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                  <text>H KE:-. TO HUSI'ITAL
I'L'~!ElllW

CLOSI:'\G THt:RSDA \'
rOLUMBtJS - Director
Chfford E. Retch of the Ohio
Oepartment of Liqu.ur
luntn1l anno unced t o da~· that
.:1ll st atl' liq u ~ r sto re s~
agenl'h'S and departmental
,1.ff1t~s witt be cll1Sl'd Thu rs·
daY. :\t1\'emtK-r ~ 4 . m otr
sef. \·anre of Thanksgivi ng

Dav.

tUPI l

DETlW l'f

Stru~ ~lin,t! Amt' rican Motors
Corp. Fndn~ reported a $54

Long, bitter
strike feared

million turnarou nd for the
past ~·ra r d~sp tte serious
setba cks in the small car
sales markl•t 1t once ron·
sidered its exclusive domain .

AMC. whose small ca rs are
being challenged by priced-

WASH l:-;GTO:'\ tUPl l
Untied
Mtne 1\'orkers
Pres tden t Arnold Mill er
Saturday predicted "a long
and bitter str.i ke"
if
agreement on a new ;wage

State

Japan to curb its e,xport s to
• reduce an estimated $10

btlhun trade surplus or face
an " Uru11anageable tide o(
pro tec tionis m ·· f r o m
Cong ress. U. S. sources said
today . The J anape se were

asked to curb thei r exports of
steel. electronic instruments
and other goods at R time

a

by its .. Btg Three.. com.
petitors , said it had net
earnings of $8.3 million, or '/.7
cents a share. for the fiS&lt;'al
year that ended Sept. 30.

Today :

record

Parkside .
Henry, a sophomore ~fr om
spr inted tl1e final
50 yards of the fiv e mil e
course to win with u time of
.. ~4 : 11 or 10 secnnds less than
the record John Kebiro of
Eastern New Mexico se t last
Au~tralia ,

ccnt ract is not reaehed ~)' the
Dec. 6 deadline. Miller made
the remark after saying that

HELP GENERATED
Three million dollars in
grants are being generated
neg:ot iatiuns during the week aruJUally by the Minority.
between the union and coal Empowerment Committee of
operatorS on H con tract were the Episcopal Diocese of
a waste of time. He said Southern Ohio. Marcus
reports of progress in the Cununings, chairperson of
talks were misleading .
the committee, revealed this
fa ct to members of Diocesan
Convention in mak ing his
·fifth
annual report on
when Americans are being
Mino
'rity
Empowerment .
laid off in those indust ries.
The source sa id a mission
TOPIC NOTED
headed by Richard Rivers;
RA
CINE
- "Operation
general co unsel to President
Crime
Alert"
will be the topic
Ca rt er 's special trade
of
Gerald
Sloane
of the Meigs
representa tive, Ambassador
Sheriff's
department
when he
Robert Strauss, presented the
spea
ks
at
the
Racine
request to Prime Minister
Elementary
PTO,
7:30
p.m.
Tak eo Fukada and other top
Monday
.
Every
one
is
officials.

yc~r .

Mark Rabu se and Bob ·
Mc{;loud , both of Pittsburg
State in Kansas, stayed with
Henry until th e final 50 yards.

Rabuse finished second with
atimeof24:13; and McCloud,
third, 24 :16.
Rick Becker of Eastern
Washington was fourth and
' Archie Mundy, Rio Grande of
Ohio, fifth . Joe Hanson of
Wis consin·La Crusse was
sixth and Bob Laugennhl,
Parkside, 17th.

wel come.

Special of the Week

By

BEEF &amp; CHEESE

· Wi11is T. Leadingham
Realtor

•
•

••
•
•• Medical Improvement Deductible ••
e
•
to
•
can

Home improvements are
• generally no1 tax dedu c.
• t ible, but they
be - if
e they ' re
a
m ed ical
e necess1.ty . For ex ample, a
• swimm ing pool to provide
• t re atment . for a pol io
• v ictim ·;
a ' c hairseat
• e l eva t or for a hea rf
pa tlen t ; cen tral air con ·
• dilloning for a child af .
• tlicted w ith ·cystic f ibrosis.
•
How much of the expense
is deductible? The amou nt
over which It Increases the
• property
value.
For
e example, if an elevator
e cos1s S5,000 , and the
• property value is increased
e by Sl ,OOO, the S4,000 exceS&gt;
• is deductible . If there 's no
• inCrease In property value,
i t's all deduc.tible. \

e
e

tBut you'll need two
ddcuments
support th is
clai m . A letter from a
doctor st!'ting tt-lat It Is a
medica I necessi ty and a
wr itt en opinion fr om a
competent real esta t e
appra iser
stating
the
amount ( j f any ) the lm ·
provement adds to the
va lue of your pr operty .

-

agree to war no more

•

e

JEIWSALEM (UP!) -Egyptian President Anwar Sadat

• .

e

and Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin announced a-momentous agreement today that there would be no more war
between their nations.
·

•
•
•

•••
•

•

If there i!. ~nrthing wt •
can do to help you in the , e
field of real estate ple•se · e
phone or drop in at •

LEI\OtNGHAM
REAL
ESTATE , m Second Ave.,
Gallipolis . Phone 446-7699.
We're here to helpt '

•
•
•

: .........................•
RECORD KlLL - Keith Woods Thursday bagged a
deer tn a wooded area near his home in Bradbury. What is
so unusual about a deer kill with a bow and arrow is the
fact it was a 39 point buck. Andy Lyles, Meigs County
Game Warden, said the kill would '&gt;e recorded in the Pope
and YoWlg record boo!&lt; on bow kills. By Saturay at 1 p.m.
500 people had viewed the carcass.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
COLOR TELEVISION

NEW SIGNS- New signs are going up everywhere at
Crow's Steak House in Pomeroy. Th is large sign is shown
·being erected in front of the establishment by employes of
CUnunings Co., Columbus . The new sign reads Crow's
Family Rest aurant wh ich is nwned by Tom ~nd Bob Crow.

Monday, Nov . 21 lhru Sunday , Nov ..27

Family Will Enjoy For Years"

SPECIAL
PRICE

VOL XXVIII NO. 154

his department is asking

1

This special is oHered to you 1o acquaint you with
the goodness and economy of our homemade
Mexican food.

Np lin'llt to quantity of purchase . Offer good for
O.r ive . In or Carry-Out Service Only :

Stronger
controls
needed
Wi\SHINGTON (UP! ) ;_
The government needs
stronger power~ to cra ck
down on farmers who ship
cattle and hogs containing
illegal drug residues , a top
Agriculture
official says.

Department

Dr. Robert Angelotti says

Sadat and Begin made the declarations of the unwritten nonbelligerency pact separately in the climax of a historic first
visit to Israel by an Arab leader and then agreed to work
toward a negotiated Middle East peace settlement.
The men whose countries have fought four wars since 1946
then journeyed to Tel Aviv by motorcade and Sadat flew back
w Cairo and a tumultuous welcome by hundreds of thousands
of Egyptians. Four Israeli-made Kfir. C-2 jet fighters escorted
him part of the way .
.
He landed in Cairo at 4:56p.m . (9:56a.m. EST).
Sadat, 56, and Begin, 64,' spoke at a joint news conference
and in formal farewell statements later in an atmosphere of
warm sincerity ard expressions by both men of a willingness
w negotiate a final Middle East peace despite oustanding
problems.
''We have decided no more war between our nations," Begin
said at the home of President Ephraim Katzir, with Sadat
seated at his side.
· " We shall estatolish peace and we shall live in peace," said
Begin, the former terrorist whose election as a hardline prime

•

"We have outstanding
problems. We shall solve them thr.ough negotiations as great
ancient nations should do ."
"Let us hope that God may guide our steps w peace and
security," said Sadat who launcbed the 1973 Yom l(ippur War
w try to regain territory Israel captured in 1967. "I agree it
.should be our slogan- security lor you, security for us without
interference ·from any other side."
Sadat and Begin· sat side by side earlier at a joint news
conference where the prime minister made the announcement
of their mutual pledge of non-belligerency, a concept first
aired publicly by form~r Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in
January, 1976.
"During the visit of Rresident Sadat to our country and to
Jerusalem a momentous agreement was achieved already,"
Begin said. "Namely, no more war, no more bloodshed, no
more threats and collaboration in order to avoid any lengths
which may lead to such tragic developments."
Alluding to his five minute
message broadcast directly
w the Egyptian people Nov .
11 in which he appealed for an

~C0ngress

for power to put a
legal "hold" on a farmer' s
Hvestoc·k when officia ls have
gnod evidence animai s
contain illegal residues.

Coupled with this, Angelotti
says officials want authority
for a livestock identification
system tinder which they can
trace animals with illegal
residue back .to the !arm
which produced them.
M present. Angelotti explained in a speech to the
Agriculture
Department's
annual Oullook Conference ,
officials are hampered in

"It is a great moral
achievement - for our

nations, for 'the Middle East,
indeed for the whole world." .
The verbal agreement,
sealed · with a h~arty
handshake and a smile before
the thunderoll'lly applauding
newsmen, would in effect rule
out resumption of hostilities
in the Middle East even
without a farmal peace treaty
since no Arab state
everrwent to war against
Israel without Egypt. If the
agreement is kept.
Egypt is Israel's mightiest
foe with a million men under
anns and a one.front war
against Israel by Syria would
be suicide, in the view of
military analysists.
Begin said Sadat did not

end to war, Begin said "that
mutual pledge was given in
Jerusalem. And we are very
grateful w.President Sadat

. PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

that he said so from the
platform Qf lhe Knesset.
personally to me and .today
again w my colleagues in
parllament.

minister sparked fears of renewed war.

en tine

at

e

A Christmas Gift The Whole

ENCHILADA
REG. 95'

~al !
fe_stat&amp;.

Co~ lo ractn

down s ubcompacts produced

Japan, asked to curb imports
TO KYO 1U Pl l - Th e
Untied States has asked

················~

Henry_sets

AMC turning high profits

~t a.,uo

Du l:!,a11l,f Pomeroy was takrn
tt1
\".et€ rans
Memo r ial
Hospital b~ t he Pom~roy
F.mt:'r~~nr:~ Squad at 2:05
p.m. Frtda1·. She had boon
struck by a 't ruck and a t farst
thoUJ!,h! shr was not mjured.
rK'hce saad . Later, the squad
\\as c~Bed to the Blue find
Grey to remo\'e her tu the
hospital

•••
cour8e mark ••
•
KENOSHA, Wis. ( UPI l - •
C: a1 r,: Henry of Pembroke •
•
st&gt;t
cow-se
Saturday as Mams State of •
won the NAIA •
nati onal cr0ss country •
championships at Wiscf'nsin· , •
•

~0. 1~77

1)..8- The Sunday Tu nes..Srnunei ,Sunda~ . Xo\

~

~

.. __

enforcing rules against drug
residues in an industry made ·

up

of

thousands

of

·producers.

Doc
Smith

Sa :

THESE CARS ARE MOSnY ONE OWNER
CAR TRADES,
AND ARE ABOVE AVERAGE. EXPECT THE BEST.

1977 BUICK REGAL
2 DOOR
DEMO SPECIAL
Fi re th Orn fi ni sPl with matching ;viny l
int er ior , white landau vinyl top,
equipme nt in cludes t nt wheel. AM
radio wit h a track stere6, chrOme
plated wheels . S ~eciaflv priced at

'5795
76 BUICK UMITED
4 DR. HARDTOP
This hard to find model has dark
bl ue finish with matching white
viny l r oo f Interior is velour with 6040 power seats &amp; AM. FM stereo
tape. Dr iven only 23 ,256 miles . We
sol d il new .

77 OLDS CUTlASS S.
4 DR. SEDAN

77 CHEVROLET
.MALIBU

Finished in sterli ng silver with a
blue vin yl roof with match ing cloth
in t erior . Th i s General Motors
fa ctory e.xecutive' s car is fully
e(;juipped , family sized and priced to
fit anyone's bvdget .
·

.Buc~.skin fini.sh with match ing vinyl
1nter1or . Th 1s 2 dr . llardtop is
equipped with air conQit.ion ing ,
power steering and power brakes.
Gener·al Motors factory official's
automob ile . Priced to sell at

'4995
76 CHEVROLET
PICKUP
Th is Scottsdale model has the red
and white two·tone paint . Special
Bonanza Pa ckage and custom trim .
Equipped with 6 cylinder engine,
standard transmission , rear step
bumper, long w ide bed and only
16,873 miles

EXTRA SHARP

SAVE
75 Pontiac Ventura
2 dr. Hatchback
Finished in bright red with white
vi nyl interior . Econom ial 260 v.a
'en gine with automa tic transmission ,
power steerin g, Ra ll ye I I wheel S
wit h r~:: ed w hit e letter tires .
. :" :.por• ·· car with flair at

'3295
74 Ford Grand Torino Elite
Finished in chestnut br ow n with a
wh ite vi nyl top, Classic gold c loth
th .e
interior .
seat s en han ce
Equipmen t
i nc ludes
a ir
cond it ioning, power steering , Power
wire wh ee l covers·.
Smith Burck. Pontiac pric~d at

'3295

'3795
1975 FORD MAVERICK
This one of a kind compact offers
you plenty of economy and comfort.
Equipment includes 6·Cylinder
engine , &amp; power steering . Must be
seen to appreciate . Driven only
18,06 1 m iles.

EXPECT IT TO BE NICE

'2895
74 OLDS CUR.ASS
SUPREME
This 2 door ~uccess car from Olds mobile is finished in ivory white with
a black vi nyl roof, equipment in.
eludes air condi t ioner and rear
window defroster .
Locally owned and priced to sell.

'2995

'4195
76 VW DASHER
STATION WAGON
This hard to find model is finished in
Agate brown with sa ddle leatherette
seats . Equipped with automatic
transm iss ion , radial ply t ires and
AM radio, dr iven only 18,000 ·careful
mil,es . New Pon.t.iac trade th is week.

'4695
75 DODGE CORONET
CUSTOM
Thi s Intermed iate wagon offers both
roomy comfort and economy .
Equipment includes a gas stingy 318
engine , autompt ic t ransmission, ·
vinyl interior , 6Jjtional3rd seat and
luggage ra ck. This wagon could be
yours tor only

'2995
1973 BUICK APOUO

Fin ished in Burnt orange wiTh -a
black vinyl roof, t omplemented by
saddle vinyl interior . This Hat.
chback model will surely catch your
eye . E-quipped with small V -8
e ng ~ne , automatic t'ransmiss!on,
power steer ing , and new Premium
white side· wall tires .

We Sold It New

"We cannot keep tra ck of
them alL P.nd if a producer·
.chooses to do so, he can ship ·
his animals to a distant
slaughter market as a means
of avoiding herd-farm
identification systems," the
offlcial said .

Angelotti, a former Food
and Dru g Administration
official, was brought into the

RCA XL-100

Kim Batey was crowned Meigs County Junior Miss South and Kim Taylor Meigs County
Junior Miss North Sunday evening at the Southeast Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship program
held at Meigs Jr. High.
Miss Batey is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Batey, Long Bottom. She is a
student at Eastern High School and was sponsored by The Pizza Shack, Pomeroy.
Miss Taylor is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Beegle, Racine . She is a student
at Southern High School in Racine and was sponsored by the Racine·Home National Bank.
Music was provided by the Meigs High School Jazz Band under the direction of Randy
and Alan Hunt Ralph Werry, president of the Junior Miss Committee, announced the
winners. Miss Batey also won the poise and appearance trophy and the talent award .

-25 INCH DIAGONAL PICTURE
-Rustic pine tabinet
-RCA quality · 100% Solid State
&lt;

i

:
;

TELEVISION .

next year.

Angeletti said producers of
broiler chickens and other
poultry have done an
e&lt;eellent job in reduci~g
illegal residues of both
pesticides and drugs. In

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - A CHARTERED jet
plane ofthe Austral air lines·crashed in a storm into the Andes
mountains during the night with 79 people on board, a company
spokesman said today. He said it was feared there were no
survivors.
HWe still don 't have any word from the rescue parties,"

chickens, for example~ a
residue violation rate of 2.2

per cent in 1973 had been cut
to 0.4 percent by fa st year .
"The livestock industry, on

infections.

,

'Brze
.

By United Press International
NEW DELHI, INDIA - MORE TIIAN 6,000 persons were
killed in a tropical cyclone and tidal wave that struck a south
Indian state this weekend, India's news agency Samchar
reported today,
The agency said the figure was official but did not give any
•
further information . Members of Parliament had said earlier
the death roll was well over 3,000 in the cyclone - the regional
equivalent of a hurricane. Official said the tidal wave alone
might have led to the drowning of thousands of villagers
because It appeared to have washed away as many as 10
villages and swept the inhabitants into the Bay of Bengal.

••· perFormance
.•

not yet been formally
introduced in Congress. With
lawmakers preparing w wind
up their work for the year, the
spokesman said, th e proposal
is not likely to be called up for
hearings and committee
consideration until sometime

-,ews

GE

PERFORMANCE COLOR TELEVISION
-25 inch diagonal picture
-Pine finish
-featuring VIR · Broadcast controlled color
rs;;;bv-Eu,-:;;;;;;-;;,:;;.-;;~;;;M~h;;;~cS-;;et
1 _In Pomeroy and select the television or console

L~~~~~..!~.!~~-*!~~~~~'"!.~~!!~-­
oPEN B01H FRIDAY AND SAtuRDAY NIGHTS nL 8 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
)

the spokesman said. "The cause of the crash is believed w
have been the heavy winds and rains. The pilot did not report
any technical difficulties." The flight left Buenos Aires at 10
p.m. Sunday and was reported missing shortly after 1 a.m.
today. The wreckage was located just after .dawn by a spotter
plane \n the Andes foothills, 16 miles east of the resort of
Bariloche .
Army pairols set out immediately for the site. Rain
continued w fallln the region with Winds up to 35 miles an hour
as the rescue parties climbed towa.rd tbe wreckage.
A TRIPLE FATALITY SUNDAY in Lucasville, involving
members of one family, shot the state's weekend traffic death
copnt to 14, an Ohio Highway Patrol s)\Okesman said today.
Carl ij. Payne, 30, New Boston, his 8-year-()ld daughter
Angie and a brother, John R. Payne, 22,Lucasville, died when
their automobile was struck by a train at a township road
crossing. The II other single-fatality mishaps included another
car-trallt death and one pesedtrian fatality ,
FUNCHAL, MADEffiA - A PORTUGUESE JETLINER
overshot a runway in heavy fog , plunged more than 200 feet off
a cllff and exploded in flames on a rocky beach below, killing
125 people, officials said today. Officials said 39 people,
including four children aged 4 to 10, survived the crash of the
Boeing 727 jet carrying 164 passengers and crew of at least five
natiortalities to the Madeira Islands from Brussels, Belgium.
No Americans were, aboard Portuguese TAP Flight 425,
officials said. The crash was the first Involving passenger
casualties in TAP's 25-year history. The disaster occurred as
relatives of the passengers gathered in the airport to welcome
home family members returning from Christmas shopping
trips on the Portuguese mainland.
TilE 10 BEST AMERICAN MOVIES, CHOSEN IN A ~LL
of ,6,000 members of the American Film Institute, was
(Continued .on Pill 8)

OTHER WINNERS - ·Left to righ.t, Mary Mota was first runner up in the Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship program, Paige Smith was second Ml!lnerup, and Judi Perry
received the Junior Miss Spirit Award. Miss Mora also received the scholastic award and
Miss Smith the youth fitness award. The event was held Sunday at Meigs Junior High School
in Middleport.

House bombed by pumpkins

Mrs. Pearl Willis, Rt. 2
Racine, may argue whether
or not pumpkins in the 1970s
are properly the traditional
symbol of
a
joyous
Friday ,
Increasing
cloudiness Wednesday with
Thanksgiving Day dinner.
a chance of rain Thursday. -~ More likely she may insist
Turning cooler Frtday with
pumpkins have pecorr.e a
a chance of snow flurries
weapon in the war between
law-abiding and ·criminal
northeast. Highs in the
upper 40s and lower 50s
elements.
Wednesday and Thursday ·
She reported to Sheriff
and in the 40s Friday. Lows
James J. Proffitt Saturday '
to the upper 20s and lower
morning she was awakened~
30s.
early by the sound of
crashing glass and by a car
going past her house.
Frightened, she did not turn
on any lights.
Later she found two
Cloudy, cooler, showers pumpkins had been throWn at
tonight and Tuesday. Lows , her house, one going through
tonight to middle 30s; high a picture window, another
Tuesday to middle 40s. landing on her. porch. The
Probailility of precipitation incident is under iii·
70 · percelt):--totfay through
Tuesday.

=I~~'*'~,..,._~,~~':'&lt;:''~~~'&lt;:'.':;.~~. . :,:,-,:,-,::.-,.,·-:::;:~~"''-.'~~ A::::::{:'''''''~:~:::rtt~.::::::t::::::::::'?:::::
: 7\ T
•
~
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
!J.
e e elR
Wednesday through

Agriculture Committee said
the department's request for
new crackdown powers has

tlle other hand, t}as not done
as well ," Angelotti said. The
chief problem s, he said,
include the continuing
appearance of illegal sulfa
drug residues in 10 to 15 per
cent of the hogs going w
market, and illgal antibiotic
residues in 15 per cent of all
dairy cattle sent to slaughter.
In the hog case, Angelotti
said the FDA is already
reviewing the possibility of
.requirin g farmers wlengthen
the current seven-day "with. drawal period" during which
hpgs must be kept off feeds
containing sulfa drugs before
going to market The drugs
are used to promote fa ster
and healthi er gro wth.
In the dairy case, the
official · said federal agents
think the problem grows out
of cases in which cows being
treated with antibiotics for
mastiti s and pneumonia

KIM TAYLOR

KIM BATEY

COLOR CONSOLE TELEVISION

Agriculture Department
earlier this year to head a
newly-Qrganized Food .Safety
and Quality Service under
Assistant Agriculture
Secretary Carol Foreman.
The FSQS handles meat
and poultry inspection arid
grading services and food
standards authority formerly
contr oll ed·
by
other
Agriculture Department
units.
Aspokesman for the Senate

Egyptian sources told UPI
bureau manager .Maurice
Guindi ,
who
accompanied Sadat, that .
Sadat first wanted his
unprecedented visit w Israel
w be digested by the Arab
world before he would ask it
wswallow a dose of Begin in
Cairo.
The Arab world has been in
a state of violent turmoil
since Sadat announced the
visit. Libya broke diplomatic
relations and there were antiEgyptian disturbances in
&amp;:ores of cities in the world to
protest what opponents called
''treason."

Cairo

'

HOUSTON (UPI)- Belea·
guered magazine publisher
Larry Flynt says he has got
religion - partly due w
· President Carter's sister and will change the content .of
his sexually explicit Hustler
magazine.
Flynt said God "convicted"
him of sin and converted him
from unbelief.
He credited his conversion
in part to Ruth Carter
Stapleton, ap evangelist and
faith healer, who shared the
pulpit with him Sunday at the ·
Braeswood Assembly of God

XL-100
...

Cairo .

Ffynt tums
Christian

ROll
l_

invite him in return to Egypt
and added, "1 do understand
why at this stage such an
invitation was not issued."
He later joked that he may
have to invite Sadat back to
Israel before he can go' w

Weather

vestigation.
Friday evening ~t 10: 10
p.m. the department received
a call from Ralph Trussell of
the Bash an Fire Department
who saia the fire siren had
been turned on. A description
was obtained on a vehicle.
Sunday afternoon, deputies
learned from Claude Eblin,
RD Pomeroy, that sometime
during the night a bulldozer
owned by him and parked
near the ball diamond at
Minersville
had
been
damaged.
Fuel lines were cut as was
wiring, and dirt and sticks
wefe put in the crankcase:
Saturday morning at 9•50
on T17 in Rutland Town·
ship,Kathy A. Roush, 20, Rt.
1, Middleport, traveling
north, had the steering fail in
a curve.
She slammed on her
,

'

brakes but the vehicle went
off the road on the right
striking and damaging a
brick walkway and mail box
O\!'ned by Robert Richmond,
Rt. 1, Middleport. Therif was
moderate damage to the 1965
Ford, and no injuries.
Sunday morning, Willard
L. Reed, Rt. 1, Reedsville,
was traveling south on SR
124, 4 miles north of Reedsville, when a deer jumped
from the left into the path of
his auto. The deer was killed.
There was slight damage to
the auto's grill.
CWTHING DAY SET ,
.Free clothing . day . will
txi held at the Salvation ArmY·
on Wednesday, Nov. 23 from
10 a.m: until noon. All area
residents in need of clothing
are welcome.

'

TWO RUNS MADE
Two calls were answered
over the weekend by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad, at 3:25 p. m. Saturday, taking Mrs. Geneyieve
Sherman, 296 Walnut St. and
at 6:06 a. m. Sunday, Mrs.
Mae Lightfoot, 1294 Mill St.,
both to VMH to be admitted.

Anybody for
a parade?
Perb"ns

and

Rich suffer from
malnutrition now
Wi\SHINGTON (UPI) -A another victim of America 's
self-confessed junk food rush to junk food. He was
junkie says more than hall young Lasky's coWlselor at a
the food a U.S. consumer eats summer camp, guilty of
each year is junk, and stealing his wards' candied
America is the first nation in goodies.
histor)\lo have the problem of . The junk food book,
ma!nub1ltion amoog the rich. published by McGraw-Hill
Michael S. . Lasky beginS this month, traces the
"The Complete JWlk Food .historical originS of various
Book" by briefly detailing foods, things we all have
ft'om chlldhood the formation wanted to know about our
favorite cravings but didn't
of a lifetime habit :
"The pimply 11\-year-()ld know where to look.
You can find the legend of
made a tearful confession. He
was fired, as the owner put it, the doughnut - how 't got its
for 'the worst kind of.thievery hole; or the first pot... ·~ips,
.,r
there is - taking candy from fried in 1853 by a
enraged
at
having
his
French
the mouths of babes.'"
The teen-ager was merely fries returned to the kitchen
by an unsatisfied customer,
\~ ;SJ- ,r -&lt;-1 ,r p ,:-;~)' 1 r.__.&lt;:; ' ~ and
other
culinary
~ ·".;.!~..,:.-;1
·~:.
.
'~
memorabilia.
·
.
.
.
.
t,
Lasky
embarks
on
monwnental tasks. He rates
';
fast food chains not only on
speedy
service,
~ their
cleanliness
and
taste,
but
""''~ includes a " grease quotient"
I~
~ as well.
As we read through his
, :;~
. . .·..·. '·
compiled list of candy bars,
'...· ,."" ..z&gt; ,,"" ~ ,( ~
we know our favorite will rate
as a "tooth rotter" in the
"dental cl]eckup" col,~mn·,
but we tintJe in anticiPei~

.

I •

"'• : l

.

.

or~

ganf•atlons desiring to
take part tn the annual
Pomeroy Christmas
parade are Biked to notlfy
Barbara Chapman at the
Po!Jieroy Chamber of
Commerce office or at 992·
5005 or 992-5185, The parade
wUJ be at 2 p.m. Sunday.
Dec. I,

"''JJrch.
-.
! -·
&gt;Flynt, 41, appealing a, 25year federal prison sentence
and a $11,000 fine for
pandering obscenity and
engaging in organized crime,
vowed w convert the content
of his magazine from
raunchy sex w healthy sex
plus a variety of other topics,
including religion.
He said it would take
several months to change the
content
because
of
publication deadlines.
. Earl~- Banning, 47, pastor
of the church, said Flynt's 26minute testimony surprised ·
the congregation. It ended
with what Flynt called his
first .prayer in publlc and a
wave of applause from the
congregation.
"He could be one of the
strongest forces in America
against pornography,"
Banning said. "He publicly
announced that he had
accepted Christ and fully
intended to turn Hustler into
a magazine that would extol
godly living."
Banning said Flynt told the
congregation, "I feel I owe
every mother here an
apology for Hustler.'"

