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8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero). 0 .. Monday, Nov . 28, t977

Deficit
(ConUnued from Plllt I)
deficit has been ab01·e $2
billion .
In September, the deficit
had fallen tl&gt; $1.7 biUion as
exporters attempted to beat
the Oct . 1 start of the dock
strike_
The adm inis tration has
said the deficit ru uld reach
$30 billion this year .

Treasury

••

ll

Area D
eathS

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

Secreta r y

Michael Blu ment h a l
acknowledged two weeks ago
that
the
defi c it
wa s
"worrisome" and added that
it " certainl y cann ot be
. allowed to perSist forever ."
However , he said, there is
'~no reason to panic and no
excuse for reactions in ways
that jeopardize the ?Verall
health of the U.S. economy or
that adversely affect world
recovery in general. "
The
C o mm e r ce
Department said l,J .S. exports
of $9.2 billion were 15 .8
percent below the record
$10.9 billion in September and
the lowest since March 1916
when exports totale d $9
billion .
Nine of the 10 expor t
categ o r i es r eg ist e red
decreases from September.
The four categories that fell
the most were machinery and

1

p.m . at ihe- home of Mrs.
Alfred Crow. Racine.
E·R CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called Sunday at 8:27
p.m. to East Main Street for
Marvin Darst who had fallen.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 12 :47
a .m . today they wer e ca lled
to Chester for Glen Lawson
who refused treatnient.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, 0 .
Now open for the seiiSon.

Choose-from Over
PoinseHias
75c
Foliage Plants 7Sc
Hanging Baskets
14.!0

15,000
to S10.00
to s12 .00
SI.2S to

Open Daily 91ill
Sundays 1 till

,I VeteransMemorl~I
o
_ Husp!lal
I
Saturday Adnuss10ns I

EDMUND BROOKINS
COLUMBUS Edmund
Chapman Brookms, 68 of
Columbus. d1ed at Riverside
Methodtst Hospital Sunday
evenmg
.
He was the s.on of the late
Issac and Jesse Ch apman
Brook 1ns He had be-en a
resident of Jackson , Ohio for
many years
Surv ivors incl ude wife. Ida
Will i ams Brookins , tt'lree
children ·
Wayne
of
Colu m bus · Issa c of Hilli ard,
Oh io and Mrs. Lonnie ( Joyce)
McGhee ol Bel l vtlle, Ohio ;
nine grandChil d ren ; three
brothers, Henry and Dwi ght
of Jackson
Paul D of
Gal li pOliS
one
sis ter ,
Dorothy of Jackson and one
n.iece ,
Nancy
M oeller .
Gall ipolis .
Funeral serv ices are being
arranged by
EiSn augle
Funer al Home in Jackson .

GLADYS GOULDING
NEW HAV EN - Gladys L

Goulding , 69 , New Ha ven,
died Fr ida y at her r esi dence .
Born July l 2. 1908. in
Plym outh, W. Va .. she was
the daughter of the late
George W. and Lena l . Clark
Ol iver .
Her husband . Charles S.
Goulding , preceded her in
death in 1958 . She worked as a
waHress and was a member
of the Chr1 st ia r1 Brethren
Church.
Survivi ng are a daugt'lter,
tr ansportion
eq uipment ,
Mrs. Leota Hubbard, Mason ;
chemicals, . rnan ufacturereQ
a son , Loyd Johnson , Mid·
goods, and food and live dleport ; two sisters, Mrs.
Gorma Bumgarner , New
animals.
Haven , and Mrs. Gertrude
On the import side. eight of Young , Mason ; a brother 1
the 10 ca tegor ies decreased . Chester Ol iver, Clifton ; six
Petroleum imports were grandchildren and f ive greaf.
valued at $3.56 biUion in grandchildr.en .
Funeral services wt ll be
Octl&gt;ber, a slight decrease
Tuesday at 1• 30 p. m. at the
from the $3.7 billion level in
Foglesong Funera l Home
with the Rev . James H. Lewis
September.
offlciatin'g . Burial will be in
the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
LODGE TO MEET
funeral ho me today from 2 to
Pomeroy Past Matrons 186_ 4 p. m . and 7 to 9 p . m .

will meet Tuesday at 7:30

H spital News ·

Minnie Cla rk, Middleport :
Ronald Dillon , Sr., ReedSI•ille; Nettie Randolph.
Reedsville.
Discha rges - James Bean,
Rolland Smith. Albert Hill,
SUSAN ERMA WEBSTER
Jr., Goldie Denney, .William
Time of the Eastern Star
Capehart
.
ser vices for Susan Erma
Sunday Admissions Webs ter, 87; of the Wa ter looFlag Spr i ng s Comm uni ty ,
Edith Spencer, Middleport .
ha s been changed.
Chris
Smith , Pomeroy.
The new time w llt be 7 p. m ..
Discharges
Louise
today ( Monday ) at lhe
Burbridge , Gladys Bosworth,
Waugh . Halley -Wood Funera l
Home. F ina! r ites w ill ,be as Charles Werry, Jeremy
scheduled : 2 p. m .. Tue sday at
Hendricks, Freda Henderson.
the funeral home , where
Memorial Gardens.
Friends m av call at the
funer al home aft er 3 p m . on
Tuesday .

calling hours will be 5-9 p. m.

loday .
Waterloo Chapter of the
OES will conduct the Ea stern
Star ser vices.

ROGER NIBERT

Roger Lee Nibert, 18. a
resident of Rt . 588, died ot
in jur ies r eceived i n an autmobile accident Sunday
afternoon .
He was born May 27, 1959,
in Gallipolis , son of John H.
and Reva I. Newhouse
Nibert.
He was one of three sons
born to thiS union . Surviv i ng
besides his parents are two
br others , Frederic of Letart.
W. Va . and John Arlen
Nibert, Reynoldsburg, Ohio.
One niece and three nephews
survive .
Nibert was a member- of tne
1977 graduating class of
Gall ia Academy High School.
He was em.ployed at the
Pennzoil Service Station on
Fi rst Ave .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at
Miller 's Home for Funera ls
with Rev . Robert Covin of .
ficiating .
- Bur ial
will
be
in
Cenetenary Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funera l home from 7 unt il 9
p.m . Tuesday.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Nov . 25)
Darla Angel, Buell Brown,
Betty Cade, Hilda Copley,
Mrs . Thomas Gaspers and
daughter , Lisa Gibson ,
Jacqueline Justice . Mrs.
Stanley Mayo and son ,
Vonnie Pine. Callie Roberts,
Cinda Stanaker .
(Births , Nov. 25)
·Mr . and Mrs . Morgan
Hanunond, a son, Patr~ot ;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Long, a
son, Apple Grove; Mr. and

Mrs. Junior

Massie ,

a

daughter, t;)ak Hill ; Mr. and
Mrs . JaQJes Mulford, a
daughter, Cheshire. Mr. and
Mrs . Teddy Staton, a
daughter, Bidwell.
(Discharges, Nov.%$)
Vonnie Berkley. Me lody
Berry, Winna Bonecutter,
Hurley Bordon, William
Callahan, Rhonda Conwell,
Vera Dotson, Mrs. James
Enyart and son~ Donna
Evans, Gregory Gooderham,
Naomi Gooderham, Edward
Jackson, Walter Jones, Cecil
Kirk, Arthur Miller, Wendy
Musick, Ruth Musser, Mrs.
Merrill Myers and son, Mary
JEREMY MULFORD
Ousley, Mrs. Walter Rawlins
Jeremy Buck Mulford , and daughter, Mary Roberts,
three-month-old son of Randy
( Buck)
and
Stephanie Martha Rose, Cheryl Sheard,
Whalen
Mulford ,
RD . Mrs. Raymond Skeen and
JULIA E. KERWOOD
MASON, W. Va. -Ju lia E. Ches h i re , died Saturday son, Beverly Spires, Albert
Kerwood .' 71. Mason , died evening at Holzer Medica l Stephens, Richell SydenSunday at the Holzer Medica l Center . He was born Aug. 14,
stricker, Elizabeth Thornton,
1977 at Gallipolis.
Center . ·
Surviv i ng In addition to his Mrs. David Walter and
Born Apri l 14, 1906, in
parents are his materna l daughter.
Plymouth , W. Va., she was
the daughter of the late Pete gr!3ndparents, Mr . and Mrs.
1Blrlbs, Nov. 26)
and Flora Stevens Nollge. · M ic hael E . Whalen , Pt .
Mr
.
and Mrs . Stenhen
Pleasant
i
paternal
grand
..
Survivin g are her: husband,
Everett 0 .; fou.r sons, Paul parents, Mr. and Mrs . John Cauff, a daughter, Galli'I'Olis.
E., James R. and John L. ,.al l W. Mulford , Cheshire ; great. Mr . · and Mrs . Minter
grandmothers , Mrs. 1 Ann Schartiger, a daughter ,
of Mason , and Cl arence R.,
Oak Hil l, W. Va .; f. ive Whalen, Sunnyvalle, Calif.,
Mrs. Max ine Wil liams, Pf . Middleport. .
daughters ,
Mrs ,
Helen
(Discharges, Nov. %7)
Hebr lck, of Kincaid ; Mrs. Pleasa nt ; grea t-grandfather,
Grace Ha r vey , Page ; Mrs. Ben Dav idson , Middleport ;
Scott Clark, Cliff Dixon.
several aunts, unc:les and Mrs. Larry Hunt and son.
Flora Eskridge, Deep Wa ter ;
Mrs. Iris Barker , Cleveland , cous ins .
Ohio; and Mrs . Mar y
Gra vesi de rites w ill be held Molly McWilliams, Hobart
M cGraw ,
Wenatachee , Tuesda y at 2 p.m. at the Mullins, Mrs. David Shafer
Gra vel
Hi ll and son, Betty Willis.
Wa sh .; four sisters. Mrs . Cheshire
Lottie Landers, Paden City ; Cemetery with the Rev. John
1Blrtbs, Nov. 27)
Mrs. Kati e Van Meter , Mrs. Jeffe ri es
o fficiati ng.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ricy Faulker,
Raw\lngs -Coa1s'
Funera l
Ruth Mullins, Elkhart, Ind. ,
Home is i n ch arge _of · a son, Wellston : Mr. and Mrs.
and M rs. Vi rgi ni a Lanham,
Mammoth ;
a
bro t her , arrangements .
James Gray , a son, Oak Hill.
Lawrence
S.
Nollge ,
' Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kasee,
Lakeland, Fla .; 27 Qr and .
Grace Surface BeaboUt
a son, Gallif,olls. Mr. and
ch fldren , and ·19 great Grace Sur,face Beabout, 80,
grandchildren .
Park St ., Middleport, died ' Mrs. Charles Lintner, a
Funeral, services will be Sunday mornin~ at Veterans
daughter, Ironton.
held Wednesday ti t 1: 30 p. m.
at the Fog lesong Funeral
Home with the Rev . A. A.
Sm ith officia ting . Buria l will
f ol low i n the Kirkland

DON'T FORGET

SANTA'S MOONLIGHT
SALE TONIGHT
FROM 6:00 TO 8:00 PM

Be sure to stop
in and register for a
Free Gift to-be given
away Dec. 23. No
·Purchase Necessary.

Memoria l Hospital.
She was born Nov. 12, 1897
at St . Albans, the daughter of

the late Cia rk J. and Martha
Good Smith. She was also
preceded in dea th by her f irst
husband, E. J. Surface in 1955
and her second husband ,
Harry Beabout in 1966. She
wa s also preceded In
dea-th by three brothers. ti.ve
half-brothers, two half-sisters
and one step-son . She- was a

AMC ,..
Gremlin
ONE WEEK ONLY
NOV . 28-DEC . 3
For one
week
only
Riverside AMC will sell
any new AMC Gremlin for
SlOO.OO over actual dealer
cost . Now is your chance to
get in on a great deal and
great economy.

~:~! As

$3575
RIVERSIDE AA'C

Gallipolis

Special of the Week
Monday, Nov . 28 thru Sunday, Dec . 4

BEEF &amp; BEAN

BURRITO
MILD OR SPICY '
SPECIAL
REG. 95'
PRICE 49~

446-9800

former

r·~s ident

of Charleston

. and Columbus.

/

Survivors in c ude two
daughters, Mrs. Edward (EI.
oise) S1iles, Middleport, and

Mrs. Thdmas .(Edna) Hooks ,
&lt;;olumbus ; one son, Harry C.
Surface, M i ddleport , nine
granddaugh ters, two grand sons, 10 great-grandchildren ,
one step-grandson, one s1epgranddaughter , and several
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services w ill be

held Tuesday at 2 p.m. al the
Rawl i ngs -Coats

Funeral

Home with the Rev . Middle·
;warth officiating. Burial wi ll
be in Rock Spri ngS Cemetery .

She was a member of the
First Bap'tist Church, M i d ~
dleport. Friends may call at
the funeral home at any t ime.

REVA M. COLLINS
Reva M. Collins. 60. 514 S.
•tn St ., Mldd leporf diedSunday evening at University
Hosp i tal , Columbus,
following a long Illness.
Mrs. Collins was born Sept.
10, 1917 in Gall ia County,

daughter of the la!e Hollis
and Ada Rusk Taylor.
She was married to Howard

E. Collins, who preceded her
ln. death .
She Is survived · by four
sis ter$, Mrs. Ada Canady and
Mrs. Marie Ricketts, both of
Columbus: Mrs . Margaret
Covrett, Delaware, and Mrs.
Doris Bradford, Plain City, a
bro ther , Merrill Taylor ,
Pomeroy ;
and
s~veral
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral servh;:es wlll be
Wednesday at 1 p.m . at the
Walker Funera l Home With
the Rev . C. J. Lemley officiating . Burial w ill be in
Bradford Cemetery . .
The family wi ll receive
friends af the funeral home
Tuesday from 2 to 4and 7 to 9.
F.riends may call until time of
services.

EDWARD C. JORDAN
Memorial services will be

held Tuesday at 7 p.m. al the
Dexter Church of Christ for
Edward Crockett Jordan who

This special is offered to vou to acquaint vou with
the goodness and economy of our homemade
, Mexican food.
No limit to quantity of purchase . Offer good for
Drive- In or Carrv-Out Service Only .
-

died Noy . 8 al Roanoka , Va .
Mr. Jordan was 88 years of
age. Burial was in Roanoke.
Mr. Jordan is survived by

his

wife,

Mrs .

Helen

Lawrence Jordan; one sister,

Mrs. Anna

Belle Walthall

Hart l eY ; a brother · in · law ,
Joseph 0 . Lawrence, and two
grandctl i ldren,
Marshall

Shuff and Mrs : !lefty S. Bolt.

Lnarles 1-(ussell. pastor,
will officiate at the service.

NOW YOU KNOW
Hollywood's movie version
of the attack on Pearl Harbor, " Tora, Tora, Tora," cost
$25 million to make - 2S
times the amounl it cost the
Japanese to launch the attack
on Dec . 7, 1941.
f

News •• in Briefs
(Continued trom PI' II• I)
A steady rain that fell through m ost of a freezing day
apparently kept away the throng tha t had b&lt;:n expected for
the first pobUc opening ~f the Presley gra ves1te, but manswn
gatekeepers estimated 3, 400 \isitors wer e ushered through the
garden in large g roups .
NEW YORK - A TEAM OF NEW YORK DOCfORS has
found a surgical method to relieve pennanenlly two types of
facial neuralgia that cause severe pain to 500,000 midtlle-.aged
Americans the researchers annoWlced today Dr . Eugene J. Ratner said he and two other doctors of
Brookl)'ll yeterans Hospital found the cause of two conditions
known as ''trigeminal neuralgia '' and ' 1atypical facial pain'' to
be infection in bone cavities - either where teeth have been
polled or the bone has been damaged . Previously the ailme nts
were believed w be psychological in origin . ·

Racists will
disrupt ·s chool
~using in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ] - The
third Annual Congress of the
White
Confed eracy,
a
coalition of white supremacy
gro ups ranging from the
Nazis to the Ku Klux Klan,
ended Sunday with a call for
the "disr uption of forced
busing by eve r y legal

brown·shirted Nazi with a
swastika armba nd.

Parity

den talk.

..

Deer Season

•'

BY G REG BAILEY
•
Area hunters are reminded of changes in this year's deer
laws One of the major changes over last year IS the
requirement that all deer must be checked by noon the next
day afU.r the kill. This will keep many law VIOI~tl&gt;rs from
attempting w take more than one deer should they !1ll thetr tag
early in the week .
1
· Secondly, all deer must be tagged . fn the past, certa n
successful hunU.rs were not required to tag thetr deer, only
check it at an official station. The law now provides that all
must tag their deer where killed.
Landowners or disabled veterans and others who were not
required wtag the ~er immediately must now make a tag of .
their own and attach it to the carcass before moving It from
-where it fell. The tag should bear the hunter's name and
address and ·the date and time killed .

a

not fair .
· f' t
The Ohioans should be given the anllerless permits . Irs
and nonresidents second. Other states, such as West Virgmta,
don't give out nonresident antler tess permits, so ~hy should!''!
we follow suit ? U any of you out there agree w1th me, votce
your opinion.
Good luck, but don 't forget tl&gt; be a sa fe hunter.

·
-_
.
•
,

I
.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~---------~

FELDS IN . POMEROY

~

legal means."

.

Gerhardt spoke before an
array of banners that in·
eluded the U.S. flag, a Nazi
standard with swastika, the
Confederate flag and the
British Union Jack . On either
side of him sat officials of the
organizations t hat make up
the confederacy including a
hooded klansma n and a

liJ!tiJ.
~~&amp;

~
~
~

AIM HIGH~

w

Proudly disptavl
yo~r gun. collec~onl

~\

·- 1n an 1mpress1vel

"SPORTSMAN" cabinet•

Aid unit busy
in Middleport
The Middleport E-R Squad
made five runs in less than 24
hours, two on Sunday and
three this morning .
AI 5:06 p.m . Sunday the
squad was called to Dock St.
for Charles Knapp, 84, who
was treated at the scene. At
6:41 p.m. Sunday they were
called near the swinuning
pool for Chris Smlth who was
injured in a fall. He was taken
to · Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
At I a.m. todav they trans·
pot:\ed Jim Clatworthy, High
St., to Holzer Medical Center.
At 1:50 a.m _ today lhey were
called to Rutland for James
Shuler. The call was given to
SEOEMS.
· At 2; 45 a.m. this morning
they were called to Sycamore
St. for Dale Hermans. No
information was available
. where he was taken.

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STILL SEARCHING
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil
(UP!)
Firefighters
searched the ruins of the
Hotel Nacional's convention
center today for more victims
of an explosion ani! flash fire
that killed 10 persons and
injured five others.
HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest lemperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 90
degrees at Santa Barbara,
Calif. Today's low was 9
degrees

below

zero

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Handsomely styled , they 're crafted
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-· - _.-( ., N
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1

8:

at

Waterloo , Iowa .
I

vETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ROOMMATES
- Now what could be s&lt;i unusual abo ut ·hospital roommates? What is unusual is that one is a former sheriff of
Meigs County and the other is Meigs County's present
sheriff, James J. Proffitt, seated. Roscoe Fowler, 84,
Middleport, is Proffitt's roommate. Fowler, sheriff in
Meigs County from 1934 w 1937, is the oldest living exsheriff in the county. Fowler said he was the only
democrat ever to hold the office until Sheriff Proffitt was
elected a year ago. Fowler, after leaving office in 1937
went to Richmond, Ind. and was In charge of personnel for
the Powell-Crosley Corp. After four years there he was
named personnel manager of the C,rosley Corp. which
manufactured the Shelvador Refrigerator and later the
Crosley autl&gt;mobile. He was also iii; athletic director.
Fowler and Proffitt are medical patients.

INe;~~;fo)

VOL XXVIII

,,
••
'

business."
The four regional winners represent some 3,500 of
Ohio's 70,000 farm bureau couples 30 and under . They'r e
" commercial farmers " who earn their living off the land,
he said.
·
Often times they enter partnersllips with parents but as
in the case of Craig and Marilyn Shaw, both 24, they
· bought.a 460--acre grain farm in Auglaize County without
family help.
The Shaws, who live near Wapakoneta have gone from a
no on-the-farm grain storage in 1973 w16,000 bushels.
A recent farm bureau survey showed 50 per cent of the
ymmg famers had working wives.
"Most weren't farm girls in the first place but they
seem tl&gt; be the most dedicated t&lt;&gt;ward farm life ," said
Gerber.
'
Other regional winners are: Gary McKeei ZR, and his
wife, Barbara, 27, wbo operate a W-acre grain and hog
operation in Greene County near Xenia .
Keith Dennis, 26, and his wife , Jane, Tl, who farm 1,03.:&gt;
acres in Perry County near Rushville_
David and Pam Oberholtzer o[ Medina County, who
operate a 500--acre grain and livestock farm. David is ~.
his wife, 29.
•
All a r e typical. They 're active in farm bureau and local
organizations. Their wives work, either reaching school or .

•

at

Schools
•
umque
in u.s.

in ma naging their operations.
The Shaws' have one child, the McKees, Dennis and
Oberholtzers each have two children .
" It might have been the way of live for farmers tl&gt; bave
large families years ago, but it's no longer the case now,' '
Gerber ,.Ud.
Judges selected the finalists on their agricultural
operation and management abilities based on their
teamwork in decision.making,' community and civic
involvement .
Gerber dispelled a myth that large col'porations are
taking over farms .
"Our young farmers are part of the 90 per cent of the
farms operated by families in Ohio . And the percentage
could be higher than that," he said .
He said the success of farmers depends on their
managerial abilities which explains why family-run
cor porate farms are good investments.
" U yo u own or operate your own business you're more
likely to be successful. Big profits aren't there for the
corporations," he said.

,

The Dennises are the only ·couple among the four
finalists who don't own their own land.
The couple selected for the top honor will receive an
expense-paid trip to the American Farm Bureau
Federation 'sannual meeting in Houston, Tex. in January.

