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                  <text>8-The l)ail)' ~rttnel. ~hddlep&lt;lrt · Pumeru) . 0 ., Monday, f&gt;t&gt;c . 12, 1977

HOSPITAL NEWS

Vrcrrans Me-morial Hospital

1Ulsrhargrs. De('. 101

Roving pickets

Khaled Alajeel. Mrs. Larry
Arthur and S&lt;ln. Charlene

In

Saturday Discharges

Bush , James Clatworthy Jr ..

- Thl• F'ederal Mediation Service sa1d a rune.fwur

.~her

(Continued from pago I)
weekend devrlopments:
sessh ~n

Jeffrey Dilchrr , Charles
Williams, Beverly Bailey,

Denzel ('leland , Jerry
Gnlhlh Jr .. Mrs.'Paul Jewell

Sunday bt!lween the UMW a nd BCOA Sunday unallended by
UMW Preoidenl Arnold Miller had "su tx·nmmitee Slatus" bul

James Adams, Lillu.• Cwn-

and daughtPr. (.()uisr Kim-

said t{ldav's session would be a •'full

mings, Brenda LeMaster,
Amy Re)·nolds.
Sunday Admissions - Paul
Stewart, West Columbia, IV.
Va.; Lena J.enz. Coolville:
Shirley Evans. R ar~ne;

berling. Kellh Montgome ry,
Melissa Nance. Doy Nitz,
Bill I' Parsons. Mrs. Richard
Pe~due and son, Clara
Pullms, Troy Russell. Mrs.
Donald Saunders and son.

William Mitchell , Pomrroy:

Constance Smith, Emo~o:ene

Elmer Van Meter, Mid·
dleport .
Sunday .'blscha rges

Smith, James Spenser.
!Births, Dec. IO
Mr. a nd · Mrs. Dennis

-Officia ls of the Southern Ohio Coal Co. and UMW !Jtl'al
1886 met Sunday to discuss temporary restrainin~ orders
!uniting pil'keting in two Ohio counties. Shots ~· ere exchanged
l""t week at a Meigs Cowtty mine .
- At Carbondale , Ill., during the weekend , Sen. Charles
Percy. R-111., railed for a quick end to the strike, saying, " It
would bt' most unfortunate i£ the strike impedes the pcu ~ress
we have made toward altering our emphasis o£ t•oal nver
rapidly depletin g supplies of oil and na tural gas."
- UMW hospital-card holders in S&lt;&gt;uthern West Virginia 's

None .

Depue. a son, McArthur. Mr .

NOW OPEN

ASK TOWED
marriage license was
iss ued to Gregory Allen
Northup, 25, Gallipolis, and
Janet Kay Shoots, 24,
Pomeroy.
,..
A

PHONE 773-5536

THE MONEY TREE
"

Now you can watch your

money grow too, with
·a Farmers Bank IRA.
(Individual Retirement Account)
If you're not covered by a Retirement
Program at your place of employment then
a Tax Free Farmers Bank IRA is lor you .
Stop in now and ask about the Farmers
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t • A

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POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000 Maximum lnsur,ance for Each Depositor.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Special of the Week

Wolfpen
Syrians
News Notes to snub

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Giles
and daughter Summers of
Grand Fork, North Dakota
spent Thanksgiving holiday
DAMASCUS, Syria I UP! I
with Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles · - Syrian leaders will re£use
and frank .
to see Secretary o£ State
Mr. and Mrs . Clinton Cyrus Vance today if be tries
Gilkey, Karen o£ Albany, Mr. to give them a message £rom
and Mrs. Franklin Russell o£ Israel, the official Syrian
Middleport, Mrs .. Harold Arab News Agency said.
GiUogly, Vicki and Bruct!, of
Commenting on press
Albany were Thanksgiving reports Van ce may be
day visitors of Mr. Lincoln carrying such a message, the
Russell .
agency quoted sources close
Julie Stev~ns and Barbara to Syrian President Ha£ez
Steadman of Fairfax, Assad as saying "Syria will
Virginia enjoyed . dinner excuse itself from receiving
Sunday at the home of Mr. Mr. Vance in Damascus i£ he
and Mrs. Harley Johns. Julie really is carrying a letter
and Barbara · furnished from the Israeli leaders to the
Kentucky £ried .chicken Syrian leaders.''
dinner.
Assad returned hOme today
Mr. and Mrs . Daniel from Abu Dhabi, the last stop
Worley and Stacy of Beckley, of a five-nation tour or the oil·
W. Va. were weekend visitors rich Persian Gulf.
of Mr. and· Mrs. Cllarley D.
Vance was in Amman,
Smith.
Jordan , for talks with King
Sunday dinner guests of · Hussein be£ore flying on to
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Sinith Damascus for talks aimed at
were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle getting Syria to end its
Knapp, Kail, Kevin and dispute with Egypt and
Charles and Mr. and Mrs. attend Cairo talks beginning
Daniel Worley and Stacy of Wednesday .
Beckley, W. Va.
On Sunday, Syria said it
Randy Pierce of Mason was would tell the American
weekend visitor of grand· secretary it wiU not go to
mother , GeQeva Shumate. Geneva and that nobody
would persuade it to fall in
PLAN REJECTED
step with · Egypt's peace
LONDON
(UPI)
mov es~ .....
Britain's 30,000 firefighters
"Syria will inform him that
voted today on a government it will not go to Geneva, it wiU
· compromise plan to end their not support (Egyptian Presi·
four·week strike and early dent Anwar) Sadat's trip to
returns from London in- Israel and will oppose it,"
dicated they would reject the Syrian foreign minister ,
plan. But two groups ac· Abdel Halim Khaddam, said
ct!pted the pay proposals in Sunday in an interview with
principle, opening the first the Kuwaiti daily AI-Rai alcracks in the hard·line stand . ilaam.
by the fire£ighters in their .
"Syria will not bargain,
four -week walkout.
whatever
the

Vance

"The Star Spangled
Banner" was adopted as the
U.S. National Anthem by act
of Congress March 3, 1931.

circwnstances,'i he said .

Speaking in a separate
interview in the same news-

paper, Syrian President
Ha£ez Assad said, "We in
Syria know that we will come
under huge pressure to
change our P&lt;JSition, but we
will never yield.11

Monday, Dec. 121hru Sunday, Dec . l.S

ENCHILADA REG. 95'

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RIO HALL Or FAME HONOREES - Two more

is Bill Gray, master of ceremonies. Second £rom right is

former Rio Grande College athletes were indul'ted into th e

Mr. Paul Hayes, Rio Grande College.COmmunity Co llege
president and alright, honoree Carl Large, Rock Hill.

college's Haii&lt;&gt;£-Fante Saturday night. Accepting for th e
late Cecil Davis was Mrs. Garland (Jenny l Elliott. On lert

---------------------------,
! Area Deaths l
I

I

W. ALDERMAN .
Wease W. Alderman of
Buckhannon, W. Va ., died
Sl,lddenly ot' a heart attack in
Saint Joseph Hospital at 6
p.m . Friday , Dec . 9.
He ~as a prominent barber .
in Buckhannon for m.any
years.
He was born Ma y 4, 19 12 a t
Alexander , W. Va. to Ra y Lee
Alderman and t~e late
Bla nche Alderman .
Survivors include his wife ,
Rose Eskew A lderma n ; one
son , James ; one da ughter ,
Caro l yn Roh r and t hree
grandch ildren of Buckhan ·
non . His fa ther , Roy L .
AIQerma n of Alexander , W.
Va .; thr ee brothers, Wi lliam ·
of Baden·, P.a ,; Robert ot
Akr on and Woodr ow of
Buck hannon .
Four sisters surv ivi ng are
Mrs .
Harry
(Juanita)
Johnston of Freedom , Pa . i
Mrs . Goldie J ohnston of
Buckhannon ; Mrs . Wayne
(Ethel ) Wil son of Paines v il le ,
Ohio and Mrs . Benzil ( Bett y)
Marsh of Pottstown , Pa . His
mother , Bla n'che Alderman
and one sister. Reta Pring le,
preceded him in death ; one
niece , Lola Cunn in g ham ,
lives at 125 Kineon Dr i ve .
Gallipolis . Serv ices were held
in Buckhannon at 2 p .m .
loday .

Tuesday at 1 p.m . a t the
Stevens-Grass Funeral Home
at Malden , W . Va . Burial wi ll
be in Kanawha Valley
Gardens . Frie,nds may cal l at
the funera l home any time .

EVA JOHNSON
Eva Johnson , 93, a resident
of 62j Third Ave ., Gallipolis
died at her home aro und 5
p.m . Saturday . She had been
ill several years .
Mrs . Johnson spent m ost of
her life at her home pla ce , Rt.
2, Crown City (Hannan Trace
Rd) .
She was born Jan . 30, 1884 ,
in Ohi o Twp . in Gall ia
County , daughter of the late

Sunday School attendance
on Dec. 4 was 58, the of£erihg
$26.70.
Worship services were held
atl0 ;45 with an attendance or
37 with Rev. Thomas bringing

WEA~E

49~

This special is offered to you to acquaint you with
the goodness and economy of our homeinade
Mexican food .
No limit to quantity of purchase. Oftei good for
Drive- In or Carry.Qut Service Only.

ALEX E. WHEELER
R"' &lt;!&gt;I N E Ale x E.
Wheeler , 79, of Route 2,
Rac ine , di ed Sunday at
Holzer Med ical Center . He
was born Aug . 28, 1898, a son
at the late James and
Ther esa Sommers Wheeler .
Su r viving are h1~ wife,
Anna Stitt Wheeler ; a son ,
Wi l l iam , Fremont ;
two
daughter s, Norma Chapman
Morris of Bow li ng Green , and.
Frankie Chapman Foster , of
Dela wa r e;
f i ve
gr and children ; a sister ,. Georg,ia
Wheeler
Wolfe
of
Washing ton , D. C. ; one niece,
Georgia Wol fe Bel l, Camp
Spr ing s, Md ., and a grec!llt ·
niece , Cindy Bell .
Funeral ser vices wi ll be at
1 p.m .· Tuesda y at the Ewing
Funera l Home with the Rev .
Freeland Norris officiating .
burial wil l be in Let art Falls
Cemetery . Fri ends m ay call
at the funeral home any time.

Alfred
Social .Notes

the Communion message
"Good News ! Jesus Came!''

from John 1:1-14. The ;pecial
number , " Fill My Cup" was

Phillip and J ulie White " sung by the choir · with
Lambert .
Howard Flanders, teader and
She was reared in the home
Janet
Moore,
pianist.
of J . M . Ours, her step-father .
held a£ter the sermon, closing
with the hymn " Blest Be The
Tie" led by the pastor.
MARKET DESTROYED
ST. MARYS, Ohio (UPI) A£ire early today destroyed a
Cardinal supermarket in the
downtown area, authorites
said. Damage could run as
high as $500,000. authorities
reported .

~

Funeral services will be
held at Big Four Church of
God on Hannan Trace Rd . 2
p .m . Tu esday with R ev.
Ernest Baker and Rev . Webb
Swain officiating . Burial will
follow in Whit~ Cemetery .
Friends may call any time
after 12 noon Monday at th e
home, 628 Thirc~ Ave . in
Gall ipolis . Grandsons wilt
serve as rallbearers .
Funera arrangements are
under the direction of WHlis
Home for Funerals .

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}, ST., POMEROY.

•••

Y.

BOSTON
America n

(UPI)
Lea gue

Mo st

nounced their ~arne Spring

training schedule, which includes visits by all four
defending division champions

to Tampa, Fla .
Cincinnati 's training camp

will open reb . 2.1, when
pitchers and catchers report ·
£or their first workout the
roll owing day. The run squad
will report reb . 28 and begin
pra ctice March 1.
Exhibi li on games in
Tampa will include visits by
the World Champion New
York Yankees March l7i

Valuable Player Rod Carew
has won the Judge Emil American League west titlisl
Fuchs award £or .contribu. Kansas City March 18;
tions to baseball.
National League. east winner
Carew, whose .388 average Philadelphia March 23, and
£or Minnesota was the highest · National League Champion
in the league since 1958, will U1s Angeles March 28.
receive the award at a Boston
The Reds will play 10
baseball writers' di!Uler Jan . ga mes in Tampa and 14 road
26.
games elsewhere in florida .

By United PressiDtematlonal
ROANOKE - NORFOLK &amp; WESTERN RAILWAY
officials say more layoffs are pending in both Virginia and
West Virginia because of the coal strike and other £actors.
Furlough notices for another 1,200 workers have been posted
throughout the N&amp;W system.
By Friday, about 2,700 employees will be laid of£ either
because of the strike or seasonal weather problems. Some
1,500 workers were laid off before the strike began including
450 in the Roanoke area and another 70 or so in Tidewater. The
latest layoffs should push the number furloughed in Roanoke to
about475. Company officials said more workers will be laid off
after Christmas if there is nothing for them to do becawte of the
strike.

MEN'S
SHIRT
SALE

Includes a II of our men' s
sport shirts in sizes S,
M. Land XL ' - All of
our men's dress shirts in
neck sires 14'/:z to 171/:z
. and sleeve lengths l2 to
35 . All of our men 1s knit
shirts and our entire
stock of men's western
shirts .
You'll like the colors the
styles
and
particularly the savings
you'll q~ake during this
shirt sale .

'

W
W

SALE PRICES
Bring the children to see
Santa Claus Monday

:~~ ~=~~=~d~~o; ~~m4
p.m.

