<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16439" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16439?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T23:48:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49576">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/44bb5893ccc5effd33fbb3f361ea25ea.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9f45c636f747a9bdfe9f491ff232bbed</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52560">
                  <text>10-The Dally Sentin•l, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Dec. 6, 1976

Hubbard". host bOO VIsitors

Salisbury honor list noted

Over 100 person• attended with the open house were Don
Salisbury Element81 1
an open ••ouse of Hubbard's Hubbard, owner, Donna School ,honor roll for the
Gr,, en House over the Hubbard, his daughter, and second six weeks grading
weekend. Door prizes were Amy Hpston and Bobbi period :
WO!l by AMI Mae Wi!Uams. Chapman employes.
First grade, David Bf"!gle, \
P.omeroy; Dorothy Davl!,
William Brothers Ron
UNIT CAUED
Middleport ; Unda King, RD,
The Middleport ER squad Capehart, Michele Folmer,
'lllnersvllle, and Florence
Sue . Ellen Fry, Charlotte
was called at 1:33 p.m. Hart, Audra Houdashelt,
;\latthews, Racine.
Each person attending was Sunday for Mrs. Dwight Artie Hunnel, Erica John·
given a live plant. ·&gt;i!'S. Eddie Zavitz, 183 North Fourth Ave. ston, Kevin Vi ctor Khig ,
Hubbard presided at the · who was Ill. She was taken to Angela Sloan, Tamra Vance.
_refreshm ent table. Assisting Holzer Medico1 Center.

The .Colonel
doesn't believe in
nickel and dime
coupons.
A f1 ~ r ~ H . h ~ _
doesn't skimp on the chicken , ~ ither.

Su heres $2.25 m coupons to have a Barrel of Fun wi\h.
(Or a bucket or dinner box of fun , even .).

r----------------,
I ,,~):9.Q,2!!.,. -~ I
I

I

I

) t~ k•• I hi~ &lt;:o upon 10 yo1tr

K~ntu~ll y !

~~
! ~ ;;

1111aBtt
u!Jh
I~oo~
j1nil onr
rt••t ~~ CQlipon

Francis holds
'76 open house
Over 500 persons attended
the annual holida y open
house ol Francis Flor ist
Sunday afternoon
in
Pomeroy.
J oining Mr. and Mrs.
William Francis, Mrs.
Kathleen Francis and Mrs.
Kathy Francis Reed to greet
the visitors was Mrs.
Genevieve Schneider. Th e
Happy Harvesters Class of
Trinity Church served
refreshments. Prizes went to
Freda Lieving, Ruth Simpson, Charlotte Whaley and
Norka Weaver.

I

~l

pdl l iclpn tm f-1

IICll Cluckeo state aud yet
$1 00 of! 011o~/1 pih c [l,u rt•1 c llll t.'l
Ot tgl ll •l l R ~ · c q)l' nr t:~tl d C r 1 ~py 01!.- t

1
I

1
'·~·•:c'"•~~.·,
_ ..,

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

II
I
I
I

'•M''., - . ..._'I·.I
~·~

75¢ Off
.·

(~,

•', ~

::~

1(.

•

"~

t,,,dt\1~f}~~
C

II
I

on a Buc ket of Kent uc ky Fried Chicke n.
I.J kt• 1 h1 ~ lO llfJO il to you 1 pill ttupd tttlg
Kcntulk y f lll'd Cht Ck t·n ~tare and get

I
I

75~ oft on &lt;l 11 tJ•~·~~· 1\uclu' t t&gt;il h l'l
O"O""'' R'"'' "' I " "' C"'PY Olfe&lt;
good thr ou ~t h
l111u t O llt!

OuLkt•lpc• Loupon .

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

~.

I
I

5.Q~,.Qff

of Kcnt uc ky Frle d Chtcken .
Talk
lnupon to yo11r pa rt tnplll l!l!]
K, ·ol "' h' F&lt;"' " l h«k"'
'"d gel
~(}!!oil ''11 l h•• pt•l chll\c ol two D111ncr

nu~

"a&lt;'

U!~o~~l!: ~.·=f..
~urr~-"
~~r
.

l1Q \l'~. '.l tln, r O t tqt iiJIRcltpe orl: \ liJ
Cttl&gt;P .' Ofrer aood tl tto uq ll
L tl nttt wo dn1tlt'r51pcrcolt po 'J.

-~. ~
II." ' ~~~

tl."'r.

·

·~

ASK TOWED
Marria ge li censes were
issued to Pa ri s Rufford
Hess, 21, Chester , and
Rob in Ro e Capehart,
17, Middleport; James Batey,
33, Middleport and Margie
Louise Smith, 32, Middleport .

,.1

(1

,#~-

j •• 1:t'·"~'\
" , ·•··· ·,\
· f
i
.·:

..

L--~~~~---------Kutuek~ fried ChiekeK®

-~

Weather .

Rain

CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE

POMEROY, OHIO

:second grade, Melani e
Arnold, Lin Cha se, April
Clark, Heather Cullums,
Todd Cullums, Phillip King,
l.isa Pullins, Sally Radford ,
Brenda Sinclair.
Third grade, Beth Blaine,
April Brickles, Mary Cun.
nlngham, Jodi Harrison ,
Barbara Hatfield, Darren
Hayes, Kevin Mowery, ScoH
Pullins, Cindy Sauter&amp;. Tim
Sloan, Anita Smith, Tammy·
Terry, David Warth.
Fourth grade, Ruth Ann
Fry, Cindy Hazelton. Sandy
Hoyt, Sha wn Johnson,
Charlott e Lyons, Greg
Murray, James Parker,
Teresa Pratt, Terry Smith,
Denise S'tegall, Ja ckie
Welker.
Fifth grade, Billy Carswell,
Rhond a Jeffe rs, Micha el
Kennedy, Angela Pratt,
Paula Swindell.
·
Sixth
grade,
Scott
Harrison, Angelo Hatfield,
Jim Hoyt, Terry Hysell, Brill
King, Natalie Lambert, Joho
Lyons, John Smith, Greg
Taylor.

992-5432 .

t his

e ve nin g ~

changing to snow later.
Chan toe of snOw Tuesday.
Low tooight in the lower 308.
High Tuesday in the upper
30s. Chance of precipitation
60 per cent today, 90 per cent
tonight and 50 per cent
Tuesday.

CONGRATULATIONS!
We're· grateful to everyone who joined our Dress·
A-Doll' " and Design-A-Toy'" programs. You're
making Christmas a happier day for many children . Congratulations to the winners!

DOLLS
Tonya Taylor

15 Years
Character
Grand Prize
Fancy
Knit
Nationality

Nancy Jo Saltz
Karen Stodola
Gail Hovatter
Marilyn Spencer
Lynn Harris
linda Well

TRUCKS
Charles Bailey

Grand
Fire Truck
log Truck

John McCarty
Gary Wolf
Chris Hill

Dump Truck.

~ ~armers Bank
t

0

$ $

POMEROY, OH 10
, TM - A T R A ~E MA AK AND ~E A V IC E MARK OF RICHAR D STEB BINS ll.ND ~SSOC IAT ES , INC

I

Voterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Lester Arnold, Westerville ;
Mildred Circle, Minersville;
Paul Burns, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Celeste Bush, Mary Deren·
berger. Coldie Lawson.
Sunday Admiss ions ..:..
Oscar Johnson, Clifton, W.
Va .; Dayton McElroy,
Minersville; Denver Blake,
Mason; Elizabeth Grinstead,
New Haven ; Evelyn Watson,
Long Bottom; Ca rolyn
David son , Middlepo rt ;
Mi cha el Crites, West
Columbia ; Dessie Kuhn,
·Cheshire ; William Boring,
Albany; Evelyn Young ,
Minersville; Nora Bing,
Shade;
J essie White,
Pomeroy; Nelli e Lemley,
Portland; Elsie Decker,
Syracuse.
.
Sunday Discharges Charles Schoonover, Betty
Lewis, Osc ar Imboden,
Russell Stalder, Dordy Call.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Willy
Starr, PQint Pleasant ; Dora
Lewis, Mason: Peter Ford ,
Southside ; Mrs. Roger
Swisher, son, Point Pleasant;
Lisa
Greenlee, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Guy Stewart,
Point Pleasant ; Sherry
Shree, Leon; Mrs. Vernon
Rizer , WestervilJ e, 0 . i
George Jorda n, Leon ; Ronald
Glenn , Henderson; Edward
Fihley, Point Pleasant; Chad
Tipton, Gailipolis; Brian
Alley , Point Pleasant ; Nellie
Connolly, Racin e: Janet
Dav is, Southsid e; Ju lia
Crump, Point Pleasant, and
Da le Thaxton,
Poi nt
Pleasant.

I

Despite cold rain people
turned out well Monday night
to welcome Santa to Mid·
dleport.
.
A parade, postponed a
week ago, was staged in the
rain with Santa and his elves
being tbe highlight. Led by
the Middleport pollee, the line
of march included .the Meigs
Hi gh School Band and
cheerleaders, Poll)t roy and
Middleport
fi re
and
emergency units, Meigs
County representatives of
Brownies and . Junior Girl
Scout.., Middleport Business
and Professional Women's
Club, the Kiddie Shoppe, the
Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club, June Wamsley.

•
TWO DIVISIONWINNERS in the Fanilers Bank and Savings Co. '~dress a doll" con~!
are pictured with their creations: They are Sue Taylor, Pomeroy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Tony Taylor in the under age 15 competition, and Mrs. Lynn Harri• , Tuppers Plains,
origlnsUy of Vieinam, who was first in the nationality category with a Vietnamese co~.
On the right is the doli of Nancy Jo Mayer Salta, Proctor, W. Va ., whose doll won first in the
character doll category. These winners received $25 savings bonds.
POTLUCK PLANNED
RACINE - Racine Grange
wm hold a potluck dinner at a
meeting to be held at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the grange
haD. There will be a report on
the state grange session
given by county delegate
Avanel Holliday . Ali mem·
bers are asked to attend .

'

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I )

·

.

other organization has insisted on the accuracy of thl!
procedure," he said.
He sald blood pressure readings taken by student nurses in
the program can be "appallingly inaccurate" ·but that the nse
of a double stethoscope with a doctor and the student taking the ·
reading to assure accuracy is seldom seen.

•

Mrs. Margaret E: Boyer.
80, Broadway St., Middleport,
di ed Sunday at Holzer
Medical Center following a
lingering illness.
Mrs. Boyer was born
March 10, 1896, a daughter of
the ·late Frederick and
Cze rna Parsons Gerla ch.
Besides her parents she was
preceded in death by her
husband , Floyd, in 1973, three
sisters and two brothers.
Sur viving
are
two
dau ghters, Mrs. Walt er
(Hazel) Friend, Letart, W.
Va ., and Miss Thelma jloyer,
at home; a son, Willard F.
Boyer, Pome roy; three
sisters, Mrs. Henry (Edith )
Nash , Middleport ; Mrs. Addo
(Audrey ) Barr, Mt. Alto, W.

Va., and Mrs. Beulah Knopp,
Point Pleasant ; a brother,
Ca rl
Gerlach,
POint
Pleasant ; a foster brother,
Glenn Kerns, Alliance, seven
grandchildren and several
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Bqyer was a member
of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Funeral services ·will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with George Glaze
officia ting. Friends may caU
at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Burial wiD be' in Riverview
Cemetery.

Christmas Gift Headquarters

MEN'S

•

WORK
UNIFORMs·
A NEW SHIPMENT In
time for Chr istm as g iving .

E·RCALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a can at
II :31 p.m. Monday to Cook's
Gap Hill for Ollie Tyree
who. was having difficulty
breathing. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

and her grandmother, Mrs. N. J. The new position is an
Walter Hayes stil!'reslde in unusual one in health·
Middleport.
profe ssion s edu ca tio n.
Christine Mcintyre is a Assignments comparable to
graduate of Middleport High Dr. Mcintyre's are found in
School, received her B.A. only ha lf a dozen other such
~ro
Ohio
Northern institutions across the nation.
ersity, and is . a
"The objective, " Stanley S.
egistered Medi cal Bergen; Jr., M.D., president
Technologist (A.S.C.P.) . .
of CMDNJ , said, "is to inThe Mc!ntyres have two troduce. students to th e
·chil6rim, Lisa, 6, and humahistic Implications of
Gregory, 2. They reside at 88 .their profeaslonal judgments.
Skyline Drive, Morristown,
(Continued on page 12)

.

DR. MciNTYRE

Improvements plan is made public ·

polyester• . 50

GIVE HIM A-

JACKET

lfNews. • •in Briefsfi

Wai st length ~t y l es
and longer jackets,
too Denim s,

NOW YOU KNOW
The residence of America's
· chief executives offi cially
acquired its present name
when Theo dore Roosevelt
had the words "The White
House" imprinted on hi s
presidential stationery.

corQur oys, cotfon .
polyester · blends.
Sizes 36 to 50 .

SALE PRICES

THREE ASSISTED
RACiNE - The Racine
Emergency Squad, called at
6:40 p.m. Sunday for Nellie
Lemley , Racine, took her to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
as a medical patient. At 7:30
p.m. Sunday Avis Frecker,
Racine, was taken to Holzer
Medical Center with a
possible head injury; and at 3
a.m. Monday, William Wood,
~cine, was transported to
HMC as a medical patient.

Christmas Gifts
For the Lilt le
Boys &amp; Girls
Slacks - knit shirts

SISTER IS ILL
Edna Evans, Middleport, •
received word that her sister,
Mrs. Allan Jenk inson ,
Flagler Beach , Fla., has
suffered two heart attacks
and is in intensive care at
F lagler
Hospital, St.
Augustine, Fla. She is also
the sister-In-law of Curtis
Jenkiilson.

these essentia l questions :
of a physical asset such as
- What Is a capital im· land , buildin gs ,· road s,
provement and why is it bridges, and expensiv e
Important to Meigs County machinery . When these
residents.?
major expenditures are
- What ore the major prope~ly plaMed, the limited
capital improvement needs of flnonclol resources of Meigs
Meigs County?
County wiU he used most
The report explains that a effectiv ely for 'uch needed
capital improvement is a local capital improvements
major expenditure for the as safe roads, adequate jails,
acquisition or improvement sanitary landfillS, and county
administrative offices that
'(:~::::::::::~:::::::::=:::::::~:::;;::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::~:;:::i:~;;:~:·:~ :~:~:~:~::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:::::::::::~~
provide efficient working
conditions.
The report Shows that a
total
of 15 different studies,
«
~
reports, and plans prepared
By United Pressloternatlooal
by numerous agencies over
ATLANTA- RONAW REAGAN SAYS THE Republican the past fifteen years have
Party Should rebuild by stressing its cpnservative principles recommended some 49
rather "than going back to thinking we can be all things to aU county government capital
people."
Improvements. The most
Reagan told a news conference Monday he will work to frequent and the most .,;,stly
"create a new majority" for the GOP by attracting Democrats recommendatipns hove been
and independents into the party fold, and is not pessimistic for needed road 1mabout the GOP's future.
provements plus certain park
"Everyone keeps having a wake and wants to raise a head· and recreation develop·
stone for us," he said. 1'I'm optimistic." Reagan, w~o ments.
narrowly lost the GOP presidential nomination to President
The total cost of tbese 49
·Ford in August, sald the 1976 GOP platfonilshould be used "as projects or others that might
a statement of principle now in building a new majority."
be needed I! not known at this
DETROIT - THE DECADE-UlNG BATTLE between lime . The available cost
Detroit automalters and Washington over tbe air bag is not estimates cover only 22
over deaplle Transportation Secretary WI!Uam Coleman's projects and total ahout $28
refusal to order the safety devices in cars.
.
million. .
The report was prepared as
U.S. autom8kers have yet to say whether they'll agree to
Coleman's proposal Monday to equip a half million C811&gt; with the first step in a six-phase
air bags .for a two-year test at an approximate cost of $86 Capital Improvements
miiUon to consumers and industry. In their initial statements, Program (CIP). A primary
they Indicated support for safety belt systems. Even If the two· · objective of the CIP is to
year test proves the air bag feasible, It stiU will be up to any enha11,ce the ability of local
new transportation department secretary to conduct new government to . identify ·and
hearings and probably face the same auto ' Industry accomplish ·the most vitally
oppoaltlon. .
·
needed public improvements ·
projects. This I! achieved by
"IF THIS IS ANY,KlNDA .OMEN, IT'S GONNA be one complllng a comprehensive
helluva llinter," lamented one busy· dispatcher at Chicago's listing of au the needed
Area 6 traffic headquarters, HeaVy anows snarled traffic, projects, evaluating them
slowed buses and delayed air traffic at O'Hare International and arranging the survivors
Airport Monday night.
in a priority sequence, and
Apotentstormspreadaheavyblanketofsnowovera wide then working to obtain the
of the Mtdwe!!t and the Plains. Snow lingered early today necessary funding .
as the lllo!'m pushed eastward, .leaving bitter cold in l~ wake
The CIP I! being developed
and trJaerlng a bevy of new watches and warnings.
jointly by· local gov~rnment
• Tbe metcUi'y Pll!ll8ed to %1 degrees bel91! zero at Hibbing, officials and by the James M.
Mlnn.and18degreeebe~zeroatRocheeter,Minn. ,by2a .m. Jennings Associates Co., as
EST tOday. Mason City, iowa, reported a 17-below chill and consultants to the Me igs
Omaha, Neb., reported a 4'below temperfllure. Six inches of County Regional Planning
snow fell in Chicago and South Bend, Ind. Five inches lof freah Comml!siori, under a mat·
mow was repor:ted at Springfield, IU.
·
ching grant fro'!! the U. S.
·
Department of Housing and
WASti!NGroN - ON WHAT WAs UKELY to he hi! last .,Urban Development (HUD).
joumey as Secretary of State, Henry Kl!slnger headed ·for
A prellmlnary · version of
ilrulle1l today lor a NATO ministerial council session. Despite this first report is available
the aentbnenlal drama ofKlsalnger's last official meeting with for public viewing during
his Western European coUeagues, officials stressed the routine regular business hours at ~
'nature of the NATO meet~. One offidal said, "The big CETA office located on the
·
(Continued on page 1'2)
·
thirrl floor at lbe rear of the

A new report related to
plaMlng and needed projects
in Meigs County known as a
"'Comprehensive Plan and
R e.co mm ended
Im.
provements" is available for
.public Inspection and com·
men!.
C. E. Blakeslee, executive
director of the Meigs County
PlaMing Commissioh, said
· today the report answers

cotton

dresses - panties - shawls . ·

sleeping bags - .blankets shoes ·· sweaters, just to
mention a few.

Let Our salesgirl shoW

you many more giH ideas

for that new baby or small

area

Santa Claus will be in the Toy De1tartmeni
- 1st Floor - Tu-sday 2 to 3 p'.m . ~
·' . Wednesday 2 to 3 p.m. - Thursday 2 to 3
p.m. Bring in the children.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
l

,.l

of l&gt;!iddleport, was among the youngsters who visited with
Santa and received a candy trea t provided by the
Middl"J10rt Retail Merchants follow ing Monday night's
parade .

.

en tine
Cruiser tfrant i
will be asked

at.Y

Choose from s different

col ors - panfs and shirts
match. Pants si ze 29
Long stee ve shirts
l41f2 to 20. 50 per

The annual Christma s
holiday season open house of
the Pomeroy 'Flower Shop
was held in Pomeroy Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Van
Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Van Meter, Miss Eleanor
Robson, Mrs. Jean Kloes,
Mrs. O~ol Kloes, OUie Mae
Cozart and Charlotte Wilford
greeted the 600 guests and
served refreshments. Win·
uers of prizes were Paul Rice,
Lenora Brown and Anna
Ogdin. Winners should check
with the flo•·er shop.

MEIGS THEATHE
CLOSED 'FOR
VACATION

Clearing tonight, tern·
peratures fall ing into the 20s.
l.ows tonight from 15 to 20.
SUMy and continued cold
Wednesday, highs in the low
30s.
Probablllty · of
precipitation 90 per cent
today , 40 per cent tonight,
near zero per cent Wednesday.
'

new medical school post
NEWARK, N.J. - A noted
blomedllcal, ethicist, )lussell
L. Mcintyre , Th.D., has
joined the !acu)ty of .the
College of · Medicin e and
Dentl!try of ~ew . Jersey as
director of programs in the
health-care humanities, a
•newpost.
Dr. Mcintyre IS.marrled to
the Iohner Chrl!tine Coats of
MiddleP.rt. ·Her, .mother ,
Mrs. Charles l:iasklll, with
her husband, Charles Gaskill,

••

•

Weather

Dr. Mcintyre directing

•· Open Tuesday through Thu.rsday, 9:30 a;m.
· to s p.m. - Friday and Saturday 9;30 a.m.
to 9 p.m.

Open house at
flower shop

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
. Tu e sday lbrou gb
Saturday, chance of llchl
rain or snow Thursday,
Friday and' Saturday.
Highs wUl he In the 30s
Thursday and In the upper
30s or 40s Friday and
Saturday. Lows wUI range
from 5 to 15 Thursday,
worming to the Z08 or 30s
Friday and Saturday.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Oecembe·r 7, 1976

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

Pomeroy 's Junior Miss ;
Niese! Duvall, Meigs County
Junior Fair queen and the
Gl~tes, according to the
listing of Mrs. Debbl Buck,
parade chairman.
The parade was sponsored
by the Middleport Retail
Merchants Assn. to officlaUy
welcome In t he holi day
:season. Following the parade
Santa met with small fry In
the ~ r ive-through. of the
Citizens National Bank to
distribute treats.

•

SUPPER PLANNED
21RUNSMADE
HARRISONVILLE - The
RACINE - The Racine ER drove 577 miles. Runs were to
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club will have a Christmas Squad made 21 runB during Chester, Sutton, Letart,
potluck supper and gift ex- the month of November, Lebanon, Olive Townships ·
change WednesdaY at 6 p.m. worked 96 man hours, and and in Racine Viilage. ·
the
Harrisonville
at
Elementary School.

Margaret Boyer died Sunday

•

SARAH AND RONNIE ANDERSON were among the
youngsters who kept dry .under umbrellas as they walled
for Sa.,ta to arrive mMiddleport Monday nigh!.

.

..

•

Santa [!.rrives
in spite of rain

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

·.
I

Hospital News

Meigs County Courthouse.
Written comments are
welcome and may be left at
the CETA office or moiled to
the Consultant whose address
is given on the report. T9 be
considered, 90mments must
be received by December 20,
1976.

Mayor Clarence Andrews
told Pomeroy Coun cil
Monday ni ght in its regular
meeting he will make application for a federal grant
to obta in desks and other
office equlpmgpt and a
cruiser, especia lly· for
juvenile apprehension .
The mayor reported on
procedures to be taken !~the
appllca,tlon which he and
special officet .L. B. Vaughan
reviewed when they attended
a meeting in Chill icothe
earlier that day. Its topic was
criminal justice planning and
project development.
Meeting with council were
Elmer Althouse and Ernie
Deeter of ·the Bald Knob
Church who received per·
mission to use · the upper

Fiflet·n l'cnt s
Vol. ~H . No. lti:l

park ing lot barbecue area to November showed that the
present a Christmas ploy and department investigated 26
sing carols on Dec. 23 be· accidents, made 34 arrests,
t ween~ and 6 p.m. They will Issued 1,004 parking tickets,
present the manger • scene . collected 1702 in parkin g
and a narrator will tell the ti ckets, coll ected $1,752.50
story. The program wlll last from street meters, $1,420
do longer than 9 p.ril.
from parking lot membt&gt;r•
Also meeilng with council making a total of $3,874,
was a representative of the drove 4,380 miles and had
Unifi cati on Church of four new tires put on the
Columbus (Moon movement) crul!er.
asking permission to solicit
Davis told council that Jack
the business establishment Kroutter 's pickup truck had
for money. Council told him been damaged when hit by
members of the Unification the city 's end loader .
Church had been mokln~ a Krautter, street superin ·
nuisance of them selves by tendent, has two estimates to
selling candy or gum and not repair his vehicle, one in .the
"taking no'' for an answer. amount of $192.47 and $349.25.
The matter was tabled.
Council suggested he get a
Chief of Pollee Jed Web- third estimate and use his
ster's report for the month of own judgment and go ahead
and have his truck repaired.
Council agreed to purchase
a standby controller in case
the traffic lights at the entrance of the Pom'eroy-Mason
Bridge go out. Cost of the
Spencer.
The story in which Spence r controller IS $2,275.
Atten~in g were Mayo r
is involved tells of the gun·
Andrews,
Ralph Werry ,
ners scoring a direct hit on a
Davis,
Lou
Osborne, Phil
Japanese torpedo plane with
Globakar,
and
Dr. Harold
a three-inch gun at a range of
Brown
.,.
council
members,
150 yards. The late Mr.
Ja
ne
Walton,
cle
r~,
Kra utter ,
Spencer was a coxswain and
Donnie
Ward,
chief
Webster,
was actuall'y the gun pointer ·
H
enry
Werry,
and
the
Rev .
who trained the weapon so
unerringly 'on the Jap plane. William Mlddleswarth who
The ship on which the late ope ned the mee ting with
Mr. Spencer was assigned prayer.
was In full action within five•
minutes after the Japanese
att acked Pearl Harbo r,
'•
according to the account.

Pearl Harbor Day ·recalled
Today is Pe~rl Harbor Day, servicemen during the at·
In moving back to Meigs tack.
Pictured on the front page
County, Billy Joe Spencer
came across a copy of the of the " PI" is the late J. D.
Seattle Post lntelllgencer, the Spencer who resided In Meigs
Oct. 30, 1942, edition telling of Co unty and died in the ea rly .
some of the facts of American 1950s, a brother of Billy Joe

Ex-radioman figures

Navy still owes him
said, sent crewmen scurrying
for fire hoses and hydrants.
"We thought It was a fire
drill and scrambled for our
hose stations,'' he recalled.
"In his haste to give the
alarm, the bosun's mate gave
!he 'Fire' Instead of 'Open
fire' alarm.
"Even though I was three
decks below, I sensed
h'
somet mg was · wrong and
headed for my bottle station
in the conning tower, figuring
that was about the safest
place to be. However, we
were
without
com·
munlcations as a torpedo bad
hit the radio room and
knocked out all our gear.
"The oper&amp;tors abandoned
the radio shack a~d went to
an aid .collection station on
deck. Thirty minutes later a
bomb hit the coliection
station and killed six of
them."
Bachner said the California
tookthreetorpedohlts, which
doomed the vesael.
He . said he remembers
interest!'
·
when
he leaped for his life
Bachner, president of tlie
ihto
the
water.
Pea rl Harbor Survivors
"It
·was
9:55 a.m. I know
Assoclatlon, was a radioman
because
my
watch stopped
3.C., aboard the California at
the minute I hit the water. I
lhe time of its sinking..
He said he was on duty at . still have that watch
the time and the first order he somewhere In the hottom of
heard was '' Fire." This. he one of my drawers at home."

HONOLULU (UP!) - Joe
Bachner says the Navy owes
him $21 because he was only
following orders when he
abandoned ship during the
Japanese atlack on Pea.ri
Hahor Dec. 7, 19U, and the
battlewagon California sank,
carrying his paycheck with it.
"It certainly wasn 't my
fault that the California sank
with aU my gear - and my
money - that mornin'gt''
Sachner said in an interview
Monday on the eve of the
aMiversary of the bombing.
" And I was only following
orders wben . I abandoned
ship, leaped Into the water
and swam ashore .. . But I've
never been able to convince
the Navy that I should be
repa !d for that clothing
allowance and paid for that
month's duty.
"I'm agreeable to a
comproml!e. If they'll pay
me the $21, we'll forget abOut
the clothing allowance -;-- and
the accumulated 35 years of

Nine traffic

ACCept bid for
neW COmpactOr

cases settled

SYRACUSE Seven
defendants were fined and
two others forfeited bonds In ·
Syracuse Mayor Herm an
London 's co urt Monday
night. The arresting officer In
all cases was Police Chief
Milton Varian.
Fined were Robert o.

The Meigs County' Com·
missioners have invited bids
for six pieces of rolling stock,
two pickup trucks, two dump
trucks, a motor grader and a
four door passenger car.
WIUls, Syracuse , $150 and
The blda will be opened on costs, three da ys • con·
Dec. 20at 10 a.m. at the office flnement , operaling a motor
of the county commissioners. vehicle while under the in·
Bids must he submitted in ·nuence Qf alcohol, 550 and
separate proposals, each to costs, lelt · of center; David
meet the conditions and Kiser, Racine, 114 and costa,
specifications as advertised. speeding ; . Jesse
W.
Th e com m 1s s 10 n e r s , Browning, Portland, 119 and
following routin e business costs, speeding, and Edward
Monday,· left for the con: · A. ~W/lOil, Syracuse, $18 and
ventlon in Columbus of Ohio costs, speeding.
comml!sioners.
Forfei ting bonds were
Attending were Henry Mcchael L. Childs, Mid·
Well! Warden Ours and dleport, 124.70, speeding, and
Bern~rd Gilkey, ' com· Preston E. Love, Point
missioners, Martha Cham· · Pleasant , t30.70, speeding.
. bers, .clerk Wesley Buehl, Sent Ins. eal
engineer and Dave Spencer ol
GRANGE TO MEET
the county 'highway garage. · Ohio Valley Grange 2612
U!tart Falls, wiU meet at the
haU Thursday at 6 p.m. A
DEER SHOT
J. R. Wamsley, age 12, potluck dinner and $1 gift
Pom ~ roy, brought down a exchange wiU follow . The
IJO.pound doe Saturday in tbe junior Grange wLII meet
Thursday Dec. 16at 7:30p.m.
Great Bend area.

TROOPER C:AS'to·

Casto is
Trooper
of year
Ohio State Highway Patrol
Trooper Arlos F. Casto of
Pomeroy has been selected
1976 Trooper of the Year at
the Gallipolis Po~t.
The award w ~s presented
to Trooper Casto, age 30, In
recognition of out .&lt; tnnd lng
servi ce during 1970 at the
Galli polis Post. Selected by
fellow officers stutloned at
.Gall ipolis, the decision to
choose Trooper CnS\o wt•s
based on leaderBhlp abilities,
professional ethics, cou rteous
treatm ent of oth ers , en·
thuslastlc ~ork nttitude, and
cooperation with supervisors,
peers, and the publi c.
Trooper Casto Is now In
contention for the District
and Staie Trooper of the Year
Awards to be announced ut a
later dote.
Trooper Casto joined the
Patrol in 1969, and has served
at the GaUipolls Post s ine~
that time. Originally from
Hacker Valley, W. Va., he
graduated from Webster
Springs High Schoot,.served
in the U.S. Air Force, and has
attended Eastern Washington
State College at Ellensburg
and Ohi o Univ ersity at
Athens . .
Trooper Casto and his wife
Maria Luisa, reside with
their children Arlos Franklin
Jr., age 7, and David Al1hur,
age 6.

- DAYSTO
CHHIST~AS

�..
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1976

Eastern ·High
etes,
cheerleaders honored

SPECIAL AWARDS - Bob McClure, oulstanding bac~ ; Dave MIU., outatanding
Uneman and honorary captain, and most Improved player, Mike Smith, 1-r.

•

'

SENIORS ON VOLLEYBALL TEAM - First row, 1-r, Tammy Fitch, Jewell Blake,
Jeanifer Gainer, Pam Spurlock, and Coach SUsan Thompson ; back row, Julia Carpenter,
Janet Ambrose, Teresa Edwards, Robin Elkins and Brenda Lanham.
.

Too many Carters alre~dy
·The crowds overflowed the · unfelt · oath against his
PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) - It scarred station oo a rainy · hometoWJ1.
.was an emotional moment. night after the polls closed at
His brother came and went.
The President-elect of the 7p.m.
The other folks lingered on.
Billy, as usual, was holding Then someone noticed thai
United States walked into the
ruling station and threw his court, this time in the back Billy, too, had gone.
arms around his brother In room of the station, a
borrowed hat on his head, a
consolation.
DAUGHTER BORN
"I'm sorry he lost/' Jimmy beer can in his hand, a quip
Mr.
and Mrs. Don Anand
a
laugh
on
his
lips.
Carter said softly to no one il)
derson,
Midd leport, ·anparticular In the crowded
He had promised a celebrastation that also serves as a tion, win or lose, rut when the nounce the birth of a
beer hangout. "He .would results were announced it daughter, Sarah Elizabeth,
Thursday, Nov. IB, at St. Ann
have made a great mayor." was diffe.fent.
Billy still smiled, and as he Hospital, "Columbus. GrandBilly Carter had just heard
the news from the vote has done thousands of times parents are Mrs. Phyllss
counters at the town hall next since his brother started Hennessy, Pomeroy, and Mr.
door. He had lost In his effort running for president , and Mrs. George Morris,
greatanswered Porrier oy;
to unseat incumbent Mayor patiently
grand~arents
are
Mrs.
A.L. Blanton, 90-n, a bigger questions.
Thomas
Hennessy,
Sr.,
margin than two years ago
"Are you prepared to
when Blanton won by six change your image for Tuppers Plains and Mrs.
Helen Reynolds, Fern Park,
votes.
political success?"
"Oil, yeah, I'm going to Fla. The couple has another
"It was hard for BiUy to
overcome aU 'the publicity change my Image. But I ain't daughter, Barbara Joan:
and his brother probably cost gonna change ' my Blue
him the election. The people Ribbon, no way."
PLEASANT VALLEY
But there was sadness
In PlaiQs have enough
DISCHARGES - Erma
Carters winning elections," beneath the mirth, and occa- Jeffers, Ashton; Sylvia Cline,
Carter said during his visit. sionally it burst out In . an Pliny; Mrs. Sidney FitzThe brothers' cousin, Hugh, unfelt vow to move to ger~ld, Point Pleasant, and
Australia or in an equally Jody Wears, Gallipolis.
Is a state senator.
By WESLEY G. PIPPER1

DR. LAMB

Isometric~
By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR. DR. LAMB- After
reading your cclumn about
Isometric exercises and what
they can actually do to the
blood pressure I became very
concerned. I do not do
isometric exercises, but
whenever I think of It I tense
my stomach muscles and
keep them tight in order to
have a flat stomach.
Is lhiB a JH'actice that I
should avoid? I am a middleaged woman and I do ezerclse. I've never lleen troubled
with high blood pressure and .
I don't want It to heppen to
me now. ·
. DEAR READER
laometric contractions, Including hand-shaking or
squeezing and voluntary
contractions, can cause a
transitory rise of the blood
pressure. They will not,cause
a normal person to develop
high blood pressure though .
The danger Ill for the person
who already hBB erces.•lvely
high blood JH'essure.
Many life sltuatlons lnthe blood pressure
'

·""""r

By Greg Bailey
Easlern . High School
honored Its athletes Monday
evening when the arutual FaD
Sports Banq~et was held with
ABC sportscaster Dave Diles
the guest speaker. Diles, a
nativ e Meigs Countian,
captivated his audience with
his humor, wit and pointed
remarks.
Now a successful author,
Diles urged the athletes to
participate In sports because
they're fun. He said that
although winnin g .Is Important, It's not the most
important thing, and he
quoted the old saying, "It's
not whether you win or lose,
but how you play the game."
He asked the boys to take
their abilities and look . at
them realistically, as
chances are Very, very
remote that they'll ever make
a living from sports. He
pointed out that successful
people care, and that's what
makes them successful. He
told the young athletes to
appreciate the people In their
lives who care about them,
teachers, parents, and
coaches. He cautioned them
to value the truly Important
things beca use the person
they have to live with the rest
of thei r lives, and the only
person . they can't run away
from, is theselves.
Following Diles' address,
Alan Holter presented junior
high football awards to Mike
Baker, Bernnie Bennett,
Mike Bissell, Bryce Buckley,
Greg Cole, Bill Frederick,
Lee Gainer, Chuck Hensley,
Nickey Leonard , Todd
Norton, James Reed, Johnnie
Riebel, Edward Riffle,
Charles Ritchie, Joe Sayre,
Sect! Skinner, Robby Smith,
Ray Spe~cer, Virgil Taylor,
Scott VanMeter, David
Wolfe, Joe Bowers, Gene
Cole, Dennis Durst. Dean
Hawk , Rodney Keller, Tony
Kennedy , Kenny Larkins ,
Kenny Newell, Rocky Pitzer,
Terry Pooler, Kenny Reed,
Greg Scarbrough, Randy
~taats, Richie VanMeter,
Mike Welch, !lay Werry,
Greg Wigal, arid managers
Eric Schmucker, Dean
Staats, and Barry Staats.
Statisticians were Jan
Smith, Sar~h . Goebel and
Cassie Sheets. J unlor high
cheerleaders introduced by
. Sally Mitchem were Laura
Eichinger, Tina Beaver, Beth
Riebel, Beth Wilson and Patti
Edwards.
Coach Sue Thompson
presented Volleyball awards
to Janet Ambrqse , Kim
Batey, Jewell Blake,.Jeresa

Raiders rip Bengals, 35-20

Sport Parade

~

SENIOR GRIDDERS - Front, 1-r, Kevin Bailon,
Darrell Drake, John Evans, Steve Hauber, Jim Hawthorne, Coach Joe Mitchem; back row, Larry Longenette,

f'ilob McClure, Dave Mills, Richard Mora, Bruce RiHie,
· · Mike Smith. Three, Bnb Kamper, Noah Hysell and Mack
Lawson were absent.

one of the host teams.
finish ahead of Pittsburgh,
lt looks now as if !he rest of which beat U1em twice this
\he AFC lineup will be mack' year. The Bro~11s can gain
up or Baltimore, as th.c East the playoffs only be beating
chwnp, Pittsburgh, as lhe Kansas City while Pittsburgh
Central chap1p, and New and Cincinnati both lose. ~~ngland, as the wild card
The Bengals made a game
team.
of it Monda y night' for the
Of course Pittsburgh, two- first half. Ti1ey trailed only
time defemling Super Bowl
by 21-13 with " fa irly
chan1pion,. hasn 't Clinched balanced off ense, but in uw
anyU1ing yet. But U1e St~elers second half they gained ' only
can ttike care of that chore 36 . rush ing "Y""Is as Ken
S~turday by beating !he Anderson ab;lJldoncd the run
Hous!Dn Oilers in the fi na I and went to U1e uir .
regular season game. If Ute)' . II proved a poor move
do. it will doso-oui both the because the Raider defense
Bengals and Clcvellllld start ed lPei ng orr on
Browns, with whom they m·e Anderson and U1e harder he
Lied righ t now with 9-4 tried. till' worse thi n~s
rccont, .
IJecamr. Itt Ute tmd, Anderson
The Bengals can still makP compl eted only nine pu sses in
it but they would hav e to beat 20 second half attcmf&gt;ts and
the New York Jets in their \\'OI'se th11n Uwi he was
final game wh ile the Steeiers mtcrcepted lhret' tlmcs. That
,lose to Houston in order to out Ute Bengals' defense in

the hole and Stabl.r quickly
ran off a pair of tnuchdo wns
to seal lhc ''erdk't.

'11te smooth throwinA teft handci· ccntpleied 16 of 27
Ul!'ows for 217 yards, pussin~
24 ·""'I three yards to Dave
Casper, 42to Ciiff IJraneh und
seven to Frc'!l Bile!Jlikoff for
tourhdowns. Pete &amp;mtsznk
rw1 a yard oft£'f' Monttl
John,son Intercepted 11 pass
· by Anderson for the oth(w
Oakland score.
'l'hr Bcn go ls got their
points on 11 40 yard puss by
Anderson to John McDnnlci,
a une·ya rd smHsh by Suw

l"ritLI and n 21-yanl run by
1\rchi c Griffin.
" If Onkland can play any
better, I would hole to see it ,"
said Bengals coul'h Bill John ·
son . "If you think they
'''eren't try ing, ask one of In)'

wtnrhed

the

gA me

n nine-game winnlng streak

rod .
Pittsburgh hns won eight in
II row Since dropping fOW' Of
i!fi first fivr, und many people
Utinl&lt; t h&lt;' Stt'tlicrs a•·e tltt• hest
1e1uo ln Uw NFI. right now.
El'l'ryonc will find out ,soon
rnou~h . Tilt' plnyoffs nre tbe
last two weekends of 01is
montl1 1111&lt;1 the SUP&lt;'r Bowl
foli&lt;lws twu w~ks Inter .
liS l1 mcwmrln~

the

CHEERLEADERS - Senior cheerleaders are Cindy
Ritchie and Diana Epple, 1-r.

Pictures by Gary Sisk
SIGNS AUTOGRAPHS autographs during a break.
1'\uckley, Teresa Edwards. Mora and Cindy Ritchie.
Robin Elkins, -Vicky Epple,
Junior Varsity coaches Ed
Tamm y Fit ch, Laurie Wilson and Arch Rose team and special awards.
Special recognition went to
Matthews, Vida Weber, Pam presented their squads of Ed
Dave
Mills and Joe Kuhn for
Spurlock, Julia Carpenter, . Adams, Brian Bissell, Tim
head
coach
Joe Mitchem and
Jennifer Gainer, Janet Dillon, Dewayne Good, Greg
Brooks, Sonia Carr, Robin Hayman, Mark Norton , Mark· assistant Rose presented
Ritchie, and Brenda Lanham, .. Smith, Blair Windon, Noah their varsity team and
and Jane Milhone, manager. Hysell, Bob VanKampen, special awards.
The captain was Miss Ed- Brtan Matthews, Perry Reed, · Special recognition went to
wards.
Greg Ginther, Randy Keller, Dave Mills and Joe Kuhn for
Before a short break, ad- and Lawrence Pooler. All-League achievements in
visor Carol King presented Managers were 'Ed Werry, 1975 and also 1976. 1976 All·
her cheerleading squads. Ray Werry, and Ro4ney Leaguers were Mills, Bob ·
McClure, Kevin Barton and
Reserve cheerleaders were .Keller .
Karen Probert, Brenda
Superintendent John Riebel Mark Lawson, and Kuhn and
Frecker, Beth Head ley, and Principal Gooding Mike Smith were hmiorable
Betsy Riffle, Sherrie Starch- prese nted trophies to all mention.
Mitchem presented the
er, and Angel Blake. Varsity senior participants, hoth girls
squad members were Kiana and hoys, before head coach special awards, McClure the
Jones, Sonia Beaver, Brenda Joe Mitchem and assistant trophy for the best offensive
Boyles, Diana Epple, Mary Rose presented their varsity , back, Mills the trophy for the
best lineman, most Improved
player to Mike Smith, and the

Dave Diles signs

honorary captain award went
to Mills. Varsity members
were Barton, Darrell Drake,
J.ohn Evans, Steve Hau6er,
Jim Hawthorne, Hysell,
Lawson, Larry . Longenette,
McClure, Mills, Richard
Mora , Bruce Riffle, Smith,
Bob VanKampen, Randy
Boston, Joe Kuhn, Brian
Matthews, Perry .Reed, Greg
Ginther, Tim Hawthorne,
Mike Hayman, Randy Keller,
Pooler, Dan Spencer, Russell
Starcher , Rusty Wigal ,
Adams, Bissell, Tim Dillon,
Don Eynon , Good, Greg
Hayman, Norton, Mark
Smith and Windon.
Managers were Ed Werry,
Ray Wer~y ano;t !lodne~
Keller .
·

Rhodes signs pay raise act H .
.
ouse names 11s
new tenn leaders

UP! Statehouse Reporter
new pay schedules will not
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov . apply until January.
James A. Rhodes has signed
The pay raise bill affects
a pair of bills granting pay nine types of officials in
raises averaging about 40 per Ohio's 88 counties. Auditors
cent to elected county .and other county officials In
officials and revising the the middle of their terms will
state's charitable bingo law. not receive pay increases
The governor signed the until afler the next elections.
bills, adopted by the General The counties will foot the cost
Asse!llbly last Nov. 9, late of the pay hikes.
Monday. Both take effect
The bingo measure is de·
Immediately, although the signed to allow veterans' and
fraternal organizations to donate proceeds to their
favorite causes while
tightening the charitable
provisions In other/ respects,
The pay raise bill includes
annual increases ranging
from $1,305 to $5,600 In most
classes of counties, although
county prosecutors will
receive extra large Increases
ranging from $8,100 to
nonnat? Can it be nonnal at $13,900.
all? I am much too shy to talk
Aside from auditors . and
to my mother or anyone JH'Osecutors, the new law
about It or to see a doctor makes county treasurers,
either. What should I do? This sheriffs, clerks of court,
Is reaDy, worrying me.
recorders, . commissioners,
DEAR READER - You engineers and coroners
should have stuck with your eligible for II"Y lnereaRes.
original resolution ·not to
The law r~uces from 35 to
W&lt;rry if your periods were
.,
irregular.
TilE D~LY SENTINEL
No, it Is not unusual to
DEVOTED TO THE
have relatively long time
INTEREST OF
MEIGS..MASON AREA
spans without menstruation
OHESTEK L. TANNEHIU.
at your age. Young girls
Eke. Ed.
. ROBF..JtTHOEFUCH
usually start having periods
City Editur
between 10 and 16 years of
Publi~llel.J il1:1 ily I!XL'i:i&gt;t Slltu1'd11y .
age. The fact thai you had
by TIH! Ohm V1:11l~y Publishing ClnnIll Co u r~ St., Pmner())', Ohio
regular periods suggests that . lmy,
45769. Bll!liness Offic~ Phone 992·
you are perfectly nonnal.
2156, Etliturial Pl1ot1e 992·2157.
Set.·cmtl cblss posla!!e' paid · at
Obeslty and crash diets are
Pomeroy, Ohio.
both factors In upsetting the
NllliOIWI CldiJ~rti.slng reprL~ II- ·
Uttiv~ W11rd • Grltrith Coll)pal'IYI' In·
delicate hormone balance
Buttiuelli untl Gt~llagher DiV.,
that controls .menstruation. c.,
757 Tlurtl 1've., New York, N.Y.
You are on the right course, J OOii ,
.
SuU,.,criptiun rttLL'S: llt!livered Uy
eating a sound, sensible diet.
Clll'ricr whc.·1·e ava il 11 b l~ 75 ~~ n\.s per·
Nature wiD likely take cnre of ~o,·eek . Ry Mulor Route wherecarTiCI'
the re~t of the development suvic(• nul 11\'aiht!Jie, One monlh,
By m&lt;~il in Ol1io 11 11~ W. Vtt.,
for you. If you do not resume $:1.25.
Om~ Vtmr, $22.00: Six munl.Jts,
menstruation by age 16 then $11.541; 'l'hn•t• m o nth ~. $7.00;
I·:J:-;~.• whcr·e 1:.!1!,110 ~·cu t·: Six muutl ts
you should see a doctor about $1:1.50;
TI II'Cl' III UII!hs, $7.50.
it.
l'iui!:'il'l'tiJiil•n prin• nwli11b Suulluy
Tllt lt'li-l'ic1•IU•t-l

14 the number of classes of
'
counties, according to
popu lation. Generally, ·
officials in the smaller
counties receive the largest
By GENE BERNHARD1 • attack on employment as
percentage Increases.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - their top priority.'
Most of the dollar Increases
House
Democrata picked a
are in the range of·$4,ii00 to
Wright was a surprise'
Massachusetts
liberal and a winner over Rep. Phillip
$5,000 a year for the various
Texas moderate for their top Burien of California. Burton
county.officials.
The bingo ~ill. amending two leadership posts in the and Missouri Rep. Richard
the charitable bingo law new Congress and turned Bolling had been considered
passed last May, also permits their attention to reforming, the front runners.
veterans' and fraternal House operating procedures.
The incumbent·whip, John'
Both Rep. Thomas "Tip" McFall of California, was the.
organizations to use proceeds
to build and maintain O'Neill, a product of rough- fourth man in the beated ra~
pol- and the first to drop out, after
facilities for conducting their and-j,ough · Boston
itics
who
was
un- receiving only 31 votes on the
games.
The organizations had opposed in the Dem· first .of three secret ballots.
complained that under the ocratic caucus Mondsy
The caucus also elected.
prior law they were to succeed retiring Carr Rep. Thomas Foley of·
restricted to a list of specified , Albert as speaker of the Washington over Rep. Shirley.
House, and his successor as Chisholm of New York for
charities.
The new law also majority leader, Texan Jim caucus chainnan by a 194-96,
;tuthorizes senior citizen Wright, who won a slim 14&amp;- VO\~.
~
groups and volunteer rescue 147 victory, pledged an all-&lt;&gt;ut ,
The selection of officers by
squam to hold bingo games
Democrats, who will continue.
under the definition of
to control the new Congress,
"charity. 11
was the first of a series of_
Existing bingo provisions
orgamzmg moves. The
are tightened under the new
caucus resumed discussion·
law'by:
today on a series of JH'Oposed.
- Ensuring that bingo
reforms In House operating,
procedures.
proflls cannot be used for
TORONTO (UP!)
noncharltable purposes.
House Republicans meet:
-Eliminating, "zingo'' and General Motors of Canada Thursday to elect their-·
other schemes of chance and the United Auto Worker.s officers; with GOP leader
conducted under the guise of today reached tentative John Rhodes expected to be, '
agreement on a contract renamed to that office.
bingo.
-Setting a maximum of following a six-bour strike
Only the No. 3 spot in 11M!
idled 28,000 workers at 11 Democratic leadership, that.
per session rent on bingo that
halls
for . qualifying plants.
of whip, remains to be filled
A GM spokesman said and Democrats were ready ,
charitable groups.
- Barring use of a detaU. of the settlement, today to consider a move tq·
reached after all night make the post' elective.
comm~rcial ,, building for
.•
were
not , 111 the pBBt t11e speaker and'
bingo by more than one bargaining
lmmedlately available.
charity.
majority
leader have.
The walkout began at mid- appointed a whip, but sin~,.
The original bingo law. was
passed to protect the game night. Bargainers meeting at that job was the flrll llep on;
for charity ,while preventing the Royal York Hotel reached the ladder to the speakershlp
its use . by syndicates agreementat Sa .m. foUowing ' there has been a :growtn&amp; ,
marathon . 20-hour move to t,t . the full ,
diverting proceeds a
negotiating
session.
elsewhere. An attempt to
membership ma~e th~
,
Gt.\'s
contract
with the decision.
satisfy the fraternal and
Rep.
John
veterans' groups was made UAW expired last July 19 and Brademas of Indiana Is the
last September but failed in since then the employes have only aMOUIIced candidate fo~ .
the l'1!9h towar~ adjournment worked under a continuous the office.
,,)· I
••
series of contract extensions.
for election campaigning.