-·
enttne
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1977

NO. 159 , POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press Interoalional
WASHINGTON - AITORNEY GENERAL GRIFFIN Bell
said today he expects U. S. District Judge Frank Johnson to
ask President Carter to withdraw his nomination as head of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation due to health problems .
"I expect him w quit," Bell rold reporters on Capitol Hill
before he testified at a Senate hearing dealing with another
Dr. Charles Galloway, nonsubject. Bell said that following the hearing he intended wtalk verbal
communication
with the Montgom ery, Ala ., judge by telephone about his _specialist of Ohio State
University , discussed
(ConUnued on pace 10)
changes In education in
relation to social changes
with some 30 business and
professional people of the ·
-county at a luncheon at the
Meigs Inn Mondl!v.
Dr. Galloway was in
United Press International · and no local issues can be Meigs County to speak to
About 500 mine rs struck the
identified as the cause for the teachers of lhe Meigs Local
School District who were
Ra'-"''On No . 3 mine of t he walkout.
.
Southern Ohio Coal Co . in
"They went out at about 8 having an in-service training
Vinton Cowity today .
a.m.," said Baker. " We have session on Monday.
Dr. Galloway stressed that
Local 19~7 of the United been trying to contact the
in
America today the attempt
Mine Workers Union has officers of the local ever since
Is
made to educate all
scheduled a meeting for later they went out but have been
children
of all parents, not a
today to see what caused the unable to get anybody to give
select
few.
He declared this is
walkout which occurred one us any definitive reason why
the
only
coUntry
in the world
week before the UMW con· they went out.
·accepting
this
challenge
tract wilh the soft-coal in"We have checked with
today
.
dustry expires.
other coal companies in Ohio
Speaking on classroom
Not so strangely, the and we are apparently the
walkout coincided with only one out," said Baker. changes, Dr. Galloway stated
opening of the Ohio deer "This is an isolated case and that 30 or 40 years ago a first
season (guns).
there is no apparent reason grade class of 120 students
would see only about 40 of
Officials at UMW District 6, for it."
those students graduating
which is headquartered in
" We might expect them to
Bellaire, acknowledged the go out even a few days early ·with dropouts all along the .
mine had been struck but had before the contract is up," way due to the lack of en·
no comment on the situation. ;-said Baker, " but you iorcement of school at·
Dave Baker, a- spokesman · wouldn't expect an isolated tendance. The fact that today
for the Southern Ohio Coal · mine to go out on ils own. We attempts are being made to
Co., said no complaints have still have not gotten any educate all children may
been filed against the com- reason which we believe contribute to low scores being
pany by workers at the mine would justify them to go out."
(ConUnued on IJIIIIe 10)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gas utility asks
for new increase
A rate -increase requested

by Columbia Gas of Ohio in

500 miners out
at Raccoon No. 3

Plans to help expedite a
ville, outlined progress in the
house rehabilitation program house numbering project
of the Gallia-Meigs Com- which began in November,
munity Action Agency were
1976. All houses in the rural
made and a report was given
areas of the county are exon the house numbering
peeled ' to be numbered
project by the Meigs County som!llime in January, next
Regional Planning Com- year.
mission Monday.
When the work is comC. E. Blakeslee, executive pleted a dire&lt;;tory will be
dlreclor of the planning prepared showing the names
commission, said the CAA._ and new addresses, including
had received $80,000 which is the renamed roads, of
to be used in_ improving residents.
homes of low income
Page said that plans should
families: He said little of the be made to prepare a base
Gl'ant has baen spent. It was map at a cost of $2,500 from
d~cided to offer help to all
which maps for public
organizations involved to dlstrlbulion can be made
help get the project started. A showing the location of each·
check will be made with a of the rural homes iti the
Community Action Agency county.
representative on what plans , It was suggested that since
the agency has for using the the project of the mapa would
money.
.
cost a bout $7,000 advertising
The commission went ori be sold to help defray the
record as having no objection costs. It was also suggested
to plans for improving Route that the directories be sold io
338 leading to the Ravens- help with costs lit the map
wood bridge site and which project.
A need for signs noting the
would connect with Route 124,
provided the improvement location of all of the newly
does not jeopardize a power named roads in the county
plant site being considered by was expressed but it was felt
the Columbus and Southern that funds will not be
Ohio ElectriC Co. Length of available for it. The cost
the road to be Improved is · could run as high as $50,000, it
3.25 miles with an estimated was reported.
total cost of $2,954,000. It
The entire project, Page
would be one with federal said, should be finished in
funding and state funding .
March. He urged the com·
James Page of Fleming, missinn to see if it can
Page, stolte, Inc., Marys- arra1.ge for the employment

Best young farm familie~ are
ambitious, leader types

e

·House rehabilitation
may he revived

6-Gun Cabinet

UITLE ROCK, Ark. (UP!)
- Sen. John McClellan, DArk., who had represented
Arkansas in the U. S. Senate
since 19-13, died during the
night.
A staff assistant to McClellan said the senator's
wife found him this morning .
when she went to awaken hun
for breakfast. He had died in
his sleep. McClellan an·
nounced a week ago he would
not run for rHlection in 1976.
His term would have expired
in January 1979.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio's outstanding young farm
couples are likely to be college graduates, leaders in their
communities and more ambitious than their city cousins.
They probably work harqer and much longer than their
city counterparts but are likely to be hiJppier because
their work produces nouri,shment for a hultgry world .
Their "take-home," pay is also likely w be a source of
envy with incomes for the successful couples ranging
from four
six fi gures.
'
That's the composite image portrayed by four regio!Jl!l
finalists in the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation's second
annual "outstanding young farm couples" contest, a
highlighl ol the federations annual meeting here this
week.
While no one but the IRS knows how much these couples
and other farm couples earned in the past years, farm
bureau spokesman Blake Gerber says "the finalists are
fine examples why young farm families a re choosing
agriculture as a way to earn a living ."
Gerber posed the question of income to leading fa rmers
in Ohio and came awaY "surprised ." He said ~' incomes
ranged from a deficit to several hpndred thousand pollars
as good management practices show in any kind of

w

HOW ABOUT THAT, Keith Woods ? Wasn't that some
deer ? Tbat kill should prove to skeptics that our w1ldlife
managers are doing fine job with the d~r herd.
Did you know that Meigs County IS one of the top deer
counties in the State? Official estimates pot the Metgs County
deer population at 11.1 deer per square mile.
The snow shoul.d help hunters again th':' season, but don't
be upset if you didn't get an a ntler less perffill_this year. Seems
as though the State people didn't iss~e as ma.~Y, ~ I personally
know of lots of applicants who d1dn I get a dot; penrut.___l!lll_
I'm sure the people in Columbus know what they redoing.
.
I'll take exception w that last statement. One gripe I have
(as well as other hunters) is that a lot Q! nonresidents apply for
and get a nllerless permits . I will take iJ stand and say that is

(ConUnued from pege I)
movement is not as strong as
reported. J enkins said more
means."
than four million farmers
Anti-racist pickets mar- across the count r y support
ched outside the motel where the strike movement.
SHAKY COALITION
Prior to the rally, more
the conference was held .
Police, some in plainclothes, than 500 tractors, combines,
USBON, Portugal (UP!) the International Monetarv
were stationed around and pickup trucks and other farnl
The
minority soc ialist , Fund • political sources say .
inside the motel. The pickets equipment, moved do'wn U .S.
government of · Prime Min- "The Socialists are clinging
included representatives . of Highway -183 in a parade
ster
Mario Soares will fall to a cracked branch, and
Youth Against Wa r and stretching for miles. About a
this week in a dispute over everyone seems to be shaking
Facism , the Anti-Racist dozen crop--duster planes flew
belt-tightening demands by the tree," one source said.
Alliance and the Defense over the route.
Committee Against the Klan.
John Gerhardt of Colwnbus , President of the
American White Nationalist
Party , read a statement
outlining the While Confederacy' s opposition to
busing.
Gerhardt said this included
fostering of · a "ri'tilitantly
uncompromising ~~position w
to busing in the white com·
munity" and the " disruption
of forced busing by every

i

Take home
pay to the
farm envied

• •

EDWARD HOLTER

Yotmg Holter
in Orlcago for
4-H Congress
Edward Holter. son of !llr.
and Mrs. Roy Holter, Route 3,
Pomeroy, left Saturday to
attend the National 4-H Club
Congress in Chicago.
Ed wiU be a delegate from
Ohio
representing
agriculture . He flew by
United Air Lines and is
staying at the Conrad Hilton
Hotel. His sponsor is International Harvester. He
wUI have a full schedule of
panquets, programs and
tours.
A so~homore at Eastern
High School, Ed has been in 4H club work eight years and
, has completed over 40
projects, most of · them
related to agriculture. He Is a
member of the Chester Farm
Boys 4-H Club, the Meigs
County Better Livestock
Dairy Club and the Meigs
County Junior Leaders Club.
He is president this year of
the Dairy Club and the
Eastern High Future Farmers of America. A delegate
to the Ohio 4-H Club Congress
earlier this year, last year he
won a state trip to Madison,
Wis. to attend the National 4H Dairy Conference and the
11
World Dairy Expo." He won
the county championship
with Holsteins and the Dairy
Sweepstakes at the Meigs
· County Fair.

Middleport beginning next
June was referred to committee for study when Middleport V!Uage Council met in
regular session Monday
night.
John
Koebel,
local
Columbia Gas Co. manager,
discussed aspects of a new
proposal with the village.
Koebel said the company is

asking for a 4.5 percent in- company, which would go
crease in the base rate for the ·into effect next June, are
first year and a 7.5 percent based upon 1976 costs of the
increase for the second year company rather than 1977
rusts, so it Is to the advantage
of the two year contract_
Asked why the contract of lhe viUage to start early on
would be for two years rather establishing terms of the new·
than four as in the past, contract.
Koebel said tbal tbe
Koebel said the uncertainty
of the economic future makes minimum rate would be
a two year contract more increased from $3 to $4.88 a
practical. He said also that monlb for first year of tile
the increases sought by the new contract and to $5.%8 for

tbe . second year. Council
decided lbat· II wanted to
study lbe contract and Mayor
Fred ·Hoffman referred tbe
maUer -to a committee
composed ·· of
William
Walters, Marvin Kelly and
Dewey Horlon.
Koebel said he would not
approach council again until
he hears from the mayor or
from the committee. He said,
however , that ' his company
does not expect any ' curtailments at this time and
that the company does not
even plan to implement
allocations which were sent
out
earlier to
small
businesses and schools
because the gas supply is up
and the company is in better ·
condition to serve its
customers than ducing last
year's hard

of Donna Thornton, who has
been enumerator for the
house numbering project; for
SANTA COMES "'-- Four year old Ken VanMatre, son of Harvey and Belty Van Matre,
another year so that someone
Route I, Middleport, was just one of the htu1dreds of ki~s w spend a moment with Santa in
will be on · hand to make
Middleport Monday night. Candy treats were provided by the Middleport merchants.
additions and provide any
needed information to the
public.
Page displayed aerial
maps which will now become
the property of the county.
There are approximately 120
Everyone loves a parade put the two together and it Middleport Monday night
of these. He showed samples
and everyone loves Santa, so spelled instant success in when the town officially
of letters which have been
::;:;:;::··:::::::;:::·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :·:·:::::::·:·:::=.::::::::::;:;::·::::::.;;·::·:;:.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:; ,:,.;:,·;:,·;:;:,:;:;:. welcomed in the Christmas
sent to each rural resident
season.
Maps, survey will be explained
advising them of their new
There was bumper to
addresses. He told of his work
·
··
Middleport residents, insannce men, realtors and
bumper
tr11ffic only from
with service units including
other interested persons are urged to aUend a public
Middleport
to lower Monkey
post offices in getting the new
hearing tonight at 7:30 o'cloek In the council chambers
Run
Iii
Porileroy
)1181 a little
house numbering system Into
regarding lbe flood maps aod survey prepared by Burgess
Meigs County Sheriff's
after
6
p.m
.
as
motorists
practical operation.
&amp;. Nlple as authorized by the Dept. of Housing, &amp; Urb1111
Dept. of James J . Proffilt
made
their
way
into
Mid·
The commission discussed
Development.
said today charges have been
dleport
to
see
the
annual
the Ohio River Port stydy
Officials from HUD, the Ohio Dept. of Natural
filed against an 18--year qld
parade
which
was
done by lhe Ohio Department
Resources, and the Burgess &amp; Nipl11 engineering finn
Racine woman in connection
highlighted
by
Santa
and
his
of Transportation and the U.
wUI be on haod
explain the program and answer
with the breaking and enhelpers.
S. Corps of Engineers. The tering of, the
questions.
Racine
Parking in Middleport any
study shows one port site for
Elementary School on the
place near the parade route
Meigs County. This Is the
weekend of Nov. lB. Three
Hobson area and involves
juveniles have also been
some 120 acres. It was agreed
charged in the entry. Two of
to maintain an active interest
the youths had attempted to
In the port authority st'udy
enter the building on two
work as it progresses .
· different occasions, the
Attending the meeting were
time as the owners of the company and the
Steve Little, employe of Midwest Steel
department said.
Blakeslee, Edison Baker,
employes were too far apart on wages and
Corp.,
and
president
of.
local
No.
6197,
Thereon Johnson, E .· F. atarged with petty theft
benefits.
· and criminal trespass is indicated today the strike now in progress at
Robinson, Fred Hoffman,
Litlle said that at the last negotiating
Debbie Lyons who, according Midwest steel would not be settled before the
John Rice, Wesley Buehl,
meeting
on Nov. 4, company officials wid
first
of
the
year.
to the charge, entered the
Henry Wells, Page, Miss
them
they
would get back with the employes,
to
UUie,
In
a
telephone
According
building twice around midThornton and Boyd Ruth in
bnt
as
of
today
nothing has transpired. Serey
night of the 18th and took conversation last week with plant manager
the conference room of the
was not available for commenl and would not
nolebooks and pencils and Torn Serey at Midwest Steel, UtUe was
Farmers Bank Bldg.
be available this week, a spokesman at the
informed the company was not ready for
(ConUnued on page 10) .
plant office said.
more negotiations in meetings at the present

winter.

Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate read a communication
from the Consumers Counsel
asking for representatives to
appear at a public forum on
Dec . I in Columbus against a
rate hike request from the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. No action was
taken.
Mayor Hoffman announced
a flood insurance public
meeting for 7:30 this evening
at village hall and that the
mobile office of Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum will be in
Middleport from 10:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m . on Dec. 14 for any
resident who has a matter to
bring to the senator's at·
- tention.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hollman, Grate, and
council members Walters,
Allen Lee King, Kelly, Horton
and Carl Horky.

Santa's show 'is big success

WOman charged
as suspect in
school B&amp;E

w

was hard to come by.
Heading the parade were
Mick Childs and George
Ingels on behalf of the
Middleport merchants who
staged a Santa moonlight sale
following the parade.
As usual, everyone enjoyed
last night's eveni.
nie weather was snappy
but not disagreeable. Four
marching bands, Southern,
!ConUnued on FPI• 10)

-:.,-.)".HJ''H J'"H
~

.

.

.

..,\.1

~

.) 1 ,_"':.,

Negotia.tions at dead-end I

'

. DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

~

�•
2- The Dall) Senttnel M1ddleport-Pomero&gt;, 0 , Tu~sd.l) , Nm• 29, 1977
3- The Dally Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TUesday , Nov. 29, 1977

Oil boondoggle of billions charged
WASHINGTON t UPi l - A
House subcommittee ts
looking mto a report that
political
and
ondustr )"
pressW'e blocked plarrs by the
In ternal ReYenue Servtce to
rule that major 011 comparues

Murder,

"'" S7 b1lllon m back taxes
The

tssue

In \'Olvt"s

pa) ments Amencan oil
comparues make to fore~gn
governm en ts
The IRS
eurrentlv

de[mes

such

payments as mea rung the

roh~ery

!lrms gel a ctouar tor aouar
cred1t mthe Umted States for
the amount pa1d lD foreign
taxes

Howe\'er the otl taxt&gt;s
could be treated as royalties,
and the compames would

then be a llowed unl)' a
deductton on tlHHr Ameracan

mcome taxt:&gt;s -

cuttmg m

half thP advanta~~s they now
f'llj O\ '

An

tmestlgator

for

the

indictments nolled

Due to msuff1ctent ev1dence
because of the SUicide of the
state's mam Witness, Terry
McCune , md1 ctments of
murder and aggravated
robbery against Clyde
Ramey Ratchlf, 50, of
Athens, were nolled Monday
lll Gallia County Common
Pleas Court
Ratchlf and McCune had
been mdicted m September
for the murder of Albert
Thompson, Rt 1, &lt;llesh1re.
Their arrests followed lll·
vest1gat1on by Deputy Shenlf
S1d Vance
Charges were filed after an
autopsy performed on
Thompson's exhumed body
showed he d1ed from a
shotgun blast in the chest and
abdomen
Prosecutlng Attorney
Joseph L Cam Monday en·
tered a nolle prosequi to two
counts 1JI the thr.,..,ount
lnd•ctment Ratcliff , who
earlier pleaded not guilty to
the theft charge, entered a
guilty plea Monday Common
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R
Calhoun sentenced Ratcllff to
a 2-5 year tenn Ill the OhiO
Penitentiary
Accordmg to the court
entry f1!ed at 2.07 p.m
Monday, Prosecutmg At·
torney Calll told the story of
how the case developed
agamst Ratcliff and McCune.
The sheriff's department
rece~ved a call to lllVest•gate
a decomJI&lt;lsed body of a man
found Ill September, 1976.
The
department
m·
ves\lgated the matter as did
Gall1a County Coroner Dr
Donald R Warehune It was
determmed that Albert
Thompson, 70, Rt
I,

Bucks top Marshall, pass secOnd test

House commerce, conswner
and
monetary
affatrs
subeomnuttec reported the
IRS audited 19 of the b1ggest

'

1973 The agency determmed
a ne"' ruhng could mean the
hrms owe $7 b1lhon 1n taKes
"they did not pay because of
the cred1ts the) took, the
invest igator sa1d
The IRS had pla mted to
release 1ts new ruling m early
November, the mvesugator
smd, but U10 matter was kept
qu1el because of lobbymg by
the
oil llldustry and
ad.rmmstratwn fears that the
conlrm•ers} could upset the
mdustry JUst as Congress was
workmg out !mal details of
the president's energy bill
Some liberal members of
the subcommittee were
reported ready to threaten
they will not support carter's
energy leglsla!Jon 1f the IRS
fads to press the 1ssue
" It 's cornmg to an embarrassmg head for the admmiS·
tratwn and ll couldn't be
comrng to a head at a worst
hme , " the subcommittee

I

Eagles begin
,season tonight

case A maJor break-through offic ers Ratcliff has not concurs m th1 s recomcame late m August of thls adnutted to any gUilt m the mendauon and, 15) the chJel
year when deputies recelved matter
com plammg witness , S1d
a tt p fr om a co mplamt
McCu ne had agr~ed to Vance concurs 1n thi s
agamst Clyde Ramey Rat· testify lor the State to the recommendauon, the state
cllff
events of that evenmg
enters a nolle prosequi as to
Followmg further In· Ho,.ever, smce his death, any co unt one and three of the
vest1gatwn, charges of statements that he made md){'tment
aggravated murder , cannot be used agamst the
In other court actwn
aggravated nlbl\ery and theft defendant Ratcliff because of Monday , Comm on Pleas
were brought agamst Ratchff the S~&gt;th Amendment of the Court Judge Ronald R
and Terry " R1p " McCune U S Const1tuhon
Ca lhoun se nt enced Randy
'
A statement was taken
Mass1e, 20, and Wilham
The entr} , contmued
from McCune m which he set
The State now only has the Edward Masste, 25, Rt 1,
forth the events of Sept 14, testunony of Donna Leedy , Waterloo, to s1x months to
'
1976, the date detennmed for who by her own statement, five year terms on breakmg
BAzAAR - Oh1o Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Phi Soronty
1ts
Thompson's death
was not present at the tlffie and
entermg
charges
~:~~:~;~ru~~~;~ bazaar from 9 a m to 5 p m Saturday at the Tnmty Church basement 1n
McCune alleged he was nor saw anything that oc· resultmg from a B&amp;E last
·1
Many handmade decoratmg 1tems and g1ft 1tems w1ll be sold and a bake sale will
huntmg With the defendant, curred that mght. Therefore, July at the Sportsman Inn at
be held m conj unction v.tth the event. Pictured with a sam plmg nf U1e sa le 1tems are Con me
Clyde R Ratcllff, when they based upon the facts and the Gall1a.
Dodson , left, and Kathy Doidge. Mrs. Doidge 1s ways and means cha n man of the chapter
went to Thompson's home followmg reasons (1) the
and Mrs Dodson 1s cocha~rman
Johnny F Sm1th, 30, Rt I, rude sa1d
located off SR 554 m Cheshire prunary Witness on behalf of Waterloo, found gu11ty of
Twp
the state IS now dead, (2) complicity earlier this month
At that t1me , McCune legal problems SW'rounding m the same B&amp;E, ""s sen·
adm1tted Thompson was the testunony of Donna Leedy tenced to 1·5 years.
killed and robbed of money and the husband and "1fe
Denms F1lhnger, 23,
and guns
privilege and the fact that she Patriot Star Rt , Galllpohs,
Donna Leedy , Ratcllff's did not see any or the events was g1ven a 60 day sentence
g1rl friend , drove the vehicle that mght, (3) addlUonal m the Gall1a County Jail for
II I
dunng the events of that costs to the taxpayers for unlawful restrunt m the
~
mght She d1d not know what Witnesses, counsel and other attempted k1dnappmg of a
.... r
was gomg to occur, the count fees associated w1th the tnal, Gall1polls woman last April
entry says
(4) the sheriff's deparlment
ll
r #l r
Prelunlllary hearlllgs were ·
held for Ratcliff and McCune '
They'll Do It Every Time
and both "ere bound over to
the grand JUry on charges of~;-::::;;::;:;::=:;-~:;:;:-;::;;::;-:::;:::-:;:;::::::::;-;;;-::;::;;;-~=.,
murder, aggravated robbery, 'fESTER/JAY' .. STE/'10 STEL WAS ASS'!GNfP 70 MR.
and theft .
FROSTBITe Wlo'O KffPS Tlf£ HEAT AT ao•
On Nov 2, 1977, Terry \-....,..- ~-:-:--:---.-,.-~-:-~ -:-r-'T'r.-..1(~
McCune committed swc1de m
the Gall1a County Jail Ac·
cording to Prosecutor Cam,
as far as the sheriff's m·
vest1gat10n revealed , Me·
Cune was the only eye·
Witness to the events
14, 1976 No note
CUNTON BAILEY, age 11, \\llh HI-point buck from
McCune as to why
MIKE HECK and 11-pomt buck from Great ll€nd
h1mself
Bashan area
Donna Leedy has been
Cheshtre, dted several weeks livmg w1th the defendant,
pnor to the flllding of the Ratcliff, for more than five
remams and the cause of years and has had one child
I
death was listed as un· by hun. There are legal
Deer season with the gun off1c1ally opened Monday
determmed at that t1me questions as to any test1mony
With deer hunters swarmmg over Me1gs County The three
(Sept 30, 1976)
she might g1ve m the case
piCtured are among the lucky ones that bagged a deer the
The sheriff's department because of the husband and
first day of the season Last year 20,561 deer were killed m
mvest)gatwn conllllued m the wife priVIlege. She has told
Ohw dunng the deer gun season The deer populahon m
Ohio IS eshmated to be m excess of 100,000

By G1'1!g BaUey
The Eastern Eagles will
rely on speed and the desire
of their young basketball
players this season as they
attempt to p1ck up their l1rst
wm in over a year The
Eagles have two starters
from last season and three
lettennen, so they Will have
some experience to go along
With their speed
Juniors Jeff Goebel and
Dan Spencer are back from
last year's startmg fiVe, and
senior Dave Brown saw
enough action to letter
Tonight when they go against
the host North Gall1a Pirates
those three w1ll be joined by
junior forward Joe Boyles
and sophomore Br1an BISSell
at a guard to complete the
starting !me-up. Goebel will
go at a guard, Spencer at a
forward , and Brown at
center
Ready to come off the
bench will be juniors Rusty

•.

.'

[

-

~

~

,..

~·w ~

,,

II U•

Prevention of diabetes
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR' LAMB -I am a
45 year old woman, and have
relat1ves who have had sugar
diabetes My mother died at
78 w1th diabetes Is there
an} thing I can do to prevent
getlmg sugar diabetes' I am
rn good health, 5 feet 8, and
we1gh 150 pounds
DEAR READER - The
hereditary aspects of
diabetes are sometunes hard
to esta bhsh. Why' Because
there IS more than one cause
for diabetes. It may be m·
her1ted or 11 may follow a
disease of the pancreas or
even mwnps. It 1s probably
;several different diseases aU
'With abnormally elevated
l:Jtood glucose levels
· The other reason 1s that
Even mher1ted diabetes may
inanifest Itself at different
;ages If 1t tended to occur at
'"ge 75, but the person d1ed
:from other causes at age 45,
ihere would be no way of
~owmg that such an m·
;div1dual earned the genes to
-develop diabetes later in life
; It JS a good 1dea to do what
:You can to prevent diabetes.
•Avoiding obesity ts the most
Jmportant measure. Avoid
'excess sw'eets and rely more
~n raw frwts and plam
:ve~etables rather than
::&gt;weets for the carbohydrates
m your diet. Remain active.
Phys1~al activity helps keep
;the blood ougar low These
&lt;neasures will help unprove
:your health anyway, no mat;ter what.
· To g1ve you more lnfonna.tlon, I am sending you The
Health Letter number 3-11,
b~abetes. D•agnos1s, Preven·
.lion and Management. Others
;who want this 1ssue can send
00 cents w1th a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for 1t
to ' me m care of this
newspaper, P 0. Box 1551,
Radio C1ty StatJOn, New
•York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
can you tell me about
;lecithin ' My mother has let a

fnend talk her mto taking up
to 20 a day It does not say on
the bottle anything about
the~r strength or what 15 con·
tamed Ill them
My husband is on a diet for
high tr~glycer1des, and she
says these pills will help him.
I am a very nervous person,
and take tranqwlizers, and
she clauns they will help my
my nerves Is all this possl·
ble' How do you know what is
too much when taking them'
DEAR READER-Would
you believe lecithin IS a com·
bmat10n of tnglycendes and
chobne That IS all 1t 15
Tr1glycendes means three
fatty ac1ds hooked to one
molecule of glycenne In the
case of lecithin, one of the fat·
ty
ac1ds
conta1ns
phosphorous The whole thing
JS then cherrucally combmed
WJth choline, another com·
pound that IS UllJI&lt;lrlant m
preventmg fatty liver and has
other functiOns m the body.
Choline JS abundant 1n lean
meat and other foods
And when you swallow
!ec1Utin, •t must be digested
The tr1glycende IS broken
free from the choline The fatty ac1ds are broken free from
the glycerme and the component parts are then absorbed
mto the blood stream. It 1s no
longer lec1thin You could get
the fatty ac1ds from many
sources, and the choline Irom
a good balanced diet
No, I am afra1d any good ef·
feels 11 has are from 1ts
placebo effects That means
1t 1s related to the fa1th the
person has m takmg 11 It w1ll
not help your husband, and 1t
Will not help you unless you
have fa1th in 11. A certam
percentage of people feel bet·
ter and do better if they take
something - anything because of this effect.
Anyone who 1s ea ling a
balanced diet has no need to
take lec1thin m any amount.
Watch your wallet, or m this
case, your mother's

Orildren like new TV series
"Cover to Cover" ts a
television series broadcast
from educahonal telev1sl0n

statiOns to schools which
part1c1pate m the m-school
anstructtonal televtston
program
The 15-mmute programs
mtroduce children m the
mtermedtate grades to a
vanety of exc1tmg and well·
written books The per·
sonable host, John Robbms,
uses story telling, drawlllg
and drama to present parts or
the book, never glVmg away
the endmg and encouragmg
children to f1msh the story
themselves
The school
hbrary IS of course one
source for children who do
want to "find out what
happens" by readlllg the
book, and the public hbrary
also has copies of many of the
titles used 10 "Cover to

C&lt;!ver "
The library staff w1ll also
be able to suggest sun1!ar
t1tles for those children who
want "another good book JUSt
like the one I heard about on
TV"
· Other programs about
books are shown on TV, both
from educatiOnal and com·
merctal channels Susan
Fleshman at the Pomeroy •
Middleport Public Library
suggests that you ask for
those which your family has
enJoyed and Wishes to read m
the ongmal
Books that have been on
telev1s1on and that are at the
llbranes now mclude " The
Uncoln Conspiracy," 11 Rtch
Man Poor Man," and tts
sequel, "Beggannan, Theft,"
"The Hobb1t," " The M1dn1ght
Fox" and "The Wolves of
Willoughby Chase "

SEOEMS certification renewed
Certification of the Southeast Ohio
Emergency
Medical Services (DE OEMS)
was recently renewed by the
Ohio Department of Health
(ODOH), the department's
d1rector, Dr. John H.
Ackennan announced today,
To qualify for cert1flcat10n,
SEOEMS
met
ODOH
reqUirements 10 accordance

'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO TilE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA •
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed
ROBERT HOEFUCH
Cfty Ed.Jtor
Publliihed dally except Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publi!hing
Company Mu1Umedaa, loc ,
111
Court St Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769
Business Office Phone 992- 2156
Editonal Phone 99'b2Hi7
Seeond class postage paid at
Pomeroy Ohio
National adverti:ung representative Ward - Grtfftth Comprany,
Inc, Boltlnclll ~nd Gallagher D1v,
757 Third Ave , New York NY
!0017
Subscnptlon rates Dellvcrcd by
carrier where available 75 cents per
week By Motor Route where earner
~rv lce not avallitble, One month,
J}.25 By mail lu Ohio and W Va.
One Year, S2200. Six months,
$ll SO Three month s S7 00,
Elsewhere $26 00 year, SIX months
fl3 50, Three months, $7 50
Subscription price lllciUdes SWJday
Times-Sentinel

w1th the NatiOnal H1ghway
Safety Act of 1966, which
required each state to
develop laws regulating
emergency
ambulance
serviCe
Accordmg to Dr. Acker·
man, the purpose or the
ODOH program IS to encourage quallf~ed EMS m
Oh10 through ! .voluntary
cooperation of emergency
medical and ambulance
serv1ces He sa1d that
SEOEMS' compliance w1th
the voluntary program gives
the regional Life Squad
service a headstart on
meetmg commg standards to
be reqUired by Oh1o's new
EMS law, wh1ch has already
estabhshed tramlhg standards for ambulance personnel.
,~
Donald Coffin, EMS cer·
tlhcatlon ofllcer for ODOH.
sud the voluntary cer·
tJflcallon program gives
ambulance
services,
throughout Ohio, time to
perform necessary
upgradmg of services, and
correct any deficiencies, so
that they w111 comply with the
certification standards soon
to be developed.