Banning said for about four
months Mrs. Stapleton and
her husband have counseled
wiUl Flynt, who had sought
them out.
"Mr. Flynt said he intends
w reveal to the court his
decision to follow Christ and
was not going to ask his
lawyer to call even one
witness," Banning said.
Flynt
Sunday
night
attended a service at the
nondenominational Church of
Castle Hills, in a northside
suburb pf San Antonio, where
Mrs. St)lpleton spoke.
• FolloWing Mrs. Stapleton's
speech, the Rev. John Hagee,
introduced Flynt and his wife
Althea and asked the
congregation to pray for the
couple.
"It's like his coming out of
the snake pit. He is going w
have some tough times
tomorrow when he tells 'his
partners he is turning down a
$20 miUion business," Hagee
told the 1,500 persons c
attending the service.
Flynt said
of
his
conversion, " (It) all sort of
happened within the last few
days.
"My· wife thought I was
nuts. When I told her Christ
had, come into my life, she
answered, •yeah and $20
million are going to go out,'' '
he said.
Although the milg~zine 's
content will · be changed,
Flynt said, it won't cease to
be coo troversial.
"The way we have it now,
.man created God in his own
image, and everyone else has
gone to hell," Flynt said. .
Flynt has defended' his
magazllje In the past as a
reflection of today's society.

/.:

LATEST POMEROY BUILDING to Wldergo _exterior painting and redecoration to
blend in with the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce program to improve the appearance of
the business section is the Pomeroy Ben Franklin Store on E. Main St. The building is.nwned
by Mr. and Mrs. lionald Kelly who also operate the store. The work is bltng ~nne by the
Gheen Painting Co. of Radne.

,\.Jt&gt;.,r.:-.

DAYSJO
CHRISTMAS

. (Continued Dll Pll• i)

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Moodily, Nov . 21,1977
2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov. 21, 197i

BEULAH PARK
GROVE CITY , Olut&gt; I UP I I
- 01" John, in hi s fourth start
at Beulal1 Park SWlday, wm
th e $2 1 , 46~ M ~&gt;d Stakes,
running the I mile and J.16 in
1: 47 1..\ and wiM in~ bv a
length and one-half ov er
SwePt Sa nd a nd Princess
Darby .
The two-year old bay
gelding returned $12.00, $4.80
and $3.60 and got $12, 885 of
the purse in the eighth
running &lt;·f the stakes race .
The :1-0-10 paid $1,465.20 to
U ticket holders. Sunday's
attendance of 5,038 bet
$582,640.

I

.

II .,

;

)

.;; .

'
.-.,

. •..,. .
••

'

Bowl lineup beautiful

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
And oow it rema ins for
Texas. the nation's Nu. 1
ranked team, to clinc h a bid
to the Cotton Bowland roWld
out m e of the most attractive
group of bowl pairings in
recent years.
The Longhorns, 29-7 victors
over Baylor last Saturday ,
will be the Cotton Bowl hosts
againSt Notre Dame if they
defeat Texas A&amp;M ne xt
Saturday and then will have
•1
the opportWlity to win the
NEW YORK t UPl I - national championship on the
Free-agent pitcher Mike field as well as in the ratings
Tnrre z
ha s
reached of the UP! Boa rd of Coache s.
agreement on a . longterni
There's a possibility 1he
pact with the &amp;ston Red Sox Longhorns will be denied
and will sign a seven-year their Cotton Bowl bid,
agreement Monday or although it is unlikely to say
Tuesday. it was reported the least. Texas A&amp;M, which
Sunday in The N~w York walloped Texas Christian, 52- ·
Times.
23, last Saturday, could win
Torrez was 17-13 with the the bid by beating Texas on
Yankees this past season, Saturday
and
Lhen
including a :l-1 mark with" completing its season with a
Oakland before he was traded victory over Baylor. The
to the New York Yankees Aggies
already
have
April 'll, in a deal that accepted a bid to play in the
included fellow hurler Dnck Bluebonnet Bowl should they
Ellis.
fail to win their last two
games.
The New Year's weekend
pamngs
shaped
up
impressively Saturday as
follows:
Rose Bow), Michigan vs.
either UCLA or Washington .
Sugar Bowl : Ohio State vs.
Alabama.
Cotlon Bowl : Notre Dame
vs. Texas or Texas A&amp;.M .
Ora nge Bowl : Arkansas vs.
Oklahoma or .Nebraska .
added another TD on a &amp;-yard
Gator Bowl: Pittsburgh vs.
run, clima!!ing a 41}.yard Clemson.
drive.
Fiesta Bowl: Penn State vs .
The championship will pit the WAC champion.
the No . I ranked team in the
Liberty Bowl: North
UP! board of coaches -'- Carolina vs. Oklahoma or
Elyria Ca tholic - against the 'Nebraska .
No. 2 team - Wyoming.
Michi~an , playing arch-

riva l Ohio State at home .
scnred its ,•ictnry o\·er the
Bu.:'k••\'es (lH short touchd1~wn
runs b.y Hoosevrlt Smith and
Rick Leach. This marks the
second stra igh t year the
Wolverines will represent the
Big Ten in the Hose Bowl at
P'asadena , Ca l.
'
lAs ing Cnac h Wnn dy
Hayes, who pwu:-hed out a
photographer immediately
after thE' game in his anger
over the loss, wjll be taking
his Buckeyes to the Sugar
B&lt;'lwl as a consolation - the
first appearence ever roc a
Bi~ Ten tea m in that bowl. It
will also mark the first time
that Hayes and Bear Bryant,
coach of the So utheastern
Co nfer e nce c hampi onAlabama, have npposed eat' h
other in their hmg cn~dUng
careers,
Vagas Ferguson ran for 128
yards and three tnuchddowns ·
in leading Notre Dame, the
nation's sixth-ranked team ,
tn a 45-0 ·victory O\'er the Air
Force Academ v.
Earl CampbOII, considered
U1e leading candidate foc the
Heisman Trophy , rushed for
181 yards and one touchdown
as the Te.as Longhor.ns
sco red thei r meth dical
triumph over Baylor and
Curtis Dickey and Geroge
Woodard combined lor 338
.yards rushing in Texa s
A&amp;M 's easy win over Texas

Make us your .macrame
headqua-rters...

HONOI:.ULU (UP!) -Reno
Abellira of Hawaii became
the first repeat winner in

Saturday's $12,100 world
surfing championships.
Abellira, who won the 1974
~vent, finished first to win the
$5,000 grand prize.
Australia's Mark Richards ,
a 1973 winner, placed second
and won $2,000.
·
THE DA'U.Y SENTINEL
DEVCfiED TO THE
OOERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNEHILL
~.Ed.

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PublisMd daily except Saturday
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Coolpany·Multimedia, Inc.,

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Editorial P~ 992-21$7.
Second claM pootage paid at
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National advert.ising repr~ ~
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carrier where avaUable 75 cents per
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beads. metal nngs . boards , pins and instruction OO&lt;l&lt;S 1

Our friendly clerks are ready to help you choose matefl&gt;-f
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17 ,,0.
Sunday

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. ·

Protein for
muscle growth
·By Lawrence Lamb, M,D.
. DEAR DR. LAMB-I read
your column on developing
muscles, and I am interested
in body building. I am 38
years old. Is meat protein as
good as mild protein in muscle growth?
I get over 100 grams of pro.tein a day from meat and
milk. How can I tell what portion of the protein I use for
growth and what portion is
waste ?
Why are my muscles sore
the day after a workout' .
Should I skip the nel&lt;l
workout if my muscles are
still sore?
DEAR READER-Meat
protein is the best of all protein for muscle growth. Why?
Since it is muscle, it contains
about the same amounts of
the various arrtino acids your
body will use to build muscle.
Milk protein is fine, too .I
Just be sure you are getting
complete protein containing
all the essential amino acids
that yo ur body cannot
manufacture in sufficient
quantilles.
Your body can manufac- .
lure most amino acids from
different proteiru; and even
by adding an ammonia group
to glucose from sugar and fatty acids from fat, except the
essential amono acids. The

Send one ...Take one home.

Thanksgiving
OurFTD
Specials
Thanksgiver' ·.
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HORN.0' PLENTY

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ONE FREE PRINT

Pom -pons, wheal and
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COME HELP US

festive

CELEBRATE OUR
1ST ANNtVERSARY,

STOP IN AND SIGN UP
FOR OUR FREE DRAWING

CRAFTY LADIES HANDICRAFTS
804 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, 0 .

Just below the Jones Boys in Pomeroy in the
Nationwide Ins . Building.
•

OPEN

Mondaylhru Wed . &amp; Fri. &amp; Sat . 10 A. M. to 5
J P .M. Thuf)&gt;day 10 : 00 - 4:00. Opi'Jl Tuesday &amp;
Thursday Evenings at 7:00.

Order one for ThanksgivingThursday. Novemher 24! A

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a woven basket. for )'OUT [~Jls
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ability of the body to change
one amlno acid into another
makes it possible for you to
use a variety of different proteins and let your body use or
make the amino acids it
needs to make any protein,
whether it is to build muscles
or to make enzymes or hor·
mones.
In your age group, an optimal diet should contain 56
grams of protein and enough
total calories from all sources
for your total energy needs.
That means your diet con·
tains 44 more grams of protein than·· y'ou need, or over
300 el&lt;lra grams a week. That
is quite adequate for you to
develop a pound of muscle a
week if your work program
stimulates your muscle
growth enough. A pound of
new muscle only requires 100
grams of protein. Of course,
just eating the protein won't
do it. The work is what
stimulates the muscle
.growth, and you won't be able
to grow a pbund of muscle a
week with any program.
I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnbsr :;..!,
Weight Training for Energy
and Weight Control. It will
give you more details. Others
who want this issue can send
50 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it ·
to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Too much muscle soreness
means you are overdoing
your exercise · program,
either in the size of the load
you are using or the nwnber
of contractions you are doing.
See The Health Letter I am
sending you for more details.
Remember to train, not
strain.
You can exercise again at
the nel&lt;l session after laying'
off a day, but I would advise
decreasing the amount of e&lt;·
ercise if you still have muscle
.soreness. Muscle soreness
sometimes means muscle
fiber damage, and you do not
want that if you want to grow
healthy muscle fiber .
There is no way you can tell
which protein you used for
muscle growth and which is
used for energy or stored as '
fat, All proteiru; are broken
down into the basic amino
acids, being absorbed into the ,
blood stream from the intestine. We can measure the
nitrogen lost in the urine and
from that measure the exces.5
amoun~jj&gt;f protein in your did
that is not used for building
purposes.

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J . t UP!) - New York
Giants' backup cornerback
Beasley Reece suffered
possible torn hgaments in his
right knee SWlday against the
Cleveland Browns and .may
be lost for the season , a
Giants' sp o kesman
announced.
Reece was injured early in .
llie firsl half and taken to a
New York hospital for an
examination.
·
MACAO- (UP!) - Ita ly's
Ricard&lt;l Patrese, clocked at
I :40:14.18 in his gold and blue
Chevron [or a vidory Sunday
ln the 24th Macao Grand Prix
despite a &lt;;ollision shortly
after the start.
" Alan Jones' car spun and
we collided ," Patrese, who
won
$4,000 and
the
Governor·' s Cup, said after
the race."! was afraid. But I
came out all right."

CINCINNATI ( UPl ) old, something new," the
wiMing pass.
Something nld , some thing trick plays that Cincinnati
"That play is called Triple
new . Snmething borrowed, deployed . ·
Pass, " sa id Ander so n.
something blue.
Trailing 17-16 with just 2:35 .. We' ve thrown it quite a few
times since I've been with the
That little marriage ditty to play, the Bengals resorted
Bengals. But il still e&lt;mfuses
turned int1• a winning formula to an old-time, razzle.(Jazzle
for Cin cinnati on a rainy maneuver.
people."
Sunday as the Bengals left
Quarterback Ken Anderson
Trumpy, who has been with
· the Miami Dolphins standing handed off to Archie Griffir,
the Bengals all 10 years nf
at the alwr, 23-17.
who in turned handed off Ln
their existenc e , recalled
~incy 's. version :
. i-t tne crossing John M&lt;'Daniel, running that play back in
SomeUnng old - A tnck wbo gave it back to Anderson,
1968.
play lhe Bengals have been who then tossed a 29-yard
"That play has kept me in
usmg 10 years. ll W!&gt;l'ked touchdown pass lo Bob the league 10 years," the tight
agam fnr the winning Trumpy alooe in lhe end end said. "I'm surprised
touchdown .
Miami wasn't ready for it .
zone.
Something
new
A
But, with all the rain and the
The new trick play came in
.
.surprtse play that Ken the second quarter. Faced wet field, maybe they didn't
:Anderson thought up just last with a 3rd and 9 at the Miami expect us to use it because il
:Week. lt went frr a touchdown 17, Anderson, believe it or · requires so many exchanges
not, ran a quarterback sneak. of the ball."
:too·
• Something borrowed - The He had clear sailing up the
Trumpy explained his job
~ootball, five times from the middle and hustled into the
was
to wait until Miami free
:Dolphins oil interceptions and end zone. More rl1 a safety Vern Roberson had
· ;fumbles.
quarterback romp than a committed himself to play for
: Something blue - What sneak.
the mock reverse run and
-else, but Miami after i! was
After the game, the then streak for the end zone.
over . ·
Bengals talked about the two
Rnberson also was the key
: The
main
victory plays. First , the fake reverse defensive man taken out on
:mRredients were "Some\hing thai turned into the game- l:he Bengals' other surprise

.

COMFORT PLUS

:an

•

•: BY JOE CARNICELLI

'

: UP! Executive Spurts Editor
: Walter Payton will long
•remember the afternoon of
:Nov. 20, t9n but so will a
:couple of rookies named Cliff

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.-. ••

"! felt weak and ha~ hot overa ll.
The Charger roo kies were
and cold flashes before the
game," he explained. " But I bubbling over with joy, a
have faith in God lliat he will contrast to Oakland Coach
take care of you a nd he did ." John Madden.
Payton rushed 26 times for
"Damn, it was fun out
144 yards and set up the there," said Olander. "This
record carry with a 53-yard was the happiest day of my
run to the Vikings' nine with football life. It's something
less than three minutes left. when you start your first NFL ·
That gave him 268 yards in 38 game against the Super Bowl
carrles and he gained seven champions .. . and you beat
more yards on two carries. them."
Mi n nesota' s
star
" Who would believe ' the
quarterback Fran Tarkent nn. Oakland Raidefs wnuld finish
who is Out with a broken a game with nnly 30 yards
ankle, was replaced by Bob passing"'' said a stunned
Lee, who completed 12-&lt;lf-24 Madden.
passes f!&gt;l' only 116 yarda and
Oa kland lost · starting
had two intercepted. Tommy quarterback Ken Stabler in
Kramer's only pass of the the fir st period and his
game also was intercepted . understudy, Mike Rae, could
The Vikings' lone score came not dent the rugged Charger
oo Matt Blair's blocked punt defense.
and ll}.yard run after he
Other Sunday games :
picked up the ball.
Sleelers 28, Cuwbuys 13 :
'Bob Thomas' 37-yard field
Franco Harris rushed for a
goal with 43 seconds left in ca reer-high 179 yards and two
the first half gave the Bears a TDs and . Terry Bradshaw
10-0 lead thai Minnesota threw for two m!&gt;l'e scores to
could not overcome. Chicago -· carry Pittsburgh past Dallas.
limited the Vikings to only 86 The Cowboys, who won their
-yards rushing and 188 yards first eight games, suffered
their second defeat in seven
.
.
days. Tony Dorsett made his
first pro start for Dallas and
had a l:l-yard TD run .

Olander and Rolf Benirschke.
Payton, the elusive running
back from Jackson State,
turned in the best singlegame rushing performance in
Natio nal Football League
history Sunday when he
gained '!15 yards m 40 carries
to lead the Chicago Bears to a
10-7 victory ove r the
Minnesota Vikings.
The effort included a !-yard
run for the game's only
touchdown, which bettered
Buffalo's O.J . Simpson's 273yard perfocmance against
Detroit last Thanksgiving.
While Olander and Be·
nirsc hke didn 't set any
records, they helped pull off .
one of the major upsets of the
season in leading the San
Diego Chargers to a 12-7
victory over the Wor ld
Champion Oakland Raiders.
Olander was pressed into
duty tliis week because the
Chargers' first two quarterbacks, James Harris and Bill
Munson, bot h were injured
last week. The gangly &amp;-foot..\
youngster directed two drives
ca pped by field goals of 22
and ~ yards by Benirschke,
who ironically was cut by
Oakland just before the ·
season staried.
The loss dropped the
Raiders a game behind
Denver In the AFC West race.
Payton's effort came after
a Week in which he was
bothered by the flu .

r------------,

:I . Pro
:I
Saints 21, Falcons
back after
:Standings \ Archie MaMing,
absence wlth an
20:

a month's
injury, threw two TD passes
WHA Standings
to tight end Henry Childs, Lhe
By United Press International
W. L. T . Pts . second· with a minute left, to
New England
15 1 1
31
Winn ipeg
12 6 1
25 propel New Orleans past
Quebec
9 ·7 1
19 Allanta. The Falcons' defeat
Edmonton
7 9 1
15
dropped them two games
Houston
6 9 0
12
Indianapolis
.5 9 2
12 behind Los Angeles in the
Birmingham
-4 10 :2
10 NFC West.
Cincinnati
4 11 0
8
Rams 23, 49ers 10:
Saturday's Resutf5
Birmingham 4, Houston 3
Lawrence McCutc heon
Win nipeg 6, lndpls 4
rushed
lor 100 yards,
Sunday' s Results
including a 42-yard TD bursl,
NeW Eng s, Edmonton 4, ot
Quebec s, Indianapolis 2 ·
and rookie Rafael 8eptjen
Cinci at Winn ipg, ppd .• snow
kicked three field goals to
Monday's Game
Cincinnati at Winnipeg
carry Los Angeles past San
Tuesday's Games
Francisco. The loss ended a
New England at Quebec
Winnipeg at Edmonton
four.game 49er win streak

E.a~~

YOU?

.W.~LKERS CUT-UP

•

...

1 lb. TEENQUEEN

~=:.~ 2/89~

RED GRAPES ......1~·. 59~

.~J~~-~-~~. . :.~~. 7g~

30 ct. CALIFORNIA

CELERY......... ~~~-~~ 59~

17 bz .

TEEN .OUEEN PEAS •• ,.~ ..................... 2159'
24 LIPTON
TEA BAGS
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46 oz. WELCH AID
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38
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OIL
CRISCO
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3'14 oz.
MY·T-FINE
PUDDINGS ••••••••••••••••••••• 3/69$
20 oz . HEINS
TOMATO KETCHUP. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79'
.

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14 oz. MAXWELL

INSTANT COFFEE ............................ '6.69
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REYNOLDS f()lt .........••••. ~ •••..•..•...••.

••
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THEY MIGHt TAKE THIS

QUICK QUIZ AND FIND OUT.
.,

True False

0 0 ( 1.) Productivity describes how well
we use resources (people, facilities, raw
materials).
:= D. 0 (2.) U.S. coal reserves are the
world's largest.
•
0 ·o (3.) Today, the U.S. ranks third in
•• international
trade.
••
•Ill
Did our little E.Q. quiz stump you? Your
•• kids probably would have breezed through it.
A special booklet on our American
Economic System can help improve your
..
E.Q.
It's fact-filled, easy reading and free.
•••
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:
~

2 lb.
OLD SOUTH

OZ • •

!••

NBA Standings

By United Press International

•

8 oz. KRAFT SLICED

-

1

1•Payton's 275-yard game best hi. NFL history

jDO

18 inch

call, the 17-yard quarterback giving Ande rs ('"
pass dropped ba lls," said Griese.
Added li nema n Larry
protection. "i t fuoled me .''
sneak.
"We gave it away."
Little,
With most Mia mi defenders
Disclosed Cincy coach Bill
up sta ndqut
Summed
anticipating a pass, only free Johnson , "Kenny thnught Lhe
rookie
defensive
end A.J .
safety Roberson had a good play up during the week.
Duhe,
"When
we
had
to play
We'd
been
watching
fiims
(of
shot at Anderson .
" It was ~ust me, Kenny and the Miami defense) and big, we didn 't ."
Miami scored on two
the free sal ety ," said thought we saw something,
Bengals' center Bob Jnhnson, · but nobody knew about it but Griese TO tosses, a 16-yarder
to Du,riel Harris and a s.
whfl blocked Rnbersnn and
he and Bnb J nhnsnn .''
made the play go.
But it was the old "Triple yarder to Nat Moore, and a
It also was disclosed U1at P.•ss" triek play that hurt 35-yard field goal by Gary
ooly Anderson and Johnson Dolphins' coach Dnn Shula Ye pre mian . The Bengals,
besides the two "!JTiek play"
knew aboul the play. Even the m ost.
the resl of the Bengals were
" We knew it's one they've TDs, g&lt;~ field goals of 42, 43
in the dark .
used in the past, " he and 42 yards from Chris
Anderson, using the code co nceded,
" But
they Bahr.
The lead changed hands 6
signal "Red 10, Red 10," executed and made the play
known only by Johnso n, work . ! hate to get beat on oAe times and it was anybody's
called
" an
audible like that, We let one get away ball game until Cincy's last
quarterback sneak to me on I felt we should have won ." trick play pul it away .
The loss put Miami ' s
the line of scrimmage," said
Miami 's Bob Griese was
Johnson .
intercepted.three times in the record at 7-3 and will rrial&lt;e it
The ollier Bengals, said first ha lf, which was played _ tougher for the Dolphins to
guard John Shinners who had in · a rainstorm , and the catch Baltimore in the AFC
brnughl in another play from Bengals also recovered two Eastern division ,
Cincinnati evened its
the sidelines, " just didn't
Dolphins' fumbles .
"The things that stopped us record at S.S and stayed in the
know ." Admitted Vern
Holland, who like the other were the fwnbles and the thick of the AFC Central
division race.
linemen figured he was

•'

·Elyria Catholic gains AA finals
extra-point kick was wide to put three points on the board
United Presslnteroatiooal
-a 29-yard field goal by Jeff
El)Tia Catholic will gel the the left.
The only Elyria score came Russell .
chance to repeat as Ohio High
But in the. final quarter
School Class AA football in the third quarter when
speedy
senior
tailback
Bryan
W
yoming
exploded for 14
champions Saturday night
Thomas
swept
right
end
on
a
,points,
all
provided
by Dnlle .
when they meet Cincinnati
22-yard
run.
Dave
McFarland
The
seni
or
quarterback
Wyoming in Akron's Rubber
added the PAT.
scored his first TD on a 44Bowl.
Thomas gained 148 yards in ya rd keeper around end and
Elyria Catholic earned the
titie shot by defeating St. ~ carries and his touchdown
Mary's
Memorial
7-6 run was his 'lith this year.
Leading rusher in the game ·
THISTLEDOWN
.Saturday night and Wyoming
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
dispensed of Canton Central was Keith, who had 165 yards
(UP!) -Song of Erin ran the
Catholic 17-0 Saturday night in 22 carries.
Elyria
is
now
11-0
and
St.
mile
and 70 yards in 1:47.2
to set up the championship
Mary's
ended
its
season
at
II}.
Sunday
to win the $7,000
pairings.
I.
.
featured
ninth race at ThistElyria came out the victors
In
Dayton's
Perc
Welornce
ledown.
when St. Mary 's Memorial
The winner, ridden by Mike
went for the tie instead of the Stadium, it was_all Cowboy
win in the semi-final playoff Quarterback Chris Dnlle as Moran, paid $7.40, $3.80 and
$2.80. Doobie Hi was second
game at Baldwin-Wallace's he scored two touchdowns including a 44-yard dash -to and Duebehang was third.
Finnie Stadium.
The 4-S-10 tenth · race
Ron Keith's 23-yard touch- lead Cincinnati Wyoming to
trifecta of Alyciday, Bullish
down run with I :39 to play in its 17-0 win .
Wyoming dominated the and Spicy Irishman was
the game pulled the
first
haH allowing Canton worth $314.70. The 7-7 daily
Roughriders within a poinl
Central
Catholic ooly one double of Beau Morn and
and they chose to kick to try
first
down
and :&gt;,5 total yards . .Plain Rough returned $59.80.
to force an overtime.
But, Chip Holtzhauer 's But, the Cowboys could only

Bengals .use trick play to top Miami

this week to accept a Fiesta
Bowl bid if lhe Cotton ,
Orange and sugar Bowls
would not walt until alter
Nov. 26," Penn State Coach
Patern o commented. " We
C'hnstian.
The big surprise Saturday fee l we will be taking an
- especially for Penn State outstanding team to the bowl
- came when the Orange and we hope to prove it this
Bowl committee announced week in Pitlsburgh."
N•H'th Carolina defeated
that it had se lected Arkansas
to oppose the winner of the Duke, 16-J, and clinched the
Oklahoma-Nebraska game . Atlanti c Coast Conference
Bob Lafferty, chainnan of title, Clemson topped South
the Orange Bowl selection Carolina, 31-27, North Texas
t'(ltnmittec . said, "Right now State topped Louisiana Tech,
Arkansas is rated higher than 41-14, and Iowa State downed
Penn State and being that Oklahoma Slate, 21·13.
Oklahoma, Alabama, Penn
Arkunsa sNhas ne ver been
here before , we thought it State, Pittsburgh, Nebraska
and · UCLA were idle
would be a great classic."
"The squad voted e;ll'lier Saturday.

... i•.
..
•

.

• ANSWERS: (lSJ!d).:l'£ .l,'l .1'1
:
'
·••
The American Economic System
..== We should ollleotn IIIOf8 about il.
~~-~--~----------,
: 1 "EconomkS:Pueblo.Colorado81009

:; 1

'I

:I

I ;yant to improve my E.Q. Please send me a free
copy of tl;le booklet about our economic system.

:1

Nam

•

. ~~
. ·&amp;I

Cl

Addr
City.

State ·

ip

!I f:l'l r;i"\ , ..... ,....._.,_
1
.. fl ... ~ \~/ ' '""""'""'""'""'"'"?'-•""'-•

I
I
I
I
I
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tL .~~-------------~ J

:

.~

,.

