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\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;:'·:-~~-~~~~-~~"''«
• ...................-.....-................ ' ••.••• ' ..
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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

�! - rhe D Ul\ St&gt;ntmt&gt;l

~1lddl.~(.).)ft

Ponwro\ 0 T\Jesdav: Nov 22 19ii

A\1M A.CAu.IN YA~
cuT, !316 CJ.r...f!

Soon you can look ahead

Wo':,kers will predici
what pensions will be
~nrunt'

\\ rki.'r;,

w tn

bi'~
~)(

193~

n \\Ill be 3ble to

1 ~ k '~:.1rs nheil d t,, "-ee \~ha t
lhf!' ''111 hmi:'toli\ i"('\0 \\hen
t.ht ' ntlre
Tlus "til b.: made possible
b\ ,1 01:' \\ "' o;;rem rnntmned tn
Sncml Serurtt\ billS rNemh
Jl&lt;1S"fti b\ the Ht)use and
&amp;mite The btU"' nrm CH\alt
fin 11 negnt 1'HiMIS b' a Hnuse
Slnlte
cnn frren ce
The bt.&gt;1 eflt pr0\ ISWOS \H'nt
l1rceh unnnttccd m pubhctt)
' Hr ht:&lt;l\ ' Soc!Bl Securtt\
ttt x UJcreast:s m both btlls
} nm~ " ntkers \\hO "ill
n tire 111 the H ar 2012 at 65
L m d1 littlt.~ planmng n ~ ~ tf
thl' nh knrm \\ hat theLr
S.ICI ll Suunt' \\tll be rn
dolia rs B' then toda) s
C'l nupt of the purchasmg
pn\er 11f dnll 1rs rna' be

e Jmn~..;less
\f

helpful

fL

boWle&lt;&gt;d up and down durmg
the prClg ram s ftrst 37 \ears
29 per&lt;'ent tn 19&gt;4 :H percent
&gt;n 1955 bark to 30 percent 1n
!964 The reeeon "as that
Congress adjusted benefits to
t11e cost of \!\ mg onh ever)
few ;ears

In 1972

&lt; lf1Hlll ttn

11

P&lt;um•d $10 000 thts \ t&gt;ar and
retlrffi next \ear ('Jl a S5 ()()()..
1 'eat
pensh)n hts re·
placement ratt&gt; \\ (lULd be 50
pe1 cent
The
a\e ra ge
Soct al
Securm i eplarement rate

\HII

be to

''lm L ts railed the
r e pl1CPT!lent rate
- a

krH H

\\ nrkci.JS penswn calculated
;JS a pc n ent..1ge of hts " 1ges
bt&gt;f re he rdtre s If a " nrker

Congress lied

retirement beneftts

tfl

the

cost of li\1ng This ~as
supposed to st ab1hze the
replacement rate, but
because of a nuscalculauon tt
threatened to make the rate

go hay\&lt;Jre
The a\erage workers replacement rate IS now 44
percent and ts due to riSe to 46

percent m 1979 Under the
19i2 fo rmula tt could nse to 67
percent bv the year 205() and
for low-tnrome workers could
nse to 106 percent that vear

- that 1s they would get
btgger penswns than thetr
\\ orktng earmngs
The cost of such mcreases

r-

Replacement rate for
calculating pensions
WASHINGTON (UPI) Here ts an example of the
Social Securlt) replacement
1 1te used to calculate the
p!'nswn benefits of a worker
~

a\ erage wage earner

thts vear makes $10 000 By
1987
not
co untmg
promotwns

tnflatwn would

push his wage to $18 619 or
895 after taxes He plans

$14

to rct1re ln 1988 at ag.e 65
In that year With a
repla cement ra te of 43

p!'rcenl (Qf $18 619) under the
Senate btl! his penswn would
be $8 006 tax free
So he 11 need $6 889 be) ond
Ius &amp;lew\ Secunty pens10n If
he \\ants the same relative

standard of h\ mg hls after
tax earnrngs would buv nov;
U th1s workers wife IS not

ln cludmg a nonworking wtfe,
the rate would be 51 6 percent

and thetr penston would be
$9,607 This IS only an
estimate of pensiOn The

actual amount would be
computed on the bas1s of hiS
actual wages over most of hiS
workmg life w1th an
adJUStment for nauonal wage
inflatwn

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Fats in the blood

•'

sktn a nd fa t removed, f1sh
and once m a wh1le, three
: • ounces of lean beef and lamb
r
Mv dtary products are sktm

Illllk low fat cottage cheese,
polyunsaturated margarme
1

,.•1•

and corn ml one egg a week

Recently. I had a blood test
ami

tn

one

year

the

' · cholesterol dropped to 244
•r bu t the tnglycendes went up
•·

.

', •
·'
•• •

.:

to 178 1 How can that be? One
goes down , and the other goes
up Is one of these more un·

portant tha n the other '
Plea se let me know the safe
!ugh nonna lfor tnglycendes
TI1at IS what I am concerned

a bout What shall I do to br
Ing 1t down?

DEAR READER
• • 1nglycendes are stmply fats
: - three fatty acids attached
:·

''

to

glyce rtne

(glycerol)

1,

C1lolesterol IS more stable

t.

and reci rculates from the

r

liver, through the bile mto the

'.

mtestme, a od IS reabsorbed

mto the blood agam It 1s not
, • Tctabolized the same way as
:: fat (tnglycendes) at all
•.

As

a

result,

the

:: tnglycendes m your blood
{-: nuctuate more read1ly If you
'. have JUst eaten fat - tn the
1
•
past eight hours -your blood
:• level may be high because of
wha t you ate eight hours ago
•• l'.e usually consider a fastmg
•
• ' level of less than 150 as nor• mal Cholesterol is less ltkely
t~ so affect"i It will fluctuate though from stress and
other factors The cholesterol

hike-s Congress n')" plans
S. th the Hnuse and Senate
b11ls attempt ttl cnrrect that
19u2 nustake thn, ugh a nev.
S\Stem known a ~ " .1g,e

mdexmg

Benefits w1ll be

bast&gt;d nn 'o\ (lrkmg ltfe
Cllf rt&gt;&lt;ted for mflatu:m Usmg

this mechamsm the Senate
~ill IS designed to make the
rep lacement rate for an
aHrage w "ll"ker rettnng at
65 rome &lt; ut at 43 percent
gt-neraw:m after generatwn
to the \Oar 2050
The a\eragr " orker toda\
IS s0me0ne "ho makes
$!0 000
If hiS "tie did not work
the1r replacement rate as a
couple " ould be 64 5 p!'r cerlt
If she " "rked for a'erage

wages she wou ld be enutled
to her own 43 percent
Both could reure at age 62
at a reduced replacement
rate 34 4 percent for one and
51 6 percent as a couple 1f the
Wife dtdn t work
Replacement rates also
var} \\tth rncome le\el For a
lo \\ mcome " flrker ( 0ne
earrung less than $4 600 m

1916)
the
tndl\ 1dual
replacement rate at &amp;5 would
be 54 p!'rcent For a high;Jatd
worker ( earnmg

O\ er

the

Social Securtt) ba se wage
now $16 500 but riSing to
$30 300 by 1985 ) 1t " ould be 32
p!'rcent of the base
The House bill at first

publish a table based on the
fm 11

'erswn of the Ia'\\
sh11"mg prl"&lt;'tSPh "hat rates
~n "11 h "hat mcomes

J r•hn

Snee

Scc unh
planner

a l SOc ial

Admimstralln n
sa'~ ''hat t1ll thts

level 1s a better mdicator of
nsk of a heart attack than the
tr~glycertde level I am sen·
ding you The Health Letter
number 1 2 Cholesterol
Tnglycendes Blood Fats
Atherosclerosis to g1ve you
more details about the relation of these to each other
Others who want this mfonnatwn can send 50 cents
With a long stamped selfaddressed envelope for this
issue to me m care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551,
Radio Ctty Statwn New
York NY 10019
The size of the particles
made up ol tr1glycendes
eholesterol and a blood protem ( hpoprotems) IS
sometunes useful tn reftrung

the nsk factor
A smgle cholesterol or
tnglycendes test IS not sufh
ctent to detenrune the usual
level You need mo(f than
one blood test to hnd out what
your nsk really IS
Laboratory test methods
vary, too The method used
for manl'i off tee and hospital
blood samples y1elds results
that are 10 to 15 percent
higher toan the methods that
are used to analyze blood
samples tn conJunctiOn With
nalional research programs
The natwnal studies IO·
diealmg that levels of
cholesterol below220 are optunalln tenns of rrununtziOg
nsk o! a heart attack are
comparable to many off1ce
and hospital detenrunatwns
of around 250
The next tune you have
your test, don t eat anythmg
With any fat m It for the even
mg meal, then bave your
blood test m the mormng
while fastmg That rrugh! un
prove t~-f accuracy of your
tnglycen&lt;le detennmatwn

~~There

adds up to ts
It tells a ~UI who s gomg
tn.. retlrt' m tht&gt; \ea r 2000 that
his le\el o&gt;f h\lng on Social
Secuntv benefits compared
to the \\Orking populauon of
that tm1t&gt; \\Ill be m the same
proportion as the level of
l1vmg of 1 ettrees today
compared to the " or king

population at th1s ume

•

• wtld card" spot

•
'

Berry's World

Kill instinct in
men denied •

rates m the fmal bill will
affect man) generations of
Americans jet the) were

sc arce!)

debated

by

Cnngress

In bflth the House and
Senate the replacement rates

By AL ROSSITER JR
UP! Science Editor
WAS IDNGTON (UP!)
Anthropol og tst Ri chard
I eake) disputes the oft·
proposed idea that humans

\\ere set m subcomrruttee and

never challenged after that
ln earh rase the rates were

chose n to be shghtly below
what would be the case m
19u9 under the 19u2 Ia" - 5
p!'rcent belo\\ 1n the House
\ erswn 2 5 percent

Ul

the

Senate s
The House bill provides a
Ill·) ear guarantee of 19u9
le vel retirement benehts the
Senate f1ve so that \\ orkers
who n0w are a fe" years fr(lm
retirement wtU not sufft&gt;r an

unexpected cut

Hundley chatted dunng an
mtervtew about law} ermg

A youthful 52 and the father
of s1x chtldren, he 1s the son of
a New York ctvtl engmeer

and the brother of two

Are you ready lor my woolly bear caterptllar
reprJrf?

countab1hty behmd the myth
that an indictment whtch
cannot be )ustlfied was the
work of 23 • mdependent '
Cltl.zens

political corruption 1s here to

- Congress ought to
restram ttself from holdmg
'showcase' hearmgs like the
Senate
Watergate
m·
vest1gation 1f the wttnesses
are likely to be put on tnal
Take a gu) like Mitchell '
he says You wipe htm out

stay

on nationwtde telev1s1on and

engmeers He says

h~

would

have been one too If he had
any talent for mathematics
Hts v1ews are deeply

colored by pragmaUsm He
thmks a certam amount of
And, as a defense lawyer,

then you try h1m a few
months later I really think tt
tsn 't exactly kosher
Hundley says 1t 15 tough
w1nntng acqutttats m political

he feels
- The role of the grand
JUry ought to be severely
limited
He says 1! IS a myth that

cases because the pressure 1s

beeame a close associate of

grand

on the JUry to convict

Kennedy
Now defending people

supposed to mvest1gate to see

Last sununer he sweated

tf there lS enough evtden~..:e to
put someone on tr1al are
mdependent ' He sees them
as creatures of prosecutors
He says prosecutors use

out 13 days of a jury's
dehberat1ons
m
the
corrup!ton tr~al of Maryland
Gov Marvm Mandel He
represented one of Mandel's
co defendants The jury

accused of the same cnmes

he s built a reputatiOn as one
of Washmgton s best - the
tYPE' of lawyer whose clients
usually are m desperate
trouble by the tlffie they come
to see him
As a prosecutor he made

the government s case
agamst the Puerto R1cans
accused of shootmg up the
House of Representa!J ves 26
years ago, a JUdge m New
York , persons accused of
fa1lmg to regtster as Com·
murusts under the Sm1th Act
As a defense attorney, he
represents Tongsun Park, the
Koren nee dealer accused of
passmg out a fortune to
congressmen to wm fnends
for Seoul
Another client IS fonner
Attorney General John
Mitchell
Hundley
represented htm through all
his Watergate troubles
Nursmg a left elbow broken
tn a !all while playmg tenms ,
mE D.AILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED:OOTHE

' INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
OIESTER L TANNEHD.J.
Ell:ec Ed

ROBERTHOEFUCH
City Ed.Jtor
Published da1ly except Saturday
by The Ohio Valley PubUShinl!

Company Multimedw Inc
Il l
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Busmess Off1ce Phone 992- 2156
Edi.tonal Phone 992 2JSi

JUries whtch are

grand JUries to hound
potenhal def~ndants for
years Let prosecutors Slgn
md1ctments, he says then

they could no longer shield
themselves

from

ar:

convtcted

Gnerally, he says, a Jury
whtch deliberates a long tlme
IS hkely to cune m With a
verdict of mnocent but the

opposite Is true

1n

political

cases

He explams If you ve got
them divided about 51&lt; and
SIX and they begm to feel the
only way they re gmng to get
out of that JUry room IS to
reach a verdict then It sa lot
eaSier for p!'ople to say
Well stx or seven people
think the government didn't
prove 1ts case

It doesn't

make you feel bad to
persuaded to say he t
guilty
But that s not true m
political cases It's a

be
not

hot
lot
harder to come back and say

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of Amenca
November 22, 1777:
On June 22 1775 Congress authomed both the states andlt
self lo pnnl paper money which has been done almost at
wlll Steep mflatron has been the mevttable result and
fmancmg the war has become increasmgly dtfficult

Congress has no taxing power So today because of In ria
tton and a severe hard currency shortage Congress votes
the f1rst of several fiscal requtsltlons of the states- to be
patd m paper money Indeed so desperate Is the young

nation s economtc plight that on the 27tlt Congress Will urge
the states to con f1scate the property ofloyalists and tosel11 t
In order to ra1se money for the military effort, some states

wtll do so but the amounts of money raised thereby will be
comparatively small Inflation will continue to soar and
Congress ulttmatelywlll have to tum to France Spain and
Holland for hard currency loans In May 1781 the
American paper currency Will collapse and nattonal

bankruptcy will be but narrowly averted
•

NatJonal advertL'Iing represe,...

''Can you tmagme, 1

asks

he

a JUry In the D1strlct of

Columbaa commg back and

acqmttmg m Watergate' Its
pretty

mcomprehens1ble
Of course,'' he concedes,
the evidence was pretty

good too, '
The lawyer he most ad

to represent was one of
Wilhams - former Treasury

Secretary John Connally,
acqmtted of charges of
Watergate-era bribery
'That would have been ..real challenge • he says
' Head to head Those are the
cases defense lawyers like to
try because you have a shot
at wmmng
uThat's because you don't
wm that much Obviously In
Watergate we didn't have
much of a shot at wtnntng '
Most of h1s energy Hun
dley says, IS spent not m
wmnmg or losmg - but In the
gray area of JUdicial com·

ficient access to food supplies
by
unhampered
and
reproduction rA'
If food resources and
space are scarce, then almost

certamly there wlll be conSpicuous terr~tonal behavior

It 1s likew1se mevttable that
some tndivlduals will fail to
secure sufftcLent food or a

place m whtch to re~r a
brood These mdtviduals are,
ol course, the weakest, and
thts IS what survival of the
ftt!est through natural
selechon really means

'Temtonal behavior Is
therefore tnggered when It 1s
requtred and remains dor·
mant when 11 IS not.' they
wrote

We can say therefore that
and aggression
are not uruversallnstmcts as
such rather they are pieces
temtor~ality

Barbs
By PHil PASTORET
Mtsery

loves company

Davtd L Htll J\dm , James
Ray Hill Deceased to Jay
Hall Jr Parcels, Letart
Helen Mane Bartrum,
dec , to Tersay W Bartrwn,
Cert for Trans , Rutland
Cecil Moore, Tina Moore to
Norwood Ferrell, Alta
Ferrell, 2 A , Bedford
Norwood Ferrell, Alta
Ferrell to Dame! O'Dell,
Carole O'Dell, 2 A , Bedford
Ronald A Hanson to James
w Stockwell, Rhonda J ,
Stockwell, 5 07 A , SCipio
Floyd J Rupe Jane A
Rupe to Handley Edward
Dunn, Lmda Lou Dunn
Parcels, Salisbury

IN HOSPITAl
"
RACINE - Paul Justis,
Racme Is a patten! at Holzer
Medtcal Center His room
number ts 419 for those who
Wish to send cards

THE
WORLD
ALMANAC'S

The Postal Service and Am·
trak have headquarters near
promise He's an expert at each other m the Capital
trading a client's guilty plea
for a reduced charge or
A recent TV saeclal bal- 1 The oldest cabinet departbargalnmg !or his client's lyhooed ltseU as the result ment of the U S federal
urununtty tf he g1ves state's of a talent search Appar· government IS the
evtdence agamst bigger eoUy, tbe produeers dldn 't 2 The ne\Yest cabmet departlind any
ment of the U S federal
game
government Ls the
Often he says, gomg to
3 The highest state m the un
court IS an acknowledgement
10n IS
of defeat

Ethiopia IS as large as
Texas, Oklahoma and New

Mex1co combined

One Ye~tr $22 00 Stx months
Sll 50 'Three months $7 00

WJlham Henry Harrtson

E,lsf where $26 00 year SII month,
Three rDfUiths $7 50
~ludes

tiOn to environmental con

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Q&amp;A

ANS"ERS

Sub6cnptlon rates Delivered by
camer where available Th cenl.s per
week By Motor Route where carrier
service not available One month
f3 25 By mall Ul OhiO and W Va

pnce

That temtonally1ty 1s
flexible should not be sur
pmmg they said "It IS,
after all a biOlogical adopmay surv1ve through suf-

