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HOSPITAL t:'~;:~:;;~~~:::;:t:\ Bridges
NEWS
Veterau Memorial H01pltal
Sa turday Admissions Van
Vranken,
Janet
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Draina Brown, Ida Dudding,
Mark Gillilan,. Robert Jacks,
· Bernadette Wolle, Nellie
Lemley, Ge~rge Molden ,
Lydia Davis, Benjamin
Moore, David Cremeons ,
Edith Burton.
Sunday Admissions Mary Crow, Rad ne :·Cecella
Biratn, South Point: Edith
McCullough, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges Hazel Curtis, Robert Hat·
field, Maxine Hobbs.
Medical Ceoter
(Births, Dee: 17)
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Briggs,
59n,. Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Kellar, son, Well·
ston; Mr. and Mrs. Kerry
Hol~er

Wedoud1y lbroalb
Frldly, cbuce ol oboW
Wedn...S.y oDd mOldy fair
Tburoday aod Friday.
Hllb 111 tile !h aDd low
111.
from five to u
degreeo

Low•
·

PA1TY OUT OF SIGHT
SAN SIMEON, Calif. (UPI)
- Patricia Hearst anc1 her
family, threatl!ned by an
anonympus telephone catr
last week, stayed out of light
during the weekend at .a
family home on a ranch near
the famous Hearst CUtle.
The caller demanded that
Miss Hearst, now free on baU
whUe appealing her federal
bonk robbery cmvicUon, be
surrendered to a group called
"The United Front."
Otherwise, be said, anyone
around her would be shot. ·
. The popular Hearst CUtle
tourist attraction was clOSed
"indefinitely" Friday.

-._ (Births, Dec. 18)
Mr. and Mrs. James Coy,

VOTE SET
Haislop, son, Patriot; .
CRESTUNE, Ohio (UP!)
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller, - The nursing staff at
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Crestline Memorial Hospital
Mrs. Larry Patterson, son, is 10 vote Tuesday on a
Racine.
tentative contract reached
1Births, Dec. 19)
over the weekend that would
Mr . and Mrs. Charles end their 11-week-old
Duncan, son, Northup; Nr. walkout.
and Mrs. Dewey · Fulk,
About half of the 30daughter, Oak Hill.
member staff went On strike
ID protest wages, alleged
interference In selecdon ol
union members and the
DANCE PLANNED
hospital nursing code.
RACINE - There will be a
semi-formal Christmas
dance at Southern HlBh
School Wednesday, Dec. 22 OHIOAN KilLED
MIDDLESBORO, Ky .
from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight.
(UPI)
- Roger England, 39,
Music will be provided by
faces
a
murder charge in the
Clockwork. Admission ls
shooting
of a Cincinnati man
$1.5() per person. The dance is
at
England's
home here
sponsored by the Tri-M· Club.
Saturday night.
Pollee said Joe Collett, 29,
was shot in the chest with a
.357-magnum pistol ,
allegei!Jy In the climax to an
argument.
Englal!d was confined ID
the Bell County Jail in
Pineville pending a hearing.
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.

.fa me~

filed. Asemi rig was involved
in an accident at 12:10 p.m.
oo Rt. 143, at CR II. The
vehicle driven by Warren J.
Bryan; 69, Canton, struck
telephone wire' breaking a
pole and cable. Another
mishap occ~rred on Rt. :Iii,
two tentha of a mOe east of
Rt. 5811 where a vehicle driven
by Emmett E. .Jones, 38,
Melbourne, Fla. struck a
metal obj~ in the roadway
causing a hole in the car's
gasoline tank.
Three persons were injured
in an accident early this
morning on Rt. 7 and :Iii. The
Gallla-Melga Post State
Highway Patrol said Tammy
C. Broyles, 18, Rt. I, Crown
Clty, lost controI 0f her car
.while shifting gears.
Her ···vehicle swerved
around striking a vehicle
broadside driven by Vir•'nia
. &amp;&amp;
M. Da rst, 59, Cheshtre. Both
drivers were injured aa. was
Kathy S. Darsi, 23, Rt. 1,
Cheshire a passenger In the
Darst car. There was heavy
damage. The accident is still
wtder investigation.
1 ·

Otarges

(Continued from page I)
up but the plane landed nose
down In the upper deck of the
closed end of the facility.
"If lt had been a close ·
game, there would have been
people up there and they
would have been falling O!JI of
the stadium," aaid Maryland
Gov. Marvin Mandel, who
attended the game. "You can
poss all kinds of laws about
Dying over the stadium, but
Utere's no way you can stop a
nut."
· Jialtlmore Colts officials
said the plane ·had been
buzzing the stadium for the
post few daya and the FAA
was notlfled. An FAA
spokesmon said attempts
BOOSTERS TO MEET
·
The Meigs Band Boosters were made to radio the pilot
wlllmeetat7 : 301hlsevenln~ during the game, but he did
In the band room of the high not answer.
Kroner an4 Officer David
Willlams
were reported In
' - - - - - - - • school.
lair •condition in a hospital
. today. Officer Joseph Socco
was treated and released for
paina in his side.
One woman fan who saw
the plane coming shouted :
"My God, let's get out ol
. here. That plane ls gonna hit

MEIGS THEATltE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WAJCH FOR
.
OPFNING DATE

THE MONEY TREE

"

Now you can watch your ..
money grow too, with
a(Individual
Farmers
Bank IRA.
Retirement Account)
If you're not covered by a Retirement
Program 'at your place of employment then
a Tax Free Farmers Bank IRA is for you.

1
1

Area Death s

an acddent at 2 a.m. SWlday
LOUELLA JENKINSON
on the Patrlot.C.dmus Rd.
Mcs. Louella Jenkin5on. 08.
two mllea west ol Itt. 141. ' ot Middleport and Florida .
Nlbel'IIOII control ol his car died une•peciedly Saturday
which ran oil the left side of at the Bar,tls! Hospital In
the highway then rolled on Ita Jacksonvll e. Fla.

;:~ ~ ~ ~~~~~mg~~~~~~~W~~~~~~~ftf:mt~r~J;~if: ~:,e~o :!rsr:sod:-!~

SUnde, son, Leon, W.Va.
...... u,

(Conllnued from page 1)

r--------------------------~
1

us."
THREE RUNS MADE
Three calli were answered
on the weekend by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad:
ot 11:23 p.m. Saturday, for
Vera Drexel, near Pomeroy,
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 1:05 a.m. Sunday, to Condor and Spring
Ave. for Ed Voss who had an
eye laceration, and at 5:49
.p.m. Sunday to pick up an
infant who had been injured
In a faU at 1712 Chester Road,
and take her to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

- Before her retir.ei'J"en1 ,
Mrs. Jenkinson worked for

the R. A'. Miller lumber Co.
and the Citizen• Nallonal
Bank in Middleport. ·
Sne was born Apdl 25, 1908
at Kingsbury, Ohio, a
daughter of the late John G .
and lzelha Wtse Gilliland.
She was also preceded In
death by a brother, John

. Herschel Gilliland.

Surviving are her husband,
Allen E. Jenkinson ; three
si5ter5, Mrs . . George ( Ber .
tht!) Me Klnnlu, Wellston ;
Mrs . Emmett (Katherine)

Tipton .. Edgemont, Ark., and

Mrs. Edward (Edna } Evans,
Middleport ; a brother , TerrJ

Gilliland . Zanesville, an

several nieces and nephews .

Funeral arrangements are
bolng completed at the
Rawlings-Coals Funeral
Home . Mr. George Glaze.
pastor of the Middleport
Church of Christ of which
Mrs . Jenkin•on was a
member , will officiate.
Burial will be In Riverfront
Cemetery .
ORIS LOREN itRK'u;; SR.
HARTFORD, W. Va . • Crt!! Lor~n Z1rkle, Sr . 59, ot
Hartford, died this morning
at his residence. Born here
September 8, 1917, he was the
son of the tate Herman A. and

Wt' nners in · Saturday's
drawing of the Gold Star
both of Rt . J, Pomeroy ; his Give-Away being sponsored
mother, /Ws . Vic tOt' Yoong. by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Pomeroy ; two brothers, Commerce were :
Victor
C.; asisler,!Ws,
ond Don. bothDate
of
Pomeroy
Klm . Ohlinger, Rt . 3
(Sharon)
Justice,
In- Pomeroy, Swisber-Lohse;
dlanapolls. Ind ., and • grand· Grace Johnson, Middleport,
daughtor , Stacy . Youngd, G&amp;J AulD,· Clara Conroy, Rt.
Pomeroy . Sever aI noecos an 1 Bol '1, Long Bottom,
nephews also survive .
"
Funeral services will be Francis Florists : Sheryl
2:30 p.m. Tuosday at the Johnson, Racine, Fabric
Ewing Funeral Home with . Shop; Betty Wlles, Pomeroy,
the Rev . W. H. Perrin of . Se
.,..
flclallng . Burial wil l be In
ars; W· M· Denton, ...
Meigs Memory Gardens . Wright St., PomeroY.,
Friends may call at the Pomeroy Flower Shop:
tunet'a i home any time.·
Marlon
Ebersbac h ,
Pomeroy, Simon's ' Gift
Pearlie C. Stansbury
Pearlle C.. Stansbury. 90, Center; Janet Duffy,
Middleport , died Sunday

. t

0

°

•

POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy, Powel.l's Super
Yalu.
AJJo, Ed Lawaon, Racine,
Grow's Steak House; Greg B.
Roush, Syracuse, Elberfelda,·
Oscar. T. Smith, Rt. 2
Pomeroy, Pomeroy National
Bank; Rev. Wllllarn Mlddle-artb
•"
' Pomeroy, Gu
..., Auto :
Debble 0 ra ke, pomeroy,
New York Clothing ; Ed
Neutzllng, Syracuse, Sears
and Jeanne Fogle,ong,
"--•muun, Moore's.
ASK TO WED
A marriage license Ms
, been Issued :.to William·
Wesley .Hawk, . 25, .Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Winifred Lynn
ilos&lt;:har, 18, Rt. 2, Racine.

......•

LODGE TO MEET

RACINE - Racine Lodge
481 F&amp;AM will bold a special
meeting Tuesday, Dec. 21, at
7:30p.m. ·work in feUoiveraft
degree. All 'master mason;
are urged to attend.

afternoon at the Angel of
Mercy Nurs ing Home in

Albany.

Mr . Stansbury was born on

Nov. 28, 1886 1n Mlddlep\)l't, a
son of the late W. E. and Sally
Shoemaker Stanstiury. He Is
by one niece and one
nephew.
.Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m :Thursday at the
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral

survive~

be

In

Middleport

Sept. I, · 1931. He was
preceded In death ~Y hi'

father, Victor C. Young and
wife, Mary Patrlc!a Jesse
Young .
Surviving are two sons,
Ri,hard M. and Eddie A.,

_g
Makin
'

.governmen

regu

0

Cay.

'

'

CHOW'S ·STEAK HOUSE
992-5432-

POMEROY, 0.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 O'CLOCK

CHRISTMAS
SALE
.

·sAVE 30%
.·

"

OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF JUNIOR,
MISSES AND HALF-SIZES ·
WINTER AND ALL-WEATHER COATS
ARE INQ.UDED IN THIS CHRISTMAS

Rutl~nd Furniture
WILL BE OPEN MONDAY
thru THURSDAY THIS WEEK
TIL 8 P.M. AND CLOSE
FRIDAY AT 6 P.M.

Spaulding, Tony Welsh, Mary Beth loog, Steve Crow,
Billy Weaver, Scott Gheen, , Roger Manley; back row ,
Mike Stone, Ricky Hawley, John Bacon, Kristen Bailey.
See Page 2 for second picture.
.

•

NO. 173

enttne

at y

e
VOL XXVII

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1976

'

~~~~D cit:~~ 6 ~ ~~:~~~~~t di~rt~~~: ~!s~~~g~o~~tirte~~u~oa~ ~~:~s..~e~!~~n s~~~·~~ s:~~ ~!ipito~.~ .n:?~~e has;~~~

·
by Ualted PreaaiDtemadoaal ·
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - WEST VIRGINIA coal
production so far this year Is lagging 2.5 per cent behind the
output lor the same period last year, according ID West
Virginia Coal Association President Edwin Wiles. However,
WOes predicted Monday that state coal production nell year
would exceed the 4.8 increase projected for the nation as a
whole.
. While the Mountain State has been falling behind, the
economics eonu!Uttee of the National Coal Assoclatlon
reported that the national coal output Is expected to iilcrease
by 2.6per cent; from 648.410 665 million IDns. Wiles attributed
the decline mWest Virginlil to midsilmmer wildcat strikes and
said thstmines in th'e state would produce between.ll2 and 115
million tons 111 1977,
SAN FRANCISCO - A CHRISTMAS TREE burst into
flames inside the potih St. Francis Yacht Club Monday night,
killing three perlk&gt;nS and ·sending hWldredS of holiday party•
goers running for their Uves.
.
Fireineri found the bodies of three unidentified victims In
Ute rubble of the two-story Spanish stucco buDding, whlcb was
destroyed.
Damagewith
wasinjuries.
estimated
at $500,000.
persons
were hospitalized
Many
of them Eleven
were pelted
by
falling debris when the audltorliDil ceiling oollapSed In a
shower of flames. ·
'

restrictions on sulfur dioxide
emissions would make "ghost
towns" out of parts of
Eastern Ohio and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia.
John Rogers, general

. .

'

• •ln rle,s:

~~onun;;~ !:; .:;~:~~ lJ~ioredEf~v~~':.':;;e~t!': :;:~.re:'!o~f:.nf::r~ fa'~ ~::sf!'!.~~fei~;,~~be~: ~~ ;~~na~i:~~~e ~":~~~

I n.fl at10
•n
·

COO

Is lO

Protection Agency hearing
here today on proposed new
sulfur dioxide emission
standards.
The colli mined in Ohio-8nd
West V'trginiaisbil(h in sulfur

sulfur coal from Western
states rather than instaU
expensive antipollution
equipment, the UMW has
contended.
•
Rogers admitted there is a
concentration of sulfur emls:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::: slons that hwnans cannot
endure.
OUGHTTA BE GOOD
"But there is · obviously a
lower limit a concentration of
S~LT LAK!l CITY (UPI) . sulfur emissions that is as
~ A thief went to the office
ol Utah's cblel (orest
~::.e• to get his christmas

must
make
hard
judgements.'' ·
,
Rogers reviewed the
elf~s of mechanization of
the mines on thousands of
cool miners.
"I saw the look on the
faces of men who bad spent
10, 20 and 30 years In the
mines when they received
that slip that told them there
was no more work," he said.

Utousands of young, lillddle
aged and old men oo the road
again ," said Rogers, "men
who buUt their life and their
expectations around a cool
mine will wake up one day
andfindoutthatUtelrminels
no longer In operation
because of the
Environmental ·Protection
Agency."
"My people have fought

·,

SALE! .
'
BR!NG THE CHJLDREN
TO SEE SANTA CLAUSI

TOYLAND, 1ST. FLOOR, TUESDAY, WEDIIoiESDA Y, THURSDAY 1 to 2 P.M.

Deputy State Fomter
Ralph MUes ssld the top 10
feel Of a blue Bpruce beblad
Pomeroy Council Monday Jaycees , llarold Norton, staled that the first load will
the •tate ForeBter's office
night accepted "with regret" Richard Roseberry, Forest be free.
was sawed oil and taken
the resignation of counellman Run Block Co., Dave Wilco1
Davis also reported that It
way.
Charles Bartels.
and Dr. Harold Brown.
will cost $1,500 to repalr the
WASHINGTON
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Jane Walton, clerk, village tractor. Davis
The
cost of living(UPI)
rose -a :,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: .
read the resignation whlch reported that Colwnbla Gas su,u~ested the posslblllty of
moderate 0.3 per cent in
gav~lh~ reason for ~e~lgnlng of Ohio; Inc., will Increase pUTChasi!IB a new tractor.
November, reflecting the
as out of town employment. ga·s rites 19.27 cents per 1,000 Councll agreed Ill study the
fjrat decline .In food prices
Councll has 30 days to cubic feet effective. Jan. 7.
proposal.
UNITED NATIONS - THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY since March, the' Labor
appoint a replacement.
COuncilman Hari'y I?avls
The first reading was given
again has called for an arms embargo against .South Mica Department reported today.
Bartels was elected in Nov. propo~ that council pur· · an ordinance that )VOUid
and econOII)Ic sanction~ against Rhodesia, handing a k~y test ·
The overall increase in
1975, and took offlce the !lrst cb~se liquid calcium at $10 a convey to the village from
ID the administration of President-elect Jlmmy Carter. Tbe prices last month was el&amp;c.tly
of this year. Three years of ton from E1celslor Salt Co., Pomeroy Cliffs Limited an
assembly Monday voted, 107~, with l:i abstentions, to ask the the same as in October, ~
his term remain.
to be used on flat streets In 0.148 acre strlp along
Security Council ID make another attempt ID impose an arms lrend which very likely will
Meeting with council were Pomeroy, In a step to keep Osborne St.
embargo on South Afrlca because of Ita continued presence in allow the
Ford ad·
Dan Thomas and Dan Will the vlllage clean. Cinders
Mayor Andrews said the
South West Africa (Namibia.)
·
·
ministration to meet Its
and Scoutmaster Frank would have to be used Davis Pomeroy Chamber of
It also voted, I:!W, with 7 abstentions, ID expand and goal for bringing the annual
Casto of Pomeroy Scout said on the hills. Council Commerce has asked council
enforce existing economic sanctions against Rhodesia and' inflation rate below 5 per cent
Troop
249. The scouts agreed to the proposal. Davis
apecifieally coodenmed the United States for ita continued by the end of 1876.
ClllCAGO
(UPI)Mayor
presented
their Eagle Scout
ImpOrts, of Rhodeslait nickel and chrome under apecial
Today's Increase works out Richard J. Daley, 74, tl)e last project, 8 slgn board, to
cmgresslonallegislatlon. The United States, joined by Britain to a 3.6 per cent yearly rate of
of the big city bosses whose coUllCll which council acand FrBIICI!, voted against the first resolution and abstained inflation.
froni voting for the second.
Coming just before Christ- influence extended from the cepted, Mayor Andrews said,
mas, Ute report was good city warda ID the White . with great appreciation. The
'
HEAVY SNOW ACCOMPANIED BY VERY COLD winds news for the American House, collapsed and died of sign has lettering yet to be
a
heart
attack
in
his
doctor's
added
which
wlll
read
NANTUCKET,
Mass. member crew, were on their
ushered in the first day of winter In northeastern Ohio IDday, consumer. The moderate
office
Monday.
"Welcome
to
Pomeroy."
(UPI)
.
.The
grounded
way to Boston at the time ihe
closing roada and dozens of schools as some areas reported up trend in prlces, combined
Church
bells
tolled
·
The
scouts
eXtended
their
Uberlan
oil
tanker
Argo
!ihlp
apllt \Q, appear at U.S.
to 15lnches of new mow on the ground. Temperatures in the with an increase In earnings,
mournluUy
over
the
wind.
thanks
to
'the
Meigs
County
Merchant,
load·ed
with
District
Court ID explain why
teens and scattered mow was reported over the real of Ohio. · bronght about a substanuaJ
and-&lt;llow-ewept
streets
ol
mUilons
of
B!lllons
of
fuel
oil,
the
tanker
wandered 10 miles
"Absolutely dlagusting," ls the way Geauga County 0.8 per cent Increase In the
Bridgeport,
the
old,
ethnic
SJillt
In
half
fbday,
the
Coast
of!
her
chartered
course .
Sheriff's Deputy Chris Quinn at Chardon described the average worker's real
neighborhood
on
the
South
Guard
reported.
The
Coast
Guard
had been
situation. "We have go~ all the schools closed today with 11 to spendable income.
Side
where
Daley
lived,
More
than
1.5
million
hoping
to
transfer
the
15 inches of snow on ·Ute ground andlt's drifting over two feet In
Food prices dropped 0.2 per
-~the~.~
~~~~the~~~ili~
spota.ll
cent last month - Ute first 500 persons packed the
tanker since it went aground gallons ol No. ,6, heavy
such decline since March. Church of the Nativity of Our
.
Wednesday on Nantucket industrial oU left in the tanker
WASIUNGTON-THE "WORLD'S BIGGEST SQUARE The cost of household
l.ordtoprayfortheman
who
Shoals,
about 27 miles 1D barges but bad weather
DANCE" and a multlfllith prayer service at the Lincoln services excluding rent fell had ruled the city lor 21 years
northeast of Nantucket prevented the transfer.
Memorial are being added to the schedule of activities lor for the first Ume since early - the only mayor a
IBland.
The 25-year-old Argo Mer·
. inaugural week. Rev. Martin Luther King St. will conduct the 1971.
generation
of
Chicagoans
had
A
Coast
Guard
spokesman
chant
has been involved In at
early morning prayer service on Inauguration Day Jan. 20, on
This helped to ol!set price ever known.
Bobby Elkins and his on Cape Cod sald the 'lanker least 18 other previous high
theslteofblsson's"lbaveadream"speech13yearsago.
·- Increases
for \ most
ln. polltical circles, Demo· daughter, Judy, were treated !&gt;roke Into two "intact seas mishaps since 1964.
·
The Rev. Bruce Edwards, embattled pastor of Carter's commodities other than food. crats jockeyed for position in for injuries ijt Veterans plecea."
• . The Uberlan tanker was
PlainS Baptist Church will also participate in the prayer Prlces rose Nbstantlally for the political vacuiDil created Memorial Hospital Monday
He said the ship' did not grounded for about 60 hours
service, the Inaugural Committee said Monday. The ·tobacco, furniture, used cars, by Daley's deaUt.
night following an auto ac· "appear to be leaking off the coast of Calabria, Italy
committee al!IO announced plana for what they called "the gaaoline and motor oU.
The Immediate future of elden! at the corner of S. profusely at this~."
in 1971 and for about38 holltol
world's biggest square dance" to be held the day after the
The Coliaumer Price Index government In the natioD;s Thlfd Ave., and Lincoln St. in
However, he said lk&gt;me ·of off Borneo In September ol ·
Inauguration In the D. C. VlsiiDrs Canter in Union Station.
stood al173.81n November largest city was mud- Middleport.
·
the remaining 6 million 1869.
The dance will be free and open to the pJblic on a first meaning that goods and ser- second
died by infighting over provi·
Middleport Pollee sald that gallons of oil did gush Into the
Richard Cronln, depu~ ·
rome, first serve baais.
vices costing $100 In 19117 now stons for naming an acUng Isaac A. Lewts, 60, Clifton, ocean when the tanker spllt. director of the Massachusetts
cost $173.11. This ~ected an
W. Va.;puUed from Lincoln
A fierce winter lllorm with Department of F~erles and
CLEVELAND- NATIONAL CITY BANK sAID IDday lt Increase of 5 per cent over · mayor.
·
City
statutes
call
for
the
St.
onto
Third
Ave.,
into
the
50-knot
wlnda and~~ seas WUdllfe, said "hundreds" of
plans to reduce Interest rates on certlftcates of depoait and last year.
City Council to meet and Elkina' vehicle which was was
heading
toward blrdahavebeenfound with oil
other long-term savings certificates, elfecdve Jan. I, whUe
A continuation of the appoint an acUng mayor to traveling south on Thlfd AV!!. · Nantucket Shoals where the on them and "a big
keeping regular passbook savlnga interest at5 per cent.
pre!Mlnt trend would allow the
run the city. untO a special Lewis has been cited to court tanker has been grounded for percentage of them are
. Meanwhile, Society National Bank sald Its changes, the IWluallnflation rate to drop election
Is held. But there was on a charge of falling to yield sl1 days.
coming in aJI:eady d.ead."
same 81 thoae revealed by National City, went Into effeCt below 5 per cent In December
confusion
over
who
aenes
sa
\hi!
right
of
way.
Dead
birds,
apparently
vic"Some are atUl showing ·
Monday. Both banks · previously reduced. business savings - a vast Improvement from acting mayor until the
Elkins and his daughter lima .of oU spilled irom a movefnent but Utere's not
passbook accounts to 4\2 per cent.
. the 7per cent rate established council meets We&lt;lneaday. were taken to \he hospital grounded tanker, have much hope'of rescue," Cronin
The Cleveland Trust Co. annoqnced last Frlday reduction at the end of 1975 and the 12.2
Daley, as was hll routine, where they were treated and washed ashore at Nantucket said.
·
·
of all savings Interest rates, effecUve Jan. I.
· per cent rerorded In 1974.
began his last day early, released by the Middleport IBlandandMartha'sVInyard.
"Aafarsal'mconcemedlt
stopping to attend church Emergency Squad. Damages An oU allck oozed ateedUy Is a potential catastr'ophe o1
services before arriving ,at were moderate to both fr001 the tanker'a ruptured major dlmenatons," aald U.S.
hll office and a Christmas vehicles.
· buU and spread 65 mUea.
Environmental ~ion
breakfast for city department
The Middleport Squad on
011 had been leaking from
•
beada.
Monday at 10:49 a,m. went to the 640-foot vessel at Jhe rate
He stopped at Civic Center 647 S. Second Ave. for Floyd ~f ~ gallons an hour,
Eighty-five persons came Brenda Davis, Virginia done by Volunteer Senior
Plaza, 111!11 door to hll office, Bush, a medical patient who according ID a U.S. CoM! '
to the bloodmobile visit Davis, Sheirl Clark, Jeff Citizens.
;
Mon~ay at the Pomeroy
Warner, Donald Wllbelm,
Clerical work was done by to ·watch lee artists carve wu taken _to Veterans Guard spokesman .
The skipper of the ship,
Elementary Scbool, II being John Ranogar, Rebeeca Jean Nease, Juanita Sayre, Olrlstmaa sculpture and then Memorial Hospital where he
accepted 81 donors. Forty· Farnsworth, A. F. Gainer, Jean Sayte, Macel Barton, appeared at the dedication ol was admitted. At 3:44 p.m. George Papadopoulou and
MVeD pinta wen, given in '11m King, Rlchafd Friend Emma K. · Clatwortby, a SouUt Side pork, where he the fire department went to · several members of hll 38
replaeement.
and Charles Eastman.
MOdred Betzlng, Don Bet· took time to lOBS Bboskethall Walnut St. to wash away
Nurses were Mrs. Vern Zing, Mra. Robert Hill, Mrs. through Ute hoop in an inalde ga~llne. It was reported that
. A one gallon donor ~as
Clearing and cold tqnlght,
Larry Mitch: Mary Davidson Story and Mr.. Lenora · Wallace Hatfield, Grace J!YIIlnastl'ffi.
the pOllee · cruiser dragged
A
short
tim•
later,
against
a
manhole
cover
and
lows
In lower teens. Sunny
and Marvin Taylor, tWO Lel(helt. Physicians In Dtake, Joyce Hoback, Lula
gallcn dillon: Albert Martin charge were DJ,. L. D. Tell, Hampton, Pat Ingels, Mary complaining of chest pains, · the gasolbie tank on the and warmer Wednesday,
three gallon, and Harlan E. Vlllaneuva, Roger Daniels Shuler, Vernon Nease, Paul Daley hurried to the office of vehicle was burst with the full blgbs In the mld 308.
Wellrunll and Robert King, and Raymond Boice.
Smart, Reva Simms, hll personal Jilyslc!an, Or· ~nk of gasoline pouring Into Probablllty of precipitation .•,
the street. The accident call 40 per cent today, 20 per cent
The
canteen
was
served
by
1111 gallon.
Clarence Struble and Dorothy Th001aa Coogan Jr.
Coogan
said
an •for the Elkins was at 4:54 tonight, 10 per cent WedBlood waa replaced for that Volunteer Senior Clthens.
(CIIIttmaed on page 2)
(CGntlnued on page Z)
p.m.
nesday.
Loading and unloading was
uaed by LindA Stewart,
~

Last big

city boss
is dead

(

hard to acquire Uteir jobs,
and they have foUght bard ID
keep them, " he ald. "We·will
not stand Idly by and see
those jobs wiped out
overnight by governmental
fiat.
" All we ask ls that you glve
lull consideration to our
positDn and thai you do not
take one step that Is not
absolutely necesary to
preserve more hwnan values
Utan are destroyed," said
Rogers. "We ask that you do
not create ghost towns."

for a donation of $500 toward
the purchase of ne'l! Christ· ·
mas lights for nut year. The
matter was tabled. Mayor
Andrews' report lor the
month of November which
showed recdpts In the
am9unt ol t2,980.70 wu
approv~. ·
The meeting wa1 opened by
prayer by the Rev. WUUam
Mlddleswarth. Attending
were Mayor Andrews, Ralph
Werry, Harry Davia, lou
Osborne, Dr. Harold Brown,
counclimen, Jane Walton,
clerk, Rev. Middlesworth and
Donnie Wafd.

T ank e·r splits in half

Bl9'0d given Monday

Weather

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

(

PRICE F.IFTEEN CENTS

Bartels resigns from council
•

. rate
3a6 0

CollisI·on
m•J•u
· res 2

WOMEN'S
COATS

.

THIS NATIVITY SCENE was the concluding feature
of the annual Cbrlamas program of all grades of the
Ml&lt;klleport Elementary School presented Monday night.
Making up this tableau are, front, liD r, MDI Blake, Allen

f~m:::::m-~,::;~'~.~''''~'~''''''*''8'~~;~'::.-;&lt;;~:.;:B~:~:::;'#,:@:'~";!~·

~News,

.

PROGRAM SET
MASON - The Mason
Assembly ol God will Mve Its
annual Christmas Program
oo Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone is welcome.

Brown, president of the Call·
fornia . Institute
·of
Technology, wiU be named
secretary of defense, and
Washington lawyer Patricia
Roberts llarris, former
amba.uador to Luxembourg,
as secretary of ho.Sing and
urban development.
Striving ID complete his
IDJI[evel appointments before
Cbrlatmas, Carter allk&gt; was
said to be prepared to name
Johnson admlnlstratlon
domestic adviser Joseph
Califano as secretary of
hellith, education an4 welfare
today or later this week.
Marshal) .was reached by
teleJilone at a hotel in Atlanta
early IDday, and he told a
reporter 111 think SJ" nwhen
asked If be would be going ID
Plaina.
(Continued on page 2)

Bids on moving equlpmenl
Pickup truck proposal No .
were opened by the Meigs 3, Smith Nelson, t4 ,930;
County Commissioners Pomeroy Motor, f4 ,'15(1 ; Dan
Monday morning . Offers Thompson Ford, t4,895;
were read for two pickup Carroll Norris Dodge,
trucks, two dump trucks, one f4 ,513.77.
· (llssenger car ~nd a motor
Pickup truck proP9SBI No.
grader.
. 5, Pomeroy Motor. Co., f4,710; ·
No decision was made on Dan Thompson Ford, f4,800;
any of the blds.
Smith Nelson Motors, t4.9~ i
Submitting bids on the Corron Norris Dodge,
passenger car and the $4,5'73.77.
amount of the blda were
Dump Truck proposal No.
Pomeroy Motor Co., Impala, t , Smith Nelson Motors,
15,150, Malibu, $4,898; Dan $14,259 with dump bed ; Dan
Thomps on Ford, $4,945; Thompson Ford, t8 ,995,
Smith Nelson, t5,24t ; Carroll $11,230 with bed ; Meigs
Norris Dodge, $4,965.
(Continued on page 2)

New EPA rules could make Ohio ghost towns

ons oo

SQUAD CALLED
The Mlddleporl
Emergency Squad transported Penny Smith, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, to Pleasant Valley
Hospital at 10:42 p:m. Sun·

TRUSTEES TO MEET
LETART FALLS - The
Letart. Twnshlp Trustees will
meet Dec. 30, at 7 p.r· . at the
Letart Fall!• Community
HaU.

NOTICE

· By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
PLAINS, Ga. (UPI). President-elect Jimmy
Carter was reported ready
IDday to name three new
· Cabinet officers, with strong
lndlcadons ooe of them would
be University of Texas
economist Ray Marshall as
lea'etary of labor.
Carter llides also Indicated
that nuclear physicist Harold

Hill

safety, luel economy and
~missions may eventually
drive smaller manufacturers
such as Chrysler and
•
·
.
American Colors Corp. out of
busless, Townsend is quoted
as saying.
Some observers feel in the
long run only GM and Ford
can alford the cost of
competing with subsidized
uf ta
f
overseas man ac urers .o r
U.S. sales, the report satd,
and others foresee the
possibility there could be only
flve auto companies in the
GEORGE R.(DICKl YOUNG world in the 1980s - all
George R. !Dick) Young,
government-subsidized.
45, Rt. J, Pomeroy , d!ed

Monday morning at Veteran s
1\'\emorial Hospital.
A veteran of fhe Korean
War, Mr , Young was born

'
~
::
'
'

opens bids

to cab.i net

Cemetery. Friends mar call
~t the .funeral home a any
time.

(Continued from page I)
veteran of World War II, and the report said, is that
a member of the D.A.v.
Survivors Include his wife, government- not coosumers
Mildred Randolph Zirkle ; a - are pulling the strings on
son, Oris Loren Zirkle, Jr., at new models.
home, andoi'Je brother , Ralph
Former Chrysler Corp.
Zirk le, Mason.
· 'Funer.;~t s~rvlce's will be chairman Lynn Townsend ·
conducted at the Fogleson~ !Did the magazine thst l!Y the
Funeral.Home on Wednesday tlme .consumers react to
at 1:30 p.m . with Rev . Dave
Fields, Jr ., offlcitttlng . Burial government control of the
will follow in , the Fairview design, availability or price
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll the product is on the street,
af the funeral hom e from 2 fo billions Mve been spent for
~ p.m . and 7 to 9 p.m. on
developmen~ and all the
Tuesday.
buyer can do is accept or
BETTY ANN CHAFFEE
reject the result.
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
H'•g b cos ts of mee 1·mg
Mrs . Fran k Upton, Rt . 1.
t
lati
Reedsville, have learned by

·~

Home with the Rev . Dwight

Sarah F. Dodson Zirkle.
He was a pottery worker a

teiO&lt;;iram from the u. s.
Army In Germ~ny of the
unex~cted death of their
daug ter, Bette Sue Chaffee.
' Friday, De,. 17.
. She was the wife of Pte.
Kenneth D. Chaffee and the
mother of Kenda Dawn,bolh
of Germany. Also survovlng
are a s1ster , Mrs . Ronald
I Mary ) Robinson and a
brother, Benjamin Franklin
Upton. Jr .. both fo Reeds·
ville.
The body will be brought to
White 's Funeral Home
Coolville. Arrangemenls wlli
be announced later.

.

•
•
mmiss1on

,Carter ·will
add .3 more

Zavltz officiating. Burial wilt

Stop in now and ask about the Farmers
Bank IRA Today .
,

~ Farmers Bank

~II

Gift winners are announced

•
PROGRAM SET
•
LETART FAW - The '
Dolll' CltriJtmaa Eve will be ;
presented at the Letlrt Falll Elem~tary School n-lay ,
at 1:30 p.m. directed by Mrs. ,
Lee Lee Ulilted by Blrbara ~
Lawrence, Jan Norris, Eileen
Buck, Roger Rouah, James •
Wickline, principal; Donna
Sayre, and Bill Downie. The
publlc is Invited.
:.

&lt;'i .

Agency Director Rull8eil
Train after obaervtng the
stranded tanker and the oU
sllck from a helicopter
Monday. "It pOBel rllk, a
very substantial rlok, to
valuable fl1herles and
vacation land on Cape Cod
and Nantucket."
Adm.
Owen
Siler,
commander of the Gout
Guard '.a Bolton district who
accompanied Train, uld the
situation ''makes yo~ sick to
your stomach. It's like
looking at lk&gt;meone drowning
and you can't do anythina
about 11."
A group of Cape Cod
ll.rthermen llled a elMs actloo
suit Monday in U.S. District
Court In Boston, seeking $80
million from the ahlp'a
owner, Tbebu Shipping Inc.
of Llberla, for damage
cauaed to filhlng areas by tbe
oU.
,

LJcenses for
. .
fun ma h •

znes
expire Dec, 31
C

·

Middleport bualn- with
coin-operated amuaement
machines and juke bout are
reminded that a vlllase
llcenae is reqalred for
machinea. All amultment
machine llcenlltl expire Dec.
31, lfl6.
The license leu lor
amusement machlnells $10 .
per year lor •ell machine up
to a ~al of th. '11le fee for
each michine over thru Ill
each.
The fee for juke bolu II $80
each per year.
Ucenau are available. at
the Mayon Office and mUll
be obtained before Jaa.
197'1 or be wbl~ to the
penalties provided for by the
village ordinance.

u-

.-.oo

1;

~

.

�2- The OaUy Sentinel, Mlddlei)Ort-Pomeroy, 0., ~.Dec. 21, 11176

Foremens' skills

Hospital News
VelerUI Memorlll H~l

Admitted - Floyd Rboda,
Middleport; Martha Taylor,
Middleport; Mark Hood,
Pomeroy; Gary Johnson,
· Portland; Marvin Durst,
RIO
GRANDE
University professor, will Pomeroy; Eileen Juatla,
"Elements of Supervision," a teacb tbe course whlcb in- Middleport; Thomas Crow,
management training course, eludes training In elements of Pomeroy; Roger Rouah,
will be taught In tbe Meigs human relatione and com· Middleport.
Mines Admlnlstratl.on municati0118 for foreman.
Dlacbarged - Cecelia
Building near Wllltesvllie at
Technical Math n, a buic Biram, Ellen Roatofer, 1
12 :30 p.m. and 5 p.m ... study of trigonometric func- Mindy Hill, VIcky Proffitt,
beglnrtlng Jan. 4.
tiona, will also be offered at Beth Eilla, J~nita Cbapman, .
The class, part of the Rio the . Meigs Mines Ad· Edith McCullough, Phoebe
Grande College-Community . ministration Building on. Lee.
Co II e g e
( R G C - CC ) Tburidays begln!llng Jari. 6,
curriculum, Is a component
Registration for either
Holler Medical Cealer
of the Community . College claM will be held on Rio
(Birlba, Dec. 10)
minlng program, but Is open Grande's campus Monday,
Wendy
Adkins, Roger
to anyooe lntetesled In first January 3 or at the flnt
level management. This meeting of eacb class. Both Banka, Betty Bernard, Mrs.
marks the first time tbe cla88es carry four credit Roy Briggs and son, Alma
course has been offered off· hours and residents of Caldwell, Gerald Chambers,
campus for the convenience Jackson, Gallia,•Meigs and Maureen Coonen, James
of those involved in mining Vinton Counties may regilter Darst, Aline Estep, Elijah
and in area Industry.
· at a cost of Sl3 per credit Estep, Sr., Edgar Greene,
Mrs. James Haiaiop and soo,
Clyde
Baker,
Ohio hour.
Cheryl Hood, Richard
Hughes, Jr., Walter HUnter,
Mn. Cbariea Keplar and son,
Tina King, Julia McGhee,
Shirley Matheny, Jane
Unlted Preu latel'l!llltonal
Ohio VaUey.
Pedigo, Katherine Perklna, .
If you think it's been cold
Travelers' advisories were Maggie stewart, Constance
up to now, wait until winter posted for portions of . Thompaon, Bl!l8ie Vaughan,
gets here!
Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Jayne Walab, Trudy Willa.
Snow apread over much of Indiana, western Virginia
(Birtbl, Dec.IO)
the Northeast In advance of and the mountalna of North
Mr. and Mrs. David
winter's scheduled 6:24' p.m. Carolina. A lre,ezing rain Marcum, son, Langsville;
EST arrival, extending from warning was issued lor Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dray,
northern New York through northern Maine.
daughter, Bidwen;· Mr. and
the northern Atlantic
The temperature dipped to Mrs.
Leslie
Malone,
Seaboard and across the 4 degrees above zero in daughter, Jackson.
Great Lakes Into the upper · Chicago at 3:30 a.m. and
strong winds sent the wind
chill factor down to 32 below
PLEASANT VALLEY
zero. "It's strong enough .to
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
give a reindeer frostbite," a John Chick, daughter,
SEMINAR PLANNED
downtown pollee dispatcher Middleport; Regina Stowers,
The Rev. William Knittel, said, though no . cases of
Point Pleasant; Hazel
minister of the United e~posure were reported.
Knapp,
Leon; Mrs. Bill
Pentecostal Church of
Fugate,
Point
Pleasant, and
Middleport, said Dec. 22 at
Raymond
Mount,
Henderson.
7:'30 Is the hour set for a
seminar on the subject "The BUST MAYOR'S
Gilts of the Spirit." The DAUGili'ER
subject of tongues and In·
LOS ANGELES (UPIJ terpretation of tongues, will l'byllis Bradley, the daughter
be taught. Everyone Is of Maynr Tom Bradley, was
welcome.
arrested Monday . and
COACH OF•YEAR
charged with poMeBSion of
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
dangerous druga.
Johnny Majors, who guided
PROGRAM SET
Police said officers found a undefaated and top-ranked
The annual Christmas
program (!f the Rock Springs small amount of · PCP, or Pitt to the pinnacle of success
United Methodist Church will "angel dust,," in Miss waa selected United Press
he held at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Bradley's car alter she was International's college
There will he songs and stopped for speeding. She was football Coach of the Year.
on $500 bond after
Majors waa chosen by a
recitations by the children released
paying
a
$65
ftne
for
an
''PI
panel of sports writers.
and Santa wiU be on hand.
unpaid traffic ticket.

subject of class

Winter yet to arrive

'

Local notices in brief

By Lawrence E. Lamb,
M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
wile has a bad case of
asthma, and has had ii all of
her life. The doctor she went
· to thought she would outgrow
it but she Ia 19 now and still
has tbe wheezing and hardness of breathing that she
always had. My problem is
this: I am sending her to an
allergy specialliJt who claims
that he can cure her asthma
with shots and treatments to
build up her resistance to her
allergies.
These shots, not counting
the prescriptions, are really
expensive. I need to find
some information or if you
ocould tell me whetber I am
spending my money for
nothing.
The funny catch Ia tbey told
us that this treatnient has to
be carried on for about four
. years to see resuits. She has
been on this treatment for
eight months and is In the
. same shape she was when

she started. I would appreciate any help you co~d
glveme.
•
DEAR READER - I
understand your concern but
this Ia not an unusual situation for an astlunatic. A large
percentage of individuaLs
with childhood astluna do
outgrow the disse, but some
do not.
The cause of asthma may
be an allergic type response
from external allerglna SOOlewhllt Uke bar fever Ia
caused by ragweed, and
tbese cases are called extrinsic astluna. If you know what
tbe offending allergin is,
complete avoidance of It is
tbe most effective form of
treatment. Unfortunately
this may not be possible.
Desensitization such as your
wife Ia getting Ia commonly
done, and it does require longterm therapy for tbe' best
results. Unfortunately, no
one can predict with certainty which patients will ~ ,

pond to the desensitization ,
program. Sinre In some pa·
tients the response is
dramatic It Ia worth trying,
but you should keep in mind
that even after tbe long trial
it may not produce !hoped-for
results.
At age 19 your wife may
still have considerable improvement in her condition.
She shouid know, however, if
her astltrna is related to an
allergic type response and if
so to what allergins. If it Ia an
allergic type astltrna her dOC"
tor should know what she is
allergic to - particularly if
tbe shots are to have any
benefit. The whole principle
of desensitization is to inject
weak solutions of the allergic
substance until tbe body
undergoes chemical cnges
that enable it to tolerate tbe
allergin without the
asthmatic response.
U tbere Ia no indication that
your wife . has allergic
asUuna tben she probably

SUPERIOR
SEMI-BONELESS

.,,.

FULLY-COOKED HAMS
WHOLE OR

HALF

LB.

FRENCK

WIENERS
zo.totlNT
24 OZ. PKG.
'

RED GRAPES
LB. 49e

the

s tation .

Tide crusheS UCLA, 36-6

all

concert this evening at
Southern
High
School
featuring the, band and choir

starting -at 8 p.m. There Is no
Band director Is

admlsSlon .

Jesse Browning. INs. Lee

Lee

choir director end Mrs.
Jocelyn Baer. choir at ·

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Editor
.

•'

will
be
In
RivervieW
Cemetery. Friends may c~JI
compantst.
at the funeral home at any .
THE .RACINE FIRE; Dept . time .

