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Dr. George Greaves resigns
•
zn dispute w·ith 648 Board

12 - TheDa ll) Sentmrl . Mlddlepo.~rt•P,uneroy , 0 .. Wednesday , No1·. 30. 1977

---------------------------, HOSPITAL NEWS
Breakthrough seen in ! Area Deaths
!
'

1

Ralston indictments

DENVER sLAGLE
Denver Slagle, 83. a former
res•dent ot Gall ipolis and a
resident of 88 10 Phyllls
Sarasota, Fla ., died
.
nesday , Nov . 23. In Sara a .
He was born in Gallla
County
and
mo\led
to
Sarasota in 196-4. He was an
engineer for 42 years at the
Galtipol1s State Inst itute .
He was a member of the

"!'

Vttrrans Mtmorlal Hospital
ADMITTED
Diane
1
Mrs . sarah va'gg i, c.alna Michael. Pomeroy; fla y
Watson. Tuppt:.rs Plain s;
County .
Funeral services were held Bernice Molden, Pomeroy ;
Sunday at the Hawk ins Delma Karr , Middlepor t ;
Funeral Home 10 Sarasota
w lth Rev . Freder ick Markan t Paul Clay , Rutland ; Valerie
of f icia t i ng .
Buri al
was Jeffers, Pomeroy ; George
Mond&amp;y in Palms Memorial Zeigler , Pomeroy; Kimberly
Park in Saras9ta
Robinson , Pomeroy.

DISCHARGED - Jennie
lies, James Adams, Rulph

Kern .

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs .
slgnifi('ant and major break·
Dennie
Thcvinin
,
Point
through in a string of
Pleasant ; Mrs. Melvin Bush,
homicides in Cler m ont
Gallipolis
r'erry;
Lala
Co unty ," s aid Clerm ont.
Bowlin,
Ashton
;
Mrs.
Charles
County Sheriff J ohn Van
Stephens, Leon ; Mrs. Helen
Camp.
Johnson. Gallipolis ; Cynthia
Three of the women
American Leg ion, Gall ipol is Blankenship, Letart; Mrs.
Ralston was accused of and Method is t Church ,
Frederick
Neal,
Point
murdering were among a list
~ethel , Ohio.
Pleasant; {;it bert Plant s,
He is survived by his wife,
Open 0U8e
of II yo ung women studied by
Anna E. Wagner Slagle, and
Gallipolis; Mrs . Albert
area law enforcement of·
twQ sisters, Mrs , Dan I Pea rl)
THE REV. AND MRS. ALBERT FlllEND, JR. and
firers at a mass meeting in
A Children Services Open the three . counties and to Cremeans. Mili on and Floyd
Alban , MinPol" Fl,. . and
daughter
of Hcnnillon were \Yt.&gt;duesday evening guests of
Bush
,
Letart
.
Cincinnati last March to try
House will be held on Mon· establish a stronger link bethe
Middleport
United Pentecostal Church. The Rev.
to determine a link. The body
day , December .I at 7 p.m . at tween the center's services
Friend
was
lhe
guest
speaker for the service on the topic,
Holzer
Medical
Center
of the fourth woman Ralston
the Gallia . J eigs . Jackson and local communities. lt is
"
~'a
ith
,
the
Substance
of Thi ngs Hoped For."
1
Discharges
Nov
.
28)
is charged with killing was
Conununity Health Center anticipated that services
Lj•da
Beech
,
Charles
Burt,
found ' se\·eral months after
located ilt the junctions of aimed at meeting the needs of
(Continued from page 1)
the meeting .
area children may be ex- Goldie Cooper. Am)' Elkins,
State Routes 35 and 160.
sign ·• a bill which violates
Doldie
Ewing ,
Larry
Harriet Kaufman, director panded.
three stipulations he earli~r
Ferguson
,
Everett
Johnson,
of children's services, said
An open invitation is ex·
set down .
the purpose of the informal tended to all persons to at · Geraldine May o, Douglas
" Both sides are very likely
·Morrison , · Mrs. James
meeting is to introduce the tend . However , please call
(Continued from page I)
to compromise,'' he said ;
Mrs. Phyllis Mason at 446- Mulford and daughter, Debra
- The committee dealing with non~x matters hopes to
listing the t hree maj or Mental He alth Center 's
Rose, Leslie. Sheets , Mrs.
that
deals 5508 if atendance is intended.
complete the third of its four bills - dealing with utility rates remaining pr oblems as program
Teddy
Staton and daughter.
specifically with children in
- by the end of this week, but still faces its most controversial ele ctric rate reform , th e
Berdie White, Rebecca
price structure on natural
subject : controls on natural gas prices .
White , Naomi Williams.
- The tax committee has done almost nothing, and gas, and a tax on crude oi1.
tBlrths. Nov . 28)
a pparently will do nothing, until the non-tax conference
He said he still supports
Mr . and Mr s. Bruce
completes its wdrk. Tbe panel does not even plan to meet House versions of the three
Fined by Middleport Mayor Moodispaugh, 18, Middleport. Gilbert, a daughter, Oak Hill.
Thursday and Friday, while its key members are involved in a issues, which he called very
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night $10 and costs, unsafe vehicle; Mr . and Mr s. Michael
separate conference on Social Security financing .
close t o his
original
were James Dale McCarty, Allred Evans. Middleport, Jenkins, a son. Gallipolis. Mr.
proposals . But he again
34, Bidwell, $15 ahd costs, $25 and costs. disturbing the and Mrs. George Hope, a
LOS ANGELES LOS ANGELES COUNTY stated the outlines which he
speeding ;
Narsa
L . peace. and Harold (S.ammy) daughter , Bidw ell .
EMPLOYEES have stolen m ore than ~.ooo worth of adding would use in considering an
(Discharges, Nov. 29)
Little,
41 , Middleport,
machines. typewriters, cabinets and other office equipment, overall energy program :
Phyllis Betz, Paul Brad·
disorderly manner. $25 and
the eounty Board of Supervisors has been told.
-Fairness in dealing with
bury, Earl Brown ; Richard
PRESENTED '50- YEAR ;' GOLDEN SHEAF ..
costs.
·
The loot county workers made off with inclu'ded 42 adding conswners.
Chambers, Virg inia Day ,
Forfeiting
bonds
were
certifi
cates of membership were Mrs. Gernice H~wk. ~nd
machines, 33 cabinets, 109 calculators, 218 tyJll'writers, 421
-Consideration of a
William Gibbs, Thomas
Mrs.
Edna
Clark, ri ~hl; at a recent meeting of Hemlock.
Michael
R
.
Taylor,
23
,
vacuum cleaners, 262 floor polishers and 14 tables, Supervisor balance
between
Halfhill , Cathy Hammond ,
Grange.
Presenting
the certificates in an impressive
Middleport.
$1110
posted
lor
Kenneth Hahn said Tuesday. "Security must be tightened," he conservation and production .
Six defendants forfeited reckless operation and $25 lor Allie 11olley, liurhl Hood ,
ceremony
was
Maste
r Bub Reed .
said. " We will have to prosecute people if they 're found
- Approval of a bill ' 'which bond in the court of Pomeroy
Clarence Huffman, Winfred
expired
operator's
license
;
stealing and make an example of them . Let this be a notice to will not bankrupt the Mayor Clarence Andrews
Hurst, Geraldine Layne, Mrs .
William A. Atkins, .24 ,
all county employees to reduce this shocking report of thefts." country."
Charles Long and son, Mrs.
Tuesday night.
Due to confusing In·
Gallipolis, $28, speeding, and
Carter,
returning
to
They were Dennis Clark ,
Junior Massie and dau ghter ,
formation,
lhe Continuing
R~nda.ll
Russell
,
23
,
CLEVELAND - CLEVELAND'S TEACHERS - on the another question dealing with Pomeroy, and Joseph Roush,
S.am McCarty, Teresa Me·
Education
Department
ol
Cheshire,
$32,
speeding.
brink of open rebellion because the school system is broke and the Mideast, said he is Clifton, W. Va., $350 each , for
Fall, Richard Nicely, Seth
Rio
Graode
Col·
their paychecks are being deferred until a new fiscal year convinced Sadat is speaking dr iving while intoxicated ;
Oiler , Dorothy Rhodes, Mrs .
lege , Commuolly Col·
begins Jan . I -have voted not to teach classes without being for the other Arabs to the best Larry Napper, Pomeroy, s:;o,
Minter Sehartiger and
lege,
announces that lb e
paid. Members of the Cleveland Teachers Union, however, did of his ability on the questions disorderly manner; Marty
daughter, Denneth Yates .
Modern
Europeao Poetry ·
not call a strike. Instead, many continued to call in sick of Palestine and the lsrae li Walden, Pomeroy , speeding,
(Births, Nov. 29)
1
English
2831 wlll
Class
COLUM BUS (UPII - The
suffering fr om "blackboard flu " - thereby forcing the closing withdrawal
lroin
the $130 ; Marianne McGuire,
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
register
students
on
of some city schools.
Ohio
Farm
Bureau
oc:cupied territories.
Columbus, $30, failure to
Nelson, a daughter. Patriot.
Monday . December 5 at the
· Despite the lack of fun¢;, all of the city schools officially
Federation's
out~tanding
" He has evoked clearly yield right of way, and Isaac
Mr .. and Mrs. John Vanco, a · Columbus and Southern
young farm couple is Gary
are ope.n because a federal court has ordered them to remain their position in his speech to Mohler,
P oll)eroy·, $30,
son. Wellston .
Electric
Building
In
so. However, II were forced to close Tuesday because 1,043 the Israeli Knesset and in his speeding .
and
Barbara McKee, who
·
Gallipolis from I until 3:30
teachers - 20.7 percent of the total teaching staff- failed to subsequent address to his
operate
a 3411-acre hog and
Fined Tuesday night were
SPEAKER NOTED
" We call it Invest ment ,''
p.m . The fee for residents
report to work. The " no pay, no work" stance gained own parliament," he said.
grain
fann
near Xenia .
Robert Burson , Pomeroy, $50 explained
Rev. Eichel of Portage,
Mrs .
Clara
momentum today, even though the 6,IJOO.rnember CTU
Carter said the question of and costs, intoxication; Doris Mcintyre , Sabbath School Pa ., will be evangelist at a of Gallla, Meigs, Jackson
The a nnoun cement was
and VInton counties Is $39.
previously had agreed to work through today . The time lapse a separate Egyptian-Israeli Haynes , Pomeroy, $50 and superintendent
made at the federation' s
of
the weekend service Friday For mqre lnlormatlon call
was designed to allow the CTU to conduct the vote.
annual
agreement has not arisen, but costs, disorderly conduct, Pomeroy Seventh·day Ad· through Sunday , 7:30 p:m . at
c onvention
in
Bernie Murphy at 215-5353.
Col
umbus.
conceded that was an and BasH Haynes , Pomeroy, ventist Church.
the Pomeroy Wesleya n
WASffiNGTON- THE FffiESTONE TIRE and Rubber eventual possibility .
Th e McKees ·will receive an
$200 and costs, assault.
She was r e ferring to Holiness Church on Route
Co. has been asked to spend more money on quality control and
~~ u a,t a later date, Jordan,
ex
pense· paid trip to (he
143
.
R
ev
.
Dewey
King
,
pennies saved, pumpkins sold
JOBLESS RATE UP
to recall its Firestone 500 steel belted radial tires because of or Syria , or Lebanon don 't
Am
e rican Farm Bureau
pastor,
invites
the
public.
and other projects that netted
CLEVE LANO (UPI J numerous complaints.
COURSE BEGINS
Federation
's aMual meeting
want peace with Israel, an
a good offering during the
The
jobless
rate
in
Cleveland
The Center lor Auto S.afety said there has been a " sharp Egyptiart·lsraeli agreement
in
Housto
n,
Texas in
A course in real estate
special
" In Ves tment"
dividual
member
's
InMay,
June
and
July
was
last
January
.
increase" i'n complaints about the tire.'- blowing out
could be pursued. "
principles and practices,
program, November 26 .
suffering fro~TI.tread separation , to the poH ·t where half of the
The McKees raise soybean,
But, he added, " I'm con· open to the public, will get
Each member decided on vestments, but they become 16.2 percent. not· ~.5 percent
God's.
And
it
makes
a
dif·
as
reported
by
the
Bureau
of'
complaints ft is nQw receiving from consUmers concern vinced ' they do want underway Thursday, 7 to 10
corn
and wheat as well as
some project with which h~
ference.
Pennies
accumulate
Labor
Statistics
•
.
according
to
Firestone tires.
peace."
more
than 850 head of.hogs.
p.m ,, at Meigs High School , thinks he can make money
rapidly
and
plants
seem
Larry
Mackie,
project
more
Gary
, 28, who holds an
.
for the church. Then he in·
Rock Springs . Registration
to
bear
more
fruit
,
and
so
director
of
the
Cleveland
associate
degree in forestry,
will be held Thursday
vests a certain amount of his
on," he said.
·
Area Western Reserve also is involved in a grain bin
own, and adds a little manevening and instructor will be
The " investors'' have been Manpower Consortium. " Our dealership and is president of
Hank Cleland . The course is a
power, or womanpower, to
working
on their projects all sample is four times that the Greene County Farm
part .of th~ cont.inuin.g
make the investment grow.
year;
When
.J anuary comes used by the federal govern· Bureau . Barbara keeps the
education series .of the R10~'' These p r o1·e c1s are a
Adventists will ment," MacKiF said Tuesday records lor the farm as well
around
most
matter of private prayer.
Grande Commuruty College.
be picking out new projects - thus the difference in as
assisting
with
its
They are not simply the in· lor 1978.
figures .
operation.

BATAV IA . Ohio (UP! l Larty Ra lston, 28, who was
ad1·ised by his father to st op
running around with young
gi rls ··or you'rp going to end
up in tro uble: · was indicted
Tuesday on charges of killing
four women ranging in ag~
from 15 to 23.
Ralston. already ja il ed in
": this Cincinnati suburb on
charges of raping three other
15'yea r Old girls, im ·
mediately
came und er
sUspicion in connection with
the unsolved deaths of eight
other area women in the past
·two years.

··we believe wr ha\•e o

Qrlldren ,s Services
.
will be
,
h
eXplained dunng

·

.I

I

;
)

Fear

News •• in·Briefs

'

FmHA LOAN PAID OFF, TAXES LOWERED Farmers Home Administration District Director Milton
Roush , second right, accepts a bank draft for $12,653.95
whic h paid off the FmHA financed portion of the Syracuse
water system. The pay-&lt;Jff, 30 years earlier thah required,
allows the Village of Syracuse to lower its tax rate by 2.60
mills . Presenting the check to Roush , as members of the
Board of Public Affairs of the village loo k on, is Mayor
Herman H. I.Jlndon . Pictured, from left, are Aaron S.avro.

Adventists'
projects are
'investments'

or

Young Xenia
couple named
outstanding

NO. 161

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!News.
.
.
in
Brief.~
~
---

By United Press lnternatlunal
WASHINGTON - BENEFICIARIES of the United Mine
Workers Health and Retirement Funds are being given official
notice that health benefits will be cutoff immediately in the
event of a strike next Tuesday . In letters being mailed to
benefici~ries this week, pensioners under the 1950 pension
trust were also told to expect only partial payment beginning
Jan. 1 lf a strike occurs.
.
UMW President Ainold Miller has warned thai the funds
will not have sufficient money to pay health or death benefits
to miners ih the event of a strike, which appears to be
inevitable. Funds spokeswoman Barbara Moldauer said the
official notification was didated only by the funds' lack &lt;J!
money , adding, "we 're not in any way trying to interfere with
the bargaining. u
NEW YORK - TREASURY SECRETARY W. Michael
Blwnenthal has put New York City on notice -come up with a
long~erm fiscal plan with a balanced budge t or risk losing
extensive federal seasonal loans next year .
Blumll!ltba.ltold the New York Board of'l'rlde Wednesday,
Conllress expects a long ~erm fiscal plan from the city as a
condition to any extension of federal !eliding - seasonal or
otherwise. ''There are some bere," Blumenthal told the dinner .
audience "who think if such a plan is not developed. the city
will at least get Congress to go along with an extension of
seasonal lending . I think they are indulging in undue
optimism ~"
·

STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN - A GIANT mudslide swept
away 40 houses in the western Swedish town of Gothenburg
Wednesday, killing at least lour people and gouging a 3,000loot4ong crevice in the earth_. Rescue workers said they feared
more bodies were buried under the debris.
"It looks like the city dump, a muddy city dump,"
AssiStant Fire Chief Bengt Sjostr3!)d said. The mud - layered
on top of solid rock and loosened by recent heavy rai,nS began rumbling down an emban!&lt;"'ent in the middle-class
suburb of Hisingen 300 miles west of Stockholm at about dusk,
officials said.
Then in broke away in a roar, smashing apart at least 40
vill~s and two.family homes and carrying them down to lower
· ground.
WASHINGTON - GIFTS BOUND OVERSEAS should be
sent air mail instead of by ship to insure arrival by Christmas,
says the Postal Service.
The service said Wednesday it would begin accepting
surface mail for all nations now that a dock strike has ended.
But it noted mail shipped by surface rates will be competing
lor spece aboard vessels with the millions of pounds of pther
commodlties backlogged at U. S. ports .

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, chance of showers
each day. Highs wlll be In
the lOs or the low 50s
Saturday and In the lOs
Sunday and Monday. I.Jlws
will range from the upper
20s to the mid 30s.

Notices, local briefs

Judge has harsh words
for whole rotten bunch
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Calling Herschel Weintrub
"one of the two most culpable in the whole rotten
bunch" of 18 persons convicted in connection with a
drug ring , federal Judge David Porter on Wednesday
sentenced the 57-year old jewerly store maml ger to 40
years in prison and lined him $10,()()().
Weintrub's brother, Norbert, 52, was sentenced to
nine years in prison and fined $3,000.
. .
Herschel Weintrub's lawyer, Arnold Morell!, made
an 'impassioned plea for lieniency, telling the judge
that Weintrub had been through "an inordinate ordeal,
a crucible a searing experience" since his July ~rest.
But Porier said it was necessary to give Weintrub a
sentence in conformity with sentences given other
persons convicted in connection with the southwest
Ohio drug ring .
Last week, Carl Sutton, Jr., was given a 9:1.-year
prison sentence and fined $1110,000.
With Wednesday's sentences, 14 of the 37 persons
indicted have been sent to prison . Four others are .
awa iting sentencing and 12are to go on trial next week .
Herschel Weintrub, indicted by a grand jury on 191
cnunis, plea bargained and pled guilty to five counts.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gas rates vary,
rate probe shows

COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - A
report released Wednesday
by th e Ohio Offi ce · of
CC\rlsilmer s' Coun Sel says
custom ers of Columbia Gas
United Press International
of 'ohio pay rates varying as
A fast moving cold front
much as $42 for the same
pushed eastward acToss Ohio amount of natural gas.
today produeing strong winds
The study of rate schedules
with gusts up to 61 miles an
in 748 areas of the 'state
hour . One man was killed in compared Columbia's ra tes
Columbus ·when a wall blew
with those of Cincinnati Gas
over on him .
&amp; Electric , Dayton Power &amp;
The National Weathe r
Ught and East Ohio Gas. It
Service said winds of 61 mph found Columbia ' s rates
were recorded at Mansfield · generally ·higher, in oome
wl]ile Columbus had gusts up
caseS by .fiS much as $23.
to 47 mph.
Tile rates were based on
·Motorists were advised to
plirchases of 15,()()() cubic feet
use caution 'C'hile driving of gas, the average monthly
because of the wind gusts and anmunt used by all customers
the pos~ibility of flying
debris.
The man who was killed in
Columbus
was
not
immediate ly identified.
Authorities said he was
working on a construction
project when the high winds
collapsed·• wall and it fell on
him .
The extended forecast calls
for a ehance of showers
during the weekend . Highs
will be in the 40s or the low 50s
Saturday and in the 40s
Sunday and Monday. I.Jlws
will range from the upper 20s
to the mid 30s. ,

Cold moves
into Ohio

not on 'specia1 rates.
is our inten t tn let local

tog ether to deal with
Columbia on a system-wide
communities served by Co ~ · basi's.' '
William Chaddock, public
Jumbia Gas know exactly
in
formation officer for
what they are paying for gas,
Columbia,
said . his utility's
compared ·
to
other
rates
vary
according to the
cb mmunities across t11e
·
cost
of
service.
state," said William A.
''Our
rates
are
based
on
the
Spratley, consumers' counoverall
cost
of
service
in
each
sel.
" I am a sking the public area," said Chaddock . "Cus·
officials in these coWlties to tomers in one commu'nity are
meet with staff from my not paying for service to .
office in March to work out a customers in another area. "
Chaddock pointed out that
qomprehensi ve program for
de aling with Columbia Gas," while East Ohio, Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric and Dayton
said Spratley.
"it is in the best interests of Power &amp; Light generally
Columbia Gas to 'divide and serve concentrated areas,
con qy,.er' small communities. Columbia serves sparsely
I feel it is the purpose of my populated areas where the
office to bring com,mWlilies cost of service is higher.

··u

Christmas trees
s·c arce in Ohio
CLE VELAND (UP! ) The · holiday forecast from
Christmas t ree wholesaler
Phil I.Jlndrico is buy now
because there may not be any
trees available - even poot
quality ones - by Dec. II or
Dec . 20.
·
·
"There just aren 't any
trees around," he savs. "It

Unidentified man
.has head bumped

Fairlawn runs
out of money

SIDNEY, Ohio (UP!) The Fairlawn I.Jlcal School
• SPRINGFIELD, MASS.- REP. EDWARD BOLAND·, D- . District in Shelby County
Mass., spent the least amount of money of any congressman closed at the end of classes
·
today because of a projected
for his re-election campaign last year - $47.
A lew other congressional candidates spent less, but they year-end cash deficit of
were non-incum.bents who did no campaigning and received $36,772.
almost po votes, according to a recent issue of the
A special 4·mill levy
. Congressional Quarterly. Boland, who had only toke~ 1 election will be held Dec. 14
opposition in his race, said the $47 was his own money and was ~· and if it passes schools
used to pay for nomination papers to have his name placed on probably will be able to
reopen for the remainder of
the ballot.
the school year, Fairlawn
Pl'ITSBURGH- AN 82-YEAR.OLD WOMAN who froze to School Superintendent James
death last year when her heat was cut off because she failed to Conard said today .
pay a $72 gas bill has left an estate valued at $292,000, officials
The district has a high ·
school, middle school and
say.
The Allegheny County Register of Wills said the estate of elementary school and an
Sophia Easer was in cash, stocks, bonds, real estate, insurance enrolbnent of 620 students .
and gold coins. It was divided among six cousins after State Auditor
Thomas
payment of $85,945 in taxes. Miss Easer's body was discovered Ferguson
in Columbus
Jan. 19, 1976 wrapped in rags and a,floor rug in her home In verified the projected year•
Munhall, a Pittsburgh suburb. The gas had been turned off by end cash deficit.
the Equltabie Gas Co. because she owed $72 oh her bill.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::
CLEVELAND -MANY CLEVELAND SCHOOL teachers,
claiming to be hostages and tired of being pushed around by
the schOill board, failed to report lor work today because tbe
(Cootinued on PIC' 2)

·I·

enttne

at

Th%~~,~~-;:;.~;~~::;:;:,.-.;:;.~&lt;:;:;:;:;;;;,,-,;~,~"'''''"'~'**'"'""""'~-~~

I"

fundin g, the 648 Board will not release any more advance
fundin g beclluse of una uthor ized spending."
In a Jetter dated Nov . 25, the 648 Mental Health Board
terminated its contract with the . Mental Health Center
e£fectLve ~ - 21. ~rs. Plwnmer Cited sev~ral. mc ~dents of
overspending and mts-rnanagementoffunds, m vtolatlon of the
contract. The mental health center observed open house on
Oct. 18.
'·
Although eight viola tions were cited, the most important
apparently were that no additional staff members be added
dur ing the fiscal year, no increase in salaries o~ use of any
unincumbered ~alary funds be made wathout prtor approval
of the board, and that the cente r's management refrain from
establishing new services or discontinue old services until
there was joint consideration by the 648 Bo~rd and the center's
board on how changes would affed further plans of the
program and total needs of the community. Cited also were
unauthorized expenditures without the knowledge or approval
of the 648 Board.
Mrs . Plummer pointed out today that all services will be
contljlued regardless of what happens.
Dr. Greaves said Wednesday, ''The 648 Board has tied up
federal funds due the center and that's why the advanced
(Co!ltlr!Ued on· page 2)

•

•

e
VOL XXVIII

r

E~ Ne utzling, Mayor I.Jlndon, Roush and Corbett
Patterson, board of public affairs president. The Board of
Public Affairs credited r esidential growth in th e village
and a rninimwn of operation costs for the town 's a bility to
pay off the 4().year notes so much ahead of time. Roush
said this was the fifb1 time in his a rea for such a financial
feat. The other phase of the water works finance~ are non.
callable revenue bonds that cannot be paid off until 1984
without a two percent penalty.

Four fined by Mayor Hoffman

Mayor's court
takes 6 bonds

'

J

A dispute over fw1ding IJetween the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Cmmnunity Mental Health 648 Board and the management of
the new Mrntal Health Center located. across from the Holze r
Medical C9nter, west of Gallipolis, resulted Wednesday in the
resignation of c Hnic director Dr . George Greaves.
.
Dr. Greaves, who came to Gallipolis rrom San Franctsco
in !973, tendered his r esignation to the 648 Center Board
Wednesday n ight.
·
In a sta tement to out~ •f~n wn news media (WOUB Athens )
Dr. Greave s said his resignation was submitted in order that
negotiations between the 648 board and the Mental Health
Center on contracts and funding "ge t mo\'ing'! .
The fi nancial dis pute became public knowledge
Wednesday when rumor s were rampant that center employees
would nul be paid Friday and that funds had been overspent,
causing possible future problems in services available.
The dispute revolved aro und the disbursement of funds
frnm the 648 Mental Health Board to the center's management.
Seventy percent of th e center's fund ing goes through the 648
board.
·
·,
A board spokesman said today all employees will be paid
as schedu led Friday.
..
Mrs. Maxine Plummer , executive director for the 648
Community Mental Health Board, said, "The Mental Health
Center r.eceived advanced funding for the first three quarters
of fi sc al 1977 in July when the spending year began. Since the
mental hea lth center has spent nearly all of that advanced

STAGE CREW for the two act comedy to be presented at Meigs High School Friday at 8
p.m. are 1-r, Jeff Daniels, Dorsey Thomas, Celia McCoy and Tod Morrow . Carin &amp;iley is
the assistant directl)r .

JUNIOR CLASS MEMBERS a t Meigs High School
UP! SAID BEST
will present a two act comedy, "Solid Gold Cadillac"
WASHINGTON (UP!) Friday at the school at 8 p.m . under direction of Celia ·
A survey of government
McO)y assisted by Carin Bailey. Front, 1-r, Rita Vinin~.
press officers on the
fairness and accuracy of
Washington coverage by 25
major ~ews media lists the
Wall Street Journal the
'
'
best newspaper, U.S. News
and World Report the best
magazine, UP! the best
opera tions in · the " United
WASffiNGTON (UP!) · wlre aervlce and CBS the
The South Korean .govern· States'. ,." sa id Kim Su-Doc,
best network.
ment categorically denies it spokesman for .the Korean
:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:,:::,:::::::::· ever had a plan to infiltrate embassy in Washington,
HILO TEMPS
top levels of ihe U.S. Wednesday night.
NEW YORK (UP!) _ The government,
despite
highest temperature reported documents and two days of
ASK TOWED
Wednesday to the .National congressiOnal tesllmony to
A marriage license was
Weather Service, excluding ~.contrary.
Alaska and Hawaii was 89 -l'he government of the issued to Davi d Ric hard
degrees at Long Bea~h, Calif. Republic of Korea has ~o Jenkins, 20, Racine, and
Today's low was Six degrees knowledge whatsoever of the Petra Klein, 18, Schweinfurt,
at Gunnison , Colo. ·
so-called ' 1976 plan for Germany .