Elberfelds· ·In PomerOJ
•

~~~IS::l~~~~~\:S:l~~~B;I:~E";;I;~~Ki'r:s::s:~E:II:~~~~SS::i:Ba~

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VOL. XXVIII

NO. 169

CHICAGO (UPI) - A
federal grand jury has in·
dieted a chemical firm and
six company officials on
charges they conspired to
conceal from a federal
agency potential cancer·
causing effects of two
pesticides.
The indictm~nt Monday
charged
the
Velslcol
Chemical Corp. and the other
defendants withheld £rom the
Environmental Protection
Agency tesi results indicating
polentialhazards in using the
pesticides heptachlor and
chlordane.
Velsicol, a division of
Northwest Industries Inc. o£
Chicago, hired a r~arch
finn in June 1971 to conlluct
an 18-month study on micewho eat food tafned with

.JJ!

l'

L WRENCE
CLARENCE A

Lawrence takes
Masonic post

Clarence Melvin Lawrence
was installed on Dec. 3 as
master of Harrisonville
Masonic Lodge No. 411 fn an
open installation. Lawrence
is employed at Southern Ohio
Coal Co. as an electrician in
the Prep Plant. He has been a
Mason four years. He and his
wife, Jill, reside in Portland
with their five year old son,
Jeremy.
Other officers for the 1977·
BONN, WEST GERMANY -'- TIIREE MEMBERS of a
78
year are Jin1 Frecker,
newly discovered communist spy ring had keys to a safe in the
senior
warden; Raymond
West German Defense Ministry which contained more than
Cotterill,
junior warden;
1,000 secret documents. Counter intelligence officials
David
Riggs,
treasurer;
acknowledged Monday that the spies obtained and passed w
Harold
Rice,
secretary;
Olen
East Gennany copies of many key secrets, including the
Harrison,
chaplain;
Duane
NATO and Bonn defense strategies in ease of Soviet bloc
Will, senior deacon; Bob
attacks.
·
Stewart,
junior deacon; Bob
The spies - a £ormer secretary in the defense ministry;
Williams,
senior steward;
her husband, also employed by the ministry, and a former
John
Cooper,
junior steward;
employee of the naval staff - were arrested last year in a .
Norman
WiD,
Tyler, and"Olen
major dragnet of communist agents. But the depth of their
Harrison, trustee.

OPEN EVERY
NIGHT TIL 8

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IN:~~~riej~

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en tine
DECEMBER 13, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

heptachlor. A similar study o£
chlordane was begun in
December 1971. Both studies
were approved by the EPA.
The indictment said two
independent pathologists
hired by Velsicol in late 1972
or early 1973 examined slides
of liver tissues from mice
used in the study and
reported to the company that
the livers contained tumors
visible to the "naked eye" at
autopsy.
By this time, the EPA had
conducted an internal review
to determine whether to
initiate regulatory action to ·
halt certain wtes or the two
pesticides.
The in&lt;\ictment charges the
de£endants with concealing
the doctors' £indings from the
EPA and with making false ·
statements by telling the
agency that all data on the
studies had been · submitted.
Responding to the charges,
Paul F. Ho£fman, chairman
and chief executive of£icer of
Velsicol, said, "It is an
outrage that the government
would even i:onsider seeking
such indictments.''

Riffle admits
store robbery

TilE MEIGS HIGH MADRIGALS will be one of the
featured·groups when the Meigs Local Junior and Senior
High Voca( ~partment presents "Con~rt of Christmas"
next Tuesday evening in the Meigs Junior· High
Auditoriwn. Songs included will be traditional carols.
Mt's. Paige Hunt, director, will be assisted by Laura
Hoover and Greg Bush. Members of the Madrigal include
!::::::;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday, fair through the
period, with btgbsln the 40s
Tbu!'llday, warming w the
upper 40s or low 50s by
Saturday. Lows will be In
the 30s.
::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;::::::::::=::::::,

Four accorded
recognitWn as

Richard M. Young, . RD
Pomeroy, owner of the
Beaciln Gulf Station, upper
Pomeroy, told the Meigs
County Sheriff's department
Friday that $100 was taken
from his station.
The 1978 edition of "Who's
Monte Riffle, arrested Who in Music" will carry the
Sat'urday afternoon on a names of £our students from
warrant charging con· Meigs High School who have
tribuling to a minor, has been selected among the
signed a statement admitting natioQ's most outstanding
he stole the money. ·
high school music students.
Bobby R. Hunt, band
The department reported a
deer was killed Monday director, head of the school's
evening when it ran into the nominating COri\IIllltee and
path of a car driven by Ira the editors of the annual
Wiseman, 58, Athens, who directory have included the
was traveling north on U. S. names of the local students
based on their music ability,
Rt. 33 at Burlingham.
academic achievement,
service to the community,
leadership in extra curricular
activities
and
future
potential.
The £our students are
C&lt;Jntinued mild, rain today,
tonight , ending Wednesday Laura Hoover, daughter of
morning. Lows tonight in the Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
upper 30s; highs Wednesday Hoover, Route 2, Pomeroy:
in the mid 40s. Probability of Teresa Van Meter, daughter
precipitation 90 perct!nl today o£ Mr. and Mrs. Purl H. Van
and tonight, 40 per.cent Meter, Rutland; 'carl Gheen,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Wednesday.
Gheen, Ro~te4, Pomeroy and
Susan Wright, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Wright,
Pomeroy .

music students

Weather

Four ·m ishaps blamed on ice
Monday evening-'s light
rain caused Icy driving
conditions in the Gallia·Melgs
County area. resulting in at
least £our traffic accidents.
The first accident caused
by ice occurred at 5: 20 p.m.
on SR 7 and SR 124 where an
auto ,driven by Lucian · L. .
Fortner, 42, St. Augustine,
'Fla. slid on an Icy. bridge,
striking the rear end of a car
-eperated by Warren G.
Fanner, 56, Pomeroy. There
was moderate damage. No
charges were filed.
A similar accident oc·
curred at 5:30p.m. on SR 248,
east of SR 7 where an auw
driven by Robert K.
~owdery, 19, Reedsville,

•.
a1 y
·-..

600 West Virginia pickets in
United Preos Inte""'tloual
Clarion County alone. A non·
Coal industry and union union mine in Mercer County,
negotiators
repor-ted Pa., closed "voluntarily."
progress on major issues in
Seven people were arrested
strike negotiations, w.hile in Spencer County, Ind.,
roving caravans of United where helmeted state P&lt;Jlice
Mine Workers members with riot sticks f(laintained
forced the shutdown of order when about 5oo strikers
several non-union operations converged at a non-union
in Appalachia.
loading dock on the Ohio
Vandalism was reported River . The seven were
Monday in Pennsylvania, ar- ordered to pay $229 each in
rests were made in Indiana fines and costs on disorderly
and non-union coal was conduct charges.
dumped in Kentucky. where
Kentucky state police esUMW pickets closed non· timated about 200 autos
union mines in at least six carrying hundreds or striking
miners enter ed eastern
counties.
"We've just got pickets Kentucky from Ohio and
running out or our ears. picketed non-union
They're trying to shut down operations. Two shots were
everything," state police at £ired al mining equipment at
Pikeville, Ky ., said.
the Canada Coal Co . in
In Utah, the scene of most Kimper, Ky ., but no one was
of the labor strife, a coal· injured.
hauling railroad and three
Pickets £orced the drivers
non-wtion mines sought relie£ of two trucks to dump 60 tons
from the courts, charging of non-union coal on a
that pickers prevented highway near Catleltsburg,
production and movement of Ky. "They wid them to dump
coal during the week~ong it, and they dwnped it," a ·
UMW strike .
state trooper said.
The strike by
In Lawrence County, Pa .,
ap~ the Ohio border, a group of
proWrlately 188,000 miners
about 25 men with crowbars in 22 stales began Dec. 6 when
damaged · four
heavy the UMW 's three-year
machines at a non-union strip contract with the Bitwninous
mine owned by Ralph Zeon, Coal Operators Association
Inc. The company estimated expired.
$I2;000damage was caused w
Negotiators for both sides
two bulldozers, a dragline mel for two hours Monday in
and a frontloader.
Washington and recessed for
Hundreds of pickets from an inde£inite period to allow
West Virginia showed up at both sides to reassess · their
non-union operations in positions.
western Pennsylvania, most
uwe're making progress
of them at mines in Clarion and still moving, " UMW
County, One non-union source · president Arnold Miller said.
estimated there were about

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Tho
Cincinnati Reds have an-

(,(

1 O~I-ICEHOURS;9;
30to12.2to5(CLOSE
Ar -NOON ON THURS.
) - EAST COURT . _I~ i11

j

HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 81
degrees at Coolidge, Gila
Bend and Phoenix, Ariz.
Today's low was 23 degrees
below zero at Glen Falls, N.

~

W

o

welcome.

checking and 1£ they find any that are open we will go back eastern section of the Buckeye State,
"Some of that coal going to the docks came in from Kentucky
down there .''
The car caravan that went into Lawrenct! County in the but there's no coal coming in ·now," said Howell. "They've
"We went clear down to Pike County, Kentucky and it southern portion of Ohio Wl'S organized in Vinton County and been pretty peaceful. Some miners even stopped one of my
seemed the state police hassled us a little blf"down · there," was, for the most part, peact!£ul, according to Lawrence deputies and asked £or directions. They're just protecting their
Q-ay said. "We were peact!ful and we told them we were going County Sheriff James Howell in Ironton.
jobs, I reckon ."
to be peaceful when we went in.
. ... "They pulled four or five trucks off the side o£ the road and
Tuscarawas County sheriff 's deputy Brian Walker said the
"But one time we had 21 state police cruisers with us and the coal was dwnped.'' said Howell. "I don 't know who roving pickets in that area of the state came from Muskingwn
everytime we sloped they got out of their cars. They all had dumped it, whether it was the miners or the driver. But if I had County, through Coshocton County and into Tuscarawas
riot equipment on and clubs. We weren 'I going to cause any 45 or 50 men standing in front or me I would dump the coal and County .
trouble," Cray said.
go home ."
"They tried to block route 93 above Sugar Creek in the
Between 500 and 600 striking UMW members, vowing "no
"There must be 500 w BOO of them here," said Howell. ,northwestern part of the county," said Walker. "They were
scab coal", went into Lawrenct! County and eastern Kentucky "About 50 or 60 cars came down -route 93, and 50 or 60 more ordered to move and they did . There's about 1110 of them in 3r
Monday while a smaller delegation or roving pickets, about came down Ohio 7. They'reshutting down the docks and all the cars and they are using citizens band radios to communicate.'
1110, was also reported Monday in Tuscarawas Countv in the non-union mlnes.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Firms indicted
for conspiracy

By KAREN SOUTHWICK

1 Elberfelds In Pomeroy

surviv~ .

•

Two more

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r···-·N·-·w···-co··M--P--T·o··N·-·o···o-·---, ~
o

Negoti-ators .say
•
progress IS
being made

(Continued from page 1)
of intercoll egiate com·
Attendance at the Sunday petition.
morning service at the fre e
Twenty -eig ht forme r
Methodist Church was 113. athletes are now nlembers of
Choir rncmbers present were the Hall of fame .·
13.
They are ;
Mr. and ~!rs . Phil Wise ,
1973 - Rich a rd Barr,
Beverly, attended Sunday Lester Berridge , Paul Dillon,
services at the local church. Howa rd (Jack) Duncan,
Mr. rrilz Stahl, New Clarence ( Bevo 1 Francis,
,Marsh£ield, son Paur Stahl, James McKenzie, Roy
Columbus, Mr. Russel!" Moses, Newt Oliver, William
Jackson, Bellview recently Pipperger, Lloyd Saunders.
railed on Mr. and Mrs. George Stevenson and Wayne
Nonnan Schaefer.
Wiseman.
Mrs. Dick Karr and Mrs.
1974 - Dr. Raymond T.
Mabel Tra cy have been Allison , Walter Cook, Bob
reported ill.
Mabry and Da~id Smith. .
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Cook,
1975 - Dallas E. Clark,
Darwin , attended Sunday Paul R. Lyne, Jim Marshall,
morning services at the locaL Johnny Matthews, Robert
church.
·
Wion and Dr. Harold Yinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Perry,
1976 - Don Allen. Maurice
Athens, spent Satunday with H. (Grinny) fowler , Michael
Mrs. Perry's parents, Mr. Burcham and Mrs. Maxie
and Mrs. N. E. Schaefer.
fowler McCarley.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey ,
Prior to the cerem ony , the
Thomas Fork, visited alumni held a banquet in the
recently with Mr. and Mrs. college careteria.
Harry Stahl.
The events were part or
Sunday, Dec. 11 , there will 1977 homecoming restivities.
be a rededication or the local
church . The public is

Communion serv.ices were

She
married
tdward
Johnson. He preceded her In
death in 1956.
She is survived f_Y five
· children: Gilbert ·Johnson ,
Mrs. Russell (Mary) Warren ,
Charles R. Johnson, all Rt . 2,
Crown City ; Mrs. Raymond
(Ciemma); lane, Rt. l,
Cheshire and Oakley John son , Rt. 2, Crown City .
Two sons, Lawrence and
Clayton, preceded her in
death . Two boys and two gi rls
died in infancy.
Two sisters survive t Mrs.
M.ary Wolford, Galli pol is and
Mrs . Bertha Craig , Rt . 2,
Crown City . One brother and
four sisters preceded her in
death . Twenty-seven grand.
45 great.grandch i ldren and lO
great-great - grandchildren

-

l

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

v

By JOHN T. KADY
United Preas International
One of the leaders of a carcaravan of striking United Mine
Workers union members said today the caravan closed down
every non-union coal mine and coal loadlilg dock it found in
southern Ohio and Eastern Kentucky Monday.
BiU Cray, vice president of UMW local 1957 at the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. Racoon mine in Vinton County, wid UPI today
the UMW would continue to send scouts into Lawrence County ,
Ohio and eastern Kentucky to determine i£ the non-union
operations wiU attempt tQ reopen .
"We had a good day, " said Q-ay . " We got a lot of them
closed. Everything we saw we closed down . We don't think
there is anything up today . But we will have scouts out

'

JACK RAY , TEAFORD
RACINE Jack Rav
Teaford, .ao, Racine , died
Saturday morning at Holzer
Medical Center . He was the
son of the late Delbert and'
· Vada Teaford . He was aJso
preceded in death bY a
brother , Dale. Mr . Teaford
was employed as a coal
miner .
He is survived by his wife ,
Betty Brown Teaford ; fo1.1r
children, Teresa , Timmy ,
Jackie and Dwayne , all at
home:
sl x
.. bro th e rs ,
lawrence, Romney, W. Va .;
Carroll and Bert,. both o f
Racine, and Fritz, Morr is and
Delbert, Jr J, Phoeni x, Ariz .,
.and two sisters, Lucille
White, Phoenix , and M il dred
Graffton , Ravenna .
Funeral services will be

BEEF &amp; OIEESE
SPECIAL
PRICE

..

Distriet 29 signed up U.1r .a temporary medical benefits ptan
agree u ~· by the Appalachian Regional Hospital at Beckley .

Weather

OF MASON

•

mmmittee " meetin~ .

and Mrs. jackie Hughes, a
Holzer Medical CentPr
daughter. JackS&lt;ln .
Miner ~ · health benefits have bt!en cut off during the strike.
(Discharges. Dec. 91
!Discharges,
Dec.
Il
l
Richard Barrett. Scon
Moanwhile. officials of the Southern Ohio Coal Co. and UMW
Ricky Boyd Jr .. Carolyn l; \Cal 1886 met Sunday to discuss temp(lrary restraining
Bond, Amy Brothers, Ora
Brumfield. Jeremy Buckley, C"o leman. Shane Cratg, Mrs. nrders limiting picketing at two mines in Meigs a nd Vinton
Gra nville Burnett . Ronnie Terry Dug! and son, Elijah Coun ty where strikers attempted to keep h1remen from
Carmichael. Mrs. Timothy Estep Sr., . Gerald Estep. ent~r.tng the mines.
Coli and son, Gary Cox, Brian fellure, Gilbert Glass.
Sllllts were fired at the N\t , I mine o£ the Southern Ohio Coa l
Valerie C&lt;Jx, Carla Crump, Mrs. James Hay es and son. Co. in Meigs Cow1ty last week.
Bridget Garrett, James Pauline Lewis. Janet Mat·
One of the organizers o£ today 's caravan is Bill Cray.
Gibbs Jr., Karen Gilkey, thews, Jess McKee , Joseph Wilkesvi lle, Ohio, vice president of U1cal 1957 at the Racoon
"Ruth Goody, George Hayes, Ohlinge r . Dorothy Rouse . No.3 mine of Ute Southern Ohio Coal Co. in Vinton County.
"We sent some scouts down there (to 1-'lwrenc-e County and
Allie Holley, Susan Hughes, Terry Shaffer, Annabelle
Clleryl McCormick, Mildred Welch.
' parts o£ eastern Kentucky) the other day, " said Cray . "They
(Births, Dec. lll
McHarg,
Mi cha el Me·
wil l sh ow us where t.he nonunion mines are .
Mr.
and
Mrs. James Jonas ,
Williams, Th oin as Mill er ,
"Snme o£ the miners will meet us here (in Wilkesville) and
Audrey Morga n, Gilberta a daughter , IVellston. Mr. and we will pick up uthers on the way ,'' said Cray. " We hope to
Neal, James Neal, Rita Pitts. Mrs. Gary Lunsford, a son, have bet ween BOO and 1,000 men by the time we get there.
Patrick Pixley. Shirley Ross. Oak Hill.
.. This non-uniun coal has got ·to stop. No scab coal," said
Cray. ·· Most &lt;lf it is coming out of Kentucky . But we are go in g
Jay Rowe, Mrs. Asa Rucker
and daughter. Dawn Sherd,
to stoo it. "
Cray also said the UMW strikers would not be armed .
' Doris Shoo k, Shirley Sim·
Temperatures between 35
"When you go in 1.-tth numbers like that there is not usual!)"
mons. James Stewart 11, and 40 tonight. Mostly cloudy
ton much violence, '' said Cray .
Sandra Taylor, Libby Trues· and windy tonight . Good
Ohio's 10,000 UMW m~m bers joined a nati on wide strike al
dell , freddie Tucker, Mrs. chance of showers Tues~a y .
Alden Wedem eyer and Hi ghs in the upper 40s . midnight Dec. 6 and all 'ITiajor non-union mines also .clnsed .
daughter, Evelyn Winter.
· Precipitation: 70 pet. tonight . Most o£ them are located in eastern Ohio.
T\le Buckeye State has 32 underground mines and 302 strip
&lt;Births. Oee. 9)
5tl pet. Tuesday.
mines which produced almost 47 million tons o£ coa l last year.
'Mr. and Mrs. Royal Martin,
a son, Pt. Pleasant .
Mnst of the Strip mines are non-union operati cms .
Ohio's major coal users- electric utilities and steel millsRESET TUESDAY
have stockpiled enough coal to last them £or between 70 and 90
The Comm un ity Action days.
Agency Board of Directors
a!Ulual meeting has been
reschedu led for Tuesday ,
Dec. 13. at 7:30 p.m. in the
cent ral office .

GINO'S

UMW caravan halts non-union coal
•
operations In Ohio and Kentucky

•

Saturday Ad miss tons
None.

went out of control of an Icy
A single car accident oc· vehicle driver. by Cllarles H.
bridge then struck a vehicle curred at 5:10 p.m. Monday ·Brumfield,. 72, Crown City.
operated by Wade L. Spen· on SR 7 at SR 143 where
Maynard W. Ta!Uler, 27,
Ct!r, 50, Long Bottom.
Christopher J. M~lothin, 20, Clendenin, W. Va .. suffered
Severe da~ge resulted Ames\lllle, lost control of his minor injuries in an accident
from an accident at 6:17p.m. car striking a . guardrail. at I p.m. Monday at the in·
on SR 248 at the same ley There was minor damage. tersection of SR 554 and the
bridge where Robert L. Hunt,
Another accident blamed Bulaville-Porter Rd. State
22, Long Bottom, lost control on Icy road conditions oc· troopers reported Tanner lost
of his car. It struck ag em· curred at 4:20p.m. on TR 247, control or his truck when the
bankment causing heavy two miles south of SR 681 in load shifted. The vehicle
damllge . .
Meigs County. Cars driven by flipped over on its right side
An icy bridge was blalned Recka
McGuire, . 26, causing minor damage.
for an accident at 7:34 p.m. Pomeroy, and Carl F. Culp,
A final accident was in·
on SR 7, north of niUepost 5 in · 29, Pomeroy, sideswiped on vestigated on SR 588, four
Gallla County where GObert an icy road. There was Ugh! tenths of a mile west of CR 5
L. Whitley, 21, South Point, damage.
where James P . McKenzie,
lost control of his car wlilch
A deer was killed in an 19, GalliP&lt;JliS, lost control of
slid on the icy pavement accident at 3:37p.m. on SR 7, his car when he became ill.
striking the Swan Creek north of milepost two . The The vehicle ran off t)le
Bridge.
animal ran into the path of a roadway str!klitg, a ditch.
'•

Lung group is
on TV program
The Southeast Ohio Lung
Assn. of which Meigs County
is a member county, will
sponsor a program on WOUB;
TV, Cllannel20, at 10;30 p.m.
Thursday.
Cooperating with the
presentation is O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital and there
will be several doctors of the
staff on the ahow to field a
question and answer session
dealing with carlo pubnonary
problems. A film with Glen
Davis dlscunlng chronic
pulmonary dl8ease and the
rehabilitation program will
aLso be featured.

Lynetta Whillingion, Vicki Pickens·, Camille Swindel, Lori
Kloes, Sandi Herdman, Marcia Holcomb, Susan Wright,
Brynda Black, Sonya Miller, Toni Pope, Laura Hoover,
Debbie Hatfield, Herbie Noel, Eric Scites, Dorsel Thomas
and ,David Riggs. A small admission will be charged for
the program which starts at 7:30p.m.

Hospitalization plan
- .
tentatively approved
A Blue Cross hos- for a total of $2 1662.
Mayor Ho£fman reported
pitalization
insurance
plan for 11 village employes that the Bureau o£ Outdoor
was tentatively accepted Recreation has $5 million to
Monday. night by Middleport . spend in 1978 on programs.
He said that securing the
~iUage Council in a regular
former railroad depot
session .
Two plans were presented belonging to the Cllesapeake
in the council's bid for an and Ohio Railroad would fail .
Insurance program for into the program If a plan
village employes and upon oould be devised on the use of
the recommendation of the structure and the IQt on
·Council President Marvin which it sets, 115 by 215 feet.
C,uncilman Dewey Horton
, Kelly, the Blue Cross
said
that he wiU work with
program was accepted.
Mayor
Hoffman in making
C&lt;Juncil took no action on
drawings
and outlining ~plan
enacting legislation,
to
be
used
In making a
however, preferring to wait
preliminary
application
for a
until the ordinance providing
grant.
The
bureau
provides
90
money to pay for the program
percent
of
a
program
and
10
Is prepared.
percent
must
be
furnished
Under the plan five single
policies and six family plan locally. The plan must be
policies will be purchased at submitted. by Dec. 31.
Mayor Hoffman reminded
a cost of $8,403 a!Ulually. Two
employes already have council members that the
coverage. One of them, the mobile office of Sen. Howard
village mechanic, will be Metzenbaum wiU be parked
given a 20 cent an hour rais~ across from Ingels Furniture
while the second - the pollee on North Second £rom 10:30 to
chief - will be given a $40 a 5:30 Wednesday. Any person
month increase, according to having any matter they wish
to discuss with the senator's
plans made by council.
This will offset the fact that
they will not be getting the
insurance coverage.
·
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate reported on a com·
murtication from Colwnbia
Gas indicating that the price Clarence Price, chairman
of gas wiD decrease 4.21 cents o£ the Meigs County ASC
per 1,000 cubic feet ef£ective Conunittee, rep&lt;lrted today_
at the Dec. 31 billing. The results in the recent Com·
rep&lt;lrt of Mayor Fred Hof£· munity Committee elections.
man for November was Men elected are listed in
approved. It showed £ines and order, chairman, vice
fees totaling $2,566 and $97 in chairman, member , first
merchant pollee collections • alternate and second alternate :
Bedford-Salisbury
Robert Hawk, Pearl Hayes,
Ernest Wood, John Dean and
Frank Broderick.
Cllester - Dale Kautz,
Paul Baer, Earl Dean ,
Richard Ko blentz and Gary
TODAY'S CRIME ALERT
Michael.
Spreading extra keys
Colwnbls-Scipio - R~ed
around, even to trusted Jeffers, Kenneth Welsh ,
friends, can be borrowing · James Gaston, Thad Dye and
unnecessary trouble. And William Kennedy.
don't try to hide emergency
Lebanon-Letart - Cllarles
keys in "unique" places
R. Harns,
· Thomas D. Sa yre,
Larry Cummins, Aaron Wol£~
burglars know them all!

sta£f Is welcome to visit the
office.
Mayor Hoffman also
reported that progress is
being made for the con·
struction of a nursing ·home
on Powell St. in Middleport.
Preliminary engineering is
being done, he said. The
mayor named Councllmen
Carl Horky and Horton to
serve on the firemen's
dependent's board for the
next year.
Plans were made for ad·
vertising for a new police
cruiser .and the next regular
December meeting was
cancelled. Council officially
freed parking meters in the
business section £rom Dec. 12
through Dec. 24 for shoppers.
The Middleport Cllamber of
Commerce will pay the
village $175 and the Mid·
dleport Retail Merchants
Assn , will pay an equal
amount for the free parking
granted by council.
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk Grate, and
councilmen Horton , Horky,
Kelly and William Walters.

ASC election results noted

by cormm'ttee chrurm'an Pn'ce

1

.~

and Andrew Cross.
'Olive-Orange Cecil
Caldwell, Cllester Buckley,
Dohrman Reed , Ronald
Cowdery and 0 . J . Pennington.
Rutland-Salem
Joe
Bailey, Cllf£ord Might, Oris
Roush, Charles Barrett and
L. R. Harmon.
Sutton - Cllarles E. Vost,
Don Smith, Tom M. Theiss,
Roger Nease and Tony
Carnahan.
The ·

chairman,

vice

chairman and member are
del ega tes to the county
convention Tuesday, Dec. 20
in the conference room of the
Agriculture Service Center
located in the Farmers Bank
Building. At the convention
'oite member will be elected to
the County Committee.

,.

�Israeli delegation in Cairo for
opening up of historic conference
8) MAURICE GUINDI
CAIRO, Eg)pt t UPll - A

blue and whtle Israeli El AI

"'lth t he word
peace ' emblazoned on 1ts
nose Ln both Hebm• and

a1rhner

TV o o .in Review
81 JOAN HANAUER

Arab tc landed today at Catro
atrpo rl wtth a n lsraeh
de legauon for histortc face to
face negoua t10ns wtth Egypt
on peace m the Mtddle East
The formal talks begm
Wednesday 111 Mena House on
the outskirts of Calfo m the
shadow of the great pyranud
of Cheops a nd guarded by the
Sphmx Enormous security
precautions were m e ffect to
pr otect th e hote l whose
ktl chen has been made
kosher for the Israeli \1Sit
We carry tbe torch of
fr eedom and of peace ," the
chtel Israeli delegate , Eliahu
Ben-Ehssar, satd before
leavmg Tel Avtv
He
promtsed to work to prepare
the ground for future talks
With other Arab states and to

UPI Tele\lsiun Wnter
NEW YORK t UPI 1 ~ Th e re are many dtfferences between
teleVIsiOn and pnnt ne" s and one of tht" mosl startlmg IS the
~a) telt'\1SlOn pt."'O ple bec(llllt' part of our h\eS
Not the entertamers - the Henn Wmklers. Farrah Fa" cett·
~la J OCS , or e\On the Luctlle Ba lls - the\ are pe rformers who
sometm1es come and gll " tth the speed of a fallmg star
The people \\ e fee l " e knt'"' are the ones " ho talk to us Waller Cronklle, John Chancellor Barba ra and H,trry
One of them has left - Ene Se\a r e 1d whose one-hour r nnversauon "1th Ch8 rle!:i Kuralt (Dec 13 S..9 pIll , Eastern time l
marks h1s fmal offtct al broadc:ast fnr CBS " here he spent 3(}...
odd years
The re's a fascma tum m the ln m•e1satwn - ('O ndensed fr om
a fl ve -hour verba l ramble - beCause th iS man has VISited m
our li\' mg rooms c1 nd " e don t reall&gt; know much about him
There are fe\\ personal revelations m his conversatJOn - the
VIe w er catches a g lunpse of his ' 'acatton home and learns he
has been tempted b~ poh ttcs but restramed b) the common
se n se helea Jned g~o " rng up m Velva NO
He scorns the ne'' JOurnalism. m y; h1ch the r eporte r despatrs By CHARLOTTE COOPER
PROVIDENCE, R I. (UP! )
of obJ ecttvtl) and gtves the reader the truth - the reporter's
A deadly pre-dawn ftre
truth whtch ts not re1ealed Word
today
swept through the top
There· IS a surpnsmg smug ness to Sevaretd when he talks
floor
of a four story
about the need for self-r eliance - not that he IS ~rong, but he
dorm1tory
at Prov1dence
doesr 't seem to realize how much luckter he IS than aU but a
College
killmg
at least seven
very fe" of his countr) men
women
and
m}urmg
15 other
Seva retd descrtbes himse lf as a general JOurna hst ,lo whtch
he defmes as "a sort of Jack-&lt;Jf-all trades and a master of none students
One flfefighler also was
excep t the trade of betng a Jack.of-a ll He's got to kouw a little
about nearly everything Mv hectd 1~ really JUSt a krnd of hurt
Authonttes satd the
medtWll·Stze wastebasket ''
dornutory
blaze that br.oke
Aod he adds "There s qwte a lot of stuff m there but I have
out
shortly
befoce
3 a.m EST
to runmmge around for 1t There s no fthng system "
m
subfreezmg
temperatures
Rrnn magmg around, he pulled out some observat.J.ons worth
may have been caused by
repeat.J.ng For mstance
- 'There are not ah\o a; s tw o stdes to every questiOn Some- faulty Christmas lights or a
hatr dryer
times there's on)J one really -Some have a stde and a half Dozens of students rushed
some have SIX Sides
to
atd ftremen m rescwng
- 'Fame ts a rather preciOUS aod unportant word Celebrity
others
from the women's
tsn t An) bod) can be a celebrlly '
dormttory
ill the college
- If you thmk close ly enoug h about the tdea of blammg
which
has
3,600
students It IS
society, "hatever that ts, for everylhmg-th1s will take you
perenmal
college
nghl over t~e prectptce - because everybody's fault means a
nobody s fau lt Just as everybody's property ts nobody s basketball power and the only
. college m North Amertca
property "
- I look at soc tetl dtfferentlv now The young lend to look at operated by tbe Domrntcan
order of the Roman Catholic
It as architecture, a structure Well le t's tear 1t down and bmld
a ne" one I don' t To me 1t s hke a vast coral r ee f , bu1lt up Church
OfftCials at the college sa1d
over centunes There are billiOns of ltttle passages and safety
two
women students were
chambers all developed out of some need or desire Now you
killed
when !hey jumped
can rechannel and you can enlarge tlus You can renovate and
their
fourth floor
from
repair but )O U ca nnot tear tha t thing down without death
window
at
Aqumas
Hall, as a
e\o eryw here ·
- 'I' m sort of a pess1m1st about tomorrow and an optmust
about th e da) af ter tomorrow "

elevate the talks to
ffillllstertal level
Ben-El! ssar,
d1 nc::tor ·
ge neral of Prune Mtmster
Menahem Begm's offt re, met
tmmedwtely
wtth th e
Egyphans fo r mformal talks
about the agenda for the
confere nce a t the Mena
House hotel where Frankllll
D Roosevelt , Wtnston
Churchill and Chtana, Kat·
She k
held
hiStOriC
conl~r~n ce s m 1943
It was the peace llllllallve
by Prestdent Anwar Sadat
that led hrnt as the first Arab
leader to set fool on Israeli
sotl Nov 19 whtch broke the
barrter of a 3(}.year Mtddle
East war , making the face-to·
face talks a reality The \1Sll

persuadmg Syn an Prestde nt
Hafez Assad to change hts
mmd and attend the Catro
conference He had fatled m
Anunan to get King Hussem
to change his mmd Syna and
Lebanon are the two Dlher
Arab Slates which border on
Israel.
EgypUan pollee m black
umlorms wtth
orange
armbands sealed of! entry to
Mena House, 10 miles from
the heart of Cruro, to all but
official vehicles The sunumt
of the hill on which the
pyramtd of Cheops stands
was barred to tourtsts and all
vehicular traffic
Two
soldiers With rifles slung over
thetr shoulders guarded an
tron bamer across the road .

b) the Israelis was JUst as
Wl precede nted
The Catro talks are bemg
boycotted by Syn ·t, Jordan,
Lebanon and the Palestme
Uberallon Orgamzallon but
th e Umted States, th e Uruted
Nations and the Vattcan have
obsen ers present
It was clear that Sadat's
pohtt cal future hinged on the
outcome of the talks
The U S delegatton led by
Alfr e d Ath e rton ,
undersecretary of state for
the Middle East and South
Asta , arnved shortly alter
the Israehs from Amman m a
borrowed Jordaruan airlmer
At the same tune Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance amved
m Syna from Betrut for the
toughest leg of ht&lt; tour '

Dorm fire kills seven women
hook and ladder compan)
moved m to rescue them The
others dted from burns or
smoke inhalation
One
student, Jackie
Botelho of Bristol, R I , was
dead on arnval at Roger
Willtams Hospital The other
stx. bodies were taken to a
makeshift morgue m the
campus chapel
''Everyone on the groWld
was yellmg to lbem to stay
calm," satd freshman Molly
McSague of Townsend, Mass
"They broke the wmdow wtth
thetr ftsts . They walled until
the ftre was r~ght behind
them, then two Jumped A
hook-and-ladder
truck
rescued the thtrd "
"Seven to 10 glfls were at
the windows screarrung 'Get
us down ' There were not
enough engmes to get them
down Kids from the dorms
helped put up ladders to get
them out and brought
blankets for the gtrls wbo
were
burned,"
satd
sophomore John Colusardo of
Garnson, NY,
Six students were admitted
to Roger Wtlllams and two

were treated and released
Ftve students were admitted
at Rhode Island Hospttal One
woman and a ftreft ghter were
taken to Miriam Hospttal
One student was taken to St
Joseph's Hospttal
'All of us here at
Provtdence College are
heartstck at tins tragedy, '
swd college prestdent the
Rev Thomas R Peterson
He praiSEd students who
helped firemen by haulmg
hoses, moVIng parked cars
and helpmg rmse ladders to
women who stood at upper
wmdows screammg for help
The Rev. Aloystus Begley,
alurruu chaplalll and prtor at
the school, swd Aquinas Hall
wa5 ftreproofed and satd ftre
doors kept the blaze from
spreadmg beyond one corner
of the top floor
OffiCials satd two women
died when they Jumped from
their wmdow as flames
fltckered behtnd them ,
apparently afratd to wrut any
longer for a ladder to arnve
"The students were herotc
Thetr actwn was very , very
pratseworthy The) were JUS!

extremely good 111 what they
did, " Peterson satd
"We 've trted to locate all of
the students Attempts are
now bemg made to contact
the parents of those rnJured
or known to be ktlled,"
Peterson sa1d
He satd tl was dtfftcult to
make a head count of 300
women students who ltved rn
the building because some
~ere not on campus durmg
the ongomg "reading penod"
m
preparatiOn
for
Wednesday's start of fmal
semester exammat1ons
Ofhctals were checkmg
whether the fire was poSSibly
caused by faulty ChriStmas
lighting or a hatr dryer .
One upper corner of the
bmlding was scorched from
smoke slams at top floor
wmdows m a rear corner of
the building

Special elections
hold schools' fate
By ROSEMARY ARMAO
United Presslntemallonal
Spectal elections today and Wednesday wtll dectde
whether 8,874 students in ftve Ohto school dtstncts
rema111 on vacatton until next month
A nwnber of other l1118ncially hard-jlressed dtstrtcts
scheduled electtons thts week to try to ge t enough
money for a full year of operation ml978
A Portage County dtstnct already closed thts fall
made a last-dttch effort today to get money enough to
reopen before Jan 3
The 1,912-&amp;udenl Rootstown Local School Dtstnct
has been m ret-ess smce Nov 28 last month voters
there defeat~d a 7 9 mill emergency three-year levy by
a 61)..40 percent margm They were asked to pass that
same levy
Wednesday , the 1,767-&lt;rtudent James A Garfteld
district , also m Portage County, wtll ask Its voters to
okay a 10 mill levy , ooe month after they voted down by
a 3-2 marg111 both a 7 5 mtll operat111g levy and a 2 5
mill permanent unprovement levy
The 2,400 students of West Muskrngum schools In
Muskingum County haven't been In classes srnce Nov.
2. No other school distnct 111 the state has had to close
lor so long The same voters who downed 5 mtll
operatrng and 3 mill permanent unprovement levtes
last month, wtll be asked Wednesday to approve a 6
null operating levy. Wtlhout 11, West Muskmgum