Agreement
is reached

'200

'

I,

Eastern opening

'72 CHEVY
IMPALA

against Lancers

PLAYING NIGHTL V

milit ary bases, wasn't to the Hoston Red Sox for 2t)..
present 11t the mmoun.remrnt ycarolrl CL'C iJ C..oopcr 111 one of
of his signi ng. He returned to thei r. deals. They obUdned
Bos ton Monday afternoon· Infield er Jamie Quirk and
where he met with his agent out fielder ,lim Woitl forli pins
and then telephone1i the • player lo he named late r
Phillies to tell u1e111 of his from Kansas .City for pil.l'her
decision.
Jim Colbor n &lt;md catctwr
Eight clubs drafted Hebne1· Darrell Port c1·, ond then
and Owens. said "three or wound up the ct.y by picking
four teams'' were in u1e sauw up cntchet· l.arry Huncy from
price range but. the ft~c t UitH Onkl;.ind
in H third
the Philli es nre p'cnna 11 t transaction .
contenders helped sway the
Sco tt . wh o played for
ex-Pintle's dec ision.
Boston from 1960 through
"We're not umler the ~ un t.o 1972, wo s a niai nst11y on the
make a trade now," added RNI Sox's 1967 American
Owens. "But, of couri.ie, we' ll League ehampionship team.
li sten ."
He hit .274 with 16 home runs
Tite Milwauke ~ Brewers, and 77 HBis last seHSQn while
who finished in the cellar in C&lt;trbo batted .235 after being
the American Leab'Ue East dealt from the He&lt;I'So• tn the ·
and won only 66 games last .. Brewers for outfielder i3obby
season , made three deals Darwin last June 3.
invol ving eight players as tim
A produ ct of the Red Sox
winter meetings official ly gpt farm system, Cooper will be
under wc1oy Mouday .
27 next week. !11 12:! games as
They shipped slugging fir st a fir st baseman and. a
biJseman George Scott and designated hitler last season,
outfielder Bernie Carbo back he batted .282 with 15 homers
and 78 It Bls.

VAI.U£ 8UY$u

KI r

,

AT

" OX

"TIGRESS"
2 Ga ls
From Pa rkorsburg

WEDNESDAY &amp;TiiURSDAY
9:00 TIL 1:00
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
10:00 TIL 2:00

THE MEIGS INN
992.3629
Pomeroy

PIZZA SHACK

INFRARED HEATERS
PROPANE TORCHES

C.o i icl bras s pcn1..i l lttmw burne r·

unit . and pr o r~n c cy li nde r
l~rov ,d cs up · to 15 hours burn ing

G&amp;J's
A. METAL
fORCH KIT

AT THE INN

PENCIL tJURNER
TORCH
'
.

&amp;

;ll"nc Com plete w i th a clog proo f
llf Cr

WI11C h

QUdrds

ii9CIIIl SI

rnpunn cs dogging the Ori fice .

tJ L L1stcd.

PROPANE

Seven riece Iorch kit . Wi lh nlllhe
Wiln t ed
accessori es :
Ma xi
Prop&lt;'ln e J e l Torch with Solid
BrrlS S Bur ner K il , Fuel Cylinder .
Spark lighter , Pen c i l To rc h

Hcud , Sri&lt;:)p On Oft F I arne
Spr (• dd e r an d .S oldering T1p:
scp,1ra le Orif ice for' pencil flame
burner head. Clag ·pr oo l fill er
w ill e t~ guMds agai n st impurities
clogg •ng the Orifice PAcked in il
red CnilmCicd steel cas e. U L
L is t ed.
h1175a

'1295

Karr &amp; VanZandt

DELICIOUS HAMBURGER

WE WILL CLOSE DEC. 12
FOR THE SEASON

The only way to recognize a bargain
is to measure the price against the
quality - That adds up to a word
called value.
QUARTZ IODINE DRIVING LIGHTS
O ri~ 1ng

R ea _d~

lo mount durabl e

plastic dispenser fil l neally
into kltchent, bathrooms, .
laundrw rooms , workshopa

and fogl1~hls fo r all 1rnpor ted and

domestiC cars. App rove~ 10 ~II 50
pe d w1 th Halogen H3 bulb.

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

DCMNINGCHILDS AGENCY INC.

Cleans ~ti e r than toap.

"
Ja1er speed and hrghway tu rnprk e dm1ng

states. £qu1p

and garages .
•

Snap In/Snap Oul Replace-

able 18 oz. cartridge.
• Easy one-hand operation.
• Five year written guarantee.
• Saves money, absolutely

TRUCK STORAGE
BOXES

no waote'(toJo)

Prices Good ijlru 12-25-76
MODEl .

115

'8

c

D

E

619350

70 1/8"

63"

161/8''

9"

201/4'

'
619351

55 1/8''

48 5fa' '

16 1JB''

9"

201

1

G&amp;.- AUTO PARTS

'

240 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS

Value Buys Everyday
'1

,,

on

tele11sion and they lmd to be
iuappy about the outcome but
not neCl'Ssa rlly with how well
Oakhutd plnyed. Pittsburgh
starl~t the season by losing
to Ute Halcters in Oakland and
if .tHI}'thing, Ule Raiders are 8
bt'tter tenm nQw thnn ·they
W\"n.' in Sc~ten'1ber 1if y ou LL~e

Phils obtain Richie Hebner

aren't usually harmful

temporarily. A good example bothering me for some
is ruanlng. As a person exerts lime
and
it
really
himself, the heart must pump 'worries me . I am femore blood. With this in- male and 14 years old. 1
crease the blood pressure started menstruating a year
rises. This Is nonnal and ago. I had read that menafter exercise the blood strual cycles can sometimes
pressure returns to nonnal. be irregular, such as skipping
Such exercise actuaUy helps a month or two, so I was not
to lower blood pressure In going to be worried or surmany nonna I people after the prised if mine did. Well, mine
period of exercise Is over.
didn't. I was very regular.
To give you more in After about six months, one
formation on isometric month I didn't have a period.
ezerclses and blood pressure It didn't come the next monih
I am sending you The Health and now !tis six months Letter number 1-10, Exercise,. half a year - since my last
Posture, . Strength. Others period.
who want this Issue can send
Around that time I changed
50 centS with a long, stamped, my eating habits and went on
self-addressed envelope for a mild diet. I started eating
11. Just send your request to the right amount of everyme In care of this newspaper, thing; plenty of vegetables,
P. 0. Box 1ii5l, Radio City fresh · fruit and the ' right
Station, New York, NY 10019. amounts of protein, milk,
Keep up your exercise. It · cereal, bread aqd milk
will help you keep strong products. I do not eat any
abdomimil muscles and help heayy, rich, sweet desserts as
prevent back problems as I used to aU the time. I lost
well as keep you nicer ·five pounds.
looking.
lsn 't six months without
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have l!iPn struatlng very · aba problem that has been

By JOE ~ARGIS
preny good position.
UP) Sports Writer
"1 said last week that the
OAKLAND (UP! ) - Now, talk by the Steelefli was
.everyone will have to believe stupid, and I still say it's
the Oakland Raiders.
stupid," said'Raiders' coach
· By MILTON RICHMAN
All week long leading up to John Madden. " I can't
UPI Spoo:ll Editor
Monds~ ni~ht's ~arne against believe any club wou!d make
the Ctnc1nnatt Bengals, such a suggestion - that we
LOS ANGELES (UPI) BaSeball managers used to be judged people everywhere, including would delibera tely lay down
simply on how many games their ,ball club6 won or lost, but the Pittsburgh Steelers, so that we could decide who
thingshavechanged:Nowtheyhold theirjob6, or lose them, on suggested the Raiders would play in the playoffs. I
how well or pPOrly they communie~~te with !heir players.
wouldn't go all out because, if hope all that talk now has
The point comes up because two of the key players traded at they lost to Cincinnati, th~ar been put to rest. It 's Ql1 to the
the baseball meetings here Monday , George Scott and Bernie old r1vals, the Steelers, would ·playoffs and I think my club
Carbo, have been Involved with commuilicaUon problems with· be denied a .spot ih the is ready for anyone, Including
managers they played for , while a third player dealt on forthcoming AFC Playoffs. the Steelers. "
Monday, Rico Carty, generally got along oksy with his
So, the Raiders who talk
By beating Ci ncinnati the
managers but sometimes ran into trouble communl~ating with often
of
pride,
went
out
and
Raiders
improved their
• his fellow players.
.
.
smacked the Bengals, 35-20, record to 12-1, the best mark
One of the reasons Scott and Carbo were sent back to Boston on national television where in the National Foo tball
for .eecu Cooper was because hoth said the nne of ccmmuni- everyone could see tllllm , League, and clinched the
• cation between them and Milwaukee Manager Alex Grammas with Ken Stabler throwing , home field e~e for the
had been cut off this past season .
.
four touchdown passes for a playoffs . That had been their
In this ooanection, it should be remembered that Sparky season total o( '!1. That put goal right along, so when the
Anderson once had difficulty getting through to Carbo with the Bengals- on the outside playoffs open the week~nd of
Cincinnati, and the Reds' manager rates right up there with looking 1n today , while the D~. 16-19, Oakland wtll I•·
Whitey Herzog of Kansas City and Frank Lucchesi of Texas as Steelers seem t~ bP sitting in
one of the best comrnunrcators in the game.
.
.
Scott and Carbo both said they .didn't want to play for
Grammas anymore. They said that publicly, although Scott
later·told the Brewers' manager privately he hadn't meant
what he said, and Carbo similarly apologized to Anderson for
saying pretty much the same thing ahout him after he had left
the Reds.
By JIM COUR
signed with the National
Managers are used to that sort of thing and seldom nurse UPI Sports Writer
League 'S Eastern Division
hard feeUngs.
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
winners Monday nig ht.
"Gecrge Scott Is a soli~ ballplay•r who wanls tn play every The Philadelphia Phillies "We're very confident he can
day," Grammas. said after the deal with the Hed Sox was came to the winter baseball do the job for us there."
announced.
meetings looking to replace
Hebner played third base
"He's the type of guy who'D say things he doesn't. mean the departed Dick Allen and for Pittsburgh last season but
sometimes. I think he overstates once in awhile. It's true he Dave Cash. They've taken originall y was a first
said he didn't want to play for Milwaukee anymore, but I care of'half that problem with baseman.
honestly think he wasn 't mad at me . f know I wasn 't mad at the signing of free agent
"I'm tickled." said Paul
him. I think the fact the ball club wasn 't winning and he wasn't Richie Hebner.
Owens, the Phillie's' director
going too well made him edgy. I talked with George a Iotta
"We'll shift him to first of player personneL "This
times, I'tn ~ fan of George Sc9(t. He bas a Iotta pride in himseH base , n eXplained Danny gives us Ute lefUtanded power
and a Iotta pride in winning and there's certainly nothing Ozark, the Phillies' manager , hitte\ we've been after for
wrong with that. He made ita point to come to me at the end of after the 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld Hebner four years."
the year In Baltimore and sat down and talked ahout 15 or 20
Hebner, wh o hit .249 with
minutes. He said he didn't mean some of the things he said, not
eight home runs and 51 RB!s
the way they came out In .the papers, anyway, and that he points on the boards in an BI- last season, was
Pit~tes'
enjoyed playing this year. I tnld him, 'George, don't worry 76 loss to Miller.
regular third ba seman since
Frei::J Logan, senior center, 1969. He helped the Pirates
a)lout it. I understand human beings and things like that dOn't
although
forced to sit out get intn five playoff series
really bother me."'
most
of
the
second half, had and one World Series. He
As Alex Grammas says, George Scott has a great deal of
18
points
as
did senior for· became the 19th of 24 free
JH'ide. HeMewhewas beingpaid$144,000and he felt he wasn't
giving the Brewers their full money's worth with his .274 ward Ron Plants. Rex Justice agents tn sign a contract wiUr
average, his.77 RBis and his 18 homers. He felt he should 've had 13 points against W tier. a new club . Owens would not
done better ; he Mew he could've done better, and that was ·Southern, in winning, 75-70 disclose terms of the multiover Trimble was paced by year pact.
why he reacted they way he did.
Carty, who Is going back to Cleveland from Toronto where he litUe Eric Dunning 's 16
Allen played fir st base for.
didn't even get a chance to play, will find the same manager points. Big Chip Brauer had the Phillies last year but
16 while Richard Teaford chose his fr ee agency and ha s
there he left, Frank Robinson.
"My ccmmunica(\on with Rico Carty \VaS perfect, '' said finished with 14 points.
not yet been signed by
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's anyone.
Robinson . "Communication is a two-way street. If you know
there's a problem, why shouldn't a manager caD a player In Southwestern Highlanders
Owens said the Phillies
and sit down and talk 7 The problem comes when you know will play at Syrrunes Valley . probably would take care of
there Is a communication gap, the player kn.Ws it, and no one Coach Gary Salyers' Vikings their sec on d base nee ds
have not played this seaso~. within their own system. The
talks."
Southwestern
is 1-1 second base vaca ncy was
In his first year managing the Indians, Robinson was ripped
following an opening loss to created when Cash went to
verbaUy by Qne of his catchers, John Ellis.
"I told him I felt he was a seHish player and until he could rugged Oak Hill then a 65-49 Montreal as a free agent. ,
play the gome the way it should be played for the good of the victory over Ironton St. Joe.
Hebner, who has been on a
Leading the Highlande r European tour of U.S.
team, he wasn't going to play,'' said Robinson . "He came and
apologillda day or so after that and said he was wrong. I said victory over the Flyers
were 6-1 senior center Keith
fine, bU: • . ;01 was going to use him as I saw fit."
Thi.s Week's Specia l
Grate with 26 points; Larry
IDtlmately, Ellis was traded to Texas where he is now.
Robinson has no feeUngs one way or another over what took Ca rter, 6-1 junior forward
place between them.
had 15 points and Don Bush,
"He doesn't go out of his way to speak to me and I don't go 5.-10 senior guard, finished the
out of my way to speak with him,' ' says the Indians' manager. night with 10 points.
1
With seven returning let' If l'dsee him right now, I'd say, 'Hi!"'
t.ermen, th e Vikin gs are
expected to improve last
year 's 4-15 record .
Returning lett erme n include Mark Wilson, 6-2 senior ·
roiward , a second tea m
honoree Ali-SVAC; Ju stin
Miller, 5-10 senior guard ;
4 Dr ., v.a. automatic, P.S. ,
Greg Estep, 5-7 senior guard;
P.B., a ir.
a third team Ali-SVAC
Four league · games VaUey of West Virginia last member; Nick Geswein, 6;2
senior forwardi Cecil Clary,
hlghllght this
week's weekend.
schedule In the Southern
nie Bobcats were led by 5-7 5-8 sen ior guard; Ra lph
Valley Athletic Conference. senior guard Mitch Salem Ingles, 1&gt;-5 junior center and
Action begins tonight with and senior forward Ralph Mike Sowards, :&gt;-4 junior
two • non-league battles. Baylor. Salem tossed In 31 guard.
Hannan Trace goes to points while Baylor added 23.
SVAC STANDIN GS
You'll Like Our Quality
Chesapeake and Eastern George Willis, 6-3 junior, also TfAM AL l GAMES
Way of Doing Bu si ness
W L P OP
plays at Federal Hocking.
2 0 153 IJ ,I
enjoyed a good night for Southern
GMAC FINANCING
Kyger Cree k
I 0 79 &lt;19
Friday night, Southern Coach Keith Carter's five.
992-5342
. Pomeroy
Sou thwes ter n
I 1 133 1·13
Open Evenings '1i l4 : 00
plays at North Gallla; Kyger
Willis, a transfer- returnee Symmes Valley 0 0 0 0
Tiltlo "' · S•t.
0 0
0
0
Creek visits Hannan Trace from South Point, had 10 Eastern
Tr ace
0 1 70 81
and Southwestern goes. to points. He had played junior Hannan
Nor th Ga ll la
0 'l 11 5 161
Symmes Valley. Symmes high and freshmen ball at
Valley will host Eastern Kyger Creek.
Saturday nlghl.
Coach • Carl
Wolfe's
FRY OUR
Coach Duane Wolfe's Southern Tornados will go .
Eastern Eagles open their after theit third straig~t
19711-77 season on the road this victory this season against
evening at Federal Hocking. Coach Ron Twyman's North
Eastern has three let-. Gallia Pirates.
tennen returning from last
Southern owns nonyear's 1·19 season. They are conference wiris over Federal
Kevin Hawk, 6·1 senior Hocking and Trimble. The
center; Bruce Riffle, 5-9 defending SVAC cage
Thank you from Adolph and The Gang . See
senior guard and Gary champs have non-league
you
next Spring!
.•
Nelson, 11-1 junior forward . losses against Eastern of
Coach Wolfe feels his squad Pike County and Mlller.
Is stronger, taller, quicker
North Gallia's offense
and has more experience cculd not get moving in the
than last year's )\:agles.
game against Eastern but the
W. Main
Coach Don Cornell's Pirates came back to place 76
Pomeroy
Haanan Trace Wildcats will
be after their first win of the
campaign against the
Chesapeake Panthers.
LUI week, the Wlldcals
· - were defeated 82-70 by Rock
Hill.
In that non-conference
battle, senior guard · Scott
Gibson dumped In 20 points to
lead the Wildcat attack.
David Swain, a junior
highly counted on lhiB seaSOII,
scored 13 points while David
Campbell ccllected II points.
1Two other Wildcats, Rick
\Thllt and Frank Mooney
were also In double figures
-with 10 points ' each.
Friday night, Hannan
Trace boats Ky@l!r Creek In
.
the opening SV AC contest for
Middleport, Ohio
both schools. Kyger Creek
912-2342
took a 79-49 victory over Elk

players lfho got his oott
i'(}tmdl'&lt;i .11
Coy Bltcon, the ~t~ran
Cincinnati defensive end ,
echoed his coach,
" If they c1111 play any
better , I don't WI!Ilt to playing
opposite them," he said. ·
Of course the $teelers

�..
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1976

Eastern ·High
etes,
cheerleaders honored

SPECIAL AWARDS - Bob McClure, oulstanding bac~ ; Dave MIU., outatanding
Uneman and honorary captain, and most Improved player, Mike Smith, 1-r.

•

'

SENIORS ON VOLLEYBALL TEAM - First row, 1-r, Tammy Fitch, Jewell Blake,
Jeanifer Gainer, Pam Spurlock, and Coach SUsan Thompson ; back row, Julia Carpenter,
Janet Ambrose, Teresa Edwards, Robin Elkins and Brenda Lanham.
.

Too many Carters alre~dy
·The crowds overflowed the · unfelt · oath against his
PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) - It scarred station oo a rainy · hometoWJ1.
.was an emotional moment. night after the polls closed at
His brother came and went.
The President-elect of the 7p.m.
The other folks lingered on.
Billy, as usual, was holding Then someone noticed thai
United States walked into the
ruling station and threw his court, this time in the back Billy, too, had gone.
arms around his brother In room of the station, a
borrowed hat on his head, a
consolation.
DAUGHTER BORN
"I'm sorry he lost/' Jimmy beer can in his hand, a quip
Mr.
and Mrs. Don Anand
a
laugh
on
his
lips.
Carter said softly to no one il)
derson,
Midd leport, ·anparticular In the crowded
He had promised a celebrastation that also serves as a tion, win or lose, rut when the nounce the birth of a
beer hangout. "He .would results were announced it daughter, Sarah Elizabeth,
Thursday, Nov. IB, at St. Ann
have made a great mayor." was diffe.fent.
Billy still smiled, and as he Hospital, "Columbus. GrandBilly Carter had just heard
the news from the vote has done thousands of times parents are Mrs. Phyllss
counters at the town hall next since his brother started Hennessy, Pomeroy, and Mr.
door. He had lost In his effort running for president , and Mrs. George Morris,
greatanswered Porrier oy;
to unseat incumbent Mayor patiently
grand~arents
are
Mrs.
A.L. Blanton, 90-n, a bigger questions.
Thomas
Hennessy,
Sr.,
margin than two years ago
"Are you prepared to
when Blanton won by six change your image for Tuppers Plains and Mrs.
Helen Reynolds, Fern Park,
votes.
political success?"
"Oil, yeah, I'm going to Fla. The couple has another
"It was hard for BiUy to
overcome aU 'the publicity change my Image. But I ain't daughter, Barbara Joan:
and his brother probably cost gonna change ' my Blue
him the election. The people Ribbon, no way."
PLEASANT VALLEY
But there was sadness
In PlaiQs have enough
DISCHARGES - Erma
Carters winning elections," beneath the mirth, and occa- Jeffers, Ashton; Sylvia Cline,
Carter said during his visit. sionally it burst out In . an Pliny; Mrs. Sidney FitzThe brothers' cousin, Hugh, unfelt vow to move to ger~ld, Point Pleasant, and
Australia or in an equally Jody Wears, Gallipolis.
Is a state senator.
By WESLEY G. PIPPER1

DR. LAMB

Isometric~
By Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR. DR. LAMB- After
reading your cclumn about
Isometric exercises and what
they can actually do to the
blood pressure I became very
concerned. I do not do
isometric exercises, but
whenever I think of It I tense
my stomach muscles and
keep them tight in order to
have a flat stomach.
Is lhiB a JH'actice that I
should avoid? I am a middleaged woman and I do ezerclse. I've never lleen troubled
with high blood pressure and .
I don't want It to heppen to
me now. ·
. DEAR READER
laometric contractions, Including hand-shaking or
squeezing and voluntary
contractions, can cause a
transitory rise of the blood
pressure. They will not,cause
a normal person to develop
high blood pressure though .
The danger Ill for the person
who already hBB erces.•lvely
high blood JH'essure.
Many life sltuatlons lnthe blood pressure
'

·""""r

By Greg Bailey
Easlern . High School
honored Its athletes Monday
evening when the arutual FaD
Sports Banq~et was held with
ABC sportscaster Dave Diles
the guest speaker. Diles, a
nativ e Meigs Countian,
captivated his audience with
his humor, wit and pointed
remarks.
Now a successful author,
Diles urged the athletes to
participate In sports because
they're fun. He said that
although winnin g .Is Important, It's not the most
important thing, and he
quoted the old saying, "It's
not whether you win or lose,
but how you play the game."
He asked the boys to take
their abilities and look . at
them realistically, as
chances are Very, very
remote that they'll ever make
a living from sports. He
pointed out that successful
people care, and that's what
makes them successful. He
told the young athletes to
appreciate the people In their
lives who care about them,
teachers, parents, and
coaches. He cautioned them
to value the truly Important
things beca use the person
they have to live with the rest
of thei r lives, and the only
person . they can't run away
from, is theselves.
Following Diles' address,
Alan Holter presented junior
high football awards to Mike
Baker, Bernnie Bennett,
Mike Bissell, Bryce Buckley,
Greg Cole, Bill Frederick,
Lee Gainer, Chuck Hensley,
Nickey Leonard , Todd
Norton, James Reed, Johnnie
Riebel, Edward Riffle,
Charles Ritchie, Joe Sayre,
Sect! Skinner, Robby Smith,
Ray Spe~cer, Virgil Taylor,
Scott VanMeter, David
Wolfe, Joe Bowers, Gene
Cole, Dennis Durst. Dean
Hawk , Rodney Keller, Tony
Kennedy , Kenny Larkins ,
Kenny Newell, Rocky Pitzer,
Terry Pooler, Kenny Reed,
Greg Scarbrough, Randy
~taats, Richie VanMeter,
Mike Welch, !lay Werry,
Greg Wigal, arid managers
Eric Schmucker, Dean
Staats, and Barry Staats.
Statisticians were Jan
Smith, Sar~h . Goebel and
Cassie Sheets. J unlor high
cheerleaders introduced by
. Sally Mitchem were Laura
Eichinger, Tina Beaver, Beth
Riebel, Beth Wilson and Patti
Edwards.
Coach Sue Thompson
presented Volleyball awards
to Janet Ambrqse , Kim
Batey, Jewell Blake,.Jeresa

Raiders rip Bengals, 35-20

Sport Parade

~

SENIOR GRIDDERS - Front, 1-r, Kevin Bailon,
Darrell Drake, John Evans, Steve Hauber, Jim Hawthorne, Coach Joe Mitchem; back row, Larry Longenette,

f'ilob McClure, Dave Mills, Richard Mora, Bruce RiHie,
· · Mike Smith. Three, Bnb Kamper, Noah Hysell and Mack
Lawson were absent.

one of the host teams.
finish ahead of Pittsburgh,
lt looks now as if !he rest of which beat U1em twice this
\he AFC lineup will be mack' year. The Bro~11s can gain
up or Baltimore, as th.c East the playoffs only be beating
chwnp, Pittsburgh, as lhe Kansas City while Pittsburgh
Central chap1p, and New and Cincinnati both lose. ~~ngland, as the wild card
The Bengals made a game
team.
of it Monda y night' for the
Of course Pittsburgh, two- first half. Ti1ey trailed only
time defemling Super Bowl
by 21-13 with " fa irly
chan1pion,. hasn 't Clinched balanced off ense, but in uw
anyU1ing yet. But U1e St~elers second half they gained ' only
can ttike care of that chore 36 . rush ing "Y""Is as Ken
S~turday by beating !he Anderson ab;lJldoncd the run
Hous!Dn Oilers in the fi na I and went to U1e uir .
regular season game. If Ute)' . II proved a poor move
do. it will doso-oui both the because the Raider defense
Bengals and Clcvellllld start ed lPei ng orr on
Browns, with whom they m·e Anderson and U1e harder he
Lied righ t now with 9-4 tried. till' worse thi n~s
rccont, .
IJecamr. Itt Ute tmd, Anderson
The Bengals can still makP compl eted only nine pu sses in
it but they would hav e to beat 20 second half attcmf&gt;ts and
the New York Jets in their \\'OI'se th11n Uwi he was
final game wh ile the Steeiers mtcrcepted lhret' tlmcs. That
,lose to Houston in order to out Ute Bengals' defense in

the hole and Stabl.r quickly
ran off a pair of tnuchdo wns
to seal lhc ''erdk't.

'11te smooth throwinA teft handci· ccntpleied 16 of 27
Ul!'ows for 217 yards, pussin~
24 ·""'I three yards to Dave
Casper, 42to Ciiff IJraneh und
seven to Frc'!l Bile!Jlikoff for
tourhdowns. Pete &amp;mtsznk
rw1 a yard oft£'f' Monttl
John,son Intercepted 11 pass
· by Anderson for the oth(w
Oakland score.
'l'hr Bcn go ls got their
points on 11 40 yard puss by
Anderson to John McDnnlci,
a une·ya rd smHsh by Suw

l"ritLI and n 21-yanl run by
1\rchi c Griffin.
" If Onkland can play any
better, I would hole to see it ,"
said Bengals coul'h Bill John ·
son . "If you think they
'''eren't try ing, ask one of In)'

wtnrhed

the

gA me

n nine-game winnlng streak

rod .
Pittsburgh hns won eight in
II row Since dropping fOW' Of
i!fi first fivr, und many people
Utinl&lt; t h&lt;' Stt'tlicrs a•·e tltt• hest
1e1uo ln Uw NFI. right now.
El'l'ryonc will find out ,soon
rnou~h . Tilt' plnyoffs nre tbe
last two weekends of 01is
montl1 1111&lt;1 the SUP&lt;'r Bowl
foli&lt;lws twu w~ks Inter .
liS l1 mcwmrln~

the

CHEERLEADERS - Senior cheerleaders are Cindy
Ritchie and Diana Epple, 1-r.

Pictures by Gary Sisk
SIGNS AUTOGRAPHS autographs during a break.
1'\uckley, Teresa Edwards. Mora and Cindy Ritchie.
Robin Elkins, -Vicky Epple,
Junior Varsity coaches Ed
Tamm y Fit ch, Laurie Wilson and Arch Rose team and special awards.
Special recognition went to
Matthews, Vida Weber, Pam presented their squads of Ed
Dave
Mills and Joe Kuhn for
Spurlock, Julia Carpenter, . Adams, Brian Bissell, Tim
head
coach
Joe Mitchem and
Jennifer Gainer, Janet Dillon, Dewayne Good, Greg
Brooks, Sonia Carr, Robin Hayman, Mark Norton , Mark· assistant Rose presented
Ritchie, and Brenda Lanham, .. Smith, Blair Windon, Noah their varsity team and
and Jane Milhone, manager. Hysell, Bob VanKampen, special awards.
The captain was Miss Ed- Brtan Matthews, Perry Reed, · Special recognition went to
wards.
Greg Ginther, Randy Keller, Dave Mills and Joe Kuhn for
Before a short break, ad- and Lawrence Pooler. All-League achievements in
visor Carol King presented Managers were 'Ed Werry, 1975 and also 1976. 1976 All·
her cheerleading squads. Ray Werry, and Ro4ney Leaguers were Mills, Bob ·
McClure, Kevin Barton and
Reserve cheerleaders were .Keller .
Karen Probert, Brenda
Superintendent John Riebel Mark Lawson, and Kuhn and
Frecker, Beth Head ley, and Principal Gooding Mike Smith were hmiorable
Betsy Riffle, Sherrie Starch- prese nted trophies to all mention.
Mitchem presented the
er, and Angel Blake. Varsity senior participants, hoth girls
squad members were Kiana and hoys, before head coach special awards, McClure the
Jones, Sonia Beaver, Brenda Joe Mitchem and assistant trophy for the best offensive
Boyles, Diana Epple, Mary Rose presented their varsity , back, Mills the trophy for the
best lineman, most Improved
player to Mike Smith, and the

Dave Diles signs

honorary captain award went
to Mills. Varsity members
were Barton, Darrell Drake,
J.ohn Evans, Steve Hau6er,
Jim Hawthorne, Hysell,
Lawson, Larry . Longenette,
McClure, Mills, Richard
Mora , Bruce Riffle, Smith,
Bob VanKampen, Randy
Boston, Joe Kuhn, Brian
Matthews, Perry .Reed, Greg
Ginther, Tim Hawthorne,
Mike Hayman, Randy Keller,
Pooler, Dan Spencer, Russell
Starcher , Rusty Wigal ,
Adams, Bissell, Tim Dillon,
Don Eynon , Good, Greg
Hayman, Norton, Mark
Smith and Windon.
Managers were Ed Werry,
Ray Wer~y ano;t !lodne~
Keller .
·

Rhodes signs pay raise act H .
.
ouse names 11s
new tenn leaders

UP! Statehouse Reporter
new pay schedules will not
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov . apply until January.
James A. Rhodes has signed
The pay raise bill affects
a pair of bills granting pay nine types of officials in
raises averaging about 40 per Ohio's 88 counties. Auditors
cent to elected county .and other county officials In
officials and revising the the middle of their terms will
state's charitable bingo law. not receive pay increases
The governor signed the until afler the next elections.
bills, adopted by the General The counties will foot the cost
Asse!llbly last Nov. 9, late of the pay hikes.
Monday. Both take effect
The bingo measure is de·
Immediately, although the signed to allow veterans' and
fraternal organizations to donate proceeds to their
favorite causes while
tightening the charitable
provisions In other/ respects,
The pay raise bill includes
annual increases ranging
from $1,305 to $5,600 In most
classes of counties, although
county prosecutors will
receive extra large Increases
ranging from $8,100 to
nonnat? Can it be nonnal at $13,900.
all? I am much too shy to talk
Aside from auditors . and
to my mother or anyone JH'Osecutors, the new law
about It or to see a doctor makes county treasurers,
either. What should I do? This sheriffs, clerks of court,
Is reaDy, worrying me.
recorders, . commissioners,
DEAR READER - You engineers and coroners
should have stuck with your eligible for II"Y lnereaRes.
original resolution ·not to
The law r~uces from 35 to
W&lt;rry if your periods were
.,
irregular.
TilE D~LY SENTINEL
No, it Is not unusual to
DEVOTED TO THE
have relatively long time
INTEREST OF
MEIGS..MASON AREA
spans without menstruation
OHESTEK L. TANNEHIU.
at your age. Young girls
Eke. Ed.
. ROBF..JtTHOEFUCH
usually start having periods
City Editur
between 10 and 16 years of
Publi~llel.J il1:1 ily I!XL'i:i&gt;t Slltu1'd11y .
age. The fact thai you had
by TIH! Ohm V1:11l~y Publishing ClnnIll Co u r~ St., Pmner())', Ohio
regular periods suggests that . lmy,
45769. Bll!liness Offic~ Phone 992·
you are perfectly nonnal.
2156, Etliturial Pl1ot1e 992·2157.
Set.·cmtl cblss posla!!e' paid · at
Obeslty and crash diets are
Pomeroy, Ohio.
both factors In upsetting the
NllliOIWI CldiJ~rti.slng reprL~ II- ·
Uttiv~ W11rd • Grltrith Coll)pal'IYI' In·
delicate hormone balance
Buttiuelli untl Gt~llagher DiV.,
that controls .menstruation. c.,
757 Tlurtl 1've., New York, N.Y.
You are on the right course, J OOii ,
.
SuU,.,criptiun rttLL'S: llt!livered Uy
eating a sound, sensible diet.
Clll'ricr whc.·1·e ava il 11 b l~ 75 ~~ n\.s per·
Nature wiD likely take cnre of ~o,·eek . Ry Mulor Route wherecarTiCI'
the re~t of the development suvic(• nul 11\'aiht!Jie, One monlh,
By m&lt;~il in Ol1io 11 11~ W. Vtt.,
for you. If you do not resume $:1.25.
Om~ Vtmr, $22.00: Six munl.Jts,
menstruation by age 16 then $11.541; 'l'hn•t• m o nth ~. $7.00;
I·:J:-;~.• whcr·e 1:.!1!,110 ~·cu t·: Six muutl ts
you should see a doctor about $1:1.50;
TI II'Cl' III UII!hs, $7.50.
it.
l'iui!:'il'l'tiJiil•n prin• nwli11b Suulluy
Tllt lt'li-l'ic1•IU•t-l

14 the number of classes of
'
counties, according to
popu lation. Generally, ·
officials in the smaller
counties receive the largest
By GENE BERNHARD1 • attack on employment as
percentage Increases.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - their top priority.'
Most of the dollar Increases
House
Democrata picked a
are in the range of·$4,ii00 to
Wright was a surprise'
Massachusetts
liberal and a winner over Rep. Phillip
$5,000 a year for the various
Texas moderate for their top Burien of California. Burton
county.officials.
The bingo ~ill. amending two leadership posts in the and Missouri Rep. Richard
the charitable bingo law new Congress and turned Bolling had been considered
passed last May, also permits their attention to reforming, the front runners.
veterans' and fraternal House operating procedures.
The incumbent·whip, John'
Both Rep. Thomas "Tip" McFall of California, was the.
organizations to use proceeds
to build and maintain O'Neill, a product of rough- fourth man in the beated ra~
pol- and the first to drop out, after
facilities for conducting their and-j,ough · Boston
itics
who
was
un- receiving only 31 votes on the
games.
The organizations had opposed in the Dem· first .of three secret ballots.
complained that under the ocratic caucus Mondsy
The caucus also elected.
prior law they were to succeed retiring Carr Rep. Thomas Foley of·
restricted to a list of specified , Albert as speaker of the Washington over Rep. Shirley.
House, and his successor as Chisholm of New York for
charities.
The new law also majority leader, Texan Jim caucus chainnan by a 194-96,
;tuthorizes senior citizen Wright, who won a slim 14&amp;- VO\~.
~
groups and volunteer rescue 147 victory, pledged an all-&lt;&gt;ut ,
The selection of officers by
squam to hold bingo games
Democrats, who will continue.
under the definition of
to control the new Congress,
"charity. 11
was the first of a series of_
Existing bingo provisions
orgamzmg moves. The
are tightened under the new
caucus resumed discussion·
law'by:
today on a series of JH'Oposed.
- Ensuring that bingo
reforms In House operating,
procedures.
proflls cannot be used for
TORONTO (UP!)
noncharltable purposes.
House Republicans meet:
-Eliminating, "zingo'' and General Motors of Canada Thursday to elect their-·
other schemes of chance and the United Auto Worker.s officers; with GOP leader
conducted under the guise of today reached tentative John Rhodes expected to be, '
agreement on a contract renamed to that office.
bingo.
-Setting a maximum of following a six-bour strike
Only the No. 3 spot in 11M!
idled 28,000 workers at 11 Democratic leadership, that.
per session rent on bingo that
halls
for . qualifying plants.
of whip, remains to be filled
A GM spokesman said and Democrats were ready ,
charitable groups.
- Barring use of a detaU. of the settlement, today to consider a move tq·
reached after all night make the post' elective.
comm~rcial ,, building for
.•
were
not , 111 the pBBt t11e speaker and'
bingo by more than one bargaining
lmmedlately available.
charity.
majority
leader have.
The walkout began at mid- appointed a whip, but sin~,.
The original bingo law. was
passed to protect the game night. Bargainers meeting at that job was the flrll llep on;
for charity ,while preventing the Royal York Hotel reached the ladder to the speakershlp
its use . by syndicates agreementat Sa .m. foUowing ' there has been a :growtn&amp; ,
marathon . 20-hour move to t,t . the full ,
diverting proceeds a
negotiating
session.
elsewhere. An attempt to
membership ma~e th~
,
Gt.\'s
contract
with the decision.
satisfy the fraternal and
Rep.
John
veterans' groups was made UAW expired last July 19 and Brademas of Indiana Is the
last September but failed in since then the employes have only aMOUIIced candidate fo~ .
the l'1!9h towar~ adjournment worked under a continuous the office.
,,)· I
••
series of contract extensions.
for election campaigning.

Agreement
is reached

'200

'

I,

Eastern opening

'72 CHEVY
IMPALA

against Lancers

PLAYING NIGHTL V

milit ary bases, wasn't to the Hoston Red Sox for 2t)..
present 11t the mmoun.remrnt ycarolrl CL'C iJ C..oopcr 111 one of
of his signi ng. He returned to thei r. deals. They obUdned
Bos ton Monday afternoon· Infield er Jamie Quirk and
where he met with his agent out fielder ,lim Woitl forli pins
and then telephone1i the • player lo he named late r
Phillies to tell u1e111 of his from Kansas .City for pil.l'her
decision.
Jim Colbor n &lt;md catctwr
Eight clubs drafted Hebne1· Darrell Port c1·, ond then
and Owens. said "three or wound up the ct.y by picking
four teams'' were in u1e sauw up cntchet· l.arry Huncy from
price range but. the ft~c t UitH Onkl;.ind
in H third
the Philli es nre p'cnna 11 t transaction .
contenders helped sway the
Sco tt . wh o played for
ex-Pintle's dec ision.
Boston from 1960 through
"We're not umler the ~ un t.o 1972, wo s a niai nst11y on the
make a trade now," added RNI Sox's 1967 American
Owens. "But, of couri.ie, we' ll League ehampionship team.
li sten ."
He hit .274 with 16 home runs
Tite Milwauke ~ Brewers, and 77 HBis last seHSQn while
who finished in the cellar in C&lt;trbo batted .235 after being
the American Leab'Ue East dealt from the He&lt;I'So• tn the ·
and won only 66 games last .. Brewers for outfielder i3obby
season , made three deals Darwin last June 3.
invol ving eight players as tim
A produ ct of the Red Sox
winter meetings official ly gpt farm system, Cooper will be
under wc1oy Mouday .
27 next week. !11 12:! games as
They shipped slugging fir st a fir st baseman and. a
biJseman George Scott and designated hitler last season,
outfielder Bernie Carbo back he batted .282 with 15 homers
and 78 It Bls.

VAI.U£ 8UY$u

KI r

,

AT

" OX

"TIGRESS"
2 Ga ls
From Pa rkorsburg

WEDNESDAY &amp;TiiURSDAY
9:00 TIL 1:00
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
10:00 TIL 2:00

THE MEIGS INN
992.3629
Pomeroy

PIZZA SHACK

INFRARED HEATERS
PROPANE TORCHES

C.o i icl bras s pcn1..i l lttmw burne r·

unit . and pr o r~n c cy li nde r
l~rov ,d cs up · to 15 hours burn ing

G&amp;J's
A. METAL
fORCH KIT

AT THE INN

PENCIL tJURNER
TORCH
'
.

&amp;

;ll"nc Com plete w i th a clog proo f
llf Cr

WI11C h

QUdrds

ii9CIIIl SI

rnpunn cs dogging the Ori fice .

tJ L L1stcd.

PROPANE

Seven riece Iorch kit . Wi lh nlllhe
Wiln t ed
accessori es :
Ma xi
Prop&lt;'ln e J e l Torch with Solid
BrrlS S Bur ner K il , Fuel Cylinder .
Spark lighter , Pen c i l To rc h

Hcud , Sri&lt;:)p On Oft F I arne
Spr (• dd e r an d .S oldering T1p:
scp,1ra le Orif ice for' pencil flame
burner head. Clag ·pr oo l fill er
w ill e t~ guMds agai n st impurities
clogg •ng the Orifice PAcked in il
red CnilmCicd steel cas e. U L
L is t ed.
h1175a

'1295

Karr &amp; VanZandt

DELICIOUS HAMBURGER

WE WILL CLOSE DEC. 12
FOR THE SEASON

The only way to recognize a bargain
is to measure the price against the
quality - That adds up to a word
called value.
QUARTZ IODINE DRIVING LIGHTS
O ri~ 1ng

R ea _d~

lo mount durabl e

plastic dispenser fil l neally
into kltchent, bathrooms, .
laundrw rooms , workshopa

and fogl1~hls fo r all 1rnpor ted and

domestiC cars. App rove~ 10 ~II 50
pe d w1 th Halogen H3 bulb.

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

DCMNINGCHILDS AGENCY INC.

Cleans ~ti e r than toap.

"
Ja1er speed and hrghway tu rnprk e dm1ng

states. £qu1p

and garages .
•

Snap In/Snap Oul Replace-

able 18 oz. cartridge.
• Easy one-hand operation.
• Five year written guarantee.
• Saves money, absolutely

TRUCK STORAGE
BOXES

no waote'(toJo)

Prices Good ijlru 12-25-76
MODEl .

115

'8

c

D

E

619350

70 1/8"

63"

161/8''

9"

201/4'

'
619351

55 1/8''

48 5fa' '

16 1JB''

9"

201

1

G&amp;.- AUTO PARTS

'

240 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS

Value Buys Everyday
'1

,,

on

tele11sion and they lmd to be
iuappy about the outcome but
not neCl'Ssa rlly with how well
Oakhutd plnyed. Pittsburgh
starl~t the season by losing
to Ute Halcters in Oakland and
if .tHI}'thing, Ule Raiders are 8
bt'tter tenm nQw thnn ·they
W\"n.' in Sc~ten'1ber 1if y ou LL~e

Phils obtain Richie Hebner

aren't usually harmful

temporarily. A good example bothering me for some
is ruanlng. As a person exerts lime
and
it
really
himself, the heart must pump 'worries me . I am femore blood. With this in- male and 14 years old. 1
crease the blood pressure started menstruating a year
rises. This Is nonnal and ago. I had read that menafter exercise the blood strual cycles can sometimes
pressure returns to nonnal. be irregular, such as skipping
Such exercise actuaUy helps a month or two, so I was not
to lower blood pressure In going to be worried or surmany nonna I people after the prised if mine did. Well, mine
period of exercise Is over.
didn't. I was very regular.
To give you more in After about six months, one
formation on isometric month I didn't have a period.
ezerclses and blood pressure It didn't come the next monih
I am sending you The Health and now !tis six months Letter number 1-10, Exercise,. half a year - since my last
Posture, . Strength. Others period.
who want this Issue can send
Around that time I changed
50 centS with a long, stamped, my eating habits and went on
self-addressed envelope for a mild diet. I started eating
11. Just send your request to the right amount of everyme In care of this newspaper, thing; plenty of vegetables,
P. 0. Box 1ii5l, Radio City fresh · fruit and the ' right
Station, New York, NY 10019. amounts of protein, milk,
Keep up your exercise. It · cereal, bread aqd milk
will help you keep strong products. I do not eat any
abdomimil muscles and help heayy, rich, sweet desserts as
prevent back problems as I used to aU the time. I lost
well as keep you nicer ·five pounds.
looking.
lsn 't six months without
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have l!iPn struatlng very · aba problem that has been

By JOE ~ARGIS
preny good position.
UP) Sports Writer
"1 said last week that the
OAKLAND (UP! ) - Now, talk by the Steelefli was
.everyone will have to believe stupid, and I still say it's
the Oakland Raiders.
stupid," said'Raiders' coach
· By MILTON RICHMAN
All week long leading up to John Madden. " I can't
UPI Spoo:ll Editor
Monds~ ni~ht's ~arne against believe any club wou!d make
the Ctnc1nnatt Bengals, such a suggestion - that we
LOS ANGELES (UPI) BaSeball managers used to be judged people everywhere, including would delibera tely lay down
simply on how many games their ,ball club6 won or lost, but the Pittsburgh Steelers, so that we could decide who
thingshavechanged:Nowtheyhold theirjob6, or lose them, on suggested the Raiders would play in the playoffs. I
how well or pPOrly they communie~~te with !heir players.
wouldn't go all out because, if hope all that talk now has
The point comes up because two of the key players traded at they lost to Cincinnati, th~ar been put to rest. It 's Ql1 to the
the baseball meetings here Monday , George Scott and Bernie old r1vals, the Steelers, would ·playoffs and I think my club
Carbo, have been Involved with commuilicaUon problems with· be denied a .spot ih the is ready for anyone, Including
managers they played for , while a third player dealt on forthcoming AFC Playoffs. the Steelers. "
Monday, Rico Carty, generally got along oksy with his
So, the Raiders who talk
By beating Ci ncinnati the
managers but sometimes ran into trouble communl~ating with often
of
pride,
went
out
and
Raiders
improved their
• his fellow players.
.
.
smacked the Bengals, 35-20, record to 12-1, the best mark
One of the reasons Scott and Carbo were sent back to Boston on national television where in the National Foo tball
for .eecu Cooper was because hoth said the nne of ccmmuni- everyone could see tllllm , League, and clinched the
• cation between them and Milwaukee Manager Alex Grammas with Ken Stabler throwing , home field e~e for the
had been cut off this past season .
.
four touchdown passes for a playoffs . That had been their
In this ooanection, it should be remembered that Sparky season total o( '!1. That put goal right along, so when the
Anderson once had difficulty getting through to Carbo with the Bengals- on the outside playoffs open the week~nd of
Cincinnati, and the Reds' manager rates right up there with looking 1n today , while the D~. 16-19, Oakland wtll I•·
Whitey Herzog of Kansas City and Frank Lucchesi of Texas as Steelers seem t~ bP sitting in
one of the best comrnunrcators in the game.
.
.
Scott and Carbo both said they .didn't want to play for
Grammas anymore. They said that publicly, although Scott
later·told the Brewers' manager privately he hadn't meant
what he said, and Carbo similarly apologized to Anderson for
saying pretty much the same thing ahout him after he had left
the Reds.
By JIM COUR
signed with the National
Managers are used to that sort of thing and seldom nurse UPI Sports Writer
League 'S Eastern Division
hard feeUngs.
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
winners Monday nig ht.
"Gecrge Scott Is a soli~ ballplay•r who wanls tn play every The Philadelphia Phillies "We're very confident he can
day," Grammas. said after the deal with the Hed Sox was came to the winter baseball do the job for us there."
announced.
meetings looking to replace
Hebner played third base
"He's the type of guy who'D say things he doesn't. mean the departed Dick Allen and for Pittsburgh last season but
sometimes. I think he overstates once in awhile. It's true he Dave Cash. They've taken originall y was a first
said he didn't want to play for Milwaukee anymore, but I care of'half that problem with baseman.
honestly think he wasn 't mad at me . f know I wasn 't mad at the signing of free agent
"I'm tickled." said Paul
him. I think the fact the ball club wasn 't winning and he wasn't Richie Hebner.
Owens, the Phillie's' director
going too well made him edgy. I talked with George a Iotta
"We'll shift him to first of player personneL "This
times, I'tn ~ fan of George Sc9(t. He bas a Iotta pride in himseH base , n eXplained Danny gives us Ute lefUtanded power
and a Iotta pride in winning and there's certainly nothing Ozark, the Phillies' manager , hitte\ we've been after for
wrong with that. He made ita point to come to me at the end of after the 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld Hebner four years."
the year In Baltimore and sat down and talked ahout 15 or 20
Hebner, wh o hit .249 with
minutes. He said he didn't mean some of the things he said, not
eight home runs and 51 RB!s
the way they came out In .the papers, anyway, and that he points on the boards in an BI- last season, was
Pit~tes'
enjoyed playing this year. I tnld him, 'George, don't worry 76 loss to Miller.
regular third ba seman since
Frei::J Logan, senior center, 1969. He helped the Pirates
a)lout it. I understand human beings and things like that dOn't
although
forced to sit out get intn five playoff series
really bother me."'
most
of
the
second half, had and one World Series. He
As Alex Grammas says, George Scott has a great deal of
18
points
as
did senior for· became the 19th of 24 free
JH'ide. HeMewhewas beingpaid$144,000and he felt he wasn't
giving the Brewers their full money's worth with his .274 ward Ron Plants. Rex Justice agents tn sign a contract wiUr
average, his.77 RBis and his 18 homers. He felt he should 've had 13 points against W tier. a new club . Owens would not
done better ; he Mew he could've done better, and that was ·Southern, in winning, 75-70 disclose terms of the multiover Trimble was paced by year pact.
why he reacted they way he did.
Carty, who Is going back to Cleveland from Toronto where he litUe Eric Dunning 's 16
Allen played fir st base for.
didn't even get a chance to play, will find the same manager points. Big Chip Brauer had the Phillies last year but
16 while Richard Teaford chose his fr ee agency and ha s
there he left, Frank Robinson.
"My ccmmunica(\on with Rico Carty \VaS perfect, '' said finished with 14 points.
not yet been signed by
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's anyone.
Robinson . "Communication is a two-way street. If you know
there's a problem, why shouldn't a manager caD a player In Southwestern Highlanders
Owens said the Phillies
and sit down and talk 7 The problem comes when you know will play at Syrrunes Valley . probably would take care of
there Is a communication gap, the player kn.Ws it, and no one Coach Gary Salyers' Vikings their sec on d base nee ds
have not played this seaso~. within their own system. The
talks."
Southwestern
is 1-1 second base vaca ncy was
In his first year managing the Indians, Robinson was ripped
following an opening loss to created when Cash went to
verbaUy by Qne of his catchers, John Ellis.
"I told him I felt he was a seHish player and until he could rugged Oak Hill then a 65-49 Montreal as a free agent. ,
play the gome the way it should be played for the good of the victory over Ironton St. Joe.
Hebner, who has been on a
Leading the Highlande r European tour of U.S.
team, he wasn't going to play,'' said Robinson . "He came and
apologillda day or so after that and said he was wrong. I said victory over the Flyers
were 6-1 senior center Keith
fine, bU: • . ;01 was going to use him as I saw fit."
Thi.s Week's Specia l
Grate with 26 points; Larry
IDtlmately, Ellis was traded to Texas where he is now.
Robinson has no feeUngs one way or another over what took Ca rter, 6-1 junior forward
place between them.
had 15 points and Don Bush,
"He doesn't go out of his way to speak to me and I don't go 5.-10 senior guard, finished the
out of my way to speak with him,' ' says the Indians' manager. night with 10 points.
1
With seven returning let' If l'dsee him right now, I'd say, 'Hi!"'
t.ermen, th e Vikin gs are
expected to improve last
year 's 4-15 record .
Returning lett erme n include Mark Wilson, 6-2 senior ·
roiward , a second tea m
honoree Ali-SVAC; Ju stin
Miller, 5-10 senior guard ;
4 Dr ., v.a. automatic, P.S. ,
Greg Estep, 5-7 senior guard;
P.B., a ir.
a third team Ali-SVAC
Four league · games VaUey of West Virginia last member; Nick Geswein, 6;2
senior forwardi Cecil Clary,
hlghllght this
week's weekend.
schedule In the Southern
nie Bobcats were led by 5-7 5-8 sen ior guard; Ra lph
Valley Athletic Conference. senior guard Mitch Salem Ingles, 1&gt;-5 junior center and
Action begins tonight with and senior forward Ralph Mike Sowards, :&gt;-4 junior
two • non-league battles. Baylor. Salem tossed In 31 guard.
Hannan Trace goes to points while Baylor added 23.
SVAC STANDIN GS
You'll Like Our Quality
Chesapeake and Eastern George Willis, 6-3 junior, also TfAM AL l GAMES
Way of Doing Bu si ness
W L P OP
plays at Federal Hocking.
2 0 153 IJ ,I
enjoyed a good night for Southern
GMAC FINANCING
Kyger Cree k
I 0 79 &lt;19
Friday night, Southern Coach Keith Carter's five.
992-5342
. Pomeroy
Sou thwes ter n
I 1 133 1·13
Open Evenings '1i l4 : 00
plays at North Gallla; Kyger
Willis, a transfer- returnee Symmes Valley 0 0 0 0
Tiltlo "' · S•t.
0 0
0
0
Creek visits Hannan Trace from South Point, had 10 Eastern
Tr ace
0 1 70 81
and Southwestern goes. to points. He had played junior Hannan
Nor th Ga ll la
0 'l 11 5 161
Symmes Valley. Symmes high and freshmen ball at
Valley will host Eastern Kyger Creek.
Saturday nlghl.
Coach • Carl
Wolfe's
FRY OUR
Coach Duane Wolfe's Southern Tornados will go .
Eastern Eagles open their after theit third straig~t
19711-77 season on the road this victory this season against
evening at Federal Hocking. Coach Ron Twyman's North
Eastern has three let-. Gallia Pirates.
tennen returning from last
Southern owns nonyear's 1·19 season. They are conference wiris over Federal
Kevin Hawk, 6·1 senior Hocking and Trimble. The
center; Bruce Riffle, 5-9 defending SVAC cage
Thank you from Adolph and The Gang . See
senior guard and Gary champs have non-league
you
next Spring!
.•
Nelson, 11-1 junior forward . losses against Eastern of
Coach Wolfe feels his squad Pike County and Mlller.
Is stronger, taller, quicker
North Gallia's offense
and has more experience cculd not get moving in the
than last year's )\:agles.
game against Eastern but the
W. Main
Coach Don Cornell's Pirates came back to place 76
Pomeroy
Haanan Trace Wildcats will
be after their first win of the
campaign against the
Chesapeake Panthers.
LUI week, the Wlldcals
· - were defeated 82-70 by Rock
Hill.
In that non-conference
battle, senior guard · Scott
Gibson dumped In 20 points to
lead the Wildcat attack.
David Swain, a junior
highly counted on lhiB seaSOII,
scored 13 points while David
Campbell ccllected II points.
1Two other Wildcats, Rick
\Thllt and Frank Mooney
were also In double figures
-with 10 points ' each.
Friday night, Hannan
Trace boats Ky@l!r Creek In
.
the opening SV AC contest for
Middleport, Ohio
both schools. Kyger Creek
912-2342
took a 79-49 victory over Elk

players lfho got his oott
i'(}tmdl'&lt;i .11
Coy Bltcon, the ~t~ran
Cincinnati defensive end ,
echoed his coach,
" If they c1111 play any
better , I don't WI!Ilt to playing
opposite them," he said. ·
Of course the $teelers

�I'

4-The ()ally Sentine!,MidcDeport-P..-roy, 0., TUesday,Dec. 7,1976

Tigers drop

Moeller dominates· A~\A team

•
'

:90-75.battle
, MOUN"I" PLEASANT,
: Michigan (UP!) - Kevin
· Janl!f, starling in his first
; game eve• for Central
Michigan, !toted 20 points
Monday night to lead Central
' to a 90-75 victory over
· Wittenberg.
. Centra.! dominated the
enUre game, leading by as
manyas20polntsa(OIIepoint
in the first half. The closest
Wittenberg ever came to a tie
was when they cut the
Central lead to seven points
midway through the second
half.
By halftime, Central lead
45;31.
Other high scorers for CentralwereLeonardDrakewlth
17 and Earl Boquette with 13
points and 17 rebounds.
Brian Anagler had 23 points
for Wittenberg.
. . The victory put Central at
.: 3-l: 'Wittenberg feU to 2-1. ·

chipped in another l7 each in
Richmond, Ky . Monday
night, to power Dayton to a
7&amp;-69 win over Eastern .
· Kentucky, Its third straight
victory of the se&amp;SOII.
The Colonels hit on only 25
per oent of their shots the
first halhndfell behind 14-28.
They rallied to·trail 71-el with .
Just ~:58 remaining, but .
Dayton scored the last five
points of th~ game..
In other games tnvolving
Ohio te81J15, West Llbe~y
. (W.Va.) atopped Steubenville
7&amp;-70 and Central State
downed WUberforoe 114-e6.
In Ohio basketball play
slated for tonight, Missouri
takes on the Rockets at
Toledo, Musktngum plays at
H~ldelberg, Wooster Is at
H1ram, John Carroll IS ~t
Mount
Union,
Oh1o
Dqminlcan fights at Ohio
:-v.esleyan, Point Park (Pa.)
IS at Kenyon, Thomas M?re
Forward Jim Paxson (Ky.) at Xavier, Cedarville
dropped in 18 points and Erv plays at Walsh and Bluffton
· Giddings and Dollli Harris at Mt. Vernon Nazarene.