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Press International
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS: While other world leaders grapple
With the Middle East and the arms race, the tmy Canbbean
nation of Grenada womes about flymg saucers On Monday
Ambassador·at·large Wellington Friday took the matter to the
Uruted Nations, W'gmg establishment of a UFO research
center Says he, "UFOS have been !rJghlenmg experiences for
lhousands of people around the world . We see m the UFO a
vast new hmterland With s1gmficance for all mankmd " Prime
Minister Sir Eric Galry backed him up, chargmg the
superJI&lt;lwers have concealed ev1dence of UFO s1ghtmgs for
years The1r presentation was greeted w1th silence

NEW TARGET: Atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair has a new
ally, and a new target m her battle against religion m secular
affa1rs W1th Austm, Texas, abortion advocate Bllt Baird, she's
taking on the Catholic Church, urgmg a boycott of such church
busmess ventures as Chnshan Brothers' Wme, Monks' Bread
and Trappist Jams She and Bmrd want the church to stop
lobbymg agamst federally fmanced abortwns for welfare
rec1p1ents Says Barrd, "We are declarmg economtc war
agamst the Roman Catholic Church . Who m the heck IS the
Roman Cathollc Church to have the arro~ance to say to we
Amencans, 'We're gomg to tell you what 1$ rtght and wrong?" '
SMOOCHLESS IN GAZA: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat
says he realty didn't kiss former ISraeli Prime Minister Golda
Meir, but he wouldn't he bashful about saymg so 1! he had. The
alleged kiss - wh1ch has stirred wrath in the Arab world was reported durmg his VISit to lsrael But Sadat says when
Mrs. Melr came to WISh hun farewell, and because I was
learung . they thought I had kissed her Well - ha, ha - 11
didn't happen But. , 1f it happened, I could say 1t."
GLIMPSES: New Orleans Mayor-&lt;Olect Ernest Moria! 1s
eombmg the classified ads -looking for wotk to meet famdy
expenses until he takes office next May .. Australian Prime
Minister Malcolm Fraser doffed coat, lie and d1gmty Sonday
m MelboW'ne, pamtlng h1s face clown-fashion to kick off a
nallonal health and fitness program titled 1'L1fe - Be m 1t" .
D1sco smger Grace Jones picked up a new fan on her European
tour, and Anthony Armstrong Jones, photographer and
estranged hiLSband of Britain's Princess Margaret, w11l follow
her back to New York for an official photo sess10n wtren the
toUJ ends Presidential aide Midge Costanza got a surpnse
cake and champagne party Monday at the White House m
celebrallon of her 45th b~rthday .. Frank Sinatra IS suing Jet
Av1a Ltd -owners of the chartered plane m which his mother,
89-year-old Natalie "Dully" Sinatra, was killed on Jan. 5-lor
unspecified damages, chargmg negligence, Ill Los Angeles
~
federal court

Grove

Tuesday
City (Pal a1 Wright
Wednesday

Malone at Mercyhurst (Pal
~

St

Stetson at Ohio St
Findlay at Bowling Green
Otterbein at Miami
Wilberforce at Ashland

Central 51 at Walsh
Hanover (lnd) at Xavier
Capital at Wheeling

Musklngum

---t;;rl-of;;;n~;-;.:;;;;;;;.-,.;; ;.;Jd be--~
1
1

be onbjeft to redactloo by
the editor) ud m..t be alped lritb lbe 1lpee'1 .._
dreu. Nams may be wldlbeld apaa pablkaU..
However, OD reqaOII, IWil• will be dllcllled. teuen
sboald be iD good Iaaie, addnulllg u-, DGC per(or

I

I

I1

sonalllleo.

Florida

Southern
Ohio Wesleyan at Ylrgmia
Tech
Westmlnlster
( Pa)
at
Baldwin Wallace
Btu!tton at Heidel berg
Kenyon at Ohio Dominican
Mount Union at Thiel (Pa)
Defiance at Ohio Northern
Steubenville at Robert Morris
(Pal
Wilmington at Centre ( Kyl
Thursday
North Carolina A&amp; T at
Cincinnati
Biscayne ( Fla l at Dayton
Cleveland St at Oh•o
Untverslty
Detroit at Toledo
Hiram at Wooster
Morris Harvey (W Val at
Marietta
Musklngum at Rollins (Ftal
Mt Vernon Nazarene at
Tiffin
Wilberforce at Cumberland
(Ky)

KEITH WOLFE , Rt. 3 Pomeroy, With s1x-pomt buck
' from h1s !ann Monday For the last two years he has
gotten a deer With a bow and arrow

t- tlwl 3GI wonlllong

at

I

I
I

I
I
t
I

See how the other half lives

Friday

Denison at Geneseo 51 (NY)
Tourney

Dear S1r ·

When I wenlto h1gh school at Tuppers Plams durmg the
1931l:;, the deepest depressiOn years for my family, OW' parents
had to buy our notebooks, workbooks, and textbooks We
packed OW' lunch and earned 1! to school, or those With enough
money ate at Hamilton's Restaurant Most of the parents were
lucky 1f they had a total mcome of 50 cents an hoW', Many men
worked a 10 hour day for $1
We sometunes got mto mlsch1ef like all healthy children,
and we were duly purushed by Mr Dav1s when we were
caught. My one time of being severely pumshed at school was
followed by a worse punishment at home' It was all called
GROWING UP AND GETTING AN EDUCATION'
After those years, and WE were the voters, we tried to '
unprove to have a better way of life for our children. Laws
were passed that they be pampered, fed at school, materials
furrushed to enable them to enJOY a much better life than our
generahon
·~
What d1d we do wrpng'
•
Eighty-five pel of the parents t6day could eas1ly afford to
lurmsh bas1c materJals that my parents HAD to purchase; yet
the parents, the teachers, and the students Write letters to the
newspapers that msult the mtellect of the grandparent
generation who had to " make~o/' or do wtthout."
Yes, I'll adm1t we started th1s snowball. But 11 has become
like last wmter's snowballs · full of holes. The actual needs of
the schools compared With their wants, also the parents'
~~i.~~~~~~1ty toward the1r own children , need to bo re- l

•

The semor c1 t1zens who had to make-do or do without still
have to ab1de by that same rule The older people do not have
"
the mcome the younger generatiOn earns The tbne seems npe
for ALL generatiOns to consider each other's problems and the. ,
younger generallon begm to stand on the~r own salary. Lift '
some of the tax burden from the grandparent and greatgrandparent generatiOns V1s1t w1th them m their homes and
SEE their problems I - Agnes C. H1ll

Ohio Wesleyan at W Va
Wesleyan Tourney
Cedarville at Taylor lind)

•

Reserve

Clhio St at Vermont

Biscayne ( Fla) at Cincinnati
Xavier at Miami
W Kentucky at Bowling
Green
Kent 51 at Pitt

Youngstown St at Ohio
University
,
Toledo at Eastern Kentucky

C

Midwest Divltion

Denver
Ch tcago
Mtlw
Kansas C•tv
lnd•ana

LOS Angeles
Seattle

2
2112
6

W L
13 8

Pet
619

GB

9 8
10 9
7 12
7 12

529
526

2
2

368
368
Detroit
6 11 353
Pacific Division
W L Pet.
Portland
15 3 833
PhOen i K
11 6 6A7
Golden Sf
9 11 &lt;SO
8 11

A21

5
5

GB
3112

1
7 1(2

Boston at Atlanta
Los Ang at Cleveland
Phtla at Sen Antonio
New Orleans at Chicago
Seattle at Denver
Detrott at MilWaukee
New Jersey at Golden St
Phoenix at Portland
New York 1t Houston

Pittsburgh
Washington

NFL Standinll

By United Preu Intent~"'"•'
Amer.nn Conftrtnct

Eut

Pittsburgh
Clelfeland
Houston
Clncfnnt~ti

Nazarene

Urbana at Copilot
ll€thony at Marietta
Musklngum at Eckerd (Flo)
Depauw ( tnd) at Otterbein
Heidelberg at Wittenberg
Baldwin Wallace at Grove
City (Pal
Kenyon at Ashland
Ohio Northern at Ohio
Dominican
Bluffton at Hanover ( lnd)
Dyke at Findlay
Pikeville (Ky) at Rio Grande
Tiffin at Siena Heights
(Michl
Wilberforce at Gannon (Pa)
&amp;t

Malone

Mercyhurst

Tourney

at Geneseo St
Tourney
Ohio Wesleyan at W Va
Denison

Weslt:yan Tourney
Case Western Tourney
Cedarville at Taylor Tourney

New Orlns 73 La St 69
N E La 78 S E La 63
N C St 98 Ga Southern 90

Midwest

!(ansas 121 Cent Mo St 65
Indiana St 91 Purdue 63
Dayton 76 Syracuse 67
Marietta 83 Malone 71
Cent St 87 Wlbrfrce 59
Mt Vrnn Naz 77 Steubnvl 69
Wayne State a9 Mercy 69
Mich st 68 cent Mlch 61
Ohio State 81 Marshall 65

Southwest

Sthrn Ark 64 S F Austn 57

Tex

Ws~vn

96 St Ed's 92

Okla St 93 S W TeJC:as 71
N
Okle 96 Coll ozarks 80
H Payne 86 Wyind Bapt 58
Tex TeCh 103 Okla Bapt 59

e

w

7
6
6
6

T Pet
0 818
0 127
0 636
0 183

.1B3

L T Pet
A 0

s 0
S 0

636

545
5A5

5 0 5&lt;5

west
W L T Pet

Denver
Oakland
San Diego
Seattle
Kansas City

10
9
6

1 o
2 0
5 0

3
2

a 0
9 o

9
1
6

2 0
.t 0
5 0

BIB
636

5A5

By RICK VAN SAN'!'
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
Cincumati Bengals are still
oo the playoff prowl, thanks
m part Ill a recent heart
patient and a 265-pound
cheerleader.
RoOkie Oerenslve tackle
Eddie Edwards, who had an
attack of pericarditis - an
Inflammation of the fluid·
filled sac that encases the
heart -three weeks ago and
missed the last two games,
returned to the starting
lineup Sunday and helped
whip the New York Giants SO.
13,
And, Gary Burley, a ~
pound defensive end, waved
oo 32,705 cheermg fans (snow
and cold accounted for 24,547
noshows) on the ll€ngals'
goalllne stands. With Burley
churning his masSive arms,
the fans' noJSe drowned out
New York's qffe"'!ive signals
and sent the G1ants back to
the huddle
Edwarda, the team's J'o. 1

TRADE-IN

On All Living Room Suites

Mondoy night's
Ohio College
Basketboll Resu Its
United Pross tnternollonot
Ohio State 81 Marshall 65
Dayton 76 Syracuse 61
Iowa 82 Kent State 64
Toledo 68 Butler ( lnd) 56
Marietta 83 Malone 77
Mt Vernon Nazarene 77
Steubenville 69
Central Stole 81 Wllberlorce
59
West Uberty (W Val 110
Walsh 75

MASON FURNITURE
•

Mon., Tues., Wed.$ Sat.-8:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va.
'

.

5

9

New England

T Pts
A 2
32
a l 25
a 1 25
10 l
19
9 0
16
10 3
15
12 2
14
13 0
12
l

Monday'• Games

(No games scheduled)

Tuesday's G•mes

Ctnclnnatl at Quebec

draft chmce, took it upon
himself to get back m
uniform after local doctors
contmually delayed h1s
return.
"I decided I wanted to gel a
different opmion and I told
M1ke (Brown, the Bengals'
ass1stant general
manager)," said Edwards
"So, he set up an appoiniment
for me at the Cleveland
Clinic. I went up there
Thursday night, took tests aU
Friday mormng and got
cleared Ill play.
"I feel great," Edwards
said after Sunday's game. "It
was just Uke starting all over
agalll, hke a rookie coming
into training camp."
Asked about the local
doctors who kept him out of
the past \Wo games, Edwards
smiled
and
said
diplomatically, "Let's just
say I was disapJI&lt;linted ";'
Burley, asked if he had
become
the
team's
cheerleader, said, " I guess
you could caU It that."
"I don't enjoy ~t," he
grinned. "I love it. I don't
care what the other team
thinks. I'm here to please the
people of Cincinnati. If fans
pay $9.2$ a game, they
deserve to do what they watft
- stomp or even streak if
they want to. I'm not gorrna
stop ( cheerleadlng) until
someone makes me stop."
Almost all of Cincinnati's
rushing yards Sunday were
piled up by the former Ohio
State tandem of Archie
Griffin and Pete Johson.
Gr1ffm rambled for 83
yards and Johnson grolUld

they moved to a 51-33 lead at
mtennlSSIOn and then held on
to down the previously undefea led Orangemen
Herb G1ddmgs scored a
game-h1gh 24 pomts and
pulled down 11 rebounds to
pace the Flyers, who also got
doublellgure scoring from
three other players Loms
Orr led the Orangemen With
23 markers and Marty
Byrnes added 21
Toledo 's Ted W1Ihams
netted 15 pomts and
teammate Stan Joplm added
another 13to lead the Rockets
to victory over Butler
The Rockets, now ~. led
all the, gomg mto the second
half With a U-22 edge. But the
winless Bulldogs, led by hotshootmg Tom Orner who
scored a game./t1gh total of
24, got to w1thm 43-41 early !!I

the second hall However,
they were shut out for the last
8:15 or play wh1le Toledo
scored 19 straight points. '
At Kent, Iowa ran off II
unanswered p01nts durmg a
three.minule stretch of the
second half to seal the
Hawkeyes' v1ctory over Kent
State
Iowa was led by 6-1
sophomore guard Ronnie
Lester With 23 pomts, while
the Golden Flashes' ~7Jumor
guard Burrel McGhe led all
seorers w1th 30 pomts
Iowa led 41-33 at the half,
despite the Golden Flashes 62
percent held goal shoolmg m
the hrst stanza. Iowa 's
offense IW'ned the shootmg
percentages around m the
second half, hitting on 64
percent to Kent State's 42
percent.

Raiders wreck Buffalo 34-13
By JOE SARGIS
UP! Sports Writer
OAKLAND, calif. (UPI) Ken Slabter surVJved despite
a gunpy knee, and now the
Oakland Ra1ders feet their
chances of wmrung the AFC
West are as good as Denver's
even though they tra1l the
Broncos by game
Stabler, hobbllllg at times
but still qu1te mobJle, played
long enough Monday mght to
throw three scormg passes,
and his effort pa1d off m a 3413 VJctllry over tbe Buffalo
B1tls
'
The v1ctory
gave the
defendmg world champions a
9-2 record and Sunday they
host tbe Mmnesota Vikings,
who are m a close fight for the
NFC Central title.
The Broncos, who are 10.1,

a

Grid ratings
NEW YORK(UPI) - The
United

Press

Board of

International
Coaches' top 20

teams after the 12th week

of

the college football season,
with

first -place

votes

record in parentheses
Team

1 Texas 36 ( 11 0)
2 Oklahoma 2 (10 1)
3 Alabama 2 (10 1)
4 Michigan ( 10 I)
5 Notre Dame 1 (9 1)

and

Points

405
350
321
281
2-45

6. Arkansas ( 10·1)
183
T Pts
7 Penn St ( 10-1)
168
4
30 B Ohio St (9-2)
141
2
28
52
3
25 9 Pittsburgh (8-2·1l
23
2
1.4 10 Clemson (8-2-1)
11 N Carolina (8-2 1)
14
MondiY'I Glmts
(No games sc:heduled)
12 Arizona St (9·2l
13
Tuesday's G1mes
IJ Nebraska (8·3)
11
Atlanta at M1nne!ota
14 (tie) Brigham Yn9 (9.2) 6
Pittsburgh at Montr~al
14 (tie) Iowa St (8 3l
6
Cleveland &amp;t Toronto
14 (tie) Washington (7 4) 6
Phila at Vancouver
11 No Texas St (9-2)
5
washington at Los Ang
18 (tte) San Diego St (9 1) 4
18 (tie) Texas A&amp;M (13)
4
20 South Cal (7 4)
3
Note· By agreement with
WH A Stin(tlngs
the
American Football
By United PreSI lntern•tional
W
15
12
12
9
8
6
6
6

was "o ur
second
half
defense."
Harley Major and Greg
Young each had 12 points for
the Thundering HerJ, who
dropped to 1·1
The Buckeyes, now~ . host
Stetson Wednesday rught
Elsewhere m Oluo college
basketball act10n Monday
rught, Dayton zapped llthrankedSyrcuse, 71Hl7; Toledo
whipped Butler, 68-56; Iowa
downed Kent State, 82-84;
Manetta upended Malone, 8377; Central State breezed by
Wilberforce, 87-59, West
L1bert y
( W . V ao. )
overwhelmed Walsh, lHI-75;
and Mount Vernon Nazarene
outlasted Steubenville, 77.139
At UD Arena in Dayton, the
Flyers h1t on a SIZzling 75
percent of their shots from
the floor m the first half as

Coaches Association, teams

on probation by the NCAA are
Ineligible for top 20 and
national
champtonshlp
consideration by., ttle UPI

Board of Coaches. Those
teams currently on probation
for 1977 are· KentuckJ,

Michigan Slate, Redlan s
Calli • Western Stale Colo

and Houston

play the San D~ego Chargers, , Stabler threw TO passes of 28
the team that upset the and 12 yards to Cliff Branch
Raiders 12-7 a week ago and and 44 yards to Fred Blletthen beat Seattle
rukoff That gave hun 16
Meanwhile, the M1am1 Dol- scormg passes for the year.
phms, who are ~3 and closest
Van Eeghen ran for 143
to the Raiders for the AFC yards and now has 1,011 for
w1ld card berth should the season He 1s the f~rst
Oakland m1ss winnmg a • player lll Raldfr h1story to
diviSIOn t1tle, go against New have two 1,000-yard seasons
"I'm not all that mterested
England
"Being -reahsttc," Raider in
personal
accomCoach John Madden s31d, pllshments," sa1d Van
after watchmg h1s team Eeghen, "It only counts if we
demolish Buffalo, now 2-9, wm. II we don 't wm, It's of no
uwe can still catch the consequence."
Broncos, especially 1f we play
Pete Banaszak scored the
as we d1d agamst the Bills " other
two
Oakland
Stabler and Mark Van touchdowns, cracking a yard
Eeghen were the key players each tune, and now has 51 for

Modell disappointed in
Browns perforntance
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) Cleveland Browns' owner Art
Modell, saying "there IS no
panic, .. wants some answers
-fast.
He personally WJ!l examme
all aspects of the club,
himself mcluded, but says
"nothmg can be done for th1s
season," - adding that he
wants "to start now to
establish a good nucleus for
the future."
"I' ve
been
very
disappomted m the last few
weeks
and
my
disapJI&lt;liniment was capped
by
(Sunday's)
drab,
miserable performance"
agamst Los Angeles, who
beat the Browns, 9-0 knocking Cleveland out of
first place m the AFC Central
DiVISion
"I am gomg to talk with
everyone," Modell sa1d
Monday "There is no
panic.
"But I w11l call m everyone
from top to bottom and find
out what we could have done
that we d1d not do and what
we have done that we shoald

Edwards, Burley keep Cincy alive

-';'· o - · •

'1 0000

W L T Pts
lA A 3
31
9 1 5
23
9 8 3
21
6 10 A
16

2 lA
Ad•ms DI&gt;JIIIon
W L
Boston
13 5
Buffalo
IJ 6
Toronto
11 4
Cleveland
6 12

Winnipeg
909 Quebec
a1a Edmonton
SA5 Houston
273 lndtanapolls
183 Blrmmgham
Clnclnnah

Natlon11 Conference
East
w L T Pet.

Dallas
St Louis
Wa!hlngton

NHL St1ndings
By Unlteel Press International
Campbell Conference
Patr1ck Olvlslon
W l T PIS
Philadeiph1
13 A 3
29
NV Islanders
11 6 6
28
Atlanta
7 7 7
21
NY Ringers
a 12 2 18
Smythe Division
WLTPts.
Chtcago
6 7 a
20
Vancouver
6 9 5
17
Colorado
6 9 4
16
Minnesota
5 12 3
13
St Louis
5 1A 3
13
Wales Conference
Montreal
Los Angeles
Oetrolt

Cl'ucago at Boston
Atlanta at Buffalo

0

Monday's G1me

Baltimore at M 1a m1 , night

Norris Dtvislon

Wednesday's G•mes

w L
Baltimore
2
Mlam•
B 3
New England
1 A
Buffalo
2 9
NY Jets
2 •
centr11

Cincinnati atKan Ctty
Cle~o~elend at san Diego
Denver at Houston
Detroit at Green Bay
New Eng land at Atlanta
NY Jets at New Orleans
Philadelphia at Dallas
Oakl&amp;nct at Los Angeles
St Louis at NY G1ants
San Fran at Minnesota
Seattle al Pittsburgh
washington at Buffalo

5

5 16 238 11 112
Mondly'• Results
New York 10A, Houston 86
Tuesdly's Games

Akron at Wooster

Chicago St at Central St
North Carolina A&amp; T at
Cleveland St
Wright 51 at Northern
Kenfucky Sl
Steubenville at Walsh
Olivet at Mt
Vernon

East

Falrfld 100 Loyola Bait 89
Oowlln" a3 Hofstra 79
Temple 75 King's Pa 60
Gannon 96 Oom In lean 68
wagner 85 Lehigh 72
E Stroudsbg 81 Ri!lmllpo 63
South
G Wash 105 Aldrsn Brddu~

VMI 105 Liberty Bllptlst 68
ArKansas 9A Miss St 61
Davidson 90 Erskine 7A
Citadel lA Charleston 82
Shena11doeh 78 GrnsbOro 7A
Newberry 9A Voorhees 68
Ga Tech 17 UNC-Wiln" 67
Llvngstn 86 Tuskegee 76
Delta St. 71 Mntlcllo 63
Davidson 90 Erskine 7A

New Orlns
11 8 579
washlngtn
9 7 563
Houston
6 11 353
Western Conftrenct

•

Saturday

College scores

773-5592

.\

Tourney
Case
Western
Tourney

Tournev

86

Centnl Division
W L Ptt GB
Clevelnd
12 5 706
Atlanta
10 6 625 ' w,
12 8 600 11!2
sen Antoni

Phtla 1t NeW Orleans
San Antonio at Wa5hington
Los Angeles at Oetron
Milwaukee at Indiana
Seattle at KamoBs City

United Press International

'

'

Joe visits the Improved
Southwestern Highlanders of
Coach Wayne Bergdoll.
Fnday night, Southwestern
tangles with Symmes Valley,
Miller IS at North GaUia and
the SV AC defending chamPion Southern Tornadoes
travel to Trimble. Federal
Hocking visits Eastern
Saturday night
A wide-open race is
predicted Ill the SVAC again
this winter w1th Southern and
Southwestern tabbed as the
early favorites

Tlllow.ll'l
Ohio Collo9o
Basketball Schedule

TRAINING TAKEN
FT. BENNING, Ga.
Pr1vate Robert E Johnson,
son of Mr and Mrs Sunon
Johnson, 1 Mill St , Pomeroy,
has completed seven weeks of
advanced mdlVIdual traming
here Pvt Johnson entered
the Anny m June of this year
He IS a 1977 graduate of Me1gs
H1gh School

peopletalk

I Pro
I
l Standings !

