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:):F':::;:;:;.;.;:;.;:;:;:::::::::::;;:;::&lt;:::::::::;:;;:;:::::::::;:;:::::;:::::::;:;:;;:;:;:;:-.::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~ ::::::;:;:;:;.;;:;:;:;"i\:

Blakeslees give account
I .

.

of trip .into f;ar West
Enrictunent in the study
of
how and
where
people live wsa provided by Mrs. Hysell's fifth
grade at Pomeroy Elementary School recently
when Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee showed slide&amp; of
the highlands of the Rockies
and dry lands to the west. ·
They outlined one of their
tripa, by way of Florida to
Texas, thence to the Arizona
Mesa, the Gulf of California,
then to the Grand Canyon of
the Yellowstone , and the
Painted Desert.
The scenes included the
Grant Teton National Psrk
with its beautiful, sharp
mountain peaks. · They
attended a church here ,
where the mountain peaks
could be seen from the
interior of the church.
In Yellowstone ·National
Park they took pictures of the
falls, the geysers, bear, elk ,
and the vegetation along the

tops of mountains with the
timber line part way up were
revealing to the class.
Yellow;tone is so huge that it
is more than twice the size of
Rhode Island.
In Colorado, they chose to
visit Garden of the Gods with
Its fa mous red rock formation, Pike's Peak , Trail
Ridge and the "top of our
continent," the Continental
Divide formed by the mairi
chain of the Rockies.
The · irrigation scenes of
Colorado showed that some
crops can get along with only
a small amount of rainfall.
One of these crops is wheat.
In Wyoming, their stops
included Loveland Pass, a
steep gorge, the canyon in
which a fl ash flood caused so
much damage a few years
ago.
Scenes of skiers in shorts
were taken on the ski slopes,
showing flowers blooming at
the foot of the slopes, and

t•r•al.'ls•. •Sc•e•ne•s•o•f•th•e•s•no•w•o
• n-·
s'.'".w_c.ov•e•r•in•g-th•e•u•p•p•e•r

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

,,

~.

.,,,

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

,.,.

Amtrak holiday train

.,,

(:1

derailed on main line

I!·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

:t

' parts of the sa me slopos.
The depth of the C:rand
Canyon of the Colorado River
was best indicated when
Blakeslees told that to get
down to the river, one mu•t
ba ek-pack a full day, spond
the night there, and climb out
another day.
The cla ss members were
espec ially intereste!l in a

slide whi ch showed Mrs.
Blakeslee standing at Pour
Corners, on a Navajo India n
Reservation . At this site, one
may have ea ch foot in a
different state and reach the
anns over another two states.
These states are Colorado.
Arizona, New Mexico, and
Utah.
The
Blakeslecs are
R.S.V.P. members who
participated in. the class
enrichment projed .

Two Survive

by miracle
OV!LAND PARK, Kan.
1UPI
- · Friends oi
Stepha ie E. Shoomaker,. 23,
and her 3-year-old daughter,
Natalie, are calling a holiday
traffic aceident "the miracle
on B9th Street."
Late·on Christmas Eve, the
Shoemaker's small car was
struck and sliced in two by a
' larger car traveling 70 miles
per hour in a 30-n\ph zone on
89th street.
The front end of Ms.
Shoemaker's car was tossed
about 100 feet down the
median, and the rear end
skidded and rolled about !50
feet on the pavement.
But young Natalie suffered
only a few scratches and cuts,
even though her sneakers
were torn off during the
crash. Ms. Shoemaker
suffered a few bruises and
possible minor. neck injuries,
forcing her to wear a neck
brace on Christmas.
Natalie's grandmother,
Jane Shoemaker, said having
the two live through the
accident was the best
Christmas present for the
family.
"Tiley talk about the
'Miracle of ~th Street,"' she
said. "J see the movie every
year on TV. :DJis has been the
Miracle of 89th Street. We
had a lot to be happy for this
Christmas.''
'

DOWNINGTOWN, Ps . (UPI ) - An Amtrak train :;::
;:;: loaded with Olristmas hollday travelers derailed Sunday ':;:
!=': night in this tiny community on Philadel(lhia:s Main Line. :l:
::=: Hospital authorities said at least 36 passengers were ::;:
':': treated for Injuries and all butfourwere released.
!:::
:;:; Four ·cars of the five-car Broadway Limited left the ;:;:
f tracks less than an hour after the train departed :;:;
:;:; Philadelphia en route tD Ollcago, striking electrical wires :;:;
( and knocking out power in the western section of the tDwn !;!;
':': for about an hour. Coincidentally, the deralhnent :;:;
':': occurred at a spot where poliCI!, firemen and hospital ;;:;
;:;: workers simulated such an accident a few months ago, to :;;;
;:;: practice bandling a disaster.
:;::
;!;!
Admitted to Chester County Hospital were lvadell :::;
:':' Gamble of Munising, Mich., and Edith Chappellear of f
j Chevy Olase, Md. Both were listed in satisfactory ·:':'
:::: coodilion . Sherwood Sledge, 38, of lAs Ailgeles, and Gus ::;:
;:;: Manheimer, ~2. of Jamestown1 Mich., were admitted to :;;:
;::; Coatesville Hospital in fair condition.
;:;:

ANOTHER SHIPMENT

CARPET MIU ENDS
BOUND ON All FOUR SIDES
- SOLID COLORS AND
PATTERNS - EXCELLENT
VALUE - QUANTITIES
LIMITED.

College ·offers
insurance class
RIO GRANDE - A new
class designed for people who
would like to know more
about insurance will be of·
fered by Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College begin·
ning January 10. The course,
"Understandin g Your fn·
surance," is open to the
public, and will be taught at
Meigs Junior High School on ·
Mondays from 7 to 9 p.m. for
seven weeks.
Two Meigs County in·
surance agents, Dale" Warner
and Larry Brogan, will teach
the class. Warner is owner of
the Dale C. Warner, Agency,
Pomeroy , and Brogan is
associated with 'Reuter· .
Brogan, Pomeroy.
According to Warner, it is
likely that 95 percent of the
public knows little about
insurance exCI!pt that they
need lt. The class will provide
participants with information
about various kinds of in·
surance and principles of
insurance. The instructors
wlll help students understand
. what to be .aware of when
buying insurance.
The Ohio Insurance Institute is cooperating with
preparation for the course .
Any resident of Meigs,
Jackson, Vinton or Gallia
rounties may register for the
course January 3 .on the
campus, or at the fir't ctass
meeting January 10, for a fee
TITO TO EGYPT
CAiRO; Egypt (UP!)
Presl~nt Tito will pay an
eight-day visit to Egypt
starting Jan . 20, the Middle
East News Agency said
Sunday.
Diplomatic sources said
Tito and President Anwar
Sadat will exchange views on
the Middle East situation and
the Egyptian demand for
reconvening the Geneva
Arab-Israeli peace conference before the end of .
March.
· The agency said Tito's visit
will include a five-day· trip to
Aswan, a winter resort in
southern Egypt.

of $14.
"Understanding Your
Insurance" is one of several
classes currently being ~ of·
fered by Rio Grande Coliege·
Community College in area
communities.

•

JUST RECEIVED

={:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;!;!~

·•sa.oo

SIZE 9x12
SIZE 12x12
SIZE 12x15

'68.00

•aa.oo

OGOON PLAYS MOSOOW
MOSCOW (UPI ) - John
Ogdon, the English pianist
who won the International
Tchaikovsky Contest, was
given "an enthusiastic
reception" on his return to
perform in the Russian
Winter Art Festival, the Tass
news agency said Sunday.
Tass said Ogdon was soloist
in works by Shostakovich,
Beethoven, Schumann,
Scriabin .and Llszt.
"As before, John Ogdon
captivated the listeners by an
original reading of the music
I
olla!n-pitcea.reiol I olhU11itceBudtltol I oftontDirNrac.rol
in hand and his siriklng in·
llanludry Fried Chidoen I llaaludry Fried Chidron llllrrtudty FrlcdChidlln ! dividuality ," Tass said.
at oarhc.1pa1rn~ I .,, onrtiC.lpoJtm.: ...
at parhti P•lt·~·--~ I ~·'*
TaSs said .Ogdon will give
stores Wll h I
I I stores w•tt.
·
\ IOf~ Mores
... t · r[ • another concert '" Moscow
! h15 t oupon 1
1 nus coupon ~
I w.tl'! l h• s.. • i ,t"
· •
{I
u1
., 4,...., ·/ , '"' 00 "
· -. 4_~ .• '• • Lmut OllU
l imit on~
•
-- ~80d th en tOUr other SoVlet
B anet O!Jr
" "
I B u cket oc r 1 . '\.. · •· I L1m112
: •
•
. cities.
(oupon
·~~ 1coucor. •
·~~ 10 Jnncr Bo-es '""0 Ut'f C'IJ irC&lt;;
Ollcr'fi•Pn •·~
I par coupon
17 Jl 76
I 17 Jl 76
Ollcrc~o,rcs

I

SIZE 12x 18 '98.00
SIZE 12x21 •10800
Shop Mon., Tues., Wed. and
Thurs., 9:30A.M. to 5 P. M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JANUARY-IN-DECEMBER

markdowns!
SOME AS LOW AS

1h PRICE
big chair
bargains!·
big selection, too!
'

INGELS FURNITURE
is stirring things up a bit!

RECLINERS $65

sleep sets

The plighl before Christmas is over!
Not a creature's been stirring and business has been really slow.
So we're going to g!ve all you year· end sale shoppers the jump on lhese
bargains ... so you can give them for Christmas if you wish!

OrigrJ Recipe or Extra (r~py ·

CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO

992-5432

WATCH .FOR

OPFNING DAl;E

f!.lery carpet
in stock
reduced

20%

Green J. Piece

LIVING ROOM

bedroom suites!
·

Your cho1o;e of l rbPr

ll!•lur e

(~~~~~air $29900

~nd

waiHO·Willl

color r(,or
li,I~UI~

love Seat)

Colonoel

tJres ser . mrr ror. chest . and berl

EAR'L Y AMERICAN

MAPLE .

30%

WAll CLOCK

25" .
ZENITH

dining groups!
MOdern ~ 2 ll46 · 6·t"" til ·
tJ II! ~ n11 4 ~ 1Ue ctHtrr s; w;Jinut .

COIDR
TV

AND LARGE HUTCH

ssggoo

$59995

COMPLETE

Our best to you
with better buys •.•

INGELS FURNITURE
N. 2nd

Middleport

••
'

A w r det~rray ot lu ~ u rv toam all!Tinncrsbr !ng
SllJS
twm . l ull. auacn and liong Slle5 rn
docorator 00Vef5 Cha1ce of f rrm11es:&gt;es

living rooms!

MEIGS THEATNE
a.DSED FOR
VACATION

V3off!

...let us light your fire'!

1

'

per110111 were injured, ooe
seriously. Rushed to Pleasant
Valley Hospital was Mike
Kincaid, 28, 222'1, Jackson
Ave., Point Pleasant. According to a hospital spokesman this morning, Kincaid
was listed in fair condition
suffering lacerations ,
multiple contusions and
abrasions.
Also taken to Pleasant
Valley were Kathy A. Ball,
16, Ashton, W. Va.,'and Tony
Starkey, 17, Glenwood, W.

r

"
Va. Both were treated and ;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::::::·
later released . The car carry·
log Click and Kincaid, with
VIEW TRAGIC SCENE
Click as driver, held Click - ID picture at right, set.
trapped for approximately N. E. Beilsoo, left, · sod
ooe hour, authorities said, Depoly Detuer Roush Ill,
who said they were unable to of the Muoo Couoty
free him from the wreckage Sber!frs Dept., check tbe '
until a Wilt from the Point car Bnrce Wayne Cllck, 18,
Pleasant Rescue Squad was Ml: Alto, drove Monday
sununoned. They dislodged evenfrrg. CUek died later at
him through the use of a the Holzer Medical Center.
porta-power tool used to pull He WIS trapped iD thfs
metal apart.
mass of l.wfsted metal
While Mason . County approximately one hour.
(Conlinued on oa~e 6)

!News. • .zn Brzefs;
·By United PreiiiDierllallollal
COLUMBUS - A FOUR-GROUP COALITION Monday
began preparations to force open Democratic and Republlcan
party caucuses to the publlc during the 112th General
Assembly, wbfcb begina work next week. "All too often
secrecy Ill used to serve special or personal interesta or tD
escape from accountability on major Issues," said Ohio
Corrunon Cause Director David Hetzler.
"EuphemiSm f&lt;r secrecy, auch as party caucuses, are
used to hide officials who wish to avoid resporurlblllty." Hetzler
spoke for his group, the American Clvfl Uberties Union of
Ohio, Ohio Council of Olurches and the Citizens League of
Greater Cleveland. The groupa Vifll lobb~. the legislative
leaderihlp of both parties to open their caucu.ses to the public.

WASHINGTON -SEN. ROBERT A. TAFT, R.Ohio, in a
move Ill give Sen.~lect Howard Metzenbaum seniority o¥er
other newly~lected U.S. senators, will resign today. "I have
written to Gov. James A. Rhodes that as of the close of
~iness Dec, 28 I will resign,'' Taft said In a statement issued
Monday. "I'm·glad to cooperate to that end," Taft added,
Later Monday , Metzenbaum Issued a statement in
Cleveland thlll!king Taft for reslgrdng early. "I am grateful tD
Sen, Taft for resigning early," Metzenbsum said. "It will be
meaningful lor committee assignments as well as
'§ubeorrurilttee chalnnanshlps."
WASHINGTON - SPOKESMEN FoR WHE.',T growe!J
h8ve asked the incoming Carter adminlatfation for help'
I'&amp;Dging from an export promotion drive to coosideratlon of
higher supports, possible export subsidies and a new reserve
program, a source said today. The requests were included In
(Continued on page 8)
•

VOL XXVII

NO. 178

992-2635

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pomeroy .
man
hurt
..
in wreck
Drexel Vance, 54, RD 4,
Pomeroy, was injured In a
traffic accident at 8:50 a.m.
Monljay on SR 7 at Story's
Run Rd.
The Gallla·Melgs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Vance was. a passenger in a
car operated by Parthenia C.
Vance, 47; Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Their car went into the path .
of a vehicle operated ·by
Howard c·. Birchfield, 51, Rt.
I, . Middleport. Mrs. Vance
was charged with failure to
yield right of way. •
In other accidents Investigated by the patrol:
Icy f!)ads were blamed for
an accident at 2:45 p.m.
Monday on Mill Creek Rd.
one and nine tenths miles
nort.h.of Georges Creek Rd.
··Jeffrey E. Bruirifleld, 23, Rt.
2, Galllpolls, lost control of
his car on Icy pavement. The
vehicle left the highway,
(Continued on page 8)

.
There was excitement
'

during the flathoating years
By Gayle Prfce
Flatboat trips were attendant with
dangers, hardships, risks both physical and
monetary and uncertainties as these letters
~ept in rriy family, reproduce~ verbatim·,
show:
William J. Taylor with whom Henderson Price had much dealing and flat·
boating experiences were: "I was disappointed in not finding you at lAulsvllle. I
designe writing you a few lines that you may
know how we got along . Slow enough you
wilf think when I tell you we did not get to
the Falls until yesterday but that was the
best we could do as there was but two calm
days and knights after we left the miU untlll
we got there as it is we got over as wei! as I
could wish but I am glad that I can say
without damage. We had not got more than
half way over when she took a notion to go
back and in spite of our men she would go
the rest of the way sturn foremost but as
· there was no hann done, I hope you wlll be
glad for me. I assure you that five minutes
of time relieved my mind very much."
The date of the above communication was
April!, 11155. In going south, aU flatboata had
to shoot the rapids and go over the falls in
the Ohio River near Maysv!Ue, Kentucky. I
have heard the falls mentioned many 1\mes.
Sometimes boats lost their cargo or capsized, especially when the river was rough
from winds and swift.
Often letters opened with inquiry as to
the weU-belng and health of the loved ones
left behind and about neighbor~ and friends.
They oflen closed the same way. I do not
think this was Idle talk. Exposure and sick·
ness was very common in those ·days and_
death came unannounced to many. A letter
from Samuel Price to his brother Henderson
explains. Both Samuel and Henderson
flathoated.
·
"Grieved to know that poor old uncle
Christian had passed away, the last time I
saw hiin he told me that he would never lay
eyes on me again in this world his words was
true he has passed and gone but we all have
to paM the· sap!e and deth is lh~ way of alf
living but If we do right we may all meal
again where the !rubbles of life will not
bother liS' as we are exposed to trUe and
\rubble, but there Is a place of peace."
The speUing and construction In the
letters have not been changed unless
necessary. Christl an Barring~r was their
mother's brother. The feeling through all.
the . letters left to. us shows a strong
humanity. These people, as aU the pioneers,
went through a lot together and they sinCI!rely cared about one another, I am not

•

e

LARGE VINYL

.After-Christmas
Sale...

:s;.

K•t•ekv fried Ckieka®

mass colllslon, lhtee ot,ller

COLUMBUS - THREE OFFICERS OF the Consumer
Companies of America, Inc., were Indicted Monday by the
Franklin County Grand Jury ·on a !Dial of 23 stock fraud
charges. W. Alvin Frost,,Carl F. Frost and C. Donald Froat are
charged with selling unregistered securities and selling
securities without a llcense.
Franklin County Prosecutor George C. Smith said the
criminal charges resulted from a joint investlgatioo with the
Division of Securities of the state CommerCI! Department, Two
civil suits are pending in Franklin County Common Pleas
Court againat the firm. One was filed by the division of
securities and the other by the Consumer Fraud Division of the
Ohio Attorney General's office.

r'· . . .

'----·-·-----.l---------·LlU.'-'~----- -

POINT PLEASANT - A
Second tragedy was added to .
the holiday death toll here
when an 18-year-old Rt. I, MI . .
Alto man .was li:Wed In a five
vehicle aeddent on Rt. 2 In
GaWpollll Ferry Monday at
~pprox!mately 5:30 p.m.
Bruce Wayne Clicl&lt; died
several hours later at the
Holzer Medical Center. .He
was the second traffic fatallty
1!1 less than a wee~. and the
sixth of the year In Mason
County, W. Va.
Besides his death In the

·~~::~~:~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::i:::::::~:::::::~:::::!8:::::::::::~~~::::~:::::.~·;

mis-matched

FRIDAY HOURS SET
COLUMBUS - All state
liquor stores will be open
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
Friday, December 31, 1976, in
order to provide service to
the public during the holiday
rush.

Young man killed
in 5 car smashup

sure about today's generation, but I think it
was true of the pioneers and the older people
I know today.
·
As to the worry and gloom and unCertainties, the following letters are informative.
"December 2, 1857. Merinda, I thought I
would write a few lines this morning to let
you know where we are and how we are. We
are all well and I hope that this wiU find all
at home well. It Is about one o'clock in the
morning and we are In sight of the mouth of
the Ohio. I can't tell anything about the
Mississippi whether It Is high or low but
from all accounts It Is very low we had one
very hard speD of weather. When we first
started It was cold and windy. We did not
run any worth much for! or 5 days but since
that we have been getting along' very well
consideren the stage of waller that we have
had ~ I have had no correct news of the
market$ below but If Ills as du1f as it Is.along
the river It Is a bsd show. For It Is the dules
time that I ever saw. All the big boats is
laying up nothing a doolng and If we have
not got hard money you cant buy anything if we have the good luck to get down
anyways soon. I would like to hear from
home this morning to know If you are well,
you must read what you can and guess at the
balance for my pen IB bad and I am very
sleepy."
Merinda was Henderson Price's Vflle.
Money of different kinds were mentioned.
This Included "payment In American
Money," hard money and sometimes paper
or script. We have ~nowledge that much of
the produce boated by Taylor and Price was
purchased at various times of the year and
boated out. They : borrowed money
Sometimes to buy. We have notes showing
that as high as ten perCI!nt was sometimes
paid.
.
Pilots were used to guide the boats down
the river so we can see that just any one
could not venture out. A Mr. Brown was
· used as a plio\ and often he was bragged on.
In one letter it was stated ''we hired the best
pilot there Is, hls name Is Wllherd Kinder."
• Another time a letter home said, "there
Is a good deal of ICI! In the river. We have not
examined our load to know whether It Is
frose or not but we know that the most of
hour potatoes Is frosep. Bui our apples, I
think, Is tolerable safe so If I get home with
money enough to pay my debts I wlll he
glad."
.
These letters may not be of interest to
some, but to others they may be. They
represent true life experience• over a
hundred years ago of Meigs County people.

•

enttne

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28. 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Architects hired

. HONORED QUEEN- Paula Eichinger was installed
honored queen of Bethel 62, Jobs Daughters, in a formal
installation serviCI! Monday evening. See page 5 for
account of .event.

The Meigs County Commissioners Monday employed the architectural finn
of Wrlght·Kes~e-Krltschgau­
Roken -Buchanan , Inc .
Columbus, to design the new
multi-purpose structure near
Veterans Memorial Hospital
that will alao house the senior
citizens center.
In other business a motion
made by Bernard Gilkey io
accept the bid for a motor
grader from Southeastern
Equipment Co. of Gallipolis
failed for lack of a second.
Wells told the Dally Sentinel
he did not feel the purchase
would be fair to the two new
commissioners who wlll take
office the first of the year.
The bid from Southeastern
Equipment Co., opened a
week ago, was $53,500 less
trade In of 120,000, making
the total bid 133,440. the
lowest of several opened a

Improvement projects·
tagged at $75 million
'

Fifty-eight possible
projects have been compiled
by
Jennings
Assoc.,
Columbus, in a capital lm·
provements study of Meigs
County at an estimated cost
of $75 million.
This was disclosed by
James Jennings, Jr., of the
Columbus finn, when the
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission met
Monday afternoon at the
agricultural conference room
of the Farmers Bank
Building.
Jennings said the projects
were culled from all of the
past plans and studies of the
county over the past 15 years,
plus Information gathered
from 16 recent interviews.
The projects cover a period
of from 1978 through 1982.
Jennings agreed that the 175
milllon to complete all of
them would he too expensive
for Meigs County. However,
he said the next phase of the
study b¥ the finn will plaCI!
the projects in a priority
arrangement · and will
recommend which should be
canied out in a particular
year.
The list of 58 projects which
deal with roads, courthouse
needs, bridges, social services, recreation, etc. wiU he
published soon.

· Henry Wells, vice chair· said that he has lnfonned .
man, who presided, an- them that the ahsndoned
nounced that a public hearing gravel pits upriver could
will be held on Jan. 12, at 10 easily, with about one·
a.m . in the common pleas quarter mile of dredging be
courtroom In Pomeroy to used as an Ohio River port.
hear plans for State Route Such ports have been under
124·338.
study for .some time.
It was stressed that every·
Blakeslee alao ·announced
one interested should attend . that the Ohio Environmental
·E. A. Wingett yesterday said Protection Agency Is holding
he understands the State hearings on standards that
plans to ·combine the two must be maintained In regard
routes in a highway running to alr pollution. It was pointed
along the river. Wingett said out that no coal burning large
that he doubted If a rodway structure can meet . the
so located would "hold up ." 'standards. It was also pointed
County Engineer Wesley out that apprently the West
Buehl said however that an VIrginia EPA standards are
improvement 1s planned to . lower and the differences are
Route 121·338 only on a causing Industry to move out
temporary basis as It Is the . of Ohio.
plan eventually for a new
Blskeslee reported that the
route to come from the bridge community development
to he. built at Ravenswood to block grant appl!ratlon Is
tie Into the Route 7 bypass. It progret,lng satisfactorily for
was stressed that a highway helng flied on Jan. 7.
must be built to ac·
The group approved
commodate the traffic clearing house Items Incoming off the new bridge. A eluding the Ohio Valley
highway would be beneficial Health Services which has
alao for the develop111ent of applied for some $200,000 In
housing on this side of the federal funds for ad·
Ohio River as a result of u.e ministration. The services, in,
new bridge.
Athens, serves Meigs County
c. E. Blakeslee, eltecutlve and a number of other nearby
director of the commission, colmties.
reported that hearings are
The next meeting was set
being held by the Ohio River for Jan. 24 and at that time
Main Stern study group. He ofllcers for 1977 will be .
named.

week ago but the motor
grader bid was the only one
mentioned Monday.
Attendln~ wer e Wells,

Ours, and Gilkey com·
missioners, Wesley Buehl ,
engln ee , and
Marth a
Chambers, clerk.

Council names
Powell to seat
'•

Larry Powell, owner of
Powell's Super Valu, West
Second St., was selected In
special session Monday night
to fill the vacan cy on
Pomeroy Council created by
the resignation of Charles
Bartels. Powell will be sworn
In by Mayor Clarence An·
drews on Jan . 3, the next
regular meeting of council.
Mayor Andrews told
council that the application
for a Federal grant submitted
by council in the amount of
$274,000 for the renovation of
the senior hlg() building, sold
to the vlllage for the sum of ll
by Meigs Local School Board,
has been. denied. The grant
was flied through the Public
Works Capital Development
and Investment Act.
Harry Davis, councilman,
disclosed that he and the
mayor had been looking at
new tractors with a backhoe
and front end loader. Council
discussed purchasing same,
hut no decision was made.
Davis said two trucks owned
by the vlllage · irre broken
down. Mayor Andrews

No one injured
in two wrecks
Snow and lee were
responsible for two accidents
in Middleport Sunday and
Monday.
At !:45 p.m. Sunday,
vehicles driven by David E.
Ross, 20, Route I, Middleport,
and Joseph R. Edwarda, 26,
Route I, Middleport, collided
on Powell St. There were no
injuries. AI 4:30 p.m. Monday, a car driven by Richard
S. Owen, 17, Middleport,
skidded into a tree on Fourth
St., Middleport. Medium
damages were reported to the
lhtee vehicles.
Pollee also are In·
vestlgatlng a hit-skip on
Hamilton St. where over the
weekend a truck, legally
parked and owned by Tho.mas
A. Hawley, Mlddlepori, was
struck by a vehicle.

suggested that all lire ex·
tlngulshcrs be checked and
filled by R. E. Tracy Co. The
meeting ·wus opened by
'pruyer by Lou Osborne.
Attending were the mayor,
Ralp~ Werry , O•horne, Davis
and Dr. Harold Brown,
coun cilmen, and . June
Walton, clerk .

TW 0 Sh0 W
~Or

11

COIUlCiJ

Due to lack of a quorum , a
regular session of Middleport
VIllage Council was not held
Monday nigh!.
Only Councilmen Carl
Horky and Marvin Kelly
reported for the scheduled
meeting as dld Mayor Fred
Hoffman
and
Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate. Four
constitute a quorum.
.
Monday night marked the
final meeting when council
could under law name a
replacement to ffll the
unexpired term of James
Brewer who
recently
resigned. It will be lUted now
through an appulntment by
Mayor Hoffman . Mayor
Hoffman said he expects to
have a name by January 1.

Drums thrown
into windows
Large windows were
broken out of two business
buildings over the weekend In
Pomeroy, Chief of Pollee Jed
Webster said tnday.
A window was knocked out
at Carpenter's Hall on Easi
Main St., and at Simon'•
Pick-a-Pair on Weal Main St.
Chief Webster said large 16gallon trash collection tlruml
used on the streets were
thrown through both win·
dows . A windshield also was
broken out of a car at the
home of Joe Fields, ·326 E.
Main St. All the incidents are
helng investigated.

Carter cabinet working on economic package
and Vifll meet with them
SJ: . SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. again at home in Plains later
(UP!) -Gathering hla entire this week.
cabinet together lor the first
He said he also ~~~~ tD
lime, Presldent~lect Jimmy Invite congressional leaders
carter says he has made to join those talks, so they can
"signlftcant progress" on an try "to work out as
economic package likely to compaUbly as we can a
Include a tax cut and a job- common presentation to the
creating progranl.
naUon about what ought tD he
Carier said he expects to done co'ncerning the sluggish
make a final decision oo a tax economy."
carter arranged an early
cut - and ita amo\U\t within a week to 10 days. He meeting today with New York
met for m&lt;re than four hours Gov. Hugh Carey and Mayor
with hls chief economic Abraham Beame to d!Jcuss
advisers Monday, shortly New York City's financial
after arriving at this resort problems and Its $1 billion
Island off the Georgia coast, municipal debt.
By HELEN THOMAS

The pr.tdent-elecl !Did reporters Monday a meeUng
with Soviet Communlat Party
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev Ill a
"likely pi'OI(lect" next year,
although no definite · plans
have been made lor his first
summit session with the
Kremlin.
· Carter has hope• of
completing a new strategic
arrna limitation agreemeni
with the Soviets bef&lt;re the
current agreement expires In
OctDber, &lt;r of working out an
extension of the present peel.
The prealdent~leclsald be
has been encouraged by
upbeat' reports on the

economy, although he said he
must await more dellnlle
Indicators - expected from
government atalilllca within
a few days - before
announcing his plans to deal
with the problem.
He said his talks with
eollnomic lldvlsera 110 far
"iocuaed
on
current
economic trends, which oeem
AllghUy niore positive than
· we had earlier expected .... "
He also has been receiving
brighter reportl on conaumer
spending and business invest·
men\ attitudes, but said "We
are looking for some
Indications of consumer

confidence in our nation's
economy, !Uid tbOH won't be
forthcoming for the ne&amp;l
three or lour days."
Carter allo aald his convening of his new appointees
before taking ofltce Ia aimed
at getting an early 1\art 011
problems "ao that wh111 we
preaent an eollnomic paciap
or a legillatlve packap !0
Congreu, we will speak with
a clear and llngular voice ••. "
The lhret-day conference,
ending Wednesday, aiJo has
high on Its agenda the
procedure for sel:~J
subcabinet officers, I
judges and diplomats.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tuesd•Y. Dec. 28, 1976

Hays downfall tops Ohio news
By EDWARD DIPIETRO
United Prtu lnttrnalloaal

A sex scandal which
knocked Rep. Wayne Hays off
the pinnacle of coogresslonal
power, broke hls health and
forced him to resign in
disgrace after 28 years In the
House was selected by Ohio
edltora as the top news story
In the state during 1976.
Hays' downfall began May
~ when Ellz.abeth Ray. a 33year-old platinum blonde and
former
Capitol
Hill
secretary, said she did
nothing In her $14,IJOO.a-year
congressional staff job but
serve as Hays' mistress
Hays, 65, who relished a
reputation as "the meanest
man in Congress," at first
denied any sexual association
with Miss Ray but a few days
later admitted to a brief
affair.
House Democrats, step by
step, forced Hays out as
chairman
of
the
Administration and
Democratic campaign
spending committees.
On June 10 he was hospitalized In a coma from an
overdose of sleepmg pills. He
said later the overdose was
accidental. He resigned on
Sept. I with a one-oentence
letter to the Speaker of the
House
The other mne top news
stories of the year selected

were;
2. Carter's VIctory In the
Ohio presidential election
3
Workmen's
compensation frauds.
4. OhiO Supreme Court
upholds the death penalty
S. The Medicaid criSIS.
6. Volkswagen Corp.
decides against Brook Park,
Ohio, as the location for a
U.S. assembly plant.
7. A shortage of more than
$500,000 In deputy registrar
fees Is uncovered m the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
8 Eight teen;~ge rs killed in
a highway acc1dent m
Minster.
9. A new rate -makmg

formula for public utilities.
10. The 130-day United
Rubber Workers' strike.
Former Georgia Gov.
Jimmy Carter led a
Democratic sweep of Ohio,
outpolllng President Ford by
11,116 votes In the closest
Jl'esidentlal balloting In the
state since 1948.
Do:mocrat Howard M. Met·
zenbaum of Cleveland won
hls third try for the Senate,
ousting Republican Sen.
&amp;bert Taft Jr ., and the
Democrats picked up two
more congressional seat!.
The presidential election
was so close In Ohlo that
Ford's supporters requested
and received a recoiDII. The
U.S. Labor party took legal
steps to prevent certlflcati&lt;n
of Carter's election because
of votmg •fraud, but were
rebuffed by a federal judge at
the last minute.
After news accounts
revealed
fraudulent
workmen's compensation
claims and payments, both
Gov. James A Rhodes and
the legislature began
mvestlgaUons.
Rhodes relieved Kennetil
Krouse, administrator of the
Bureau of Workmen's
Compensatioo, and replaced
Gregory
Stebbins
as
chairman of the state
Industrial Conunission.
He also fired Stebbins from
the conunission altogether,
but It took the Democratic·
controlled Senate months to
ratify the dismissal because
Stebbms was an appointee of
former Democratic Gov .
John J. Gilligan and backed
by organized labor.
On Nov . 24, the Ohio
Supreme Court upheld the
state's death penalty and
ruled 11 does not Impose
"cruel
and
unusual
punishment" within the
meaning of the U S
Const1tutioo.
The court ruled In the cases
of two men and set execution
dates for both.
" It cannot be clalllled tilat

punishment by death In Ohlo
Is excessive because it ill
grossly disJI'oportlonal to the
severity of the crime, for
death l.s Imposed only In
cases of purposeful murder
and ooly when ooe or more
specific aggravating factora
are also present," the court
said.

Ohio now hss 61 persons on
death row and the last
execution In the state was
March 16, 1963.
A shortage In Medicaid
funds led to the biggest
squabble of the year between
the governor and majority
Democrats In the legislature
Rhodes blamed Insufficient
appropriations, while the
lawmakers blamed poor
administration In the Public
Welfare Department.
The shortage grew from
tm mllllon to $161 million
over six months. When the
Democrats finally came up
with the full amount, Rhodes
reduced It by $13 million, cut
state spending by another I
per cent and warned
mcreaslng welfare costs
woald require tuition hikes at
Ohio colleges
On May 28, Volkswagen
Corp. announced it would
negotiate with Pennsylvania
for a site at New Stanton, Pa.,
as 1ts first choice for a U S.
auto aOI.'Ielllbly plant.
The German automaking
firm Informed Ohio Gov,
James A. Rhodes that an
abandoned tank plant m
Brook Park, a suburb of
Cleveland, was Its second
choice. Rhodes and the Ohlo
Department of Community
and Economic Development
bad been vying for the plant,
which is expected to employ
S,OOO workers by 1963.
In the story on the Bureau
of Motor Vehicles, news
reporters uncovered a
shortage of more than
$500,000 In deputy registrar
fees in the BMV. Registrar
Curtis Andrews moved to
eliminate the irregularities,
but clashed with his boss,

1\uo-feng
says
war averted
'
By CHARLES R. SMITH

UPI Senior Editor
HONG KONG l UP!)- The
purge of the "Gang of Four"
In October averted "a major
clvU war" in China in which
tile Soviet Uiilon would have
been Involved, according to
Communist party Cllairman
Hua Kuofeng.
Hua called the struggle
, against the gang, led by the
widow of the late party.
Chairman Mao Tse-tung, the
gravest threat In the 27-year
history of the People's
Republlc of China.
The four "exploited the
grave difficulty" facing
China before and after Mao's
death In an al\"mpt "to usurp
the supreme party and state
leadership," Hua said In a
speech delivered Christmas
Day to 8,000 delegates to a '
national conference on
agriculture In Peking
Part of the speech was
transmitted Monday by
Peking Radio and the official
New China News Agency. A
more detalled version was
carried by both today.
"Should their scheme have
succeeded, that would bave
led to a great retrogression

and spilt In our party and
country and touched off a
major civil war," Hua said.
"They would have directly
capitulated to imperialism
and social-Imperialism,
relying on the aggressor's
bayone\ to prop up their
puppet throne, and there
would have been both
Internal strife and foreagn
aggression."
'Social-lmperlallilm'' is the
term the Chinese use to refer
to the Soviet Union.
Hua said it was wrong to
label the four - Madame
Mao (Chiang Ching), Wang
Hungwen, Cbang Chun-ehiao
and Yao Wen-yuan - as
radicals.
"They are ultra-rightists,
out;~nd-out
capitalist
roaders and the most
ferocious
counter..-evolutlonarles . What
'leftIsts"
What
'radicals'!
They could not have l"'fSUed
a line farther to the right !" he
1

said.

"The Infamous records of
Chang Cllun-ehiao, Clllang
Ching and Yao Wen-yuan
show thst they were linked
with the Chiang Kal-ohek
reactionaries In a thousand

and one ways/ ' Hua said. He
called Wang "a typical
representative of the
newborn bourgeoisie."
After Mao's death, when
the four made their move,
"rolling dark clouds hung
over China,n Hua said.
"Such a grave situation had
never amen since the
founding of our people's
republic and was rarely seen
m the history of our party."
When the party central
comrnlttee "adopted resolute
measures" to deal with the
four, Hua said, "the broad
masses rose In response and
swung Into action, and the
issue was settled without
firing a sfngle shot or
shedding a drop of blood "

Highway Safety Director
Donald D. Cook, over policies
and operatioo of the ooreau.
Cook SU8pellded Andrews,
but Rhodes reversed the
suspensioo and reasaigned
both men to other positions.
Cook refused to accept his
new job and left the
administration
On March 7, eight teenagers who were en route to a
dance were killed when they
were struck by a car as they
stood In the middle of a road
near Minster Five others
were Injured.
The eight were among SO
hlgh school students who
formed a caravan of
automobiles to go to the
dance. The lead car stopped
and many of those In trailing
cars got out to see what
happened. A car driven by
John JVemer, 21, of Marla
Stein, came over the crest of
a hlll and plowed 11110 12 of the
youths. ·
The victims were burled In
a cOITilllon grave In Minster
on March 11.
In the utilities story, the
General Assembly, following
an 18-month tug-of-war
between Ohio utillties and
consumer grou~. enacted a
controversial new ratemaking formula designed to
keep public utilities from
paSSlng on to their customers
the full cost of their
Investments and capital construction.
The governor Signed the
measure but warned it probably would not result In lower
utility bills for consumers
On April 21, The United
Rubber Workers Union
struck the "Big Four" tire
makers. The strike lasted for
130 days, idling about 70,000
workers at 47 plants
natwnwlde and costing
employes an estimsted $270
nilllion m lost wages.
During the last week of
August, two major tire
companys - Goodyear Tire
&amp; Rubber Co. and Firestone
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. - came to
terms with the union Shortly
afterward Uniroyal and
Goodrich settled.
The three-year contracts
With the t1remakers mcluded,
for the first tune In the rubber
mdustry, a cost-of~lvlng allowance, the b1ggest sticking
point m negotiations.