CWfNNNAT! (UPi) - The pions were breaking open the
Cin · ti Reds have signed National League Western
vete n iefthanded pitcher Division raoe.
Fred Norman to a two-year
From June 13 until Aug . 5,
contract, marking only the Norman won eight times in
third time in reoent years the nine decisions, Including
club has agreed to give a seven complete games and
player a twoyear pact.
three shutouts, compiling a
In
Monday
night's brilliant 1.18 earned run
announcement that Norman average during that time.
had signed, Reds officisls
The little lefty finished 'the
disclosed the contract covers regular season witb a 12-7
both the 1977 and 1978 record and a 3.10 ERA and
seasons.
was the winning pitcher in the
Reds officials, like many second game of the World
baseball executives, prefer to Serie.S against the Yankees.
sigh players to one year
The Reds have now an.contracts ao they won't he nounced that 10 players are
obllgsted to the player U he under contract · for next
gets hurt and can't play the season.
second seaaon.
But last year, Johnny
College Basketball Results
Bench became the first Red
By United Pr ess Internationa l
in reoent years to reoeive a
two-year pact and last month Calif Pa 80 J:ss~&amp; Jeff 71
Cla rk son 66 Rochstr U, 02
the team revealed that Cesar Clar
ion 97 Gene\la 83
Geronimo also had signed a Domin ic an 89 Yeshi11a 65
Edinboro 99 Al liance 85
two-year contract.
F&amp; M 60 El izabethtown 56
Part of the reason the Reds Gannon sa Allegh eny 70
lost free agent pitcher Don Holy Cross 123 Bflo 89
iah 109 Easton 100
Gullett was their refUsal to Mess
Rut ger s 97 Leh lgh 73
give him a long-term Se ton Ha ll 104 canislus 76
Stony Broo&lt; 90 M . Evers 59
contract. Altbough the Reds ·stonehllt
eo Nrtheastrn 6&lt;~
said they offered him a a two~~~~e~\,"~
76 ~~c~e~~~~n 67
year pact, Gullett late last
South
month signed a six-year deal Appy St . 7 1 Davidson
53
Benedi
ct
l
1S
Clafl
in as
with the New York Yankees.
r lstn 88 Char . Bapt 79
Nonnan, 34, was the most Cha
Citadel 87 Presby 78
effective pitcher on the Reds' Dayton 76 E. Ke ntucky 69
staff dllfing the middle of the Dav is&amp;Ei k lns 9&lt;1 Shephrd eo
lon 91 Mars Hill82
seaaon when the world cham- EHunting
don 14 Wrn . Ca rey 66

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
U n I I e d Press In ter na tiona l
Boo1rd of coaches' cr) ll cge
basketball ratings wit h won lost
records through gam es of
Saturday ; Dec . 4, and number
of tirst :pla ce vo tes in paren
theses. First week ·
Team
Points
1. Mi chi gan (72) (1 .0 )
368
2. MarqiJette 116 ) 11-0)
·JOB

l UCL A (3 -01

159

A. Nevada ·Las Vegas( 1HJ-0) 179

5. Kentucky (2-0)
6. Alabama (4 OJ
7. Arizona (~ - 0 ~
e. San Francisco (4-0l
9. North Carolina (2 -11
10. Cincinnati 13-0l
11 . Notre Dam e f3-0 l
12. Indiana ( 1-11
13. Tenn essee (2.0J
14. Wake Fores t [J .OJ
t.'i, Maryland (3 - t J
16. Louisville (1- 1)
11 . Wash ington St . (J -0)
1 ~ . southern Illinois (J.Ol
19 Or•gon (11 1
20: ct;'m son (·-1 -0 )

168
119
97

95

90
87
86
57
41
31
28
27
19
1a
t3
10

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cincinnati Moeller continued·
its dominanoe of Ohio high
schoolfootballtDday, walking
oU with the three top honors
on the 1976 United Press
International Class· AAA allOhio team.
Tim Koegel, Moeller's
flamethrowlng senior
quarterback, was the .
overwhelmlng choloe as the
backofUwyear; hulking Jim
Brown, a 6-4, 270~pound
offensive Lackie, Willi voted
!be Uneman of the year; and,
Gerry Faust, the mastermind
of the Moeller dynasty got
!be nod of the voting co~ches
and news media ·as the coach
of the •year
The &amp;-4. ii!C).pound Koegel,
a three-year starter, led the
Crusaders to 24 straight
victories and back-to-beck
state championships with his
rlflelike aJ1ll
Playil)g oniy half the lime
the past'seaaon; Koegel hit.86
of l48 pass attempts for 1,240
yards and 16 touchdowns. In
the two layoff victories over
P

Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney and Gahanna
Uncoln, be completed 20 of 32
for 272 yards and five

toucbdowna.
Moeller's only losa during
Koegel's three-year reign
was a 21}.10 setback to Warren
Harding In the sernlftnal.l of
the 1974 state playoffs hla
sophomore year, leaving the
Crusaders · 34·1 under
Koegel's leadership. ·
Br6wn, a two-year Moeller
regular, Is anc~her In a long
line of outatandtng rlloeller
linemen, which Includes
former llnem.en of the year
steve Niehaua and Jay Case.
Joining Koegel in !be first
team offensive backfield are
running backS Doug bonley
of Cambridge, CJlff Delmer of
Mansfield Senior and
Findlay's
Big
Andy
Sc(lfamm.
.
Donley, a &amp;-1, 180-poWld
speedster, gained 1,480 · and
scored 15 touchdowns for
Cambridge the past year and
had season highs of 2« yard&amp;
against Canton McKinley and
266 against Dover.

Delmer, a &amp;-3, 20(1.pounder,
led Mansfield Senior to me of
lts finest seaaoM In several
year•, ruahing lor 1,156 yards
In the tough Buckeye
Conferenoe, an average of 7.1
yard&amp; per carry, and acortng
16 touchdowns.
Schramm, a aolld &amp;-2, 218pounder, was the workhorse
for a fine Findlay team,
Cllrrylng the ball 215 times In
• only eight games, mlaalng
two because of injury.
But, in the eight games In
which he played, Schranun, a
second team selection a year
ago, picked up 1,014 yards
and scored 18 touchdowns.
· The ends on the No. I
offensive squad are &amp;-4, 205pOWld Ben Needham, Grove..
port's outstanding two-way
performer at split end, and
Jerry Browne, of East
Liverpool at tight end.
Sandusky's Luther Henson
joins Moeller's Brown as the
offensive tacldes on·the team,
with Larry Lee of Dayton
Roth and Jim Mazza of
Columbus Northland · the
guards and Sam Grooms of

.

Wlbeaten Miami Traoe as the
center.
· The 12-man first defensive
team 1.1 headed by linebacker
Todd Bell of Middletown and
middle guard ol Centerville,
one of three Centerville
players named to tbe squad.
The others, both secood team
selections, were offensive
tackle Bruce Otten and
defenilve tackle BJII Becher.
steve Bertz of. Napoleon
and Warren Harding's David
Allen man the defensive end
spots, witb Gerald Howard of
Columbus Walilut.Ridge and
Fremoot Ross' Jim Smith the
tackl"'! and Bach, a rugged
2!~1D\der at middle guard.
BeD, a 2:&gt;-foot plus long
jwnper Wring the track sealiDO, mans one of the three
linebacker spot.a, !be others
going to Gahanna Lincoln's
Glenn Bradford and Mark
Reichard of Lakewood st.
Edward:
The four deep back spots go

Masalllon Wa,hlngton,
Jeremiah Gunn of'Groveport,
Mike Kennedy ·of Toledo St.
Francis and Hubert Oliver ol
Elyria.
Gunn, another two way
Groveport per!ocmer, alao
played tight end and teamed
with Needham to give the
Cniisers one· of the top end
·tandems In the slate.
Moeller, which outscored

fC .

COLUMBUS (UPI)
,
Gerry Faust, who guided
Cincinnati Moeller to Its
second straight 'state .high
SChool football championship
this year, ciimBxed an allwinning season tOday by
being named the United
Press International Class
AAA coach of tbe year.
Faust, 41, the only coach
Moeller has ever had,
reoeived 14 of !be 50 votes
cast in the coach of the year
balloting by fellow coaches
and members of the news
media from around the sf ate.
Second in the votilll. was

/

••

""

I'

'

PRE-CUT TREES AVAILABLE

Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east •t Darwin onto Rt.
681, go 4 miles to Milepost 13, turn south on gravel road
· Pt4 m1les to grove . .

WATCH •FOR SIGNS
Hours 12 til dark except weekends, 9til dark.

~...~~'4Mt.WNN-.-... ... ._9iilt'Mtilltill.._, ..

AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR
OPErllER SYSTEM BY ALLIANCE

Gahanna Lincoln's Neal Bill·
man with six, followed by Bill
Ricco of Walsh Jesuit and
Don Hertler of North Canton
Hoover with four each and
Centerville' Bob Gregg with
three.
"This year was a tougher
year even though the games
were easier I " said Faust,
who has a I~IS.2record in 14
years at Moeller, "because of
the pressure that was put on
us. But, the .kids seemed to
work harder and the coaches

all year long in the UP! Board
of Coaches AAA ratings,
getting near unanimous
support !be final few weeks.
The unbeaten untied season
was the · sixth for Faust at
Moeller, which will take an
overall ~arne win streak
into next year and a regular
season string of 42.
"We've had some great ·
teams," said Faust, a
University of Dayton
graduate, "but Ibis has to go
down as one of the best. Ithad
great. character and ability.
did too."
Moeller was the .No. I team It was a great year."

Park. your car in

the .garar;~e

the t!iiSY , modern v-'BV, without

hav inr;~

to get oui into bad weather

to open the oa ragadoor, w ith a smooth ly-operatinQ opener!

INCLI.JOES ONE
TRANSMITTER

Kentucky topples Indiana five
By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Wrtter
They didn't look like the
defend l n g nat l 0 n a I
Champions, especiaUy in the
first half. And they certainly
didn't look like the defending
nau· 08 I ham ., . g
C
ps P aym on
their home COurt.

°

11 We did some things in the
first half like we had never
been on the court," said
'-d·
C ·ach· BObbY Kn'1ght ,
m. JRnB 0
following fifth-ranked
Kentucky's 66-51 victory
. Monday night over the 12thranked
Hoosiers · in
Bloomm
· gton, Ind.
"Defensively we did a
pretty good job' bUt we
couldn't get any pressure on
!be offensive end of the floor .
Our offense ln the first hall
L ibrt y Bapt 90 Bowie St 85
Lnr ·Rhyn e 39 Gui llrd 37
was the key to the game."
Louis v i 89 va . C'wlth 60
. The
defeat snapped
L SU 100 Sa mford 89
M c Nees e 75 So , Alabama 74
Indiana'~~ 35-game winning
Methodist 61 N.C. Wesleyan 55
streak on their home court
Miss. Co11.89LeTourneau61
~ Michigan 97 Va nd erbilt 76
and marked the first time in
""'"s S'· "'1 sw La . n
. Knight's six yeats as coach
.v, - . •~a ry 87 Geo. Mason 69 · tb t th H ·
N .C. -Cha r . 75 Morehead St . 68
~ 8
e OOSlers, now 12
-,
Newberry 94 Fr anc is Merion 67 have been below ,500
NWLa . 70C e nten.o~ry67
K tu kyj pedi •36-15
Pfei ff er 80 All . Chr istian 7A
en C urn
Oa
Potoma c St. 81 Dundalk 70
advantage and led at
Rndlp h - Ma c o~ 65 Shippnbg 40
halftime ~21. "Early in the
Radford 67 Kmg 65
' .
Rust 69 Lane 67
game we did what we wanted
Sa lsbry St. 79 Loyol a Md . 74
to do, accomplished what we
S.C. A 1ken 83 S.C.- Sprtnbg 15
wanted to accomplish and
S.C. St . 81 Wnstn Salm St . 76
Southern u. 10~ Ark .-LR 86
maintained our poise,"
V!lla.n~va 69 America n u. 60
Kentucky Coach Joe Hall
V1rgtn1a St. 105 Lvngstn e 77
. ..
,
voorhees 8~ Lander 82
S81do (Jay) Shidler gave us
west Liberty 76 Steubenvi)O
the outside shot when we
W'm nstr Pa. 78 Bthny W.Va 6J
d the
ld
W
W.Va . Wstyn 95 Sal em 73
Wante
OUts e ShOt. e
western Ky . 75 C?ella St. n
had difficulty going inside,
Xevler La . ;7 .Mtss Ind. 81
but when we did we kicked it .
Mtdwest
'
Butler 63 Loyola Ill. 62
back OUtside."
c . M ic h . 90 ~ittenberg 75
Indiana trimmed the
Cent 51. 84 Wllberfrce 66
.
Detr oit 113 Oakland 45
Wildcats lead to 13 pomts
tbree times in !be second
0

half, the last time at 64-51
with two minutes to go.
Shidler and Larry Johnson
each scored 20 points to pace
Kentucky and Jack Givens

added 16. Kent Benson, the &amp;foot- II All-America oenter,
was the onlr Hoosier in
double figures with a gamehigh 21 points.

PLANETARY GEAR CHAIN DRIVE

GARAGE DOOR OPENER
Pork your CCJ" in the goroge ihe easy, modern way, withoo1 having
sofety of your car.
.•· ~

• 114 HP MOTOR
.
• DUAL SAFETY ADJUSTMENTS
' FOR DOORS TO 7FT. HIGH

I

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

j Simple facts everyone who
I owns a ho'me, car or business should kn11w
I How to Get
I

j the Hest Insm;~.~ v~~!.!~~

1
[
)

Your Monev
·

The _best way to get a .tr.ue
~ barga1n o_n Insurance 15 to
r shop tor If. But there are
l more th~n three !housa_nd
compan1es . _selling
tn ·
surance pollc1es to protect
homes ,
cars .
_an~
busin~sses, and 1t 1sn t
practtcal tor you to check
[ each i!lnd every one .
1 That 's why it's a go_od
~ idea to cons~lt an tn·
dependent . 1nsurance
agent . An Independent
~ agent does not work for i!!n
insurance .company . He
works for you. Which
means he can plan the
coverage that protects yOu
~ best . An~ then place it with
the most suitable of the
several insurance com ·
panies he duls with .
Many people make the
~ costly mistake of assuming
that insurance policies are
all the same. The truth is
~ they are not. Not only does
the quality of coverage
vary from policy to policy ,
\ but the cost offen varies

I

I
I

I
I

I
i

l

com~anv·s reputation . tor
servtce
and
cla•ms
payment. is critical.
And if you ha'lle a claim ,
your independent agent is
in a position to support you .
To be on your side i n
helping you obtain a just,
equitable
settlement
Promptly.
Because he is a self·
emp loyed local business
man, an independent agent
knows his responsibi lity is
to his customers . His
success is based on serving
his customers in three key
areas.
1 : HI! provides the best
Insurance cQvera9e at the
lowest true cost to you.
2. Me is available day and
night to respond to your
needs .
3 . He handles all types of
Insurance,
and
deals
through strong, reliable
companies .
To make sure you have
an indep·endent Insurance
agent on your side, took for
this symbol or consult your
Yellow Pages. It he can't

to~emember
not

~

that price is help you ,
the .onlY basi~ tor . nobody can .

·=~r:.~o"
·•

"The ln•urance Store"

\ Reuter-Brogan lnsu.rance Service

i.

214 E. Main

992·5130

Pomeroy

SALE PRICE

10

leave the

9997
IN CTN.

~

!
!
l
l

DELUXE SCREW DRIVE

~

I

GARAGE DOOR OPENER

1

Exclusive worm screw syste.m designed for your comfort ond safety..Complete control
relay.

~

.j

• 1/3 HP HIGH TORQUE MOTOR
• TWIN LIGHT MODEL
• FOR DOORS TO 7 FT. 61N. fHGH

)

i
1
i

!

214.75

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.

1i
~

I

!
J

REGULAR

CHWl

Mr. Frierdly

The Department Store of Building

Since 1915

American Beauty

PHEBE'S STCRE
. Pec!lnber l · Dec~mber 9
Hlgirt Reservect tCI Limit Quantities

Wo Otadlr Accept Fed: Food·Stamps
Mondaythru Friday

BREEZl GIANT SIZ£ ........... :..................................

11.39

MJIOO.E WHIP SALAD DRESSING. .....................~~-~.~:. 99'

OSCAR MEYER
ALL "'EAT

OSCAR MEYER

BACO

WIENERS
LB.

LB.

99~

FRENCH CITY

STEA.k

FRANK~ 99~

!109

.~----~~~-~~H,ODua~~~---~~·~,~---~~~---~-~~4~.~~.~~~~FRENCH CITY

RC COLA
8 PK-16 OZ.
'

,---:---------.
: Pro :
'"'ts:ann1ngs
•.:t

o

VAllEY BELL CHOCOLATE MILK ........................~.~!·.. ~l.59

BUSH'S BEANS ...~~~x~..~~~-'?:.~.~:?.t••~~!.'!!!~!l ..... 43oo cans'l.OO
HEINZ KETCHUP................... :.....'........... 32 oz. bottle 89'
DAWN DISH DETERGENL ............................... 22 oz. 79'
·PROGRESSO SPAGHETTI SAUCE ..........................?~.~~: 59'

students for desegregation
purposes - mostly blacks
from East Aus tin where
predominantly black schools
were closed under a 1971
court order. The plan created
to meet the appeals' court
ruling called for busing 13,000
to 14,000 students.
11
I'm tremendously.
pleased," said Carole McClellan , president of the
school board.
She said the plan approved
by the appeals court would
have given all Austin schools
a majority of white students.
"The effect was that we
could not have any school
anywhere in this district that
had a majority of minority
students," she said.
She said school officials
also would have constantly
been moving students from
school to school to combat
segregated residential
patterns.
Mexican-Americans and
I
I blacks in Austin, however,
_1•
I expressed disappointment ·at
1
the high court action.
NHL Standings
"!think the whole thing is
By United Press Internationa l
politically motivated and I
Campbell Conference
don't like it," said School
Patrick Division
,
W L T Pts. GF GA board member Gus Garcia.
• NY lslandrs 16 7 3 35 90 62 "It puts a big dent in our
Phila
13 7 6 32 93 74 effort
to desegregate
Atlanta
13
8 6 32 97 Bl
.
NY .Raogers 1211 5 19 109 96 Mexican-American kids. "
.Smythe Division
The appeals court had
St·. l-ouis
1~ 1~ T1 P~~- Gfs 99~ ruled Austin discriminated
Ch ic"ago
10 14 3 13 88 99 against Mexican·Americans
Colorado
8 16 J 19 76 93
M innesota
616 &lt;~ 16 n 116 aswellasblacksand ordered
vancouve r
719 2 16 n 109 desegregation to · balance
Wales Conference
Norris Divisiori
popu iat'tons. About IS per ·'
w L t Pis. GF GA cent of the district's 56,000
Montreal 1\1 4 4 46 141 62 si d 1 are bla k 23 pe
!
Los Angeles 9 11 9 27 96 93
u en s
c ,
r
Pi ttsburgh
9 12 5 23 75 88 cent Chicano and 62 per cent
Detroit
8 14 4 20 70 87 Anglo.
washing ton 7 15 4 l B 74 107
Th
.
Adams Division ·
·
e Supreme Court said
w L T PIS . GF GA much of Austin 's school
9 6 2 40 107 81
easton
1
BUffalo
14 1 3 31 Bl 60 segregation was the result of
Toronto
12 9 6 30 103 91 housing patterns over which
68 91 school . officials had no conCleveland
6 14 7 19
Monday's R esuth
,
.
Moritreal 1 Cleveland o
trol 1 theref(lre It was un(On l y game scheduled )
proper "to force desegregation
Tuesday's Games
·
d
'
st. L;ou is at NV lsl arders.
. to an extent, WhlcH coul not
vancouver at Washington
nonnally be achieved.
Minnesota at Plllsburgh
"Whether
the Austin school
Wnlv games sc:,hedu ledl
,
•
wcdftcsday's Games
authoritt~s
mtentionally
St . Lou is .at t-_~Y Rangers
'discriminated
against
Atla nta at M.nnesota
,
. .
.
I f . dt
Montreal at Chicago
mmortttes or stmp y a11.e o
vanco,u ver at Toronto
fulfill affinnative obligations
Buffal o at Cleveland
1' ·
··
Colorado at Los Angel es
to e unmate segregatiOn ..
{Only games schedul ed )
the remedy ordered appears
!

c_.._..__._.._.._.._.._..~-----·---·_._.._..

TAll BOY SOUP........................ :...........3 19 oz. cans '1.00
JOllY GOOD OORN ....................................
4303 canss1.00
'
.

AUS
Tex. (UP!) School officials haven't
thrown away their massive
plan to bus 13,000 students
yet, but it doesn't look like
they'll be rieeding it either.
The U. S. Supreme Court
ruled Monday Austin would
not have to meet rigorous
guidelines set by the 5th U. S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in a
~ desegregation suit. The high
_, court, in reversing the a~
• peals court, said the district
' did not have to impose a more
thorough 11\iX of students than
would naturally occur.
"There's
a
strong
llkelihood we will not have to
have the massive program
that had been contemplated,"
said Supe,rintendent J.ack
Davidson.
Davidson said Austin
currently
bused 4,454

.

.!

FRESH
Sl DE

LB.

•
89
,

· SLICED QUARTER PORK LOIN

PORK CHOPS
9-11 CHOPS

Free Snow White ft'lug With
J

99 0 ~.

•s.oo Purchase

seen at such events - Henry
Ki s s I n g e r ,
Ne Is o n
Rockefeller, Chief Justice
Warren Burger, ranking
White House aides and
members of Congress.
But the dinner and fonnal
welcome earlier in tbe day
for Andreotti were Ford's
most extensive cereroonlal
activities slnoe the election
and, barring u ~expected
developments, were the last
he ' will give · for a filreign
leader.
Iii an apparent effort to
make it a special occasion,

Ford .invited his GOP vice
presidential nominee, Bob
Dole, and a bevy of top
political adviSers including
Melvin Laird, Bryoe Har to
make it a special occasion,
Ford invited his . GOP vioe
!"esidential nominee, Bob
Dole, and a bevy of top
political add Cochairman
Robert Carter were on the
· guest list. So was Max Fisher,
one of the biggest GOP fund
raisers .
Among the entertai11ers
were :several who actively
support~ Ford in the battle

Busing plan is overturned Glenn supports Sen. Byrd
TIN,

CUT YOUR OWN AT

C

i

budget experts before
attending a private reoeption
tonight at his country club in
suburban Bethesda, Md.
Durin ~
the Andreotti
dinner, Ford offered a
traditional diplomatic toast
to the•ltalian visitor and said
nothing to suggest !be affair
was unlike others he had
hosted for previous visiting
dignitaries.
Among those in attendanoe,
were mant V!Ps regularly

•

BRADFORD'S GROVE

C

and the Pre\ident's way of
WASHINGTON (UPI) - It saying thank you" to some of
was President Ford's last thepeopie who helped him try
scheduled state dinner for a and win a full four-year tenn
foreign leader aod he invited in the Oval Office.
many old friends from the ' At one point the guests gave
Republican party, his Ford a standing ovation after
~lchtgan hometown and the · hearing singer Tony Orlando
ll'orlds of corporate lobbying , declare: "This is the year I
met a President and boy what
show business and sports.
As one aide put It, the a great one I met! "
Ford planned no public
Monday night affair officially
appearanoes
today. He arhonored Italian Prime
ranged
a
round
of meetings ·
Minister Giuiio Andreotti but
also "was a farewell of sorts with stall members and

CHRISTMAS TREES

I

'

, By RICHARD E. LERNER

to tbe oecond defensive
squad, joining Centenllle u
the mly achoola with three
players named.
Others with two playera
selected were GahaQJla
Uncoln, , Miami Trace,
Warren Harding, Princeton
and Groveport.

,........ . tiilt.............. ..

'

and Rod Markley of Ford football '• Gedrge Blanda IIIII
Joe Paterno, Olympic
Motor Co.
sWimmer
Gary Hall lllld .uto
~~•cball 's Johnny Bench
and ' Yogi Berra, former rater Mnlo Andrelll
• heavyweight boxing represented the world of
against Jimmy Carter, such champion Joe Frazier, sports.
as Pearl Bailey, Joe
Garagiol a, Rod McKuen,
Uonel Hampton and Peter
QUALITY ADMIRAL
Graves.
Orlando, a frequent escort
of the Ford family at the GOP
National Convention in
Augu st, was tapped to
perform at !be dinner .
Ford invited haU a dozen
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!!!
personal friends from his
hometown of Grand Rapids ,
Mich., and two 0\hers who
are among Washlrigion •s
foremost corporate lobbyists,
Willlam Whyte of U.S. Steel

Lame Duck .President presides at last hurrah

ita two undefeated opponlllll
91-&amp;ln wlming the Clall AAA
playofl tide, alao Md junior
llneMcker Bob Crable named

to Antbony Grizzard of

.Faust 'Coach-of-Year'

:Norman signs on
·for 2 more years

Ratings

~-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddle(!Ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday, Dec. 7, 1976

1976 Class AAA

By J.R. KIMMINS
problems of the Midwest ,"
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. said Glenn.
John Glenn, ~hlo, Monday
Glenn said he favored Byrd
said he would vote for Sen. over Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
Robert Byrd', D-West DMIM.,and said "there .are a
Virginia, next month to number of people" who have
sucoeed the retiring Mike tbe qualifications lor offioe .
Mansfield as majority leader
He said the job needed
of !be u.s. Senate.
someone · "vigOrous.'~ an
"I have talked with him obvious
reference
to
(Byrd) a number of times Humphrey's reoent cancer
and we have a mutual operation.
interest in this area of the
On other matters, Glenn
coWltry ," said GleM at a said he had tall&lt;ed ''several
news conference in his times" with President-elect
Columbua office .
Jimmy Carter about jobs for
"We have bordering sLates Ohioans in the Carter
and we need someone who is administration.
!amlllar with the workings of
He said he made some
Co" Dick Reynolds and a Congress and with the
talented group of Cardinals
will invade Lyne Center
Wednesday night at 7:30 for a
showdown with the Redmen
of Rio Grande in what
promises to be a big test (or
both teams.
Otterbein, 21 and 6 last
season, is young (only two
seniors) and Improving as
they set their rights on
matching last year's Ohio
Conference Soutbern Division
co- championship and
national rankmg.
~d by a balanced : iack
th'at shows si.x men averaging
in, double figures, !be Cardinals are I and I thus far
with an opening loss to
Marshall (79-76) and a 9H9
victory over Wabash.
Coach Art Lanham's
L
Redmen will be led once
again by senior Jimmy Noe,
from Gallipolis, who is
coming olf a 28 point 20
rebound effort ,il_Balnst
Alderson Qroaddus lait week.
Noe is averaging 25.3' points
and 14 .6 . rebounds for the
year, tops on the team.
Along with Noe will be Gil
hand ~in-hand
Price i5. 7 points average,
Mark Swain 15.3, and Dale
Royse 10.3 as well as the ever
dangerous Greg James who
is averaging 6.0 points and 7.3
rebounds per game.
The Redmen, 2 and I this
season, are anxious to defeat
a team the calabre of the
Cardinals and seem to have
the talent to do just that.

Redmen

q

host

Otterbein

Wednesday

recommendation s, but
declined to discuss !be matter
further. He said he expec.ted
to make further personnel
suggestions once Carter
takes office Jan . 20.
Glenn also said he
disagreed with Carter's
announced plan to pardon
VIetnam-era draft resisters .
"It's fine now, " S6id Glenn,
"but what If we get into a war
agaln'?"
Glenn said he !bought a
pardon·' might set a bad
precedent, but said he would
reserve judgment on Carter'
final proposal until its
specifics are made public~

SAVE
•30
TO
'200
On Some
and
Models.
1976

1977

JUST IN TIME FOR
GIFT-GIVING ~
For a Christmas they'll never forget.

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleoort, 0 .

~t's being done

about the rising cost
of health care?
Plenty.

UPIAll~Ohio

CQL.UMBUS WPI ) - Th e
Second Team Defense
1976
Uniled
P r ess
In E _ Ted ournbautd , Troy ,
ternatlonal (C las s AAA) All · 6 .2. 205, Sr .
E - MyK e Cla r c tt , Voun gs Ohio Football Tea"m :
FirstTeam Offense
tow n c ardinal Mooney , 6 -2,
SE Ben
Needham ,
712, sr
Gro veport. 6 -4, 205 . Sr .
T _ Bill Bec her , Center .
TE ~ Jerry Browne, East
vi ll e, 6-6, 730. Sr
Ljve rpool 1 6 · 2, 212 . Sr
T
Ke \l in
K uhar ,
Cleveland s t , Joseph , 6-2, 2&lt;10 ,
T - Jim Brown, Cincinnat i
Sr ,
· Moeller , 6-4, 270, Sr
T - Luther Henson , San .
MG _ Dar rell Solo mo n ,
dusky , 6-2, 225, Sr .
Steub en vill e, 6-1, 205, Sr .
LB - Sam Gia ngar de ll a,
G ~ Larry Lee , Dayton
Roth , 6-3, 250, Sr .
Niles, 6-0, 215, Sr .
G - Jim Mazza , Col umbu s
LB _
s tan
B row der,
North land , 6-2, 220. Sr .
Prin cet on , 6-J, 22 9, Sr .
C - Sa m Grooms, M iami
LB Bob crab'!€~. Cln Tracc , 6-2, 217, Sr .
cin n ati M oe ll er . 6-3, 200. Jr .
1
QB -. Tim Koegel , Cin CB B~ad ~
· rr i son ,
cinnati Moeller. 6-4, 180. Sr .
worlhington . 6, 1,
· Sr
RB Doug Donley, Cam CB Norm
. urrows ,
Portsmouth , 5-11 , 170, Sr .
briQge , 6-1, 180, Sr .
RB - Cliff Bel mer, Mans s _ Marty cons ta rliine .
..
fie ld Sr 1 6-3, :mo. Sr .
walsh Je su it, 6-0, 180, Sr .
•
RB Anf:iy .• Sc hram m,
s _ Chris Dearborn ,
~ ~indlay , 6-2, 218, S ~ .
Bow ling _Green , 5-11, 175, Sr .
First Team Defense
Back -of -the -y ea r - Tim
E - Steve BertL Napoleon.
Koegel . Cinc inna t i Mo ell er .
6-2, 215, Sr .
Lineman , of - the -y ea r - .
E - David Allen , War ren
Jim
Brown,
Cincinnati
Hard ing, 6-2, 205 , ' Sr .
Moeller
T Gera l d Howard ,
' coac h .of .the -year - Gerry .
Co lu mbu s Walnut Rid ge, 6-2,
Faust , Cincinn~i Moell er .
231 , Sr .
Sp ecial Mention Lin e m en
T - Jim Smith , t"' remQnt;
Gr eg Ballish , L orain Ad Ross , 6-1, 248 , Sr .
mi ra! Ki ng ; Dave Condeni ,
MG Terry Bach , Cen Cin c innati Moeller ;
Bob
terville , 6-0, 210 , Sr .
Ca la bre~e. Toledo Central
LB - To dd Bell , Middlecat holic; John Epilropou los,
town , 6-2, 190- Sr .
warren
Harding ;
Mark
LB · Glenn Bradford ,
Gysan , Fr emon t Ross ; Jeff
Gahanpa Lincoln , 6-J, 198 , Sr ·
Jackso n , Toledo Scott; . Ray
LB Mark Reichard ,
Long , Fr emont Ross; Dtrve
Lakewood 51 . Edward , 6-l&gt; Medi ch , Steubenville ; Edwin
220, Sr .
Rivera , Lo rain so uthview ;
CB Anlh~my Gr i zzard,
Keiih St evens , Zanesv i.ll e;
Massillon Washington, 5-11,
~i m Sc arbt.Jry , Mansfleld Sr . ;
115 , Sr .
Jim Tucker. Lancaster ; Mike
CB Jerem iah Gunn ,
Trgovac , Austintown Fitch ;
Gro"eport, 6-L 194 , Sr .
Tom Wande rs l eben, Euclid .
S - Mike Kennedy , Toledo
Special Mention Bac"s
.
St . F rancis , 6-1, 115, Sr .
o
Mark Adkins, Reyno lds ·
S - Hubert qli\ler . Elyria ,
bu rQ ; Terry Bates. Fremonl
5-10, 190, St .
Ross ; Clint Dozier , Akro n
Stcond Team Offense ·
North : Ray Ellis . canton
SE - Dan Shetler , North
McKinley : Greg Hollins ,
Canton Hoove r . S-11 , 175 , Sr .
za n esv ille ; Ste ve Popov i c h ~
TE
Bitt"
N ell l ing ,
Lora in Senior ; Curtis Rein ,
Cuyahoga Falls, 6-5,212, Sr .
N iles ; Mike TucK er , Fa irborn .
T - Bruce Otten , Center .
Park Hills ..
,
ville , 6·3, 235 . Sr .
Honorable Mention
T Scott
Newburg ,
Linemen
Clclylon Northmont , 6.5, 2,30 ,
Greg . Bow sh er , ColUmbus
Sr .
, . ,
·· • Eastrl'oor ;
Ru .dy
Bulio .
G - Ern•~ Ej;utropoulos ,
Parma Senior ; David Berry .
warrer H_ardtng, 6-1, 208 , Sr .
hill , Fairborn Park Hilt s;
G - Ttm Malltry , Pa r ma
Dave Be.c ker ,- Steubenville;
Sr ., 6t l. 225 ,. Sr . ·
Todd BlaiSing, Mansfield
C" - ~Ill Slewe, Kettering
senior ; George cook , Elyria ;
Aller , 6-A; 220, Sr .
.
Tom
Catania ,
Garfield
QB Art SchliCht er . , 'Hei ghts ; Mike C~ac k . Par ma
Miami Trace , 6-J, 185 , Jr .
Padua ;
Mark
Chevc ny ,
RB -'- Derrdn Hunt er .
Ma ssi l lon Jackson ; Greg
Prince ton , 5) , 165 , Sr .
Fox .. Lak ewood St . Edward ;
RB
Tim JO'Cain . •
T ed
F lohre ,
Day ton
Gahanna Lincoln . 5 B. 165, Jr .
Stebb in s ;
Mark
Gr een.
RB Tim Campbell,
CamiJridge ; Har old"- Gibson ,
Dayton Meadowdale , 5 11 ,
Ma ns field Senior ; Br a dy·
:n s . Sr .
Ho k~ . KettP ring Fairmonl
RB - Doug West. W inlers
E a"&gt;t : Dav e H~ndwcrkcr .
Vill e, 6-0, 190, ·Sr . •
Dayton M cadowltal e ; D enni s

I'

to exceed that necessary to
eliminate the effect of any
official acts or omissions,"
the Supreme Court majority
said.

Ju lie n . Akro n North ; Jell
Kl i n e, Willoughby South ;
Car l Kandel. Lou isvi lle; Don
Konovsky ,
Massillon
J a ckson ; Carey Kowalski ,
Toledo St . Francis ; Ke n
Lan ie r, Colu m bus Marion
Fran~l in; Greg Lyt2 , Wa lsh
Jesuit ;
Ric h Lewis , Akron Spri ng
field ; Bi ll McDermott , Walsh
Jesuit ;
Brett
Modic ,
Willovghby
South ;
Don
M cKill an , Fa irfield ; carlos
Mahaffey , MI . Healthy ; Lynn
Moor e, Sandusky ;
Greg
MOnro e, P i qua ; Brendan
Moy ni hi"ln·, To ledo St' . Johns ;
Mike Nicholl s, Galion ; Mark
Russo . Lorain Sr . ; Tony Ruiz,
Fremont Ross 1
Doug Roese , Avon Lake ;
Rieh
Sh earer,
C l a·~rtont
Morlhmont ; Gene Schwar t z,
N ew
Philadelphia ;
Dan
Santog ro ss l, Bowling Green;
l,.arry . Sabino. · Warren
Western Reserve : Allan
Tasman , Ma nst iel d Sen ior ;
T i m To urn ey and Jesse
Toles , Ma ss i llon washington ;
Pa u l Thomp son , Deyton
Roth ; Tom Walters , Winters vi lle : Billy W ill ia m s, Elyria ;
Cur-L..i_s Wingard , Xenia ; Bill
Wi l e~Cinc innati Woodward .
HOnora'b,le Mention
B""'::cks
Ken ny Agee, Cleveland
Ken nedy ; Tom Bri dgman .
K.elleri ng F airmont West ;
Harold Brown, Kent Roose velt ; Doug ~Oehm e, Xenia
Beav ercreek ; Andy Can navino , Cleveland St . Joseph ;
Mike Chandler, Newark ; Tim
Clifford, Colerain ~ Joe Croft ;
Youngstown
Cardinal
Mooney ;
Tony
'Cari~a,
Co lumbus Northland ; J1m
Ouffalo ." Maple Heights ;
.
Tony Dunklin , Cleve land ,
Height s ;
Dick
Duffett ,
Ca n field ; Mike Fairrow,
Ch illi cot-he : Ste&lt;ve Givens,
Cincinnati Moeller ; Ri c ky
Holman , C l eveland Ea st;
Mark Horvath , Parma Valley
l=orge ;
Monty
Hun t er ,
.Oover : M lck Jordon , Nort h
Canton
Hoover 1 Lonn ieJohns on , Akron Nor th; Bob
Massong , Cincinnati Moelle r ;
Larry Ma c k , Midd l etown ;
Dan Martinez , F indlay ; Bob
Muz.lo , Lorain Senio r ;
Ed NasontL Belle\lue ; van
Ne l.son , warren western
Reserve ; Ro ll and Parker ,
Zan es ville ; •Joet Payton ,
Mentor ; Bob Rush ; Sten
b env i ll e ;
Bill
Rackley ,
Ba rberton ; Harold Robert
son . Cint in'nali Oa~ H ills ;
Richard Sc olt , A lliance ; Bob
ShalfP.r , Cuyahoga Falls ;
John T ill ery , Conf ield ; Art
Ta lam ine, Steubenville ; Ken
Topp ing , Co lumbus Walnut
RtdQ r;: Brad White . Bcctforct ;
M et WNtlherspoon , ° Canlon
M c. Vi nlr' y

•

Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans are
working
with doctors, hospitals,
area-wide health planning agencies, and regulatory agencies in a constant struggle to
hold down.costs ... to achieve im acceptable
balance between quality health care and cost.
And it's tough. Inflation has hit health care
·even harder than it has the rest of the economy.
Advances in medical science have made treatment available that is more intensive, m9re
complicated, more effective -and more costly.
And people are seeking more and better
health care than ever before.
Despite these factors, pro~ess is being made
in holding down increases m the cost of health
care. Programs have been established to
promote efficiency and help make sure the
right health care facilities ,and se~vices are
available where they are needed w1thout unnecessary duplication. And the effort to

identify and develop cost-saving programs is
continual.

But your help is needed.
You are the real consumer of health care. Not
the doctoror the hospital. Not your Blue Cross
or Blue Shield Plan or any other health care
protection plan.
And when you use your Blue ·cross or Blue
Shield benefits, you should ask your doctor
about alternatives to expensive bed-patient
care .and what else can· be done to hold
down costs.

Find out what you can do.
Some practical suggestions on what you can
do to help hold down the cost of health care
are in this free booklet. It also tells you why
health care costs have risen so fast and what
doctors, hosPitals, and your Blue Cross and
Blue Shieltf Plans are doing about it. Send for
it today.
·

Please send my free copy of
How All of Us Can Help Each of Us
Hold Down Health Care Cost to:
Name: _______________________________
Address~~---------'----

City ____ State_ _ _ Zip. _____
..
Mail this to:
free.Booklet
,
Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Central Ohio
Box 348
Colun1bus, Ohio 43216

Blue Cross(!)
Blue Shield ~
in Ceritral Ohio

All.of us helping each ofus.
I

II

••

• t

I

�I'

4-The ()ally Sentine!,MidcDeport-P..-roy, 0., TUesday,Dec. 7,1976

Tigers drop

Moeller dominates· A~\A team

•
'

:90-75.battle
, MOUN"I" PLEASANT,
: Michigan (UP!) - Kevin
· Janl!f, starling in his first
; game eve• for Central
Michigan, !toted 20 points
Monday night to lead Central
' to a 90-75 victory over
· Wittenberg.
. Centra.! dominated the
enUre game, leading by as
manyas20polntsa(OIIepoint
in the first half. The closest
Wittenberg ever came to a tie
was when they cut the
Central lead to seven points
midway through the second
half.
By halftime, Central lead
45;31.
Other high scorers for CentralwereLeonardDrakewlth
17 and Earl Boquette with 13
points and 17 rebounds.
Brian Anagler had 23 points
for Wittenberg.
. . The victory put Central at
.: 3-l: 'Wittenberg feU to 2-1. ·

chipped in another l7 each in
Richmond, Ky . Monday
night, to power Dayton to a
7&amp;-69 win over Eastern .
· Kentucky, Its third straight
victory of the se&amp;SOII.
The Colonels hit on only 25
per oent of their shots the
first halhndfell behind 14-28.
They rallied to·trail 71-el with .
Just ~:58 remaining, but .
Dayton scored the last five
points of th~ game..
In other games tnvolving
Ohio te81J15, West Llbe~y
. (W.Va.) atopped Steubenville
7&amp;-70 and Central State
downed WUberforoe 114-e6.
In Ohio basketball play
slated for tonight, Missouri
takes on the Rockets at
Toledo, Musktngum plays at
H~ldelberg, Wooster Is at
H1ram, John Carroll IS ~t
Mount
Union,
Oh1o
Dqminlcan fights at Ohio
:-v.esleyan, Point Park (Pa.)
IS at Kenyon, Thomas M?re
Forward Jim Paxson (Ky.) at Xavier, Cedarville
dropped in 18 points and Erv plays at Walsh and Bluffton
· Giddings and Dollli Harris at Mt. Vernon Nazarene.