.. o

•I til '
" to
t I ,
w

COURSE OFFERED
As a part of the R1o Grande
Comm umty College con·
tmumg education senes, a
real estate prmc1pals and
practiCes course w1U be of·
fered at the Me~gs Semor
H1gh School, begmmng
Thursday,. 7 to 10 p.m In·
structor w1ll be Hank Cleland
and registration w1ll be on the
f1rst mght of the class.

r------------,

Basketball returns to the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference this week With
four games IJlvolvmg league
teams scheduled this evenmg
and four others on tap this
week.
In the only league affair
tonight, Eastern of Meigs
County visits North Gallia
The Pirates were dumped 97·
53 Saturday rught by EastelJI
of Pike County.
•
Coach Dan Cornell's
Hannan Trace Wildcats open
the~r new season hosting
Rock Hill while Ironton St

11

performance was indeed
Marshall held a 29-28 lead
enjoyable for Ohio State fans with 2.30 left 10 the half, but
The
young
Bucks •Scott, who spent seven
outrebounded the Thundermg mmutes on the benc h,
Her~ by a ~7 margin and
returned to score seven
got 21 points from center pomts before interin!ss10n Ill
Herb Williams and 17 give the Buckeyes their
markers from guard carter halfhme edge
Oh10 State ran off 10
Scott, both freshmen.
"Anytime you have that blg straight pomts early m the
of a rebounding advantage fmal half and steadily pulled
you are in prelty good away to lead py 24, 81-57, w1th
shape," said Miller. "Outs1de two mmutes left
Marshall's Danny Hall,
of the fUJBI score, rebounding
IS the most Important who dumped m a game./ugh
22 pomls mcludmg 16 Ill the
statistiC 11
Scott, ~2. scored 13 of hlSI7 first half, drew added
points m the f1rst half whiCh attentiOn from the Buckeyes
ended w1th the Buckeyes in the last half.
" Williams and (Jun) Smith
ahead, 37-31
The ~II W1lliams, who had really went to work
34 points ill his collegiate defens1 vely on Hall m the
debut Fr1day mght, had 13 of second half," sa1d Miller,
his total m the second half adding that he believed the
standout feature of the game

W1gal, Keith Wolle, and
Randy Browning, senior Ed
Chevalier, and sophomore
Don Eynon.
The Pirates beat the Eagles
, lll the SV AC Preview, but that
was early in the pre-season,
so tonight's contest is up for
graba The Pirates will have
two strong lettermen under
the boards, Rex Justice and
Calvin Minnis
Eagles coach Duane Wolfe
sees the SVAC as a toss-up
th1s year as most or the teams
NY Giants
A 7 0 364
match up evenly His Eagles
Phlladelph•a
J s o 273
will use a fast break to take
Centnl
W L T Pet
advantage of their speed.
I
I Minnesota
140636
Due to the schOQl's closmg
Chicago
6505AS
Detroit
560&lt;55
on December 8, Eastern
Green Bay
2 9 0 183
revised 1ts schedule, moving
Tampa Bay
0110000
North Ga!t1a up to tomght.
West
NBA St•ndlngs
W L T Pet
By United Press tnlernltionll
Saturday they host Federal
Los Angeles
8 3 0 121
Eaatern Conterence
Hockmg , and nert Tuesday
Atlanta
6 5 0 545
At11ntlc Olvltlon
5 6 0 ASS
W L Pel Gl San Francisco
Symmes Valley comes to
New Orleans
3 8 0 213
Phlla
lA
5 737
town The rest of the schedule New York
Manday•s Game
11 8 556 3
Oakland 34, Buffllo 13
15 a question mark until
Buffalo
9 10 A7A 5
Sund~ty's Games
...
Boston
6
11
353
1
school resumes on January 2. New Jersey
Chicago at tampa Bay
3 16 158 l1

SVAC teams in
action tonight

.

Successful Hunter

Lawrence' E. Lamb, M.D.

By
United
Prell
lnleraational
The "new look" Ohio State
Buckeyes have passed their
second test of the young
basketball season with flying
colors
The Buckeyes, with three
freshmen
and
two
sophomores m the startmg
hneup, bree1:ed to a 81~
Vlctllry ove( MarshaU in a
non-conference battle
Mooday night at St. John
Arena before a second
straight capacity crowd of
13,489.
"You had two teams really
going at it out there tomght
and when that happens, It's
fun to see,'' sa1d Eldon
M1ller, the Bucks' second
year coach
The
Buckeyes'

U S ml compames back to

ou&amp; 'IJ 1o account for 1M ollbe

llenfala' 176 total.
Allied to explain why he
had one of his best days,
Gnffm sunply said, "The
holes were there."
Unhappiest man Sunday
also happened to be alllnner
Ohio Stater - Jolm Rldll, a
Giants' lmeman wbo did not
get mto the game. New YCJl'k
coaches
have
been
disappomted In his play.
Dozens of H1cks' relatives
and friends were In the
stands.
"I bought about 100
tickets," said a glwn H1cks
alter the game. "They're
disappointed. I'm
disappointed. I v.anted to
play in the worst way, But 1t
was a decisiOn the coaches
made."
Meanwhile, the Bengals
today were like a horse bemg
fitted with blmdera - with
visiOns of Pitts but ~h all
around them, they tried to
look strmght ahead at Kansas
City.
The
Benga!s,
hke
Cleveland and Houston, trail

the Steelers by one game ill
the sllcky AFC Central
diVISion IItie chase. And,
Cincy's Saturday, Dec. 10
home
game
against
Pittsburgh has shaped up as
the division showdown duel
But the ll€ngals, spoutmg
the old cliches "One game at
a tlme" and "We can't look
ahead" - even though they
have to be lookmg ahead to
PiltsbW'gh sunply because
they're human - are trymg
to concentrate on this
Sunday's game at Kansas
City.
Indeed, an upset loss to the
Ch1efs would JUst about
negate
any
Steeters'
showdown And, Pittsburgh
nearly got caught napping
itself Sunday before pulling
out a 23-20 deciSion over the
New York Jets. The Steelers
ente(tam Seattle thiS Sunday.
The ll€ngals go into the
Kansas City game on a hot
streak Almost out of the
playoff picture five weeks
ago w1th a 2-4 record, Cmcy
has won four of 1ts last five
games.

not do I want to analyze the
whole thmg," he related,
makmg no mention of a
coachmg change or attempts
to strengthen the playmg
roster
"This lSll't somethmg we
are gomg to get done by
midnight tonight or by some
deadlme," he sa1d. "But we
are starting today,"
Scatback Greg Pruitt felt
the Browns didn't -call his
number often enough m
Sunday's toss, the f1rst
shutout defeat in 70 games
and only the f1fth m the
Browns' history
He may have been nght,
smce the offense they d1d use
produced so httle
" I didn't run enough times
to tell you whether the Rams
have a tough defense, or not,,
he sa1d "Some things take
time and I )lave to carry
enough to see how people are
playmg me, but today I
didn't I'm supposed to be
unportant to oW' attack, but I
W811l't used as an unportant
factor ill thiS game " •
l'nllll carried 11 times for
38 yuds,
threw
an
inc«nplete pass and caught
three more passes for 2:;
yards m the defeat that all
but erased Cleveland's
playoff hopes
"We just stumbled too
many Urnes," said head
coach Forrest Gregg.

his Ra1der career '
The Raiders took a 20-10
halftime lead but the Bills got
a second field goal from
carson Long m the early
mmutes of the th1rd quarter
to trail by only a touchdown,
20-13
Then, Stabler and Van
Eegehn went to work, movmg
the Ra1ders 63 yards in six
plays for one score, then only
20 m three for another
followillg a fumble recovery
by Jack Tatum. That put the
game out of reach even
though Joe Ferguson never
stopped firing
The young Buffalo quarterback had 18 completions for
252 yarda and one touchdown
- a 29-yard throw to John
Kimbrough But 1t was
nowhere nearly enough.
Oakland
may
hear
somethmg about the game
from league offiCialS.
Late m the third quarter
B1letmkoff thought he had
caught a scorlllg pass. The
off1cral nearest the play said
Blletnikoff trapped the ball
and when the Oakland wide
receiver bumped him in
protest, he threw him out of
the game.
B1letmkofl refused to
discuss the sttuation, but he
was still upset after the game
was over
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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday, Nov. 29, t9n

Special awards to be
given at flower show
Fives pectal a~·ards wlll be
presented at the ··Currier and
Ives Christmas" flower show
to be staged this weekend in
the Pomeroy Elementary
School by the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association.
ln the artistic arrangements division awa rds
will go for the " Best of
Show", that design seleded
as t he very best of all entries
in the adult classes, with a
•·Junior Best of Show'' for exhibitors of school age . There
will also be a "Creativity' '
and a "Reserve Best of
Show'' a wards presented
following the judging on
Saturday which begins at I
p.m.
In the horticulture division,
a "Sweepstakes" award will
presented to that exhibitor
compiling the most points for
ribbons on her specimens.
There will be five points for
blue ribbons, three for red,
two for yellow, and one for
white.
Another feature of the show
will be of an educational
nature. At stated times dur·
ing the two days, Mrs.
Howar~Birchlield will be
presen g the OAGC slide
presen tion on Williamsburg
Flower Arrangements . Mary
Thompson will be giving
demonstratins on making
tree ornaments entitling her
presentation , " Dough It
Yourself."
Mrs . Charles K uhi will
display a mist box and give
out instructions on how to
construct one. There will also
be from the Meigs County E:x·
tension Office booklets on
poinsettias and other
seasonal flowers available
free of charge, and Francis
Florist will have a display of
flower arranging materials.
Books from the libraries will
also be displayed ~t the show.
The show this year is
dedicated to Mrs. James S.
Titus, Meigs County 's first
OAGC accredited judge, a
past Region ll director, and
one who has been a guide and
inspiration to aU Meigs Coun·
ty garden club members dur·
ing her many years of club

work.

I"

Entries in the show are ·to
be placed before noon on
Saturday and will remairr in
place until after 4 p.m . on
Sunday.
The show is open to the
public for viewing from I to 5
p.m. on Saturday and from I
to 4 p.m . on Sunday .
Everyone -whether a

ga rden club nlember or not is im•ited to exhibit in the
sho w. There are II artistic
design classes which are
rest riated to garden cl ub
member exhibit only, but all ·
other classes. including
seve ral of a rtistic design are
in1•itati onal which means that
anyone may enter. Senior
citizens a re particularly en·
couraged to display at the
show. All entries must be
placed before 12 noon on
Saturday.
In the artistic designs division of the show the classes
are :
''A Tribute to Currier and
lves '\ an arrangement made
in a sleigh.
"A Colonial Christmas" a
'
mass design.
"Snowed Up", featuring .
white .
"Christmas Aglow " , in·
eluding one or more candles.
"Serene and Lovelv" with
madonna and child. ·
"There's a Song in the
Air", a stabile.
"Starburst", an abstract
using black tight to be fur·
nished by the exhibitor.
" Hearthside", a floor a rrangement, a minimwn of
four feet an9_to include some
evergreen.

"'Tis the Season", a door
decoration.

" Spirit of the Day", a table
picture depicting a Christmas
festivity in a stated part of
the United Stat~s .
"Christmas is Forever",
feat uring driftwood or
weathered wood'
The above are the classes
which a re restricted for ex·
hibits from Meigs Counfy
Garden Club members only .

.s:::::»,"*......~"~.~;:;.-~;::~~~~'¢\.--:C.'$

.
....... m:::·:t ·::.::=·
-

I .Generation Rap
~

W!&gt;~~

...

By Helen and Sue Bottel

ARE EMPLOYEIIS UNFAffi?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE: .
I'm 17 and work in a hardware store for $1.75 per hour. My
friend works a t a bakery for $2.00an hour. We work six to eight
hours a day, five days a week, with no breaks.
Isn' t this unfair? I thought minimum wage was something
like $2.30 or $2.40 an hour.· WONDERING
P .S: This bakery was recently voted " small business of the
yea r. " DEAR WON :
Most workers whose employment is covered under the Fair
Labor Standards Act must be paid at least minimum wage
(which will soon rise to $2.65 per hour ) and -usilally -extra pay
for overtime.
However, there's a catch here : Exceptions are full-time
students and apprentices who may receive less tban the
minimum under special certificates issued by the Labor
Department.
Are you two in either of these categories? lf not, talk to your
employers ·. or perhaps the Wage-Hour Division of the U.'S.
Department of Labor · about a raise . • HELEN AND SUE
DEAR RAP :
About school spankings: Here's what happened at a local,
middle-class, a ll-white school. A principal walked into a noisy
classroolrt, grabbed a girl by the ha·i r a nd threw her to the
floor. This same person also manhandled a number of students
he considered undesirables.
Complaints were ignored until the newspapers ran articles
on the growiing unrest due to school discipline measures. The
man was then allowed to resign, and he will continue
elsewher.e as an educator ! This, I suppose, becailse firing him
would have brought on lawsuits, etc.
We need stronger laws to protect abused students and pr&lt;&gt;secute sadists who are allowed to remain in the teaching pr&lt;&gt;fession . ·CONCERNED OBSERVER

c.o,:

Public reaction usually weeds out sadists in public schools
before they have done irreparable damage. And when there 's
a borderline ca se, it's often better to ask Tor a resignation
rather than fight it in court. The principal might have won.
HE: LEN
C.O.:
As for his continuing in the profession, most schools wouldn't
take a chance on a man whose discipline made headlines, and
who resigned \lllder fire .
,
Without recommendations, he'll find job-hunting tough. Isn't
this prosecution e nough? ·SUE
RAP:
.
This girl and I had a big falling out over money she owed me.
Finally, her parents paid a nd she threatened to beat me up for
bothering them.
Now she's pregnant and has started calling me. Last night
· she hinted I should give her a shower. Am I getting shafted
again? - JOSfE
DEARJOSfE :
Probabiy.'Look, if you don 'I like the girl, tell her you're busy
next time she calls. You're not obligated to give a former
friend a shower.· HE:HEN AND SUE

•

I

f

l

;

A '-Cltl'l r
A
~·

..

(! h'

The invtt.at.Ional or open

'

l

"Behold a Star", inter·
pretive and for those whO
have not taken a blue ribbon
in a county show .
"F un and Fancy", a
favorite design. ·
"Let's Wrap It Up". gift
wrapping to include some
plant material.
"Let's Raise it High"· a i
Christmas wall hanging to include some plant material.
The junior artistic design
c lasses are ·' Winter
Pastime'', showing motion ;
and "Away in a Manger", an
arrangement including an
animal figurine.
The horticulture classes of
the show where entries are
not restricted to one per class
as is true in the artistic
design are as follows:
Dried or treated plant
material with classes for
roadside material. fantail
willow, seed pods or nuts ,
Houseplants with classes
for flowering cacti, hanging
plant of a foliage kind, hanging pia nt of a flowering kind,
cacti or succulents of a large
variety, smaU cacti or succulents not to exceed six inches in height , flowering
plants to include African
violets, and large foliage
plants which may include
ferns.
The junior horticulture
division has classes for pine
branches not to exceed 16 in·
ches, broadieaf evergreen
11ith a minimum length of
eight inches, and a house
plant which may have one or
more varieties in the container.

Receives
invitation

I

1'•:t··

t

t

classes of the show are :

Albany to host .
·auxiliary meeting
District 12 Ladies AuXiliary
to the Veterans of Foreign
Wars President Neta Wood
announces the Winter Con·
ference
will
convene
December 4 at Albany Post
9893, in conjunction with the
· Veterans of Foreign Wars.
The auxiliary meeting will
be held at the Albany Grange
Hall , Albany, Ohio, with
registration from 9 to iOa.m .
when the business ·m eeting
starts promptly. Lunch will
be served ·at the Albany Post
Home.
All chairmen are requested

~

r
•

''

,.
il

- ~•

'

•

-----··

" A CURRIE R AND IVES CHRISTMAS" is the theme
of the annual Christmas flower show of the Meigs County
Association of Garden ·Clubs. Here Mrs . Wilson
Carpenter, chairman , shows ~ theme exhibit to be on ,
display in the foyer of the Pomeroy ElementArv School

Green

••
••

where the show will be staged Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m. and
Sunday , I to 4 p.m. The exhibit includes Currier and Ives
prints in block art by her daughter, Janet Carpent er
. Young of Lancaster.

••
••

Thumb
Notes

cutiings of leaves on the bottom two inches. Score Ute bark, dip
the cutting into Rootone and put it into t he sand , firming the
sand around th e cutting .
Any plant too small to be transplanted into the garden will
do fine in this mist box till large enough for tra nsplanting .
To winterize , remove hose from the box and store it as
usual .
let the box, sand and any plants in it alone. lf the plants in
it are of shrub cuttings, they may show new leaves and new
growth when spring arrives .
You v.-ill find this interest ing, fllil , money savin g· and you
will have plants to show, share, sell and to boast abo ut !
I'll be as arixious to hear a bout your r esults, as I will be to

•••
••
•• see mine !
•• Good Luck !

A weekly feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

BY MRS. CHARLES KUHL
CHESTER GARDEN CLUB
A mist box is used fot rooting cuttings of shrubs and plants.
The chosen spot to build a mist bo&lt; is in a sunny, weD
to s ubmit a progress report
for the a uxiliaries to follow. drained spot in yo ur back yard.
A good sized mist box Is 36 inches square.
President Wood requests a
To build this box, drive four 12x2&lt;44" boards into the
Buddy Poppy arrangement
ground to form a square 36" each way. Drive each board into
from each auxiliary using a
the
ground~ inches . Around the bottom of each, nail a 1x6x36"
Christmas theme. The best
board.
design will be entered in the
Pill a 24" p,ipe ('k'') to the center of the box . Using a n
state-wide contest at the
elbow
extend a nother pipe up the center of the box. Qn top of
Midwinter Conference a t
Columbus in January. There this pipe attach a mist head pozzle No. 550-A.
This nozzle may be bough\ from Mrs. Fred Schuster, 4315
will also be a judging of
Rehabilitation posters In . Strobridge Rd. , Vandalia, Ohio 453n or you may purchase a
.
categories
of
the mist head elsewhere .
Fill the box with coarse builders sand to the top of the 6"
rehabilitation
program .
board. It will take about 450 pPunds of sand. Pack the sand
Further, President Wood
doiVn firmly .
asks members to not forget
Wrap the box with 4 mil. or heavier plastic. Secure the
their contribution to · the
plastic
on all sides with staples. Secure the fourth side in such a
Ch illicothe V.A. Comfort
way
-it
can be -used as a door, ·allowing you to get in to the
items for patients there and
plants.
Leave the top uncovered.
a lso their ccntribution of
Attach
a water hOse to the pipe entering into the box. Open
articles for the Cancer
the
faucet
slightly,
only a mist is desired, too much force will
Auction arid drawing for the
wash
away
sand
from
your cuttings.
Mid·Winter Conference at
The
mist
should
spray
from sunrise to sunset. The box will
Columbus , Any article
not
use
more
than
ten
gallons
of water a day.
submitted will be appreciated ·
lf yo u should forget to turn the water off a t night, don't
for the Cancer Auction and .
worry . This will do no harm. Also , should you be going away
Cancer Drawing at the· Mid·
Winter Conference . Bring' for a few daysleav.ethe water turned on.
The shrubbery cuttings to use in the box should be new
articles to this meeting and
growth
. They should be cut 8 to 12 inches long. Strip the
any articles submitted will be
appreciated.
It is also requested that
each Post be represented at
the meeting. A $2 gift ex·
change will be conducted by
The Sew and So Club met at Swain ; assistant treasurer,
members.
t he home of Mrs. Dana Dana. Caldwell ; assistant
Auxiliaries in District 12
Caldwell with 13 members news, Geraldine Sheets.
are Nelsonville, New Marsh·
present.
fie ld , Jacksonville, The
Also decided was to
Devotions were given by c ha nge the date of the
Plains, Albany, Portsmouth
Mrs. Pam Clary reading a Christmas party at the
(t wo
Posts),
Jackson ,
Thanksgiving poem and · Holiday Inn to Dec. 10 at 6:30
Gallipolis, Symmes Valley,
member s repeating the p.m.
Greenfield, Chillicothe.
L.crd's Prayer .
•"•::y;:· . :.e. dtn .OJ £.0) ~
Games for the evening
Were condu cted by Mrs .
Nelda Ca ldwell and the prize
going to Mrs. Pam Clary.
Mary Young received a
Syracuse , 0 .
secret sister birthday gift.
992-5776
The business meeting
Now open for the season . .
TUESDAY
ccnsisted of electing officers.
Choose from over u ,ooo
TOPS CLUB OH 570, Tues·
They are as follows.
PoinseHias
75c to $10.00
day efening 6:30 p.m . at the
president, Nelda Caldwell ;
Foliage Plants 75c to $12.00
Pomeroy Baptist Church
vice president, Carla Swain;
Hanging Baskets
S1.25 to
social room. Anyone in·
$4:50
secretary, Pam Clary;
terested is welcome to attend.
treasurer, Daryle Sheets;
Open Dally9til5
COUNTY Officers Meeting
news reporter , Alta Dailey;
Sundays 1 til5
to be held at·the Rock Springs
assistant ·secretary, JoAnn
Grange Ha ll, 7:30p.m. Tues·
day.
POMEROY Past Matrons
186 Tuesday i:30 p.m. home
of Mrs . Alfred Crow, Racine.
WEDNESDAY
,'UNIORS of the American·
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
Legion Auxillaryof Drew
Will
my insurance provide liability protection In case
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
there
is a ~ire on my property which spreads to an
will meet at 7 p.m . Wednesalljacent house?
day atthehome of Mrs. Harry
Yes, protection is provided in the Personal Liab ility
Davis. Gifts will be wraped
section of your basic HOmeowner's Pol icy. The
for the veterans at the Athens
coverage pays on behalf of the Insured a ll sums which
the Insured sha ll become legally ob ligated to pay
Mental Health Center and the
becau~e of bodily Injury or pr-operty damage. In this
Arcadia Nursing Home.
particular situation you might have a problem In
.. --, FRIDAY
obtaining adequate lim its. It is Often diff icu lt to say
BEDFORD
Tow'n s hip
wha t wou ld be adequa te CQ'(erage on. your property In
Trustees Friday 6:30 p.m . at
case of a catastrophic occurence such as a fire
spr eading throughout the neighborhood . For extra
home of lfelen Swartz, clerk.

HUBBARD'S
. GREENHOUSE

!IIVR·MIT!OI RB

SATURDAY
YE OLD CHRISTMAS
Gathering Saturday at
Bradbury Elementary School ·
4 to 7 p.m . Bazaar and
spaghetti dinner .

_____ -- -·-------

.._

214 E. Main

The Insurance Store
'192·5 130

Pomeroy, 0 .

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
NO DEALERS PLEASEI

Open Mon. thru Sal 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Open Sunday 9 a.m. Jo 6 p.m.

Quantity Rights Reserved
.,

..

PORK LOIN
CUT INTO CHOPS

LB.

ENJOYS GUESTS
Thanksgiving Day cUnner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Walburn Sr. were Mr.
and Mrs. Dennls Walburn and
four children, Beverly, Mr.
and Mrs. David Taylor and
daughters. Fostoria; Mr. and
Mrs.
Ronnie Walburn,
Beltsville, Md., and Mr. and
Dale Wal burn, Jill and Steve,
home from the Vlrgfnla Intermont College at Bristol, Va .

·

Joins club

IN HOSPITAL
Minnie May Clark, 353 N.
Ethe l Bentz and Dee 4th St., Middleport, was taken
Brov.'ll were welcomed into to
Veterans
Memorial
the Conway Diet Class held Hospital Saturday morning
Monday evening at the· by the Middleport E·R Squad.
Meigs Inn . The trophy for Her room number is 124. She
the most we ight lost went would appreciate receiving
'to Caralee Cwnmins with cards. They may be sent to
the runner-up trophy going her in care of the hospital.
to Susie French . Point
Pleasant class honors went
to Hope Eblin , the most
A thought - for the day :
weight lost, and Sharon
Riffle, runner-up. Velva Ame rican writer Henry
Pierson was presented with Davis Thoreau said, " Time is
a 20 pound pin and cer· but the st rea)U I go fishing
Ln.''
tlficate.

AUNT JEMIMA

ALL STAR

$ 28

2%'
FORTIFIED ·MILK

BOX

GAL

GOLDEN ISLE

SINGLES
CHEESE

12

W/C

£SI /9/i

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

125 E. Main Street 992-2171

f.n:m .~ !" ~l:i 000 t hruugh Tht • Cit y 1.-~l; n•

•• ~. npan.v .

77

FRESH FLORIDA

WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT

ROLL

4

W/C

NO. 155

Coupon Expires' Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

29¢

COUPON

67

48 OZ. CAN

LARGE
SIZE

4

HEFTY TRASH BAGS
.