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L Pet. GB
Phili!l
10 5 .667
New York
9 6 .600 1
Buffalo
8 8 .500
2lf2
BQSton
4 10 .286 S'l2
New Jersey
2 13 . 133 8
,Central Dlvi&amp;ion
~·
W. L
Pel. GB
Cleveind
10 S .661
Atlanta
9 5 .643
'h
San Antoni
10 8 .556 l 'h
washingtn
7 6 .538 2
New Orlns
8 8 .500 2112
Houstpn .
6 a , 429
J'h
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L Pet. GB
Denver
11 5 .688
Chicago
8 7 .533 2112
Milw
1 8 .467
3 112
Detroit
6 9 .400 4 112
Indiana
6 9 .400 4111
Kansas ·City
6 10 .375 5
PICifiC DIViSiOn
W. L Pet. GB
Portland
12 3 .800
Phoenht
8 5 .615 3
Golden St.
9 1 .563 3'h
Los Angeles
7 8 ..467 s
· Seattle
.4 14 .222 9'12
•.;Saturdly's ResultS
Buffalo \02, Boston 98
New York 129. lnd: 127, ot
Phila111, Milwaukee 100
Atlant11 129, New Jersey 114
New Orleans 103, Houston 101
Golden St. 128, Detroit 96
Portland 109&gt;, Cleveland 67
Wash 131, Kan City 125, ot
sunday's Results
Denver 125, New Jersey 118
Phoenht 134, san Antonio 112
Chicago 102, Los Angeles 80
Portland '118, Detroit 101
Cleveland 115. Seattle 108
Mondey! s Game
Washington at Buffalo

NHL Standings
By United Pres.s International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Ph iladelph i
11 3 3
25
NV Islanders
8 5 6
22
Atlanta

6

1

s

17

NV Rangers
7 10 2 ·· 16
Smythe Division
•
W. L. T. P1s .
Chicago
5 6 1 · 17
Colorado
6 6 3
15
Vancouver
6 9 3
lS
Minnesota
5 10 2
12
St. Louis
4 12 3
11
Wales Conference
Norris Divjsion
W. L . f . Pts.
Montreat
12 J 3
27
Detroi t
8 6 3
19
Los Angeles
1 6 4
18
Pittsburgh
5 9 3
13
wash ing ton ,
2 13 3
7
Adams Division .
W. L. T. Pts.
Buffalo
12 4 2
26
Toronto
10 4 2
22
Boston
9 5 4 ' 22
Cleveland
5 10 ·2
12
Saturday's Results
Colorado 7&lt; Cleveland 2
Boston 3, Toronto .1
,
Montreal 4, Los Angeles 2
Buffalo 7, Washin gton 6
Detroit 2, St . Louis 1
NY lstndrs 9, Vanco~.,~ver 2
Philadelphia 7, Minn 2
Pittsbgh 5, NY Rngr s 5, t ie
Sunday's Results
Vancouver 3, NY Rangers 0
Philadelphia 4, Atlanta 0
Buffalo s, Washington 2
Bostqn 1, Ch :cago 0
Monday's Games
( No games scheduled)
Tuesday 's Games
Colorado' at NY Islanders
M innesota at A tlanta
Pittsburgh at vancouver

and dropped them virtually
out of title contenton in the
NFC West.
Br,,nc~•s 14, Chiefs 7:
Craig .Morton pul Denvet;"
ahead with a 2:!-yard TO pass
to Haven Moses with 4:29 to
go and the Bronco defense
preserved the win by
slopping Kansas City four
times from the one in the last
two minutes. The Broncns'
victory gave them Ule AFC
West lead nver Oakland by a
game.
Linus 16, Buccaneers 7:
Reggie Pinckney returned
an interception 48 yards for a
score with 1: So left to seal
Detroit's victory and send
winless Tampa Bay to its 24th
consecutive loss.
,.
Pa triuts 20. Bills 7:
Sam Cunningham had TD
runs of 31 and one yard in the
last period to lift New

England past Buffalo.
12:
Bert Jones passed for 322
yards and three TDs and
Lyde ll Mitchell surpassed
Lenny Moore as the leading
rusher in club history in
Baltimore1: win over the
Jets. The v1ctory boested the
Colts to 9-1.
Cardinals 21, Eagles 16:
Jim 0.\iS scored two TDS,
including the game-winner
frnm a yard nut with 38
seconds tn pl ~y, as St. Louis
overcame a 16-0 deficit and
defeated Philadelphia to pull
t..n within a game of DallaS' in
the NFC East race.
OUers 22, Seahawks 10:
Dan Pastorini passed for
237 - yards and Houston's
defense allowed Seattle only
fiv e pass completio~s en
route to a victory over the
seahawks.

c..Jts 33, Jets

Grammas is out
MILWAUKEE (UP!) The
"Saturday
night
massacre 11 was less than 24
hours ' old
when
the
Milwaukee Brewers began
rebuilding their front office
by naming California Angels'
executive Harry Dalton as
the team's new general
manager.
The Brewers Saturday
night fired Manager Alex
Granunas a nd Director of
Player Development AI
Widmar a nd accepted the
resignation of Ji!p Baumer,
their director of baseball
operations.
Dalton, 48, the Angels '
general manager since 1971,
will be taking over Baumer's
key position, one responsible
for making a winner out
of a loser. ·
·
The Brewers, in a brief
statement read over the telephone Sunday night, said
Dalton also becomes an
executive vice president with
the team and ' 'will asswne
his duties immediately."
A club spokesman said
Dalton and Allan " Bud"
Selig, president of the
Brewers ,
would · be
.unavailable for comme nt
until a news conference today
at
Milwaukee
County
Stadium.
The Brewers haVe ·been
consistently bad since
moving here in 1970 and the
massive shakeup is proof the
club is desperate to turn ·
things around. ·The Brewers
started that ~t Friday by
s igning MinneSota Twlns'
slugger Larry Hisle, one of
the big stars available in the
free agent draft.
Grammas had one year left
on a three-year-pact and the

Brewers have paid him O
ff for
next year. Most of Grammas'
coaching staff is believed to
be on its way out with
Granunas but one coach,
former slugging star Frank
Howard, a Wiscons~n native,
is already being mentioned as
a possible successor to
Grammas.
Sports Transactions
By United Press International
Sports
Baseball
Milwaukee - Hir ed Harry
Dalton from the Cal ifornia
Angels as general manager,
Basketball
New York Nets - Waived
Dave Wahl. Reactivated Bob
Ca rrington.

OSU to play
in Sugar Bowl
NEW ORLEANS (UP! ) _ • IH loss to Michigan al Ann
For the first time ln Sugar Arbor , M1ch. Sugar Bowl
Bowl history , a Big 10 school President Ha~ry England
will be reoresented in tho presented the mv1taUon and
post-season classic in a Jan, g it was accePted immediately.
confrontation between two of
Bryant's team won an autocollege football ' s most malic inviflltion to the Sugar
irascible and Wlpredicatable Bowl by wmnmg the
coaches.
Southeastern Conference
Paul "Bear" Bryant of championship.
Alabama, whose Crimso n
Bryant, whose squ~d
Tide has been in seven Sugar defeated Penn State l:l-6 m
Bowls will meet Woody the Sugar Bowl two years
Hayes ' of Ohio State in the a~o,. watched the entire
Louisiana Superdome for the M1ch1gan.()h10 State game on
nationally televised game. televlSlon, smce he knew the
Bowl officials announced Tide would be facmg the
Saturday that the Buckeyes loser. Michigan goes on to the
have been chosen to play Rose Bowl.
Alabama.
"It's obvious Ohio State has
The
invitation
was a great football team and
extended to Ohio State Alabama looks forward to the
Athletic Director Hugh challenge," Bryant said.
Hmdman sa1d he accepted
Hindman after the Buckeyes'
the
invitation
with
"tremendous pleasure" and
.hopes Ohio State will have
enough tickets to satisfy the
demand. The game, which
will be nationally televised by
ABC, is a sellout except for
the tickets allotted to the
teams.
Alabama has won four
times and lost three in its
Sugar Bowl appearances.
COLUMBUS
The
Division of Wildlife of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources remind s every
hunter who kills a deer in
Ohio that a temporary tag
must be attached to the dead .
deer at lhe place where it
falls.
"This is the first year that
people who are exempt from
an independent
As
purchasing a deer hunting
insurance a gen cy, our
permit must tag their deer
immediately," said Dale primary function is to
provide pol ici es which
Haney, Chief of the Wildlife afford f inancia l protection
Division. "In previous years
in case of !oss.
these people could take their
But. we also have a vital
deer to a checking. station
interest in loss prevention.
as should our ctien1s. We
without a temporary tag."
Landowners, their children, encourage care, caution
and safety . .. preventiYe
tenants or managers hunting
measures which can keep
on lands where they reside,
that car accident f rom
and certified disabled
happe~ing , that building
veterans who are exempt
flr·e from start i ng , that
from purchasing a deer
home burglary from being
permit, must now attach a
committed.
tag bearing their name and
Prevention saves life,
li rilb and property .. . and
address to the dead deer
help ~ control insurance
where it falls. Th~ tag may be
made out of any material but costs and premiums.
When losses do occur,
the information written on it
our pol icy hol ders can count
must be legible.
on protecting and serving
" A Lag should be prepared
in time of need . But we still
before going into the field and
s'ay - preven tion is the
the hunter should have a
best policy.
strong piece of string or wire
ready for attaching it to the
deer," sald Haney.

All hunters
·must tag

deer kills

NOTICE of:
APPOINTMENT
Case No . 22258
Estate of HAZEL R . REED
Deceased .
Notice Is her eby given that
Nancy C. Reed of Front
Street, Middleport , Oh i o, has
been
duly
app oin t ed
Executrix of t he Estate of
Haze l R . Reed, deceased, tare
of Middleport. Meigs Cou nty,
OhiO.
Creditors are requ ired to
file tpalr claims w ith said
fiduciary
within
three
months.
Dated this 16th day of
.November 1971 .
Ma·nn lng 0 . Web ster
Judge
Cou rt of Common Pleas,
Probate Division

2t, 28,

(ttl

(121

s,

PREVENTION
IS lHE
BEST POLICY

DAl£ C. WARNER

In 1938, Nazi forces occupied the western regions of'
Czechoslovakia and declared
all persons in those areas
German citizens.

992 -2!43
t02 W. Main
Pomeroy

This Week's
SPECIAL
NOV. 20 thru NOV. 26

Jtc

Mike Swiger

3 PIECE

992-7155
t49 S. Third St.

CHICKEN
DINNER

Middleport, 0 .

"Caal me for
life iosuruce."

Like agood neighbor,
State Farm•is there.
Stilt f twm Lole

lna~J"OC~

REG. $1.95
THIS
· WEEK

.

$169

;:ompiny

ltlmt Otllct. 8IOOI11HIQ10n, ll•notS

upper

'

FRENat FRIES

19~

in

With the Purchase
of any
Sandwich

' One or two day full
denture service,
partials&amp;: relines.

For Ccmvlcte lnfOJ!!UIIiOn
caJf Free, Anywhere in Ohio

.

1-800-282-6410

Out Or Sial&lt; Call Collect

DtRooaldE
Dr. A. J. StRhll

Dr.C.W.Bnl
Center
Ave .

614) 2l2·l 181

WE WILL BE CLOSED

THANKSGIVING DAY
C.J d ~ . + A '

11

Lotus!

&lt;ar""'

any tsle I:J.
992-5248

leport, 0 1•

�•

&lt;!-The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 •. Monday, Nov. 21, 1911

Nets are
loser in
5 games

'

Ulliled Preu bterulllul
Sometimes a chanllf of
~ery

j
AWARDS TO SENIORS - Senior awards,
(Volleyball, cheerleaders, and football players ) left to
right, front, Kim Batey, Diana Jones, Mary Mora , Brenda

I

Boyles, Lori Young ; back row, Joe Kuhn, Dennis Rucker,
Jim Davis, Randy Boston, and Brian Matthews. Absent
was cheerleader Sonia Beaver.

SPECIAL AWARDS- Special awards went to Joe Kuhn, outslanding back, honorary
captain, and SVAC-MVP back, and Randy Boston, outstanding lineman. Not available lor
picture was Mike Hayman, most improved player.

Fall sports banquet held at Eastern High
After a short break
following the address, Coach
Duane Wolfe opened awards
presentations by introducing
the junior high football team
who had a fine . 5-1 record.
Junior high, reserve. and
varsity cheerleaders were
presented by advisor Carol
King , and then the booster
club president and vice
president made trophy
presentations to the "100
Club" which is composed of
businesses and individuals
who have contributed at least
$100 to the boosters.
a smorgasbord dinner . Music .
Given trophies were the
was provided by La vina Baum Lumber Company,
Brannon and the invocation Farmers Bank, Fick and
and benediction were given Karr Contractors, Five
by the Rev . Richard Thomas . Points Grill, Grover Studios,
By Greg Ballry
EAS T MEIGS - An
overflow crowd Sat urd a y
night heard Jerry Kelica n,
head coach at James Wood
High School in Winchester.
Va . address players, parents,
and guests when Eastern
High School held its annual
Fall Sports banquet. Kelican
was the coa ch when
Eastern's ment or, J oe
Mitchem. pl.ayed on the
gridiron.
Tom Gumpf was the
master of ceremoni es who
introduced the speaker after

CfklwmJuJ and !flou.thevn @lu'o
8kcltic riomjwmy o/licm

will ie ckJed
Thurs., Nov. 24 and Fri., Nov. 25
•

foi

Thanksgiving Holidays

:Jfa1fte a nice day

Col!b~
loufiKom

Karr Construction, Mr. and
Mrs. R. C. Cassidy, Racine
Home National Bank, and
Tuppers Plains Branch
Pomeroy National Bank.
Freshman football awards
and the team were presented
by Ralph Wigai, followed by
the girls volleyball te'am
presented by Coach Susan
Thompson. Their record was
a fine~ .
Senior Awards, both boys
and girls, were presented by
Supt . John Rfebel and Mr.
Lees . Then came the
presentation of special
awards and the varsity
football team that · had a
record of:;.:;. Head coach Joe
Mitchem and Assistant Ar· chie Rose made those
presentations.
Senior Joe Kuhn was
recognized as the outstanding
back and also as the honorary
captain. Kuhn earlier in the
week had been recognized as
the Most Valuable Back in
1977 in the SVAC. Kuhn also
won All-League honors in 1975
and 1976.
AU-League honors for 1977
also went to Randy Boston
and Dan Spencer while Mike
Hayman and Rusty Wigal
received honorable mention
awards .
_Senior Randy Boston
received the Eagle award for
the Outstanding Lineman for
1977 while Mike Hayman was
presented the award for the
most improved player.
Foilowing are all team
members, managers,

statisticians ,
and Sonia Carr ; Freshmen.
Pebbles
Blake. Laura
cheerleaders :
Eichinger . Denise White,
Brenda Riffle, Rhonda
V• rslty Foolbl II
Randy Boston, Jim Davis, · Holsinger .
Joe · Kuhn, Brian Mattt&gt;ews.
Sial$ - Robin Rilchie.
Dennis
Rucker,
Randy
Wendy Elkins, ~ally Ed·
Browning, Greg. Ginther, Tim
Hawthorne, Mike Hayman,
Randv Keller, Jack Parker,

Lawrence

Pooler ,

Den

Spencer, Russell Slarct&gt;er,
Bryan White. Rusty Wlga[,

Brian Bissell , Tim Dillon,
Don Eynon. Greg 1-jayman.
Mark Norton, Gene Cole.
Dennis Durst, Rodney keller,
Tony
Kennedv.
Kennv
Larkins, Gary Putman , Gr~
Scarbrough, Ray Werry,

wards, Sarah Goebel ; Cassie

St&gt;eels. RecO...d 8·3; Ca.ch,
Sue Thompson .
Vorsity Chftrltodt,..

Diana Jones , Captain ,
Senior;
Sonia
Seaver.
Senior ; Brenda Boyles .
Senior : Mary Mer a, Senior ;
Betsy Riffle. Junior; Brenda
Frecker, Junior.

Reserv11

Karen Probert , Junior ;

Beth

Headley ,

Junior:

Sherr i e Starcher, Junior ;

Angel Blake. Sophomore;

Oaw11 Sorden, Junior ; Lori
Longenette,
Sophomore,
alternate.
Junior High .

Belh . Wilson. 81h ; Kelll
Headley, 7th; Pam Murphy,
71h; Andrea Batey, 7th ; Jan
Smith, 8th , allernale .
CheerleadM

King .

Advisor, Min

Suns 1:14 Spurs 111:
The Suns set a club record
of 24 steals, Jold by Rod Lee's
five. Alvin Adams scored 32
points and had four steals
himself, along with Walter
davis.
Bulb 112 Lakers •:
The Lukers nnissed 21 of 23
field goal attempts in the first
quarter and · the Bulls
bounded off to a ~. firstperiod lead in snapping a
three-game losing streak .
Artis Gilmore scored 36
points for the Bulls.

workl wonden.
But, other thnes It doetn'l,
as lake the case of the New
Jersey Nets.
The Nets Slllfered thtlr lilh
straight lou Sunday night,
losing a heartbreaker to the
Denver NugiJfts, 12~111. at
the Rutgers AthleUc Cenler
In their temporary heme In
Piscataway, N.J. The loa
dropped the Nets' record to~
13.
It
was
especially
frustraUng to Nels' Coach
Kevin Loughery, not only
becallM! his team had been up
13 points In the first half, but
at one point In the decisive
fourth quarter nad led by .7
points.
"I have no doubt that If we
were a winning team inlttad
of a losing one we would have
won this game," said
Loughery. "Instead of being
aprehenalve down the lltrtlch
we would have been
confident."
The Nug!Jfts outacored the
Nets, 37-23, in that llnal
quarter, holding roolde liar
Beriljlrd King to juat lhrte
points in that perlflll. Far the
game, King wu the Nets'
high scorer with 32 poiftll.
In other games, it wu
Phoenix 134 San Antonio 112,
Ollcago 102 Loa Anlelel 10,
PorUand 118 Detroit 101 and
Cleveland 115 Seattle lot.

Field slope key to interception

Greg Wigal. Managers. Brei!
Matlt&gt;ews, Ed Werrx . Head
Coach,
Joe
M1lchem ;
Assistant Coacl;les. Arc~ Rose
EAST RUTHERFORD,
and Ralp~ Wigal.
Jr. High Footblll
N.J. (UP!)- One (l{ the first
71h Grade - David Durst, things Gerald Irons noticed
Jim Carte:r, Roger &amp;issei I. . Sunday when he stepped into
Mark
Gaddis.
Randy
Slewarl. Mark Riddle, Brian Giants Stadium .was · the
Well. Gerald Wolson. Mark sharp slope from the middle
Holter. Mike Connolly, Glen (l{ the field to the sidelines.
Putmah, Jimmv Bauman, :
It was something Irons, the
John Davis, Keith Bentz,
Cleveland
Browns' eighthDave Gaul, Mike Whlllatch,
Roci""Y Tripp, Brian Collins, year linebacker who played
Bill McClure.
his first six years with
8th Grade - Joe Sayre, Oakland, said he learned to
Jolm Beaver. Ed Rifle. Rob
study
from
Raiders'
Smith, Bill Fredrick, Klare
Kimes, Mike Barker, Larry quarterback Ken Stabler .
PaHerson. Todd Norton,
The deu.ee of the sl""' Irons
Terry Sayre, Jim Reed , realized, meant a sideline
David Wolfe, Ray Spencer,
Mike
Hauber,
Johnnie )iass would take just a titUe ,
Riebel, Bryce Buckley, Greg longer than usual to reach the
Cole, Nick Leonard, Lee
receiver.
Gainer, Klint Kimes, Tad
"It told me I had to make
Darling, Mike Bissell.
deeper
drops on pass coveraCoach, Duane Wolfe :
ge." Irons said,
Assistant, Dennis Eichinger' ;
Manager, Danny Lecnard.
That bit of wisdom used
Volleyball Tum
againilt
an inexperienced
Seniors- Kim Batey, Lori
quarterback
resulted in
Youn9 : Juniors, Vida Weber,
Laur 1e Matthews , Debbie Irons' S~yard interception'
Durst,
Chris
Persons ;
return for a touchdown late in
Sophomores. Donna Persons, 'the third perind which broke
a 7-7 tie in Cleveland's 21-7
victory over the New York
Giants.
Jerry Golsteyn, the Giants'
first-year backup
quarterback who replaced
injured starter Joe Pisarcik
after two plays, attempted a
sideline pass to rookie wide
receiver Johnny Perkins. But
Irons stepped in Iron t of
Perkins, picked off the pass
and raced 53 yards down the
right sideline for his firstever touchdown, including
high school.

"It was lovely," Irons said.
" In idle moments sometimes

you try tn think what you
would do if you ever scored."
Irons was so impressed
with the blocking of his
teammates, however, he j~t
handed the ball to right end
Mack Mitchell.
"Mitchell dunked it over
the goalpost," lrol\5 said.
" Beautiful."

Golsteyn said he failed to
:·Spot Irons until after the pass
was thrown .
''lt was my job to see him,''
Golsteyn said. "He drifted

underneath the cut of the
receiver and as soon as !let it
. go I saw him standing there.
It was my mistake."
Giants' Coach John MCVay
said Irnns made an excellent
play to get in position foc the
interception, the second of
three thrown by Golsteyn,
who completed 12-of-25
passes for 150 yards.
"If he had gone and thrown
'the ball away ... but that will
· come with learning," McVay
said.
"He's a good quarIrons sald.
terback,"

"But he will be much better,
He learned somelhing today.
It took me tiJm to lell'll ."
Cleveland increased Ita
lead to 21-7 with !0:23lell on
David Mays' 11-yanl TD pau
to Paul Warfield, who nwde a
leaping catch deep in the end
zone. The play was set up by
Rolly Woolsey's 44-yard punt
return to the Giants' 38.
Mays, making his first NFL
star! with Brian Slpe ootfor
the season with a fractured
shoulder blade, complet2&lt;1 IS.
of-zt for 138 yards.

.Gabe Paul to Tribe .front office coming .
Yankees part owner who
He also pointed out be gill
CLEVELAND (UP!) Gabe Paul is "virtually would presumably divest along well with Yanken
principal pwner George
certain" to leave the Y{orld himself as well.
Paul
Is
presently Steinbremer.
champion New York Yanllees
.
The report pndicted the
and return to Cleveland as vacationing in Puerto Rico
chief executive and part with O'NellLand Indians announcement would cune
owner of the Cleveland general manager Phil Seghi. prior to the O.C. 4 winlel'
Indians, it was reported
'"111ere are many factors baaebaU meetings and that
today.
involved, and it is a very club president Alva "Ted"
·He i.s under contract with difficult decision for me to Bonda would step down,
New Yock until Jan. 15, and leave New Yock. After all, although he wu believed 1o
maintains a decision has not things are pretty good with also be one ' of the new
been made yet and woo 't for the Yankees ... we;ve won two investors.
at least another week, years in a row," Paul told the
according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Plain Dealer.
He would return in
connection with a takeover of
the
financially
ailing
franchise by a group headed
by Browns owner Art Modell
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 I CLOSE
with a chief investor being
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
local businessman F. J.
ST.,
POMEROY.
1
' Steve" O'Neill, presenUy a
•

···-,rw:coiProri~o.o:·-

-a"oMm••'

..

:·

.. J

By Helen Bottel
DEAR.'HELEN : TOOGOODISNOGOOD?
I love one woman ' my wife • and I don't allow myself to be
,.tempted ,bY worldly things. The problem : she won't believe

me.

1

, She was unhappily married before. It turned her against
.men . .She reads the newspapers and sees friends geiting
divorced, and predicts I'll be like all the rest. We've been mar,fled four months.
_. I go to church every Sunday, don't cuss, don't drink, and
-pray a lot. In my !&gt;-year first marriage, f was never unfaithful.
• I constantly tell my wife I love her only. I buy her a small
,wedding cake every month, grant ber every wish.
., Lately she has been lalking divorce. What can I do ? RE.JECTEO DEAR REJECTED:
• I'm guessing again, but could it be your wife is a bit bored by
abject adoration? While she doesn't want an uhfaithful hus)land, perhaps she might appreciate you more if, rather than
- ~ ' too good to be true," you were just barely good enough to be
}rue. ln other words : human.- H.
7tJEAR HELE-N:
, Males aren't the only ones who are stereotyped (ie. macho,
-;effeminate) by their looks.
I am a 49-year-old woman, happily married {or 29 years. Yet
..because of my physical build and possibly some mannerisl)lS
,jnsinuations occur~ These insults are made by unhappily mar:
.fled relatives.
~. How grossly cruel and unfair to identify someone as gay by
:unpressions ! It 's the easiest thing in the world to say, andre"JUlfes no proof - just a few words label a person lor life. How
. ~an I deal with this situation'- HOPE
DEAR HOPE:
; A firm confrontation, in the presenc'tl of witnesses, nnight
•shame these gossips into silence. Better yet, ~sk your husband
, to set them straight since (am I right] ) they're his relatives. -

"H.

-

•.QEAR HELEN :
My wile and I have been married four years. We have two
,daug~ters, a nice home, above-average income, and are hap- ·
,:PY· At least I am. However, in the past few monthS, she has
,:been hitting the bottle, secretly. When I question her, she lies
-and blames her dizziness on Valium or her diet, but our vodka
supply dimihishes with alarming speed.
I've' stopped saying anything because it starts fights. She
already has nerves caused from child care.
She's a fantastic wife and !love her. How can I help? LES
OEARLES :
First, your wife should know that Valium and liquor can be ,a
deadly combination.
· Second, direcr her toward new interests : a part-time 'ob
perhaps, with baby-sitting for the children.
c Best therapy for the housebound blues-secret booze syn"drome is the obvious : get out of the house. Act now, before her
'habit is well-established. - H.

INVESTITIJRE - An investiture ceremony for new girls coming into Girl Scout Troop
1271 was held Thursday night at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Invested were front, left
to right, Tammy Wright, Kim Hamm, Tracy Smith, Wendi Dunfee, Teresa Pierce, and
back, Kri.s Heines, Beth Ewing, Lisa James, Teresa Johnson, and Beth Pierce. Connie
Hysell is the troop leader, Sharon Manley, c&lt;Header, Dreams Smith, Jennifer Anderson,
and Susie Heiries, assistants. New girls coming into the troop but not present for the
investiture were Kenda Dunfee, and Mayrene Thomas.

.........•............... Shrinettes
•
•
~

: Green
••
•• Thumb
••• Notes
•• · A weekly feature ol Meip
•• County Club members.

: elect officers
••• New officers were elected
at a meeting of the Twin City
•• Shrinettes
Wednesday night
•• atumbus
the social room of the Coland Southern Ohio
•• Electric
Co.
Elected were Mrs. Cora
••

Garden

BY MRS. CHLORUSGRIMM
BEND O'lliE RIVER GARDEN CLUB
It's going to be a Currier and Ives Christmas at the Meigs
County Garden Clubs' flower show to 1M, held this year on Dec.
3 and 4 at the Pomeroy Elemenlary School.
_
· The theme has been carried out by the artlslic. designs
schedule prepare&lt;\ \ 1 the chairmen.
Currier -..ll.J lves were partners and carried on tbeir
bu.•;,...., auring the middle of the 19th Century, 1835 to 1690.
,uter their death, their SQns, Edward Currier and Chauncey
Ives, took over the business and carried on into the early part
of the 20th Century.
· The first of the art work was done by the method known as
lithOj!raphy. This was writing or drawing on stone and taking
,.ressions of the print, by prJ!Ssing paper over it. The Ink was
made by a mixture of grease, gas black or saap. They were
· o
later colored very crudely but socn became very professional
~\}:~:~:~t:f: ~:~:~:;:~:~:::}!t:~~~~r~~~:~n~rt:~:)}t~~~?tttf:~:t~::::: : : ::: :::::~::;:tt:Jt~~!~ looking. Currier and lves were not good artists themselves but
were artiStic and creative and worked with artists,
The first of tbe drawings were of calastrophes and later
... .
••.•,·,
Currier and lves turned to countryside drawings ~owirig the
~· The Adult
Fellowship with 47 persons attending.
beauty of the New England States in winter and swruner.
At the dinner were the Rev . Thousands of the small prints were sold or peddled across the
,:Classes of the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene held and Mrs. Dale Bass and Tom, country reaching to the western states.
~their annual Thanksgiving Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Stewart,
The name Currier and I ves soon became a legend and it
dinner in the parsonage and Doug, Mr. and Mrs. Oris was considered impressive and a sign of status to have a
social room Thursday night Hubbard , "Mr. and Mrs. Bob Currier ~nd Ives print on the wall·, from the richest' to the
Lemley ana Mindy, Mr. and poorest. Without reatizing it· Currier and Ives were selling
Mrs. Leonard Bass, Mr. and America to Americal\5 by their prints showing both disastrous
Mrs. Ham Cunningham, Mr. happenings as well as the beauty of America.
and Mrs. Clifford Hall, Mr.
Consistent with Section
Many artistic natives assisted them by lithographing
and Mrs. Ralph , Lavender, · scenes from all walks of llfe. The most prominent of these was
121 .22 of lhe Ohio Revised
Code. all off ici al action~
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens
Palmer who prnduced many beautiful things, Thomas
and deliberations
on
and Eber, Jr. , Mr. and· Mrs. Fannie
Worth
and
Louis Mayrer, who contributed much to Currier and
official business by the
Robert Cunningham and Ives in a variety of ways. Currier and Ives were quick to see
Publl ·c
U1 i lities
Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. James the ability and talent of the artists and purchase the prints art
Comm ission of Ohio are
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Carson work. Soon thousands of prints were made.
conduo:ted
in
open
Hayes, Claudia Owens,
meetings . A weekl'p' agenda
The winter scenes were the most popular but also popular
Is prepared which provides
Garnet Potts, Jenny Bass and were the scenery prints.of the fresh New England countryside.
advance. notice of maHers
Beth, Bob Moore, Oma History. was being spread from the northeast to the far well!
to be considered at these
Hysell, Lundy Dietz, Clara and the contribution of these artists and Currier and Ives Is
meetings. This agenda is
Lavender, Elizabeth Rice,
posted in the Offices of the
recorded. The source of much of their materi.sl has not been
Louise Frank., Marilyn disclosed and there have always been questions about how
Comm ission . 180 East
Deemer, Junior Martin and they gathered the art works which went into their prints.
Broad Street, Colu'mbus,
Oh lo 43215, and Is available
Harvey, Emma Hayman, ArIt is enough at present th.a t we recognize the rich legacies
by subscription at 1he rate
tie Grindley, Sis Cundiff, and which have been handed down to us by Currier and Ives. The
of $20 per year by
Fannie Aleshire.
three score of Currier and Iv.S prints are, perhaps, the most
contacting the Commission
for the proper subscription
exciting years America has ever known.
William Beaumont, pioneer
form .
And with this summaUon of the ability, creativeness, and
Randall G. Applegate
American anny surg~on, was ingenuity Of these remarkable men, we )illy tribute and present
Secretary
born Nov. 21, 1785.
to you, "A Currier and Ives Chri.stnias."

f::i: 'Adults enjoy holiday dinner i i\

EVERYONE WELCOME

•

•

~ Christian

FOR THE HOLIDAYS, WE'RE ROLLING OUT THE

Baptist Church

' · P~stor - James E. Keesee
Sunday School.. .................... lO:OO A.M.
Mof.ning Worship .................. 11:00 A.M.
$unaay Evening ................ ;.,. 7:00P.M.
We(fnesday Evening ................ 7:00P.M.

a

Mrs. Guthrie, addresses
Retired
Teachers
Assn
+

r,
1

~

.,FY,ndamental -

·4,; ;

.

