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                  <text>II- The llllllySentlnei,Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov.17,1976

Tri-State Scouts Will go
to Wisconsin Canoe Base

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center
PLEASANT YAUEY
DISCHARGES - Paul
Dlocbargea, Nov. 16 Juanita Abshire, Leslie Gleason, Point Pleuant;
Bennett, Rhonda Conn, Sue Sarah Rainey , Gallipolis
erawfo rd, Gary Ellls, Ferry; George Mayes,
Richard Fitch, William HenderiOII; Bradford Smith,
HUNTINGTON, W. Va . .:_ ElJ)lorers." It will be a nine- located on White Sands Lake Hatten , Roy Herrmann, · New Haven; James Thaxton,
Tri-state Area Council of the day trek Including the trip to near Boulder Junction, Will. Haley Howell , Maggie Slssonvllle; Sean Wolfe,
The expedition ill seven days Jarrell, Ruby Kinder, Robin Glenwood ; Cbarles Stone,
Boy Scouts of America will and from the base.
Northern Wlacons ln long with canoeing over Kratzenberg,Sheila Lanham, Point Pleasant; Lucy ·Hunt,
coordinate a trip to Northern
Wlllconsln Canoe Base In 1977 National Canoe Base is one of neariy 'every kind of water, Lee Layne, Kelly Lewis, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Dale
the
famed Kevin Lewis, Charles ·Long, Austin, Portland, 0.; John
which accord ing to Jim six National High ,Adventure Including
Collins, Council AdvisOr, "Is Bases In use by Scouls and Manitowish, Flambeau, and William Maddox, Bette Krebs, Point Pleasant ; John
avaDable to all Scouts and Explorers In the nation. It is Wisconsin · Riven. and Meadows, Rita Payne, Albright, West Columbia;
countless lakes and streams Yvonne .Pearson, Mary Samuel Farrah, Point
.
.
riearby.
Ramsburg, Mary · Riffle, _ Pleasant; Mrs. John Me·
Departure lor the trip will· Charles Roberts, Judy Daniel, West Columbia;
be June 20, 1977. with return Sho em.a ker,
Do roth y ·-David. Parsons, Point
scheduled for June 211. The Swisher, Dorothy Walker,' Pleasant; Mrs. Norma
canoe base fee lor Scouts and Charles Waller, Texanna McBralr, New Lexington, 0 .;
Explorers is $250, including Well.
Cha rles Wamsley , Point
transportation to and from
Birth, Nov. 16 - Mr. and Pleasant; John Greenlee,
IIDNTINGTON, W. Va. -~ supervision ," McCray ex- the base, meals and lodging Mrs. Samuel Malone, son, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Alonzo
Because Inte)llgent discipline plained . "A leader must en route, base fees and In· Oak Hill.
Roush, Letart; Harold Clark,
Is the Individual's basic communicate the reasons for surance, and side trips. The
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Samuel
defense throughou( his life, rules and procedures to gain age requirement Is that any
Miller, Leon, and Charles
leaders of the Boy Scouts of their full acceptance, and, ·boy be at least 13 upon arrival
Adkins, Crown City.
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
America use a boy's personal when boys fully understand at the base.
BIRTHS-A son to Mr. and
Admitted - Sarah Congo, Mrs. John Pickens, Portland,
Scouts and Explorers In·
code of conduct to assure their purpose ,-they are likely
Tina
Voss, 0.
terested may contact the Tri· Portland;
safety In all Scouting's ac· to cOnform." '
Pomeroy;
Jerry
Owens,
State
Area
Council,
733
tivltles. ·
Tile abn Is to gain the boy's
Dr . Richard McCray, understanding and accept- Seventh Avenue, Huntington, Syracuse; Mary Peak,
Camping Chairman of the ance of a personal code of W. Va. 25701, or call ~23- Rutland ; Jacquelyn Powers,
BOND SALES NOTED
Tri-State Area Council, Boy conduct, McCray said, and 3408 for detailed information. Middleport.
September 1976 sales of
Discharged - Earlen e Series E &amp; H United states
Scouts of America, stressed the vitality of his personal The Huntington office will
Scarberry,
Roy Scarberry, Savings Bonds In ·Ohio were
the importance of safety code wiil depend on the coordinate th is combined
Corden
Randolph
, Nancy $34.7 million. AI the end of
effort
lor
several
C6uncils
in
standards In preparation for strength of a self-imposed
Schoonover,
Alice
Nease, September, the State attained
the
West
Virginia,
Ohio
and
fall and winter activities. discipline.
Rita
Hughes,
William
Boring.
Kentucky
areas.
Those activities Include troop
~.6 percent of its 1976 Sales
"Self-d iscipline is an
campouts, patrol hikes and essential ingred ient in
Goal. Theodore T. Reed Jr.,
camporees.
Meigs County Volunteer
character developm ent ,''
As a leader in the health McCray said. "In our safety
Savings Bonds Chairman,
Alfred News
and safety field since the program it has always been
reported Saptember sales of
Sunday school attendance
birth of Scouting In 1910, the the basic defense against the
Savings Ronda In the county
national youth organization potential hazards of ad· on Nov.l4 was46, the offering
were $14,303, or 66.6 percent
set up over 4ll years ago a venturous activity. It is also ' $26.51. Worship services were
of its a~ual sales go.al on
Safe Swim Defense pian that the basis of right decisions for held at 10:45 with 'Charles
Septffl!ber 30.
bas been a model protective hea.lthful living and moral ''Skip" bomigan bringing the
method for conducting safe &lt;;~~pduct. Our job in preparing message on '.~Sin and its
CLUB TO MEET
group swims.
youth for the days and years Origin and some of Its Con·
REEDSVILLE - The
"Intelligent discipline is ahead r equires intensive sequences" Romans 5:
Riverview G.arden Club will
based on strict but fair fostering of self-disci pline." . "What harm can possibly
come from one little sin'
Shirley Sher, ally in fact, meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
Adam, Moses, as examples. Barbara Ann Sher to David at the home of Mrs. Warren
If man sins he has an ad· Myron McE wen, 76 A., Pickens. Members are to
vocate with the Father, but if Salisbury.
take. gifts for the patients of
not repented of the wages of
Harold E. Hood, affidavit, the Athens Mental Health
sin is death. " Attendance at Pomeroy.
Center and also cookies lor a
this service was 35.
Harold E. Hood, Carol Ann roll call exchange.
The Sunday evening Hood to Harold E, Hood,
revival service had an at· Carol Ann Hood, Lot,
tendance of 38-40 with Rev, Pomeroy.
AGNES GRIMM D~S
Domigan bringing the
S. W. Durst, affidavit,
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. message "On the Crucifixion Lebanon.
.
Agnes Grimm, New Haven,
of
Christ
and
the
part
Pilate
Patricia
Michael
nka,
was dead· on arrival at the
By Goldie Clendenin . step-father are in jail.
and
others
had
in
It
and
how
it
Patricia
Woodyard,
James
·Pleasant
Valley Hospital
Mrs. Gately, clerk in Nash·
PORTLAND - We see by
affects
the
world
then
and
Woodyard
to
Herman
C.
Tuesday
evening
. Funeral
ville
Police
Dept.
is
sending
the paper:
now,
as
se
en
by
hi
s
Mi
chael,
Maxine
Michael,
services
will
be
announced
by
10,000
petitions
out
to
folk
to
" M~n fa ces molesting
followers., ,
Parcel,
Salisbury.
the
Foglesong
Funeral
Home
sign
and
send
to
the
Gover·
charge", after giving her
The South Bethel Church
Fred A. Lewis, Janet M. In Mason.
phencyclidine, a drug to quiet nor, Ray Blanton, to urge him and Rev . Sydenstricker and
Lewis
to Jerry W. Davenport,
to
restore
the
death
penalty,
wild large animals, taking
hi
s
wife
attended
In
a
body
Gail
Davenport , Lot 100
her to his room and raping especially for child abusers.
and
furnished
help
in
the
Behan
Add., Middleport.
DINNER AT 5
In September, Columbus
her; she was 16, he 22.
worship
and
In
special
Robert
L.
Reeves,
Sh•il•
Serving
of the annual
He was out, after posting Dispa t~h :
M.
Reeves
to
Francis
S. turkey dinner of the Rutland
singing.
.
''
Intruder
shot
,
woman
11,000 of a $25,000 bond,l5,000
Rev. and Mrs . . Frank Hudson , Connie Hudson, II&gt; Fire Dept. will begin at 5 p.m.
for each of five other held." .A man broke into a
Cheesebrew
of Shawnee, 0. A., Middleport.
Thursday In the cafeteria of
Chicago
apartment,
raped
a
assaults, one girl abducted
and
a
young
peoples
trio
and
Nellie
M.
Brown,
affida~it.
the Rutland Elementary
22
yr.-old
woman,
then
threw
and raped In a neighbor's
·
their.
driver
were
present
at
Nellie
Tewksbary
to
Ed·
SchooL
her
out
a
15
story
window
·
...
yard. Pictures of nude girls
were in the apartment. Now and was shot' by her room the revival on Wednesday ward Ellsworth Tewksbary,
held without bonds since the mate. Intruder escaped, and evening when the Rev . Frank Robert Owen Tewkshary, Lot
girl was arrested for owning Cheesebrew was speaker and 104 Palmers Add:, Midbeast struck again.
In Cleveland, Tenn. - Four an unregistered gun and the trio sang. After the dleport.
meeting they all visited at the
Thomas R. Kibble, Irene
year old girl tortured to death firing it In city limits!
home
of
relatives
of
the
!{ibble,
Betty , Battista,
Seems like all laws.
by her step-father, her
Cheesebrews
here,
Mr.
and
Thomas
Battista, Peggy
mother says, by forcing her especially this gun thing, is
Mrs.
Charles
D.
Woode.
Stevens,
Kenneth
Stevens to
to walk for hours, then giving against people, young and
Ollie
Atherton
recently
F)cemyer
and
Salmons
her hot sauce, and beating old, being able to protect
week,
with
her
spent
a
Lumber
Co.,
Inc
..
40
acres,
themselves.
her with a stick.
daughter
and
family,
Mr.
and
Olive.
Life
Is
so
cheap
to
some
,
Mallsha Morgana Gibson
l Carson Crow, Receiver,
was found dead on · a urine money for defense , a few Mrs. Ernest. Vineyard and
baby
son
who
was
iii
at
the
Cardinal
Enterprise, Inc. to
months
maybe
in
prison,
for
soaked mattress ; mother and
Ace High Music Inc,, Parcel
the rest of another's life cut time In Michigan. ,
Howard Flanders is con- Sec 3T2Rl3, Salisbury.
·short. Big Deal!
valescing
at his home, since
Adetective in Chicago tells
being
hospitalized
In Cam.
of old, sick, poor and scared
den-Clark
Hospital.
Market Report people in rundown apartFlorenee ·Spencer entered
ments, who have nothing
Ohio Valley
except welfare checks and Camden-Clark Hospital on
Llveotock Co.
food stamps, 65 to over 90. Sunday, Nov. 14 where she
Gallipolis, Ohio
And young able bodied wiil undergo gall bladder
11-13-76
hoodlums break in on them surgery.
Sunday dinner guests of
Stocker Cattle, steers, 250 · demanding , while beat ing
to 300 lbs. 22. to 29.75 ; 300 to them, where is the money? Mr. and Mrs. Vere Swartz
toO lba. 22.50 to 31.; toO to 500 Two women, 82 and 83 yrs. were their son, Mr. and Mrs.
lba. 24. to 34.75; 500 to 600 lbs. old, were beaten , locked in a Vernon Swarts and Rena and
24, to 39.50; 600 to 700 lbs. closet and raped. These Tena, Robin, Rex and Roger
22.75 to 37.; 700 lbs. and over devils between 16 and 19 of Hockingport, 0 .
Afternoon guests at the
23. to 31.
.
needed money to buy clothes
Swartz home were Mr, Chase
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300 with! ,
lba. 1~ . to 24. ; 300 to toO lbs.
They'll make great citizens Kimes and son Fred, and
• 19. to 26.50, 400 to 500 lbs. unless someone solves the Mary and Ruth Kimes o!
Columbus, 0 ., couSins of Mr.
· 18.50 to 26.; 500 to 600 lbs. sickness in our land.
Swartz.
19.75 to 25.50; 600 to 700 Ibs.
18. to 29.; 700 lba. and over 17.
to 25.75.
Stock Cows and Bulls (By
the head) - Stock Cows
125.00 to 240.00; Stock Cows
and Calves 160.00 to 270.00;
Stock Bulls 115.00 to 235.00;
Baby Calves 9.00 to 4£.00
(By The Pound ) - Canners
&amp; Cutters Cows 15.50 to 16,;
Holstein Cows 17.75 to 21.65;
.Commercial Bulls 22.10 to
28.25.
Pigs 9.00 to 27.50.
Veal Calves- Tops 220 lbs.
to 250 47. to 51.; Medium 200
lba. to 300 41. to 46.50; Culls
, lll, to down.
· Sows 350 lba. up 22.65 to
Sq. Yd.
Sl.50.

Personal reliability
key to Scouter's safety

Meigs
.Property
Transfers

Hoodlums attack

Opposition to new coal tipple
in river at Clifton reported

Santa
c~ming to
.
town on the 29th
With holiday decoraU111111 Nick and four of IU tlvea.
all In place through the Several bnda Including
commercial areu of the Meiga, Soulbern ·and Kyger
town, the annual parade to Creek are especl«&lt; to tate
welcome In the Christmaa · part as il a number of
seuon in Middleport has
been oet for Monday, Nov. 29.
The annual parade will
start at the Gateway store
and move south through
town. Registration for par·
ticlpatlon Is requested so that
a line of march can.be worked
out In advance. Mrs. Debbi ·
(Continued from page I)
Buck will be taking the for two-thirdl of tbe state were releMed Tuelday and allowed
registrations and can be. · lbat Jimmy Carter'a lead aver Gerald Ford bu dropped to
reached at 99U58Ii or 992- 6,91111 votea.
Thirteen more Oblo countlellllld written vote tabulatkllltbe
3133•
A highlight of the parade with Secretary of 1b1e Ted Brown, ~to 118 COUll11ea
will be the Santa float with st. number that baw flied otllelll reporto.

News •• in Briefs

Four die

TY

Government conununlques
said the gunmen seized the
hotel at 9:50 a.m.(2:50 a.m.
EST) and the gunbattle raged
more tlu!n four hours.
The guerrlllas burst Into
the hotel firing submachlne
guns Into the air, and threw a
grenade at a receptionist In
the lobby.

fNews • • .in Briefsl
By Ualled Presslnle1'118tlonal
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND - BRITAIN TODAY urged
blacknaUonallstleaders Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo to
join dlacllllllons m the shape of a pre-independence Interim

go~=e~~~~:::W.n

of join
thethepeace
conference,
suggestedway5 for \he I)VO men to
discussion
without
appearing to lose face, folloWing their refusal to discuss
anything until a firm date for Independence was set. Richard
has Bald he cannot and will not set a blinding date lor the
transition to black majority rule, but suggested It could come
aaearlyas Dec. 1,1977,lfnohltchesareencountered.

snap
super
pockets. It 's m
velous
for
V(:IU ,
marvelous for gift
glying , too . Machine
wash ·lind ·dry Arnel ·
nylon in bl ue, green
or wine.
S·M·L , $20 .00 X· KX ,
I

..,'

su.oo

minimum

SALt LAKE.CIT:Y ~ UTAH HEALTH oHiclals say they
Will IsSue arrest warrants lor suspected carriers of a
penlcllllrH:eslstant strain of gonorrh(l&amp; unless they cooperate
j'rith treatment programs.
·
..
Bonnie· Bullock, venera! ,disease treatment director lor
$all Lake County, and Ron Cremo, VD program director for
the state Health Division, said the public health threat posed
by the super strain of gonorrhea prompted the get-tough
policy, The health officials said they received a poor response
to a plea two weeks ago f~r all gonorrhea victims in Salt Lake
County to report to clinics for follow-up treatment because of
!be penlclllln-resistlmt strain,
,

d\lposlt, interest paid
quarterly.
A substantial penalty 11
Invoked on all certificate
·accoun ts withdrawn pi" lor
to the dale of matur ity.

.Meip Ql. Branch

CLOSED FOR

-@

Vlt.ATION
WATCH FOR ·

The Athens count)
Saving• &amp; LOin Co.
296 Sec and St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Open Monday lllrouo~ Tllundly9:301oSp.m .
Friday 9:30 Ia 8 p.m. and
Saturday 9:301a5 p.m.

ELBERFELDS

age~

-

Special -.·

writers said.

OUR LAYAWAY
PLAN

French Fries

Coffee, Tea or Milk

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, o.
Phone 992-6304

Nylon

Kitchen&amp;"

T.v. Room
I

necessary.~~

However , the notice, with
plans of the project,
said:
. ·
" Interested part ies ar&lt;!
Invited to state ~ny objections
they may have to the
proposed work. The decision
whether to issue a permit will
be based on an evaluation of
attache~

the probable Impact of the

proposed activity on the
public interest. That decision
will reflect the national
concern for both protection
and use of Important
resources. The benefit which
reasonably may be expected
to accrue from the proposal
must be balanced against Its
reaso nabl y foreseeable
detriments. AU factors which
may be relevant to the
proposal will be considered;
among th ose . are con·
servation ,
economics,
(Continued on page 2)

en tine

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1976

e

·

.

.

'
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT

PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) President-elect Jimmy
Carter wants the Democratic
leadership to give top priority
to granting him authority to
reorganize the executive
branch, which he said would
take "two to three years" to
complete,
The leadership's reaction
to Carter at their first post·
election meeting was cordial,
but noncommlttalto specifics
of his program.
According to a high Carter
source, one congressman
pr aised
Carter
for
acknowledging at a news
conference this week that the
nation may have 5 to 7 per
cent unemployment for much
of his first term.
The congressman
reportedly said ''It was
worthwhile to let the
American people know
.PUblicly there was no quick."
fix answers to our economic
· problems."
For the meeting, the president-elect
went
to
congressional turf , the
antebellum mansion of Sen.

·. ·

PRICE· FIFTEEN CENTS

.

·

.

e

.

HerrnanE. Talmadge, ~a . ,
near Lovejoy .
Carter and the dozen
ranking Democrats met
reporters outside the
mansion after the thre~our
meeting. Later In the day, the
source, wbo asked to remain
unidentified , briefed
reporters.
'
Carier revamped the
government of Georgia as
governor
and
made
reogranlzation a major
theme o! hill campaign. The
source said that In the
meeting Carter 11 0bvious1y
felt the need to lead off with
the reorganization.
"The governor emphasized
at the outset, and, In fact ,
characterized as being
particularly important to
him, what he felt was his
ccmmltment to the American
people with regard to
reorganization," the source
said ..
Carter told reporters he
woilld like for the old Hoover
reorg~nlzatlon authority,
which recently expired, to be
reinstated, Thill gives the
p r e s id e n t br oa d
reorganization powers ,

·
subject only to veto by one
chamber of Congreas.
Carter said he would make
revision "a very careful, a
very deliberate process" the
source said, adding, "it'll he
two to three years before it's
completely consummated.''
The source said the
congressional reactlm was
"generally favorable, quite
favorable ." With Carter
standing by, reporters asked
·the leadership for their
reaction.
House Democratic Leader
Thomas "Tip" O'Neill of
Massachusetts, who probably
will be speaker, pledged "100
per cent cooperation." But
O'Neill stopped short of
making Carter's legislative
priorities his own, saying
only that Congress "will work
with him."

Sen. Edmund S. Muskle of
Maine prediCted that Carter
woilld have a honeymoon, but
Sen . Gaylord Nelson of
Wisconsin, said that, for
Instance, he needed to know
the details of Carter's health
plan before predicting how
Congress would react to lt.

New trial denied
The request of Mary husband, Floyd, last June I
Virginia Hendricks for a new has been denied .
Her attorney, James A.
trial, overturning a jury
finding she was gullty of the Bennett, Gallipolis, listed the
shotgun slaying of her following causes as grounds

p
.

ff

e

JANE BROWN, Meigs Cowtty's tuberc"losls nurse,
gives
swine flu vaccine to Mille Fry, Syracuse.
.;

•

ro Itt~wms
by just_eight

WU.UAMSBURG, VA. - PRESIDENT-ELECT Jimmy
The sheriff-elect of Meigs Hargenbach requested the
Carter has Informed 200 European and American polltlclans County Is Democrat James J. recount under Ohio law which
attending the North Atlantic Aasembly he plans to strengthen Proffitt by a margin of 8 votes provides. that such recounts
U.S. Ilea with NATO allies. Carter's message was conveyed to In 10,328 cast!
,
must. be handled by,the board
applauding Aasembly delegates by Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Tex. ,
The Nov. 2 election for of elections free of charge
a member of the U. S. delegstion.
sheriff .became official when a candidate Is defeated
Brooka told the delegates, all politicians from Uie 13 West Wednesday evening following by one-half of one percent of
European natioos which together with Canada ailfi the U. S. a recount by the staff of the the total vote cast.
comprise NATO, that Carter had "asked that I convey to you Meigs County Board of
Following the recount,
his dep dedication to strengthening our ties with our North Elections.
Proffitt still led Hartenbach
Atlantic ailles and working together to solve our mutual
The recount was requested by eight votes, 5,168 to 5,160.
problems.''
by Republican incumbent The board of elections staff
sheriff, Robert C. Har- began the recount of the
PITTSBURGH - A CO-PILOT SUFFERED A BROKEN tenbach, who, according .to county's 30 precincts at 9
ankle and two flight attendants received minor Injuries In a · the official tally of the board a.m. Wednesday and did not
near mid-air collision Involving a Trans World Airlines jetliner following the election, trailed C.mplete the recount until
and another aircraft, a TWA spokesman sald today.
Proffitt by IIi votes . well after 5 p.m . Wednesday.
TWAldenWied Its plane as a DC 9, Fllllh1.516, which took
off from Indianapolis Wednesday afternoon with 73 passengers
and a crew of four. The Incident occurred as the aircraft was
attempting to land at Greater Plltaburgh International
Airport. 'lbe other aircraft was not Identified by TWA or the
)rederal Aviation Admlnlatration. "The only Information I
'
TUPPERS PLAINS have ilthat evasive action was taken," said FAA spokesman Bats, the flying , not the to the group's attention that
several immediate repairs In
Jamea J ..Hanten. .
·
hitting type, and an open the building are needed and
sewer across the playground, that .two very ·serious con·
got attention recently when ditions exist which coilld
the
Tuppers
Plains affect the health of the pupils.
,BEAUTY FINED
ON BALLOT
Elementary
School
was
bost
The committee for lm·
FEDERAL WAY, Wash.
CIUCAGO (UP!) - Ed
to
lis
annual
open
house.
provement to the playground
(UPI) - Sharon Lambert, · Sadlowski, candidate for
Many parents attended this reported that an open sewage
thla year's first Miss president of the United
session
which provided an , ditch ·on the playgrou~d
Washington, was fined $150 Steelworkers of America,
opportunity
lor them to meet should be tiled and covered. A
plus $4 In court costs said Wednesday he has
with
teachers
and observe motion was made , that the
Wednesday on a shoptiltlng received enough local
some
of
the
activities
in same committee, Bill Durst,
nominations to be placed on
conviction•.
which
.
the
children
are
Frank Rice and Keith Weber,
Mlas Lambert was charged the national ballot for the
participating.
be appointed t6 assure that
with lhoplllting laB! SIIIIUlltr, union office. .
After open , house, the the necessary arrangeme11ts
Sadlowski is director of the
She l'tliped her tltle and a
IIUCcesaor was named to com- 130,000 member District 31. regular booster's meeting be made to provide adequate
pete In the Mlas America The USW election Is set for was held in the school treabnent. of this problem .
gymnasium. It was brought
. Pageant at A!lanllc City.
next Feb. 8.

for a new trial in his motion:
The verdict was not
sustained by sufficient
evidence and is countrary to
law : the following error of
law occurring at the trial (A)
the denial of the defendant 's
right of cross-examination of
Mrs. Ellis, the prosecution
witneas, as to the statements
made by" the dele naanfTmmediately · following the
alleged shooting, all of which
constituted res gestate; (B.)
the order of the court
. prohibiting the . defendant
from
providing
any
testimony on the question of
self defense alter the
testimony of the defendant.
Mrs. Hencricka was Indicted for murder at the May
term trial which began Aug.
28, 1976. She was sentenced to
the Ohlo Refonnatory for
Women at Marysville on Aug.
30.
A motion for shock
probation on Oct. 5 also was
denied by Judge John C.
Bacon. The court entry shows
Judge Bacon ovecrilled the
motion for a new trial on Oct.
28.

' GETI'ING HER SWINE flu vaccine from the "gun"
type of applicator is Hnzel Thomson, active senior citizen ,
plano accompanist of the senior citizens choir .
Administering the vaccine Is Oris Hubbard, E.M .1'. of the
Syracuse Emergency Squad.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK •
Saturday through
Monday , ltille or no
preclpitatfoo through lbe
period. Highs Saturday wlll
be In lbe 10s and In the 30s
Sunday aod Monday. LoWs
will be In the mtd 201 to the
mid 30s.

Tickets
on sale
for game
Advance tickets for the
annual Thanksgiving
Pomeroy-Middleport alumni
MRS. PAT INGELS, left, who was working as a
foot!mll game with proceeds
volWJteer with the swine vaccine program at the Senior
going to the Meigs Unit of the
Ctt)zens Center In Pomeroy, takes time out to get her
American Cancer Society go
vaccination from Mary Myers, county public health
on sale Saturday.
nurae.
Members of the unit will be
at the Farmers Bank and
Savings' Co., and the Citizens
National Bank In Middleport
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon selling
Pterodactyl egg
tickets and all day at Krogers
Store In Pomeroy, Tbe game
will be' 'played on the recommended
Pom~roy field at Z p.m. on
Thanksgiving Day .
as Christmas gift
An Innovation to half time
activities this year will be the
CLEVELAND (UPI ) crowning of a queen and king
You ny
be's got
and a princess and a prince.
Meigs County's free swln
everythiU aod you don't
All elementary schools of the
know what to get him for vaccine clinics got underway
county have· been Invited to
Chrlotmas? How about bls Wednesday with the Senior
participate in the royal
Citizens Center In Pomeroy
very own Pterodactyl,egg?
program for children from
Eggs of the prehistoric as the first location.
kindergarten through the
During the five hours of the
flying reptile are beln&amp; oold
sixth grade.
first
.clinlc, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
ao pan of The Ark In the
Selection of the royalty will
a~9ut
160 persons received
Park Cbrtatmas Collection
be on the penny a vote
the
vaccine.
Nationwide
at lbe Cleveland Muteum
method:- The-'prlnce and · of Natural History and Pl!bllcltr givell to· recent
princess will be from among
each comea wllb hatehlng alleged vaccine-related
the kindergarten through
dealha may have reduced ·the
iollructfono.
third grade and the king and
figure.
The museum says
queen from among the fourth
. Health
department
anyone wllllng to put the
through sixth graders.
workers and volunteers wbo
egg oa a red silk goose
are 'providing the vaccine ,
down plllow aod set on It
are hoping that before the .
for sot dayo will get hts
end of the week, "holdbacks"
money (l%.00) back U It
will change their minds.
doesn't
batch.
The schedule lor the
ARTIST DIES
The ens and other
remainder
of the week :
PARIS (UP! ) - American
unusual gUts will be on Bile
THURSDAY
through SuDday.
artist Man Ray, a mover and
Rutland High School gym,
shaker of the Parts art scene
6:30
p.m. • 9 p.m.; Pomeroy
since the 1920's, died today In
Fire
Station, 6:30 p.m. • 9
his Paris studio, friends
p.m.
reported. He was 88. Ray,
FRIDAY
equally at home with painChester
Fire Statton, ~:30
ting, photography and
p.m. · 9 p.m.; Harrisonville
sculpture, was one of the
founders Of both the dada and
Cloudy tonight, lows to Elementary School, 6:30 p.m.
9 p.m.
surrealist art movements, upper 30s. Cloudy, t~mlng
SATURDA!
.
forerunners of today's pop cooler Friday, highs In the
Southern
Junior
High
art .
upper 50s. Probability of
precipitation near zero per School, Racine, 6:30p.m. • 9
cent today , 20 per cent p.m.; Pomeroy Fire Station,
tonight, 10 per cent Friday. 9 a.m. • 2 p.m.; Meigs l!lgh
School, 9 a.m: • 2 p.m.

Swine flu

clinics in

full swing

Weather

Bats, sewer get' parent attention

$588

Stuffed Shrimp

"A preliminary deter;
mination based upon an inspection of the site and an
environmental assessment
Indicates that preparation of
an Environmental Impact
Statement wlll not be

Top P. ·r iority on
reorg·a·niz·a·tion

aso.Smolleft died of old
... 9at the NatlonalZoo in .
Washlrigton.lle waa buried last week near his birthplace, but
formal services were postpooed until Wednesday. The bear's
value as a conservation and fire prevention symbol was
pralaed during the ceremonies by several speakers, many of
whom llad a hand In making hbn famous.

Thursday Night

CARTY HONORED
CLEVELAND (UP!) Designated hitter Rico Carty,
clabned by Toronto In the
American Legue expansion
drali two week&amp; ago, waa
voted the Cleveland Indiana'
"Man ollhe Year" by local
baaeball writer .. He will be
honored at Toronto's first
lilies here.next aea.son, the

at y

CAPITAN, N.M.- MORE THAN 250 persons, many of
them children given a school holiday, attended memorial
aerv1ces Wednesday for Smokey Bear near the sP9\ where he
was lomtd.as an ~rphaned, whimpering cub a quarter century

.Lydia, dear-you
simply must attend!
It's the biggie big event
of the year-and all
the best carpet buys
will be there!

ASK ABOUT

•

COLUMBUS - JIMMY CARTER'S LEAD over Gerald
Ford dropped by 20 votes Wednesday as eight more Ohio
counties flied official Nov. 2election returns with Secretary of
Slate Ted Brown.
With 74 of the state's 88 counties reporting, Brown said
Carter led F~rd by 6;969 votes - 2,003,622 to 1,966,653. Three
large metropolitan areas have yet to file of!lclal returns. The
official count . from Franklin County Columbus Increased
Carter's taDy.by 124 votes and Ford's total by 227 votes.

UNGERIE DEPT. - 2ND FLOOR

·oPENING I'.ATE

Visit Our Salad Bar

ABOUT 6,500 OHIO MEMBERS of the United Auto
Union joined a nationwide strike against
International Harvester early today.
About 6,14llemployes of )llat two planls In Springfield, 359
tnel'e at a plant at Shadyside and 116 at a parts distribution
center In Columbus joined the walkout.
W~rkers

PARTRIDGE, KY. - THE LONG ENTOMBMENT of II
tnen killed last March In the second Scotia coal .mine explosion
will end Friday, ·accordlrig to stale and federal mining
officials. Recovery·workers will lead a group of pathologists,
coroners and federal, state and company mine officials into
the large mine under Black Mountain in southeastern
Kentucky.
_
·
The actual process of bringing the bodies to the surface Is
expected io take one day. Widows and other relatives of the
vicllm8, who have waited eight months to bring their men to a
final resting place, will be at the mine entrance to transport
the bodies to local funeral homes .

deposit.

MEIGS THEATRE

M~F

·:::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::~;::::~:::;:;:;;;:~;:;:;;;:;;;::::~:::::·::::::::::8~:·:::::::~::::::::::~=~:~::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::

7'1• Pet. per year on a
4 year certificate of

Sl,OOO.OO

,...:ftl!llll~

POMEROV-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVII NO. 151

hurt."

was

"'

CIIES!aE I'I.VA.-0!110 iWmmu

W~RMTH

(Continued from page I)
criminals were killed. A
fourth criminal was serioualy
woUnded, taken to a hoapltal
and arrested.
"His . Majesty King
Husaeln, who followed the
progress of the operation
from tbe moment It began,
had directed the commander
In chief of the armed forcea to
carry out the operation with
the
minimum losses,
especially among the hotel
guests. None of the guests

indiscrinninately

Densely-tufted,
Level-loop

Jr

e

young, old,

TilE INN PLACE

..

CLIFTON, W. Va. - A across the river, were being
petition was reported In alerted to the prospect of a
circulation
today
for ·coal crusher, settling pond,
signatures In opposition - an loading chute and other
environmental grounds - to paraphenalla being to their
the coOJtructlon of a coal windward.
loading facility here in the
The Corps of Engineers has
Ohio River.
set Nov. 22, 1976 for the last
The petition apparentlv will ruite written statements may
be directed to the Huntington be ·received (PO Box 2127,
District Corps of Engineers - Huntington, W.· Va. ) In opwhich has the power to stop position or support to the
construction it admits was project. •
started UlegaUy by builder
Without explanation, the
William F. Zuspan of Mason. Corps in its first and onlY
Meanwhil e, citizens In public notice issued Oct. 22,
Middleport, Ohio, directly received locally Nov. 5, said,

·:sq.

Yd.

Totally New

Texturized nylon
Luxurious, with
All the durability
aqd wearablllty

LONG AND lHICK

NYLON LUXURY

saw;

of IOODct.

CarpeT

In time

Nylon pile. '

is only a
partiallisting ... so be

-and this

sure to' hurry in tomorrow to

. F.or Olrlslmasl

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635
/

o.

I

Gary Skinner, president of
Mrs. ~udy Sams, school
.nurse, reported that bats are the boosters, agreed to the
living In the basic structure of motion that he submit these
the kindergarten classroom. reports to the Eastern Local
It was stated that moldings School Board along with a
financial
were Installed between the request for
ceiling and walls to aid In the asalstance needed to correct.
elimination of falllng waste these matters.
The next boosters' meeting
caused by the bats. This
waste \Vas previously falling wll) be held December 13 at
onto the children's tables and .7:30 p.m. All parents are
toys, creating a serious urged to attend. Any
health problem. Bats are suggestions on Improving the
carriers of Uce and many present conditions are
diseases, but · even more welcome. Also Reed~ are
alarming Is the fact that If volunteers to help make
bitten, the victim could suffer repairs and raise additional
paralysis or even death .
lunda.

Volunteer units busy
The Pomeroy Emergency Cecil Grimm, 18, Warren
Squad and Fire Department High School, was Injured ih a
answered five calls Wed- basketball scrimmage. He
nesday :
was taken to St. Joseph
AI 9;30 a.m., E·R to Route Hospital at Parkersburg.
661 near Tuppers Plains lor
AI 8:15 p.m. firemen to
Ray Powell who was Ill. He Breezy Heights where a truck
was taken to St. Joseph belonging to J elf Hysell
Hoapital.
burned up. Value was set at
At II a.m. the Fire Dept. to $150 .. Wiring was given as the
the Bill Bentley home on probable cause.
Route 681 where a wall
At 8:15 a.m. today, E-R to
receptacle had shortened. Texas Road near Pomeroy
There was little damage.
for George Eastman who was
At6:25 p.m. Wednesday, E- · taken to Veter.ans Memorial
R to Meigs High School where Hospital.

.'

�2-Tho Qaily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Nov. 18, 1976

UAW counting ,. , ,.:~::·, :~~~::·:~,, , Nuke fallout expected
down 'with GMleave 1-H jobs

1

By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN a.m. EST Friday at GM's 117
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - The
United Auto Workers, with Its
cmtract at Chrysler Corp.
rat!lled despite a near veto by
skllled tradesmen, tW1led Its
full attention today to
General Motors where 390,000
workers are set to strike at
one minute past midnight.
Approval by the skllled
tradesmen, who hold a veto
power over any aulD IOOustry
cmtract despite their small
numbers, came on a 622-vot:e
margin out of 11,108 votes
cast. The final tally was
announced late Wednesday
by an obviously relieved
Douglas A. Fraser, the UAW
vice president who negotiated
the pact.
The remainder of the
118,000 U.S. and Canadian
Chrysler workers
overwhelmingly approved
the contract, which is
patterned after the pact won
at the Ford Motor Co. during
a 23-day strike and expected
to he matched by GM The
Ford pact also was nearly
defeated by the dissident
skilled tradesmen, finally
passing on a 48S-vote margin.
UAW Vice President Irving
Bluestone warned late
Wednesday
that
GM
negotiators had better begin
respmding to UAW demands
if they hoped to avoid an
unprecedented second auto
IOOustry strike in one year·
The offic1al deadline is 12:01

plants in 21 states.
Sources indicated the
negotiations were hung up
over the union's demand for a
GM pledge not to interefere
with organizing efforts in the
South
and
company
reluctance to match the
Chrysler
and
Ford
agreements on reduced
workUme - a total of 13 new
paid days off during the life of
the three-year agreement.
"In aU of Wednesday's
negotiations, only a small
number of issues were
resolved and the pace of the
negotiations seemed to have
slowed down somewhat,"
Bluestone said. "We are
striving for a settlement, but
if a settlement is to be
achieved, GM must step up
the pace of the negotiations."
Fraser said he could not
figure out why the Chr)'l!ler
skllled tradesmen voted in
such large numbers agaln.!t
the agreement. Many skllled
tradesmen - carpenters,
millwrights, tool and d1e
makers, electricans and
other craftsmen - said there
was not enough spread
between their wages and
those of production workers,
but Fraser discounted that.
"I wiah I could say what
caused the large negative
vote," he told a la~vening
news conference. ''There was
no single issue that caused
the negative reaction agamst

the agreement."

CHICAGO, UPI - Some
40,Mil Ualted Auto Workers
wallted off their jobs at
late11111~ooal
Harvester
planll In 11 states earlv
today but negotiators for
both oideo continued tallts
In hopei of ending the
walkout
Workers set up picket
lines at all Harvester
planh when a otrlke
deadline of 12:01 a.m.
pa18ed
without
an
agreement.
Both sides sought a
speedy end to the strike
and negotiations continued
tbi'Gugb the early morning
hours.

··::-:=::::··::::·::·::;;:;·::::: ·: ::·.·.=::: ':::':'::·

Miller honored
as top manager
Bob Miller, Cit y Loan
Office Manager, of the
Pomeroy office, was among
96 company mana gers
honored at a recent special
meeting.
These

managers,

representing all areas of
Oh10, were recogmzed for
their outsta nd ing contributions 10 the growth of the
company during the past
year. Managers of th e
Mayfield He1ghts and East
Liverpool offices were c1ted
as the two top members of the
select group. The guests were
presented awards for thm
achievements
as
top
producers 10 the company.

Agnes F. Grimm
died on Tuesday

Tokyo Rose begs
for a country

'•

,.. .

•,
_L' -

,''

.

By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) American-born " Tokyo
Rose" returned to the
courthouse where she was
convicted of treason 10 1949
and requested a presidential
pardon so she would not die
without a country.
"Age is creeping up on me
and I can't wait forever," Iva
Toguri D'Aquino, 60, said
Wednesday, in her first news
conference since her release
from prison 20 years ago.
The small, bespectacled
woman, who was born on July
4, 1916, has continually
pleaded innocent to being the
voice, which
beamed
propaganda broadcasts from
Tokyo Radio to Gls in the
Pacifi~ durillg World War II,
"Am~rica is my home. It
will always be my home.
American Citizenship Is a
deep, valuable thing. You
don't recognize the value of It
until you don't have it."
. Mrs. D'Aquino, who was
reared in Los Angeles,
graduated from UCLA and
runs an import-export
business in Chicago, said she
was not seeking exoneration,
merely a pardon In regain her
citizenship.
She served 6\0 years of a Illyear sentence in West
Virgmia and _was fined
$10,000.
Accompanied by her
lawrer, Wayne ColUns, and a
crowd of supporters, Mrs.

•
:'

i

.•

.:

lead down

Cleveland's to the end
By RICHARD E. LERNER

schools to

desegregate
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Cleveland and Oh1o school
offlC!als are under court
orders tnday to move ahead
w1th plans to desegregate the
Cleveland public school
system.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled Wednesday
that desegregation efforts,
halted for the past two
months,
be
resumed
immediately.
The decis10n was a major
victory for the NAACP,
anxious to desegregate
Cleveland's schools.
The NAACP already has
proposed an ambitious plan,
which Cleveland School Superintendent Paul Briggs complains would require the most
severe and massive bul!lng of
students ever lRlposed on an
American city.
Although Wednesday's
decision means the Cleveland
and Ohio school boards lost
their bid to further delay
desegregation planning, the
appellate court did agree to
hear the1r appeal of U.S.
District Court Judge Frank J.
Battisti's decision that the
school boards were guilty of
a I Io wi ng
ra cia I
discrlmirution.
A ruling on that appeal,
however, isn't expected for
' several months, so the net
effect 1s that Cleveland school
desegregation moves allead.
-

·

Tourism

up 22%

in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Travel and tnurism in Ohio
increased from $2.3 to $2.8
bill10n or 22 per cent during
1975, acording to figures
revealed by the United States
Travel Servtce.
Douglas Frechtling,
director of the USTS Travel
Data Center, in an address to
the 1976 Ohio Conference on
Travel and Tourism last
week at Salt Fork Lodge n~ar
cambridge, reported results
of a recent study which
indica ted that travel and

Diabetes' effect on pregnancy

..

:·..

I

Ford Will

DR. LAMB

''
•

•'

NEW HAVEN, W Va Agnes F · Grlffim, 78, was
dead on arnval at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital on
Tuesday Born here Dec, 6,
1897, daughter of the !ate
John G and Luella Riggs
D' Aquino, in a symbolic Layne, she was a member of
gesture, went to the old the New Haven St Paul
federal courthouse, where Lutheran Church.
Surv1vmg are her husband,
she was convicted, and
handed
an
envelope Otto W.; a daughter , Mrs
containing the petition to San Roland (Shirley) Karr,
Owensboro, Ky. i three
Francisco Postmaster Urn P
granddaughters, Deb bie,
Lee.
The petition was mailed to Diane and Sandi; one sister,
U.S . Pardon Attorney Mrs Clair (Chloris) Horner,
Lawrence Traylor, and if 1t Canton, Ohio; two brothers,
clears the FBI and attorney Raymond Layne, Parkers·
general, It goes to the borg, and Harry Layne, New
Haven , and several nieces
Prel!ident.
Collins, son of the lawrer and nephews,
Funeral services will be
who defended Mrs. D'Aquino
at her 1949 trial, said he had conducted at 2 p.m. on
spoken with Traylor and "we Friday, at the St. Paul
are confident the petition will Lutheran Church with Rev
George Weirick olflciat10g.
be reviewed favorably."
Pressures to pardon Mrs. Burial will follow in the
D'Aquino mounted this year Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
when she got the support of
the california Legislature' Foglesong Funeral Home 2 to
and the foreman of the jury 4 and 7 to 9 th1s evemng, and
that cmvicted her said jurors one hour prior to services at
were inflamed by anti- the church.
Japanese feelings at the Ume.
ColDns said the peUtion
UNIT CALLED
argued that Mrs. D' Aquino
RACINE - The Rac1ne ER
broadcast only musical and squad was called Wednesday
other entertainment and not at 3.0o p.m. for Nelhe
news, and that under the Lemley, RD , Portland, a
Freedom of Information Act medical patient was taken to
it was learned the Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
government knowingly used
perjured testimony before
the grand jury that indicted
SQUAD TO MEET
her.
RACINE - The Racine ER
Mrs. D'Aqumo went to squad wlll meet Monday,
Japan in 1940 In visit rellltives Nov 22, 8 p.m. at the
and was trapped there by the f1rehouse Election of offlcers
war.
will be held.