The Middleport E-R Unit
was called to North Second
Ave . at 2 p. m . Wednesday lor
an unidentified man who
suffered a head laceration in
a fall from a wall along the
street. The victim had no
identifjcation on his person,
squadmen said. He was taken
·to . Veterans
Memorial
Hospital lor treatment. He
was said to appear in·
toxicated·.
At 9:53 a. m. the squad
went to Logan St. lor I.Jlshia
Mitchell, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

usually takes us about three
or four days to get about
4() ,000 trees.
" This year it took us five
weeks to line up trees. We
traveled lour states and
Canada . I must have put on
5,000 miles traveling all over
Michigan. We also called
places in New Jersey and
New York trying to find trees.
"We had to go mostly to
new dealers. The old places
we dealt with in the past just
didn't have any trees they
could supply us wlth . l'm still
about 4,000 short from what I
could use."
I.Jlndrico says he and his
brother supply about 60
percent of the tree retailers 1!1
the Cleveland area. He
operates a wholesale and
retail lot· in suburban Valley
View and his brother runs an
outlet on Cleveland's East
Side.
Clarence Greathouse of
C&amp;G Trees, Cleveland, says
he already has "completely

~~~s ~~t~et~il~e~~arly

21 ,000

Film card is
doubled Friday

Jo McKinney, Shari Mitch, I.Jlri Wood, Stephanie
Radford, Brenda Foster, Carin Bailey, Toni Pope , and
Celia McCoy; back, Jeff Daniels, Gary Basham, Randy
Arnold, Keith Krautter, Kevin King , Dorset thomas and
Rick Hovatter.

The Meigs !bental health
center's Free Film Forum
Friday wlll be a double
feature . The first half-blur
film, Hassels and Hanpps,
makes the strong point that to
need guidance Is not a slgn of
weakness ; rather, It ls a sign
of
intelligent
self·
preservation .
The second movie ts the
last in the series of Transactional Analysts films,
"Feelings", and explores
some of the. ways old and
often inappropriate emotions
didate how we feel and act
now.
The films wlll be shown at
the center In Pomeroy at 236
2nd St., at 2 p.m . The
public is invited.

w:

Koreans claim total ·i nnocence

Toe
Meigs
County
Bloodmobile will be held
Monday, Dec. 19, at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
froml:30to5:30p.m. Vernon
Nease , chalrman, a_M ounced
today .

The Meigs REACT team
wlU meet at 7 p. III· Friday at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy . All members are
asked lo be present and
guests a're welcome.

The first meeting of Meigs
County Basic Police School
will be held this evening at 5
p. m . in room 315 at Meigs
High School. All participants
in this sehool should attend.

Glen T. Crisp will be in·s talled as master of Middleport I.Jldge 363, F &amp;AM, on
Wednesday, pee. 7,. rather
than this evening as was
reported erroneously to the
Daily Sentinel.

·•

1

We ca n ca tegorically
slate that the government has
never had such a· plan," he
said.
Th e st a tement by · the
embassy official was the
Korean government's first
comment since a House In·
ternationa l Relations s ub·
committee released Tuesday
a 1976 Korean intelligence
document outlining a $750,000
plan.to infiltr"te top echelons
'

of the U. S. government and
media - including even the .
State Department and the
White House - to win policies
favorable to South Korea .

Weather

Colder tonight, chance of
snow flurries, with lows to the
low 30s. Cloudy Friday , highs
in the 40s . Probability of
precipitation 70 pet. today , 30
pet. tonight , 20 pet . Friday.
4

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS
••

�~---·------,

2-The Dail• S...n\tnel. ~hddleport- Pume roy . 0. Thursday. Dec 1. 1977

3- The Daily Sentmel, r liddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 1, 19'17

Peace is like touching heaven
Ed it ur 's

N"uk ·

.\1au ri &lt;' t"

{~umdi,

UPI Ca1rn bureau
managt•r.
lra \ t•lt•d
ld
Jau salt'm "llh Prt'~ldrnt
An\o\ar Sadat and stayt-d una
ft''"'- days In \'ISH St~mt• punts

.. r mterrst

111

By MAURICE GUINDI
SlRENI . Israel
1UPI l F11r us to have
pe.H't.' 1s like touehmg heaH.'n
NETZE~

v.'lttl our fmger s and fee hng

1!." 51-ml Mrs. Clara Hcmanw.
" ~'lllarl

at th1s

k1b b u tz
1 (' P il ec tl v ~
se ttlem ent I
as
she
ecst at t ..~ aJ I}
clt st· uss ed

El() pttan Prestdent Anwar
Sadat s pe,tcemakmg v tslt
Is rael.

tA."t

Swaymg gently as sh e sat
at a table m the c0nunw1al
dmmg r nom,

the

short.

heavy-set. stlver./latred Mrs
Hana nta satd 1 " I enJoyed
wat chmg Prestdent Sadat on

TERR\ MOORE, S)Tacuse. "as a luck) hunter
Monda• He bagged a rune pOint buck back of Ra cme. The
deer an est umted 3' , ) ears old. " etghed 185lbs

Dr. Greaves resigns
(Continued from page 1)
mone\ was spent •·

For u:s 1t

new btrth

\\o e are vrry sa tisf1M "
Mrs Hanama was nne uf
many Israelis m the &lt;' Illes
280

(' OUOir\' S id e

k.ibbutzun tn whom Saruit has
endeared
htm se lf
b)
breakmg all the rules and
cunung to lsr&lt;tel - lh e ''bon's
den," as he put It - to talk
peace
~ " It " uuld be great tn have
peace and fnendshtp between

· Scout leader refuses to form
honor guard using all whites
.c/
" repugnant ," and satd
Wednesday he wtll not permt!
any of hts scouts to parttctpate.
"l was told that the counctl
wanted no black, Mextcan or
Vtetnamese scouts to take
part tn the holiday program,"
Palermo satd "The fact that
~ was asked to assemble a
llly-whrte group of scouts for
that counctl was repugnant to

KA NSAS CITY, Mo. rUPl )
. - A Boy Scout leader says a
publi cly fun ded commumty
group asked htm to assemble
"a hly -whtte" honor guard
. for tts Chrtstmas program bamng black, Mcxtcan Amen can and Vtetnamese
. youngsters.
Frank Palermo, chairman of the Boy Scout Lone
Star Dt strt ct , ca lled the
· request from the Northeast
Area Cnmmunlt ) Counc il

me "

.Farm prices

up 4%

over a \year ago
WASHI NGTON fUPi l
Ra"' fann produ ct prtces
rose 1n m1d~~~,\f'nJber to 4
percf.'nt tJhu1 f' a w 1r e~go. but

remained 34 percent below
'.
the level wht ch a fann ers'
protest movement has se t as
the mmmmm for avmdm g a
stnke Dec 14
The Agnculture Depart·
ment's monthly fanh pnce
report Wednesday showed a
contthumg bri sk post·harvest
recovery for wheat , corn and
SO) beans ea rned the average
of all fo1!T'1 product pnces up
t pt: '
'I
r lltj~(Jcto be r.
the second stratght I percent
gam lollo"mg a 10 percent
drop tn the precedmg four
• months
The mcrease , which out·

•

•

pa ced a 0 5 percent gam m
farmer s' costs, boosted
average commodtty prtces to
66 percent of the government's !ann partty standard
compared with 65 pe rcent tn
October and 66 percent a yea r
ea rher - among the lowest
r ~ admgs smce the ea rly
years of the 1930s depresston
The report tndtcated the re
was httle hope that leaders of
a new protest group, the
American
Agrtcult ure
Movement, would back off
ihe tr plan to ca II for
na tlQn wtde fanner s' stnke
begmnmg Dec. 14 unless the
government takes steps to
help them get 100 per cent of
panty pnces.

E!(J pt "desert, l;e sdtd

brcakUm•ugh Many tn th ts
kibbut z fet'l that lilday th ere

would g ladly mcake uur krto \\•~
hn "' CI\'Clliilble Itt ._t n)o~l (' .nut

Sl' rl SC
tn
makm ~
a
rnm pwnuse There IS mnr e
n•admess for ('jl ncess lt"! ns
beeause everybody here nnw
feels tht s would be to thctr
advcmta ~ e "

the m t•st )()glcctl tlung \\ nultl

grandm other, who was l)()rn
tn Turkey and cam e II&gt; lsr ael
Ill 1952
Other members of kibbutz
Netzer Strem, which has &gt;40
res id e nts ,
runs
three
fa ctones and culttvates 1,100
acres. JOined Mrs Hanama in
hatlmg Sadat's mtsston
An !Jptnskr. 25. a cost

IJptnskt sard he ce lebrated
Ins 2-year.old son's birthday
Nov. 20 " he n Sadat
addressed the Knessct and
"thts was a double-barreled
relebratton "
.. 1 hope tllat \\hen my

~ ~n

grows up he wtll be able to go
tn Catro to thank Prestdent
Sadat personally," he satd
1Jptnskt looked forward to
the day when IsraeliS can

By IRA R. AALLEN
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Desptte crushmg court
backlogs smce the last new
ederal Judges were named m
1970, the Democrats who
control Congress were not
eager to create JUdgeships for
a Republican president to fill
Now they are about to hand
Prestdent Carter the chance
to mcrease the federal
JUdictary about 30 percent by
nammg more JUdges than any
other preSident m htstory
The prospect that the
Democrats wtll reap a
patronage bonanza was a
maJor concern of the House
Judtctary Co mmtttee

Wednesday when tt approved
a btl! creatmg 110 new dtstnct
court judgeshtps and 35 new
crrcutt court posittons,
It aloo voted flO to 12 to ask
Carter to make
the
nomUlabons on the basts of
ment, not party, although hts
record to date has been one of
nammg only Democrats as
fUdges and U S attorneys
The sponsor of the mertt
amendment, Rep Romano
Mazzoli, D-Ky ., conceded
"the
presrdent
has
disappomted me" by not
foll owing hts , campatgn
pledge to make appomtments
on a ment basis.
The proposal urges the

l

Area Deaths

months
He was born Sept 1. 1920, tn
Mtddleport, the son of the late
Charles E
and Mar te

Mornstown, N

He was a veteran of WW II ,
serv1ng '" the , European
Theatre He was a member of

1 p

M1lhoan Burdette
Heath

LJn.ted

Method1st

Church, Ounng h1s ltfe he
was
employed
by 1he
Columbus and Southern Oh to
Electr ic Company, the New
York Centra l Ra1lroad and tn

J ,

and Mrs .

James !Barbara) Hegler of

Columb•~· S C , and several
COU SinS
Funeral ser v •ces will be at

m. Saturday at the

Raw11ngs Coats
F uner a l
Home w1th the Re v. Rober t
Bumgarne r
off1c1at 1ng
Bunal will be 1n the Leon
Cemetery Fnends may call

at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p m.

HOSPITAL NEWS ·

Local Bowling

Team high
ser •es
Shamrock Molel 1271

A thought for the day
Prest dent Franklin D Roosevelt told the American nation
almost a year before the
Umted States' entry into
• World War II : " We must be
the great arsenal of
democracy." .

•

Now you Know
The penkmfe wtth the
greatest number of blades tS
made by Joseph Rodgers &amp;
Sons Ltd., of Sheffield,
England. First bunt in 1822
wtth 1,822 blades, the knife
blades have continued to
match the year ever since.

I
"'r

oth er rl'QU ISites tn
peasants But Uw ktbbut&gt;. ts a
compa ct.
al m o st
selfsuffll'Il'nt l'Oilli11Uillly. I WI b y
a
J.!l'neral
~S~ ('I Il bl )

v:l 1 I ''' M A

adult

Have you any rei1gtous tra c ts by a Lawrence

res1dcnts. a sec t etar tal (md
seve 1 ttl

, ..

c o mlu l tt ees

over seemg va r•wus act1' 1t1es
I had lunch wtth snme nf the
n.•sJdents m tl1e communal
d1nmg rtl nlll and they

Special education experience
offered Meigs 3-4 year olds

reCC I\ ed me \\ tth lhe same
co urt esy and e nthu sias m
acco rded to all ' ts ltmg
Egyptians du11n g Sadat 's

A dozen th ree Hnd fou r- actt"t tes \\t il be held for the
year-old cht ldren of the Meigs dozen chtldrcn dunng the
Local School Dtstrtct are class hours Parents must
bet ng off ered a spc ctal provrde transportation and on
~du cat10n
cxpcrt cncc m occaston they may stay and
v1ew the actiVIt ies of a class
January
from
an unobserv ed positiOn .
An mnovauve program for
T)le
program
ts destgned to
the ag e group ts bem g
provtde
experience
In chtld
established by Mrs Karen
development
for
the
home
Goms of the home econonucs
department of the htgh school economt cs students mvolved
and her jumor and scnwr and educa tional expert ences,
students wtll be workmg wtth dtsgUtsed m the lorm of play,
the 12 chtldren accepted for for the chtldren.
Only 12 youngsters will be
the program.
Accordmg to plans. the 12 accepted and acceptance wtll
chtldren wtll report to the be on a first come, first
Metgs Htgh School. Monda) served basts wtth the apthrough Fnday. 1 45 to 3 15 pllcatton form belo" to be
p. m &lt;4unng the month of completed and sent to Mrs
Goms at the Met gs Hrgh
January .
A van ety of educati onal School. Route 3, Pomeroy.

stay

Galw Gtthg, 26. a compu t er

Modq~

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televtsion Writ er
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The hohday season ts a time for cold
wmds and warm hearts and what could be more heartwarmtng
than chtldren '
There are some very talented ktds on televtston Dec. 4, when
the Bell System presents a new ~erston of Rudyard Kiplmg's
"Captams Co ura geous" (ABC, 7-9 p m. , Eastern time), and
NBC brm gs the cast of the Broadway htt mustcal "Anrue"
center stage fnr the "' An me Otrtstmas Show ," 8-9 p m ,
Eastern tune
Tite effectrveness of the Kiplmg comes from a combmatton
of the trted and tru e Kiplmg tale about a spotled nch ktd who
grows up when acctdent strands htrn on a Yankee fishmg
schooner off th e Grand Banks, and the very talented cast.
ln the role of rotten ht tle Harvey Cheyne, 16-year-&lt;&gt;ld Bntish
actor Jonathan Kahn almost steals the show from a veteran

Clocmnall
8 1J 0
16
lnd tana poh s
6 11 J
15
B•rmm g ham
6 13 i
14
Wednesday's Results
Cmc1 ) , Ind ia napoliS D
Ed monton 4 , Btrm1n gham 2
New Eng J , HOU S J , of ITe
Thursday 's Game
Quebec at Indianapol is
Friday's Games
B1rrnTn gh am at Edm onton
l nd•anapolts at Houston
Wtnmp eg at New Engla nd

The lead ts Karl Malden as Capt. Dtsko Troop out of
Gloucester, Mass, who makes a young man out of an
extraordmanly callow youth Rt cardo Montalban makes a
very reahsttc Portuguese satlor Also aboard are Ne1olle
Brand as half-daft l.Jttle Penn, Fred Gwynne as Long Jack and
Fntz Weaver as the seruor Cheyne
A different kind of charm ts spun by the enure cast of
"Anme " m thetr NBC spectal. They perform five numbers
from the show, a special " It 's Otnstmas" song by show
composer and lynctst Otarles Strouse and Marttn Charnm
along wtth some traditional Chnstmas tunes
'
Particularly delightful are Dorothy Loudon, who IS very
melodtc, and "Annte" star Andrea McArdle tn a touchmg solo
of "The !Jttle Drummer Boy."

lbs 30 a3 2's roao 1600 lbs 25 60.
Standard 1 2 750 900
Jbs 25 so 29
vea lers Pnme 200 240 lbs 66

32 Jeuocks

69 , choice and pnme 100 125 lbs
27 35 , tnd1'o'1dUal cho 1ce 175 180

lbs 47 50, good and chooce 95
115 lbs 20 25 , good 165 295 lbs
25 40. bu lk 30 31 so too 120 Jbs
35 . 85 95 11;s 11.27 . so 125 Jbs 9.
17 Feeder callle Cho oc e bolls
JOO 675 lbs 28 35 , cho tce steers
tg~ ~~50 ~~~. 1&amp;5 ~115 1 ~~· 3 l~~ ~~~
good and chotce JOO 490 Jbs 28

11

1
CtOSe

t.llfi.P I

CLEVELAND (UP! ) - At
least 25 of the ctty's 174 public
schoo ls were closed today
when teache rs earned
through on thetr promise to
stay home until the fmanctally troubled school system
meet s tts payroll.
A school board spokesman
said 11 or the system's 14
semor htgh schools and 12 of
the 28 jumor high schools sent
student s hom e at the
begmnmg of the school day
because of teacher absen teet sm Fig ures were
mcomplete on the system's
132 elementary schools, but
at least two were known to be
closed

.

DEVOTED TO TIJE
INTEREST OF
Mt: IGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L T ANNEHIU.
F..1.:ec Ed
'
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Clly Editor
Pubh.shi!d donly elt'epl Saturday
by The Ohio VaUey Publishing

111

~769

Busme!IS Ofhce Phone 992· 2156
Edtlonal P hone992-2 1~ 7
.Jiccond class PQ.'Jlat~:e pa1d at

Inc , Bntlillelll nnd Gallagher Otv.,

757 Third Ave , New York NY
'

Sut»&gt;crlptlon rates Delivered by
earner where av1ulable n cents per
wee k Oy Motor Rou te where carrier
serv1ce oot availllble, One monlh,
$3 25 By mail m Ohio and W Va ,
One Year, $22 00; Sut month!,
'II :;o, Th ree months, 11 00,
Elsewhere $26 00 year, Sl.x months
113 $0, Three months $7 50.
Subscnptlon price includes Swulay
'l'irnes-.Sentmel.

furman~e

Scnrml! 70 rt(linh

against a good club so early
tn the season has to be a
cause
ror
opttmism
espectally since one of the
question marks of thts year's
club was tis scoring punch.
lmprovtng over thetr loss to
Southern tn the Kyger Creek
Preview, the Marauders
showed good teamwork as
well ~s a hot hand at the foul
line, hittmg on 20 of 27 free
throws However, Logan satd
that to wm Fnday hts team
wtll have to do away wrth the

needless louis 132 agamst
Vinton) and reduce tumovers.
Center Brent Stanley ts
questiOnable for rrtday du e
to a spramed ankle, but he 's
expected to be ready If he
can't go, then Tom Hawley or
Dave Blake wtll step m
Guard Grc~ Becker left
practtce Wednesday til, so he
also may be questtonable
Btlly Elkms and Ray An·
drews were s1 ck earher tn the
week, but they are both back
now.
Logan was pleased wtth

guard Kenny Youpg's ad·
]Ustm ent to th e role of
playmaker
Ironton lost four starters
from last year'&gt; title con·
tendtng squad, but tHl Robm
Fttzpatnck wtll be lrlhng m
qutte well. He 'll be ]o:ned by
leaper Bobby Wtlllams and
speedster Juan Thomas, both
starters off the football team
Also ftlhng m those four spots
wtll be reserves that went 18-0
last S&lt;:ason, as well as the
season before
Wtth both teams tn a
rebulldmg year, tt all adds up
to an mterestmg match

BERKELEY, Calif. IUP!)- Calilornia's Mike White,
lhe coach credited with deyeloping one of college
f•••tball's top passing attacks, has been fired by the
tmiverslty's athletic dtrectur.
The action by Dave Maggard Wednesday ended
White's stx-year re&lt;ord (34-3].() at Cal and the longest
tenure among current Pacifie-S Conference head football
cnaches.

"I'm maklng the decision based on what I feel is best
fur the future of California football," said Maggard. He
satd he acted alone and under nu mfluence from alUmni ur
nlher groups.

Mocltl LC .

sa td the new contra ct
supersedes the current one,
which has a year and a hall

LUnclf)' C•nt•r

remammg

MONTREAL (UP!) - The
Expos' 1978 Grapefrutt
League 25-game schedule
released Wednesday ts
htghhghted by games wtth
tllree dtVlSIOn wmners from a
year ago, mcludmg the world
champi on
New
York
Yankees, the Los Angela
Dodgers, the Philadelphia
Phtlhes, and by lour games
with Toronto Blue Jays.
Ftrst work outs at City
Island Park tn Daytona
Beach, Flortda, \\Ill be Feb.
23, for pttchers and catchers,
wtth the full squad expected
to take the f~eld March 1.

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

JOIN THE CELEBRATION

THE "NEW"

NEW YORK CLOTH.ING HOUSE

CHICAGO
(UPI )
Standout runnmg back
Walter Payton and four other
Chtcago Bears were listed on
the team's weekly tn]ury
report Wednesday, but
coaches satd all of were
"probable" to play against
Tampa Bay Sunday
Best des Payton , who is
re covering from flu the
players are: wide receiver
Steve Shubert, who has a
nght leg stram; fullback
Robin Earl, wtth a shoulder
contusion; lineman Jeff Sevy,
recovering from tonsillitis,
and ltnebacker Doug Buffone,
recovering from pneumonia.

GRAND RE-OPENING
STARTS 9:00 A.M. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2
WE HAVE COMPUTED MUCH OF OUR REMODELING -

THE BALANCE WILl. BE

COMPLETED AFTER CHRISTMAS. IT IS TIME TO START HELPING YOU WITH YOUR
CHRISTMAS GIFT BUYING. AND WE INTEND TO DO JUST THA Tl WE HAVE

College Basketball Results
By Umted Press International
East
Adelph • 91 , Hofstra 87
V1llnva 6 1. Ph1 la Text 57
Alcorn St 97, s Hous 51
Bsn U 81 , Stoneh1ll 69
Brandeis 97 , MIT 70
USCG 64, NY Mar lttme 50
Delaware 91, Drexel 78
Del val 63, Wilkes 61
Dowlmg 72, Pratt 49
E Conn 77, Keene 67
Falrfld 98 , Bndgpt 86
F .Pierce 84, St JOS 80
Geotown 50, Dickinson 33
LaSalle 92, Bucknel l 77
Mass 73, Harvard 66
Navv 60, Pnnceton 57
New Hamp 87, Bsn Coli 77
NJ Tech 69 , Poly Tech 65
NY Tech 96, Sacrd Hrt 81
P1tt 80, W Va Ws lyn 56
P1ff Jhnstn 75 , Pt Pk 72
PrOV 57 , LOUISVIlle 51
Rhode Island 83, Brown 59
Rutgers 81, Seton Hall 76
St Bonny 84 , Scranton 74
St Jos 108 , Albright 78
Sf V1nce 83, wash&amp;Jeff 68
Slip ~ck 87, wavnsbg 82
Steubnvl 80, R MorriS 711
Syracuse 101 , Conn 61
Vermont 79, .Norw ich 54
Widener 103. Ursmus 64

South
Alabama 92, SCar 67
Belmnt Abby 75 , Old Oom 67
Bluef ld 69, Emory&amp; Henry 59
Clemson 101 , Fu rman 83
E Tenn 80, Appy Sf . 63
Ga Sthern 75, Ga St 73
Ga Tech 84, Troy St 69
MISS 81 , N C Char 6.4
No Car 90, Ore Sf 64
Ashvl72, S c. Spartbg 61
Pac if ic 76, Mrehed St 72
V~ . 68 , Randlph Macon 55
VMI 107 , Aldrsn Brods 90
va. Tech nt o Wslvn . 71
Wm8.Mary 72 , west va 61

BROUGHT INTO THE STORE NEW STOCKS IN EACH DEPARTMENT AND NEW
BRAND NAMES THAT Wll.l. PLEASE EVERYONE.

FEATURING

BRAND NAMES

•JOCKEY
eLEVI'S
eHAGGAR
eROLFS
eENGLISH LEATHER
eFLORSHEIM

•JOHNNY CARSON
ePALM BEACH
eAR ROW
eVAN HEUSEN
eMANHATTAN

.

eWEMBLEY
REGISTER FOR 7 FREE
GIFT CERTIFICATES TO BE
GIVEN AWAY BY NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE.

lW0-$50
GIFT CERTIFICATES
.
.
FIVE-$25 GIFT CERTIFICATES

This is 1n addition to
Merchants Gtve-Away .

F~OUS

the

Pomeroy

-JANTZEN
ePURITAN
eDICKies
•LONDON FOG
•SAMSONITE
.OTHERS

New York Clothing House Chri$hnas Specials
LARGE GROUP LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS ............. SAVE 20%
STRAIGHT LEG HEAVY WT. LEVIS ............................ SAVE 20%
ENTIRE STOCK SAMSONITE LUGGAGE.. .................... SAVE 25%
ALL BOYS WEAR .............................................. SAVE 50%
FLORSHEIM SHOES ... ·• .. -.. -.. •·• .. •....... ··--... -..... -.... SAVE 15%
LEISURE SUITS .• -. -·-.... ·.. •.. ·· •·- ••·• .. ·.... ·... -- .. -·- .. -· SAVE 30 r..

Midwest

Pome roy, Ohio
National advertlllln8 represe ntative Ward ·. Griffith Company,
10017

By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauders open
Southeastern Conference
cage campatgn Frtday ni ght
at Ironton against the Tigers
of Coach Buddy Bell. Ironton
ts 0-2 on the year, both losses
to strong AAA clubs Meigs is
0-1 after Its loss last Saturday
to the powerful Vmton County
club, 70-76.
Following the Vinton game,
Metgs Coach Ron Logan
admitted to betng somewhat
pleasantly surprised wtth his
club's
offensive
per-

Cal's Mike White {4-ed

IN U 5 A

Today, the dress boot ts
vital to your wardrobe Fashton dtctates this
' fresh approach as a
complement to your
new outftt Come
in and see our
complete
assortment.

TII E DA.ILYSENTINEL

Company-Mulhmecha, Inc ,
Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio

at Ironton Friday night

scores

·

d

NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Bill
Campbell, the UruverSlty of
Columbta 's head footba ll
coach lor th e past four
seasons, r eceived a new
thr ee-yea r co ntract
Wednesday
AI Paul , Director of
Athletrcs at the university,

auditions .

.

SCh00 [s

SAN DIEGO (U P!) Otargers rumung back Joe
Washmgton goes mto the
h&lt;lspttal today for an eye
operatton, whtch wtll keep
him out of Sunday's game
wtth the Cleveland Browns
Brown suffered a partially
detached retma when poked
tn the eye durmg the game
agamst th e Seattle Sea
Hawks Sunday

by

ABC WtJl drop usan Pedro Beach Bums" from Its schedule
after Dec. 19, while addmg two new shows, "Fantasy Island"
and '~How the West Was Won." Redd Foxx goes fr om a regular
ser1es to special slottmg status, and six of the network's other
programs will be get new schedule spots
The btggest of the .network changes, expected to be and Th sd
nounce
ur ay, occurs on Monda y rught when 11 Lucan "
will go in from 8-9 p m., Eastern tune , m a ltrnited run unttl
"Six Mtllion Dollar Man" takes restdence in the slot Jan. 30.
From 9-11, Monday wtll become an ABC "event " mght that
will mclude everythmg from th~ Academy Awards to the NFL
I
c
Pro Bow to a two-uo ur Bmg Crosby retrospective.
Lee Majors' btontc Sunday rught spot will go to James
Ar
dE M
g
ness an va arte arnt wmnmg the west
"Fantasy Island ," m whtch Rtcardo Montalban "plays a
man of mystery who has the abthty to fulfill the dreams of all
who venture to hts remote Island paradise ," will go on
Saturdays, 10-11 p.m., pushmg "Love Boat" back into the 9-10
slot
"Stru sky and Hutch " move to Wednesday 10-11 p m
"Ftsh" moves in before "Ba rney Mtller" Thur;days
· .,
"Ba
"
1 8:3().9,
retta goes to Thursday, 10-ll, and "What's Happening' '"
swttches' to Saturday 3-8 30

'

the Cal tfornia Angels' rookie
team at Idaho Falls m the
Pioneer League next season,
the
club
announced
Wednesday .
Noga, a restdent of Brownwood, Texas, also wtll serve
as a scout wtth the Angels

Boots are
NOW!

cast.

Slaughter cows Ut tl 1ty and
ccmmerc 1al 2 4 ~so 1600 lbs 21
77 75 , few h1 gh dressmg 26 00
27 35 . few low dress1 ng 11 n as ,
cutter 1 1 750 1400 lbs 20 25 .
canner 1 2 650 11 30 lbs 17 11 25
Slaught er bulls l's 1280 2145

lbs 28 10, feeder PtQS 1 J 30 50
lbs l.t 26 50 40 45 lbs 21 24 , 50
76 lbs 29 32 per head ,
Sheep
Wooled slau g h t er
lambs 2 2 75 h1gher , shorn
la mbs 150375 h•gher, feeder
lambs 25 1 h1gher cho 1ce and
pr.me 85 115 lbs wooled 53
55,75 . cho1ce 98 116 l bs shor n
w i th no l pel ts 55 25 58 50 ,
f eeder lambs cho•ce and tan c v
67 84 l bs 56 25 59

O i st r 1ct. F l aya c h oo l

TV•••in Review

36

med•om 259 lbs 31 75 , med&gt;om
and 1's 370 .400 lbs 33 SO 34 , 1 3
420 582 lbs 33 25 34 50 , 2 3 625
680 lbs 33 33 so , boars 345 560

~h oo l

Te lep ho ne Mu mbe r- ------ - ·- -·- - -- -- -· --- -- ·- -· -----

pnme 2 3 850 1220 lbs JV 42 75 ,
cho tce 2 4 850 1210 lbs J&amp; 40 50 ,
low dress tng 34 35 m•xed good
and c ho,ce 2 3 650 1090 lbs 31
l~ l~ good 1 3 860 1300 lbs

1 25 higher 1 sows steadv to so
htgher , boars 10 higher f eeder
p1gs steady barrows and g ills
1 3 210 250 lbs 42 80 43 35 , sows
1 3 310 595 lbs 32 60 33 60 . Jot

loc:; !\ l

NHL Standmgs
Bv United Press Inte rna tional
Campbell Conference
Patnck 011; tSion
W l T Pts
Phlladelph t
14 4 3
11
NY Islanders
11 ~ 1
29
All anta
7 8 7
21
NY Ran gers
8 12 2
18
Smythe D1v tslon
W L T Pts
Ch1cago