Blood

Commissioners

(Continued froin page 1)
Will.
.
Donations were by QuaUty
Print Shop, Meigs local
School, The Dally Sentinel,
Atbens Meuenger, WMPO
Radio, Pomeroy Emergency
Squad
and
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Dance tickets

still available
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department has about 30
reservations available to
couples lor the annual New
Year's Ball at the Pomeroy
Elementary School beginning
at 9 a.m. on Dec. 31. The
reservations will be given on
a first come, first served
basis. Couples wishing to
secure reaervationa may can
on Kermit Walton at the New
York Clothing House.

COURSE COMPLETED
Four Middleport and
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
members recently completed
a couroe lri basic cardiology
for the fail term at Hocking
Valley ')'echnical College in
Nelsonville, They were Joe
Struble of the Pomeroy Unit.
and Larry Baker, Wayne
'Davis and Kevin Dailey of the
Middleport Squad. They are
now enrolled in another
emergency medical training
services course at the
college.

(Continued from page I)
Equipment, lntematiohal,
three prices, $10,946, $10,986,
and $11,516; Pomeroy Motor,
$10,950; Carroll Norris
Dodge, S8,176.27, body option
additional costs.
Dump truck proposal No. 2,
Smith Nelson, $11,259; Dan
Thompson Ford, $8,'995
without dump bed, $11,230
with dump bed; Meigs
Equipment, U0,946, $10,986,
$11 ,516; Pomeroy Motor,
$10,950 ; Carroll Norris
Dodge, S8,176.27, additional
for dump bed.
Motor grader Quality High·
way Equipment, Gallon, 1977
vehicle, $37,276.25; 1976
vehicle, U5,741; Riebel
Equipment Co., Columbus,
1977 vehicle, $51,998; Southwestern Equipment Co.,
Gallipolis, 1977 vehicle,
$33 ,440; ·King Equipment,
Columbus, 1977 vehicie,
136,534.115.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours, and
Bernard Gilkey, commissioners, Martha Chambers, Clerk, Wesley Buehl,
engineer and Dave Spencer or
the county highway depart·
men!.

Courthouse will
close 2 Fridays

· Offices of the Meigs County
Courthouse will he closed all
day Friday, Dec. 24, a~~ all
day on Friday, Dec. 31, Judge
John C. Bacon, common
pleas court, announced
today.
Judge Bacon said that the
Ohio Legislature has decreed
both days to be h~lidays. The
courtbouse will, therefore,
close at 4 p.m. on Thursday
before Christmas and New
Year'sandwillopenat9a.m.
· on the Monday following each
• of tbe holiday weekends.

bas intrinsic astltrna. In tius
esse the desensitization program may not be very usefu].
Since an asthmatic has to accept a large part of the day to BABOON CAUGHT
PORT CLINTON, Ohio
!laY management of his or .(UP!
) - Mrs. Nancy Daniel's
her illness I think she should
secret
on how to to capture a
know what her status really
baboon,
one of three whlcb
is. She should avoid exposure
·
escaped
from the riearby
to any of the things she is
African
Lion Safari last
allergic to . .She should know
slimmer,
was to win his
what to do to treat acute atconfidence
through his
tacks and what.measures she
stomach
just
like
can use to prevent attscks. reward was $50. a man. The
Medicine Ia available for this
Police said the woman fed
'purpose and Ia even used by
the
animal, which has been
highly skilled athletes before
lurking
In the area for
competition.
mooths,
in
her baek ynrd this
To give you more informa· past week and
then managed
tion I am sending you The Monday to lure
It Into her
Health Letter number ~. garage where she slammed
Astluna. Others who want
•'
this information can send 50 the door.
The Safari sent out a
cents with a long, stamped, handler who shot the baboon
self-addressed envelope for with alranqullizer gun before
the information. Just send returning it to Its cage.
your letter to me in.care of
Two baboons whlcb fled ~t
this newspaper, P.O. Box the same time were capturetJ
1551, Radio City Station, New aarlier and returned to the
York, NY 100)9.
Safari.

••'

'•

..

SANTA AND HIS REINDEER were another feature of the annual Chrlslrnas program
of Mid&lt;jleport ElementafY students presented Monday night. Direction was by ~ ·
Maurita Miller assisted by the teacbera who are Miss Debbie Ohllnger, Mrs. Wtlson
Carpenter, Mrs. Twlla Childs, Miss Barbara Logan, Jan HW, Debbte ~· Mrs. Lucy
White and Margaret Barr . Pictured are front,! tor, Kimberly Deem, Klrnbe:ly stewart,
Kristi Richinond, Cindy Riffle, Mark Smith; back row, Eddie Kitchen, Damn Drenner,
Shane Engle, as Santa; Tammy Cremeans and Jell Nelson.

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Thursday Uuu Sunaay

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cbampionship, had' them out
or the top 10. and kept tbem
out or one of the more
prestigious howls-all for the
first time In six years-the
Tidemen were determined to
· make amends In the Uberty
Bowl.
They did it in spades.
Scoring the first four times
they had the ball and, at
times, humili~tinR the

College scores

Foreman voted most valuable

Pin Bu ~te r s
96 J2
Village Pharma cy
95 JJ
· Wa id Cross &amp; Son
65 63
Tea m 1
H 81
Tea m 2
&lt;15 B3
Fonzie Follower s
36 92
High sirig le gam e -'- Pat
Bentz 112; Betfy Writesel 160 ,·
Pat Bentz 154 .
High se ri es - Pal Bentz
449 ; Se lby Man'ley 416 ; Betty
W rit ~se l 412 .

Bucks drilling
for Orange game
MIAMI tUP! l ~ Coach Wednesday.
Woody Hayes will put his
Hayes refused to pick a
Ohio state Buckeyes through favorite for the Orange Bowl
a twohour practice session clash.
today and tben let the news
"I won't answer that one,';
media in to take pictures.
he said.
Reporters
and
''Sorry, because I don't like
photographers have been tO favor teams. A a matter of
shut out of the practice f~~. when you're favored, I
sessions and have been asked worry . When we're not
not to .Interview the players favored , I'm bitter. I'm just
as Hayes runs his typical not sure people can put that
tight ship In preparation for onus on anyOOdy."
the New Year's night Orange
Bowl game against · the
Coloredo Buffaloes.
NHL Standing~
The Buckeyes turned In a By United
Press International
campbell Conference
workout Monday which
Patricle Division
Hayes termed "excellent."
W L T PfS . GF GA
He said his 86 players Phi la
19 7. 7 45 120 89
NY lslandr sl 20 B 4 44 116 79
appeared to be in good Atlanta
15 12 7 ~ 1 111 104
physical condition, and that NY Rangers 14 13 8 36 . 131 122
'
Smyttle Division
will earn tbem a day off
W l T Pts. GF GA
Wednesday.
St. Lo uis
13 17 4 30 97 12d
The squad will resume Chica~o
10 19 4 24 102 125
8 19 5 , 21 90 116
work Thursday and Friday Colorado
vancouver 9 23 3 21 96 139
before resting on Chrlslrnas Minnesota 6 19 7 19 82 137
Wales Conference
·
day.
Norris Division
Unebacker Tom Cousinaau
W l T Pts. GF GA
strained a knee In the Montreal 26 5 4 56 167 76
Angeles 11 \3 10 37 JOB JOS
Monday session. He is Los
Pitt sburgh 13 15 5 31 102 115
expected to mills a couple of Detroit
11 17 4 26 92 lld
10 18 4 24 91 130
practices and return to work washingtn
Adams Division
later in the week.
W L T Pis . GF GA
21 10 2 44 129 104
The Colorado Buffaloes Boston
20 8 J 43 114 73
working out ·for the game In Buffalo
Tor onto
16 12 6 38 rJO 111
Boulder, are scheduled to Cleveland 10 17 7 27 99 114
Monday's Results
a)Tive In tbe Miami area on

Gollege ratings
~ETSY

By DAVID MOFFIT
UP! Sporn Writer .
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI )Alabama iuod something to
prove In the Uberty Bowl, but
not even Bear Bryant
dreamed the Crimson Tide
would do it so decisively.
Unhappy over a subpar &amp;..1
season that prevented them
from
winning ·,
the
Southeastern Conference

NEW YORK (UP!) - What constitutes prejudice? Peo~e
hear the word and automatically associate it with race or
religion. But prejudice can pertnin to many other things. The
general de!inition Is preconceived judgment or opinion, about
l!!!Y!Illn(l,and In that context,! confess I'm guilty Df prejudi&lt;;O
eyery tiffie I'm asked to vote for my selections for Baseball s
Hall of Fame.
Now !know I'm not supposed to aUow my personal feelings
to get In tbe way. All I'ni being asked to do by the BasebaU
Writers' Association of America Ia vote for anywhere from one
to 10 candidates I feel should be elected, but how would it he
College Ba1iketball Results
humanly possible for nie or anybody else to vote for anyone
By United Press International
tndiina Classic
without this preconceived judgment or opinion? . .
Round)
Prejudice bas come to be a dirty word but the. truth .IS ~obody . Indiana 79nst
UTah 51. 71
really is completely free from it. Everybody IS preJudiced m Miami 0 . 74 Tex . Tech 63
East
someway or another, to some degree, whetberhe admits it or Allian ce 100 Behr
e nd 74
not.
Bkl y n Co li. 79 Yeshiva 58
Put simply, rm prejudiced in behalf of practically all 34 Calif . Pa . 76 Mt Un.lon 63
79 Catholi c U. 17
candidates eligible for the 1977 Hall of Fame election. I've seen Hofstra
Kean 86 Eastern Conn . 59
them all play bsseball, on good days and bad, and most of them Qu e~ n s Co li. 80 CCNY ~
59 Princ eton 54
tire pel'90tUII friends. Still I try not not to let that Influence me Rutgers
Scrntn 94 E . Strov dsbg 72
more than I can help.
,
Temp le 67 King 's Pa . 54
The19771ist of eligibles for the Hall of Fllll)e is in front of me Wash &amp; Lee 93 Pratt 85
South
· · now and there are any number of candidates I'm tempted to A . Peay 68 Stetson
66
vote for. Men lllte Don Drysdale, George Kell, Mickey Vernon, Bowling Grn 93 Marsh II 88
la . 78 Ill. Wes leyan 611
Harvey ·Kuenn, Vic Wertz, Roger Maria, Bill White, Ted FGa
. So uthern BJ So . 111. 67
Kluszewski, Elston Howard, Don Larsen, Walker Cooper, s . Mis s . 71 Ball St. sa
Alvin Dark, Dick Groat, Bobby Thomson, Richie Ashhom, M iss. Vall ey 81 Lincoln 66
No. Carolin a 113 BYU 93
Camlio Pascual and the late Gil Hodges.
Randlph .Macn 84 Sh ep hr d 66
Frankly, I'm tempted to vote for as many as I can, all ?f SE La . 70McNeese 56
. Ill. 55
tl)em if I could, but I won 't because in my heart, as well as m Va · Teth 92MNoidwe
st
my judgment,! don't honestly believe they are Hall of Famers. Akron 71 Mor ehead St 64
I could aaslly be wrong- ! haven't made a mistake m the last Den ison 11 Def iance 58
De Paul 77 Army 66
30 seconds- but this Is my feeling and,l'm stuck with it.
Ill inois St 73 Kent Sf. 69
Those I feel should be elected to the Hall of Fame next month Ind . St. -T.H . 75 W .Tex . St . 61•
Kan sas 69 St . Louis 68
are Ernie Banks Eddie Mathews, the late Nellie Fox, Pee Wee Marietta
97 AldrSn ·Brddus 86
Reese and Duke'Snider and they are the five I'm voting for.' Mich . St . 78 No . Ca r . St . 60
It botbers me to Ieitve off fine candidates like Kuenn, Nebraska 71 Northwestern 68
No. Ky . St 91 Franklin 68
Vernon, Kell, Drysdale and Hodges because I'm completely Ohio
Nrthrn 6!l Wilm ington 49
familiar With all their credentials ~nd I know an excellent cas.e Rio Grande 90 Glenville 87
Toledo 79 Loyola Ill. 59
can be mede for each of them.
W.M ich . 78 Ind . St. .E 'vl 46
· The voting rules do not deftne what constitutes a legitimate
Southwest
Hall of Farner. In one sense that's good because it gives the Arkansas 80 Kansas 51. 65
Ark . St . 82 M o.· ROlla 57
voter ample latitude to e~ercise his judgement. In another · Mesa
Coil . 89 N.M . Hilnds 80
sense it's not good because some voters feel they need more N .MeM . 107 San D iego St. 104
NW La . 86 TeKaS ·Arl. 81
guidelines to make a proper judgment.
wesr
Ernie Banks Ia one of tho!ie appearing on the ballot this year Cal Po \y.Pom . 91 S.F St. 79
for the first time. His 1,636 RBis total more than any other Fuller ton St . 74 Rice 6'1
George FoK 90 w Bapt 73
candidate on the list al!fl the ~nly other eligible,, who hit _as Grambling
67 c. Wash . 51
many )lomers as he did, IS Eddte Mathews. Both fmished wtth Haw .. Hilo 113 McAistr 68
Hciyward St. 105 Linfie ld 97
512. Only eight players have hit that many and five alr.aady are Le
wi s &amp; Cla r"- 80 Carroll 70
in the Hall of Fame, so that gives you so.me idea of the Mankato St. 89 Bak er'sfld 88
,
achievement. Banks bad 2,583 hits and Mathews 2,315, ~d Pacif ic 89 L SU 76
, Pepp erd ine 71 Wash . St. 67
there is no question In my· mind that both belong m Prllnd St . 94 Ca l SI . -L A BO
Porll and U. 87 Chico St. 63
Cooperstown.
.
·
· .
St . Jos Ind. 92 E . Mont . 69
Nobodyamong the present eligibles ~d more base hits than San
Diego U. 86 U C.S D 66
NellieFox. He had 2,663. Would you beheve he had even more Seame u . 67 Creightn 64
than Ted·Williams? He did, but that's not the reason he gets Stanford 95 Cat .Davis 65
Ut lrvnc 67 Se att le Pa c. 58
my vote. One of the raasons he does Ia because he got more out
of his limited ability than any other ballplayer I can think of.
He made himself Into a standout, the same way Rogers
Hornsby did. For years, every time you thought of the Chicago
Pomeroy Bowling Center
White Sox you au~atically thought of Nellie Fox.
Wednesday Afternoon
Lea~ue
The rec.;..ds of Pee Wee Reese and Duke Snider stand up to
Dec . 15, 1916
any inspection. To appreciate them to their fuUest, though, you
Standings
w. L.
bad to see them play. What a·treat you missed if you never did.

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ARGO PEAS
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TEEN_.®EEN

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,,

Daley

.ALUMI"UM FOIL

.

,.

Carter will

BROUGHTON'S
; . J ·· -

"•·

:louse counselor In energy Sports Briefs
and other fields, pending By
United
Preas "
elevation and consolidation of · Jatei'I!IIUonai
'.'
STANFORD, Calif. (UP!) ;.
(Continued from page I ) · the ertl!t:gy agencies into a
department Schlesinger - Incoming Stanford head ·
But when asked if he was to •· would head.
football Coach Bill Walsh .
be appolnteil secretary of
Environmentalists oppose Tuesday named George ::
labor, he said "any SChlesinger for the energy Seifert, the former bead 1'
annolUlcement will have to program and instead urge the coach ·at Cornell University,
come from
Governor appolntmen) of Alice Rivlin, to his staff of assi~nts.
,.,
Carter.''
director of the Congressional
Wat.b also named Doug "
T he
C a b i n e t Budget Off.ice, or outgoing Single, currenUy on the Stan- '
announcements were Congresswoman Patsy Mink ford staff, to remain as
scheduled to be made at of Hawaii.
assistant coacb for offense. •'
Carter's
fiftti
news
Seifert, 36, was defensive "
conference In a week this ·
ba~kfield coach at Stanford ··•
afternoon at the University of
before moving to Cornell In '
Georgia's
Southwest
1974, will be in charge of
Agriculture Station.
(Continued from page 1)
defense.
Marshall was supported electrocardiagram and a
strongly by consumer checkup indicated an
WASHJNGTON (UP!) - ·•
advocate Ralph Nader, and irregular heart rhythm and Washington Redskins' '
apparently acceptable to that he had told Daley to President Edward Bennett "
organized labor, which had ·check in to a hoapital. He sold Williams said Monday he '·
preferred former Labor the mayor agreed. Coogan plans to offer Coach Geor~e ~
Secretary John Dunlop.
Allen an extension of hiS
An
eipert on
un- said he left the room while contract, whicb bas another .
phoned his son,
employment· and jobs lor Daley
Michael.
When Coogan year to run, tbe Washington ::
minorities, Marsha II returned, the
•
aging mayor Star reported Tuesday.
currently is head of the was In the throes
"We want him to stay. I '·
of the fatal
department of human heart attack.
have every confidence we'll ~
· resources at Texas.
Daley never regained reach an agreement," the ':
Mrs. Harris is a former consciousness, despite efforts Star quoted Williams as '•
dean of the Howard of paramedics and a medical saying. "We have adequate ,.·
University Law School and team from Northwestern time. I've always felt that it
would be the answer to some Memorial Hoapital. Doctors was premature to be "
of the criticism directed at applied closed chest heart discussing an extension with ·
Carter for his failure to name massage and use&lt;l dr ugs and him until the season before
more women and blacks to a hand respirator to keep . his last . season was .
his Cabinet. She Is black,
Daley alive ..Spe.,ahsts made completed.''
Brown is a former Air surgical openings in Daley's
Force secretary during the throat and chest to aid
ANAHEIM (UP!)
Johnson administration. He breathing while members of Veteran catcher .. Andy
Ia considered a liberal on ·the mayor's family walled in Etchebarren has signed a .
defense policy - a stand that the next room, praying.
contract with the California ~
has
prompted
some
Finally, a priest was called Angels to be a playero(oacb ~
opposition from hardliners. to administer the last rites of for 1977, his 14th season In the
His nomination has been the Roman Catholic churcb. major leagues, it was
rumored for weeks.
1·
After 90 minutes of fruitless announced Monday.
On Monday, Carter named efforts, Daley was declared
"While Andy still has the :o
former federal Judge Griffin dead.
ability to contribute as a "
Bell,longtime Atlanta friend,
player, we feel he can serve a .•
to be attorney general ;
dual role," Angels' general rr
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Juanita Kreps, vice president The Los Angeles Rams' Jack manager Harry Dalton said.
of Duke University, to be · Youngblood and University of "He has excellent knowledge ,
coinmerce secretary, and Southern California's Dennis of the game and his :
Minnesota Congressman Bob Thurman have. been named · experience should prove very ;
Bergland to be secretary of coathletes of the month for helpful to . our younger ,,
agriculture.
•
November by the Citizens · players."
The appolniment of Bell Savings Athletic
..
Immediately met stiff opposi· Foundation.
BOISE, Idaho (UP!) - "
lion from the NAACP,
Thurman was the Pacific Idaho State University ;
Common Cause and Nader 8's Interception leader with Monday named Leo "Bud" ,
forces for his rulings In the eight for 170 yards. and one Hake !o replace Joe Pascale·
civil rights and consumer touchdown.
1 as head football coach.
,.
fields during his years on the
Youngblood, a six-year pro
·Pascale was fired after his ·.
5th Circuit Court of Appeals from University of Florida, 1-9 season this fall.
..
before his retirement last helped the Rams hold their
Hake has been tbe head ,
Mnrch. ·
opponents to an average of coach at Grays Harbor .
There also were reports · just over 110 yarda rushing Junior College In Washington ,:
that Carter may tap former per game, second only to the for the past 10 years. His ·•
Defense Secretary James NFL!eading Pittsburgh junior college
teams
Schlesinger to be a White Steclers this season.
comoiled a 63-2&gt;-1 record. ,

REYNOLD'S

TANGELOS
49e ooz.

.

.

FUNERAL SERVICES tor
Mrs .
Luella
Gi lliland
Jenkinson , 68, wl'lo d ied
unexpectedly Saturday In
Jacksonville, Fla .• will be
held at 2 p.rn - Wednesday at
the Rawlings -Coats Funeral
Home wl th Mr. George Glaze
officiating . Among lhe sur.
vlvors Is a . brother. Perry
Gilliland or Zanesville. Burial

3/'1
'

Urgent

members attend . Offi cers
w ill be nom ina ted .

There will be a Christmas

a~thma . victim

3- The Daily Sentlnei,Mlddleilort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Dec. 21 , 1976

will meet this evening at 8 at

The South~rn High School
Tri -M Club wnt hold a Chrlstmasda.nce Wednesday from 9
to 12. Music will be provided
by Clockwork . Admission Is
$1 .50 per person . The dance Is
semi-formal .

DR. LAMB

Help for

•

"

' NEW YORK IUPII - Th•
~ n 1 t e d Press lf\lernational
Board ot Coaches' college
basketball ratings with won .tost
cecords through gam es of
Saturday, Dec. 18, and number
elf first place votes in paren ·
es~s : (3rd Week)
elm
Points
Michigan (37) (4·0)
· 406
~ Notre Dame {2) (6.0)
235
3. San Francisco (2) 00·0) 2JO
J. Alabama (6·01
208
'Marquette 14· 11
207
6. Clncinnati17·0l
179
. 7'. Kentucky (6 · 0
154
. ~ · UCLA (5. 1)
107
t: North Carolina (1) (.t.l ) 100
10. Clemson (7 -0l
64
1J . Nevada.Las Vegas (6 .1) 62
lQ, Wake Forest (6.0)
51
,\3 , Louisville {4·21
47
Arizona (7.1)
42
E' · Utah (S.JJ
38
rr6 . Minnesota (6·01
22
..; . S,yracuse f7 · 1l
13
18. OrtQOn (S.JJ
o
19. M issouri 16 2)
1
20 .. Georgetown (4 0 )
6

f.

t:·

Tororito 6 Atlanta 2.
Mon t real 5 Vancouver 4
(Only games schedul~dl
Tuesday's GameS
Boston at NY lslanc!ers
Chicago at Minn esota
(Only ga mes scheduled)

Wednesday's Games .
Ph i Ill"'' NY Rangers
Detroi t at Atlanta
Pittsburgh at Tqronto
Vancou.ver at Los Angeles
Buffalo at Chlc~go
Minnesota at Clevelend
St , Louis at Colorado
(Only gam es sche dul ed)

tnternetional Hockey
League Standings
' United Press lnternation~. l
North
w t t pts . gf
Kalamazoo17• 11 3. 37 142 112

ga

Flint
IS 13 4 34 136
, Saginaw
13 13 6 H 125
Port Huron
14 15 4 32 119
Muskegon 13 14 4 30 120
South
w I t pts . gt ·
Toledo
15 1l 5 35 l40
Dayton
16 1J 1 33 125
Columbus 12 u 6 30 124
Ft . Wayne 10 19 5 26 115
Monday's Resul1s
No gllmes sche9 ulcd

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tri County League
Dec. 14, 197&amp;
Standings
Team
Pts .
Eag l es Club
76
St rikers
71
Porn . Cem ent Block co .
63
Compu ter SC rvi ces
58
H&amp;R Fires ton e
52
Cline 's Con st. Co .
40
H ig h individual game· Dale Davis 203; Steve Burson
200 ; Dale Davis 197
High ser ie s - Dal 4t Davis
548 ; Ray Roa ch 547 ; John
Tyree 535.
Te am hi gh game - Cline 's
Constr uctio n Co . 92 1.
Team hi gh series - Cline 's
· Co nstructio n Co . '2 614.

Early Wednesday Mixed
Lugue
Dec . IS , 1976
Standings
Team
Pts .
Zide'sSport Shop
· 86
Oilers Four
84
Smith Nelson Motor s
74
Young's Su per Market
70
Tenth Fr am er s
48
Nel son Drug Co .
46
High ind i v idual game Charles Sm ith 210 ; Caroly n
Bachne r 176 ; Ed voss 198
Betty Smith 168; L . Dugan , B.
Port er find Richerd Russell
188 , MaKine D . 161 .
High series - Ed Voss 569
Carolyn
Backner
176 ;
Charles Smith 547 Betty
Smith &lt;166 ; Jim Hawley 487
Pat Ca rson 452.
Team h jgh game - Zide 's
Sport Shop 660.
T eam hig h series - Nelson
D~ ug Co . 1900.
Efllrly Sunday Mixed
League
Dec. 12, 1976'
Standings
Team
'Pts .
Tom 's Cairy Out
88
Jack 's Dairy Bar
82
Town Kiln
74
Cline 's Con st . Co
54
Pomeroy F lewer ShOp
46
Mark V
40
High indiv id ual g~me - Ed
Voss &amp; La rry Dugan 199 ;
Belly Wh itl atch 203; Darrell
Dugan 198 Marlene ~ilson
179 ; Ed Voss 196 H elen
Phe lps . 175 .
High series - Eel voss 582 '
Bet ty Whitlatch 509 : Larry
Dugan 550 Helen Phe lp s 480 ;
Darrell Dugan 513 Mary Voss
469 .
T eam hig h "gl'llme - Cline's
Co n stru ctio n Co . 718 .
Te6 m h igh series - Tom's
Carry Ou\ 2022 .

112
12&lt;~

126 •
126
ga
137
125
126
158

r
·•

Tuesday's Games
No gamr;) scheduiPd
Wednesday ' s Gam es
Pori H uron at Saq lnaw
Flint at Muskegon
Or'J iy qames schedu led

By RICK GOSSELIN
•
By UP! Sporn Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - "II
Chuck Foreman isn't named
the most valuable player in
the league " Minnesota
quarterback Fran Tarkenton
sai~ following the Vl)dngs
playoff win over the
Washington Redskirts last
weekend "there is something
wrong ." '
Nothing is wrong.
Foreman, who spent the

nation 's fourthbes\ college
"We have done a great job
offense, lhe underdog ' of coming back from being a
Crimson Tide trounced 6th· nothing team at lhe start of
ranked UCLA, · 36-6- tbe the year to what we were
largOS! margin In Uberty tonight, " he added. "We beat
Bowl history.
a pretty good football leam."
"Hell yes, I was surprised
UCLA did not look like the
by the score," said Bryant. "I 9-1·1 team it was .
would have settled for one
"I wanted to play tonight,
point. I thought we could beat but.l think we felt it wasn't a
them, hut 1 didn't know for game lhat would make our
sw-e."
season."·. !'iatd
UCLA

quarterback Jeff Dankworth .
"llhink maybe we felt it was
kind of a consolation game
lor us . We didn't have
Intensity or fire."
UCLA Coach
Terry
Donahue dlsagreed . "I think
we tOQk this gan1e serious
enough. To say otherwise
would detr act from an
outstanding i\labama effort. I
thought,. very frankly, ti1at

1976 season solidifying while Dallas quarterback . conferent'e; and scoring H
'1itmself as lhe most versatile Roger Staubach, Tarkenton touchdown! to lie ~'rant'O
running back In the game, and . Los Angeles running Harris of Piltsburgh lor the
was chosen by United Press hack Lawrence McCutcheon coleadership In the NFL.
It marked th e seco nd
!nternational.')'uesday as the also received mentlon.
most valuable player m the
Foreman proved himself straight season the 2f&gt;.ycar·
N a t' i o n a I F o o I b a 11 the most valuable in every old running back !rom the
Confere~ce. Foreman was
pHase of the Minnesota attack University of Miam i !1as
named on 26 ballots from the this season : rushing I or a topped the I,OOO:yard mark
UP! board of 42 voters, three club record 1,155 yards to and he did lt.wiU• a consistent
from each conference city . finish fourth In the NFC; 14-week performnn ce
Chicago running ba ck catching 55 passes for 567 tughlighted by just thr~ !()().
Walter Payton finished as yards to rank second in the yard ga mes.
nmnerup with nine votes
~'oreman rushed fur 100
yards against Seattle, 146
against Pittsburgh and 11 club
record
200
ver sus
Philadelph ia . For em an
added six pass receptions for
65 yards In that Eagles'

Falcons slip past MU;
Toledo, Miami trlumph g•~:~~·
e

·

By
IJnited
Press all scorers.
Jaternational
At Toledo, Dick Miller
Three of four of Ohio's Mid- poured in 26 points and gol a
Amertcan Conference gamebigh 12 rebounds as the
basketball teams rolled to Rockets put down an early
victory Monday night in second half rally and waltzed
• ncnconference action.
to victory.
Bowling Green bad a tough The Rockets, 6-3, jumped
time with Marshall but oH to an il-2lead and rolled on
managed a 93-88 win in to a 42-28 bulge by
overtime; Toledo brte!&lt;ed to intermission, but the
a 79-59 victory over Loyola of . Chicagoans cut the deficit to
Chicago; and Miami downed 10pointsinthelastbalf,at44Texas Tech 74~ In tbe 34.
opening round the Indiana
Miami's Redskins led all
Classic at Bloomington, Ind. lhe way for their fifth win in .
Kent State was the only state six games. Their biggest lead
MAC
team
defeated, In the first half was eight
dropping a 7~9 decision to points but It was only 35-32 at
Ulinois State. '
the half.
Bowling Green, now 3-3,
Miami outscored l..qyola II·
held a six-point lead with 30 2lo open the second half lor a
seconds left In regulation but 46-34 lead and coasted home.
the host Thundering Herd
Archie Aldridge's 22 points
managed to knot the score at was high for the Redsklns
711-78 to send the contest into while Bernard Newman
overtime. •
tossed in 13 points and John
The Falcons were able to Shoemaker added II as they
stave off a second comeback knocked the Texans from
rally as they held the Herd , ranks of the unbeaten.
·
scoreless over the final 30
The Redsklns tangle with
seconds of overtime and host Indiana tonight for the
Rosie Barnes sank two foul tourney crown.
sbots with two seconds
Kent State, playing at
remaining to cllncb the win. home, held a 33-31 halftime
Tommy Harris drilled In 40 lead but lliiqois State,
points for the Falcons to lend sparked by 7-foo\ center Jeff

Steelers' backs
!l

badly battered
.
PITISBIJRGH (UPI) The Pittsburgh Steeler
running backs will take it
easy In practice this week due
to injuries, but coach Chuck
Noll says that should only
leave them 11real fresh" for
the game with Oakland on
Sunday.
When he was through
joking with newsmen
Monday, however, Noll said
the injury sltuati.on with
Franco Harris and Rocky
Bleier "doesn't look good
right now ... It looks bad."
Harris has bruised ribs
which hurt when he breathes,
and meier is using a cane
because ol a sprained right
big toe, which he uses to push
off on.
Frencby Fuqua has a
pulled calf muscle, and
rookie Jack Deloplaine
definitely is out of the
Oakland game due to a
sprained k~ee.
That leaves Reg_gle
Harrison as t~ only really
healthy running hack.
Harris was injured early in
the second half of the
steelers' 4().14 victory over
ihe Baltimore Colts SUnday,
and meier was Injured in·the
first few minutes of the game.
Neither man returned to
action after he was Injured.
In addition, a groin injury
which has bothered placekicker Roy Gerela the past
four weeks has betn
aggravated.
·
Despite alllhis, !loll said,
the team would be rendy for
the game with the Raiders in
Oakland fcir the American
Football Conference
championship.
"We
can
make
•I

.

·

Wilkins, came back in · the
second half and took a 51H3
lead with less than seven
minutes gone and stayed in
front the rest or the way.
Kent State, now 3-3, was
headed by Burrell McGhee·
with 15 points.
Elsehwere, Akron downed
Morehead State 71-64, California (Pa.) whipped Mount
Union 76-63, and North
Dakota defeated Wright State
67-58.
In other tourney action,
host Ohio Northern breezed to
a 68·49 victory over
Wilmington and Denison
whipped Defiance 71-58 in the
opening round of the Ada
Rotary Tournament ; and
host Marietta beat AldersonBroaddus '(W.Va) 97-116 and
Rio Grande edged Glenville
(W . Va . )~ in first round of
the Marietta Invitational
Shrine Tournament.
Ohio Northern takes on
Denison tonight lor the Ada
tourney title and Marietta
plays Rio Grande II) the finakl
of the Marietta ·Invitational.
Among qther games
tonight, Ohio hosts Davidson
'and Dayton tangles with
visiting Santa Clara.

Monda-.. •s
Ohio College
Basketball Score
United Press Internationa l
Toledo 79 Loyola 01\ l 59
Illinois 51 73 Kent St. 69
Bo wling Green 93 Ma rsha ll 88
to t l
Akron 71 Morehe ad S! M
C{ll i fornia (Pa) 76 M o unt
Unio n 63
Indiana Classic
Miami 74 Tex as Tec h 63
Ada Rotary Tournament
Oh iO Northern 68 Wil mingtoh
49
Den·lson 71 Defiance 58
Marie tta Invitational
Marietta
97
A ld erson
Broaddus (W V&amp; ) 8iJ
Rio Grande 90 ·G lenvill e (W

durable Foreman also
led the way for NFL runmng
backs with a pair of !()().yard
receiving day s, ca tching
seven passes for 100 yards
against New Orleans in the
season opener and eig ht
passes for 118 yards against
U1c New York Giants.
Foreman !ailed to cntch
passes In just two of the l4
games as he topped the 50.
catch level for the third
straight year.
Foreman becomes the third
Viking ever to win the honor
and the second in a rpw,
following Tarke0ton who was
natped player of the year In
1975 . Minnesota defensive
lineman Alan Page w011 the
award in 1971.

we would play very weU.
Most of our problems were
due to Alabama's play.''
The Crimson Tide scored 17
points in a 4:31apan late in
the first period and, lor all
practical purposes, the game,
played In subfreezing
weather with a stroog wind
that lowerf'(i the wind chUI
factor to zero, was over,
In th at
first-period
outburst, Buck{ . Berrey
kicked his first o a Uberty
Bowl record three lleid goals;
Barry Krause, voted most
valuable player in the game,
scored on a 44-yard return of .
th e first of thr ee Tide
interceptions ; and Johnny
Davis ·scorllli on a two-yard
plunge.
Then, addin g Insult to
injury. Alabama made it 2~
eal'ly in the scccnd period
when the Tide caught the
· Bl'ulns by surprise with a 20yard touchdcwn pass from
Nalhan, the tailback, to
quarterback Jack O'Rear .
'Two more Berrey field
goals had It 3()..() early In tho
final period before UCLA,
hold for downs on three
()(_'Casions , got Its only points
on a 61-yard run by Theotls
Brown,
a touchdown
Alabama got back In the
closing seconds when Rick
Watson 's one-yard plung e
capped an 82-yard march.
Thi• Week'• Spec&lt;a l

'

USED ARS

'71 OLDS 88
4 DR. SEDAN
V in y l rool , a ir , whiiP.-wiJIIs,
1 owner .

'1495
( less 10 Pd._!llscountl

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll

Like Our Qu•llty

Way ot Doing

Business

GMAC FINI\f\ICING .
992-5341
Pomeroy
· Open Evenings 'tll6:00
Tllll~

... . S.t.

If your insurance agent can't give you
·"worry free" service, fire him and hire
Mick .

"Let Mick Do It!"

adjustments," he said.
The Raiders beat the Stee·
You may never have to worry about
lers, 31-28, In a ftgbt-pl~ued
insurance
again.
opening game of the 1976
season, but Noll said, "I will
not talk to the team about
retaliation. We plan to play va) 87
Bo wling Gr een 98 M arsh all 88
football.''
"We will play tbe game tbe lo t)Ohio Northern Tourney
way we know how to play it. Den ison 71 Def ia nce 58
Middleport, 0.
992-2342
Indiana Classic
We don't want to fight," he
Miam i 74 Texas Tec h 63
sai~.
.
Noll said center ,Ray Mana·
Held probably will handle tbe
kic~offs in place of Gerela,
who will kick extra points and
field goals, Manslleld kicked
In tbe second half of the
DEADLINE FOR PuRCHASE OF 1977 DOG LICENSE I S JANUARY 20TH . TWO
DOLLARS ($2.001 PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE .
Baltimore game and was
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THI S HANDY APPLICATION BLAN K AND
successful on one ,extra-point
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE
attempt.
TWO DOLLARS 112.001 FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMA LE.
"Once he (Gerela l kicks,
To obta in license by mall , fill In and ma ll this form to HOWARD E . FRANK ,
he's spent'and needs time to
COUNTY AUDITQR. Meigs County, Pomer oy, Ohio.
rest," Noll said.
Wide receiver Lynn SWann,
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope -a nd price of license .
who was injured in the 6rst
Oakland game, will continue
to handle punt returns.
Male Dog U .OO - Spayed Female $2.00 __: Female$2 ,00 - Kennel License SIO
Noll cited tbe offensive line
OWNER'S NAME
. and Fuqua for special praise
In the Baltimore game ..
'
ADDRESS
"He .(Fuqua) played a
fantastic game in spite of a
TOWNSHIP
'pulled calf mQSCie," Noll
Said. "But be probably won 't
be able to work out much 1
either this week.''
;
Sex
A e
COLOR
Ha ir
Breed Fees
"We will have a normal
If
week with closed practices," l.&lt;r. Mo . M F Blk White Gray Brindle Ta n Brown
Yellow Lon9 Short Know Paid
. he said. "Our club responde
to a crowd, whether it's
•
hostile or frieadly. The crowd
gets the team excited.
"it!! far as what we will do
... we may go to a three·
receiver offense or uae one of
our rece1vers (either Frank'
Lewis or Theo Bell) as a
back.".
.
As ' for stopping Oakland
quarterback Ken Stabler,
Noll said, "It will take a team
effort.
,
"You need the rush, the
jams, the holdupa and the
License musl be obtained not later than Jon. 20, 197lto avoid paying penalty. Aller
good coverage.''
thi• date penally will bt 12.00 for single lag and 15.00 lor kennel license.

DOWNING CHILDS (iJi)
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.

Attention Dog Owners

.

.

Howard

E. Frank

County AQdltor of Meigs County
.

•

'

�2- The OaUy Sentinel, Mlddlei)Ort-Pomeroy, 0., ~.Dec. 21, 11176

Foremens' skills

Hospital News
VelerUI Memorlll H~l

Admitted - Floyd Rboda,
Middleport; Martha Taylor,
Middleport; Mark Hood,
Pomeroy; Gary Johnson,
· Portland; Marvin Durst,
RIO
GRANDE
University professor, will Pomeroy; Eileen Juatla,
"Elements of Supervision," a teacb tbe course whlcb in- Middleport; Thomas Crow,
management training course, eludes training In elements of Pomeroy; Roger Rouah,
will be taught In tbe Meigs human relatione and com· Middleport.
Mines Admlnlstratl.on municati0118 for foreman.
Dlacbarged - Cecelia
Building near Wllltesvllie at
Technical Math n, a buic Biram, Ellen Roatofer, 1
12 :30 p.m. and 5 p.m ... study of trigonometric func- Mindy Hill, VIcky Proffitt,
beglnrtlng Jan. 4.
tiona, will also be offered at Beth Eilla, J~nita Cbapman, .
The class, part of the Rio the . Meigs Mines Ad· Edith McCullough, Phoebe
Grande College-Community . ministration Building on. Lee.
Co II e g e
( R G C - CC ) Tburidays begln!llng Jari. 6,
curriculum, Is a component
Registration for either
Holler Medical Cealer
of the Community . College claM will be held on Rio
(Birlba, Dec. 10)
minlng program, but Is open Grande's campus Monday,
Wendy
Adkins, Roger
to anyooe lntetesled In first January 3 or at the flnt
level management. This meeting of eacb class. Both Banka, Betty Bernard, Mrs.
marks the first time tbe cla88es carry four credit Roy Briggs and son, Alma
course has been offered off· hours and residents of Caldwell, Gerald Chambers,
campus for the convenience Jackson, Gallia,•Meigs and Maureen Coonen, James
of those involved in mining Vinton Counties may regilter Darst, Aline Estep, Elijah
and in area Industry.
· at a cost of Sl3 per credit Estep, Sr., Edgar Greene,
Mrs. James Haiaiop and soo,
Clyde
Baker,
Ohio hour.
Cheryl Hood, Richard
Hughes, Jr., Walter HUnter,
Mn. Cbariea Keplar and son,
Tina King, Julia McGhee,
Shirley Matheny, Jane
Unlted Preu latel'l!llltonal
Ohio VaUey.
Pedigo, Katherine Perklna, .
If you think it's been cold
Travelers' advisories were Maggie stewart, Constance
up to now, wait until winter posted for portions of . Thompaon, Bl!l8ie Vaughan,
gets here!
Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Jayne Walab, Trudy Willa.
Snow apread over much of Indiana, western Virginia
(Birtbl, Dec.IO)
the Northeast In advance of and the mountalna of North
Mr. and Mrs. David
winter's scheduled 6:24' p.m. Carolina. A lre,ezing rain Marcum, son, Langsville;
EST arrival, extending from warning was issued lor Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Dray,
northern New York through northern Maine.
daughter, Bidwen;· Mr. and
the northern Atlantic
The temperature dipped to Mrs.
Leslie
Malone,
Seaboard and across the 4 degrees above zero in daughter, Jackson.
Great Lakes Into the upper · Chicago at 3:30 a.m. and
strong winds sent the wind
chill factor down to 32 below
PLEASANT VALLEY
zero. "It's strong enough .to
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
give a reindeer frostbite," a John Chick, daughter,
SEMINAR PLANNED
downtown pollee dispatcher Middleport; Regina Stowers,
The Rev. William Knittel, said, though no . cases of
Point Pleasant; Hazel
minister of the United e~posure were reported.
Knapp,
Leon; Mrs. Bill
Pentecostal Church of
Fugate,
Point
Pleasant, and
Middleport, said Dec. 22 at
Raymond
Mount,
Henderson.
7:'30 Is the hour set for a
seminar on the subject "The BUST MAYOR'S
Gilts of the Spirit." The DAUGili'ER
subject of tongues and In·
LOS ANGELES (UPIJ terpretation of tongues, will l'byllis Bradley, the daughter
be taught. Everyone Is of Maynr Tom Bradley, was
welcome.
arrested Monday . and
COACH OF•YEAR
charged with poMeBSion of
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
dangerous druga.
Johnny Majors, who guided
PROGRAM SET
Police said officers found a undefaated and top-ranked
The annual Christmas
program (!f the Rock Springs small amount of · PCP, or Pitt to the pinnacle of success
United Methodist Church will "angel dust,," in Miss waa selected United Press
he held at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Bradley's car alter she was International's college
There will he songs and stopped for speeding. She was football Coach of the Year.
on $500 bond after
Majors waa chosen by a
recitations by the children released
paying
a
$65
ftne
for
an
''PI
panel of sports writers.
and Santa wiU be on hand.
unpaid traffic ticket.

subject of class

Winter yet to arrive

'

Local notices in brief

By Lawrence E. Lamb,
M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
wile has a bad case of
asthma, and has had ii all of
her life. The doctor she went
· to thought she would outgrow
it but she Ia 19 now and still
has tbe wheezing and hardness of breathing that she
always had. My problem is
this: I am sending her to an
allergy specialliJt who claims
that he can cure her asthma
with shots and treatments to
build up her resistance to her
allergies.
These shots, not counting
the prescriptions, are really
expensive. I need to find
some information or if you
ocould tell me whetber I am
spending my money for
nothing.
The funny catch Ia tbey told
us that this treatnient has to
be carried on for about four
. years to see resuits. She has
been on this treatment for
eight months and is In the
. same shape she was when

she started. I would appreciate any help you co~d
glveme.
•
DEAR READER - I
understand your concern but
this Ia not an unusual situation for an astlunatic. A large
percentage of individuaLs
with childhood astluna do
outgrow the disse, but some
do not.
The cause of asthma may
be an allergic type response
from external allerglna SOOlewhllt Uke bar fever Ia
caused by ragweed, and
tbese cases are called extrinsic astluna. If you know what
tbe offending allergin is,
complete avoidance of It is
tbe most effective form of
treatment. Unfortunately
this may not be possible.
Desensitization such as your
wife Ia getting Ia commonly
done, and it does require longterm therapy for tbe' best
results. Unfortunately, no
one can predict with certainty which patients will ~ ,

pond to the desensitization ,
program. Sinre In some pa·
tients the response is
dramatic It Ia worth trying,
but you should keep in mind
that even after tbe long trial
it may not produce !hoped-for
results.
At age 19 your wife may
still have considerable improvement in her condition.
She shouid know, however, if
her astltrna is related to an
allergic type response and if
so to what allergins. If it Ia an
allergic type astltrna her dOC"
tor should know what she is
allergic to - particularly if
tbe shots are to have any
benefit. The whole principle
of desensitization is to inject
weak solutions of the allergic
substance until tbe body
undergoes chemical cnges
that enable it to tolerate tbe
allergin without the
asthmatic response.
U tbere Ia no indication that
your wife . has allergic
asUuna tben she probably

SUPERIOR
SEMI-BONELESS

.,,.

