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.
'
•
aVID S three mines

The Sunda y Times.St•Jltinrl . SUJnda1)'. Dec. i . 1977

.

PCP's danger bared

Berry's
World

Ry CRAIG A. PADtEH
\I'ASHI1\GTON I LI P! I
Hospita l t' 11Wr t!£'11l'Y rotnns
ar(' 1 11HI L St~r lll~ LnCn~aSIIlJ! ) \'

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cm im~il

ust! rs 'o f an

tra nqutliz('r Pt'SSl'ssi n~ a kh:k
S&lt;' biw rn• it's

tx•l•n

dubbL'd

··e m ba lmi ng f l utd ,''
tt' an urtrt&gt; il'CJSed

a('cnrdm~

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Forg et 't he b~rds an d the bees .· Let's discuss
ho·., you stand on abort1 on and ga y nghts !"

HEALTH

go\'r rnment study . ·
The drug is eall t~l PCP . and
such is iLS (.'(feet on hw11ans
that up to 20 In oOpercent .. r
admi ssio ns
to
llh.' nt Hl
hospitals lll B\ ' be related h 1
Its· use, ~(~~·evrunent drug
off icials said.
ln a report being drafted by
th e Dru g Enforce me nt
Adm ini s tration and tht'
National l nstitllle on Drug
Abuse. statistics show PCP is
turning up more often in the
death rep0rt s of medica l
examiners. Thr deaths are
often violent.
Called embalming fluid,
angel dust, hog, or peace pill.
PCP is now public enemy No.
l for many drug treatment
officia ls. It has spawned an
edu c ational mailing
campaign to apprise national

anri

hi('Hl

hC'a lth agenctt's uf

P'l'P's d&lt;.ir)).!t'I'S.
Th t• latest rt'porL frnrn the
twn dr ug agt.•m·ies' Dru g

Ab use Warning Netwnrk also
makt:'s rwtt• of the numbt.-&gt;r t'f
ht'ro m-mo rphmc
deaths
among 10 of 24 big l'ity &lt;t l'l'fiS
rt~j,.! ular J ~· s un•ry t~ .

rt' l).lrt smd
P CP-r cla t ed de ath s increased in the survey area
from four in the J~ly·t o­
Septcmber qua rt er of 1976 to
13 the foll o wing quart e r .
During the full year. 3~ PCP
deaths were mentioned In
' areas including Los Angeles
end Se n Diego, Celif.
PCP. ~~r phem:yclidinc ..is
a n a n-t ma l tra nq uili Zt•r .
" which · l'O IIlbtnes th£&gt; nu,st
hnrrible qualit ies of ot her
d ru gs'.' when used bv
hum&lt;lllS , aecording . to
R,1bert DuPont. director tl f
tJ1e drug abuse institute.
Hesearch shows that some·
times PCP victims Uwught
they were taking something
else. he said .
,
"0fflc ia Is don 't noti ce
this:· said DuPont. ''bel·ause
Tht• DAWN

or.

Special of th e Week

lht' dlfli( •:l l S \ ndrnnw IS
UH.il:-.ttngu!~h;lbl~· fr,\ltl ;u·utl•
S('h lzuphn'rua."
1\S fur till' ht•roin..Junrphine
~tatJsl it ·s. tlw \att·~t OJ\W r\
rrpnrt .smrl tltil l fur la st yt•a r.
41 7 pf till' 1,495 herninmnrp hi lll' dt•aths n.•pc,rt rd

SALEM CENTER - · Although there were indications
Saturday that the Southern Ohio Coal Company 's Mine
Number Two would stay open despite the nationwide soft-coal
miners' ~t rike, its 600 workers voted Sunday to walk out in
anticipation of the strike sch'eduled to begin at midnight
tonight.
.
That action closed all three mines of the Southern Ohio
Coal Company - known as the Gavin mines - and put the
cumpany's 1,579 miners off the job in what the United Press
International called "early bird walkouts ."
Southern Ohio Coal Company has Meigs Number Two,
Meigs Number One, and in Vinton County Raccoon Number
Three.
A secretary in the uffice of David Baker, personnel
director , today confirmed the closing of the three mines.
According to United Press International, Gene Oiler,
president of UMW Locall886at Southern's mine No.2, the men

Monday , Dec . S lhru Sunday . Dec. 11

ALL BEEF TACOS

TACOS

thnl U}..:hnut thl• !'UI' \'CY s~ :-&gt;tem
in thl' Lus Angl'it•s

Ol'l'lHTl'd

area .

REG. 55'
VISIT. PROTF:STF:ll
LONDON (UPl l ~ Arab
and Pa lestini a n s tudent s
protesti ng Isra eli Prim e
Minister Menahem Begin 's
\'i sit to Brit a in Saturday
marchrd through downtown
str ee t s
cro wd ed
with
Christmas shoppers. l'alling
him ~ .. fascist murderer.''
Begin . on his first trip
a broad s ince his hist ori c
meetin g with E g ypti"n
President Anwar Sadat in
Jerusalem, opened his talks
with Prime Minister James
Ca lalghan and so urces said
he planned to present nn
optin1ist ic report on Middle
East peace prospects .

SPECIAL
PRICE

· This special is offered to you to acquaint you with
th e goodness a nd economy of our homemade
M exican food .
No lim•t to quantity of purchase . Offer good for

~

I
~

LBERFELDS IN POMEROY

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TIL 8 P.M. ---~.;J"'

*R

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"No.''

.

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w

'

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O ld fas hi o ne d ch a rm wit h modem com fort a nd quality cn n-

s tructwn f111ely uphol stered by K1·oe hl e r ih carefr ee sturd v
ole fi n fi be rs for Pasy up kee p and lo n g wea1·ing good l ~oks.
r1ch. comple mentary colors. A rev o lu t ionary va lue at onl y

In

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\

I.

HOBSTETTER

I

REALTY

MOMMY&amp;
ME

107 '12 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
PHONE 992·6333
Office Hours :
9 A.M. to4 P.M.
Closed Thursdays and
New 4 bedroom. 2500 sq'. ft .
li ving space , 21/i! ba.1hs, 12
room ranch brick . Located
3 miles from Rt . 7, up West

We have need of li sting~,
all types, homes , land ,

commercial, etc. ··
Cheryl Lemley

Associate

W
111

~!&lt;'&lt;,.. ~r&lt;:m:m:m:n.f:

S.cotchgan:r
""" •

Home Phone 742· 2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.

no " &lt;'O ~

All fine Kroehler furniture features ·

Saturday at noon.

Shade Rive t' . Ca!l for an
appoihtmer t.

758 Second Ave .
Next to Gillingham
Gallipolis, Ohio

C~l.l cll ,\

Broker

Layaway - Free
Wrap
Mas
Charge - Visa . Gift
Certificates.
·

Drugs.

An. l't
Aml'
hl'll la.l(t'
ofIs t.I'IL'
" I'HC&lt;' ll'ith
Krt&gt;t'iliL· I·'s. II",,,·l.t'
·I
. r il'an
·t
.
. I and lh
.
I lim,,
"(·on s rw· or~ 111 :_1 H'lg"l l CUH lnl'i,\· /lora ! print of 10W/r nvl 1
I,1oneers lll'W fronl ll'I'S m heauty ~.md \'alta.' at
.
· l n.

Georg~ s. Hobst etter Jr .,

We have children's
Angel Treads

or

elsewhere .
Th.e effects of a strike were
not expected to be felt
immediately by consume rs
because most utilities had
built up large st ockpiles of
coal to carry them through
for at least the first few
1
weeks.
Both UMW Presi den t
Arnold Miller and Joseph
BreJIDan, president of the
Bitumin ous Coal Operators of
America, indicated Horvitz's
assessment was correct .
" We 're talking, " Miller responded to reporters as he
left the bargaining roo m at
the Capital Hilton Hotel when
asked if any progress was
made. That compared with
comments by Miller earlier
In that day that progress was
being made.
Brennan said " interesting
discussions" had taken place,
and, when asked if any
agreement had been reached
on major issues, repHed :
" You don't reach ag reement
on substantive issueS until

at

weeks to retify a cuntract and
miners have a tradition of not
working without a ratified
contract.
Earlier Sunday Miller left
open the possibility of an
extension, saying it would be
possible if t here was
considerable movement on
major issues.
The two major issues are
wildca t s trikes, in which
individual union loca ls walk
out , and t he financial
Viability of the union 's
welfare and pension funds .
The union wants miners to
be able to strike individual
mines over local grievances,
and the BCOA is asking for
penalties a ga in st wild cat
strikers. The welfare and
pension funds are affected
because they are funded by a
fee on coal production which
is cut back by a strike.
Wages appeared not to be a
main point. UMWA members
now receive top pay of $7.88
per hour, or $315.40 for a 4().
hour work week.

en tine

possible extensio n of the
c urrent 3-year contract
beyond the 12:01 a .m .
Tuesday deadline.
Unless such an extension
was made, the mifler were set
to walk out, even if
agreement w.ere reached ,
since it will take about two

Arabs organize for war with ·Egypt

Hardline Arab leaders marred by the walkout of
Sadat has already recalled
signed
an
a ccord
to- iraq after a major row with his ambassadors from
day
freezing
diplomat- Syria.
Moscow and the Arab states
ic relations with Egypt
Iraq walked out of , the taking part in the Tripoli
and setting up a new · Tripoli conference early conference . The Egyptian
military command: Reports today because it fe lt the anti- leader has brushed aside the
in Israel said Secretary of Egyptian measures were not anger of the hardl!ne Arabs
State Cyrus Vance would visit strong enough.
and called on Israel to make
the Middle East this week on
The new military pact was
a peace shuttle mission .
ca lled the " Front
of
Official sources in Tel Aviv Steadfastness"
in
the
said the object of Vance's trip doctllllent signed in the
would be to try to get more former royal palace of Tripoli
Arab countries to attend the and stipulated that "an
United Press Interualional
Cairo meeting called for next attack on one is an attack on
SINGAPORE (UP!)-Uniweek by Egyptian President all.';
...
gunmen hijacked a
clentified
Anwar Sadat. The State
A Libyan spokesman said
Malaysian
Airlines jetliner
Department
had
no he understood the freeze did ,
and
fought
a gunbattle
immediate comment but not mean a full break in
aboard
the
plane
, but the
suggested there might be an diplomatic relations except in
craft
exploded
in
midair
and
announcement later today . the case of Libya .
plunged
into
the
swamp
The accord of hardline
"Libya had already ·made a
southern
Arabs a ngry with Sadat was complete break In diplomatic tidelands - of
Malaysia,
killing
all
aboard.
signed in Tripoli, Libya, by relations with Cairo before
Sulaiman
Sujak;
Dato
Algeria, Libya, Syria and today's signature and that
deputy
'chairman
of
the
South Yemen, along with the will not change. I understand
107
persons
airline,
said
all
Palestine
Liberation that Algeria, Syria and South
Organiization. But the Yemen, however, will only aboard the Boeing 737 jet
success of the meeting called recall their ambassadors for were killed. He declined to
say whether he knew who the
to try to isolate Sadat was tile moment. ~~
hijackers were or how many
there were .
·
Other airline sources said

conces sions at the Cairo
parley he has called for next
week .
Libya's official Jamahiriya
news agency said the Tripoli
conference also expelled
Sadat from the three-man
leadership of the Federation
of Arab Republics . The

By United Press International
PRESIDENT CARTER TODAY begins
a week of extensive budget review, starting with an
examination of the fiscal needs of the nation 's top secret
intelligence operations. Carter was tackling the problem of
how much money 'the nation's intelligence community,
including the CIA, needs to spend.
Director Stansfield Turner is known to be in the process of
trimming his staff in an efficiency move that may lower the
agency's employee level by 20 to 2:i percent in the next fiscal
year. Station chiefs in at least eight capitals have received
their pink slips and as many as 1,000 members of the agency's
clandestine branch may be eliminated in the next fiscal year .
Carter is believed to feel that waste can be trimmed from
Intelligence operations and he expects Turner to make the
CIA, in particular. trimmer and more efficient.

~/

Trad ti_o n a l styling with contemporary' Kroe hl er quality con stt'u ctwn hand soln e ly cove red in a durable 100% Scotchg anl '
treated nyl on tweed. Stri.kes a · blow fu t' freedom f1·om the
ordinary at J
·

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ll w~:• 1-ti'l tllt!·•Lit:l ·d1'"''d 111
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~~·a I t&gt;• l &lt;'••till• tt'l , 11 ,. 11 .,h [1mo., mntl~ ,
~&gt;f lw:11) .lo•t h ll ~ p"l.\'lll'l'l halll'

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\\ it·,• ancl l"1.'k ed

f niti1L

KANSAS CITY, MO. - EACH YEAR CHRISTMAS card
lists hav~ a way of growing .longer and longer. The president 's
list is no exception . The last of 60,000 specially designed cards
was shipped to the first family during Thanksgiving week,
Jeannette Lee, a Hallmark Cards Co. vice president, said
Sunday.
Hallmark has printed the White House Christmas card for
six consecutive presidents, beginning with Dwight Eisenhower
in 1956. Since that time tbe ]ist has grown from the 1,300 cards
ordered by . the Eisenh4)wers to the Carters' 60,000. The first
family's 1977 Chrisbnas card features a detailed pen-&lt;lnd-ink
drawing of the south portico of the White House . The drawing
was made by Harvey Moriarity, a-35-year-&lt;Jld Atlanta artist
and Carier campaign wor~er .
"Best wishes from our family for a Merry Christlllas ahd a
Happy New Year. Signed The President and Mrs . Carter," the
engraved formal scrip(;reads, under an embossed presidential
seal.
FREEZING RAIN HIT PARTS OF CENTRAL .OHIO
today, making driving in some areas extremely hazardous
while snow was reported in parts of northwestern Ohio . A
heavy snow warning was issued for northwestern Ohio, a
iraveler's advisory has been posted in northeastern and
central counties and a flash flood watch is in effect in
southeastern Ohio.
A severe thunderstorm watch w:is issued for southeastern
Ohio. Snow in northeastern Ohio is expected to cha nge to rain
while showers and thunderstorms are expected jn southern
counties.
WASffiNGTON - LARRY FLYNT OF COLUMBUS, Ohio,.
the born-again Christian publisher of Hustler, says he wiU sell
his explicit men's magazine on the streets of Cincinnati this
week and challenge authorities to arrest him again so he can
get "a fair trial." Before his recent conversion , Flynt ,was
sentenced to sevlin to 2:i years by a Hamilton County court on
charges of pandering obscenity and engal!ing in organized
(Continued on page 10)

AW.

1~AT'5

OKA&lt;,; ... c,.bU

V\OJLDN'T

UNDERSTAND~

th ey may have been
members of the Japanese
Red Army guerrillas but a
Japanese gover nment
spokesman in Tokyo said it
appeared unlikely.
Sujak said the plane began
its landing approach to Kuala
Lumpur against hijacker
orders but pulled away from
its landing approach after
gunfire broke out inside tbe
plane, It was ordered to
Singapore but crashed
minutes before landing In tbe
tidelands
of
southern
Malaysia.
The airline sources said
conversations from the plane

IT'S ONLY
AEa\T

CWRISTMAS
AND
"(,.Oj'~E

&amp;ffl,

AbV ANCED WINNER ~ Sandra Dee Thompson ,
Steubenville, Ohi9 State champion in strutting and
twirling in the 15-20 year old age group, was advanced
twirl off winner Sunday at a baton twirling event staged at
the Wahama High School under direction of Mrs . Judy
Riggs, left, presenting the trophy . Miss Thompson is
preparing for national competition to be held in midJanuary In St. Paul, Minn . The Wahama Band Boosters
sponsored the event.

"JUDY, JOE AND THE HO- HOoHO' ' - read
how two little kids search (or - and rind !&lt;: their
Christmas dreams in the big city world of highrise and hurry. The Sentinel's Ben B y- Line helps
them lind the solution to their problem s. Drawn
by Don Bauer, with story by Phil Pastore!, the
adventures of "Judy, Joe and the Ho-Ho-Ho"
begin today in The Daily Sentinel, Pg. 7 and
conclude Christmas Eve.

Associate
Home'Phone 949-2589

Fifteen Cents
' Vol. :!M, No. Hi:!

SANTA ARRIVES - Santa Claus came to Romeroy Sunday afternoon, Chamber of Commerce which sponsored the parade. Bands participating
officially opening the Christmas season. Santa rode the float provided by the were from Southern, Meigs, Eastern and Kyger Creek. Baton groups were
junior cosmetology class at Meigs High School. There were four bands , three the Glo-ettes, Riggs Royal-ettes and the Val-Va-Diers from Athens. There
baton groups, horses, scout troops, brownie groups from tbe area and fire were two units from the Big Be)ld CB Club , REM::'!' Club , fire units from
units in the parade. Hundreds o[ children and adults lined the streets to get a Racine , Mason, Chester, Rutland, Pomeroy a nd Middleport, North and
glimpse of Santa. Treats were distributed to the youngsters by Santa [rom South Meigs Junior Miss and Miss Regatta . Mayor Clarenc'e Andrews was in
the Elberfeld parking lot on Second Street1 Jim Frecker was parade . theeparade as was "Mrs." Claus riding with the · merry old gent from the
chairman assisted by Barbara Chapman, secretary of the Pomeroy north .

::~~~~~i~~~;;~h~~di~u~ Extremist

WASH~NGTON -

--~---1

w

•

Federation, established in
1971, groups Egypt, Libya
a nd'· Syria but has .been
dormant through most of its
lifespan .
Official sources in Tel Aviv
said Vance will visit the
Middle East by the end of this
week in an effort to get wider

Arab participation at the
scheduled Cairo talks on the
Arab-Israeli conflict, official
sources said today.
So far only Egypt, Israel,
1
the United States, and U.N.
Secre tary General Kurt
Waldheim have agreed to
attend the Cairo talks.

Jetliner is battleground in the sky

~

I.

WASHINGTON (UP!) United
Mine
Workers
President Arrlold Miller said
today his union's 13~,000
members will strike at
midnight, with no chance a
last-minute settlement can
avert a walkout.
Arriving
at
today 's
negotiationing session , Miller
said the situation is "not too
good. We're not getting any
closer."
Is there any chance a strike
cuuld be averted ?
'What a re the chances
a
'
walkout?
"There wilJ be one .' '
Coal operators president
Joseph Brennan said only
"we' re just going to be
talking ."
After bargaining Sunday
over a nwnber of crucial nonwage issues, both sides
arrived shortly before 10 a .m.
and were expected to be in
joint sessions with chief
federal mediator Wayne
Horvitz throughout the day .
''We've _g ot some hard
problems," Horvitz said .
"We're working on them .
That's the name of this
process . We 're dealing
with substantive issues," he
added.
Some m!n~rs in Ohio and
West Virginia did not walt for
lhe midnight deadline and
• began the walkout early.
Similar mQves were expected

:

\

production through until spring, '' said a spokesman for i.J. S.
Steel. " Our stockpiles are higher than normal. ''
Layoffs are expected immediately by the large coal-carrying railroads, mainly the Norfolk &amp; Western Railroad and the
·
Chessie System.
The N&amp;W has already announced layoffs in oth er cQ&amp;l:
producing states. "Norfolk &amp; Western will be prepared to take
whatever actioil is necessary to keep its expenses in line if a
prolonged strike takes place," the railroad ' has said .
U the strike appears to be a long one, then Oh,i o' s electric
com panies will reassess their situation. " After the strike has
been on about 30 day•, if it lasts that long , we will look at our
reserves again and decide from there, " said a spokesman for
·
Cleveland Electric lllwninatin~.
The state of Ohio has already made an emergency
purchase of 100,000 tons of coal to make sure it has enough to
heat various facilities such as mental institutions.

Nation's mines
certain to close

~

Wear

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, December 5, 1!)77

rr' ""' ""'

~ Maternity .

the UMW -clintract expires.
Ohio's electric companies, which produce over 90 percent
of their power by burning coal, have stockpiles expected to last
from 70 tn 90 days.
Mnst steel companies also say they have a n adequate
s upply of coal on hand to run their mills.
Republic Steel Co., headquartered in Cleveland, said it has
enoul!.h coa l t.o last ' 'a considerable period of time .
"Cual has not been in short supp ly and we 've had
considerable warning of the possibility of an cri1ergency," said
a spokesman for Re public. "Cqnsequently, we have had time
to prepare ourselves."
,
A spokesman for Armco Stee l Corp., headquartered in
Middletown, said, we "Have taken the necessary steps" to
insur e an adequate supply of coal in the event of a strike .
U. S..Steel Corp., which has plants in Lorain, Cleveland
and Youngstown , said it also had plenty of coal on hand .
"We 've got coal and coke available which would see our steel

Dr ive-In or Carry-Out Service Only.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
By Lawrence Lamb, M. D. · reconunend physical act1vitr
DEAR DR. LAMB-Iam38 as oart of a program designed
years old . Since the age of 15! to prevent fatty-cholesterol
have been a long, lank 6 feet deposits in the arteries . This
is the disorder that is respon~. and weighed 160 pounds .
My lifestyle would ha ve sible fa over half of all the
pleased you: no misuse of dea ths from all causes in the
alcohol , no smokilig, d"il}· E'X· U.S ., and is a s imil ~r problem
erl'ise in t he form of . in other industrialized nahorseba ck nding. walking. tio~s. You do not have that
carrytng wat~r. using &lt;1 disease, and perhaps your
sho\'el. ttx. and saw, etc . I ate lifestyle has protected you
a lot of fat. but my system from it.
The m•erall program of
took good care of it, fo r my
diet, exercise, and decreascholeste rol count was low.
Last year, doctors ing smoking seems to have
discovered that I have a bad had some impact nationally,
heart; id iopathi c congestive as there has been a significardiomyopathy. Bed rest cant reduction in deaths from
has reduced my heart from a hea rt attacks in aU ages. Parhuge size on X ray to an ticularl y gra tifying has been
al m ost norm a l s ize . the decrease in heart attacks
However. my life expectancy in young men . This has been
accomplished after greater
IS sti ll said to be very short,
Furthermore , . my doctors public awareness of the prorecommend precisely the in- blem even with less than opactive life you so disapprove tinlal compliance by all of the
of. I am not supposed to public.
You have a relatively rare
engage in any exercise that l
disease . The heart muscle
can possibly avoid.
Why would a person who starts to enlarge - without
lived as I did suffer from a an y evidence of fattybad heart ? Must l look for- cholesterol deposits in the
ward to a short life of inac- arteries to the heart . The
muscle changes result in
. tivity, subsisting on pills '
sca
rring of the heart muscle
DEAR READER - There
continued over growth.
and
are exceptions to every rule,
and you are one of them. We Why does this happen ?. No
one really knows, but scienr,o:c l:&lt;o&lt;!&lt;:&lt; I&lt;::!E:&lt; """'~
tists can discuss the various
~
Mommy&amp; Me
~
and many theories ad'
nauseam.
The disease most often occurs in healthy, active men in
their late 30s - as tn your
~
~ case. It may be some body
response to an unidentified
~
~ chronic
mjury. It may be a
~
~ form of allergy to your own
~
~ body proteins directed
~
~ toward the heart.
Whatever it may be, it can
~
~ cause a poor outlook.
~
~ However, if you ha ve correct~
~ ly labeled and described your
your outlook is far
~
~ disease.
better. than many with varia~ tions of this disease. I refer to
those with obstructions of the
~
~ valve areas of the heart. And
yqur outlook is not entirely
~
\
hopeless. There have been
some long tenn remissions or
cures, but in each case they
res ulted from prolonged
~
~ have
bed rest - measures to rest
~ the heart which means inac~
~ tivity and support with
medicines used to treat heart
f
failure.
~
Perhaps the striking im{
I
prov ement you have already
had augers well for your
future. I sincerely hope so.
Those who want to know
what inactivity does to the
body can send for The Health
Letter number 6~ . Effects of
Inactivity, Including Bed
Rest. Send 50 cents with a
long , se If -addres s ed,
stamped envelope for it to me
in ca re of this newspaper,
P .'O. Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York, NY 10019.

were upset with the way cont.raet talks were going and nlsn
with the prospect of losing health benefits as of Tuesday.
By Sunday about 2,800 miners were already reported out of
work . Two Consolidation Coal Co. mines in eastern Ohio were
reported out by officia ls Friday.
The stale's electric companies, steel mills and coal miners
are prepared for a lengthy strike by the United Mine Workers
union that will start out costing the state over half-a-million
dollars a day in lost wages alone.
There are about 10,000 UMW members in Ohio, inostly at
the 32 deep mines in Eastern Ohio, and they earn about $6J a
day .
The Ohio UMW members are part of District 6 which is
headquartered in Bellaire, but a lso encom passes the northern
panhandle of West Virginia .
Ohio, which produced 47 million tons of coal last year, also
has 352 &gt;1rip mines, many of them small · and non-union.
However, the non-union mines are also expected to close when

l

)

had identified the hijacking
The plane, Flight 653, had
as a Japanese Red Army · departed the resort city of
operation.
Penang, 500 miles north of
In
Tokyo,
Japa nese Singapore, en route for the
authorities said there was . Malaysian capital of Kuala
little possibility the hija~kers Lumpur then Singapore.
were of the Japanese Red
The pilot, Capt. G.K
Army , which customar ily Ganjoor , reported he was
makes an annohncement being hijacked as he
approached Kuala Lumpur
when it seizes a plane.
and at that point the pilot and
the control tower argued over
whether the plane should land
in Kuala Lumpur for
Flash flood watch today .
refueling . The plane made an
Windy, showers and thun- attempt t.O land until shooting
derstorms with ·heavy local was heard tn the ca bin of the
rains, chang ing to snow plane.
flurries and much · culder
Witn ess es
o ut side
tonight. Low in the mid 20s. Singapore reported the. plane
Cold Tuesday . High in the was descend ing for an
mid 30s, with snow likely.
(Continued on page 10)

Weather

Bullet or pellet chips
windshield on Route 7
A Belpre woman reported
to the department of Sheriff
James J . Proffitt Sunday her
car apparently was a target
for a gunman, or perhaps
·took a spent bullet from a
deer hunter's gun Sunday.
Luda Amott said she was
traveling- south on SR 7 al"
proximately ¥• mile north, of

}
'
·~

t,,

DAYS Tr,
CHRIST: ,AS

Chester when something
struck the right comer of her
windshield, chipping it on the
inside . It appeared to have
been a BB or pellet.
She said there were no
vehicles In the immediate
vicinity tha t could have
kicked up a pebble. The incident is under investigation .
Saturday night about 11 p.
rn. on U.S. 3J ·about ¥• mile
north ·of the parks, Bailey J.
Dugan, 17, Rutlan,d, coming
south, struck and killed an 8
point buck deer . The driver
was unable to locate the deer
at the time. However, Sunday
morning he returned to the
area to find the deer lying in
the medii-HI strip approximately 500 feet from the
site where it was struck.
Dugan was driving a 1968
truck which had damage to
its radiator and grille. The
driver was unhurt .

�2-The Dally Sentmel, MtddJeport·PomerO\ 0 . Monda\ [)('(' 5 1971

~mericans
WASHI!'GTON t UPil The nation n}a ~ ha\ e lo make
ntE: D.Al l.,\ SF,,...,FI
DE:\ OTED TO nu:
J'lTER~--r

-

or

MEJGs-MASO.._ ARF...A
CIU~ TERL TAS~ E Hlll..