6 a 8
20
Vancouv er
6 10 S
17
Colorado
6 9 5
17
Mmn esota
6 12 3
15
Sf LOUIS
5 15 3 '
13
Wale s Conference
Norns 01\ 1510n
W l T Pts
Monlret31
IS 4 3
33
Los Ang eles
10 7 5
25
Detro 11
9 9 3
21
Plllsbu r gh
7 11 4
18
Washtn g ton
2 lS 5
9
Adam s D1\ lslon
W l T Pts
Bas i On
13 S 4
30
Buffalo
14 6 1
30
Toront o
12 5 3
11
Cle'o'eland ,
7 13 2
16
Wedne sday ' s Re sults
Cleveland 5, Toronto J
NY Ranger s 4 51 LOUI S 0
NY lslndrs 3, Col o 3 11e
P 1tiSb urgh 6. Delro tt 4
Buffalo 3. Chtcag o 1
ThursdiiV ' S Games
Montreal at Buffalo
Minnesota at Boston
Phlla at L os Angel es
Fnday 's Gamu
Cle11e land at Wa sh ngl on
Alla11ta al Vancouv er

l' a r e nt o r

Market Report

34 , 510120 lbs 31 34 25 good 300
650 lbs 27 50 33 heifers good
and ChOICe 300 470 lbS 26 30
510 no lbs 25 25 30 so
Hogs Barrows and o•lfs 1

25

Sports

•

and

a ll

8 1

s

gn ve lm nent ·fun l'llopr rat 1\'es
prtwt de trdl'liii'S, f er t il izer s

cu m pr1si n g:

17

8V United Pren International
Eastern Conference
Atlant iC Ot\!ISion
W l
Pel G8
Ph lla
16 5 762
New York
11 9 550
Buffa lo
10 10
Boslon
1 11 368
New Je r sey
J 17 150
Central 01\'I SIOh
W l
Pet . GB
Clevelnd
13
1'2 2
Atla n l t~
11 1 611
1
Wsh ng tn
10 1 SBB 21 1
San Ant ont
11 10 545 3
New Orlo s
11 10 514
J 11
t1o uston
1 11 389
6
West ern Conference
Midwest DIVISIOn
BUFFAI ,0, N .Y (UP f) W l
Pet. GB Buffalo Braves owner John
Denv er
14 8 636
Ch1ca go
10 9 516 2 1 ~ Y. Brown ha s sold half of the
M ll w
1I 10 57 4 1 1~ NBA franchrse tu former
OelrO!f
8 I I 421
41;
Rochester,
N . Y.,
1 13 JSO 6
Kan sa s Ct t y
1 13 350 6
lnd •ana
busmessman Harry ManPac:1f1c 01\! ISIOn
gurian.
W l
Pet G8
Portla nd
16 J B42
Braves President Norm
Phoen t)(
11 1 611
4 1 1 Sonju
satd Brown and
Go lden St
10 I I 476 1
Man g\ll'lan, whn resides in
8 13 381
9
L os Angeles
Seattle
6 11 ?61 12
Ft.
Lauderdale,
Fl a.,
Wednesday ' s Results
complet ed
the
deal
S. os ton 98, Ch1cag o 9'1
Bu ffal o 105. A tl ant a 93
Wed nesday, alth ough tt may
Ph i Ia 117. N ew Or l ean s 114
take up to four weeks for the
Wa sh 116 San Ant ont o lOS
draft of the agreement to be
Detro •! 104, Lo s Ang 98
Mtlw auk.ee 110, lnd 1ana 113
hnahzed. SonJU satd he and
Seattl e 86, Kansas Ct f y 84
Brown
would st tll continue
TP\ursday's Games
Houst on at Clev ela nd
the manageme nt of the
New York al San Ant on•o
Braves
•
Frtday ' s Ga me s
Sea ttl e ;,t Bosl on
New Jer se v al Den11 er
Det r o •t a ! Kansas Ct tv
Washtng l on al M tlwau k ee
ANAHEIM, Calif. (U P! ) Portla nd a t Ph oenllt.
George
Noga, 50, wtll mana ge
Ch tc ego AI lnd tana

soo

be tn flSS ISt nUl llt'l ~ hllor s.' '
As &lt;:Ill F. gyplta n, l fnu ntl. tht'
kibbut z. ('nnee pt l:l tntally IIPW
CX(lt.'I'I CIIU.' Ther e i s coopl'rHtl\'(' fc~rmmg tn 1: gyp t, where

BURNS FATAL
was krlled .
CLEVELAND tUPI ) - MiThe blast occurred at the
chael Ceferattl Sr , 59, Oeve- S(ln's home m Mentor when
land, dted Tuesday night at the men we1e remo vm g
Cleve la nd Metropolitan carpet paddmg with gasoline
General Hosp rtal from when fumes were ignited by
InJUri es suffered m an ·the furnace, poll ee satd The
explns1on Nov 16m which his explostnn did $6,000 damage
lWlll , Mt cha el Jr . 26, Mentor, Ill the home .

"

NBA Stan0 1ngs

" \Vt•

student , satd "I thtnk Sadat is
prestdent to establish B gr eat leader He believes m
gllldelrnes for the nommallon what he dnes and wh) he docs
of Judges on ment - such as It He set•rns tn be a d eeply
setllng up nonpartiSan rehgw us man and thiS IS
selecllon panels - but allows good It trmk great courage
htm to tgnore them by for htm to come to Israel."
nottfym g th e Senate tn
She satd one of her dt eams
wntmg of his reason
ts to VI Sit Egypt "to see the
Th e amendment would people and the anttqutttes
apply only to the new judges
about whi ch I read so mm.:h.
and thetr successors. not to Tn see IS !}Omeltung else "
sittmg JUdges or thetr
A man 1epresenung the
succeS&amp;&gt;rs.
generatton m between Mr s.
The Senate ts not expected Hanama and Mtss Gtthg had
to gtve up t!s patronage of
dtf!erent dreams for the
federal judgeshtps tn a
future
con feren ce comtlllttee,
Menahem Hendler, 53, a
assummg the House passes fa ctor) worker, .!:ip0ke about
the commtttee bill.
posstble future Arab-I sraeli
Rep . Jack Brooks, [).Tex , cooper atlon tn economiC
the committee's second· deve lopment of tl&gt;e reg ton
rankmg Democrat, was one
He too k prtde that Ill s
of only two members (Rep kibbutz. nne of tbe most
Thomas Kmdness, R.()hio , prosperous m Israel wtth an
was the other) to vote agamst annual Income of $10 mtUion,
the bill
has both tndustry and
Brooks charged the panel agnculturc.
It s
three
abdtcated tts chance to take fact orte s manufacture
politics out of the Judictary trailers. office furmture ' and
when tt added more than 30 containers and tt s la nd
judgeshtps to the bill after It prpduce s a vat Lety l'f ct ups ,
came out of subcommittee mcludtng cotton and cttrus
"This IS one of the best frutt.
classr c
examples
of
" We ar e much hao01er
logrolhng," he told hts today than before Sadat's
colleagues. "Thts would have VlSit beca use now we feel that
been an excellent opportun tcy there \Hil be no more wars, '
(for the House ) to create Hendler sard ·:we hope that
judgeshtps on the basts of on ce Jll'aCe ts establi shed we
merit alone mstead of JUS! can move nn to economtc
decoratm g t hts Chnstmas deve lopmen t tn both Israel
tree."
and the Arab world The
Each state represented by Arabs and IsraeliS together
members of the comrruttee can offer many thmgs to the
got at least one new federal
world JUSt hke the Eu ropean
JUdge
Economtc Market
Rep. Otarles Wtggms, RCallf., wtth assent from some
Democrats on the panel, said
the question of merit in
federal judges "IS a polttical
COLUMBUS (U P! ) - Wed
's 11vestoc:k au ctt on
problem and one lor which nesday
compared w1fh last Neek
the prestdent should be held slaughter steers steady slaugh
pohttcally a=untable " The ter he•fers atChampatgn stead y
to 1 lower , at Mount Vernon 1
Senate conftrmation process hig
her , slaughter cows
13
is \he right way to detemiine higher , slaughter bulls 1 higher,
bu l lodc.s mostly steady , vea lers
a nomrnee's qualifications , he steady
to 4 lower , feeder cattle
sal d.
steady
Slaughler steers H1gh c:ho• c: e
The Senate verswn ·of the
pr 1me 2 3 900 1100 lbs 43
bill would create three more and
44,25 cho 1ce and pr 1me 2 4 900
distnct Judgeshtps and would 1165 l bs 41 50.43 90 , chotce 2 .d
12 10 lbs 380 41 50
mtx ed
create a new ctrcutt court out 815
good a nd ch0 1ce 2 3 800 1200 lbs
of the sprawling Ftfth Circwt 36.111 , good 2 3 900 1310 lbs 35
39
coverrng the Deep South
Slaught er hetfers Cho tce and

'
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Nov. 30
Pamela Black, Linda
Bonecutter, Pauline Brewer,
Sandra
Bush,
Donna
Creemeans, Leo Davidson,
Dorothy Davts, Elva Davts,
Jane Davts, Arlene Dowell,
Edna Ellts, Rtchard Evans,
Fred Facemtre, Mrs. Rtcky
Faulkner and son, Gary
Flemmmg, Walley Hart, Alta
Htll, Eva Johnson, Gerald
Lehew, Betty Lemley, James
Murphy, Betty Prolfttt,
Arnold Rrffle, Henrietta
PLEASANT VALLEY
Saunders, Beulah Simmons,
DISCHARGES - George Steve
Sltkas,
Leslie
Mayes, Henderson; Mrs
Stapleton, Roger Swann,
JUI1tor Gillispie, Mrs Donald Emma Thompson , Cornelia
Ntchols, Dwayne Plants, Ttpton, Roscoe Walker ,
The Almanac
Jeffrey Pelfrey, Point Donna Waugh, James Wtlson,
United Press Iolernatiooal
Pleasant; Mrs. Glen Deeter, Gladys York
Today rs Thursday, Dec. I ,
Long Bottom ; Mrs. Kevin
Births, Nov. 30
the
335th day of 1977 wtth 30 to
Dennis', Gallipolis ; Randy
Mr. and Mrs Dennts · follow
Fobey, Pomeroy; Brandy Dodrtll, a son, Vinton.
The moon ts movmg from
Batles, Robertsburg ; Mrs.
Its
full phase to the last
Kenneth Fnend, Mt. Also ;
quarter.
James Kapp, West ColumDEATH PROBED
The morning stars are
bta ; Mrs . Charles Buck,
COLUMBUS
[UP!)
Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and
Robertsburg ;
J osephine
Foss, Mason and Jessica Pohce continued to in- Saturn
vesttgate the shooting death
Th e evemng star ts
Workman, Gallipolis.
BIRTHS - A son to Mr and of Daniel Turnbow , 18, Mercury
Those born on thts date are
Mrs. James Duncan, Point Columbus, whose roommate
Pleasant, and a son to Rev. was abducted, shot and under the sign of Sagtttanus
Amencan actress Mary
and Mrs. Kenneth Coleman, wounded Wednesday by two
men. Pollee said Darrell Martin was born Dec. I, 1914.
Point Pleasant.
On this day tn histor} :
White, 18, Columbus, was
In 1913, the world 's ftrst
shot in the head but escaped
his captors and was in critical drtve-tn 'gasohne station
conditton at a Columbus opened for busmess m
Polnerov Bowling lanes
Tuesday Tr1pl1cate League
Pittsburgh .
hospttal.
Nov 22, 1977
In 1917, Father Edward
Standmgs
Flanagan founded Boys
Team
Ph .
BAN LlFJ"ED
:rown , the "City of Ltttle
Shamrock'Motel
66
Royal Oak Park
66
LANSING, Mich (UP!)
Men ," 11 m1les west of
Royal Crown Cola
60
Gov. Wilham C. Mrlliken Omaha, Nebraska.
Franm Flonst
48 Wednesday srgned mto law
In 1943, ending a " Btg
Oa v 1d Bnck les ,
General Contractor
38 what he called "long over- Three" meettng m Tehran,
Mark v
34 due " legislation hftmg Iran, Amencan Prestdent
Htgh tndiVtdual game
Michigan's ban agamst the- Franklin D Roosevelt,
Betty Sm1th 187 , Pat Carson teachtng of birth control in Brill sh Prim e Mtnister
180 . Annette Phailn 160
H&gt;gh series _ Betty Smith public schools With repeal of Winston Churchtll and
511 . Pal Carson 465 , Annefte Michtgan's 50-year-old ban, RusSian leader Josef SUJltn
Phalln 447
' l..ouisrana is the only state pledged a concerted effqrt to
whtch still prohtbtts b1rth defeat Nazt Germany,
Team h1gh game
Shamrock Motel 440
control instruction

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admttted
Florence
Horton, Mtddleport; l..oshta
Mttchell, Middleport; Veneva
Gtlliam, Pomeroy; Charles
Neal, Pomeroy; George
Connolly , Syracuse ; Meltssa
Jeffers, Pomeroy; Thomas
Hendrix, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Dana
Govert , Larry Patterson, Jr.,
Mtldred Gaul, Chrts Smtih,
Roger Smith, Jr , Julta
Gibbs, Adelme Heilman.

Wtno 1peg

)U MUSt Bl: OVER 21

makt• d\'atlablc to Ej..:) pl tlw
l'X JX'I H'll('l' tlll'y J.!CI Ull'li II\
h10d
fl'dam.tt I II II
,trHI
l'i lll1flHIUal hfe tn k.iblJUI/1111
Po lntmg nut tha t 11W:&gt;!1 t•f

adu eve d a psyc.·lmlogu·a l

• IS

the two rountnes, " sa1d the

1

LON DOl' - FIRES KILLED FIVE people tn the deadliest
24 hours smce Bntatn 's 35,000 ftreftghters struck 18 days ago ,
and Pnme Mmt ster James Ca llaghan hardened his stand
agamst a btg pay tncrease
The latest ca sualues Wednesday boosted the death toll to
37 smce the government mobtltzed 18,000 troops, satlors and
rurmen m emergency ftr efightmg squads Prevtously, the
. highest death toll m ftres for a smgle day durmg the strike was
· four Seruor fire offtcers, who are not stnking, V!Stted
Callaghan at hts No 10 Downmg Street restdence to urge him
to seek a compromtse that would brmg the ftreftghters back to
work

He sa td "Sadat reall y

Democrats expect windfall
in judgeship appointments

l ·

(Continued from page 1)
board rs deferrmg thetr salanes because It is out of money
School Board Prestdent Arnold R Pinkney said schools
oEEt ctally were open and srud teachers who didn't report for
work \\ere constdered to be on stnke and would not be pat d.
'·J don 't see any JUSttfrcatlon for payrng people who refuse
to report for work ," Pmkney satd " We, as a board, have no
chmce in the matter
' We are under federal court order to keep the schools
open As I understand the contract wtth the t.eachers, tf the
schools ar e open the) must work, ·• added Pinkney, who satd all
other Cit) school employees and thetr umons are not takmg any
WOrk StOppage ac tion, JUSt the teachers

cma i) SJS d t' rk ,

It was very

He accused the 648 Board of holding up Title XX momes ,
sa• rng the board had no n ghrto do so
Dr Grea•es also satd the center can operate three weeks
on current fUI1ds and th at 100 employees wtll be patd as
scheduled
Meanwhll e,1he "center board" composed of 15 members
representing the Galha.Jackson-Mflgs area, wtll meet today
to dectde " hat steps wtll be taken for the center's contrnued
operations
Patient serv1ces, center operation, and payroll fundmg are
on the agenda for dtscusSlon.
The center could be run by the 648 Board headed by Mrs
Plumm er. executl\ e director. and Tom McOurg of Jackson,
chatrman of that board
Da\"id Strang. Public Relatwns Dtrector at Rw Grande
College , ts chatrman of th e center board ''. The mental health
clmtc. constructed and JUSt opened \\tthtn the past few months
on Jackson Pike, operates bv funds funneled thcough the 648
Mental Health Board '!rom three sources , federal, state and r--------------------------~
local fund s
Local funds generated by a two4enths mtlllevy mall three
I
counttes, are matched b) state funds on a 3-1 basts, mearung 1
the st ate pro• tdes three dollars for each local $1
construction work
CHARLESE BURDETTE
Sun1t'J1ng are a brother m
Charles E Burdette 57,
Accordmg to a center spokesman , 2 000 persons are
active!) regtstered on the clmtc's ftles Between 1,200 and 1,500 Gra nt Sf , Mtddleport. dted law and stsfer , Mr and Mrs
Emerson ( Beulah) Jones of
at the Veterans '
persons are seen each month b} the varwus personnel Wednesday
Hosp tfal
1n
Hun tin g ton M1ddleport , two n1eces, Mrs
employed the re
Lee (Sharon) Oav 1dson of
followmg an illness of several

News •• in Briefs'

went HS fm a s
tn ~ U gg~~ ~ lsra('(l rl'lrll'\'~ S I III\ S
m the 1ntt&gt;rests tt f ;m AI ublsnu~ lt pe-ace se t tlemt'nl.

\l; i iS et

eh armmg nf hun tu Cc\nu." and

and

Israel.

at 85 01e oldest

lt' l t' \1 SU1l\

--:--p~~---:1 N::uEn~~~r~:~·~~~t;-r~~;3 Meigs
l Standings I, ~~:~~··
:~ ·~ i H

II

BETTY OHLINGER
I

Main St.

Ashlnd 115, Wlbrfrce 76
Bowing Grn 82, Fmdlv 61
Cent St 83, Walsh ao
E lll 76, Mo St L 59
Hanover lnd 70, Xavr 78
He1dlbg 101, Bl uftln 88
KanMs 99 , Fordham 67
Kenvn 68, 0 Dom1n cn 57
Loyola Ill 70, M 1nn. 66
Mia mi 0 84, Ottrbem 60
Notre Dame 98, Bavlor 57
Oh1o St 108, Ste1son 71
Wllm 85 , Cen tr e ky 71
Southwest
McMurry 63, Angelo Sr 61
sw rex St 105, B(shop 89
Tex Tech 71, N Mex St 68
West
A•r Force 75, Colo 56
Stnfrd 69 Sola Clara 67

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
126 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, 0.

�•

'

• i

5--The Daily Sentinel, Midaleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. I, 1977
~-Th~

Datly Sentinel , Mtddl~port- Pom~roy, 0 .. Thursday,

~.

I, J9n

'

d€'fensi\'€'IJ than

we

were

bmight . · ~
" It \\·as l1ur third game m
fi n• da\ s and 1lUr first twn
wert&gt; \lo:tns . They {players )

were all excited and f11rgot
the basics tonight. " said the
. set\lnd year C11ach . " We ga\'e

up a lm of base·line dn Yes : ·

However, Miller didn 't
have any C'llmplaints about
the nffensive showing of his

Sophomore Kehin Ransey
It'd lilr scunng parade with 22
points. while Carter St.'ott, a

tht're a re a lot of more
Pxperienced people . Herb
knows ht• has a lot to l(\arn .
" but

11 Herb Williams. also a

freshman, had 18 p&gt;i nts and
16 rl!buw~tls bef()re departing
with 5:40 left.
Todd Penn. a fr eshm an
from Columbus LindenMcKtnle)· High School. drew
pra ist:' fr nm Mille r for
sparking a second- half surge
whirh tumed the ga me into a
rout .
" The litt l{' man played as
as a nynne tonight. Man ,

w~ll

he was really diggmg. That's
what it's all about. That 's
what you pay to see ."
Penn,

the

Buckeyes'

S!llall~st

yotlllg Buckeyes who went
ovpr the centurv ma rk for the

first timf this SNtson as they

sevfn assists .

record

player with his expPrie11re 10
the ('1 1Untry," Millrr sa id ,

6-2 freshman addrd 19 and 6-

player at !Hl, played
18 minutes and &amp;'ored II
points, including nine in the
second half. and dished out

kept
their
unblemished.

:1\'erat!Ull! :eN.:! JX'Ints and 15.3
rebnunds in Ohio State's
thrt.&gt;e Win S .
" Thert&gt; 's nn t a bt&gt;tu•r

M1ller usrd 14 players m
lhe- ~a me and fin• of them
set.'red m dfl uble f1~urf!s .

Miller also had some good
words for Williams. who is

(9JH

Uwu~h . "

StNS(ln, now 0-2, was ne-ver
in the ~a me after the middle

nf th e first half when the
Bu&lt;•keyes reeled off eight
straight points to take a 3()..20
lead.
Greg Guy led the Hatters
with 20 points, while Kevm
Tucker added 19 and Curt
Forreste r chipped in with 12.
Elsewhere
Wednesday
night, Bowling Green breezed
by Findlay, 82-lil : Miami
do wn~d Otterbein, 84.ji() ; and
· Han over (Ind .) surprised
Xavier , 79-78.
At Bowling Green, Joe
Faitte. last year's Ohio high
school Class A player of the
year. scored 26 pomts to lead
the .Falcons to their victory
over Findlay .
Faine, playing in his first
collegiate game, shot 12 of 19
from th~ field and made two
of two from the .line . The

Fal l'ons alsn

~N

help frnm

senior centl'r Hn.n Hanunyc
and juni11r transfer Duane

(lray who each c.•hipped in

with 18 points.
Findlay. ~\iii 'Pd by Jnhn
Walsh whn S('11rt'd 17 points.

led 3.1-30 at intermission .
Bt1wling Green is now 1-0

while the Oilers fip&lt; •rl a 2-1
seaSl"ln reeord.
Miami gol 16 points from
Handy Ayers as the Redl;kins
0pened their season at horne
with a win over Otterbein.
Otterbein, 0-1, took an early
S.O lead, but Ute Redskins
ti""lO k· over after that, leading
42-24 at the intermission and
never trailing in the second
ha lf.
Otterbein's D&lt;m Brough
was the game's high scorer
with 20.
Han&lt;&gt;ver 's 6-9 center Dan
Mullin hit a jumper from the
left side of the key with two
seconds left as the Indiana
squad handed winless Xavier
its second loss of the
season.

Mullin, who dumped in a
ga me~1ig h 2!i points, led a
surge in the final eight
minutes

that

saw

Han-

p;.~l·ed

Wednesda v
8o~ IO n

Xavier

with 23 pt'ints and Steve
Sp1very rhipped in with 12
markers.
In 11ther adinn , Virginia
Tt.•&lt;·h ovl'rwhclmed Ohio
Wesleya n 111-71. Heidelberg
za pped Bluffton 101.88 ,
Westminster 1Pa. l downed
Baldwin -Wallat·e 92 -65,
Defian ce beat Ohio Northern .
70-59. As hland cl obbered
Wilberforce 115-76, C'e~tral
State edged Walsh 83-80,
Capital defeated W11eeling
( W.Va .I 79-06, Wilminglm
bested Centre tKy .) 85-71,
Ke nyon
whipped Ohio
Domini ca n 68-57, Florda
S o uthern o utlasted
Muskingum 60-59 ,
Steubenville got by Robert
Morris (Pa. ) II0-76 and Mount
Union downed Thiel (Pa .) 'IS66. '
Nine games involving Ohio
teams are on tap tonight. The
top contests will see North
Carolina A&amp;T at Cincinnati,
Biscayne (Fla.) at Dayton,
Cleveland State al Ohio
University and Detroit at
Toted&lt;&gt; .

for Browns
BEREA, Ohi" tUPi l Dave
May s
wi:t
be
quarterbacking
th e
Clrvelund Browns Surutuy
when th ey battle th e
Chargers in &amp;:m ~ Dicgn , say s
C&lt;ach Forrest Gregg.
It 'II be Mays' third start at
the hebn, e~·en thou~h he was
banged arowtd quite a bil but not injured seriously - in
last SUnday's 9-ij loss lo the
IilS Angeles Rams.
"Dave larks experience,
true , but he's a very capable
quarterback with a good arm

Built with plent y of power , ease of
handl ing
Inten ded for light
profess ional
use or around the home or farm . Equipped with an
ant i -vribr ation mounted front handle to help dampen
vibr at ions .3nd a large etfecti,e silencer. The 65 is a
l ightweight yet powerful chain saw . ( Hand guard is
opet1onal. l

Football
New York Je t s
51Q ile&lt;J
def ens i v e en d AI Ou rton .md
cornerba ck Ron M~bra AS tr er
~gen t s

Oe lrort

SEE OUR SElECTION

Wilkinson Small Engine Sales &amp; Service
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Holiday weekend blackened
by ice and snow last night

"We will t.'all more, bulr11•f

Even so. Gregg and the rest
of Cleveland's coaches plan
W call more plays from the

•Mobile Home
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
• Tie-Downs
• - Awnings-Carports

The Daily Sentinel
.... ,..,,
..., ......

INSURANCE
REPAIRS

~ -.

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Crim e wan:! by ·

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES .
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
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Sonics

had

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five

struggled · to

was

''""""''
~ · o&gt;.::~.r( ' ~ ·.~~·~ ·.~~~~~~
~,.1
The Daily Sentinel
~
~
111 Co11rt Street
~
~ Pomeroy', Ohio
~

:t::: .· .· : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~·:::::::.·::.~·.·.·.·.·:::.:::·.·.::· ~

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WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CA'RD
WITH EACH GIFT SUBSCRIPTION
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t'(lllling nut
(OJ' US."

t.hl' Jjnn.s this season.
Scl'ond-year man David

((If

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Maddox also was pursued
by the Orioles and the
Chicago White Sox an d
reportedly signed for less
money with the Mets because
he wanted to return to New
York.
He is the first major league
free agent signed by the
Mets, who previously had
gambled only oo pitcher Tom
Hausman in the re.entry
draft circus.
Brohamer batted .257 in 59
games for the Chicago White
Sox last season . and is

expec ted to push Denny
Doyle , the Red Sox'
incwnbent ~nd baseman,
in addition to giving Boston
inlield
some
needed
insurance.
PARTY TONIGHT
RUTLAND - THe Rutland
Church ol Christ will hold a
skating party tonight at the
Skate-a-Way Rink on Route 7
near Chester. Those at·
tending are lo meet al the
church at 6:30p.m.

BAZAAR, SALE SET
A holiday bazaar and bake
sale will be held all day
Friday at the City Loan, East
Main St., Pomeroy, by the
Young Wives' Club of
Chester. All of the proceeds
will go to charity.

Gu.• Williams finished with
24 points and Slick Walts !til
two baskets in the final two
minutes as Seattle won its
second game oo the road . It
was the opening game for
O•ach Lenny Wilkins, the
t·ep\acement
for
Bob
Hopkins, who was fired Wednesday.
Bucks 120, Paeers 113:
Brian Winters and Marques
Johnson scored 21 points each
~· power Milwaukee. Indiana
was paced by 34 points from
Adrian Dantley, who tangled
all game with Ute Bucks'
Dave Meyers. Afterwards,
the two exchanged words
outside the Milwaukee locker
ronm and had to be separated
by police.

AT 391 N. 2nd Ave.

....

Job hunting

Hoop shoot finals

Indians can

slated Saturday

receive help

Pete Nibert announced
today that the 1977 Elks
Hoop Shot lfnals for
students lu Gallla and
Meigs Counties wUI be held
12 noon Saturday In the
Gallla Academy High
School Gym.
Six wiDDero tout ol t,OOO
pupils In the lwo counties
who were eligible lor the
event I will be determined
following Saturday's shoot
oil.
There will be three boy
winners In dHierenl age
categories and three girl
winners.
The local winners will be
honored with a banquet oo
Dee. 19. The state shoot oils
wUI be held lo Columbus lo
1 January.

A representative from the
Xenia, Ohio Indian Center
will be in Gallipolis on
Wednesdays at tbo Ohlb Job
Services Office located at 45
Olive St..(phone 446-1683 ) and
in Pomeroy on the lirst and
third Mondays of each month
at the CETA Olfice of the
County Courthouse (phone
992..1526). The representative
will provide assistance to
Native American Indians
who . are unemployed or
underemployed.
The Xenia Indian Center
has developed employment
opportunities as well as
training programs lor In·
dians lor the past three years.
Diane Green berg
will
represent the center in Gallia
and Meigs counties and the
surrounding

counti es

of

Athens, Hocking, Perry and
Vinton.

I

Washington
Report

GENE SMITH

Gene Smith is
bossing buses
The Rev. William Knittel,
pastor of the Middleport
United Pentecostal C~urch,
has appointed Gene Sniith,
Middleport, as bus ministry
director in charge of lour
buses in operation.
Mrs. Michael Zirkle Is bus
captain of the 66 passenger
bus, with Robert Shafler
driver . Their bus route
covers the Middleport and
Rutland area. Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Meadows are bus
captains of a 15-passenger
van covering the PomeroY.
and Harrisonville area . Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Craft are
bus captins of a 15-passenger
van covering the Chester and
Tuppers Plains areas, and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smith are
bus captains of a 48
passenger bus which covers
the Racine and Syracuse
area.
Anyone in those or
surrounding areas, who
would like transportation to
and from Sunday School may
caU 992·2502 or 992·3507.

Apple Grov,e
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cady,
Jerry and Lori of West · Jel·
ferson , 0. spent Thanks·
giving with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Groggle and family,
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
visited Raymond Bell at the
Arcadia
Rest
Home,
Coolville, Friday ·evening. On
Sunday Mrs. Bell visited Mrs.
Doris Hensler, Racine, and
they visited Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Hensler, Mr. and Mrs.
David Hensler, Portland Rd.
Mrs. Bell also visited Mrs.
Bessie Ervin at RaCine
Friday.

MR. AND MRS. JAN HAUCK, left, and their stylist,
Melody Bowman, met Terry Brtadshaw, the Pittsburgh
steelers' quarterback, at a recent sales meeting in
Houston, Tex. Mr. and Mrs. Hauck own Jan Hauck Hair
Unlimited, a full hair replacement studio for men in
Colwnbus. Bradshaw Is wearing a hair replacement from
the Allen Arthur Co. for which the Haucks are direct
distributors serving 23 counties in Ohio. The Haucks are