FULLY-COOKED HAMS
WHOLE OR

HALF

LB.

FRENCK

WIENERS
zo.totlNT
24 OZ. PKG.
'

RED GRAPES
LB. 49e

the

s tation .

Tide crusheS UCLA, 36-6

all

concert this evening at
Southern
High
School
featuring the, band and choir

starting -at 8 p.m. There Is no
Band director Is

admlsSlon .

Jesse Browning. INs. Lee

Lee

choir director end Mrs.
Jocelyn Baer. choir at ·

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Editor
.

•'

will
be
In
RivervieW
Cemetery. Friends may c~JI
compantst.
at the funeral home at any .
THE .RACINE FIRE; Dept . time .

Blood

Commissioners

(Continued froin page 1)
Will.
.
Donations were by QuaUty
Print Shop, Meigs local
School, The Dally Sentinel,
Atbens Meuenger, WMPO
Radio, Pomeroy Emergency
Squad
and
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Dance tickets

still available
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department has about 30
reservations available to
couples lor the annual New
Year's Ball at the Pomeroy
Elementary School beginning
at 9 a.m. on Dec. 31. The
reservations will be given on
a first come, first served
basis. Couples wishing to
secure reaervationa may can
on Kermit Walton at the New
York Clothing House.

COURSE COMPLETED
Four Middleport and
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
members recently completed
a couroe lri basic cardiology
for the fail term at Hocking
Valley ')'echnical College in
Nelsonville, They were Joe
Struble of the Pomeroy Unit.
and Larry Baker, Wayne
'Davis and Kevin Dailey of the
Middleport Squad. They are
now enrolled in another
emergency medical training
services course at the
college.

(Continued from page I)
Equipment, lntematiohal,
three prices, $10,946, $10,986,
and $11,516; Pomeroy Motor,
$10,950; Carroll Norris
Dodge, S8,176.27, body option
additional costs.
Dump truck proposal No. 2,
Smith Nelson, $11,259; Dan
Thompson Ford, $8,'995
without dump bed, $11,230
with dump bed; Meigs
Equipment, U0,946, $10,986,
$11 ,516; Pomeroy Motor,
$10,950 ; Carroll Norris
Dodge, S8,176.27, additional
for dump bed.
Motor grader Quality High·
way Equipment, Gallon, 1977
vehicle, $37,276.25; 1976
vehicle, U5,741; Riebel
Equipment Co., Columbus,
1977 vehicle, $51,998; Southwestern Equipment Co.,
Gallipolis, 1977 vehicle,
$33 ,440; ·King Equipment,
Columbus, 1977 vehicie,
136,534.115.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours, and
Bernard Gilkey, commissioners, Martha Chambers, Clerk, Wesley Buehl,
engineer and Dave Spencer or
the county highway depart·
men!.

Courthouse will
close 2 Fridays

· Offices of the Meigs County
Courthouse will he closed all
day Friday, Dec. 24, a~~ all
day on Friday, Dec. 31, Judge
John C. Bacon, common
pleas court, announced
today.
Judge Bacon said that the
Ohio Legislature has decreed
both days to be h~lidays. The
courtbouse will, therefore,
close at 4 p.m. on Thursday
before Christmas and New
Year'sandwillopenat9a.m.
· on the Monday following each
• of tbe holiday weekends.

bas intrinsic astltrna. In tius
esse the desensitization program may not be very usefu].
Since an asthmatic has to accept a large part of the day to BABOON CAUGHT
PORT CLINTON, Ohio
!laY management of his or .(UP!
) - Mrs. Nancy Daniel's
her illness I think she should
secret
on how to to capture a
know what her status really
baboon,
one of three whlcb
is. She should avoid exposure
·
escaped
from the riearby
to any of the things she is
African
Lion Safari last
allergic to . .She should know
slimmer,
was to win his
what to do to treat acute atconfidence
through his
tacks and what.measures she
stomach
just
like
can use to prevent attscks. reward was $50. a man. The
Medicine Ia available for this
Police said the woman fed
'purpose and Ia even used by
the
animal, which has been
highly skilled athletes before
lurking
In the area for
competition.
mooths,
in
her baek ynrd this
To give you more informa· past week and
then managed
tion I am sending you The Monday to lure
It Into her
Health Letter number ~. garage where she slammed
Astluna. Others who want
•'
this information can send 50 the door.
The Safari sent out a
cents with a long, stamped, handler who shot the baboon
self-addressed envelope for with alranqullizer gun before
the information. Just send returning it to Its cage.
your letter to me in.care of
Two baboons whlcb fled ~t
this newspaper, P.O. Box the same time were capturetJ
1551, Radio City Station, New aarlier and returned to the
York, NY 100)9.
Safari.

••'

'•

..

SANTA AND HIS REINDEER were another feature of the annual Chrlslrnas program
of Mid&lt;jleport ElementafY students presented Monday night. Direction was by ~ ·
Maurita Miller assisted by the teacbera who are Miss Debbie Ohllnger, Mrs. Wtlson
Carpenter, Mrs. Twlla Childs, Miss Barbara Logan, Jan HW, Debbte ~· Mrs. Lucy
White and Margaret Barr . Pictured are front,! tor, Kimberly Deem, Klrnbe:ly stewart,
Kristi Richinond, Cindy Riffle, Mark Smith; back row, Eddie Kitchen, Damn Drenner,
Shane Engle, as Santa; Tammy Cremeans and Jell Nelson.

GOLDEN ISlE

79e

2/89$

8 OZ. CARTON .

1&amp;

oz. 29e
Open
•

9 til 7

sun. io to 5 ;
,

00

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32 OZ. JAR

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89•

Prices Effecttw.i

Thursday Uuu Sunaay

ROSS

BIWWN 'N SERV_
E_ROUS

oz. 49• -

cbampionship, had' them out
or the top 10. and kept tbem
out or one of the more
prestigious howls-all for the
first time In six years-the
Tidemen were determined to
· make amends In the Uberty
Bowl.
They did it in spades.
Scoring the first four times
they had the ball and, at
times, humili~tinR the

College scores

Foreman voted most valuable

Pin Bu ~te r s
96 J2
Village Pharma cy
95 JJ
· Wa id Cross &amp; Son
65 63
Tea m 1
H 81
Tea m 2
&lt;15 B3
Fonzie Follower s
36 92
High sirig le gam e -'- Pat
Bentz 112; Betfy Writesel 160 ,·
Pat Bentz 154 .
High se ri es - Pal Bentz
449 ; Se lby Man'ley 416 ; Betty
W rit ~se l 412 .

Bucks drilling
for Orange game
MIAMI tUP! l ~ Coach Wednesday.
Woody Hayes will put his
Hayes refused to pick a
Ohio state Buckeyes through favorite for the Orange Bowl
a twohour practice session clash.
today and tben let the news
"I won't answer that one,';
media in to take pictures.
he said.
Reporters
and
''Sorry, because I don't like
photographers have been tO favor teams. A a matter of
shut out of the practice f~~. when you're favored, I
sessions and have been asked worry . When we're not
not to .Interview the players favored , I'm bitter. I'm just
as Hayes runs his typical not sure people can put that
tight ship In preparation for onus on anyOOdy."
the New Year's night Orange
Bowl game against · the
Coloredo Buffaloes.
NHL Standing~
The Buckeyes turned In a By United
Press International
campbell Conference
workout Monday which
Patricle Division
Hayes termed "excellent."
W L T PfS . GF GA
He said his 86 players Phi la
19 7. 7 45 120 89
NY lslandr sl 20 B 4 44 116 79
appeared to be in good Atlanta
15 12 7 ~ 1 111 104
physical condition, and that NY Rangers 14 13 8 36 . 131 122
'
Smyttle Division
will earn tbem a day off
W l T Pts. GF GA
Wednesday.
St. Lo uis
13 17 4 30 97 12d
The squad will resume Chica~o
10 19 4 24 102 125
8 19 5 , 21 90 116
work Thursday and Friday Colorado
vancouver 9 23 3 21 96 139
before resting on Chrlslrnas Minnesota 6 19 7 19 82 137
Wales Conference
·
day.
Norris Division
Unebacker Tom Cousinaau
W l T Pts. GF GA
strained a knee In the Montreal 26 5 4 56 167 76
Angeles 11 \3 10 37 JOB JOS
Monday session. He is Los
Pitt sburgh 13 15 5 31 102 115
expected to mills a couple of Detroit
11 17 4 26 92 lld
10 18 4 24 91 130
practices and return to work washingtn
Adams Division
later in the week.
W L T Pis . GF GA
21 10 2 44 129 104
The Colorado Buffaloes Boston
20 8 J 43 114 73
working out ·for the game In Buffalo
Tor onto
16 12 6 38 rJO 111
Boulder, are scheduled to Cleveland 10 17 7 27 99 114
Monday's Results
a)Tive In tbe Miami area on

Gollege ratings
~ETSY

By DAVID MOFFIT
UP! Sporn Writer .
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI )Alabama iuod something to
prove In the Uberty Bowl, but
not even Bear Bryant
dreamed the Crimson Tide
would do it so decisively.
Unhappy over a subpar &amp;..1
season that prevented them
from
winning ·,
the
Southeastern Conference

NEW YORK (UP!) - What constitutes prejudice? Peo~e
hear the word and automatically associate it with race or
religion. But prejudice can pertnin to many other things. The
general de!inition Is preconceived judgment or opinion, about
l!!!Y!Illn(l,and In that context,! confess I'm guilty Df prejudi&lt;;O
eyery tiffie I'm asked to vote for my selections for Baseball s
Hall of Fame.
Now !know I'm not supposed to aUow my personal feelings
to get In tbe way. All I'ni being asked to do by the BasebaU
Writers' Association of America Ia vote for anywhere from one
to 10 candidates I feel should be elected, but how would it he
College Ba1iketball Results
humanly possible for nie or anybody else to vote for anyone
By United Press International
tndiina Classic
without this preconceived judgment or opinion? . .
Round)
Prejudice bas come to be a dirty word but the. truth .IS ~obody . Indiana 79nst
UTah 51. 71
really is completely free from it. Everybody IS preJudiced m Miami 0 . 74 Tex . Tech 63
East
someway or another, to some degree, whetberhe admits it or Allian ce 100 Behr
e nd 74
not.
Bkl y n Co li. 79 Yeshiva 58
Put simply, rm prejudiced in behalf of practically all 34 Calif . Pa . 76 Mt Un.lon 63
79 Catholi c U. 17
candidates eligible for the 1977 Hall of Fame election. I've seen Hofstra
Kean 86 Eastern Conn . 59
them all play bsseball, on good days and bad, and most of them Qu e~ n s Co li. 80 CCNY ~
59 Princ eton 54
tire pel'90tUII friends. Still I try not not to let that Influence me Rutgers
Scrntn 94 E . Strov dsbg 72
more than I can help.
,
Temp le 67 King 's Pa . 54
The19771ist of eligibles for the Hall of Fllll)e is in front of me Wash &amp; Lee 93 Pratt 85
South
· · now and there are any number of candidates I'm tempted to A . Peay 68 Stetson
66
vote for. Men lllte Don Drysdale, George Kell, Mickey Vernon, Bowling Grn 93 Marsh II 88
la . 78 Ill. Wes leyan 611
Harvey ·Kuenn, Vic Wertz, Roger Maria, Bill White, Ted FGa
. So uthern BJ So . 111. 67
Kluszewski, Elston Howard, Don Larsen, Walker Cooper, s . Mis s . 71 Ball St. sa
Alvin Dark, Dick Groat, Bobby Thomson, Richie Ashhom, M iss. Vall ey 81 Lincoln 66
No. Carolin a 113 BYU 93
Camlio Pascual and the late Gil Hodges.
Randlph .Macn 84 Sh ep hr d 66
Frankly, I'm tempted to vote for as many as I can, all ?f SE La . 70McNeese 56
. Ill. 55
tl)em if I could, but I won 't because in my heart, as well as m Va · Teth 92MNoidwe
st
my judgment,! don't honestly believe they are Hall of Famers. Akron 71 Mor ehead St 64
I could aaslly be wrong- ! haven't made a mistake m the last Den ison 11 Def iance 58
De Paul 77 Army 66
30 seconds- but this Is my feeling and,l'm stuck with it.
Ill inois St 73 Kent Sf. 69
Those I feel should be elected to the Hall of Fame next month Ind . St. -T.H . 75 W .Tex . St . 61•
Kan sas 69 St . Louis 68
are Ernie Banks Eddie Mathews, the late Nellie Fox, Pee Wee Marietta
97 AldrSn ·Brddus 86
Reese and Duke'Snider and they are the five I'm voting for.' Mich . St . 78 No . Ca r . St . 60
It botbers me to Ieitve off fine candidates like Kuenn, Nebraska 71 Northwestern 68
No. Ky . St 91 Franklin 68
Vernon, Kell, Drysdale and Hodges because I'm completely Ohio
Nrthrn 6!l Wilm ington 49
familiar With all their credentials ~nd I know an excellent cas.e Rio Grande 90 Glenville 87
Toledo 79 Loyola Ill. 59
can be mede for each of them.
W.M ich . 78 Ind . St. .E 'vl 46
· The voting rules do not deftne what constitutes a legitimate
Southwest
Hall of Farner. In one sense that's good because it gives the Arkansas 80 Kansas 51. 65
Ark . St . 82 M o.· ROlla 57
voter ample latitude to e~ercise his judgement. In another · Mesa
Coil . 89 N.M . Hilnds 80
sense it's not good because some voters feel they need more N .MeM . 107 San D iego St. 104
NW La . 86 TeKaS ·Arl. 81
guidelines to make a proper judgment.
wesr
Ernie Banks Ia one of tho!ie appearing on the ballot this year Cal Po \y.Pom . 91 S.F St. 79
for the first time. His 1,636 RBis total more than any other Fuller ton St . 74 Rice 6'1
George FoK 90 w Bapt 73
candidate on the list al!fl the ~nly other eligible,, who hit _as Grambling
67 c. Wash . 51
many )lomers as he did, IS Eddte Mathews. Both fmished wtth Haw .. Hilo 113 McAistr 68
Hciyward St. 105 Linfie ld 97
512. Only eight players have hit that many and five alr.aady are Le
wi s &amp; Cla r"- 80 Carroll 70
in the Hall of Fame, so that gives you so.me idea of the Mankato St. 89 Bak er'sfld 88
,
achievement. Banks bad 2,583 hits and Mathews 2,315, ~d Pacif ic 89 L SU 76
, Pepp erd ine 71 Wash . St. 67
there is no question In my· mind that both belong m Prllnd St . 94 Ca l SI . -L A BO
Porll and U. 87 Chico St. 63
Cooperstown.
.
·
· .
St . Jos Ind. 92 E . Mont . 69
Nobodyamong the present eligibles ~d more base hits than San
Diego U. 86 U C.S D 66
NellieFox. He had 2,663. Would you beheve he had even more Seame u . 67 Creightn 64
than Ted·Williams? He did, but that's not the reason he gets Stanford 95 Cat .Davis 65
Ut lrvnc 67 Se att le Pa c. 58
my vote. One of the raasons he does Ia because he got more out
of his limited ability than any other ballplayer I can think of.
He made himself Into a standout, the same way Rogers
Hornsby did. For years, every time you thought of the Chicago
Pomeroy Bowling Center
White Sox you au~atically thought of Nellie Fox.
Wednesday Afternoon
Lea~ue
The rec.;..ds of Pee Wee Reese and Duke Snider stand up to
Dec . 15, 1916
any inspection. To appreciate them to their fuUest, though, you
Standings
w. L.
bad to see them play. What a·treat you missed if you never did.

16 OZ. CAN

16

'

OLEOMARGARINE..

SALAD DRESSING
HERSHEY'S SYRUP

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN

ARGO PEAS
17 oz. CAN 4/'1 00
TEEN_.®EEN

•.

.

HEAVY DUTY 18" 'SIZE

afiP DIP OR SOUR CREAM

,,

Daley

.ALUMI"UM FOIL

.

,.

Carter will

BROUGHTON'S
; . J ·· -

"•·

:louse counselor In energy Sports Briefs
and other fields, pending By
United
Preas "
elevation and consolidation of · Jatei'I!IIUonai
'.'
STANFORD, Calif. (UP!) ;.
(Continued from page I ) · the ertl!t:gy agencies into a
department Schlesinger - Incoming Stanford head ·
But when asked if he was to •· would head.
football Coach Bill Walsh .
be appolnteil secretary of
Environmentalists oppose Tuesday named George ::
labor, he said "any SChlesinger for the energy Seifert, the former bead 1'
annolUlcement will have to program and instead urge the coach ·at Cornell University,
come from
Governor appolntmen) of Alice Rivlin, to his staff of assi~nts.
,.,
Carter.''
director of the Congressional
Wat.b also named Doug "
T he
C a b i n e t Budget Off.ice, or outgoing Single, currenUy on the Stan- '
announcements were Congresswoman Patsy Mink ford staff, to remain as
scheduled to be made at of Hawaii.
assistant coacb for offense. •'
Carter's
fiftti
news
Seifert, 36, was defensive "
conference In a week this ·
ba~kfield coach at Stanford ··•
afternoon at the University of
before moving to Cornell In '
Georgia's
Southwest
1974, will be in charge of
Agriculture Station.
(Continued from page 1)
defense.
Marshall was supported electrocardiagram and a
strongly by consumer checkup indicated an
WASHJNGTON (UP!) - ·•
advocate Ralph Nader, and irregular heart rhythm and Washington Redskins' '
apparently acceptable to that he had told Daley to President Edward Bennett "
organized labor, which had ·check in to a hoapital. He sold Williams said Monday he '·
preferred former Labor the mayor agreed. Coogan plans to offer Coach Geor~e ~
Secretary John Dunlop.
Allen an extension of hiS
An
eipert on
un- said he left the room while contract, whicb bas another .
phoned his son,
employment· and jobs lor Daley
Michael.
When Coogan year to run, tbe Washington ::
minorities, Marsha II returned, the
•
aging mayor Star reported Tuesday.
currently is head of the was In the throes
"We want him to stay. I '·
of the fatal
department of human heart attack.
have every confidence we'll ~
· resources at Texas.
Daley never regained reach an agreement," the ':
Mrs. Harris is a former consciousness, despite efforts Star quoted Williams as '•
dean of the Howard of paramedics and a medical saying. "We have adequate ,.·
University Law School and team from Northwestern time. I've always felt that it
would be the answer to some Memorial Hoapital. Doctors was premature to be "
of the criticism directed at applied closed chest heart discussing an extension with ·
Carter for his failure to name massage and use&lt;l dr ugs and him until the season before
more women and blacks to a hand respirator to keep . his last . season was .
his Cabinet. She Is black,
Daley alive ..Spe.,ahsts made completed.''
Brown is a former Air surgical openings in Daley's
Force secretary during the throat and chest to aid
ANAHEIM (UP!)
Johnson administration. He breathing while members of Veteran catcher .. Andy
Ia considered a liberal on ·the mayor's family walled in Etchebarren has signed a .
defense policy - a stand that the next room, praying.
contract with the California ~
has
prompted
some
Finally, a priest was called Angels to be a playero(oacb ~
opposition from hardliners. to administer the last rites of for 1977, his 14th season In the
His nomination has been the Roman Catholic churcb. major leagues, it was
rumored for weeks.
1·
After 90 minutes of fruitless announced Monday.
On Monday, Carter named efforts, Daley was declared
"While Andy still has the :o
former federal Judge Griffin dead.
ability to contribute as a "
Bell,longtime Atlanta friend,
player, we feel he can serve a .•
to be attorney general ;
dual role," Angels' general rr
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Juanita Kreps, vice president The Los Angeles Rams' Jack manager Harry Dalton said.
of Duke University, to be · Youngblood and University of "He has excellent knowledge ,
coinmerce secretary, and Southern California's Dennis of the game and his :
Minnesota Congressman Bob Thurman have. been named · experience should prove very ;
Bergland to be secretary of coathletes of the month for helpful to . our younger ,,
agriculture.
•
November by the Citizens · players."
The appolniment of Bell Savings Athletic
..
Immediately met stiff opposi· Foundation.
BOISE, Idaho (UP!) - "
lion from the NAACP,
Thurman was the Pacific Idaho State University ;
Common Cause and Nader 8's Interception leader with Monday named Leo "Bud" ,
forces for his rulings In the eight for 170 yards. and one Hake !o replace Joe Pascale·
civil rights and consumer touchdown.
1 as head football coach.
,.
fields during his years on the
Youngblood, a six-year pro
·Pascale was fired after his ·.
5th Circuit Court of Appeals from University of Florida, 1-9 season this fall.
..
before his retirement last helped the Rams hold their
Hake has been tbe head ,
Mnrch. ·
opponents to an average of coach at Grays Harbor .
There also were reports · just over 110 yarda rushing Junior College In Washington ,:
that Carter may tap former per game, second only to the for the past 10 years. His ·•
Defense Secretary James NFL!eading Pittsburgh junior college
teams
Schlesinger to be a White Steclers this season.
comoiled a 63-2&gt;-1 record. ,

REYNOLD'S

TANGELOS
49e ooz.

.

.

FUNERAL SERVICES tor
Mrs .
Luella
Gi lliland
Jenkinson , 68, wl'lo d ied
unexpectedly Saturday In
Jacksonville, Fla .• will be
held at 2 p.rn - Wednesday at
the Rawlings -Coats Funeral
Home wl th Mr. George Glaze
officiating . Among lhe sur.
vlvors Is a . brother. Perry
Gilliland or Zanesville. Burial

3/'1
'

Urgent

members attend . Offi cers
w ill be nom ina ted .

There will be a Christmas

a~thma . victim

3- The Daily Sentlnei,Mlddleilort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Dec. 21 , 1976

will meet this evening at 8 at

The South~rn High School
Tri -M Club wnt hold a Chrlstmasda.nce Wednesday from 9
to 12. Music will be provided
by Clockwork . Admission Is
$1 .50 per person . The dance Is
semi-formal .

DR. LAMB

Help for

•

"

' NEW YORK IUPII - Th•
~ n 1 t e d Press lf\lernational
Board ot Coaches' college
basketball ratings with won .tost
cecords through gam es of
Saturday, Dec. 18, and number
elf first place votes in paren ·
es~s : (3rd Week)
elm
Points
Michigan (37) (4·0)
· 406
~ Notre Dame {2) (6.0)
235
3. San Francisco (2) 00·0) 2JO
J. Alabama (6·01
208
'Marquette 14· 11
207
6. Clncinnati17·0l
179
. 7'. Kentucky (6 · 0
154
. ~ · UCLA (5. 1)
107
t: North Carolina (1) (.t.l ) 100
10. Clemson (7 -0l
64
1J . Nevada.Las Vegas (6 .1) 62
lQ, Wake Forest (6.0)
51
,\3 , Louisville {4·21
47
Arizona (7.1)
42
E' · Utah (S.JJ
38
rr6 . Minnesota (6·01
22
..; . S,yracuse f7 · 1l
13
18. OrtQOn (S.JJ
o
19. M issouri 16 2)
1
20 .. Georgetown (4 0 )
6

f.

t:·

Tororito 6 Atlanta 2.
Mon t real 5 Vancouver 4
(Only games schedul~dl
Tuesday's GameS
Boston at NY lslanc!ers
Chicago at Minn esota
(Only ga mes scheduled)

Wednesday's Games .
Ph i Ill"'' NY Rangers
Detroi t at Atlanta
Pittsburgh at Tqronto
Vancou.ver at Los Angeles
Buffalo at Chlc~go
Minnesota at Clevelend
St , Louis at Colorado
(Only gam es sche dul ed)

tnternetional Hockey
League Standings
' United Press lnternation~. l
North
w t t pts . gf
Kalamazoo17• 11 3. 37 142 112

ga

Flint
IS 13 4 34 136
, Saginaw
13 13 6 H 125
Port Huron
14 15 4 32 119
Muskegon 13 14 4 30 120
South
w I t pts . gt ·
Toledo
15 1l 5 35 l40
Dayton
16 1J 1 33 125
Columbus 12 u 6 30 124
Ft . Wayne 10 19 5 26 115
Monday's Resul1s
No gllmes sche9 ulcd

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tri County League
Dec. 14, 197&amp;
Standings
Team
Pts .
Eag l es Club
76
St rikers
71
Porn . Cem ent Block co .
63
Compu ter SC rvi ces
58
H&amp;R Fires ton e
52
Cline 's Con st. Co .
40
H ig h individual game· Dale Davis 203; Steve Burson
200 ; Dale Davis 197
High ser ie s - Dal 4t Davis
548 ; Ray Roa ch 547 ; John
Tyree 535.
Te am hi gh game - Cline 's
Constr uctio n Co . 92 1.
Team hi gh series - Cline 's
· Co nstructio n Co . '2 614.

Early Wednesday Mixed
Lugue
Dec . IS , 1976
Standings
Team
Pts .
Zide'sSport Shop
· 86
Oilers Four
84
Smith Nelson Motor s
74
Young's Su per Market
70
Tenth Fr am er s
48
Nel son Drug Co .
46
High ind i v idual game Charles Sm ith 210 ; Caroly n
Bachne r 176 ; Ed voss 198
Betty Smith 168; L . Dugan , B.
Port er find Richerd Russell
188 , MaKine D . 161 .
High series - Ed Voss 569
Carolyn
Backner
176 ;
Charles Smith 547 Betty
Smith &lt;166 ; Jim Hawley 487
Pat Ca rson 452.
Team h jgh game - Zide 's
Sport Shop 660.
T eam hig h series - Nelson
D~ ug Co . 1900.
Efllrly Sunday Mixed
League
Dec. 12, 1976'
Standings
Team
'Pts .
Tom 's Cairy Out
88
Jack 's Dairy Bar
82
Town Kiln
74
Cline 's Con st . Co
54
Pomeroy F lewer ShOp
46
Mark V
40
High indiv id ual g~me - Ed
Voss &amp; La rry Dugan 199 ;
Belly Wh itl atch 203; Darrell
Dugan 198 Marlene ~ilson
179 ; Ed Voss 196 H elen
Phe lps . 175 .
High series - Eel voss 582 '
Bet ty Whitlatch 509 : Larry
Dugan 550 Helen Phe lp s 480 ;
Darrell Dugan 513 Mary Voss
469 .
T eam hig h "gl'llme - Cline's
Co n stru ctio n Co . 718 .
Te6 m h igh series - Tom's
Carry Ou\ 2022 .

112
12&lt;~

126 •
126
ga
137
125
126
158

r
·•

Tuesday's Games
No gamr;) scheduiPd
Wednesday ' s Gam es
Pori H uron at Saq lnaw
Flint at Muskegon
Or'J iy qames schedu led

By RICK GOSSELIN
•
By UP! Sporn Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - "II
Chuck Foreman isn't named
the most valuable player in
the league " Minnesota
quarterback Fran Tarkenton
sai~ following the Vl)dngs
playoff win over the
Washington Redskirts last
weekend "there is something
wrong ." '
Nothing is wrong.
Foreman, who spent the

nation 's fourthbes\ college
"We have done a great job
offense, lhe underdog ' of coming back from being a
Crimson Tide trounced 6th· nothing team at lhe start of
ranked UCLA, · 36-6- tbe the year to what we were
largOS! margin In Uberty tonight, " he added. "We beat
Bowl history.
a pretty good football leam."
"Hell yes, I was surprised
UCLA did not look like the
by the score," said Bryant. "I 9-1·1 team it was .
would have settled for one
"I wanted to play tonight,
point. I thought we could beat but.l think we felt it wasn't a
them, hut 1 didn't know for game lhat would make our
sw-e."
season."·. !'iatd
UCLA

quarterback Jeff Dankworth .
"llhink maybe we felt it was
kind of a consolation game
lor us . We didn't have
Intensity or fire."
UCLA Coach
Terry
Donahue dlsagreed . "I think
we tOQk this gan1e serious
enough. To say otherwise
would detr act from an
outstanding i\labama effort. I
thought,. very frankly, ti1at

1976 season solidifying while Dallas quarterback . conferent'e; and scoring H
'1itmself as lhe most versatile Roger Staubach, Tarkenton touchdown! to lie ~'rant'O
running back In the game, and . Los Angeles running Harris of Piltsburgh lor the
was chosen by United Press hack Lawrence McCutcheon coleadership In the NFL.
It marked th e seco nd
!nternational.')'uesday as the also received mentlon.
most valuable player m the
Foreman proved himself straight season the 2f&gt;.ycar·
N a t' i o n a I F o o I b a 11 the most valuable in every old running back !rom the
Confere~ce. Foreman was
pHase of the Minnesota attack University of Miam i !1as
named on 26 ballots from the this season : rushing I or a topped the I,OOO:yard mark
UP! board of 42 voters, three club record 1,155 yards to and he did lt.wiU• a consistent
from each conference city . finish fourth In the NFC; 14-week performnn ce
Chicago running ba ck catching 55 passes for 567 tughlighted by just thr~ !()().
Walter Payton finished as yards to rank second in the yard ga mes.
nmnerup with nine votes
~'oreman rushed fur 100
yards against Seattle, 146
against Pittsburgh and 11 club
record
200
ver sus
Philadelph ia . For em an
added six pass receptions for
65 yards In that Eagles'

Falcons slip past MU;
Toledo, Miami trlumph g•~:~~·
e

·

By
IJnited
Press all scorers.
Jaternational
At Toledo, Dick Miller
Three of four of Ohio's Mid- poured in 26 points and gol a
Amertcan Conference gamebigh 12 rebounds as the
basketball teams rolled to Rockets put down an early
victory Monday night in second half rally and waltzed
• ncnconference action.
to victory.
Bowling Green bad a tough The Rockets, 6-3, jumped
time with Marshall but oH to an il-2lead and rolled on
managed a 93-88 win in to a 42-28 bulge by
overtime; Toledo brte!&lt;ed to intermission, but the
a 79-59 victory over Loyola of . Chicagoans cut the deficit to
Chicago; and Miami downed 10pointsinthelastbalf,at44Texas Tech 74~ In tbe 34.
opening round the Indiana
Miami's Redskins led all
Classic at Bloomington, Ind. lhe way for their fifth win in .
Kent State was the only state six games. Their biggest lead
MAC
team
defeated, In the first half was eight
dropping a 7~9 decision to points but It was only 35-32 at
Ulinois State. '
the half.
Bowling Green, now 3-3,
Miami outscored l..qyola II·
held a six-point lead with 30 2lo open the second half lor a
seconds left In regulation but 46-34 lead and coasted home.
the host Thundering Herd
Archie Aldridge's 22 points
managed to knot the score at was high for the Redsklns
711-78 to send the contest into while Bernard Newman
overtime. •
tossed in 13 points and John
The Falcons were able to Shoemaker added II as they
stave off a second comeback knocked the Texans from
rally as they held the Herd , ranks of the unbeaten.
·
scoreless over the final 30
The Redsklns tangle with
seconds of overtime and host Indiana tonight for the
Rosie Barnes sank two foul tourney crown.
sbots with two seconds
Kent State, playing at
remaining to cllncb the win. home, held a 33-31 halftime
Tommy Harris drilled In 40 lead but lliiqois State,
points for the Falcons to lend sparked by 7-foo\ center Jeff

Steelers' backs
!l

badly battered
.
PITISBIJRGH (UPI) The Pittsburgh Steeler
running backs will take it
easy In practice this week due
to injuries, but coach Chuck
Noll says that should only
leave them 11real fresh" for
the game with Oakland on
Sunday.
When he was through
joking with newsmen
Monday, however, Noll said
the injury sltuati.on with
Franco Harris and Rocky
Bleier "doesn't look good
right now ... It looks bad."
Harris has bruised ribs
which hurt when he breathes,
and meier is using a cane
because ol a sprained right
big toe, which he uses to push
off on.
Frencby Fuqua has a
pulled calf muscle, and
rookie Jack Deloplaine
definitely is out of the
Oakland game due to a
sprained k~ee.
That leaves Reg_gle
Harrison as t~ only really
healthy running hack.
Harris was injured early in
the second half of the
steelers' 4().14 victory over
ihe Baltimore Colts SUnday,
and meier was Injured in·the
first few minutes of the game.
Neither man returned to
action after he was Injured.
In addition, a groin injury
which has bothered placekicker Roy Gerela the past
four weeks has betn
aggravated.
·
Despite alllhis, !loll said,
the team would be rendy for
the game with the Raiders in
Oakland fcir the American
Football Conference
championship.
"We
can
make
•I

.

·

Wilkins, came back in · the
second half and took a 51H3
lead with less than seven
minutes gone and stayed in
front the rest or the way.
Kent State, now 3-3, was
headed by Burrell McGhee·
with 15 points.
Elsehwere, Akron downed
Morehead State 71-64, California (Pa.) whipped Mount
Union 76-63, and North
Dakota defeated Wright State
67-58.
In other tourney action,
host Ohio Northern breezed to
a 68·49 victory over
Wilmington and Denison
whipped Defiance 71-58 in the
opening round of the Ada
Rotary Tournament ; and
host Marietta beat AldersonBroaddus '(W.Va) 97-116 and
Rio Grande edged Glenville
(W . Va . )~ in first round of
the Marietta Invitational
Shrine Tournament.
Ohio Northern takes on
Denison tonight lor the Ada
tourney title and Marietta
plays Rio Grande II) the finakl
of the Marietta ·Invitational.
Among qther games
tonight, Ohio hosts Davidson
'and Dayton tangles with
visiting Santa Clara.

Monda-.. •s
Ohio College
Basketball Score
United Press Internationa l
Toledo 79 Loyola 01\ l 59
Illinois 51 73 Kent St. 69
Bo wling Green 93 Ma rsha ll 88
to t l
Akron 71 Morehe ad S! M
C{ll i fornia (Pa) 76 M o unt
Unio n 63
Indiana Classic
Miami 74 Tex as Tec h 63
Ada Rotary Tournament
Oh iO Northern 68 Wil mingtoh
49
Den·lson 71 Defiance 58
Marie tta Invitational
Marietta
97
A ld erson
Broaddus (W V&amp; ) 8iJ
Rio Grande 90 ·G lenvill e (W

durable Foreman also
led the way for NFL runmng
backs with a pair of !()().yard
receiving day s, ca tching
seven passes for 100 yards
against New Orleans in the
season opener and eig ht
passes for 118 yards against
U1c New York Giants.
Foreman !ailed to cntch
passes In just two of the l4
games as he topped the 50.
catch level for the third
straight year.
Foreman becomes the third
Viking ever to win the honor
and the second in a rpw,
following Tarke0ton who was
natped player of the year In
1975 . Minnesota defensive
lineman Alan Page w011 the
award in 1971.

we would play very weU.
Most of our problems were
due to Alabama's play.''
The Crimson Tide scored 17
points in a 4:31apan late in
the first period and, lor all
practical purposes, the game,
played In subfreezing
weather with a stroog wind
that lowerf'(i the wind chUI
factor to zero, was over,
In th at
first-period
outburst, Buck{ . Berrey
kicked his first o a Uberty
Bowl record three lleid goals;
Barry Krause, voted most
valuable player in the game,
scored on a 44-yard return of .
th e first of thr ee Tide
interceptions ; and Johnny
Davis ·scorllli on a two-yard
plunge.
Then, addin g Insult to
injury. Alabama made it 2~
eal'ly in the scccnd period
when the Tide caught the
· Bl'ulns by surprise with a 20yard touchdcwn pass from
Nalhan, the tailback, to
quarterback Jack O'Rear .
'Two more Berrey field
goals had It 3()..() early In tho
final period before UCLA,
hold for downs on three
()(_'Casions , got Its only points
on a 61-yard run by Theotls
Brown,
a touchdown
Alabama got back In the
closing seconds when Rick
Watson 's one-yard plung e
capped an 82-yard march.
Thi• Week'• Spec&lt;a l

'

USED ARS

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Way ot Doing

Business

GMAC FINI\f\ICING .
992-5341
Pomeroy
· Open Evenings 'tll6:00
Tllll~

... . S.t.

If your insurance agent can't give you
·"worry free" service, fire him and hire
Mick .

"Let Mick Do It!"

adjustments," he said.
The Raiders beat the Stee·
You may never have to worry about
lers, 31-28, In a ftgbt-pl~ued
insurance
again.
opening game of the 1976
season, but Noll said, "I will
not talk to the team about
retaliation. We plan to play va) 87
Bo wling Gr een 98 M arsh all 88
football.''
"We will play tbe game tbe lo t)Ohio Northern Tourney
way we know how to play it. Den ison 71 Def ia nce 58
Middleport, 0.
992-2342
Indiana Classic
We don't want to fight," he
Miam i 74 Texas Tec h 63
sai~.
.
Noll said center ,Ray Mana·
Held probably will handle tbe
kic~offs in place of Gerela,
who will kick extra points and
field goals, Manslleld kicked
In tbe second half of the
DEADLINE FOR PuRCHASE OF 1977 DOG LICENSE I S JANUARY 20TH . TWO
DOLLARS ($2.001 PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE .
Baltimore game and was
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THI S HANDY APPLICATION BLAN K AND
successful on one ,extra-point
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE
attempt.
TWO DOLLARS 112.001 FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMA LE.
"Once he (Gerela l kicks,
To obta in license by mall , fill In and ma ll this form to HOWARD E . FRANK ,
he's spent'and needs time to
COUNTY AUDITQR. Meigs County, Pomer oy, Ohio.
rest," Noll said.
Wide receiver Lynn SWann,
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope -a nd price of license .
who was injured in the 6rst
Oakland game, will continue
to handle punt returns.
Male Dog U .OO - Spayed Female $2.00 __: Female$2 ,00 - Kennel License SIO
Noll cited tbe offensive line
OWNER'S NAME
. and Fuqua for special praise
In the Baltimore game ..
'
ADDRESS
"He .(Fuqua) played a
fantastic game in spite of a
TOWNSHIP
'pulled calf mQSCie," Noll
Said. "But be probably won 't
be able to work out much 1
either this week.''
;
Sex
A e
COLOR
Ha ir
Breed Fees
"We will have a normal
If
week with closed practices," l.&lt;r. Mo . M F Blk White Gray Brindle Ta n Brown
Yellow Lon9 Short Know Paid
. he said. "Our club responde
to a crowd, whether it's
•
hostile or frieadly. The crowd
gets the team excited.
"it!! far as what we will do
... we may go to a three·
receiver offense or uae one of
our rece1vers (either Frank'
Lewis or Theo Bell) as a
back.".
.
As ' for stopping Oakland
quarterback Ken Stabler,
Noll said, "It will take a team
effort.
,
"You need the rush, the
jams, the holdupa and the
License musl be obtained not later than Jon. 20, 197lto avoid paying penalty. Aller
good coverage.''
thi• date penally will bt 12.00 for single lag and 15.00 lor kennel license.

DOWNING CHILDS (iJi)
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.

Attention Dog Owners

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Howard

E. Frank

County AQdltor of Meigs County
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4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 21, 1976

Highlanders host
Bobcats tonight -.·

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Knapple, Reed will start
against Bucks in Orange

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Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Southwestern Highlanders
losers of their last two games
by just three points will host
Kyger Creek this evening in.
the only game involving
5V AC schools.
Kyger Creek, coached .by
fonner Highlander ace Keith
Carter, is fresh off a 1~7 .
qon·league thumping of
HaMan, W. Va. The Bobcats
are 2--2 overall and 0.2 in the
SVAC.
Southwestern has lost to
Synunes Valley by one-point
and HaMan Trace by two.
Kyger Creek was edged by
HaMan Trace then bcmbed
by league-leading Southern.
The Highlanders are led by
seniors Keith Grate, Kip
Lewis and Don Bush and
juniors Larry Carter, Monte
Blanton and sophomore Gene
Layton. Kyger Creek's of·
fense has been paced by
senior forward Ralph Baylor,
senior guards Mitch Salem
and Doug Sands, and
sophomore center Jon

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAMS
W L P OP

Southern

S 0 424 298

Sy m. Valley
Kyger Creek

3

Hanoan T r ace

2 7 256 278

Southwestern

North Gall ia

Easter n

TEAM

7 777 798
7 2 301 279
I 3 252 256

I 3 244 289
0 4 137 228

SVAC ONLY

So uther n
Hannan Tra ce

W L P OP
3 0 272 184

2 0 124 121

Sy m. Vall eY
North Gall ia

2

So uthwestern

0 2 119 122

Kyger Creek

Eastern

I

182 181
1 129 12a
I

0 2 118 163

o 2 71 i16

SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Gall Ia
2 o 92 51
So uthe rn

Sym. Va lley
Kyger Creek
Southwester n
Hannan Tra ce

Easte rn

3 1 145 123

2

1

130 13 1

I I 16
1 1 80
0 2 72
0 2 61

90
BO
81

100

Redmen get past
Glenville State
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Rio Grande, with four
Marietta pushed off to a 53·
players in double figures, 31 intermission lead and
held on to defeat Glenville rolled on to its third victory in
State College ~ Monday six games. The West Virginia
night in the opening round of team, led by Shirley Marlin
the Marietta Invitational with 21 points, is &lt;h'i.
Shrine Tournament.
The host Pioneers held
Marietta downed Alderson · down scoring by Alderson •
Broaddus 97-86 in the other Broaddus, which averaged
first round game to set up more than 100 points a game,
Tuesday night's finals be· with a running game all the
tween the host Pioneers and way. The West Virginians
the Redmen .
had a full court press on
The Redmen, 7-1, held a 51· Marietta all the tbne.
37 halftbne lead but Glen·
RIO GRANDE · (901
ville, 1-6, charged back in the Swain 6·1· 13 ,· Royse , 2·4-8 ;
second half, outscoring Rio Price, 11 -2-24 ; Noe, 8-2-18 ;
Grande 50-39. Glenville's James, 5·0·10: Fltzpat.rlck , J.
2-8; Robinson , 0-0-0; Gibson,
WaY.., Washington dumped 0-0-0;
VIckroy , 4-1-9. TOTALS
in 2ll points to lead the un· 39-12-90.
successful charge.
GLENVILLE (871
Gil Price scored 24 points Coates, 2-2-6 ; Warner, 10-020 : Washington , 10 ·8· 28 ;
for the Redmen while Jbn Thomas
, 2·2·6; Hawkins, 4·0·
Noe had 18, Mark Swain 13, 8 : Noddingham , 1·2·4 :
and Greg James 10.
Gil liard , 1-1-3; Knicel y, 6·0·
In the first game, Mitch 12 ; Page, 0-0-0. TOTALS 36Miracle and Jeff Faloba each IS-87.
Score at half: Rio 51
poured In 22 points to spark Glenvi lle 37 .
Marietta to victory over
Alderson • Broaddus.

Equal opportunities
policies are affirmed

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David Gloeckner, director,
said today the Gallia-Meigs
Community ,Action Agency is
committed to equal em·
ployment opportuntiies lor all
applicants, participants, and
employees in all phases of its
operations and where
deficiencies are noted to take
affinnative action to correct
such deficiencies.
"In ~ddilioil, it is our policy
to recruit, hire, and promote
in all job classifications
without regard to race,, color,
religion, national origin, ~~ex
(except where sex is a bona
fide occ~pational
qualiflcaUon) age, political
affiliation, or handicap
(provided qualification) age,
political affiliation, or han·
dicap (provided physical
limitation does not prevent
job performance)," he said.
. His statement continued:
"It is our policy to take af·
finnative action to lpsure all
training programs and all
persoMel actions such as
rate of compensation,
benefits, transfers,
promotions, layoff and ter·
mlnations be administered
without regard to race, color,
rellgloo, natiooal origin, sex,
age, political affiliation."
Gloeckner has the overall
responsibility
of
ad·
ministering the program. If a
sub-grantee stall member,
program participant or
applicant .feels he-she has
been discriminated against In

employment, seeking em·
ployment, and-or training
with this CETA Title I
Program, he·she should
immediately contact
Gloeckner, (614) 367-7341 to
pursue
the
proper
discrimination complaint
procedure.
· EEO is a legal, social, and
economic necessity for the
Gallia·Meigs Community
Action Agency. All em·
ployees are asked to assist in
thls effort to achieve equal
employment opportunity.
Any willful or deliberate
violation by any employee of
the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency of our equal
employment opportunity
policy will be cause lor appropriate disciplinary action.