schools wtll stay shut through the new year
Five Blanchester schools closed down Nov 28 can
reopen for Its 2,130 pupils 11 voters Wednesday okay a
5 3 null operatrng levy Last month a 3 3 null levy was
voted down by a mere 41 votes and officials are
optuntsttc about thet.r chances this tune
The 620 students of Shelby County's Fatrlawn Local
distnct were sent home Dec 2 because a 4 mill
combmed levy fatled m November They wtll stay
home through the new year unless voters approve
added leVles to keep schools open throughout 1978
The Wiltougyby • 'Eastlake board, responstble for
14,000 students, ts asking for approval of a 6 4 mill levy
to rwt for flve years, ra1srng $3 million a year The
Kirtland school board ts asking for a 59 null levy to run
for three years It would rats. about $252,000 a year for
the 1,350-pupil d1stnct
Four Ohio school d1stncts forced by deftctts to close
for the year m early December have decided not to
chance special elections
Representing more than 17,000 students, the
Parkway Local distrtct of Mercer County, Allen
County's Allen East distrtct, Metgs County's Eastern
Local and Hamilton County's Northwest Local won 'I
reopen th1s year
Offtctals m all the dtstrtcts dosed or askmg for
spectalleVles dtd not expect to beneftt from legtslatwn
recently passed to atd strapped school distrtcts The
new law allows borrowmg on the commg year 's
revenues to cover debts owed m a current year ,
But the dtstrtcts closmg down have more than a cash·
flow problem Olflctals say they sunply are not takmg
m enough money

peopletalk

By KENNETII R. CLARK
Unued Press lnlemalional
JUST CHINWAGGING Auntfe Marne and the hrst lady
shared a luncheon Monday m New York, and Marton Tanner the real~tfe model for the famous character created by her
nephe", Patrtck Denms -loved 11 Rosalynn Carter dropped
m on MISS Tanner at the Greenwtch Village rest home where
she now lives Says Mtss Tanner, "We just chmwagged It was
a very pleasant l'Oilversation - like you'd have With any
charmmg luncheon mate She's a charmmg, stmple. forthrtght
"That will be up to the and ratwnmg fuel dllrmg and loveable woman "
Legislature," he saad "We energy emergenctesand caDs
PARTY TIME Whtle Jacqueline Onassts jmned Claudelte
will have some 111pul We'"" for a new overall state energy Colbert and Ronald and Nancy Reagan at the Monday mght
already talked to some of plan
prevtew of a costume exhlb&amp;twn at the Metropolitan Museum,
them (legtslators ) They
Rhodes would not elaborate son John F Kennedy Jr was off on a party of his own He
know where we stand "
on hts obJeCtions, e~cept to showed up at New York Ctty's Tavern on the Green to help
The governor satd he say there were
John Travolta celebrate the opemng of hts latest him,
anttctpates Ohto voters will " com ph cat 1on s and "Saturday Ntght Fever " Meanwhtle, at Studio 54 - the Btg
be asked to approve a duphcatwns" wtthm the Apple's diSco of the celebnttes - Cashton destgner Halston was
conslltuttonal
amendment btU
thro\\rng a party for Btanca Jagger Rock star husband Mtck
penmttmg the state to gtve
Although an emergency Jagger was rnvtted - reportedly for public reconcthatwn m a
extra asststance to school , clause makes the measure marrtage reported on the skids m recent months
distrtcts unable to provtde ' effecttve tmmedtately,
GEORGIE ROSTER Tbe Amen can Gutld of Vartety Arttsls
baste support to theit schools. Rhodes satd tl wtll be next has announced the lineup for Its "Georgte" awards, to be
He said thts will be May before money becomes presented Jan 8 m Las Vegas, Nev Steve Martin and Tolle
necessary because a judge m ava tlable for the coal Ftelds are male and female comedy stars of the year . Top
has research secllon of the bill smgers of the year are Engelbert Humperdmck and Barbra
Hamtlton
County
declared the current state
A new tax wtll be leVled on Stretsand, and honors for best song and dance act go to Shtrley
school atd formula IS the use of coal It will be MacLame Donny and Marte Osmond are the top vocal team,
Wlconstttullonal Rhodes de· - graduated to discourage lin· and Shtelds and Yarnell wm both as top novelty act and as
chned to comment on porlmg low.,;ullur coal from rtsmg stars of the year The best animal act - "Fred tbe
whether be favors appealing other states and to encourage B1rd"
;
that rulmg
the use of OhiO fuel
CARDINAL SANTA CLAUS· Cardtnal Terence Cooke
The governor satd he will
Rhodes satd he hopes that usually has more wetghty matters on his hands than playmg
allow a comprehenstve state by January 1979 four surrogate for Santa Claus, but he turned out to 1111 the role
energy policy btU to become commerctal scale proJects Monday He (Omed New York Ctly's Mayor-elect Ed Koch at
law wtlhoul his signature at removlllg sulfur from coal the Waldorf-Aslona to help dtstnbute gtlts to more than 100
v1a the "fluidtzed bed" children frorwthe ctty's Foundlmg Hospttal
mtdmght tomghl
Rhodes satd he sees techntque will be started In
DEATH VALLEY DAZE· Harold Hanv1e and Cratg Roberts
' certam shortcomings" m Ohto
can clatm a world record, simply because nobody else ever
the btll and 'there's no sense
The governor predicted a thought of crossmg Ca~forma's Death Valley on a trtcycle The
startmg a ftght (With tbe coal mmers' strike will raise 55-year-&lt;Jid Hanvte and Roberts, hts 21-year-old fellow lrtkeLegtslature ) nght before the prtce of coal "every trekker, both of Rtdgecrest, Calif , made the 44 3-mtle crossmg
Chrtstmas "
place" but added there will m 10 hours, 17 mmutes, 28 s~onds They really weren't trytng
Therefore, he said, while be be more natural gas to pedal thetr way tnto a world record The nde across the
ts not approVlng the measure available tn Ohto this wmter desert - the lowest and usually the hottest spot on the
he will not veto It and the new than last
continent- was a pubhctty gtmnuck to stti up some support
law will take effect unRhodes also satd House for the Marme Corps League's annual Chrtstmas Toys for Tots
mediately.
Speaker Vernal G Riffe Jr., drtve
The btll, enacted a month DNew Boston, and Senate
GUMPSES Costars James Coburn, Beatrice Stratght, Jean
ago
by the
General Prestdenl Pro Tempore Sunmons, and newcomer Nancy Addison have wrapped up the
Assembly, creates a new Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron, fllmmg m New York of a CBSTV num..senes based on Dashtell
state Department of Energy showed "great leadership" m Hammett's "The Dam Curse" .. Piamst Steven De Groote,
Rhodes satd he W!U appomt enactmg tax abatement 1977 wmner of the Van Cliburn International Quadrenntal
Robert S Ryan, now the legtslatton for mdustrtes Plano CompetitiOn, made hts Carnegte Hall debut Monday
state's energy chtef operating purchasmg new machmery rught, then was honored at a reception by Cliburn hunself
m the Department of and equtpment
New York Gov Hugh L Carey received the Umted Cerebral
Economic and Commumty
He predicted thelegtslallon Palsy Humanttarian Award Monday nlght at the WaldorfDevelopment, as director of would result m $2 5 billion Astona from Bob Hope, a past rec1p1enl of the c1tatwn . Yale
the new department
worth of mdustnal expansion Uruverstty Provost and Acllng Prestdent Hanna Holborn Gray
The bill also sets forth and 100,000 new JObs "very wtll become the ftrst woman ever to serve as president of the
reqmrements for curta&amp;lmg shortly."
Umverstty of Chicago .

Blue ribbon probe wanted

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Medicine niay help
By Lawrence Lamb, M D.
DEAR DR LAMB -I have
been on a cholesterol·
restncted dtet for about a
year, but my cholesterol IS
sttll 274 and my trtglycertde
counlts 360 I am 70 years old
I am not overwetght
I eat no lunch meats of any
kind, eat only meat "tlh the
fat removed three lo four
times a week non-fat rruik ,
com oil margarine, but to no
avail
I do eat a shce of cheddar
cheem, each mornmg as I
understand a person needs
some cholesterol for the

b!&gt;dy

' A frtend of nune takes
Alromtd.S Do you think 11
would be advtsable for me to
take those capsules also Wllh a doctor 's prescrtpt10n,
of course ?
DEAR READER - In pa·
bents who have followed
fatthlully a good dtetary prC&gt;gram and are not overwetghl,
tits sometunes helpful to use
medicmes to control the
trtglycer~de and cholesterol
levels Medicmes should not
be const dered as a sutiSiltute
for senstble dietary management
Atromtd.S ts one of the
medtcmes that has been used
Ther e are so me new
medJcmes that nave been
marketed 1n recent months
that your doctor may want..to
try also
The body can fonn Its own
cholesterol, even from sugar
if need be You don't need to
eat any foods to provtde some
cholesterol for your body, 11
will make tts own To gtve
you more rnfonnatwn, l am
sendtng you The Health Let·
ter nunnber 1·3, Dtet, Preven·
ling Atherosclerosis Others
who want these diet prtn·
ctpJes can send 50 cents wtth
a long , stamped , se lf·
addressed envelope for 1t to
m · m care of this newspaper,
I u Box 1551, Radio Ctly Sta·
lion, New York , NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB -I have
some quesllons about he
delector tests that I thmk you
could answer

.

of schools by Gov. Rhodes
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov
James A Rhodes satd
Monday he favors a "blue
nbbon" comrruttee of the
Oluo General Assembly to
look mto the management of
Ohto'spubhc school distncts.
The governor told a news
conference he would make
hts vtews known to the
comrruttee but would not
present his own package of
recommendations for solvmg
the school fmancmg problem,
which is likely to occupy the
bulk of the Legislature's tune
early next year
The news conference was
held m oon(unctton wtth the
governor's
annual
hamburger
and
chtll
IWlcheon for the news media
and hts staff
Rhodes satd a cost
accounting exannna'hon of
the schools IS needed, as well
as an exploratiOn of how
many educatiooal programs
are mandated by the state on
local school d1stncts wtthout
accompanymg funds.
" We have to freeze the new
programs and pay for the
ones we have now," he sa1d.
"We can't be continually
expanding programs."
But beyond that, he was
evastve about hiS own tdeas
and what role he wtll play m
sol vmg the problem m 1978

My stster had an elec·
trocardiogram which con·
cerned her doctor, so he had
another test done wtth very
different results
A young man J know lrted
three tunes to get mto the
Navy and couldn 'I pass the
phystcal because his pressure
shot way up Dunng the same
time , he saw h1s own doctor
seve ral t1mes, and hts
pressure was nonnal on all
the VISits
Another young man wan·
tmg to prove his umocence on
a cnmmal matter eagerly
took the he detector test, but
to hts diSIDay the results
came out that he koew about
or was unp~cated m the
crtme The young man did not
commit the crune, but did
have suspiCions as to who did
Would not the he detector
test he took be the same as
the vanable results people
expertence wtth electrocardiograms and blood pressure
readmgs? Many people
become exctled or upset dur·
mg any kmd of test, and I can·
not see how thts stress test
could be very accurate I'd
apprectate your comments
DEAR READER- At best,
11 IS JUS! a laboratory test,
and laboratory tests of all
types can be maccurate for
many reasons The he detec·
tor test depends upon
changes m blood pressure,
THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTEDnl 11!E
heart rate, and a change m
INTEREST OF
electrtcal resiStance m the
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER I... TANNEHILL
skm All of these can and do
E&gt;« Ed
respond to stress
ROBERT HOEFIJCH
The value of the he detector
City Editor
PubWhed dally es:cept Saturday
test depends a great deal on
by The Ohio Valley PubUshing
the expertence of the person - Comp&amp;ny-Multl.medL.a, Inc , 111
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio ~769
who gtves and mlerprets the
BuSmess OffiCe Phone 992- 21~
test A person who IS up-tight
Edilortal Phone 992-2J57
'
Second c lass pootage pa1d at
because he IS confronted for
Pomeroy Ohio
any reason should sfiow this
National advertL5lll~ represen·
ta.Uve Ward
Grifftth Companf,
on the test even when the
In(' Bottmelti and Gallagher Dlv,
operator knows he ts telling
757 Third A11e , New York NY
the truth
10017
Subscrtption raw Delivered by
Knowmg the mflmte
carrier where avt~.Uable 75 cents per
capactty of human bemgs to
week By Motor Route where earner
servtee not availt~.bl~ . One month,
err, I would think any he
$3 ~ By mail m Ohm and W Va ,
detector test results could be
One Year. $22 00, SIX months,
$11 50 ~ Three months, $7 00,
changed and often a second
El&amp;ewhere $26 00 year SIX months
test wtth a second opotmon
'IJ 50, Three months S7 50
from a different operator
Subscription pnce mcludes Sunday
Tim e.Sentinel
may be mdicated
'

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

3- The Datly Sentmel, ~;td dl eport -P omcroy , 0 , Tuesday, Dec

2- The D31h Sentln£'1 :\1uhUt?p.111 · P( IIJl erl) ~. 0. Tucsdo~} . [)pl 13 1977

Judy, Joe and the Ho-Ho-Ho

HA'S A
OJESTION RJR
a&lt; PRCBE .

l'M

by laur and Pastorat
~Rt.',

BUT

THE D&lt;X"Ta&lt;
15N'T lN . •

MOTJ.l~R

5/ll.lS SANTA

IS A I=ANJA5l( .6ND
ISN'T' GCOD Rl&lt;
CHI L[)kl=:N .

1'.3 5ANTA
A FANTA5£.'?

OH, BOY' WHAT
- WILL l TELL
THIS CHILD~

Visitors from
Wellston win
Wellston 's vtsttmg fresh·
men defeated Metgs, 33-27, m
a SEOAL contest Monday
mght Wellston IS now 2·1.
Metgs IS (}.2
For the winners, Jeffers
was htgh wtth 15. Dever and
Kmg each had SIX Cox had
four and Mtchael two For
Metgs, Dave Kennedy had !5,
John Staats etght, Kev Smtih
and Chrts Judge two each
Metgs htt 26 percent from
the fteld, Wellston 48 percent
Next Metgs game IS Thurs·
day, at Jackson .
Score by quarters
Metgs
2 6 8 11-27
Wellston7 12 6 8-33

Lost dog
finds home
650 miles
away
SOU'I'H ELGIN, ill (UPI)
- Waft Dtsney would have
loved this one
Jack Mtllikan blacked out
after an auto acCident on
Interstate BO near L111Coln,
Neb , SIX mooths ago, and hts
lnsh
se tter
Jesse
disappeared
But the loyal pet fmally
found Its way home, after
roamrng for 650 miles
"l knew she'd come back ,"
Millikan satd "I kept tellmg
everybody but nobody
believed me All the tune I
kept saymg, 'Jesse's gomg to
come back. If nobody catches
her, she'll come back"'
Jesse had no address tag on
her collar and she never had
been
anywhere
near
Nebraska . She found Millikan
at his parents' house , where
he had moved only a few
months before the accident m
which the dog was lo!ll.
Millikan thinks she may
have smelled the way to her
South Elgm home
"Thai's what I think," he
satd. "! had a feeling she
knew where she was the
· whole time ''
Millikan said a very thin,
dirty Jesse returned home
last week Her temperament
was similar to that of a
junkyard dog, but she now Is
waggmg her tail a lot, he
S81d.
'

Meigs girls
even record
The Metgs gtrls of Coach
Joy Bentley evened thetr
record to J.l Monday mght
when they defeatl'&lt;l vtsttmg
Alexander 66-48 Meigs ' 29·
po1111 second quarter put the
game on ice wtlh· the hosts
leadtng 46·25 at the halfway
mark
Sentor Glenda Brown had
good outmg as she tossed m 23
pomls whtch wtth ,her 16
reboWlds, led her team m
both departments Metgs had
a total of 39 caroms Transfer
student Vtcky Epple also had
a good mght as she htt double
figures wtlh 19
Coach Bentley was well·
pleased wtlh her team' s
overall performance as they
worked wtth a new defense
and caused the v1s1lors to
tum the ball over maJlY
ltmes.' She also pratsed her
gtrls for a good overall team
effort
Metgs shot a good 39 per·
cent from the held, h•ttmg on
30 of 76 shot s They canned 6
of 9 from the chartty strtpe
Alexander ws led b;

Saylor, Skmner, and Clark
Wllh 13, 12, and 10 pomts,
respectively The Spartans
hit 34 percent from the fteld
and canned 8 of 15 from the
line
The reserve game was low·
so aring , yet ex clttng , as
Andrea Rtggs tossed In a long
one wtth two seconds to go to
gtve Metgs a 13·11 wtn The
reserves are now 2~ Scormg
for Metgs were Rtggs and
Debbte Woodyard wtth four
each, Shart Drehel wtth two,
and April Ktng wtth three
Next Metgs game ts Thurs·
day wh en they enterl a tn
Logan Reserve game tune ts
6pm
By Quarters·
M
17465866
A
9253748
Me1gs
Brown 9·5·23 ,
Burdette 4-0-8, Pat Vaughan
3·lHi, Epple 9·1-19, Wtlson :j;jl6, T Ash 2.{).4, Lightfoot tJ.lHI,
S Ash 1).0.() Total 3lHHl6
Alexander - Saylor 5·3-13,
Clark 5-ll-10, Sktnner 5·2·12,
1~ g htfrttz 2·1 5, Young 1·2-4,
Dean 2.{).4 Total 20-a-48

NBA Stand ings
By Untie-d Press Inte-rna ti ona l

Easter n Confe rence

Ftve league games are
scheduled thts week tn the
£outh ern Valley AthletiC
Co nference Ac ti on beg tn s
tomght wtth Hannan Trace
vt stltn g So uthwes tern a nd
Kyge r Creek gotn g to
Southern
Frtda y ntght, So uthern
plays a t Hannan Trace and
No rth Galha travels to
Symmes Valley In Saturday
outmgs, Southwestern plays
at Kyger Creek m a make--up
contest postponed from last
week and Symmes Valley
goes to Green Twp
Gotn g mto tomght s action,
Southwestern , Southern and

VICKY EPPLE, Eastern High transfer , ts a starter on
th e Me1gs High gtrls basketball team thts season Above
she brmgs the ball upcourt agrunst Alexander Monday
mght Metgs "on tJ6.48

Hannan Trace aU have I-0
r ecords m the lea gue
Southern contmu P~ tfl be

und efeat ed, howeve r, the

Wildcats
rema1n
No. One

Marauders want
first victory

NOW OPEN

GINO'S .
OF MASON .
PHONE 773-5536

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
4-0 Kentucky Wtldcats
mamtamed thetr hold on the
No 1 spot m the Uruted Press
lnternaltonal Board of
Co ats, Brent Stanley and
Coaches' poll, but North
Chuck ~' ollro d
F ollrod
Carolma, a close second last
week , slipped all the way to
spramed h1s ankle m that
ftfth on the basts of the Tar
Chteftam loss, and if he can I
Heels ' startlmg 7&amp;-75 upset
go tonight, Ray Andrews or
loss to Wtlham and Mary
Tom Hawley wtll gel the
Dec 5
starttng nod
In tis place, the 6-0 Notre
Metgs has been exDame Ftghtmg lrtsh, who
ceptionally cold tn shootmg ,
d~feat e d UCLA m Pauley
even from the foul hne Last
4
Pavthon for th e second
week no one htt double
THREE REBOUNDERS - Debby Lightfrttz (34 ) and
stratght
year Saturday, 69-liS,
figures and the team htt was Mtchele Clark ( 30) of Alexander contest the ball wllh
moved
up
from thtrd whtle
27 percent from the fteld
Metgs leadmg scorer tht s year, Glenda Brown ( 12)
UCl,A
slipped
to stxth from
Wellston no longer seems to Monday at Metgs High defeatrng Alexander 61H8 Brown
week's
No
5 spot
last
be the cellar dwellers of the haa 23pomts on nme fteld goals and ftv e free throws
Marquette, 4-U, also moved
SEOAL They beat Jackson
up a notch to No 3 from
for thetr only wm of the
fourth
season but blew a lead last
Arkansas, 6-0, moved mto
week m a thrtllmg 74~ loss
College
the
No 5 spot while lnd1ana
to Athens The Rockets hlt 50 Monday s Spgrts Transilcttons
lndt ana
Slate Na med
percent of lhetr shots wtth By Untted Preu International R tc h a rd Ja m teson head footba ll State moved up to seventh,
coa ch to suc ceed Tom Harp
Ba sketball
swttchmg wtth Cmc tnnatt,
John Martm leadmg the way
Basellilll
N ew Jersey ~ Wa1ve d gua r d
N ew York Yank ees - Sent which dropped to e1ghth
wtth 21 pomts whtle Robbte Btrd Av eni! S1gned gua r d Ed
r g hf handed p 1 t c h e r St a n
Jordan
Lomsvtlle, rated 18th last
Norman htt for 14.
Th omas and an undiSc losed
Hockey
Wellston ts a tall, phystcal
Oetrotf - Recal led forwar d amount of cash to th e Chicago week, burst mto the top ten by
1te Sox far I rst baseman dowmng the n-! !th·ranked
club "'th three starters at R1ck Vasko from K, an sas Ctty Wh
J1m Spenc er tn a m1nor league
(C
HU
Mtch1gan , 88-65, and also
6'3" The other two starters
Sf L OUt S (NHL ) - Ac q ui r ed deal th e Y ankeeS traded r1ght
are 6'2" and 5'11" They have goaltender Ph I M,y re left wt ng hand er Ed R1cks t o th e Whi l e deleatmg Robert Moms 101·
Iowa farm club for n ght
Syrac use
defeated
four starters back from last cen ter Cu rt Benne tt a nd d e Sox
han ded p rtcher Bob Pol 1n Sk t 68
fenseman Barry Gi bbs from
year, Marttn, Swmgle, A tl ant a for forward Bob Mac and outf•elder Tomm y Cru z, Co lgate, 99·50, and also
are
ass1gne d fo ! h e crushed St Bonaventure, 107Gtllllan, and the playmaklng Mdl.!!n , goalie Y11es Belanger who
Yan k ees T acoma f arm c lub
defensem an D1ck Redmond and
guard Royster
81, t.o hold on to the No 10
a dr~ft cho 1ce
Metgs wtll be playmg a
spot
New Y ork Rang er s (NH L l Ca lled up goal te nd er
Doug
College Basketball
San Franetsco, whtch retotal of three games lhts Soetaert
from N ew H aven and
Monday ' s Resutls
week, and a wm lomghl co uld asstgned go al1e Hardy Ast r om
mamed
undefeated at 4.0 but
By Umted Press lnternahonat
Just gtve the Metgs crew the to New Ha ven
had a rough tune downmg
East
Cmc tnnat• {WH Al - Stgned Adel ph i 84 Queens College 7'2.
unranked Califorma&amp;nta
mcenttve It needs to go on a mmor
lea gue left w tng P ~ul
Arm y 96, K tn gs Pt 60
wmmng streak
Stewart to a 10 game tr 1a l
Barbara
m
overtime
Bryant 81 R 1 Coi l 75
Curr y 94 wor c ester St 8 7
Saturday, dropped out of the
Fa 1rf1el d 82 Vermont 67
top ten In the No 11 spot
Gannon 88 Al l 1anc e 09
Geneva 80 Th el 67
Holy Cross, whtch defeated
Hunter 55 Rutger s { Newark ) 48 lona and Yale, moved up
NY T ech 64 M onmouth 58
from 18th to 12th, ProVldence
Penn State 109 Muhl enberg 78
Roger Willi a m s 72 HawthOrn e moved from 17th to 13th by
59
Rutg er S Camd en 72, Ncr tclk 6 4 defeating Wisconsm and
Rutg ers 78 Dav •d son 77
AssumptiOn, and Mtchtgan,
Scranton 79 E Stroudsbu r g 58
now
4-1, dropped from the No
Stena 79 u ot BLi ffa1o 78
11 spot to No 14.
Templ e 80 Btsr: ayne 58
Tufts 75, Cla rk 13
Teams which were shuffled
Urs1 nus 61 , Del a ware Va l 52
back
two spots included No
west mtriSf er 86 P tt Johnstown
75
15 Utah (3-1 ); No 16 Purdue
Yale 83 Fordh am 72
(4·1), No !?Kansas (5-I) and
78 Jeep Cherokee S
South
No 18 Maryland (5·1)
~!it'., 2 Door
Ch 1cago St 80, Morehouse 79
St John's slipped one notch
Colum bus 88 Ga Coli 83
Kent uc ky 84 , Scuth Caro tm a 65 from 18th to No 19, whtle
Lander 71 AuguSi i!Ji 67
New Mextco, whtch lost to
Newberry 106, SC Aiken 104
Southern Cal, 93-lltl, dropped
(O t)
NC A shevtlle 99 Milligan 84
out of the top 201o be replaced
R~dford 5d Roanoke 50
by Vtrgmta
Tenn Martm 72 Lambuth 69
78 Jeep Ptckup
_ '0\
Others recetvmg votes
Midwest
-~,
were
Texas Tech, Detrmt,
Aqumas 48 F err s 51 45
Artzona,
Texas A&amp;M and
Cent Mt ch 103, Gr V alley St
Kansas Stale

Sport transactions

RUGGED·

DURABLE
Holiday

Special

Atlantic D1VIS1on
W l,
P et GB
Phi lad1ph
18 7 720
New York
13 12 520 5
Bu ffalo
11 12 478 6
Boston
8 16 333
91 ,
New Jersey
5 22 185 14
Cenlral DIVI SIOn
W L Pel GB
Wshng tn
15 9 625
Clevelnd
14 10 583 2
San AntOf') l
15 12 556 2 1 1
Atlanta
12 12 500 4
New Or lns
II 15 423
6
~ ous ton
10 15 400 6 1 1
We st ern Conf erenc e
Mtdwesl DIVIS ion
W L Pel GB
Denver
18 8 691
Ch icago
15 9 625 2
M l wa uke
14 14 500 5
lndt ana
10 14 417
7
Oe tr o1 1
9 14 )qJ
71 2
Kan sas C1ty
9 17 346 9
Pa c1 hc Ot v tslon
W L Pet G B
Portland
20 4 833 Phoenu~
14 9 609 5 1 1
Gol den Stt
13 11 520 7 1 1
Los Angels
10 15 400 10 1 1
Seatt le
11 11 393 11
Monday' s Result s
(No games scheduled )
Todav ' s Games
A t l an ta at New Yor k
Seattle at Cl t-llel and
L os Angeles at New Orl ean s
Golden Sta te at Wa sh mgton
Denver a t Ch cago
Ph li adel ph ta at M ll w&amp;uk ee
Buffa lo a t Port la nd
New Jer se y liS Boston at
Hartford
Wednesday ' s Games ,........
Golden Slate a t New Jer sey
A t l anta at Phtladelph la
L os Ang eles at Houston
Chtc ago at San An t on to
Sea tile at Oetro1t
New York at lnd ana
Denver a t Kan sas Ctt y
Buffalo at Phoen tx

Kentucky wins h andilY
0

The Metgs Marauders, sttll
trymg to pick up thetr first
wm of the new season, travel
to Wellston tontght to battle
the much Improved Wellston
Golden Rockets of second·
year coach Rtck Purdue The
Rockets are 1·3 on the )ear
Last week the Marauders
were erased b} the VlSlhng
Logan Chteflams 59,39 After
a promtsmg offensive perronnance m their opemng
loss to Vtnlon County, Metgs
shooters haven't found the
hoop, scormg JUst 69 pornts tn
the last two cant ests
Coach Ron Logan wtll go
wtth mamly the same star·
ters as last week Greg
Beckeer, Kenny Young, Tun

SVAC STANDINGS
SVAC defending champtons
W l P OP
TE.AM
have had lady luck on thetr Southern
2 0 123 11 9
stde wtnntng both games thts Southwestern
2 1 221 194
season by just two potnts
Hannan Tr ace
l 2 197 210
Coa ch Dan Cornell 's Sy mmes Va!ley I 2 185 175
th Gallla
1 3 247 280
Hannan Trace Wtldcats take Nor
Ky g er Creek
0 I SO 56
a J.2 record to So uthwestern Eas t ern
0 3 128 183
where
Coach
Wayne
SVAC ONLY
Bergdoll's Highlanders are 2·
TEAM
W L P OP
I Southern wtll be hostmg Sou t hwe ste r n
1 0 63 6 1
Coach Ketth Carter's Bobcats Sout hern
1 0 61 59
who lost last week to Coal H an n an Trace 1 0 69 62
Kyger Cr eek
0 0 00 po
Grove , 56-50
Nort h Gal l1a
1 I 135 102
North Gallta, coached by Symmes Val ley 0 2 120 124
former Ptrate Ron Twyman, Eas t ern
0 2 84 138
SVAC RESERVES
wtll put tls 1·3 mark on the
W L P OP
hne m Fnday 's game agamst TEAM
Nort h Ga l lla
2 0 95 56
the SyiJU11es Valley Vtkmgs Sou
thern
1 0 64 53
of Coach Ed Hardy SVHS has Symmes V al ley 2 1 1J6 119
0 0 00 00
a 1·2 record but both of tts K yge r Cr eek
losses have been heart· Hannan T race 0 I 23 51
Southwest ern
0 1 30 38
breakers to So uthern and East ern
0 2 58 89
So uthwestern

-~

'

"

78 Jeep Wagoneer

A FULL LINE OF 4-WHEEL DRIVES FOR
ON AND OFF-THE-ROAD ACTIVITIES
At tbe lime of year when moot 4 wheel drive dealers are holding out for high
prices, Riverside AMC.JEEP II helping you hold down lbe cost of ttan·
sportaUon. For the enUre monlb of December Riverside will give

10% OFF
The Price Of Any Jeep Truck, Cherokee, or Wagoneer

C1nc•nnat 1 73 , East ern Ken
tu cky 58
Iowa St ate 82, W1scon s•n 73
Mt
v ernon
Na 1. arene
91
Urbana 79
R10 Gra n de 90 Wel sh 79
Wh eaton 79 North Cent r al 69

NEW YORK (UP I) The
u n , t e d Press lnternattona l
Board of
Coaches ' college
basketba ll ratmgs w1t h won lost
th r oug h gam es of
recon:ts
Sunday Dec ll , and number of
ftrst pla ce votes tn parentheses
Southwest
(Second week)
Ab ilene Chnstn 61 U SAO Ok la
Potnh
Team
14
406
Ok1a
Ctty
104,
Roo se vlt 1 Kentucky (34 ) ( 3 OJ
2 Notre Dame (3) (6 0 )
373
Ch 1c ago 63
319
Houston 133 Southwest ern Untv 3 Marquette (3 ) {4 0)
4 North Carolina (51 )
2\9
98
196
5 Arkansas ( 1) (6 0 )
143
6 UCLA 15 11
West
7 lnd1ana State (I) (6 0 )
116
Ca1 Da v ts 70 Ca l San Otego 66
110
Ca l Nor thndge 73 Texas A&amp;l 8 Cm c nnat1 ( 4 0 )
82
9 lOUtSVt11e (3 1)
61
74
Full erton St 65 U Of W1Scons m 10 Syracuse ( 6 1)
11 San FranC ISCO (4 I )
60
59
12 Hol v Cross (4 0 )
39
Geo Foll: 8'2 W ll ame tt e 72
PI Lom a 102, La Ver ne 75
San t a Clara 68, Ken t ~ ~ 52

Press
By
Umted
International
The Kentucky Wildcats
play ed under a special
burden Monday mght, and
they emerged hke the top·
ranked team they are
"We certainly did not want
to Jose tlus game ," sa1d
Coach Joe Hall after the
Wtldcats topped South
Carolma 64-65 m thetr ftrst
game smce the death of
Hall's predecessor, Adolph
Rupp
Rt ck Robey scored 19
pomts and keyed a scormg
spurt mtdway through the
second half before a capactly
crowd m the arena that bears
the
name
of
Rupp,
Kentucky 's prune basketball
mover
"We talked about 11 before
the game ," satd Hall
• Although none of us
actually played for hun, we
all knew what he meant to
thts program," Robey satd
South Carolina Coach
Frank McGwre admitted 'the
ttmmg of the game dtd not
work m his club 's favor, but
added had hts team stuck to
tis "New York" style of play,
lt mtght have. won
"It 's a ridiculous schedule
we have, but I made 11
myself," McGwre satd "We
play an eastern style of
slowdm\'Tt and you can t freewheel wtth a team hke
Kentucky or they'll kill you "
The Gamecocks, 3-3, stayed
close through the f1rst half
but the Wtldcats , behmd
Robey and Kyle Macy, wbo
scored 18, took a 65-48 lead
wtth 10 14 remammg
'They htt 13 straight free
throws," Hall satd "They
were able to stay wtth us
because of that "
But after htthpg 15-&lt;Jf-16
free throws m the ftrst half,
South Carolma htt only four
of·l2 in the second In
addttion, after htttmg 111-&lt;Jf.\4

Ohto H1gh School
Basketball Results
Unrted Press International
Monday
Badger 54 Brookfield 41
Maplewood 42 Champ1on 27
• Poland 44 Howland 37
L iberty 54 Jackson M11ton 19
Canf i eld 48 Boardman 44
Campbell 72 East Palestme
East

"I Jee~­
RIVERSIDE AMC • JEEP
446-9800

Jeep wrote the book on 4-wheel drive!

L1berly 54 Jackson Milton 19
Maplewood 42 Champton 27
Poland 44 Howland 37
Sy l vania Nor thv 1ew SJ Tol

Cent Cath 30

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

USED CARS

73 OLDS 98 4 DR.
Loaded , like new

'3295
73 CHEV. CAPRICE
4 DR HT
Air c lean

'2095

Karr &amp;VanZandt
Way of Domg Busmess

GMAC FINANCING
992 -5342
Pomeroy
Open Evehmgs 'ttl6 00

TJISpmSal

Damage

Liverpool 45 M1d land

(PaJ11

NHL Standtngs
By Un1ted Ftress Intern altona I
campbell conference
Patnck OtVIStOn
W L T P1s
Phtladelph l
19 A 4
42
NY I slander s
15 6 7
37
Atlanta
9 10 9
27
NY Rang er s
10 14 4
24
Smythe DIVJSton
WLTPts
Van couver
9 12 6
'1 4
o ucago
8 12 8
24
Colorado
6 12 6
18
Mmn esota
6 18 4
16
51 L OU IS
6 19 3
15
Wales Conference
NOrriS DIVISIOn
W L T Pis
Mon t real
19 5 4
42
Los Angel es
13 9 5
31
P ttsburg h
8 14 6
22
Detrot t
9 14 3
21
washmgton
4 19 5
'3
Adams DIVISIOn
W l T Pts
Boston
18 5 5
41
Buffalo
19 6 3
41
Toronto
16 6 3
35
Cleveland
8 17 3
i9
Monday's Result
t-J'Iontreal 5 Clevel and 1
Tuesday ' s Games
Chtca g o at NY I slanders
Wash1ng ton at Vancouv er
Buffa lo at Colorado
Wednesday's Games
NY Rangers at Cht cago
NY Islanders at Toron t o
Montreat at Mmnesota
P tttsburg h at Sf LOUtS

You'll LtkJ Our Quality

23
•

Badger 54 Brookf1eld 41
Campbell 72 East Palest1ne

23
Ca nf ie ld 48 Boardman 44
East L •verpoo l 45 Mtdland

13 Prov tdence ( 50)

36

14 M1ch1gan ( 4 1)

25
Utah {3 I)
IS
Purdu e (4 1)
14
l(.ansas (5 1)
13
Mar yl and (5 1)
12
Sl JOhn 'S (5 1)
8
20 V rg.n1a (50 )
1
Oth ers recetv ng votes Texas
Tech Det ro 1t Anzona Texa s
A&amp;M an d Kansa s Stat e
Nc t e By agreement w tth the
Am er. cpn Ba ske-tba l l Coa ches
Assocl a ttcn t eams on probatton
by th e NCAA ar e •n e11g1b1 e for
top 20 and n a hcnal champton
shtp constderat10n by t he UP!
Board ot Coaches Those team s
currently on probat 1on for 1971
are C en t en a r y Clemson
Hawa11 , Mtnn esota Nevada L as
Vegas Western Caroltna
15
16
17
18
19

. ..............

WHA Sland1ngs
By Un1ted Pres s International
W L T Pts
New E n g land
18
6 3
39
Queb ec
16 10 1
33
w1nn 1peg
1d 12 1
29
Edmonton
12 13 1
25
Houston
11 12 I
23
tnd1 a napol •s
q 15 3
21
Cm c ,nnat l
10 15 0
20
Btrm1n gha m
8 15 2
18
Monda v's Gam es
{ No ga m es scheduled )
Today ' s Games
B1rm1ngha n't at Hous ton
C zechoslo\lakta at W mntpeg
Wednesday 's Games
l n dtanapoi iS al C1 ncmnah
Sov tet
A \1 Stars
at
New
Engl and
C ze c hos l ov a ~ ~ a at Ed mon ton

shots from the fteld m the
second half, the Gamecocks
cooled off and converted only
IZ-&lt;11-23
Jack Gtv ens scored 18
pomts for Kentucky while
reserve James Lee added 10
In other games, Cincmnatt
topped Eastern Kentucky 7358, Rutgers edged Davtdson
7&amp;-77 and Detroit mpped St
Bonaventure !J4..92
Crncmnatt came back from
a seven.pomt deftcil late m
the first half to extend the
nahan's longest home-eourt
wmnmg streak to 65 games
Eastern
scored
II
consecuttve pomts on the
scormg of Juruors Kenny
Ellwtt and Vtc Merchant and
semor Mtke Oliver to earn a
33-32 lead at the half
Revertmg to run-and-shoot
basketball, Cmcumatt drew
away to an ll!iX&gt;tnl lead, 7(}.
52, Wllh Steve Collter ptcldng
up etght of hts 12 pomts, Bob
M1ller stx of hts 10 and Pat
Cummmgs etght of his 16.
Cmcrnnatt guard Eddte Lee
and Eastern forward Lovell
Jomer tted Cummmgs for
game·lugh honors at 16 pomts
each.
Center James Bailey hll a
free throw wtth stx seconds
left m the game to gtve
Rutgers a hard-fought
victory Wtldcats ' JUmor
guard John Gerdy htt llk&gt;f-25
fteld goal attempts and mne·
of-10 from the foullme for 41
pomls
Bailey led Rutgers wtth 23
and semor forward HoUts
Copeland chipped m Wtlh IB
as the Scarlet won their
fourth game m five outmgs
In other games, 1t was
Fatrfield 82, Vermont 67,
Stena 79, Unlverstty of
Buffalo 78, Yale 83, Fordham
72; Mtddle Tennessee 61,
Mtsstsstppt 33, Iowa State 82,
Wtsconsm 73 and Fullerton
St . 65, Umverstty of
Wlsconsm 59
I Pal \1

G1rls

MEIGS INN
PIZZA SHACI&lt;

··7e

Gallipolis, Ohio
In
1975,
Australia's
conservallves defeated the
Ltberal Party , 10 an
overwhelmmg swmg to the
rtght
~
•

uamesl:Standmgs
Pr~ !
TwoSVAC e'
\
slated tonight

Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN
Tues., Wed., Thurs., 4:00-11:00
Fri. and Sat., 4:00-1:00

t

Sunday 4:00-11:00

~

PHONE 992-6304

~

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~

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,

•\\

�4 - The Daily St&gt;nu nel. Middleuort-P omefO), 0., Tuesdll)'. 0..•&lt;'. 13. 1977

Rio Redmen top Cavs
90-79 in MOC opener
After a OIJ&gt;'ano-t uck oatue
during the first 12 minutes of
title on a successful note play , Ironton's Dean Fitzl'rlonda y ngiht by t Wllin g pa tric k p ut the Redmen
back visiting Wa lsh College . ahead 26-25 on a " stuff" with
90-79 .
8:10 left in the half. Rio was
Coach Art Lanham's crew, never headrd .
Leading by one point , 29-28,
now &gt;-1 overall, had si •
players in double figures in with 5:46 left in the first ha lf.
scoring. led by Gil Price's 2:l Don Gibson and Da n Bise
points.
came off th~ bench to spark
Dale Royse added 13, Ma rk the Redmen to a ~3-34 halfSwain 12, and pan Bise ll . tint&lt; lead .
Greg James and Don Gi bson
During th at four minute
ea ch had 10.
span just before halft inJe. Rio
Craig Luther was the big outseor ed the vi sito rs 11 -0 · as
gun for the Cavs with 20 Bise blocked t wo Cav shots
points. J oe F eesler and Ed and Gibson hit Bise with
Ungashick each had 10. Lon three beautiful passes for
Moo re popped in 11 ma rker s. layups .
Rio Grande opened defense
of its Mid-Ohio Conference

,•.. .

Rio maintained a !()·point
spread until Greg J ames
inj ured an a nkle with 9:50
left . The Cavs rallied from a
66-50 deficit to cut Rio's lead
to four, 66-62, with 7:09
remalfling . At this point,
Coach Lanham called lime
and the R&lt;.'d men went into a
w ne defense. Rio, behind Gil
Pr ice, Mar k Swain and Dale
Royse . increased its· lead to
7~ wit h 2: 41 remaining.

Rio's

next

game

is

Sat urda y a t Whee ling,
sta rting at 9 p.m. The game
was ori g in a ll y sc.heduled
f r iday night .
·
Walsh .dropped t o 2-6
overall and 0-1 in league play.

Bengals
plan for
playoffs

Today is the kick'{Ill date of Patrol's Galli a-Meigs Patrol
recr uitment efforts for Ohio Post, announced the opening
St a t e
Hi ghway
Pat ro l · .of recruitment for Patrol
Troopers.
Academy classes to be
Lt. Ernie Wigglesworth , conducted duri ng 1978. He
commander of the Highw ay

lost to Dallas, eve n though his
club dipped to &gt;-8 and lost
what chance it had to finish at
.!'&gt;00. The 49ers wind up the
season Sunday , against the
Packers in Green Bay,
Staubac h threw scoring
passes of 36 yards to Preston
Pearson, 20 to. Tony Dorsett
and 22 to Butch J ohnson,
P l unkett
got
whil e
touchdowns on throws of 10 to

FOOTBALL
M iam i ,
i Ba lt imor e
~ e w Eng la nd
N Y Jets
BUffal o

· P ittsou rg h
Cinci nnati
Hou ston
Clev ela nd
x -Den ver
Oakland
San Diego
Seattle
Kensa s C1 ty

National Conference
East
. W. L· T. Pd .
x -Dalla s
11 2 0 .846
Wash ington
a 5 0 .615
St Louis
7 6 0 . .538
NY Giants
5 B 0 .385
Ph ilad elph ia
4 9 o .308
Central
W. L . T. Pet .
8 5 0 .615
M innesota