UNIT CALLED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse ER Squad Monday
at 9:30a.m. removed Everett
Roush, Racine , who was
involved m an automobile
accident, to Veterans
Memor~al Hospital

are welcome

Carter: big news
NEW YORK (UPI) - stories In the1r ranking of tiie
Jimmy Carter's successful top 10 headline stor~es.
campaign for the presidency
The mysterious disease
was the overwheimlng choice that claimed the Uves of 29.of
today of American editors as those attending an Am~iean
the top news story of 1976.
:..egion convention in
Editors participating In the Philadelplua was second.
UPI also asked the editors
annual poll by United Press
International chose eight to rank the year's biggest
domestic and two fore1~n

DR. LAMB

Air pressure causes ear pain
Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
flymg to Cahforma for a
vacation. The last tune I flew
I had this terrific Pi"" in my
right ear which was almost
unbearable. Can you suggest
anything I can do to relieve
this' Would packing the ear
help? I am 65 years old.
DEAR READER - For
heavens sakes don't pack
your ear. That Ill the worst
thing you could do. The pam
Ill probably associated With
the cbanges in air pressure.
There as an external •
pressure to all parts of your
body and at sea level it is.
about 15 pounds per square
mch. This pressure 1s also applied to your ear drum The
same pressure 1s transmitted
to the Inside of your mouth
and through a tube to the m·
s1de of your ear. As loog as
the pressure is equal 1ns1de
and outside the ear you have
no symptoms or awareness of
the pressure.
When you first take off the
co"J"'erc1al a1r, hnes now

pressurize the cabm while at drum may cause symptoms.
ground level. This mcreases
Ill a tube at the back
the external pressure and of There
the
mouth
transnuts
may cause trouble Im- the pressure mthat
the mouth to
mediately. At high •llltude, the mtemai ear. If 1\ 18 closed
In flight, the pressure may
any reason - blocked with
decrease but, 1\ IS kept at or for
mflammatlon
from a cold, or
below 7,000 feet. The 7,000
from
an
overgrowth
of lymph
feet altitude though, or even t1ssue, it IS not effective
m
lesser altitudes, IS enough to rapidly equabzmg the mteraffect your ear.
nal pressure to that of the
As the pressure dimlmshes
outs1de
pressure. You 101ght
outs1de the ear, If you don't
iwve
your
doctor elUIITiine
also decrease the pressure myou
to
see
if
you
have normal
Side the mouth and to the mopenings
to
your
ears. .
ternai ear, the unbalanced
To
msure
the
pressure
expressure will push the mner
cbange
some
people
chew
ear contents outward. The
stretching causes the pam. gum. The action allows the
When you finally adjust to the pressure to change rap1dly in
new level and the pressure In· the back of the mouth and
may help keep the tube to the
s1de and outside the ear Ill the mlernal ear open Yawning
same at altitude, all1s well.
The problem starts agam also helps
lf.you do not have a cold
when you descend to land. As and all else falls you can
the external pressure mcreases if the mternal sometimes blow gently while
pressure 1s still eqUivalent to pmching the lip of the nose
the lesser pressure of shut This Will help mcrease
altitude , the external the air 111 the back of the
pressure against the e&lt;lr mouth and m the tube. '11118

NEW ORLEANS tUPI) - A WtiiiWI . . . beell
booked with attempted murder for deouiq ber
buabud wltb g~~ellae, aettlag bJm 011 fire ud cbulq
bbn III'OIDld their bo•e tryiDg to IIIrow more 11101 011 the
O•mes.
Her H111bud, Fred Broob, U, wulllnllllaeto.ry
coacUIIOII Moodily 11 Lbartty IIGiplta1 wiib tlllrd·
degree buru ever b1U of lila llady.
Broou told police dult dDrla&amp; u ~t~wueul, hll
wUe, Barbara, Zl, &amp;l'lbbed I IMOU. till ud dOIIHII
him. She then Ill a ~ of .-por IIIII let the 1110111le
oa Ore, be lllcl. Broou lllcllbe e•aed blm wiib the
caa, tbrowlq mort guollDe oa him, UDIU be dove
lbrougb a bedroom wiDdow. He nld be rolled Ill lbe
gra11 lD put out tbe llames.

should never oe uvne u you
have a cold or you m•ght blow
mfectcd mater~al mto the e&lt;lr
and bave an ear mfeclion as"
complication. And 11 doesn't
work 1! you are having trouble because there IS too much
pressure ms1de compared to
outside the ear, as occurs
while you are at altitude.
I would also like to mentwn
that some people bave more
trouble because they bave an
e&lt;lr partially or completely
blocked with wax Acheck up
before flymg 101ght ellnunate
these problelll.'&gt; for you
For mformation on causes
and treatment of .
"Headache· Man's Most
Coounon Pam, send SO cents
for The Health Letter
number 2-9 with a long,
stamped, sell-addressed
envelope for madmg J lllil
send you•· request
.. to Dr Lamb m c.are of
this newspaper, P.O Box
ISS I, RadiO City Statwn, New
V01·k, NY 10019

Sport Parade

Lawyer says heart also

changed in Mason girl

r------------,
: Pro
I

Irish sock it
to Penn State

...

B bcats

lose to
Chiefs ·

..

n

1

4. CIA-FBI •SCandals.
5. SuJI'eme Court ruling on
capital punishment.
6. Jlaclal unrest grows In
Rhodesia, South Africa.
7. Brltlah economic crisis.
8. Lebanese war.
9. U.S Bicentennial. 10. Lackheed scandal,
Including Indictment of
former Japanese prime
mlnlster.

Musk
15 loll
Saginaw 14 15
PI Huron 15 16

South

4 34 131 129
6 34 131 133
4 34 1 125 131

W l T Pts GF GA
Dayton
17
Toledo
IS
Columbus U
Ft Wayne12

1o11
15
15
19

1 34 134
5 35 145
6 3-4 135
5 '29 12'2
Mond1y 's Results
No games scheduled
Tuesd,ay•s Games
No games scheduled

Wednesdly 's Gamu
Ftmt &amp;t Fort Wayne
Deyton at Sag:m.aw
Toledo at Columbus
M uskegon at Kalamazoo

130
150
136
161

Pttntroy. Ohio
National adverUIJ.na npr:we•
laUve Wtitd - GrllfiUt Cooloiny, loe , Boltlnelll and Gallatdler Dlv.,
7f1 Third An., New York, N.Y.

-lim

111011

-

rolel: O.Uveretl by
e~rrier where ava1lable 7&amp; eenta per
week By Motar Route where c.nier
service not avlillble, 0nt monlh,
$3.2:5. By man ln Cllio 1nd W Va ,
ODe Year tD 10; lll monthl,
$1J.51, Three monthJ, 11 00,
Ellewhere . . 10 year, Sil IDOIIthl
tn !10, Three monthl, f7 50.

~...:'"' lntludoo s.nday

AII· Colleve Tourney

Oklehoma City
University 73

97

Oh ld

L.utheran BrotherhoOd

Tournament
"
Capital 80 Carthage (Wis ) 7&amp;
Wittenberg 91 Contord la of
51 Paul (Minn J 40
Colon1al Claulc
Kenyon 85 Thomas Mor~t

1Ky l 81

,

Oh i o Northern 82 Wevne
1
Stele (Mich ) 69
GreaterBiuefleldfWVal ,

"

Invitational

Marietta 89 EHzabet~

IN C I 76

Ducks stop Bowling Green, 66-54

Today's

OVRDC silo recoounended
PORTSMOUTH - Two
that
the villsge of McArthur ..
major changes have been
be
added
to the Jactaon •
Included In the State's ApWelistoo
growth
corridor but
palachlsn Development Plan
not
for 1977 as a resuH of so far this addltl~s
recommendations made by been approved.
Clark Alexander, 0 DC "
the Ohio Valley Regional
Chalnnan,
aald an effort
"
Development Commlssloli.
be
made
to
amend
the
plan
to
Both concern the "growth
areas" In the 11 county Include \be VInton County "'
seat. The villages of Hamden
dlatrtct.
One was addltlon of the and Coalton are Included In
Waverly - Piketon area the Jackson-Wellston •
•
because of the anticipated corridor.
Other
areas
with
Impact of the ...4 billlon
Atomic Energy Plant ad· significant potential for
dltlon . The other added a growth designated In the :;
Unear growth corridor along State Plan Include the Portsthe Appalachian Develop- mouth • Ironton corridor,
ment Highway from Peebles Chillicothe, Gallipotls, Hllls- received the death west to Batavia to Include by boro, Greenfield, Milford- ;·
By JACK V. FOX
I..OSANGELES (UPI ) -In sentence, later conunuled lD name, the villages of Peebles, 1.-'lveland and the western ,
Seaman. Winchester, Sar- portion of Clermont County
her neat skirt and page-boy life In prisoq.
dinia, Mt. Orab, Willlams· The Gavin Power Plant ' .'
hairdo, time had changed
burg and Batavia In ~dams, Impact area of VInton County •
Leslie Van Hooten's appearBrown and
Clermont (Wilkesvllle area) Is also ::
ance drastically from the
Included.
1
I
Manson Family's bloody
Counties.
I
C'
_1•
I
"Heller Skelter" days of the
1960s, and her attorney ! ;:,t:~nn1ngs 1
argued that 1\ bad changed
National Basketball
her heart too.
Association Slilndl ngs
Untied Press International
MlSS Van Houten, 27, "has
Eattern Conference
been thoroughly rehabilitated
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
and presents no danger to
W. L. Pet . GB
htlll
1!1 12 600
soctety ," her attorney maln- PBos
ton
17 1J 567 1
lalned Monday, arguing she NY Kn tc ks
16 15 516 21h
'"
o
14 19 42d S"1
should be released on ball NBuYffal
"'
Mets
12 19 387 6%
pending a second trial for two
Central DtYISion
wound up wath two straight
By DAVID MOFFlT
W L Pc;t GB
of the murders that made the
HO;J Ston
18
10
64]
losses
(Pitt and Notre
UPI
Sports
Writer
Manson Family Infamous. Cle velan d
19 12 61 3
112
Dame)."
,,
JACKSONVILLE
,
Fla.
The hslr she shaved off N e w Orleans 18 16 529 3
"We
peaked
at
just
the
(UPI)
Penn
State,
whch
San
Antonio
17
16
51
.5
31
'7
with the other Manson girls Wa shlngton 13 17 433 6
never could beat Notre Dame r1ghl time,'' said Hunter.
has grown shoulder length Atlanta
12 23 343 9 1''
back In the '21b when the late "We Improved with every
Western
conference
and her smoothly coiffed
M1dwest Division
Knute &amp;ckne coached the Jl'acllce."
"
bangs covered the faint scar
W L Pet. G B
worked
hard
all
"We
Fighting
Irish,
has
found
out
of the "X" she carved, like Den 11 er
21 10 677
year,"
said
Notre
Dame
'"
19 14 575 3
that a 48-year layoff didn't
the others, Into her forehead. Detro1t
tnd 1ana
15 19 441 7,'4
help lmll'ove that situatloo. Coach Dan Devine. "We
1
The girl who hissed at the Kans Ct!y
14 20 412 8 '7
The
two
nationally looked at this game as a ..
11 16 40 7 e
judge In her first trial spoke Ch 1cago
M il waukee
7 '16 212 15
renowned
independents
met reward (for an 8-3 seaaon). It soflly at the hearing Monday.
PactiiC OIVISton
was good to finish with a win. ~
for
the
first
time
since
1928ln
W l Pet GB
Because of her changed
It makes a good start for nell\ , ,
Por
tland
22
10
688
Mmday
night's
Gator
Bowl,
nature and exemplary record L os Ange les 20 13 606 211,
season."
,J
and
the
result
was
the
same
In prison she qualifies for Golden State 15 1&lt;1 s11 51,
For the record, Notre
- Notre Dame beat Penn
16 18 11 11 7
ball, maintained atlorney Seallle
Phoenlx
13 15 464 1
Dame, which will open a 10. :
State, »e.
Maxwell Keith.
Monday's Results
year home-and-home
Statistically,
the
underdog
No game~ sc heduled
Prosecutor Stephen Kay regular«ason series with u
Tuesd,v
'
s
Games
Nlttany
Uons
played
the
an assistant at the first Houston at NY Kntcks
,
PaM State In 1981 (alter a 53- ~
13th-ranked
Irish
about
even.
multiple murder tr1al of Seatt le a t Atlanta
year
hiatus), now holds a ~ '"
But
Notre
Dame
capitalized
K
an
sas
Ct
ty
at
Cle11
el
and
Charles Manson and three of
Philad elp h i a at San A nton1o
I
11
edge
over the Nittany Lions. ..
on
strong
defensive
play
to
his "girls" - countered, lt Por tl and at Chi cago
wild
a
20-3
halftime
lead
and
•
W&amp;
Shtngton
.,,
lnd1&amp;nl'l
IS one thing to do well In
Pho en1x a t D env er
PeM State couldn't make up
priSOn, but it IS another to Milwaukee
at Gold en State
,,
that much ground despite a
know that if you are again Bo sto n at Los Angeles
strong
challenge
In
the
!mal
0
Only gam es scheduled
convicted of first-degree
Wednesday's Games
period.
murder, you will spend much Kansas
C1ty at Buffal o
"We just got too far behind
Se a tt l e at New York Nel s
more time in prison ...
Philadelp h ia at Hou ston
In
the f1rst half,'' said Penn
"I want to he sure she'll Atlanta et Washin g ton
State
Coach Joe Paterno.
show up" for trlal, he said, P ortland at Oetro rl
'
"We
never
really got out of
Bo
sto
n
al
Phoenr
x
pushing for a high bail.
Only gam es scheduled
the hole."
Superior Court Judge Jack
AI Hunter, the only Notre
.,
Goertzen went along, setting
Dame
runner to gain more
ball a\ $200,000, but agreed to
NHL Slandmgs
,
N\l'loSlder a motion to lower lt
By Un1ted Press International than 1,000 yards In a season,
" "'"'
Campbell Conference
was
named
the
Gator
Bowl's
OKLAHOMA
CITY,
Okla.
(&amp;ter,
Patrrck DIVISIOn
(UP! ) - Freshman Ernie •
W L T Pis GF GA most valuable player after
He tentali veIY scheduled Phda
" 1 a 50 m 95 rushing for 102 yards and H111 hll eight of 11 !run the ,
Miss Van Houten's second NY l sl andrs 12 8 4 48 121 80
both Irish touchdowns - on field and added nine free .,
trill fot the murders of Leno Allanta
11 11 7 41 119 101
.
to
N Y Ranger s \ 4 1• 10 38 13!1 130 matching oneyard plunges
throws for 25 points In leading
and Rosemary LaBl&amp;nC8
Smythe 01VIStOn
late
In
the
first
and
second
OklahOma
City to a 97-73
begin Jan. 28, but attorneys
W L T PIS GF GA
periods.
victory over Ohio University .
for both sides agreed ~~~~~~~s
J~ ~ ~; ~~~ g~
The Uona' lone touchdown, In the flrat round of the 41Jt
postponements will probably vancouver 10 25 3 23 102 150
on
an eight-yard pass from annual All College Baaketball
delay it until March.
Colorado
8 22 5 21
96 129
Mmn esot&amp;
6 70 8 20 88 1dd sophomore
quarterback Tournament Monday night.
An appeals COurt niled th at
Wales Conference
Chuck
Fualna
to frestunan
The victorious Chlefa, using '
Miss VanHouten was dented
Norn s 01v1s1on
fullback
Matt
Suhey,
came
baD
control and accurate
W
L
T
Pis
GF
GA
elf eellve represen tation at Montreal 11 5 d se 111 78
with
mly
8:37
left
In
the
shooting
the outside,
the first trial In 1970 because P•llsburgh 15 16 5 35 113 12• game. Notre Dame turned had threefrom
otheu
In double 1
her lawyer disappeared near Los Angel~s 11 " 10 34 111 m
o rt roll
11 19 d 18 102 125 back two other fourth1JI!rlod , figwea. Calvin Montgomery
the end of lhe Jl'oceedings. w shlngtn 10 10 4 l 4 •s 140 scoring
bhrea~
with scored 20 points and
Keith took over, but the
Adams Otvlslon
Interceptions.
·teammates Clydell Tucker
W
L
T
PIS.
GF
GA
appeaIs court ruled Illat he su fa lo
23 8 3 49 127 79
PaM
State's
first
mistake
Greg Krause each added
had Insufficient preparation, Bo ton
n 11 3 47 136 113 came immediately after the , and
12.
and her case should have Toronlo
10 15 6 38 136 124
11 19 7 29 108 127 Uons' took an early 3.() lead
•
Cle ve l and
Ohio's Steve Skaggs scored
been severed and a new trial
Monday ' s Results
on a 7&amp;-yard field goal by 18 polnta, while Ernie Whltus
granted.
Los Angele s 1 Delroll d
Tooy Capozzoli!. That was added 14 for the loaers.
air]&amp;
Monlreal 4 Cleve land 2
Manson a nd the three oAll&amp;n t&amp; 6 Color &amp;do 2
letting
Terry Eurtck find
OCU hit a strqpg :M of 56 or
-Miss VanHouten. Patricia Philadel phia 5 Vancouv er 1
l'llllnlng
r'oom
on
the
right
eo.
7 por cent from the field,
Krenwlnkle and Susan Aikins
!Only games schedu led I
Tuesdily's Games
sidelines lor a 65-yard klckO!t' while uie llobcilta managed
N Y Rangers at Wa sh m gton
return that set up Hunter's 31 of llO for 38.8 per cent.
NY Islanders at St LO UI S
Los Angeles at Ml')ne sota
first touchdown.
,.
The win improved the
stories from the standpomt of
!Only games schedul ed ]
The
second
was
a
Mike
Chief's.
~n mark to 4-.1
Wednesday ' s Games
long-range slgnl8cance.
Guman fumble at the Penn and Ohio Is now 4-2 for the
Buffalo at A tlanta
Carter's defeat of Gerald Montreal at Ptllsburgh
State 24 that set up the first of year.
R. Ford In the presidential washmgton at Colorado
two 23-yard field goals by
In the tournament's ,
Detro1t at Chl c:ago
race also was voted the • Tor
onto at Cle11eland
Dave Reeve and a 10-3 Irish opener, five.Brigham Young .
number one story 111 this Boston at Vancouver
lead with 8:49 to go In the players scored In double '
!Only game'!. '!. Chedul ed l
category.
hall.
figures as the Cougars .Second place went to tbe
World Hockey
The
third
was
a
24-yard
defeated St. J~'s, 68,56 .•
Auoclatlon Standmgs
leadership transition In China
Scott Fltzkee punt that left
., •
Un1ted Press lnternat1ontll
following the death of Mao
East
the
Irish
In
good
position
to
;
W L T Pis GF GA
Tsetung and Cllou En-lai, the
drive
In
for
Hunter's
second
21 15 I 43 165 135
two ranking officials of the Quebec
Indian
18 13 2 3S 109 120
touchdown.
Clllnese Communist party. CtnC IM 17 15 2 36 152 12-4
"
"I won't take anything
New E ng 15 17 4 34 119 127
The top 10 headline storle•: M
away from Notre Dame,''
14 17 4 32 106 112
tn n
"
COACH RESIGNS
1. Jimmy Carter's election. Birm 1ng 13 25 I 27 132 153 said
Paterno.
"They
HONOLULU (UP!) - Mike-'
West
2. Legionnaire's disease.
executed well and they have a Rasmussen, the University of ·
W L T Ptl GF GA
3. Kidnapping of 26 San OH!QO 22 13 1 d6 129 115 good football team. But, we
Chowchilla, Calif. Houston 11 14 4 38 120 110 played well only In spurts. I Hawall's quarterback coach•
WlnntDeQ 18 I ~ I 17 UR 117
the past two years, resigned
schoolchildren.
feel bad lor our seniors who Monday to become an of, :
Edmon
16 19 1 33 97 124
4. China translUon.
Calgary l..t 17 2 30 100 101
bad such great careers, but fenslve •.• back • coach at '
13 20 2 28 116 155
S. Ellzabeth Ray-Wayne Hays Phoenix
Mond1y's Results
BOwling Green,
scandal.
I No games scheduled I
Tuesday's Games
6. Patricia Hearst trial.
lndtan&amp;polis at PhoentK
7. Israell raid on Uganda Qulebec
a t Edmonton
TIIED.U.Y SENTINEL
airport at Entebba, freeing Wlnn tpeg at Hou ston
DEVOTED to THE
New England at M innesota
IN'IEIII:n OF
hostages.
(Cinly games scheduled)
MEKl&amp;MAiiON
AIIEA
8. U.S. ' Viking spacecraft
Wednesday's Games
CHESTEIU. TANNEHILL
Monday's
IJ
No
game'!.
'
!
.
Ctiedul
ed
landings on Mars.
Elee. Etl.
Oh1o College
...
ROBERT HOEFLICH
9. U.S. Bicentennial.
Basketb1ll Scores
International Hockey
Cllyl!.daor
Un1ted Pr&amp;ulnternatlonal •
10. Death of Howard Hughes.
Lngue st1nd1ngs
1'11bllahod dally ...... S.tunlay
Far West Clanlc
lntern1flonal
by The Ohio valley l'llblilhln&amp; c.mLaue RaDle Slplllcance United Press
Oregon 64 Bowling Green SA
North
&amp;n)', Ill Cowt St , P«neroy, Ohio
0
I. Carter's election.
Motor City Classic
W. L T Pts GF GA
46'119 Businest Office Phone m.
t&lt;ent St1te 16 Sf
Peter•S:
Kalama
17 13 J 37 147 121
2111 lldltorUtl Pltooem2117.
2. China transition.
INJ .I 69
"
Flint
16 loll o11 36 142 121
Second clus poatage p1id at
3. Mars landings.
q

CLOTIIING OFFERED
Free clothmg day will be
held at the SalvatiOn Army,
Pomeroy, Thursday, Dec. 3o
from 10 a m. to noon All area
residents In need of clothing

Development
changes asked

Husband doused, burned

City

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - They've come up with a brand new
name lor themselves. The Go-Crazy Minnesota Vildnga.
They're so high , so !Ired up and anxious to go , they wish the
Super Bowl game was Wednesday Instead of two weeks from
now.
Their coach, Bud Grant, says &lt;Ill this relatively sudden
Intense fervor can be attrlooted to a new dimension the
Vikings have added, a dunenslon he calls emotion.
Personally, Bud Grant isn't an emoti&lt;llallndividual. On a
good day, be !!bows about as much as the Statue of Uberty, but
he 's buying aU this emotion among the players of his team
readily and unreservedly. First, because they're wlnnlng; secood, because tlley've never been happier, and any Ume a
team la wlnnlng ana happy It follows logically the coach of that
team has to be happy. too.
In the past, the Vikings usually reflected the austerity and
rigidity of the man who was coaching tilem, Bud Grant. They
showed hardly any emotion at all. They were so highly
disciplined, they all lined up and stood at attention for the
National Anthem exactly the same way.
Then Ahmad Rashad, the affable, oulgolng wide receiver,
came to Minnesota last Septembe~ and be gradually Introduced the Go-Crazy life style to tbe Vlldngs, who went for 11 In a
1
big way.
What Ia Go-Crazy actually? Mostly It's a happy, hwnorous,
sometimes obscene manifestation of camaraderie among the
players, designed for no other purpose than to keep everyone
loose and In a good mood. O.J.Simpson ts a devout bellever In
the style and Rashad picked It up when he was with the Buffalo
Bills.
As the VIkings employ It, It is a form of emotional release, an
"In" thing they joke about anytime, anywhere. The subject
matter they choose isn't Important. It's how they say It that
counts, the language!they use, which would be considered
profane by othel'!! but not to them.
Actually, there is nothing new about the whole thing.
The Go-Crazy pattern has been around In sporta a long time.
Nobody refilled it to a sharper edge than Muhammad Ali, not
only to motivate and amuse himself but ail tl!Ose around him.
Ali says it has helped him out of some tough spots.
He says, for example, be recalls the time a dog came at him,
menacing and snarling, looking for a piece of him. Ali says he
charged right baek at the dog, waving his bands wildly In the
air and hollerlngattheanbnal even louder than it was barking
at him. It worked, Ali Insists.
Pepper Martm used pretty much thiS same Go-Crazy 1dea
with the St. Louis Cardinals m the '30s. Only he did 11 has own
particular way. He was a big league ballplayer and was
supposed to be aU busmess, but one night he'd be driving a
midget auto racer somewhere, the nell\ night he'd be
refereemg a wreslllng match and the following night he'd be
dropping bags of water upon unsuspecting pedestrians from
his hotel window.
In Boston one evening, he let one of those water bags go from
the sixth floor and It landed squarely on Frankie Frisch, the
Cardinals' manager at the tune. Thsl was a little too Go-Crazy.
Frisch never saw where the water had come from, but he knew
who was responSible .
•
"There's mly one guy on thl.s club who would do anything
like that,'' he roared at Mike Gonzalez, one of his coaches. "Go
find Marlin and tell him that little joke will cost him a hundred
dollars !n
More recently, tile Oakland A's did things that raised a lot of
eyebrows. They acknowledged their free-wheelihg style wasn't
necessarily for everybody, but they also pointed out it d1dn't
keep them from winning three world championships
Hyou go back a couple of thousand years, Plato said, "What,
then, is the right way of living? Life must be lived as a play,
playing certain gBI)Ies, making sacrifices, slngmg. and
danCing, and then a man will be able to propitiate the gods, and
defend himself against hill enemies, and wm in the contest."
The Minnesota Vlkmgs have a good thing gomg for them.
Whether it's enough to help them beat the Oakland Raiders
Jan. 9 is something else again, but Bud Grant Isn't about to
order them to knock 11 off.

By
Uulted
Preu
lateruallonal
Bowling Green's highi!D•ered offense was held In
check \l'[onday night by
defensive-minded Oi'egoo In
the opening round of the 21Bt
annual Far West Classic.
Oregon's tenacious defense
stopped Bowling Green cold
and the Ducka won a convlnc·
lng iiU4 victory.
Bowling Green coach John
Welriert, who said the play of
hls club may have "set
basketball back 30 years,''
claimed experience was the
difference.
"We're awfully young and
played a very experienced
ball club, a very smart ball
club,'' Weinert said.
Bowling Green w!ll tangle
with Oral Roberts m a
consolation game Wednesday
night
Oregon, ranked 18th In thl!
nation and third defenalvely,
held the Falcons scoreless for
a 5Y, minute stretch midway
through the first hall, and for
another 4:18 to end the hall
with a 37-:lllead.
The Falcons, now 3-4 on the
season, were averaging 80
points a game before Monday
night.
Roo Hannye and Tommy
Harris led Bowling Green
with 19 apiece. HarriS hsd
been averaging 24 points a
game.
In other first round tournament games , Kent State
downed St. Peter's (N.J.) 7974ln the Motor City Classic at
Detroit, host Oklahoma City
whipped Ohio University 9773ln the Ali-O&gt;llege Toomey,
Kenyon edged Thomas More
(Ky. ) 85-81 and Oh1o
Northern thumped Wayne
State (Mich.) BUS m the
Colonial ClassiC at Mt.
Vernon, Capital got by
Carthage (Wis.) 81).76 and
Wittenberg overwhelmed
Concordia of St. Paul (Mlnn )
91-40 in the Lutheran
Brotherhood Tournament at
Minneapolis, and Marietlil
beat Elizabeth City (N .C ) 8976 111 the Greater Bluefield
(W.Va ) Invitational.
Kent State got off to a slow
start and trailed St. Peter's,
IU, with seven minutes gone
111 the first hall, but the
Golden Flashes came back to
take a ~7 haHUme lead.

College Ba 5.k etball Resul ts

Tournaments
(lsi Round Action)
All College Tournament
BYU 68 St Joseph 's P a 56
Ok la Ctly 97 Oh to U 73
B1g 8 Holiday Tourney
Mr ssour 1 81 Iow a St 67
K ansas 51 74 Ok la St 56
ECAC Holiday F est1va1
M anhattan 60 LIU 56
Gee town 0 C 79 Fa 1rfld 69
Far West Cla SS IC
No Ca r 100 0 Robert s 84
Or egon 66 Bowlmg Gree n 5~
Loutslana Cla ss1 c
LSU 101 Mont an a St 81
V1lla nova 64 Hofslra 62
Mtlwaukee Cla s!ilc
W1 s 74 Boston Col i 66
M arquell e 67 Clemson 49
Motor Ctty Cl ass tc
Kent St 76 51 Peter s 69
Oetr01t 79 Cente nar y 74
Reno Cla n tc
utah 107 IdahO 66
Nev Reno 78 Pepprdne 68
Sen 1or Bowl
Te)( aS Tec h 75 So M ISS 74
So Alabama 81 Samford 67
East
Ham•llon 102 St one Hill 87
Harl wt c k 93 1&lt; mg 's Pa 74
Pr a l l 109 Stevens Tec h 66
Towson 9 1 Ph1l a Ph arm 71
w est Chester 79 Wdmngtn 73
South
So uthern 87 tnd Purd ue HI
M1ctwest
Dep aul 86 Br ed ley 80
Knyn Coli 85 Thos M or r- 81
Oh10 Nr thrn 82 Wayn e St 69
West
Ar l zona 90 Sta nfor d 82
M ontana 84 E M onlana 63
Pactf ic 85 Sac: lo St 75
uc Sta Br b 100 St Xav Ill 75
Wa sh St 69 Fr esno 51 62

..

Wa~iQrs top ·
Tigers, 74-66
I

j

"'

'

By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Writer
Thill is a classic week In
college basketball-as In Far
West Clamc~ · Louisiana
Classic, Milwaukee Classic,
Motor City Classic, Rainbow
Classic, Rel!o Classic and the
rest of the holiday
tournaments.
A number of the tourneys
began Monday rught and the
rest start on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
, In the first round of the
Milwaukee Classic, Butch
!lee scortd 17• •points and
Marquette stopped Clemson's
hlgb-ecorlng offense to hand
the Tigers their first defeat
alter seven victories, 74-116.
Marquette seeka Its ninth
straight Milwaukee Classic
title Tuesday night against
Wisconsin, which edged
Boston College, 74-68.
PhU Ford acored 211 points
8nd Walter Davis added 18 as
No. 6 North Carolina
overcame a 46-polnt effort by
• ~thony Roberts to beat Oral
1Roberta, 100-84, In the
lopenqgameoltheFar West
1Classic In PorUand.
• In the nightcap of the Far
·weal Classic, 2oth-ranked
Oregon stopped hlgh«&lt;rlng
Bowling Green, iJU4, The
Ducks, the third best
defensive team In the
country, were sparked
ollensively by GreR Ballard

i

'

with 19 points and Rob Closs
with 18. Ron Hannye and
Tommy Harris led the
Falcons with 19 each.
In one of the few games
that wasn't part of a
tournament, AriZOna held off
Stanford, 90-82, as Herman
Harris scored 14 of his 24
points In the second hall.
Stanford led, 37-35, at the
half, but Arizona moved
ahead, 67-56, with 8:41
remaining. '
Scott Sims, who hlt 1ilx
straight free throws during a
tecmlcal foul barrage late In
the first half, scored 26 points
to lead Miaaourl to an 81-6'1
victory over Iowa State In the
opening round of the Big
Eight llollday Tournament.
In fhe second game of the
Big Eight tourney, of which

defeated OklBhoma State, 7456.
In · other tournaments,
Geor•etown beat Fairfield,
e
79-G9, and Manhattan downed
Long island University,~.
In the ECAC Holiday Festival
In New York. In the All
College Tournament In
Oklahoma City, Brigham
YOWII! beat St. Jooeph's, 6856,and0Ida homa CityrO uted
Ohio Unlvenlly , 97-73. In the'
openinggameoftheRalnbow
Classic, Houston edged
DUnols, ~-

,,

The

Uri I I e d Pr ess lnt ern &lt;'l110ne l
Board of Coa ches ' colleg e
basketba ll ratmgs w i th won tosl
r ecords lhr ough qam es of
Saturday. Dec 25 and number
ot f 1r st piece vot es m paren

th eses !fourth weeki

Team
1 M1 c h1gan (32 ) IS 0)
2 Notre Dt~m e
f1 OJ

Poonts

Jn

en

3 San Franm co W 111 01
4 Alaba ma ( fl OJ

~

1

Ctnc mnatt 17 Ol

• North Carohna 15 11
7 Kcnlucky .(6 11
8 UCL A f 7 I )
• Nevada Las Vegas IR
to Wake Forcsl 17 01
11 Cl em son 17 0 1
11 Mmncso ta , R 01
13 Amona lA 11
14 Mdrquc ll e (&lt;~ '})
II I OU &gt;SV&gt;II C f\ 11
t6 Maryland 11 11
,, " rkanm 1801
18 Syra cuse ! 7 1)
t9 tnwa 11 01

l }(J
.

Orro on II 11

144

m

11

sea son , a 22-0 loss to
Michigan
"I've got tilem back nght
now,'' he sa1d of his ankles.
"It's been a bad season for
me. I want to go out With two
good games, have a great one
here and a great one in the
Senior Bowl."
The senior fullback says he
figures that would go a long
way toward making him
more desirable for pro
scouts.
Hasselbeck, a 6-7, 250poWld semor who also is
hoping to be a high draft
choice, played the final three
games of the season With hts
broken left hand in a cast.
He was unable to catch a
pass In that time, but the cast
1s off now and both he and his
coach, Bill Mallory , figure he
will be ready for the Orange
Bowl.
H[)on had the cast removed
about two weeks ago and his
hand Is much better ,"
Mallory said. "He's getting
much moa;e strength In 11 and

at the mere thought of
another big show :
"We'd been wa1tlng for th1s
game a long time and we
knew all along that we would
beat them (the Steelers).
We're on our way to
Pasadena and I've been there
before. But that was m
college and this w11l be for lbe
championship of !he world.
Imagine that!"
And, Oakland will not be
underdogs as they were
against the Stee)ers; they are
four-point favorites to beat
the NFC champion Mmnesota
VIkings on Jan. 9.
Steeler quarte,rbaek Terry
Bradshaw was so impressed
with Oakland's running game
Sunday that he predicted, "ff
the Raiders can run on
Minnesota, they'll win."
COach John Madden gave
hls players off Monday with
plans to resume practice
Wednesday . He also looked
forward to quarterback Ken
Stabler's return - he was

NEW YORK tUPI ) - Powers, Manhattan, John
Michigan maintained its No . Thompson, Georgetown
I ranking this week In the
MIDWEST: Johnny Orr,
United Press IntemaUonal Michigan ; Bob Nichols,
Board of Coaches' college Toledo; Digger Phelps, Notre
basketball ratings, but Dame; Ray Meyer, DePaul;
se&lt;.'Ond..-anked Notre Dame Tex Winter , Northwestern;
and third-ranked San AI McGuire, Marquette
Francisco each gained
SOUTH · Frank McGuire,
ground.
South Carolma; Dean Smith,
Michagan, which defeated North Carolina, Lefty
Central M1ch1gan, 1~ , last Drlesell, Maryland; C.M.
week for its fifth victory Newton, Alabama; Hugh
Without a loss, received 365 Durham , Florida State;
pomts, 4lless tban \be week Norman Sloan, North
before, while Notre Dame, 7-11 Carolll1a State.
alter trouncing Vermont, 8948, p1cked up 40 points for a
total of 275.
San Francisco, which
defeated Oral Roberts, 86-78, •
and Cal Poly-Pomona, 96-&amp;,
to Improve Its record to 12-11,
picked up four first-place
votes and a 244-polnt total.
Alabama remained No. 4,
but Cincinnati JllOved mto the
No. S position, replacing
Marquette, which lost Ita
second game, 66-59 to
Wllh help for jOIII
Minnesota, and dropped out
car ho111P.I1fr and
of the top 10.
health in~urance .
North Carolina climbed
from No. 9 to No. 6, Kentucky
• e me.
remained No . 7 and UCLA
No. 8, ,while Nevada-Las
Vegas moved up two
149 South Third Slreel
positions to No. 9. Wake
Mtddleporl, OhtO
Forest, unbeaten In seven
992 -7155
games, moved Into the No 10
slot, replacing Clemson,
SU!H fAIM
which was 1dle.
Here, by sections, are the
coaches who comprise the
INSUIAN(I
UPI major college basketball
ratings board ,
EAST: Lou Camesecca. St.
Joho's; Chuck Daly, Penn ;
Insurance Companies
Tom Young, Rutgers; Jack
Kraft, Rhode Island, Jack •

~
55

'~

~7
''
~;

•·t
"

i

·~:~:1

DELTA 88
ROYALE
'5795

he 's been recelvmg the ball
well."
Colorado, however, will be
without backup running ba ck
Howard Ballage, who tore a
ligament 111 his knee In drills
last · Fnday . Mallory
dlsclosed M o n d a y the !Sapound sophomore would have
to undergo an operation and
was lost lor the game.
"It will hurt guys from a
depth standpoint,'' Mallory
said of Ballage's mjury.
"We'll go with a freshman,
Charlie Martin,and use him a
bit to spell Tony Reed."
But he said if It was
necessary, Reed could go all
the way
Reed 's record backs up
Mallory 's faith Th e 192pound all-BI8 Eight choice,
who played his h1gh school
ball m Japan , gained 1,210
yards this year In a school
record 284 carries
"He has great endurance,
and has played most of the
time," Mallory said. "He 'll
go as long as you want."

taken out of the Stceler game
after being hit 111 the ribs on
his second touchdown pass.
The X-rays showed no breaks
and Stabler pleged he would
be ready for !he Super Bowl
and the Vikings
"I wouldn't miss it for
anytillng."

Karr &amp; VanZandt

If your insurance agent can't give you
"worry free" service, fire him and hire
M1ck.

"let Mick Do It!"·

You may never have to worry about
insurance again .

DOWNING CHILDS ~
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
992 -1342

Middleport, 0.

JUMBO FRANKS.~~~~~~~~-5
~~:.~1.10
WIENERS ~-~~~~i.~:~. ':~~:.:.~~~-- . . . . ......... .......... :.~~-. gge
CANNED HAMS ~-~~-..~-~~~........................... ~~-~4.95
1~·. 99'
.~~~-~~~~~
HAM
.. .................... . ....

•• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; ••• •

l-Ib. Teen

~~~

MARGARINE
QUARTERS.......
2 lb. Teen Queen

2FO,':7 9~

~~: .............~.~~-~129
ORIEDO

FRENCH FRIE$ ..............................~..1-~:. 75$

Like a good
neighbor,
State Farm
is there.

8 ct. 3 Mill Bestpak Trash Bags •••••••• '1.10
3 oz. Reg. Jellos •••••••••••••••••••••• !.~2 for 41 •
'
'
14112 oz. Jeno Cheese Pizza ••••
59•
20 oz. Del Monte Chunk Plneapple •••••• 49•

BILL FLETCHER

27 oz. Teen Queen Kraut.~········•2 for 69•
Gallon of Rich and
Ready Orange Drink ......................... 89•

:!j .
110

player, Tim Appleton, who State. Mitch
Miracle
scored 26 pomts In a game slammed In 15 points and
last year.
Gary Hursey had 14 for
Brad Longberry scored 21 Marietta, which hlked Ita
pomts and pulled down 12 season standing to 4-2.
rebounds to lead Ohio
Northern to Its victory over
Wayne State. Tom Bramlage
Tlll,l - k' s Speet•l
added 18 poin ts for the
•
winning Polar Bears.
At Minneapolis, Wittenberg
hsd lltUe trouble with Con·
cordia of st. Paul. The Tlgl)rs
raced to a 26-3lead In the first
USED ~S
five minutes and coasted to .
an easy victory in the
Lutheran Brot he r hood
Invitational.
In the same tourney,
Capital sank 15 straight free
thr ows In the final 61&gt;
minutes to down Carthage . HT Cpe, fu l l power .
Wittenberg and Capital , fa ctory air, ster eo. 18,000•.
both member of the .Qhlo mtl cs
Athletic Conference, wlll
tangle tonight for the tourney
championship.
( less 10 Pet Ot SCOUJlt}
Ano~r OAC member , Maraetta, plays host Bluefield
(WVa). State tonight In the
championship game of the
You' lll.lke Our Quallly
Gr e ate r Blu e field
Way ot Doing Buslnen
GMAC FINANCING
Invitation•I.
Pomeroy
992-53&lt;3
Jeff Faloba canned 22
Open Evenings '1116:00
points to pace Marietta In its
TillS p m. Sol
VIctory over Elizabeth City

'76 OLDS

Michigan is No.1

Ratings

Mt.uri has won four in the
past five years, Kansas State

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) Only four members of the
Oakland Ra1ders were with '
the AFC champions when
they last appeared m the
Super Bowl.
That was In a losing effort
against the Green Bay
Packers afier the 1967
season. The Raiders went on
to chalk up the National
Football League's best
overall won~oss record but
they always m1ssed the
return ticket !o the Super
Bowl - until their 24-7 win
over Pittsburgh Sunday.
Cornerback Willie Davis,
looking back to hls f~rst Super
Bowl game With Oakland,
says this year's Raiders
should do better.
"There can be no doubt that
thiS is the greatest Oakland
Raider team ever observed
Davis, a Raider standout of
the past 10 seasons.
Another Super Bowl
veteran, running back
Clarence DaVIS, was excited
1"

FOOTBALL
NE W YOR K tu PI\

Oklahoma City used ball
control and accurate shooting
fr om the ouistde to defeat the
Bobcats, now 4-2

Ulllo's Steve Skaggs scored
16 points, while Ernie Whltus
added 14 for tile losers.
In the fifth annual Colonial
Clssalc, Kenyon w!ll defend
its title to nigh t In the
championship game against
Ohio Northern.
Kenyon's Evan Eisner
dumped In 32 points (15 field
goals and two free throws ) to
set a single-game tournament
record as the Lords downed
Thomas More. The old mark
was held by another Kenyon

Raiders like chances

e.,. Untied Press lnt ernolftonal

VIkings, 011 a four-4lay bollday alter wilullDC the Natloaal
Football Coalereoce IItle, go back to wort Friday for their
fourth Super Bowl game with a new dlmeaalon going for
them - emotloa.
The Vltlllgs predict thai iD tbls Super Bowl, agalnsl
the Oakland Raiders al Pasadena Jau. 9, they'll finally
win. The team will vacation through 'Iburaday - wbUe
the coaches study films of Oakland games -and wort out
ooa home field Friday alld Sullday, with New Year's Day
off.
The Vltlllgs will Oy to California nut Monday for a
week of warm.,.ealber pt'llctiee 11 the I..Gnl Beach
headquarters of the Los Angeles Rams, the team they
. ·.'•' ......
....bea~,
....... . ..··•...··~~Y...
..··· .. .. f.~r·.·..t!'~.
.. ..~--~·
.. ~....plo~~bip.
. ............. . ......... ......

~\.t " •

MIAMI (UPI) - One of the
nice th111gs about playing In a
major bowl game la it g1ves
you plenty of time to heal the
wounds from an ll.game
season.
Two cases In point are
fullback Pete Johnson of Ohio
state and tight end Don
Hasselbeck of Colorado, the
Buckeyes' opponent m the
Orange Bowl Saturday mght.
Johnson a bruising 24llpounder, played all but the
first three games of the
season with two strained
agkles that limited his
rushing totals to 698 yards
and 18 touchdowns
"I was In tears every game
because my ankles were so
messed up," he said Monday.
"I went a month and a hall
without practice. The ankles
would get swollen ~p so badly
after a game I could hardly
walk."
But Johnson has healed
considerably since the Buckeyes' final gam e of the

BASKETBALL

('UP
·:·:·.:·:.·i'"·;·:·:..:·:.·:·.:.:·,:. n
·:·:.·:.:·.·:~·:·::·. :·
·
·~~:- ..

The Flashes will play the
University of Detroit In torught 's championship game.
In the na tion 's oldest
holiday season tournament ,
Oklahoma City freshma n
Ernie Hill hit e1ght of II from
the f1eld and added nine Iree
tllrows for 25 pomts In leading
the Chlefa to victory over OU

Johnson ready
for bowl tilt

®

··: :··: ·::;;J;;;~~~~N; -~..:·:·.:·.:·:·:.·

zt!J·..

St. Peter's rallied In the
second half to take the lead
once again , but Kent State
took over for good with three
minutes gone In the second
haH, 42-41, before scoring sli
In a row to wrap up the
contest.
The Golden Flashes had
four men In double figures,
led by Burrell McGhee w1th
16, Cort02e Brown with 15 and
Trent Groom With 14.
Kent State evened Its
season mark at 4-4 while St
Peter's fell to 3-5

A

STATE FARM
llomoOIII~.;b,Bioommgton,llhnols

1 1 ••• 1 . . . . . . .

28 oz.

Brown Apple lutter••• ~ ••••••••• 89•
rafl Grape Jelly..................... 59'

10' 2 oz. Hilton's Oyster Stew••• 2 for '1.G9

.1.---------------------····-••111
Mr. Baa 69c Chlps•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.49•
•

,.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tuesd•Y. Dec. 28, 1976

Hays downfall tops Ohio news
By EDWARD DIPIETRO
United Prtu lnttrnalloaal

A sex scandal which
knocked Rep. Wayne Hays off
the pinnacle of coogresslonal
power, broke hls health and
forced him to resign in
disgrace after 28 years In the
House was selected by Ohio
edltora as the top news story
In the state during 1976.
Hays' downfall began May
~ when Ellz.abeth Ray. a 33year-old platinum blonde and
former
Capitol
Hill
secretary, said she did
nothing In her $14,IJOO.a-year
congressional staff job but
serve as Hays' mistress
Hays, 65, who relished a
reputation as "the meanest
man in Congress," at first
denied any sexual association
with Miss Ray but a few days
later admitted to a brief
affair.
House Democrats, step by
step, forced Hays out as
chairman
of
the
Administration and
Democratic campaign
spending committees.
On June 10 he was hospitalized In a coma from an
overdose of sleepmg pills. He
said later the overdose was
accidental. He resigned on
Sept. I with a one-oentence
letter to the Speaker of the
House
The other mne top news
stories of the year selected

were;
2. Carter's VIctory In the
Ohio presidential election
3
Workmen's
compensation frauds.
4. OhiO Supreme Court
upholds the death penalty
S. The Medicaid criSIS.
6. Volkswagen Corp.
decides against Brook Park,
Ohio, as the location for a
U.S. assembly plant.
7. A shortage of more than
$500,000 In deputy registrar
fees Is uncovered m the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
8 Eight teen;~ge rs killed in
a highway acc1dent m
Minster.
9. A new rate -makmg

formula for public utilities.
10. The 130-day United
Rubber Workers' strike.
Former Georgia Gov.
Jimmy Carter led a
Democratic sweep of Ohio,
outpolllng President Ford by
11,116 votes In the closest
Jl'esidentlal balloting In the
state since 1948.
Do:mocrat Howard M. Met·
zenbaum of Cleveland won
hls third try for the Senate,
ousting Republican Sen.
&amp;bert Taft Jr ., and the
Democrats picked up two
more congressional seat!.
The presidential election
was so close In Ohlo that
Ford's supporters requested
and received a recoiDII. The
U.S. Labor party took legal
steps to prevent certlflcati&lt;n
of Carter's election because
of votmg •fraud, but were
rebuffed by a federal judge at
the last minute.
After news accounts
revealed
fraudulent
workmen's compensation
claims and payments, both
Gov. James A Rhodes and
the legislature began
mvestlgaUons.
Rhodes relieved Kennetil
Krouse, administrator of the
Bureau of Workmen's
Compensatioo, and replaced
Gregory
Stebbins
as
chairman of the state
Industrial Conunission.
He also fired Stebbins from
the conunission altogether,
but It took the Democratic·
controlled Senate months to
ratify the dismissal because
Stebbms was an appointee of
former Democratic Gov .
John J. Gilligan and backed
by organized labor.
On Nov . 24, the Ohio
Supreme Court upheld the
state's death penalty and
ruled 11 does not Impose
"cruel
and
unusual
punishment" within the
meaning of the U S
Const1tutioo.
The court ruled In the cases
of two men and set execution
dates for both.
" It cannot be clalllled tilat

punishment by death In Ohlo
Is excessive because it ill
grossly disJI'oportlonal to the
severity of the crime, for
death l.s Imposed only In
cases of purposeful murder
and ooly when ooe or more
specific aggravating factora
are also present," the court
said.

Ohio now hss 61 persons on
death row and the last
execution In the state was
March 16, 1963.
A shortage In Medicaid
funds led to the biggest
squabble of the year between
the governor and majority
Democrats In the legislature
Rhodes blamed Insufficient
appropriations, while the
lawmakers blamed poor
administration In the Public
Welfare Department.
The shortage grew from
tm mllllon to $161 million
over six months. When the
Democrats finally came up
with the full amount, Rhodes
reduced It by $13 million, cut
state spending by another I
per cent and warned
mcreaslng welfare costs
woald require tuition hikes at
Ohio colleges
On May 28, Volkswagen
Corp. announced it would
negotiate with Pennsylvania
for a site at New Stanton, Pa.,
as 1ts first choice for a U S.
auto aOI.'Ielllbly plant.
The German automaking
firm Informed Ohio Gov,
James A. Rhodes that an
abandoned tank plant m
Brook Park, a suburb of
Cleveland, was Its second
choice. Rhodes and the Ohlo
Department of Community
and Economic Development
bad been vying for the plant,
which is expected to employ
S,OOO workers by 1963.
In the story on the Bureau
of Motor Vehicles, news
reporters uncovered a
shortage of more than
$500,000 In deputy registrar
fees in the BMV. Registrar
Curtis Andrews moved to
eliminate the irregularities,
but clashed with his boss,

1\uo-feng
says
war averted
'
By CHARLES R. SMITH

UPI Senior Editor
HONG KONG l UP!)- The
purge of the "Gang of Four"
In October averted "a major
clvU war" in China in which
tile Soviet Uiilon would have
been Involved, according to
Communist party Cllairman
Hua Kuofeng.
Hua called the struggle
, against the gang, led by the
widow of the late party.
Chairman Mao Tse-tung, the
gravest threat In the 27-year
history of the People's
Republlc of China.
The four "exploited the
grave difficulty" facing
China before and after Mao's
death In an al\"mpt "to usurp
the supreme party and state
leadership," Hua said In a
speech delivered Christmas
Day to 8,000 delegates to a '
national conference on
agriculture In Peking
Part of the speech was
transmitted Monday by
Peking Radio and the official
New China News Agency. A
more detalled version was
carried by both today.
"Should their scheme have
succeeded, that would bave
led to a great retrogression

and spilt In our party and
country and touched off a
major civil war," Hua said.
"They would have directly
capitulated to imperialism
and social-Imperialism,
relying on the aggressor's
bayone\ to prop up their
puppet throne, and there
would have been both
Internal strife and foreagn
aggression."
'Social-lmperlallilm'' is the
term the Chinese use to refer
to the Soviet Union.
Hua said it was wrong to
label the four - Madame
Mao (Chiang Ching), Wang
Hungwen, Cbang Chun-ehiao
and Yao Wen-yuan - as
radicals.
"They are ultra-rightists,
out;~nd-out
capitalist
roaders and the most
ferocious
counter..-evolutlonarles . What
'leftIsts"
What
'radicals'!
They could not have l"'fSUed
a line farther to the right !" he
1

said.

"The Infamous records of
Chang Cllun-ehiao, Clllang
Ching and Yao Wen-yuan
show thst they were linked
with the Chiang Kal-ohek
reactionaries In a thousand

and one ways/ ' Hua said. He
called Wang "a typical
representative of the
newborn bourgeoisie."
After Mao's death, when
the four made their move,
"rolling dark clouds hung
over China,n Hua said.
"Such a grave situation had
never amen since the
founding of our people's
republic and was rarely seen
m the history of our party."
When the party central
comrnlttee "adopted resolute
measures" to deal with the
four, Hua said, "the broad
masses rose In response and
swung Into action, and the
issue was settled without
firing a sfngle shot or
shedding a drop of blood "

Highway Safety Director
Donald D. Cook, over policies
and operatioo of the ooreau.
Cook SU8pellded Andrews,
but Rhodes reversed the
suspensioo and reasaigned
both men to other positions.
Cook refused to accept his
new job and left the
administration
On March 7, eight teenagers who were en route to a
dance were killed when they
were struck by a car as they
stood In the middle of a road
near Minster Five others
were Injured.
The eight were among SO
hlgh school students who
formed a caravan of
automobiles to go to the
dance. The lead car stopped
and many of those In trailing
cars got out to see what
happened. A car driven by
John JVemer, 21, of Marla
Stein, came over the crest of
a hlll and plowed 11110 12 of the
youths. ·
The victims were burled In
a cOITilllon grave In Minster
on March 11.
In the utilities story, the
General Assembly, following
an 18-month tug-of-war
between Ohio utillties and
consumer grou~. enacted a
controversial new ratemaking formula designed to
keep public utilities from
paSSlng on to their customers
the full cost of their
Investments and capital construction.
The governor Signed the
measure but warned it probably would not result In lower
utility bills for consumers
On April 21, The United
Rubber Workers Union
struck the "Big Four" tire
makers. The strike lasted for
130 days, idling about 70,000
workers at 47 plants
natwnwlde and costing
employes an estimsted $270
nilllion m lost wages.
During the last week of
August, two major tire
companys - Goodyear Tire
&amp; Rubber Co. and Firestone
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. - came to
terms with the union Shortly
afterward Uniroyal and
Goodrich settled.
The three-year contracts
With the t1remakers mcluded,
for the first tune In the rubber
mdustry, a cost-of~lvlng allowance, the b1ggest sticking
point m negotiations.

UNIT CALLED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse ER Squad Monday
at 9:30a.m. removed Everett
Roush, Racine , who was
involved m an automobile
accident, to Veterans
Memor~al Hospital

are welcome

Carter: big news
NEW YORK (UPI) - stories In the1r ranking of tiie
Jimmy Carter's successful top 10 headline stor~es.
campaign for the presidency
The mysterious disease
was the overwheimlng choice that claimed the Uves of 29.of
today of American editors as those attending an Am~iean
the top news story of 1976.
:..egion convention in
Editors participating In the Philadelplua was second.
UPI also asked the editors
annual poll by United Press
International chose eight to rank the year's biggest
domestic and two fore1~n

DR. LAMB

Air pressure causes ear pain
Lawreace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
flymg to Cahforma for a
vacation. The last tune I flew
I had this terrific Pi"" in my
right ear which was almost
unbearable. Can you suggest
anything I can do to relieve
this' Would packing the ear
help? I am 65 years old.
DEAR READER - For
heavens sakes don't pack
your ear. That Ill the worst
thing you could do. The pam
Ill probably associated With
the cbanges in air pressure.
There as an external •
pressure to all parts of your
body and at sea level it is.
about 15 pounds per square
mch. This pressure 1s also applied to your ear drum The
same pressure 1s transmitted
to the Inside of your mouth
and through a tube to the m·
s1de of your ear. As loog as
the pressure is equal 1ns1de
and outside the ear you have
no symptoms or awareness of
the pressure.
When you first take off the
co"J"'erc1al a1r, hnes now

pressurize the cabm while at drum may cause symptoms.
ground level. This mcreases
Ill a tube at the back
the external pressure and of There
the
mouth
transnuts
may cause trouble Im- the pressure mthat
the mouth to
mediately. At high •llltude, the mtemai ear. If 1\ 18 closed
In flight, the pressure may
any reason - blocked with
decrease but, 1\ IS kept at or for
mflammatlon
from a cold, or
below 7,000 feet. The 7,000
from
an
overgrowth
of lymph
feet altitude though, or even t1ssue, it IS not effective
m
lesser altitudes, IS enough to rapidly equabzmg the mteraffect your ear.
nal pressure to that of the
As the pressure dimlmshes
outs1de
pressure. You 101ght
outs1de the ear, If you don't
iwve
your
doctor elUIITiine
also decrease the pressure myou
to
see
if
you
have normal
Side the mouth and to the mopenings
to
your
ears. .
ternai ear, the unbalanced
To
msure
the
pressure
expressure will push the mner
cbange
some
people
chew
ear contents outward. The
stretching causes the pam. gum. The action allows the
When you finally adjust to the pressure to change rap1dly in
new level and the pressure In· the back of the mouth and
may help keep the tube to the
s1de and outside the ear Ill the mlernal ear open Yawning
same at altitude, all1s well.
The problem starts agam also helps
lf.you do not have a cold
when you descend to land. As and all else falls you can
the external pressure mcreases if the mternal sometimes blow gently while
pressure 1s still eqUivalent to pmching the lip of the nose
the lesser pressure of shut This Will help mcrease
altitude , the external the air 111 the back of the
pressure against the e&lt;lr mouth and m the tube. '11118

NEW ORLEANS tUPI) - A WtiiiWI . . . beell
booked with attempted murder for deouiq ber
buabud wltb g~~ellae, aettlag bJm 011 fire ud cbulq
bbn III'OIDld their bo•e tryiDg to IIIrow more 11101 011 the
O•mes.
Her H111bud, Fred Broob, U, wulllnllllaeto.ry
coacUIIOII Moodily 11 Lbartty IIGiplta1 wiib tlllrd·
degree buru ever b1U of lila llady.
Broou told police dult dDrla&amp; u ~t~wueul, hll
wUe, Barbara, Zl, &amp;l'lbbed I IMOU. till ud dOIIHII
him. She then Ill a ~ of .-por IIIII let the 1110111le
oa Ore, be lllcl. Broou lllcllbe e•aed blm wiib the
caa, tbrowlq mort guollDe oa him, UDIU be dove
lbrougb a bedroom wiDdow. He nld be rolled Ill lbe
gra11 lD put out tbe llames.

should never oe uvne u you
have a cold or you m•ght blow
mfectcd mater~al mto the e&lt;lr
and bave an ear mfeclion as"
complication. And 11 doesn't
work 1! you are having trouble because there IS too much
pressure ms1de compared to
outside the ear, as occurs
while you are at altitude.
I would also like to mentwn
that some people bave more
trouble because they bave an
e&lt;lr partially or completely
blocked with wax Acheck up
before flymg 101ght ellnunate
these problelll.'&gt; for you
For mformation on causes
and treatment of .
"Headache· Man's Most
Coounon Pam, send SO cents
for The Health Letter
number 2-9 with a long,
stamped, sell-addressed
envelope for madmg J lllil
send you•· request
.. to Dr Lamb m c.are of
this newspaper, P.O Box
ISS I, RadiO City Statwn, New
V01·k, NY 10019

Sport Parade

Lawyer says heart also

changed in Mason girl

r------------,
: Pro
I

Irish sock it
to Penn State

...

B bcats

lose to
Chiefs ·

..

n

1

4. CIA-FBI •SCandals.
5. SuJI'eme Court ruling on
capital punishment.
6. Jlaclal unrest grows In
Rhodesia, South Africa.
7. Brltlah economic crisis.
8. Lebanese war.
9. U.S Bicentennial. 10. Lackheed scandal,
Including Indictment of
former Japanese prime
mlnlster.

Musk
15 loll
Saginaw 14 15
PI Huron 15 16

South

4 34 131 129
6 34 131 133
4 34 1 125 131

W l T Pts GF GA
Dayton
17
Toledo
IS
Columbus U
Ft Wayne12

1o11
15
15
19

1 34 134
5 35 145
6 3-4 135
5 '29 12'2
Mond1y 's Results
No games scheduled
Tuesd,ay•s Games
No games scheduled

Wednesdly 's Gamu
Ftmt &amp;t Fort Wayne
Deyton at Sag:m.aw
Toledo at Columbus
M uskegon at Kalamazoo

130
150
136
161

Pttntroy. Ohio
National adverUIJ.na npr:we•
laUve Wtitd - GrllfiUt Cooloiny, loe , Boltlnelll and Gallatdler Dlv.,
7f1 Third An., New York, N.Y.

-lim

111011

-

rolel: O.Uveretl by
e~rrier where ava1lable 7&amp; eenta per
week By Motar Route where c.nier
service not avlillble, 0nt monlh,
$3.2:5. By man ln Cllio 1nd W Va ,
ODe Year tD 10; lll monthl,
$1J.51, Three monthJ, 11 00,
Ellewhere . . 10 year, Sil IDOIIthl
tn !10, Three monthl, f7 50.

~...:'"' lntludoo s.nday

AII· Colleve Tourney

Oklehoma City
University 73

97

Oh ld

L.utheran BrotherhoOd

Tournament
"
Capital 80 Carthage (Wis ) 7&amp;
Wittenberg 91 Contord la of
51 Paul (Minn J 40
Colon1al Claulc
Kenyon 85 Thomas Mor~t

1Ky l 81

,

Oh i o Northern 82 Wevne
1
Stele (Mich ) 69
GreaterBiuefleldfWVal ,

"

Invitational

Marietta 89 EHzabet~

IN C I 76

Ducks stop Bowling Green, 66-54

Today's

OVRDC silo recoounended
PORTSMOUTH - Two
that
the villsge of McArthur ..
major changes have been
be
added
to the Jactaon •
Included In the State's ApWelistoo
growth
corridor but
palachlsn Development Plan
not
for 1977 as a resuH of so far this addltl~s
recommendations made by been approved.
Clark Alexander, 0 DC "
the Ohio Valley Regional
Chalnnan,
aald an effort
"
Development Commlssloli.
be
made
to
amend
the
plan
to
Both concern the "growth
areas" In the 11 county Include \be VInton County "'
seat. The villages of Hamden
dlatrtct.
One was addltlon of the and Coalton are Included In
Waverly - Piketon area the Jackson-Wellston •
•
because of the anticipated corridor.
Other
areas
with
Impact of the ...4 billlon
Atomic Energy Plant ad· significant potential for
dltlon . The other added a growth designated In the :;
Unear growth corridor along State Plan Include the Portsthe Appalachian Develop- mouth • Ironton corridor,
ment Highway from Peebles Chillicothe, Gallipotls, Hllls- received the death west to Batavia to Include by boro, Greenfield, Milford- ;·
By JACK V. FOX
I..OSANGELES (UPI ) -In sentence, later conunuled lD name, the villages of Peebles, 1.-'lveland and the western ,
Seaman. Winchester, Sar- portion of Clermont County
her neat skirt and page-boy life In prisoq.
dinia, Mt. Orab, Willlams· The Gavin Power Plant ' .'
hairdo, time had changed
burg and Batavia In ~dams, Impact area of VInton County •
Leslie Van Hooten's appearBrown and
Clermont (Wilkesvllle area) Is also ::
ance drastically from the
Included.
1
I
Manson Family's bloody
Counties.
I
C'
_1•
I
"Heller Skelter" days of the
1960s, and her attorney ! ;:,t:~nn1ngs 1
argued that 1\ bad changed
National Basketball
her heart too.
Association Slilndl ngs
Untied Press International
MlSS Van Houten, 27, "has
Eattern Conference
been thoroughly rehabilitated
AtlantiC DIVISIOn
and presents no danger to
W. L. Pet . GB
htlll
1!1 12 600
soctety ," her attorney maln- PBos
ton
17 1J 567 1
lalned Monday, arguing she NY Kn tc ks
16 15 516 21h
'"
o
14 19 42d S"1
should be released on ball NBuYffal
"'
Mets
12 19 387 6%
pending a second trial for two
Central DtYISion
wound up wath two straight
By DAVID MOFFlT
W L Pc;t GB
of the murders that made the
HO;J Ston
18
10
64]
losses
(Pitt and Notre
UPI
Sports
Writer
Manson Family Infamous. Cle velan d
19 12 61 3
112
Dame)."
,,
JACKSONVILLE
,
Fla.
The hslr she shaved off N e w Orleans 18 16 529 3
"We
peaked
at
just
the
(UPI)
Penn
State,
whch
San
Antonio
17
16
51
.5
31
'7
with the other Manson girls Wa shlngton 13 17 433 6
never could beat Notre Dame r1ghl time,'' said Hunter.
has grown shoulder length Atlanta
12 23 343 9 1''
back In the '21b when the late "We Improved with every
Western
conference
and her smoothly coiffed
M1dwest Division
Knute &amp;ckne coached the Jl'acllce."
"
bangs covered the faint scar
W L Pet. G B
worked
hard
all
"We
Fighting
Irish,
has
found
out
of the "X" she carved, like Den 11 er
21 10 677
year,"
said
Notre
Dame
'"
19 14 575 3
that a 48-year layoff didn't
the others, Into her forehead. Detro1t
tnd 1ana
15 19 441 7,'4
help lmll'ove that situatloo. Coach Dan Devine. "We
1
The girl who hissed at the Kans Ct!y
14 20 412 8 '7
The
two
nationally looked at this game as a ..
11 16 40 7 e
judge In her first trial spoke Ch 1cago
M il waukee
7 '16 212 15
renowned
independents
met reward (for an 8-3 seaaon). It soflly at the hearing Monday.
PactiiC OIVISton
was good to finish with a win. ~
for
the
first
time
since
1928ln
W l Pet GB
Because of her changed
It makes a good start for nell\ , ,
Por
tland
22
10
688
Mmday
night's
Gator
Bowl,
nature and exemplary record L os Ange les 20 13 606 211,
season."
,J
and
the
result
was
the
same
In prison she qualifies for Golden State 15 1&lt;1 s11 51,
For the record, Notre
- Notre Dame beat Penn
16 18 11 11 7
ball, maintained atlorney Seallle
Phoenlx
13 15 464 1
Dame, which will open a 10. :
State, »e.
Maxwell Keith.
Monday's Results
year home-and-home
Statistically,
the
underdog
No game~ sc heduled
Prosecutor Stephen Kay regular«ason series with u
Tuesd,v
'
s
Games
Nlttany
Uons
played
the
an assistant at the first Houston at NY Kntcks
,
PaM State In 1981 (alter a 53- ~
13th-ranked
Irish
about
even.
multiple murder tr1al of Seatt le a t Atlanta
year
hiatus), now holds a ~ '"
But
Notre
Dame
capitalized
K
an
sas
Ct
ty
at
Cle11
el
and
Charles Manson and three of
Philad elp h i a at San A nton1o
I
11
edge
over the Nittany Lions. ..
on
strong
defensive
play
to
his "girls" - countered, lt Por tl and at Chi cago
wild
a
20-3
halftime
lead
and
•
W&amp;
Shtngton
.,,
lnd1&amp;nl'l
IS one thing to do well In
Pho en1x a t D env er
PeM State couldn't make up
priSOn, but it IS another to Milwaukee
at Gold en State
,,
that much ground despite a
know that if you are again Bo sto n at Los Angeles
strong
challenge
In
the
!mal
0
Only gam es scheduled
convicted of first-degree
Wednesday's Games
period.
murder, you will spend much Kansas
C1ty at Buffal o
"We just got too far behind
Se a tt l e at New York Nel s
more time in prison ...
Philadelp h ia at Hou ston
In
the f1rst half,'' said Penn
"I want to he sure she'll Atlanta et Washin g ton
State
Coach Joe Paterno.
show up" for trlal, he said, P ortland at Oetro rl
'
"We
never
really got out of
Bo
sto
n
al
Phoenr
x
pushing for a high bail.
Only gam es scheduled
the hole."
Superior Court Judge Jack
AI Hunter, the only Notre
.,
Goertzen went along, setting
Dame
runner to gain more
ball a\ $200,000, but agreed to
NHL Slandmgs
,
N\l'loSlder a motion to lower lt
By Un1ted Press International than 1,000 yards In a season,
" "'"'
Campbell Conference
was
named
the
Gator
Bowl's
OKLAHOMA
CITY,
Okla.
(&amp;ter,
Patrrck DIVISIOn
(UP! ) - Freshman Ernie •
W L T Pis GF GA most valuable player after
He tentali veIY scheduled Phda
" 1 a 50 m 95 rushing for 102 yards and H111 hll eight of 11 !run the ,
Miss Van Houten's second NY l sl andrs 12 8 4 48 121 80
both Irish touchdowns - on field and added nine free .,
trill fot the murders of Leno Allanta
11 11 7 41 119 101
.
to
N Y Ranger s \ 4 1• 10 38 13!1 130 matching oneyard plunges
throws for 25 points In leading
and Rosemary LaBl&amp;nC8
Smythe 01VIStOn
late
In
the
first
and
second
OklahOma
City to a 97-73
begin Jan. 28, but attorneys
W L T PIS GF GA
periods.
victory over Ohio University .
for both sides agreed ~~~~~~~s
J~ ~ ~; ~~~ g~
The Uona' lone touchdown, In the flrat round of the 41Jt
postponements will probably vancouver 10 25 3 23 102 150
on
an eight-yard pass from annual All College Baaketball
delay it until March.
Colorado
8 22 5 21
96 129
Mmn esot&amp;
6 70 8 20 88 1dd sophomore
quarterback Tournament Monday night.
An appeals COurt niled th at
Wales Conference
Chuck
Fualna
to frestunan
The victorious Chlefa, using '
Miss VanHouten was dented
Norn s 01v1s1on
fullback
Matt
Suhey,
came
baD
control and accurate
W
L
T
Pis
GF
GA
elf eellve represen tation at Montreal 11 5 d se 111 78
with
mly
8:37
left
In
the
shooting
the outside,
the first trial In 1970 because P•llsburgh 15 16 5 35 113 12• game. Notre Dame turned had threefrom
otheu
In double 1
her lawyer disappeared near Los Angel~s 11 " 10 34 111 m
o rt roll
11 19 d 18 102 125 back two other fourth1JI!rlod , figwea. Calvin Montgomery
the end of lhe Jl'oceedings. w shlngtn 10 10 4 l 4 •s 140 scoring
bhrea~
with scored 20 points and
Keith took over, but the
Adams Otvlslon
Interceptions.
·teammates Clydell Tucker
W
L
T
PIS.
GF
GA
appeaIs court ruled Illat he su fa lo
23 8 3 49 127 79
PaM
State's
first
mistake
Greg Krause each added
had Insufficient preparation, Bo ton
n 11 3 47 136 113 came immediately after the , and
12.
and her case should have Toronlo
10 15 6 38 136 124
11 19 7 29 108 127 Uons' took an early 3.() lead
•
Cle ve l and
Ohio's Steve Skaggs scored
been severed and a new trial
Monday ' s Results
on a 7&amp;-yard field goal by 18 polnta, while Ernie Whltus
granted.
Los Angele s 1 Delroll d
Tooy Capozzoli!. That was added 14 for the loaers.
air]&amp;
Monlreal 4 Cleve land 2
Manson a nd the three oAll&amp;n t&amp; 6 Color &amp;do 2
letting
Terry Eurtck find
OCU hit a strqpg :M of 56 or
-Miss VanHouten. Patricia Philadel phia 5 Vancouv er 1
l'llllnlng
r'oom
on
the
right
eo.
7 por cent from the field,
Krenwlnkle and Susan Aikins
!Only games schedu led I
Tuesdily's Games
sidelines lor a 65-yard klckO!t' while uie llobcilta managed
N Y Rangers at Wa sh m gton
return that set up Hunter's 31 of llO for 38.8 per cent.
NY Islanders at St LO UI S
Los Angeles at Ml')ne sota
first touchdown.
,.
The win improved the
stories from the standpomt of
!Only games schedul ed ]
The
second
was
a
Mike
Chief's.
~n mark to 4-.1
Wednesday ' s Games
long-range slgnl8cance.
Guman fumble at the Penn and Ohio Is now 4-2 for the
Buffalo at A tlanta
Carter's defeat of Gerald Montreal at Ptllsburgh
State 24 that set up the first of year.
R. Ford In the presidential washmgton at Colorado
two 23-yard field goals by
In the tournament's ,
Detro1t at Chl c:ago
race also was voted the • Tor
onto at Cle11eland
Dave Reeve and a 10-3 Irish opener, five.Brigham Young .
number one story 111 this Boston at Vancouver
lead with 8:49 to go In the players scored In double '
!Only game'!. '!. Chedul ed l
category.
hall.
figures as the Cougars .Second place went to tbe
World Hockey
The
third
was
a
24-yard
defeated St. J~'s, 68,56 .•
Auoclatlon Standmgs
leadership transition In China
Scott Fltzkee punt that left
., •
Un1ted Press lnternat1ontll
following the death of Mao
East
the
Irish
In
good
position
to
;
W L T Pis GF GA
Tsetung and Cllou En-lai, the
drive
In
for
Hunter's
second
21 15 I 43 165 135
two ranking officials of the Quebec
Indian
18 13 2 3S 109 120
touchdown.
Clllnese Communist party. CtnC IM 17 15 2 36 152 12-4
"
"I won't take anything
New E ng 15 17 4 34 119 127
The top 10 headline storle•: M
away from Notre Dame,''
14 17 4 32 106 112
tn n
"
COACH RESIGNS
1. Jimmy Carter's election. Birm 1ng 13 25 I 27 132 153 said
Paterno.
"They
HONOLULU (UP!) - Mike-'
West
2. Legionnaire's disease.
executed well and they have a Rasmussen, the University of ·
W L T Ptl GF GA
3. Kidnapping of 26 San OH!QO 22 13 1 d6 129 115 good football team. But, we
Chowchilla, Calif. Houston 11 14 4 38 120 110 played well only In spurts. I Hawall's quarterback coach•
WlnntDeQ 18 I ~ I 17 UR 117
the past two years, resigned
schoolchildren.
feel bad lor our seniors who Monday to become an of, :
Edmon
16 19 1 33 97 124
4. China translUon.
Calgary l..t 17 2 30 100 101
bad such great careers, but fenslve •.• back • coach at '
13 20 2 28 116 155
S. Ellzabeth Ray-Wayne Hays Phoenix
Mond1y's Results
BOwling Green,
scandal.
I No games scheduled I
Tuesday's Games
6. Patricia Hearst trial.
lndtan&amp;polis at PhoentK
7. Israell raid on Uganda Qulebec
a t Edmonton
TIIED.U.Y SENTINEL
airport at Entebba, freeing Wlnn tpeg at Hou ston
DEVOTED to THE
New England at M innesota
IN'IEIII:n OF
hostages.
(Cinly games scheduled)
MEKl&amp;MAiiON
AIIEA
8. U.S. ' Viking spacecraft
Wednesday's Games
CHESTEIU. TANNEHILL
Monday's
IJ
No
game'!.
'
!
.
Ctiedul
ed
landings on Mars.
Elee. Etl.
Oh1o College
...
ROBERT HOEFLICH
9. U.S. Bicentennial.
Basketb1ll Scores
International Hockey
Cllyl!.daor
Un1ted Pr&amp;ulnternatlonal •
10. Death of Howard Hughes.
Lngue st1nd1ngs
1'11bllahod dally ...... S.tunlay
Far West Clanlc
lntern1flonal
by The Ohio valley l'llblilhln&amp; c.mLaue RaDle Slplllcance United Press
Oregon 64 Bowling Green SA
North
&amp;n)', Ill Cowt St , P«neroy, Ohio
0
I. Carter's election.
Motor City Classic
W. L T Pts GF GA
46'119 Businest Office Phone m.
t&lt;ent St1te 16 Sf
Peter•S:
Kalama
17 13 J 37 147 121
2111 lldltorUtl Pltooem2117.
2. China transition.
INJ .I 69
"
Flint
16 loll o11 36 142 121
Second clus poatage p1id at
3. Mars landings.
q

CLOTIIING OFFERED
Free clothmg day will be
held at the SalvatiOn Army,
Pomeroy, Thursday, Dec. 3o
from 10 a m. to noon All area
residents In need of clothing

Development
changes asked

Husband doused, burned

City

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - They've come up with a brand new
name lor themselves. The Go-Crazy Minnesota Vildnga.
They're so high , so !Ired up and anxious to go , they wish the
Super Bowl game was Wednesday Instead of two weeks from
now.
Their coach, Bud Grant, says &lt;Ill this relatively sudden
Intense fervor can be attrlooted to a new dimension the
Vikings have added, a dunenslon he calls emotion.
Personally, Bud Grant isn't an emoti&lt;llallndividual. On a
good day, be !!bows about as much as the Statue of Uberty, but
he 's buying aU this emotion among the players of his team
readily and unreservedly. First, because they're wlnnlng; secood, because tlley've never been happier, and any Ume a
team la wlnnlng ana happy It follows logically the coach of that
team has to be happy. too.
In the past, the Vikings usually reflected the austerity and
rigidity of the man who was coaching tilem, Bud Grant. They
showed hardly any emotion at all. They were so highly
disciplined, they all lined up and stood at attention for the
National Anthem exactly the same way.
Then Ahmad Rashad, the affable, oulgolng wide receiver,
came to Minnesota last Septembe~ and be gradually Introduced the Go-Crazy life style to tbe Vlldngs, who went for 11 In a
1
big way.
What Ia Go-Crazy actually? Mostly It's a happy, hwnorous,
sometimes obscene manifestation of camaraderie among the
players, designed for no other purpose than to keep everyone
loose and In a good mood. O.J.Simpson ts a devout bellever In
the style and Rashad picked It up when he was with the Buffalo
Bills.
As the VIkings employ It, It is a form of emotional release, an
"In" thing they joke about anytime, anywhere. The subject
matter they choose isn't Important. It's how they say It that
counts, the language!they use, which would be considered
profane by othel'!! but not to them.
Actually, there is nothing new about the whole thing.
The Go-Crazy pattern has been around In sporta a long time.
Nobody refilled it to a sharper edge than Muhammad Ali, not
only to motivate and amuse himself but ail tl!Ose around him.
Ali says it has helped him out of some tough spots.
He says, for example, be recalls the time a dog came at him,
menacing and snarling, looking for a piece of him. Ali says he
charged right baek at the dog, waving his bands wildly In the
air and hollerlngattheanbnal even louder than it was barking
at him. It worked, Ali Insists.
Pepper Martm used pretty much thiS same Go-Crazy 1dea
with the St. Louis Cardinals m the '30s. Only he did 11 has own
particular way. He was a big league ballplayer and was
supposed to be aU busmess, but one night he'd be driving a
midget auto racer somewhere, the nell\ night he'd be
refereemg a wreslllng match and the following night he'd be
dropping bags of water upon unsuspecting pedestrians from
his hotel window.
In Boston one evening, he let one of those water bags go from
the sixth floor and It landed squarely on Frankie Frisch, the
Cardinals' manager at the tune. Thsl was a little too Go-Crazy.
Frisch never saw where the water had come from, but he knew
who was responSible .
•
"There's mly one guy on thl.s club who would do anything
like that,'' he roared at Mike Gonzalez, one of his coaches. "Go
find Marlin and tell him that little joke will cost him a hundred
dollars !n
More recently, tile Oakland A's did things that raised a lot of
eyebrows. They acknowledged their free-wheelihg style wasn't
necessarily for everybody, but they also pointed out it d1dn't
keep them from winning three world championships
Hyou go back a couple of thousand years, Plato said, "What,
then, is the right way of living? Life must be lived as a play,
playing certain gBI)Ies, making sacrifices, slngmg. and
danCing, and then a man will be able to propitiate the gods, and
defend himself against hill enemies, and wm in the contest."
The Minnesota Vlkmgs have a good thing gomg for them.
Whether it's enough to help them beat the Oakland Raiders
Jan. 9 is something else again, but Bud Grant Isn't about to
order them to knock 11 off.

By
Uulted
Preu
lateruallonal
Bowling Green's highi!D•ered offense was held In
check \l'[onday night by
defensive-minded Oi'egoo In
the opening round of the 21Bt
annual Far West Classic.
Oregon's tenacious defense
stopped Bowling Green cold
and the Ducka won a convlnc·
lng iiU4 victory.
Bowling Green coach John
Welriert, who said the play of
hls club may have "set
basketball back 30 years,''
claimed experience was the
difference.
"We're awfully young and
played a very experienced
ball club, a very smart ball
club,'' Weinert said.
Bowling Green w!ll tangle
with Oral Roberts m a
consolation game Wednesday
night
Oregon, ranked 18th In thl!
nation and third defenalvely,
held the Falcons scoreless for
a 5Y, minute stretch midway
through the first hall, and for
another 4:18 to end the hall
with a 37-:lllead.
The Falcons, now 3-4 on the
season, were averaging 80
points a game before Monday
night.
Roo Hannye and Tommy
Harris led Bowling Green
with 19 apiece. HarriS hsd
been averaging 24 points a
game.
In other first round tournament games , Kent State
downed St. Peter's (N.J.) 7974ln the Motor City Classic at
Detroit, host Oklahoma City
whipped Ohio University 9773ln the Ali-O&gt;llege Toomey,
Kenyon edged Thomas More
(Ky. ) 85-81 and Oh1o
Northern thumped Wayne
State (Mich.) BUS m the
Colonial ClassiC at Mt.
Vernon, Capital got by
Carthage (Wis.) 81).76 and
Wittenberg overwhelmed
Concordia of St. Paul (Mlnn )
91-40 in the Lutheran
Brotherhood Tournament at
Minneapolis, and Marietlil
beat Elizabeth City (N .C ) 8976 111 the Greater Bluefield
(W.Va ) Invitational.
Kent State got off to a slow
start and trailed St. Peter's,
IU, with seven minutes gone
111 the first hall, but the
Golden Flashes came back to
take a ~7 haHUme lead.

College Ba 5.k etball Resul ts

Tournaments
(lsi Round Action)
All College Tournament
BYU 68 St Joseph 's P a 56
Ok la Ctly 97 Oh to U 73
B1g 8 Holiday Tourney
Mr ssour 1 81 Iow a St 67
K ansas 51 74 Ok la St 56
ECAC Holiday F est1va1
M anhattan 60 LIU 56
Gee town 0 C 79 Fa 1rfld 69
Far West Cla SS IC
No Ca r 100 0 Robert s 84
Or egon 66 Bowlmg Gree n 5~
Loutslana Cla ss1 c
LSU 101 Mont an a St 81
V1lla nova 64 Hofslra 62
Mtlwaukee Cla s!ilc
W1 s 74 Boston Col i 66
M arquell e 67 Clemson 49
Motor Ctty Cl ass tc
Kent St 76 51 Peter s 69
Oetr01t 79 Cente nar y 74
Reno Cla n tc
utah 107 IdahO 66
Nev Reno 78 Pepprdne 68
Sen 1or Bowl
Te)( aS Tec h 75 So M ISS 74
So Alabama 81 Samford 67
East
Ham•llon 102 St one Hill 87
Harl wt c k 93 1&lt; mg 's Pa 74
Pr a l l 109 Stevens Tec h 66
Towson 9 1 Ph1l a Ph arm 71
w est Chester 79 Wdmngtn 73
South
So uthern 87 tnd Purd ue HI
M1ctwest
Dep aul 86 Br ed ley 80
Knyn Coli 85 Thos M or r- 81
Oh10 Nr thrn 82 Wayn e St 69
West
Ar l zona 90 Sta nfor d 82
M ontana 84 E M onlana 63
Pactf ic 85 Sac: lo St 75
uc Sta Br b 100 St Xav Ill 75
Wa sh St 69 Fr esno 51 62

..

Wa~iQrs top ·
Tigers, 74-66
I

j

"'

'

By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Writer
Thill is a classic week In
college basketball-as In Far
West Clamc~ · Louisiana
Classic, Milwaukee Classic,
Motor City Classic, Rainbow
Classic, Rel!o Classic and the
rest of the holiday
tournaments.
A number of the tourneys
began Monday rught and the
rest start on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
, In the first round of the
Milwaukee Classic, Butch
!lee scortd 17• •points and
Marquette stopped Clemson's
hlgb-ecorlng offense to hand
the Tigers their first defeat
alter seven victories, 74-116.
Marquette seeka Its ninth
straight Milwaukee Classic
title Tuesday night against
Wisconsin, which edged
Boston College, 74-68.
PhU Ford acored 211 points
8nd Walter Davis added 18 as
No. 6 North Carolina
overcame a 46-polnt effort by
• ~thony Roberts to beat Oral
1Roberta, 100-84, In the
lopenqgameoltheFar West
1Classic In PorUand.
• In the nightcap of the Far
·weal Classic, 2oth-ranked
Oregon stopped hlgh«&lt;rlng
Bowling Green, iJU4, The
Ducks, the third best
defensive team In the
country, were sparked
ollensively by GreR Ballard

i

'

with 19 points and Rob Closs
with 18. Ron Hannye and
Tommy Harris led the
Falcons with 19 each.
In one of the few games
that wasn't part of a
tournament, AriZOna held off
Stanford, 90-82, as Herman
Harris scored 14 of his 24
points In the second hall.
Stanford led, 37-35, at the
half, but Arizona moved
ahead, 67-56, with 8:41
remaining. '
Scott Sims, who hlt 1ilx
straight free throws during a
tecmlcal foul barrage late In
the first half, scored 26 points
to lead Miaaourl to an 81-6'1
victory over Iowa State In the
opening round of the Big
Eight llollday Tournament.
In fhe second game of the
Big Eight tourney, of which

defeated OklBhoma State, 7456.
In · other tournaments,
Geor•etown beat Fairfield,
e
79-G9, and Manhattan downed
Long island University,~.
In the ECAC Holiday Festival
In New York. In the All
College Tournament In
Oklahoma City, Brigham
YOWII! beat St. Jooeph's, 6856,and0Ida homa CityrO uted
Ohio Unlvenlly , 97-73. In the'
openinggameoftheRalnbow
Classic, Houston edged
DUnols, ~-

,,

The

Uri I I e d Pr ess lnt ern &lt;'l110ne l
Board of Coa ches ' colleg e
basketba ll ratmgs w i th won tosl
r ecords lhr ough qam es of
Saturday. Dec 25 and number
ot f 1r st piece vot es m paren

th eses !fourth weeki

Team
1 M1 c h1gan (32 ) IS 0)
2 Notre Dt~m e
f1 OJ

Poonts

Jn

en

3 San Franm co W 111 01
4 Alaba ma ( fl OJ

~

1

Ctnc mnatt 17 Ol

• North Carohna 15 11
7 Kcnlucky .(6 11
8 UCL A f 7 I )
• Nevada Las Vegas IR
to Wake Forcsl 17 01
11 Cl em son 17 0 1
11 Mmncso ta , R 01
13 Amona lA 11
14 Mdrquc ll e (&lt;~ '})
II I OU &gt;SV&gt;II C f\ 11
t6 Maryland 11 11
,, " rkanm 1801
18 Syra cuse ! 7 1)
t9 tnwa 11 01

l }(J
.

Orro on II 11

144

m

11

sea son , a 22-0 loss to
Michigan
"I've got tilem back nght
now,'' he sa1d of his ankles.
"It's been a bad season for
me. I want to go out With two
good games, have a great one
here and a great one in the
Senior Bowl."
The senior fullback says he
figures that would go a long
way toward making him
more desirable for pro
scouts.
Hasselbeck, a 6-7, 250poWld semor who also is
hoping to be a high draft
choice, played the final three
games of the season With hts
broken left hand in a cast.
He was unable to catch a
pass In that time, but the cast
1s off now and both he and his
coach, Bill Mallory , figure he
will be ready for the Orange
Bowl.
H[)on had the cast removed
about two weeks ago and his
hand Is much better ,"
Mallory said. "He's getting
much moa;e strength In 11 and

at the mere thought of
another big show :
"We'd been wa1tlng for th1s
game a long time and we
knew all along that we would
beat them (the Steelers).
We're on our way to
Pasadena and I've been there
before. But that was m
college and this w11l be for lbe
championship of !he world.
Imagine that!"
And, Oakland will not be
underdogs as they were
against the Stee)ers; they are
four-point favorites to beat
the NFC champion Mmnesota
VIkings on Jan. 9.
Steeler quarte,rbaek Terry
Bradshaw was so impressed
with Oakland's running game
Sunday that he predicted, "ff
the Raiders can run on
Minnesota, they'll win."
COach John Madden gave
hls players off Monday with
plans to resume practice
Wednesday . He also looked
forward to quarterback Ken
Stabler's return - he was

NEW YORK tUPI ) - Powers, Manhattan, John
Michigan maintained its No . Thompson, Georgetown
I ranking this week In the
MIDWEST: Johnny Orr,
United Press IntemaUonal Michigan ; Bob Nichols,
Board of Coaches' college Toledo; Digger Phelps, Notre
basketball ratings, but Dame; Ray Meyer, DePaul;
se&lt;.'Ond..-anked Notre Dame Tex Winter , Northwestern;
and third-ranked San AI McGuire, Marquette
Francisco each gained
SOUTH · Frank McGuire,
ground.
South Carolma; Dean Smith,
Michagan, which defeated North Carolina, Lefty
Central M1ch1gan, 1~ , last Drlesell, Maryland; C.M.
week for its fifth victory Newton, Alabama; Hugh
Without a loss, received 365 Durham , Florida State;
pomts, 4lless tban \be week Norman Sloan, North
before, while Notre Dame, 7-11 Carolll1a State.
alter trouncing Vermont, 8948, p1cked up 40 points for a
total of 275.
San Francisco, which
defeated Oral Roberts, 86-78, •
and Cal Poly-Pomona, 96-&amp;,
to Improve Its record to 12-11,
picked up four first-place
votes and a 244-polnt total.
Alabama remained No. 4,
but Cincinnati JllOved mto the
No. S position, replacing
Marquette, which lost Ita
second game, 66-59 to
Wllh help for jOIII
Minnesota, and dropped out
car ho111P.I1fr and
of the top 10.
health in~urance .
North Carolina climbed
from No. 9 to No. 6, Kentucky
• e me.
remained No . 7 and UCLA
No. 8, ,while Nevada-Las
Vegas moved up two
149 South Third Slreel
positions to No. 9. Wake
Mtddleporl, OhtO
Forest, unbeaten In seven
992 -7155
games, moved Into the No 10
slot, replacing Clemson,
SU!H fAIM
which was 1dle.
Here, by sections, are the
coaches who comprise the
INSUIAN(I
UPI major college basketball
ratings board ,
EAST: Lou Camesecca. St.
Joho's; Chuck Daly, Penn ;
Insurance Companies
Tom Young, Rutgers; Jack
Kraft, Rhode Island, Jack •

~
55

'~

~7
''
~;

•·t
"

i

·~:~:1

DELTA 88
ROYALE
'5795

he 's been recelvmg the ball
well."
Colorado, however, will be
without backup running ba ck
Howard Ballage, who tore a
ligament 111 his knee In drills
last · Fnday . Mallory
dlsclosed M o n d a y the !Sapound sophomore would have
to undergo an operation and
was lost lor the game.
"It will hurt guys from a
depth standpoint,'' Mallory
said of Ballage's mjury.
"We'll go with a freshman,
Charlie Martin,and use him a
bit to spell Tony Reed."
But he said if It was
necessary, Reed could go all
the way
Reed 's record backs up
Mallory 's faith Th e 192pound all-BI8 Eight choice,
who played his h1gh school
ball m Japan , gained 1,210
yards this year In a school
record 284 carries
"He has great endurance,
and has played most of the
time," Mallory said. "He 'll
go as long as you want."

taken out of the Stceler game
after being hit 111 the ribs on
his second touchdown pass.
The X-rays showed no breaks
and Stabler pleged he would
be ready for !he Super Bowl
and the Vikings
"I wouldn't miss it for
anytillng."

Karr &amp; VanZandt

If your insurance agent can't give you
"worry free" service, fire him and hire
M1ck.

"let Mick Do It!"·

You may never have to worry about
insurance again .

DOWNING CHILDS ~
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
992 -1342

Middleport, 0.

JUMBO FRANKS.~~~~~~~~-5
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WIENERS ~-~~~~i.~:~. ':~~:.:.~~~-- . . . . ......... .......... :.~~-. gge
CANNED HAMS ~-~~-..~-~~~........................... ~~-~4.95
1~·. 99'
.~~~-~~~~~
HAM
.. .................... . ....

•• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; ••• •

l-Ib. Teen