Independent

Rt.7 By Pass and Rt. 124

Report on children given
A report on assistance to a
family of live children was
given by Mrs. Donna Byer,
service chairman, at a recent
meeting of Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority.
Meeting at the home of
Karen Stanley, the ~hapter
made plans for the couples
party to be held 1\! the Meigs
Inn on Dec. 16' Mrs. Stanley
asked that everyone let her

•

FAMOUS BRANDS! BIG SAVINGS!

know if they plan to attend by
the next meeling. An invitation from Ohio University inviting members to basketball
games on Dec. 7 or Dec. 10
wasread. '
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning,
ways and means chaimian,
reminded members of the
cookie sale to be held on Dec.
6. Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Judy Crooks and
Mrs. Sandi Sargent.

Meigs County
Grange meets

Social
Calendar

16 West Washington
Athens

.

Watc:h For Our G1.mt

Cl1~.1ranr.P. S;l11~

Ad In Nov. i':J St•ntml'l

RACINE CARPET·SHOP

•

''

~~,..··

' . '+.

'

ONLY

'13995

INGELS FURNITURE

106 N. 2ND AVE.

AMERICAN Legion Aux-

iliacy of Drew Webster Post

39, will meet Tuesday at the
Bearcat IV. The ullimate scanning monitor! There are now four Emergency and Public
hall for a joint junior and
bands you can monitor. Select the police, firemen, weather, mobile phone, or hundreds
senior
meeting. There will be
channels to monitor at home or in your t11rl And you can 911 them all on the Bearcat lVI If ·
a
covered
dish dinner at 6
thu air, you ca11 hear i11 The choice is yours .. , any eight channels of action, excitement,
p;m,
with
dessert
to be served
information from tha nation'&amp; four fnquency bands. from Electra, 1ha originators of Sc11nnint1l
by
the
unit.
The
ineetlng
will ·
Monitor Radios.
be held at, 7:30 at which time
charter members gold ' alar
. mothers, and 30, year cootinuous memberships will be
honored.
WEDNESDAY
.
FEB:NEY-BENNETI .Post
128, American Legion, 7:30
Wednesday night at the hall.
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
MIDDLEPORT. 0.
992-2635
128, 7:30 Wednesday night a.t
the hall, Middleport .

o¥~al!_newtiV
De(llca

.•

Miss Lucille Snnith, first vice
president ; Bertha Snnith, second vice president ; Mrs.
Mary Hughes, secretary ;and
Nan Moore, treasurer.
Mrs. Dill spoke briefly asking the members to work
toward making the chapter
an honor one. She will name.
her committees later.
Following the luncheon,
Wolfe
a memorial

-

·r_cROSS __:.
1
.
~

"

l1

A
R

tribute to deceased members
including Mrs. Nellie Vale,
Fred Rice , and Eugene
Campbell. Tables for the luncheon were decorated by
Mrs. Geneva.Nolan and Mrs.
Clara Lochary. For grace,
members sang a Thanksgiving song. The meeting closed
with an article from "The
Way It Was" by the president.

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Tell a story
Hurry of feathers, barely a
DEAR DR. BLAKER: I'm few feet off the ground. After
worried about my !&gt;-year-old
grandson because he Is bare- all, that's how prairie
ly passing in school and skips chickens are supposed to fly.
Years passed, and the
all after-school activities. He
eagle
gre"! old. Then one day,
seems bright but lacks selfhe
saw
a magnificent bird far
esteem. His parents ·are
above
him
in a cloudless sky
employed at very demanding
Hanging
with
graceful majesjobs and as a result, probably
ty
on
the
powetiul
wind curdon't notice their son's
rents,
it
soared
with
scarcely
behavior. I do because I take
of
its
strong
golden
a
beat
care of him every day after
wings.
"What
a
bea~tiful
school. I think I know how to
encourage him but hesitate to bird," said11 \he eagle to his
do what his parents ought to neighbor. What is it?"
"That's an eagle. The chief
be doing. Is there any way
of
the. birds," the neighbor
that I can influence him - and
clucked.
"But don't give it a
yet be discreet about it'
second
thought.
You could
DEAR READER: I'm not
never
be
like
him.''
sure why you feel you need
So the eagle never gave it
·permission from your grandanother
thought and in time
son's parents to encourage
he
died,
still thinking he was
him in school or in aftera
prairie
chicken.
school activities. Children
Write
to
Or. Blaker in care
lind support frolJl many peoof
this
newspaper,
P.O. Box
ple - not only those in the im489,
Radio
City
Station,
New "
mediate family _Perhaps you
York,
N.Y.
10019.
Volume
of
are angry at his 'parents'
mail
prohibits
personal
(one of whom is your child,
right?) and are hoping to replies, but questions of
recruit me on your side in general interest will be
some lanni1y battle I know discussed in lutu~e colunms.
nothing about.
Only you can answer that.
If, however, there is a genuine reason why you .must
be discreet, how about storytelling? Certainly it is a
natural grandparenting_ activity - a much neglected one
- which can teach children a
lot about life. If I were you I
might begin with this
American Indian legend.
One day a brave found an
eagle's egg which he put into
the nest of a prairie chicken.
The baby eagle hatched with '
the brood of chicks and grew
up with them. As he
developed, he - thinking he
was a prairie chicken - did
what the prairie chickens did . 1

Beegle, president; Mrs.
Laura Bowers, vice president; Mrs. Edna Slusher,
secretary; Mrs.
Mary
Bowen, treasurer. Mrs.
Bowers presided at the
meeting in the absence of
Mrs. Jean Moore, president,
who is confined to the Holzer
Medical Center, Room 525,
Plans were made for the
Christmas party on Dec. 14 at
the Meigs Inn. Husbands ami
friends of the members will
be guests. Reservations are
to be made with Mrs. Arthur
Slusher by Dec. I, 992-3407.
Mrs. Bowers and Mr,s. Gertrude Mitchell served
refreshments to members.
Seven applications for
Mrs. Bowers, 1\lrs. Mitchell,
membership
were accepted
Mrs. Slusher, and Mrs. Aaron
when
the
Meigs
County
Kelton will attend the
Pomona
Grange
met
recently
meeting of Thea Court for the
fall ceremonial of the Ladies at the Roell Springs hall.
The fifth degree was e~­
Oriental Shrine to be held at
emplified
by the officers on
Rhodes Center in Coll.\DlbUS
~y Massie, Francis E.
on Saturday.
Shaeffer, Mary E. Shaeffer,
James L. Fry, Ola St, Clair,
Teresa Van Meter, and Roy
VanMeter.
Junior Deputy Elizabeth
Jordan presented ribbons to
the county contest winners
whose projects were sent to
the State Grange. Mrs.
Frances Goeglein was
elected to the office ofireasurer and Mrs. Pauline
Atkins
to the office of chaplin. ·
MONDAY
Both
were
installed by Keith
MEIGS COUNTY Churches
Ashley.
of Christ Men's Fellowship
An officers' conference was
meeting at Pomeroy Church
announced
for Nov. 29 at 7:30
of Olrlst, 7:30 p.m. Monday
p.m.
at
the
Rock Springs hall.
for observance of family
Each
grange
in the county is
night; speaker will be Danny
to
send
representatives.
Evans.
matrons and )iatrona
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio Junior
were appointed for the new '
Garden Tractor Pullers County
Junior Pomona
Monday 7:30 p.m. at coon Grange and they are Keith
h,.!!Dters bui1ding at Meigs and E~ Ashley and Opal
County Fairgrounds:"' Will Oyer. It was voted to provide
discuss rules. Meeting open · the funds to obtain the
to the public.
charter for the juniors
1WIN CITY Shrtne Club
Refreshments were' served
special meeting Monday 7:30 following the meeting by the
p.m. at the club house. All OhioValleyGrange.
members urged to attend tp
transact important business. HISTORY DAY GRANT
CLEVELAND ( UPil
CHESTER PTA meeting
Case·Westem
Reserve
with open house to be
featured, 7 p.m, Monday at University has a $200,oo0
school, parents and friends grant from the National
Endowment
for
the
invited.
pernnitting
the
Hwnanities,
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
History
Department
faculty
p.m. Monday, program by
Mary Myers, Health ..Depart- to spearhead a regional
ment, film oo safety .by the history day next year.
The annual competition for
Rev. George Glaze.
junior
and senior high school
Hostesses, second grade
students
is similar to tbe
mothers. Pledge by Mrs.
Science
Fair.
·The contest,
White's fourth grade.
four
years
ago, went
started
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Aux- statewide under the Ohio
iliary, Racine Post 602, Tue&amp;- Revolutionary War
day night, 7:30 p.m. at the Bicentennial Collll]'lission in
1976.
hall.
- cPOMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tues~ay at noon
at Meigs Inn. Glen Smith
guest speaker.

Hear your police and firemen in action

Mrs. Edith Guthrie, president of the Ohio Retired
Teachers Association, was
guest speaker at the Saturday
luncheon meeting of the
Meig_s · Chapter , Retired
Teachers Association, held at
the Meigs Inn.
Ira Wolfe, president, introduced the speaker along
with other guests, Mrs. Irene
Braruwn, district director,
and Mrs. Stanley, former
district director .
In her talk, Mrs. Guthrie
noted that the Ohio Retired
Teachers Association is
celebrating its 30th anniversary, and that earlier
organizations of retired
teachers have not been effective. She said that there are
nearly 30,000 members in the
ORTA with each county having at least one chapter, and
that there are 3,000 llfe
members. She also noted thai
death claims more than 500
members per year.
Mrs. Guthrie commented
on various legislative bills
and what effect they will have
on present retirees. The pnr
ject of providing an old school
house lor Ohio Village in Columbus is progressing
satisfactorily, she reported. ·
Tbe need for setting good
examples to others in
behaviour and dress was emphasized by the speaker who
described retired teachers as
that link with the past with a
legacy to pass on. She urged
support of the Ohio Retired
Teachers Association in her
concluding remarks . A gift
was presented ·to Mrs.
Guthrie by the president.
Both Mrs. Stanley and Mrs.
Brannon spoke briefly.
· New officers elected were
Mrs. Thelma Dill, president;

He scratched
in .the
dirt for
seeds
and insects.
He clucked
and cackled. And he flew - if
that's the word - in a quick
thrashing of wings and a

li:t~~~:J~£~

Son born
.
.
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Dame! C~­
mgham of Route 4, Pome oy,
are announcmg the birth of a
son,. Oct. 29, at the Holzer
Medical . Center. ~e e1ght
pound, e1ght ounce infant has
SUPPLY CO.
been nalJled Davtd Eugene.
Maternal grandparents are
OPEN
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Arnold,
MONDAY-SATURDAY
Route 4, Pomeroy, and the
8;00tos:oo
paternal grandparent IS
Convenient Free
Parking
Henry Cunningham, Route 3,
405 N' 2nd Ave.
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. CunMiddleport, Ohio
nhigham have another son,'
Charles,agefour.
L-~----------l

KING .

I wish to thank everyone
who supported and voted
far me In the Nov. lth
election.

HERBERT ROUSH
LETART TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Pd . Pot. Adv.
-~·-

GET READY FOR OLD MAN wd!ITER!

BE PREPARED THIS WINTER
WITH HEAT TAPE, WRAPPING, INSULATION

-

D

w .
A

R
E

AND PROPANE TANKS FROM CROSS
HARDWARE. DON'T LET ,THOSE COLD WINTER
WINDS HUFF, PUFF AND FREEZE YOUR PIPES.

CROSS HARDWARE

Open Monday thru Saturday 9:00to 5:00
71 N. 2nd Ave.
Middlepqrt, Ohio
992-3831

•

.,:...

�• j

ll

••

•••
•

.

•
7-Tht O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 21, 1977

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .• Monday , Nov. 21, 1977

{:assidy

•••
•;'

JIIUUI Pretton, 52, JackJon,

Chlr&amp;ed with OWl
• followinc a traffic accident at
.• IO:JO p.m.' S.tunlay on SR 688

back on
.screen

FQOD

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

STORE HOURS

miUion record.s starred in
"The Partridge Family" and
packed concert hairs. turned
off his career like a water tap
three years ago and walked
away from it all .
The vouthful miUionaire
bought 3n estate in Hawaii . a
horse farm in Santa Barbara
Calif., and Jet the rest of the
world go by .
During the frantic four
years of televis10n series
Cassidy was a teenage idol
. whose public appearances
fostered
riot
control
. precautions. To youngsters
he was Elvis, the Osmonds
and Elton J ohn all rolled in

.,

Til

FRESH
OYSTERS

His image was wholesome,
drugless and romantic. There
was no telling how high his
career might have soared .
But David quit cold after a
concert for 40,000 screaming
fans in England .
It was a mMter of sellpreservation .
Now David, Tl ; has sur·

HAM PAniES ..... ·~;~·

$

PORTIONS $}19
HAMS..............'!!·••••

2•

1

epi·s ode of television's ·
"Police Story," the first step
in re-establishing his ca reer .
"I'm glad the mania is
over.~~ he said. " It was an
incredible
trip
and

_ Pound
-~

79;

Dark Meat

.

~':

Pound·

CORN KING

SWIFT

CANNED HAMS ...... '&lt;~

S6l'

~~·

$1 on

WIEIEIS ................................... " OZ . 59'

'1/IMTII I
IEMITYNII
SELTZER ..... ':;~· 71111• ...,
I 6 IIAIY POWDER ..'~;: sIn .
· u •.t IAliuonn :.::. sI''
I 6 I C:OnOI SWAIS ~~;" 99'

m 16. Mlgh lor

'3"

1 •nd Dave Somerville wa s
h h lor 3 with t75.
1 Hm 6 won 6 from Team 8.
h for 6 was Steve
herds with 2G3 and high

I I was Lee Howtll with 1U .
tam t and Tum 1 spill ~
a ~ - High for 9 was Wilma
&amp;her with 117 and high for
•• Jim Clalworthy with

~

l l l.

WHITE
20 L&amp; .
POTATOES .................... ..

$1

~

1
1

~Lf

PLAZA

..

"The whole phenomemon

~IOHTI ~EIIRV!O

EAIIL'I' CAllrOIINIA

omeroy lowllnt Ll ..s
November I, 1977
nr Tue&amp;dty Trlpltctle
!
Ltogue

•

. IIJ'I OLIVES ........... :......:.......'~ ...

of David Cassidy was a
bizarre way of life. And I was
fortunate to have come out
' through the other side with
my head on straight. l sur-

KiliAn

,

UTA._.A 11155* ........::.:. 5..

~!; RAFT

PREPARED MUSTARD '~;:'

BOROENS NON SUCH

MIIICEMEAT .....................·~;~· s I "

~yived.

" The key to surviva l is that
I left the experience at the
peak . 1t didn't leave me.
Rejection is what really takes
its toll on young people in this
business.
"When I hung 'em up there
were all kinds of offen
waiting for me - TV series,

DROM EDARY

PinED DATES ...............•:;;• 5 129

KRAFT

59• 1000 ISU.IIIISSIM

~~J

~(ltl S IU~IS

if:
~\ : · ··..

;;

•

Umi t two with coupon 1nd

79(!
•

Q

4..
""sroAEs

OOJOM

""

50: oz.
Jar

eacluding b-• . ""'"• ~d clgartttll

0

~
•
~
~

110.00 purcn ...

DIAMOND

79'
SHELLED WALNUTS .. ... ~:: 11"
HOLIDAY MIXED IIUTS ... ~.~ s I "
WALNUTS ............................. ~-~
DIAMOND

GO LD lUST

Rqool Crown Cola
so
Slomrock Motel
50
RMIOak Park
48
1'1'11&lt;1• Florist
3A
• !'folk \1
Oild Brlckles,
•neral Contrec:tor
lO
~ g_h IAdlvldual game p carson 115 . 179, Betty
.
Srilh 1~ .
lgh Mrln - Pat Carson
sOt Becky Kl- .f59 ; Belly
Srilh ....2.
high gamt- David
Brtkln General C011traclor

.~53•

• CARDINAl HHIDSTORES

•

.~
Q

'"m

89;

;

."'r
'
Oa

.Nm :hltlh Mrles - Royal
Park 132~ .
''Tri-Counly
'
L..gut

'

Nov . •~ 1977

1

.~

Slondlngs

PLANTER S

1"
CHEEZ-ITS ............................ •:;:· 79•
1

Pis.
60
48

SU N SHINE

DEL MONTE

.00

PiiMPiCIIi PIE MIX ..................'~-::

DEL MONTE

~

Pis.
S2

T11n

PECANS ................................ •:,;;~ 13"
MIXED IIUTS ..................... •;;•

1WO
29 oz.
CANS

!::~::..,--"~~­

'

89~

S9'
COCOJIUT .................................... ;:: 75'
•STLES MORSELS ..... .... .. ... ':;;~ 1 151

36 '

BAilERS ANGElFLAKE

KlAn MARSHMALLOWS ...':;;~

28
28
game Ips 213; Bert
· Dale Davis 203 .
- O.le O.vls
Rou•ghl S50; Bert

$ss•~

SEMI -SWElT

MINIATUIIE

~OSTORES,

•.

49'

r·"·-... ,, .. game ~.,SIU II tS

.' -

•

:~1
~

Kenny L. Barcus, 17, Crown

April Smllh 182; men, John
Tvree 20•. women. Helen
Phelps 180; men, Ray Roach '
201 , women, Deloris Tvree
180.

High series -

Men, Ed

NEWARK, Ohio (UP! ) Services will be held toda y
for Kenneth Kreider, former
Licking County prosecutor
and retired attorney who
lived at Harbor Hills .
Kreider died Thursda,y at a
Columbus hospital. He was
71.

Eagles

COUPON
DEL MONTE

Expires 11-26·77

~D STORES

Leogue
Nov . 9,1977

Ed's Crossroads Groc .

No .6

w.

BOA DENS

W.M.P.O.
Ruth's Beaut y Shop
Fraley 's Logging.Co .

43 37
39 41
30 so

WEDNESDAY, NOV.

Ed's Cro55roads Groc.
No.1
'"
18 62
Higl'l game - Lena Howard
166, Teresa Uttle 155, Ella
Roush 156. .
.
High series Jennv

I~E CREAM BARS .......... .'~;;·
ltUILE~

ASIORTEO INACII CIIACitli'IS 01

65•
KELLOGGS C:IOUTETTIS ... ~-;· 59'
CHIC Kill IIOTH ............. l '~;:' sI
SHill DIGS SIIAC:KS ............ ...

" But my ·primary interest
is straight acting, the kind of
thing'l'm doing L1 this 'Police
Story' segment."

THE UN ·COL4

·

7-UP.;........ 8

18·u.l.

Bib

$

'

89• .

•t 0111. w;

.,
1

Lena Howard .413. ...

'

November 4, 1917
Mason Bowling lanes

.w.

Team 2
Team A
Team I

L

62 18
56 2•

WALKIE
TALKIE

AS 35
36

,

Qua lily Prlnl Shop
Team 5
Team6

44

37 43

080
Higl'l Individual game -

Ann Grover 168 ; Helen Corsi
162; Ann

Grover 159. ,

High Ind ividual serie5 Ann Grover .471 ; Wanda
Teaford
.442 ;
Barba ra
High team game - TeamS
7:21 .; Quality Print Shop 71.4;

Team 2 617.

· High team series- TeamS
2010; Team 2 1984 ; Qualitv

PRICE
,
Stocking StuHer

Prln l Shop 1981.
The Odd Boll League
November 11 ; 1977
Mlson Bowling Center

w.

Team 2

,--

,&gt;

PAIR

Uses Standard 9 Volt
Battery

L.

66 22

,.9 39

Qua lify Pr int Shop

&lt;6 42

TeamS

45 ,.3

Team6

0 80

High individual game -

Barbara Wh it t ingt on 187 ;
Shirley Mitchell 171; Wanda
Teaford 168.
High Individual series -

CONSOLE STEREO
with AM/ FM STEREO, 8-TRACK
TAPE PLAYER, PHONOGRAPH

'~

~139:t~

713 ; Team 4 703; Quality
Print Shop 685 .

Handsome wa.lnut.grain viny l veneer ca binet

High team series - Team 2

6V2" full range speakers. Controls for ton~ ,
vo lume , balance. 36 " H x 19 3/." W x 14 '/."D.

2052; Team 5 2028 ; Team 1
1986.

BARIAIIII AM/FM
PORTABLE RADIO
L_s_Av
___
~3.60

w ilh door. BSR turntable, 45 RPM odop ler.

Team2
Ga.J Auto Parts
Gl bbs Grocery

Newell Sunoco ·
Teams
Karr a. Van and!
High l~d . Game
Margaret Follrod 180,
O' Brien and T. Osborne

TO

Panasonic.

Pis.
55
52

MODEL

46

45
26
16

••

,,
'

Portable 8 Track

94

MODEL Rl2l2

Morning Gh)ries Le•gue

November 1, 1977

1

Solid state. Built- in AC
line. Uses 4 "C" balteries
(extra). leather look case .

IOUI\InfiiLil\1

TAPE PLAYER
•.Manual program
selec tor b ull on
• Carrying ha ndle
•Comes w/ botteries , plus AC and
car / boot adap1e~

-

High Ind. Series - Mary
Porfer , 48l i Ann GroVer A79 .
Team High Game - Glbb 's
Grocery 792 ; Team High
Series- Gibbs' Grocery 2245.

Farmers Bank

60 28

Ruth's Beauly Shop
W.M.P.O.
Fraley's Logging Co.

45 43
45 43
20 68

Ed's Crossroads Groc .

No . 1
20 68
High game- Mary Hoover
182; Teresa Lillie 179; Selby
Manley 177.
Selby
High series Manley 478 ; Mary Hoover
461; Teresa Lillie 4S9.

DELUXE CASSEnE

POLAROID

MINUTIMAKIR CAMIRA
REGULAR

Takes sharp , colorful
photos that develop
in 60 seconds. Auto matic exposure. Uses
3V.x4 1.4" or 3'.4x3 '/ •"
films. Has neckstrap.

1

17.94

TAPE RECORDER
SAVE
'10

$2994

COMPLETE WITH BUILT

REG.
39.94
COMPLETE AC.OC POWER
SUPPLY
1

'2

BEITER RECEPTION

REG. '29.94

CLOCK

RADIO

$ 99
EACH

SUPER GlfTf
Wake to music or a larm.

Lorge, l ighied numerals .
24 .hour wake-up sys tem .

4" dynamic speaker. AFC .
on FM. AM / FM onlennos.
Wal nut- look poly cobinel.

~~

I I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'·

94

IN FM ANTENNA FOR

CONIC
~~CB
AM/• •
RECEIVER DIGITAL

25545

.

SAVE '5

. 1. Band Selector Switch
2, Power Switch
3. Tone Control
4. Volume Control
5. Tuning Contro l
6. AC ·Cord

R.
118

Wo&lt;lnesday Affernoon
Bowling League
Nov. 16, 1977
Standings
Team
W. L.
Ed's Crossroads Groc.
No.6
64 24

24'

4

AM-FM
TABLE RADIO

RQ-30905

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE •
I

Rotary Dial
• Antenna

62 26

Teem~

Team 1

•••••••••••••••••••••••••• TEL ..,,. ,, •• , •••• •••

.I

I

:$794
94

47AB1

·············· ··· ··· ·······~ ······,···········

COllfOl iNN

i

REG. 112.94

MODEL

Whllllngton 433.

23RD

POCKET
RADIO

SOLID
STATE

Tho Odd Boll League

L..rohorl, ,INN _:_
4a:)RI!$S.- ••••••••

intersection with an auto
operated by Ralph E.
Fellure, 18, Bidwell . There
was severe damage .

- AM/FM

PRECOR

Whlllaf&lt;h 465 ; Pal Bentz 421 ;

.,.cople ~... Audlencn
S.lf-Ccinlldenct
other- - S. a kiter S.ltsman

,.._,....v..

an auto

SALE- PRICES THRU

SAVE
.

sideswiped

operate&lt;!, by Ronald L.
Callicoat, 30, Scottown. There
was moderate damage.

26

REGULAR 14.89

19(

car

56 24

s•

Farmers Bank

WHIPPING .
CREAM ... c~~:~ 491

C1n.

GaUipolis, was charged with
driving left of center
following an accident at 3 :45
p.m. on SR 14I, six tenths of a
·mile west of CR 19 in Gallia
County.
State troopers said Jones'

Robert E . Lowe r y, 16 ,
GaUipolls. was charged with
failure to yield following an
accident at 12: IO a. m . today
on Bob McCormick Rd.
According to investigating
officers of the OSP , the
Lowery ca r co llided in an

L.

CIESC:EIITIOLLS J;;;; 49•

. .

car.

WedntsdiY Afternoon

PILLIIUIII Y

.

Games had minor injuries.
Forrest
Jones,'
26,

Smith

.

ICE CREAM
~·Gil. 0
~

unkno"~

vehicle.
Payne was also cited to
Municipal Court for improper
passing . There was moderate
damage .
A deer was killed in an
accident at 10 :30 p.m.
Saturday on SR 7, two miles
south of SR 554. 1be animal
ran into the path of a car
operated by Bruce Yeauger,
69, Cheshire.
William 0. Games, 19,
Bidwell, was slightly injured
in an accident at 12:15 a.m.

Nel•on 2070.

On this day In history:
In 1877, Thomas Edison
announced the Invention of
what he caUed " The Talking
Machine" (phonograph).

IS OZ.

just as the Payne car pulled

out to pass an

A cow owned by P aul Dean
N1day, Northup, was killed in
an accident at 8: 10 p.m .
Sunday on Lincoln Pike near
Northup . The animal ran into
the path of an auto driven by
Timothy G. Wa t so n, 17,
Gallipolis. There was heavy
damage to the front end of his

Teem high game - Smith

Nelson 717.
Team hi gh series -

)

RAISINS

City, wa s charged with Ga llipolis, slid off the right
dri ving left of cente r side of the roadway while
following an accident at 9 :30 attempting to avoid an auto
a .m . "Saturday on Teens Run operated by Ralph Thomas,
Rd ., at the junction' of SR 7. 57, Columbus. The Barcus car
• The patrol said the Barcus struck two mailboxes. There
ca r turned right sideswioim! was minor damage . No
a vehicle operated by Charles charges were filed .
Jannette Campbell, 24,
W. Lamm , 32, Crown City.
There
was
moderate Bidwell, was cited for left ol
center followmg an accident
damage .
An accident occurred at at 12 :25 p.l)l . Saturday on SR
10 :05 a .m . Saturday on the 160, four miles north of US 35.
'The patrol said the CampBulaville-Porter Rd . ,four
tenths of a mile south of SR bell car attempted to pass an
160 whe~e an auto driven by auto operated by Stanley M.
Ralph L. Barcus, 25 , Payne, Jr., 24, Columbus,

Sunday on Prospect Church
Rd. three tenths of a mile
south of the Bulaville•Porter
Rd .
The patrol said Games
going south , lost control of his
car which ran off the left side
of the highway striking a
dit ch and embankment .

Voss 610, women, Bettv Smith
510; men , Russ Carson 535,
women, Helen Ptlelps 484 ;
men, John Tyree 523, women,
Carolyn Bachner 480 .

Wanda Teaford ,.76; Connie
Cl'lapman ,.60 ;
Barbara
Wh ittington •SO.
,
High learn game -;- Team.2

l

1 5-oz.
Can

z

$landings

11

RY

· record cont racts and even

.
lgh game for the wOmen

lgh Mrlts ior the women
Mary Lookado with 506.
· lfh game for lhe men was
Janey with 2&lt;6. High
ts wu 5n lor Jtck. Other
htl starts go Ia Betty Merry
Jack Mink 501), Opal
to (sub.) 20t , Larry
rick 527. Merida Shaw 511 ,
Howell so7, George
R 1111 51~. Stove Richards
, and Jim Clalwarthy 503.

4

QUANTITY

Nm 1~ and Team 12 spill~
~- High for I~ was Glenda
nor with 190 and O.rlene
In was high for 12 with

I the evening was Glenda
ner wllh a 190.