By CHARLES R. SMfiH
several days before it can
UPI Senior Editor
determine whether any
HONG KONG (UP!) fallout has occurred and what
China exploded its most areas of the United States
powerful nuclear bomb ever would be affected.
and the fallout from the blast
American monitors said
may spread to the United tile blast Wednesday, the
States within the next few fourth by China this year,
was in the four-megaton
days.
·
Low~evel !~out from a range - C&lt;lllparable to a
similar blast in the miiUon pounds of TNT.
atmosphere in September
It was China's 21st nuclear
settled across portions of the explosion since October
northeastern United States, 1964.
particularly Pennsylvania.
Aspokesman for the United
In
Washmgton,
the
Environmental Protectlm
Agency said Wednesday it
has activated !Is monitoring
system to try to locate any
fallout cloud that may result
from the hydrogen exploS!on .
The EPA said it will be

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- f am a
female, 23 years old, 5 feet 2
and weigh 110 pounds. I have
diabetes which is now being
controlled by diet.
I have been reading about
diabetes and trying to learn
all I can but I can't find
anything concerning a
diabetic pregnancy. I have
two chlldren and would like to
have more. They were all
right u they were born
before
this
disease
developed.
I am worried that the fetus
might not receive proper
nourishment and am ap·
prehensive about any com·
pllcatlons that might occur
during delivery. I don't know
if It would be safe to nurse the
new baby or not. Please give
me some information on this
subject.
DEAR READER - Your
diabetes ia mild or you would
not be able to manage lt with
diet alone. That decreases the
likelihood that you will have
any problems with another

pregnancy . In any case
anyone with diabetes who is
pregnant should have very
careful monitoring during the
pregnancy.
The need lor lruutin is
uauaUy decreased durmg the
first trimester of the
pregnancy, and returns to
about the same requirement
during the last two
trimesters. In your case that
should mean that you can sail
through the pregnancy
without the problems that
more severe diabetics have.
Your baby may be 'larger
than usual as often happens
in
diabetic
mothers.
SomeUmes that causes some
di!ficulties in delivery.
The baby wlll not be
malnourished if you do not
develop complications during
pregnancy. Remember that
the baby will have ita own
insulln·formmg glands. In
fact these are someUmes
enlarged at birth, producing

an excess amount of insulin,
if the mother ls diabetic. This

sometimes requires giving
the newborn baby extra
glucose by vein for a time
until the Insulin-forming
glands regress to normal.
The glucose prevents the
newborn baby from having
low blood sugar problems.
The complications from
diabetes are Increased in the
mother as a result of
pregnancy It depends a lot
on whether the diabetes ls the
"juvenile type" beginning in
childhood or the "adult onset
type." And lt depends upon
how severe it Is
Many d1abet1c women,
particularly if the disease is
of long standing, are
especially prone to toxemia
of pregnancy, with fluid
~etention,
high
blood
pressure and other hannful
consequences. That ls one
reason a diabetic mother
needs to be monitored
carefully throughout her
pregnancy.
,pbviously diabetic women
can and do have normal

,.

children. You already had the
underlymg cause of your
diabetes dur)llg your first two
pregnancies even though the
disease was not advanced to
the point it could be
diagnosed.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 3-10,
Diabetes:
The Sweet
Sickness, the first of two
issues on diabetes smce you
want infonnallon about the
disease Others who want this
issue can send SO cents with a
long,
stamped,
self·
addressed envelope for it.
Just send your letter to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box ISS!, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
I must add that you are
fortunate to have two
uneventful pregnancies and
in more advanced diabetics
the advisability of having
more pregnancies is often
question~d., b~
diabetic
specialists, 'nO\ just for the
baby's sake but because of
the r~Jks the mother takes.

WASHINGTON (UP!) 'Prel!ident Focd Is determined
to lead the nation until his last
day in office, even to the point
of approving a new U.S.·
Soviet strategic arms
iiJmtatlon a!!!:eement if he
can get a pact in America 's
interest.
Ford's press secretary
made that clear Wednesday,
saying he had been pursuing
an arms settlement for two
years regardless of domestic
politics and would not g1ve up
that quest or any other
respoosibilities in advance of
J i m m y Ca r t e r ' s
inauguration.
Today, Ford called budget
experts in for the third Ume
in as many &lt;lays to cmtinue
working on the federal
spending proposals be will
subm1t to Congress in
January.
Press Secretary Ron
Nessen
refused
" to
characterize the outlook" for
ending a yearlong stalemate
in the U.S ..SOviet arms talks
under way in Geneva, but
said "there has been a
continuing exchange of views
... in the past several months
that resulted in progress in
several areas."
He then added: "If an
agreement can be concluded
in America's interest before
the inauguration of Prel!ident
carter, then it will be."
Senior U.S. officials have
been saymg Washington and
Moscow were unlikely to
agree on a second-stage
SALT pact before Corter
takes office Jan. 20 because
of two complex issues: the
· Russians ' swingwlng,
supersonic

''Backfire'.'

bomber and the American'
pilotless, low..flying, subsoruc
II

cruise IlUBSlle' I I

SALES OFF
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
nation's largest department
store chain, Federated,
reports third quarter net
earnings were 135.6 mlllion, a
3.4 per cent decrease from
the $36.9 million earned the
same quarter of 1975.
tnurism in Ohio accounted for
123,000 Ohio jobs, $595 mlllion
in payroll, and $298' mlllion in
state and federal tax

States' Energy Research and
Development adminlJtratlon
in Washington said the
erploslon OCCIII'I'&lt;!d· at I a.m.
EST Wednesday at the !Alp
Nil' test site in Western
Olina 's Sinkiang Regio~.
"This Ia the fourth Chinese
test aiUIOunced this year and
the largest one we have ever
detected," the spokesman
said.
The test was announced in
a canmunique isaued today
by the official New China
. News
Agency.
The
com munique was
accompanied
by
a
commentary In the People's
Daily, oWcial newspaper of
the Chinese Communist
party.
The cCIIIIIlunlque said the
test was "a heavy blow to the
two superpowers, the Soviet
Union and the United States,
which
are
pursuing
hegemmism and attempting
to practice nuclear mooopoly
and nuclear blackmail."
The Chinese emphal!ized
that their nuclear testing was
conducted "entirely for the
purpose of defense" and "de·
clllres mce again that at no
time and under no circumstances wt11 China be the first
to use nuclear weapons."
The Chinese linked the test
to
current
political
developments in China and
the appointment of Hua Kuo·
!eng as new chairman of the
Communist party.
The previous blasts this
year occurred Jan. 23, Sept.
26 and Oct. 17.

Police will
review talk
with chief
IRONToN, Ohio (UP!) The Fraternal Order of
Police meet tonight In discuss
the . outcome of a second
meeting between the police
chief and a lawrer lor five
police officers complaining
about him.
On Oct. 14, the five flfed six
complaints against Chief
George Akers faulting his
policies oo overtime, shift
rotation and seniority.
Their attorney, Charles
Cooper said he met last
Friday with Akers to clarify
the isaues first discussed
Nov. 5.
The FOP had asked for the
second meeting.
In another development
the Ironton Civil Servlc~
Commission agreed to reopen
a hearing infD one complaint
brought by Patrolman
Richard Kratzenberg.
He had at first appeared
before the commiss1on
without an attorney. The new
sesaion would allow Cooper to
speak for him.
The complaint under
discllllillon was Aker's policy
of refusing overtime for lo
days to police employes who
take l!ick leave. It was not
clear if the bearing would go
into the other complaints.

revenues.

In
releasing
the
information Wednesday,
State Development Director
James A. Duerk said, "This
is clear evidence that the
increased emphasis
promoting Ohio travel by the
Rhodes admlmstration is
paying
handsome
dividends."

GRIFFimiLL
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Route I, Middleport,
for Homer E. Griffith, who
was lll. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

HOSPITAL NEWS .
Holzer Medlul Ct11ter
(Dlaebartet, Nov.17)
Oakley Addis, Peggy Betts,
Bradley Blaine, Minnie
Brown, Janet Byers, Clarice
Callicoat, Mrs. Larry
Camden and daughter,
Maggie Freeman, Beverly
Friend, Mildred Howell,
Bessie Hudson, Mrs. John
Ingels and daughter, Mary
Kalklosch, Janelle Kaylor,
Ruby Kegley, James Kelley,
Stanley Lane, Elizabeth
Lear, Margaret Lewis,
Matthew Loveday, Anna
Lyons, John Miller, Sybrena
Mitchell, Virginia Pen·
nington, Richard Radcliff,
Arnold Richards, Anna
Robinson, Eric Saunders,
James Shope, Delores
Spencer, Elmer Thornton,
Jeffrey Troendly, Carolyn
Wade, Hilah Westfall, Bryan
Williamson, Nellie Winston,
Ramona Yonker.
( Birtbs, Nov.l7)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smith,
daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. George Spradlln, ~on,
Gallipolis; Nr. and Mrs. Bill
Clarkson, son, Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Carpenter,
son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
John Buttrick, daughter,
Galllpolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Van Meter, daughter,
Letart, W. Va.

a-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomet'O)J.Q....Thursday, Nov. l8, 1976

.~!~~£~.

.PLEASANT VALLEY

DISCHARGES - Mn.
Ronald Jlaynes, Bidwtll, 0.;
Nellie Pickett, Crown City,
o.; Mrs. L!&gt;raine Crump,
Leon; James Nelaon, Bidwell, 0.; Raymond Duncan,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Edward
Cheesebrew. Point Pleasant;
Leo Jarvis, Athena; 0.; Mrs.
Garland Bostic, Gallipolis
Ferry; Crystal Stewart,
Po1nt Pleasant; Lester
Foreman, Mason; Tanya
Phillips, Crown City, 0.
BIRm .- A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gardner,
Gallipolis.

By United Prtn lntern•tlonal
Eutern Conference •
Atlantic Dlvll illn
Philadelphia

6oustttaolno
8

Opposition

Benefit sing
is scheduled

mEDALYSENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHIU
El.«". Ed.
ROBERT IIOEFUCH
City EdJlOr
Pubhshed dally except Saturday
by The Ohio \ralley Publisbl.ng Com.
any, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio
4$769. Business Office Phone !19221~. Edlt&lt;Jrlal Phone 992-2157
Second class poo;lage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio
National .advertL'Im!! reprtten•
llltive Ward . Griffith Company.,. In·
c , BoLune\1! and Galla!!her Dlv ,
'157 11u1d Ave , New York, N.Y.
10017
~
Suhlicriptlon rate¥ Delivered by
carrier whe1 e llvatlable 7~ cents per
week B) MotQr RQute where carrier
!;emce nut available, One monLh,
t:I.1S By nunl !n Ohio and W, Va ,
Ont Year, 122 00 SlX mm1ths,
Sll 50, Three munLhs, 17 OO;
El:lewheH~ $26 00 year: Six muntll.!l
$13 50, Tllree months, J7 50
S u i.J!j~,;n plhm prk'C ir1dudes Suuday
'J unelhScnLinl!!.

Ave.
The caboose will contain a
"cargo" of five leading
volunteers equipped with a
five handled shovel to make
the official ground breaking
forth~ new Blood Center. The
public, volunteers and con·
lrtbutors are aU invlled to
attend the
on·site
ceremonies, Refreshments
wlll be served at the down·
tolln Holiday Inn upper lobby
following
the
ground
breaking.
•
Volunteers from Huntington, Charleston,
Parkersburg, Beckley (West
Virginia ) and Maysville
(Kentucky) will play a key
roll in the ceremonies. Mrs
R. W. Agee, Chapter
Chairman of the Huntington·
Cobell Courtly Red Cross,
announced that representatives from each Tri..State
Red Cross Blood Subcenter
area wiD help turn the first
shovel of earth
.
Mrs. Harriet Cartmell,
Regional Red Cross Blood
Program Chairman, ex·
plained that the five handled

shovel, donated by Me·
Donough Corpqratlon of
Parkersburg, is being used as
a symbol of regional
cooperation.
"Each of the five handles
have special significance, one
handle will symbolize the
entire 52 county region, one
the main Center in Hun·
tlngton , and one handle
represents each of the three
subcenters In Charleston,
Beckley and Parkersburg
respectively," Mrs. Cartmell
elaborated.
. "Rev. John F. Torrence,
Chapter Chairman of the
Kanawha-Clay
(West
Virginia) area; John Kelz,
Project Lifeblood Fund
Raising Chairman from
Raleigh County (West
Virginia); and !..Gull Harris,
Chapter Chairman Wood
County (West Virginia will
join Mrs. Agee of Huntington
and Mrs. Cartmell of Kentucky in the ground
breaking," Mrs. Barbara
Battin, Fund Raialng
Director said.
John Ketz of Westmoreland
j

Coal said the Project
Ufebiood fund campaign has
been able to raise more than
$1,460,000 through private
industry and individuals.
Ketz added, "The support
that the Regional Red Cross
Blood Center has just
received from the state
legislators has been a
tremendous boost to every
Red Cro88 volunteer. That
$500,000 for equipment put the
tOtal at over the 67 per cent
mark ln the U,900,000
regional fund raising effort 10
only $900,000 more needa to be
raised."
LGuia Harris of Parker.,.
burg's McDonough Cor·
poration commented on the
value that the fund raising
campaign has had in
educating the publlc and
industry to the scope of the
regional Red Cross Blood
Program. "In the Wood
County area, where a new
·subeenter Ia scheduled for
completion within several
years, awareness aa well Ill!
dollars have been big byproducts."
·
t

1

5
5

6

S83
583

538

W L Pet

'"

"

"'
....

..

112

Cleveland
11 3 .786
11ouston
1 5 ~83
New Orleans
B 6 571
Sart AntoniQ
1 6 538
Wash ington
6 1 .462
Atlanta
5 9 .357
Western Conference
Midwest Divisi on
W 1.. Pet.
Denver
10 1 9()9
O.troit
9 6 600
Kansas City
7 1 500
Indiana
s 9 351
Chicago
2 B 200
Milwaukee
J 13 188
Pac1flc Divluon
W L Pet
Portland
7 4 636
Seattle
8 7 533
Golden State
S 6 455
Los Angeles
S 7 .417
Ph0en1x
J 6 333
Wednesday's Results
Wash Ill NY Knlcks 97
Denver 112 NV Nets 78
Boston 104 Atlanta 91
Indiana 123 Phil&amp; 11 7
Houston 120 Buffalo 114, ot
Detroit 118 New Orleans 95
Phoentx 103 Milwaukee 95
Sea ttle 92 Cleveland 78
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Kan C1ty at Sen Antonio
Detro it at Indiana
PhOen l)( at Golden Sta te
(Only games scheduled)
Frida't'S Games
Denver al Boston
New Orleans at Phlla
NY Nets at Phoenh&lt;
Golden St at Los Angeles
Milwaukee at Portland
Buffalo at Seattle
(Only games scheduled )

ll1

3

GB
3
3
3112
4'/J

6
GB

J
4'h
6'h
7'h
9lh
GB

1
2
2'17
3

...

...

"

' •&gt;

u ,
"''
, .,,

,_

.....
n••

t'

" ·r
"'
....

North

w It pis. gf ga
8 6 I 17 77 63

Kalamazoo

Muskegon

881176567
7 7 I IS

Saginaw
Flint

56~

692146670
• 5 8 3 13 51 67
South
w It pts: gf ga
Col umbos
6 4 5 17 67 54
Toledo
7 6 2 16 62 61
Fort Wayne 6 6 3 15 59 61
Dayton
7 7 0 14 59 62
Wednesday 's Results

Muskegon 2 Port !-turon I
Toledo 4 Fort Wayne 4
Kalamazoo S Saginaw 2
only games sched u led
Thursday's Games

No games scheduled

Friday 's Games

Muskegon at Dayton

at

Port Huron
Fl int
Saginaw at Columbus
Fort Wayne at Toledo

Local Bowling
Wednesday Early Birds

II- 10·76

Sid

Team
Royal Crown
Evelyns Grocery
King Builders

56

53
4ll

Lighthouse Rest

47

Ben Tom

46

Shirley Kay's

n

....

International Hockey
League Standings
United Prtss International

Port Huron

NHL Standtngs
By United Press International
, Campbell Conference
Patnck Divis1on
- W L T P.ls GF GA
NY lstandrs 12 2 3 27 66 35
• Phlactelph \a 9 1 J 21 64 54
Atlanta
B 1 5 21 65 65
NY Rangers 7 10 '2 16
76
Smythe Olviston
W L T Pts. GF GA
Ch1cago
9 9 2 20 70 70
- · st Louis
9 9 I 19 61 77
. , M1nnesota
5 11 3 13 51 80
" V&amp;ncouver 5 14 1 11 48 79
Colorado
d 13 2 10
46 65
Wales Conference
Norrts D1vis1on
W L T Pis GF GA
Montreal
u d 3 31 102 45
Los Angeles 8 6 7 23 69 61
Pittsburgh
6 7 5 17 55 64
Washing ton s 10 2 12 49 70
•· Oetrott
4 10 4 12 49 63
Adams Div1s1on
W L T Ph. GF GA
,,
Boston
13 3 1 27 73 53
Buffalo
10 5 2 22 57 41
Toronto
1 7 4 18 61 60
Cleveland
6 7 6 18 56 56
Wednesday's Results
NY Rangers 3 Ch1c&amp;go 2
Allanta 6 Color&amp;do 3
•
r •
Toronto 1 Moo Ireal 0 St LOUIS 5
Oelr oil 5, l1e
Cleveland 3 Mlnn 3, lie
...... Buffalo 3 Vancouver 2
(On ly games scheduled)

Thursday's Games

wash1ngton at Boslon
NY Islanders at Los Ang
Wnly games scheduled)
Fnda't'S Games
ChiCAgO at Atlllnta
Minnesota at Montreal
Boston lit washington
Cleveland at Detroit
NY Islanders al Vancouver
{Only games scheduled)

WHA Stand1ngs
Bv lln1tect Press 1n1ernat1onal
East
W L T Ph GF GA
Cmcinnah 10 5 2 22 90 64
Quebec
11 6 0 22 81 63
New Englnd 7 7 2 16 53 57
lndianapols 6 9 2 14 49 75
M1nnesota
~ 10 3 11
46 62
B1rminghm 5 15 1 11 76 95
West
W l T Pts . GF GA
Winnipeg
12 6 0 24 91 55
Houston
10 6 2 22 65 50
Phoen1x
10 7 1 21 70 81
San 01ego
9 7 2 20 63 62
Calgary
7 B 1 15 Stl 52
Edmonton
6 11 0 12 .46 68
Wednesday's Results
New Eng 6 B1rmmgham 4
San Diego 4 Edmonton 2
(Only games sc;heduled)
Thursda't'S Games
Quebec at Minnesota
Calgary at Phoenix
COnly games scheduled)

14

lndtvldual high series
Mary Voss , 5'32; Marlene
Wilson, 473, Flossie Maxson,

448: Donna McFarland, 448

lnd lvltlual high game Mary Voss , 232; Shirley
Simmons,

Wilson , 173.

175,

Marlene

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporll Writer
,
John Havlicek didn't want
to rub I! in , having kno1111
good and bad times in the
N a tiona! Basketball
Aosocation, so he just
summed lt up in one
sentence.
"They were pretty had and
our offense was pretty good,"
be said Weililes&lt;!By-night ,
after the Boston Celtics used
a 24-1 burst 'to score a 1114-91
victory over the Atlanta
Hawks.

The Celtics trailed, by 37·
· 'tl, with 6:13left in the half,
when they ripped off 16
straight points in 3:46. Tom
Barker interrupted the drive
with a free throw and then the
Celtlcs rammed home eight
straight more points for their
24-1 edge during that stretch.
Havlicek and Charlie Scott
scored 20 po10ts each, Sidney
Wicks tallied 19 and Jo Jo
White had 16 to lead the
Celtics, who are tied with
Philadelphia Ill' first plllce 1n
the NBA's Atlsntic Division

As expected Kyger Creek
and North Gallia, the top ·
teams in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference
dominated the AII-SVAC
dream team selections
Wednesday night at North
Gallia High School.
Kyger Creek, by virtue of
ita fourth straight cham·
plonship, placed five men on
the 22·man roster. Each
school got two honorable
mentions. North Gallla had
four players made all-league
and walked off with the Most
Valuable Uneman Award lor
the second straight year and
co-Most Valuable Back
Award.

The Pirates' Bill Baker,.a
180·pound offensive tackle
and defensive 'linebacker,
was voted the Most Valuable
Lineman Award. Baker, a
senior, received 34 votes in
the palloting by league
coaches.
His stiffest com pelltion
came from the Bobcats'
Darrell Jones, a 229·pound
junior tackle. Janes received
30 votes. Eastern's Dave
Mills, a defensive end, was
the only other hneman
nominated.
Baker was cred1ted with
108 detens1ve potnts in 1976
He had 31 ind1v1dual tackles
and 76 assists. Baker

UPI champs headed
for state playoffs
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS ' (UP!)
Playoff-bound Cincinnati
Moeller and New Lexington,
along
with
unbeaten
Artingtnn, have been voted
the top football temns in the
state by the United Press
International Ohio High
School Board of Coaches.
Moeller, which takes on
runnerup Youngstown
Cardinal Mooney in the
semifinals of the Class MA
playoffs Friday night at
Dayton, finished with a 287192 margin over the Cor·
dinals. Moeller reqeived 26 of
29 first place votes. Both
teams are 10:0.
New Lexington, a previous
AA state poll champion, had a
much closer fit, beating out
second place Huron 147-136,
with unbeaten Reading
climbing into the No.3 spot in
the final voUng with 131
points.
Arlington, which edged out
Woodsfield Ill' the Class A
title, Is the only one of the poD
champions not in thls weekend'• playoffs.
"The Itids were really em·
cerned about It," said
Arlington coach Joe Metr.ger,
referring to the outcome of

"

the UP! voting. "It really
takes the diasppointment out
of not mailing the playoffs.
The coaches' poll is a very big
thing around this town."
All lour of the C!Bss AAA
plllyoff semifinalists made
the top ten, with Gahanna
Uncoln (~)third in the final
voting and the Lions '
opponent, Lakewood St .
Edward, finislung seventh.
The rest of the AAA top ten
conl!lsted of Princeton 10
foutth, Stow Walsh Jesuit in
filth, Centerville in sixth,
North Canton Hoover in
eighth, Massillon Washington
in ninth and Akron North in
tenth.
Musillon's appearance in
the top ten was the T1gers'
first, winning eight in a row
after dropping their first two
games.
New LeXington and Huron,
both 10.0, alw made it intn the
playoffs, meeting No. 7
Brookville and No. 10 Elyria
Catholic, respectively.
Columbus Watterson,
which just missed out on a
playoff berth, fell to fourth
tJ\is week in AA, while the
other AA top ten teams were
St. Marys Memorial in fifth,
Urbana in l!ixth, Akron st.
Vincent-St.· Mary in eighth

and Orrville in ninth.
Atllngton, which posted its
first 10.0 season in 75 years of
football , wound up with a 197·
184 margin over No . 2
Woodsfield, which also had a
10.0 record.
Newark catholic (9-1) and
West Jefferson (&amp;.I), who
flniahed thtrd and fourth,
along with No. 9 Fostoria St.
Wendelin, are the ten teams
in the Aplayoffs. Newark and
West Jeff go against each

COLUMBUS

IUPI)

-

Final 1976 Un ited Press In

ternalional Ohio 1-tlgh School

-Quasar.

" '

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'76' GREMLINS

'"

Team

Team
Pomts
1 New Lexington 5 ( 10-0) 147

1 Cincm Moeller 26 I10·0) 287
2. Youngs Mooney 110 0) 192 2 Huron 4 (10 01
3 Gahanna Lmc oln (9.0) 188 3. Reading 3 110·01
tl. Princeton (9 1)
146 4 Col. Watterson 2 (9-1)
5 Stow Walsh Jesu1t 2 ( 10·
0)

120
I10-0)
102
7. Lakewood St Edward (9
1)
BO
B. N Canton Hoover (9-1) 70
9 Massi llon Wash (9-2)
59
10 Akron North (9 01
49
6 Cenlerv~lle1

Second ten
Trace 40 ; 12

11
Miami
Columbus

North land 27, 13 Daytoh
Meadowdale 24; 14. Parma

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"'d' ""''"

''"
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•

176
195

BobMcCiure-Eastern

150

Kevin Barton - Ea stern
Steve Boso- Southe rn

170

15.5

AI Hill - Southern

160

160

Steve Hendricks- Southern
Kip Lewis- Southwestern
Larrv Carter- Southwestern
Kurt Nolan- Southwestern
Jim Waugh- Hanna n Tra ce
Ri ck Si bl ey- Hannan Tra ce
Richard Stumbo-Symmes Valley

HONORABLE MENTION-

191
185
155

155
145
205

Kyger Creek -

Lucas and Mike Hendr ickson

Jt

Jr
Sr.
Sr
Sr
Brian

''9Perationsand
hOspital rooms cost
alotmore .
than you think~

BILL A.ETCHER

MOST VALUABLE LINEMAN
Bill Baker, Norlh Ga llla
CO·MOST VALUABLE BACKS
Todd Taylor, Kyger Creek

llSB Powoll St.
Middleport, 0 .
Ph. "2·7155

Fred Logan, North Ga llla

two fumbles and had one
Interception.
Logan collected 814 yards
in 81 carries, a 10 yard
average. He had 498 yards
throu gh th e a ir on 24
rece~tlons lor a 20.7 yard
average. Logan had eight
touchdowns on passes and II
rush1ng He returned tJ
kickoff returns for 257 yards.
On defense, the senlor, a
member of the 1975 Ali..SV AC
squad, had 44 tackles, in·
tercepted six passes and
recovered two fumbles
Seven players selected
Wednesday
night
are
returnees from the 1975 All·

SV AC squad. 1 hey are
Darrell Jones, Kyger Creek;
Fred Logan and Mark Theiss,
North Gallia; Dave Mills,
Eastern; Kip Lewis, Southwestern, Steve Boso, Southern and Jim Waugh, Hannan
Trace.
Selections were made by
the foilowmg head coaches:
Jim Sprague, Kyger Creek;
John Blake, North Gailia;
Joe Mitchem, Eastern; Bill
Jewell, Southern; Bob
Ashley, Southwestern , Larry

See me for State Farm
hospital/surgical insurance.
Like a ~:ood

nelll:hbor,

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Is there.

Cremeens, Hannan Trace

and Greg Bailie, Symmes
Valley.

511'1 firm

I MIUIAN l l

•

M U I~ I I ~~\()rll obllt

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Gas Line Freeze-U p!
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• Aids quick winter starting

Clinton, 34 each; 14 Milan
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59~

Trenton

Wh eelersburg 11
Class 'A

Halpa atart cold

Points

1 Art mgt on 9 (10·0)
2 Woodsfield 7 I 10 01
3 Newark CatholiC(9·1!
4 West Jefferson IB·II
5 Black River 1 IB·ll
6 Rldgemonll 19-11
7 Dalton 1 19·0)
a Falrporll-tarbor I (9 II

Jr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr

Eastern - Joe Kuhn and Mik e Smi th
Southern - Jerry Johnson and Mart in Bush
Southwestern - Don Jeffers and Lllrry Ruff
Hannan Trace - Jeff Halley and Scott Gibson
Symmes Valley Bennie Jones and Andy
P inker man

Second ten Jl. Ironton 40 ;
12. (tie) Wyom 1ng and Port

Team

Jt ,

North Gallla - Brett Tackett and Re&gt; Justice

197
184
150
139
104
97
83
62

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Salem, 29 each, 14 Bluffton

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Portsmouth Notre Dame 26 ;

17 Centerburg 24; 18. Twin
Valley South 22 , 19. Cory.
Rawson 18; ~0 1-tlcksvllle )7.

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446-183i)

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· GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
"

DAN'S
.
IN MIDDLEPORT
318 N. 2nd Ave.
OPEN
9:00·5:00

Monday lhru Saturday

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professionals under

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135

190
195
182

Sr
Sr
Sr

too late and the game went
into overUme. John Lucas
scored 21 points for the
Rockets.
Nuggets 11%, Nell 78:
Gus Gerard had 17 points
and David Thompson 16,
leading the Nuggets to their
easy victory over the Nets.
Other Nuggets In double
figures were Dan Issei with
13, Willie Wise wlu\ 12 and
thre other players with 11.
Nate Archibald scored 16
points Ill' the Nets
Suu 103, Bucu ttl :
Dick Van Arsdale, Ricky
Sobers and Paul Westphal
combined for 5S points in the
Suns' victory at Phoenix. The
Suns never trailed nnd went
ahead wl th four minutes gone
In the second period. The lou
wss the fourth straight for the ·
Bucks and their seventh
straight on the road.
Sonic• 92, cava 78:
The Sonics made the best
defensive effort in their
history In holding the
cavaliers to 78 points and
broke open the game with a
27-17 outburst in the third
period. Bruce Seals scored 21
points and had 10 rebounds
and Mike Green had IS
rebounds to lead the Sonlcs.

Second ten· 11. Versa illes
32 , 12 (tiel Ashtabula St

No chassts
tubes to bum

lute Tube a 1et
black matrtK

PRICES GOOD
THRU NOV. 25th

Mike Casey - N orth Gall i a
Dave Mills- Eastern
Mark Lawson- Eastern

Mark Theiss- North Gall Ia
Fred Logan- North Gall Ia
Bill Baker- North Gall Ia

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'73' FORD VAN
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170
129
112

119

Wendelln I t7-ll)
10 Carey (7 -2)

Electronic
L1ght Sensor
automatically
adjusts p1cture
as room
light
changes

YNidtolor And
mtile Ollilsar
MalrlxPiusPtc·

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Steve Baird- Kyger Creek
Darrell Jones- Kyger Creek
Mar cus Geiger- Kyger Creek

136
131

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ONLY '2698
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190

I)
106
6. Urbana 2 110-01
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7 Brookville 2 110 01
97
9. Akron St Vincent I 19·21 70
9 Orrv&gt;lle(90·11
61
10. Elyria Cathol&gt;&lt; IB 1·1 46

each , 20

Yr. Warronty
AT DEALER COST!

Over 40 New
VW-AMC.Jeeps

Ralph Baylor- Kyger Creek

S. St. Marys Memorial 2 (9

and

YR

148

Edgewood, 16 each; IB (ti e)
Norwalk and Lima Bath, 12

\h i!

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Class AA

NOW
' ........

Fremont Ros s, Colera in and

Cuyahoga Falls, 13 each . 19
(tiel Fairborn Park Hill s and

ff'S EASY_ON THE EYES!

". '

'"

Valley Forge 23; 15. Toledo
St
ohn's 20, 16 (lie ),

Minerva

-.

.....

other Friday night, while St
Wendelin plays No. 12
Ashtabula St. John.
Black River, which led the
small school ratings lor
several weeks until it lost,
wound up in fifth, followed by
Ridgemont, Dai!Dn, Fairport
Harbor,
Fostoria
St.
Wendelin and Corey.

Board of Coaches football
ra tmgs wtth first place votes
and won los t records tn
pa ren th eses
Points

Burden had H points each.
Pacers 1%3, 76ers 117 :
Blliy Knight scored 30
points as the Pacers ended a
seven-game road trip with a
l'lctory over the 76ers. Wil
Jones added :!II points to the
Indiana attack and Doug
Collin.! led the 76ers with 31
points
Rockets 1!0, Braves 114:
Moses . Malone &amp;nd Rudx,
Tomjanovlch scored four
points each in overtime as the
Rockets raised their record to
7-a. Bob McAdoo, who led all
scorers with 27 ponts, made a
4IJ.Ioot hank shot at the
buuer bul the apparent
winning bucket was ruled

Todd Tavlor - Kyger Creek

recovered one fumble and
mtercepted one pass, On
offensive blocking, Coach
John Blake said he was
graded at 73 pet wh!le his
pulling and trapping form
was excellent.
North GaUls 's Fred Logan,
!Uo·pound senior running
hack and Kyger Creek's Todd
Taylor, 148 pound wmgback,
lled for the Most Valuable
Back Awards.
They collected 31 points
each. Also nominated were
Bob McClure, Eastern; Steve
Boso, Southern and Jim
Waugh, Hannan Trace.
Taylor, a small but qu1ck
running hack , rushed for 439
yards in 58 carries a 7.7 ave.
He scored six touchdowns On
the passing end, Taylor
grabbed 19 passes for 392
yards while scoring four
touchdowns.
He returned f!Ve kickoff
returns for 207 yards a 41.4
ave. while scormg two six·
pointers. Taylor punted II
times for 342 yards, a 31.1
average. On defense, Taylor
was the Bobcats' second
leading tackler. He recovered

Class AAA

· Platona 118, Jut 95 :
Bob Lanier and M.L. carr
each scored 24 points as the
Plstoos won the1r seventh
straight game desp1te a 23point performance by Pel&gt;l
Marovich. The Pistons had a
:;&amp;.41 lead at hai!Ume, thenincreased tbe1r margin to 30
points at the end of the third
penod.
lllllleto Ill, Knlcb 97:
Phil Chenier scored 30
points and Len Robinson
added 'll and had a career·
high 20 rebounds in the
Bullets' triumph o,ver the
Knicks. Earl Monroe led the
Knicks with 18 points and
Wait Frazier and T1cky

,
1975 ALL-SVAC FOOTBALL TEAM
NAME- SCHOOL
WT

Final UP/ grid ratings

I

-·

of the Eastern Conference
Barker led Atlanta with 20
points.
In other NBA games ,
Detroit defeated New
Orleans, 118-9S, Washington
beat the New York Knicks ,
lll-97, Indiana tapped
Phlladelphla, 123·117,
Houston downed Buffalo, 120114, in overtime, Denver
whipped the New York Nets,
112·78, Phoenix dumped
Milwaukee, 103·95, and
Seattle drubbed Cleveland,
92-78.

Bobcats and Pirates
dominate dream team

111\.l

Blood center groundhreaking slated
HUNTINGTON, W. VA On November 29 at 10:30 a.m.
the "Project Ufeblood Ex·
press" a Cbessle System
locomotive and caboose wlll
pull up alongside the floodwall opposite the site for the
new Regional Red Crass
Blood Center here on 2nd

7

1

GB

NY Knicks
8 7, 533
NY Nets
S 9 357
Centnl Div11ion

Veterau Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED
Betty
Brooks, Albany; Emmett
Smalley, Pomeroy; Victor
Braley, Rutland ; Mildred
Dtll, Loog Bottom; Dora
Frost, Athens ; Nellie
Lemley, Portland ; Pearl
Hayes, Shade; Deborah
Leeper, Athens; Homer
Griffith, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Floyd
Bush, Mary Cleek, Margaret
Allen, llerbert Shields, Gary
Welch.

DINNER PLANNED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse First Church of God
will hold Its annual Thanksgiving dinner Saturday, Nov.
Eastern schools
:!11, at 6:30 p.m. The public Is
The Willing Workers
plan c~nferences ofinv1ted.
the Misaionary· Society of
EAST MEIGS - Eastern the church recently pur·
Local School District will chased a public address
hold a parent-teacher con- system.
ference on Monday, Nov. 22.
Classes will be dismissed in
the elementary school and
grades from kindergarten
through six. The high school
(Continued from page I)
and junior high will hold aesthetics, general en·
regular classes.
virohmentai concerns,
Buses wlll run the regulsr . historic values, fish and
morning and afiernoon wildlife values, flood damage
schedule picking up students prevention,
land
use
in grades seven through 12 classification, navigation,
only. Parents of children in recreallon, water supply,
grades seven through 12 can water quality, and, in
arrange conferences with general, the needs and
the1r children's teachers by welfare of the people ,, No
calling the high school permit will be granted unless
principal.
,
its issuance Is found to be in
the public interest."
The notice describes the
proposed work as follows:
" ... a coal loading lacillty
consisting of six wood pile
clusters, three steel tripod
SYRACUSE - There will clusters and a steel structure
be a hymn Slng Saturday, to support the wallrway and
Nov. 'tl, at 7:30 p.m. at the covered conveyor, This
Syracuse Elementary School. portion of the facility will be
~1ngers will be the Gospel constructed in the waterway
Tones, the choir of the and will extend riverward a
.Syracuse Asbury United maximum of 35 feet. The
Methodist Church, and the operation on land will include
· Stewart family.
two coal stock piles, a coal
The sing Ia being sponsored crusher and a settling pond to
by the Syracuse ER Squad. be fed by a diversion ditch as
An offering will be taken at well as by natural drainage.
the door. There will alao be The covered conveyor wtll
refreshments. Proceeds wlll extend from the crusher to a ,
be used to pay for the newER telescopic chute over the
truck.
barges moored at the facllity.
"Preliminary studies in·
FESTIVAL SET
dicate
that the mooring of
The Pomeroy Elementary
vessels
at this facility will be
PTA annual fall festival will
limited
to
a zone not to exceed
be held from 6:30 p.m. to 9
78
feet
rlverward
from the
p.m. Saturday at the school.
riverward
face
of
the pile
There will be games, refresh·
clusters.
ments, a country store and a
"Some work had been
flea market.
accomplished without prior
authorization as required by
BELLOW PICKED
rules and regulations '
CHICAGO (UP!)- Author governing the Departm · nt of
Saul Bellow, winner. of this the Army permit program,
year's Nobel Prize for aU investigations and legal
literature, has been chosen to proceedings connected with
give the 1977 Jefferson the unauthorized work were
Lecture in Humanities, the concluded prior to the
National Council on the ' ·processing of this apHumanitles ~nnounced plication. Therefore, the
Wednesday·
. application will be evalusted
Bellow, professor of on ita own merits, and no
E~liah at the University of consideration will be given to
Clilcago, will give two the applicant's unauthorized
lectures in March 1977, the activities or prior ex·
first in Washington and the penditures."
second in Chicago.

W. L Pet

Celtics roll over Hawk~, 104-91

Quebec o11t Calgary
Winn lpeo at New England
c 1nc•nnati at Edmonton
Birmingham at tndiol!Mapolls
Houston at san o.ego
I Only games sched tJied l

You'll f1nd th111uptrb velut •t 1hN

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
144 West Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohio

.,

ii,: P~:

Auto Parh ' •IC:.•r!

G&amp;J AUlO PARTS

•
Route 33
Mason, West ,Virginia
"

�2-Tho Qaily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Nov. 18, 1976

UAW counting ,. , ,.:~::·, :~~~::·:~,, , Nuke fallout expected
down 'with GMleave 1-H jobs

1

By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN a.m. EST Friday at GM's 117
UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - The
United Auto Workers, with Its
cmtract at Chrysler Corp.
rat!lled despite a near veto by
skllled tradesmen, tW1led Its
full attention today to
General Motors where 390,000
workers are set to strike at
one minute past midnight.
Approval by the skllled
tradesmen, who hold a veto
power over any aulD IOOustry
cmtract despite their small
numbers, came on a 622-vot:e
margin out of 11,108 votes
cast. The final tally was
announced late Wednesday
by an obviously relieved
Douglas A. Fraser, the UAW
vice president who negotiated
the pact.
The remainder of the
118,000 U.S. and Canadian
Chrysler workers
overwhelmingly approved
the contract, which is
patterned after the pact won
at the Ford Motor Co. during
a 23-day strike and expected
to he matched by GM The
Ford pact also was nearly
defeated by the dissident
skilled tradesmen, finally
passing on a 48S-vote margin.
UAW Vice President Irving
Bluestone warned late
Wednesday
that
GM
negotiators had better begin
respmding to UAW demands
if they hoped to avoid an
unprecedented second auto
IOOustry strike in one year·
The offic1al deadline is 12:01

plants in 21 states.
Sources indicated the
negotiations were hung up
over the union's demand for a
GM pledge not to interefere
with organizing efforts in the
South
and
company
reluctance to match the
Chrysler
and
Ford
agreements on reduced
workUme - a total of 13 new
paid days off during the life of
the three-year agreement.
"In aU of Wednesday's
negotiations, only a small
number of issues were
resolved and the pace of the
negotiations seemed to have
slowed down somewhat,"
Bluestone said. "We are
striving for a settlement, but
if a settlement is to be
achieved, GM must step up
the pace of the negotiations."
Fraser said he could not
figure out why the Chr)'l!ler
skllled tradesmen voted in
such large numbers agaln.!t
the agreement. Many skllled
tradesmen - carpenters,
millwrights, tool and d1e
makers, electricans and
other craftsmen - said there
was not enough spread
between their wages and
those of production workers,
but Fraser discounted that.
"I wiah I could say what
caused the large negative
vote," he told a la~vening
news conference. ''There was
no single issue that caused
the negative reaction agamst

the agreement."

CHICAGO, UPI - Some
40,Mil Ualted Auto Workers
wallted off their jobs at
late11111~ooal
Harvester
planll In 11 states earlv
today but negotiators for
both oideo continued tallts
In hopei of ending the
walkout
Workers set up picket
lines at all Harvester
planh when a otrlke
deadline of 12:01 a.m.
pa18ed
without
an
agreement.
Both sides sought a
speedy end to the strike
and negotiations continued
tbi'Gugb the early morning
hours.

··::-:=::::··::::·::·::;;:;·::::: ·: ::·.·.=::: ':::':'::·

Miller honored
as top manager
Bob Miller, Cit y Loan
Office Manager, of the
Pomeroy office, was among
96 company mana gers
honored at a recent special
meeting.
These

managers,

representing all areas of
Oh10, were recogmzed for
their outsta nd ing contributions 10 the growth of the
company during the past
year. Managers of th e
Mayfield He1ghts and East
Liverpool offices were c1ted
as the two top members of the
select group. The guests were
presented awards for thm
achievements
as
top
producers 10 the company.

Agnes F. Grimm
died on Tuesday

Tokyo Rose begs
for a country

'•

,.. .

•,
_L' -

,''

.