formerly of Middleport.
~

Brian and Shelly of Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Par·
sons, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Durst visited Mr. and Mrs.
By Clarence
Robert McKinney at Scott
Depot and called on Mr. and
Miller
« Mrs. Cla rence Roush at
Win[ield, W. Va. Friday.
What Is the public interest lorever: but the point is that
Mr. and Mrs. Jelf D\Jnohew
and how Is It determined? government has tried to do and children of Little
What kind of risks can and too much, too fast and aU too Hocking , Mr. and Mrs.
should government protect often has done it poorly. George Donohew and family
the public against? These and Congress in its quest to do ol Circleville, Mr. and Mrs.
other fundamental questions good has relinquished vast Greg Donohew of Colwnbus
underlying regulatory policy policy maklllg powers to Ute were Thanksgiving Day
have never been adeqlllltely President
and
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
addressed by Ute Congress, bureauer'!cy . Invariably , Donohew.
and loo often they are in· government solutions make
Thanksgiving weekend
tentionally ignored. matters worse. That is why gu~sts of Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Nevertheless, the ·public is more and more people are Wheeler were Mr. and Mrs.
questioning the proper role ol seeing government as the Bill Wheeler of Fremont, Mr.
government regulation in a problem, not the answer.
and Mrs. Ed Morris and
lree, open society. People
Does the government know family of Bowling Green, Mr.
want lo know the costs and best? Are bureaucrats any and Mrs. Larry Fo$\er and
benefits ol regulation and its wiser than the average children o[ Columbus.
consequences on their citizen• Should goverrunent
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hayman
freedom to make choices and protect people from them· and family of Laurel, Mo .,
·live their lives as they see fit . selves? I think not, and I am Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman
No matter how · well in- encouraged with the public and children of Westerville,
tended regulation may be, ii awakening to the evils of Mrs. Phyllis Young ol Midoften leads to undesired el- 1 federal paternalism. It is a dleport, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
lects. Take the government's 1 trend that can lead America Jewell and lamily ol Letart,
mandate lor fire-proofing to recapture the sovereignty W. Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Robert
children's sleepwear. In this of the individual over the Hart and family , Bruce Hart,
column a couple weeks ago, state, and make government Columbus, Lorna Bell were
we noted that while saving bound to the consent of the Thanksgiving weekend
children !rom flames, the governed.
guests o[ Mr. and Mrs.
government unintentionally
Gerald Hayman and Keith.
exposed children to greater
Thanksgiving weekend
cancer risks. In another case,
guests ol Mr. and Mrs.
the government has required
Vernon Donahue were Mr.
au 1984 automobiels to come
and Mrs. Kearney Donohue
equ fpped wfth air bags
and lalfllly of Marion, 0., Mr.
despite Ute superiority ·of
and Mrs. Robert Harden and
By Mrs. Herbert Roush·
Eric, also of Marion.
other less costly eras~
· Thanksgiving Day guests of
Thanksg· iving weekend
protection systems like
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Tom
Norris
safety belts.
·
were Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur guests ol Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
A further example ol ad· Gathers, Sandra and Johnnie Durst, Roger and Rick were
ministrative bungling can be
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Durst
seen in the Environmental o[ New Albany' Mr · and Mrs. and larnily of Springfield, Mr.
Protection Agency's (EPA) Larry Gathers and Kelly of and Mrs. Lawrence Durst
Mr. and Mrs.
order that cars be built wiUt Chillicothe,
Tom ·Norris and son Tom, lamily of Urbana, Mr. and
catalytic converters in order
Mrs. George Morris, Tammy
to clean up automobile Linda, V. J : and Roger, aU of Cleland of New Carlisle.
exhaust. These gadgets were Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle
Mrs. Pearl Whitman,
intended to convert the sulfur entertained with a Thanks- . Merrill Atkinson of Athens,
in gasoline into· sulfuric-acid giving dinner Wednesday at ·Paul Cross, Columbus, were
inist which wollld be released - their home in Racine. At- .Thaqksgiving Day guests of
at ground level. However,
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross.
this latter substance is one of tending were Early Roush, Paul will remain lor the
the most toxic agents con· Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mr.s. holidays.
Candi and Wendy Sumtributing to air pollution. Marlene Fisher, Amy, Molly
Here again Is an instance and Larry, Mr. and Mrs. Pete merfield o[ Sandwich, Ill.,
Shields, Lawrence Beegle,
where
government Mr. and Mrs. Beegle, Zane Robin Venoy of Pomeroy
bureaucrats attempted to and Tracy.
were Saturday night guests ol
correct one problem but
Mandy and Michael Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Don Beegle and attended Sunday School
created another
more
hazardous situation. It is a spent the 'Thanksgiving at the local Methodist
classic case o[ government holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Church.
Saturday dinner guests ol
oot looking before it leaps. · ~~t Gree~e, Washington, D.
Congress often delegates to
Mrs. Mary Roush, John Mr. and Mrs. Ronald RusseU
the bureaucracy wide powers
and lamily were Tom and
to fill In its broad mandate Shain spent Thanksgiving Carolyn Summerfield, Candi
with technical and ad· with Fred Shain at Racine. and Wendy ol Sandwich, Ill.,
Thanksgiving Day guests ol
minlstratlve detail. In doing
Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Roush Brenda, Steve Haggy,
so, however, Congress in
Stephanie and Brad, Mr. ~nd
effect allows agencies 'to and II!IIIily were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russell, Mr. and
make law - a power Mrs. Walter McDade of Troy, Mrs. Don Russell, Bob,
reserved exclusively under 0 ., Mr. and Mrs. Dick Smith Loraine and Robin Venoy of
tire Constitution to an elected ol Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Roush and children,
national legislature.
Discrimination is a good Greg Cundiff o[ Syracuse,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connolly,
example of how unelected
bureaucrallt make law. With
no direct authority [rom
·Congress lo use nwnerical
SAVE
IN HOWE
standards for reducing
UP TO
/0 HEATIN
G
COSTS
discrimination, HEW has
created a policy of imposirig
racial and sexual quotas on
schools.
The examples could go on

I

Apple Grove
News Notes

Pomeroy.
Mike Rbodes of Griffin Air
Force Base, Indiana spent a
week with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Rhodes and
Karen and attended Sunday
S..hool at the local Methodlst
Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
will host the U.M.W. Society
of the local church at their
home Tuesday, Dec. 13.
Ohio VaUey Grange 2612
Letart Falls will meet Dec. 8.
A turkey dinner will be
served at 6:30 p.m. Each
member is lo bring potluck. A
one dollar gift exchange will .
be held.
Earl and Lois Grimm of
Columbus visited Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. D\Jn Bell
and Lorna. Mrs. Bell and
Mrs. Grimm visited Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Roush at Racine.

Be ready for winter, get
where-you want to go safely
with a good set of snow
tires.

"

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FRY

had more than 60 RBI and
believe Kingman will give
them top to bottom loog-ball
strength, which can't be
pitched around.
Maddox batted ooly .262
with two homers and nine
RBI for the Baltimore Orioles
in 1977, but Mel General
Manager Joe McD\Jnald said,
"he's a fine talent and should
be a welcome addition to the

$60,246 RECEIVED
The office of State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson an·
nounced the distribution of
$34,629,593 in Aid to Dependent Children to 505,511
recipients in Ohio 's· 88
counties. · Meigs County
received $60,246 of the total
for 961 recipients.

FRY PAN

In addition to our

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------=.. ..·;-- - _--

to sign lucrative contracts

I~AC 0;I ·' /I

HOT DOGGER

HAND MIXER

·

l

million with the Chicago Cubs
Wednesday and announced
he was "looking forward to
playing 81 games in Wrigley
~"ield next season ."
The 6-foot, 6-inch, 210pound slugger, who played
for four teams last seatS&lt;m,
· was one of Utree free agents

1 Wednesday.
Outfielder 'Elliott Maddox,
troubled with injuries since a
brilliant season with the New
York Yank~s in 1975, sig ned
a
nve-year
package
estimated at $800,000with the
America 's No . 1
ut.
New York Mets and utility
Home Carpet
I
infielder Jack Brohamer
Cleaning
C.:~~. 'J I agreed lo a pact with the
System
f Boston Red Sox for a reported
·/ \
, I $JOO,OOO spread over three
yeats.
·- -------- --- -:--- . Kin~man, who has hit
many Of his gigantic homers
out of Wrigley Field, agreed
tn the Cubs' offer after
dickering with them and the
New York Yankees since the
end of the season.
The Cubs point out that
'
they had five players last
949-2S2S
season who had dou ble
Racine, 0 .
_ _ I figures in homers and each

Rent

PASTERY·.
TOASTER

ELEC.

Rt . 62 North

strikeouts, signed a five-year
contract estimated at $1

Get professional
results at a
fractior of the cost.

ELEC.
PITTSBURGH · (UPIJ Only two Pittsburgh Sleeter
players have been ruled out
. of Sunday's game with the
S..altle Seahawks. Defensive
ends John Banaszak and L.c .·
Greenwood, both of whom
missed the last three games
because of knee injuries, will
see no action Sunday.
Safety DoMie Shell worked
out Wednesday for first time
in two weeks and reported no
problems with the right knee
that caused him to miss the
'last two games.

By FRED DOWN
UP! Spurts Writer
Dave Kingman, the erratic
slugger who hils baseballs
ove r apartment buildin gs
behind ball parks but bats in
the .220s with lrequenl

MORE
FOR

Show her you
ca &lt;e with a Gilt
she'll really use - -We have a selection
of personal and kitchen
appliances that's second
to none - - - - And at
.Prices you'll go for .

tur U1e Spurs with 2U pcdnts.

Kingman signed
for $1 million

for New Orleans two seasons
ago, ·
He scor ed seven of his 17

~

Bulls.
Braves 105, Hawks 93:
Billy Knight fired in 32
Division .
points and Swen Naler snared
Gail Gmdrirh, who playrd a game.fiigh 13 rebounds as
lhe entire game with Buffalo downed the injuryMarav icb nut . lmd a season- ridden Hawks . For 'the
high 27 points for New Braves, Chuck Williams and
Orleans
while
Truck Wil Jones scored season
Unbinson had a gameNgh 32 highs o[ 22 and 18 points,
p1ints and 21 reboun~s .
respectively. Atlanta was led
Elsewhere in the NBA, by Ollie Johnson JVith 19
&amp;1ston defeated L1ticago, 98- points.
92, Buffalo beat Atlanta, 105- Pist,.ns 104, Lakers 98:
93, Detroit took lils Angeles,
Bob Lanier scored 30 points
104-98, Washington stopped and teamed with AI Skinner
San . Antonio, 116-105, Seattle· ~· lead a last-period rally as
trimmed Kansas City, 8tHI4, Detroit won its second
and Milwaukee topped conscu tive ga me after
Indiana, 120-113.
dropping six •traight. Norm
CeUies 98, Bulls 92:
Nixon had 23 points and Earl
Veteran
Dave
Bing, Talwn 20 lor lhe !..akers. ·
replacing injured Charlie Bullets 116, Spurs 105:
Scott, scored a season-high 21
Milch Kupchak tossed in 26
points and Dave Cowens points, Phil Chenier 24 and
added 12 points and 14 Elvin
Hayes
21 as
rebounds to lead a fourth· Washington contro ll ed the
quarter surge that sent offensive boards en route to
ll&lt;&gt;Ston past Chicago. Artis its victory over San Antonio.
Gilmore had 32 points for the George Gervin was high man

and doing Uw job

[)Qug Collins had 19 JX'ints
and Lloyd Free l8 for
Philadelphia.
The J azz, wit h Pete,
Maravich ·sidelined with a

ORDER FROM OUR REGULAR

~ ~~~~ .'~~~·~

( ICW IIIC

t'omeba ck. " Every night it

20 SP. BLENDER

ELSEWHERE....••....•••••.••..• :...... '26.00 YR.

~

seems like S(IJl'leone else is

by Henry Bibby, wh o played

hired as assi$lant CQach. He
served as Russell 's assistant
until he was named Russell's
successor on a one·year
contract.
At the time, Hopkins said
he wanted ooly a year lo
prove himself.

OHIO &amp; W, VA .....................•22.00 YR.

~

damugcd cartilage at

Practical Gift...

victories as Hopkins tried

everything he could think of,
including pep talks and lineup
chang&lt;'S, to turn the team
around.
"For a U of us il was a very
difficu lt thing," Wilkens told
reporters at Kansas City. " I
want to chan ge our mental
attitude immediately. Sometimes we've been playing
with what looks lik e a
defeatist attitude. We will
change some of the things we
do on the court, but it's
. nothing that can show up as
fast as tonight."
In the second year of Bill
RusseU's foiU'-year reign as
Sonic coach, Hopkins - a

of his own .

f&lt;•rd Hnspital Wednesday
and is done playing football

rcJJJ!lVe

the Perfectly

Going into the Kansas City
the

shatterin~

·The mountain ous Phila delphia center hit a IS-loot
jump shot with three seconds
remaining as Ute 76ers fought
back to dump the Jazz, 117114, lifting U1e 76ers lo their
!Otl1 strai~ht victory.
1110 76ers, who have found
new life since. •witching
coaches, rallied from a !9point deficit in the third
quarter to • give Billy Cunningham his 14th win in 15
games.
"That's not the f irst tune
happened,"
this
has
Cun ningham sa id of the

bone spur, were vietimized

a

~

Then Darryl Dawkins did
some

WHY
PAY

many games at home ."
game,

crowd

Asso ciation game,

given the option of stepping
down or being fired, " said
Hopkins. "I guess you could
say I was fired . !think I had a
fair shot. But the bottom line
is winning and we just
haven 't been doing that. I
think the main reason I'm
gone is because we lost so

Looking for just the right gift for that certain someone?
How about present that will be good at all seasons of the
year? A subscription to the Daily Sentinel and Sunday
Times Sentinel .
A coupon containing subscription information necessary
· for your gift giving is contained in this ad for your
convenience. Fill it out and send it in together with your
check.

AMPI, E SAM WINS
t.F:BANON , Ohio (UPI) Ample Sam, pacrd by Roger
Plununer, won the featured
eighth race at Lebanon
Raceway Wednesday night,
going the mile in 2:10 2..1 and
paying $29, $12,60 and $5.20.

PONTIAC, Mich . (UP! ) Tight end Charlie Sanders
tulderwen\ knee surgery to

or

record~shattering

poinls in U1e last quarter as
the 76ers upped their record
tn 16.,1, tops in 01e Atlar.tic

of 35,077 was on hand at the
Louisiana Superdorne
Wednesday night - the
largest ev~r for a regularse•son National BaskelbaU

paying $11.40 and $3, and
IJttle Napoleon was third,
paying $3 . The J.l daUy
double of B. T. Honey and
Parkway Joe paid $199.80.
Acrowd ol8,884 bet $90,144.

abilil)' to function t•n the
ficl~ ," Gregg relatt~l. ··We' ll
be mnre specific c.~bnul what
we want called in c('rtuin
si tuations.
'''l11en , if the nffensr is
unsuccess ful. Dave won't
have to bear the brunt unci
burden of it not working . Wr
made the mistake· in 1975
t'han~ing qUarterbacks tl l(l
mUch. It just splits the team
and ta uses a lot or
problems."
Mays is fillin g in for Brian
Sipe , who 's out for the season
wiU1 a fra ctured shoulder
bone .

this team and winning ."

A

l.{lne Mountain was second,

enough to take away his

and a good mind," Gregg said

BY FRED UEF
UPI Spurts Wrl(er

••

cousin of Russell's -

fr~~~! f~iJ~:-~1 ~~ ~?~
.. '" - .. . . . .... .,....

changes would be down in the
National Basketball
AssoCiatiolt standings for the
Sonics and out of the roaching
ranks for himself after only
22 games of the 1977-78
season.
The firing of Hopkins came
in a sudden aMouncement by
Sonic General Manager Zollie
Volchok Tuesday at Kansas
City, several hours before the
Sonics' game aga inst the
Kings.
Lenny Wilkens, director of
player personnel and former
player..;oach of the team,
was tabbed to take over as
head coach immediately and
Hopkins was given a new
assignment of director of
scouting .
"I stepped down . I was

TtCittl end ( hM itf'

si delines .

after Wednesday's workout
al the team's BaldwinWallace College training
facility. " We believe in him
and that he can move the
team. He 's capable of taking

the

ln tu red r eserv e ItS! and roolo:.ie
runr11n9 ba c k. Glenn Ca pr lola
wa'5 ~i qn ed

noo ooo

Sonics' Hopkins .is fired
SEATTLE (UPI J - When
Bob Hopkins was promoted
from assiStant to head coach
of the Seattle Supersonics this
year, he promised, ·'It's a U
going to be changes."
But he certainly didn't
intend that the most evident

Basrball
Cllrnf' to lf'r r~l5 Wt lh

wa s p!a ced on

35,077 see Dawkins' heroics

tree aqen l Ja N.
Brohatu ('r
reportedly tor a thr ~c yel'lr
contra c t wor th appr oll; ml dl!'l y

CHAIN SAWS
Rightjor Any Cutting Job

s ... nctt&gt;rs

By Untied Pres.s trH t&gt;rna t io nal

call hikes ,

over come back from a 71-06
deficit.
N1ck Oaniels

Sports transactions

Mays will

Bucks romp to third straight victory
United Press lntr-rnatfonal
Tile. Ohio St~ltt&gt; Bur kt' ~ ('S
l'ha lked up thr tr thtrd
stra1ght ,.i . .·torr ilf t h(' sea54.1 ri
Wrdnrsday night. but C''"" ·h
Eldon
Miller
wa s n' t
cmnpiPtely satisftt"'tl.
"It was a good game fr nm
thE' standpomt Uult se n~ral
penp!C' gnt a chanc£' tn play."
said Miller aft~r ht• watr.hrd
the Bucks romp to a 108~ 71
win nYer Stetson \ Fla .l. " But
I'm s ure wt~' re b(.&gt;tler

•

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RUTlAND FURNITURE

ARNOLD GRATE
742 -2211

TtltS un tQue cOmDtnltt on wOod 110"1'11
1nd ltreplaee co~er p.~ne l onltalla In
mtnutes w•lhout m~son ry alteralfonl
II b~ouns season!(! woO&lt;I tnrougn out
ttll ntghl. will heal your home o~ nd
cook your mu11 Ata.o greet for
c:ampa , UblnS , lkHOdgtl lf\d II In

emergency unit in cue ot power fai'·
urea F'trebo-. · 18 ~ high ; 1&amp;'· wide; 2A""
deep Ooor Open ing· 9'" •13··. Wtigl'lt :

1501DS Btctl Ptntl · Std . J.t'h " h iQh

u ·· WIM

• Hof'lzonro v-oroovu
• 29" I( 26" )I 32'11" hioh

•

Other altel 1\'ailabte.

a~
GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

........_

___

- '"~~ - .,...,~,

'

No. 79.001

• Afoldowoy work center
• Giant vise.and §OW"horse
• Double odj"ustment le11ers

POMEROY. CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
of Building Since 1915

�6- Thr Dally Sent mel. Moddleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Dt-&lt;·. 1, 1977

Bob Evans Farms' sales up
' COL.UMB US - Bob Evans

uicrease over $32,948,492 for

board, figures for net income

F a m 1s, Inc ., the midw est

the same period a year ago.

per com!llon share have been

sausage and restauran t
company. ha s report ed.s.1Les
of $38,775,900 for its forst ha lf
end ed October 28, whoch

Net income was $2,489,268 or adjusted to refle&lt;:t two 1977 · ~"-1~..;
$.98 per shar~ compared to st ock splits: a 3 for 2 spht
$2,318,289 or S.94 in 1976.
March 18, and a· 4 for 3 split
t\cco rdi n ~ to Daniel E. effecti•·e Nov.mber 18.

re present s an 18 percen t

Evan s. chairman of the

Evans

w;:.:~ld ~I· ::i~l&gt;::!~~t:&gt;;S~~~-&lt;:S~i&gt;;:!:~s:;:~&lt;::;~~

~

attrib ut ed
i ncreas~

company 's

W additional

\'i

•

Rutland Garden Club

the

sales to

resta urants in

operation. o•·erall increased
. restauran t sales, and inr&lt; . creased sausage volume.
~ ·He said that increases in
~ consolidated net income for
l'! the half were achieved ex·
~ rlusively by the restaurant
u operations .
\'i " Net income . actua lly
\'i decreased in the sausage
II! business primarily because
~ of lncreased raw matenal

ll:

\'i( )fl
r~

~

~

\'i
\'i

~
W

\'i

GUITARS
~ GAMES
~ TONKA TRUCKS
li:

tl

~

u:

\'i

"t!
fl

~

,

•

~

u

~
~

and

ne w market

start-up

costs," Evans said.
The new market costs have
been incurred in and around
.St. Louis, Mo. where th~
compa ny has expanded
sausage distribution to inelude 12 middle west and
eastern 'states. Bob Evans
Farm s-'
co mpany~own"ed
restaurant chain was started

j',,

in 1968 and now totals 33
country sty le restaurants in
Ohio, Mich ig an , lndiana ,
Kentucky and West Virginia.
Sales for the wholly-o"11ed
restaurant subsidiary for the

\'i
~

~ ERTL TOYS

\

•
CLAUD IA ROUSH at new dri ve. through
facility.

first

~ FARM
~ EQUIPMENT

~~ TRUCKS

s lx

m onths

JJ:&lt;.:ANNIE NEASE at the new walkup tell er windows.

Real cut
•
m
taxes
promised

Public to visit
remodeled bank

Open House will be observed at the Racine Home National
Bank, Racine, on Monday, Dec. 5 from 1 to 6 p. m. to welcome
$15,217,000 as compared to customers and friends to see .the newly remodeled facility .
$10,871 ,000 in 1976. Earnings·
An added attraction will be Archie Griffin of the Cincinnati
were $1,243,1100 or $.49 as Bengals and David Diles of ABC Sports who will attend the
compared to $911 ,000 or $.36 special occasion . They also will be sellmg and autographong
last year.
their new book, " Archie ".
The bank has added new walkup teller windows, a drive
through facility. new accounting deparunent and large
parking Jot. David Parsons was general contractor of the
remodeling.
No business will be conducted inside the bank Monday
LETART
FALLS
from 1 to 3 p. m. The drive~n part, however, will be open for
Relatives came here from a business.
distance to attend funeral
The bank extends a special invita tion to ever:; one to
services for General Hall at attend. Refresh ments will be served.
the Letart Fall s United
Brethren Church Monday.
n[ Solomon
Cla rk. 51,
CHARGED
They were Mr. and Mrs. WOMAN
YO UNGSTOWN, Ohio Yf1Ungstn w11, at a motel in
Lyman Calhoun , Mr. and ( UPl ) - Annie Gross, 25, nearby Liberty Township.
Mrs. Everette Fincher, Mrs. Yriw 1gstown , was charged
Clark was shot to death
Ed Kitchen, all of Gallagher,
Tuesday
night and died at
Wednesday with agb'favated
W. Va .; John Holland and .. nlurder
Northside
Hnspilal in Youngin the shnntong death
daughter, Lansing, W. Va.;
stown.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Trwnan, Summersville, W.
Va. ; Mrs. Cecil Fleslunan
and sons of Norfolk, Va.;

\1

were

WASH INGTON (UPl ) President Carter promised
the American people Wednesda y he will propose
substantia l tax cuts in 1978 as
pl)rt of his tax reform
package.
Although Carter and his
aides have long promised
rcduet.&gt;d taxes next year, it
was the first time the
president personally has
suggested the cuts will be
large. He said he has
assurances of support from

Relatives come
for Hall rites

~
~

· ~

GUNS
And Many Morel

BUDDY L

TYPEWRITERS
Was

15.95

1

Mrs. Frank Pregen:zer and

children, Virginia Beach;
Mr. and Mrs. William D.
Reese and family, Marietta ;
DaviQ Reese, San Pablo,
Calli. ; Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Fisher
and
family ,
Charleston, W. Va.

IRST ALERT

Slrioke Alarm

DEC. 5, 1977
9:00A.M.

$1795

Gotcha Gun

$1499

You are invited to aMend
the Grand Opening of

All Amity
BILLFOLD.S

rookie ' s Fashions
, &amp; Kaylor's
Gift &amp; Antique

REDUCED!!

Pine
Tree

$15

West Bend

Beans &amp; Stuff
SLOW COOKER

Located in Downtown New
Haven, W. Va. Stop in and
register tor free door
prizes .
No
purchase
necessary to win . Don 't
miss our openinCJ sale.

PRO
DRYER

Scotch

Coffee
Maker

$}299
99
POLAROID ,

PRONTOI B

CAMERA

'29

CLAtKIJ.l..

CRAZY BABY

$}699

95

S.YLVANIA

CURLER

Ferguson's
warchest

Mrs. John Evans, Racine,

mat e rnal
grandparents.

g r eat·

one isn't over yet," has now

asked for a recount of the
recu W1t.

·LOW 'GRADE LOGS

DUTTON .DRUG CO.

'

SIZE········ • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • · · • • • • • • • ••• 6~ ' thru 25 "

LENGTH •• ••. •• •.•..••• 6'4",7'8",8 '6",11'and12'6"

~ THE SHOE BOX
~

Middleporl , Ohio

~

~

-~-~-=~-~~I&lt;:!~~~NI'&lt;O!I!IIIl'&lt;=lr&lt;o!J

in

Administra ti on offi c ials
. ha ••e been talking about a $22
billion cut - divided onethird for business and l'!'othirds for individuals.
Ca rter told a nationally
broadcast news conference
he wants to cut taxes next
yea r to offset th~ affects of
ta• increases he expects will
be enacted this year - in·
eluding hig her Soc ial
Security rates and ene~gy
taxes.
He explained that these
mc reases ca rmot be avoided ,
no ting that the Soc ial
Security. system needs the
in c reased reve·n ue and
energy taxes tend to disco urage consumption.
" I would hope that all those
changes in the law that bring
a bout any tax increase will be
concluded in 1977, and in 1978
there will be substantial tax
reductions and combined
with that will be an adequate
proposal for tax reform ,"
Carter said.
SON BORN
Mr. a~ d Mrs. Tom King, 343
E. Syca more, Columbus, are
announcing the birth of their
first child, a son, Nicholas
Vincent. The eight pound, six
ounce baby was born on Nov.
28. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Nichols of Bay Village, and
the paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Robert King
of Route I, Middleport, Mrs.
OJ eva Cotterill of Middieport,
Route I, is a great·
grandmother.

CHRISTMAS" IDEA.
SHE'S DREAMING

~
~
~

w

w

\

W

portable case)

t • (Complete

PAY BY.MEASUREMENTOR WEIGHT

with

a

• One Year Free Service

W•

Auxiliary prepares gifts

YOURORISM45 LB...
I:Z ~nESEGFr

I
I

. .~

ON CARHARTT
AND WRANGLER
CLOlHING

IMMMM
~~

II