10011

Times-Sentinel

ammals are terntortal

d1t1ons so that the spec1es

talive Ward
Griffith Company
Inc Bottlnelli and Gallagher OJV
757 Third Ave New York NV

Subscription

note that terrttortal claims

are Widespread among dtf
ferent spec1es Bul not all

because then

not gutlty

mtres ts Edward Bennett

Sei::ond claM po$t&amp;ge pa1d at
Pomeroy Ohi o

113 50

Lmportant resources tn the
envLronment 1
As far as war lS concerned

Leakey and Lewts contend
tltat wars are plaMed and
to ktll each ot her
On the contrary Leakey orgamzed by leaders mtent
and Dr Roger Lewm a on mcreasmg their power
btochemtst and sctence editor over people and resources
of the Bnt1sh Journal New and that It takes cooperauon
Sc1ent1st contend that the among p!'ople to wage war
'Powerful leaders have
e\ tdence suggests that we are
more coo perallve than found more and more to fight
about and mcreasmgly efaggressivE:
Leakev and Lewtn wntmg fective ways of ach1evmg
m thetr JUSt published book their ends
'We should not look to our
Ortgms sa1d there IS no
doubt that aggresston and genes for the seeds of war ,
terrttortal struggles are part those seeds were planted
of modem life but they argue when, !0,000 years ago, our
thts beha\lons the product of ancestors for the first tune
our envtronment, not our planted crops and began to be
fanners The transitwn from
genes
Anyone who argues for tlte nomadic hunting way of
mbuilt aggresston m Homo life to the sedentary one of
sapaens must see agressaon as fanners and mdustnalists
a umversal mstmct m the made war possible and
antmal kmgdom
they potentially profitable '
Leakey and Lewm said
wrote It IS no such thing
But Leakey, son of famed what has transport~ the
anthropologist Loms Leakey possible mto reality IS the
and Qtrector of the National same factor that has made
Museums of Kenya and h1s human bemgs special m the
co author do not clalffi that anunal klllgdom - culture
It IS social and political
humans are of naturally good
ideologies
, and the tolerance
natured toward one another
It 1s culture that largely or lack of 1t between them
weaves the patterns m that brings hwnan nations to
bloody conflict "
human soc1e1ties '
Ongud ' 17 95$ 1s published
Lookmg at lower animals to
explam the beha vtor of by E P DUtton, New York
humans Leakey and Lewm

they've got to go home and
people, maybe their own
lanulies- Will say Why did
nou let that crooked politician
off'

Williams and the client he
Wishes he had had the ehance

Court St

of behavior that are tuned to
particular hfe styles and to
changes m the ava!lab1lity of

are bbrn wtth an Innate dr1ve

Lawyer's career has gone in reverse
By MIKE FEINSILBER
WASIDNGTON fUPI) With a hearty laugh Wtlliam
Hundley says his professional
ltfe as a lawyer has been a
wash
"I've spent 15 years trymg
to put people m Jail and the
next 10 years trymg to keep
them QUt ' says th1s former
prosecutor turned crlmmal
defense attorney
From 1951 unttl 1966
Hundley was m the Justice
Department prosecutmg
white collar crunmals and
He
corrupt politiCians
headed the orgaruzed crune
section under Attorney
General Robert Kennedy and

SlUiday

- El y

R05s Mackenzie I

JeH

are oo easy teams

m this league, ' preached
Allen, whose club IS now 6-4
and one game behind St
Louis m the race for the NFC

The ch0tce of replacement

employed, thetr replacement glance also provtdes an
rate as a couple would be 64 5 average replacement rate of
p!'rcent and thetr p!'ns1on 43 percent But 1t 1s based on
retirement at 62 rather than
$12 009
Mount Vernon was ongl&amp;5
and works out to 41
H both work for average
nally part of a royal grant to
percent
for
an
average
wages each would get a
Lord Culpepper, whom 1674
worker retinng at 65
p!'nswn of $8 006
deeded 5,000 acres to Nrcho-Before worked can figure las Spencer and John Wash
Such a worker retmng at
tlle1r
replacement rates the mgton great grandfather of
age 62 mstead of &amp;5 m 1988
Social
SeeurJt} George Washmgton
"ould have a replacement
Admuustration
will have tfl
rate of 34 4 percent and hiS
penSto n would be $6,405

HEALTH
Bv Lawrence Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Will
}OU please ansY&lt;er my ques·
liOns about cholesterol and
tn glycertdes? I am a 69--year
old woman and we1gh about
127 pounds A year ago my
choleste rol was 313 and my
tn gl) cendes 155 My doctor
put me on a d1el I eat mamly
: • chteken and turkey w1th the

\\ oU ld
be ' staggenng
doubling Social Sernntl tax

MacNt'lly/Cl!i77 Umlt'd F'ealure Syndicate

holds the record for the
largest presidenlial family
w1th 10 children

1•••1 eas ••oqe 1001 0011
Where do they store alllbe
•
9
opn1t1Je
aaeJaAe opeJOtOD
junk ttems on sale at the
yule season, during the rest t LL61 t any tt.et [UJapaj
,(q P•1••, 1UOW1Jedaa
of the year'
hiJOU3 Z SJIOI!V u8tOJOj
)0
1UOW1JedOQ 041 se 68L1
our neighbor, who says be
hfls a thirst for knowledge, 't:/. hjn f SSOJ8UOJ )0 1ae ,(q
quenches It by re~dlng p;l'leOJO 1UOW)JedOQ 3\B 1S j
booze labels

in there rs--pdin~---l
tan

I
By TOM WHITFIELD
UPI Spurts Writer
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Wash mgton Redsk1ns
stayed w1thm sn1ffmg
distance of the NFL playoffs
Monday rught In thetr usual
fashion - another clo se,
defens1 ve..,rlented wm that
went down to the last play
H Coach George Allen was
expecbng something better
than the 11).9 deciSton he woo
over the strugglmg Green
Bay Packers and r oo kte
quart er ba c k Dav1d
Whitehurst , he wasn't about
to let on

'

lh Ull:'\ ALD H \In
II \SIIl'\GTO:\ &lt;UP! l
f 'r lhl ftr~:t tune ... mce So&lt; tal

iieailySedtnmels,Mki;s,fuh~g

Joe The1smann rwsed hiS
record to 3-1 as a startmg
quarterback - B1lly Kilmer
wa s 3-3 before rotten
offensive
pr oduction
prompted Allen to bench hun
- but could reach the end

zone only once agamst the 2-8

Lavender It was one of Packers, 254 yards to 196, but
the
same
several game-6avmg plays by CJ&lt;mmltted
mistakes
that
have
plagued
th e Redskin defense
It was Allen s No 1 them m recent weeks They
defensive prwrtty to try and drew 11 penalties !or 85 yards
and allowed Green Bay four
rattle Wlutehurst, the eighth
quarter, capped a mne1Jlay , round draft cho1ce who sacks - one of whtch cost
79-yard drlve and came on a became the Packers' No 1 them a chance for a
passrun option rollout
quarterback when Lynn touc hdown on Mosele) 's
'We felt the1r defense Dickey broke h1s leg last f1eld1!oal dnve
would allow the opportuntty week More titan a dozen
It wasn't tmmed1ately
for that play ,'
sa1d Redskm blitzes sacked apparent whether some
The1smann "Mike ducked Whitehurst s1x times, but h1s defe nsive lnJUnes the
behind the linebacker and stat1st1cs were comparable to Redsklns suffered would hurt
was w1de open He made a The1smann's - 12-for-24 for them for Sunday's showdown
ruce catch (m front of Packer 140 yards compared to With NFC East rtval Dallas
safety Johnme Gray) "
The1smann's 1().for 21 for 124 &amp;hrls Han burger, mak&gt;ng h1s
Mark Moseley, who gave yards
~lrst start at lmebacker m stx
Washmgton a 3-0 lead early m
"The thmg that unpressed weeks, hurt his left knee,
the second quarter with a 3:&gt;- me was hiS po1se," saad Allen
while defenstve hnemen
yard fteld goal, booted the • We came after hun With Dave Butz and Bill Brund1ge
extra pomt that proved to be every dog (blitz) m the suffered ankl e mJunes
tlte wmnlng margm C1tester book •
Safety Jake Scott broke tltree
Marco!, who had earlier field
• There was pressW'e on me nbs
goals of 40 and 42 yards, all week, but I couldn't let
The Packers lost Ezra
added a 44-yarder with 4 16 that bother me and 1t duln t, ' Johnson, who blocked
left m the game, but the sa1d Whitehurst It started Moseley's held goal attempt
Packers' lastd1tch dr1ve was to a httle, but T felt I did a and fullback Barty Snuth to
killed by Whitehurst's thtrd pretty good JOb We JUSt knee
InJUries
of
mtercept10n, that one to Joe dido 't wm the ballgame "
Wldetennmed seventy
Pack Thetsmarm s 7 yard
touchdown pass to Mtke
Thomas which rescued the
Redskins from
6-3 def1c1t
mulway through lbe fourth

a

The Redskm~ mttu~•nF&gt;ft the

Oriole DH Murray top rookie
By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Spurts Writer
NEW YORK (UP!)
Eddte Murray set no goals for
htmself this season but
nevertheless

made

an

Wlexpected mark m baseball
history tlte hrst designated
hitter to wm a postseason
award
The 21-year-old Balumore
Drwle DH Monday narrowly
woo the Amencan League
Rook1e of the Year Award
over Oakland s Mitchell
Page, the favonte for the
honor It was the ftrst tune

ever a DH was recogntzed for
anytltmg &gt;n the short history
ol the position
I don t set goals - I never
have,

srud Murray after

learnmg of hiS award "I just
tried to do a good JOb
I knew 1t (!he votmg)
would he close !knew I had a
good year and I knew I could
wm 11, but I tned not to think
about 1t Maybe 1t would
come ~ and It did come

Murray, who batted 283
w1th '1:1 home rWlS and 88 runs
batted m lor Baltimore, won
tlte AL honor by three votes
over A s outfielder Page
Murray collected 12 full votes

Murray Ballimore's third
seleclion m tlte JIUle 1973
draft was prunarily a right
handed hitting first l)aseman

and shared another wtth

when he started h1s career

Page for a total of 121&gt; pomts,
while Page had 9\2
Second baseman Bump
Wills of the Texas Rangers
was thtrd with four votes and
p1tcher Dave Rozema of the
Detrmt Tigers the only other
player to rece1ve support,
was fourth wttlt two votes
The vot&gt;ng was conducted
by 28 members of the
Baseball Wnters Assoctatton
of Amenca two from each
AL c1ty, with each member
selecting only one player
"It feels good to wm thls
award especially over the
crop of rookies we had thiS
year - guys like Mitchell
Page and Bump W11ls,"
Murray said 'The main
thmg that womed me was

But he converted hunself to a
sw1tchhitter m 1976 while
playmg with Olarlotte and
Rochester m the mmors and
then became an outfielder
and designated hitter at
Baltimore because of the
presence of slugger Lee May
at !trst base
A patient h1tter, Murray
displayed h1s power by
stroking many of hls homers
to the opposite field He also
proved to be a clutch h1t!er
accounung for flve game
wmnmg hits alone against the
World Champion New York

Torrez to Boston
for $2 million
By GIL PETERS
UP! Sports Writer
BOSTON (UP!) - M1ke
Torrez might not wm the
World Ser1es for the Boston
Red Sox, but he could save
the franchise for prospective
owner Haywood Sullivan and
company
Passmg h1s ftrst test as a
maJor
league
general
managet,

Sulltvan

announced Monday he had
come to tenns With the righthanded Torrez, the World
Senes savtor f..- the New
York Yankees this fall
Sullivan whose group has
been the subject of a court
swt by another btdder and
close scrutmy by other
American League owners

Team elects

also annoWlced the SlgOtng Of
free-agent reliever DICk
Drago, who helped Boston to
the 1975 pennant before
movmg on to Califorma and
Balt1more Both pitchers
s1gned undisclosed, multiyear contracts

Sullivan, named general
manager by the trust that
runs the ballclub unttl the
ownership diSpute 1s settled,
concentrated on Sightng tlte 1&gt;foot-li Torrez The b1g nghthander attended seven of the
rune seSSions held m Phoemx
last week between Sullivan
and agent Gary Walker
Reports mdicate the Red
Sox who lacked a conSistent
starter m thetr futile flag
chase of 1977, will pay Torrez
$2 million for five years
The agreeme]lt g1ves
credibll1ty to the Sullivan
group, which must ward off
the swt filed by A-T.O of Ohio
and prove 1ts financial
stabi11ty to the other 13league
owners
Torrez, 31, a native of
Topeka, Kan , has a 114-ll4

record With a history
most lifetune
1f lpttchmg well m the late

valuable
B J Dalley, son of Mr and
Mrs Don Dailey, C1tillicothe,
fonnerly of Pomeroy, has
been named the University of
Dayton's most valuable
football player
Dalley, grandson of Mr
and Mrs Everett Dalley,
Pomeroy, and Mrs Thelma
Hawley, Mmersvtlle, shot·
tered most o! the school's
career passing records the
, past season
A senior In busmess admmlstratlon, he was name&lt;!
• by team members who were
asked to select "the player
owe could least afford to lose "
During the season, however,
the university team, the
"Flyers" never had to find
out what they would do
cwlthout DaUey He sat out
' part of one game only with a
• concWISion
' The SIX loot, 185 pounder
' completed 51 percent o! his
' passes for 1,601 yards and
&gt;passed for 3,688 yards dunng
his lbur year career

stages of the season
He had a 14-12 mark with
New York, wmnmg seven
stratght complete games
begmmng m August and
pitchtng 51&gt; mnmgs of
shutout relief tn the ftnal
dramatic AL playoff game
agamSt Kansas City He was
the pttch&gt;ng star of the World
Ser1es, wmrung lwo complete
games against the Dodgers,
mcludlng the fmale
The 6-foot-5 Torrez was
huntmg near hts Topeka
borne when Sul11van made the
annowtcement at a Fenway
Park news conference

Torrez was to visit F11,11way
Park Wednesday, where tt
was expected he would Sign a
coo1ract
Drago, 32 p1tched f..- both
Cabforma and Baltunore last
season, comp1bng a 6-4
record aoo a 3 41 ERA
Sullivan swd he still was
seeking to stgn free agents
but added "We're not
mterested m any as much as
we were m TorreZ But we
still would like a left-handed
relief p1tcher "
The Red Sox also hope to
land a utility mflelder, either
Jack Broltamer ..- MW!Y
Perez
'

playmg DH l was the DH for
so many games "

Earl Weaver sa1d of Murray
late m the season ' He has
great knowledge of hittmg for
a young player and he
certamly has demonstrated
the ability to get h1ts when
they re needed '
Murray returned the
complunent to Weaver
"I like him, swd the
rookie •'He coaches each guy

gs

I
I

N BA Shtndmgs

By

Un1ted

~ress

lnternar.onal

Eastern Conference
AtiiMIIC 01VIS10ft

Ph li a

w
10

L.