CWfNNNAT! (UPi) - The pions were breaking open the
Cin · ti Reds have signed National League Western
vete n iefthanded pitcher Division raoe.
Fred Norman to a two-year
From June 13 until Aug . 5,
contract, marking only the Norman won eight times in
third time in reoent years the nine decisions, Including
club has agreed to give a seven complete games and
player a twoyear pact.
three shutouts, compiling a
In
Monday
night's brilliant 1.18 earned run
announcement that Norman average during that time.
had signed, Reds officisls
The little lefty finished 'the
disclosed the contract covers regular season witb a 12-7
both the 1977 and 1978 record and a 3.10 ERA and
seasons.
was the winning pitcher in the
Reds officials, like many second game of the World
baseball executives, prefer to Serie.S against the Yankees.
sigh players to one year
The Reds have now an.contracts ao they won't he nounced that 10 players are
obllgsted to the player U he under contract · for next
gets hurt and can't play the season.
second seaaon.
But last year, Johnny
College Basketball Results
Bench became the first Red
By United Pr ess Internationa l
in reoent years to reoeive a
two-year pact and last month Calif Pa 80 J:ss~&amp; Jeff 71
Cla rk son 66 Rochstr U, 02
the team revealed that Cesar Clar
ion 97 Gene\la 83
Geronimo also had signed a Domin ic an 89 Yeshi11a 65
Edinboro 99 Al liance 85
two-year contract.
F&amp; M 60 El izabethtown 56
Part of the reason the Reds Gannon sa Allegh eny 70
lost free agent pitcher Don Holy Cross 123 Bflo 89
iah 109 Easton 100
Gullett was their refUsal to Mess
Rut ger s 97 Leh lgh 73
give him a long-term Se ton Ha ll 104 canislus 76
Stony Broo&lt; 90 M . Evers 59
contract. Altbough the Reds ·stonehllt
eo Nrtheastrn 6&lt;~
said they offered him a a two~~~~e~\,"~
76 ~~c~e~~~~n 67
year pact, Gullett late last
South
month signed a six-year deal Appy St . 7 1 Davidson
53
Benedi
ct
l
1S
Clafl
in as
with the New York Yankees.
r lstn 88 Char . Bapt 79
Nonnan, 34, was the most Cha
Citadel 87 Presby 78
effective pitcher on the Reds' Dayton 76 E. Ke ntucky 69
staff dllfing the middle of the Dav is&amp;Ei k lns 9&lt;1 Shephrd eo
lon 91 Mars Hill82
seaaon when the world cham- EHunting
don 14 Wrn . Ca rey 66

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
U n I I e d Press In ter na tiona l
Boo1rd of coaches' cr) ll cge
basketball ratings wit h won lost
records through gam es of
Saturday ; Dec . 4, and number
of tirst :pla ce vo tes in paren
theses. First week ·
Team
Points
1. Mi chi gan (72) (1 .0 )
368
2. MarqiJette 116 ) 11-0)
·JOB

l UCL A (3 -01

159

A. Nevada ·Las Vegas( 1HJ-0) 179

5. Kentucky (2-0)
6. Alabama (4 OJ
7. Arizona (~ - 0 ~
e. San Francisco (4-0l
9. North Carolina (2 -11
10. Cincinnati 13-0l
11 . Notre Dam e f3-0 l
12. Indiana ( 1-11
13. Tenn essee (2.0J
14. Wake Fores t [J .OJ
t.'i, Maryland (3 - t J
16. Louisville (1- 1)
11 . Wash ington St . (J -0)
1 ~ . southern Illinois (J.Ol
19 Or•gon (11 1
20: ct;'m son (·-1 -0 )

168
119
97

95

90
87
86
57
41
31
28
27
19
1a
t3
10

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cincinnati Moeller continued·
its dominanoe of Ohio high
schoolfootballtDday, walking
oU with the three top honors
on the 1976 United Press
International Class· AAA allOhio team.
Tim Koegel, Moeller's
flamethrowlng senior
quarterback, was the .
overwhelmlng choloe as the
backofUwyear; hulking Jim
Brown, a 6-4, 270~pound
offensive Lackie, Willi voted
!be Uneman of the year; and,
Gerry Faust, the mastermind
of the Moeller dynasty got
!be nod of the voting co~ches
and news media ·as the coach
of the •year
The &amp;-4. ii!C).pound Koegel,
a three-year starter, led the
Crusaders to 24 straight
victories and back-to-beck
state championships with his
rlflelike aJ1ll
Playil)g oniy half the lime
the past'seaaon; Koegel hit.86
of l48 pass attempts for 1,240
yards and 16 touchdowns. In
the two layoff victories over
P

Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney and Gahanna
Uncoln, be completed 20 of 32
for 272 yards and five

toucbdowna.
Moeller's only losa during
Koegel's three-year reign
was a 21}.10 setback to Warren
Harding In the sernlftnal.l of
the 1974 state playoffs hla
sophomore year, leaving the
Crusaders · 34·1 under
Koegel's leadership. ·
Br6wn, a two-year Moeller
regular, Is anc~her In a long
line of outatandtng rlloeller
linemen, which Includes
former llnem.en of the year
steve Niehaua and Jay Case.
Joining Koegel in !be first
team offensive backfield are
running backS Doug bonley
of Cambridge, CJlff Delmer of
Mansfield Senior and
Findlay's
Big
Andy
Sc(lfamm.
.
Donley, a &amp;-1, 180-poWld
speedster, gained 1,480 · and
scored 15 touchdowns for
Cambridge the past year and
had season highs of 2« yard&amp;
against Canton McKinley and
266 against Dover.

Delmer, a &amp;-3, 20(1.pounder,
led Mansfield Senior to me of
lts finest seaaoM In several
year•, ruahing lor 1,156 yards
In the tough Buckeye
Conferenoe, an average of 7.1
yard&amp; per carry, and acortng
16 touchdowns.
Schramm, a aolld &amp;-2, 218pounder, was the workhorse
for a fine Findlay team,
Cllrrylng the ball 215 times In
• only eight games, mlaalng
two because of injury.
But, in the eight games In
which he played, Schranun, a
second team selection a year
ago, picked up 1,014 yards
and scored 18 touchdowns.
· The ends on the No. I
offensive squad are &amp;-4, 205pOWld Ben Needham, Grove..
port's outstanding two-way
performer at split end, and
Jerry Browne, of East
Liverpool at tight end.
Sandusky's Luther Henson
joins Moeller's Brown as the
offensive tacldes on·the team,
with Larry Lee of Dayton
Roth and Jim Mazza of
Columbus Northland · the
guards and Sam Grooms of

.

Wlbeaten Miami Traoe as the
center.
· The 12-man first defensive
team 1.1 headed by linebacker
Todd Bell of Middletown and
middle guard ol Centerville,
one of three Centerville
players named to tbe squad.
The others, both secood team
selections, were offensive
tackle Bruce Otten and
defenilve tackle BJII Becher.
steve Bertz of. Napoleon
and Warren Harding's David
Allen man the defensive end
spots, witb Gerald Howard of
Columbus Walilut.Ridge and
Fremoot Ross' Jim Smith the
tackl"'! and Bach, a rugged
2!~1D\der at middle guard.
BeD, a 2:&gt;-foot plus long
jwnper Wring the track sealiDO, mans one of the three
linebacker spot.a, !be others
going to Gahanna Lincoln's
Glenn Bradford and Mark
Reichard of Lakewood st.
Edward:
The four deep back spots go

Masalllon Wa,hlngton,
Jeremiah Gunn of'Groveport,
Mike Kennedy ·of Toledo St.
Francis and Hubert Oliver ol
Elyria.
Gunn, another two way
Groveport per!ocmer, alao
played tight end and teamed
with Needham to give the
Cniisers one· of the top end
·tandems In the slate.
Moeller, which outscored

fC .

COLUMBUS (UPI)
,
Gerry Faust, who guided
Cincinnati Moeller to Its
second straight 'state .high
SChool football championship
this year, ciimBxed an allwinning season tOday by
being named the United
Press International Class
AAA coach of tbe year.
Faust, 41, the only coach
Moeller has ever had,
reoeived 14 of !be 50 votes
cast in the coach of the year
balloting by fellow coaches
and members of the news
media from around the sf ate.
Second in the votilll. was

/

••

""

I'

'

PRE-CUT TREES AVAILABLE

Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east •t Darwin onto Rt.
681, go 4 miles to Milepost 13, turn south on gravel road
· Pt4 m1les to grove . .

WATCH •FOR SIGNS
Hours 12 til dark except weekends, 9til dark.

~...~~'4Mt.WNN-.-... ... ._9iilt'Mtilltill.._, ..

AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR
OPErllER SYSTEM BY ALLIANCE

Gahanna Lincoln's Neal Bill·
man with six, followed by Bill
Ricco of Walsh Jesuit and
Don Hertler of North Canton
Hoover with four each and
Centerville' Bob Gregg with
three.
"This year was a tougher
year even though the games
were easier I " said Faust,
who has a I~IS.2record in 14
years at Moeller, "because of
the pressure that was put on
us. But, the .kids seemed to
work harder and the coaches

all year long in the UP! Board
of Coaches AAA ratings,
getting near unanimous
support !be final few weeks.
The unbeaten untied season
was the · sixth for Faust at
Moeller, which will take an
overall ~arne win streak
into next year and a regular
season string of 42.
"We've had some great ·
teams," said Faust, a
University of Dayton
graduate, "but Ibis has to go
down as one of the best. Ithad
great. character and ability.
did too."
Moeller was the .No. I team It was a great year."

Park. your car in

the .garar;~e

the t!iiSY , modern v-'BV, without

hav inr;~

to get oui into bad weather

to open the oa ragadoor, w ith a smooth ly-operatinQ opener!

INCLI.JOES ONE
TRANSMITTER

Kentucky topples Indiana five
By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Wrtter
They didn't look like the
defend l n g nat l 0 n a I
Champions, especiaUy in the
first half. And they certainly
didn't look like the defending
nau· 08 I ham ., . g
C
ps P aym on
their home COurt.

°

11 We did some things in the
first half like we had never
been on the court," said
'-d·
C ·ach· BObbY Kn'1ght ,
m. JRnB 0
following fifth-ranked
Kentucky's 66-51 victory
. Monday night over the 12thranked
Hoosiers · in
Bloomm
· gton, Ind.
"Defensively we did a
pretty good job' bUt we
couldn't get any pressure on
!be offensive end of the floor .
Our offense ln the first hall
L ibrt y Bapt 90 Bowie St 85
Lnr ·Rhyn e 39 Gui llrd 37
was the key to the game."
Louis v i 89 va . C'wlth 60
. The
defeat snapped
L SU 100 Sa mford 89
M c Nees e 75 So , Alabama 74
Indiana'~~ 35-game winning
Methodist 61 N.C. Wesleyan 55
streak on their home court
Miss. Co11.89LeTourneau61
~ Michigan 97 Va nd erbilt 76
and marked the first time in
""'"s S'· "'1 sw La . n
. Knight's six yeats as coach
.v, - . •~a ry 87 Geo. Mason 69 · tb t th H ·
N .C. -Cha r . 75 Morehead St . 68
~ 8
e OOSlers, now 12
-,
Newberry 94 Fr anc is Merion 67 have been below ,500
NWLa . 70C e nten.o~ry67
K tu kyj pedi •36-15
Pfei ff er 80 All . Chr istian 7A
en C urn
Oa
Potoma c St. 81 Dundalk 70
advantage and led at
Rndlp h - Ma c o~ 65 Shippnbg 40
halftime ~21. "Early in the
Radford 67 Kmg 65
' .
Rust 69 Lane 67
game we did what we wanted
Sa lsbry St. 79 Loyol a Md . 74
to do, accomplished what we
S.C. A 1ken 83 S.C.- Sprtnbg 15
wanted to accomplish and
S.C. St . 81 Wnstn Salm St . 76
Southern u. 10~ Ark .-LR 86
maintained our poise,"
V!lla.n~va 69 America n u. 60
Kentucky Coach Joe Hall
V1rgtn1a St. 105 Lvngstn e 77
. ..
,
voorhees 8~ Lander 82
S81do (Jay) Shidler gave us
west Liberty 76 Steubenvi)O
the outside shot when we
W'm nstr Pa. 78 Bthny W.Va 6J
d the
ld
W
W.Va . Wstyn 95 Sal em 73
Wante
OUts e ShOt. e
western Ky . 75 C?ella St. n
had difficulty going inside,
Xevler La . ;7 .Mtss Ind. 81
but when we did we kicked it .
Mtdwest
'
Butler 63 Loyola Ill. 62
back OUtside."
c . M ic h . 90 ~ittenberg 75
Indiana trimmed the
Cent 51. 84 Wllberfrce 66
.
Detr oit 113 Oakland 45
Wildcats lead to 13 pomts
tbree times in !be second
0

half, the last time at 64-51
with two minutes to go.
Shidler and Larry Johnson
each scored 20 points to pace
Kentucky and Jack Givens

added 16. Kent Benson, the &amp;foot- II All-America oenter,
was the onlr Hoosier in
double figures with a gamehigh 21 points.

PLANETARY GEAR CHAIN DRIVE

GARAGE DOOR OPENER
Pork your CCJ" in the goroge ihe easy, modern way, withoo1 having
sofety of your car.
.•· ~

• 114 HP MOTOR
.
• DUAL SAFETY ADJUSTMENTS
' FOR DOORS TO 7FT. HIGH

I

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

j Simple facts everyone who
I owns a ho'me, car or business should kn11w
I How to Get
I

j the Hest Insm;~.~ v~~!.!~~

1
[
)

Your Monev
·

The _best way to get a .tr.ue
~ barga1n o_n Insurance 15 to
r shop tor If. But there are
l more th~n three !housa_nd
compan1es . _selling
tn ·
surance pollc1es to protect
homes ,
cars .
_an~
busin~sses, and 1t 1sn t
practtcal tor you to check
[ each i!lnd every one .
1 That 's why it's a go_od
~ idea to cons~lt an tn·
dependent . 1nsurance
agent . An Independent
~ agent does not work for i!!n
insurance .company . He
works for you. Which
means he can plan the
coverage that protects yOu
~ best . An~ then place it with
the most suitable of the
several insurance com ·
panies he duls with .
Many people make the
~ costly mistake of assuming
that insurance policies are
all the same. The truth is
~ they are not. Not only does
the quality of coverage
vary from policy to policy ,
\ but the cost offen varies

I

I
I

I
I

I
i

l

com~anv·s reputation . tor
servtce
and
cla•ms
payment. is critical.
And if you ha'lle a claim ,
your independent agent is
in a position to support you .
To be on your side i n
helping you obtain a just,
equitable
settlement
Promptly.
Because he is a self·
emp loyed local business
man, an independent agent
knows his responsibi lity is
to his customers . His
success is based on serving
his customers in three key
areas.
1 : HI! provides the best
Insurance cQvera9e at the
lowest true cost to you.
2. Me is available day and
night to respond to your
needs .
3 . He handles all types of
Insurance,
and
deals
through strong, reliable
companies .
To make sure you have
an indep·endent Insurance
agent on your side, took for
this symbol or consult your
Yellow Pages. It he can't

to~emember
not

~

that price is help you ,
the .onlY basi~ tor . nobody can .

·=~r:.~o"
·•

"The ln•urance Store"

\ Reuter-Brogan lnsu.rance Service

i.

214 E. Main

992·5130

Pomeroy

SALE PRICE

10

leave the

9997
IN CTN.

~

!
!
l
l

DELUXE SCREW DRIVE

~

I

GARAGE DOOR OPENER

1

Exclusive worm screw syste.m designed for your comfort ond safety..Complete control
relay.

~

.j

• 1/3 HP HIGH TORQUE MOTOR
• TWIN LIGHT MODEL
• FOR DOORS TO 7 FT. 61N. fHGH

)

i
1
i

!

214.75

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.

1i
~

I

!
J

REGULAR

CHWl

Mr. Frierdly

The Department Store of Building

Since 1915

American Beauty

PHEBE'S STCRE
. Pec!lnber l · Dec~mber 9
Hlgirt Reservect tCI Limit Quantities

Wo Otadlr Accept Fed: Food·Stamps
Mondaythru Friday

BREEZl GIANT SIZ£ ........... :..................................

11.39

MJIOO.E WHIP SALAD DRESSING. .....................~~-~.~:. 99'

OSCAR MEYER
ALL "'EAT

OSCAR MEYER

BACO

WIENERS
LB.

LB.

99~

FRENCH CITY

STEA.k

FRANK~ 99~

!109

.~----~~~-~~H,ODua~~~---~~·~,~---~~~---~-~~4~.~~.~~~~FRENCH CITY

RC COLA
8 PK-16 OZ.
'

,---:---------.
: Pro :
'"'ts:ann1ngs
•.:t

o

VAllEY BELL CHOCOLATE MILK ........................~.~!·.. ~l.59

BUSH'S BEANS ...~~~x~..~~~-'?:.~.~:?.t••~~!.'!!!~!l ..... 43oo cans'l.OO
HEINZ KETCHUP................... :.....'........... 32 oz. bottle 89'
DAWN DISH DETERGENL ............................... 22 oz. 79'
·PROGRESSO SPAGHETTI SAUCE ..........................?~.~~: 59'

students for desegregation
purposes - mostly blacks
from East Aus tin where
predominantly black schools
were closed under a 1971
court order. The plan created
to meet the appeals' court
ruling called for busing 13,000
to 14,000 students.
11
I'm tremendously.
pleased," said Carole McClellan , president of the
school board.
She said the plan approved
by the appeals court would
have given all Austin schools
a majority of white students.
"The effect was that we
could not have any school
anywhere in this district that
had a majority of minority
students," she said.
She said school officials
also would have constantly
been moving students from
school to school to combat
segregated residential
patterns.
Mexican-Americans and
I
I blacks in Austin, however,
_1•
I expressed disappointment ·at
1
the high court action.
NHL Standings
"!think the whole thing is
By United Press Internationa l
politically motivated and I
Campbell Conference
don't like it," said School
Patrick Division
,
W L T Pts. GF GA board member Gus Garcia.
• NY lslandrs 16 7 3 35 90 62 "It puts a big dent in our
Phila
13 7 6 32 93 74 effort
to desegregate
Atlanta
13
8 6 32 97 Bl
.
NY .Raogers 1211 5 19 109 96 Mexican-American kids. "
.Smythe Division
The appeals court had
St·. l-ouis
1~ 1~ T1 P~~- Gfs 99~ ruled Austin discriminated
Ch ic"ago
10 14 3 13 88 99 against Mexican·Americans
Colorado
8 16 J 19 76 93
M innesota
616 &lt;~ 16 n 116 aswellasblacksand ordered
vancouve r
719 2 16 n 109 desegregation to · balance
Wales Conference
Norris Divisiori
popu iat'tons. About IS per ·'
w L t Pis. GF GA cent of the district's 56,000
Montreal 1\1 4 4 46 141 62 si d 1 are bla k 23 pe
!
Los Angeles 9 11 9 27 96 93
u en s
c ,
r
Pi ttsburgh
9 12 5 23 75 88 cent Chicano and 62 per cent
Detroit
8 14 4 20 70 87 Anglo.
washing ton 7 15 4 l B 74 107
Th
.
Adams Division ·
·
e Supreme Court said
w L T PIS . GF GA much of Austin 's school
9 6 2 40 107 81
easton
1
BUffalo
14 1 3 31 Bl 60 segregation was the result of
Toronto
12 9 6 30 103 91 housing patterns over which
68 91 school . officials had no conCleveland
6 14 7 19
Monday's R esuth
,
.
Moritreal 1 Cleveland o
trol 1 theref(lre It was un(On l y game scheduled )
proper "to force desegregation
Tuesday's Games
·
d
'
st. L;ou is at NV lsl arders.
. to an extent, WhlcH coul not
vancouver at Washington
nonnally be achieved.
Minnesota at Plllsburgh
"Whether
the Austin school
Wnlv games sc:,hedu ledl
,
•
wcdftcsday's Games
authoritt~s
mtentionally
St . Lou is .at t-_~Y Rangers
'discriminated
against
Atla nta at M.nnesota
,
. .
.
I f . dt
Montreal at Chicago
mmortttes or stmp y a11.e o
vanco,u ver at Toronto
fulfill affinnative obligations
Buffal o at Cleveland
1' ·
··
Colorado at Los Angel es
to e unmate segregatiOn ..
{Only games schedul ed )
the remedy ordered appears
!

c_.._..__._.._.._.._.._..~-----·---·_._.._..

TAll BOY SOUP........................ :...........3 19 oz. cans '1.00
JOllY GOOD OORN ....................................
4303 canss1.00
'
.

AUS
Tex. (UP!) School officials haven't
thrown away their massive
plan to bus 13,000 students
yet, but it doesn't look like
they'll be rieeding it either.
The U. S. Supreme Court
ruled Monday Austin would
not have to meet rigorous
guidelines set by the 5th U. S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in a
~ desegregation suit. The high
_, court, in reversing the a~
• peals court, said the district
' did not have to impose a more
thorough 11\iX of students than
would naturally occur.
"There's
a
strong
llkelihood we will not have to
have the massive program
that had been contemplated,"
said Supe,rintendent J.ack
Davidson.
Davidson said Austin
currently
bused 4,454

.

.!

FRESH
Sl DE

LB.

•
89
,

· SLICED QUARTER PORK LOIN

PORK CHOPS
9-11 CHOPS

Free Snow White ft'lug With
J

99 0 ~.

•s.oo Purchase

seen at such events - Henry
Ki s s I n g e r ,
Ne Is o n
Rockefeller, Chief Justice
Warren Burger, ranking
White House aides and
members of Congress.
But the dinner and fonnal
welcome earlier in tbe day
for Andreotti were Ford's
most extensive cereroonlal
activities slnoe the election
and, barring u ~expected
developments, were the last
he ' will give · for a filreign
leader.
Iii an apparent effort to
make it a special occasion,

Ford .invited his GOP vice
presidential nominee, Bob
Dole, and a bevy of top
political adviSers including
Melvin Laird, Bryoe Har to
make it a special occasion,
Ford invited his . GOP vioe
!"esidential nominee, Bob
Dole, and a bevy of top
political add Cochairman
Robert Carter were on the
· guest list. So was Max Fisher,
one of the biggest GOP fund
raisers .
Among the entertai11ers
were :several who actively
support~ Ford in the battle

Busing plan is overturned Glenn supports Sen. Byrd
TIN,

CUT YOUR OWN AT

C

i

budget experts before
attending a private reoeption
tonight at his country club in
suburban Bethesda, Md.
Durin ~
the Andreotti
dinner, Ford offered a
traditional diplomatic toast
to the•ltalian visitor and said
nothing to suggest !be affair
was unlike others he had
hosted for previous visiting
dignitaries.
Among those in attendanoe,
were mant V!Ps regularly

•

BRADFORD'S GROVE

C

and the Pre\ident's way of
WASHINGTON (UPI) - It saying thank you" to some of
was President Ford's last thepeopie who helped him try
scheduled state dinner for a and win a full four-year tenn
foreign leader aod he invited in the Oval Office.
many old friends from the ' At one point the guests gave
Republican party, his Ford a standing ovation after
~lchtgan hometown and the · hearing singer Tony Orlando
ll'orlds of corporate lobbying , declare: "This is the year I
met a President and boy what
show business and sports.
As one aide put It, the a great one I met! "
Ford planned no public
Monday night affair officially
appearanoes
today. He arhonored Italian Prime
ranged
a
round
of meetings ·
Minister Giuiio Andreotti but
also "was a farewell of sorts with stall members and

CHRISTMAS TREES

I

'

, By RICHARD E. LERNER

to tbe oecond defensive
squad, joining Centenllle u
the mly achoola with three
players named.
Others with two playera
selected were GahaQJla
Uncoln, , Miami Trace,
Warren Harding, Princeton
and Groveport.

,........ . tiilt.............. ..

'

and Rod Markley of Ford football '• Gedrge Blanda IIIII
Joe Paterno, Olympic
Motor Co.
sWimmer
Gary Hall lllld .uto
~~•cball 's Johnny Bench
and ' Yogi Berra, former rater Mnlo Andrelll
• heavyweight boxing represented the world of
against Jimmy Carter, such champion Joe Frazier, sports.
as Pearl Bailey, Joe
Garagiol a, Rod McKuen,
Uonel Hampton and Peter
QUALITY ADMIRAL
Graves.
Orlando, a frequent escort
of the Ford family at the GOP
National Convention in
Augu st, was tapped to
perform at !be dinner .
Ford invited haU a dozen
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!!!
personal friends from his
hometown of Grand Rapids ,
Mich., and two 0\hers who
are among Washlrigion •s
foremost corporate lobbyists,
Willlam Whyte of U.S. Steel

Lame Duck .President presides at last hurrah

ita two undefeated opponlllll
91-&amp;ln wlming the Clall AAA
playofl tide, alao Md junior
llneMcker Bob Crable named

to Antbony Grizzard of

.Faust 'Coach-of-Year'

:Norman signs on
·for 2 more years

Ratings

~-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddle(!Ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday, Dec. 7, 1976

1976 Class AAA

By J.R. KIMMINS
problems of the Midwest ,"
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. said Glenn.
John Glenn, ~hlo, Monday
Glenn said he favored Byrd
said he would vote for Sen. over Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
Robert Byrd', D-West DMIM.,and said "there .are a
Virginia, next month to number of people" who have
sucoeed the retiring Mike tbe qualifications lor offioe .
Mansfield as majority leader
He said the job needed
of !be u.s. Senate.
someone · "vigOrous.'~ an
"I have talked with him obvious
reference
to
(Byrd) a number of times Humphrey's reoent cancer
and we have a mutual operation.
interest in this area of the
On other matters, Glenn
coWltry ," said GleM at a said he had tall&lt;ed ''several
news conference in his times" with President-elect
Columbua office .
Jimmy Carter about jobs for
"We have bordering sLates Ohioans in the Carter
and we need someone who is administration.
!amlllar with the workings of
He said he made some
Co" Dick Reynolds and a Congress and with the
talented group of Cardinals
will invade Lyne Center
Wednesday night at 7:30 for a
showdown with the Redmen
of Rio Grande in what
promises to be a big test (or
both teams.
Otterbein, 21 and 6 last
season, is young (only two
seniors) and Improving as
they set their rights on
matching last year's Ohio
Conference Soutbern Division
co- championship and
national rankmg.
~d by a balanced : iack
th'at shows si.x men averaging
in, double figures, !be Cardinals are I and I thus far
with an opening loss to
Marshall (79-76) and a 9H9
victory over Wabash.
Coach Art Lanham's
L
Redmen will be led once
again by senior Jimmy Noe,
from Gallipolis, who is
coming olf a 28 point 20
rebound effort ,il_Balnst
Alderson Qroaddus lait week.
Noe is averaging 25.3' points
and 14 .6 . rebounds for the
year, tops on the team.
Along with Noe will be Gil
hand ~in-hand
Price i5. 7 points average,
Mark Swain 15.3, and Dale
Royse 10.3 as well as the ever
dangerous Greg James who
is averaging 6.0 points and 7.3
rebounds per game.
The Redmen, 2 and I this
season, are anxious to defeat
a team the calabre of the
Cardinals and seem to have
the talent to do just that.

Redmen

q

host

Otterbein

Wednesday

recommendation s, but
declined to discuss !be matter
further. He said he expec.ted
to make further personnel
suggestions once Carter
takes office Jan . 20.
Glenn also said he
disagreed with Carter's
announced plan to pardon
VIetnam-era draft resisters .
"It's fine now, " S6id Glenn,
"but what If we get into a war
agaln'?"
Glenn said he !bought a
pardon·' might set a bad
precedent, but said he would
reserve judgment on Carter'
final proposal until its
specifics are made public~

SAVE
•30
TO
'200
On Some
and
Models.
1976

1977

JUST IN TIME FOR
GIFT-GIVING ~
For a Christmas they'll never forget.

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleoort, 0 .

~t's being done

about the rising cost
of health care?
Plenty.

UPIAll~Ohio

CQL.UMBUS WPI ) - Th e
Second Team Defense
1976
Uniled
P r ess
In E _ Ted ournbautd , Troy ,
ternatlonal (C las s AAA) All · 6 .2. 205, Sr .
E - MyK e Cla r c tt , Voun gs Ohio Football Tea"m :
FirstTeam Offense
tow n c ardinal Mooney , 6 -2,
SE Ben
Needham ,
712, sr
Gro veport. 6 -4, 205 . Sr .
T _ Bill Bec her , Center .
TE ~ Jerry Browne, East
vi ll e, 6-6, 730. Sr
Ljve rpool 1 6 · 2, 212 . Sr
T
Ke \l in
K uhar ,
Cleveland s t , Joseph , 6-2, 2&lt;10 ,
T - Jim Brown, Cincinnat i
Sr ,
· Moeller , 6-4, 270, Sr
T - Luther Henson , San .
MG _ Dar rell Solo mo n ,
dusky , 6-2, 225, Sr .
Steub en vill e, 6-1, 205, Sr .
LB - Sam Gia ngar de ll a,
G ~ Larry Lee , Dayton
Roth , 6-3, 250, Sr .
Niles, 6-0, 215, Sr .
G - Jim Mazza , Col umbu s
LB _
s tan
B row der,
North land , 6-2, 220. Sr .
Prin cet on , 6-J, 22 9, Sr .
C - Sa m Grooms, M iami
LB Bob crab'!€~. Cln Tracc , 6-2, 217, Sr .
cin n ati M oe ll er . 6-3, 200. Jr .
1
QB -. Tim Koegel , Cin CB B~ad ~
· rr i son ,
cinnati Moeller. 6-4, 180. Sr .
worlhington . 6, 1,
· Sr
RB Doug Donley, Cam CB Norm
. urrows ,
Portsmouth , 5-11 , 170, Sr .
briQge , 6-1, 180, Sr .
RB - Cliff Bel mer, Mans s _ Marty cons ta rliine .
..
fie ld Sr 1 6-3, :mo. Sr .
walsh Je su it, 6-0, 180, Sr .
•
RB Anf:iy .• Sc hram m,
s _ Chris Dearborn ,
~ ~indlay , 6-2, 218, S ~ .
Bow ling _Green , 5-11, 175, Sr .
First Team Defense
Back -of -the -y ea r - Tim
E - Steve BertL Napoleon.
Koegel . Cinc inna t i Mo ell er .
6-2, 215, Sr .
Lineman , of - the -y ea r - .
E - David Allen , War ren
Jim
Brown,
Cincinnati
Hard ing, 6-2, 205 , ' Sr .
Moeller
T Gera l d Howard ,
' coac h .of .the -year - Gerry .
Co lu mbu s Walnut Rid ge, 6-2,
Faust , Cincinn~i Moell er .
231 , Sr .
Sp ecial Mention Lin e m en
T - Jim Smith , t"' remQnt;
Gr eg Ballish , L orain Ad Ross , 6-1, 248 , Sr .
mi ra! Ki ng ; Dave Condeni ,
MG Terry Bach , Cen Cin c innati Moeller ;
Bob
terville , 6-0, 210 , Sr .
Ca la bre~e. Toledo Central
LB - To dd Bell , Middlecat holic; John Epilropou los,
town , 6-2, 190- Sr .
warren
Harding ;
Mark
LB · Glenn Bradford ,
Gysan , Fr emon t Ross ; Jeff
Gahanpa Lincoln , 6-J, 198 , Sr ·
Jackso n , Toledo Scott; . Ray
LB Mark Reichard ,
Long , Fr emont Ross; Dtrve
Lakewood 51 . Edward , 6-l&gt; Medi ch , Steubenville ; Edwin
220, Sr .
Rivera , Lo rain so uthview ;
CB Anlh~my Gr i zzard,
Keiih St evens , Zanesv i.ll e;
Massillon Washington, 5-11,
~i m Sc arbt.Jry , Mansfleld Sr . ;
115 , Sr .
Jim Tucker. Lancaster ; Mike
CB Jerem iah Gunn ,
Trgovac , Austintown Fitch ;
Gro"eport, 6-L 194 , Sr .
Tom Wande rs l eben, Euclid .
S - Mike Kennedy , Toledo
Special Mention Bac"s
.
St . F rancis , 6-1, 115, Sr .
o
Mark Adkins, Reyno lds ·
S - Hubert qli\ler . Elyria ,
bu rQ ; Terry Bates. Fremonl
5-10, 190, St .
Ross ; Clint Dozier , Akro n
Stcond Team Offense ·
North : Ray Ellis . canton
SE - Dan Shetler , North
McKinley : Greg Hollins ,
Canton Hoove r . S-11 , 175 , Sr .
za n esv ille ; Ste ve Popov i c h ~
TE
Bitt"
N ell l ing ,
Lora in Senior ; Curtis Rein ,
Cuyahoga Falls, 6-5,212, Sr .
N iles ; Mike TucK er , Fa irborn .
T - Bruce Otten , Center .
Park Hills ..
,
ville , 6·3, 235 . Sr .
Honorable Mention
T Scott
Newburg ,
Linemen
Clclylon Northmont , 6.5, 2,30 ,
Greg . Bow sh er , ColUmbus
Sr .
, . ,
·· • Eastrl'oor ;
Ru .dy
Bulio .
G - Ern•~ Ej;utropoulos ,
Parma Senior ; David Berry .
warrer H_ardtng, 6-1, 208 , Sr .
hill , Fairborn Park Hilt s;
G - Ttm Malltry , Pa r ma
Dave Be.c ker ,- Steubenville;
Sr ., 6t l. 225 ,. Sr . ·
Todd BlaiSing, Mansfield
C" - ~Ill Slewe, Kettering
senior ; George cook , Elyria ;
Aller , 6-A; 220, Sr .
.
Tom
Catania ,
Garfield
QB Art SchliCht er . , 'Hei ghts ; Mike C~ac k . Par ma
Miami Trace , 6-J, 185 , Jr .
Padua ;
Mark
Chevc ny ,
RB -'- Derrdn Hunt er .
Ma ssi l lon Jackson ; Greg
Prince ton , 5) , 165 , Sr .
Fox .. Lak ewood St . Edward ;
RB
Tim JO'Cain . •
T ed
F lohre ,
Day ton
Gahanna Lincoln . 5 B. 165, Jr .
Stebb in s ;
Mark
Gr een.
RB Tim Campbell,
CamiJridge ; Har old"- Gibson ,
Dayton Meadowdale , 5 11 ,
Ma ns field Senior ; Br a dy·
:n s . Sr .
Ho k~ . KettP ring Fairmonl
RB - Doug West. W inlers
E a"&gt;t : Dav e H~ndwcrkcr .
Vill e, 6-0, 190, ·Sr . •
Dayton M cadowltal e ; D enni s

I'

to exceed that necessary to
eliminate the effect of any
official acts or omissions,"
the Supreme Court majority
said.

Ju lie n . Akro n North ; Jell
Kl i n e, Willoughby South ;
Car l Kandel. Lou isvi lle; Don
Konovsky ,
Massillon
J a ckson ; Carey Kowalski ,
Toledo St . Francis ; Ke n
Lan ie r, Colu m bus Marion
Fran~l in; Greg Lyt2 , Wa lsh
Jesuit ;
Ric h Lewis , Akron Spri ng
field ; Bi ll McDermott , Walsh
Jesuit ;
Brett
Modic ,
Willovghby
South ;
Don
M cKill an , Fa irfield ; carlos
Mahaffey , MI . Healthy ; Lynn
Moor e, Sandusky ;
Greg
MOnro e, P i qua ; Brendan
Moy ni hi"ln·, To ledo St' . Johns ;
Mike Nicholl s, Galion ; Mark
Russo . Lorain Sr . ; Tony Ruiz,
Fremont Ross 1
Doug Roese , Avon Lake ;
Rieh
Sh earer,
C l a·~rtont
Morlhmont ; Gene Schwar t z,
N ew
Philadelphia ;
Dan
Santog ro ss l, Bowling Green;
l,.arry . Sabino. · Warren
Western Reserve : Allan
Tasman , Ma nst iel d Sen ior ;
T i m To urn ey and Jesse
Toles , Ma ss i llon washington ;
Pa u l Thomp son , Deyton
Roth ; Tom Walters , Winters vi lle : Billy W ill ia m s, Elyria ;
Cur-L..i_s Wingard , Xenia ; Bill
Wi l e~Cinc innati Woodward .
HOnora'b,le Mention
B""'::cks
Ken ny Agee, Cleveland
Ken nedy ; Tom Bri dgman .
K.elleri ng F airmont West ;
Harold Brown, Kent Roose velt ; Doug ~Oehm e, Xenia
Beav ercreek ; Andy Can navino , Cleveland St . Joseph ;
Mike Chandler, Newark ; Tim
Clifford, Colerain ~ Joe Croft ;
Youngstown
Cardinal
Mooney ;
Tony
'Cari~a,
Co lumbus Northland ; J1m
Ouffalo ." Maple Heights ;
.
Tony Dunklin , Cleve land ,
Height s ;
Dick
Duffett ,
Ca n field ; Mike Fairrow,
Ch illi cot-he : Ste&lt;ve Givens,
Cincinnati Moeller ; Ri c ky
Holman , C l eveland Ea st;
Mark Horvath , Parma Valley
l=orge ;
Monty
Hun t er ,
.Oover : M lck Jordon , Nort h
Canton
Hoover 1 Lonn ieJohns on , Akron Nor th; Bob
Massong , Cincinnati Moelle r ;
Larry Ma c k , Midd l etown ;
Dan Martinez , F indlay ; Bob
Muz.lo , Lorain Senio r ;
Ed NasontL Belle\lue ; van
Ne l.son , warren western
Reserve ; Ro ll and Parker ,
Zan es ville ; •Joet Payton ,
Mentor ; Bob Rush ; Sten
b env i ll e ;
Bill
Rackley ,
Ba rberton ; Harold Robert
son . Cint in'nali Oa~ H ills ;
Richard Sc olt , A lliance ; Bob
ShalfP.r , Cuyahoga Falls ;
John T ill ery , Conf ield ; Art
Ta lam ine, Steubenville ; Ken
Topp ing , Co lumbus Walnut
RtdQ r;: Brad White . Bcctforct ;
M et WNtlherspoon , ° Canlon
M c. Vi nlr' y

•

Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans are
working
with doctors, hospitals,
area-wide health planning agencies, and regulatory agencies in a constant struggle to
hold down.costs ... to achieve im acceptable
balance between quality health care and cost.
And it's tough. Inflation has hit health care
·even harder than it has the rest of the economy.
Advances in medical science have made treatment available that is more intensive, m9re
complicated, more effective -and more costly.
And people are seeking more and better
health care than ever before.
Despite these factors, pro~ess is being made
in holding down increases m the cost of health
care. Programs have been established to
promote efficiency and help make sure the
right health care facilities ,and se~vices are
available where they are needed w1thout unnecessary duplication. And the effort to

identify and develop cost-saving programs is
continual.

But your help is needed.
You are the real consumer of health care. Not
the doctoror the hospital. Not your Blue Cross
or Blue Shield Plan or any other health care
protection plan.
And when you use your Blue ·cross or Blue
Shield benefits, you should ask your doctor
about alternatives to expensive bed-patient
care .and what else can· be done to hold
down costs.

Find out what you can do.
Some practical suggestions on what you can
do to help hold down the cost of health care
are in this free booklet. It also tells you why
health care costs have risen so fast and what
doctors, hosPitals, and your Blue Cross and
Blue Shieltf Plans are doing about it. Send for
it today.
·

Please send my free copy of
How All of Us Can Help Each of Us
Hold Down Health Care Cost to:
Name: _______________________________
Address~~---------'----

City ____ State_ _ _ Zip. _____
..
Mail this to:
free.Booklet
,
Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Central Ohio
Box 348
Colun1bus, Ohio 43216

Blue Cross(!)
Blue Shield ~
in Ceritral Ohio

All.of us helping each ofus.
I

II

••

• t

I

�1976

Polly's Pointers
Wlllll~

1

Dear Rap :
My family thinks it's shocking, but f'd like to know : is
there anythifl8 wrong in marrying your stepmoth!;r's nephew ?
- TROUBLED

I

Dear Troubled:
Not unless tllere's·something wrong with the nephew. It's
not incest, II that's what bothers your family , - HELEN AND
SUE

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
About your answer to tlle young woman who had given up a
child at 14, was a high school ~~enior and pregnant again . You
offered her tlle same questions I was told to ask myself as an
unmarried mother - the same stacked deck of stereotypes
. that leads to only ooe conclusion: give up the child. (They
included : are you financially and physically able to care for it;
will your parents nelp ; will you regret your decision, come
diapers and 2o'clock feedings ; are you being fair to tbe child?)
May I propose an alternative set of questions for women in
this position, based on my experience - I gave up my first
child, kept the second, am now happily married and have a
third baby.
I deeply regret giving up my first, and do rot regret
keeping the second even though it meant two years as a single
mother . Here are 'MY questions :
How will it feel to have gone through the experience of
pregnancy and birth , and never be able to discuss it?
If you have later children, hO)" will it feel to lie every time
you tell someone how many babies you have borne - to say
"two" when you know in your heart there are three ?
How will it feel to cry every year on your first child's birthday; to wonder where and how he is; to search the fares of
children on the street, looking for a familiar feature ; to be
gripped with fear each time you hear of an adopted child being .
abused or kiiled, wondering if he's yours'
Will freedom mean so much to you when, instead of a 2
o'clock feeding, you find yourself ccying alone at 2 a.m.' Wiil
d;ltes be so great when the· boys don't understand your
experience and loneliness'
Finally, before you decide on "what's best for the child,"
talk to adult adoptees. Hear the sense of rootlessness, or
r.ejection; of lack of heritage that many of them have lived
with.
·
Adoption isn't always the best answer for either mother or
child. It can be a source of lifelong pain. Please listen to those
of us who have given up a child. We deserve to be heard so that
a new generation ofsingle mothers will not fail for the lies that
were fed to us. - MICHAEL'S MOTHER

. ~J· )I
. CANDLEUGHT INVESTITURE -Members of Brownie I293 Girl Scout Troop were
invested in candlelight ceremonies at the Rutland Elementary School Monday evening.
Mrs. Shirley Wilson, leader, was.assisted by Mrs. Sonia Parsons and.Mrs , Irene Kennedy in
the investiture. In the group were left to right, front row, Sabrina Wilson, Gi-eta Kennedy ,
Sherry Wilson, Chris Black, and April McGrath ; middle. row, Terri Combs, Mandi Black,
Micheiie Peterson, Laney Hankla and Sue Parsons; and back row, Regina Eblin, Diana
Wiiliamson, Christine Hysell, Tracy McKinney, Janet Hy!ltlll and Kathy Blessing.
.

School to stage operetta

SALEM CENTER - A
Christmas operetta wiil be
presented under the direction
of Miss Glenna Sprague,
vocal music teacher, at the
.Salem Center Elementary
School auditorium on Friday
evening at 7:30 p.m.
·Assisting Miss Spra gue
with the operetta are Mrs.
Wykle Whitley, first grade
teacher ; Mrs. Olive Page,
second grade; Miss Rebecca
Triplett, third ; Mrs. Winifred
Naas, fourth ; Mrs. Anna E.
Turner , fifth , and Mrs.
Roberta Wilson, sixth grade
teacher
and school principal.
Dear Mother:
The
first
grade children
· We agree, adoption isn't ALWAYS the best answer for
will
si
ng
"Here
Comes Santa
mother or child. Likewise "keeping the baby" can become a
disaster, if immaturity, regret, revenge, parental discord or Clau s,' ' "Jingle Bells,"
other neg~tives enter the picture.
If our so.ealled "stacked deck of stereotypes" persuaded

the girl to give up her child, \h en we humbly submit she wasn't
ready for the responsibility. If she truly felt capable, those
questions would only have strengthened her belief in herself.
After ail, they didn't sway YOU the second time around ..
Right ' - HELEN AND SUE

+++

NOTE TO READERS : Yes, we still have a limited supply
of the leaflet, '~What is a Crush ?11 "What Is a First Love'! !!
"What Is Getting to Know Yourself ?" Please send a long ,
stamped, self-addressed envelope for your copy.- HandS
::::::::::~:...::::*!i-~'»;~'f.».~'&lt;W:?J«:'

If

I
~

Social ·
Calendar
.

.

TUESDAY
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Qaughters of America, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday night at the
hall. Quarterly birthdays to
be observed. Refreshments to
be served by the good of the
order committee.
TOPS CLUB Tuesday at
Middleport American Legion
Hall, 6:30 p.m. Bring funny
money and gift for auction.
Plans for Christma~ party
will be made. New members
are welcome.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, Tuesday,
Dec. 7, 8 p.m.
. XI GAMMA MU Cha pter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co., socia l room in Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, .staled
,convocation Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
·
Tem ple.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 8:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masoni c
Temple.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon , Meigs Inn.
REGULAR MEETiNG,
Racine. Grange, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the grange
hall .
Potlu ck
dinner
preceding report on State
Grange session by county
delegate, Avanel Holliday.
All members asked to attend .
MIDDLEPORT
AMATEUR Gardeners Club
annual Christmas party, 8
p.m. Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Ferman Moore ,
Lincoln Hill. Gift wrappings
will be judged before the
exchange takes place.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
holiday potluck, 6:30 p.m. at
the hall Thursday. Meat will
be furnished . G.ifts .for the
AthenS'Mental Health Center
to be taken to the meeting.
GA LLIA COUNTY Salon
6I2, Eight and Forty, annual
Christmas dinner , 6 pm.
Thursday at the home of Miss
Erma Smith, Pomeroy.
J

I

Club soda cleans
pet accidents

Daughter Berome Nle&lt;e?

!.isles honor
son Todd
Mr. and Mrs. John Lisle
entertained recently with a
.party honoring their son,
Todd, on his sixth birthday.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream and Kool Aid were
served . A football player
. replica cake was presented to
Todd by his grandmother,
Mrs. Don Lisle. Attending the
party were Mrs. , Marjorie
Manuel and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Lisle, Todd's grandpa rents;
his
greatgra ndmother, Mrs. Florence
Potts, Mrs. Jeanie Allen,
Bria n and Mark, and Todd's
brother, Scott. Sending gifts
were Mr. and Mrs . Keith
Lisle a nd Jason, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roy J enkins and
daughter, Kimberly .

MEET SET
Wom e n 's
Aglow
Fellow ship of Meigs
County will meet Saturday
at II a.m. for a luncheon at
the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.
Speaker will be Mrs.
Delores Kithcart of Akron.
The luncheon Is $2.25 per
person and reservations
are required by Wednesday
noon to one of the officers,
Gloria Johnson, 992·5845,
June Baker, 949-2723, or
Judy Jones of Gallipolis,
146-091&amp;. The public Is
Invited to the nondenominational meeting,

"Christmas

Be lls /'

and

"Jolly Oid Saint Nicholas."
Rhythm sticks will be played
by the class, and three
Students, Angie Wright,
Elizabeth Thornton and Peter
Pumem will be featured on
the resonator bells.
Second grade children will
sing " Rudolph, the Red
Nosed Reindeer" and "Sant a
Claus is Coming to Town."
Third graders will present
"Frosty the Snowman," "He
is Born " and "Shepherds
Ca me to Bethlehem."
The chorus for the operetta,
made up of fo urth and fifth
graders, includes Annie
Barrett, Peggy Barrett,
:E;ddie Bishop, Brenda
Games, Brian Hicks, David
Hobbs: Beth Hobstetter,
Dickie Jarvis , Jodie Kunath,

Gregory Lathey, John Longstreth, Terry Mullins, Cheryl
N~ u!zling, Gary Rife, Robin
Rife, IAJri 'Fanner and Mike
Willford, fourth graders ; and
James Adkins, Melody
Bumem, Michael Campbell,
Carl Davies, Jeff Gilkey,
Dia na Hypes, Bobbi Sue
Imboden , Paul Lester, Gina
Lindsey, David Mould, Mary
Sturgeon,
Kenny
Sue
Thomas, Clinton Turner and
Charlotte Wise, fifth graders.
Songs of the chorus will
include "Hark, The Herald
Angels Sing," "Silver BeJls,"
"Little Baby Boy,'' "0 Little
Town of Bethlehem," "Hey,
Hey, Anybody Listening" and
"We Three Kings,"
Instruments to be used by
the
chorus
as
accompariiment with the carols
will be the resonator bells,
sna re dr um~, tamborines,
firiger cymbals, chimes,
maracas, and autoharps.
"The Spirit of Christmas"
is the play to be presented by
the sixth graders. Speakers
will be Harold Fetty, Gregory
Rife, Keith Hypes, Rocky
J ohnso n, Keith Johnston ,
Scott
Lester, · Jimmy
Metheney and Sean Graves.
The gift bearers will he
Timmy Spires, Linda Ashbum, Brenda Smith, Joan
Tanner , Tammy Ward,
Teres.a Carter, Jeffery Rife
and Gregory Burnem.
· Presenting "Birthday of a
King" wiil be Anita Basham,
TereSi' Wise, Shirley Me-

Charles Klein feted
on 59th birthday
The fam ily of Charles H.
Klein, Sr. of Pomeroy entertained with a party in his
honor on Thanksgiving Day.
Born on Nov. 25, 1917, he
celebrated his 59th birthday.
Attending were Mrs.
Charles If. Klein, Sr., Katie
Klein, Tommy Klein, Kenny
Klein, Paul Klein, David
Klein, Connie Klein, Marty

Mae Klein, Donna Klein,
Tammy Klein , Edna Klein,
Trena Klein, Henry Klein,
David L. Klein, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Klein, Jr., Charles
H. Klein lll, Dreama Klein,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Klein, Sr.,
Gene Klein, Jr., Michelle
Klein, Mr. and Mrs. fred
Pullin , Shelly Pullin, Sheila
Pullin and William L. Klein .

Donald, Leann Da vis and
Gloria Barrett. Carrie Adkins
will give "That First Christma s Nigh t" and Christi
Imboden and Roberta Myers,
"One Solitary Life."
In the manger scene wiJI be
Keith Johnston as Joseph;
Linda Smith, Mary; Harold
Fetty, Biliy Goble and
Cha rles Neutzling, the shepherds. Scott Lester and
Charles Neutzling are the
stage managers.
..

SUNDA \' VISITORS
Sunday guests of Mrs. Paul
Gr ueser, Middleport, for a
pre-Christmas holi day observance were Mr._and Mrs.
Mitchell
McCa le
and
children, Maureen and
Mitchell, Jr. of Williamstown, W. Va. The 'family
e~ch a nged gifts following a .
dmner. Before returning
home they visited in Pomeroy
with an aunt, Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe.
FUNERAL ATTENDED
Out-of-town relatives here
for the funeral services of
Herschel Rose were Mrs. Jim
Johnson of Dublin ; Mr. and
Mrs. John Gilhiy, Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Rose, Columbus•;
John Carroll and Mr. and
Mrs. Van Vickers of South
Charleston, W, Va .

By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- My living
room rug has a terrible ndor
left from accidents our puppy
had before she was house
broken. I have shampooed it
several times but that did no
good. It · is especially annoying when the weather is
damp. Is there anything I can
do to rem ove this odor?MRS. F. A.
DEAR MRS. F. A. - Since
these spots were evidently
made quite some time ago, I
am not sure that anything
will work. The following are
~II good when such spots are
new and damp. Club soda put
on lull strength Is our family
standby. Or, salt can be
generously spread ov~r tbe
dampened spots, left overnight and then vacuumed up.
This mean s thoroughly
cleaning the vaceum afterwards. Or, you might try
sponging with white vinegar
and water - a teaspoon of
vloegur In a quart of warm
water. Test anything before
using. - POLLY.