Elrt Ed
R0 8t: RTHOEFLI\ H
U) Edltor
Pubbsht&gt;d din!~ I'X('f'pl Saturda\
b) 1'ht:! Otuo \ allt-\ l~bllshllll'(
Cornpam MultU'nerlta i n(
Ill

Court St Pumtro' Ohio .S769
BusLnes.s Offtl't' Phorw ~1 .,156
EdJ.tonal Ptwne !Wl :Zl57
Se&lt;-ond doss post.age p.:ud at
Pomero) Otuo
Na borud

ad\ er USUl!i.

t.atn e Ward
lrll

Ci rtfhth

reprt.&gt;St'n
Cor n~ n)

Bothr'lt'l!J and lialla;:ht"r 01\

i57 Tiurd AH• ~e .. \ ork N \
10017
•
J
Sub6rr1ptmn r.tt~ Dt&gt;h,('rt'\l b'

~arrwr ll'ht&gt; rt&gt; a\ &lt;~.Wible ~s ~ er 1.!&gt; pe r

week B ~ Motor Rout(' " hc.&gt;rr earn er
~I'\ tee oot a; atJablt&gt; One moolh
13 25 B' mall m Ohto owd ~ \a
One \ear fl2 00 SL'\ rnoolhs
.S l l SO Thrt&gt;e mo nths S 00
Elst'.,..ht-re. $26 00 \ t'Br SL• monlhs
113 50
Th rl'e months S 50
Subscrtptwn pnu u t dud~s Stmdil'

Tlmes-St&gt;ntmel

snmr bard rhmt'l's m the ne);t
fiH' \-ears as to" hl&lt;'h goals full emplo\1nent a ba lanced
budgt&gt;t tlr ne" government
pwgrams - tt Yo ants most
Ute. bead. of t]w Cougresswnal
Budget Offlc\' satd toda)
Ahce R11lm told Congress
J ouH Econo1m t Commlltl"t'

lhM (\Ill\ under the
op 11f111Stlc

most

e&lt;:onom1c

.ISSUIIl lliHms Ctmld all thnse
g('l,tls be ac tue, ed at met*
tn order w ht'g m makin g
such ch111ces, she sa1d, Con ~ress slwuld begm sr ttl n~
f~d·ra
l
budget ta rget s
..
se1 erall ears ahead
CBO a research arm of
C«ngress released a report
loo kmg at the fiscal 1 cars
19i9 through 1983
Be.cause of the progress!H'
na ture of the federal mcomP
tax "tnl' h keeps puttm g
e\ er}one m higher brackets

shr s~11d , U1t:&gt; ;unuwH of
ln turn thdt Yo ould m~dn l.l
nwne\ the goHrnment t~lkt's budget «ldtot uf $19 btllwn tn
out \1 [ the et(t~Wlll\ dunng 1983
undt.' r
nwdt.&gt;rat c
that per1od ~~ 111 rlSP fa stt•r
as~umptwn~
.ts
10
than tht&gt; .mww1t It puts bal:k pt&gt;rfu nn~HlU.' 11f the non
1n the f,m n nf " a~&lt;&gt;
Ceder&amp; eu&lt;nt&gt;m) she smd
punh.t&gt;&lt;'s ,md p;llmrnts tn
The furth er the nat to n
mdtlldu.t ls
",tn ts
10
redu ce
Unless
poluws
.-tn• unempl v \ lilt nt,
she
chan~L'(l tht• H' P I11 t satd tlu~ mdu.: atert the hm dc1 1t \\Ill
\.Hll exert '' f tsc~tl drdg
bt• tv b.a l,111ce th~ budget
tnletfen ng '' "h t.•&lt;:olhl lll l l
CBO suggPst cd Congress
gi O\\lll tind effnrts tn JtduLc ~ ~~uldfJet ze fpde r,tl spending
LUlemp!f,\ment
ciS £1 peu:entage of b'TUSS
Undt&gt;r modt t.lt t' t:&gt;l:\ 1numJc natl!'llal pn)du&lt;.t 01 could
assumptwns \Irs H1\ltn es pr!1\Jdt.• (lutllmatlc ta.'O cuts
tllll"n l"d
thac $115 btlhtlll 111 ,...,"&lt;'Ir•d
.._
(
~ I' &gt; tnfl ""tlt&gt;tl
,tddttwn.I l bud&lt;&gt;et
stimulus
C'BO'
" k •tllt'a&lt;l s ht' " ed
"
&gt; lI•'
ta x euts ot spend mg '"'"r,tl th ings tha t 11111
mcreases - M Uld be needed happen lo federal prog ra ms
b) 1983 to offset th at drag
b) 1983tf current pohctes are

WH

hanged

IJe(ens~ " tll n se frn rn 24
pertf'nt tl f
go\ enmen t
S}J4mdmg to 25 percent

COUNCil TO MEET
The Galli a Count) Human
Sl'rVtC'es (ounctl"'tllmect on
t'hu rsda) Derembcr 8 at
noon at the Ga lha Jackson .
Me1gs (o m m un lt} Men ta l
Hea lth Cent er Ioc:ated. on
V10ton P1ke across from
Holzer Med1ral CPnter A
tourof the ne" facihl} "'ll be
given 1 unch wt 11 be sen ed
for a sma 11 co st Please ca 11
Mrs Ph)lhs Mason al 4465508 for reservations b)
Wednesday , Decem5er 7

~Pa ; ments to llldl\rtduals

Will rtSP from 32 percent to 36
perl-ent. largely because of
CAt.IFORNIAN DEAD
BE DFORD HE IGHTS,
Ol! w (U P]) _ Ralph Phtlhps,
36, Bellfl ower Cahf , dted
Su nda) mo r nt n~ fr om a
gunshot wound suffered after
he held up a mght clerk at a
hotel, puhce said
Chtef Dmmmc Meutl saad
Phillips was a rmed. and took
about $600 from the mght
cJc1 k at the Ramada Inn at
4 30 am He two patrolmen
arnl'ed at the hotel JUSt as
Phtlhps "as leavmg The
)Jilh(.'(! had been alerted by the
mghl clerk

New drugs shoW
•
great promise
CHICAGO (UP I I - The
development of l" o anlmra l
drugs could herald a ne"
class of drugs to elmtmale
presentl) untreatable viral
diseases. an edtlonal 10 thls
week s edition of the Journal
of llle Amencan Medtcal
Association satd

Journal Editor Dr Wtlham
R Barclav satd lhe two drugs
ldready d·eveloped show 11 IS
posstble lo create medicmes
to selectively destro) VlrlJSes
- wtlhout damagmg human
tissue
'The development of
antiviral
agents
ha s
regenerated the excitement
that foll ows a maJ or
breakthrough ' Barclay satd,
"and perhaps a cure o[
dtseases

fo r

presenllv

which

have

we

no

the dtseases that shorten the
normal h[e span Barela)
satd
'What wtll be left are lllose
diseases that man mfhc t.s on

htm s elf
thr o ugh
carelessness! greed , lazmess
and stuptdlly
he added
For these trmts m man,
there are no cures as ;et tn
Slghl '
Barela) satd the t" o
antiviral
drugs
are
amantadine hydrochloride
for the treatment o[
influenza , and v1darabme for
the treatment of herpes
Simplex mfect10ns
'The entrance or both of
these drugs onlo the
therapeutic scene has been
more grad ual and less
dramatic than was the
mtroduction of pemclllln and

treatment "

streptomycm' a generatiOn

Barclay
satd
the
development could help
people live longer
' If "e should enJOY the
same success m developmg
addttlonaLantlVlral agents m
the future as we have m
developmg anttbaclenal
agents m the past, then "e
will have cooquered most of

ago, Barela) satd 'Bullhetr
ultunate Impact on medtc;t
pracltce may be JUSl as great
or €\ en greater
The) appear , however, to
work best \\ihen the \'lralload
IS small and are less hkely to
be ef[ectlve 'm l'Otnbalmg
vtruses that have long
peoops of laten c). he noted

HOST OPEN HOUSE - The Franc iS fa mtl) observ ed
liS annual hohda1 open house Sunda) at Francts Flon slm
Pomeroy P1ctured are 1\-lrs Gencv1eve Schnetder 1 Mrs
Kathleen Francts, Mr and Mrs Btll Francts, and Mrs
Kalhv Francts Reed Refreshments were served b) the

Happ) Harvesters Class of llle Trmtly Church, Pomeroy
Pnzes went to Opal Etchmger. Chesler. Ruth Ann
SCarbrough, Coolvtlle, Beatnce Blake, 'Racme , Joseph
LJsh. Mason and Mrs Wtlbam B Watson, Pomeroy

Dorcas
News Notes

GREET VLSITORS - Mr and Mrs Mtllard Van Meter greeted an esttmaled BOO
VISitors Sunday afternoon to their annual holiday season open house 1 the 17th 1 at the
Pomero) Flower Shop Asststmg Mr and Mrs Van Meter m the servmg of refreshments
"ere Mtss Eleanor Robson Mrs Jean !Goes Mrs Opal Kloes, Miss Debbte Harten ba ch
Mr and Mrs Melvm' Van Meter , Charlotte W1iford, Ohve Mae Cozart Organ mus1c
throughout the Observance "'lls presented by K&gt; le Allen Pnzes were awarded Elotse
Adams, Stella Atkms and Lon Faulkner

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

..

Western £inns offering
to deal with coal miners
HUNTINGTON, W Va I UPI )- Etght t'Oal f1rms out
West already have senll'Ontracl oUers to United Mme
Workers locals for constderalwn, and one has been
raufted , a Huntmgton newspaper revealed today
The Herald-Dispatch m a• copynghled arllcle.
quoted one UMW o[hctal as saymg Eastern operators
would be nearer a contract settlement 1f they had
bar gamed the same way as owners did out West
Jun Varney, who heads up the UMW's orgamzmg
offtce m Wtlhamson, W Va , told the newspaper that •f
the Bltwm 0 ous Coal Operators Assoctalton had been
as "as 10terested m a settlement as Western operators
were, we could have been further along toward

'

••

.'

..

.

.'

Varney smd one Western local raltfted a pact wtth
GuU Otl's Ptllsburgh &amp; Mtdway Mmmg Co, and other
locals were volmg on o[fers
Steve Galati, the UMW's dtreclor o[ eontract
adm101slalwn , noted that llle etght Western ftrms have
2,400 umon employees With an annual outpul m excess
o[ 8 mtlhon tons
The etght do not belong lo the 131knember BOOA
Galati descnbed the contracts negotiated as the
best ever " m the West and suggested the orgamzmg
effort would be easter because of them
F1rms mvolved mcluded
Gulf Otls P &amp; M, wllh operations at Oak Creek, Colo ,
and Gallup, N M , employmg 2110 mmers Oak Creek
rattfled a new con tract Saturday mght \\htle Gallup
was consadermg 1t
Peabody Coal Co mmes at m Colorado two m
NavaJo County, Anz and one al Coalslnp, Mont The
UMW represents 1,1100 men and ftve locals, but no
agree ments were urunedtalely reached
Consolidation Coal Co , "estern divtswn, nunes at
Belva, Glenharold, N D , employmg 220 mmers No
agreements reached
Energy Fuels Corp , ooe mme at Oak Creek wtlh 250

'

.

'' IIONOI Ul.U (UPI ) - Nob&lt;Kl) 111 baseball nut even Char he
Fmley. has bt:en IHt harder Utan Calvm Grt!fllh, but you don 't
c.1tc h hun cry1ng dl all cmd m the t'mJ he t.:nuld wtnd up
laughmg al evl•rybnd)
O' er the la st two yem s, Fmley ha s seen 11 of hts Oakland
plaY!! s go to olhet dubs as free agents Gnfftlh lJas watched
12 1ewe hiS MmnesotC:t rwms [or more monC) r
Lall year , he lost Ius ace rehef pitcher Btl! Campbell, lo
Boston' Thts year lle lost lu • tw" hardestlullmg outfielders,
Larry H1sle , tu Milwaukee, tlnd I yman Bostock tn Cahrorma ,
becaLSe the) made better deals for themselves Gnfhth nearly
lost hs manage1 . Gene Mnuch also but he sa\ cd him at the
last fllmUte Wllh a shoestnng calch
F (r sum~ me wtw has .1bsorbed so much and taken as many
bt1d~ blow s as he has the Twins ' owner shows nn nulward
mmks ( If b1tte1ness at these baseball meetmgs
Ot the contra• y, he looks good, he talks opllmtsllcally about
Ius dub's challces f~1r Ute rmmng set~ son and clauns he still has
· tlv best ballplayer m A1nenca m stx,ttme battmg champ
,md MVP Rod Carew
Plevallmg atlltude m baseball today IS buy now pa) later
whm at comes tu s1grung free t~~ents Tile last time the qwners
tool nut U1e1r pocket &lt;:alculators and f1gured out how muc;h
the&lt; owed llle players m deferrals, the total came to more than
$10.mtlhon Nobody ever hb'Ured out where all that money
wasever gomg to come from and some o[ the players agents
.u c legmmng to wonder about that themse lves but you know
hnwthat ts - bu) now, pray later
11e way I look alit , some nf the clubs are gomg lo have to
go 1~0 bankruptcy, • sa) s G!l!ftlh A lot of ballplayers are
gettng $100,000a year deferred for 20 years Some o[ them are
gellng 11 [or 25 years TI1at money has to be added to your
pay~ll every y~.11 Lind the owners can't keep ra1smg the1r
pnC!S f01 Uckets year after year People only have so much
mn~) to spend and necesstltes hke [ood and she lter lake
prHYltY over what U1ey ll spend on sports "
A '"uple of ballplaye1 s lla•e satd Gnfftlh has "no feehng"
ror nem. and t11at 's nne charge that rankles tum
Jell, • he says, 'tf 1t wasn l for lhem, I wouldn't be m
busuess Don t you thmk I know that' Some of them forget
that when there were only seven $100,1100 players m the
Am.-tcan League I had t" o of them - Tony Ohva and
Hdroon Killebrew
raturall),l wasn l happy over losmg Htsle and Bostock It
was10tnetlung I duln 1 relish , but who 10 hell are they to get me
out .r baseball' ff I paul U1em what they were lookmg for,
the\d be mtlhonatres and I d be out of baseball looking for a
jOb I
Glfflth IS glad Mauch "1ll be back as the Twtns manager
t•vel though he had shown a strong des1re to go wtlh the
An!llS, who wanted hun Gn[ftlh refused to let Mauch go
wttkmt compensatiOn ffllm the Angels
• can 't blame Gene • says the Twms' boss " If l were a
trmuger and had tile upportwuty to go wtlh an orgamzat1on
unl, a few m1les from hnme so 1 could see my ch1ldren and
gradchildren
more often, I would be mleresled 10 that, too
'
A first, Mauch smd he didn t care to come back lo a club
th'lhad let a couple of pla)ers hke Bostock and Htsle go Then
he econs1dered and dec1ded to return - wtthout any raise 1n

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI E"ecutlve Spurts Ed1h1r1
They were maJnr questwn
marks when the seaSiln began
but on Sunday all three
emerged a s stars
tn
guarantee lhetr clubs dtvtswn
lltles
People satd Pal Haden was
too small In play quarte~back
In the Nalwnal Football
League and tt seerned Los

College results
B~ Un1ted Press

East

Army 90 Wagner 78
B1ngt1am•on 73, Allred 55
Bsn Coli 84 Harvard 70
Bwdotn 105 Conn Co li 76
Brande iS 89 NorWICh 62
Bryant 109 Ntchols 61
Bucknell 68 Bloomsbg 5.4
Cal Pa 6.4 Lclo. Havn 52
Cheyney 8J Wm Patrsn 68
Clanon 98 Malone 78
Clark 67 Amtlerst 62
Colby 98 Salem St 9?
Ov1S &amp; Elkns 11-4 LaRche 7~
Del St 87 Stheastrn 72
Drexel 80 R 1der 79
E Mtch 68 Cornell 55
E Naz 73 St Fran 70
Eastrn 102 Phlla B ble 55
Gannon 106 Wllbrfrce 87
Geneva 71 wash&amp; Jeff 66
Gettysburg 74 Morav1an 73
Hawthrne 91 St Jos 67
Howard 99 Hamp lnst 81
1nd Pa 90 Al l 1ance 65
M1ch1gan 71 Fordham 62
Montclr St 81 Mar st 70
Muhlnbrg 71 D1cknsn 60
Pennsylvania 83 Navy 69
Ph Ia Pharm 81 Swrthmre 75
Phda Tex 59 St Jos 58
P1ft 55 Kent St -47
Prov 60 Seton Ha ll 58
R I U 84 LeMoyne 57
R 1 Coli 90 Bsn Sl 87
Scred Hrt 68 Trntn St 57
51 Bonny 71 Geotown 67
51 Fran 65 Catholt c 53
51 Jno NY 43 Prncetn 40
51 Peters 67 N H 63
Sprng Grdn 71 W Chs lr 68
Syracuse 75 M1ch Sl 67
Temple 84 Assmp110n 66
Vermont 77 OhtO 51 76
Wslmnslr 82 PI Park 75
Wdl!ams 69 Tufts 58
South
Amertcan 80 S1ena 79
Auburn 71 S F la 54
Avern 84 N C Grnsoro 77
Bluefld 97 lbrty Bapl 79
Clemson 99 C1tadel 65
Oav 1dson 103 Colgate 87
Duke 97 Wake Forest 84
Fatrmon t 76 Wheel ing 64
G envl 75 va Wslyn 51
Hmp Sydny 84 Aid Brdd s 77
Lander 77 N C ASIWI 74
Manetta 74 Bethany 62
Marshall 87 Morehead 8 1
Mass 77 G Wash 73
MISS 79 Tulane 77
N C Char 93 Roll ns 67
Salsbry St 91 York 75
Vil lanova n west va 63
Va 86 Old Domm1on 67
Va Cmnwlth 94 W Car 73
V 1rgmla St 92 Shaw 81
va Tech 86 R tchmon d 76

I

'"

B) Eha Knopp
The annual Thanksgtvmg
dinner at th e Sterrett
restdence at Galltpohs was
men, no contracts yet rat1f1ed
on Saturday
observed
FMC Corp . one mme at Kemmerer, Wyo , 55 men
evemng Those attendmg
Kemmerer Coal Co. one at Kemmerer, 150 men,
"ere Edtlh Gnmm and •
With the local to consider the contract Sunday
fnend. Walt Walters of Kent
Btg florn Coal Co m10e at Shendan, Wyo . 2110 men,
Patlle Larr and chi ldren
an
agreement reached
Shawn and Beth Ann of
Amencan Coal Co mme at Beulah , N D.
Northern
Changha Falls, Tom and
250
men,
no
agreement reached
Barbara
Brulvan
and
Pend10g rallhcalton by all locals, no deuuls were
chtldren Jenmfer and Jeffne
disclosed, but the UMW sald the lumted nght to stnke
'
of Cmctnnau Larry and June
Issue vtas not part of the Western mmers' demands
Roush , Max and Sherrie
Knopp and sons, Aaron and
Bnan, Otts and Edna Knopp
of Dorcas, • the host and
hostess, Dtck and Lora and
sons Matt, Mtke and Max
Carroll and Bob Btrch and
daughters, Momca and
Janelle 0! Bellevue spent the
weekend With their parents,
Enuna Salser, Elza and Cora
Birch, frtends and relattves
Dtck and Romame Beegle
POWHATAN POINT, Ohio contract negollallons wtth the
of Barberton VISited recently (UP[) - "No matter what so!t coal mdustry The UMW
wtth brothers , Tom and they pay the coal mmers, ll's contract eiq&gt;lres at mtdntght
Robert a nd Martha Lou not enough," satd Terry tomghl and
strike IS a
Beegle
Snively 11 You never saw certamty
A party was gtven by great· them come out o[ there
"Those men negotiating m
gra ndparents, Paul and mangled, hacked up, dead Washmgton
have
our •
Josephme Smtth for Davtd See the doctor pronounce respect,'' sa td Smvely ..
Smtih, age three Those them dead rtght oo the spot " " We're solidly behmd them ;;
present were Terry and Faith
Smvely, 54, trun and lean
"We'll stay out (or as long ·Varney, children, Jenme and wtlll closely cropped red ha1r as 1t takes to get what we ••
Bndget, Ted Smtih, hts has been a coal mmer sm"" want Sruvely sa1d
~=
parents. Don and Mary 1912 He has been recording
"We want a decent contract · •
Smtih Cake and Ice cream secretary of Local 5497 at that mc!udes fatr wages, fair
were served to guests
Norlll Amencan mme No 1 vacations and we want that
Guests of Robert and for 21 years
health and welfare lurid back "
for
Martha Lou Beegle
"I had been m the mmes m the black," srud Smvely
Thanksgtvmg were thetr two months when thts guy
The UMW's Health and
sons, Bruce of Columbus, Bill was run over by a coal car 111 Retirement Fund was sorely
and Debbte o[ Galltpohs, satd Smvely "Somebody depleted by wildcat stnkes •
Aunt Vera Beegle, Racme, Sa.Jd 1 'come back here and last summer and medtcal
and Tom Beegle
look at him, you rrught as well beneftts for mmers and their
Paul and Josephine Smtih get used to tt now ' He was families covered by the fund
attended the dtnner gtven for dead I dtd and I took 11 and I will stop once the natwnwtde
the Semor Citizens volunteers dectded If I could do that I stnke starts
at Royal Oak Park on Thurs· made my dectson nght there
"I've got ftve ktds that '
day There were 235 present
to be a coal mmer
were covered by that fund,"
[I was gtven b) the Center m
"Anybody who says coal srud Wagmld 'To lose 1t ,
appreciation
for work mmmg Isn't dangerous ts really hurts "
. ._.
volunteered
crazy as hell," satd Sruvely
Wagnild also satd he would
Sharon (Baker) Lewts of "Although I will say tt's a lot hke to see the new contract •
Okeechohte, Flonda VISited better now than 1t used to mclude dental and eye care
her mother, Edna Baker, her be"
benefits
mother·m·law, Faye Lewts,
"I'm a coal mmer and
All three satd they were •
and slster-m-law, Connie damned proud of 1t," he satd angry about the Image
Grounds accomparued her '' I've been m the mmes for 35 pamled o! the coal mmer
and attended the funeral of years and probably have
"Everybody talks about the
Mrs
Lew1s
mother, been on strike for seven of wtldcat
stnkes," satd
Margaret Allen
them But you have to stnke Ho!fman "Nobody says ' '
Dorthea and Jumor Salser to get what youdesorve "
anythmg when we are nght "
were dmner guests of thetr
Smvely's comments were
"Coa1 mmers are damned , ••
daughter, Rtta Mathews and echoed by Bob Hoffman, local proud people," satd Smvely •
farruly of Syracuse Thursday president and Ken Wagmld, "We pay our bills I had my
evemng
chairman of/the local's gnev- house ftxed up last summer
Na om 1 Nevtlle spent ance comm ttee
and the man down at the bank
Thanksgtvmg wtth her
All three satd they were IS not gomg to worry about 11
daughter, Joan and Charles sohdJy behind the Uruted He wtll get 11 when we go back
Roberts and children, Scottie Mme Workers leadership m to work He knows that "
and Crystal of Galltpobs
"Another thmg, everytlme
Emma Salser, Ronme and
Mr and Mrs Kenneth somebody smgs that damned
Cookie Salser and daughters, Thetss Jr of Lancaster and song ("11i Tons") on _
Tonya and Sheila and Mtke David Thetss o[ Columbus televtston they come out m Salser spent Thanksgtvmg spent the holiday wtth their long underwear and a dirty .:!:
with Tookte and Betty Salser parents, Kenneth and Ber· face," satd Snively. "That's ~":
and the1r son, Steve and wife ruce Theiss
the unage a lot of people have •,:
Beckte of Johnstown Ohto
Wtlcoxm
of of mmers, long underwear •
Larry
Max and Sherry Knopp and Columbus vtslted recently and d1rty faces "
:f
sons, Aaron and Brian, spent With his parents, Martm and
WagnUd satd he came to ' ,
Saturday ntght wtth her FranciS Wtlcoxln
Ohio [rom Wtsconsm 15 years "::
parents, John and Katte
Jessie Ptckens received ago and recently went back to "
Sprow of Galbpobs Sherry's word h•s daughter, Came, IS his home area
:'..
ruster, Suste and Brent Me· confmed to a hospital m
"The people there asked !
Creedy of Wtlmmgton jomed Flonda
me what I dtd and I told them ;;
them [or Thanksgtvmg
Charles Theiss IS attendmg I was a coal mmer ,1 ' sa1d :
dinner on Sunday at Aunt the N F 0 Conference at Wagmld. "They Just looked at •
Parmey Carter and Nannte Omaha, Nebraska this week me and smd "You're a what? _,
Brumfteld
Elotse Wtllbarger and That's the llllage llley had - James and Ida Counts and children, Randy, A J and long underwear and dirty :,=:
chtldren have moved from Dtana of East Letart spent faces
Mtddleport to the Otts Knopp Thanksgiving wtlh her
"And It's JUSt not r1ght," _...
fann
mother, Edna Baker
srud WagnUd
-

Enough never enough

Miners come out
mangled, cut up

TOP PO!NT WINNERS - THese are t he high pomt winners I&lt;Ith their trophies at
Sunda) 's baton twtrhng con test held at Wahama High SChool Ohto West Vtrgtma
Kentucky Maryland and Pennsylvama were represented m the numero~s contests of th~
day The lop wmners from the left are Marcy Burkhamer, 15 20 years, Belpre, Susie Dray,
Kentucky state strutlmg champ, m the 11-15 age group Lisa Gtra. Belle Vernon, Pa , 111 the
7·10group and Tonya McCourt, Sulotn, W Va , 10 the !H) years of age group

1

OPEN HOUSE - Open house "as observed Saturday and Sunda) at Hubbard 's Greenhouse m Syracuse Showo wtth a few o[ the 15,1100 pomselttas are 1--r, l mda , Donna and Don
Huooara ln addition to the pomseltlas there are hundreds of vanous plants Approximately
900 persons attended the two day e1ent Door priZes went to Dorothy Baker, Mtddle)Jilrt,
Helen Dorst , Tuppers Plams and Beth Fry New Haven

va Un1on 73 L ncoln 65

w va

Jl'l

•

•

s t 75

M

Harvey

73

Wm&amp;Mary as Radford 56

We'll carry on without Bostock and Htsle Gnfhlh says
Remember how fellows hke Ktllebre"· (Bob ) Allison ,
(EJrl) Batley and (Jtimme) Hall rettred wtlh us? We mtssed
U1 , but we dtd okay We won the pennant 10 '65, went nghl
u o the last day of the season m 67, and won our diytston 10
6 and '70
We've got thts new young outfielder , Jesus Rtvera, now Hll
3 and had 95 runs batted m and 17 homers wtth Denver They
te me he's ready lo take Htsle's place nght now
Ever)~hiOg considered, " e're 10 pretty good sha pe !'m not
dtllreo;,&gt;ed "

Midwest
Alma 92 Aqu nas 76
Ashlnd 73 Kenyon SS
Bethel 90 Kan Wslyn 67
Cap tal 78 Urbana 45
Cent St 0 78 Ch1SI 69
u ot Ch 1 83 Gnnnell 62
( lOC I 77

BISCyne 62

Cleve St 61 N C A&amp;T 60
Detro1t \\2 Adr1an 69
Frr 1s St 88 Wyne St 70
Frn~ln Coli 89 Mllllk.n 76
tnd Cent 89 ll l Wslyn 75
lnd St 102 Baptist 55
Iowa 66 Cal St Nrthrge 63
M1amt o 62 xav1er 61
Mo 74 Te)( El Paso 63
Nrthwstrn 57 Buna Vsta 55
Northwood 87 Mercy 77
Notre Dame 89 Vlpnso 75
N E Mo 66 Stnwestern 49
Oh iO No 68 OhiO Com 52
Oh 10 U 67 Yngstwn St 64
Oklahoma 52 Drake 50
Purdue 82 Alabama 65
So MISS 95, Ball St 85
so I ll 87 Roosevelt 65
washbrn as Adams St 75
Wslyn 97 Cedar\1 lle 87
W Ill 99 N Iowa BJ
W Ky 78 Bwlng Grn 63
W!S 96 Can1s•us 70 W 1ttnbg 85 He1dlbg 17
wooster 92 Akron 85
southwest
Alcorn St 86 S Hous 77
Baylor 10-4 N TeKaS 74
E Te)( Bapt 60 Ark St 57
Houston 96 SW La 12
La Colt 66 S F Austn 6-4
New Mex 94 New Me)( St 87
R ce 52 Pactf iC 50
Slhwstrn 83 E Tex St 70
Sui Ross 70 Angelo 69
Texas 81 M ss St 69
Tex Luth 85 P Qumn 71
Tex Tech 70 Atr Force 63
W Te)(CIS 88 Okla Bapt 54
west
A lh m Act10n 98 Md 9..
Arizona 89 San Fran 79
Cal!f 91 eakersfld 75
Cal Sta Barb 77 Stnfrd 78
Denve r 101 Botse St 69
Frsno St 80 Prtlnd St 75
Fullrtn St 87 LA St 72
Hawaii Hllo 87 Geo FoX 81
Idaho st 94 evu 87
L ng Bch St 95 Wteh St 94
Nev L v 91 Bradley 90
No Colo 76 Montana 75
NW Naz 95 warner Pac 72
Ore 88, Doane Ntb so
Pac Ore 89 Wlllmtte 8.4
S 0 St 113, Nell Reno 88
St Mary's 100. N Oak 75
U C davis 78, Hywrd St 65
UCLA 88 Santa Clar a 79
Utah 93 So Cal 67
Utah St 95 Mdwstrn 55
Weber St 70 Loyola 64
wsn Bapt 79 Ida Coli 68
Sunday
Oregon 78 oregon St 51

Mark Beverage
lasers. ·

used to build shipping crates.
"It was nothing you could call
E career:' he recalls . "I felt I could
be more than I was at the time:·
So Mark went to technical school
md became a laser technician. "It's
be most important decision I've made
il my life. Most of what I know and
lave today is an outgrowth of going
lack to school:'
Over a million such technical jobs
rre waiting to be filled. And usually
i takes only two years of technical
t·aining to qualify.
If you feel your job isn't right
hr you, take a tip from Mark: "You
can be more than you are. Write to
'Careers' for a free record-brochure
fill of entertaining, unbiased infornation that tells you how:'

'CAREERS"
Do• Ill
Washington, D.C.