5

Pet
667

New York
9 6 600
Buffalo
8 9 471
Boston
4 10 286
New Jersey
2 13 lJJ
Central DIVI SIOn

GB

woody

'
h S
e

Sorry

1
3

COLUMBUS,O!uo(UPI)Oh1o State football Coach
GB
Woody Hayes Monday mght
I
W L
Pet
satd
he was sorry about
Clevelnd
10 5 667
At la nta
9 5 643
' sluggmg an ABC teleVISIOn
Washlngtn
B 6 571
~ : ~ cameraman who got tn hls
Sen Anton
10
B 556
New Orlns
8 B 500 2'' way durmg Saturday's OSUHouston
6 B 429 3
''
M1ch1gan game and wanted
W~stern Conference
to clear the atr a bout what he
MIOWest 01 \IISIOft
W L
Pet GB
called
'the affair up at Ann
Denver
11
5 688
Chicago
B 7 533 2.,, Arbor "
Mllw
7 8 467 3'1'
In the !mal two mumtes of
Detroit
6 9 400
lnd1ana
6 9 400 ~: ; an hour-lpng address at the
Kansas C1ty
6 10 375 5
annual ~ OSU
Football
PICII IC 01\'ISIOM
GB
Apprec1aton
Banquet
that
W L Pet
ranged from pra1se of his
Portland
12
3 ao1J
Phoenn&lt;
B 5 615 3
Buckeyes to adulalion of
Golden St
9 1 563
1
Eqypban
President Anwar
'
LOS Angeles
7 8 467
Seatt e
4 14 222 9' ' Sadat, Hayes talked about h1s

~·'

r

Mondays Result
Buffalo 97
Tuesdays Games
Buffalo at New York
Houston at Ph !Ia
lnd1ana at New Orlns
Denver at Wash.ngton
Golden State at M tw
Los Angeles at Pheenuc
Wednesdav s Games
Houston at Boston
Denver at Atlanta
N J at Sa n Anton io
Ph ladetph1a at Detroit
Golden State at lnd1ana
M I waukee at Kansas C t y
Ch cage at Portland
Los Angeles at Seatt le
Wash 114

NFL Standings
By Umted Press International
A mencan Conference
East
W L T Pet
Ba hmore
9 1 0
900
Mlamt
7 3 0
700
New England
640600
NY Jets
2 80
200
Buffalo
2 80
200
Central
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cmcmnat1

W
6

L T P&lt;l
600
' 0

controvers~al

weekend

Hayes told an audtence of
about 1,100 at the OSU
student unum Monday mght,
'I m so damned tired of
hear10g what I d1d to tltat
man out there Sure I regret
about what I did We
fumbled and I got mad The
reporter satd I took the
headphones off and threw
them down He 's a liar I
didn't have them on The
reporter satd I ran 20 yards to
stnke that man I did not
Hell, lturned and ran to here
(he mdicated four steps) "
'I'm sorry what! did Do I
make mistakes Hell , I make
plenty I try not to hide my
mistakes"

tantrwn
Reporters who watched the
altercation from the press
box this weekend satd Hayes

Hayes
added
\hat
"Actually I like the little guy
(Freedman) He 's just domg
his job He's been around for

yanked off his earphones

years '

threw them to the ground and
charged cameraman M1ke
Freedman ol Los Angles as
he was zeromg m on the

Seruor lmebacker Dav1d
Adkms of Xenta, who led the
Buckeyes m tackles, was
honored at tlte banquet as the

coach's

squad's

reaction

to

a

disastrous fwnble by OSU
quarterback Rod Geroln

Sport notes

says!

most

valuable

player

HARTUNG REWARDED
In the report on the Big
Bend Warriors football
season, the name of Donald
11
Moose-" Hartung was
uruntent1onally omitted as
recelVtng a specl8l award
Moose was g1ven an
honorable mentton !or hts
defensive pjay
PLAY NOV 29
Because ol Eastern' •
financial problems which
wUI Ioree lbe district to
close Dee 8, lbe North
Gallla Eastern basketball
game bas been cbauged
from Dec. 9 to Tuesday,
Nov zt at North GaUla
I

Center to close
for Thanksgiving
The Gallta • Jackson •
Meigs Communtty Mental
Health Center wlll be closed
Thursday, Nov 24 and
Friday, Nov 25, 1n ob·
servance of the Thanksglvmg
holiday The CriSlslme and
Emergency
Serv1ces
programs w!U contmue to be
m operatton durmg this
pertod and may be reached
by calling 446- ~554 The
center

Alumni players
prepared to go

wtll

re·open

on

Mondt.y, Nov 28

CLUB TO MEET
RACINE - The Western
Boot Citizens Band Radio
Club Wlll hold a special
meetmg Saturday at 7 p m
Saturday at the Racine
Grange Hall on Oak Grove
Road The meeting will be
held to plan for the Christmas
party Those members who
cannot attend but would like
to parttclpate m the gift
exchange are to contact Judy
Sm1th, 949-2813

By Greg BaUey
tlte Pomeroy Natwnal, The
600
6 ' 0
dif!erently That's 101portant
5 5 0
500
A lot of plarmmg has gone Athens County Savmgs and
5 ~ 0
500 Into Thursday's gnd1ron
because werve got 25
Loan, and the Middleport
West
mdtvtduals
contest between the Mtd· Ctttzens Bank Game time Is 4
W L T Pel
Page batted 307 at Oakland Denver
9
1 0
900 dleport and Pomeroy Alumni
p m at Marauder Stadium
fl
2 0
800
wtth 21 homers 75 RBI and 42 Oakland
San D1ego
S 5 0
500 The Me1gs Athle!tc Boosters,
stolen bases W11ls, the son of Seattle
3 7 o 300 sponsors of the contest, are
2 8 0
200
former Los Angeles base- Kansas C1ty
extendmg special apN at1onal Conference
stealing star Maury Wills,
East
prectahon to the many mhad a 281 average With 28
W L T Pet divlduals who have con·
Dal BS
8 2 0
800
steals at Texas and Rozema Sf
LOUIS
7 J 0
700 tnbuted tlffie and help
was t~-7 despite mtssmg Washmgton
6 4 0
600
Up tn the press box will be a
4 6 0 400
several weeks m the second NY Gtants
Ph ttadelphla
3
7 o 300 Me1gs Countlan to whom area
ThiS Week's
hall of the season Wltlt arm
Central
sports fans owe a lot of
Oluo College
Tourney
W
L
T
Pet
trouble
Yank~s
Basketball Schedule
thanks, not only for h1s
Wnght St Tourney
Mmnesota
6
•
0
600
The Nat10nal League Ch1cago
Un1ted Press lraternat1onal
" I believe he has a chan"'
5 5 0 500 ded1cated tune on Thursday,
Oberlin at Calvin Tourney
Tuesday
5 5 0 500 but also for his many years of
to become an outstanding Rookie ol the Year will be Detro t
Bluffton at Goshen Tourney
Green
Bay
2 8 0
200
Steubenvtlle
at Dyke
R1o Grande Tourney
announced
on
Wednesday
hitter," Baltimore Manager
Tampa Bay
0 10 0
000 promotmg and helpmg Wlth
Urbana at W1lmtngton
Wright St Tournev
West
the youtlt softball programs Wilberforce at West V1rginla Ttffln at Hdlsdale Tourney
W L T Pet
St
Findlay at Keene St (NHl
Los Angeles
7 3 0
700 of the area None other t~an
!Wednesday
Tournev
Atlanta
5 5 0
500 Kenny Wtggms, who has a
La Roche t Pa l at Dyke
Ohio Wesleyan at Bellarmlne
San Fran
4 6 0
400
Walsh at Shaw (Mlch l
New Orleans
3 7 0
300 wann spot m all our hearts,
(Ky) Tourney
Monct•y S Re5Uit
Thursday
Will be d1rectmg the actiVIties
Sunday
Washington 10 Green Bay 9
No games scheduled
Ohio
Wesleyan
at Bellarmlne
above
the
f1eld
In
the
press
Thursday s G11mes •
Friday
box At the end of the contest, Cal State Hayward a! Ohio Tourney
Ch1cago at Oetro1t
Findlay at Keene 51 Tourney
Mlam1 at St Lours
Kenny Will conduct the St
Sundays Games
Ohio Northern a! Uberty
selection of the MVPs
Atlanta at Tampa Bay
Baltimore at Denver
Bob Burton will be 10 Baptist (Va)
THIS WEEK'S St'"'-'
Dallas at wash ngton
University at Clemson
charge o! the offiCials wh1le Ohio
Kansas C1ty at Houston
Tourney
&amp;hembechler sa1d, declmmg
Los Ang at Cleveland
Bill Wtlford and Dave Capttal at Fairmont St (W
By RICHARD L SHOOK
Minnesota
at
Green
Bay
to
take
a
posthon
on
the
Jenkms
are m charge of Va ) Tourney
UP! Sports Writers
New Orleans at San Fran
t1cket sales Wally Hatfield Oberlon at Calvin (Mich )
ANN ARBOR, Mich (UP!) mc1dent 'I d1&lt;ln't see It - I
NY G1ants at c ncmnat1
Tourney
Ph1la at New England
-Although Bo Schembechler didn t even know 1t happened
and football coach Charlie Bluffton at Goshen ( lnd )
Pittsburgh
at
NY Jets
Chancey are domg the overall Mennonite Tourney
thmks sometlt&gt;ng should be Wlhl I heard about It after the
San Otego at Seattle
USED CARS
Mondays Game
coordlnatmg of gettmg the Tiffin at Hillsdale (Mich)
done
about televlston game
Buffalo at Oakland mght
I m not the JUdge of his
teams tn uruforrns, seemg Tourney
cameras on the stdelines
Rto Grande Thanksglvtng
durmg football games, the actions You don t know if
that they have a place to Tourney
74 CHEV. NOVA
Mich1gan coach says he IS there was anythmg sa1d
practtce, etc
Wrtght St
Invitational
4 Dr V 8 P S , vinyl root
The Pomeroy Emergency Tourney
"not the JUdge" of Woody between tltem He may have
Saturday
been provoked "
Squad wdl be on hand as
Hayes' conduct
Oakland (Moch l at Toledo
"I've turned around at &amp;hernbechler said
volunteers gtve the1r tlme, Akron at Cincinnati
'2495
'I
ve
had
a
camera
stuck
m
times to substitute somebody
although It's hoped that their Cal St Hayward at Davton
Xavier at Purdue
and almost thrown a my face r1ght after
NEW YORK &lt;UPIJ _ The servtces won't be needed
Valley (Mich I at
somethmg had gone wrong,"
74 MONTE CARLO
cameraman mto the game,
u n 1 t e d Press lnternahonal Balls and trophtes have Saginaw
Youngstown St
&amp;hemhechler
replied
when
It
Board of Coaches top 20 teams been donated by four local John Carroll vs Cleveland Sl
the Wolvermes coach satd
Full power, air
after the 11th week ot the bank
""' F
B k
when the delicate subject of was suggested gettmg college
football season w1th
s - .~-ue anners an ' Case Western vs Baldwin
Wallace
hls old mentors s1delme physiCal was not the solnlion hrst place votes and l'ecord 1n
'3495
Deftance at Heidelberg
parentheses
behavwr came up Monday to the problem
Team
Pomts
Grove C•ly ( Pa ) at 111\ount
HWe've
got
to
get
some
Hayes struck a ABC-TV
I Texas 135} no OJ
386
Union
318
Sideline cameraman shortly restrictions on cameras on 2 Oklahoma 19 1J
.f.our
Dyke at Walsh
(1) (9 11
315 Reds S
-e·- I'
Wilberforce at Thomas Mt:Jre
after hiS quarterback made a the stdeUnes," he satd • And A3 .Alabama
M1ch1gan (10 1)
270
You'll Llke0111'0uallly
,
(Ky l
211
cructal fumble on the Wol- you know those guys with the 5 Notre Oame Ill (9 11
Way ol Doing Business
ng UlJ!:nlclertJTaylor at Wilmington
Arkansas (9 1 J
170
vermes' e1ght that gave sound Illlkes' When the ball 76 Ohio
GMAC FINANCING
•-o
JKa'
Cedarville at Earfham (lnd I
State (9 21
102
992 5342
Pomeroy
Mtch1gan the football and gets near rrudfteld, they've 8 Penn State ( 9 1)
100
Oh•o lln1verslty at Clemson
Open Even! !\liS 'hl6 00
IB 1 11
90
Tourney
kept Ohio State from scormg moved right m front of me " 910 Pittsburgh
Nebraska (8 2)
87
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Cap•ta at Falrmo1t St
TI!Sp m Sat.
Athlehe Director Don 11 Texas
a poss1ble game-tymg
A&amp;M (7 2)
54 Clncmnau Reds announced
3"2
touchdown late m the fourth Canham of M•chl!lan had the 12 Iowa State (8 3}
North Texas St (9 2)
15 Monday night that four of the
obv1ous reason for the 13
quarter
14 Clemson 18 2 1)
9 organiZaUon s most highly
The cameraman zoomed m presence of telev1swn people 15 North Carollna (8 2 1 J
8 rated young mf1elders have
16 Washmgton (7 41
7
on Hayes to get a predictable on the sidelines durmg 17
UCLA (7 3)
6 Signed tlteu: 1978 contracts
football
games
reaction but the coacb of the
18 Br1gham Young (8 2)
5
The fotif are Harry
"Ott, $600,000, Ulat's why," 19 Colorado State (8 2 1J
4
Buckeyes, accordmg to
Sjultnan,
,j mmor league
2C
Stanford
18
3)
3
Witnesses, went out of his way he sa1d "When you guys
Note By agreemen.t w1th the hitting sensation this past
(writers) g1ve us 600 Grand, Amencan Football Coaches
to confront him
we'll
put your fanmes on the Assoc.at1on teams on probaf•on season, Ron Oest.er 1 M1ke
"I was not mvolved there 1 "
by the NCAA are mel 191ble for Grace and Rafael Santo
bench 1f you want '
top 20 and national champion Domingo
"One thtng we've got to be ship cons1derat1on by lhe UPI
Sp1Iman, 23, a hrst
Board of Coaches Those leams
careful about - and you currently
on probation tor 1977 baseman, hit 373 at Three
media guys can help a lot ere Kentucky M chlgan State
R1vers of the Class AA
here," Schembechler said Red I an d s ICe! f 1 western
State (Colo land Houston
Eastern
League thiS year
With some pass10n on a
Oester,
a 21-year old shortrelated topLC, 11 8Dd that's not
stop and nat1ve of Clncmnatt,
SURGERY
SET
to let the crowds and
COLtlMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- and thtrd baseman Grace,
extracurricular thmgs
Chicago
Bears wtde receiver also 21, made up the left side
\
destroy this great' nvalry
and
spectalty
team member of the mf1eld at Indianapolis
"Saturday you saw a
Monday m Class AAA last season
Brtan
Baschnagel
penalty free football game of
underwent
surgery
for an "and provided some of the
\ great mtens1ty ,'' he sa1d
ankle
Injury
suffered
In a fmest defens1ve play ever
NEW YORK IUPI) - The You didn't see any cheap weekend game aga mst seen m the Amer1can
U n 1 t e d Press International shots, any d1rty football,
Mmnesota The three-year Assoctat1on,' according to
Board of Coaches preseason
Insure your nome and belongings
college basketball ratmgs with anything t~at would ile1ract regular wingback at Ohw Reds officials
first place votes m parenthesis from the r1valry
with our specia I policy for
Santo Dommgo, a 22-year
Points
Team
oYou saw aggressive, State ( I913-75) asked to be
1 (Tiel Kentucky (17)
351
brought to Colwnbus when old Puerto R1can, played
homeowners or apartment renters.
1 (Tie) No Car f16 )
J51 clean, tough football played
J MarQuette (7)
J09 between two teams with told Sunday that surgery shortstop at Three Rtvers and
You will be insured for fire, theft and
batted 281
• Notre Dame
745
enormous respect for each would be required

Week's college
BB schedule

Schembechler no

judge of Hayes

Texas by
•d dge
WI e e

Karr &amp; VanZandt

iun

you

DON'T WAIT•••

INSURE

Wildcats,

Tarheels

AND ITS

lead field

CONTENTS NCM!

5
6
7
8

San Francisco (1)
UCLA
Purdue
Clnclnnatt
9 Arkansas (1)
10 Loulsv lie
11 Syracuse
12 MIChigan

13
U
u
16
16
18
19

701
15&lt;
104
99
89
87

other I don t think there's
another nvalry of such
lntetiSlty m the country where
the
opposmg teams have so
62
respect for one
!2 much
28 another

Maryland
(T,~ Wake Forest
23
"I don't want to !:!ee
(T1e l St John s
23
&lt;T1el lndtana St
22 anythmg ever happen to
&lt;T1e ) Utah
22 change tltat, ' he saJd 'I'm
Kansas State
16
Alabama
14 wlklng about fans stormmg
2C Holy Cross
~ 13
OJ1 the f1eld when tlte game Is
The following teams because
over,
(goal) posts bemg
they are on NCAA probat10n
were me1Jg1ble to rece1ve voles
npped down, fans drinkmg on
Centenary Clemson, Hawaii
Minnesota Nevada Las V~:gas the f1eld you've go\ to draw
and Western Caroline
the line somewhere '

other damages to your house, your
furniture and yoor personal
property. Don't wait until it's too
late. Call today.
We Wr1te All Forms
of Insurance

rSJiiP
-

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

�•

--

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tu.esctay, Nov . 22,1977

.

Bostock gets $3 million
ANAHJ::IM , t:aUf. (UP!) Lyman Bostock signed a fiveyear contract estimated to be
worth 13 million , with the
Calif~rnia Angels Monday,
making
him
possibly
baseball ' s highest-paid
player. Reggie Jacilscn of the
New York Yankees has a
reported $2.9 million pact.
Bostock, who is 'l1 today,
played out hls option with the
Minnesota Twins last season
a!ld was pi~ked by 13 of the 2li
major league clubs in the
second re-entry draft.
Runner-up to Twins '
teammate Rod Carew in the
American League batting
race with a .336 average last
seaS&lt;Jn, Bostock contended he
turned down a better money
offer from the Yankees, but
signed with the Angels to be

197i SV AC FOOTBALL CHAMPS - Coach Jim Sprague 's ~ge r
Creek Bobcats recently won their fifth stra ight SV AC grid championship
this fall. Team members are. first row, left to right. Mike Mc Donald,
Mark Price . M~,Gi1more, Jack Minor , Bob Misner. Mike Swisher. Mike
Shoemaker. Slillwn Thomas. Rusty Taylor, J ohn Heiskell, and Carey .
Secmd r ow. left to right , Mike Casey , Rusty Lucas, Tim Nibert, Claude'
Cocnelius, Scott Richards. Semaki Cor!ias. Darrell J ones . Mike
Hendrickson , Margus Geiger. Roger Spaulding, Gre~ Mulford and Randv

Langsville

Meigs

Mrs . Clair ParkerS&lt;Jn is
recovering from a fall in
wliich she broke her wrist.
Lloyde Merz of Sprin~
L3ke, Michigan, visited his
brother·ln·law and wife , Mr.
and Mrs . Caro l Pierce
recently . He also called on
Elvira Barr.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Barr,
David and Michelle of
Rutland and Elvira Barr
visited at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Blair Cadwallader and
sons at Seamon.
Jess Swan is sick and in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barr
of S)oracuse and Elvira Barr
were Sunday diimer guests·af
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr of
Jackson.
lifrs. Carolyn .Jenkins of
Springfield visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Lynch recently .
Mrs. Evelyn Thoma called
on Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr
last week.
Mrs . Donna Morris is
spending S&lt;Jme time with her
parents , Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Denny of Wilksville , who are
both very poorly.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bobo
of near Charleston were
Sunday guests of his ·brother
and famiy, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Bobo and attended Sunday
School and church at
Langsville .
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard

Property
Transfers
Ronald G. Shepard, Shirl~y
M. Shepard to Roy Kesterson.
Maxine Kesterson, 6.096
acres, Rutland.
Ruth Taylor to Backwoods
Log Homes Partnership, 0.5
acre, Chester.
Henry E. Cleland Jr .,
Kathleen M. Cleland to
James M. Saunders, Lynette
Saunders,
3.05
acres,
Chester,
.
Dale L. Harvey, Arlene G.
Harvey to Robert D. Peck,
Sue A. Peck; 1.50 acres,
Colwnbia.
Three
Easements,
Monongahela Power Co.,
Pomeroy.
Clinton Jones , Rosette
Jones to Kenneth E. Romine,

Marie

Romine,

Lots ,

Pomeroy.

