riverview School PTA attendance.
there . will be no PTO in
Sa lisbury pri nci pa l, t hree meeting was highlighted by a
Mrs. Weber announced a December.
trophies to be dtsplayeq m the spectal program presented Thanksgiving Assembly will
After
some
project
school's t rophy case. One of by three piano solos by be held at the school suggestions, the PTO voted to
the trophies was won by the students
of
Maxine November 23. The early buy additional components
Pomeroy Little League All Whitehead's of Riverview , dismissal of school necessary and ins.tall an intercom
Stars in the Wellston Tour· Aleshia Holsmger, ' Beth in December due to the levy system in the school. They
nament during the pa st Berkhimer and Angela not passing was discussed also authorized the purchase •
sunun er. and the others were Collins. '
and plans were made for the of $20 worth of games and
awa rd ed th e Pomeroy
Teresa Collins, president, school activities involved . equipment for each class·
Yankees Little League team. presided durtng the bu siness Refreshments were served room, with each teacher to
Dur'ing
the
busi ness
meeting . Mrs .
Weber by the sixth grade mothers. .select wh'at is needed in his
meeting prestded over by
own room.
reported the new mattress
Mrs . Barbara Fry, it was and springs are being used in
.J _ _] .With the school in the final
teS
year ofthestatedentalhealth
the sickroom and a new sign
pilot project, PTO members
has been placed at the en·
.
approved the purchase of
OPENING
trance to the school. Ad·
The weekly weight Joss toothpaste for the students.
dtlional projects for the
trophies
were awarded to They also voted to buy five
SOON
scl10o l were discussed in
Karen
Johnson
and Debbie Whiz
Kid
electronic
detail and scholarship fund
Windon
at
the
Monday
night
calculators
for
Ed
Bartels'
and county dues were paid.
of
the
Conway
Diet
math
classes.
The
group
also
meeting
Janice Young, chairman of
Class
held
at
the
Meigs
Inn.
raised
$10,
the
amount
paid
to
membership drive, gave the
Coralee
Cummins
was
the
person
who
drives
to
report of new members.
welcomed
as
a
new
memher.
Columbus
each
year
to
select
Classes winning in the
membership contest are first At the Point Pleasant class, prizes for the Fall Festival,
grade, third grade and fifth Hope Eblin was welcomed in- and they decided to buy
Second grade won the to the class and Marylin Christmas treats for the
grade.
MASON, W. VA.
att.endance banner and Clark was presented a 20 . pupils again this year.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ._, money for h~ ving the highest pound pin and certificate.
Mrs. Helen Dais' second
The Athens class gave grade won the room count.
recognition to Pat Tennant Refreshments were served'
for losing the most weight for following the meeting.
the week .

Us

1r

~: :

~:

G1r1 Scout Diary

~

-- ·

I

-

-

-

-

-

-

•" l.

-- . .

·~~
:I

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

A sterile solution
Bv Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
The sex of the counselor is
important to' some callers on
a crisis hot tine . For example,
a woman may·feel more c"Um·
fortablc discussing child·
rearin g problems with
another woman. In thiS excerpt from a hot line conver·
satiun hDwever, sexual ern.
pathy is not the issue. A male

caller wants a )YOman's reac-

tion so he' can second·guCJ;S
his wife.
Mr. T: I'm glad that a
woman fina llv answered this
Phone . I ca lled twice before
but. .. anywa )', let r me get to
the point. I have dectded that
I should take responsibilit)'
for btrth control in my fa mtly
since my wife has had it for
over 15 years. J.have always
fel t guilty that she has l&lt;tken
chances With, her healt~ so
that we wouldn 't have
•hildred ,
ldn 't ff d or
c. .
, ~&lt; e cou
a or
Uil&lt;e care of properljt!. Now
that we have three . neari,r
grown chi ldren , I think tt s
ttme for me to do somethmg.

D~

~

Holiday concert
slated for Monday

u

0

idea ..,

Mr. T: She stayed out all
rU~ht and Ulcn acted like
nothing unusual had happen·

ed.. ,
Dr. B: that - must have

rnade yo~angry .
Mr. T: You bet it did, and
that's when I sl&lt;trted thinking
how to get back ather.
Dr. B: ,f.nd your revenge lS
If
T ect•
to get yourse stert tz ·
Mr. T: Yes. 11 sounds crazy
to me too, now that [ think
about it. It makes great sense
doesn't it, hurting· myself
physically and emotionally
on the chance that I can ex·
.
U
pose her. I guess I m rea y
. the one who gets hurt, I
. wonder why I just can't bring
' myself t6 confront her ?
Dr. B: Absolutely. Why
don't we talk about that. (Dr.
lllaker cannot Ulke telepho~
ca lls from her reader's,
However, there are hundreds

think ? You're a woman...
Dr. B. Do you really want

of crisis intervention phone
lines in the United States. For
the phone number of one near
the optnlon of Just a ny you. conU!ct your local men·
woman. or are you wondering tal health association or men·
how your wtfe will feel about Uil health informa tion ser·
vour decision"
' Mr. T: Well, to tell you the 11ce. J
Write to Dr, Blaker in care
truth, that's why f called. 1
wanted to try out my line on of thi'l newspaJ&gt;Or. P,O, Box
you . I thought you would real· 489, Radio City Station, New
'l't · York, N,Y. 1(1019, Due to
IY go for tha t ·responstb11
y volume of mail she cannot
bl~r. B ..Can tell me a Ul· r~ply personally. but ques·
·
lions of general mterest wtll
tle more •.
. , ' be di • ,. d · f t
1
Mr, T: Well. it's sort of em- '·
sc~=e '" u ure co·
barrassmg but I thtnk my umns.
wife is cheating on me I ~;:-----~----·
suspect it's been going on for
several years, but r ·v~ never
had the nerve to.,
~e'Q,
bluff A few ctays ago i't "'61 .,
curred to me that if I was
sterilized she wouldn 't have

vou

tMt

Pomeroy
Flower
'"
Shop

n

-

Salisbury PTO conducts meeting

y

'
Yes ? Mr.T: Well. what do

any reason to continue taking
'lis If h did
birth control pt · s e
continue ... well , at least I
would know once and for all. 1
know that sounds weird .. .
Dr. B: What happened a
few days ago, around the
lime you thought up this

1111 HOSPITAL
Patty Hy selJ, Route 2,
Pomeroy , ts a surgical
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Cards may be, sent
to Room 133.
Li '' ~'"""
·n

1, 1 . , ~

•n

•v•v ~ '1 01 I'H , -=1

I ~ ,..

'

c •••

YOUR AREA

Qu&amp;sa~
. DEALER

Riverview PTA
announces projects

FOR THE HOLIDAYS, WE'RE ., ROLLING OUi.THE

A

Trop

h•

...

D

awarueu

GINO'S

PIZZA

I Would Like To
,.
'

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov . 18, 1977

Forest Run UMW enjoy dinner

Film sfated
A program on scoliosis curvature of the spine - wiU
be held In the dintng room of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
on Friday, Nov. 25 at 2 p.m.
Opal M. Grueser, R. N.,
Meigs
County
Health
Department crippled
children nurse, In announcing
the program said that in·
formation on scoliosis will be
presented by Nan Heiskell,
R.N., dlstrl ~ t consultant,
of
Crippled
Bureau
Children's Services.
"Scoliosis
A
film ,
Screening ror Early Detec·
lion," used for training health
professi onals to screen

children for scoliosis in its
early stages, will be shown.
The fl\m points out methods
of evaluation and how a mild
curve can be successfully
treated. It also shows how an
curvature
untreated
progresses into severe
deformity and disabiUty . The
film-is being Shown with the
permission of Dr. Donald
Thaler, orthopedic specialist.
Residents Interested in the
program are asked to call the
Meigs
County
Health
Department, 992·3723 or 992·
7160 if they can possibly at·
tend. There will he refresh·
ments.

Wolfpen News Notes
Earl Russell of Kentucky is
staying with his mother,
Bertha Russell.
Tim Knotts of King Hill was
Sunday visitor of his aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda and Ronald.

Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith were Sunday afternoon
callers of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Haning and family .
Mrs. Paul Pierce a nd
family of Mason were
Saturday visitors of Geneva
~h,~matP

TELEVISION
VIEWING
FRIDAY, NOVEM6Uc

t&amp;, lYII

6:1l0-News 3,4,8,10,13, 1S,. ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6' 30--NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13,. Carol Brurnett
&amp; Friends 6; Making Things Grow 33
7: 30--Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4,. Candid Camera
6; Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Family Feud 10; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop
Goes the Countrv H

a·ro-&lt; PO Sharkey 3,1S; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13; In
Search of 4; Wonder Woman 8; Washington Week In
Review 20,33; , War of the Roses 10.
8:30--Chlco &amp; the Man 3, 4, IS; Wall Street Week 20,33.

9:tl0--Rocktord Flies 3,4,1S; Movie "Mary White" 6,13;
Movie " The Three Musketeers" 8, 10; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 20 ; Leonara Bernstein Con.

ducts 33.
9:30--Microbes &amp; Men 20
10: t)(f-Qulncy 3,4,1S; Fll of Ea~les 33.
10:30--News 20; 11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, ts ,. Dick
Cavett 20; Lilias Yoga 9 You 33.
'. 11 :30--Johnny Carson 3.4.1S; Baretta 6,13; Boxtng B;
ABC News 33 ; Movie " Frankenstei n Created
Woman " 10; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20 .

12 :oo-Monty Python's Flying Circus 33; 12 :30-Janakl 3,.
12:40--Lohman &amp; Barkley 6 ; Ironside 13; 1: ~
Midnight Special 3.4,1S; J·40--News 13.
2:30--News 3; Mary Hartman 10; 3' tl0--Movle " The
Whole World Is Watching" 3; S:oo--Movle
"lobruk " J .

Movie Channel 4 s&amp; 7 P.M.- Seven Percent Solution (PGJ
9 &amp; 11 P.M.- Dog Day Afternoon (R )

"

'

I

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19,1977
6:tl0--Sunrlse Semester 8, 10; 6:31)-Marlo &amp; 1he Magic
Movie Machine 4; TV Clanroom 8; U.S. Farm
Report 10; Kentucky 'Afield 13.
7:tl0--Saturday Report 3; Fun tor Everyone 6,. Ghost
Busters 8; Public Polley Forums 10; Grape Ape 13.
7:30--Pink Panther 3,1S; World of Survival 4; Jetsons
6; Ark tl 8; Weekend Special 13.
8:00-C .B. Bears 3,4, t5 ; Supertrlends 6,13,.
Skaateblrds 8,10; Sesame St. 20:
9:tl0--Spece Sentinels 3,4,15. Scooby' s Laft-A-Lymplcs
6,13; B'ugs Bunny-Road Runner 8; Bugs Bunny &amp;
Friends 10; Mister Rogers 20.
9:30--Super Witch 3,4,t5; Elec. Co. 20.
10 :tl0--Bang-Sahng Lalapalooza 3,4,1S; Once Upon A
Classic 20.
.
10:30--Muhammad All 3,4,15; Batman-Tarzan 8,10;
ConSUfTler Survival Kit 20.
11 :oo--Thunder 3,4, 1S; Krofft Supershow 13; Big Blue
Marble 6: Crockett's VIctory Garden 20.
11 :30--Search &amp; Rescue 3,4, 15; Countdown to Michigan
6; SpoceAcademy 8,101 Coping With Kids 20: B
· t2 :oo-Baggy Pants &amp; the Nitwits 3, 15; Movie
' " Destlnotlon Gobi" 4; Secrets of Isis 8; In The
Know 10; Action News for Kids 13: Music 20.
12 :30--Red Hand Gang 3,1S; College Football Pregame
Show 6, 13; Fat Albert 8,10.
12 : 4~ollege Football 6, 13.
·
1:oo-Jetsons 3; Mr. Magoo 8; Family Affair 10; PTL
Club tS ; Romagnoli's Table 33.
1:31)-Marshall Football 3; Bob Jones 8; Movie "The
Pleasure Seekers" 10; Beginning to Sew 33.
2:oo--Pro Bowling 3; Movie "Women of the Prehistoric
Planet" 4; VIewpoint 8; Making Things Grow 33.
2 : 3~ovle "Young Fu,y" 8; Antiques 33 .
3.tl0--Wrestllng 1S; Guppies to Groupers 33.
3:30--Thls Is The NFL 3; Movie "Bride of the Gorilla"
4; Area Showcase 33.
4:00--Movle "King Kong vs. Godzllla" 3; College
Football 6. i3; Homer Formby 8; That Nashville
Music 10; Better Way 15; Jody's Body Shop 33.
4:31)-Sports Spectacular 8; Nashville On The Road 10;
Wally' s Workshop 1S; Catch -33 33.
S:tlO--Star Trek 4; Pop Goes The Country 10; To Be
Announced 15; Zoom 33.
S:30--Porter Wagoner 10; Once Upon A Classic 33.
6:1l0-News 3,4,10; Lawrence Welk 8; i;od Has The
Answer 15; Images of Aging 33.
6:30--NBC News 3,4.15; CBS News 10; 7:01)-AII -Star
Anything Goes 3; Lawrence Wetk 4,1S; Hee Haw
6,8; Bugs Bunny 10; Wild Kingdom 13; World Wart
33.
7:30--We Think You Should Know 3; Music 33; All-Star
Anything Goes 10; Endangered Animals: Will They
Survive? 13.
8:tl0--Movle " Contract on Cherry Street" 3,4,1S;
Tabitha 6, 13; Bob Newha~t 8, 10; Best of F.amllles
33.
.
.
8:JO-Operatlon P~ttlcoat 6,13; We've Got Each Other
8, 10.
9:00--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Jeftersons 8, 10; Advocates
.JJ.
9:30--Tony Randall 8,10.
10:tl0--Love Boat 6,13; Carol Burnett 8, 10; World of
Franklin &amp; Jefferson 33 .
10 :31)-Kanawha County Board of Education Meeting
33.
11 :llO-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, IS; Black Perspective on the
News 33.
11 :15-ABC News 6; Film IS; 11 :30--Movle "You'll
Like My Mother" 3; Saturday Night A,1S: Movie

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Silverfish shun dry places
POLLY'S PROBLEM ·
DEAR PQLL'l-Thank you
for the Pomters as I use many
of them. Could you suggest
something one could use to
prevent sHverlish as so many
people are tormented by
them.- MRS. W.L.
DEAR MRS. W.L. - Silver·
fish seem to thrive 10 warm
damp places and are at·
tracted by starch 10 clothes.
sugar, wallpaper paste and so
on. They are less often found
in dry, cool and well·aired
rooms. Places they have appeared could be sprayed with
a good household insecticide
spray and then be dusted with
pyrethrum powder. - POI.r
LY.
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
B.l.. to mix topping she
wishes to sprinle on v,arious
dishes wtth her pastry
blender. I always do this with
any topping that includes that
popular btscuit mix and it
workS great. It mixes perfect·
ly and does not mash down
enough to make a dough out
of the ingredients.- M.M.
DEAR POLLY- Recently I
attended an outdoor wedding
in a state park and instead of
using rice to shower the bride
and groom guests were prtr
vided with wild bird seed.
Qutte a clever idea I thought.
-FAYE .
DEAR POLLY - Oven
cleaning is the worst of all
cleaning jobs to me but I have
found a way to make it a little
easter. In the evening I spray
oo a new ''overnight" cleaner
and then the next morning
remove the racks and all
pieces that will come out
(sometimes even side rack

holders cvme out l and tf1ke
them all out of doors on the
lawn and rmsc off with the
garden hose. T~e pressure of
the water removes most of
the grease a nd dirt and there'
is no worry about splashing ~
the floor or other things with
the cleaner. If the pieces are

another spray of the cleaner
right out of doors, let dry and
then rmse off again with the
hose. The oven itself has to b.
done the usual way but this
method cuts the cleamng
time in half forme.- N.K.S. -.
DEAR POLLY - If you
wash a nd dry overalls at
home, ptrt a thin washcloth or
a short sock over the strap
buckles so as to keep them
from scratching the inside of
your washing machine and
from making a lot of noise
banging around in the dryer.
-JUNE.
. '
DEAR POLLY - I have a
Pointer I think all brides
should know. I have used my
nice set of glass oven ware for
many years and they sttll
look as pretty as when new as
I use baking sOda for cleaning
them. Pour or shake baking
soda mto the sotled dish and
soft sponge them to a
beautiful shine. ·PAMELA .
DEAR POLLY- I use those
plastic sheets that bacon
slices are placed on in the
package to separate meat I
am packaging for the freezer.
This is very good for ham·
burg. The meat does not
adhere to the plastic and the
plasllc can be washed and reused. 1 cut four pieces from
each sheet, ·FRANCES.

log

his

cards were his aunts, Patty

Social
Calendar
FRIDAY
PAST
MATRONS
of'
Evangeline Ch~pt~r. Mid·
dfeport, OES, Frid!ly 7:30 ·
p.m. home of Mrs. Marion
French . .

MEIGS County REACT
Team special meeting, 7 p.m.
, Friday at Meigs Senior
Cttizens Center in Pomeroy.
All members, especially
charter ones, urged to at·
tend; 1978 dues now payable.
ROUND and square dance
Friday 8:30 to 11 :30 at Senior
Citizens Center. Music by
Strlngdusters. Dance open to
public.
SATURDAY
SPORTS Banquet at
Eastern
High
School
Saturday 6:30 p.m. Advance
tickets on sale at school, or
pur~ase from any member
of football or volley ball
squads or cheerleaders.
Jerry Kelican, head football
coach at Jameswood High
School, guest speaker.
SOUP SUPPER by Eagles
Class at Asbury United
Methodist Church basement,
Syracuse, beginning at noon

Saturday. Soup, sandwiches

Cindy

A report on a vistt to the Ar·
cadia Nursmg Home was
given by Mrs. · Freda Ed·
wards at a meetmg of the
Dorcas Circle of the B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport Fiest Baptist Church held at the home
of Mrs ..Helen Bodimer.
Mrs. Isabelle Wmebreimer
also reported on preparing
and delivering a tray of frutt
to Mrs. Alice Freeland as a
· TI\anksgiving
r•membrance
o
7"
from the ' circle: Another
Thanksgiving project will be
the preparation of a dinner
for a shutin.
For Chrisbnas gifts of
money will be sent to Dr.
Willia.ilf McpJlets~rt ·and' l\is
farru!y, special interest rllis·

The Voters Of Bedford Township
OWEN SMITH
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Watch For Our Giant Clearance Sale Ad In No11. 23 Sentinel

RACINE CAR.PET.SH"OP:

Woody Hayes: Football 10; Movte " From Here to
Eternity" 13; Janakl 33.
12 :tl0--Movlo "5 Card Stud" 10; 1:tlO--Movle "Story of
a Woman" 4; 1:30-Mary Hartman 3; This Is the
NFL 6; Movie "Tales of Terror" 13.
1:55-Mary Hartman 3; 3:tl0--ABC News 13; 3:30-News 3,. 4:tl0--Movle "To Ole In Paris" 3; S:30-Movle "A Woman of Distinction" 3.
Movie Channel 4 -

s &amp; 9 P.M. -

Pink Panther Strikes Again (PGJ
7 &amp; 11 P.M.- Flrs!Travellnq Saleslady (G)

FREE
With

Purchase of
EAR RINGS

24 Carat
Gold
Over
Surgical
Steel

!)

sionaries, and Mary TiHord,

Baptist scholarship student.