Angeles management a greed
when tl1ey stgned veteran J oe
Namath as a free agent last
sprmg
But Had en supplanted
No:11nath as a starter early m
the season a nd Sunday he
brought the Rams the NFC
West ttlle, when he threw a
IJ..yard touchdown pass In
Harold Jackson wtth JUSt 2 10
le[t [or a 20-11 vtctory over
the Super Bowl champton
Oakland Ratders
There were those who
doubted Hetsman Trnphy
wtrmer Tony Dorsett's abthty
to perform as a pro They
ctled Ius lack of Size and
wondered whether he could
wtlhsland llle puntshment of
a long season
But Dorsett silenced hts
crntc s Sunday. when he
capped a club-&lt;ecord 20&amp;yard rushmg performance
wtth a dazzling 64-yard
touchdown run that propelled
Dallas to a 21·11 vtctory over
Phtladelphla and brought the
Cowboys a hflll stra1ght NFC
East hUe

And there we1 c nWO) whu
ques ti oned whether Cr a tg
Mortnn had tile abthly to be
,m NFL quarterbac k when he
was wtlh New York Gtants
But he fnund new hfe m
Den ver and Sunday he threw
two TD passes, then came nff
lhe bench after bemg Ill JUred
to set up the chnchmg ~ore
m a 2~ · 14 vi cto ry ov er
Hnustun The \\ m brought
Den ver Its fir st playoff berth
m the club's 18-year history
Oakland tied !he game wtth
I 13lefl on a 21 yard I'D pass
from Ken Stabler to Dave
Casper and veteran Errol
Mann 's extra pmnt gave the
Ratders a 14-13 lead But the
Rams whn mlercepted four
Stabler passes and recovered
tw4J Ra1der fwnbles , came
nghl back ,They drove from
lhetr own 17 tn the Oakland 43
m ftve plays as Haden hit
three passes On 2nd-and·l2
Haden threw to Jackson. who
eluded the Raider secondary
for hts f1rsl receptwn of the
day
" I never doubted thai 1

be U1e st &lt;~rte r , sm d ;o u ha ve tn Wlderstand Lh1s 1s
Haden, who as 7·1 stnl:e t.o km g a cl"sely krul uml that has
played together all year "
over for Na rnat h
Other NFL games Sunday
Dorsett s 1 un wa s u club
record and h1s two TOs gave Vtkmgs 28, 49ers 27
Rookie Tomm) Kramer
tu m 11 fur th~ year €:: quahog
a club record set 1n 1971 by c~une off the hench to throw
Dua ne Thomas He also three TO passes m the fmal
became only the thtrd ruokie penod , one !qr 69 yards and
m NFL h1sto1; tn ga 1n more rally Mmm!'snta over San
FranctSt.:fl
than 200 yards m a ga me
G~anls
27, Cardinals 7·
" I hnpe to have more days
Btl!
Bryant returned an
hke this," satd Dor~ tt . who
now h~ s 865 yards If my mtetceplion 51 yards for a TD
hnernen block hk e they dtd and Joe P•sarctk 's 61-yard
today, I'll have a thousand pass to Gary Sh1rk set up
another ro, enabhng the flu·
yards
Mnrlon s I D passes of 13 ndden G1ants lo damage St
yards w Rtlc) Odoms and l J&gt;u•s' playo[f hopes
Ht ck Upc hur ch and Jtm Redskins 10, Bdls 0·
Joe Thetsmann threw a 12Turner s 42 yard field goalm
the thtrd pertod gave Denver yard TD pass to Jean Fugett
Houston m the second quarter to lead
a 17 7 lea d
countered wtth a 29-yard TO Washmgton over Buffalo Sl
pass from Dan Pastonm to Louts and Washmgton !ace
Ken Burrough but Morton each other next week tn a
came back after an Ill Jury to wtldcard showdown
set up backup quallerba ck Bears 10, Buccaneers 0.
Walter Pa) ton gamed 101
Nnrns Weese' 5 yard run for
yards, mcl uding the game's
the cilnchmg 1 D
It s g1 al![ymg to me, of only TD on a 3-yard run m the
, course," sa1d Mortnn But !mal period, and Bob Thomas
kicked a 32-yard !1eld goal as
l'~+ uld

I

Ch ica go handed wtnless
Tampa Bay Ils their 26th
stratght loss
Pa trints 16, Falcnns 10
Steve Grogan threw a 3J..
yard TO pass to · rookte
Stanley Morgan wtlh 4 10 left
to rally New England over
Allan !a
Steelers 30, Seahawks 20.
Terry Bradshaw passed for
nne TO and ran for another
and Roy Gerela ktcked a 43-yard fteld goal m a ll.pomt
fourth quarter that hfled
Ptltsburgh over stubboro
Seattle
Jets 16, Samts 13
Pat Leahy ktcked U1ree
field goals, mcludmg a career
best of 16 yards lo lead New
York over New Orleans and
snap the Jets' seven-game
losmg streak
Packers 10, Lions 9
Green Bay stopped Delrml
on the two wtlh 4 48 le[l and
the Packers held on to wm

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

,Bengals still alive after
27-7 win over Kansas City
' Mo (UP])
KANSAS C!TY,
Tony Davts of the
Cincmnall Bengals w1ll never
be confused wtth Btlly
Johnson, Rtck Upchurch,
Johnny Rodgers or any of the
Natwnal Football League s
premter punt returners
But the Kansas Ctty Chtefs
did thctr best Sunday to give
g r ounds
for
Davis
companson
Davts returned a Jerrel
Wtlson punt 70 yards m the
[mal 2.0 seconds of llle ftrst
half to gtve Cmcmnah the
ball at the Kansas Ctly 11
Ken Anderson htl Pat
Mclnally wtth a touchdown
pass on the very next play
JUst seven seconds be!ore
mternuss10n to g1ve the
Bengals a 17·7 lead and the
necessary momentum for a
27·7 VICtory to remam alive m
the AFC Central Dtvtston
race
jjThere 1s no question aOOut
ll /' satd mtenm Kansas City
coach Tom Bellis "That
return by Davts took the wmd
out of our salls H's llle f1rst
punt return they've broken
all year Thmgs hke that
aren't supposed to happen If
you had to classtfy thetr punt
returners, they'd be very
average And then they go an
break ooe hke that on us
"The Iromc tlung 1s that m
our meeting Saturday, I told

By GREG BAILEY
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Eagles came wtthm
a breath Saturday rug!1t o[
upsetting the vtsttmg Federal
Hockmg Lancers before the
Lancers came from behind m
the last mmute to wm 15-11
Wtth a mtnute left, Ronme
Russell sank a fteld goal from
the corner to put his team
ahead 4!H4 The VISitors then
went tnlo a stall, but a turn·
over gave Eastern a last
chance
Trymg for the last good
shot, the Eagles of Coach
Duane Wolfe ra~ the clock
down to 10 secondS and found
a man wtde open under the
bucket But the ball went wtld
and out of bounds on an
errant bounce pass and the
Lancers ktlled the clock a[ter
the turnover
It was a see-saw battle
from the very start
It was !led llklll shortly
after the ftrst whistle stop,
and for the first half of the
second per1od, the hosts went

in only one or two days.
One or two day full
denture serv1ce,
part1als &amp; relmes
For Complete

Calt Free, Anywher&lt; m Ohto

the specmlt) teams that 1f
there was one area that was
gmng to be cnttcal agathsl
Cmcm nau , 11 was gomg to be
our kicking game And then
he breaks one hke that "
Dav1s 1 whose best prevwus
return this year was 18 yards,
lm k U1e 32 yard Wilson punt
and scrambled up the nght
s1dehnes before Kansas
Ctty's Andre Samuels finally
shoved htm out o[ bounds ll
was the longest punt return m
Cmctnnati htstory and was 18
yards longer than the best
prev10us runback agamst
Kansas Ctly thts year, a 52·
yarder by San Dtego 's
Rodgers
"It's unbelievable that they
could run one back hke thai
on us," sa1d Steve Ortrnayer,
the Kansas Ctty spectal
teams coach ll was a lack
of determmahon on our part
The ktck was not whal we
wanted Wtth that hUle time
left m the half, we wanted
Jerrel to hang 11 up there and
hope we can get an early hit
for a fumble But It looked
hke he shot that one out o[ a
cannon Couple that wtlh JUS!
poor, poor coverage on our
part
Tony Davis did what he
always does - he ran
stratgtil upheld wtth the
football and challenged you

He doesn't ha1e the speed to
pultl together hke that but he
beat us n
You never expect to break
one hke that," satd Dav1s
"Bu l we've been close for a
long ume and II was JUSt a
matter of "hen ll was gomg
to happen for us I should
have taken 11 all the way m
for the score, though Those
opportumltes don't come
along that often and you have
to lake advantage o[ them
"hen they do
It was a tremendous punt
returr'l
added Cmcmnatl
Coach Bill Johnson 'It put us
over the hQmp Kansas Ctty
"as feel mg prelt) good up to
lllal pmnl and Tony JUSt gave
them a tremendous JOlt It
ca1ned over mto the second
half "
Saymg thaltl earned over
mto the second half may have
been the understatement of
the year by Johnson
Cmcmnau was able to put
away the ~ame m the lhtrd
quarter desptte scormg JUSt a
!teld goal The Bengals held
the ball o!fenr •vely for all but
I 24 of the thtrd penod,
runnmg off 27 plays to JUSt
four for the Chtefs
Anl doubt about the
outcome was squelched when
Pete Johnson went m from
the I yard lme on llle hrsl
1"

PHONE 773-5536

play o[ the fourth ,quarter to
gtve the Bengals thetr fmal
20-poml margm
Ken Anderson struggled m
the ftrsl half wtth JUSt mne
complelwns m 20 lnes for 69
yards bullwo of his hook-ups
wenl for touchdowns, a 15-yarder to Btlly Brooks m .
Cmcmnatl S hrst possessiOn
of the game and the 14-yarder
'As an tndependent
to Mc!nally Chns Bahr
In suran ce agency our
kicked a 35-yard held goalm
pr1mary funct io n Is to
the second quarter and added
prov1de policie S whiCh
a 2~yarder m the thtrd
afford fmancla l protectJon
penod
1n case of loss
Kansas City's lone score
came on a perfectly executed
But we also have a v1tal
Interest 1n loss protection.
screen pass whtch rookie
as should our clients We
fullback Mark Bailey earned
encourage care
caution
17 yards untouched mlo the
and safety
preventive
end wne for hts hrst NFL
measures wh1ch can keep
touchdown late m the f1rst
that car acc1dent from
quarter But 11 was not
happenmg
that bulld1ng
enough lo prevent the Chte[s
f ire from start1ng
that
fr om droppmg thetr lOth
home burglary from be~ng
game m 12 starts
com m1tted
The Bengals upped their
Prevent1on saves l1fe, limb
record to 7-5 headmg mto
and
property
and helps
llletr showdown game wtth
control 1nsurance costs and
the frontrunnmg Pittsburgh
premJums
Steelers (8-4) m Ctncmnat1
next Saturday m a' game that
When losses do occur our
wtll dectde the AFC West's
policy holders can count on
lone playoff representative
protection and serv1ce In
The Bengals need to beat the
ttme Of need But we still
say prevention IS the
Sleelers by seven pomts or
best pol&gt;cy
more and lhen wm their last
game aga liiSl Houston to
advance mto the playoffs

PREVENTION
IS llfE

BEST POLICY

1

DALE C.

Eastern comes oh, so close!

DeiiiUfCs
1-800-282-6410

I

up by two only to have the
Lancers tte 11 Wtth m·
termtsston nearmg, the
VISitors knuckled down to
build up a 27·24 lead
The Lancers of Coach Btll
Jacobson kept the lead until
5 45 m the thtrd penod when
Rusty Wtgal !ted •t wtth a free
throw Dan Spencer put the
Eagles out m front to stay
unttl the last mmute when he
sank two more [oul shots
Etther team m the last
quarter could have pulled
away, but netther could fmd
the range on the o~e-and·one
!ree shots Eastern fared
better at the free throw hne,
cannmg 10 of 19 shots whtle
the Lancers managed JUSt
three of ten The score
remamed 44-43 for over two
mmutes before Russell's
game wmnmg shot
Center Dave Brown, Je[f

College Football Results

Untted Press International
Texas A&amp;M 27 Houston 7
W1dener 39 Wabash 36
Fla St 37 Florida 9
S D 51 37 San Jse 51 34

Leh•gh 39 Cal Dav&gt;s 30
Ntre Dme 48 M1am• Fla 10
Jacksnvl St 31 N D 51 7
~

Goebel!, and Rusty Wtgal of 16, Rusty W gal 4 3 11 Totals,
the Eagles led the scormg 17 10 44
FED HOCKING - Ronnie
wtth 16, 12 and 11 pomts, Russell
5 l 11, Brent Chad
respecuvely Russ ell led well 2 0 4. J1m Dtlllllger 50
Federal Hocking wtlh 11 10, J 1m Hart 50 10 Randy
while Jun Dtllmger, Jtm Hart Hornsby 4 2 10 Totals 21 J 45
and Randy Hornsby each had
10
Both teams were cold [rom
the floor Eastern htt JUst 37
percent (17 o[ 16) and Federal
Hockmg canned just 21 of 61
for 31 percent In the
reboundmg department
Spencer had 11 o! Eastern 's
36 whtle Hart had 15 of the
Lancers' 35
Federal Hockmg's reserve
squad took an early lead
enroute to a 33 27 wm M1ke
Cuckler and Jeff Cullen led
the wmners wtth 13 and 10
pomts whtle Cole had mne for
Eastern
Federal Hockmg ts now J.1
whtle Eastern dropped to 0·2
Eastern plays tis last game
unttl after the !1rst of the year
tomorrow mght when they
ONLY
host Symmes Vallye The
games ongmally scheduled
had to be postponed due to the
early school closmg
Quarters

WARNER INS.
992 2143
102 W Mam

Pomeroy

THIS
WEEK
DEC. 4-10

FISH
SANDWICH
&amp; FRENCH FRIES

E

IJ

F

12 27

24

38

44

TRY OUR

37 45

EASTERN - Jeff Goebe l6
0 12 Dan Spencer 0 3 3 Br1an
81ssell 1 0 2, Dave Brown 6 4

89~
•

SHRIMP lASKO
OR

WHOPPER
FISH lASKO
WE HAVE DELICIOUS

HOT' CHOCOLATE
l'

~

-

Jnternattonal

SaturdiY

a

Protein rip-off

..

[ederal revenues to 52
percent
- Corporate mcome laxes
would remam a htlle over 14
percent of revenues
- Social msuranl'e taxes
would fall from 31 per(.'(!nl to
30 per cent,
assummg
enacbnent of pending Soctal
Secunly leg!Slatwn

.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

verted to fat Other ammo
actds from protem are con·
verted dtrectly1to fatty actds
and used as fat These we call
ketogemc But glucogemc
ketogemc, or what have you
llle unportant thmg for all to
remember before bemg had
by the protem rl[H&gt;ff IS that
the ammo actds 1n protem
that you don 't use for butldmg
are sunpl) converted to fat
and glucose, and used ltke all
the other sources of fat and
carbohydrate 10 your [ood
Takmg extra protem then IS
JUS! an md1rect way of con·
swmng more fat and car
bohydrate
If you are senous about los
mg wetght, you need only
follow a good, senstble program of a well balanced, low
calone dtet and a good dally
exercise program I am sending you The Health Letter
number 4-7 , Wetght Losmg
Dtel, to help lou Others who
want th1s mfonnat10n can
send 50 cents wtlh a long,
stamped, self addressed
envelope for 1! to me m care
o[ this newspaper, P 0 Box
1551, Radto Ctly Sta tton New
York, NY 10019
Vttarrun E has no role at aU
m helpmg a person lose fat In
general 1 1t IS an macttve
substance Most of the
beneftts some people thmk
they get from 11 are all
psychologtcal You rrught as
well put dtsttlled water m a
capsule arld sell 1t to mosl
people A well balanced diet
Will provtde all the vttan:un E
you need
Vttamm B~ w1ll not cause
you to lose [at etther It has
been mcluded m a number o[
fad wetght reducmg schemes,
but your body wtll only use so
much v1tamm B~ and the ex·
cess Is ehmmated m your
urme
The protem powders and
vttaimns wtll not hurt you,
but they won't help you lose
wetght unless they moltvate
you to follow a calone-restrtcted dtel and exerc1se,
"hich reall1 does the JOb

mcrcases m the number of
Sncml Secunty a nd Medicare
beneftcianes
-Grants to state and local
goverrunf nts wtll fall fr om 12
to 10 percent as some
count ercyc lical program s
phase out
- lndlvtdual mcome taxes
Will rtse from 4~ percent of

reachmg an agreement ''

HEALTH ,
By Lawrence Lamb, M,D
DEAR DR LAMB - My
[nends and [ are l&lt;lkmg protem powder '"tee a day
along wtlh vttamm E and B~
This IS supposed to help us
lose wetght We are wonder
mg if there IS a danger m tak·
mg too much protem and
how much IS too much' Also,
are the vttamm E and B~
necessary .,
We belong to a new club
and are usmg the products
the club IS selling us Are we
hanrung ourselves m any
way'&gt;
DEAR READER - If you
don t mmd throwmg your
money away, you are not har
mmg yourself
The protem np-off ts
wtdespread Your body only
uses a bmtted amount of protem each day to replace
tissues or form compounds
such as enzymes that are
made up of lhe ammo acids
m protems
For women wtlhout any
bizarre protem losmg disease
and who are not pregnant, the
Recommended Datly Dietary
Allowance {considerably
more than the Mtmmal Datly
Reqwremenl ) •s less than 50
grams of protem a day You
Will gel that much m a half
pound of lean meat chicken
or ftsh Without countmg the
protem m rrulk and other
foods
What happens lo the extra
protem - surpnse, surprrse
Your body sunply uses 11 for
Its calone value, and a gram
of protem has the same
calorte value as a gram of
carbohydrate If that m·
creases ) our cal one ml&lt;lke
more than your body uses,
the extra calones can be con·
verted to bodv fat Isn't that
JUSt great [or a reducmg program! You are reall 1 takm g
a food supplement
'"" otems arr made up uf
.JJ
10 acids and these can be
C&lt;&gt;llverted to glucose Scten·
!tsls call thts process
gluconeogems (formmg new
~lu cose) by the hver, and the
excess glucose can be con·

Rams jolt Raiders, 20-14

face hard econOmy goals choices

-

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Dr A J Srathll
Dr C W Btal
Dr G
The Rl\ 1crc Center
949 E Lt 1
A&lt;e

;t arry 1sle

Columbus

to rust Street

992 -5248

Mtddleport, 0

�5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec. 5, 1977

Redmen remain unbeaten,
face Otterbein Tuesday
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Pri te led
th t.&gt;. v. a) \\Hh 3~. hitting 14
,,f ~0 -~h o ts fr om tht~ field ,
lire~

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Dan BtSt&gt; ca mt! ~, ff the
bench tu &lt;'lllil'&lt;. t r1 ~h t.
F\1r Ptken l\e. Dand Rowe
tL•'"rd 1!1 18 pomt s L. A
Andre" ; odded 16. Tern
Ha\dtUlS 15 and T~ rune DuM
S\~ alJ'\

Rtdt~:t"

SEASO ' DOI' G
'\ ORTHf"IE I 0.
Oh1o
L' PI - :-;, n hf1eld Park
ends u s cu rr i'nt m eet
Sat urda) mght. and ~ 111 be
closed unul D&lt;'C' 30.
:'l.hSSQ un Tun e tLxa k the
ea rl; lead and won the $6 ,000
Pomsetua Pace at :"'orthftelo
Pa rk Sa t urda y night by
bea ting Osborne Creed to the
w~r e
Qumt s .-\.rrh·aJ was
third
~1 1S.SO Url Tim£\ O'o'itlt'd b,·
John and Florence \'1tull~.
YL1U.ngsto \\11 . scored her 12th
" In of the season m 2.05 2-;,.
and returned !.3.60 . S3 . S2 . ~0 .
Sharon Prmcess won for
the ftft h consecutiH orne an
takm g the se\'enth race m
2 04 ~.;. and returned sa.
SS .'!O . $3 . ~0'. BlarnC\· Baron
~as ~ond and Ab-b\S .\nd'
third .
.
.

GJ! Pnft' and C•·mp..H't~ bt:'lZar.
r li1:-,k

The Ri'dmen held a 13-21
haiftune ad\anta..:e ct~~5~5t
~he B~·ars rame aftt' r that

. NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

l1
Rtv \'l•n t w lled the boards
~~ lt
49 r t."l bou nds t o

P1kenlle' s 36 R10 had ti
tu rno\'ers. the Bears had 20
·Tho Redmon ta ckle a
strong Onerbeio fin• at
Westen ille Tuesda \ .

Sa turda\' . R1o will host
W tl berfo~c e t:n t\·ersity . It

lnited PreSs International

C1nc1nnati Coach Gale
Catlett says the basketba ll
game agatnst ~lia m1 in the
Queen City Tuesday night
may be a big n\·alry cont est
bat he doesn't conside r it the
biggest one on his season
schedule after 63 straight
home co urt \'ictories. the

JJ(•J• :uul lJJt• JJt)IJJ(•
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LOUVERED
SHUTTERS

SELF-STICK

WALl CORK
12" • 12" PANELS

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Ro,.-se ~ 0 J
Pr•cl' I J .a 32 J am €'s 5 ~ 12
Johnson 0 0. 0 F t~oatnc k 0
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Miami to face
Cincy Tuesday

(;it)s_Jt)J•lJiiJJ,

• 5&lt;' ":·e-.: ... e~ ·

"'II be t he Redmen's annua l

longest tn the nation .
The
eighth
rllnked
Bear cats. fresh from a 77-62
,·ictc• ry
o\·er
win less
B1scayne- nf Flon da Saturday
mght. beat the Redsk1ns with
little trouble a ve-ar ago.
··That ·s nni th e '"""' rn nst
im portant game of the year
fM us." Carlen said. " I was
sw-pn.sed we r ould dominate
,. the game 1ast year They are
a g . ., d team . They thlnk \1 IS
the game of the year ...
..IJt hough Catlett mdtcated
conftdenre in the Bearcats'
abilit\ to take the Tuesda\'
game and all the others this
seasnn. he satd there are
things to be ironed out
immedtateh·.
.. I bP1ieve we a re going to
Win thom all this year . I am
_an optimmist j I' m not
predicting it. I just feel that
w a~ . I qut&gt;stion our team play
some. but that has to change
Tuesday." he said .
"We'll not work \'er\' hard
before ~lia mi , but a fter that
we're going to work a full
'week . We are not in ,.el) good
cnndition."
. Cununings tallied 20 points
and Jl'ob ~1iller 19 Saturda"
mgh t as the Bearca t.s surgf.'d
to a 21 pcinl lead before
Biscayne found the range and
trimmed the lead tD 42-36 at
half time , on the outside
shooting of forwards R1chard
Hardy and AI Russell. The
talle r Bearcats re ga ined
control in the last half, to
boost their record to 3-(J,
while B1sca;ne dropped to().
l.

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REG .
19.99
EACH

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SA::; DJF.r.O 1 UP IT- "It

l&gt;"sted the ad,·antage tt l 27~
a punter's dream," a b) ha Jrtlmt&gt;-. the 1n1•st pnmts
"&lt;11-rested Jeff West sa1d. St'•1red b~ Sa n D1egn m a half
ru rr~l Greg~ th•IU ~ ht ll
th1 s seasnn. The 37 tr •tal was
t he rnns t S£'o red against
I
.
I \\ as a cPa t h 's nt)!htmare.
" Wt' ·,·e pia~ t'd some ~reat
Cle1eland' th1 s rear
teams thts seasnn. but we '\·e"Thts IS the ·best C'hart-:er
new-r been pushed aruWld 1eam J'\·e been ~SS&lt;•ciat ed
. NFL Stt~nd ln gi.
Bv Un•te d Preu ! nt erna t•o,al
hke th1s." the d1~runtif.'d wtth ," msisted F11uts. a fn·eAmtr·1 can Conference
C'le~·ciand
"'ach said after year vetera n wht!."' w•t the
· Ea st
t he San D1e~ n Chargers t·ham·e t u pia) because
W L T P el
';1
1 0 818
Ba ll m-ore
d.ls mantled tile Brtwtns '3i·l 4 James flarrtS 1s 1dled w11h a
8 3 0 727
M a m•
Sunda)
, nrtuall) oluntnaung f~ ~ ~ l lnJUr)
NeY&lt; E l"' g l and
a J o ~1
"'JY .V e ls
C•1 ach T nmmy Pr othro
J ' 0 150 Clen•la nd fr om the :"'F l.
2 10 0 167
Bo fta !o
pla~
nffs
31!r€'£'d
.
CenTral
w L T Per .
So wtal was the Chargers'
" I thmk we're ~ ot some
P nsb urgh
8
J 0 OM
d•'flllnatl lm that West. the \.'nnfldence nnw," he 5ald .
C• n (.nn a l•
7 5 0 S&amp;3
San Oie!:{n punter wh ose " \\'e believe something good
Cit&gt;\ t&gt; lan d
6 6 0 500
~ OV Si on
6 6 0 500
pc1rents were watching the t.s k.! l •lrl~ ln happen now. It"s a
Wul
game on te le vision 1n \\ tx1le new aUt tude .
W l T Pet.
-.Denver
!I
I 0 917 Ra\'enna, Ohio. had to be
" This is the first time m
Odk. I,JnO
9 3 0 750
t·n ntent
tG
chee r hts four years t ha t I can
Sa n 0 1tq0
1
5 0 58 3
Seatt lE'
J 9 0 ?.SO
teammates on fr om the remember fi(\t being worried
Ka n sas C;l y
1 10 0 167
m the last few minutes of a
s1delmes .
Nal~onal Conlerenee
been
m
lmtball
since
"
l'
\'e
~a me.' '
East
W l T Pet .
I!H8." Gregg told repcrters
San D1ego. which suffer('()
" Da ll as
10 ' 0 833
the
contest.
··and
this
is
after
last
·min ute defeats by
51 L OI,JI S
1 5 0 583
Wasn rngron
5 0 SSJ the first time the defense
Ka nsas C1ty and Den••er
NY G a n rs
5 7 0 J !1
Pn ao~ l p h a
J 9 0 1SO didn't force the offense tD earlier thts season. ts no w
Central
punt. Gentlemen. the Browns workmg rsn a string of three
w L T Pet. were a dead and buried stratght wins that started
M nnes.o1a
8
' 0 661 k•1tba1l team todav ."
With a 12-i upset m·er the
]
5 0 583
O ,•cago
Oerro 1
5 1 0
·· Hnw irClrric," \\'est satd . Super
Bowl cham piOn
10 0
Gr ee rt 8a v
" It was the only ga me I didn't Oakland Ra1ders two weeks
T a!Tipa Sa y
0 12 0 000
West
get tP play in thts year and all ago
W L T Pet.
Rolf Bemrschke aidf.'d the
x Los An ge les
9 J .0 lSO my family and frtends were
.l.r tanta
6 6 0 500 " atchtng . I had nothing to do
San Diegn ca use with held
Sa n Fra nCISC O
5 7 0 .1 11
wah the win "
goals of 35. 36, and 24 yards. ·
New Orltoa n s
J 9 0 250
Quarterback Dan Fouts.
The Chargers defense .
X· clinched d • ~· • s i on t•t le
Sunday ' s Resu lts
getung his second straight ranked first 1n the AFC
Ch •c: a9 o 10 Ta pa Bav 0
sta rt after a season-long against the pass. pressurf.'d
( 1nC 1 11 Kai'\SaS ( IIY 7
Sa n D1eqo 37 C!ev£' u
eontract dispute, had a lot to Cleveland quarterback Daw
Dem.er i J Hou s ton lJ
dli
with the \·icton ·.
~la ys all aftern&lt;&gt;lll. but he
GreE'fl Ba y 10 Oerro 11 ;
Fout s. ~&lt;ho pu shed the still managed tn complete !9
New Eng 16 A.t l anla 10
NY Jers 16. Ne.,., Or l.,s 13
Chargers tn a 30-2B win onr nf 31 passes for 208 yards.
Da llas 2..s' Pru la 14
Seattle
in his debut last week ,
LOS Ang 10 Oak land l .J
NY G 1it niS 17 St LO UI S 7
completed H of 20 passes
P ~u sb tJ rq h JO seat tle /0
against Clel'eland for 23i
Wasn •ngton \ 0. Bufl a lo 0
M mn 215 . San Fran c •sco 11
~ ards and three touchdowns
Mondav · s Gam e
as
the Chargers, now 7-5 and
Ba lf• more aT M1am •. n
assured nf their wmningest
Syracuse. 0 .
seasnn since joining the ~FL
WHA Stand1n95
in 1910. rolled up ~ 25 yards
By Un 1ted P ress lnterrtational
Now open "for the season .
W L T P ts . tn.tal 1/ffense .
from over 15.000
Choose
New t:ng land
10 5 3
35
Fnuts'
·
t
ouchdO
\\Tl
·aerials
PQinsettias
7Sc to SlO .OO
Quebec
1J 10 1
27
Foliage P-lants 7Sc to Sl2 .00
W inn ipeg
12 11 1
25 went tn Hank Bauer for 15
E dmonfon
11 11 1
23 yards, Charl!e Joiner for 30
Hanging Ba skets
Sl .2S to
Houston
Q 10 1
1';1
S4
.SO
yards
and
Larry
Dorsey
for
lnalan apoli s
a 12 j
1';1
Cmcinn a t~
Q •14 0
18 67 yards. gi,ing the Charge rs
~en Da ily 9 til s
B1rm •ng a m
8 13 2
18
a 37-i lead in the fourth
Sat u rday ' s Results
Sundays 1 ttl~
~ as

: Pro · :
:Standings :

'

Cleveland's only scoring

t ame 1n the fwal period as
~1 ay s

found Reggie Rucker

,., a I'll·) •rd pass and Cleo
M1ller ran

tw•• rmnutes to play.
San Diego · vJsils. Denver
next week while Cleve land 1
now 6-6 · a nd tra il in @
Pittsburgh b)' twn games in
the A~T Cen tral Division
hosts Houstc1n.

ln dpts 0

HOUSIOn 3 C•nc 1nnal • 2
Ed monton J , W inni peg 1
Monday ' s Games
! No 9 ames scheduled )
Tu~sdli V ' .S. Gam es

HoU ston a t QUebec
New E ng l and a 1 lndpls

the floor to take an 110-75
game fr om eastern Kentuckv
at Ri chmond . despite the
Colone ls' Da ve Boo tche k
getting 23 points to be the
ga me high man. Eastern

quarter .
D&lt;&gt;rsey caught four passes
for 108 yards. two of them in a
game..()perung i2-yard march
that ended_ when running
back D&lt;&gt;n Woods raced 29
yards for the score. San
Diego increased the lead to
14..() in t.he first quarter and

Kentucky visi ts · Dayton
tonight.
Overtime free thr ow
sh ooting handed Wooster a
92-M win over Akron. now 1).2
for the season.