NO. 755

40 CT. PKG.

W/C

$238

W/C

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

~!!~~~~~.!_!..~&lt;.~.-~/~·~.~~~~~~~~~~i;~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::£~~::;;::~. .:. ~.:~.-.~·~·~:-~,
COUPON

j

t
WORCESTERSHIRE-SAUCE : :~
.

:oo.:~

HEINZ

:

37~ M

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

HUNfS ·WESSON OIL
NO. 155

vi;c

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

:,:l
IMPERIAL MARGARINE : l

AX ION.PRE-SOAK

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE

~~~~ $559

NO. 105

Wit

Coupon Expires Dec . 3, 197'1
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

38 ux

$1.27
wit

COUPON

• • •

NO. 405

NO. 255

Coupon Expires Dec . 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

10 CT. PKG.

"

1
. . . J1

COUPON

: :~

BA~QUET

~?"'*.:-.--7'7'-

. ' • ' • •

HEm TRASH BAGS

Wit

59"

Wit

Coupon ExRires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY •

SAN KA COFFEE
LB. CAN

N0.105
LB. CTN.

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

48 OZ. BTL

..

29 OZ. JAR

NO.2
CANS

VANISH
BOWL CLEANER

SPAGHETTI SAUCE
NO. 155

POTATOES ~~- 89~

COUPON
'
--

CHEF BOY AR DEE

70Z.
BARS

MAINE ·.

25'

COUPON

'

CITY LOAN
&amp;..SAVINGS

3

PKG.

974
3

NO. 275

U.S. No. 1

PORK &amp; BEANS

REYNOLDS
WRAP

DIAL SOAP

When you need money to keep your car running, or for any good
reason, talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and
~th co~ideJ::ation. You ~borrow with trust where people save
w1th trust. C1ty Loan &amp;Savmgs.
We find ways to help,

"!

oz.

COUPON

4

Van Camp's

HUNfS
29 oz.
CAN

LB.

88

240Z.
BOTTLE

4

TOMATO SAUCE

MARGARINE

atOty

48

2-LB.

DIXIE

Get back in the
driver~ .s eat

SYRUP

PANCAKE MIX

,/

safety , ~onsult with your agent about fhe particular
factors in your sit uation .

'REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

PRICES GOOD TlfRU SATURDAY, DEC. 3

Meigs County girl scouts
have been invited to be guests
for four Bobcat basketball
games at Ohlo University.
Tite invitation came from the
Department of Inter•
c'Oilegiate Athletics.
The games to be played are
Dee. I, 0 . U. and Cleveland
State, 7:30p.m.; Dec. 3, 0. U.
and Youngstown State, 3 p.m.
Dec. 7, 0 . U. and Marietta
College, 7:30 p.m . and Dec,
10, Northern Illinois and 0.
U.,3p.m.
The scouts must attend in a
group a11d there must be a
minlmwn of 20 althOugh
there is no maximum.
Reserved seat tickets will be
supplied as long as the supply
lasts and all groups attending
will be recognized over the
public address system.
&amp;outs may a ttend as many of
the games as they want as
guests of the University .
Fonns for sending for
tickets are available from
Mrs. Pat Thoma .

Mrs. Caldwell hosts club

Social
Calendar

FROM THE PICK OF THE PORKERS

•

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.

FRIED CHICKEN

W/C

2 LB. BOX

'$159

Coupon Expires Dec. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY
Y

•~''I'

W/C

J

�\

7- Tho Dill I Sent mel, Mld&lt;lleport-Pmnemy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 29, 1977

6- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-P~mer0)', 0 ., ruesaay, NO\'. 29, 1977

Middleport PTA purchases
toys
.

Four inducted into society .

· KYGER CREEK--Four
Kyger Creek High School
seniors were inducted into the
National Honor Society in
ceremonies last •·eek at the
school.
Indu cted were Tarissa
Harless, granddaughter of
Mrs. Sally Harless. Cheshire :
Greg Mulford. son of Mrs.
Martha Brunson , Route 1.
Cheshire; Jean Elkins.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Elkins, Route l;
Bidwell, and Kay Roush ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
John Roush, Route 1,
Gallipolis.
Conducting the ceremony
were Honor Society senior
members, Kim Reynolds.
president, dilughter of Mr.
and Mrs . William A.

Reynolds ; Marc Geiger,
grandson of Mr. and.Mrs.
Burley Ge1ger, ,.;(.., preside~t. who talked on leadershtp:
Robtn, Frate)',
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul E. Fraley, secretary
who presented the principle
of character: Cindy Preston,
daughter of ~tr . and Mrs.

Jmnes Preston, treasurer,

who spoke on scho larship;
and Todd Thomas. son of Mr.
&lt;lml Mrs. Charles Thomas,
reporter, who talked on ser·
\'ice.
.
Areception was held for the
senior members, their
parents and teachers in the
home economics room. Alumni members assisting with
the induction were Pauline
White. Debbie Baird, Liz

"A ll New"
BUFFET
BREAKFAST
:ODA .M .-11: 00 A. M .
Mon. t hr u Frida y
OR ORD ER FROM OUR REGULAR
MENU SATURDAY&amp; SUNDAY

SPECIAL LUNCHES FOR
GROUPS ONLY
(Phone For R~rvalions)
DINNER SERVED NIGHTLY

5:30 to 10:('0
(Buffet Style Friday

ng s l .

BUFFET ON SUNDAYS •
Live Entertainment in the lounge from 9: 00-2:00
.

PT. PLEASANT INN

"

.'!'

PT. t'teasant, W. ViJ

. 62 North

contributed, Jinuny's Pastry~
Donnelli's Pizza, the Middleport Department Store,
Village Phannacy, Baker
Furniture, H. and R.
Firestone, Betsy Ross
Bukery. Royal Crown Bottling Co., Heritage House,
Ralls Ben Franklin,. Ingels
Furniture, Dudley Florist,
Western Auto, Middleport
Book Store, Elberfelds,
Powell's Super-Vatu,

304-675-6276

The Gallipolis Christian
Church will begin their new
Sunday School quarter this
Sunday, December 4. They
ex:tend a wann welcome to
everyone to begin this new
quarter with them.
Five elective classes are
offered- "Don't Divorce the
Holy Spirit," "Let Yourself

principles). There is a class
for college and career "Spares and Pairs." There
are 13 classes for the youth.
Sunday School begins at
9:30a.m., worship service at
10 :35. Transportation Is
provided by bus . Harold
Taylor is Sunday School
Supt., Lawren ce Tawney,
Grow, " ' 'Basic Ghristian Ass't ., Denny
Coburn,
Doctrine" (Fundamentals of minister, Jack Perry,
Christianity), "The Standard associate. For more InLesson /' ''A Teachers' formation call 446-1863, 446Training Course" (survey of 7318 or 446-3179.
the Bible and teachin~

TRY OUR DELICIOUS

~

19/Thermostats.

Do n't keep the door open fo r any longe r than necessa ry
This is as important in the winter as in the summer.

Set at

w

w

68° o r less d uri rJg the day. Eve n lower at n igh t.

~

20/Washers and Dryers.

14/0ven.

11
~

Do n't use uni1 l you can do a full load.

If you are going to cook one dish in the oven , why not cook

t§

21/0utslde daors.

two or m ore? You save energy by doing the whole meal in
the o ven .

15/Dishwasher.
Only wash w hen you have a full load .' And nnse dishes 1n
c o ld wa ter befo re putting them in the dishwasher

K

~

Keep sh u t tig h tly. Do n 't ho ld th e door open t o t a lk to
vis1tors . S tep outside or inv1te the m irJ.

~

22/Bulbs.

JtU

Use d 1mmers and three-way bu lbs . Adjust a m ount o f light
to what you reall y need .

18/Mealtimes.

23/Fireplace.

Make su re everyone ea ts at the same ti m e . Separate meals
waste both tim e and energy.

Install a g lass screen or a door to keep ai r fro m escap1ng
up the Chimney. C lose the damper w hen the fi re place is
not in use.
·

17/Biinds and Draperies.
Open d u ring the day for ext ra heat from the
· s un and free light.

24/0utdoor lighting.
Use as little as possi ble. Turn it on JUSt befo re
compa n y comes a nd o ff a fter they've arrived .
Then on aga in es they-leave, a nd off after
they've gone. If you're going away and
-...:- want to leave the o utdoor lig ht1ng on ,
\-"'•:-" :&gt;- insta ll a time c lock.to-tumJbeJights o ut
d uring the day.

18/Lights.
Stiut incandescent ligh ts off when you leave
a room ~ even for a few minutes. But leave
fluoresce nt lights on if you'll o,.n ly be 15
''1ft
minutes o r so. These bulbs do use extr-a
ene rgy when they are turned on and
off and that a lso shorten·s their lives .

~

I!!

«

I1C

a
f.(

DAIRY VALLEY
HR S.: 10:00 A.M. til tl :OOP.M. Sun .. Thurs . 10 :00 A.M.
t il 12:00 P.M. Friday and Saturda y.

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

Stwr·lrtf fil l lnd t tr.,.
IJJttP lltOtld.

rII -------------------,
~
- ..... .·...._.1

We're doing our best to see that natural gas rema1ns an ene rgy bargain . A recen t stu d y shows Jhe average fami ly
spends a bout the same percentage of its budget today for energy as 10 years ago. During the same pe riod , the cost of [lat- I
ural gas to Columb1a more than d oubled .
There are th ings that you . cai'J do to keep your ene rgy costs .
in line. These conse(vation lipS - an d the ones we'll provide
1n the next fe w weeks - are ways that you ca n save e nergy
a nd mo ney now. All o f these tips and more are from a book
called The Homeowner's Energy Guide , by J o hn A Murphy,
The book n o r ma ll y cost $6 95 . But you can get 1! from
Colu mbia Gas fo r wha t the book cestus .,. $2 50.
J ust fill o ut th is orde r fo rm and mail it with a c heck for $2.85, 1
w hich includes postage a nd 10¢ sales tax, to Columbia Gas
of Ohio, P 0 . Box 117, Department A, CDium bos. O hio 43216.

IHII!illlfJIII!DI

1
,. ,·,•,r ,...
1 •,..·,·.·.··.··"'
.......
1. . .&lt;.: ~-c-,....... ,

1I

ANdadmeress

1
1

Criy
State

ZrpCode

~

·

/A\"ol.

'G
r NLA_Snn nr.\FfilD@H"__
~
~ U \JUL!:!tu;;l.
0
1

1
I

L.-------------------..1

'

1

11 you mossed our other energy-savong l•ps. wnte

your local gas comp;!ny oHrce

FIIEIDLIEST

MON. lHRU SAT! 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

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

~p

\

RK-LOI

Cf:NT£R CUT

RIB PORK CHOPS ............ '"""' •1••
Pound

J "

COUNTRY STYLE

SPARERIBS ..........................""' 1

WHOLE

1

J Jt

• •

LOIN PORK CHOPS ...........,., 1

1
LOIN END PORK ROAST
,, ••"... 1"

PORK ROAST ............................... '"""' 1"
LEAN .II. MEA TV

PORK STEAK ................................ ••""' 11"

FRUIT

SWIFT SIZZLEAI ................ ',~;;• 11 J'
SWIFT PREMIUM PEPPERONI ~:: 99•

U.S. D .A . CH O I CE BON ELESS

FARM FRESH PRODUCE
U.S. NO . 1 All PURPOSE

IDAHO

PLACE YOUR

Accutron

ORDER NOW

·

FRUI TS

10

F lORIDA FRE SH

M ix

5 lB

Match

~

CORIEu BEEF .... .. ............""'
GOETZ

COTTAGE BUTTS ...... .. . '•""'

IJ H
$

F LORIDA FRESH

1"

ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY FRUIT BASKETS NOW.

SEA STAA

BATTER DIP FISH ...... . --"""' 89'

QUANTITY RIG H TS RESE RV ED

8

R. C•
and

99~

KRA FT

Plus

MIRACLE

I

l omt l m"ie w•th coupon end 110.00 putchese
e~c! 4W n9 bee• . winoer and cigan~ttes

SMALl. ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU
BIG ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU

.

.

HEINZ

TDM-TOHETC P WJ

'!114-oz.

SIO!H~A~C O.RDHWIOO O STORE S

Mix

FANCY &amp; FRE H

• SU PER IOR

.•~.~'J

BAG

BAN AN AS...................... 88• CUCUMBERS
s
o;,;.,,. 2
PEPPERS .,
ORANGES................ ~f-~. 99•
TANGELOS .............. ~~;-_gg•

Pound

ardinal

LB

FANCY &amp; FRESt1

.

• lB .

EXPECTING
COMPANY?

Bulova
and

·

POTATOES ••••••• ~..

. DRY FRY
~
::.::·~:.:-::;.-::::
$129 ~

$1

FRESHLIKE BEETS .............. 3 ~~:
F"ESHllf&lt;E

13 :0z ,.

Can

Bottles

FRESHLIKE PEAS ............. 3 ·~~;:' 89'

IIJ!el iJ ifl•l: I

SPINACH .. , .................... 3'~~;:• 89'

~
~

...... 111,/ H

g

GO&lt;Id Ml C.... ""'¥•1 l!luo ltoroo

DUNCAN HINES

&lt;II

oo

12

or. .f:l

CIHEMII

C ARDINA L ~~

14 ¥2 oz, CREAM STYLE or

12 oz. WHOLE KERN EL

19-oz . . .

OAK PAR K U NP EELED · WH OLE

APRICOTS ................. "...':t.~· 59'

,~

Box · ·

·

Limit twu with coupon and $ 10.00 po.~rch iM

PILLS BU AV ASST. S I ZES &amp; VAR IETIES

FROSTIN' MIX ........ ... ... 75

ArtCarved

~o~iii·z·~~$ss•
IA//l'( VMUB
WHOLE MOON
.
. ,.;b.
COLBY CHEESE ................... ""'·
CARDINA l

,.....
.
S.tlll-ll rtlllllblnltll IIHI.

It::...=·=...

WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

GROCERY CARRY O UT

QUARTERED

BOSTON BUTT

or Call ·
and We'll
Cut It .
To Your
Satisfaction

::::E~=j

'l"

KRAFT REG. ar PIMENTO

=··t·:l.

CHEEZ.WHIZ ............................ ';::

77'

1-Lb.
Carton

COTTAGE CHEESE ...... ...1:;;:; 89'

Costume
Jewelry

;
S'
·

.

In Beautiful
Selections

PIZZA

Delightful
To Give
Wonderful
To Get

a

MARDI GRAS

USE
OUR

PriMHI

emtOrda,-

Gents• Anson Thr'·

Toea, Tlo liars ond

Key
Protectors ,
S,oldol
Wotch
l.tnds, ladles' a .
G•nll'
Ladles'.

CONVENIENT

Dllmond
&amp;
·Ear
Rings,-~~~·
I . "-•ld
Pin.&amp; Ear Rings,
Pierced E.r Rings,
Cvltur:ed . P•arl
Necklaces,
Dtcwollw Clocko.

CARRY·

Sflierplate · an.il
Kromex GHt lt•ms.

T
VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL
FOOD STORE

Goassler's Jewelry Store
-aJURT ST.

POMEROY

Use Our;

'.

STORE HOURS

Desire,
Stop In

I~

1

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAlA

I I

Everyone want1 a Bulova ·
Acculron watch. Come In
now Wid choose for lhe
Nmtll on your girt lilt. Every
8uiOYa Accutron hu the
famous etectrqnlcally--drtven
tuning fork movement
GUIIranteed accurate to

Glinl!'ltr

You can do a lot lo save money this win ter - and we wan t to
help

:_,

•HAMS
•VEAL
•SALT FISH
•FRESH
OYSTERS

Bulova
Accutron®

wlltlln 1 rmnutt a month .
,. ... .

FOOD BTDI=I&amp;S

COUNTRY CURED

Cuts Of
Meat You
.

inaI

N'S

AT OUR
STORE

Any Special

For Christmas

,Ina

Like all energy bills. gas bills are go1ng up. The reasons are
c lear-+ higher cos ts for materials and labor. for purc hased
g as . for taxes; misg uided nat1 o nal policies al so figure in the
eq ua tion.
·

'

Stop In
and Order

ADOLPH'S

Now is the time to get ready for cold weather. There are lots
of things to do that save money by saving energy.

13/Refrigerator.

•'

BOWLS
and
BASKETS

SANDWICHES

More Ways to Save
on w·
Energy B1
You Can Do Now.
~

AVAILABLE

Gallipolis Christian Church to
start Sun..day Schoof quarter

. .. TO CHERISH
CHRISTMAS ·AFTER CHRISTMAS .

.Here's a checklist for the downstairs part of your home:

NOW

Pomeroy flower Shop, Middleport Fire Department.
Middl eport Lunch Room,
Mark V, Twin City Gateway,
Blue Tartan , Modern
Woodmen of America.
Principal Bob Morris and
Custodian Earle Wood receiv·
ed a special thanks from the
P.T.A. as did the judges, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Hoffman, Mrs.
Velma Rue, Mrs. Renee
Stone, and Mrs . In a
Meadows.

'

Mooday lhru Saturday .

·::

POLLY'SPOINTERS

Toys for each of the
classrooms at the Middleport
Hood Rwnley , C)•nthia Clark, •
ElemenU.ry School have been
and Steve Baird. Mrs. Fay
Polly Cramer
purchased by the Middleport
Sauer is the sponsor. The
P'l'A, 11 was reported at a rere ce ption table was
c-en t meetin~ .
decorated in the ThanksgivIt was aecided at the
ing motif with ca ke, punch, Restore natural fibe r to11e
meeting to pay part on the
eandy and mints being servPOLLY'S PROBLEM
down so as to reduce the cost of the basketball
ed.
DEAR POLLY - Can you swelling . I co uld not depend wtifonns for the Bradbury
In conjunction with the in- · tell me how I can on finding a footstool at the team which is CQmposed of
duction cere mon y, a get a ma crame purse doctor's office or at the approximately !iO children
1llanksgiving service was back
to
its natural homes of friends so 'went to from the fourth grade at the
held. A musical program was .white color? I washed it with the Army Surplus store and . Middleport, and the fifth and
presented by Mrs. Barbara a mild detergent and it turned .for li!tle over a dollar and a sixth grades at the Bradbury
Stewart with !he junior high yellow so I tried bleach but half found a portable camp school.
chorus singing " Battle Hyrrm there was ,no change. Thank stool to carry with me. It is
Mem.bers were also urged
of the Republic" Band "What ou. - CAROL.
to
support the Bradbury
light, folds Oat and can go in a
is America J" and then being
DEAR CAROL - Yo.u flat shopping bag with Christmas bazaar and
• joined by · the senior high could try color remover that handles and carried over my spaghetti supper to be held on
chorus for "Let There Be can be found in stores with am1 like a purse. Since the Dec. 3.
Peace." The senior high packaged dyes. - POLLY. legs are wood they can be cut
A thank you note was read
chorus sang "A Time for Us"
to suit the person's CQmfort. from the Parent-Teacher
and the popular "Have You
DEAR POLLY - I want to A friend with a bad knee has Forwn at Meigs Junior High
NeverBeenMellow."
add to Vern's list of bad table followed suit and it is so School, and the Meigs County
The Thanksgiving medita- maMers. At family picnics, cheap people living on Social Council of Parents and
tion was given by the Rev. church pot luck supper, etc. Security can afford it. Teachers meeting wa~ set for
Lynn Lahae of the Faith Bap- when a platter of fried MRS. P.R.B.
Feb. 2 at the Middleport
tist Church in Gallipolis. chicken is passed (especis:lly
DEAR POLLY - When I go School with Founders Day to
There was a vocal duet "You on the second go round) some shopping I always carry be observed at that time.
Light Up My Ufe': by Marc people will use the fork they some name and address
Coffee and donuts were
Geiger and Sandy Van Sickle. have been eating with and stickers in my purse. When I served on Wednesday during
Accompanists for the musical spear every pie&lt;;,e on the buy something I stick one of National Education Week as
program were Todd Thomas platter looking for a favorite these on the package in case I parents visited the school. It
and Elaine Ward.
was noted that there will be
piece before passing it on. should lose or misplace it. no meeting in December but
That is when I quit eatin~. MRS. JAN L.
Who wants a piece of meat
DEAR POLLY- Have you there will be a Christmas pr&lt;r
that has been speared and discovered that some of the gram presented by the
HAVE GUESTS
students.
moved around by a fork that
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley has been in someone's family's jacket sleeves are
A podium is being built at
Bryan of and Mr. and Mrs. mouth? Do not use my name too short or that the cuffs are the high school for the P.T.A.
worn
out
?
Cut
the
ribbed
tops
Harol d Scarberry and but just sign me - A FAN.
from old socks and sew them A report was given on the rechildren , Mickey a nd
DEAR POLLY- I want to on and even give the gar· cent town meeting wbere the
Heather, Middleport were ~uggest to Mrs. J . M. who is
P.T.A. served refreshments.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. plagued by lint balls on ments a new sweater look. · Program for the evening
M.V
.S.
and Mrs. John Bryan, Mid- thlilgs, that she might try
Polly will send you one of Wl)S by Mrs. Mary Myers of
dleport.
·
gently rubbing the surface of her signed thank-you news- the Meigs County Health
the fabric with FINE grained paper coupon clippers if she Department whn talked on
sandpaper. I have had great uses your favorite Pointer, the role of the department in
SEEN VISITING
the county's health program.
Dr. and Mrs. Donald L. Cl-· success removing lint balls Peeve or Problem in her the Rev. George Glaze
on material s, column . Write POLLY'S
inger, Cincinnati Mr . and fo rm ed
sweaters,
etc.
and especially POINTERS in care of this presented devotions and also
Mr s. Jo hn Bowman,
showed a fiim on the safety
those
made
of
synthetics. newspaper.
Pataskla, and Mr. and Mrs.
patrol.
HELEN
K.
Paul WinebreMer, Colwnbus
It was reported that the
DEAR
POLLY
I
find
that
were Thanksgiving guestsof
carnival was a financial sucwet
plastic
curlers
will
curl
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Owens,
cess and the unit extended apdry hall- very well and faster
Middleport.
preciation to merchants whn
than when the hair Is wet.
'
This is especially good for
those with long hair as it dries
HAD GUESTS
RETURNS HOME
so ruowly and for short hair
Mr.
and
Mrs: Harry Davis
Vicki Boso is expected to be wh en it does not need of Ave., Pomeroy,
had as
returned to the home of her washing but you would like to their Thanksgiving guests
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clair give it a quick curl. - LVNN.
Mr. and Mrs, Bill Lehew,
Boso , Great Bend today,
DEAR PO LLY - I am Ted, John, Billy and Cheryl,
fo llowing eye surgery at recoVering from a broken Mrs. Louise Hawkins, and
Universit y Hospital ·in ankle and therefore need to Mrs. Sadie Thuener.
Columbus.
keep it elevated when sitting

II&amp;&amp;IST SAYII&amp;S II TOWII

13¥, _oz. Cheese
Pkg .

99&lt; .

TOWELS

14 oz. Pe pperoni or
16 oz. Sau sage

111 t

Jumbo

Roll

LYSOL SPRAY ..... .. ....., ......."t::
COAST BAR SOAP .................... ~.~

99',
IJ 1'
STOR£ 5 • CAROINAlfO ODSlOJ!f.S

13· OfF lABEl

LIQUID DERMASSAGE .. .............~!;:.~ 69'
'~';:· 1

ARM &amp; HAMMER .........................

.

;
6 99

.

1"

ASST . FLAVO RS OIEl

16-oz.

FAYIOPDP

Bottles

.

NIMTN I. BEAUTY AilS
REG . or M I NT

CLOSE UP
TOOTHPASTE ·,~::

79(

N~XZEMA CREAM ........... •;:;

1

1··

MINT or LlMON·ORA NQE

,

DI-GEL TAILETS ....~ ...........·~~·

.

ST. JOSEP H

79C

CHILDREIS ASPIRII ........':;;' 39'

Xt{tlil :0:•1:1

F'iosAfiNG MIX

...

75( ~

.......tl/3/H

o...l .. ~( ""¥'"'

~

~

''"" ••o-

g

::;;

110 OB 0. ~

CARDINAl l~i''

�12 o ~Jj}--Janakl33 : lo~Jj}--To morrow

8 _ T~ Daily Sent mel, ~llddleport·Pomero;, 0 ., 'l\tesday. Nov. 29, 1977

U Wonisorl!ndto.r
,.._ Cash
I d.Jiy
2days
3dlys
5 days

'

."'

Char~t

100

""

190

In MeRKH"Y

190

:s

Elich word onr W mumnwn

1~

t 'or flenl

IN LOVING memory of George
Nesselrood Sr
.... no possed
·away 8 years ago Nov ']&lt;I

!1!5

l

JOO

I'W~

words \S 4 ~nu j.X"r • i.V'd ptr da)

E•g~'~t yeOrs hove pcssed smce

Ads NMII'I&amp; other Uwln ~tJH•
days will bft chargf'd at w · I da~

....

that sod do.,
On• you lo ... e was coiled away
God too~ htm home tt was hts
wtll
But m our heons he ltveth 'ttl!
Sodl., mtss&amp;d by w1fe cht!dren
and grandchtldnm

In llll'mory, Card at Thanlr..l and
6 cenu per ~orU. 13 00
minimum . Cash Ul ad'o·~
~itLW')' ·

MoMr HiH1lt' sal~ and rant sa les
arT accepted only WJLh rash w1th

HOOF HQllOW Ho"es Buy sell
!rode or tro111 New and used
saddles Ruth Reeves Albany
MI:IGS COUNTY Humane SC)Ciety

bnel.
The Publlshfor ~1'\' I!S tht' nghl
to edit or ~ject any ads det&gt;n~ G&amp;

je&lt;'l.iona!. The PubliSher w1 U not bt&gt;
responsiblf. £or morr thanQM tn~w·
rect LnSeruon.
Phone 992-2156

, GU N SHOOT R'CICi ne Gun Club
e'&gt;~iHy Sun
afternoon . Fa ctor
Chock guns only
Assorted
meats
THERE Wil l be no huntmg no
lrespassmg and no tJ:ccepttons
on m'r proper ty. Bob McCraw
THE RACINE Volunteer Ftre
Deportment wdl ~pon~or o gvn
shoo t e ver~ Saturday at 6 p .m .
at the ir building in B o~hon Foe ·
tory choke guns only.

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

TIM BERlAND OWNERS Do you
need help in rnonog 1ng yolJr
woodlands and morlo;et1ng your
timber? Mead s staff ol proles ·
SIOnol fo r e~ters IS ovodqble to
offer you onistonce at no cos t
Meod con assure you at diver·
sil ied
markets
complete
ttmber utd 1zation
Including
whole· tree chtpp1ng and super vi sed
harvest ing
programs
designed to pro tect your lands
and pr omote timber. growlh .
For details . roll collect or wrtte
MEAD
PAPER
Wood
&amp;
Woodlands Dept . PO BoK :)q l,
Jackson ,
O hio
4564 0 .
Teleph on e. 614-:286 ·2868 .

Monday
Noon on Saturday

""'""'

thr\1 Friday
4P.M.
the day before publication

Sw&gt;day
4P.M.

Fnday afternoon

NOTICE ON FILING
OF IN V ENTOR Y
AND APP-RAISEMENT
Th e State of Ohio. Meigs
County , court of common
Plea~. Probate Di vision
To the EliH~tor or Ad ·
ministrator of the estate , to

such o f the follow ing as are
residents of the Slate of Oh io,

v i :z : ~ the surviving spouse,
the
ne!(t
of
k in,
the
benef i ciaries under the wil l;
and to the attorney or at.
torneys represent ing any of
tl'le aforement iOned pe rsons ·
George F . R it tenhouse .
Racine , Oh i o.
You are hereby not ified
that the Inven to ry ·and AP ·.
pra isement of the estate of
the
aforement i oned ,
deceas ed , late of sa id County ,
were f iled in this Court . Said
Inven tory and Appraisement
will be for t'!earing Detore th is
Court on the 1st day ot
December • . 1977. at 10 : 00
o'clock A .M .
Any per son . deslrlng to file
exceptions th ereto must tile
them at l e;;~st f iv e days prior
to the date set for hear1ng
Given und er my bond and
seal o f sa id Court , th is 19th '
day of November 1977 ,
Ma nning D . Webs fer
Judge
By Caro l yn G . Thomas
Deput y Clerk
(1 1l 22 . 29 , 2tc

Wednesd,a y , November

IF VOU hove o serv1ce to ofler
wont t'a bv., or sell someth1ng
oe loo~"'9 tot worl..
01
whatever
'fOV II gel resuhs
Iosier w 1th a Senl1nel Wont Ad
Call9911l56

Ito 14) o98 3290

order . 1!i ~nt charg!' 101' ads C'8J"11'·
ing Boa Nwnber In Carl' ul The ~n­

Careline and odopt1or1 Ser\lrce
qq1 ·7 bBO 741 316'2 992 5427
FO R • STU D
Servrce
AK(
reg•stered rocker spanrel
Blotk and ton . Clarksdale
l rnes Showquolrty J &amp; "D Ker1
nels 742-3162
AK C REGI STERED pelo.lnge 5e pup
p1es Phone (304) 88:2 ·2683
RISI NG STAR Kennel Boordmg
lndoo• and outdoor rvns
Groom ing all breeds . Cleon
sanitary lacilit1e1. Cheshrre
Phone (6 14) 367 ·0191

\it!) GJO[fJ[brflmiJ
Nov. 3D, 1971
You will be ir1volved ir1 more
activities that will keep you on
the go both mentally and physi·
cally this coming yea r . The re
will be fun alo ng the way , as
well as many opportunities to
learn .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191
You are adept at mas termind~
ing thi n9 s today . You ' ll use
your ability 10 the fu llest. A long
th e way , yo u 'll ge t a pi ece ol
th e ~ction .
~D-Fe~.

191 In

parte rship arrangements today
you sho uld set the pace. If
there's somethi ng- good · for
both parties . i nitiative the
act ion .

PISCES !Feb. 20·March 2Dl Ci rcumstances affecting your career are very ben,eficial today
You ' ll have the ear of tho se in
high pla ces. They'l l be fa'o'or able to your proposals.

ARIES (March · 21 -Aprll

191

You ' re a bit rest less and adven·
turous today . Associ ate with
acli'o'e people wt10 c an help you
satis fy the Craving to get up

and go.
TAURUS

(April 2D·May

201

When you ~ee somethi n g you
wan t today , y,ou 're equ ipped to
go out ahd get it. You ' re determ ined , without being stubborn
or obstinate .

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) You
are very analy tical, log iCal and
objective today. These are
· qualities that you use well .'
They enable you to accurately
assess situations .

Customers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

NOTICE TO Hunters : Please note ·
No hunting or trespouing on
the Wallace Ambu rger form .
Nease Settlemenl , Mmersville
Ohio . Includes oi l game
DEER

HEADS

Mounted .

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

Coli

985-3833.

9.;..-

NO HUNTING on the follow ing
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
properties: Guy Rose. Warren . . . .
Phone 992-2181
Rose, Robert lee . Winston
Va rney . Carl Offutt Charles
Will CARE for the elderly in our
Bush and Carl Morris.
home . PhoneQ92·731 4.
PIANO TUNING · lone Daniels .
New phone number . 992 -2581 .
FOUND IN Rock Springs area : Dog
resembling coon hound Has
collar and flea collar . Call
~2·5881 or 992 -7512 . to identify .

.::'o:::l:;.
l9:.:9.:2.:;·2.:;0.:
82::.:.__

0 .:;
0 :..:
_:;.f :;.'::
"'::w
:;.•::.:'c:.·
1

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

LOST ON Sy camore or Beech
Stree; in ~;idd l eport :
Ton
billfold witk Holzer Hospital
Cord . license, Soc . Security
r ord . Blue eyeglasses flecked
wilk brow n. tinted lens. Silver
watch with chain . Brenda
Johnson , 949-2123 .

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

applia nce servicem.on . Pai d
ho l idays ,
'&gt;lOcations
and
hospitol i zatioll .
Goll i o
Refr igerator Co .. 611 3rd Ave .,
Gollipo l i~ . Ohio .

HOUSEKEEPER . COOK to li ve in ,
to .shore home with elderly
lady . Middleport Hill . Small
salary. 992·576.4.

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) This is

your kind of day . You ar e
ad mired fo r your leadership ,
sought out for yo ur co unSel
and o gled for your bright , zesty
attire .

JOB OPEN ING · landmark S~r ... ice
Station . Apply by applications
at thelandmor k Office .

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0c1 . 23) II you
ha'o'e some th ing you want a
large organization to take o n ,
this Is a good day to plead yo ur
case . You're sk illed in dealing

1970 TOYOTA . Hi· Lux . Pickup.
$S50. Fiberglass topper , $150.

614-378-03 11.

SOMEONE TO li"e in and dri&gt;~e o
cor . 790 Maple Stree-t , Mid ·
dteport . 992.2936

1973 FORD lTD 2·door hard top .
Opera wind271 .

CA SH paid lor 011 makes and
models of mobile homes.
Phone area code 61 .4 -41 3·9531 .

1973 FORD LTD 2·door 1-,ordtop.
Opere windows , low mileage.
eKcellent condilion.. Will trade
tor pi.ckup truck , give or t oke
differe nce . Robert Hill , Racine ,
Ohio9 4 9-20t3 .

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products . Top pr ice for st and ing
sawtimber. Call 992 ~ 5965 or
Kent Hanby . 1·4-16·8570 .
COINS , CURREN CY . tokens . old
pocket watches and cha ins ,
silver and gold. We need 1%.4
and older silver coin~ . Bu y , ~e ll,
or trade ' Call Roger Woms!ey,

1963 FO~D PICKUP . 6 cyl. Ru ns

good . 985-3849.
1972 El CAMINO . A .C. , P.S .. P_a ..
new paint . new Crogars &amp; ti res .
63 ,000 miles . S2 ,000 . 949· 2880.
1974 VEGA . Priced reasonably .
7b0 laurel Street, M idd leport.

Ohio

742-2331.
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes , brass
beds , iron beds , etc. , complete
households . Write M . D. Miller ,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Oh10 or coli
~2 · 7760.

NO ITEM TOO Lorge at too smo.ll.
Will buy. I piece or complete
household . New , us.ed . or an ti·
qUes . Mar tin 's Furnitur e, 20 N.
2nd St. , Middleport. Phone
992-6370 .
CHIP
WOOD . POles
ma x.
diameter 10" on largest end . $8
per ton . Bundled · sl9b . $6 per
ton. Del ivered to Ohio Pollitt
Co .. Rt . 2. Pomeroy . 99:2-2689 .
CASH FOR Junk Cars . F.rye's Truck
and Auto Wrecker Service.
Phone 74:2-2081 or Pennzoil
Ru tland 7-42 -9575.
WANTED TO bu y: Deer Hider .
Phone 742·2790.

FOR SALE or Trade: Trailer and •
lot . Sell on land con tract ,
Loc:oted above Jones Boys.

$4 ,800: Jock
446-0157 .

Neal.

(6 14 )

You'll
tract it down
nch laster
rlth 1

.WANT AD

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 You

c an get what yo u want today
without being too obvious .
Gentle pro dding mo~es .th ings
in your direction .

-

--

with muttiludes .

SCORPIO. (Oct . 24·Nov. 22) Matenal thmgs motivate you
today . The higher the stakes
involved . the more you ' ll put
your sh o ulder to lhe whee l.
\NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS SN )

COAL. limestone . and cal ci um
ch lor ide and calcium brrne for
dus t co ntrol and special mixing
salt fer lormers . b:celsior Soil
Works, Main Street , POmeroy,
Ohio or phone m . 3891 .
CAMPER . S600 . Also . horse
trailer . $450 . Phone {614 ) 698 ·

3290.
ECONOMV TRACTOR wilh all ol ·
lochments. Like new , osk1r1g
S2'2SO. Phone {614) 69B·3290.
APPlES . FITZPATRICK Orchards .
Stole Route 689 . Pkone
Wilkesville , 669·3785 .

- --

RUGS, WALL Hangings and
ofgons, Nice fo r Christmas .
Reasonable . Coll992 ·22 14
197b FORD F·;250 C!Jstom 17 .50 K
14.00 tires . winc h. Only 14 .C(!O
_
mi. Headers . CB. Tape deck .
Ove r $3 ,000 in eKtras . Serious
colts only alter 12 noon :
690 -1 072 . $6 ,800.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES. Pt , Plea ·
sent . W. Va . beside He&lt;k 's.
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
bedroo m
1973 Dorion 14 "'60 2 bedroom
1972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom .
2 bath
1972 Coventry 12 ~~: 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 x 60 2
bedroom .

BROWNING MARK Il l Golden
Eagle 23 chonnel AM bose sto ·
tion CB . Best one o11er $250
tokes it. 949·2322 .
VERV GOOD hoy. $1 .50 pe r bole .
{614) 667 ·3368 . Tu pp ers Plains ,
Ohio .

ROBYN C.B.
sx 007
'79.95
Complete

with

accessories. Yes. we will
layaway for Christmas.

Pomeroy Landmark
w.

LJack
Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992· 2181

t::==:,_______

__J

TWO WROUGHT iron lire place
screens . Folding type , $7 . Flush
fill ing type wi th wire cu rtains
and andirons , $10. Both in good
cond it·ion . Co lt 992·5666· bet ween, 4:30 and 6:30p .m .

8&lt;3-2933 .
TWO TWIN beds, comp lete . 1
chest . 1 Webcor 8·trock tope
player. 992·5523.

OPPORTUNITIES
$8, 100 for education,
75 per cent of your
College tuition free ,
College
Level
Examination
Free,
An Associate Degree
through
the
Community
College
of the Air Force, 30
days paid vacation, 7
paid 3 day weekends ,
good starting pay and
much
more.
Interested?
Contact me, Vernon
Zeger. your Air Force·
Representative.
For an appOintment
in the Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592-4592 Collect.
Order No . 9-ct·86

A POLlED Hereford Herd Bul! . 5
years old . Ros Victor Plato I.
Trosk bred , both sides . Paul
. Kerr , Chester, Ohio . 985·3538 .
NINE BLACK Angus Cows with
ca l ... es . Ca ll George Frecker ,
985·3827 e\lenings .
l'il76 YAMAHA YZ 125 X. EKce llenl conditi on. Many extras .
992 ·3016 .

General Contractors
Phone 949-2801
or 949-:.td60

Dave Parsons
Owner

FREE ESTIMATES

11 ·25 1 mo.

No Sunday Calls Please
11 ·21 1 mo.

EXPERIENCED

Supe1io1

Radiator~

Steam Exllaction

Young's
Carpeting

W. Carsey, Mgr.
P hone 992 -2181

Service rm!ID
, , _ th• ._,..._, frvck or lutlt&amp;ot.,.

.....

.... fetor ta

Route l Pomtnl)', 0.

Ca1pet &amp;UphOISitty
Phone Mike Young

NEW ·HOME 1 m1le 11) bock of
Portland. 4 roo ms and both 2
acres . Con tact Delbert lawson
Eagle Ridge Rood
-

~~

992-2206 01992-7630
''The Ori1in1to"
Not The lmitato11

-

ALL ELECTRIC 3 bedroom home
w1th utili ty room end Iorge k if chen . aluminum siding , attach ·
ed garage. 2 Storage build ings .
garde n spot , established yard
with trees and shrubs. All on 1
acre . Tupper s Pla ins , Ohio .
EIGHT ROOM house w 1th both
ond other buildings . Carpenter ,
Ohio . S9,000. 742 -2271 .

Located In

Middleport, Ohio

Blo•n
lnwlllion Se~ices
Finandna AaYJble
81owfl hUG Walls &amp; Attits

PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours: 9 A.M. to 4
P.M.

Special Orders or ShoWing
of Carpets by Appointment

Only ,

Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10; To Tell The
Tru1h 13; Gilligan's Is. 15; French Chel20; Parent
E ffectlveness 33.
7:3D--Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races 8;
Hollywood Squares 4; Wolfman Jac.k 6; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20.33: Price Is Rlqht 10; That' s
Hollywood 13; Music City _15.
8:oo--Amerlca Salutes the Queen 3,4,15; Happy Days
6,13: Fi1zpa1rlcks 8. 1D; Bos1on Pops In Hollywood
33; Eyewl1ness 20 .
9 ooo--Three's Company 6,13; Mash 8,10; Jacques

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
COME

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save JO pc1. 10 lO pd.

~ETIREME~T,

fNPUST~Y- -

300 Main 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992.6182
or 992·6263

lARRY lAVENDER

8 A.M. Io 4 o3D P.M.

SJI'KUSI, Ohio

Ph. 992-3993

$ALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9·tfC

HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre and HOWERY
AND M ARTIN
up . M iddleport. near Ru tland . . coveting , septic sys tems .
Call 992-7481.
·
dozer , backhoe . dump truck
limestone . grovel, blacktoP
NEW 3 bedroom hous.e , 2 bath s,
pavin g . Rt. 143. Phone 1 (6 14)
all elec .. 1 acre, M iddleport .
698 -733 1.
close to Rutland . Phone 99'1·
748 1'
SMALL fo rm for sole, lO 'Y.-· down ,
owner fina nced. Monroe Coun ·
ty , W . Vo . Phone "(304) 772 ·
3102 or (304) 772·3227

BATHROOMS AND Ki tchen~
remodeled , ceramic tile , plum·
bing . carp en try and general
maintenance. 13 ~eors eK perience . 992·3685 .

COUNTRY formlond with seclud·
ed woods . wate r end good oc·
cess in_ Monroe County , W _ Vo .
$1 .000 down . roll (304 ) 772 3102 0' (~ )7 72-3227 .

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY

-com merci al property appro )(. i7
acres. level land . locoted ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio . Route
7. Phone (614) 667 -6304 .

ANN
DAILE Y' S Upholste r y .
Por tland , Ohio. 843·25-42 .

VA -FHA, 30 Yr. financing . Ireland
Mortgage . 71 E. State , Athens ,
phon!il' {61-4) 59:2·3051.
2.

STORV 3 bed r~cm frame
house, F.A. furnace, storm win ·
dows , fireplace in Middleport.
Phone 992·3457 or 992·5867.

APMIAALs.:.MeKEE

. $11.000.
EXCELLENT

-

Very

large . newer home with 3
bedrooms·. and 2112 baths .
Has 2 ca r garage and 1.4
acres. Central heating and
air conditioning with large
stone fireplace .

CARTHAGE HILLS -

3

bedroom ranch home with
,bath, electric basebo ard
heat, rural water, nice
kitchen and good country
r oad. Only $16,500.

RT. 33 -

Near Shade. A 3

bedroom , split le&lt;Jel home
with nice lot . Garage and
drilled wells. A good buy a t

iusl S21,5DO .
HORSE FARM - 145acres

IS" calor television .
wristwatch . 843·2645.

·Timex

land . $36,000 .
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms,

ONE ClARINET in excellent condition . $75 . 992 -5786.

3 bedrooms,. 1V2 baths,
di ning,
living
22'x24' ,
in tercom ,
stove .
refrigerator , and large
fenced lot. 538 1 500 .

FOUR YEAR old Polle d Hereford
BulL Regi stered . 800 lb. groin
Jed beet . ready tc;&gt; but cher .
992 ·2867, a her 6 .

4D ACRES -

TWO HR 70 - 15 steel belted radial
snow tires, Like new . $60. Lynn
Shuler. Phone 247 -3251 ,

nice. Has all the m inerals
and a small barn . Good
Hunting .

1Cit 76 HONDA 750 Super Sport . EK tro s. First $1295 . Motorcycle
and · or garden tractor trail er.
Heavy duty , $75 . 992-5240.

F . A. f Urnace , family roo m.
and carport on over sized

Some lays

RACINE AREA - La rge
living , 3 bedrooms, bath,
lot.
CURE YOUR HOUSE
NEEDS. SEE US OR CALL
992-3325.
Helen L . Teaford
C. Bruce Teaford
Associates

11 : 3().;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Smash Up on

INDLISITRIES
DOESN'T:

lnlersta1e 5" 6.13; Movie " Night Terror"' 8; ABC

KingsbuiJ
Hom~ Sales
•Mobile
Home' .
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
! Tie - Downs
• Awnings - Carports
•Ins urance
Repa irs

\l'lJ)lf.\fl

WHY ~RB liOI..' DI'&gt;SATISFir-D
\UITH 40i:R "1.1\Tih A~f&gt;.Y."
....._'--_:.;\I: ATC.H '?