By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) American-born " Tokyo
Rose" returned to the
courthouse where she was
convicted of treason 10 1949
and requested a presidential
pardon so she would not die
without a country.
"Age is creeping up on me
and I can't wait forever," Iva
Toguri D'Aquino, 60, said
Wednesday, in her first news
conference since her release
from prison 20 years ago.
The small, bespectacled
woman, who was born on July
4, 1916, has continually
pleaded innocent to being the
voice, which
beamed
propaganda broadcasts from
Tokyo Radio to Gls in the
Pacifi~ durillg World War II,
"Am~rica is my home. It
will always be my home.
American Citizenship Is a
deep, valuable thing. You
don't recognize the value of It
until you don't have it."
. Mrs. D'Aquino, who was
reared in Los Angeles,
graduated from UCLA and
runs an import-export
business in Chicago, said she
was not seeking exoneration,
merely a pardon In regain her
citizenship.
She served 6\0 years of a Illyear sentence in West
Virgmia and _was fined
$10,000.
Accompanied by her
lawrer, Wayne ColUns, and a
crowd of supporters, Mrs.

•
:'

i

.•

.:

lead down

Cleveland's to the end
By RICHARD E. LERNER

schools to

desegregate
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Cleveland and Oh1o school
offlC!als are under court
orders tnday to move ahead
w1th plans to desegregate the
Cleveland public school
system.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled Wednesday
that desegregation efforts,
halted for the past two
months,
be
resumed
immediately.
The decis10n was a major
victory for the NAACP,
anxious to desegregate
Cleveland's schools.
The NAACP already has
proposed an ambitious plan,
which Cleveland School Superintendent Paul Briggs complains would require the most
severe and massive bul!lng of
students ever lRlposed on an
American city.
Although Wednesday's
decision means the Cleveland
and Ohio school boards lost
their bid to further delay
desegregation planning, the
appellate court did agree to
hear the1r appeal of U.S.
District Court Judge Frank J.
Battisti's decision that the
school boards were guilty of
a I Io wi ng
ra cia I
discrlmirution.
A ruling on that appeal,
however, isn't expected for
' several months, so the net
effect 1s that Cleveland school
desegregation moves allead.
-

·

Tourism

up 22%

in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Travel and tnurism in Ohio
increased from $2.3 to $2.8
bill10n or 22 per cent during
1975, acording to figures
revealed by the United States
Travel Servtce.
Douglas Frechtling,
director of the USTS Travel
Data Center, in an address to
the 1976 Ohio Conference on
Travel and Tourism last
week at Salt Fork Lodge n~ar
cambridge, reported results
of a recent study which
indica ted that travel and

Diabetes' effect on pregnancy

..

:·..

I

Ford Will

DR. LAMB

''
•

•'

NEW HAVEN, W Va Agnes F · Grlffim, 78, was
dead on arnval at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital on
Tuesday Born here Dec, 6,
1897, daughter of the !ate
John G and Luella Riggs
D' Aquino, in a symbolic Layne, she was a member of
gesture, went to the old the New Haven St Paul
federal courthouse, where Lutheran Church.
Surv1vmg are her husband,
she was convicted, and
handed
an
envelope Otto W.; a daughter , Mrs
containing the petition to San Roland (Shirley) Karr,
Owensboro, Ky. i three
Francisco Postmaster Urn P
granddaughters, Deb bie,
Lee.
The petition was mailed to Diane and Sandi; one sister,
U.S . Pardon Attorney Mrs Clair (Chloris) Horner,
Lawrence Traylor, and if 1t Canton, Ohio; two brothers,
clears the FBI and attorney Raymond Layne, Parkers·
general, It goes to the borg, and Harry Layne, New
Haven , and several nieces
Prel!ident.
Collins, son of the lawrer and nephews,
Funeral services will be
who defended Mrs. D'Aquino
at her 1949 trial, said he had conducted at 2 p.m. on
spoken with Traylor and "we Friday, at the St. Paul
are confident the petition will Lutheran Church with Rev
George Weirick olflciat10g.
be reviewed favorably."
Pressures to pardon Mrs. Burial will follow in the
D'Aquino mounted this year Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
when she got the support of
the california Legislature' Foglesong Funeral Home 2 to
and the foreman of the jury 4 and 7 to 9 th1s evemng, and
that cmvicted her said jurors one hour prior to services at
were inflamed by anti- the church.
Japanese feelings at the Ume.
ColDns said the peUtion
UNIT CALLED
argued that Mrs. D' Aquino
RACINE - The Rac1ne ER
broadcast only musical and squad was called Wednesday
other entertainment and not at 3.0o p.m. for Nelhe
news, and that under the Lemley, RD , Portland, a
Freedom of Information Act medical patient was taken to
it was learned the Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
government knowingly used
perjured testimony before
the grand jury that indicted
SQUAD TO MEET
her.
RACINE - The Racine ER
Mrs. D'Aqumo went to squad wlll meet Monday,
Japan in 1940 In visit rellltives Nov 22, 8 p.m. at the
and was trapped there by the f1rehouse Election of offlcers
war.
will be held.

By CHARLES R. SMfiH
several days before it can
UPI Senior Editor
determine whether any
HONG KONG (UP!) fallout has occurred and what
China exploded its most areas of the United States
powerful nuclear bomb ever would be affected.
and the fallout from the blast
American monitors said
may spread to the United tile blast Wednesday, the
States within the next few fourth by China this year,
was in the four-megaton
days.
·
Low~evel !~out from a range - C&lt;lllparable to a
similar blast in the miiUon pounds of TNT.
atmosphere in September
It was China's 21st nuclear
settled across portions of the explosion since October
northeastern United States, 1964.
particularly Pennsylvania.
Aspokesman for the United
In
Washmgton,
the
Environmental Protectlm
Agency said Wednesday it
has activated !Is monitoring
system to try to locate any
fallout cloud that may result
from the hydrogen exploS!on .
The EPA said it will be

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- f am a
female, 23 years old, 5 feet 2
and weigh 110 pounds. I have
diabetes which is now being
controlled by diet.
I have been reading about
diabetes and trying to learn
all I can but I can't find
anything concerning a
diabetic pregnancy. I have
two chlldren and would like to
have more. They were all
right u they were born
before
this
disease
developed.
I am worried that the fetus
might not receive proper
nourishment and am ap·
prehensive about any com·
pllcatlons that might occur
during delivery. I don't know
if It would be safe to nurse the
new baby or not. Please give
me some information on this
subject.
DEAR READER - Your
diabetes ia mild or you would
not be able to manage lt with
diet alone. That decreases the
likelihood that you will have
any problems with another

pregnancy . In any case
anyone with diabetes who is
pregnant should have very
careful monitoring during the
pregnancy.
The need lor lruutin is
uauaUy decreased durmg the
first trimester of the
pregnancy, and returns to
about the same requirement
during the last two
trimesters. In your case that
should mean that you can sail
through the pregnancy
without the problems that
more severe diabetics have.
Your baby may be 'larger
than usual as often happens
in
diabetic
mothers.
SomeUmes that causes some
di!ficulties in delivery.
The baby wlll not be
malnourished if you do not
develop complications during
pregnancy. Remember that
the baby will have ita own
insulln·formmg glands. In
fact these are someUmes
enlarged at birth, producing

an excess amount of insulin,
if the mother ls diabetic. This

sometimes requires giving
the newborn baby extra
glucose by vein for a time
until the Insulin-forming
glands regress to normal.
The glucose prevents the
newborn baby from having
low blood sugar problems.
The complications from
diabetes are Increased in the
mother as a result of
pregnancy It depends a lot
on whether the diabetes ls the
"juvenile type" beginning in
childhood or the "adult onset
type." And lt depends upon
how severe it Is
Many d1abet1c women,
particularly if the disease is
of long standing, are
especially prone to toxemia
of pregnancy, with fluid
~etention,
high
blood
pressure and other hannful
consequences. That ls one
reason a diabetic mother
needs to be monitored
carefully throughout her
pregnancy.
,pbviously diabetic women
can and do have normal

,.

children. You already had the
underlymg cause of your
diabetes dur)llg your first two
pregnancies even though the
disease was not advanced to
the point it could be
diagnosed.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 3-10,
Diabetes:
The Sweet
Sickness, the first of two
issues on diabetes smce you
want infonnallon about the
disease Others who want this
issue can send SO cents with a
long,
stamped,
self·
addressed envelope for it.
Just send your letter to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box ISS!, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
I must add that you are
fortunate to have two
uneventful pregnancies and
in more advanced diabetics
the advisability of having
more pregnancies is often
question~d., b~
diabetic
specialists, 'nO\ just for the
baby's sake but because of
the r~Jks the mother takes.

WASHINGTON (UP!) 'Prel!ident Focd Is determined
to lead the nation until his last
day in office, even to the point
of approving a new U.S.·
Soviet strategic arms
iiJmtatlon a!!!:eement if he
can get a pact in America 's
interest.
Ford's press secretary
made that clear Wednesday,
saying he had been pursuing
an arms settlement for two
years regardless of domestic
politics and would not g1ve up
that quest or any other
respoosibilities in advance of
J i m m y Ca r t e r ' s
inauguration.
Today, Ford called budget
experts in for the third Ume
in as many &lt;lays to cmtinue
working on the federal
spending proposals be will
subm1t to Congress in
January.
Press Secretary Ron
Nessen
refused
" to
characterize the outlook" for
ending a yearlong stalemate
in the U.S ..SOviet arms talks
under way in Geneva, but
said "there has been a
continuing exchange of views
... in the past several months
that resulted in progress in
several areas."
He then added: "If an
agreement can be concluded
in America's interest before
the inauguration of Prel!ident
carter, then it will be."
Senior U.S. officials have
been saymg Washington and
Moscow were unlikely to
agree on a second-stage
SALT pact before Corter
takes office Jan. 20 because
of two complex issues: the
· Russians ' swingwlng,
supersonic

''Backfire'.'

bomber and the American'
pilotless, low..flying, subsoruc
II

cruise IlUBSlle' I I

SALES OFF
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
nation's largest department
store chain, Federated,
reports third quarter net
earnings were 135.6 mlllion, a
3.4 per cent decrease from
the $36.9 million earned the
same quarter of 1975.
tnurism in Ohio accounted for
123,000 Ohio jobs, $595 mlllion
in payroll, and $298' mlllion in
state and federal tax

States' Energy Research and
Development adminlJtratlon
in Washington said the
erploslon OCCIII'I'&lt;!d· at I a.m.
EST Wednesday at the !Alp
Nil' test site in Western
Olina 's Sinkiang Regio~.
"This Ia the fourth Chinese
test aiUIOunced this year and
the largest one we have ever
detected," the spokesman
said.
The test was announced in
a canmunique isaued today
by the official New China
. News
Agency.
The
com munique was
accompanied
by
a
commentary In the People's
Daily, oWcial newspaper of
the Chinese Communist
party.
The cCIIIIIlunlque said the
test was "a heavy blow to the
two superpowers, the Soviet
Union and the United States,
which
are
pursuing
hegemmism and attempting
to practice nuclear mooopoly
and nuclear blackmail."
The Chinese emphal!ized
that their nuclear testing was
conducted "entirely for the
purpose of defense" and "de·
clllres mce again that at no
time and under no circumstances wt11 China be the first
to use nuclear weapons."
The Chinese linked the test
to
current
political
developments in China and
the appointment of Hua Kuo·
!eng as new chairman of the
Communist party.
The previous blasts this
year occurred Jan. 23, Sept.
26 and Oct. 17.

Police will
review talk
with chief
IRONToN, Ohio (UP!) The Fraternal Order of
Police meet tonight In discuss
the . outcome of a second
meeting between the police
chief and a lawrer lor five
police officers complaining
about him.
On Oct. 14, the five flfed six
complaints against Chief
George Akers faulting his
policies oo overtime, shift
rotation and seniority.
Their attorney, Charles
Cooper said he met last
Friday with Akers to clarify
the isaues first discussed
Nov. 5.
The FOP had asked for the
second meeting.
In another development
the Ironton Civil Servlc~
Commission agreed to reopen
a hearing infD one complaint
brought by Patrolman
Richard Kratzenberg.
He had at first appeared
before the commiss1on
without an attorney. The new
sesaion would allow Cooper to
speak for him.
The complaint under
discllllillon was Aker's policy
of refusing overtime for lo
days to police employes who
take l!ick leave. It was not
clear if the bearing would go
into the other complaints.

revenues.

In
releasing
the
information Wednesday,
State Development Director
James A. Duerk said, "This
is clear evidence that the
increased emphasis
promoting Ohio travel by the
Rhodes admlmstration is
paying
handsome
dividends."

GRIFFimiLL
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Route I, Middleport,
for Homer E. Griffith, who
was lll. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

HOSPITAL NEWS .
Holzer Medlul Ct11ter
(Dlaebartet, Nov.17)
Oakley Addis, Peggy Betts,
Bradley Blaine, Minnie
Brown, Janet Byers, Clarice
Callicoat, Mrs. Larry
Camden and daughter,
Maggie Freeman, Beverly
Friend, Mildred Howell,
Bessie Hudson, Mrs. John
Ingels and daughter, Mary
Kalklosch, Janelle Kaylor,
Ruby Kegley, James Kelley,
Stanley Lane, Elizabeth
Lear, Margaret Lewis,
Matthew Loveday, Anna
Lyons, John Miller, Sybrena
Mitchell, Virginia Pen·
nington, Richard Radcliff,
Arnold Richards, Anna
Robinson, Eric Saunders,
James Shope, Delores
Spencer, Elmer Thornton,
Jeffrey Troendly, Carolyn
Wade, Hilah Westfall, Bryan
Williamson, Nellie Winston,
Ramona Yonker.
( Birtbs, Nov.l7)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smith,
daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. George Spradlln, ~on,
Gallipolis; Nr. and Mrs. Bill
Clarkson, son, Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Carpenter,
son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
John Buttrick, daughter,
Galllpolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Van Meter, daughter,
Letart, W. Va.

a-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomet'O)J.Q....Thursday, Nov. l8, 1976

.~!~~£~.

.PLEASANT VALLEY

DISCHARGES - Mn.
Ronald Jlaynes, Bidwtll, 0.;
Nellie Pickett, Crown City,
o.; Mrs. L!&gt;raine Crump,
Leon; James Nelaon, Bidwell, 0.; Raymond Duncan,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Edward
Cheesebrew. Point Pleasant;
Leo Jarvis, Athena; 0.; Mrs.
Garland Bostic, Gallipolis
Ferry; Crystal Stewart,
Po1nt Pleasant; Lester
Foreman, Mason; Tanya
Phillips, Crown City, 0.
BIRm .- A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gardner,
Gallipolis.

By United Prtn lntern•tlonal
Eutern Conference •
Atlantic Dlvll illn
Philadelphia

6oustttaolno
8

Opposition

Benefit sing
is scheduled

mEDALYSENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHIU
El.«". Ed.
ROBERT IIOEFUCH
City EdJlOr
Pubhshed dally except Saturday
by The Ohio \ralley Publisbl.ng Com.
any, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio
4$769. Business Office Phone !19221~. Edlt&lt;Jrlal Phone 992-2157
Second class poo;lage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio
National .advertL'Im!! reprtten•
llltive Ward . Griffith Company.,. In·
c , BoLune\1! and Galla!!her Dlv ,
'157 11u1d Ave , New York, N.Y.
10017
~
Suhlicriptlon rate¥ Delivered by
carrier whe1 e llvatlable 7~ cents per
week B) MotQr RQute where carrier
!;emce nut available, One monLh,
t:I.1S By nunl !n Ohio and W, Va ,
Ont Year, 122 00 SlX mm1ths,
Sll 50, Three munLhs, 17 OO;
El:lewheH~ $26 00 year: Six muntll.!l
$13 50, Tllree months, J7 50
S u i.J!j~,;n plhm prk'C ir1dudes Suuday
'J unelhScnLinl!!.

Ave.
The caboose will contain a
"cargo" of five leading
volunteers equipped with a
five handled shovel to make
the official ground breaking
forth~ new Blood Center. The
public, volunteers and con·
lrtbutors are aU invlled to
attend the
on·site
ceremonies, Refreshments
wlll be served at the down·
tolln Holiday Inn upper lobby
following
the
ground
breaking.
•
Volunteers from Huntington, Charleston,
Parkersburg, Beckley (West
Virginia ) and Maysville
(Kentucky) will play a key
roll in the ceremonies. Mrs
R. W. Agee, Chapter
Chairman of the Huntington·
Cobell Courtly Red Cross,
announced that representatives from each Tri..State
Red Cross Blood Subcenter
area wiD help turn the first
shovel of earth
.
Mrs. Harriet Cartmell,
Regional Red Cross Blood
Program Chairman, ex·
plained that the five handled

shovel, donated by Me·
Donough Corpqratlon of
Parkersburg, is being used as
a symbol of regional
cooperation.
"Each of the five handles
have special significance, one
handle will symbolize the
entire 52 county region, one
the main Center in Hun·
tlngton , and one handle
represents each of the three
subcenters In Charleston,
Beckley and Parkersburg
respectively," Mrs. Cartmell
elaborated.
. "Rev. John F. Torrence,
Chapter Chairman of the
Kanawha-Clay
(West
Virginia) area; John Kelz,
Project Lifeblood Fund
Raising Chairman from
Raleigh County (West
Virginia); and !..Gull Harris,
Chapter Chairman Wood
County (West Virginia will
join Mrs. Agee of Huntington
and Mrs. Cartmell of Kentucky in the ground
breaking," Mrs. Barbara
Battin, Fund Raialng
Director said.
John Ketz of Westmoreland
j

Coal said the Project
Ufebiood fund campaign has
been able to raise more than
$1,460,000 through private
industry and individuals.
Ketz added, "The support
that the Regional Red Cross
Blood Center has just
received from the state
legislators has been a
tremendous boost to every
Red Cro88 volunteer. That
$500,000 for equipment put the
tOtal at over the 67 per cent
mark ln the U,900,000
regional fund raising effort 10
only $900,000 more needa to be
raised."
LGuia Harris of Parker.,.
burg's McDonough Cor·
poration commented on the
value that the fund raising
campaign has had in
educating the publlc and
industry to the scope of the
regional Red Cross Blood
Program. "In the Wood
County area, where a new
·subeenter Ia scheduled for
completion within several
years, awareness aa well Ill!
dollars have been big byproducts."
·
t

1

5
5

6

S83
583

538

W L Pet

'"

"

"'
....

..

112

Cleveland
11 3 .786
11ouston
1 5 ~83
New Orleans
B 6 571
Sart AntoniQ
1 6 538
Wash ington
6 1 .462
Atlanta
5 9 .357
Western Conference
Midwest Divisi on
W 1.. Pet.
Denver
10 1 9()9
O.troit
9 6 600
Kansas City
7 1 500
Indiana
s 9 351
Chicago
2 B 200
Milwaukee
J 13 188
Pac1flc Divluon
W L Pet
Portland
7 4 636
Seattle
8 7 533
Golden State
S 6 455
Los Angeles
S 7 .417
Ph0en1x
J 6 333
Wednesday's Results
Wash Ill NY Knlcks 97
Denver 112 NV Nets 78
Boston 104 Atlanta 91
Indiana 123 Phil&amp; 11 7
Houston 120 Buffalo 114, ot
Detroit 118 New Orleans 95
Phoentx 103 Milwaukee 95
Sea ttle 92 Cleveland 78
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Kan C1ty at Sen Antonio
Detro it at Indiana
PhOen l)( at Golden Sta te
(Only games scheduled)
Frida't'S Games
Denver al Boston
New Orleans at Phlla
NY Nets at Phoenh&lt;
Golden St at Los Angeles
Milwaukee at Portland
Buffalo at Seattle
(Only games scheduled )

ll1

3

GB
3
3
3112
4'/J

6
GB

J
4'h
6'h
7'h
9lh
GB

1
2
2'17
3

...

...

"

' •&gt;

u ,
"''
, .,,

,_

.....
n••

t'

" ·r
"'
....

North

w It pis. gf ga
8 6 I 17 77 63

Kalamazoo

Muskegon

881176567
7 7 I IS

Saginaw
Flint

56~

692146670
• 5 8 3 13 51 67
South
w It pts: gf ga
Col umbos
6 4 5 17 67 54
Toledo
7 6 2 16 62 61
Fort Wayne 6 6 3 15 59 61
Dayton
7 7 0 14 59 62
Wednesday 's Results

Muskegon 2 Port !-turon I
Toledo 4 Fort Wayne 4
Kalamazoo S Saginaw 2
only games sched u led
Thursday's Games

No games scheduled

Friday 's Games

Muskegon at Dayton

at

Port Huron
Fl int
Saginaw at Columbus
Fort Wayne at Toledo

Local Bowling
Wednesday Early Birds

II- 10·76

Sid

Team
Royal Crown
Evelyns Grocery
King Builders

56

53
4ll

Lighthouse Rest

47

Ben Tom

46

Shirley Kay's

n

....

International Hockey
League Standings
United Prtss International

Port Huron

NHL Standtngs
By United Press International
, Campbell Conference
Patnck Divis1on
- W L T P.ls GF GA
NY lstandrs 12 2 3 27 66 35
• Phlactelph \a 9 1 J 21 64 54
Atlanta
B 1 5 21 65 65
NY Rangers 7 10 '2 16
76
Smythe Olviston
W L T Pts. GF GA
Ch1cago
9 9 2 20 70 70
- · st Louis
9 9 I 19 61 77
. , M1nnesota
5 11 3 13 51 80
" V&amp;ncouver 5 14 1 11 48 79
Colorado
d 13 2 10
46 65
Wales Conference
Norrts D1vis1on
W L T Pis GF GA
Montreal
u d 3 31 102 45
Los Angeles 8 6 7 23 69 61
Pittsburgh
6 7 5 17 55 64
Washing ton s 10 2 12 49 70
•· Oetrott
4 10 4 12 49 63
Adams Div1s1on
W L T Ph. GF GA
,,
Boston
13 3 1 27 73 53
Buffalo
10 5 2 22 57 41
Toronto
1 7 4 18 61 60
Cleveland
6 7 6 18 56 56
Wednesday's Results
NY Rangers 3 Ch1c&amp;go 2
Allanta 6 Color&amp;do 3
•
r •
Toronto 1 Moo Ireal 0 St LOUIS 5
Oelr oil 5, l1e
Cleveland 3 Mlnn 3, lie
...... Buffalo 3 Vancouver 2
(On ly games scheduled)

Thursday's Games

wash1ngton at Boslon
NY Islanders at Los Ang
Wnly games scheduled)
Fnda't'S Games
ChiCAgO at Atlllnta
Minnesota at Montreal
Boston lit washington
Cleveland at Detroit
NY Islanders al Vancouver
{Only games scheduled)

WHA Stand1ngs
Bv lln1tect Press 1n1ernat1onal
East
W L T Ph GF GA
Cmcinnah 10 5 2 22 90 64
Quebec
11 6 0 22 81 63
New Englnd 7 7 2 16 53 57
lndianapols 6 9 2 14 49 75
M1nnesota
~ 10 3 11
46 62
B1rminghm 5 15 1 11 76 95
West
W l T Pts . GF GA
Winnipeg
12 6 0 24 91 55
Houston
10 6 2 22 65 50
Phoen1x
10 7 1 21 70 81
San 01ego
9 7 2 20 63 62
Calgary
7 B 1 15 Stl 52
Edmonton
6 11 0 12 .46 68
Wednesday's Results
New Eng 6 B1rmmgham 4
San Diego 4 Edmonton 2
(Only games sc;heduled)
Thursda't'S Games
Quebec at Minnesota
Calgary at Phoenix
COnly games scheduled)

14

lndtvldual high series
Mary Voss , 5'32; Marlene
Wilson, 473, Flossie Maxson,

448: Donna McFarland, 448

lnd lvltlual high game Mary Voss , 232; Shirley
Simmons,

Wilson , 173.

175,

Marlene

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporll Writer
,
John Havlicek didn't want
to rub I! in , having kno1111
good and bad times in the
N a tiona! Basketball
Aosocation, so he just
summed lt up in one
sentence.
"They were pretty had and
our offense was pretty good,"
be said Weililes&lt;!By-night ,
after the Boston Celtics used
a 24-1 burst 'to score a 1114-91
victory over the Atlanta
Hawks.

The Celtics trailed, by 37·
· 'tl, with 6:13left in the half,
when they ripped off 16
straight points in 3:46. Tom
Barker interrupted the drive
with a free throw and then the
Celtlcs rammed home eight
straight more points for their
24-1 edge during that stretch.
Havlicek and Charlie Scott
scored 20 po10ts each, Sidney
Wicks tallied 19 and Jo Jo
White had 16 to lead the
Celtics, who are tied with
Philadelphia Ill' first plllce 1n
the NBA's Atlsntic Division

As expected Kyger Creek
and North Gallia, the top ·
teams in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference
dominated the AII-SVAC
dream team selections
Wednesday night at North
Gallia High School.
Kyger Creek, by virtue of
ita fourth straight cham·
plonship, placed five men on
the 22·man roster. Each
school got two honorable
mentions. North Gallla had
four players made all-league
and walked off with the Most
Valuable Uneman Award lor
the second straight year and
co-Most Valuable Back
Award.

The Pirates' Bill Baker,.a
180·pound offensive tackle
and defensive 'linebacker,
was voted the Most Valuable
Lineman Award. Baker, a
senior, received 34 votes in
the palloting by league
coaches.
His stiffest com pelltion
came from the Bobcats'
Darrell Jones, a 229·pound
junior tackle. Janes received
30 votes. Eastern's Dave
Mills, a defensive end, was
the only other hneman
nominated.
Baker was cred1ted with
108 detens1ve potnts in 1976
He had 31 ind1v1dual tackles
and 76 assists. Baker

UPI champs headed
for state playoffs
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS ' (UP!)
Playoff-bound Cincinnati
Moeller and New Lexington,
along
with
unbeaten
Artingtnn, have been voted
the top football temns in the
state by the United Press
International Ohio High
School Board of Coaches.
Moeller, which takes on
runnerup Youngstown
Cardinal Mooney in the
semifinals of the Class MA
playoffs Friday night at
Dayton, finished with a 287192 margin over the Cor·
dinals. Moeller reqeived 26 of
29 first place votes. Both
teams are 10:0.
New Lexington, a previous
AA state poll champion, had a
much closer fit, beating out
second place Huron 147-136,
with unbeaten Reading
climbing into the No.3 spot in
the final voUng with 131
points.
Arlington, which edged out
Woodsfield Ill' the Class A
title, Is the only one of the poD
champions not in thls weekend'• playoffs.
"The Itids were really em·
cerned about It," said
Arlington coach Joe Metr.ger,
referring to the outcome of

"

the UP! voting. "It really
takes the diasppointment out
of not mailing the playoffs.
The coaches' poll is a very big
thing around this town."
All lour of the C!Bss AAA
plllyoff semifinalists made
the top ten, with Gahanna
Uncoln (~)third in the final
voting and the Lions '
opponent, Lakewood St .
Edward, finislung seventh.
The rest of the AAA top ten
conl!lsted of Princeton 10
foutth, Stow Walsh Jesuit in
filth, Centerville in sixth,
North Canton Hoover in
eighth, Massillon Washington
in ninth and Akron North in
tenth.
Musillon's appearance in
the top ten was the T1gers'
first, winning eight in a row
after dropping their first two
games.
New LeXington and Huron,
both 10.0, alw made it intn the
playoffs, meeting No. 7
Brookville and No. 10 Elyria
Catholic, respectively.
Columbus Watterson,
which just missed out on a
playoff berth, fell to fourth
tJ\is week in AA, while the
other AA top ten teams were
St. Marys Memorial in fifth,
Urbana in l!ixth, Akron st.
Vincent-St.· Mary in eighth

and Orrville in ninth.
Atllngton, which posted its
first 10.0 season in 75 years of
football , wound up with a 197·
184 margin over No . 2
Woodsfield, which also had a
10.0 record.
Newark catholic (9-1) and
West Jefferson (&amp;.I), who
flniahed thtrd and fourth,
along with No. 9 Fostoria St.
Wendelin, are the ten teams
in the Aplayoffs. Newark and
West Jeff go against each

COLUMBUS

IUPI)

-

Final 1976 Un ited Press In

ternalional Ohio 1-tlgh School

-Quasar.

" '

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'76' GREMLINS

'"

Team

Team
Pomts
1 New Lexington 5 ( 10-0) 147

1 Cincm Moeller 26 I10·0) 287
2. Youngs Mooney 110 0) 192 2 Huron 4 (10 01
3 Gahanna Lmc oln (9.0) 188 3. Reading 3 110·01
tl. Princeton (9 1)
146 4 Col. Watterson 2 (9-1)
5 Stow Walsh Jesu1t 2 ( 10·
0)

120
I10-0)
102
7. Lakewood St Edward (9
1)
BO
B. N Canton Hoover (9-1) 70
9 Massi llon Wash (9-2)
59
10 Akron North (9 01
49
6 Cenlerv~lle1

Second ten
Trace 40 ; 12

11
Miami
Columbus

North land 27, 13 Daytoh
Meadowdale 24; 14. Parma

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•

176
195

BobMcCiure-Eastern

150

Kevin Barton - Ea stern
Steve Boso- Southe rn

170

15.5

AI Hill - Southern

160

160

Steve Hendricks- Southern
Kip Lewis- Southwestern
Larrv Carter- Southwestern
Kurt Nolan- Southwestern
Jim Waugh- Hanna n Tra ce
Ri ck Si bl ey- Hannan Tra ce
Richard Stumbo-Symmes Valley

HONORABLE MENTION-

191
185
155

155
145
205

Kyger Creek -

Lucas and Mike Hendr ickson

Jt

Jr
Sr.
Sr
Sr
Brian

''9Perationsand
hOspital rooms cost
alotmore .
than you think~

BILL A.ETCHER

MOST VALUABLE LINEMAN
Bill Baker, Norlh Ga llla
CO·MOST VALUABLE BACKS
Todd Taylor, Kyger Creek

llSB Powoll St.
Middleport, 0 .
Ph. "2·7155

Fred Logan, North Ga llla

two fumbles and had one
Interception.
Logan collected 814 yards
in 81 carries, a 10 yard
average. He had 498 yards
throu gh th e a ir on 24
rece~tlons lor a 20.7 yard
average. Logan had eight
touchdowns on passes and II
rush1ng He returned tJ
kickoff returns for 257 yards.
On defense, the senlor, a
member of the 1975 Ali..SV AC
squad, had 44 tackles, in·
tercepted six passes and
recovered two fumbles
Seven players selected
Wednesday
night
are
returnees from the 1975 All·

SV AC squad. 1 hey are
Darrell Jones, Kyger Creek;
Fred Logan and Mark Theiss,
North Gallia; Dave Mills,
Eastern; Kip Lewis, Southwestern, Steve Boso, Southern and Jim Waugh, Hannan
Trace.
Selections were made by
the foilowmg head coaches:
Jim Sprague, Kyger Creek;
John Blake, North Gailia;
Joe Mitchem, Eastern; Bill
Jewell, Southern; Bob
Ashley, Southwestern , Larry

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hospital/surgical insurance.
Like a ~:ood

nelll:hbor,

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Cremeens, Hannan Trace

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Valley.

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I MIUIAN l l

•

M U I~ I I ~~\()rll obllt

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Clinton, 34 each; 14 Milan
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59~

Trenton

Wh eelersburg 11
Class 'A

Halpa atart cold

Points

1 Art mgt on 9 (10·0)
2 Woodsfield 7 I 10 01
3 Newark CatholiC(9·1!
4 West Jefferson IB·II
5 Black River 1 IB·ll
6 Rldgemonll 19-11
7 Dalton 1 19·0)
a Falrporll-tarbor I (9 II

Jr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr

Eastern - Joe Kuhn and Mik e Smi th
Southern - Jerry Johnson and Mart in Bush
Southwestern - Don Jeffers and Lllrry Ruff
Hannan Trace - Jeff Halley and Scott Gibson
Symmes Valley Bennie Jones and Andy
P inker man

Second ten Jl. Ironton 40 ;
12. (tie) Wyom 1ng and Port

Team

Jt ,

North Gallla - Brett Tackett and Re&gt; Justice

197
184
150
139
104
97
83
62

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Salem, 29 each, 14 Bluffton

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17 Centerburg 24; 18. Twin
Valley South 22 , 19. Cory.
Rawson 18; ~0 1-tlcksvllle )7.

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135

190
195
182

Sr
Sr
Sr

too late and the game went
into overUme. John Lucas
scored 21 points for the
Rockets.
Nuggets 11%, Nell 78:
Gus Gerard had 17 points
and David Thompson 16,
leading the Nuggets to their
easy victory over the Nets.
Other Nuggets In double
figures were Dan Issei with
13, Willie Wise wlu\ 12 and
thre other players with 11.
Nate Archibald scored 16
points Ill' the Nets
Suu 103, Bucu ttl :
Dick Van Arsdale, Ricky
Sobers and Paul Westphal
combined for 5S points in the
Suns' victory at Phoenix. The
Suns never trailed nnd went
ahead wl th four minutes gone
In the second period. The lou
wss the fourth straight for the ·
Bucks and their seventh
straight on the road.
Sonic• 92, cava 78:
The Sonics made the best
defensive effort in their
history In holding the
cavaliers to 78 points and
broke open the game with a
27-17 outburst in the third
period. Bruce Seals scored 21
points and had 10 rebounds
and Mike Green had IS
rebounds to lead the Sonlcs.

Second ten· 11. Versa illes
32 , 12 (tiel Ashtabula St

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tubes to bum

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Dave Mills- Eastern
Mark Lawson- Eastern

Mark Theiss- North Gall Ia
Fred Logan- North Gall Ia
Bill Baker- North Gall Ia

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". '

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Valley Forge 23; 15. Toledo
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ohn's 20, 16 (lie ),

Minerva

-.

.....

other Friday night, while St
Wendelin plays No. 12
Ashtabula St. John.
Black River, which led the
small school ratings lor
several weeks until it lost,
wound up in fifth, followed by
Ridgemont, Dai!Dn, Fairport
Harbor,
Fostoria
St.
Wendelin and Corey.

Board of Coaches football
ra tmgs wtth first place votes
and won los t records tn
pa ren th eses
Points

Burden had H points each.
Pacers 1%3, 76ers 117 :
Blliy Knight scored 30
points as the Pacers ended a
seven-game road trip with a
l'lctory over the 76ers. Wil
Jones added :!II points to the
Indiana attack and Doug
Collin.! led the 76ers with 31
points
Rockets 1!0, Braves 114:
Moses . Malone &amp;nd Rudx,
Tomjanovlch scored four
points each in overtime as the
Rockets raised their record to
7-a. Bob McAdoo, who led all
scorers with 27 ponts, made a
4IJ.Ioot hank shot at the
buuer bul the apparent
winning bucket was ruled

Todd Tavlor - Kyger Creek

recovered one fumble and
mtercepted one pass, On
offensive blocking, Coach
John Blake said he was
graded at 73 pet wh!le his
pulling and trapping form
was excellent.
North GaUls 's Fred Logan,
!Uo·pound senior running
hack and Kyger Creek's Todd
Taylor, 148 pound wmgback,
lled for the Most Valuable
Back Awards.
They collected 31 points
each. Also nominated were
Bob McClure, Eastern; Steve
Boso, Southern and Jim
Waugh, Hannan Trace.
Taylor, a small but qu1ck
running hack , rushed for 439
yards in 58 carries a 7.7 ave.
He scored six touchdowns On
the passing end, Taylor
grabbed 19 passes for 392
yards while scoring four
touchdowns.
He returned f!Ve kickoff
returns for 207 yards a 41.4
ave. while scormg two six·
pointers. Taylor punted II
times for 342 yards, a 31.1
average. On defense, Taylor
was the Bobcats' second
leading tackler. He recovered

Class AAA

· Platona 118, Jut 95 :
Bob Lanier and M.L. carr
each scored 24 points as the
Plstoos won the1r seventh
straight game desp1te a 23point performance by Pel&gt;l
Marovich. The Pistons had a
:;&amp;.41 lead at hai!Ume, thenincreased tbe1r margin to 30
points at the end of the third
penod.
lllllleto Ill, Knlcb 97:
Phil Chenier scored 30
points and Len Robinson
added 'll and had a career·
high 20 rebounds in the
Bullets' triumph o,ver the
Knicks. Earl Monroe led the
Knicks with 18 points and
Wait Frazier and T1cky

,
1975 ALL-SVAC FOOTBALL TEAM
NAME- SCHOOL
WT

Final UP/ grid ratings

I

-·

of the Eastern Conference
Barker led Atlanta with 20
points.
In other NBA games ,
Detroit defeated New
Orleans, 118-9S, Washington
beat the New York Knicks ,
lll-97, Indiana tapped
Phlladelphla, 123·117,
Houston downed Buffalo, 120114, in overtime, Denver
whipped the New York Nets,
112·78, Phoenix dumped
Milwaukee, 103·95, and
Seattle drubbed Cleveland,
92-78.

Bobcats and Pirates
dominate dream team

111\.l

Blood center groundhreaking slated
HUNTINGTON, W. VA On November 29 at 10:30 a.m.
the "Project Ufeblood Ex·
press" a Cbessle System
locomotive and caboose wlll
pull up alongside the floodwall opposite the site for the
new Regional Red Crass
Blood Center here on 2nd

7

1

GB

NY Knicks
8 7, 533
NY Nets
S 9 357
Centnl Div11ion

Veterau Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED
Betty
Brooks, Albany; Emmett
Smalley, Pomeroy; Victor
Braley, Rutland ; Mildred
Dtll, Loog Bottom; Dora
Frost, Athens ; Nellie
Lemley, Portland ; Pearl
Hayes, Shade; Deborah
Leeper, Athens; Homer
Griffith, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Floyd
Bush, Mary Cleek, Margaret
Allen, llerbert Shields, Gary
Welch.

DINNER PLANNED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse First Church of God
will hold Its annual Thanksgiving dinner Saturday, Nov.
Eastern schools
:!11, at 6:30 p.m. The public Is
The Willing Workers
plan c~nferences ofinv1ted.
the Misaionary· Society of
EAST MEIGS - Eastern the church recently pur·
Local School District will chased a public address
hold a parent-teacher con- system.
ference on Monday, Nov. 22.
Classes will be dismissed in
the elementary school and
grades from kindergarten
through six. The high school
(Continued from page I)
and junior high will hold aesthetics, general en·
regular classes.
virohmentai concerns,
Buses wlll run the regulsr . historic values, fish and
morning and afiernoon wildlife values, flood damage
schedule picking up students prevention,
land
use
in grades seven through 12 classification, navigation,
only. Parents of children in recreallon, water supply,
grades seven through 12 can water quality, and, in
arrange conferences with general, the needs and
the1r children's teachers by welfare of the people ,, No
calling the high school permit will be granted unless
principal.
,
its issuance Is found to be in
the public interest."
The notice describes the
proposed work as follows:
" ... a coal loading lacillty
consisting of six wood pile
clusters, three steel tripod
SYRACUSE - There will clusters and a steel structure
be a hymn Slng Saturday, to support the wallrway and
Nov. 'tl, at 7:30 p.m. at the covered conveyor, This
Syracuse Elementary School. portion of the facility will be
~1ngers will be the Gospel constructed in the waterway
Tones, the choir of the and will extend riverward a
.Syracuse Asbury United maximum of 35 feet. The
Methodist Church, and the operation on land will include
· Stewart family.
two coal stock piles, a coal
The sing Ia being sponsored crusher and a settling pond to
by the Syracuse ER Squad. be fed by a diversion ditch as
An offering will be taken at well as by natural drainage.
the door. There will alao be The covered conveyor wtll
refreshments. Proceeds wlll extend from the crusher to a ,
be used to pay for the newER telescopic chute over the
truck.
barges moored at the facllity.
"Preliminary studies in·
FESTIVAL SET
dicate
that the mooring of
The Pomeroy Elementary
vessels
at this facility will be
PTA annual fall festival will
limited
to
a zone not to exceed
be held from 6:30 p.m. to 9
78
feet
rlverward
from the
p.m. Saturday at the school.
riverward
face
of
the pile
There will be games, refresh·
clusters.
ments, a country store and a
"Some work had been
flea market.
accomplished without prior
authorization as required by
BELLOW PICKED
rules and regulations '
CHICAGO (UP!)- Author governing the Departm · nt of
Saul Bellow, winner. of this the Army permit program,
year's Nobel Prize for aU investigations and legal
literature, has been chosen to proceedings connected with
give the 1977 Jefferson the unauthorized work were
Lecture in Humanities, the concluded prior to the
National Council on the ' ·processing of this apHumanitles ~nnounced plication. Therefore, the
Wednesday·
. application will be evalusted
Bellow, professor of on ita own merits, and no
E~liah at the University of consideration will be given to
Clilcago, will give two the applicant's unauthorized
lectures in March 1977, the activities or prior ex·
first in Washington and the penditures."
second in Chicago.

W. L Pet

Celtics roll over Hawk~, 104-91

Quebec o11t Calgary
Winn lpeo at New England
c 1nc•nnati at Edmonton
Birmingham at tndiol!Mapolls
Houston at san o.ego
I Only games sched tJied l

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._TheDailySentinel,MJddleport-Pomerov.O., Thursday,Nov. l~!!ll!----------------------------------"-----------------,

.Loop champs

MI DLEP RT MER HANT
FRIDAY Nl HT ALE

recognized
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League offlclalll Wednesday
nlght recognized conference
~oH and !ootbaU champions
during their annual winter
meeting at Jackson.
Gallla · Academy High
School captured the 1976 golf
championship. GAHS
received $1~ from the league
to help purchase the championship trophy. Logan and
Ironton were recognized as
co-football champions.
It was announced Gene
Slaughter, former South
Point and Jackson Htgh
School coach and now head
football coach at capital, will
be guest speaker for the 1976
Ali·.S outheastern
Ohio
League banquet.
· .Logan wlU. host the league
· football banquet on Thursday , Dec. 2, beginning at 6:30

Bench
:Hickok
•
:w1nner
•

; NEW YORK (UP!) ; L'incinnati catcher Johnny
1 Bench, wbo.battted .533 in the
: Reds' fourgame World Series
: sweep of the New York
1 Yankees ,
was named
: Wednesday the landslide
:winner of the October
• balloting for the Hickok
: Professional Athlete of the
., Year.
f Bench received 102 first
' place ballots and 342 points as
: he drew out of sight in tbe
• voting.
.
· James HWlt of Britain, the
Grand . Prix
driving
champion, was proof of auto
1 racing's growing popularity
t as he collected nine first
; place votes and totaled 60
l points .for second place. He
t was the only nonAmerican
i sports figure to gain support
~ among the top IO vote getters.
~
Two pro quarterbacks
\ gained nominal backing as
t Bert Jooes of the Baltimore
~ Colts received 55-11 votes and
: Steve Grogan of the New
rr Orleans
. Saints had .40.
, They were followed by
~ catcher Thurman Munson of
the New ·York Yankees (3&gt;t l'l ), running back Walter
• : Payton, of the Chicago Bears
r ( 34), quarterback Roger
l Staubach of the Dallas
J Cowboys ( 21 ), Minnesota
1 Viking quarterback Fran
Tarkentoo (20), Yankee first
l baseman Chris Chambliss
, . (15 ), and Colts' running back
; · LydeU Mitchell (13) .

r

1

I.