CAFE
DOORS

'i:

1

to btJttle
Indiana

.Dolphins,
Colts
.
clash in Miami

a

KING
BUILD.ERS SUPPLY CO.
OPEN
MONDAY · SATURDA'(

a ,oo lo 5,oo
Convei-uenf Free
Parking
~nd AVe.
Middleport, Ohio

GOLD STAR
CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY

40.5 N.

LOW GRADE LOGS
•

White Sox eye
Bonds in trade

~\ : :;: :·: ~: ~~:8::~: : : : :~: : : :;:;:;: : :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: : : : : : :·: : : : : : : : ;: : : : :; : : : : : : : : : : : : : :;:;: :~};!
Kentucky Cage results

WANTED
SIZ~ o , o o
LEN~TH

on a 38-yard fie ld goal by series, running 13 yards for a bound Texas A&amp;M to 8-3 and
United Press lnteroallooal
In a celebration of All - Chris Dennis and a 35-yard scnre and a 10-7 Aggies' lead. clinched third place in the
»
« America talent, Notre Dame scoring pass from Kenny Heleda23-yard scoring drive SWC behind Texas a nd
By KENNETH R. CLARK
closed out its regular season McMillian to ti ght end St.lve seconds later and, to start the Arkansa s. The Aggies face
United Press International
.: ·., :, : : ·
with a nourish Saturday night Alvers but the Irish went second half, ran 35 yards for a Nn. 20 Southern California in
worker safety regulations such as decreeing the shape
HOME IS THE SAIWR : The lon~ voyage is over for a 54and stood poised for its ahead , 20;10, before the half touchdown and 42 yards to set Hnuston Dec. 31. Houston, the
of toilet seats or how far fire extinguisher.s must be
year..-.Jd Australian grandmother who set off for England 2'h
upcoming Cotton Bowl battle when'Feqguson took a 23-yard up Tony Franklin 's 57-ya rd defending SWC cochampion,
hung off the floor.
years ago, and wound up sailing alone around the world . Mrs .
whic h finished 6-5. was
with top.ranked Texas on scoring pass from Montana . field goal.
In a move described as unique in the history of
Anne Gash piloted her 27-foot yacht , Jlimo, into Sydney harbor
The victory pushed · the . unable to ge ne rate au)
The Irish blew the game
Jan
.
2.
regulatory agencies, the department's proposa l is a
Sunday amid a welcoming flotilla of small craft . She refused to
Tight end Ken McAfee, upen in the third quarwr with record of Bluebonnet Bowl- offense in the second half .
followolhrough
on a promise made earlier this year by
tell her family where she was going when she set off for
touc hdowns,
as
named la st week to UPI's All- th ree
Eula Bingham, head of the Occupational Safety and
England because she was afraid they would talk her out of her
America first team for the Montana 's passes of four and
Health Administration, to do away with nitpicking
globe1!irdling trip . Says she, "I just didn't have enough money
third straight season, scored five ya rds to McAfee
and concentrate on major workplace
regulations
w get to England in a conventional way, so I decided to try
two touchdowns after the sandwiched ·a four-yard run
hazards.
sailing."
Notre Dame defense, led by by David Mitchell. Notre
Most of the n~les involved were adopted by OSHA
first team All-AmeriCa Dame added a final TD in the
in 1971 !rpm proposals developed by various private
YULETIDE TRUCKER; Edward Hwnbert and his wife,
Luther Bradley and second fourth quarter on a one-yard
standard~tting organizations.
Myrna,,)lave drawn\alpresidential mission. They're delivering
by
reserve
warn AIIAmericas Willie Fry snea k
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall said: "unnecessary
Ule 700-pound, 24-foot noble fir that will serve this year as the
and Bob Golic, started th~ quarterback Rusty Lisch.
HONOI..ULU (UPI ) - The probably won't be able to
and overly complex regulations place a tremendous
White House Christmas tree - hauling it aboard a 45-foot
lrlsh rolling toward a 48-10
Elsewhere, Texas A&amp;M Chicago Whit.. Sox, adhering keep Bonds more than a year,
burden not only on businesses but also on our limited .. . romp over Miami of Florida . beat Houston, 27-7, San Diego
refrigerated trailer from Olympia, Wash . The De~ver couple :)
to their same .. rent--a-player" but owner Bitl Veeck is only
will cross 11 states on their 2,7fiO.mile trip tn Washington D.C. .·.·. inspection resources. As a result worker health and
The Irish took a 14.~ lead in State edged San Jose State, philosophy that made them looking toward next season
First Lady Ro~salynn Carter will accept the tree Thursday.
::.: ::. : safety suffers.
::::: the first quarter on.. the 37-34, and Florida State the big surp rise in the and in keeping fan interest
"The thousands of working people suffer serioas ;::::
strength of their defense . Fry topped Florida, 37-9.
American League West last high .
~Cldendts and illnehssesbeeach year ,dyet to.the best of our ::.:".: blindsided
BIG APPLE PARANOIA: Singer Julie Budd has changed
M
i
ami
At
College
Station,
Texas
season
, are on the verge of·
The .Angels, overl oa ded
her Manhattan address, and she's keeplng the new one ;:;: .... ow e ge none as en cause by the shape of a
A&amp;M
's
freshman
quarterba
ck
Kenny
obtaining
slugging
outfielder
outfield talent, are eager
with
stamped top secret. For years, she lived on the city's west side , ::;: · toilet seat or because a fire extinguisher was 2 inches :;;:· McMillian to force a rumble quarterba ck Mike Mosley Bobby Bonds fr om the to obtain a first string catc her
but a burglar broke in, stole several thousand dollars and
whi ch Golic recovered . entered the game late in the California Angels for the one and another starting pitcher
wrecked what valuables he couldn't carry away . .Then the
Vagas Ferguson then ran the second quarter and · directed coming up .
and Essian and Knapp would
scary mail started coming - including death threats. She 's
ball in from II yards for the four scores on cOnsecutive
The Bonds trade, which fit perfectly .
relocated on the east side, but she'll be out of town for a while
score. I..ess than 90 seconds PQssessions against Houston. could be finalized today at the
Power-hitters suc h as
anyway. She opens next month at Studio One in l..os Angeles .
later , Fry put another
Houston, winner in three of annual winter baseba ll Bonds .are bein g offered
Saturday Nognt
Onio High School
ferocious rush on McMillian. its last four games, led, 7-3, meetings, would send the 31- around
loca lly
like
GLIMPSES: Alex Haley, author of "Roots," received the
Basketball Scores
The freShman quarterback's with 4:08 remaining in the year..-. 1~ home run hitter , macadam ia nuts. John
United Press International
Anti-Defamation League's "Torch of Uberty" award Sunday
hurried pass was picked off first half after Delrick along with a pitcher. to the May berry, !,ee May and
Akron East 75 Elyr ia 68
in IA~s Angeles for his "great contribution to world literature ...
by linebacker I..eroy I..eopold Brown's 3-yard TO pass to Whit.. Sox for catcher Jim George Scott as well as
Akron South --49 Perry -42
Jimmy Durante was rushed to UCLA Medical Center in I..os
Alexander 80 Trimble 65
who ran it back·a 17-yards for Willis Adams.
Essian , pitcher Chris Knapp Matthews and Mon tanez ali
Angeles Friday, choking on a piece of food which doctors
Alliance 73 Sl Thomas another quick touchdown.
Mosley directed an 83-yard and another pitcher . Only may be wearing different
Aqu inas 50
removed from the 84-year-old comedian's thrMt .. . Lucie
Miami1ought back to 14-10 touchdown march his first hitch holding up the deal has mtiforms next season before
Antwerp 77 Pa ulding 50
Arnaz is on the mend, with severe bruises suffered when she
been Angel owner Gene th e week 's meeti ngs are
Arcadia
84
New
Riegel
53
Two of the best senior
and roommate Judy Glbsuo, who came away with a broken
Archibold
71 Conti nental 57
Autry's reluctance to part concluded.
wrist, were run down by a van as they crossed a, New York guards in the nation, All- Bellef ontaine 81 North ·
with Bonds.
At the same time, the
street ... The widows of New York City police got a star- America favorites Phil Ford eastern 34
Atlanta
Braves, trying their
It
is
expected,
howe
ver,
studded Christmas present Sunday night as Stephanie Mills, of topranked North Carolina Berea 60 · North Olmsted 58
that Buzzie Bavasi, th e best to shed two top.Jleavy
76 Elida -49
Uza Minelli, Uyl Brynner, Estelle Parsons,. Betsy Palmer, and Butch I..ee of third- Bryan
Buckeye Trail 91 Caldwell 60
Angels'
new
general contracts, are talking to three
ranked
Marquette,
took
Elizabeth Ray and VIctor Borge did a show for their benefit at
Buckeye Cen·t ra l 93 Plymouth
manager,
will
convince
Autry diffe rent clubs
the
command to lead their teams 73
the Shubert Theawr.. ..
to
deal
Bonds,
who
is
on
the
Yankees,
Mets
and
Cardinals
to
victory
Saturday . Canton CC i 1 Northwest 42
MIAMI {UPI) - H you're conference quarterbacks, last year of his contract and - in an effort to unload
However, the emphasis will Canton McKin ley n YoungsPittsburgh
'
55 Kent St 47
Mlaml 62 Xavier 61
enough of a football freak to according to the NFI..'s rating has expressed inleresl in outfielder Gary Matthews,
Rio Grande 78 Pikeville (Ky) be on teamwork and history ~e~i~aEt;'~~ua Jk
Northern Kentucky 76 Wright
64
Chardon
Painesvi
ll
e
own an NFL rule book, you system, and Jones is second. testing the free-agent market who carries one of those
when co-No. I Kentucky hosts
State 51
67
Tiffin 91 Siena Heights
longtime deferred con tracts
Harvey
65
12
oil
might get it out because
But Jones has been nothing next year.
Ohio U 61 Youngstown 51 64 !Michl 68
Indiana tonight.
The
White
Sox
are
eager
to
at
something like $350,000
Cin
Walnut
Hills
52
Columbus
things
could
get
cow.plicated
but
big
trouble
for
the
Ohio Wesleyan 85 W Va Toledo 86 E Kenfucky 75
Ford went on a threeCentral
46
should
underdog
Miami
beat
Dolphins,
leading
the
Colts
to
make
the
deal
because
they
year,
a nd first ba se man
Wesleyan 83
Vermont 77 Ohio State 76
minute , 11-point scoring
Olivet 71
Mt . Vernon
W Kenlucky 78 Bowl ing spree Saturday night to put Clev Benedictine 80 Cle King Baltimore in the Orange Bowl five straight wins over Miami feel Bonds has the kind of fan Willie Montanez, who draws a'
52
Nazarene 60
Green 65
tonight.
and throwing his last 165 appeal that can help offset salary in the $330 ,000 ran~e.
the Tar Heels ahead for good Cloverleaf 69 Buckeye 55
The Mets are said to be
Clyde
66
Danbury
Lakeside
65
With
New
England
passes
without
an the loss of popular heroes
and lead them to an 8U2
Colonel
Crawford
62
Bucyrus
narrowly
li'nocking
off
interception
.
Richie
Zisk
and
Osca
r
talking
seriously with the
victory over North Carolina
Gamble,
who
played
only
one
Kansas
City Royals about
~~lumbus
South
Newark
Atlanta
Sunday,
an
Orange
"We
bring
out
the
best
in
State in the finals of the Big
67
43
season
with
the
Sox,
but
Mayberry
and are offering
Columbus
North
7
Marion
Bowl
victory
for
the
Dolphins
him,"
said
linebacker
Bob
9
Four
T o urnament
Harding
57
would
put
the
Patt:iots
back
in
Matheson
.
"He's
well
aware
team
win
·
90
·
pitcher J erry
helped
the
Jefthanded
Championship - the first Big
Cov
ington
61 Newton 55
the
AFC
East
race.
of
what
we
do
offensively
,
games.
However,
both
played
Koosman,
still
one of U1e best
Four title for North Carolina
Cuyahoga Heights 59 Grand
The Dolphins and Colts " 'and I guess he 's out-executed out their options and became pitchers in the Nationa l
since 1971.
Valley 41
Meanwhile, I..ee scored 18 Dayton Alter 61 Centerville 37 would be tied, at 9-3, with the us. We run a lot of zones and millionaires in the free agent League despite having lost 20
games last season .
PQints to lead the. Marquette Dayton Carroll 61 Fairborn Patriots a game back, at B-4. he's thrown a. lot underneath draft .
Pomeroy Merchants
Hill
64
The
key
is
that
New
·England
our
coverage
."
Park
The
White
Sox
know
they
Warriors to a ~7 win over
Miami Coach Don Shula
Dayton Stebbins 82 Dayton plays Miami next Sunday and
Western Michigan State. I..ee Wright 68
ha s been a Jones awmrer
· ""
Delphis
St
Johns
7
Delta
Baltimore
in
the
regular
scored on three straight
2
66
season finale a week later. ever since t he former LSU
jumpers midway through the Dover 67 Jackson 48
East
Kno•
98
Centerburg
73
Two New England wins star's rookie year.
second half it) put an end to
"In the five games they've
East Liverpool 57 Cle Hay 52 would throw the division into
the Broncos' hopes of an Eaton 64 Carlisle 46 ·
Elyria Cath 61 Midview 48
a threeway tie, at 10-4, and won, he's played pretty much
upset .
Findlay
69
Wapakoneta
58
·
the league would have to start error-free football," Shula
There was one major upset
Fort
Je
nnings
75
New
.
exploring its complicawd tie- said of Jones .
in the Top 10, with fifthKnoxville 59
formUla .
The injury pictw·e i.s"' not
ranked San Francisco losing ~ranvllle 60 Licking .Heights breaking
But Miami would be sitting bright for either team . BalIt) Arizona State, 89-79, in the
final of the Fiesta Classic ' Greenon 66 Northwestern 52 pretty also, because if they timore running backs I..ydell
Guernsey Cath 61 Bea llsville stop the Colts and win. their Mitchell (groin pull) and
tournament. ·
59
·
last two, the title woul4 be ·· Roosevelt I..eaks (knees and
Roy Joshua scored 22' Hig hland 61 Mansfield theirswithtlleirbett..rrecord ankles) are both hurting
Drawings For Gift
PQints for the Sun Devils, Christian 57
within the division breaking along with wide receiver
eight of them coming during Hudson 90 ·Aurora 66
Certificates Every Day
67
Newar~
Cath.
the possible tie . with Roger Carr.
Johnstown
a !().minute stretch in the
57
Baltimore.
Miam i will be without
Thru December 24th
second half, in which Arizona
Lakewood 68 Watkins 48
Finally, a Baltimore win defensive end Vern Den
outscored San Francisco, 29- Lakewood St. Edward 58
tonight- and they are slight Herder (knee ) and safety
12. The streak turned a 37-37 Lakewood 53
1 DRAWING DECEMBER 23
Lancaster
12
Marion
Frank·
favorites
- would about put it Charley Babb (collar bone),
tie into a 66-'9 Sun Devil
lin
61
~ way for them with a two- who were sidelined for the
advantage with 5:08 to play. Liberty Benton 73 McComb 55
1 d d
· M1am1
· · •s d&lt;5, -I 4
San Francisco gua rd Chubby Licking Valley 62 Northridge· game ea an two games to seaso n on
CASH
58
play.
thrashing
of
St. Louis ·
Cox led all scorers with 26.
Lima
Bath
66
Napoleon
62
The
game
shapes
up
as
a
Thanksgiving
Day.
Fourth-ranked Notre Dame
Usted as questionable are
No purc;hase necessary. Get your tree tickets at
defeated Valparaiso, 89-75, Lima Perry 12 Cory Rawson battle of wits and arms
the
opposing lin ebacker Steve Towle
all participating Gold Star Store•.
sixth-ranked UCLA beat ~ma Senior 90 St. Marys between
quarterbacks, Miami's Bob (knee), wide receiver Duriel
Santa Clara, 88-79, seventh- Memorial 56
ranked Purdue drubbed Logan 78 Nelsonville Vork 61 Griese and the Colts' Bert Harris (ha mstring) and
69 Springfield Jones. Griese leads AFC .lullback
Leroy Harris
London
Alabama, 8U5.
Shawnee 65
( ha
·
Madison
Pla ins
67
mstrmg) .
..................................................................................................... Southeastern 62
Marietta 76 Athens 69
Marion Pleasant _:t8 Elg in 57

?

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C ~r1-c i 5. NeON E ng l and 1
Sunda y ' s Res ults
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POMEROY, 0.

Saturday's
Ohio College
Basketball
Results
United Press international
(Ashland 73 Kenyoo 55
apital 79 Urbana 45
CCent;al St 18 Chicago St. 69
;ncmnati 71 Biscayne IFia)
6
Cleveland St 61 North

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Splingboro 55 Wayneovllle 52
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-

POmeroJ Cemen t
.,. BIOck Co •

PJ~

··-:···
·.·.·.·

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

peopletalk

Chargers dismantle
Cleveland, 37-14

~

j

I

ochOfl

· ··~'i;. ae ~

• · erriK'Z · ·,-;·oo•,::

,-

·~ · ·/

~

' • ' Rockwell

~liami. headed by Archie
..IJdridge with 20 po ints and 13
rebounds, held off a late
charge by Xa,·ier to take a 62·
61 home win. Miami's fire.
point lead with 28 seconds left
was quickly cut tn one ~,~,·hen
Xa' ier player dropped in two
fielders in a despe rate surge.
:'r-1iam1 nnw IS 2-0.
The Uni\·ersity of Vermont
upset · Ohio State 77-76
Saturday ni ght w stretch its
stnng win to th ree , while
handing the Buckeyes their
first defeat in four games.
Freshman guard Dane
Cornell dropped in two free·
throws with I~ seconds left in
the game to assure the
\ic tory , after a close battle
all the way.
Vennoo t took a 46-45 lead
at halftime, but dropped back
~2. and then made It a
seesaw battle the rest of the
way.
" The key was our
reb&lt;•und111g totals," Vermont
coach Pete r Salzberg said
later , noting his squad
outreb ounded OSU H -32 .
·'This was out finest big win
e\·er . The win was no nuke ."·
Youngs town State wa s
after an upset in Athens , but
Ste,·e Skaggs tallied Z3 po111ts
2'8" X 4'0"
Ill. head Ohio Uni\'ersity from
OR
behind to a 67-04 win. the
~
3'0" )( 4'0"
lll\bcat.s third in four season
starts. Ohi'o U overcame the
LOUVERED
Penguins 35-32 margin at the
intermission.
Pittsburgh pushed to a 23-18
fi rst ha lf lead and boosted the
POlY W~LM U1 FR.v.IE
margin to 17 in the last half in
.DOOR MIRROR
takinga 55-47 home win ove r
l 6 "' .I 56"
Kent State. The Golden Fla·
TOUR
shes.
spa rked by Burrell
CHOICE
~I&lt;Ghee with 19 pcints for
ga me hooor s, managed to cut
• Prer" JJ~ Quo ""f.
the dtificit to 52-45 with Jess
I""! rr~
than two minutes left by
• ~ocoror oes'Qrea
• 1·1 8" oonderos.oo•nt
ta king advantage of PHt
lnu'·Jo::o; lrJr-e
.
1..-..
p1
off ens l·"e
error s. Then
• ....a
nc: l ude~ !&gt;Ue·..-s
• t.
M ttns orto .,.. ,Tuv ul com t li! ly
..
•.,.,~ .~
i&gt;krl"9'',.. .
Pittsburgh
utilized
a
- ~ ·~
• Rtody fo l-1n•ioh (less hon:TNOI'"e )
1
~-----J L---::;;;::-------.:.__j s nwdown offensive to keep
con trol the rest of the way .
lv
Weste rn Kentucky had
little trouble beating Bowling
Green on the Ohio court ,
because James J " hnson
poured in a ca reer high 31
points and grabbed 13
reb&lt;Junds.
The Fa lrons, who
The Departmf!nl .Store of Building
will host Tn State of Indiana
V•night. were sparked by Rnn
Since 1915
Hammye With 25 points.
· T{\ledn hit 60 percent frnl!'

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·=··

Strategy goes awry
on .ast hole Sunday

Curtis Strange and Nancy .
I..opez, who had come from
three strokes off the pace to
tie Pare and Stacy with one
hole to go.
Pate made it.

LARGO, Fla. (UPI) Jerry Paw and Hollis Stacy
thought they had it all figured
out.
The way it) win the $200,000
Mixed Team Golf Championship, they agreed, was to
alternate strokes so that Pate
was hitting the approach
shots and Stacy was putting .
It worked like a charm for
three days, especially at the
end of the third round, when
the 23-year&lt;:&gt;ld Stacy curled
in long birdie putts on two of
the last three holes to give
them a three.,;troke lead
going into Sunday's final
round.
'
· But the strategy went awry
Sunday .
Stacy was having trouble
off the tee and it was Paw
who ended up handling tbe
putts - and he wasn 't

NOW OPEN

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OF MASON

year&lt;&gt;ld Pate lined up over
the most crucial putt of the
tournament - a seven-footer
on the lijth green. If he sank
it, they won. .
U he missed , they would
enter a sudden-death playoff ·
'th h d h
Wt
ar &lt; arging rookies
Fl~dlay 75 Dyke 70

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�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Dec. 5, !977

6-The Daily Sentmel, ~1tddlcpm1- Pomeru) , 0 .. Monda), Dec· 5, 1977

Charo only 26 ?
Tell us another one
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) There's a clear and present
danger inherent in asking any
female over the age of 18 t.o
tell how old she as.
But when a woman makes
an issue of her age, as did

Charo recenUy when she
became an American citizen,

CREATIVITY AWARD - Mr&gt;. Bermce Carpenter won lhr ··creati1•ity Award " for her
entry an class "Slarburst ." an abstract design using blacklight. Her arrangement depteted
a manger below a star and she used corn husk flowfr s. honeysuckle \'lfle, and tinsel before a
dark sculptured ba ckground . Mrs. Carpenter is a member of the Bend o· the River Garden
Club.

....

"BEST OF SHOW" - Mrs . Pat Holter of the Chesler Garden Club won the "Best of
Show" award at the Christmas flower show held over the weekend at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. In thf,' class "Serene and Lovely," Mrs. Holter's exhibit was an

arrangement of bronze mwns , treated fern , burnt palm leaves. fantaf~IIlow with a
Madonna and Child all displayed on a wooden boa rd .
-

joy at a weekend Chnstmas

Cl ub;

flower show staged at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Vtsitors were greeted by a
theme exhibit, " A CUrrier
school foyer as they entered

Carpenter. Mrs. Marie Sirchfield , Rutland Friendly
Gardeners. and Mrs. Susie
Grueser. Second diviston wanners were Mrs . Suzy
Carpenter. Mrs . Wihna Ter-

the auditoriwn where dozens

rell, Mrs. Jaumta Lambert

of exhibits were attractavely
displayed. Mrs . Bernice

and Mrs. Shirley Turner .
"Let's Raise ll High".

Carpenter was general cha1r.-

Christmas wall hanging

and [ves Chnst.mas" in the

SWEEPSTAKES AWARD -:- Mrs . Ada Holter of the Chester Garden Club won the
horticulture sweepstakes award. She accumulated more points for ribbon awards than anv
other exhibitor . In the division, Mrs . Holter won two blue rtbbons, two red nbbons. nne white

ribbon, and one yellow.

Meigs
PrQperty

Mrs. Elste Forbes entertaaned Sunday with a dinner
party honoring Jil) Barber
and Jeff Reuter, her greatgranddaughter and grandson, on their. birthdays.
Others attending were Mr.
and Mr~ . Roy Reuter, Cherrie
Reuter. Pomeroy: Mr. and

Transfers
Nancy Jaspers to Zelia
Taylor, 0.12-8 acre, Tyree's

Mrs . David Barber, Grove C1~

Sub Div.', Sutton.
Betty Brickles, admrx ., Ina
Hoback, dec 'd. to Charles F.
Pyles, Shirley L. Pyles, Lot
81, Racine.
William Grueser, Buena
Grueser to Harold H.
Blackston.
Helen
E.
Blackson Lot, Salisbury.

ty ; Make Dawson, Mason, W.
Va. , and Mr and Mrs Brooks
Sayre, Syracuse.
·
Saturday Mrs. Reuter met
Mr. and Mrs. David Barber
and Jtll at Nelsonville for a
,rtde on · the Hocking Valley
Santa Specta l

William Grueser,

Buena

Grueser to Harold
Blackston,
Helen
Blackston, Coa l under
acres, Salisbury.
Paul Mako, dec.
Margaret Mako , aff .

H.
E.
4' 1

trans., Salem.
Marvin Allen Fry to John
A. Elias, Kathy Elias, Parcels. Salisbury.
Elden Blake lo Elden C.
Blake, Jr .. Helen Blake.

to
deed, Olive
for Correction
Dan C . Hooper , ~ Ruth

Hooper to Margaret Conley,
Hillard
Conley , Porcel,

;~ ._
I

Bedford .

WOPEN

Walter Miller to Daniel L.

Donahue ,

Janey

Donahue ,

Parcels , Salisbury .
Paul l
Manuel to Paul

GINO'S

Byron Roush , 4 lOB acres ,
Le tart
Dave{. D. Wolfe, Cathenne
Y . Wol e to Harold W. 81rd ,

OF MASON

Emma

Lee

B1rd .

River

frontage No . B. Letart .
Antiquity .
•
Davey D . Wolfe, Catherine
Y

PHONE 773-5536

Wolfe to Carden C. Ran
A Randolph.

dolph, Phyllis

R1ver frontage Lots

14,

15, 16.

17, 28 , Letart ·- Ant iquity .

a Great

gift idea

e

Bisek &amp; Osckel'

Wo.tmate

All-porpou worlt tenter &amp; vlu

•
•
•
•

No. 79.001

Afoldaway work center
G1ont \liSe and sawhorse
Double odiustfllent levers
Homontol Y·groo'&gt;~es

• '19" IC 26" IC 32W.hlgh

•
•

...

......
. .... .
.•••II•
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.... •

l.