AFffiST
WS ANGELES (UP!)
Singer JohMy Mathls will be
the first U.S. entertainer Ill
perform before a racially
mixed audience in South
Africa, a spokesman for the
singer said Monday.
The spokesman, Skip Heinecke, said the segregationist
government of South Africa
had given Mathis, a black
singer,
a
"special
dispensation" to appear
before mixed audiences in
·Durban, JohaMesburg and
Cilpelllwn next month .

•
DALLAS (UP!) - Major
college football powers have
protested for years their fall!
was being decided by NCAA
schools who knew nothlng
about the problems they fa ce.
Now those football'j)laying
schools are going Ill organize
in hopes of convincing the
rest of the NCAA institutions

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Mason County

News Notes .:\:

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By Alma MarshaU

.

lliat what is good for big~bne next -!(Hast organizational
football is good lor the them, step in lonnlng llie College
too.
Football Association, a sort of
And what they want most of lobby group that will carry
all is a reorganizatipn of the the sport's message to the
NCAA so that only the lop NCAA.Some ofthemostwell·
football-playing schools in the known figures in college
C(]untry are in Division I.
football were presentRepresentatives of 58 Including Nebraska Athletic
schools met Monday as a Dir~or Bob Devaney and
· Arkansas Athletic Director
::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::: Frank Broyles.
Spokesmen said formatloo
FAVORITES NOTED
of
llie group was not intended
RENO, Nev. (UPI ) as
a threat to the NCAA.
The Mbmeoota Vlk.ll1ga and
"If anyone Interprets our
P'ltllburgh Steelers
Attendance at all services · Monday were made lour- organization .as being
Dec. 19 at the Free Methodist point favorites .lor this intended at lessening the
Church was 225.
weekend's National present restrictions and
Hannon F'ox is a patient Football League Playoffs trying Ill write a blank check
in Holzer Medical Center.
by Harrah 's Reno-Tablie for what we want to do and
tum us inlll pro football
Word has been received Racebook.
.that Mrs. Esta Wise is a
The Vlldngo meet the Los teams, they are incorrect,"
patient in Riverside Hospital, Angeles Rams In Bloom• said Father Edmond Joyce,
Columbus.
lngton for the Nallooal vice ·president of Notre
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fox Conlerence title and the Dame.
Earl Ramer, faculty re·
recently called on Mr. and Steelets are in .Oakland to
presentative
from the
Mrs. ·Hannon F'ox.
.
"leet the Raiders for the
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell; American Conf eren·ce University of Tennessee, said
.the group would work within
Aston, spent the weekend at championship.
their home. Mrs. Howell :::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: the framework of the NCAA.
But, no matter how unified
remained for a week due to
the
major college·achools are
the illness of her father, MAO'S DISAPPOINTMENT
when
they go to the NCAA
Hannon Fox.
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Julie convention in Miami next
Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Nixon Eisenhower says
they will still be in the
Vernon, spent the weekend Chairman Mao Tse-tung was month,
minority. There are more
with Mr. and Mrs. N. E. disappointed" with China's than 700 voting NCAA
Schaefer.
youth, which he described as members.
Ninety-live persons at· an "wilested generation ."
"We will have to win our
tended the Christmas dinner
The younger daughter of• points through rational ar·
and program which was held former President Richard griments," said Joyce.
at the Grange hall at Rock Nixon met Mao while on a
Springs.
lour of China with her
The Christmas program husband, David, in December
was held Sunday evening at 1975, nine months before the
the local church. A large Chinese leader's death.
In an excerpt from her
crowd attended.
Alien Eichinger underwent book, "Special People," she
a cataract
operation said, "He (Mao) actually
sounded skeptical and
recently.
Vern Story, Columbus, is disappointed In his people,
spending a week's vacation especially the young."
with his wife, Fern Dora and
son John.
.Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes,
Mrs. Edna Hawk and Grace
Richerson, A.\hens, Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Gilkey, Bradbury Tuppers Plains.
· Mr. and Mrs: Charles
and John · Stahl, local,
Baker,
New Boston, Mr. and
recently called on Mr. and
Mrs.
Ross
Shuler, Rt.l
.Mrs. Harry Stahl.
Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Rupe, Kyger, called on Mr.
and Mrs . Alex Shuler
recently.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

.e=:::~:&amp;:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i===:=:=:=:::::::::=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::;:;: ;:;:;.::::·.:

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Lobby group for big-time football •.
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schools.closer to realig~ing move
•
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BOULDER. eo( ! UPI) - Colorado coach Bill
Mallory plans to start Jeff Knapple at quarterback and
Ali-Big Eight tailback Tooy Reed New Year's Day in
the Orange Bowl against Ohio State.
•
Knappie had alternated at quarterback with Jeff
Davis during the season and Reed had suffered bruised
ribs. Mallory said Reed 's ribs healed following the end
of the regular season last month.
"I'm feeling great," said Reed, a 6-0, 191-pound
senior who ran for 1,210 yards during the season and
set a school ret;ord with 2M carries . "This is going Ill be
a whale of a football game and I'm looking forward to
it. )l'e seniors wanted to gci Ill the Oralige Bowlll)ld.win
a championship the worst way! '
.
Mallory, whose team worked out Monday for the first
lime in a month , said Knapple was "our number one .
quarterback. I feel he had a fine year and even though
he was a little off in the last game, I think he'll get the
job done."
The coach said he believed the layoff would sharpen
Colorado's chances against Ohio State.
"The last couple of weeks of the season we were a
little stale, " he said. "I thlnk the layoff will just help
our team Ill come backfired up. "I know I'm fired up . f
tell you, I would walk back from Miami with that
trophy if we could win it."
Mallory said broken.hands suffered by tight end Don
Hasselbeck and defensive back Odis McKinney had
healed and hoth wou)d be ready for the New Year's
Day gllme. He said linebacker Bart Roth also would
play despite a rom knee ligament.

Thompson .
Baylor hlld 38 points in the
HaMan victory while Sands
tossed in 27 points, hls hlgh
mark in two years.
Southwestern had a 1-3
record this year, 0.2 in the
league.

11
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The Helping Hand Extension Homemakers dined· out for
their Christmas dinner at Crow's Steak House on Dec. 15 and
afterwards returned Ill the Lewis Historic Home for gift
exchange and program.
· Mrs. Lester (Joy) Foreman read the Christmas story from
' Luke and "Ciiristmas Angels." Mrs. Foreman closed the
devotionals with prayer.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet read , "Ch•istmas is a Lot of Thlngs"
and Mrs. Earllngelsread, "As Joseph was Walking."
Games were played and each won a prize. Mrs. Thabet
won the door prize.
.
Hostesses were Mrs. Delwon Roberts, Mrs. Delmar
Alexander and Mrs. Earl Ingels.
.
Attending the dinner meeting and social hour were Mrs.
Lester Foreman, Mrs. Freddie Thabet, Margie Grinstead, Pal
Burllln, Mrs. Lucy Johnson, Mrs. Clara Smith, Mrs. Addie
Brown, Mrs. Delwon Roberta, Mrs. Delmar Alexander, Mrs.
Earl Ingels, Mrs. Charlotte Jenks and Lois Arm Young .
CHRISTMAS PARTY
The Mason Extension Homemakers Club held their annual
Christmas party Tuesday, December 14 at the Virgil Lewis
Historical home. The traditional turkey diMer and ali the
trbnmings were served al5 p.m. , alter dinner a short program
was given. Laura Johnson gave devotions Luke 2: 7-14 also a
reading A Christmas Prayer, all repeated, "I Heard the Bells
on Christmas Day," the song, Silent Night; reading, Ready for
Christmas, Roberta Yoimg; Legend on the Chrisbnas Tree,
Nancy Van Meter; song, "Harold Angels Sing," and the
closing, "A Christmas Prayer for You," by Nancy Van Meter.
Business included discussion of the Lesson Leaders
Meeting at the next council meeting. Gifts were exchanged.
Attending were Laurene Lewis, Clara Williams, Laura
Jotmson, Helen Williams, Nancy Van Meter, Catheryn Smith,
Roberta Young, Eyelyn Stewart, Ted Roush , Joyce Carson,
Matilda Noble, DOrothy Queen, Hazel Smith, Sarah Spencer,
Lila Zerkle. Our February hostesses are Clara Williams and
Laurene Lewis.

... lnvitatio~
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Pre sa
By
United
!JitetnaUo1181
One potential guest says
he'll be delighted, if he's
Invited, to attend a reception
at llie White House the
morning
after
the
Inauguration - ur.less grits
are oo the menu. .
· "There are limits to the
sacrifices I will make for
JJ.ffimy carter'.. says
WUiiam Schreiber of Des
Moines, who played host Ill
the virtually unknown
Democratic contender during
lbe crucial early cam·
paignlng lor !he Iowa party

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have not yet gone out,
llecause those Carter friends
contacted by UP! have not
yet received them. But most
plan to be in Washington for
lbe festivitie! and, in the
·words of one of them, 11 l'd
sure like to get one of them."
· caroline Gross made a pot
of coffee to help Secret
Service ' men through a cold
night in Concord, N:H.; they
had to guard a fellow from
Georgia who said he was
running for president.
A year before that, carter
spent a night in Henderson ,
Ky ., with Dale Sights, who

says : "When he was here in
January,J975, he said, 'I owe
you a night in lbe While

House.11 '
The times Carter stayed
with Howard Samuels in New
York, he always arrived on
time. "I remember .. : he
lll8kes his bed every morning
when he gets up," Samuels
said.
~ Mrs .
Samuels
suggested, I tak~ some
leadership from' Mr. Carter
but I lllld her that that was
not part of the deal."
Henry Howell had carter Ill
hlR house in Norfolk, Va ., in
August', 1975. He told a caller

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the sroblem. 11
.
...
To qualify for membershiit
in the CF A, !1 achool milS\
have a 30,000«at stadium,
must have averaged 20,000 iri•
attendance per home game'

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for the past three years and
must have awarded 8Q
scholarshipa the past three,
years. Members of seven
conferences
and
18
independent schools will be
Invited -Ill attend, but oo·
representative of the PacificEight or Big Ten was present
at Monday's meellng.

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Personal!

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By combining your Auto
and
Homeowners
insurance into ONE policy
... You may be able to

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On your yearly insurance

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We will review your
insurance pr()gram
with you free of
charge any' day of the
week.

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OR STOP
AND SEE US
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"The
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Store"

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BY GLENNA SHULER
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
McClain (Esther Chapman),
Neisonvllle, are the proud
parents of a daughter born' in·
Nelsonville Hospital on
·Saturday. Rev. and Mrs.
Chapman are grandparents.
Mrs. Chapman is spending
some tbne in the McClain
MASON - The Mason 'Senior Citizens enjoyed a turkey home. They have a daughter
and ham dinner at their recent Christmas party at the Senior JUI to welcome the new baby
Citizens trailer home in Mason.
home.
The trailer was decorated throughout for the holiday
Visiting recently with Rev.
fesiivities. One of their members, Mrs. Edna Burris who is a and Mrs. Raymond Fife were
patient at Holzer Medical Center, was remembered with a gill Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Fife and
given by the group. Gifts were exchanRed.
Attending were Joann Hendrickson, Helen Elias, Blanclie Linda, Turkey Run, Mr. and
Jones, Nancy Kinnaird, Barbara McDaniel, Cora Roush, Ella · Mrs. James Keefer , Mrs.
Ford, Clara Staats, Goldie Smith, Frank Hendrickson, Mildred Marie Keefer of Leon, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Roscie E. Fife,
Tripp, Bertha Hall, Lucy Johnson and Wilda Coleman.
Eno.
Spending a recent evening
ATTEND RECITAL - Mr. and Mrs . Curtis McDaniel
with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
attended a recital on Saturday evening in Pl. Pleasant. Two of
Conkle
and Cindy were
their grandchildren, C. R. and Christine McDaniel, were
Denny
Spires,
Mr. and Mrs.
participants. They are the students of Mrs. Phyllis Miller. The
Junior
Whlte
and
Mr. and
grandchildren returned to Mason Ill spend the evening with
Mrs.
Eddie
Carruthers.
They
their grandparents.
enjoyed string music.
Keith Bradbury, Columbus,
spent a day recently with
Mrs. Malinda Bradbury. Mrs.
Leslie Hawley visited her
mother a day recently.'
Mrs. Marie Spires and
JAVITS ON HEALTH
· ULLMAN, DEN r R 0 · Stevencalled on Mr. and Mrs.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) Calvin Caldwell af Gallipolis
AWARDS
Sen. Jacob K. Javits says a
a
day recently.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) - •
" rebellion " against high Robert DeNiro and Liv
Denny Spires, Denise· and
medical charges will force !Tilman won the- 1976 best Julie called on Mrs. M~riel
the Congress to draft a movie actor and actress Spires ilnd Inna Bales a day
national health care program awards from the Los Angeles recently.
within two years.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Fibn Critics Association .
"National health care is an
DeNiro was.named lot his Paul Searls recently were
idea whose time has come,'' performance in ' 'Taxi Mrs. Fredah Gibnore, Rt. I
Javits Said. "The public is Driver" and Miss Ullman lor Middleport, Mrs. Joan Fife
disgruntled and demands re· her role in , Face to Face," and Melissa.
lief.,
an lngmar Bergman !ibn that
Visiting fdr. . and Mrs.
Giving the keynote address was named best foreign Marlin Rile a dsy recently
Ill the annual forum of the language movie.
were Mr. and Mrs. DaMy
Southern
Council
of
"Network" and "Rocky" Young and Tanya of Mineral
Optometry Monday , Javits tied ".for the best picture Springs, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
said any program would be award, but "Network" took Glenn YounJ:, Michelle and
"free and open" and Jnvolve two more honors - Paddy Glenn, Jr. of Eno.
·no doctor being compelled to Chayefsky lor best script and
Mr. and Mrs .. Marlin Rife
wo•k lor the government ,at Sidney Lumet for 'best spent a day recently with Mr.
graded salaries.
direcror.
and Mrs. Charles Young at

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DaUy Sentinei,Middleport·POMEROY,O., Tuesday ,Dec . 21,1976

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnan
Resources Council, noon
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
Chester King , chai rman.
Meeting to include in·
_!!lallation of officers.
GROUP II of the Mid·
dleport · First
United
Presbyterian Chur ~ h
Tuesday 7:30 p.iri. -at the
home of Mrs. Carl Horky with
Mrs. James Buchanan as cohostess. The program will
feature a Christmas playlet.
There will be a $2 gift ·exchange.
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Christmas
dinner party in the East-West
Lounge. Potluck with $2 gilt
exchange. Invited guests are
the doctors and their wives
and Mr. and Mrs. Sc~tt
Lucas.
,
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Christmas party, 7:15 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Rita Lewis. Appetizer to be
served prompUy at7: 15. Gifts
to be wrapped in white paper
with red bow.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
Axuiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, at the hall. Turkey
diMer at 6:30 p.m. followed
by a meeting and Christmas
party with a $2 gift exchange.
AMERICAN LEGION,
Feeney~BeMett Post 128, 6:30
turkey diMer followed by a
time for sacking candy for
treats to be distributed
"hristmas Eve.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
In de pen dent Holln ess
Church, Fourth and Lincoln
Sts., Middlepor.t ; public
welcome.
POMEROY COMMUNITY
Christmas program, 7 p.m.
Wednesday at community
tree on upper parking lot with
muaical progratn1by "Voices
of Liberty" arid visit from
Santa with candy treats lor
children . . Sponsored by
Pomeroy Community Action
Committee.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Irm.
·
·
OHIO VALLEY COM·
MANDERY 24, Knights
Templar, ,stated conclave

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DIAMONDS:

h~~t~U

entertain
classes

Lb.

...........IDAHO POTATOES ...~?.t 99
,..

10 lb.

.

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8 oz. Droneday Pitted Dates •••••••••••••• 49c

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Rt!i~u!ar$12.99 .

Th l1 set of • will

1ny wall. A lo11ely
gilt for any home.

'i dd color Ia

SON IS BORN
Mr. and Mrs. William
Strausa of Rt. I, Fleming are
armouncing the birth of a son,
Stephen Wesley, Dec. 2 at St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkers·
burg, W. Va. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Weber, Long Bottom; Mr.
and Mrs. Whitney Ingraham,
Lisbon, and Mrs. Irene
Strauss, Fleming. Greatgrandparents , are c. H.
Ingraham, Marietta, and C.
C. Strauss, Waterford. r-,fr.
and Mrs. Strauss have two
other 'children, Mahala and
John.
·

SET Qf 4

GIRLS COSMETIC SETS
Rea. '1.49
Utile lliss Pi1~

$}DO

l SliMs

BEDSPREADS

SPINNING WHEEL

WOOD

3 PIECE GLASS

CHIP (N DIP

WOVIIIMUElASSI rrPE
Blue. Ora~ge
FULL BED SIZE

PLANTERS

Gold , Avocado,

RE9, ~2.99 YA LUE
'

$ 88

Tul.u rlitd bra c:. d, &amp;tl ec l
wllh !lcUI •nd cr" l dt t itn.
Brl idtd
knltl t d
ldnge,
Wn h•btt. A SlU5 Vl!hre.

SET

$1599

REG.

'2.99

·

$ 66

·

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GIFM:R!£1

I

LAFF- A- DAY
·--... ----

~~

Includes sluffed animals , games, l1nk
models, punln and dolls. Come on In
and save. :'1~

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DRASTICALLY
REDUCED I

20 oz. Heinz Tomato ,Caitsup .............. 69c
·32 oz. Kraft Miracle Whlp.................. a9c
'•

not sure I like this equality ' · - - - - - movement."

,.

CHRISTMAS
Glm
HOT ON SALE

$1288

COZY QIILTID COMFOITII

\

3 oz. Llbbys Pumpkin Pie Mix ............ 59'

, ..••••IM••••••••••••••••u•••••..

REGULAR
'16.99

TOYS

12 oz. Nestles ·
Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chlps.............•1.09

,.

PRICE \ . '~&lt; )

'1'"---

.

16 oz. Kraft Cheese Whlz ............•1.29 iar ·

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6 oz. Nescafe lnst. c;offee Limit 1...... '2.29

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GIFTS FROM THE HEART

Juice ............ ..

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BAKER FURNITURE

FLORIDA ORANGES

. , c·
.
49C
7 oz. Ke II ogg ,s · routettes ••••• ~·········· .
•
16 oz. Peter Pepper Hot Peppers ••••••• 49c

BIRTHSTONE:

NIGHTTILB P.M.
Open Tit 5 Christmas Eve

SELF-CLEANING OVEN
COMBINATION

On Dec. 13, The Baptist
Women met at the home of
Microwave Oven l! SCS 50
Rhojean McClure where a
to 75 pe l. less enN gy
work session was held.
f Clea ning Br oiler Oven
Gilt boxes containing
Sm oo th Top Coolo. inq
homemade sl(ppers and l:surla &lt;:c - Auloml1 ~ k t uwr r
va rlous personal items for
Opti onal i-' o li % C'rle
lnll111te Heat Con!rl}l'i
residents of the Meigs County
Inlinnary were packed and IISuorloo:e I t .,... Ov vn a11d
~~~~~~:~(~L"Ig~::~
Ult~ri
"sl l
wrapped . Christmas tray 1\
I uwer
cards for the hospital were
also made.
It was noted that a box has
~~IQ• • • .. ,"'
'lOhO" "
been placed in the hall of the
Ope~ Til&amp; This Week- Open Tll5 Christll)as Eve.
church for donations of
grocery items that are to be
taken to a needy famUy. The
meeting closed after tea and
cookies were served.

11a11mans

12'&gt; OL Welchs

OPEN EVERY

HOLIDAY ·VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
joined by Mrs. Abna Jotmson
of Springfield visited recently
with Miss Dorothy Leifheit at
Orient. From here they went
to Springfield to the home ol
Mr . and Mr s. Richard
Leifheit and children Emma
Jo and Klrk, lor a pteChristmas dinne~ party. Mrs.
Gamet Runyan was also a
guest. A gift exchange waa
!Jeld around alighted tree . On
Wedn.esday Mr. and Mrs. '
Davis were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Lehew ,
Debbie, Charlotte and Robin,
Columbus.

apprehended, would be
GRABS MONEY .
MIDDLEFIELD,
Ohio charged willl bank larceny.
Ffank
Wodall ,
59,
(UP!) - The FBI said today
.
an elderly man, who walked Cleveland, was apprehended
into the Chardon Savings Monday shorUy after the U
NIECE .DIES
Bank and reached over a heist. He was held w.•'thout
'.)'
Mrs. Gamet Williamson of
counter, grabbed a handful of bond pending arraignment
Rutland received word
money from a teller's drawer before a federal magistrate
Monday evening of the death
and then walked out of the in Cleveland.
"Allegedly one. of the
of her niece, Mrs. Huston
bank
before
being
customers saw him do it and
Cilgle in a Dayton hospital.
followed him out of the bank
Mrs. Cagle had been ill for
and flagged down a
the past week.
7:30p.m. Wednesday at the policeman who was driving
Pomer~y Masonic Temple. &lt;by," an FBI agent told UP!. .
All Sir Knights and · their ~"The policeman captured the
-ladies invited for a visit to the suspect· and all the money
Meigs County Infirmary
taken was recovered."
The annual Christmas 1
· meeting of the Golden Rule
Sunday School classes of the
Long Bottom Churches was
•SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
held at the home of Mrs.
•MASON
•POINT PLEASANT
Ernesting Hayman. The
Hayman home was · ex·
ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT lUES., 5 P.M. THRU DEC. 24TH
OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 P.M.
tensively decorated for the
/ ;:.· ~. ··
holiday season.
Not
Be Availil!ble In All Stares
A ·chicken dinner was lttc•o••• '49.99 Electric Tri-Pan ............. Now '35.11
'served and a program
N-o '39.99 Potluck Slow Coolcer........ Now •29.77
· pr~ented by the members
Rival '32.H 5 Qt. Croclc Pot ••••••••••••• Now •2,:11
Decorators fa vorites . hrly American dulgns. Include a
who
read
Christmas
pin·up styles . a11ailable In some .stores. White and
Hoover '29.99 Electric Fry Pan,, ......... Now '22.11
meditations and Bill Hoselton
.colors, Gift bOxed.
who played his tape recor·
H~mllt0n-8each •22.11 I lender •• ••• ••• •• Now ·'17 .99
REG. '6.99
REO. '9.99
ding of the Chrlsbnas story
Hamilton-leach '11.99 Slow Cooker ..... Now '1 •.77
and hymns. Members exHoover •29.99 Eleclrlc Crepe Maker, .... Now '19.18
changed gifts. Cards were
'.'J..it .. . ..
Noralco '36.99 Dial Coffee Maker ....... No¥1f '26.11
signed for members who are
~· . ,•
IWntoor Plk '22.il Water Filter ........... 1 Now '19.77
hospitall,ed.
Enjoying the evening were
Hoover '16.99
. 2 Slice Toaster ............ Now '12.11
.
ALL PORTABLE RADIOS
Mr. and· Mrs. Jotm Brewer,
lcc~rnwe•lt '22.99 Broiler Toaster•••••• .. •• Now '16.77
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Bill
AND &amp;·TRACK PLAYERS
Hoselton, Mrs. Ella HaMum,
Mrs. Ethel Larkins, Mrs.
Mary Pierce , Mrs. Dora
Crispin, Mrs. Ruth Larkins,
Mrs. Mae McPeek', Mrs.
Sadie Larkins, Mrs. Leona
1 Hensley and the hostess.

9 oz. Cool Whip •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 69c:

''"

ing, Mrs. Joan Hoffman,
Mrs. Evelyn Gibnore, Mrs .
C.. rolyn McDaniel, Mrs.
Mildred Wells, Mrs. J.ucy
White and Mrs. Pandora Col·
tins who will host the Jan. 12
meet1ng.

CALORIC
MICROWAVE
OVEN

Women work ·
on projects

___....__

Watches.

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I 1/JSsr OJ A F'EW 1 SN1ALL
\ CClVI&lt;?rt=51 E 5 , "

'''·99~

MARGARINE

PRINCESS GARDNER : LADY SPIED
JEWELRY BOXES •
BULOVA WATCHES: ACCUTRONS, CARAVELLE
- CHARMS - MOTHER'S PINS AND
,.
NECKLACES

VISIT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Dal e
Kesterson and Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Kesterson of Langsvllle
s~ent the weekend in
Hn milton visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Ea rl Kesterson ond
sons.

CHILD BORN - Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Schoonover
are announcing the birth of
their first grandchlld, a son
to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne L.
Searls
stationed a i
Seymour Johnson Air
Force Base at Goldsboro,
N.!f. Born on Nov. 121 the
haby weighed 10 poundo.
He has been named
Christopher Scott. Mrs.
Searls is the Iarmer Debbie
Schoonover. The paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Searls of
Rulland. Mr. and Mrs.
Schoonover and son,
Tommy, spent a recent
weekend visiting their new
grandson and bls parents.

·':&gt;UIC.t::,

Quarters

;

Rings, Pendants, Pierced Earrin

'

I "'HINK YOO'LL FIND TI-IAT I'M NCiT"
A DIFFICULT NIAkl TO t.O()k'K FOR. ...

:!69
AMPA:KARI~N ~~~~E49• ~~~-~~~~~... 2 Lb-49~

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GOESSLER JEWELRY

FUNNY BUSINESS

lOR BOILED HAM...................... ::~.~-~~- s129
.SMOKED CALLIE HAMSt·~~~~~~~?~!:~~~!......7?:.. 63~
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD..........................~~:. 99~
FROZEN FRYERS -~~.'.~::.s..~~~. ~~....................~~:...59$

RINGS:

Sunday, ''I slept in Jimmy
carter,'s bed last night. "
Carter tnld reporters the
While House doors would be
opened to all of those who
opened their homes to the
.carter family .
"We kept a record of where
every member of our family
stayed," be told reporters in
C(]nfirming rumors of the
morning-after party.
But a UP! survey of carter
hosts across the country
uncovered no invitations
received so far. Presumably
they 'II go out this week or
next.

A recording of several
missionaries was played to
explain som• of their prayer
and financial needs. They
also gave testbnony of thanks
to those who help wilh the
Lord's work through giving to
these needs.
A Call to Prayer was given,
and each missionary whose ·
birthday was i,isted for that
day was lifted up in prayer. A
prayer session was also held
where personal requests
were mentioned.

Betty Wehrung, Mrs. Manila.
Hoffman, MrS. Aun Bru wn-

HOBNAIL ELECTRIC LAMPS

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SIGNET,
DIAMOND, MASONIC,
PRINCE GARDNER ZIPPO &amp; WINN LIGHTERS
TIE TACKS &amp; CLASPS
BULOVA: ACCUTRON,
CARRAVELLE, POCKET
WATCHES.
WALDEMAR CHAINS
WATCH FOBS
MEN'S

The Pomeroy First Baptist
Church recently participated
In the Week of Prayer lor the
Lottie Moon Foreign Missions
Christma s Offeri ng wit h
DoMa Spencer, Clara White
and Rachael Lefebre of the
Baptist .Women's group
presenting the program.
Abl'ief history of the life of
Lottie Moon; missionary to
China was given. It was noted
that the Southern Baptist
Convention Goal lor thi s
offering is $29,000,000 and the
local church ~oal is $175.

Frui t baskets lor shutins the Meigs Inn for their tr•di·
will be distributed by ljle tiOllal holiday dinner and
Sew-Rite-Se wing Club then went to the home of Mrs.
Wt'&lt;inesd;ty. Remembering Blirbara Mullen for a P,.rty
s hutins is a spe ci• I •nd gilt exchange.
Christ.m•s projtocl of the
The Mullen home w•s at·
club.
tratively decor~ted for the
Members met reeenUy •I holidays •nd the hostess
pre~tln t ed
white cenunic
angels inscribed with her
name and date to each of the
members. The gifts were ex·
changt'&lt;l around a .Ughll'l
tre... De&lt;:orated ca ke .and
punch were served by the
ho stess with Mr s. ~' lo
Strickland providing the tray
fUVOI'S.
I Allending the party besides
those n• med were Mrs. Net·
tie Boyer. Mrs. Shirley B•lty.
Mrs. Lenora McKn ight, Mrs.

.

.,

Give that special person
a gift to remember..

Club distributing fruit baskets

Social Offering discussed
Calendar at women 's meet

'.,

for White House grits spurned

caucuses.
The soft•ken Georgian
who will become president
Jan. 20, saved a heap of
campaigu money by "living
on the land" during the early .
months before federal
matching funds began
flowing .
·
HIS standard farewell to his
hosts was a promise to
reciprocate their hospitality
after he moved inlll the White
House. Now, he says, he's
going to have some 800 or
them over on the very first
morning he is there.
Apparently the invitations

The final organizational
meeting lor llieCFA laaet for
February and diiiCUSiiont
have been going on for 18
months.
•
"What triggered thia action
is the obvloua fact that the'
divisional concept In the
NCAA needs refinement,".
said Joyce. "The NCAA baa,
failed 10 come to. gripa. with

Storys Run

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~ -The

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Colorful prinls acCent these

pretty comfOrters . Polyester
filled . Acetate coverll!d . Full

and twin sl1es.

liE EXCHAINGEDI
DEC. 271H 10
DEC. 31ST ONLY

(

AM $h0f1Pf11 Mart Stores Wil lit Cbed Sunday, Dec. 26th "'d
tan. 2nd - So We Can Rest.

... 80 with you.
Thonko for boinl

...., ,.... t,ho.
whh 111 over

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4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 21, 1976

Highlanders host
Bobcats tonight -.·

~--------------------.

Knapple, Reed will start
against Bucks in Orange

I

Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Southwestern Highlanders
losers of their last two games
by just three points will host
Kyger Creek this evening in.
the only game involving
5V AC schools.
Kyger Creek, coached .by
fonner Highlander ace Keith
Carter, is fresh off a 1~7 .
qon·league thumping of
HaMan, W. Va. The Bobcats
are 2--2 overall and 0.2 in the
SVAC.
Southwestern has lost to
Synunes Valley by one-point
and HaMan Trace by two.
Kyger Creek was edged by
HaMan Trace then bcmbed
by league-leading Southern.
The Highlanders are led by
seniors Keith Grate, Kip
Lewis and Don Bush and
juniors Larry Carter, Monte
Blanton and sophomore Gene
Layton. Kyger Creek's of·
fense has been paced by
senior forward Ralph Baylor,
senior guards Mitch Salem
and Doug Sands, and
sophomore center Jon

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAMS
W L P OP

Southern

S 0 424 298

Sy m. Valley
Kyger Creek

3

Hanoan T r ace

2 7 256 278

Southwestern

North Gall ia

Easter n

TEAM

7 777 798
7 2 301 279
I 3 252 256

I 3 244 289
0 4 137 228

SVAC ONLY

So uther n
Hannan Tra ce

W L P OP
3 0 272 184

2 0 124 121

Sy m. Vall eY
North Gall ia

2

So uthwestern

0 2 119 122

Kyger Creek

Eastern

I

182 181
1 129 12a
I

0 2 118 163

o 2 71 i16

SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Gall Ia
2 o 92 51
So uthe rn

Sym. Va lley
Kyger Creek
Southwester n
Hannan Tra ce

Easte rn

3 1 145 123

2

1

130 13 1

I I 16
1 1 80
0 2 72
0 2 61

90
BO
81

100

Redmen get past
Glenville State
",. ' .

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Rio Grande, with four
Marietta pushed off to a 53·
players in double figures, 31 intermission lead and
held on to defeat Glenville rolled on to its third victory in
State College ~ Monday six games. The West Virginia
night in the opening round of team, led by Shirley Marlin
the Marietta Invitational with 21 points, is &lt;h'i.
Shrine Tournament.
The host Pioneers held
Marietta downed Alderson · down scoring by Alderson •
Broaddus 97-86 in the other Broaddus, which averaged
first round game to set up more than 100 points a game,
Tuesday night's finals be· with a running game all the
tween the host Pioneers and way. The West Virginians
the Redmen .
had a full court press on
The Redmen, 7-1, held a 51· Marietta all the tbne.
37 halftbne lead but Glen·
RIO GRANDE · (901
ville, 1-6, charged back in the Swain 6·1· 13 ,· Royse , 2·4-8 ;
second half, outscoring Rio Price, 11 -2-24 ; Noe, 8-2-18 ;
Grande 50-39. Glenville's James, 5·0·10: Fltzpat.rlck , J.
2-8; Robinson , 0-0-0; Gibson,
WaY.., Washington dumped 0-0-0;
VIckroy , 4-1-9. TOTALS
in 2ll points to lead the un· 39-12-90.
successful charge.
GLENVILLE (871
Gil Price scored 24 points Coates, 2-2-6 ; Warner, 10-020 : Washington , 10 ·8· 28 ;
for the Redmen while Jbn Thomas
, 2·2·6; Hawkins, 4·0·
Noe had 18, Mark Swain 13, 8 : Noddingham , 1·2·4 :
and Greg James 10.
Gil liard , 1-1-3; Knicel y, 6·0·
In the first game, Mitch 12 ; Page, 0-0-0. TOTALS 36Miracle and Jeff Faloba each IS-87.
Score at half: Rio 51
poured In 22 points to spark Glenvi lle 37 .
Marietta to victory over
Alderson • Broaddus.

Equal opportunities
policies are affirmed

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David Gloeckner, director,
said today the Gallia-Meigs
Community ,Action Agency is
committed to equal em·
ployment opportuntiies lor all
applicants, participants, and
employees in all phases of its
operations and where
deficiencies are noted to take
affinnative action to correct
such deficiencies.
"In ~ddilioil, it is our policy
to recruit, hire, and promote
in all job classifications
without regard to race,, color,
religion, national origin, ~~ex
(except where sex is a bona
fide occ~pational
qualiflcaUon) age, political
affiliation, or handicap
(provided qualification) age,
political affiliation, or han·
dicap (provided physical
limitation does not prevent
job performance)," he said.
. His statement continued:
"It is our policy to take af·
finnative action to lpsure all
training programs and all
persoMel actions such as
rate of compensation,
benefits, transfers,
promotions, layoff and ter·
mlnations be administered
without regard to race, color,
rellgloo, natiooal origin, sex,
age, political affiliation."
Gloeckner has the overall
responsibility
of
ad·
ministering the program. If a
sub-grantee stall member,
program participant or
applicant .feels he-she has
been discriminated against In

employment, seeking em·
ployment, and-or training
with this CETA Title I
Program, he·she should
immediately contact
Gloeckner, (614) 367-7341 to
pursue
the
proper
discrimination complaint
procedure.
· EEO is a legal, social, and
economic necessity for the
Gallia·Meigs Community
Action Agency. All em·
ployees are asked to assist in
thls effort to achieve equal
employment opportunity.
Any willful or deliberate
violation by any employee of
the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency of our equal
employment opportunity
policy will be cause lor appropriate disciplinary action.

AFffiST
WS ANGELES (UP!)
Singer JohMy Mathls will be
the first U.S. entertainer Ill
perform before a racially
mixed audience in South
Africa, a spokesman for the
singer said Monday.
The spokesman, Skip Heinecke, said the segregationist
government of South Africa
had given Mathis, a black
singer,
a
"special
dispensation" to appear
before mixed audiences in
·Durban, JohaMesburg and
Cilpelllwn next month .

•
DALLAS (UP!) - Major
college football powers have
protested for years their fall!
was being decided by NCAA
schools who knew nothlng
about the problems they fa ce.
Now those football'j)laying
schools are going Ill organize
in hopes of convincing the
rest of the NCAA institutions

N

~l

Mason County

News Notes .:\:

I
~J

By Alma MarshaU

.

lliat what is good for big~bne next -!(Hast organizational
football is good lor the them, step in lonnlng llie College
too.
Football Association, a sort of
And what they want most of lobby group that will carry
all is a reorganizatipn of the the sport's message to the
NCAA so that only the lop NCAA.Some ofthemostwell·
football-playing schools in the known figures in college
C(]untry are in Division I.
football were presentRepresentatives of 58 Including Nebraska Athletic
schools met Monday as a Dir~or Bob Devaney and
· Arkansas Athletic Director
::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::: Frank Broyles.
Spokesmen said formatloo
FAVORITES NOTED
of
llie group was not intended
RENO, Nev. (UPI ) as
a threat to the NCAA.
The Mbmeoota Vlk.ll1ga and
"If anyone Interprets our
P'ltllburgh Steelers
Attendance at all services · Monday were made lour- organization .as being
Dec. 19 at the Free Methodist point favorites .lor this intended at lessening the
Church was 225.
weekend's National present restrictions and
Hannon F'ox is a patient Football League Playoffs trying Ill write a blank check
in Holzer Medical Center.
by Harrah 's Reno-Tablie for what we want to do and
tum us inlll pro football
Word has been received Racebook.
.that Mrs. Esta Wise is a
The Vlldngo meet the Los teams, they are incorrect,"
patient in Riverside Hospital, Angeles Rams In Bloom• said Father Edmond Joyce,
Columbus.
lngton for the Nallooal vice ·president of Notre
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fox Conlerence title and the Dame.
Earl Ramer, faculty re·
recently called on Mr. and Steelets are in .Oakland to
presentative
from the
Mrs. ·Hannon F'ox.
.
"leet the Raiders for the
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell; American Conf eren·ce University of Tennessee, said
.the group would work within
Aston, spent the weekend at championship.
their home. Mrs. Howell :::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: the framework of the NCAA.
But, no matter how unified
remained for a week due to
the
major college·achools are
the illness of her father, MAO'S DISAPPOINTMENT
when
they go to the NCAA
Hannon Fox.
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Julie convention in Miami next
Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Nixon Eisenhower says
they will still be in the
Vernon, spent the weekend Chairman Mao Tse-tung was month,
minority. There are more
with Mr. and Mrs. N. E. disappointed" with China's than 700 voting NCAA
Schaefer.
youth, which he described as members.
Ninety-live persons at· an "wilested generation ."
"We will have to win our
tended the Christmas dinner
The younger daughter of• points through rational ar·
and program which was held former President Richard griments," said Joyce.
at the Grange hall at Rock Nixon met Mao while on a
Springs.
lour of China with her
The Christmas program husband, David, in December
was held Sunday evening at 1975, nine months before the
the local church. A large Chinese leader's death.
In an excerpt from her
crowd attended.
Alien Eichinger underwent book, "Special People," she
a cataract
operation said, "He (Mao) actually
sounded skeptical and
recently.
Vern Story, Columbus, is disappointed In his people,
spending a week's vacation especially the young."
with his wife, Fern Dora and
son John.
.Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes,
Mrs. Edna Hawk and Grace
Richerson, A.\hens, Mr. and
Mrs. Pearl Gilkey, Bradbury Tuppers Plains.
· Mr. and Mrs: Charles
and John · Stahl, local,
Baker,
New Boston, Mr. and
recently called on Mr. and
Mrs.
Ross
Shuler, Rt.l
.Mrs. Harry Stahl.
Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Rupe, Kyger, called on Mr.
and Mrs . Alex Shuler
recently.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

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@

Lobby group for big-time football •.
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schools.closer to realig~ing move
•
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BOULDER. eo( ! UPI) - Colorado coach Bill
Mallory plans to start Jeff Knapple at quarterback and
Ali-Big Eight tailback Tooy Reed New Year's Day in
the Orange Bowl against Ohio State.
•
Knappie had alternated at quarterback with Jeff
Davis during the season and Reed had suffered bruised
ribs. Mallory said Reed 's ribs healed following the end
of the regular season last month.
"I'm feeling great," said Reed, a 6-0, 191-pound
senior who ran for 1,210 yards during the season and
set a school ret;ord with 2M carries . "This is going Ill be
a whale of a football game and I'm looking forward to
it. )l'e seniors wanted to gci Ill the Oralige Bowlll)ld.win
a championship the worst way! '
.
Mallory, whose team worked out Monday for the first
lime in a month , said Knapple was "our number one .
quarterback. I feel he had a fine year and even though
he was a little off in the last game, I think he'll get the
job done."
The coach said he believed the layoff would sharpen
Colorado's chances against Ohio State.
"The last couple of weeks of the season we were a
little stale, " he said. "I thlnk the layoff will just help
our team Ill come backfired up. "I know I'm fired up . f
tell you, I would walk back from Miami with that
trophy if we could win it."
Mallory said broken.hands suffered by tight end Don
Hasselbeck and defensive back Odis McKinney had
healed and hoth wou)d be ready for the New Year's
Day gllme. He said linebacker Bart Roth also would
play despite a rom knee ligament.

Thompson .
Baylor hlld 38 points in the
HaMan victory while Sands
tossed in 27 points, hls hlgh
mark in two years.
Southwestern had a 1-3
record this year, 0.2 in the
league.

11
•

The Helping Hand Extension Homemakers dined· out for
their Christmas dinner at Crow's Steak House on Dec. 15 and
afterwards returned Ill the Lewis Historic Home for gift
exchange and program.
· Mrs. Lester (Joy) Foreman read the Christmas story from
' Luke and "Ciiristmas Angels." Mrs. Foreman closed the
devotionals with prayer.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet read , "Ch•istmas is a Lot of Thlngs"
and Mrs. Earllngelsread, "As Joseph was Walking."
Games were played and each won a prize. Mrs. Thabet
won the door prize.
.
Hostesses were Mrs. Delwon Roberts, Mrs. Delmar
Alexander and Mrs. Earl Ingels.
.
Attending the dinner meeting and social hour were Mrs.
Lester Foreman, Mrs. Freddie Thabet, Margie Grinstead, Pal
Burllln, Mrs. Lucy Johnson, Mrs. Clara Smith, Mrs. Addie
Brown, Mrs. Delwon Roberta, Mrs. Delmar Alexander, Mrs.
Earl Ingels, Mrs. Charlotte Jenks and Lois Arm Young .
CHRISTMAS PARTY
The Mason Extension Homemakers Club held their annual
Christmas party Tuesday, December 14 at the Virgil Lewis
Historical home. The traditional turkey diMer and ali the
trbnmings were served al5 p.m. , alter dinner a short program
was given. Laura Johnson gave devotions Luke 2: 7-14 also a
reading A Christmas Prayer, all repeated, "I Heard the Bells
on Christmas Day," the song, Silent Night; reading, Ready for
Christmas, Roberta Yoimg; Legend on the Chrisbnas Tree,
Nancy Van Meter; song, "Harold Angels Sing," and the
closing, "A Christmas Prayer for You," by Nancy Van Meter.
Business included discussion of the Lesson Leaders
Meeting at the next council meeting. Gifts were exchanged.
Attending were Laurene Lewis, Clara Williams, Laura
Jotmson, Helen Williams, Nancy Van Meter, Catheryn Smith,
Roberta Young, Eyelyn Stewart, Ted Roush , Joyce Carson,
Matilda Noble, DOrothy Queen, Hazel Smith, Sarah Spencer,
Lila Zerkle. Our February hostesses are Clara Williams and
Laurene Lewis.

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Pre sa
By
United
!JitetnaUo1181
One potential guest says
he'll be delighted, if he's
Invited, to attend a reception
at llie White House the
morning
after
the
Inauguration - ur.less grits
are oo the menu. .
· "There are limits to the
sacrifices I will make for
JJ.ffimy carter'.. says
WUiiam Schreiber of Des
Moines, who played host Ill
the virtually unknown
Democratic contender during
lbe crucial early cam·
paignlng lor !he Iowa party

•'

have not yet gone out,
llecause those Carter friends
contacted by UP! have not
yet received them. But most
plan to be in Washington for
lbe festivitie! and, in the
·words of one of them, 11 l'd
sure like to get one of them."
· caroline Gross made a pot
of coffee to help Secret
Service ' men through a cold
night in Concord, N:H.; they
had to guard a fellow from
Georgia who said he was
running for president.
A year before that, carter
spent a night in Henderson ,
Ky ., with Dale Sights, who

says : "When he was here in
January,J975, he said, 'I owe
you a night in lbe While

House.11 '
The times Carter stayed
with Howard Samuels in New
York, he always arrived on
time. "I remember .. : he
lll8kes his bed every morning
when he gets up," Samuels
said.
~ Mrs .
Samuels
suggested, I tak~ some
leadership from' Mr. Carter
but I lllld her that that was
not part of the deal."
Henry Howell had carter Ill
hlR house in Norfolk, Va ., in
August', 1975. He told a caller

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the sroblem. 11
.
...
To qualify for membershiit
in the CF A, !1 achool milS\
have a 30,000«at stadium,
must have averaged 20,000 iri•
attendance per home game'

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for the past three years and
must have awarded 8Q
scholarshipa the past three,
years. Members of seven
conferences
and
18
independent schools will be
Invited -Ill attend, but oo·
representative of the PacificEight or Big Ten was present
at Monday's meellng.

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Personal!

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week.

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AND SEE US
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BY GLENNA SHULER
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
McClain (Esther Chapman),
Neisonvllle, are the proud
parents of a daughter born' in·
Nelsonville Hospital on
·Saturday. Rev. and Mrs.
Chapman are grandparents.
Mrs. Chapman is spending
some tbne in the McClain
MASON - The Mason 'Senior Citizens enjoyed a turkey home. They have a daughter
and ham dinner at their recent Christmas party at the Senior JUI to welcome the new baby
Citizens trailer home in Mason.
home.
The trailer was decorated throughout for the holiday
Visiting recently with Rev.
fesiivities. One of their members, Mrs. Edna Burris who is a and Mrs. Raymond Fife were
patient at Holzer Medical Center, was remembered with a gill Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Fife and
given by the group. Gifts were exchanRed.
Attending were Joann Hendrickson, Helen Elias, Blanclie Linda, Turkey Run, Mr. and
Jones, Nancy Kinnaird, Barbara McDaniel, Cora Roush, Ella · Mrs. James Keefer , Mrs.
Ford, Clara Staats, Goldie Smith, Frank Hendrickson, Mildred Marie Keefer of Leon, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Roscie E. Fife,
Tripp, Bertha Hall, Lucy Johnson and Wilda Coleman.
Eno.
Spending a recent evening
ATTEND RECITAL - Mr. and Mrs . Curtis McDaniel
with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
attended a recital on Saturday evening in Pl. Pleasant. Two of
Conkle
and Cindy were
their grandchildren, C. R. and Christine McDaniel, were
Denny
Spires,
Mr. and Mrs.
participants. They are the students of Mrs. Phyllis Miller. The
Junior
Whlte
and
Mr. and
grandchildren returned to Mason Ill spend the evening with
Mrs.
Eddie
Carruthers.
They
their grandparents.
enjoyed string music.
Keith Bradbury, Columbus,
spent a day recently with
Mrs. Malinda Bradbury. Mrs.
Leslie Hawley visited her
mother a day recently.'
Mrs. Marie Spires and
JAVITS ON HEALTH
· ULLMAN, DEN r R 0 · Stevencalled on Mr. and Mrs.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) Calvin Caldwell af Gallipolis
AWARDS
Sen. Jacob K. Javits says a
a
day recently.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) - •
" rebellion " against high Robert DeNiro and Liv
Denny Spires, Denise· and
medical charges will force !Tilman won the- 1976 best Julie called on Mrs. M~riel
the Congress to draft a movie actor and actress Spires ilnd Inna Bales a day
national health care program awards from the Los Angeles recently.
within two years.
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Fibn Critics Association .
"National health care is an
DeNiro was.named lot his Paul Searls recently were
idea whose time has come,'' performance in ' 'Taxi Mrs. Fredah Gibnore, Rt. I
Javits Said. "The public is Driver" and Miss Ullman lor Middleport, Mrs. Joan Fife
disgruntled and demands re· her role in , Face to Face," and Melissa.
lief.,
an lngmar Bergman !ibn that
Visiting fdr. . and Mrs.
Giving the keynote address was named best foreign Marlin Rile a dsy recently
Ill the annual forum of the language movie.
were Mr. and Mrs. DaMy
Southern
Council
of
"Network" and "Rocky" Young and Tanya of Mineral
Optometry Monday , Javits tied ".for the best picture Springs, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
said any program would be award, but "Network" took Glenn YounJ:, Michelle and
"free and open" and Jnvolve two more honors - Paddy Glenn, Jr. of Eno.
·no doctor being compelled to Chayefsky lor best script and
Mr. and Mrs .. Marlin Rife
wo•k lor the government ,at Sidney Lumet for 'best spent a day recently with Mr.
graded salaries.
direcror.
and Mrs. Charles Young at

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DaUy Sentinei,Middleport·POMEROY,O., Tuesday ,Dec . 21,1976

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnan
Resources Council, noon
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
Chester King , chai rman.
Meeting to include in·
_!!lallation of officers.
GROUP II of the Mid·
dleport · First
United
Presbyterian Chur ~ h
Tuesday 7:30 p.iri. -at the
home of Mrs. Carl Horky with
Mrs. James Buchanan as cohostess. The program will
feature a Christmas playlet.
There will be a $2 gift ·exchange.
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Christmas
dinner party in the East-West
Lounge. Potluck with $2 gilt
exchange. Invited guests are
the doctors and their wives
and Mr. and Mrs. Sc~tt
Lucas.
,
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Christmas party, 7:15 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Rita Lewis. Appetizer to be
served prompUy at7: 15. Gifts
to be wrapped in white paper
with red bow.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
Axuiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, at the hall. Turkey
diMer at 6:30 p.m. followed
by a meeting and Christmas
party with a $2 gift exchange.
AMERICAN LEGION,
Feeney~BeMett Post 128, 6:30
turkey diMer followed by a
time for sacking candy for
treats to be distributed
"hristmas Eve.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
In de pen dent Holln ess
Church, Fourth and Lincoln
Sts., Middlepor.t ; public
welcome.
POMEROY COMMUNITY
Christmas program, 7 p.m.
Wednesday at community
tree on upper parking lot with
muaical progratn1by "Voices
of Liberty" arid visit from
Santa with candy treats lor
children . . Sponsored by
Pomeroy Community Action
Committee.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Irm.
·
·
OHIO VALLEY COM·
MANDERY 24, Knights
Templar, ,stated conclave

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DIAMONDS:

h~~t~U

entertain
classes

Lb.

...........IDAHO POTATOES ...~?.t 99
,..

10 lb.

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8 oz. Droneday Pitted Dates •••••••••••••• 49c

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Rt!i~u!ar$12.99 .

Th l1 set of • will

1ny wall. A lo11ely
gilt for any home.

'i dd color Ia

SON IS BORN
Mr. and Mrs. William
Strausa of Rt. I, Fleming are
armouncing the birth of a son,
Stephen Wesley, Dec. 2 at St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkers·
burg, W. Va. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Weber, Long Bottom; Mr.
and Mrs. Whitney Ingraham,
Lisbon, and Mrs. Irene
Strauss, Fleming. Greatgrandparents , are c. H.
Ingraham, Marietta, and C.
C. Strauss, Waterford. r-,fr.
and Mrs. Strauss have two
other 'children, Mahala and
John.
·

SET Qf 4

GIRLS COSMETIC SETS
Rea. '1.49
Utile lliss Pi1~

$}DO

l SliMs

BEDSPREADS

SPINNING WHEEL

WOOD

3 PIECE GLASS

CHIP (N DIP

WOVIIIMUElASSI rrPE
Blue. Ora~ge
FULL BED SIZE

PLANTERS

Gold , Avocado,

RE9, ~2.99 YA LUE
'

$ 88

Tul.u rlitd bra c:. d, &amp;tl ec l
wllh !lcUI •nd cr" l dt t itn.
Brl idtd
knltl t d
ldnge,
Wn h•btt. A SlU5 Vl!hre.

SET

$1599

REG.

'2.99

·

$ 66

·

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GIFM:R!£1

I

LAFF- A- DAY
·--... ----

~~

Includes sluffed animals , games, l1nk
models, punln and dolls. Come on In
and save. :'1~

'

DRASTICALLY
REDUCED I

20 oz. Heinz Tomato ,Caitsup .............. 69c
·32 oz. Kraft Miracle Whlp.................. a9c
'•

not sure I like this equality ' · - - - - - movement."

,.

CHRISTMAS
Glm
HOT ON SALE

$1288

COZY QIILTID COMFOITII

\

3 oz. Llbbys Pumpkin Pie Mix ............ 59'

, ..••••IM••••••••••••••••u•••••..

REGULAR
'16.99

TOYS

12 oz. Nestles ·
Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chlps.............•1.09

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PRICE \ . '~&lt; )

'1'"---

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16 oz. Kraft Cheese Whlz ............•1.29 iar ·

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·•566

6 oz. Nescafe lnst. c;offee Limit 1...... '2.29

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GIFTS FROM THE HEART

Juice ............ ..

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BAKER FURNITURE

FLORIDA ORANGES

. , c·
.
49C
7 oz. Ke II ogg ,s · routettes ••••• ~·········· .
•
16 oz. Peter Pepper Hot Peppers ••••••• 49c

BIRTHSTONE:

NIGHTTILB P.M.
Open Tit 5 Christmas Eve

SELF-CLEANING OVEN
COMBINATION

On Dec. 13, The Baptist
Women met at the home of
Microwave Oven l! SCS 50
Rhojean McClure where a
to 75 pe l. less enN gy
work session was held.
f Clea ning Br oiler Oven
Gilt boxes containing
Sm oo th Top Coolo. inq
homemade sl(ppers and l:surla &lt;:c - Auloml1 ~ k t uwr r
va rlous personal items for
Opti onal i-' o li % C'rle
lnll111te Heat Con!rl}l'i
residents of the Meigs County
Inlinnary were packed and IISuorloo:e I t .,... Ov vn a11d
~~~~~~:~(~L"Ig~::~
Ult~ri
"sl l
wrapped . Christmas tray 1\
I uwer
cards for the hospital were
also made.
It was noted that a box has
~~IQ• • • .. ,"'
'lOhO" "
been placed in the hall of the
Ope~ Til&amp; This Week- Open Tll5 Christll)as Eve.
church for donations of
grocery items that are to be
taken to a needy famUy. The
meeting closed after tea and
cookies were served.