MONDAY
CANDYSTRIPER meeting
Monday 7 p.m. at Veterans
Meriwrial Hospital. Anyone
16 or older who wish to join
are asked to attend, or caU
949·2042 after 5 p.m.

Mcs. Clarabelle Riley, vice
cha irman , opened t he
meeting with two poems,,"As
I Grow Older" and "Lord,
Thank You for Everything"
from the Ideal magazme.
Mrs. Bodimer had several
verses of scripture. and a
meditation from "Our Daily
Bread."
The treasurer's report was
given by Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, and dedica ting the
love gift offering was Mrs.
Kathryn Metsger;· who also
presented the program .. on
Dorcas Women ofHatti.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess, Mrs. Bodimer,
to those named and Mrs.
Martha Kline, Mt-5. ' liilliahi
Demos key, Mrs . · 'Dana•
Hamm , and Mrs. Mary
Brewer.

Company
store.

our

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26
ff

9:00 . 5:00
f:O:&lt; 1.::! '!&lt;::!I&lt;;:! I&lt;;:!!'&lt;::&lt; 1&lt;:1. fjO! '!&lt;::! l;&lt;::(fjO! r:&lt;::&lt; fjO! r~

THIS WOULD MAKE A GREAT
W.
EARLY CHRISTMAS GIFT

W

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Middleport Book Store ·
·:Mi,dd~port, Ohio , .,,
Ph . 992·2641
Those under 18 years 'of age must be

accompanied by parent or guardian .

. IIJ12~'i-

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Thanks to the Voters of
Bedford Township for your
vote and support In the
Nov. Bth Election.

NORMAN. WOOD
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

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2617*

gas Y-8 pickup.
''"fl'' t"t''

.: ,EORD

·Pd . Pot. Adv.

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''" x · r ·' •· .-.,. Builfttstlgh from 'ihe ground yp
· ~~ . .
.
" :'' ' ' 1·'' '•"Choice qt t'ab styles fo mat eli yow' seatlng requi rements
, ·
' ·" • 'Big selection of options lo make your'drlvjng easier .•. your pr ckup
:;;
' : ~ .• '. b,~Uer .~\iu !PPfld !of\ work or persona1. use
·
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tO~gh
bargaina 'at .r our F9rd Dealer Include •••.
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RC/Diet RitE
16oz.8pack

FORD

..' 'Lucky Luciano" 6; Movie "Romeo &amp; Juliet" 8;

THANK

Pierced Ears

Circle visits nursing home

I

and pie available; take
containers for takeout ser·
vice.
RACINE Grange will host
its annual Thank sg iving
'l urkey dinner, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the hall. Those
attending to take a covered
dish and own table service.
" Ptg m a poke'' auction will
follow. Gifts will be accepted
for- annual Christmas box for
Athens State Hospital.
SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Assn., 12 noon
Saturday at Meigs Inn ;
representative of the Ohio
Retired Teachers As•n . will
speak.
OHIOANS FOR Wildlife
Conservation in Meigs
County will hold a: party
Saturday beginning at 6:30
p.m. at archery building of
Royal Oak Park; all who
helped defeat Issue 2 are
mvited.
SUNDAY
COUNTY· WIDE
Prayer
Meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday ·at
Hobson Church of Ch•ist in
Christian Union with Glen
Bissell, class leader.

C&lt;rhostesses for the dinner
were Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan,
and Miss Mae Weber.
Mrs. Weber presided at the
meeting during which time a
$10 contnbution was made to
the Middleport firemen. Mrs.
Evelyn Grueser was reported
ill. "!rs. Peggy Kerns won the ,
traveling prize, and Mrs. ,
Edtth Jividen anrt Miss
Weber, the game prizes.
Others attending were
1\lrs.Barbara Mullen, Mrs.
Jane Gi lkey, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Bea Robson,
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Freda
Mitch, Mrs. Rhonda Hackett,
Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs. Alma
Miller.

mother's

and

Attending besides those
named were Mrs . Edison
Hollon, Mrs. Elma Holter,
Mrs. May Holter, Mrs. Ver·
non Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease,
1\lrs. U. S. Nease, Mrs. Erma
Roush, Mrs. Mary K. Roush,
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Harry
Wyatt, and Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger.

ner.

hospitalization. Cake, ice
cream and koolald were
served. Gifts and cards
were presented to him by
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Swan,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cooper
and Christina , his cousins,
Steve and Missy Anderson,
his sister and brother,
Trishia and Bubby Morris,
and his father. His mother
called from the hospital
and sent a card. Also
remembering him with
Anderson
Taylor.
' '

Binds."

Sewing Club
has meeting

GUY MURRIS
CELEBRATING - The
fourth birthday of (iuy
.Morris of Parkersburg; W.
Va. Was celebrated Nov. It
at the home of his grand·
parentS.: Mr. and Mrs.
Clffrence Coo per of
Portland. Guy Is staying
with his grandparents dur·

nut entirely clean I give them

meeting held at tbe Heath
Church in Midldleport.
Thirty·two sick visits and
shutin calls were reported.
The meeting closed with the
song, " Blest Be the Tie That

The annual ThankSgiving meeting. Devotions were
dtnner of the United gtven by Mcs. Henry Salser
Methodist Women of the who used Psaim 136 and a
Forest Run United Methodist meditation on Thanksgiving.
Church was held recently at She closed with prayer.
The program was on
the church.
Members sang " Count Thanksgiving with members
Your Blessings" to ooen the reading poetry and medita·
lions. Mrs. Russ Watson and
Mrs. Vernal Bla~kwood
.sang"Whispering Hope."
The love offering was col·
lected' and .r1ipecial offering
was taken for World Thank
The J oily Bunch Sewing Offenng projects. It was
Club met Tuesday at the noted that severa l members
home of Mcs. Margaret B. attended the workShop held in
Weber for a covered dish din· Athens recently, and also the

Enter RC Cola's
PRO FOOTBALL
-TRIVIA CONTEST

LOOK FOR DETAILS .
AT THE RC DISPLAY

~ &lt;i!B)

iamJj~ Fo;J. B~onco . ; AVAILAri~ ~ NOW IN

• As co,rnfortfible as it .s tough

, ~ :•• ~ c

. ,,

:;~ '

.,._..

New Ford Econoline
• Combines roominess with economv

GOOD QUANTITIES~ ..

·: -

IMMEDIATE DEUI£RY.

,,

'

'

�8-- The Daoly Senttnel, Middleport-Ponwro) . 0 .. Fnd11y , No1·. 18, lli!l7~•iL..-------------------------------------------------~------------...- - ,

9---The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy ,O .• Frid•y, Nov. 18.1!177
DlCK TRACY

THESE MESSAGES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITAGE ARE SPONSORED EACH WEEK BY THE FOl.lOWING
TRINITY CHURCH

R~~

W H

Hel l sup!
Perr 1n pastor Roy 1\'\a..,.er Sun
RUllAND CHURCH OF GOO
do) school supt Ckuteh School
Rev Jonies D Guynn postal
Q 15 am
~orshrp ~('r\'rU• 10 30
Svndo,- \Chool 10 o m Sunday
om Chorr r eh~rso l Tuer.doy
... or!'!h,p l 1 a m Sunday even1ng
~ JO p m under dHe-tlrQn of M r~
Sl!f\ol~e ., p m
Wednesday war
Pc;~u l Npose
sh1p servtre 7 30 p m
POMEROY CHURCH OF lHt
HAZEl CO.\\i\1UNITV CHURCH
NAZARENE Corner Ufl•O" and N('QI long 8ollam Edsel Hart
Mulberry Rev Clyde
Hender
pouor Sur1doy school 10 a rn
son pos1or Sunday schpol 9 JO Church
7 30 p m
p1aye'
o m Gle-n McClung sup! morn
r11eef1119 7 JO p m,, Thursday
rng worshrp 10 30 o m evenrng
M IDDL EPORT f'ENTECOST A L
$ervrce 7 30 mrd week ser.rce
Ttwd A~e the Re11 w,ll.on1 Krl•t ·
Wednesdoy 7 30 p m
lei pastor Ronald Dugan Sun
GRACE EPISCOPAl The Re v doy School Svpt Classes for all
Harold Deeth r ect or Church 5er - ages e~enmg serv.ce 7 30 Bib le
•·rccs 10 30 a m Holy tommu · stud) W~n€!sdoy . 7 30 p m
nron J~rsr Sundov at monrh
youth se1 .. 1Ces Fndoy 7 30p m .
church school 10 30 o 111 lor
M10DlfPOR1 FREEWill SAP
nursery through 12
fiST Corner Ash a nd Plum Noel
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRISl
He rrm an pas tor Saturday even
212 W Morn StJohn Mo, r thur
mg serviCe 7 30 p m
Sunday
pasto r Brblli"' 5Choo l 9 30 o m
School 10 30 a .m
mornrng worshrp 10 30 om
MEIGS
Youth meet rn gs 6 30 p m e.,en COOP ERATIVE PARISH
rng worshr p 7 30 Wednii!sdoy
METHOOIS T CHURCH
n1 gh1 preyPr mee1mg end 'S tble
Robert T Bumgor •'cr
s!udy 7 30 p m.
D•rector
THE SAl VATION ARMV 115
POMEROY CL USTER
Bu1lern1Jt Ave Pomeroy En voy
Rev Robert Hoyden
and Mr~ Roy Wmmg o ff •c er s m
Re v James Corb•tt
ch a r ge
Sunday hol1neH
CHESTER Wors h•p 9 15 om
meeltng 10 a .m., Sun dOy Sdwol
Church School 10 o m
10 30 o m . Sunday school leode1
POMEROY
worsh1p ser'o'ICe
YPSM . Elo1se Adorn s 7 pIll
915 om Sunday school, 10 JO
:.olvolion
meet1ng
~cnous • am .
Re v. Robert Hoyde n .
~ peeke rs and rnusic specials , 7 30
rntn 1stcr
,
p n1 Thursday 10 o m . to 2 p m .
ENTERPR ISE Worsh ip 9 o .m
lod•es Home league oil women Church School 10 a.m
n woted 7
p m prayer mee tmg
ROCK SPRI NGS Worsh1p 10
and B•blf' s1udy
Bo b Estep
a.m. Church School 9 15a.m .
leader.
Rev
Noel
Hermon
UM YF 6 30 p .m .
teacher
FLATWOODS Worsh 1p , 11 am
BURl iNGTON SOUTHERN BA P· ChurchScheol1 0 o.m
TJST CHAPEL Rou te 1 ShadeMIDDlEPORT CLUSlER
Pastor Bobby Elluns
Sunday
Rev . Robert Bumgar ner
sc hool 5 p .m Sunday w orsh1p
HEA TH
Robe r t Bumgarner .
5 45 p m Wednesday prayer ser· Pastor . Worsh •p 10 30 om
11ice 7 30 p m
Church School 9 J O o m UMYF 6
POMEROY WESTSI DE CHURCH pm
OF CH RIS T 200W Mom St . Jerry
RUT LAND W ilbur Hil t. Pastor
Paul m~niste r . phone 992·7066
Wors h•p 10 JO d m Ch urch School
Conservot•~· e
non mstrument ol
9 30 a m
Sund ay w orshi p, 10 o .m B1b lli!'
SYRACUSE ClUSTER
stud y 11 o .m worsh1p , 6 p rn
Re v Hervey Koc h . Jr.
Wed nesd ay Brble s'tudy , 7 p .m
AS BURY
Wor sh1 p 11
a.m
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN ChiJrch S'chool 9 50 a m . UMW
Sm•th
CHURC H , Rev ' Rolph
f~rst Tu esday Bible Study Thurs
pos!or Sund ay school 9 30 o m
7 30 p .m
Mrs Worl ey Fro ncJs superm ten ·
FOREST RUN Wor sh•p 9 a.m
dent Preochmg serv1 ces f~r s! &amp; ChiJrch School lOam
th~rd Sunda ys fo llowm g Sunday
MI~ERSVIllE Wor ship 10 a,m .
School
Church School 9 a.m
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
SYRACUSE Chu rc h School 9 00
Preochtng 9 30 a.m . f irs! and se
a.m. Wors h1p serviCe 7.30 p.m .
cend Su ndays of each mon1h
SOUT)1ERN CLUSTER
t hird and fourth Sundays each
Re v T1mothy Sm1th
month . worship ser11ice cl 7·30
Clus t er leader
p m
Wed nesdey even ings o1
Re v Steven Wilson
7 30 . Prayer end Brble Study .
Assoc•ote
AD VENTIST
SEVENTH -DAY
BETHANY (Dorco.s ) Worsh1p
Mulberry.,He•ghts Rood , Po meroy , .9·30 om Ch urc h School 10 JO
Pcsl or . Albert D1fte s. Sabbath om .
School
Supenntendent , (lora
CARMEl. Chrud; School 9:30
Mctnlyre . Sabbath School , Sotur · a.m. Worsh1p 10:30 om 2nd and
day afternoon at 2 00 . wtt h War · 41h Sundays .
sh1p Serv ,ce l ollow•n g at 3 15.
APPLE GROVE Sunday School
RUTLAND FIRST
BAPTIS T 9:30 o.m Worship 7·30 p m. ls t
Hor rt ett and 3rd Sundays . Prayer meetmg
CHURCH S•ste r
Werner . Sup! Sunde-,: School . Wednesday 7 30 p m. Fellowsh •p
9 30 o.m · morn1ng worsh1p
su pper first Solurday b p.m. UMW
10: 45 o .m
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m .
THE Hi lAND CHAPEl . George
EAST lETART, Chruch School
Casto. pastor . Sunday School
1st . 2n d . 3rd Sundays 9 30om
9.30 a.m evening worship . 7 30. Fourth Sunday 10.30 a m Wor·
Thursday evenm g prayer serv1ce
sh1p 2nd Sunday 7 JO p.m 4th
7· 30 p m
Sunday 9:30 o m . Pr ayer mee tmg
POMERO Y FIRS T BAP TIST , Wed nesda y 7 30 p m UMW lsi
Dov1 d Mann min 1ster Wtll10m Tuesday 7 .JO p m
Watson , Svndoy school supl Su n·
WESlEYAN (Roctne ) Sunday
day school , 9,30 a .m . mornm g Sc hooi . IO a .m . Worship 11 a m.;
worshrp 10 30om
Jr UMYF Wednesday 3·30 p .m .:
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTIST, 282 Bib le StiJdy Thursday 7 p m. Choir
Mulbarry Ave . Pomeroy , Paul J. Prac t1ce Thursday 8 p .m
Wh 1te . Pastor Gory Ba sham Sun ·
LETART FAlrS . Church School
dey school supt Sunday school
1st 2nd , 3rd Sundays 10· ]5 a .m .
9·30 a m : morn rng wor sh1p
4th Sund ay 9 15 o rn .. Warsh1p
10·30. e'&gt;~en m g wo r sh1p, 6 30 p m
lsi , 2nd . 3rd Sundays 915 am.;
M idWeek prayer service 7·30 4th Sunday 7 30 p.m .
p m.
MORNING STAR , Worsh1p 9 30
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER . am . Church School 10:30 o .m ,
Dexter Rd . langsvill e . Oh1o . Rev . Mld· Week Serv 1ce Wednesday B
Clyde Ferre ll. Pas to r Sunday pm
School
11
a .m .
Saturd a y
MORSE CHAPEL, Worshp 11
preochmg services 7.30 p .m. a. m , Church School9 30 o rn
Wednesday evening Bible study
PORTlAND , Worsh1p 7·30 p m
at 7:30p .m .
Chu rch School 9 30 o m
FAITH TA BERNACLE CHU RCH ,
SUTTON . Church School 9·30
~lley Run Rood , Re v. Emme tt
a m Wor ~h1 p I st ond 3rd Sundays
Rowso n , pastor Handley Dunn , 10:30a m ."
·
su pt Sur:Jdoy schoo l. I 0 o m Sun ·
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
doy even1ng serv •c e 7 30 B•ble
Rev R1chord Thoma s
teochmg , 7 30 p .m Thursday
Pastor
DYESVIllE
COMMUNITY
Duane SydenstriCker
CHURCH . Rog er( Turner pastor
John Douglas
Su " ir~y school 9·30 a m : Sunday
Associates
mnrn1n g worsrup . 10 30 Sunday
JOPPA , Worsh1p 10 a .m .
e11! .,r • ser\l tce . 7 30
Church School 9 a.m. Prayer
MiDDlEPORT
Meeting Wednesday 8 p .m
MT MORIAH BAPTI ST . Corner
lONG BOTTOM , Sunday school
Founh and Mai n, Middleport . ot 9.30 a .m . Worsh1p services ot
Rev Henry Key . Jr .. pastor. SiJn · 7 30 p.rn . B•ble study gnd Youth
day SchooL 9 30 a .m . Mrs Ervin m eettng
at
8 p m.
on
BoiJmgordner
supt . · Morning Wednesdays
wor ship, 10 45 a.m
NORTH BETHEL . Worsh1p 11
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF om · Church School 10 a.m
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION .
AlFRED . Sunday School 9 30
la wren ce Man ley . pastor, Mn&gt;
o m : Worsh•p 10 45 a m .. Prayer
RIJssell ' Young . Sunday School meeting Wednesday 7·.45 p.m ·
Sup I. Sunday School 9 30 a.m . UMW 3rd Tuesday 8 p m
Even tng worsh1p , 7.30 Wednes REEDSVIllE. Sunday School 9·30
day prayer meetmg , 7 30 p m .
om . Worship 7·30 p m , Prayer
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD , Meeting 7 30 p.m
Tuesday
Rocme ·Route 2, the Rev . James Visllotion7 30 p m I st Thursday .
M Muncy . pastor Sunday school.
SilVER RIDGE . Worship 10 o .m
9 45 a m : mornmg worshtp , II Church School '9 a m.
o m
evenmg worshtp , 7·30
TUPPERS PlAINS. Worship 9
Prayer meellng. Tuesday , 7:30 o m. Church School10 a.m .
p m · Young people 's meet1ng,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST .
7.JQp m Thursday .
George Fredenck , sup!. Service
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , week l y, 9 30 a .m. on Sunday
Corner Stxth and Pa lm er the Rev. Preaching f lfs t and third Sundays
Peter Granda I. pa sto r . Manning of month by Cl11ford Sm,th , 9.30
Kloes
supe rin ten dent Sunday om .
Schoo l. WMPO Rad io program
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
7 45 a.m .: SlJndoy School . 9: 15 Rev Ketth Eblm , pastor . Sunday
am
Mor ning Worsh ip . 10· 15 School,
9 30 o m .,
leonard
a m
Youth
act1vit1es and G1lmore. ftrst elder: even1ng ser·
lellawsh1p lor junior and senior vice . 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
h1gh sludents 6 p .m Sunday meeting . 7·30 p m
even1ng worship 7.30 p.m M id·
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO
week pr ayer 5er vices Wednes · RaCine Route 2 The Rev Charles.
day 7.30 p.m
Hand , pastor Sunday school. 9·45
CHU RCH OF CHR IST
M id· om ·: mornm~ worsl·up . 11 o .m
dlepor t , 5th and Main George Evenmg serv1c~s . Tuesday and
Gloze , m1 ms t er. Mik e Ger lach . Friday , 7·30 p m ~
wpertn tend ent. Terry Vonkey ,
BEARWALLOW'i!IDGE CHURCH
youth m•nts ter.o Bib le school, 9 30 OF CHRIST . Doug Seamon .
om
morrung worship , 10 30 minister. Bible study . 9:30 a .m .
o m
even•ng worsh1p , 7 30, morning worsh.tp . 10:30 a.m ..
prayer ser ''ICe, 17 p .m . Wed nes · evening worship . 7·30 p .m .
day
•
Wednesday 81ble study. 7•30 p .m .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST.
NA ZARENE Rev . J1m Broome. George Frederick . supt , Sunday
post er . Mr s.. Mary Lathey, StJndoy morning service . 9;30 a .m . with
school su pt Sunday school , 9 30 preaching on first and third Sun·
a.m .. mornmg wors hip. 10 30 day of month by Geerge Pickens .
a .m ,;
SlJndoy
evangelist i c
NEW STIVERSVIlLE COMMUNI·
meeting
1 00 p m
Pray er TV Church , Sunday School ser·
, mee1mg . Wednesday . 7·30 p .m
v1ce . 9.45 om .; Worsh 1p servic\9,
UNITED
PRES BYTERIAN 10 30, EvangelistiC Service , 7 30
MINISTRY Of MEIGS COUNTY , p rn 1 Wednesday ,
Praye r
Dwight L. Zo'WIIZ d~rec tor
nieettng, 7 30
HARRI SONVILLE
ZION CHURCH OF' CHRIST,
PRESBYTERIAN . Rev.
Ernest Pomeroy · Harnsonv1lle Rd .. Don
Stricldm , pastor Sund ay church Kennedy . pasto r, Bill McE lr oy ,
school . 9:30 a .m., Mrs . Homer Sunday sd10o l supt
Sunday
lee . sup! ., morning wors h ip. school, 9 30 a m ., mornmg wor ·
10:30.
shtp and communton . 10.30 a .m .:
MIDDlEPORT. Sunday school. SUnday even1ng youth Christian
9 ~0 o.m , Richard Vaughan . supt. Endeavor . 6 p m . worship ser·
Mormng worship . 10 30 .
v1ce. 7 p.m WPrtnesday even1ng
SYRACUSE Morn ing worsh1p . 9 prayer meetmg and Bible \,ludy,
om .. Sunday school . 10 a .m. Mrs . 7 30p m

:m

~mp&lt;&gt;en

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M•ddleporl. Ohio

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MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.
1
John F. Fulh
Ph 9f2 -2101
Pomef"oy

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complet e Automotive Servtce
Mtddleport

98S-l944

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Ph . f49-9130
Coo~r.gr. 1

or 949-2860.