~~~'Til ~F.

A!JT\-·

IANt~Ti 1- A~O '&gt;HCX.K-

WMPI,.,I-IIJT?

na r "'• ~S ALN'BRI\S~C~ '!

IMODI

Jack's Septic
Tank SeMce

LOOK ~--

HE'S

RIGH1' OYER mAl'
OlD SARGE NOW ...

WHERE WE WERE. ...

Chester, Ohio

AXEL~

1115 ONL'f 1"'
SERGE --·

{614) 592· 1692,

E.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
FARM - 70 a cres nice
lay ing land . Nice home
with 2 bedrooms, d ining
roo m , bath , large liv ing
with fireplace, carpeting,
full basel'!lent &amp; garage.
Large
hog
house.
aL,~tomatic feeders ; Pond,
other buildi ngs . $38,500.00 .

POMEROY -

13

room

o lder home , 2112 baths,
large kit chen &amp; d i ning
room, hot water heat. part
basement, garage, walk to

1971 SALEM 12 x 65 2 bedroom .
Fr ont den modeL Furnished,
Hooked vp to utilities o t Count ry M obile
Home Pork .
Ever~thing is in the den ready
foro fireplace or wo_o d-burning
stove . $6 ,000 ft rn'l . Call
992·7034 or 992 -7671 , after b.
1965 NEW MOON 2 bedroom
troller 10 x 65. Con be ready to
go at a weeks notice. For more
in lormotidn . call 9.49· 2484 or
985·4240.

AUCTION SALE , every Tues . and
Fri. at 7 pm. New and used
merch andise ot Ohio River Auction , Meigs Plaza , Middleport,
Ohio . Home Phone (304 )
773·5471 .

I ·KJ

12 years

old . Close in, 3 bedrooms,
bath , dining room, forced
air N .G . heat. insulation,
hardwood
floors , ·
carpeting, other feat ures.

126.600.00.
SYRACUSE

Nic e

cottaage, 2 or 3 be.drooms,
bath, kitchen with range &amp;
re f. · N . G .heat , storms.

JUST $11,000.00.
POMEROY - Overlooks
the ri ve r, I floor plan , 3
bedroom s, bath, dining R .
Kitchen has range &amp; ref..
basement ,
N .G.
heat .

112,500.00.
TO THE MAN WITH
WISDOM- YOU CAN'T
AFFORD
TO
PASS
THESE BY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992 -2259 - 992-6191

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20, 33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 10 ; Emergency One 13 ; My Three Sons 15.
5:31}-()dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary

t:J

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
·
6 :0G-New·s 3,.4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 : 3~NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;

I

Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.

7 :oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross· Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
News 10; Gllllgan"s Is. 15; Daniel Foster . M.D. 20;

Big Green Magazine 33.
7: 3~Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; MacNeil -Lehrer RReport 20,33;
The Judge 10; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8 o~Jj}--Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; Eight Is Enough 6,13;
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer 8,10; Nova 20.33 .
9:ClO-Oregon 1 raii3,4,1S; Chi'! ... lte· ~ Ar':Jtlrl:l o,u ; t3ing

"THE RATS ·"

ri..et T e Open ng

_,the"-"

..11.rnbte Book No. 10,
110 puzziM, IIIIWillii:IIIIIIDr $1.35 . ..
pold - -·
'Box:M. - · N . J . 07&amp;11.yourn~m~,..,_, llpooell.nd'"*-c:hldla~toll
I 5 I loa

uNR~LSTERING

&lt;Jo...

Crosby 8, 10; Great Performances 33; Union Male "

20.
10:01}--Big Hawaii 3,4,15; Baretta 6,l3 o Johnny Cash
8,10; News 20 .
Fawlly Tower! 2D: Thirty Minutes wllh Larry Groce
333.
. '
.
.
n ooo--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,i5; pick Cavett 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11:3o--Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 ;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie '"The Love
Machine'" 10. 12 :0D--Janakl 33.
12:4D--Mystery of the Week 6,13: McCloud 8; I :Qj}-Tomorrow 3,4.
'·
2: ID--News 13.

And

TRIM SHOP IN RACINE
Be· rne opening of the i ndoor season tor you with
your old rurniture re upholstered In beautilul
warm colors &amp; pattern'
from Bob ' s. It you are
looking tor U'o'lngs it will
pay you to pav us a visit.
louted in be c k or the Sew
N ' Sew Ouflet on Ma i n St .•
Rac ine. 0 .

11 . 101 mo .

SWAIN
~utomatic

transmission Service

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
o.

Ph. l7U210

~ealf.· t/}ALLEYOOP

by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 Style of
ACROSS
window
1 Love, in
4 Blushing
Seville
5 Plaint
5 - lazuli
6 Entertain
1D Additional

~'MJNMUG
IS SENDINIS
OSCAR BOOM.
AMOS 8R()N6()H,
ANO HIS UNClE,
AUGUSTUS

PEEVILl, BACK

'/VJ!:~~

PLAN "TO EX-

ROMAN CITY OF

CONSTANTINOf!£,
AND SEEK
AUDIENCEW~
ITS BlJILDE~,

S.MPEROR

CONSlANTINE.

GASOUNE ALLEY

.. .what nobod4 I know,
else but 40u sir! I've
kin hearL been a
selfish
old
miser!

Yes'

shouldn't be
walkio'..on 4er
"'~-"'-- mone 4!

ductive
120ne of
Disney's

dwarfs

16 Biblical
eagle
18 In
those
days
21 Urban

oasis

Movie Channel 4 -

5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Pink Panther STrikes Agaln (PGJ
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Seven Percent Solution I PG l
Cable Channel 5 6:3o-- P .M. -Testimony Time
7 o00- Paul Gaudino Family fitness
7o30 - Marshall Basketball
9o00 - Celebrity
10 :00 - 700 Club.