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
of Building Since 1915

.::::~::;~:~
••ill:·~l¥lo.!ill-illtllfi;Oili"lii&amp;\I&amp;Oilit'

~==

Social
f
Calendar
~:

I

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
. Club, Monday, with a dinner
at 6:30 p.m. at Crow's Steak
House. Meeting will follow at
8 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Carl Horky. There will be a
gift exchange and members
are reminded to lake gifts for
the patten! at the Athens
Mental Health Center.
RACINE CHAPTER. Order
of Eastern Stars installation
of officers M'onday, 7:30 p. m.
All Racine members to bring
covere~ dish .
TUESDAY
SOUTHERN Local School
Board special session
Tuesday at 7 p.m. in cafeteria
at high school.
LADIES AUXIIJARY of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Chnstmas party Tuesday
6:30p.m. in east-west dining
room . Potluck with $2 gift
exchange.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter
OF Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Dec . 6, Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
There will be a cookie sale at
the meeting. The cultural
report wall be given by Mrs.
Carolyn Satterfield and Mrs .
Libby Sayre. Kathy Fry and
Texanna Well will be the
hostesses.
·MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
LODGE, 363, F. and A. M.,
Tuesday 7:30p.m. with work
in the entered apprentice
degree .
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of Ameraca , 7:30
Tuesday, at the hall. Nomination of officers, quarterly birthdays to he observed, and
refreslmients to be served.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC
LODGE 363, F. and A. M.
Wednesday, mstallahon of offleers. Open to master
masons, their wives and
friends.
LETART F AU1l Umted
MJthodast Women, annual
Christmas dinner to be held
at the home of Mrs. Ernest
Shuler, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
THURSDAY
·GALL! A County Human
Services Council meeting
noon at Community Mental
Health Center. Tour and
lunch . Call 446-5508 for
reservations .

no holds are barred .
A judge,
accepting
affidavits from family and
neighbors in Spain, officially
delcared the singer-guitarist
to be 26 years old.
Cynics laughed it up . )[ the
Spanish ball 9f fire is only 26
now, how could she have been
featured with Xavier CUgat in
Las Vega's a dozen years ago'
Fourteen-year-&lt;~ld
kids
aren't allowed to work
saloons in the first place. And
anyhow, no 14-year-old in
memory had , achieved the
physical 'precocity of the

Retired teacher A~rm
.m Jure
. . d.m wreck ~CJ~
e~~~~'~h~::~eral
Bernice Bede Osol
'

'

Couchie.Couchie girl when
she first appeared on stage.
Charo,

however,

You will

is

/:!

adamant, though somewhat
inarticulate, about her 26
summers.
A'5 a new and recW'ring
member o~ the "ChiCj) And 1
The Man' ' television series,

Charo took time off during a
rehearsal break to defend her
age.
"I lied when I first came w
this country from Spain with
CUgat," Charo said . "Other
girls my age were drinking
hot milk and going to bed at 8
o'clock .
" When we went to the

Flamingo hotel in Las Vegas
they told me as a minor l
muldn'l work in the lounge
because the show's were too
late. The last two shows went
on at 2 a.m. and 4 a.m.

Winners of Meigs Flower Show announced
Beauttful flower ar- D1ehl, and Mrs. Wtlma Terrangements accented with rell. Winding Tra il. Second
satm baubles, Silver stars. diviSIOn wmners were Mrs.
and colorful candles. Ruth Erwin, Mrs. Ruth Karr.
Y.Teathes of every description Mrs. Pauline Atkins and Mrs.
and galt wrappmgs galore, all Berntce Carpenter.
creations of Meigs County
'"Tis the Season ", a door
garden club members , were decorati on . Mrs . Bets y
displayed for the public to en- Horky, Middleport Garden

Enjoys guests

ASTRO·GRAPH :

Mrs .

Bern t ee

a

Air'\ a stabile: Mrs. Bernice

" Hearthside" , a floor ar-

rangement with a minimum
height of four feet: Mrs. Ada
Holter, Mrs. Alice Thompson,
Windin~ Tn1in, Mrs. Chloris

NO '!MI &amp;IMII

fREE RlltLACIMIN
GUARANTEEI

SAYRE
HARDWARE
882-2525
126 Main

NEW ,HAVEN,

w. v~

.
VICTORY EKED OUT - Federal Hocking got the
luck of a turnover inside the last 10 seconds by Eastern
and coniJ·olled U1e ball to win 40-44 Saturday night an a
non4eague basketball game at Eastern. Above, Dave

Young, Jared Sheets and Lisa
Young , tied forfourth .
Houeplants:
Jay
Carpenter, both first and second : Robm Young, and Lisa
Young .
The show was dedicated to
Mrs. James (Judy) Titus of
Rutland , a member of the
HOR- Rutland Garden Club, Meigs
JUNIOR
County's first OAGC acTICULTURE
'
Pane · Branches: Lisa credited judge, a past direcYoung, Robin Young, Jared tor of Region II, and an inspiration and guide to all
Sheets, and Aaron Sheets.
Broadleaf evergreen: Jay Meigs County garden club
Carpenter. Phil Young, Robin members during her many
years as an active member of
the county association.

and Mrs. Wilma Terrell,
fourth.
Flowering Houseplants:
Miss Ruby Diehl, Rutland
Garden Club; Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Wtldwood ·Garden
Club, with Miss Diehl also
takmg both third and fourth.

Brown (341 of Eastern defends against Randy Hornsby
(411 of Federal Hocking with the ball while others on both
teams want to get an the action. Picture by Greg Bailey.

Mrs. Geneva Howell, 71, miles/east of Vinton County.
The patrol said the
Gallipolis, a retired reacher
unknown
vehicle went left of
in the city school system, is
center
striking
a car driven
listed in fair condition in
by
Terry
M.
Barreit 26,
intensive care at the Holzer
Medical Center where she Ewington.
Danny R. Ford, 29,
was admitted following a
traffic accident at 12:08 p.m. Wyandot, Mich. was cited to
Sunday on US 35, three tenths Gallipolis Municipal Court
for passing at an intersection
of a mile west of SR 160.
The ·Gallia·Meigs Post following an accident at 2:40
State Highway ·Patrol said p.m. Sunday on US 35 at
she was a passenger in a car Mitchell Rd . Officers said the
operated by Naomi' M. Ford car sidesll'iped an auto
Howell, 70, Gallipolis, widow operated by Michael !}.
of Judge John W. Howell. The Marcum, 16, GallipOlis.
At 1:45 a .m. Stlllday; cars
Howell car, going east, struck
the right side of a semi rig driven by Crystal R. Ward ,
operated by John E. Angel, 38, Bidwell, and JohnnY D.
30, Rt. 2, Crown City. There Conkle, 33, Bidwell, collided
was moderate damage to the on Story's Run Rd. in
truck and heavy damage to Cheshire Twp. There was
moderate damage and no
the Howell car.
charges
were filed .
Mrs. Howell was cited to
single
car accident oc~
A
Gallipolis Municipal Court
curred
at
8
p.m. Saturday on
for failure to yield right of
Mill
Creek
Rd. two and five
way.
A deer was killed at 12 :30 tenths miles north of SR 7.
p.m. Sunday on TR 3 in Meigs State troopers said Jackie
County, west of SR 124. The Lee Henson, 25, Rt. 1,
patrol said the animal ran Gallipolis, going south, lost
into the path of a car operated control of his car which ran
by William M. Long, 17, Long off the roadway into a creek.
There
was
moderate
Bottom.
damage.
A hit-skip accident ocWillard M. Taylor, 56,
curred at l: 15 p.m. Sunday on
SR 124, one and one tenth

Give A Gift
That K~eeps On GiVing
;

BROWN CANS TWO - Dave Brown (34) high poant man ( 16) for the Eagles in a losing
cause ( 44--45 ) t.o Federal Hocking Saturday night at Eastern, puts a shot up beyon d the
defendang hands of Jun Hart (31), Bnan Ritenour (15) and Randy Hornsby (41) Greg
Ba1ley photo.
·

Critical decisions coming in
•

one-day .~ession Tuesday
lly LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio General Assembly

A coupon c~ntai~i~g s~bscripti~n information necessary .
for your g1ft g1vtng IS conta1ned in this ad for your
c9nvenience. Fill it out and send it in together with your
check.
OHIO &amp; W. VA ......... :: •.•••••.• '22.00 YR.
ELSEWHERE............................ '26.00 YR.

"f·~~~b~~~"$P:'~~~
!~ The Daily ~ntinel
:~
~

'

~~

¥(

111 Court Street

::~::..~.~:. .......................................... i.·.

:

............... .............. :........ .................

~

S~reet

&lt;fi

C1ty .. -. . .. .. . .. . . . . State .

~

~

'- 1

veto of a collective
bargaining b1ll for public
workers.

voted against the bill two
weeks ago.
Three of those five remain

adamenl in their oppoSition to
r econvenes Tuesday for a at 10 a.m. and the tfouse at the bill that would allow
striking by all public
year-end wrapup sessaon, 10 :30 a.m.
The session is planned for a workers, except those on
with action scheduled on
emergency legislation· to single day, but maght spill safely forces . Rep. Irene
assist debt-ridden school over into Wednesday if Smart Of canton, however 1
systems and Democratic crucial items are not settled. will become a municipal
maneuvering expected on . Aside from the bill granting judge in January and
overriding a gubernatorial Cleveland, Toledo and other Democrats may delay an
financially troubled school override vote until after then,
:listricts expanded borrowing in hopes her replacement will
NOTICE ON FILING
powers, there is no certain ty support it.
OF INVENTORY
Senate President Pro Temabout what action will be
AND APPRAISEMENT
pore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
The State of OhiO ~ M eigs
taken.
county, Court of Common
These matters are awaiting and House Speaker Vernal G.
Plus, Probate Division
Riffe Jr. , D-New Boston,
disposition:
To the Adm 1nistratrix of
the estate, to such of the
-An
industrial
tax have ·agreed to move the
tollowtng as are residents. of
incentives bill, now in joint school bill.
the State of Ohio, vit : - the
It
would allow the
surviving spouse, the next of
House-Senate conf erence
kin, the benefic iar ieS under
Cleveland
school board tl!
committee, backed by the
the will; and to the attorney
extend
$15
million worth of
administration of Gov. James ,
or attorneys representing any
of the afor ementioned per · A. Rhodes .
loans from two Cleveland
sons .
- A· controversial banks through 1918, require a
James
W.
Farmer ,
Deceased. Middleport , Ohio,
charitable bingo bill, also in a detailed plan for making
Sal ibrury Tow ns hip , No .
repayment and furnish
conference committee.
22221
You are hereby not 1fied
- A decisaon on legislation assurance that schools would
that the In ve-ntorY and Ap ··
providing for candidates for remain open for another .
pra1sement of the estate of
the
atorem entioned,
goverr10r and lieutenant year.
deceased, late of said County , governor to run as a team
It is similar to one defeated
was f1!Cd in th is Court. Said
by
the Senate in October,
within
their
parties
next
Inventory and Appraisement
wil l be for heanng before this year.
conference although that bill applied only
A
Court on the 12t h day of
to Oeveland. This bill would
December. 19?7 , at 10·00 committee expected to have a
measure ready for floor extend the same borrowing
o'clock A .M
Any person desiring to file action by Monday night.
powers to other schools in
exceptions th ere to must ti le
I
In addition, Democrats will financial difficulty.
them at leas! five days pr1or
fo the date set for hearrng
Ocasek and Riffe plan t.o
probably
be
at
work
rounding
Given under m.y hand and
seal of said Court. lhls 23rd out enough votes to overcome · meet Monday to try to come
day of November 1977
Gov. James A. Rhodes rejec- up with an agreeable version
th eir collective of legislation offering
Mannmg D . Webster tion of
'
Judge bargaining
bill.
The financial incentives for
Bv Carol yn G . 1homa-s
mdustries to modernize and
Deputy Clerk Democrats hold a veto-proof
expand.
majority
in
both
houses,
but
\ ( 11 J (12l s, 2tc
five Democrats in the House
.,
Judy, Joe and the Ho-Ho-Ho
The Senate is to reconvene

By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY-I washed
my polyester pants suit and
then pul'it in the dryer and
completely forgot it. The
wrinkles are really set in jt
and I have was~ed it again
and let it drip dry but this did
no good. It looks like I had
slept in it so I do not want to
wear it so I hope you will tell
me what to do.-MRS.J.K.
.DEAR POLLY-I have
U1ree beautiful sheer panel
curtains that are full of
wrinkles and I have steam
ironed them, pressed them
while soaking wet and
sprayed with fabric ftnish as
well as putting them in the
dryer. I do hope someone has
a solution but I am afraid this
is one of those materials one
ca n do nothing about.MARYL.
DEAR MRS.J.K. and
MARY L.-You do have pr~
blems and hopefully the
following will help both of
·you. I had the same problem
with a pair of white polyester
permanent pressed pants and
finally made them presentable lookmg by ironing with
a pressing cloth that bad been
wrung out of WHITE vinegar.
Repeat if necessary as the
results may not be inst;mt.POLLY.
DEAR READERS-A couple of the ladies and one
gentlemsn wrote to disagree
with my suggestion to Mrs.
J.F'S. that she cut her toolong zipper off at the bottom
and then firmly Uick or stitch
across to prevent the zipper
from opening too far down
and getting off the track.
E.G.'s letter is the least complicated so we are printing it
and then you readers can
choose the way that seems
best for you.-POLLY.

.. ... .... Z1"p .......... ~

HIS

~

15

HE 510RY OF ... ,

•

WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CARD
'

WITH EACH GIFT SUBSCRIPTION

JUDY ...

DEAR POLLY-I read
your idea on cutting off a zir&gt;per. l have always cut them
from the top. Put closed zir&gt;per in as usual, open to. the
bottom, cut off excess and
sew across top tapes or tuck
under facing and stitch
across a couple of tirnes.E.G.
DEAR POLLY-I want to
tell the lady who does not
know what to do with her 25foot-telephone cord that I attached a coffee mug hook
near the phone. r drape the
long cord over it in large
loops and it is most convenient. When one moves the
phone th.ere is no fuss.ALENE.
DEAR POLLY---While
visitmg my sister in Ohio
she showed me how to get
every drop of toothpaste out
of a tube. When the paste is
partially used turn it up at the
bottom and Uten ron with a
rolling pin. You wit! be amaz·
ed at how much more Utere is
than you thought. This is also
very good when a person has
weak hands or wrists.FLORENCE.
DEAR POLLY-Keep an
asphalt shingle or two in the
car trunk and when stuck in
the snow or ice Jay the rough
side down to get traction to
get the car going.
Place a pencil sharpener on
the rim of a waste basket with
tape so it is always handy and
you have less mess as the
shavings will fall in the
basket.-ESTHER.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column, Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

DEAR DR. BLAKER - ·My
husband and I have reserved
a room in a secluded country
inn for the weekend. After 15
years of marriage, we still
feel uneasy stealing time
from the children for
ourseLves, so we decided to

by Bau~ and Pa1toret

.-- - - --,

~
From..............................................
~
~~~,~~~~~~.~~~.~~
~~~~
( KI!IIIC

Waterloo, was charged with
left of center following an
accident at I :25 &lt;p.m.
Saturday on SR 141, one mile
west of SR 325.
The patrol said Taylor's
car sideswiped an

auto

operated byt William C.
Conner, 38', Haydenville.
There
wsa
moderate
damage.
A deer was killed in an
accident at 6 a.m. Saturday
on US 35 when the animal ran
into the path of a vehicle
' driven by Edward 0 . Repass,
33, Gallipolis.
Another single car accident
occurred at 4:30 p.m. on SR
218, one mile north of CR 3.
Officers said Terry E.
Johnson, 18, Crown City,
going south, lost control of his
car which went off the left
side of the highway striking a
guardrail and embankment.
Afinal accident occurred at
4 a.m. on SR 554 at milepost
18 where an auto owned by
Michael W. Doyle, Gallipolis,
ran off the left slde of the
highway striking a utility
pole. The driver could not be
located. Doyle had reported
the car stolen prior to the
acctdent.

Polly Cramer

Iron polyester with vinegar

Looking
just the right gift for.that certain someonef
How about a present that will.be good at all seasons of the
year? A subscription to the Daily Sentinel and Sunday
Times Sentinel.

-

POLLY'S POINTERS

m~

man for the successful show cludmg plant material: Mrs.
which included special ex- Margaret Parker, Mrs. Marhibtls from the Meags jorie Walburn. Crystal
Bookmobile,
Francis Rayburn, and Mrs. Evelyn
Florists, and Mary Thompson Hollon.
wtth dough tree ornaments.
"Behold a Star", interMrs. Dorsey Bumgarner, pretive design ; Mrs. Eileen
an accredited judge of the Buck . Bend 0' The R1ver.
Ohio Associaton of Garden Mrs . Linda King , Mrs. MarClubs, judged the show and jorie Walburn , and Mrs.
awarded four top awards - Margaret Parker.
the "Best of ,Show" in artistic
"Fun and Fancy ", design
arrangements to Mrs. Pat of ·imagmatton : Mrs. Judy
Holter: the "Reserve Best of Titus, Mrs. Janel Young,
Show" to Mrs. Evelyn Lancaster, Mrs. Wan etta
Hollon ; the '.' Creativity Radekin, and Mary Hays.
Award" Mrs. Bernice
·' Let's Wrap ll Up", gift
Carpenter, and the ·'Junior wrappmgs: Mrs. Evelyn
Best of Show " to Lisa Young. Hollon, Mrs
Marilyn
The hortiCulture sweepstakes Wisecup, Wtnding Tratl; Mrs.
award went to Mrs. Ada Juanita Lambert, and Mrs.
Holter.
Marjorie Walburn.
In the arttsltc designs divi"Sparit of the Day" , a table
sion, the ribbon winners picture of the exhibition type
were, listed first through depicting a Christmas festivifourth, respectively : " A ty : Mrs. Addalou Lewis, AnTribute to Currier and Ives", na Turner, Rutland Garden
an arrangement made m a Club; Mrs. Reva Snowden.
Sleigh: Mrs. J. J. Fi-y, Mid- Rutland Garden Club, and
dleport Garden Club ; Mrs. Mrs. Allee Thompson.
Suzy Carpenter, Rutland
Junior Artistic: "Winter
Friendly Gradeners; Mrs. Pastime", showing motion:
Evelyn Hollon, Wildwood Robin Young, Jody Grueser,
Gar~en Club ; and Mrs. Linda
Pa!!Y Parker, and Denise
Lambert, Wmdmg Tra1l - Mnlbert ; and " Away in a
Garden Club.
Manger ", mcludang an
"A Colonial Christmas", a anunal figurine: Lisa Young,
mass design': Mrs. Pauline She1la Horky , Patty Parker,
Ridenour, Chester Garden and Kathy Parker.
Club ; Mrs. Geneva Nolan'
HORTICULTURE DJVIPomeroy Garden Club; Mrs. S!ON
Mae Mora, Chester Garden
Roadisde Material: Linda
Club;
Mrs. Marjorie Kmg, first; Addalou Lewis,
Walburn, Winding Trail.
second, and Wilma Terrell,
"Snowed I.Jp", featuri ng fourth
white: Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, · Fantail Wallow : Addalou
Mrs. Ada Holter, Chester and Lewis, Wilma Terrell, no
Wildwood Garden Clubs; third and Linda King' fourth .
Mrs . Susie Grueser,
Seedpods or nuts: Mrs. Ada
Wildwood Garden Club, and Holler, Mrs. Addalou Lewts,
Mrs. Ruth Erwin, Chester Mrs. W&gt;hna Terrell, Mrs.
Garden Club.
Ada Holter.
Hanging plants of folaage:
'''Christmas Aglow" , ancludmg one or more candles: Mrs. Alice Thompson, Mrs.
Mrs. Juanita Lambert, Ada Holter, Mrs. Esther
Rutland Frtendly Gardeners; West.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, Rutland
Garden Club; Mrs. Bunny
Kuhl, Chester; and Mrs. Bernice'Carpenter, Bend 0' the
River. Second division of the
same class: Mrs. Fry, Mrs.
Margaret Parker, Winding
· Tratl; Mrs. Susie Grueser,
Wildwood, and Mrs. Ada
Holter.
"Serene and Lovely" with
Madonna and Child : Mrs. Pat
Holter, Mrs. Ruth Karr,
Chesler; Mrs. Linda King,
Chester Garden Club, and
Mrs. Ada Holter.
"There's
Song in the
Carpenter, Mrs. Bunny Kuhl,
Mrs. Suzy Carpenter, and
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon.
"Christmas is Forever" ,
featuring driftwood or
weathered wood: Mrs. Addalou Lewis, Winding Trail ;
Mrs. Ruth Karr, Mrs. James
Titus, Rutland Garden Club,
and Mrs. Bernice Carpenler.
"Starburst" ,. abstract usmg blacklight : Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter, Mrs. Pat Holter,
. Mrs. Ada Holter, and Mrs.
Suzy Carpenter.

Hanging pots of flowenng
plants : Mrs. Ada Holler.
Large each or succulent :
Mrs . Alice Thompson, Mrs.
Carrie Grueser, Wildwood
Garden Club : Mrs. Esther
West, both third and fourth,
Bend 0 ' the River Garden
Club.
Small Cacti or Succulents: .
Wanetta Radekm, first : Alice
Thompson' both second and
third, and Carne G rueser.
Foliage plants: Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon, first ; Mrs.
Ada Holter, second and third,

)

AND THE

I,,

HO · H0-1-10 •·

get away for a ''self-directed
marriage

encounter experience." If you think this is

a good idea, p)fmse advise us
oo some techniques to get us
started. We have never done
anything like this before but
we think it might help us to
communicate better and to be
better parents.
'
DEAR READER - Hey,
wbat is thl,s.- "stealing" time
for a get-a:way to a secluded
weekend hideout? Are you
really "bad guys" just
because you want to spenp a
weekend together away from
the children? Of course not.
You shouldn't have to steal
time - you should be able to
take it and use it however you
want.
So on this particular
weekelld, try using the tiine
strictly for yourselves - not

An

keep feelings to yourself rer

TillS SUPERVISOR IS~
DEARHELEN :
.
What do you do when your supervisor goes through a routine
of personal habits.each day at the office? He polishes his shoes,
applies cologne, underarm .deodorant, and gives ~If halrCU\S. He also uses a jar on his!lesk as a spittoon, and he couglls
a~
.
He has a lot of seniority over us two women co-workers. Is
Utere any alternative but quitting?· RAND A
DEAR RANDA:·
Have you tried complaining to the big boss? Management
nnight overlook occasional shoe polishing, but public underarm
dabs, self-haircuts and most especially the jar- they have got
to go! No amount of seniority should excuse them!
·
If this fails, try klutziness : accidentally knock over the spittoon a couple of times.
... Or you could simply tell the man his habits annoy you.
After aU, you're two against one.- H.

DEAR HELEN:
My sister has made it her_life's project to get whatever I
have, especially men.
•
I moved to a different city, met my wooderful Tony, and we
were married. Get this : In four years away from home, I was
never once visited by my sister. She always had excuses, but
the truth was,my single life was tooduU for her.
But we were scarcely back from our honeymoon before she
showed up, charm oozing from every pore. She wants to spend
her month's vacation with us in the spring. Tony thinks she's a
cute, harmless kid and says "Why not'" If I tell him how many
guys I lost to her, he may see me as a loser. Should I let her do
it to me again?· FEARFUL SISTER .
DEAR SISTER:
. Newlyweds don 't need a month of a vacationing sister, even
if she weren't predatory. Tell her to vacation elsewhere. And
tell Tony exactly how you feel. I think he can help you with
your insecurity problem.- H.
DEAR HELEN:
I am a 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld woman who is desperate for male companionship. Must I go to bed for it? Am I the only single person
left on earth who wants an alternative to the one-night stand?
I've been so traumatized by the way n\en act these days that I
can't relate to them anymore. Is it prudish to resent sleeping
With a stranger? I want ttme for love to develop first. Help! SCARED
DEAR SCARED:
Men try these days because they feel it is expected of them.
Women accept one-night stands for the same reason. They
substitute sex for communication, when perhaps neither wants
it nearly so much as he or she pretends.
Why not start a real conversation with the next man you
date? ":ou may discover he is quite w,:··~~ to wait.- H.
for your children. Since this
may be a new experience for
you, some guidelines might
help.
Make a -rule : for two days
we Will not mention the
children ! This will help keep
the weekend focused on your
relationship. If your life has
revolved around children for
many years, you may have to
endure some painful
moments when you think you
have nothing to say to each
other ... but it will be worth
all your effort and patience if
fOU can truly discover each
other again.
My husband and I have invented a "game" that is fun
and revealing. You may want
to try it. Make a list of "important" issues such as busing, abortion, marijuana, gay
rights, t~e Panama Canal,
capital punislunent, Vtetnam, psychoanalysis. "To
begin with let him guess what
you believe about each item.
If he is correct, give him a
kiss ; if he guesses wrong,
think oi a proper punislmient
(keep silent• ). Then you
guess what he thinks on each
issue. (''No opinion 11 is an acceptable guess if it's correcl.)
AI the end .of this "encounter 1 ' ' each person ex-

presses how he or she felt
when listening to their
•

I

env. -

able relationship s thts com1 ng
year The y will be w1th people
wh o are as concerned w1 th
advanc1ng your hopes as you
are W1th theu s
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec .
21) Today m deal1ng w1th others
try to see th at wh 1ch IS beneath
the surface. It' ll help you es tab ~
lish stronger bond s w!lh people You have felt had littl e to
offer. F1nd out to whom you' re
romantically suited by sending
for your copv of A s tr o~Graph
Lener Mail 50 ce nt s for each
3nd a long , self-addressed .
stamped envelope to AstraGraph , P 0 Box 489 , Radio C1ty
Stat1on . NY 10019 Be sure to
specity your b1rth sign
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19)
You con duct yowsell we ll to·
day in areas where vou have
authority You' re fa1r and ju st.
yet firm when necess ary
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19)
Grve free rergn to your 1mag 1na~
lion today 1n situat1ons that
have far-reaching effec\s You
should be able to perce1ve the
ou tcome and make plans
accordingly
· ..
PISCES (Feb . 10-March 20) Yolf
sh1ne today in your ab1lily to
mastermind the alfa1rs of oth ers . Way s and means o l achie~
1.ng goals overlooked by them'
will be obviou s to you.
ARIES (March 21-Aprif 19)
opportunity may arise, today tO'
transform a situations deemed
undesirable into somethinQ
quite beneficial Be wrttmg to
change
'
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Th •S
could be the day you 've been
wait1ng for to do a ltftle negoth
ating with th e boss m order to
better your lot . Play your aces
wisely
,
GEMINI (May 11-June 10) Don 't

spouse's guesse.. Common

responses are : "I can't
believe' you know that much
about me;" "We've talked

about that so many times,
and you still don't know what
I think;" "I' m not surprised
that you couldn't guess my
opinion, I guess I really have

never been very open;" or "I
· never realized I just don't
have many opinions." The
feelings expressed at this
time can be a springboard for
further discussions.
Clear

con'ununication

is

gardtng someone you really
care lor, but have been rettcen~
to reveal. Chances are th~
teet1ngs are mutual.
CANCER (June 11-Jufy 12) The
circuitous route you 'll use to
reach your goals tod ay may
baffle th e cunous observer , yet
to you, each and every step wit I
make sense.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) As a
salesperson 1! w ill be dlfftcult
to find your eQual today You
aren't apt to promote anythmg
you don ' t sincerely believe in
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) You•
flair In financial matters could
b"' UIJite remarkab le today A ll
" · ,•II tak e rs the proper chal·
' t-... IQ~

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Others
wilt tr nd your personality
appealtng, although a shade
mvsterious today. You won ' t
be role-playing . You may not
even be aware of it yourself
SCORPIO (Oct. 2f-Nov. 22) The
sec:ret for getting associates to
do your bidding today is to
appeal to the1r emo t1on s This
1s especially tr ue for persorl s
vc.u've previously he lped .
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Columbus, Oh1o
November 25 , 1977
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No . 77 -l297
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sea l ed proposals will be
rec:e1ved at the office of the
Director
of
the
Ohio
Department
of
Tran s
portation, Co l umbus, 01;110,
unt1l
10 . 00 A .M ., Oh10
Standard Time , Tuesday ,
December 20, 1977, for im ·
provements in :
Par1 1

Br~~i:~o C~u~~~j3 ~~~~ . tn.

Route 33 So u'thbo uncL
Section
3.79,
Salisbury
Township, over Sta te Route 7,
by repainng O\lerhe ight toad
coll i SIOn damage to steel
beam,
replacing
cross
frames , painting and related
work
" The date set tor com
plet ion of thi s work shall be
as set forth in the bidding
propos.&lt;tl "
Each bidder Sh&lt;tl l be
required to f ile w1th his bid n ·
cert if ied chec k or cashier's
check tor an amount equal , to
li.ve per cent ol his bid , out 1n
no event more than 11tty
th ousand dollars , or a bond
for ten per cen1 of his b•d .
pay~ble tp th e D1rector
B(dders must ~pply , on the
proper
tocms ,
tot
qualification at least t en days
prior to the date set for
open ing bids 1n accordan ce
with Chapter 55:15 Otuo
Revised Code
Plans and specif iC ation s
are on file In th e Depa rtm ent
of Transpol'tation and th e
office of th e Distr ict Dep uty
Director
The Crlrector reserv es th e
right to reject any and att
b ids .
S

DAVIDL WEIR

1121

s,

DIRE CTO R
12 . 21c

essential to a good relation·
ship. And if you try this next of this newspaper, P.O. Box
exercise, you will realize how 489, Radio City Station, New
misunderstandings can result York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
from faulty listening. You mail prohibits personal
begin. Talk for 1:&gt;-20 nninutes replies, but questions of
about the pros and cons ·bf general interest wm be
your marriage. The rule is discussed in future colutlllls.
that your hu.!band cannot interrupt to explain or defend
himself. He must listen. After
you have finished, he repeats
wbat you said and you rorrect'
any misunderstandings. Then
reverse things, with him Uilking first. Being understood is
a satisfying -although infrequent- experience.