11a11mans

12'&gt; OL Welchs

OPEN EVERY

HOLIDAY ·VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
joined by Mrs. Abna Jotmson
of Springfield visited recently
with Miss Dorothy Leifheit at
Orient. From here they went
to Springfield to the home ol
Mr . and Mr s. Richard
Leifheit and children Emma
Jo and Klrk, lor a pteChristmas dinne~ party. Mrs.
Gamet Runyan was also a
guest. A gift exchange waa
!Jeld around alighted tree . On
Wedn.esday Mr. and Mrs. '
Davis were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Lehew ,
Debbie, Charlotte and Robin,
Columbus.

apprehended, would be
GRABS MONEY .
MIDDLEFIELD,
Ohio charged willl bank larceny.
Ffank
Wodall ,
59,
(UP!) - The FBI said today
.
an elderly man, who walked Cleveland, was apprehended
into the Chardon Savings Monday shorUy after the U
NIECE .DIES
Bank and reached over a heist. He was held w.•'thout
'.)'
Mrs. Gamet Williamson of
counter, grabbed a handful of bond pending arraignment
Rutland received word
money from a teller's drawer before a federal magistrate
Monday evening of the death
and then walked out of the in Cleveland.
"Allegedly one. of the
of her niece, Mrs. Huston
bank
before
being
customers saw him do it and
Cilgle in a Dayton hospital.
followed him out of the bank
Mrs. Cagle had been ill for
and flagged down a
the past week.
7:30p.m. Wednesday at the policeman who was driving
Pomer~y Masonic Temple. &lt;by," an FBI agent told UP!. .
All Sir Knights and · their ~"The policeman captured the
-ladies invited for a visit to the suspect· and all the money
Meigs County Infirmary
taken was recovered."
The annual Christmas 1
· meeting of the Golden Rule
Sunday School classes of the
Long Bottom Churches was
•SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
held at the home of Mrs.
•MASON
•POINT PLEASANT
Ernesting Hayman. The
Hayman home was · ex·
ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT lUES., 5 P.M. THRU DEC. 24TH
OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 P.M.
tensively decorated for the
/ ;:.· ~. ··
holiday season.
Not
Be Availil!ble In All Stares
A ·chicken dinner was lttc•o••• '49.99 Electric Tri-Pan ............. Now '35.11
'served and a program
N-o '39.99 Potluck Slow Coolcer........ Now •29.77
· pr~ented by the members
Rival '32.H 5 Qt. Croclc Pot ••••••••••••• Now •2,:11
Decorators fa vorites . hrly American dulgns. Include a
who
read
Christmas
pin·up styles . a11ailable In some .stores. White and
Hoover '29.99 Electric Fry Pan,, ......... Now '22.11
meditations and Bill Hoselton
.colors, Gift bOxed.
who played his tape recor·
H~mllt0n-8each •22.11 I lender •• ••• ••• •• Now ·'17 .99
REG. '6.99
REO. '9.99
ding of the Chrlsbnas story
Hamilton-leach '11.99 Slow Cooker ..... Now '1 •.77
and hymns. Members exHoover •29.99 Eleclrlc Crepe Maker, .... Now '19.18
changed gifts. Cards were
'.'J..it .. . ..
Noralco '36.99 Dial Coffee Maker ....... No¥1f '26.11
signed for members who are
~· . ,•
IWntoor Plk '22.il Water Filter ........... 1 Now '19.77
hospitall,ed.
Enjoying the evening were
Hoover '16.99
. 2 Slice Toaster ............ Now '12.11
.
ALL PORTABLE RADIOS
Mr. and· Mrs. Jotm Brewer,
lcc~rnwe•lt '22.99 Broiler Toaster•••••• .. •• Now '16.77
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Bill
AND &amp;·TRACK PLAYERS
Hoselton, Mrs. Ella HaMum,
Mrs. Ethel Larkins, Mrs.
Mary Pierce , Mrs. Dora
Crispin, Mrs. Ruth Larkins,
Mrs. Mae McPeek', Mrs.
Sadie Larkins, Mrs. Leona
1 Hensley and the hostess.

9 oz. Cool Whip •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 69c:

''"

ing, Mrs. Joan Hoffman,
Mrs. Evelyn Gibnore, Mrs .
C.. rolyn McDaniel, Mrs.
Mildred Wells, Mrs. J.ucy
White and Mrs. Pandora Col·
tins who will host the Jan. 12
meet1ng.

CALORIC
MICROWAVE
OVEN

Women work ·
on projects

___....__

Watches.

'

I 1/JSsr OJ A F'EW 1 SN1ALL
\ CClVI&lt;?rt=51 E 5 , "

'''·99~

MARGARINE

PRINCESS GARDNER : LADY SPIED
JEWELRY BOXES •
BULOVA WATCHES: ACCUTRONS, CARAVELLE
- CHARMS - MOTHER'S PINS AND
,.
NECKLACES

VISIT ENJOYED
Mr. and Mrs. Dal e
Kesterson and Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Kesterson of Langsvllle
s~ent the weekend in
Hn milton visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Ea rl Kesterson ond
sons.

CHILD BORN - Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Schoonover
are announcing the birth of
their first grandchlld, a son
to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne L.
Searls
stationed a i
Seymour Johnson Air
Force Base at Goldsboro,
N.!f. Born on Nov. 121 the
haby weighed 10 poundo.
He has been named
Christopher Scott. Mrs.
Searls is the Iarmer Debbie
Schoonover. The paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Searls of
Rulland. Mr. and Mrs.
Schoonover and son,
Tommy, spent a recent
weekend visiting their new
grandson and bls parents.

·':&gt;UIC.t::,

Quarters

;

Rings, Pendants, Pierced Earrin

'

I "'HINK YOO'LL FIND TI-IAT I'M NCiT"
A DIFFICULT NIAkl TO t.O()k'K FOR. ...

:!69
AMPA:KARI~N ~~~~E49• ~~~-~~~~~... 2 Lb-49~

l

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GOESSLER JEWELRY

FUNNY BUSINESS

lOR BOILED HAM...................... ::~.~-~~- s129
.SMOKED CALLIE HAMSt·~~~~~~~?~!:~~~!......7?:.. 63~
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD..........................~~:. 99~
FROZEN FRYERS -~~.'.~::.s..~~~. ~~....................~~:...59$

RINGS:

Sunday, ''I slept in Jimmy
carter,'s bed last night. "
Carter tnld reporters the
While House doors would be
opened to all of those who
opened their homes to the
.carter family .
"We kept a record of where
every member of our family
stayed," be told reporters in
C(]nfirming rumors of the
morning-after party.
But a UP! survey of carter
hosts across the country
uncovered no invitations
received so far. Presumably
they 'II go out this week or
next.

A recording of several
missionaries was played to
explain som• of their prayer
and financial needs. They
also gave testbnony of thanks
to those who help wilh the
Lord's work through giving to
these needs.
A Call to Prayer was given,
and each missionary whose ·
birthday was i,isted for that
day was lifted up in prayer. A
prayer session was also held
where personal requests
were mentioned.

Betty Wehrung, Mrs. Manila.
Hoffman, MrS. Aun Bru wn-

HOBNAIL ELECTRIC LAMPS

1

')

SIGNET,
DIAMOND, MASONIC,
PRINCE GARDNER ZIPPO &amp; WINN LIGHTERS
TIE TACKS &amp; CLASPS
BULOVA: ACCUTRON,
CARRAVELLE, POCKET
WATCHES.
WALDEMAR CHAINS
WATCH FOBS
MEN'S

The Pomeroy First Baptist
Church recently participated
In the Week of Prayer lor the
Lottie Moon Foreign Missions
Christma s Offeri ng wit h
DoMa Spencer, Clara White
and Rachael Lefebre of the
Baptist .Women's group
presenting the program.
Abl'ief history of the life of
Lottie Moon; missionary to
China was given. It was noted
that the Southern Baptist
Convention Goal lor thi s
offering is $29,000,000 and the
local church ~oal is $175.

Frui t baskets lor shutins the Meigs Inn for their tr•di·
will be distributed by ljle tiOllal holiday dinner and
Sew-Rite-Se wing Club then went to the home of Mrs.
Wt'&lt;inesd;ty. Remembering Blirbara Mullen for a P,.rty
s hutins is a spe ci• I •nd gilt exchange.
Christ.m•s projtocl of the
The Mullen home w•s at·
club.
tratively decor~ted for the
Members met reeenUy •I holidays •nd the hostess
pre~tln t ed
white cenunic
angels inscribed with her
name and date to each of the
members. The gifts were ex·
changt'&lt;l around a .Ughll'l
tre... De&lt;:orated ca ke .and
punch were served by the
ho stess with Mr s. ~' lo
Strickland providing the tray
fUVOI'S.
I Allending the party besides
those n• med were Mrs. Net·
tie Boyer. Mrs. Shirley B•lty.
Mrs. Lenora McKn ight, Mrs.

.

.,

Give that special person
a gift to remember..

Club distributing fruit baskets

Social Offering discussed
Calendar at women 's meet

'.,

for White House grits spurned

caucuses.
The soft•ken Georgian
who will become president
Jan. 20, saved a heap of
campaigu money by "living
on the land" during the early .
months before federal
matching funds began
flowing .
·
HIS standard farewell to his
hosts was a promise to
reciprocate their hospitality
after he moved inlll the White
House. Now, he says, he's
going to have some 800 or
them over on the very first
morning he is there.
Apparently the invitations

The final organizational
meeting lor llieCFA laaet for
February and diiiCUSiiont
have been going on for 18
months.
•
"What triggered thia action
is the obvloua fact that the'
divisional concept In the
NCAA needs refinement,".
said Joyce. "The NCAA baa,
failed 10 come to. gripa. with

Storys Run

,

'. j

~ -The

w

•

Colorful prinls acCent these

pretty comfOrters . Polyester
filled . Acetate coverll!d . Full

and twin sl1es.

liE EXCHAINGEDI
DEC. 271H 10
DEC. 31ST ONLY

(

AM $h0f1Pf11 Mart Stores Wil lit Cbed Sunday, Dec. 26th "'d
tan. 2nd - So We Can Rest.

... 80 with you.
Thonko for boinl

...., ,.... t,ho.
whh 111 over

�6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Dec. 21, 1976

...

··with. F'ood ···-·····-

;~:·;o;.:·.····~·····················;················~"(.'•'R'V'•'&amp;'•:tt~,~··

~

"'

F~~-

Congregation
holds
.

~

"v. r.harlene HoPflirh

SEVEN LAYER COOKIES
Take a stick of oleo and put it ln a 9 x 13 cake 'pan. Put this
ln the oven and let the oleo melt. Take out of the oven and mix I
cup of graham cracker crums in with it and then spread evenly
in the pan.
Then in layers put in I six ounce package of butterscotch
morsels, I cup ol coconut, I six ounce package ol chocolate
. morsels, I cup ol nuts, and then over this pour O!Kl can of
. sweetened condensed milk.
·
Bake 30 minutes and no longer at 350. degrees. Cut into . ·
small squares.
DATE LOGS
'I• cup ol flour, I cup sugar, I tsp. baking powder, v, !Bp.
salt, I cup chopped pitted dates, I cup chopped walnuts, 3 eggs,
well beaten.
Silt together the dry ingri!dients,.stlr in the dates, walnuts
~d beaten egg. Pour lnto greased pine lnch square pan. Bake
mslow oven, 32:idegrees, 35 to 40 minutes. Cool, and cut into 48
logs. Roll in powdered sugar .
'
TEXAS BONBONS
2 pounds confectioners sugar, one l:k&gt;unce Eagle Brand
condensed milk, v, cup of butter melted, 2 cupa of dinely
· chopped pecans .and 31&gt; ounces of flaked coconut.
·
Mix ~U Ingredients in a large mixing bowl (use hands 11
necessary), and then shape into balls smaller than a walnut.
Let set about one hour.
Melt 12 one&lt;Junce squares of unsweetened chocolate, or 12
ounces ol semi-sweetened chocolate chips with one ounce ol
paraffin.
Using round toothpicks, dip the balls into the chocolate and
then place on waxed paper.
When dipping leave the chocolate over the warm water.
Once the chocolate has started wset, go back and fill the toothpick holes with chocolate.
Do not refrigerate. makes II dozen bonbons.

Anniull health Party given
dub party
McClure
On Saturday, Dec. 18, a
held Thursday surprise
birthday party was
The annual Christmas dinner party of the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club was held
Thursday night at the home
of Mrs. Marjorie Goett.
Following the potluck dinner a program was presented ·.
with Mrs. Amber Lohn
reading "0 Come Let Us
Adore H.im," Ruby
Frick,"Mothers Keep All ·
These Things," Mrs. Goetl,
"The Man Who Almost Miss-'
ed Christmas," and Mrs.
Jean Wright, " A Gilt from
the Heart." Members exchanged gilts.
Attendillg were those named and Mrs: Doris Shook;
r.,.rs. Donna Gibnore, Mrs.
Della Curtis, Mrs. Georgia
Diehl , Robin Campbell,
Madeline Cballin, Ann Mash,
Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mrs.
Iva Powell, and Mrs. Linda
Pullins, a guest.

VISIT FAMILY
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace made a weekend preChristmas visit with Mr. arid
Mrs. Alan Wallace and
family, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Wallace and family of
Route I, Lancaster. They also
went. to McConnelsvllle to·
visit Mrs. Wallace's mother,
Mrs. G. C. Knox.
.

given lor Hershel (Sonny )
McClure at his home on
Route 3. A large sheet cake
decorated by Donna Spencer
portrayed a bearded face and
fitted the occasion because .
Mr. M.cClure wears a beard.
He received many fun gilts as
well as thoughtful ones.
Friends and family who
attended were: Mrs. Hershel
McClure, Jeannie, Billy and
Bobby, Darlene Roush, Belva
Glaze, Donna Spencer, M·r.
and Mrs. Gary Basham, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Browning,
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Coleman,
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lefebre
and Rena, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Patterson, Mr. and Mrs ..)im
Pauley, Mr. and Mrs. John
Pauley, Mr, and Mrs. Paul
White and Mr. and Mrs. Troy
Zwilling.

TOYS ARE NEEDED
The Salvation Army in
Pomeroy has expressed an
emergency need lor good
used or new toys to be
distributed with food ·haskets
for the underprivileged lor
Christmas. Toys may be left
on the porch of the Army's
headquarters,. 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.

Southern, Joy Beaver, Judy Hall, Terri Fife, and chrtsu
Hess; and (bac~ row), Randy Roach, Terry Yankey, Ken
Hoffman, Beck! Fry, Pam Powers, Angie Baker and Mrs.
Becky Glaze, director.

. YOUTH CHOIR - The Middleport Church of Christ
.choir to present "One Small Child," at 7:30 Wednesday
night, is composed ol (front seated, left to right) Robin

Youth choir presenting. musical
'

" One Small Child," a Glaze, the musical is the
Christmas musical. by Lani story of a young man who
Smith, will be presented by views his own insignificance
the youth choir ol the Mid· in comparison to the vast
dleport Church of Christ at expanse of the world. He then
7:30 p.m . Wednesday at the reflects on the Christ Child,
his birth in Bethlehem, his
church.
Directed by Mrs. Becky trip to Calvarv •nd his

EVERY YEAR Mrs: Bowers makes a quantity of fudge,
and every year she gives a new recipe a try, but always
returns to her "Million Dollar Fodge" recipe.
MILLION DOLLAR FUDGE
I cup cbopped walnu!B, 2 six ounce packages of chocolate
chips, !large plain chocolate bar (10%ounce size, Hershey), I
pint jar of marshmallow creme, I tsp. vanilla, 4 cops of sugar,
and I can evaporated milk.
·
1n a large mixing howl place the nuts, chocolate chips,
chocolate bar, broken into small pieces, marshmallow creme,
and the vanilla.
, 1n a pan place the sugar and the evaporated milk. Brlng to
a boll and stirring constantly, boil for 10minutes.
,
Pour the hot mixture over the contents in the bowl and stir
until melted. Pour into buttered pans. When set cut in squares.
This makes about five pounds.

presence in the world today,
and through the music calls
for a rededication to the task
of bringing others to Christ.
Soloists for the musical are
Randy Roach who sings
"ThJs Time of Year," "No
One Ustens" and "Get It

AilogeUier," and Ken Hoffman who sings "The Master
Plan." Other selections are
"One Small Child " "Once

Upon a Long Ago,"' " A New
Dawn. A New Day," and

"Walk With Hbn."

Polly's Pointers Quilt blocks made

'
By Polly Cramer

Turpentine safe
for some sweaters

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - How can I
get dried paint off ol a white
sweater? Also, my Pet Peeve
is with those tags that come
inside clothes. So often the
size of the garment is all
wa s hed ou t, · but th e
trademark stays bright as a
dollar. ·ALICE.
DEAR ALICE - You certainly did not give us much to
go on - not the. type of paint
nor"what the sweater is made
of. II the sweater is not
washable, try turpentine. II
this does not work, take it to
the dry cleaner, II washable,
PU! petrolewn jejly on the
pamt spots and leave it on until the paint softens, then
soak ih turpentine, rub spots
out and then wash in usual ·
suds and rinse. - POLLY,
DEAR POLLY - f want to
tell Cecile tbat I remove
sl&lt;!ins from the toilet bowl by
llliing a stick shaped pumice
stone that can be bought at
most hardware stores. It
removes any kind ol sl&lt;lin by
rubbing and does not leave
any scratch marks. -·
EUNICE.
DEAR POLLY - To cure
the ·hiccoughs or a cough, I
drink a glassful of wann, not
hot, water. !'or the hiccoughs
I drink as much as I can with
one breath. This . works
wonders lor me.- KRISTA.
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell gardeners how to keep
the birds away from planted
seeds. Put some foil pie pans
on strings and sl&lt;lke them
over the seeds. The pans can
be removed when the seeds
sprout. - AMY.
DEAR POLLY- To protecl
my floors from furniture
marks ani! scratches, I wax
the rockers and feet on chairs
anil l&lt;!bles when I wax the
floors. This also helps koop
the furniture 'rom pulling

LB.

splinters out ot l}le !lour
boards in hardwood floors.
II you do not have a rubber
hot water bottle and need
one, put a small bag of salt in
a skillet and heat it. Wrap
this hot bag in a closely
woven cloth. ·It will hold the
heat for quite some time.
Our big living room mirror

was accidentally broken, but
a neighbor suggested that I
. not throw the pieces away but
have a glazer cuf them into
squares. These squares make
most altractive ornamerit.s

Quilt blocks were made
during the recent meeting of
the Women's Missionary
Society ol the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church held
at the home of Mrs. Wanda
Eblin.
Mrs. Jean Wright opened
the meeting with devotions
Irom Luke 2 and a meditation
"If He Had Not Come" from
the book, "Streams In the
Desert." Mrs. Joy Clark had
prayer and Mrs. Wright read
the "Mother's Prayer at

Plans to. continue support
of a child in California in 1977
were made during a meeting
of the Men's Fellowship of
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church at the
sides uf ::;heels that are worn' home of Steve Eblin Thurs~
in the middle. A new sheet day night.
The group also voted to
costs very little more than a
pair of pillowcases at today's send a $5 gift to the child lor
prices. I use the worn centers Christmas. Members reol the sheets for dust cloths.
membered Pearl Jacobs on
Another great saving is his 86th birthday with cards
that I make my kitchen
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
towels out ol laded print
tablecloths. A 52-inch square
one will make lour gotxfsize
towels and a 72-inch one
makes six towels that are six inches longer but an inch or
twonarrower. - ROSE. '
DEAR POLLY - If you
have a p1eture you wa~t to
keep, get a piece of smooth
wood the same size as the picture. Paste the picture on the
wood and let the glue dry
thoroughly. Then spray clear
shellac over it as a prolection .- ALLYSON.
Polly will send you one of
. her " peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal lor framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, il she uses your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column.
Write Polly's Pointers in ca re
ol this newspaper . .
w1der vases . and

bowl~i .

-

19e

DOZEN

and a birthday cake. Bob
Barton had prayer and
Seldon Baker, Jr. gave dev&amp;- .
lions alter which time the
men discussed effective
Christian living. Reports
were given by Ed Van Inwagen, treasurer, and Uoyd
Wright, secretary. Ernest
Powell had the closing
prayer and refreshments
were served .·.
with Major Hoople

•

New anti-Israel
accord signed
' CAIRO (UP!) - Presidents calling
for
gradual
Anwar Sadat of Egypt and unificati on in economic,
Halez Assad of Syria todsy diplomatic, military and
signed a joint declaration other fields .
which. diplomatic sources
Following t)le signing
~aid spells out steps to reunite ' ceremony, Assad and Sadat
their .political and military drove together to Cairo
energies against Israel.
airport where they reviewed
The signing at the end of a display ol Egyptian arms,
Assad's four -&lt;lay visit including warplanes.
climaxed the two Arab
The Syrian leader left for
leaders ' reconciliation in Damascus at 12:30 p.m. (5:30
October, following their 13- a.m. EST).
month rllt.
J!:gyptian Vice President
The decla.ratlon will be Hosni Mobarak said Mondsy
released at news conferences the Sadat-Assad talks "will
scheduled lor 6 p.m. (12 p.m. produce very important
EST) by Egyptian F.oreign results in the near .future lor
Minister Ismail Fahmi in 'the benefit of th e Arab
Cairo and Syrian Foreign homeland."
Minister · Abdel Halim
Khaddsm in Damascus.
Diplomatic sources said the ·
declaration charts the course
Egypt and Syria wUl take
Mrs. Jones dies
toward unity, including the
establishment ol a unified in Nelsonville
political leadership.
The two countries recently CARPENTER - Services
named Egyptian War were held recently in
Minister Gen . Mohamed Nelsonville lor Mrs. Donald .
as
joint Jones, 59 (Wanda Starkey),
Gamassy
commander Of the Egyptian who died at her hom e
and Syrian fronts with Israel. following a long illness. Mrs.
The sources said they Jones, daughter ol Earl and
doubted that the Sadat-Assad Oma Caster Starkey, local,
plan envisages an immediate was reared in this community
compl~te merger of the. two · and was . a gra duate . of
counlms. Rather, 1t hkely Columbia High School. She
~ould he something similar was a member of the United
to the agreement Syria and · Methodist Church.
Jordan concluded last year · In addition to her parents,
she is survived by her
husband, Donald R. Jones,
Nelsonville; two sons, Donald
K. and David E., both ol
Alexandria, Va.; a daughterin-law, Sherry and two
grandchildren,
Brian and
HEARINGS SET
·
Carrie;
a
sister,
Mrs. Wilda
LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!)
Wiseman,
Harrisonville,
and
- Eleven suspects believed
a
sister-in-law,
Mrs.
Marian
responsible for as many as 25
Fairfield County breakins in Foster, New Straitsville.·
the last three months were w Other relatives from a
appear in court today for distance who attended the
services were A. R. Caster
preliminary hey~rings .
Police picked up a juvenile and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Monday, after arresting 10 Spencer, Charleston, W.Va.;
other persons over · the Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell,
weekend also believed Myrtle Harris and Mr.· and
members ol a burglary ring. Mrs. Wilbur Rupe, ColumPolice Chief Sam Hutsler bus; Mrs. Elma Vernon and
said an Informer , tipped family, New Lexington; Mr.
police about the gang 's and Mrs. Forrest Harper and
operation in connection with Mr. and Mrs. James Starkey,
the theft of "a considerable Chillicothe; Mr. and Mrs.
amount of cash and Lloyd McComas, · Hockingmerchandise" from cowdy port; Beulah Jones, Athens,
homes, schools and business and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
establishments during the Holliday, De&lt;ler.
last three months.

Corn Poppers Reg . 118.99 for $14.99
Slow Crock •Cooker &amp; Fryer Reg. $29.95 for
$18,99 •
.'

A donation wthe Personal
Advocacy Program was
made during a recent
meeting of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority held at the home of
Mrs. Janet Downie.
A thank you note was read
from Veterans Memorial
Hospital for !()ys for children .
in the pediatric ward. Also
read was a note of appreciation from Mrs. Sherry Abbott
for cards and flowers at the
birth of her baby. II was
noted that the home of one of
the pledges, Mary Fry, bad
recently burned and
members were asked to do
something for her. The an·

for 115.99

0

I

Automatic Drip Coffee-Maker Reg. $26.99 ·

nual Mother's March of
Dimes was set for Jan. l7.
Kathy Cwnmings gave the
Heritage Heartbeat on
"Reflections of a Beta Sigma
Phi- Daughter." A bake sale
and use of proceeds was .
disciJ!ised. A Christnias din~
ner party was held Saturday
night at the Holiday Inn. The
gift exchange party will be
held tonight at 6:30 at the
home of Mrs. Debi Buck.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey gave the
cultural report on music.

Hall mar~ Cards 2Sc to 51.00

Gift-Wrapping Paper 89c to $3.00
Gift Boxes 79c
Na'p kh\s, Plates, Ribbons, Gift Trims

' I ,,

- '

"_
...
I

Max for Men 526.95
·super Curl by

I

Men's and Ladies' TimeK Watches $12.95

· Luggage Reg. $25.00 for $14 .99 ·1
Knee Hi Hose 4 pr. Sl.OO
Panty Hose 2 pr . $1.00
Lady Arrow Shirts Sizes 8-18 Reg. 510.99

St.~

I
Fresh
1 ·Chrisbn·as
I1

TRIP MADE
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne spe~t the weekend
1n Columbus with Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Hanuner. Others I
vWttng at the Hanuner home . I
were Mr. and Mrs. Dallu
Jones and daughter, Chris, I
Mrs. Alma Thompson, and
Mr. and Mrs. steve Martin. !I

,and UP.Children's Snoopy 114.95 and 115.95

~·

Phone 992-5560

Gillene S19.99

St.ylijt ·Btower-Oryer Reg . $19.95 for $14.95

,,rf/'p~/!1

59 N. Second

'.!

Make. Up Mirror Reg . $37.85 for $29.95

p•·------,
_,._.

for .l5.9,9,
Ladies ' Umbrella Reg. 14.98 for' l2.99

I

. Ladies ' Comb .&amp; Brush Sets 56.99
Men's Jewel Case Reg . $4.99 for 52.89
Pipes 52.50 an'd Uo

I
I

l

I Nlllll
•.--gements 1I

I

• Centerpieces
• Vases

20% OFF

I
I

~~

..................
K

Cash 'n carry

fi ·

'
Et~ct•lt

c.

.
H•ir Clippers Reg. 112.50 lor 18.88

¥tH'I't'· Billfolds Reg . 511 .00 for !8.88

Trifold.llea . suo lor s5 :~9
Door Sprays Reg. $5.00 lor $2.99
Kodak 'El&lt;6 Camera Reg. $69.50 lor 159.95
- KodOI&lt;· EK4..Came•a'i Reg. 153.50 lor 146.95
Soap Reg. 12.60 for bo• of 3 99c (Herbal,
lemon , strawberry)
Jigscpft ,~Puzzle' Reg. Sl.49 for &amp;9c
Straw. lja1 ,, ~ 0 tpgn~ , S1.9S lor 99c .

. Presto tMagi'a 5how Reg .· l2.50 for '9c

Mon., Tues •• Wee! .• Sat.-8:30111 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
'773-5592

Herman Gtat•

Mason. W.Va.

I

·-

' Reg . SJ.50 for S1.99
Candles
Turtle-Neck Sweaters for Men Reg.

for $6.99
'
'
Photo Alb~s Reg . s3,~q for 11.29
Zippo Lighters 14.75

Pint or Quarter Stainless Steel Thermos
Wide Assol'flfle"t of Toiletries for Men and
Women· . ~Q /~ ~ 1, ...

British Sterling from $3.00 and Up
Musk S5.7S and Up
Brut $4.99 and Up
Aqua Velva Smart Se111.29

GOLDEN ISLE

ORANGE
JUICE

SLAB BACON

He•ven Scent Gift Sets for ladies SS.75 and

HAM
SUCED

'1" LB.

HAM.
SALAD
MEYER

LIVER
PUDDING

WIENERS
LB. 99~

$139
LB.

'$12.50
Currant Spray Mist $4.75
Chanel No. 5 Gilt Sets 115.50
sPray Cologne Reg. 12.00 lor 88c

The Pomeroy Chamber ot \.Ommerce is
attempting to raise funds for Christmas
lighting. We koow thai· all residents of
Pomeroy a_nd residents of Meigs County are
mterested m making Pomeroy, your county
seat _attractive to outsiders. won't you
contribute to helping Pomeroy achieve this
goal. Your contribution to the Christmas
Lighting Fund or information pertaining to
the ChaiTtber of Commerce should be
submitted to Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. P.O. Box S26 or phone 992-500.5:
You need not · be a businessman to join the
Chamber of Commerce. any citizen in the
county may join and help make Pomeroy
the number one County Sea !'in Southeastern
Ohio.

Currant Gift Sets 56.75 to 119.00

Emeraude Reg. 17.00 lor 13.99

13-Piece Corning Ware S.e.ts Reg. 569.95 tor

124.95
Over-The-Call Men's Socks Reg. 124.00 for
14.99 doz.

Johnson &amp; Johnson Baby Powder Reg.

lor 85c
Russell Stover Candy

12.00

II.SO

and Up

Dietetic Cookies Reg . 58.95 for $4.95
Chocolate Dietetic Cookies Reg. Sl.OO for
11.09
Assorted Toys Reg . $1.29 for

"c

Electric· Wall Clocks 18.96 and Up

JACKSON SLICED

BOLOGNA

~~.~~---~.~~.594

SPAGHIDI SAUCE ..................

.'

Beauty

PORK &amp; BEANS .... :...................~::..~~~~ 99~

Valley Bell

LUX DISH DETERGENT.. .....~~.~-z:..~t·t-'~-· 79'

EGG
.NOG

LB. $119

· 79~

QUART ' .

POLISH
·SAUSAGE
LONGHORN
CHEESE

1500 Inch Cellophane Tape 29c

992-3106

CANS

.

'

·FRED W. CROW, PRESIDENT

.

DRUG STORE

POMEROY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

8 oz.
PKG.
K

49~

CHOCOLATE
MORSELS

'1"

EACH

,.

IDAHO
POTATOES

89¢

LARGE CAL

NIA

NAVEL
}QroR
•
ORANGES

99¢

10 LB . .BAG

i"~COO)A'Q;"!

!fRUITY PEBBLESf
No . lOS

-

:

JS

:::
:

59 i
~

~

7-UP
8-PACK
CARTON

Box

..................
.........""""!
Coupon e11p. uec. 21',1.976'

•

Twin Glty G~tewa.Y

:
:

No. lOS

LIQUID
DETERGENT

99

Plus Tax &amp;
Deposit

J

I DYNAMO :~

Chiffon
Soft Stick

:

: MARGARINE
1 lb.
pkg.

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

I 59¢
Lb, Bag

:
:
:

I
'

NESTLE~'S~. . . .~~~~~. .~

12 OZ. PKG.

.....

:coupon exp . Dec . 24, 1
Twin City

N. 2nd Ave. Middleport

99~

3FOR

~

· DUTTON'S

oz.

12

MEIGS COUNTIANS

'Old Spice Gilt Sots 13.75

Progresso

Plus tax
&amp; deposit

DRUG
STORE

Chanel No . s Spray Cologne sa.oo and

CRISCO Oll. .........................~~.~~~.~~t.'~. s139 .

~/:z~\ottles

AT DUTION'S

NO DEALERS .PLEASE!

We Will Close 6 P.m. Christmas Eve. Closed Dec. 25 &amp; 26.

ATTEND CONFERENCE - Meigs High VICA
members recently attended a leadership conference, Dec.
4 at Guernsey-Noble Joint Vocational School in Senecaville. Meetings were on leadership, good manners and
personality. The group returned to Meigs High at 6:30
p.m. TransPOrtation was provided by teachers Mrs. Linds
Yonker, Dale Harrison, Charles. Corder. Studen!B
attending were left to right , Ray Willford, Greg Smith,
Noah Hysell, Dusty Smith, Stan Starcher ; back row
Brenda Bishop, Kathy Morris, Imo Jean Blevins ·TructY
Hall, Deanna Knapp, Debbie Lambert. - l~o Jan
Blevins, reporter .
·
·

Program gets donation

BOILED

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ................ 2~x~.~~~.s-99~

PEPSI

WE .ACCEPT FI:OERAL FOOD STAMPS
. PRICES IN EFFECT THRU DECEMBER 24, 1976

Up

~ucky

COKE~ 7-UP99~

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

49e

CAKE MIX.~~~~~~.'..~~~~-~..~?~.~~ .............. ~~.. 59'
Leaf
APPLE SAUCE ...............:....... ~2 oz. jar 594

Americ~n

SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

TANGERINES

PEARS

'

OPEN

Blenders

Christmas." It was noted
that a mail box has been placed at the church lor
Christmas cards and an Offering lor missions box for
the money usually spent lor
sl&lt;lmps to mail the cards.
Mrs. Eblin and Mrs.
Sharon Fobner served the
refreshments. Mrs. Iva
Powell will host the January
meeting. Others attending
were Mrs. Doris Shook, Mrs.
Donna Gilmore, Mrs. Ann
Mash and Mrs. Tina Jacobs.

Duncan Hines •

FOR CHRISTMAS GROCERY BASKET
WORTH $25, SIS, or $10
Prawing '4 P.M., Dec. 24

The congregation of the Foley and Kelly Smith, led by
First Southern Baptist Cindy Patterson and Debbie
Church held a baptiam ser- Pickens. Members of the
vice at the French City Children's DivWon wbo gave
Baptill Church at GaWpoUI parts were: Mike Patteraon,
the afternoon of Dec. 19, ·with Chris Smith, Eric Spencer,
Pastor ·Paul Whlte baptlzlng K~ren . Spencer, Becky
Velma Taylor, Becky South, Adklrul, Tammy Adklrul, BW
Norma South and Clifford McClure, Julia Spencer,
South. ·
Gary Foley, Sandy Foley and
The lame evenlng a Christ· Usa Allen, led · by Daily
mas progr~m Will! presented Patterson, Racheal Lefebre
at the Pomeroy Church with and Betty Foley:
Donna Spencer using flannelThe congregation pargraph In lelllng the Christ- tlclpated In the singlng of
muStoryandtheyouthchoir "Joy To The World,"
singing the following songs 1n "There's A Song In The Air,"
the presentation: "Gentle "Silent Night" and "Amulng
Mary Laid Her Child," Grace." Clara Whlle read a
"Angels We Have Heard on Christmas poem that had
High," (featuring Jennller been composed by a personal
VanOver ptaylng the Oute ), friend. A gift of an afgljan ·
"Star Of The Eut," "Go Tell with white backgroutld and
II On The Mountain" and pink rosebuds was presented
"Love Came Down At Christ· to Pastor and Mrs.. Paul
mas." Pa!'llcipating youth Whlte - Pastor White told of
choir members were Kbn the love th8t he and his wile
Basham, Rena Lefebre, ·· have for the congregation and
Cheryl Lefebre, Jeannie Wished everyone a Merry
McClure, Cindy Patterson, Christmas. Jeannie McClure
Debbie Pickens, Karen representing the Senior High
Spencer, Julia Spencer, youth class presented Mrs.
Jennifer VanOver, Gary Whlte with a l!anglng basket
Basham, Bill McClure, planter and poinsettia. There
Curtiss Spencer and Gerald were 73 In attendance.
Spencer. Sonny McClure led
A conventloli-wide Carol
the choir and accompanist sing will be held Dec. 22 and
was Rhojean McClure.
the Pomeroy Church will
Pre-school children who meet at6:30 that evenlng and
gave parts were Ray Lynn disperse In groups to carol at
Basham, Cindy Foley, Robin appOinted areas.