NO . 1 YEL.LOW

COOKING
lLB.
BAG
ONIONS........................
.

DIODOIAIIT ..... ,........... i.~. 45'
PAMPERS DAYTIME

w01

rold Skldmort was high
l6 with 182.
••m 5 won 6 from Team
1 High far 5 was Jack Janey
h a 266 and high lor 1S wu
Atk Penn wl.lh 119.
fHm 7 Wo,l all 8 from
Tom 3. High lor 7 wasY Slanl~ (sub.) with

U ,S. NO. 1

SICIUT IIOll·ON

~

rry Patrick with 213 and

' YAMS ....... ,.................... ..

i.J .s.

38

um • won 1111 I from

U.S. NO.1 FANCY

SALE DATES N()VEMBER 20-24,' 1977

4-1

1 •

~~~;

AUo\

«

m 13. High lor 2 w01 Jerry
do wllh lU and Lee
mpbell was high lor 13 wlfh

T LB . .

'

«
«

Mm 2 won all 8 from

RE D RIPE

SOUTHERN

~2

~

4
CELERY.........•........... ........
FRESH
.
39•
CRANBERRIES ........ .. .

49e

3LB.

~2

~9

~

~

STAlK

APPLES

"
"

3~

50
32
5cl
32
56
27
61
26
62
Nm t 1 won 6 points from
m 10. Mlgh lor 11 WO$
kt Walter&amp; with 162 and
lor 10 wu Joe Sluder
166.

.PASCAL

ROME BEAUTY

..

38
39
.00

No. 15
No. 13
No. tO
No. 11

S]•t

SWIFT

50

1\10. 16

5

TURKEY HAM IOAST ...............

3~

-lo. 1
1-io. ,.
No . ll
No. 7

3"
..................._. S2"

White &amp; Dtri ._. . ,_,

OHIO. GROWN

ROASTING CHICKENS ......... ~.~- .79c

through. l enjoyed it. But l
stopped because I was
overworked. I didn't think 1
could take that part of my
ca reer any further .
" I needed a readjustment
to living and to get in touch
with myself and my friends.
" It seemed everyone had a
piece of me , pulling in different directions. I'd lost
control of my life. I can understand what Freddie
Prinze went through. He was
younger than I was and had to
cont end with the same sort of
pressures .
'There comes a time when
ove rwhelming success a t an
early age becomes too much
to handle. The only option
that made sense to me was
steppiljg back from it.

to.6

110.'

TURKEY ROAST .................... &gt;:;;·
White Meat ...... .... ......... •-

5~

5~

.... .
... 5

FANCY TENDER CALIFORNIA

Ill: IN

tremendous experience to go

N&gt;. ~

SWIFT

KAHNS HICKORY SMOKED

faced to star in a two-hour

'

TURKEYS . ":~:: 79

liEF

SEMI-BONELESS

HO"MEL

i

1

STILL PLENTY LEFT
FOR THAT BIG
THANKSGIVING FEAST

s~!No!Ro $219

l FOIID IOWLING
NOV . 15,1977
r.,m
Won Losl
Nl. 2
60
28
If!. 3
5~
3~

•••M

LEAN FRESH

was moderate damage to. hi s
car.

men, Ed Voss 226, women ,

· DAN THOMPSON

::~~~:~~~1~~YS . . ~. . 65~

ARMOUR GOLD BAND

Preston was taken to the
Hol•er Medical Center for
treatment of injuries. There

Eagles Club
40
Nelson Drug Co.
30
High Individual geme -

IITOWI&amp; .

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. - ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT
.
WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
.
GROCERY CARRY OUT

y

at Honeysuckle Lane .
The Galllo-Meigs Post
state Highway Patrol said
Preston lost control of his car
whleh ran off the right side of
the highway, back across the
left aide then struck a maUbo• and embankment.

RETIRED LAWYER DEAD

"

.MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

one.

m0vies . But I refused to let
anybody with toils of money
seduce me into going on.
"I didn't retire . I jllll
wanted a rest. r told myself,
hopefully, when I returned
the people who cared for !114!
would ca re for me again .
" I haven't missed the pace
and the excitement. I enjoyed
the luxury of not having to
work fo r a living while l took
a long look at the future."
The young man invested hil
fortune wisely and , even ln
the face' of inflation , could
Jive comfortably the rest of
his life .
Cassidy has matured
co nsiderably. He married
actress Kay Lenz seven
months ago. His baby faced
good looks have given way to
attractive masculinity. Hil
voice has deepened and he's
developed a sense of humor
a bout himself.
· David discovered the
public isn't as fickle as}le had
heard. During his hl.itus he
traveled around the world
~twice. He was recognized and
besieged for autographs In
this country and a broad, due
in part to endless reruns of
" The Partridge Fannily ."
When the " Police Story','
episode was filmed at a Loi
Angeles high school (David
plays a narc) barriers wen
erected to keep kids from
swa rming all over him . Bid
the old frenzy was gone.
" l was flattered by the
positive reaction of the kids,"
David said. " It would have
.bothered me four years ago.
But this time I )oved it.
"I wouldn 't want the old
intensity of the past. I'm
coming back because I think
it's time· to act and record
again. It's not a popularity
contest I've come back to.

Nine weekend wrecks keep patrolmen busy

: Wll

By VERNON SCOTI
HOLLYWOOD t UPI I
David Cas81dy . sho sold 20

\

'

1- '

.( '

SAVE

.$8

�•

•

___

&amp;-The Daily Scntmt•l. Mulctleport·Pomeroy. 0., Mond"Y· Nov . 21.1977

Prosecution's case near done
in Michigan poison cow case
CADILLAC tU PI I - On a
bluste n · dav last February. a
Fa tmo~th 'rarmer and has
w1fe set out to pr on~ t(\ a
Wexford County judge that
their cattle werr p..1isoned
and the1r daan· busint&gt;ss
devastated by the toxic fi re
retardant PBS .

t·allrng the last of more than
30 wa tnesses wh o-~ ha\'e
tt'st1fit&gt;d in the maraUwn trial

of

t~

TlH:nma's $1 nnllion
dama~e suit

Defense at torne)'s ha \'e
askt'd Clr ('uit Judge William
H. Peterson. who is hearing
the landm&lt;uk trial without a

It is the first tnal sH.·mnun~
from
M ir h i~a n 's
PBB
HveS{(lC'k disastt.~r wh1rh
bt&gt;gan with :1 Ji\·estoc k fl.:'e0
mixup in i9i3, and resu lted in
the destruetion uf thousands
of farm animals and the
t•on taminat iun nf 1 ~eatS and
dairy produd s so ld to
Mkh i~ an cOnSWlli.:'rS.
, Hundred s of
similar
law suits are pending, and
debates a re still raging o \W

__ '.

.

t-The Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 21,1977

·D ean Johnson to
keynote meeting

tht• effN·ts uf PBB. (i r
polybnuninatt"d biphenyl , on
humans .
[)('-ft&gt;ndants 111 tJw 1,:ast' are
l\1ic h1~~m Chem1cal Co.,
maker nf PBB. and Far'H
Burt•au S~r\'ices. which

ATHENS '- "Trends In
Rural Health Delivery of
Primary Cart Services" will
be the topic of the keynote
addrtaa by Dr . Douglas
Joru-t when he opens ihe
flrlt Conference on Rural
Hellth In APflltlachla Ohio
Dec. llltd 2 In Atllens.
Johnson Ia the ... ssodate
dean of the School of
Medicine and associate
profeaaor of preventive
medicine II the University of
South Carolina. Prior to his
move to South Carolina, he
wu the rt~~lonal director of
the Central Appalachian
1\qlon of the United Mine
Workers
Health
and
Retirement Fund at Big
Stone Gap, VIrginia.
Co-sponsors of the con·
ference, to be held on the Ohio
University oampus, are: The
Corporation for Heallh
Education In Appalachia
Ohio (CHEAO); the Ap·
palachlan · Development
Office of the Ohio Depart·
. menl of Economic and
Development ;
Community
the Athens league of Women
Voters; ·the
American
Aaaoclatlon of University
Women, Athens Branch; and
the
Health
Education
Alliance of the University of
Cincinnati (HEALTH·UC).
Following
Johnson's
...-,tation, Lucia Hatch;
asalatanl
health
com·
rnlllloner and director of
operations at the Cincinnati
Health Department, will
ldclrea "The Dynanlics of
the Polltlcal System" and
how consumers, providers
~Jld planners can w9rk
together to bring about the
tno11 ellldent system. Hatch

mixed and Sl.))d tons uf PBS-

tainted feed thro u~hout tht·
state.
More than eight mpn ths jury, fur a week-l ong r l'&lt;.'ess
Gan Schenk, (1nc of
later. attClrneys for Roy and at the conc lusion (l( thE;'
Tacon;a
·s att(lr neys, said h£'
Taeoma ease before they
~tar ih'n Tacoma t.l'l1s week
plans
to
call a Canatbun
plan tO conClude their l' ase by begin their defense.
biochemist. Dr . Stepl1en SafP.
or. the University of Guelph
(Ontariol, as the li.lst witness
when the tria l n.~sumes Tuesday .
Sa'fe
has
con du cted
research into the effects of
t.arry Harris. Rocky Van Meter, Blair Windo~' · Ed Holter.
,. CO MPETrNG FOR THE' Eastern Chapter ~' uture
Greg Hayman. Don Eynn , Btll Ka utz, Mike Datly, Don
PBS whe n it is absorbed into
Farmers l)f Americn in the Distric t Parliame ntary
the bodv. He said he belie\'rs
Putnam, Jim Jackson, and Oenms Durst.
Proted ur~ ('ontl'St will be Scott Cheva'Her , Dean Hawk .
PBB b;eaks down into even
For Tuesday , Nov . 22 , np
more to.xic su ~st &amp;,nces, called
arene oxides. which attack
livin~ cells a nd ca n damage
I
Ute liver .
" We will be looking over
Bernice Bede Osol
the transcripts of what has
been said so far to make sure
we ' re
not
overlo oking
anything ." Schenk said. " But
our plan is that Dr . Safe will
be our last witness.''
No._ . 22. 1977
Farm Bureau a t turney
More respons11Jil1 ty w 1~1 b
Kenneth Mc)nt)Te said he
thrust upon . you lt'11S conii n
year 1t could have a oene lit:ia
plans after the recess to ask
et
tect on you r career l1 w!ll cu
that the suit be dism issed on
mto your free ttme. so yo
grounds that Ta co ma 's
must make a wts e choice
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov . 2'
attorneys failed tQ prove that
Don" t make the m1stake
the two firms engaged in
underes11rna11ng · yOur adve
intentional acts against
sary +1 rnvol ved tn ne got1a.tio
Tacoma that would entitle
today . or you 'll com e out on lh
shan end Fmd out to wno
him to ''extraordinary or
you 're: rorn antrcally su1ted b
BUMPER CROP- Fern Norris of Racine has had a bwnper crop of big turnips on lhe
punitive damages ."
sendmg tor your copy of Astr
Mcintyre
said
the
farm this fall. These four displayed by Norris weigh 12 pounds . · ·
Graph Letter Ma•l 50 cents I
defendants have agreed from
eac h s1gn and a ton g, sel
addre ssed stamped en velop
the beginning to a ccept
to Astra-Graph , P 0 . Box 48!
responsibility
for
arty
RadiO C1 ty Station. NY 1001
damages tQ Tacoma 's herd
~E EASTERN CHAPI'ER Future Farmers of America 's Soil Judging Team received
Be sure to speci fy your b1r
(Ccnllnlled !l'GIII pace 1)
direct!) resulting from PBB
srgn
a first-place troplly Thursday night at the ann\13! Soil Conservation Dist rict's Banquet held
SAGITTARIUS tNov. 23-Da
of its making "The Junk Food contamination , but have
at Chester . Team members,l-r. a re Dermis Durst , Rocky Vanm~ ter , and Dnn Eyon .
21) TM bQss ha s been a lit!
rejected the punitive damage
Book Hall of Fame."
""
STELlA SAUNDERS
WINONA CORDEll
1mpat1ent You hav·en' t be
~ Stella Mae Saunders, 931 a
Mrs . Winona Cordell. 86, a
The humorous insights that claim.
perf oimtng up to h1s e;o:p"ec\
• resident of Rodney , d ied at 1 former . resident of Buck
Mcintyre said he may
t1ons Today you 'll 'get biiC~ r
only
an
addict
would
.know.
a .m. Saturday in Ho lzer Ridge , died SUnday around 3
h1s good g ra c e~ .
;
make ''a number of motions" ·
('~lhe
icing
is
as
thick
as
latex
Medical Cen ter fol lowing an a .m . at St. Anthony Hospital
CAPRICORN (Dec . 2Z·Jan.
aimed
at
ending
the
trial
house paint, and prevents us
.
in Columbus .
e)(tended illness.
Anttctp8t1ng that a Stl uat1 on
She wsa bam Nov . 4', 1884,
Funeral arrangements will
from tasting the broWl!ie without having to call defense
foredoomed could cause yo4
_, in Gall ia Courify , daughter of be announced by Miller ' s below"), are well balanced witn.esses . If that fails, he
tot of needles s worry tod3
.,1 t he late John Dickerson
Home . for Funerals .
You 'll be pleasan tly surpr is'
said
there
may
be
as
many
by medical and advertising
~ RoWle y and
Mary Jane
_
at the outcome .
·as
20
defense
witnesses
,
and
data , and commentaries
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
( Hughes Rowley .
l0
l from
· ..
She married Verne A.
physicians and dentists. the trial may not conclude
Usua ll)' you're ~ery l1beral w
~ Saunders of Galli a County on
fnends but today you may r 1
The book is bad news for the until February - a year after
~ Ap ril 2, 1905 , in Gal l la
you rself a htlle too possessi
American public's sweet it started.
lij County . To this un i on , nine
Have
the goo&lt;;! sense to b
So far in the trial,
• chil dren were born . Two sans
tooth.
off
•.
"' and two daughters su rv i'lle :
The Middleport Business
Lasky
explains
the Ta coma 's att orneys have
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) ~
~ Claude Saunders, Yellow
testim ony
from
can 't reach someone essen I
and Professional Women's physiologica l addiction to taken
.,.. Springs.
Oh io ;
Ernest
to your prese nl plans . A t ,
scie~sts
who
discussed
the
~ Saunders ,
Jeffersonville ,. Club will meet at 7:30 p.m . refined sugar; explores.t the
part y can mak e lhe enlree,,
of
PBB
on
animals
effects
Monday at the Columbia Gas psychology of supermarkets,
~ Ohio : Mrs . Wa llace (Clara
le t ner knoc k on the doo
,. Mae I Saunders , Rodney and Co. office .
(how the floor layout leads us and humans; farmers and
yo ur behalf .
"- Mrs.
Harold
( Max ine) The prog'r.m will be given by tQ the soda PoP and makes us veterinarians who told of
ARIES (March 21·.t.prll
! Bradds , ·Jamestown. Ohio.
You ' ll prObably reap
their experiences with PBB;
... Nineteen grandch il dren , 23 · the young car~rist com~ drink); exposes the reality of
rewards yell seek today ,
mittee of Carol Lyons, the ~ ·natural" food campaign officials from Farm Bureau,
• great-grandch ildren and four
you ·re bound to doH !he
l great -great · - grandchildren chai rman , and members in advertising; and examines Michigan . Chemical and
wa y lf s aln1ost as If .vou c r
._. surv1ve.
the obstacles
Linda Lambert, Marian the puritanical roots of government agencies who
,.
She was a member of the
TAURUS (April 20,May ' )
told how the incident
Taylor
and
Mary
Marlin
:
America's
"
ph&lt;ib1a"
with
Centena ry Methodist Church .
Someone Ul a key posi1 n
'
Funeral serv ices wi ll be Contestants will speak about germ·free products he feels occurred and what they did tQ
mig ht tr y to co mpliCate !h i s
'- held 2 p.m . Tuesday at
self-advancement and their laid the foundation for the try and stop it; and the
1n a commerci al matter Ia .
:" Miller 's Home for Funeral s professions. They will be success fast food chain:s.
You 'll be able to circumvents
Tacoma' s themselves .
..a. with Rev . Damon Stapleton judged oq poise, assuredness,
in
fluen ce. however ..
In
tearful
testimony
last
THREE DELEGATES OF THE Eastern Chapter Future Farme1s of America, Don
" H it is indeed true that
GEMINI (May -!'t~Juno I )
•· officiating. Burial will be in
week
Mrs.
Tacoma
and
&amp;c- 'You are what you· eat,' then
Eynon, Roc ky Van Meter , and Ed Holter, 1-r, went to the Nati~nal Convention in Kansas
:._Centenary Cemetery . awareness
Shoulder respon sibilities I y
• Friends may ca ll from 2·4 complishments.
City, Mo. They we re elected by the chapter with the FFA proVIdmg part of the ·costs f or the
rather than took for someon . o
we all mi~)!L_as well tie desc~i bed the the PBB
.:., and 7-9 p.m on Monday .
s hare lhe load . You' ll t
"a living
The chapter winner will go ourselves up inside a Hefty episode as
trip . They left Nov . 8, and returned on the 12th. The del~gates shared a bus on the tnp w&lt;th
things do ne more effici e y
to the district contest. All bag and throw ourselves nightmare that we have lived
other FF A boys from different schools who also were gotng to the convent10n . ~e membe.rs
ORA LUCAS
that way .
'
with
for
lhe
past
four
years,
also saw many things ·on their way to the convention such as the Gateway Arch m St. I.ou1s,
Ora Elv is Lu cas, 56, a members are asked to attend away. More than hail the food
CANCER (June 21.July 2 II
of 06'2 Third Ave .,
you 're pushing an }ambiti s
to help . make plans and an
average
American 24 hours a day. "
and an American Historical Museum .
••• resident
Gallipolis, died at 4:15 a .m.
'
PfOiect and it seemsjtQ ·ha 1a
reservations far the . annual conswnes a year is junk," he
,. Saturda y at h'is home
· oupl_e . squa re wheels, s 11
Christmas dfrmer meeting. says.
Mr . Lucas was born April
asid e. Later . thing~ will . n
Kathryn
Sponagel,
Mrs.
ASK
TO
WED
.~
The irony is that the book
muc h more smoolh ly.
29, 1921, at Salt Rock , W. Va ,
Clifford Thomas and son,
Marriage -licen-s es were lEO tJuly 23·Aug. 2Z) Goal s n
The moon is approaching will be competing with the
He was the son of tl'1e 1a te
Henry Walters, Carroll issued to Keith Gordon be reached today, but ot ·
Ora L. Lucas and Ida Mae its full phase:
sale of its subject. Alter all,
(Births,
Nov.l8
)
Porter Lucas. who survives
Williamson ,
Raymond Bradford, 21, Rt. 1, Racine, through risky n:tethods . e
Veterans Memorial Hospital
The morning stars are
and resides at 662 Third Ave. Venus, Mars. Jupiter and for the price of a book, we can
M'r
.
and
Mrs
.
Rodn
ey
and Debra Sue Neigler, 21., only those ways you kno to
Zerkle.
Saturday Admissions indulge our covetQus palates
be effec live .
••
He
attended
scl'1ool
in
West
;., Virginia .
Larck , a daughter, New
tBirths, Nov. 20)
Racine; Robert James VIRGO tAug . 23·Sept. 22) e
Saturn.
with their sweetest desires . Betty Wils on 1 Porn eroy;
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Johnson, 20; Racine , and fo nd ol you has been tryin o
Genevieve Sherman, Mid· Haven . Mr . and Mrs . J ohn
Mr. Lucas worked on a
; tarm
Lewis, a son, Wellston. Mr. Sheard , a son, Gallipolis.
wl'1en he was a young
Judith Ann Lavender, 16, warn you ot someth ing lor
d!eport
;
Wallace
Haynes,
••
Middleport; Jerry W. Well , own good . Toda)' , by ex ·
' '" man .
Syracuse ; Luther Imboden , and Mrs. Ro ber~ Williams, a
ence , you may lear~ .Qf 'it' . r
~~
He married Jane Alfreda
son, Wellston . Mr. and Mrs.
27, Rt. 1, Shade, and Susan yourself.
Rutland .
PLEASANT VALLEY
Barcus on Aug . 8, 1942, in
Ronnie Wolford, a so n,
(Ccnllnlled from .... 1)
Saturday Discharges r
Gallipolis . To this union , 10
Mrs . Ann Lanning, 26, Rt . 3, liBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 3) T re
DISCHARGES 1
been so methi'ng
t
Ja
ckson.
child
ren
were
born
:
Gary
E.
Birtie
Wyatt.
Floyd
Rhodes,
Melvin Halstead, Point Pomeroy ; Sammy Lee Little, has
Thursday . Tonight at 9:30 p.m. EST CBS will
you
've
ten
would
be
difficu
to
•• • Lucas, H.illiard ; Jerry Lucas , annoWJced
(Discharges.
Nov.
191
Lawrence Donohue. Almer
Pleasant; Robert Van Meter, 19, Pomeroy, and Tammy achiE!ve . An ally may sho ·y
:.; Ottie Lucas. Ora D. Lucas , broadcast excerpts from the following winning films: ·
Ben Adkins, Lucille Barry, Mason; Charles Sheline, Lyn Michael, 19, Rt . 4, example today thai it$ wi in ·
Mtldred
Fisher,
Althouse,
... and Michael R. Lu cas. all of
1. " Gone with the Wind ," 1939, Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh .
your capabilities .
t
Flossie
Hysell,
Mary Raymond Broyles, Dorothy Henderson; James Stewart, Pomeroy.
~:. Gallipoli s ; Wendell Lucas,
2: "Citizen Kane," 1941, Orsen Wells. .
Camp, Lillie Chaney, Billy · Long Bottom ; Mrs. Dorsi!
f,., Crown City ; Mrs. Stephen
Nicewander.
David
Parsons,
· 3. " Casablanca," 1942, Hwnphrey Bogart, Ingrid Berg·
''
tt!' (Barbara) George, Stow,
Sylvia Parsons , 'Bessie Clagg, John Davis, Thomas McCoy. Henderson; Ronald
~
Ohio ; Mrs . Douglas (Joan ) man .
Davis, Clara Deck, Helen Trimble, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Barnhart.
~ Mays, Ewing ton ; Mrs . Keith
4. "The African Queen," 1952.
Sunday Admissions - Mae Dempse y, Ora DeWeese , David Hindy ,' P oint Pleasant;
•,-, (Ca rlene) Miller, Crown
5. "The Grapes of Wrath," 1940.
:1' City ; Mrs . Larry (Connie)
Lightfoot, Middleport ; Oris Evelyn Elliott, Mrs . James Alonzo Dickens,
P oint
6 ''One "Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest," 1975.
Phil lips, Crown City ; twe lve
Hubbard, Syracuse ; Pamela Hill and son, Spencer Hunt, Pleasant; Mrs. Larry Oldam,
7.
"
Singing
in
the
Rain."
1952.
rtl• grandchildren ; one brother ,
Theiss, Racine : Paul Casci , Roy Kent . Mrs. James Knight Letart; Mrs. John Woyan,
,.._ Vernon Lucas. Gall ipolis.
B. "Star Wars--;'' 1977.
.
I
~
Middleport; Earl Mossman, and daughter, Mrs. James Apple
t""
Fou r sisters : Mrs. Layunie
Grove;
Angela
9. "2001: A Space Odyssey," 1968.
and
daughter,
Mary
Lloyd
~ Hutchinson. Gallipolis ; Mrs .
Operation
Crime
Alert,
a
be
able
to
tell
at
a
~ance
if
Pomeroy.
Blessing, Clifton; Heather
10. "The Wizard of Oz, " 1939.
~ lma
Kingery, Kerr ; Mrs .
Sunday Discharges - Alvin Lowe, Kathy McDaniel, Mrs. Powell, Ashton; Mrs. Robert statewide progr~m in crime something is missiq. {
•., Leona
Drummonds ,
mark ·. your
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - NON!rrOP NEw'S COVERAGE of Smith, Edith Blevins, Jane Melvin Morgan and son, Sheline, Middleport ; Walter prevention, is being sup· . Always
"41 Ga llipolis and Mrs . Rutt-1
Mary
Payne,
Tammy
Plants,
ported
in
Meigs
County
with
,
possession
with
yor ' social
Karr,
Harvey
Erlewine,
~ Green. Gallipol is.
Dabney,
Henderson ;
• President Anwar Sadat 's impending visit caught the Soviet
His second marr iage was to radio· jamming system .by surprise, Israel Broadcasting said Anna Ha rte nbach , Lowell Nancy Radford , Grace Riel, Amanda Oldaker, Hartford ; the distribution of literature security number, l-iCense
Mrs . Frances
Barcus,
Mrs. David Ross and son, Lory - Stewart,
Halfhill, Walla ce Haynes.
Point on the subject and promotion number, or son&gt;' other
.
..
; Gal lipolis. Four step -so ns Saturday.
Shaffer,
Mary
Shrop·
Elsie
of activities leading to citizen idenmying mark. ·I
Pleasant;
Helen
Miller,
't survive : Michael B9rcus, . . The goyer~ent radio's Copenhagen corr:esponde~t said
Holzer Medical Center
shire, Perry Studler, Mar· Middleport; Larry Hudson, participation according the
Never give a ~glar an .
;... Larry Barcus. Ralpt-1 Barcus the jamming that blocks the usual Israeli broadcasts at 5 a.m.,
(Discharges, Nov. 181
I! and· 'Ira Barcus, all of 1 p.m. a~d 7 p.m . did not operate to stop special coyerage
jorie
Ward ,
Frank Point Pleasant; Mrs. Archie Sheriff James J. Proffitt.
even break.
t: Gall ipolis. _
Mrs. Herbert Adkins and Weth e rh o lt ,
Garnet Pierce, Rutland; Audrea · These suggestions are
Start a "buddy ystem"
,.,._ He was a former member during the · rest of the day Friday. Soviet authorities only son, Ossie Auxier, Judy
Williamson,
Thom~ s Wilson .
offered
today
:,
with
neighbors to .. ch each
Arnold,
Pomeroys;
Jonathan
on
at
midnight,
when
they
started
blocking
all
tran
s.
caught
:;.,. of both the American Legion
· Bennett, Connie Berkley,
(Births, Nov. 19)
In conjunction with the otherrs homes. VlAch for
and VFW. He was a World miSsions including music shpws, the Israeli radio said .
Waugh, Ashton; Nathan
Ke nneth .Bloomer, Dow
~ War II veteran , having
Mr . and Mrs. Marlin Marquardt, Point Pleasant; State of Ohio Crime unexpected "movei" · and
:1;'
served in the U. 5. Army.
.THROUGH THE NORTH Border, Janict: Brown, Remy Folden , a son, Ja ckson . Mr. John Morrow, Point Pleasanl Prevention Program of " repairmen" at ; house
... Twelve grandchildren surBLIZZARDS THAT ROARED
Burton , Georgia Calv in , and Mrs. Michael Morgan, a and Shawn Wood, Point Operation Crime Alert , Meigs where no one Is ho ·. '
:::: vive , along with five step- CENTRAL states kept poWldlltg at the eastern Dakotas and
eanette Davis, Iantha daughter , .Jackson ; Mr. and Pleasant.
J
Co unty Sheriff J ames J :
Report any s iclous
,... grandchildren .
Minnesota today joined by fierce cold that blanketed the
Garnes,
Wanda
Henry,
Stanley
Mayor,
a
son,
Mrs.
Proffitt
advises
that
his
aet\ons,
sounds, or ' aflllers
•:
Funeral services will be northern United States from Montana to Wisconsin .
.... held 10 a .m . Tuesday at
.
h ··•t
t
· th t
Steven Hunt, Dennis Kimes , Gallip oli s. Mr . and Mrs.
department
is
participating
to
the
sheriff's
offi r local
'a f. Mi ller's . Home for Funerals
Wmdgustso£upto60mp , Wlu1 ~mpera ures 10 e eens,
Ethel Lewis, Edna Lipscomb, Bobby Patterson, a daughter,
WOMEN
TO
MEET
by
providing
literature
a
nd
•
pollee.
'
I • i'
with Rev. Alfred Holley of
continued in northern and central Mmnesota and the eastern
Matthew Long. Richard Pomeroy . Mr . and Mrs.
The
Middleport
•
Pomeroy
other
activities
to
got
the
ficla. ling. Buria. I will be In \ Dakotas, where blizzard warnings remained in ~ffect. Sto:m
Meadows Sr., Warren Miller, Rog er Jtaffert y, a son, Area Branch of the American
ne cessa ry
citizen par•'-\.
warnings were in effect over Lake Supenor, while htgh wmd
Pme_Street Cemetery .
Mrs. Terry · Napper and Ja ckson.
Fnends may call at the
d · ·
· d · ff t
in
Crime
BOOSTERS TO]iEET
Assn. of University Women ticipation
funera l home fr.om 2. 4 and 7-9 warnings and travelers a Vlsones ~erna1~e m e ec over daughter , Orpha ' Peters,
(Discharges, Nov. 20)
will meet at 7:30 Tuesday in
Prevention .
The Meigs Bani! :oosters
~ p.m. today .
.
.
southern Minnesota and northwest Wtsconsm. The snow e~ded
Ma ry Adkins, Mrs. Larry tlfe kindergarten building
Mitchell
Picke.ns
,
Bever·
Preventing
crime
is
will
meet at 7:30 thiS•vening
~.,
..
.
.
and wind subsided in the West, only to be replaced by bttter
ly
Queen,
Harrell" Barrett a nd daughter, Zelia near the Racine Jupior High everyone's job everyday.
at the high school. Prents of
Mll&lt;tary
graveSide
serv&lt;ces
ld
'
•
.
t
d
Bo
man
Mont
reported
read.
i
ngs.of
20
will be held .
co . u:wts own an
ze
,
.,
.
Eph
Ross, Bla ir, Mrs. James Butcher School. " f&gt;oliti cs of Food" Citizens should take a little all band members at asked
below early tQday. The below zero temperatures extended mtQ Reynolds,
and daughter, James Day, will be the program topic time to protect themselves to attend.
Mrs
.
Harold
Russell
o,
GOlDIE HUTCHINSON
western North Dakota .
and
daughter,
Sharon Mrs. Paul Goddard and son, presented by Mrs. Jean against ,criminals and their
.,.
Mrs . Goldie Hutchinson, 64,
CONCLAVE Sir
~ a resident of Columbus and
Shrader, Jacqueline Sisson , Mrs . Jack Ha ggy and Alkire and Miss Susan Flesh· activities (Citizens Hand·
• former Gallipolis resident ,
Ohio Valley Com&amp;ndery,
F&amp;AMTOMEET '
The evening star is Mer· Nancy Stewart', Clair Taylor, da u ~tcr , Bertha Halstead, man. Hostesses will be Mrs. book ).
';' died 7:30 a . m . today in
l
Bryan
Hoffman
,
Katherine
Eileen
Buck,
Mrs.
Maxine
Help
.
t
he
law
to
held
you
.
Wallace
Sr.,
Tamara
Kmghts
Templar w~hold a
Floyd
Middleport Lodge 363 F &amp; cury.
#I" Columbus .
regular conclave at 30 p.m.
Jewell
,
.Joseph
Loftis
,
Russell
Philson
,
Mrs.
Lee
Lee,
and
Keep
an
inventory
of
all
Williamson,
Hamie
Wool
um.
~
Funera l arrangements will
this
date
are
Those
born
on
AM wiU meet at 7 p.m.
Pritty Ill , Ros e Sirbatk, Mrs . Bernice Carpenter.
Wednesday at the t ple.
your properly so that you will
t be announced by Miller's Tuesday
under the sign of &amp;orpio.
night.
""' Home for Funerals.

-

_________

...;_,_

-----ASTRO•GRAPH

~.

~\Y0QJ~
.
~CJ~mdtr ·

--------------------------- Rich suffer

Area Deaths

~

has directed a regional health
ca re project In rural western
Michigan where she ad·
ministered a central clinic
and Its satellite medical and
dental outreach clinics,
serving four counties.
Johnson and Hateh share
the task of setting the tone
and 8Cale of the rural health
conference, according to Dr.
Jeffery S. Gordoo, executive
director of CHEAO. "We feel
this conference will provide
the catalyst In bringing
Appalachian Ohio com·
mWllties together to share
their problems and to seek
solutions jointly," Gordon
said. ·
In addition to the general
sessions on the first day ofthe
conference,
a
panel
discussion on "Techniques
for CommWlily Organizing"
wlll be held.
Members or the oanel in·
elude: Byron T. Scott,
associate professor
of
journalism at Oltlo Unlver·
slty, former editor of
"Today's Health" and active
in consumer health interests
in Athens; Kay Beegan, state
legislative committee
. chairman of the AAUW and a
member of the health ser·
vices Committee of the Scioto
County Health Planning
CoWJcll; and Brian Barger,
vice president of health
systems division, Health
Planning Association of the
Central Ohio Valley (COR·
VA), Cincinnati region.
CHEAO, the chief spon·
sorlng agency for the con·
ferences, encourages
requests for additional in·
formation by writing Rural
Health Conference, CHEAO,

CONTEST SET
MASON - A batQn twirling
contest wiD be held Dec. 4 at
the Wahama High &amp;hool
under the sponsorship of the
Wahama Athletic Boosters.
The contest, sanctioned by
the National Baton Twirling
Assn., will start ' at 12 noon
and is open to all twirlers.
Those wishing to enter may
contact Judy ~iggs, contest
director, at Chester, Ohio 985-

3595.
LIONS TO MEE:T
The Pomeroy • Middleport
Lions Club will meet for a
noon luncheon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn. AU members
are asked to be present .
OES TO MEET

-Pomeroy Chapter 186
Order of Eastern Star will
meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday for an
Installation practice. All old
and new ofllcers are asked to
attend ..
P. 0. Box 825, Athens, O~lo
45701, or by ~alling Donna
Pope at (614) 593-M:IS in
Athens or (614) 43JI.I948 in
Cambridge.
To "gain maximal benefit
from the conference, par·
ticipants are urged to attend
both days of the conference.
However, those able to attend
ooly one day are encouraged
to do so.
A general registration fee
of $30 covers meals and
meeting costs for the two daY·
session for $15 for one &lt;jay;
with a special student fee of
$15 for two days or $8 for one
day.
Dormitory
ac·
commodatlons
can
be
arranged for a 16 lee.
The one-day option is being
offered because of the large
number of requests for one·
day attendance. Registrants
should indicate which day
they 'wish to attend.

Edsels--1.0 0 of them··on Lesley farm
OXFORD, Pa . (UPI ) Hugh Lesley tugged at the bill
of his green cap with the
large white "E" and flicked
back an old white bedspread.
" Here's ow- b.Bby," he said
with pride.
The "baby" was a long,
sleek, vermilion convertible
with a chrome spare tire
cover in the Continental sty!~.
The oval grille marked it as a
1958 Edsel Pacer .
On his farm Hugh lesley
has about 100 Edsels, mostly
of the 1958 vintage, which he
calls "the really true Edsel,"
because it's not just Ford
parts in an Edsel shell.
Ford built the car probably the greatest sales
disaster in automotive
history - in 1958 and 1959 and
about 1,500 drastically
restyled models in 1960,
before finally giving up on
them.
Most of lesley's Edsels are
scattered
haphazardly
among the oak trees, or lined
up next tQ the cornfield, their
yawning snouts rusting away
and their bodies stripped of
parts tQ keep others going.
Lesley, a corn fanner who
admits tQ making a good
living at it, has 12 Edsels
running,
licensed
and
inspected, and about 20 more
he wants tQ restore. This
winter he'll build a second
huge shed tQ house those.
On !he walls of his two-car
garage and in the shed where
he keeps the pick of the fleet
- plus a Maserati or two and
some 1940 Ford coupes hang the distinctive grilles
that marked the Edsel.
"This is wbat really helped
killed the Edsel," he said,
stroking the chromed, horse
collar-&amp;iaped grille.
"People said it looked like

'

an Oldsmobile sucking a
lemon and the newspapers
sort of built it up . Pretty 900n.
people got the feeling that the
car was a lemon and sales
just went downhill."
And why does he love the
Edsel?
11
They were dift'erent," he
said. ''That was Ford's whole
idea - tQ build a car that you

WASHINGTON (UP!) President · Carter, saying
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat'stripto lsrael"breats
down ... centuries of hatred,"
believes the journey has
aided Middle East peace
prospects and improved
chances for a Geneva
conference.
The president planned
meetings today with national
security adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski for a briefing that
includes an update on the
Middle East, plus sessions
with members of his senior
staff and the Cabinet.
.
Carter led about 100
worshipers at tile First
Baptist
Church
of
Washington in prayers for a
Middle East peace Sunday
and said some leaders in that
part of the world have failed
tQ heed their COWltr)'lllen's
yearning to end the violence.
nte president later voiced
his opposition to a private
settlement between Israel
and Egypt and said neither
Sadat nor Prime Minister
Menachem Begin would

accept such a partial
solution.
In a six-minute petsonal
prayer, Carter atQOd at the
church's pulpit aiiCI said, "We
have a vivid reallzation that
the chosen leaders have nOt
responded adequately to this
yearning ... of the people of
the Middle East for peace."
"Sometimes the leaders of
nations have been the ones
who have been an obstacle tQ
peace that was yearned for
by the people of their
countries," Carter explained
later when asked by
rep«ters to elaborate.
"Some of them, I think,
have underestimated the
willingness of .their own
people to accept strong
moves toward a new
Wlderstanding," he said.
Carter predicted the trip
"will transform ... the MidcUe
Eastern peaCi! prospects regardless of the outcome of
this particular visit. It's a
brealtdown In 30 years and
perhaps centuries of hatred
... I think ll will be a major
. step forward."

1

BROUGHTON'S

...•..•
i

News •• in Briefs

:f

:£
:t

'*;

f

r

t~

'

..
....
4o

-~·

..

'

fl- ··'

-,

r

•

"I think so."
He said people in both
Egypt and Israel have
reacted with "overwhelming
gratitude and excitement" to
the trip, and said it "shows
that the people were ready
for it and it was just
reluctance of leadera to take
this momentous step."
Carter admitted that other
Arab nations, particularly
Syria, "fear thai Egypt and
Israel will negotiate a
bilateral peace agreement tQ
the exclusion of other Arabs.
"This Is something that
neither Sadat nor I want, nor
Prime Mipister Begin,"
Carter sald.
Carter, who watched the
televised arrival of Sadat in
Israel Salurday, also saw the
speeches Sunday by Sadat
and Begin before the Israeli
Parliament,
which
he
described as "a moving
occasion and a contribution to
the cause of peace."

Karl and .Mary Kebler,
owners of the Pomeroy H. &amp;
R. Block Office, attended the
fann tax and workshop in
Chillicothe Nov. &amp;-10.
The discusislons covered
many of the complek areas
dealing with fanners' special
tax problems. The 1977
Simplification Act was
discussed.
The workshop for !ann tax
preparers was sponsored by
Washington -c. H. and
Jackson Area Extension
Centers,
College
of
Agriculture and Home
'EconomiCll of the Ohio Stale
University in cooperation
. with lhe Internal Revenue
Service. Among the speakers
was Dwight L. James, Jr.,
District Director. CinclMall
District of Internal Revenue.
Also attending were Allee
Jacobs, Rosemary Samsel
and Leonard Lyons, em·
ployees of the Pomeroy H. &amp;
R. Block office. •

DEL MONTE

PUMPKIN

' 24 OZ. CARTON

,
IHIOMO MILK.........................~.~~•. 7
VAU.fY BEll
.
·. ·
89

~

BROUGHlON'S

C:OnAGE C:IHIEESE ...........~~.~.~~••

~

·USDA lARGE