~~~::

ssooo

I•ww•w•ww
.

~
~

«
~

s 1. 10 Per Thousand Ft. or $12 .00 Per Ton

~

JACKSON PALLET CO.
1 Miles West of Wilkesville on St. Rt. 114
CALL669.4734 BEFORE MAKING DELIVERY

~
1!$

11.

Not tonight . . .
its against
the law Carlo

I
I
1I

McDaniel family visits

It's ~our night to shine........

Leather

Free Instructions

L ""' ""' 1&lt;:! iS::&lt;"""""" Y&lt;:l .

AGREAT SELECTION
OF MEN'S &amp;
LADIES' LEATHER
COATS AND JACKETS

50

I

M~~

'"MIERIIIY CHRISTMAS'' WITH A~~

.

THE
SEWING
CENTER
Oq The T
In Middleport

CANDY CLASSES

~

tf!: • Also many other sewing
11. gifts &amp; Holiday fabrics.

I

"""!""I

i
5
5
i

~

~

POLLY"S POINTERS

·;

SEWING MACHINE

~
~

FRIDAY
BEDFORD Towns hip
Trustees Friday 6:30 p.m. at
home of Helen Swartz, clerk.
HOLIDAY B~AAR and
RliTLAND-Plans for par- gram included flower ar- Most." She said that the basic brown.
bake sale, Friday , all day at
ticipation in the Christmas rangements using weathered requireme nt for good
Slides showing flowering Ci ty Loan, Pomeroy , by
flower show to be staged this wood by Mrs. Alice houseplants I is the right houseplants were shown by Young Wives Club, Chester,
weekend at the Pomeroy Grossman, OAGC judge.
amount of sun or shade, Mrs. Ann Webster with Mrs. with all proceeds to go to
Elementary School were
An invitation was read periodic feedings, water as Carl Denison reading in- charity.
made at the Monday night from the Gallipolis State In- needed, repotting when pot· formation on the plants.
UMWA SUPPORTERS
meetinij of the Rutland stitute inviting members to. bound, and slaked if needed.
An auction of food and Club meeting, 10 •·OJ· Friday
Garden Club held at the home attend a Christams party on She spoke of cleaning the flowers was held with Mrs. at . E~ Club in Pomeroy ;
of Mrs. V. E. Nelson.
Dec. 6 6:30p.m. at the dining leaves and said that dust can Denison as the a~ctioneer . beef money and tickets to be
Mrs. Ralph Turner presid- pavilion. Those wishing to at- be removed with a damp Thetravelingprize was won turned in at meeting .
ed at the meeting with Mrs. tend should send a note by cloth, sponge, or ordinary by Mrs. Harry Williamson
SATURDAY
Nelson giving devotions using ·Nov. 30 to reserve a meal and tissues. Mist sprays, tepid with Mrs. Vernon Weber proANNUAL CHRISTMAS
articles from the SWlShine then take along a $2 gift for showers in bathtub or sink viding the prize for the next Bazaar of Ohio Eta Phi
Magazine, "I Walk with the gift exchange.
are also ways of cleaning meeting.
Chapter Sorority 9 a.m. to 5
Him " and "It Takes
Mrs. Paul Winn exhibited plants, she reported. Mrs.
Refreslunents were served p.m. Saturday at Trinity
Courage." The creed and col· an autWM arrangement, Nicholson also suggested that by tbe hostess to those ~arne Olurch, Pomeroy; numerous
lect were given in unison and "Melody and Mwns." It was plants be turned occasionally and Mrs. C. 0. Chapman, homemade Christmas items
members responded to roll noted that several members to keep them in better shape Mrs, Chris Diehl, Mrs. Roy and decorations and a bake
call by giving a Thanksgiving had taken flowers to their and that a teaspoon of lime be Snowden, and a guest, Mrs. sale.
memory.
respective churches during added to flower pots to help Thomas Hill, cousin of Mrs.
SOUP SUPPER - ChristMiss Ruby Diehl reported the past month. The annual keep the leaves from turning Atkins.
mas bazaar, Portland
on the fall regional meeting Christmas party was set for
Elementary PTO at school,
held on Nov. 5 at Rio Grande. Dec. 12 at 6 p.m. at' Crows
Saturday, 5 to 9 p.m.
Others attending from the Steak House. From there
HOMEWARD BOUND
Christmas gifts for veterans were wrapped at the
club were Mrs. Turner, .Mrs. , members will go to the home
Singers
from
Barboursville
Wednesday
night workshop of the Junior American
James Titus, Mrs. Charles of Mrs. Paul Winn lor a party
will be at Rutland Church of
Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster Posl39. Assisting in the
Lewis, and Mrs. James and $2 gift exc hange.
God Saturday, 7:30 p. m.
project were left to right, Robin Campbell, Paula Kloes,
Nicholson. Mrs. Charles Kuhl Members are to take
Public
invited.
'
Pam
Powers and Anna Wiles, and not pictured, Rhonda
of Pomeroy was installed as Christams flower arBAZAAR
by
the
Middleport
.
Reuter
.
regional director by Mrs. Joe rangements for the Athens
Polly Cramer
I
United
Pentecostal
Ladies.
Bolin. State officers were Menta i Health Center.
Auxiliary, Saturday 10 to 5
recognized and several
Mrli. Virgil Atkins, prop.m. at the New Haven Comawards were presented. The gram chairman, presented
munity
·Building. Homemade
Her cupcakes fall apart
Rutland Garden Club receiv· Mrs. Nicholson who gave an
gift
items
and baked goods.
ed a rating of "good" on its article on houseplants entitlDEAR POLLY - I would in a regular size to match the
"
YE
OlE
CHRISTMAS
yearbook. The afternoon pro- ed "Little Things Count like to know how to keep
Gifts for the veterans at the and favors all carried out the tags. The unit also received a
sheet and use a com- GATHERING", Bradbury
thank you note from Mrs.
cupcake papers from pulling plimentary plain color for the School, Saturday, 4 to 7 p.m. Athens Mwt..i Health Center holiday motif.
·
'
During las t night' s Wilma Sargent for new
II!MI!Mt=II!IIIIIIW IIIWIIIWIIOII l'&lt;:&lt;IOIII WIOOII""I!M I!MI!MI!OII
away from the cupcakes after middle pillow and get two spaghetti supper, country were wrapped at a workshop
they have cooled. This complete bed changes out of store, sweet shop, handmade of the Junior American workshop, the girls also Christmas cards ~onated to
1~
Legion Auxiliary of Drew · prepared 100 Chri stmas the Senior Friends Program.
happens every Ume I bake three sets of pillowcases.
crafts.
A donation was made to the
containing candy
them. - MRS. G.D.
When using shams on bed
YE OLD CHRISTMAS Webster Post 39 held Wednes· stockings
"Yanks
Who Gave" fund .
the
birthday
party
canes
for
day
night
at
the
home.
of
Mrs.
DEAR MRS. G.D. - I do. pillows use inexpensive foam Gathering Saturday at
'11le
Eighth
District J unior
at
the
Chillicothe
Veterans
Harry
Davis,
advisor.
not have an answer to your· filled pillows in the shams Bradbury Elementary School
conference
was
announced
on
Dec.
8.
Hospital
y
Mr
s
.
Davis
T
oda
quesdon but am sure we will inStead of your good down 4 to 7 p.m. Bazaar and,
fo
r
April
15
at
the
Pomeroy
Plans
were
made
to
visit
delivered
the
gifts
to
the
be hearing from some of lbe filled pillows and you do not spaghetti dinner.
Post
Home.
Paula
Kloes,
the
Arcadia
Nursing
Home
at
Athens
and
also
veterans
many good coots among our have to switch at night. saves
SUNDAY
Eighth
District
Junior
presi·
presented then with cans of and also the patients at the
readers. - POLLY.
dressing and undressing
CHURCH SERVICES at cookies and candy, Santa Young Home in Pomeroy, dent , will pres id e. The
those shams every day. Laurel Cliff Free Methodist favors made by the juniors Dec. l5.
I
Departmeni Junior conDEAR POLLY-I have DOROTHY H. .
Church Sunday. Morning containing potato chops, pads
I
ference
will be held in Canton
During the bus iness
discovered a great. way to · DEAR POLLY - There are worship 9:30, Sunday School
on
May
13 at the Imperial
clean water marts off ol a many procedures for ridding 10 :30, evening worship and pencils, cards , and candy meeting thank you notes were House . Christma
s cards were
stainless steel sink. I rubbed one's home of pests, I SUI&gt;- ' service 7 p.m . Dedication and another Ch ristmas read from Dan Medley of
signed
for
Sherrie
Marshall,
mine with petroleum jeUy so pose, but our favorite harm·'· service Sunday, Dec. 11, at pa ckage containing an Hardings Cottage, Xenia, for
Dorothy
I,.eifheit,
and Bill
orange, comb and Kleenex. Halloween cards sent to the
it now sheds water a.nd should less and totally effective 9:30a.m.
STOP
REGISTER
Rovnak,
"i!dopted"
friends
of
Ali of the gift items were boys, and from Richard Com·
there be any spots left they way to evict mice is to
the
juniors.
FAMILY
NIGHT
·
Obser
stock
of
the
Chillicothe
prepared by the juniors at the
can be swished away with the sprinkle peppermint or
It was decided not to have
vance,
Sunday
evening
at
the
Hospital for Christmas name
Wednesday
night workshop.
band. - ANTHONY.
spearmint extract in their
a
Christmas
party but to have
Heath
United
Methodist
In
the
boxes
for
the
three
DEAR ANTIIONY - My hide-a-ways. They ·will abGIFT CERTIFICATE
one
at
Valentine's
Day.
Church,
6
p.m.
Mrs.
Norman
male
veterans
were
dress
personal thanks for this dicate the premises im Mrs.
Davis
served
chips,
Wayland
is
chairman
for
the
shirts
,
ties,
cologne
,
~~; To be given away Dec. 23 . ·No
Pointer. My stainless steel mediately and for good.
dip,
Lool·Aid,
and
homemade
dirmer
with
everyone
to
take
Christmas
cards
and
stamps.
I ' purchase necessar·y. Need not be
sink now looks satiny and
II ants are a problem
candy.
MONEY COMES
I ·_., present to wiri.
'·
smooth but I suggest thai the sprinkle talcum powder on a covered dish and their own For the one female veteran
table
service.
November
gasoline
excise
of
there
were
three
pairs
petroleum jelly not be applied their trails or wherever they
TWIRLING CONTEST, hose, jewelry, cosmetics, a tax checks totaling $9,871,245
wltb too heavy a hand - a gather and soon they will be
Wahama
High School Sunday blllfold, and Christmas cards wer~ distributed by , State
little bit goes a long way. conspicious by their absence.
Auditor
Thomas
E.
under
sponsorship
of and stamps.
POLLY.
: If roaches invade sprinkle
Ferguson's
office
on
Nov.
30
Mrs.
·Davis
conducted
a
Wahama
Athletic
Boosters
DEAR POLLY - I find it dry boric acid where they
I
to
Ohio
counties,
townships,
party
for
the
veterans
awar·
and
directed
by
Mrs.
Judy
more practical and more congregate. These are
economical to use three nature's own repellents and Riggs. Event sanctioned by ding prizes to the winners of cities and villages. Amounts
regular size pillows on my not man-made pestlrldes or National Baton Twirling _ games . . She also served received by Meigs com·
FLORENCE, Ore. (UPI ) king size bed rather than two poisons. They are not harm· A"'!n. is open to all twirlers. refreshments of ice cream munities include Middleport, The city of Florence may
$2,160;
Pomeroy,
$2,301
;
snowmen,
cake,
and
coffee.
Open Fri. and Sat. ti II 8 p.m.
MONDAY
king size pillows. I buy a ful to children or pets so on.e
have stumbled upon the
MIDDLEPORT
GARDEN Her table arrangements, Racine , $600 ; Rutland, $531 , simplest and most effective
of
pillowcases
matching
set
has total ecological safety.'--~---~~l!lll!l""!~l~!~i~i~~~~~~~~·
and
Syracuse,
$701.
plates,
napkins,
mint
cups
Club, Monday, with a dinner
MR. D.H.D.
way ·of checking population
DEAR MR. D.H.D. - at 6:30 p.m. at Crow's Steak
growth - a ban on sexual
Thank you lor your letter but House. Meeting will follow at
inlercoW'se.
1 do not think your last two 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
An ordinance passed by the
sentences should Include the Carl Hori\y. There will be a
City Council this week makes
boric acid for roaches (often gift exchange and members
it illegal to have sex "while in
used for this 1 as my druggist are reminded to take gifts for
or in view uf a public or
Informed me that should the patient' at the Athens
Thanksgiving dinner guests James Tolle and children, private place."
children or pets partake of Mental Health Center.
of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Jinuny and Anita June,
When the City Council
SOLVE THEM HERE!
RACINE CHAPTER Order. McDaniel, Sr., Middleport, Leesburg ; and Mr. and Mrs. passed the ordinance, council
too much il would be
of Eastern Stars installation were their two children and Frank L. Hawley and members thought they were
poisonous. - POU..Y.
Polly will send you one of of officers Monday, 7:30 p. m. their families, Mr. and Mrs. children, Gregory, Christy forbiddin g lovema kirq in
her
signed thank-you All Racine members to bring David C. Jacks, Sr., and Ann and son, Mark, Colum- public - and in ~'' · ate
~
newspaper coupon clippers if covere&lt;l dish.
children, David, Jr., Patrick bus.
places that can be Vlewed
Earlier
she uses your favorite
in
the
week
Mr.
and
... so glow from head to toe in pretty, flirty
Neal,
and
Bridget
Renee,
Mr.
from public places.
FRIDAY
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
footing. Here. playing your kind of music. T·
The council didn 'I realize
Revival services now in and Mrs. Paul L. McDaniel, Mrs.' Paul L. McDaniel were
her column. Write POLLY'S progress at the Church of the Jr. and daughter, Michelle visited by Mr. McDaniel's that it had ruled out sex in
strap style in silver. Mid-heel or higher heels.
POINTERS in care of this Nazarene in Racine through Dawn, all of Middleport. eldest brother and his wife, private until days afte r the
newspaper.
Dec. 4, 7:30p.m. nightly. The They were joined by Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ciaren&lt;-e E. ordinance was passed.
City officials said they will &lt;
Rev. Richard E. Havens is McDaniel's parents, Mr. and McDaniel of Hobson Road in
the evangelist. The public is Mrs. Arthur C. Barr, Grant remembrance of Mrs. Paul not enforce th e new
, REVIVALBEGINS
ordinance ·until it can be
Cordially invited to attend. St., Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. McDaniel's recent birthday.
RUTLAND - Revival
amended.
services will begin tonight
December · 1 and continue
through Sunday, Dec. 4, at
Apple Grove
the Rutland Church of the
Mrs. June Wickersham and
Nazarene with Rev. Melvin
son
Jeff and Kim Jarrell
H. Miller, pastor of the
Thanksgiviilg with Mr ..
.
spent
Columbus Grace Church of
and
Mrs.
Don Hodges at
the Nazarene, evangelist.
Rev. Miller is vice president Columbus.
of the Central Ohio District
~ youth. This is a youth revival,
but all ages are .invited.
Services nightly at 7 p. m.
Two Hour Classes
and 10:30 a. m. Sunday. A
cordial invitation is extended
'5.00
to the public.
You'll
make
over a dozen
i
different
candles,
SINGERS COMING
i
chocolate
covered
RUTLAND
- . The
cherries, coconut bon-bons
w Homeward
Bound singers of
and take it all home with
Barboursville, W. Va., will be
you. '
MEN'S PRI~ED FROM
at the Rutland Church of God
Phone
~ Saturday, Dec. 3, at 7:30p. m.
Diana Boggs
5
TO
The public is invited to at·
446-7903
tend.

Choose

OF A "WHITE"

.-----------------~~
WANTED
5

........· gs~
o.

Home National Bank.

close for the holidays, outstanding wildlife prints by the
rt
famous pa inter, Jo hn A.
Athens, will present a concert Ruthven , will be on exhibit.
at 4 o'clock. Mrs. Wilkin will These prints may be pur- .
include a var'iety of classical chased an d wou ld be
numbers during the first half treasured Christmas gifts .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
of her program, followed by The prints are priced intraditional Christmas music dividually, both fr amed and Auditor Thomas E.' Ferguson
for the latter half. Her ac- unframed. D'etail ed in - ha s built up a $117,000
companist will be Harolyn form at ion on pri ces and ca mpaign warchest for use in
Brient , also from Athens. availability are handled by · a re-election bid next year,
This vocal concert is open to the monitors at Riverby tapping his employees lor
the public. Refreshments w.ill during the hours the Galleries most of it.
be served at the close of the a re open on Saturdays,
The auditor filed a cam·
concert.
Sund ays, Tuesd ay s and paign finance report Wed·
On the following Sunday Thursdays,
nesday with Secretary of
evening, Dec. 11 , the Annual
The Galleries will reopen State Ted W. Brown showing
Family Christmas Party at after the New Year holiday contributions of $103,461 since
Ri verby for French Art on Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1978, last February.
Colony members and their featuring an exhibit of Gallia
The con tribution s were
immeqiate families will be County Senior Citizen art.
mainly small and regular
from 6 o'clock unti18 o'clock.
donations from employees of
This evening time was chosen
the audotor 'S office on a Jist
which took up 257 pages.
so that members could also
attend "The Messiah" at Rio
Virgil E. Brown, director of
Grande on Sunday afternoon.
the Cuyahoga County Board
Mrs . Gaby Sattler is
of Elections and a member of
making the arrangements for
the Republican State Com·
the Family Christmas party.
mittee, filed a report showing
The children will be able' to
a fund of $4,198 for use in a
decorate the tree at Riverby
ca mpaign for lieutenant
starting at 6 o'clock, and
governor next year.
shortly after six, Sa nta Claus
Slate Treasurer Gertrude
a rrives to visit with the
W. Donahey's report showed
children . After Santa leaves,
a balance of $18,1108, including
the entertainment for the
receipts of $14,477 this year,
entire family will be Marko
mainly from office workers
the Magician and Tarbaby
and a fun d-raising event.
the Clown, well·known and
The reports, du e Wedtalented young men from
nesday Were required of all
Jackson, Ohio. Refreshments
persons who intend to be
will be served following the
ca ndidates for statewide
program.
office next year but were not
Until Dec. 17, when the
on the ballot in 1976.
Galleries at Riverby will
Rev . Leroy Jenkins of
JENNIFER DAMRON
Delawa re repo rted in a
HONORED - Jennifer
telegram to the secretary of
Lynn Damron, daughter of
state that he has established
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Damron,
a campaign committee for
Racine, celebrated her
governor, but he did not say
fifth birthday on Nov. 22.
whether he will file as a
Sharing in the games and
Democrat or ind ependent.
refreshments were Amy
Williams, Johnie Settle,
Meredith L~e Settle, Roy
Johmwn, Amtette Cordone, ,RECOUNT REJECTED
Darla Evans, Amy Settle,
CINCINNATI ·(UPI) - In a
and Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
4,200-vote suburban Forest
Settle, Jr. Those unable to
Park city council election,
attending but sending gllts
Brandon Wiers lost to
were Mr. and Mrs.
Waymon Brown by one vote .
Damron, Smithers, W. Va.,
Wiers asked for a recount,
paternal
great- '~ got it, and won by three votes.
b'l'andparents, and Mr. and
But Brown, who says "this

FLASHCUBES

122 N. 2nd Ave .
Middle port.

John T. Wolfe, president of the Racine

at $117,000

Keep This
Date Open

leaders

Cong res~ .

Sandra Wilkin, th e very
talented vocal instructor for
the French Art Colony from

ELECTRIC
BLANKET

NORELCO

Democ ratic

Riverby prepares for 'holidays

NORTHERN

Social
Calendar

·

1'5.

t Certificate~

11

We'll Issue Them in Any Amount

wt?~Qij~~11R~WW'ii41

·~

herltaae nouse
5

SHOES

Open Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30 to 5:00
Friday9:30to8:00
N. 2ND AVE.
"'
MIDDLEPORT, O.

; ~&lt;"· .... -

B¥1!11111!&lt;:! 1'&lt;=1 Boi\!OlJ7j;l ~ E0¥1'101 Y&lt;:ll!lll Bollt&lt;:&lt; ~"""""' Boii'IOII!S:&lt;- JljO. -

-

!:
11

fi

..;.4 "-:'.'

s195

LADIES' PRICED FROM

' 100

00

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-41:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va.

562~ TO

s195

CERT~:~TES ~AYS
BAHR CLOTHIERS
,

"Your Christmas Gift

N. 2nd Ave.

Headquarte~"

Middleport, 0.

�..
S- The Dally Senum•L MtddlcJAirl-POllll'ro)', 0 ., Thursday, Dec. l , t9n

~
·
A--f HEALTH

Pre-Geneva talks put back until mid-December
l'AIRO. Egypt

~~ Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.

t~gypt

is delaying

t UPll t~ Pprnmg

, f pro-Geneva Middle East
pt'U&lt;' e negntiHtinns in Cairo

Wtlilmid-De&lt;"mber, p&lt;•ssibly

An overloaded liver
By Lawrenre Lamb. M.D.
DEAR DR . l.A.MB - ~1y
mother , 80, has been diagnosed as having hy.per-

to

llw level builds up. Or, if you

to reconstcler their lxlr&lt;.'( ltl (l(
the parlt&gt;y .
Tht" semi . . ,fficial AI Ahram

ha\'e an mereased amount of

newspaper

bl oo~

although Egypt announced
readiness to host th e
ennferenre as uf Saturday.
"it welcomes the datr
announced by President
Carter
at
his
ne ws

qmltely. as in liver disraS('S,

cell

destruction,

ba lirubinenlia after tesl'i at

overloa ding

the hospital.
She has never had this eundilion explained to her
salts!aclion by her doctor. a

&lt;"apacily to handle it, you
n~•l' develop a high blood
le\'el 1hyperbilirubinemia ).
Tius may occur with some
anrmia.s associated with increased destruction ol red
blood cells.
In mild amounts. such an
elevcttion may not be
medically significant. ln
larger a rnounl'i, it causes
jaundice. F'rom the lone of
your lelle~. l presume lhe
elevation in your mother's
case is slight. or your doctor .
would be more concerned
about il.
Since this is a function of
the tiver. I am sending you
The Health Letter number
7-a, Uving with Your Uver,

elassic case of not wanting to

waste hts time with 11wnerous
questions.

We would greatly appreciate any information

from you .
DEAR READ E R
Bilirubin is a pigment. It
l'Omes from vour red blood
eells. Did vou know that the
ave rage person destroys, and
at the same time [orms, 200
million red cells a minut e.
Each red blood ce ll contains
hemoglobin, the containing
pigment.
As you r red ce lls break and
release the hemoglobin. the
pi gment must be handled.
Your liver does this. The extra hemoglobin iron is converted to bilirubin and is excreted in your bile as a bile
pigment. ll causes the green
color olbile. As this pi gment
is acted upon in the bowel, it
changes color,

pr~viding

col-

or to the bowel movement. If
you block o!f the bile, as with
a gall stone, the stools wijl be
clay or chalky-colored
without the usual pigment.
If the bile can 't drain, as
with a stone, the bilirubin
builds up in your blood and
may ca use ja1111diee. If the
liver ca n't handle the
hemoglobin pigment ade-

t he

liver's

to give you more detailed in-

fonnalion . Other who want
this infonnalion on lhe liver
ca n send 50 cents with a long,
sta mped,
se lf-a ddressed
envelope for il lo me in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station. New
York, NY 100!9.
DEAR DR. LAMB - If a
woman has had her tubes
tied, could that b€ undone ?
What kind of doctors would do
this? Is there anv chance of
getting pregnant· if anything
could be done?
DEAR READER - Yes,
doctors have repaired
damaged lubes for years .
When a woman has her tubes
tied , that is really an injury to

.

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK

,
United Press International
J"ATCH!NG THE PENNIES: California Gov. Jerry Brown
is noted for keeping a light set of purse strings, so no one really
w&lt;Ls surprised when he arrived in Lo ndon Wednesday a board a
cuJ-rate Laker "Skytrain'' flight. Says Brown -in England [or
a ltlemorial service to author Ernst Schumacher - "I have
vi~wed this as a nongovernmental trip. Since I'm paying for it,
1 &lt;l"cided to lake the inexpensi ve way." Would he fly Concorde
m.an emergency' Says Brown, "To tell the truth , l think I'd
us~ the telephone ."
. STILL A VIP&lt; Ex-White House budget chief Bert Lance ·still
is •under grand jury investigation of his financia l affairs but
~te House press secretary Judy Powell says he'll keep his
special VIP diplomatic passport because he may be called
u-wn by President Carter for an overseas mission . And, says
P~ell , "!don' t see anything in the world wrong with it."
•
COLUMBO TAKES A WIFE: Peter Falk, star of the
"Ovlumbo" TV detective series, is getting married. He'll wed
28,year~ld actress Shera Danese Friday at the Church of Good
SlJtphe~d in Beverly Hills, Calif. lt will be the second marriage
fo• the SG-year~l d F'alk - the first for Miss Danese. Falk 's
b€~ man will be actor Wayne Rogers, former costar of the "M·
A-ll-H" series. Actors John Cassavetes and Ben Gazzara will
seP.ve as ushers.
·

.

---..l-

........:

~ELLO

give hmd·line Arabs time

-·

CAROL.: Carol Channing 's star rose on Holl)'wood
Bot,Jievard's Walk of Fame Wednesday, but not in line with the
ot~er 1,691 stars o! that concrete galaxy . Hers went up on a
special wa::rway in front of the Pantages Theater where she
begins o ii· ·-week engagement in the musical " Hello Dolly"
to~lghL
.
'

~LIMPSES: Former President Gerald Ford received the
U$)-Los Angeles are;. 's second annual Distinguished
~erican Award Wednesday fr om last year's winner, Gen.
Ornar Bradley ... Hal Unden, star of ABC-TV 's "Harney
Miller," is out of a Harris, N.Y. , hospital after treatment
fooexhaustion and a bronchial infection ... Professor Louis 0.
Colle of Bowdoin College, a prize-wi1111ing poet and playwright,
has been named the !977 Fellow of the Academy of American
Pe&gt;ets - a post carrying a $10,000 stipend .. . Russian chess
grlmdma ste rs Vlktor Korchnul and Boris Spassky played to a
draw Wedresday in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, in the fifth ga me o!
their match to choose a cha ll ~n gcr lor the world title held by
1
Aliatoly Karpov ....

sa id

tvday

will start a day l~ttt·r .
Al Ahram said th £' w lk"
WE'rE' belllJ! dt•laycd 111
d('f£&gt;rrrt&lt;'£' tu CarH•r's wtsh
But diplomatic.· snur('t'S SC.lt lt
thr dday was mf"ant to giH•
hard..Jine ArCibs lillie l!) snftt•n
their npposition to thl'
President · Anwar Sadat 's
lX'i.ICe initiative ami possibly
end their OOyl'nU t) f th(' Cmru

pmle)·.
Moderate Arabs, led b)'
S&lt;mdi Arabia and Kuwait,
also

will

ha\'C

t)pportunity to

ampll'

brin~

thl•ir

C"or1fenmce. ·'

··good l•ffices" intn the

Carter said the talks will
begin Der. 13 but the Slate
Department said the Cairo
parley will start Dec. H . The

changing Mtddle East picturl'
aml prevent an irrep..'lrablt·
split in Arab r~mks , the
sources said.
The hard ~iners, int'luding
Syria, [jbya, Iraq and the
Palestine
Liberati on

officials said Dec. 13 was just

an approximate date and it
has been decided the talks

fil~1 ·

L&gt;rg: uu tah•lll, \\t'rt· bt ·~ ummg
ri\·al :-unHIIIt llh.'r.'tutg tt•da\
Ill 'l'f'll k•h. I Jb~ .I
-

&lt;I

- Ln

J\Ttl:-.illt·lu. thpl~ti!Hi th '

~·urn~~

~dttl

l-'L:.\JJI

\\ II U)d

&lt;U!I'('(' at tl1t' l'mrtl tnt'l'tlrlg tn

\\ltiHLro.m "'!til' troo p~ fru111
tht• S111~11 &lt;mtl thilt L"rat'! tn
rl'turn \\'(lu!d agn.\' UH\ 11•

a utlw nv·

Ill'''
Jt' \\J sh
1111 nt'l' llfHl'd Arab

St•ttknu•nts
l:mds .

In an-•thl'r l!,t'stut·e;tlmNI at

br·1n~ing n\h(:r Arabs mtn tht•
JH'ae e ..)na kin g· pr t1t.'i:'SS, ,\1
Ahrmn :-&gt;Hid Eg\ pl 1s rt.•;u.ty to
to.l kt• part 111 another !Jn•luni-

prarc ee1nference
~l'llJ)(lst•d tJr U.N. Secretary-

• 11&lt;11")

Fureign Minister ButrHS
Ghali Wednesday .
Dipl•' malic sources said
Ghali told Pnlyaknv Egypt
was "sorry for Utis negative
stand and Ute Soviet Uniun 's
failure to shou lder its
resp&lt;•tsibility as one of lhe
cn~hairmen of the Gt'neva

Kurt Waldheim.
But diplt,rltatic SuW't-es said
til!' U.N. e&lt;&lt;tference might
nt•n:•r Sl't&gt; the light, in view of

Ct' IH.' r a l

ls rat•l's

opposition

Aln('ru·a 's

and

noncommitta l

~1 and .

confereru:e." The other &lt;.'0-

Only Israel, America and
lhl' United Nations accepted
lll\'it.ations to the Cairo
1101 rll'y . ~
111e &amp;•viet Union's offi cial
refusal tu a tte nd was

~ha irm an

is t he Un ited

States.
Polyakov replied thai his
government s uppor ts a
Middle
East
peace
settlement, and believes it
should be worket) out at

rl el ivcrcd b)' Ambassador

Vladimir Pl•lyakov to acting

Geneva.

To wttidt Ghali retorted :
"If Ute Snviel Union really
wants Ute Geneva eonfercnee
held, why does it &lt;•bstrut·t
preparations for it '"
In the Suez Canal city of
lsmai lia, Sadat said he was
detern1ined to proceed with
his peace initiative, despite
the protests of other Arabs.
11
( promise you Uu1t I will
carry my p&lt;~uco call to the
very end," Sadal told a
de li.·~a tio11 from the Sinai
Peninsula, which is pmtly
·~·c upled by Israeli troops.

GOP's finances
in good shape
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Rep11rler
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes and the
Ohio Republican party are in
sound finan c ial shape
heading into the 1978
sta tewide ca mpai gn , according lo the latest reports
) on political f1111ds.
! Reports filed Wednesday
will] S&lt;"Cretary o! State Ted
W. Brown show tlle governor
has accumulated a campaign
fund ol $110,000, not cowtling
the estimated $400,000 he
raised at a testim onial event
earlier this month .
In addition, three statewide
Repub lican co mmittees
repor ted
receipts
and
expe nditw-es of more than
$2.7 million this year . They
showed a net balance of
$104,227 plus a total debt of
• $41,555.
A special committ ee
assisting
Republican
candidates for the Ohio House
of Representatives reported a
balanc~ of $28,150.
The Ohio Democratic Party
r.eported receipts o! $143,150
and expenditures of $131,5!5,
and a ba lance of $8,610.
Rh odes'
campaig n

$81,552 and expenditures &lt;•f
$9.821 through Oct. 31 , added
to a carryover balance of
about $39,000 for a total ol
$110,000.
But his Nov. !6 flUid-raiser.
reportable next May, will put
him far in uie lead ol
potential g ub e rn ato ri a l
candidates with regard to
finances . At least 4,000 tickets
were reportedly sold for that
event al $1110 apiece.
Campaign finance reports
had to be filed by all persons
who expect lo be candida tes
for statewide office next vear
but were not on the .1976
ballot.

.