$13.99

Child receiving support
from men 's fellowship

J.C.W.
DEAR POLLY- I have not
bought a pair ol pillowcases
for over live years. I make
them out ol tile two good

9 AM TO 9 PM

Melamine Dinnerware Re9 . 519.99 for ·

during society meet

SWEET
POTATOES

REGISTER

MON. THRll SAT.

baptism on Sunday

Sq you haven't baked a oookie nor made a pound of candy .
It 's not too late!
• And Eileen Bowers of Pomeroy, Rt. 3, shares some of her
holiday recipes with "~ un with Fo00s."

.

OPEN

Betty &lt;::rocker

WALNUT
BROWNIE MIX

MRS.
BUTTERWORTH

SYRUP

No. 175
22 oz. Box

No. 125
24 oz. Btl .

89~

89~

e•p. Oec.ll, 1976
· City Gateway

.,

Birdseye Frozen

COOL WHIP
'
9 OL
cln.

g~

�6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Dec. 21, 1976

...

··with. F'ood ···-·····-

;~:·;o;.:·.····~·····················;················~"(.'•'R'V'•'&amp;'•:tt~,~··

~

"'

F~~-

Congregation
holds
.

~

"v. r.harlene HoPflirh

SEVEN LAYER COOKIES
Take a stick of oleo and put it ln a 9 x 13 cake 'pan. Put this
ln the oven and let the oleo melt. Take out of the oven and mix I
cup of graham cracker crums in with it and then spread evenly
in the pan.
Then in layers put in I six ounce package of butterscotch
morsels, I cup ol coconut, I six ounce package ol chocolate
. morsels, I cup ol nuts, and then over this pour O!Kl can of
. sweetened condensed milk.
·
Bake 30 minutes and no longer at 350. degrees. Cut into . ·
small squares.
DATE LOGS
'I• cup ol flour, I cup sugar, I tsp. baking powder, v, !Bp.
salt, I cup chopped pitted dates, I cup chopped walnuts, 3 eggs,
well beaten.
Silt together the dry ingri!dients,.stlr in the dates, walnuts
~d beaten egg. Pour lnto greased pine lnch square pan. Bake
mslow oven, 32:idegrees, 35 to 40 minutes. Cool, and cut into 48
logs. Roll in powdered sugar .
'
TEXAS BONBONS
2 pounds confectioners sugar, one l:k&gt;unce Eagle Brand
condensed milk, v, cup of butter melted, 2 cupa of dinely
· chopped pecans .and 31&gt; ounces of flaked coconut.
·
Mix ~U Ingredients in a large mixing bowl (use hands 11
necessary), and then shape into balls smaller than a walnut.
Let set about one hour.
Melt 12 one&lt;Junce squares of unsweetened chocolate, or 12
ounces ol semi-sweetened chocolate chips with one ounce ol
paraffin.
Using round toothpicks, dip the balls into the chocolate and
then place on waxed paper.
When dipping leave the chocolate over the warm water.
Once the chocolate has started wset, go back and fill the toothpick holes with chocolate.
Do not refrigerate. makes II dozen bonbons.

Anniull health Party given
dub party
McClure
On Saturday, Dec. 18, a
held Thursday surprise
birthday party was
The annual Christmas dinner party of the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club was held
Thursday night at the home
of Mrs. Marjorie Goett.
Following the potluck dinner a program was presented ·.
with Mrs. Amber Lohn
reading "0 Come Let Us
Adore H.im," Ruby
Frick,"Mothers Keep All ·
These Things," Mrs. Goetl,
"The Man Who Almost Miss-'
ed Christmas," and Mrs.
Jean Wright, " A Gilt from
the Heart." Members exchanged gilts.
Attendillg were those named and Mrs: Doris Shook;
r.,.rs. Donna Gibnore, Mrs.
Della Curtis, Mrs. Georgia
Diehl , Robin Campbell,
Madeline Cballin, Ann Mash,
Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mrs.
Iva Powell, and Mrs. Linda
Pullins, a guest.

VISIT FAMILY
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace made a weekend preChristmas visit with Mr. arid
Mrs. Alan Wallace and
family, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Wallace and family of
Route I, Lancaster. They also
went. to McConnelsvllle to·
visit Mrs. Wallace's mother,
Mrs. G. C. Knox.
.

given lor Hershel (Sonny )
McClure at his home on
Route 3. A large sheet cake
decorated by Donna Spencer
portrayed a bearded face and
fitted the occasion because .
Mr. M.cClure wears a beard.
He received many fun gilts as
well as thoughtful ones.
Friends and family who
attended were: Mrs. Hershel
McClure, Jeannie, Billy and
Bobby, Darlene Roush, Belva
Glaze, Donna Spencer, M·r.
and Mrs. Gary Basham, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Browning,
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Coleman,
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lefebre
and Rena, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Patterson, Mr. and Mrs ..)im
Pauley, Mr. and Mrs. John
Pauley, Mr, and Mrs. Paul
White and Mr. and Mrs. Troy
Zwilling.

TOYS ARE NEEDED
The Salvation Army in
Pomeroy has expressed an
emergency need lor good
used or new toys to be
distributed with food ·haskets
for the underprivileged lor
Christmas. Toys may be left
on the porch of the Army's
headquarters,. 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.

Southern, Joy Beaver, Judy Hall, Terri Fife, and chrtsu
Hess; and (bac~ row), Randy Roach, Terry Yankey, Ken
Hoffman, Beck! Fry, Pam Powers, Angie Baker and Mrs.
Becky Glaze, director.

. YOUTH CHOIR - The Middleport Church of Christ
.choir to present "One Small Child," at 7:30 Wednesday
night, is composed ol (front seated, left to right) Robin

Youth choir presenting. musical
'

" One Small Child," a Glaze, the musical is the
Christmas musical. by Lani story of a young man who
Smith, will be presented by views his own insignificance
the youth choir ol the Mid· in comparison to the vast
dleport Church of Christ at expanse of the world. He then
7:30 p.m . Wednesday at the reflects on the Christ Child,
his birth in Bethlehem, his
church.
Directed by Mrs. Becky trip to Calvarv •nd his

EVERY YEAR Mrs: Bowers makes a quantity of fudge,
and every year she gives a new recipe a try, but always
returns to her "Million Dollar Fodge" recipe.
MILLION DOLLAR FUDGE
I cup cbopped walnu!B, 2 six ounce packages of chocolate
chips, !large plain chocolate bar (10%ounce size, Hershey), I
pint jar of marshmallow creme, I tsp. vanilla, 4 cops of sugar,
and I can evaporated milk.
·
1n a large mixing howl place the nuts, chocolate chips,
chocolate bar, broken into small pieces, marshmallow creme,
and the vanilla.
, 1n a pan place the sugar and the evaporated milk. Brlng to
a boll and stirring constantly, boil for 10minutes.
,
Pour the hot mixture over the contents in the bowl and stir
until melted. Pour into buttered pans. When set cut in squares.
This makes about five pounds.

presence in the world today,
and through the music calls
for a rededication to the task
of bringing others to Christ.
Soloists for the musical are
Randy Roach who sings
"ThJs Time of Year," "No
One Ustens" and "Get It

AilogeUier," and Ken Hoffman who sings "The Master
Plan." Other selections are
"One Small Child " "Once

Upon a Long Ago,"' " A New
Dawn. A New Day," and

"Walk With Hbn."

Polly's Pointers Quilt blocks made

'
By Polly Cramer

Turpentine safe
for some sweaters

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - How can I
get dried paint off ol a white
sweater? Also, my Pet Peeve
is with those tags that come
inside clothes. So often the
size of the garment is all
wa s hed ou t, · but th e
trademark stays bright as a
dollar. ·ALICE.
DEAR ALICE - You certainly did not give us much to
go on - not the. type of paint
nor"what the sweater is made
of. II the sweater is not
washable, try turpentine. II
this does not work, take it to
the dry cleaner, II washable,
PU! petrolewn jejly on the
pamt spots and leave it on until the paint softens, then
soak ih turpentine, rub spots
out and then wash in usual ·
suds and rinse. - POLLY,
DEAR POLLY - f want to
tell Cecile tbat I remove
sl&lt;!ins from the toilet bowl by
llliing a stick shaped pumice
stone that can be bought at
most hardware stores. It
removes any kind ol sl&lt;lin by
rubbing and does not leave
any scratch marks. -·
EUNICE.
DEAR POLLY - To cure
the ·hiccoughs or a cough, I
drink a glassful of wann, not
hot, water. !'or the hiccoughs
I drink as much as I can with
one breath. This . works
wonders lor me.- KRISTA.
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell gardeners how to keep
the birds away from planted
seeds. Put some foil pie pans
on strings and sl&lt;lke them
over the seeds. The pans can
be removed when the seeds
sprout. - AMY.
DEAR POLLY- To protecl
my floors from furniture
marks ani! scratches, I wax
the rockers and feet on chairs
anil l&lt;!bles when I wax the
floors. This also helps koop
the furniture 'rom pulling

LB.

splinters out ot l}le !lour
boards in hardwood floors.
II you do not have a rubber
hot water bottle and need
one, put a small bag of salt in
a skillet and heat it. Wrap
this hot bag in a closely
woven cloth. ·It will hold the
heat for quite some time.
Our big living room mirror

was accidentally broken, but
a neighbor suggested that I
. not throw the pieces away but
have a glazer cuf them into
squares. These squares make
most altractive ornamerit.s

Quilt blocks were made
during the recent meeting of
the Women's Missionary
Society ol the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church held
at the home of Mrs. Wanda
Eblin.
Mrs. Jean Wright opened
the meeting with devotions
Irom Luke 2 and a meditation
"If He Had Not Come" from
the book, "Streams In the
Desert." Mrs. Joy Clark had
prayer and Mrs. Wright read
the "Mother's Prayer at

Plans to. continue support
of a child in California in 1977
were made during a meeting
of the Men's Fellowship of
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church at the
sides uf ::;heels that are worn' home of Steve Eblin Thurs~
in the middle. A new sheet day night.
The group also voted to
costs very little more than a
pair of pillowcases at today's send a $5 gift to the child lor
prices. I use the worn centers Christmas. Members reol the sheets for dust cloths.
membered Pearl Jacobs on
Another great saving is his 86th birthday with cards
that I make my kitchen
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
towels out ol laded print
tablecloths. A 52-inch square
one will make lour gotxfsize
towels and a 72-inch one
makes six towels that are six inches longer but an inch or
twonarrower. - ROSE. '
DEAR POLLY - If you
have a p1eture you wa~t to
keep, get a piece of smooth
wood the same size as the picture. Paste the picture on the
wood and let the glue dry
thoroughly. Then spray clear
shellac over it as a prolection .- ALLYSON.
Polly will send you one of
. her " peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal lor framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, il she uses your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column.
Write Polly's Pointers in ca re
ol this newspaper . .
w1der vases . and

bowl~i .

-

19e

DOZEN

and a birthday cake. Bob
Barton had prayer and
Seldon Baker, Jr. gave dev&amp;- .
lions alter which time the
men discussed effective
Christian living. Reports
were given by Ed Van Inwagen, treasurer, and Uoyd
Wright, secretary. Ernest
Powell had the closing
prayer and refreshments
were served .·.
with Major Hoople

•

New anti-Israel
accord signed
' CAIRO (UP!) - Presidents calling
for
gradual
Anwar Sadat of Egypt and unificati on in economic,
Halez Assad of Syria todsy diplomatic, military and
signed a joint declaration other fields .
which. diplomatic sources
Following t)le signing
~aid spells out steps to reunite ' ceremony, Assad and Sadat
their .political and military drove together to Cairo
energies against Israel.
airport where they reviewed
The signing at the end of a display ol Egyptian arms,
Assad's four -&lt;lay visit including warplanes.
climaxed the two Arab
The Syrian leader left for
leaders ' reconciliation in Damascus at 12:30 p.m. (5:30
October, following their 13- a.m. EST).
month rllt.
J!:gyptian Vice President
The decla.ratlon will be Hosni Mobarak said Mondsy
released at news conferences the Sadat-Assad talks "will
scheduled lor 6 p.m. (12 p.m. produce very important
EST) by Egyptian F.oreign results in the near .future lor
Minister Ismail Fahmi in 'the benefit of th e Arab
Cairo and Syrian Foreign homeland."
Minister · Abdel Halim
Khaddsm in Damascus.
Diplomatic sources said the ·
declaration charts the course
Egypt and Syria wUl take
Mrs. Jones dies
toward unity, including the
establishment ol a unified in Nelsonville
political leadership.
The two countries recently CARPENTER - Services
named Egyptian War were held recently in
Minister Gen . Mohamed Nelsonville lor Mrs. Donald .
as
joint Jones, 59 (Wanda Starkey),
Gamassy
commander Of the Egyptian who died at her hom e
and Syrian fronts with Israel. following a long illness. Mrs.
The sources said they Jones, daughter ol Earl and
doubted that the Sadat-Assad Oma Caster Starkey, local,
plan envisages an immediate was reared in this community
compl~te merger of the. two · and was . a gra duate . of
counlms. Rather, 1t hkely Columbia High School. She
~ould he something similar was a member of the United
to the agreement Syria and · Methodist Church.
Jordan concluded last year · In addition to her parents,
she is survived by her
husband, Donald R. Jones,
Nelsonville; two sons, Donald
K. and David E., both ol
Alexandria, Va.; a daughterin-law, Sherry and two
grandchildren,
Brian and
HEARINGS SET
·
Carrie;
a
sister,
Mrs. Wilda
LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!)
Wiseman,
Harrisonville,
and
- Eleven suspects believed
a
sister-in-law,
Mrs.
Marian
responsible for as many as 25
Fairfield County breakins in Foster, New Straitsville.·
the last three months were w Other relatives from a
appear in court today for distance who attended the
services were A. R. Caster
preliminary hey~rings .
Police picked up a juvenile and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Monday, after arresting 10 Spencer, Charleston, W.Va.;
other persons over · the Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell,
weekend also believed Myrtle Harris and Mr.· and
members ol a burglary ring. Mrs. Wilbur Rupe, ColumPolice Chief Sam Hutsler bus; Mrs. Elma Vernon and
said an Informer , tipped family, New Lexington; Mr.
police about the gang 's and Mrs. Forrest Harper and
operation in connection with Mr. and Mrs. James Starkey,
the theft of "a considerable Chillicothe; Mr. and Mrs.
amount of cash and Lloyd McComas, · Hockingmerchandise" from cowdy port; Beulah Jones, Athens,
homes, schools and business and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
establishments during the Holliday, De&lt;ler.
last three months.

Corn Poppers Reg . 118.99 for $14.99
Slow Crock •Cooker &amp; Fryer Reg. $29.95 for
$18,99 •
.'

A donation wthe Personal
Advocacy Program was
made during a recent
meeting of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority held at the home of
Mrs. Janet Downie.
A thank you note was read
from Veterans Memorial
Hospital for !()ys for children .
in the pediatric ward. Also
read was a note of appreciation from Mrs. Sherry Abbott
for cards and flowers at the
birth of her baby. II was
noted that the home of one of
the pledges, Mary Fry, bad
recently burned and
members were asked to do
something for her. The an·

for 115.99

0

I

Automatic Drip Coffee-Maker Reg. $26.99 ·

nual Mother's March of
Dimes was set for Jan. l7.
Kathy Cwnmings gave the
Heritage Heartbeat on
"Reflections of a Beta Sigma
Phi- Daughter." A bake sale
and use of proceeds was .
disciJ!ised. A Christnias din~
ner party was held Saturday
night at the Holiday Inn. The
gift exchange party will be
held tonight at 6:30 at the
home of Mrs. Debi Buck.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey gave the
cultural report on music.

Hall mar~ Cards 2Sc to 51.00

Gift-Wrapping Paper 89c to $3.00
Gift Boxes 79c
Na'p kh\s, Plates, Ribbons, Gift Trims

' I ,,

- '

"_
...
I

Max for Men 526.95
·super Curl by

I

Men's and Ladies' TimeK Watches $12.95

· Luggage Reg. $25.00 for $14 .99 ·1
Knee Hi Hose 4 pr. Sl.OO
Panty Hose 2 pr . $1.00
Lady Arrow Shirts Sizes 8-18 Reg. 510.99

St.~

I
Fresh
1 ·Chrisbn·as
I1

TRIP MADE
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne spe~t the weekend
1n Columbus with Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Hanuner. Others I
vWttng at the Hanuner home . I
were Mr. and Mrs. Dallu
Jones and daughter, Chris, I
Mrs. Alma Thompson, and
Mr. and Mrs. steve Martin. !I

,and UP.Children's Snoopy 114.95 and 115.95

~·

Phone 992-5560

Gillene S19.99

St.ylijt ·Btower-Oryer Reg . $19.95 for $14.95

,,rf/'p~/!1

59 N. Second

'.!

Make. Up Mirror Reg . $37.85 for $29.95

p•·------,
_,._.

for .l5.9,9,
Ladies ' Umbrella Reg. 14.98 for' l2.99

I

. Ladies ' Comb .&amp; Brush Sets 56.99
Men's Jewel Case Reg . $4.99 for 52.89
Pipes 52.50 an'd Uo

I
I

l

I Nlllll
•.--gements 1I

I

• Centerpieces
• Vases

20% OFF

I
I

~~

..................
K

Cash 'n carry

fi ·

'
Et~ct•lt

c.

.
H•ir Clippers Reg. 112.50 lor 18.88

¥tH'I't'· Billfolds Reg . 511 .00 for !8.88

Trifold.llea . suo lor s5 :~9
Door Sprays Reg. $5.00 lor $2.99
Kodak 'El&lt;6 Camera Reg. $69.50 lor 159.95
- KodOI&lt;· EK4..Came•a'i Reg. 153.50 lor 146.95
Soap Reg. 12.60 for bo• of 3 99c (Herbal,
lemon , strawberry)
Jigscpft ,~Puzzle' Reg. Sl.49 for &amp;9c
Straw. lja1 ,, ~ 0 tpgn~ , S1.9S lor 99c .

. Presto tMagi'a 5how Reg .· l2.50 for '9c

Mon., Tues •• Wee! .• Sat.-8:30111 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
'773-5592

Herman Gtat•

Mason. W.Va.

I

·-

' Reg . SJ.50 for S1.99
Candles
Turtle-Neck Sweaters for Men Reg.

for $6.99
'
'
Photo Alb~s Reg . s3,~q for 11.29
Zippo Lighters 14.75

Pint or Quarter Stainless Steel Thermos
Wide Assol'flfle"t of Toiletries for Men and
Women· . ~Q /~ ~ 1, ...

British Sterling from $3.00 and Up
Musk S5.7S and Up
Brut $4.99 and Up
Aqua Velva Smart Se111.29

GOLDEN ISLE

ORANGE
JUICE

SLAB BACON

He•ven Scent Gift Sets for ladies SS.75 and

HAM
SUCED

'1" LB.

HAM.
SALAD
MEYER

LIVER
PUDDING

WIENERS
LB. 99~

$139
LB.

'$12.50
Currant Spray Mist $4.75
Chanel No. 5 Gilt Sets 115.50
sPray Cologne Reg. 12.00 lor 88c

The Pomeroy Chamber ot \.Ommerce is
attempting to raise funds for Christmas
lighting. We koow thai· all residents of
Pomeroy a_nd residents of Meigs County are
mterested m making Pomeroy, your county
seat _attractive to outsiders. won't you
contribute to helping Pomeroy achieve this
goal. Your contribution to the Christmas
Lighting Fund or information pertaining to
the ChaiTtber of Commerce should be
submitted to Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. P.O. Box S26 or phone 992-500.5:
You need not · be a businessman to join the
Chamber of Commerce. any citizen in the
county may join and help make Pomeroy
the number one County Sea !'in Southeastern
Ohio.

Currant Gift Sets 56.75 to 119.00

Emeraude Reg. 17.00 lor 13.99

13-Piece Corning Ware S.e.ts Reg. 569.95 tor

124.95
Over-The-Call Men's Socks Reg. 124.00 for
14.99 doz.

Johnson &amp; Johnson Baby Powder Reg.

lor 85c
Russell Stover Candy

12.00

II.SO

and Up

Dietetic Cookies Reg . 58.95 for $4.95
Chocolate Dietetic Cookies Reg. Sl.OO for
11.09
Assorted Toys Reg . $1.29 for

"c

Electric· Wall Clocks 18.96 and Up

JACKSON SLICED

BOLOGNA

~~.~~---~.~~.594

SPAGHIDI SAUCE ..................

.'

Beauty

PORK &amp; BEANS .... :...................~::..~~~~ 99~

Valley Bell

LUX DISH DETERGENT.. .....~~.~-z:..~t·t-'~-· 79'

EGG
.NOG

LB. $119

· 79~

QUART ' .

POLISH
·SAUSAGE
LONGHORN
CHEESE

1500 Inch Cellophane Tape 29c

992-3106

CANS

.

'

·FRED W. CROW, PRESIDENT

.

DRUG STORE

POMEROY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

8 oz.
PKG.
K

49~

CHOCOLATE
MORSELS

'1"

EACH

,.

IDAHO
POTATOES

89¢

LARGE CAL

NIA

NAVEL
}QroR
•
ORANGES

99¢

10 LB . .BAG

i"~COO)A'Q;"!

!fRUITY PEBBLESf
No . lOS

-

:

JS

:::
:

59 i
~

~

7-UP
8-PACK
CARTON

Box

..................
.........""""!
Coupon e11p. uec. 21',1.976'

•

Twin Glty G~tewa.Y

:
:

No. lOS

LIQUID
DETERGENT

99

Plus Tax &amp;
Deposit

J

I DYNAMO :~

Chiffon
Soft Stick

:

: MARGARINE
1 lb.
pkg.

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

I 59¢
Lb, Bag

:
:
:

I
'

NESTLE~'S~. . . .~~~~~. .~

12 OZ. PKG.

.....

:coupon exp . Dec . 24, 1
Twin City

N. 2nd Ave. Middleport

99~

3FOR

~

· DUTTON'S

oz.

12

MEIGS COUNTIANS

'Old Spice Gilt Sots 13.75

Progresso

Plus tax
&amp; deposit

DRUG
STORE

Chanel No . s Spray Cologne sa.oo and

CRISCO Oll. .........................~~.~~~.~~t.'~. s139 .

~/:z~\ottles

AT DUTION'S

NO DEALERS .PLEASE!

We Will Close 6 P.m. Christmas Eve. Closed Dec. 25 &amp; 26.

ATTEND CONFERENCE - Meigs High VICA
members recently attended a leadership conference, Dec.
4 at Guernsey-Noble Joint Vocational School in Senecaville. Meetings were on leadership, good manners and
personality. The group returned to Meigs High at 6:30
p.m. TransPOrtation was provided by teachers Mrs. Linds
Yonker, Dale Harrison, Charles. Corder. Studen!B
attending were left to right , Ray Willford, Greg Smith,
Noah Hysell, Dusty Smith, Stan Starcher ; back row
Brenda Bishop, Kathy Morris, Imo Jean Blevins ·TructY
Hall, Deanna Knapp, Debbie Lambert. - l~o Jan
Blevins, reporter .
·
·

Program gets donation

BOILED

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ................ 2~x~.~~~.s-99~

PEPSI

WE .ACCEPT FI:OERAL FOOD STAMPS
. PRICES IN EFFECT THRU DECEMBER 24, 1976

Up

~ucky

COKE~ 7-UP99~

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

49e

CAKE MIX.~~~~~~.'..~~~~-~..~?~.~~ .............. ~~.. 59'
Leaf
APPLE SAUCE ...............:....... ~2 oz. jar 594

Americ~n

SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

TANGERINES

PEARS

'

OPEN

Blenders

Christmas." It was noted
that a mail box has been placed at the church lor
Christmas cards and an Offering lor missions box for
the money usually spent lor
sl&lt;lmps to mail the cards.
Mrs. Eblin and Mrs.
Sharon Fobner served the
refreshments. Mrs. Iva
Powell will host the January
meeting. Others attending
were Mrs. Doris Shook, Mrs.
Donna Gilmore, Mrs. Ann
Mash and Mrs. Tina Jacobs.

Duncan Hines •

FOR CHRISTMAS GROCERY BASKET
WORTH $25, SIS, or $10
Prawing '4 P.M., Dec. 24

The congregation of the Foley and Kelly Smith, led by
First Southern Baptist Cindy Patterson and Debbie
Church held a baptiam ser- Pickens. Members of the
vice at the French City Children's DivWon wbo gave
Baptill Church at GaWpoUI parts were: Mike Patteraon,
the afternoon of Dec. 19, ·with Chris Smith, Eric Spencer,
Pastor ·Paul Whlte baptlzlng K~ren . Spencer, Becky
Velma Taylor, Becky South, Adklrul, Tammy Adklrul, BW
Norma South and Clifford McClure, Julia Spencer,
South. ·
Gary Foley, Sandy Foley and
The lame evenlng a Christ· Usa Allen, led · by Daily
mas progr~m Will! presented Patterson, Racheal Lefebre
at the Pomeroy Church with and Betty Foley:
Donna Spencer using flannelThe congregation pargraph In lelllng the Christ- tlclpated In the singlng of
muStoryandtheyouthchoir "Joy To The World,"
singing the following songs 1n "There's A Song In The Air,"
the presentation: "Gentle "Silent Night" and "Amulng
Mary Laid Her Child," Grace." Clara Whlle read a
"Angels We Have Heard on Christmas poem that had
High," (featuring Jennller been composed by a personal
VanOver ptaylng the Oute ), friend. A gift of an afgljan ·
"Star Of The Eut," "Go Tell with white backgroutld and
II On The Mountain" and pink rosebuds was presented
"Love Came Down At Christ· to Pastor and Mrs.. Paul
mas." Pa!'llcipating youth Whlte - Pastor White told of
choir members were Kbn the love th8t he and his wile
Basham, Rena Lefebre, ·· have for the congregation and
Cheryl Lefebre, Jeannie Wished everyone a Merry
McClure, Cindy Patterson, Christmas. Jeannie McClure
Debbie Pickens, Karen representing the Senior High
Spencer, Julia Spencer, youth class presented Mrs.
Jennifer VanOver, Gary Whlte with a l!anglng basket
Basham, Bill McClure, planter and poinsettia. There
Curtiss Spencer and Gerald were 73 In attendance.
Spencer. Sonny McClure led
A conventloli-wide Carol
the choir and accompanist sing will be held Dec. 22 and
was Rhojean McClure.
the Pomeroy Church will
Pre-school children who meet at6:30 that evenlng and
gave parts were Ray Lynn disperse In groups to carol at
Basham, Cindy Foley, Robin appOinted areas.

$13.99

Child receiving support
from men 's fellowship

J.C.W.
DEAR POLLY- I have not
bought a pair ol pillowcases
for over live years. I make
them out ol tile two good

9 AM TO 9 PM

Melamine Dinnerware Re9 . 519.99 for ·

during society meet

SWEET
POTATOES

REGISTER

MON. THRll SAT.

baptism on Sunday

Sq you haven't baked a oookie nor made a pound of candy .
It 's not too late!
• And Eileen Bowers of Pomeroy, Rt. 3, shares some of her
holiday recipes with "~ un with Fo00s."

.

OPEN

Betty &lt;::rocker

WALNUT
BROWNIE MIX

MRS.
BUTTERWORTH

SYRUP

No. 175
22 oz. Box

No. 125
24 oz. Btl .

89~

89~

e•p. Oec.ll, 1976
· City Gateway

.,

Birdseye Frozen

COOL WHIP
'
9 OL
cln.

g~

�Television log for easy viewing
In The t&lt;now 1D; Wild Kln9dom 13; Nashville on t110

TVESDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1f76
6:3o-NBC News l,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6-;
CBS News 8, 10; Hod!iepodge Lodge 20; lTV
Utilization 33 .
· 7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6 ; Lot' s Go to the Races 8:
News 10: To Tell The Truth 13; My Three Sons 15;
Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20; Percussion
Noel 33.
7:3o-Hollywood Souares 3,4 ; Let's Deol With It 6;
Match Game PM 8: Mac Neil-Lehrer Report 20,33;

.,,CAPTAIN EASY ·

OKAY; CAROl.·· L ;nt.t. THINK YOU'·III'
GOTTA ~~ tMA EotNIN&lt;'i At.~.THIS··ILIT
LET ME CHecK HER OUT~

Wt&lt;O I~ THIS. Jli'ZE'IlEI.
'IOU THINK HA,; TU R~ED
WA~H'!&gt; HEAD~

WIN AT BRIDGE
That IIHie ·.Omethlng
21
NORTH
6H8 72
¥10 53

•a

. A974

POLY:, AM

•:o::L . ·- ·
~~
·
, ..
.
'

:~
,.

.

.. .

~-

HARD WATER
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22)
Some good news you've been
a nxiously awaiting is on its way
today. Check your mailbox .
l ea11e wor d where you can be
reached If you leave the phone.

PROBLEM 5 7
..... ,......, ., LlllllltnMt'
.,..W.O. 1o condition Y-·
wlftr U~XVI
ONLY '279,95

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc.
21) A small good will investment
ca n pay you hand so me ~ ut twst your
dividend s late r on. Follow your ,,..._
instinCts. Cast a little bread upon ·
the water today.
. '.

W...,

p
amenJY Landmalk

1:.:

PERSON's BODY Shop, 26 Ro il rood
St., Middlepo(t would like to
remind customers that Dec. 31
is tha lost day to toke advantage of the point jobs . oil
over in 1 color, $100, 2 lone
$125 wi thout body work . Stop
in or phone 985·4174 lor appointment.
NOTICE, Prall's Meat Mkt .
(Pieosonlon Meal Proceuing,
InC.) Custom sla ughteri ng, and
processing. Retai l, wholesale.
No appoinme nt necessary. Call
(614) S93·8655, hours , 9;00 ti ll
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood. Athens.
Oh.
THER E will be no gu n shoot Dec,
25th or Jon. 3 otthe Raci ne Fire
_E_ept . Building in Bo~ n .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon. 11)
Jock W. CarMy, Mt!r
You have a way of making peo.
Phanttt2-2111
··
pie get in... alved 1n thi ngs In ·
which you're vitally interested to·
day Vou won't even have to do a
PLEASURE HORSES and po nies.
selling iob1
olso will tiuy horses and
FOR return o f Iorge 12
ponies . Phone (614) 698·3290.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 11) 11 REWARD
year
old
male
Beagle
lost
Dec.
the re's something you rea lly
Ru_
t h_R_
e_
ev.e ~.~--9 in Dexter area . Wort on eye
wanl in your Christmas stocki ng , lid ond middle of, forehead. No TO GIVE AWAY .· Meigs Co.
today Is the day to drop a few ques tions oske d. Phone
Humone Soc1ety has 1 spade
hints. Your Santa Claus will add 742-2863.
femole Siamese col for odopIt to his list.
·
LOST IN Pome roy oreo, 10 .-eor - ~~~n!.~~ PISCES (Fob. 20· Mtrch 20)
old white Scottie dog answers Sh.pherd pupp~ . lu ll blood&lt;ttl, 8 week' old ,
Accept any Invitation you get to a
to "F ro!lie". Coli 992·23.49 S..e Rochard Gllkev . Cliti on W.IJo. F'tlone
holiday party, even If it's with a
before 3 p.m. o or 992-2050 (31')(1 n3·5'11)2 or 77J.~ns .
---~~---ofter3p.{l'l .. Reword
group of people; you don't know.

1969 Novo. e~etro sharp, new
point bucket seals , air shocks ,
mogs . Phone-949·2480.
1969 CADILLAC Se_d~a::
n~D-ev-iclle
tour door, white si'Ciewoll tires ,
power steering, power brakes,
poWer seats. om &amp; fm radio,
climate control. Excellent con·
dition . local owner. Phone
992-2413. $1 ,444 .4.ol .
1968 CHEVELLE 2 door hardtop,
V.·8, gqod cond ition , $.495.
Phone 378-bl.ol9.
· 1969 A DOOR ha rdtop Delta 88.
p.s., p.b., air conditioning, This
car is in e~&lt;celle nt cond ition.
Original owner ond guaranteed
mileage . $950. Phone 992·5786
doily from noon ~~
P ·:,:m::.·:c-1970 DODGE POLARA . Phone
--~·5478 offer ~ p.m.
1962 FORO VAN , 6 cyl. 3 speed
house vehicle title, fu ll y
carpeted wi th shag carpet,
sides and root covered also.
Am-Fm · and lope player in
hont , sepo ~ate tope player and
speakers in rear.. built-in bed
and icebox. Price $1000. Coli
RObert E. Buck, 992-5847 qr
992·3833 for further informO.

-------

tion::,·-~~-~­

l972 VEGA. $1000 Phone
949-2307 '
1973 CHEVY truck, six cylinder.
· standard , good tires, $2100.
Phone 985-4245 .

Once you mingle. you'll have a
fine time.

Doc. 22, 1178
You 'll have a more active social
life th is co ming year. Some of

those you meet In this way will be
Influential persons with whom
"YOu'll develop a good rapport
(Are ypu s Capricorn 'l Bernice

Osof has wrmen s specie/ AstraGraph Letter lor you . For your
copy send 50 cents and a long
selr-a dd ressad, s ta m ped
envelope to Astra-Graph, P.O.
Box 489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Be sure
lor Capricorn Volume 1.)

ro. ask

BOWLING
Thursday Rejec1s
Week of 12-9-76

NOTICE ON FILING
OF IN VENTORY
AN D APPRAISEMENT
The Sta le of Ohio . M ci q ~
County , Co urt of Co mmon
Plea s. Prob nt(' Div ision .
To th e EKec ulo r or AU
mlni_:;l rator of lhe es l'all' , to
!'o UCh of lhe fo ll owi n~ a!&gt; are
resident s of lhe ~· 1a1e of Oh 10.
viz ·
!h e surv ivin g spou se.
lhC nex t ot kin , lh C
bene ficia ries und er lh e will .
and to the attorney or ill
1orn eys rep resenting any of
lh£&gt; aforementiori ed per s on ~
&lt;; arah
A
KoehiN ,
Deceased . Pomeroy . Ohio .
&lt;; qlisb ur y Township , No
711lS7
Yo u are hereby notified lha 1
lhe Inventory and tip
pra lsement ol I he est a le of the
afo rcmcnlio nl'd ,
dccea.sed .
late bf said Cou nt y, wa s filrd
in th is Court Said tnvcnto r v
an d App r aiscmenl wi ll be for
h'carinq heforc !his Court on
the ?!llh day of Dccrmbcr .
!976. at' 10 ' 00 o'c loc k AM
Any p ~rson dr.slr1ng to filf'
f')(Ce pt iom, th ereto mu st filf'
Ih em a 1 leas t fiv e day s prior to
th e dill ~ se t lor hcari nq
Give n under nn hand and
sea t ol said Court , lhis 10t h
day of December 197 6
Mannmq ('I Webste r

••
••
'

1·
'

Teams 2 and 4
Team I
Team5

W
72
68
52

L
48
52
68

Wel ker's Ashland

46

74

Team High Game - Team
5 260 ; Welker 's Ashla nd 240 ;
Team 4 236.

Hig h Ind . 3· Games Charlene DO&lt;z i 377 ; Pa tti

••

J61 ;

Llaura

Car .

penter 360.
High Ind . Game - Pa tti
Wi l liams 149 ; Ja n Alexander
148 ; Doczl and Carpenter 139.

·-

••

•

Wolfpen
l;• •

I

•

.l7\TeW
7\TOteS
ll
S 111
·

'"l'"

' .

___,_

J

992·3660 .

·~==-~~~~~~

171 1.1. 71. 11c

LARGE ENCLOSED truck o r von to
move to Geor gia aft er
Christmas. Will poy cosh . You
dr ive or we drive. Phone
992-3573 or 9'12·6079
,

The AlmaDac

Bv

United

Preoo , 3 AND o4 RM. furni !hed and vn·

Unlttd Preu International

Today II Tuesday, Dec. 21,
the 356th day ol1976 with 10 to
follow.

The moon Ia between Its
new phase and first quarter .
The morning stars are
Mars ard Saturn.
. The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Thoae born 111 thla date are
IDider the sign of Sagittarius.
Soviet Premier Jollllf Stalin

was born Dec. 21, 18'19.
()I this day In history :
In 1920, the PUgrbns Bet
foot for the first time 111
American eoU at Plymouth,

Mr. Earl R1188ell of Ken·
tucky Is visiting with Bertha
R1188ell.
Mr, and lylrs. Sheldon
Rowan and famlly of Athens
. were Wednesday evening
visitors ol Mr. and Mrs.
Harley E. Johnson and
family.
M~. Lliieoln Ruuell, local,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Johnson, local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Sheldon Rowan were
Wednesday evening caDers of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley John·

liOn.
Mrs. Robert Reed · of
Hemlock Grove visited
Wednelday evening with her
1011, Guy Sargent.

Mall.
In 1942, the U.S. Supreme
CoUrt J1Pheld the .valldlty of
six-week divorces granted In
Ne'vada.
In 1968, Apollo 6 blasted off
lor moon orbit carrying
Franlt Borman, James lovell

and Wll1lam Ancien.

furni shed opts. Phone 992 ·
5434 .
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt .
33, ten miles north of PomerOy .
Lorge lots with concrehJ patios,
sidewa lks, runners and off
street parking. Phone992-7479 .
FURNISHED two bedrooni opt ..
ad ults onl y. No pets. Middlepo rt. Phone 99~ - 3874 .
AVAILABLE at Rl \lers lde Aport·
ments, I bedroom, $100 per
month, 2 bedrooms, $133. An
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Phone 992-3273.
ONE BEDROOM Apts. at VILLAGE
MANOR In ·Middleport for $104
monthly plus elec . or $130 In·
eluding el&amp;e . LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
to shopping on Third and Mill
Sts. in Middleport. &amp;rand new ·
high qua li ty apartments . See
the manager at Apt. ~8 or coli
992·7721. An Equal Housing
_ 9!:Porlun i t.Y~::,
· ---c:7-:--~2 BEDROOM mobile home In
Racine Area. Phone 992-5858 .
.
3 BEDROOM, 2 story house. com·
pletely remodeled, new carpet ,
kitchen, e tc. 4 miles north of
Pomero~ on St. Route 7. $225
month plus utllllie1 . Phone

---

In 19'15, B lemlrlata burst
Vienna meeting of oU
985·33&lt;1.
producing nations' mlnl.sters, -·~FOR rent, odults onl ~.
ldlled 3 persons and held 70 TRAILER
' Phone
·--· -992·3181.
, .. __.._¥ _._ _·¥_. __

Into 1

hollagea, Including 11 OPEC
ml!lllt@l:~.

1i

2 . BEDROOM mobile home in
Che,ter. Coli after 5 p.m.,
985·3826

thought for the day : 3 BEDROOM mobile home neor
Brltllll poet Richard Trellch Rac ine. Ph one·9.t9-~638 ,
llld, "We lmeel, how weak. 2 BEDROOM trailer, real nlu•.
We lilt, how_lull of power."
Phone 992·33~4 . adult• only .

•

1972 VEGA , $1000.
949·2::
30-:_1::.
. -~

Phone

11

We Care"

Work Guar.

Free Est.

Rutland 12-9·1 mo. 742-2328

.

..............
n - ··
.._...,.
. -

--'~ .

41i0

.
o.

·I

FREE ESTIM TES

IOONE

lnwlation Serwites
fiAIMiiJ Auilable
Blown i1t0 Wills I AHits

CARPET SHOP

SIOIM

wtlfllilWS I DOOIS

ASSORTED RUaBER

REPLACE"'EfiJ

BACK CARPETING

'"tin

,.

WIIIOOWS
llUIIINUII
SIDINJ:.SGFFm
_

Square Yard Installed

lARRYs;(JCIM.IIII
LAVF"DER
Ph. 9!2·1111

RaCine, Ohio

'6.95

ru~_NIN~S

~1 ~1 mo

For
mattresses, padding. Ideal
lor campan. Variety ol

sizes. .
Velvets,

nylon

prints,

D11yid. Plrsonsr Ow-ner
949·2814

11·4·1 mo.

GUARANTEED JOBS-LOCATION : ELECTRONIC T.V . CLINIC , New
$374 .40 single, $502 .80 mar·
T.V. shop, Ell!lcfronic T.V. Clinic
ried. Army Recruiting. Call col·
Service ca ll , $5.95. Color. 8 &amp; W
antenna systems stereos, etc.
lect (614( 593·3022 or JBS.6318.
572 South Third, Middleport .
Phone 992·6306. Corry in and
save money.
HOMESITES for sole, I a cre ond HOWERY . ~ND MARTIN Ex·
caJol in g. septic systems,
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
Ca11992'-7481.
li mestone, grovel, blacktop
NEW 3 bed room house . 2 baths.
paving , Rt . 143. Phone I (614)
all elec., 1 cere, Middleport,
698.7331.
close to Rutlond. Phone 992· EXCAVATING .
BACKHOES .
7481
DOZER , TRENCHER, LOWBOY,
SMAll form lor sole, lO'Ya down ,
DUMP TRUCKS. BILL PULLINS.
owner financed. Monroe Coun ·
PHONE 992·2478 , DAY OR
ty , w. Vo. Phone (.304) 772 ·
NIGHT .
3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
CHRISTMAS ' SPECIAL: Sewing
COUNTRY farmland with sedud·
Machines cle aned ~ oiled and
ed woods , wa ter end good oc·
od 1us ted . $5 .98 . Sewing
cess in Mon roe County, W. Vo.
Center, Middleport, Ohio.
$1.000 down, coll ,(304) 772·
GAS AND ELEC. Appliance ser3102 or (304) 772 · 3~27 .
vice work . Phone 992·5726, ·
Commercial property approx. 17
acres, level la nd, located of
Tuppers Pldins on Ohio , Route
7. Phone (61.4) 667·6304 .
· 3b;d rooms , IYJ baths , lorQe li \1·
ing •oom, dining room and kif· WiII do odd ·JOS
b , roomg
t· , ·pam·
·
chen, tu lly corpefed. Phone
ling , gufler wo..-..; . Ph one 992·
992-3129. or 992.5434.
74

·

• QJ9

·U ·

.Dili~ct . FABRIC.SAfES~
-

~TnSireet

Both vufnerable

·

Pl. llluunt
Ph.67H469
9:30-5:00 Dolly
Till8 :000 Frida s

AND HE DID

·

2nd_~~. ~iddlepo::r.::'·---

CHEVY Impala convertible
283 cu. in. engine, standard
transmission. Also. 23 channel
M141ond C. B. r~i o with om·fm,
c.tb. antenna. Coll992-61 33 O(
see at 873 South' Second Ave ..,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
FIREWOOD for !ole. Phone
742·2131.
HEAVY GAUGE I Beonls and H
Beams for sole, eight 9 11 10.In·
en. Phone 992·7034 .
scHoO l --sEWI NG ma chines.
Singers in walnut coh5olette,
$C6. Pho.ne992·5146.

RACINE - about 2 acres. 3
bat~s. very
nice kitchen, carpeted, full
basement, central heat and
air cond. 3 car garage,
sloroge bldg . $30,000.00.

19~

PHOTOGRAPHY
985-4155
Chester, Ohio
10·11·1 mo I

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

(614)

Pd.'...,

.-

GEE! I WAS
TERRIBLY IIUHGRY··
9UT I KIWEK'T
AHY APPETITE

'

ANYMORE -·

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, " Com-.
plete Service. Phone 949-2487.
or 949·2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt·
Bradford .
'
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - :
Sweepers, toasters, irons, all,
small appli ances. Lawn mower /
ne~e t to Stat&amp; Highway GoraQ!t:
on R'oute 7. Phone (614) 985;J825.
REMQDELING, P,lumbing , heating·
and all types of general repair.:
Work guaranteed 20 years e:ocperience. Phone 992·2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service, all makes , 992-2284. The
Fabric Shop , Pom eroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING, dozer. loader ond
backhoe work; dur'np truck•
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef fers , day phone 992-7089 ,
night phqne 992 - 35~5 or 992·
5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer, bockhat
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot·
fie ld ,' Bock Hoe SeJvice ,
Rutland. Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
sEPTIC systems ·mslo lied bV
licemvd installer. Shepard
· Contractors. Phone 742-2409.
!J
IC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation, 992-395.ol or 992·1
2428.