Ledlie had as weekend
guests, Mr . a!l(l Mrs. John
Merrill of Colwnbus and Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Ritter and·
girls of Fort Knox , Ky.

Our 66th Ym!

Dale Carnegie Class

Now Forming in Gallipolis .
Since 1912 success-m inded people have deve.lope&lt;l their

latent ab ilities in local cla~es of ftle world-famous
Date Carnegie Course . And once a~ai,..- fOr a limited
time only - a class is forming ~ Gallipolis. DON' T

MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY! Find out now with no
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P.O. ·Bo• 61 Ona, W. Va. 25545

Litf!f'~~tture , pleiSe -

·
;

NAME••••••••••••••••••••••••••••······~··•••••••••

ADDRESS ••••••••••••••••
..
TE
CITY•••••••••••••••••••••• ••,..
L. ; •• ,, ••••••••• ,
I •••••••••••••••••••••••••

COMPANY ••••••••••••••••••• POSITION •••••• ••••••

Lucas. Third row, lef: to right, Coach Jim Sprague, Mike Kelley, Greg
Smith, Larry Harrison , John Westfall , Victor Vansickle , Tom Reese ,
Chris Elliott, Allen Sheets, Jeff Painter, Doug Stover, Woody Burnett,
Bruce Gilm&lt;re and assist.anl coaches Mike Mulford and Deryl Wall.
Fourth row, leftto right , Billy Swisher. Paul Lasseter , Kevin Wise, Brian
Sutphin, Von Taylor, Jon Thompson, Gary Nibert, Jim Misner , Steve
Russell . Mark Curnutte and Scott Burnett. Absent, Randy Taylor and
Howard Halley . tSee KC team slats inside ).

Alfred
Social Notes

TV•• .in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Television Writer

Sunday School attendance
NEW YORK (UPI)- The latest project of Capt.ain Jacques
on November 13 was 4ll. The
offering was $21.30. Worship Cousteau is time travel - underwater, of &lt;;ourse.
"Did you ever read 'Tbe Tinie Machine,' by H.G. Wells ?"
services were held at 10 :45
with Rev . Charles Domigan Capt. Cousteau asked during an interview, in which he was
bringing the message from explaining the basis fer his new "Cousteau Odyssey" series on
Isaiah 65, ;,A Vision of Peace PBS.
"We have developed during my lifetime the means and the
and Rest" . The choir sang,
"lt Is Mine " for a special tools to penetrate the ocean - the,_Aqualung, the minisub,
number . Attendan~e at houses under the sea, underwater cameras, even television
cameras, and much more.
worship service was 39.
"All this array of hardware we have used until now, for what
The photographer will be
the horizont.al exploration of the oceans, exploring them
I
call
here at the church on
they
are today anywhere, at any depth. To explore
as
Thursday, Nov . 17 from 5 til9
horizontally
is tD explore in space.
p. m. to take pictures for the
"In
1Y76
I
tried to turn all this hardware into a radically
Pictorial Church Book .
different
use
- to explore not in Space oot in time - vertical
Remember
your
ap·
exploration,
to
turn back the clock."
pointment. It is important!
The
French
undersea
pioneer and explorer said that he and
Also Pamela Henderson
his
son,
Phillippe,
co-producers
of the new series, will air four ·
will take pictures of the
shows
for
F'BS
is
the
197i·78
season,
and eight more for the two
church in action, planned for
subsequent
series.
"Calypso's
Search
for the Britannic" (Nov.
Nov. 23 and 27.
The UMW will meet 22, check local listings ) was chosen for the first because it was
Tuesday evening at 8 at the the closest in time. The Britannig, sister ship to the Titanic,
in World War I and sunlt in
home of Janet Moore, with was converted into a hospital
Nina RobinS&lt;Jn having the the Aegean Sea Nov. 21 , 1916.
"We wanted to start 'almost in modern times," Cousteau
Tlianksgiving program.
said.
"We were turning the clock back some 60years."
A large nwnber of people
He
said future "Odyssey" programs woUld explore subjects
attended the services for
of
increasing
antiquity - Byzantine, Phoenician, Roman,
Hobart Vineyard at St. Paul
Green,
Minoan,
pre-Minoan.
Church •ll Tuppers Plains on
"We
want
to
begin
tD investigate the relationship between
Saturday, Nov. 12 as well as
beings
and
their
environment, as it has been in the
human
during the calling hours at
past.
the White Funeral Home at
"Have hwnan beings always been destroyers?
Coolville. The community has
"U
they have, how did he cope? How much damage did he
lost a good ci.tizen and the
are lessons we can get from antiquity."
do?
These
church a staunch supporter,
So far, the answer appears to be that man has always been a
the family a good husband
and father . We extend our destroyer .
"Man has always been a predator, always a destroyer, but
sympathy to the bereaved.
were so few people on this planet," he added. " When
there
Todd and Timmy Flanders
there
were
fewer than a million individuals on this earth, they
tiave been ill ~&gt;ith colds and
could
not
do
much harm . "Tbe tr.ouble now is that the teeth of
flu.
the
Pf'eda
tor
have grown "' long."
A weekend revival is
Cousteau
today
finds all the problems of pollution- from oil
planned here beginning
spills
to
overfishing
to the Other ills he has tried to fight over
December I · and running
years
·miilor
compa~ed to what he considers the
the
through the 5th .
ov~rriding evil- the unresolved problems thai heavy reliance
The Christmas program
has been set for Wednesday ·on nuclear energy cou,Jd bring.
"We propose a moratoriwn until there has been time to solve
evening, Dec. 21 at 8 p. m.
the technological problems. Otherwise what man does today
could poison generations for thousands and thousands of

ship

years.' '

LAFF ·A- DAY
r----------------~

.......

Personnel officers dine, see
films at Holiday Inn meeting

The local chapter of the
American Society of Personnel Administration,
meeting for their monthly
dinner program at the
Holiday Inn near Gallipolis
November 16 saw two films ,
"Up The Organization,'' and
'-~-''o:o-c=~=-:=-c.o·-""'"-''-=-=---"""'
."'-' " I Told Them Exactly How
"Well, you were right about get· To Do It," presented ~y Mary
ling straight A's-Appolling, · Jane Tennant .
Present were Janet Maier,
Abominable, and Anti-social."

personnel administrator.
Holzer Hospital;
Ruth
Hamilton,
personnel
manager, Robbins &amp; Myers;
Mrs. Tennant, personnel
~ssistant, Foote Mineral Co.;
Alice Icard, .personnel
assistant,
Ohio
Valley
Electric Co.; Lowell Weaver,
personnel manager, Scot\en
Dillon Tobacco Co.; Charles
Huber, personnel assistant,

close to his mother, Annie, 60,
who lives in Inglewood, Calif.
But a spokesman for
Yankees ' owner George
Steinbrenner denied the
Bostock 'claim in candid
terms.
" II he (Bostock ) said that
our offer was higher than the

COMPANY MOVE
The Rio Grande Cross
CHICAGO
( UP!l
Country
team finished a very
AddresS&lt;JgraPb · Multigraph
Corp. board chairman Roy L. respectable 'lith out of 53
shareholders teams participoUng in the
Ash told
NAIA National Cross Country
Monday the company plans tD
relocate corporate meet held Saturday at
headquarters from Cleveland Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Archie Mundy, a junior
to Southern Califocnia next
spring .
.
from
Rootstown,
Ohio
Ash said, "In analyzing the linisheq filth out of 412
looger range future of the . runners with aq excellent
company and tbe ·kinds of time of 24:42. The top twentyleclmologies and products on
five runners are NAJA CroSB
which that future must be Country All American . Ron
wilt, j\'e have concluded that Dunfee, a sophomore from
the best location for Coolville, Ohio finished 7Sth
with a ttrne of :I: 41. Gary
co~pora te headquarters
would be in the Southern Henry of Pembrook ·State
California area.
College in North Carolina
Ash said all of the approxi- won the individuol crnwn
mately 150 employes at
company headquarters will
be offered employment at the
new headquarters.

income families insulate

Stauffer Chemical Co.; Larry
Shepler, personnel manager,
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.,
and Maggie Hirner, per·
sonnel manager, Federal
Mogul Corp.

with a time of 24:11.
Adams State College in
Colorado won the team race
with 103 points while Saginaw
Valley in Michigan was
runnerup with 133 points.
Rio Grande runners were :
Team IDd.
J1!ce nre
5th 5th Archie Mundy
.
24:42
·59th 7~th Ron Dunfee 2:1:41
ll~h 138th· Dave .P arlin
26:12
:with 297th Ben Junlt
'l1:23
mth 2911.h Sam Mohler
'l1 :26
25Mb 307th Mark.Fox 'l1:31
298th 358th Tab Huff
28:19

CORN
·
GREEN BEANS ·
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3

ROME APPLES ............ Bag 2.50
G.olden
Dehc.

303
Size

~

BAKER'S

PHEBE ' STORE
Thursday, Nov . 22 througH Saturday, Nov. 26
Right Reserved To Limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept .Fed. Food Stamps
f"
Monday thru Friday
I

VALLEY

CHOC. CHIPS.-..... ~ .... :.. ~2k:~· 69~

COTTAGE
~~t~z. 89~
CHEESE .. ·'·· ........................ .
MRS. FILBERTS

,

.

. ~

MARGARINE ............. ~-... 49

20 lb. •

,
.
49
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"

REUTER-BROGAN ·. INSURANCE
. SERVICE
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"

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GREER

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FRESH ROAS.TED

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~

I

QtiCKEN GIBLETS .
JACKSON .

59'

FRESH OR FROZEN TURKEYS,
FROZEN STEWING HENS,
OYSTERS

Plenty
of gas
claimed
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Marvin E. White, chairman
of ·Colwnbla Gas of Ohio, said
Monday the utility has
"plenty ol gas" for this
winter and blamed a lot of the
: firms troubles last winter on
: the
Public
Utilities
: Commission of Ohio.
.
~

"We are proud of Qur past,'.'

.;., White told a meeting of
: businessmen, industrialists
: ·and office holders . "While we
• feel our future is brighter
•• than our past, I would like to
• say to legislators who are
here that if we continue to get
~ lambasted by ill conceived,
• unworkable legislation, I'm
: · afraid our great industry will
: be led down the road to

: nationalization .''

POTATOES ................... ~~!b. '1A9
TANGERINES ................~~~ ... 69•

GIZZARDS ·
_
HEARTS .......... ;7; .~~.~ ..

WASHINGTON (UP[) Fourteen ·years ago today,
· John Kennedy was gunned
down by an assassin . On the
anniversary , Pierre Salinger
was back at the White House
- not as a presidential
· spokesman but as a reporter
interviewing th.e president.
Salinger , youthful official
voice of the youthful
president, now is 52. He was
scheduled to .interview
President CBj'ter today for
the French news magazine
L'Express and for broadcast
reports t o be used in France .
He has been working at the
White House press room for
about a week, stirring a
combination of ironies and
memories.
Soviet
Ambassador
Al)atoliy Dobrynin emerged
from a meeting with Carter
and was co nfr ont ed by
reporters .
He
fielded
questions easily until his eyes
· caught the familiar face from
·. the past.
Temporarily st unned,
Dobrynin could only offer a
surprised "Oh." Then he
clasped Salinger's hand and
shook it vigorously .
While still smoking cigars
.. and walking with brisk au·
thority, &amp;ahnger now is
clearly an outsider.
·
Along with a grqup of ,other
). reporters, he stood outside
the office d oor of. Jody
Powell, the current voice of
presidential feelings and
thoughts.
For mo1e than 30 minutes,
Salinger waited at the door to

This extra ex~nse will be covered If your Automobile

policy contains "towing and labor" coverage. part of
the physical damage coverage In an Automobile
policy. This coverage will pay for the towing of the
vetllcle to a repair station and. labor costs necessitated
by the disablement of the owned auto or of any non.
owned auto driven by the policyholder provided the
labor is performed ai the place of disablement. An
' example of labor performed might Include service
charges for jumping a bottery or changing a flat tire.
However, the repair of the tire would not be covered ...
only the labor of changing II. With "towing and labor"
coverage, !berets usually a maximum liability paid for .
each occurrence.

BOLOGNA

·MVER
·PUDDING

Tennis ·big ·with Israeli now
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
tennis boom has reached
Israel , wher e a uniqu e
national
program
is
underway .
In the first 18 months, some
10,000 youngsters have been
given free lesS&lt;Jns at a new
tennis center and use free
equipment - thousands of
rackets, halls and sneakers
flown in from a clearinghouse
in New York. The program is
supported by the United
States Committee Sports for
Israel
Its goals, says Dr. Ian
Froman, executive director
of the new Israel Tennis
Center four miles north of Tel
Aviv. are two-fold.
"One, we hope to develop
world-class players within a
few years . Two, I think
everyone in Israel wants
some normality to life and
some outlet fnr relaxation .

Tennis is giving it to them.
"Israel is nearly 30 years
old . That 's young for a
l'Ountry but quite a lot of
years in the life of · an
individual. il 's been always a
time of tension and economic
problems and I tliii\k some
Israelis have left the country
because they couldn't see the
li gh t at the end of the tunnel."
From~, on a two-week
fund raising tour of the United
States, is a teqnis-playing
dentist who moved to Israel
from South Africa 14 years
ago . He has played with aod
coached Israeli Davis Cup
teams and became so
involved with the tennis
center he now works at it full
time.
The new center at Ramal
Hasharon , first of six to be
completed, has 14·courts, one
field court with seating for
1,500 spectators and a main
stadium seatin g 5,000. Mnre

courts are likely to be added.
"The Idea for the center
came from people in the
United States wh b were
in volved in other projects for
Israel ," says Fr oman.
" Later, a stadjwn wa s built
at the complex with funds
raised in Canada."
The center came about
from a joint effort by Dr .
William Lippy ol Warren,
Ohio, Harold Landesberg of
Philadelphia, Joseph D . .
Shane of Los Angeles and
Rubin Josephs of Monsey,
N.Y. Several were tennis
buffs who felt a tennis center
W.t&gt;,~ld be a natural adjunct to
their other work for Israel.
They raised the funds and
Josephs supervised th'e
construction .
Several leading players, including·Jlmmy Con nors, are
among the donors.
So far, about $3 million has

gone into tile first center,
Froman says. Another f7
million will be required for
the five sa tellite centers
scattered around the country.
" If we charged the kids to
play and learn, we could be
self-sufficient once the
facilitie s are ln.' ' says
Froman. "We charge adults
to play, but when it's time lor
the kids to come on in prime
afternoon time, we chase the
adults and let lhe kids play
for free ."
There are a bout 650 courts
in Israel, nearly all of them
private.

•
White said the PUCO
: should be blamed for
:: contributing to last winter's
by
preventing
: .. crisis
• Columbila from making
•• emergency gas purchases
: without signed contracts.
:
White also blamed PUCO
:flll,r curtailments on schools
• ' that ca!lsed closings last
: year. He said the school
: curtailment was a mistal&lt;e
: but added , ."we didn't have
• any choice. We were
: following a PUCO order."

•••
••
·•••
•••
:•
••
•

•••

•
••
•••

•

:

~·

.

.

the office that was once his
own - now modified and
made smaller than it was in
his tenure.
Once admitted, Salinger
sat in a chair abou! five feet
fr om Powell's desk and

listened as the press
secretary mixed humor with
substance in answering
questions - much as he
himself had done in the days
when he sat on the other side
of the desk.
The former insidet took

notes part of the time, and
doodled with his blue fe It tip
pen as the conversation
strayed . from his interests
and thoughts .
How does the former presidential spokesm~n evaluate
the job the current one is

dQing?
11
l'm not here day in and
day out, but from what I've
heard and seen ... he's done
well,'' Salinger says.
"He has a good sense of
humor , and that helps
things."·
.

SANDWICHES
~~ES~-y/.

0

ADOLPH'S

Salinger shows a blunt
gr.asp of realities
in
answering a question about
whether he
had
any
suggestions or advice on how
to handle the task .
"He doesn't need my
advice, '' he· shrugged.

DAIRY VALLEY

'

•

If you're comparing plans, sit down
If you're comparing health care _
plans for your company, you should · and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
be aware that although two plans
how your health care program
may look alike, they can still be
quite different. Make sure you're
can be strengthened to better
meet your group's specific needs.
comparing exactly the same cover·
It will be worth the time ... because .
ages ... dollar for dollar ... benefit
for benefit ... service for service.

Otherwise, it's like

compan·ng apples to oranges.
Another comparison you should
look at is the balance between
benefits and cost ... what you need
versus what you can afford. And,
it's especially important to make
sure you and your employees are
adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could wipe
out a life's savings.

apples to apples, it's awfully.
tough for anybody to beat a Blue CT .
and Blue Shield plan.

Blue'Cross
Blue Shield
in Central Ollio

.

. THANKS TO MY SUPPORTERS .
AND VOTERS IN THE NOV. lth
ELECTION .+'Rfl:ill~r~ Marks Blue.Crnss Associ ation

DONALD L. MOORE
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Pd. Pol. Adv .