Yesterday's Answer

22Eihlcs
23 Satires;
lampoons
24 Imitation
Iabrie

25 Composed
27 Military
barracks

29Mark
Fidrych

is one
30 Bizarre
31 Amalgamate
32Wearied
Tuesday, Nov : 29
34 Built
37 Old saying

---:B=R:-::=ID:--=G=--E- -

port
27 Box or
baggage28 Nonsense
29 Discuss :

Careful play pulls 6
29

religious
belief
35 Prefix wi!h

~ORTH ( D)

• J 98 .
¥ A K2
t K 93
• Q 10 8 3

son or fonn

36 Printed
matter
Agitate

37
36 Planting

MI9SING PfRSONS BURfAU

Do

EXC A VA TING, dozer , bo c:khce
and ditcher . CharlO$ R. Hal·
fie ld , Back Hoe Service ,
Rut land , Ohio . Phone 742 -2008 ,

~

() t971 b ~ HEA. lnt . 1M

Ae~

•

SOL'T H
• A K Q 10 4
• J 864
t

West

is

how to work
A X Y D L B A A X'R
LONGFELLOW

-.;o.\l.'i-\~11\ll\11\1'

711\11111111'

• ~A PACIFIC ISLAND, lhtX'MNOS
OF MILES R'it:h« CEN17?AL

Burger Chef Wants You

WHO Ki'PN5 f10W MANY MONTHS
IVE 5PENT ON TH IS TINY

IBLAND?

IT'6 A MIRACLE

7HATIM 877LL
AliVE!

HOPE,THEY SAY. SOON I'LL 13E
WELL ENOUoH TO
ESCAPE FROM lH I
TROPIO\L Fl11$0N

c

~·

.'larlh Ea! l
IA
Pass

Pass 3 •

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

looked as if there were only

CSL

OQL

z

HAD HIS
APPI./TIZER
F0~6ET
I

6•

·By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South studied for a long
while before playing to the
first trick. How could ~he
make his contract ? At best it

HE'S ALREADY
11AVE '{OU EVER GOTTEN
A GOLD STAR,MARCIE?

South
2A

Opening lead - Q •

BARNEY

I'VE NEVER GOTTEN
A GOLD STAR FOR
AN~TI11NG,
I

hearts and ace of diar:nonds .
South had made six trump
tricks instead of just five by
what is known as a dummy
reversal play . It is worthy of
note that if South had been
careless

at

trick one

and

won the diamond in his own
hand he would have lost his
contract .

NHSOCBG 10 tricks to be gathered in .
Then he saw a way to
XQMJQ
ILR
N. CGG collect 12. He started proOQSHYDQ
ceeding by winning the diaHK
NHXLS mond in dummy. Then came
NHGMOMHRG
MROH
club to his ace, a spade to
z s . adumm;y's
BLCZ cLSGQMN
R
eight, a club ruff
N cy8
N c s wL s
with the ace of trumps, a
spade to dummy 's jack, a
Yesterday's Cry]lloqaote: IF I COULD, I WOUU&gt; ALWAYS . second club ruff, a heart to
WORK IN SILENCE AND OBSCURITY, AND LET MY dummy's king, a ruff of the
EFFORTS BE KNOWN BY THEfR RESULTS.-EMILY last club, a heart to
BRONTE
dummy 's ace, the lead of
dummy 's last trump to ~et
0 19'7'7 Kinl featur es S~ nd iu le , Inc .
NLHNBL

AND WHERE THEI?E'S LIFE THERES

Join our rapidly growing management
team today.
If you have interest,
in.t~lligence and integrity,
with
a
w1lhngness · to work hard, we have the
pos1t1on for you. ~e offer paid vacations,
tnsurance beneltts and advancement
opportunities: No experience necessary
Ca II Linda Toll Free 1-800-428-9176 Monda~
thnl Friday, 9 A.M. - 5 P.M. for an
mterv1ew.

It:

One letter simply stands for another. In this ftmple A· i1
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
h ints. Each day the C'ode letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

.'

rid of trumps white c hucking
1he losing diamond from his
own hand and then the lead
of the heart deuce.
East took his queen but .
had to give South the last
two tncks with the jack of

.

Both vulnerable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

US P~l Ot!

A62

.. A

1 Accumulate

WINNIE

,..

.. 7 6 4 2

2 Fine coflee

!j f\lfflYJorH? ''
I

• Q 10 53
• 10 1 5
• K J 95

• QJ 84

DOWN

ERNI£ - - $f'OP
SAYING, •• Wloltfn'

• 73

" 91

Johnson
4G Stringent
41 Useless
plant

tlif A FAvOR,

EAST

WEST
• 6'5 2

de~ce .
r~~~!!E:R~N~I~E~----~----------------------------------_:"----------------------~ 39Comlc

EXCAVATING . doz er ~ loader and
backhoe work: dum p truck s
and lo·boys for hir''G: will haul
fill dirt , to soil. limestone and
grov'el. Coli Bob or Ro9er Jef.
fer s, day phone 992-7089, night
phone 992 -3525 or 992- 5232 ,

Equal Opportunity Employer

14 Mollusk
15 Pronoun

33 Primitive

SEWING MACHIN.E Repairs. ser vice , oil makes , ~2 . 228 4 . The
Fa bric Shop , Pomeroy .
A uthorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

Burger Chef ~
Going Places
Why Not Come
Along

8 Provincial
9 Unpro-

2 wds.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , tooster.s, irons , oil
smoll opp li onc.e~ . la wn mower
next to Stole Highway Gorog~
o"n Rou te 7 . Phone (b14 ) &lt;nJ5.

WILL do roofing , construction .
plumbing and heot ing. No job
too Iorge or too smalL Phone
7o12·234B.

7Nuisance

13 Sour

All - up
Antenna
El!.l~£Efu!L.!!.!.~' 2% Cheeseparer
25 HarTy or
Macdonald
Mr. Pert. LJOU 28 Algerian

BRADFORD, Auctione~r . Com ·
pl9le Service . P"'one 9"9·2487
or 949 ·2000. Racine , Ohio, CriH
Bradf ord.

REMODELIN G , Plumbing , heating
on~ all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yea r s ex ·
perience. Phone 992 -2409 .

11 Caikins

16 Sign
17 Cracker
19 Reclihe

F'LOR£ 'JH!;;

5- 17-TK_ ~-

shop. 116,500.00.
RANCH TYPE -

3:1 5-General Hospllal 6.13 ; 3:3D--AII In The Family
8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:oo--Mister Car1oon 3; Little Rascals-Our Gang 4;
Gong Show 15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan' s Is. 8;
Sesame 51. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4&gt;3D--My Three Sons 3; Parlrldg·e Fam ily 4; Brady
Bunch 8.10; Ll1tle Rascals 15.

10 30 c

BOB'S

1

Journal 20.

I 11l0UGH1' I
HEARD SO&gt;IEOIIE,
BUT IT WAS

DON'T SHOOT,

COMRADE

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

1 :Qj}--Gong Show 3; Al i My Children 6,13 ; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Nol for Women Only 15.
I :3D-Days ol Our Lives 3,4,15: As The World Turns
8, 10; 2 :QD--$20.000- Pyramld 6,13 .
2:3o--Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6.13; Guiding
Light 8,10; J :Qj}--Another World 3,4, IS ; Ohio

s:oo-Bonanza· 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsfnoke 8;

IANTOYB

ORPHAM AMNJE-WALK$ LIKE A NAN

IJTTI..E ORPHAN ANNIE

Say The Leas1 15; Midday 13.
12 :3o--Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp; 1he

±

I] I

Resident i al
and
commercial.
Call
for
estim ate, 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime.

featuring A shleys gnd t:Om ·
Rtemillo.
ple te selection of coal. gas .
wood circ ulating- he-a fers :---Carpenter , (614) 698·7191.

VAMAHA , HARLE Y·DAVIDSON &amp;
Can -Am Motorcycles. Cornplefe
soles and fa ntastic service!
HQur s M ·T, T 9·6: W·F, 9·7 ; Sot.
9·5. " The Motorcycle _People of
Sou lh ~astern
Ohio '' A t hens
Spor t Cycles, Inc .. 20 W . Stirn·
son Ave .. Athe ns. Ohio . Ph one

12:oo-Newscenter 3; News A,6, 10; Di'lorce Court 8; To

CENIE

TllEil WHAT IS1.{0\Jf(

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Box. 34

~ THATSCRAIIIILEDWQRDQAME
byHenriArnofdandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

See us at 1100 East Main
Street, Pomerov, Ohio or
Phon e 992 -7034. t0-29. 1mo.

Phone 985 -3806

m'\t

~ ~ ~~ ®

3825.

6

f.amil.y neighborhood at e
family price. 3 bedrooms,
l'h baths, and large yard ,
Just outs ie e o f town .

School 33.
ll ooo--News 3.4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cave11 20; Over
Easy 33.
f.

IHERE , ~E'(

Pomeroy,.Qhio 45769

In a

6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6oso-Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13: 6:55--Chuck White Reports 10;
Good Morning. Trl State 13.
7:1Jj}--Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6,1 3; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
7:3~Schoolles 10; 8 o ~Jj}--Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
51. 33.
.
9:1Jj}--Merv Gr iffin 3; Phil Donahue 4.13; 15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8,10.
9 o 3~Edge of Night 6: Andy Griffith 8: Price Is Rl,ghl
10.
IO :Loo-Santord &amp; Son 3•••15; Price Is Righi 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
10: L~Jj}--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Joker 's Wild 10.
11 : Qj}--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Ma1ch Game 8.10; Elec .
Co. 20.
11 :3D--Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
8,10; Se9ame S. 20,33; 11 o55-CBS News 8; Loving
Free 10.

10 : 3o-Faw lt y Towers 20; Bllnd Teacher in a Pu.bllc

'YEAR A.D. 33D.

VIRGIL B. TEAFO~D. 51&lt;. ,
REALTOR
216 E. Seconcl Street •.

WILL TRADE -

YOU KNOW

I'RS.MONT AIR·
CRAFT HIRES
E~·6EIIIERAL5 ANO

IN"TlMElO~E

Rf.Apoo

Phone 9h.p2l

Sunrlse Semester 10; 6 : 2s-ChrlstopherCioseup 10.
6 : 3Q-News Conference 4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8;

9 o3D--Soap 6; One Day At A Time 8,10; Good Old Days
ol Radle 331 Mary Tyler Moore 13.
IO ooo--Famlly 6,13; Lou Grant 8,1 0; News 20 .

.JOB I~ THE DS.FE~SE

Show

_ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER30,197l
5:•5::-Farm Report 13; 5o50--PTL Club 13; 5:55--

Cous teau 20.

SOMEDAY YOU"L.L. BE
LOOKil\16 FOR A CIVI LIAN

on heating cost
Experience and
tully insured
Fr~ Est .
Ca11667 -6479'
JJ . I4.J m o pd.

11 ·25-1 mo.

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
IWMINUM
SIDIIfG.SOffm
GUTTEIS-AWNINCS

Close
Thursdays
and
Saturdays at noon.
New 4 bedroom , 2.500 sq. f t .
living space , 21'2 baths, 12
room ranch brick . Loca ted
3 miles from Rf . 7. up West
Sh ade River . Call for an
appointment .

OJ

CLOSED FOR WINTER .... "

CARTER

FREE ESTIMATES

We have need of listings,
all types, homes, land ,
commercial , etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742· 2003
Hilton Wolfe. Sr.
Associate
Home Phone 949·2589

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

n .9.t fc

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr. ,
Broker
107'11 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Plenty of acre lots at the
Wildw ood
Estates
Addition, Flatwoods Road',
zoned and a f' l utilities
a"o"aitable, $2500 per acre.

Pomtrot

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons ,
Owner

MEIGS PLAZA

REALTY

TEAFORD

st~p

by

ACE HARIMARE

HOBSTETTER

992-1174

?13 l rno

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
instructions.

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
~~

0

FIV E ROOM h ou~e . both . 1' ,
o c re~ . Rt. 33 · corporo tiopl1mit .
Phone 99 2·3689 or 247·3272 for
appoin tment.

112 Acre Lot Surveyed,
approved
fo r
sewage ,
wooded and secluded,
loca ted .07 of a mile off o f
Sum merf ie ld roa d near
T uppe rs
P l a i ns , Ohio .
Priced t&lt;~ go ·at $4,000 .00 .

7:00 Paul Gaucjlno Family F itness
7 : J~Melgs vs Vln1on Co. Basketball
9:00 - Cable Spotlight
IO :Qj}---700 Club

News 33; Movie " Two for the Road" 10.

Pomeroy Landmark

With t)ou se. barn, ce llar
and outbuilding . House is
high for nice v iew o f the

CONTROL HUNGER and lose
weight with New Shope Diet
Pion ond Hydre11: Water Pill s. At
DuHon Drug , M i d~epo_r_!_:_

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

Bissell Siding Co.

Thi rd Street
Racine. Ohio

ONE Trombone, I llvte, both like
new. Worner 's IO·speed bl . ..
hardl~ ridden . 992-7621 .

ADMIRAL UPR IGHT Freezer . 15
cu . ft. Good co ndition. $ 150.
992 ·bl38 .
.
.

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum
Siding

1

all

ST ARCRAFT FAll · Sole . Mini·
mo tors , 20' and 22'. TraVel 1972 DODGE CHARGER . 1972
Olds 350 engine. 400 Olds
Trailers , 18' 5" $3 .799 , 25' 7"
transmission , heO'o' JI duty . 391
Bunkhouse $4 .875. Fold -down ,
rear end , Set of An sen wheels
$1 ,700 IJp . We sell service and
end !Ires . Call742 ·2450.
qua lity. Open Sund ay s. Camp
Conley Sta rcroft Soles . Rt. 62 , FIREWOOD . split an d deli..,ered .
N . of Pt. Plea sant.
$4 5 a co rd . All hardwood .

HOUSEWIVES: EARN $18 . $50 o
week or more plus o $300 war·
drob'8 . fr~e . w 1th Beeline
Fashions . Colt ~49 · 2803 . Also .
bookin g fashion shows .

OnlyS279.9l

Ito 14 ) 667 3096.

FIREWOOD . Any lengths or any
amount . Delivered or may
pickup . PhOne 949-25b3 .

1975 CHE VROLET MONTE Carlo.
P.S., P,B., A .C., tope player.
Phone 992-2628.

·

Good Used Hotpoint '
Refrigerator
S11S
1 Lancaster Chain Saw S75

...

stereo
recorder .
992· 7453,

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERVICE

FOR SALE
New Co -O R water and
softeners, · model VC -SVI .

SIX ROOM hOuse lor rent 10
Pomerqy. Inquire ol 7W) South
3rd Middlepor t.

1974 SUZUK I RM 125 . Excellent
condition . 247·3861 .

L.:==:..,.____:..:,_:___

Let us test your water Free

TO lEASE OR Rent Old Prav1co
bu1ld1ng 9'12-3677 .

12 x 60 MOBILE HOME . Good condn1on large yard
l mile
Rocme . 992·5858

9'a _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone992-2181

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

*279.95

Now Only

Save $50 . 00 on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
125.00 Discount
( 1) Good Refrigerator SISO
Upri&lt;jhf Freezer
S225

985-3350.

NO HUNTINC or tre~po~~ing and
no e¥Cept i on~ . Almo Petei-~on
gnd Sam Bel ler fo rms .

CANCER (June 21·July 221 All

yo ur nati'o'e shrewdness w i ll
come into play in the areas of
finances and you r work today .
If ' s unlikely you ' ll ·be using any
red ink .

portun1t~

FI VE ROOM furnished apartment .
Newell '5 Sun oco
Chester.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . .
211 The ex pa.n sive mood you're
in to da y enable9 you to lake
small things and make them
into something gr-ea ter . Th e
whole day should be generally
lucky . Find out more about
yourself by send ing for your
copy of Astro·G raph Letter .
Mail 50 cen ts for each and a
lqng , self-addressed, sta mped
envelope to As tro-G raph , P .O.
Box 489, Rad io Ci t y Station,
N .Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
yQur birth sign .

tncrl"dlble• Why po~ high electfiC
b1ll.s th 1s wtn ter let us poy
them for you 1 One bedroom
fran\ S130 no w ovadoble .
Village Manor Th1rd 011d M ill
Streets M1ddlepon . Telephone
992 ·7787 Equal Housi ng Op·

TRA ILER LOT l or re nt in the lower
-~o f Middlepor t. 992-7276 .

30

AW~Drm

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork
Route 33 "or th of Pomero~
large lots Co11992·1479

let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
wafer and CO·OP water
softener, Model UC .SVI.

•

6 :30P .M . - Testimony T l me

7: 00-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross. W its 4; ; liars Club 6; ;

Adults

COUNTRY HOME
remodeled .
carpeting , 3 or 4 bedr oom
modern k ttchen 2 baths . Scemc
ond private Abaul4 miles west
Call
&amp; D Kennels olt breed dog . · of Harnsonville . Ohio
742-3159 .
groo rqing . Make oppo1ntment
now tor Holiday Seosor1 Coli COUNTRY HOME. remodel ed,
742·3 162.
,:orpeting , 3 or 4 bedr oom .
modern k itchen , 2 baths . Scenic
TO GIVE away old tabby 011d
ond priv at e Abou t 4 mi les west
t1ge1 ca ts . Young eels w ith
of Harrisonv ille Ohio . Cell
yellow
and wh ite
Anni e
742 -3159 .
.M ohle r l ead ing Creek Rood .

Pomeroy Landmark

Bernice Bede Osol

FOUR ROOMS and bottl
o11ly No pNS (!q2 5908

Movie Channel 4 -

5 &amp; 7 P .M. - Burn1 Offerings (PG)
9&amp; 11 P .M. - Dog Day Alternooon I Rl
Cable Channel l -

TlJESDAY , NOVEMBER 29,1977

Business Services

3 AND 4 RM tu rn1s hed and vn
lurn1shed opts Phone (/q2
5434

NO HUNTINC day or night or , - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
tr espassing on lhe following
We Are Now
fo rms : R.H. Sootwright , Jr.
Hunt , Gory Dill , John Ginther .
Taking New

ASTRO•GRAPH. EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR ond

AQUARIUS (Jan.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

3,• ; lo 05-Ko jak 8;

I :3D-News 13.

A Wisconsin reader asks
what happens in rubber
bridge ; Player number 1
leads a card. Player number
2 asks to $ee the last trick
before he plays . Is he entitled to see it ?
Player number 2 is entitled to see the previous trick.

He retains all rights since
neither he or his partner has

·

played to the new tric k.
!NE WSPA PER ENTE RPRISE ASSN . l

(Do you have a ques tion for
the experts? Wri te " Ask \ Ute
Jacobvs" cer.e of th is
newspaper. The Jacobvs will •
ans wer IndiVIdual ques tions 11
stamped . self·add re ss ed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions will
be used In this column and will
receive copies of JACO BY
MODERN/

'

�10-The Daily Sent mel, MJddJeport-Pomero). 0 .. Tuesday. Nov. 29, l9n

U.S., Israel going to Sadat summit
Prtss
By
Unl!td
IDtematiooal
The United States and
Israel
will
send
representatives to Cairo as
early as Saturday f&lt;r talks
aimed at reswning the stalled
Geneva Middle East peacy
conference, OOt Arab nations·
still plan to boycott the
meeting .
U.S. offi cials in Washington
said Monday the United
States will attend the Cairo
meeting caUed by Egypt's
President Anwar Sadat and
President
Carter
was
expected to make the official
announcement today .
In Tel Aviv, Israeli Prime
Minlster Mena hem Begin
said he will send one of his top
aides, former spy Etiahu benEiissar, and legal expert
Meir Rosenne to Cairo as
soon as Thursday .
"Thuo begin direct negotiations ' toward
Geneva,
negotiations we always
wanted,
face-to-face
negotiations
with
our
neighbors for a true peace in
llle region," Begin told ParUament .
Sadat , in a speech to the
Egyptian Parliament
Saturday, called the Cairo
meeting as a follow-up oo his
historic Nov. 19 journey to
Jerusalem, which resulted in
a verbal "no more war"
agreement.
A spokesman for the Egyptian F oreign Ministry said
llle talks may begin as earl y
as Saturday, will have no
agenda arid will not be
" restricted by proced u ral
rules.'' ·
Sadat 's peatY initiative has
drawn harsh condemnation
from hard~ine Arab nations.
Both Libya and Iraq have
called rival Arab summit
meetings.
Faced with disarray in the
Arab ranks, Syria~ Preside nt
Hafez
Assad
Monday
softened his criticis m of

Sadat, saying there was no
"dh·orce between t~·o
lrother countries .··
But S)Tia still refuses to go
to the Cairo meeting. The
only other Arab muntry that
said it might atteOO ~·as
Jordan - but only if all otller
Arab co untries also take part.
American officials said pril'ately they were concerned
the Cairo , meeting could
result in •a separate peace
agreement between . Egypt
and Israel that would prevent
an overall Middle East
settlement.
But Sadat, in an American
television interview, said he
would attempt to negotiate a
''romprehensive agreement··
with Israel even though other
Arab . nations are not
participating in llle Cairo
meeting .
"! shall be negotiating a
comprehensive
agreement

School -- -

and I shall be brmging 1t back
to the Arab swrunit io give
their say and for each party
to give his word, agree or
refuse ." he told CBS. "This is
for them to decide in llle Arab
swnmit. "
Isra el was invited to the
Cairo talks in unprecedentOd
contacts between the Israeli

Santa's
(CIIntlnued fl'cm ....

1)
Meigs. Wahama and Ky ger
Creek, moved along at a
·lively pa ce and a great addition to the parade was the
appearance of Snow White
and the Seven Dwarfs with
Mrs . Twila Childs as Snow
White .
Costumes were outstanding
and were rented from a
Wheeling , W. Va . costwne
firm for the parade . The
Ri ggs Royal-ettes sported
new green light ed batons for
the occasion and there were
varipus queens on hand including the Big Bend Reg alta
Queen , North Meigs Junior
Miss and South Meigs Junior
Miss and others as well as
Bend area Girl Scout s,
Brownies and Cub Scouts.
The Glo-eltes were on hand in
spa rkling silver and red
outfits and, of course, the fire
department
was
well
re presented as well as
severai other groups whose
signs were difficult to read in
the street lighting along the
route.
All in all - it was a great
welcome for the Christmas
season.

Woman

(jf! _:._ /J!!!,

Across from tbe CoW'I Hquse in Pomeroy ·

992-5120
BUl Quickel, Roy Sheperd, Jeannie Starcher

One Man's Family

lADY
WHO OPENS A
CHRISTMAS CLUB

ACA:OUNT

\fliJI
\I IMC I
liN-.! I&lt;

"THE
.FRIENDLY
BANK"

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

JAY, VT. - STATE POLICE SEARCH teams today
located 14 Montreal college students who were two days
overdue on a winter hike along the Long Trail near 3,80().feel
Jay Peak in the mountains of northern Vermont. A spokesman
at tile Derby state police barracks said he was notified via
radio lllat llle group had been located and as far as he knew all
members of the group appeared to be in good shape.
1t would take two or three hours before llle students get
down from the mountain, the spokesman said. State troopers ,
aided by heticopter, began a search at dawn for the Dawson
College students who had hiked up the mountain Friday and
were reported overdue Sunday .
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL MEDIA TORS made a lastdit ch effort ooday to avert what United Mine Workers officials
now describe as the inevitable prospect of a nationwide
bitwninous coal strike Dec. 6. Federal mediation chief' Wayne
Horvitz and an assistant, William Hobgood, met separately
with negotiators for llle un ion and the bitwninous coa l industry
in an effort to Iring them together for the first lime sint'e last
Friday.
Asked if he were willing to reswne talks willl the industry,
UMW President Arnold Miller said: " Well, we're tr ying."
Miller also was asked whether 1&gt;e would agree to an extension
of llle c urreni contract to avoid a strike at 12 :01 a .m . Dec . 6. "I
kind of doubt it, " he said.
COLUMBUS - TWO OFFICIALS OF THE Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation Monday announced the awarding of a
$40,000 contract to Ba ttelle Memorial Institute to fin ance a
project to see if it is economical to produce gasoline from
grain .
The announcement was made by Wallace Hirschfeld,
federation president, and C. William Swank, executive vice
president of the federation, at the opening of the bureau 's
annual convention . " We want to find out if it is economically
feasib le to construct grain alcohol mnversion plants in Ohio, "
said Swank.
WASHINGTON - GOVERNMENT FORECASTERS sa y
there is a 65 percent chance more normal weather palterns
will spare much of llle nation from the prolonged record cold of
last winter. The loogofange outlook calls for below normal
temperatures in lhe north&lt;entral areas but warmer ttlan
usual weather in the Southeast, Mid-Atlantic states and much
of the West .
" The pattern is more balanced and that means less
extensive cold than last year,' ; said Dr. Donald Gilman,
director of the longofange fore cast office . "I think it would be
pretty hard to match last year ." The December-February
outlook issued Monday was based on indications the upper
altitude winds responsible for regulationg wealller will flow
more from the west to the east than they did last winter.

NEWS

AT HOME NOW
Lonnie LeMaster, who has
been a hospital patient, is at'
home lor a short time.

NOW YOU KNOW
People eat pythons more
than pythons eat people.

CHRISTMAS OORSAGE
FOR EVERY

plans. The two men talked Monday but Justice Department
officials said no fmal decision had been made then.