~~~

MARGARINE
QUARTERS.......
2 lb. Teen Queen

2FO,':7 9~

~~: .............~.~~-~129
ORIEDO

FRENCH FRIE$ ..............................~..1-~:. 75$

Like a good
neighbor,
State Farm
is there.

8 ct. 3 Mill Bestpak Trash Bags •••••••• '1.10
3 oz. Reg. Jellos •••••••••••••••••••••• !.~2 for 41 •
'
'
14112 oz. Jeno Cheese Pizza ••••
59•
20 oz. Del Monte Chunk Plneapple •••••• 49•

BILL FLETCHER

27 oz. Teen Queen Kraut.~········•2 for 69•
Gallon of Rich and
Ready Orange Drink ......................... 89•

:!j .
110

player, Tim Appleton, who State. Mitch
Miracle
scored 26 pomts In a game slammed In 15 points and
last year.
Gary Hursey had 14 for
Brad Longberry scored 21 Marietta, which hlked Ita
pomts and pulled down 12 season standing to 4-2.
rebounds to lead Ohio
Northern to Its victory over
Wayne State. Tom Bramlage
Tlll,l - k' s Speet•l
added 18 poin ts for the
•
winning Polar Bears.
At Minneapolis, Wittenberg
hsd lltUe trouble with Con·
cordia of st. Paul. The Tlgl)rs
raced to a 26-3lead In the first
USED ~S
five minutes and coasted to .
an easy victory in the
Lutheran Brot he r hood
Invitational.
In the same tourney,
Capital sank 15 straight free
thr ows In the final 61&gt;
minutes to down Carthage . HT Cpe, fu l l power .
Wittenberg and Capital , fa ctory air, ster eo. 18,000•.
both member of the .Qhlo mtl cs
Athletic Conference, wlll
tangle tonight for the tourney
championship.
( less 10 Pet Ot SCOUJlt}
Ano~r OAC member , Maraetta, plays host Bluefield
(WVa). State tonight In the
championship game of the
You' lll.lke Our Quallly
Gr e ate r Blu e field
Way ot Doing Buslnen
GMAC FINANCING
Invitation•I.
Pomeroy
992-53&lt;3
Jeff Faloba canned 22
Open Evenings '1116:00
points to pace Marietta In its
TillS p m. Sol
VIctory over Elizabeth City

'76 OLDS

Michigan is No.1

Ratings

Mt.uri has won four in the
past five years, Kansas State

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) Only four members of the
Oakland Ra1ders were with '
the AFC champions when
they last appeared m the
Super Bowl.
That was In a losing effort
against the Green Bay
Packers afier the 1967
season. The Raiders went on
to chalk up the National
Football League's best
overall won~oss record but
they always m1ssed the
return ticket !o the Super
Bowl - until their 24-7 win
over Pittsburgh Sunday.
Cornerback Willie Davis,
looking back to hls f~rst Super
Bowl game With Oakland,
says this year's Raiders
should do better.
"There can be no doubt that
thiS is the greatest Oakland
Raider team ever observed
Davis, a Raider standout of
the past 10 seasons.
Another Super Bowl
veteran, running back
Clarence DaVIS, was excited
1"

FOOTBALL
NE W YOR K tu PI\

Oklahoma City used ball
control and accurate shooting
fr om the ouistde to defeat the
Bobcats, now 4-2

Ulllo's Steve Skaggs scored
16 points, while Ernie Whltus
added 14 for tile losers.
In the fifth annual Colonial
Clssalc, Kenyon w!ll defend
its title to nigh t In the
championship game against
Ohio Northern.
Kenyon's Evan Eisner
dumped In 32 points (15 field
goals and two free throws ) to
set a single-game tournament
record as the Lords downed
Thomas More. The old mark
was held by another Kenyon

Raiders like chances

e.,. Untied Press lnt ernolftonal

VIkings, 011 a four-4lay bollday alter wilullDC the Natloaal
Football Coalereoce IItle, go back to wort Friday for their
fourth Super Bowl game with a new dlmeaalon going for
them - emotloa.
The Vltlllgs predict thai iD tbls Super Bowl, agalnsl
the Oakland Raiders al Pasadena Jau. 9, they'll finally
win. The team will vacation through 'Iburaday - wbUe
the coaches study films of Oakland games -and wort out
ooa home field Friday alld Sullday, with New Year's Day
off.
The Vltlllgs will Oy to California nut Monday for a
week of warm.,.ealber pt'llctiee 11 the I..Gnl Beach
headquarters of the Los Angeles Rams, the team they
. ·.'•' ......
....bea~,
....... . ..··•...··~~Y...
..··· .. .. f.~r·.·..t!'~.
.. ..~--~·
.. ~....plo~~bip.
. ............. . ......... ......

~\.t " •

MIAMI (UPI) - One of the
nice th111gs about playing In a
major bowl game la it g1ves
you plenty of time to heal the
wounds from an ll.game
season.
Two cases In point are
fullback Pete Johnson of Ohio
state and tight end Don
Hasselbeck of Colorado, the
Buckeyes' opponent m the
Orange Bowl Saturday mght.
Johnson a bruising 24llpounder, played all but the
first three games of the
season with two strained
agkles that limited his
rushing totals to 698 yards
and 18 touchdowns
"I was In tears every game
because my ankles were so
messed up," he said Monday.
"I went a month and a hall
without practice. The ankles
would get swollen ~p so badly
after a game I could hardly
walk."
But Johnson has healed
considerably since the Buckeyes' final gam e of the

BASKETBALL

('UP
·:·:·.:·:.·i'"·;·:·:..:·:.·:·.:.:·,:. n
·:·:.·:.:·.·:~·:·::·. :·
·
·~~:- ..

The Flashes will play the
University of Detroit In torught 's championship game.
In the na tion 's oldest
holiday season tournament ,
Oklahoma City freshma n
Ernie Hill hit e1ght of II from
the f1eld and added nine Iree
tllrows for 25 pomts In leading
the Chlefa to victory over OU

Johnson ready
for bowl tilt

®

··: :··: ·::;;J;;;~~~~N; -~..:·:·.:·.:·:·:.·

zt!J·..

St. Peter's rallied In the
second half to take the lead
once again , but Kent State
took over for good with three
minutes gone In the second
haH, 42-41, before scoring sli
In a row to wrap up the
contest.
The Golden Flashes had
four men In double figures,
led by Burrell McGhee w1th
16, Cort02e Brown with 15 and
Trent Groom With 14.
Kent State evened Its
season mark at 4-4 while St
Peter's fell to 3-5

A

STATE FARM
llomoOIII~.;b,Bioommgton,llhnols

1 1 ••• 1 . . . . . . .

28 oz.

Brown Apple lutter••• ~ ••••••••• 89•
rafl Grape Jelly..................... 59'

10' 2 oz. Hilton's Oyster Stew••• 2 for '1.G9

.1.---------------------····-••111
Mr. Baa 69c Chlps•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.49•
•

,.

�•
•

I

OPEN
MON. THRU SAT.

Traditional potluck
enjoyed by council

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

ALL (;AMES
Team
W L P OP
Logan
1 . o 638 415
Wheelersbg . 6 0 409 298
Pl. Pleas.
1 o 87 75

5 2 424 424

Jackson
Ironton

3 2 274 237

Frederick sent word. of her
appreciation foo· c•rds and
flowers.
D(.lughtet·s of America, was
Plans were made for the
held Tuesday night at the books to be autliled on Jan. 3
hall.
at 1:30 p.m. at the horne of
Prayer was given by Ada Doris' Grueser. At the next
Morri s and Dorothy Lawson meeting new officers will be
presided at the dinner installed and the officers are
meeting attended by Jl as ked to wear while.
members. Opal Hollon, Nomination and election of
chainnan of the good of the officers was completed.
order committee, asked the
The members sang
fla gbea rers to escort the Christmas c• rols and giving
book officers tb the altar readings were Erma Cleland,
wh ere they were given Elizabeth Hayes, and Jean ·
special recognition and a gift. Swnrnerlield. Games were
11my were Ethel Orr, Ada played with prim going to
Van Meter, Zelda Weber, the winners. There wa.s &lt;m
Margaret Tuttle and Ada exch• nge of gifts. Mrs. Wolf
Neutzling. Also recognized was pianist.
and given a gift were Esther
Others attending were
Ridenour, deputy st.lte cowl· Charlotte Grant, Dorothy
cilor, Helen Wolf, pjanist, Ritchie, Mary Newell, Goldie
and Mary K. Holter, publicity Wolfe, Marcia Keller, Letha
chairman. A birthday gift Wood , Goldie Frederick,
was also presented to Mrs. Eilee n Martin, Thelma
!Udenour and membeo·s sang While, Dorothy Lawso n,
"Happy Birtlxlay" to all Dorothy Myers, Mae
those with December bil'· Spence r, Doris Koenig,
thdays.
Leona Hensley, Joe Bissell,
It was reported that Hattie Belly Roush, S•die Trussell'
· Frederick fell and broke her Julia Rose, Ada Bissell, May TOT ALS
10 16 1J 44 13~ 4 for years to come/' sald
hip and is now a patient at the McPeek, Laura Mac Nice,
Press Hobso"n , viee president
Holzer Medical Center. Leda Mabel Van llieter, and lnzy
and general manager of the
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Mae Kraeuter is home troni a Newell.
track.
Team
W L P OP
Columbu s Hospital. Mrs .
Hobson said he and Cowens
Ga llioolis
3 0 130 99
.Aihens
2 1 151 122 "agreed that this is not a
Waverly
2 1 134 119 publicity deal,"
Logan
7 1 128 113

Classes present program

A program of recitations ,
dialogues and music was
presented by the Sunday
school classes at the aimual
Christmas program at Heath
United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
Mrs. Bob Byer was chair·
man for the program and was
assisted by Mrs. Steve
Houchins. The kindergarten
and nursery children Iinder
the direction of Mrs. Judy
Fraser did a flannel graph
Christmas story and then
sang "Jingle Bells."
The primary children, first
through fourth grades, had
recitations and a dialog ue
with their teachers, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward YOung. In tM
group were J. R. Kitchen,
Sarah Philson, Terry Hart,
David Fisher, Eric Philson,
Allen Spaulding and Brent
George. They were joined by
the kindergarten class to sing
"Away in a Manger".

A skit, "Snow White and
the Seven Elves", was

presented by Mrs. Betty
Fultz' fifth and sixth graders.
In the group were Stephanie
Houchins, Mary Hibbs, Paula
Horton , Charles Davis,
Susanne Wise, Megan Cale
and Cluis Burdette with
Brian George .in charge o£ the
props.
Mrs. Vicki Houchins'·.
junior high class had Charles
Dickens' story , ''The
Christmas Carol,'' as written
by Angie Houchins. Parts
were ta ken by Larry Byer,
Randy Murray, Ruth Blake,
Ca th y Blake, Angie
Houchins, Greg Hibbs, Jean
Ann Horton, and Helen Slack.
Ther e were several
musical niunbers py the fifth,
sixth, seventh and eighth
classes.
,
The senior high claso
whose teacher is L. W. Me·
Comas prese nted the
Christmas message in verse
and song. Mrs. Twila Childs
at at the piano. Taking part
wereDanny Davis, Laura
Hoover, Kelly Burdette, Jo
.I

•

McKinney, Steve Walburn,
Melissa and Marcia Cale, Andy Hoover, Jennifer Wise,
Mike Davenport, Julie Byer,
John Byer, Becky Fultz,
Rhond• Reuter, Julie Kit·
chen, Fwniko Iwasaki, Toni
Pope, David Horton, Steve
Bachner, and Joni Murray.
From the milled adult
class, Dewey Horton gave a
recitation and there was a
vocal quartet, "I Heard the
Bells On Christmas" by the
Rev. Robert Bwngarner, Mr.
and Mrs. Wendell Hoover and
Ben Philson, with Laura
Hoover, accompanlst
·
Symbols and lrHdi·
tionswere given by members
of Class 12 with Mrs. James
Euler •nd Mrs. Ben Philson
giving the history of carols
and caroling; Mrs. James
Jividen, the tradition or giv·
ing gifts; Mrs. Nan Moore,
the " Twelve Days of
Christmas, " Mrs. Robert
Reinhart, the story of
Christmas carols. There was
group singing of carols with
Mrs. Emerson JOnes at the
piano.
A social hour with a visit
from Santa followed Uie program.

1 1

Jackson

Wel lslon
Meigs
TOTI\LS

84

Jan. 6 gameS :
Athens . at Gallipolis
Jackson a t Meigs
Wellston at Waver ly
Logan ~ O pen

Feb. 5 game :
Wa ver ly at Logan (Makeup,
11 a .m .)

All Games

Eastern

0 4 137 228

CASH AND CARRY

2 3 321 319

Kyger Creek
Norlh Galli a

2 3 3SS 348
1 3 244 289

On All

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP
'Southern
3 0 272 184
Hannan Trace

Christmas

2 0 124 121

Symmes Valley 2 1 182 181
North Gatlla
1 1 129 128
Southwestern
1 2 188 176
Eastern
0 2 71 116
Kyger Creek
0 3 172 232
RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Galli a
2 0 92 51
Southern

3 1 145 123

Southwestern

2 1 114 110

Hannan Trace

0 2 J2 81
0 2 61 100

Merchandise

Symmes Valley 2 1 130 131
Kyger Creek
Eastern

I 2 106 124

RIB END

PORK
ROAST

PORK
ROAST

LB.

TOMATO
JUICE

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon .• Tues.; Wed. B, Sat.-8:301115:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 N.OON

32 oz. Btl.

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

:
:

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:•

:

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Mason, W. Va .

RAGU

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:

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. Twin City Gateway

DIAL ·
SOAP

I 39¢

GOLD ONLY

I ~~~ I
99~

FABRIC
: SOFTENER
96

i-= .:.

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oz.

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f

Twin City Gateway

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i

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LEMON
DISHWASH
No. 205
22

oz.

Btl.

$

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•

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f

lt77

.

INSTANT

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·:1COFFEE
HOUSE

l0oz~2 99
Jar ·

Coupon exp . Jan. 1,

Twin City

/-~

"Your eyes are like limpid
pools, your ears are .Ivory
shells, your lips are like
rosebuds, but your throat is
inflamed by a minor virus in·
recuon! ..

59 N. SECOND ST.

$299

Directors entertain employees
·with party at Meigs Inn
PRESENTED ATTRACTIVE CAKE- Mr. and Mrs,
David Ohlinger, Middleport, who celebrated their 34th
wedding anniversary Christmas day, were presented a
beautifully decorated cake by Gwen Swann. The two tier
cake was given to theonthe day before Christmas.

Directors of the Meigs In·
vestment Corporation entet··
lllined o·ecenlly with a party
allhe Meigs Inn for employes
and their guc~Lii ,
Dinner was prepared and
served by the direclurs and
cnterl&lt;Jimncnt was prov ided
by "Tigress." Gifts were
presented to alithe employes
by John Musser and Bill
Childs and door prizes were
e~warde ll . In recognition of
speciul service provided the
Meigs Inn, gifts were also
presenlc'll to Augie Caito,
Lancaster fur his serviees in
opening the new Meigs Inn
By Polly Cramer
have served .their purpose I Pizza Shack, Virgil Brown,
Polly's Problem
save them for the grand· Pomeroy for· hi~ service~ ami
DEAR POLLY - Would ·children's visits. I keep
in special foods,
anyone have a suggestion for chiJdren 's scissors and assislanc'e
and
Bill
Chiltls,
president of
removing greasy' finger- crayons on hand. They enjoy
the
corporation,
roo· his
prints that are around the coloring the black mod while assistcmce iri plannirw
and
handles on my cabinets and pictures with the crayons and
furniture? Also, how does one then cutting out the colored
remove make-up from pictures to paste on large
around the collar on a perma· sheets of while or colored
nent press coot? -MRS. R.M.
paper. This keeps them
DEAR MRS. R.M. -There amused for quite a time.
is a CHANCE you could
I save so many different
remove those greasy S}l(lt.s sizes and types of plastic
with a laundry pre-test spray buwls and cont.;Jiners that
such as used on garmenW. ·when a howl is empty I put a
Test first as you did not say nwnber on the butlom with a
what sort of finish your waterproof mao·king pen and
piet&gt;es have . A wood cleanet a matching nwnber on its lid.
could also be used alid then Then~ is nu mure hlinling for
the pieces waxed or polished the proper lit!.- GRANDMA.
as usual. I£ there is a heavy
build-up of wax remove it :~8::::~-w::».~ ::. !L .. :C:i&amp;'e'!'
with liquid wax sprayed on
and rubbed orr while wet. The
marks may come orr with the
wax. A furniture wash that
will remove a build-up of dirt
and grime is to mix three
t.lblespoons linseed oil, one
t.lblespoon turpentine in a
quart of hot water and let
TUESDAY
cool. Wash a small section at
RACINE AMERICAN
a time, rub dry and go to next Legion Auxiliary, 6:30
section. When finished polish Tuesday nlght at the hall. ·
as Usual.
Members to take cookies.
You might sprinkle corn ml
. 'l'i!URSDAY
on your coat colr, let it st.ly a
LETART
TOWNSHIP
few minutes and then brush
Trustees
Thursday,
7 p.m, at
off. If this does not work try a
Letart
Falls
Community
regular dry cleaning fluid. I
once read that many new Hall.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
fabrics should be treated like
ON DISPLAY with other
trustees
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
V!Ps so · •·emember that.
celebrities,
Liza Mlonelll
Heed any warnings on labels at town house.
was among the star
and lest anything before usattractions at a California
ing.- POLLY.
charity benefit staged like
DEAR POLLY -.! was
a circus. The festivities
looking around fur something
were
!limed
for
better than brown paper bags
present•llon on
to cover the children's school
nationwide television in
books and came up with a HODGSON QUITI'ING
January ,
·
couple of old plastic tote bags · TOKYO (UP!) - U.S. Am·
that were too pretty to throw bassador James Hodgson has
away. They made great told
the
Japanese
covers. Before too long an old govenunent he wlll resign SUNNY PLAYBOY
HONOLULU (UPI)
pink plastic raincoat was put and return tb the United
to the same use and then a States in early February, a Hugh Hefner may open a
blue plastic shower curt..in Japanese Foceign Ministry Playboy club and hotel in
Honolulu..
was bought at a garage sale spokesman said today.
"We had several of our club
for fifty cents and I had more
The resignation had been
executives
here less than a
because
of
covers. The best part is that expected
month
ago
to look into the
such t'Qvers · are sturdy, President Ford's loss m the
possibility
of
opening a club
November
presidential
waterproof •nd can be easily
and
a
hotel,"
Hefner ,
election.
Hodgson
,
a
wiped off when soiled.. Republican, was appointed chairman and Chief executive
BE'ITY.
or
Playboy
DEAR POLLY - After by former President Richard officer
Enterprises,
said
Monday.
those Christmas cat.liogues Nixon.

managing the coo·poration.
On behalf of the employes.
illolph Werry presented a
silvco' service to Mr. and Mo's.
John

Polly's Pointers .
Try furniture wash

~

t

I

2 LB. BAG...

59~

g ~ ncnll

uml Jolm llremmur, Pam
Granen and ClmrhJs Brown,
Jane Cundiff, Mo·. and Mo.,;.
Hun Quillen. Mr. and Mrs.
Williani Cogur, Mr. ami Mrs.
Charl es Chancey, !lui ph
Werry , Eleanor Werry.
Helen lloliley, Ollie Young,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bentz,
Thomas Bentz, Jr., Denni s
Musser, 1'om Mussc1·, Hubert
Lemley, Rick Couch and
.June Wamsley, Mr. uud Mrs.
AI Haomon, .loni Sellers and
Eric Pearch, Ron Vance and
Naiocy St. Clai r, Mr. mod Mrs.
Dou~la s Wy•tl, Mr . mod Mo's.
Noel Milleo· , Fran ces
Carleton , Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Angle
Caito, Lonni e Donahue,
Hazel Buck, Put O'Dell , llun
Brinker, and Miss Jwasukl.

n vi sion. But tndny, w~·!\
lived, makes evr:ry ycStcrfl .
drmun of huppincss,
every tomorrow a visit
hope."
tt

Social
Calendar

111

of

1977
Time
\ For
I

. Troop exchanges gifts

\N~w

'-

Members of the Syracuse
Junior Girl Scout Troop 120-1
mel recently at the home of
Mrs. Sharon Michael foo a
party and gift exchange.
Games were pbiyed with
pri1.es going to Christy Ar·
nold, Julie Willis and .lennoe
Bentley. Christmas cupcakes, cookies, ice cream
and Kool-Aid were served

CHILDREN TREATED
Over 400 children received
treats from Santa at the
Ameri can Leg ion hall In
Middleport on Christma s
Eve. Treats and glfis were
also taken to the Meigs
County Infirmary and sent to
Arcadia N~rsing Home anti
th e Children's Home In
Gallipolis. Each place aiso
received a basket of fruit.

and then the girl::: went curnling. Trish Michael wa.s H
guest for the pa rty.
Al lt:~ s t wcek' s regulHr
meeting the members nnlsh·
ed their Christmas projects.
A vote of thanks was extend·
cd . to l.inda May co· for
finishing some uf the
ceramics. The meeting opened with the Lord 's Pruycr let!
by Jennie Bentley, and the
pledge to the flag by Clwisly
Arnold, All of the girls
recited the girl scout promisc.

WATCH

PRICED
UNDER

$35

SERVICE SET
There wlll be a New Year's
Eve service at the_ Stiver Run
Freewill Baptist Church
beginnin g at 7:30 p.m.
Preacfting wlli be by the Rev.
Noah Burgess and the Rev.
William Price. The public Is
weJcome.

REUTER-BROGAN
"The ITlsurance Store"
1.

Auto Insuran ce

2. Home Insurance

Mobil e Homes
4. Hea lth Insurance

l

s. Life Insurance

6. Boat In surance
7. Motorcycles

CARfl\IELLE,

8. Jewelry and Oth er
Villuablos

NRlJLOJ~

9. Bu siness Package
Policies
10. Lia tJil lly In surance
11. Fartn Insuranc e

Wo'fo otlerlng 1hl&amp;walch
1wo ways. If!!: an eKcellent

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"

texlUred gold lone case,
sweep !lecond, fu ll numeral

PACKAGE POLICY - Put your auto, home. hea lth
and life insuran ce Into ONE policy . Save money and
have one premium due date for all your Insurance.

dial and unbreakable
mainspring. Water and
ahock resistent . SuiOYII

And very
modntlv orlced. ·

guoronte~ .

Some Of OUr .O ther Services:
Copy Servict -Notary S.rvice-&lt;Ar Lusing
Service ·

GOESSLER'S

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

JEWELRY STORE

"The Insurance Stone"

214 E. MAIN

IJ&amp;Iue. Preci sion leweled.

Claoslc In style. Wllh

Court St ..
Pomeroy

PH. 992-5130

992-2920

KRAFT

MAC. &amp; CHEESE DINNER •••••••••••••·~.~·i. 69'
CUT GREEN BEANS •••••••••• -.;~~~~::. 31'1.00

&amp; Pearl .

AUNT JEMIMA

PHEB.E'S STORE

PANCAKE MIX •••••• ~ •••••••••••••••'2,,~ .. ~·•• sr

Rlgl!t Reserved to Limit Wantliles
We Ctadly Acctpt Ftd cFood Stamps
Monday 'thru Friday
9:00to 7:00
to9

7-UP or
PEPSI
~,~az~ 99~

(ENDS)

DAWN DISH DETERGENT•••••••••••••••••••
12 oz.
79'

IDAHO

Potatoes

10 lb.

Bananas

s lb.

bag

' '

- - VALLEY BELL
DAIRY

99~

SOUR CREAM
.or CHIP DIP

2/89~

2 lb . Tray
Sliced

$129

-

PORK CHOPS
LB.

.

TASTEE
BOLOGNA

FRESH LIKE SUCED BE~ •••••••••JRm, 41'1
TAU BOY SOUP......... Tomoto
&amp; Vegetaboe
3/SJOO.
~.~.............
-- PRODUCE

CENTER CUT

PORK
CHOPSLB.99~

GREEN GIANT

00

FRENCH
FRIES

M usscr,

manager . Mi ss Fumikn
Iwasakl, a Japanese · excha nge student li ving with
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard ~' ullz,
sang "Silent Night" in
J &lt;.~ pe~ n ese . She received a
si.Hnding ovHtion r1·u.m those
present.
Directors und their wivt:s
present were M•. • nd Mrs.
Bill Chi lds, Mr. and Mrs. Ber·
nard Fultz, Mr. anti Mrs.
John Musser, Mo·. a111l Mrs.
R H. ltickens, Mr. and Mrs.
Hichard Owen and Mr. and
Mrs. Kcl'lllil Walton.
Employes and special
guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Lany Smith, Myrtle Cogar

Refreshments w rn~ served

following the in, tollatl on.
The honored qut~ n ·s colors
nre rt!d, whit e nnrl siiYer , her
em blem, nn ll n)&lt;!el_, her
flower , the red carnation, her
theme, hope, nnd .her motto,
" For yestcrduy is but 11
dream. and tomor:row is only

PRINGLES lWIN PAK •••••••••••••••••••••• 89'

bottles
Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

'

Vanessa Folmer. senior
custodian: Valerie Jeffers:
junior cust odian: Kend a
Braun, inn er guard , and

ROBIN HOOD flOUR ooooooooooooor251b. Bag $3,99

Dec. 28 . Jan. 1

GOLDEN ISLE

Susanna Wi se, librarian ;

Installed as choir members Marty Krawsczy n, a&lt;·
were Oee Simm s, La nl companlst for spe lal music
Vellincla, Mary Sue Durst, prese nted by the Meigs High
Merri Aull, Mary Ann Hoff- School Girls' Eusenlble .
man, Kim Sebo IUld Jull · Guests were registered by
Velllnicia.
Sa ndy Curtis and Carolyn
The Installing officers were Soneltzer.
Merri Aull , Installing offi cer:
The guardian council Is
!Nbbie Glaze, guide :· Diana composed ol Kathy Millor,
Carsey, marshall; lJz Blactl· guurdia n: Bill Quic kel,
nar, chaplain : Barb Fult~. associate guardln n: Marilyn
senior custodian : Angle Wilcox, guardian secretary ;
Sisson , junior cus todian ; Luis Weaver , guAr dian
Cathy Workman, r ee~rder : treasurer. Mnklng up the
Sha ron Wilson, musici an : assotiate guard ian council
Lisa Thomas, flag benrcr ; are Carol Si!ISon, promoter
Gerald Kelly, soloist, and o! sociobll ity : lln rbara
Murray , .custodh111
of
pa ra ph ern olln : Audr ey
Woort,
promoter
of
hos pita lit y: und J une
Eichinger, dl rcct01
of
fi nance.

All Purpose

COFF.EE

Twin City Gateway

MAXWELL

.

·

I

Btl-

:•

Coupon e~~;p, Jan. 1, 19".:
Twin Citr Gateway f!

,

11-U

39e.

' MAXWEll
tDISE

f

i

'

LARGE
BUNCH
. .

I

DOWNEY .

...................
..................
.....- ....
,.................!

i
i:

STORE CLOSED
•

i.SPAGHETTI .i

i !•

&lt; Coupon e~ep . Jan. 1, 1977 It

l.ge. Bar

FRIDAY' UNTIL 8 PM

,,

FLORIDA
COOKING
CELERY
ONIONS
..............,
•• .................!

••

59 N. SECOND ST.

Merchandise
NEW YEAR'S DAY

...: J

LAFF. A. DAY

Christmas

YELLOW

at

Ctay.

On All

89f
.

SAUERKRAUT

SHOWER SET
A·household shower for the
Prater family whose home
was destroyed by fire last
week will be help Thursday
night at 6 p.m. at the Burling·
ham Woodmen's Hall, next
.door to Bur~on's Grocery in
Burlingham, There are six
members in the Prater
family and they are in need of
all kinds of household items
as well as furniture. Anyone
with furniture to donate is
asked to contact either 992~·992-2232, 992-7435 or 9925001.

CASH AND CARRY

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE
PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

OLD FASHIONED JAR

HEINZ
KEG-0·
KETCHUP

OFF

46 oz.
'CAN

• 32oz.49¢ PIZZA

NEW YEAR'S DAY

Southwes1ern at Portsmouth

99~

LB.

GOLDEN ISLE

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH

STORE CLOSED

Thursday. Buflalo, W. Va.
Kyger Creek and

SALE

. LOIN

This week's games :

Tonight.
Southern
Federa1 Hocking .

++ +

AFTER CHRISTMAS

·

2 2 256 2J8

S.W.:
The Lord helps those who help themselves.
Get into "Hi" gear and let the girls know you're interested .
After the first Hello, things get easier, You'll see. - HELEN
H .· +
.
NOTE FROM SUE : Especially if you pick a girl who
seems a little out of it too. Sometimes they're the best kind.
And tell her you'.re shy. It's a great way to bring out the
protective instinct in women.
PERSONAL to "Liz Me D. of Noxville" : You're more •
than a little mixed up. First you confuse me with another
columnist (I've never. been divorced), and when I try to
answer your criticisms personally, my letter is returned,
marked "Addressee unknown."
I'm saving my explanations for you, 1£ you'll come clean .
with a stamped, self-addressed envelope. - HELEN

OFF

Hannan Trace
Southwestern

~

PORK
LOIN

vlastc

at
HURRICANE BABY
PAmRSON, N.J. (UP!)The
wife of
Rubin
"Hurricane" Carter Monday
gave birth to a boy six days
after her husband was
convicted f(J" a secood time
foc the murder of three
persons at a Paterson bar
moce than 10 years ago.
A spokeswoman at Barnert
·Memorial Hospital Center
here se,id Thelma Carter and
the six:JlOund, 3\1-ounce boy
were in excellent condition.
Last lfeek, Pulaic County
Coort Judse Bruno Leopl!zi
denled a defense requett that
Carter, a· former boxer,
remain free on bail untO the
chlld was born.

QUARTER

'

SALE

TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
S 0 425 298
Symmes Valley 3 2 277 298

Rap :
I'm 16 and live a Christian life . For two years I've prayed
every nigl\t that God would send me the right gitl. He doesn't
even send me the wrong oneJ The Bible says, "Trust in Him
and he shall bring it to pass." But I'm impatient.
· Please give me some advice. - STILL WAITING

$}09

AFTER CHRISTMAS

SVAC STANDINGS

+++

12 OZ. PKG.

BEEF

92

0 3 136 160
o 3 81 139
10 10 BOO 840

Dear Just :
Can a hurnmiilgbird hatch an ostrich egg?
Daydreaming is fme : most of us thrive on a bit of it. But be
reallstic too. Even groupies hardly ever make it with the Star:
He's too busy and well-protected, among other things.
stay with "fan," It 's safer that way. - HELEN AND SUE

.59~

installed were Beverly
Wllco• . chaplain : Tracy
Jeffers, record er; Sheila
Horky, treasurer: Janet
Horky. musician: Ruth Ann
Blake, 1st messenger: Kathy
Blake, second messenger :
J en~ife r
Wise,
third
messe nger : Susie Zirkle,
fourth messe nge r : Vickie
Sheets, fifth messe nger :

Cn.ssle Sheets, outer guard.

Dear Helen and Sue :
I like a man who is 14 years older than I, and I've never
met him. I've been hung up on him several years, and kids at
school say I'm dumb because he is weird, crazy, and some
other things.
I'm sotry I can't tell you his name but he is a very famous
rock star, known foc jlis glasses and,wild clothes,
·
I can't outgrow him as people sqggest, so please tell me ·
how I can meet E. J .. and make him like me as more than JUST A FAN

79e

."I '

+++

+++

WIENERS

GROUND

next season

(

•

NOTE FROM SUE: What's so unusual? Going Dutch or
borrowing until payday is pretty routine in the "equality
generation." If your friend likes this guy's company, why get
l!hol down by tradition?