D&amp;llt
FDDDS

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

les?

lesto

O::

~

0

HRS. , IO ,oo'A.M.til1t :00 P.M. Sun. · Thurs . 10,00 A.M.
til 12 ,00 P.M. Friday and Saturday.
_

Big suit .
charges
•
piracy
CH ICAGO (UP]) - A
music publisher is suing 15
American Roman Catholic
dioceses for $8.5 million,
charging that biShops are
allowing their parishes to
pirate
hymns
for
unauthorized use in churches
and schools.
The suit, filed Monday in
U.S. District Court by F .E.L.
Publications Ltd .. was filed
~~ reluctantly and as a last
res ort,"
said
Dennis
Fitzpatrick, president of of
F.E .L. Publications Ltd .
F .E .L. filed a similar suit
against
the
Chicago
archdiocese last year and at
that time asked bishops and
archbishops elsewhere to
investigate the possibility of
unauthorized use of F.E .L.· ·
copyright songs in hymnals.
"These requests were uni··
formly ignored or rejected,"
Fitzpatrick said. ·
Early this month, he said,
the firm repeated Its request
and showed bishops and
archbishops samples of
unauthorized use of F.E .L:
hymns In
publications
circulated in their dioceses.
"Their unsatisfactory response to these 1 letters
prompted our re~Qrt to
· litigation," Fitzpatrick said.
Fifteen dioceses are
specified in the suit. They are
Boston; Brooklyn, N.Y.;
Buffalo, N.Y .; Chicago;
Cincinnati; Cleveland, Ohio;
Denver; Detroit; Fort
Wayne .South Bend, Ind.;
Green Bay, Wis .; New York,
Phoenix,
Ariz.;
St.
Augustine, Fla., and San
Francisco.
The suit asks the court to ·
stop unauthorized printing,
use and distribution of the
hymns and tD order delivery
of any pirated hymnals to
F .E;.L . for safekeeping
pending the outcome ol the
case.
.In the Chicago case, he
said, it' was found that 56
percent of Catholic.churches
were.J using
hymnals
containing pirated F .E.L.
hymns.
·
Chicago Cardinal John
Cody has denied the charge of
copyright Infringement and
filed a counter"!!uil charging
antitrust. violations.
A
,spokesman said the Chkago
archdiocese
had
no
immediate comment on that
lawsuit.
Fitzpatrick said, "! believe
on the Day of Judgment I will
be asked - like the servant
entrusted 1vith the silver
pieces (Matthew 25:14-30) what I did with the copyrights
that were entrusted to my
care. Did I sue to protect
them'!

" When I was coaching the
.Davis Cup .leams, we had no
place to practice," says
Froman . "We used to sneak
over to one ol the private
clubs, cut a hole In the fence
and work out until a security
guard chased us away . That's
like teUing a concert pianist
he can use your piano once a
week and that's it.
11
Today I our national team
coach, Jackie Saul, has the
use of facilities at the
national center. For the first
time this year, Israel has
reached the · third round in
Davis Cup play. The team
averages 19 years old. It used
to average about 30.
" We have beaten Finland
and play Austria in the third
round next March, at the new
center. 11

TRY OUR DELICIOUS

Salinger in White House now as magazine reporter

Recently my car wouldn'fstart and 1had to
call a serviceman to come and start it.
Would my Automobile policy cover this
extra expense?

INSTANT
GAIN ·
·
20 oz.
•
Box
DmRGENT.........................

DCI.I.

.

CELERY............................ ~~~-~~.. 49•

.

9 :001117 :00

Saturday 9: 00·9 :00
CLOSED

.

APPLES .................... aag 3.50

•.

·
SKIING FAMILY in the United States tries o ut a run at Steamboat Springs, Colo. Rocky
Mountain areas are looking for heavy snowfalls this winter to make up for last year's
disastrously
near-snowless season . '
·
"

REUTER,SROGAN INSURA"CE. .

20 lb .•

.

,..-1"...,

1
'

IIID·II!IOI RB

HAPPY
DEL MONTE

,,.·

Scout will go on
Antarctic trip

Rio 27th in .national meet,
Mundy fifth with top honors

their homes, Sens . John
Glenn
and
Howard
Mel%enbawn, both O..Ohio,
announced Monday.
"The purpose of this
!X'Ogram is to aid low4ncome
families in insulating their
homes, thereby reducing
energy consumption and
lowering utility bills," said
the senators in a joint
statement.

.

Angels, then he's a Uar. We
offered him nowhere near
what was paid Larry Hiale by
the MUwaultee Brewent or
Richie Zisk by the Tens
Rangers. There's no way he
would have been the hi8Mst
paid player in baseball if he'd
'' have taken our oller."

HUNTINGTON, W. Va . from other councils in Area 6
The Tri-State Area Council, of the East Central Region.
Hoy Scouts of America, is Area winners wUI go on to
IO(,)king for a Scout or E•· regional competition, to be
plorer to go on an Antarctic completed by May I, and the
six regional winners will go to
expedition next year.
John R. Moll , Council.Vice Washington lor a full week
President, said the selection during June for selection of
of a single representative of the national representative.
The Antarctic trip, lasting
the Boy Scoul8 of America is
SANITARIANS
in commemoration oi the 50th at . least three months, will
COLUMBUS (UPI l - Five
members ·
have
been anniversary of Seoul Paul · begin in the fall of 197!. It Is
Siple's trip to Little America co-sponsored by the National
appointed by Gov . James A.
with Cmdr. Richard E . Byrd Science Foundation and the
Rhodes tD a newly created
Reader 's Digest Foundation.
in 1928.
State Board ol Sanitarian
" It is also intended to stress
Candidates must have two
Registration .
the
high-adventure
aspecl8
of
years'
membership In the
A new law that goes into
·the Boy Scouts of America, to Boy Scouts of America, and
effect next August provides
for stale registration of recall the strength of preference will be given to
sanitarians - experts in Scouting ove r the five candidates who hold selected
decades since Paul Siple's merit badges or have proven
public health and sanitatioo
experience,
to emphasize abilities
in
similar
who meet certain
Scouting's
highlight
disciplines
,
edtlcatiooal and experience
Full requirements and
programs for youth based on
requirements.
~
1
individual
initiative
and
.
application
blanks · will be
The new board.. members
ability,
and
to
bring
to
a
large
available
at
the Tri.State
are: James D. Lucas,
proportion
of
American
youth
Area
Council
office, 733
Camden, associate !X'Ofessor
the
significance
of
polar
Seventh
Ave.
in
HunliOj!ton.
at Wright State University ;
scien1ific
studies
as
a
base
for
The
Tri.State
Area
Councills
Charles · G .
Gossett,
broadening
human
a
member
agency
of the
Colwnbus, an employee of LCabell·Wayne United Fund,
K Enterprises; Boyd T ,. knowledge," Moll said.
The Tri-state Area Council the Boyd County Community
Marsh, commissioner of
environmental health ser· will sefect its candidate by C'nest, and the Lawrence
vices of the Cleveland March 1, 1978. The winners . County, Ohio. United Fund.
Department of Health; will compete wi•h wi""-""
Kenneth W. Kerick, health
commissioner of Sandusky
and Seneca counties; and
Charles R. Terry, sanitarian
in the Jackson County Health
Department.

INSULATION GRANT
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Department of Energy
has offered Ohio a $1.38
million grant io help low

..

-, .. Rtgisttred Servict Marks of Th~ National As~ation of 81~ Shiel.,_.

�6- The Daily Sent me l, M1ddleport-l'omeroy. U.. tuesday .l'iov. 2'2. 1970

Minersville
UMW
present
The
male
myth
vanishes;
~
Thanksgiving program
~
what men really· want

,::::::~:::::::::::::::::::;s:::&lt;::::::::::.::.':·:·:.:·~:..~::~~::.:.'=~*~::::-..-.::=:::::;...:...::-"}"*-~:''*::.:•~~·~:&gt;!·:-:·:·:.

,\\

Generation Rap ·

~

By Helen and Sue Bottd

!\\\

•

DESER\'ES ·UGLY OF YF..AR' TITLE

~

RAP :
Mv fiance n.-·er sa1d much about h1s father . He left home at

16, shortly after hiS mother died. He put himself through col·
lege and has a great job. My parents and e"erybody else like
him. and I'm su much mlove that, well, I honestlv feel like sen·
ding Ius father a rattlesnake in the mail.
·
i\s a wedding g1ft •ran you believe' I, Ty's father mailed him
th•' old razor strop he'd used to beat hbn with. Ty finally open·
ed up and told me about lhose terrible beatings· he's still got
scars. The card ms1de sa1d, "Use lhis on your cluldren." t
!,"Ut'SS· h{''s actually proud of making,. tys son run away from
home .
·
I want to write a le lt&lt;·r that will blister lum inside out, but 'l'y
say8, " forget 1t." He says the only way not to be bitter is to
forg11·e •though he's glad he won't be at our wedding ).
I fN'll'll explode lf I don't tell that hOrrible man what I think
of him. What do you tlunk ? ·NOEL
DEAR XOEI. :
This is Ty's battle, not )·ours: and if he has called atruce, let it
stand.
We ttu.tk you have an e:tceptional man here: a person wise
enough to understa nd that hate erodes but fo rgiveness carries
~"th 1t the detemtination that he will never· be like his father . ·
HELEN AND SUE
.
DEAR HELEN At'IDSUE :
.
A year ago I was raped. Well. I made it through a lot of pain
'-:tllij anger. I'm okay. But if anyone were to ask me if I'm a
virgm, what do I say ' I did not want this; it was ''iolently
agains t my will.
Had a child of five been molested, she would still be . con·
side red a virgin, but because I was in my teens when it happened, what am I? · VIRG IN BUT NOT
DEAR VIRGIN.
I'd say &lt;though I'U get arguments): consider this an un·
fortunate accident, one which doesn't cha nge your status.
because you are still waiting for the rig ht man.
How you fee l abt\.\'P:ourself is much more important than
the technical details , and if you fee l more okay as a virgin,
I then be one · even though you'll probably tell key people in
your .life about the rape.· HE LE~
DEAR VIRGIN:
Since when is it anybody's business whether or not you're a
virgin? If someone asks. you've a right to silence· or to say
wha t makes youlllore comfortable with yourseif. ·SUE - RAP:

This is to "Pressured by Relatives" who doesn't want to take
her "countrv cousin' ' to the dance.
PBR: If you can' t have the court esy to show him a fun time,
you aren 't worth two Cents. It's not like this is the last dance of
the century.
As for "being so popular"· that's conceited bragging. Try a
little kindness and maybe those guys you can "get anytime you
want " will start liking you for yourseif and not what they can
gel.· T.C.

'

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Hair spray rids ink stains
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY-Please tell
me what to do to remove ball
point ink and lipstick stains. FAITH .

OEAR POLLY- How can I
remove ball
m~

po~nt

ink from

husband's pastel dress
slurts?
f save leftover foil TV dinner
trays and use them for
heating !~Clove rs as this
eliminates a lot of dirty pans

.'

usual. ·J .T.
DEAR POLLY- Being on a
fixed in come we usually buy
our gasoline at seif-service
sta tions and also many times
when one wants to buy
gasoline that is all they can
find . There is notlung worse
than that gasoline smell left
on your hands after filling the
tank so I carry a few lemon

.

'

NEll' YOHK t l'PII - :l111st
Arnrru·an men vrefer

l).lp

the nwchn mysuqur

ltk~

marrliH!t~ bl PflliHiSCUity. are ~ a soap bubble.

b.•rt."&lt;l b\ ft•malt&gt; nuditv and •-~ ··r.lodt.•rn man h&lt;.~ s lx.•pn
SE'XUHII~: p.aS.SIW' womCn' turn dt•pJ['ted i:t a \';:Jnety nf w&lt;:~ys.
tht'JT\ off. nut llll
mnst tlf tht.'lll unfiattrring, all
That's hardly a portrait of
theruthlt'SS ;· maleehau,·inist
pig. " ttw demon of wr•men's
hb, but 1t 's tht&gt; ttneo that

nf tht.•rn s kr td1y and simplistic,·· they wr1le ··TtJf' TV
s ituat1un ('nlllL"'.ht;'S P\'rtray

~uu?rges

wtinsp irt:&gt;{l bun~lt.'~, while tht•
adVt.:'nture ShOWS t'aSt him as
a t'l'ldblotldNl. ·\·ll,lent hwlt~r
of nwn and cym c.clt prt;&gt;'dati.,r
of Y. nmcn.
"'llte femini:sts accuse him
of
bt~ tn~
exploitati\' t&gt;.

in the most detailed
~xuality SUf\'P)' Sinn• tht"
Kinst-y Report of 1948.
The nt&gt;w surn•y. compiled
in a natiflnwidt- study of 4.066
mfn. iS ron'talned in ··sey0nd
tht&gt; . Male M\'ttr," to be
published Dec ~ 3, and in it.
authflrs Anthcmy Pietropinto

TUES DAY
AMERICAN Legion Au.,.
iliary, Racine Post 60'l. Tues·
day night, i:30 p.m. at the
ha ll.
PO MERO Y Cha mber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn . Glen Smith
guest speaker . .

AMERI CAN Legion Aux·
iliary of Drew Webster i'Post
39. will meet Tuesdal' at the
hall for a joint junior and
senior meeting. There wtll be
a covered dish dinner at 6
p.m. with dessert to be served
by the unit. The meeting will
be held a t 7: 30 at wluch tune
cha rter members gold st&lt;l r
mothers, and 30 year coflo
linuous memberslups will be
honored.
M I D DL E p 0 R T •
POMEROY Area Branch of
tlie American Association of
University Women, 7:30p .m.
Tuesday in the kindergarten
building located near the
Racine Junior High School.
Program will be on the
politics of food by Mrs. Jean
Alkire and Susan Fleshman.
Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs. Max·
ine Plulson, Mrs. Lee Lee,
and Mrs. Bernice Ca rpent er
will be the hostesses.
POMEROY CHAPTER lOO ,
O.E.S., practice for installation Tuesday, i p.m. All ofd
and new officers to attend .
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BENNETT Post
128, American Legion , 7:30
Wednesday night at the hall .
AMERICAN Legion Aux·
ilia ry, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7:30 Wednesday night at
the hall, Middleport.

him as an rmasculated.

e~(llistite~l anrl &lt;'bsessed with

indi s\.'riminate sexual
gratificatwn . Writers of
pop ular ps. ology books
de se r i'Le tum
unc ot11mwtieati,;?. insensitt
drivt'n by machismo ."
ln the sur vey. the t n
emerges as nothin g of t e
sort, turning out tn be ;Jt lea ·t
as S}1np&lt;~thetn: nnd sensiti'
a hum~m bemg ctS his femal
t'nun tt~rpart .

Pit·tropmtn. a psychiatrist.
Silm:.naaer, a sciencE&gt;
writer . learned that contrarY
to lhP prevailing myth, the
sexua1ly &lt;l~ressive woman
holds no fear for the average
~nd

man . On

t h~

contrary, they

say. "The sexually passiYe
wnman may be a maj or t'ause
of itnp•:•tency fl'r alnwst half
the nation's mrn ." ·"
'
Men .· they say, are mure

Sl'K th;m C'\'t•r
bl'fnrt' - must wuuld hke 1t Pll
an &lt;J\·t•ntge n( ft1i..u· tunes a
\H'l'k
and ki ssin!!, and
t·arl'SSIIlg " ab l.'lt~ m the
sun t.') af tlw 11w~1 cnjnyablr
fPrt"pla} .
Yet for all tlw lrl(' rea sed
Interest. 11n\y (lnt• man in fiw
Cll llSHlcrs se x the nwsl

mtl' rrstPd m

Ut lportant p\t&gt;asurc in life and
- in a blriw tn publishers of
thr
~irly
magazine
ccmerfolds- nuditr got few
\ 'I HE'S as a turn-ntl. OrH l sex
rml'l'!:!('d as thr most favor£..'&lt;1
new intitntlL'Y·
Thr£&gt;t.•-fourths of lht&gt; m~n
..sUJ·\·eyed dt~d marnage as
'the " ideal se x life" - ,,,I(y
one in lO preferred the
arrar1genwnt of siJnpl~· li \•ing
together.

·

The suney also indicated
men ha,;e mor e sensitivity
and pay mure attention tn
th eir lovemaking than did
their Kinsey counterparts of
30 years u~n.
"1\ len are ntllft:' sutcessful

Prayer .··

Plans were made for a
Christmas pa rty to be held at
the home of Mrs. June Savre
U1an en:r befor~ in brin!Sng at 6 p.m. on Dec. 21 wi tli $1
W(lllh!n tn Mgasm - and gift exchange. Cards and
derastated when they do remembrances will be sent to
shutins . Gifts will go to a
not,'' say the authors.
On the other hand, half the ' needy fam il y and t he
men surveyed admit ted minister .
11aving cheated on their wives
f New offieers were cll'l'led
or girlfr iends. and th e du ri ng the meeting with Mrs.
"Otsmopolitan girl" ·- thai Mary Pugl1 8nd Mrs. ~illircd
enmbination of beauty kmd Plullips reporti ng fur the
brains - was found to make nominc.t ing cm Jlrr Jittee. Ther
-are Mrs." Ruby Grucser.
most nwn ne r vous.

a

Huby Grueser and Mrs . Gertrude Mlll'hell. ·

president ; Mrs. M11ry PU!-!h .
vice president ; Mrs Junl'

Sayre , secretary ; ami Mr~ .

Mary Husscll, trca"trcr.
The day was spt•ut qu1lt111g

•

amlmcmlx:rs enjoyed a sal'k
lunch at nuun . AltcJ Jdmg were

" Se rv ice
tha t Excel s "

Mrs. Pugh , Mrs. Forbes,
Mrs. Stella Grue.sur, Mrs.