You will know the enrounter weekend has been a
success if you plan your next
weekend together without the
aid ofan agenda!
Write to Dr. Blaker in care

.,.,

......

OH,U OUOtl

SIA~ f .lloni lo!~ n~u1 ~ 11&lt;;f .:Omp.~~ 1

w~

e 0,.. t~ 8 oomrr.v1on iii·"O•i

�•

8-The Daily Sentinel. Middlepor t-Pome roy, 0 .. Monday, D&amp;·.

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport- Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday , Dec .~- 1977
DICK THA CY

&gt;. L9i7

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
Ufld.-r
C..h
t'hilrMt'

100
150
110

I Way
2dayf

•

3dayl
6 d.a)'f

J OO

125

Notic.,.

2l.S

CUN SHOOI

,..,

J i$

Elich 11•1lfii O\'tr thr nununwn 1$
wurdJ .l.!i 4 l'f'nls ~r won! peor d.il)
Ads n&amp;MWI! ollwr ll"'iin l"MSi"'..'Ull\' l'
dilys will bt d lal rKed Ott Uw I da )

.....

lfWlimwn CoaJh U'1 advtUK't

Mobdr I-IOIT'I4i Sillies ,auld Yard salt's
•rr »Ct'j!'ptNJ only With l'JiSh With
~r 2$ c-.nt dwrge for ~ds l'!lrning Bn Nwnbet In Clln: ul Tlw-~;t­

tinel.

Tht Pubhsher reserves tht! n~ht
~ tdh or rr~l &amp;ny ads det~d obJK&gt;LioniL Thr PuOllShtr W"lil not bt
~b it for mort lha n ont mcorrect uuertum

Phont' 99%-11 56

..
NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday
Noon on Silturilily
Th&lt;my
thru Friday
4 P.M
Lhe iby before pubhl'llttun

SundMy
4P.M
Fnda)' 111flt.&gt;rn0011

NOTICE TO

CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANS PO R: T ATION
Columbus ; Oh to
No ... tmber 18, H77

Contract Sales Ltgil
Copy No . 77 -llOO
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
FEOE~AL-

SEC 402
SAFETY FUNDS

•

J9 -77 -009 ( lnc-41
Seale-d proposals will bE
rece 11fed at the off ice of tne
D irector
of
the
Oh •O
Department
Of
Trans
portal ion , Columbus , Oh •o .
unt il
10 00
A M
Oh 1G
Standard T ime , Tuesday .
December 10 . 1977 , lor im
pro ... emenrs in ·
Athens , Gatha . Guernse't ,
Hocking , Me 1gs . Mo!'lroe ,
Morga n,
Noble .
Perr)
Vinton
and
Was h• ngton
Count ies . Oh io, on var ious
sect ions on ATH U . S Ro ut es
33 and 50. State" Rou tes 7, 13 .
56 , 78 . 124 . 143 . \44 , 278. 329,
3?6 , 377 , 5.50 . 68 1, 6132 . 685 . 690
end 691 •n Ath~ns County .
GAL U.S Route 35 . State
Routes 7 , 141 , 160 , 218 , 2JJ,
279 , 325 . 553 . 554 , 588 , 775 an d
790 in Gall ia County , GU E
State Routes 83 , 146, 340 and
1121 in Guernsey County , HOC
US Route JJ , State Routes
56 , 11J. 93 , 180 . 216, 1711 , 327 .
374, 595 . 66A and 678 ,,
Hocking County . MEG U S
Route 33 , St ate Rou tes 7, 124 ,
UJ , 189 . 2-48 , 325 , 338 . 681 , 684
and 6~2 in Me igs County ;
MOE State Ro u tes 7, 26 . 78,
145 , '255 , 260 , 379 . 536 . 5j7 , 565 ,
724 and BOO in Monroe
County , MRG State Routes
37 ' 60 . 78, 83 . 266 , 284 , 329.' 339 ,
37 6, 377 , 555 , 669 , 676 and 792
in Morgan County . NOB
State Routes 78. 83 , 145 , 146,
U7 . 215 ,2 60 ,265 , 285 . 313 , 339 ,
340 , 513.564 , 5.65 . 566, 574 . 724 ,
761 and 821 '" Noble CQunry ;
PER State Ro utes 93, '216 and
595 in Perry County ; VIN
U. S. Route SO . State Routes
56, 93 , 124, 160, 278 , 3'24, 327 ,
32 8, 349, 356, 671 , 617 , 683 and
689 In Vinto.n County ; WAS
State Routes 7, 26. 60 . 83. \24 ,
145 , '260 , 339 , 530 . 5.50, 555 , 618 .
676 , 792 and 821 if"l wash 1ngton
County ; by laying out and T
marking center li ne .
Pavement W1dlh - Varies .
Work Length - Varies .
The Ohio Department of
Transportat•on
hereby
notifies ,all bidders that 11 w ill
aff irmati11e Jy insu re that in
any conf ract entered into
pursuant
to
this
ad venisemenl.
minor i ty
bus iness enterpr1ses will be
afforded fu ll opportunity to
submit b •ds in response to
th1s invitation and w il l not be
d iscr iminated against on the
grounds of r ace , cplor , or
na tural
orig1n
1n
c on .
Sideration for an award .
" Min imum wage rates for
this proiect have been
predeterm.n~d
as reQ ui red
by law and are set forth in the
b id proposal. "
" The date set for com .
pletion of this work shall be
set for t h in the bidding
proposa I."
Each bidder Shall be
required to file w 1th his b id a
cert ified check or cashier's
ctJeck for an amount equa l to
five per cent of his bid , but in
no event more 111an fifty
thousand dollars , or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid ,
payable ro the D1rector .
Bid,ders must apply . on the
proper
forms ,
for
Qualif ication at least ten days
prior to the date set tor
open ing tl ids In accordance
w ith Chapter S52S Ohio
Rev.sed Code .
P lens and specifications
are on file in the Department
of Tra nsportation and the
office o f the Distr ict Dep u ty
Director .
The Director reserves the
nght to reiect any and all
bidS .
.

chlo••d(:" and l Oll tu u• b•m(» lo•
du ~ t (QI\tt ol ond ~ pe c• ol m•~• n g
'&gt;oh lot for 1n c t~ ~~~u~i'&gt; IO ' ~all
\Vor t. s Ma 1n Str;"£"1 t'or n£&gt;toy
Ohto ot pho ne QQ1 Jijqt

THtR~ WILl be no hu nt rnQ ''"
011

In memory , C..rd tJ Th.ilnb auld ·
ObtlWIJ"Y 6 l'tnl.!l ~r word , $3 00

~TARCHAf

Ro ~ •ne Gu n Cl ub
Sun o lle rnoon Fo LIO•
Choc k guns onl y Assotted

El" li!''Y

IH"p0U 1119

my

t:ampi~

t "or Sale

an d

n p ~ &gt;. C(' pl oon s

propar! t BobM cGro"

lH[
llACI Nf Volun t"""" ' Fn e
Oe portl1l(' r1 t w• ll spor150• o gu r1
shoo t 9\er y Sclutdoy o• 6 p m
otthe lf bvdd1ng m BoshO•\ 1-oc
tot ¥ cho lo. e guns on ly
ABSOLUTElY NO hu n!mg or
!r tHROHIIlQ
O !l
.Geo rg e
Freeland s property S'p' f OCl..1~ e

'

Sl~r l r.o'" 10 l)l.ln 101 ~ p!'OI&amp;UIC)II.tl U
tfoiJI dto• f'\111 . Of9 A."'l Ot11 1)1 ! ~·~·
lram!!lg Jt nooi Olletl c~fll)l t l '"
ilttKIO!i "'Odoll!&gt;t!QI OI ~1ell t ~l&gt;dtkat
lt\i\ljj!llg I O ~IM"il lulhn II.I!'!!P Vt.OIU lOb
,.l(f t• ll•n ll ll p~&lt;t !1ma ti.Ji'5 t S~I 6

0&lt; ~lle"d "'" :J .. ee ~ tull t oflle
• eS.dctfl lh~! lll f'9
n "~'' 1\0001 10&lt; lull

S un

on lorn~ &gt;hou

Lo5tand Found
POUND Hou nd dog on ll t 7 .n
Chesh•re a reo o . . er o yea r o ld
Block end whll~ w1th br own
ears Hos hod pupo1f'S. ~ b l 4 '
· 307 0035
__ ,

c..

Flewco lr.ctOf ·lratiM lrarn1ng, lne

304 - 422 -4080

OLD FURNITURE, •&lt;e b a. ~es bros s
beds •ron beds etc. complete
house ho ld~ Wr11e M. 0 Mtller.
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh1 o o r coil
992-7760

.

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small.
Will buy I pu~ ce or comple1e
household New . used , or ant iques Mo rl•n 's Furntture 20 N
2nd St . Mtddlep ort Phone
992 -6370.
CHIP
WOOD . Poles mo )c
dtomeler 10 . on largest end sa
per ton Bu ndled slob S6 pe r
ton D• l• vered to Oh 10 Pollet
~o . ~ - 2 ~o~e~oy 992 -2b89
CASH FOR Junk Cars . Fryl3' sT ruck
ond Aula Wrecker Se rv•c e .
Phone 742-2081 or Pennzo1l
Ru tl onp 742-9575

APPLE S. FtrZPATRI CK Orchards
Srcre Route 689
Ph one
W d hes~ille 6b9 3785
RUG S
WALL Hong•ngs ond
ofgons N1ce tor Ch(ls trtlo s
Reo'&gt;onoble Coii9Q2 1714

Pt '

1965 NEW MOON 1 bedroom
tr aoler 10 • 65 Con be r,eody 10
go or o weelo. s noll(~ Fol more
mlor mot, on coli 949-7484 Ot
985-4740.
MOBitE HOME I 0 )( 55 S1 BOO
tittle Hoc king . 98Q.:]7{)()

TIMBER
Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducts Top pr •&lt; f' tor stond1ng
sowt•mber. Co li 992 5965 or
I&lt;Eml Honby l -446-8570.
COINS , CURRENCY token s old
pocket wel ches and cho1ns
sil11er ond go ld We need 1%4
and old&amp;r s•lver co• ns Bu y sell
or trade Coli Roger Wom siPy
742 -2331

SbOO

197b FORO F 250 Cus tom 17 SO .ot
1400 t lll'S wrhch Only 1ti(X)Q
m1 Headers CB Tope dec lo
O ver SJ 000 1n e~Hos Ser~ovs
( oils onl ~ alter 12 noon
b96 1072 . S6 800.

PARKERSBURG

LOST AROUN D Longs ... dl e Cer
man Short - Ho 1r~d po1nter
Rewo rd 742-28 76

CASH po•d for all mokes o n.;!
models oi mobde home s
Phon e area code 61A -423 -9S31

Al!. o
horse
!J O' I'l' $4 50 Ph p n~ \614 ) 698
3790
KONOMY lRACTOR w•th at: at
rochme rHs Uke ne w os k1ng
S1250 Phone (614 ) 6Q8 .J2Q()
lAMP~R

8 8. S MOBilE HOMES
Pleo·
sant W Vo . bes•d e H ec~ s.
1973 Broodmore 14 • btl 2
bedroo m
1973 Dar iop \4 )( bO 2 bedroom
1971 V!Ctonon 14 )( 67 3 bedroo m
2 both
1972 Cowen try 1'l "b5 3 bed roan,
l9bQ Slatesrnon 12 )( 60 2
bedroofl1 .
FIREWOOD . Any lengths or onv
o•nount
Delive red or may
p1ckup PhonP. 949-2563.

IF YOU hove o se rv1Ce to offer

wo nt to buy or sell someth 1ng
oe look •ng lor work
or
who te..,e r . . you II ,get result~
foste r wi!h o·Sent,nel Wont Ad
Coll9'il2 -2156

HOOF HOLLOW Ho rses . Buy st!'li
trade or train . New and used
saddles Ruth Ree v~s Albany
(614 ) 09~ · 3790
'
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc ial'!'
Corehne and adopt iOn Servtce
992-7680 7'42 -3162. 991-5427 .
FOR
STUD
Serv1ce
AKC
reg1stered cocker spon1el
Block and to n Clorksdole
Lmes . Show quohty . J 8. 0 Ken
nels 74~-31 62

FIREWOOD spill and delivered.
S45 a cord All ha rdwood
843 7933

ROBYN C.B.
SX 007

$79.95
with
alt
Complete
accessories. Yes . we will
layaway tor Christmas.

Pomeroy Landmark

9,. _Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
llliil. Phone 992 -2181

DOWN!

Equipm.,nl

I

t-All

mo t or~

10

1' oders

11:1 S

Su n khou~l'

01 1d

1 • o V ~· I

SJ IQQ 15 1
$4 8 75 fo ld d o wn

St 700 up W~ ,.ell ,(ltv1r e a nd
q uo l• ry Op_en Sundov) Cornp
lo nl£&gt;y 5ror o ott Salt''&gt; R1 61
N of Pr Plca:.o n l
·

AUC ti ON SALE every lues and
Frr at 7 prn New ond u~l'd
merchond•se ot Oh10 R1ver Auc
lion Me igs PlolO Mrddleport
Oh•o . Horne Phone (304)
773-5471

TECHNICIAN

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

THE NAVY

CAU US

Pomeroy Landmark
'9. ~Jack

Ail.

-.

·- :

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•

---

---

-

Pomeroy Landmark

9.

Dave Parsons
Owner

CO UNTRY lo tmlo11d w1 th seclud
ed woods , water and go o d oc
cess .m Monroe Counry W Vo
$ 1 000 do wn coli (304) 772
3102 or {304 ) 772 -3227
Co mmerc1ol propll'!rl y appro,._ 17
acres le . . e l land locot ed ot
Tuppers Ploons on Oh.o Rou te
7. Phone (614 } 667 6J04

GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.,
Broker
1011 1 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
PHONE 992 -6333
Office Hours : 9 A. M. to 4
P .M.
Close
Thursdays
and
Saturdays at noon
New 4 bedroom , 2500 sq. ft .
liv ing space . 21 2 baths . 12
room ranch br~ck . Located
3 miles from R t. 7, up West
Shade River. Call for an
appointment.

PARTS· LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
Mttcbfllle. 0.

Septic
Tank Service
ao, 34

Ph. 171~250
5-1/lfC

Chester , Ohio
10 -30-c

RACINE CARPET

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

Automatic

· Transmlssion Serwice

Jack~s

SHOP
CLOSED FOR WINTER·

Let Thtt Open ng

OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE
Be 1he opening of the in door season for vov with
vour old fu.rnlture re upholstered in beautiful
warm colors &amp; panerns
from Bob's . If you are
tookmg for u~ings it will
pay you to pay us a ~· tsit.
Located tn back of the Sew
N' Sew Outlet on Main st .,
Racme , o.
11 10 1 mo .

Special Orders or Showing
of Carpets by Appointment
On(y.
·

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons,
Owner
11 -25 h no

Kin~ury

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

Service~
lull4o•.,.

rrDm rhe ..,,.., frud or
•••ll•tor to ,.._
C.re .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC~

Horne Sales
Home·
•Mobile
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tie -Downs
• Awnings - Carports
•Insurance
Repairs
See us at 1100 East. Main
Street , Pomeroy, Ohio or
Phone 992-7034 . 10-2'9 ·1mo

PomeJOy

PU92·2l74

THE HOSOT 15' F~EMO NT

AI~CRAFT~...THEN WHAT
'AM L DOING HERE~

Save lO pet. to 50 pet.
on heat ing cost
E ~tperience and
fully insured
Free Est .
Call667-6479
11 -14 1 mo. pd .

Appalachian
Stove Company

SWAIN

Residential
and
commercial.
Call
for
estimate , 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 98S.J806

A complete selection
of Coal &amp;. Circulating

,BORN I.OSEH

MUPLE

•••
"

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

I

~
'3
1"2 .

Balli Siding Co.
lHIS IS MAll'S WRITIN'
AND 11 WA'S HID HERE IN
lliE GARAGE ... OH,
BR- RUTHER! IS THIS
THI!IG HOT/

LEAPIN' LIZARDS!
"DEATH LISTl" 11 SAYS!
NAME AND ALL THE BIG
CIT'f 'FICIAL 5 ...

Route 3 Pomero,. 0.
Carpet

&amp;Upholstety

IQUOPEA
V "J I

0\JT 0' HERE!

I0
rrxJ rrrxxJ

Phone Mike Young

At

9!!2·2206 or 992-7630
··rhe OrtJin•tors

Answer here:
12 -.S·77

Saturday's

ACE HARIMARE

I

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles : DINER HANDY INDIGO JACKET
Answer: Looked a! her, amorously-A "GANDER"

~

•
ALL.EYOOP

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MEIGS PLAZA

43 Became

ACROSS
i~~ I Mustard or
laughing
~--::::.r__..)_,____....: 4 Cathedral

Middleporl , Ohio
11 ~ 9 - ttc

aware of

44 U not
45 Musical

l 2ll

mel

''Get A load Of This" ·
IL....-~==~~~~2!.14

I

HarUord
Henderson
882 -217S
675-1582
UNION OPERATED
12-2-1 mo .

YAMAHA. HARLEY -DAVIDSON &amp; BRADFORD . Aucrion ee r. Com- ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR -,__
plete Service. Phone 949 .2487
Coh -Am Motor c yd~s Complete
Sweepers , !oos ter~ . irons, all
smell appliances . Lawn mower .
or 949-2000. Rac ine Ohio . Crill
soles ond fa ntastic ser ... ice!
Bradford .
next to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
Hours M-T. T 9-6: W F. 9-7: Sot .
9-5 · The Motmcycle Pl3'ople of
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985382S .
Sou theastern Ohio ' Athens REMODELING , Plumbing , healing
Sperl Cycles , Inc., 70 W Stimand alltype5 of generol repo~r .
son A11e , Athens Ohro . Phone·
Work guoronteed 20 ~eo.rs ex
{614)592-1692
perience . Phone 992 -2d09
---~...-....--...--- ---~PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete SEWING MACHINE Repa irs. ser · Se rvice . Phone 992 2478.
vice , o il molo.es. '192-2284 The
Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
~ervic e We sharpen S(issors .
~

--

SAVE ON
CARPETING

HOMESITES for so le . I c ere and
up. Middleport . nl3'or Rutland .
Co ll 992-748l.
ACRES ON lead ing Creek
Rood. Phone 992 -706b.

1 J

·---

~----··

TEAFORD(g
RE ~1 0R

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD. SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
RESTORED - 3 bedroom.
2 baths, all city utilities,
near shopptng, and other
conveniences. 515,000.
VIEW OF RIVER A
family
home
of
4
bedrooms, all city utilities,
large
garden,
near
playground and store.
Want $16,500.
NEW LISTING - Country
home
and
6
acres :
Remodeling 2 bedrooms,
bath, Leading Creek water.
Near town . $19,500.
ATTRACTIVE - Little 2
bedroom frame home with
bath,
cis tern
water,
fireplace , por'ches and
basement . Near ly one acre
tor 57.500 .
NEW
LISTING
&lt;
bedroom, brick home .
Conveniently located near
schoqls
and
stores.
Porches . basement and
allc lly utilities. $23.500.
ADVANTAGES - With 2
bedroom home in town tor
an older couple. All city
utilities . Walk ·to the stores.
A good buy al only $11.000.
FAMILY SECURITY - In
fbis 4S acres in the country .
Use. nat ure's heat, wood,
L. C. wate r , electricity and
septic tank . Will sell for
$13.500.
Helen l. Teaford
Gordon 8 . Teaford
Associates

EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
backhoe work · d um p trucks
ond lo -boys for hire: v-iii haul
fill dirt , to soil. fimes!one end
grovel. Col! Bob or Roger Jef fer s, doy phone 992-7089, night
phone 9&lt;/2-3525 or 992- 5232.
EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and ditche r. Charles R. Hat field , Bock Hoe Serlo'ice ,
Rutland . Ohio. Phqne 742-2008.

'

GASOLINE ALLEY

You are lookinq
at a chanqed
man, Miss
Melba!

voice

I have never (sob)
been so happ4 in
m4 whole life!

Henceforth l shall

has spoken dedicate m4 life to
tome!

·

do root ing , construction ,
plumbmg and heotins No 1ob
!oo Iorge o r too sma ll. Phone
742·2348

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
Regular 16.95
Save 14.88 Sq. Yd.

---HOWERY AND

--~- ~--'

MARTIN Ex ·
cove ting , sepltc sys tems ,
dozer , backhoe . dump truck .
limestone . gro\lel , block!op
pav ing . Rt. 143 . Phone 1 (6 14 )
098-7331 .

kind

BATHROOMS AND Ki\&lt;hens
remodeled , cera mic tile; plum·
bing , corpentry. end general
maintenance. 13 years ex-

~ien~~~ -~~­
ANN DAILEY 'S Up holstery.
Portland , Oh1o 843-2542 .
~

--

-

---- -

••

spot

8 They need

locale

dressing

25 Constel-

9 Foes

lation

A-I AUTO REPAIR
PARTS DEPARTMENT

OLO, IIMefliCAN
ICNoW • HOW, E:RN1f • ••

5
:-/OR Til
4 K Q 73

·--

WESTID)

.$1-8,000

wo~H

OF

PART$ AND JUlLD A
J.

1

4ll Relative of 1 -,--+~f--+landlock

"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

~

;;.----------------------_::¥':_:5~,0=0=0=-~CII=::fl:_:•:._!l:i_!~:,j
•
*WINNIE

'

AXFF

NDZCM
WHC

LKWCM ,
:rSWHTK

AXFF

RUTLAND

••
:

•e.

:

THAT'S PLUMB
SCANDALOUS!!

SNOOI"!, BUT I'M GOI N6
TO FIND OUT WHO DID ...

NOW, HERE'S I LOVE
M'i SECRET SECRET co•
. PLAN ...
PLANS 0~
,
!.

'(OU'LL WEAR THIS WIG,
SEE, AND 'IOU'LL SIT IN
MY SEAT AT SCHGOL

WHILE '!'OU'RE DOING THAT,
I'LL SNEAK AROUND, AND
FIND OUT WHO TOOK
THE
STAR5 1

Pass 4 •

Pass

South
2•

Pass

TIQK . -

WULWSWQ

PRIDE IS A KIND

OF

TH' WAV LOWEEZV
PUSHES HER

MAN SNUFFY
AROUND~!

simple hands for our read·
ers. Af least ones that are
s imple to experts."

Jim : '' Here'sagoodone to
QM

EKLSWEN

PLEASURE

TIDNKING TOO WEll.

(lljl7 Kinl f"eahues Syndicate, Inc .

..........................
ARNOLD GRATE

PKD

WHC

-.

Saturday's Cryptoquole:
PRODUCED BY A MAN
SELF.-SPINOZA

I DIDN'T STEAL THAT
OOX OF GOLD STARS,

:'&lt;.'orth t;::ast
Db!
Pass

Pass

FXHTIFH

'

l.

ble to pick up four in the

East hand ."
-Oswald: "Sure enough,
East has all four and South
must go after hearts. Which

one should he lead?"
Jim : "This is the third
simple problem. He musl
·tead the nine . If he leads this
and West ducks he ca n continue with the queen and get
to lead the suit three times .
If he starts with the quee n
West can beat him by ducking twice .''

Opening lead - K t d )

X

.

.. J 9 8 6

~·~,~~
11 L o N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply stands for another_ In this sample A ia L.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __j
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single letters, By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A Nebraska reader wanls
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
to know our opening bid wilh
hints. Each day the code letters are dUJercnt.
Oswald : " It is about time · · .t.AKM • AKx • x x x .
that we: run' some really
A K J x.

8:00 lil5:00

RUTLAND FURNITURE

it:

AXYDLBAAXR

CRYPTOQUOTES

Rutland

from dummy makes it possi-

EAST

42 Go for
Wt'sl

~

they break 4-Q. If West ha s
all four South is helpless.
The lead of a high spade "

.. K 8 7 5
.. 6 3
t A K Q 10
• 8 52
.. 10 8 6 s 2
4 K 974
SOUTH
4 A 10 S 4 2
.. Q 9 2
• 76 3
.. Q 3
Both vulne'rable

Pepper's
group

lead from dummy ? The an-

swer is either the king or
queen of trumps. He can
pick up trumps easily unless

..AJL04 ·
• J 94
4 A J

38 Sgt.

NJ!vl!fl UNDtflS'rJIND
~ nttY C:FIIU ,.AICe-

JO rolls ot carpet in stock:
Good selection all on sale.
lnsta lied with padding, no
edra to pay.

••
•
••

BRIDGE
Proper play for 4 spades

:z: MA#lVe4 AT GOoD,

~'"'-

Thursday 8 til noon

Monday, Dec. 5

Oswald. and Jim Jacoby

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ , 3 2 M y: Lat.
33 Gotcha!
35 Innovative:
comb. form
37 Ukely

Mon., Tues., Wed.

742-2211

22 Goliath was
23 Belfry

musical

Reg. 14.95-not installed

Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

,•

20 River: Sp.

&amp; Faction
7 Heavenly

31 Popular

~

4.88 sq. yd.

FRIDAY TIL 5
:

16 Singer Mel

the convention
29 Most liberal
33 In shape to
34 Ice pellets
36 Telling
blow: sl.
39 Scottish river
41 Actress Balin

Not him

-.'

••

2 wds.

Actor
George
Words to
live by
Mow down

.
••

Bulgarian

27 Addressed

gratitude:

5 Pilgrims'
address:
2 wds.

man

•••••••••••••••••••••••
Convenient Shopping Hours
•
••

••••

10 Showing

debris

~tar

1

742·2211

Yesterday'S Answer

22 Brightest

12 and 15 H. width Car~! _
rubber back.
,..

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

dweller

3 Deli item
4 Etnean

statesman

: FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Ca II 742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPETC6NSULTANT

~2 'Tent-

10:01&gt;-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S ; Big Valley 6; Price Is
Right 8: Mike Douglas 13 .
10:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3.&lt;.15: Joker's Wild 10
11 OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3.1S ; Happy Days 6,13 ;
Marcus Welby, M .D. 4; M,atch Game 8,10.
11:31&gt;-Knockout 3.15: Family Feud 6, 13; Love of Lite
· 8, 10; Sesame St . 20: Once Upon a Classic 33 .
,11 :55-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10.
12:0Q-Newscenler 3; News 4.6.10; To Say The Least
15; Divorce Court 8; Midday 13 ; Mus!c 33.
12:31&gt;-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Bob Brau~ 4; Gong Show IS;
Search for Tomorrow 8. 10; Elec . Co . 33.
1 :oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13 ;
News B; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 1S.
•
,
l :Jo--Oays of Our Livesl,4,15 ; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2 :0Q-S20,000 Pyramid 6.13.
2 :31&gt;-Doctors 3.&lt;.15; One Lite to Live 6,13 ; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; Consumer Survival Kit 20 .
3 : 15-Gen~ral Hospita l 6,13; 3:31&gt;-After Hours 8;
Family Atfalr 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:01&gt;-Mister Cartoon 3; Llftle Rascals-Our Gang 4;
For Ri cher, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Sesame
S. 20,33: Gomer Pyle, USMC 10: Dinah 13.
4 :31&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8,10; Little Rascals 15.
,.
s -·oo.-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan·s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
S· 3o-Qdd Couple 4; News 61 Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6 :0Q-News 3.&lt;.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :31&gt;-NBC News3.&lt;,1S ; ABC.News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7:01&gt;-Truth or Cons. 3; Liars Club 6; Pop Goes the
Country 8; ·News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan' s Is. 15 ; French Chet 20; Parent Ef ~
fectiveness 33 .
7:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,&lt;; Let's Go To The Races 8;
· Woltman Jack 6; MacNeiL -Lehrer Report 20,33 :
Price is Right 10 ; That's Hollywood 13; Music Clty
15.
8':01&gt;-Man From Atlantis 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Fitzpatrlcks 8; In Performance at Wolf Trap 20;
Listen, That's Love 10; Piccadilly C)rcus 33.
8: 31&gt;-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 .
9 :1l0-Mulllgan 's Stew 3,4,15; Three's Company 6. 131
Mash 8, 10; Porlrall ot Jamie 20 .
9 :31&gt;-Soap 6; One Day AI A Time B, 10; Mark Russell
20; Mary Tyler Moore 13; Christmas ln The Valley
33.
10:1l0-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Barbara Walters 6,13;
Lou Grant 8,10;
News 20; Equal Justice Under
Law 33 .
10 :3~Biack Perspective on the News 20.
11 ; ?1&gt;-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1S; Dick Cavett 20 .
11 : 31&gt;-Johnny Carson J.&lt;, IS; Movie " Quilter: Price at
Violence" 6,13; Movie "Houston, We've Got A
Problem" 8; ABC News JJ; Movie "Where tne
Spies Are" 10.
12:01&gt;-Janakl33; 1:1l0-Tomorrow3.&lt;; 1:11&gt;-lronslde
13; 2:11&gt;-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 7 P .M- VIgilante Force tPG)
9 &amp; 11 PM- Taxi Driver IRl

21 Uproar

W I L~

. -

DOWN
, 1 Mucilage

coin
.---:::-:-15 Dracula
in flight
117 Draughts
• p1eces
18 Friend,
in '!'ours
19 Italian

-

~-

syllable

Veered
" Zoo's '
Who"
entrant
Jekyll's
evil side

WETHERALL CONCRETE

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-ltc

Not The Imitators

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

~ _..A
L--'"-Ll_....L_...L_.l.'&gt;~

!ennis

300 Main St.
Pomer,o y, Ohio
Pomeroy 991-6282
or 992 -62&amp;3
8 A .M . lo4:30 P . M:

. WHAI YOU Mle&gt;HT
FIND AT THE
PRINTER'S.