8 5 0 .615
Chi cago
6 7 0 .462
Detroit
3 10 0 .231
Green Bay
1 17 0 .077
Tampa Ba y
Wes1
W. L - T. Pet .
X·LOS Ang el s
10 3 0
.7 69
At lanta
6 7 0 .-462·
5 8 0 .385
San Fra ncisc
New Or lea ns
J 10 0 .231
x -clinched division t it le
Monday's Game
Da llas 42 , San Fr~ncisco J5
Saturday 's Games
Lo s Angeles at Was hington
Buffa lo at Miami
1'/linnesota at Detroit, night
Sunday's Games
Chicago at NY Giants
Ci ncinna ti at Houston
Cleveland at Seattl e
Denv er at Dallas
Kansas Ci ty at Oakla nd
N,ew England at Ba ltimore
New Orleans &lt;!t Atlanta
NY Jets at Philadelphia
Pittsburgh at San Diego
St . Louis at Ta mp ~ Bay
San Fran ci sco vs . Green Bay
at Milwaukee

asked all young men and
women interested in pursuing
a career as Troope rs to call at
their nea rest post for further
information.
" The position of Ohio State
Hig hwa y P atrol Trooper
offers applicants the chance
of a challeng ing career ," Lt.
W igg l es w or th
said .
" Troo pe rs are frequently
called upon to take charge of
va rious, oft e n emergency
situations. F or this reason
they a re thor oughly trained
to handl e people and
situations calmly, efficiently ,
and diplomatically."
Applicants for the position
of Trooper must meet the
following qualifications : 21-30
years of a ge ; a minimum
height of 5'8" (measured in
st oc k ing feet) with body
we ight proportional to
height ; have a valid driver's
licen se; must ha ve graduated
from high school or be able to
show satisfactory completion
of .t he G.E .D. or equivalent.
Starting
salary
for
Troopers is $ll ,o44 per year •
with maximum potential ,
through yearly increases, of
$14,040 annuall y. Benefits
include paid holidays, •
vacation, and sick leavei •a ,
comprehensive
retirement ,
and pension plan , and group
medica l, surgica l, and life
insurance program .
" The Ohio State HighwaJio
Patrol needs sincere younlt
people who are interested in;
developing a solid, secure
flllure In law enforcement,''
Lt. Wigglesworth said. "Men
and women who wish to apply
for the position of Trooper are
ask&lt;.'d to call their local patrol
post immediately . The
deadline date for accepting
applications is January 27,
1978."
The Gallia-Meigs Patrol
Post is located at 422 Jackson
Pike, State Highway Garage,
Gallipolis. Call Lt. Wigglesworth at 446-2433 or 992-2397
for furth er infonnation. All
an equal opportunity em·
ployer any qualified resident
of Ohio may apply .

CINCI NN ATI ( UP l ) - The
Cincinna ti Bengals have op•
In last night's preliminary
limistically put tickets on
contest. the Rio Redwomen
saie for a possible American
do'oln &lt;.'d Salem College , 8Hi7.
f oo tb a ll Co nf e r e n ce
Deb Lee had 18 and Kim
champion sh ip gam e at
Ramsey 16 for Rio Grande.
Riverfront Stadium on Jan . I.
U the Ben gals win their
Monday ' s box :
WALSH (79) - Moore 5·1
Cadets received 280 hours
final r egular season game
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
11; Ungash lck 1·8 10 : Lut her Sunday at Houston , they will P epartment of Natura l of instruction on Ohio law a nd
6 -8 -20 ,
' Fees l e r
4-2 -10 ;
play a first roWld playoff Resourc es (ODNR) con- law enforcement in addition
Koun o uz v etis
3-0-6 ;
Pri demore 1 0-2, Charney 2-2·
game a t Denver on Dec. 24. ducted graduation exercises to 78 hours of specialized
6; Sieg le 0-0-0 ; Smi th 4-0-8 ;
Should the Bengals win that last week in Columbus for 19 training in la ws governing
Sa bulski 2-2 6. TOTALS 18-lJ. game, and should the AF'C state park rangers and 24 th e use use of Ohi o's
79.
wild card Oakland Raiders watercraft officers who have waterways and stale pa rks.
RIO GRANDE ( 90) Each park ranger graduate
James 5-0-l O; Swa in 5-'2 -12 ,
win their first playoff game completed law enforcement
Price 8-7-13; Royse 5-3- 13;
Dec . 24, then the AF C training at ODNR's Zaleski is assigned to one of Ohio's 65
Bise J-5-11 ; Fi tzpatric k 3-2-8;
championship game would be Ranger Academy in Vinton state pa rks . Th e ne w
Gi bson 3-4-10 ; Phel p s 1-1-3 ;
watercraft officers will serve
Johnson 0-0-0. TOTALS ll-24- played in Cincinnati on New County .
90.
.
,.,, The 10-week training an apprenticeshi p a t one of
Year's Day .
Halttime score - Rio 43
However, all of those things CQurse included instruction in the stat e' s six distri ct
Wal sh 34 .
must happen !n order for the search and seizure, police watercraft offices.- All new
AFC cha~pwnsh~p to be ethics, report writing, laws of employees with ODNR will
played
m
Cmcmnat1. arrest, traffic control , fir st ·: serve a 120-da y probationary
Altho.ugh the Be~als have aid and the handling of period.
been Ln three previOUS playoff firearms .
games, !her~ never has been
.a playoff game in Cincinnati.
Bengals ' officials said
Ken Harrison, Zl to Gene
tickets, costing $15 .25 each
Washington, l t o Delvin
(the price is established by
Williams and 47 to Paul Seal.
Dorsett ran 21 yards for
the NFL ), are available at
another touchdown and window No . 9 at Riverfront
Pearson got his second score Stadium. Tickets also my be
on a 3-yard run. Staubac.h · ordered by mail, with an
accounted for the sixth Dallas enclosed remittance payable
COLUMBUS - A Toledo River on Oct. 13, recorded a
to the Cincinnati Bengals and man is awaiting ~ertification feat neve r before ac.TD on a !-yard smash .
The Cowboys scored 21 addressed to Bengals Ticket of two state record fish he complished in . Ohio.
points in the second half to Office, Riverfront Stadium, caught on the same day in
Within hours of each other,
take the lead and they never Cincinnati , Ohio, 45202.
he
landed a 12-pound, 4-(Jwtce
virtually the same spot,
Bengals' officials said if the according to the Division of coho salmon measuring 32
trailed , although the 49ers
kept coming back on game is not played in Cincin- Wildlife of the Ohio Depart- inches long , and a 31 -pound.
Plunkett 's finest passing nati, ticket holders can get a ment of Natural Resources 9'{)unce chinook saimon 44
performance of the year - a refWtd by presenting their (ODNR).
inches long .
!&gt;-completion effort which tickets at any Central Trust
According t o hi s entry
Harold Hale Jr., fishing at
accounted for 263 yards .
Cc. office .
the mouth of the Cha~rin fom1s submitting each fish in
the " Fish Ohio " Contest
sponsored by ODNR , Hale
used an artificial minnow
lure on a spinning rod and
. Monday's
Ohio College
reel with S-pound test line to
Basketball Results
land both fish.
United Press International
The previous state record
Cincinnatt 7,3 Eastern Ken coho
salmon was taken from
tucky 58
Western lllihois 83 Akron 77 the Chagrin River by UnCINCINN A'l'I ( UPI) - He
The lanky, S-6, 210 pound Cumberland ( Ky) 82 Central
wood \'&lt;loneymaker 9f Mentor
says the only four-letter word native ol Villa' Park, C,alif ., St 81
9t
in
October 1974. It weighed 10
he uses is "Yale, " he said he had been surprised to Mt . Vernon Nazarene
pounds,
15 oun ces and
Urbana
79
apologies to reporters when read that Steelers' defensive
Rio
Grande
90
Walsh
79
measured
31
inches long .
he catches himself saying the back Mel Blount had kind
11
The
previous
chinook
word "aln 't" ( 1 don't want things to !!llY about him
of
26
1l!
pounds,
salmon
record
my mother to see me quoted coming into the game.
391':.
inches
iong
was
and
as saying it") and he is
"I've had 10 catches in
DEATH
.
taken
in
Octoher
1972
in
the
Syracuse 1 0 .
STABBING
992 -5776
working toward his Ph .D. in three
years,"
laughed
WILLOUGHBY,
Ohio
Chagrin
River
at
Dani
~s
French literature . .
Mclnally, who sometimes
Now open for the season
(UPI). - Charles T. Combs, Park by Jim Siggers of
He is Pat Mcln~lly, seems to "plod" rather than
Choose from over 15,000
Harvard University's gilt to "run" patterns. "We have an 44, Willoughby, was st?bbed Warrensville Heights ..
PoinseHias
7Sc to SIO.OO
Hale's record catches will
Foliage Pia nts 7Sc to S12.00
the Cincinnati Bengals, and Olympic speed team here to death Monday durLng a
Hanging Baskets
S1.25 to
although he has a lot of with our recivers and then domestic squabble· at his remain unofficial unlll
,
said,
adding
certified
by
the
Rkord
Fish
home,
police
$4.50
interests in life , right now there's me, the anchor ."
be's mainly concerned .with
Just as tQe )lengals had to that the.vtctim ~wife,. Jo, 43, Committee of the Outdoor
()pen Daily9tilS
helping Cincy reach th e. beat Pittsburgh to avoid was charged wtth voluntary Writers of Ohio
Sundays 1 Ill~
manslaughter - a first·
playoffs.
elimination from the playoff degree felony .
"I know this sounds chase , they also bave to win
corny," he says " but we've at Houston next Sunday.
got a lot ol character now ."
The Bengals edged the
MclnaUy, the team's Oilers 13-10 in overtime in Houston, I just don 't ihink
regular punter who is Cincinnati earlier this year . they will make it past the first
becoming nearly as good as
The Steelers will get' the round of the playoffs."
his hero in that department, playoff nod should Cincy lose
Cincinnati never has
&lt;l
Oakland's Ray Guy, alsd and Pittsburgh's John Stall- before .
proved
a
capable worth noted, "Houston
The Bengals made the
replacement for the alling certainly can beat Cincinnati, playoffs in 1970, '73 a nd '75,
Isaac CUrtis at wide receiver but Cincinnati has the but lost first round games
this past weekend against the incentive .''
every time. However, Uley
Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30 til 5:00
Pittsburgh Steelers.
Said the Steelers' Dwight have been doing better each
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
Mac made a lunging catch White , "I'd like to think . time. In '70 it was a 17-0
of Kenny Anderson's 43cyard Houston is capable of beating shoutout:lo'!S to Baltimore, in
pass late in the third ,q uarter Cincinnati anytim:e."
'13 a 34-18 defeat to Miami
for
the
game•winning
But then White stung the and in '75 a tense 31-28
touchdown in Cincy's "do or Bengalsa little, "If they beat squeaker to Oakland.
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va .
773-5592
die" 17-10 win.
"They're a great team/'
Mc!naUy said of Pittsburgh,
"but we're just. 1coming into
our own. We've gbt character
now. You have to have it to
win a game like that."

Rangers, watercraft

officers are graduated

Cowboys outlast 49ers, 42-35
have, considering these were
By JOE SARGIS
two
pretty good defensive
UPI Spons Writer
teams.''
· SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) Landry wasn 't upset his
f or get the s cor e . Tom
team
gave up 35 points. He
Landry got what he wanted .
The Dalla s coach was a . was tickled to death, though ,
littlf concerned about his with the 42 the Cowboys
team 's
o ff ense , whi c h scor ed.
" Our
off ense
was
generated only 38 points the
last two weeks in victories exceUent ," he said . "It 's the
over
Wa s hington
a nd best offense we 've had in
some time . Of course, the
Ph iladeiphia . · .
defense
wasn't too good , but
So when the playoff -boWld
I'm
not
upset..' '
Cowboys carne out to play
The
Cowboys
locked up the
Monday night against the San
NFC
East
title
and
the home
Francisco 49ers, Landry was
in
the
first
roWtd of
field
edge
hoping for an offensive
NFC
playoffs
by
beating
the
show.
He got it, and then some, as the Eagles a week ago. The
Roger Staubach completed l4 victory over San Francisco
passes for 220 yards and three gave them the home field
the
NFC
for
touchdowns in a wild 42-35 edg e
victory over San Francisco. championship game as well ,
While Staubach was having should the club get that far.
Of course, the only thing on
his best game of the season,
the
Cowboys' mind these
so was Jim PIWtkett for the
days
is the playoffs, evea
49ets. Between them, the two
though
they have one more
veteran quarterbacks threw
regularseason
game left to
seven , count them, seven
play
Sunday
at home
touchdown passes in what
amounted to a no-defense against the AFC West
champion Denver Broncos,
game.
" U someone would have the team they could possibly
said there would be 77 points meet again later in the Super
scored in this game," said Bowl.
" We wanted to get some
49er Coach Ken Meyer, "I
wouldn't have believed him. I momentum going for · the
don't think anyone would playoffs," said Landry . "This
game
(against
San
Francisco ) helpS.
I'm
Gregg exp"ected
pleased more than I can say
because we scored 42 points
to' step down
against a pretty good
CLEVELAi&lt;D (UP! )
defensive team."
Head coach Forrest Gregg of
Landry did not know it for a
the Cleveland Browns will fact but the 42 points was the
resign, possibly as early as most scored against the 49ers
Tuesday, and likely will be since the middle of the 1969
replaced
by
Dick season, a !;pan covering 121
Modzelweski, the club ' s games .
defensive coordinator, for the
"We expected a tough
final game of the season game
against
San
Sunday in Seattle against the Francisco," Landry said. "I
Seahawks, it was reported . don't care what their record
The Browns originally had is , the 49ers have been
planned to make the playing excellent football the
announcement after the last six weeks."
Seattle game, ac~ording to
That may be an exaggeraThe Cleveland Plain Dealer tion . A week ago, San
in its Tuesday editions, Francisco blew a 24-0 lead to
adding that Gregg had Minnesota and lost 28-ZI. The
considered quitting severa l week before that , the 49ers
weeks ago. That was after struggled to beat New
owner Art Modell lashed out Orleans following a ragged
at the way the club was 23-10 loss to the NFC West
champion Los Angeles Rams.
playing .
No matter, because Meyer
Gregg and Modell could not
wasri 't that upset the 49ers
be reached for comment.

Chagrin River gives up
,

big salmon catches

Mclnally says Bengals
'coming into our own'

Groundbreaking is Thursday

Patrol .wants recruits

'. •

RIO GRANDE - Groundbreaking for the $1.8 miUion
Technical Careers Center at
Ri o Grande College and
Communit y College
is
scheduled for Thursday ,
December 14, 10 a .m ., on the
building's site below Lyne
Center.
Plann&lt;.'d for completion a
year from now, it wiU be the
first new· building constructed on the Rio campus
since Lyne Center was
opened in 1970, and the first
building constructed by Rio
Grande Community College.
The Center will house
facilities for the Community
College technical programs
and, though owned by the
Community College, wUI be
leased back to Rio Grande
College lor operation.
More than 10 two-year
programs will use the Center.
The 35,000 square foot
building will provide classroom and laboratory space
for account.ing, secretarial

•

..
"!.h.__ _..
MISTER BASS 1977 - Jack Stanley, left, Saturday night was presented a plaque and
the traveling trophy for having caught the largest poWtdage o~ fish during tournaments last
season sponsored by the Big Bend Bass Anglers Club . Makmg the presentation was. B1ll
Grueser during the club's annual dinner at its new club house located on West Shade R1ver .
afterwards.
The governor was asked at
a news conference Monday if
"something" to encourage he has changed his mind now
industrial development .
that the Legislature has
In June 1976, Rllodes got off
enacted his proposal to
one of the most memorable
reduce industrial t ..es on
lines of any of his past new
and
replacement
spe ec~es when he told the
equlpment and machinery .
leg islators, mainly majority'
" Yes," replied Rhodes with
Democrats, they had done a smile . nThey 've done some~
"nothing" to help promote thing ." He added that
industrial growth and jobs.
majority Democrats showed
"Don't go back to your ~ i great
leadershi-p"
in
districts and say you've done adopting the tax reduction
everything you can," Rhodes
bill.
scolded the lawmakers in his
" State of the State '' message .
" You've done nothing .''
Democratic legislative
NO CLASS SET
leaders reacted angrily and
Gloria Wallace announced
co ntinued to feud with that there would be no baton
Rhodes for six months or gymnastics this evening.

Leadership wins Rhodes' nod
COLUMBUS~UPI ) - After
18 months, Gov . James A.
Rhodes has credited the Ohio
General Assembly with doinR

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

HUIIBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Pla~s

science, electronics, medical available for several new
laboratory and mmm g
programs which are already
in existence at R io Grande. In
addition, s pa ce will be

New coordinator with
·Meigs Senior Friends
'

By Wilma Sargeot
This past month the Senior
Friends were assigned a new
coordinator, Jan No rthup .
Since the first of St&gt;ptember
after the resignation of
Kathie Filsinger we have
continued to function under
the supervision of our ef·
ficient
and
pleasant
secretary, Pam Riffle. The
Senior Frienda want to thank
Pam for all the overtime she
has worked in order to keep
u.s going.
At the geriatric center at
the Athens Mental Health and
Retardation Center we have
continued with individual
visitatin of patients, crafts,
working,
taking
wood
patients on shopping tours,
reading, and assisting in
feeding patients.
At Arcadia Nursing home
in Coolville, In addition to
visitations and crafts, we
have assist&lt;.'d in completing
Christmas card baskets and
two large wreaths. Angels
are now being made to he
used in the decorations on
their dining room tables.
Also, a handmade bowling
alley has been added for the
men's activities with their
bean bag, marbles and horseshoe games . The Senior
Friends thank everyone who
contributed Christmas cards
to Arcadia Nursin~ Hnme.

made

Plans have been completed
for the open church w&lt;.'dding
of Miss Sandra Neigler,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R.
E. Eblin, Pomeroy, and Benny Wright, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Pomeroy.
The w&lt;.'dding will he an
event of Sunday, Dec. 18 at
2:30 p.m . at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
Music by Mrs. Darla Hawley,
church pianist, will begin at 2
p.m. An open reception
following the ceremony will
be l)eld in the church
fellowship room.

AU MEAT

MINUTE
STEAK

I

'

't

CANDY CENTER

40
Different Kinds of Candy
and Nuts Of All Kinds

ORANGES-GRAPEFRUIT
TANGELOES-GRAPESTANGERINES-BANANAS
ALSO
Can Order Now For

.

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FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

HOMO . .
IJz Gallon
MILK ....•....•.•....•.......•......•

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FAT MILK ................... ~.... .
BROUGHTON'S

FRESH &amp;
LEAN ·

GROUND
ROUND

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8-16 oz.

79~
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bottles

DR.
PEPPER ... 89t

49~

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PAPER TOWELS............. ~2~ ••

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FAVORITE

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SNYDERS

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4 QUARTS

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ICE CREAM SANDWICH ....................~:~•• 694:
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BROUGHTON'S

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CHUCK

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BROUGHTON'S

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DAIRY SPECIALS

79t. conAGE

HOMEMADE

.

I

The number of home
contacts have continued to
grow which indicates l)ow
appreciated this program has
become. Senior friend 's
duties are many and varied
such as visitation, shopping,
doctors appointments .and
other errands for seni or
citizens living alone. Also ,
probably one of the most
improved aspects of the
program is the fact the
contact realizes they have a
friend who ·really cares for
them.
A new project has been
added to our program
whereby visitations and
crafts are being sta)'ted at the
Pine Crest Nursing Home in
Gallipolis on a weekly basis .
Pine Crest is a beautiful new
nursing home and has an
efficient and conscientious
staff to make life for the
patients as pleasant and
happy as poSsible. This is a
challenging undertaking for
us as the nursing home has
just opened and we hope to be
able to use the valuable experience · and traiJting we
happily acquired during the
past year.
With the cpming holiday
season the Senior Friends
wish everyone a Merry
Christmas and a Happy New
Year .

NO WASTE

Lakers' Washington nailed
with suspension, big fine
NEW YORK (UPI ) - NBA
at least 26 games. He will not
be paid and is prohibited
Commissioner Larry O'Brien
from taking part in any team
levied one of the stillest
action.
penalties In sports history
Monday, fining Kermit
Tomjanovich, who had
Washington $10,000 and
been trying to break up a
fight . between Washington
suspending the Los Angeles
Lakers' forward for at least
and Houston's Kevin KulUlert
60 days for punching
when he was struck,
Houston's Rudy Tomjanovic.h
remained In intensive care at
&lt;· Centralia
Hospital
in
last week.
The suspension is the
Ingelwood, Calif., with a
broken jaw and nose plus a
longest ever in NBA history
concussion .
and the fine is the m""imum
permissable under league
·"The stringent penalty refleets the severity of
rules. Washington may apply
Washington's actions on the
for readmission at the end of
court," O'Brien said. " A
the 60-day period but the
suspension could be extended
careful review of two· video
tapes of the game, reports
for the rest of the season.
The action continued the
from officials and statements
strict policy against violence
from witnesses persuaded me
to take this action."
set this year by O'Brien, who
earlier in the season fined
Tomjanovich, trying to act
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar, also
as a peacemaker between
of Los Angeles, $5,000' for
Washington and Kunnert, ran
punching Milwaukee Bucks'
toward the fight with a group
rookie Kent Benson.
of players when Washington
suddenly turned and sent him
Neither the Lakers nor
Washington
had
any
crashing to the floor with a
right
hand
punch.
immediate comment Monday
night. After learning of his Tomjanovic.h was bleeding
suspension, Washington .]eft
friirri the nose and lip and had
New Orleans, where the _to be helped from the court.
The split lip required nine
Lakers had a game Tuesday
night against the Jazz, and ' stitches.
· Washington was ejected
retW1led to Los Angel~s .
Washington, a powerful &amp;- from the game.
foot-a, 230-pounder, will miss
"I saw him comin~ and I

technologies.
enforcement
Acco rdi ng t o P a ul C.
Hayes, Rio Grande president ,
the Center is the fir st of three
buildings to be added to the
campus in the next two years.
A fine a rts a nd performing
center , also to be built by the
Communit y Co llege is

programs currently unaer
d ev elopm en t i n cl ud in g
ma nufacturing , automotive,
diesel, food service a nd law

planned for construction next
spring, and a student center
is planned lor 1979-l!O.'
Thursday · m orning ' s
pr ~gram will include a
welcome by Dr. Hayes and
r ema rk s
from
E inon
Plumm er, cha irman , Rio
Grande Community College
Board of Trustees; and Dr.
B r a nd e be rr y,
Ke ith
e xe c utive
co mmit te e
chairman , Ri o Gra nde
College Board of Trustees.

REG. 1.59

$·129

POTATO CHIPS .......................-•••••• ~~ ••••••••

We

�•

Wiki;;;;;rc;;J;·~'""ctub
gathers for turkey dinner
.

Members of the' Wrldwood and Santa made a \'tsit to
Garden Club had a turkt''' distn bute gifts. The club
dinner at the Meigs 1~1 presented a gift to Mrs .
\VC'dnrsday night alld tht·u Doroth)" Snuth, president ,
went to the homr or Mrs . Car· who then presented each
n~: Grueser for H partr cmd IIimnber with a small gift.
grft exchange.
Mrs. Mary Nease had the
~I rs .

arrangement of the month
Hilda Yea uger had grace. which consisted of holl )'. red
At the holiday dumer,

The Grueser home was exten-

&lt;.'andles, a Santa f igur ine,

and Mrs. Hollon received the
reserve best of show in artistic design.
Fruit baskets will bf
prepared and delivered to
sbutins by Mrs. Virginia
Fisher, Mrs. Ada Holter , and
Mrs. Kathryn Miller.
Mrs. Grueser served cake
and coffee and presented

each member with a ceramic

- sively decora ted for the pa rty pine cones, all on a long

Santa sh_oe filled with candy.

styrofoam base. She received

a blue ribbcn.
The Christmas nower show

N&amp;N OPEN

was discussed and it was

GINO'S

Spring Ave., Pomeroy, are

Susie Grueser , Mrs. Smith,
and Mrs. Carrie Grueser
reeeived ribbons for their ar-

OF MASON
PHONE

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mh. Jack Hagg)',

noted that Mrs. Ada Holter.
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon. Mrs.

77~5536

announcing the birth of a nine
pound, five ounce daughter,
Alicia Mae, on Nov. 17 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mrs. Eula
Mae Haggy, Spring Ave .,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Neece , Route I,
Middleport. Mr. and Mrs.
Haggy a)S(! have a daughter,
Deanna, 6.

rangements. Eileen Hayes,
daughter of the club's president , also recei,·ed a ribbcn
on an arrangement she exhibited. Mrs. Holter was the
sweepstakes award winner,

You Wouldn't
. Buy HAlf

ADDRESS NOTED
Friends are advised the
address of Sgt. Gene R..
Lawrence is Gardner Hills
Housing Area, 7381 B, N. 6.
Bannion Ave ., Ft. Campbell;
Ky. 42223.

An Umbrella
... and you shouldn 't carry home or auto insurance that
doesn 't offer complete coverage . Consu'lt with us today
... and be adequately insured tomorrow!

l·
IN HOSPITAL
RACINE - Mrs. Paul
Lawrence, Racine, is a
surgical patient at St. Joseph
Hospital, Pa!kersburg. Her
room number is 241.

Davis Insurance Agency
Across from the Court House in Pomeroy

Bi ll Ouickel. Roy Shepherd. Jeannie Starcher
A Notary Service &amp; Complete Bonding Service

'

,.

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

Holid~ty weekend blackened

Dec.

,0 ,

Vaughans installed to OES post

Valley, New Ma rshfield ,
Aure liu s and Ra ci n e
Chapters.
Introduce&lt;] and escorted to
the East were past grand
matron, Roberta K. Mindling , 1978 deputl' granamatron, Nancy Riley, and
Grand Representative to
Kansas in Ohio, Pal Wilson .
Others introduced and
welcomed we re worthy

:fi~::-,:~:~.:~;:~ ZE7 ~?.::i:t;i i~!£'"0:~'::!?.::: ::::;:;,;~;~::;~~

patron of Pomcro)' Chapter
186. Order of the Eastern
Ia r , in 1 n ~ I a II at i o r1
ceremonies held recently at
the Pomeroy Masonic Tem'pie.
·
Other officers installed for
the 1978 year were Mrs. Arm

secreta ry; Mrs, Dorothy
Woodard, trcasurcn Mrs.
Pa uline Hysel h conduclrcS&gt;&lt;;
JudiUl Morris, as.-;ucia le conduelress; Sy lvia Midkiff.
chaplai n; Ma bel Goeglein,
ma rshalL Mrs . ,Helen Wolf,
organist ; Beth Vaughan ,

Kathryn

Windon,

Electa;

pin and an engraved gavel by
her daughter, Beth, a gift
Dale Smith, sentineL
from the family . The junior
Mrs. Lois Pauley, installing past matron , Charlotte
offi cer was assisted in the in- Dillard, was presented with
stallation by Mrs. Ella Smith, her grandmoth er' s pa st
marshall ; Estelle Ankrwn, matron's pin by Mrs. Evelyn
conductress; James Soulsby, Knight. Mrs. Dillard thanked
chaplain ; Marga ret Blaetl- her officers and spoke of the
nar, orga,nist ; Mabel Moore, rewards of the year, and matrons and wort~ patrOns
warder ; Fred Blaetlnar, sen- Mrs. Vaughan thanked her of· of otner chapters, past
tine!; and Thomas Edwards, ficers, conunittees and in· matrons o[ Pomeroy
Chapter , Margaret Blaellinviting marshalL Honorary stalling officers.
star points were Donna
Mrs. Dillard and James nar, Dorothy Woodard, Marie
McLean , Adah ; Naomi Soulsby. worthy matron and Curd, . Florence Well , Ella
Brinker , Ruth ; J&lt;Jy ce patron, opened the meeting · Smith, Sylvia Midkiff, Mabel
BOYFRIENDS FIGHT: GIRL LOSES
Mali sher, Esther ; Joyce attended by 92 persons from Goeglein, and Sue Soulsby,
RAP :
Ma
lisher , Martha; and Alban y , Harrisonvill e, and past patrons, Dale Smith,
.
' had a silly fight, and I started
I went wtthSam
for a year. We
Albert Woodard, Thomas Edgoing with Stephen, though I still liked Sam best (l think . 1
wards, and Fred Blaettnar,
Sam said some mean things, trying to break Steve and me
all Knights of the York Cross
up. Instead. the two guys got into a big fist fight.
of Honor, and James Soulsby,
Well, that was okay. l have to admit it made me feel pretty
who san g " The Lord's
btg.
Prayer' ' accompanied by
But .. then Sam and Steve got together and became friends.
Mrs. Margaret Neuman dur·
And I haven 'tseeneilher of them in three weeks!
ing the installation.
Polly
Cramer
I finally called up Steve a1rd he told me he and Sam were skiMrs. Clara Thomas, a 50
ing every weekend and it cost so much money they couldn't afyear member, and Louise
ford girls.
Stewart, distri ct secretary,
Do you suppose they're gay '- CHARLENE
Paint over splatters
six former grand appointees,
DEAR CHARLENE :
pointed hem . Attach a waist- and past matrons and past
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Let's settle for "happy." You may find this hard to believe,
DEAR POLLY - We would band and put zipper in open- patrons of other chapters
but skiing CAN be more fun than a girlfriend who plays one
appreciate it ir someone ing . Such a skirt must be were recognized.
fellow against the other. - HELEN AND SUE
The altar was draped in
could tell us how to remove completely lined. -ESTHER
memory
of past grand
DEAR POLLY - I have a
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
dried on while latex house
matron,
Edith
Conge,, who
Ever.siilce my 23-year-old brother moved into an apartment, paint from the shingles on our lovely long skirt thai I made served Grand Chapter
· house. While painting the with discarded ties. Mine re- 194:;-.w, The sunshine offering
things around home haven 'l been the same.
My parents are very upset Mom constantly worries about window and door rrames quired 36 to 38 tles and always was taken by Mrs. Logan and
him and Dad acts guilty, as if he has been rejected. All they some of the paint dribbled creates a lot of interest when M)"s. Blaettnar and was
talk abcut lS my brother. They're grouchy, and they treat me . and splattered on to the dark I wear it. I hand sewed the donated to the DES home engreen shingles leaving ties together, added a waistawful. What can I do?- YOUNG NERVOUS WRECK
DE)&gt;.R YNW :
notrceable stains. Is there band and sewed two ties dowment fund.
Pf!&gt;'tem officers were Mrs.
Give your parents tune toadjust. It's rough losing the first anything that will take them together for a Iiebelt. This Thoma s , organist; Mrs.
left
the
gently
flaring
bcttom
chick, even though at 23, he's·a full-grown rooster who should off''- MR. and MRS.D.W.
Florence Well, Adah ; and
have left the nest several years ago. By the time this letter
DEAR MR. and MRS.D.W. in points, The skirt could Ziba Midkiff, sentinel.
reaches print, I'll bel things will be much calmer at your -The core nught leave you in .have been machine stitched
Albert Woodard was
house. - HELEN
worse shape than you are in and the lies could have been
welcomed
back after a long
now . The re is a commercial opened but mine is like a
illness
.
latex paint cleaner sold at model I saw that was priced
YNW:
Refreshments were served
··
You omitted some important details: Did your brother leave paint dealers that will at$250. -ALTA.
in
the dining room which was
DEAR ,POLLY - I am an
after a fight? Has he become involved with something or so- dissolve the latex that has to
decorated
in keeping with the
he scrubbed off. But what is ayid coupon clipper so do
meone your parents don't approve'
holiday
season
. A dried arIf they 're still upset, tell them how their actions are affecting , this going to do to the finish hope my Pointer is accepted rangement in a copper pityou, and d9n't soft-pedal! Seems they 've forgotten you in their on the shingles'! The green and that I receive one of your cher graced the main table,
worry over him; an honest talk may bring them back home may, and doubtless will, coupon clippe rs. I have an an anniversary gift from the
mme off, too. I discussed envelope marked for each
again.- SUE
.
your problem with a large month in the year and I file worthy patron to his' wife.
paint firm and the general coupons with expira tion da tes Mr.s . Hysell and Mrs. Morris
RAP:
concluSion
seemed to be that in th01 proper envelopes so presided at the serving table
I've been going out with Freddie for three months. The trouthe
safest
way to remedy that the time does not slip by with assorted sandwiches,
ble is w~never I'm with othedriends - even shopping with
would he to try me. Those that are good until cookies; coffee and tea being
your
problem
girls - he always shows up.
to
match
the
green of the some time next year go in an served. On the Eastern Star
I've spoken to him abcut it but he says it's just coincidence.
shingles and then paint oyer enve lope marked ' 'i'lexl servillg committee are Mrs.
What should I do? ·BEING FOLWWED
the splatters a nd splashes. Year" and the first of the Georgia Watson, Caryl Cook ,
B.F .:
Cleo
DeTray, Sal l y
Either Freddie is. checking up, or so much in love he can't Sorry not to have a more en- yea r will go ·in the proper Ebersbach, and Pal Thomas.
stand separation. Whichever, he's got a bad case of the couraging answer but some envelope. I chec k each Guests were registered and ·
problems just do not have envelope the first of each
" shadows," which will soon lose him·a girlfriend, right]
given cross pinons by Mrs.
month.- MRS.C.E.R.
them.
- POLLY.
Discuss personal space with him, and hope it takes. Mabel Moore, Mrs. Sue
will
send
you
one
of
Polly
DEAR POLLY •• My
HELEN AND SUE
.
.
and
Mrs .
answer is for the reader who her signed th an k-yo u Soulsby,
Ceramic
wanted to know what she newspaper coupon clippers il Ebersbach .
could make with the many she uses your favorite figurines were given to the inmen's neckties she had. This Pointer, Peeve or Problem in stalling offi cers, aprons to lhe
is NOT a new idea as I am 45 her column. Write POLLY'S commillee memhers, and
years old a nd ffil' grand- POINTERS in care of this scarves to the new officers,
The nursery-kindergarten Lisle, Todd and Scott, Mr. father's wife taught me how newspaper.
by Mrs. Vaughan.
class of the Asbury United and Mrs. Don Harden, D. J . to create a skirt out of
Methodist Church, Syracuse, and Michael, Mrs. Judy discarded ties . She had seen
enjoyed a Christmas party. Williams, Jane Ann and one of her parent's servants
Sunday evening highlighted Tucker, Mr. a nd Mrs. Albert make these in St. Thomas,
by a visit from Santa who Harmon, Wendi and Crystal, V.I.
distributed gifts and candy Mrs. Diane Mills and Angie,
.I suppose I was one original
canes.
Mrs. Faye Clifford and " hippie" as my· mother was
Refreshments of sand- Milisa, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis appalled that I would even
wiches, cookies and koolaide Moore, Jerod and Amy, Mrs. think of wearing such a thing,
were setved to the Rev. and Shirley Sayre and Stephanie, Cut the ties open, iron,
Mrs. Harvey Koch, Mrs. Judy Mrs. Hilda Weaver and measure your desired skirt
.Pape, Kristen and Cheryl, Brian, Mrs. Peggy Stout, length leaving enough for a
Mrs. Judy King and Kristen, Chris and Robin, Mrs. Jea n hem. This is a lot of work but
Mrs. Becky Teaford, Sherry Alien and Mark, Mrs. Debbie well worth the effort I think.
and Angela , Mr. and Mrs. Powell and Jason, Mrs. Terry Cut off the top and then join
Kenny Buckley and Tammy, Walker and Tony , Mrs. ties together by machine stitMrs. Cathy Fry and Stacie, Beulah Ward, Mr. and Mrs. ching. A beautifully flared
Mrs. Carolyn McCoy and Roy Jenkins and Kimberly
skirt results that has a
Michelle , Mr. and Mrs. Joha
Zi ba Midkiff, warde~; and

PRICES GOO_D THRU SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17TH
WE ACCEPT