DAVIS
INS. AGENCY

Fannie Plnllips, Mrs. MaHt:: ,

Mrs. Mi i(!l'ed Phillips, Mrs.
Mary Hussell, Mrs. Sayre.
Mrs. Doris C:rucser. Mrs.

We P"Y

I 00% INTEREST
in serving
YClJR

Beulah Nutt , Buckhannon.
W, Va . has been the guest of
Mrs, Ge1 1~vievc Ml'inllo, rt
and M1ss En11a Smlth .
Mr. 1111d Mrs. J Ot' Bissell,
lnng Bottom, have n.·t urncd
fro m visitmg Mr. Hnd Mrs.
Ted Hayman and family,
Westervill e, Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Groeneveld and Tom·
my , Worthington. ~nd Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Bisst!ll ' Col·
wllbus.
Mrs. Ben Heapp and
daughters. Che ryl and Carol,
Merritt Island. Fla . v1s1kd
Tuesday e\·e ning with Mr.
and Mrs . Osby . Mt~rtin ami
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mm ·
lin . Thev are " lso visiting in
G~ll ipol is with t&gt;k and Mrs.
thirry
Rc ap p.

• Life
• Hea llh
•Farm
•F ir e
•Auto
• Notary
•Complete Bonding
Se rvice

BILL QUICKEL, OWNER
Ac ross from
The Courthouse : 1
in Pnmerov

PHONE 992-5120

'

By ANN ARNOLD
HOUSTON
(UP() Leaders of the National
Women's Conferenc:e will
seek federa l funding for
another meeting to promnle
femi nis t goals·, deSj)ilc
pr otests
of
dissident
de l~ga tes who walked nut nf
Mooday 's closing session.
Pres id ent Carter's top
wnmen a ppointees said thev
will meet next week to
prepare a special repfil't on

the meeting for U1e president.
Carter also wi ll receive 25
rec("lrnmcndations ap pro\'l~d
by nearly 2,000 delegates
from acrnss the nation .
Tile historic rcmference - a
culmination of a t wo-year
project financed by a $5
mi llinn appropriation from

their understanding of what
democracy and free speech is
then we are in grave trouble
in this country," Mrs.
Gubbins said. " I hope the
Ccmgn..&gt;ss dnes nut decide to
contmue U1is ra rce."
Sl"lme 200 delegates from
lndiana, Mississippi, Kansas,
Omgress - voted Mori.day to Alabama,
Oklahoma,
request "suffic:icnt f.unds'' to Misso uri, Ohio, and Montana
carry
out
it s
rec- stalked out with her .
om mend atio ns and sti:l'ge
A split in the feminist
.anot her meeting.
the
majority
hel ped
Nn date was speci fied but conservatives to defeat
con ference leader Bella another proposal for a federal
Abzug said U1e next meeti ng woman's department.
mi~ht come as soon as 1980.
Snm e lesbians indi ca ted
"It should take a couple of they voted a gain st the
years t.o assess the work d epa rtm ent beca use Ms.
MINERSVILLE - Mr. and · that 's . gone on here and Abzug had been reluctant to
Mrs. Otto Hartenba ch will be pre pare for a seco nd s uppor t t heir ca use. Many
observing their 60th l"eddin g meeting," Ms. Abzug sa id . feminists, however , said th e)'
anniversary quietly at their " We fee l tilat we have were concern ed that a
home In Minersville Monday. enrn mcnced something that sepa r ate w o m e n 's
Mr. Hartenbach bega n will create a new stage in the department would result in
working at the foundry on E. SW'ge for equali ty - a ·stage tokenism.
Main St . in 1916 when it was of action .''
"We dream of a Ca binet in
known as the J&lt;:b ers ba ch
Indian a legislatnr Joan M . which we're going to have"
Foundry. It later beca me the GtAI/ins, a Republican who equal representation. " said
Parkersburg Rig and Ree l le3tf the walkout minutes Eleanor C. Smeal, National
a nd he was employed there before the conference ended, Organiz a tion of Women
also lor a total of 43 years at • said cnnse r valive delegates president. " Besides, most of
both locations until the firm were incensed at feminist us co uld not envisi on a
operation was closed in 1959. dom in&lt;:ttion uf the meeti ng Cabinet that would have a
F o ll o wing temp o r a r y and the prospect of more department of women with a
retirement, Mr. Hart enbach federa l spending to promote woman pres ld enl. We're
in 1960 accept ed a position as U1e Equal Rights i\mendn1ent wt1rking very hard toward
custodian of the Pomeroy and Civil rights for lesbians. that day. "
National Bank and was there
" If this i~ an ~-xnr&gt;~ .... 1,., "' '
.. lor nearly 14 years before ill·
ness forced his retirement.
Also on Monday , . Mr . .Har-.
tenbach will be observing a ·