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The word providence stands for the gooc!ness. the faithfulness of God ~reminds men that He has provided everythong to
meet our daily needs. It dwells on spiritual as well as ~t;roal
blessmgs.

{For a f"eal auction calli he Rut
McCoy)
I. 0 . I Mac ) McCoy

282 W. Main. Pomeroy.992 -99'62

ThanksQiving ,, man ·s reverent respon5e to God's providence. In cOlonial hist01y that word became assocoared _With a
songle day, an occasion set aside for apprecial!ng our blessmgs ...
expressing gratitude in wo~op and celebrallon.

510 N. 2nd. Middleporl-992-3451

But providence isa reason for;-varshippi~Gcxl all year. And it
is a reason for celebrating our rehgk)Us conVlCliOnS on daoly concern fo r one ~nuther.

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Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding, Storm

Windows and Insulation .
Phone 949-1801

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

Racine

BISSELL SIDING CO.

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situated! But both derive their common name from a wo rd U1at
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PomeroY

992 -29SS

PHONE 992·2156

Ph . "2-9921

GJ~Iovidence ...

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PRESCRIPTIONS

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Locust &amp; Beect't Sts.

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PHARMACY

GOVERNOR, THIS
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MR. OaMILL 1
THE GOVERN0~-5
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(

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804 W. Miin

Pomeroy

Ph. "l-1318

se·ectoo rw
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r~ .. " ')""~~~~~ l;l•blu

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~OU DO&gt;J ' T MINO IF
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YOU WANT TO ELBERT! t
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SAVINGS &amp; LOAN j:O.

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Racme
Ph. 949-2626

Pomeroy

296 W. 2nd

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MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

Ph . "2 -2582
Mason
Ph . 773-5721

PHONE 992·2156

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

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116 E. Second

Pomeroy

1100 E. Main

Ph . 992-3l2S

Ph.992-7034

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
Third 51.

For The Best tn TV Viewing

GROCERIES &amp; GENERA~
MERCHANDISE

985-4155

Fire Extinguishers
Fire Dept . Equip.
Rutland
Ph . 742 -2771'

HEINER'S BAKERY
'

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Ray R1ggs
1

Ph. 985-4100

Chester

AND ADVANCED!
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Ph, "2-2206

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Chester, Ohio 45720

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

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Ph. 949-2550

Roger Riebel

~~

&amp;
EQUIPMENT

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of your Weddtng.

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0

POINTVI£W CABLE TV
SYSTEMS, INC.

Pomeroy

Ken Grover Photography

0

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BELIEVES IN

Ph . 992 -2196

Ph. 992 -5130

SI.R1. 7

SPfi'ID 1HEIR TIME
EARNING MONEY ·
NEGLECT THEIR
fEllOW MEN 1

HA 1 HE'S THE COMMONEST MAIII
11VE SEEN! PREACH1NG THE SAME
LINE THAT LOUSED UP GOOD
DEMOCRACIES ~ND TURNED ' EM
INTO DICTATORSHIPS TWO
THOUSA ~D YfARS

BUT MAX

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461 S Jf"d

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SERVICES

Racine

THE 8A'51C PROBlEM
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UNEQUAL DI~TRHlJTON
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THAT auM?

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I

Ph. 949-2882

.

. .IIIII[JE~lf~~BA::H~!:P:EO:P:l:E~W~H:O
~~~O~H·,~I=DU~N~N~0~1~c

DAN THOMPSON FORD, INC.

Racine

214 E . Main

Pomeroy

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Church &amp; Office Suppltes

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

.GIFTS

KERMIT' S KORNER

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 Mill St.

ST . JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST .
Pine Grove . The Rev William Loc:o ted ol Ru lland on New l1mo
Mid~ l esworth
P,ostor
Church Road , ne ... t to Forest Acre Porlo; ,
serv1c:es 9:30 om . Sunday School Rev Ray RoUse, pastor Robert
1030a m
Musser , Sunday School sup! Sun ·
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF day s ~ hool , 10 ·30 o .m worsh•p
CHRIST , Mr . Donald Roley . pastor . 7·JO ll m B1bfe Study , Wednes Sundoy sc hool , 9.30 a m ., war · day , 7·30 p m : Sat~Jrday n1ght
ship service , 10.30 a.m. , Sunday prayer se rviCe. 7·30p ,m .
serv1ces . 7 p m ; youth group,
HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN .
Wednesday , 7 p .m
Roger WatsOrJ, ,; pastor Kt.nnelh
A.NTIQUITY BAPTIST Re v Earl Byer StJnday school supt Morn
Shuler , pastor 51Jnday school ing worship . 9·30 o m · Sun ·
q 30 o.m ; Church serv1CE-r 7 p .m .. dayschool , 10:30 a .m .; e... enmg
youth meetiog. 6 p m f1'esdoy B1 · service. 7:30 . Wednesday B1ble
ble Study 7 p m .
Stu dy. 7:30pm .
RACINE
CHURCH OF
THE
MT. UNION BAPTIST Rev John
NAZARENE . Rev . John A Cofl · El swick . pastor: Sunday school
man pastor . Frank lin Imboden , supe r intendent, Don W ilson Sun ·
chairman of the Boord of Chris - day school , 9 45 o .m ., even1ng
lion Life Sunday School , 9 30 worship , 7.30 p m
Praye r
o.m · morning worshtp , 10·30, mBQtmg , 7.30p .m Wednesday .
Sunday evening worship , 7:30
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
p.m Prayer meetmg . Wednes - CHURCH . EIJgene Underwood ,
day . 7.30p.m .
pastor. Howard Co ldwell . J1. ,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don l. Sunday School Sup t ., S1Jnday
Walker . Pastor . Ronnie Salser , School, 9.30 a .rn , Mornmg Ser·
Sunday school svpt .. Sunday man , 10 30om , Sunday eventng
school, 9 30 a .m . morning war · service, 7 p .m
sh•p, 10 40 o .m . Sunday evenmg
lETART
FAllS
UNITED
worsh1p , 7.30, Wednesday e11en· BRETHR EN Rev Freeland Nom s,
pastor Floyd Noms . supt Sunday
•ng 81ble study . 7:30
DANVIllE WESLEYAN , Rev R. school 9·30 am ; mornmg ser·
0 Brown , pastor. Sunday School , mon, 10·30 am , Prayer serv 1ce .
930 om .; mormng worsh1p Wednesday . 7·30p m
10 AS youth se rv ice, 6 &lt;IS p.m ..
CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO
~ven•ng worsh•p . 7 30 p.m .. PHECV , O .J. White Road off 1b0.
prayer and praise Wednesday , Rev . George Croy le. postorSun
7·30 P m
day School, 10 a .m .. Arthur Hen SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST
son . Sup t .. Morning Wor ship . 11
Mites Trout , pastor
Sunday a.m . Young People 's service . 7
sc hool 10 a .m .: Sieve Liffle. supt
p.m Evenmg service. 7·30 p .m .
Evening serv1ce 7 p m : prayer Wednesday Mid· Week Prayer
meeting Thursday 7p.m
Service, 7.30 p . m ..
Youth
CHESTER
CHURCf10F
GOO. meettng . 6 30 p .m . Evenm g war Rev . Bobby Porter , pastor Sun · sh 1p , 7:30p .m
worsh ip
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE f
dav sc hool. 9 :30 o.m
ser...tce , II a .m ; evening serv1ce, NAZARENE , Rll'v · He rber t Grate ,
7,30 • youth service, Wednesday , pastor Worsh•p serv •ce , 11 a.m.
7 30 P m
'
and 7 30 p .m. Sunday 1, Sunday
lANGSVIllE
CHRISTIAN School , 9 30om . Rtchord Borton .
CHURCH . Robert MIJ sse r pastor . stJpt . Praye r meeting , Wednes ·
StJ ndoy schadl 9·30 a .m .: Roy day . 7·30p .m
Sigmon . supt .. morning wars~·up
BRADFORD ' CHURCH
OF
10.30; Sunday evemng serv ice . CHRIST Gabnel Mzrs , pastor. B1 ·
1 30, m id· week stHVIt:;e , Wednes- ble Sunday School9 ·30 am mar ·
day , 7 30p m .
nmg church 10·30 om .. Sund ay
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE evening serv1ce .
7 00 p m
NAZARENE , Rev
Dale Bo ss , Wednesdoy ser..,ice. 7·30 p m
po sl or. Bob Moore, Sunday
lAUREl CLIFF FREE METHODIST
School supl .. Sun day school , 9:30 CHURCH . Rev. Flo yd F Shook .
om .: mornmg worship , 10:45 pastor : Ll oyd Wright
StJnday
o.m .; evangelistic serv1ce. 7 p .m . School Supt. . Morning Worsh1p
Wednesday servtces prayer 9:30 a .m .: Sunday School 10' 20
and prot se , 7 p m , N&lt;Jzarene am .. Wednesdoy Prayer and Bi·
youth 7 p .m
Doily proy~r ble Study 7:30p.m : Sunday even ·
meet1ng . 8 30 o m Mens prover ing worship 7:30p .m ., Ch oir Pro c
meetmg, Saturday , 7 p m•
IKe Thu rsday , 7 p .m .
EDEN UNITED 8RETHREN IN
DEX TER CHURCH OF CHR IST,
CHRIST , Elden R. Blake . pastor • Charles Russell. Sr .. mmiste r .
Sunday School 10 o.m : Howard R1ck Macomber sup! . Sunday
McCay . sup!. · Mor~lng sermon
school. 9.30 a .m .: wor~h1p ser·
11 o.m : Sunday n1ght serv1 ces vice , 10.30a .m Btbl eS tu dy . lues·
Chmtton Endeo'.lor, 7:30 p m
doy, 7.30 p m.
Son g servic e. 8 p.m Preoch tng
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
Midweek
Prayer JESUS CHRIST OF lATTER DAY
8·30 p .m .
meeting, Wednesday . 7 p m Roy SAINTS Por!lond Ro dne Rood .
Adams . loy leader .
w,ll,om RotJ sh , pa stor Russell

Moddleporl

Pomeroy, Ohio

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

WHY IS IT EVERY-

POMEROY
BEN FRANKLIN STORE

TIMe I START
TO GET ON MY
FEE1i OOMEONE
PULLS fljE RUo

Home lite Saws

1'11. 985 -3308

Vo Sunday Bib le Study 10 o ,m .,
Ratcli ff (hurch sc hool D~r ector
Sunday School 9·30 o .m , Morn· Worshtp 11 a .m . and 7 p m . B1ble
ing worship. 10·30 om · Sun day Study Wednesday 7 p m , Vocal
cve nm g serviC e 7 p m . Wednes · mUSIC
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOO.
day even1n!:J pray er services . 7 30
Duddmg lone, Mason , W Vc
p m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIS'f Rev Eorl Chester Tennant, Pastor Sunday
Shuler pastor. Worship serviU! . School 9·45 a m.; Ch1ldren s
- 9 30 o m . S1Jndoy school. 10 30 Church 6·45 p m Voung People's
am . Bible Study and prayer ser· Se rv ~ee 6' 45 p m EvangelisTIC
Service 7 30 p m Women 's M1 s
vic e Thursday 7 30 p m .
CARLETON CHURCH . Kingsbury sionory Council 10 am f~r st and
Rood . Gory King . pa stor. Sunday th ird Tuesday s. Prayer and Bible
school, 9:30 a.m ., evenin g war· Study . Wednesday , 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
ship , 7 30 p m Prayer mee ting,
IN CHRISTIAN UNION . The Rev .
Wednesdoy ,,7 30p .m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Wilham Campbell pas to r. Sunday
Bruce Smtth , peste r. Wall ace School . 9·30 a.m .: James Hughes.
Damewood Sup! B1b le School , sup!., e11ening service . 7.30 p .m.
prayer
Preach1ng serv1c;e, Wednesday evening
9 30 o m
meeting, 7.30 p m . Youth prayer
10 45 am No even1n g servtce .
serv1 ce each Tuesday
..
HVSEL~ RUN FREE METHODIST
FAIRVIEW
BIBlE CHURCH .
CHURCH Rev Herber t Ailing ,
poste r Su'!doy School 9·30 o m , letart, W.Va ., Rt. 1, Re 11 Charle s
Hargraves, pos1or . Warshtp ser·
Morntng service
10 30 a m ..
youth
service
6 · 45
p .m . v1ces. 9 30 o .m . Sunday school ,
1\ am . even1ng worsh1p , 7 30
Evangelistic ' service 7 30 p m
Tuesday cottage prayer
Prayer meet1ng . Thu r sday . 7·30 p. m
meeting and 81ble study , 9 30
p .m.
•
FREEDOM GOSPEl M~SSION of am Worsh1p se rv1ce, . Wednes·
Bold
Knob
Re v
LCwrence day , 7·JOp m
CAlVARY BIBLE CHURCH. 26 N
GltJesencomp Sr .. pastor ; Roger
Middleport
Alan
Willford Sr . Sunday school supt. Second .
Sunday sc hool 9.30 a ... Sunday Blackwood , pastor Services on
evening service. 7 p .m . Prayer Sunday at 10·@0 a.m . and 7,30
meehng , Tuesday . 7 30 p m. p .m . with Sund&lt;Jy school at 9·30
Ernest Deeter , doss leader . a.m . Bib le study . Wednesday .
You th meeting , Wednesday . 7:30 7·30 p .m .
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
p m. w1fh Don and Martha
CHURCH . INC.
Corner Four1h
Meadows . leaders.
and lmco ln Sts-. Middleport · R(lv .
W~lllE S CHAPEL, Cool vi lle RD
Rev Roy Deeter , pastor . Sunday O 'Dell Man ley . pastor ; Sony Hud·
schoo19 JO o m ., worship serv tce , son , Sunday School superir~ten ·
10·30 a m 81ble sttJdy and prayer denl. Sunday sc hool. 9:30 a m.;
e11ellmg worshtp , 7:30 p . m ..
serv1ce , Wednesday , 7 30p .m.
prayer and
praise service.
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHU RCH OF CHRIST, Wednesday, 7 30p.m .
THE PEOPLE 'S CHURCH OF
Dennts Sm1th
pastor; Fronk
Young ,Sundcy sc hool sup! Sun · POM,~ROY - Corner Main and
day scho9 l ond ·comm un ion , 9·30 Court Sts , third floor over
Henry
o.m
Worsh1p and comun1on , L•ghthoiJse Restau rant
Coole , pastor Sunday school , 10
10 30 a .m .
RUTlAND
COMMU NITY o m ; morn1ng worship , 11 a m ..
CHURCH . Sunday School 9.30 evenmg service , 7 30 Wednes ·
o.m , worship service . 11 o.m . day even1ng service , 7 30. In ·
Wednesday prayer meeting , 7·30 terdenom1no tiono l . full gospel
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO p .m youth serv ic es. Sunday 7
Pastor Oenn1s Bales
Sunday
p.m Sun day night worship . 7:30.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE School, 10om. worsh1p service .
NAZARENE , Rev. ll oyd 0 . Grimm . 11 30 o .m and 7:30 p .m . Prayer
Jr ., pa stor . Sunday school , 9:30 meetmg , Wednesday . 7:30p .m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
o.m ., worship serv ice. 10:30 a.m .
Broadcast li ve ever WMPO : yotJng OF JESUS CHRIST , Thomas L.
peoples
se rv i ce .
6 : 45 . Ho lmes . pastor. Bible study ,
evongeltstic service. 7.30 p.m . Saturday . 7·30 p .m .: Evangelistic
Prayer meet1ng . Wednesday 7 30 p .m .; prayer meeting Tuesday .
p.m , MI SSIOnary meeting , 7 30 7:30pm .: B1ble St udy , Thu rsday .
7:30p .m
p .m ft rst Wed nesda y of month
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
MASON COUNTY
FIRST SOUlHERN BAPTIST , Cor· HOLINESS - Hermanville Rood ·
ner ol ';econd and Anderson . Dewey King , pastor, Edison
Mmoh Pa stor Fra nk Low ther. Weaver . assistant ; Henry Eblin ,
' undoy schoo l 9.45 a .m ., w ar· Jr . Sunday schoo l sup!. Sunday
sh •p .serv1ce , 11 a .m . and 7,30 school . 9 30 a m ., morning wot
p m
We e kly
Btbfe Study , shtp, 11 a .m . Sunday evening ser
v•ce , 7 30 , prayer meeting . Thurs·
Wednesday . 7 30p.m .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P. day , 7.30 p.m
SYRAC USE FIRST CHURCH OF
0 . Box 48 7. Mil le.- St , M osen, w.

Chesler

GOO - Not Pentecostal , Rev.
George Oiler, pasto r. Worsh1p
serv1ce Sunday 9 45 a .m ., Sun ·
day school. II o m . worsh•p ser·
v•c e, 7·30 p .m ThiJrsday prayer
meeting, 7&lt;J!J p .fT1
M T. HERMON United Brethren
Church . Sunday School 9·.JO a m
Worship !ervtce 10 45
o. m
Preach1ng .serv1ce s eVe ry Sunday
alternating w1th C. E Wednesday
prayer meetmg 7·30 p m . Rev.
David
James leach . paslor
Holter . lay leader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 mile
cost of Rullo nd , junct ion of Route
124 and Noble S1Jmm1t Rood (T
174) . Sunday Sible LecttJre. 9 30
a.; Watchtower study . 10 30
a.m .; TtJesdoy . Bible study . 7 and
8: 15 p .m .: Thursday , theocrclic
school , 7:30
p m ..
servic;e
meeting. B.JOp.rn .
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St ..
M1ddlepor l. Bobby Elkm s, poslar.
Sunday School , 10 a.m ., worship
service, 11 a m .. evening service,
7 30 p .m . Thursday
prayer
meehng and B1ble study, 7 30
pm
RUTlAND FREEWill BAPTIST
Church - leland Holey , pastor.
Sunday schoo l, 10 a.m ; evening
~ l'!f :VICe ,
7 30 p m
Pr&lt;Jye r
meet1ng, Wednesday. 7·30 p .m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy .
located on the 0 . J White Rood
off highway 160. Sunday School
Superintendent John
10 a .m
Loveday. Fir st Wednesday night
of month CPMA services . second
Wednesday WMB mee ting . lh ird
lhrough fifth
yaiJth
serv ice .
George Croyle, pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570
Grant Sl ., Middleport , ~ev Bobby
Elkms . Sunda y school. 10 a.m ..
mormng worsh1p , 11 ; e'Wening
worsh ip, 7.30 p.m, Th"Ctrsdoy
evenmg B1bl e study ·llld prayer
meeting, 7·30 p .m. Affiliated with
SBC
HYSEll
RU ·N
FREE
METHODIST- Rev . Herbert Ail·
mg. pa stor. Sunday school , 9.30
o.m : morn1ng worsh tp , 10: 15 to
11 o m . E11on.Qelisi 1C serv1ce , 7 30
p.m .. prayer meetmg , 7 p m .
Thursday
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHR IST- Gabriel Mroz, pastor
StJnday school 9 30 o.m ; morn ing church . 10·30 om . Jun1or
chu rch program under dir~ction
of Koren Mraz for children . 2-10,
duri ng regular chlJrch hour in
~,;hurc h basement. Sunday even ing se r vice. 7 p .m .: Wednesday
S~r vice , 7.30 p .m
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER George's Creek Rood Church
school , 9"30 o .rn ., morning worsh ip , 10 '10, evening serv ice 7:30.
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30
pm .
ST . PAUL lUTHERAN CHURCH .
Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sis. , Pomeroy . The Rev . W ill iam

!'~OM

Pomef"oy, Ohio

• COME ON, WI NNI";
CHEEQ UP' fljE
WOQLD DIDN'T
COME TOAN

YOU ?

END '

UN DEQ

ME, ?

M1ddle sworth , Pastor
Sunday
School ot 9;45 a.rn and Ch'urch
Serv1ces 11 o m
SACRED HEAR I , Rev . Father
Paul D. We l ton , post01 Phone
992· 2825 Saturday even~ng Mo ss .
7:30: Sunday Mo ss , 8 and 10 a .m.
Confession Sat urday 7·7.30p .m.
CHRISTIAN BAPTIST - On the
Route 7 bypass . James E Keesee
pa slor Sund ay school 10 a .m .
mornmg worsh1p , 11 o .m even·
ing se rvice . 7.

... what I wu'Z swore
I hope I ain't sa4
an4thin" I shouldn't! I do when I come in

jes· spoke
tn truth,

Yer

Laurel Oiff

here!

Report
baclt. to

Three Pac 8 teams are still hopeful

-the

jur4

room,
ma'am!

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Three Pacific Eight teams
still have a shot at a Rose
Bowl berth, but the latest
conference statistics are
dominated by two teams that
have been knocked out of
contention.
Southern Cal tops the
conference in total offense
(456.5 yards per game) and
IDtal . defense {274.2). The

Friday, November 18

BRIDGE

News Notes
The Free Methodist Church
members held their Sunday
morning services at the
elementary school. The
evening service was held at
the county infinnary.
. Mrs . Mabel Tracy remans
a patient at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called Sunday
morning for Mrs. Georgia
Diehl who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for medical treatment.
Mark Stahl of Stockdale
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mrs: Ruth Douglas of
Guysv1lle spent an evening
recently with her mother
Emma Fox .
'
Mrs. Madlyn Chaffin was
host Tuesday evemng to ten
members and one guest
Robin Campbell, of thJ
Laurel Cliff Health Club. The
birthdays of Leona Karr
Della Curtis and Georgi~
Diehl
were
ob•erved .
Refreshments we•c •erved
and games were won hy
Bertha Parker a nd Ann
Mash.
Mrs. Polly Hysell has been
returned
home
from
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Floyd Shook was 8
patient in Holzer Hospital for
a couple of days but has been
returned home.

OH,__IOI IWIE , HOW
Dl v I EVER GET
A LONG Wti!jOIJT

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

'
, North knows a better "way
18

~ORTH

AT THORf-JAPPLf-' 1CATl\JWr1Nio i'JcAII\l'.

• 43 2

D1Sft&gt;RAL£FUL., i.HIF.F! H~'&lt;;

t A965
&lt;lo K 52

HI&lt;; OWtJ l(l()f&lt;!&lt;;T l'tJ!&gt;M\{ 1

WEST
• Q 10 6
• QJ 8 6

• 10 8
•Jl098

EAST
• J 9
• 10 9
t K .1 7 4 3 2

•Q64

SOUTH 1D1
,j.AK753
• A K 75

• Q
"'A 7 3
Both vulnerable
West

~urth

East

IT 'S SORTA CHILLY
TONIGHT, JUGHAID--

8E SHORE
AN' COVER

UP REAL
GOOO!!

hand'~

lour ordinary words

At trick two he should lead
a low heart. 1£ hearts break
S-1 he wasn't going to make
h1s contract m any event. If
they broke 3-3 all heart plays
would be equaL
After this play a second
club would be led . South

TADAP

would win m dummy, cash

I KJ

his ace-king of spades and
ace-kmg of hearts. Then he
So ulh
1•

BARNEY

three spades.
' North replied . "I would
have 1f I had known you
'il'Jt~~
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
were going to misplay four
~ \9 ~~®
byHenriArno!dandBoblee
spades."
Do you see how South Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
should have played the one letter to eacll square, to form

m'\l

• 842

BORN LOSER

Trojans also· have the
toughest ground game (271.7)
and the toughest ~efense
against the run ( 137.8) . In
addition, USC has surrendered just 15.7 points per
game.
California has the top
passing attack ( 265.1 ), the
best pass defense ( 118.7) and
is scoring at a 29.7 point per
game clip.

Pass l N. T. Pass 3 •
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 •
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - J •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacob~
South playe,d the hand
quickly and meffectovely. He
took his ace of clubs, cashed
lhe ace and king of trumps
and ace and king of hearts.
Then he led a third heart. •
West won, cashed the
queen of trumps and la st
high heart. Then the defense
waited to set the hand with a
club trick . South wanted to
know why North hadn't bid
three notrump rather than

would ruff hls last heart in
dummy and relax . .