~~~~~ ~~~f]~l~i~~
The Daily Sentinel
,,~·~"·:·~"~-~~~·~·~-~"~·~~--~~~~-- .., .....
Crime wne by

FOOD STAMPS

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM
OPEN SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

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BUY YOUR FAVORITE PIECES
BY THE PIECE

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STOCK UP FOR CHRISTMAS .

STORE MADE

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Looking for just the right gift for that certain someone?!
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year? A subscription to the Daily Sentinel and Sunday
Times Sentinel.
'

W!C

HEINZ KETCHUP

ELSEWHERE............................. '26.00 YR.

NO. 155

(f.:et~":'f!tf.~~w-~~~·~~·~·
•
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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In time for the gift season ... a
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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Dec. 17, 1977
TW
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�8 - "'he Da1ly Sent mel, Mlddleport-Pumen•), 0 ., Tuesday . 0.&lt;' 13. 1977

Birthday enjoyed

Walburns host dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn
and children, Jill, a semor at
Me1gs H1gh &amp;hoot, and
Ste\·e. a junior at V1rgmia In-

tennant College at Bristol.
Va ., hosted a fam1ly dinner
party Sunday at the Walbum
home in Middleport.
Guests were children and
grandchildren of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Robert G. Clarke.
Sr. Missing from the family
grou~ were Mr. and Mrs.
Janl~s Cotten, Austin. Texas.
and Attorney and Mrs.
Robert G. Clarke, Jr., Columbus, Ind.
Attending were KiJ)1 Sdn
of Bristol. Va. who accompanied Steve Walburn
home for a visit, Mr. and Mrs .

Mrs. Wolfe is
honored with
church sho'{.J)er
KINGSBURY
Mrs .
Kevin 1Denise Hendricks )
Wolfe of Racine was honored
at the Carleton church with a
shower in the social room
decorated with blue, pink and
white streamers. The gift
table was center ed with a
large rattle and the refreshment table was centered with
i wo cakes, one in the shape of
a baby carriage, the other in
a design of booties.
Games were played and
prizes won by Sadie Carl and
Alice Wolfe, and a door prize
by Virginia Dean.
Mrs. Wolfe opened her gifts
from Mrs. Elizabeth Murray,
Mrs. Lo uise Harrison, Mrs.
Anita Dean, Mrs. J udy !:art,
Mrs. Virginia Dean, Mrs .
Sadie Carl, Mrs. El va Wolfe,
Mrs. Karla Chevalier, Mrs.

W1!ham Forbes. Mr. and
Mrs. Le1gh Shephard and
sons. Clarke and Austm,
Charleston, W. Va.: Mr. and
Mrs. Dale WallaL-e Hill. Mrs.
Pete Roush, and Mr . and

Mr. and Mrs. Patnek
Q'Brten of Hyst•ll Run Road
entertained on Del'. 3 w1th a
party 1n &lt;·elebratlon of thr St.&gt;cond birthday of their
daughter, Joy.
i\ Mickey Mouse eakc baked by Joy's grandmother;

fa\'ors

Wl're

~l\1 en

to th('

rtuldrcn . Games \\ere pia) ell
with pnzes going to Wendy
Wolfe. Tnl'ia Wolle. and IJS&lt;I

Messiah presented
to area audience

The orchestra presented a
pa•ioral symphony prior to
the appearance of Sandra
Frymyt•r.
Lambert Wilkin of Jackson Attemhng the party were
Mrs. Dale Humphre~·s.
Mrs. Carl Wolle, Wrndy, C'urnmumty College Churus she the original Catherine ·
the
Handel's Safford in Gallia Co untry.
Christopher and Peter, New
Tfl('la. and Megan. Ra cine; pr ese nt
"Mrssiah"
with
a stri n~ Sandra Wilk in sa ng the three
Haven. W. Va .: Mrs. Elroy Mrs. Charles Bradbury . was Mr. and Mrs. Char les Brad·
orchestra
aceompanying
five recitatives, " There Were
Kayl or and Mrs. Jark served with ice cream and bury, Middleport : Mrs. Asa
SOlOIStS
.
Shepherds Abiding," "an Lo!
Kaylor . Letart, IV. Va .
koola1de. Party hats and Bradbury, Nikki and Jeff,
With conductors Anne The Angel of the Lord ," and
Circleville: Mrs. Clarence
William s and Walt, Fischer and Merlyn Boss "And Suddenly There Was
Pomeroy; Mrs. Don Frymyer alt ernat ing, the 90-plus with the Angel."
peuple on the stage or the
The chorus had "Glory to
1 and children Lisa and David. lndh·idual singE'l'S sung for an God."
The Gallipolis Christ ian devotions everyone gathered Mrs. J otUl Blake. ~·r;mk am!
Mrs. Wilkin came back for
Church had a Chri stmas In the fellowship hall for Abby. Middleport, and Mrs&lt; hour and 45 minutes. Violins
were
played
by
Dr
.
Jay
.
the
air. " Rejoice Greatly."
Dinner Thursday. Decen1ber games prepared by Jack Pat Hill and Jcred. Pumeruv .
Shendan,
Barbara
11mmas.
Judy
Johnson Burdell was
Scites
and
Denny
Coburn.
Sending
gifts
were
Mrs
.
8 in the fellowship hall. Th e
dinner was catered by Cir- The evening was a time of fun Katie Biron, Mr. and Mrs . and Pam Terrizi; the viqla by the soloist for the recit ative,
cle's Restaurant of Gallipolis. and fellowship for all who James OBrien and Pegg)·. Linda Phelan ; the cello by "Then Shall Uu- Eyes of the
Denny Coburn, minister , attended. Jack Sdtes gave Mr. and Mrs. Paul Henn· and Cynthia Langona: the harp- Blind" and the air, '' He Shall
Shannon, Kettering: and Mr. sichord by Anne Fischer: and , Feed His Flock."
opened the even ing with the benediction.
Th e chorus had the next
The plaMing committee and Mrs . Mike O'B rien. J im- the piano by Edith Ross.
prayer.
After
dinner
B. Gale Douthitt. whu will three aspects of the
everyone gathered for co-chainnen were Barbara my and Johnny ; Gallipolis.
also sing the tenor opening ''Messiah," " Behond the
caroling led by Jack Perry , King and Sharon Burris .
part la ter this Yule season at Lamb of God," "Surely He
associate minister. The· Decorating committee was
Carroll.
Ohio. with another Hath Borne ," and "Lift Up
carols were played in a Jane Vinson , Charlotte
orchestra
, sttng the recitative Your Heads ."
beautiful style of Frank Smith, Diana Galliamore ,
"Comfo
rt
Ye My People, ··
The chorus had "Worthy is
Kunszabo. pianist. After and Kitty Perry . The
and
the
air,
"Every
Valley
the
Lamb ." and the rousing
caroling , Jim Younkin gave fellowship hall was decorated
Shall
Be
Exalted."
DAUGHTER
BORN
fmale,
" Hallelujah."
the evening's devotional. His bea utifully with nativit y
ClJar!es
L.
Ecker
,
bass;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Tom
Lyons,
personal testimony showed scenes, candles and wreaths.
'
that ther e is more than just The wreaths were made by Pontiac. Mich. are aJUlOWIC- came t o the mi crophone after
taking the steps In becoming Jane Vinson and given as ing the birth of a daughter, the chorus had sung "And the
CARDS REQUESTED
a Christian. He reiterated prizes to Patty Miller and Kimberly Jo, born on Nov . I Glory of the Lcrd," with his
Roland
" Pete" Fisher,
"Th
us
Saith
the
Lord"
and
that Christianity involves a Barb King. Individual place at St. Joseph Hospital in Ponformerly
uf
Racine, is confin"But
Wh
o
Ma
y
Abide."
lifetime commitment in one's cards had scripture verses tiac. Mr. and Mrs. Lvons
ed
to
a
convalescent
home.
Ecker
came
back
nca
r
the
personal lifestyle. After about the birth of the Lord have another daughter,
Hls
address is Highland View
end
with
"
Behold
I
tell
You
a
Tonya
,
age
five
.
GrandJesus.
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Mystery" and ·'The Trumpet Hospital, Room B 248, Ireland
Driv e.
Warrenville
John Lyons, Middleport, and Shall Sow1d."
Ellen Leftwich gave the Township, Cleve land, Ohio
Carlet on Scherlitz, Marion,
"Behold.
a 4·U20. He would appreciate
Mich. Mrs. Ruth Schranun , recita t ive
Middleport, is a great- Virgin," and the air, "0 Thou cards from relatives and
That Tellest Good Tidings ." friends here .
grandmother.

r$~ Sod~i -

) ·calendar
TUESDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 6 p.m. potluck dinner at
the home · of Mrs. .Dollie
Hayes. There will be gift exchange.
RA CINE LODGE 461
F&amp;AM Tuesday. All master
masons and their guests· are
invited. Officers will be in·
st a lled

ln

an

op e n

in-

stallation.
CHESTER TOWNSH IP
Trustees Tuesday 7 p.m. at
town hall In Chester .
POM " ~ JY CHAMBER of
Commerct Tuesday at noon
'
at Meigs Inn.
MEIGS COUNTY Pamona
J unior Grange Tuesday 7
p.m. at Rock Springs Grange
Hall. All members who have
not paid dues of $2 should do
so.
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
7:30 p.m. at school.
HAR RIS O NV ILL E
Chapter 255, O.E.S,, 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the temple. There
will be initiation. Practice for
insU.Ilation to follow. All new
officers and insU.lling of·
ficers requested to be present.
ELEANOR Circle, Heath
United Methodist Church, annual Christmas party, 7: 30
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Bernard Fultz.
GALLIPOLIS Christian
Women's Luncheon, Holiday
Inn 12: 15. Call367-7676 or 4461707.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gard eners, 8 p.m. Wed·
nesday at the home of Miss
Erma Smith with Mrs. Veda
Davis as co-hostess.
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 .p.m. a t the Colum bus
and So uthern Ohio Electric
Co.
ALL NON-certified employees of the Southern U&gt;cal
School District will meet at 7
p.m. Wednesday at the high
school in Ractne ,
TWIN CITY Shr inettes
Christmas dinner, 6:30 p.m.
at the Meigs Inn. Husbands
and friend to be guests. All
Shrinettes and their guests
invited. i
.p . 0 M' E.. R 0 Y •
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
annual Christmas party,

,,'

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·-~·.

•HAMS
•VEAL
•SALT FISH
_•FRESH
OYSTERS

Adult class enjoys
yule time party
The Young Adult Class of
the Bradford Church of Christ
held a Christmas party althe
Kin folk Resta urant Point
Pleasant rccentlv . ' From
there they went to the church
for a meetil1g. Devotions
were on "The Promised
King " with scripture from
Micah &gt;. 2 through 4 verses.

There was carol singing, a
gi ft exchange , and a dessert
course served.
Atlemhng were Steve and
Dream a Pickens, Bonnie
Pickens, Dan Harrison,_Nancy Morns. . Mad e! me and
Becky Pamter, Kathr yn
Russell , Guy . and Ruby
Hysell, Betty W11l, and EtU.
MaeE!hs.

MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM ----"'

-FRUIT
BOWLS
and
BASKETS

Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
Lions asked to take small gift
for exchange.
POME ROY CHAPTER 80
Holiday · party plans were
RAM Wedn esday 7: 30 p.m. completed when the Ohio Eta
Bosworth Council 46 R&amp;SM Phi Chapter of BeU. Sigma
8:15 p. m.
Phi Sorority met recently at
RA C I NE
G R ANGE the home of Sonja Ohlinger.
· Wednesday 7:30 p.m. at the
The couples Christmas parhall. Work in third and fourth ty will be held Dec. 17 at the
degrees. Potluck refresh- Sportsman Inn , Athens and
ments. Du es of» for 1977-78 those who will not be attenare due.
ding are asked to contact
WIDTt: RO:SE LODGE , Cheryl Crow. The cocktail
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. in the hour will begin at 7 p.m. and
social room of the Columb us the dinner will be served at B
and Southem Ohio Electric · p.m.
The members ' gift
Co.
change
party will be held
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Dec.
20,
at
7 p.m. at the Meigs
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday a t
Inn
with
a pizza pa rty to
the home of Mrs. Arthur
follow.
Strauss. Mrs. Everett Hayes
Kathy Cumings presided at
io review "The Song of
the meeting during which
Solomon ,l.'
time a corrununication was
THURSDAY
read from Jerry and Susan
ROCK Sprin gs Better
Health Club, Thursday noon, Well thanking the chapter for
potluck dinner at the Rock a wedding gift. Refreshments
Springs Church. Turkey fur- \!'ere served by Linda King
and Maurisha Nelson.
nished by club. Cookies and
candy to be prepared for
shutins . Members to U.ke a
grab bag gift and a secret pal
gift.
MAGNOLIA Cl ub, 6:30
p.m. Thursday evening at the
Meigs Inn for II Christmas
dinner.
INSTALLATION OF New
Offi ce r s, Ha rr ison vill e
Mrs. Libby Fisher, Ralph
Chapter 255, O.E.S., 7:30 and Damon , hosted a
Thursda y ni ght a t the Christmas dinner for Frank
Masonic Temple. Potluck Cleland 's Sunday school class
refreshments.
of the First Baptist Church of
EPISCOPAL WOMEN of Racin Racine on Monday
Grace Epi scopal Ch.u rch, evening, Dec. 5.
A turkey and ham dinner
Christmas luncheon, parish
was served to the Rev. and
house, 12: 30 p.m.
Mrs. Don Walker, Dennie,
FRIDAY
Gertie,
Denise and Troy
PAST
Ma t rons, Manuel,
Marilyn
and J erry
Eevangeline Chapter, O.E.S.,
Po
well
,
Ruger
, J an ie,
annua l Christmas party to be
Heather
and
Scott
Hill,
held a t the home of Mrs.
,
Donna
,
Amy
and·
Austin
Virginia Buchanan, 6 p.m.
Jerry
Wolfe,
·
Terry
PatterFriday . Potluck dinner with a
son, Bill, Mary, Mark and
$2 gift exchange.
John Porter, Frank Clela nd,
REVIVA L,
Br adbu ry Lillian Weese, Donna and
Church of Christ, Dec. 16, 17 Roy J ohnson, Larry, Dolly,
and 18 7:30 each evening. Laren and Kent Wolle, Leda
Dave Lu cas, evan geli st ; Mae Krauter , Roberta
special musi c by ''The Maidens, Aaron Wolfe, Nettie
Watchmen" from Operatin g Cross and Ubby, Ralph a nd
Evangelize.
Damon Fisher.