~~~~......~~~ . 69e

REG. 59'
NO.2~ CAN

MELLO ROAST
FRIDAY &amp; SUNDAY

COFFEE

RC
OR

DIET RITE

ri

Ways to fight '
•
cnme
suggeste~

attended

(:OnAGE C:IHIIEIE!iiE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 89~

HOSPITAL NEWS

f[

Asked whether the trip
would improve chances for
finally bringing about a
formal
Geneva
11eace
conference, cat'ter replied:

CELERY...............~~. 39~

.
"

Farm tax
workshop

OPEN THANKSGIVING
10:00 A.M. 10 4 P.M.

if...
,..
•

MOlt of Lesley's 100 Etlsels
were bought for parts. He
paid about $50 for each.
U a car Is fixed up - or can
run with a little fixing- he'll

historic value to SadJJt's trip

mee
this evening

t·

there."

President Carter cites

1

B&amp;PW

pay $100 or more. .
With a chuc;kle,- Lesley
(X'oduced a letter from a
Rhode Island Edsel owner
offering tQ sell his prize for
$5,000. "There's not an Edsel
aro1111d thai's worth that kind
of money,'' he said.
"We've got kind of a
museum here. People come
. out every weekend just to see
· the Edsels. Maybe I'll have to
put up a museum turnstile or
something,"
he
said,
admitting it would be "just
for fun ."

"we realized this was a pretty
nice car. We realized we
ought tQ have a wagon."
That was bought, he said,
and "it just sort of grew from

could look down the block and
tell it was an Edsel."
Lesley got hia fir~ Edsel in
1960, shortly after Ford an·
noW1ced they were killing
them.
· I,t was a second·hand;
copper' and·whlte
1958
Citation he bought for $750. It
went 160,000 miles before
retiring, but In the meantime

KEN-l RAnON

DOG
FOOD

COKE
OR

SPRITE
4 QUAJtTS

.,00
DR.
PEPPER
..
89~

7-UP

gge

.,

4 NEW FLAVORS

8--16 dZ. BOTTLES

5

CANS

WILDERNESS OR THANK YOU

CHERRY PIE
FILLING
. REG. 1119

NO.2 CAN

- NABISCO

CRACKERS

99°

1-1.8.

BOX

To lmit

·59°

.·suGAR
5 LB.
BAG

•

�'
IG- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy . o ., Monday, Nov. 21, 1m

Let·The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
IS W~ ue

Utltkt
('han:t•
Cash
IOJ
I ll/
llO

I"

"''

~ d~y~

J till~!&gt;

liD

13 ilil~s

:J.Oil

E:il&lt;t. •unl

uv ~:r

th•: muuiHWil 15
pt•r " 'ul'\l ~"'' da~
'Ao.ls runnm+e uUwr IJ• tl ,~ .,.~,·\lith·
~~~o·;Jil'W ~ 4 t't'IIU

lit- d wraet'd

r.lciy~ 'lr.-111

&lt;~ !

lll(· l

d:t}

·rak
lll

1 \k'tullr~ , Q m.l

a ~-~ '''

ObtU&lt;Ir) ·

ul Tll.illlk:. ant!

pt"r .. 1onl.

t.t 110

IIIIIIUIIWU . (III.SI J tn IILI\' II IM."t' .

Mobllt• Komr a It's 11 nJ \'11 rtl .!HI k-s
lift' ~K"~TJ)it'l.l vnb v. 1111 ~ alii• 'A' tlll
unJt•r ·~ l't'!l1 dwr~t· l&lt;lf" il~ ~·Oil r ~11 1~

lio•x .'owulot·r In C!m· ul rho· S.·•t-

llllt&gt;l

Th1.•

P\JIJI~wt n"''."t"'lt-:oo Ill&lt; 11~ht

.o.

'' ' t-d!l , .r rt' J1:t1 il !!) 111!.. \lwi!M.'~I
1'' lli.•Jill Tht• P\Jillbho.-r ,.Il l '"~ l.k•
1"\"~t:.tl!lt· (,,t• llk•rl' Uldll ••Ut ' lll~•of·
rrt·t Ul ~r1 1uu

Phuno.' 99'!-ll~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
·oEADUNES

l

~rM

UM.•dil) I.Jto(un•publintl !l•u
Sw lt~}

4P.M .
f.' mill) ,.rtt.·m· ~~~

CASH paid for oil molt•~ ond
models ot · mobile homes .
Pt-Lone oreo cod. bt4.4:23 -95Jt .
TIMBER . Pomeroy FOf'est Pro·
ducts. Top· p11ce f01 standing
sawtimber. Coli 99:2.5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1-446·8.570.
COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches ond chain~ .
silver ood gold. We nNd 196-1
and older silver coins . 8uy . sell .
or trade' Coli RoQe r Wamsley .

7&lt;2-2331 .
OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass
beds. iron beds . •tc .. com plel•
households. Write M. 0 . Miller ,
Rl . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio or call
9'97·7760 .
NO ITEM TOO Lar94 or too small ,
Will bu~ 1 pi.ce or complete
household. New, us.d, or anti·
ques . Martin's Furniture. 20 N.
2nd St .. Middleport. Phone

992-6370.
CHIP WOOO . Poles mow .
diameter 10" on largest .nd, S8
per ton. lundl.-d slob . S6 per
ton . Oeliventd to Ohio Pollet
Co . . Rt. 2. Ppmeroy. 992 -:2689 .

...

:-:: .~-

.: · == ·

WILL CARE lor the elderly 1n our
kame. Phone 9'n 7314

THERE WILl be r10 hun11ng no
trespossmg ond nc ••cept1ons

Taking New
Customers For

~ my prop!.'"~~Bob_~~~ro~

THE
RACt f.IE Volun te•r Ftre
O.portment w dl sponsor o guM
shoQI •very Soturday at 7 p m.
otthe tr b~o~dd, ng in Bo shon Foe·
tory choke guns only . "
~--·r
TIM8ERLANO OWNERS· Do you
nved help tn managing your
...,.()Odlonds and morkettng your
limber? M.ad s srofl of prof es ·
tionol laresren 11 o"at loblv to
offer you au tstonce ot no cost
M.ad con ouurt you of diver ·
sified morlt.ets . complete
l imber u ttlizot ion .ndudmg
whole-tr ee ch ipptng a.,d super ·
vised "harvesting programs
designed to prot~t your lands
ond promote limber growtk .
For deta il s, coli collfKt or wr ite :
MEAD
PAPER , Wood
&amp;
Wood lands Ooept. , PO Box 39 1.
Ja ck son ,
Otl i o
45b40 .
Telephone: 61• ·286 -2868_._ _

Sf.W &amp; SEW Outlet in Rac ine jus t
r.ce ived Mew sh tpmltflt of
polyesler doubl• kn its . 51.98 &amp;
$2 .69 yard , :225 yard spool
polyester thread . 5 for $1 .00.
Kwik -Sew pallerns . ' l he fast
and eosy way for you to uw
kn i ts or hov&amp;your sewing done
by Oeoi •e, for tt'le greatest l it
evef .

Tu..·...W,~
thru rmi..~

~

GUN SHOOT Roc1n4 Gun Club
every Sun oh•rn0011 Facto,
Cto.ock guns on l y Auarted
mears .

no exceptions do.,. or nigh1 on
Chorlts Vo~t ' s . Ivan Will's. and
Alon Smith's forms .

Nuou t ~l Siltunill ~

::.·

.,:;.:"',.: :__. -: ' -

NCI HUNTING, ne trespouingond

MvnLlll}

...1,

.

FOR ~LE or trod. or lend con·
• tract , 2 • bedroom house m
Rutland . 992-5858.
FOR SALE or Rent : Trailer with
Iorge build ing lot i n· Syracuse .
992-6344 . ..

LOST ; 22 rifle on Boll Run Rood .
Reward
oft,r~~td .
Phone

992-7810.
WHITE MALE poodle lost in Hor ·
risonville . 74:2 -:2256.

FOUND. GOLDEN-BROWN dog .
S..n here for o month. Found
at 3.44 South 3rd.

E~PERIENCEO

REfRIGERATOR ond

appliance serviceman . Paid
holidays .
vac al i ort~
and
hosp i tal!za l i on .
Go Il i a
Refrigerator Co .. 611 3rd Ave ..
Gallipolis , Ohio .
PARl·TIME ADVEMTISING SALES
in the Pomeroy . Middleport .
Gallipolis area . Represenring
the
Athens
Messenger .
Mil~ ollowonte. $2.65 per
!'lour. Ideal for retired person .
Call 992 -5920, ask for Fred
Bolle1 , retail ad vertising

'
PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT op·
portunities os county e•len1ion
ogenh . Motter degr" re~u ir ed. Pr efer cit leoti on•
~,. . in ei1her ogr ic.l.!l1ure or
home ~ttonomics . Minority ap plicants encouraged. Coli
~14: 412 - 618 1 · lor
application
ond information or conta&lt;t
John C. Rice , Meigs County Ex t•nsion ott ica. ~2 - 3895'.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO

OEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus . Ohio,
Novtm ber 4, 1t71
Contr1ct SIIU Ltga l
Copy No. 77-124~

UNIT PRICE CONTUCT

F -11(111
Sea led propoSits will be
received at the oftlce of the
D i recto r
of
nu~
OhiO
Department
of
1'rans portalion , CoiOmbus, Ohio,
until
10.: 00
A .M ., Ohio
Standard Time , Tuesday,
December 6, 1977 , for im .
provem ents in:
Athens, Gall'la, Hocking
~ and Meigs Counties, Ohio, Ol"l
Sect ions ATH -33- 12.97, 15. 11 ,
·- 1.5 93 ; ATH -S0 -17.69 ; GAL,. ·1·
26 .93 , GAL -35 - H .94 , 16. 59 ;

TO

PUBLIC NOTICE

ONEITA

BA KER

HUTTON . whose test known
address is Akron , Ohio ; ana
t he unknown he i~ s . dtvisees .
l eg e t res . ·administrators.
ellecutors end -or ass igns of

ALVARETTIE

FRYMAN.

, dec . whose last known aCI ·
dress Is Redner , Ohio ;
ROXANNA
BAILEY ,
dtceased, whose last known
address Is Radner, Ohio ;
ALLEN OSBORN, deceasrd,
aka W . A . .OSBORN, whose
lest knoWn address is 190-4 e.
Fifth St .• Oaytr;tn , Ot1i0 ;
ARTHUR
OSBORN,
deceased ,
aka
W.
A.
HOC -33-3.76, 9.50 ; MEG -33 ·
OSBORN, whose test known
• .25, 9.21, Stete Route No . 7,
address Is 1904 E . Fifth St..
,U.S. Rou t es Nos . 33, 50 and
Dayton ,
OhiO ;
EMORY
"'J 35. by removing ulsting
OSBORN, deceased, aka E .
4' ·mercury luminaire and in E . OSBORN , whose last
.}l ~ stallinQ hiQh pressure sodium
known addren Is Coolv ille,
liQhtlng .
Ohio ; EDSON OSBORN ,
.!'$:. Project Length - 0.00 feet
deceased .
aka
E.
G.
~' or 0:000 milt .
OSBORN, wi'IOS! last known
·~ ~
work Length - 0 .00 feet or
address is 2203 W. Th ird St .•
0.000 milt .
Dayton , Ohio and NETTIE
The Ohio Department of
B"AKER, deceasrd
. ~. -:. Transportation
hereby
You are hereby notified
. • · notiflet all bidders that lt will
thet you have been named
,J affirmatively Insure that In
defendants in a legal action
~ ,·any contract entered Into
entitltd Roberta c. O'Brien ,
·" pursuant
to
this
ld ·
plaintiff vs Onei ta Baker
~~o vertiSement.
minority
Hutton, ef al . defendants .
~"' busintu enterprtsfs will be
This acflon h'as been assigned
' affr;arded full opportunity to
case No. 16619 In the Com .
submit bids In responu to
mon Pleas Court of Meig~
&amp;"" ttl is invitation and will not be
County, Ohio, Pomeroy, Ohio,
... ·•discriminated aQainst on the
45769 . The oblect of the
•11 , ground! of race. color, or
complaint is to partition end
.,. nafural
origin
In
con .
qu let titl e to rea l estate
··'#sideration for en award .
situated in Olive Township ,
-~'
"Minimum wage rates for
Meigs County, Ohio. wtl ic h is
~-:L this
prolect havt ttten
described as fol lows :
·
.... . pr~etermlned IS required
Being In Fraction JS ,
., ,• by law end are set forth In fhe
Section 2J, Town 4, RanQe 11
J\ · b id proposal "
Ohio . Company ' s Purchase ,
!~. ' " Th~ de ti set for com .
beginning et the southeast
plet ion of this work shell be
corner" ot said fraction ;
set forth in the bidd i ng
thente north to a li ne made as
.~ p r,~.posal . "
a division line by John Holk
~
Each . •bidder shall be
2d. Surveyor, between the
•• required to ·fill' wlfh .hll bid 1
n i d Samuel Osborn and
• . certified Check or cash ier 's
W i lliam Osborn, running east
"'" ·' check for an amount equal to
and west ; thence west .to the
) \' tlvt per cent of till bli, but In
west line Of'. said ucllon ;
no event more ·than fiftv
thence south 106 rods to ttle
J ' thousand dollars. or • bond
south line of setd fraction ;
for ten per nnt of hl1 bid.
thence east 134 rods to the
· pevable to the Director .
southeast corner of said
Bidders must apply , on the
traction
and
pllce
of
~ -= prop,r
forms ,
tor
beginning .
- 1 qualification at lent ten diYI
It i s hereby intended to
• . priOr to tl'\t' dete set tor
convey all the said land south
• · opening bids in accordenct
of uld d ivisio n line as
with Ctlepter SS2S OtUo
aforesaid with ttle exce ption
. Revised Code .
of tl'lat par.t out of the north '·
Plans and specifications
east part deeded .to Semuer
.&lt; art on file in the Department
Werd ,
. • of Transporta tlon and the
Reference Volume 112 page
J . office. of the Oltfr lct Otputy
341 and ,Volume 22 page 219
'- Ojrector.
...
Meigs Count~ Deed Records .
!· 1 Ttle Dlrec tor renrves the
You are required to answer
' rlgl'lt to rtfect any and ell
the compla,nt wlttlin 28 Clays
bids .
·after the last publication of
thiS notice, which will be
DAVID L. WEIR published once each week for
DIRECTOR sh« consecutive wetkS . Ttle
last publication will be made
- Rev. ,8· l1 ·7:l
on Decembtr, 5, 1977 and ttlt
211 days for answer will start
Nov . l4, 21
that date .
In case of your failure to
In 1183, President Jolin F .
answer or othuwise respond
Kennedy wu greeted ·by as requireCI by the Oh io Rule!
cheering crowds in San of Civil Proctdure ludgment
by default will be rendered
Anlonlo, Hollllon and Fort eo a ins t you tor relief
Worth, Teus, trith
por- "emandtd i n the complaint .
Larry E. Spencer,
tents of the tragedy to befall
Cltrk of courts
Mei§IS County , Oh io
him u hll moto«~~de moved

an

110

tltrq1J8!1 Dlllu t~e

;y.

dar, . .

!•

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Monday, Nov. 21, 1m

follow!nc

(10) 31. IIIJI, 14, 71. 28, 112)
5. 6tc

COAL . l•me.ton• and coloum
cMonde and cotc1um bnn• for
dus.t cootrol and spe&lt;•ol m1wing
tolt lor formert . h celsior Sal t
Wotl..s , Mo•n S.treet . Pomeroy ,
Oh•o or phone 9'92· 3891 .

WeAre Now

CAll

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc•ety ,

---·"~

ECONOMV TRACTOR w ltl'\ all ct ·
tochments. Like new , asking
$2250. Phone l61•) 096-3290.
~--·

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

us

Pomeror Landmark

ltt

9a -J~ck W. C•rsey, Mgr.
llli1L Phone"2-2111

PomNoy

Lendm.uk
condition your

soften &amp;

ind Co-op water
softener, Moftl UC-SVI.
Now Only

water

PlANO TUNING - Lane Daniels .
New phone number . 992·2581 .
If no answer, coli 991-208:2

Ntw co.Op water and
sofltners, model VC-SVI.
Only 5279.95

SERVICE

Save

sso.oo

on

new

1

1

Good

Used

Pomeroy landmark

1972 PONTIAC CATALINA . Sedrs
stereo
recorder.
Phone

992-7&lt;53 .

Hatpoinl

Refrigerotor

1975 FORO VAN , Fully customi:·
ed. P.S.. P.B., TV , plus more.
$4 ,500 , Phone 991-74'56.

1125

1 Llncaster Ch•in Saw 575-

9a _Jock W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Pomeroy landmarl
AlA Phanet91-2 181
9. -Jock W. Corsey, Mgr.
lllil. Phone "2-2111

1975 CHEVROlET MONTE Corio ,
P.S., P.8 ., A .C · taj)e player,
ATHENS . OHIO business for sale.
P~ane 992 ' 2628 ·
Small 4~ . fl . Supermarket
1972 VW SQUAREBACK . $1 ,300.
· dose to Oh io U with beer and
RUCS . WALL Hangings and
2·" Beeck Street , Middleport .
wine corry out lic•nse doing
afgons . Nice for Chr istmas . ·
992 . 63 s7 .
good business on heavy trovell·
Reasonable . Co1199'2 -2214.
..,.:~~~~~--~-ed Athens Str-t . Lorge pork· N.C.R. 299Bookkeep;ng machine . 1971 FORD LTD Wagon . $850 or
in g lot with room lor other out·
best
offer. 991 -5756 or
Maintenance
tontroct
door busineu. Perfect busjnen
992 .5477 .
ovoiloble . Programmed to do:
for two people. Selling b«.ouse
Soles
Repor!s ,
Accounts 1%7 CAMARO . Good condition .
of absent" owner . Terms for .
Payable. Payroll . Government
1974 Kawosokimotorcycle . (all
right person . For more informo·
Report!
,
W-2
forms
and
write
992
·:2530.
lion colt or write : PO Box 5301 .
checks . Con be programmed to
Vienna , West Virginia 26101 or
do General Ledger ond Ac 1-::S0. -295·9352
counts Reulivable . Contoct ;
Carol Wilkes at )Jo4 . 2~5- 939 1 '

sa, 100

for education,

75 per cent of your ·
College tuition free,
College
Level
Examination
Free,
An Associate Degree
through
the
Community College
of the Air Force, 30
days paid vacation, 7
paid 3 day weekends.
good starting pay and
much · more.
Interested?
Contact me, Vernon
Zeger, your Air Force·
Representative.
For an appointment
in the. Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592-4592 Collect.
Order No. 9-ct-84

197'6 FORO f.:2so Custom . 17 ,50 x .
14 .00 tires · winch . Only 14,000
mi. H.;nder,. CB. Tope deck. Commercial properly appro~e . 17
Over l3.000 in edros. S.rioui
"ocres, level lond. loca ted at
calls only gfter 1• nOC?":
luppers Pl~ins on· Ohio , Route
696-1072.16.800.
.
7. Phone (614) 667•630&lt;1 .
THREE HORSES. 1 is Western VA-FHA, 30 'yr. financing . Ireland
Pleasure . 2 mares: 1 is '!, and I
Mortgoge.
E. State, AtJ,ens ,
is ¥, Arabian . 992-708-4 .
phone {614)59:2·3051 .
B I S MOBILE HOMES. Pt . Plea· 1. STORY 3 bedroom frame
sonr, W. Vo. beside Hec."k 's.
house, F.A . furnace . storm win·
1973 Broodmor• 14 w 6o4 2
dows , tireplace in Middleport.
bedroom
Phon e.-992-3.457 or 992-5867.
1973 Dorion 1.- x 60 2 bedroom
FOUR
BEDROOM house with both
1972 Victor ian 14 1167 3 bedroom .
and '!'• . Central heating . Full
t 2 both
basement .
In - Pomeroy .
1972 Coventry 12 w65 3 bedroom
992.101• o,&lt;l92-3465.
1969 Statesman 1:2 ',: 60 2
bedroom .
2'1• acre lot w ith garage and
cellar , located in langsville.
1976 SUZUKI RM 125. bcelleni
$6 .500. Phone 742-2965 ,
c:ondilion . 247 -3861.

n

HOMEWORK£RS : $85 weekly addressing. stuffing envelopes.
Start
immediately . Oetiols,
ru)h 251 and telf-oQdreS5ed
stomped envelope:· Beslco.
32QCil N.W. 75th Terrace, Dept.
C981 , Hollywood Flo . 3302.. .

TECHNICIAN
WE'RE LOOKING FOR '
PEOPLE WHO LIKE TO
~ET OFF
A LITTLE
STEAM.
Become a Navy Sol ler
Technician . An expert on

shipboard equipment lhal
produces
steam
for
propulsion engines and for
generating electr!c power .
Top Navy training and

benefits. See your local
221 Columbus Road
Athens, OH
593·3566 ( Colltcll

Carpet• UpMISttry
Phone II ike Youna
AI

,2-2206 1tr 992-JUO
''Tilt Oripulon

PU7U2SO
1-17-IFC

llat lh I.......

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

BOB'S UN~LSTERING
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

Residential
and
comml!rcial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.

le the aptnlng of the Indoor season tor you witl'l
your old turniture re upl'lolstered in belutilul
warm colors &amp; p1tterns
tram Bob's. If you are
looking for savinvs it wIll
ply you to ply us 1 visit.
Located i n back of the Sew
N ' Sew Outlet on M1in St.,
Rlcint. o.
11 -10· 1 mo .

RfOUCE SAFf &amp; fast with GoBese
Tablets &amp; E· Vop '"wa ter pill!5 '.
Nelson Orug .

It's An Adventure.
Order No. 11-CT-84
INSULATION .MANUFACTURING .
This field is wide open 1ince in·
sulotion is in such short 1upply.
Almost ' every homeowner &amp;
businessmen and all contra&lt;·
tors need insulation. Our in·
sulator offers you the op·
porlunil)' tc manufacture &amp; in·
stall w ith on unbelievable small
investment. For details, coli

(412f q&lt;/2·2853 (9 om · 5 pm) .

STARCRAFT FAlt Sole . ¥ini motcirs . 20" ond 22' . TraVel
Trailers . 18' S" $3,799. :25' 7"
Bunkhouse $A ,875. Fold -down .
$1 , 700 up, We sell service and
quality . Open Sundays. Camp
Conley Stortroh Soles, Rt . 62 .
N . of Pt..Pieosont .
·
1972 ARISTOCRAT 18: Travel
Trailer . Excellent condition .

on

Minis , troilers , and fold -downs ,
Used unirs in stock . .Open Sun·
day . Camp
Storcrott
Scles , Rt . 62

3 AND 4 RM . furn ished and unfurnished

opts.

Phone

~:2 -

5434 . .
FOUR ROOMS ond both , Adults
only, No
992·5908.

.,.ts.

COUNTRV MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
large lots. Call 992-_7479.
Incredible! Why pay high electric
bills this winter? let us pay
them for you I One bedroom
from $130 now avoiloble .
Village Manor, Third and Mill
Streets, Middleport . Telephone
99:2-7787. Equal Housing Op·
portunity .
'
BUILDING FOR lease . S700 sq . ft .
store building, with full windows ond owning In front . 40
car perking :ot. All on main
thoroughfare .In Athens , Ohio,
close to Ohio Uriiversi ty . Con tact: H. Wllk•s. PO. Box 5301 ,
Vienna, West Virginia 26105 or
calll -304 -295-9352 .
12 x 60 MOBILE HOME . Good condition . large yard. 1 mile
Roclne. 992 -5858:
.

IF YOU hove a service to offer, NEWl V REMODELED 7 room house
plus bathrooms, I up and I
wont to buy or sell something,
oe looking for work . . . or 1 down . Has all utilities plus 10
acres of ground. 5 minutes to
whotev,r ... you 'll get results '
Pomeroy . $:225 per
mo.
foster with o S.r\tinel Wont Ad.

Coli 992-2156 .

AUCTION SALE . every 'r ues . and
Fri. Ot 7 pm . New ond used
merchondise at Ohio River Auc·
lion , Meigs Plato , Middleport ,
Ohio . Home Phone (30.ot)

992·5970 ., 992-6270.

TWO BEDROOM tr ailer
PomeroJt. (614}446·0157.
~--

in

---.--b.droom Schultz

12 x 52 two
mobile home . Phone 985-3820.

----

~~-------·----

'

General Contractors

Phone 949-2801
or949 -21160

lots of cabinets and cooking
unit. Utility room, finished
garage . Very large lot .
$25,900.00.
JUST LISTED .:.... 20 acres
with 5 yr. old home, 3
bedrooms, beth, needs a
little finish work on Inside.
Some timber. HERE IS A
REAL BUY FO~ YOU .
$20,500.00.
JUST LISTED - About 5
yrs . old . Beautiful 3

::=:=:=::::::1:1·=2=1·=1=m=o~-~
ALUMINUM S1DING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Euy
step
by
step

bedroom home . Modern
bath , dining area •. lovely
kitchen, utility
room ,
hardwood floors
with
carpet In~ over, carport &amp;

storage . GOING AT JUST
$24,500.00.
NICE OLDE.R HOME Wood -burning
fireplace,
fenced yard, 3 bedrooms,
carpeting and remodeling.

lots of features . JUST
$14,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT Older
but nice, off st . parking, 2
fireplaces,

bath ,

nice

neighborhood . SEE AT
JUST $13,000.00.
WE
LIST
NEW
PROPERTIES
EACH
WEEK - IF WE DON'T
HAVE WHAT YOU WANT
TODAY
WE
WILL
PROBABLY HAVE IT TO
MORROW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR '
ASSOCIATES
"2·2259-992-tlf\

;

J&amp;L

Btown -Insulation

Street. Pomeroy , Ohio or
Phone 992-7034 . 10-29 -lmo.

ID'il

UK... H~lO, MR. 5&lt;:.HLDPP... I'M ...
LIH ... '&gt;ORR4 I GA!HD I{QU
P\..W~~~~ !W.ID\1'7, HA - HA ...

Mlddlepor1 . Ohio
11 -9-IIC

t~rvcli·
or .,I.....,

·JIM KEESEE

Jf!'JT.
~
· ,•.

ITOYEI AfiG

FMI'\,ACU

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
on huting cost
Experience 1nd
fully insured
FrM Est.

~

RNR
HEAT&amp;FUe

1

.

..

773-5955

Coll667-6479

Lakin , W .

1J . J4. I mo. pd.
AN.O MARTIN Ex·
coveting , septic •yslems ,
dozer, ·backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone. grovel , blacktop
paving, Rl. lo43 . Phone I (6U)
69Q-733L

HOWERY

'~~•~

-·

Acre Lot Surveyed.
approved for
sewage,
wooded and secluded.
loca.ted .07 of a mile off of
Summerfield road near
Tuppers
Pia ins, Ohio.

corner lot. Now has small
busineSs with room for
expansion , City wafer , on

Priced to go at 54,000.00.

State Rt. 124 In Rutland .
$35,000.
MIDDlEPORT - 4 unit
apartment building with
good Income. Par11y rented

Wildwood .

Plenty of acre lots at the
zoned and all utilities
available. S2SOO per acre.
We have need of listings,
types, homes, land,
commercial, ett.

all

location.
SOMETHING SPECIAL This fine old home will

Chery I Lemley
Associate

Extra nice

Home Phone N2·2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.

fancy oak trim . shiny
floors, hot wat!r heat,
large formal dining room ,

and 2 car garage . $35,000.
PREFERRED LOCATION
New 7 room trl -level
home. 1112 baths, family
room, garage, and one acre
of land . Nke carpet and

kitchen . $11,000.
FAMILY ROOM 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
gas central heating, nice

Associate
Home Phone 949~ 258~

--....,

r~

·:;~:~r'

,.....,

9!2-2174

'

In

beck balcony , and large
living room . This rests lust
out of town for $30,000.

Helen L. TNford
Gordon B. Teaford
Associates

t:I\Y COMES... .

51011

742-2211

rx IJ r1 XI IJ
(~

&amp;.

S.lurday'sl Jumbles&lt; IVORY

·-

PEACE

CHI.\BBV

lamOm&gt;w)

SAFARI

Allow«: What. guy who clldn1 like gelling food that
-~-upgatllng-''FRESH"

IIUI1NUI

SlDIIlC-somTT
!;UT1USMIIIII5S

LARRY LAVENDER
~~~Oilio
~h. !12·l"l