~~~~Jl§l
The

s&lt;:~me

.

I K] _ I' I

Nebraska

reader wanted to. know if
a ny husband and wife had
ever won either the Vanderbolt or the Spingold .
Yes . In 1962 the late Carolyn Levitt won the Vallder·
bill with her husband J erry,
Garrett Na~h, Larry Kolker
and George de Runtz
• N ~: WS PAP I-: t! 1 : /I.' TF: !ti'I US~~

ASSN

f

(For a copy of JACOBY MOOs(H)d sr to · wm at
Brtdge • ca re o f Th 1s newspa·
oer P 0 Sol( 489. Radt o Ct ly
Statton New YorK . N Y 10019)

ERN

IKUPHOQ !
SHAVIN

WHAT THOSE FCUM0~5
AI'SOUT THE
DRINKER WERE.
Now arrange the .c1rcled letters to
form the surpflse answer, as sug·
gested by the above car1oon

I I I
Answer here: " [

I I XXXI X]''
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles: TRIPE

BERTH

JARGON

ANYONE

Answer· Might lake tile train and follow her I -

A TRAINBEARER

..l!..fttil Book No. 10. wilt'! lhl . _ 110 pwztR. II~ for $1 35 poll·
pMJ tram JlMTible, eJo 1tiS
1 J*, Boll34, NoriliDod, N.J. 01141. 1ndi.dl
your fW'I"4, lddrtrel, :q, oodl81ld n-. thecb ~ ~&gt; ••• r r IJOCka.

'*"

�u - w• Da_!ly Senti~el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov, 18,1977

SPECIALS • THANKSGIVING ~
m
0

THANKSGIVING
' \\

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111

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tl • )'tl &gt;'•HI :i 1..1
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\It oil
.1

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1-1 \
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o,

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fi{IJol l

I'

I·

I' ' ' "' ' . -·

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

'h•• J,tl

r.r . ... l,ol
, '"' " 1"1' pulul•

olio n

:-.und,11
&lt; f' \1

r

IN LOVI NG memory ol our dee r
, father Ste11e Eb l1n who passed
owoy tw o yE&gt;OfS ago today
A heart of go ld stopped beor rng
Two shrn1r1g ~yes ot te$1
•
God broke our hearts 10 prove TO

u•

He only lakes the best,
God know s you had to leo~&lt;e us ,
But you dodn t go al one
For po rt of us wenT wtth you
The doy He too~ you home
Its o lone some house wrthout
you
And sod has been !he" way
Fo r lrfe and home ore not the
some
S1nce you were coiled away
Sad ly missed by child ren Edith ,
Artre . Madel ine
Myrtle ,
Grorldchildren a nd Great
Grondchtldren .

GUN SHOOT Ra crne Gun Clu b
every Su11 afternoon Foetor
• Choc k guns only Assorted
meals
THE RE WILL be no huntmg no
tr esposst ng end no ell'ceptiom
an my propl!rty Bob McGraw
THE RACINE Volunteer Fire
Depo rtment wt ll sponsor o gun
shoot e very Saturday o1•7 p.m.
at therr bu ddmg rn Boshon Foe·
tory choke guns .only
SLUG SHOOT Sunday No11ember
20. hook Walton Form near
Chester
1'] 00
Hams and
turkeys os nzes .
BLACK DIAMO ND l1noment
Groodpo Wonder Pme for
Soop F Guthrre. 33 Townsend
Athens . Oh1o
WANTED · IN corpcol to Porker
sgu rg 7 3 30 om $hilt. Coli
742-2170

~.w'Hd'
THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Italian
I Firulish
bell
by

town

DOWN
I Out of
tile money

2 Thespian
3 Chamberlain
or Eden :

2wds.
1 Apiece
5 Exempted
6 Heaped
7 She : Fr.
8 Address for

2wds.
15 Singer
Jones
16 More
callow
17 Depended
(upon)
19Give whirl :

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•279.95

FOR SALE

OPPORTUNITIES

Pomeroy Landmark

9.,
6il.

12 'liJ MOBILE HOME Good cond•t ron Lorge yard 1 mrle
Roc1ne. 992-5858
NEWLY REMODELED 7 room house
pl1.1s bathroom s, 1 up and I
down Has oil ulllrttes plus 10
acres of ground 5 minutes lo
•-rda ' _._a
Pomeroy
$215 per mo
Y es..c
1
Y .I'LII.IIWer
9~2 - 5970 or 992-6270.
12 Fountain
25 English
HOUSE FOR ren t 4 roo ms Furilem
play wright
niS hed . Aduli&gt; 949-2597 .
II Overlay
Z1 Cut
:T-:'O.':l::E..:Ac-:SC'E'-'O:':R~Re'-n'-'IC:..:O"'Id'-'--':P-ro-voco
with gold
Z8 Athirst
build;ng' 991-3677 .

18 Row

3Down :

Zl Nimb119
Z2 Of the sea
Z3 Salubrlo119

2wds.
11 S, Amer.

.,..._:~L_,.,..-

30 Prong
3% Hindu
festival
34 Shinto ·

U Attack

20 Temperate
21 Freshly
2% Intellect
23 Overwbe~
2-tCurse

~-1---l---1

25 Golf
scores
Ui SUkwonn
27 Expand
29 - Chapel
31 Stadium
shout
33 Lead
on
34 - illy
35 Young
one
36Bad

COA L lt mestone , ond colc 1um
c hl o r~d e and colctum brme for
dust cont rol ond special m1xtng
so h for former s, Excelsior Soh
Works. Mom Stre4t Pomeroy ,
Oh 1o or phone 992- 3891.
CAMPER , $600. Also . horse
trorler , $450 Phone (614) 6983290 .
ECO NOMY TRACTOR wrlh all ot toc hmenfs L•ke new . osk mg
$2250 Pho(le (614) 698-3290.

-+-t--1 APPLES.
Stole

FITZPATRICK Occhords
Rout e 689
Phon e
Wi lk esville . 669-3785
RUG S, WALL Hongr ngs and
ofgon s Nice for Chris tmas.
Reas onable . Coll 992-2214

guy
37 Make

t...-1.-.1..--1_,.,! N.C R. 299 Boo kkeep rn g machine .

over

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's
Is

how to \YOrk It :
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One le tle r simply stands for another. ln t his umple A i1
u sed for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. S ingle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wo rds are all
h ints. Ea ch day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQIJOTES
ZY

FD
BYUZOK

FOR SALE or trad e or la nd con·
tract . 2 bedroom house in
Rutland 992-5858
FOR SALE or Re nt 1974 Schultz
Mobde Hom e. 12 ;.; 65 20 K 8
slide-out . Total -e lectric . Pn vo te
lo t {614) 667-3305.

2wds.

'

~

IIIJI.-

It I I !- tt,ld,
i I' \1

13 Agitate
11 Wrong
about :

.