HASTINGS , NEB. - DEPUTY SHERIFF JAMES Stutesman says a mutilated 400i&gt;ound sow found norlll of Juniata
died of ordinary causes and then was attacked by wild
animals, ending speculation the animal )lad been attacked by
.
aliens from outer space.
.
Area residents had speculated alieris were responsible for
the sow's mutilation because there were no traces of blood
around the sow, no traCks and ~~strange~' incisigns on the
VeteraDB Memorial Hospital animal. Stutesman said he made the cut under the hog's left
Admitted - Carol Schuler, front leg to determine the cause of death. 'The animal was
Rutland; Delores Aeiker , examined by a veterinarian after Stutesman had left town for
Pomeroy; Roger Smith, Jr., a vacation, but the cut could not be explained .
Pomeroy ; Melodi Cundiff,
Syracuse; Marvin Darst,
ASHTABULA, OHIO - RONALD CRAWFORD, . 22,
Pomeroy ; Inez Stive-rs, Ashtabula,
.
bas been ordered held for county grand jury action
Pomeroy; Cecil S mith, for allegedly tossing hiS II .month-old daughter into Lake Erie.
Middleport ; Oscar Imboden, Judge John E. Olsen Monday said Crawford, charged with
MinersviUe ; Charles Jones, attempted aggravated homicide and felonious assault, was
Pomeroy; Lela Robinson, being held in the Ashtabula County Jail, Jefferson, under bond
·
·
Racine; Charles Williams, totaling $11 ,000.
Letart. W. Va,
· Crawford's daughter, Cassie Marie, is recovering at
Discharged Eugene Ash bul Gen 1 H
1 h
Fisher, Mildred Fisher, Paul
ta a
era ospita, w ere she was taken after being
recovered from the chilly water near the A &amp; B Dock last Nov.
Casci, Roscoe Fowler, Edith . 21 . Two Coast Guard crewmen revived llle child by giving her
mouth-to-mouth and cardioi&gt;ulmonary resuscitation .
Spencer.

Plays Santa Easily
This family thinks holiday shopping is easy
as pie because they started a Christmas
Club last year . Now they have a tidy sum to
make "merry gifting" this year!

(Continued frclm PIC• 1)

.•.
TAL
Hosp

CLUB TO MEET
The United Miner Workers
of America Supporters Club
will meet at 10 a.m . Friday at
the Eagles Club in Pomeroy.
Beef money and tickets are to
be turned in at this time.

ASK TO WED

Marriage licenses were
issued to William E . Brown,
23 , New Marshfield, and
Patricia Walsh, 24 , Albany ;
Roger Paul Gilmore, 25,
Athens, and Mary Lou
Radford, 25, Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
Steven Ray Hoover, 18, Rt. I,
Middleport, and Rhonda Ruth
Wood, 16, Rutland.

DIVORCE GRANTED
Zelia Taylor has been
granted a divorce from
George Taylor by Meigs
County Common Plea; CoW'!.

CALL ANSWERED
The Middleport E -R Squad
answered a 'call to 25 Point
Lane in Pomeroy at 3:07p.m .
Monday for Charles Jones,
Sr., a medical patient, who
was taken to Veterans
Memoria I Hospital.

TAKEN TO VMH
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called to 239 Mulberry
Ave., at 2:54p.m. Monday lor
Richard Kesterson age 1
•
•
who was iU. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

-

CALL FOR HELP WITH COBRA
If you drive today,

Burial will be In • Mound Hill

WI I I I a m
E d war d
Shoemaker, 88, Rt. 1, Northup , died at 6: 30 p .m .

Cemetery. Call ing hours will
be held at the funeral home

Shoemake r. Akiron ; Mrs .

Jolin ( Katllleenl Slrtiack .
Columbus ; Mrs . Willa r d
( Emogene} Swain. Mer ce rville .
and
Clend on
Shoet;naker , at home ; l7
grand
and
24
great .
grandchildren .
Five siste·rs and three
brothers also preceded him in
death. Two sons died in infancy .
·
He spent all t'l is l ife in
Gallia County and was a
member of the Pate.lot

Masonic Lodge .
Funeral services will be
lleld at 2 p.m. Tllursday from
tile
Waugii .Halle y·Wood

Funera l Home with Rev .
Charles Lusher off lclatinQ .

from 2· 4 and 7-9 p.m . Wed-

nesday .

ERNEST W. SMITH
RACINE - Ernnt William
Smith, 87 , Racine , died
Monday .evening at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Smith, a farrner . at-

tended tile Racine Baptist
Chvrct'l . Born at Bashan, Jan.
31. 1890, he Was a son of the

late Josiall and Ellzabetll
McElroy
Smit h.
Also
preceded him in death were

Ills wife, Etllel Sotser Smltll,
in 1974 ; four brothers, and
two sisters. ·
Surv iving are four sons.
Robert M ., Syracuse ; Delbert
A. and Harol d M., both ol
Route 1. Raci ne, and Oris L .•
long Bottom ; a sister , Mrs.
Hattie Taylor, Harpston,
Ohio, 12 grandchlldren and
three
areat-orandchlldren .
Funera l services will be
at 2 p.m. Tllursday ot tile
Rawl ing_s -Coats
Funera l
Home with the Rev. Steve

Wilson officiating . Bur ial wi ll
be In Sutton Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Wednesday .

Board names

•

Fear reduced in Mid East says Carter

its officers
The Meigs County Welfare
Advisory Board has reelected
Manning D. Webster Its
chalnnan, Leafy Chasteen,
vice chainnan, and Mary
Hobttetter, secr«ary.
The board, mandated by
amended Sub H.B. 383, and
appointed by the county
commissioners, acts In an
advisory capacity to ~he
Cl)unty commi!sloners and
Cllunty welfaNO director on
matters
of
welfare
organizatloo, the budget, and
social services plamlng.
It was agreed to meet the
first Thursday of each month
at 7:30p.m. The next meetinl!
is scheduled Thursday , ~ .
I, at the office of the commissioners .
Members present were
Manning Webster , Leafy
Chasteen, Mary Hobstetter,
Allee Adams, Janice Lee,
Judy
McDaniels,
Mrs.
Charles Sprouse,
Leta
Kraeutter, and Carl Quallo.

I

.

•

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Wh ile House fttoporter
WASHINGTON (U P! ) President Carter said today
he is very pleased over the
reduction of fear and di•tru&gt;t
in the Middle East, caUing
recent diplomatic moves "a
historic breakthroug~ in the
sea rch tor a perma nent
'
lasting peace."
. He praised the courage of
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat and " the ~iacious

digitals.
Japa nes e
Seiko
The
company, a world gianl in the
industry which played a
leading r ole in pioneering the
digital watch, tol.d Modem
Jeweler magazine recently it
has decided the real future of
the,watch business lies in the
quartz sweeplland timepiece
selling at a substantial price
lllrough llle retail jeweler.
Chairman
Harry
B.
Henshel of Bulova, who was
criticized for being slow to
turn to the digital as Bulova •s
earnings were eroded , said he
now feels vindicated and is
convinced the "fastest future
growth should be in quartz
analog watches with dials
hoth for men and women."
He also said the conventional
spring.powered sweephand
watch will continue to be an
important part of the
business 1111d that both these
and quartz analog watches ·
lend themselves best to
jeweler
styling
and
marketing and jeweler
servicing.

face-to-face meetlnKS and
recognition by Sadat of
Israel's " right to exist."
But he warned that in the
Pi:tSl, "ex pectation s have
sometimes
been
exaggerated."
He noted that the problems
of a Pa lestinian homeland
and lhe return of captured
Arab lands have not been
resolved.
Carter said the Cairo
~onference called by Sadat is

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November :10, 1977

•

" ~ very t:uustrudive step ,"
and said the United States
would "participate at a high
level." He , said Assistant
Secretary of State Alfred
Atherton would represent the
United States.
Carter said that in the past
the United States has played
a lt•ading' role in trying to set

prnper role of t11e United
States is t" support that
progress."
"The fact that thi s
strongest Arab country and
Israel are now conductiug
direct nego tiations" is a
major step toward peace. he

up

pci.lr:L"

been very pleased to see this

conference on the Midclle

reduction in the mistrust ...
betwee11 the Arabs and the
Israelis.

a

East,

GcnC\'ll
~ut,

"N uw

tha t

progress is being made, th£&gt;

~lid .

"The United States has

•

at

\.

\

\

\

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'

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line. Whether you want a
compact , a sideband or basestation model, Cobra has
them all. For car, truck, boat,
home or snowmobile. And
they all punch through loud
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RUTlAND FURNITURE

ARNOLD GRATE

742-2211

AND OHIO·
I

•

answer to a question that :
"President
Sadat
is
spea king for the . Arab
world ."
Carter said he felt the
Soviet Union has moved "to a
much more balanced 1 '
attitude toward the Middle
East, and that although the
two supe rpowers disagree in
many areas on the explosive
area, "I believe' the Soviets
any
will
follow
const ru ctive steps toward

peace."
Carter said it is ''too early
to tell" if the United States
will participate in a proposed
U .N . confere nce on the
Middle Easl.
To a question about the
continuing s truggle
in
Cong ress over a compromise·
energy bill, Carter said he is
not in a compromising mood
a t the present time and
warned that " I wouldn 't
(Continued on page 12)

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2M, No. 160

Mini -·s trike ends

.,

'

." I want to provide my
congratu lati ons and my
support for these two strong
leaders," Carter said.
He said the United States,
Egypt a nd Israel already
have taken the position that a
separate peace agreement
between Egypt and Israel "is
not desirable."
)3ut despite the sharp
allacks by Syria and Libya on
Sadat's ove rtures to the
ISraelis, Carter stresseci in

en tine

''\

Dial watches retail
50% share of market
sweephand watches, Benrus
and . Gruen, did suffer huge
losses . Ev en Bulova and
Timex, the gianls at llle top
and bott om ends of the price
spectrwn in the American
watch industry, had to take
th eir lwnps.
·
But ma ny of the makers of
mass produced digitals were
driven out completely as the
digitals managed to capture
only 20 to 40 per cent of the
estima ted 52 to 53 million
watches tha t will be sold this
year, with much of that share
achieved only by savage
price cutting .
As prices of digital watches
plunged
fr om
several
hundred dollars to as little as
$10, three big ..;miconductor
manufa ct urers, Intel ,
AmericaQ Microsystems and
Litronix, pulled out of the
finished watch business .
Three remain , Fairchild ,
National Semiconductor and
Texa s lnstrwnents .
Benrus, Gruen, Armin, Gillette and HMW Industr ies
a ls o have quit makin g

recepti on of him in Israel by
Prime Minister Menahem
Begin."
Carter told a news con·
ference that Sadat's visit is
" already a tremendous ac~
cvmpllshment .. . an initiation
of direct person-to-person
negotiations" bet~een Israel
and " the strongest Arab
country."
He said the meeting met
"two of ~Israel's most
cheris h ed
desires"

WILKESVILLE-A one-day
strike at Racoon No.3 mine of
the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
' ended a t 8 a.m. today. The
Vinton County mine, located
.near Wilkesville, was unexplainably out from Tuesday,
one week before the UMW
contract with the soft coa l industry expires.
" ~ UP! reported that 500
miners walked out Tuesday.
4,~ Union Local1957 officia ls.and

'

'l;,j j

company offi cials appealed
for the miners to return to
work.
An executive at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co., who
requested that he nol be identified by name, told the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company
that the men returned to work
this morning .
UP!, however, quoted Dave
Baker, a s pokesman for the

company, that no complaints
wer~ filed against the company by workers at the mine,
and no local issues could be
identified as the cause for the
brief walkout.
William Grey, union loca l
vice-president, said tbat the
men probably just wanted to
"e xpress di ssastis faction
with the way talks are gtr
ing. "

Actions at law
ask $1,359,712
Harsha shows shady deals
routine in Defense Dept. ·

WORK ON THE COFFER DAM phase of constructing
a 35~foot intake canal for the 40,000 kw electric
ge nerators a t the Racine Dam in the Ohio River is
wlderway. The plant is being built by the Ohio Power
Company . Two 20,000 ge nerating units will be powered by
the water flowing through the ca nal. Picture by Katie
·
Crow.

COnstructlon
• .s -at dam
b egm

t)avy offi cials which Harsha firm was ultimately "cheated
said included falsification of .out" of th e contrac t
documenJs in violation of anyway .
In llle contract d ispute with
federal law .
- A conspiracy to defraud th ee Navy, Harsha said he
the governm ent involving believes " this is not just a
Navy and industry off icials, dinky ven de tta by Navy
and lucrative contracts for officers and civilians against
air traffic control equipment. a small Dayton contractor."
RACINE - The first phase
The agency Harsha specifi- in construction of two 20,000
The Dispatch said Harsha
1
hegan looking into defense cally targets for Kanistros
kw hydrOelectric generators
contra cting practices in re- proble m is the Navy Ships and recr-eational facilities is
sponse· to a plea of help from Parts Con trol Ce nter, Me- und erway at t he U. S.
P.J .
Ka nistros,
the n chanicsburg, Pa.
Government's Racine Dam
presi d ent
of
Day-to n - The-congressman sa id that on tlre- Oliio River.- Ele ctron ics Products and in fiscall976, ~.m of the 6,104
Dravo Corp. of Pittsburgh
contacts overseen by the is preparing the coffer da m
now head of Poii.Com.
Kanistros' company in 1969 agency had been awarded as phase of the project. Comhad been the low bidder on an "exceptions" \Q.-; general re- pletion date for thjs phase is
Air Force contract to supply quireme nts for competitive July, 1978. Other contracts
parts , but the contract was bidding.
will · be announced for in"For an agency charged · stallation of the power units.
awarded to another firni, the
with the responsibility of
newspaper said .
License to build the units
obligating
$400 to $500 million here was taken by the Ohio
Kanistros complained to .
the General Ac counting a year of the taxpayers' Power Company on Jan . 25,
this
kind · of 1974. The license calls for
Office whic h found that money,
pro
curement
pro
ce dur e completion of , the entire
denying Kanistros' firm the
contract was
" plainly cannot be tolera ted ," said project in 1978.
.
Harsha . "I cannot ascribe to
illegal."
Included In the project is a
Harsha said the Kariistros their motives but the record 35~foot intake ca nal , two
will attest to their deeds."
27,400 horsepower turbines,
~::::.~~,~~'-''&gt;.~':;:;:.;:;;;:;:::~~~'!!.~~'!:*:::!.\\~~~~::!!!:=::..~~X*:.&lt;!:.O:.~!:.'!~".::::..~
The
newspaper
sa id two 20,000 kw gen erators a nd
Defense Department officia ls recreational facilities such as
ha ve denied improprieties in an overlook. parking area,
their action .
picnic area and fishin g pier.
A 69,000 volt transmission
By United Press International
line
will transport power
· WASHINGTON ~ ANOTHER ATIEMP'f TO END the
lon g deadlock oo abortion funding failed in Congress Tuesday
and there. was only slo~ progress in effor!s to put together a .
compromtse energy btU. On other matters; congressional
committees heard reports of high projected costs for President
Hunters killed 265 deer in
Carter's wellare reform plan and of an elaborate South Korean Meigs County the first day of
plan to influence U. S. government policies.
deer gun season, according to
The House and Senate bave been at odds for five months on the Meigs County Wildlife
'
provisions of the abortion legislation arid the deadlock has division.
blocked approval of a $61 billion appropriations measure for
The Division of Wildlife of
llle departments of Labor and Health, Education and Wellare . the Department of Natural
Temporary funding arrangements for lllose agencies were due Resources reported 5 1953
to run out tonight . The latest attempt at compromise was deer were taken in Ohio
t
drafted by House and Senate leaders and approved by the during the firSt day of gun
l
Senate, but the House rejected the plan on a 205-183 vcite.
deer sea son Monday, a n
1 ".l· '
increase of 19 percent over
WASHINGTON- HOUSE AND SENATE negotiators are the 4,997 de'e r kill ed on
moving at a snail's pace on a compromise energy bill, and opening day last year.
The top five counties are
chances are lessening that the legislation will reach President
Carter by Christmas. With only three and a half weeks Muskingum
with
480 ,
remaining before Christmas Eve, this is the situation of the • . Ashtabula
with .
408,
two House-Senate conference committees on energy:
Washington with 350, Athens,
336 and Trwnbull with 335.
(Continued on page 12)
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Illegal actions by Defense
Departmenl officials have
been reported by Rep .
William Harsha, R.Ohio, who
says they are 11 SO common as
to be routine ," jt was
reported Tuesday.
The Co lumbus Pis patch
said Harsha had shipped off
to U.S. Attorney Genera l
Griffin Bell and .the U.S.
attorney for the District of
packets
of
Columbia
documents which -he~says
proves two instan ces of
illegality
by
Navy
Department officials.
.
The newspaper said the
episodes of alleged illegality
Harsha and his staff have
investigated included :
- Rejection of a low bid of
$1 .3 million from Poli.COm
In c. , Dayton, on a radio parts
contra ct. The contract was
later awarded
to an
Oklahoma firm at a cost to
the government of $1.7
million in maneuvering by

JNews . . .•in Briefsl

265 deer are

taken in Meigs

e

. h d
.
Irom l e am to the system's
existing trans miss ion net-

Two lawsuits for judgment
have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
as the result of an accident
that occurred on SR 7 in
Salisbury Township on Jan. 3,
1977.
Ray Hughes, guardian of
Sue A. Hughes, Gallipolis, is
suing for $1,049,350.40 against
Hoba rt V. Newell, Chester, et
al.
And Betty J . Moles, administratrix of the estate of
Dianna L. Moles deceased,
Cheshire,
is
asking
$310,371.86 against Hobart V.
Newell, Chester, et al.
Hughes' suit is for injuries
and medical expenses for
alleged severe brain stem
contusion to Sue Hughes as a .

the departp1ent is offering no
recmnffiendations on any of
the four plans at this time but
arranged the visit in
Pomeroy to hear and record
comments of residents on the
proposal.
·
Before any definite pi. "
can be adopted there is a n
•

,.

archaeological study.
others
cost
Among
estimates must be secure
before construction.
When certain decisions a re
r;eached and studies completed, a public hearing will
be he ld loca ll y prior t o
adoption of final plans.

GLEN T. CRISP

Crisp will he
installed .as
} dg
0
e master

~~~~~e~~~;~~:~i~~th~~o~~~ Economy Improved
GlenT.crisp, ~mployed In
.
commumcat10ns by the

company in July, 1969.

Bird hike at
Evans Dec. 10
A winter bird hike will be
conducted at Bob Evan;
Farms on Saturday , Dec. 10.
Everyone interested in
participating should meet at
the Bob Evans Farms Canoe
Livery Log Cabin ,at 8:30a .m .
This is the first nfficial bird
hike to take place on the
farm; it will be followed by
other hikes throughout the
year. Novice and experienced
bird watchers are enco uraged to share this outdoor experience offered by
Bob Evans Farms that is at
·no cost to the public ..

WASHINGTON (UPil'-~ in four years. Contractors
The governtl)ent index increased ·their requests for
intended to predict the new building permits by 9
direction of the national percent in October to boost
economy rose 0.7 pert'ent in their anticipated construction
October for its fourth 25percent higher than a year
consecutive monthly gain, ago.
The Federal Reserve
the C&lt;lmmerc~ Department
reported today .
Board has also adopted a
It was a solid rise in the · moderate policy on money .
Index of' Leading Economic This has bad the effect of
Indica tors, indicating current holdJng down interest rates
job and production conditions by allowing enough money
probably will improve in the for business , niortgag~ and
Consumer loans.
'
months ahead.
The department said the
T he
Co m m e r c e
two chief fa ctors for the Department said the index
Octo her rise in the index were stood at 133.8 in October from
building permi!s and the the 1967 base· of 100.
money supply.
Since the severe cold
The housing industry is weather closed factories and
building new homes and temporarily put thousands of
apartments at the fastest rate workers out of their jobs' last
January, the index bas risen
eve;y month with the
exception of minor declines in
May and June .
When the index is viewed
over a long term, it rose 0.8
percent j n llle first three
months of the year, 1.9
percent in the next three and
I pert'ent in the final three .
These increases are not
strong compared to the gains
of 2.3 to 5.6 percent in earlier
years ·When the economy was
growing
broadly
and
unemployment was low .
But they do indicate that
the economy is going in the
right direction .
:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::=:::=:::::::::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday lhrough Sunday,
fair Friday and a cbaoee of
rain or snow Saturday aod
SliDday. Higbs will range
from lhe upper 30s to tbe
middle 40s and lows will
range from lhe upper 20s to
tbe low 308.

Team shows alternate
.SR 7 extension plans
A team from the district
office in Marietta of the Ohio
Department of Highways was
in Pomeroy for six hours
Tuesday to present four
alternate routes for extension
of Route 7 from Rock Springs
to Five Points.
Howard Gifford, design
and-plarming engineer, said

res ult of the accident,
resulting in her being in a
semi.,omatose condition.
' Dianna L. Moles was a
passenger in the car and was
severely injured causing her
dea,th according to the
petition.
Newell was operating a
vehicle in the course of his
employment with the Board
of Chester Township Trustees
at the time of the accident .
In other actions, Thomas
Edward. Wil\!(ln , Pomeroy,
filed suit lor divorce· against
Rhonda
Jean
Wilson ,
Pomeroy.
Charles R. Lambert, Rt. I,
Rutland and Beverly D.
Lambert, Rt. l, Rutland, filed
for dissolution of marriage.
•

"" you need a CB radio.

• Maximum

0

WILLIAM E. SHOEMAKER

minimize America's role in
promoting a settlement and Monday In the Holler
ica Center . He had been
Sadat insisted that America / Med
in serious condition the last
still holds " 99 percent" of the nine days.
cards in llle Middle East
A farmer, he was born Oct.
17, 1889 to tile late JQO L.
game.
The Soviet Union was Shoemaker and P:achael
Erwin Shoemaker .
unlikely to lake part in the
He was preceded In death
Cairo meeting in view of by his wrte, Myrta Wells,
mutual recriminations whom he married July 29,
between Sadat and Moscow. 1911 In Gallipolis. Slle d l"ed
Jan . 20, 1971.
Survi-ving
are
these
children: Mrs. Hazel Sheets.
Asllvllle .
0 .;
Nob le

News •• in Briefs

(Continued fl'cm p1p 1)
made by students in the
national testing programs,
the guest speaker said .
Referring to Americans as
a passive society. watching
television, sports and other
activ ities but not partic ipating , Dr . Galloway
commented that there is a
lack of real communication .
He stated tha t teachers need
to know how students with
variou:; backgrounds feel and
students need to realize what
it 1s to be a teacher. Today
appears to be la cking in
respect in both directions, he
stated.
Facia l and body expr ess ions communicate
different meaning to different
persons in requests and orders. People say very little to
(Continued fl'cm PIC• 1)
each other and find it difficult other pupil supplies from
to listen to each other, Dr . desks .
GaUoway closed .
· She is to appear in Meigs
County Court Friday morning .
An Accident
f - ~ fi,~
Monday evening about 7:10
Juanita Lodwick, Chester,
Won't Walt
.
traveling south on SR 7 .near
Until You Have
~
~'
the Pomeroy Golf Course
Road hit one of two deer that
ran in front of her. The deer
ran off and could not be
located
. There was slight
B~t ~rotection costs little. Remove the ftnancial string
w1th Insurance. For all your insurance needs- home
· damage to her 1973 Ford van,
health, earning capacity, auto - see us!
·
'
and she was not injured.

Davis Insurance Agency

and Egyptian ambassadors
at the Uniled Nations Sunday,
tearing apart llle traditional
falric of Middle East · diplomacy .
In extending the invitation
to Israeli Ambassador Chaim
Herzog directly , Egypt'
bypassed the United States.
But Egyptian officials said
Cairo was not attemptiru{ to

,--------------------------.
! Are~:t Deaths . j

Southern Oh1o Coal Co., will
be installed Thursday as
master of Middleport Lodge :
No. 363 by James Clatworthy
of Middleport, district deputy
grand master.
Crisp, who has been a
Mason six years, was elected
to the lodge's top post
November 1.
·
other officers of the lodge
are Robert W. Kuhn, senior
warden ; William C. Quickie,
junior .warden ; James D.
Euler, treasurer i Paul M.
Darnell, secretary i Charles
M. Buskirk, chaplain; Andy
0 . Doczi, senior deacon ;
Harry C. Roush, junior
deacon ; Rodie Hatfield ,
senior steward ; Don Roush,
junior steward ; James W.
Criswell, tyler, and Charles
M. Buskirk, trustee.
Charles M. Buskirk, is the
outgoing master. Crisp lives
at Route No. I, Langsville,
with his wife, Charlayne. All
master masons are invited to
attend .

BOARD NOT TO MEET
The Meigs County Commissioners will not met next
Tuesday, Dec . 6 due to a
county
commissioners
convention in Colum bus.

E-R CALLED
The Middleport E-R Sq~ad
was called to 285 S. Third
Ave., at 8:12a.m. Wednesday
lor Mrs. Pauline Horton who
was ill. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

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

Weather
GLENN A. SMITH, DISTRICI' DEPUTY director of the Ohio Department of Highways ,
Marietta , left, a nd Howard Gifford, design and planning e ngineer of the district, with an
aerial map showing four alternate ro utes being considered in the proposed extensinn of SR 7
from Rock Springs to Five Points in Meigs C11unty . See map on Pg. 9.

•'

Rain tonight, lows near 40.
Showers likely Thursday ,
highs in the upper 40s .
Prohability of precipitation
near 100 pet. today and
tonight, 60 pet. Thursday.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

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