0

~

Charles Robinson, President ,
Jr .,
De~uty
General Manager, National
Rural Electric Coo perative
Association ; Washington, D.
C.; Gordon Campbell , Senior
I( ice-President and ' tthlef
Corporate Banking Of!icer,
BancOhio, Ohio National
Bank, Columbus, and J , K.
Smith, Governor, National
Rural Utilities Cooperative
Finance Corp., Washington,
D. c.
Cardinal generat_ing station
Unit No.3 brings needed new
electric power and energy to
much of rural Ohio. The
6!~ ,000 kilowatt facility is
owned by members of Ohio's
Chairman , American 28 rural electric cooperatives
Electric Power Com pany , through
their
special
New York City ; Thomas generating
cooperative,
Farr, President , Louis- Buckeye Power, Inc. The
ville Bank · for Coo p- cooperative power systems
eratives, Louisville , Ky .; serve homes, fanns, and
businesses in parts of 70 ol
Ohio's 88 counties.
''This unit represents the
Your " Extra Touch "
newest and cleanest electriC
Flor ist Since 1957
generating station in Ohio,"
Cleveland said. "A major
device for pollution control is
the unit' s electrostatic
precipitator, which removes
99.8
percent of the solid
FLORIST
particulates from combustion
gasses before they enter the
PH. 992·2644
900-foot high stack. This
precipitator is larger than the
3S2 E . Main , Pomeroy
unit 's 20-story-high boiler."

!

L_::~~~::::_...J
_ " "'
iii:

as
seen on
national

RECEIVED

SHIPMENT

BOWS

Sample Shoes
by
Connie &amp; Jacqueline
Values from $25.00

out of four women to get pregnant alter the tubes have
been repaired. The outlook is
not good enough to encourage
a woman to do this except in
wmsual circwnstances. If a
woman is going to have her
tub€s tied, she should regard
tl as a permanent sterilization.
With the·new microsurgery
technique, some doctors have '
had higher success rates. The
detailed surgery that ean be
done on such delicate struc-

CHRISTMAS

TV

NOW

.

sggg

25

Sizes J lh to 6

21-1526

CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP-

heritage house
OF SHOES

SAVE s40

Open
Monday
thr u
Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30
to 5:00. Friday 9:30 to 8:00.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

REG. '5.00

Reg. 99

95

'

CONTAC

Hear all the excite ment of police
ca lls , 24 hr . weathercasts.
ca bs , aircraft! Built in o ur own
factory . Cut 40%1

12-HOUR
RELIEF

CONTAC

12-750

and

Reouore P&amp;1m1t - Check w• th l ocal A uthiJIIH8S

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES}

~~
•-~~
~
~ i" _ · . ,

Realist ic Minisette '" - IV tapes music "live "
a nd off-the-air ... even sho ut ~ of glee on
Ch nst mas morn I Built-i n mike, a uto -level , pa'u se con[rol , counter. With batteries.

Middleport, 0.
992 -2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7 :00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7: 00 to 3: 00 Saturday

'------·

-~.,.....·--

- -·______,.

national

TV

SAVE•100

WE

DELIVER

923 S. 3rd Ave .

seen on

POWERFUL 25-WATT* HI-FI
AM-FM STEREO RECEIVlR!
Re alistic STA -84 gives you more p ower and
sound fo r you r stereo doll ar! Loudness, hi -filt e r,
lighted dia l and meter. cus tom wa lnu t veneer case .
' 1 !.1

w, P•anr1el M•n

....
I

~R

BRIDGE PLAZA

also avarlable a't

Rad~;,~:~:

look lor l h•s
s1gn rn your

A DIVI SIO N OF l AND'!' CORPORATIO N

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORE S

rl9 \9hborh0od

Bad news bearers hardly ever win points with the people
they' re trying to help. In a perverse sort of way, Annileah may
even blame you lor making her unhappy.
. . bo [ . d
Let someone else tell her abo ut the ·t wo-t lii1ll1g Ynen '
HELEN

20

16

oz.

•

REG.

Myadec Capsule con tains a hig h-potency
vitam tn formula wt th
mineral s-9 tmponant
vitam1ns and 6 minerals,
to be exact. And now

39~

ULTIMATE

SLIPPER SOCKS

C126-12 OR Cll0-12

REG. 99' ONLY

ONLY97~

57~

BIC
LIGHTERS
REG. 51.49

th is same t1tgh -potency

vitam1n produclt~ also avatl able 1n an easy-to-take
tabl et. 11 you're active and on the go. stop in today ~
ana buy a supply of Myadec Tabs.
I
I

Kenneth McCulloUIIh, R. Ph.
Charles Rif!le, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon. lhru Sat. 8:00 a.ni, to 9 p.m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12 :30 and sto 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992-2955
Friendly Service
Pomeroy,O.
E. Ma in
Open Nights 11119

----o/)/'~

.. ... .

Me igs Countv, on the 3rd da.,.. '-·

of December 1977. at Io:OD::;::

l!ln
_ lfi1Willl!Jitl

bee. Z,1977

l1

Big things can happen lor you
this
yeat anti
. but
not in
wayscoming
you might
cipate . It
won 't be an easy row you 're
hoeing, but it will be a bountiful
one.
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov . 23·Dec.
21) Your strength today is in a

f~~tgsc~n~ ~~e.!.h:0 ,!ollowing Parce l No. t :
The following described •
real estate situate in the ·,
Coun ty of Meigs, in the stale
of
io, and In the Township,
of Oh
Olive . and bounded and
described , as follow• . viz '

·

~~~~: (~ r:rtth~, 5 ~0~ -~~~~?:~~~ ·~

the Estate of Ma jor Reed, • •
Deceased
beginning
at the
Northeast, c9rner
of a part
of .~
~t

competitive enterprise where said estate belonging to A. w _ .

HUBBARD'S
REENHOUSE

OFF

53~

KODAK FILM

REG. '19.95
ONLY

U\!J~

%

85'

The ChriStmas Tree;

The Parke-Davis

\"11.1, nllJ

1

Al£0.REX
RUBBING ALCOHOL

Should Have Under

RM S @8 II hom 20 lO,OC(I Hr w•ih no more than 0 7'!1. THD

Most '"ms

ONLY

ADAM :

cast&gt; no . 16, 421 , 1 will offer tor'

sa
le atof pubHc
auct ion
at the
door
the Court
House
ot

L..-------..1·,

What Every Man

Reg.
29995

SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY ..• MOST STOHESOPEN. lATE- NIGHTS TIL CHHISTMAS

REG. 89'

REG.
'1.60

hid no equal-until
they made a s399
tablet.
as

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
"CORPORATION

gg~ .

SAVE•30
Reg.
8995

CASH&amp; CARRY
PRICES

REG. sz.09 ONLY

'

CASSETTE RECORDER
WITH AM-FM RADIO

Annileah and 1 were good pals, WI til I !ell in love with her.
Now she'll hardly ,speak to me. She's going with a guy she
lhinksis lruetoherandcan'triskhisjealousy.
· 1so ·
·th 11 f
his h 1
I found out I his guy IS a gomg WI a g r rom
sc 00
andihearthey'realmostengaged.
Shouldltel!Annileah?-ADAM

·10 CAPSULES

Mob1le VHF / UH F Uu m 5Qm8 States Ma ~ Be' Ul'\llhlllll or

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

WHITMAN'S CAPERS
PECAN-CARAMEL CLUSTERS

(60 PIECES)

PATROLMAN ®6-BAND RADIO
AM/FM/AIR/VHF HI~LO/UHF

e

there is a possibility lor per- Cowdery a no In the South line
1
sonal
Pushing
Lydia ion
K . Packard
dollarsgain.
makes
sense to
l or make
you. of
in lands
the ot
intersect
of the
NOTE F'ROM SUE: If there's a break-up, Annileah will be like 10 find out more of what roads leading from Reeds • ~
lookm
' gforafn'endwhowllllts
· a hea d for you ,. sen d for ville.
to Plains
Forked
Run
and '·
- ' tentohertroubles · Don'tpush· 11es
Tuppers
; then
ce East
the love interest 1111til sbe recovers. Then· good luck. -- your cop~ of Astro-Graph Let- with sou1h line of said L yd io ·
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
lor by maoling 50 cents for each , K. Packard land 129 teet to a '•
•t
boyf · d f
1m t f
1...
d th
Si gn and a long , self · ., stake: thence South 99 teet to
I ha ven seen my
rten or a OS IVe wee .. an
en addressed , stamped envelope a stake ; thence west 152'h
he only stayed two hours and ten ,...mutes. In a lew days, I'll be to Astro-Graph p o Box 469 feet to the west so de of sol d ·,
sevenmonthspregnant.He's18,1'ml6.
Radio City Station.
Forked
Run and
East; thence
line of ·.··
- · 10019'
. · A.
W . Cowderv
's land
- ' NY
8
He told me we'd be marrieQ this month, but then he put it off
• sure· to spec•fy your btrlh with said Cowdery 's line in a ·
.
'
Northerly directi on to the ..
because he was busy a t SC h00I· Now he says we'll get mam'ed · sign
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) place of beg inn in g. con ·
this swruner. He has a tendency of lying to me. I don't even Don't procrastipate on deet- taining one-tourlh rv.) of on ··, ,
havetheengagementringhepromlsedmeinNove!fiber.
sions. You reason things out acre, more or less .
,,
I' been dymg
' t
him WIUl recently but now I'm not well today , but U you put them
P&amp;rcel No . ~ :
.
.
ve
omarry
off, they may be shel,ed for a
The foiiQwo~g des~r~becl
sosure.Shouldigo aheadwlthourweddingplans?-S.K.
lon~li mo .
real
estate
sotuate
1n
th
e
·s. .
Town ship of Olive In the ·
DEARS .:
AO ARIU (Jan. 20-Feb. 1_9) II count y of Meigs and State of •·'
What wedding plans?
could seem to you lhallh&gt;ngs Oh io. tow it : Being a part of· 1
We'regladyou'renolongerdyingtomarrythisyoWlgman, pertaining lo you are out of Lot Number Three 131 otlhe ·
your control today . Don't fret. S ub~ ivlsion of the Estare o~ _'~
for it's very apparent he lsn'tdying to marry YOU.
Your best interests will be .Ma1or Reed , Deceased . • •
.ll'he most you can expect (if you're lucky) Is help with ex- served
beginning at the sou thwest .
0
penses. We're sorry to be so pessimistic, but that's the way it is PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) A ~~~~ ~6~\ df:des~ i~Y b"~~ •..
·and you may need a court order to even win this much. willingness . lo compromise Arnott (deed bearing date ot ~ ·
bnngs surpriSing results today . July 15 , 19011: thence Ea st .
HELENS .:
Generally , you 're easy lor with the south li ne of said 101 ·
Now lor the big question: What are your plans for the baby? friend or stranger to gel along 152•; , feet to the Southeast · .:
Can you care for him (or her) properly and still attend school? with .
corner of said lot ; then co ·•
W'll be h
d
te h
'th
? Ar
•· .
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll19) Chat- South 7Ph feet to • stake;
1
aveana equa orne WI you . eyourparen.,ma longeslnsplreyou tothegreat- thence west 184 teet to the .,
position to help? Think long and hard before you make a deci- est productivity today . That's ~;;~ s~~~ -J;~eli~~r~rdA~~~ ·.• •
sion, A life depends on it. :sUE
whore the b1g rewards he . Cowder y's land; thence with
Mundane tasks waste your said A . W . Cowdery' S line in a "
PERSONAL TO " WANTING TO WOW THEM": It's said limo
and return
. 20) pl~ce
Nor. therlofy beginning
direction ,to coIhe
TAURUS
CAP&lt;llnothing
2D-May
n - ''·
'
that agossiptalksaqoutothers, a bore talks about herself -and Things with an element of \o onmg one -fourth I'!, I ot on "
a brilliant conversationalist talks ahout you! ·
chance could Tpay olf hand- acre,
more
Parcel
Noor
. 3:less.
SUE
somely today,- ho~gh oth.ers
The following real es tate ..
may feel you re takmg a nsk , situated in the County of •
the
areyour
that favor
sou nd
Me 1gs,
in Township
the state ofofOliiJe
o h io~ '•u
~-;pw BO&lt;I);J(~-;;~~;~:r~~~""l'''":
~·
CASH paid for ol mo kes on d
tion6dds
tilts in
. evalua- Md
in the
models of mobile homes.
GEMINI (Miy 21·June 20, Be bouhded a~d descr ibed as '
Phone a reo code61•·•23-q531 .
quick to jump into any situation fo llows : Bemg Lot Num ber; -·
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro that adds to stabll lty or security Fltty -three (53 ) in McDole
. and Torrence Add ition to · •:•
ducts . Top price for stan ding tod ay . It mu st also , benefit Reedsville , Meigs county, ..
sawtimber. Coli 992 -5965 or those you 're responsible tor, Ohio.
~··
_:K~ec:n::_
lH
::a~n:::b._,y':':.,
I·::,••:.::6:.:·B:.::S:.,
70:.:·--:-: to pay oft .
Reference Deed : Vol. 22.4 , •"
ld
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Page 151, MeJgs County , ,.,
COINS, CURRENCY. to kens, 0
You 're very enthusiastic today . Oh io, Oeed Records .
.
pocket watches ond chains , You carry peorle along In your
Terms of Sale : cash m
silver and gold . We need 1964 wak.e . Channe this energy into Hand . Canno1 be sold for less
and older silver coins. Buy, sell. a meaningful project and it 'll be than S2 ,000 . All three parce ls
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley , a great day .
sold as one .
•MEDICO
7.42-233 1 ·
LEO ' (July· 23·Aug. 22)- Like a
Jllm es J . Prottitf ~
OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass
magnet, you attract money and
· Sheriff •DR. GRABOW
beds , iron beds, etc. , complete material objects today . Keep
Meigs Count1 ~
housetwlds. Wrlte M. O. Mil ler . . yourself in the middle Of (11) 3, 10, 14,24 {12) 1, Stc ;;
Rt. .4 , Pomero~ . Ohio or coli · things. Let nature take its
.--•YEU.OW BOLE
992-7760.
course.
...:._~~~-----::VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Deal
NO ITEM TOO large or 100 smo11 - on a grandiose scale today .
Will buv 1 piece or complete
housahold . New. u5ed, or anti- y ou •re up to handlir)g the big·,
N
gies . You can score with large
20
Syracuse,
0
.
ques. Martin's Furniture.
- groups, major projects of the 992-5776
2nd St .. Middleport . Phone top bananas.
Now open for the season. .1 ~.
992-6370.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) One
Choose
from over 15,000 .
CHIP . WOOD . Po les mox. waytogalntheboss 'sapproval
Poinsettias
7Se to $10.00
diameter IO"_on largest end, $8 today is to take something on
Foliage Plants 75c IOS1 2. 00' '•
per ton . Bundled slob, S6 lier that another booted , and turn It
Hanging Baskets
S\.25 to .;·
ton. Dell~ered to Ohio Po let
Into 8 winner. He won 't forget
. ...
Co ,, Rt. 2, Pomeroy . 992-2689.
it.
.
$4.50
CASH FOR Junk Co'!. Frye's Truck SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) lay
.
a good foundation today for
Open Daily 91115
ond Auto Wrec k_,., Serv•ce. future projects . Don 't invest
Sundays tilt 5
Phone 7.,.2-2081 or Pennzoil
Rutland 7.t 2.qs7s_
any h~rd cash or miike any firm
commitments.
WANTED TO buy : Deer Hider Phone 742-2790.

GIFT ·
TAGS

Io ROLLS

building matArials

RAP :

.

Our TRC-466 " Min i-40" even makes Santa 's eyes
l1ght -upl ANL, lig hted channel se lector. modulation
indicator. Fits· neatly in com pact cars, trucks, RV's,
snowmobilesl Priced right fo r "jo lly good buddies'.'
Now 50% ofl at Rad io Shack I

'TELLINGALL'WON'TWINPOINTS

PIPEs

CANDY

BAG OF

REALISTIC ®40 ~ CHANNEL CB
FOR SAFETY ON THE ROAD!

:

·-·-l!totlQ!•-·-·-

~"" g;:&lt;ll:¥ g;:&lt;""' g;:&lt; ~ l':i::&lt;l""' !'::&amp;&lt;~~I!:¥ g;:&lt;~ --PI!II\Q!
.,..._I!:¥ 1);1(1""'•~•-•·-·-·...__
~:v.~u-PW~~~~

PRICES GOOD lHRU SUNDAY

JUST

:;

Cleveland pointed out that
Cardinal Unit No. 3 joins
the plant also uses a two other already existing
hyperbolic hatural-dralt and operating units which
. g tower standm' g 423 were put ·mto commerc1a1
COOIIII
feet tall with an overall operationatthesiteinl969at
diameter of 384 feet. Con- a cost of $107 per kilowatt of
denser water is pumped installed capacity. Cardinal
through the cooling to war at Unit
Number
Thre e,
the rate of 300,000 gallons per however, is estimated to cost
minute, which keeps the $550 per kilowatt of installed
water in a closed cycle so that capacity, Cleveland pointed
no heat Is rejected into the out. This reflects the cost of
. R'tver, Cleve1an d sat'd. envtronmen
·
t a 1 1&amp;Cit
'l 't tes,
'
Oh 10
"These large, el&lt;pensive e!!ects of inflation and other
devices do not contribute to site-related. problems enthe production of electricity countered during five years'
and, in [act, decrease the construction of the .large
Plant 's efficiency ," plant.
Cleveland said. "However,
Cardinal Unit Number
they are reqlred in order for Three is capable of delivering
the unit to meet environ· more than 4"&gt; billion kilowatt
mental standards and be a hours of electricity a 1111 ually
· hbo I
d
goo d ne1g r or the com· an represents a giant step
munlty."
forwanlinmeetingtheneeds
Coal, with a sulfur content of rural electric cooperative
of Jess than one percent, can member-owners _ some
· d t the p1a sit
250000 • 11 ·
be recetv~
a
nt e
I
vmg an d work'mg
by barge, rail or truck. Or- throughout rural Ohio,
dinarily, 60 days of coal Cleveland said.
supply is stocked at the plant
from which about two million
tons will be bomed 81Ulually
SCHOOL COMPLETED
by this new unit .
Navy Hospitalman ApA modern control room prentice David S. Ridgway,
'd
senses temperatures , son o[ Dr. John H. Rl gway
pressure• and other functions and Hattie L. Ridgway, both
in various locations in the ol Pomeroy, has been
p)~nt SO i[ any vital system
graduated from the ,Navy's
fal'ls, a!anns WI' III&gt;OIII1d m
· the Hospt'tal Corps School. A !976
control room and corrective graduate ol · Meigs High
action can be taken im- School, he joined the Navy in
mediately.
June, 1977.

liP8£ arp

NEW

cess - - me3ning enabling on

adding a new dimension to
surgen. Gynecologists are
the specialists who do these
operations if they are to be
done at all .

BRILLIANT, Ohio - Unit
No. 3 ol the Cardinal Plant,
an electric power generating
station, was dedicated here
today by Its owners, Ohio's 28
rural electric cooperatives.
Executive Manager Robert
N. Cleveland presided al ·
ceremonies at the plant that
features
as . speakers
Governor J ames A. Rhodes
and David Hamil , Ad·
. ministrator, Rural Electrification Administration, U.
S.
Department
of
Agriculture, Washington, D.
C.
Other speakers particlpating in the ceremonies,
were W. S. (Pete ) White.

DRY
VHLUES

lhe tubes.
Data from studies vary, but
doctors who do this work
often claim a 25 percent suc-

tures under a ·microscope is

Cardinal Plant's third unit
dedicated at Brilliant ·today

-------·-

commiuee showed receipts of

l.:_w: :=:«:'%GB·-~v'=~;H®e:I;e-n,;an;rd~ns:·.u-:e~RBo~ ~t·~e~I l l"&gt; .,' "'.: ;s;l" ~~~~ \gf~~~Mf~,~~gl

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 1, 1977

~~

~ ••

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ROBERT A. HUNNEL,
PLAINTIFF
VS
JUNE SAFRANEK, ET AL,
DEFENDANTS .
NO . 16,638
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO FRED KAPTINA. ,
whose last known address is
601 wood Street, .Zephryhl~ls ,
Florida, 33599 whose exact
address is unknown and
ca nnot with reasonable
diligence be ascertained ,·
TO EMMA MAE KAP TI NA , an Incompetent per son , whose last known address Is New Washington,
Ohio and whose e)Cact ad dress Is unknown and cannot
with reasonable diligence b'
ascertained :
·
TO
THE
PERSON ,
OR
IN ·
GUARDIAN
STITUTION haiJ ing the care
and control of Emma Mae
Kaptina, lin incompetent
person , whose identity and
·whereabouts are unknown
and cannot with reasonable
dil igence be ascertained: _
You are hereby notified
fh.at you .. have been named
defendants in a legal action
entitled Robert A. 'Hunnel,
plaintiff vs June Safranek , et
al. This action has been
assigned Case No . 16,638 in
the com mon Pleas Courtr of
Meigs
county,
Ohio ,
Pomeroy , Oh iO o45769 ;
The object of the com plaint
is to partition and quiet title
to the real estate situ&amp;led in
the Village of Pomeroy ,
County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, and being Lot No . 71
beginning at a stone corner of
no rt herly side of Condor
Street ; thence westerly &amp;long
the northerly side of Condor
Street 40 feet to a stone ;
thence ba ck at right angles
with said street 100 feet
thence eesterlv with first line
forty (40) feet ..thence 100 feet
to the beginning.
Also a strip along the west
sj de of ,sald lot, described as
toltows: bei ng about three
teet more or less on Condor
Street ; then ce rUn ninb back
100 feet and being 14 teet
more or. less on the ba ck end
thereof , and belnv the same
J;~rem lses on wh ich Carolina
Kalb formerly resided and
conveyed to her by John
Pence end Cordelia Francis
Pence .
·
Reference Is ma de to
Certificate of Transfer from
Rebert B. Hunnel L dec.
You are required to answer
the Complaint with in 28 days
after the last J:JUbli catlon cf
this notice, which will be
published on'ce each week for
siX consecUtive wee\(.s . The
last publication will be made
on Jan . 5, 1978 and the 28 day$
for answer will start on that
date .

SHOP EARLY

AND SAVE

In case of vour feil ure to
answer or otherw ise respond
as required by the Oh io Rules
of Civil Prodcedure judgment
by default will be rendered
against vou tor relief
demanded In the com pla in t.
Larry E. Spencer
Clerk of Court
Common Pleas Court
Meigs count~, Oh io
lt21 1, l : t5, 22. 19 (II 5, ••c

....'
The Racine Home National Bank, Racine,
Ohio. is having Open House Monday, ' ''
I,
December 5, 1977 from 1:00 P.M. until 6:00
'
.,..,
P.M., to acquaint their customers and
friends with their newly remodeled facility.
I·''

.

. The Racine Home National Bank

..'.:

extends a special invitation td you

•-''

,.;'·
'•

I

to be their guest any time from

"·

''

l:OO p.m. until6:00 p.m.

.,
.'

...'
•'·

As An Added Attraction• •
'

'

Archie Griffin of the Cincinnati
Bengals and David Diles of ABC
Sports will be our guests for the
occasion. They will also be there
to sell and autograph their new
book , ''Archie".

.,,"
.,

-.

"•

••

.·-.,
·'

..

.'

•,

'!.

_,_~~~~i A Home Bank
For
Meigs County
People

-~

® '

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
,.

•'

.."
&lt;

~

,,•I
,•
"
;.
•'

".

.,

..,
•••..,

•.

"I(

.,,'.
,(

..
.,
'
•

BANI~-· "
•

�FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2,1977
5,45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5· ss-

1D-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PomerO)', 0 ., Thursday. 0&lt;!&lt;:. 1, 1977

I~ Won:is« Undtr

"""100

I doy

Cha'll•

!"
190

,...

110
1.00
3 00

2d.r•

3 lillyl

ld.ys

3.7S

Each wMI oYer \hr mLn.imum IS
words u i cmts pc't word per day
Ads n&amp;nnU'!S otbtr lhan CON«"Uli\'e
days w!.ll be charged It lM I dlty

......

[n memof1', C.rd ol Thllnb

r

and

Obituary • ' C"ents per word, f3.00
Tllll'limllffi, Cah IJIIId:Y~IIK"t .

•t

1

Moetle Htme Slles 11.:i Y•nl11ln
... l&lt;t'&lt;pUtl only with cull 0\lll
&lt;rder. :IS renl chlrge for adl carry.
~ &amp;. NwnM In Care rl. TheSr:n-

t

d

W..l

s
c

nw Publisher resc!f'\III!S lhr

righl
to ecUt or re~ any ads demwd objectklnal. Tht Pubbsher wiU nut be
responsible for mol'!! than one ilK-orred inlertion .

y

q

Phi:ww 99'2-2156

p

f•

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
~oon

on Saturdly

l'ueodly
thruFrtday
4 P.M.
lhtday before pubtic1Uon.

r

•

f'ridly af\rmoon
y

c
p

c
. ~

lN MEMORY of ovr dear mol her ,
. Ann ie lcenhpw8'r , who pass ed
awov 4 y&amp;Ors ago todoy ,
December 1st . 1973 .
Whenever lo .... ed ones ~ss away .
No words however kind .
Con lruly eo5e the gr ieving
hearts,
Of those they leave beh ind .
But memory is the traasv re
hou.!e ,
Oh hoppv thoughts they poy ,
And hoppy thoughts of those we
love .
Will never pass awdy .
Very Sadly miss.d by doughier .
Mrs . Helen Jeffer~ ond Fb mily ,

c
0

y

a
c
y
y

t
n

1
h

GU N SHOOT Roc1ne Gun .Club HOOF HOllOW H orse~ B ~y sell
e very Sun aft ernoon Facto•
trade o• lr otn New ond used
(hock guns onl)l Anor te-d
saddles Ruth Reeves Albon'!l
mea ts
(1&gt;1 &lt;) 698 3290
THERE Wil l be no huntrng no MEIGS COU NTY Humane Soc t et~
1resposs rng ond no except ions
Corelme ond odop1 1on' Servtce .
on mr property . Bob McGraw
992 7b80 742-3161. 992 5427 .
THE RACI NE Volun tee• Ft re FO R S IUD
Serv 1c e
AKC
Deportmen t wtll sponsor o gun
reg1s1e r*'d coc ke1 s pof1 ie!
~ h oot e very Sot~o,~•doy ot b p m
BloCk ol'ld tof'l Clarksdale
ot thelf bu1l d1ng 1n 8oshon Foel tnes St'lowquoltty . J &amp; D Ken ·
tory choke guns orily .
nels 71112·3 162
TIMBERlAND OWNERS Do you AK C REG IST ERED pek1ngese pup\!
need help tn manag•ng rou•
,ptes. Phone ~ 30.111 ) B82·7b83 II'
woodlands and mc rkeftng .,.cur
ttmber ? Meod s ~ toll of prafes- RISING STAR Kennel , Boarding.
Indoor and outdoor runs .
s•o nol foresters •s ovodoble to
Groom 1ng a ll breeds . Clean
oHer yo u OS51Stonce at no cost
sondary tocih ttes Chesh rr e
M~d con assure you o l diver·
Phone {b 14 ) 367 · 02~ .
sifred marke-ts . complet e
limbe r ut,iltzolion •nd ud ing J ~ 0 Kennel ~ all breed dog
whole· tr ee chipp ing and super grooming. Make oppoinlmenl
vised horves tm g program s
now lor Holldo)l Season . Call
des1gn.d to protect your lands
7&lt;2·3162.
a nd promole limber growth.
For details . coli collect or wr 1te TO GIVE awov old tabby and
. tige r cols . Young .cots with
MEAD PAPER , Wood &amp;
yellow and wh ite , Anni e
Woodlo il ds Dept ., PO Bo• 391
!Aoh~er_
l,!~~ Creek Ro od .
J~JCkson
Oh1o
45640 .
Telephone 6\4 . 286 · 2~ ,
TO GIVE owoy : 2 pup pies. l fuzzy
block and I• block and white .
DEER HEADS . Moutited . Colt
Phone843-277 4.
QBS-3833 ,

CHRISTMAS SAL-E . 0 &amp; J's House
of Fabrics . December 1st thru
8th . All fabr ics 20-... off . Gilt
items 5uch as pillow case-s , cu rtains . crocheted housesl ippers .'
e-t c. Also. me n'S cor~uroy
pants, polyesler and cotlon ,
priced $3 eoch . Not air 51-zes ot
this price. 1 mile south ol Mid dleport on SR 7.

FO UND: COO NHOUND . 949·2b93.
LOST. BLACK and wh ite lemale
coon hovnd in Cheshire str ip
mi ne oreo. $50. reword. Call
calleci 1·3Q.t·675·2799.

HOUSEKEEPER· · COOK to liv• in ,
to shore home with eldedy
lady. Middleport Hill . Small
salary . 992-5764 .

(Glaze) Hill

a

v
I
iJ

u
IF VOU · hove a service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell 's omething.
oe looking for work ... o r
wha teve r .
you'll gt!'t result s
foste r with o Sentinel Wont Ad.

s

Call 992·2156.c._ _ _ __ _

u
F

I•
b

s
E !.

I.

~

(

F
g
d
tl
A

1970 CHR YS LER 300 Bargain pr ic ·

ed . $650. CoiJ 992-532.c3·~~~
1976 FORD GRANADA . 4-door. 6
cyl , A . ~ .. P .S.. P.B. l ow
m ile·oga .. · $3 ,500
Phone
992 ·5445 . Coli evenirigs after 4

pm .

'

1976 Grand Prix ••••••• }4695
'75 Malibu Cpe..........s2995
V-8 engine, automa1lc, P .S., P . B .. radio , silver, blk .
vinyl roof, less 1han 29,000 miles by one local owner .

TRUCKS
'75 Chev. 60 Series •••• $4395
102" cab to a xle, extra good, 825K20 tires , 15,000 lb . 2
speed R. axle , 292 cu . in. engine .

1975 Scout II - XLC •• ..S4495
A wh. drive, V-8, automatic, power steering &amp; brakes,

radio, 1 local owner .

'74 Scout II. .......•.•.• $2895
.
.

Travel top, .258 cu . in . 6 cyl. engine, .a uto. trans., like
new tires, rad io, 2 wheel drive.

1974 Chev. 8' ••••••.••••• $3495
Fleetside Cheyenne ca b . full chrome trim , step
bumper, 454 engine, a utomatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, rally wheels, a ir condl11oning, color white, real
sharp.

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1976 FORO GRANADA . 6 cyt.
16,000 miles. h ce llent shape .
Phone 247·21 42.

Reg o,tered

8(X) lb

grotn

31o2 oc (3041772-3727
fed beel rcody ro but&lt;her .
COUNIR
Y locmlond w•th ••&lt;lud·
9&lt;12 18b7 , o h e• b.
ed wood• wotec ond good OC ·
TWO HR 70 . I 5 steel belted rodrol
c~ss rn Monroe Count y, W . Vo
!&gt; now !ires L•ke new $.60 lynn
$1 .000 d own , call (304) 772
Shu ler. Phone 247 J25 1.
3102 oc (304) 772 3227 .

J&amp;L

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until8p.m.

softeners , model vc.sv I.
Only $279 .95

Blown' lnsulatiO
"n
JIM KEES.EE

1 New 20 cubic II. Chest

y
oung's
Carpetmg
•

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal lnsulatt· on

FrHzer
( 1)

$25.00 Discount

1 Good

Used

1225

Refrigera1or
$125
1 Lancaster Chain Saw S75

Pomeroy Landmark

1965 NEW MOON 2 bedroom
tr ail er 10 x 65 . Cor bJ r~ody to
go ot o weeks notke. For more
information ; call 949•2484 Or
985·42-40.

1 1 om.,;t l d8pm . 992 . 2501. ~ ~

11 60 MOBILE HOME . Good con-dilion . Lo rge yard . 1 mile
Racine . 992-5858 .

985·3350

197S YAMAHA ENDURO 100, Ap·

older ·home , 2112 baths.
farge k i tchen &amp; dining
room , hot water hea1. part
basement. garage, walk to

We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

773·5471 .

COAL, li m&amp;s lo ne, end calcium
chloride and cafc lvm brine tor
dust control ond special mildng
salt for farmers . bc•lsior Salt
Works , Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio or phone 9'12 - 3891 .
CAMPER , $60(). . Also , horse
trailer. $450. Phone (614 ) MB-

3290.
ECONOMV TRACTOR with oil otlachments. like new , asking
$2250. Phone (614 ) 698·3290.

1976FORDF -250Custom . 17 .50 x
14.00 tire.s · winch . Only 14.000
mi. t-leoders . CB. Tope de(;k .
Over $3,000 in e:oc tros. Serious
co ils on ly after 12 noon :

696·1072. $6 .600.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES , Pl . Plea·
son! , W. Vo . beside Heck 's .
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dorio n 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1972 Victor ion 14 x 67 3·bedroom ,
2both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 :oc bO 2
bedroom .·
FIREWOOD . Any lengths or any
amount . Deli vered or moy
pickup . Pho ne 9-49·2563 .
1972

FIREWOOD, s pl it and deliv ered .
$45 o cord . All hofdwood .

0.3·2933.

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark
'W'a -Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
llllil,; Phone 9'/2-2181

PIANO TUNING · lo ne Daniels .
New phone numbe r, 992-2581 .
If no answer. coli 992-2082 .

APPUANCE
SERVICE

with

9 .. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ail. Phone 9'12-2181

12 years

old . Close in, 3 bedrooms,
bath , dini ng room , fort:ed
air N.G . heat, insula1ion,
hardwood
floors,
carpe1ing , other features .

ather brands.

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

Be the opening of the In ·
door 1euon for you with
vour old furniture re .
uphoiS1ered in beautiful
warm colors &amp; patterns
tram Bob's . II you are
looking for s•vlngs it will
p.ay v.ou to · pay us a 'J is it.
Located in bactc of the Sew
N ' Sew Outlet on Main St .•
Racine . o .
11 . 10 . 1mo.

WElHERALL CONCRETE

I

Hartford

Henderson

882 ·2175
675-1582
UNION OPERATED
12-2-1 mo.

BRADFORD, Auc tionee r, Com·
plete Service . Phone 949 ·2487
or 949-2000. Racine. Ohio ,.Cr ill
Bradford .

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992-3325
WILL TRADE -

In a

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
George S. Hobstetter Jr .,
Broker
107'11 Sycamore St.
Pam eroy, Ohio
P HDN E '9H3J3

Office HQurs : 'A.M. to 4
P.M.
·a nd

New 4 bedroom, 1500 sq. ft.
living space, 2 12 baths, 12
room rand) brick . Located
3 miles from R1 . 7, up West

Shade River . Call f~r an
·

llh Acre Lo1 Surveyed,
approved for sewage.
wooded and sec luded,
loca1ed .07 of a mile off of
Summerfield road near
Tuppers Pla ins , Ohio .

s4.ooo.oo.

We have need of listings,
all types, homes, land ,
commercial: etc.
·

Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 74:Z-200l
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associate
Home Phone 949-2589

$12,000.
EXCELLENT

-

Very
large newer home with J

bedrooms and 2112 baths.
Has 2 car garage and 1.4
acres. Cen1ral heating and
~ir condition ing with large
stone fireplace.

CARTHAGE HILLS -

3

bedroom ranch home wi1h

ba!h. electric

baseboard

heat. rural water, nice
kitchen and good country

road. Only 116.500 .
RT. 33 - Near Shade. A 3
bedroom , spilt level' home
with nice lot. Garage and
drilled wells. A good buy at
just $21~ 500 .
HORSE FARM - 145 acres
With house , barn.

cellar

and outbuilding . House Is ·
high for nice view of the

land . $36,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms,
3 bedrooms, 11h
baths,
dining,
living 22'x24' ,
intercom ,
stove,
refrigerator , and farge

-

Sweepers , loosters, irons , all
small applionces . lo wn mower ,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6 14 ) 985-

3B2S.
REMODELING, Plumbing . heating
ond all typits of general repa ir.
Work guaranteed 20 years &amp;X ·
perience . Phone 992·2409 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs . ser ·
vice, all molo.e~ . 992·228.:1 . The
Fabri c: Shop , Po merov .
Authorized Singer Sales ond
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

1&gt;98·7331 .
BATHROOMS AND l&lt;it c hens
remodeled : ceromic tile~ plumbing, corpenlry, ond general
maintenance . 13 years ex-

featuring Ash)eys ond corn·
plete selection of cool. gas .
wood circulat in g heater5 .
Ca rpenter, (614) 698·7191 .
ANN DAILEY 'S Uph olste ry .
Portland. Ohio . 843· 2542 .

YAMAHA, HARLEY·DAVIDSON &amp;
Con· Am Motortvdes . Complete
sale s ond fantaslic se rvice!
Hou rs M·T, T 9·6; W· F, q.J : Sal.
9-5. "The Motorcycle People ·of
Southeostern Ohio" Athens
Sport Cycles . Inc ., 20 W. Slim.
son Ave., 'Athen s, Ohio . Phone
~ 4) 592· 1692.

a,·

SUPPW THE
NECESSARY
FORM!P:

Fantastic Flying Fools" 10. 12 :oo-Janakl 33 .
12 : 40-Gamblers : Winners &amp; Lose r s 6. 13 ;
Tomor row 3.4; 2 : 10- News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 58. 9 P .M. - Bound for Glory ( PG J •
7 8. II P .M. - Flying Deuces IGJ

by

step

ACE HARIMARE
Located In

PCN'IIIfOJ

Special Orders or Showing
of Carpets by Appointm e nt

8 00 - Speci al Edit ion
9. 00 - Horne Diges t
Jo ,oo - 700.Ciub .

~fji}N} ffi'\l ~ THA~'scRAMBLED WORD GAME

BO HN LOSER

~ ~ ~~ ®

')()'.leHQUJ, BllfAKrAST I~

1CHI~!&lt;:I~IM

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons .
Owner

Middleport, Ohio
11 ·9·tfc

IT

13€0 I.DSE:S IT$
\IIHEN l()U ~AVE. TO ~&gt;f&gt;RE

HOUSEWIVES ' EARN SI B . $50 o
week or more plus o SJOO wor·
drobe , free . with Beeline
Fas hions . Coli 949-2803 . Also.
booking fas hion shows.

lot.
CURE YOUR HOUSE
NEEDS . SEE US OR CALL
9'12·3325.
Helen l . Teaford

SOMEONE WHO won ts to eo rn
ex tro cosh in their spore time .
No experience necessary.

C. Bruce Teaford
f1J'Associa1es

PUlliNS ~XCAVATING . Complete
Service . Phone 992·2478 .

992·5344 .
--.,.- - --

...

"'--"'--~

Unscramble these fou r Jumbles,
one letter to eact1 square. to form
four ordinary wo rds.

'iOJRSW=.

STORM

RIPIACIMINT

Pomeroy, Ohio

T y ler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.

7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross. Wits 4; Liars Club 6;

l I K I

IYOMARRI

t]

I I I

BELOW

EN SOMEONE A'T5
THI5 WAY, IT'S APT
TO GET A "R:15E. "
OU"T OF 'IOU ,

or 992-6263

WH'f ER·.. I ···

General Contractors
.Phone 949-2801
or 949&lt;uJ60

FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please

I THOUGHT I'D·· ·

Now arrange the ci rcled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by tt1e above cartoon.

Yesterday's

.

HOLD IT

A MINU~ ,

FELLAS!

Appalachian
Stcwe ~pany
A complete selection
of Coal &amp; Circulating
Heaters at low prices .
Fully stocked.
GASO L1 NE
~
A=
Ll=.E::._Y:____

____,r-::::-:---...._,

Rl- 143. Phone 698·7191.
12-1· 1 mo .

11 -21· 1 mo.

EJECT

FUTURE

MORGUE

·aslabllsh a relationship- AN "OVERTURE"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IF CONSTANTINOPLE
BV, we SHOULD BE
FROM "TT&lt;E 'lOP OF

11 -25-1 mo.

We're in Carpenter just off

I

Jumble" VISOR

,
Answer: What the composer made In order to

~.~
.. It'
'

• ALLEYOOP

Racine, OhiO"

Dave Parsons
Owner

r

(Answers tomorrow)

CONTINUOUS
GUTIER SERVICE
third Street

"[I I I I I

Printanswerhare:

SHOP .

5-1/.TfC

Bissell Siding Co.

INTERESTED IN
POliTIC$~

[)()~STAIRS •••

RACINE CARPET

PARTS, LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES Ph. I7U250

Storm Windows
1
Call Pro fessional
Builders

OH I UsED TO···
SOT W~O'S

I HffliRD VOiCES

SALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9·lf C

Automatic
Transmission SeJYice

·-.0.

iJ'l'l'LE OHPHAN ANN II':

IA .M. to4 :30P.M.

·SWAIN

_.------.==------.uv;;
I didn't
hear ·
nuthin' 1

EXC AVATING , dozer , backhoe Wfll do roofing ,. cons tructi on ,
and d i l ~her. Charles R. Hot·
plumbing ond heating. No job
field . Bock Hoe Service ,
too Iorge or too small Phone
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 7.42.1008.
7&lt;2·23&lt;8.

ACROSS
DOWN
I Take pains
I Neighbor of
5 Pursue
Ore .
10 In the center Z Confed·
II Squirrel or
erate of
beaver
Absalom
13 Irish
· 3 Have
export
coming ;
U Appear
2 wda.
15 Suffix
4 Nigerian
meaning
city
somewhat
5 Invent
16 Girl's
6 Intimate
nickname
7 Suffi&gt;: with
17 Gennan name
cannon
prefix
8 Bring upon
_.-~~~-~~---.._ /-=-.,---::=--~ 18 Untruth
oneself:
There is much to
20 Cockney's
3wda.
be done' So man4
flock
9 Play the
wronqs to be ·
Z1 The Ells'
glutton
r i qhted!
stronghold
12 Sinew
2% Trademark ,.......,....,.,....,..,;.design .
· 23Mother; Sp.b-+--+-1-. 25 Napery
fabric
26 OUve genus
27 Addltlonal

Movie Channel 4 -

5 &amp; 7 P .M.-Planet Outlaws (GJ
9 &amp; 11 P .M.-Network ( R I
Cable Channel 5 6 '30 P .M.-Testimony Time.
7,00- Paul Gaudino Family F itness
7 ' 30 - Consultation
8·:00- Sports . Travel World
9:00- ·H·a ppy Place
9: 30 - Blue Ridge Quartet
10 :oo-7oo.Ciub .

Yesterday's Answer
29 Irish
feet
com&gt;ty
19 - Teasdale
30 Actress
Z2 100
Burstyn
centesimi
31 Papal
Z3 Swamp
crown
24 warned .
36 Electric
25 Ear
Jhursday, Dec. I
"----'-'----'-~----c--" - - .
part
37 Golf
%7 Disfigured
score

16 5,21K\

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

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

Cinch hand for Lochridge
• B5
• 765
t B 43

idea . He s imply ran off the

LOoiC M tr 'rHIS

35 Current
37 Hebrew

INAY, f:RNII •••
WI'I"H INP.L.II,.IOH.

38 Stringent
39 Bono;s ex
40 Crossed

DON',. HAve lf'O
A80U,. WIVING

lib lruY A LRT OF
ClfeiiP ~f• . TH"v~~-t

75 V.W.
Beetle

acrostic

oul

41 Sicilian
volcano

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
lo

AXYDJ,BAAXR
J, 0 N. G F E L L 0 W

Mustang II

QOYD

K

YO

J T I KQ

1

HITS

KTQ . -

MDIPMV

PMVVIT
h
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PEOPLE WOUlD RATHER BE
SHOWN HOW VALUABLE YOU ARE, NOT TOLD. - ROGER
BABSON
QOENKD

Burgundy wi t h
white
pinstripe. 4 cyt., A speed .

• J 94

• 9

• J 962

• J 7653
~ Ol

TH 10 1

() l 977

J(jnc

Futurf'5

S)lndi caLP ,

\\t&gt; st

\onh

~: ast

Pass

6A

Pa ss

Pass
Pass

6 N.T Pass

Inc.

monds , Wes t to three hearts
and two diamonds.

Now Charley led his quee n

of cl ubs . West let another
heart g o. Then Charley
played his ace-&lt;Jueen of
hearts. West wa s in with the
king and had to lead away

South
5 N .T.
6A

Pass

from his king of diamOnds .
" Cincl1 hand," remarked
Charley . " I wa s s ure that
Wes t led in1o my spades
because he held both red
k i n~ s . "

Opening lead ,..... 4 •

TIP MDI

QE

0 E B

PKRE .TD .
IK U G

610 764
• K 10 8 3 2
t K 10 7 5

last five spades to come
down to a· ftve-card ending .
East came down to two
clubs, a heart and two dia -

.,AKQ J32
•AQ
tAQ
• AQ 2
Both vuln erable

Vi K T U

74 Ford

UST

--

One letter simply stands for an other. In t his sample A is
u Sed for th e three L's, X for the twO O's, e tc. Sin gle let ters.
apostrophes, the len gth and formnlion of t h e words are all
h ints. Each dn y the cocle lett ers arc difTCreryt.

WINNIE

\\ I::ST

.

CRYPTOQUOTES

E xira nice .

a red-s uit finesse at tflis
point, but he had a. better

• K 10 9 B 4