CALL US
Pomeroy landmark

'\ ~•I I 1\ \,l iUtd H ~

C&lt;&gt;W'Se

IIC Ktl OF [l v,, t're~l-.-.y to the
11MBERLANO OW NERS Do you IF 'f'OU hoH• a !ienotce to ott er
Crvrc CentN Good cond•h on
want to bu~ or :.ell someth rng
n(&gt;ed ht-lp '" monogu'lg you r
) 411188 ssoo
oc loo ~ ong lo1 wool..
, 01
.... oodiQnd.-. ond modo.etmg your
w hot~v ~~.~.
you I! get re sult s
t.mbf&gt;r? Meads stoff of profei
B &amp; S MOBilE HOMES Pt Plea
ta ster v. oth a Sentinel Wont Ad
~,anal f or e)ters 11 ovo1loble t o
sent W Vo bestde Hec-k s.
Coli QQ'}715b
ofle• you a$S•sr ance at no cos t
1973 8roodmore 14 ~ 04 1
Mead con ouure you of d1,..er
bttdr oorn
~~~ · ed
markets
comple te lo,;t and found
1973 Oor ron 1~ :o: 60 "}bedroOm
t11nber u11lozohon tndud•ng
1n2 Vrctortcn 141 ,. 67 3 be1.h uo•n
.... hole tree chtpptng and super - LOST 21 ro Ue on Boll Run Rood
2 both
vt sed ho rv esl1n9 programs
Rewor d
offere d
Phone 1972 Coventry 12 )( 65 3 bed room
de~ogned to protect you r fo nds
qq'} 7810
1969 · Slotesmon 17 I( 60 2
and promote umber growth
bed room
WHilE
MAlE
poodle
los
t
II'
H01
For detmls call collect or wnte
JQ72 ARISTOCRAT
18 Travel
fiSOil\ldle 7-f2 2150
MEAD PAPER:
Wood
&amp;
lra tler
e,~~ c ellenl
co ndtt oon
Woodland~ Dept
PO Boa )91
S2 400 Colt 991-3580.
..to c kson
Oh 1o
4564 0 . Auto Sa.lt"!i
Tele ph one 614 '186 286B
JQ76 SUZUK I RM 125 . E.o. cellent
1971 PONTIAC CATALINA S~ors
condrtron '147 38bl
FlEA MARKET Nov 19lh a nd 10th
~tereo
recorder .
Phone:
Roon e lt!g•o n Ha ll Tob iE&gt;s
lOWR EV GENIE organ Modf'l 44
CW1-7453.
rented for 52 pe r day Colt
Has 2 ke~boord s wrth oc
19b9
FORD
VAN
$100
Needs
Q4Q ')7'1J or 949-2428
compOfHmenl pl us burlt m lope
work Phone ~2 - 3 462 oiler 6
reco rder bench and books
pm
Would make nrce Chnstrnos
We Are No w
g•ft Coli 9-6 (304} 773 5777
197.:1 SUNBUG VW Go ld Spe( tol
Taking Ne w
Alrer 6 94Q 218S, ask for Jock
mter ror sunroof rod•o 28
mpg . Rodrols . 985-4277 alte r 6
Customers For
WARM MORN ING Cool Stove .
loke-new . 65 000 BTU bottltt gas
1973 VOLKSWAGON SUPER Bee and heolrng stove. 992 -7253 or
tle. Run$ good Pnced rtght
see WoherHoggy on New limo
949 -2559
Rood alter I '1
1975 FORD VA N Full y cu&lt;&gt;tomu1977 CHE VY STEPSIDE pt e ~ up 350
ed P.S P B TV plus more
cu.m 4 bb! Porlly customrted
$4 SOO . Phone 992 7158
slung pr rc e
$5 .400
Col!
1977 CHEVROLET SCOTTSDALE 29:9-2-2912 .
tone sltdong glos'&gt; wmdow .
rear step bumper 30S. 3- 1970 VW BUS reburll t?ng Go~
heater Rodooltor es some rusl
speed 992· 5671
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
24 mtles pe r gallon . 992 5980
1973 MONTE CARLO . A.C. , P S
.....
Phone992-2181
PB
AM tope
Good gas 1977 PASSENGER VAN . A.C EKt ro
mtleoge . Excellen1 cond•t•on .
seaT 3 000 mrle . 992 -5770.
742-2020 alter-b.
FIREWOOD Any lengThs or any
- R:;
O..:
lE
:'::T:"':c
M-:0-:N-::Tc:E-:C
:-o-cl:o-.
I9-75 _C_H_EV
omounl Del ivered or may
P.S , P 8 A C tope playe r.
ptckup Phone 949-'1563
Phone 992 -2628 .
1976 VW BUS Compmobole 13,800
EXPE RIENCED REFRIGERATOR ond
m1les Still under worrenty .
app liance serv•cemon Pood
AM -FM slervo conelte player
hol tdoys
vacol rons and
SS,SOO Co1 199'1-S933
hospllolizot oo n
Gollta
STAIKR AFT FALL Sole M1ni ,
Relr1gerolor Co 61 1 3rd Ave .,
motors 20' ond 22' TraVel
GaHrpoJrs Oh..-:'"'
0 ~~Trailers, 18 5 S3 7'19, 25' 7 ·
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fold down ,
HELP WANTED. Mole or Fe male.
$1,70Q up We sell ~ervoce and
Med1 col hc hnol og tst Accep·
Let Pomeroy Landmark
trng cpplrcotrons fo r ful l lime
qu ol•ly Open Sunday$ Camp
soften &amp; condrtion your
Conley Storcralt So le s, Rt 62 ,
permanent
t echn olo g i st .
water and Co-op water
Resumes or opplrcotrons may
N of PI Pleasant
softe ner , Model UC -SVI .
be motled 10
Now Only
Veterans Memroool Hospo tal Box 1975 CAVALCADE TRAVEL Tre der
self-contorned. A C.. ro ll up
7.:19
Mulberry
Heighls ,
le1 us 1est your water Free
Pome roy , Ohoo 457Ml (6 14) ~wnrng 992 -27:~9'-'4'-.- - - 992-2104 .
1972 ARISTOCRAT 18 Travel
Tro rler . Excellent conditron
New Co -Op water and
$2 400 Call 992-3580
softeners , model V'C-SVI .
ST ARCRAFT WINTER Sole on
Only 5279.95
M1n1s trollers , a nd fold,downs
Save sso .oo on a new
Used units in s tock Open SunHotpoint Refrigerator
S8 , 100 for education,
day Camp Conley Sla rcroh
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
Soles , Rl . 62 N of PI . Plea$ont .
75 per cent of yo ur
Freer:er
$25 .00 Discount
Co l lege tuition free ,
(I } Good Refrigerator !$175
Upr1ght Freezer
S2?5
Col lege
Level
1 Good Used Holpoint
Examinat•on
Free,
THREE OR FOUR room opt . or
1
Refrigerator
S125
An Assoc iate Degree
.small tro1ler in Pomeroy or M•d ·
1
Lancaster
Chain
Saw
S75
dleporl oreo 992 -7 189
through
the
1 Good Used Hotpoint
Community
College
Eled ric Stove
S85
of the Air Force. 30
1 Good Used Unico
Washer
S99
days paid vacation , 7
3 AND 4 RM. lurnrshvd and un·
paid 3 day weekends,
lurnrshed opts Phone 992
5434
good starting pay and
_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
FOUR ROOMS and both Adu lts
much
mor e .
Phone 992-2181
No
pets
.
992-5908.
only.
Interested?
COU NTRY MOBILE Home Por k.
Contact me, Vernon·
Route 33, nort h of Pome roy FAMILY MILK Cows . Guernsey
Zeger, your Air Force
Lorge lots . Coll 99'1-7479
Red Herfers and calves Don
Representative.
Mora 992-7765.
lncred1ble I Wh y pay hrg h electm
For an appointment
bills thts wrnfer? le t us pay 12 GA PUM P 6 shot w•th poly
them lor you t One bed room
choke Good s lug gun $125
in the Pomeroy or
from Sl 30 now available
Also
!trewood on l loc ust
Athens area
phone
1/.llog e Manor , Third end Mill
post~ 74'2. :z.3. s.?:.....--~-592 - 4592 Collect.
Streets M1ddleport . Tele phone
992-7787. Equal Hou$ing Op - 12.5 cuboc If . re lr•gerotor $100
Order No . 9-ct-86
39
e lec tr ic stove . Coli
portunity
7.:12-2170.
BUILDING FOR l ease 5700 sq . ft
store burld rn g w11h full wtn
dows a nd ownrn g in front. 40
cor porktng lo t All on mo1n
thoroughfare in Athens , Ohio,
dose to Ohoo Umvers 1ty Contact : H. Wilkes PO . Bo x 5301 ,
Vre nno, We$ 1 Vrrgrn ro 26105 or
coll1-304-295-9352

---

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

nomad
5 Accelera ted
9 Israeli
port
10 Keeps on

Real htilate

-·-

NOTICE

t- 1 ,j,,, u:.1 u...

Yard Sale

l'mtic..s

1 •ill

z y

BJNBZP
· BYFBQDP

T J

Moin l en on ce
co nt r a ct
ovotlable Programmed to do·
Soles
Report s , Acco unt s
Payable, Payroll . Government
Repo rt s, W 2 f o ~m s a nd write
chec ks Con be programmed lo
do General Ledger and Accounts Recervob le Contact
Carol Wilk es at 304-295-9391 '
1976 FORD F-250 Cus tom 17 SO)(
14 00 tir es · winch . Only 14 ,000
mi . Heoders CB. Tape deck
OYer S3 000 rn ex fros. Senous
co ils only after 12 noon ·
696- 1on $6 aoo

T J fHREE HOR SES, 1 is Wester~

BPBKD

Pleoo;u re 1 mores I •s 'h and 1
is 3/ • Arabian . 992 7084

Yeoterday'o Cryploqaole: OUR AITITUDE TOWARD LIFE
OOUNTS MORE THAN OUR ANCESTRY. -ROY L. SMITH

LIKE-NEW Clormel , case, beg•n·
ners books and s ta nd $100 .
Phone (6 14) 2-47-347 1

I~BNOZOK .-

PBOZYF

(119 77 Kinl f'utUHs Syndlcatr , Int .

·--··

MAIN
POMEROY,
JUST LISTED -

0.

Nice lit1 1e

3 Bdrm . ranch ty pe home.
ca fp e 1ing .
panel in g .
ca rport . other features .
ONLY $13,500 .
JUST LISTED - Th1s 3
ho me
has
a
Bd rm.
ba semen t , n ice kitc he n .
carpeting. other fea tur es.
ASKING 118,000 .00 .
JUST LISTED ~ Appx 19
Acres, most ly woods. close
to
Pom e r oy.
O NL Y
15,000.00 .
FREE GAS - 2 acres, 3 4
Bdrm s., newe r ran ch type
country home, carpeting.
pa neli ng, br ick • &amp; fra m e
construc t ion,
o the r
bui ldings.
AL L
FOR
$35,000 .00.
HELP WITH - VA or F HA
financing . Th is 3 year old
' s paciou s ranch can be
yours for less than you
think . Many features, over
1 acre , close to Pomeroy.
CALL TODAY 137,300.00
OLDER HOME - This 2
stor y frame has more to
offe r than you 1hink , n 1cely
remodeled 3-4 Bdrms .,
mod ern ki t c he n , t u ll y
eq ur pped beauty sa lon to
boot, etc et c $3 1,900 00.
MIDDLEPORT Good
s tr ee t , 2-3 Bdrms. , 2
firepla ces, 1 f loor plan ,
carpet 1n g . CHEAP AT
$13,000 00
NEAR HYDRO UNIT Th1s 2 stor y home could be
tust about w ha t you're
looktng for, access to the
ri ver . ONLY $6 ,900.00 .
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
THE RIGHT PROPERTY,
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU . CALL
TODAY FOR DETAILS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK ; KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
~92 · 2259 or992 6191

for Sale

HOMESil ES lor soh! 1 acre and
up Middleport n~() r Rutland
Coli 99? 7 481
NEW 3 bedroom hous e 2 baths
all elec I OC!e- Middleport
close 10 Rut land Phon e 9CJ2
7481
SMALL form lur ,ole 10• • do w11
o wnPr fonom·ed Monrnc Coun
ly W ' Vo Phone (304) 771 3102 or (304} 771-3727
COU NTR Y tormlond wllh sedud ·
ed woods wote1 ond good ac
cess '" Monroe County W Vo.
$1 000 down calf (304) 772
3102 or (304) 772-3'127
Conu\1ercral properly opp roK . 17
acres level lend lac or~d at
Tuppe rs PI oms on Ohto Route
7 Phone (61.:1 ) 667 -6304
VA -FHA 30 yr ftnon co ng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E. State, A then~o ,
phone (6 U ) 59'1 -3051
2

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house F A fu rnace storm wtn ·
dows fireplace rn Middleport.
Phone 992-3457 or' 99'1 ·5867

SEVEN ROOM house in Moddleport Wall -to wall corpeltng,
2 cor gorog&amp; Good locolro n.
Low pme of S 16 .000 rn2 -2498
FOUR BEDROOM house woth bolh
and ', Central heorrng Fu ll
ba semen t
In
Pomeroy .
992-7074 or991-3465

------2 ' l acre lot

--wrth goroge

ond
cellar Located rn Lat1QS11rll e
Sb SOO Phone 742-2965
10 ACRES · Ru ral area near
Ro crne SuJtoblie~ lor budding or
form•ng J W Archer estate
Brds accepted Contact Mrs L
Morr is , 949-2647 or Barbero
...!~~99~86 -

TEAFORD[B
r'lf Al lOR

IIRGlL B. TEAFOI!D, &gt;R .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom
frame on Sta te Rt. 124
Bath , natural gas furnace,
crty water , fro n t porch and
Reduced to S16 , SOO for
qu1ck sale .
RUTLAND - 4 bedroom
hom e, natural gas , ct ty
wate r , fireplace, 2 ca r
garage and ex t r a lo t.
$14,000
72 ACRES - New fences, 2
farm ponds. o ld bar n , 8
room
house
(modern
mside l. 2 baths, garage
and all mineral s. $37,500 .
NEW LISTING - 9 room
older home in Ra crne. 4
Bedrooms, bath . natural
gas furnace , garage and
large lot . 528 ,000 .
TUPPERS PLAINS Reasonable 3 .,P,edroom
home with bath , ga,~
furna ce,
breezeway ,
garage , and lot 150x200.
Asking just $1 7. 500
57 ACRES - Racine r uraL
Mostl y fenced , s mall
stream, good gambrel root
barn . J car garage, corn
cr ib , 3 bedroo m house,
bath , 2 dri lled wells, on,
good gravel road . Only
119 ,000 .
17S ACRES PLUS - Gas
we ll for your heat ing , 4
bedroo m mode r n home.
bath , fu rnace .. old barn ,
near town . Mineral s . Need
S65,000 .
NEW LISTING - Old 9
room bric k wi th nat ural
gas and city watt£r in
Syra&lt;;u~ with extra tot for
$5,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 room
fra me house wi1h f ireplace,
natural gas furnace , ba th ,
carpeti ng and 2 car garage
for only 113,250.
NEW
LISTING 2
bedroom r emode led frame
home. Fireplace, cistern
water, part ial base ment
and 95 of an acre. Only
$7,500
NOW IS THE TIME TO
SELL. FOR LITTLE COST
AND TROUBLE CALL 9923325.
·- HELENL.&amp;
"GORDON B. TEAFORD
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES .

Business Services
Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

lion.
Call

Prolessionals

Cellulosic ( wolld fiber)
Thermal Insulation

Bissell Siding Co.

save 30 pet . to so pet.
on heating cost
E)l perience and ·
full-; insured

Afoul contract01
Phone 949-2801
01949-2860

Fr~ E~t .

Frte Estimatn

Call667-6479
11 - 14-1 mo. pd .

No Sundfy &amp;ills Please

10-20.1mo. ,

FREE ESTIMATES

r'IR£f'\.AC!S

EFEL
RNR

R•le ! PomtrDJ. 0

Carpet &amp;Uphotstety
Phone Mike Young

WINDOWS
AWMINUM
SIDING-SOffln

At
!192-2206 01 992-7630
"fht 0fii1Qtof1
Not The lmit1ton

GUnERS-AWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
SyTKIM, Ohio
Ph. ~2-l't93

'

'

~

Ntwldta

.,.

Equipment

•1

po1d for oil m"'kes and
modeli of mobile homes
Phone area code 614-423-9531 '

773-5955

I

L1k ln, w . va .

10181rno

CURRENCY . tokens . ~d
pockel wot chei end chains
sr!Yer and gold We need 1964
and older si lver coins. Buy sell
or trade ' Call Roger Wormley,
7•2·2331 ,
FURN ITURE . Ice bo•es, b~s
bttds , rron beds , etc . compJe le
household$ Write M D Mrller .
lh . 4, Pomeroy . Ohio or coli
991-771iJ

PARTS -LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES Ph 37"lSO

Ro..mille,O,

Fores1 Pro

, Pot'T1eroy
ducts. Top Price lor slonding
sow1imber Ca ll 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1·446-8570,

5·27 IFC

!Hlmo

IT EM TOO Lorge or too small
Wt ll buy I prece or co,nplete
household . New , used or onhque li. Ma rtin 's Furniture , 20 N.
2nd St., Mrdd lepor t Phone
992·63 70.

P

CARTER

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Any day , i.nytime.
Phone 985-3806

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomerov 99'1-6282
or 992-6263
8 A.M. to 4 : 30P .M.

Jack's Septic
Tank SeMce

Box 34

Chester, Ohio
10-30 -c

SALES "'NO SERVICE
11 -9-tfc

Kingsbury
Home Sales

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SID1NG
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp;DOWN
SPOUT
Easv
step
by
step

•Mobile
Home·
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
• Tie- Downs
• Awning$- Carports
•Insurance
Repairs

tn~tructions .

ACE HARIMARE
Locoted In

MEIGS PlAZA

See us at 1100 East Main
Street, Pomeroy , Ohio or
Phone 992-7034 . 10-29-lmo .

MiddlePOrt. Ohio
11 ·9-tfc

Let T e Open ng
OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And
•
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE
Be the opening of th e Indoor r.eilson for you wtt h

your

old

fu rni tur e

r e·

from Bob's. II yo u are
look1ng fo r savin vs 1t will
pa11 you to pay us a 111slt .
Located i n back of the Sew
N' Sew Outlet on Main St .
Riltcine , 0 .
11 10 1 mo

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

· · ~ · 195 - 9352 .

---'~c-'-:=.,.-

Service
~
~,._ U•• lei-lett Trlldl
lvtl.to••'
01'

h41e tor to the

'-•·

Ph. 991·ll14

HOOF HOL LOW Horse5 . Buy, sell
trade or trorn New ond used
saddle s Ruth Reeves . Albany
(614 ) 698·3290

APPUANCE
SERVICE

' Pomeroy landmark

flliA

OhiO 45U.9 .

CENTRAL REAL

co.

JUST LISTED - -Step inside the split "toyer of th is
beautiful 3 year old hom e and have a look a1 a nice
livin g room , d ini ng room , k i1chen wi1h bu ilt -In stove &amp;
refrig . and lots of ca b inets. Large family room with
ftreplace 3 Bedrooms, plenty of closets &amp; 2112 baths .
Tota l electr rc with central a tr . O ne acre land . Located
in 5 Po ints area eas1 of Rt 7 Shown by appointment.
$45.000.
MIDDLEPORT - SPAC IOUS HOME TO FIT YOUR
BUDGET . 3 Bedroom, lovely carpeted li v ing room ,
w it h sliding glass doors , fa mily room with fireplace ,
nice dining room , kitchen with lots ttf cabinets. All
remodeled inside &amp; o ut. Corner lot Close to schools &amp;
s hopptng area . A "st ea l" a1 S21,500. Shown by
appo intm_ent on\ ~ ·
FREE . GAS - Why worr y about the high cos t of
heating yo ur home, ou tsi de ti ghts, heating your water,
drying your clothes. etc. We ' ll sell you your ow n ga s
we t I. Not only that we' It t hrow in a good 1 11:~ story house
w1 th 3 bedrooms and bath , nice dtntng room and full
basement, also ove r 50 acres of land with a large
beauti ful pond stocked with fi sh . Ca ll for appo intment.
Price d for quick sale a t .$37,500.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT ~ ll/2 acres of levelland . nice
12x64 all c arpe1ed mobrle home with 2 BRs, li ving
room , ki tc hen and bath . 2 rooms budt on, nice family
room wi th fireplace, plenty of garden space, some fruit
tr ees. Large workshop and block cellar. Ctty wa1er and
septic tank. Nice cou ntry set1i ng on County Rd . 28.
Price $15,900 .
'
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom' house wi th
bath. Two more s mall bedroOms could be f inis hed
upstairs Also garage , storage building, stra~berry
patch and garden space Driveway Is electric heated .
Ni ce Ohio R iver view. Furniture can be bought extra .
P rice for quick sale. House and lot, $12 ,600.
CALL JIMMY DEEM AT949-2388

EXC AVATING , dozer , backhoe
and drtche r Charles R. Hatfield . Bock Hoe Se rvice,
Rutla nd, Ohi o Pho ne 74'1 -2008

SA
ON
CARPETING .

Will do roofmg , construc tion ,
p lu mbing ond heotmg No tab
too Iorge or too small . Phone .
742·2348.

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
RegularS6.95
Save 54.88 Sq Yd .

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY
leoluring Ash leys ond co mplete selection of coal . ga s,
wood clrc ulol 1ng heaters .
Corpenler (614) 698-7 191.
WINDOW CLEANING Cammer·
co1l · Restden tiO I. New Con
struction Cleanup Ree l - Clean
Window Co Phone 992-7018.

------

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. •

--

HOWERY AND MA RTIN E'·
co ve ting , septrc systems ,
dozer . bac khoe. dump trlfck.
limes1one, grovel , blo ckl op
pa v1 ng , Rt 143 Phone I (614)
698· 7331.
BATHROOMS AND K1tchens
remodeled. ceramiC lil'l, plum·
brng , carpen try , and general
motntenance . 13 years eKpe rieme. 992-3685

---

HOMEW ORK ERS $85 wee~ly oddn&amp;ssing stuffing envelopes
Start •mmedootely
Detrols
rush 25 1 and sell addressed
stomped envelppe
Bestco
3209 N.W, 75 1h Te rrace . Dept
C981 , Hollywood, Flo 3l024

--

BRADFORD Au ctioneer . Com - WI LL CARE for the elderly rn our
plete SEHIIice . Phone 949 2487
home . Phone992-731-4 ,
or 949-200J Roc me. Ohio Crill ----~
PIANO TUN ING
Lone Do nrels
Bradford
New phone number , 992-258 1
ElWOOD BOWERS REPA IR If no answe r, co11992-2082 .
Sweepers , toasters ~ron s oil
small opp l\onces . Lawn mowe r,
next to Stole Hig hway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (6 14) 985
f WO BEDROOM l rotl er 1n
3825 .
Pomeroy (614) 4-46-01 57 .
REMODELING
Plumb1 ng heolln~
12 ll' 52 two bedroom Schulh:
and all types o l general (eporr
mobile home Phone 985-3820.
Wo,r k guaranteed 20 years eKper lence Phone 9'i(:-2409
We have enlarged our
service department and ·
SEWING MACHINE Re pairs . ser
vice, all makes , 992-2284 The
will service Hotpomt and
Fobnc Sh o p , Pomeroy