CHUCK BOAS

1

·

Great fo r Fam ily-.Sized Meal s

~~~~....s,

~FF LIVER

-·a" G'ROUNo CHUCK............:B:.99~

U.S.O.A. CHOICE

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST .....

.

Po•nd

5

1°

9

FRENC H CITY

CARDINAL

.*

SLICED
BACON ........l~; ....
RO~E

HAM

SALE DATES DECEMBER 14-17, 1977

SLICES

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERV ED

.
U. S. NO. 1

BEAUTY

APPLES

.

LB. S}59

..

--

SEMI . BON E L ESS

HAlf HAM

POTATOES .••..••. ~~.~~·.~?...~- 1 59
CORROTS
2PKGs.49'

AU PURPOSE

LB. $}39

FRESH 'RISP
R f2" D RIPE

'SAlAD TOMATOES2ta. 99e CUCUMBERScORPEPPERS.

DIAMOND BRAND
LARGE

79$

1 LB.
PKG.

2 LB.
.

PUMPKIN

EGGS.............~~~. 59
$1
Asst.

~ ::;t~=~

3" .I
............ ' ~;:· 89'

IIISTAJIIT COFFEE ................................... 'j:;
CAIINII.TI ON

,

&lt;
--

u..,;, ,..o .... ~
·1~.00 ~uf'Cilo••

5

. ..

PURINA

~

§&gt;
l: !\Hilo l~fn ~"'&gt;:
00 00 &lt;lU

~

.

,,,,

......

FAYGO POP

•
ooooOO ;

5~8 19'
'

NIITLI&amp;

~·•"

.ITUIIOOAtl. O~l'MI!At.

-. .~MUT 8UTTI!"

. COOIIIMIX

•::7tc

Choo. Chip I'I&lt;JI.

2 ......89•
C•n•

REG. OR DIET

PEPSI
8-16 oz. bottles

GIVING.

• Sh e Can Check Tr affic. Road Condi tio ns!
• Report an Emergen c v! Ge t Direc tion s'
• M akes Anv Trip Sa fer. Quicker, M ore Fun!

99~

(CASES ONLY)

••

!i iii OW fl OSS

SAUERKRAUT ...... 'j~

39'

Fishers host
yuk dinner

OYSTER STEW ........ ··'·····'-".~:·59'

,_...

A DIVISION OF TANDY CO RPORATI ON

VARY

PRICE GOOD THRU
DEC. 24 ONLY .

Ar INDIVIDUAL

:t.s.. -; CHARGE IT {MOST STORES)

M us t • II ~JliS
illso ilv ,'lililhl• · &lt;tt ·
Ratlto Sh Ack
0f:&lt;&gt;lcrs
look for H1 •s
~Hill

RES

Ill V flllf

,l....,ql•hmhooll

ftad10
/llaek
D EA L E R

CONVENIENT'

CARRY·
T
VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL
FOOD STORE

·::- 55•

)f

DUTCH MAID IIOODLES •:;-; 49'

BOUNTY

·USE
OUR

l •.

CIGIJII-1. ......:............;.. :.: Sft
H1lfON

¥A.lAWARIS

~-

STIIff&amp;li ~ ........,..........'::'1"

ICIU-OeOI "

MEO. WI OE or EMTft A WIDE

• Doubles as a Mobile Radio on Vacation s!
• A Must 'for Businessmen and Wom en!

CHOICE
SMASil\i"ER' BR fDGI"PWAMAS

&amp;TOWTOP.cNtC:UfllltLAVOit ~

'

._ He Can Communicate With You In Your Car!

YOUR

-

CMI

FOR

BASE

C AHO INAll~

GOLD MEDAL

*'I' .

59•

CHRISTMAS

~
~

0

DOD CHOW 25~:~ ~ 4

REGULAR ASST. FLAVORS

•

!!~~~~~~:~-~:.~;.t 49; .~. ~
END UI T

' \\

THE DUST MAGIIET ............ :... .. ........ .'g;:; sp•
GALA DIIIIIERIIAPIUIIS ........... .. ..~;~'

49•

HUV'I' DUTY

REYIIOLDS FOIL .................................... .'::.: 69'

.......
.
VI.IAWARIS
·::stc

.

~·

5 $1

FlfJll/1 I(J(JI$
BANQUET

.

POT PIES =:~~.~;:·k•n

:k~~-

Assl VAR!ETIES

BANQUET DINNERS
11 OZ. PIIG. 55e
BANOUET
ASST. VARIETIES

BUFFET
SUPPER
2-LB.
PIIG,

49(!'
~

89

VICTOR Y Al P

Jumbo
' Aolt

0

.

MARASCHIIIO
CHERRIES

&lt;!

-n~

..... .. ......... ••o-....

on. • ....,..,,. ~., "'""'~&lt;

,

COFFEE MATE

•

VIJ SlOAt $

Fl••••• ~

IU NI'IIIE

,"

"

9

VALLEY FARMS
MEDIUM

IKS

....,.. .

p

FlORIDA ORANGES

IPPLESIU~;~ ·
WAGNERS

MWCIMIAT

"

CALL TODAY FOR PRICES
MUSSELMAN

IOI:DIHfl NOIIIUCH

p

Greot For Christmas Glvlngl
Citrus By The t;as~ All Varieties

$}57

2 ::··.· ag~

'n
"

PKG.

DEL MON::'!TE~.....

I•
0

ENGLISH WALNUTS

CITRIS

MOBILE
169
"

COFFEE

WH IT E &amp; DARK M EAT

FARM FRESN PRODUCE

OHIO GROWN

FLORIDA

179 92~5

j

Xtt I l1Jift t]\ 1 ·•:

WHIT E M E A T

FOR FRESH

9?.522

FOLGERS

WIENERS ............... .':.?.~-..~129

TURKEY
RO
" oz. $399
$129 AST......••••:.K.G: ••••

ORDER NOW

Reg.

&lt;::t\)OSIUfUS . CARDI NAII OOOSIOIH S

o...

SWIF T

PLACE YOUR

Reg . .

.~UI.'

. .
59'
SHORT
RIBS OF BE Ef.... :: ............ ~~-~~~ 69e
·

ENGLISH ROAST ......... .,.,, 89&lt;

$129
LB.

69

,~,,

Bc;:&gt;NELESS BEEF STEW.............. }.~~~P-~.1·· .

with Carrots &amp; Potatoes Tossed in the Pol l

WHOLE
HAMS

Stop In
or Call
and We'll
Cut It
To Your
Satisfaction

ex-

I

WE GlADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

GROCERY CARRY OUT

U .S.D.A . CHOICE BLADE CUT

Desire,

Holiday party plans
com·:pleted

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER - MIDDtEPORT

1.

EXPECTING
COMPANY?
Any Special
Cuts Of
Meat You

SKI G O ~G L E·s rt n m o rt• tha n kee p s lt"t•t and s now ou t.
Thost.• wllh intt•r t' ha nga bl t• lt• nst•s hrl p s ha rpt&gt; n df't a il
111_
1 hazy . nr 11\'l' f ('a .. t da}'S, t.' Ul glan• un .sunn y d ays or
blut• k Wi nd. St•lt•t·t "idt.· opt ka lly ('orr t·r t lc nst&gt;s. These
fru m Ra us.«·h &amp; Lorn~ lta \'l' a ir \'Cnt s t~l prcvt• nt lt"n s
from r n~glllg 311d Wldt•, hea d Sla p to kef p l!OggJes
st• c· ur t·.
'l

. fiiEIIDLIESl -SUYI(E Ill lPWIII

BONELESS

Stop In
and Order

...' } .

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

STORE HOURS

MAKE A SET of Ptat·emats and napkin s to gill yourself
or a holiday hostess . Green holly lt.•avt's, red bcrrit•s
aud red-and-green sC'atlop stit(:h an· on "hil c tint•u .

18
..,

FOOD STCR&amp;S

COUNTRY CURED

'

Nickie Wolfe, Ter esa Davis,

Mrs. Sh errie Abbott and Mrs.
Unda Well. Others presenting gifts were Mrs. Willie
Davis, Mrs. Ole St. Clair,
Mrs. Al pha Bailey , Mrs.
Mary Lo u Houdashelt, Mrs.
Eva King, G0ldie Dill and
Neva King. The hostesses,
Mrs. Yvonne Young, Mrs.
Karla Chevalier, Mrs. Unda
Well and Mrs. Sherrie Abbott
served refreshments of cake,
mmt s, potat o chips and
punch.

ina I

AT OUR
STORE .

Church gathers for dinner

Mrs. Janeth Beat,

~

AVAILABLE

An aud1ence which more
thnn half filled the Ga!lia
Academy High Schuol
uuditorium
hNtrd
the

Yvonne' Young, Mrs . Alice

Wolfe,

NOW

IIG&amp;EST SAYIII&amp;S Ill fOWIII

BORDEN S

ICE CREAM
%- Gallon'';
Carton

1

/ j'\

SUIIDI WHIP
TOPPIIIIi ...... :... :;-:;; 49'

�10 ~ The Dati\ S&lt;ntmel MtddleJl&lt;&gt;rt -Pumero ~ . 0 .. TUesday. INc . lJ, 19;;

~~
=ANJ'
: :. .=c&amp;~
~~

.

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

.JUST MY LUCK! ME

100

l days

1.10
1 111

J dllys

words ~ • C'enl5 per word per da)
Ads ruMtni olhf-r than l"'f1.'&gt;eC'Ull\ t
dlys will be ebarged at the I day

meHoge to Ouf lo ved on _up
abc.:IV e

""In memory, Ca

Mobde Home Sollie! and n~r'd sales
~ted ';l(l)y

Wllh cash w1th

32'l0

"
Slo~r l ~

w•de

order 2S N!nl C'hllfl!t&gt; for ads t'Yrl"}·
tng Bol Number Jn Cart of Tho&gt; Sentinel.

!ll:hool o11it&lt;s comoerenl ,,..
slrucl01"1 mooctrnucwrcment•ndCNI
1111'9111Q uaon•"'l'•eldt KMP ~~~ loll

h' """9
~ nd

r!('t IJUt'rtlon .
~m- z t S6

onloo n~;~ uon

PARKERSBURG

Fo r port of us wen t w 1lh hom

lhe day God ca ll ed h1m home
When the thought o f the lost haUl

· NOTICE

n 1gl-lts

We alle n li e 01wcike .
II s a lon es om i\! house w ithout
yov

And sod ho'i been I he wa y .
Our Ide and, home ore not 1he
1
some
~
S1nce you we re called away
In the QlJie l of I he n1ghts
My tears wdl ohen flow
To lh ink how svddenly you we re
taken !rom us
On lhts day one year ago .
Sadly m 1ssed by his w .!e Ellen
and Family

Monday

Nooo on Saturday

~e~y
4 P.M.
the day befOrt' publicauon

• SWidal'
4 P.M.

alttmoon

-~

For Wednesd1y , Dec. 14. 1977

IN MEMORY o f Charles E lork ms
on his b1r thday December 13
Although he is gape he os no!
l or gollen .
The Fom dy.

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A'l10Jrm

~ mcr~~~~m~
u . 1917

TM com1ng ye ar snould oe an
1nterest1ng an d tUn on e tor you

soctally . Befo re

1!'s

ove r.

304--422 ·4080

1t IS

THE FAM ilY ol Mar tha Searls
w ish to th ank all l r i&lt;ends and
neighbors for lheir lo. indness
an d prayers in our t ime of sor·
row A special thanks to thos e
who senl tlo-...e rs and to the
women who prepared and
broughl food . A spectal th; nlo. s
to Re w. Merlm Teets and Re11 .
Noo l Hermann. son gers and
pallbearers . May God Bless you

GUN SHOOT Rocme Gun Clvb
every Sun oll€lrnoon . Factor
Chock guns only
Assorted
rnea1 s
THE RACINE Vo lun teer Fire
Department woll sponsor a gun
shoot e11e(y Saturday at b p m .
at lhen budding on Bashon Fa clo~y ~ho lo.,e gvns on l!:_ ·--:c"""::c:":
SK ATE - A -WAY
ANNOUN CES
Ch11stmos Par ty
Fr i
Dec.
23rd 7 30 · 10 00 races pr.zcs
balloons New Years Eve Par·
ty Sat Dec 31st 7 .30 · 12:30·
hols horns
naosemak ers .
E11eryone Welcome . Oper1
wed Fr r Sol. ni te s 7 30
10 00 · Avooloble for private
porl oes M on. Tues .. Thurs .
nigh ts or Sol . or Su n. ofter·
noons. Phone 985 -3929 or
985 -9996 for reservations .
WANTEO : lAND f or hUnting
1-200 acres . East ot Pomer oy. T,
Peyton Bo x 1273 Charles ton

W. Vo. 25325 .

FOU ND: BE AGLE dog in M id dleport Hill ar ea . Ph on e

9'12-3702 .

a ll .

Searls and Ell is Fami ly .

l1kety you

w1 11 ha&gt;Je greatly
e~pandeo your c•r cl e .o f ac Quain tances and con tacts

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
Z1) Someth ing that you have
planned for today may no t
co me off exa c tly as you enviSIOn i.t. However . i.t should work
out better •n the long ru n . Find
out more about yourse lf by
se n d~rig for your copy o f AstraGraph Letter Ma il 50 cen t s lor
each copy and a long . selfaddressed . stamped enve lope
to Astra-G raph , P.O. Box 489 ,
Rad io City Stat1on. NY . 10019
Be sure to specify your b1rth
s1gn

CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan . 191
You ' re luck y today i n things
tha t conce rn you mater ially o r
car eerw 1se . b ut not so 1n frivolous interests . Pla y doesn 't

pay
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 191
Ti ming is aU-important In turh•
•ng your dreams into realit ies
today . Start with small steps
belore breaking i nto a trot .

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 201 The

quiet , subtle approac h will
wo rk won ders for you to da y in
accom plis hing your p u rpos e s.
Do wha t's necessary sans
spotlight

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 Th is
is a good d ay to push impo rtant
pl ans th at ha ve tar-reach in g
effects. Your ideas wi ll m ake
sense and you will gain ready
support

TAURUS (April 20-May 101 Conditi ons are promisin g today
wh ere joint ven tures are co n·
cerned , p rovi ded you take the
dori1inant role . l et your coho rt s
se rve as back -ups .

GEMINI (May 1&amp;-June 101 Al lies who ha~e histori c ally
proven themselves loyal and
tr ue will be e~en mo're so
today . Fo rtune a1te nds yo u
thr~gh you r ste rling relation ship's .

CANCER (Juno 21-July 221
Being of w orthy service to
loved ones today w ill afford you
as muc h gi'a tif ication as it will
please those whom you serve .
Pitch·-in where it co unts.
.

LEO (July 23-Aug . 12) Toda(s
happe ning s sho u.ld flatte r you .
lor your compa nionship is
likely to be sought by one you
truly adm ire . Let him or her
make the over tures .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Your
inspirati on for a second e ffort
will co me to you today beca use
ol a des ire to pro'w'ide more
boun tifu lly for t hose under
your wing .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 You
have a knack for li fti ng the
spi rits o f others today by turning everythin g in to fu n . Use it.
Change the mundane into th e
light and enjoyable .

SCORPIO (Oct .

2~- Nov.

221

Something good you na~e
goi ng for you looks like it will
have a pretty tl efty payoff . lt will
co me in over still wa t ers ~· so
don' t rock the bo at
(NEW SPAPER ENTERP RI SE ASSN I

'
Thoan.s Jefferson
Thomas J efferson , the
third president, was born
April 13, 1743, al Shadwell,
Va . Because he opposed the
Federalists
and
con·
traUzation, he was called a
Republican (the equivalent of
a Democrat in later years).
In 1776 he wrote the basic
draft of the Declaration of
Independence. He made
treaties with France and
Prussia ,
studied
ar·
chilecture, gardening and the
French Revolution, whose
leaders consulted him.

'

Kingsbury
News Notes

HOOF HO LLOW Hor ses Buy sell
trade or tro1n New and used
saddle s Ruth Ree11es Albany
\bl4 ) 698 3790
MEIC.5 COU NT Y Hum ane Society
Corel one orld odoptoon Servrce

9'12-7680 742)1 62 9'12 5427
FOR
STUD
Serv i ce .
AK C
registered coc ke r spon•el
Blo ck and ton. Clarksdale
Lmes Showquo l 1ty J &amp; D Ken ·
nels 742 ·3 1b2

ECONOMY TRA CTOR w 11h all ol ·
tochment s l1ke new osk oog
$1250 Phone (61 " ) 698·3290
APPLES FITZPATRICK 0 1t ho• ds
Stote Rou t e 689
Ph one
Wilkesv rl le 669·3785.
RUGS
WALL Hon gongs orld
olgons . No ce for Chnslmos
Reasonable Call 9Q2 -221 4

AKC REG ISTERED pekrn9ese pup ·
p1es . Pho'2.!.! 304) 882· 2~ .

we sometomesleel
As though our hearts w dl breo~
And through the long ond lonely

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Doc.

lr""' on p.oollo-

If only we h od h1m bod.. ogo on
!t broke ov r hearts ro lose hm1
Bul he dtd not go alone

responsiblt for more \han one 111COr·

Frida~·

b• ~~~

( S•I l
Sun I 01 1nend our 3 ~ It!" lome
ri!SICII!flllrMr~r\1) Callrt9M nooa· fof !ujl

Hea ven

;,ecllooal. TIW Pub~ wiU not ~

10 IJI.,ln IOf a poQfes5tOI\tl c•
dl• ~" '9' OIQ RIQ 0u&lt; porure

,_

And o lo v mg -..o1ce smd Come
Although hts soul1 s now at res I
And fr ee from core and po 1n
The world woulD sevm h lo.e

The- ?ubbstw-r r"eR'rn•:s tht-·rtt~hl
ID edit or l"t}ed any 1tds detl'T'Ied ob-

COAL , l imest one , ond colc1um
chlonde and colc•um brone fo1
dust con tr ol ond speool moxmg
solt t o r farmers Eo: celsoor Solt
Works M oon Slreet Pomer oy
Ohoo or ph011e 992' 389 I
CAMPER
S600 A lso hors e
tra der, $450 Phone (6 14) 1',198

And tell h1m ho w m uc h wt&gt; mi SS
horn
And g• v e hun all our He b td no
one o lOst farewell
He so1d goodbye to pone .
The Heo&gt;~ enly Gates (U"!tl opened

rt1 ci Thomks anti
Ob&amp;t~ . 6 C"t'nl.!i p!!t .,..· ord, $3 00
nun!mum CaM! madvanre
art

IF YOU ho .. e o servoce to o lfer
won! to buy or sell someth1ng
oe lookong for work
or
-...hotever
you II get results
foster woth o Sentme! Won t Ad
(ol!992 21~

IN MEMORY ol John 0 Arna ll
wh o po !&gt; sed owa..,. ! yeo l ogo
todov Dec ember 13
Dea r Cod
Please tok.t» tl"ui

"'

EXPERIE NCED REFRIGERATOR and
appliance ser..-ice.non Paid
holid ays .
11 a cot i oM
and
ho spitalilotion .
G,orl i o
Relrige rotor Co .. 611 3r d Ave ..
Gallipolis Oh io.
WOMAN OR co uple to li Ve w ith
· middle·oged lady in Pt. Plea·
sant . W. Va. Salary negot iable.
Phone 1·304 ·675· 699q .
SAWYER FOR au to mation sow
m ill. Good pay. Pa id vacatio n .
Co 11 614-667 -3131 .

RISING STAR Kennel 8oo rd1ng .
Indoor
and ou td oor runs ,
Groamong all br eeds . (leon
sorHtory fo&lt;: JI1toes . Cheshire .
Phone (614 ) 367·0292

1976 FORO F-250 Custom . 17 .SOx
14 00 trres&lt; . wonc h. On I.,. 14 OOC1
m1. Headers CB To pe de&lt; lo.l
Over S3 000 in ex l ras . Senous M
calls only o ll ~r 12 noon ;
b9b· 1on. S6 soo

B &amp; 5 MOBILE HOMES. Pt . Plea·
sont. W Vo . bes1de Heck 's.
1973 Broodrnore 14 x b4 2
bedroom
! 973 Do n on 14 x 60 2 bedroom
J 8. 0 Ketnne15 , all breed dog 1972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedrOom
groorrung . Make oppomtmen t
2 both
now l or Holiday Season, Call 1972 Cove11 1ry 1'1"' 65 3 bedroom
747-31 62
19M Sta tesmo n 12 ;w; 60 2
.
bedroom .
TO GIVE away : Mole abandoned
dog Wou ld l1 lo.e to fi nd a good FIREWOOD. An.,. leng th!o or ony
home Bloclo. ond brown about
amount
Deli vered or may
3 mo . old . Phone 992 -3367
p1cku p . Phone 949 -2563 .

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

.'

1969 CI-IEV ROLET IMPALA . Fine
co ndition . $595. 7.42·2359.
water

Landmark
. '
&amp; condition your
and Co-op wafer

softener, Model UC-SVI .
Now Only •279,95

STAR&lt;::RAFT FALL SOle , Min~ ·
Let us test you·r water Free
motors . 20' ond 22'. TroVe,l
Trc ilen . 1B' 5" $3 ,7'19 , 25 ' 7"
Bunk house ~ . 8 75 . Fold·down.
New Co . Op water and
$1 .700 up . We sell se rwic e and
softeners,
model VC -SVI.
quali ty . Open Sundays _ Comp
Only 1279.95
Conley Slorcr oft Soles, Rt . 62 , .
Save sso.oo on a new
N. ol Pt. Plea sant .
Hotpoint Refrigerator
TRUCK CAPS $ 199 up. Truck
1 New 10 cubic ft . Chest
campe rs? Don I
miss
our
Freezer
S25 .00 Discount
specials ! See them today a!
( 1) Good Refrigerator SlSO
Codner's Camper s on Rainbow
Upright Freezer
S12S
Ridge . O ff Rt . 7. tok e Meigs 28
to 32 Ia Boshan and · fo llow
1 Good Used Hotpoinf '
signs. Owner Robert Codner ,
Refrtgerator
S125
long Bottom . Ohio .
1 L:ancaster Chain Saw S7S

FOR SALE

9a

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.a il.

992-6370.
Social Security
Anyone Working as a maid ~
cook, chauffeur, babysitter,
butler, ga(dener . and at the
other household tasks in the
hoUse of another, is covered
by Social Security if he or she
earns $50 or more in cash in
three months from any one
employer. The job doesn't
have to be regular or !till·
time. The employee should
get a card at the Social
Security office and show it to
the employer .

·

CHIP
WO O D.
Po les m o:oo: .
diame te r 10" on larges t end . SB
per ton . Bundled slob , S6 per
len. De li11ered to Ohio Polle t
Co ., Rt. 2, Pom eroy. 992-2689.
CASH FOR Junk Cars, Frye 's Truck
and Au to Wre cker Sen&lt; ice .
Phone 742· 2081 or Penn2oil
Rutla nd 742 -9575 .
WILL PAY cosh for good guns ,
mini-bikes , m"o to rc ydes , go ·
korts , tractors , tiller ~, bench
tool s, or whol hove yo u. Will
even buy broken guns lor
paris, e:a:tra barrels , etc. Fife's,
Rl.
7 South, M iddleport.

992-7494.

Residential
and
cOmmercial .
Call lor
est ima te , 24 hour servic:e.
Anyda)- , anytime.

Cellulos1c (wood tiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save30 pet.·I050 pet.

Phone 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Box 34

Chester, Ohio
10·30·c

'

FREE ESTIMATES

!EPI.!CEMENT
WJNOOIIS

AlUMINUM
GUTIE!S-AWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
PU!2-l'lil

CON TROl HUNGER an d lose
we ight ·with New Shope Diet
Plan and Hydre• Water Pills At
DuHon Drug, M iddleport .

ROBYN C.B.
sx 007

$79.95
Complete
with
all
accessories. Yes , we will.
layaway for Christmas.

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

lllil,

'
' ~

Phone 992-2181

.

Friends 6: CBS N ews 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:QO--Truth or Cons . 3; Cross·W its 4 ; Liars C lub 6; Pop

1tl}~Nl

UNION OPERATED

BORN LOSER

Pl!FF-F'UFF- ... B04 ,
AM I P00Pt::D 1

lour ordinary wc;&gt;rds.

R~ST

wHriJ'S nu::

A

~APN

I A.M. to4:30 P.M.

'

SALES AND SERVICE

PARTS - LABOR
·GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

5 H·H· H... PERHAPS
SUCH MEN ARE

BETTER DfAD.
ANN IE .1

MEIGS PLAZA

or 949· 1.1160

Middleport, Ohio

LetT e

•Mobile
Home
Underpinning
.
• Roof Coating
• Tie -Downs
• Awnings- Carports
• Insurance
Repairs
See us at 1100 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio or
Phone 992-7034. 10.29 . 1mo .

HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre and
up . Middleport ,, near Rutla nd .
Coll992 ·7481 .
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
all elec , 1 acre , Middleport ,
dose to Ru tland . Ph one 992 -

7.481
SMALL form for sale. 10% down .
owner financed . Monroe Cou nty . W . Vo , Phone (304) 772 -

3102 or (304 ) 772·3227 .
COUNTRY farmland with sedud·
ed woods . w ater end good oc~ess in Monroe County. W . Vo.
$1 ,000 down . call (304 ) 772 3102 or (304 ) 772·3227.

llJ
r-~10R

VIRGIL B. TEAFOillD, SR .
~EALTOR

216 E. Second Street
Pllona 992-3325
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms,
bath , city water , natura I
gas furnace, garage on
corner lot. $16,500 . .

RUTLAND - &lt; bedroom s,
fireplace, bath , city water ,
natural
gas hea tin g ,
garage , and ex tra lot .

$14,000.
TUPPERS

PLAINS

-

Ranch 3 bedrdom home .
Gas F.A. furnace, city
water , breezeway, gar~ge,
and large lot near school.

$17,500.
RACINE

$28,000.
POMEROY -

Escape the

co untry weath~r by l i ving .
i n this 4 bedroom famlfy
home . 2 baths , family
rooms, large yard . A place ·
for a family . S27,SOO.

THtS .SPACE RESERVED'
FOR YOUR AD WHEN
YOU LIST WITH US .
SYRACUSE - Old 9 room
brick home . Ci ty wate r ,
natural gas and electric . ~

lots.

Be the opening bl the In door · nason for you w!fh
your old furniture re upholstered in beavtlful
warm colors &amp; patterns
from Bob's. If , you are
looking far savings .It will
pay you to pay us a visit .
Located in back of the Sew
N' Sew Outlet on Main St .,
Racine, 0 .
11 -10 · 1 mo-:-

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
CLOSED FOR WINTER·
Special Orders or Showing
of Carpets by Appointment

Dnly.

HOWERY
AND MARTIN E:oo:·
cove ti ng , S$plic syst•ms ,
doze r, backhoe, dump truck,
limeslone , gra vel, blacktop
paving , Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614)
BATHROOMS AND
Kitchens
remodeled , ceram ic file, pl umbing, carpentry, and gene ral
maintenorice. 13 years ex per ience . 992 -3685.
PULLINS EXCAVATIN G . Com plete
Ser11ice . Phone 992-2.478 .

HOBSTElTER
REALTY
Georges. Hobstener Jr.',
' Broker
1071!1 Sycamore Sf.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~~or.-.

to tM

.......

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

t~~~~~~~1n~s~=~~~~ru L-~""'------"..ll..J =-~...JL-"J'--....,"-L--""'-'
-

Pert:s monel\ is
safe hidin' under
them juqs o' cider'

Home Service
Elec., plumbing.
carpenter
work,
painting,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
home.

12.1.1 mo .

BRADFORD , Auct ioneer, Com·
plele Service. Phone 949-2.487
or 949 -2000 . Ra ci ne , Ohio , Critl
Bradford.

MY

ELWOOD BOWERS REP AIR Sweepers', toasters . irons , oil
small appliances, lawn mower,
next to Sto le Highway Ga rage
on Route 7. Phon e (614) 985·

3825.

EXCAVAl,~G . dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; dump truck s
O(ld lo-bo.,. s lor hire : will haul
fill dirt , to tioil, limas tone and
graveL Call Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone ~2 - 7089 . nig tl t
phone 992-3525 or 992 - 5232 .

~-.·

WINNIE
'

WHILE I.AY lEG WA5

HEALING I HAD
PLENTY

OF TIME

U51N&amp; MATEIZ IALS I
FOI:JND, I WA&amp; ABLE

New 4 bedroom. 2500 sq. f1
living space, 2111 baths, 1:
room ranch brick . Locate&lt;
3 miles from Rt. 7, up Wes ·
Shade Rlver . Ca.lt for ,ar

10 WOI2K Wl11-1
MY HANDS.

·allpolntmenf.
We have need of listings,
all types, homes, land,
com mercia I, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate

Helen L. Teolord
Gordon B . Teaford
Associates

Home Phone 949-2589

Associate

Poorer

15; Mer11 Griffin 6;

s :oo--Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke ~ ;

Mlsler

Rogers'

Neighborh()()d

20,33; Hogan s

Heroes 10; Emergncy One 13'; My Three Sons 1:1' .

DOWN
1Uite
chanteuse
2 Neckwear
3Put
in
trim:
3 wds .
4 Y?png cbap
5 Ptilnter .
6Gaze
7 Tennis
serve
8 Whip
9 Ennoble
12 Inclined
16 Mexican · ""
money
19 U.tvian

SHOULDER HURTS ...

.

7;30-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6,
Family Feud B; MacNeil -Lehrer Repor120,33; The
Judge 10; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
B:QO-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; Eight is Enough 6,13;
Good "Times 8,10 ; No\Ja '20,33 .

•

a:3Q-Szysznyk 8,10; 9:QO-Biack ,Sheep Squadron
3,4,15; Movie "The Next Man 8,10; Dance In
America 33; An Evening with Nancy Wilson 20.
10:00-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Perry Como 6,13; News
20; Cinderella 33.
.
10:30-Wodehouse Playhouse 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavell 20; Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 ;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie "Meet Me In
Las Vegas" tO; 12 :1)1)-Janakl 33.
12 :40-Mystery of the Week 6,13; Kojak B; t :I)()Tomorrow 3,4; 2: IQ-Ironslde 13; 3: 10--News 13.

Yesterday's Answer
22 Hay
32 "L&lt;&gt;ne
houslllg
Ranger's"
23 Emphasize
name
24 Builder
34 Bring up
2S Student
3&amp; Fluidity
27 Crusoe's
unit
friend
37 Algerian
30Unearthly
governor For Release T UESDAY. December 13. 1977

BRIDGE
Oswald arid Jim Jacoby

=+---+-Dummy entry is puzzler
-----------~·- · decides to enter dummY to
NORTH
121 13-A
lead a second diamond.
• A
Which way should he enter

'K

+ 10 :16
8 6 32

•

A 632

dummy ?
Most players will lead to
dummy s king of hearts to
retain control of all suits and
1

WEST

EAST

• Q tO 8 54
'7 J 2

..1 632
• Q 10 4

most of that grOup will see

+A 4

diamonds

East rise with the ace of
and lead the king
+KQ .JIO
of clubs. Dummy 's last en·
try will be knocked Oilt and
SOUTH
G
there will be no way to bring
• K 97
in the diamond suit.
' A985
The best line of play is to
K Q9
o 40 Frail
enter dummy with the ace o£
• 87 5
41 Belgian
· clubs. East gets in and
river
cashes three clubs but South
--..1..-t--.J.:,:":' I Both vulnerable
!' '
will take the rest of the
South . tricks .
Norlh Eas'l
to
work
it!
Wesl
DAILY CRY·PTO(jlJOTE ~ Here's how
I+
Pass
t•
AXVIll.IIAAXR
3NT
Pass
Pass
Is l.Oi'iGt' l::LJ. OW
Pass
Pas.'i
Pass
A Virginia reader wants to
One letter si mply s tands 'fo r another . In thiS sample A is Opening lead -- Five of know the rule in this case.
South is declarer, but East
used fo r th.e three L's, X f or th e two O's, etc. Si ngl e letters, spades.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word s are all
leads out of turn. South puts
hints. Eac h day the code !P li er s are differen t.
L-----~-----..J his hand down as dummy. At
BY Oswald &amp; James Jacoby !his point attention is called
l ' RVPTOQUOTES
South leads the deuce of to the lead out of turn. The
Q
R
diamonds
from dummy at lead stands. South remains
G A R' D
QRERESRQ
trick two. East ducks and as dwruny and North be·
D y G South rises with the king . ·Comes _declarer .
BAWB
H D Y G,
HAYURCJDL
How should he ~ontinue?

+J75
• 94

37 Terrible
38 wren
39 "Essays
of

_.

+

2'

SAKES ALIVE!!

pQ~tpone

I CAN'T G.O TO SCHOOL
roDA'I ... M'l RIGHT

. IF [ SHOULD HAPPEN
TO KNOW AN ANSWER ,
I WOULDN'T BE ABLE
TO RAISE MY HAND

Big Green

,

~ Q,~~

INEWSPAPim

SPREAD

773-5471 '

For

E y G

He Is a trifle too high .
LQWHH
J .H
DY
BARQR
· Twelve points Oi&gt;posite 12 ls
usually not enough · for
EWQBV B . NYADHYD ·
game, but South is there and
Yesterday's Cryploquote: BY THE TIME YOU THINK YOU wants to make it.
HAVE THE WORLD ON A STRING SOMEONE SHOWS UP If he has seer_1 an enemy
hand he can brmg the conWITH A PAIR OF SCISSORS.- NATHAN MITCHELL
tract in by playing his nine
"1~17 Konlt f r MlUlf'S s~nr.h ~ •l\' . lnf .
of diamonds·, but he isn't
clairvoyant nor does he have
eye$. Therefore he
BARNEY

8 x 52 TRAILER FOR: sale, Write
Nan cy Clork, Rt . 1 Sox: 39
Roci ne, sfotlng phon~ number ,'

AUC_TION SALE , every Tues . and
Fn . ot 7 pm . New and used
merchandise at Ohio River Au c·
llo~ . Meigs Pla~o . Middleporl ·
Oh1o , Hom&amp; Pt1one (:J0 4j

For Richer,

Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame . 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
tO; Dinah 13.
4:30-My Thee Sons 3; Partridge Family &lt;: Brady
Bunch 8 ; 10; L11lle Rascals 15.

Magazine 33.

BY

EXCAVATIN G , dozer , backhoe
and ditcher, Charle s R. Hot ·
l ield , Bock Hoe Se r vice
Rut la_nd , Ohio. Phone 742·2008 .'

OUT J No ne"ed 'IQ
your hQpp in eu
wo1trng for builders. See this 24
x 12 Add -a-room on disp.l ay at
Kingsbury. Ho me s. $3 ,800
moves ond sell it up ready 10
be· lived in . Phone 992·703.4 or
949-265A .

· 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Storyteller' s Town 33.

4: DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals -Our Gang 4;

vyx•

TO FASHION THIS
SEt OF 11TOOL5 11

P.M.
atu .

3·15-General Hospltal6,13 ; 3:30-AIIIn The Family

Moore '19 ; Daniel Foster, M .D . 20;

•

REMODEliNG . Plumbing , heating
and all types of general repair .
Work guoronleed 20 years ex·
perience , Ptlone 992 -2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs : ser·
vice , oil moke5, 992 -2284 . The
Fa bric
Shop . . Pomeroy .
Author i1ed Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

urns

8.10; 2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; 2:3Q-Doctors
34, 15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding Llghl 8, 10.
3:1)1)-Another World 3,4,15; Ohio J~urnal 20;

6:1)1)-News 3,4.8.10.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15 : ABC News 13; Carol
Burnett &amp; Friends 6; CBS News 8,19; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; Liars Club 6; News 10; To Tell
The Trulh 12,13; Gilligan's Is . 15; Mary Tyler

'
"
~~~~~~~~=========;--------,---r---------------------------------------------~Gawked

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

PHONE 992-6333
Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon .

Jumbles: GAUZE SURLY NAUGHT BRIDLE
Male1 a 1,.,,ng
., ~
·
~lrom~--,_,_
and ~. -B RGLAR

17 Eggs
18
Mahjong
pieces
20 ~~arandy -~'
21 Hotbed
~.&amp;..---._
22 Just a taste
lf 40 U , 23 Free-for-&lt;~ll
saljs so.
·zs Basti·
Joel r .
nadoed
'
%6 Riding
gail
27 Duffer's
call
28 Matter:
law
29 French
. annuity
31 Comic·
strip cry
~~ 32Free ·
=
from
33 Chalice
veil

OHice Hours: 9 A.M . to,,

Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolle, Sr.

ss,soo.

Service
.
Prom tM

11 -25-1 mo.

742-234B .

I I I]

Answer:

ACROSS
1 Machine
part
5 Swiftly
10 Upanisbad
11 Remember
13 Caustic
11 Squirrel
monkey
15 Dandy one
16 Mosle!ll salllt

992-5705

Will do roofing, construction,
plumbi ng and healing . No job
fOO Iorg e or too smalL Phone

rI I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

PHONE

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons,
Owner

Now arrange the cirded letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by t~e above cartoon.

~

ALLEYOOP

Radiator~--.

c.,.:,

I

T

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15 .

12· 11 - 1 mo.

~etta.t ...

THEM,

•

1: 3~0ays of Our Lives JA,15; As The World

5:31&gt;--'0dd Couple 4; Elec. Co. 20,33; News 6; Mar !

pen ng

698-7331.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Yesterday's

"S INCE 1947

OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
A.n!L
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

ese ~LOW

(Answers tamQrrow)

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

11-21-1 mo.

Kingsbury
Home Sales

'l'OLJ CAN'i

Print answer here:

.

No Sunday Calls Please

11 ·9-tfc

f.EAFORD

INSULATION
' SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

News 8; Young~ the Res~less 10; Not For Women

Only 15 .

RACINE , O.

992 -3978

Phone 949-2801

t :I)()-For Ri cher . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;

WHERE ' D YOU GO ?

RACINE
PLANING Mill

Bissell Siding Co.
General Contractors

EH? YOU'RE .

News 4,6, 10; To Say The Least

Treasures of Tutankhamun 33.

I [J

.THE. MAH I WAS
JUS T TALKIN ' TO-- ·

Family Feud 6,13 ; Love ot Life
, B. 10: Ses ame St. 20,33; 11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving

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

DEPIMN

IJTTI .E ORPHAN ANNIE

: ~LKnockoul 3,15;

15 · Divorce Court B; Midday 13.
12 : 3~ Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Gong Show 15; Bob Braun 4;

~HOOiiNe

Ph.J7U150
1-17-TFC

!-11•.0.

n .9-tfc

Located In

11

12 : ~~~~scenter 3;

IACCUST
I
[J I

Automatic
Transmission Service

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

ACE HARIMARE

Marcus Welby, M .D . 4; Match Game8,10 ; Elec . Co .

I Kl

SWAIN

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

in~tructions .

·

I""'"'""'"c.._,,
KI.......,_...__

DALf?

West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Chuck White Reports tO ; Good Morning, Trl
state t3.
7:oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Bullwinkle 10; 7:30-Schoolles 10.
B:QO-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame 51. 33.
9:QO-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Aftalr 8,1 0..
9:30-Edge of Night 6; Andy Grlffl1h 8; P rice Is Right
tO :c:_Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Big Valley 6; Price Is
Right B; Mike Douglas 13 .
10 :30-Hollywood Squares ~.15 ; Joker' s Wild 10 .
11 :1)1)-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Happy Days 6,13;

CDfJ(QRATi!~I&gt;.TIO~S !

00TTA

.
ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT a, CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
.step
by
step

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one latter to each square, lo form

MAIDT

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy t92-6282
or 992-6'263

12-2-1 mo .

rnlt ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

12· J.1 mo .

300 Main St.

WrntERALL CONCRETE
Hartford
1 Henderson
8a2-2115
675-1582

6 : JG-News Conference 4; N,ews 6 ; Sunrlse Semester B,
6: 4s-Morning Report J ; 6 :50--Good Morning,

Goes The Counl ry 8; News l D; To Tell The Truth 13;

Rt. 143. Phone 6.'8 -7191.

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

"Get ALDad Of This"

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER t~ . 1977
1:45-Farm Report 13; S;S()-PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10 ; 6:1)1)-PTL Club 15.
6:25-Chrlslopher Closeup 10.
,

Gilligan ' s Is. 15; French Chef 20 ; Parent Effect iveness 33.
,7:30-Hollywood Squares 3: L et's Go To The Races 8;

We ' re In Cupenttr just off

CARTER

TODAY.
PRICE REDUCED -

. YO.UR HOME OR FARM.
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
ASSOCIATE)
992-2259 - 992-6191

REMt;M I3EII!~ .

•

windows &amp; doors, in a good
s ubd ivisio n .
CA~l

hea t i ng bill s this w in.fe r
with - &lt;y our own gas. 4
Bdrms ., uti li t y, larg~ k it .•
patio, barn &amp; other ~h eds,
garden space on th is 2
acr es . $32,000 .00 ,
WE .HAVE BUYERS FO~

A compl,e le selection .
of Coal &amp; Circulali~g
Healers at low prices .
Fully stocked.

11·25· 1 mo.

Large 4
bedroom home w.lth central
heat and ai r conditioning .
Storm doors and windows .
Garage and large lot.

No

· M0D IFICATJ0NS --

FL'IAI!LE !

2:30-News 13.

10; Hogan's Heroes 15 .

Appalachian
Stove Company

Dave Parsons
Owner

Srrac••· Ohio

TE ST:

~LIGHT

1 :DO-Tomorrow 3,4; 1 :05-Kojak 8; 1 : 3Q-I ron s! de 13 ;

6:QO-News .3,4,6,8,10,13, 15; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;

2B imc

Third Street
Radnt, Ohio

SIDING-SOffiT!

"5HE·OcV/L"
PERFORMED 0"-l ITS

\1/LADEK WA&gt;JTF;;D TO
MAKE A FEI'I SLI GHT

Nvt Thtlmibtoft

CONTINUOUS
.. GUITER SERVICE

STORM
IIINOOIIS l ·DOORS

~01'1 T:HE

THAT W~S ""'1!
R: I\3 Hr
NOw ITS ~OT EVErJ

THEIII:

Fitzgerald In Hollywood " 6,13; Movie " Hitchh ike! " 8;
ABC News 33; Movie "The Wandel Country" tO.

5:JI)-()ddC,ouple4 ; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary Jyler Moore

"Titt OutinJIM

RACINE CARPET
. SHOP

Blown
lnsulltioft StAic•
FiftancifttAQQW.
llow'll Into Walb lo Attics

W&gt;iADDA '&gt;" MF;;A'i \1/E'RF.
IN TROU B L E~ 'IOU SAW

10: JQ-Biack Perspective ant he News 20.

11 :oo-News 3 , ~.6.8. tO,t3. t5; Dick Cave11 20.
11 : 30-Jo~nny Carson 3, 4.,1 5; Movie " F. Scoff

Bunch 8,1 0; litt le Ra scals 15.5 : 00-Bonanza J ; Mv
Three Sons 4; Secret Santa Conti nues 6; Gun smoke 8; Mister Raqers ' Nei ghbOrhood 20,.13;
Hogan 's Heroes 10; Emergency One 13 ; My Three
Son s 15.

~APT AIN EASY

C1rpel l UphOlStery
Phone Mike Younc
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

on heating cost
Ex perience and
fully insured
Free Est .
Ca 1161!.7 -6479
ll - 14· 1 m o . pd .

Tank Service

St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady

Young's
Carpeting
lllllt l p..,..,_
0.

20; Christmas at

Pops 33.
9:30-Soap 6; One Day AI A Time 8, tO; Mary Tyler
Moore 13.
10 :QO-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Family 6,13; Lou Grant
8, 10; News 20 ; Equal Jus.tlce Under Law 33 .

3:30-AIIIn The Fam ily 8. 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.

Superioo
Ste1m blraction

.Blown Insulation
JIM KE-ESEE

---·

fUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

Will buy 1 piece or complete
household . New . used, or antiques . Martin' s Furniture, 20 N.
2nd St.
Middleport. Phone

J&amp;L

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

i9n

197 4 VEGA Slo t•onwogon , good
condition . new tires 11 26 E.
Mo 1n
St.
Pomeroy . Ph .
992 -3408 .

TUESDAY , DECEMBER 13, 1977
• :oo--Mister Cartoon 3; Little Ra sca ls-Our Gang 4;
For R icher, For Poorer 15 ; Gilligan ' s Is. 8; Sesame

-

WHITE 1974 Corv f!tte . 3SO 4 · CHRISTMAS TREE S for sole Mo1n
speed
AM ·FM Stereo
ti h ·
Street . Rut lend
tel es co pic wheel · power wrn ·
D00GE- ' • •on Club Cob .
dows. power steeri ng . disc
A uto
Pr oce d re a sonably
brakes, cuslom in terior . air
949· 260 I
co nditionrng. $6 .300 or bes t of ·
fer 'N2·2661.
PIGS. S30 b 14·-378 -63 11
1973 FORO PINTO. 2 door, good NEW IDEA one row corn pic ker .
co nd1ti an C:oii992 -553J .
ex c·e l lent
$399 . Rem ufg ton
~--11 ,49 ou1 o . 12 go .. 30"' lull . ex ·
1964 BUICK WilDCAT. Runs good.
ce llenl $13 5. A ntique Wm ·
Has good fires . ~ 1 50 . Ptl on e
chester
bros s sco pe and
"992 -2749 .
'•
'
moun ts
wery good . $75 .
1974 PIN TO WAGON . E:oo:cellent
742 1359 .
condition . Ph"o ne992 -b1 3.4 .

With E ric Sevareld 8, 10; James Michener' s World

20.33.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; 9:QO-Mulllgan' s Slew
3,4,15; Three' s Company 6,13; Mash 8,10; Hea lth Care : Your Money or Your Life

Business Services

•

FIREWOOD , spld and dehwered
$45 o cord A ll hardwood
843 -2933 .

Thanksgiving visitors oi
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Brickles
were Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Brickles of Glouster and Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Brickles· of
We Are Now
Gaitersburg, Md.
Taking New
Mr . and Mrs . Homer Bailey
Customers For
were Thanksgiving guests of
Pomeroy Landmark
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Young,
w. Carsey , Mgr .
Wesley and Yvete ..
Phone ffl -'2181
Mrs. Ruby Burnside spent
3 AND 4 RM , turni 5hed ond un fu rnished opts . Phone 992·
Thanksgiving with Mr . and
5434.
Mrs. Richard Houdashelt and
FOUR ROOMS and both . Adu lts
Audra.
only . No pets. 992· 5908 .
CALL US
Mr . and Mrs. John Dean
Com mercial property opprox . 17
COUNTRY
MOBilE HOme Pork
acres . !ewe! land, loca ted at
had as Thanksgiving visitors
Pomeroy Landmark
Route 33 , north ~~ Pomeroy
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route
Mr . and Mrs. John Walter
Loi-ge lots . Coll 992 -7479.
~
~ack
W.
Carsey, Mgr.
7. Phone (614 ) 667·6304 .
Dean and Jeremy, Mr . and ~ Phone 992 .2181
TWO BE DROOM o pt . Call VA -FHA . 30 yr . tinancmg. Ireland
Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
9,92·22B8 before B:30 om
Mortgage . 77 E. St ate, Athens.
Raci]le. Callers in the af- WILL CARE for the elderly in our
phone (6141592-3051 .
FOUR ROOM lurnis hed opt. for
ho me . Phone 992· 7314 .
ternoon were Mr . and Mrs.
rent . 992.3658
SIX ROOM house . oil eleclric .
Robert Reid of Pataskala.
PIANO TUN ING · Lan e Daniels .
carpeted. car por t. SH•.OOO. A r·
New ph one number, 992-2581 . HOUSE FOR lease on lincoln Hill
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
row Camper . $600 . 9&lt;}2.7885 . 10
in .P omeroy
5· bedrooms .
II no answer , co11992·2082 .
and Mrs . Dale Harrison ,
om to 6 pm . No Sunday coil s.
req uired. 992 -34B9
Deposit
Scott and Jodi, were Mr. and Will DO typing . Mor1uscripts.
after 5 pm .
H.OUSE . HA VE to sell by lst of
stotistico·l. resumes , etc. Cal l
mar1 th. Call 742 -2810 be tween
Mrs. ·Phil Harrison , Rodney
. 992-3827 , evenings after 6 an d COUNTRY HOME . remodeled :
11 om and 10 p,m .
and Trevor,. Mrs. Mildred
car
pe
ti
ng
.
3
or
A
bedroom
.
weelo.ends .
modern ki tchen , 2 balhs , Iorge
-=--~~-­
Hudson of Pomeroy, Mr. and MOBIL E HOME
repairs. 992 -5858 ,
fish pond . sc enic and private .
Mrs. Olen Harrison and Mr.
About 4 mi les west of Harrison·
oitie Scholl of Pomeroy .
ville, Ohio to ward DeKter .
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beals'
Deposit r&amp;quired . Rent S1 50 per
month . For info rmation , ca ll
Thanksgiving guests were
502-439 -533 1 between 7 om and
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Well,
10om , Mon . through Set .
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier
and Jessica of Chester, Mrs.
We have enlarged our
Betty Chevalier and Rodney ·service department and
MAIN
Chevalier of TUppers Plains.
will service Hotpoint and
POMEROY, 0 .
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, who has
other brands.
1977
SUZUKI
~M
125 B
Mot ocro 5ser , ext ra s. exce llent
been living in Pomeroy, qas
4 lOTS &amp; HOME - 6
cond ition 992 -3082 .
rooms , 3 or 4 bedrooms.
moved back to her !ann here.
batt1 , some carpeting &amp;
Pomeroy Landmark
Recent visitors were Mr. and
Wll~ PAY cash lor guns, go - ~arts ,
paneling, porches, all in
mini and motorcycles or w ha t
Mrs. Patrick Williams of 9a-Jack W. Carsey,Mgr.
hove you See ad under wonted
good condition. $12,000.00.
McArthur.
Phone 992-2181
sectio n Fife's. 992.7494 .
4.IteR ES - Rutland House
Recent visilots of Mr. and
ha s 3 bedrooms , bath, 2
GOOD USED cha in saw s or wil l
Mrs. John Walter Dean were
l iving rooms , roofed patio
tr ade f or w hat ha ve yov . Fife's.
Mr. and Mrs . Bobby Sager! of
992 -749 4.
in the rear , trailer hookup.
Rutland , Mr . and Mrs. CASH pa id l or all makes and FIREWOOD
$15,500.00.
seasoned hard Garold Gilkey, Tammy,
JUST LISTED - 2 slory
wood s. split and deli ve red .
models ol mobile homes.
f ram e •• 3 BDRMS ., l lf:::~
Cindy, Rick of Athens .
742·213 1.
Phone or eo code 6 14·423 -9531 .
bath s, 2 Jivi ng roo ms.
Visiting over the weekend TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro· COLLECTOR BOTTLES, secls unf
i repla ce,
porche s,
broken . Call (304) 773 -5651 '
with their grandmoth~r, Mrs.
duels . To p price for standing
carpeting &amp; hardwood
Mason
.
W
.
Vo
.
sa
wt
imber
.
Call
992·5q65
or
Elizabeth Murray were Tina
floors. good condition, good
Kent Hanby. 1-446·8570.
10 HEAD 'oF Sleer , we1ghing
and Greg Murray of Sandne
ighborhood, immediate
4-500 lbs . 5 head of mixed
COIN S, CURRENCY . tokens . old
ville, W. Va.
posses sio n .
ONLY
Hereford Cows . 19591ton GMC
pocke t watc;hes and cha ins .
The house on the fonner
$13,900.00.
wi th
52,590 actual mlle~ .
silver and gold . We need 1964
Sam Damron farm burned
TWO .FIREPLACES - Up
8•3-2353.
ond ol der sil'&lt;~er co ins. Buy , se ll,
lo 3 EIDRMS., 1 floor plan ,
down last week.
or trade ' Call Roger Wamsley , ELECTRIC CORD orgor1 . Some as
742 -2331 .
~it.
&amp;
bath ,
nicely
Mrs .
Eugene
Smith
new , o good Christmp s pre··
remodeled, near ,shoppi ng
sen I , 992 -7883 alt er 5 pm .
received word of the death of OLD FURN ITURE , ice bo xes. bro ss
in Middleporf. ONLY
beds , iron bed s. etc. ., complete !'966 FORD PICKUP , ~195 . 1968
her father, · Forrest Bailey
$13
,000.00,
households. Write M . D. Miller ,
Chevrolet cor , $150. Run s goad
who lived in Kentucky .
Rt. A, Pomeroy , Ohio or ca ll
TWO YEARS OLD ~ Th is
Phon
e
1-378
-6216
.
FWleral services whe set at
99H760.
modern ran ch carr be yours
NEW YAMAHA Juitar wi th case
Ewing Funeral Home.
for
only $25 , 9~0 . 00 . 3
NO ITEM TOO large or too small.
(6141667-3920.
Bdrms ., garage , s torm

..

THIS IS DE'CEMBER!

COMMERCIAL LINED UP
FOR
PERFUME,

ln ·Memnrr .

Each word owr tht mmunum IS,

AND

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DaMILL!!

NO PR013LEM! MAl-&lt;EUP
WILL COVER

EILOTCHES ON MV "'ACE.

A OREAT CHRISTMAS

,,.
100
,,.

""

&amp;day&amp;

VVITJ.I FROSTBITE

KENO PRODUCTS HAS

15 WOf"ds or Undt&gt;r
Cosh
(1\lr~e
! day

Hollywood Squares 4 ; Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33; Pr ice Is Right 10; That's
Hollywood 13 ; Music Clly 15.8:1)1)-Man From
Allanlls 3,,,15; Happy Days 6,13; Conversallon

- 11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeroy,O .. TUesday, Del'. 1:1, 1977
DICK TRACY

C'MON, GET UP ! l{OU
CAN ALWA'1'5 RAISE
'{OUR OTHER HAND..

l{OU EXPECT ,.11Ero
ANSWER QUESTIONS
LEFT- HANDED?!

I SHOULD A-KNOWED
BETTER THAN TO
AST PAWTO
c'LEAR OFF
TH' SUPPER
TABLE!!

ElNTF: RPRISE A.So.'iN.I

·roo you have

a ques tion

for .
the B)(perts ? Wrife "A sk the
Jacobys~

care of this newspa·
per. Th e Jacobys will answer
individual qu_e s tions if
sta mped. self-addressed envelopes are enclosed. The most
interes ting questions will be
used in th is column and will
receive copies of JACOBY
MODERN.)

.

�•
12 - The Datly St&gt;ntlneUltddkp.•rt·P&lt;&gt;meru) , 0 .,1'uesda) , Del'. 13. 1977
..· ... '-:-:-:-:~:·:·:·: ·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·: -:-;-:-:·:-;- :·:':

---------------------------1
!
Area Deaths · !
I

I

ROY L. HEADMAN

MASON -

Roy Lloyd

Herdman, 57 , Mason , died

Chdpel Church in hi s ear lier

years.

The follow ing brot hers and

Su nda y at Pleasa nt Vallev

sis1ers

Hospita l.

Ralph, Raymond, Sh1r!ey .!nd
Br~dy , Jr ., a ll of Rt . 1, Crown
City , Mrs. Betty Crouse,
Ga lli poli s
M rs .
Erw i n
{Josephine &gt;Gibson .

Born

1n

Putnam

Co .• Feb . 8. 1920. he was the
son of the late Forrest and
Ell a Burchard Her dma n.
He was emplo-red b'l' the M .
G. Towting Co .• and a
member oi the Mason
Assembly of God .
Survivors inc lude h i ~ wlfe.
Ethel C. Herdman . Mason ;
tnree Sons , Lionel H . and Roy
luther Herdm an, Elkhart.
Ind., a nd Lonnie W. Herd
man ,
Mas on ;
three
daughters ,
Mrs .
Larr y
( Pratty) Mart in , E lkhart ,
Ind.; Mrs . R,upurt { Dorothy I
Howard, Hartford , and Mr s.
John ( Mace!) Bush . Mason
f i lo'e s i sters . M rs
Etl'lel
Ba rnett and Mrs. Ed ith Buck ,
Buffalo ; Mrs . Syb il Greene
and Mrs . Mabel Carne y .
Hat1ord, and Mrs. Dels ie
Farrel , Oak land , Md .: three
brothers. Lu ther Herdm an,
Point
P leasant ; Hebert
Herdman . Robertsburg. and
Brycle, Buffalo ; 16 grand -·
children and two grea t ,
grandch il dren ,
F!Jneral ser vic es will be
con ducted Wed nesday 1: 30
p.m . at the Mason Assembly
of Gael with the Rev . Chester
Tennant officiating . Bur i.al
will be in Graham Cemeter y .
Friends may cal l at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
today be tween the hours of 2
to 4 p.m . and from 7 to 9 p .m .
The bod y wi ll be tak en to the
church one ho ur pr ior to
servi ces .

DONALD ANGEL

Donald

Angel. 56 , a
res ident of 4092 Bea ch Bank
Rd ., Whiteha ll, diPd at 11
a.m .. Monda:y at Uni Vers i ty
Hosp i tal, Columbus . He had
P.,en in falling health the past

two .vears .
He was born June 16, 1921,
in Gallia County , son of
Brady Angel, Rt . 2. Crown
City and the late Belva M .
lv\ar1 in Angel.
Mr . Angel Is survived by
his wife, Carrie Fin ley Angel ,
along with one · daughter ,
Mrs . E l izabeth Stra ight ,
Wh i tehal !; one son , Robert , of
Pasadena . Texas. and five
grandchildren .
Mr . Angel was a Wor ld War
II veteran . He attended Kings

1:"'-:"--------

survive :

James ,

Coshocton .:
Mrs .
Bas il
( Irene) Holley. Mrs. Dona ld

(Dorothr) Per k ins and Mrs .
James Barba ra) Clary, a ll
of Gal li polis ; Mrs . Kenneth
{Lucy ) Bra y, Crown City ;
Mrs. Cl ine ( Audry) Saunders .
Cro~n City ; Mr s.' James
{ Pauli ne) Jeffers, Columbus
and Charles Roger An·g~l .
Ma ntua, Oh io. One brother
preceded hi m m death .
Funeral serv ices will be
hel d 2 p .m .. Th ursday at the
hH 1
d F
1
Wa u.g · a ley - 00
unera
Home w i th Re v . Alfred
Holley off iciat ing . Buria l will
be in Prov i dence Cem etery .
Fr iends may call at the
funer a l hom e from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m . Wednesda y.
M ilit ar y gra ves i de r i te s
will be conducted by Post
446 4, Veterans of Fore ign
Wars.

w

lELLA REYNOLDS

LONG BOTTOM

~

Mrs.

Zelia Rernolds , 79',•:bt Route 1,
Long Bottom , died ear l r. th is
morn ing at Mercy Hosp1ta l in
Portsmouth .
She was born a t Shamblings M ill s, W. Va ., the
daughter of the late John L.
and Emma Stalnaker Santee.
She had been a res ident of

Loog

Bottom lhe last tl

years .
She is survived by two sons,
Everett and Herbert , both of
Par~ersburg ; a daughter ,
Mrs . Wil l iam Freda L. Wells
of Tuppers Plains , and 15
grandchil dren.
She was preceded in death
by her husband , General
Floyd Reynolds, and one s·on ,
Undsey L .
Funera l services will be
Thursday at 2 p.m . at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville w i th the Rev .
Richard Thomas officiating .
Bur ial will be in Success
Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral home after 2
p.m . Wednesday .

CLAUD HUSTED

Claud Albert Husted, 70, of
Pomeroy , ~ied Mondav af ·

ternoon at Holzer Medical
Cen ter . He was born Nov . 25 ,
1907 , the only son of the late
Clarence and Clara Beckman
Husted of Weston, Ohio.
A member of the Ch urch of
Christ of Weston , he served
with the Naval Air Force
three years during WW II.
Surviving are his wife,
Martha Brown Husted ; a
daughter, Joan Anna-belle
Husted Claus, of Kinderhook ,
N'. Y .; four grandch i ldren .
Paula Joan, ·Gregory Wayne,
Aaron Douglas, and Holly
Olivia ; three si sters, M ildred
Plessner of Sun City , Ariz . ;
Margaret
M i ller
of
Whitehouse. 'Ohio, and Elsie
Matheny of Yuma , Ariz .
Funera l services wilt be
he I d Thursday a:t 2 p.m. at the
~wing Funer~l Home . The
Rev . James CorjJitt w i ll officiate . Burial wilt be in Rock
Spr ings Cemetery. The Rev .
Jack Finnicum will assist at ·
the · graveside . Friends may
call at the funeral home after
7 p.m . thi s evening .

\

SU R\IEY UNDERWitiY ·
A rlrculatlon
ilod
readership ourvey got
underway today In Meigs
and
Muon
Co unty
Coun~es lor Tbe Dally
SenUnel.
Publisher Richard S.
Owen said IS pel. of the
drculaUon wUI be reached
by telephone. Six questloos
will be uked by the
railers.
1\taldug the · calls are
Imogene Holstein, Mildred
Pierce and Diana MIUs.
The survey Is experted to
continue tbrougb the week.

Cub pack will
go caroling
on Dec. 19th
RACINE - A Christmas
party and gift exchange were
planned for Dec. 12 and go
Christmas caroling on Dec. 19
when Racine Cub .Scout Pack
243 met recently.
The pledge to the nag was
led by Damon Fisher and a
group participation was led
by Jean Cleland followed by
song activities entitled ,
" Head. Shoulders, Knees and
Toes," ;,Grand Old Duke of
York," and ' Willie, the Two·
. Gun Co wboy ." Kenny Layne
recited a poem, "I'm Just a
Little Cub."
AnnoW1cements were made
bv Jean Cleland and it was
repOrted that the Tom Watt
Shov.:case fund raising drive
was successful. There was
another group participation
entitled, " A Boy in a Toy
Shop,"
and
members
presented a skit, "The Lit·
tlest thristmas Tree_. "
Following the meeting
parents viewed crafts on
display which included
poinsettias, holiday or·
naments and candles wl)ich
the boys had made. On
Monday, the pack attended
the Racine Home-National
Bank grand opening with
each member meeting Dave
Diles and Archie Griffin and
receiving an autographed
miniature football .
Attending the meeting
which closed with the group
singing "Joy to the World"
were Earl, Jean, Jimmy,
Tracy, Marty Cleland; Dave
and Doug Powell; Libby,
Ralph and Damon Fisher;
Patty and Jamey Hensler;
Lucille, Brian Diehl; Mar·
shall, Debbie, Joey, Gortney
Roush, Debbie, Joe, · Greg
Hoff; Bill, Diann, Matt, Chris
Jewell ; Louise and Robbie
DeLmg; Terry Clark, and
Kenny and Kevin Layne.