Ideas wanted by Jan. 12 on poison catfish problem
CINCINNATI (UPI) - DiBclooure that catfish in some
parta of the Ohio River are
too poL!onoua 'for hwnans to
eat has pmnpted officials of
river border states to set a
Jan. 12 deadline for
recommending what should
be dooe. ·
Federal and state government water sanitation
experts discussed the
problem for three hours
Monday .at a special meeting .

0

containers, potato chip cans
with iida and old sou\'enirs
that the children seem to
enjoy more than the toys . JEAN.
DEAR POLLY - To rid
your camper or trailer of ants
and other crawling insects,
saturate cotton !Jails with
insecticide and apply to all

....

Ar~.,.ro4ets

U.SI

Sbows D11

$2.00

High School
·Sponsored bv- - Mlddloport
V . F're
t

..
'

rf

·.

THROUGH THE HOLIDA YSI

f

POINSETTIAS · f

!

1
20'

I

~ .r:l;
CARRY
WHITE

c

~.

·.

rf

~~~OK

i

f

BUY YOURS · ~
EARLY.. • f
ENJOY IT . '
.
'f
NOW.

c

~ CHRISTMAS TERRARIUMS

'
'IH,_.,

.,

,,OIH'tu•

l'

.

-

LB.

I

FRESH &amp;LEAN

NO WASTE

MINUTE
·

STEAKS ......'.

99.;
CHUCK .......••.. ;..
·

GROUND '

. LB

5 LB. OR MORE

GROUND
BEEF

LB

FRESH &amp; LEAN

39

BUCKET
STEAKS ••••••••••••••

WP Accept Federal Food Stamns
PHONE 992-3480
Gomer Mill and Second Sts. We reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

LB.

BACON ENDS
&amp; PIECES.

HOMEMADE PURE

......l~.;99e

PORK

SAUSAGE

99~
HAM SA-LAD•.•·••
HOMEMADE ·

.

--1.,,'
f

LB.

.

LB

:.

'

59 2ND ST.

since 1863

~e~. ~:~.S~~~41.~oi:O~.sl&gt;'i4o.~.-.~~-~~~-~-..··"""'o.!iil"

PARTY SLATED
The annual Christmas
party of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, will be held Sunday
afternoon at 4 at the hall.
There wili be a covered dish
dinner with the meat and
coffee to be furnished.

MORTON

·' 1

TV
DINNERS.......
AU. VARITIES

·CEREMONIAL SET
Mary Shrine 37, Order of
the White Shrine of
Jerusa lem, wiii hav e a
ceremonial Friday at 8 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All officers are to
wear forma ls. Potluck
refreshments will' be served
following the ceremonial.

SCOT PRIDE

29
VANILLA
ICE MILK~~....

out at

RC
DIET
RITE COL~~.

"

· 8 PAK

16 OZ. BOffiES
•

f'llmeroy. ()]lo
LUllllnt~lu

H'dtOO fhruuJeh·Tht&gt; City Loan Cnm1~ny .

I

5 LB.

7

BROUGHTON'S

COTTAGE

24

oz.

CHEESE .. ~R~N. ••
:~~~ $}49
2% MILK ..·: ..
BROUGHTON'S

ALL WEEK

MR. PIBB
8 PAK
16 OZ. BOTitES .·

4 QUARTS ·
\

QTYLOAN

125 E., Maln Street 992-2171

APPLES

HOMO ~ G!UDN
MILK........••.-••

8 PAK
.16 Ol BOmES

When you need money for your kid's braces, or any good reason,
talk oo us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with ·
consideration. You can borrow with trust where people.save with
trust. City LOan &amp; Savings.
-

&amp;SAVINGS
£SI !912

RED DELICIOUS

· BROUGHTON'S

NEW FROM COCA-COLA

Loan.
THURSDAY
OPEN INSTALLATION of
offiaers, Shade River Lodge
453, R&amp;AM, at temple, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. All Master
Masons, families and invited
guests welcome.
· GUYSVILLE COMMUNITY Chu rch revival
Dec. 5-Dec. 12, 7:30 p.m. with
Rev. Roy Deeter, eva~gelist;
special vocal music; public
invited.
PUBLIC MEETING on
drug and alcohol abuse
Thursday, 7 p.m. at RacinJ
Fire Station with special
speakers
on
vario us
problems and how they. can
be met. Public invited.
Sponsored by Ra cine Village
Council.
.

NO WASTE

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

20% ·Off '
Cash 'n Cjlrrv '

~Pf!:N
.
W,e've been growing

DEAR POLLY :- My two
little grandsons outgrew their
baby bathtub, but f kept it to ·•
hold the toys that I keep for
them. I also throw in odds and
ends such as pa nt yhose

SE·AITI..E ( UP! ) - Safety
Bryant Salter, acquired by
Seattle on waivers from
Miami ·onl)' last week, was
dropped by tlle Seahawks
Monday.
Wide-receiver Don Clune,
cut from tlle Seattle roater to
make room for Salter, was
reassigned to the club. Clune
has caught four tlli~ lor 67
yards for Seattle this season.

Wednesday, Dec. 8th
Meigs Jr.

~-~-·- ~~·;~;;:r;~~~~~~~~-.,

i.

build electrical equipment
such as transformers and
capacitators. Although it is
speculated that runoff from
oid, junked eq~uent t'Ouid
be - seeping intp' tlle rivfr ,
officials do not yet know
where PCB 's are entering the
981-miie river that winds
from Pittsburgh to cairo, !II.,
where II ent ers the
Mississippi River.
Officials · also
are
concerned that PCB's might

1111
1011

7:30 P.M.

her ''peaehyu thank·you

~

of the fish."
'
Pi ckard said more study is
needed to determine "how
widespread and how serious"
the problem ;s,
"We don 't know ali the
answers and we can't afford
to take chances," he sa id.
"There are a lot of questions
to be answered. Where do the
PCB's come from'! How long
do they stay in the river?
Does it affect other fish '"
PCB's have b~n used ·w.

1::

l'rke

1\dult

cards, ideal for fram ing or
placing In your family
scrapbook, if she uses your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem In her column. Write
PollY's Pointers In care of
this newspaper.

f

"The engineerifl8 committee
will then report to the entire
oonunission on Jan. 13."
Pickard said officials from
each state would have to
decide II they want to limit or
maybe even ban the fishing
an,d eating of Ohio River
catfish.
Said James Simmons of the
·federal . Food and Drug Ad ministration, who attended
Monday's meeting, "! could
not recilmmend QOitsumptlon

told what was dtscuaaed and
asked
· to
submit
r eco mmendations nut
month.

HOLIDAY
FANTASY
ptt~enr.d iar
Wood Co. Sports Allk

and vents. This eliminates
the risk of contaminating
dishes and cooking utensils
when spraying. This can also
be used effectively in close
places at home. - MRS.
D.A.W.
Polly will send you one of

«

PCB's have been linked to
called · by the Ohio River
Valley Water Sanitation ·cancer in labora tory test
animals and to other health
Commission.
A commission study last problems like skin lesions
week revealed that catfish in and deterioration of nerve
the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati , tissues.
" We decided to ma ke
Louisville, Wheeling , Va .,
and Gallipolis, Ohio , areas definitive recommendations
contain man-made chemicals Jan. 12 at a meetifl8 of the
engineering
called
P C S ' ' s commission's
(polychlorinated biphenyls) . committee ,'' Ralph - C.
"In excess of the Uilerance Pickard , commis s ion
limit
for
human . chairman , reported ·after
Monday 's special session.
co~suinption ."

bP sli pping tli rough cit y
sewer system treatment
. plants or could ba coming
from tri buta ries lik e the
Kanawha Ri ver in West
Vir ginia, the Scioto River in
Ohio or the Wabash River In
Indiana .
The conuni.s.s.ion represents
eight states - Illinois,
India na, Kentucky, New
York , Ohio, Pennsylvll!lla ,
Virginia and West Virginia.
All stateil except Ohio, New
York . and· lliinois had
representatives at Monday's
meeting . Pickard sa id
offi.cialsof those sta tes will be

MAGIC

areas around doo1·s, windows

DEAR POLLY - Candles
can be made dripless if
placed in the refrigerator
freezer for 24 hours before
)ighting. This cold storage
treatment insures slow
burning. - DELORES.
DEAR POLLY - I ha ve a
suggestion for the reader who
complained about not being
able to buy darning cotton. I
cut the top off of an old crew ~
sock. The top unrave le d
easily and made good darn- ~
ing thread. - LUCILLE.
DEAR-POLLY - MRS. J.
D. who has such stiff washcloths should wash them with
a load of towels. Then rinse a
second time, with one cup of
white vinegar added to the ~
rinse water. This keeps my
towels and washcloths soft. - C
CALLIE.
DEAR POLLY - MRS . J. C
D. will find that boiling her
washcloths in bleach water
after washing in the machine
will make them lovely and
soft. I have never had such ~
trouble. I have always done ~
this and they come out nice
and soft and white. - MRS.
W. C.

7- Tho nouy Sentinel, Mlddieport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1976

Wednesday, Dec. 8th
AI Meit' Jr.
High School

,.
.l

\,

'1 .1 9

DR. PEPPER
8 PAK
16 Ol BOmES

�1976

Polly's Pointers
Wlllll~

1

Dear Rap :
My family thinks it's shocking, but f'd like to know : is
there anythifl8 wrong in marrying your stepmoth!;r's nephew ?
- TROUBLED

I

Dear Troubled:
Not unless tllere's·something wrong with the nephew. It's
not incest, II that's what bothers your family , - HELEN AND
SUE

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
About your answer to tlle young woman who had given up a
child at 14, was a high school ~~enior and pregnant again . You
offered her tlle same questions I was told to ask myself as an
unmarried mother - the same stacked deck of stereotypes
. that leads to only ooe conclusion: give up the child. (They
included : are you financially and physically able to care for it;
will your parents nelp ; will you regret your decision, come
diapers and 2o'clock feedings ; are you being fair to tbe child?)
May I propose an alternative set of questions for women in
this position, based on my experience - I gave up my first
child, kept the second, am now happily married and have a
third baby.
I deeply regret giving up my first, and do rot regret
keeping the second even though it meant two years as a single
mother . Here are 'MY questions :
How will it feel to have gone through the experience of
pregnancy and birth , and never be able to discuss it?
If you have later children, hO)" will it feel to lie every time
you tell someone how many babies you have borne - to say
"two" when you know in your heart there are three ?
How will it feel to cry every year on your first child's birthday; to wonder where and how he is; to search the fares of
children on the street, looking for a familiar feature ; to be
gripped with fear each time you hear of an adopted child being .
abused or kiiled, wondering if he's yours'
Will freedom mean so much to you when, instead of a 2
o'clock feeding, you find yourself ccying alone at 2 a.m.' Wiil
d;ltes be so great when the· boys don't understand your
experience and loneliness'
Finally, before you decide on "what's best for the child,"
talk to adult adoptees. Hear the sense of rootlessness, or
r.ejection; of lack of heritage that many of them have lived
with.
·
Adoption isn't always the best answer for either mother or
child. It can be a source of lifelong pain. Please listen to those
of us who have given up a child. We deserve to be heard so that
a new generation ofsingle mothers will not fail for the lies that
were fed to us. - MICHAEL'S MOTHER

. ~J· )I
. CANDLEUGHT INVESTITURE -Members of Brownie I293 Girl Scout Troop were
invested in candlelight ceremonies at the Rutland Elementary School Monday evening.
Mrs. Shirley Wilson, leader, was.assisted by Mrs. Sonia Parsons and.Mrs , Irene Kennedy in
the investiture. In the group were left to right, front row, Sabrina Wilson, Gi-eta Kennedy ,
Sherry Wilson, Chris Black, and April McGrath ; middle. row, Terri Combs, Mandi Black,
Micheiie Peterson, Laney Hankla and Sue Parsons; and back row, Regina Eblin, Diana
Wiiliamson, Christine Hysell, Tracy McKinney, Janet Hy!ltlll and Kathy Blessing.
.

School to stage operetta

SALEM CENTER - A
Christmas operetta wiil be
presented under the direction
of Miss Glenna Sprague,
vocal music teacher, at the
.Salem Center Elementary
School auditorium on Friday
evening at 7:30 p.m.
·Assisting Miss Spra gue
with the operetta are Mrs.
Wykle Whitley, first grade
teacher ; Mrs. Olive Page,
second grade; Miss Rebecca
Triplett, third ; Mrs. Winifred
Naas, fourth ; Mrs. Anna E.
Turner , fifth , and Mrs.
Roberta Wilson, sixth grade
teacher
and school principal.
Dear Mother:
The
first
grade children
· We agree, adoption isn't ALWAYS the best answer for
will
si
ng
"Here
Comes Santa
mother or child. Likewise "keeping the baby" can become a
disaster, if immaturity, regret, revenge, parental discord or Clau s,' ' "Jingle Bells,"
other neg~tives enter the picture.
If our so.ealled "stacked deck of stereotypes" persuaded

the girl to give up her child, \h en we humbly submit she wasn't
ready for the responsibility. If she truly felt capable, those
questions would only have strengthened her belief in herself.
After ail, they didn't sway YOU the second time around ..
Right ' - HELEN AND SUE

+++

NOTE TO READERS : Yes, we still have a limited supply
of the leaflet, '~What is a Crush ?11 "What Is a First Love'! !!
"What Is Getting to Know Yourself ?" Please send a long ,
stamped, self-addressed envelope for your copy.- HandS
::::::::::~:...::::*!i-~'»;~'f.».~'&lt;W:?J«:'

If

I
~

Social ·
Calendar
.

.

TUESDAY
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Qaughters of America, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday night at the
hall. Quarterly birthdays to
be observed. Refreshments to
be served by the good of the
order committee.
TOPS CLUB Tuesday at
Middleport American Legion
Hall, 6:30 p.m. Bring funny
money and gift for auction.
Plans for Christma~ party
will be made. New members
are welcome.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, Tuesday,
Dec. 7, 8 p.m.
. XI GAMMA MU Cha pter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co., socia l room in Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, .staled
,convocation Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
·
Tem ple.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46,
Royal and Select Masters,
stated assembly, 8:30p.m. at
the Pomeroy Masoni c
Temple.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon , Meigs Inn.
REGULAR MEETiNG,
Racine. Grange, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the grange
hall .
Potlu ck
dinner
preceding report on State
Grange session by county
delegate, Avanel Holliday.
All members asked to attend .
MIDDLEPORT
AMATEUR Gardeners Club
annual Christmas party, 8
p.m. Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Ferman Moore ,
Lincoln Hill. Gift wrappings
will be judged before the
exchange takes place.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
holiday potluck, 6:30 p.m. at
the hall Thursday. Meat will
be furnished . G.ifts .for the
AthenS'Mental Health Center
to be taken to the meeting.
GA LLIA COUNTY Salon
6I2, Eight and Forty, annual
Christmas dinner , 6 pm.
Thursday at the home of Miss
Erma Smith, Pomeroy.
J

I

Club soda cleans
pet accidents

Daughter Berome Nle&lt;e?

!.isles honor
son Todd
Mr. and Mrs. John Lisle
entertained recently with a
.party honoring their son,
Todd, on his sixth birthday.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream and Kool Aid were
served . A football player
. replica cake was presented to
Todd by his grandmother,
Mrs. Don Lisle. Attending the
party were Mrs. , Marjorie
Manuel and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Lisle, Todd's grandpa rents;
his
greatgra ndmother, Mrs. Florence
Potts, Mrs. Jeanie Allen,
Bria n and Mark, and Todd's
brother, Scott. Sending gifts
were Mr. and Mrs . Keith
Lisle a nd Jason, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roy J enkins and
daughter, Kimberly .

MEET SET
Wom e n 's
Aglow
Fellow ship of Meigs
County will meet Saturday
at II a.m. for a luncheon at
the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.
Speaker will be Mrs.
Delores Kithcart of Akron.
The luncheon Is $2.25 per
person and reservations
are required by Wednesday
noon to one of the officers,
Gloria Johnson, 992·5845,
June Baker, 949-2723, or
Judy Jones of Gallipolis,
146-091&amp;. The public Is
Invited to the nondenominational meeting,

"Christmas

Be lls /'

and

"Jolly Oid Saint Nicholas."
Rhythm sticks will be played
by the class, and three
Students, Angie Wright,
Elizabeth Thornton and Peter
Pumem will be featured on
the resonator bells.
Second grade children will
sing " Rudolph, the Red
Nosed Reindeer" and "Sant a
Claus is Coming to Town."
Third graders will present
"Frosty the Snowman," "He
is Born " and "Shepherds
Ca me to Bethlehem."
The chorus for the operetta,
made up of fo urth and fifth
graders, includes Annie
Barrett, Peggy Barrett,
:E;ddie Bishop, Brenda
Games, Brian Hicks, David
Hobbs: Beth Hobstetter,
Dickie Jarvis , Jodie Kunath,

Gregory Lathey, John Longstreth, Terry Mullins, Cheryl
N~ u!zling, Gary Rife, Robin
Rife, IAJri 'Fanner and Mike
Willford, fourth graders ; and
James Adkins, Melody
Bumem, Michael Campbell,
Carl Davies, Jeff Gilkey,
Dia na Hypes, Bobbi Sue
Imboden , Paul Lester, Gina
Lindsey, David Mould, Mary
Sturgeon,
Kenny
Sue
Thomas, Clinton Turner and
Charlotte Wise, fifth graders.
Songs of the chorus will
include "Hark, The Herald
Angels Sing," "Silver BeJls,"
"Little Baby Boy,'' "0 Little
Town of Bethlehem," "Hey,
Hey, Anybody Listening" and
"We Three Kings,"
Instruments to be used by
the
chorus
as
accompariiment with the carols
will be the resonator bells,
sna re dr um~, tamborines,
firiger cymbals, chimes,
maracas, and autoharps.
"The Spirit of Christmas"
is the play to be presented by
the sixth graders. Speakers
will be Harold Fetty, Gregory
Rife, Keith Hypes, Rocky
J ohnso n, Keith Johnston ,
Scott
Lester, · Jimmy
Metheney and Sean Graves.
The gift bearers will he
Timmy Spires, Linda Ashbum, Brenda Smith, Joan
Tanner , Tammy Ward,
Teres.a Carter, Jeffery Rife
and Gregory Burnem.
· Presenting "Birthday of a
King" wiil be Anita Basham,
TereSi' Wise, Shirley Me-

Charles Klein feted
on 59th birthday
The fam ily of Charles H.
Klein, Sr. of Pomeroy entertained with a party in his
honor on Thanksgiving Day.
Born on Nov. 25, 1917, he
celebrated his 59th birthday.
Attending were Mrs.
Charles If. Klein, Sr., Katie
Klein, Tommy Klein, Kenny
Klein, Paul Klein, David
Klein, Connie Klein, Marty

Mae Klein, Donna Klein,
Tammy Klein , Edna Klein,
Trena Klein, Henry Klein,
David L. Klein, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Klein, Jr., Charles
H. Klein lll, Dreama Klein,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Klein, Sr.,
Gene Klein, Jr., Michelle
Klein, Mr. and Mrs. fred
Pullin , Shelly Pullin, Sheila
Pullin and William L. Klein .

Donald, Leann Da vis and
Gloria Barrett. Carrie Adkins
will give "That First Christma s Nigh t" and Christi
Imboden and Roberta Myers,
"One Solitary Life."
In the manger scene wiJI be
Keith Johnston as Joseph;
Linda Smith, Mary; Harold
Fetty, Biliy Goble and
Cha rles Neutzling, the shepherds. Scott Lester and
Charles Neutzling are the
stage managers.
..

SUNDA \' VISITORS
Sunday guests of Mrs. Paul
Gr ueser, Middleport, for a
pre-Christmas holi day observance were Mr._and Mrs.
Mitchell
McCa le
and
children, Maureen and
Mitchell, Jr. of Williamstown, W. Va. The 'family
e~ch a nged gifts following a .
dmner. Before returning
home they visited in Pomeroy
with an aunt, Mrs. Mabel
Wolfe.
FUNERAL ATTENDED
Out-of-town relatives here
for the funeral services of
Herschel Rose were Mrs. Jim
Johnson of Dublin ; Mr. and
Mrs. John Gilhiy, Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Rose, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Rose, Columbus•;
John Carroll and Mr. and
Mrs. Van Vickers of South
Charleston, W, Va .

By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- My living
room rug has a terrible ndor
left from accidents our puppy
had before she was house
broken. I have shampooed it
several times but that did no
good. It · is especially annoying when the weather is
damp. Is there anything I can
do to rem ove this odor?MRS. F. A.
DEAR MRS. F. A. - Since
these spots were evidently
made quite some time ago, I
am not sure that anything
will work. The following are
~II good when such spots are
new and damp. Club soda put
on lull strength Is our family
standby. Or, salt can be
generously spread ov~r tbe
dampened spots, left overnight and then vacuumed up.
This mean s thoroughly
cleaning the vaceum afterwards. Or, you might try
sponging with white vinegar
and water - a teaspoon of
vloegur In a quart of warm
water. Test anything before
using. - POLLY.

Ideas wanted by Jan. 12 on poison catfish problem
CINCINNATI (UPI) - DiBclooure that catfish in some
parta of the Ohio River are
too poL!onoua 'for hwnans to
eat has pmnpted officials of
river border states to set a
Jan. 12 deadline for
recommending what should
be dooe. ·
Federal and state government water sanitation
experts discussed the
problem for three hours
Monday .at a special meeting .

0

containers, potato chip cans
with iida and old sou\'enirs
that the children seem to
enjoy more than the toys . JEAN.
DEAR POLLY - To rid
your camper or trailer of ants
and other crawling insects,
saturate cotton !Jails with
insecticide and apply to all

....

Ar~.,.ro4ets

U.SI

Sbows D11

$2.00

High School
·Sponsored bv- - Mlddloport
V . F're
t

..
'

rf

·.

THROUGH THE HOLIDA YSI

f

POINSETTIAS · f

!

1
20'

I

~ .r:l;
CARRY
WHITE

c

~.

·.

rf

~~~OK

i

f

BUY YOURS · ~
EARLY.. • f
ENJOY IT . '
.
'f
NOW.

c

~ CHRISTMAS TERRARIUMS

'
'IH,_.,

.,

,,OIH'tu•

l'

.

-

LB.

I

FRESH &amp;LEAN

NO WASTE

MINUTE
·

STEAKS ......'.

99.;
CHUCK .......••.. ;..
·

GROUND '

. LB

5 LB. OR MORE

GROUND
BEEF

LB

FRESH &amp; LEAN

39

BUCKET
STEAKS ••••••••••••••

WP Accept Federal Food Stamns
PHONE 992-3480
Gomer Mill and Second Sts. We reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

LB.

BACON ENDS
&amp; PIECES.

HOMEMADE PURE

......l~.;99e

PORK

SAUSAGE

99~
HAM SA-LAD•.•·••
HOMEMADE ·

.

--1.,,'
f

LB.

.

LB

:.

'

59 2ND ST.

since 1863

~e~. ~:~.S~~~41.~oi:O~.sl&gt;'i4o.~.-.~~-~~~-~-..··"""'o.!iil"

PARTY SLATED
The annual Christmas
party of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, will be held Sunday
afternoon at 4 at the hall.
There wili be a covered dish
dinner with the meat and
coffee to be furnished.

MORTON

·' 1

TV
DINNERS.......
AU. VARITIES

·CEREMONIAL SET
Mary Shrine 37, Order of
the White Shrine of
Jerusa lem, wiii hav e a
ceremonial Friday at 8 p.m.
at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All officers are to
wear forma ls. Potluck
refreshments will' be served
following the ceremonial.

SCOT PRIDE

29
VANILLA
ICE MILK~~....

out at

RC
DIET
RITE COL~~.

"

· 8 PAK

16 OZ. BOffiES
•

f'llmeroy. ()]lo
LUllllnt~lu

H'dtOO fhruuJeh·Tht&gt; City Loan Cnm1~ny .

I

5 LB.

7

BROUGHTON'S

COTTAGE

24

oz.

CHEESE .. ~R~N. ••
:~~~ $}49
2% MILK ..·: ..
BROUGHTON'S

ALL WEEK

MR. PIBB
8 PAK
16 OZ. BOTitES .·

4 QUARTS ·
\

QTYLOAN

125 E., Maln Street 992-2171

APPLES

HOMO ~ G!UDN
MILK........••.-••

8 PAK
.16 Ol BOmES

When you need money for your kid's braces, or any good reason,
talk oo us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with ·
consideration. You can borrow with trust where people.save with
trust. City LOan &amp; Savings.
-

&amp;SAVINGS
£SI !912

RED DELICIOUS

· BROUGHTON'S

NEW FROM COCA-COLA

Loan.
THURSDAY
OPEN INSTALLATION of
offiaers, Shade River Lodge
453, R&amp;AM, at temple, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. All Master
Masons, families and invited
guests welcome.
· GUYSVILLE COMMUNITY Chu rch revival
Dec. 5-Dec. 12, 7:30 p.m. with
Rev. Roy Deeter, eva~gelist;
special vocal music; public
invited.
PUBLIC MEETING on
drug and alcohol abuse
Thursday, 7 p.m. at RacinJ
Fire Station with special
speakers
on
vario us
problems and how they. can
be met. Public invited.
Sponsored by Ra cine Village
Council.
.

NO WASTE

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

20% ·Off '
Cash 'n Cjlrrv '

~Pf!:N
.
W,e've been growing

DEAR POLLY :- My two
little grandsons outgrew their
baby bathtub, but f kept it to ·•
hold the toys that I keep for
them. I also throw in odds and
ends such as pa nt yhose

SE·AITI..E ( UP! ) - Safety
Bryant Salter, acquired by
Seattle on waivers from
Miami ·onl)' last week, was
dropped by tlle Seahawks
Monday.
Wide-receiver Don Clune,
cut from tlle Seattle roater to
make room for Salter, was
reassigned to the club. Clune
has caught four tlli~ lor 67
yards for Seattle this season.

Wednesday, Dec. 8th
Meigs Jr.

~-~-·- ~~·;~;;:r;~~~~~~~~-.,

i.

build electrical equipment
such as transformers and
capacitators. Although it is
speculated that runoff from
oid, junked eq~uent t'Ouid
be - seeping intp' tlle rivfr ,
officials do not yet know
where PCB 's are entering the
981-miie river that winds
from Pittsburgh to cairo, !II.,
where II ent ers the
Mississippi River.
Officials · also
are
concerned that PCB's might

1111
1011

7:30 P.M.

her ''peaehyu thank·you

~

of the fish."
'
Pi ckard said more study is
needed to determine "how
widespread and how serious"
the problem ;s,
"We don 't know ali the
answers and we can't afford
to take chances," he sa id.
"There are a lot of questions
to be answered. Where do the
PCB's come from'! How long
do they stay in the river?
Does it affect other fish '"
PCB's have b~n used ·w.

1::

l'rke

1\dult

cards, ideal for fram ing or
placing In your family
scrapbook, if she uses your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem In her column. Write
PollY's Pointers In care of
this newspaper.

f

"The engineerifl8 committee
will then report to the entire
oonunission on Jan. 13."
Pickard said officials from
each state would have to
decide II they want to limit or
maybe even ban the fishing
an,d eating of Ohio River
catfish.
Said James Simmons of the
·federal . Food and Drug Ad ministration, who attended
Monday's meeting, "! could
not recilmmend QOitsumptlon

told what was dtscuaaed and
asked
· to
submit
r eco mmendations nut
month.

HOLIDAY
FANTASY
ptt~enr.d iar
Wood Co. Sports Allk

and vents. This eliminates
the risk of contaminating
dishes and cooking utensils
when spraying. This can also
be used effectively in close
places at home. - MRS.
D.A.W.
Polly will send you one of

«

PCB's have been linked to
called · by the Ohio River
Valley Water Sanitation ·cancer in labora tory test
animals and to other health
Commission.
A commission study last problems like skin lesions
week revealed that catfish in and deterioration of nerve
the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati , tissues.
" We decided to ma ke
Louisville, Wheeling , Va .,
and Gallipolis, Ohio , areas definitive recommendations
contain man-made chemicals Jan. 12 at a meetifl8 of the
engineering
called
P C S ' ' s commission's
(polychlorinated biphenyls) . committee ,'' Ralph - C.
"In excess of the Uilerance Pickard , commis s ion
limit
for
human . chairman , reported ·after
Monday 's special session.
co~suinption ."

bP sli pping tli rough cit y
sewer system treatment
. plants or could ba coming
from tri buta ries lik e the
Kanawha Ri ver in West
Vir ginia, the Scioto River in
Ohio or the Wabash River In
Indiana .
The conuni.s.s.ion represents
eight states - Illinois,
India na, Kentucky, New
York , Ohio, Pennsylvll!lla ,
Virginia and West Virginia.
All stateil except Ohio, New
York . and· lliinois had
representatives at Monday's
meeting . Pickard sa id
offi.cialsof those sta tes will be

MAGIC

areas around doo1·s, windows

DEAR POLLY - Candles
can be made dripless if
placed in the refrigerator
freezer for 24 hours before
)ighting. This cold storage
treatment insures slow
burning. - DELORES.
DEAR POLLY - I ha ve a
suggestion for the reader who
complained about not being
able to buy darning cotton. I
cut the top off of an old crew ~
sock. The top unrave le d
easily and made good darn- ~
ing thread. - LUCILLE.
DEAR-POLLY - MRS. J.
D. who has such stiff washcloths should wash them with
a load of towels. Then rinse a
second time, with one cup of
white vinegar added to the ~
rinse water. This keeps my
towels and washcloths soft. - C
CALLIE.
DEAR POLLY - MRS . J. C
D. will find that boiling her
washcloths in bleach water
after washing in the machine
will make them lovely and
soft. I have never had such ~
trouble. I have always done ~
this and they come out nice
and soft and white. - MRS.
W. C.

7- Tho nouy Sentinel, Mlddieport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1976

Wednesday, Dec. 8th
AI Meit' Jr.
High School

,.
.l

\,

'1 .1 9

DR. PEPPER
8 PAK
16 Ol BOmES

�_8- T)le Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'I'IIeoday, Dec. 7, 1976

NO MAlTER WHAT vou·BUY

uv

~ t - ~DaUySentlnel, Mid~port-POOiel'oy, 0 ., 'I'IIesday, Dec. 7, 1976
· .
·:. · :: - ~~,,,._~:::.':':;:&lt;'''''.&lt;''''~~~ Services
-.

Mamn Q&gt;unty

.'·

.-,

'·

MASON "hanging of tbe

Ohio Marathon
Championship. The winner
paid $4.80, $3.00 and $2.60
Yak! King was second and
Shifting Ways was third.
Graell also had three other
winners to run his · season
total to 335, by far the best of
the year at Thistledown. ·
The :1-6-1 tenth race trifecta
of Rescind Sir, Sea Art and
Nasculia was. wort~! $093.60

$10 ,000

Tillie LaRue ·
of Mason dies

SOFA, CHAIR
&amp; LOVESEAT

Viny I Covers

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

Holiday weekend hla~k~ned
by ice and sn~w last !light ·

~t~~ }(~~ t~:-j 1~:1 E.~~~;~
,.,,~

BACK IN PORT
RACINE - Navy Boatswain's Mate Third Class
Benwood D. Bickers, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William B.
Bickers, and whose wife
Edith is the daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Warren H. Rose, aU
of Route I, Racine, recently
returned from participation
In the martime portion of the
major NATO ex~l'cises
· "Autumn Forge '76." He is a
crewmember aboard the
oiler USS Caloosahatchee,
homeported at Norfolk, Va.

,..

-~~~~lt;C:::~~:~:r
·{'cation
. (fs cerh
_
1

-·"-"''

. {or shert -· · "'=~,:;:~ ;;§;-,;:.;;
·-·-c---= --.:.--··-- -.•:o;:.~--=
Court cI c•ars. wa)
~-·-:."":.~;=:}: :=:-_;-;;~~.:.-.:-::.:.; :::;&amp;-=~•.: .;:_.;::.~ =:;.:::.::-::::.:;=:.:::.

-.:r;=:;,"""· ~?2;;.,;~'£-;.:::· '""'""-·

~- .... in~

~r~~o;i~;b~l! ~~~~- ~!~~ .
?I ""' ·.. .....

.-ar:;.

ands "e" P ·
'fhoUS

12 o·

e,
ifferent~~. Double lined ~

AN

ll""

and

. ~v. '44.95

sr

'itched

.'

Now'34ts

FROM '129.95

~

fROM

·

'7995

'
VOO'E RECOUNTED

COLUMBUS (UPI)
1\esulta of a presidential
reco111t lhow Jimmy Carwr ·
earrled Ohio by 11,118 votes
Prellldent Ford - by
1,783 'fOtel more than the
iJrlglnai count showed.
, Requested by Ford's :!5
llhio electon, the recount will
lie certtfled Wl!dnesday a! 10
f.m. for '(lrelleDtatloo to the
EltictoraJ College Dec. 13.
Carter oriP!aiiY had a
1,333-vole margin over Ford
but gained 1,112 votee In the
recotllt wblle the President
- 1o11nc W. The final
tlltail were: Carter 2,011,621

~....................... ~

City . ........... . . .. State . .. .. .. . .. Zip .......... ~

,( 1 C. _I'-C'

POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Afternoon
L£&gt;ague·
December 1, a16

Pi n !3usl er s
Vlllaqe Pharma cy
~- wai d Cr o ~ s &amp; Son
Team 1

8?
Bl
61
d3
dl

W L

JO

Ji

s1

69
11
8•1

ro nzie Fo il ow N s
28
HiQh 5inqle Ga me
Ma r y
Hoover 193, Sh e lb y M&lt;~n!ey ,

WITH EACH GIFT SUBSCRIPTION

165, Jean Pr ov i nce 163 .

Hiqh
Hoover

Se ri es

Mary
Se lb y M a nl e y .1•"
Pf' &lt;tr l R; uso:,cll 1?11

I,

quatify this year.
· He served as Master of
Racine Lodge of Masons in
1974; High Priest of Pomeroy
Chapter, Royal Arch Masons
in 1974; Master of Bosworth
Council, Royal and Select
Masters· in 1973, and Com- 10,000.

POTLUCK PLANNED
The Harrisonville Senior
Citizen• Club will have a
Christmas potluck at the
Harrisonville Elementary
School at 6 p.m, on Dec. 15 ..
There will be a gift exchaqge.
Both t'art A and Part B of
Medicare can help you pay
for b)ood that VOU liM.

QUASAR
TELEVISIONS
If you need a new TV now Is the time to buy ·one. We have purchased
Quasar TV at a special low price. We are passing the savings along to
our customers.

19" COLOR TV

23'' COLOR TV

'599

·.•399 95

95

-·

©®Lb®lJl
LP®l1l~l1l~il~
12" BLACK &amp;WHITE

TELEVISION

.1~7 .

md Ford

I

(,

2,tQI~.

12" COLOR TV

'8995

•29995

COMES IN DECORATOR COLORS

QUASAR

19'1
BLACK &amp; WHITE

PORTABLE
DEAR FRIENDS: ·
.
.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS "FREE' ' PROFESSIONAL
PORTRAIT OFFER . IT'S MY WAY OF SAYING "THANK·
YOU" TO OiJR VALUED CUSTOMERS AN,DTHE COMMUN· .
ITY WE SERVE.
SINCERELY

;. , ,; :..·._;t·/

f'

:tL::._:t/·

Darrell Ellis
• Limit: one special Bx10 per family
• Additional portraits available in all sizes at
reasonable prices
·
• All Ages Welcome, Including Grandparents
• Satisfaction Guaranteed

wer

Tc:a m 6

WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CARD

5353).

ROCKING CHAIRS

)\[

~
From..............................................
~
~~;f$;;:t.~~~~~'Q·~·~~··
?~
' ~~~'if::l&lt;
..

RIO GRANDE - Senior
Citizens may attend classes
.~ at Rio Grande College" Community College
~:· (RGC)CC) free, according to
• President Thomas J. Quick.
7, Quick said the college Board
7, of Trustees bad adopted the
;·, state-wide program io make
· classes available to senior
: adults.
7. Any person 60 years of age
7 or older, who hail resided in
, the State of Ohio for at least
ooe year may attend courses
• or classes without paying•
:; matriculation or tuition
~ charges.
.. The only stipulations are
" • that the course be taken on a
;': non-credit basla, that attend~. ance IB approved by in:': dlvldual Instructors, that
~ there IB space available in the
" c1aas and that a person
~ enrolling agree ,to pay any
~. neceuaty laboratory fees.
:-; Senior citizens wlsblng to
~ partldpate may regilter for
" ~ Tuesday, January 4,
~ 1977, between 9 a.m. and 4
~ p.m. Further Information
~ about the winter quarter
"~ schedule may be obtained
~. !rQm RGC(:C Office of .Ad·
~ mlsal0114 and Recorda (m:
~

MAPLE

w ~:::r~~ ~~·i·~............................... ;........... ~
Street ...•.. ; ........................

BEAN
BA
Queens~ GS

ROLLTOP AND KEYHOLE
MAPLE, OAK &amp; WALNUT

Pir
~.....,.,., ~~ ?~~"'-"'-'-' ~
· ~·
~ · .~~~·;\:,;:;;&gt;.."w-l•!&lt;'r' 'o~~~~~.~

~
ttf

"

~--

OHIO &amp; W.VA .................... '22.00 YR.
ELSEWHERE: ........................... '26.00 YR.

fB~tl®

at no cost

7.

ALL
SALE
PRICED

A coupon containing subscription information necessary
for your gift giving is contained in this ad for your
convenience. Fill it out and send it in together with your
check .

..

HPMEDESTROYED
RACINE _ The Racine
Fire Department answered a
call to the Paul Bowers
mobile home at Apple Grove
at 2:30 p.m. sunday. The
department which had 11
men and three trucks on the
scene, said that the fire was
apparently caused by an
electrical shortage. The
mobile home· was termed a
complete loss by the depart. ment. No one was at the home
when the .fire occurred.

go to Rio

mander of Ohio Va ll ey
Commandery. Knig ht
Telilplar, in t975.
He was elected to mem·
bership in Ohio Priory and his
election confl'rmed by Convent General of the Order on
Nov . 29. l bere are sixty-eight
Priories of the Order with a
present membership of

'•

Berkline
Recliners

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

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street

'

JUST
ARRIVED

Sherrill New
Pitt coach

!~
~

DIEHL ORDAINED
Michael Diehl was ordained Dec. 5 into the priesthood of the Reorganized ·
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints. The
ceremony took place in the .
Lansing, Michigan, branch.
He is the husband of the
former Diane Roush,
daughter of !Uah and William
Roush of Portland. William
Roush is · the pastor of the
Reorganized Church, Portland-Racine Branch.

60 &amp; plus

The
Daily Sentinel
.. ...
'· ... . ....
. .....
~·

sr-".

M

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
GROUPS

~

Ouiolmas festivities at · Mason United

f«a unlquelllUIIcalprogramat 7:30p.m. The varied program
beginl with the Junior Choir and will end as the Sanctuary
Choir 111ngs tbe Hallelujah Chorus by Handel.. Solos, daets and.
ch«uuee will present the ·Cl1ristmas message in interesting
form.
The accampani8U and directr- are Mrs. Ray Proffitt,
Mrs. Nolan SWackhamer, Mrs. Robert Guthrie, Mrs. John
Sluon and Mrs. Dennlll Harrt.s.
The Yo~mg Acmlt Claas wW go caroling on Dec. 23 at 7:30
p.m. and afterwards aU will return to the church for hot
chocolate and refreatunents.
The YOUDg Adults regular dinner meeting will be held on
Tueaday, Dec. Ztl at 6:30p.m.·
The Muon United Methodist Church plans !D distribute
· Chriltmal baskets to the needy families. Food and money for
'· these are to be trough! to the church on Dec. 12 and placed in
, the corner of the church pro~ed.
:• Basketa will be prepared on the 19th and dlatribllted on Pee.
· 21. Volunteers are lD con1act Mrs: William Zerkle, phone 773: 5558.
.
•
"
. The Thanksgiving season is a perfect time to express our
~ •gratitude to aU those who have helped in the continuing growth
~. oftheMaaon Ubrary during the first year in our new building.
~
For mnatlng books, we give thanks to Mr. and Mrs. Earl
:· Ingels, Emogene Crow, Henrietta Ruttencutter, Virginia
" Faudree, Lola Jeffers, Margaret and Vernon Rizer, Mr. and
~ Mrs. Opal Eads, Nancy Hayes, Mrs. Mary Pearson, Ruby
'· Bond, David Dudding, Irma Turnbull, Ruth and Elizabeth
~ Mclntolh, Mary Fry, Regina Rayburn, Becky Reed, Pearl
~ Rousb,lsaac Smith, Fred Taylor, Mrs. Allee McDonald, Mrs.
" Walter Patterson, Barbara Zuspan, Kim Capehart Robie,
! Jeanne Johnson, Helen Johnson and family, Becky Merlcal,
Kathy Yo,ung, Gary Roush, Millard Gress, Mr. and Mrs. W. F.
;• Macblr, _and VIolette S. Machir, who gave us two volumes of
" Ceine~ Inacrlptlons.
·
;· Memorial \M!Oks purchased during the year are as follows :
·~ In Memory of Hattie Reed, "The Homecoming", Earl Hamner
and "Hilll!illy Women", ~a thy Kahp, presented by Hilda
•· Click; ''The Frontiersman" Eckert, by Sarah Lambert,
" Barbara and Dale Works; "The Telltale Lilac BW!h", Gainer,
by Betty Reed Detner; "Folk Songs from West Virginia",
Gainer, in memory of Squire J. Phillips and Eliza Jane
Phi!Upe, by Hattie Reed; "Born Again", Colson, by Mr. and
Mrs. Sammy HoHman.
.
'
Memorials for Mr. B. F. Board were "Angels", Billy
Grsharn and "The Total Woman", Morgan, presented by Mary
Berry and Mrs. B. F. Board, and "The Spirits of '76", Slane, by
Friends,
.
In memory of Robert J. Rousb, "Henry Ford and GrassRoots America•.•, Wilt, by Mary Berry and Mrs. B. F. Board.
In memory pf James A. Diehl, Sr., by Bess Diehl, "The
Courage to Choose: An American Nun's Story", Griffin;
" "Whittlin', Whistles and Thingamajigs", Metcalf; "I Heard
' the Owl Call My Name", Craven.
. .
In memory of Homer S. Carman "West Virginia : A
Bicentennial History" • Wllliams, by Mrs. Fl ora Board an d
Mary Berry.
· InmemoryofJosieEilas, "Lipreading" , Hazard, by Mary
Berry and Mrs. B. F. Board. "Prison Letters 197o" Corrie Ten
Boom and "Silver Bridge", Barker, by Mr. and Mrs. Nolan
Swackhamer; "Fire", Stewart, by Helen Eliss.
A blg"thanks' goes to Mrs. Paul R. Stodola for regular
vohmteer work, and to Vicki Clark, Comie Gray, Joyce
Redman, Janet Conard, and Earlene Bumgardner for helping
(Continued on page 12)
·

members at a craft workshop at the home. Left to right
ar.e Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs. Helen
Williams and Mrs. Lester Johnson. Those in charge of
decorating the home are Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. Detmar
Alexander and Mrs. Delwon Robert.s. Others assisting
included Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs. Cecil
Smith, Mrs. John Marshall; Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs.
William Zerkle and Mrs. Addie Brown.

and the 4-2 dally double of
Rick's Mark and Shotlzon
paid $54.40.
The final day's attendance
of 4,968 boosted total
attendance for the year to
1,057,795, a decrease of 2.6 per
tent compared to 1975. And
the final day's handle of
$711,862 made It a total of
$114,178,931 for the year.

M llie p

Sllllciuary.
On Dec. 19 tbe Junior Choir and Sanctuary Choir will join

.

1111STLEDOWN

;:,:

Followillg the evening meal and program, which consisted of
a film, ''Chriit 18 Born," teachers and church workers
decorated tbelr own class rooms and togethe!' decorated the

'

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI ) - Reason to Dare
carried Antonio Graell to
· \\ictory in the last featured
race of the year at
Thistledown Monday as the
track shut down for the
winter.
The four-year-old filly covered the mile and seveneighths in 3:50 ID win the

{

RACINE - Davie W. Fox, highest office in each of the
R.R. 2 Radne, has been fou r bodies ol the rile.
awarded the designation of
Fox becomes one of the
Knight of the York Cross of comparative ba ndfui of about
II'
0
U IRS
Honour, highest honorary .., 400 of the over four and a
degree in the York Rite of qua rter million Freemasons
LONG BOTTOM - Ser- Freemasonry, conferred only in North America, the
vices for Mollie 'E. Pullins, 79, on those who have held the Philippines and Australia to
55 Jefferson St., Newark,
were held Saturday at the
Criss Brothers Funeral Home
in Newark with Robert L.
Settlage officiating.
·"ilurial followed in the Sand ·
Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Mrs. PuUins wasliorn Dec.
28, 1696 jn Long Bottom'to the ·
late Holt W. and Mary
Catherine Foster Curtis and
was the last of her Immediate
family .
Mrs. Pullins was a member
of the Plymouth United
Church of Christ and the
American Gold &amp;tar Mothers
of Newark.
Surviving are three
daughters, Mrs. Ellswort.h
(Dora ) Crispin, Long Bottom ; Mrs. Ralph (Ruby )
Bowman, Newark, and Mrs.
Donald (Yvonne) Griffith,
Granville; two sons, Elmer
C. Swank, Newark, and Roy
E. Swank, Ontario, Calif., 24
grandchildren and 24 greatgrandchildren.
Ason, Glen, five sisters and
three brothers also preceded
her in death.

Metbodilt Ourch began Monday evening, Dec. 6 with the

CHRISTMAS SALE

CHRISTMAS AC11VITIES - Mason 's Historical
Society members have been bUlly for several weeks
planning activities for the Christmas holidays. Featured
is their Christmas tree at the ,former Lewis home on
Brown Street complete with all handmade ornament.s
(above) made by society members. The tree was donated
by Mr. and Mrs. Landon Smith. Also pictured are- society

News l\.t11otes
~
· · f':~ saturday 10r

By Alma Marshall

Santa Will Get h Down Your
fhimney In Time for Christmas

held

'

Cross awarded Yo:rk honor in Freemasonry

EASTERN PHOTOGRAPHIC LABORATORIES, INC.

I--'"=

4 DAYS ONLY
-·
WED., DEC. 8TH
THRU SAT., DEC. 11TH

pt, Pleaaant, Ripley; Atbens, and Belpre.
L----~ ~

_.:___ __

•14995
FREE
SHOP-A-RAM A
TICKETS

23" COLOR TV

''

'59995

PH. 446-1830

LARRY'S ·wAYSIDE FURNITURE
&lt;lLIVE ·&amp; THIRD STREET

'\

LAY-A-WAY

OPEN EVENINGS

GALliPOLIS. OHIO

�_8- T)le Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'I'IIeoday, Dec. 7, 1976

NO MAlTER WHAT vou·BUY

uv

~ t - ~DaUySentlnel, Mid~port-POOiel'oy, 0 ., 'I'IIesday, Dec. 7, 1976
· .
·:. · :: - ~~,,,._~:::.':':;:&lt;'''''.&lt;''''~~~ Services
-.

Mamn Q&gt;unty

.'·

.-,

'·

MASON "hanging of tbe

Ohio Marathon
Championship. The winner
paid $4.80, $3.00 and $2.60
Yak! King was second and
Shifting Ways was third.
Graell also had three other
winners to run his · season
total to 335, by far the best of
the year at Thistledown. ·
The :1-6-1 tenth race trifecta
of Rescind Sir, Sea Art and
Nasculia was. wort~! $093.60

$10 ,000

Tillie LaRue ·
of Mason dies

SOFA, CHAIR
&amp; LOVESEAT

Viny I Covers

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

Holiday weekend hla~k~ned
by ice and sn~w last !light ·

~t~~ }(~~ t~:-j 1~:1 E.~~~;~
,.,,~

BACK IN PORT
RACINE - Navy Boatswain's Mate Third Class
Benwood D. Bickers, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William B.
Bickers, and whose wife
Edith is the daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Warren H. Rose, aU
of Route I, Racine, recently
returned from participation
In the martime portion of the
major NATO ex~l'cises
· "Autumn Forge '76." He is a
crewmember aboard the
oiler USS Caloosahatchee,
homeported at Norfolk, Va.

,..

-~~~~lt;C:::~~:~:r
·{'cation
. (fs cerh
_
1

-·"-"''

. {or shert -· · "'=~,:;:~ ;;§;-,;:.;;
·-·-c---= --.:.--··-- -.•:o;:.~--=
Court cI c•ars. wa)
~-·-:."":.~;=:}: :=:-_;-;;~~.:.-.:-::.:.; :::;&amp;-=~•.: .;:_.;::.~ =:;.:::.::-::::.:;=:.:::.

-.:r;=:;,"""· ~?2;;.,;~'£-;.:::· '""'""-·

~- .... in~

~r~~o;i~;b~l! ~~~~- ~!~~ .
?I ""' ·.. .....

.-ar:;.

ands "e" P ·
'fhoUS

12 o·

e,
ifferent~~. Double lined ~

AN

ll""

and

. ~v. '44.95

sr

'itched

.'