:: SVAC p }ans
,
~

p.in . In the high sc h·ool
cafeteria .
During Wednesday's
lengthy session, the 1977·78
basketball schedule was
discussed. Two changes were
approved, one on starting
limes during the holiday
season and ·another ·on
rebalance .of home and away
games.
Athens Athletic Dlr~or
Bill Waddell and GAHS
Athletic Dlreclor Ed Stewart .
were authorized to draw up
the SEOAL cage schedules
for 19711-79 and 1979-M. The
schedules will be presented
for approval during the nexl
league meeting in Jackson on
March 2 at 7 p.m.
In other matters, officials
approved the girls. 1977
volleyball schedule.
Constltutiona·l changes as·a
result of girlll participation in
athletic programs took up the
remainder of the evening. A
request to recognize girl
champions
at
league
banquets was tabled until the
spring meeting.

Winners from the Pomeroy
Elementa ry School in the free
throw foul shooting contest
were (boy listed first) :
6-9 year olds, Brian Buf·
fington, son of Sharon Bul·
fington , 98 New Street, and
Kelly Whitlatch, daughter of
Mr . a nd Mrs. Harlan
Whitlatch, Unlon Terrace.
· 10·11 yea r old~. John
)llcKinney, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Bill
McKi nney ,
Mulberry Ave., and Susan
Lightfoot, · daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Lightfoot,
Route 4. ·
12-13 year olds, Todd Fife,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
File,
Spring Avenue,
Pomeroy, and Barbara
Grueser, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Grueser, Lincoln
Heights.
Brian is a student of Mrs.
Bonnie Fisher and Kelly a
student of Miss Rebecca
Tate. John and ·Susan are
students of John Arnott.
Barbara and Todd are
students of Mrs. Pamela
Crow.

Church plans
holiday bazaar
CLIFTON, w. Va. - The
Clifton United Methodist
Church will hold a Christmas
bazaar and bake sale
Saturday, Nov. 20 beginning
at 10 a .m. in the church an·

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Kapstein sald. "I think he
made a bad business decision
and he's payiitg lor it now."
· Kapstein was questioned
from · the audience after
giving a brief speech at

Boston

University's

Distinguished Lecture Series.
He was accompanied by free
agent Don Gullett, a pitcher
with the world champion
Cincinnati Reds.
Three of Kapatein 's free
agent clients signed with new
clubs earlier Wednesday :
Rudi with the California
Angels, Dave Cash with tbe .
)llontreal Expoa and Bert
Campaneris with .the Texas
Rangers.
"Howdo the fans feel about
players getting live times as

much money as fans earn?"
&amp;Bked one fan.

'' .. .that's just

jea lousy, ~~

answered Kapatein.
"How are you financially
compensated lor your
duties?" asked another
person In the audience.
"Generally with American
dollars," quipped Kapatein.
Qne lan.inquired if Gullett's
appearance with· Kapstein
signaled the Boston Red Sox
might get a new pitcher.
"He's been \alking with the
Red Sox," said ~pstein .
But
Kapstein
said
representatives from the St.
Louis Cardinals alllo were
interested in Gullett.

By RICHARD L. SHOOK
tlPl Sporta Wdler

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)
- The key to stopping
Michigan for Ohio State could
be halting the Wolverines'
potent pitch-catch
combination of Rick Leach to
Jim Smith.
Smith, a senlor wingback
who iB bound to be a standout
as a professional, bas caught
nearly three times as many
passes as Michigan's No. 2
receiver. He has 24
receptlons compared to nine
lor senior back !IDb Lytle.
Leach, who seldom looks
like the sophomore tllal he IB,
bas · thrown 13 touchdown
paues lbi.s 1111ason-«x of
tllem to .Smith, the man he
Invariably goes to wben a
pau i.s mandatory.
"1 feel confident in our
passing," coach Bo Schem-

becbler said early in the
week. But asked to rate
Leach as a great passer, be
wouldn't say it. "He's justa
sophomore.
"We've had two great .ones
bere since I've been here Don Moorhead and Dennls
Franklin," the coach said.
"Let's walt a couple of years
to make a judgment on
Leach. 1 will say this: be's a
very advanced sophotilore."
Leach has a 53 percentage
completlonrateon46outol87
for {197 yards.
Several times in recent
games · Schembechler bas
shown an Wlchar&amp;fteristic
penchant for passing on first
down. Just as often as not, It
bas worked. With Smith as
the recipient.
Ohio State bas not bad
much luck with passing this
season except in one gam~. It

· only has one touchdown pass,
thrown by Jim Pacenta. The
senior will be starting
because
sophomore
quarterback Rod Gerald was
put out of action three weeks
ago.
"Pacenta throws more
than Gerald," Schembechler
says in assessing the two. He
does not see the .change
creating extra defensive
problems for the Wolverines.
"One throws more, the other
runs more, bui basically the
offense stays the same."
Schembechler Is planning
on having junior John
Anderson, who suffered
spraine{l llgements In his
right knee two weeks ago ,
available lor both punting
and at defensive end against
the Buckeyes.
Anderson bas shown no
problems with the ligaments
lh practice this week. His

crucial. "

The junior's replacement ,
Gregg Willner, mishandled
one anap against Illinois last
week and punted poorly oo
another occasion.

a laborer.

In 1960 be went into
OperaUons as a UHIIty
Operator and
then
Auxiliary Equipment
Operator uatUl&amp;Y when he
transferred to mala·
tenaace. The Roltgeu's
have two sons and make

their home in Mason.
SUNDAY
NEWSMA·N Quartet, 9:30
a.m. Sunday at Pomeroy
Church of Nazar.ene. and 2:30
p.m. Sunday at Racine
Church of Nazarene. Public
invited.
VICTORY PARTY for
Democrats 2' p.m. Sunday at
the !IDdney Grange Hall in
Galli a County. Bring covered
dish. Public invited.
MARY SHRINE 37, White.
of
Jerusa lem
Shrine
rehearsal, 2 p.m. Sunday at
Pomeroy Mason Temple to
prepare. for ceremonial to be
held Dec. 10.
GEORGE PICKENS,
student
at
Kentucky
Christian College, guest
speaker Sunday at Keno
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Public invited to attend.
REVIVAL at Eden U.B.
Church, two miles north of
Reedsv ille on . Rt. 124,
beginning Sunday, 7: 30 each
The
Bethel
evening.
Messengers Quartet will be
featured each evening and
Rev . Freeland .Norris will be
evangeliBt; pubi!c· invited.

THEY'RE HERE!
GIRLS' JUMPSUITS

be discontinued

Pkg.

INGELS FURNITURE

million , but the sales were
nullified
by Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
· Six Oakland players
became free agents through
the re-entry draft. Four have
signed with other clubs.
"Athletes are very special
in baseball WJd Finley could
have slgned all. live of his
players for less than what be

"in a tough game, the kicking
· game becomes even more

1·

MR. BEE

JOHN ROTI'GEN
NEW HAVEN, W. VA. Jolui M. Rottgen, master
maintenaace maa at lbe ·
PbUip Sporn Plaat near
here was promoted to
mainteaaace foreman Nov.
16. Born Ia Lucasville,
Ohio, he grad~ated fro(ll
Wabama High School,
served In tbe Navy until
1957, when he began em·
ploymealal Sporn Plant as

SIZES 7 THRU 14

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~

Mlssisslppl
St .
23 though only 4-1-1 overall, are
Missls8ippl 7 - Ole Miss' ~I on their home field.
offense has suddenly gone
Te.xas . 18 Baylor 9 kaput.
Longhorns' defense got back
Tbe Midwest
in the groove .last week.
• Michigan 13 Ohio St. 9 - · Arkansas. 23 SMU 12 The ann~al " bore-a-thon" Second place in SWC still in
ortce again p~ta us to Bleep. reach ·for Razorbocks.
· Notre Dame 21 Miami ·The Rocldes
(F1a.) 6 - Irish still in
Wyoming 24 Air Force 21 contention for a major bowl Cl~ victories have become .
invitation.
the
norm for
WAC
Minnesota 1» Wisccinsin 7 - • champions.
Badgers have too many
Arizona 30 New Malco 27
defensive holes.
- Just your typical WAC
Purdue 22 Indiana 10 - shootout.
That victory over Michigan
Arizona St. 25 Colorado St.
made BoUennakers flex their 20 - Small consolation for
muscles.
Sun Devils.
The Mldlaads
Brigham Young 28 Utah 20
Missouri 27 Kansas 10 -Gifford Nielsen adds to biB
Tigers wUI end up being the TD passing record.
best 7-4 team In the nation. The West
Colorado 28 Kan~as St. 6 UCLA 23 Southern Cal 17 Buffaloes keep Orange Bowl Wendell Tyler outshines
hopes alive.
• Ricky Bell.
Iowa St. 24 Oklahoma St. 20
CaUfornia 27 Stanford 21 -Cyclones alllo·smell those "The Big Game" goes
Oranges.
airborne.
Tbe Soulbwest
Oregon 26 Oregon St. 13 TexasTech20Houston 17- Both teams are weak, but
Cougars have had two weeks Oregon bas a slightly better
to prepare for this one, but offense.
Red Raiders want to protect
Washington
St.
23
that perfect record.
Washington 14 - State's been
LSU 17 Tulane 13 - Tigers, playing better in second half
..
of season.

Pitch-catch combination tough

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MIDDLEPORT
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I

5-8 p . m. FRIDAY - ALL

BOSTON (UP!)- Baseball
agent Jerry Kapstein says
Oakland A's owner Otarles
Finley made a big mlstake by
trying to sell the iights to
three of his players to other
clubs last sununer.
"Finley has done more to
hurt· the salary structure of
baseball th.an any other
par11011 just by making that
sale ," . ·Kapstein
said
Wednesday night. .
.
Finley offered Roll!e
Fingers and Joe Roell to the
Boston Red Sox for $1 million
each and Vida Blue to the
New York Yankees lor $1.5

51o 8 p.m.

re&lt;~d l ngit w illgiveyou.tnewundeont jn d ins

of the Sc:riplures."

L

oot we lhink.the New Year's
Day feature might have a
Utile different twist to it this
time. We like Mlchlgl!ll to end
Ohio Slate'$ lout-year
sojourn to Pasadena and
UCLA to make It two straight
appearances to the .Rose
Bowl lor tbe first time in
history.
.
Here's how we see the top
games acrose the nation :
Tbe Ellll
West Vlrginla 1» Syracuse
13 - ll'a been a harrowing
season lor the Orangemen.
Boston College 27 Massachusetts 6 - Minutemen are
well overmatched.
Villanova 1» Temple 10 - If
only the first baH of the
se&amp;l!On could have been like
the secorid lor Wildcats.
Tbe Soulb
Maryland 33 VIrginia 0 ~
Terpa' first perfect season
since 11151 earns them a trlp to
a major post.,..ason bowl.
North Carolina 23 Duke 1»
-Tar Heelll need a victory in
this traditional rivalry to lock
up a bowl bid.
·
South Carolina ~ Clemson
7 - Gamecocks already
missed their bowl shot but
st1U have more than enough
to handle Tigers.

Kapstein says.Finley erred

Reg. $1G.9S

Ked's

By JIIIED MeMANE .
. tlPI 8porll Writer
Thla week Ia college
football's annual re-run
festival . .
The mabl feature on Saturday's program i.s a double btu
thai has ~n playing fer the·
Put 1111~ral ~na. And, In
cue you milled lllaat year,
tlloee same lolkil who brought
you Mlchtg~hlo State for
the Big Ten cbamplonahip
and UCLA-USC lor the
Paclllc Elght Ci'"'t'n are
proud to preeent It again.
The script Ls aslamlllar as
the dialogue from "Gone
Wltll The Wind."
,
Miehlgan and Ohio State
always play a duD game thai
have TV vlewers $loring by
halfllme, and the. Buckeyes
Invariably wllund wind up as·
tile visiting team In the Rose
Bowl. Thai bas been the case
lbe peal lour years,
UCLA-&amp;utllern Cal UBuaUy
Ls a hit more a citing, but the
ouU:ome there i.s stereotyped
alllo. Southern Cal usually iB
the winner, although UCLA
did spoD thlngaa Year ago by
tripping the Trojana, 25-22.
The winners this year once
again will represent their
conferences in tile Rose Bowl,

Calendar

'•

DELUXE. PADDE :
EDITION

ALL CANVAS
Footwear
By Converse

20%

3QI

THE WORLD'S MOST
READABLE BIBLE·

5-a'p.m. Only

MEN'S
LEISURE
SUITS
REDUCED

nex.
Handmade crafts, such as
afghans, pillows, baby
sweaters, crocheted covered
;
clothes hangers, fabric
I
flowers, pot hold ers and
5-8 P.M.
1
Wednesday night during hanging planters will be sold,
: the annual SV AC meeting to and a white elephant booth
: select the all conference will be held.
~ -football squad the- -svAe - Food suclras·soup, hot~ogs ~~ ~t,~~
:l basketball coaches discussed and coffee will be featured.
ONLY
I plans to rotate the 1977-78
cage sthedules. Passes lor
· the upcoming cage preview
l Saturday night at Paul R.
,J. Lyne Center
were
EXCUSE US!
·I ' distributed.
HOUNSLOW , England
FREE
:; ~ Also meeting were women (UP!) - Donna Hewett was
coaches in the league . .
surprised to receive a Jetter
IN-HOME
;, ' They met with Uoyd L. from the National Social
Versatile
entertainmen
t
center
j Myers, Paul Dillon and Cliff Security office this week
SET UPI
in mellow walnut vi nyl veneer .
,j Willlon, athletic directors in alleging her weekly con·
,, the county, to set up league tribu.tlons were insufficient.
:.'I schedules, games starting Donna is 6 years old.
times and discussed the
jj purchase of a championship
1J trophy. Present were Karen
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
11 Thomas, Hannan Trace~
PLAYERS
TO
MEET
J~ Susie Thompson, Eastern;
EAST, MEIGS - Eastern
,, Patsy Fields, Kyger Creek;
alumni
players are to
' Connee Willlams, Southern 'meet atfootball
Eastern
High School
:• and Mary Fulkner, Symmes
•
Sunday, Nov. 21, at 2 p.m.
t Valley.
••
Hand crafted coo coo clocks
Germany
••••
~ Hand crafted leather items
Handblown glass from Blincoe &amp;
Pilgrim
OR. A .J.STAEHLI
OA. K. H.CHUNG
Picks
&amp; Heshi Jewelry
l
OR . VICTOR 'V . LIANG
~\ I
Hurricane Lamps
FOR PRICES CALL COlLECT
Oil Paintings on Canvas
• ••'
r
AREA CODE (514)--,
•tl ••
Spanish
&amp; Mexican Imports
I_ 252-3181 '
Decorative
Dolls
••
One or Two Day Full Denture
•'r:.,
Lawn Decorations
Service, Partials, Extractions,
Tiffinily Lamps
!~
\,
X.
:fl:-1;;iiii;~
•
--..;.;:.::&lt;;J
Man.y
unusual
novelty items .
••
~mething for everyone .
;
:

1}118 BUI CAl CIIIGI YIUI fUJilY

AND

FRENCH FRIES

..

FRI. NIGHT SPECIAL .

FRIDAY NIGHT
S-8 P.M.

Hoop shooting
winners at
Pomeroy listed

r

CLIP
&amp;

I

The Livestock Feed this use to those owned or
Program is being Phased out ·controlled by the Commodity
aa the limited stocks of Credit Corporation, This
Commodity Credit Cor· action came when surpluses
poration (CCC)-owned oats were becoming burdensome
avallable in the reserve for and was one of many over a
use under this program are · spari of years designed to lind
depleted, the U. S. Depart· outlets lor commod ities
menl of Agriculture (USDA) • acquired by the Government
announced today. The oats under the Support Program.
remaining in the reserve are
upected to be sold to
livestock producers In
BAZAAR SET
~rought-allected
areas
CHESTER - The Chester
before the end of this month, Young Wives Club will hold a
USDA said.
Christmas holiday bazaar
Dlllaster relief will continue from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
to be available through other Friday at the Dale Warner
government programs ad- Insurance Agency, W. Main
minlstered by the Depart· St., Pomeroy.
menl ' s Agricultural
Slablllzalion and Con·
ORGANIZING
~emUon Service (ASCS),
A youth drill team is being
Faimers
Home
Ad- organized by Mrs. Jo Ann
minlstraUon (FmHA), and Newsome. Youngsters from
Federal Crop Insurance lour through 12 are Invited to
CorporaUon (FCIC).
take part and there are still a·
Also In dlsaster designated few openings left in the
by the President additional group. Anyone interested
aldmaybeprovldedaslsnow should call Mrs. Newsome at
'belng done in several states . 992-3382.
,.lhrough·hay and cattle transportation asslllance.
The Livestock Feed
·Program was authorized In
1tl54 by a congr08Sional·actlon
Certain condltlons which
amending the bulc dlaposal are considered dlaabllng
.~uthorlly for surplus fann under the Social Security law
commodities detailed In are deacrlbed in lhe Social
, "Sectlon
407
of
the Security Regui.stions which
: ,Agricultural Act of 1949. It are avatlable at any Social
· llmlla the grains avaUsble lor Security office.
~

.

Ill N SECOND 10/E

-

·16!•1

ouse
992-5627

Middleport, Ohio

FRIDAY
Take covered dish, lllblt
CHRISTIAN
YOUTH service , '·a plg In a poke" and
revlvol , Bradford Church of gift for Athens State Hospital.
Christ, Thursday through
FALL FESTIVAL SaturSunday, 7:30p.m. ea ch night. day beginning t p.m. at
Dave Roberson, evangelist' RuUand Elementary School
with special mu!lc by Sons of by PTA :
Light. Everyone welcome.
SQUARE DANCE SaturPAST
MATR ONS,
day
at
Middleport
TiruRSDAY
Evsngeline Chapter, O.E.S.
Elementary
School
from Ito
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, at the home of Emma K.
II
p.m.
Musi
c by
7:30 Thursday at the home of Clatworthy, 7: 30p.m. Friday.
Stringdusters.
Admlsslon
lor
Mr s. Jean Moore, MidSATURDAY
dleport. .
odults
$1. Children under 12
RUTLAND PTA sponsored
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC feU festival beginning 4 p.m. with parents admitted free.
Lodge 363 Thursday, 1:30 Saturday
at Rutland Sponsored by senior citizens
p.m. to Install diBtrict deputy . Elementary School ; door center.
SUNDAY
priz~ to be awarded.
MAGNOUA CLUB, 7:30
EASTERN Alumni football
GOSPEl,
TONES,
7:
30p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Ella
players Sunday, 2p.m. at the
Smith. Plans lor Christmas Saturday at l.ong Bottom high school.
Methodist Church. Publi c
party to be made.
COUNTY-WIDE prayer
invited.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday at
RACINE Grange Thanks·
Health Club, 1 p.m. Thursday
Hobaon
Church
of Christ In
at the home of Mrs. Frances giving dinner 6:30 p.m. Christian Union, Glen BIMell,
Goegleln with Mrs. Barbara Saturday at grange hall.
Goegleln, ho.stess. Sandy
Folmer to have program,
Mrs . .LQulse Folmer, the
contest. Members to take
toys lor Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
MAGNOUA CLUB, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Da le Smith, Spring
Ave., Pomeroy.
WILLiNG WORKERS
Class, Enterprise United
l!lethodlst Church, 7:30p.m.
thursday at the home of Mrs.
Kay Logan.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, Columbus
and Southern. Ohio Electric
COMPARE
Co. Peggy Schmoll to have
OURS
devotions; Mrs . Hele~
Blackston and Mrs. Judy
WITH
Humphreys, hostesses.
THEIRSProgram will be a Chtlstmus
workshop .
You'll See A
Difference
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Warren
Pickens. Members to take
gifts for , Athens Mental
(J'oice rjCJJisclfminating'Women
Health Center and cookies for
Jbr /00 "Year~
roll call excha nge.
FRIDAY
GALLIA-MEIGS Community Action Agency free
clothing day, low income
persons, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Friday at agency's clothing
83 Mill
992 -5320
bank In former high school ot
Cheshire.

~Soci.~l

College football re-run show
comes Saturday in doubleb~ill

.

SPECIAL

t-'l'helllll}'.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o...Thursday, Nov. 18, 1976

0H •5160

Th~n•w

WHITE
Fllp·Top.·

THE SEWING CENTER

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
AT BAHR'S CLOTHIERS

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION OF

MEN'S WEAR
BLOUSES by
Lady Manhattan

HATS
"' Adcrms

*

:If

KNIT TOPS
and SHELLS

PANTS by

by
Switch-mate
Coddington
Fairfield

Hubbard
Haggar

:If

SHIRTS

*
I)RESSES ~y

by

Arrow
Career Club
Jockey

Berkshire
Hob-Nobber
City Scene
Kay Windsor
Rontini

:If

PENDLETON
Suits &amp; Jackets

:If

:If.

LEVI DENIMS

Leather
Handbags by

:If

COATS and CAR·
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CHRISTMAS
Betty Rose

BRIGHT

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FEMININE

HOSIERY

TOPCOATS, CAR mATS,

~~A~

p~~;e:y
DELIGHTS
...
&lt;r'!?- SUITS and PANTSUITS ·.
.~i;l

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Coddington

•

ROBES and
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•

SWEATERS
by Catalina
Jantzen

:If

LADIES' JEANS
from
Turtle· Box.

r.AY-AWAY PlAN' -10%
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By

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Fun -time sportsters
Connie signature on the
your mark - and
natural color.

' GREAT SELECTION OF

Pleatway
B.V. D.

holiday

comfort

JACKETS

Leather, wool,
vinyl, wool-dacron blends.

•
SUITS and SPORTCOATS
•

by Curlee
Merit
Hubbard
Warren Sewell

•

LEISURE SUITS
by Haggar ·
Hubbard

llf

UNDERWEAR
by Jockey
Hanes
B.V.D.
Discount To
Senior Citizens
(Gold Card)

BAHR CLOTHIERS

N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. 0.

Forbis

~
·'

.

992-2351

I

�,.

._TheDailySentinel,MJddleport-Pomerov.O., Thursday,Nov. l~!!ll!----------------------------------"-----------------,

.Loop champs

MI DLEP RT MER HANT
FRIDAY Nl HT ALE

recognized
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League offlclalll Wednesday
nlght recognized conference
~oH and !ootbaU champions
during their annual winter
meeting at Jackson.
Gallla · Academy High
School captured the 1976 golf
championship. GAHS
received $1~ from the league
to help purchase the championship trophy. Logan and
Ironton were recognized as
co-football champions.
It was announced Gene
Slaughter, former South
Point and Jackson Htgh
School coach and now head
football coach at capital, will
be guest speaker for the 1976
Ali·.S outheastern
Ohio
League banquet.
· .Logan wlU. host the league
· football banquet on Thursday , Dec. 2, beginning at 6:30

Bench
:Hickok
•
:w1nner
•

; NEW YORK (UP!) ; L'incinnati catcher Johnny
1 Bench, wbo.battted .533 in the
: Reds' fourgame World Series
: sweep of the New York
1 Yankees ,
was named
: Wednesday the landslide
:winner of the October
• balloting for the Hickok
: Professional Athlete of the
., Year.
f Bench received 102 first
' place ballots and 342 points as
: he drew out of sight in tbe
• voting.
.
· James HWlt of Britain, the
Grand . Prix
driving
champion, was proof of auto
1 racing's growing popularity
t as he collected nine first
; place votes and totaled 60
l points .for second place. He
t was the only nonAmerican
i sports figure to gain support
~ among the top IO vote getters.
~
Two pro quarterbacks
\ gained nominal backing as
t Bert Jooes of the Baltimore
~ Colts received 55-11 votes and
: Steve Grogan of the New
rr Orleans
. Saints had .40.
, They were followed by
~ catcher Thurman Munson of
the New ·York Yankees (3&gt;t l'l ), running back Walter
• : Payton, of the Chicago Bears
r ( 34), quarterback Roger
l Staubach of the Dallas
J Cowboys ( 21 ), Minnesota
1 Viking quarterback Fran
Tarkentoo (20), Yankee first
l baseman Chris Chambliss
, . (15 ), and Colts' running back
; · LydeU Mitchell (13) .

r

1

I.

:: SVAC p }ans
,
~

p.in . In the high sc h·ool
cafeteria .
During Wednesday's
lengthy session, the 1977·78
basketball schedule was
discussed. Two changes were
approved, one on starting
limes during the holiday
season and ·another ·on
rebalance .of home and away
games.
Athens Athletic Dlr~or
Bill Waddell and GAHS
Athletic Dlreclor Ed Stewart .
were authorized to draw up
the SEOAL cage schedules
for 19711-79 and 1979-M. The
schedules will be presented
for approval during the nexl
league meeting in Jackson on
March 2 at 7 p.m.
In other matters, officials
approved the girls. 1977
volleyball schedule.
Constltutiona·l changes as·a
result of girlll participation in
athletic programs took up the
remainder of the evening. A
request to recognize girl
champions
at
league
banquets was tabled until the
spring meeting.

Winners from the Pomeroy
Elementa ry School in the free
throw foul shooting contest
were (boy listed first) :
6-9 year olds, Brian Buf·
fington, son of Sharon Bul·
fington , 98 New Street, and
Kelly Whitlatch, daughter of
Mr . a nd Mrs. Harlan
Whitlatch, Unlon Terrace.
· 10·11 yea r old~. John
)llcKinney, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Bill
McKi nney ,
Mulberry Ave., and Susan
Lightfoot, · daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Lightfoot,
Route 4. ·
12-13 year olds, Todd Fife,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
File,
Spring Avenue,
Pomeroy, and Barbara
Grueser, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Grueser, Lincoln
Heights.
Brian is a student of Mrs.
Bonnie Fisher and Kelly a
student of Miss Rebecca
Tate. John and ·Susan are
students of John Arnott.
Barbara and Todd are
students of Mrs. Pamela
Crow.

Church plans
holiday bazaar
CLIFTON, w. Va. - The
Clifton United Methodist
Church will hold a Christmas
bazaar and bake sale
Saturday, Nov. 20 beginning
at 10 a .m. in the church an·

LADIES'
PANTSUITS ·

20%

FRIDAY, NOV. 19

Or

"Th•P'•: h...

o&lt;ummunlut:.~ ~ f~~

me~ugl! ofChrist·to our11enero~~tion . Your

BAHR CLOTHIERS

heritage house

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

. FRIDAY NIGHT
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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Middleport, 0.

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Sat., Sunday 1-6.

VIllAGE PHARMACY
271 N. Second St.

Middleport

10% Discount to Senior Citizens

J!

CLIP .

&amp;

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one

player ·for t''

Kapstein sald. "I think he
made a bad business decision
and he's payiitg lor it now."
· Kapstein was questioned
from · the audience after
giving a brief speech at

Boston

University's

Distinguished Lecture Series.
He was accompanied by free
agent Don Gullett, a pitcher
with the world champion
Cincinnati Reds.
Three of Kapatein 's free
agent clients signed with new
clubs earlier Wednesday :
Rudi with the California
Angels, Dave Cash with tbe .
)llontreal Expoa and Bert
Campaneris with .the Texas
Rangers.
"Howdo the fans feel about
players getting live times as

much money as fans earn?"
&amp;Bked one fan.

'' .. .that's just

jea lousy, ~~

answered Kapatein.
"How are you financially
compensated lor your
duties?" asked another
person In the audience.
"Generally with American
dollars," quipped Kapatein.
Qne lan.inquired if Gullett's
appearance with· Kapstein
signaled the Boston Red Sox
might get a new pitcher.
"He's been \alking with the
Red Sox," said ~pstein .
But
Kapstein
said
representatives from the St.
Louis Cardinals alllo were
interested in Gullett.

By RICHARD L. SHOOK
tlPl Sporta Wdler

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)
- The key to stopping
Michigan for Ohio State could
be halting the Wolverines'
potent pitch-catch
combination of Rick Leach to
Jim Smith.
Smith, a senlor wingback
who iB bound to be a standout
as a professional, bas caught
nearly three times as many
passes as Michigan's No. 2
receiver. He has 24
receptlons compared to nine
lor senior back !IDb Lytle.
Leach, who seldom looks
like the sophomore tllal he IB,
bas · thrown 13 touchdown
paues lbi.s 1111ason-«x of
tllem to .Smith, the man he
Invariably goes to wben a
pau i.s mandatory.
"1 feel confident in our
passing," coach Bo Schem-

becbler said early in the
week. But asked to rate
Leach as a great passer, be
wouldn't say it. "He's justa
sophomore.
"We've had two great .ones
bere since I've been here Don Moorhead and Dennls
Franklin," the coach said.
"Let's walt a couple of years
to make a judgment on
Leach. 1 will say this: be's a
very advanced sophotilore."
Leach has a 53 percentage
completlonrateon46outol87
for {197 yards.
Several times in recent
games · Schembechler bas
shown an Wlchar&amp;fteristic
penchant for passing on first
down. Just as often as not, It
bas worked. With Smith as
the recipient.
Ohio State bas not bad
much luck with passing this
season except in one gam~. It

· only has one touchdown pass,
thrown by Jim Pacenta. The
senior will be starting
because
sophomore
quarterback Rod Gerald was
put out of action three weeks
ago.
"Pacenta throws more
than Gerald," Schembechler
says in assessing the two. He
does not see the .change
creating extra defensive
problems for the Wolverines.
"One throws more, the other
runs more, bui basically the
offense stays the same."
Schembechler Is planning
on having junior John
Anderson, who suffered
spraine{l llgements In his
right knee two weeks ago ,
available lor both punting
and at defensive end against
the Buckeyes.
Anderson bas shown no
problems with the ligaments
lh practice this week. His

crucial. "

The junior's replacement ,
Gregg Willner, mishandled
one anap against Illinois last
week and punted poorly oo
another occasion.

a laborer.

In 1960 be went into
OperaUons as a UHIIty
Operator and
then
Auxiliary Equipment
Operator uatUl&amp;Y when he
transferred to mala·
tenaace. The Roltgeu's
have two sons and make

their home in Mason.
SUNDAY
NEWSMA·N Quartet, 9:30
a.m. Sunday at Pomeroy
Church of Nazar.ene. and 2:30
p.m. Sunday at Racine
Church of Nazarene. Public
invited.
VICTORY PARTY for
Democrats 2' p.m. Sunday at
the !IDdney Grange Hall in
Galli a County. Bring covered
dish. Public invited.
MARY SHRINE 37, White.
of
Jerusa lem
Shrine
rehearsal, 2 p.m. Sunday at
Pomeroy Mason Temple to
prepare. for ceremonial to be
held Dec. 10.
GEORGE PICKENS,
student
at
Kentucky
Christian College, guest
speaker Sunday at Keno
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Public invited to attend.
REVIVAL at Eden U.B.
Church, two miles north of
Reedsv ille on . Rt. 124,
beginning Sunday, 7: 30 each
The
Bethel
evening.
Messengers Quartet will be
featured each evening and
Rev . Freeland .Norris will be
evangeliBt; pubi!c· invited.

THEY'RE HERE!
GIRLS' JUMPSUITS

be discontinued

Pkg.

INGELS FURNITURE

million , but the sales were
nullified
by Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
· Six Oakland players
became free agents through
the re-entry draft. Four have
signed with other clubs.
"Athletes are very special
in baseball WJd Finley could
have slgned all. live of his
players for less than what be

"in a tough game, the kicking
· game becomes even more

1·

MR. BEE

JOHN ROTI'GEN
NEW HAVEN, W. VA. Jolui M. Rottgen, master
maintenaace maa at lbe ·
PbUip Sporn Plaat near
here was promoted to
mainteaaace foreman Nov.
16. Born Ia Lucasville,
Ohio, he grad~ated fro(ll
Wabama High School,
served In tbe Navy until
1957, when he began em·
ploymealal Sporn Plant as

SIZES 7 THRU 14

-- ~-~~"Mi~t~~~~---------I(·Tnnr~ SHOPPE•
Scbembechler believes that
Feed program to

--

99~

CONVERTER

$2244

~

Mlssisslppl
St .
23 though only 4-1-1 overall, are
Missls8ippl 7 - Ole Miss' ~I on their home field.
offense has suddenly gone
Te.xas . 18 Baylor 9 kaput.
Longhorns' defense got back
Tbe Midwest
in the groove .last week.
• Michigan 13 Ohio St. 9 - · Arkansas. 23 SMU 12 The ann~al " bore-a-thon" Second place in SWC still in
ortce again p~ta us to Bleep. reach ·for Razorbocks.
· Notre Dame 21 Miami ·The Rocldes
(F1a.) 6 - Irish still in
Wyoming 24 Air Force 21 contention for a major bowl Cl~ victories have become .
invitation.
the
norm for
WAC
Minnesota 1» Wisccinsin 7 - • champions.
Badgers have too many
Arizona 30 New Malco 27
defensive holes.
- Just your typical WAC
Purdue 22 Indiana 10 - shootout.
That victory over Michigan
Arizona St. 25 Colorado St.
made BoUennakers flex their 20 - Small consolation for
muscles.
Sun Devils.
The Mldlaads
Brigham Young 28 Utah 20
Missouri 27 Kansas 10 -Gifford Nielsen adds to biB
Tigers wUI end up being the TD passing record.
best 7-4 team In the nation. The West
Colorado 28 Kan~as St. 6 UCLA 23 Southern Cal 17 Buffaloes keep Orange Bowl Wendell Tyler outshines
hopes alive.
• Ricky Bell.
Iowa St. 24 Oklahoma St. 20
CaUfornia 27 Stanford 21 -Cyclones alllo·smell those "The Big Game" goes
Oranges.
airborne.
Tbe Soulbwest
Oregon 26 Oregon St. 13 TexasTech20Houston 17- Both teams are weak, but
Cougars have had two weeks Oregon bas a slightly better
to prepare for this one, but offense.
Red Raiders want to protect
Washington
St.
23
that perfect record.
Washington 14 - State's been
LSU 17 Tulane 13 - Tigers, playing better in second half
..
of season.

Pitch-catch combination tough

Baked enamel e~eel frame•

-Get ""1our Chrlst~as

.

TOY CHEST
Size: 16V." x 311' x 17" high
For the Pep-pep-peppiest
kids around - Excitingly
different
.
: Buflt tor durability.

20% OFF

lfoldedl I4T not included)

·

IDDLE

AL L girls' long-sleeve tops
(4T not intluded) Sizes 4-6x

~OFF

REG. HOT DOG

$888 .

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

I

5-8 p . m. FRIDAY - ALL

BOSTON (UP!)- Baseball
agent Jerry Kapstein says
Oakland A's owner Otarles
Finley made a big mlstake by
trying to sell the iights to
three of his players to other
clubs last sununer.
"Finley has done more to
hurt· the salary structure of
baseball th.an any other
par11011 just by making that
sale ," . ·Kapstein
said
Wednesday night. .
.
Finley offered Roll!e
Fingers and Joe Roell to the
Boston Red Sox for $1 million
each and Vida Blue to the
New York Yankees lor $1.5

51o 8 p.m.

re&lt;~d l ngit w illgiveyou.tnewundeont jn d ins

of the Sc:riplures."

L

oot we lhink.the New Year's
Day feature might have a
Utile different twist to it this
time. We like Mlchlgl!ll to end
Ohio Slate'$ lout-year
sojourn to Pasadena and
UCLA to make It two straight
appearances to the .Rose
Bowl lor tbe first time in
history.
.
Here's how we see the top
games acrose the nation :
Tbe Ellll
West Vlrginla 1» Syracuse
13 - ll'a been a harrowing
season lor the Orangemen.
Boston College 27 Massachusetts 6 - Minutemen are
well overmatched.
Villanova 1» Temple 10 - If
only the first baH of the
se&amp;l!On could have been like
the secorid lor Wildcats.
Tbe Soulb
Maryland 33 VIrginia 0 ~
Terpa' first perfect season
since 11151 earns them a trlp to
a major post.,..ason bowl.
North Carolina 23 Duke 1»
-Tar Heelll need a victory in
this traditional rivalry to lock
up a bowl bid.
·
South Carolina ~ Clemson
7 - Gamecocks already
missed their bowl shot but
st1U have more than enough
to handle Tigers.

Kapstein says.Finley erred

Reg. $1G.9S

Ked's

By JIIIED MeMANE .
. tlPI 8porll Writer
Thla week Ia college
football's annual re-run
festival . .
The mabl feature on Saturday's program i.s a double btu
thai has ~n playing fer the·
Put 1111~ral ~na. And, In
cue you milled lllaat year,
tlloee same lolkil who brought
you Mlchtg~hlo State for
the Big Ten cbamplonahip
and UCLA-USC lor the
Paclllc Elght Ci'"'t'n are
proud to preeent It again.
The script Ls aslamlllar as
the dialogue from "Gone
Wltll The Wind."
,
Miehlgan and Ohio State
always play a duD game thai
have TV vlewers $loring by
halfllme, and the. Buckeyes
Invariably wllund wind up as·
tile visiting team In the Rose
Bowl. Thai bas been the case
lbe peal lour years,
UCLA-&amp;utllern Cal UBuaUy
Ls a hit more a citing, but the
ouU:ome there i.s stereotyped
alllo. Southern Cal usually iB
the winner, although UCLA
did spoD thlngaa Year ago by
tripping the Trojana, 25-22.
The winners this year once
again will represent their
conferences in tile Rose Bowl,

Calendar

'•

DELUXE. PADDE :
EDITION

ALL CANVAS
Footwear
By Converse

20%

3QI

THE WORLD'S MOST
READABLE BIBLE·

5-a'p.m. Only

MEN'S
LEISURE
SUITS
REDUCED

nex.
Handmade crafts, such as
afghans, pillows, baby
sweaters, crocheted covered
;
clothes hangers, fabric
I
flowers, pot hold ers and
5-8 P.M.
1
Wednesday night during hanging planters will be sold,
: the annual SV AC meeting to and a white elephant booth
: select the all conference will be held.
~ -football squad the- -svAe - Food suclras·soup, hot~ogs ~~ ~t,~~
:l basketball coaches discussed and coffee will be featured.
ONLY
I plans to rotate the 1977-78
cage sthedules. Passes lor
· the upcoming cage preview
l Saturday night at Paul R.
,J. Lyne Center
were
EXCUSE US!
·I ' distributed.
HOUNSLOW , England
FREE
:; ~ Also meeting were women (UP!) - Donna Hewett was
coaches in the league . .
surprised to receive a Jetter
IN-HOME
;, ' They met with Uoyd L. from the National Social
Versatile
entertainmen
t
center
j Myers, Paul Dillon and Cliff Security office this week
SET UPI
in mellow walnut vi nyl veneer .
,j Willlon, athletic directors in alleging her weekly con·
,, the county, to set up league tribu.tlons were insufficient.
:.'I schedules, games starting Donna is 6 years old.
times and discussed the
jj purchase of a championship
1J trophy. Present were Karen
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
11 Thomas, Hannan Trace~
PLAYERS
TO
MEET
J~ Susie Thompson, Eastern;
EAST, MEIGS - Eastern
,, Patsy Fields, Kyger Creek;
alumni
players are to
' Connee Willlams, Southern 'meet atfootball
Eastern
High School
:• and Mary Fulkner, Symmes
•
Sunday, Nov. 21, at 2 p.m.
t Valley.
••
Hand crafted coo coo clocks
Germany
••••
~ Hand crafted leather items
Handblown glass from Blincoe &amp;
Pilgrim
OR. A .J.STAEHLI
OA. K. H.CHUNG
Picks
&amp; Heshi Jewelry
l
OR . VICTOR 'V . LIANG
~\ I
Hurricane Lamps
FOR PRICES CALL COlLECT
Oil Paintings on Canvas
• ••'
r
AREA CODE (514)--,
•tl ••
Spanish
&amp; Mexican Imports
I_ 252-3181 '
Decorative
Dolls
••
One or Two Day Full Denture
•'r:.,
Lawn Decorations
Service, Partials, Extractions,
Tiffinily Lamps
!~
\,
X.
:fl:-1;;iiii;~
•
--..;.;:.::&lt;;J
Man.y
unusual
novelty items .
••
~mething for everyone .
;
:

1}118 BUI CAl CIIIGI YIUI fUJilY

AND

FRENCH FRIES

..

FRI. NIGHT SPECIAL .

FRIDAY NIGHT
S-8 P.M.

Hoop shooting
winners at
Pomeroy listed

r

CLIP
&amp;

I

The Livestock Feed this use to those owned or
Program is being Phased out ·controlled by the Commodity
aa the limited stocks of Credit Corporation, This
Commodity Credit Cor· action came when surpluses
poration (CCC)-owned oats were becoming burdensome
avallable in the reserve for and was one of many over a
use under this program are · spari of years designed to lind
depleted, the U. S. Depart· outlets lor commod ities
menl of Agriculture (USDA) • acquired by the Government
announced today. The oats under the Support Program.
remaining in the reserve are
upected to be sold to
livestock producers In
BAZAAR SET
~rought-allected
areas
CHESTER - The Chester
before the end of this month, Young Wives Club will hold a
USDA said.
Christmas holiday bazaar
Dlllaster relief will continue from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
to be available through other Friday at the Dale Warner
government programs ad- Insurance Agency, W. Main
minlstered by the Depart· St., Pomeroy.
menl ' s Agricultural
Slablllzalion and Con·
ORGANIZING
~emUon Service (ASCS),
A youth drill team is being
Faimers
Home
Ad- organized by Mrs. Jo Ann
minlstraUon (FmHA), and Newsome. Youngsters from
Federal Crop Insurance lour through 12 are Invited to
CorporaUon (FCIC).
take part and there are still a·
Also In dlsaster designated few openings left in the
by the President additional group. Anyone interested
aldmaybeprovldedaslsnow should call Mrs. Newsome at
'belng done in several states . 992-3382.
,.lhrough·hay and cattle transportation asslllance.
The Livestock Feed
·Program was authorized In
1tl54 by a congr08Sional·actlon
Certain condltlons which
amending the bulc dlaposal are considered dlaabllng
.~uthorlly for surplus fann under the Social Security law
commodities detailed In are deacrlbed in lhe Social
, "Sectlon
407
of
the Security Regui.stions which
: ,Agricultural Act of 1949. It are avatlable at any Social
· llmlla the grains avaUsble lor Security office.
~

.