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

~

MIDDLEPORT -

Very

nice home . 3 bedrooms, 2

baths,
din i ng
room,
carpeting, natural gas
· heal , ut ility room . Very
nice
neighborhood .
122,000.00.
A VERY MERRY
AND A HAPPY
YEAR FROM ALL OF US .
HANK · KATHY · LEONA
&amp; HENRY.
!i EN.RY E. CLELAND
BROKER

BEAUTIFUL FOREST Near town. yet a lot · of
privacy. 29 acrft and a 3
bedroom 14x70 mobile
ho.me .
Thanks for a ;rut year ,

m•y thi new year bl bitter

for you.

A lirsl glance at the dummy
s hows South that he has lour
. potential losers. A trump
;.::.::;:.::....,..,__ _ loser II the linesse fails; two
hearts and one diamond .
If he has to play hea rts
himself he will get. away with
only one loser in that suit if he
can lind East with both king
and queen or with a doubleton
honor. He can also expect to

m==t=:=
BORN LOSER

33.

11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3.4,15: Movie "The Dau9hlers ol
Joshua Cabo Return. 6, 13; Ko(ok 8; Mary Hortmon
10; ABC News 33.
12:00-Movle ·" The Scapegoat" 10; Janak l 33.
12 :3o-Movle "Two Weeks In Another Town" 8.
l :OD-Tomorrow 3,4. News n .
'
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER22.1976
6:110-Sunr lse Semester 10.
6:15-En911Sh 3; Farm Reporl 13.
6:lo-Not tor Women Only ll.
6:30-AG· USA 4; News ' 6; Sunrise Semester B:
Chr·lstopher Closeup 10.
b:•s-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, Wes~ Vlrglnlo 13.
6:Ss-Good Morning. Trl State ll .
7:00-Today 3,4,15 1 Good Morning. Amerl &lt;a 6,13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White Rtiporls 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o-School les 10.
8:00-Lassle 6: Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. JJ .
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Ph il Donohue •.13 , 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Phil Donahue 13.
9:Jil-Cross·WIIs 3; One LIJe to Live 6; Good Day 8;.
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3•• •15: Price Is Right 8,10: Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :15-General Hospital 6.
10 :30-Holtywood Squares 3••• 15.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3. 15 ; Weekday 4; Edge ot
Night 6: Dou ble Dare 8,10; Morning with D.J 131
Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3o-Stumpers 3.4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Love of Life
8,10; Sesame St. 20,33. ·
11 ;55-Take Kerr 8; Ms . Flxlt 10.
12:00-News 3,8,10 ; Bob Braun 4;\0 Grand Slom 15.
12:3o-Gong Show 3,1 5; All My Children 6,13: Search

A Mississippi reader wants
to know ir the three-diamond
bid Is a Ioree In th e
partner ship bidding sequence :
one heart, one spade, two
diamonds, two notrump, three
diamonds .
This is . a ma(\er lor
par tners hip agreement . We
play tt as a force as do most
other players .
(Do you have a question
· " the experts? Write '"Ask
/he Jacobys '" care of fhls
newspaper. The Jacobys w/11

for Tomorrow 8,1 0.

1111&gt; IS A
R8LORDIIJ6 ...
WH~f.l 'W

ltf.R
1\l~ B\IZZt;i&lt;.,
4().1 WIU. HI&gt;-IJf.'.

\0 SI\1.{'\D 40U
e#.IDITS WON'T
TAKF- \HAT
i,.OtJb!

STCWitJb

STATe I{C&lt;.IR

PA'{M!itJT OtJ
TI1B' Qfl:.l&lt; !
VJI&lt;OTf.'.

1/o;esSfl.t£.

confinement
(2 wda.)

I'M

IS SUC+JDG 10

Eban
5 Diamond
theft

answer individual questions
if stamped, se/1-liddrassed

envelopes ere enclosed. The
most interesllng questions
wilt be used in this column
and will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.}

14 "-, if by
land ... "
15 Street
(Fr.)
16 Kilkenny
fiChter
17 Notched
Uke a saw
11 NauUcal

GASOUNE ALLEY

DOWN
I Uterary

4:Jo-Mv Three Sons 3; Emeroen&lt;y One 6; Partridge
Famll.y 8; Fllntstones 1S.
.
5 ; DO-~Ig Volley J; Merv Gr lllln '' Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 1S.
.
5:3o-News 6; Faintly Altair 8; Elec. Co. l0,3J: Ada m.
12 1j,
6:110-News 34,6,8,10,1J,1S: Zoom 20; P rayers of the
Animals 33.6:3o__ _
6:3o-- NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
7:00-·Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 13; Bowling
for Dollars 6: Pop Goes the Country 8; News tO: My
Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20;
Christmas In West Vlrglntl 33 .
·
· 7:3o-Dolly 3; $100,000 Nome That Tune 4;: Mal&lt;h
Game PM 61 $25,000 Pyramid 8; MocNeii ·Lehrer
Report20,33; Some Children See Him tO; Breek the
Bank 13; Wild Kingdom IS ..
8:00-CPO Shorkey 3 . ~. 15 ; Bioni c Woman 6,13 ; Gun .
smoke 8: Good TlflleS 10; Wonder Anew 33.
8:3o-McLean Stevenson 3,4,15; Jeffersons 10.
9:00-Sirota's Court 3,4,15: Beretta 6,13: Mo vie
" Cohill, United States Marshal" 8,10; Great

musketeer
Z Pat or

Richard
S More

depressed
4 Opponent
of ODE
5 Revel
I Seafarer
7 Built
I Analyzed

t

Word with
perfect II'

press

Yesterday'• Aoswer.

2$ Synopsis
!8 Chaplain

18 Old Norse
poem

Z1 Dessert
wine
zz Like the

Z8 CauUous
. 29 Like some
leaves

bull

30 Trlinmlng

23 Fervent;

11 Cooking

tenn

fal)rlc
31 Au nature!
31 FaUure
f7 Stripling

earnest

Z4 Star In

U Blot out

Cygnus

chain

them

10 Put Into

come

service
21. Equal
22 Prong
Z4 Mead:s
partner In

for
dinner

Christ·
mas!

'Performances 33: Soundatage 20.
9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; The Practice 4, 15.
IO :IIO-Ouest 3.•: Charlie's Angels 6,13; Oral Rober ts'
Christmas Dream ' 15; News 20.
10 :3o-Book Beet 33.
11 !00-News 3.4.6,8, ID, 13,15: MocNeii-Lehrer Report
33.
.
11 :Jo-.Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Movie
" Dirty Dingus Magee" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12:(1( - Movie "First to Fight " 10; Janakl 33 .
12:40-Mystery of the Week 6,13.

pubUshlng

The1.1

2$ Glass
K Apiece
rl Furrow
!8 Revere's.
signal light

looked
loneiL!!

3Z Beftre
33 Netherlands
corrunune
34 Maori

I : ~Tomorrow

3,.-.

2:1o-News 13.

t-

~!}IJ~ID'il ~THATICRAMIL!DWORDQAMI

~ 1.!;11 ~~·

root pit

: UuABNER

·

ll :S5-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-Somerset 3: Ryan's Hope 6.13 ; Concentration 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :3o-Days of Our Llvea 3 . ~.15 ; Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 13 : Dinah 6.
2:3o-Do&lt;lors 3, 4,151 One Life to Live 13; Gu iding
. Light 8,10.
•
J :OO-Another World 3, 4,1 S; Allin The Family 8, 10: On
Aging 20.
3: 15-General Hospital 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6; Match Game 8,10: Lilias Yogo &amp;
You 20.
~
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby , M.D. 4;
Somerset 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mou se Club
8: Sesame St . 20.33: Movie " Tarzan ond the Great
River" 10; Dinah 13.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
. tO Shabby
1 Israel's
41 Feat

10 Gilded
metalware
11 Meager
I! Type of
mllltary

'
~AT I HA~B

P'

S5 Concrete

Unlcramblt

building

byHonri AmotctandBobLH

lour Jumbles,

one- 10 ooch ~quoro , 10 torm

product
(2 wda.)
II Protect
3t Tennis ace

lourOr&lt;llntr'/ orotdt.

t

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'A how to work It:

I

AXYDLBAAlfR

LESOO
' L~~~~:,::!:;::~~..J""'fiot:r:~

It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is
u1ed for the three L;s, X lor the two O's, etc. Sln,le letters, .apootrophes, the length and formation ol the words are all
hints. Eoch day the code lettera are different.

CAJATWKHEO

..

·'•'

UWTA

ENVJ

"'

MTHLA

H ,K

YIFFEG

H K

CHXHJC

svJ

OWG

E V B.li J C

DAKK

VJ L
EN V

J

OWG
JAAL . - BVNOHO
CHPT~J
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IT NEVER OCCURS TO FOOlS
THAT MERIT AND GOOD FORTUNE ARE CLOSELY
UNITED. - VON GOETHE
C 19'76 Kina ••••turet ~)lndlcllle . lac .

'USINESS OPPORTUNITY
RIPLEY • RICHWOOD • Ji'AINELLE
'

to sales ori~ted persons with previous ·,
\ales experlencer Montgomery Ward ofjtrs
the opportunity to own and opera11 1
catalog sales store. Immediate opening In
these stores.

-~

.

I l

CRVPTOQUOTES

~ ICI'RI:5ThiAB

'

•xtra

get away with one loser il he
can get the opponents to play
hearts ror him .
There Is a lso an extra
chance . Can you see it?
South wins the club lead In
dummy and loses a trump
rinesse. He rurrs the club
return ; enters dummy with a
trump ; leads a low diamond
and sticks in his nine to Ioree
West's ace . Another club Is .
rufred ; the queen o( diamonds
led and a heart chuc ked rrom
dummy .
East takes his king, but
South is home. He will be able
to discard dummy 's other losing hear1 on the jack or
. diamonds .

~~~·C·~tJ

~

want a garden and a 2

8:00-Baa Baa Blo&lt;k S~eep 3,1S; Happy Days 13;
Movie " King Kong" 4; College Basketball 6; Mqvle
"Tom Sawyer" B, 10; The Nutcrocker 33: Beauty
and the Beast 20.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 13; Christmas Celebration 20 .
19:110-Pollce Woman 3, 15; Rich Man, Poor Man 13;
M·A· S·H 8,10: Touch of the Renaissance At
Chr istmas. 20.
9:»--ne Day At A Time 8, 10; Music of ChrlstmaslO;
World War I 33.
10 :00-Poltce Story 3,4,15 ; Fomlly 6,13; Oral Roberts'
Christmas Dream 8; Swl1ch 10: News 20 ; Christ·
mas at Pops 33 .
10:30-Biack Perspective on lhe. News 20.
11:00-News 3,,,6,8,1 0,13, 1S; MaoNelt.Lehrer Report

~Q~~

Pas!!

difference between failure
and success.

A c9uple that

NATURES
MASTERPIECE
Waterfalls with good
fishing and hunting . Bank
bflrn, fences, water, and
minerals. SlO,OOO.

2•

KEN .GROVER

7 PM ·- WMPQ .• 92.1 FM.

bedroofT)S, 2

Pass

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

SWAP SHOP.

RIVER FRONT LOT 77K 119
with . water,
.electr icity, sepflc tank, and
level. Only 13,000.

Norlla East

By Oowatd &amp; James Jacoby
As we have said time and
time again in this column, the
expert gives himself a UtUe
extra chance whenever possi·
ble. Sometimes that liUie ex·
tra chance mak es the

PHOTOGRAPHY

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

bedroom home with l
bath s, full basement.
ca rport In good locale:
Asking 118.000.

We11

Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 3 6

ll'"'.,•..

BRICK &amp; FRAME ~ about
4'12 years old . 3 nfce
bedrooms, 'ceramic bath,
modern kitchen with range
and dishwasher, carpeting.
garage, storage bldg . .B5
acre. 128,000.00.

t K 10732

herculons, vinyl solids, 11111
f1ncy prints, ICCIIIOI"Itl.

TEAFORD

N E E DS -

t A854

6A Q1065
¥ AJ61

Pomeroy Landmark

698·3290
.::·- - - - " " ' " " 1976 RIDING LAWN Mower, XI ln .
cut~ing edge, elec. slorl, $650,
sale for ,$.500 or trade for good
pickup truck . Phone 985-4290 or
985·41 19.
CORN FED beef . Phone 985·3559.
GOOD EAR corn , $2.00 bushel.
Phone 742-2389 .
LOOK TRIM! Toke · Algin en di'l
plo(l and Aquavop "wale,
pills". Village Pharmacy , 27 1 N.

EAST
6 3
¥K8 2

·

FANCY CITRESS fruits , , ilovel
o r a nge s,
tangerin es.
tongeloes, 6 variety of apples
in any qua nity red, blue end
white grapes, assorted bu lk
Chmtmos candy ·and nuts.
Also, for a Chri5tmos gift sug·
gestion : e)(fra family fruit
bas kets. 4 convenient sizes to
III you r nee ds. Quanity dis·
counts available. Bob's Market .
09.
Just across the bridg e, Mason . 59 ceres, 6 roo m house. both, . EKPERIENCED BABYSITTERS takPhone (304) 773 _47 21.
portly carpeted , twa out·
ing reservations · for oil night
bu ildings, dug basement ,
and hourly sitting for New
ROBYN BASE C.B. radi o. (tube
one-th ird tilla ble , mine ral
Year's Eve. For information ,
type ) with 0-1 04 power mike.
righh located near Danv ille.
co11992-7092.
Like new . Priced reasonable.
Redu ced for quick sole ,
::::::....~~~~~~~Phone 949-2322.
$23,500. Phone 7.42-27b6.
WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing, ond heating. No job
APPLES, CIDER, Romes , Gal. 150 x 200 LOT lor sole in
too Iorge or tbo small. Phone
Del icious. Wine sap. Fitzpatrick _ Syracuse . Pho ne99,7-371 4.
742·2348.
Orchard, Stole Route 689,
Wilk esvi ll e. Phone (6 14 )
CARPENTER, flooring; ceiling,
669:3785.
1975 CASTLE 12 x i:IJ, 2 bedroom,
paneling. Phone 992· ~759,
wOodgrai
n
e:oc
lerior,
boy
win·
·
CHAR lois ANGUS clu b call, halter
.
.
dow, total wrap Foom·Cor , lui- DOZER work and welding. Con-.·
, broken, on feed. Pho ne (6 14 )
·VIrgil B. Sr., Realtor
ly
furnished .
Frostfree
tact James Parsons , Rt . .1,
378·6311 ofter_.6:_oP:.:·"'
m"-.~~216 E. Second Street
refrigerator, corp8ted thru out,
RaCine, on Carmel Road.
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
ike new. Priced right. Con be MOBILE Home· Repair , Elec.,
PhOne 992 •3325
·
seen of Kingsbury Home Soles,
plumbing and healing, Phone
'
100 E. Main St. Pomeroy . Ohio.
992-5858.
I
ACRES PLUS - Nice 2
• Jock W. CarSty, Mgr.
old 4 bedroom hom~ . 2V,
Phone 992-2181
family
room,
,!lijo.l'ijo._ _ _,._~---....-.....-...
··
k it chen , large · ;;.!.......
FE NCE POSTS, $1.00. Al so.
ning,
garage
and
firewood three- fourth ton
baseme nt. Only 146,000 .
pick up loads delivered, S~5
with in 25 miles . Phone
1!!1!1"'1111 QUIET - l bedrooms,
985.4197.
bath, natura l gas heat. city
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
,. :
water, 2 porches and level
LISTEN TO THE
Beloi t3008 Skldde r: Timberjock
lot. Asking $16;500.
3bO Grapple Skidder; John
Deere 350 Crawler loader wg
RT, 124 WEST - 4 brs.,
Forks; Bush 60 in. Metallurgical
POMEROY
Chipper. Conlocl Don Groves ,
bath, nat. gas. st . doors &amp;
MULLBERRY HTS .
or lyons Equi pment Co .. Inc.
windows. Front porch, 2
to
Veterans
Close
Cirtleville, Ohio 43113. Phone
car garage and garden.
Memorial Hospital. J ust
(6141 59b·•lb9.
completed,
lovely
4
$12,800.
bedroom home. 2 modern
295 AMP electric welder . new
1
baths, sewing room or den ,
$150. Burning outfit, new $125,
NO NEIGHBORS - 5·acres
or both for $250. Phone
uti llty
room,
large
on gravel road,· 2
recreation room, dining
99'l·27S9,. _----~bedrooms, full basement,
room,
carpeted
NEW SHIPMENT. Western Boots,
cistern for only $5,000.
throughD\11 . Spill entrance
$27 .95 ond ·$32 .95. Used Men's
or foyer . Garage, located
work clothes, f $2 .50 set .
PERFECT - For those
on double lot . Financing
Bailey'! Store, Middleport .
who
want additional
availab le. Many other ·
2 GAITED horses, one registered
Income and five In town. 3
features . ( A dream home).
Arabian and one Palomino ,
apartments. 120,000.
140.000.00.
saddles and bridles . Call (614)
_1 _

WEST
6K 1 .
¥Q 97

.Q 1063
•KJH
SOUTH !DI

PROFESSIONAL

---~-

· sLJOE PROJECTOR and screen .
By finn A wa tson
Phone..99
cc.:,
2·.::l:::
27c:2::_.~~~~. Deputy Clerk
-

Team 6
42 78
Team high 3-Games
Team 5 717 ; · Team 1 668 ;
Team 6 664.

Will iams

·~

1968 PLYMOUTH 318 automatic,
a1r cond itioning, heavy dut y
trailer hitch, mag wheels. $650.
$550 witho ut mags . Phone
992·5169:_._ _ __

--

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products. Top price for standing
sawti mber. Call Kent Hanby,
1·446·8570 - - - - - --··----CO INS, CURRENCY, tokens, old IF YOU hove a service to offer,
wont to buy or sell something,
pocke t watches and chains.
silver ond gold . We need 1964
oe look ing for work .•. . or
ond olde rs ilver coin s. Buy, sell.
whotevwr ... you'll gel results
or trade' Cal l. Roger Wamsley ,
Iosier with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
742 .23J1.
Coll992·2156.
~~~~~~CASH!!! for junk cars. Frye's
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
~o ~
WRECKER SER VICE! Phone ForSaJ.t!"
.
742·2081 .
8UYING RAW FUR . Na. I,
Muskra t $4 .75: Coon , $15; Mole
mink, $15 . Phone Geo .
One good used Remington
Buckley , (6 14) 669·4761 after 5
Chain Saw
SSO
One good used McCullough
p, m ,
--.-,___._._.
cnain Saw
S7S
WA NTED OLD uprig ht pianos in
One g,ood used Home lite
any cond ition. Will pay $10
Chain Saw
51 SO
each. Flfsl fl oor an i.- . Write giv·
New Co -Op . Water SOt ·
ing directions to Witten Piano. teners
Co. , Bo• 188. Sardis. Ohio
model VC-XVI Only \279 ,95
43946.
One good used Gibson Side .by -S ide Refr igerator S2Q_!t
A GOOD used Porto·crib. Phone

J ud q c

Santindgs

,'

OLD furnitu re , ice bo~ees , brass
beds. wol I telephones and
ports , or complee households .
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Coll 992·7760.
CASH paid lor oil makes and
models of mobile ho mes .
Phone areo code 6io4·423·953 1.

COAL , limestone,! ond w ldu m
chloride end calcium brine for
dust control and special mi xing
salt lor formers. Main Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992" JB91 '
1971 HONDA Cl-450, 12 ,000
miles, sissy bar, crash bars ,
pull bock handle bars, new tire
and seals, Scrambler side
_pipe~so....._Coll 949 2:.:4::
80:.:·~­
POTATOES ond pumpkins . C. W.
Proff itt, Portland , Ohio. Phone
8d3·2254 .
------~COAL for sole, Open 6 days per
week and ev~ni ng s. For furth e r
information cal l (6 U ) 367-7338.
APPLES, FITZPATRI CK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE b89. PHONE
WIL KESVILLE, (61 4) 669·3785.
FULLER Brush Products for sole.
Pho ne 992·3.dl0.
CAMPER , $600. Also , horse
trai ler. $450. Phone (614) 698·
3290.
---:"::-:PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bose sto·
lion . Pho ne 247-2684 after 5
p.m.
--CHRISTMAS TREES . Main St ..
Rutland .
CH RISTMAS PONIES for childreo.
(all (61 41!'?8-3290 . - - - BEEF CATTLE. 36c lb., good hoy
roke . Also set of 16.5 rims for
Ford or Chevrolet three-fourth
ton tru ck w1th stainless hub·
cops ..~o 1~~· 7201 or 992-3309.
CHRISTMAS TREES Beautiful Plan·
tation grown Scotch.Pine. white
Spruce, Norway Spruce, Col·
orodo Blue Spruce, S to 10 feet ,
a lew larg e r. Pri ce d
reosonoblt&lt;. Areas best seleclion. I 2 consecutive years of
tree selling. Bob's Market, just
across the bridge in Mason .
Phone (304) 773-4721.

~ .
soJ.~JP~shlOM.

....... ,.'&amp;.

0

.

Road 1S.

(] ·(

)

IFARGOE'
.
· . I

I· K. )

I

Now anonge lito clroled leltlrl 10

~ted~~:n.:::o.~ tug·

.Prlnt.,.w.r~~n: ' (llii I

IJ

(An-11 tomOrrOW)

l

J..-: WHISK N:IRTA GLoiw. . CANNED
Yotllrday'o· An-: Why"""' 1nc1 inowa.,. no 10ng1r UMd In
-'-THEY HAVE DRAW8ACKB

BARNEY

I'LL FETCH IT
·BACK TOMORRY

THANKY,
LOWEEZV··

Company training - minimal investment
'
.
.'
Write. W. A. Borowski· Giving fuii'IN!rsonal
'
qualifications.
··
.

.THE 0Nl'1' THING I DIIJN'T
UNDERSTAND WE~E TilE !'ARTS
ABOUT THE SHAMPOO,THE
.SOAPAND THE COFFEE ...

MONTGOMERY WARD
1000 S. Monroe St.

Baltimore, MlrylanCI21232

.
'

'

•

�Television log for easy viewing
In The t&lt;now 1D; Wild Kln9dom 13; Nashville on t110

TVESDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1f76
6:3o-NBC News l,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6-;
CBS News 8, 10; Hod!iepodge Lodge 20; lTV
Utilization 33 .
· 7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6 ; Lot' s Go to the Races 8:
News 10: To Tell The Truth 13; My Three Sons 15;
Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20; Percussion
Noel 33.
7:3o-Hollywood Souares 3,4 ; Let's Deol With It 6;
Match Game PM 8: Mac Neil-Lehrer Report 20,33;

.,,CAPTAIN EASY ·

OKAY; CAROl.·· L ;nt.t. THINK YOU'·III'
GOTTA ~~ tMA EotNIN&lt;'i At.~.THIS··ILIT
LET ME CHecK HER OUT~

Wt&lt;O I~ THIS. Jli'ZE'IlEI.
'IOU THINK HA,; TU R~ED
WA~H'!&gt; HEAD~

WIN AT BRIDGE
That IIHie ·.Omethlng
21
NORTH
6H8 72
¥10 53

•a

. A974

POLY:, AM

•:o::L . ·- ·
~~
·
, ..
.
'

:~
,.

.

.. .

~-

HARD WATER
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22)
Some good news you've been
a nxiously awaiting is on its way
today. Check your mailbox .
l ea11e wor d where you can be
reached If you leave the phone.

PROBLEM 5 7
..... ,......, ., LlllllltnMt'
.,..W.O. 1o condition Y-·
wlftr U~XVI
ONLY '279,95

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc.
21) A small good will investment
ca n pay you hand so me ~ ut twst your
dividend s late r on. Follow your ,,..._
instinCts. Cast a little bread upon ·
the water today.
. '.

W...,

p
amenJY Landmalk

1:.:

PERSON's BODY Shop, 26 Ro il rood
St., Middlepo(t would like to
remind customers that Dec. 31
is tha lost day to toke advantage of the point jobs . oil
over in 1 color, $100, 2 lone
$125 wi thout body work . Stop
in or phone 985·4174 lor appointment.
NOTICE, Prall's Meat Mkt .
(Pieosonlon Meal Proceuing,
InC.) Custom sla ughteri ng, and
processing. Retai l, wholesale.
No appoinme nt necessary. Call
(614) S93·8655, hours , 9;00 ti ll
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood. Athens.
Oh.
THER E will be no gu n shoot Dec,
25th or Jon. 3 otthe Raci ne Fire
_E_ept . Building in Bo~ n .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon. 11)
Jock W. CarMy, Mt!r
You have a way of making peo.
Phanttt2-2111
··
pie get in... alved 1n thi ngs In ·
which you're vitally interested to·
day Vou won't even have to do a
PLEASURE HORSES and po nies.
selling iob1
olso will tiuy horses and
FOR return o f Iorge 12
ponies . Phone (614) 698·3290.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 11) 11 REWARD
year
old
male
Beagle
lost
Dec.
the re's something you rea lly
Ru_
t h_R_
e_
ev.e ~.~--9 in Dexter area . Wort on eye
wanl in your Christmas stocki ng , lid ond middle of, forehead. No TO GIVE AWAY .· Meigs Co.
today Is the day to drop a few ques tions oske d. Phone
Humone Soc1ety has 1 spade
hints. Your Santa Claus will add 742-2863.
femole Siamese col for odopIt to his list.
·
LOST IN Pome roy oreo, 10 .-eor - ~~~n!.~~ PISCES (Fob. 20· Mtrch 20)
old white Scottie dog answers Sh.pherd pupp~ . lu ll blood&lt;ttl, 8 week' old ,
Accept any Invitation you get to a
to "F ro!lie". Coli 992·23.49 S..e Rochard Gllkev . Cliti on W.IJo. F'tlone
holiday party, even If it's with a
before 3 p.m. o or 992-2050 (31')(1 n3·5'11)2 or 77J.~ns .
---~~---ofter3p.{l'l .. Reword
group of people; you don't know.

1969 Novo. e~etro sharp, new
point bucket seals , air shocks ,
mogs . Phone-949·2480.
1969 CADILLAC Se_d~a::
n~D-ev-iclle
tour door, white si'Ciewoll tires ,
power steering, power brakes,
poWer seats. om &amp; fm radio,
climate control. Excellent con·
dition . local owner. Phone
992-2413. $1 ,444 .4.ol .
1968 CHEVELLE 2 door hardtop,
V.·8, gqod cond ition , $.495.
Phone 378-bl.ol9.
· 1969 A DOOR ha rdtop Delta 88.
p.s., p.b., air conditioning, This
car is in e~&lt;celle nt cond ition.
Original owner ond guaranteed
mileage . $950. Phone 992·5786
doily from noon ~~
P ·:,:m::.·:c-1970 DODGE POLARA . Phone
--~·5478 offer ~ p.m.
1962 FORO VAN , 6 cyl. 3 speed
house vehicle title, fu ll y
carpeted wi th shag carpet,
sides and root covered also.
Am-Fm · and lope player in
hont , sepo ~ate tope player and
speakers in rear.. built-in bed
and icebox. Price $1000. Coli
RObert E. Buck, 992-5847 qr
992·3833 for further informO.

-------

tion::,·-~~-~­

l972 VEGA. $1000 Phone
949-2307 '
1973 CHEVY truck, six cylinder.
· standard , good tires, $2100.
Phone 985-4245 .

Once you mingle. you'll have a
fine time.

Doc. 22, 1178
You 'll have a more active social
life th is co ming year. Some of

those you meet In this way will be
Influential persons with whom
"YOu'll develop a good rapport
(Are ypu s Capricorn 'l Bernice

Osof has wrmen s specie/ AstraGraph Letter lor you . For your
copy send 50 cents and a long
selr-a dd ressad, s ta m ped
envelope to Astra-Graph, P.O.
Box 489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Be sure
lor Capricorn Volume 1.)

ro. ask

BOWLING
Thursday Rejec1s
Week of 12-9-76

NOTICE ON FILING
OF IN VENTORY
AN D APPRAISEMENT
The Sta le of Ohio . M ci q ~
County , Co urt of Co mmon
Plea s. Prob nt(' Div ision .
To th e EKec ulo r or AU
mlni_:;l rator of lhe es l'all' , to
!'o UCh of lhe fo ll owi n~ a!&gt; are
resident s of lhe ~· 1a1e of Oh 10.
viz ·
!h e surv ivin g spou se.
lhC nex t ot kin , lh C
bene ficia ries und er lh e will .
and to the attorney or ill
1orn eys rep resenting any of
lh£&gt; aforementiori ed per s on ~
&lt;; arah
A
KoehiN ,
Deceased . Pomeroy . Ohio .
&lt;; qlisb ur y Township , No
711lS7
Yo u are hereby notified lha 1
lhe Inventory and tip
pra lsement ol I he est a le of the
afo rcmcnlio nl'd ,
dccea.sed .
late bf said Cou nt y, wa s filrd
in th is Court Said tnvcnto r v
an d App r aiscmenl wi ll be for
h'carinq heforc !his Court on
the ?!llh day of Dccrmbcr .
!976. at' 10 ' 00 o'c loc k AM
Any p ~rson dr.slr1ng to filf'
f')(Ce pt iom, th ereto mu st filf'
Ih em a 1 leas t fiv e day s prior to
th e dill ~ se t lor hcari nq
Give n under nn hand and
sea t ol said Court , lhis 10t h
day of December 197 6
Mannmq ('I Webste r

••
••
'

1·
'

Teams 2 and 4
Team I
Team5

W
72
68
52

L
48
52
68

Wel ker's Ashland

46

74

Team High Game - Team
5 260 ; Welker 's Ashla nd 240 ;
Team 4 236.

Hig h Ind . 3· Games Charlene DO&lt;z i 377 ; Pa tti

••

J61 ;

Llaura

Car .

penter 360.
High Ind . Game - Pa tti
Wi l liams 149 ; Ja n Alexander
148 ; Doczl and Carpenter 139.

·-

••

•

Wolfpen
l;• •

I

•

.l7\TeW
7\TOteS
ll
S 111
·

'"l'"

' .

___,_

J

992·3660 .

·~==-~~~~~~

171 1.1. 71. 11c

LARGE ENCLOSED truck o r von to
move to Geor gia aft er
Christmas. Will poy cosh . You
dr ive or we drive. Phone
992-3573 or 9'12·6079
,

The AlmaDac

Bv

United

Preoo , 3 AND o4 RM. furni !hed and vn·

Unlttd Preu International

Today II Tuesday, Dec. 21,
the 356th day ol1976 with 10 to
follow.

The moon Ia between Its
new phase and first quarter .
The morning stars are
Mars ard Saturn.
. The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Thoae born 111 thla date are
IDider the sign of Sagittarius.
Soviet Premier Jollllf Stalin

was born Dec. 21, 18'19.
()I this day In history :
In 1920, the PUgrbns Bet
foot for the first time 111
American eoU at Plymouth,

Mr. Earl R1188ell of Ken·
tucky Is visiting with Bertha
R1188ell.
Mr, and lylrs. Sheldon
Rowan and famlly of Athens
. were Wednesday evening
visitors ol Mr. and Mrs.
Harley E. Johnson and
family.
M~. Lliieoln Ruuell, local,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Johnson, local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Sheldon Rowan were
Wednesday evening caDers of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley John·

liOn.
Mrs. Robert Reed · of
Hemlock Grove visited
Wednelday evening with her
1011, Guy Sargent.

Mall.
In 1942, the U.S. Supreme
CoUrt J1Pheld the .valldlty of
six-week divorces granted In
Ne'vada.
In 1968, Apollo 6 blasted off
lor moon orbit carrying
Franlt Borman, James lovell

and Wll1lam Ancien.

furni shed opts. Phone 992 ·
5434 .
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt .
33, ten miles north of PomerOy .
Lorge lots with concrehJ patios,
sidewa lks, runners and off
street parking. Phone992-7479 .
FURNISHED two bedrooni opt ..
ad ults onl y. No pets. Middlepo rt. Phone 99~ - 3874 .
AVAILABLE at Rl \lers lde Aport·
ments, I bedroom, $100 per
month, 2 bedrooms, $133. An
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Phone 992-3273.
ONE BEDROOM Apts. at VILLAGE
MANOR In ·Middleport for $104
monthly plus elec . or $130 In·
eluding el&amp;e . LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
to shopping on Third and Mill
Sts. in Middleport. &amp;rand new ·
high qua li ty apartments . See
the manager at Apt. ~8 or coli
992·7721. An Equal Housing
_ 9!:Porlun i t.Y~::,
· ---c:7-:--~2 BEDROOM mobile home In
Racine Area. Phone 992-5858 .
.
3 BEDROOM, 2 story house. com·
pletely remodeled, new carpet ,
kitchen, e tc. 4 miles north of
Pomero~ on St. Route 7. $225
month plus utllllie1 . Phone

---

In 19'15, B lemlrlata burst
Vienna meeting of oU
985·33&lt;1.
producing nations' mlnl.sters, -·~FOR rent, odults onl ~.
ldlled 3 persons and held 70 TRAILER
' Phone
·--· -992·3181.
, .. __.._¥ _._ _·¥_. __

Into 1

hollagea, Including 11 OPEC
ml!lllt@l:~.

1i

2 . BEDROOM mobile home in
Che,ter. Coli after 5 p.m.,
985·3826

thought for the day : 3 BEDROOM mobile home neor
Brltllll poet Richard Trellch Rac ine. Ph one·9.t9-~638 ,
llld, "We lmeel, how weak. 2 BEDROOM trailer, real nlu•.
We lilt, how_lull of power."
Phone 992·33~4 . adult• only .

•

1972 VEGA , $1000.
949·2::
30-:_1::.
. -~

Phone

11

We Care"

Work Guar.

Free Est.

Rutland 12-9·1 mo. 742-2328

.

..............
n - ··
.._...,.
. -

--'~ .

41i0

.
o.

·I

FREE ESTIM TES

IOONE

lnwlation Serwites
fiAIMiiJ Auilable
Blown i1t0 Wills I AHits

CARPET SHOP

SIOIM

wtlfllilWS I DOOIS

ASSORTED RUaBER

REPLACE"'EfiJ

BACK CARPETING

'"tin

,.

WIIIOOWS
llUIIINUII
SIDINJ:.SGFFm
_

Square Yard Installed

lARRYs;(JCIM.IIII
LAVF"DER
Ph. 9!2·1111

RaCine, Ohio

'6.95

ru~_NIN~S

~1 ~1 mo

For
mattresses, padding. Ideal
lor campan. Variety ol

sizes. .
Velvets,

nylon

prints,

D11yid. Plrsonsr Ow-ner
949·2814

11·4·1 mo.

GUARANTEED JOBS-LOCATION : ELECTRONIC T.V . CLINIC , New
$374 .40 single, $502 .80 mar·
T.V. shop, Ell!lcfronic T.V. Clinic
ried. Army Recruiting. Call col·
Service ca ll , $5.95. Color. 8 &amp; W
antenna systems stereos, etc.
lect (614( 593·3022 or JBS.6318.
572 South Third, Middleport .
Phone 992·6306. Corry in and
save money.
HOMESITES for sole, I a cre ond HOWERY . ~ND MARTIN Ex·
caJol in g. septic systems,
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
Ca11992'-7481.
li mestone, grovel, blacktop
NEW 3 bed room house . 2 baths.
paving , Rt . 143. Phone I (614)
all elec., 1 cere, Middleport,
698.7331.
close to Rutlond. Phone 992· EXCAVATING .
BACKHOES .
7481
DOZER , TRENCHER, LOWBOY,
SMAll form lor sole, lO'Ya down ,
DUMP TRUCKS. BILL PULLINS.
owner financed. Monroe Coun ·
PHONE 992·2478 , DAY OR
ty , w. Vo. Phone (.304) 772 ·
NIGHT .
3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
CHRISTMAS ' SPECIAL: Sewing
COUNTRY farmland with sedud·
Machines cle aned ~ oiled and
ed woods , wa ter end good oc·
od 1us ted . $5 .98 . Sewing
cess in Mon roe County, W. Vo.
Center, Middleport, Ohio.
$1.000 down, coll ,(304) 772·
GAS AND ELEC. Appliance ser3102 or (304) 772 · 3~27 .
vice work . Phone 992·5726, ·
Commercial property approx. 17
acres, level la nd, located of
Tuppers Pldins on Ohio , Route
7. Phone (61.4) 667·6304 .
· 3b;d rooms , IYJ baths , lorQe li \1·
ing •oom, dining room and kif· WiII do odd ·JOS
b , roomg
t· , ·pam·
·
chen, tu lly corpefed. Phone
ling , gufler wo..-..; . Ph one 992·
992-3129. or 992.5434.
74

·

• QJ9

·U ·

.Dili~ct . FABRIC.SAfES~
-

~TnSireet

Both vufnerable

·

Pl. llluunt
Ph.67H469
9:30-5:00 Dolly
Till8 :000 Frida s

AND HE DID

·

2nd_~~. ~iddlepo::r.::'·---

CHEVY Impala convertible
283 cu. in. engine, standard
transmission. Also. 23 channel
M141ond C. B. r~i o with om·fm,
c.tb. antenna. Coll992-61 33 O(
see at 873 South' Second Ave ..,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
FIREWOOD for !ole. Phone
742·2131.
HEAVY GAUGE I Beonls and H
Beams for sole, eight 9 11 10.In·
en. Phone 992·7034 .
scHoO l --sEWI NG ma chines.
Singers in walnut coh5olette,
$C6. Pho.ne992·5146.

RACINE - about 2 acres. 3
bat~s. very
nice kitchen, carpeted, full
basement, central heat and
air cond. 3 car garage,
sloroge bldg . $30,000.00.

19~

PHOTOGRAPHY
985-4155
Chester, Ohio
10·11·1 mo I

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

(614)

Pd.'...,

.-

GEE! I WAS
TERRIBLY IIUHGRY··
9UT I KIWEK'T
AHY APPETITE

'

ANYMORE -·

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, " Com-.
plete Service. Phone 949-2487.
or 949·2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt·
Bradford .
'
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - :
Sweepers, toasters, irons, all,
small appli ances. Lawn mower /
ne~e t to Stat&amp; Highway GoraQ!t:
on R'oute 7. Phone (614) 985;J825.
REMQDELING, P,lumbing , heating·
and all types of general repair.:
Work guaranteed 20 years e:ocperience. Phone 992·2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service, all makes , 992-2284. The
Fabric Shop , Pom eroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING, dozer. loader ond
backhoe work; dur'np truck•
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef fers , day phone 992-7089 ,
night phqne 992 - 35~5 or 992·
5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer, bockhat
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot·
fie ld ,' Bock Hoe SeJvice ,
Rutland. Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
sEPTIC systems ·mslo lied bV
licemvd installer. Shepard
· Contractors. Phone 742-2409.
!J
IC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation, 992-395.ol or 992·1
2428.

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

~

MIDDLEPORT -

Very

nice home . 3 bedrooms, 2

baths,
din i ng
room,
carpeting, natural gas
· heal , ut ility room . Very
nice
neighborhood .
122,000.00.
A VERY MERRY
AND A HAPPY
YEAR FROM ALL OF US .
HANK · KATHY · LEONA
&amp; HENRY.
!i EN.RY E. CLELAND
BROKER

BEAUTIFUL FOREST Near town. yet a lot · of
privacy. 29 acrft and a 3
bedroom 14x70 mobile
ho.me .
Thanks for a ;rut year ,

m•y thi new year bl bitter

for you.

A lirsl glance at the dummy
s hows South that he has lour
. potential losers. A trump
;.::.::;:.::....,..,__ _ loser II the linesse fails; two
hearts and one diamond .
If he has to play hea rts
himself he will get. away with
only one loser in that suit if he
can lind East with both king
and queen or with a doubleton
honor. He can also expect to

m==t=:=
BORN LOSER

33.

11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3.4,15: Movie "The Dau9hlers ol
Joshua Cabo Return. 6, 13; Ko(ok 8; Mary Hortmon
10; ABC News 33.
12:00-Movle ·" The Scapegoat" 10; Janak l 33.
12 :3o-Movle "Two Weeks In Another Town" 8.
l :OD-Tomorrow 3,4. News n .
'
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER22.1976
6:110-Sunr lse Semester 10.
6:15-En911Sh 3; Farm Reporl 13.
6:lo-Not tor Women Only ll.
6:30-AG· USA 4; News ' 6; Sunrise Semester B:
Chr·lstopher Closeup 10.
b:•s-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, Wes~ Vlrglnlo 13.
6:Ss-Good Morning. Trl State ll .
7:00-Today 3,4,15 1 Good Morning. Amerl &lt;a 6,13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White Rtiporls 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:3o-School les 10.
8:00-Lassle 6: Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. JJ .
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Ph il Donohue •.13 , 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Phil Donahue 13.
9:Jil-Cross·WIIs 3; One LIJe to Live 6; Good Day 8;.
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3•• •15: Price Is Right 8,10: Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :15-General Hospital 6.
10 :30-Holtywood Squares 3••• 15.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3. 15 ; Weekday 4; Edge ot
Night 6: Dou ble Dare 8,10; Morning with D.J 131
Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3o-Stumpers 3.4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Love of Life
8,10; Sesame St. 20,33. ·
11 ;55-Take Kerr 8; Ms . Flxlt 10.
12:00-News 3,8,10 ; Bob Braun 4;\0 Grand Slom 15.
12:3o-Gong Show 3,1 5; All My Children 6,13: Search

A Mississippi reader wants
to know ir the three-diamond
bid Is a Ioree In th e
partner ship bidding sequence :
one heart, one spade, two
diamonds, two notrump, three
diamonds .
This is . a ma(\er lor
par tners hip agreement . We
play tt as a force as do most
other players .
(Do you have a question
· " the experts? Write '"Ask
/he Jacobys '" care of fhls
newspaper. The Jacobys w/11

for Tomorrow 8,1 0.

1111&gt; IS A
R8LORDIIJ6 ...
WH~f.l 'W

ltf.R
1\l~ B\IZZt;i&lt;.,
4().1 WIU. HI&gt;-IJf.'.

\0 SI\1.{'\D 40U
e#.IDITS WON'T
TAKF- \HAT
i,.OtJb!

STCWitJb

STATe I{C&lt;.IR

PA'{M!itJT OtJ
TI1B' Qfl:.l&lt; !
VJI&lt;OTf.'.

1/o;esSfl.t£.

confinement
(2 wda.)

I'M

IS SUC+JDG 10

Eban
5 Diamond
theft

answer individual questions
if stamped, se/1-liddrassed

envelopes ere enclosed. The
most interesllng questions
wilt be used in this column
and will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.}

14 "-, if by
land ... "
15 Street
(Fr.)
16 Kilkenny
fiChter
17 Notched
Uke a saw
11 NauUcal

GASOUNE ALLEY

DOWN
I Uterary

4:Jo-Mv Three Sons 3; Emeroen&lt;y One 6; Partridge
Famll.y 8; Fllntstones 1S.
.
5 ; DO-~Ig Volley J; Merv Gr lllln '' Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 1S.
.
5:3o-News 6; Faintly Altair 8; Elec. Co. l0,3J: Ada m.
12 1j,
6:110-News 34,6,8,10,1J,1S: Zoom 20; P rayers of the
Animals 33.6:3o__ _
6:3o-- NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
7:00-·Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 13; Bowling
for Dollars 6: Pop Goes the Country 8; News tO: My
Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20;
Christmas In West Vlrglntl 33 .
·
· 7:3o-Dolly 3; $100,000 Nome That Tune 4;: Mal&lt;h
Game PM 61 $25,000 Pyramid 8; MocNeii ·Lehrer
Report20,33; Some Children See Him tO; Breek the
Bank 13; Wild Kingdom IS ..
8:00-CPO Shorkey 3 . ~. 15 ; Bioni c Woman 6,13 ; Gun .
smoke 8: Good TlflleS 10; Wonder Anew 33.
8:3o-McLean Stevenson 3,4,15; Jeffersons 10.
9:00-Sirota's Court 3,4,15: Beretta 6,13: Mo vie
" Cohill, United States Marshal" 8,10; Great

musketeer
Z Pat or

Richard
S More

depressed
4 Opponent
of ODE
5 Revel
I Seafarer
7 Built
I Analyzed

t

Word with
perfect II'

press

Yesterday'• Aoswer.