HARK! QUICK! PUT
IT BACK AND GET

.--...L

AND HERo'S MR . PUOOLE'S

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VLNYLSIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
, GUTTERS &amp; OOWN
SPOUT
Easy
st•p
by
step
instructions.

j

I JELIAD

IJTTI.£ OHPHAN ANNIE

General Contractors
Phone 949·2801
or 949-:Cd60
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please
11.21 -1 mo.

f

B.

&gt;

8 Pancho of

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Young's
Carpeting

TUESDAY , DECEMBER6, 1977
5 : &lt;5-Farm Report 13; 5: 50-PTL Club 13 ; 5 :S5Sunrise Semester 10.
6 :0Q-PTL Club 1S; 6 : 25-Concerns S. Comments 10;
6 : 3G-Focus on Columbus 4; News 6 ; Sunrise
Semester 8.
6 : &lt;5-Morning Reporl 3; 6 : so-Good Morning , West'
Virginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good
Morning, Trl State 13 .
7 :0Q-Today 3.&lt;.1S ; Good Mor.nlng America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Bull~inkle 10.
_
7 :31&gt;-Schoolles 10; 8 :0Q-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St . 33 .
9 :01&gt;-Merv Grltfln 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,1 S; Fam ily
Atfair 8, 10.
9 :31&gt;-Price is Right 10 ; Edge ot Night 6; Andy Griffith

1

. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

CARTER

Superior
Steam £•traction

s

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, 10 form
tour ordinary words.

We 're tn Carpenter just off
Rt . 143. Phone 698·7191.
1~ I - I mo .

r

,•

1

'fl\)jif.\.fi fii)'fl W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
r!:!J ~ ~~ ®
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Heaters at low prices .
Fully stocked.

feature

FOR SALE

9 ...

Thtrd Street
Racine, Ohio

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Blown Insulation
Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

11 25 1 mo.

NEW 3 bl]d room houH! 'l boths
oil elec I ac re M1ddl eport
do~e to Ru!lond Phorm
997
7481

J&amp;L

JIM KEESEE

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERVICE

SJtiCUst, Oltio
Ph. !91-l!!l

'279,95

Pomeroy Landmark

SHOP.

I,ARRY LAVENDER

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

ooa

RACINE CARPET

Blo•n
lnsuiiUon Strwites
rlundnJ Awaif1ble
8klwt Into Walls l AHits
SIORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPIJCEMENT
WINDOWS .
AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOffiTI
GUnERS-AWNINGS