GALLIPOLIS

~~~day anniversary

- his

La1Jette
shower
held
'J

tgomery, Agnes Faber,
Sheila Hawk, and Terry
Pys archuk , Gavin plant
secretaries.
Games were played with
prizes being won by Brend.a
Ha ggy and JoAnn Clark. The
door prize was won by Anna
Neal.
AlU!nding were Pamela
See, Evelyn Laning , Brenda
Haggy, Tera Lane, Diana
Lewis, Anna Neal, Ada King·;
Kay King, Vicky Adkins ,
Tammy_Adkins, Sherri Clark,
JoAnn Clark, E ve lyn
Spe ncer , Ire ne Hanson,
Hildred Sickels, Darla Kelly,
Halcie Sayre, Nancy Lilly,
Lucille King , Hester Sickels,
and
Carla King.
Mon ., Tues .• Wed . &amp; Sat .......a : 301il5 : 00
Sending
gifts were Viola
. i'HURSDA!l' TIL 12 NOON
Bayles , Bessie Quillen, Myrtle Quillen, Tina Jacobs, Don·
na Gilmore, Mildred Jacobs,
Jane Jacobs, the Rev. and
Mason, W: Va.
Herman Grate
773·5~92
,,Mrs. Floyd Shook, and Connie
~. ..,..;;.. . . ., .. . . .. ,. . . ..,.,;............... ·'Lanning.

A layette shower honori ng
Mrs. Vicki Hanson, wife of
Ha rold Hanson , Pomeroy,
was held recently at the
Meigs Inn banquet room.
Hostin g the shower were
Susan Lanning, Vi ckie Mon·

., OO®

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

teacher-educator, has been
named 1977 Educator of the
Yea r by the Ohio fede ration,
Cou nci l for Exceptional
Children. Mrs. Gardner was
honored last week du ring the
Silver Anniversa ry of the
OFCEC in Toledo.
More th an 800 pe rsons
attended the banquet, ending
a three day conference for the
Coun ci l for Exceptional
Olfldren.
Honored as teacher of the
year was Mrs. Barbara
Antony of P arma City
Schoo ls . Ka thy -! Susan
Kessling

Wildwood Garden .Club
visits GSI garden club
The Wildwood Garden Club setved.
members were at the
Favors including candy ,
Gallipolis Sta te Institute combs, and pencils from the
Thursda y for a therapy prtr. Farmers Bank and Savings
gram with the Nature Garden Co., Pomeroy Natinal Bank
Club.
Landtnark, and the Royai
Mrs. Dorothy Smith, presi· ' Crown Bottling Co. and the
dent, had charge of the Fruth Pharmacy of Gallipolis
mee ting and dislributed were given to · the GSI
Thanksgiving readings which residents. Mrs. Garnet Wood,
members of the Nature Club therapy chairman for the
read .
Nature Garden Club, noted
For the therapy work, Mrs. that the club received second
Kathryn Miller provided in Region ll on their scrapsmall plastic buckets which . book.
the club members decorated
Going down for the therapy
with Chrisimas trirrunings of program were Mrs. Ada
!elt. Cookies and koolaid were Holter, Mrs. Mae Holter
'
'

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. James !lut-

cher, Route 2, Racine, are an·
nouncing the birth of a
daughter, Julie Kri~len . The
seven pound, five ounce in-

fant was hom on 'Nov. 17 at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Butcher have a
son, ·Jeffrey . Norman, . age
two. Grandparents are Mr . .
and . Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Margaret.
Butcher , Middlepo7.

Mrs. Dorothy Smith, Mrs.
Virginia Fi sher , Mrs.
Kathryn Miller, and Mn.
Doris Grueser,•

TV .

REALISTIC@}
40 CHANNEL MOBILE CB RADIO
Hol&lt;days m ea n fa mil y tr avel all over A'm en cal
Now , wh en you n eed It m ost. our rRC · 466 will
keep you &lt;nform ed abo ut roa d and tr aff&lt; c co nd1 ·
t1o ns for a safer hol &lt;day . It's " m&lt;n &lt;" ·Siz ed, JU.St
1 1/ax5 '!.x8%" , to f11 in small cars van s tru cks
And. 1t 's a fu ll f eature 4 0 c han~el . CB- not a
"2 3 " close out! A t t hi s lowpri ce TRC-466 •sal sa
an aff ordable gift 1dea ! Yo u get a su per deal at
The Shack • : h uge saving s plus th e fun and
sec unty of Realt st &lt;c CB
th e br and Am en ca
loves b est I

Reg.

EDUCATOR HONORED - Mrs . Eugenia Gardner, EMR. Supervisor for Gallia County,
Gallipolis City and Meigs Local Schools, receives congratulations from Thomas Hairston,
Galtia County School Superintendent for her latest award , " 1977 Educator of the Year"
presented by t~e Ohio Federation Council for Exceptional Children givi ng during the
organization's silver anniversary celebration last week in Toledo.

House GOP counts with care
By GENE BERNHARDT
WASHING'l'ON (UP!)
Republicans boasted last
year .that it would be "76 in
'76," indicating the number of
additional House seats they
intended to win in the
presidential year electioos
last November. They ended
up with a net loss of two seats.
Today, even with political
history on their side, Republi·
cans refuse to mention
numbers and only cautiously
predict lhey will make. gains
in the November; 1978, mid·
term congressional elections.
Histori c ally,
the
president's party lost an
average of 45 House seats in
mid:&gt;erm elections up until
1962. Then it averaged out at
21 until the last such election,
in 1974, when the outo&lt;Jf.power
Democrats registered a 4;}.
seat gain.
The
current
party
breakdown in the House is 289
Democrats
and
t46
Republicans and Democrat;s
generally cnncede they will
lose some seats next year .
But they say it's too early to
speculate on how many ,
"We Democrats expect to

lqse some seats," · said
~peaker Thomas O'Neill .
'Only once in my memory
did the party out .of power fail
to gain mid.(erm seats and
that was in I934 under
Franklin Roosevelt." The
nul"'!f-power Republicans lost
t4 seats in FOR's first mid·
term .
In a recent television panel
interview ·featuring Senate
GOP leader Howard Baker
and House Republican leader ·
J ohn
Rhodes,
Baker ·
commented that he had been
told Republicans expect to
gain 33 f!ouse seats in 1978.
Rhodes , following the
dictum of House GOP
strategists
again s t
rnentioning numbers , only
smiled and said " I guei;S that
means you expect to gain 17
Senate seats." That ended the
numbers game.
" It 's too early to pick out
districts and say it will be
played out here ," said a
Democratic spokesman .
"There'll be a lot of horse
trading. We'll lose som.,
· conservative seats and we'll
win
some
younger
Repu~lican seat!)."

____ ,, f; .~ ~,V~.J~ J

THEN IT'S SETTLED,GENTLEMEN. WFLL PAY $24.00
FOR THlS ISLAND ADVERTISED IN THE WANT ADS.
If you have an article or service to sell, put in a Quick Action
WANT AD ·• It could be the start of something big.

992-2156

21 - 1526

RADI~

SMART SAf/TAS SHOP EARLY . .. MOST STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS 'TIL CHRISTMAS

_SEE THE TELEPHONE DIRECTORY WHITE
P"flES FOR THE RADIO SHACK NEAREST YOU

SHACK!

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,,rsu av,l•'.aiJI!&gt;•"'
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lhaek
CEA L. IEQ

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Miami Univer-

Caution in the winds

t

WANT ADS

gg~s

THERE'S ONLY ONE PLACE YOU CAN FIND IT -

1

ot

sity , Oxford was named
student teacher of the year.
MFS. Gardner, a 42-year
vetefan in t he t eaching·
profession , has served as an
EMR supervisor the la st
eight years. Upon assuming
that post, she wa s in charge
of
s pecial
edu ca tion
1

Stockings made
for children

as
seen on
national

Mrs.

Eugenia Gardner , a veteran

Hartenbachs to
observe date

Mr. and Mrs. Hartenba ch
have
three
children ,
Margaret (Mickey) Russell,
Dorothy Hartenbach and Bob
Hartenbach who wa s formerly sheriff of Mei gs
County . The Hart enba chs
malli.ng address is Minersville, Ohio.

d1e

Recognition
given educator

Leaders disagree on goals

moistened towelettes in the

glove compartment of the
and saves so much time. - car . Alter filling our tank
DONNA
either my husband or 1 can
DEAR F Al'l'H AND DON· freshen up our .hands and get
NA- The American institute rid of the dirt and odor by us·
of Laun dering says, 1 'Hair ing one of them. We heartily
Christmas stockings for the
spray is !he nemesis of ball recommend tlus to others. - chlldren a t Veterans
pomt ink stains. &amp; rape off ANABEL.
Memorial
Hospital were
any surface ink , sa turate
DEAR POLLY - I find that completed at the Thursday
spots with spray and when it two old metal automobile meeting of the Bradbury
is dry wash fabri c by hand or li cense plates make a Variety Club held at the home.
in the washing ma chin e. If wonderful device for picking of Mrs. Arline Davis .
any remains, repeat." Or up leaves, dirt, etc. This is
Coloring books and crayons
petrolewn jelly may be rublr better than a dust pan as you were put into each of the
ed into such stains and then can scrape wi th it and both stockings for the hospitalized
wash in hot detergent suds. hands .are left free to use in· children. Mrs. Bernice Wino
Tlus is also very good for stead of having only one to presided at the meeting with
removing . lipstick sta ins. use with the broom . Thank Mrs. Davis giving the scriP'
·POLLY.
you for all your good lure and the secretary's
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Pointers.- LENORA.
report . Mrs. Evelyn Murray
Peeve is with restaurants
DEAR POLLY -1 dislike fit· gave the flower fund report.
that do not allow people over ted bottom sheets bu\ solved
A sympathy card was sigflo
12 years of age to order a my problem with them when ed by the members for Mrs.
cluld's platter. I have found I thought of using the bottom Oleva Cotterill. Plans were
that even at church picnics sheet on the bed crosswise. made for the annual
lh'ey will not ·Serve a child 's There will be no tuck-in at the Chrisimas dinner to be held
portion to an adult and there head and foot but pulled tight at the Meigs Inn on De'c. 15
are many of us who cannot there is so much tuck·in on with a party to follow at the
eat so much food and hate to each side that they stay in hoome of Mrs. Carolyn
waste it. I was raised on the place beautifully.- IVY.
Searles. There will be a gift
idea that wasting food was a
Polly will send you one of exchange and dessert at the
sin and I still go by this. - her signed thank -you Searles home .
MRS.G.R.
n~wspaper coupon clippers if
Mrs. Winn had grace
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. she uses your favorite preceding the potluck lunJ.H.W. can also r~move Pointer, Peeve or Problem in cheon . The benediction
· water spots from her wood her column. Write POLLY 'S dismissed the meeting. Also
table top by applying a truck PO!Nfl'ERS in care of tlus attending was Mrs. Virginia
coat of jelly, leave it on over- newspaper.
Whitlatch.
night, wipe off and polish as

J

ami Jnl'queluw Suuenau,•r

:\ Thanksgivmg prograrll
w;-t s presPnted at tlw rl'n:nt
llh~ dtng
of the Umted
Mctl1odtsl Women uf the
Minersville United Mt'thodist
Church.
Prayer by Mrs. Helen
Maag opened the meeting
w1th m~mbers singing
"Count Your Blessings."
Mrs. Mary Russell had the
program and read Psalm 9'2.
Readings included " A Taste
of Heaven" by Mrs. Mary
Pugh; "Bright Things" by
Mrs. Elsie Forbes : " Bountiful Living" by Mrs. Huby
Gmest•r; " The Bread of
!Jfe" by Mrs. Stella Grucser;
'"FmM11s Promising" by j\.1rs .
Helen Ma.ag ; ·' Rt!vcrse Judgment" by Mrs . Mildr~l
Phillips; and "Come Unlu Me
Ye Who are Wean' cmtl
Heavy L~den " by · June
Sayre. Mrs. Dorfs G rueser
gave an article on Thanksgiv·
ing and " The Middle Age

.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport:Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 22,1977

WANT AD
BRING .M
BUYERS SO
FAST SHOULD
HAVE
RAISED .M
PRICE!

programs for Gallia , Meigs.
Jackson , Athens, and Morgan
Counties. Mrs. G&lt;1rdner is
now in charge ~ f EMR
(educable mcqlally retar·
ded ) cla sses for Gallia
County and Gallipolis City
Schools and Meigs I.ocal,
Schools.
She served as a special
education instructor for tl ·
years at Gallia Academy
High School. Prior to that she
was an elementary teacher at
Washington School.
Her award reads. " Citation
for distingui shed se 1·vice
conferred up on Eugeni a
Gardner by the Ohio
Federation. Council for
E.ceptional Children in
recognition· of outsta'nding
leadershi p in the role of 1977
Educator of the Year. "
Her ~r esenter was Mrs.
Patricia Skinner, P.P.D.C.
coordinator of the Athens
Southeastern Ohio ltegional
Resource Cente1·.
A graduate of Ohio
Un iversity , Mrs. Gardner
received her Master 's Degree
from Marsha ll University
a nd had done post graduate
work at the University of
Chicago, Indiana University
and Oh io University.
She currently teaclws "
special education language
arts 'class at Ohio Unive rsity,
one night a week. Mr s.
Gardner has also receivf'l.!
the Am y Allen Awa r d };iven
for outstand ing teaching in
the specia l education fie ltl.
She is a mernUcr of the Ohio
Associa tion of Special Ad·
ministra tors an d S pecial
Education Super visors and
Work Study Coordinators and
served as coordin3tur for the
low incide nce prograrri for
Gallia County S~h ools .
In att enda nce
at the
banquet were Dr. Robet't
Weinfurtner, director of the
SEO Reg ional n esource
Center ; Sherri Alli son, low
incidence coordinator for the
center ; Amy Allen a11d Dr.
Larr y Jagema n of · Ohi o
University.
Mrs. Ga rdner is marri ed to
Nelson Gardner. a retire.&lt;!
employee of Buckeye Rural
Electric.

11
Come back in Utree or debacle the GOP suffered in
four months. We should have national elections last year
·
something a little firmer by may be flattening out.
Brock said the Nov. 8
U1en ," said a Republican
electi ons showed " we made
spokesman.
One Democrat, referring to soiid progress in our critical
the historical pattern of mid· effort to restore the local base
term elections, Said "This is of the Republican party."
That is basic GOP straU!gy,
particularly true for a new
pour
ing manpow er and
administration because of the
effect of campaign promises money into the states in an
and the failure to come organi zational eff ort they
hope will start a groundswell
through on all of them."
" The president sure is of substantial gains in !978
helping
us, "
sa.id
a with the big pres id ential
Republican . " We should payoff in 1980.
make gains in the West on the · Democrats are painfully
water and land problems. " aware of the strategy . Rep.
~. ' T h e
C a r t e r
John Bradema s , D-Ind .,
administration has positioned "J]ouse Democratic whip, said .
i')t4so that some Democrats recently Republicans were
have to run against it," one building an ~npre cedente d $8
Democrat conceded . t'How milli o n congr ess ional
do you run in the West? And campaign committee war
the farmer s, who are chest for House races alone in
traditionally mad at the 1978.
admini st[ation in power
Republicans said the figure
regardless of party, ar.e mad is more like $.'i million, which
at us and that's where we would still be unprecedented .
made gains in 1974 and '76." The GOP spent a record $3.5
Bothparties are also aware million on House races in 1976
of the mounting number of and Democrats said they put
"
departures from the House, out about $750,000.
The
Republi,
can
either retiring- or running for
another office in 1978. So far, Congressional Campaign
10 Democrats and .nine Committee has already put $3
Republicans will be quitting million aside for next year. It
the House and that number is expects to get another $1.5
expected to double before million from the Republican
National Committee and an
next November.
Republicans are looking additional $500,000 from GOP
MARIETTA
Ha nd·
hard at Texas where veteran "booster clubs. "
crafted potter y, cop per
The
Democrati c
Democrats George Mahon,
enamelin g and
simpl e
W. R. Bob Poage and Omar Congressional Campaign wooden folk toys will be
Burleson are retiring and Committee hopes to come up featur ed
Sat u rd a y,
sophomore Robert Krueger is with $1 million for 1978 and November 26, when the Ohio
might gel another $700,000
running ·for the Senate.
Historica l Society hosts a
the
Dem oc ratic
" It looks good for us in all from
special " Craftsmen 's Day"
four of those districts plus a National Committee.
'
Democratic House leaders, at the Campu s M'artiu s
couple of others like (Dale)
Museum ,
Second
a nd
Milford and Sam Hall," said noting th~ bulging GOP war Washin gton Str eets in
chest, have redoubled efforts
a GOP strategist.
Marietta .
Republicans are also to get passage of a bill to
Each craftsman will be on
optimistic about Colorado provide public financing of
hand
throughout the day to
and
Wyoming
where congressional campaigns, or
demonstrate
th eir uniq ue
Democrats Frank Evans and at least House campaigns.
skills and 3nswer visitors'
Teno Roncalio, respectively, The Senate has already voted
questions. Featured in this
are retiring . And the GOP down such a proposal.
special
exhibit are : Laura
The plan is modeled after
thinks that secondterm Tim
Shackelford,
an a rea art ist in
Wirth of Colorado can be the pres ent law which
'
copper
ena
mel ing; Sherprovides matc hing funds
beat.
c1
local
Democrats are optimistic from tax revenu e for ma ·&gt; Koo ns,
nd
Dic k
potter
;
a
about Republican retirees presidential campaigns . The
Schna
cke,
a
na
tio
11
ally
such as Olarles Whalen of attraction for Democrats in
Ohio, Gary Myers . of this plan is .that it includes known folk-toy maker a11d
Pennsylvania and Joe limits on spending, a definite · author . Oth er artists and
Skubitz of Kansas, as well as advantage fOr incurrlbent craftsmen, including quilti ng
and spinning demonstrations,
William Cohen's departure in officeh olders.
will.also be in cluded in tltc
Maine to run for the Senate.
program, providing visitors a
Republicans take heart
unique opportunity for some
from the four special House
early
holiday shopping.
elections held this year to fill
Visitors
will be invited to
seals vacated by Democrats.
tour
the
rest
of th e museum,
Thtee of them w~nt
display
ing
th
e fa sc in a ti ng
Republican and Bill Brock,
exhibits
of
Marietta's
pioneer
chairman of the Republican.
history.
Campus
Martius
is
National Committee, said
open
from
9:30
a.m
.
to
5
p.m.
this spelled a resurgence of
Adtnission is $1 for adults and
the GOP. He predicted
Two deer were killed in children who are 12 and under
sweeping congressional gains three traffic accidents in·
and are accompanied by theit•
in 1978.
vestigated Monday by the parents are admitted free .
GOP strategists, however, Gallia·!lleigs Post State
looked at tho.s e viclorjes Highway Patrol.
1
more soberly in privaU! and
,The first occurred on US 35
agreed in general with the at SR 3Z7 in Jack""n County
Democrats' assessments that where a deer ran intuthe path
IN HOLZER
the GOP simply outworked of an auto operated by Donald
Heidi Caruthers, fi ve~year·
and outspent Democrats. If F. Gault, 51 , Coi umbus. old daughter of Bob and
anything, they all agreed, the There was minor damage. Diane CarUth er s of Pomer oy,
losses served · to alarm
The second deer mishap is confined to Holzer Medical
Democrats still celebrating occurred in Meigs County on Center wit h pneumonia. The
capture of the White House SR 7 south of SR 124 where an room number is 508.
last year.
•
animal ran into the path of a
"What's happened to the car operated . by Scott A.
Democrats is that the key Warner, 17, Pomeroy. There
MHC CLOSING 1
people in the 1976 campaign was minor damage to his
. The Gallia • Jackson
are now working in the vehicle.
Meigs Mental Health Center
administration . They 're not
Larry W.
Call, 19, irt Pomeroy wll) be closed
out helping candidates Gallipolis ,was charged with .Thursda y a nd Fridlj&gt;y i.n.
anymore," · · s aid
one · failure to 1 yield right ·of way observance of Thanksgiving .
Democrat .
following an accident at 10:25
That log ic wa s evident in a.m. Monday on SR 7 at 218.
the state and local elections The patrol said Call's car
FIREMEN TO MEET
held
No v.
8.
While pulled into the path of a
SYRACUSE
- A meeting
Republicans did not make vehicle operated by Richard
Syracuse
Volunteer
of
the
sensational gains, they did E. Carpenter, 25, Scottown .
will
be held
Fire
Department
manage to hold on to key There
was
moderate at 7:30 this evening at the
governor, mayor a nd state- damage .
Municip11l Building. '•
house se ats, indicating the

Craftsman 's
Day to
be featured

Two deer
killed in
highways

•

�•
Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tllesday, Nov. 22, 1971

Basketball Referees Learn
ta Whistle While They Work
9fficials Get a Jump on Hoqp Stars of the
THERE'S MORE TO REfEREEING a basketball
game than blowing a whiStle . The rrfrrer has to be in as

good shape as the players 1f he IS ~oing lo keep up with
1
the action .
This is why the 26 men who referee the Natwna)

on subversives

NBA

Basketball Association games turn up every autumn for
an in-service training program. F'or the fifth consecutive
year. the sesslons have been held at Huberto Clemente

about catcaUs , but he had better be right when he makes
t h~

cuurt.

The program includes scrimmage officiating in games
between professiOnal and amateur teams. Officials of
the National flasketbaU Association are on hand to
comment on the referee performances. This may be
foilowed by a ·little j og~ mg along the banks of the

ahead of him .

Harlem RIVer. •
The NBA season is no w Neli Wlder way. Each referee

a
thorough physical examination to makr certain he is fit
IS

By ED ROGERS

~iver1

State Park in the Bronx, N.Y. F;ach mun is

for the rugged 174-&lt;lay seasort that

Alternating with the workouts are c lass~s in NBA
gam~ rules und proc·edures. The referee Cf!n' t do much
a decis1on on

After the physical come the workouts --:-- a dgorous
daily schedule that 1s to be earned on even a fter the
training program ends and the pla'ying season begins.
The men are coached in tj1.e most effective exercises.

works on an a\'e rage of two games every five nights as

the 22 teams of the i ea~ue grind away at their schedule
witich stret ches from October iS to April 9. That's not
cuun t ing play-offs.

'

'.

\
...t

til \l

\

DR lTJ\ ER. the super... lsor of offlt'isls, ou llint•s lh£' sL,·day trainlng program to the men.

•

' .

'•
\
i

•••

\

.. :.
"
.,

WASHINGTON (UP!) ·- •
'!be FBI has opened to the
pubUc three filing 1cabinets
full of recorda of the dirty
trlcltJ It played for 15 years of
ef(orll
to
disrupt
organizations J . Edgar
! Hoover thotl8ht were subver·
slve or violent.
'!be 52,641 pages of docu·
menll released Monday
showed the late director
counterbelieved
his
lnteUisence program, code·
named Cointelpro, was If
succe.u - at least as far as
the Black Panther Party was
concerned. ,
A memo dated March 4,
1971, Aid the Panthers were
In a chaodc condition, and the
two publicized leaders,
&amp;preme Cmunander Huey
Newton and Minister of
Information Eldridge
Cleaver, were feuding
bitterly'
''The above developmenll
1re attributable to tbe ·
bureaus's coordinated
counterinteJII&amp;ence
program," the memo said. It
said the FBI'a phony hate
lettent had turned Newton
and Cleaver against eadl
olher.

The FBI also claimed
credit
ior
causillt!
disillusionment among
by
Panther
members
covertly circulllllng news ac·