2$ Synopsis
!8 Chaplain

18 Old Norse
poem

Z1 Dessert
wine
zz Like the

Z8 CauUous
. 29 Like some
leaves

bull

30 Trlinmlng

23 Fervent;

11 Cooking

tenn

fal)rlc
31 Au nature!
31 FaUure
f7 Stripling

earnest

Z4 Star In

U Blot out

Cygnus

chain

them

10 Put Into

come

service
21. Equal
22 Prong
Z4 Mead:s
partner In

for
dinner

Christ·
mas!

'Performances 33: Soundatage 20.
9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; The Practice 4, 15.
IO :IIO-Ouest 3.•: Charlie's Angels 6,13; Oral Rober ts'
Christmas Dream ' 15; News 20.
10 :3o-Book Beet 33.
11 !00-News 3.4.6,8, ID, 13,15: MocNeii-Lehrer Report
33.
.
11 :Jo-.Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Movie
" Dirty Dingus Magee" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12:(1( - Movie "First to Fight " 10; Janakl 33 .
12:40-Mystery of the Week 6,13.

pubUshlng

The1.1

2$ Glass
K Apiece
rl Furrow
!8 Revere's.
signal light

looked
loneiL!!

3Z Beftre
33 Netherlands
corrunune
34 Maori

I : ~Tomorrow

3,.-.

2:1o-News 13.

t-

~!}IJ~ID'il ~THATICRAMIL!DWORDQAMI

~ 1.!;11 ~~·

root pit

: UuABNER

·

ll :S5-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-Somerset 3: Ryan's Hope 6.13 ; Concentration 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
I :3o-Days of Our Llvea 3 . ~.15 ; Family Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 13 : Dinah 6.
2:3o-Do&lt;lors 3, 4,151 One Life to Live 13; Gu iding
. Light 8,10.
•
J :OO-Another World 3, 4,1 S; Allin The Family 8, 10: On
Aging 20.
3: 15-General Hospital 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6; Match Game 8,10: Lilias Yogo &amp;
You 20.
~
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby , M.D. 4;
Somerset 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mou se Club
8: Sesame St . 20.33: Movie " Tarzan ond the Great
River" 10; Dinah 13.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
. tO Shabby
1 Israel's
41 Feat

10 Gilded
metalware
11 Meager
I! Type of
mllltary

'
~AT I HA~B

P'

S5 Concrete

Unlcramblt

building

byHonri AmotctandBobLH

lour Jumbles,

one- 10 ooch ~quoro , 10 torm

product
(2 wda.)
II Protect
3t Tennis ace

lourOr&lt;llntr'/ orotdt.

t

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'A how to work It:

I

AXYDLBAAlfR

LESOO
' L~~~~:,::!:;::~~..J""'fiot:r:~

It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is
u1ed for the three L;s, X lor the two O's, etc. Sln,le letters, .apootrophes, the length and formation ol the words are all
hints. Eoch day the code lettera are different.

CAJATWKHEO

..

·'•'

UWTA

ENVJ

"'

MTHLA

H ,K

YIFFEG

H K

CHXHJC

svJ

OWG

E V B.li J C

DAKK

VJ L
EN V

J

OWG
JAAL . - BVNOHO
CHPT~J
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IT NEVER OCCURS TO FOOlS
THAT MERIT AND GOOD FORTUNE ARE CLOSELY
UNITED. - VON GOETHE
C 19'76 Kina ••••turet ~)lndlcllle . lac .

'USINESS OPPORTUNITY
RIPLEY • RICHWOOD • Ji'AINELLE
'

to sales ori~ted persons with previous ·,
\ales experlencer Montgomery Ward ofjtrs
the opportunity to own and opera11 1
catalog sales store. Immediate opening In
these stores.

-~

.

I l

CRVPTOQUOTES

~ ICI'RI:5ThiAB

'

•xtra

get away with one loser il he
can get the opponents to play
hearts ror him .
There Is a lso an extra
chance . Can you see it?
South wins the club lead In
dummy and loses a trump
rinesse. He rurrs the club
return ; enters dummy with a
trump ; leads a low diamond
and sticks in his nine to Ioree
West's ace . Another club Is .
rufred ; the queen o( diamonds
led and a heart chuc ked rrom
dummy .
East takes his king, but
South is home. He will be able
to discard dummy 's other losing hear1 on the jack or
. diamonds .

~~~·C·~tJ

~

want a garden and a 2

8:00-Baa Baa Blo&lt;k S~eep 3,1S; Happy Days 13;
Movie " King Kong" 4; College Basketball 6; Mqvle
"Tom Sawyer" B, 10; The Nutcrocker 33: Beauty
and the Beast 20.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 13; Christmas Celebration 20 .
19:110-Pollce Woman 3, 15; Rich Man, Poor Man 13;
M·A· S·H 8,10: Touch of the Renaissance At
Chr istmas. 20.
9:»--ne Day At A Time 8, 10; Music of ChrlstmaslO;
World War I 33.
10 :00-Poltce Story 3,4,15 ; Fomlly 6,13; Oral Roberts'
Christmas Dream 8; Swl1ch 10: News 20 ; Christ·
mas at Pops 33 .
10:30-Biack Perspective on lhe. News 20.
11:00-News 3,,,6,8,1 0,13, 1S; MaoNelt.Lehrer Report

~Q~~

Pas!!

difference between failure
and success.

A c9uple that

NATURES
MASTERPIECE
Waterfalls with good
fishing and hunting . Bank
bflrn, fences, water, and
minerals. SlO,OOO.

2•

KEN .GROVER

7 PM ·- WMPQ .• 92.1 FM.

bedroofT)S, 2

Pass

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

SWAP SHOP.

RIVER FRONT LOT 77K 119
with . water,
.electr icity, sepflc tank, and
level. Only 13,000.

Norlla East

By Oowatd &amp; James Jacoby
As we have said time and
time again in this column, the
expert gives himself a UtUe
extra chance whenever possi·
ble. Sometimes that liUie ex·
tra chance mak es the

PHOTOGRAPHY

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

bedroom home with l
bath s, full basement.
ca rport In good locale:
Asking 118.000.

We11

Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 3 6

ll'"'.,•..

BRICK &amp; FRAME ~ about
4'12 years old . 3 nfce
bedrooms, 'ceramic bath,
modern kitchen with range
and dishwasher, carpeting.
garage, storage bldg . .B5
acre. 128,000.00.

t K 10732

herculons, vinyl solids, 11111
f1ncy prints, ICCIIIOI"Itl.

TEAFORD

N E E DS -

t A854

6A Q1065
¥ AJ61

Pomeroy Landmark

698·3290
.::·- - - - " " ' " " 1976 RIDING LAWN Mower, XI ln .
cut~ing edge, elec. slorl, $650,
sale for ,$.500 or trade for good
pickup truck . Phone 985-4290 or
985·41 19.
CORN FED beef . Phone 985·3559.
GOOD EAR corn , $2.00 bushel.
Phone 742-2389 .
LOOK TRIM! Toke · Algin en di'l
plo(l and Aquavop "wale,
pills". Village Pharmacy , 27 1 N.

EAST
6 3
¥K8 2

·

FANCY CITRESS fruits , , ilovel
o r a nge s,
tangerin es.
tongeloes, 6 variety of apples
in any qua nity red, blue end
white grapes, assorted bu lk
Chmtmos candy ·and nuts.
Also, for a Chri5tmos gift sug·
gestion : e)(fra family fruit
bas kets. 4 convenient sizes to
III you r nee ds. Quanity dis·
counts available. Bob's Market .
09.
Just across the bridg e, Mason . 59 ceres, 6 roo m house. both, . EKPERIENCED BABYSITTERS takPhone (304) 773 _47 21.
portly carpeted , twa out·
ing reservations · for oil night
bu ildings, dug basement ,
and hourly sitting for New
ROBYN BASE C.B. radi o. (tube
one-th ird tilla ble , mine ral
Year's Eve. For information ,
type ) with 0-1 04 power mike.
righh located near Danv ille.
co11992-7092.
Like new . Priced reasonable.
Redu ced for quick sole ,
::::::....~~~~~~~Phone 949-2322.
$23,500. Phone 7.42-27b6.
WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing, ond heating. No job
APPLES, CIDER, Romes , Gal. 150 x 200 LOT lor sole in
too Iorge or tbo small. Phone
Del icious. Wine sap. Fitzpatrick _ Syracuse . Pho ne99,7-371 4.
742·2348.
Orchard, Stole Route 689,
Wilk esvi ll e. Phone (6 14 )
CARPENTER, flooring; ceiling,
669:3785.
1975 CASTLE 12 x i:IJ, 2 bedroom,
paneling. Phone 992· ~759,
wOodgrai
n
e:oc
lerior,
boy
win·
·
CHAR lois ANGUS clu b call, halter
.
.
dow, total wrap Foom·Cor , lui- DOZER work and welding. Con-.·
, broken, on feed. Pho ne (6 14 )
·VIrgil B. Sr., Realtor
ly
furnished .
Frostfree
tact James Parsons , Rt . .1,
378·6311 ofter_.6:_oP:.:·"'
m"-.~~216 E. Second Street
refrigerator, corp8ted thru out,
RaCine, on Carmel Road.
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
ike new. Priced right. Con be MOBILE Home· Repair , Elec.,
PhOne 992 •3325
·
seen of Kingsbury Home Soles,
plumbing and healing, Phone
'
100 E. Main St. Pomeroy . Ohio.
992-5858.
I
ACRES PLUS - Nice 2
• Jock W. CarSty, Mgr.
old 4 bedroom hom~ . 2V,
Phone 992-2181
family
room,
,!lijo.l'ijo._ _ _,._~---....-.....-...
··
k it chen , large · ;;.!.......
FE NCE POSTS, $1.00. Al so.
ning,
garage
and
firewood three- fourth ton
baseme nt. Only 146,000 .
pick up loads delivered, S~5
with in 25 miles . Phone
1!!1!1"'1111 QUIET - l bedrooms,
985.4197.
bath, natura l gas heat. city
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
,. :
water, 2 porches and level
LISTEN TO THE
Beloi t3008 Skldde r: Timberjock
lot. Asking $16;500.
3bO Grapple Skidder; John
Deere 350 Crawler loader wg
RT, 124 WEST - 4 brs.,
Forks; Bush 60 in. Metallurgical
POMEROY
Chipper. Conlocl Don Groves ,
bath, nat. gas. st . doors &amp;
MULLBERRY HTS .
or lyons Equi pment Co .. Inc.
windows. Front porch, 2
to
Veterans
Close
Cirtleville, Ohio 43113. Phone
car garage and garden.
Memorial Hospital. J ust
(6141 59b·•lb9.
completed,
lovely
4
$12,800.
bedroom home. 2 modern
295 AMP electric welder . new
1
baths, sewing room or den ,
$150. Burning outfit, new $125,
NO NEIGHBORS - 5·acres
or both for $250. Phone
uti llty
room,
large
on gravel road,· 2
recreation room, dining
99'l·27S9,. _----~bedrooms, full basement,
room,
carpeted
NEW SHIPMENT. Western Boots,
cistern for only $5,000.
throughD\11 . Spill entrance
$27 .95 ond ·$32 .95. Used Men's
or foyer . Garage, located
work clothes, f $2 .50 set .
PERFECT - For those
on double lot . Financing
Bailey'! Store, Middleport .
who
want additional
availab le. Many other ·
2 GAITED horses, one registered
Income and five In town. 3
features . ( A dream home).
Arabian and one Palomino ,
apartments. 120,000.
140.000.00.
saddles and bridles . Call (614)
_1 _

WEST
6K 1 .
¥Q 97

.Q 1063
•KJH
SOUTH !DI

PROFESSIONAL

---~-

· sLJOE PROJECTOR and screen .
By finn A wa tson
Phone..99
cc.:,
2·.::l:::
27c:2::_.~~~~. Deputy Clerk
-

Team 6
42 78
Team high 3-Games
Team 5 717 ; · Team 1 668 ;
Team 6 664.

Will iams

·~

1968 PLYMOUTH 318 automatic,
a1r cond itioning, heavy dut y
trailer hitch, mag wheels. $650.
$550 witho ut mags . Phone
992·5169:_._ _ __

--

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products. Top price for standing
sawti mber. Call Kent Hanby,
1·446·8570 - - - - - --··----CO INS, CURRENCY, tokens, old IF YOU hove a service to offer,
wont to buy or sell something,
pocke t watches and chains.
silver ond gold . We need 1964
oe look ing for work .•. . or
ond olde rs ilver coin s. Buy, sell.
whotevwr ... you'll gel results
or trade' Cal l. Roger Wamsley ,
Iosier with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
742 .23J1.
Coll992·2156.
~~~~~~CASH!!! for junk cars. Frye's
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
~o ~
WRECKER SER VICE! Phone ForSaJ.t!"
.
742·2081 .
8UYING RAW FUR . Na. I,
Muskra t $4 .75: Coon , $15; Mole
mink, $15 . Phone Geo .
One good used Remington
Buckley , (6 14) 669·4761 after 5
Chain Saw
SSO
One good used McCullough
p, m ,
--.-,___._._.
cnain Saw
S7S
WA NTED OLD uprig ht pianos in
One g,ood used Home lite
any cond ition. Will pay $10
Chain Saw
51 SO
each. Flfsl fl oor an i.- . Write giv·
New Co -Op . Water SOt ·
ing directions to Witten Piano. teners
Co. , Bo• 188. Sardis. Ohio
model VC-XVI Only \279 ,95
43946.
One good used Gibson Side .by -S ide Refr igerator S2Q_!t
A GOOD used Porto·crib. Phone

J ud q c

Santindgs

,'

OLD furnitu re , ice bo~ees , brass
beds. wol I telephones and
ports , or complee households .
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Coll 992·7760.
CASH paid lor oil makes and
models of mobile ho mes .
Phone areo code 6io4·423·953 1.

COAL , limestone,! ond w ldu m
chloride end calcium brine for
dust control and special mi xing
salt lor formers. Main Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992" JB91 '
1971 HONDA Cl-450, 12 ,000
miles, sissy bar, crash bars ,
pull bock handle bars, new tire
and seals, Scrambler side
_pipe~so....._Coll 949 2:.:4::
80:.:·~­
POTATOES ond pumpkins . C. W.
Proff itt, Portland , Ohio. Phone
8d3·2254 .
------~COAL for sole, Open 6 days per
week and ev~ni ng s. For furth e r
information cal l (6 U ) 367-7338.
APPLES, FITZPATRI CK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE b89. PHONE
WIL KESVILLE, (61 4) 669·3785.
FULLER Brush Products for sole.
Pho ne 992·3.dl0.
CAMPER , $600. Also , horse
trai ler. $450. Phone (614) 698·
3290.
---:"::-:PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bose sto·
lion . Pho ne 247-2684 after 5
p.m.
--CHRISTMAS TREES . Main St ..
Rutland .
CH RISTMAS PONIES for childreo.
(all (61 41!'?8-3290 . - - - BEEF CATTLE. 36c lb., good hoy
roke . Also set of 16.5 rims for
Ford or Chevrolet three-fourth
ton tru ck w1th stainless hub·
cops ..~o 1~~· 7201 or 992-3309.
CHRISTMAS TREES Beautiful Plan·
tation grown Scotch.Pine. white
Spruce, Norway Spruce, Col·
orodo Blue Spruce, S to 10 feet ,
a lew larg e r. Pri ce d
reosonoblt&lt;. Areas best seleclion. I 2 consecutive years of
tree selling. Bob's Market, just
across the bridge in Mason .
Phone (304) 773-4721.

~ .
soJ.~JP~shlOM.

....... ,.'&amp;.

0

.

Road 1S.

(] ·(

)

IFARGOE'
.
· . I

I· K. )

I

Now anonge lito clroled leltlrl 10

~ted~~:n.:::o.~ tug·

.Prlnt.,.w.r~~n: ' (llii I

IJ

(An-11 tomOrrOW)

l

J..-: WHISK N:IRTA GLoiw. . CANNED
Yotllrday'o· An-: Why"""' 1nc1 inowa.,. no 10ng1r UMd In
-'-THEY HAVE DRAW8ACKB

BARNEY

I'LL FETCH IT
·BACK TOMORRY

THANKY,
LOWEEZV··

Company training - minimal investment
'
.
.'
Write. W. A. Borowski· Giving fuii'IN!rsonal
'
qualifications.
··
.

.THE 0Nl'1' THING I DIIJN'T
UNDERSTAND WE~E TilE !'ARTS
ABOUT THE SHAMPOO,THE
.SOAPAND THE COFFEE ...

MONTGOMERY WARD
1000 S. Monroe St.

Baltimore, MlrylanCI21232

.
'

'

•

�10- The Dally Sentinei.Mi)kueoort-i&gt;omeroy. 0 .. Tueodav. Dec. 21.1976

Mrs. Gay held for murder

Strauss replacement
vital to Democrats
'

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK

WASHINGTON (UP!l Sometime In the ne&gt;:i moolh,
President-elect Jimmy
Carter will mak" known who
he wants to be chairman of
the Democratic National
Committee. The selection

··:

smi·-~ :

...
' '
·.·
..

Wlththlm

··

: ~· ....

:· :

,.,
:·.,

This vear soy /'v1erry Christmas
Wlih OUf unrquelv elegant
orrongElment of Christmas
::

green.s. ~ owe r s ·and candles
In a SOlid brass"bowl . We otso ,
havQ tradl
lienal poinset- •.
tios and
many other
selections

:.

..
:·

•

'

may be as lmpoctanl to the the legislatures In only five
Republican Party as it is ID states.
the Democratic.
There are those who say
In choosing a replacement IIlia completes the picture of
for Robert StrsUBS, Carter · a political party on the way
will have several options.
out. That could be so, but
- He can select a there is one area where the
figurehead chairman to Republicans stW hold an
preside over a passive advantage
over
the
national committee that will Democrats.
take its lead from the White
That ia In the organization
House for the ne&gt;:t f9ur yeacs. and operation . of their ·
~ He can redeem some of national
pitly.
The ·
his campaign prOmises io · Democrats iinproved ·their
various Interest groupa by operallons under Strauss, but
selecting a woman, a black or the first priority of the
a Hispanic to lead the outgoing chairman was ID
committee. ·
patch up the Ideological splits
- He can choose a "nuts In the party rather than
and bolls" polltlchin tD Improve Ita efficiency.
Improve and polish the party
The Rep u b 11 cans,
organization, nallonaUy and according ID the Democrats
In the states.
themaelves, bave a far more
It Is the last alternative sophlstlcaled polltlcal
that would be of most Interest research· operation \bat can
- and poaalbly danger - ID make ,vital campaign
the GOP. H Carter aees and Information available almost
grasps the opportunity w instantly ID candidates and
upgrade the Democratic their staffs.
National Committee's · In addlllon , tlie GOP's
political apparatus , the political auxUiarlesappear ID .
Republicans could be in the be better organized than the
deepest kind of trouble.
Democratic counterparts..An
GARNER GRIFFEN of Alfred, holds a plaque
In losing the presidency example of that was the
signifying 50 years of membership in Modern Woodmen of
this year, just about the last response to President Ford's
America.
realistic claim of the comments on Eastern
Republicans to major party Europe during his second
status diaappearad. The GOP debate with Carter.
has not controlled either
The Republlcana were able
house of Congress since 1952 ID. quickly assemble leadel]
and for the second of
nationality groups
COOLVILLE - Modern Methodist Church ..
In the pro gram, " My
consecutive session It has supporlingFordaltthe White Woodmen of America, Camp
barely one-third of the · Ho"IM' to listen to and publicly 10900, held its annual Earliest Christmas
membership of the !louse and accept the President's Chrlslmas party at the SenioP Memories," Nina .Robl!&gt;son,
Senate.lt holds less than one• apology and el)llanation. Tbe Citizens Hall her e wlth Alma Swartz, Hazel Parish,
third of the gove!'llorshlps GOP has an ongoing, active Gamer C. Griffen of Alfred, a Helen Woode, Osie Hen·
and it controls both houses of "Heritage" division that was half-century member, and derson , Genevleve Gutherie,
able to produce the meeting past camp secretary for 35 Clara Folirod and others
on short notice.
years, being awarded a contributed Interesting acThe Democrats ca lled plaque In recognition of his counts of childhood days.
IDgether a similar group, and conscientious and dedicated Mar jorie Coakley , Hazel
It duly condemned Ford. But , community service.
Parrish and Marie Root told
much of' its meet!Qg was
As part of the Modern some ·history of the Senior
taken up by complaints that Woodmen Bicentennial flag Citizens Hall, one of the early
the party hnd done little ID program, it was announced landmarks In Coolville. The
organize ethnic support tbat . Tuppers Plains mem· hall was on~e the general
before It soddenly decided ID bers would receive a flag for store of AI and Clayte White.
try ID exploit the Ford gaffe. the newly completed United
Ralph Henderson, camps
secretary, conducteq, the
business meeting. Officers
for the coming year will be :
council, C. W. Henderson ;

Griffen honored

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Night Special

King Arthur's fabled
table fails its test

Visit Our Salad Bar
Wing Dings
French Fries

$295

Coffee, Tea or Milk

Plus ~ax

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomerov,

o.

Phone 992-6304

LONDON
( UPI)
Scientiata have turnad tbe
table on the legendary King
Arthur by announcing the
round table oo display in
Winchester Great Hall could
not possibly have been uaed
by the fabled king and his
knights.
An American tree expert,
scientists from Harwell
Atomic
Research
Establishment, experts on
paint and olbers on Medieval
carpentry have been working
oo the table In an attempt w
prove or disprove the
Arthurion legend.
The researchers announced
Mondav that their studies

ft,;,g:m•'EI:lB:IBOt~: 'EOI:'EI:It!IIOII!O(!illllt!!l:t!l!:l:l!lottl:llgwg•pn~•BOt!f:I!I:I:I!O(~!illlltl!&lt;:t!""'l~ ' ·ll

WE'Ll MEND
THE HOLE·
IN YOUR
CHRISTMAS
STOCKING
You'll be out of the red in no
time at all, with a personal
loan you can repay in comfort·
able monthly payments.
WAlK-UP TEU!R WINDOW AND
AUTO TEU!R WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.

"THE
1'RIENDLY BANK"

indicated the table was
probably made for King
Edward III in about 1336,
several hundrad years after
King Arthur was said to have
lived.
Edward instituted the
Order of the Garter, Britain's
highest order of Chivalry, In
fulfillment of a vow to restore
the round · table of King
Arthur.
Scholars have never agreed
on tbe existence of King
Arthur.
Early
Welsh
literature and other ancient
documents depict hlm as a
great Celtic warrior who
defeated the Saxons around
the year 500.
The table, 18 fe et In
' diameter and weighing 1.25
tDns, has been Ui the Great
Hall at Winchester lor
hundreds of years, and a
great attraction to tDurlsts.
"We have not destroyed a
legend, because il was never
more than fantasy that King
Arthur satin the Great Hall,"
said Marlin Biddle, dlrectDr
of the Winchester Research
Unit. "We have created ·a
legend by showing tbat the
table is connected with tme of
England's greatest Medieval
kings at the height of the age
of chivalry."
Tree..-ing tests made by
Prof. A.C: Barefoot of North
Carolina State University
Indicate that one of the pieces ·
of Umber uaed In the table
was fellad in 1336.
Radio-carbon. tests carried
out by atomic scientists
showed another piece of
timber was felled around
1330.
The researchers also X·
rayed the table and
dlacovered tbat there were no
earlier paintings beneath the
supposed portrait of King
Arthur, the Tudor Rose, and
the names of the knights
painted oo the table.
Otber .research Indicated
that the paintings could not
bave been done before 1510
and thai the portrait painted
on the table could in fact have
been that of King Henry VIU . .

MEIGS THEATHE

advisor, W. H. Carr i wat·

BLACKWOOD, N.J. (UP!)
- The wife of Philadelphia
Eagles' defensive lineman
Blenda Gay is being held oo
$100,000 bail oo charges of
slabbing her husband to
death with a kitchen knife
while their 3-year-&lt;~ld
daughter slept nearby.
Police said Roxanne Gay,
26, was charged with murder
and atrocious assault and
battery just a few hours after
her husband was stabbed In
the throat and died at John F,
KO!lDedY Memorial Hospital
In nearby Stratford early
M9nday.
The couple's ground-floor
apartment showed signa of a
struggle,
including
overturned furniture and
large blood stains in the foyer
and the steps.
Camden County Proseculllr
Thomas Shusted said tbe
Gays' daughter, Fonda, slept
In their $26i).a-rnonth garden
apartment during the
argument.
Friends of Gay, a 2Mi&gt;&lt;J1Did
veteran of three years ln tbe
National 'Football l..eague,
~d

stabbing.
"He always seemed to be
with his family," said a
spokesman for the Eagles,
who first · signed th.e
Fayetteville (N.C.) State
graduate during training
camp last year.
Gay moved from the
Oakland Raiders Ill the San
Diego Charges and then ID the
New York Jets since be
entered the league In 1973. He
finally earned a starting
berth on the Eagles.
Coach Dick Vermeil de·
scribed Gay as a "tlard·
working guy who was vsry·
much respected anlong the
squad. He was ,a very warm
person. He gave a lot. It's just

Gallagher aald, "~ wu a
beautiful guy. He was a good
guy."
Gallagher llllld be ldt IIW
Gay at a.,,uistmaa party
given by Eagles Dec. 11. "Hil :..
&gt;rife and little ~ugbler ft'tl
there and he waa enjoying •
himself," said Gallagher.
·
But~saidthecouple .

had a history of family

course, but how aggravated
they were lsn't known," the 11
prosecuwr said.
,,
Gloucester. Township '
Ponce Chief Seth Slichler. :
said · Mrs. Gay had flled '!.
charges of .assault and •
battery against her husband '
this year but later withdrew "
a shock."
.
·
Eagles' spokesman Jlm them.
k

VACATION
.'

,WATCH .FOR
OPFNING DATE

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatior
DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

'

'

...

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"

M

•fiiER!I.!F~ELD!i!S~IN~P~0111111
ME~RO~Y-i'
.'•
OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9 '

•

I
I

chman, Charji e Woode;
se ntry , Vernon Swartz;
escort, Hobart Swartz;
trustees, Myrl "Coakley, G. C.
Griffen and C. L. Henderson.
Earl Deem and Calvin
Hawk were presented 25 year
pill$.
In the recreation period . .
following, Charles Griffen,
Elliott and Stephanie Lee,
·
and John Glenn Hawk led the
singing of "Christmas Bells".
Prizes were won by Richard
McPherson and Delphin
Greeger, Coo lville; Lisa
Henderson, Alfred; Maxine
Griffis, Guysville; Lena Belle
Pullins, Reedsville; Robert
Henderson, Guysville; Zona
McPherson, Coolville; Sue
Lee, Athens, and Calvin
Hawk, Reedsville.
~
Children gathered lit the
Christmas tree were given .
treatsandMWABtcentenniat

.,'

SALE I

they were WiawiJie of

any domestic problems that
mi ght have led to the

!

arguments. "There have "'
been l"'oblema In the put, of

•

r•

WOMEN'S

"

COBBLER APRONS •
'
;

/z PRICE! '

1

:9ll spill threatens ecology
.

'

"

iof rich Georges Bank area

BySTE11'ARTPOWEIJ.
NANTUCKET , Mass.
(UP!) -The wor11 oil spiU In
the ......,., of the U. S.
Atla~ Coast has touched
pan of ilie rich Georges Bank
llshlng ponds and pooes an
. 'cologlcal .and economic
lbreat.
·
'· A .Coul Guard spokesman
"ld today some of the
!"'lmated 8.5 mllllon gaUona
of oil spilled from the
Liberian tanker Argo Mer·
chant '' has gone across·
Georges Bank" but the
damage might not be as
widespread as first feared.
"Very little of the oU has

.

.

comelncontactwiththetipof
Georgea Bank, the southwestern tip," lbe spokesman
said. "A big portion of it bas
misSed the bank and won1
com~ In contact with lt."
"We bave r011son to believe
aU that has reached the bank
so far is all that will affect ·
It," the spokesman said.
The tanker split in half
Tuesday during a winter
Storm that caused 20-fool
waves. The area of sea
pollution measured ap·
proximately 75 111ues by 'll
miles at its widest point.
Winds and currents have
kept the oil away from the
.

coast, but mere were fears wandered 10 miles off ber
changes In the weather could · chartad course last Wednes·
~ause the oll to come ashore day ID run aground in shallow
on beaches and threaten the waters 'll miles southeast of
tourist business in resort Nantucket Island.
areas.
The Coast Guard estimated
Fro!ll the air the smelly -bout one million g-llons ol"
mess "looked like a mass of oll was still Inside the
pancakes 20 feel in tanker's 12 forw-rd ~torage
diameter," -ccordlng to a·· CQr!laincr.s.
,
Coast Guard spokesman: The
The ship split at 11s stern
?ilwasthr~toftve feetthlck about 9 a.m. Tuesday and
m some ~lions. At one point was beld together by a few
the oil gushed from the ship st~l strands as churning
at the rate of 15,000 gallons whitewavescrashedoverthe
per hour.
bow, which was embeddad In
The 640.foot vessel .the saoo while . the. stem
carrying a 7,6 nullion..gallon • bobbed helplessly m wmds up
cargo of No. 6 crude oU ID 40 knots.

I
I

sl ip-over

styles.

SANTA'SIN TOWN - Tueaday afternoon Santa (Leroy Bartrum), was on the streets of
Pomeroy handing treabl Ill children. Here he Ia shown holding Tracy Smith. Battrum is
portraying Santa for the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.

•

Day for presents

at y

, The Pemeroy National Bank annually presents gifts of
that
perform a service to residents o( the county.
·
Tuesday was the day this year's gifts were presented to tbe
· · county's fire departments, emergency squads, the Salvation
. Army, the Meigs Capnty Children's Home Col1lllliltee, the
Meigs Jaycees and ID the county lnformary for Christmas
presents to residents there.
The it.lctures below were taken of the presentations by
Edlson •Hobstetter, president of the bank.
1pa11ey lo &lt;rganizationa involved In community project• or

VOL XXVII NO. 174

HOME FURNISHINGS
ANNEX

SANTA CLAUS
- TOYLAND, MAIN STORE
WEDNESDAY &amp; lHURSDAY 1 to 2 p M

~~~J:~H G!.!~N!1JME~~y

.

I

·'EMERGENCY SQUAD representatives.reeelviilg $100 checks each from the left ~ re
Doo Mayer, Pomeroy; Jlm Daniels, Middleport; Gary Wolfe, Racine; Marvel Quillen,
Rutland. Unrepresented Syracuse will receive a check later. Mr. Hobstetter is on tlie right.

Supt. Charles L. Dowler
was directed to seek applications for 8Jlew clerk by
the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education
in a special session at the .
Meigs Junior High Tuesday
night.
Earlier, the board refused
to rehire John Triplett who
bas been clerk since early
last year. Reasons for
failing to rehire Triplett
were not disclosed allhe Dec.
21 se8slon althongh Triplett,
represented by an attorney,
sought to bave them made
public. The board refused to
give specific reasons on the
grounds that it did not have
counsel present.
Amajor part of last night's
meeting was · spent ln
discussion of a student ex·
pulsion problem.

Dowler reported that there
Is a Spanish Instructor's ,job
open at the high achool,
although there ls a qualified
substitute now !llllng the
post. One application lor the
job baa been received.
After being authorized to
seek applications for the
clerk's post Dowler said he
will set up Interviews when be
bas applications on band.
The boorq. Informally
arranged for pupa to use
the Rutland gymnasium for
basketball play at the request
of member Snowden. At· ·
tending were Supt. Dowler,
his assistant, Dan Morris;
high achooi principal, James
Diehl; clerk, Jobn Triplett,
and members Snowden,
Virgil King, Wendell Hoover
and Dr. Keith Riggs.

Six have to pay says'
Four defendants were fined
and two others forfeited fines
In tbe court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined
were
Gerald
Wilkinson, 38, Pomeroy, $15
aoo costa, disorderly manner
charge; Gene E. Blanken·
ship, 18, Middleport, $10 and
costa, running a red light;
Jar:aes D. Terry, 32, Miners-

Specially Developed! Sensationally Priced!
SAVING 100% SOLID-STATE

CHROMACOlOlll
":
F.IRE'D!!JPAR'I'ME~T representatives receiving $100 each from Edison Hobstelter,
o. right, lneluclepfront, I tor, C. P. Harris; Jr., Olive; Jim Bailey, Bashan · Jim Daniels
rJ MI&lt;Weport; bacliro'W ,ltD r, George Collins, Orange Township; Ross Cleland, Chester;
t i May~. Pomeroy; Mltcb !'lease, Racine; Dick Foley, Rutland. Syracuse will be sent a
(' check.

nor:

I

Features Stereo Precision record changer with Micro.
Touch 2G tone arm, 8-track tape player-and colld-state

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~·

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~~.~" '"'~ ~i"]'ggooDIAGO ~Al

. '7#1t~TH ~ ll~-:-t:f
~ ,
~~\Utqll

,

.

~

ville, $10 and COMa, splnillng
tires; Isaac Lewis, 10, CJif.
ton, W. Va., 110 aoo costlj
failure to Yle!il the right ol
way. .
·
Forfeiting bonds were Billy
R, Ferguson, 40, West
Columbus, $300 posted on a
charge of dnvlng while Intoilcated, and Jerry D.
Lauer, 19, Whipple, . 132,
posted on a speeding charge,

Allegro Sound Syolom

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but every in c h a
Zenit h. So li d·st ate
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Fiadlo-Buzzer Alarms.
Choice .of Wheal or
Gold col Or finish.

OPEN TIL 8 PM lHIS WEEK

_.., , t

By UDited Preaslnlinla.tiOJUII
MILWAUKEE - DEAN EMERITUS ,JEREMIAH L.
O'Sullivan wai a one-line legend In the old United Preu, It was
he of the raspy voice and pithy reporting whOle telegram of
resignation from ~In J921lsa classlc.Hiatel~ramAid :'
"Hours tDo long, wages tDo low ,!He tqo short. '
O'Suillvan, a pioneer In journaliarn eitlucalloo and a
longtime former dean of the Marquette University journallem
school, died Tueoday after a buul with cancer. He wu 82.
O'Sullivan was journallem dean from J928to 1982 and during
those 34 years his gruff exterior, soft heart, and high
profeaslonallsm got thousands of studenta launcbed Into their
journalism careers.
WASlUNGTON - IT WilL COST 25.4 MJWON elderly
and diaabled persons an extra .50 cents a month for Medicare
l"'elhluma 'ofter next July I. Citing higher medical cosll, the
Department of Health, Education and Welfare Tuesday
announced an Increase from $7.20 to $7.70 a month In the
premiuma, effective July I, 1977.
.
Tbe Increase will cost Medicare beneficiaries an
additional f!5H mUUon a year In out.oli)Clckel costa toward
doctor billa and such other medical services as wheelchairs
and crulches. An earlier announced Increase effective Jan. I
raises the ouiAifi)Clckel charge for Medicare hospital blUa
from $1041D fJ:U. An estimated 5.9 mDllon persona wiD pa~ this
so-called deductible lnflscal year 1977 as their share rl the flnt
60 days of hospital care.

· CLEAR, RICH
NATURAL
SOUND

RECEMNG CHECKS FROM Mr. Hobatetter, right, are ltD r, Ray Win~, Salvallon
, Army; Sbaron8alley, chairman of the Children's Home Citizens Committee; Bill Young,"
'' Meigs Jaycees; Grace Elch, Meig$ Co!mty Humane Society, and Mlldred Jacobs, Meigs
I. Coqn)¥ lnlli'mary superintendent,

:Fire levels home with $30,000 loss
Lou was estimated at
• f3Q,OOO from a fire which

datroJed the

two and onebalflllary frame home ol Mr.
aoo Mr8. Roacoe Prater, SR

80ND8 GIVEN UP
Tbrte defendanta forfeited
' boncbl In the court of Pomeroy
, !lfayQr ~Jarenc~ Andrews
" Tulllllay night. They Include
Rogir Stewan, Middleport,
J f3Q jlcllted on a speeding
• chal1•; fllgle Chafin, VInton,
I f3Q, foiled on a speeding
cbat1' and Wayne Barnhart,
P~. $160, postad on a
· recklell operaliu~ charge.

681, one-half mile west of US
There was Insurance.
33 Tuesday afternoon.
Pomeroy received the caD
Pomeroy Fire Chief 11:50 a.m. and tbe entire
Charles Legar said his · second floor and attic were in
department was hampered names when the department
by high winds which fanned reached the scene.
the biiize and lack ol" water on
the ocene. The Middleport
Department answered a call
for ald with a tanker to
EXTENDED OUTLOOK .
provide more water.
Frldly throu•h Suad.y,
The . blaze apparently fair Friday and 8 chance of
started In the attic of the snow Satunl~y and Sunborne and It was believed day. Hllba will be In lbe 20s
defective wiring was the or low 3lo. Lows will be 5 to
cause. A small portion of the It Friday and ID lbe teens
family's furniture and some : Saturday and Sunday.
Christmas presents for the
children .were saved:

INSTAU.ATION - 1977 presidents of the Meigs
County Human Resources Council were installed at
Tuesday's meeting at lbe Meigs Inn. Mrs. Leafy
Chasteen, left, lnatalled Vernon Nease and Mrs, Mary
Skinner wbo wtll each serve three month terms. They are
pictured with reUrlng president, Chester King. Others to
serve next year but not at Tuesday's meeting were Glenna
Criap and Gene Lyons.

oourt

' It·

·25"CONSOLE TV

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1976

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Solid

.$8.00 - 100 per cent cotton.
Limited quantify . ,

The

entine

Meigs Local wants.new clerk

colors . and pr in ts ,.
Regular prices S1.95 to. '

1

Russell . E.
Train,
administrator of the U.S.
Elllrlronmental Prolecllm
~ency, llllld Tuellday the
spill already waa the biU.-I
oU disaster in the hjllory rl
th~ U.S. Atlantic Caul. The
. Center for Short-Uved
' Phenomena In C&amp;mb~ldge
said loss of the entire cargo
would mak~ the diluter one
oftheworldslarpllollaplUa
In the past decl!de.
The Argo Merchant has
reported II Incidents ,
ranging , from equipment
malfunction ID groundlilga,
since 1964, :ccordlng to
Richard Golo .

•

Sizes: Small 1 medium and
large. Button· front and

ClOSED FOR

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

LONDON - mE SOVIET UNION IS SO FAR ahead 111
mllltary Blr power the United States might be forced 10 tiR
l)Uclear weapons If war broke out ))etween lhe' two Bilper. powers, according Ill the latest edition ol Jane's All the wltld'a
.Aircraft. The. new editlm of the authoritative alinual,
publiahed Tueoday, sald the !lillie !lefenae armory of the
United States consists malnly rl aging bomber1 and
Interceptors. It urged quick production of the cootruverstal B1
bombers.
In contrast, Jane'ssald the Soviet Union Ia building SQUIId·
rons of super1011lc swing-wing bombers and -llle IJ&amp;blera
far slirpaMing the MIG 2$ llinded In J~- b~ a ~n
defector laslSeptember. J. W. R. Taylor, editat ol Jane'~;Ald
Washington baa serloualyuooereslirnated theiatelll MlGt and
the Soviet Backfire bomber, which 1100ld strike at targell in
the United States from Ruaalan bases and Ry on to Cui!~, He
said the Soviets already bavemore tban 100 Backfire bomera
In service.
LYON : FRANCE -· A SCHOOL BUS CARRYING
mentally retardad c!tlldren home from a joyful rre.cbrlalmP
'class lost its way In denSe log and crashed Into the ley Rhoile
River Tuesday, killing t3of tbe children aooa teacher.
Police said 9 peraons - 7 chlldren, the bua driver and
another teacher - were pulled from 16 feet of !rigid water and
survived. Only one child and the driver remained In the
hospital today.
'

•

Council officers installed
Officers for 1977 were In·
stalled at the luncheon
meeling of the Meigs County
Human Resources Council
held Tuesday at tbe Meigs
Inn.
The Counclloperates with a
president change every three
months and the officers for
1977 are Mrs. Mary Skinner,
.Januar,y, February and
March; Mrs. Glenna Crtsp,
·April, May and June; Vernon
Ne~e, July, August and
September; and Gene LYons,
October, November and
December. Mrs. Marg~ret
Lew1s wtll continue to serve
as Council secretary.
::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::

Montgomery 0 f

Tbe retiring.' president, day if possible.
Chester King, conducted the
Brown spoke of the acmeeting with short reports tlvltles of Headatart noting
being given by several of the tbat wben a child Is accepted
agency reprl!!lentatlves at Into the program, tbe flrsl
the meeting.
thing Ill determine Is "where
Sandy Brown of the Gallia· the child Is" and then start
Meigs Headstart Program, the child there and begin
reported on that agency's ef- eatabllshing success pat·
forts to secure a Headatart terns. She retioried that a
Center ln Meigs County: She · Christmas party had been
noted that ~urrently under heldforthechildrenMonday.
, consideration Is the Racine . Vernon Nease, Red Cross
fire- station. She sald that 60 blood program chairman,
pre-school children are cur· talked on tbe new two million
rently Involved In liae pro- blood center under construe·
gram through a "home lion ln Huntington. He
start'' project which provides reported that Monday 116 per·
for vlslts to the children ooe sons had reported to
day a week. Tbat program, Meigs bloodmobile and that
• she said, would be continued 81 pints had been taken. The
but lbe children would also new Center In Huntington, he
come Ill a Center for a baH·
(Continued on page 18)

Gallia elected
county sheriff
·GALLIPOLIS
(Special) -Commou Pleas
Jad&amp;e ftoJUo Mlldlell,
Jaeklft C..ty, stttlag by ·
nll&amp;•meal ruled todiy
Jamea Moat&amp;omer'y Is
Gallta Ctaaty's duly
e~ted sherllf.
Jad&amp;e Mltclled lbrtw out
tbe aalt brought by
defeated 1berllf'a eaa·
dldale Ray Robert•
(Repa!JHeaa) thai soup!
~ void Montgomery'•
election on groWidtllbaiiD
11115 be wu pllty of a
feloay,lbat Is, non-npport.
Moatcomel')' ls lbe Ifni ·
Demecnt elected lllerllf In
the -.aty 11Dct liH.

the.

Give-Away is
Friday
at
one
\
'

The drawing of the TV part Beulah Jones and Fred Crow.
of the Gold Star Give-Away . On Feb. 9 Gordon Coleman
program being sponsored by of tbe Cincinnati Rada front

the Pomeroy Chamber of office wlll speak at the
Commerce wlll be held chamber meeting at the
Friday, Dec.24 at I p.m. at Cathollc Church. World
the office of the Pomeroy Series lllm will be shown.
Chamber of Commerce, lt
Crow reported there Is
was decided by the Chamber. $2,172.16 In the general fund,
ln Its regular meeting $2,8111.55 In the Regatta fund
Monday ut noon at the Meigs and f273.69 In the banquet
Inn. No purchases ~e lleeri fund.
necesaary ID participate.
Barbara
Chapman,
Fred Crow, president secretary announced that
::;::,,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::::::::,,:,:,:;::::::::; · repoited,a youngster, Nancy Santa wl)l be on the padtlng
Carter, had donated $6 lot Wednesday evening at the
toward the Christmas Votces of Uberty program.
Ughtlng fund. Atotal of 11,408
It was reminded Jbat a
bas been pledged with 1838 of hearing on the subject of tbe
the amount having b~en approach to the new bridge at
collected. In order to get ' Ravenswood will be held al
.-··~,&lt;.•
.. ....' adequate llghllng for next the counbouse on Jan. 12 at
year a total of $4,000 will be 10 a.m .
needed,
.
. · Attending we're Crow, Mrs.
An awards dinner will Chapman; Bill Gruew,. Jlm
be held In January Frecker, John Anderson ,
either on the 12th or Vernon Weber, Dale Warner,
17th at the Meigs Inn. c. E. Blakeslee, Jack Carsey,
Named to the awards com· N. W. Compton, Tberflln
mlttee were Richard Jones, Johnaon, and VIrgil Teaford.
Thereon Jones, Katie Crow,

-··t'.
.',.

a··

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

'

..,

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