FRANKIE

FRESH I
LEAN I

be back, but

QUINCY, Mass. (UP! )
Gall ipoli s
3 3 352 364 Boston Cellics' e~nter Dave
Waverly
3 J 322 330 Cowens says he will begin a
Ports.
2 2 266 250 job at a race track next
Meigs
1 4 ~07 36 1
Wellston
1 S 302 472 month · and return to
Athens
0 7 393 4B4 basketball next season.
- Oec. 28 games :
In an exclusive interview
West at Wh eelersburg
published Monday by the
South Po int at Ironton
Washington CH at Waver ly Patriot Ledger of Quincy,
Cowens said he wlll not
Dec. 29 games:
Jackson at Greenl leld
return to the Celtlcs this
Dec. 30 games:
season . He took a personal
Vinton County at Wellston
leave of absence Nov. 10,
Lancaster at Athen s
GA HS vs . Pt . Pl ea sa nt, a t Rio saying he had lost his
enthusiasm for basketball
· and needed a rest.
SEOAL VARSITY
·'I'll definitely be there the
TEAM
W L
P OP
first
day training camp
Log;;~ n
.1 0
379
711
Ja ck son
3 1 n a n s opens. I'll be ready tn go at it
Iront on
3 1 1)1
IB7 again. Whether the Celtlcs
G~llipoli s
1 2
n7
23 7
wav er ly
7 1
715 77 7 want me or not, I'll be there,''
Meig s
1 3
751&gt;
10 I
Cowens told sports writer
well ston
1 3
198
:177
an .
A lhC I'l S
0 4
?&lt;10
16 7 Harv ey Robbins in
TOTALS
16 16 1980 lUO
interview from Cold Spring,
Ky.
The 6-foot-9 Cowens said he
SEOAL • E s E • v E '
will
become assistant general
W l P OP
TE AM
... o 709 106 manager althe New England
Iront on
Athen s
' o 1B 1 157 Harness Raceway in Foxboro
3 1 171 1so
Waverly
3 1 11 1 1se Jan. 11.
L oqan
Gallipoli s
1 3 136 1"
"This is not a position just
17 3 237 . for today. II is somethong' that
Jackson
1
3
0 ~ 11 (&gt; 160
M eigs ,
o , 137 m offers a solid future for him
Well ston

CHESTER -- The tradi·
tiona! holiday potluck of
Ch es ler Cou ncil 323 ,

LB.

Cowens will

Cage sta11dings

HELEN

SPARE RIBS

ENTERING GOLDEN YEARS -Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Hughes of Galllpoll.s Route I will celebrate their 50th
anniversary with an open house Sunday, Jan. 2from 2 to 4
p.m. at.the home of their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon (Janet) Goble, Mills VUi8ge, 43S Lariat
Drive, Galllpolls. The Hughes are the parents of three
children, Roy, Gallipolis; Mrs. Marlon (Doris) Rainey,
Nitro, W.. Va. and Mrs. Goble. They also have 10
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Mr. Hughes
is a retired dairy fanner . The couple has spent their entire
ffilU'I'ied life in Addison Twp. They were married Dec. 31,
1926 by her father, the late W. Kenneth · Riggs, The
omission of gifts is requested.

Paula Bichinger , daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Eichinger, Mulberry Heights,
was installed honored qu~n
qf Bethel 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, in
ceremonies Monday night at
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
Others installed were Lori
Wood , senior princess:
Mandy Sisson, junior prln·
cess: Beth Ann Weaver,
guide, and Joni MurrnY,
marshall, aU elected officers.
The appoint erl offl re".

N.T.L.:
Since your friend settled for "broke but honest, " let's gQ
with that. Come payday, she may have a different opinion. -

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

•

Bethel 62 installs honored queen

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Ia He Honest or a Moocher?
Rop :
•
There's a new guy in our office my friend likes a lot. The
other day h~ mvited her to hmch. Then added , "If you'll lend
me the money till payday." She went! Unusual, I'd say.
What's your opinion of him ? - NOT THAT UBERATIJ:D

' SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

FRESH

I

•

OPEN .

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 1, 1977

Generation Rap -

~

9AMT09PM
How about a New Year's Day football widows' jamboree?
That's what has been suggested by a Sentinel reader who
prefers to remain anonymous because she doesn't care " for
the populace to know my marital problems.''
The leUer from Mrs. X"On New Year's Day I always have a headache and jangled
nerves. It's hot caused by celebrating on New year's Eve. The
ailment is caused by the con,stant noise of football gatnes on
TV from early afternoon until II or 12 p.m. ·
"For some of tl.S, there seems to be no escape. We have no ·
soundproof rooms. The stores are not open to shop, the chur·
ches have their parties the nighi before, friends have their
relatives and Immediate fami ly at home. I hate the modem
movies, and it seems that even visiting rest homes are not ad·
visable after 5or6 o'clock. Does anyone have asuggestion]
"For years I have wondered why an organization or civic
group did not sponsor an annual FOOTBALL WIDOWS' JAM·
BOREE.
"Children and non-football men could also attend if they
wished. A potluck supper could he held if the group was small
or an organlz&lt;ltion could serve a supper to raise mO.ey.
"Games, talent show or hymn sing could be held. Aspelling
contest would be fw1. A style show would be interesting to the
females. I ha.ve always wanted to attend a public meeting
where anybody could get up .and talk on any subject for a set
time. There are so many possibilities.
I am not a leader but would he willing to help if aliy group
want.s to sponsor such an event and let It be known by way of
the Sentinel. "

5- Tbe Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday ,INc. 28,_1916
~~&gt;:~:::ISI&gt;;;:&gt;.«@:IJ$..&lt;$:'~~'5o'i.:S&lt; /i~"&lt;$1-)~~ilw.':':"'"'-~;·:&lt;

VIRGINIA

iJACoN I&amp;$119

$}19

BEEF LIVER
LB.

29e
WIENERS

20 CT.

•

�•
•

I

OPEN
MON. THRU SAT.

Traditional potluck
enjoyed by council

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

ALL (;AMES
Team
W L P OP
Logan
1 . o 638 415
Wheelersbg . 6 0 409 298
Pl. Pleas.
1 o 87 75

5 2 424 424

Jackson
Ironton

3 2 274 237

Frederick sent word. of her
appreciation foo· c•rds and
flowers.
D(.lughtet·s of America, was
Plans were made for the
held Tuesday night at the books to be autliled on Jan. 3
hall.
at 1:30 p.m. at the horne of
Prayer was given by Ada Doris' Grueser. At the next
Morri s and Dorothy Lawson meeting new officers will be
presided at the dinner installed and the officers are
meeting attended by Jl as ked to wear while.
members. Opal Hollon, Nomination and election of
chainnan of the good of the officers was completed.
order committee, asked the
The members sang
fla gbea rers to escort the Christmas c• rols and giving
book officers tb the altar readings were Erma Cleland,
wh ere they were given Elizabeth Hayes, and Jean ·
special recognition and a gift. Swnrnerlield. Games were
11my were Ethel Orr, Ada played with prim going to
Van Meter, Zelda Weber, the winners. There wa.s &lt;m
Margaret Tuttle and Ada exch• nge of gifts. Mrs. Wolf
Neutzling. Also recognized was pianist.
and given a gift were Esther
Others attending were
Ridenour, deputy st.lte cowl· Charlotte Grant, Dorothy
cilor, Helen Wolf, pjanist, Ritchie, Mary Newell, Goldie
and Mary K. Holter, publicity Wolfe, Marcia Keller, Letha
chairman. A birthday gift Wood , Goldie Frederick,
was also presented to Mrs. Eilee n Martin, Thelma
!Udenour and membeo·s sang While, Dorothy Lawso n,
"Happy Birtlxlay" to all Dorothy Myers, Mae
those with December bil'· Spence r, Doris Koenig,
thdays.
Leona Hensley, Joe Bissell,
It was reported that Hattie Belly Roush, S•die Trussell'
· Frederick fell and broke her Julia Rose, Ada Bissell, May TOT ALS
10 16 1J 44 13~ 4 for years to come/' sald
hip and is now a patient at the McPeek, Laura Mac Nice,
Press Hobso"n , viee president
Holzer Medical Center. Leda Mabel Van llieter, and lnzy
and general manager of the
SEOAL FRESHMEN
Mae Kraeuter is home troni a Newell.
track.
Team
W L P OP
Columbu s Hospital. Mrs .
Hobson said he and Cowens
Ga llioolis
3 0 130 99
.Aihens
2 1 151 122 "agreed that this is not a
Waverly
2 1 134 119 publicity deal,"
Logan
7 1 128 113

Classes present program

A program of recitations ,
dialogues and music was
presented by the Sunday
school classes at the aimual
Christmas program at Heath
United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
Mrs. Bob Byer was chair·
man for the program and was
assisted by Mrs. Steve
Houchins. The kindergarten
and nursery children Iinder
the direction of Mrs. Judy
Fraser did a flannel graph
Christmas story and then
sang "Jingle Bells."
The primary children, first
through fourth grades, had
recitations and a dialog ue
with their teachers, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward YOung. In tM
group were J. R. Kitchen,
Sarah Philson, Terry Hart,
David Fisher, Eric Philson,
Allen Spaulding and Brent
George. They were joined by
the kindergarten class to sing
"Away in a Manger".

A skit, "Snow White and
the Seven Elves", was

presented by Mrs. Betty
Fultz' fifth and sixth graders.
In the group were Stephanie
Houchins, Mary Hibbs, Paula
Horton , Charles Davis,
Susanne Wise, Megan Cale
and Cluis Burdette with
Brian George .in charge o£ the
props.
Mrs. Vicki Houchins'·.
junior high class had Charles
Dickens' story , ''The
Christmas Carol,'' as written
by Angie Houchins. Parts
were ta ken by Larry Byer,
Randy Murray, Ruth Blake,
Ca th y Blake, Angie
Houchins, Greg Hibbs, Jean
Ann Horton, and Helen Slack.
Ther e were several
musical niunbers py the fifth,
sixth, seventh and eighth
classes.
,
The senior high claso
whose teacher is L. W. Me·
Comas prese nted the
Christmas message in verse
and song. Mrs. Twila Childs
at at the piano. Taking part
wereDanny Davis, Laura
Hoover, Kelly Burdette, Jo
.I

•

McKinney, Steve Walburn,
Melissa and Marcia Cale, Andy Hoover, Jennifer Wise,
Mike Davenport, Julie Byer,
John Byer, Becky Fultz,
Rhond• Reuter, Julie Kit·
chen, Fwniko Iwasaki, Toni
Pope, David Horton, Steve
Bachner, and Joni Murray.
From the milled adult
class, Dewey Horton gave a
recitation and there was a
vocal quartet, "I Heard the
Bells On Christmas" by the
Rev. Robert Bwngarner, Mr.
and Mrs. Wendell Hoover and
Ben Philson, with Laura
Hoover, accompanlst
·
Symbols and lrHdi·
tionswere given by members
of Class 12 with Mrs. James
Euler •nd Mrs. Ben Philson
giving the history of carols
and caroling; Mrs. James
Jividen, the tradition or giv·
ing gifts; Mrs. Nan Moore,
the " Twelve Days of
Christmas, " Mrs. Robert
Reinhart, the story of
Christmas carols. There was
group singing of carols with
Mrs. Emerson JOnes at the
piano.
A social hour with a visit
from Santa followed Uie program.

1 1

Jackson

Wel lslon
Meigs
TOTI\LS

84

Jan. 6 gameS :
Athens . at Gallipolis
Jackson a t Meigs
Wellston at Waver ly
Logan ~ O pen

Feb. 5 game :
Wa ver ly at Logan (Makeup,
11 a .m .)

All Games

Eastern

0 4 137 228

CASH AND CARRY

2 3 321 319

Kyger Creek
Norlh Galli a

2 3 3SS 348
1 3 244 289

On All

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP
'Southern
3 0 272 184
Hannan Trace

Christmas

2 0 124 121

Symmes Valley 2 1 182 181
North Gatlla
1 1 129 128
Southwestern
1 2 188 176
Eastern
0 2 71 116
Kyger Creek
0 3 172 232
RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Galli a
2 0 92 51
Southern

3 1 145 123

Southwestern

2 1 114 110

Hannan Trace

0 2 J2 81
0 2 61 100

Merchandise

Symmes Valley 2 1 130 131
Kyger Creek
Eastern

I 2 106 124

RIB END

PORK
ROAST

PORK
ROAST

LB.

TOMATO
JUICE

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon .• Tues.; Wed. B, Sat.-8:301115:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 N.OON

32 oz. Btl.

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

:
:

:•
:•

:

t

Mason, W. Va .

RAGU

r ..............,

:

:

. Twin City Gateway

DIAL ·
SOAP

I 39¢

GOLD ONLY

I ~~~ I
99~

FABRIC
: SOFTENER
96

i-= .:.

.

oz.

:

: Coupon exp. Jan. 1. 1977 •
f

Twin City Gateway

f CHIFFON

:.:.
i

!•

LEMON
DISHWASH
No. 205
22

oz.

Btl.

$

................"
•

.

: 1Coupon exp. Jan. 1,

f

lt77

.

INSTANT

:
:

.

. 1NSTANT
·:1COFFEE
HOUSE

l0oz~2 99
Jar ·

Coupon exp . Jan. 1,

Twin City

/-~

"Your eyes are like limpid
pools, your ears are .Ivory
shells, your lips are like
rosebuds, but your throat is
inflamed by a minor virus in·
recuon! ..

59 N. SECOND ST.

$299

Directors entertain employees
·with party at Meigs Inn
PRESENTED ATTRACTIVE CAKE- Mr. and Mrs,
David Ohlinger, Middleport, who celebrated their 34th
wedding anniversary Christmas day, were presented a
beautifully decorated cake by Gwen Swann. The two tier
cake was given to theonthe day before Christmas.

Directors of the Meigs In·
vestment Corporation entet··
lllined o·ecenlly with a party
allhe Meigs Inn for employes
and their guc~Lii ,
Dinner was prepared and
served by the direclurs and
cnterl&lt;Jimncnt was prov ided
by "Tigress." Gifts were
presented to alithe employes
by John Musser and Bill
Childs and door prizes were
e~warde ll . In recognition of
speciul service provided the
Meigs Inn, gifts were also
presenlc'll to Augie Caito,
Lancaster fur his serviees in
opening the new Meigs Inn
By Polly Cramer
have served .their purpose I Pizza Shack, Virgil Brown,
Polly's Problem
save them for the grand· Pomeroy for· hi~ service~ ami
DEAR POLLY - Would ·children's visits. I keep
in special foods,
anyone have a suggestion for chiJdren 's scissors and assislanc'e
and
Bill
Chiltls,
president of
removing greasy' finger- crayons on hand. They enjoy
the
corporation,
roo· his
prints that are around the coloring the black mod while assistcmce iri plannirw
and
handles on my cabinets and pictures with the crayons and
furniture? Also, how does one then cutting out the colored
remove make-up from pictures to paste on large
around the collar on a perma· sheets of while or colored
nent press coot? -MRS. R.M.
paper. This keeps them
DEAR MRS. R.M. -There amused for quite a time.
is a CHANCE you could
I save so many different
remove those greasy S}l(lt.s sizes and types of plastic
with a laundry pre-test spray buwls and cont.;Jiners that
such as used on garmenW. ·when a howl is empty I put a
Test first as you did not say nwnber on the butlom with a
what sort of finish your waterproof mao·king pen and
piet&gt;es have . A wood cleanet a matching nwnber on its lid.
could also be used alid then Then~ is nu mure hlinling for
the pieces waxed or polished the proper lit!.- GRANDMA.
as usual. I£ there is a heavy
build-up of wax remove it :~8::::~-w::».~ ::. !L .. :C:i&amp;'e'!'
with liquid wax sprayed on
and rubbed orr while wet. The
marks may come orr with the
wax. A furniture wash that
will remove a build-up of dirt
and grime is to mix three
t.lblespoons linseed oil, one
t.lblespoon turpentine in a
quart of hot water and let
TUESDAY
cool. Wash a small section at
RACINE AMERICAN
a time, rub dry and go to next Legion Auxiliary, 6:30
section. When finished polish Tuesday nlght at the hall. ·
as Usual.
Members to take cookies.
You might sprinkle corn ml
. 'l'i!URSDAY
on your coat colr, let it st.ly a
LETART
TOWNSHIP
few minutes and then brush
Trustees
Thursday,
7 p.m, at
off. If this does not work try a
Letart
Falls
Community
regular dry cleaning fluid. I
once read that many new Hall.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
fabrics should be treated like
ON DISPLAY with other
trustees
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
V!Ps so · •·emember that.
celebrities,
Liza Mlonelll
Heed any warnings on labels at town house.
was among the star
and lest anything before usattractions at a California
ing.- POLLY.
charity benefit staged like
DEAR POLLY -.! was
a circus. The festivities
looking around fur something
were
!limed
for
better than brown paper bags
present•llon on
to cover the children's school
nationwide television in
books and came up with a HODGSON QUITI'ING
January ,
·
couple of old plastic tote bags · TOKYO (UP!) - U.S. Am·
that were too pretty to throw bassador James Hodgson has
away. They made great told
the
Japanese
covers. Before too long an old govenunent he wlll resign SUNNY PLAYBOY
HONOLULU (UPI)
pink plastic raincoat was put and return tb the United
to the same use and then a States in early February, a Hugh Hefner may open a
blue plastic shower curt..in Japanese Foceign Ministry Playboy club and hotel in
Honolulu..
was bought at a garage sale spokesman said today.
"We had several of our club
for fifty cents and I had more
The resignation had been
executives
here less than a
because
of
covers. The best part is that expected
month
ago
to look into the
such t'Qvers · are sturdy, President Ford's loss m the
possibility
of
opening a club
November
presidential
waterproof •nd can be easily
and
a
hotel,"
Hefner ,
election.
Hodgson
,
a
wiped off when soiled.. Republican, was appointed chairman and Chief executive
BE'ITY.
or
Playboy
DEAR POLLY - After by former President Richard officer
Enterprises,
said
Monday.
those Christmas cat.liogues Nixon.

managing the coo·poration.
On behalf of the employes.
illolph Werry presented a
silvco' service to Mr. and Mo's.
John

Polly's Pointers .
Try furniture wash

~

t

I

2 LB. BAG...

59~

g ~ ncnll

uml Jolm llremmur, Pam
Granen and ClmrhJs Brown,
Jane Cundiff, Mo·. and Mo.,;.
Hun Quillen. Mr. and Mrs.
Williani Cogur, Mr. ami Mrs.
Charl es Chancey, !lui ph
Werry , Eleanor Werry.
Helen lloliley, Ollie Young,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bentz,
Thomas Bentz, Jr., Denni s
Musser, 1'om Mussc1·, Hubert
Lemley, Rick Couch and
.June Wamsley, Mr. uud Mrs.
AI Haomon, .loni Sellers and
Eric Pearch, Ron Vance and
Naiocy St. Clai r, Mr. mod Mrs.
Dou~la s Wy•tl, Mr . mod Mo's.
Noel Milleo· , Fran ces
Carleton , Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Angle
Caito, Lonni e Donahue,
Hazel Buck, Put O'Dell , llun
Brinker, and Miss Jwasukl.

n vi sion. But tndny, w~·!\
lived, makes evr:ry ycStcrfl .
drmun of huppincss,
every tomorrow a visit
hope."
tt

Social
Calendar

111

of

1977
Time
\ For
I

. Troop exchanges gifts

\N~w

'-

Members of the Syracuse
Junior Girl Scout Troop 120-1
mel recently at the home of
Mrs. Sharon Michael foo a
party and gift exchange.
Games were pbiyed with
pri1.es going to Christy Ar·
nold, Julie Willis and .lennoe
Bentley. Christmas cupcakes, cookies, ice cream
and Kool-Aid were served

CHILDREN TREATED
Over 400 children received
treats from Santa at the
Ameri can Leg ion hall In
Middleport on Christma s
Eve. Treats and glfis were
also taken to the Meigs
County Infirmary and sent to
Arcadia N~rsing Home anti
th e Children's Home In
Gallipolis. Each place aiso
received a basket of fruit.

and then the girl::: went curnling. Trish Michael wa.s H
guest for the pa rty.
Al lt:~ s t wcek' s regulHr
meeting the members nnlsh·
ed their Christmas projects.
A vote of thanks was extend·
cd . to l.inda May co· for
finishing some uf the
ceramics. The meeting opened with the Lord 's Pruycr let!
by Jennie Bentley, and the
pledge to the flag by Clwisly
Arnold, All of the girls
recited the girl scout promisc.

WATCH

PRICED
UNDER

$35

SERVICE SET
There wlll be a New Year's
Eve service at the_ Stiver Run
Freewill Baptist Church
beginnin g at 7:30 p.m.
Preacfting wlli be by the Rev.
Noah Burgess and the Rev.
William Price. The public Is
weJcome.

REUTER-BROGAN
"The ITlsurance Store"
1.

Auto Insuran ce

2. Home Insurance

Mobil e Homes
4. Hea lth Insurance

l

s. Life Insurance

6. Boat In surance
7. Motorcycles

CARfl\IELLE,

8. Jewelry and Oth er
Villuablos

NRlJLOJ~

9. Bu siness Package
Policies
10. Lia tJil lly In surance
11. Fartn Insuranc e

Wo'fo otlerlng 1hl&amp;walch
1wo ways. If!!: an eKcellent

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"

texlUred gold lone case,
sweep !lecond, fu ll numeral

PACKAGE POLICY - Put your auto, home. hea lth
and life insuran ce Into ONE policy . Save money and
have one premium due date for all your Insurance.

dial and unbreakable
mainspring. Water and
ahock resistent . SuiOYII

And very
modntlv orlced. ·

guoronte~ .

Some Of OUr .O ther Services:
Copy Servict -Notary S.rvice-&lt;Ar Lusing
Service ·

GOESSLER'S

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

JEWELRY STORE

"The Insurance Stone"

214 E. MAIN

IJ&amp;Iue. Preci sion leweled.

Claoslc In style. Wllh

Court St ..
Pomeroy

PH. 992-5130

992-2920

KRAFT

MAC. &amp; CHEESE DINNER •••••••••••••·~.~·i. 69'
CUT GREEN BEANS •••••••••• -.;~~~~::. 31'1.00

&amp; Pearl .

AUNT JEMIMA

PHEB.E'S STORE

PANCAKE MIX •••••• ~ •••••••••••••••'2,,~ .. ~·•• sr

Rlgl!t Reserved to Limit Wantliles
We Ctadly Acctpt Ftd cFood Stamps
Monday 'thru Friday
9:00to 7:00
to9

7-UP or
PEPSI
~,~az~ 99~

(ENDS)

DAWN DISH DETERGENT•••••••••••••••••••
12 oz.
79'

IDAHO

Potatoes

10 lb.

Bananas

s lb.

bag

' '

- - VALLEY BELL
DAIRY

99~

SOUR CREAM
.or CHIP DIP

2/89~

2 lb . Tray
Sliced

$129

-

PORK CHOPS
LB.

.

TASTEE
BOLOGNA

FRESH LIKE SUCED BE~ •••••••••JRm, 41'1
TAU BOY SOUP......... Tomoto
&amp; Vegetaboe
3/SJOO.
~.~.............
-- PRODUCE

CENTER CUT

PORK
CHOPSLB.99~

GREEN GIANT

00

FRENCH
FRIES

M usscr,

manager . Mi ss Fumikn
Iwasakl, a Japanese · excha nge student li ving with
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard ~' ullz,
sang "Silent Night" in
J &lt;.~ pe~ n ese . She received a
si.Hnding ovHtion r1·u.m those
present.
Directors und their wivt:s
present were M•. • nd Mrs.
Bill Chi lds, Mr. and Mrs. Ber·
nard Fultz, Mr. anti Mrs.
John Musser, Mo·. a111l Mrs.
R H. ltickens, Mr. and Mrs.
Hichard Owen and Mr. and
Mrs. Kcl'lllil Walton.
Employes and special
guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Lany Smith, Myrtle Cogar

Refreshments w rn~ served

following the in, tollatl on.
The honored qut~ n ·s colors
nre rt!d, whit e nnrl siiYer , her
em blem, nn ll n)&lt;!el_, her
flower , the red carnation, her
theme, hope, nnd .her motto,
" For yestcrduy is but 11
dream. and tomor:row is only

PRINGLES lWIN PAK •••••••••••••••••••••• 89'

bottles
Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

'

Vanessa Folmer. senior
custodian: Valerie Jeffers:
junior cust odian: Kend a
Braun, inn er guard , and

ROBIN HOOD flOUR ooooooooooooor251b. Bag $3,99

Dec. 28 . Jan. 1

GOLDEN ISLE

Susanna Wi se, librarian ;

Installed as choir members Marty Krawsczy n, a&lt;·
were Oee Simm s, La nl companlst for spe lal music
Vellincla, Mary Sue Durst, prese nted by the Meigs High
Merri Aull, Mary Ann Hoff- School Girls' Eusenlble .
man, Kim Sebo IUld Jull · Guests were registered by
Velllnicia.
Sa ndy Curtis and Carolyn
The Installing officers were Soneltzer.
Merri Aull , Installing offi cer:
The guardian council Is
!Nbbie Glaze, guide :· Diana composed ol Kathy Millor,
Carsey, marshall; lJz Blactl· guurdia n: Bill Quic kel,
nar, chaplain : Barb Fult~. associate guardln n: Marilyn
senior custodian : Angle Wilcox, guardian secretary ;
Sisson , junior cus todian ; Luis Weaver , guAr dian
Cathy Workman, r ee~rder : treasurer. Mnklng up the
Sha ron Wilson, musici an : assotiate guard ian council
Lisa Thomas, flag benrcr ; are Carol Si!ISon, promoter
Gerald Kelly, soloist, and o! sociobll ity : lln rbara
Murray , .custodh111
of
pa ra ph ern olln : Audr ey
Woort,
promoter
of
hos pita lit y: und J une
Eichinger, dl rcct01
of
fi nance.

All Purpose

COFF.EE

Twin City Gateway

MAXWELL

.

·

I

Btl-

:•

Coupon e~~;p, Jan. 1, 19".:
Twin Citr Gateway f!

,

11-U

39e.

' MAXWEll
tDISE

f

i

'

LARGE
BUNCH
. .

I

DOWNEY .

...................
..................
.....- ....
,.................!

i
i:

STORE CLOSED
•

i.SPAGHETTI .i

i !•

&lt; Coupon e~ep . Jan. 1, 1977 It

l.ge. Bar

FRIDAY' UNTIL 8 PM

,,

FLORIDA
COOKING
CELERY
ONIONS
..............,
•• .................!

••

59 N. SECOND ST.

Merchandise
NEW YEAR'S DAY

...: J

LAFF. A. DAY

Christmas

YELLOW

at

Ctay.

On All

89f
.

SAUERKRAUT

SHOWER SET
A·household shower for the
Prater family whose home
was destroyed by fire last
week will be help Thursday
night at 6 p.m. at the Burling·
ham Woodmen's Hall, next
.door to Bur~on's Grocery in
Burlingham, There are six
members in the Prater
family and they are in need of
all kinds of household items
as well as furniture. Anyone
with furniture to donate is
asked to contact either 992~·992-2232, 992-7435 or 9925001.

CASH AND CARRY

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE
PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

OLD FASHIONED JAR

HEINZ
KEG-0·
KETCHUP

OFF

46 oz.
'CAN

• 32oz.49¢ PIZZA

NEW YEAR'S DAY

Southwes1ern at Portsmouth

99~

LB.

GOLDEN ISLE

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH

STORE CLOSED

Thursday. Buflalo, W. Va.
Kyger Creek and

SALE

. LOIN

This week's games :

Tonight.
Southern
Federa1 Hocking .

++ +

AFTER CHRISTMAS

·

2 2 256 2J8

S.W.:
The Lord helps those who help themselves.
Get into "Hi" gear and let the girls know you're interested .
After the first Hello, things get easier, You'll see. - HELEN
H .· +
.
NOTE FROM SUE : Especially if you pick a girl who
seems a little out of it too. Sometimes they're the best kind.
And tell her you'.re shy. It's a great way to bring out the
protective instinct in women.
PERSONAL to "Liz Me D. of Noxville" : You're more •
than a little mixed up. First you confuse me with another
columnist (I've never. been divorced), and when I try to
answer your criticisms personally, my letter is returned,
marked "Addressee unknown."
I'm saving my explanations for you, 1£ you'll come clean .
with a stamped, self-addressed envelope. - HELEN

OFF

Hannan Trace
Southwestern

~

PORK
LOIN

vlastc

at
HURRICANE BABY
PAmRSON, N.J. (UP!)The
wife of
Rubin
"Hurricane" Carter Monday
gave birth to a boy six days
after her husband was
convicted f(J" a secood time
foc the murder of three
persons at a Paterson bar
moce than 10 years ago.
A spokeswoman at Barnert
·Memorial Hospital Center
here se,id Thelma Carter and
the six:JlOund, 3\1-ounce boy
were in excellent condition.
Last lfeek, Pulaic County
Coort Judse Bruno Leopl!zi
denled a defense requett that
Carter, a· former boxer,
remain free on bail untO the
chlld was born.

QUARTER

'

SALE

TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
S 0 425 298
Symmes Valley 3 2 277 298

Rap :
I'm 16 and live a Christian life . For two years I've prayed
every nigl\t that God would send me the right gitl. He doesn't
even send me the wrong oneJ The Bible says, "Trust in Him
and he shall bring it to pass." But I'm impatient.
· Please give me some advice. - STILL WAITING

$}09

AFTER CHRISTMAS

SVAC STANDINGS

+++

12 OZ. PKG.

BEEF

92

0 3 136 160
o 3 81 139
10 10 BOO 840

Dear Just :
Can a hurnmiilgbird hatch an ostrich egg?
Daydreaming is fme : most of us thrive on a bit of it. But be
reallstic too. Even groupies hardly ever make it with the Star:
He's too busy and well-protected, among other things.
stay with "fan," It 's safer that way. - HELEN AND SUE

.59~

installed were Beverly
Wllco• . chaplain : Tracy
Jeffers, record er; Sheila
Horky, treasurer: Janet
Horky. musician: Ruth Ann
Blake, 1st messenger: Kathy
Blake, second messenger :
J en~ife r
Wise,
third
messe nger : Susie Zirkle,
fourth messe nge r : Vickie
Sheets, fifth messe nger :

Cn.ssle Sheets, outer guard.

Dear Helen and Sue :
I like a man who is 14 years older than I, and I've never
met him. I've been hung up on him several years, and kids at
school say I'm dumb because he is weird, crazy, and some
other things.
I'm sotry I can't tell you his name but he is a very famous
rock star, known foc jlis glasses and,wild clothes,
·
I can't outgrow him as people sqggest, so please tell me ·
how I can meet E. J .. and make him like me as more than JUST A FAN

79e

."I '

+++

+++

WIENERS

GROUND

next season

(

•

NOTE FROM SUE: What's so unusual? Going Dutch or
borrowing until payday is pretty routine in the "equality
generation." If your friend likes this guy's company, why get
l!hol down by tradition?

FRANKIE

FRESH I
LEAN I

be back, but

QUINCY, Mass. (UP! )
Gall ipoli s
3 3 352 364 Boston Cellics' e~nter Dave
Waverly
3 J 322 330 Cowens says he will begin a
Ports.
2 2 266 250 job at a race track next
Meigs
1 4 ~07 36 1
Wellston
1 S 302 472 month · and return to
Athens
0 7 393 4B4 basketball next season.
- Oec. 28 games :
In an exclusive interview
West at Wh eelersburg
published Monday by the
South Po int at Ironton
Washington CH at Waver ly Patriot Ledger of Quincy,
Cowens said he wlll not
Dec. 29 games:
Jackson at Greenl leld
return to the Celtlcs this
Dec. 30 games:
season . He took a personal
Vinton County at Wellston
leave of absence Nov. 10,
Lancaster at Athen s
GA HS vs . Pt . Pl ea sa nt, a t Rio saying he had lost his
enthusiasm for basketball
· and needed a rest.
SEOAL VARSITY
·'I'll definitely be there the
TEAM
W L
P OP
first
day training camp
Log;;~ n
.1 0
379
711
Ja ck son
3 1 n a n s opens. I'll be ready tn go at it
Iront on
3 1 1)1
IB7 again. Whether the Celtlcs
G~llipoli s
1 2
n7
23 7
wav er ly
7 1
715 77 7 want me or not, I'll be there,''
Meig s
1 3
751&gt;
10 I
Cowens told sports writer
well ston
1 3
198
:177
an .
A lhC I'l S
0 4
?&lt;10
16 7 Harv ey Robbins in
TOTALS
16 16 1980 lUO
interview from Cold Spring,
Ky.
The 6-foot-9 Cowens said he
SEOAL • E s E • v E '
will
become assistant general
W l P OP
TE AM
... o 709 106 manager althe New England
Iront on
Athen s
' o 1B 1 157 Harness Raceway in Foxboro
3 1 171 1so
Waverly
3 1 11 1 1se Jan. 11.
L oqan
Gallipoli s
1 3 136 1"
"This is not a position just
17 3 237 . for today. II is somethong' that
Jackson
1
3
0 ~ 11 (&gt; 160
M eigs ,
o , 137 m offers a solid future for him
Well ston

CHESTER -- The tradi·
tiona! holiday potluck of
Ch es ler Cou ncil 323 ,

LB.

Cowens will

Cage sta11dings

HELEN

SPARE RIBS

ENTERING GOLDEN YEARS -Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Hughes of Galllpoll.s Route I will celebrate their 50th
anniversary with an open house Sunday, Jan. 2from 2 to 4
p.m. at.the home of their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon (Janet) Goble, Mills VUi8ge, 43S Lariat
Drive, Galllpolls. The Hughes are the parents of three
children, Roy, Gallipolis; Mrs. Marlon (Doris) Rainey,
Nitro, W.. Va. and Mrs. Goble. They also have 10
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Mr. Hughes
is a retired dairy fanner . The couple has spent their entire
ffilU'I'ied life in Addison Twp. They were married Dec. 31,
1926 by her father, the late W. Kenneth · Riggs, The
omission of gifts is requested.

Paula Bichinger , daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Eichinger, Mulberry Heights,
was installed honored qu~n
qf Bethel 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, in
ceremonies Monday night at
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
Others installed were Lori
Wood , senior princess:
Mandy Sisson, junior prln·
cess: Beth Ann Weaver,
guide, and Joni MurrnY,
marshall, aU elected officers.
The appoint erl offl re".

N.T.L.:
Since your friend settled for "broke but honest, " let's gQ
with that. Come payday, she may have a different opinion. -

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

•

Bethel 62 installs honored queen

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Ia He Honest or a Moocher?
Rop :
•
There's a new guy in our office my friend likes a lot. The
other day h~ mvited her to hmch. Then added , "If you'll lend
me the money till payday." She went! Unusual, I'd say.
What's your opinion of him ? - NOT THAT UBERATIJ:D

' SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

FRESH

I

•

OPEN .

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 1, 1977

Generation Rap -

~

9AMT09PM
How about a New Year's Day football widows' jamboree?
That's what has been suggested by a Sentinel reader who
prefers to remain anonymous because she doesn't care " for
the populace to know my marital problems.''
The leUer from Mrs. X"On New Year's Day I always have a headache and jangled
nerves. It's hot caused by celebrating on New year's Eve. The
ailment is caused by the con,stant noise of football gatnes on
TV from early afternoon until II or 12 p.m. ·
"For some of tl.S, there seems to be no escape. We have no ·
soundproof rooms. The stores are not open to shop, the chur·
ches have their parties the nighi before, friends have their
relatives and Immediate fami ly at home. I hate the modem
movies, and it seems that even visiting rest homes are not ad·
visable after 5or6 o'clock. Does anyone have asuggestion]
"For years I have wondered why an organization or civic
group did not sponsor an annual FOOTBALL WIDOWS' JAM·
BOREE.
"Children and non-football men could also attend if they
wished. A potluck supper could he held if the group was small
or an organlz&lt;ltion could serve a supper to raise mO.ey.
"Games, talent show or hymn sing could be held. Aspelling
contest would be fw1. A style show would be interesting to the
females. I ha.ve always wanted to attend a public meeting
where anybody could get up .and talk on any subject for a set
time. There are so many possibilities.
I am not a leader but would he willing to help if aliy group
want.s to sponsor such an event and let It be known by way of
the Sentinel. "

5- Tbe Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday ,INc. 28,_1916
~~&gt;:~:::ISI&gt;;;:&gt;.«@:IJ$..&lt;$:'~~'5o'i.:S&lt; /i~"&lt;$1-)~~ilw.':':"'"'-~;·:&lt;

VIRGINIA

iJACoN I&amp;$119

$}19

BEEF LIVER
LB.

29e
WIENERS

20 CT.

•

�·6 _The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Der·

Ast
Graph.
~o1

1

Bern•ce Bade Osol

for Wednnd•y, Dte. 28, 1171

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The torro w lng docurh cnrs
wen~ r ece ived or prPpM ed by
The Ohio Envlronmf'nti'll
Pr otec tion Agency during th e
previous
week
Anyone

1'6or Fast Results. Use

aggrieved o r adv ersel\1 at
fect~d . b~ is!ouance , .den1lll ,
modllrcahon . re¥ocahon or

re,.,ewal of

any

perm lt('i l.