Ill N SECOND 10/E

-

·16!•1

ouse
992-5627

Middleport, Ohio

FRIDAY
Take covered dish, lllblt
CHRISTIAN
YOUTH service , '·a plg In a poke" and
revlvol , Bradford Church of gift for Athens State Hospital.
Christ, Thursday through
FALL FESTIVAL SaturSunday, 7:30p.m. ea ch night. day beginning t p.m. at
Dave Roberson, evangelist' RuUand Elementary School
with special mu!lc by Sons of by PTA :
Light. Everyone welcome.
SQUARE DANCE SaturPAST
MATR ONS,
day
at
Middleport
TiruRSDAY
Evsngeline Chapter, O.E.S.
Elementary
School
from Ito
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, at the home of Emma K.
II
p.m.
Musi
c by
7:30 Thursday at the home of Clatworthy, 7: 30p.m. Friday.
Stringdusters.
Admlsslon
lor
Mr s. Jean Moore, MidSATURDAY
dleport. .
odults
$1. Children under 12
RUTLAND PTA sponsored
MIDDLEPORT MASONIC feU festival beginning 4 p.m. with parents admitted free.
Lodge 363 Thursday, 1:30 Saturday
at Rutland Sponsored by senior citizens
p.m. to Install diBtrict deputy . Elementary School ; door center.
SUNDAY
priz~ to be awarded.
MAGNOUA CLUB, 7:30
EASTERN Alumni football
GOSPEl,
TONES,
7:
30p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Ella
players Sunday, 2p.m. at the
Smith. Plans lor Christmas Saturday at l.ong Bottom high school.
Methodist Church. Publi c
party to be made.
COUNTY-WIDE prayer
invited.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday at
RACINE Grange Thanks·
Health Club, 1 p.m. Thursday
Hobaon
Church
of Christ In
at the home of Mrs. Frances giving dinner 6:30 p.m. Christian Union, Glen BIMell,
Goegleln with Mrs. Barbara Saturday at grange hall.
Goegleln, ho.stess. Sandy
Folmer to have program,
Mrs . .LQulse Folmer, the
contest. Members to take
toys lor Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
MAGNOUA CLUB, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Da le Smith, Spring
Ave., Pomeroy.
WILLiNG WORKERS
Class, Enterprise United
l!lethodlst Church, 7:30p.m.
thursday at the home of Mrs.
Kay Logan.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, 7:30
p.m. Thursday, Columbus
and Southern. Ohio Electric
COMPARE
Co. Peggy Schmoll to have
OURS
devotions; Mrs . Hele~
Blackston and Mrs. Judy
WITH
Humphreys, hostesses.
THEIRSProgram will be a Chtlstmus
workshop .
You'll See A
Difference
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Warren
Pickens. Members to take
gifts for , Athens Mental
(J'oice rjCJJisclfminating'Women
Health Center and cookies for
Jbr /00 "Year~
roll call excha nge.
FRIDAY
GALLIA-MEIGS Community Action Agency free
clothing day, low income
persons, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Friday at agency's clothing
83 Mill
992 -5320
bank In former high school ot
Cheshire.

~Soci.~l

College football re-run show
comes Saturday in doubleb~ill

.

SPECIAL

t-'l'helllll}'.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o...Thursday, Nov. 18, 1976

0H •5160

Th~n•w

WHITE
Fllp·Top.·

THE SEWING CENTER

YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS
AT BAHR'S CLOTHIERS

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION OF

MEN'S WEAR
BLOUSES by
Lady Manhattan

HATS
"' Adcrms

*

:If

KNIT TOPS
and SHELLS

PANTS by

by
Switch-mate
Coddington
Fairfield

Hubbard
Haggar

:If

SHIRTS

*
I)RESSES ~y

by

Arrow
Career Club
Jockey

Berkshire
Hob-Nobber
City Scene
Kay Windsor
Rontini

:If

PENDLETON
Suits &amp; Jackets

:If

:If.

LEVI DENIMS

Leather
Handbags by

:If

COATS and CAR·
COAlS by
CHRISTMAS
Betty Rose

BRIGHT

:If

FEMININE

HOSIERY

TOPCOATS, CAR mATS,

~~A~

p~~;e:y
DELIGHTS
...
&lt;r'!?- SUITS and PANTSUITS ·.
.~i;l

by Jant1en
Catalina .
Coddington

•

ROBES and
LOUNGE

•

SWEATERS
by Catalina
Jantzen

:If

LADIES' JEANS
from
Turtle· Box.

r.AY-AWAY PlAN' -10%
&gt;v.&lt;·tn.nl

By

Stetson

by :ojud

Fun -time sportsters
Connie signature on the
your mark - and
natural color.

' GREAT SELECTION OF

Pleatway
B.V. D.

holiday

comfort

JACKETS

Leather, wool,
vinyl, wool-dacron blends.

•
SUITS and SPORTCOATS
•

by Curlee
Merit
Hubbard
Warren Sewell

•

LEISURE SUITS
by Haggar ·
Hubbard

llf

UNDERWEAR
by Jockey
Hanes
B.V.D.
Discount To
Senior Citizens
(Gold Card)

BAHR CLOTHIERS

N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. 0.

Forbis

~
·'

.

992-2351

I

�'1'-_

1;,:~==~==~~~~~- l~Im

more" In 1m. Shopper~ will
find the lowest pork prices of
the year during the · w ly
winter mootha of 1177, O'om
predicted, while beef
cuts of choice grade beef is record annual average 01 probably wlll peak seuonally
expected to advance from $1.36 a pound this year, may nert swtuner. '
this year's $1.39 to about fall 5 centa a pound "or
$1.49, the highest annual
average on record, But
another specialist added one
note of ·comfort for beef
lovers.
Although the 1977 average
will pass the 1975 r~rd of
$1.46 a pound, shoppers are
not likely to find prices next
year reaching the o0e-mooth
peak of $1.61 set In July, 1975,
ecopomistllrry Deuwer said
.in an interview. ·
Crom, In a report prepared
for delivery to
the
Agriculture
Deparbnent's ·
annual Outlook Conference,
said that beef suppliesCuatomlzed to your
depressed because low cattle
home at the Job elte.
prices have led cattlemen to
Batlafactlon duirintHCI.
trim production plans-will
For FMII!IIImate
drop from an estimated 128
Call
Now ...
pounds per person this year
to about 120 or 122 pounds.
Hog production, however, is
expected !IJ Increase.
· Crom said -retail pork
prices, which reached a .

Beef will cost more next year
WASHINGTON (UP!) pound from its 1976 r~ord,
Collllumers will find beef Agriculture Department .
prices climbing 10 cent.s a economist Richard Crom
pound to a new reeord annual predicted today.
average in 1977. but pork may · Crom predicted the annual
decline 5 cents or more per . average retail price of all

~I

inventory is scheduled ·

If

J~

I

,.

•

SENIOR FRIENDS- An addltlooal service to the elderly in Meigs County is the Senior
Friends Program, a r.Cent project of the Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Community Me~~ I Health
Cllnlc.S.mlor friends of Meigs County are, front,l-r , Jewel Welch, Olive Smith and Zetts
Ritchie; back, Mildred Betzlng, Lula Hampton, Wayne Turner, Vida. Green and Wilma
Sargent. Absent was Lawrence Stewart.
•

The Senior Friends
Program iB a recent project
of the Gallla.Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Clinic. Senior Friends are
contracted to work on a one·
to-one basis with geriatrics
patients of the Athens Mental
Health Center, area n ursing
hom e res ident s and inpatient.s of the Meigs Mental
Health Clinic. .
They visi t regula rly,
providing social and personal
support, help to develop daily
living skills and to direct the
way to community resources.
Holiday events are taking
place in the next week such as
a Thanksg iving pa rty at
0
Athens Mental Health Center
which will include a group
singing session and a movie,
John Wiles and Cecil R. See
while Athens res idents,'
beca
me new ·members and
assisted by Senior Friends,
Don
McKenzie
was reinstated
will plan, buy and prepare the

. Ohio Director o( Health .Or. standardS. .
Because of the qualified
John H. Aekerman this week
announced his Department sanitarians already available
has been given th~ go-ahead through the state and local
on an inventory of the state's health departments , Ohio
over 1,600 community water EPA sought the Hea lth
supply systems. The Ohio Department's cooperation in
Environmental Protection conducting the inventory,
Agency contracted with the which is expected . to be
Department to complete the completed by the 1977 efinventory which is a fective date.
The contract does not in·
prerequisite to the state's
assuming responsibility for dude Ohio's 866 municipal
enforcement in Ohio or the water systems, which have
Federal' Safe Drinking Water already been inventories by
Act, which becomes effective the Ohio EPA under Ohio
law.
June 24, 1977.
A cotnm unity water supply
949-2814
RACINE, 0.
is one which serves at least 25
year round residents, or has
at least 15 service connections s~rv ing · permanent
residents. Included within
this definition could he a
mobile home park, a real
estate sub-division, or a
nursing home.
Dr. 'Ackerman explained
that local health departments
will be asked to participate in
collecting . data which will
·•· ·...
68·1022
include the location or
comm unity type water
I
,
5-CELL
supplies and the number of
persons served.
:
FLASHLIGHT
Under the 'Federal act,
Plenty of ltght when ever you need tl !
PRICE CUTS FOR COST -CONSCIOUS SHOPPERS! I Ftrst 5- Cell Flashlight FREE. extras at regu lar
owners of community type
wa ter supp lies will be
I pnce Pers ons under 16 r'nust be accompamed
responsible for the quality or
by an adult Of fer expires 11 -28-76
I NAME
_________________
their water. They will be
._
required to submit samples to
IADDRESS _________________
state approved labs, who will
inturn reporttoboththeOhio
EPA and to the owner. If the
BASE / MOBILE CB
.
water is found to be unsafe,
the owner will be required to
not ify the residents using the
'
........ ...,..
REALISTIC BASE / MOBILE
water and will be required to
bring the system up to
CB RADIO

PRE-HOLIDAY

·
1
.~~R!~~. 1
YOUR

Memb ershlp now at 333

when Drew Webster Post ~9,
lunerican Legi0n, held its
annu al turk ey
di nn er
Tuesday night at the post
home.
Membership was reported
CANCELLED
at 333 for the new Legion
RACINE - THe meeting of
year. Harry Davis, chairman
of the "Gifts for the Yanks the Racine American Legion
Wh o Ga ve" program, Auxiliary has been cancelled
thank ed the Pomeroy · this month.
community
for
it s
•
cooperation and help last
week. The public contributed
when
post
members
delivered loaves of bread to
homes in exchange far
marks where I started and contributions.
Wint er .means snow
stopped.
Speaking on the program,
and bad dri\l ing
Direc tions on the dye Davis said $1 00,000 was
cOnditions, so you 'll
package said nylon could be raised last year. Examples of
nCed snow tires ...
successfully died, but not expenditures from the fund
polyester or acrylics. Since I . are the purchase of one bus
knew my rug was nylon the for the Sandusky Soldiers
job turned out great. It took a Hom e and another for the
week and a lot of elbow wheel chair patients at the
grease to do this, but it wasso Dayton home, in addition to
successful for me l did want Christmas remembrances.
to tell Mrs. S. about it.
Charles Swatzel reported
It takes two days for each on a meeting of the Pomeroy ,.
section to dry completely. I Community Improvement
put waxed paper under the Committee which expects to
legs of the furniture after I make Pomeroy a more at·
moved it back on the wet tractive community. It was
surface and left the paper voted to send two teams to a
· TIRES ARE
until the rug was completely bowlin g tournament in
dry.
Cleveland . A report was
OUR BUSINESS
My rug required twelve given on military rites held
. . Enough Said
packages of dye and anyone for Clarence Massar.
tryingthis should he sure to Clar ence Sc hm ucke r ,
Come In !
exp~dment on an in·
commander, presided.
conspicuous spot so as to he
Prepa ring the turkey
sure to get the correct shade. dinner served prior to the
- My- c·arper was- o,rlgmally ·meetTrig- was ·Paur - casci
blue, but had faded to a gray assisted by Roy Reuter and
Middleport, 0.
white. ! used Kelly green dye. Bob Vaughan.
·
- EDITH.
DEAR READERS - When
I did this ONCE years ago I
found thai a thorough
vacuuming ,will bring back
the nap and Duff up the rug.
Mine looked pretty nat and
matted when first dry. 8
POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - It is
easier to make a knot In
polyester thread, and also
keeps it from tangling, If it is
first run across wax. Most
sewing centers sell those
round plastic cases with slits
to pull the thread through to
wax it. - LETHA.

Polly's Pointers
Slippery spread

t'
~

J

·•

;!
·:
•
:

:z

.••.

•••
••

·J

'

lha

refreshments, Kimes Con- enough to apply for a position
valescent Home reside nts with the project even though
and Athens geriatrics unfortunately, it was not
patients are looking forward possible to hire all those who
to a specia l home-cooked . expressed interest.
Thanksgivi ng dinn er, in
And finally, to recognize
which they will be guests for Vida Green, Mildred Betzing,
the day in the home of a Wayne Turner, Olive Smith,
Senior Friend, should they he Lula Hampton, and Wilma
unable to go to their own Sargent, in their invaluable
home for the holiday.
service; these are the people
The Sen ior Fri end 's who have ma de Senior
coordinator welcomes to the Friends th e Program· that it
program t he new Senior is hoped to be; an opportunity
Friends, Z~tta Ritchie, Jewel for each individual to apWelch, and Lawrence · proach his fulles t degree of
Stewart, and to sincerely hea lth and independe nt
thank each person who cared . functioning.

falls off bed

POLLY'S PROBLEM
·DEAR POLLY - I have a
new quilted bedspread with a
100 per cent nylon hacking
that causes ihe spread to
slide around. Do you know of
any remedy for this' - MRS.
A.K.
DEAR MRS. A.K. - I do
not know of a remedy for this,
but such a spread does have
one advantage - Ills easy to
pull It a bit here and a bit
there so It hangs evenly on
the bed. Readers, how do you
&gt;eope with such spreads? POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - l recently
had the same experience as
Mrs. S. whose white nylon r ug
looks gray. She wanted to
know If she could spray paint
it. My htishand and I were
painting our bedroom when
the white pamtwassp1lled on
the floor, leavmg two large
spots on- my-100--per - cenr
nylon rug. We cleaned up all
we could but still I had visions
of having to buy a new rug.
I bought a box of that
clothing dye, mixed it with
twelve cups of water, and
with a six-inch brush that haa
a handle I used this dye under
the dresser, so the spot would
be hidden If my experiment
was a failure. It turned out
beautifully so I did the entire
carpet, usin g a circular
motion. When making more
of the dye mixture the
proportions
must- be
EXACTLY the same each
time. Now I have a beautiful
emerald green rug, wall to
wall, and with no overlap

''
''•'
•

I

t

.•'•

if"RE~!-:;~t~
___________ _

95

.ISAVES40I
~

'l1IE NEWSMAN QUARTET will appear at two Meijl
County churches Sunday. At 9:30a.m. the group will be at
the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene and at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday the group wlll be at the Racine Church of the
Nazarene. The publlc is ihvlted to either appearance.

:· Annual dinner held
at Baptist Church

RACINE CARPET SHOP

Senior Friends activities in Meigs noted

I

•'

FfOIIi Our
Mobile Factlory\
to YOur House

l0

By Polly Cramer •

••'

SEAMLESS-ALUMINUM
GUTTERING

Water supply systems'

The annual Thanksgiving
potluck dinner of the Golden
Rule Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church was
held recently at the church.
Blessing preeedlng the dinner
_ . was given by the pastor, the
Rev. Peter Granda!.
New officers elected at the
·baslness meeting are Mrs.
John . Metzger, . president ;
Mrs. Peter Granda!, vice
• · president ; Mrs. James
- · Brewer, secretary.treasurer;
: • Mrs. Fred Klein, flower and
card chairman.
The class voted to donate
$15 on the shopping trip to the
Grand Central Mall for needy
children. Plans were also
made for the men of the class
to deeorate the exterior of the
church for Christmas.
· The annual Christmas
, • party was set for Dec. 9 at the
; , home of Mr . and Mrs .
Manning Kloes.

Out otamlln g fea tures onc lude 23 chann els.
all crystals up-fro nt spea ke r li lum111 aled
S RF me ter and channel selec tor. AC and DC
PO-'Iercables. dynarn tc rn• ke and mou nt

Herbert Gilkey hosted a
meeting of the Ught &amp; Life
Men's Fellowship of the
La.urel Cliff Free Methodist
Church at his home reeentlr .
Seldon Baker, Jr. had the
prayer wi.th Robert Barton
giving devotions. Pearl
Jacobs read "The Stlngy Old
Woman" and several of the

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SAVEs100 '
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NEW GROUP

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•

CANDY
IS

FOR THANKSGIVING BY
RUSSEll STOVER

POWERHOUSE SAVINGS ON THIS
REALISTIC AM -FM STEREO
RECEIVER!

SAVE$20
TAPE PRINTOUT
.Reg .
119.95
CALCULATOR
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Reg.
5-FUNCTION CALCULATOR 10.95
WITH PERCENT

999"

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ollld YII H &lt;-.I ll

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lioWr ,t o 11 .t l t) it •T• Ifi J,IIIll(j
tl m t"' ')tl,,r lo ··li m:~ Oltw •
" '111 1 tll,ll\• , '"·1Y .JI',IJ tw
. o ~.lll, d &gt; IP l.l t •l ,lll l ,11 VUI" IIHiH
In •olo itt ·

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AI Radio Sh ac ~

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80 MIN.

Reg. 1 99

R811. 2.49

60 MIN .

90 MIN.

199

Reg. 1.59

Reg . 2.09

44·841

44·602

159
44-840

4995

~e~s

.

12· 771
.

Broadcast s. Shor t w11ve, AM, FM a nd MOrel

SAVE$2

PANTS ....... , 34-40
TOPS ......•..•. 38-46

75-IN-1
. ELECTRONIC
.,
Kl

Also:
New shipment of maternity wear.

Reg.
21.95

1995

28-247 '

~~?

SAVE 25%

ii;1~· '
~'j ·::-.; ~~:MISTRY
\'

~~·r!
~

.

.

. _. ..,

Reg . •

. 7·99

599

28·192

TANDY CORPORATION CtlP.RNY

;

''·

156

, ... Jd .

3,

$225.00
4,

14-836

TH R .I;l D JAr.t ON O
AN'I' IQ ll.[ RING
Tht&lt;~• bluln 1 dl""'""" '

WI in I t k\, \oollo• or
"'' - IW I &lt;&gt;I • .

\,l,!:l,

..
"'

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

+++

5,
5.

LAY-AWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS!.

1995

28-199

~• •.
•

:·

Ill E. Court, Pomeroy

MAY IN HONORARY
MARIETIA - Martella
College junior Michael May
of Rutland Is a member of PI
Epsilon Tau, a national
honorary society for students
in petroleum engineering.
The society's purpose Is to
foster a closer bond!ffiODII _its

members and the petroleum
lnduatry, and to maintain the
high ideals and standards of
the profession. A 1974
sraduate of Meigs High
School, Michaelis the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel May,
Bryant Road, Rutland. ·

nil

t'II Shtonl'd t~muf~Jt' l

::;:! ...

ii2
HONOREO - Tanimy Jo
Mlller celebrated her third
birthday on Wednesday at the
home of her mother , Mrs .
Sherry Sn yder, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Also present were
Kenneth Snyder. Larry
Snyder , her uncles, Randy,
Mark and Paul Michael, an
aunt, Tammy Michael, and
her maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Keqneth H.
Mi chaeL
Gifts
were
presented to Tammy Jo and
refreshments were served.

t&gt;&lt;'l'fcd lew t h··
he,·I k Ilk )' II II l c•~&lt;l.

~
Z

DATES ANNOUNCED
Dates of tbe nut three
free cancer ellnlea for
Metes County women were
announce d today. Any
woman may make an
appolnlmeat for the ellllles ·
held at Veteraaa Memorial
Hospital by calling 91123382, 91!W83Z or 91!Z.7531.
There are openings for any
of the ellnlea whlcb will be
Nov. Z4, Dec. 8 aDd Dec. 29.

Ml'gllerite's Shoes
Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main

Pomeroy, o.

RABBIT
SEASON
- -IS
NOW
OPEN
Our complete line of hunting supplies anci
equipment Is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and hi a
large range of prices.

AMMUNITION OF ALL KIN .......
WESTERN - REMINGTON

CRAYON SETS
on jolly holiday cards

•

For eyes . .. 2 shimme ry shadows
For lips and cheeks , . . one for each

11,49.
· per cor~

NEW HOURS
OPEN
· Monday lhru Thursday 4:00 til II : oo

S2(J(),00

Friday and Saturday4:DDtil I :OO
Ktn"'tl! McCullough 1 R. Ph. Charlts RIH!o; R. Ph.
Ronold Honnlng, R. Ph.
·
Mon. tl!ru Sot. I:OOo.m . fo9 p.m.
,
Sundoy1D:IOio1l:30ond5to9p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
·
Friendly Service
j .112 E. MAIN · Open lllahtdlll .POME.R.OY •.o.

t

--------.:...--

\!H~c

SHOTGUNS-&amp; RIFLES

AN TT QU!: DI AMOND
Euul11lr , looor
fii OJ fft mountl "l "l
I 4 k t . ••Uuw 10ld

992-2920

ti..:ct· ut

4l uy l ong In soH

+ + +·

DEARHELENANDSUE:
Today I got told I was crazy for accepting $2 to clean the
house. My friend says my Mom should have paid me at least
$4. Should I sttike for higher wages? I might lose everything If
I did. -BROKE
DEAR BROKE : Several questions: Do you get an
allowance In addldon to housecleaning pay? And just bow
much clelinlng Is Invilved? Can your parents afford the raise '
Is your mother apt to say, "I'd rather do it myself!'··i
Remember, it's your house too. Since you get food, shelter,
clothes, trallSportation, etc. here, you should GIVE a little in
return -like helping with ordinary chores for free, and doing
extras at below minimwn wage scale- HELEN

Donna Glln1ore.
Games were played with
prizes going to the winners.
Mrs. Della Curtis won the
door prize.
Relrealu)lents served by
Mrs. Chaflln, Rema aQd J.o.
+ ++
included a birthday cake
NOTE FROM SUE: On the other hand, If this pay i!1 your
honoring Mrs. CurtiB and only "allowance," and your work is worth $4, ask about a
Mrs. Georgia Diehl who was raise. Maybe your mother hasn't noticed lately how little $2
unable to attend due to can buy and how well you do the housecleaning. If you suggest,
illness. Besides those named but don'tdemand, what can it hurt ?
others attending were Mrs.
++ +
Ruby Frick, Mrs. lunher RAP:
Your advice please : What would you do ? ThiB guy barges
Lohn and !\Irs. Ann Mash.
up like along-lost buddy and wh.en you can't place him and are
trying to cove.r up and get your memory in gear, he just lesves
you floundering. You ask leading questions.lhat lead nowhere
·he sees to that. Finally, very superior, he smirks, "You drew
a blank didn't ya?" So you make a wild guess. It's wrong-and
WOLFE IN SOCIETY
the final jab- he aays, "Guess again !" You want to go through
MARIETTA - Marietta the floor while he gives you vague clues that only confuse you.
College junior David Wolfe of Finally you learn he's someone you knew quite weiHour years
Middleport Is a new member a~o, but he' ~ shaved his head and gained 50 pounds. Why do
of the Society of Petroleum JlOOJlle DO this to you ? EMBARRASED
Engineers, an organization DEAREMB:
largely concerned with
M"oii!l1;;
yT.to;-;m
=te=
a yo=u-:aq=ulrm
= . I'd clo~ him down fast with,
educational activities con· "Sorry I don't play guessing games."·- SUE
trihutlng both to students and
.
+ ++
local industry. A 1974 DEAREMB:
graduate of Meigs High
Failing that, I'd l!hd the conversation with, "Well, so long,
· School, David is the son of old Buddha," bestowing a pointed pat on his stomach. HELEN ,
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Wolfe,
278 Pearl St., Middle~.

SU PtR U!:L ICATE

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
.

NnturH IIzcr sets
~· pur

"I:,~_

AUNT :
And a mother who goes along with the scheme deserves
the kind of daughter she evidently has . .SUE

TUSSY

ontv

•

Wants Wedding To Get Loot
RAP :
.
My nieee has been living with her fellow for a year. Now
they've deeided to get mlirried and they want a big wedding
with word passed around that they prefe.r gifts of money. Yo~
see, they pian a trip to Europe and they need plane fare. Otherwise they probably wouldn't bother with marriage, but they
see no other way to raise the money. My sister is so thrilled
that her daughter has finally become "conventional " she's
willing to splurge on a wedding. (If she gave the kids the 12,000
it would cost, they'd skip legality and take off for Europe un·
married. ) What do you call this? - AUNT
DEAR AUNT:
. Bribery anct collusion! People who plan a big wedding only
for the loot deserve fri ends who stay away in droves. (Or
donate their wedding checks to "a favorite chanty." ) -HELEN

.(

$115.00

3.

DIGITAL
COMPUTER KIT

PRICES MAV VARV AT INDIVIDUAl STOR ES

AN1'JQllt ~ILAGR El
UJJIIMI)N U lUN G
Solin 14 - ~ . Hl low •r
whHf l&lt;&gt;ld .
'

Comfor t
for the
professional
woman

;~:::.-::~::.-::::::~:::;::::::::;:;:::;;;:::::;~::8i:!8:!!::::::~::!!:::::::::.-::;::::::::.-::~..-:::::.'&gt;~'=~"""='.;:.-:;:::::=:=~s~:o::l

Yule party slate.d
The annual Christmas
party of the L8urel Cliff
Better Health Club was
planned for Dec. 9 at the
home of Mrs. Marjorie Goett
when the group met reeently
at the home of Mrs. Madolyn
Chaffin.
Mrs. Jean Wright opened
the meeting with prayer
followed by the Lord's Prayer
In unison. Readings on
Thanksgiving were given by
Mrs. Goett, Mrs. Wright,
Mrs .' Chaffin, Mrs.'· Iva
Powell, Mrs. Mlldred Bowen,
Mrs. Bertha Parker and ·Mrs.

. i!

ROYALTY - These children were crowned prince,
princeas, king and queen at the fall festival at Salem
Center School oo Nov.-13: fr ont, 1-r ,.prince Joey Reynolds,
second grade, son of Mr. and Mrs. · Danny Reynolda,
Vin!l:ln, and ptlncess Angela Wright, first grade, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wright, Vinton; back, king
Gregory Lathey, fourth grade, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lathey, Langsville, and queen Gina Lindsey, fifth
grade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Schoonover,
Rutland.
·

MAGC MAKEUP

44-~03

Tap_e Counter, Cue/ Revie w ~nd More1

.SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

I . AN TIQ U.[ DU MOND
D INNtR R ING
J 4 kt . rdlm.- '" •hllo

·sggs

.SMART S ANTA S SHOP AND SAV E E~RLV ... STORES NOW OPEN LATE NIGHTS 'T IL CHRISTMAS !·

Hom ebuilders Class and
served by the men including
Denver Rice, Mack Stewart,
Chester Erwin, Bill Grueser
lind Ed Evans.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Clarice Erwin from
Psabns 95 and 100 and In·
eluded a reading on
Thanksglvl,ng by Peter
Marshall by Mrs. Hazel
Wilson.
Refreshments were served
by the hosts, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Erwin and Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Wilson to Mr. and
·Mrs. Leonard Van Meter, Mr.
and Mrs. Mack Stewart, Mrs.
Denver Ri ce, Mrs. Flo
Grueser, Mrs. Cole and. Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Evans. Blessing
was given by Stewart.

$155.00

SAVE 33%

Reg .
29 95
·

sans

I. [L[G A Nf AN TIQU[
DIAMOND II lNG
u ... ,.11&lt;&gt;• lold ~~), .

.• B11ttery-AC. Built-in Condens•r Mike,

• H ear Police Calls, W11a th fJr Service

LARGE SIZES

'·

REALISTIC CASSETTE
RECORDER

5-BAND BATTERY -AC
RAD.IO

BEAUTIFUL HOLIDAY COLORS
REG. SIZES 10 THRU 18

119

sympathy cards sent when
her sister died.
The flagbearers escorted
Mrs. Ada. Neutzllng and Mrs.
Zelda Weber to the altar
where the members
"Happy Birthday" to them.
!du. Esther Ridenour,
·deputy s!ate . councilor,
prese nt e~ Mrs. Neutzllng
with a gift, and Mrs. Dot'othy
Ritchie, district deputy,
presented Mrs. Weber with a
gift. Both were also
recognized for the work they
have perfonned as officers of
the coW!Cil.
others at the meeting were
Mrs. Mae Spencer, Mrs. Opal
Hollon, Mrs. Marcia Keller,
Mrs. Jean Summerfield, Mrs.
Ada Morris, Mrs. Helen
Wolfe,
Mrs .
Goldie
Frederick, Mrs. Eilee n
Martln,.Mrs. Mary K. Holter,
· Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, Mrs.
Theima White, Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs.
Doris
Gr ueser,
Mrs.
Charlotte Grant; Mrs. Leona
Hensley, Mrs. Betty Roush,
Mrs. Ada Bissell, Mrs. Mae
McPeek, JuDe Rose, Mrs.
Goldie Wolfe, . Mrs. Mary
Showalter and Mrs. Helen
Wolfe, the pianist.

TU //11

SAVE 25%

40 MIN .

a~lhankedthemembersfor

Financial aid given
Financial assistance to a
family whose home burned
earlier this month was given
by the Homebuilders Class of
the Middleport Church of
Christ at a meeting Tuesday
night at the church.
The class voted to give a $50
gift certificate to the Cade
family and also to make a $50
contribution
to
the
Fellowship Class for use in
remodeling the basement for
junior church.
Mrs. Farle Cole presided at
the meeting which opened
with the Lord's Prayer and
reports from the officers.
Plans were made for the
Loy a I
Bereans
Class
Christmas dinner to be
prepared
by
the

New officers were elected .Thanksgiving Eve It the
at the Tuesday night meetmg Middleport First Baptist
of Group II of the Middleport Church.
First United Presbyterian
Bible study on witnessing
Church.
·
for Christ was held. Mrs.
The meeting held at the Ander1011 served a desacrt
home of Mrs. Martha' An- course. Mrs. Gladys Cumderson followed a Thanks- mlngs was a guest for the
giving dinner at the Meigs . diMer.
Inn. Officers elected were
Mrs. Faye Wallace and Mrs.
SON BORN
Velma Rue, co-chairmen;
CHESTER - A son, James
Mildred Karr, seeretary, and Paul, was bom to Mr. and
Mrs. · Kathryn
Miller, Mrs. James Kimes of
treasurer.
Keywest, Fla. on Nov . ~ . He
Devotions were given by weighed seven pounds, six
Mrs. Dorothy Morris on the ounces. Grandparents are
theme of "My Many Loves''· Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Sines,
The least coin offering was Conneaut, Ohio and Mr. and
taken as the meditation, "Put Mrs. Roscoe Hollon, Chesler.
On Christ/' was read.
Plans were made for the
Chrillimas meeting to be held
MEET TONIGHT
at'lhe home of Mrs. Betsy
The
Democrat central
Horky on Dec. 21. The
committeemen
will meet
community Thanksgiving
Thursdsy,
7:30
p.m.
at the
service was announced for
Grace Episcopal Church.

rr==========" l't\~·"'JJ
••hlrJ=.="

9BS
65-60

REALISTIC BLANK
CASSETTE

SAVE 5 20
Reg
69.95

65;

REALISTIC BLANK
8-TRAO&lt;S

CHESTER - Holiday
party plans were diacuased at
the Tuesday night meeting of
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of Amertea, at the
hall.
The district depucy club
ChriatmU party wlll be held
at the Chesler Lodge lfl!ll on
Dec. S. It will be a potluck
dinner at 2 . p.m. with
everyone io take her" own
table service and a $2 gift for
an exchange.
The Coun cil Christmas
supper will be held Dec. 21
with a $2 gift exchange. The
potluck will be served at 6:30
p.m.
Mrs. Dorothy Lawson ,
councilor. presided at the
meeting attended . by 29.
Reported ill were Mrs. Letha
Wood, Miss Leda .. Mae
Kraeuter, scheduled to enter
Riverside Methodist Hospital
in · Colum~us. and Mrs. Hattie
Frederick lo enter the Holzer
Medical Center on Tuesday.
Mrs. Frederick sent thanks
tO the .Council members who
had remembered her with
cards. A thank-you note was
also received from Mrs.
Erma Cleland for those who
came to the funeral home at
· the time of her mother's
death. Mrs. Sadie Trussell

RIEBEL FETED
A dinner party in ob·
servance of the 73rd birthday
of Elber Riebel was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Riebel Saturday. The
honored guest's dinner
partner was Mrs. Clare
Powell of Racine. Other
guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Monroe, I;\oger, Beth,
Renee and Rhonda Riebel,
and Bill Jeffers.

- •- E-IISy to Re'll-d {)· i'g*&lt;&gt;lrl)lsprtayr----j
• Square Root and Per ce nt Keys!
• Batt eries ln r!uded! '

*

DUTTON'S '. DRUGS

MRS. HOLLON BACK
CHESTER - Mrs. Eva
Hollon has retumed from
SanduskY after spending
several weeks there with her
daughter, Mrs. Belly Lou
McNally, who is seriously ill.
Cards may be sent to Mrs.
MeN ally at the .Good
Samaritan Hospital, 703
Tyler St., Sandusky, Ohio,
44870.

~=~5 17~~

'

JACKETS * _SKIRTS
PANTS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS

DANDY

men gave testimonies. The
secretary's report wa8 given
by Uoyd 'Wright. The next
meeting will be held at the
home of Steve Eblin. The
Rev. Floyd Shook dismissed
the meeting with prayer and
refreshments were served.

RADIO SHACK'S
POCKET-SIZE
CALCULATOR WITH
MEMORY

'

-TIRES -

~

TRANSFERRED
Arnold Richards of Mid·
'dlep&lt;irt was transferred from
the Hol%er Medical Center to
Un iversity
Hospital ,
Columbus, Wednesda y,
Room 909. He is expected to
undergo surgery Monday.
Mrs. Richards is in Columbus
with her husband.

21·1S3

D~Ha

GENERAL

:~0 D~~~~~A~

Mrs. Dale Walbum gave
devotions on Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Don Wilson and Mrs.
Lacy Barton, were In charge
of arrangements for the
Thanksgiving dinner.
Attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald An·
thony, Mr. and Mrs. James
Brewer and Mary Beth, Mr.
and Mrs. Lacy Barton, the
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Granda!
and children, Roxanne, Susie
and Dan, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Klein and son, Van, Mr. and
Mrs. Manning Kloes and
Lori, Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz
and Marc, Mr. and Mrs. John
Metzger, Mrs. Bob Parker,
Cindy and Robbie, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Riggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Wilson and grand·
son, Chuckle Pullins, Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr., and Mr. and
Mrs. ·Danny White.

Gilkey entertains group

Reg . 159.95 21 -143

Reg. 179.95

New officers slated

Party plans made
by Chester council

-

__,_._.._,_,

Closed Sundays
The All New Meigs Inn

. PIZZA SHACKPomeroy, o.

125 E. Main Sl.

Remington - Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson
Browning Gun Cleaning Kits - Gun
Oil - Recoil Pads - Game Bags Shell Vests - Gun Cases - Hunting
Accessories - Hunters Ja·ckets &amp;
Caps - Hunting Pants &amp; Caps Rifle Sling Straps - Steel Traps.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

iEBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN
POMEROY
We Issue Hunting U~ense

'

'

�'1'-_

1;,:~==~==~~~~~- l~Im

more" In 1m. Shopper~ will
find the lowest pork prices of
the year during the · w ly
winter mootha of 1177, O'om
predicted, while beef
cuts of choice grade beef is record annual average 01 probably wlll peak seuonally
expected to advance from $1.36 a pound this year, may nert swtuner. '
this year's $1.39 to about fall 5 centa a pound "or
$1.49, the highest annual
average on record, But
another specialist added one
note of ·comfort for beef
lovers.
Although the 1977 average
will pass the 1975 r~rd of
$1.46 a pound, shoppers are
not likely to find prices next
year reaching the o0e-mooth
peak of $1.61 set In July, 1975,
ecopomistllrry Deuwer said
.in an interview. ·
Crom, In a report prepared
for delivery to
the
Agriculture
Deparbnent's ·
annual Outlook Conference,
said that beef suppliesCuatomlzed to your
depressed because low cattle
home at the Job elte.
prices have led cattlemen to
Batlafactlon duirintHCI.
trim production plans-will
For FMII!IIImate
drop from an estimated 128
Call
Now ...
pounds per person this year
to about 120 or 122 pounds.
Hog production, however, is
expected !IJ Increase.
· Crom said -retail pork
prices, which reached a .

Beef will cost more next year
WASHINGTON (UP!) pound from its 1976 r~ord,
Collllumers will find beef Agriculture Department .
prices climbing 10 cent.s a economist Richard Crom
pound to a new reeord annual predicted today.
average in 1977. but pork may · Crom predicted the annual
decline 5 cents or more per . average retail price of all

~I

inventory is scheduled ·

If

J~

I

,.

•

SENIOR FRIENDS- An addltlooal service to the elderly in Meigs County is the Senior
Friends Program, a r.Cent project of the Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Community Me~~ I Health
Cllnlc.S.mlor friends of Meigs County are, front,l-r , Jewel Welch, Olive Smith and Zetts
Ritchie; back, Mildred Betzlng, Lula Hampton, Wayne Turner, Vida. Green and Wilma
Sargent. Absent was Lawrence Stewart.
•

The Senior Friends
Program iB a recent project
of the Gallla.Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Clinic. Senior Friends are
contracted to work on a one·
to-one basis with geriatrics
patients of the Athens Mental
Health Center, area n ursing
hom e res ident s and inpatient.s of the Meigs Mental
Health Clinic. .
They visi t regula rly,
providing social and personal
support, help to develop daily
living skills and to direct the
way to community resources.
Holiday events are taking
place in the next week such as
a Thanksg iving pa rty at
0
Athens Mental Health Center
which will include a group
singing session and a movie,
John Wiles and Cecil R. See
while Athens res idents,'
beca
me new ·members and
assisted by Senior Friends,
Don
McKenzie
was reinstated
will plan, buy and prepare the

. Ohio Director o( Health .Or. standardS. .
Because of the qualified
John H. Aekerman this week
announced his Department sanitarians already available
has been given th~ go-ahead through the state and local
on an inventory of the state's health departments , Ohio
over 1,600 community water EPA sought the Hea lth
supply systems. The Ohio Department's cooperation in
Environmental Protection conducting the inventory,
Agency contracted with the which is expected . to be
Department to complete the completed by the 1977 efinventory which is a fective date.
The contract does not in·
prerequisite to the state's
assuming responsibility for dude Ohio's 866 municipal
enforcement in Ohio or the water systems, which have
Federal' Safe Drinking Water already been inventories by
Act, which becomes effective the Ohio EPA under Ohio
law.
June 24, 1977.
A cotnm unity water supply
949-2814
RACINE, 0.
is one which serves at least 25
year round residents, or has
at least 15 service connections s~rv ing · permanent
residents. Included within
this definition could he a
mobile home park, a real
estate sub-division, or a
nursing home.
Dr. 'Ackerman explained
that local health departments
will be asked to participate in
collecting . data which will
·•· ·...
68·1022
include the location or
comm unity type water
I
,
5-CELL
supplies and the number of
persons served.
:
FLASHLIGHT
Under the 'Federal act,
Plenty of ltght when ever you need tl !
PRICE CUTS FOR COST -CONSCIOUS SHOPPERS! I Ftrst 5- Cell Flashlight FREE. extras at regu lar
owners of community type
wa ter supp lies will be
I pnce Pers ons under 16 r'nust be accompamed
responsible for the quality or
by an adult Of fer expires 11 -28-76
I NAME
_________________
their water. They will be
._
required to submit samples to
IADDRESS _________________
state approved labs, who will
inturn reporttoboththeOhio
EPA and to the owner. If the
BASE / MOBILE CB
.
water is found to be unsafe,
the owner will be required to
not ify the residents using the
'
........ ...,..
REALISTIC BASE / MOBILE
water and will be required to
bring the system up to
CB RADIO

PRE-HOLIDAY

·
1
.~~R!~~. 1
YOUR

Memb ershlp now at 333

when Drew Webster Post ~9,
lunerican Legi0n, held its
annu al turk ey
di nn er
Tuesday night at the post
home.
Membership was reported
CANCELLED
at 333 for the new Legion
RACINE - THe meeting of
year. Harry Davis, chairman
of the "Gifts for the Yanks the Racine American Legion
Wh o Ga ve" program, Auxiliary has been cancelled
thank ed the Pomeroy · this month.
community
for
it s
•
cooperation and help last
week. The public contributed
when
post
members
delivered loaves of bread to
homes in exchange far
marks where I started and contributions.
Wint er .means snow
stopped.
Speaking on the program,
and bad dri\l ing
Direc tions on the dye Davis said $1 00,000 was
cOnditions, so you 'll
package said nylon could be raised last year. Examples of
nCed snow tires ...
successfully died, but not expenditures from the fund
polyester or acrylics. Since I . are the purchase of one bus
knew my rug was nylon the for the Sandusky Soldiers
job turned out great. It took a Hom e and another for the
week and a lot of elbow wheel chair patients at the
grease to do this, but it wasso Dayton home, in addition to
successful for me l did want Christmas remembrances.
to tell Mrs. S. about it.
Charles Swatzel reported
It takes two days for each on a meeting of the Pomeroy ,.
section to dry completely. I Community Improvement
put waxed paper under the Committee which expects to
legs of the furniture after I make Pomeroy a more at·
moved it back on the wet tractive community. It was
surface and left the paper voted to send two teams to a
· TIRES ARE
until the rug was completely bowlin g tournament in
dry.
Cleveland . A report was
OUR BUSINESS
My rug required twelve given on military rites held
. . Enough Said
packages of dye and anyone for Clarence Massar.
tryingthis should he sure to Clar ence Sc hm ucke r ,
Come In !
exp~dment on an in·
commander, presided.
conspicuous spot so as to he
Prepa ring the turkey
sure to get the correct shade. dinner served prior to the
- My- c·arper was- o,rlgmally ·meetTrig- was ·Paur - casci
blue, but had faded to a gray assisted by Roy Reuter and
Middleport, 0.
white. ! used Kelly green dye. Bob Vaughan.
·
- EDITH.
DEAR READERS - When
I did this ONCE years ago I
found thai a thorough
vacuuming ,will bring back
the nap and Duff up the rug.
Mine looked pretty nat and
matted when first dry. 8
POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - It is
easier to make a knot In
polyester thread, and also
keeps it from tangling, If it is
first run across wax. Most
sewing centers sell those
round plastic cases with slits
to pull the thread through to
wax it. - LETHA.

Polly's Pointers
Slippery spread

t'
~

J

·•

;!
·:
•
:

:z

.••.