'-at-1-.

BRADFORD , Au ctioneer , Complete Service . Phone 949-2487
or 949·2000. ~oc,n e , Ohto, G: rtll

Bradford::·-~ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , )oosters, iro.ns, all
small opplionCI!!IS. Lown moWer,
next to State Highwo.,. Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985·

Ytlterday'a

382S.

%1 Greek

REMODELING . Plumbing, heating
and all types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years e:. ·
perience. Phone 992 ·2409.

river

.&lt;aiJ&lt;nr
38 Meted (out)
SZ Old Clrd

game

MACHINE Repairs, ser vice , all make s. 992-2284 . The
Fabric
Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Singer So les oncj
SerVice. We sharpen Stiuors. •

Yes'm~

Afterfive he
add late

EXCAVATING, dozar , loader ond
backhoe work : dump truckS
and lo-boy s for hire: wi ll t\oul
lill dirt , to soil. limestone and
gro11el . Coli. Bob or Roger Jef.
fers, doy phone 992 -7089 , night
phone 991-3525 or 992· 5232.

!51van1 e.g.

Wh4 does

wait
till th'las·

SI"-

minute?

n ·Trlnket

40u

TIIUChed

Me"

MoDday, Nov. 21

38 Simpleton

Computer tells the story

SAVE ON
CARPETING

21
~ORTH(D)

Condy Strip
Rubbet- Bock
Regu Ia r 56.95
Save
14.88 Sq. Yd .
1

• J 74
• J 83
• Q63
• A KJ 9

: FRANK&amp;ERNIE .

•

fll. - •'

12 and 15 II. width Corpel .
rubber back.

I·

s•ve saT'

'4.88 sq. rd.
30 rolls of carpet in stOc•.
selection all on sale.
lied with padding, nc
to pay.

lttc:ORP

WEST
• Q 10 2
.. Q97 6

'1"0 ~&lt;.eeP

MY fiNlitll S
WMI!IZ • • S Go
'
,._ 1'1 If: ' oPf•cE

Reg.l6.95-not 1nstolled

f~

•as

•Q ~ 3 2

•

W~sl

1·21

.DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

1~:

AXYDLBAAXR

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

to

: WINNIE
LO~INGDINO

131~§\'PU 1 1?E !liGHT...
DU 1 10 oNAP OUT
THIS MOOD I'M IN !

MRMiliSJ
WAB NO W55
AT ALL .

••
•••
•

EAST ·
• 86
• Al052
• K J92
• 7 84

SOUTH
• AK953
"Kt
• A 1074
• 108
North;:South vlllnerabte

l

TWI 'T'ING PAP!1l• ~
CI.IP.S 'PODAY!

Coll742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

ARNOLD GRATE '

7!3Cf-,-Hollywood S~uares 3; Let's Go To The Rae" I;
Hollywood Squares •• Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10; That's
Hollywood 13; Music City 15.
8:00-Man From Atlantis 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; ·
fllzpatrlcks 8,10; Jac~uos Cousltau 33; Eyewlf.
ness 20 . ·
8:»-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:00-Mulllgan's Stew 3,4,15; Three' s Company 6,13 ;
Mash 8,10; Health Care: Your Money Or Your Life
33: Georgia O'Keelfe 20.
9:»-Soap 6; One Day AI A Time 8,10; Mary Tyler
Moore 13. ·
10:00-Pollce Woman ~.4,15; Family 6,13; Lou Grant
8,10; News 20.
10:3Cf-,-Biack Perspective on the News 20.
11:00-News 3.4.6.8,10.13.15; Dick Cavell 20; Over
Easy 33.
.
11 :»-Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Movie 'Where Have All
the P-Ie Gone?" 6,13; Columbo 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "Or. Jekyll B. Mr. Hyde" 1q..
12 :00-Janakl33; 1:DO-;-Tomorrow 3,4; 1: Ill-News 13.
Mllvla Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - First Traveling Saleslady (G)
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - I Will, I Will For Nciw I Rl
Cable Channel 5 6:30P.M. - Testimony Time
7:00- Paul Gaudino Family Flfness
7:30- Home Digest
8:30 - Celebrity
9:30- Consultation
10:00- 700 Club.

3S Praag
M 'lbll: Sp.

~EW ING

•
RUnAND FURNITURE
:
•
•
..........................·je ·:
e

Now arrange the clrci«l 1eaer1 to

Answer here:

•

fedlveness 33.

(J form the suipriM . , _ , as IIUQ·
L-L_L.~.b--'1.-;::::~ge~s:IOd by lhe aboVe ca.-..

Stnicos

Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

Pomeroy with sewer, city
water, •d electric .
with full basement, 2 acres,

GARDEN FOR HQUR5 ... MD
BE 1'fD SlOP ... LikE A PIG!
~

THIS 15
THE BRm5H AND
OUFC5ELVS&amp;.

I CRIONI
j
(
I I

YOU WILL ROOT ltl TillS

'!HAl CAPITI\l16T 5W111H
WAll TILL WE HA\11: 001!
lRUE DfMOCRACY' AND
I AM MASTER HERE ...

'""'""""'
tioeA..u~
r'
.."'""Watts Attics

FRIDAY TIL 5

patio, and about one acre.

(J 0 . . . . -

I I I

LONGF~LLOW

Sorlh £ast

South

1• PU8 1•
PU5 I N.T.Paso 3 •
l'a&amp;o 3• Pa.. t•
l'a&amp;o Po.. Pa..
Opening lead - 8 •

I
.
By Oswald .&amp; James Jocoby
One le1ter simply stands lor another. In this sample A ll
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters.
Oswald: "Some hundred
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are
lhousand bridge players wlll
hints. Each day the cod~ letters are different .
be com~Ung today in the
fall
continent-wide charity
CRYPTOQUOTES
game of the American. Con·
DSP AS SF P SD H TLUO? tract Brldce League. The
!••cue holds lhree of these a
JGBEB
PGB year with the proceeds all
PGHP
LV D' P
going to -charily."
VIFTTR Jim: ''The hands are dealt
LV!- · NEHDM
NEFLP
by computer and as sqch are
Ynterday's CISJhlp!Oie: HE WHO IS AFRAID OF ASXING completely random. No effort is made to find unuaual
IS ASHAMED OF IEARNING.-DANISH ADAGE.
hands."
,
Ct 11'77 ICUI• F~~&amp;hiNI S-.DCUcate, II'C ,
Oswald: "The league's expert staff also prepare.a Uat
BARNEY

IVE ~IMPLY GOT TO
RJRGET HIM ... AND
GO ON lOSOME·
'THING E~E!

..

Thursday 8 til noo~

3

I

NOVEY

Mon ., Tues., Well.
8:00til 5:00

bedroom stucco home .
Natural gas floor fu.r..n ace,

VAHEY

o·m ~·~~-

I

the rent tluy you a home .
Natural gas, city water ,
near stores . Only $9,600.

$20,000.
.
MOBILE HOME LOTL

I

HA- HA ...

-~·- ...;"'""'

••
•••

carpeting, full basement,
garage, 3 lots. $27,500 .
2 FAMILY HOME - Let

LISTING

Estat'es

Addition. Flatwoods Road.

now, but still gives you
$50.00 monthly income over
your payment. Excellent

JUST M4 ATTiiMP! AT oomJS~

.

1112

Large

BAAltJ &lt;,;VRt&gt;OOt-1.&gt; ..

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

10 -18 - 1 mf' ·

EXCAVATING, doter , backhoe
and ditch~r . Cherie~ R. Hot ·
l 1eld . Back
Hoe Ser11ice ,
Rutland , Ohio . Phon e 742 -2008 .

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD; ~R.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-~325

B€1~ PAID ~~K~

Unser.,_ lhese lour Jumblto,
one Jetter to each square, to form
lour "1l1111Y words.

WINDOWS I DOQQ
IEI'UCUIEIIT

~

EFEL

to so pet.

... AIV THAT f..f.N.X ABCXJT 1¥JU I30f7

!

......

'"''·

llft~Nl
~ THATSCIWIBLEDWORDGAIIE
~ \!::!1 ~~·
byft!n~NnoldandBoblee

lila••

'?m..,.