~~~~------------------------------------; M~ian
river

$3195

Super Beetle

dununy's 10. East pla yed
low lo keep Charley from
taking four c lub tricks .
Charley might have tried

'OR Til

measure

Auto ., A.C., P.S., 6 cyl. ,
AM-FM.

74 V.W.

9:30-Trains : W~ere Will They Go ? 20.
10 ;01)-Qulncy 3,4,15; News 20 ; Fall of Eagles 33.
10:3()-Fawlty Towers 20
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,B,10,13,1·5; Dick Cavett 20 ; Lil ias,
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
. 11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Baretta 6,13; Mash 8;
ABC News 33 ; Movie " The Raven" 10.
12 :0()-Monty Python's Flying Circus 33 .
12 :05-Kojak B; 12:31f--Janakl 33 ; 1.2 :41f--Lohman &amp;
Barkley 6: Ironside 13.
I :co-Midnight Special 3,4, 15; Movie " Death Smiles on
a Murderer" 10.

33 Recline

75TCorona
Mark II

LocaL one ow ner , fvel
in jection . ·

Lake Wood Manor" 6, 13; Movie " The Four
Musketeers" 8, 10 ; Reflections on Ralls 20; Leonard
Bernstein Conducts 33.

fibn
32 Land

ECONOMY SPECIALS

A. C., 4 cyl ., 5 speed trans.,
4 doors.

in Review 20,33
B:3o-Chico &amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Wa ll Street Week 20,33.
9:oo-Rockford Fi'les 3,4, 15;' Movie " It Happened at

28 Matter: 18'11'1=-+......J1 %9
Mlnnelli

VW ~ AMC ~ JEEP

75 Datsun
610

of 4; Billy Graham Crusade 8,10; Washing1on Week

.1

RIVERSIDE

; cyl ., 4 speed.

Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13)
Gilligan ' s Is. 15; Almanac 20; Making Things Grow
33.
.
7:3D-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4: Candid Camera
6; Price is Right 8; MacN e il -Lehrer Report 20,33;
Family Feud 10; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop
Goes The Country 15.
B' ®-CP0Sharkey3, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13: In Search

1: 4D-News 13; 2:3()-News 3.
3:oo-Movle " The Young Warr io rs" 3; 4 ,3o-FBI 3;
5:3D-B ig Valley 3; 6 :31f--Bewitched 3.

b--+--+-

76 Chevrolet
Luv Truck

1'DO-·Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
1:Jo-Oays of Our Lives 3,-4, 15; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2,oo-s20.000 Pyram id 6,13 ; 2'31f--Doctors 3,4,15; One
Life to Live 6, 13; Gui ding Light 8, 10 .
J: oo-Another World 3,4,15; Crockett' s Victory Garden
20 .
3, 15-General Hospital 6, 13; 3:3D-AII In The Family
8,10; Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20.
4,oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals·Our Gang 4:
Gong Show 15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan' s Is. 8;
Sesame St . 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4:3D-My Three Sons 3; Partr idge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8,10; Little Rascals 15.
S:DO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan ' s

6:oo-News 3,; ,8, 10,13.15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3D-N1!C News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.

300 Main St.,
Pomerov 992-6282

lS ; Divorce Court 8; Midday 13.
12 ,31f--Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4 ; .Ch ico &amp; the

Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15 .

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

WINDOWS UOOIS

J2: QO----Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; To Say The Least

5' 3D-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20 ,33; Mary

CARTER

flnJncint Anil1bh
IUow1ll1ta Will I Attics

S,roc,., Ohio
Ph. 992·3!r.ll

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

11 ·25-1 mo .

FREE ESTIMATES

6,oo-PTL Club 15: 6: 25-{)verseas Mission 10; 6;30Columbus Today 4 ; News 0; Sunrise Semester 8.
6:45---Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morn ing j West
VIrgin ia 13; 6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good
Morning, Trl State 13.
1'oo-Today 3.4, IS; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
7,30-Schoolles 10; B:oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesa me
St. 33.
9,oo-Merv Grlll ln 3: Phil Donahue 4; Ne w Mickey
Mouse c;;tub 6: Family, Affair 8, 10.
9' 3()--Magazine 10; Andy Griff ith 8; Edge of Night 6.
IO ,oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4,15; Big Va lley 6·; Price is
Right 8: Mike Douglas 13.
I0 ,3D-Hollywood Squares 3,&lt;, 15; Joker's Wild 10.
11 :oo-Wheel of Fwtune 3,1 5; Happy Days 6,13;
Mar-cus Welby , M.D. 4: Match Game 8,10: E lee. Co .
20
]1 ,3(}-Knockout 3.15 ; Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
8,10; Sesame St . 20,33 .
JUs-CB S News 8; Loving Free 10.

M an 15; Search for Tomorrow B, 10; E lee . Co. 33 .

7 :00 - Paul Gaudino Family F itnes s
7: 30 _: Coac h 's Corner

Only .

MEIGS PLAZA

1:00-

Cabel Cha nne I 5 6,30 P .M . - Test imony Time

CLOSED FOR WINTER·

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The

game

was

m a tc h-

point duplicate. The la te
Charles Lochndge, one of
the great dummy playe r s,
whose bidding wa s on the
sensational side e lec t e d to
·operi fiv e notru.mp and

wound up at six afler getting
a e hance t o show hi s s p a d es .

West opened the fou r of
spades . Charley won, played
his a ce of clubs, stopped for

a second to note th a t Wes t
had disca rded the deuce Of
hearts

and

continu ed

by

leadtng his deuce of clubs lo

A Canadi a n reader wants
11 know the correct o pening
bid with '
.
.. KI Ox •A JIOx t K l09
X A K J
when playi ng a standard 1618 point notr ump .
We open one notr ump . The
three · 10 s p ots mak e our
'ha nd worth an ex tra point.
~ f:\..'S I'AI'EH

t:\·n :HI'IU St: ASSN 1

F or a co ny o l J A CO BY
M OD ERN send S 7 ro Wrn 81
Br ,dqe
c o lhts newspaoet .
P 0 Bo)' -4 89 Radro Crty S ta/!o n.
Ne., Yon, NY 100 19 J

BARNEY .

Don't Uke The 78's?
GET A '77 AND SMILE
77 Grand Prix, auto., a.c., p.s.
77 Monte Carlo, auto., a.c •• p.s.

nit;e. Has al l 1he m inerals
and a small barn . Good
Hunting .

F .A. furna ce , family room
and carpor:J on o.v er sized

Ea sy 33 .
11:30-Johnny Carson 3.4.15 ; Police Sto ry 6, 13 ; Mov ie
" The Firechaser s'
BC News 33 ; Movie " Those

_y~. ~~
2 ·~3~
M~5~·------­
APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY

fenced lot . $38,500 .
40 ACRES ~ Some lays

RACINE AREA - Large
living , 3 bedrooms, bath,

Easy
step
instructions.

EXCAVATING , do:zer , l0ader and
back hoe work : dump trucks
ond lo-boys for hire: will houl
1!11 dirt , lo soil, limes tone and
grovel. Cell Bob or Roger Jef fe rs, dav phone 992·7099, night
phone 992-3525 or 992· 5232.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
co yoting , sep tic syslems ,
darer, backh oe , dump truck ,
limestone. grovel , blackto p
po .... ing , AI. 143. Phone 1 (614) ·

MUST IJ!' HA!\ID LE'D
ACCORDING TO
REGUl. AT IONS :

11 . 00-News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13. 15 ; Dick Cavett 20 : Over

MEA"'WHIL.E··
IF VOU CARE TO
SU&amp;MIT A FORMAl..
P~OPOSAl. ·· IVE ' L.l.

SHOP

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding ·

1he river , 1 floor plan , 3
bedrooms, bath, dinii'lg R.
Kitchen has range &amp; ref..
basemen t,
N .G .
heat.

family neighborhood a t a
fart~ily price . 3 bedrooms,
1'/2 baths, and large yard .
Jus1 outside of town .

appointment.

TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

"Get ALoad Of This"

REALTOR

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon .

OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And

I A55UilE 'IOU·· MAJOR MBDWAV/1;
IUPO!t'r ON ~OUR ~EW FIGHTER Wll.L.
GET CAREFUL ATTSNTIO,_,,,

RACINE CARPET

LARRY LAVENDER

JUST Sll,OOO.OO.
POMEROY - Overlooks

S12,S(JO.OO .
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

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT

CUT!Us.AWNINGS

Let The Open ng

10 3o-Faw lty Towers 20.

:=========":':'"=" : ~=========~
,

ALUMINUM

Nice

will service Hotpoinl and

Ad\iition, Flatwoods Road ,

Pomeroy Landmark

RANCH TYPE -

TEAFORD(B

zoned and all utilities
available. $2500 per acre.

all

shop. $16,500.00 ,

992·2174

,~

SIOING-SOffiTT

Chester, Ohio
10-JO.c

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

Plenty of acre lots at the.
Wildwood
Estates

aecessories. Yes, we will
layawav for Christmas.

room

We have enlarged our
service depar1ment and

Priced to go at

ROBYN C.B.
sx 007
$79.95

13

''TtltOriainltoft
N.tThtlmitJII)B

WINDOWS

co1taage, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
bath, ki1chen with range &amp;
ref. " N.G .heat, s1arms .

DODGE CHARGER . 1972

Olds 350 engine . 400 Olds
tr ans mission . heoYy duty. 39·1
r@or end . Se t of Ansen wheels
and !ires . Col1742·2-450.

POMEROY -

SYRACUSE

APPLES. FJTZPATRICK Orchards .
Stole Route 689 . Phone
Wllkesvil)v , 669.:)785 .
RUGS . WALL Hangings and
ofgom; . Nice for Christmos .
Reasonable . Call992.221-4 .

a nd

Jack's Septic
Tank Sel't'ice

Box 34

992·2206 or 992·7630

Blown

126.600.00.

Will CARE for the elderly in ou r
home . Phone 992-73 14.
AUCTION SALE . &amp;\iery Tues . ond
Fri. at 7 pm . New and· used
merchandise a t Ohio River Auc .
tion, Meigs Plaza , Middlepor t,
Ohio . HOme Phone (30.4)

FARM 70 acres nice
la ying land. N ice: home
with 2 bedrooms, dining
room , ba1h. large living
with fireplace, carpeting,
ful l basement &amp; garage.
Large .
hog
house .
av1omatic feeders , Pond ,

other bu ildings . S3B,500 .00.

992 · ~ 561 ..
3 AND 4 RM . furnis hed and un·
fu tn ished opts .· Phone 992- CO BRA I ~ 5 CB rod,io, l Oll · Oelto
radio . Phone 992·7066.
5434 .
FO UR ROOMS a nd both . Adults
onl~ . No pets . 992·5900 .

12

0.

NEW · WOODond cool burn ing
! ~love ond 20 ~ I . Ot S:love pipe.
Phone 742 ·.2003 .
pr o • 1,300 miles . Comes wi th 1
helm et . $400. Like ·new . Coli
between 11 om a nd 8 pm .

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Park .
Ro ute 331 north of Po meroy .
Lor ge lots . Ca11992·7-479.
Incredible ! Whv poy high electric
bills !his winter? Lei us pay
them lor you! One bedroom
from $130 now available .
Village Manor , Third ond Mill
Streets . Mi~dleport. Telephone
992-7787 . Equol Hoysing Op·
portunitv .

MAIN
POMEROY.

At

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

lnsuliUon Smices

Phone 985-3106

Hotpoint ·

L'APTAIN EASY
M'i DISAR 511&lt;:: YOU
oON'f $EEM TO REAL IZ.E
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMSNT

-.414ftcH t• tt..
Cooo.

Phone Mike Youn1

A BC News Closeup

I. Claudius 33 : Billy

Graha m Crusad e 10; News 20.

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

C1rpet &amp;UphOlstery

commerciat
Call
fOr
estima1e, 24 hour service.
Anyday , any1ime.

Good Refrigerator S1SO

6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8;

Nwlt 3 PomtfGJ, 0.

Save 30 pet. to so pet.

R e s i d e r'l · t i a I

20,33 .
Y ~o-- - Cart e r Co untry 6, 13; 10 :00

Steam Ettrlttion

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Save sso .oo on a new
Ho1poln1 Refrigerator

20.33; Waltons 10.
8:3(}- Best o f Ernie Kovacs 20.33.
9 :oo-Hall of Fam e 3.4. 15: Barney Miller 6, 13; AII .Star

Superior

K"lnP'UIJ
,.,..
Home Sales

ONE USED co ol fu rnace pipes ond
reg isters . S300 . Coli between

Complete

992-2126

8 vll

Uprigh1 Freezer

t

1

l\1

h

1977 Monte Carlo ••••••• ~100
Sport wheels, air. cruise, 1ilt P . windows, c lo1h
in1erior, tiucket seat, AM-FM rad io, t:olor sil ... er with
matching 1andau top. A really clean sharp car .

l

(

9'12·7066.

Red with white vinyl top. carefully driven &amp; IQaded
with every option inc. air, 1ilt wheeL speed &amp; t:ru lse,
fvll pOwer . CO. car, never titled .

0

s
h

f,

1976 21 FOOT Terry Travel
Trailer . equipped . Ph o ne

4 Dr ., 11 ,000 mlles by careful owner . Beautiful white
over dark red finish , 305 V-8, automatic , P .S., P.B ., air
conditioned, spare never used , showroom cl~n . Save.