•••
••

·J

'

lha

refreshments, Kimes Con- enough to apply for a position
valescent Home reside nts with the project even though
and Athens geriatrics unfortunately, it was not
patients are looking forward possible to hire all those who
to a specia l home-cooked . expressed interest.
Thanksgivi ng dinn er, in
And finally, to recognize
which they will be guests for Vida Green, Mildred Betzing,
the day in the home of a Wayne Turner, Olive Smith,
Senior Friend, should they he Lula Hampton, and Wilma
unable to go to their own Sargent, in their invaluable
home for the holiday.
service; these are the people
The Sen ior Fri end 's who have ma de Senior
coordinator welcomes to the Friends th e Program· that it
program t he new Senior is hoped to be; an opportunity
Friends, Z~tta Ritchie, Jewel for each individual to apWelch, and Lawrence · proach his fulles t degree of
Stewart, and to sincerely hea lth and independe nt
thank each person who cared . functioning.

falls off bed

POLLY'S PROBLEM
·DEAR POLLY - I have a
new quilted bedspread with a
100 per cent nylon hacking
that causes ihe spread to
slide around. Do you know of
any remedy for this' - MRS.
A.K.
DEAR MRS. A.K. - I do
not know of a remedy for this,
but such a spread does have
one advantage - Ills easy to
pull It a bit here and a bit
there so It hangs evenly on
the bed. Readers, how do you
&gt;eope with such spreads? POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - l recently
had the same experience as
Mrs. S. whose white nylon r ug
looks gray. She wanted to
know If she could spray paint
it. My htishand and I were
painting our bedroom when
the white pamtwassp1lled on
the floor, leavmg two large
spots on- my-100--per - cenr
nylon rug. We cleaned up all
we could but still I had visions
of having to buy a new rug.
I bought a box of that
clothing dye, mixed it with
twelve cups of water, and
with a six-inch brush that haa
a handle I used this dye under
the dresser, so the spot would
be hidden If my experiment
was a failure. It turned out
beautifully so I did the entire
carpet, usin g a circular
motion. When making more
of the dye mixture the
proportions
must- be
EXACTLY the same each
time. Now I have a beautiful
emerald green rug, wall to
wall, and with no overlap

''
''•'
•

I

t

.•'•

if"RE~!-:;~t~
___________ _

95

.ISAVES40I
~

'l1IE NEWSMAN QUARTET will appear at two Meijl
County churches Sunday. At 9:30a.m. the group will be at
the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene and at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday the group wlll be at the Racine Church of the
Nazarene. The publlc is ihvlted to either appearance.

:· Annual dinner held
at Baptist Church

RACINE CARPET SHOP

Senior Friends activities in Meigs noted

I

•'

FfOIIi Our
Mobile Factlory\
to YOur House

l0

By Polly Cramer •

••'

SEAMLESS-ALUMINUM
GUTTERING

Water supply systems'

The annual Thanksgiving
potluck dinner of the Golden
Rule Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church was
held recently at the church.
Blessing preeedlng the dinner
_ . was given by the pastor, the
Rev. Peter Granda!.
New officers elected at the
·baslness meeting are Mrs.
John . Metzger, . president ;
Mrs. Peter Granda!, vice
• · president ; Mrs. James
- · Brewer, secretary.treasurer;
: • Mrs. Fred Klein, flower and
card chairman.
The class voted to donate
$15 on the shopping trip to the
Grand Central Mall for needy
children. Plans were also
made for the men of the class
to deeorate the exterior of the
church for Christmas.
· The annual Christmas
, • party was set for Dec. 9 at the
; , home of Mr . and Mrs .
Manning Kloes.

Out otamlln g fea tures onc lude 23 chann els.
all crystals up-fro nt spea ke r li lum111 aled
S RF me ter and channel selec tor. AC and DC
PO-'Iercables. dynarn tc rn• ke and mou nt

Herbert Gilkey hosted a
meeting of the Ught &amp; Life
Men's Fellowship of the
La.urel Cliff Free Methodist
Church at his home reeentlr .
Seldon Baker, Jr. had the
prayer wi.th Robert Barton
giving devotions. Pearl
Jacobs read "The Stlngy Old
Woman" and several of the

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SAVEs100 '
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NEW GROUP

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•

CANDY
IS

FOR THANKSGIVING BY
RUSSEll STOVER

POWERHOUSE SAVINGS ON THIS
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tl m t"' ')tl,,r lo ··li m:~ Oltw •
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80 MIN.

Reg. 1 99

R811. 2.49

60 MIN .

90 MIN.

199

Reg. 1.59

Reg . 2.09

44·841

44·602

159
44-840

4995

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.

12· 771
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Broadcast s. Shor t w11ve, AM, FM a nd MOrel

SAVE$2

PANTS ....... , 34-40
TOPS ......•..•. 38-46

75-IN-1
. ELECTRONIC
.,
Kl

Also:
New shipment of maternity wear.

Reg.
21.95

1995

28-247 '

~~?

SAVE 25%

ii;1~· '
~'j ·::-.; ~~:MISTRY
\'

~~·r!
~

.

.

. _. ..,

Reg . •

. 7·99

599

28·192

TANDY CORPORATION CtlP.RNY

;

''·

156

, ... Jd .

3,

$225.00
4,

14-836

TH R .I;l D JAr.t ON O
AN'I' IQ ll.[ RING
Tht&lt;~• bluln 1 dl""'""" '

WI in I t k\, \oollo• or
"'' - IW I &lt;&gt;I • .

\,l,!:l,

..
"'

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

+++

5,
5.

LAY-AWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS!.

1995

28-199

~• •.
•

:·

Ill E. Court, Pomeroy

MAY IN HONORARY
MARIETIA - Martella
College junior Michael May
of Rutland Is a member of PI
Epsilon Tau, a national
honorary society for students
in petroleum engineering.
The society's purpose Is to
foster a closer bond!ffiODII _its

members and the petroleum
lnduatry, and to maintain the
high ideals and standards of
the profession. A 1974
sraduate of Meigs High
School, Michaelis the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel May,
Bryant Road, Rutland. ·

nil

t'II Shtonl'd t~muf~Jt' l

::;:! ...

ii2
HONOREO - Tanimy Jo
Mlller celebrated her third
birthday on Wednesday at the
home of her mother , Mrs .
Sherry Sn yder, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy. Also present were
Kenneth Snyder. Larry
Snyder , her uncles, Randy,
Mark and Paul Michael, an
aunt, Tammy Michael, and
her maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Keqneth H.
Mi chaeL
Gifts
were
presented to Tammy Jo and
refreshments were served.

t&gt;&lt;'l'fcd lew t h··
he,·I k Ilk )' II II l c•~&lt;l.

~
Z

DATES ANNOUNCED
Dates of tbe nut three
free cancer ellnlea for
Metes County women were
announce d today. Any
woman may make an
appolnlmeat for the ellllles ·
held at Veteraaa Memorial
Hospital by calling 91123382, 91!W83Z or 91!Z.7531.
There are openings for any
of the ellnlea whlcb will be
Nov. Z4, Dec. 8 aDd Dec. 29.

Ml'gllerite's Shoes
Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main

Pomeroy, o.

RABBIT
SEASON
- -IS
NOW
OPEN
Our complete line of hunting supplies anci
equipment Is here ready for selection. Made
by world-known manufacturers and hi a
large range of prices.

AMMUNITION OF ALL KIN .......
WESTERN - REMINGTON

CRAYON SETS
on jolly holiday cards

•

For eyes . .. 2 shimme ry shadows
For lips and cheeks , . . one for each

11,49.
· per cor~

NEW HOURS
OPEN
· Monday lhru Thursday 4:00 til II : oo

S2(J(),00

Friday and Saturday4:DDtil I :OO
Ktn"'tl! McCullough 1 R. Ph. Charlts RIH!o; R. Ph.
Ronold Honnlng, R. Ph.
·
Mon. tl!ru Sot. I:OOo.m . fo9 p.m.
,
Sundoy1D:IOio1l:30ond5to9p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955
·
Friendly Service
j .112 E. MAIN · Open lllahtdlll .POME.R.OY •.o.

t

--------.:...--

\!H~c

SHOTGUNS-&amp; RIFLES

AN TT QU!: DI AMOND
Euul11lr , looor
fii OJ fft mountl "l "l
I 4 k t . ••Uuw 10ld

992-2920

ti..:ct· ut

4l uy l ong In soH

+ + +·

DEARHELENANDSUE:
Today I got told I was crazy for accepting $2 to clean the
house. My friend says my Mom should have paid me at least
$4. Should I sttike for higher wages? I might lose everything If
I did. -BROKE
DEAR BROKE : Several questions: Do you get an
allowance In addldon to housecleaning pay? And just bow
much clelinlng Is Invilved? Can your parents afford the raise '
Is your mother apt to say, "I'd rather do it myself!'··i
Remember, it's your house too. Since you get food, shelter,
clothes, trallSportation, etc. here, you should GIVE a little in
return -like helping with ordinary chores for free, and doing
extras at below minimwn wage scale- HELEN

Donna Glln1ore.
Games were played with
prizes going to the winners.
Mrs. Della Curtis won the
door prize.
Relrealu)lents served by
Mrs. Chaflln, Rema aQd J.o.
+ ++
included a birthday cake
NOTE FROM SUE: On the other hand, If this pay i!1 your
honoring Mrs. CurtiB and only "allowance," and your work is worth $4, ask about a
Mrs. Georgia Diehl who was raise. Maybe your mother hasn't noticed lately how little $2
unable to attend due to can buy and how well you do the housecleaning. If you suggest,
illness. Besides those named but don'tdemand, what can it hurt ?
others attending were Mrs.
++ +
Ruby Frick, Mrs. lunher RAP:
Your advice please : What would you do ? ThiB guy barges
Lohn and !\Irs. Ann Mash.
up like along-lost buddy and wh.en you can't place him and are
trying to cove.r up and get your memory in gear, he just lesves
you floundering. You ask leading questions.lhat lead nowhere
·he sees to that. Finally, very superior, he smirks, "You drew
a blank didn't ya?" So you make a wild guess. It's wrong-and
WOLFE IN SOCIETY
the final jab- he aays, "Guess again !" You want to go through
MARIETTA - Marietta the floor while he gives you vague clues that only confuse you.
College junior David Wolfe of Finally you learn he's someone you knew quite weiHour years
Middleport Is a new member a~o, but he' ~ shaved his head and gained 50 pounds. Why do
of the Society of Petroleum JlOOJlle DO this to you ? EMBARRASED
Engineers, an organization DEAREMB:
largely concerned with
M"oii!l1;;
yT.to;-;m
=te=
a yo=u-:aq=ulrm
= . I'd clo~ him down fast with,
educational activities con· "Sorry I don't play guessing games."·- SUE
trihutlng both to students and
.
+ ++
local industry. A 1974 DEAREMB:
graduate of Meigs High
Failing that, I'd l!hd the conversation with, "Well, so long,
· School, David is the son of old Buddha," bestowing a pointed pat on his stomach. HELEN ,
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Wolfe,
278 Pearl St., Middle~.

SU PtR U!:L ICATE

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE
.

NnturH IIzcr sets
~· pur

"I:,~_

AUNT :
And a mother who goes along with the scheme deserves
the kind of daughter she evidently has . .SUE

TUSSY

ontv

•

Wants Wedding To Get Loot
RAP :
.
My nieee has been living with her fellow for a year. Now
they've deeided to get mlirried and they want a big wedding
with word passed around that they prefe.r gifts of money. Yo~
see, they pian a trip to Europe and they need plane fare. Otherwise they probably wouldn't bother with marriage, but they
see no other way to raise the money. My sister is so thrilled
that her daughter has finally become "conventional " she's
willing to splurge on a wedding. (If she gave the kids the 12,000
it would cost, they'd skip legality and take off for Europe un·
married. ) What do you call this? - AUNT
DEAR AUNT:
. Bribery anct collusion! People who plan a big wedding only
for the loot deserve fri ends who stay away in droves. (Or
donate their wedding checks to "a favorite chanty." ) -HELEN

.(

$115.00

3.

DIGITAL
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PRICES MAV VARV AT INDIVIDUAl STOR ES

AN1'JQllt ~ILAGR El
UJJIIMI)N U lUN G
Solin 14 - ~ . Hl low •r
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'

Comfor t
for the
professional
woman

;~:::.-::~::.-::::::~:::;::::::::;:;:::;;;:::::;~::8i:!8:!!::::::~::!!:::::::::.-::;::::::::.-::~..-:::::.'&gt;~'=~"""='.;:.-:;:::::=:=~s~:o::l

Yule party slate.d
The annual Christmas
party of the L8urel Cliff
Better Health Club was
planned for Dec. 9 at the
home of Mrs. Marjorie Goett
when the group met reeently
at the home of Mrs. Madolyn
Chaffin.
Mrs. Jean Wright opened
the meeting with prayer
followed by the Lord's Prayer
In unison. Readings on
Thanksgiving were given by
Mrs. Goett, Mrs. Wright,
Mrs .' Chaffin, Mrs.'· Iva
Powell, Mrs. Mlldred Bowen,
Mrs. Bertha Parker and ·Mrs.

. i!

ROYALTY - These children were crowned prince,
princeas, king and queen at the fall festival at Salem
Center School oo Nov.-13: fr ont, 1-r ,.prince Joey Reynolds,
second grade, son of Mr. and Mrs. · Danny Reynolda,
Vin!l:ln, and ptlncess Angela Wright, first grade, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wright, Vinton; back, king
Gregory Lathey, fourth grade, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lathey, Langsville, and queen Gina Lindsey, fifth
grade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Schoonover,
Rutland.
·

MAGC MAKEUP

44-~03

Tap_e Counter, Cue/ Revie w ~nd More1

.SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

I . AN TIQ U.[ DU MOND
D INNtR R ING
J 4 kt . rdlm.- '" •hllo

·sggs

.SMART S ANTA S SHOP AND SAV E E~RLV ... STORES NOW OPEN LATE NIGHTS 'T IL CHRISTMAS !·

Hom ebuilders Class and
served by the men including
Denver Rice, Mack Stewart,
Chester Erwin, Bill Grueser
lind Ed Evans.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Clarice Erwin from
Psabns 95 and 100 and In·
eluded a reading on
Thanksglvl,ng by Peter
Marshall by Mrs. Hazel
Wilson.
Refreshments were served
by the hosts, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Erwin and Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Wilson to Mr. and
·Mrs. Leonard Van Meter, Mr.
and Mrs. Mack Stewart, Mrs.
Denver Ri ce, Mrs. Flo
Grueser, Mrs. Cole and. Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Evans. Blessing
was given by Stewart.

$155.00

SAVE 33%

Reg .
29 95
·

sans

I. [L[G A Nf AN TIQU[
DIAMOND II lNG
u ... ,.11&lt;&gt;• lold ~~), .

.• B11ttery-AC. Built-in Condens•r Mike,

• H ear Police Calls, W11a th fJr Service

LARGE SIZES

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BEAUTIFUL HOLIDAY COLORS
REG. SIZES 10 THRU 18

119

sympathy cards sent when
her sister died.
The flagbearers escorted
Mrs. Ada. Neutzllng and Mrs.
Zelda Weber to the altar
where the members
"Happy Birthday" to them.
!du. Esther Ridenour,
·deputy s!ate . councilor,
prese nt e~ Mrs. Neutzllng
with a gift, and Mrs. Dot'othy
Ritchie, district deputy,
presented Mrs. Weber with a
gift. Both were also
recognized for the work they
have perfonned as officers of
the coW!Cil.
others at the meeting were
Mrs. Mae Spencer, Mrs. Opal
Hollon, Mrs. Marcia Keller,
Mrs. Jean Summerfield, Mrs.
Ada Morris, Mrs. Helen
Wolfe,
Mrs .
Goldie
Frederick, Mrs. Eilee n
Martln,.Mrs. Mary K. Holter,
· Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, Mrs.
Theima White, Mrs. Ada Van
Meter, Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs.
Doris
Gr ueser,
Mrs.
Charlotte Grant; Mrs. Leona
Hensley, Mrs. Betty Roush,
Mrs. Ada Bissell, Mrs. Mae
McPeek, JuDe Rose, Mrs.
Goldie Wolfe, . Mrs. Mary
Showalter and Mrs. Helen
Wolfe, the pianist.

TU //11

SAVE 25%

40 MIN .

a~lhankedthemembersfor

Financial aid given
Financial assistance to a
family whose home burned
earlier this month was given
by the Homebuilders Class of
the Middleport Church of
Christ at a meeting Tuesday
night at the church.
The class voted to give a $50
gift certificate to the Cade
family and also to make a $50
contribution
to
the
Fellowship Class for use in
remodeling the basement for
junior church.
Mrs. Farle Cole presided at
the meeting which opened
with the Lord's Prayer and
reports from the officers.
Plans were made for the
Loy a I
Bereans
Class
Christmas dinner to be
prepared
by
the

New officers were elected .Thanksgiving Eve It the
at the Tuesday night meetmg Middleport First Baptist
of Group II of the Middleport Church.
First United Presbyterian
Bible study on witnessing
Church.
·
for Christ was held. Mrs.
The meeting held at the Ander1011 served a desacrt
home of Mrs. Martha' An- course. Mrs. Gladys Cumderson followed a Thanks- mlngs was a guest for the
giving dinner at the Meigs . diMer.
Inn. Officers elected were
Mrs. Faye Wallace and Mrs.
SON BORN
Velma Rue, co-chairmen;
CHESTER - A son, James
Mildred Karr, seeretary, and Paul, was bom to Mr. and
Mrs. · Kathryn
Miller, Mrs. James Kimes of
treasurer.
Keywest, Fla. on Nov . ~ . He
Devotions were given by weighed seven pounds, six
Mrs. Dorothy Morris on the ounces. Grandparents are
theme of "My Many Loves''· Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Sines,
The least coin offering was Conneaut, Ohio and Mr. and
taken as the meditation, "Put Mrs. Roscoe Hollon, Chesler.
On Christ/' was read.
Plans were made for the
Chrillimas meeting to be held
MEET TONIGHT
at'lhe home of Mrs. Betsy
The
Democrat central
Horky on Dec. 21. The
committeemen
will meet
community Thanksgiving
Thursdsy,
7:30
p.m.
at the
service was announced for
Grace Episcopal Church.

rr==========" l't\~·"'JJ
••hlrJ=.="

9BS
65-60

REALISTIC BLANK
CASSETTE

SAVE 5 20
Reg
69.95

65;

REALISTIC BLANK
8-TRAO&lt;S

CHESTER - Holiday
party plans were diacuased at
the Tuesday night meeting of
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of Amertea, at the
hall.
The district depucy club
ChriatmU party wlll be held
at the Chesler Lodge lfl!ll on
Dec. S. It will be a potluck
dinner at 2 . p.m. with
everyone io take her" own
table service and a $2 gift for
an exchange.
The Coun cil Christmas
supper will be held Dec. 21
with a $2 gift exchange. The
potluck will be served at 6:30
p.m.
Mrs. Dorothy Lawson ,
councilor. presided at the
meeting attended . by 29.
Reported ill were Mrs. Letha
Wood, Miss Leda .. Mae
Kraeuter, scheduled to enter
Riverside Methodist Hospital
in · Colum~us. and Mrs. Hattie
Frederick lo enter the Holzer
Medical Center on Tuesday.
Mrs. Frederick sent thanks
tO the .Council members who
had remembered her with
cards. A thank-you note was
also received from Mrs.
Erma Cleland for those who
came to the funeral home at
· the time of her mother's
death. Mrs. Sadie Trussell

RIEBEL FETED
A dinner party in ob·
servance of the 73rd birthday
of Elber Riebel was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Riebel Saturday. The
honored guest's dinner
partner was Mrs. Clare
Powell of Racine. Other
guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Monroe, I;\oger, Beth,
Renee and Rhonda Riebel,
and Bill Jeffers.

- •- E-IISy to Re'll-d {)· i'g*&lt;&gt;lrl)lsprtayr----j
• Square Root and Per ce nt Keys!
• Batt eries ln r!uded! '

*

DUTTON'S '. DRUGS

MRS. HOLLON BACK
CHESTER - Mrs. Eva
Hollon has retumed from
SanduskY after spending
several weeks there with her
daughter, Mrs. Belly Lou
McNally, who is seriously ill.
Cards may be sent to Mrs.
MeN ally at the .Good
Samaritan Hospital, 703
Tyler St., Sandusky, Ohio,
44870.

~=~5 17~~

'

JACKETS * _SKIRTS
PANTS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS

DANDY

men gave testimonies. The
secretary's report wa8 given
by Uoyd 'Wright. The next
meeting will be held at the
home of Steve Eblin. The
Rev. Floyd Shook dismissed
the meeting with prayer and
refreshments were served.

RADIO SHACK'S
POCKET-SIZE
CALCULATOR WITH
MEMORY

'

-TIRES -

~

TRANSFERRED
Arnold Richards of Mid·
'dlep&lt;irt was transferred from
the Hol%er Medical Center to
Un iversity
Hospital ,
Columbus, Wednesda y,
Room 909. He is expected to
undergo surgery Monday.
Mrs. Richards is in Columbus
with her husband.

21·1S3

D~Ha

GENERAL

:~0 D~~~~~A~

Mrs. Dale Walbum gave
devotions on Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Don Wilson and Mrs.
Lacy Barton, were In charge
of arrangements for the
Thanksgiving dinner.
Attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald An·
thony, Mr. and Mrs. James
Brewer and Mary Beth, Mr.
and Mrs. Lacy Barton, the
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Granda!
and children, Roxanne, Susie
and Dan, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Klein and son, Van, Mr. and
Mrs. Manning Kloes and
Lori, Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz
and Marc, Mr. and Mrs. John
Metzger, Mrs. Bob Parker,
Cindy and Robbie, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Riggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Wilson and grand·
son, Chuckle Pullins, Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr., and Mr. and
Mrs. ·Danny White.

Gilkey entertains group

Reg . 159.95 21 -143

Reg. 179.95

New officers slated

Party plans made
by Chester council

-

__,_._.._,_,

Closed Sundays
The All New Meigs Inn

. PIZZA SHACKPomeroy, o.

125 E. Main Sl.

Remington - Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson
Browning Gun Cleaning Kits - Gun
Oil - Recoil Pads - Game Bags Shell Vests - Gun Cases - Hunting
Accessories - Hunters Ja·ckets &amp;
Caps - Hunting Pants &amp; Caps Rifle Sling Straps - Steel Traps.

LICENSED GUN DEALER

iEBERSBACH
HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN
POMEROY
We Issue Hunting U~ense

'

'

�'
t.--'!'beDailySentlnel,Mlddleport.Pomeroy,O., Tbunday, Nov. l8, 19'16
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

s
P M
Day
Publicat ion .

IN LOVING memory of our dvor

Before

Ctnc•llatlons,

father Steve Eblin who passed
away one year ago, Nov . 18,

cor~ec ·

publlcetlon

We wonted •a. much to keep you
We watched you day by day
Until at, lost w•th breoktng hearts
We sow you slipping away .
You wore a crown of pol1enCe,
As you struggled on and on
And hands that rest forever,
Are tht hands thot ore so strong
God watched you wh ile you sui·
fered
,
He knew you hod your shore
He tenderly closed yo ur weary
eyes
And took you m His care
Dear God, please toke th1s
message
:Jo our loved one up above
Tell h1m how mut h we m nu h1m,
And gtve h tm all our love '
So Sadly m•ued by ch1 ldren
Ed1th . Art1e Myrtht Madelme
grond chddrvn and gree t
grandch ildren

'

REGULATIONS
,.he Publisher reserns

the r l9ht to edlt or relect

any

ads

ab ~

Cleemed

ttctl onal The publisher
will not ce responsible for

morr than one IncorreCT
1nsert lon

RATES
For Wanr Ad Ser\llct

cents per word one

.S

lns.er1 10n

,

M ln1m um Charge Sl 00
IJ

cents per word th ree

consec ut1ve Insertions
26 cents r,er wotd sbc
consecu tive nsertlons
25 Per Cent Olscourft on
paid

ads

and

wlltirn 10 dJ~ys

ads

pa1d

CARD OF THANKS

&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for
50
word

.nlnlm,um ,

• E'ac

ce nts

aiJdlt !onal word J

BLIND -ADS
Ad ditional 25c Charge

per Advert 1semenr

OFFICE HOURS
to 5. 00 p m
am to 12 00

GUARANTEED

8 JO a m
Dil lY . a JO

JOBS

137&lt; .&lt;0

s•ngle , SS02 80 momed Army
Recru11 1ng (01&lt;1 ) 593 3022, col i
coiled

Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 2156

EXPE RIENCED
bab~ slt ter
hous ekeeper
needed
at
Washi ngton, W Vo 40 houn
wee~
w1th other benef1ts
Mob•le home furn•shed for
pr1vate l1vmg quarters h
cell ent
oppor tumty
f or
employment and own place to
l"1e Phone (30A) 663 6088 after

NOTICES
ATTN . I!
All HOUSEWIVES
A~ l Ya rd Sa tes Rumm age ,
Porcti an d Basement Por ch
and Basement Sates , etc
must be pa 1d m advance
Get yours •n early by
stopp ing by our off •te .111
Th e Da•ly SenTinel , Ill
Court 51 or wr.tmg Bo x
729 , Pomeroy , Oh•o 457 69
w1th your r em1H an ce

·'

6p m
1970 FORD E300 von , good con d1
t1on , Also , Dune Buggy extra
sharp Need mce pleasure
boot Phone 9-49·2770

AstroGrapM

I NEED one good soles person to
he lp me Ill my buslneu
S30 000 per yea r for righ t per
_ son P~one 949 2770 lor oppt

LOCAL BU SINESS has on openmg
lor o person to os s1st m
Bemtco Bodo Oool
customer 1so le s, some del•v ery
o n~ heavy lilting Send your
For Friday, Nov. 19, 1t78
work &amp;)(pedence personal tn
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 1&amp;) A
formot1on and phone number
well -placed fnend who can be
to Box 729L C· O The Do•ly Sen
relied upon may have an unusual
!!_nel P o~e rov Oh1o 45769_
proposi tion today that cou ld
beneht yo u Listen closely

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II a
pal has someone he s been wa nting you to meet, try to get
together today It could be one
with whom you have a lot In c om -

mon
GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20) You
tunctlon best today if left to you r
own devtces partic ularly m a
crea ltve area Let your tmaglnal• on run rampant

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Spontan eous thmgs will t~,.~rn out
Mst tor you today Go whe re
both the scenery and the com pany are new and di fferent

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) What you
need t o ma~e t h is day
me morable •s to have an lm·
promptu get-together at your
place w1th someohe you' re fond

of
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Good
news may come to you today m
an unexpected manner. Tl'le
glad tldmgs are 1n regards to
someth ing soc tal

LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0cl 23) Lady

Luc ~ could be rld mg on your
s houlder today 1n fl nanc 1al
matters A famtly member may
pu t you on t o something
profttable

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Today, others Will fm d you par ticular ly ap pealmg You ma~e a
very favorable 1mpress1on on
th ose who meet you tor th e llrst
tt me

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) You could be lucky today by
being In the nght place at the
nght ttme Good fortu ne corr.es
thro ugh a untq u e chain of
events

NOTICE
BidS Wil l be re ceived at the
of1 1Ces of Fultz and Knig h t,
unlit Saturday , No vember 20 ,
1976, at 10 o'c lock A M for the
sale of the Mar~ Pa r k
r esi d en ce sit ua te d a t 371
North Th•rd Avenue. M id
dleport , Oh io Also btds will be
re ce1ved unt i l th e same t ime
fo r th e sate at the busmess
budding , conslst mg of two
stor e r oo m s owned by Mary
Park at the co rn er ot Mil l
Street and Sou th Second
Ave nu e, Middleport. Oh •CI
Inter es ted part1es may appear
at t h e lime of sale and bid
co m petlllvely
tor
ei ther
prop erty Part1es mte r es ted m
Inspecti ng the pr opert y '"
Adv an ce of sate date ma y
meke appomtment to do so by
c&amp; lli ng 997 7186 , Pomeroy ,
Oh i o
The
und ers i gned
reserves th e r 1ght to r e tect
any and all b1dS
Bernard V F ultz
E Kecutor of the Estate ot
Mary A Par ~ . deceased
( 11}. 12, u , 16 , 11, 18, 19, 6tc

Someone new IS about to enter
yo ur hie Keep a sharp weather

eye peeled Today could be lhe
day

You may have some pleasant
su rpnses m store tod ay, simply

legal Not•ce
The undersigned will sell at
publt c sa le for cash the
follow1ng motor veh1cle to be
tak en from John Pierce , 311
Wetzgall Street, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769
19 7&lt;1 Bui ck, se rial no
4B27 H4K116097
T he sale Will be held at The
Farmers Bo!lnk and Sav1ngs
Company , 21 1 west Second
Street. Pomeroy , Oh 10, at
10 00 A M on lhe 19th dl!ly of
November , 1976
The unders igned reser~o~es
th e r )ght to bid
The Farmers Ba nk and
S a~o~lng s Company
Pomeroy , Ohio
111) u , 16, 18, :nc

PUT JT

ON, HUGH

magazine's

for

centerfold girls.
the

PlByboy

Corporation's stoclthold.."'''s in

recent years, less

has

been

PISCES (Feb. 20·Morch 20) You_.mOOeJ. - - may be dlscussmg something t o-

But founder and Playboy·

day whan a l,lash ol tnsplralton in.cblef Hugh M. Heffner had

, hits you Don t d1scard the 1dea
.'· ~ You ca n later put 11 to good use

:

•:

::
:;
~; ·The
•

90me good news foi- them

'1\i. .y, He reported the

first quarter of flscall977 was
the most profitable in tile
hlrt-hrlnl 1 corporation's hiBtory.
vn '-' ~
Profits of more than $3.7
Nov. 19, 1978
mlllion, compared to lBSB
coming year Is not ltkety to than 1900,000 in the same

ya_J(

be a run.ol -the·mlll one There

quarter last year, which

:: are some pleasant surpnses quadrupled dividends from 10
ahead You II do more lhtngs you cents 'to 41 cents 8 share, be

,"
•
•:
:

,

enjoy
(Are you a Scorpto? Bernice
Osol has wrttten a spectal Astro·
Gra ph Letter lo r you For your
copy send 50 cen ts and a se/1.
addressed stamped envelope to

• .. Astro-Graph, P 0 Box 489 .
Radto Ctty Statton New York,
•' :..N Y 10019 Be su rt} 10 ask lor
1 !' Scorp1o Volume 1 )

..

'

.,

there are time llmlta for
submitting

' ~'

medical
insurance
clallns
to
Medicare. You always bave
at least 15 m~tha to eullmlt
your clalmB, but It Ia wlae to
lllbmlt them u soon u your

annual 160.00 deducUble Li

met.

Delbert Swisher's

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Tnpllcaht
November 9, 1976

Tu.11

Std .

Roval Oak Pa rk
57
Royal Cr own Cola
55
ShafT1rock Mofel
54
New York Cfothlng
34
Ruth 's Beauty shop
32
Shirt s. Lid
32
H 1gh Ind i vidual game,
Nora RICe , 177 second h•gh
Indivi dua l ga m e, Marlene
Wilson , 173
High series Mar lene
W•lson , d85 . seco nd high
serh!!., Nor a Rice , &lt;156
Tel!l m high game - Royal
Oak Park , -467 , team high
series, Roy !!II Oak Park , 1.323.
Pomeroy Lanes
Morning Glories
Nov . 9, 197&amp;
Sid

Newell Sunoc o
62
G &amp;J Au to Par ts
50
Sears
43
Karr &amp; VanZandt
42
Roach 's Gun Sho p
28
No 2
IS
High Ind ivi dual game
Alma Pool er , 118, second
h 1gh Individual ga me ---.
OeJorl s Tyree . 173
H igh Individual se ries AlmB Poo le r , &lt;147 , second
h igh
l ndtv•dulll
ser i es ,
Deloris Ty r ee , 441
High team game - No . 2,
J1 51 , h1gh team ser ies
Newell Sunoc o, 2.213

and

1

EleC. Service
Anv type of furnue 1nd
heat1ng system . New and
old . lly lht hour or contract
price. All work gu1r•nteed .
Phone
U14l 446 -3177,

G•llipolis,

said.

Team

Remodeling,
Plumbing

0~10 .

t,~h:~~· •' ~· bu-·~ ~'•g

I•
NOW occ•pUng plano students ,
begmners lnttrmf&lt;hates ocf.
vonced student• Coli
m.

@)·

2 SIGNS
OF

MONTGOMERY

PROFESSIONAL

197SCHEVYELCAMINO
$3995
Classic, 350, V-8, automatic, power steering and

radio ,

Mf iGS COUNTY Fish and Game
Ann . wdl hold a meeting Nov
18 ot 7830 pm ol Coon
Hunter's Club rooms on
Snowball H•ll ot Syracuse New
membersh ip cords w1l1 be
ovo1lble