Now'34ts

FROM '129.95

~

fROM

·

'7995

'
VOO'E RECOUNTED

COLUMBUS (UPI)
1\esulta of a presidential
reco111t lhow Jimmy Carwr ·
earrled Ohio by 11,118 votes
Prellldent Ford - by
1,783 'fOtel more than the
iJrlglnai count showed.
, Requested by Ford's :!5
llhio electon, the recount will
lie certtfled Wl!dnesday a! 10
f.m. for '(lrelleDtatloo to the
EltictoraJ College Dec. 13.
Carter oriP!aiiY had a
1,333-vole margin over Ford
but gained 1,112 votee In the
recotllt wblle the President
- 1o11nc W. The final
tlltail were: Carter 2,011,621

~....................... ~

City . ........... . . .. State . .. .. .. . .. Zip .......... ~

,( 1 C. _I'-C'

POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Afternoon
L£&gt;ague·
December 1, a16

Pi n !3usl er s
Vlllaqe Pharma cy
~- wai d Cr o ~ s &amp; Son
Team 1

8?
Bl
61
d3
dl

W L

JO

Ji

s1

69
11
8•1

ro nzie Fo il ow N s
28
HiQh 5inqle Ga me
Ma r y
Hoover 193, Sh e lb y M&lt;~n!ey ,

WITH EACH GIFT SUBSCRIPTION

165, Jean Pr ov i nce 163 .

Hiqh
Hoover

Se ri es

Mary
Se lb y M a nl e y .1•"
Pf' &lt;tr l R; uso:,cll 1?11

I,

quatify this year.
· He served as Master of
Racine Lodge of Masons in
1974; High Priest of Pomeroy
Chapter, Royal Arch Masons
in 1974; Master of Bosworth
Council, Royal and Select
Masters· in 1973, and Com- 10,000.

POTLUCK PLANNED
The Harrisonville Senior
Citizen• Club will have a
Christmas potluck at the
Harrisonville Elementary
School at 6 p.m, on Dec. 15 ..
There will be a gift exchaqge.
Both t'art A and Part B of
Medicare can help you pay
for b)ood that VOU liM.

QUASAR
TELEVISIONS
If you need a new TV now Is the time to buy ·one. We have purchased
Quasar TV at a special low price. We are passing the savings along to
our customers.

19" COLOR TV

23'' COLOR TV

'599

·.•399 95

95

-·

©®Lb®lJl
LP®l1l~l1l~il~
12" BLACK &amp;WHITE

TELEVISION

.1~7 .

md Ford

I

(,

2,tQI~.

12" COLOR TV

'8995

•29995

COMES IN DECORATOR COLORS

QUASAR

19'1
BLACK &amp; WHITE

PORTABLE
DEAR FRIENDS: ·
.
.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS "FREE' ' PROFESSIONAL
PORTRAIT OFFER . IT'S MY WAY OF SAYING "THANK·
YOU" TO OiJR VALUED CUSTOMERS AN,DTHE COMMUN· .
ITY WE SERVE.
SINCERELY

;. , ,; :..·._;t·/

f'

:tL::._:t/·

Darrell Ellis
• Limit: one special Bx10 per family
• Additional portraits available in all sizes at
reasonable prices
·
• All Ages Welcome, Including Grandparents
• Satisfaction Guaranteed

wer

Tc:a m 6

WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CARD

5353).

ROCKING CHAIRS

)\[

~
From..............................................
~
~~;f$;;:t.~~~~~'Q·~·~~··
?~
' ~~~'if::l&lt;
..

RIO GRANDE - Senior
Citizens may attend classes
.~ at Rio Grande College" Community College
~:· (RGC)CC) free, according to
• President Thomas J. Quick.
7, Quick said the college Board
7, of Trustees bad adopted the
;·, state-wide program io make
· classes available to senior
: adults.
7. Any person 60 years of age
7 or older, who hail resided in
, the State of Ohio for at least
ooe year may attend courses
• or classes without paying•
:; matriculation or tuition
~ charges.
.. The only stipulations are
" • that the course be taken on a
;': non-credit basla, that attend~. ance IB approved by in:': dlvldual Instructors, that
~ there IB space available in the
" c1aas and that a person
~ enrolling agree ,to pay any
~. neceuaty laboratory fees.
:-; Senior citizens wlsblng to
~ partldpate may regilter for
" ~ Tuesday, January 4,
~ 1977, between 9 a.m. and 4
~ p.m. Further Information
~ about the winter quarter
"~ schedule may be obtained
~. !rQm RGC(:C Office of .Ad·
~ mlsal0114 and Recorda (m:
~

MAPLE

w ~:::r~~ ~~·i·~............................... ;........... ~
Street ...•.. ; ........................

BEAN
BA
Queens~ GS

ROLLTOP AND KEYHOLE
MAPLE, OAK &amp; WALNUT

Pir
~.....,.,., ~~ ?~~"'-"'-'-' ~
· ~·
~ · .~~~·;\:,;:;;&gt;.."w-l•!&lt;'r' 'o~~~~~.~

~
ttf

"

~--

OHIO &amp; W.VA .................... '22.00 YR.
ELSEWHERE: ........................... '26.00 YR.

fB~tl®

at no cost

7.

ALL
SALE
PRICED

A coupon containing subscription information necessary
for your gift giving is contained in this ad for your
convenience. Fill it out and send it in together with your
check .

..

HPMEDESTROYED
RACINE _ The Racine
Fire Department answered a
call to the Paul Bowers
mobile home at Apple Grove
at 2:30 p.m. sunday. The
department which had 11
men and three trucks on the
scene, said that the fire was
apparently caused by an
electrical shortage. The
mobile home· was termed a
complete loss by the depart. ment. No one was at the home
when the .fire occurred.

go to Rio

mander of Ohio Va ll ey
Commandery. Knig ht
Telilplar, in t975.
He was elected to mem·
bership in Ohio Priory and his
election confl'rmed by Convent General of the Order on
Nov . 29. l bere are sixty-eight
Priories of the Order with a
present membership of

'•

Berkline
Recliners

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

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street

'

JUST
ARRIVED

Sherrill New
Pitt coach

!~
~

DIEHL ORDAINED
Michael Diehl was ordained Dec. 5 into the priesthood of the Reorganized ·
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints. The
ceremony took place in the .
Lansing, Michigan, branch.
He is the husband of the
former Diane Roush,
daughter of !Uah and William
Roush of Portland. William
Roush is · the pastor of the
Reorganized Church, Portland-Racine Branch.

60 &amp; plus

The
Daily Sentinel
.. ...
'· ... . ....
. .....
~·

sr-".

M

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
GROUPS

~

Ouiolmas festivities at · Mason United

f«a unlquelllUIIcalprogramat 7:30p.m. The varied program
beginl with the Junior Choir and will end as the Sanctuary
Choir 111ngs tbe Hallelujah Chorus by Handel.. Solos, daets and.
ch«uuee will present the ·Cl1ristmas message in interesting
form.
The accampani8U and directr- are Mrs. Ray Proffitt,
Mrs. Nolan SWackhamer, Mrs. Robert Guthrie, Mrs. John
Sluon and Mrs. Dennlll Harrt.s.
The Yo~mg Acmlt Claas wW go caroling on Dec. 23 at 7:30
p.m. and afterwards aU will return to the church for hot
chocolate and refreatunents.
The YOUDg Adults regular dinner meeting will be held on
Tueaday, Dec. Ztl at 6:30p.m.·
The Muon United Methodist Church plans !D distribute
· Chriltmal baskets to the needy families. Food and money for
'· these are to be trough! to the church on Dec. 12 and placed in
, the corner of the church pro~ed.
:• Basketa will be prepared on the 19th and dlatribllted on Pee.
· 21. Volunteers are lD con1act Mrs: William Zerkle, phone 773: 5558.
.
•
"
. The Thanksgiving season is a perfect time to express our
~ •gratitude to aU those who have helped in the continuing growth
~. oftheMaaon Ubrary during the first year in our new building.
~
For mnatlng books, we give thanks to Mr. and Mrs. Earl
:· Ingels, Emogene Crow, Henrietta Ruttencutter, Virginia
" Faudree, Lola Jeffers, Margaret and Vernon Rizer, Mr. and
~ Mrs. Opal Eads, Nancy Hayes, Mrs. Mary Pearson, Ruby
'· Bond, David Dudding, Irma Turnbull, Ruth and Elizabeth
~ Mclntolh, Mary Fry, Regina Rayburn, Becky Reed, Pearl
~ Rousb,lsaac Smith, Fred Taylor, Mrs. Allee McDonald, Mrs.
" Walter Patterson, Barbara Zuspan, Kim Capehart Robie,
! Jeanne Johnson, Helen Johnson and family, Becky Merlcal,
Kathy Yo,ung, Gary Roush, Millard Gress, Mr. and Mrs. W. F.
;• Macblr, _and VIolette S. Machir, who gave us two volumes of
" Ceine~ Inacrlptlons.
·
;· Memorial \M!Oks purchased during the year are as follows :
·~ In Memory of Hattie Reed, "The Homecoming", Earl Hamner
and "Hilll!illy Women", ~a thy Kahp, presented by Hilda
•· Click; ''The Frontiersman" Eckert, by Sarah Lambert,
" Barbara and Dale Works; "The Telltale Lilac BW!h", Gainer,
by Betty Reed Detner; "Folk Songs from West Virginia",
Gainer, in memory of Squire J. Phillips and Eliza Jane
Phi!Upe, by Hattie Reed; "Born Again", Colson, by Mr. and
Mrs. Sammy HoHman.
.
'
Memorials for Mr. B. F. Board were "Angels", Billy
Grsharn and "The Total Woman", Morgan, presented by Mary
Berry and Mrs. B. F. Board, and "The Spirits of '76", Slane, by
Friends,
.
In memory of Robert J. Rousb, "Henry Ford and GrassRoots America•.•, Wilt, by Mary Berry and Mrs. B. F. Board.
In memory pf James A. Diehl, Sr., by Bess Diehl, "The
Courage to Choose: An American Nun's Story", Griffin;
" "Whittlin', Whistles and Thingamajigs", Metcalf; "I Heard
' the Owl Call My Name", Craven.
. .
In memory of Homer S. Carman "West Virginia : A
Bicentennial History" • Wllliams, by Mrs. Fl ora Board an d
Mary Berry.
· InmemoryofJosieEilas, "Lipreading" , Hazard, by Mary
Berry and Mrs. B. F. Board. "Prison Letters 197o" Corrie Ten
Boom and "Silver Bridge", Barker, by Mr. and Mrs. Nolan
Swackhamer; "Fire", Stewart, by Helen Eliss.
A blg"thanks' goes to Mrs. Paul R. Stodola for regular
vohmteer work, and to Vicki Clark, Comie Gray, Joyce
Redman, Janet Conard, and Earlene Bumgardner for helping
(Continued on page 12)
·

members at a craft workshop at the home. Left to right
ar.e Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs. Helen
Williams and Mrs. Lester Johnson. Those in charge of
decorating the home are Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. Detmar
Alexander and Mrs. Delwon Robert.s. Others assisting
included Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs. Cecil
Smith, Mrs. John Marshall; Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs.
William Zerkle and Mrs. Addie Brown.

and the 4-2 dally double of
Rick's Mark and Shotlzon
paid $54.40.
The final day's attendance
of 4,968 boosted total
attendance for the year to
1,057,795, a decrease of 2.6 per
tent compared to 1975. And
the final day's handle of
$711,862 made It a total of
$114,178,931 for the year.

M llie p

Sllllciuary.
On Dec. 19 tbe Junior Choir and Sanctuary Choir will join

.

1111STLEDOWN

;:,:

Followillg the evening meal and program, which consisted of
a film, ''Chriit 18 Born," teachers and church workers
decorated tbelr own class rooms and togethe!' decorated the

'

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI ) - Reason to Dare
carried Antonio Graell to
· \\ictory in the last featured
race of the year at
Thistledown Monday as the
track shut down for the
winter.
The four-year-old filly covered the mile and seveneighths in 3:50 ID win the

{

RACINE - Davie W. Fox, highest office in each of the
R.R. 2 Radne, has been fou r bodies ol the rile.
awarded the designation of
Fox becomes one of the
Knight of the York Cross of comparative ba ndfui of about
II'
0
U IRS
Honour, highest honorary .., 400 of the over four and a
degree in the York Rite of qua rter million Freemasons
LONG BOTTOM - Ser- Freemasonry, conferred only in North America, the
vices for Mollie 'E. Pullins, 79, on those who have held the Philippines and Australia to
55 Jefferson St., Newark,
were held Saturday at the
Criss Brothers Funeral Home
in Newark with Robert L.
Settlage officiating.
·"ilurial followed in the Sand ·
Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Mrs. PuUins wasliorn Dec.
28, 1696 jn Long Bottom'to the ·
late Holt W. and Mary
Catherine Foster Curtis and
was the last of her Immediate
family .
Mrs. Pullins was a member
of the Plymouth United
Church of Christ and the
American Gold &amp;tar Mothers
of Newark.
Surviving are three
daughters, Mrs. Ellswort.h
(Dora ) Crispin, Long Bottom ; Mrs. Ralph (Ruby )
Bowman, Newark, and Mrs.
Donald (Yvonne) Griffith,
Granville; two sons, Elmer
C. Swank, Newark, and Roy
E. Swank, Ontario, Calif., 24
grandchildren and 24 greatgrandchildren.
Ason, Glen, five sisters and
three brothers also preceded
her in death.

Metbodilt Ourch began Monday evening, Dec. 6 with the

CHRISTMAS SALE

CHRISTMAS AC11VITIES - Mason 's Historical
Society members have been bUlly for several weeks
planning activities for the Christmas holidays. Featured
is their Christmas tree at the ,former Lewis home on
Brown Street complete with all handmade ornament.s
(above) made by society members. The tree was donated
by Mr. and Mrs. Landon Smith. Also pictured are- society

News l\.t11otes
~
· · f':~ saturday 10r

By Alma Marshall

Santa Will Get h Down Your
fhimney In Time for Christmas

held

'

Cross awarded Yo:rk honor in Freemasonry

EASTERN PHOTOGRAPHIC LABORATORIES, INC.

I--'"=

4 DAYS ONLY
-·
WED., DEC. 8TH
THRU SAT., DEC. 11TH

pt, Pleaaant, Ripley; Atbens, and Belpre.
L----~ ~

_.:___ __

•14995
FREE
SHOP-A-RAM A
TICKETS

23" COLOR TV

''

'59995

PH. 446-1830

LARRY'S ·wAYSIDE FURNITURE
&lt;lLIVE ·&amp; THIRD STREET

'\

LAY-A-WAY

OPEN EVENINGS

GALliPOLIS. OHIO

�0r

10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 7.1976
Meigs Coun t y
Agr lcunural Socie ty
Fin!! ncial Statement
RI!CI!Ipts

A(lm•sslons

'l16,SO&lt;~

Membership Fees
Season T1cket Sales
Concessions

Class Entry Fees
Speed Receipts

State Aid (Jr &amp; Sr J
Co ~Jnty Aid

oc

7,14 9 0(
· 204 OC
11 ,982 21

456 00
2,730 00

22,698 00
3,500 01

5

B•tore

P .N! . I Day

Publication
_
Can ct iiBtlons ,
cor~ ec
Hons accepted t lr~ t dev of

1, 173 01. .

any

iectlonel

LonQ Term Ren tals

250 00

ad s

deemed

ob .

w ill not be rt"spons ible for

127 .92
4, 500 oo

more than
insertion .

Rc tu nds
MISCellaneous
Re tleposl ted c d
n~tJ beglnntrm o f yr
Tot al ·

1.440 29
7,781 90

RATES
For W1nt Ad SerYice
~ cent s per word one
inlert lon .
;
Minimum Cherge $1 00 .
14 cents per word three
conse cut ive Insertions
7&amp; ce nts per w9td si x
conse cut iv e lnsutlons .
15 Per Cent Discount on
pa id ads and· ads pa id
w ithin 10 da ys .

637
91,560

E .. perHe~

on e incorrect

Sat aries
\ uoci oo
Laborers
7,A66 OS
Taxes
1.257 6 1
1, 126 48
&lt;;on tra c t Work
Eleclric+an&lt;i
1.269 99
CARD OF THANKS
613 00
lm;l,(ra nce
&amp; OBITUARY
JUdges
58 I JQ
· n .oo tor . -~50 word .
Directors E11pcnse
061 65
•
Adm+nistraltve Exp
242 66 • m In.l.!:ru/..rrl~
t:ifCn----a dd liTOr ,..l woro :.1
Dues &amp; Subscnpttons
87 00
cent s.
Pn•rntum~;Sr Fa+r
6,090 16
BLIND -ADS
Prl'm+ums Jr Fa tr
s.sos
Addit ional 25c Ch arge
Ra,+n£' Pu r ses &amp;
per AdYerti sem ent
2J,B55 44
Expenses
OFFICE HOURS
PubliC LlliHires
LOS5 42
8 JO a m to S.OO p m .
~pecta l Attracttons
5,800 75
Da l ly , 8 30 am to 12 ' 00
SIHl+laii M
6·74 so
Noon Satur da y .
AllvPr t;&lt;;lng
641 B?
Phone today 992 2156
fiOt Jtl(i Sy&lt;;tE&gt;m
.1&gt;00 00
lC r+ l Ren t(IIS
389 25
~IIISC E:a:: pen5c
65 I A]
NOTICES
rr cm+urn, Bo.o k s A.
,
ATTN .: I!
Pr+ntmq
893 18
ALL HOUSEWIVES
M&lt;.ltn l ena m.+•
307 i6
A ll Ya rd Sales, Rummag e,
Ci't ptl r;d Improvement s
Porch and Basement Porch
8,840 ,62
and Basement Sa les , etc
B~nk r c1 n ovqn t
15, 000 00
m ust be p11 1d In adllance
1 o~n
lnt p;wmc nts 7,250 . 0 ~
Gel your s 1n early by
HJI endo f) r
J0701
n.soo 12 stopp ing by our office i't
ro tot
The Da lly Se nt inel , fll
Cour t St or wr ttln g Bo x
( !71 7, \1 (
729 . Pom eroy , Ohio 45769
w ilh your remill an ce

LOST, BROWN and block mole
Gormon Shephe rd dog Contact
Ronald Cowdery at 985-3S81 .

I

'

a.

AstraGraph
8em1ce Bede Osol

For Wedttesday, Dec. B, 1976

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Doro 't tcy to rn an ~:~ge ou tsi ders
th e woy you would those tn your
twmo tod ay Whore the family
wouldn't tn rnd , othe rs would take
off ense

TAU RUS (April 20- Moy 20)
Follow your own Judgment +n
bu•wws~. r•1a tters today If you
s&lt;:.t•~ thu c.ounsel of too many
pvGpte, 11u could be sadder, but
110

wiser

GEMINI ( Maw 21-J une 20)
M11tenal eondtttons are a m ixe d
bag for y hi today You m1ght
h[lve a Sltable gam but you
GOUld ter1 d 10 spend too m uch

CANCER {J une 21-July 22)
Wh1 te you have a knack l or per !)tJnal acquisiti on today. avoid
bo tng se lllsh If yo u tur n a
healt hy pro fit, sttare wit h those
wllo helped make It poss ibl e

LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) 11 you're
lfWolvod with an org aniza tion o r
group toUay , help them more
w1th your Sf'! VICes tha n with you r
pu r~ o.

VIRG O

(A.,g . 23-Sopt. 22) You
may hav e to apply a little subtl e
pressure on so meone who ts inrlt&lt;tJ ted to you Be fi r m, but don't
ol&lt;erclse too much leverage at
tins ltrne
LIB~A

(Sepl . 23 -0cl . 23)

Conce ntrate on pdorny goals to ·
day Yo u might not sco re at first ,
tJu t yo u co.n make a touc hd ow n
wit h a stel lar second effort.

SCORPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) One
Who doesn't have your best ln teresJs at heart m ay t hrow so me
onstac!es 111 your pat h t oday
However you'll h urdle them in
stnd e.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.

In Memory
IN MEMORY of Au nt Ethel Hol ter
Wht:!ul!:'+ who pa ssed owoy
Dec . 7, 1975
A "ilent thought. o secret lear
Keeps her memor y eve • dea r
Tm w tokes m ny th e edg e of
grte f
Bu t molnory hu m brJCk every
leal
Sadly tn 1sse rl by Ado E Boy s
IN MEMORY of Fra nk Grtmm who
pO'&gt;sed away Dec 7. 1975 One
)' COr ago today
We k now your no llorgollen
Any r+ mo through! the y(!.ar .
A11d th1s IS I U.S I to tel l you .S O ,
This time of th e year .
r or yo u ore bemg thought of
m o ver y ~pec 10l woy ,
More deeply onrl s1ncere ly the n
1hese wo1d s
con eve t soy
Sad ly nliS sed by wrl e, Nev a and
s!ep ·chtldren

Notices
NOW occeplt ng p1ono studen ts
beg 1nnars m termedtates, ad
van ce d stud ents Coi l
992·
1270
INTERVIEWS wtll be held Mndoy
Nov 27 1970 sloil1ng o l I I 00
o m o d ock 1n the off ice of the
Me1gs County Cornmlss,oners.
Coul'l House. Pomeroy . Oh1o
tor or ch +lec ts w ho me on the
appr oved li st of State Ar
chrll'l'c lb (f'u b/, c Works Store ol
Oht o) for th e proposed mv lll purpo sc focd+l)' for Mergs
County . Please coli for oppotnl
rnen t 997 78~5
PIANO INST RUCT IONS Chil dren s
and adult s. Juna VanVranken
992· 2270
ALTHO UGH B 1rch h ~ l d's Tox tder my ha s burned work STILL WILL
BE
DONE
111
temp or ar y
qua rt ers. Hove your lrophtes
mounl txi tod o ~ on d trea sure
them l o m o~row . BIRCHF IELD's
TA XIDERM Y, eosl ol Rutl an d ,
mil e on Rt
1'24
Phon e
742-2 178

CAPRICORN (Dec:. 22-Jan 18)
GJVe. and. take IS 1mportant tn
one- to-one rela tt o nsh1ps today
You have to make concession s
or there II be 1'10 profits

XMAS SPECIAL
Any Sew1ng
mochtn e c.leoned o+led and ad·
1usted
$5 .98
THE Sew in g
Center Middl eport
RUMMA GE SALE Dec Blh and

AQ UARI US ~Jan . 20 - Feb. 19) !n
career matters do wh at you think
to lle b est . not wha t you thtn k
r lw uld be don e to pa cify
,11 1\her
To thine o wn self be
truo

9lh , Wads ond Thursdo)' , 186
N s.eco nd M+ddl epor t Ne•l to
Deb s Barber Shop clothr r:g .
avon bo lll es, m• sc
YO U IN beautiful lull co lor pa r·
l rott s. The Pho to Place (Bob
Hoefl•,h) 992 5292,

Don't be too l tmtd abouttakmg a
chence to Improve your lot I O·
day. Even if you fail, wh ich 1sn 't
likely, you 'll still be be tter o lf

: ~ Your
Birthday

'\iii

Dec. 8, 1978
Be alert thi s year for unusual
busIness o p p o rt u n Il l es
Someonemsycometoyouwlth
a beller mousetrap wh1ch you
can take to the marketplace.

(Are you e SegsnBrius? Bernice
Osol nas written a specuJI AsrroGra ph Lett er for you. Fo r your
copy sen d 50 cents end a self.
addressed. sta mped envelope to
Astro·Grap/1, P.O. Box 489,
Radio Cay Sta tion , New Yotk,

N Y 10019 Be sure to ask lor
Sagutoous Volum9 1.)

HOUSE
OUR BO ARDI.,G
""

bifocal s.

Phone

-·

Yard Sale
IF YOU hove o serv rce to off er .
won! to buy or sell !l.Ome lhing,
oe lookm g lo r work ,
or
~ o u ' l l gel results
who lever
Ios i er with o Sen tm ef Wont Ad .
Coll992 ·215b

pay

and

a llowan Ce$
wh i le
we
pro&gt;wlde to p training In
exciting f ield of )tour
choice. If you're 18 to 31
ye•rs old and can quality,
we' ll guarantee Dffer In
writing. Sign on now and
get current liberal G. I .
BILL be'n ef lt5 . Call or see
your Navyman at :
211 Columbua Rd .

Athens, OH

PH : 59J. JS66 {COUtcU

L-....:~:.:,::::;::;::::~:::.::::.:.:....-1

9._-Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,

6iA

(;ampi ng Equipment
1976 TRAVEL lRAilER, fully equ1p
ped w1t h showe r 17 ''• fl sell
reasonabl e Phone 9CJ2.9981

FOUR CEM ETERY plots ot Metgs
Memory Gardens . W1ll sell
seporo tel y Phone 985·4146

5 MONTH OlD Registe red femal e
lm h Setter . $75
Phon e

TRE ES,

Mom

St

AVA ILABLE al Rtver stde Aport ·
menh I bedroom, $ 100 per
month, 2 bedroom s $ 133 An · SCHOOL SEWI NG ma chin es
Equal Housi ng Oppor luntl y .
Stngers tn · wa lnut con so lette
Phone 992-3273
Phone 992 -5 146
ONE BEDROOM Apt s at VILL AGE
MANOR tn Mi ddlepo rt l or $1 04
monthly plus elec o r S1JO +n·
cl ud+ng elec . LOWER RATES l or
SE NIOR Cl'r l ZE NS Conven tent
to shopp tng on Third and Mi ll
Srs rn Mrddl epor l . Brand new
ht gh qua lity oparhnenls See
the mana ger at Apt 28 or coli
992· 772 1. An Eq ual Hous ing
Opportun ity .

FREIGHT DAMAGED October 19
1976
Zig · Zog
Sew1 n g
Mach +nes ,
but t on hol e
monogram ,
el&lt;:.
Origina lly
Sl 79 95 wtl l sell lor $59 ~5 cosh
or terms Phon e &lt;;192 5146.

GOOD

MIXED

hoy .

Phon e

949·2523.

5 ROOM HOUSE o nd both In
Raci ne oreo Phone 992 5858

1971 LTD. o•r- condit ioned , p b ,
p s , e•celle nt condihon Four
45 X 1.4 SnOW hres , one boy 5 26
inch bik e new Col l992·34.42.

2 BE DROOM MOBil E home adult s
on ly Phone 992·55:15

TWO COATS. See Pomeroy MotoiCompany , o r A .R Knight.

SMALl
SEM f.furm shed
apo rt
men l
126 Mulberry Ave
Phone 992·2030

USEO fORESTRY

Trmbeqa(k 230D Sktdder John
Deere 4408 SKtdd er: Pett1bone
Super 8 Cory Ltft , Morbark 48
m Chip-Poe; Prentice GRM
Loader Mossey·Ferguson 356
Lt li Contact Oon Groves , or
Lyons Equtpment Co., Inc
Ctr clevtlle, Ohio 431 13. Phone
( b l4 )
(614 ) 59 6 · 4769 or
474.6()28 .

4 ROOM FURNISHED o pt , close to

Powell 5 Supe r Vo lu

Phone

992·3658
EFFI CI ENC Y HOUSE , adult s only
+dea l lor 2 men No pel s. Phone
q92·779 1 alter "' p m
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Rocme A reo . Phone 992 5859

7409
EXPERIENCED 6A6YSITTERS lok
mg rese rvations l or all n+ght
and hour ly s11t ing lor New
Yllors Eve For mforma t1on,
coll992 ·7092
BOOKEEP ER All pho ~es . Phone
992· 7476

: ERTIFIEO' READING

Speciol+st
w1th 4 yea rs e)(perience help·
ing di!iobled ond reluctant
readers. espectally Jr. H1gh
level . For other tnformot+on
and hourly rates Co119~2· 7735

b1 hour Ca ll 9927 135. can fur

ni sh references

POTATOES and pumpkins C W.
Proff itt , Portland Ohio . Phone

843·2254.
COAL for so le . Open 6 days per
week and evenrngs Fo r further
illform otton cal l {6 1-t) 367133 8.

APPl ES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
. STATE ROUTE 6119. PHONE
WIL KESV ILlE, (6 14) t&gt;69·:1785
Phone 992 3410.
FU Ll ER Bru sh
Produc
ts ,f or horse
sole.
CAMPER,
S600
Also
trailer , $450. Phone (614 ) 698·
32'10

EQUIPMENT

ARMSTRONG GAS furnace used
one season , $300 . Phone

992·7135.
ELECTRIC SINGER sewing machine
1n cobinel wifh seot tncluded
Phone 992· 3626
AN TIQUE DINING roo m suite, ook
banquet table . 6 cho trs and buf·
l et Phone 992·6008 to see
JOHN DEERE Jesef 3'50 end
loader. excellen t condiltOn
Wmch lair leads , fo rk s and
ove rcob . Ph one 949·2663.

Mobil" Komes'

tor

Side

MOBIL E' home for sal e 0 1 ren t, 3
bedroom s, ol utd tltes po1d .
Phone 992 ·7751 .

Real Est~te ·,;;;,-~I:~:~
-

1H E fARMERS HOME AD ·
MIN ISTRATION HAS FOR SALE ,
FROM TIME TO TIME. FARM .
RESIOENTIAL .
BU SINE SS ,
RECREATION ANO·OR OTHER
PROPE RTIES IN ATHENS AND

MEIGS COUNTIES ANY LICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKER IN·

TERESTED IN LISTING 1HESE
PRO PE Rli ES SHOULD CONTACT

lHE

FARMERS

HOME

COND

ST REET, POMEROY ,

OH IO

457b9

TE LEPHONE

992-6644 .
3 BE DROOM house. both ond utdi ty , I ocre o l ground +n
S)' rocuse, Phone 949 2057.
4 BEDROOM home on Butternut
Ave . in Pomeroy Cool or gos
healing new kttchen and otr
co ndi tioning New hot water
hea ler
I % baths
Phone

992·3356 .
2 STORY brick home on Mulberrv
Avenue. 2 bath s, new roo f .
some
r e modeling
do ne .
Reason abl e Phone 992·3356
3 BEDROOM, full basement , hot
woter heot 11/J baths. new hot
wa ter heale r , new k 1tchen,
wo lllo wal l carpet, downs ro trs,
air
conditi oni ng ,
newly
remodeled Iorge yard . Phone
992-3356

-

1975 HONDA

CBSOO·T,
new battery, in
storage except for 3 month s.
1333 mrl es . (Osf ov er $1700,
will sell for $950. Phone

BLACK AND white 16 Inch Ad ·
m1rol portab le T V . $75. Phone

·--

992·5006

LOOK TRIM . Tolo:e Algtness diet
pion and Aquovop " woter pills"
Village Phor mocw 271 N . 2nd
· Ave . Mtddlepo: t _ ~-.

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?
Let Pomeroy Llndmork
soften &amp; eondl11on your
water UC-XVt
ONLY

'279,95

Let us test your water
Free.

Pomeroy Landmark
· Jack W. CarSey, Mgr.
Phone992-2181

Also, lev awev

Hubbard's

GreenhouSe

David Parsons, Owner

949·2114

Phone 992·5776
Syracuse, Ohio

11·4-1mo.

HOMESITES for sole . I 'cere and
up. Middleport , near Rutland
Co l1 992 7481 .
NEW :1 bedroom house , 2 ba ths,
all elec , I acre, Mi ddleport
d ose to Ru tla nd Phone 992·

7481 .
---~-

SMALL form for sole . 10% down.
owner ft~onced. Mon roe Coun ·
tv W. Va . Phone (30-4) 772·
--~--

COUNTR Y farmland w 1th seclud
ed woods , water and good oc·
cess in Monroe County , W Va
$1 000 down , ca ll (304 ) 772·

TOM RUE MOTORS

·=
~
........
--·

.

...........
..
..........
..,..,..

. ·,1011

24

hour

LITTLE ORPHAN

mO.

oc'res 6 room house . both ,
portly carpeted, two out .
butldmg s
dug basement ,
one·fhi rd hlloble , mt ne roi
nghts located neor Danvill e.
Reduced for qui ck so le ,
$23 ,500. Phone 742 -2766 .

NEARLY new ol elec home lull
ba!iement , for sole by owne r
Rutland oreo. Phone 742·2531
TUPPERS PLAIN S, OHIO Three
bedroom house . fam ily room
ftre ploce . 2 baths , dtshwosh er ,
ra nge
i
carpet .s un
$26 ,500. Phone

Vl rgit B. Sr .• Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy , Ohio45769
Phone 992-3325

NEITHER CA~ I ·~ HA ~ NOW
I KMOW WHAT THEY MEAN ,.
Wti~ THEY SAY ONE "HAS

YE1!1 LITILE fUTURE'-

Dependable ·

Oi I or Gas Burners

PICKENS HOWE.
Por1!~nd , Q.

BORN LOSER

I&gt;

D:Jil'T FOR.b!"T,
IMA~

ELECIRONIC T.,V. CLIN IC. New · ElW..;:O::O.::D=B-0-WE
-RS-'-R-E_P_A-IR~T V shop, Efectrol)rc T.V. Clink
Service call , $5.95. Co lor , B &amp; W
antenna sy51e ms ster eos, etc.
572 South Thtrd , Middleport.
Phone 992·6306 Corry in an d
save money

GRAVElY SERVICE - Save 25 Pet
on lobar by hovtng yo ur Gravely Tracto r repa ired or se rviced
now Gravely Tractor Soles,
Pomeroy , O hio Phone (614)
992-2975
WILL TRIM or cut trees and shrub·
bery. Phone 742·3167 or &lt;;149.
2545

FROSTY'S C 6. RADIO Equ1p ..

Sweepe rs , toa sters, rrons, all
small applianc es. Lawn mower.
ne11t to Stole H1ghwov Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6 1.4) 985·
3B25 .
~:::..........,...,.,-.,----,-­
REMODELING, Plumbtng, healtng
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex·
perience . Phone 992· 2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs, ser·
vice , all makes , 992·2284. The
Shop ,
Pomeroy .
Fabr i c
Authorized Singe r So les end
Ser ... ice . We sharpen Scissors .

heet, 2 ceramic

baths. Nice mod. kit ., tr0f1t
2 car

l11 ~ WHO~o

13 Cower
14 Be a

'?(.HOO~

ham

FOR. ~ou

GASOLINE ALLEY

modern

large

kitchen ,

carpeting, garage, 8 tenths
acre . OWNER TRANS FERRED. $28,000.00.
ABOUT 2 ACRES - 6 yrs.
old. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
very nice kitchen, utility
R., central heat and air

basement. 3 car
garage and storage. Close
to HI School. 529,800.00.
CORNER DOUBLE LOT
with large bri ck, 5
bedrooms, 2 bath s, ultra
modern kitchen {has
eve~ythlng). Natural gas
hot water heat. Fireplace.
ASKING $20.000.00.
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
NOTED IN THIS AD - WE
HAVE GREAT DEMAND
FOR NEWER HOMES LET US SELL YOURS
TODAY.
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
. BROKER
99~· 2259 or 992-2U.
cond., full

instance
(4
'
wds.1

old 4 Br, house, lf2

bath, 2 porches on Rt 7.
Asking $12,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Older 8
room home with 4 Brs .. 2
baths , leve l lot with
garage . S12.000.

the authorities !

nose
(abbr .)
32 Remote
33 Nautical
chain

SEPTI C Systems installed by
licensed
mstall er
Shepard
Controcton. Phone 7-'12· 2409.

r---------_;;,----.-,.....-~-....,.-.,....--------...----.
THAT'S
NATURALLY ~.'- WHY
WHY 'WE'RE [:0'70/J THINK I
""r, ,_ •·15TOPP/N6
ALL THAT
2H~RE!~

CARPENTER , floorm g . ceilin'g ,
ponehng Phone 992·2759

l .DO-Tomorrow 3.

2:10-News 13.

'i}jJjjNf fi;)'ft ~THAT sCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ $

34 Literary
musketeer
36 Money in
Milan
37 Philippine
language
38 Descended
I poet.)

glass doors tn dining. 2 car:

We have now moved to our
I - ot
Eost

t
r; J

TIFFY
1

Cl'l .... lhoc._r,_

is

it:~ VENET

A X Y D I, II A A X R
I. 0 N G F E 1. I. 0 W

i

M~-

L....!;,=l=.!,~~f'"~__,.,V.....,'i
.

l A

l

.

One l etter simp ly stands for another. In this s&gt;J mple 1\. i s

used for the three L·s, X fo r the two O's, ('tc. Si ngle l etters,
apostrophes, the length and for mation of the '"'ord s arc all
hints Each day the code letters arr different.

LISTEN TO THE
WINNIE

SWAP SHOP

- WMPO • 92.1 FM

7 PM

CRYPTOQUOTES

NES
WELL! HAD A II.ON6ERFUL
TRIP WE51:•. MET &amp;oME ,___

BVF

IN1ERE5llN6 PEOPLE

DSHFKFY

ALONG 1J.!E WAY...

WJCER
NR

ILR
CSAJQ

I L Q

y J Q.

OLQBFAK .

- LPSPRWSAQ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : FINDING A WAY 1'0 LIVE THE
SIMPLE UFE 1'0DA.Y IS MAN 'S MOST COMPLICATED
TASK. - HENRY A. COURTNEY

92 in the CountiJ

0

l!l71i Kin!( Jo'e111urf'l Synthr ll l e, Inc.

I LESTUSj
I I r

~
PUL.LEt7 OUT AFTER
·~N O~AL. EXAM.

IDRYBAN±
V
'i. I
I I
Prlnt111awer he111: A{X XXITI )
~

...A
1--L-.L...Jr:......a::.....&lt;L-.

Yaolerda .,
y

Now arrange the circled lenera to

form tha aurpriJe answer, aa aug•.

gested bylhe above cartoon.

IJumble•:
CHANT
Anower: What

IT SHORE IS

Mon., Tues:, Vft\1.111 ~.-:;:n•s·~•
THURSDAY TIL 12
M

HOW ABOUT MY
6RANDFATHER ?

FRillY UNTIL 8.Pll

=
MASON fURNnuRE
nl-5592 .

Hlnn1n

...

He·s

REALL'I
DEPRESSED'

LONESOME OVER AT
M\f Ot: HOUSE WIF
ALL TH' FELLERS
GONE FLOAT

.,

,,,,,

HE JUST FOUND OUT KE·s
TOO OLD .TO ATTEND A
MID- LI FE SEMINAR!

' ..

'

FISHIN'

'fO'RE PLUMB
WELCOME 10
STAY WIF US
TILL THEil
GIT BACKI
lOWEEZlf

.

I
ALL THAT
DADBURN LONESOME

•

Mlllllbll••••
I'

\

(An swers tomdrrow,

BURST . AVENGE LEGUME
people of differing oplnlono mtght join
In - AN ARGUMENT

BARNF;Y

garage . 532,500.
RUTLAND - 2 bedrooms,
bath, fr0f1t parch, utility
building and garage. near
shcool. $11,000.

byHenriAmoldandBobLoo

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leHer lo each square, lo fo rm
four ordinary words .

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;!UOTE - Here's h ow lo work

In kitchen, and Ohio ele.
hoot. S23,DOO.

ba1hs, Ele. FA heat, sliding

23 Frost
24 Tongue-lash
25 Without
ethics
29 Mountaintop
nest
30 Vaquero's
rope
rssier
elcome Kind of dog

born

RUTLAND - 1 Yr . otd 3

acre, new 3 bedrooms, 2

9 Required
13 W1th 7
Down,
seasonal
admonition
15 Ethioptan
lake
18 Reducing
regimen
21 Iowa
export

31 Kind of

bedrooms ,
bath,
thermopane windows, eat·

1

Vestttday's Answer

are read
{2 wds .)
24 Thaila nd
money
26 Sundered
Z7 Scottish
uncle
28 To \he -

"

TUPPERS PLAINS - I'll

HARRISONVILLE -

2 Liturgical
vesbnent
3 Frank·'
lncense or
myrrh, for r

leaves

Thieves! I must alert

10; Dinah 13.
Three Sons 3: Emergency One 6; Partr idge
Family 8; Flnln1s1ones 15.
5:1)()-Big Valley 3; Merv Grlttln 4: ; Brody Bunch 6;
Mister Rogers 20,33: Star Trek 15.
5:3D-News 6; Family Affai r 8; Elec . Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
6:GO- News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,15; ebc New• 6; Zovm 20;
Teaching Children 33.
6:3D-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grlfftlth
6; CBS New s 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:1)()-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tellt he Truth 4; Bowllno 4P~L
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To
Tell1he Truth 13; My Three Sons 15: Consumer
Survival Kit 20; Sportpage 33.
, .
7:30-Dolly 3: $100.000 Nome That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bonk 13;
Wild Kingdom 15.
B:GO-CPO Sharkey 3,4,15; Christmas In Dloneyland
6, 13; Gunsm o~e 8; Novo 20,33 ; Good Times 10.
B:30-Mclean Steven son 3,4115; Jeffersons 10.
9:oo--Sirota's Court 3,4,15; Carpenters 6,13; Movie
"Save 1ho Tiger" B, 1D; Soundstage 20.
9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; The Pr~&lt;:llce ~. 15
10 :0Hue st 3,4.15; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; News 20; To
Be Announced 33.
10:30-Book Beat 33.
11 :GO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Movie " The
Mating Game" 8; Mary Har1!T1 ~n 10; ABC News 33.
12:()()--Movle "The Law 8.1he Lady" 10; Janokl33 .
12 :40-Mystery ot the Week 6,13.
~ : 3D-My

IS Quaker's
pronoun
I Within
16 Venerable
(comb.
17 East lnd1an
fonn)
s Agile
cedar
19 I:.inlls place . 6 Silkwonn
20 All over
7 See 13
I Fr.)
Down
21Vocal (4wds.)
22 Where
8 F1shennan

1

garage, &amp; full basement.

garden, 57500 .

8; Sesame St. 20,33j Movie " Be!ot Foot Forwe.rd"

,creation

r;-'-

3,.c.

1·15-News 11

~~@~\:!~

39 Ill-point
type
40 Entreaty
DOWN
1 Chef's

boost

lf.li'UWD

5232

FRALEY's Lumber Company ot
ju nct1 on of 346 ond 50 W .. · SEP TIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Albany Off1ce phone, {614)
Sanitation , 1192·3954 or 992698·6700, or res idence · (6l4)
242.::
8,.------69B·5310 or 698·8890. Open 7
WILL do roofing , construclton,
o m,:.:c_~-~----plumbing and heotmg. No .job
EXCAVATING .·
BACKHOES .
too Iorge or too smo fl . Phone
DOZER , TRENCHER, lOWBOY
742·2348 .

DUMP TRUCK S. SILL PULLINS.
PHONE . 992·2478 , DAY OR
NIGHT.

11~

EXCAVATING, dozer . baclo:hoe
and di tcher Charles R. Hat·
f 1eld. Back Hoe Serv1ce,
Rutland , O hto Phone 7-'1'2·2008 .

Now Of11y $35,000.

acres,

4•

II Susceptible
12 Morale

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader end
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo·boys lot hue ; will haul
frll dirt, 'to soil, limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Ro.ser Jef·
fe rs , day phone 992·7089,
night phone W2-352S or m.

GAS AND OI L furnace r epa ir ,
soles and service , 24 hour s.
Phone 8&lt;43·21 65.

3 YRS . OLD - 3 bedrooms,

Tf\{IT

.;mi-l
~!'?ITS lD ~OJR
H~ WHII.f
Ho H/..Dltl!;

BRADFORD, Auctioneer Co m·
plete Seryice . Phone 949-2.. 87
or 949 2000 Racine, O h1o , Crttt
Bradford ,

older stucco home. 2 baths,
furnace heat, equ ipped
kitchen and 2 car garage.

frame house with 3 Brs.,
Ph baths, front porch and

.:LOSE TO MEIGS Ht, brick and frame, about 4'12
years old. 3 lovely BR,
modern bath, u1111+y R.,

:1 N T

d1 c~r

MP6. l\1®JAI'f't.~ I

698 7331. ~-----

and ba c k por ches

~ .

Pass

ACROSS
I Anagram
for ages
5 Large car
10 Uganda 's

843·2165

3 bedroom

wood

~

a

It
INT

Pass
Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH

11.11-1 mo.

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Ex·
cov oting . s,e ptr c sys te ms,
dozer, bockhoe , dump truck ,
limes ton e, gravel . blacktop
paving. Rt U3 Phone 1 {614)

NEW LISTING - Business
bu ilding with~ apartments.
and pool ha ll with all
equipment.

ARE

.-.~

Furnace Service.

PLY MOUTHS
Phone 992-2594
Middleport, 0 .

eve rythi ng 1n two·woy radio,
antennas ond occes. Phone
843·2855, Portland

TEAFORD

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

ON
NEW r77

DOZER work and weld1ng . Co n·
tact James Persons , Rt . I ,
7. ~~~e J~4 ) ~7..:._630~-Rocme , on Ca rmel Rood .
------.
3 bedrooms , l'h baths, Io rge liv·
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec..
ing room , dining roo m and kit
plumbtng and heo t+ng Phone
chen, fu ll y corpeled Phone
.
1_ ~2·58S8 .
992 -3129, or 992 5434.

RUTLAND -

1¥

South

It didn't require any great
expertise for the late Sidney
Silodor to see that three
notrump · would have been a
better con tract than fiv e
d1amonds S1dney also knew
that North should have let him
play three notrump, but lhere
was no use cry mg over spilt
milk . Sid ney wa$ ln fiv e
diamonds and had lo do hiS
best to mak e 1t.
He ca lled for dummy 's Jack
of hearts . East produced the
ace and immediately played
the ace of clubs Then East led
a low spade
Sidney. was in dummy and
had to tackle the trump suit
The norn\al cor rect play w1th
lhe particular trump holding
JS to lead a low one and fmesse

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Co mmercial property opprox. 17
ocre!l. leve l fond , located ot
Tuppers Plains on Oh1o. Rou te

sq

PaSs
Pass
11ass
P.\SS

3102 or (304) 172·3227

'

.

Norlh East

Pass

DAILY RENTALS

NEW LISTING - 7 room

992·S324 .

.. 58·1630

'6.95

-

ss.oo.

MIDDLEPORT - 5 Yrs.
old. ~ bedrooms, bath, nat.
gas F.A. furnace, birch
kit., and level lot . S23,000.

MOTORCYCLE .

FARM EQUIPMENT , Reduce the
cost of buy tng for~achinery
up to IO o/, by lak in
vantage
of Fede ral Income
cred rt on
equipment purchase before
Jan . Is! Shrnn 's Tractor So les ,
l eon , W. Va . Phone {304 )

4·1~ 1

WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER 8, 1970
6 :00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
1
6.15-E ngllsh 3, Form Report 13.
' East cashed his ace of clubs
6 20-Not For Women Only 13
so 'qui ckly thai I knew he
6 30-AG· USA 4; Arthur Smith 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
lhoughl he had a trump tri ck
Chils1opher Closeup 10.
com ing, so I dec1ded lo lay
Report 3.
6:45-Mornlng
him for e ith er Iu s actu al
6:50-Gooct
Morning,
West VIrginia 13
holdmg or kmg·tenxx .' ·
6:65-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13
7:GO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning , Amer ica 6,13; CBS
News 8. Chuck White Repor1s 10.
I
ACanadian reader wants to
7:05- Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
know th e signifi ca nc;e or
7:30-Schoolles 10
8:GO-Lossle 6; Cap1 . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame S1 . 33.
Easl"s pass when lhe bidding
8·30-Big Valley 6.
has gone one spade by South,
double by Wes1, redou ble by · •· 9:oo-A.M 3; Phil Donahue ~. 13,15;; Lucy Show 8:
Mike Douglas 10 .
Norlh, pas s by F;asl
9:30-Cro..-Wits 3; One Lite to Live 6, Good Day 8.
A very few people play thiS
10 :1)()-Santord 8. Son 3.4, 15; Price Is Rlgh1 8, 1D; Mike
pass to say " I lhmk we can
Douglas 13.
beat thiS one-spade conlraCl."
10 :15-General Hospllal 6
The great ma)on ty, mcluding
10: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15
the Jacobys, play it as asking
11 :OD-Wheel of Fortune 3, IS; Weekday 4: Edge ot
West to gel uul of hts own
Night 6; Gambii8.1D; Morning wl(h D.J . 13, Elec.
troubles .
Co.
20.
(Do you have a question
11 :3D-S1u mpers 3,4, 15; Happy Davs 6, 13; Love of Ute
for the ex perts? Write "Ask
8,10; Sesame St . 20 ,33. .
rhe Jacobys" ca re of this
11 •S5-Take Kerr 8: Ms . Flxlt 10.
newspaper Th e Jacobys will
12:0CI--News 3,6,8.10 ; Bob Braun 4; SO Grand Slam 15.
answer mdtvtdual quest1ons
12:30;-Gong Show 3,15; Al l My Ch ild ren 61 13.
If stamped, sell-addressed
12:55-NBC News 3, 15.
envelopes are enclosed. The
1:oo--Somer se13: Ryan's t1~pe 6, 13; Con centration 8;
most in teresllng questio ns
You ng &amp; lhe Rstless 101 No1 For Women Onty 15.
wtll be used in thts column
1:30-Days ot Our -Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13: As
and wt/1 receive copies of
The World Turns 8, 10.
JACOBY M ODERN )
2:0CI--$2D,OOO Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:3D-Doctors 3,4,15: One Lite to Live 13; Guiding
Llgh1 8, 10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15; From Jan ice. John:Mary.
and Michael 8.10; On Aging 20 .
3: 15-'-General Hospita l 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6; Lllas Yoga &amp; You 20
4:1)()-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby , M.D. 41
Somerset 15; Howdy IJoody 6; Mickey Mouse Club

1:00-Tomorrow

10 and wrapped up the con·
tra ct.
When asked why he took this
unusual pl ay, S•dney replied .

Pass 5 .
Pass Pa ss
Opcnini lead - lO •

Rutland , Oh•o 45775
Ph . U14t 742·24 09
W e Deliver
7 28 ·4 mos .

LARRU!~~DER
Ph.

'

$3 4,000.

REDUCED PRICE
John Deere
8ul ldozer , $2700 Saw mill
truck. All for $3000 Wtll sell
sl!pora!e Phone 99:2·3792 .

-

IWMINIJI

POINSETTIAS now for
CHAtSTMAS.
600 0
to
choose tram . PERFECT
FOR GIFTS in red , White
and pink. 53 00 to 56 .00 20
pet . !"ff an 10 or mor e

AD ·

MINI STRATION A T 22 1 WEST SE ·

Located in Langsville
Box28-A

SIDIN&amp;.SOifiiT
CUTTEIUWIINGS

10

Square Yard Installed

.

..

WtNDOIIS

&lt;~oK Q7

Wrst

.

33

ed successfully agai nst East's

BoUt vulnm abl e

Tns Rafter Co.