•

WANT AD$

INFORMATION
't

Auto Saln

The Sentinel Classifieds
'

Autos.lee

Business Services

DEADLINES
P .Nl .
Da-;· Before

· Publlcallon .
•
license ( s l. or v a r i ance(s J
correc
Cancellations .
ARIES (M1rch 21~Aprll 1t) may requesr an adjudication
lion~ acctpted first day of
Don't let sel flsh interests take heari ng bv wrltten r f'quest
publication .
pursuant to Ohio R~v i~cd C~de
REGULATIONS
Precedence over· maintaining the
8
Secti on 374.5 07 w!!hr n lhrrty
The Publisher reservet
good w•tl ot tnen ds tOday. e Clays of !he d irectors proposed
·he right to edit or reJect
dernocrstlc tn your outlook
acllon to iss uE.' or denv such
any ads deemed ob ·
TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) Try document s. That statute does
iectlon al . The publlther
not prOVIdC tor hear ing
will not be responsible for
not to take your Utile m1stakes reQues ts , 0 the OEPA . on
more then one Incorrect
too seriously today. Laugh them applications . com pla ints,
1975 CHEVELLE
l4l95
insertion . RATES
art . Others wil l.
verified complain ts, orc.ters , or
Estate Wagon, toca ll owner car, white radial tires, air
fin al actions
For Wanl Ad Strvlct
conditioning, V"8, automatic, power steering and
GEMINI (M•y 21··June 20) This
Within 30 days of publ icat ion
5 . cents per word one
brakes, radio, d~rk red finish, black vinyl interior.
should be a tun day lor you . but In I! ne-wspaper 1n th e aff ec ted
insertion .
you cou ld Incu r une)(pected ex · co unt~ en·y pP.r son may also :
Minimum Charge Sl.OO.
1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO
.
ll995
Ha ve so me ext ra ( 11 submit wr itten comments
lA cents per word tnree
pense 5 ·
.
re lating to actions . propo!aed
ct..lsecutlve Insertions .
Cle!islc, lso V-6, automatic. power steering and brakes,
chang e ha nd y to avotd em - actio ns'. co mpla ints . verified
26 cents per word Slk:
·ra ll y wheels, radio, black and very attre~IIJe .
barrassme.nt.
com pla ints ; {71 r eques t a
consecutive Insertions .
public mee ting regard ing ,
25 Per Cent 0 lsccr:unl on
CANCER (Junt 21-July 22) If proposed a ctio ns. and or D l
Ill'S
1916 C!iEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
paid ads and eds pa id
youlhin k your ideas or methods re quest not ic e of furt her
Grn. finish, good tires, V-8, automatic, P. steering,
within 10 davs.
are better than your associa tes a c1ions on proceedings .
CARD 0~ THANKS
radio, fadory a ir .
t oda~ , u ~ e them. but in a way
Fi nal actions to is.s ue . deny ,
&amp; OBITUARY
th at doas'l'l offend the1r sen- m odi fy, re vo ke o r renew
u .oo for SO word
perm its .
llcenses .
or •minimum .
s lblllties
var ian ces that ar e no f · Ei!ic'h addlt lonaf "wOrd J
cents .
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) You r preceded bY proposed act ions
may be appealed to The
BLIND ADS
warm . e:.~pan si ve ap proa ch Environm e n tal Board of
Additional 2Sc Charge
melts the penl ne s'l in others to- Review . s uit e 305, 395 East
per Advertisement .
day. You mspire the m to follow Br orld Str ee t. Columbus, Ohio,
OFFICE HOURS
your exce llent example
dJ1 16 All suc h lin at actions
8 · 30 a .m. to 5:00 p.m .
arc so ident ified in thi s noti J: C.
Dally , 8:-JO a .m . to 17:00
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Peo- A ) I other requt'~ t s for ad
Noon Sat urday .
pie will do t,hings for you today judicbtl on heor ing s , and oth er
Phone today 992-2156.
Notires
AI!IO Sale•
simply because they . like you. corn munlcations con cerning
11 h
h
publi c heariny s ,
pu blic
NOW ac cepting piano sludenh, 19M Nova. extra sharp, new
You have only to te t em w at m ce t inqs ,
ad ju di c ation
NOTICES
beginners . in termediates, ad·
poin t bucket seots, air shoc ks.
Yflll need .
hear ings. complaint s of ..,ny
ATTN .: !I
vonced
stud
enl!i
Coli
992
·
mags
. Phone Cl'-49-2480.
ALL HOUSEWIVES
L I OR~ (Sept. 23-0cl. ' 23) You ki nd . and regulations , sh?uld
2270.
be addr ess('d 10 Tt]e Legal
All Ya rd Sa les, Rummage-,
1969
CADILLAC
Sedan Devi lht
c; .-~n !ook at both sides a t impor - Re cords Sec tion . OHio EPA .
Porcn and Basement Porch
lou r door . white sidewall tire!,
tant ,!,~ii H:!S today . ThiS will be to p o Box t0A9 , Colu mbus , and Bne me nt sates, etc .
power steering . power broMes ,
111Ur .-dvantage You won't be Ohio , d32 16, (6 1 ~) 466 6037
must be paid in advance .
power seats, om &amp; fm radio.
Q O~ '=: Hf!d by Impulse.
Unl ess otherwise s tated in
Get yours In early by
pa n ic ular noti ces , all other
cllmote control. hcellenl con·
s topping by our office .at
Lost and found
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) c ommunicatio ns includi ng
The Da lly Sentinel. Itt
dlli on. Local owner . Phone
Rewar ds. both spiritu a l And · comments on prop osed ac
Cou rt St or wr iting Box
LOST IN Pomeroy area , 10 year
IX1·2-2413 , $1,444.44 ,
7'19 . Pomeroy , Ohio .157 69
matena l. come 10 you to day tions and requests for pub lic
old whi t&amp; Scott ie dog answers
meeti ng s. sl'lould be addr('ssed
wilh your rem ltt.anct' .
to "Frostie". Coli 992·2349 ONE 1%8 2 door Cu tlos~ in' ex.·
because you're Wlllmg lo a1d e ilhc r taTtl e New Source , Ai r ,
cell-en! condit ion . Phone
before 3 p.m. o or 992·2650
others ou t of th e goodness of ar NPOE S Perm if Rec ords
9925786.
of1er
3
p.m
..
Reward.
your heart .
sec non. wh ic he ve r is ap
propriatc , ill the Ohio EPA. P ln 1\-lemory
LOST · female loxhound. initials 1972 VEGA . SIOOO. Phone
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . . 23~Dec . o Rox t0 ol9 , Co lumbus . Ohio ,
949-2307 .
D. W.T. Emory Gordon ,
21) You're tn a mood to have tu n. .tJ? 16
IN MEMORY of Ernest D. Johnson
Cheshire
,
Ohi
o
II
fou
nd
.
coil
P.
but lry to choose activities that
Ap pr ova l ol plan s ilf!CI
who di,;~ d December 2fl . 1970.
D. Brooki ns (614 ) 446-2826
Yard'i:iale
don·t cost money Today th e best spc t ili ca l1 ons
The ~ord Is mY shpherd, I shall
Rog er Horn sby Pool Co
$5.00
REWARD
for
the
return
of
not
wo
nt:
th ings In life are free.
s ~ra cuse . Oh •o
the red, whitt&gt; ond blue billfold IF YO U have o se rvice to offer,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~Jan. 19)
Septic Tank , lccch lic td nnd He makes me lie down in gret&gt;n
wont lo buy or se lt 5omething ,
los t I rom Swisher &amp; Loh se Phorsand f i lt~r s lor Syril cusc
postures
oe looking lo r work . .. or
You r mmer1 a1prospects are very swi n1111ing pool
mocy on Oec. 4 Net&gt;d medicarE&gt;
He leods me beside still woter ;
whote~er .. . you'll gel resu lts
encouragtng today. particularly
cord badly , Please drop off at
He resto res my soul.
foster
wi th o Sentinel Wont Ad.
where you're workmg tor the ( 11! 18 , li e
the Daily Sentinel office, if
He l eo d ~ me in poths of
Coll 992-215b.
lam lly and rfot just you rself
found . l11a Cremeans .
righteousness. ,
lor His nomes sa ke .
AQUARIU S (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
BROWN FRA¥ED d1s to nce
h en though I walk through !he
Being fort hright work s to your
e~eg losses l9sl Tuesday even·
l'et• (or i:iale
volley
,
The Alrnana e
advantage today. Rather than
ing possibly in oiJey bad, of
Of the shadow of death.
using subterfuge. lay ever yth ing
Du llon's Drug, Middleport. Call PLEASURE HORSE S an d ponies,
I lea r no evil:
olso will• buy horses and
out in th e open
997-7852 .
United Press Interoallonal
For thou art wi th me:
pon1es. Phone (61.4 ) 698·3290.
PISC ES (Feb. 20· March 20)
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 28, Thy rod ond ly staff , thi!~ co rnlorl BROWN· FRAMED distan ce
Rut h Reeves .
eyeglasses los t Tuesday evenConditio ns still favor you wllere the 362nd day of 1976 with
me
ing possibly 1n alley back of FREE PUPPIES. short hoir, holt bi~d
doll ars and cents are co ncerned
Thou prepore!&gt;t a table belore me
three to follow.
dog , 10 weeks old . Nice for o
Du llon's D•ug. Middleport ,
111 the presence of my enemies,
You have to exert some eff ort
The moon is in 11.'1 first
child . Phone 992-3420.
Oh1o . Pho n·e ~92 - 2852 .
, thou onointest my head with 0 11 .
my cup overllows ,
roll icg. quarter.
FOU ND HUNTING or birddog RISING STAR KENNEL. boarding
The m ornin g stars are Sur ely goodness and mercy shall
indoor and outdoor. Grooming
Fou nd in vicinity of Middlepor t.
foll ow me .
all breeds. comple te sanitary
Mars and Saturn.
Coll992-3165 and iden tity
All the doys of my life:
fac ilities, Cheshire . Phone {~ t4 )
The evening stars are Mer- and 1shall dwel l in the house
3b7 ·0l9l .
cury, Venus and Juptter.
ol the lord lo r ever .
Help Wanted
Those born on this date are Sadly missed by wife . Emma .
child
ren
and
grondch1
ldren
.
Your creat1ve ability could put under the sign of Ca pricorn.
TEXAS REF INER Y CORP . offers t'orSale
you In th e pr ol1t column thrs Woodrow
Wilso n ,
28th IN MEMORY of Ro lph Borton who PLENT¥ ol MONEY plus cash
bonu se~.
fr inge benefits to COAL . limestone . and calcium
coming year . lm ag1naltve and 1n- president of th e United
pa s~ed away 6 yrs . ago. Dec.
111oture individual in Pome ro ~
novat1ve conce pts should not be
2B,
1970
Soltly
the
leaves
of
chloride and &lt;alc1um brine for
States, was born Dec. 28,
or ea . Regardl ess of ex ·
Ignored .
memor1es iolls.
dust contr ol and specia l mix ing
perience, write G. I. Pole.
1856.
We gat her and treas ure.them all .
salt lor lormers Moin Street .
(Are y011 a Caprrcorn ? Bern,ce
On this day in history :
Pomeroy . Ohio or phone 992Umeen , unheo rd he is olwoys Pres. Texas Refinery Corp.,
Osal has wnltcm R speer a/ AstraBo• 71 1, Fort Wort h, Te11os
near ,
389 1.
In 1832, John Calhoun, at
Graph Le/ler lo r you . For your
Still loved. still missed and stil l as 76 101.
19·71 HONDA Cl-450, 12,000
copy send 50 cents [1nd_ a tong odds with President Andrew
dear.
miles . sissy bar. crosh bars.
self -addr es sed , s tamped Jackson, became the first
Sadly missed by wile, Hazel,
pull bock handle bars. new lire
eno;elope to Astro-Graph, P.O. vice president to resign.
ch.ddren , and grandchi ldren .
ond sea ls, Scrambler side
Box 489. RadiO C1 /y StrH10n , New
In 1646, Iowa was admitted
pipes , $650. Ca ll949-2480.
York . NY 100! 9. Be sure ,to as k to lhe Union was the 29th
Want~d to Dny,
'otkes
lor Capn co rn Volume I )
POTATOES and pu mpki ns . C. W.
state.
Proll111. Portland , Ohio. Phor:'le
PERSON 's BODY Shop. 26 Rai lr oad OlD furnit ure, ic~ bo11es. brass
beds
.
woll
telephones
and
843·2254
.
St , Middlepor t wou ld like to
port~ . or complee households
COAL for sole. Open 6 doys per
remind customers !hot Dec . 31
week and evenings . For lurther
1s the lost do~ to toke ad · Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Call992·7760 .
lnfo rmoiiOn cal l (614) 307-'7338 .
~ an t oge of the poinr jobs · oil
over in 1 color , $100, 1 to ne CASH paid tor oil makes and
, FIT ZPATRICK ORCHARD .
5125 wit hout body wo rk. Slop
models of mobile homes . APPlES
If'
ITS
NOT
TO
RAISE
STATE
ROUTE 689 . PHONE
TO GET BLOOD
oF
in or phone 985·4t74 lor op·
Phone ort&gt;o code ~14 · 42 3 - 953t
WILKESVIllE, (614) 669·3785.
TAXE6, WHAT K IND OF
A Grolo!E ~W6E·· ·
poin tm en t.
TIM BER. Pomeroy Forest Pro· FULLER Brush Produ cts lor sole.
l-AND BOOM IS IT:'
NOTI CE . Protfs Meat Mkt.
duels Top price for stand1 ng
Phone992-3410.
(Pleasant on Meat Procvssi ng ,
sowlirnber . Call Ke nt Han by ,
Inc.) Custom slaugh tering. ond
CAMPER,
$600. Also. horse
1-A46-B570.
p~o cessln g . Retoil , wholesale .
trailer , $4 50. Phone (614) 698·
No oppoinment necessary . Ca ll COI NS, CURRENCY . tok ens. old
3290.
pocket wa tches and chains ,
(614) 593·Bb55 , hou rs. 9:00 till
silver and gold We need t964 PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bas'e sta6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens.
tio n: Phone 2A7-26B4 after S
and older silver coins . Buy , sel l,
Oh
.
p,m.
or trade· Coli Roger Wornslev .
THERE will be no gun shoo t Dec.
742-233 1.
FENCE POSTS , $1 00 . Also,
25th or Jon . 3 at the Raci ne Fir e
hrewood lhree·fourth torr
CASHI!! lor iunk cars. Frye's
Dept . Building m Boshon,
pickup loads delivered, $25
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
SPECIALS AT the 0 &amp;· J House of WRECKER SERV ICE! Phone
within 25 miles. Pho n1il
Fabric. Iorge blanket pieces .
985- 4197 .
142·2081 .
Regular $1 .50 lb. 119w S1.00 lb.
l
Crushed ~el~e l p1eces . sizes for HIGHEST PR ICES PAID lor Old Fur·
n1ture
,
Antiques,
collecti
bles
of
drapes and bedspread s, Reg.
HARD WATER
all i~pes. We buy entire
$2 50 lb. now $1.00 lb, Real
households or single p1eC8i in
PROBLEM 57
nice. Tobie of poly knit , reg.
onv condition . Appraisal, and
$2.49 yard . now $1 .39 yard on
Auction se rvice o~ailo ble. Coli 'Lei Pllmti'OI' Llndm•tr
S.R: 7, 1 mi le below M1d·
col
lect , Athens, 592·4743 .
oolltn I condition your
dlepor t. Ohio.
592 ·4929 e~enin g s .
wlter UyXVI
SPECIALS AT rhe D &amp; J House ol
Fabric!&gt;. large blanket pieces. 1-lOW BUYING Scrap. Pomeroy
ONLY 1
Auto Recvding , high prices
reg ulor$1.50\b .. nowSI.OOI b
paid
,
auto
bodies
,
motors.
Crushed ve lvet pieces , sizes lor
~c rop , iron, metals, i,&gt;olferies ,
,l,tl us !ttl your wator
drapes and bedspreads, reg .
8 till"&lt;t :JO . Monday thru
open
Free.
$2 .50 lb. now $1.00 lb. Reo)
ro
Sot urdoy , Old 33. just above
nice
Ta
ble
of
poly
khit
reg
8/U.. CA5AMA5SIMA,
fairgrou nds . Pomeroy. Oh10.
;t3 ;m.AI'fftc sr:;
$2 .49 yard, now $1.39 yard on
Will olso p i c~up cars . Phone
CARrEil£7; N. J.
S R 7. 1 mile below Mid·
992·6337
Jock W. C.r•J• Mgr.
dl eport , Ohio.
Phone "2-2111

13\. 2 SIGNS Pomeroy
~ OF

QUALilY

t.

Motor Co. ·

~~~~~nil

.' ~CQ~.CW7~~ill1]

PICKENS HOWE.
··Portland , o.

Racine.

POL.J.fOAM

UPHOLSTERY
. FABRIC h.
sofa, cna1r ciis tons

CARR Sf. or 730 E. MAIN ST.
JACKSON .
OH IO
45640. OWNER WILL CARRY 60
P
E R CE
NT
OVER A 100 YEAR PERIOD at 7
PERCENT.

~nire• Offered
Will do odd iobs , roofi ng , pain ·
ling, gullet work . Phone 992 7409.
Will DO bobysill ing i_n m~ home .
Phone 992-2748.

CORN FED beef . Phone 985-355'l .

LARGE ENCLOSED truck or von to GOOD EAR corn. $2.00 bu!hel.
rnove lo Georgia after
Phone 742-2359.
Chris tmO$. Will poy cosh . You
196-4
CHEVY lmpolo (O nve rtible
drive or we dri ve. Phone
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
283 cu. ln. engine . standard
992-3573
or
992-607qi
case No . 22.000
lransminion . Also , 23 chonnel
Estate of Steven Eblin ,
Midland C. B. rodio with om·fm ,
Dec ea!ai&gt;d
c. b. antenna. Coll992-6133 or
Notic e is hereby glvt'n tha t For Rent
see ot 873 SoUth Second Ave.,
FrankW Por l£' r .J r , hl'ISbeen
Middl9port, Ohio 45760.
ciul~ appOifllrd Adrnili istra tor
3 AND' 4 RM . furnished and un·
of !he Es tat e of C, i ~: vcn Eblin .
fu rnished opts . Pho ne 992· FIREWOOD for sole. Phone
(l oc eascd . tal e of Meigs
5434.
742·2131 '
Counly . Ohio
Creditors are required to COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt. HEAVV GAUGE I Beoms and H
fit(' lhei r cla im s wilh said
33, ten mi les north of Pomeroy.
Beams lor 1ole, eighl9 x 10 In·
fiduciary within lhre e mo nths
large lot!. with concrete patios,
en. Pho ne 992 · ~034 .
fli'll fl d lh ls 22nd de~y of
sidewalks, runners and off
flcccm bcr t9 76.
street parking. P~ o ne992·7479 . SCHOOL SEWING machines .
Manninq 0 . Webster
Singers in wotnut consolette,
· Judge
$&lt;6. Phone992-51&lt;6.
Court of common Plea!.. FURNISHED two bedroom opt.,
adults only . No pets. MidProbate Division
NEW A.M·FM Stereo·rodio, 8 lrocM
dlePort. Phone 9_92·3814 .
Mr1qs
County .
Ohio
tope com blnolion. $129.95 or
' fi'J~ 'J R I l l d. 11 . ]lr
ONE BEDROOM Apt•. al VILLAGE
tenm. Phone 992.J965.
MANOR in Middleport lor $1().(
monthly plus elec or $130 in·
NOTICE OF A PPOINTMENT
eluding elec. LOWER RATES for
(flU' No 72 ,001
F
fstilfc of Mary E"hlin ,
SENIOR CITIZENS. Conven ient
Dccef!S('d.
to !hopping on Third ond Mill
One toad used Remington
NOI iCC iS hl"rf'bV qivc n thi'lt
Sts. in Middleport. Brand new
cnain saw
sso
FranK J Portl'r , .! r , ha s been
high
quality
apartments
.
See
good
used
McCullougti
One
· duly appolnl•~d /'.Cimi ni st r a tor
Cheln Saw
115
the monoger af Apt. 28 or call
ot' lhr E~ttll f' of MM V Eblin,
One good used Homelltt
99'2-Tii.L An Equol Housing
drccas cd . tat e of Mriqs
ChalnSaw
SUit
Opportunity.
Coun 1y, Ohio
Crcdilon Mf' r ('quir"d to TRAILER FOR renl. adul ts only , ' New Co ·OP Water SofJ
tcners
file lhcir clai"'&lt;&gt; wi lh ~il id
Phone992-3181 .
model VC · XVI Only S21t.t5
fi(tu ciary witt-in lhrc'f' mo n th ~
Ont good uud Gibson Side·
f"\a!Nt !his nnd detV of 2 BEDROOM trailer,' reel nice.
ll l'(f'm twr t q7h
.by -Side Refrigerator Sl~
Phone 991·3324 : od uhs only
J
flllilnninrt 0 . WPhsh•r
JUdl'l l" TRAILER IN Chos hire. Ohio.
rnurl of (ommnn Ptr•;J..,,
Suitable lor 2 or 3, comtructron
,roh ,, lf" O iv•~in n
Jock .w. C.rser. Mjjr.
men
prefcr~ed . Phone • /304)
Mr • 1q ~ (llll ul y, nh io
Pt.ono 992-2111
773 ·5873
I I:•' ?~
I II .: II 11r

Pomeroy landmark

(

Real Eotate (or Sale

I "M HERE .•.WHAT

CARC"- I THINK.
'IOIJ'IE GOT THAT
GIRL A•L WRON G:

•

.. K

••

•J 9654
t J. 972
.. 81 j

~.7 32

••o

12

SOUTH
.. AQ854

tA
• .. iO9 5
North-Soulh vulnerable

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

......... w

·-!'I-'ll'
-

·1

J·

0.

J•

West

North East
Pass
44
Pass
S•
Pass

FREE ESTIMATES

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Pass
Pass

Insulation SeiYiees
financint Anillblt
Blown into WillS &amp;Attics
SIOilM
WIIIIIOWS &amp;DOORS
IEPIACDIENT

Protect · vour investment
plus add to the value of
your home. Trust those
necessary fix-it, room
addition and remodeling
jobs to your friendly,
neighborhood, quail lied
builder.

Pass 6 •

BlOWn

WINDOWS

ALUMINUM
. SIDING-SOFIIIT
GUTTfRS-AWNINGS _

Business S&lt;,rvicc• '
DOZER work and welding , Con ·
!oct James Parsons, Rt. 1,
Ra,ci ne , on Cormol Rood .
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec .,
plumbing and heo ting. Phone
992-5858 .
ELECTRONIC ·T,V CLIN IC. New
TV , shop , Elec tr onic T.V. Clinic
Service co li . $5 . ~5 . Color , B &amp; W
antenna sYs tems stereos , etc.
572 Sou th Third, Middleport.
Phone 992-6306, Corry in and
s o~e money.
HOWERY AN D MARTIN
cavolin"g , sept ic systems,
dozer, backhoe. dump tru ck .
limestone , grovel. blocktop
paving . Rt . 143. Phpne I (blol )
698-733 1'
EXCAVATING ,
BACK HOES .
DOZER , TRENCHER, lOWBOY,
DUMP TRUCKS. Bill PULLINS.
PHONE 992-2ol78. OA Y OR
NIGHT .
CHRISTMAS SPECI AL: Sewrn g
Mcichines cleaned , oiled 011d
odj usfed . $5 .98
Sewing
Center, Middleport, Ohio .

GOODBYE 1976
HELLO , 1977

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE- "DARK

~~ ~ .-~J

1RUE,SA1419 --0NE
FALSE 5TEP AHD
ONE COULD FALL
10 HO TElLING
WHAT D£P'IH5--

""-HOUSE &amp; BARN ~
TRUSSES
ANY PlTCH
ANYSlZE

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

11: i~Johnny Carson ),,., 1S;.Movle " In Tandem"O, 13;
Kolek B; Mary Hartman 10; BC News 33 .
12 :01)-Movle " The Viking Queen" 10: Jonakl 33.
12: 30-Movle " The People Ne)( l Ooor " B.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13 .

lncidentally . we do n't think
much of West's opening lead.
While West did have a very
unattractive choice of opening
leads we would ralher lead as
unbid suit ( h ear l s or
diamonds) instead of playing
lhe one bid by dummy.

~Q~~

6•

A reader from New Mexico

Here is the fastest played
hand of 1976. At least the play
was fast after trick one.
West did study before
teading the seven of clubs and
South went into a real ex ecutlv~ session before playing
from dummy .
HAZARD"
His problem wa s to decide if
West was actually leading
HQf IT IS A
PILE OF KINDLING - from the king in order to force
South lo make a decision at
VEl&lt;~ DRY! SUCH
AS lHE ANCIENT
trick one.
ONES USED FOR
Finally, South decided that
TOI~CHfS ' 5AHI6 · West
was not that kind of a
A MATCH, PlEASEmean defender , so South went
up with dummy 's ace.
When the ace droppe d

---.

wants to know what is meant
by the expression, "A passive
lead ."
.
A passive lead is one designed to protect your own high
cards. As an example, suppose the opponents reach six
notrump and you hold two
kings a nd a queen . The
passive lead would be in the
suit without an honor.
(Do you have a question
for the 8KPtlftS ? Write "Ask .•
the Jacobys " care ot this
newspaper The Jacobys will
answer indi11idua/ questions
it stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
mos r Interes ting qussfions
will be used in this column
and Will receive copies or
JACOBY MO DERN I

~"""* "'""

Located in Langsville
• Box 28-A

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph . (614) 142 -240V
We Deliver
12·22 ·4 mos.
BORN LOSER

tiusiM~!i-~~~~ .~{;:~~?

EXCAVATING·, dazer. loader and
backhoe wo rk ; dump trucMs
ond !o-boys for hire ; will ha ul
fill di rt, lo soil , tirhes tone ondgro~e t. Co li Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, day phone . 992·7089,
ni ght pho ne 992·3525 or 992·
5232 . .

... BlJT THI~ fMPTY 61-6 C./IIJ

II.OP i!J ... ]:'lA..

BifADFORD , Auc tioneer, Com·
plele Service. Phone 949·24B7
or 949·2000 Rocine, Ohio. Cntt
Bradford.
ELWOO D BOWERS RE PAIR Sweepers, toasters. 'irons. oil
small opplionces. ,lawn mower,
nex t to Stole Highway Gotage
orl Route 7. Pho ne (614) 9B5·
3825.
REMODELI NG, Plum bing, healing
and oil ty pes of general repair.
Work guaran teed 20 yeors ex ·
per1ence. Phone992-2409 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice, oi l makes, 992·2284 . The
Fob r ic Shop , Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sa les ond
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

A~WA"'S

~.!VB ~ou

I&gt;IITS MF. ARiDe .

TO LIC\!1&lt; CAR!

l[rol,

~0
0

OH , r OOf.I'T HAVe
AC.AR ...

~~~~~-··_·..~~:~'·:":::•·:__

___A,

.:'".:·•-~~

1

He sall
Ljer
name,

11

1:"xcAVATING . dozer . backhoe
an d ditcher. Charles R. Hal, field, Back Hoe Serv ice.
Rutl ond, Ohio . Phone 742-200B.
SEPTIC S~stems ins talled by
licensed ins ta ll er. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742-2409.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sanitation·. 992- 3~5 4 or 992 2428.

ACROSS
II Fox of S .
I Away,
Air .
grimalkin! IZ Prevent
s Vulgar
13 Require
10 Swlss
DOWN
river
I Back talk
11 Minces
Z Dromedary
13 Was
3 Mountain
suspicious
crest
(3wds. )
~ . Partof!TI
Ynterday's Answer
IS Arrange the- (abbr .)
s Masticated ' 11 Qurdened 28 " Mouse"
tableware
'16 Mllkfish
6 Airport need 19 Further tn 30 Backbone
31 Not poetry
17 Prefix for 7 Gentle crime
32 Drunkard
metric
lamb
%2 Unruffled
(sl.)
18 Conductor
8 Wrinkle,
%3 Thwart
36 Engendered
20 Wine (Fr.)
with "up"
Z4 Assuaged
38 Flnal
ZJ Oyster 9 Coastland
2S Roofing
39 Chinese
22 Relinquish 12 Intoxicated
subatane&lt;!
dynaaly
23 Colorado
,..;(;,;;sl;;;.l_,,...,.,-- 2tl Reality
resorl
26 Bundled
21 Layer of
paint ·
28 Cone&lt;!rt
choice
(abbr.)
29 Jockey
Turcotte
30 Tamn's
Cheeta and
others
33 Giant
inunortal
:W Hebrew
liquid

measure

37 Time of

ooe's
glory
(2 wds.)

18 Moon
goddess

IJAILY CRYPTO&lt;lUOTE -

J-!ere'~

how

to

work It:

...,

It

.

I, ONGFEI.t. OW

Meigs County
Real
Estate
Owners
The Tax Books are now open for the

One lcllcr simply stands for another. In 1hlo sample A II
used for the t·h rec J.'s, X for the two O's, r tr. Singlr letten.
apostrophes the length and formation of the wurda are 111
hints. F.nrh day the ('ode leltcrs are different.

December of First Half Collection of
the 1976 Rea I Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing Date will be
Jan. 20, 1977.

GR

'

( 'RYPTOQUO'l't:S

WINNIE
l'HE:CHILDRE:N CALL£D HOME ... AND AND WHAT
THAN I
WTH WERE HOMESICK ,BUT
ARE YOUR
EXPECTED1 I OTHEk!Witlf' ALL RIGHT. AND
PLANS FOR
DIANA... I HELPED ENTERTAIN SOME
NEW YEAR'S
&amp;ENIOR CITIZEN&amp; ON
EVE'?
CHRISTMAS DAYI
BETTER

Meigs County Treasurer

t-iUY,-Siitoi-iRAifl
I

USTEN TO THE

SWAP SHQP

-~

I
I

7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM J

'·---.!~~~~!.~~~
r

yp

XDFDYGD

WCGWVB

MARCIE,M'i

TQRWEJDI.

GYQCTB . - EWKJE

I.YQFV
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : aJUNTRY cLUB COUNTRY
SOCIAL REST. - SHANA ALEXANDER
HOTBED
ft IY16 K1n1 fo'ttM IUf t'~ Sy nd in t~ . ll)c.

m·

RUN FER IH'

CONSCIENCE ?

SRWXHV .

WQR

JUGHAID !!
ARE' 'IOU,

yp

GR

BARNEY

WHAT

CYDLJDL

STORM

CELLER !! ·

IS A

tJ

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

YERNT

I KJ

II

t
J J

IYARROS

IVCGWVB

UJBJYDB

PYQ

NO DATE&amp; NO PROSPEtT5 • I
1
GUESS ILL JU&amp;T 5PEND
ANOTHER QUIET EVENING .~T
HOME WITH THE FOLKS
(SIGH).

'

'

WQR

I ICX
~ · ·~"''" r_,.,.., ,

AXYDLJIAAXR

GEORGE M. COWNS

WEDNESDAY, DECE MB ER 29, 1916
6:DO-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: Is-Farm Report 13 .
6:20-Not For Women On ly 13.
6:30-AG·USA 4; News b; Sunrise Semesle r B;
Chrlslopher Closeup 10.
6: &lt;s-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6; 50-Good Morni ng, West Virginia 13 :
o :ss-Good Morning , Trl State 13.
l :oo-Todoy 3,4, 15; Good Morning , llmerlca~ , l3 ; CBS
News B; Chuck White Reports 10.
')
7:0s-Bugs Bunny &amp; Frlen&gt;Js 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
.
B:DO-Lossle 6; Cepl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
B:30-Big Valley 6.
9:0&lt;1-A.M. 3: Ph11Donahue4,13,1l ; LucyShow8 ; Mlk&lt;
Oougllls 10 .
9:JO-Cr0.,.Wits 3: One Lite to Live 6; Good Dey I.
10:00-Santord &amp; So n 3,&lt; . IS; Price Is Right B. 10: Mike
Douglas 13 .
10 : Is-General Hospita l 6.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 :DO-Wheel ot Fortune·3, 15; Weekday 4: Double Dare
B,10 ; Morning wllh D.J . 13 ; Elec . Co. 20
.
11 :30-Shlmpers 3,4, 15 ; Happy Days 6, 13; Love ot Life
B, 10 ; Sesa me St. 20,33.
11 :55-Ta ke Kerr B; Ms . FIKit 10.
12 :00- News 3,6,8,10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; SO
Grand Slam 15.
12 :30-Gong Show 3,15 : Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10 .
12 :ls- NB C News 3.6. 15.
1:oo-Somerset 3; All My Chi ldren 6, 13; Concentra 11 on
B: Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1:30-Days ol Our Lives 3,4, IS ; Family Feud 6, 13 ; As
The World Turns 8, 10.2:1l0-S20,000 Pyr omld 13;
D.lnah 6.
2:30-Doclors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 13: Guiding
Light 8,10 .
3 :DO-Another World .3,4, 15: All In The Family 8,10;
On Aging 20.
3:1s-Gener ol Hospital 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6: Malch Gome B. 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20 .
4:0()-Misler Cartoon 3; Mar cus Welby, M.D. 4;
Somersel 15; Howdy .DQody 6; Mi ckey Mouse Club
B; Sesame St . 20,33; Movie "The Secr et Portner"
10; Dinah 13 .
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Bewitched 6; Partridge
Family 81 Flintstone• IS .
5:0&lt;1-Big Volley J: Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch 81
Mlsler Rogers 2 20,33; Stor Trek 15.
5:30-News 61 Family Affair 81 Elec . Co. 20.331 Adam 12 13.
o :OD-News 3,4,6.8, 10,13. 15; ABC News 6: .Zoom 20,33 .
6: 30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News13 ; Andy Griffith 61
CBS News 8,101 Hodgepodge Lottge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 337: oo-Truth or Cons. 3;To Tell the Truth 13; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes lhe Country B; News 10; My
Three Sons 15; Consumer Survlvol Kit 20;
Americana 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; 1100,000 Nome Thai Tune 4; Match
Gome PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeii ·Lehrer
20,33 ; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
a :IJO-CPO Sharkey 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman 6. 13; Gun·
smoke 8; Orar19e Bowl Preview 10: Nova 20.
8:3o-Mclean S1evenson 3,.4,15.
9: OD-Siroto's Court 3,4 ,15; Bar ella 6,13 ; Mual c Hall
America 6; Movie "Smile" B.10 ; Soundstage 20 .
9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; The Pracllce 4, 15;
Great Perform·ances 33,
10:1»-Quest 3,4, t5 ; C~arlle's Angels 6,13: News 20 .
11 :0D-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13! Cannon 8:
Mary Hariman 101 Janakl 33.
12 :oo-Movle "Hell Is For Heroes" 10.
12 :40-Mystery ot the Week 6,13.
1:0()-Tomorrow J,A .
2: 10-News 13.

as Pillage

WILL do roofif'!g , const ruct ion,
plu mbing ond heatmg . No job
too Iorge or too sma ll . Phone
742·2348 .
CARPENTER , llooring , ceiling .
pon'eling Phone 992-2759.

LEGAL

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

"We Care"
Free Est.
Work Gu1r.
Rutland 12 ·9-l mo. 742·2378

4-10·1 mo

South
1•
4 N. T.
s N. T.

Pass Pass Pass
· Op..,~n_
g _lea_
d -_:_
1.::
•:__ _

AL TROMM CONST.

LAffRl,~..~fh~DER .

TEAFORD

an overtrick.

• Q6
.. AQJ642
WEST
EAST

• K Q 63

(614) 9BS-4ll5
Chesler. Ohio
10-ll-1 mo (Pdl

Ph. 992·3193

"'K

28

• A

.,,

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

tK I065l3

East 's singleton king South
had no problem in the play of
the trump suit. He would be
sure of his contract If he
didn' t lose a trick to \he king
of spades to be followed by a
club ruff so South played his
ace of trumps, dropped thesecond singleton king and made

NORTH 101
•JI0 96

~

Commercia l property approx . 17 r--------:::::;;iiiiliiiii:~
acres, level land , loco ted ot
Tuppers Ploins on Ohio, Ro ute
7 Phone (6 141b67-6304:
3 bedrooms, l'/1 ba ths, Iorge liv·
ing roam. dining roo m ond kit- a...:lrlj~
chen, full~ carpeted . Phone
608 E.
9'12·3129 . qr992-54J4 .
MA.N _ loil~
59 ocras , 6 room house, both,
POMEROY, (),
partly carpeted , two out·
buildingi , dug ·basement ,
one·lhird lilloble , mineral
•
righ ts located neor Don11ill@.
Redu ced for quick sol e ,
$23.500. Phone 742 ·2766.
Is your house too small or
28 ACRE FARM, reor Brod bu r ~ too large? let us ull it and'
Schoo l. See Woller Miller ot 328 furnish vou with what you
Six th Street. Poi nt Pleasant . need . Call now. Happv New
W.Vo. 25550.
Year from all of us here, to
all of you there. Meigs
County's oldesl full time
real estate office .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Vl'rgll B. Sr .. Realtor
992-2259 or 992-2S6B
116 E. Second Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

IF · YOU WANT IT SOLD
AT A PROFIT, TRY THE
PROFESSIONALS.

KNOW Wt-t y'

.....

HOMESITES lor sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, neor Ru tlond .
Co11992-7481 .
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 baths.
all elec., I ocre. Middl eport ,
close to Rutla nd. Phone 992·
74Bl.
SMALL form for sole. 10% dowri . GAS AND ElEC. Appliance se r·
owner linonced. Monroe Coun ·
vice work . Phone 992-5726 .
tf . W. Va. Phone (304 ) 772·
Oi l AND GAS lu rnoce service and
3102 O&lt; (304) 712-3227 .
ports . Tra iler and homes. 2&lt;~
COUNTRY fo rml ond wi th sedud·
hour serv 1ce . Phone843·2 165.
ed woods, woter and good ac ·
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo.
$1 .000 down, call (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 112·3227.
Heal t:statt• for ~ale

RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
2 baths. 9 rooms in all.
Kitchen has stove and
refrigerator, 2 car garage
with storage. $35,000.
EASTERN S.D.- Modern
3 bedroOms, 2 ceramic
baths, nice kitchen. full
basement and 2 car
gorage. S34.DOO.
Ml DOLE PORT
4
bedrooms, nice bath, eat-In
kitchen. ~ga$ furnace and
level lot'. Only S23,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 1'1•
·acres Of level land and an
old 4 bedroom house on Rt.
7 with T.P. water . and lf2
bath. Only 112.DOO.
CORNER LQT - 2 bath
home, .4 bedrooms, nat. gas
heat and garllge in
Middleport . Just 112,000 .
BUSINESS And 4
apartments (rented ) and
all
equipment
for
recreation center
at
Racine.
PAGEVILLE - I room
house with 3 bedrooms, and
balh . Fronl porch and
garden for only $7,500. ·
HARRISONVILLE - New
3 bedroom home . Brick
veneer, 2 bafhs, furnace
ht!at, dining and 2 car
garage . 132,500.

eon-1

WIN AT 'BRIDGE
Good guesa saves set

:'

Schools
Weddings

DIR~8 ~!~~~e~~ES

Bu&amp;id~e&amp;j)pt&gt;Ortunitics

WE-

HAP..:G IT ALl- ·

SH~FTOE ~

Aerial
Commercial

For
maHres5es. padding. Ideal
for campen. Variety of
sizes.
Velvets, nylOn prints,
herculons, vinvl solids, and
tancv prints, accessories.

Pl. Pleasant
Ph. 675-!469
9: 30-5 : oo Dallr
Till B:000 Fridays

TW I NS~

NO U5E B·~ATit.J 6
AROUND THE BU9H ...
ABOUT SHI\' AUN

PHOTOGRAPHY

Ohio

'IOU KNOW 1 NEVER GET Tr
SPEND HALF AS MUCH TIME
A!&gt; I"D LIKE TO WITH YO V AND

WASH AtJO THE

.

PROFESSIONAL

Squa'r e Yard lnstallod
O.vid Parsons, OWner
949-2114
11 · 4·1 mo.

l;i

E£AR 1\liTI-1 (.)5 ... \-IE.IS A NE~
t&lt;l~t-.1 AND I-IA,S Tf&lt;OtlBLe Ll NlNG
t&gt;P AN INVERTED IMAr.;;,E •

.• CAPTAIN EASY
TNAIJI&lt;5 FOR TA~I"'G T!Mf; TO
MEET ME FOR LU~ CH. EASY:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,INC
•.
Phone 992 -S716
p......;
~==S:v:r:•:c:u:"~·=O~h:lo==::: ~P=IL=It2=·2:11:4:::::!::=:::

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
1
6.95

PomeiiiJ '-dm.t

Bollen

.."•'

Greenhouse

. RACINE
CARPET SHOP

279,95

~ FUNNY BUSINESS

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
YOUR HO,.,E In pots end
hanging baskett from 75c
to $5.00. A.lso, lay away
POINSETTIAS now for
CHRISTMAS . 4000 lo
choose from , PERFECT
FO~ GIFTS In red , whUe
and pink . SJ .OO to $6.00. '"20
pet . off on 10 or more.

.--------------------; '

our

Wanted to Rent

S:OD-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin &lt;; Brady Bunch 8;
Mis ter Rogers 20.33 : Sjar Trek 15.
S:»-News 6; Famllr Atr It 8; E lee . CQ. 20,33; Adem 12 13 .
6:0D-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 »-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC News 13 ; Andy Grlttlth 6;

· Hubbard's

R4J.216S

CBS News B. 10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Once Upon
a Classic 33.
.
7: oo- Trulh or Cons. 3; SIOO,DOO Name That Tune 6;
Let ' s Go To The Races B; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13 ; My Three Sons IS; Cooking wllh e Continental FlaiJor 20; American Issues Forum ll.
7:3()-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares &lt;:
Match Game PM B: Mac Ne ii .Lehrer Report 20; In
The Know 10: Wild Ki ngdom lJ ; Nashv ille on the
Road 15.
8:oo-eaa Baa Black Sheep 3,15: Happy Days 6,13 ;
Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn B. 10; Piccadilly Circus 20 ,33.
B: 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:DO-Pollce Woman 3,4, IS; Rich Man , Poor Man 6, 13 ;
Mash B. 10.
9:3()-()ne Day at a Time 8, 10; Three ,American
Goldsmiths 20.; World War I 33 .
10:oo-Pollce Story 3,4,15 ; Family 6, 13 ; Swllch B, IO;
News 20 ; E uropeM VIsion of Ameri ca JJ,
10 :30--Bieck Perspective on the N ews~~ .
11 :oo-News 3,4.6,8, I 0, 13,15: MacNeil · Lehrer Reporl

TUESDIIY, DECEMBER 21, 1916

NOTICE

hour
Depend1ble
Furnace Service.
Oil or Gas Burnen

24

They'll Do It Every Time

Uow

Television log for easy viewing

I K

..... /1
P LATES 50ME.TIME5

U5ED FOR EVE.~Y­
DAY EATIN~ .

I
(J I tJ
':'~~~:':': r XXXXI I I )

1REFOBE

Yesterday's

Now arrange the circled letters to:
lorm the surprise answer, a&amp; aug-,
gested b)' the above :canoon .

(Anowera lomorr"'!)
Jumbles: TAKEN SNORT BE,IIGLE DEPICT
Answer: Where you mer read every day Of
· lho year-ON A CALENDAR

I

�·6 _The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Der·

Ast
Graph.
~o1

1

Bern•ce Bade Osol

for Wednnd•y, Dte. 28, 1171

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The torro w lng docurh cnrs
wen~ r ece ived or prPpM ed by
The Ohio Envlronmf'nti'll
Pr otec tion Agency during th e
previous
week
Anyone

1'6or Fast Results. Use

aggrieved o r adv ersel\1 at
fect~d . b~ is!ouance , .den1lll ,
modllrcahon . re¥ocahon or

re,.,ewal of

any

perm lt('i l.