-

669·.(12,0 t'leningl
F~RIIONI

stNI "ottucb, l"t ~
fw"llOII. lli1111 564.U...... . ~ ·
•
10271rTlo

U~1BRI~ .
For sofa,

992 2270

~~~====~~~-~

23 h 1973 Wilderness travel
lroiler
stove
relr1gerotor
freeter tub and shower , forced
o1r heat double bowl s• nk
oven w1th power plant For
sole. S3 700 The number to call
SHOOTING Motch 1Ust off Rt 7
IS 985·3875
by pass by Rock Spnngs
Cemetefy 12 noon, deer slugs
and shot. Sponsored by l u cky 7
Gun Club
SHOOTING MATCH
Broodrun
Rod and Gun Club New Ha ven .
W Va Saturday Nov 20, 5
p m Pubhc Welcome

--

LOCUST POST S, rou nd or spl1t
Phone 9~9 · 277 4
COAL, hmeslone and calc1um
chlonde and colc1um brme for
dust con trol an d spec1ol moo;1ng
salt fo r formers Mom Stree t
Pomeroy Oh10 or phon e 992·
LOST Pee~ A Poo Poodle lost
38'11
be tween Hobson and Me1gs·
Goll1o Llne Mondoy n1ght If 1Q71 HONDA. Cl -.4 50 12 000
~-d p leos~ coli 9~2 7572
miles msy bor crash bors
pull bock handle bon new lire
LOST IN Tuppers Plom s, Iorge
and seals
Scrambler s1de
mole Atredale brown, ton ond
p1pes, ~ Co~ 949 2480
cin namon m co lOr Ca ll {01~ )
667 3829 e~o~e n mgs o r be fore 8 POTATOES and pumpkms C W
0
m _
Pro ff1tt Portland Oh1o Phone
LOST Yellow cot , fa mily pet · 8~3 · 2 25.4
answers lo the name of COAl f ;· sale O pen 0 do s per
YEL LOW BABY l os t in VICin ity
week and e~en 1 ngs For f~rther
_of S1x th l•ncoln and Peod St ,
ml ormot 1on call (6 14) 367 7338
Mtddleport If found, call 992
Lost Lod•es leather b•l lfold 1n
fron t of Duttons m Mtddleport
Co 11 9-49,2510

APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
ROUTE

689

PHONE

WOULD THE man who called Mon·
WilKESVIllE, (614) 669 376S
day n1ght co ncerning the
Peek A -Poo poodle w1th cham FULLER Brush Products lor sale
Phone 992 J,j1 0
on wh1ch he found plea se call
ag~t~?~?,2 ..
CAMPER , $600
Also
horse
tra1ler $.450 Phone ~6 14 ) 698
LOST Wh1le mole Scath e dog
3m
Answers to Froslie Coll992·
2650 after 3 p m or 992 2349 Garage Equ1pmen t
che ap
be fore 3 p m Reword
bu siness buddmg 50 x 60 , ex
cement
cei lent cond1llon
7--ur;_ -~ -. ~
--;-":::; 1!::..::dnve Rutland Co rp ., pnce
reduced Ca ll 7&lt;~2 2602 Rea son
FOR SALE or rent Nice 3 bedroom
lor sellmg · poor heolth
home Will se ll on lond co n

F ·s&amp;f.kli~~~~
~
!:__

tr act , $1 000 down w1lh
payme nts $175 per month or
rent for $175 per month Phone

(61&lt;) 667 3436

TD2&lt;1 INTERNATIONAL bulldozer
good cond1hon Phone 949·

2770
24FT MOTOR home loaded w1 th
e~o~erything beauhlul w.ll to~e
trodes Phone 9~9 2n0

Wmteit-to.:Biir.:
---c~- - --:OLD furmture Ice boxes , brass
beds
wall te lephones and
ports, or complee hquseholds
Wr1te M D M1ller Rt 4
Po~ roy, Oh•o_ £ oll 992-7?__~
CASH po1d for all mokes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 614·-423· 9531

-

New T V Shop ' ElectroniC TV
Clime
Sen11 ce call $5 95
Phone 992 6306
BEE LINE fASHJONS Phone 992
3373
PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sto
t1on Phone 247 2b8A oiler 5

TRACTORS , 1961 Mo ssey
Ferguson 35 gasolme lop con
dttton 1971 John Deere 82
D1esel very good cond•hon
1973 Maney Ferguson, 175
Diesel on ly 600 hour s Sh1nn 's
Tractor Soles , Leon, W Vo
Ooy phone 458· 1630 e11enmgs

"-458·1752 _ _ _ _

1968 MUSTANG 289 auto , p s,
fle w !ires Phone 985 4209.
1973 FO ~D G'llox •e one owner
cor Ph one 742·2202 onyhme
exc epl Sun da11 Rev Lloyd
Grimm
PRICED LOW 59 acres 6 room
house, both outbwld mgs near
all 3 Me1gs Mmes m Danvil le
$23 500 Phone 742 2766
1970 4 wheel dnve tru ck , phone
992 5349 or 992-2395

1-4&lt;6-8570
COINS CURRENCY , tokens old
pocket walches and chams,
s1l~o~er and gold We need 196.4
and older silver coins Buy, sell,
or rrade Co li Roger Wams ley,
742·2331

12 GAUGE Spnngheld shotgun,
16 shot Marlin rifhJ, 10 speed
b1ke : rod1o bathroom heaters
Coli 7~2· 2078
CLARINET , good cond•t•on , $65.
307 locust St
Middleport,
Oh1o.

IF VOU have o service to offer,
wont to buy or sell someth1ng,
oe lo o~i ng lor work ,
or
whatever . , you 'll get results
foster with o Sent1nel Want Ad

Call9922156

..

-~-

---

~

---

IN DASH 23 channel CB om.fm
rod1 o, B track tope deck Call

992 3965 .
3 YEAR OLD Regtstered Suffolk
ram Phone 992·7165.
2 COMPLETE acquonum s w1th
stands Co11 after 4 30 p m
I 949 2862

-·- ---------

1%6

OlDS Cutlass

Svpreme,

$225 Also Alli s Ch&lt;:ilmers com

____ ----

b1ne,,$175 Phone949·2179

-

'GRANNY'S FlEA MARKET open

do•lv 10 to 5 ~~ Route 15-4,
tu rn left on 325 . come to Don·
v1ll e and follow s1gns More in·
formation ca ll7~2 2-481

YAROSA"L"E,' F r~do-;- , -;;l e ho;;,
Chester Bridge, Rt , 2-48 across
from Golf Course Gas stove,
$25 . blue loborqtory bowl. coal
gas heater, chtldren's clothes,
and women's SI Ze 7 to 12
Phone 985 3335
YARD SAlE, Fndoy, Nov 19 m
room bock of D &amp; J s Houle of
Fobrl$'· 1 mlle south of Mid·
dl.,.rt on S.R. 7 Junior
women 1s and ch ildren's dothes
and $hoes some extro n1ce and
new Items gnd other m•~&lt;

~

CHOICE ear co rn , $2 00 bu5hel.
Phone 7-42 2359

FOR SALE

One good used Ho1polnr
retrlger•tor
S100
One good
used G. E .
refrigerator
U50
One good used Holpotnt
range ,
UO
New co.op water softener,
Reg Sl~ 9
NOW U99
Ou1s Humldtfiers, m1.1u~ t
OH800
n~LY lto7 .9l
One good used Homellte
chatn saw
$100

Pomeroy Landm..

~Jack W. ('.ar~~~ Mgr.
Phone 1'2·21tl

~
...
ANY PITCH

'6.95
Ph 992·2174

'J

ANY SIZE

.. s

3 AND 4 RM fu rn•shed and un
fu rmshed opts Phone 992

5434

We repa1r the old and butld
the new Papenng, pamttng, panellngJ wmdow
replacements ,
glass ,
roofmg, hot moe, Sldtng,
storm Wtndows , door~ ,
remodel kitchens
and
bath s, etc Phone 949 -2023
No Sunday Calls Please
10. 14 1 mo pd

~nly

Co/1"992 7639

.. 7 2
¥ K71
t A9 3·
.. A K 10:12
Both vu lnerable

Located in Langsville
Box 28·A
West

North East

Suuth

Pass

1•
Pass
J N T Pass

1 N 'I'
Pass

l (o

FURNI SHED two bed room opt
TUPPERS PLAINS OHIO Three
adu lts on ly No pets M1d
bedroom house, lom•ly room
dleport Ph one 992 3874
f~reploce 2 baths , d1 shwasher
- .
2 bedroom unfurnished opt m
range, garbage disposal ,
Mtddleport Phone 992 3129 or
carpet sun deck large lot

--- -

'192·5434

$26 ,500. Phone(614) 667 ·6304

HOUSE for rent , 5 rooms an d BASHAN STORE A lways o money
both unfurntshed
In M1d
maker W11l hel p f1nonce •f
dleport Phone 992 ~57
needed Phone 949 2770 W•ll
toke trades
ONE bedroom -,r~1 le'r o; ! ~ ~o
pets , $30 week or $120 per
mon1h lltlilt 1es po1d Phone

V.rgtiB. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomeroy,

PRICED LOW , 59 acres 6 room
house , both outbu1ldmgs near
oil 3 Meigs Mmes m Oonvdle.
$23 500 Phone 7-42·2766

2 ACRES - M or Lon nice
creek bottom . 14x10 mobile
Br .

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toa sters 1ron s all
small appliance s lawn mower,
next to State H1ghwoy Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985

382S

Wil l do odd tabs , roofmg, pamtmg gutter wor k Phone 992

7409

home,

Coli

air

coodltloned, 1112 baths and
nice 2 room garage with 1!2

balh
RUTLAND - 9 room
house, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
lull basement. porches &amp; 2
car garage
MIDDLEPORT - S yrs.
old. 4 bedroom home with
nat . ga S F.A furnace ,
disposal, birch kitchen and
level lot. Only 523.000

nice shade trees, &amp; garage.
Asking 512,000.

RUTLAND

-Aboul

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
home wllh modern bath ,
nat . gas F.A furnace and

4

acres. Older ·home has 3

bedrooms, balh , d ining
room, natural gas heat, out
cellar, storage bldg., alum.

siding. S1S,500 00.
RACINE - Lovely 6 yrs.
old home. About 2 acres. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
kllchen. lots of cabinets,
disposal, dish :washer, full
dry basement, central heat

and are cond , close to HI
school $29,000.00 .
POMEROY - About I
acre, mobile home hookup,
sewer, water , concrete
pallo, lovely wooded area
JUST $2,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 story
br ick, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
balh. enclosed rear porch,
natural gas F.A. furnace.
Very nice level lot ,
concrete block

garage

$B.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot, 1112 story frame, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. dining
room ,
utility
room ,
carpeting, paneling VERY
NICE 522.000.00.
LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY
NO SALE
NO CHARGE
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259

WHO O'YUH S'POSE
IT WAS? INDIANS?

lHE. PLACE
IN A MESSH OP~

lull basement. $S500.

SATISFIED-

MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot near the river, 8 room
lral"e house with 2 baths .
gu

heat

and

garage. Only 512,000.
NEAR GAVIN - 6 room
modern home J Brs ,
enclosed

bath ,

nice

cabinets In the kitchen,
natural gas F A. furnace &amp;

city like water. 522.000.
11 ACRES - Near Wllksvllle, 4 Br. residence. 1'1' ·
baths, gas F .A furnace
and good spring . New
fence
IS

ACRES -

3 bedroom

r~novated home. Gas we1l1

&amp; F.A. furnace City like
watar and 2 balhs. Nice
kitchen , laundry room &amp; 2

car garage 532,500
LAND IS IN SHORT
SUPPLY . BUY YOURS
NOW.

SPVIHG ~

PRETlY SMART SCUT1LE,
0 1 YOU, OLIVER, EH? WEll,
PlAtntH ' THEM
IIFE L1 SURE
PHOtW LETTERS
HE'D BE
AHD THAT DIAI1Y-j SNCOP!t-16

~=-----~,~~AR~OUND -

Blown

Then he cashed dum my 's
queen or cl ubs, led a second
club to ward hts hand and went
up wttlt Ius ktng Wes t dropped
a low d1amond and th e
student' s fourth club trick had
gone mlo li mbo F1ve mmutes
later the oppone nts had chalk-

Insulation Services

Overseas Mi ssion 10

6:45-Mornlng Reporl J
6 so-Good Morning . Wesl VIrginia 13
6.55-Good Morning , Trl Slale 13.
7 oo- Today 3. ~ . 1S; Good Morning. Amerlca6,13: CBS
News B. Chuck While Reporls 10.
7 O~Bugs Bunny&amp; Friends 10.
1.3G--Schoolles 10. ·
8:0D-Lassle 6: Capl Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesa111e 51 33
8·3G--B ig Valley 6
9·oo-A M 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,1S. , Lucy Show B;;
Mike Douglas 10
9: J()-Cross Wlfs 3, One Llfelo Live 6, Good Day B.
10 OO.Santord &amp; Son 3.••15.• Price Is Righi 6,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 ! ~General Hospllal 6
11 DO-Wheel of Forlune 3,15; Weekday 4, Edge of
Nlghl6, Gambit 8,10 , Morning with D J . 13.
11 3()--Siu mpers 3,4, IS , Heppy Oays 6.13 . Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame 51 20,33.
ll ' l~T ake Kerr 8, Ms FlxiiiO
12.DO-News 3,6,8,10, Don fio 13; Bob Brau~ 4, so.
Grand Slam 15.
12:3()--Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
''r TomOrrow a, 10
.
12 S~NBC News 3, IS.
1 00-Somersef 3, Ry1m's Hope 6,13, Concentration B;
Young 8. the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS
1.3()--Days ol Our Lives 3.&lt;.1S; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns B.1 0
2 D0-$20,000 Pyramid 13, Dinah 6.
2·3G--Doclors 3,4,15; One Life lo Live 13, Guiding
Llghl 6,10
3·0G--Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family B. lO t
Crockell's Vlclory Garden 20
3 · 1 ~General fiospllal 13
3·3()--Bewllched 6; Malch Game 8,10, Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20
4 DO-Misler Cartoon 3, Marcus Welby, M.O 4: fiowdy
Doody 6, Somersel 1S; Mickey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame 51 . 20,33; Movie " Hanky Tonk" 10; Dinah
13.4 ·3D-My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6;
Parlrldge Family 81 Fllnlstones 1S
s·oo-B ig Valley 3, Merv Griffin ~ ; Brady Bu nch B:
Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Slar Trek 1S.
l ·3G--NewS6, Family Atfalr a. Elec. Co. 20,33, Adam12 13
6 DO-News 3,&lt;.8, 10,13,\l ; ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6.3()--NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grllllth 6;
CBS News 8.10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; VIlla Alegre
33.
7·oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Truth 4: Bowling for ,
Dollars 6; Andy Williams 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My ThrH Sons 15: Ohio J9urna120: Black
Perspective on lhe News 33,
7:3G--Porler Wagoner 3; Break the Bank 4; Candid
Camera 6; Treasure Hunt 8, Mac. Nell Lehrer
Report 20,33 ; Andy Williams 10, Nama Thai Tune
13; Pop Goes lhe Counlry IS.
8 DO-Sa.ntord &amp; Son 3,&lt;,15; 3 . ~. 15 : Oonnv &amp; Morl•
6,13; Lawrence Welk 8; Washington Week In
Preview 20,33, OSU + Michlgan Preview 10
B JG-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3,4,15, WaH Slroet Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Flies 3,~,1S; Movie " Revenge for a
Rape" 6,13; Movie "I Wan( to Keep My Baby I"
8,10, Oocumenlary Showcase 20,33.
IO ·OD-Serplco 3,.,1S; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.

A Nevada reader wants to
know what you should btd m
second sea t after a one-club
openmg b1d to your rtg ht You
hold
• AQXXIC . X t AQXX KA XX

The c~orrect overea ll t:&gt;l one
spude You hope to be 11hl&lt;• lo

the Ja cobys" care of th1s
newspaper The Jacob ys w111
answer md1vtd11al questiOns
11 stamped, self-addressee

envelopes are enclose d The
most mterestu1g questiOn s
w1fl be tJsed m flu s column
and w11f rer;erve r;o pres of
.JA CO BY MODERN )

Fiuntllll Autlab~
Blown 1nto Wills &amp;Athu

~

STURM
WINOOifS I OOOIIS

REPLACE.ENI
WINOOWS

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Asian river
I "Call
3 One kind
Me - "
of jockey
6 Terrify
I Formic acid
11 Food actd
source
f.(), MU
M, I'M OOT
12 Bird of
5 Mater&lt;;.He's
prey s
familias
weapon
6 Wander
SIC I&lt; ... [Ur-Jt:~ .,_,
13 Nuptial sign 1 Dray
I'MNf;
(2 wds.)
8 Bqxing great
15 Any ciwnsy 9 Ex·piiCher,
boat
Preacher 16 Make lace 10 Purpose
17 Culturally II Abrasion
chichi
11 Ethereal
19 Destiny
18 Beam
22Seem
19 Concu25 Subtle
piscence
essence
%0
Viva voce
26 "Lt'l
%1 Subdue
~!{iQ-2[GiLj€;j;e! Abner"
Z2 Love (Sp. )
~
character

BORN LOSER
I"

LARR~,!!,~'~DER

P'

Af;il'£$ IX!Ol.E:;_:L{·~;;;/
'ioJse;

4-1 ~I mo

1

HIRW
I&amp;

REMODELING Plumbmg heottng
and all ty pes of general re pair
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
per1e nce Phone 992·2409

MliS&amp;~F

SEWING MACHINE Repc trs, ser·
~ 1 ce all makes 992 228.4 The
Fobr1c Sho p , Pomeroy .
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Servtce We sharpen Sc•ssors .
EXC AVATING , dozer looder and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re. w11l haul
1111 d1rt, to sod, ltmestone and
grovel Coil Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7009 ,
night phone 992 3525 or 992-

~M~~··

Yesterday's Aoower'
23 Boundary 35 German
21 Beseech
river
25 Indian city 36 Punster
27 Pigeon
37 Nigerian
31 Covered
city
with dirt 38 Through
32 Nasal
(comb. form)
sensation 39 Ttbetan
33 Wound
gazelle
slightly
40 Call the
31 Formerly
shots

rr-~;'--r.~.-

(2 wds.)

Palm
leaf

29 Voice of
the - "
30 King
1

j

MOBILE home for sole or rent, 3
bedrooms ol uhht1es patd
Phone992 775 1

$8.000 Phone.992-3333.

SEPTIC TANI&lt;S cleaned Modern
Somtotion 992 3954 or 992·
1972 CHAMPION 12x60, un ·
2426
furn1shed , except carpehng
and k 1tchen opphance s lots of WILL do roofmg , construciiOn ,
extras must se ll Phone 992.
plumb1ng and heohng No tob
2292 after 5 p.m
too large or ioo sm oll. Phone
1971 WINDSOR mob1l e home,
742·'23&lt;18
with expondo Pcrl1olly furn 1sh :Cc:
A::RP::E::N::T::l_:R: "IIo_o_r,.,n-g-. - ,e--.11:---ln-g,
.... - e·d: - ss-;soo- -F.-no-nc mg-ponelmg Phone99'2 ·2759
ovodobte to qua lo l iGcl person
Also, a Boys 1C speed b•cyde DOZER wor~ and weldmg. Con2~ mch $60 Ph one 992-7729
tact James Persons, Rt I ,
Roc1ne , on Carmel Rood.
24 x 60 DOUBLE WIDE mob1le
home m Syracuse on 190 x 55 MOBILE Home Repai r Eiec .,
plumb1ng and healing Phone
lo t, totol electrtc Call992-3792

992·5858 .
ELECTRONIC 1.V CliNIC, New

HOMESITES for sole, 1 ocre and
up Mtddleport near Rut land.

Coii992-74BI .
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
oi l elec , 1 acre, M iddleport.
dose to Ru tland Phone m.
SMALL farm for sole , 10% down,
owner fmorlced Monroe Coun.
ty W. Vo Phone (3().4) 772·

3102 or (30&lt; )172·3227

m .m5.

-

·- ~~~~~.,~~~~~-=~:-----=~-~~~----~--~·~=:=:=:::::::::::~::-::~--~~-~-- ~eipr~ian
TH[;RE'S THE 6COD
W££K. ROSilA
- COME BKK IN A
W!LL
HUNT/N6 LOfXSE, .AND TH£RSS MY
TAI&lt;E MARVELOUS CARE: OF US !rGOOD 0/...D HCJU5EKEEPE:R, ffi~~~l~--l
ROSITA !:'-

r-----

992·3129 . or 992-5&lt;3&lt;
59 acres, 6 room house, both,
portly corpete'd , two outdug basement ,
bu•ldings
one·lh~rd
lllloble, mineral
rights located near Danville
Redut:;;ed for • quick sale,

$23.500 Phone 7&lt;2-2766
NEW 3 Bedroom totolelec. home ,
1,113 a(res, rural water ,
ocreotor sephc system, neor

longsvllle. Coll7&lt;2 2819.
HOUSE, 5 rooms ond both, drilled
well , 35 A more or less• 1n
country Phone 247·2286

--'-::--

APPROX . 10 ocres on Chester
water good rood . Beautiful
bullding lototion. Will h•lp
ftnonce 1f needed Phone 949

2770

r-+-lr-; J)l]J~llJ];f:t.:::~Z:.~t::

12 Prevention
13 ~=~~
11 Wralh

Unscramble theKe four Jumbles,
one letter tn each square, lo

DOWN

form four ordinary word1.

1 Spanish
belle
II J8

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

AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

One leiter simply stands for another. In th(o sample A 11
used for the three L's, X lor t he two O's, ele Single leiters.
apostrophes 1 the length and formation o( the word• are all
hm ts. Each ~ay the &lt;ode leiters arc ditrerent.

WINNIE

r:::===::Jilllli::=~T7~ r--=---=-~~=-"'V--::-:-==-::-::-:::~-.,.--::7.':':':--::-::-::::V S w P L·,,- E X J
,,.,,,w WE
... IN FACT,,oHE5EEMo
HMMM ... MAy~E
OWE HE!&lt;
A FAVOR'...

MORE LIKE FAM!LY 111AN

uc•·

,

vr'";J-~~114E UNCLE

IRAN
AWAY Fr20M!

TI-Ho WILL WORK V B R S L
OUT FINE A FTER
ALL I

WB

WM g

WMS

WB

BPU

MOTORCYQ.ES

••'n PRICE SALE"

Inventory.

Pleau,

no

phone coils or dooltrs. Sole .
ends Nov. 30, 1976.

Athens Sport Center
140 CO[UMIIUS ROAD '
ATHENS, OHIO
Slit HOurs:
to.m.tu p.m.
Monday lllru S.turd.oy

-·-

JII

•

USLESHW

NS

QSXQ . -QGXZS

'
EXJ
QS

t;OUNOS. ' 't=NT"
ON CI&lt;:IME.

II

LMXWWSUSQ

MOONID ~
"l

t

'
anon,. the
I
I
V~
":::::;~=.~~~~
!
- ~~~~:J~•u1,.•ted

f

Yeol'erday'a Cryptoguote: TilE KEY TO IL\PPINESS IS TilE
WilL TO WORK AND TilE WISDOM TO ENJOY IT. - 0 A
BATI1STA
. .
C&gt; 1976 Kln&amp; feaLurn Sy ndic l tr, Inc.

KAWASAKI ·&amp;SUZUKI

r

PRAILL

EBGWGSUL

All 1976 modola ltfl In
stock. Buy tho first blko 11
regulor rellil and gol 111tt
lnd HALF PRICE. BlkH
must be In 111tt somo price
brocket, this Is o ono lime
only sole to reduct

1

CRYPTOQUOTES

Commercfol property approx 17
acres , level lond, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio Route

'

Nillw'llli 11

12 :DO-Movle " See No Evil 10; Janak! 33.
12 :4()--Mod Squad 61 WrestHng 13
1:DO-Midnlghl Special 3,4,1S.
1.4G--News 13.
2:3G--News 3.
3 DO-Mov ie " Panic In lhe Streets" 3.
~ : 3G--Movle "Hole! for Women" 3.
6·DO-Movle " Dangerously Yours" 3.

Gold (Sp.)
Bad news
.16 NupUal
} symbol
• (2 wds .)
II Mode of

GRAVELY SERVICE - So~o~e 25 Pet .
on labor by hovmg your Gro~o~e­
ly Tractor repo1red or serviced
now. Gravely Tractor Soles ,
Pomeroy Oh1o Phone (61_.)

COUNTRY lormlo od w1th seclud·
Phone B&lt;3·2165
ed woods. water ond good access in Monroe Counly, W. Vo. WILL TRIM or cut trees and shrub$1 .000 dow~ coil (304) 772- bery Phone 742 3167 or 9~93102 or (304) 772·3227.
2545

7 Phone (61&lt;)667-630~ .

Angels on Wheels" 8; Mary Hortman 10: ABC

name

T V shop ElectroniC T V Clinic
Servtee coli $5 95 Color, B &amp; W
onlenno SjiStems stereos , etc .
572 South Thud , Mtddleport
Phone 992-6306 Corry In ond
save money

GAS ond Otl Furnace Repair ,
soles ond serv•ce, 2~ hours .

3 bedrooms, IV, boths Iorge l1v·
ing room dinmg room and kitchen, fully ca rpeted . Phone

11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13 ,15

11 : 3()--Jo~nny Car$(1n 3.~.15; SWAT 6,13, Movie "Hello

(Sp. )
Signorina 1s

1975 TRAILER for sole, 12x65 fur·
n1sh ed wtth P.ir candtllomng

7481

HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
bedroom renovated home.
Modern kit , oil F A.
furnace . Nice balh &amp; full
basemen! 519,500.

nafural

HE'S

win the secorld""m qummy
50 YOU WEllE

:.::

acre lot on Rt 1. Old 7 room
house, 112 bath, porches,

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

~~r ~:~~~t.ED,

'SURE LEFT

5232

TUPPERS PLAINS- I 'I'

608 E.

UTilE ORPHAN ANNIE

IUIMINUM

BRADFORD Auctioneer Com
plate Serv1ce Phone ?~9·2487
or 9-49 2000 Rocme, Oh1o Cr1tt
Bradford

6·2G--Nol For Women Only 13.
6: 3G--Columbus Today 4; News 6. Sunr ise Semesler B,

tnck one There were etghl show diamond s later Do not
toP""card tncks and JUSt one mak e a takeo ut do u b l ~
ex tra club tnck would gt ve because or your s. mglf.&gt; ton
heart
htm game and rubber
(Do you IJave a questton
lie ducked the ftrst hea rt on
general pnnctQles, bul had to lor th e experts? Wr1t e " Ask

0.

Phone 992-33~

3
CHRISTMAS Auchon Sole toy s
g•fts ond other new mcrchan
d1se Frtd oy 6 30 p m ot the
Auction House Hor ton Sl
Mason, W Vo

wmner s befor e playmg to

SICING.SOFFITT
GUTTE1$.1WNINGS

11 -11 -1 mo .

WILL DO HOUSE cle omng
after 6 p m 742 2152

TEAFORD

992·3436
FURNISHED Tra1ler fo r rent
Clean $30 week Sigle or
co uples onl y One acre Flat
woods Phone 992 58344 alter
5p m

Th e studenl co unted htS

FREE ES IMATES

PLY MOUTHS
Phone 992-2594
Middleport, o.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19,1976
6 oo-Sun rlse Semester 10.
6 · 1 ~E n gllsh J ; Farm Reporl 13.

~~~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

HEY!
WE'VE BEEN

Ph 992·!!193

NEARlY new al elec home full
bo5emen t, for so le by owner
Rutl and a reo Pho ne 742·2531

• Q6 5
• Q6 4
.. J9B5 4

SOUTII IDI

Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

LITTLE

DAILY RENTALS
ON
NEW r77

---

COUNTRV Mobde Home Pork , Rt
3J te n mdes north of Pomeroy
Lo rge lois w1 lh co ncrele pat •os
s1dewol ks runner s and off
street porkmg Phone 992 7&lt;179
TroJIIi! r adults
or 992 31 81

Square Yard Installed
David Parsons, Owner
949·2814
11·4-lmo

RUE MOTORS

D&amp;D
Construction

EAST
.. J 6

10932
t KJ 7

So~h~

.

•

WEST

PROWLED!

4 sp eed rear wmdow defog
ger S1300 Phone 992 5875

Rodt"'e~~-~~=- ~~

,_

6

.. Q 10 9 6

.

Revive the o:~~~~~::~~:r
of your russ.
your own home
by Von Schrader
dl)'·foam method.
No muss. No fuss.
No odor. Use the
same day.
All work
guaranteed.

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~

ed up lOll points above the line
"Wasn 't i unlucky ' " asked
the student
"Yes. you were," replied
the Professor " But you made
your own bad luck You on ly
needed four club lrtcks Once
East followed 10 the second
club you could be sure of four
club trtcks by St mply lmesStng
the Len spot
" Your pl ay of the ktt tg
would have been correct 1f vou
had needed five club trtcks,
but you only needed fout a nd
should have taken the safety
pla y to msure yoursclr &lt;.iga1nst
the actual club break ·

Opemng lead - J "

Racine. Ohio

ladlllor

1973 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle ,

19721NTERNATIONAL Seoul new
pamt , good shape Phone 992·
77 17

RACINE
CARPET Sl«)p

f"" lite latpsl

1974 JEEP Renegade V 8 10 000
m1 les 1976 Mus tang II Cobra
6 400 m1les All power and o1r
Ph one 7-42-3072

4)446-2745
-- - ------ -(61--Pomero11 Forest Pro 3 BEDROOM House and tro1lvr m
Syracuse, 33 acres , smoll borh,
all electnc, $35 000 sm all 4-40
dozer log truck 1905 model,
sow m11l $.4,500 Phone 992·
3792 . Homer Mills

A AKH3

•

R uttand, Oh1o 45775
Ph . U14 l 7-42- 2409
We Deliver
7 284moS

Phone 992 -5776
Syrnuse , Ohio

Service

18

NORTH

Pa ss
Par;s

---~

TIMBER
ducts Top price lor stand1ng
sowhmber Coli Kent Hanby

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

Ph. 67S-3469
9:30-5-00 Dally
Tlll8 :000 Fridays

--

CB RADIO FOR SALE Johnson 130
Mob1le CB Phone, $100 Two
Mob•le antennas. Also Demeo
50 Watt Mob1le • Lewter and
re&lt;:liU\oler preomr, $100 Par
table 4 chonne pollee scan·
ner, $90. All guaranteed. Coli

•• M

1031 mo

POINSETTIAS now for

CHRISTMAS
6000
to
choose from
PERFECT
FOR Gl FTS ln red , white
and pink SJ DO to S6 00 20
pet off on 10 or m ore

Pf. Pleasant

pm

NEW 23 Channel C B $1 29 95 or
term s Call 992 ·3905

YOUR HOME ln pots and
hang ing baskets from 75c
to S5 00 Also , lay away

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
- 328 Main Street

--

5292

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR

chair CUshtons,
mallreoses, ~N~ddlh9 . Ideal
far campers . Vartety of
sizes.
Velvets, nrlon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
fancy prints, accessories.

..... .

One trick calls for finesse
t l08 52
"'Q 7

NOTICE

- OLSTERY

I

A T'r'PICAI. AM~RICAN5KI! ..
H!i CANNOT E\IE!V KE'E'P Hi5
ON
IMPORTANT
OF

,¥tl6lll "'·JJH
,,
, . . .•

(614) 985-4155
Chostor , Ohio
10·17·1 mo IPdl

POLY-F ~AM

A. GUARANTEED Christmas Hove
o Fnendly Party and earn you
Chmtmos free Go w1th the b1g
gest and have the be st lnv1te
11our gues ts We'll do the rest PlEASURE HORSES and pon•es
olso will buy hories and
Largest lme or guaranteed toys
, pomes Phone (614 ) 698 3290
and g•fts Call •~9 2803
~
Ruth Reeve'$
SPECIALS AT 0 &amp; J FABRICS
Fake fur in p1eces , regu lar AKC REGISTERED BOXERPUPPI&lt;S
Hod shots and wormed Phone
S150 lb now $1 50 lb Lorge
(614) 992 37&lt;2
blank et p1eces $1 50 lb 1 toble
of po ly double ~ nit ond poly TO GIVE AWAY Mole dog, por t
blends , Values to $2 -49, now
Colhe and Beagl e, about 2
$1.00 y ard Red Heart Wtn lucie
year s old Good watch dog
yotn ~ oz . ske1n, 98 1 each 1
Phone 9.49·28 16
mi le south of Middleport on
DOBERMAN pupp •es, A.KC !;jOO d
SR 7
lines mce look1ng Phone (304 )
-----~--WE LOVE captunng baby in fvll
675 6655
color ph otos at THE PHOTO
PLACE In lime for Chm tmos
too For appointment
992

----

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Lonesvme, Ohto 45741

PIANO INSTRUCTIONS . Ch1ldren 's
and oduhs June VanV ranken,

WJN AT BRIDGE

Weddings

Roule'11o• 121

•

•tten •

Schools

TRAILER SALES

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
U99S
Local I owner car, green fin ish, green vinyl roof. radial
W·w tires, air cond , V-8, with automatic power
steering and brakes

6:3()-N8C News 3,4,'15, ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; fiodgepodge Lodge 20; lTV
Ullll1allon 33.

·=-== ...............

Commercial

$3195
w-w tires, clean

*"''

0

Aerial

brekes, rally wheel s, radio, black and very attractive.

1975 LUV PICKVP
W lt.h topper , low mileage,

eAtw•l••

PHOTOGRAPHY

INTERVIEWS will be held Mnday
No'o' 22 1976 stortip g ot 11 C()
o.m o'clock In the off ice of th.
Me•gs County (omminionen,
Court House Pomeroy, Qh1o
for orchtteds who are on the
approved lilt of State Ar
chllec ts (Public Works State of
Oh•o) for the proposed multi
purpose fo(lllly lor Me•gs
County , Please call lor appoint
ment 99'2·2895

7:DO-Truth or Cons. 3: To Ttlllht Trulh ~ ; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show I ; News 10; To Tell lht
Tro lh -13; My Three Sons 15, Anyone for 'TennysOn?
20; Gelling On 33.
7·3(f-Hollywood Squares 3, ~ ; Ohio Slalo Lollery 6;
PrTce Is Right 8; MacNelf .Lehrar Reporl 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on lhe Road 131 Dolly
IS .
8 DO-Oick Van Dy ke 3 3.~ . 15:-Wel come Back, l(oller
6,13; Wa llons 8,10, VIsions 20. Maslerplece Thea Ire
33
8:3G--Barney Mlltor 6,13.
9:DO-Besl Sellers 3,4, lS, Tony Randall 6, 13; Hawa ii
Flve-0 B; VIsions 33. Movie " No Way lo Treat a
Lady " 10.
1
9.3()-Nancy Walker 6,13; Jeanne Wolf Wllh 20.
10 DO-Gibbsvllle 3,&lt;,15: Slreels of San Francisco 6,13 ;
Barnaby Jones 8. News 20
10·3G--Woman 2D.33 .
li ·DO-News 3,~. 6, 8 ,1 0 , 13, 15, Mac Nell Lehrer Report
33
11 3G--Johnny Carson 3.~. 1S , SlrHis of San Francisco
6,13. Kojak B; Mary fiarlman 10. ABC News33.
12 .00-Movlo "The Chapman Reporl" 10; Janak! 33.
12 :3()--Movla " See The Man Run" 8
12.&lt;G--Oan August 6,13.
1 oo-T'Omorrow 3,-t,
1 50-News 13.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER II, lt76
S DO-B ig Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch e.
Mlsler Rogers 2G,33 ; Slar Trek IS
S : ~News6; Family Alfa lr 8; Elec Co 20,33 ; Adam
12 13
6.DO-Nem 3, ••8.10,13,1S, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
Consumer E ~tperlence 33

QUAUTY

2270.

NEW HOLLAND 63 bu shel manure
sp rEtOder, P T 0 New Ideo
small manure spreader, both
good cond•hon Al so, Iorg e
tandem fe rt1l1zer spreader
Phone 9-49-2770

LOS ANGELES (UP!)

because you're well lhoug hl of But
by others Peop le Just want to do
ntce thmgs for you

ha•e • gun •hool Solu&lt;doy ••

STATE

less may be better when it
AOUI\RIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 1i) comes to clothing Playboy

· G;j

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

THE RACINE Firt Deportment will . . - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - ; ; ; ; - - -·-

2531

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19)

' .. ·~

F0 r Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
.

!975

hens acceplect f1rst day•ot

·

' -fi~~W'tln~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '11wrsday, Nov.IS, 1976

PrillliiSMISIINSWIIIMrl

Now
circled !ellen
to form the 1urprtu an1wn, u
by the above clll'loon.

I

"(11IIIIJ"
(AIMwtrt tomorro"}

Jumbl.., BATCH FLUID PENCIL IQUANA

\'eturday't

I

Mtwu1 Tldltf " overturned " In tile 4Grlc..:....''NIQHT"

BA1!NEv-- - -

I CAN'T TALK TO HER ...
5!1E'S MAD AT ME BECAUSE
I DIDN'J MAKE MI./ BED...

..

EVER'BODY'S 1ALKIN'
ABOUT THAT TERRIBLE
FIGHT ''IE HAD WIF
'lORE WIFEMATE,
LUKEV···

'IO'RE A DISGRACE

10 1H' MENFOLKS
OF HOOTIN' HOLLER!!

MfWBE I'LL WHUP
HER NEXT.TIME I

�'
t.--'!'beDailySentlnel,Mlddleport.Pomeroy,O., Tbunday, Nov. l8, 19'16
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

s
P M
Day
Publicat ion .

IN LOVING memory of our dvor

Before

Ctnc•llatlons,

father Steve Eblin who passed
away one year ago, Nov . 18,

cor~ec ·

publlcetlon

We wonted •a. much to keep you
We watched you day by day
Until at, lost w•th breoktng hearts
We sow you slipping away .
You wore a crown of pol1enCe,
As you struggled on and on
And hands that rest forever,
Are tht hands thot ore so strong
God watched you wh ile you sui·
fered
,
He knew you hod your shore
He tenderly closed yo ur weary
eyes
And took you m His care
Dear God, please toke th1s
message
:Jo our loved one up above
Tell h1m how mut h we m nu h1m,
And gtve h tm all our love '
So Sadly m•ued by ch1 ldren
Ed1th . Art1e Myrtht Madelme
grond chddrvn and gree t
grandch ildren

'

REGULATIONS
,.he Publisher reserns

the r l9ht to edlt or relect

any

ads

ab ~

Cleemed

ttctl onal The publisher
will not ce responsible for

morr than one IncorreCT
1nsert lon

RATES
For Wanr Ad Ser\llct

cents per word one

.S

lns.er1 10n

,

M ln1m um Charge Sl 00
IJ

cents per word th ree

consec ut1ve Insertions
26 cents r,er wotd sbc
consecu tive nsertlons
25 Per Cent Olscourft on
paid

ads

and

wlltirn 10 dJ~ys

ads

pa1d

CARD OF THANKS

&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 for
50
word

.nlnlm,um ,

• E'ac

ce nts

aiJdlt !onal word J

BLIND -ADS
Ad ditional 25c Charge

per Advert 1semenr

OFFICE HOURS
to 5. 00 p m
am to 12 00

GUARANTEED

8 JO a m
Dil lY . a JO

JOBS

137&lt; .&lt;0

s•ngle , SS02 80 momed Army
Recru11 1ng (01&lt;1 ) 593 3022, col i
coiled

Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 2156

EXPE RIENCED
bab~ slt ter
hous ekeeper
needed
at
Washi ngton, W Vo 40 houn
wee~
w1th other benef1ts
Mob•le home furn•shed for
pr1vate l1vmg quarters h
cell ent
oppor tumty
f or
employment and own place to
l"1e Phone (30A) 663 6088 after

NOTICES
ATTN . I!
All HOUSEWIVES
A~ l Ya rd Sa tes Rumm age ,
Porcti an d Basement Por ch
and Basement Sates , etc
must be pa 1d m advance
Get yours •n early by
stopp ing by our off •te .111
Th e Da•ly SenTinel , Ill
Court 51 or wr.tmg Bo x
729 , Pomeroy , Oh•o 457 69
w1th your r em1H an ce

·'

6p m
1970 FORD E300 von , good con d1
t1on , Also , Dune Buggy extra
sharp Need mce pleasure
boot Phone 9-49·2770

AstroGrapM

I NEED one good soles person to
he lp me Ill my buslneu
S30 000 per yea r for righ t per
_ son P~one 949 2770 lor oppt

LOCAL BU SINESS has on openmg
lor o person to os s1st m
Bemtco Bodo Oool
customer 1so le s, some del•v ery
o n~ heavy lilting Send your
For Friday, Nov. 19, 1t78
work &amp;)(pedence personal tn
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 1&amp;) A
formot1on and phone number
well -placed fnend who can be
to Box 729L C· O The Do•ly Sen
relied upon may have an unusual
!!_nel P o~e rov Oh1o 45769_
proposi tion today that cou ld
beneht yo u Listen closely

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II a
pal has someone he s been wa nting you to meet, try to get
together today It could be one
with whom you have a lot In c om -

mon
GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20) You
tunctlon best today if left to you r
own devtces partic ularly m a
crea ltve area Let your tmaglnal• on run rampant

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Spontan eous thmgs will t~,.~rn out
Mst tor you today Go whe re
both the scenery and the com pany are new and di fferent

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) What you
need t o ma~e t h is day
me morable •s to have an lm·
promptu get-together at your
place w1th someohe you' re fond

of
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Good
news may come to you today m
an unexpected manner. Tl'le
glad tldmgs are 1n regards to
someth ing soc tal

LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0cl 23) Lady

Luc ~ could be rld mg on your
s houlder today 1n fl nanc 1al
matters A famtly member may
pu t you on t o something
profttable

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Today, others Will fm d you par ticular ly ap pealmg You ma~e a
very favorable 1mpress1on on
th ose who meet you tor th e llrst
tt me

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) You could be lucky today by
being In the nght place at the
nght ttme Good fortu ne corr.es
thro ugh a untq u e chain of
events

NOTICE
BidS Wil l be re ceived at the
of1 1Ces of Fultz and Knig h t,
unlit Saturday , No vember 20 ,
1976, at 10 o'c lock A M for the
sale of the Mar~ Pa r k
r esi d en ce sit ua te d a t 371
North Th•rd Avenue. M id
dleport , Oh io Also btds will be
re ce1ved unt i l th e same t ime
fo r th e sate at the busmess
budding , conslst mg of two
stor e r oo m s owned by Mary
Park at the co rn er ot Mil l
Street and Sou th Second
Ave nu e, Middleport. Oh •CI
Inter es ted part1es may appear
at t h e lime of sale and bid
co m petlllvely
tor
ei ther
prop erty Part1es mte r es ted m
Inspecti ng the pr opert y '"
Adv an ce of sate date ma y
meke appomtment to do so by
c&amp; lli ng 997 7186 , Pomeroy ,
Oh i o
The
und ers i gned
reserves th e r 1ght to r e tect
any and all b1dS
Bernard V F ultz
E Kecutor of the Estate ot
Mary A Par ~ . deceased
( 11}. 12, u , 16 , 11, 18, 19, 6tc

Someone new IS about to enter
yo ur hie Keep a sharp weather

eye peeled Today could be lhe
day

You may have some pleasant
su rpnses m store tod ay, simply

legal Not•ce
The undersigned will sell at
publt c sa le for cash the
follow1ng motor veh1cle to be
tak en from John Pierce , 311
Wetzgall Street, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769
19 7&lt;1 Bui ck, se rial no
4B27 H4K116097
T he sale Will be held at The
Farmers Bo!lnk and Sav1ngs
Company , 21 1 west Second
Street. Pomeroy , Oh 10, at
10 00 A M on lhe 19th dl!ly of
November , 1976
The unders igned reser~o~es
th e r )ght to bid
The Farmers Ba nk and
S a~o~lng s Company
Pomeroy , Ohio
111) u , 16, 18, :nc

PUT JT

ON, HUGH

magazine's

for

centerfold girls.
the

PlByboy

Corporation's stoclthold.."'''s in

recent years, less

has

been

PISCES (Feb. 20·Morch 20) You_.mOOeJ. - - may be dlscussmg something t o-

But founder and Playboy·

day whan a l,lash ol tnsplralton in.cblef Hugh M. Heffner had

, hits you Don t d1scard the 1dea
.'· ~ You ca n later put 11 to good use

:

•:

::
:;
~; ·The
•

90me good news foi- them

'1\i. .y, He reported the

first quarter of flscall977 was
the most profitable in tile
hlrt-hrlnl 1 corporation's hiBtory.
vn '-' ~
Profits of more than $3.7
Nov. 19, 1978
mlllion, compared to lBSB
coming year Is not ltkety to than 1900,000 in the same

ya_J(

be a run.ol -the·mlll one There

quarter last year, which

:: are some pleasant surpnses quadrupled dividends from 10
ahead You II do more lhtngs you cents 'to 41 cents 8 share, be

,"
•
•:
:

,

enjoy
(Are you a Scorpto? Bernice
Osol has wrttten a spectal Astro·
Gra ph Letter lo r you For your
copy send 50 cen ts and a se/1.
addressed stamped envelope to

• .. Astro-Graph, P 0 Box 489 .
Radto Ctty Statton New York,
•' :..N Y 10019 Be su rt} 10 ask lor
1 !' Scorp1o Volume 1 )

..

'

.,

there are time llmlta for
submitting

' ~'

medical
insurance
clallns
to
Medicare. You always bave
at least 15 m~tha to eullmlt
your clalmB, but It Ia wlae to
lllbmlt them u soon u your

annual 160.00 deducUble Li

met.

Delbert Swisher's

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Tnpllcaht
November 9, 1976

Tu.11

Std .

Roval Oak Pa rk
57
Royal Cr own Cola
55
ShafT1rock Mofel
54
New York Cfothlng
34
Ruth 's Beauty shop
32
Shirt s. Lid
32
H 1gh Ind i vidual game,
Nora RICe , 177 second h•gh
Indivi dua l ga m e, Marlene
Wilson , 173
High series Mar lene
W•lson , d85 . seco nd high
serh!!., Nor a Rice , &lt;156
Tel!l m high game - Royal
Oak Park , -467 , team high
series, Roy !!II Oak Park , 1.323.
Pomeroy Lanes
Morning Glories
Nov . 9, 197&amp;
Sid

Newell Sunoc o
62
G &amp;J Au to Par ts
50
Sears
43
Karr &amp; VanZandt
42
Roach 's Gun Sho p
28
No 2
IS
High Ind ivi dual game
Alma Pool er , 118, second
h 1gh Individual ga me ---.
OeJorl s Tyree . 173
H igh Individual se ries AlmB Poo le r , &lt;147 , second
h igh
l ndtv•dulll
ser i es ,
Deloris Ty r ee , 441
High team game - No . 2,
J1 51 , h1gh team ser ies
Newell Sunoc o, 2.213

and

1

EleC. Service
Anv type of furnue 1nd
heat1ng system . New and
old . lly lht hour or contract
price. All work gu1r•nteed .
Phone
U14l 446 -3177,

G•llipolis,

said.

Team

Remodeling,
Plumbing

0~10 .

t,~h:~~· •' ~· bu-·~ ~'•g

I•
NOW occ•pUng plano students ,
begmners lnttrmf&lt;hates ocf.
vonced student• Coli
m.

@)·

2 SIGNS
OF

MONTGOMERY

PROFESSIONAL

197SCHEVYELCAMINO
$3995
Classic, 350, V-8, automatic, power steering and

radio ,

Mf iGS COUNTY Fish and Game
Ann . wdl hold a meeting Nov
18 ot 7830 pm ol Coon
Hunter's Club rooms on
Snowball H•ll ot Syracuse New
membersh ip cords w1l1 be
ovo1lble

-

669·.(12,0 t'leningl
F~RIIONI

stNI "ottucb, l"t ~
fw"llOII. lli1111 564.U...... . ~ ·
•
10271rTlo

U~1BRI~ .
For sofa,

992 2270

~~~====~~~-~

23 h 1973 Wilderness travel
lroiler
stove
relr1gerotor
freeter tub and shower , forced
o1r heat double bowl s• nk
oven w1th power plant For
sole. S3 700 The number to call
SHOOTING Motch 1Ust off Rt 7
IS 985·3875
by pass by Rock Spnngs
Cemetefy 12 noon, deer slugs
and shot. Sponsored by l u cky 7
Gun Club
SHOOTING MATCH
Broodrun
Rod and Gun Club New Ha ven .
W Va Saturday Nov 20, 5
p m Pubhc Welcome

--

LOCUST POST S, rou nd or spl1t
Phone 9~9 · 277 4
COAL, hmeslone and calc1um
chlonde and colc1um brme for
dust con trol an d spec1ol moo;1ng
salt fo r formers Mom Stree t
Pomeroy Oh10 or phon e 992·
LOST Pee~ A Poo Poodle lost
38'11
be tween Hobson and Me1gs·
Goll1o Llne Mondoy n1ght If 1Q71 HONDA. Cl -.4 50 12 000
~-d p leos~ coli 9~2 7572
miles msy bor crash bors
pull bock handle bon new lire
LOST IN Tuppers Plom s, Iorge
and seals
Scrambler s1de
mole Atredale brown, ton ond
p1pes, ~ Co~ 949 2480
cin namon m co lOr Ca ll {01~ )
667 3829 e~o~e n mgs o r be fore 8 POTATOES and pumpkms C W
0
m _
Pro ff1tt Portland Oh1o Phone
LOST Yellow cot , fa mily pet · 8~3 · 2 25.4
answers lo the name of COAl f ;· sale O pen 0 do s per
YEL LOW BABY l os t in VICin ity
week and e~en 1 ngs For f~rther
_of S1x th l•ncoln and Peod St ,
ml ormot 1on call (6 14) 367 7338
Mtddleport If found, call 992
Lost Lod•es leather b•l lfold 1n
fron t of Duttons m Mtddleport
Co 11 9-49,2510

APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
ROUTE

689

PHONE

WOULD THE man who called Mon·
WilKESVIllE, (614) 669 376S
day n1ght co ncerning the
Peek A -Poo poodle w1th cham FULLER Brush Products lor sale
Phone 992 J,j1 0
on wh1ch he found plea se call
ag~t~?~?,2 ..
CAMPER , $600
Also
horse
tra1ler $.450 Phone ~6 14 ) 698
LOST Wh1le mole Scath e dog
3m
Answers to Froslie Coll992·
2650 after 3 p m or 992 2349 Garage Equ1pmen t
che ap
be fore 3 p m Reword
bu siness buddmg 50 x 60 , ex
cement
cei lent cond1llon
7--ur;_ -~ -. ~
--;-":::; 1!::..::dnve Rutland Co rp ., pnce
reduced Ca ll 7&lt;~2 2602 Rea son
FOR SALE or rent Nice 3 bedroom
lor sellmg · poor heolth
home Will se ll on lond co n

F ·s&amp;f.kli~~~~
~
!:__

tr act , $1 000 down w1lh
payme nts $175 per month or
rent for $175 per month Phone

(61&lt;) 667 3436

TD2&lt;1 INTERNATIONAL bulldozer
good cond1hon Phone 949·

2770
24FT MOTOR home loaded w1 th
e~o~erything beauhlul w.ll to~e
trodes Phone 9~9 2n0

Wmteit-to.:Biir.:
---c~- - --:OLD furmture Ice boxes , brass
beds
wall te lephones and
ports, or complee hquseholds
Wr1te M D M1ller Rt 4
Po~ roy, Oh•o_ £ oll 992-7?__~
CASH po1d for all mokes and
models of mob1le homes
Phone area code 614·-423· 9531

-

New T V Shop ' ElectroniC TV
Clime
Sen11 ce call $5 95
Phone 992 6306
BEE LINE fASHJONS Phone 992
3373
PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sto
t1on Phone 247 2b8A oiler 5

TRACTORS , 1961 Mo ssey
Ferguson 35 gasolme lop con
dttton 1971 John Deere 82
D1esel very good cond•hon
1973 Maney Ferguson, 175
Diesel on ly 600 hour s Sh1nn 's
Tractor Soles , Leon, W Vo
Ooy phone 458· 1630 e11enmgs

"-458·1752 _ _ _ _

1968 MUSTANG 289 auto , p s,
fle w !ires Phone 985 4209.
1973 FO ~D G'llox •e one owner
cor Ph one 742·2202 onyhme
exc epl Sun da11 Rev Lloyd
Grimm
PRICED LOW 59 acres 6 room
house, both outbwld mgs near
all 3 Me1gs Mmes m Danvil le
$23 500 Phone 742 2766
1970 4 wheel dnve tru ck , phone
992 5349 or 992-2395

1-4&lt;6-8570
COINS CURRENCY , tokens old
pocket walches and chams,
s1l~o~er and gold We need 196.4
and older silver coins Buy, sell,
or rrade Co li Roger Wams ley,
742·2331

12 GAUGE Spnngheld shotgun,
16 shot Marlin rifhJ, 10 speed
b1ke : rod1o bathroom heaters
Coli 7~2· 2078
CLARINET , good cond•t•on , $65.
307 locust St
Middleport,
Oh1o.