other brands.
Authorized Singer Soles an d
AUCT10N SALE , every Tues. end
Service We sharpen SCissors
Frt at 7 pm . New and us ed
me rchond rse at Ohio Rr ve r Auc• EXCAVATING, dozer , loade r and
backh oe work , dump trucks
Iron , Metgs Plaza , Mtddleport.
and lo boys for hr re will haul
9.a_Jack W. Caroey, Mgr.
Ohio . Home Ph one (304 )
fi ll dirt , to soil, lr mes tone and
773-5471
Phone992-2181 ,
gro11e l Call Bob or Roger Jeffers . day phone 992-7089, nrght
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232

Good
Busineu
Bldg.
located at 605 W . Main St. ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Presently
occupted by
a going
business . Bldg. has deluxe
apartment
overhead
bringing in good income .
Priced on inspect1on only .
Can be seen any time from
10 a.m . to 6 p.m . tnqutre at
605 w. Main St. , Pomeroy ,

OHIO bu siness lor sale
Small ,.OOOsq It Supe rmarket
d ose to Ohlo U with beer a nd
wtne car ry out license doing
good business on heo,..y tro ... e ll ·
e d Alhens Street large park Ing lot w•th room lor otl;u:rr out ·
door bus iness . Perfect bu!!ilness
for rwo peopl e Selling because
ol absentee ow ner Terms for
nght Person . For mo re infor ma tion co li or write . PO Bo • 530 1,
Vienna , Wes t V•r g1 n1o 26101 or

jA 111tNI&gt;

uphol stere d tn bea utifu l
war m color s &amp; patterns

197'1 SALEM 12 M 65 2 bedroom .
Front de n ' model Frun1shed .
Hooked up to util ities at Co .. ntry Mob ile Home ·•Pork .
E11erythi ng is in th den ready for
o ltreploce or wood -burmng
sto ve Sb.OO frrm . Coii992-70J4
or992 -767 1 ofter6

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

WOOD
Po les mo •
diameter I0" on lorgesr end $8
per ton . Bund led slab, S6 per
ton. De livered to Oh1o" Pollet
Co . Rt
. 992-2689 .

12 and 15 It width
rubber back .

•
Carpet 1
:

4.88 sq: yd.

1

MEIGS COUNTV Huma ne SoCiety
Corelme and odoptton Ser ....ce
992-7680. 7•2·3162 992-5427 .
AKC IRISH Setter poppies , 6 wks
old
Phone
1 - 30~ 882 -2397
after 5 pm .
NINE WEEK old Beagle pups . Rob hi! dogs Started and fram ed
$15 ond up. (614) 741-252 1,
SUFFOLK RAM S3S . 742-2753

302 , 2 Dr , V B. sport perfor;r.a:1ce pack , T root.
convertrble, fron t spOiler , w -s w radiCtl tires . d1g1tal
Quartz crystal clock. front &amp; rear bumper guards, AM FM stereo extenor accent grp. New car warranty .

1977 Ford Mustang II 2 "or. Hd. Top .... $AVE$
302 VB. glow pamt, w h tte full vi n yl roof. cruise o malic
trans , w s w rad ial t ires. power steering, console.
power front d 1sc brakes, AM rad10 with stereo tape .
e)(terior accent grp ., protection grp , hnted glass .
Complete

CI.RS
1976 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4 DR. : .• '5895
equipped, like new)

• C Fully

V 8, auto. trans., P.S., A C. , rad to, tape deck , One
owner

1973 Maverick 4 Dr....................... .12095
P.S, 6 cyl. , auto tra ns .. A.C., vlny l roof .

1976 Ford F-150 , ............. ............. 13695

••
••
••
•

•.

Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

.•........................
•
•

..

:.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

742-2211

ARNOLDGRATE

•J

OWNER WAREHOUSE
·· ~ALES CO.

~

RUTLAND :.

~:

•
•••
.

.

..

radio, one owner . low mil eage

1975 Ford F-250 .. .... .. .•............. .... 13495
V-8, 4 speed , P . S , rad to, 4 D s uspension , one ow ner

1974 Ford F-100 Short Bed ...•......... .. 12885

Full power , air . T + T
wheel, .•AM -FM ,
light
green . gree n vrnyl roof.

MORE IN STOCK

DAN THOMPSON FORD
See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrell Dodrill
For A Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle
Open Evenings til6 : 00 except
ThurSjlay and Saturday . Closed Sunday
992-2 196
,
Middleport, 0 .

1977 CADILLAC
DEVILLE CPE.
Full power, atr , crutse,
T+ T wheel. AM- FM &amp;
tape, landau root , 9,200
mi les.

1977

CRUISER
WAGON .

Ful l power , air ,
mileage, light blue

low

Terms, cash or check with positive ~~ D.
Not responsible for accidents .
Auctioneer, Bi II Brown

1975 BUICK 225
Ltm1ted 2 dr. H T , red ,
white landau roof. f u II
power, air Sharp .

'10,000

•4995

YOUR
1976
DEVILLE CPE. or SEDAN

1975 ROYALE CPE.

'8000

Fu ll power &amp; air , P - T
wheel, AM-FM &amp; tape,
s harp .

'6295

Low mtleage, sharp car,
arr 1 AM- F M &amp; tape, blue.
wh1 t e v rnyl r:oof, white
vi nyl t r rm.

'4395

•7900

73 CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE

73

72 OLDS 88

4 DR.

ROYAL

Vi n yl r oof. full power . air .
Wa s sJaoo
stereo

'1295

1974 CUT. SUP. CPE.

73 PONTIAC
CATALINA 2 DR.

Atr , AM-FM radio , blue,
bla c k viny l roof .

V1nyl roo t
Wa s $2795

4 Dr . alr ,

NOW •2900

'.

'2595

72 CHEVY IMPALA
HT CPE.
wa s$1495

A1r .

NOW •1295

•1795

•2995

73 CHEVY NOVA
SS COUPE

75 PINTO
WAGON

1971 FORD
4 DR. LTD

V-8, aut omati c, P S

6cy

6 cyl . aut o trans., like new f tni s h .

Work Car .

•1895
74 CHEVY VEGA
GT CPE.

'395
74 CHEVY
NOVA

72 CHEVY IMPALA

4 OR., Air

J speed
Wa s $1995

'795

NOW •1695
"

73 DODGE
·CHARGER

4dr .. V-8, auto., vtnyl roof.
Was 52795

NOW
71 OLDS
Power &amp; a ir
Wa sS 199 5

Coupe. air .
Wa s\2195

.

ASTRO•GRAPH

~'VJrurm

W

mnwllidJm\7

ROYAL OAK FARM
COMPLETE COW HERD DISPERSAL

SALE
NOV. 25, 1977
STARTING AT 10:30 A.M.
Farm located 3 miles north of Pomeroy,
Ohio on old Rt. 33.

FRIDAY TIL 5

1977 DEMO.
98 REGENCY SED.

V 8, auto. trans., rad1o.

Christmas auction in southeastern

Prizes on the hour all evening. Don't pay
store prices, pay auction prices.
All
merchandise name brand products. This is
a small list, come early, stay late. This is
the only sale of this kind this year. 10,000
dollars worth of merchandise.

"en

SPECIALS • THANKSGIVING

1975 Ford F-100 ..... ... ..... ............ .. '3495

for-Signs. This will be tfle largest

colored TV, stereos, radios, tools.

Thursday 8 til noon

z

1973 Gran Torino 2 Dr..... .... ... ... ....•.12195

oo West Union St., ·Athens, 0., watch

toys, large and small elec.

z
z

G)

302 V 8, auto . t r ans., A.C, radio, ex. clean.

At the Athens County Jr. Fair building

Toys of all kind Including riding

)&gt;

G)

1973 Maverick 2 Dr.. .................. .... 12195

Rad10 Crty Slatto n, N.Y. 10019
Be su re to specify your bHih
stgn
'
' SA'GITTARIUS (Nov . Z3-Dec .
1 21) "You· r~c undu ly se ns 1tive today to treatmen t by yo ur rm me·
dtate family Yo u might .be hurt
TO GIVE away 6 wee k old pu p FOR
ST UD
ServiCe ·
A KC by readr ng more mto th e1 r
Por t coll1e. shots s10rted and
regrs lered cocker spon 1el
remarks than was rntend ed
wo rm ed Call 992-3331
Block and ton
Clarksdale CAPRICORN ~Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
lr nes Shqwquolily J &amp; D Ken·
HaYe a hear1 for th e ear o f yo ur
ne ls 742 3162
'
l1s1e ner today If you have a
TO G IVE Away Dog '1, Chm esl3 story to tell do not be!Ebor your
pug. •t,chthuohuo 11 mo old pornls 8e S UCC inC t
lemole wi1h 2 puppies Small AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 191
house dog Pup s ore 1 week Pre king up th e tab for pals !hat
old 991-1514'c---'-c-:---- respo nd in kind rs o ne th mg ,
but gra bbmg the c he ck fo r
AKC REGISTERED pekingese pup
pi.e s . Phone [30.4 ) 882-2683 .
freeloa d e rs IS anot her . Try to
d1strngursh be twee n the two
PISCES ~Feb . 20-March 20) You
For Saturday, Nolf. 19, 1977
shouldn' t. but 1t 's pos s ibl e today that you could. be overly
conce rn ed wtth o lhe rs op1n·
tons Tht s may cause you to do
thmg foolt s h
Bernice Bede Osol some
ARIES ~Ma1ch 21 -Aprll 191 .Normal ly you deal with hfe pra g
ma!tca ll y, but today yo u are
more of a dr ea mer K1 dd 1ng
yourself co uld ge t you rn trouble .
T... URUS ' (April 20-May ZO )
Nov. 19, 1971
Someone tn yo u r peer gro up
It is very lrkely th at you wi ll be known fo r tak rng advan tage o f
able to accu mulate a conside r- her fne nds may have you Si ngled ou t today Be wary of her
able s urplus thi s com tng year
Yo u mu s t be ca ref ul . howeve r, soft soa p
no t to blow 11 o n hwolous GEMINI (M~y 21-June ZO) Unfo rlu nately you c an ' t put co mthrngs .
SCORPIQ (Oct. Z4·Nov. ZZI It's ple te faith m prom ises made to
impo rtant to bea r tn m1nd today you today-particula rly from
that you r fnends lik e yo u fo r one Wt lh a poo r record fo r
whal you are and not lor wha t de ii Yery
you pretend to have o r be At rs CANCER (June Z1-July 2ZI Try
are unne cessa ry . Find out lo not lo blow littl e aches and
who m yoll' re romantical ly pa tns today out of proportion
su it e d by sending for your c opy Don 't use th e m fo r exc uses to
of As tro-Graph Le tt e r. Mail 50 avord yo ur re s ponsibilities
ce nt s for each and a long , s elf- LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Be very
addressed , s tam ped envelope select1ve today--of whom yo u
to As tra-G raph , P 0 Bo)( 489 . get involved with 1n any type of

SAT. EVE., NOV. 19
6:00 P.M.

-4

G)

351. V-8, 2 Dr , A.C., P .S., au to . tra ns, AM radio, on e
owner

Ohio.

Mon .. Tues . , Wed .
8:00til5:00

I

&lt;

1974 Galaxie 500 2 Dr..............••... ,. 2295

CHESTER, 0.
___
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1973 CHEVY 'h TON PICKUP.. ~~d~~~~iJ~n 12395
1966 FORD 1fz TON PICKUP.................. '695

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1975 FORD GRANADA 2 DR •.....•~:~ •.•. '2995
1974 MUSTANG II MACH 1.••..........•. '2495
1974 BUICK REGAL 4 DR ... ~ ... ..•...•... 12695
1974 FORD GRAND TDRIN0.'.............. 12295
1973 MAVFRICK 4 DR ••.....•........•...• 11495
1973 CHEVY MONTE CARLO 2 DR........ 11895
1973 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE..~ .?::.~.!; .. 11695
1973 BUICK CENTURL ... ... ~ -~;:·.~!~ ....11495
1973 PONTIAC LEMANS 2 DR ...........• 12195
1973 PONTIAC FIREBIRD ...... ~~~~:'.~ ..... 12695
1973 PLYMOUTH 4 DR .•.. .., .. .. .......... 1895
1972 PONTIAC GRANVILLE 4 DR .. ~:~.-- 11295
1972 CONTINENTAL 4 DR....• !~.":~- ~~-'; .. 12195
1971 PLYMOUTH 2 DR ....... ............ .. .'595
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selection all on sa
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REGISTERED POllED HEREFORDS
107 Spring cows with calves at side
45 Fall cows with calves at side
54 Bred heifers
17 Open heifers
10 Yearling herd bull prospects
6 Herd bulls including 'I• interest in S
Gilead 115 -the 1976 National Reserve
Champion Bull .

There will be many excellent club
prospects sold off of their dam .

calf

74 •MONTE CARLO
Fu ll powe r &amp; a tr.

A.r .

'2195
Nottce of Appointment
Case No . 22,161
Estate of- Hazel Mtcheel,
Oecea$ed .
Notice 1s hereby g iven lhat
Ralph Michael of 11932
co urtle1gh • No
a, Los
Angeles, Calif ., ha s been duly
appo in ted e~ecutor of the
Estate of Ha zel Michael,
deceased , lal e of Syracuse ,
Me1gs Cou nt y, Ohio .
Cred1tors are r equired to
tde their claim s w1th said
fiduciary
wrthin
thr ee
mon th s.
Da t ed t his 7th day ot
November , 1977 .
Manning o. Webster, J.udge _
Court of Common Pleas,
Probate Division
Metgs county, Ohio

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
or George Harris

Karr ~Van Zandt

' 2·' 141

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Busmess " GMC Financing
Open Evenings Until6 : 00- Til s p. m . Sat.

Pomeroy

{11) 11, 18, 25 , 31C

the Sermonette
WHY CHURCHES DIE
We hear a lot about
sickness today. We have flu
seasons. new viruses, colds,
and legionnaire's disease. Of
course, cancer is still without
a cure. People ·are very
conscious of physical illness,
and yet, there is a fatal
malady infecting churches
across this country that goes
on unnoticed. Let us consider
briefly why c hutches sicken
and die ,
The most easily remedied
and yet the most rampant
symptom of this plague is t he
absence of the Word of God.
When a lost a nd confused
people need to hear, "Thus
saith the Lord ," they hear a
wat~red down perve r s ion of
Scripture or a tissue of
wornout
cliches
and
platitudes that is pass ed off
as a "sennon ."
Churches die when the
Scripture is ga rbled from the
pulpit. We cannot afford an
uncertain sound from t he
t rumpet today. Homes no
longer have a family altar,
and the Bible is nothin g more
than a place to store poems
a nd four leaf clovers. According to Ephesians 6:17,
t he Word oi God is the
Chr istia n 's on ly olfe nstve
weapon. A sold ier weapon-

less is soon a casualty of the
battle.
· Churches die for want of
power. The power of God is a
pronounced characteristic of
a living and healthy church .
However, power c omes only
when God's people pray.
For three days preceding
the preachmg of the sermon
that sta rt e d t h e " Great
Awakenin g ," Jonathan
Edwards prayed for . God's
anointing pow er. History
records the results of ' those
prayers. Neither clergy nor
laity demonstrate much
power today. The drawing
power of God's Word has
been shelved in favor of the
flashy t rivia that marks a
Madison Avenue advertising
campaign . " 8uying' 1 riders
for c hu rch buses f u rt her
ch eapen s the m inistry of the
c hurch , Prea c h ers
and
co n gregatio n a like ha ve
com promised with the world
until they have nothing t o
offer. Only those obedient t o
Christ a nd the Book can
expect God 's power .
Finally , and most damning
of all, ·1s the absence of all
t hat could be called love.
LOVE demands truth. If a
preacher t rul y loves his
people, he will preach the
t ruth .

When the Bible says, "the
soul that smne th , it sh a ll
die," it is decidedly not lov e
that causes a pastor to :gnor e
the sin in his congregation .
Love is not to be mistak en for
thi s in si pid sentimen tali ty
that is foisted on the public. A
genuine Godly love exhibits
itself in t he Chnstian con·
cerned for the so uls of m e n .
These three symptom s: no
Bible, no power , and no love,
are indicative of a c hurc h
that is nearing the tenninal
stages of illness, The only
hope for the churches of
America Yea America
herself - is r eviva l. I do not
mean a series of m eetings,
but a Heaven sent r evival
that manifests itself, not in a
morass
o f Ch arismatic
confust1on, but in cha nged
lives.
The g reat est sig n s a
groping world ca n see are th e
miracles of · the New Birth
and co n sist en t Chris t ian
living . The c ure is readily
available . 'fh e qu estion
remains as to ' what shall be
done with it. - Alan Blac kwood, Pastor of Ca lva ry
Bible Ch ur c h , 26 North
Second Avenue, Middle port.

A tho ught for th e day:
Brttain playwright George
Bernard
S ha w
sa1d,
"Ever ything happ e n s to
everybody sooner or later if
there is ttme enough ."

The Almanac

Press
By
United
lnLernational
Today is Friday, : Nnv . IB,
th e 322nd day of 1977 w1th 43
follow
The moon is be tween its
first quarter a nd full phase
Th e mornin g s t a r s a r e
Mars, Vemt• , Jupiter and
Saturn .
Th e e vening star is
Mercury .
Thnse born on thi s date are
under the sign of Scorpi o.
Amer1can astron aut Alan
Shepard was b orn Nov. 18,
1923.

w

On tllis day in history '

In 18&amp;3, t he UniLed States
adopted Standard Time and
set up fow zones - Eastern,
Ce ntra l , Mounta in
a nd
Pacific.
In 1903, Panama and the
Unite d States signed a tr ea ty
for the buildin g of Lhe
Panama Canal, linking the
P acif ic and Atlant ic ocea ns.
' In
1969 ,
American
astrona uts Charles Conrad
a nd Alan Bean made man' s
second landmg on the moon m
the lunar module of Apollo 12.
In 1974, P r esiden t Ford
arr ived in Tokyo for a staLe
vtsit on his way to a meeting
with Soviet Communist parly
ch1 ef Leomd Brezhnev in
Vladivostok .

•

�--------------------------- ,
U. S. wants Sadat 's visit to l Area Deaths l
Jerusalem to be a success

12-The Daily ~nlmel. Mtddleport·Pomero). 0 .. Fndav. Nov. 18. 1977

I

By Laurence. lcQulllan
WASHlNGTON l UP II President Carter is urging
the Israelis to make Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat's
\isit to Jerusalem a su('{'ess
and reassur.ing other Arab
nations the trip will not
undermine Middle East
peace.
Sadat's \isit was ce rtain to
Nme up at a meeting today of
Carter, Vice Presiden t
Walter Mondale, Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance and
national security ad\'iser
Zbigniew Brzezinski.
Carte r told reporters
Thursday Sadars trip had

Red link
(Continued from page I )
now living in Beckley, W.Va ..
is also a member of .the
National United Workers
Association ,
group of
activist labor groups that was
formed on Labor Day last
September.
United Mine Work er s
President Arnold Mill er
predicted coal miners would
re ject the Miners Right To
Strike Committee after
learning of its connection
with the RCP.
"These people have caused
a lot of troubl e," Miller said.
·'I sus pect ed this g roup
(MRSC l had affiliati ons
other than with the mUle
workers. !'figured it would he·
a matter of time before it
would rome out. "
The comm ittee he ld a
closed meeting last Saturday
at the Daniel Boone Hotel in
Charleston , W.Va ., at which
15 to 20 persons discussed
what actions to take if the
new ·UMW rontract does not
mntain their demands.
Miller said the right4ost rike
demanded
by

a

committ~ members differs

"go"d ;Mentlal to open up the

Mtddl e EaSI lor general
c:b~l'USSIOJl .''

But asked whether he felt
Sadat tmght be taking
political risks in beNming
the first Arab national leader
to visit lsrael. Carter replied,
" lt"s always a danger . But
it 's a good thing. I'm in ravor
of it. "
·
He smd the hostile react ion
of Syria's President Hafe•
Assad, who tried to talk Sadat
out
of
going.
was
"predictable" and did not
disturb him .
Carter also was reassuring
Arab nations. who bitterly
opposed Sadat's trip. that the
U.S. Middle East policy will
not he altered as a result of
the visit, sources said.
The United States has been
pressing for a full-fled ged
resumption of Ute p.eneva
peaceronferenre and Sadat's
decision t o hold face 4o-face
talks with the Israelis caught
officials by surprise .
Whit e
House
Pres s
Secretary Jody Powell said .
"The United "States is aware

Gailipolis Municipal C&lt;J w-t
Judge Robert S. Betz this
morning levied fines totaling
over $6,000 and sentenced a
Rodney man to six six-m onth
terms (total three years ) in
the county jail on conviction
of writing llad checks. Four of
the six-month jail terms.
howeve r , a r e to run
concUrrenUy.
The jail sentence and !1.000

plalna

sure

we

alle.iate any concern that
this is a d~parture from the
United States policy tho~ we