•

WANT AD$

INFORMATION
't

Auto Saln

The Sentinel Classifieds
'

Autos.lee

Business Services

DEADLINES
P .Nl .
Da-;· Before

· Publlcallon .
•
license ( s l. or v a r i ance(s J
correc
Cancellations .
ARIES (M1rch 21~Aprll 1t) may requesr an adjudication
lion~ acctpted first day of
Don't let sel flsh interests take heari ng bv wrltten r f'quest
publication .
pursuant to Ohio R~v i~cd C~de
REGULATIONS
Precedence over· maintaining the
8
Secti on 374.5 07 w!!hr n lhrrty
The Publisher reservet
good w•tl ot tnen ds tOday. e Clays of !he d irectors proposed
·he right to edit or reJect
dernocrstlc tn your outlook
acllon to iss uE.' or denv such
any ads deemed ob ·
TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) Try document s. That statute does
iectlon al . The publlther
not prOVIdC tor hear ing
will not be responsible for
not to take your Utile m1stakes reQues ts , 0 the OEPA . on
more then one Incorrect
too seriously today. Laugh them applications . com pla ints,
1975 CHEVELLE
l4l95
insertion . RATES
art . Others wil l.
verified complain ts, orc.ters , or
Estate Wagon, toca ll owner car, white radial tires, air
fin al actions
For Wanl Ad Strvlct
conditioning, V"8, automatic, power steering and
GEMINI (M•y 21··June 20) This
Within 30 days of publ icat ion
5 . cents per word one
brakes, radio, d~rk red finish, black vinyl interior.
should be a tun day lor you . but In I! ne-wspaper 1n th e aff ec ted
insertion .
you cou ld Incu r une)(pected ex · co unt~ en·y pP.r son may also :
Minimum Charge Sl.OO.
1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO
.
ll995
Ha ve so me ext ra ( 11 submit wr itten comments
lA cents per word tnree
pense 5 ·
.
re lating to actions . propo!aed
ct..lsecutlve Insertions .
Cle!islc, lso V-6, automatic. power steering and brakes,
chang e ha nd y to avotd em - actio ns'. co mpla ints . verified
26 cents per word Slk:
·ra ll y wheels, radio, black and very attre~IIJe .
barrassme.nt.
com pla ints ; {71 r eques t a
consecutive Insertions .
public mee ting regard ing ,
25 Per Cent 0 lsccr:unl on
CANCER (Junt 21-July 22) If proposed a ctio ns. and or D l
Ill'S
1916 C!iEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
paid ads and eds pa id
youlhin k your ideas or methods re quest not ic e of furt her
Grn. finish, good tires, V-8, automatic, P. steering,
within 10 davs.
are better than your associa tes a c1ions on proceedings .
CARD 0~ THANKS
radio, fadory a ir .
t oda~ , u ~ e them. but in a way
Fi nal actions to is.s ue . deny ,
&amp; OBITUARY
th at doas'l'l offend the1r sen- m odi fy, re vo ke o r renew
u .oo for SO word
perm its .
llcenses .
or •minimum .
s lblllties
var ian ces that ar e no f · Ei!ic'h addlt lonaf "wOrd J
cents .
LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) You r preceded bY proposed act ions
may be appealed to The
BLIND ADS
warm . e:.~pan si ve ap proa ch Environm e n tal Board of
Additional 2Sc Charge
melts the penl ne s'l in others to- Review . s uit e 305, 395 East
per Advertisement .
day. You mspire the m to follow Br orld Str ee t. Columbus, Ohio,
OFFICE HOURS
your exce llent example
dJ1 16 All suc h lin at actions
8 · 30 a .m. to 5:00 p.m .
arc so ident ified in thi s noti J: C.
Dally , 8:-JO a .m . to 17:00
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Peo- A ) I other requt'~ t s for ad
Noon Sat urday .
pie will do t,hings for you today judicbtl on heor ing s , and oth er
Phone today 992-2156.
Notires
AI!IO Sale•
simply because they . like you. corn munlcations con cerning
11 h
h
publi c heariny s ,
pu blic
NOW ac cepting piano sludenh, 19M Nova. extra sharp, new
You have only to te t em w at m ce t inqs ,
ad ju di c ation
NOTICES
beginners . in termediates, ad·
poin t bucket seots, air shoc ks.
Yflll need .
hear ings. complaint s of ..,ny
ATTN .: !I
vonced
stud
enl!i
Coli
992
·
mags
. Phone Cl'-49-2480.
ALL HOUSEWIVES
L I OR~ (Sept. 23-0cl. ' 23) You ki nd . and regulations , sh?uld
2270.
be addr ess('d 10 Tt]e Legal
All Ya rd Sa les, Rummage-,
1969
CADILLAC
Sedan Devi lht
c; .-~n !ook at both sides a t impor - Re cords Sec tion . OHio EPA .
Porcn and Basement Porch
lou r door . white sidewall tire!,
tant ,!,~ii H:!S today . ThiS will be to p o Box t0A9 , Colu mbus , and Bne me nt sates, etc .
power steering . power broMes ,
111Ur .-dvantage You won't be Ohio , d32 16, (6 1 ~) 466 6037
must be paid in advance .
power seats, om &amp; fm radio.
Q O~ '=: Hf!d by Impulse.
Unl ess otherwise s tated in
Get yours In early by
pa n ic ular noti ces , all other
cllmote control. hcellenl con·
s topping by our office .at
Lost and found
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) c ommunicatio ns includi ng
The Da lly Sentinel. Itt
dlli on. Local owner . Phone
Rewar ds. both spiritu a l And · comments on prop osed ac
Cou rt St or wr iting Box
LOST IN Pomeroy area , 10 year
IX1·2-2413 , $1,444.44 ,
7'19 . Pomeroy , Ohio .157 69
matena l. come 10 you to day tions and requests for pub lic
old whi t&amp; Scott ie dog answers
meeti ng s. sl'lould be addr('ssed
wilh your rem ltt.anct' .
to "Frostie". Coli 992·2349 ONE 1%8 2 door Cu tlos~ in' ex.·
because you're Wlllmg lo a1d e ilhc r taTtl e New Source , Ai r ,
cell-en! condit ion . Phone
before 3 p.m. o or 992·2650
others ou t of th e goodness of ar NPOE S Perm if Rec ords
9925786.
of1er
3
p.m
..
Reward.
your heart .
sec non. wh ic he ve r is ap
propriatc , ill the Ohio EPA. P ln 1\-lemory
LOST · female loxhound. initials 1972 VEGA . SIOOO. Phone
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . . 23~Dec . o Rox t0 ol9 , Co lumbus . Ohio ,
949-2307 .
D. W.T. Emory Gordon ,
21) You're tn a mood to have tu n. .tJ? 16
IN MEMORY of Ernest D. Johnson
Cheshire
,
Ohi
o
II
fou
nd
.
coil
P.
but lry to choose activities that
Ap pr ova l ol plan s ilf!CI
who di,;~ d December 2fl . 1970.
D. Brooki ns (614 ) 446-2826
Yard'i:iale
don·t cost money Today th e best spc t ili ca l1 ons
The ~ord Is mY shpherd, I shall
Rog er Horn sby Pool Co
$5.00
REWARD
for
the
return
of
not
wo
nt:
th ings In life are free.
s ~ra cuse . Oh •o
the red, whitt&gt; ond blue billfold IF YO U have o se rvice to offer,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~Jan. 19)
Septic Tank , lccch lic td nnd He makes me lie down in gret&gt;n
wont lo buy or se lt 5omething ,
los t I rom Swisher &amp; Loh se Phorsand f i lt~r s lor Syril cusc
postures
oe looking lo r work . .. or
You r mmer1 a1prospects are very swi n1111ing pool
mocy on Oec. 4 Net&gt;d medicarE&gt;
He leods me beside still woter ;
whote~er .. . you'll gel resu lts
encouragtng today. particularly
cord badly , Please drop off at
He resto res my soul.
foster
wi th o Sentinel Wont Ad.
where you're workmg tor the ( 11! 18 , li e
the Daily Sentinel office, if
He l eo d ~ me in poths of
Coll 992-215b.
lam lly and rfot just you rself
found . l11a Cremeans .
righteousness. ,
lor His nomes sa ke .
AQUARIU S (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
BROWN FRA¥ED d1s to nce
h en though I walk through !he
Being fort hright work s to your
e~eg losses l9sl Tuesday even·
l'et• (or i:iale
volley
,
The Alrnana e
advantage today. Rather than
ing possibly in oiJey bad, of
Of the shadow of death.
using subterfuge. lay ever yth ing
Du llon's Drug, Middleport. Call PLEASURE HORSE S an d ponies,
I lea r no evil:
olso will• buy horses and
out in th e open
997-7852 .
United Press Interoallonal
For thou art wi th me:
pon1es. Phone (61.4 ) 698·3290.
PISC ES (Feb. 20· March 20)
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 28, Thy rod ond ly staff , thi!~ co rnlorl BROWN· FRAMED distan ce
Rut h Reeves .
eyeglasses los t Tuesday evenConditio ns still favor you wllere the 362nd day of 1976 with
me
ing possibly 1n alley back of FREE PUPPIES. short hoir, holt bi~d
doll ars and cents are co ncerned
Thou prepore!&gt;t a table belore me
three to follow.
dog , 10 weeks old . Nice for o
Du llon's D•ug. Middleport ,
111 the presence of my enemies,
You have to exert some eff ort
The moon is in 11.'1 first
child . Phone 992-3420.
Oh1o . Pho n·e ~92 - 2852 .
, thou onointest my head with 0 11 .
my cup overllows ,
roll icg. quarter.
FOU ND HUNTING or birddog RISING STAR KENNEL. boarding
The m ornin g stars are Sur ely goodness and mercy shall
indoor and outdoor. Grooming
Fou nd in vicinity of Middlepor t.
foll ow me .
all breeds. comple te sanitary
Mars and Saturn.
Coll992-3165 and iden tity
All the doys of my life:
fac ilities, Cheshire . Phone {~ t4 )
The evening stars are Mer- and 1shall dwel l in the house
3b7 ·0l9l .
cury, Venus and Juptter.
ol the lord lo r ever .
Help Wanted
Those born on this date are Sadly missed by wife . Emma .
child
ren
and
grondch1
ldren
.
Your creat1ve ability could put under the sign of Ca pricorn.
TEXAS REF INER Y CORP . offers t'orSale
you In th e pr ol1t column thrs Woodrow
Wilso n ,
28th IN MEMORY of Ro lph Borton who PLENT¥ ol MONEY plus cash
bonu se~.
fr inge benefits to COAL . limestone . and calcium
coming year . lm ag1naltve and 1n- president of th e United
pa s~ed away 6 yrs . ago. Dec.
111oture individual in Pome ro ~
novat1ve conce pts should not be
2B,
1970
Soltly
the
leaves
of
chloride and &lt;alc1um brine for
States, was born Dec. 28,
or ea . Regardl ess of ex ·
Ignored .
memor1es iolls.
dust contr ol and specia l mix ing
perience, write G. I. Pole.
1856.
We gat her and treas ure.them all .
salt lor lormers Moin Street .
(Are y011 a Caprrcorn ? Bern,ce
On this day in history :
Pomeroy . Ohio or phone 992Umeen , unheo rd he is olwoys Pres. Texas Refinery Corp.,
Osal has wnltcm R speer a/ AstraBo• 71 1, Fort Wort h, Te11os
near ,
389 1.
In 1832, John Calhoun, at
Graph Le/ler lo r you . For your
Still loved. still missed and stil l as 76 101.
19·71 HONDA Cl-450, 12,000
copy send 50 cents [1nd_ a tong odds with President Andrew
dear.
miles . sissy bar. crosh bars.
self -addr es sed , s tamped Jackson, became the first
Sadly missed by wile, Hazel,
pull bock handle bars. new lire
eno;elope to Astro-Graph, P.O. vice president to resign.
ch.ddren , and grandchi ldren .
ond sea ls, Scrambler side
Box 489. RadiO C1 /y StrH10n , New
In 1646, Iowa was admitted
pipes , $650. Ca ll949-2480.
York . NY 100! 9. Be sure ,to as k to lhe Union was the 29th
Want~d to Dny,
'otkes
lor Capn co rn Volume I )
POTATOES and pu mpki ns . C. W.
state.
Proll111. Portland , Ohio. Phor:'le
PERSON 's BODY Shop. 26 Rai lr oad OlD furnit ure, ic~ bo11es. brass
beds
.
woll
telephones
and
843·2254
.
St , Middlepor t wou ld like to
port~ . or complee households
COAL for sole. Open 6 doys per
remind customers !hot Dec . 31
week and evenings . For lurther
1s the lost do~ to toke ad · Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Call992·7760 .
lnfo rmoiiOn cal l (614) 307-'7338 .
~ an t oge of the poinr jobs · oil
over in 1 color , $100, 1 to ne CASH paid tor oil makes and
, FIT ZPATRICK ORCHARD .
5125 wit hout body wo rk. Slop
models of mobile homes . APPlES
If'
ITS
NOT
TO
RAISE
STATE
ROUTE 689 . PHONE
TO GET BLOOD
oF
in or phone 985·4t74 lor op·
Phone ort&gt;o code ~14 · 42 3 - 953t
WILKESVIllE, (614) 669·3785.
TAXE6, WHAT K IND OF
A Grolo!E ~W6E·· ·
poin tm en t.
TIM BER. Pomeroy Forest Pro· FULLER Brush Produ cts lor sole.
l-AND BOOM IS IT:'
NOTI CE . Protfs Meat Mkt.
duels Top price for stand1 ng
Phone992-3410.
(Pleasant on Meat Procvssi ng ,
sowlirnber . Call Ke nt Han by ,
Inc.) Custom slaugh tering. ond
CAMPER,
$600. Also. horse
1-A46-B570.
p~o cessln g . Retoil , wholesale .
trailer , $4 50. Phone (614) 698·
No oppoinment necessary . Ca ll COI NS, CURRENCY . tok ens. old
3290.
pocket wa tches and chains ,
(614) 593·Bb55 , hou rs. 9:00 till
silver and gold We need t964 PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bas'e sta6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens.
tio n: Phone 2A7-26B4 after S
and older silver coins . Buy , sel l,
Oh
.
p,m.
or trade· Coli Roger Wornslev .
THERE will be no gun shoo t Dec.
742-233 1.
FENCE POSTS , $1 00 . Also,
25th or Jon . 3 at the Raci ne Fir e
hrewood lhree·fourth torr
CASHI!! lor iunk cars. Frye's
Dept . Building m Boshon,
pickup loads delivered, $25
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
SPECIALS AT the 0 &amp;· J House of WRECKER SERV ICE! Phone
within 25 miles. Pho n1il
Fabric. Iorge blanket pieces .
985- 4197 .
142·2081 .
Regular $1 .50 lb. 119w S1.00 lb.
l
Crushed ~el~e l p1eces . sizes for HIGHEST PR ICES PAID lor Old Fur·
n1ture
,
Antiques,
collecti
bles
of
drapes and bedspread s, Reg.
HARD WATER
all i~pes. We buy entire
$2 50 lb. now $1.00 lb, Real
households or single p1eC8i in
PROBLEM 57
nice. Tobie of poly knit , reg.
onv condition . Appraisal, and
$2.49 yard . now $1 .39 yard on
Auction se rvice o~ailo ble. Coli 'Lei Pllmti'OI' Llndm•tr
S.R: 7, 1 mi le below M1d·
col
lect , Athens, 592·4743 .
oolltn I condition your
dlepor t. Ohio.
592 ·4929 e~enin g s .
wlter UyXVI
SPECIALS AT rhe D &amp; J House ol
Fabric!&gt;. large blanket pieces. 1-lOW BUYING Scrap. Pomeroy
ONLY 1
Auto Recvding , high prices
reg ulor$1.50\b .. nowSI.OOI b
paid
,
auto
bodies
,
motors.
Crushed ve lvet pieces , sizes lor
~c rop , iron, metals, i,&gt;olferies ,
,l,tl us !ttl your wator
drapes and bedspreads, reg .
8 till"&lt;t :JO . Monday thru
open
Free.
$2 .50 lb. now $1.00 lb. Reo)
ro
Sot urdoy , Old 33. just above
nice
Ta
ble
of
poly
khit
reg
8/U.. CA5AMA5SIMA,
fairgrou nds . Pomeroy. Oh10.
;t3 ;m.AI'fftc sr:;
$2 .49 yard, now $1.39 yard on
Will olso p i c~up cars . Phone
CARrEil£7; N. J.
S R 7. 1 mile below Mid·
992·6337
Jock W. C.r•J• Mgr.
dl eport , Ohio.
Phone "2-2111

13\. 2 SIGNS Pomeroy
~ OF

QUALilY

t.

Motor Co. ·

~~~~~nil

.' ~CQ~.CW7~~ill1]

PICKENS HOWE.
··Portland , o.

Racine.

POL.J.fOAM

UPHOLSTERY
. FABRIC h.
sofa, cna1r ciis tons

CARR Sf. or 730 E. MAIN ST.
JACKSON .
OH IO
45640. OWNER WILL CARRY 60
P
E R CE
NT
OVER A 100 YEAR PERIOD at 7
PERCENT.

~nire• Offered
Will do odd iobs , roofi ng , pain ·
ling, gullet work . Phone 992 7409.
Will DO bobysill ing i_n m~ home .
Phone 992-2748.

CORN FED beef . Phone 985-355'l .

LARGE ENCLOSED truck or von to GOOD EAR corn. $2.00 bu!hel.
rnove lo Georgia after
Phone 742-2359.
Chris tmO$. Will poy cosh . You
196-4
CHEVY lmpolo (O nve rtible
drive or we dri ve. Phone
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
283 cu. ln. engine . standard
992-3573
or
992-607qi
case No . 22.000
lransminion . Also , 23 chonnel
Estate of Steven Eblin ,
Midland C. B. rodio with om·fm ,
Dec ea!ai&gt;d
c. b. antenna. Coll992-6133 or
Notic e is hereby glvt'n tha t For Rent
see ot 873 SoUth Second Ave.,
FrankW Por l£' r .J r , hl'ISbeen
Middl9port, Ohio 45760.
ciul~ appOifllrd Adrnili istra tor
3 AND' 4 RM . furnished and un·
of !he Es tat e of C, i ~: vcn Eblin .
fu rnished opts . Pho ne 992· FIREWOOD for sole. Phone
(l oc eascd . tal e of Meigs
5434.
742·2131 '
Counly . Ohio
Creditors are required to COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt. HEAVV GAUGE I Beoms and H
fit(' lhei r cla im s wilh said
33, ten mi les north of Pomeroy.
Beams lor 1ole, eighl9 x 10 In·
fiduciary within lhre e mo nths
large lot!. with concrete patios,
en. Pho ne 992 · ~034 .
fli'll fl d lh ls 22nd de~y of
sidewalks, runners and off
flcccm bcr t9 76.
street parking. P~ o ne992·7479 . SCHOOL SEWING machines .
Manninq 0 . Webster
Singers in wotnut consolette,
· Judge
$&lt;6. Phone992-51&lt;6.
Court of common Plea!.. FURNISHED two bedroom opt.,
adults only . No pets. MidProbate Division
NEW A.M·FM Stereo·rodio, 8 lrocM
dlePort. Phone 9_92·3814 .
Mr1qs
County .
Ohio
tope com blnolion. $129.95 or
' fi'J~ 'J R I l l d. 11 . ]lr
ONE BEDROOM Apt•. al VILLAGE
tenm. Phone 992.J965.
MANOR in Middleport lor $1().(
monthly plus elec or $130 in·
NOTICE OF A PPOINTMENT
eluding elec. LOWER RATES for
(flU' No 72 ,001
F
fstilfc of Mary E"hlin ,
SENIOR CITIZENS. Conven ient
Dccef!S('d.
to !hopping on Third ond Mill
One toad used Remington
NOI iCC iS hl"rf'bV qivc n thi'lt
Sts. in Middleport. Brand new
cnain saw
sso
FranK J Portl'r , .! r , ha s been
high
quality
apartments
.
See
good
used
McCullougti
One
· duly appolnl•~d /'.Cimi ni st r a tor
Cheln Saw
115
the monoger af Apt. 28 or call
ot' lhr E~ttll f' of MM V Eblin,
One good used Homelltt
99'2-Tii.L An Equol Housing
drccas cd . tat e of Mriqs
ChalnSaw
SUit
Opportunity.
Coun 1y, Ohio
Crcdilon Mf' r ('quir"d to TRAILER FOR renl. adul ts only , ' New Co ·OP Water SofJ
tcners
file lhcir clai"'&lt;&gt; wi lh ~il id
Phone992-3181 .
model VC · XVI Only S21t.t5
fi(tu ciary witt-in lhrc'f' mo n th ~
Ont good uud Gibson Side·
f"\a!Nt !his nnd detV of 2 BEDROOM trailer,' reel nice.
ll l'(f'm twr t q7h
.by -Side Refrigerator Sl~
Phone 991·3324 : od uhs only
J
flllilnninrt 0 . WPhsh•r
JUdl'l l" TRAILER IN Chos hire. Ohio.
rnurl of (ommnn Ptr•;J..,,
Suitable lor 2 or 3, comtructron
,roh ,, lf" O iv•~in n
Jock .w. C.rser. Mjjr.
men
prefcr~ed . Phone • /304)
Mr • 1q ~ (llll ul y, nh io
Pt.ono 992-2111
773 ·5873
I I:•' ?~
I II .: II 11r

Pomeroy landmark

(

Real Eotate (or Sale

I "M HERE .•.WHAT

CARC"- I THINK.
'IOIJ'IE GOT THAT
GIRL A•L WRON G:

•

.. K

••

•J 9654
t J. 972
.. 81 j

~.7 32

••o

12

SOUTH
.. AQ854

tA
• .. iO9 5
North-Soulh vulnerable

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

......... w

·-!'I-'ll'
-

·1

J·

0.

J•

West

North East
Pass
44
Pass
S•
Pass

FREE ESTIMATES

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Pass
Pass

Insulation SeiYiees
financint Anillblt
Blown into WillS &amp;Attics
SIOilM
WIIIIIOWS &amp;DOORS
IEPIACDIENT

Protect · vour investment
plus add to the value of
your home. Trust those
necessary fix-it, room
addition and remodeling
jobs to your friendly,
neighborhood, quail lied
builder.

Pass 6 •

BlOWn

WINDOWS

ALUMINUM
. SIDING-SOFIIIT
GUTTfRS-AWNINGS _

Business S&lt;,rvicc• '
DOZER work and welding , Con ·
!oct James Parsons, Rt. 1,
Ra,ci ne , on Cormol Rood .
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec .,
plumbing and heo ting. Phone
992-5858 .
ELECTRONIC ·T,V CLIN IC. New
TV , shop , Elec tr onic T.V. Clinic
Service co li . $5 . ~5 . Color , B &amp; W
antenna sYs tems stereos , etc.
572 Sou th Third, Middleport.
Phone 992-6306, Corry in and
s o~e money.
HOWERY AN D MARTIN
cavolin"g , sept ic systems,
dozer, backhoe. dump tru ck .
limestone , grovel. blocktop
paving . Rt . 143. Phpne I (blol )
698-733 1'
EXCAVATING ,
BACK HOES .
DOZER , TRENCHER, lOWBOY,
DUMP TRUCKS. Bill PULLINS.
PHONE 992-2ol78. OA Y OR
NIGHT .
CHRISTMAS SPECI AL: Sewrn g
Mcichines cleaned , oiled 011d
odj usfed . $5 .98
Sewing
Center, Middleport, Ohio .

GOODBYE 1976
HELLO , 1977

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE- "DARK

~~ ~ .-~J

1RUE,SA1419 --0NE
FALSE 5TEP AHD
ONE COULD FALL
10 HO TElLING
WHAT D£P'IH5--

""-HOUSE &amp; BARN ~
TRUSSES
ANY PlTCH
ANYSlZE

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

11: i~Johnny Carson ),,., 1S;.Movle " In Tandem"O, 13;
Kolek B; Mary Hartman 10; BC News 33 .
12 :01)-Movle " The Viking Queen" 10: Jonakl 33.
12: 30-Movle " The People Ne)( l Ooor " B.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13 .

lncidentally . we do n't think
much of West's opening lead.
While West did have a very
unattractive choice of opening
leads we would ralher lead as
unbid suit ( h ear l s or
diamonds) instead of playing
lhe one bid by dummy.

~Q~~

6•

A reader from New Mexico

Here is the fastest played
hand of 1976. At least the play
was fast after trick one.
West did study before
teading the seven of clubs and
South went into a real ex ecutlv~ session before playing
from dummy .
HAZARD"
His problem wa s to decide if
West was actually leading
HQf IT IS A
PILE OF KINDLING - from the king in order to force
South lo make a decision at
VEl&lt;~ DRY! SUCH
AS lHE ANCIENT
trick one.
ONES USED FOR
Finally, South decided that
TOI~CHfS ' 5AHI6 · West
was not that kind of a
A MATCH, PlEASEmean defender , so South went
up with dummy 's ace.
When the ace droppe d

---.

wants to know what is meant
by the expression, "A passive
lead ."
.
A passive lead is one designed to protect your own high
cards. As an example, suppose the opponents reach six
notrump and you hold two
kings a nd a queen . The
passive lead would be in the
suit without an honor.
(Do you have a question
for the 8KPtlftS ? Write "Ask .•
the Jacobys " care ot this
newspaper The Jacobys will
answer indi11idua/ questions
it stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
mos r Interes ting qussfions
will be used in this column
and Will receive copies or
JACOBY MO DERN I

~"""* "'""

Located in Langsville
• Box 28-A

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph . (614) 142 -240V
We Deliver
12·22 ·4 mos.
BORN LOSER

tiusiM~!i-~~~~ .~{;:~~?

EXCAVATING·, dazer. loader and
backhoe wo rk ; dump trucMs
ond !o-boys for hire ; will ha ul
fill di rt, lo soil , tirhes tone ondgro~e t. Co li Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, day phone . 992·7089,
ni ght pho ne 992·3525 or 992·
5232 . .

... BlJT THI~ fMPTY 61-6 C./IIJ

II.OP i!J ... ]:'lA..

BifADFORD , Auc tioneer, Com·
plele Service. Phone 949·24B7
or 949·2000 Rocine, Ohio. Cntt
Bradford.
ELWOO D BOWERS RE PAIR Sweepers, toasters. 'irons. oil
small opplionces. ,lawn mower,
nex t to Stole Highway Gotage
orl Route 7. Pho ne (614) 9B5·
3825.
REMODELI NG, Plum bing, healing
and oil ty pes of general repair.
Work guaran teed 20 yeors ex ·
per1ence. Phone992-2409 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice, oi l makes, 992·2284 . The
Fob r ic Shop , Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sa les ond
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

A~WA"'S

~.!VB ~ou

I&gt;IITS MF. ARiDe .

TO LIC\!1&lt; CAR!

l[rol,

~0
0

OH , r OOf.I'T HAVe
AC.AR ...

~~~~~-··_·..~~:~'·:":::•·:__

___A,

.:'".:·•-~~

1

He sall
Ljer
name,

11

1:"xcAVATING . dozer . backhoe
an d ditcher. Charles R. Hal, field, Back Hoe Serv ice.
Rutl ond, Ohio . Phone 742-200B.
SEPTIC S~stems ins talled by
licensed ins ta ll er. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742-2409.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sanitation·. 992- 3~5 4 or 992 2428.

ACROSS
II Fox of S .
I Away,
Air .
grimalkin! IZ Prevent
s Vulgar
13 Require
10 Swlss
DOWN
river
I Back talk
11 Minces
Z Dromedary
13 Was
3 Mountain
suspicious
crest
(3wds. )
~ . Partof!TI
Ynterday's Answer
IS Arrange the- (abbr .)
s Masticated ' 11 Qurdened 28 " Mouse"
tableware
'16 Mllkfish
6 Airport need 19 Further tn 30 Backbone
31 Not poetry
17 Prefix for 7 Gentle crime
32 Drunkard
metric
lamb
%2 Unruffled
(sl.)
18 Conductor
8 Wrinkle,
%3 Thwart
36 Engendered
20 Wine (Fr.)
with "up"
Z4 Assuaged
38 Flnal
ZJ Oyster 9 Coastland
2S Roofing
39 Chinese
22 Relinquish 12 Intoxicated
subatane&lt;!
dynaaly
23 Colorado
,..;(;,;;sl;;;.l_,,...,.,-- 2tl Reality
resorl
26 Bundled
21 Layer of
paint ·
28 Cone&lt;!rt
choice
(abbr.)
29 Jockey
Turcotte
30 Tamn's
Cheeta and
others
33 Giant
inunortal
:W Hebrew
liquid

measure

37 Time of

ooe's
glory
(2 wds.)

18 Moon
goddess

IJAILY CRYPTO&lt;lUOTE -

J-!ere'~

how

to

work It:

...,

It

.

I, ONGFEI.t. OW

Meigs County
Real
Estate
Owners
The Tax Books are now open for the

One lcllcr simply stands for another. In 1hlo sample A II
used for the t·h rec J.'s, X for the two O's, r tr. Singlr letten.
apostrophes the length and formation of the wurda are 111
hints. F.nrh day the ('ode leltcrs are different.

December of First Half Collection of
the 1976 Rea I Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing Date will be
Jan. 20, 1977.

GR

'

( 'RYPTOQUO'l't:S

WINNIE
l'HE:CHILDRE:N CALL£D HOME ... AND AND WHAT
THAN I
WTH WERE HOMESICK ,BUT
ARE YOUR
EXPECTED1 I OTHEk!Witlf' ALL RIGHT. AND
PLANS FOR
DIANA... I HELPED ENTERTAIN SOME
NEW YEAR'S
&amp;ENIOR CITIZEN&amp; ON
EVE'?
CHRISTMAS DAYI
BETTER

Meigs County Treasurer

t-iUY,-Siitoi-iRAifl
I

USTEN TO THE

SWAP SHQP

-~

I
I

7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM J

'·---.!~~~~!.~~~
r

yp

XDFDYGD

WCGWVB

MARCIE,M'i

TQRWEJDI.

GYQCTB . - EWKJE

I.YQFV
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : aJUNTRY cLUB COUNTRY
SOCIAL REST. - SHANA ALEXANDER
HOTBED
ft IY16 K1n1 fo'ttM IUf t'~ Sy nd in t~ . ll)c.

m·

RUN FER IH'

CONSCIENCE ?

SRWXHV .

WQR

JUGHAID !!
ARE' 'IOU,

yp

GR

BARNEY

WHAT

CYDLJDL

STORM

CELLER !! ·

IS A

tJ

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

YERNT

I KJ

II

t
J J

IYARROS

IVCGWVB

UJBJYDB

PYQ

NO DATE&amp; NO PROSPEtT5 • I
1
GUESS ILL JU&amp;T 5PEND
ANOTHER QUIET EVENING .~T
HOME WITH THE FOLKS
(SIGH).

'

'

WQR

I ICX
~ · ·~"''" r_,.,.., ,

AXYDLJIAAXR

GEORGE M. COWNS

WEDNESDAY, DECE MB ER 29, 1916
6:DO-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6: Is-Farm Report 13 .
6:20-Not For Women On ly 13.
6:30-AG·USA 4; News b; Sunrise Semesle r B;
Chrlslopher Closeup 10.
6: &lt;s-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6; 50-Good Morni ng, West Virginia 13 :
o :ss-Good Morning , Trl State 13.
l :oo-Todoy 3,4, 15; Good Morning , llmerlca~ , l3 ; CBS
News B; Chuck White Reports 10.
')
7:0s-Bugs Bunny &amp; Frlen&gt;Js 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
.
B:DO-Lossle 6; Cepl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
B:30-Big Valley 6.
9:0&lt;1-A.M. 3: Ph11Donahue4,13,1l ; LucyShow8 ; Mlk&lt;
Oougllls 10 .
9:JO-Cr0.,.Wits 3: One Lite to Live 6; Good Dey I.
10:00-Santord &amp; So n 3,&lt; . IS; Price Is Right B. 10: Mike
Douglas 13 .
10 : Is-General Hospita l 6.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 :DO-Wheel ot Fortune·3, 15; Weekday 4: Double Dare
B,10 ; Morning wllh D.J . 13 ; Elec . Co. 20
.
11 :30-Shlmpers 3,4, 15 ; Happy Days 6, 13; Love ot Life
B, 10 ; Sesa me St. 20,33.
11 :55-Ta ke Kerr B; Ms . FIKit 10.
12 :00- News 3,6,8,10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; SO
Grand Slam 15.
12 :30-Gong Show 3,15 : Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10 .
12 :ls- NB C News 3.6. 15.
1:oo-Somerset 3; All My Chi ldren 6, 13; Concentra 11 on
B: Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15.
1:30-Days ol Our Lives 3,4, IS ; Family Feud 6, 13 ; As
The World Turns 8, 10.2:1l0-S20,000 Pyr omld 13;
D.lnah 6.
2:30-Doclors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 13: Guiding
Light 8,10 .
3 :DO-Another World .3,4, 15: All In The Family 8,10;
On Aging 20.
3:1s-Gener ol Hospital 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6: Malch Gome B. 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20 .
4:0()-Misler Cartoon 3; Mar cus Welby, M.D. 4;
Somersel 15; Howdy .DQody 6; Mi ckey Mouse Club
B; Sesame St . 20,33; Movie "The Secr et Portner"
10; Dinah 13 .
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Bewitched 6; Partridge
Family 81 Flintstone• IS .
5:0&lt;1-Big Volley J: Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch 81
Mlsler Rogers 2 20,33; Stor Trek 15.
5:30-News 61 Family Affair 81 Elec . Co. 20.331 Adam 12 13.
o :OD-News 3,4,6.8, 10,13. 15; ABC News 6: .Zoom 20,33 .
6: 30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News13 ; Andy Griffith 61
CBS News 8,101 Hodgepodge Lottge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 337: oo-Truth or Cons. 3;To Tell the Truth 13; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes lhe Country B; News 10; My
Three Sons 15; Consumer Survlvol Kit 20;
Americana 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; 1100,000 Nome Thai Tune 4; Match
Gome PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeii ·Lehrer
20,33 ; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
a :IJO-CPO Sharkey 3,4, 15; Bionic Woman 6. 13; Gun·
smoke 8; Orar19e Bowl Preview 10: Nova 20.
8:3o-Mclean S1evenson 3,.4,15.
9: OD-Siroto's Court 3,4 ,15; Bar ella 6,13 ; Mual c Hall
America 6; Movie "Smile" B.10 ; Soundstage 20 .
9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; The Pracllce 4, 15;
Great Perform·ances 33,
10:1»-Quest 3,4, t5 ; C~arlle's Angels 6,13: News 20 .
11 :0D-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13! Cannon 8:
Mary Hariman 101 Janakl 33.
12 :oo-Movle "Hell Is For Heroes" 10.
12 :40-Mystery ot the Week 6,13.
1:0()-Tomorrow J,A .
2: 10-News 13.

as Pillage

WILL do roofif'!g , const ruct ion,
plu mbing ond heatmg . No job
too Iorge or too sma ll . Phone
742·2348 .
CARPENTER , llooring , ceiling .
pon'eling Phone 992-2759.

LEGAL

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

"We Care"
Free Est.
Work Gu1r.
Rutland 12 ·9-l mo. 742·2378

4-10·1 mo

South
1•
4 N. T.
s N. T.

Pass Pass Pass
· Op..,~n_
g _lea_
d -_:_
1.::
•:__ _

AL TROMM CONST.

LAffRl,~..~fh~DER .

TEAFORD

an overtrick.

• Q6
.. AQJ642
WEST
EAST

• K Q 63

(614) 9BS-4ll5
Chesler. Ohio
10-ll-1 mo (Pdl

Ph. 992·3193

"'K

28

• A

.,,

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

tK I065l3

East 's singleton king South
had no problem in the play of
the trump suit. He would be
sure of his contract If he
didn' t lose a trick to \he king
of spades to be followed by a
club ruff so South played his
ace of trumps, dropped thesecond singleton king and made

NORTH 101
•JI0 96

~

Commercia l property approx . 17 r--------:::::;;iiiiliiiii:~
acres, level land , loco ted ot
Tuppers Ploins on Ohio, Ro ute
7 Phone (6 141b67-6304:
3 bedrooms, l'/1 ba ths, Iorge liv·
ing roam. dining roo m ond kit- a...:lrlj~
chen, full~ carpeted . Phone
608 E.
9'12·3129 . qr992-54J4 .
MA.N _ loil~
59 ocras , 6 room house, both,
POMEROY, (),
partly carpeted , two out·
buildingi , dug ·basement ,
one·lhird lilloble , mineral
•
righ ts located neor Don11ill@.
Redu ced for quick sol e ,
$23.500. Phone 742 ·2766.
Is your house too small or
28 ACRE FARM, reor Brod bu r ~ too large? let us ull it and'
Schoo l. See Woller Miller ot 328 furnish vou with what you
Six th Street. Poi nt Pleasant . need . Call now. Happv New
W.Vo. 25550.
Year from all of us here, to
all of you there. Meigs
County's oldesl full time
real estate office .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
Vl'rgll B. Sr .. Realtor
992-2259 or 992-2S6B
116 E. Second Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

IF · YOU WANT IT SOLD
AT A PROFIT, TRY THE
PROFESSIONALS.

KNOW Wt-t y'

.....

HOMESITES lor sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, neor Ru tlond .
Co11992-7481 .
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 baths.
all elec., I ocre. Middl eport ,
close to Rutla nd. Phone 992·
74Bl.
SMALL form for sole. 10% dowri . GAS AND ElEC. Appliance se r·
owner linonced. Monroe Coun ·
vice work . Phone 992-5726 .
tf . W. Va. Phone (304 ) 772·
Oi l AND GAS lu rnoce service and
3102 O&lt; (304) 712-3227 .
ports . Tra iler and homes. 2&lt;~
COUNTRY fo rml ond wi th sedud·
hour serv 1ce . Phone843·2 165.
ed woods, woter and good ac ·
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo.
$1 .000 down, call (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 112·3227.
Heal t:statt• for ~ale

RUTLAND - 3 bedrooms,
2 baths. 9 rooms in all.
Kitchen has stove and
refrigerator, 2 car garage
with storage. $35,000.
EASTERN S.D.- Modern
3 bedroOms, 2 ceramic
baths, nice kitchen. full
basement and 2 car
gorage. S34.DOO.
Ml DOLE PORT
4
bedrooms, nice bath, eat-In
kitchen. ~ga$ furnace and
level lot'. Only S23,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 1'1•
·acres Of level land and an
old 4 bedroom house on Rt.
7 with T.P. water . and lf2
bath. Only 112.DOO.
CORNER LQT - 2 bath
home, .4 bedrooms, nat. gas
heat and garllge in
Middleport . Just 112,000 .
BUSINESS And 4
apartments (rented ) and
all
equipment
for
recreation center
at
Racine.
PAGEVILLE - I room
house with 3 bedrooms, and
balh . Fronl porch and
garden for only $7,500. ·
HARRISONVILLE - New
3 bedroom home . Brick
veneer, 2 bafhs, furnace
ht!at, dining and 2 car
garage . 132,500.

eon-1

WIN AT 'BRIDGE
Good guesa saves set

:'

Schools
Weddings

DIR~8 ~!~~~e~~ES

Bu&amp;id~e&amp;j)pt&gt;Ortunitics

WE-

HAP..:G IT ALl- ·

SH~FTOE ~

Aerial
Commercial

For
maHres5es. padding. Ideal
for campen. Variety of
sizes.
Velvets, nylOn prints,
herculons, vinvl solids, and
tancv prints, accessories.

Pl. Pleasant
Ph. 675-!469
9: 30-5 : oo Dallr
Till B:000 Fridays

TW I NS~

NO U5E B·~ATit.J 6
AROUND THE BU9H ...
ABOUT SHI\' AUN

PHOTOGRAPHY

Ohio

'IOU KNOW 1 NEVER GET Tr
SPEND HALF AS MUCH TIME
A!&gt; I"D LIKE TO WITH YO V AND

WASH AtJO THE

.

PROFESSIONAL

Squa'r e Yard lnstallod
O.vid Parsons, OWner
949-2114
11 · 4·1 mo.

l;i

E£AR 1\liTI-1 (.)5 ... \-IE.IS A NE~
t&lt;l~t-.1 AND I-IA,S Tf&lt;OtlBLe Ll NlNG
t&gt;P AN INVERTED IMAr.;;,E •

.• CAPTAIN EASY
TNAIJI&lt;5 FOR TA~I"'G T!Mf; TO
MEET ME FOR LU~ CH. EASY:

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,INC
•.
Phone 992 -S716
p......;
~==S:v:r:•:c:u:"~·=O~h:lo==::: ~P=IL=It2=·2:11:4:::::!::=:::

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
1
6.95

PomeiiiJ '-dm.t

Bollen

.."•'

Greenhouse

. RACINE
CARPET SHOP

279,95

~ FUNNY BUSINESS

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
YOUR HO,.,E In pots end
hanging baskett from 75c
to $5.00. A.lso, lay away
POINSETTIAS now for
CHRISTMAS . 4000 lo
choose from , PERFECT
FO~ GIFTS In red , whUe
and pink . SJ .OO to $6.00. '"20
pet . off on 10 or more.