IF VOU have o service to offer,
wont to buy or sell someth1ng,
oe lo o~i ng lor work ,
or
whatever . , you 'll get results
foster with o Sent1nel Want Ad

Call9922156

..

-~-

---

~

---

IN DASH 23 channel CB om.fm
rod1 o, B track tope deck Call

992 3965 .
3 YEAR OLD Regtstered Suffolk
ram Phone 992·7165.
2 COMPLETE acquonum s w1th
stands Co11 after 4 30 p m
I 949 2862

-·- ---------

1%6

OlDS Cutlass

Svpreme,

$225 Also Alli s Ch&lt;:ilmers com

____ ----

b1ne,,$175 Phone949·2179

-

'GRANNY'S FlEA MARKET open

do•lv 10 to 5 ~~ Route 15-4,
tu rn left on 325 . come to Don·
v1ll e and follow s1gns More in·
formation ca ll7~2 2-481

YAROSA"L"E,' F r~do-;- , -;;l e ho;;,
Chester Bridge, Rt , 2-48 across
from Golf Course Gas stove,
$25 . blue loborqtory bowl. coal
gas heater, chtldren's clothes,
and women's SI Ze 7 to 12
Phone 985 3335
YARD SAlE, Fndoy, Nov 19 m
room bock of D &amp; J s Houle of
Fobrl$'· 1 mlle south of Mid·
dl.,.rt on S.R. 7 Junior
women 1s and ch ildren's dothes
and $hoes some extro n1ce and
new Items gnd other m•~&lt;

~

CHOICE ear co rn , $2 00 bu5hel.
Phone 7-42 2359

FOR SALE

One good used Ho1polnr
retrlger•tor
S100
One good
used G. E .
refrigerator
U50
One good used Holpotnt
range ,
UO
New co.op water softener,
Reg Sl~ 9
NOW U99
Ou1s Humldtfiers, m1.1u~ t
OH800
n~LY lto7 .9l
One good used Homellte
chatn saw
$100

Pomeroy Landm..

~Jack W. ('.ar~~~ Mgr.
Phone 1'2·21tl

~
...
ANY PITCH

'6.95
Ph 992·2174

'J

ANY SIZE

.. s

3 AND 4 RM fu rn•shed and un
fu rmshed opts Phone 992

5434

We repa1r the old and butld
the new Papenng, pamttng, panellngJ wmdow
replacements ,
glass ,
roofmg, hot moe, Sldtng,
storm Wtndows , door~ ,
remodel kitchens
and
bath s, etc Phone 949 -2023
No Sunday Calls Please
10. 14 1 mo pd

~nly

Co/1"992 7639

.. 7 2
¥ K71
t A9 3·
.. A K 10:12
Both vu lnerable

Located in Langsville
Box 28·A
West

North East

Suuth

Pass

1•
Pass
J N T Pass

1 N 'I'
Pass

l (o

FURNI SHED two bed room opt
TUPPERS PLAINS OHIO Three
adu lts on ly No pets M1d
bedroom house, lom•ly room
dleport Ph one 992 3874
f~reploce 2 baths , d1 shwasher
- .
2 bedroom unfurnished opt m
range, garbage disposal ,
Mtddleport Phone 992 3129 or
carpet sun deck large lot

--- -

'192·5434

$26 ,500. Phone(614) 667 ·6304

HOUSE for rent , 5 rooms an d BASHAN STORE A lways o money
both unfurntshed
In M1d
maker W11l hel p f1nonce •f
dleport Phone 992 ~57
needed Phone 949 2770 W•ll
toke trades
ONE bedroom -,r~1 le'r o; ! ~ ~o
pets , $30 week or $120 per
mon1h lltlilt 1es po1d Phone

V.rgtiB. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomeroy,

PRICED LOW , 59 acres 6 room
house , both outbu1ldmgs near
oil 3 Meigs Mmes m Oonvdle.
$23 500 Phone 7-42·2766

2 ACRES - M or Lon nice
creek bottom . 14x10 mobile
Br .

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toa sters 1ron s all
small appliance s lawn mower,
next to State H1ghwoy Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985

382S

Wil l do odd tabs , roofmg, pamtmg gutter wor k Phone 992

7409

home,

Coli

air

coodltloned, 1112 baths and
nice 2 room garage with 1!2

balh
RUTLAND - 9 room
house, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
lull basement. porches &amp; 2
car garage
MIDDLEPORT - S yrs.
old. 4 bedroom home with
nat . ga S F.A furnace ,
disposal, birch kitchen and
level lot. Only 523.000

nice shade trees, &amp; garage.
Asking 512,000.

RUTLAND

-Aboul

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
home wllh modern bath ,
nat . gas F.A furnace and

4

acres. Older ·home has 3

bedrooms, balh , d ining
room, natural gas heat, out
cellar, storage bldg., alum.

siding. S1S,500 00.
RACINE - Lovely 6 yrs.
old home. About 2 acres. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, nice
kllchen. lots of cabinets,
disposal, dish :washer, full
dry basement, central heat

and are cond , close to HI
school $29,000.00 .
POMEROY - About I
acre, mobile home hookup,
sewer, water , concrete
pallo, lovely wooded area
JUST $2,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 story
br ick, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
balh. enclosed rear porch,
natural gas F.A. furnace.
Very nice level lot ,
concrete block

garage

$B.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot, 1112 story frame, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. dining
room ,
utility
room ,
carpeting, paneling VERY
NICE 522.000.00.
LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY
NO SALE
NO CHARGE
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-2259

WHO O'YUH S'POSE
IT WAS? INDIANS?

lHE. PLACE
IN A MESSH OP~

lull basement. $S500.

SATISFIED-

MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot near the river, 8 room
lral"e house with 2 baths .
gu

heat

and

garage. Only 512,000.
NEAR GAVIN - 6 room
modern home J Brs ,
enclosed

bath ,

nice

cabinets In the kitchen,
natural gas F A. furnace &amp;

city like water. 522.000.
11 ACRES - Near Wllksvllle, 4 Br. residence. 1'1' ·
baths, gas F .A furnace
and good spring . New
fence
IS

ACRES -

3 bedroom

r~novated home. Gas we1l1

&amp; F.A. furnace City like
watar and 2 balhs. Nice
kitchen , laundry room &amp; 2

car garage 532,500
LAND IS IN SHORT
SUPPLY . BUY YOURS
NOW.

SPVIHG ~

PRETlY SMART SCUT1LE,
0 1 YOU, OLIVER, EH? WEll,
PlAtntH ' THEM
IIFE L1 SURE
PHOtW LETTERS
HE'D BE
AHD THAT DIAI1Y-j SNCOP!t-16

~=-----~,~~AR~OUND -

Blown

Then he cashed dum my 's
queen or cl ubs, led a second
club to ward hts hand and went
up wttlt Ius ktng Wes t dropped
a low d1amond and th e
student' s fourth club trick had
gone mlo li mbo F1ve mmutes
later the oppone nts had chalk-

Insulation Services

Overseas Mi ssion 10

6:45-Mornlng Reporl J
6 so-Good Morning . Wesl VIrginia 13
6.55-Good Morning , Trl Slale 13.
7 oo- Today 3. ~ . 1S; Good Morning. Amerlca6,13: CBS
News B. Chuck While Reporls 10.
7 O~Bugs Bunny&amp; Friends 10.
1.3G--Schoolles 10. ·
8:0D-Lassle 6: Capl Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesa111e 51 33
8·3G--B ig Valley 6
9·oo-A M 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,1S. , Lucy Show B;;
Mike Douglas 10
9: J()-Cross Wlfs 3, One Llfelo Live 6, Good Day B.
10 OO.Santord &amp; Son 3.••15.• Price Is Righi 6,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 ! ~General Hospllal 6
11 DO-Wheel of Forlune 3,15; Weekday 4, Edge of
Nlghl6, Gambit 8,10 , Morning with D J . 13.
11 3()--Siu mpers 3,4, IS , Heppy Oays 6.13 . Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame 51 20,33.
ll ' l~T ake Kerr 8, Ms FlxiiiO
12.DO-News 3,6,8,10, Don fio 13; Bob Brau~ 4, so.
Grand Slam 15.
12:3()--Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
''r TomOrrow a, 10
.
12 S~NBC News 3, IS.
1 00-Somersef 3, Ry1m's Hope 6,13, Concentration B;
Young 8. the Restless 10; Not For Women Only IS
1.3()--Days ol Our Lives 3.&lt;.1S; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns B.1 0
2 D0-$20,000 Pyramid 13, Dinah 6.
2·3G--Doclors 3,4,15; One Life lo Live 13, Guiding
Llghl 6,10
3·0G--Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family B. lO t
Crockell's Vlclory Garden 20
3 · 1 ~General fiospllal 13
3·3()--Bewllched 6; Malch Game 8,10, Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20
4 DO-Misler Cartoon 3, Marcus Welby, M.O 4: fiowdy
Doody 6, Somersel 1S; Mickey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame 51 . 20,33; Movie " Hanky Tonk" 10; Dinah
13.4 ·3D-My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6;
Parlrldge Family 81 Fllnlstones 1S
s·oo-B ig Valley 3, Merv Griffin ~ ; Brady Bu nch B:
Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Slar Trek 1S.
l ·3G--NewS6, Family Atfalr a. Elec. Co. 20,33, Adam12 13
6 DO-News 3,&lt;.8, 10,13,\l ; ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6.3()--NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grllllth 6;
CBS News 8.10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; VIlla Alegre
33.
7·oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Truth 4: Bowling for ,
Dollars 6; Andy Williams 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My ThrH Sons 15: Ohio J9urna120: Black
Perspective on lhe News 33,
7:3G--Porler Wagoner 3; Break the Bank 4; Candid
Camera 6; Treasure Hunt 8, Mac. Nell Lehrer
Report 20,33 ; Andy Williams 10, Nama Thai Tune
13; Pop Goes lhe Counlry IS.
8 DO-Sa.ntord &amp; Son 3,&lt;,15; 3 . ~. 15 : Oonnv &amp; Morl•
6,13; Lawrence Welk 8; Washington Week In
Preview 20,33, OSU + Michlgan Preview 10
B JG-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3,4,15, WaH Slroet Week 20,33
9 DO-Rockford Flies 3,~,1S; Movie " Revenge for a
Rape" 6,13; Movie "I Wan( to Keep My Baby I"
8,10, Oocumenlary Showcase 20,33.
IO ·OD-Serplco 3,.,1S; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.

A Nevada reader wants to
know what you should btd m
second sea t after a one-club
openmg b1d to your rtg ht You
hold
• AQXXIC . X t AQXX KA XX

The c~orrect overea ll t:&gt;l one
spude You hope to be 11hl&lt;• lo

the Ja cobys" care of th1s
newspaper The Jacob ys w111
answer md1vtd11al questiOns
11 stamped, self-addressee

envelopes are enclose d The
most mterestu1g questiOn s
w1fl be tJsed m flu s column
and w11f rer;erve r;o pres of
.JA CO BY MODERN )

Fiuntllll Autlab~
Blown 1nto Wills &amp;Athu

~

STURM
WINOOifS I OOOIIS

REPLACE.ENI
WINOOWS

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Asian river
I "Call
3 One kind
Me - "
of jockey
6 Terrify
I Formic acid
11 Food actd
source
f.(), MU
M, I'M OOT
12 Bird of
5 Mater&lt;;.He's
prey s
familias
weapon
6 Wander
SIC I&lt; ... [Ur-Jt:~ .,_,
13 Nuptial sign 1 Dray
I'MNf;
(2 wds.)
8 Bqxing great
15 Any ciwnsy 9 Ex·piiCher,
boat
Preacher 16 Make lace 10 Purpose
17 Culturally II Abrasion
chichi
11 Ethereal
19 Destiny
18 Beam
22Seem
19 Concu25 Subtle
piscence
essence
%0
Viva voce
26 "Lt'l
%1 Subdue
~!{iQ-2[GiLj€;j;e! Abner"
Z2 Love (Sp. )
~
character

BORN LOSER
I"

LARR~,!!,~'~DER

P'

Af;il'£$ IX!Ol.E:;_:L{·~;;;/
'ioJse;

4-1 ~I mo

1

HIRW
I&amp;

REMODELING Plumbmg heottng
and all ty pes of general re pair
Work guaranteed 20 years ex
per1e nce Phone 992·2409

MliS&amp;~F

SEWING MACHINE Repc trs, ser·
~ 1 ce all makes 992 228.4 The
Fobr1c Sho p , Pomeroy .
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Servtce We sharpen Sc•ssors .
EXC AVATING , dozer looder and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re. w11l haul
1111 d1rt, to sod, ltmestone and
grovel Coil Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7009 ,
night phone 992 3525 or 992-

~M~~··

Yesterday's Aoower'
23 Boundary 35 German
21 Beseech
river
25 Indian city 36 Punster
27 Pigeon
37 Nigerian
31 Covered
city
with dirt 38 Through
32 Nasal
(comb. form)
sensation 39 Ttbetan
33 Wound
gazelle
slightly
40 Call the
31 Formerly
shots

rr-~;'--r.~.-

(2 wds.)

Palm
leaf

29 Voice of
the - "
30 King
1

j

MOBILE home for sole or rent, 3
bedrooms ol uhht1es patd
Phone992 775 1

$8.000 Phone.992-3333.

SEPTIC TANI&lt;S cleaned Modern
Somtotion 992 3954 or 992·
1972 CHAMPION 12x60, un ·
2426
furn1shed , except carpehng
and k 1tchen opphance s lots of WILL do roofmg , construciiOn ,
extras must se ll Phone 992.
plumb1ng and heohng No tob
2292 after 5 p.m
too large or ioo sm oll. Phone
1971 WINDSOR mob1l e home,
742·'23&lt;18
with expondo Pcrl1olly furn 1sh :Cc:
A::RP::E::N::T::l_:R: "IIo_o_r,.,n-g-. - ,e--.11:---ln-g,
.... - e·d: - ss-;soo- -F.-no-nc mg-ponelmg Phone99'2 ·2759
ovodobte to qua lo l iGcl person
Also, a Boys 1C speed b•cyde DOZER wor~ and weldmg. Con2~ mch $60 Ph one 992-7729
tact James Persons, Rt I ,
Roc1ne , on Carmel Rood.
24 x 60 DOUBLE WIDE mob1le
home m Syracuse on 190 x 55 MOBILE Home Repai r Eiec .,
plumb1ng and healing Phone
lo t, totol electrtc Call992-3792

992·5858 .
ELECTRONIC 1.V CliNIC, New

HOMESITES for sole, 1 ocre and
up Mtddleport near Rut land.

Coii992-74BI .
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
oi l elec , 1 acre, M iddleport.
dose to Ru tland Phone m.
SMALL farm for sole , 10% down,
owner fmorlced Monroe Coun.
ty W. Vo Phone (3().4) 772·

3102 or (30&lt; )172·3227

m .m5.

-

·- ~~~~~.,~~~~~-=~:-----=~-~~~----~--~·~=:=:=:::::::::::~::-::~--~~-~-- ~eipr~ian
TH[;RE'S THE 6COD
W££K. ROSilA
- COME BKK IN A
W!LL
HUNT/N6 LOfXSE, .AND TH£RSS MY
TAI&lt;E MARVELOUS CARE: OF US !rGOOD 0/...D HCJU5EKEEPE:R, ffi~~~l~--l
ROSITA !:'-

r-----

992·3129 . or 992-5&lt;3&lt;
59 acres, 6 room house, both,
portly corpete'd , two outdug basement ,
bu•ldings
one·lh~rd
lllloble, mineral
rights located near Danville
Redut:;;ed for • quick sale,

$23.500 Phone 7&lt;2-2766
NEW 3 Bedroom totolelec. home ,
1,113 a(res, rural water ,
ocreotor sephc system, neor

longsvllle. Coll7&lt;2 2819.
HOUSE, 5 rooms ond both, drilled
well , 35 A more or less• 1n
country Phone 247·2286

--'-::--

APPROX . 10 ocres on Chester
water good rood . Beautiful
bullding lototion. Will h•lp
ftnonce 1f needed Phone 949

2770

r-+-lr-; J)l]J~llJ];f:t.:::~Z:.~t::

12 Prevention
13 ~=~~
11 Wralh

Unscramble theKe four Jumbles,
one letter tn each square, lo

DOWN

form four ordinary word1.

1 Spanish
belle
II J8

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

AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

One leiter simply stands for another. In th(o sample A 11
used for the three L's, X lor t he two O's, ele Single leiters.
apostrophes 1 the length and formation o( the word• are all
hm ts. Each ~ay the &lt;ode leiters arc ditrerent.

WINNIE

r:::===::Jilllli::=~T7~ r--=---=-~~=-"'V--::-:-==-::-::-:::~-.,.--::7.':':':--::-::-::::V S w P L·,,- E X J
,,.,,,w WE
... IN FACT,,oHE5EEMo
HMMM ... MAy~E
OWE HE!&lt;
A FAVOR'...

MORE LIKE FAM!LY 111AN

uc•·

,

vr'";J-~~114E UNCLE

IRAN
AWAY Fr20M!

TI-Ho WILL WORK V B R S L
OUT FINE A FTER
ALL I

WB

WM g

WMS

WB

BPU

MOTORCYQ.ES

••'n PRICE SALE"

Inventory.

Pleau,

no

phone coils or dooltrs. Sole .
ends Nov. 30, 1976.

Athens Sport Center
140 CO[UMIIUS ROAD '
ATHENS, OHIO
Slit HOurs:
to.m.tu p.m.
Monday lllru S.turd.oy

-·-

JII

•

USLESHW

NS

QSXQ . -QGXZS

'
EXJ
QS

t;OUNOS. ' 't=NT"
ON CI&lt;:IME.

II

LMXWWSUSQ

MOONID ~
"l

t

'
anon,. the
I
I
V~
":::::;~=.~~~~
!
- ~~~~:J~•u1,.•ted

f

Yeol'erday'a Cryptoguote: TilE KEY TO IL\PPINESS IS TilE
WilL TO WORK AND TilE WISDOM TO ENJOY IT. - 0 A
BATI1STA
. .
C&gt; 1976 Kln&amp; feaLurn Sy ndic l tr, Inc.

KAWASAKI ·&amp;SUZUKI

r

PRAILL

EBGWGSUL

All 1976 modola ltfl In
stock. Buy tho first blko 11
regulor rellil and gol 111tt
lnd HALF PRICE. BlkH
must be In 111tt somo price
brocket, this Is o ono lime
only sole to reduct

1

CRYPTOQUOTES

Commercfol property approx 17
acres , level lond, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio Route

'

Nillw'llli 11

12 :DO-Movle " See No Evil 10; Janak! 33.
12 :4()--Mod Squad 61 WrestHng 13
1:DO-Midnlghl Special 3,4,1S.
1.4G--News 13.
2:3G--News 3.
3 DO-Mov ie " Panic In lhe Streets" 3.
~ : 3G--Movle "Hole! for Women" 3.
6·DO-Movle " Dangerously Yours" 3.

Gold (Sp.)
Bad news
.16 NupUal
} symbol
• (2 wds .)
II Mode of

GRAVELY SERVICE - So~o~e 25 Pet .
on labor by hovmg your Gro~o~e­
ly Tractor repo1red or serviced
now. Gravely Tractor Soles ,
Pomeroy Oh1o Phone (61_.)

COUNTRY lormlo od w1th seclud·
Phone B&lt;3·2165
ed woods. water ond good access in Monroe Counly, W. Vo. WILL TRIM or cut trees and shrub$1 .000 dow~ coil (304) 772- bery Phone 742 3167 or 9~93102 or (304) 772·3227.
2545

7 Phone (61&lt;)667-630~ .

Angels on Wheels" 8; Mary Hortman 10: ABC

name

T V shop ElectroniC T V Clinic
Servtee coli $5 95 Color, B &amp; W
onlenno SjiStems stereos , etc .
572 South Thud , Mtddleport
Phone 992-6306 Corry In ond
save money

GAS ond Otl Furnace Repair ,
soles ond serv•ce, 2~ hours .

3 bedrooms, IV, boths Iorge l1v·
ing room dinmg room and kitchen, fully ca rpeted . Phone

11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13 ,15

11 : 3()--Jo~nny Car$(1n 3.~.15; SWAT 6,13, Movie "Hello

(Sp. )
Signorina 1s

1975 TRAILER for sole, 12x65 fur·
n1sh ed wtth P.ir candtllomng

7481

HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
bedroom renovated home.
Modern kit , oil F A.
furnace . Nice balh &amp; full
basemen! 519,500.

nafural

HE'S

win the secorld""m qummy
50 YOU WEllE

:.::

acre lot on Rt 1. Old 7 room
house, 112 bath, porches,

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

~~r ~:~~~t.ED,

'SURE LEFT

5232

TUPPERS PLAINS- I 'I'

608 E.

UTilE ORPHAN ANNIE

IUIMINUM

BRADFORD Auctioneer Com
plate Serv1ce Phone ?~9·2487
or 9-49 2000 Rocme, Oh1o Cr1tt
Bradford

6·2G--Nol For Women Only 13.
6: 3G--Columbus Today 4; News 6. Sunr ise Semesler B,

tnck one There were etghl show diamond s later Do not
toP""card tncks and JUSt one mak e a takeo ut do u b l ~
ex tra club tnck would gt ve because or your s. mglf.&gt; ton
heart
htm game and rubber
(Do you IJave a questton
lie ducked the ftrst hea rt on
general pnnctQles, bul had to lor th e experts? Wr1t e " Ask

0.

Phone 992-33~

3
CHRISTMAS Auchon Sole toy s
g•fts ond other new mcrchan
d1se Frtd oy 6 30 p m ot the
Auction House Hor ton Sl
Mason, W Vo

wmner s befor e playmg to

SICING.SOFFITT
GUTTE1$.1WNINGS

11 -11 -1 mo .

WILL DO HOUSE cle omng
after 6 p m 742 2152

TEAFORD

992·3436
FURNISHED Tra1ler fo r rent
Clean $30 week Sigle or
co uples onl y One acre Flat
woods Phone 992 58344 alter
5p m

Th e studenl co unted htS

FREE ES IMATES

PLY MOUTHS
Phone 992-2594
Middleport, o.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19,1976
6 oo-Sun rlse Semester 10.
6 · 1 ~E n gllsh J ; Farm Reporl 13.

~~~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

HEY!
WE'VE BEEN

Ph 992·!!193

NEARlY new al elec home full
bo5emen t, for so le by owner
Rutl and a reo Pho ne 742·2531

• Q6 5
• Q6 4
.. J9B5 4

SOUTII IDI

Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

LITTLE

DAILY RENTALS
ON
NEW r77

---

COUNTRV Mobde Home Pork , Rt
3J te n mdes north of Pomeroy
Lo rge lois w1 lh co ncrele pat •os
s1dewol ks runner s and off
street porkmg Phone 992 7&lt;179
TroJIIi! r adults
or 992 31 81

Square Yard Installed
David Parsons, Owner
949·2814
11·4-lmo

RUE MOTORS

D&amp;D
Construction

EAST
.. J 6

10932
t KJ 7

So~h~

.

•

WEST

PROWLED!

4 sp eed rear wmdow defog
ger S1300 Phone 992 5875

Rodt"'e~~-~~=- ~~

,_

6

.. Q 10 9 6

.

Revive the o:~~~~~::~~:r
of your russ.
your own home
by Von Schrader
dl)'·foam method.
No muss. No fuss.
No odor. Use the
same day.
All work
guaranteed.

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~

ed up lOll points above the line
"Wasn 't i unlucky ' " asked
the student
"Yes. you were," replied
the Professor " But you made
your own bad luck You on ly
needed four club lrtcks Once
East followed 10 the second
club you could be sure of four
club trtcks by St mply lmesStng
the Len spot
" Your pl ay of the ktt tg
would have been correct 1f vou
had needed five club trtcks,
but you only needed fout a nd
should have taken the safety
pla y to msure yoursclr &lt;.iga1nst
the actual club break ·

Opemng lead - J "

Racine. Ohio

ladlllor

1973 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle ,

19721NTERNATIONAL Seoul new
pamt , good shape Phone 992·
77 17

RACINE
CARPET Sl«)p

f"" lite latpsl

1974 JEEP Renegade V 8 10 000
m1 les 1976 Mus tang II Cobra
6 400 m1les All power and o1r
Ph one 7-42-3072

4)446-2745
-- - ------ -(61--Pomero11 Forest Pro 3 BEDROOM House and tro1lvr m
Syracuse, 33 acres , smoll borh,
all electnc, $35 000 sm all 4-40
dozer log truck 1905 model,
sow m11l $.4,500 Phone 992·
3792 . Homer Mills

A AKH3

•

R uttand, Oh1o 45775
Ph . U14 l 7-42- 2409
We Deliver
7 284moS

Phone 992 -5776
Syrnuse , Ohio

Service

18

NORTH

Pa ss
Par;s

---~

TIMBER
ducts Top price lor stand1ng
sowhmber Coli Kent Hanby

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

Ph. 67S-3469
9:30-5-00 Dally
Tlll8 :000 Fridays

--

CB RADIO FOR SALE Johnson 130
Mob1le CB Phone, $100 Two
Mob•le antennas. Also Demeo
50 Watt Mob1le • Lewter and
re&lt;:liU\oler preomr, $100 Par
table 4 chonne pollee scan·
ner, $90. All guaranteed. Coli

•• M

1031 mo

POINSETTIAS now for

CHRISTMAS
6000
to
choose from
PERFECT
FOR Gl FTS ln red , white
and pink SJ DO to S6 00 20
pet off on 10 or m ore

Pf. Pleasant

pm

NEW 23 Channel C B $1 29 95 or
term s Call 992 ·3905

YOUR HOME ln pots and
hang ing baskets from 75c
to S5 00 Also , lay away

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
- 328 Main Street

--

5292

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR

chair CUshtons,
mallreoses, ~N~ddlh9 . Ideal
far campers . Vartety of
sizes.
Velvets, nrlon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
fancy prints, accessories.

..... .

One trick calls for finesse
t l08 52
"'Q 7

NOTICE

- OLSTERY

I

A T'r'PICAI. AM~RICAN5KI! ..
H!i CANNOT E\IE!V KE'E'P Hi5
ON
IMPORTANT
OF

,¥tl6lll "'·JJH
,,
, . . .•

(614) 985-4155
Chostor , Ohio
10·17·1 mo IPdl

POLY-F ~AM

A. GUARANTEED Christmas Hove
o Fnendly Party and earn you
Chmtmos free Go w1th the b1g
gest and have the be st lnv1te
11our gues ts We'll do the rest PlEASURE HORSES and pon•es
olso will buy hories and
Largest lme or guaranteed toys
, pomes Phone (614 ) 698 3290
and g•fts Call •~9 2803
~
Ruth Reeve'$
SPECIALS AT 0 &amp; J FABRICS
Fake fur in p1eces , regu lar AKC REGISTERED BOXERPUPPI&lt;S
Hod shots and wormed Phone
S150 lb now $1 50 lb Lorge
(614) 992 37&lt;2
blank et p1eces $1 50 lb 1 toble
of po ly double ~ nit ond poly TO GIVE AWAY Mole dog, por t
blends , Values to $2 -49, now
Colhe and Beagl e, about 2
$1.00 y ard Red Heart Wtn lucie
year s old Good watch dog
yotn ~ oz . ske1n, 98 1 each 1
Phone 9.49·28 16
mi le south of Middleport on
DOBERMAN pupp •es, A.KC !;jOO d
SR 7
lines mce look1ng Phone (304 )
-----~--WE LOVE captunng baby in fvll
675 6655
color ph otos at THE PHOTO
PLACE In lime for Chm tmos
too For appointment
992

----

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Lonesvme, Ohto 45741

PIANO INSTRUCTIONS . Ch1ldren 's
and oduhs June VanV ranken,

WJN AT BRIDGE

Weddings

Roule'11o• 121

•

•tten •

Schools

TRAILER SALES

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
U99S
Local I owner car, green fin ish, green vinyl roof. radial
W·w tires, air cond , V-8, with automatic power
steering and brakes

6:3()-N8C News 3,4,'15, ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; fiodgepodge Lodge 20; lTV
Ullll1allon 33.

·=-== ...............

Commercial

$3195
w-w tires, clean

*"''

0

Aerial

brekes, rally wheel s, radio, black and very attractive.

1975 LUV PICKVP
W lt.h topper , low mileage,

eAtw•l••

PHOTOGRAPHY

INTERVIEWS will be held Mnday
No'o' 22 1976 stortip g ot 11 C()
o.m o'clock In the off ice of th.
Me•gs County (omminionen,
Court House Pomeroy, Qh1o
for orchtteds who are on the
approved lilt of State Ar
chllec ts (Public Works State of
Oh•o) for the proposed multi
purpose fo(lllly lor Me•gs
County , Please call lor appoint
ment 99'2·2895

7:DO-Truth or Cons. 3: To Ttlllht Trulh ~ ; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show I ; News 10; To Tell lht
Tro lh -13; My Three Sons 15, Anyone for 'TennysOn?
20; Gelling On 33.
7·3(f-Hollywood Squares 3, ~ ; Ohio Slalo Lollery 6;
PrTce Is Right 8; MacNelf .Lehrar Reporl 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on lhe Road 131 Dolly
IS .
8 DO-Oick Van Dy ke 3 3.~ . 15:-Wel come Back, l(oller
6,13; Wa llons 8,10, VIsions 20. Maslerplece Thea Ire
33
8:3G--Barney Mlltor 6,13.
9:DO-Besl Sellers 3,4, lS, Tony Randall 6, 13; Hawa ii
Flve-0 B; VIsions 33. Movie " No Way lo Treat a
Lady " 10.
1
9.3()-Nancy Walker 6,13; Jeanne Wolf Wllh 20.
10 DO-Gibbsvllle 3,&lt;,15: Slreels of San Francisco 6,13 ;
Barnaby Jones 8. News 20
10·3G--Woman 2D.33 .
li ·DO-News 3,~. 6, 8 ,1 0 , 13, 15, Mac Nell Lehrer Report
33
11 3G--Johnny Carson 3.~. 1S , SlrHis of San Francisco
6,13. Kojak B; Mary fiarlman 10. ABC News33.
12 .00-Movlo "The Chapman Reporl" 10; Janak! 33.
12 :3()--Movla " See The Man Run" 8
12.&lt;G--Oan August 6,13.
1 oo-T'Omorrow 3,-t,
1 50-News 13.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER II, lt76
S DO-B ig Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch e.
Mlsler Rogers 2G,33 ; Slar Trek IS
S : ~News6; Family Alfa lr 8; Elec Co 20,33 ; Adam
12 13
6.DO-Nem 3, ••8.10,13,1S, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
Consumer E ~tperlence 33

QUAUTY

2270.

NEW HOLLAND 63 bu shel manure
sp rEtOder, P T 0 New Ideo
small manure spreader, both
good cond•hon Al so, Iorg e
tandem fe rt1l1zer spreader
Phone 9-49-2770

LOS ANGELES (UP!)

because you're well lhoug hl of But
by others Peop le Just want to do
ntce thmgs for you

ha•e • gun •hool Solu&lt;doy ••

STATE

less may be better when it
AOUI\RIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 1i) comes to clothing Playboy

· G;j

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

THE RACINE Firt Deportment will . . - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - ; ; ; ; - - -·-

2531

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19)

' .. ·~

F0 r Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
.

!975

hens acceplect f1rst day•ot

·

' -fi~~W'tln~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '11wrsday, Nov.IS, 1976

PrillliiSMISIINSWIIIMrl

Now
circled !ellen
to form the 1urprtu an1wn, u
by the above clll'loon.

I

"(11IIIIJ"
(AIMwtrt tomorro"}

Jumbl.., BATCH FLUID PENCIL IQUANA

\'eturday't

I

Mtwu1 Tldltf " overturned " In tile 4Grlc..:....''NIQHT"

BA1!NEv-- - -

I CAN'T TALK TO HER ...
5!1E'S MAD AT ME BECAUSE
I DIDN'J MAKE MI./ BED...

..

EVER'BODY'S 1ALKIN'
ABOUT THAT TERRIBLE
FIGHT ''IE HAD WIF
'lORE WIFEMATE,
LUKEV···

'IO'RE A DISGRACE

10 1H' MENFOLKS
OF HOOTIN' HOLLER!!

MfWBE I'LL WHUP
HER NEXT.TIME I

�•

T:v~l~Se~fel,Middlepo~~~~:~-~:;,;2;~,:~'=;:;:~:~:; · rR•'•._-------------------------------------•-------.

da~:~{a~;:£~::~~a~~ -

Smartfamily
are recounted
Paul

Smart,

retired

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

from 8 to 11 p.m. at the
;!~~~port Elementary

president of the Citizens
Music wUI be provided by
National Bank, Middleport,
the Strlnfdusters. Ad·
spent 44 years in the banking
mission Is U for adults with
business. During vacations,
children under 1% ac·
the Smart family traveled
compaaled by their parents
extensively throughout the
admitted free. The dance 111
United States, because of sponsored by the senior
their belief that, "to see an
citizens center.
area flrst·hand, is better than :;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;; ;:;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:
· to read about it In a book."
He spoke of these . travels
Friday, Nov. 12, to Mrs. Mary
Hys~ll's fifth grade of
P~meroy Elementary School.
The science unit currently
being studied is the "Con·
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Van
structlonal and Destructlonal
Meter,
Middleport ,
Forces" which keeps the
represented
Meigs
County at
earth's surface in a state of
a
public
education
workshop
constant change.
As a good example of held Nov. 10 at Mercy
constructional forces, Mr. Hospital, Portsmouth, by The
Smart told of the volcanic American Cancer· Society,
isllmds of Hawaii, where they Ohio Division, Inc.
As a result of the training,
recently visited .. Their motel
was situated on the edge of 12 Mr. and Mrs. Van Meter can
active volcanoes, and motor now answer questions and
travel continued unrestricted assist local groups in
over the steamy black ash. choosing the latest programs
The destructional force for their schools, clubs,
described by Mr. Smart was churches or organization.
a glacier in British Columbia, Volunteers from eight
between Lake Louise and southeastern Ohio counties
Jasper. The river of ice was a participated.
grinding mass 600 foot thick.
By use of snowmobiles, Pilgrimage Day
tourists could ride over the
slick ice, even though there planned Sunday
were some " bottomless"
The Bradbury Church of
chasms. The summer sun Christ will hold its
melts the surface very little. Pilgrimage Day Sunday
Mr. Smart's visit was
sponsored by the Retired starting with the morning
Senior Volunteer Program. service. Sunday School will
be held at 9:30 a.m. aild
church at 10 a.m. Dress will
be as was in the days of the
FIRST CHILD BORN
Pilgrims.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Morrow
There will be a potluck
of 93 Kemp St., Newark are
announcing the birth of their dinner following worship
Turkey
and
first child, a son, Jacob services.
beverage wlll be provided.
Matthew. Th~ seven pound, Please bring own table
six ounce infant was born on
Nov. 8 at the Licking service. A special invitation
Memorial Hospital. Grand· also is extended to former
parents are Mrs. Ruth members. For more in·
Crouch and Mr. and Mrs. formation cail Mrs. William
Fred Morrow, Syracuse. Mr. King or Mrs. Raymond
afternoon
and N/rs. Tom Willis, Win· Wilcox. An
program
will
begin
at I :30
ferhaven, Fla., are great·
p.m.
grandparents.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.
I

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE

CONTINUING TltiS FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

MEN'S s7.95
EL SPORT SHIRTS
Sizes small, medium, large ·
and extra large, 2 button
through pockets, full tails,
sanlorlzed .
Shrunk , colorful plaid
patterns and neal checks.

Van Meters go
to workshop

SALE! MEN'S SHIRTS
Western shl.r ti- leisure shirts
and hanging sport shirts. ·

SALE PRICES

SPECIAL SALE

FRIDAY

SALE

&amp;SATURDAY

MEN'S SWEATERS
s eeveless sweaters, so
p~r.fect for Christmas
g,v,~g,
size
small,
medium, large and extra
arge.
'

SALE PRICES

tw-:A..-;:;-::::.·=~--~-·--·-w~-._,.J...,....lw~:...._,_.,,_~.;.,J,

YARD GOODS

OPENINQ-OATE- -1-~n!~~~~:~~e_n~r~i~~~~:-f

per cent colton pr ints,
Inches wide, good
selection of patterns.
100
36

_

36 inch width, fancy patterns and
stripes. Sew your own Christmas
gift.

58 INCHES WIDE
Regularly '2.69 to '4.99 yard

MEN'S &amp;BOYS'

WINTER
JACKETS

FOAM RUBBER
Foam mattress pads, cot pads, foam throw
pillows that you can cover. Foam squares
and oblongs in various sizes for
upholstering and do-it-yourself projects.
And shredded polyurethane ~ for

Boys sizes 3 to 18,
mens sizes 36 to 50.
A big selection and
the sale Includes
our entire stock of
mens and . boys
-........ao·~·:· jackets.

SALE PRICES

FURNITURE DEPT. ON 3RD FLOOR

.

r. .-, your shopping for Christmas

now and use our layaway plan.
A small deposit holds
selection until Christmas.

WOMEN'S COAT SALE
Includes our entire stock of women's
juniors, misses and half sizes. Stvle~
feature . leather, fur trimmed, all weather
and many othe.rs.

GIRLS
COAT SALE

SALE PRICES
·KNIT TOPS SALE
Women's and 'juniors knit tops, all are
machine washable and permanent press. In
polyester and cotton.

SALE PRICES

PRETEEN SPORTSWEAR SALE

1 Group Reg. $18.99----1 Group Reg. $15.99 _ _ _ __

BOYS

SALE! KROEHLER

1 Group Reg. $14.69 _ _ _ _ _ Sale $7.35
1 Group Reg. $13.69
Sale $6.85

REG. 1129.00 ...................... SALE 1107.00
REG. 1159.00...................... SALE 1130.00
REG. 1179.oo ..............~ ....... SALE 1147.00
.REG. 1199.()(). ..................... :.SALE 1163.00
REG. 1219.00 ....................... SALE 1179.00
REG. 1279.00............ ;.......... SALE 1229.00
REG. 1289.00 ...................... SALE 1237.00

LIVING ROOM SUITES &amp;SOFAS
SAVE UP TO '240.00
ONE GROUP OF EARLY AMERICAN
AND TRADITIONAL SUITES AND SOFAS
REGUlARLY 1439.00 TO '579.00

Save This Weekend

$33900

YOUR CHOICE

SALE PRICES

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M.
TO - 5:00
P.M.
. -·
~

'

ELBERFELD IN P M
I.

your
·

Its a wonderful way to buy the
toys you need and its a good way for
you to take advantage of the early
selection and special sale prices all
over the store.

SWEATERS- cardigans, V-necks, scoop
necks.
.
•
KNIT TOPS- polyester, cotton blends.
BLOUSES- 100 per cent nylon, polyester·
cotton blends.
SLACKS &amp; SKIRTS -: denim, ~ carduroy,
polyester in sizes 3-6 to 1i-14. ·
ALL AT

MEN'S SHOES

' .

ELBERFELD$
LAY·AWAY PLAN

Our entire stock is
redu&lt;:ed for this sale.
Sizes run from 12
months to 24 months
and 2 to 14. Buy the
J~"\..-o"'"'¥''-/ --SALE--- I-~""1.a you need and
save.

1 Group Reg. $15.49,, -----Sale sa.oo
1 Group Reg. $16.50
Sale $8.25

f

Y2 PRICE

'1 15 YARD

ELBERFELDS HOME FURNISHINGS

MAPLE, PINE, PECAN &amp; WALNUT FINISHES

THE SHOE BOX

YARD GOODS CHRISTMAS SPECIALS

COTTON FLANNELS

SALE!

WOMEN'S SHOES

~BANKA_M~RICARO

.....·--·--"1

DOUBLE KNIT
POLYESTER YARD GOODS

JUST RECEIVED

KNEE HOLE A~D ROLl TOP DESKS

I

HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

_.,,L.I.....I.;,..w_ _.._,,_,,_~...-·.,..,_,,_~-~~-·-·--~-·-·--w----·-

SALE Br Yard

SPECIALS

~'"

14 inches square, checked pattern,
limited quantities, whlle they last.

SALE PRICES

REGULAR '1.39

SPECIALS
Regu1ar $119
•

.PRICES

,

THROW PILLOWS

YARD GOODS CHRISTMAS SPECIALS

CHRISTMAS

'l''tfrATDE
MEIGS
CLOSED fOR
VACA:rloN
WA fOR

HIGH PRICED

Our entire stock of
boys
sweaters
included for this
special two day sale.
Size 3 to 20.

~oat styles, slipovers,

BLOUSE
SALE

I

..

BOYS' SWEATERS

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - McWhorter Advertising,
Fifty-three youths from 13 Huntington Publishing
local schools are now par· Company, Chapman's
pillow~, pads~ses .
ticipating in Career Ex· Printing, and Free-lance
ploring, a Division of the Boy Artists. Bill Sayers and Bob
Etter are co-cordinators, and
Scouts of America.
The Naval Reserve Center Tina Boster is the post 1-·-·-·-~-~~·-·-··-~~-·--·-w--·--·--4
has sponsored a program in president.
Each of these new
Navy and Coast Guard. Bob
programs
will provide career
Finney is the Program
exploration,
showing and
Coordinator and Mike Sexton
giving
youth
information
and
is post president. WOWK·TV
experience
in
what
that
has sponsored a program in
Commercial Art with the particular career field is all
cooperation of persons from about.
Companies, businesses ,
industry, and community
large group of
organizations provide the
womens
blouses
I nuu n
expertise and open their
in
plaids,
solids
doors to youth to explore and
and prints. long
to learn. Other local sponsors
and
short
Include the Cabell County
sleeves, nylon,
Sheriff's Department, Cabell
and
polyester
Huntington Hospital, Cabell
Huntington Public Library,
cotton
blends.
TrU
Ensign Electrk, Tri-State
Sizes 30 to 46.
,n,n
Airport Authority, Guyan Soil
Conservation District, Cabell

1 Group Reg. $12.49_ _ _ _ _ Sale $6.25

SALE PRICES

J-~--·--·-~---·-·-~--·-·-·-~--·-·-·-~--~-·-.:.~·~~~-·--·-~---·-·-~--~-·-·-~ -~----~---·--·-------1

53 boys in J3 schools

'

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

A terrific selection.

Career exploring draws

MISSES AND CHILDREN'S

A special two day sale on all of our
boys trousers, sizes 3 to 7 and 8 to 18,
regulars, slims and huskies, blue
denll')'ls, corduroys, cottons, cotton
. and polye~ter blends.

This special sale Includes
all of our men's knit shirts-

ANNEX

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

BOYS TROUSERS

(

y

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