!£PLAC£.ENI

YOUR HOME In pots and

BACK CARPETING

-

S!Jutheastern Ob~

IIIIIDOII$1DOOIS

hangt ng basket s from 7Sc

3102 or {304) 172·3227

992·3565.

51111M

NOTICE ·

ASSORTED R~SBER

.

FURNI SHED two bedroom opt ,
adu lts o n f ~ No pels M td·
die po rt Phone 992 -3a74 .

..... ioll II... IAttiCI

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR

Racine, Ohio

Pels fur Sal~ "=··

ALL WHITE German .Shepherd
pu pptes, full blooded . See
R1 chord Gilkey, Cltlton . W Vo

,.;.,_

ANY PITCH "
ANY SIZE

'

11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Movie " The Man Who
Would Not Ole" 6,13 ; Kolok 8; Mary Hortman 10;
ABC News 33.
12 :00-Movle " The Dangerous Days or Kiowa Jones "
10; Jonakl 33
12:30-Movle " Fer .De. Lanco" e.

,j,Q9 2
• 75 4
t AQ96

Hy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

CARPET SHOP

1&lt;;173 VOLKSWAGON 4 speed ,
good condr tion . $1000 Pho ne
992 5875
.

SOUTH tDI

hllllllliln StnK•

,

RACINE

Rd 28

STEREO AM ·FM rod1 o, 8 track
Balance
l ope combmollon
$106.40 or terms. Co il ~92 · 3965

CHRISTMAS
Rut land

¥10 986

810111

~

Pl. Pleasant
Ph. 675·3469
9:30-5:00 Daily
Tilt B:000 t:_ridays

1972 NOVA . 6 (y l1 nder, standard ,
on floor In good co ndttian ,
$ 1250 Phone 94&lt;;1-2860 or 5ee
Char les B1 ssell at Boshon Co .

phone {304)773·5962

• J.
t2 .

DI_RE.g re~Rs\~e§ALES

1q73 FORD PICKUP truck , Ra nger
XLT . F·IOO power steenng ,
power brakes , delu xe mter ror
lnq u1re o t lngel s Fu rn iture ,
Middl epo r t Ftr sl conw · ft rs t
serve, $1500.

EAST
"'10 8 7653
¥ A
t K 10 3
.. A 92

,j,J8 65 4 3

fancy prints, accessories:

c•

the queen : This w1ns ~ gainst
s mslelon kmg , kmg-10, K X or
K x x m 1he East hand
This best play represents
only a 33 per. cent chance, but
Sidney disdained 1t
He led dummy 's )ack of
diam ond s' East covered .
Sidney look his ace, returned
to du nuny wi\11 a s&lt;eond spade,
led a second dwmond, finess·

7

A AK
yK QJ32

rl ltHI71

Far sof1, cha•r Wshlons,_ '
mottresses, padding. Ideal
tor aompers. Yorl.ty of · ,
sizes.
Velvets, nylon prints ,
herculons, vinyl solids, and

power, rodto ond tope 1974
Jeep Renegade V 8 standard .
Phone 742 ·3072

COUN TR Y Mobtle Home Park Rt
33 len mtles north of Pom(.oroy
Lorge Jots wt th concro1e pottos
s+dewolks, riJnn ers ond off
str ee1 po rk mg. Phone 992-7479

1971 HONDA CL·450
12.000
mt!es, siuy bor. crash bars,
pull back handl e bars , 'new ti re
and sea ls, Scrambler side
ptpes $650 Co li &lt;;149·2480

!

pm

NOR Til

WEST

FABRU'';

Pl EASURE HORSES dnd ponies,
olso w rll buy horses ·a nd
pontes Phone (614) 698· 3290,
Ru1h Reeves .

3 AND 4 RM furnr shed and un
furn is hed oph Phone &lt;;192.
5434

3891

~t~~;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~j

PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose ~ lo
l+on Phon e 247 2684 alter 5

Silodor reads opponent's play

CAPTAIN EASY

+ J87~4

UPHOLSTERY.

CH RI STMAS TREE SI On O ld Rt 33
between Co Roods 1B and 19
Tog now and cui fres h w hen
des+red Pr iced $2 00 to $8.00
Opha and Ba rbaro Oflu!t
Phone 992 ·3296

COAL , limes tone , an d calcium
( hfonde and .calcium br1ne for
du st ( ontrol ond special mixmg
so ft for form ers . Main Stree t,
Po mero ~ , Oh to or pho ne 992-

~:-:~.&gt;jl,

Phone 992-2181

CHO ICE ear corn, $2 00 bu shel
Phone 742 · 2359

HOUSEWORK wonled , by day or

with Mol' Dr Hoople

Pomeroy Landmark

TfWlEI. SAlES

~QI.J.fOAM

-

$195
New Hotpoinl M1crowav e
Ove n, mod el RE93D SAVE
S1OJ
N ew Co · Op Wa t er Sof .
tene rs
mo del VC -XV I Only S279 .95
Flanne l Shirts
14 .99

.....

,j,IO

(614) 985-4155
Chest or, Olllo
10·17·1 moll_'dl

beds
wa ll telephones and r. L---~----------'------·-J
par is, or cornplee hou sehold s.
Wr ite M D M il ler Rt . 4 ,
1~08 JEEP WAGONEER. A whefi! l
Pomeroy, Oh10 . Coli q92 7760 . Aut&lt;fSales:
drive . lock out hub 6 cyl .. $895 .
A lso , F·250 FORD 10 wheel
CAS H po td tor oi l makes and
1969 Nova e.-t ro sharp , new
drive pi ckup , good , Haro ld
model 5 of mobtle homes
porn! bu cket seal s, o+r shoc: ks,
Brewer , long Bottom or ca ll
Phone area cod e 614 · 423·9531 .
mag s Ph one 949 2480.
985·35S&lt;
TIMBER
Pom eroy Fores t Pro·
69 CHEVELLE MAliBU , yellow wt l h MUST SE LL . 1q70 Cutlass, $1000 .
· d uel ~ . Top pnce for sto ndm g
block vtn yl roo f and bl oclo; tn·
Phone 985·3.501 offer 6 p m
saw timber . Cal l Ken t Hanby
te nor. 307 engtn e . 2 door
] .446·9570.
1965
Pl YMOU TH Belvedere 2 dr .
aulomol +c. power !iteering,
sedan . automofcc transmiSS IOn ,
COINS, CURRENCY tok ens , old
!Ope playe r and new ex haust
good
co nd i ti on
Phone
pocket watches and chams .
s ~ ~t em , fair condtlion $ 1,000
992·357&lt;.
stl ver and go ld We need 1964
Phone 949 2574
and ol der sliver co1ns Buy, se ll ,
1&lt;;168 CUTLA SS, 2 dr , $700· 1969
or !rude' Coli Roger Wam sley,
Olds mobtle , 4 dr., $950, 1q74
for
Sale
7.&lt;12 233 1
BUick Apollo . 2 dr $2450
Phone 992 5786 from noon to 6
CASH +++ l or 1unk cor s F r ~e s
p m on ly , da1 ly
!ruck and Aut o , 24 HOUR
WRE CKER SE RVI CE•
Phone
H omet1te
1968 BONN EV ILL E PONTIAC
742 ·208 1.
Phone 992· 5535.
OLD JEWELRY Phone 992· 2075 .
1976 MUSlANG II Cob ra o1r , oil

Wtl l do odd tabs, rool+ng pam·
t1ng gutte r work . Phone 992·

ONE!

Get · FULL

PHOTOGRAPHY

:;,:~.:.~~ ... ~- POM.~~~.:~~ CO. @)

..~~=:---..----,. . s,,.,;ces Offered
THIS

53295

DA RK REO bull w1th wh tte face ,
LOSl +n the area o f Leod lng
Creek and Jesse Creek rood ,
oppro• +motely 500 lbs Phone

PUBLIC MEE TIN G , Dec. 9 Thu rs
day . 7 p tn at Racme Town HoU. 4 ROOM fu rms hed opt . uhlt ty
conce rn mg dru g abuse of .
po1d Pho ne 992·3356
Ron ne and surroundmg area
Pu blic enc ouraged to anend .

CHECK

1975 LUV PICKUP •

With topper, low mileage. rad io, w w tires. clean .

For Henl

• 21) Success IS assu red tod ay,
where you ca n act frrmly But 1f
you 're too lax tn dealing s wl1h GU N SHOOT ot the Ro d ne Gun
fnends, there' ll be d 1sap- r Club every Sundoy 1 p m
potn tments
As!&gt;or ted meol.s

PIS CES (Feb. 20-March 20)

Hob so n ,
74'12789.

a Cont inental Flavor 20; Amerlnn Issues Forum

33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal W11h 11 6;
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
In Tho Know ID; Wild Kingdom 13; Nashville On
The Rood 13;
B:GO-Bao Boo Black Sheep3,4,1S, Happy Day•6,13;
Tony Orlando &amp; Down B,10; Not ional Geographic
20,33.
8.30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,1 3.
9 : ~Pollce Woman 3.4, 15; Rich Man , Poor Mon 6, 13;
M·A·S·H 8,10; Nepal. Where The Gods Are Young
33; Evening o1 Championship Skating 20.
9:»-&lt;lne Day At A.Time 8,10; To Be Announcod 33.
10 GO-Pollee Story 3,4, IS ; Fam ily 6.13 ; Let Freedom
Ring B; Switch 101 News 20, Documentary
Showcase 33.
10 :30-Biock Perspective on the News 20
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13.15; MacNeil · Lehrer Report

WIN AT BRIDGE

-··

,,..

KEN GROVER

power steering and D
brakes, rally wheels, rad io, black and very attractive.

FOUNO· EYE GLAS!ES on Rl 7 ol

Radiator .-I~
Service

Aerial
Co,m'mercial
Schools
Weddings

s.m

$3995 ~

Consequences J; SoapBox 4; Bowling
forDoilars6: Le1'sGoToTheRaces8; News10; To
Toll Tho Truth 13; My Three Sons IS; Cooking With

6:30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr lttlth 6:
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20, lTV
Utilization 33.

PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY

1975 c'HEVY EL CAMI~O
Classtc, 350. v.a, automat tc,

7 : ~Truth or

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, Tt76 ·
5:fl0-'.Big Valley 3; Merv Grltfln 41 Brady Bundt 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
S.30-News 6; Fam ily Altair 8: Electric Company
20,33 ; Adam·12 13.
6:()()--News 3,4, 8 , 10~ 13, 15;
ABC News 6: Zoom 20 ;
Consumer E xi)C!rl ence 33.

Estate Wegon , locall owner car, wh ite radial tires, air
conditioning, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes. radio, dark red finish , black vinyl interior

return of one fema le chocolate
point S1 om ese cot betw een
So uth Second ond South Third
Sl Middleport , An swe r&amp; to the
nome of ··sa, ," Ph ooe 991·5454
or 618 So uth Th1rd St .

Television log for easy viewing

Business Serv.ices

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1975 CHEVELLE

3 VE RY UNHAPPY boys wont th e

n

.

'2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Th e pub lis her

Interest
Loans

oo
90
:n

hovl! o gun .1hoot $otu rdoy 01
6·30 p,m . at their bu1lding 1n
Bm:hon

'h,e Pub lish er resenes
the r i9ht to edit or reject

1,826 00

Auto Sale•

THE RAC INE Frre Oepo rtmenl will

·· REGULATIONS

Sllort Term Rentals

1 , ~00

Nutiee•

publite tlon .

AdvertJs!ng

Fast ~esults Use The Sentinel Classifieds

~

WANT AD.S
INFORMATION
DEADLIN,ES

•

�0r

10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 7.1976
Meigs Coun t y
Agr lcunural Socie ty
Fin!! ncial Statement
RI!CI!Ipts

A(lm•sslons

'l16,SO&lt;~

Membership Fees
Season T1cket Sales
Concessions

Class Entry Fees
Speed Receipts

State Aid (Jr &amp; Sr J
Co ~Jnty Aid

oc

7,14 9 0(
· 204 OC
11 ,982 21

456 00
2,730 00

22,698 00
3,500 01

5

B•tore

P .N! . I Day

Publication
_
Can ct iiBtlons ,
cor~ ec
Hons accepted t lr~ t dev of

1, 173 01. .

any

iectlonel

LonQ Term Ren tals

250 00

ad s

deemed

ob .

w ill not be rt"spons ible for

127 .92
4, 500 oo

more than
insertion .

Rc tu nds
MISCellaneous
Re tleposl ted c d
n~tJ beglnntrm o f yr
Tot al ·

1.440 29
7,781 90

RATES
For W1nt Ad SerYice
~ cent s per word one
inlert lon .
;
Minimum Cherge $1 00 .
14 cents per word three
conse cut ive Insertions
7&amp; ce nts per w9td si x
conse cut iv e lnsutlons .
15 Per Cent Discount on
pa id ads and· ads pa id
w ithin 10 da ys .

637
91,560

E .. perHe~

on e incorrect

Sat aries
\ uoci oo
Laborers
7,A66 OS
Taxes
1.257 6 1
1, 126 48
&lt;;on tra c t Work
Eleclric+an&lt;i
1.269 99
CARD OF THANKS
613 00
lm;l,(ra nce
&amp; OBITUARY
JUdges
58 I JQ
· n .oo tor . -~50 word .
Directors E11pcnse
061 65
•
Adm+nistraltve Exp
242 66 • m In.l.!:ru/..rrl~
t:ifCn----a dd liTOr ,..l woro :.1
Dues &amp; Subscnpttons
87 00
cent s.
Pn•rntum~;Sr Fa+r
6,090 16
BLIND -ADS
Prl'm+ums Jr Fa tr
s.sos
Addit ional 25c Ch arge
Ra,+n£' Pu r ses &amp;
per AdYerti sem ent
2J,B55 44
Expenses
OFFICE HOURS
PubliC LlliHires
LOS5 42
8 JO a m to S.OO p m .
~pecta l Attracttons
5,800 75
Da l ly , 8 30 am to 12 ' 00
SIHl+laii M
6·74 so
Noon Satur da y .
AllvPr t;&lt;;lng
641 B?
Phone today 992 2156
fiOt Jtl(i Sy&lt;;tE&gt;m
.1&gt;00 00
lC r+ l Ren t(IIS
389 25
~IIISC E:a:: pen5c
65 I A]
NOTICES
rr cm+urn, Bo.o k s A.
,
ATTN .: I!
Pr+ntmq
893 18
ALL HOUSEWIVES
M&lt;.ltn l ena m.+•
307 i6
A ll Ya rd Sales, Rummag e,
Ci't ptl r;d Improvement s
Porch and Basement Porch
8,840 ,62
and Basement Sa les , etc
B~nk r c1 n ovqn t
15, 000 00
m ust be p11 1d In adllance
1 o~n
lnt p;wmc nts 7,250 . 0 ~
Gel your s 1n early by
HJI endo f) r
J0701
n.soo 12 stopp ing by our office i't
ro tot
The Da lly Se nt inel , fll
Cour t St or wr ttln g Bo x
( !71 7, \1 (
729 . Pom eroy , Ohio 45769
w ilh your remill an ce

LOST, BROWN and block mole
Gormon Shephe rd dog Contact
Ronald Cowdery at 985-3S81 .

I

'

a.

AstraGraph
8em1ce Bede Osol

For Wedttesday, Dec. B, 1976

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Doro 't tcy to rn an ~:~ge ou tsi ders
th e woy you would those tn your
twmo tod ay Whore the family
wouldn't tn rnd , othe rs would take
off ense

TAU RUS (April 20- Moy 20)
Follow your own Judgment +n
bu•wws~. r•1a tters today If you
s&lt;:.t•~ thu c.ounsel of too many
pvGpte, 11u could be sadder, but
110

wiser

GEMINI ( Maw 21-J une 20)
M11tenal eondtttons are a m ixe d
bag for y hi today You m1ght
h[lve a Sltable gam but you
GOUld ter1 d 10 spend too m uch

CANCER {J une 21-July 22)
Wh1 te you have a knack l or per !)tJnal acquisiti on today. avoid
bo tng se lllsh If yo u tur n a
healt hy pro fit, sttare wit h those
wllo helped make It poss ibl e

LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) 11 you're
lfWolvod with an org aniza tion o r
group toUay , help them more
w1th your Sf'! VICes tha n with you r
pu r~ o.

VIRG O

(A.,g . 23-Sopt. 22) You
may hav e to apply a little subtl e
pressure on so meone who ts inrlt&lt;tJ ted to you Be fi r m, but don't
ol&lt;erclse too much leverage at
tins ltrne
LIB~A

(Sepl . 23 -0cl . 23)

Conce ntrate on pdorny goals to ·
day Yo u might not sco re at first ,
tJu t yo u co.n make a touc hd ow n
wit h a stel lar second effort.

SCORPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) One
Who doesn't have your best ln teresJs at heart m ay t hrow so me
onstac!es 111 your pat h t oday
However you'll h urdle them in
stnd e.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.

In Memory
IN MEMORY of Au nt Ethel Hol ter
Wht:!ul!:'+ who pa ssed owoy
Dec . 7, 1975
A "ilent thought. o secret lear
Keeps her memor y eve • dea r
Tm w tokes m ny th e edg e of
grte f
Bu t molnory hu m brJCk every
leal
Sadly tn 1sse rl by Ado E Boy s
IN MEMORY of Fra nk Grtmm who
pO'&gt;sed away Dec 7. 1975 One
)' COr ago today
We k now your no llorgollen
Any r+ mo through! the y(!.ar .
A11d th1s IS I U.S I to tel l you .S O ,
This time of th e year .
r or yo u ore bemg thought of
m o ver y ~pec 10l woy ,
More deeply onrl s1ncere ly the n
1hese wo1d s
con eve t soy
Sad ly nliS sed by wrl e, Nev a and
s!ep ·chtldren

Notices
NOW occeplt ng p1ono studen ts
beg 1nnars m termedtates, ad
van ce d stud ents Coi l
992·
1270
INTERVIEWS wtll be held Mndoy
Nov 27 1970 sloil1ng o l I I 00
o m o d ock 1n the off ice of the
Me1gs County Cornmlss,oners.
Coul'l House. Pomeroy . Oh1o
tor or ch +lec ts w ho me on the
appr oved li st of State Ar
chrll'l'c lb (f'u b/, c Works Store ol
Oht o) for th e proposed mv lll purpo sc focd+l)' for Mergs
County . Please coli for oppotnl
rnen t 997 78~5
PIANO INST RUCT IONS Chil dren s
and adult s. Juna VanVranken
992· 2270
ALTHO UGH B 1rch h ~ l d's Tox tder my ha s burned work STILL WILL
BE
DONE
111
temp or ar y
qua rt ers. Hove your lrophtes
mounl txi tod o ~ on d trea sure
them l o m o~row . BIRCHF IELD's
TA XIDERM Y, eosl ol Rutl an d ,
mil e on Rt
1'24
Phon e
742-2 178

CAPRICORN (Dec:. 22-Jan 18)
GJVe. and. take IS 1mportant tn
one- to-one rela tt o nsh1ps today
You have to make concession s
or there II be 1'10 profits

XMAS SPECIAL
Any Sew1ng
mochtn e c.leoned o+led and ad·
1usted
$5 .98
THE Sew in g
Center Middl eport
RUMMA GE SALE Dec Blh and

AQ UARI US ~Jan . 20 - Feb. 19) !n
career matters do wh at you think
to lle b est . not wha t you thtn k
r lw uld be don e to pa cify
,11 1\her
To thine o wn self be
truo

9lh , Wads ond Thursdo)' , 186
N s.eco nd M+ddl epor t Ne•l to
Deb s Barber Shop clothr r:g .
avon bo lll es, m• sc
YO U IN beautiful lull co lor pa r·
l rott s. The Pho to Place (Bob
Hoefl•,h) 992 5292,

Don't be too l tmtd abouttakmg a
chence to Improve your lot I O·
day. Even if you fail, wh ich 1sn 't
likely, you 'll still be be tter o lf

: ~ Your
Birthday

'\iii

Dec. 8, 1978
Be alert thi s year for unusual
busIness o p p o rt u n Il l es
Someonemsycometoyouwlth
a beller mousetrap wh1ch you
can take to the marketplace.

(Are you e SegsnBrius? Bernice
Osol nas written a specuJI AsrroGra ph Lett er for you. Fo r your
copy sen d 50 cents end a self.
addressed. sta mped envelope to
Astro·Grap/1, P.O. Box 489,
Radio Cay Sta tion , New Yotk,

N Y 10019 Be sure to ask lor
Sagutoous Volum9 1.)

HOUSE
OUR BO ARDI.,G
""

bifocal s.

Phone

-·

Yard Sale
IF YOU hove o serv rce to off er .
won! to buy or sell !l.Ome lhing,
oe lookm g lo r work ,
or
~ o u ' l l gel results
who lever
Ios i er with o Sen tm ef Wont Ad .
Coll992 ·215b

pay

and

a llowan Ce$
wh i le
we
pro&gt;wlde to p training In
exciting f ield of )tour
choice. If you're 18 to 31
ye•rs old and can quality,
we' ll guarantee Dffer In
writing. Sign on now and
get current liberal G. I .
BILL be'n ef lt5 . Call or see
your Navyman at :
211 Columbua Rd .

Athens, OH

PH : 59J. JS66 {COUtcU

L-....:~:.:,::::;::;::::~:::.::::.:.:....-1

9._-Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,

6iA

(;ampi ng Equipment
1976 TRAVEL lRAilER, fully equ1p
ped w1t h showe r 17 ''• fl sell
reasonabl e Phone 9CJ2.9981

FOUR CEM ETERY plots ot Metgs
Memory Gardens . W1ll sell
seporo tel y Phone 985·4146

5 MONTH OlD Registe red femal e
lm h Setter . $75
Phon e

TRE ES,

Mom

St

AVA ILABLE al Rtver stde Aport ·
menh I bedroom, $ 100 per
month, 2 bedroom s $ 133 An · SCHOOL SEWI NG ma chin es
Equal Housi ng Oppor luntl y .
Stngers tn · wa lnut con so lette
Phone 992-3273
Phone 992 -5 146
ONE BEDROOM Apt s at VILL AGE
MANOR tn Mi ddlepo rt l or $1 04
monthly plus elec o r S1JO +n·
cl ud+ng elec . LOWER RATES l or
SE NIOR Cl'r l ZE NS Conven tent
to shopp tng on Third and Mi ll
Srs rn Mrddl epor l . Brand new
ht gh qua lity oparhnenls See
the mana ger at Apt 28 or coli
992· 772 1. An Eq ual Hous ing
Opportun ity .

FREIGHT DAMAGED October 19
1976
Zig · Zog
Sew1 n g
Mach +nes ,
but t on hol e
monogram ,
el&lt;:.
Origina lly
Sl 79 95 wtl l sell lor $59 ~5 cosh
or terms Phon e &lt;;192 5146.

GOOD

MIXED

hoy .

Phon e

949·2523.

5 ROOM HOUSE o nd both In
Raci ne oreo Phone 992 5858

1971 LTD. o•r- condit ioned , p b ,
p s , e•celle nt condihon Four
45 X 1.4 SnOW hres , one boy 5 26
inch bik e new Col l992·34.42.

2 BE DROOM MOBil E home adult s
on ly Phone 992·55:15

TWO COATS. See Pomeroy MotoiCompany , o r A .R Knight.

SMALl
SEM f.furm shed
apo rt
men l
126 Mulberry Ave
Phone 992·2030

USEO fORESTRY

Trmbeqa(k 230D Sktdder John
Deere 4408 SKtdd er: Pett1bone
Super 8 Cory Ltft , Morbark 48
m Chip-Poe; Prentice GRM
Loader Mossey·Ferguson 356
Lt li Contact Oon Groves , or
Lyons Equtpment Co., Inc
Ctr clevtlle, Ohio 431 13. Phone
( b l4 )
(614 ) 59 6 · 4769 or
474.6()28 .

4 ROOM FURNISHED o pt , close to

Powell 5 Supe r Vo lu

Phone

992·3658
EFFI CI ENC Y HOUSE , adult s only
+dea l lor 2 men No pel s. Phone
q92·779 1 alter "' p m
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
Rocme A reo . Phone 992 5859

7409
EXPERIENCED 6A6YSITTERS lok
mg rese rvations l or all n+ght
and hour ly s11t ing lor New
Yllors Eve For mforma t1on,
coll992 ·7092
BOOKEEP ER All pho ~es . Phone
992· 7476

: ERTIFIEO' READING

Speciol+st
w1th 4 yea rs e)(perience help·
ing di!iobled ond reluctant
readers. espectally Jr. H1gh
level . For other tnformot+on
and hourly rates Co119~2· 7735

b1 hour Ca ll 9927 135. can fur

ni sh references

POTATOES and pumpkins C W.
Proff itt , Portland Ohio . Phone

843·2254.
COAL for so le . Open 6 days per
week and evenrngs Fo r further
illform otton cal l {6 1-t) 367133 8.

APPl ES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
. STATE ROUTE 6119. PHONE
WIL KESV ILlE, (6 14) t&gt;69·:1785
Phone 992 3410.
FU Ll ER Bru sh
Produc
ts ,f or horse
sole.
CAMPER,
S600
Also
trailer , $450. Phone (614 ) 698·
32'10

EQUIPMENT

ARMSTRONG GAS furnace used
one season , $300 . Phone

992·7135.
ELECTRIC SINGER sewing machine
1n cobinel wifh seot tncluded
Phone 992· 3626
AN TIQUE DINING roo m suite, ook
banquet table . 6 cho trs and buf·
l et Phone 992·6008 to see
JOHN DEERE Jesef 3'50 end
loader. excellen t condiltOn
Wmch lair leads , fo rk s and
ove rcob . Ph one 949·2663.

Mobil" Komes'

tor

Side

MOBIL E' home for sal e 0 1 ren t, 3
bedroom s, ol utd tltes po1d .
Phone 992 ·7751 .

Real Est~te ·,;;;,-~I:~:~
-

1H E fARMERS HOME AD ·
MIN ISTRATION HAS FOR SALE ,
FROM TIME TO TIME. FARM .
RESIOENTIAL .
BU SINE SS ,
RECREATION ANO·OR OTHER
PROPE RTIES IN ATHENS AND

MEIGS COUNTIES ANY LICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKER IN·

TERESTED IN LISTING 1HESE
PRO PE Rli ES SHOULD CONTACT

lHE

FARMERS

HOME

COND

ST REET, POMEROY ,

OH IO

457b9

TE LEPHONE

992-6644 .
3 BE DROOM house. both ond utdi ty , I ocre o l ground +n
S)' rocuse, Phone 949 2057.
4 BEDROOM home on Butternut
Ave . in Pomeroy Cool or gos
healing new kttchen and otr
co ndi tioning New hot water
hea ler
I % baths
Phone

992·3356 .
2 STORY brick home on Mulberrv
Avenue. 2 bath s, new roo f .
some
r e modeling
do ne .
Reason abl e Phone 992·3356
3 BEDROOM, full basement , hot
woter heot 11/J baths. new hot
wa ter heale r , new k 1tchen,
wo lllo wal l carpet, downs ro trs,
air
conditi oni ng ,
newly
remodeled Iorge yard . Phone
992-3356

-

1975 HONDA

CBSOO·T,
new battery, in
storage except for 3 month s.
1333 mrl es . (Osf ov er $1700,
will sell for $950. Phone

BLACK AND white 16 Inch Ad ·
m1rol portab le T V . $75. Phone

·--

992·5006

LOOK TRIM . Tolo:e Algtness diet
pion and Aquovop " woter pills"
Village Phor mocw 271 N . 2nd
· Ave . Mtddlepo: t _ ~-.

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?
Let Pomeroy Llndmork
soften &amp; eondl11on your
water UC-XVt
ONLY

'279,95

Let us test your water
Free.

Pomeroy Landmark
· Jack W. CarSey, Mgr.
Phone992-2181

Also, lev awev

Hubbard's

GreenhouSe

David Parsons, Owner

949·2114

Phone 992·5776
Syracuse, Ohio

11·4-1mo.

HOMESITES for sole . I 'cere and
up. Middleport , near Rutland
Co l1 992 7481 .
NEW :1 bedroom house , 2 ba ths,
all elec , I acre, Mi ddleport
d ose to Ru tla nd Phone 992·

7481 .
---~-

SMALL form for sole . 10% down.
owner ft~onced. Mon roe Coun ·
tv W. Va . Phone (30-4) 772·
--~--

COUNTR Y farmland w 1th seclud
ed woods , water and good oc·
cess in Monroe County , W Va
$1 000 down , ca ll (304 ) 772·

TOM RUE MOTORS

·=
~
........
--·

.

...........
..
..........
..,..,..

. ·,1011

24

hour

LITTLE ORPHAN

mO.

oc'res 6 room house . both ,
portly carpeted, two out .
butldmg s
dug basement ,
one·fhi rd hlloble , mt ne roi
nghts located neor Danvill e.
Reduced for qui ck so le ,
$23 ,500. Phone 742 -2766 .

NEARLY new ol elec home lull
ba!iement , for sole by owne r
Rutland oreo. Phone 742·2531
TUPPERS PLAIN S, OHIO Three
bedroom house . fam ily room
ftre ploce . 2 baths , dtshwosh er ,
ra nge
i
carpet .s un
$26 ,500. Phone

Vl rgit B. Sr .• Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy , Ohio45769
Phone 992-3325

NEITHER CA~ I ·~ HA ~ NOW
I KMOW WHAT THEY MEAN ,.
Wti~ THEY SAY ONE "HAS

YE1!1 LITILE fUTURE'-

Dependable ·

Oi I or Gas Burners

PICKENS HOWE.
Por1!~nd , Q.

BORN LOSER

I&gt;

D:Jil'T FOR.b!"T,
IMA~

ELECIRONIC T.,V. CLIN IC. New · ElW..;:O::O.::D=B-0-WE
-RS-'-R-E_P_A-IR~T V shop, Efectrol)rc T.V. Clink
Service call , $5.95. Co lor , B &amp; W
antenna sy51e ms ster eos, etc.
572 South Thtrd , Middleport.
Phone 992·6306 Corry in an d
save money

GRAVElY SERVICE - Save 25 Pet
on lobar by hovtng yo ur Gravely Tracto r repa ired or se rviced
now Gravely Tractor Soles,
Pomeroy , O hio Phone (614)
992-2975
WILL TRIM or cut trees and shrub·
bery. Phone 742·3167 or &lt;;149.
2545

FROSTY'S C 6. RADIO Equ1p ..

Sweepe rs , toa sters, rrons, all
small applianc es. Lawn mower.
ne11t to Stole H1ghwov Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6 1.4) 985·
3B25 .
~:::..........,...,.,-.,----,-­
REMODELING, Plumbtng, healtng
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex·
perience . Phone 992· 2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs, ser·
vice , all makes , 992·2284. The
Shop ,
Pomeroy .
Fabr i c
Authorized Singe r So les end
Ser ... ice . We sharpen Scissors .

heet, 2 ceramic

baths. Nice mod. kit ., tr0f1t
2 car

l11 ~ WHO~o

13 Cower
14 Be a

'?(.HOO~

ham

FOR. ~ou

GASOLINE ALLEY

modern

large

kitchen ,

carpeting, garage, 8 tenths
acre . OWNER TRANS FERRED. $28,000.00.
ABOUT 2 ACRES - 6 yrs.
old. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
very nice kitchen, utility
R., central heat and air

basement. 3 car
garage and storage. Close
to HI School. 529,800.00.
CORNER DOUBLE LOT
with large bri ck, 5
bedrooms, 2 bath s, ultra
modern kitchen {has
eve~ythlng). Natural gas
hot water heat. Fireplace.
ASKING $20.000.00.
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
NOTED IN THIS AD - WE
HAVE GREAT DEMAND
FOR NEWER HOMES LET US SELL YOURS
TODAY.
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
. BROKER
99~· 2259 or 992-2U.
cond., full

instance
(4
'
wds.1

old 4 Br, house, lf2

bath, 2 porches on Rt 7.
Asking $12,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Older 8
room home with 4 Brs .. 2
baths , leve l lot with
garage . S12.000.

the authorities !

nose
(abbr .)
32 Remote
33 Nautical
chain

SEPTI C Systems installed by
licensed
mstall er
Shepard
Controcton. Phone 7-'12· 2409.

r---------_;;,----.-,.....-~-....,.-.,....--------...----.
THAT'S
NATURALLY ~.'- WHY
WHY 'WE'RE [:0'70/J THINK I
""r, ,_ •·15TOPP/N6
ALL THAT
2H~RE!~

CARPENTER , floorm g . ceilin'g ,
ponehng Phone 992·2759

l .DO-Tomorrow 3.

2:10-News 13.

'i}jJjjNf fi;)'ft ~THAT sCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ $

34 Literary
musketeer
36 Money in
Milan
37 Philippine
language
38 Descended
I poet.)

glass doors tn dining. 2 car:

We have now moved to our
I - ot
Eost

t
r; J

TIFFY
1

Cl'l .... lhoc._r,_

is

it:~ VENET

A X Y D I, II A A X R
I. 0 N G F E 1. I. 0 W

i

M~-

L....!;,=l=.!,~~f'"~__,.,V.....,'i
.

l A

l

.

One l etter simp ly stands for another. In this s&gt;J mple 1\. i s

used for the three L·s, X fo r the two O's, ('tc. Si ngle l etters,
apostrophes, the length and for mation of the '"'ord s arc all
hints Each day the code letters arr different.

LISTEN TO THE
WINNIE

SWAP SHOP

- WMPO • 92.1 FM

7 PM

CRYPTOQUOTES

NES
WELL! HAD A II.ON6ERFUL
TRIP WE51:•. MET &amp;oME ,___

BVF

IN1ERE5llN6 PEOPLE

DSHFKFY

ALONG 1J.!E WAY...

WJCER
NR

ILR
CSAJQ

I L Q

y J Q.

OLQBFAK .

- LPSPRWSAQ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : FINDING A WAY 1'0 LIVE THE
SIMPLE UFE 1'0DA.Y IS MAN 'S MOST COMPLICATED
TASK. - HENRY A. COURTNEY

92 in the CountiJ

0

l!l71i Kin!( Jo'e111urf'l Synthr ll l e, Inc.

I LESTUSj
I I r

~
PUL.LEt7 OUT AFTER
·~N O~AL. EXAM.

IDRYBAN±
V
'i. I
I I
Prlnt111awer he111: A{X XXITI )
~

...A
1--L-.L...Jr:......a::.....&lt;L-.

Yaolerda .,
y

Now arrange the circled lenera to

form tha aurpriJe answer, aa aug•.

gested bylhe above cartoon.

IJumble•:
CHANT
Anower: What

IT SHORE IS

Mon., Tues:, Vft\1.111 ~.-:;:n•s·~•
THURSDAY TIL 12
M

HOW ABOUT MY
6RANDFATHER ?

FRillY UNTIL 8.Pll

=
MASON fURNnuRE
nl-5592 .

Hlnn1n

...

He·s

REALL'I
DEPRESSED'

LONESOME OVER AT
M\f Ot: HOUSE WIF
ALL TH' FELLERS
GONE FLOAT

.,

,,,,,

HE JUST FOUND OUT KE·s
TOO OLD .TO ATTEND A
MID- LI FE SEMINAR!

' ..

'

FISHIN'

'fO'RE PLUMB
WELCOME 10
STAY WIF US
TILL THEil
GIT BACKI
lOWEEZlf

.

I
ALL THAT
DADBURN LONESOME

•

Mlllllbll••••
I'

\

(An swers tomdrrow,

BURST . AVENGE LEGUME
people of differing oplnlono mtght join
In - AN ARGUMENT

BARNF;Y

garage . 532,500.
RUTLAND - 2 bedrooms,
bath, fr0f1t parch, utility
building and garage. near
shcool. $11,000.

byHenriAmoldandBobLoo

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leHer lo each square, lo fo rm
four ordinary words .

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;!UOTE - Here's h ow lo work

In kitchen, and Ohio ele.
hoot. S23,DOO.

ba1hs, Ele. FA heat, sliding

23 Frost
24 Tongue-lash
25 Without
ethics
29 Mountaintop
nest
30 Vaquero's
rope
rssier
elcome Kind of dog

born

RUTLAND - 1 Yr . otd 3

acre, new 3 bedrooms, 2

9 Required
13 W1th 7
Down,
seasonal
admonition
15 Ethioptan
lake
18 Reducing
regimen
21 Iowa
export

31 Kind of

bedrooms ,
bath,
thermopane windows, eat·

1

Vestttday's Answer

are read
{2 wds .)
24 Thaila nd
money
26 Sundered
Z7 Scottish
uncle
28 To \he -

"

TUPPERS PLAINS - I'll

HARRISONVILLE -

2 Liturgical
vesbnent
3 Frank·'
lncense or
myrrh, for r

leaves

Thieves! I must alert

10; Dinah 13.
Three Sons 3: Emergency One 6; Partr idge
Family 8; Flnln1s1ones 15.
5:1)()-Big Valley 3; Merv Grlttln 4: ; Brody Bunch 6;
Mister Rogers 20,33: Star Trek 15.
5:3D-News 6; Family Affai r 8; Elec . Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
6:GO- News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,15; ebc New• 6; Zovm 20;
Teaching Children 33.
6:3D-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grlfftlth
6; CBS New s 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:1)()-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tellt he Truth 4; Bowllno 4P~L
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To
Tell1he Truth 13; My Three Sons 15: Consumer
Survival Kit 20; Sportpage 33.
, .
7:30-Dolly 3: $100.000 Nome That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bonk 13;
Wild Kingdom 15.
B:GO-CPO Sharkey 3,4,15; Christmas In Dloneyland
6, 13; Gunsm o~e 8; Novo 20,33 ; Good Times 10.
B:30-Mclean Steven son 3,4115; Jeffersons 10.
9:oo--Sirota's Court 3,4,15; Carpenters 6,13; Movie
"Save 1ho Tiger" B, 1D; Soundstage 20.
9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; The Pr~&lt;:llce ~. 15
10 :0Hue st 3,4.15; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; News 20; To
Be Announced 33.
10:30-Book Beat 33.
11 :GO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Movie " The
Mating Game" 8; Mary Har1!T1 ~n 10; ABC News 33.
12:()()--Movle "The Law 8.1he Lady" 10; Janokl33 .
12 :40-Mystery ot the Week 6,13.
~ : 3D-My

IS Quaker's
pronoun
I Within
16 Venerable
(comb.
17 East lnd1an
fonn)
s Agile
cedar
19 I:.inlls place . 6 Silkwonn
20 All over
7 See 13
I Fr.)
Down
21Vocal (4wds.)
22 Where
8 F1shennan

1

garage, &amp; full basement.

garden, 57500 .

8; Sesame St. 20,33j Movie " Be!ot Foot Forwe.rd"

,creation

r;-'-

3,.c.

1·15-News 11

~~@~\:!~

39 Ill-point
type
40 Entreaty
DOWN
1 Chef's

boost

lf.li'UWD

5232

FRALEY's Lumber Company ot
ju nct1 on of 346 ond 50 W .. · SEP TIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Albany Off1ce phone, {614)
Sanitation , 1192·3954 or 992698·6700, or res idence · (6l4)
242.::
8,.------69B·5310 or 698·8890. Open 7
WILL do roofing , construclton,
o m,:.:c_~-~----plumbing and heotmg. No .job
EXCAVATING .·
BACKHOES .
too Iorge or too smo fl . Phone
DOZER , TRENCHER, lOWBOY
742·2348 .

DUMP TRUCK S. SILL PULLINS.
PHONE . 992·2478 , DAY OR
NIGHT.

11~

EXCAVATING, dozer . baclo:hoe
and di tcher Charles R. Hat·
f 1eld. Back Hoe Serv1ce,
Rutland , O hto Phone 7-'1'2·2008 .

Now Of11y $35,000.

acres,

4•

II Susceptible
12 Morale

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader end
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo·boys lot hue ; will haul
frll dirt, 'to soil, limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Ro.ser Jef·
fe rs , day phone 992·7089,
night phone W2-352S or m.

GAS AND OI L furnace r epa ir ,
soles and service , 24 hour s.
Phone 8&lt;43·21 65.

3 YRS . OLD - 3 bedrooms,

Tf\{IT

.;mi-l
~!'?ITS lD ~OJR
H~ WHII.f
Ho H/..Dltl!;

BRADFORD, Auctioneer Co m·
plete Seryice . Phone 949-2.. 87
or 949 2000 Racine, O h1o , Crttt
Bradford ,

older stucco home. 2 baths,
furnace heat, equ ipped
kitchen and 2 car garage.

frame house with 3 Brs.,
Ph baths, front porch and

.:LOSE TO MEIGS Ht, brick and frame, about 4'12
years old. 3 lovely BR,
modern bath, u1111+y R.,

:1 N T

d1 c~r

MP6. l\1®JAI'f't.~ I

698 7331. ~-----

and ba c k por ches

~ .

Pass

ACROSS
I Anagram
for ages
5 Large car
10 Uganda 's

843·2165

3 bedroom

wood

~

a

It
INT

Pass
Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH

11.11-1 mo.

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Ex·
cov oting . s,e ptr c sys te ms,
dozer, bockhoe , dump truck ,
limes ton e, gravel . blacktop
paving. Rt U3 Phone 1 {614)

NEW LISTING - Business
bu ilding with~ apartments.
and pool ha ll with all
equipment.

ARE

.-.~

Furnace Service.

PLY MOUTHS
Phone 992-2594
Middleport, 0 .

eve rythi ng 1n two·woy radio,
antennas ond occes. Phone
843·2855, Portland

TEAFORD

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

ON
NEW r77

DOZER work and weld1ng . Co n·
tact James Persons , Rt . I ,
7. ~~~e J~4 ) ~7..:._630~-Rocme , on Ca rmel Rood .
------.
3 bedrooms , l'h baths, Io rge liv·
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec..
ing room , dining roo m and kit
plumbtng and heo t+ng Phone
chen, fu ll y corpeled Phone
.
1_ ~2·58S8 .
992 -3129, or 992 5434.

RUTLAND -

1¥

South

It didn't require any great
expertise for the late Sidney
Silodor to see that three
notrump · would have been a
better con tract than fiv e
d1amonds S1dney also knew
that North should have let him
play three notrump, but lhere
was no use cry mg over spilt
milk . Sid ney wa$ ln fiv e
diamonds and had lo do hiS
best to mak e 1t.
He ca lled for dummy 's Jack
of hearts . East produced the
ace and immediately played
the ace of clubs Then East led
a low spade
Sidney. was in dummy and
had to tackle the trump suit
The norn\al cor rect play w1th
lhe particular trump holding
JS to lead a low one and fmesse

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Co mmercial property opprox. 17
ocre!l. leve l fond , located ot
Tuppers Plains on Oh1o. Rou te

sq

PaSs
Pass
11ass
P.\SS

3102 or (304) 172·3227

'

.

Norlh East

Pass

DAILY RENTALS

NEW LISTING - 7 room

992·S324 .

.. 58·1630

'6.95

-

ss.oo.

MIDDLEPORT - 5 Yrs.
old. ~ bedrooms, bath, nat.
gas F.A. furnace, birch
kit., and level lot . S23,000.

MOTORCYCLE .

FARM EQUIPMENT , Reduce the
cost of buy tng for~achinery
up to IO o/, by lak in
vantage
of Fede ral Income
cred rt on
equipment purchase before
Jan . Is! Shrnn 's Tractor So les ,
l eon , W. Va . Phone {304 )

4·1~ 1

WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER 8, 1970
6 :00-Sunrlse Semester 10.
1
6.15-E ngllsh 3, Form Report 13.
' East cashed his ace of clubs
6 20-Not For Women Only 13
so 'qui ckly thai I knew he
6 30-AG· USA 4; Arthur Smith 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
lhoughl he had a trump tri ck
Chils1opher Closeup 10.
com ing, so I dec1ded lo lay
Report 3.
6:45-Mornlng
him for e ith er Iu s actu al
6:50-Gooct
Morning,
West VIrginia 13
holdmg or kmg·tenxx .' ·
6:65-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13
7:GO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning , Amer ica 6,13; CBS
News 8. Chuck White Repor1s 10.
I
ACanadian reader wants to
7:05- Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
know th e signifi ca nc;e or
7:30-Schoolles 10
8:GO-Lossle 6; Cap1 . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame S1 . 33.
Easl"s pass when lhe bidding
8·30-Big Valley 6.
has gone one spade by South,
double by Wes1, redou ble by · •· 9:oo-A.M 3; Phil Donahue ~. 13,15;; Lucy Show 8:
Mike Douglas 10 .
Norlh, pas s by F;asl
9:30-Cro..-Wits 3; One Lite to Live 6, Good Day 8.
A very few people play thiS
10 :1)()-Santord 8. Son 3.4, 15; Price Is Rlgh1 8, 1D; Mike
pass to say " I lhmk we can
Douglas 13.
beat thiS one-spade conlraCl."
10 :15-General Hospllal 6
The great ma)on ty, mcluding
10: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15
the Jacobys, play it as asking
11 :OD-Wheel of Fortune 3, IS; Weekday 4: Edge ot
West to gel uul of hts own
Night 6; Gambii8.1D; Morning wl(h D.J . 13, Elec.
troubles .
Co.
20.
(Do you have a question
11 :3D-S1u mpers 3,4, 15; Happy Davs 6, 13; Love of Ute
for the ex perts? Write "Ask
8,10; Sesame St . 20 ,33. .
rhe Jacobys" ca re of this
11 •S5-Take Kerr 8: Ms . Flxlt 10.
newspaper Th e Jacobys will
12:0CI--News 3,6,8.10 ; Bob Braun 4; SO Grand Slam 15.
answer mdtvtdual quest1ons
12:30;-Gong Show 3,15; Al l My Ch ild ren 61 13.
If stamped, sell-addressed
12:55-NBC News 3, 15.
envelopes are enclosed. The
1:oo--Somer se13: Ryan's t1~pe 6, 13; Con centration 8;
most in teresllng questio ns
You ng &amp; lhe Rstless 101 No1 For Women Onty 15.
wtll be used in thts column
1:30-Days ot Our -Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13: As
and wt/1 receive copies of
The World Turns 8, 10.
JACOBY M ODERN )
2:0CI--$2D,OOO Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:3D-Doctors 3,4,15: One Lite to Live 13; Guiding
Llgh1 8, 10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4,15; From Jan ice. John:Mary.
and Michael 8.10; On Aging 20 .
3: 15-'-General Hospita l 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6; Lllas Yoga &amp; You 20
4:1)()-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby , M.D. 41
Somerset 15; Howdy IJoody 6; Mickey Mouse Club

1:00-Tomorrow

10 and wrapped up the con·
tra ct.
When asked why he took this
unusual pl ay, S•dney replied .

Pass 5 .
Pass Pa ss
Opcnini lead - lO •

Rutland , Oh•o 45775
Ph . U14t 742·24 09
W e Deliver
7 28 ·4 mos .

LARRU!~~DER
Ph.

'

$3 4,000.

REDUCED PRICE
John Deere
8ul ldozer , $2700 Saw mill
truck. All for $3000 Wtll sell
sl!pora!e Phone 99:2·3792 .

-

IWMINIJI

POINSETTIAS now for
CHAtSTMAS.
600 0
to
choose tram . PERFECT
FOR GIFTS in red , White
and pink. 53 00 to 56 .00 20
pet . !"ff an 10 or mor e

AD ·

MINI STRATION A T 22 1 WEST SE ·

Located in Langsville
Box28-A

SIDIN&amp;.SOifiiT
CUTTEIUWIINGS

10

Square Yard Installed

.

..

WtNDOIIS

&lt;~oK Q7

Wrst

.

33

ed successfully agai nst East's

BoUt vulnm abl e

Tns Rafter Co.

!£PLAC£.ENI

YOUR HOME In pots and

BACK CARPETING

-

S!Jutheastern Ob~

IIIIIDOII$1DOOIS

hangt ng basket s from 7Sc

3102 or {304) 172·3227

992·3565.

51111M

NOTICE ·

ASSORTED R~SBER

.

FURNI SHED two bedroom opt ,
adu lts o n f ~ No pels M td·
die po rt Phone 992 -3a74 .

..... ioll II... IAttiCI

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR

Racine, Ohio

Pels fur Sal~ "=··

ALL WHITE German .Shepherd
pu pptes, full blooded . See
R1 chord Gilkey, Cltlton . W Vo

,.;.,_

ANY PITCH "
ANY SIZE

'

11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Movie " The Man Who
Would Not Ole" 6,13 ; Kolok 8; Mary Hortman 10;
ABC News 33.
12 :00-Movle " The Dangerous Days or Kiowa Jones "
10; Jonakl 33
12:30-Movle " Fer .De. Lanco" e.

,j,Q9 2
• 75 4
t AQ96

Hy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

CARPET SHOP

1&lt;;173 VOLKSWAGON 4 speed ,
good condr tion . $1000 Pho ne
992 5875
.

SOUTH tDI

hllllllliln StnK•

,

RACINE

Rd 28

STEREO AM ·FM rod1 o, 8 track
Balance
l ope combmollon
$106.40 or terms. Co il ~92 · 3965

CHRISTMAS
Rut land

¥10 986

810111

~

Pl. Pleasant
Ph. 675·3469
9:30-5:00 Daily
Tilt B:000 t:_ridays

1972 NOVA . 6 (y l1 nder, standard ,
on floor In good co ndttian ,
$ 1250 Phone 94&lt;;1-2860 or 5ee
Char les B1 ssell at Boshon Co .

phone {304)773·5962

• J.
t2 .

DI_RE.g re~Rs\~e§ALES

1q73 FORD PICKUP truck , Ra nger
XLT . F·IOO power steenng ,
power brakes , delu xe mter ror
lnq u1re o t lngel s Fu rn iture ,
Middl epo r t Ftr sl conw · ft rs t
serve, $1500.