should move toward a
romprehensi ve settlemPnt.''
One high- r anking
administration

source

told

repot·ters he believes the
dramatic Egyptian initiative
could backfire.
" It is unquestionably a
political and psychological
breakthrough of great
historial significanee," this
source said, ''bu t it is also a
high risk operation."
U Sadat overstates the
Arab positi on on peace
issues. he said, he runs the
risk of driving the Israelis
into an infletdble position of
their

own.

But if h e is too ~ ndliatory ,
he r uns the ri sk. of
antagonizing his allies and
losing his role as the leading
spokes man for the Arab
moderates.

fines on each of six bad check
charges was given William R.
Duncan , 22, formerly Of New
Albany, Ind.
Just recently, Judge Betz
sentenced Duncan to 30 days
in the county jail for writing
llad checks. Authorities said
Duncan is wanted by Meigs
County authorities on other
alleged bad checks.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Open your Christmas Club before
January 1, 1978, make 49 prompt
weekly payments, and the
Pomeroy National Bank will make
the 50th payment for you .

h_.

to make

reduced to one year

... to get moving
... to join the Christmas Club
. , . to beat Christmas bills
... to enjoy your Christmas.

rutbld

want

Three year sentence

from his demands at the
llargaining table in that the
committee wants the right to Veterans Memorial Hospital
strike on both contractual
ADMITTED - Gladys
and non&lt;ontractual issues. Bosworth, Dexter; Alba
Among the other demands Bing, Shade; Jane Ann Karr,
put forth by the committee Pomeroy; James Adams.
are restoration of medical Rutland ; Da vi d Persons,
henefits,.raised and equalized long Bottom; Ralph Kern.
pensions including a cost of Shade ; Louise Johnson,
living clause, a hefty wage Pomeroy.
increase, a safety program
DISCHARGED - Nancy
enforced by the miners, and Anderson, )\'alter Asbury ,
the elimination of· all Phillis Blake, Earl Clark.
absentee and sick policies. Adrienne French.

pomer~

of the danger of the Sadat
\'lSi t. "
Asked what dalljler he re·
ferred to. Powell said, ··w e

:;:rs•ror
bank
i'latlona

==

WI tnlfledl812

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Nov.IS)
Mrs . Roger Abbott and son,
George Bennett , Betty
Bently, Dov e Blommer,
Emory Bunch, Mrs . John
Bush and daughter, Alice
Clark, Robert Coleman ,
Hazel Drummond, Georgia
Hael. Otis Hudson, Mary
Partlow, Mary Phillips, Opel
Phillips, Dora Queen, Doris
Rapp, Arthur Robinson,
Dawn Roush, Hubert Sheets,
Gladys S.keens, Clyae Smith,
Elizabeth Smith, Floyd
Spence, Jeffrey Taborn, Opel
Williams, Karen . Wills,
Brenda Winkler.
(Births, Nov. 16)
Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Barrett, a daughter, Vinton;
Mr . and Mrs. Jerry Hall, a
son, Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
· James Lloyd, a daughter,
Patriot; Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Morgan; a son, Oak run; Mr.
and Mrs. David Ross, a son,
Middleport.
(Discharges, Nov.l7) .
Edward Boer, Raymond
Bell, Dorothy Bryan, William
Bush, Jackie Call, William
Cooper, Marri Darst, Doris
Dehart, Mrs. Gary Fallon
and daughter, Wendall
Harris , Luella Hazelbaker,
Cathy Himelrick, Jam~s
Matheny, Wyomax McGhee,
Kathleen Moody, Vivian
Moore, Jessie Petrie, Stephen
Plaster, Lurette Roberts,
Carl Roush , Jane Rucker,
Richard Thomas, Joe Voreh,
Mrs. Charles Waugh and son,
Pauline White, Evelyn
Winter, Debra Wood .
(Births, Nov. l7)
Mr.. and Mrs. James
Butcher, a daughter, Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Fit·
chpatri~ k .
a daughter ,
Middleport ; Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Goddard, a son, Kerr;
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Haggy, a
daughter, Pomeroy. Mr. and
Mrs. James Hill , a son,
Ja ~;kson . Mr . a nd Mrs .
George Lewis, a son, Oak
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Thomas , a son, Middleport.
PLEASANT VAlLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Warren , Gallipolis ; Mrs.
Robert. Gillespie , New
Haven ; Charles Utchfield,
Point Pleasant ; Worthy
Daylong, Gallipolis Ferry;
Essie Layne, Point Pleasant;
Kevin Sparks, Mason;
Lowman Jones, Jr., Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Arnold
Blankenship, C&lt;Jttageville :
Mrs. Joseph Oldaker, Hartford ; Kenneth Bland, Letart;
Mrs . Perry Sayre, Point
Pleasant ; Sheri Swafford,
Buff a lo ; Garry Goddard,
Buff a lo ;
Edwin
Holt,
Thurman, 0 .; Shirley Lively,
Letart ; Peggy Johnson, Point
Pleasant ; Ruth Cassell,
Gallipolis Ferry; William
Dye, New Haven; Mrs .
A1Jhley Bishop, Middleport ;

•

-'

I

DENVER DAVIS
Denver l Davis, Sr ., 83, a

EMMA M. SHOENBERGER
Emma May Shoenberger.

resident of 32l2 East Wilder
Ave .. Tampa . Fla .. and a
former resident of Gallipolis ,
died Wednesday In a Tampa

92 . died Thursdav evening at
the home ot her nephew.
Henry Wells , Ball Run
She was the daughter of the
late Henry and "El izabeth
Rasp Cline . She was also
preceded in death by her
husband , Ralph. one brother
and one sister .
She is survived by a second
nephew . Edward Wells , a lso
ot Sail Run .
She was a member ot the
UniteQ Brethren Church at
Goldsborough , Ohio. She and
her husband performed for
many vears in vaudeville as
jugglers billed as " Ralph and
Mav." Thev appeared in 45
states and Canada .
Funeral ser.,..ices will be
Sunday at 2 p .m . at Ewing
Funeral Home w 1th burial in
Ridgewood Ceme tery at
Wellston . Fr iends may call
after 9 a .m . Saturda y .

Hosp1tal.

Funeral services wi ll be
held 1 p.m . Saturday at the

Chapel ot F . T. Blunl Co.

Funeral
Home,
5101
Nebraska Ave .• Tampa .
Bl•rial will be in I he Garden
of Memory Cemeler., In
Tampa .
Surv i vors include his w i fe ,
Ka'ther ine Neff Dav is ; six

sons , Leo O"vis. Jr .1 Tampa ;

George William' Davis, Ft.
Myers, Fla .; Cecil , Carl ~ and
Robert Davis . all of Tampa
and

Fli~or .

Donald

California ; seyen daughters ;
Mrs . Walter Caldwell , Mrs .
Gene Beech . Mrs . James
Kelley ,
Mrs .
James
Bohannon , all of Tampa ;
Mrs . I. L. Pri tchard, Zephyr
Hil ls . Fla .; Mrs . Shirley
Gibson , Jacksomdll ,•, Fla .
and Mrs. Delores Whaley.
Boonville, Ky . Thirty -seven
grand
and
31
gre_,r .
grandchildren survive .

MARIE VROOMAN MARSH
Mr s . Mar ie
Vrooman
Marsh , 72 , formerlr ot
_Middleport , 4Jl Laure St.,
Ch il licothe, d ied Thu rsda y
afternoon at Mt . Carmel
Hosp ital West In Col u mbus
following an extended illness .
Mr s . Marsh was born Sept.

20,

1905

in

Rutland , a

daughter of the late Joseph
and Clara Pierce Ma nahan .
She w as preceded in dea th by
her first husband , Frank
Vrooman in 1966. Surviving
are her husband, Fo rr es t A.
Marsh ; a sister, Mrs . James
(Zelma) Ta ckett, wa .... erly
and a half -brother , Harry
Nla nahan, Columbus .
Mr s . Marsh was a member
ot lhe Br idge St . Church ot
Christ in Chillicothe and the
auxi li ary of the Ba ltimore
and Ohio Local Railwa y
Eng ineers and Firemen .
Funeral services w ill be
held at 1 p.m . Monday at the
Fawcett-Oii ve -Giass Funeral
Home in Chi llicothe with W.

R.

Golden

off iciating .

Following services the body
will be brought to the
Riverview Cemetery in
for
buria l.
M idd leport
Fr iends may call at the
Ch ill icothe funeral home.

Dirty work
is done, by
children
~EW YO"I'

(UP! ) Adults routio.ely escape
prosecution
for
drug
trafficking·, prostitution and
arson by using teenagers and
children to do their dirty
work, witnesses tolQ a
legislative hearing Thursday .
drug
" Generally
traffickers will employ
youngsters to quote prices,
make deliveries , keep
inventories and do such other
dangerous acts as would
provide felony ·terms in
the adult
prison for
trafficker," Rep , Lester
Wolff, O.N,Y., testified.
Wolff, chairman of the
House Select Committee on
Narcotics Abuse and Control,
led off the testimony· at a
hearing by the New York
State Assembly committees
on Child Care and Code:;.
Drug dealers give the
children a set fee or
"compensate them with
varying amounts of heroin ,''
Wolff testified.
"They are doing the
deadly, dangerous dirty work
of the street pushers and
,dealers," he said . Cotmtless
11

numbers of small children
were observed roaming the
streets, right between the
pushers and the addicts,
learning how easy it is to
make a buck and not go to
school."
MORE WHEAT SOW
WASillNGTON (UP!)
The Soviet Union has ordered
250,000 metric tons of
American wheat, boosting
purchases this week to a
rombined 1.6 million metric
tons of wheat and corn, the
Department
Agriculture
reported today.

Celeste
(Continued from page

J

COI.UMBU$ - Miss Vicki Spencer, ·
35100 J.akcwMd road, has been awarded
the graduate Fellowship 'ro r Rotary .
Distril1 669, al'co rdin~o: to Ca rl Denison,
president of the Midd leport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club, sponsoring cl ub.
Thi s Graduate Fellowship at the
Univcrsitat Bielefeld. 4800 Bielefeld ,
UniversitaL'ist rauss in Germany, is for the
academic year of 1978-79 and was awarded

by The Rot ary Foundation of Rotary In·
tcrnational. She plans to study in the fi eld
or lingubtic.s.
RotHry Dbtrict 669 includes Colurn·
bu s, Ohio, and all of the state east and
south. Miss Spencer was selected ff"om a

pension reforms.

Celeste was chosen head of
the Cuyahoga County Demo·
cratic delegation in late 1972,
and be&lt;'ame majority whip
the foll owin g year . He
steered maj or le gislation on
public employee pensions and
Medicaid reform through the
legislature , and go t a
controversial house-to-house
voter registration bill
through the House helre it
was stalled in the Republic·
dominated Senate.
He was instrumental in
negotiating the terms of an
ethics bill·for public officials
and employees - the No. I
priority of the administration
of Democratic Gov. John J .
(iilligan, and he was a top
Democratic spokesman for
upgrading Ohio 's campaign
financing hiw.
In
1974,
Gilligan
unofficially tapped Celeste as
his choice for a running male
in a re.eleclion bid.
Celeste won in a crowded
Democratic primary field ,
easily outdistan cing eight
other opponents for \he
nomination. He then upended
veteran Republican Lt. Gov.
John W. Brown by 217,000
votes while Gilligan was
losing the general election. ·
Since then, Celeste has
sought to play a role in
' intergovernmental relations,
but his efforts to assist the
Republican administration of
Gov. James A. Rhodes, a
prospective opponent in 1978,
have been spurned.
· Celeste and his wife ,
Dagmar·, a native Austrian
whom he mel at Oxford, have
six cllildren, the latest of
whom is a son born last

The objective of the Rotary Foun·
dation through The Rotar,v Foundation's
educational awards and activities is to
furt her understanding and frie nd ly
r e laHons among people or differ e nt
nations.

Miss Spencer. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs , Harold (Jack) Spencer, is preser.tly
l'Tirolled as a graduate student, De part-

member of Kappa Alpha Theta social intenstve language lnstrucuon, travel,
lodging, and food, in addition to tuition,
bool&lt;ll, and laboratory lees.
A characteristic of Rotary education
awar&lt;b is that .the recipient has op- •
porturutles to speak to Rotary Clubs as
member of the Curtis E. LeMay Angel well as other groups in his study country
Flight, service honorary sponsored by the and in his home rountry. A1J a result, apU. S. Air Force, Reserve Officers Training plicants are evaluated ,pn their am·
Corps, at Ohio State. Future Plans of Miss bassadorlal as well as scholarly potential.
Anyone interested in learning more
Spencer beyond her graduate fellowship
may lead to a c;:. ·er in F oreit:n Language about qualilicatlons lor an award from the
Educa tion, teac11mg E ngHsh as a second Rotary Foundation should contact a
member of any Rotary Club. Interestingly
language, or re~earch in linguistics.
enough,
these awards are not available to
·~ Rotary Foundation awards underwrite
the lull cost of study abroad, paying for any member of a family or relative of a
Rotary Club member.

ment of Linguistics. Ohw State Umversity,
and is em ployed as a graduate research

sorori t y where she served as music
chainnan and rush chairman. During her
senior year she was awarded the Esther
Starford Creativity Award for c reativity in
cont ribut ion to sooiety. She was also a

associate in the Department of German.
Ohio State University .

Miss Spencer. a t973 graduate of
Eastern Hi gh School, graduated June 9,
t977, with a Bachelor of Arts De~ree in
Gennan in the College o£ Humanities at
Ohio State. Universit y. Her minor fields or
study included French. Spanish, and
lin~uistics . While in school , she sup-p le m e nt ed her academic lang uage
education by working as a laboratory
assistant in the foreign language tape
"librti ri es.

At Ohio State Miss Spencer ha s been a

COLUMBUS (UP! ) ~ The
Ohio Supreme Court today
agreed to hear an appeal of a
lower court decision which
re versed· the
murd e r
conviction of James Ruppert,
co nvicted of killing II
members of his family on
Easter Sunday ... 1975.
The First Ohio Distri ct
Court of Appeals had
reversed the guilty verdict
delivered by a three-judge
panel in Butler County
Common Pleas Court. The
Appellate Court ruled that
Ruppert. of Hamilton, had
been told the decision of the
three-judge panel must be
unanimous. The dectsion by
the panel was 2-to-1 for
conviction.
The appeal to the Ohio
Supreme Court was filed by
Butler County Prosecu tor
John Holcomb.

summer.

Celeste is scheduled to
meet
with
Cleveland
supporters in the Cleveland
Convention Center at 8 p.m.
to affirm hls candidacy.

SHE WON'T DESERT
DUBLIN, Ireland (UP!) Lillian Carter, whose return
flight to the United States is
snarled by union troubles,
today rejected suggestions
that she leave her fellow
Americans and depart alone
on a commercial fli ght. "I
came with a n American
party and I will return with
them , and no other way ,"
President Carter 's 79-yearold mother said.

Market Report

Holcomb, i.n arguments
filed with the Supreme Court,
said
Ruppert,
43,
."unquestionably understood
tl1e constitutional , right he
was wai ving' ' when h e
elected lo be tried by the
three · judge panel.
"The assertion
that
Ruppert wa ived a jury trial
solely on his belief that the
three judge panel's verdict
must be unanimous and that
no other advice regarding the
jury waiver was given by his
co un se l,

is

entirely

inconsist ent
with
hi s
tes timony that he had
discussed the possibility of
waiving a jury" with his
attorn eys, H01mmb said.
The appellate court, in
reversin g the deCision, said
Ruppert 's waiver of a jury
trial was " not knowing ,
voluntary and intelligent
since he had been informed
by counsel and the presiding
judge that a three-judge
panel 's verdict must be

Thurs . Wlanimous."

COLUM BU S (U P O day 's livestock a uction :
Compared with last week
sl~ughter steers steady to 50
higher; s laug hte r he ifer s steady
to 1.25 lower , sla ugh ter cows 50 1.50 lower , slaughter bulls
stead y, feeder calll e stead y to 1
lower .
Slaugh ter steers : Choice and
pri me 2·4 940-1235 lbs 41.50 -44 ;
choi ce 2. 4920-1200 lbs 40 ·41: low
dressi ng 37.50-39 .50 ; good and
choice 2-3 950-1175 lbs 38.75 -40;
good 2-3 850·1385 lbs 33 50-38 .85 ;
standard 1 2 850 1300 lbs 28 ·35.
Slaughter hei fer s : Cho ic e 2-4
850-1110. \bs 38.50 -41 .25 ; 4-5 .845 1135 1bs 36-38,50 : good . and
choice 2-3 825-10 75 lbs 36-38 .50 ;
good 2-3 175 -990 lbs 33-36.50 ; few
30-33; standard 1'-2 125-1000 lbs
27-32 .
.
Slayght~r cows: Util ity and
commerCial 2-4 900-1650 lbs
21.50 -26 ; t1 1gh dr ess1 ng 25 -28 .35;
cu tter 1-2 700-1205 lbs 19.50 24.50 ; can11er 790-960 tbs 17.35 ·
20 .25 :
Slaughter bulls : 1-2 1070-1645
lbs 27-34 ; bullo cks, good 1030
1280 lbs 30 -34 ; standard 840-t090
lbs 26-30.
vea!ers : Choice 210-295 lbS
38.25 -57; good and chOice 115 .
270 lbs 39 44 ; 86 -110 lbs 12 -25;
good 160-270 lbs 29-36 .
Feeder catt le; Steers in divi dual prime 580 lbs 44 .50;
500-790 lbs 35-37 ; good and
choice 300 -500 tbs 30 -36.50: 500 700 lbs 30 -37 : good 285 -510 lbs
28 .50 -35 ; 500-700 lbs 30 -34;
standard 300 -650 lbs 24 -30 ;
he ifers choice and pr ime 300-555
tbs 26-33 .50; 500-770 lbs 25 -30 ;
good and low choice 300-475 lbs
24 .50-28 ; good 325·600 lbs 23 -2u :
standard 2u5 -600 tbs 18-24.
Hogs : Berrows and gilts and
sows steady , boars 50-1.50
higher , feeder pigs 3 higher :
barrows and gills 1-3 230 -240 lbs
28 .30-38.80 ; sows 1-3 J00-450 lbs
30 .50-32.80; 435 -650 lbs 32 .4034.50 ; boars 300 -650 lbs 28 .40·
19 .50 ;
190-240 tbs 29-31 .75 ;

The appellate court had
remanded the case back to
the· Butler Cuun)y C&lt;Jmmon
Pleas Court.
Ruppert had pleaded
innocent by reason of
insanity.
He is currently serving 11
consecutive life sentences for
the murder of his mother,
br other , sisler-in-lliw and
eight nephews and nieces.

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) The Sunday game between
the San Francisco 49ers and
LaS Angeles Rams was sold
out Thursday, permitting the
contest to be televised locally
oo Chan nels 5 and 10.

teeaer pigs 1-2 lot

VOL. 12

Addition made
to teachers'
subbing list

Court to .review
murder appeal

4~ lbs 44 ; 1-3
lot 170 lbs 40; 1-3 30-35 1bs 23.5026.50; 44.55 lbs 28.50-32 ; 62-90
lbs 35 ,38 .50,
Sheep : S I aught e r lambs
woo led 1.25 h ig her at Bucyrus,
75 tower a1 Wil mington. sho rn
lambs at Bucyrus steady,
feeder lambs at Bucy rus .4.25
higher .
Slaughter lambs choice and
prime 87 -110 lbs wooled 50,2053.60 ; choice and pr ime 90-108
lbs 1shorn with no 1 and 2 pel1 s
50,90-52.80 1 slaught~ r ewes utili ty and good 105-1 95 lbs 13.00·
16.90 ; feeder lambs cho ic e and
fancy _ 56-88 lbs 56 .00-58.25 ;
choi ce lot 78 lbs 50.90 ; good and
cho ice 85 -92 lbs 50.25-53 .25.

MIDDLEPORT - The question in the

a nd the United !:,lates of America as

proposed abandonment of the Chessie

defendants.
The appeal will center on the
di.sposition, and possible alternate service
on the Kerrs-Pomeroy segment of the line .
The proceedings are expected to delay

System (C&amp;Oi l,ogan-Pomeroy (via
McArthur and Gallipolis) line · has been
moved from the lntcrsta te Commerce
Comm ission to the federal courts."

The Meigs County Rail Service
Committee, George Arnott, chairman,
said an appeal of the final administrative
decision was filed Oct. 28 in the United
States Court of Appeals . lor the Sixth