E-R CALLED
.T h e
Mi dd Iep ort
Emergency Squad went to 842
Pearl St . at 11:40 a.m .
Monday for Linda Lane who
was
having
difficulty
breathing. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At
8:38a.m. Tuesday, the squad
went to CR 5 for Mrs. John
Miller, Rutland, injured in an
auto accident. She wsa taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment of
minor injuries.

H.a ve you tried.
our Drive-In
Facillttes1

A Point PleiiSIInt mah and
his father have filed suit in U.
S. District Court in Columbus
seeking a judgment of
$1 ,363,311 agai n~l a city
policeman and tile. , Oly of
Gallipolis as a result of a
traffic accident last June 4.
James Edward Martin, and
Joseph E. Martin , Rt . l,
Sandy
Hei ghts , Point
Pleasant, brought the actioo
against Ptl . Timothy S.
Weaver and the City of
Gallipolis. Joseph E. Martin
has
been
appointed
committee
for James
Edward Martin .
ActxJrding to the complaint,
it alleges thai on June 4. 1977,
on St&gt;cond Ave . in Gallipolis,
the defendant, Timothy S.
Weaver, recklessly and
negligently
drove
an

]oint policy
statement
is developed

We Tend to Our Knitting

During Monday's joint
executive committee meeting
ofthe Gallia- Jackson· Meigs
Community Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
"648" Board and the GaUia • Veterans Memorial Hospital
Jackson · Meigs Community . ADMITTED - William
Mental Health Center Board, Clonch, Middleport; Glennie
a joint policy statement was Little, Middleport ; Thelma
Salser, Racine; Cecil Smith,
developed.
Th·e policy statement will Middleport; Naree Hale ,
create
an
interim Dexter; Harold Cowdery,
management team with Reedsville; Hilda Hunt, Long
overa ll
management Bottom: Beverly Collins,
authority to direct Center and Tuppers Plains; Dessie
"648" Board activities in the Boring, Albany; Gertrude
ensuing two month period Woods, Middleport· Shannon
from Dec. 13, 1977 through Morarity, Racine.
DISCHARGED - Mildred
Feb. 12, 1978.
Details of implementing Arnold, Frank Wolford,
management functions will Charles Jones, Bernard
be forthcoming, pending Rairden, Myrta Schaefer,
approval by the respective Paul Stewart, Edgar Taylor,
boards.
Walter Robinson.
AITEND PARTY
Clint Birch and daughter,
Leota. Portland, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Wallace, Racine,
attended ihe 30th weddirig
anniversary of Mr. Birch's
daughter and son-in·law, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Upps of Yin·
cent. A very special guest for
the occasion was Mr. Lips'
daughter, Mrs. Maxine
Feather of West Yorkshire
Keighley, England: whom he
had not seen for over 30
years. Gale Lipps and Mrs.
Feather accompanied Mr.
Birch and his daughter here.
CLATWORTHY HOME
James Clatworthy has been
returned to his home at 730
High St., Middleport, from
Holzer Medical Center after
undergoing major surgery.
He is expected to be confined
for the next eight weeks.
Clatworthy, associated with
the Christian and Co. Food
Co., is district deputy grand
.master of the 12th Masonic
District.
DIVORCE ASKED
Mary Newlun, Rt. 2,
Racine, filed suit for divorce
against John R. Newhm,
Long Bottom in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

Deer· missed
.

b ut poIe h It•
NEW HAVEN, w. va. Three Middleport men were
injured, one seriously, early
today when the driver of the
car they were riding in
swerved to miss a deer and
hit a utility pole near here on
us 33 a t 12 : 30 a.m.
The Mason County Sheriff's
department said Ashley T.
Bishop; 56, ihe driver, was in
stable condition at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. Robert S.
Parker, 43, and Charles S.
Scott, 38, passengers, were
treated _and released.

HAVE GUESTS
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Willie Collins were
Keith McGraw, Mrs. Bill Collins and children nf West
Virginia; Charles . Collins,
Washington, D. C.; Mt. and
Mrs. Denver Bush, Big Stone
Gap, Va.; Stella Condroy, Ex·
eter, Va:; David Collins;
Racine-; ·,_ and Victor
Geneheimer, pomeroy .
Willie Collins was a recent
hWlter in the hills of West
Virginia.

Scores of customers are now driving
daily into our spacious auto-bank
facil it ies to cash checks, make depos1ts
and pick ·up money .

News.~ in Briefs

(Continued on ~&gt;~~• 11)
infiltration - they had access to a ministry safe stuffed with
Holzer Medlral Center
secrets - was Wtknown until the Frankfurter Allegmeine
(Discharges, Dec . !%)
newspaper broke the story Monday . The goverrunent later
Ri ~hard Baley ; Carlos confirmed it.
Bishop, Nanette Boring,
Anna Chapman, Terry
AMERICAN AGRICULTURE LEADERS HAVE ASKED
Denney, Wilbur Diefenbach, to plead Uteir case before a joint session of Congress today on
Craig Fisher, Mrs. Michael the eve of the scheduled first nationwide fanners '.strike. "We
Forner and son, John Fry, wish to convey that the United States is facing a . crisi$
John Gamble, William Hall, unprecedented in ' American history," American Agriculture·
Roger Haynes, Spring spokesmen said in a telegram sent to the naton 's capital
Higginbotham, Rhonda Monday.
Hof(man,
Mrs. Jackie
"U you allow this naUon to face famine, mass
Hughes and daughter, Mrs. unemployment and etxJnomic choos unparalleled in American
Royal Martin and son, Mide history, then Congress has failed the American people and
McKnight, Katrina Mercer, must face the responsibility." Keith Thomas, a founder of the
Olin Millhoan, Leanne maverick strike movement, said !ann leaders want to meet
Parson, Mrs. Gregory with President Carter before the strike begins Wednesday, but
Stewart and daughter, John there has been no action from the White House.
Vorys, Mabel Wells.
1Births, Dec.l2)
CHARIJE NASH, EXECUTIVE DIRECfOR OF THE
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Clark, a 9,0011member0hio Fanner's Union, said Monday that a fann
son, Pt._ Pleasant. Mr. and strike called for Wednesday Is "something that is well-needed
Mrs. John Sayre, a son, and long overdue."
·
Henderson. Mr. and Mrs.
Nash said that a group of fanners from Fostoria would
Allen Wheeler, a son, assemble at the State Capitol Wednesday in support of the
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. !ann strike. "The Ohio Flinner's Union has long been a long·
Truman White, a daughter, time ·supporter of 100 percent price supp&lt;irt with parity, U il
Crown City.
takes a strike, then that is something that is well needed and
long overdue.
••unless we get improvemeqt (in prices), many fanners will
go broke," added Nash.

Senator comes
to Middleport
The mobile office of Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum will be
in Middleport from 10:30 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday,
Dec. 14, at the corner of North
Second and Race Sts. in the
business section. Purpose of
the office, manned by two
memP.rs of the senator's
staff, is "to provide district
office services to areas of the
state that .are distant from
the offices in Cleveland,
Columbus and Cincinnati.
Staffers in the office will be
Steve Witt and Steve
Friedman.
$68,895 RECEIVED
Meigs County's three local
school districts have received
a total of $64,895 .17 after
deductions for retirement in
the State School Foundation
subsidy payment program
for December. Of the total, '
Eastern Local received
$19,784.66;· Meigs Local,
$23,339.30, and Southern
Local, $21,761.21. In addition
to the county bo.ard of
education received a direct
allotment of $3,826.50.

DINNER TONIGHT
. HARRISONVILLE - The .
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will hold its .Christmas
potluck dinner this evpning at
6 p.m. at the Harr~sonvUJe
Elementary School. Persons
. are to bring their own table
service and a $2 gift ex·
change.
•

"THE ,
FRIENDLY

OPEN ROAD

ELBERFELD$
Open Every Night Til 8

INTRODUCING
THE NEW GENERATION

SUPP-HOSE®

BUY ONE PAIR
GETONEFREE
To the new generation of Supp-hose, we've
added new light support panty top hose.
We gave them a·
special kind of
sheer support,
light, energ1z1ng.

THE MEIGS INN

'

GINO'S
OF. MASON
PHONE 773-5536

EAST . MEIGS - The
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education, agreed
in a regular session Tuesday
night,

VOL. XXVIII NO. 170

FREE.

;rt' ·

-;---rR_ __
Santa Claus wi II be on the 3rd floor Tuesday,
6 to 7 p.m. and Wednesday 3to 4 p.m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

reopen

three parent s -"':u;:~~~---:~=-=~:-:;;:;:~;;-;-::::--~=:;;:::::::;;;;;:;;;:;C!IHil-­
about dis cipline to their
children before schools
closed .
Charles Estep who has
been a substitute bus driver
was employed as a full time
driver and the board passed.,
legislation authorizing
Eastern Board members who
received the maximum pay,
$40 a month , if the board
wishes td set the figure for
pay
at
the January
organizationa l meeting.
Presently, board members
get $20. The organizational
meeting was set for 10 a.m.
and Jan. 2 with a regular
meeting to follow im·
mediately.
Attendin g last night 's
meeting were Doug Bissell,
Bob Davis, Dorsel Larkins,
Clifford Longenette and
Dorothy Calaway, board
members, and the two new
board-elect members, Deryl
Well and James Caldwell;
Fred Kessinger, president of
the Eastern Local teachers;
Supt. Riebel, Clerk Eloise
Boston and several parents
and bus drivers.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

EMERSON HEIGHTON, PRESIDENT of the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce, stands beside one of
Middleport's parking meters which have been capped to
permit free parking for shoppers during the Christmas
holiday sea.On. The free parking, arranged by Edison
Saker on behalf of Middleport merchants with village
council, will he in effect through Dec. 24. The meters were
covered by members of the Meigs Chapter , Order of
DeMolay. Most Middleport merchants have begun
stayling open until 8 each eve ning for Christmas shopping
and will close at 5 p.m. on Christmas Eve.

Egyptians, Israeli open peace talks
~·~

By JIM .ANDERSON
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!)
Israel and Egypt sat down at
the bargaining table today lo
be gm a new era of face-to·
fa ce negotiaUons and Israeli

By United Press International
CLEVELAND
• RICHARD
HONGISTO ,
CONTROVERSIAL sheriff o! San Francisco County, Calif.,
was to he named police chief of Cleveland today . At least one
San Francisco official said Hognisto would not last until spring
in Cleveland. Mayor Dennis Kuclnich, 31, elected only last
month who will appoint Hognisto , said he was just waiting for a
chance to ask Hongisto to come to Cleve land. The mayor
. toured', the Cleveland Press with Hongisto early today,
introducing him to editors and reporters.
·
"He has proven he can meet i.he test of being responsive to
the community," Kucinich said .
Hongisto, 40, a ten-year veteran of the San Francisco
police force who holds a master's degree in crimonology, put
through jail ref&lt;inns such as medical care and drug cowtseling
during his six years as sheriff. He also improved training of his
deputies. But he became controversial when he appeared with
leaders of his city's gay community and traveled to Maimi to
oppose Anita Bryant's crusade against homosexuals. And be
also spent five days in the San Malo County Jail last summer
for refusing to evict some 70 elderly Chinese and Filipino
residents of a lost-rent hotel. •

Prime Minister Menahem

COLUMBUS - FORD MOTOR CO. HAS SELECTED a
35!H!cresite at M.ton in Clermont County about 25 miles east of
Cihcinnati to build a $500 million transmission plant, it was
·
reported today.
Scripps-Howard Newspapers in a copyrighted story by
Ron Royhab said the giant plant initially will employ about
4,1100 workers, with a possibility of between 8,000 and 10,000
workers.

By SAMUEL 0. HANCOCK

~/';. ·

cannot

calendar made necessary by
the Dec. 8 closing, and ac·
C(Jrding·to the calendar, the
final day of school in the
district will be June 9. It
would have been on May 26
had the schools been able to
remain open.
Kathy Osborn was em·
ployed at the Chester
Elementary School as a part
time secretary beginning
Jan. 3 and added to the
substitute teachers list were
Becky Cotterill, Susie Heines,
Edward Schaekel, Gayle
Salyer and Randy Simmons.
The board agreed to make
necessary bus, roof and
furnace repairs while schools
are closed.
Early graduation for
seniors who have completed
the requirements by mid·
term was authorized and for
the first time, such senions
will be permitted to take part
in graduation ceremonies for
their class, but in no other
school activities.
Transfers within the budget
were approved Is&gt; balance the
books at the end of the year
and the board discussed with

en tine
four Midd.le East wars ago.
"Gentlemen, I declare open
the first meeting of the Cairo
informal pre·paratory
meeting for the Geneva
conference," Meguid said at
the nationally televised
inaugural session of the talks
at 11:33 a.m. (4:33a .m. EST)

llegin new to the United
States for talks with
Presid~nt

Carter.

Chief Egyptian delegate
and conference chairm~n
Esmat Abdel Meguid tapped
em a halffull glass of water
with a ball point to open the
first direct peace conference
grouping Arab and Israeli ·
negotiators since the birth of
the Jewish state 29 years and

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UP!)
- Two minlltes after takeoff
Tuesday night, with no time
to get off a radio message, the
chartered DC-3 carrying the
University of Eva nsville
basketball team plunged Into
a fog-shrouded ravine, killing
all 29 on board ..
Only one lived long enought
to reach a hospital. The last
of the 14 team members,
Artis Greg Smith, 18, of West
Frankfort, III., died early
today · in an Evansville
hOspital.
The plane, owned by
National Jet Service Inc. of
Indianapolis, went . down
about !.S miles east of the
main . runway at Dress
Regional Airport in this Ohio
River city.
"The plane disappeared
into the fog and about a
minute and a hall later I
heard the engine cutting out,
and it went down," said Rick.
Notter, an airport worker. "I

saw it explode in name. "
Airport manager James
Stapleton said the· plane
struck below the crest of the
small hill at a time when
visibility was three-&lt;jtll!rters
of a mile, but fog was heavy
in places.
.
"Bodies in the front were
melted Into the wreckage,"
. said Stapleton, who ruShed to
the crash site. "Some of the
bodies were tossed into a
. jlUIIy. It was a • tragic,
gruesome scene."

Killed in the- crash of the
-vintage, twin-propeller plane
..~ere ·•II 24 passengers and
ftve crew members. Among
the passengers were Coach
Bobby Watson, sportscaster
Marvin Bates and executives
of the charter firm.
The" team was flying to
Nashville, Tenn., forta game
tonight at Middle T'nvessee
State at Murfreesboro.
The
University
of
Evansville,
once
a
Mid·-·estern small college
basketball powerhouse which

He then began a prepared

Egyptian policy statement, to
be followed by similar addresses by the chief delegates
of the other parties present Israel, the Un[ted States ~nd
the United Nations.·
. Meguid was seated directly
across from head Israeli
delegate Eliya Ben-Eiissar at

a large leather-lopped round
table in the conference room
at Mena House hotel in the
shadow · of the Great
Pyramids.
The chief U.S. delegate,
undersecretary of slate
Alfred Atherton, was facing
Lt. Gen. Ensio Siilasvuo of
Finland, the head U.N .

Home destroyed
.
-·

DEXTER - Losses were home at 9:16 a.m. and
estimated at $35,0011 from a returned to its station at 12 : 16
fire which leveled the story p.m.
.
and one-half frame home of
At 4:12 p.m. Tuesday, the
Floyd J. Rupe, on Route ·1, department was called to 200
Dexter, Tuesday morning. Butternut Ave. to the
The home was engulfed in residence of Laura Autherson
flames when the Pomeroy · where an electric stove had
Fire Department arrived on shorted and caught fire.
the cene. Fire Chief Charles There was damages only to
Legar said a daughter of the - the stove. The property is
Rupes heard a crackling owned by Archie Swartz.
noise upstairs and upon in·
At 7:20 p.m. Tuesday the
vestigating found the upstairs Pomeroy Emergency Squad
ablaze. She went to a neigh· went to 1524 Nye Ave . for
bor's home and called the lire Clarence Lee who was ill. lle
department.
was treated at home. At 5:05
All of the b~longings of the a.m. Wednesday the squad
family were destroyed by the went to Route 143 for Cletus
blaze. There was no in· Arnott who was ill. He was
surance. Chief Legar said taken to Veterans Memorial
that the fire started· either Hospital.
from electric wiring or from
a defective flue . The fire
department was called to the .

DeCISIOD
••

moved into major college
competition this season, declared a day of mourning and
cancelled classes for its 3,0011
students .
"It's a tragedy thai defies
description," said university
President Wallace Graves.
Authorities originally
reported 31 persons aboard
the plane Tuesday night on
the basis of a Federal
Aviation Administration
passenger manifest. But one
of those on the list, student
- radio announcer ) Mark
Moulton, decided to skip the
·trip because he had the nu .
Witnesses said the aircraft .
plowed into the ro.foot hill,
snapping both wings and the
fuselage. Bodies, duffel bags,
sports equipment and college
letter jackets were tossed
ooto the slope.
Rescue workers who fought
through knee-deep mud to
reach the flaming wreckage
found Utree persons alive.
But only Smith survived long
enough to reach a hospital.

OD

takeover
requested
WASHINGTON (UP!) The American El.ec tric
Power Co. and the Colum,bus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. Tuesday filed separate
motions with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
urging it to expedite its
decision on a proposal that
AEP acquire C&amp;SOE .
Under the proposal, AEP
would acquire C&amp;sOE by
exchange of common stock.
The proposal has been before
the SEC since Feb. 23, 1968 .
C&amp;sOE said Ute delay has
restricted its financing plans
and such restrictions could Pe
expected in the future until
the matter is resolved by the
SEC.
AEP said its planning and
execution
for
major
generalion and transmission
facilities through 19115 are
heavily affected by whether
C&amp;SOE will or will not
become part of the AEI,'
system.

envoy.

The four delegates were
separated by empty chairs
reserved for five key parties
whose boycott of the talks
talks called by Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat
turned them into what
amounts to a bilateral

meeting between Egypt and
Israel, with U.S . and U. N.
officials taking a secondary
role.
Empty seats were left for
the Soviet Union, Syria,
Jordan, Lebanon and the
Palestine
Liberati o n
Organization , virtually

cer ta in

to

stay

away

throughout the conference
despite an 11th-hoW' bid by
Egypt 1'uesday for them to
soften their stand.
Further sessions were not

scheduled to he open to
reporters or
cameramen .

te1evision

Pomeroy's Christmas canes
will he turned on Thursday
-

College team killed
Almost like giving your legs a
massage, all day, every day, no matter how
hard you work. And because they're panties
and pantyhosE'! ir. one, there are never any
panty lines.
·
Now, when you buy a pair of this style, or
any style in the New Generation Supp-hose
.~
line, we'll give you a pair

it

· schools this year and set a
new school calendar.
Leading a discussion of
Senate Bill 384, which
outlines a plan under which
districts having to close for
financial reasons may
borrow money against next
year's funds, was Supt. John
Riebel. The bill requires that
a district borrowing money
must :
- Show in detail where
budget cuts can be made in
1978.
- Guarantee to remain
open in 1978 every day as
required.
- And repay the money to
be used during this calendar
year.
It was the consensus of the
board that no cuts can be
made to allow payback of
such loans and it was agreed
to remain closed for the rest
of this year.
The board adopted a new

CONSTRUC'l'ION OF A I(]f).BED NURSING HOME on Powell St. in Middleporl appears
to be all but certain. Property where Ute facility is to be located has been surveyed and the
grades of the site are being studied . ff plans proceed as expected, construction will begin in
the spring and be in construction some six or eight months. Approximately 90 persons will
be employed when the facility is completed. George Glaze, left, owner of the bulk of the land
on which the facility will be built, and John O'Neill, Cleveland who will construct the
facility, conferred on the site 1'uesday morning . R. C. Glasgow a~d Associates, Pomeroy,
have done the surveying and grade determinations on the project.

COOLIDGE, GA.- A lll-FOOT·IDGH VIRGINIA pine has
been selected as the Christmas tree for President carter's
Plains, Ga., home.
The tree was selected Tuesday in a contest by the Georgia
Christmu Trees Growing Association and will be taken '7~
miles to Plains Friday. The first family plans to celebrate
(Continued on ~&gt;~Ce 18)

-'"'·'.

NOW OPEN

'.

Construction preparation will begin immediately, a
spokesman said. Formal announcement was expected from
Gov . James A. Rhodes, Development Director James A.
Duerk and Ford executives frpm Detroit at a news conference
today.

~.::;-~

From Parkersburg, W.Va.
WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY

10..2

Member Federal Depo&lt;it Insurance Corporation

required to extend large
swns of money in the future
for medical expenses,
nursing services and physical
Uterapy in the approximate
swn of $350,0011.
Plaintiff further cootends
he has been permanently
.injured and claims damage of
$1,362,611.68.
· His father seeks an
additional 1700 -for court
expe nses incurred In the
prosecuting of the action.
In addition, the Goodyear
Tire and Rubber Company,
the firm where Joseph Martin
is employed. has filed a
separate
suit
for
reimbursement for the
medical
payments
of
insurance made for any
medical, drug and hospital
services lor James Martirl.
The
Gallipolis
City
Commission following a
special session Monday .
evening, authorized City
Solicitor William N. Eachus
to obtain an attorney woo
specializes in law suits,
particularly in federal COW'ts.

PARTY HELD
Otho Karr of Leading Creek
Road was surprised with a
birthday party recently by
his grandson, Rick Morris
and his wife of Racine, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris
of Pomeroy. He received gifts
and cards along with
telephone calls on his 76th
birthday.

Auto Teller Window and
Walk - up
Window
Open
Friday Evenings s to 7 P. M.

DEPOSITS
INSURED TO $40,000

Weaver was not responding
to an emergency call as
defined under section 701.02
of Ute Ohio Revised Code .
Plaintiff c'Oiltends Utat as a
direct and proximate result
of defendant's negligence. he
suffered pennanent injuries
to his head, brain, neck, back
and nervous system, and
other parts of his body and
suffered great pain and
suffering of body and mind
and will cootinue to suffer
great pain.
Because of his permanent
and severe injuries, the suil
conti nu~s , plaintiff James
Edward Martin, has been and
will always be unable to
perform his usual and
customary duties of his
oe~:upatioo and has been and
will be unable to enjoy the
pleasures of life as ·he has
done in the past and would do
in the future .
Plaintiff says he has
incurred medical expenses,
nursing expenses and
physical therapy expenses
totaling $12,iH1.68 and will be

H\&gt;SPITAL NEWS

f,..'""'l'""'1

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

Martin was operating his car
in compliance witlt the laws
of the State of Ohio and
municipal ordinance of the
city of Gallipolis.
The suit claims that at the
time of the accident. Ptl.

automobile owned by the City
of Gallipolis against a vehicle
driven by the plaintiff, James
Edward Martin, and owned
by plaintiff, Joseph E.
Martin.
At the time of the collision .

~~~~~~~~--~In

BANK"~

Eastern schools will reopen
.zn 1978; adopt new calendar

$1,363,311 sought in judgment suit

'2

- ~

Fred Crow, president of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce at its noon luncheon Tuesday at the Meigs Inn,
commended the persons who made new Christmas decorations
placed in downtown Pomeroy.
He said they were Jim Frecker, Ed Kennedy, Chuck Mullen
and John Anderson, the lighting committee, and Phil Kelly and
members of the Pomeroy Fire Department.
Crow disclosed that Frecker himself put up 30 candy canes
last Sunday on Pomeroy's Second Street.
Frecker displayed one of the canes placed on the streets.
He said the canes will be lighted Thursday as additional wiring
has to be obtained. Cost to make one cane amounted to $10. If a
new decorations had to be purchased they would cost $300
each.
Crow pres.:nted a letter that will be mailed to all interested
citizens of Pomeroy and Meigs County explaining that $2,400
was collected last year for Christmas decorations. He added
that they are running out of money to complete final Christmas
decorations.
He alSo commented that more donations are needed to tjdd
lights on Lynn, Court and Sycamore Streets. He is hopeful that
additional lights can be made and erected next year.
He added, "We hope you will see the need to make
additional contributions so the town will glow with pride." ~
Crow introduced three guests, Mark Serett, Judge
Manning Webster and Bill Hogan, who was the guest speaker.
N. W. Compton had as his guest Rory Mack of. WMPO
Radio.
Hogan, adult service director lor Ute mentally retarded in
Gallia CoWI\y, told members that schools for the mentally
relarded came into being In the 1950s and early 1960s.

He stated that mental retardation can happen in any
family between birth and 18 years of age . Gallipolis is
providing service to Meigs County.
From Meigs County there are between 18 to 19 persons
under 21 attending Community Class at Cheshire and nine
adults, according to Probate Judge Manning Webster,
chairman of the Board for the Mentally Retarded.
Webster explained that the board of county commissioners
pays approximately $2,100 per year per person to Gallia
County. In addition, Gallia County receives funds for each
student from Meigs County from the State.
Webster said the Meigs County Board for Mental
Retardation owns three buses and has to pay the transportation costs, and for the bus drivers.
Hogan showed slides of activities that take place in
community classes at Cheshire. He stated thai some cannot do
simple tasks that we lake for granted as tying shoes, putting on
a coat, combing hair or brushing teeth. These are some of the
things they learn.
Hogan displayed several ceramic articles made by
students in the W&lt;X;kshop. One was a Christmas tree sold in
several Hallmark Stores. He .asked if frogs students have
made could be sold during· Regatta weekend. It was thought
this could be arranged.
A question was raised about a school for the mentally
retarded in Meigs County. A levy was passed several years ago
for the con.struction of such a facility, but never collected.
Several levies have been turned down for money to operate the
school.
Judge Webster stated that at this point it is going to be
(Continued on Pill• 18)

Petit, grand jury lists drawn
Fifty names wer;· drawn
Tuesday morning ig the office
of the clerk of ·&lt;t;ourts for
possible petit jury duty and IS
nanies for possible grand
jury. .
Names

drawn

for.

possible petit duty were Earl
Shuler, Racine; Frances B.
Adkins, Rt . 4, Pomeroy; Guy
Harper, Rt. 4, Pomeroy;
Dorsel E. Larkins, Long
Bottom; William H. King, Rt.
I, Middleport; John Fry,
Rutland; Kathy S. Hood, Rt.
I, Middleport ; Harold
Teaford, Middleport; Larry
Edwards, Rutland; Betty

C OF C TO MEET
A meeting of the Mid·
dleport Chamber of Com·
merce will be held at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.

Donovan, Syracuse; Dorothy
Cray, Dexter; Wo'Odrow
Zwilling, Syracuse; William
R. Hayman, Racine; Mildred
Bowen, Pomeroy; Arthur
Eblin, Rt. 4, Pomeroy;
Robert Tripp, Tuppers
Plains; Ray Pullins, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy; Janice Lawson,
Syracuse; Wayne Cobb, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy; Grace Pratt,
Middleport; John Brewer,
Reedsville; Charles L.
Harris, Reedsville; William
L. Will, Rt . 3, Pomeroy;
Everett -Calaway, Coolville;
Iris A. Payne, Middleport;
Gary Norris, Racine; Charles
Mugrage , Rt . 2, Racine;
Melissa Coleman, Long
Bottom; . Irene Hoback,
Syracuse; Donald Vaughan,
Pomeroy; Mary Lee Maxey,
Reedsville ; Ternsley H.
Miller, Albany; Clay Eblin,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Charles N.
Nease , Rt . 4, Pomeroy; Linda
Mayer, Pomeroy; Rachael
Downie, Racine; Harold

Holter, Long Bottom; Glenn Arnold, Rt . 4, Pomeroy; Will
Stout, Long Bottom; Gary Dillon, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and
Reed, Reedsville; Douglas . Mildred Hart, Racine.
Russell, Tuppers Plains;
Attending were Common
Ruth Sheley, Middleport; Pleas Judge John C. Bacon, ~
Stephen Nease, Pomeroy-; Freeland Norris, Jury
Ina B. Masser, Reedsville ; CommiSsioner, deputy for the
DorisE. Fox, Albany ; Nonna sheriff's department, Mandy
Baker, Pomeroy; James R. Lefebre, Nellie Brown,
Sheets, Rutland ; Mildred Marlene Harrison and Larry
Pierce, Syracuse; Nonnana Spencer, clerk of courts.
Price, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ;
Pauline Barr, Reedsville, and
Mary Findley, Rt . I, Racine .
Names dtawn for possible
grand jury were Eleanor
Wingett, Syracuse; Gordon
Ridenour, Tuppers Plains:
Mary Taylor, Rt.
4,
Pomeroy ; Thor Carsey, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy : Olin Bo oth ,
Pomeroy; Mary Madden, Rt.
I, Middleport; Edna Wilson,
MiddlePOrt: Dorothv Savrc.
Rt . 2 Racine; Kenneth E.
Riggs , Reedsville ; Larry
Collins, Long Bottom:. Vincent Knight, Pomeroy; Mary
Li.s le,

Syracuse;

Borinie

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

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    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49065">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49064">
              <text>December 13, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="831">
      <name>angel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1202">
      <name>herdman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4342">
      <name>husted</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="278">
      <name>reynolds</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7621">
      <name>santee</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