EAST
"'10 8 7653
¥ A
t K 10 3
.. A 92

,j,J8 65 4 3

fancy prints, accessories:

c•

the queen : This w1ns ~ gainst
s mslelon kmg , kmg-10, K X or
K x x m 1he East hand
This best play represents
only a 33 per. cent chance, but
Sidney disdained 1t
He led dummy 's )ack of
diam ond s' East covered .
Sidney look his ace, returned
to du nuny wi\11 a s&lt;eond spade,
led a second dwmond, finess·

7

A AK
yK QJ32

rl ltHI71

Far sof1, cha•r Wshlons,_ '
mottresses, padding. Ideal
tor aompers. Yorl.ty of · ,
sizes.
Velvets, nylon prints ,
herculons, vinyl solids, and

power, rodto ond tope 1974
Jeep Renegade V 8 standard .
Phone 742 ·3072

COUN TR Y Mobtle Home Park Rt
33 len mtles north of Pom(.oroy
Lorge Jots wt th concro1e pottos
s+dewolks, riJnn ers ond off
str ee1 po rk mg. Phone 992-7479

1971 HONDA CL·450
12.000
mt!es, siuy bor. crash bars,
pull back handl e bars , 'new ti re
and sea ls, Scrambler side
ptpes $650 Co li &lt;;149·2480

!

pm

NOR Til

WEST

FABRU'';

Pl EASURE HORSES dnd ponies,
olso w rll buy horses ·a nd
pontes Phone (614) 698· 3290,
Ru1h Reeves .

3 AND 4 RM furnr shed and un
furn is hed oph Phone &lt;;192.
5434

3891

~t~~;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~j

PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose ~ lo
l+on Phon e 247 2684 alter 5

Silodor reads opponent's play

CAPTAIN EASY

+ J87~4

UPHOLSTERY.

CH RI STMAS TREE SI On O ld Rt 33
between Co Roods 1B and 19
Tog now and cui fres h w hen
des+red Pr iced $2 00 to $8.00
Opha and Ba rbaro Oflu!t
Phone 992 ·3296

COAL , limes tone , an d calcium
( hfonde and .calcium br1ne for
du st ( ontrol ond special mixmg
so ft for form ers . Main Stree t,
Po mero ~ , Oh to or pho ne 992-

~:-:~.&gt;jl,

Phone 992-2181

CHO ICE ear corn, $2 00 bu shel
Phone 742 · 2359

HOUSEWORK wonled , by day or

with Mol' Dr Hoople

Pomeroy Landmark

TfWlEI. SAlES

~QI.J.fOAM

-

$195
New Hotpoinl M1crowav e
Ove n, mod el RE93D SAVE
S1OJ
N ew Co · Op Wa t er Sof .
tene rs
mo del VC -XV I Only S279 .95
Flanne l Shirts
14 .99

.....

,j,IO

(614) 985-4155
Chest or, Olllo
10·17·1 moll_'dl

beds
wa ll telephones and r. L---~----------'------·-J
par is, or cornplee hou sehold s.
Wr ite M D M il ler Rt . 4 ,
1~08 JEEP WAGONEER. A whefi! l
Pomeroy, Oh10 . Coli q92 7760 . Aut&lt;fSales:
drive . lock out hub 6 cyl .. $895 .
A lso , F·250 FORD 10 wheel
CAS H po td tor oi l makes and
1969 Nova e.-t ro sharp , new
drive pi ckup , good , Haro ld
model 5 of mobtle homes
porn! bu cket seal s, o+r shoc: ks,
Brewer , long Bottom or ca ll
Phone area cod e 614 · 423·9531 .
mag s Ph one 949 2480.
985·35S&lt;
TIMBER
Pom eroy Fores t Pro·
69 CHEVELLE MAliBU , yellow wt l h MUST SE LL . 1q70 Cutlass, $1000 .
· d uel ~ . Top pnce for sto ndm g
block vtn yl roo f and bl oclo; tn·
Phone 985·3.501 offer 6 p m
saw timber . Cal l Ken t Hanby
te nor. 307 engtn e . 2 door
] .446·9570.
1965
Pl YMOU TH Belvedere 2 dr .
aulomol +c. power !iteering,
sedan . automofcc transmiSS IOn ,
COINS, CURRENCY tok ens , old
!Ope playe r and new ex haust
good
co nd i ti on
Phone
pocket watches and chams .
s ~ ~t em , fair condtlion $ 1,000
992·357&lt;.
stl ver and go ld We need 1964
Phone 949 2574
and ol der sliver co1ns Buy, se ll ,
1&lt;;168 CUTLA SS, 2 dr , $700· 1969
or !rude' Coli Roger Wam sley,
Olds mobtle , 4 dr., $950, 1q74
for
Sale
7.&lt;12 233 1
BUick Apollo . 2 dr $2450
Phone 992 5786 from noon to 6
CASH +++ l or 1unk cor s F r ~e s
p m on ly , da1 ly
!ruck and Aut o , 24 HOUR
WRE CKER SE RVI CE•
Phone
H omet1te
1968 BONN EV ILL E PONTIAC
742 ·208 1.
Phone 992· 5535.
OLD JEWELRY Phone 992· 2075 .
1976 MUSlANG II Cob ra o1r , oil

Wtl l do odd tabs, rool+ng pam·
t1ng gutte r work . Phone 992·

ONE!

Get · FULL

PHOTOGRAPHY

:;,:~.:.~~ ... ~- POM.~~~.:~~ CO. @)

..~~=:---..----,. . s,,.,;ces Offered
THIS

53295

DA RK REO bull w1th wh tte face ,
LOSl +n the area o f Leod lng
Creek and Jesse Creek rood ,
oppro• +motely 500 lbs Phone

PUBLIC MEE TIN G , Dec. 9 Thu rs
day . 7 p tn at Racme Town HoU. 4 ROOM fu rms hed opt . uhlt ty
conce rn mg dru g abuse of .
po1d Pho ne 992·3356
Ron ne and surroundmg area
Pu blic enc ouraged to anend .

CHECK

1975 LUV PICKUP •

With topper, low mileage. rad io, w w tires. clean .

For Henl

• 21) Success IS assu red tod ay,
where you ca n act frrmly But 1f
you 're too lax tn dealing s wl1h GU N SHOOT ot the Ro d ne Gun
fnends, there' ll be d 1sap- r Club every Sundoy 1 p m
potn tments
As!&gt;or ted meol.s

PIS CES (Feb. 20-March 20)

Hob so n ,
74'12789.

a Cont inental Flavor 20; Amerlnn Issues Forum

33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal W11h 11 6;
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
In Tho Know ID; Wild Kingdom 13; Nashville On
The Rood 13;
B:GO-Bao Boo Black Sheep3,4,1S, Happy Day•6,13;
Tony Orlando &amp; Down B,10; Not ional Geographic
20,33.
8.30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,1 3.
9 : ~Pollce Woman 3.4, 15; Rich Man , Poor Mon 6, 13;
M·A·S·H 8,10; Nepal. Where The Gods Are Young
33; Evening o1 Championship Skating 20.
9:»-&lt;lne Day At A.Time 8,10; To Be Announcod 33.
10 GO-Pollee Story 3,4, IS ; Fam ily 6.13 ; Let Freedom
Ring B; Switch 101 News 20, Documentary
Showcase 33.
10 :30-Biock Perspective on the News 20
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13.15; MacNeil · Lehrer Report

WIN AT BRIDGE

-··

,,..

KEN GROVER

power steering and D
brakes, rally wheels, rad io, black and very attractive.

FOUNO· EYE GLAS!ES on Rl 7 ol

Radiator .-I~
Service

Aerial
Co,m'mercial
Schools
Weddings

s.m

$3995 ~

Consequences J; SoapBox 4; Bowling
forDoilars6: Le1'sGoToTheRaces8; News10; To
Toll Tho Truth 13; My Three Sons IS; Cooking With

6:30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr lttlth 6:
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20, lTV
Utilization 33.

PROFESSIONAL

PHOTOGRAPHY

1975 c'HEVY EL CAMI~O
Classtc, 350. v.a, automat tc,

7 : ~Truth or

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, Tt76 ·
5:fl0-'.Big Valley 3; Merv Grltfln 41 Brady Bundt 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
S.30-News 6; Fam ily Altair 8: Electric Company
20,33 ; Adam·12 13.
6:()()--News 3,4, 8 , 10~ 13, 15;
ABC News 6: Zoom 20 ;
Consumer E xi)C!rl ence 33.

Estate Wegon , locall owner car, wh ite radial tires, air
conditioning, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes. radio, dark red finish , black vinyl interior

return of one fema le chocolate
point S1 om ese cot betw een
So uth Second ond South Third
Sl Middleport , An swe r&amp; to the
nome of ··sa, ," Ph ooe 991·5454
or 618 So uth Th1rd St .

Television log for easy viewing

Business Serv.ices

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1975 CHEVELLE

3 VE RY UNHAPPY boys wont th e

n

.

'2 SIGNS
Of
QUALITY

Th e pub lis her

Interest
Loans

oo
90
:n

hovl! o gun .1hoot $otu rdoy 01
6·30 p,m . at their bu1lding 1n
Bm:hon

'h,e Pub lish er resenes
the r i9ht to edit or reject

1,826 00

Auto Sale•

THE RAC INE Frre Oepo rtmenl will

·· REGULATIONS

Sllort Term Rentals

1 , ~00

Nutiee•

publite tlon .

AdvertJs!ng

Fast ~esults Use The Sentinel Classifieds

~

WANT AD.S
INFORMATION
DEADLIN,ES

•

�. ·~ ;---

.
12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 1976

Carter moves desk to
old governor's house

~clntyre
(ConUnuftl from page I)
"is curing enough or should
t)le physician, for erampie,
actively encourage better
health practice.o! How far
should he or she go 1o try to
change the destructive life
style of a patient? Is there a
tradeoff between longevity
and tbe pleasure of smoking?
What about abortion, or
euthanasia?
•
"Strangely eno~gh ,
organized discussion'el' such
considerations entered the
medical school curriculum
only around 1970: We think It
is here 1o stay."
Dr. Mcintyre's work Is
being supported by a grant
from lhe Foundation o!
CMDNJ.
He described his role as
thai of a "catalyst of all the
humanities, such as ethics,
sociology, psychology,
religion, philosophy and
law.;;
"We do not necessarily
have answers," he said, "but
tomorrow's health -care
professionals must know that
they will have to lace up to
the questions and, iri their
day-by-day practices, deal
with them.
"Medicine has a moral
imperalive, to say nothing of
a life-and-death consequence.
It is illustrated every time a
patient says, 'Doctor, tell me
what do you recommend.' "
Dr. Mcintyre, who li~es
with his wile, the former
Christine Coats, of Middleport, Ohio, and their two
children in Morristown, N.J.,
is a (1962) graduate of
Wagner College, Staten
Island, N. Y. His divinity
degree was earne~ (in 1965)
at Lutheran Theologica l
Seminary, Philadelphia. He
then studied ethics and
!heology at Wittenburg
University, Springfield, Ohio,
and went on to the Graduate
School of Theology at the
University of Toronto, where
he receivetl his doctorate (In
1969).
Before coming to CMDNJ,
Dr. Mcintyre .was Kennedy
Fellow in Medical Ethics at
the Harvard Medical School,
and a visiting scholar in
ethics at Harvard Divinity
School. From 1969 to 1975, he
was assistant professor of
religion at the Catholic
University of America , after
having served as a teaching
fellow in ethics at the
University of Toronto. From
1965 to 1967 ·he was pastor of
Calvary Lutheran Church,
Springfield, Ohio.
Dr. Mcintyre is a member
of the American Society of
Christian Ethics, the Society
for Health and Human
Values, the Institute of
Society, Ethics and the Life
Sciences and the American
Philosophical Association,
among other professional
organizations. His writings
include The American Ethic :
The Moran Foundations of
American Society.

"

.

Proof promised of vote frauds
By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - An
attorney for the U.S. Labor
party In the party's suit
against Ohio election
officials, seeking w void the
Ohio Nov. 2 presidential
election, said loday be would
IJ'Ove that 11,847 "fradulent"
votes were cast in the
election.
Richard Reichel,
MassJllon, Ohio, said in
opening testimony ln U.S,
District Court that the 11,847
votes were "a margin greater
than the margin of victory for
Mr. Carter."
A recount conducted by
Ohio Secretary of state Ted
W. Brown gave Jimmy

Carter an 11,1111-vote margin aa neceuary" 14 bear ill nino
out ol more than 4 million • witnesses scheduled to
votes 'cast last mooth.
testify.
The llrst witneu fol\ the
On Wednesday, Brown Is
u.s. Labor party was Jeffrey scheduled to certify the
steinberg, New York City, rsulll of Ohio'a preeldentlal
WOO coordinated a random balloting for the Dec. 13
sample of voters in meeting of the Electoral
Cleveland, Columbus, College which meellat noon.
Cincinnati and Toledo which
Defense attorneys
CGIIcluded there were 11,847 representing Brown and the
lradulent votes cast.
Democratic eleclorl pledged
·steinberg told U.S. District 14 Carter attempted lo
Court Judge Joseph P. lnvalldate Reichel's opening
Kinneacy othat ~ had a team atatement and .Stelnberg'l
. of 45 volunteers who initial testimony by cWmlng
conducted .,1~e random that the "rand&lt;mi sample
sample in !!I• lour cities and cooducted by the U.S. Labor
found 101 cases of non- party was not a true
eldstent addresses or aban- '·

defense secretary.
carter originally was oo
have flown from Plains to
Atlanta, but because of rainy,
overcast weather he decided
to make the trip by
auwmobUe. He left Plains
about 8:45 a.m. EST on the
2~ hour drive.
·
To conduct the interviews, •
Carter borrowed the facilities
of the governor's mansion,
where he lived while he was

News •• in Briefs

Hospital News

~~OO::~:er.U:: ca':

Leo R

euler
Pomeroy dies

•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Lace 'n ·

Ruffles 'n
Brushed
Soft

Warmth

Two injured'.

,.

in accident

· It's easy
to ploy Santo with our
Christmas Club Account

•'....

'"

MEIGS THEATME
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

LINGERIE
.DEPARTMENT
2ND R.OOR

WATCH .FOR
OPENING DATE

THE INN PLACE

Wednesday Night Special

7

lltixns ~alional

Visit Our Salad Bar
Sea Food Platter

-"'IPICIMIIA Tl

French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

Member Federal Deposit Insurance wporatior
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40.000

Sets - Bras - Panties.

$295
Plus tax

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0 .

PI;I.ZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

COLUMBUS (UP! )- Ohio Secretlry of State Ted Brown
loday refused 14 C1!rtlly Jimmy carter'a 11,116 vote win over
Gerald Ford in Ohio presldenUal balloting until a suit seeking
to void .the election results Is decided.
"I won'~slgn the certifying carda for the electon until (U.S.
Dilltrlct Judge Joaeph P.) Kinneary decides the case," said
Brown at a morning news conference. ,
Klnneary's secretary said earlier in the day a decision

Store hours this week: Wednesday and Thursday, 9:30 A.M. to 5
P.M.- Friday and Saturday 9:30A.M. to 9 P.M.
NOW YOU KNOW
)'he iirst collision between
airliners on scheduled fllghts
Bring the children in to see Santa ·Claus Wednesday 2 to 3, p.m.,
occurred April 7, 1922, 18
Thursday2to3 p.m., Friday2 to3p.m.
'
miles north of Beauvais,.
'
Toy Dept.- 1st Floor _ ., '
France between planes'
belonging to Daimler Airways and Grands Express
Aeriens, killing all seven
personsahoaro,
. i.•~~~~•N•N~·--~~~·~~~~~~~.,~~~~.-~~~~1

Elberfelds In Pom

I.

could be delayed until.Jafe r in the week . The Electoral College
coovenes at noon Dec. 13.
Brown said •recount §bowed that Carter wtaled 48.92 per
cent of over 4 million votes cast Nov. 2. Ford got48.65 per cent
of the total vote, making Ohio 's eelctlon the closest since 1892.
In a related aMouncement, Brown said he would ask the
state Controlling Board for $595,000 to reimburse county
boards of election 14 investigate vote fraud char~ed in the U. S.

•

•

.
vo( xxvu No. 164

•

at y

e

Mrs. Marshall

f

'

I

'

o

'

Brown delays okaying vote
•

vounc.

°

'

..

reprnentatlon ol aUeaed
fraud."
David
a Collllllbul
attome)' lor BroWD, llld Ill
InJunction aaatn1t the
prellder¢1al baJWinc 'Wllllld
create "• national and
conllitullonal crllll" and
lhllthemdenceCGIItalned In
leCII brlefllllled by the U.S.
Labor party showed "no
where near the macnltude"
olvoter fraud clahned by the

Georgia's chief executive.
Brown, former Air Force
secretary who is president of
California Institute of
Technology ln Pasadena, Is
rumored lA&gt; be a hot prospect
for the Pentagon job, but
there was no official
confirmation.
party.
HtB wife said in a telephone ·
· Klmeary allo aaid he will
Interview that he was llyirlg
treat
court Ollly 45 mlmalel
to Atlanta today for a
lor IWich and .:ontlilue the
meeting .Wedn esday with
bearing Into the ~venlng, If
Carter. But when asked
necessary.
whether he would be joining
the CarterlJibinet, she
replied: "We haven't got
(Continued from page 1)
anything to say.'.'
problems of the last 18 months have been pretty well solved:"
votes In the election.
(Continued 1rom page 9)
Mias Jordan, who won a
Steinberg said otber wit·
Those problems C1!nlered around NATO's so~thern flank : measure of national attention
VeteraDB Memorial H08pltal nesaeS will show that that with Slory Hour.
f Malo f their
Portugal, Italy, GreeC1! and Turkey. The officials said the as a member of the Nixon
Admitted Frances number could be proJected 14
Sin~re thanks goes to the Town nd ~Varian
feared Communist drift in Italy and Portugal appears ro have impeachment committee and
R st f
p
. G ldi · show that Ohio's 25 electoral cooperallon In whatever needs to be done, a to
.
been halted and both countries remain effective members of as a keynote speaker at this
o o er, omeroy, o e
.
lor Student summer work
the alliance despite financial problems. Greece and Turkey year's DemocraUc National
We thank the Mason Mother's Club lor giving too toward
Laws 0 n , M1n e r s v 111 e ; votes should not be awatded
Raymond
Lambert
Rutland
·
to
Carter
because
of
hi h
tJy needed and now
have begun talks tha't may solve the long-&lt;rtanding dispute.
Convention, was expected to
...,....
· McMurray, 'R utlan d:, "widespread voter .fraud." lluying
a new typewriter, w c we grea
,
.
El
s1e
have
be interviewed for' two
WASHINGTON- THE POSTAL SERVICE says special possible Cabinet posts,
Beulah Autherson, Racine ;
Kinneary said .he~ keep
· The most recent venture lor which we give lbanks, Ia the
inauguraUon day cancellations can be bought Jan. 20 in attorney general and
Mary Rice, Chester; ~nna hia court in seasion as long Bake Sale organized and CGIIdUCted by Marie Pe\0', assisted
Washington, Plains, Ga., and Ceylon, Minn. Plains Is the secretary
Mitch, Middleport; Wilbur
by Diane Pyatt, Betty LIUy, Loraine McCauley, Mary Rouah,
of
Health,
hometown of President-&lt;&gt;lect Jimmy carter, whUe Vice Education and Welfare.
Whaley, Shade; James
.
0
Sara Gibbs and Brenda Jividen, on behalf of the Mothers of tbe
President-elect Walter Mondale was horn in Ceylon.
Young, Racme; Woodrow
Sinry Hour children, and to the many Interested persona who
Among others expected in
Machine cancellations in the three cities will bear the Atlanta were defense
Fortney, Long Bottom; Hazel
donated baked goods which netled a wtal of $84. This money
words "Independence Day" in the killer bars. All covers must speCialist Paul Warnke,
Curtis, Reedsville; Evelyn
will be used to purchase recordings and other needed items.
bear uncanceled postage at first-class or higher rates. Mail reportedly being considered
Mundry, Reedsville; Ellen
LasUy we thank our patrOIII who- the library regularly
orders should be addressed to "Inauguration Day CanC1!~ " for director of the Central
Johnson , Pomeroy; Glen
_Leo H. Reuter, 86, Rt. 4, andrea~thevalueolallbraryinourtowp.
Stone, Lakin, W. Va.; Clolst Pomeroy, died Tuesday
MuonudArt8Penoula
postmaster, city, state and zip code. Zip codes are Washington, Intelligence Agency, and
20013; Plain~&gt;, 31760;· and Cey lon , 56121.
Badgley,
Racine;
Aretta
morning
at
Veterans
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Shennan Ford visited recently with their
Polish-born Co lumbia
Brlckles,
Mi~dleport.
Memorial
Hospital.
daughter
and
son-ln
Professor
Zbignlew
4aw, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Day and sona of
Discharged Debra
The son of the late WilHam Pickerington, Ohio.
ANCHORAGE, ALASKA - WORKERS HAYE FINISHED Brzezi..,IU, said lo be the
laying the 800-mile trans-Alaska pipeline, and oU could begin front runner as National
Russell, Richard De~oss, and Sophia Rlselng Reuter,
Holiday guests pf Mrs. Clara Smith were Mr. and Mrs.
flowing from ll1e Arctic North Slope by next summer. The last Security AffaiJ:s adviser in
Aaron Kelton~ Elmer Riggs, he was also preceded in death Luther ·Smith and Timmy ; 1\fr. and Mrs. Kenneth Smith and
section of 46-inch pipe was laid Sunday in rugged Thompson the White House.
Nancy Holsmger, Lester by his wife in 1952; three Mr. and Mrs. Terry Smith, Sgt. A. A. and Mrs. GaHotd and
Arnold , Dorothy Wright , sisters, Mrs. 'Emma Leifheit,
Pass 20 rniles northeast of the terminal at the Ice-free port of
Vice President-elect Walter
Valdez, the A!yeska Pipeline Service Co. reported Monday.
Mondsle was summoned w
Clyde Ferrell, Pearl Hayes. Mrs. Edna Riggs and Mrs. sonsitecent dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Curtia McDaniel and
Gertrude Neutzling, and two Chalky were Mr. and Mrs. calvin Me Danle1, ..,.,......,,
~--•·· c. R. and
The first section was mstalled some 20 months ago at the Atlanta from Washingoon to
bro thers, WaIter and./Ed- ·Christine Dawn of Pt. Pleasant; Mark SWain, Crown
Tuns ina River, aoout 55 miles north of where the final link was · join Carter in the private
City,
Holzer Medical Center
set in the $7.7 billion projeCt. Aspokesman for Alyeska said the talks which will be held at
(Discharges, Dec. 6) .
w~~~vlng
are two sisters, Ohio; Mrs. Wilma McDaniel, Pt.PleB!lllnt; Mr. and Mrs. Stan
pipeline is scheduled to be put into operation in mid-1977. Oil the 'governor 's mansion
Bertha Braden, Myrtle Mrs. Louise Hawkins, Rt. 4, Saunders and children, Cameron, Amber and Melanie,
COI\lpanies are expected then lo begin pumping at 600,000 where Carter will spend the
Columbus.
.
Coon, Dennis Edwards, Earl P
barrels per day and lo double that amount, reaching the initial night. Carter was governor of
omeroy, and Mrs. Clara
Mr. and Mrs. Curtia McDaniel visited a lew days with Mr.
Fletcher, Robert Goodall,
capacity, Within a few months.
Georgia from 1971 until 1974.
Ray Jeffers, Herbert Mc- Zink, Cincinnati, and several and Mrs. Jaines Uoyd and family at Nashport, Ohio and with
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Sam~dersandfamlly in Columbus.
His house guest Monday
Cain, Sybrema Mitchell, nieces and nephews.
WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE Henry night was Atlanla attorney
Funeral
services
will
be
I
Recent visitors at the home of Mrs. Lee Rlchardaon and
Harry Osborn, Sr., Thomas
Kissinger and Cyrus Vance, the man who will succeed him Charles Kli'bo, one of his
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
Ewing
Mr.
and Mrs. RUBseU Capehart and Christy Bletner were Mrs.
Owen, Mrs. Allen Page and
Jan . 20, have held their first meeting, traded compliments, and closest advisers, who heads a
Funeral
Home
with
Jack
Jane
Potter and daughter, Anno! Silver Springs, Md.; Mr. and
daughter, Mrs. Robert Porter
pledged frequent consultatiorts in coming weeks. Vance told team preparing the Vietnam
Perry
offlclaUng.
Burial
will
Mrs.
Leroy Metcalf and sons Jeff and Mike of Columbus, and
and daughter, Gregory
reporters he "Would not hesitate to use Kissinger's great, pardon proclamation Carter
be
II!
Riverview
cemetery,
Mias
Elaine Potter, a student at Dayton University.
Reynolds, Marvin Robinson,' ·
great talents if the occasion arises." Kissinger grinned will issue during his first
Middleport.
Friends
may
call
Recent
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart
Bessie Swain, Susan Zinn,
broadly.
at
the
funeral
home
any
time
and
Christy
Bletner were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coben of
week in office.
Edgar Zuspan.
"We'll be spending a great amount of time .together while I
af!er
7
tliJs
evening.
•
Pomeroy;
Mr.
and Mrs. John Si.lson and lamlly.
Kirbo ' has
already
(Births, Dec. 6)
learn from him," Vance said. Kiasloger called Vance "a indicated that he does not
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
brilliant appointment" and once again pledged the full want to serve in Washington,
Storms,
son, Wellston; Mr.
cooperation of the department to give all available information but witl be available for
and
Mrs.
Ricky Northup,
to Vance during the transition period.
consultation ,
daughter, Point Pleasant;
Cart er's cam paign
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Williams,
treasurer Robert l..Jpshutz
Jr., daughter, Jackson; Mr.
and transition chief Jack
and Mrs. Stephen Grant, son,
Watson will be tapped for
Coalton ; Mr. and Mrs.
high-level but not Cabinet
. Donald Roush, son, Syracuse.
posts
in
the · new
(Birth,Dec. 3) .
administration, according to
Mr. and Mrs-. Robe{t
aides.
Porter, daughter, Jackson.
Carter left home in a
(Birtbs, Dec. 4)
driving rain Monday' night to
Mr. and Mrs. Bonnie
go console his brother. Billy,
Hutchinson, son, Bidwell;
who lost a bid to unseat
Mr. and Mrs. Max Snyder,
incumbent A.L. Blanwn ·as
son, Crown City.
mayor of Plains. ..
(Births, Dec. 5)
With a crowd of supporters
Mr. and Mrs. James Jones,
and members of the press
daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
corps looking on, Carter
Mrs. Richard New Vahner,
hugged Billy and told the
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
gathering, "He would have
Utterly fe min1ne . .. With
Mrs. John Angel, son, Crown
made a great mayor - he'll
all ·around yDke, and
City.
.
try again.''
darnty lace edging
After more
private
that c1rcles right around
meetings Wednesday, Carter
the shoulder. And the
heads for Washington with a
print is positively
BIRTHDAY NOTED
two-day agenda of meeUngs
charming.
You'll love it!
Clifford ·Holler, Racine, a
~
with governors,
Styled
with
elasticized
'
resident
of
the
Arcadia
congressional leaders and
cuffs and contrast1ng
Nursing Home In .Coolville
,flii/.
Pentagon policy planners.
yoke piping, too . In cozy.
wJII celebrate his birthday on
!i""
warm brushed acetate /
"'..\;"' .l
Two persons were taken to
. - - - - - - - - - .· Dec. ll. Cards may be mailed
nylon th at mach rne
•
to him at the above address O'Bieneas Hoapital in Athens
~"
washes and dries in
.'t
and would be greatly ap- following a traffic accident at
a wink. Pink or blue.
preciated.
9:15 a.m. Monday on SR 689,
tong Gown,
one tenth of a mile south of
S·M-L
SR 346.
According to the GaWaLong Pajama,
Meigs
Post State Highway
MEETING CALLED
32·40
Non-certified employes of Patrol, an aulo driven by
the Southern Local School Michael T. Richardson, 26,
District wlli meet Wed- Athens, went out of control,
tf you have a Chn st m as Club Accou nt w1th our
nesday, Dec. 8, at a p.m. at came acroas the center line
bank , you kn ow how easy Christmas can be. By
striking a car driven by
the high school.
sav1n g 1ust a l•ttle eac h week . you bu1ld up a conDennis L. Rosser, ~o. Rt. 3,
s•derabl e balance by the end ol th e year . Just
Albany, then struck a ditch . .
Both' drivers suffered inbef ore Chn st mas. our Christmas Club sends you a~
juries. Richardson was cited
check for you r ent ire accoUnt balan ce
to Meigs County Court for
Play•ng Santa 1s easy when
driving left of C1!nter.
you ha'le the, mon ey .. . our CR ristmas Club helps
A deer WBII killed In an
you have t he money whe n you need 1t.
accident at 3:15a.m. Monday ·
' on SR 325 in Meigs County.
The animal Jumped lnlo the
WAlK-UP TElLER WINDOW AND
side of a vehicle operated by
Bernatd Wilaon, 60, Rt. I,
AUTO TEllER WINDOW OP~N
Vinlon.
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to P:M.
A final mishap was in·
vestigatedat 7 p.m. on &gt;i t. 160
In Gailla County, two and
.,
nine tenth&amp; miles north of Rt.
"THE
35 where an aulo driven by
Lonnie K. Hutchinson, 26, Rt.
FRIENDLY BANK"
4, Oak Hill, struck an metal
object which was lying in the
.
·( ;)
highway. The object punctured a small hole in the gas
Be sure ·to see all the other fine gifts in the Lingerie Departmenttank of Hutchinson's car.
2nd Floor- Long and Short Robes - Slippers - Slips - Gown and Robe

By HELEN THOMAS
PLAINS, Ga. ( UPI )
P r esiden t-el ect ·Jimmy
Carter headed for Atlanta .
today to use 'the governor's
mansion he once occupied lor
an Intensive round of
interviews with prospective
Cabinet appointees.
One of those scheduled tO
meet with Carter was nuclear
physicist Harold Brown, a
possible ca ndidate for

'

Labor party's suit against Brown.
"I think It's important enough to be Investigated," said
Brown. "It 's hard to have any election without some
irregularities."
Nine witnesses Tuesday ouUlned to Kinneary the results of
their investigation of Nov. 2 vote fraud .
They claimed they could prove enough Jrregularltles to
overthrow the eleetlon and take Ohio oul of the Carter column.

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1976

POMEROY·MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

Cabinet appointees interviewed
.

.

STAGE HANDS - Stage hands for the progrru1.1to be
presented at Salem canter School••rtdny ut 7:30 p.111. are
Timmy Spires, left, and Scott Lester . &amp;&gt;e plcturr · of c. •·'
on page 2 wday.

!:~::::::::::::::o::::::;~:::::::;:;:;:;:~;:;~:;.;::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:::-:::·:::::•::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::~~

Mondale sat in on the second
By HELEN THOMAS
AtLANTA (UP!) - Presi· day of intensive Interviews by
dent -&lt;&gt;lect Jimmy Carter Carter, who met with several
::~
~~
loday interviewed four more prominent names from past
By United Preas International
pro lpec tiv e cabinet presidential administrations
YUMA, ARIZ. - THE SUBMERGED SOUTHERN end of appointees, including a Tuesday .
the San Andreas fault twitched Tuesday, shaking parts of woman and a nuclear
Speeding up his transition
Arizona, California and Mexico.
·
physicist, before flying to 1o the White House, Carter
The earthquake tegiatered between 5 and 5.5 on the Rich- Washington for two daYS of also arranged to fly to
ter Scale at 6:01 a.m. MST and was centered 50 to 90 miles transition meetings.
Washington late in the
south of the Arizona-Mexico border, where the Colorado river
Ca rt e r summoned afternoon and gather with
empties inlo the Gulf of California, according to the Caltech Ca lifornia physicist Harold represe ntatives of the
sel!mologicallaboratory at Pasadena, Calif. The shake was Brown, Jane Cahlll P!eifer, National Gove rn ors
fell in southern Arizona, scattered areas of far Southern Democratic Cot!gressman Conference before a round of
California and Baja Calllornia, Mexico.
·
Brock Adams of Washington meetings with federal agency
State and Bendix Corp . leaders on Thursday .
TOKYO - PREMIER TAKEO MIKJ will announce his President Michael BluBrown, president of the
resignation Fridsy as leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic menthal to the Georgia California Institute of Techparty, which suffered Its worst eleatlon setback in history governor's mansion, which Is nology, apparently was being
earlier this week, his spokesman said loday.
on loan to the former given strong consideration by
Former Deputy Premier Takeo Fukuds, Mild's arch rival , governor.
the President-elect for the
was the likely cholC1! to succeed him as party leader - a posl
Vice PresidPnt,.:olprt WJtlter
thatautmnatically carries with it the position of premier since
the LDP is the majority party in the lower house of parliament.

[News. • . in Briefs\!i
'

PONTIAC; MICH. - A POLICEMAN GUARDING an
injured robbery suspect was killed in a hospital-room shootout
by a man and the prisoner's girlfriend woo broke In to free the
prisoner, authorities said.
Pollee said patrolman Gerald L. Carpenter, 24, though
mortally wom~ded by six bullets, managed lo fire six shots and
seriously wound the gunman belpre falling dead in the doorway of the prisoner's room at Pontiac General Hospital. The
prisoner and 'the woman escaped, leaving their wo\ulded
acccmpllce on the hospital floor, but were captured by Pontiac
pollee a hall hour later about four miles from the hospital.

Butz predicts

'no' to levies

'

Carter arrived in AUant.a
made the visit as "a friend "
and not as a potential Tuesday on a sentimental
candldale for a top posllion . visit tu the · governor's
It was understood that mansion where he served as
Carter will meet in Ge orgia's chief executive
Washington with Rep . from 1971 to 1975. Georgi a's
Barbara Jordan, D-J'ex., as Democrati c Gov . Gt'o rge
he pursues his search for an Busbee Invited Curler to be
attorney general. He also was his guest.
expected to meet with former
He held a series of private
Maine Gov . Kenneth Curtis, sessions with sev eral
an early Cartfli supporter, prominent per:10nalltles whoaccording.to sources was most of them famJIJar fn t'tlS
considered for cha irmam of from the past - Indicating he
th e Democratic Nat iona l will dip Int o pre.vlous
Co mm itt ee, succeeding administrations for ut least
some of hi s own lop
Robert Straws.
The Wall Street Journal appointees.
and the AUanta Constitut iOn
Among them were former
reported today that Carter Defense Secretary James
was considering Los Angeles Schlesinger, with whom
U.S. District Judge Shirley Carter spenl two hours and
Hufstedler fo r attorney also dined. Whether he has a
general .
future role In the carter

ndministration liAR bl'Cll the
subject of much speculation.
bu t carter aides huve refused
to clarify the ma11er.
Carter also talked to Wn&gt;hJngton lawyer Jose ph
CaH!ano,
a Johnso n
admini str ation domestic
adviser : rorm er Howurd
Universit y Law School Dean
Patricia Roberl.'l HarrL1, who
nlso served us ambu s~Hdur to
Luxembourg in the Joh nson
administration ; form er Sllltfl
Dcpartmcnl policy pllmncr
Zb lgnlew • Br7.ezl ns k l,
reportedly In line to be
Nationa l security affairs
adviser and Paul Warnke,
former assis tant dufcnse
secretary for International
security, said oo be under
consideration

as

a

replacement for Bush.

.

Toughest fight Mo~ey pledge~ for new lights
• own f amily
m

By BERNARD BRENNER
SANrA FE, N. M. - A PSYCHIATRIST sa)'!! convicted UP! FARl\1 EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UPI) )!Iller ll!!!'X Gllml!r.e.ltl mentally j)l and the Utah courts set a !'resident-elect
Jimm y
dangerouslegll!ll¢ mtira!'precedent by givillg in to his wish to
Carter's
secretary
of
die before a firing squad.
agriculture
may
find
some
of
"He is sick and Olllht lobe treated," Dr. Joel S. Hochman
his
toughest
battles
inside
his
said Tuesday. "No treatment comes out of a rille. 1bere is a
reallas~e being fought' he!'e on the value of human life, like own administration rather
abortion. This establishes a precedent that human life is not than with outside Cfitics,
former Agriculture Secretary
worth it, so go ahead and shoot and burn them.
"In essence society Is playing an active part in his sickneas Earl L. Butz predicts.
"Power Struggles inside
and desire 14 kill himself by giving in to his desire lo kill
the
executive branch go on
himself. This Is an' extremely dangeroua precedent for lhe
regardless of which party Is
law."
in control," Butz said in an
interview
here.
WASHINGTON - THE 1977 WINTER WHEAT crop is in
The
former
cabinet officer,
fair condition nationwide, but In the Great Plains where most
who
served
nearly
five years
of the crop is grown; conditions were considered,. "precarious"
before he was forced ro resign
as winter set In this week.
·
The assessment was delivered Tuesday in the Agriculture last October over a racial
Department's weekly crop weather report. The report , joke, added that carter's loss
covering developments through last Sunday, noted that soil of many farm belt states In
moisture remained short through most of the Plains and the election mar deprive his
temperatures were far below normal again, extending sub- agriculture secretary of
"clout" in future struggles
normal readings into the lith week in somutates.
with other lnterbts inside the
new administration.
Butz' comments reflected
the fact that issues of naUdnal
and international food
supplies and prices have
become so Important in
· · recent years that farm
leaders are no longer left
alone to decide many farm
policy Issues.
Increasingly, economic and
By
United
Press Madison schoois, said early
today If the system doesn't foreign policy forces in and
Intemati-1
Two Ohio school districts get 'Bdditional funds It will not out 'of govenunent have been
will remilln closed for the be able to open next taking a hand In what once
were considered parochial
remainder of the year alter September.
voters Tuesday again
"U we don't get additional farm issues , and many
rejected
new
school funds and are not able to open decisions once · made within
operaUng levies.
school next September, then the Agriculture Department
The 6,800 students of the we'd miss more daYS next fall now go to the White House.
"The secretary of agriculGroveport-Madil!on School than we could possibly make
ture's
big job the last three or
District, on enforced vacation up In the spring of 1978 and
four
years,
and the next three
since Nov. 3, wlilnot return to that would mean we would
claases until Jan. 3 when a need lo consider merging or four years, Is with other
of
the
new 1977 operating budget with another district next members
administration - the State
goes Inro effect.
September."
That same day the ·2,300
He said students thia school Dcpariment, the Treasury,
t11e
Office
of
students of the Benton- year would have to make up and
Carroll-Salem School District 33 days missed by attending Management and Budget,''
in Ottawa County also will go classes on Saturdaya and Butz said.
The former cabinet officer
back ro the classes they left extra daya in 'June.
silld
future battles inside the
Nov. 24, with the district
Ail the vote results came in
administration
may involve
borrowing on next year's Tuesday night, Williams oold
iasues
including
international
anticipated tax leyy.
members of "We Stlll Care,"
trade
relationships
and
Superintendent Walter who had campaigned
access
14
foreign
markets
for
Joseph said he had no I~ vigorously for the levy, "I
oow long the schools co d don't have any suggestions American fanners.
One such struggle, Butz
operate, but they would t tonight. I know \his: it is
go on as long as they could. much easier to run a negative said, occurred last slllllli1er
The Benlon.Qirroli-Salem campaign than a positive and fall when he sided with
voters rejected by a margin campaign."
of I,7H to t39, the same 8omill
While the care group had
CONTRACT TALKS
operating levy they bea t gone out in favor of the levy, a
Mike
Clltlord, staff
down general election day. strong competing group
representative
ol the Ohio
The 12 schools In .the called "Citfzens for Betier
Civil
Service
Employe•
Franklin County district of Schools for Less Money" had
Association,
said
today a
Grovepor't·Madllon shut worked against the money
contract
I•
being
down right after voters issue.
negotiated
with
the
Meigs
~down an u.~tilleyy
WUUams said his schools
by 108 votes. .
budget had come out under County Highway Depart·
. Tueaday, by a final vote of the state average and lo meat. The first meeting
3, 7231o 2,974, they rejected a "have ~ple say we are was held Friday and was
13.8leyy, the ststb time since lnelllcient,lt reaDy cuts me. I very producllve, Cllllonl
1968, theyhavebeatdown any know I shouldn't be lecturing said. The next meeting will
property tax increase.
you, but I just feel sorry for be held Thursday at.B •a.m .
at the courthouse. ·
Phil Willi am s, the kids."
superintendent of Groveport-

Voters· again say

post of defelllle secretary.
Deputy Press secretary
Rex Granum told reporters
Carter would also meet with
Mrs. P!eiler, a former vlC1!
president of IBM Corp. and
understood to be under
considera tion
lo
be
commer ce secretary . She
lives in Washington.
Adams, chairma n of the
House Budget Committee,
was reportedly being
interviewed for the job of
transportation secretary .
Blumenthal was a trade
negotiator in the Kennedy
administration and his name
has been mentioned among
possible candidates for
treasury secretary .
Carter's first caller todsy
was Rep . Al)drew Young, DGa .; who wid reporters he

J:attlemen in moving wclose
a . loophole
in
lhe
government's beef import
c~tr~L prograin. Bulz won
the flghl , biit not until after he
overcame opposl lion from
other olilclals ivho favored a
S(lltei' line.
·
"There was some bloodletting over that (Issue )
which didn't get mto the
papers. I had to go lo the
President on that," Butz
recalled.
"I won some and I lost
some over the years, but I
had excellent rapport at thet
White House and I got thai by
building a political power
base.! worked hard at that,"
t;lutz said.
Carter's agriculture secretary, Butz con.tended,
"won't have the same power
base In the farm belt"
because Carter lost many
farm area states w President
Ford.
uearter 's a damn good

politician. ! feel he'll consider
that his power base Is in
industrial, consumer, labor
and minority votes, not in the
farm hell ," Butz argued.
"This means thai the
agricultural leadership
around the country is going w
bave to be alert to keep from
getting washed down the
tube," Butz said .
"Farm organizations and
commodity people should be
making a conscious effort .to
get closer to people in the
executive branch outside the
Agricult~e Department,'' ·
Butz advised.
F~rm groups, Butz said,
have i111g known bow to "live
with" the middle-level
agncultural . bureau?rats
whose prelimlDBry deciBlons
often pave the way for actions
by top policymakers. N~, he
said, ''they'll have to learn
how to do the same thing in
State, Treasury and those
places."
.
. President Ford, lollowmg
hitter far.mer protests over a
1975 gram export embargo,
reorganized his policymaking
machinery earller this year
and ereated'an Agricultural
Policy Committee including
representatives of 12 cabmet
and White House agencies
With Butz as chalnnan. There
has been no Indication
whetherCarterwillfollow the
same pattern,
MR. JACK~ON DIES
RA C!i&gt;E - James T.
Jackson, 93, Racln3, died
Wednesday morning at the
Ar ca dia N•rslng Home,
Coolville . Funeral
arrangements w'm be announ ced by the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Over 1800 to be used for th e
purchase of new Chrl~mas
lighlln g for Pomeroy 's
buSiness section has been
pledged. Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce President Fred
Crow announced Tuesday .
The need for new strands of
lights · was dlscl!ssed at a
special chamber meeting
held at tpe Meigs Inn. Adrive
has been launched to raise
the needed ·funds which may
not be used until next year
since the holiday season Is
alrea dy here . Crow, indicated
however, that he hopes from
12,000 to 13,000 can be raised
for the lights.
Pledges already of $50 to
1100 have been made by the
Pomeroy Na tiona l Bank, The
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co,. Crow, Crow and Porter,
Elberfeld's, J . and R. Sports
Shop, Ed Kennedy, Teaford
Rea lty and the Pomeroy
Flower Shop. Pledging from
125 to $50 are Goessler's
Jewelry, Sybil Ebersbach ,
Wa rne r ' s
Insurance,
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.,
Franklin Rizer, Excelsior Oil

Everybody
of Meigs

in free
Who says you can't get
something for nothing?
Ohio University will
showcase its Bobcat basketball team this Saturday, Dec.
IJ, in a game against
Marietta Coll ege. Meigs
County residents will be
admitted free.
To gain free admission,
Meigs Countians must
display a driver's license or
some other identification
proving their residence at the
·doors of the Convocation
Center which open at 2 p.m.
Tip-off is set for 3 p.m.
If you have no !dentification or would like to get
tickets ~arly, you can pick
them up until Friday at
WMPO radio or Meigs High
School.
"We sure hope' to pack the
place," and 0 . U. sports
information Director Frank
Morgan. "There aren 't many
things a person can get free
these days."
Ohio University plans a
competitive brand of basket- ,
ball and has already beaten
the Pitt Panthers this season
while losing by a bucket to
Northwestern of the Big Ten.
The Bobcats are given an
outside chance al the MidAmerican Conference crown
!his season. Ohio's domed
eourt . the Convo, is one of·the
fin e sports facilities in the
re~iu n .

Co., and the Po meroy Motor oul slandi ng Meigs Count y
Co . Other co ntributors so far Citizen
are Aaron Kelton, E. F.
He also ~nuo unced lhnt he
Robinson, Gloeckne r's Cafe, hus been m touch with Lilli
Jack Warner and Jim Rees . . Ritchie, head of the West
Crow, observing that VIrgmla l)epartnienl of Highlighting the town for the ways , who has Indicated that
Christmas season il; a matter he wlll cooperate with the
or civic pr tde: urged privat e chamber tn attempts to
perlSOnS and businesses to secure the new road to lhe
help out m the fund 1drive. Ravenswood, W. Va., bridge
Any contri buti on will be site. Crow said th at the
glad ly accepted and anyone chamber must push for lhe
w ishln~ to contribute ma y n.ew hi ghway to the bridge
contact Mrs. Barbara smce norma lly some fiv e
Chapman, secretary, at the years can lap~~e before highchamber office In Pomeroy. ways are pio nned and
Spe~Jal promotions to raise become reality.
more mon eys were planned
and lists of contributors will
be published.
James Frecker reported
that he has Inspected the
strands of lights used in
form er years and efforts are ,,
being made to salvage some
of the.se for use yet this year.
Robert Anthony Koushak,
Some 500 colored bulbs have
28,
Ga lnesvllle, Fla., held In
been secured and Frecker
Meigs
County jail for grand
sa id that, hopefully. the li ghts
larceny
and failure to appeal
can be put Into position next
for
trial
whlie on bond , has
week. Ben-Tom is donating
refused
to
waive extradition
equipment to be used by
to
Florida
,
workers In placing the lights.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Crow commended Frecker
Dept.
said Kouschak was
and Mrs Chapman fo r their
taken
Into cust ody about
roles in the Christmas parade
midnight
of Dec. 4 by Sheriff
which one member comRobert
Hartenba ch and
mented was the "best yet. "
deputi
es
Includ ing Mid ·
Crow announced an evening
dleport
Chi
ef
of Pollee J. J.
meeting for January and a
plan for recognizi ng an Cremeans at a home In the
Morning Star area .
Tuesday at II :30 a.m,
Koushak was taken before
Judge Judge Robert Buck of
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday, the County Court to wa ive his
chance of rain or snow rights to the Slate of Florida.
Friday and a chance of After being advised of his
flurries Saturday and rights, Koushak refused to
Sunday, mainly In the
1•
northeast sections. Highs
wtll be In the mid lOs to mid
50s and lows wtll be In the
30s Friday. Highs wm be In
lhe 30. and lows wlll be In
Five defendants forfeited
the teens Saturday. Sunday
bonds
and a sixth was fined In
highs will be In the 20s and
the
court
of Pomerox Mayor
lows wtll be In the 20s.
Clarence Andrews Tuesday

Altcndin~ tim m ec lin~ were
Crow. F roc,kcr,
Mr s.
Chnpmn n, Leo . Vnu ghun.
Vernon Weber , 811! GruuHt•r.
Dale ~~ rner . Mr. und M1·s.
Vir gil Ieafonl , N. W. Ca mpton . .lack CMSC)' and .John
Ander!IOn.

· Weather
Clo udy tonight. lows lu 15.
Cloudy Thur&lt;duy, high,q to 35.
Probablllty of predpltutlon
40 per cent todny, 10 per cent
tonight, 20 per cent Thursday.

Proceedings to
extradite start
waive extradition.
·Charles Knight , 1"slstant
prosecuting attorn ey, im mediately notified authorities
In GainesvJlle that lhc suhjcct
would not waive 'hi s rights
and they advised they would
start extradition proceedings
Immediately .

'Mayor rules
against eight

Eight defendants were
fined Tuesday night In the
court of Middleport mayor
Fred Hoffman.
They were Brian W. Klzzec,
19, Mlddlcport , I!O and costs,
disturbing the peace; David .
Wiseman, no age or addres•
listed, $25 and ('O Sis, disorderly manner,' and $25 and
costs, disturbing the peace;
Tom McCloud, 21, Mid- ·
dleporl , $50 and costs,
disturbing the pea ce; ISO and
costs, disorderly manner,
and $100 and costs, resisting
arrest; Sandy Tyree, no age
or addrClls listed, $25 and
nl~ht.
costs, disorderly manner;
Forfeiting were Jack E. Ronnie Pooler , no age or
Hall , Rulland,$25 posted on a address listed, $10 and costs,
speeding charg e; Ru ssell destruction of property; Joe
Jackson, Racine, S30, assured Bego, Middleport, $15 and
clear distance; Dennis Tillis, costs, permitting a dog to run
$300, driving while in- loose; Terry Brewer, no age ·
toxicated; ·Roliert Headley, or address listed, ISO and
COQlville, $lZ speeding; Cecil costs, assault and battery,
Roseberry , Racine, $30, and $50 and costs, destruction
speeding. Fined $200 , and of property: Harold Harman,
costs . on a petty larceny Gallipolis, who forfeited u $50
charge was David Donohoe of bond posted on a disorderly
Stiversvllle.
maMer charge.

Five forfeit

court bonds

BWODMOB1LE SET ,
Dec. 20 Is Bloodmobile
Day In Meigs County. It
w!U be at the Pomer~y
Elementary School from 1
to 6 p.m. "Mnke some one
live by gtvl~ a unit of your
blood as a Christmas Gift."

Battery exploded into man 's face

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

The Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to South Fdurth Ave. at 11 :43
p.m. Tuesday for John McCloud, 18, Middleport who
suffered facial injuries when
the battery in his ca r exploded . The car had stalled
and McCloud was lookin g
under the hood. The sq uad

.,

••

j

took hi m to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and then
on to the Holzer Medical
Center.
At 2:05 p.m. Tuesday, the
squad was ,called for Mrs.
Eleanor Zeither , 714 S.
Second Ave. She wirs Jeken to
Veterans Meniorial Hospital.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="784">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11253">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52562">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52561">
              <text>December 7, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1741">
      <name>reuter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