Circuit located at Cincinnati by the Public
Utilities Commission or Ohio, Keener Sand
and Clay Company, and the Cooperative
Legislative
Committee
Railroad
Brotherhoods and Unions namin g the ICC

Lawmen in

'

bold move

•

at Libby

GOODBYE,

' '

MUNICIPAL COURT Judge Ele ct James A. Bennett and Atty . Hamlin King
ended their Jaw partnership Friday. Above, Bennett takes down office sign while
King and Mrs. Wilma Brown, secretary. look on.

Law partnership is
ended in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - A law partnership of
more than nine ye.ars came to an end

Friday afternoon .
Atty . Hamlin King and Atty . James A.
Bennett shook hands and took down their
sign in front of their offi ce on "lawyer's
row" 21 locust St. thus ending the long·
time pertnership.
The ending of this partnership is the
result of Mr. Bennett's election as judge of
the Gallipolis Municipal Court . It would be
a conflict of interest for Mr. King to
prosecute cases in a court manned by
his law partner. They will, however,
temporarily continue to jointly occupy
their office at 21 Locust St. , until one or

NOW YOU KNOW
. ~o Arab head of stale has
vtstled Israel smce 11 was
founded in 1948; Egyptian
President Anwar Sadal wUI
be the first if he arrives, as
planned, 6n Saturday.

both can locate in other quarters.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Hamlin King first came to Gallipolis in
1967. In 1968 he beCame Ga llia County

Prosecutor, at the time the youngest in the
state. Mr. Bennett came to Gallipolis in
1968 at which time he became assistant
prosecutor. They left office in 1972.
Mr. Bennett has been serving as
village solicitor to the Village of Rio
Grande, although he resigned that position
Nov . 17 . Mr. King was appointed Acting
Solicitor to fill out the term.
Mr . King has served as solicitor of the.
Village 6f Cheshire· since 1972. Both have
been assistant city solicitors for the City of
Gallipolis · with the reeponsibility of
proseCuting all the misdemeanor cases for
Gallia County in the Gallipolis ·Municipal
Court .
Mr. Bennett resigned this position last
Tuesday. Mr. King will asswne all the
duties of that office.

'

Nixon spending clean

OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 8 P.M.

WASHINGTON (UP! )- Richart! Nixon
ha s used his $150 ,000 yearly federal allotment to buy such diverse items as
luxurious electric golf carts, telephone
taping equipment and a subscription to the
Washington Post, tw o syndicated
colwnnists reported Satl\fday,
Columntsts Martha Angle and Robert
Walters said they got their figures from
the General Services Adminis trati on
under the Freedom of lnfcrmation Act.
They emphasized there was nothi ng
anyl\1]ere in the figures to indicate "even a
hint ·of scandal" in Nixon's expenditures.
Here are some of the things they found

Speciai ·Sa!e Prices Friday and Saturday during our PreHoliday Sale- Visit every department, shop every floor
and the Warehouse on Mechanic Street .
Take time to look around at all the fine gift selections
for everyone on your list.
·

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

PRIOf 25 CENTS

Chessie System abandonment
is taken into federal courts

LAW Of-Fit !.S

SPLIT THREATENED
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!)
- Libya warned today it
would break diplomatic
relations with Cairo if Anwar
Sadal . visits
Israel,
threatenmg the very split
within the Arab world that
the Egyptian president had
hoped tD avoid.

tntitttl

tmts
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1977

NO. 42

.BEN NET1 ~ hI~

RACINE - l'he Southern
local Board of Education
Thursday qight placed
Madhu Malhotra on the
substitute teachet list ,
authorized the junior high
boosters to use the junior high
gym on Nov. 19 for a dance,
and granted permission to the
Western CB Club to use the
Portland Elementary School
on bee. 10 for a Christmas
party.
Bids for tools and equipment for the new vocational·
agricultural shop were ac·
ce pted from Patron and
Patters and Broadllead and
Garrett.
They changed the teachers'
in-service day from Nov. 28 to
be e. 23. Attending were
Robert Sayre, president,
Jack Bostic and David Nease,
board members, Linda
Spencer, clerk , and Bobby
Ord, superintendent.

CASTRO
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Fidel Castro's growing
mHitary involvement in
Africa has ·stalled, and
perhaps .even killed for now,
any chances for early
improvement of relations be·
tween the United States and
Culla. The Wliite House and
the State Department also
made.clearThursday that the
presence of an estimated
27,000 Cuban military and
civilian advisers in 16 African
nations ''is' a threat to peace"
in that continent.
·

•

unb

TOP PRIZE IN THE STATE OF OHIO, a 1!1-inch m lor television with cassette
,television games, in Landmark's Fall Family Fun Festival was won by Mrs. John
(Virginia) Dean, Wolfpen Road . Mrs. Dean recei ved her prize from local Landmark
Manager Jack Carsey. With Mrs. Dean and Carsey a re two other. pri zes won by Meig s
County residents in tile festival, a chain saw by F . E. Biron,Middleport , and a smoke fire
alann by Raymond C. Blake. Route I, Reedsville.
•

Chad Filter, Henderson ; Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, Racine ;
Theodore Melr o.s e, Point
Pleasant; Anita Riffle,
Gallipolis Ferry; Christopher
Thornton, Leon; Hamiltoil'
Silane Roush , Mason ; Harry
Knapp , West Columbia;
Karen Sparks, Mason; Mrs.
Charles Marlin, Buffalo;
Harry Simpkins, , Point
Pleasant and · Timothy
Luikart, Leon .

cleaned and the lock reset.
- He spent $647 in public funds last fiscal
year for photo processi ng, printing and
devel oping . His chief aide, John Brennan,

said the former president still gets and fills
"hundreds of requests each mooth" lor
photos because "when we left the White

House, ever~ihg was confiscated."
- Althongh his White House taping .
system has been dismantled, Nixon -like
thousands of other people - has purchased
a hand-held tape recorder and a $10
s uction cup to record telephone conversations.

a

-Nixon leases 1976 Oldsmobile station
wagon and a 1977 Olds 98 Regency lour-Nixon, whose disagreements with door sedan loaded with extra equipment ,
newspapers are legend , subscribes to the Including a stereo tape deck. The leases
Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles cost $6,142 a year, and from public.funds
Herald-Examiner, the San Diego Uni on, last year Nixon bought $2,290 in gasoline
The New York Times and the Washington and $72 worth of car washe s.
- An avid golfer, Nixoo has purchased
Post - the paper that won a Pulitzer Prize
two electric golf carts that cost more than
lor Watergate.
- Nixon remains security conscious. He $2,000 each. Accessories include seven
paid to have a lock changed on his safe yards of fringe for the canvas roof, new
after he returned to California - and paid carpeting, headlights, hubcaps, chrome,
$50 last year to have a safe disa ssembled ,
Continued on A·2

issuance of the abandOnment certific~te
for at least si1=- months.
The ICC iss ued its final decision on

September 7, grant in~ Chessle's request
as follows :

Oldtown (logan ) -

•
Creola;

abandon operations and trackage.
Creola·Dundas
abandon

operations and lease to Chessle System
IB&amp;O) for continued service.
- Dundas-Gallipolis - abandon
operations and trackage.

- Gallipolis-Pomeroy - abandon
operations, Conrail will continue to have
trackage rights but extent of local service
is unknown.

- Pomeroy, end of line - abandon
operations and trackage.
The ICC would have IssUed the
abandonment certillcate shortly had the
appeal not been filed. Chessle has agreed
to operate the line for 364 days after the
certificate is issued. The application was
originally filed in April 1974, anx further '
appeal would take the caBe to the United
States Supreme Court.

ICC documents in error says Meigs County railroad committee
In a related matter the Committee
said The Interstate Commerce Com·
mlssion ~as released documents and maps
detailing nationwide future rail abandonw

ment plans. The . committee charged
material is part of a federal program to
coordinate

rail

abandonment

actions,

replacing the present line by lin·e system
which fails to consider the condition of
other rail line~ serving an area in abah·
donrnent proceedings.
The program requires each railroad to

- Athens to Armitage, 1.35 miles
- South Webster to Edmunds and
trackage at Portsmouth, 2.91 miles.
Chessie System abandonment applications pending before ICC :
- Oldtown to Nelsonville, 10.45 miles
(hearing to be held in NelsonviUe on
November 30)
- Relief to Philo, 35.81 miles
. Th.. maps have one major error in that
the Council line between Corning and
Hobson is mistakenly shown as "avaUable
for subsidy after April I, 1976." This in·
dicates ihat it one of the segments of the
former Penn Central which was , not
acquired by Conrail anci is therefore out of

explainea that this was done because the
Commission has issued a final decision
granting C&amp;O's request.
The court challenge filed in late Oc·
Iober delayed the abandonment certificate·
wttil this challenge is resolved.

Tax receipts up in

Meigs for October

file with the ICC a system .map showing
lines on which abandonment applications
POMEROY - Both retail sales tax
are pending, lines on which abandonment
applications
will
be
filed
within
three
and
automotive sates tax were up con·
, GALLIPOLIS - A rombined force of
service.
siderably in Meigs County for October,
city police and sheriff's deputies stormed a ·. years, lines under study for possible
Actually the line was acquired by
room in \he Libby Hotel in downtown abandonment .application, lines being .Conrail and is in service dally. According compared to October, 1976, acrordlng to
tbe monthly report .of Mrs. Gertrude
operated
under
subsidy,
and
all
other
lines
G~Uipolis Fri~ay to overcome a young,
to an ICC official this mistake was pro· Donahey, state treasurer.
owned.
desperate man who threatened to blow the
Motor vehicle sales tax receipts for the
The ICC has then. compiled the in· bably caused by a time lag in the Oow of
place up.
·
information between various federal month, this year, totaled $52,300.07
dividual
railroad
maps
into
stale
maps
ft was the second wild escapade for
agencies. The official also stated that if compared to receipts of $39,868.44 for
showing each classification .
Michael Sullivan, a resident of t:1e hotel,
Conrail planned to abandon the line It October, 1976, an increase of $12,631.63, or
The
Ohio
and
West
Virginia
maps
and
who was in jail Satuf-day facing numerous
related print outs carry good news for would have probably been Identified as 31.84 percent. Retail sales tax ,recelpts lor
charges as a result of his latest battle with
the month totaled $52,738.65 while last
Southeastern Ohio and the bordering area under study.
officers.
Additionally the other segments of October, the receipts amounted to
in
that
no
unexpected
of
W
est
Virginia,
According to reports filed with the
abandonment plans were revea)ed. The Conrail's Columbus·Charleston line are $43,595.84, an increase of $9,142.81 or 20,91
Gallipolis police department, Debra Ann
Hnes which were identified are list;ed and properly identified and are not Identified percent.
Sullvan, his estranged wife, called the
as under study. It therefore appears at this
classified as follows:
department at 10:10 a.m. Friday stating
Under study for possible aban· time that Conrail plans to retain the line
that her husband had called her to come to
donment application by Conrail (no ap- which serves Percy, Athens, arid Meigs . WO
the hotel to pick-up a stereo. SuUivan mel
plications can he filled by Conrail before Counties. Conrail will revise its study list
~aned
her there but after she had possession of
in Decem he~ and again early in 1978,
- · __,.,..
April
I,
1978)
:
the stereo, she said he r.efused to let her go ,
BURLINGAME, Calif. (UP!) _ Two
- Glass Rock to Fultonham, 11 .90 miles however these two revisions will primarily
and began hitting and kicking her. She got
remove
lines
from
the
list
which
have
been
yowtg
men will be arraigned Monday on
- Zanesville to New Lexington, 21.80
loose to call police who sent Ptl. Harold
found
to
he
economically
viable.
charges
of kidnapping the screaming, II·
miles
Moyer.
The
Chessle
Systen:
(C&amp;O
)
line
from
year-&lt;lld
son of 8 wealthy executive 00 the
Trackage
at
Crooksville,
UO
miles
Sullivan, arrested . for disorderly
logan
to
Pomeroy
&lt;&gt;:•~
McArthur
and
,
street
as
the boy walked to school.
-Trackage
at
Fultonham,
3.10
miles
conduct, by Moyer had grabbed Moyer and
ts
not
tdentilted
as
a
pending
Fifteen
hours later the victim, Nels
Galhpohs)
Understudy
for
possible
abandonment
wrestled with him. Moyer was forced to
abandonment
apphcatlon.
The
ICC
official
Legallet,
was rescued when a p6lice
application by Chessie System:
use his mace in order to stop Sullivan. AI
special
weapons
squad kicked In the door
that point, Sullivan was booked lor
of
a
motel
room
where tbe boy was kept
disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and
tied
in
a
sleeping
bog ,
·
assaulting a police officer .
Nels,
a
blonde,
blu...,yed
sixth
grader,
He was later released from custody
said, "I was scared, but I'm not scared.
after bonds were posted totaling $488.
now." However, he later described his
At 6.:45 p.m. Friday, Mrs . Sullivan
abductors
as "very nice ."
advised lawmen that her husband, who
Police
arrested
John Joseph Reiser, II,
was sought by sheriff's deputies on
and
Scott
Timmons,
19, whose father Is a
another warrant, was in the lobby of the
long-time
friend
and
employe of the
hotel.
victim's father, Jok Legallet. Legellet
Lt. Carl Langford of ' the sheriff's
operates tanning and wool companies 20
department went to the hotel where
miles north in San Francisco.
Sullivan, who apparen\IY saw the officer
The two SUSP1Cis, both of whom have
coming, ran to his room where he o
juvenile records, were booked for
barricaded himself behind the door.
investigation of kidnapping.
Sullivan told Langford he had a gun
and explosives and was going to take a few
police officers with him if they rushed the
ME INVESTIGATED
doors.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
After nearly two hours of negotiations,
sheriff's deputies Friday investigated a
the combined team of city and county
breaking and entering at the McFann
lawmen rushed the door, forcing it open
propertv on SR 218. Sj!t. Dan White
while holding shotguns. No gun or ex·
reported two antique plctures were taken.
plostves were found in the ro om .
Nothing else was missing.
Sullivan was placed under arrest for
physical harm , however , additional
SMITH TO SPEAK
charges are pending.
POMEROY-The Pomer9y Chamber
Participating in the SWAT effort were
of Commerce wUI meet Tuesday at noon at
Sgt. Joe Owens, PI[ Ray Hall, Ptl. Harold
the Meigs Inn. Glen Smilh, director of the
Moyer, Ptl. Bernard Goelling and Ptl. J .
Marietta division of the State Hlghwa~e
D. Taylor of the Gallipolis Police
Dept. will be the guest speaker. Smith will
Depertment and Lt. Langford and Deputy
discuas the proposed intersection of U.S.
A KINDERGARTEN ROOM at the Pomeroy Elementary School wiU· be a
Alva Sullivan, Gallia County Sheriff's
Rt. 33 and SR 7.
brighter place, thanks to two Meigs High School students, Kim Krautter and Paige
deputies.
Smith. A shower room was con verted into a kindergarten facility lD accommodate
C OF C TO MEET
Sullivan was involved in an accident
the overflow of pupils (45 in lhe afternoon session). Miss Krautler and Miss Smith
MIDDLEPORT
- The Middleport
earlier this year in which he ran his car
have spent the week painting a bright colored fl ower scene, letters of the alphabet
of
Commerce
will meet tit 8:30
Chamber
over hedges on Mill Creek Rd. and struck a
and numerals to create a pleasant room . Miss Krautter , left, and Miss Smith are
p.m.
Tuesday
at
the
Meigs
Inn. Husbands
sheriff's cruiser and anl!&gt;ulance owned by
art students of Jack Slavin .
and
wives
of
members are invited.
SEOEMS.

is

T

young men

will be a......

~ out:

It pays to take advantage of the sales at Elberfelds.

r-------~----------·---········---,

1 N. W. COMPTON, 0.0. 1
I
·
OPTOMETRIST
f
1 OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE 1
1 AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT 1
I ST., POMEROY.
I
______________

.

field of 22 ca ndidates and will be one or
nearly 900 young men and women worldwide who recently received educational
award'i totalin g over 17 million from the
Rot ary foundation . There are more than
17,000 Rotary Clubi. in 152 eo untri es and
geographical regio"n s of the world .

VICKI SPENCER

I)

1967, Celeste joined hi s
father'sfirm , worked his wa y
up to president of Nationa l
Housing Consult ants, Inc.,
and then was elected to the
Ohio House of Repre·
sentatives in 1970.
He served t w o terms,
specialiting in ethics and
ca mpaign finance legislation.
along with election and

Rotary fellowship awarded Meigs' Vicki Spencer

SATURDAY -OPEN 9:30 AM 1U 5 PM

' '

-------------·· ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

"·

1'

EDA grant .will
RIO GRANDE-A grant of $158,520 from
the Economic Development Adminislra·

lion will go to upgrading the water system
of the village of Rio Grande, Mayor Marlin
Wedemeyer announced Saturday.
A new tank will be len times as
capacious as the present tank, and new

up~ade

village water system

pwnps will send water through the village
twice as fast as the present pumps, the

horsepower each. The 71&gt; hp pwnps work . with the growth.
at 150 gallons a minute, while their new
Legal advertising ·on Page 9 of Friday's

mayor said

successors will pump at 300 gallons a

(;.m,,uti,. O.ily Tribun.- called for blds on

The present 20,000-gallon tank will IX,
supplanted by a 200,000-gallon tank. The
present two pwnps of 71&gt; horsepower each
will he supplanted by two pwnps of 25

minute .
,
Mayor Wedemeyer said that Rio Grande
had grown so much that il was necessary
to Improve the water system to keep up

the project to be submitted by 7 p.m. Dec.

19. In answer to a question, Mayor
Wedemeyer said that work on the project
would start as soon as the bid iB let.

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