tJ

3102 0' 1304}771-~~~2:.:.7.:.,- - -

(104) 712-3227.
-3102
---0' -----·--.-

BORN LOSER

~~~---~========·
Wood Stoves FREE ESTIMATES

NEW LISTING You
finish this 3 bedroom home

St . 000 down , coli (304) 772-

lO :DO-National Women's Conference 1977 33; News

MEIGS PLAZA

........ ,.. ,._

.

SMALL form for sole, ta•;. down 1
owner financed . Monroe County , W . Vo. Pkone (304) 772.
COUNTRY farmland wilh secluded woods , water ond good access in Monroe County, W. Vo.

Age of Uncertainly 20,33; 8:3Cf-,-Lucllle Ball 8,10.
9:00-NFL Football 6,13; Images of Aging 20; Fall of
Eagle• 33.
9:Jo-Columbo 3,4,15; American Film Institute 8.10;
20.
.. 10:3Cf-,-Farm Dlgesf 20 .
11 :00-News 3,4,8,1 0,15; Dick Cavell20; Relations 33.

Locattd In

·-the .....

See us at 1100 East Main

city water, ullllfy room.
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 both1,
all el•c .. l ocre, Middleport,
close to Rutland . Phone , 9927481 .

Beach Bums 13; Emergency One 6; Peanuts 8,10;

:
Radiator~ ·
11 o m e Service ' - ·

•Tie-Downs
• Awnings - Carports
•Insurance
Repairs

SALES AND SERVICE
11·9-tfc

NEW

:

EXPERIENCED

Underpinning
• Roof Coating

or ft2-6263

intrigue you.

Camera 13; Nashville on he Road 15.

instructions.

Kingsbury
Home Sales

IA.M.Io4 : 30P.M.

7 :3o-Tllat Nashville Musl ~ 3; New Truth or Cons. 4:
Muppel Show 6; Malchl.,Game PM 8; MacNeil ·
Lehrtr Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
8 :00-Little Houoe On The Prairie 3.4.15; Son Pedro

r---~------~~----------~ :

• M o b i 1e

Your Schools 33.

THE HIIIZD 5ELL --TO THE
PENTAGON t&lt;RASS!

FREE ESTIMATES

...:...:..:..:..J

300 Main St.
Pamaroy, Ohio
Pomeroy m-6282

BUSIIU:.SS SITE -

All WE ' Y~ GOT SO fAR IS SOME GOOD
HIIIZ~WAR.E TO $HOWl NEXT COME$

No Sunday Calis Please

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

~vo30pcl .

Dllll./1&lt; UP, GE'IT!'!
THE I.ADV I
"!IHE·DEVIl" •l&lt;;~,;ioo

ACE HARIMARE

Anyct.y, anytime.
Phone 985-3800

CARTER

6:00-Newo 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:»-NBC New• 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6: CBS N'ws 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3/ Cross-Wits 4: Liars Club '6:
Marty Robbins' Spolllgh18; News JO; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan's Is. 15: Prime Time 20; Know

CAPI'AIN EASY

5:~

6:25--Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:»-Focus on
Columbus~ : News 6; Sunrise Semest.r t ; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6; so-Good Morning, Wnt
Virginia 13; 6:55--Chuck Whitt Reports 10; Goad
Morning, Trl Slate 13.
1:00-TOday 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7:»-Schoolln 10.
8:Do-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:00-Merv Grlttln 3; Phil Donahue 4; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Famlly Affair 8,1 0. ·
9:»-Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffith 8; Price Is Right
10.
JO :OCf-,-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6; Pra Is
Right 8; Mike Douglas 13.
10:»-Hollywood S~uares 3,4,15: Joker's Wild 10.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3.1~; Happy Days 6,13;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Match Game 8, 10.
'11 ;3Cf-,-Knockout3.U; ·Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
8,10; Sesame St. 20; Once Upon A Classic 33 .
11 :55--CBS News 8; LOVIng Free 10.
12 :00-Newscenler 3; News 4,6,10; To Say The Least
15; Divorce Court 8; Midday 13; Music 33.
12 ;3Cf-,-Ryan's Hope 6,13: Bob Broun 4; Chico lo the
Man 15; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:00-AII My Children 6.13; News I;· Young &amp; the
Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15.
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:»-Doctor• 3.4.15: One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
.'
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; Consumer Survival Kit 20
3:1~ral Hospital 6,13: 3:3~AII In tho Family
8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4:00-Speclal Treat 3••• 15; Merv Grlflln 6: Gilligan's
Is. 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10:
Dinah 13.
4:3il-Brady Bunch 1,10.
5: 00-Bonanzo 3; My Three Sons 4; Girnsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 1S.
5: 3!&gt;-0dd Couple 4: News 6: E lee. Co. 2o.33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3.4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:»-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; Liars Club 6; Pop Goes The
Country 8; To Tell The Truth 13; NIIWS 10;
Gilligan's Is. 15; French Chef 20: Parent Ef:

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Her,oes 15.

Biall Siding Co.

~------~T

Let The Opening

HOBSTffiER
REALTY

actual miles. Real good condl·
lion . No rust . 40' alovotor for
grain or hoy , with motor. Con·
!oct. Delbert lows.on. Eagle
Ridge Rood.

Irs Not Just A Job,

. _7~5~!._1 ' - - - -·'...·_ __

PARTS- lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

toolo l, P~, 0.

LOWREY GENIE organ , Model 44 . . NEW HOME~ I "'ile in bock of
Porll(:md. 4 rooms ond both . 2
Has :2 keyboards wifh ocacres. Contact Delbert lawson ,
WILL do roofing .. construcHon ,
componiment .plus builf·1n tope
·Eagle Ridge Road.
pl~mbing and hea ting . No job
recorder , bench and books .
foo Iorge or lao small . Phone
Would make nice Chmfmcn MOVE INTO the sunny state of BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
742-2348.
)
gift . Coli 9-6. (304) 773-5777 ,
remode led , ceramic tile , plum·
Florida; I hove 3 acres ot land in
~her 6, 949-218S. ask for Jock .
bing , carpentry ,· ond general
the little village of Deland Spr ·
maintenance. 13 years ex ·
•ngs on Aragon Avenue . Wr ite ~
1977 CHEVY STEPSIDE pickup. 350
perience. 992-368.5.
Dole E. Wolfe, Rt . I , Box 14-C,
cu .i n. 4 bbl. Portly cu~tomized .
Reedsville
.
Asking price. $5,400. Call
APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY
992-2912.
feoturing Ashleys and com ·
plete selection of cool , gas .
1970 VW IUS rebuilt eng. Gas
wood c;,ulot;ng heo le " .
heater . Rod iallires . some rust .
~C~c~,pe~n~
ie~'·~(~
61~4~)~
6~
~·7~19.:_1~.---·- ­
24 miles per gallon. 992-5980.
WINOOW
CLEANING
. Cammer ·
1977 PASSENGER VAN . A.C. E.l'o
co il · Residen tia l. New Con ·
seat. 3.000 mile. 992 -5770.
st ruction Cleanup . Real . Clean
FIREWOOD. Any lengths or any
Window Co . Phone 992 -701B.
George S. Hobstetter Jr.,
amount. Oel i'lered or moy
Broker
pickup. Phone 949-2563.
MAIN
107'12 Sycamore St.
TROMBONE . GOOD condition.
POMEROY, 0.
Pomeroy, Dhib
$100 . Brke Hart , Racine.
PHON.E
992-6333
949-2593 .
JUST LISTEQ Juot
OHice HoUrs: t A. M. to 4
completed new home.
1971 KAWKASAKI 100 Dirt Bike .
P.M.
Large living room with
HOMESITE$ for sole, I acre and
Street or trail $150. Phone
corner
fireplace
.
3
Close
Thursdays
end
up
..
Middleport
,
near
~utlond .
742-'J077 .
bedrooms, bath , dining
Coli 992.7481 .
Saturdays at noon.
TWO COMPLETE t hair kits , 12
room. lovely kitchen has 32
New 4 bedroom, 2500 sq. ft.
yards of fobris . $175 value for
tt. cabinets and ra.nge.
living space, 21h baths, 12
$60 . Taki ng orders
for
Carport &amp; storage space. 1
room ranch brick. Located
Ckristmos. 992-7075.
level acre . SJS,900.00 .
3 miles from Rt. 7, up West
JUST LISTED - Lovely 2
TWO REGISTERED Polled Hereford
Shade River . Call for an
yr.
old
home
.
3
bedrooms,
bulls . 1 Polled Hereford steer .
appointment.
bath
,
utility,
nice
kitchen,
Good club project. 992-5565.
REALTOR

1965 FORO FAIRLANE 500 . 47 ,000

ntE NAVY

Storm Window~
Ca 11 Professional
Build,ers

Aulomatic:

Transmission Stmu

TEAFORD[B

recruiter :

12.400. Col/.992-3580.
STAACRAFT WINTER Sole

Young's
Carpeting

Siding

Box34
Chester, Ohio
1973 MONTE CARLO, A .C .. P.S.,
c t__
• _ _ _ 1~3~ c
P.B., AM tope. Good gas
mileage . Excellent cond ition . '-----~-==.!..!!"':-'
7.42-2020, after 6.

APPLES . !FITZPATRICK Orchards .
State Route b89. Phone
W ilke-sv ille , 669·3785 .

OPPORTUNJnES

Steam E•troction

5:00-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergenty One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5:30-0dd Couple 4; News 6; Ele&lt;. Co. 20,33; Mary

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SWAIN

S1perior

An~

Hotpolnl Refrlgerotor
1 New 20 cubic fl . Chest
Fr"ter
$15.00 Discount
(1) Good Rtlrigorotor suo
Uprighl Frteter
5225

We h•ve enlarged our
ser"¥ice depitrtment and
will service Hotpoint itnd
other br.ands.

NINE WE:EK old Beoglv pups . Rob·
bit dogs. Starte-d and lroin,-d .
_!l~~nd~..._(6!_4..J?~~- 2~:2_1 _._ _
FOR
STUD
S.r vic• :
AKC
registered coc k~~tr
•pon iel.
8lock and ton. Clorhdol+tt
lines . Showquolity. J &amp; 0 Ken·
nels. 7.e2-3162.

RISING SlAR fliennel . Boord1ng .
Indoor ond ou tdoor
runs .
Groom•ng all • breeds . Clean
sanitary facilities . Cheshire .
, Phone (61•) J67-0292 .

tfJt your water FrH

FOR SALE

APPUANCE

Afi\C IRISH S•tter puppies , 6 wlu.
old.
P~onf'
1-304 ·882 -:2397,
offer S pm
· - - _ -...,.. __

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 22,1977
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:5o-PTL Club 13;
Sunrise Semnfer 10; 6:00-PTL Club u.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER21, 1977

Corel.ne ond adoption Serv •c•
992 -7680 . 142-31 62, 991·S..27 .

AKC REGtSrEREO pekinge1e pup·
pies. Phone (304~ 882· 2b83 .

•279.95

Let us

saddles . Ruth R.. ves A lbany
(614t 69B .Jm.

11 :3Cf-,-Johnny Carson 3.4,1 5; Movie " Let' a Swllch" t ;
ABC News 33; Movie "Kiss the Girls ttnd Make
Them Ole" 10.
12:00-Janakl 33: News 6,13.
12 :»-FBII6; lronsldt 13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,~; 1:»News 13.

.TELEVISION ·viEWING

Business Services

HOOF HOllOW Horu1 . Buv sell
trod• or tro.,, . New ond used

CAMPER , $600. Also
horse
tro1 ler , $4)(). Phono (6 14) 698·
3200.

FUR OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

DICK TRACY_

an

of hands with analysla to
Rive thoSe who play in the
tournament a chance to see
what happens when a hand&lt;
b played fifty thouaand
limes by all sorts of
players."
Jlrii: "Today's hand was
· played In the summer charity game. The bidding in the.
box is how it usually wenl
after a club opening by
North. Four spades was also
reached if North patllted."
Oswald; "Four spades
:nade moat of the time. Most
ieclarer.t would try 1 flneue
llalnst West's queen . of
olubs. Thoee who didn't usu.
tlly wound up In the soup
while thooe who played no:rump only came to elcht
tricks against the nonnat
heart opening."

~-·SJ4·

A Canadian reader wanta
lo know what we do In third
seat. We hold:
• Kx •Qxx eJx•
10 I.

I[

z.

We Pass. Opening thla 110rt
of hand in any POSition is far
more likely to lead •lo a loss
than to a catn:
f NEWSPAP£R ENTERPRISE ASSH .J

(l'or a copy of JACOBY MODERN, , Hod II to: 'Win at

Bridge," care of thiS n•w•pa-

per, P.0 . Bor 469, Radio C/11
Starlon, New York, N.Y. IIJOIO.)

MAW!! TATeR GOT
A RINGER!!

THE POLAR SEARS ARE
IN TROUBLE TODA¥

I I ill

·''"''!
ll'

RUTLAND' e

--111171JnLI~ Fut~re

Synd1c:111. Inc

.A

e
r

e
0

s
0

t
)

e

'
'

�I

~i: : {' : : : : :; : 'tt:::;:::~t:ff{:;::::t:::i:t:::::::::t:::: :::::::::::::t::,::::;:;;'::':::t:rft:::;:;:;:::;::t:J:Kt~:;;::::J:tmn::::;:?:'ii!'!l!·

\2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov. 21,1977

Hussein willing to discuss
pe~ce issues with Israelis .

Punishment is
given firemen
as discipline
WASHINGTON C.H.. Ohio
1UP! I - The \0 firefigh ters
who

st a~ ed

u

three-dav

1'\; \'J ll'
.[1.

.. sirk·out .. last week to
rressure the City Council into..

\\ '

t.l v

mak inl! an
acceptable
t'0iltra c t of£cr , cfln ta inin g
~n1ge un.·reases and benefits,

"IV

•·til not be diSciplined but will
l•tw w gtw up three days of

i

. ..,

:1:::':

,··

•.'
1,.\ill

.

their a~cumulated vacatlon
tilllP.

Thev rrturned to work

carlv ·S:lturdav after Local
24 7i of the ·Int ernational
Assoriattnn of Firefighters
::::::::

Rio has four starters back from
last year's championship quintet

Otief John Rockhold to man
the department the rest of the
week .

~~=~~~~~~-~~~~~~-~~•-w•~~~~--~

tre

If ~ou

1•nthe.~ed·

Christmas
e

.

\

·

. •••

RIO GRANDE- With thetr

!~I(

sights set on another Mid·
Ohio Conference cham·
pionship, Coach Art Lanham
!I! and his Rio Grande College
I( and
Community College
Redmen will open their 1977I( 78 basketball season Friday,
Nov. 25, as they host West
!I! Virginia State in the opening
U game of the second annual
?l Rio Grande Lions Thanks·
W giving Tournament.
!I!
Smith
and . Streets'
I( "Basketball Yearbook " rated
fi the Redmen 18th in the .
fi nation .
'iJ. The Redrnen have seven

!
'a

1

/

lettermen, including four

il

Starters, returning from last

W year's 22-4 squad. Six fopt, six

W ·inch .enior Gil Price,
GaUipolis, heads the group.
Price, who averaged 19.1
points and nearly 8 rebounds
w per. game, was ·named
VJ honorable mention AIIII! American in the National
Association of Intercollegiate
· !.l Athletics (NAIA).
W At the other forward
W positions will be 6'4" Greg
111 James, Bidwell . James, who
I( started last. season, averaged
Vi 11 points and 9 rebounds per
W .ganie during· his freshman
!I! year. He lias the capability of
I( picking up the scoring slack
left by the graduation of All'iJ. American Jim Noe.
'i1. Guard positions will be
!I! filled up by Mark Sw~in, a 6'
I( junior from Crown Ctty who
'iJ. averaged nearly 12 points per
'/l game last season, and junior
111 Dale Royse, who led the
I( Redmen in assists while
fi playing excellent defense.
il Royse and Swain will have
W a strong supporting case at
!I! the guard spots with fresh!1 man
Vincent
Phelps,
il sophomore Ron Burrell and
W senior Don Gibson.

il
'a

g

il

·~

il
w
w
w
w
?l

SEE US!

'1l

Being Broke during the holidays may not

.

be the

$1

~~.

$3 5

The otber center is 6'6"

Skipper Johnson, Gallipolis.

ELBERFELDS -IN.,_,POMEROY
"

JohnsOn , a senior, is lin-

proving daily and should see
a great deal of action this
season.

·'

Adding to the Redmen ·s
overall depth will be 6'6"
junior Dan Bise, 6'4" junior
Paul Niday, and 6' guard Dan
Purcell.
Coach Lanham, now in his
18th year at the helm of the
Redmen, says this team
could be even stronger than
last year's squad.
.
Tickets for the Lions Club
Tournament are on sale now .
at Lyne Center or from any
Lions Club member

OPEN FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY
NIGHTS UNnL
8 O'CLOCK

.•

VOL XXVIII NO. 155

on the retw-n of the West
Bank to rule by Amman, the
source said.
In departing from Israel,
Sa&lt;jat left behind a challenge ·
to the Jewish nation : Make

By Polly Cramer
w
POLLY'S
PROBLEM
w DEAR POLLY
-I bought a

DA VTON (UP!) - Virgil
Brown of Cleveland, a
Republican candidate for

AWeek For 49 weeks and we pay t~e
50th week for you.
•

Stop In Today and open your Fanners "
Bank Christmas Club and Don't Be · ,.
Caught In the Reel Next Yea·r.

the
state's
No.
2
administrative position to be

I

more than a ceremonial post .
Brown, director of the

Cuyahoga County Board of
Elections and a former
Cleveland Council member,
told a Young Republican
group and members of the
Montgomery County
Republican Committee more
importance can be given the
l)eulenant governor's posi·
lion because the nominee will
be paired with the governo~
for the first time in 1978.

Farmers. Banki
'il

I

'

UNGERIE
ON 2ND R.OOR

Monday. Nov. 21 thru Sunday, Nov. 27

BEEF &amp; CHEESE

...

ENCHILADA
SPECIAL
PRICE

No limit to qUantity of purthase. OHer good for
Qrive~ ln or Carr;y.Qut Service Only. '

.~ :.~:o=-.v..:.

X';&gt;QO:W.."'I.;•:&gt;o.~.,....,

,~-vll

JNews.· .• in Brief~

Jan Alkire Hill, Middleport
Elementary School third
grade teacher, is the Mid·
dleport Business and Professional Women's " Young

Special of the Week

This special is offered to you to acquaint you with
the goodness and economy of our homemade
1
Mexican food.

en tine

.I

&amp;RCALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to 60¥.1 Coal St., at I :31 p.m.
Monday for Nellie Hanson ·
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

I•

~

.

{.. .'

•

•

'

•

I

:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Price of
cars up
WASHiNGTON ·(UPI)
The colt o( liviJlf! .rose 0.3
per~nt in October for the
fourth consecutive inonth of
.moderate consumer inflation,
the Labor Department
reported today. But prices for
new cars and gasoline in·
creased sharply.
The slowing of inflation
combined with pay hikes and
a longer workweek increased
the average urban worker 's
spendable earnings 1.1
percent from September, the
department said.
Inflation was harder. on
new car buyers than any
other class of American last
month due to the introduction
of new models, the report
said. Not only did new car
prices rise twice as fast as the
overall inflation rate, but the
value of the trade-in plunged.
Used car prices decreased 2.1
percent.
.
The cost of driving reflected in gasoline and
mo!Jr oil prices - rose five
times faster than the overall
index. Those petroleum
products went up 1.4 percent.

*

SWORN IN- Jim Neutzling, who was elected to council at the November electionJor a
four year tenn, was named Monday night to fill the unexpired term of Phil Globokar wh o
resigned Oct. I. Neutzllng, who will be sworn in for his own, full term Jan . !; was sworn in
above by Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews prior to the council meeting Monday nighl.
Left to right, Neutzllng and Mayor Andrews.
'

School returned
to Meigs Local
The old Pomeroy Senior
High
School
building
deeded to the Village of
Pomeroy by the Meigs Local
Board of Education, will be
given back to the school
board.
. This decision was made at
the request of Mayor
Clarence Andrews at a
meeting of council Monday
night.
It was noted by the mayor
that since the village has
· been denied federal money to
repair the building, it is
useless to continue ,paying
insurance, gas and electric
bills.
Police Chief Jed Webster
and Capt. Henry Werry asked
for an explanation of the
ordinance that requires an
officer to work on a holiday if
that is his r~gular. work day-.
Under the ordmance an
officer must work on a
holiday if that is his reg~lar
dayto work and be. patd tune
and a half. If he fatls to work
he would be docked for that

day;s work.
Council agreed that there is
nothing they can do in regard
to the holiday coming up,
, Thanksgiving, but decided to
have a safety committee
meeting soon and, hopefully,
make changes in the or·
dinance.
•
Mayor Andrews said
village employes have begun
work cleaning up debris on
the property owned by Amy
Kingsland Jones next to the
new Stiffler store on
Pomeroy's West Main Street.
He and Lou Osborne are to
meet with the ·. Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce today
on free parking for shoppers
a week or two before
Christmas.
Council asked dtizens of
the communitY to let their
feelings known in regard to
the experimental light placed
near the fire station coal
trucks traveling th~ough
lf&gt;wn, and ~r\ the proposed
· coal tipple !o be bulft near

Clifton, W. Va.
Council asked residents
who wish to express opinions

on these issues to attend the
next regular meeting of
council on Dec. 5 or to notify
the mayor of their concern.
Council.agreed to purchase
a new hitch for the snow plow
on the new truck at a cost of
$550 from ·Southeast Ohio
Equipment Co., Gallipolis,
and a new typewriter for $145
and repair the old one for $3!i
to $50.
The mayor's report for the
month ' showing receipts of
$3,286.25 was approved.
The meeting was opened
with prayer by the Rev.
William Middleswarth.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Osborne, Harr'y
Davis, Jim Ne~tzling, Harqld
Brown and Larry Powell,
councll members, Jane
Walton, clerk, Jack Kraut:rer..
Chief Webster, Captain
Werry and Rev. Middleswarth.

Juveniles are arrested

''

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

pastor at the Syracuse
Methodist Church, will speak
at the Syracuse service .
Special mu sic will be
provided by the choir from
Asbury Methodist Church
and by a soloist from ljW1
Church of the Nazarene.
Other . ministers and ·
laypersons from the area will
be participating. The people
of the area are invited to
participate in these services
of public thanksgiving.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, chance of mixed
raiD and snow lD the nortltwestern seettonS and rain
eloewhere Thursday and
Friday with mostly fair
weather Saturday. Highs
!rom the mid 40s to mid 50s,
and lows In the 30s Thursday and 20s Saturday.

Careerist" of 1977 . .
Selected last . night by a
panel of judges composed of
Joan Wood and Lucy Ear- ,
wood of the Gallipolis BPW
Club, and Airwana Plants,
Point Pleasant BPW Club,
Mrs. Hill will riow compete
for district honors. Judging
. was based on a talk given at·
the meeting dealing with
career goals and the enrichment which a career brings
into the life of a woman.
Runner-up for the title was
Gail I:lavenport, and the other
contestants were Lynn Brown
and Debbie Gerlach.
Mrs. Hill, who resides with
her husband, Marvin, and
two children, Andy, four, and

SPECIAL NOTE
The Sharon Smilh in
University Hospital is not
Sharon Faye Smith, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Jenni, one, at Racin~, is a
graduate of Southern Local
Smith. Pomeroy .
~r «:&gt;, r &lt;:&gt; ,r- &lt;) ,r. &lt;:&gt; ,, &lt;l).,' High School and Ohio University.
·
rA;.;.o.~:~ .c::·-~~&gt;~~.-~-~~-,.) ~
...(\;.,.:,..~ . j, .. ·. ...... ~.·:-·; 'q
The runner-up is the wife of
' . '
• ..
••
"''I
Jerry Davenport, Mid.
~
dleport, and is a radiologic
nuclear technologisl at the
'(&gt; Pleasant
Valley Hospital. She
~ has a daughter, Heather,
'.... three. Mrs. Davenport
· ~
received her training at St.
Joseph
Hospital
in
P.arkersbw-g, with additional
instruction at the Lawrence
County General Hospital in
Ironton.
Chainnan for the contest
was Carol Lyons.

'1 think some of the worst

;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Teacher is ''Young .careerist"·for '77

ELBERFELDS .

REG. 95'

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ,

1

!ears of the other Arab
nations have been allayed ,"
press secretary ·Jody Powell
said . "In his public
statements, Sad at presented
not just the view from
Egypt. "
State Department officials ,
said Sadat's trip had raised
the prospects for Middle East
peace to the highest point
(ConUnued on page 12)

scheduled in two churches

The second application Morris has completed is under the
Applications for two federal grants to carry out special
programs in the Meigs Local School District have been "TAG" program for talented and gifted children. The request
completed and forwarded to Washingtoo, D.C. according to is for a grant of $32,000 which would be used to employ an
itinerant teaCher, called a "circuit rider" in the application.
district director of curriculum Dan Morris.
There are approximately 60 students in the Meigs Local
One application, Morris told the hoard of education Monday
School
District with an I.Q. of 120 or above. The special
night, is for $92,000 and would be used on a program of early
who would travel from school to school to meet with
teacher,
education for the handicapped of the district. Centers would be
these
children
, would arrange special enrichment programs
established at the Rutland and Pomeroy Elementary Schools
for
them
.
There
would also be contact between the TAG
where handicapped children would attend a kindergarten type
,
teacher
and
the
regular
teachers of these children so that these
program.
'
teachers
could
also
~elp
in the overaU program .
Teachers would have special skills; there would be physical
Morris
said
he
has
"high
hopes" that both programs wiD
therapy involved, and a special bus would be provided to
be
approved
and
funge(l
,
He
was
commende~ by the board for
accommodate the pupils. A l~tter Q£. endorsement Jrom the
state director of special servict!S accompanied the application preparing the detailed program applications. Morris indicated
that if the 1'AG program is t!lfned down in Washington perhaps
prepared by Morris.
_l
·
fundsfiJr.it will be available through othersow-ces.
&lt;·'"""""""'"'-"""''''''."''•:•:·:···~&lt;•'""':':':&gt;."&lt;":&gt;:'·:-~~-~~~~-~~"''«
• ...................-.....-................ ' ••.••• ' ..
.....
.................. :-.-........, ......
The board placed a curfew on school property for all
people other than those involved in school activities. The time
of the curfew from September through March wiD be 7 p.m. to
7 a.m. at ihe high school and from 6 p.m. to 7 a.m. at the other
district schools.
By United Press International
The measure is designed to help reduce vandalism which
COLUMBUS, OHIO - THE "FIRST STEP" towards has been considerable in the district. The curfew will be in
obtaining a major league bas~ ball franchise for Ohio's capital effect year round with slightly different hours in the summer
city was revealed today with the announcement of proposed months. Persons found to be loitering or present on school
plans to enlarge Franklin County stadium.
properties without permission of a school authority or employe
"Obviously there is great potential in·Columbus for major wlll be considered trespassing and will be prosecuted.
league baseball," said Generai_Manager George Sisler of the
Casting -a dissenting vote· on the measw-e was Mrs.
International League Columbus Clippers, who hosted the news Jennifer Sheets who said she felt facilities of the schools should
.conference at whic~ the plans were announced. "The Clippers be available for longer hours than . those designated ..
have enjoyed unprecedented success this year in the . particularly in the areas where there are no other facilities for
·
International League," Sisler added, "but if ther~'s a chance children playing.
for major league baseball to become a reality in Columbus,
The board named to the substitute teaching list Diana
we're all for it."
Williams, Linda Aikman, Madhu Malhotra, Sandy Luckeydoo,
Barbara DeYoung, and Margaret E. Lewis with Mrs. Lewis
LONDON, OHIO- WILLIAM RIDENOUR, 29, serVing a also named to do supplementary tutoring for two Pomeroy
life sentence for murder from Montgomery County , escaped Elementary students. Named substitutes in non-teaching jobs
from the London Correctional institute today, sources said: were Mary.Dorst, Evelyn Stanley, cooking positions; Darlene
Ridenow- was last seen at 1:30 a.m. and was reported Barrett, Jeannie Taylor, Sharon Roseberry, Darla Hawley,
missing to Ohio police agencies at 3:50a.m. Details on how the aides and Deborah Hawley, aide and secretary.
escape was made were not immediately available.
Resignations of Harold White as a bus driver effective as
of
Dec.
2 and Cecelia Hart as. a high school English teacher
'
COLUMBUS - THE STATE DEPARTMENT of were accepted. White was named a substitute bus driver and
· (Continued on pace II)
·
(Continued on page II)
~

lieutenant governor, wants

will be of some help to you. POLLY
DEAR POI,LY - I had the
misfortune to touch some
plastic wrap with my hot
electric skillet and it melted
right onto the skillet. I tried
everything to no avail. Final·
ly I used a commercial
cleaner, which is sold for the
purpose.of removing burned
on grease, left it for 60
minutes and was able to peel
the plastic right off. - MARJ.
DEAR POLLY - I used to
haye trouble with my nine
month old daughterls bottle
leaking whenever 1 took lier.
out. Recently my husbanq
discovered the tops from
baby juice jars lit on to the
tops of glass and plastic baby
bottles perfeclly. Now I save
the tops from juice jars and
use them orrthe large bottles
when going out. I just carry a
nipple along to put on the bottle when I am ready to use it
so there is no more leaking
for me.- MRS. N.L.
DEAR POLLY - I wear
footsies m~ch of the time and
had a hard time keeping them
iogether in a drawer until I
snapped each pair together
with a snap clothespin. I also
used such clothespins to hold
shorts on a hanger.- PAT
PQlly will send you one of
her · signed tha nk·you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in ca~e of th1s
newspaper.

at

In Washington, the White
House said President Carter
believes a Geneva pea ce
conference is now closer to
reality as a result of Sadat's
to
breakthrough
trip
Jerusalem .

Thanksgiving Eve seroices

Funds asked for handicapped
and specially gifted students

New duties for
Lt •.Govemor
are predicted

Help for wrinkled knits

or 2000

I

pre-season practice and
should give Rio added
strength inside.

•

e

has been very impressive in

•

5

so~.

•

Polly Cramer

Y1 wrinkled white nylon knit
ideal way to get into that joyous spirit.• .SO don't . Y1 shell thinking I could remove
'i1. the wrinkles but have had no
I washed it with
be caught red faced next year, Stop in and open
w luck.
lukewann water and dripil dried it from the machine. I
a Farmers Bank Christmas Club today.
washed it again and dryed it
w in the dryer on the delicate
cycle but the wrinkles are
w still
5
there. -J.H.
00, 5 00, S}QOO
00,
w DEAR
J .H. - I have had
w fairly good luck pressing such
wrinkles with a pressing cloth
w that
been wrung out of
~ whitehasvinegar
and water.
w Some knits that might flatten
w out too much from the weight
the iron would have to be
w ofpressed
.
I
over very lightly. Try
J
'i1. this and I do hope it works for
w you.-POLLY.
w DEAR POLLY- To save on
human energy as well as elec·
w tricity
I fold handkerchiefs
w and smooth
them as they
'i1. come out of the dryer. I then
w put the unplugged iron on lop
of the hankies on top of the
w dryer.
The heat from the
'i1. dryer will iron the hankies
.
'i1. when the next load is put in. NORMA
DEAR POLLY - About
one·third of my iron is
discolored from something
w that stuck to it. Since the
silver coated ironing board
POMEROY, OHIO
cover is torn1 thought it·could
'i1. be that and used a scraping
?l cloth on the iron but to no
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor .
'i1. avail. Any suggestions' .A.
Member Feder.al Deposit Insurance Corporation ,
il MRS.R.H
DEAR MRS.R.H .A.
~~~~,~~--~~· .· B·=~
· ·9-~9aH&amp;~~~---.-.B¥-tw-B¥B¥~~~ Perhaps the following letter

Pay·

The battle for center is between a pair of jumping
jacks. Dean Fitzpatrick, a
6'6" sophomore from Ironton,

FIVE GENERATIONS - Steven Brian Cook, being held by his great-great·
grandmother, Carrie Smith of Middleport, makes five generations in her family. Standing
are Steven Ray Cook, of Scott Depot, father ; Patty Cook of St. Albans, grandmother, and
. Irene Lamont of Charleston, great-grandmother.

POLLY'S POINTERS I

il
il

!

DANNER ASSIGNED 'rO MEIGS COUNTY - Trooper.Thomas D. Danner, 35, right, is
welcomed to the Galila·Meigs Post, State Highway Patrol, by Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth,
Commande~ . A 1960 graduate of Chauncey-Dover High School, Trooper Danner graduated
from the Ohio Patrol Academy in 1967. He has been stationed at the Ironton Patrol Post the
past 10 ye~rS': Ptl . D"!lner has been a~igned as a resident trooper in Meigs County. A
former restdent of Galh11 County and Gallipolis native, Danner spent tl)ree years in the U.S.
Army, attended the Gallipolis Business College and was a member of th e Ohio Valley
Pubhshmg Co. advertising staff prior to joining the patrol. His wife Beverly and dau ghter
Deborah, 15, Susan, 13 and Leah, 7, are reisidlng in South Point but will move back to this
area shortly.

GREG JAMES

MARK SWAIN

Denan who lS not a umon
me m ber. and Assistant

0\&amp;,

I!Je occupied West · Bank ,
reported that Jordan's King
Hussein was interested in
talks with Israeli leaders, but
added that this depended on
· the results of Sadat's secret
talks with Prime Minister
Manahem Begin.

41

g&lt;•t an offer of a 5 percent pay
increase and eight additional
varatwn how-s per person.
The \0 started their action
Wt'dnesdav m.;ning, leaving
Fi re Chief Maynard L.
Denen I his son,
fireman Pat
.
.

~

world by coming to
Jerusalem , asked the Israelis
to reciprocate by making
Jordan's informatit'n
concessions on the issues that
minister today praised
threaten Middle East peace
· Egyptian President Anwar
- the lands captured from
Sadat's visit to Israel and the
the '' hard and drastic" the Arabs in 1967 and
jsraeli government radio said
decisions
necessary for a Palestinian rights .
King Hussein is interested in
The government radio, Middle East peace .
''Thei-e is a great need for
talking with Israeli. leaders.
Sadat ended his historic hard and drastic decisions .
Jordanian Information however, sald Jordanian
had
been three-day mission to Israel Let us hope , all of us, that we
Minister Adnan Abu Odeh authorities
told reporters in Amman, disappointed by Begin's. Monday after pledging• with can keep up the momentum,"
"The visit of President Sadat noncomm ittal reply to Israeli Prime Minister Mena- cSadat said .
"! have already taken my
has achieved its goals. This Sadat's call for territorial hem Begin there would be
00 more war" between their
share in my decision to visit
visit has broken the ice and withdrawal.
It quoted a sow-ce in the nations.
here and I shi.u be really
removed the psychological
He flew back to Egypt, his looking forward to those deci·
barrier and brought fresh occupied town of Ramallah
hope for resuming the who is close to the Jordanian plane flanked by Israeli jets sions from Prime Minister
Geneva peace conference court and had returned from until Egyptian air space aP- Begin .and the Knesset (par·
the Jordanian capital of proached, and was received liament),''
within a new framework.
by million s of cheering
It was the first praise. for Amman Monday.
Egyptians
who lined his
But
the
sow-ces
said
if
there
Sadat's mission to come from
any of Egypt's "con· is good news from the talks, motorcade route chanting,
frontation" allies bor- Jordan may follow the Egyp- "With soul and blood we
redeem you, Sadat."
tian initiative.
dering on Israel.
Sadat, who drew the wrath
The Jordanians were also
The Israeli government
Community Thanksgiving
radfo, quotiing a source on unsure about Sadat's position of virtually the entire Arab
Eve Service will be con·
ducted at the Church of the
•
Nazarene in Middleport and
at the Presbyterian Church in
Syracuse on Wednesday at
7:30p.m.
The Rev . George Glaze,
pastor at the Middl eport
Church of Christ, will be the
speaker at the service in
Middleport. Special music
will
be furnished by the
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1977
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS Church of the Nazarene.
The Rev . Harvey Koch,
By RICHARD H. GROWALD
JERUSALEM (UP!) -

YOUNG CAREERIST of the Middleport BPW Club selected last night is Jan Hill,
center . She was presented a chann by the contest chairman, Carol Lyons, right. Runner-up
in the contest, Gail Davenport, received a gifl{rom the club.

Sheriff James J . Proffitt
today aMounced an"ests ·of
juveniles in the breaking and
entering of the Racine
Elementary School over ihe
weekend and · in two attempted entries of the same
premises within the last two
weeks.
William Nease, custodian
at the school, discovered the
school had been entered and
teachers' ·desks ransacked
when he opened the building
for classes Monday morning.
Entl')' was made into the

were in the building two other
times during the night.
'While deputies were inpane in the outside door of the
boys' restroom. The burglars · vestigating, the boYS involved
attempted to forcibly enter Implicated a third juvenile in
two metal cupboarda. Stolen attempting to enter the
were a number of staplers, building on the weekend of
pencil s, pens, notebooks, November II by breaking out
scissors, and paper weights, a window pane in the same
!rom the desks in the various boys restroom door . The only
rooms. Many of the items problem that time was that
they broke out the wrong
have been recovered.
According
to
the pane and were unable to
statements from two of the reach in and unlock the door.
Later in the week they .
juveniles, they entered the
building Fri(fiy evening, and
(C.Unued on Jlllille II)
Racjne Elementary Building

by breaking out a window

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