Auction

AKC REGISTERED pek mgese pup- NfW WOODond cool burnrng
stove and 20 fr . i f s tove pipe .
pres . Pho ne {304 ) 882-2683
Ph on~:&lt; 742-2003
RISING STAR Kennel Boord mg
Indoor a nd outdoor runs 1975 YAMAHA ENDURO 100 Ap·
pro)( 1 300 m1ies . Comes wdh I
Groom ing ' oil breeds . Cleo n.
helm
e t. $400 . Like-new . Call
sOntlory fac ili ties Cheshlfe
between 11 om ond 8 pm .
112
Acre Lot Su r veyed .
Pho ne (614 ) 367 0292 .
992-2561 '
approved
for sewage ,
J 8.
Ke~ne-1~ · oi l breed dog
wooded
and
secluded .
COBRA
135
CB
radio
,
1011
··
Delio
HOUSEWIVES • EARN $1 8 · $50 o
groom•ng. Make oppo1n tme nt
rod•o . Phone 992 7066
located .07 of a mile off of
day or more plus o $300 warnow for Ho liday Season Coli
Summerfield road near
drobe
lrel3'
wtth Beel ine
742 -3102 .
RED SHA GMOOR Coat Size 20 .
Fosh 1ons . Coil 949 2803 . Also.
Tuppers PlainS , Oh io.
992-7807
.
Phone
SPAYED ENGliSH Sheepdog for
booking fashion shows .
Priced to go at S4 .000.00.
sole. S20 . Paul Buc kley . R1 . 2. 1977 PASSENGER VAN . AC e• PUBLIC NOTICE
lro seat 4,000 miles" 992-5770 .
Coolville . { 61~-~~63~1 ._
TO
ONE1TA
BAKE~
Plenty of acr-e lots at the
oNe~
LAR-GE - s~ r~d5
HUTTON . WMS£&gt; last know n
Wildwood
Estates
address 1S Akron , Ohio . and
985-4111 or 992-562 1.
Addi
ti
on
,
Flatwoods
Road .
the unknown he irs , dev isees ,
zoned and all uti lities
legatees , adm in i strators ,
1974 VEGA . Priced re csonobly.
e:.:eculors and or assigns of
available. S2500 per acre .
760 l au rel S!r@@l , Middlep Ort ,
ALVARETTIE
FRYMAN ,
dec . whose last known ad Oh 1o .
We have need of li_stings,
dress is Radner . Oh io ;
Jq77
GMC HEAVY Ho lfton equ1p·
let Pomeroy landmark
all tyJ)es, homes, land,
ROXANNA
BAILEY ,
ped 1975 Hor net Spartobout
deceased , whose last known
soften ' &amp; condition your
comn1ercial. etc.
address 1S Radner , Oh io ,
Wogan Phone 99:1-7060 .
water and co.op water
Cheryl Lemley
ALLEN OSBORN , deceased ,
softener, Model UC.SVL
1976 FORO GRANADA 6 cyl.
Associate
a-.a W. A. OSBORN , whose
16
miles bee lien! shape
las t krown address 15 1904 E
Home .Phone 742·2003
Now Only
Fifth St . , Dayton, Oh iO.
Pkcne 247 -2142 .
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
ARTHUR
OSBORN .
let us test your water Free
Associate .
deceased .
aka
w
A . 1976 CHEVELLE , 4·dr . s!otton
wagon , outo . . .P.S.. A.C. .
OSBORN , whose last known
Home Phone 949-2589
address is 190-&lt;i E , Fifth St . ,
$3 ,495 1976 Che . . elte . 4-!&gt;peed,
New co . Qp water and
Dayton , Oh io;
EMORY
$2 .295 . 1976 P,remlm auto ..
softeners, model VC -SVI.
OSBORN , deceased , aka E .
P.S., $2 ,495 . 197S Che vrolet
VA-FHA . 30 yr linoncmg . Ir eland
Only 1279.95
E OSBORN , whose las t
truck , 3-speed , 6 ' , loot bed .
Mortgoge , 77 E. State Athens ,
known address 1S coolv il le .
Save SSO.OO on a new
52 ,495 . 1974 Vega , auto.,
phone {614 ) 592 -3051
Oh iO; EDSON OSBORN ,
Hotpoint Refrigerator
S1 . t9 5. 1973 Pin!o 4-s peed.
deceased ,
aka
E.
G
2. STORY 3 bed room lrQme
1. New 20 cubic ft. Chest
A.C.. $1 .295 . 1973 Me rcury
OSBOR N, whose last knoW n
house. F.A. fufnace. stoim wm ·
Free1er
125 .00 Discount
address 1S 2203 W Th ird St . ,
Come!, 2-dr., oulo .,
V-8 ,
dews , lireploce in M1dd leport.
Oa'p'IOn , .Ohio and NETTIE
( 1l Good Refrigerator 5150
Sl ,495. Coll992 -7013
Phone 992-3457 or ~2 - 5867
BAKER , deceased
Upri.ghl Freeur
122S
1973 PONTIAC GRAND
You are hereb y .1.:1t1fied
that you have bePn flamed
992 -5866 .
1 Good Used Hotpoinf'
defendants in a legal t~ction
Refrigerator
5125
1963 DODGE DART . Runs good.
entitled Roberta C O ' Br1E' n,
1 Lancaster Chain Saw S75
Good tires $125 . 992 -7565.
plaint iff vs Oneita Bake1
Hutton , et al , defendants .
Th is action haS been ass1gncd
Case No 1M19 1n the Com mon Pleas Court of Mf"•gs
-Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Cpunty , Ohio, Pomeroy , Ohio . EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and ~
Phone 992·2 181
45769 . The object of the
appliance
serviceman
Po
1
d
complain t is to part iti on and
MAIN
holidoys ,
voc at ions
and
quiet title to real estate
ho~p•tol • zot1on
Gallto TWO JOHN Dee re model H form
s itu ated in Oli ve Townsh ip ,
POMEROY .. O.
tro(tors , I in good running con Relrige rotor Co ., 611 3rd Ave.,
MeigS COunty , OhiO . Wh iCh tS
dition . S300 for both. Phone
described as follows
_G~IItp ~ l •s . Oh ro
MAYBE IT' S TIME to
Being •n Fract ion 35 ,
84~ ~16_or 985-c:c38:::0:c7c..----·
move to that home that you
Sec.tl on 27 , Town 4 , Range 11
30· HARVEST GOLD Corning E\ec have
been
prom ising
Ohio Company 's Pu :- chase,
lr !C smooth lop range . Sell ·
yourself. 3 bedroom s, bath ,
beginning at the soui&gt;,east
cleonin9 o"'en Sto roge drawer .
corner ot said fract 1t..~ ·
formal dining. garage . l '.
WE ' 'RE LOOKING FOR
Excellent condi tion . $250. Paul
thence north to a tine made as
acre.
In
· e.l'icellent
a diV IS ion. line by John Ho ik
PEOPLE WHO LIKE TO
_
_
Bu~kJ~!:
~~~?:6~~
~
conditton.
$19,500.00
.
2d , Surveyor . between the
LET OFF A LITTLE
BUDGET
HOME
4
said Sa muel Osborn and
STEAM.
rooms. bath, porches , nat
Will iam Osborn , running east
and west , thence west to t he
gas heat. Buy this"for less
Become a Navy Boi ler
west li ne of sa id section,
than renl. SS, 400.00.
thence south 106 rods to the
WILL CARE lor the elderly in our
Technician . An expert on
OVER
3
ACRES
south line ot said fraction ;
home . Pho ne992 -i:1'14 .
sh ipboard equipment that
Recentl~ remodeled , 2
thence east 134 rods to the
produces
steam
for
bedroom's,
bath,
F .A.
sout"heast cornPr of said
propulsion engines and for
fraction
and
p lace
of
furance,
por c hes ,
WeAre Now
generating electric power.
beg in ning .
basement. barn &amp; other
It is hereby intended to
Top Navy training and
Taking New
bu il dings , $11.500.00.
convey all th e said land south
benefits. See your local
Customers'
For
INCOME PftOPERTY of sa id d ivisi on l ine as
recruiter :
aforesa 1d with the £&gt;xcept•on
Walk
lo
shop,
2
221 Columbus Road
of that pl!lrt out of the north .
apartments.
porches ,
Athens. OH
east part deeded to Samuel
ground, 2 car garage, all in
Ward .
593-3566 {Collect)
good condition . 113,500.00 .
Referen c e Volume 112 page
6 ACRES 11h year old
348 and Volume 22 page 289
Meigs County D£&gt;cd Records
double wide , 2 large
Yo u a re requ ired to answer
bedrooms
(walk
in
It's Not Just A Job..
the compla•n t w 1thin 28 days
closets).
din
in
g
room
,
bath,
It's
An
Adventure.
after the last pub lic ation of
large
living
room,
Order No. 11 - CT~84
this notice, which wil l be
carpeting, all like new.
published once each wee.k for
si,.; con$ecutive weeks . The
Garage and other building .
W. Carsey, Mgr.
DAVID L WEIR last publicat1on will be made
SOMEONE TO st'ly night s w1th
$17.000.00.
DIRECTOR on December, S, 1977 and the
Phone992-21BI
mon . Contact Morvin Dorsi a t
NICE . CORNER LOT - 2
28 days for answer WI !I start
Rev . 8 -17-73
Ve!erens Memor ial Hosp rtal
or 3 tiedrooms. bath,
on that date
Room 113.
In case of your failure to
carpeting. nat. gas F .A.
(Ill 28 . (·1'2) s, 2rc
PIANO TUNING · lo ne Doni els .
answer or otherwise respond
New phone number 992-2581 .
furnace. porct1es. All th is
as reQuired by the Ohio Rules
If no answer , colt 992-2082.
for just 113,800.00.
or Civil Procedure ludgment tt:.r_F~-~~~
tly default w i ll be rendered
LET US SHOW YOU SOME
against you
t or
re l i£&gt; 1
OF OUR NEWER HOMES
3
AND
4
RM
furnished
and
un
demended in th e c ompla-int
- JUST CALL OR DROP
fur nis hed opts . Phone 9&lt;/2Larry E Spencer ,
IN .
Clerk ot Courts
5434 .
Me igs County , Oh io
NOTICE oF
HENRY E. CLELAND
FOUR
ROOMS
ond
both
Adults
(10 ) 31. (1 11 7, 14 , 21 , 28, ( 12 )
APPOINTMENT
REALTOR
~mly
.
_No
~e!s
.
9E
-S908
.
5,
6t
c
C•se No. n2Sa
HANK,
KATHY &amp;
Esfillte ol HAZEL ~ - REED
CO UNTRY MOBILE f1ome Pork
We have enlarged our
Dtcused,
LEONA
CLELAND
Route 33, north of Pome roy
- service department and
Notice is herecv g iven that
REALTOR
Lorge lots Coll992-7479.
Nancy C. Reed of FrOnt
w1ll service Hotpoint and
ASSOCIATES
Street, MiddlePort , Ohio , has
FIVE ROOM furn1 s hed apartment
other brands .
992 ~ 2259 - 992-6191 •
betn
•duly
' appointed
Ne
well's
Sunoc.o
,
Chester
ExecutriK of the Estate of
985-3350 .
"
Henl R . Reed . deceased , lete
All ELECTR IC. 3 bedroom home
ot Middlf~port , Me lg's County ,
HOUSE FOR feosc on lincoln Hil l
w1th ulthty room and Io rge kit Onio .
in Pomeroy . 5 bedroorns
chen aluminum sid1ng. a !loch·
Creditors are required to
BOND TAKEN
Depo si t re qu ired
992 3489
_Jack W. Carsey , Mgr
ed gorage 2 s torage building s,
file their claims wi t h said
POMEROY In . Mayor
after 5 pm .
...
Phone 992-2181
garden spot . eslobhs hed yord
fiduciary
wi thin
three
with tree s and sh rubs . All on I
months .
, Clarence Andrews court
Dated this 16th day of
o&lt;r e . Tuppers Plai ns, Oh1o
Tuesday night Mart Walden,
Novtmber 1977 .
Will DO typing . Monuo;cripts ,
{614 ) b67 3096 .
Pomeroy, forfeited a bond j)l
Manning D . Webster
stotisticol , resumes . etc. . Co li
Jud ge
the amount of $30 on chatges
992-3827 , evenings Offer 6 ond HOUSE FOR Sole . 3 bedrootn 1
ONE USED coql furnace p1pes and
Court of Common Pleas,
cor goroge . ·2 yea rs old
weekPnds
of
speeding
n
ot
$130
as
was
registers , $300. Call bet ween
Probate D•vl sion
$27,500 . Rus t• c Hills SyrocUso.
fll) . 21, 28, { 12) 5, 3tc
~
reported.
MOBILF HOME re pa irs . 992-5858.
l I o m and 8 pm . 992-2561 .
'191 5541 .

D

FREE ESTIMATES

qn 7066

SMALl !arm lo r sole \0° 0 down
o wner l.nonced Monroe Co un
ly W . •Vo. Phone 1304 ) 77'2
3102 or (304) 772 -3227

S:oo-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
M ister Rogers ' N eighbo rhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13 ; My Thr~e Sons 15 .
5 . 3o-Qdd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co . 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
6 :QO- Ne ws 3,4,8 ,10, 13,1 5; ABC New s~ ; Zoom 20,33 .
6 :31&gt;-NBC News 3.&lt;.15 ; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 61 CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33 .
7:()0- - That Nashvi lle M usic 3; Cross· Wits 4; Liars Club
6 ; M ar ly Robb ins ' Spotlight B: News 10 ; To Tell The
Truth 13 ; Gilligari ' s Is. 15, Prime Time 20; Know
Your Schools 33.
7:3o-College Basketball 3; New T ruth or Co ns . 4 ;
Muppel Show 6; Male~ Game PM B; Mac Ne il Lehrer Report 20,33 ; Wild Kingdom 10; Ca nd id
Camera 13 ; Nashvil le on the Road 15.
8 :DO-McNamant 's Band 13; Little Hou se on the
Pra ir ie 4,15 ; Heisman Trophy 6; Circus of the Stars
8 , 10; Age of Unc erta inty 33; National Geographic
20.
9 :01&gt;-NFL Foolba ll 6, 13; Movie " The Storyteller"
&lt;.15; Ageof Unce rla i nty20 ; Fallotagles33 .
9:31&gt;-Movie " The Soryleller" 3; 1.Q :OI&gt;-Swi lch 8, 10 ;
New s 20 ; Movie " Come to the Stable" 33 .
10 :31&gt;-FarmDigesl 20 ; 11 :01&gt;-News 3,4,8,1 0, 1S, Dick
Cavell 20 .
II :.31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3.4.15 ; McMillan S. Wite 8; ABC
New s 33 : Movie " The Proud &amp; the Damned" 10.,
12 :0Q-Janakl 33 ; News 6,13 ; 12 :31&gt;- FBI 6; Ironside
1): l :QO-Tomorrow 3,4; l : JQ---News 13 .

'-·-----------------------------------.J

1Q/ 6 71 rOOT leuy
T roder
equ •pped

-.

MONDAY . DECEMBERS. 1977

Business Services

Salr . Mu u'
'}')

TELEVISllJN
VIEWING

PERFUME!
ITS 60 FEET
STRAICiHT

I~ W-ord.!~ or

Movie Channel • 5 &amp; 7 P .M . - Buttalo Bil l &amp; !he ind ians ( PGH)
9 &amp; 11 P .M . - Stay Hungry {R)
Cable Channel 5 6 .30 P .M.- Testimony Time
1 :00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7:30 - Spirit of Chrlslmas
8 ;00 - Home Digest
9 :00 ·- Cable Journal
10 :00 - 700 Club

OF

HIM·

start with . West cashes the
three top diam onds and
shifts to the five ofctubs."
Oswald :. "~" irs! e lementary decision for South.
Should he finesse? The answer in CB language is
' Negatory' . He doesn't need
that finesse."
Jim : "Next elementary
problem . What card does he

We open two nolrump . We
have 22 high-card points and
notrwnp distribution .
!NEWSPAPER ENTEHPIUSE ASSN . 1

(Do you have a que ~ fion for
/he experts? Write "As: k the ·
Ja co bys " care of thiS newspa·
per The Jacobys w1ff answer
1nd f viduaf ques/Jons i f
stamped, -seff·addressed enve·
lopes are encfosed. The most
mteres/ing questions w1f/ be
used in this column and will
receive copies of JACOB.Y
MODERN. )

DRAP ME OFF AT
TH'CARD GAME,MAW

l

'
I

�!{)- The Da1ly Sentml'l. ~1Jddl eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monda) . Dee. 5, '19i7
Capehart. Janet Crabtree ,
Mrs. Denms Dodrill and son,
Rodney Grueser, Mrs .
'
('remeans, a daughter . Michael Jenklns and son ,
\ 1eterans Memorial Hospital
C'oo l\'ille, Mr . and Mrs. George M c K enzie~ Daisey
Saturday AdmiSSions Marie Custer. Pomeroy: Jamos Day, a daug hter , Osborn.
Th omas Bing , Rutland : Gallipolis. Mr. and Mr s.
1Births. Dec. 41
Donald Gumther. Pomeroy. Larry Howell , a daughter ,
Mr. and Mr s Willi am
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cundiff . a daughter, Pt.
Saturday Discharges Valerie Jeffers , M mme Napper , a daughter. Ham- Pleasant.
Cla'tk, George Zeigler. Delma den .
PLEASANT VALLEY
1Discharges. D•c. 31
Ka'rr . Ray Wat son. Paul
DISCHARGES
- ; Mrs.
Jerry Cain, Kim Canaday,
Clay, Nellie Hanson.
Vern
on
Little
an
son ,
Teresa Church, Willis
Sunday Admissions Mrs. Ora
Middlep ort:
Rolland Smith, Middleport : Cooper, Linda Damewood. Durham, J ackson; Clara
Oma Hy sell , Syrac~se : Mr s . Robert Eynon and Harmon , Point Pleasant ;
William Clonch. Middleport , daughtrr , Vi olet Gerla ch. George Mora, Portland, 0.:
Herschel Gilbert, L1ili GreenSunday Disc harg es
Mrs. Allen Co&lt;, Gallipolis ;
Rolland Smith . I.oshla lee, Darvln Harris, Terry Keith Neal. Polnt Pleasant : Mitchell , Lela RoBinson, Helmandollar. LouiS Hoch- Mrs. James Stewart , West
berg, Arthur Ho)1. Tammy
Gladys Nicholson.
Hurl ey, Glenna Ja ~john, Co lumb ia ;· Riley Swartz,
Holzer Medical Ctoter
Gallipolis Ferry ; George S.
Chloe Kelly. Carol Krebs.
(Discharges, Dec. %I
Love. Pomt Pleasant ;
Lynda Adkins. Jewel Clark, Mrs. Cha rles Llntner and Kenneth Ashworth, Ashton ;
Roscoe Co zart , Lo well dau ghter, Judith Uvingston, Brady Duncan, Apple Grove ;
Dickason. Sharon fox. ·nora J oh n McMackin , Monta Granville
Hill,
Point
Hash, Joseph Higgins, Ralph Metzger, Sharon Mont- Pleasant ; Robert Van Meter,
Lea ch. Luman Louden, gomery. James Polcyn. Betty Mason; William Searsman,
Ri chard Long, William Ragllnd , Olen Smith. Harold Point Pleasant ; James Ball,
Marting. Andrew McCarty. Swartz, J ames Swingle. Apple Grove; Mrs . Carl
Raymond Mull en. Jame s Mark Van Sickle. Patricia Rairden , Hartford; Will
Richard Workman.
Nelson, Billie Provens. Williams,
Johnson , Bidwell; Carry
t Births, Dec, 31
Th om as Ragan, Mi chael
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Card· Johnson , Bidwell ; Glen
Rawlings, Howard Samples ,
McCarty. Pomt Pleasant;
Shirley Sn oddy , Edison well. a son. Wellston. Mr. and Gary
Cochr.an,
Point
Spriggs , Harry Swartz. Mary Mrs . Dougl as Duhl , a Pleasant; Mrs. Okley Willet.
Thomas. J ason Tu cker . daughter. Chillicothe . Mr. Cheshire; Parry Casto, Point
and Mrs. Gregory Grover. a
Record Tull , Mrs . J ohn
Pleasant ; Mrs. Freddie
Vance and son. Rita Walker, daughter. Pomeroy. Mr. and Lemley, Gallipolis; Lloyd
Mrs . Th omas Skinner, a
Marlene Whitman . Debra
Edward Haynes, Point
dau~ler. Gallipohs.
Wood .
Pleasant; Stephen Johnson ,
!Discharges, Dec. 4)
(Births. Dec. 21
Mary Akers, Russell Point Pleasant: Mrs. Leo
Mr .' and Mrs. Marv in

HOSPITAL NEWS

Special of the Week

TACOS
29~

This spectalts offered to you to acquaint you with

the goodness and economy of our homemade •

f

Mextcan food .-

Medica l Center Hospital after

Notices,
local briefs
The Harr ison"Ville Senior
Citizens Clvb will hold a
Christmas and , birthday
potlvck supper and S2 gift
el'.changebn TV'esday, Dec. 13
at 6 p.m . at the Harr lson Yille
Elementar1 School. ·Persons
are to bring their own table
service.
The Sal'olatlon Army , in
need of new or used toys to be
given to needr children for
Christmas wil accept same
at 115 Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy . Also canned goods
and other food products will
be accepted to help with the
Chr istmas baskets . All
donations
w ill
be
apprec iated.
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge
164, F &amp;AM, will meet for
Installation of officers at 7: 30

p.m. Wednesday . All Master
Masons are invited .
Women w ish ing to make an
appointment for the fre e
cancer clin ic to be held all
day Wednesday at the
basement .of Heath United
fv\ethodist Church in Mid ·
dleport are asked to call 992 ·
5832 ·this evening . There will
be only one clinic this month
and this is the first t1me that
the cervical clinic has been

a period of ia !ling hea lth of
several years' durat•on. Her
cond ition was ser ious the past

week .

She was born Apr il 26, 1903,
i n Ind iana to George and
Emma Williams Swain . and
she marr ied John W. Waugh
Aug 5, 1924. He d ied Aug . 10,

1973.

The ir surviving
are Mr s. Roger

Crump, W. Monroe ,

Jp

No limit to quantity of purchase. Offer good for

Drive-In or Carry-Out Service Only .

.·

La .;

Waugh ,

Ray ,

Oh io;

16

grandchildren and t hree
great-grand chil dren .
Three brother s and a s1ster
preceded her in dea th , but
five sisters surv ive: Mrs.
Retha Finley and Mrs. Ada
Carter , Gallipoli s; Mrs. Iva
Johnson and Mrs. Audrey
Haffelt , Cr own City ; Mrs .
Laura Jackson, Springf ield.
Ohio.
She spent most of her li fe in
Gall ra County . She was a
member of the Mt. Zion
Baptist Ch'urch and the Gallia
County
Sen ior
Citizens
Center .
Funera l services will be
held at 2 p. m. Wednesday at
the
Waugh - Hall ey -Wood
Funeral Home , the Rev .
Charles Lusher of fic iating ,
and burial w ill be 1n Mound
Hill Cemetery .
Friends may ca\14-6 and 7.9
p. m. Tuesday at the fun eral
home

her In deat~ . They had no
children
The followi ng brothers and
sisters surviv~ : Louis W.
Cennam o,
Anthony
D.
Cennamo. Mrs . R . V . (('l.;uilll
Wagner ,· Mrs .
W ill iam

(Gloria ) Withrow , Mrs. P. B.
{Ma ry ) Wiles. Mrs . Carl W.

!Josephine ) Raub, Mrs D. J .
IAnni Bonzo and Mrs . M. J .

(Lucy) Tully , all of Colum .
bus. One sister, Mrs John
(Conce tta) Fabbro, pr'eceded
her in death
She was the former owner
, of Joy Togs m Gallipol is and~
former employee of Pau l
Oa\l ies Jewelers .
She was a member of t he
Catholic Women ' s Club ,
treasurer
of
the
GSI
Volunteers Association ,
treasurer of the ParentsVolunteer Association, and
Sheltered Industr ies of the
GSI . She was past president
and past treasurer of Un it 27,
Amer ican leg ion Auxiliary .
She was La Oemi Chapeau
Prem ier of Gallla County

Will1am H. Walker
Will iam H. Walker , 75 , a
res ident of 84 Lucust St.j
Gall1polis, died Saturda y at
8: 30 p, m . in Holzer Medic; a!
Center.
Son of Samuel S. and
Blanche Weigle Walker , he
was born Jan . 2, 1902, at
Elizabeth, Pa . He married
~ry AAargaret R1chards on
Feb . 14, 1936, In Parkersburg ,

CConUnued from pace I)
apparent
landing
but
suddenly pulled sharply
upward, followed by a
bllndlng flash and a loud
explosion.
It was at least the second
crash of a hijacked aircraft.
On Sept. 15, 1974 a hijacker
demanJing to be flown to
Hanoi seized an Air Vietnam
Boemg 7'rl jet en route from
Danang to Saigon and set off
a grenade ln flight. The plane
crashed at Phan Rang, 175
miles northest of Saigon,
killing all 70 persons aboard .
The au-line said 1t was
investigating reports that
Malaysian Agriculture
Mlnister Dato Sri Ali Haji
Ahman and the Cuban
.ambassador to Japan, Mario
Garcia lnchaustegui, may
have been aboard.
Most of the passengers
.were reported to be either
Singapore or Malaysian
citizens.

1

on Jan , 23, 1942 . He preceded

•

(Mary )

l

Holzer Med ica l Center .
She was born in Columbus
on July 9, 1906, daughter of
the late Dominic and Pia
Cennamo .
She marr ied Ph ill ip Hecker

Children

Cl ifford Wilugh , Gr~nwich .
Ohio; I~Ja n Waugh, Frank ·
fort , Ohio ; Carrol Waugh ,
Gall i polis , and J ohn F .

Jetliner

AIJ. BEEF TACOS

REG. 55'

! Area Deaths

held in Middleport.

Monday, Dec. 5 thru Sunday, Dec. 11

SPECIAL
PRICE

---------------------------,

Plants, Point Pleasant :
Kenneth Robinson. Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Kenneth
Coleman and son. Point I
Pleasant ; Richard Grin·
stead , New Haven ; Mrs.
GOL 0 IE J . Waugh
Charles Eshenaur, Logan. W.
Goldie J . Waugh, 74, Rt . l .
Va ., and Mrs. Herbert King. Crown City t Swan Creek
community ), died at 11 :30 a .
Letart .
m . Su ndav in Ch i llicothe

W. Va ..

Salon No . 612, Eight and
Forty . She was a member of

St . Lou1s Catholic Church .
Funeral serv ices will be

held at Sl. Lou is Catholic
Church Wednesday 10 a .m.
wllh
Falher
A.
J.
Golubiewskl
offic iating .
Bur ial will be in St. Joseph
Cemetery, Columbus.
Friends may call from 7.9
p.m . Monday and 2·4 and 7-9
p.m .
Tuesday
at
the
Warehime Funeral Home

GINO'S
OF MASON

in ta iling health tor about two
years .
For 20 years he had been a
bri ck
mason
In
the
fabr ica t ion
maintenance
department
of
Ka iser
Alum inu m Corporation.
Ra ve nswood ~ He was a
member of the br ick masons
local 52 and of the U. S.
Steelworkers local 5668,
Ravenswood.
Born Oct . 1•. 1902 , In
Geovlnazzo. Italy , to Michael

m. Tu.. dav.

Albany , who was killed In

will be held Tuesdoy at 2 p.' ,
m. at the Albany Baptist- ~
Church with the Rev . Donald ~
Shue oft lcl atlng. Burial will •
be In Temple Cemetery .
'!
Friends will be received af• •
the Jordan Blgony Funeral ...-;
Home In Albany today ......
Graveside services will bP ~•
conducted by Albany VF~
Post 9893.
,.
Mr . Stout was prKeded ln .. ~~

survived by his wife. Esther
Scherel ; two daughters, Mrs .

(Marla)

Tuesday at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers the family
reciJests dona tions for St.

Jude Children 's Hospital,
Merrlph ls, Tenn .

LILLIAN CONLEY

lillian Conley , 74, Lower
Rl\ler Rd, Gallipolis, died at
5 a. m. Sunday In f.,hrcy
Hospital, Portsmouth . She
had been In failing health for
about two years.

ANTHONY ALTIERI
Anthony Altieri, 75, Klneon
Drive, Gallipolis, died at 2:15

o

m.

Sunday

at

Holzer

a~

automobile accident Frlday1 ·:.

and Mar la Altieri, he Is
Ron

Breed ing,

Columbus, and Mr5. William

(Mary) Bennett, Chillicothe,

and f1ve grandchildren .
He had lived over 50 years
in Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p . m . Tuesday at the

death by his lather, Orville. ·. ,

He Is survived by hi ;
mother , Velma Eastman, .-.

Albany ; his wile, Betty Bobo-.
Stout; one son, Steven ; ~ :

Waugh -Halley-Wood Funeral

brother , Charles, Albany ; a •
sister , Anna lee Gibson • .,.'
Albany ; a nephew. A.

Home, the Rev. Arthur Lund

offlclallng, and the body will

several aunts and uncles . -.
He was a member ot •

Albany Baptist Church, VFW.;
Post 98'13 ; Albany Masonic ·'
Lodae F&amp;AM 723. and Albany ':

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born Sept. 8, 1884, she was

ar:.

LAURAJ . EISELSTEIN
night

Order of Eastern Sters, 558.. ,.
J\\ason lc and Eastern Star ..
Services will be tonight
7: 30 .
" ;.

ot

the daughter of the late

..

James and Ethalinda Stone
Moore . She
was
also
preceded in death by her
husband, Delbert J a son.
Orval ; six sisters . and three
brothers.
She is survived by two sons ,
Cecil and James, both of
Pomeroy ; three grand ·"'
children,
five
great grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Mrs . Eiselsteln was a
member ot the Pythian
Sisters and the United

•'
. •

E·R CALLED OUT
~
The Mlddleport·E·R squad:
was caned lo VIUage Manor :
Apartments at 9:22 p.m. '
Sunday lor Gary Hart who..;
was ilL He was treated by tM.:;
squad. Middleport pollee, •
reported a traffic aeeldent 011,,
Page St. Saturday when a car 1driven by Denzil F. Proctor,..
Middleport, struck a utility_.;
pole. There was medium,!
damage. He is charged wittr•
leaving the scene of an ac- •
cident, pollee said.

Methodist Church,

Funeral services will be

Robert Hayden and the Rev .
Robert Bookman officiating .
Burial will be in Beech Grove

News .. in Briefs
(Continued !run pace 1)
crime. A court in Cleveland this fall struck down the stale's
organized crime statute and Flynt has appealed his conviction.
"Next week I intend to go back into the streets of
Clncinnati and sell my magazine to force them to arrest me,"
F1ynt told a Speech Communications Association meeting
Saturday. "l'mdoing this because I tl!ink the country is aware ~
enough of who I am and what took place·down here that maybe
I will have an opportunity to get a lair trial ."
PALMDALE , FLA. - COLONEL, THE WAYWARD
elephant, headed home to the circus a~ "his people" today
after discoverlng the wilds of south Florida can be very
lonesome lor an 8,0IJO.pound pachyderm. "We found him really
scared and freaked out," said Cliff Vargas , owner of Circus
Vargas. "It's difficult to believe that a big elephant can be
afraid, but you have to understand Colonel had never been by
himself before. He's used to being around 'his people.: "
The pilot of R state Game and Fresh Water Commission
search plane s)JO\ted the It-year-old Colonel in a heavy thicket
west of Lake Okeechobee Sunday mocning. A ground posse of
20 men ran to the spot and surrounded him, That ended silt
days of freedom for the center ring star. He escaped Tuesday
lnto the 400,000--acre Lykes Brothers ranch and game presetve
when he was unloaded from a trailer-truck, which caughl fire
while transporting him to a performance in Miami,
-

.

COLUMBU&amp;-THE AMERICAN FEDERATION of State,_
County and Municipal Employees of the AFL.CIO responded "
Satu•day to Gov. James A. Rhodes' veto of a collective :
bargaining bill for public employees by criticizing Ferguson ·
law . Thomas E. Morgan, director of the .federation, said the ,
governor's veto leaves Ohio's :;oo,ooo public employees ~
"saddled by the Ferguson Act, the only state law on the books in Ohio that pertains to public employee labor relations."
•
He said "After 30 years, the Ferguson law has proven to be
a failure, from the employers' standpoint, the employee•'
standpoint, and the taxpayers' standpoint. Morgan said public
employees aren't "strike-bappy" and have struck in the past .
"only in their frustrations over poor wages and working
conditions which forced them into the streets'. ''

GIFT SUGGESTIONS FROM THE HOUSEWARES DEPT. 1ST A.OOR
WEST BEND

NEW!

a

. , where cra ftsmen sltll care•

CANISTER
SET

a
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where craltsmen sll lt ClUe•

FRYETIE'"

• Conveniently·
sized canisters with
decorative
mushroom motif.
. • Saamless
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electric
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• Perfect size for couples, singles,
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• Uses just 2 cups of oil to fry one
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• Includes slolled spoon and plastic

construction;
durable
polypropylene
covers.

cover

..

WESfBENO ® automatic
.

where Cl al!smcn st1 ll c are~

Self-Buttering
Corn Popper

11" BUFFET SKILLET

~

. wl\ere crallsmen sU11 care®

• Porcalain-on-alumin11,mpan
spntads halt evenlY-to roast
or fry foods to perfection.
• Fired-On No.Stick

Board of Public Affairs, $30 per month ,
Miscellaneous en'lployces, ~c~ctary tn Mayn r , less than

six month s service, $2,408.40 6 mos . and after six months
service, $5 ,356.80 per year .
·
Council also heard a presentation from a represen l.attve uf
the Columbus and S/Juthe~·n Ohio Electric Co. suggesting
changing present mer cw·y vatx~r hghts 111 the duwntnwn
section to low sul phur lights. cenerally. tile recommended
lights would be of smaller wattage but they would crea te more
illumination . A representative will complete a detailed plan
and costs on the changeover fm council un Ja n. 3.
Acom plaint was received from OSby Martin about a dead
tree on village property which is endange ring his property on
1Continued on page 12)

e
at
en tine
Ohio coal industry shut down
'

Fiftt&gt;l'n Cents
Vol. 2K. No. u ;~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesdav. December 6. I!J77

·:•: :;: :;.: : :-: : ;~::~·~· · :!~::·· ·~::::·· · '· · ·:_.:_·
~:;:

'f\

-•
.\

nationwide at 12: 01 a.m. :::;:·
United Press bJlernatimwl
A nationwide strike of coal miners began a minute

and thousands of non-union

::::.

after

continuous

miners in the Buckeye State
ashlso. stadyed thorr tthe johib,
uttmg own e en tre 0 o

.·.• :. •
.;
..}
·.·.
:·,•·,:',·
:
\
::;:

to produce a
The coalfields remained peaceful dunng the early
hours as 130,000 members of the United Mine Workers
launched their lOth nati onwide stnke m 35 years. UMW
President Arnold Miller, who stormed out of the talks
five hours before the actual strike deadline, accused
the Bituminous Coal Operators Association of "trying
to break this union."
Even with the mlners gone from their jobs, the
walkout thiS year was not expected to cnpple U. S.
lndust~y, which has been stockpiling the coal in recent
months. Also, half of the nation's coal is mined by non-

:::
by the UMW
::: members will cost !he state
/ at least ·$2.5 million a week in
::·: lust wages alone not counting
:;; . the variety of wages paid the
:••: 3,000 to 5,000 non-union
·i miners in Oh10 and the
) millions of dollars more in
... local purchases made by Ohio
} coa l compa nies .
:-:
The state has 32 deep mines
_::: and 352 .Strip mmes which,

midnight

this

mornin g

when

·_:.~· :ft~!:~~~~s spannlng four days failed

':::
:;:~

}
._._
:_,:_,:_,.:
}
..
)

·..
:.,:,;,:
·~;~;

:::
_.,:_:.•

Hy JOHN T. KADY
United Press International
Ohio's 10,000 union miners
today joined a. nationwide
United Mine Workers strike

co~!"~~~~~-

union workers who are not on strike.

::;:

com bined ~ produced nearly

Federal med iator Wayne Horvitz scheduled a
resumption of contract talks for Thursday at 3 p.m.
ESf in Washington . Miller tol d reporters he would
"return to the nego.llations when there is so me sign of
real progress." Horvitz said he expected Miller to
attend Thursday's session.
In West Virginia, where nearly ha U tile nati on's
union mlners are employed, there was talk of shulhng
down non-union mines and disrupting coa l barge

(
·-:·
(
-:-:
·:·:
::::
::;:
:-':

47 million tons of coat last
year . The majonty o1 the
str1p mines are non-union
faCilities and they were also
shut down today.
William Spiker. board
cha irman of the R&amp;F Coal
Co. which is headquarted in
Cadiz, said his firm employs

:::0
traffic.
:;::
Local union officials were predictin g a strike of six to ·~;:

about 350 nonunion miners in

over 40 strip mmmg
;.;~ seven weeks
:;: operations and all were
.:,,·:.:-:•:-:::::::::.::·::.. :·.:·:· ::::•··:•·:-.,. :,.,. :: -.·.;-::·.; :::-:•&lt;· :• -'·:-:-:-'-:-·- _. ._.; ,.. ,,_._.;:: ·:';: :,:,: :, :,·-: :- _. ..'-', closed.
"They are not open and I
would say they will not open"
Post'sdu~lng
the d~ation of the
·
stnke, sa1d Spiker.
Spiker and other operators

Cook named G-M

'Trooper-of-the-Year'
Gallipotis Ohio State Highway Patrol Trooper Rodney
C. Cook has been selected
197'1 "Trooper of the Year" at
the Gallia-Meigs Highway
Patrol Post.
The award was presented
to Trooper Cook, 30, in
· recognition of outstanding
service during 1977 at the
Gallta-Meigs post, Selected
by fellow officers stationed at
the Gallia·Meigs Patrol Post,
the decision to choose
Trooper Cook was based on
leadership
~bilities,
professional ethics, courteous
treatment of othe~s. en,
thuslastic work attitude, and
cooperation with supervisors,
peers, and the public.
Trooper Cook is now in
contention for the D1st;-iC1
Nlne and State Trooper of the
Yeat awards to be announced
at a later date.
Trooper Cook joined the
Highway Patrol in 1971 and
has served at the Ironton and
Gallipolis Posts. Originally
from Gallia County he is a
graduate of Southwestern
High School. Trooper Cook
served four years ln the U. S.
Navy. Other patrol awards

of non-union mines shutdown
rather than risk problems
with roving UMW pickets.
The Carter administration

has said enough coal is mined
by non-llllinn miners - about
48 percent - to meet the
nation 1S energy needs during

a lengthy strike but Spiker
laughed
at ·
this,
acknowldgmg that if they are
not working they are not
mining coal.
"! think he should come out
to the real world and see what
it is like 111 said Spiker.
The UMW does not have a
strike fund and its members
will get no strike ben eli ts but
will qualify for food stamps.
In addition, the UMW stopped
1ts med1ca l benefits and
miners will have to pay their
own doctor and hospital bills
durlng the work stoppage.
" We will just have to make
RODNEY C. COOK
received in the past include a
five-year safe driving award
and Past Patrolman of the
Year at the Ironton Post.
Trooper Cook and his wife
Charla Rae (Gooch) Cook
live at Rt. 2 Gallipolis at
Centenary. They have one
child, Melissa Rae Cook, age

5.

do the best we can/' Ken

Wagnild , Shadyside, an
official of UMW Local o497 at

the North American No. 1 in
Powhatan Point, said today .
"I don't have any other plans
for work during tile strike.
" We'll just have to get by ,"
said Wagnild, who \1&gt; married
and the father of five
children. "I personally don 't
think the st rike will last very
long . I don't know why I feel
that way. It's just a gut
feeling , I guess. But we are
ready to stay out until it is
settled, however long that
takes.'
Sheriff's departments
throughout eastern Ohio said
there had been no reports, as

yet, of rovmg pickets .
The UMW traditionally
sends out roving pickets to
close
down
non-union
operations , includmg both
mines and coal loading docks
along the Ohio river, during a
union strike.
•
" It IS extremely quiet this
mornmg," sa id Belmon t
County sheriff 's deputy John
Foy in St. Clairsville .
" Everything shutdown at
midnight.· I haven't had any
reports of any roving pickets,
at least not yet .''
· Mike Ott, a deputy with the
Harrison County sheriff's department in Cadiz, said it was
also quiet in that area, which
is peppered with non-union
strip mimng operations.

•

'il""
~t\
'

YOUNG AND OLD alike enjoyed the open house.
Sitting on Archie Griffin's lap is K. C. Arnott, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Arnott, Syracuse.

Archie Griffin

" I doo 't know whether all

popular
guest
No one charged
(Continued on page 12)

in 2 accidents
No one was charged in two
minor traffic accidents Investigated Monday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The f1rst occurred at.11 :14
a.m. on US 35, four tenths of a
mile east of milepost 2 where
an auto operated by Timmy
R. Saunders, 19, Galena, 0 .,

struck the rear of a vehicle
driven by Agnes C. Evans, M,
Oak Hill . There was
moderate damage.
An unidentified truck was
lnvolved ln an accident at
1:45 p.m. on SR 338, south of
RaCine. The patrol said the
truck flipped a stone that
b~oke the windshield in a car
driven by Larry F. Eakins,
18, Racine.

•
Three killed m
McArthur blast

MCARTHUR, Ohio (UP!)
According to area fire
- An explosion ripped departments, the company
through the Austin Powder has pnvate lire fighting
Co. plant here Monday night. facilities and does not require
Authorities said three assistance from public
~~
:~ persons were killed in the forces.
Law enforcement agencies
blast in the jelly dynamite
By United Press International
of
the
plant.
in
the area reported "very
section
Egypt today enforced its break in diplomatic relations
The
Vinton
County
sheriff's
tight
security at the company
with five hard~lne Arab states by posting riot police around
office
said
today
compound,"
tlleir embassies in Cairo, as U.S. officials rushed preparations
The company, located on
for Secretary of State Cyrus Vance 's tour of Middle East identification of the victims
was withheld pending Ohio 677 aboutrour tniles east
capitals this weekend.
of here employs between 250
The influential Lebanese newspaper An Nahar predicted notification of relatives.
The
e&lt;plosion
occurred
at
and300workersand
was used
Egypt's President Anwar Sadat will follow his move against
p.m.
Monday
in
one
of
lor
the
production
of
military
6:15
Syria, Libya, Algeria, Southern Yemen and Iraq by severing
75
structureS
separated
explosives
during
the
about
ties with the Scviet Union.
by
large
moUnds
of
earth
on
•
Vietnam
conflict.
It
now
Cairo's ambassadocs to all five Arab countries, plus the
ambassador to Moscow, already have been recalled. Squads of the company's 1,300acres in produces 1ndustrial
explosives.
riot police rlnged the live Arab embassies in Cairo, whose staff central Vinton County.
An
employee
said
the
buildAn explosion at the company
members were given 24 hours' notice to leave the country 'in
ing
that
exploded
was
about
compound
on Dec. 29, 1975
the expulsion order Monday .
40 feet wide by 60 feet long. killed one person.
Officials
from
four The victims were David
CAIRO, EGYPT - EGYPT'S RUPTURE of -diplomatic
hospitals
and
medical
centers
Jarvis, Roger Ervin and
relations with five hard-line Arab states plun ged the Middle
in
the
Vinton
County
area
Steve
McVey, the company
East into turmoil today and undercut U. S. efforts at
no
accident
victims
said
in
~ brief statement.
reported
·
reconciliation in . the region .
in
their
facilitiess
.
The
statement
did not give ·
· The move against Syria, Iraq, Libya, Algeria and South
Ken
Price,
planl
·manager,
tile
ages
or
the
hometown
of
Yemen -all critics of President Anwar Sadat's campaign for
said
one
employee
was
the
victims
and
tile
company
peace with Israel - appeared to bury chances lor an overall
further comment.
Middle East settlement any time soon. The state-controlled "slightly injured" in the refused
41
explosion.
An
investigation
is
Cairo press said today the decision was taken in retaliation for
Sheriff's
deputies,
Stale
underway
to
try
and
a "freeze" on ties with Egypt which was declared by the
Highway Patrol officers arid getermine the cause of the
radical Arab states at a summitin Libya Monday.
company officials refused arcidenl ," the cn mpany
LONDON- PRIME MINISTER '!enahem Begin of Israel late Monday to gJve out any statement concluded.
details about the ac-cident.
(Continued on page 12)
:::::::::::::::::~~=~::~:::::::::::::.:·!·!·!·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::·:·:·:::::::·:::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

INews. . . in Briefsl

itt completely

•
tnos .; alter three mont hS serv1ce, $5,860.80 per year .
Dispatcher, less than three months service, $1 ,2ii1 20 3
mos.; After three months service, $5,356.80 per year .
Extra Patrolma n or Meterman, $2.45 per hour .
Extra Dispatcher, $2.45 per hour.
Water and Sewer Dept., W,atcr 'and Sewer Distribution
System, Superihtendent , $3.85 per hour ; Assistant Plant
Superintendent, $3.30 per hour; Uti lily Trainee and Opera tor
in training, less than three months service, $2.45 per hour ;
three to nine months se rvice, $2.65 per hour ; nine to twelve
months se rvice, $2.75 per hour; and after twel ve months
service, $3 per hour .
"
Laborer, Office Clerk Bookkeeper, $5,822.80 per year ;
Assistant Office-Clerk Bookkeeper , $2.45 per hour ; Clerk of

•

Gibson Ill, of Albany, on&lt;t•;

Laura J . Elselsteln, 93, of
653 Osborne St., Pomeroy.

Sunday

Pomeroy Village e111ployes were given approximate six
Street and Cemcteary Maintenance, Assistant Supervisor,
. pet. pay increases effective Jan . 1, 1978 by village council in One to six months service, $2.55 per hour · Six to twelve months
regular session Monday night .
servic'e, $2.93 per hour.
'
Council Suspended the rules and gave the new ordmance
Laborers, Less than three months service, $2.45 per hour ;
three Jreading!f under emergency measures so that it will Three to nine months service, $2.55 per hour · Nine to twelve
become effective the first of next year.
·
monU15 service, $2.67 per hour.
'
Following is the new pay schedule for employees as
Pollee
approved Under the new ordinan ce:
Chief of Pollee, Less than three months service, $1,543.20 3
'Street and Cemetery Department :
mos.; After three months service, $6,746,80 per year.
Street Supervisor
Captain, Less than three months service, $1,465,20 3 mos. ;
One to Ulree monltis servk-e, $1 1680.60 per 3 m o.
After three months service, $6,438.80 per year .
Three to six montlls service, $1,813.20 per 3 mo.
Pa trolmen, Less than three months service, $1,417.20 3
Six to nine months service, $1 ,969.20 per 3 mo.
mos.; Alter three months service, $6,172.80 per year.
Nine to twelve months service, $8,188.80 per year .
Meterman, Le&lt;s thon three months service, $1 , 33~. 20 3

c, •

be cremated. Friends may
call at the funeral home 6·9 p.
m . today .

died

Council raises village employes' pay

SAMMY STOUT

funeral
services
for
Sammy Stout, 43, of Route 2.

• Wednesday at _1 p.m. al
Rosary will be held 8 p.m. Ewing Chapel with the Rev.

She surv ives. alonQ , with
two sons, John Ru:ahrd
Born April 13. 1903, In Boyd
Walker, Mansf ield, Pa ., and
County, Ky. , to John and
James Blaine Walker , St.
Virginia Dickson Hart, she
Paul, Mrnn . Two grand - married William Russell
daughters surv1ve .
Conley Nov . 9, 1922, in
Two brothers and tw o Catlettsburg, Ky ., ond he
sisters preceded him in died Apr.il 24, 1968.
death.
They are survived by three
Mr . Walker was a pur - daughters and two sons : Mrs
chasing agent for the Terin 1 James (Cieoral
Egner ,
Construction Co. before Galltpotls ; Mrs . James
retiring .
During
h is (Virginia) Swain , Black lick ,
association w1th that firm, he Ohio ; Mrs . Charles (Bar ·
and his wife and family bara) Thomas , Casey , S. C ;
traveled to South Amer ica
Bill Conley. Columb•a , S, C.,
where they resided for five and Donald, Fairfield, Calif.
years. They also resided in A daughter and two grandSt. Calhannes . Canada for children preceded her in
five years
death, but ten grandchildren
He was a member of the and two great-grandchildren
Presbyterian Church in survive .
Elizabeth, Pa., a 32nd Degree
Two brothers and a sister
Mason and a member of the survive · Henry M . Hart,
GallipOl is Shrine Club.
Roanoke. Va. ; Paul Hart, los
The remains will be Angeles ;
Mrs .
Eugene
cremated . Graves ide ser - { Hazel) Hall, Huntington
vices will be held Wednesday Beach. Ca li f. A brother ,;~~nri"
at 2 p m . at the M t. Zion sister preceded her in death.
Cemetery, off R t . 35 , with
Private funeral services
Rev. James Frazier of - will be held at 10 a. m.
ficiating .
Wednesday at the WaughThere will be no call1ng Halley -Wood Funeral Home,
hours
the Rev . Chalmer,s Conley
The family requests no and the Rev . Alfred Holley
flowers.
officiat ing and burial will be
Contributions may be made in Centenary Cemetery.
to the Gallipolis Shrine Club. Friends may calf at the
Funeral arrangements are funeral home 7-9 p . • m.
under the direction of Willis Tuesday .
Funeral Home .

NOW OPEN

Cemetery. Friends may cafl
at the funeral home after 10 • ·

Med ical Center . He h&lt;ld been

\

RACINE - Dave Diles of
ABC Sports and Archie
Griffln, running back of the
Cincinnati Bengals' and
subject of Diles' latest book,
helped the ~acine Home
National Bank show off its
newly remodeled facilities
Monday from 1 to 6 p.m.
While Diles - native of
Middleport and SQn of a New
York Central Railroad
engineer ~ and Griffin
welcomed hundreds or guests
to the open house, they had
their own thing going signing
copies of Diles' latest book,
"Archie."
Youngsters
crowded into the bank with
footballs, autograph bonks, in
some cases just scraps of
paper, for the two-time
Heisman Trophy winner
Gnflin out of Woody Hayes'
football department at Ohio
State University in 1976 to
sign.
,
Archie had one of his be!lt
days since JOining the
Bengals Sunday in defeating
the Kansas City Chtefs 27-7 to
stay alive In the playoff
chase.
The bank has added a new
drive-through facility , all
new accounting department,
new walkup teller windows,
and quarters lor a doctor's
office.
They also have a new off.
the-street parking area.
David Parsons wa s the
general contractor.
A dinner was given at the
Meigs Inn Monday evening
honoring Diles and Griffm.

COOKIE SALSER was in charge of selling Dave Diles
and Archie Griffin's book "Archie" along with other books
that Diles has written. Shown with Mrs. Salser is Tom
Wolfe, president of the bank . The books sold very well and
all were auwgraphed by the two celebrities.

DAVE DILES AND ARCHIE GRIFFIN, seated, and Tom Wulfe, president uf the Ra cine
Home National Bank, who made Diles' and Griffin's vi sit possible. Tours of the new
facilities were given, refreshments were served, and gif~ hanrled to everyone

Rural grocery robbed
More than $2,000 worth of
merchandise was taken in a

'breaking and entering early
Monday
at
Howard
Lawrence's Grocery Store
located at DeWitt's Run in
Lebanon Twp. '
Meig s County · Sheriff
James Proffitt's Dept. said
entry was gained by breaklng
Schools of the Meigs Local a glass. Missing were an
School
District
were undetermined amount of
dismissed two hours early on cigarettes, coffee, jackets,
Monday due to flood threats boots, shoes, knives and
in rural areas due to the meat.
The robbery , occurred be·
heavy _raijis which fell Sunday and Monday.
Southern Local Schools
conducted a normal day
Windy and colder today,
schedule on Monday as did
the Eastern District with the two to four inches snow by
exception of one school bus evening and ending thi s
which was dispatched earlier evening. Lows tonight 5 to 15.
than normal due to lhe nood Cloudy and cold Wednesday,
threat in the area where the chance of snow by evening.
bus had to travel.
Highs in t he low 20s .

Meigs schools
let out .e arly.

Weather

,.

tween 2:30 and 8:30 p.m.
Anyone having any in formation is requested to
contact the shenff's office.
Roger T. Klein, 29, Rt. 2,

Klmn car attempled to pHss
just as an auto driven by Mrs.
Vonderine Wilhams, Rt. 1,
MmcrsvJIIe, started to make
a left 1urn No one was ln-

Pomeroy, wa s ci ted to Meigs

jurcd . 111Cre wa s moder ate

County Court for improper damage to the Williams car
passing following an ttccidenl and no damage t o Kl ein's
at 4:45a.m. Monday on SR 7: veh1cle .
According to deputies, the
GOLD STAR DRAW
Winners Monday ln the
Christmas Gold Star GiveAway promotion sponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commer1•e were Sarah
Yonker, Sumner Road,

Pomeroy , $10 gilt certllicate at Nelson's Drugs
and Carol Ann Webb, Box
317, Syracuse, SID girt
certificate at Stllners. No
purchase Is necessary to ·

participate,

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

•;.

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