)

~

ST AACRAFT FAll Sole. Min i·
mo tors . 20' end 22'. TrciVel
Trailers , 18' 5" S.J.799, 25' 7"
Bunkh9use $4 ,875. Fold-down .
$1 ,700 up. We sell service and
quoHly . Open Sundovs . .Camp
Conley Storcroh.Sales , Rl . 62,
N, of Pt. Pleasant.

USED CAR SAVINGS
1977 Chevrolet Impala $5495

s

SMALL form lor sole, 10 • . down .
0\&gt;Y fl e! ftnan ccd Monroe Coun ·
~O UR YE AR old Polled Herel or d
t)l W Yo. Phone {304 ) 77'1

8 ·0G-Chips 3, 4, 15. Santa Uaus is &lt;.om1ng To Town
6, 13; Billy Graham Crusade 8; Once Upon A Classic

Tr ibute to Elizabeth Taylor 8 ,1 0 : Best of Fa m ilies

FOR SALE

FIVE ROOM fu rnished apartment.
Newe ll 's Sunoco , Chester

2

3 bed• oom h~;~ u se 2 bolhs
all elec
I oue M1ddleport
close to Rv llond Phone 992
7481

•279.95

FO UND NEAR Rt. 7, off Leoding
Creek Rd : Beagle dog . Call
992·3260 to identify .

appli ance ser11iceman . Pa id
holidays ,
vocatio ns
and
hospilalizotion .
Gallia
Ref rigerator Co .. 611 3rd Ave.,
Gallipo lis , Ohio.

"

CL ARIN ET rn e~ c eltenr cond•
hon 575 {jq2 5786

O N~

N~W

1976 HONDA 750 Super ~p ort b. Commercto l property oppro x. 17
on hea1ing cost
tros Firs t $1 295 Mo torc ycle
a cres. level land located ot
Experience and
and · or ga rden tractor trot!er
Tvppers PI&lt;;Jins on 9h1o RouiC
tully insured
Heavy duty . $75. 992·52-40.
1 Phone (6!4) b67-0l04 .
Free Est.
ADMIRAl UPRIGHT Freezer 1S VA-FHA . 30 yr . fmonc.ng . Ireland
Call667•6479
cu lt . Good co ndi tion . $150 .
992-61 38.
Mortgage , 77 E. Statu , Athens ,
11 ·1 4-1 mo. pd .
pho ne (614 ) 5q2.J051 .
'===;==;::===~
CO NTROL HUNGER ond lose 2. STORY 3 bedroorn f rame I
we1ght with New Shop e Diet
house , F. A furnace . storm win Plan ond Hydrex Water Pills At
dows . li fc ploce in Middlepor t.
DuHon Or~ -~id dlepor t .
Phone 9n -34S7 or C/C't) .5867 .
ALL El ECTRIC 3 bedroorn home
wi th utility room and Iorge kit - • Mob i I e
H o m e'
chen alum inum s1d in g . attach·
Underpinning
ed goroge, 2 sto rage buildings. • Roof Coating
garde n spot established yard
FOUR ST . Berna rd fe mo le puppiE'S Let Pomeroy Landmark
with trees and shrubs. All on I
• Tie· Downs
to gt ve owoy to good home. soften &amp; condi1ion your
acre. Tuppers Pla ins . Oh1o . • Awnings - Carports
Should hove spayed . Phone water and (o.op water
9.49·248q for informat ion .
16 14 166 7· 3096 . _
•Insurance
Repairs
softener, Model UC·SVI.
HOUSE FOR Sole . 3 bedroom. I
Now Only
car garage . 2 ~ear s old . See us at 1100 East Main
$27.500.
Rustic Hills . Syracuse . Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or
Le1 us test yoUr wa1er Free
?9_2-_55_4_1:..
Phone 992-7034. 10·29-1mo.
1974 VEGA . Priced reasonoblv .
1.3 ACRES ON l e ad ing Creek
7b0 l aure l Streel , M)'d dlepo rf.
Ro od. Phone 992· 7066 .
New Co -Op water and
Ohio .

1977 GMC HEAVY Holflon equip·
ped . 1975 Hornet Sponoboul
Wogan . Phone m .7Q66.

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR qnd

c

Tr orn bone l flute both 11'-. e
new Women s 10 speed brk e
hardly 11dden 9q2 7621

ON ~

THURSDAY , OECEM!!ER I, 1977

Business Services

NINE BLACK Angus Cows w11h HOM~S!IlS lo r so le- I acre and
up Mtddleporl . near Rutland
calve:. Coli George f•ec:.. e r
Coli 997 7 481
9e5 3827 elo'('lllngi

-

NO HUNTING on the follow ing
properties Gu )l Rose , Warren
Rose. Robert l ee , Winston
Varney . Carl Ollutt. Charles
Bush a nd Cor! Mo.rris .

Sunrlse Semester 10.

Real &amp;tate for 1iale

Pet&amp; for SalE

ABSOLU TE LY NO hunt1ng or
trespassin g
on
George
Freeland's propt!'r ty . Syracuse.

~'
4 P.M.

\

TELEVISilJN
VIEWJN(;

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

$5595.00
$5195.00

RECENT TRADE INS
'

74 Mercury Comet. auto., a.c.
73 Ford L TO, local car

$2995.00
$1895.00

'{OUR BOX OF GOLD

STARS? NO, M/l:AM,
I DON'T HAVE IT

I'M AN HONEST
PERSON .. .I EVEN HAVE
AN HONEST FACE ..

IT'S

A liTTLE

DISORGANIZED,
BUT IT'S HONEST!

'IOU SHORE
WORKED HARD
IN SCI!-!OCll
TODAY, ,..--...__""'
JUGHAID

vc·o .. r HAD A HEAP
OF KETCH IN' UPTO DO
AFTER BEIN' ABSENT
FER THREE
DAYS

I 'TRIPPED ARKY TWICET, DIPPED
SAMANTHY'S PIGTAILS IN TH'INKWELL,
TARNED LOOSE A SACK OF GRASSHOPPERS,
AN' PUT THREE FROGS IN TH'
SCHOOLMARM'S DESK
If~

�..

Public workers' collective bargaining
vetoed
.

COLUMBUS (U?Ji - Declaring it would ha ve dangerous
and costly consequences, Gov . James A. Rhodes Friday vetoed
a collective bargaining bill for public employees passed by
majortty Democrats as a major goal or this legislative session.
When Dayton firefighters went ,m strike and let several

str~ctur~ burn to the ground earlier this year, le~alizing

stnke rtghts for public employees became a controversial

SHOP EVERY DEPARTMENT, VISIT EVERY FLOOR FOR GIFTS FOR EVERYONE ON YOUR LIST.

issue. The final version of the bill, pounded out in Senate-House
conference committee permits strike by all but public safety
workers hke pollee and firefighters.
It nevertheless ran into considerable opposition and the bill
was passed by a margin small enough to suggest Democrats
don 't have enough votes to override the governor.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE MANY ITEMS SALE PRICED NOW

But Rhodes said the bill which would have repealed the

state's 3Q..year-uld Ferguson Ad pruhibiting lhe statL•'s 500,000
public wnrkers from striking, fell fa r siHirt nf a wlmt a
collettive bargai ning measure must du: ''create a healthy omd
productive atmostphere for negut iations between empluyers
and employees, while siymltaneously guaranteeing to the tax
paying public continued and uninterrupted services fur wh1eh

they have paid tax dollars."
He said it modifies only superfkiaJly some provisions of a
sim ilar bill he vctned two years ago. The governor said he was

disapproving the bill specificially because of the strike
provision, a requirement for binding arbitration as the final
step in an impasse and a provision allowing fOr an agency
shop, !ffider which publi(• employees are nt't t rPouirM t n l1rol n" t!.

to·a uniun but must pay a " service fee" in place of dues if the)'

SALE JUST9

Regular S98 .99 Size 9x12

Rhodes said the bi'll would allow strikes by menta I health and
programs.

"Labor procedW'es found in the private sector, such as
strikes, cannot automatically be transferred to the
government sector without creating severe hardships," he

said.
Rhodes said requiring binding arbitration as the final step in
an impasse was "unfair to employees because it binds them to
the award while permitting a city council or school board to

OVAL BRAIDED RUGS

Hundreds of ties to select from. Either four in· hands or ready tied . Solids. white ,
patterns . When you g ive him a Wembley tie.
you ' ll re~lly please .

Approximate size 9x12 feet. reversib le . Home
Furnishings. 1s t Floor .

'59

. FREE GIFT BOXES

SALE PRICES
GIFT SALEI

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS
Sizes 38 to 46 reg ulars and longs, zip out linings,
choice of colors. Popula r styles. Sale prices now.

'59.95 All WEATHER COATS .............s49.20
~.95 All WEAntER COATS ...; ... :.... '45.10
THIS

Y~AR

GIVE

A KIMBALL PIANO
SALE PRICES
Select a Kimball Spinet or console
piano. Fine tone. s uperb furniture
styling. A gift the whole family will •
en joy for years an~ years.

QUILTED BEDSPREAD
SAVE 20%

Bedspreads for full , tw in, king or queen sizes .
An excellent selection of patterns and co lors.
Sale includes also matching draper ies and
pillow shams .

ELICTRIC BLANKET

ELECTRI C BLANKET

Girls' Tops and Sweaters
. Our en ti re s tock of swea ter s. kn it tops. cowl
necks. and turtle necks in sizes 2-4, 4-6x. 7- 14.

LITTLE BOYS

TUPS AND SWEATERS
Inc lu des
sweaters .
sweatshirts and knif tops.
Sizes 3 to 7.

MUSIC DEPARTMENT ON THE 2ND FLOOR
Music Department on the 2nd floor. Sele.c l the
guitar you like. guilar case. strings, picks,
straps, instruction ,books. ·

HOLIDAY SLACKS SALE!'
Just in lime for Christmas giving ... fantastic
savings on every pair of men ' s slacks in stock!
Large assortment of sizes and styles ... one just
right for your man!
.Siz~s 29 ·. to 48 . Solid-colors and patterns.

SPECIAL SALE

,,

WOMEN'S SWEATERS
Si ze~ 34 - 5~

LADIES

Plenty of good styles and colors
that are sure to please. Let us
help you with your selection.

COAT SALE
Buy now while the
selection is good and
save! Junior, missy
and half sizes.

WOMEN'S TOPS
Nice se lection of styles.
colors and s izes S. M. L and

XL.

MEN'S AND BOYS'
$1.25 TUBE SOCKS

Jackets , tops. skir t s, ves t s,
sweaters and · satin b lo uses.
Velvet slacks , j ackets and sklrts,
sizes 3-6 to 11 - 14.

EXTRA SIZE '"'

MEN'S $26 JOG SUITS ·
\

Zipper jackets and bottoms to match
as pictured. Sj.les medium, large a'nd
extra large. Uflusual and app.reciated
gift for him . ·

1

19.99

'7.95 SHIRTS ...... '6.95

Chris tmas sale of men 's work un iforms. Another
big shi pme nt just received . Pa nts in -s izes 29 to
50. Shirts in sizes 14 1 ' to 20. Pe r f.ect match in
navy blue, dark ol ive. khaki. cha rcoa l and
spruce green .

FOR THE
TRAVELER
ON YOUR
CHRISTMAS
LIST

Just received a big shipment of Airway luggage
now on sale, 1st floor. Styles for men and
women. Thoughtful gift.

Men's ss9.95 Sport Coats.............. s49,99
Men's s49.95 Sport Coats .............s41.99
Men's s39.95
Coats .............. s32.99

GIRLS' COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR .
Nice selection of holiday slacks, skirts,
gauchos, vests, sweaters, knit tops,
and cotton tops . Dressy velvets
included sizes 7-14.

MEN'S 3 PIECE VESTED SUITS

SALE PRICES

95

Work Wear

SPORTSWEAR SALE
T t1 is sale includ~s Lady Jane
Colby, Patri cian and Lady
Devon . Slacks slzes 30 to 46.
Tops. jackets, and blouse sizes

JB' to 46.

"I am not going to do

ORIGINAL VOLUNTEERS - These residents were
recognized Thursday at a Meigs County Retired Senior
Citizens Volunteer Program luncheon as original
members of the Meigs County Council on Aging. They are,
front , I to r, Pauline Roush, Evelyn Knight and Gertrude
Mitchell; back, I to r, C. J . Struble and ?atrick Lochary.

You'll .like the selection of men 's suits a t
Elberfelds and you'll like the exce llent values.
Sizes 36 to 46 regulars and longs . Solid color .
stripe . patterns.

'95JJO SUITS ................... SALE '79.99
ss9.95 SUITS................... SALE s75,99
S79.95 SUITS ....... ~ ......... SALE SS6.99

JEANS AND
FASHION JEANS
..

CERTI FICATES FROM GOVERNOR - Bob Richmond , area director of the Golden
, Buckeye Cards p•ogram, presented certificates from Gov. James Rhodes to six residents
for thelr work over the past months in signing up senior citizens as ParticipantS in the

Sr. volunteers
told 'thank you'
Approximately 160 of the
265 members en rolled in the

program Thursday. With their a warda are, front, I tor, Marcia Dennison, Edith Williamson,
Leona Hensley, Mae McPeak; back, Ito r, Charles R. (Dick ) Karr, Early Roush, Dwayne
Hawk , assistant to Rictmumd apd Richmond, area director of the program.

Middleport
Park, the
multiphasic health screening
clinic, the Mei gs Mental
a " thank ~yo u " luncheon Health Center , Yesteryea r,
Thursday at the Royal Oak Eastern High School, the
Park recreation building.
Middleport Elementary
From Jan. I, 1977 through School, and operation of
Nov. 30 this year seni or senior clubs at Rutland, Long·
volunte~rs gave 37,815 hours Bottom and Harrisonville.
time to the community at
At the center in Pomeroy,
volunteer stations includ(ng volunteers also qulit, weave
the Meigs County Health rugs, cane chairst work on
Depa rtment, Meigs County crafts, rag rugs, fold and
Cancer Clinic, Racine kln- address newsletters, serve
derg·arten , Pomeroy and del iver meals , mow
Elementa ry School, Southern grass, plant and weed
Junior High , the American fl owers, and many other
activities .

Hom e

visits,

INews • • •in BriefsJ
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - NEGOTIATORS FOR COAL operators
and the United Mine Workers, ending a week-long stalemate,
agreed to meet today for talks to avert a nationwide
reswne talks followed a UMW 'proposal to 'limit negotiating
teams to four members each. The size of the teams had
stymied negotiations since last Friday when talks were broken
off.
Mine workers have threatened tc strike Tuesday at 12:01
a.m. EST if agreement is not reached on a new contract.
"This is a promising development," sald a spokesman for

the Federal Mediat.ion and Conciliation Service, which had
been tryin g for three days to get the two sides together. "It will
be the first joint l)leeting under government auspie&lt;:s."
Administration officials Thursday expressed growing
concern about the talks,
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall swnmoned union President
Arnold Miller to his office for a briefing, and the Energy
. Department warned of coal shortages.
BALTIMORE- AN OUT.QF .COURT SETILEMENT of a
state antitrust suit requires Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. to
stop selling tires to oil companies for 18 months, according to
the attorney general. Francis B. Burch said .Thursday the
agreement follows more than three years of litigation and
applies only to Maryland oil companies and service stations.
The state claimed that Goodyear gave.the oil companies
"con!ide~tial discounts" so they would force their retail gas
stations to buy the tires. "The consent decree will especially
(Continued on page 14)
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::: :::::::::::: :: :::::::::::::::::::~::.

WINNER ANNOUNCED
. Winners ln. the first drawing "In the Gold Star
Christmas Give-A,.ay held Thursday were Iris Payne,
Middlepurl who received a $10 gift certificate !rom
Swisher and Lohse and Norma Wilson, Pomeroy, a $10 gUt
certificate from Stlfflers.
The Christmas promotion Is sponsored by Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce. No purchase fs necessary to
participate.
.
FIRS~

:;:::::::;;.;.;:::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::j:::;:;:;:;:;:

'

sympathetic to business.
"We obviously have to have
some flexibility in negotiations," Carter told the group,
noting that he has not been

the administration involved
In the bargaining effort "are

not authoriz,ed by m~ to
depart from 1administration
policy" wit!loht his approval
first.
But Carrer conceded, "I
may not be able to satisfy you
completely.''

He said that there has been
''encouraging" progress
made thus far in reaching a
compromise,
but

STAFF WORKED - The staff of the Meigs County Retired Senior Citizens Volunteer
Program had an important role in staging the luncheon to thank sen ior volunteers for their
year of work Thursday. Operating the program through the county senior citizens center,
are Jeanne Braun, Alice Wamsley, director, and Susan Oliver (1... ).

telephoning, trips to the
doctor , grocery shoppin g,
leaf raking, window and
Meigs County Infirmary, the . home repair are some of the
COAD Nutrition Program, other services performed by ·
the Personal Advocacy the senior volunteers for
Program,
Veterans residents who can no longer the county.
Memoria l Hospital , Athens do these things. The volun·
The luncheon was held to
State Hospital, Chester teers also contribute time and say "thank you" to these
Elementary School, th e effort towards raistng dollars senior citizens for their work .
hearing clinic, the simulated for operational costs for all of Following the luncheon slides
eme rgen cy
exe r cise, the senior citizen programs in were shown of the various
~~'*'"»~~~~"&lt;»-::R,~~;::;~-:;.o;,·;:;:;.-;:~,,,;~;;:,'*'-;:,:,:''"''*'~~..,~%.~~1

Senate version seen as mOre

He said that members of

Meigs County Retired Senior
Vol unt eer Program attended

Red Cross, Meigs County
cancer office, Meigs County
Museum, the bookmobile ,
Arcadia Nursing Home ,

clandestine,' '

Carter told the congressmen
during a meeting in the
cabinet room.
The meeting was called to
address doubts of the liberals
who have openly expressed
fear that the administration
will ~ack down on some of the
major issues at stake in ·the
compromise efforts between
,the tough House bill and a

directly involved in current
discussions.

Pomeroy Fire Depa rtment,

bitwninous coal industry strike next week . Agreement to

COORDINATED
SPORTSWEAR

Boys size fils all sizes 7 to 11 . Men' s size fits all
'i• sizes-9 to 15. White with colored tops . Buy now .
for that little extra gift .

aac PR.

SALE!

·-Six nations in Europe and
Asia from Dec . 29 to Jan. 6.
Car ter will embark on
- Three nations in South
three world trips in the next America and Africa between
six months in what officials March 24 and April 3,
say is an attempt to exert · ~ An international
leadership in a world no economic stimmit in Bonn
longer totaUy dominated by combined with a state visit tc
the two superpowers.
West Germany in June or
Carter will go to:
July.
travel schedule.

negotia tions.
anything

SALE PRICES
SALE PRICES

SPECIAL GIFT SALE

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

t e House annoWiced a new

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
. WASHINGTON (U?I) ~
President Carter promised a
group of congressional
lil&gt;erals today he will make no
secre t concessio ns on a
nati onal ·energy bill, but ,
warned them there is a need
for flexibility in the current

'8.95 PANTS ..... '7.95

Select the coat you like then a pair or two of
slacks to go with the coat. It's a perfect gift for
him .

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

Sizes 36 to 46, jeans and vest
match coat perfectly. Also men's

Sizes 36 to 46 in regu la r s and longs. Excellent
pattern s and a good se lect ion of solid colors.

t;;HRISTMAS GIFT

GIVE HER A HANDBAG

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2. 1977

Carter promises
no secret deals

MEN'S BLUE DENIM
SPORT SUITS

MEN'S SPORT COATS

Plain
and
Patterns.
Pullover. belted. button
front .

THIS YEAR

CAN'T DECIDE WHAT TO GIVE?
STOP AT THE OFFICE ON 2ND FLOOR,
BUY A GIFT CERTIFICATE.

khaki 3 piece suits

You' ll find a big selection. of
electric
b l ankets .
Home
f urn ishings departmen t. lsi floor .
Twin . fu ll , queen and k ing size
beds. Ideal gift t ha t lasts for
many years .

HOLIDAY SALE PRICES

GIVE A

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 162

•

~

CONTINUING THIS SALE

UITAR

VOL. XXVIII

•

•

e

... AGIFT
CERTIFICATE

'

reject it. The rul~s of collective bargaining should apply
equally to both sides of the bargaining table," Rhodes said.
He added that binding arbitration takes respdnsibility for
decision making from the hands of elected representatives.
"The most repulsive feature of the bill," Rhodes declared,
"would permit payments in lieu. of union dues to charitable
organizations approved by the employee organization, and the
employment relations boards from those public employees
who are prohibited due to sincerely held religious belief from
financia lly supporting employee unions."
Rhodes said the provision "forces a citizen of this state to
purchase his religious freedom, and is iotally contrary to this
country's cherished heritage of religious freedom .

..

school employees, medical personnel, public transit workers
and personnel who issue checks in a number or goverrunent

•

WEMBLY TIES
FOR' HIM

~

do not belong ,

work stations and volunteers.
Presented were the ~ir s t

ha ve worked for several

members of the Meigs
Council on Aging and given
certificates from Gov. James
'Rhodes were volunteers who

citizens for the Golden
Buckeye . Cards. A square
dance was held to conclude

months in signing up senior

the afternoon activities.

Meigs honored
for role in
VOte On trapS
Attending the Ohio Farm
Burea u Federati on 59th
annual meeting at the Neil
Hoilse, Columbus, this week
along with 15 others from
Meigs County were Mrs.
Donald Mora,

Pomeroy ,

Meigs County Farm Bureau
president ; Henry Frank ,
Pomeroy , public affai rs
chairman, and Samuel

Michaels, Min ersvi ll e,
Landmark delegate.
Mrs. Mora served on the
state policy developm ent
committee which devoted
several days to compiling and
reviewing policy submitted
from 86 counties before
making . suggestions to the
annual meeting delegates for
their consideration. ·
Meigs Co unty was among
the top 10 counties in the state
honored at the Tuesday
moll)ing business session for
having worked hard for the
"No" Vote on Issue T':"o·
Issue Two called for bannmg
leg hold traps in Ohio and was
suundly defeated in Meigs
County by 88.37 percent.
State president Walla ce
Hirschfield pre·s ented
miniature leg hold traps to
each 10 county presidents.
A commemorative gift for
an increase in 1977 county
membership was presented
to Mrs. Mora at the
president's honor luncheon
held at the Sheraton Hotel.

Sheriffs business
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated two
battery theftS on Wednesday. Clifford South, Rt. 3, ?omeroy,
said he was at a local night club outside of Pomeroy and when
he came out Wednesday night the battery had been removed
from his 1969 Mercury,
·
·
Wednesday morning Duane Longenette, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom, said a battery had been stolen from his GMO ·truck
. that had been parked near the Twin City Shrine Club building
at Racine. He discovered the theft Wednesday morning.
Thursday a fte~noon at 3:20 p.m. at Meigs High School
parking lot, a car owned by Verna Evans, 47, Galtipolis, was
struck when an auto driven by Raymond A. Wilford, 18, Rt. I,
Middleport, backed into its left side. There was no damage to
the Wilford auto, moderate damage to Evans'. Wilford was
cited for improper backing.

Reminder to recently appointed special deputies: A basic
police school of 2BO hours is being conducted in Meigs County
that Q11alilies the officer to the Ohio Peace Officers' Certificate
upon successful completion .
The certificate is required of all deputies or police officers
or they must fo rfeiftheir commissions within one year of the
appointment, according tc rules of the Ohio Peace Officers
CounciL
·
The classes will be held at the Meigs High School with the
exception of Friday nights when the course will be at the Meigs
Junior High Cafeteria at Middleport. The class runs from 6
p.m. to 10 p.m:
·., ..' '-&lt;i".&gt;~ _&lt;£1'.J 1 &lt;;J- . ' ' ·~ ' ·'"' 1

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~'

Weather

Cloudy Saturday with highs
to upper 40s. Mostly clear
toni ght , lows near 30 .
Probability of precipitation
20 percent today, 10 percent
tonight, 20 percent Saturday.

·~

·,
~,

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS
I.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mildred
Arn old , ?omeroy; Gladys
Nicholson, Rutland.
DISCHARGED - Melodl
Cundiff, Florence Horton,
Kimberly Robinson .

acknowledged several major
issues

remain

unsolved,

inclUding pricing for natural
gas and crude oil. .
The House members have

been dissatisfied with White
House efforts in seeking passage of an energy bill, many
urging a tougher stand.
Carter, while still pushing
the administration's position,
appeared to be setting the
stage for some concessions.
The president had to
postpone his first major trip
abroad beceause of the
energy controversy. On
Thursday, however, theW hi

Pool profit of
$4,528 reported
SYRACUSE - London
Swimming ?ool in Syracuse
made a profit of $4,528.09
Robert Wingett, council
president, reported to a
regular meeting of council
Thursday night.
Total receipts
were
$17,564.94, broken down into:
parties, $1,025.50; gate,
$5,815.03; lessons, $2,176;
season passes, $3,TI4.85, and
concession stand, $4,696.56.
1Council members were
obviously pleased with the
result of the first year's
operation . Municipal
swiinming pools generally do
well to break even.
Meeting with council was
Jeff Burt of Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Regional
Development District ,
Marietta. Burt explained that
he is meeting with all local
governments, county commissioners in eight counties.
He said a program is underway caUed "Area Wide
, Action Program." Its pur, pose is to inquire what
projects villages might be
interested in that could be
funded with federal and state
dollars. Burt said the
program's intent is to act in
an advisory capacity.
There will be a meeting
after the first of the year with
representatives of au villages
and· county governments
when projects will be submitted.
After additional meetings it
will take a year and a half to

complete the wo1 .. , Burt

stated.
Jim Teaford complained to
council of ,cars going in and

out of the driveway on the
lower part of the park at night
making loud noises. Mayor
Herman London told Teaford
to secure license numbers
and arrests would be made if
warrants are signed.
Council agreed the complaint was a legitimate one
and wiD have a cable placed
across the driveway that will
be locked until spring.
Troy Zwtlling who has
served on council more than
20 years, and at one time as

Mayor in the 1940s, attended
his last meeting Thursday
night. Zwilling elected not tc
run lor a seat in 1978.
Zwilling thanked the mayor
and council for the fine
cooperation and for their fine
"team effort.11

Council commended
Zwilling for his many years of
service and It was noted he
always had the interest of the
village in mind.
Rogert Wingett,. who also
served his last meeting,
thanked council. Council told
him that with him on council,
"they gQi results."
.
Attending were Mayor
London, Zwilling, Eber
Pickens, Wingett, Kathryn

Crow, Council members,
Janice Lawson, clerk, George
Holman, treasurer, and Chief
of Pollee Milton Varian.

Spratley goofed big says
Ohio natural gas company
COLUMBUS - Columbia ·
Gas of Ohio said the
statewide survey of natural
gas rates released. Thursday
by Ohio Consumers' Counsel
William · Spratley
was
misleading and inaccurate.
The company charged his
proposal for a statewide' rate
for Columbia customers
would mean higher gas rates
for many gas users.
· "According to the survey,"
Columbia ~aid, "the highest
bill for 15,000 cubic feet of gas
was $55.87 in Martinsburg
(Knox County). The correct
amount for 15,000 cubic feet
'
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''':;:,:,:;:::::::;::;:;:;:,:,:,:,:,:;:
SANTA COMING
Santa Claus wUI be on the
Elberfeld parking lot next
to ?omeroy ·VUiage Hull
following the Zp.m. parade
In Pomeroy Sunday. Santa
wUI have treats for the
children at that time . :
Anyone wiBhlng to be In the
parade can stUI do so by
reporting to the assembly
area at the back of the
senior citizens center In
Pomeroy. The parade will
welcome in. the holiday
season.
:.:,:,:,:,:,:,:;:,:,:,:,,,,,,,,.,.,,:-:,:::,:::,:,:,:,:,:;:::::::;:;:::::;:;

of gas In Martinsburg should where service costs are much
be$43.81 which ls•l2.06lower higher to go down," the
than what was calculated by company e~plained. "Under
the Consumers' Counsel." the
present
system
This represents an error of 27 established by the Ohio
percent.
•
Constitution, rates in each
In calculating the lowest community, are based upon
bUI, the survey referred to a the cost of serving customers
few rural customers in parts in that community only. If the
of Defiance, Fulton, Henry, plan proposed by the Con·
Lucas and Paulding Counties. somers' Counsel Is ac"These
few
rural compllshed, many of the
customers- totaling only 91 communities In the state
gas users - are right-of-way would have to ~pay an extra
customers served from the charge in order to subsidize
interstate transmission lines lower rates to customers in
of Panhandle Eastern other communities."
Pipeline Co., and not from
Columbia pointed out it is
distribution
lines
of required by the state conColumbia. Columbia reads stltution's
home
rule
the meters of these few provision to permit a
customers an d bill s Ihem as a municipality to set its own
convenience
to
both gas rate if the community so
Panhandle
and
the desire~ and to permit that
customers," the statement community to limit its rate to
' 'd.i
sat
on1y 'tt s own 'cost of serv 1ce.
Columbia also pointed out The company said a com·
that the proPQ!jal by the · munity should consider this
Consumers' Counsel lor a subject ca refully
and
uniform statewide rate for determine how its rate would
Columbia customers would be affected if they gave up
equalize rates throughout the thi)l Ql)tion.
state ... not lower them .
The Columbia statement
"What it would mean is pointed out:
that in some communities - "Columbia serves many
rates would go up to allow small communities and rural
rates in other communities
(Continued on page 14)

l

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