.--------------------; '

our

Wanted to Rent

S:OD-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin &lt;; Brady Bunch 8;
Mis ter Rogers 20.33 : Sjar Trek 15.
S:»-News 6; Famllr Atr It 8; E lee . CQ. 20,33; Adem 12 13 .
6:0D-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 »-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC News 13 ; Andy Grlttlth 6;

· Hubbard's

R4J.216S

CBS News B. 10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Once Upon
a Classic 33.
.
7: oo- Trulh or Cons. 3; SIOO,DOO Name That Tune 6;
Let ' s Go To The Races B; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13 ; My Three Sons IS; Cooking wllh e Continental FlaiJor 20; American Issues Forum ll.
7:3()-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares &lt;:
Match Game PM B: Mac Ne ii .Lehrer Report 20; In
The Know 10: Wild Ki ngdom lJ ; Nashv ille on the
Road 15.
8:oo-eaa Baa Black Sheep 3,15: Happy Days 6,13 ;
Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn B. 10; Piccadilly Circus 20 ,33.
B: 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:DO-Pollce Woman 3,4, IS; Rich Man , Poor Man 6, 13 ;
Mash B. 10.
9:3()-()ne Day at a Time 8, 10; Three ,American
Goldsmiths 20.; World War I 33 .
10:oo-Pollce Story 3,4,15 ; Family 6, 13 ; Swllch B, IO;
News 20 ; E uropeM VIsion of Ameri ca JJ,
10 :30--Bieck Perspective on the N ews~~ .
11 :oo-News 3,4.6,8, I 0, 13,15: MacNeil · Lehrer Reporl

TUESDIIY, DECEMBER 21, 1916

NOTICE

hour
Depend1ble
Furnace Service.
Oil or Gas Burnen

24

They'll Do It Every Time

Uow

Television log for easy viewing

I K

..... /1
P LATES 50ME.TIME5

U5ED FOR EVE.~Y­
DAY EATIN~ .

I
(J I tJ
':'~~~:':': r XXXXI I I )

1REFOBE

Yesterday's

Now arrange the circled letters to:
lorm the surprise answer, a&amp; aug-,
gested b)' the above :canoon .

(Anowera lomorr"'!)
Jumbles: TAKEN SNORT BE,IIGLE DEPICT
Answer: Where you mer read every day Of
· lho year-ON A CALENDAR

I

�•
.
'
....
8- The DaUy Sentinel, MlGdleport-t'OIIIeroy, u ., ·•ueoaay, uec.
&gt;In
~

""· I

News •• in Briefs

Alma Beller of '''''~;=~=,,~=~,, , ,. Tanker captain
nund•y t~rouch
IOSt IS h 0 urs.
Salurdlly cbaa.. of soow
R tland di
e1cb dly. Cold Tllufldly
U
eS
aad Friday 1nd aUgllUy
before wreck '
warmer Saturdly. Hllhl

Young man

(Continued from page 1)
Sheriff Sgt. N. E. Benson
stressed that the accident Ia
still under lnvestlgaUon, he
said It apparently resuhed
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The when CUck struck the back of
captain of the U be rian- a car driven by Janet L.
reglstered . tank er Argo . Blanken~hlp, 31, Gallipolis
Merchant llliys he did not Ferry. She reportedly bad
know where his ship was for been stopped In order to
15 ho.urs before it ran aground matea lelttum onto Plymale
beeause the ship's primary Lane. Alter strl~lng the
compass failed ,
Blankenship car, It Is
Ca pI .
G e o r g e. believed that Click continued
Papadoupolos told a U. S. past the car and hit two
Qistrict Court hearing on a parked cars belonging to
suit against the ship's owners . Eloise Nibert and Helen
Monday \hal the problem Pyles , both of Gallipolis
with the gyrocompass Ferry.
'-jprobably was" the cause of
Alter striking the two
the accident which caused the parked cars, Click's car
worst oil spill ever on the apparently bounced hack into
nstion 's Atlanti c coast.
the middle of the road where
Two other Argo Merchant · 11 was strucl&lt;-by an oncoming
officers were ordered to truck driven by Tony
appear in court tnday to give Starkey according to Ben·
'
depositions on Papadoupolos' son
testimony.
Aldlng Sgt. Benson at the
The 7.6 million gallons of oil scene were Deputies Detner
spilled from the tanker Roush Ul and Thomas Roush
stretches across an area 141 and Henderson pollee
miles long and 44 miles patroiman Ron Erskine. The
across al Its widest point.
Valley Volunteer Fire Dept.
and Rescue Squad were also
called. The rescue squad
transported Click to Holzer.
Also transporting victims
were Crow-Russell and
Wilcoxen's Funeral Homes.
aoth the Click 1970 Olds·
mobile and the Starkey 1972
Ford truck were demolished.
Estimates
of $450, $400 and
WASHINGTON (UP I) $SO
resulted
to the Blanken·
The United States posted a
ship,
Nibert
and Pyles cars
record $906 million deficit in
respectively.
international trade in
November because of an

Hospital News Ford to 'look'
over amnesty
Vele~ Memorllllhlpltol

(Continued from page I)
Admitted - John Dill,
Umitted to Carter trallliUon team olfictall by
Melvindlle,
Mich.; Everett
leaders ol the National Auoclatlon ol Wheal Growers. The
Roush,
Racine;
Debra
group repraenta Ianners who have aeen two successive
VAIL, Colo. (UPI)
Owens,
Reedsville;
Edward
wW
be
Ia
lbe
tee•
norlb
record w~l crop~ push prlcef down
rply.
•
RUTLAND - Mrs. Alms
President Ford IIYI be Ia
M.
Martin,
Pomeroy;
aad
Ia
the
ZOs
aouth
Agr!adture Department olllclala recently reported the E. Beller, 66 , Rutland ,' died
Dorothy Jarvia, Syracuse; CO!IIIdering grantlnl! a lull
197'1Wlnter wheat crop may be cut aper cenlfrom this year's Monday
at
Veterans Tbufldly aad Fridly and
Ellja
Adams, Pomeroy; amneoty lor an VIetnam-eta
In
the
%Go
north
aDd
301
level. But UIIIOld grain stocks from earlier crape are expected Memorial Hospital.
Clarence Mcintyre, Langs- draft evoden and d.....Ws
oooth Sall!rday; Lows will
to top 1 bllllon bulllela by the time the 1977 harvest begins nell
She was born Jan, 3, 1911 In
ville; Thomu Bowen, before leaving office- but be
be from 10 to ZO early
sprlnl!. To he\p cope with the surplus, grower spokesmen Gallla County to the late
Pomeroy : Allee Russell , sounds unlikely to change the
Tblinday aad Saturday
rep&lt;l'tedly have asked Carter officlala to conaider Increasing Theodore and Ida Russell
Pomeroy; James Alley , poeiUon he has maintained
aad zero to 10 1bove
the support Joan rate on the 1976 and 1977 crape to aomewhere. Da vldson. Besides her
throu(!houl two years In of·
Racine.
Friday.
above the $2.25 rate set for both years by the Ford _ parents, she was preceded In
Ike.
Discharged
~
Floyd
admlnlatratlon.
death by her first husband,
On MJ11111ay, Ford uld he
Rhodes,
Don
Wilson,
Roger
U lhla pushes market prlcea.above world prjce levela, one Sidney Elli•, In 1945; three
agreed
to review the 1mnesty
Roush,
.Jr.
NAWG leader said the new admlnlltraUon should consider a brothers, a sister and two
lasue
at
the behest of the wife
temporary revival of export subsidies.
grandchildren.
of
Sen.
Philip A. Hart of
Surviving are ber husband,
Michigan,
who died Sunday.
THE CHRISTMAS HOlJDAY TRAFFIC death toll feU Samuel Beller; twoaons, Roy
PLEASANT VALLEY . But later, Ford left aome
below the estimate of safety experts th1a year.
Ellis and Dale Ellis, both of
DISCHARGES - Ruby reporters with the Impression
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) Flnalfiguroo Monday showed that 441 peraons died on the Rutland; a daughter, Mrs.
Cox, Vinton, 0.; VIvian that he was unlikely to lake
nation's highways during the holiday period, which began at 6 Harold (Betty) Kirby , A Liberian tanker ran
Mayes, Point · Pleasant; the dramatic step she
p.m. local time Thurldly and ended at midnight Sunday. Tile Vienna, W. Va.; a brother, aground In the Delaware
Michael · Duncan, Apple ~uggllSted.
National Safety ·Council had estimated between 480 to 560 Ben Davidaon Middleport 12 River Monday and sent oU
Grove; William Bonecutter;
Asked if he was 11 sei'ious"
per11011s would die durlns the 1978 holiday weekend. However, grandchildren' and sev~ral surging Into the water from
Point Pleasant; Gary Cooper, In telling Mrs. Hart he could
·
the death count was higher than last year's period, when 412 great-grandchildren, nieces, Its ruptured hull.
• Apple Grove; and Morgan consider II, Ford said: "Oh,
persons died in traffic accidents durinl! the Christmas holiday· nephews and cousins.
The Coast Guard early
Smith, Point Pleasant.
no. I just said that at the
Funeral services wW be 2 today estimated at least
request of her I would look at
GHICAGo - THE WIDOW OF A MAN who died, ollunB p.m. Thursday at the Rutland 133 , ~00 gallons of light
it."
cancer In 1973 has been awarded $475,000 In dlmages In a Chapel of the Walker Funeral Arabian crude oil had spilled
LODGE TO MEET
Pressed to say whether that
negligence law suit against a radiologist who faDed to detect Home with the Rev. Amos from the tanker Olympic
HARRISONVILLE
meant
he merely was being
the dlaesae on an X-tay two years earlier.
Tillis officiating. Burial will Games. A spokesman said
Harrisonville Lodge 411,' polite to M.ra. Hart, he
Cook County ctradt Court Judge James C. Murray be In Miles cemetery , "As far as we know, it's still
F&amp;AM, will meet Jan. 8 at replled, "the words speak for
Monday signed the verdict in favor ql MarjOrie Hynes, 48, Friends may call at the . leaking ."
7;30 p.m. Instead of Jan .. 1 themaelves" and said no
suburban Hickory Hills, after the verdict was returned by a chapel alter 2 p.m. Wed·
Emergency crews were
more on the subject.
jury last Thursday. Mrs. Hynes and her late husband, nesday. The family will he working to keep the oil from
Raymond, bad five chUdren. The verdict was delivered present from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 flowing Into the New Jersey
against Dr. Abram . H. Cannon, fanner chainnan of the p.m. Wednesday.
marshlands.
r8dJcliOIO rlonartn..,nl a~'!'l:esley Memorial Hospital.
The Olympic · Games nin
aground one mile south of
Philadelphia at 4:10 p.m.
EST. The Coast Guard said
the mishap occurred as the
tanker was attempting to
, Mrs. Lady Sidenstrlcker Township, a daughter of the tum .
The Coast. Guard Monday
®
Canaday , 80, Columbus, late Floyd and Allee Murray
night
managed to refloat the
former resident of Meigs Sldenstrlcker, She was also
County, died at . Riverside preceded In death by her 12-year-oid, · 171·foot tanker increase in petroleum imhusband, Scott Canaday, in and tow it to its destination, ports and a drop in food ex·
Hospitsl early today.
.
.
Mrs. Canaday was born 1947; one daughter, Mrs. the British Petroleum ports, the Commerce Depart·
April 29, 1896 in Rutland Nellie Haines, and a sister, refinery at nearby Marcus men\ said today.
It was 6th consecutive
Hook , Pa . The tanker came
Miss Lelah Sidenstrlcker.
monthly
decline and the
from
Freepori,
Bahamas.
The deceased is survived
largest
since
the pr~vious
by a son, Richard, and a
·
·record
of
$888
million
was set
daughter-in -law , Dorothy
In
August,
1974.
·
Canaday, Orient, Ohio; one
·
Commerce
said
imports
granddaughter, Mrs. John
(Continued from page I)
totaled $10.5 billion · in
Candace
Scribner, Bruns·
striking a fence .
November, up one per cent
Robert E. Griffith, 18, RD wick, Ohio; two grandsons,
Wash one pi~ .or up to
from
October because of a
2, Crown City, was cha~ged Christopher Canaday,
an 18-lllliltltllhls
surge
in
petroleum, food&amp; and
and Craig
MASON PERSONALS
Frlgldah't'-' Dtrty
with failure to yield following Columbus,
a
variety
of manufactured
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Harbour
Washer. Mlldllng Dryer
an accident on ljamllton Rd. Canaday , at home, and three
products.
offers ·a 2•posltlon Fabrtcs
one and four tenths miles east grea.t.grandchildren, Ryan, spent two weeks visitlnl! his
'
selector. Tl~ and
of Victor Rd . Griffith's Shannone and Debln Scrll&gt;- parents, Mr. and Mrs .
No Heat cycles. .
Stanley Harbour and family.
vehicle struck a vehicle ner, BrunSwick.
Funeral
services
will
be
Harbour has Hnlahed lour
driven by Harold Green, .51,
Thursday at 2 p.m. at years with Air Force Band. Straight's grandmother, Mrs.
RD 2, Gallipolis.
No charges were liled in an Rawlings Coats Funeral Mrs. Mike Harbour was also Matilda Noble in Mason.
Christmas dinner guests of
accident at 5 p.m. Monday on Home with the Rev. Robert . a member of the Air Force
Bumgarner
officiating.
Band.
They
have
returned
to
Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley
Big Creek Rd. one and two
/'
Burial
will
be
in
Miles
Colorado
Sprlrigs,
where
they
Harbour
were Mr. and Mrs.
tenths miles west of SR 7
/
.
where an auto driven by Cemetery, Rutland. Friends reside ·and will prepare to Pete Karschnik and son, Jon
......
Robert A. Queen, 67, may call at the funeral home move hacl&lt; to this area since Keith of Pomeroy, Mr. and
~~ · r::~~~:-;~L.
Gallipolis, slid on the ICY, any time after 2 p.m. Wed· both have enrolled at Mrs. Mike Harbour, Cnlorado
/
Marshall University.
Springs, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
pavement striking a parked nesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
vehicle owned by Mae
Alexander
of Cambridge, M:~·and Mrs. Don .Hofch
Puckett, 50, of Radcliff.
Ohio
visited
on Christmas
There . was minor damage.
Eve with his parents and and Gary of New Qrleans, La.
Colder tonight, chance of brother, Mr. and Mrs . are visiting her sister and
flurries. Lows tonight In the Delmar Alelllnder In Mason. hrother.Jn.Jaw, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Elmer and daughter,
When action - plus - co mlon
mid teens. Continued cold, On Christmas Day tbe above Nancy
STILL KEEPING a
at Clifton, W. Va.
counts.
think HANES! Now. a new
chance of snow Wedn~sdly, mentioned visited with Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
hand In the light pme,
breed
ollinesl
cotton knitunderwear.
highs to 25. Probability of Delmar Alelllnder's parents, McDaniel spent Christmas
Joe Louis turned up at 8
The
HANES
T-shirt Remarkable
precipitation 30 per cent Mr. and Mrs. Clyde ThompNew York gym lor a press
son
at
McConhelsvQle,
Ohio.
Day
visiting
their
daughters
shnnk-resistant
pertormance .
tonight, 40 per cent Wed·
conference
on
an
There
were
34
relatives
and
families.
They
visited
reinforced
neckband
to reduce
''.
·nesday.
upcoml!lg fight. The
with Mr. and Mrs. Stan
or
stretching
.
Fine qualrty
sagging
presen\lor Chrialmasdlnner. Saunders In Columbus In the
legendary heavyweight
I
cotton
knirkeeps
ils
shape
and lit .. .
JOHNSON HURT
Sunday dinner guests of
champion Is managing one
yet
grves
automatic
comfort-stretch!
RACINE - The Racine Mr . and Mrs. Norman morning and In the afternoon
of the Hghters In a Las
they vil!ited Mr. and Mrs.
Emergency Squad trans· Reynolds at Kanauga, Ohio James
The HANES Briel: The lOngLoyd at Nashport, 0.
Vegas bout.
ported Emerson Johnson o.f were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth · Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
diStance perlormer with a hrnt of
Portland from the Racine Reynolds, Mrs. Landon Foreman of Lorain, Ohio,
athletic support where you want it!
Heat-resistant elastic in waist-band
Lock and Dam to Holzer . Smith, all of Mason, and Mrs. visited their daughter, Mrs.
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
and in leg openrng s. Perma·wh ite
Medical Center with a R. C. King ol Henderson.
Myra Hysell and family (UPI) - The Springfield
lrnest absorben t knit From the
possible leg fracture on
Indians, mired In last place In
Mrs. R. C. King, during the·holidays.
HAN ES family of fine underwear.
Christmas Day , The Racine Henderson, Mrs. Landon
Mr. Chalky McDaniel .·the American Hockey
unit also removed Carter Smith, Mason, visited with
League, fired Coach JOhn
his sister, Mrs. James Hanna Monday , Springfield
Smith from the Vista Station Mr. and Mrs. Nelson visited
Loyd and family at Nashport,
In Racine to the Holzer Reynolds and family on Ohio
during the holidays anlf President George Leary
Medical Center; Cloisl BadB· Christmas morning and with with another sister' Mrs. Stan announced.
Be sure to see aII the other styles .
ley, Racine, to Veterans Mr, and . Mrs. Kenneth Saunders and family at
Hanna was replaced by
Hanes
Underwear for men &amp; boys
Memorial Hospital and Kay Reynolds and family In the Cnlumbus.
Gary Dineen, 33, coach of the
Vournacos, Syracuse, to afternoon.
Mass~onn Twins of the
including Ther.m;lls.,for .men &amp; boys.
Mrs. Matilda Noble has
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Junior Amateur Hockey
,;;, •,i.ir •
"r
Veterans Memorial Hospital
returned
home
alter
two
McDaniel
and
Cllalky
spent
'
'
League. Dineen was coach
In other recent runs.
••. '
Christmas evenlnl! with Mr.
weeks visit with her son and · and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel and general manager of the
daughter-in-law, Mr . and and family In Pt. Pleasant. AHL Springfield Kings In
CALLING PEKING
.VATICAN CITY (UP!) - ~~- Did! Noble at Mifflin, Also visiting at the McDaniel 1971·72 when the team was
under different ownership.
Vatican Radio said Monday it
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Straight home were Mrs. McDaniel's
Hanna will remain wit~ the
will st8rt dally programs In and children of Grafton, W. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
team
In an unspecified job,
Chinese Jan . I.
Leary said.
Va. visited recently with Mrs. La~:UGHTER BORN
... for the finest services offered
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
by any bank. Visit us today for
McFarland, Mason, are
announclnl! the birth of a
more information about our
daughter, Tracey Dawn on
checking and savings account
PL~CE
Ouistmas Day at Holzer
plans. We will be happy to serve
Medical Center. The mother
you.
Ia the former Beck)' Raynes.
The Infant weighed 6 pound&amp;
and 14 ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
·McFarland also have a son,
WALK-UP TELLER WINOOW AND
Travis, age 3,.,. Maternal
A_UTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Dayton Raynes and the
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.
great-grandmother Is Mrs.
Katherine Raynes, all of
Mason.
Paternal
"THE
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Wllllam McFarland and
great-gra.q,&amp;rents are Mr.
For mixed· vitamin deficiencies
FRJENDLY .BANK"
and Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,
aU of New Haven •.

JI'OPOAII

a
.
ha

Delaware River
gets oil dose

suggestion

Record deficit

posted for year

Fonner resident of Rutland
dies at age 80 in Columbus

Frigidaire
Laundry
Pair

Pomeroy

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Hanes

•

1'

...,,

.T·Shirt &amp; Brief

Mason Area
News Notes

)

$569

/ T-SHIRTS
/ 3 for $4.79

BRIEFS
3 for $4.49

Weather

Keep passing the buck on

to

.CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

\

.A~~Fi~

.~~
· ~DD~D

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

TilE INN

More physicians and .
pharmacists recommend
Theragran®than any
other high potency
vitamin formula

Wednesday Night Special

Visit Our Salad
Hoagg y Steak

Bar

MEIGS 1H£ATNE
CLOSED FOR

Home Fries
Vegetable

Hot Rolls
Cof.fee, Tea or

MIDIUPORT, OHIO
Mend* Federal Deposit Insurance Capocaliar

'

--·.--

DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40.000

·===:-"- '

!

(

Mil~

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, o:.

VACATION

WATCH FOR
OPFNING DATE

THERAGRAN

lHERAGRAN-M

100 with 3D Free

100 with 30 Free

'4..
Nelson's Reg. $7.59

Nelson's Reg. $7.99

Employment office expected
to return to Meigs County
Strong indications surfaced
today that Meigs County soon
may have a Bureau of Em·
• ployment Services office.
Several years ago a local
office where the unemployed
could .file claims for unemployment benefits was closed
down and since then Meigs
Countians have had to travel
to Gallipolis to apply for
benefits.
Through the effort of Meigs
County Auditor Howard
Frank,
Commissioners'"
Henry Wells, Bernard Gilkey
and Warden Ours, there Is.

everY indication now that a
local office to provide not
on ly unemployment but
employment services will be
opening soon.
Tu esda y,
the
com·
missioners signed a contract
with the Bureau of Ern·
ployrne nt
Ser vi ces,
Columbus, Indi cating that
they will pay one·half the rent
on office quart ers. Th e
arrang ement ha s been
cleared through the Stale
Attorney General by Frank
and final approval on the
'

Two getting
jail terms
Two men' were fined and ·
ordered to go to jail by
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night on
being convicted of destruction of property in the breaking out of two large plate ,
glass windows and the wind·
shield of a car.
Fined $250 and costs on
each of three offenses were
David Tiemeyer, 20, of
Pomeroy, and Tom McCloud,
21 , Middleport. In addition to
the fines , which total $750,
each was sentenced to lBO
days in jaiL
Windows broken out by the
two lnclucte the Carpenter's
!!aU on East Main St., and

Simon's

Pic-a~Pair,

opening of the office will rest
with fede ral officials in
Chicago since fede ral funds
will be involved in opening
and operating the ofl(ce.
The office will be located at
110 Sycamore St. in Pomeroy ,
the former Reuter-Bragan
In surance Agency Offi ce,
owned by George Hobsietter
of Pomeroy.
If the demand is present,
the office will be opened on a
full-time basis. II the work
load Is not sufficient for a lull
time operation, a shorter
schedule will prevail.
Local officials said not only
has the filing of claims by
Meigs Countians in another
county been a problem for the
unemployed from the
standpoint of traveling, but

from the standpoint of the
tr ue unemployment picture.
The rate of unemployment in
Meigs County is reported
quite tow and It Is felt that,
perhaps, unemployed per•
sons making claims in other
rounties might not have been
recorded as a part of the
Meigs County unelnploymenl
•plc;ture.
Several federal programs
are designed to provide aid
lor counties · with high
unemployment and officials
feel that with a local office
operating a true picture of the
unemployment in Meigs
County can he ascertained
and perhaps, will provide
better eli gibility lor the
county for participation In the
programs.

office fa cilities for un un employm~ nl and Pmployrnenl
services offi ce in Pomeroy . Looki ng on Is Meigs Auclitor
Howard Frank who has played a major role In helping to
get .a locut office recsta blished.

W. Main

St., was broken by the defen·
dants . The two . were apprehended by the Pomeroy
Police Department Tuesday.
VOL XXVII
Also fined in the court Tues- .
day night were Rex Darst,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, for
disorderly conduct, and
Brian Kizzee , Middleport,
$100 and costs, for a petty
larceny.
Forfeiting bonds in Mayor
Andrews' court were Roy
Boggs, Shade, $50, posted on
an intoxicatin charge, and
Winnie Fiber, Mason, $30,
Fifteen defendants were
posted on a charge of failing fined and eight others for·
to yield the right of way.
feited bonds in Meigs County
Court Tuesday.
';:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:; ~: ;:;:;:;:;.:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:· :::·:·:::::·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Maxine M.
Powell, Rt. 1, Long Bottom
1
lf
$150 and costs, three days
confinement, ficense
"
By UDited Press International
suspended .for 30 days,
NEW YORK - MAYOR ABRAHAM BEAME and Gov . driving while intoxicated;
Hugh carey came away satisfied from their meeting ,with Robert M. Johnson, Jr., Rt. 3,
President-elect Jimmy Carter, who promised to keep the city Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
from bankruptcy and blamed some of its financial problems on tsklng illegal deer; Lowell
past federal policy.
Schivendeman, Lowell, Ohio,
"President-elect Carter reiterated that he is not going to $9 and costs, speeding;
let New York down i ' Beame said as he arrived in New York Sidney Burton, Middleport,
Tuesday night after the meeting with carter in St. Simons $10 and costs, illegal hacking;
Island, Ga. Carey added, "We now have a reason to be Ruth Luthern, Rt. 2, ·Racine,
optimistic."
$10 and costs, left of center;
Paui -~ Keller, Rt. . 1, MidWHITESBURG, KY. - ·OFF\CIALSOF THE federal mine dleport, $15 · and costs,
safely agency have nearly eliminated what had been their parking on
roadway;
leading theory of the cause of a fatal exploslon that claimed 11 Everelte Smith, · Rt. 1,
lives last March at the S~otia Coal Co. mine in Southeastern
Middleport, $15 and . costs,
Kentucky, The Courier-Journal reported today. Mining speeding
; William B. Rife,
Enforcement and Safety Administration officials have
'
practically ruled out the possibility that electrical currenl
might have been inadvertently been sent into the area of the
mine explosion, triggering the explosion.
MESA officials said their investiga lion was far from
complete, but they indicated checks of electrical equipment at
the mouth of the Letcher County mine led them to change their
minds about the probable cause of the explosion. Other leading
theories being pursued by MESA are that the blast was caused
by roof falls, smoldering fires or a spark from a compressor in
RACINE - Four defenan old locomotive engine inside the mine.
dants all of the Racine area
forfeited bonds of $35 each to
MUNICH, WEST GERMANY - AMERICAN fashion Racine Mayor Charles Pyles
designer lolain Rousseau Bocher, who created styles for Tuesday nigh~. all posted for
wofnen ranging from the duchess of Windsor to the Girl Scouts , speeding citations.
is dead at 86. The Munich Harlaching Hospitsl said Bacher
Forfeiting were John F.
died late Tuesday of double pneumonia. Bucher was born in Young , Racine ' Donald
Chicago Oct. 24, 1890, the son of a French businessman and his · Dillon, Route I, Racine;
British wife .
Lawrence W. Abies, Route 2,
He began his career as a musician, studying piano and Racine, and Milford
singing, but lost his voice and switched to the study of art in Frederick, Racine.
Chicago, New York and Munich. In 1922 he worked .as an
Fined for speeding were
illustrator for Harper's Bazaar and later became an ed1tor of Ellis McMillan Racine
Vogue magazine In Paris until1929. He opened his own shop in - $!lit.70· Clarence 'Lawrence'
Parts in 1930, but it was closed by the outbreak of World War II Jr., ' Portland, $31.10;
and he returned In 1940 to New York, where he opened a salon Clarence P Parsons Route 2
that dressed the rich and Influential women of the world.
Racine, $34.70 and Charles F:
TUCSON, ARIZ . - SHERIFF'S DEPUTIES kept John Wagner, Racine, $29.70. The
Adamson's jail whereabouts hidden today at the start of h1s arresting officer was Chief of
\
trial on charges of murdering investigative reporter Don Police Allred Lyons.
Bolles fearing for his life from a "shadowy organization" that
may. have ordered the slaying. A spokesman for the Pima
County Sheriff's Department said Adamson , 33, a burly
Intimate of prominent persons involved in big land deals in
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Arizona's real estate frontier, was at one of five prison and
Friday through Sunday,
holding facilities and might he moved about.
cold
Friday aad tem·
Adamson, wearing dark glasses and a blue sports outfit,
peratures
slowly
was present In Superior Court Tuesday at the start of jury
moderating
Saturday
and
selection In the second attempt to try him for the car-bomb
Suildoy.
A
chance
of
snow
killing of Bolles, 47, a prize-winning newsman for the Arizona
New Year's Day, maluly Ia
Republic, Adog breeder and sometime tow truck operator, he
the northern oecllons of tile
was whisked away after the proceedmgs.
state. Hlgbs will be In tile
teens or lower 20s Friday,
WASHINGTON -THE UNITED STATES POSTED a
record $906 million foreign tude deficit during November but
warmln1 to the 20s Suodly.
officials said that's good, not had, with respect to the economy.
Lows wlll he zero to 10
Exports tailed off 1 per cent last month to $9.6 billion, and
above Friday mornlag and
Imports grew 1 per cent from October to $10.5 billion, the
10 to 20 Sunday morning.
Cnmmerce Department announced Tuesday.
Commerce economist Maynard Comiez said the increa~
:::·:::·:·:::·:·:·:::::::::·::::::::::::;::::·:·:·:·:::.;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
(Continued on page 10)

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Court takes
four bonds

Rt. 1, Middleport, $15 and
costs, failure to yield; Jimmy
B. Griffith, Rt. I, Middleport,
$15 and costs, failure to stop
within
assured
clear
distance; Richard D. Helton,
Rt. 1, Dexter, $150 and costs,
license suspended 30 days,
attend school In Athens,
driving while intoxicated;
Clinton P. White, Milton , W.
Va., $12 and costs, speeding;
Kenny Morris, New Marshfield, $25 and costs, 15 days
confinement, confinement
suspended , one
year
probation, trespassing;
Ronald Handy, Columbus,
$100 and costs, spotlighting
deer; Edward B. McKinney ,
Cniumbus, $100 and costs,
hunting Illegal deer ; Sammy
F. Stamper, Jr., no address
recorded, $100 . and costs,
illegal Spotlighting.
Forfeiting bonds were
Lewis T: Ifiwhorn, Bidwell,
$33.50, speeding; Lillie M.
Stoat, Huntington, $27 .50,
failure to yield; David A.
Fife, Middleport, $27 .50,
speeding; Gary L. Harris,
McArthur, $27.50, left of
center; Tommy Joe Ferrell,
Charleston, and Patricia Hill,
Rt. 1, Portland, $357.50 each,
driving while Intoxicated;
Sigle E. Chaffin, Vinton,
$27.50, left of center; Sinday
Howell, Parkersburg, $50,
assault.

First Federal
payment here
says auditor
Meigs County Auditor
Howard E. Frank, chief
executive officer of Meigs
County who signed the
statement of assurance
required by the Public Works
Employment Act 1976, said
today Meigs County· has
received 17,773 as Its first
quarterly Installment.
The Intent of Congress was
that these funds be used
prima&lt;ily for the em·
ployment of persons and the
provision of basic services by
our government. The state
law requires that these funds
be appropriated or en·
cumbered within six mbntha
of receipt by local government.
NOW YOU KNOW
Because of underground
streams It is possible to catch
fresh water fish In the Sahara
desert.

4,500 pills stolen
Three persons have been matter accordlnl! to a spokes· he reported for work at 9a.m.
taken . Into custody by Gallia man for the Gallia County Tuesday. The building was
County sheriff's deputies for sheriff's department and entered some time between 9
questioning In connection Gallipolis Police Depart· p.m. Monday and Tuesday
with the breaking aiKI en- ment. The three suspects morning 'by knocking a hole
tering and theft of 4,500 pills included a !~·year old through a drywall covering a
,
valued at $768 from juvenile.
small window In a restroom.
According to Gallipolis
Gillingham's Drug Store on
Another small bole was
Second Ave. and Pine St. In Pnlic&amp; Chief John Taylor, made through a drywall
GaUlpolla Tuesday IJ)Ornlng. Richard MacKenzie pertitlon into 8 drug storage
Charges are pending In the discoyered the robbery when room . The 4,500 pills Included

PRIC E FIFTEEN CENTS

:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:-

Buck's court
docket heavy .

News. . . in Briefsl

4'

AGREEMENT SIGNED - Mei gs County
Commissioners,! tor, Bernard Gilkey, Henry Wells and
Warden Ours 'signed an agreement Tuesday with the
Bureau of Employment Services to pay half the rent on

Darvon, Ubrium, Mellaril,
Gerax, and Valium. It was
unofficially reported some of
the pills were recovered.
· Three suspectr. were
booked for further In·
· vestlgatlon after complaints
were received at the sheriff's
office regarding dlaorderly
conduct In the Neighborhood
Road area.
~·

'

REMINDER NOTED
Middleport businesses
are reminded that Friday,
Dec. 31 Is the deadline lor
obtaining amusement
machine licenses as
required by village or·
dlnance. Llceoses are
available at the Mayor's
office.

Baby Derby near
1977 launch time

;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:·:::·:;:·:::·:·:::-:::·:::::·:;:::::;:::·:·:·:·:·:·

Thirty-two Big Bend
merchants are offerin g prizes
in the 1977 Daily Sentinel
Baby Derby .
Parenls of the first baby
through the derby will
receive a number of gifts
contributed by the 32 business
houses as a part of the derby.
According to rules of the
contest , parents of the first
baby of 1917 must be legal
residenli of Meigs County
although the fat~er may be in
the Anned Forces nnd the
family stationed at a distant
point.
The exact time of birth
must he specified in a written
statement from the attending
physician. The statement of
birth must be received at the
Daily Sentinel Office, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, no later
than midnight on Jan. 10.
Gifts include two cases of
baby !nod from Wald Cross
and Sons, Racine; a $!i gift
certificate from Heritage

Reform
still on
schedule
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
. ST . SIMONS ISLAND , Ga.
(UP!) - President-elect
Jimmy Carter, in the face of
remarks by his cabinet
members to the contrary, has
restated his intention to seek
welfare refortn and a
reduction In defense waste
during his first year in office.
"I think you can depend on
it," Carter said Tuesday
night in an Interview with
NBC-TV following a dinner
with cabinet members.
In brief remarks, carter
said his administration would
put together a welfare
package this year, although
he
said
"complete
implementation" may come
later. He also said ~tting $5
billion to fl billion from the
Pentagon budget "will be
completed before the next
· budget."
Earlier Tuesday, Harold
"Brown, defense secrelarydesignate, Joseph Califano,
secretary-designate of
Health, Educalion and
Welfare, and Jody Powell,
Jimmy Carter's spokesman
and adviser, indicated the
administration would delay
fulfilhnent of two of Carter's
main campaign promisesquick welfare reform and
defense savings.
Carter said throughout the
campaign that he would insti·
tute welfare reform during
his first year In office, and cut
defense spending by $!i billion
to $1 billion amually.
"To he realistic, a lull
accomplishment of . that
reduction In (defense ) waste
(Continued on page 10)

.Two fined on

DWI charges
in Middleport
Six defendants were fined ,
two on charges of driving
,while Intoxicated, by Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Marilyn D.
Hendricks, 22, Parkersburg,
$150 aod costs and three days
In jail and Robert Rickard,
34, Olflon, W. Va., $150 and
costs and three days In jail,
both on charges of driving
while intoxicated; John T.
Rue, 22, Middleport, $10 and
costs,. running a stop sign;
Steven R. PuUin, 27, Mid·
dleport, and Thelma Fams·
worth, Long Bottom, $10 and
costs each, both being
charged with running a red
light, and Laura M. Thomas,
19, Middleport, $10 and costs,
· lallur~ to yield, the right of
way .

.House; a case of cann ed milk
from KroKers; u package or
diapers from Slifllcrs Store;
a battery operated lolliclock
and two cnses of Royal Crown
from the Hoyal Crown Bot·
tling Co.; a one piece snow
suit from the Racine Depart·
ment Store; a baby bunting
from Landmark; a three
piece feeder set from K. and
C. Jewelers .
A$10 savings account ut the
Racine Home-National Bank;
a $3 gift certificate from The
Fabric Shop; three boxes of
new born pampers from the
Racine Food Market; a babY. ,
planter from the Pomeroy
Flower Shop; a slip for
mothei·· from the L. &amp; z.
Dress ·Shop; three boxes of
new born paffipers tr·om
Swlsher·Lohse Phannacy ; a
case of baby fond from Twin
Cities Gateway Super ·
market; a cui flower
acrangernent from Dudley
Florist; a $10 savin gs account

at the · Pomeroy Nalionnl
BHnk ; u cosc uf LJ.aby food
from Mtu·k V Supcnnnrkct; n
brown beur fr om Moore':-;
Store ; n freu mbnl to the
mother fr om· Crow's Slcnk
House.

A$10 suv ln ~s acco unt nt the
Citizens National lln nk: a
pa ir of baby shoes f1·om Ha&lt;t·
· ley 1S Shoes: three boxeN of
pQmpers fr om Vill age
Phun·nucy ; ·$5 of£ on uything
ordered from Scm·s' cntulo~
from the Seers Store; 10
~all o n s of gasolin e fr om
Welker 's Ashland Sta tion : n
feed er spoQn with rattler,
Goessler 's J ewelry Stor e;
free meal for the porents at
Meigs Inn; a $!i gift ,cer·
tlllcate, The Kid&lt;\le Shoppe ; n
crib toy fro"' Western Auto;
o $10 gift certificate from
Powell's Super Valu ; a free
meal from ihc pHrents at
Country Cousins Cook
Shoppe, and a $10 gift' ce1··
tillcate from Elberfeld 's.

$450,000 action filed
A suit for $450,000 resulting
The suli claims the
from an accident in Meigs plaintiffs were riding In .a
County on Oct . II, 1975 has vehicle driven by Roher! F.
been filed in Meigs County Lawson on CR 31 when It
Common Pleas Court by collided with a second car
Shirley Ann Evans, Rt. 2, driven by Bums. Mrs. Evans
Racine, on behalf of herself charges Burns and Lawson
and Jason Lawson, Sherrie
Lawson, Amy Lawson and
Robert Lawson, all ·minors.
Defendants In the case are
Robert P. Burns, Gahanna;
Robert F. Lawson, Rt. 1,
Portland, and \he board of
Meigs
County
Com·
missioners.
Gallla County sheriff-elect
James M. Montgomery today
named veteran Meigs County
sheriff Robert (Bob) Har·
tenbach one of his fulltirne
The Pomeroy Emergency deputies .
Squad answered a call to the
Hartenba ch, defeated In his
Certified Service Station at bid lor reelection last month ,
12 :41 p.m. Tuesday lor Russ was sheriff (or 16 years.
Miller, who had a possible
Other staff members given
fractured ankle. He was the oath of office this morning
taken to Veterans Memorial by Common Pleas Court
Hospital.
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun
At 9:19 p.m., the squad were Sid Vance, Vinton ,
went to Mulberry Heights for another veteran officer
Mrs. Ben Brown, a possible currently servin g under
coronary victim, who was Sheriff Oscar Baird, and new
also taken to · Veterans deputies Rober! Meade of
Memorial Hospital. At 8:26 Vlntori and Jimmy Hatfield of
·a.m. Wednesday, the squad
went to the Meigs Inn for
Daniel Wagner who was also Things reversed
taken to Veterans Memorial
The State Highway Patrol,
Hospital.
GaUipolls, said today Howard
C. Birchfield, 51, 'Route I,
Middleport, was cited to
SUIT FILED
court'
on a charge of falling to
Joyce M. Te~ry , West yield the
right of way as the
Hamlin, W. Va., filed for result of an accident on SR 7
support under the Reciprocal at Story's Run at 8:50 a.m.
Agreement Act in Meigs Monday.
County Common Pleas Court
An earlier account of the
against James D. Terry,
accident stated erroneously
Harrisonville. Ethel E:rther that Mrs. Parthenia C.
Connor was granted a divorce Vance, 47, Route 4, Pomeroy,
from Jim Connor.
driver of a second car In the
accident, was cited on the
BOARD TO MEET
charge. The earlier account
The Meigs County Board of also stated that Drexel
Commlasloners will meet In Vance, a passenger In the
special session at I p.m. Vance vehicle, was injured.
Thursday to wrap up end of The Patrol said that Vance
the year business.
was not Injured.

with -negli gence of operation
and the board of county
commissioners with falling to
maintain CR 31 properly. The
money Is sought lor alleged
pennanent injuries to the
plaintiffs.

Hartenbach lands
Gallia deputy job

Call answered

.

Patriot.
Dispatchers named were
Gordon Wooten, Herb Dunn
and Harold Pauley. S~c rllf
Montgomery's wife will serve
as jail matron. Ra chel
Borton, Gallipolis, will he the
offi ce
secret ary
and
bookkeeper, and Kathy
Spaulding, Rt. 1, Chesh ire,
the cook.
Montgom ery said ad·
dltlonal deputies will be
uamed Monday. Montgomery
win become· Gallia County 's
first Democrat sheriff since
1956 at 12 :01 a.m. Monday .

Weather
Cloudy with more snow
tonight. Lows near 5. Cloudy
and cold T!mrsday, hi ghs in
upper teen s. Probability of
precipitation . near 100 per
cent toda y, 60 per cent
tonight, ao per cent Thursday '
ASSISTS GIVEN
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad Tuesday
at 3 p.m. transported Bill
Wood, Racine ,. a medical
patient to the Holzer Medical
Center. AI 9:10 p.m. the
squad too k Fern Hayman,
near Racine, who was having
difficulty breathing, to Holzer
Medical Center. Wednesday
morning at 7:05 a.m, Betty
Willis was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital with &amp;b·
domina! pains.

I

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