counts that Newton wa s

!.\
~,

'

.

61~

FBI opens

0

\

living in a ~ a mooth
apartment.
"'!be poor in the ghetw
must really appreciate this,"
said a spurious letter the ~'BI
senl to newspapers about
Newton 's expensive living
quarters.
The Jiles also detailed Coin·
telpro tactics the FBI used
qainst the Ku Klux Klan and
other ''white hale groups,"
the "new left," the Socialist
Workers
Party ,
the
Communist Party and a
project concerning "Soviet
expionage."
Other Iiles inyolved
perSlns from Mexico, Cuba,
Puerto Rico and Yugoslavia,
who became involved in
extremist U.S. organiiatioos .
Another group of flies re·
vealed · details
of
"Hoodwink," an effort in the
late 19608 to start a feud
between the Communist
Party and organized crime,
by planting phony letters that
made it appear they were
bad.mouthlng eadl other.
The FBI believed it could
achieve this in part by
making It appear the
Communists blamed " La
Cosa Nostra" - It called it ·
LCN - for a bomb that
damaged the party's New
York headquarters. .
The FBI also sent out
spurloua Communists leaflets
accusing a Mafia&lt;&gt;wned linen

Geneva parley closer
. ~0 reality--belief

supply com(Nlny of being a
sweatshop, and letters to
WliQII members claiming the
Communists were going to
clean criminals out of their
ranks.
&amp;ch letters went to varioua
locals of the .Teamsters and
Longshoremen's unions.
In April 1971 Hoover
abruptly
ordered
all
Colntelpro operations halted,
giving no reason. He died a
year later. The Socialist
Workers Party has claimed
. Cointelpro~ype
disruptioos
continued for another two or
more years.
The FBI has since been
deluged with requests filed
under the Freedom of
Information Act for files on
Cointelpro and other matters.
Ii already had released
thOIIsands of pages of its
secret documents, all
carefuUy censored.
The new Cointelpro files
had many words, lines and
entire paragraphs blacked
out. In addition, the FBI
withheld 16,346 pages of
classified information or
other matters the act l!'!Ys did
not have to be released.

I

enhanced chances of a Middle
UPI White Holl§e Reporter . East conference.
Begin called Carter
WASHJNGTON ( UPI) Monday
afternoon and
Presiden! Carter is assessing
briefed
him
on the weekend's
Egyptian President Anwa r
events
in
a
conversation
that
Sadat's breakthrough trip to
lasted
five
to
10
minutes.
"erlllijllem and a top.aide said
"The prime minister again
he believes a Geneva peace
his apprecilition
expressed
conference is now closer w
for
the
president's
efforts In
reality.
the
Middle
East.
which
the
"Yes, I think so/' said
press secretary Jody Powell prime minister said made the
when asked if Sadat's historic historical meeting possible,"
meeting with Israeli Prime a White House statement
HERMAN EILTS has
Minister
Menahem Begin said.
been U. S. ambasndor
An aide said a fuller
Egypt since the lwo
detailhl report on the talko.is
NOW
YOU
KNOW
nations resumed
Many lizards often shed expected to he forthcoming
diplomatic relations In
their tails it they are caught from Begin. It was
November, 1973. He was
by a predator. The tall considered likely that Carter
expected to dellver
continues to nan, distracting also would talk w Sadat about
Israel's lnvUatlun to
the attacker, whUe the lizard his diplomatic venture. .
Sadat.
"I think some of the worst
flees .
fears of the other Arab
nations have been allayed,"
Powell said. "In his public
BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP! )- spurred' the Bullets to their statements, Sadat presented
The Buffalo Braves have a fourth straight victory . a 114- not just the view from
new coach and four new 97 win over the Braves, in the Egypt."
"We are assessing events
starters this season, but it only National Basketball
of
the past several days and
was the same Washington Association game. The
the
sti\Ps that are propitious
Bullets and the Braves still Bullets, leading by three at
for
us
to take," Powell added.
lost to them Monday iught for the half, scored 39 points in
Monday, assistant
Earlier
tbe sixth straight time in just the third quarter for their
secretary
Rex Granum
press
a little over two season.
biggest margin of the game,
told
reporters
Carter
did not
. Mitch Kupchak's 21 points 116-64.
·yet
know
whether
.a·ny
and Kevin Grevey's 19

llf HELEN THOMMAs

w

Bullets still topped Buffalo

concessions were offered"·
during the talko.
"No, we doo ~ know of any
changes" In the previous
positions, Granwn said.
He chided the Soviet Union
for its criticism of the Sadat·
visit, without mentioning
Russia by name.
Asked about the SoViet
response, Granum said, "as
cochairmen of the Geneva
conference ,

there's

a

responsibility to support
moves whidl would lead to a
recoiwenlng of the Geneva
conference."
t
" It would be our J/ope the
other cochalnnan would use
Its Influence constructively,"
Granum !iald.
By and large, the While
House attitude toward the
Sadat-Begln talks was one of
cautloua optimism.
"We are encouraged by'
developments there,"
Granwn said. "We feel their
actions break down the
p~ychological barriers to
peace IIi the Mldeatll and
clearly their actions change
the approadl ... "
The meeting, he said,
provided "a very tangible
demoostration that both sides
genuinely want peace."

EVICTION NC11'1CE
may be eomiDI up for
Queen Ell•abeU. If 11Je
Scotlilb Natl.mal Party
should IUC:o:eed ill patting
Its land "'form pllicy
illIa effect, The party,
which lavon ~.ertng
preseat polltlcal,lles wltb
E•lland
and
establilbiiiC SM!Md u
an illdependeDI aatloo,
propo1e1 breaklnl ap
sreat eslaleo lllcll .. tbe
Qaeea'a U,ttt-acre
Balmoral Elllte. Teaut
fanaent woald bave lint
claim tu purcbase uf the
farmland wblle the
Queen
would
be
permitted tu keep
Balmoril Caotle itself.

Concordes end
noisy battle
1 '' 11 I \\M!M-t:P, Bernie

t
f:ryer (left). Mike .Mathis and Ed Rush (right!

By ARfiruR IUGBEE

.
try a sprint around tbe gym.

TECHNICIANS hook up referee Jake O'Donnell lor his electrocardiogram , (Nlrt of his physical at the start of the referee gatherwg.
"

some 3.5 hours - mote than
twice ai fast as the fastest
subsonic jetliner, but
pasaengers must pay nearly
five times the dleapest fare
available.
A Londoo-New York round
trip costs U,$86 on the
planes....,,
Coocorde cm:npared with $2311
The noedle-nooed aircraft oo Freddy Laker's Skytraln
were expected ·to touch down and $1,312 for a flrsto(!lass ·
at John F. Kennedy ticket on a subsonic jetliner:
International Airport within A Paris-New York roWJd trip
seconds of each other COliS $!,640.
carrying about 100 persons
Despite the high ticket
eadl including Frendl and prices and Air Fra9ce
British dignitaries and statements that sales are
reporters u well as paying brisk on the New York route,
cuat.omers.
the financial future of the SST
Among the pauengers In Ia still In doubt.
the French craft were
Air Franee says the brisk
Maurice Bellonte, 82, who sales may force it w add a
Dew the Drat Paris-New York second daily Concorde flight
mlo flight in 1130, and Frendl to New York, but even two
Transportation Secretary runs a day would leave the
Marcel Cavalle.
Coocorde well short of being
New Yorkers, who for the a profitable jetliner.
past 19 months waged · a
Air France has estimated it
pitched baUie to keep the , caMot make a profit unless ·
· Anglo-French SSTs from each of its four SSTs Dies 7.5
landing at Kennell)' f&lt;r being hours per day with 65 of its
too · noiay, planned to 100 seats fiUed. But the one
demmstrate outside the air- New York trip a day will
port. ' '
raise the SST's average air .
. The SSTs cover the Urne to only four hours per
LondmNew York route In day, and twicedaUy service to
ooly 5.5 hours.
A
British
Airways
spokesman stressed Mooday
the New York routes are
"taUor.fllade for Concorde.
PARIS (UP!) - Two
French
and
British
Concordea flying from
Londm and Paris to New
Y&lt;rk today are ending a I~
month battle almolt as noisy
as critics claim the sleek

DaJJas sets
2 prayers

·r;t.: T rp THERE' is what Riehle Powers appears to be saying during a series of high leg-raises tbat are part of conditioning.

THE REFEREES get together wllh league officials In a classroom to discuss hand signals . .

DALLAS (UPI) - Local
Democrats planned a prayer
service today to mark the
14111 IMlveriiiii'Y of Joon F.
Kennedy's ap•oudnation, but
three men who tliaagree with
the official version of what
happened on Nov. 22, 111113,
say they will hold their own
service.
Tlie
Dallas
County
Democratic Party planned a
noon prayer service at the
John F. Kennedy Memorial
near the site where Kennedy
wu shot witlle he rode In a
motorcade through

.. '
'

'
'(

' ·.

\4,
-~

''

f.

,,
'
,~,\J~/

''

for JFK

It's a businessman's route,"
Md added the airline already
had sold 1,000 SST seats frof!l
now ooW &lt;llrlstmas.
Whatever
happens,
aviation authorities say no
more Concordes will be built
after the 16th Is finished some
Urne next year. Total cost for
15 years of · research,
development and
manufacture has been about

.

•·
•

\I~ 'INY SOKOL, officia tes for practice I n ~ scrimmage between two Bronx basJtetbaU teams.

DON MURPHY learlll a WBrJD·Up exercise.

MILT COOPER (right ) keeps
'

t,n

eagle eye on the conduct o! a cCMJple of rebounders.
i

Now is the time to get ready for cold weather. There are lots
of things to do that save money and save energy at the same time.

a

He
1/Windows and doors.

&amp;/Heating systems.

Check for air leaks by shining a flashlight around the outside frames at night; see if light shines through. If you live
in a high-rise apartment. check at night to see if light from
the street shines through . If there are leaks, install weatherstripping or caulking .
·

7/Hot water pipes.

2/Storm windows.

8/Faucets• .

••

"_

Have them cleaned and inspected. Make sure all thermostats are working correctly- properly calibrated.
,
Check that all are wrapped and that the insulation is
in good condition .

If you .have them. check their condition before installation.
If you don't, consider buying two or three for the principal
windows . You can seal other windows with plastic
sheets .

9/Roof and Siding.

3/lnsulation. ·

10/Chlmney.

Check to make sure it's thick enough . Replace or add insulation where necessary.

Make sure it's clear and fireplace damper closes tightly.

4/Window air conditioners.

·

' ~\

Check for leaks and replace washers as needed.
Check carefully for air leaks.

11/Lighting.
The cleaner the lights are, the
more efficient the light.

If you have them in place for the
winter. be sure they have air' .tight weatherproof covers.

12/Weatherstrlpplng.
Make sure it's on all doors and
windows. Repair and replace
any existing weatherstripping
that's damaged.

5/Hot water heaters.
Drain sediment. A bucket or two
will do the job.

~billion.

The

British Airways
will start out
making two London•New
York Olghts a week. That will
rise . to four weekly next
mooth and six In January.
Dally service will begin In
February.
Concord~

downtown Dallas.

But at Dealey Plaza, two
blocb from the memorial,
freelance writer Larry
a.rta, 2$, planned IIIOther
' service.
Harris said he and two
Mlmeapolia men would lead
thuervlce. Harris, wllo leltifled before the House
Apalllnatioo
Committee,
doe&amp; not IM:lleve the Warren
Cmunlsllon replrllhat Lee
Harvey ()nnlld, ac:tlilg ilone,
shot the Jli'OIIdenl.
''My .finn belief Is that Lee
lllirvey
Oswald
was
ltmocent." Harris said. "I
lhlnlt It was the ~test
mt.carr~age of justice in
hlltory.''
Rldt Anderson. 2$, and
John Co~m~Glle, •· drove
from MJnneapolla to join
Harris for the service.

Do Now

What You

Social
Calendar
SAnJRDAY
FRENCH CITY Swingers
Square Dance Club, Dance 811 .p.m.,. rrt-Grande Square •
Bid!!., caller,, Chad Johnson. ·
'WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club
meeting, noon 'lbunday .at
MeipiM.
OHIO VALLEY Com·
mandery 24, Knights Tern·
plar,
mHtlnc, 7:30
p.m. Wedllelday Ill temple.

••led

Like all energy bills, gas bills are going up:The reasons are
clear-higher costs for materials and labor, for purchased
gas, (or taxes; misguided national policies also figure in
the equation.
We're doing our best to see that natural gas remains an
energy bargain. A recent study shows the average family
spends about the same percentage of its budget today for
energy as 10 years ago. During the same period. the cost
of natural gas to Columbia more than doubled.
There are things that you can do to keep your energy posts
in line.Theseconservation tips -a'nd the ones we'll provide
in the next few weeks ~ are ways that you can save energy .
and money now. All of these tips and more are .from a book
called The Homeown~r 's Energ'y Gu.ide, by Johri A.
Murphy. The book normally costs $6.95. But you can get
it from Columbia Gas for what the book cost us- $2.50.
Just fill out this order form and mail it with a check for $2.85,
which includes postage and 10¢ sales tax. to Columbia Gas
ofOhio.P.O.Box117,0epartmentA.Columbus,Ohio43216.

'

You can do a lot to save money this winter-and we want
to help

r--------~------~-----~----,

I·

I
I
I
I

.I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Name

i

. .,.,...,
-

'

•... .

1-

Address

City
Zip Code

State

©6w~riDII&amp;,I
GAB
OF CHID

•

L--------------------------J
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10- The Daily Sentinel, Midcllepcrt-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . 22, 1977
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMEN"T
The Shit of Ohio, Mtigl
County, Courr ot ComMon
Plus . Probate D1\'l$iOn
To tr.~ E•~cutor or Ad
m1 n tslrator of the ntate , to

WANT AD
CHARGES

such ot the foltowmo .1s are
residents of the Slatt&gt; of Oh io,

vtz - the- survPJ tno sPouse .

the
next
ot · -. ..,
the
beneficiaries under the will

tornevs r'eo.re.sent •ng anv of

2days

Rac 1nt , Oh10
You ajre heortbv

6days

3~y5

notified

l n\ltntorv dnd Ap

tne aforen,f'nt•onPd ,
deceued . late of sa1d County ,

role

w il l be tor near tng oetort;&gt; th i s
Court on lh~ tsf day at
Oecemcer . 1977 , a t lO 00
O' ClOC k AM
Anv person des i r rn g to f ile
exc-e-pt tons thereto must f rl e
t he m at least flve davs pr ro r
ro the date set tor near rng
G i ~tt&gt;n under mv bond and
Sf'CII Of So) rd Court . th iS 19th
day of November 1977

·' Racine
Social
Events

3.00

3.7~

THE RA CINl: Volun teer Ftre
Deparlment w dl :.ponsor o gun
'lohoot e vti.ry Saturday at 7 p m
fll tho 1r buold•ng '" Boshon Foe ·
tory cho ke gun~ only

'

Moblk&gt; Homr sales and Yard sales
only with cuh with
urdt!r. 2:1 ~t chllq!fe foc ads carryIn!! &amp;x Number In Canol The Sen-

111"1' ai'l~

llnel.

The PublisW I"CS('rves the right
1o
'

edit or re}t&gt;ct any ads deemed ob-

Tht Pub!U.her w1ll not bfo
respons~ble (or fJ"lOre lhiln one mcor·
rec:t ~t~Mrt.Jon.
Phone 992-2156

]e(:l.IOf\lll.

NOTICE
••

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M-y

Noon on Saturday
l'ueodoy

thru Friday

4PM

the day belo~publicatlon

SWHlay

4PM

WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

Fnday aftemoon

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

FO&lt; Wednosdl(, No• . 23, 1977

ASTRO•GRAPH

'9
a

Bernice Bede Osol
~

~[1

··

UJn[1iJfuDUll]

CALL US
Pomeroy landmarll

'

J:...Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
'---'----P-hone_992·2181___.

By Mrs. Francis Morris
No., . 23, ~977
Mrs. Ann Coe has ·returned Thts c omtng
year w111 be a very
from Holzer Medical Center exctl l.n g one, wilh many proJ- EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and
and IS convalescing at her ecls and activities How proapplion&lt;:e ',.. serviceman . Paid
ducltve It IS w111 depend on how
hol idays
v oca t io ns
a nd
home.
well you ass•gn your pnorilles.
hosplfalrzat1on .
Goll1o
Mr. and 'Mrs. Albert Hill SAGITTARIUS
!No•. 23-Doc:.
Refr rgvq:llor Co.. , 611 3rd Ave ,
spent the weekend with Mr. 21) Sensible safety precautions
Gall ipolis , Ohio .
and Mrs . Ray Sayre at should be taken today if you ' re
working with sharp tools or PART. TIME ADI/ERTISING SALES
Roseville.
in the Pomeroy , Middleport ,
electrical equipment. Also
Mr . and Mrs. Chrisie keep an eye on your helpers
Goll1polrs or~ . Representing
the
Athens
Mes senger
Powell visited several days in F'md out more about you.rself
Mileage allowance $2 65 per
.Norfolk, Va . with their by sending for you r copy of
hour. Ideal for retired person .
Astra-Graph teller. Ma il 50
grandson, Mr . and Mrs. Carl cen1s
Call 992 5910. ask for Fred
for each and a long , self·
Robmson.
Bo lles . retail
odvert tsing
addressed . stamped envelope
manager .
Mrs. Grella Simpson ' to Astro-Graph : P 0 Box 469,
returned home after spending Aad10 Ctly Statton , NY 10019 PROFESSIONAL -EMPLOYMENT ap·
sure to specify your birth
portun ilies as county extension
two weeks with her son, Mt. Be
sign .
agents: Master degree re ·
and Mrs . Bud Simpson at CAPRICORN !Dec: 22-Jan. 19)
qu ired Prefer at least one
Seymour, Ind . Her grandson, Fidgety people or restless
degree in e1ther agriculture or
youngsters
could
get
your
goal
BruCE Simpson, broUght her
Home economiCS . Minorr ty Op·
today You don '! QU ite know
pllcants encouraged . Call
home.
how to cope Either avoid them
614 ·422 ·6181 fo r opplrcotron
Mr . and Mrs. Albert Hill or watch your temper
and mformollon or contact
spent a recent weekend in AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
John C R1ce , Me1g.s County fK .
This
is
not
a
good
day
to
sprtng
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs. surprises on your mate You
tension Off1ce , 992·3895
Waid Foster.
can 't break the domestic rouShields tine w1lh tmpun tly.
Mrs.
Mabel
returned home from Holzer PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) ll 's
t mport~ n t that you dommate
IF VOU ho"'e a serv1ce to' offer,
Center , after the
Medical
clock today rather than let tl
surgery.

CASH potd lor all mok.w~ ond
models ol mob1le ho111e~
.. Phoneoreocode61~ ~'13 9531
TI MBER
Pomeroy Fotest P(Q·
ducts Top pr~ce lor "lond1ng
!iowhmber. Coli W2·5905 or
Kent Hanby 1.446·8570 .
COINS CU~R[NCY tokens , old
poc!o.el watches and d'la•ns .
srl¥er and 9old . Wf! need I &lt;;64
and oldeor s:1lver coins . Buy , sell .
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley
742·'2331 .

TIMBERLAND OWNERS Do you
OLD FURNITURE . •ce boJtc!!S , brass
need help 1n monogrng your
beds, .ron beds. etc complete
woodlands and morketrng your
households Wr1te M 0 M .tlr-r
trmber' Mead 's staff ol prat es ·
Rl 4, Pomeroy . Oh1o or ca ll
s1onol foreslers !S ovarloble to
W2.77W.
ofler you aSsistan ce at no cosl.
Meod con o~sure you of d1ver
NO ITEM TOQr l:oorge or too small.
sified markers
complete
Wrll buy 11' piece or complete
11mber ut+li zolton lnclud1ng
household. New , used, or ant i
whole tree ch1ppmg and super ·
ques Mbrtin 's Furniture, 20 N
..,,sed
hoP•esTrng
programs
2nd St . M1ddleport Phone
des1gned to protect your lands
m -6370.
and promote trmber growth
CHIP
WOOD .
Poles
max .
For detorls coli collect or w rite
dromel er 10' on large st end. $8
MEAD
PAPER
Wood
&amp;
per t e&gt;1 . Bundle d -s lob . $6 per
Woodlands Dept PO Box 39 1
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pollet
Ja ck son ,
O tno
45040
'
Co.,
At. 2..:...~!: 99_? · 2~ .
. _ Tv li!phon! . 014 ·~86 ·2 808_.__
WANTED OLO pianos . any cond1· ,
NO HUNTING, no tr~sposs1ng and
l ion . Poy1ng $ 10 8 $25 each.
no e•ceptroM day or nrghl on
First fl oor only Expert movtng
Char les Yost\ Ivan W1ll's. and
Fully 1n.s-.rred company . Wnte.
Alan Smdh s forms
giv•ng d irec tio ns
Wrtten
SEW &amp; SEW Outlet m Re cine tusl
P1onos, Box 188 . Sord1s . Ohio
.S 39AO Phonebi4 ·48J 1005
recewed new sh1pmenf of
polyesler double knits . S1.98 &amp;
S2 09 yard 225 yard spool
polyes tr-r thread. 5 tor Sl 00.
Kwik ·Sew pa 11erns . The fast
and r-osy way for you to sew
knits or have yo ur sewrng done 1972 PONTIAC CATAliNA Sears
stereo
recorder
Phone
by Den ise . tor the greatesl fi t
992-7453
evr-r .

In lllftTlocy. Qr.rJ ol Thil nb 1ud
Obituary: 6 l'tfiU per word, 13.00
rrunllllum. Cash ut advance.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Case No . ~2.154
Estate of SHIRLEY 0
CUSTER , Deceued .
No tice rs hereby 91Vtn that
Hu gh P Custer of R: . 0 . 3,
Pomer oy , Ohio , has been duly
.appo rn ted E~ecu tor of the
Estate of Shirley 0 Custer ,
dece ase d. t ate of Me igs
County , Ohio .
Cred rtors are required to
tile th ei r cl a ims with said
fiduci ar y w i thi n to ur months .
Dated th i s 3rd day of
Nove-mber 1977
Mannmg D. Webster
Judge
Court of Common P leas .
Probate D iv ision
1111 a, 15 , n . Jtc

1.911
!.2$

days "'lLl ~ cbargl!d at lht' 1 day

were f iled ' " lh1s court Sa 1d
lnverHory and Appra .semenr

By Carolyn G Thomas
Dtputy Cler k
( 11 ) 22 . 29 , 2tc

1.10

THUU Will be no hunting , no
trespoHrng and no excepi•Or'll
on my p• opf.'l ly Bob M({~.row

UIL.'h word oYer lht minunwn 15
words IS 4 ~nl! ~r word ~ day.
Ads runnin~ ocher \han f."')f1RC.'\1Uve

praisement of the estate 01

D. Webster
Judge

100

"""K'
1.2$"

"""'
""

'"''

tht atore.m,nl .ontd pt'rsons
George F
R itt enhouse ,

Mann r n~

GUN SHOOl Rocme Cun Club
e-very Sun otternoon Foetor
Chock gu n~ only Assorted
meats

l~WordsorUndt&gt;r

and to the attornf'y or at

•hat the

- The Daily Sentinel, Midcllepcrt-Pome~oy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . 22,1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

H'O TICE ON FILING

rule you Budget your t1me. or
you ' ll just make Circles

wont to buy or sell somett11 ng,
oe look1ng for work . . . or
whote . . er
. you ·ll get results
faster wrttl o Sent mel Wont Ad .
Coli 992·2156

Mr . and Mrs. William
Mitchell of Columbus spent ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) II
youvre obligated to someone
' the weekend with Mrs . and
you ch ance to meet this
·: Bertha Robinson.
person today , you'd belter
., Mr . and Mrs . Delbert have answers. He ' s about to
Morris of Athens visited Mr. call tnJour marker.
TAUR S !April 20-May 20)
_and Mrs. Francis Morris and You ' re renowned for your HOOF HOLlOW Horses Buy, sell
!rode or trorn New ond used
·,.Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Morris plac1d disposltton , but somesaddles . Ru!h Ree.,..es . A lbany
one who doesn 't know you well
·. Sunday afternoon.
(614 ) 698-3290.
get another 1mpress1on 1f
" Mr. and Mrs. Roderick could
you treat him brusquely .
MEIGS COUNTV Humane Soc1ety ,
: Gnmril spent the weekend GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
Careltne ond odopt 1on Servtce .
992-7680 742-3162. 992·5427 .
: with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis sure you get adequate rest
today . Don ' t pu sh youtse lf be: at Norwalk.
STUD
Servtce ·
AKC
yond normal limits , o r you ' ll be FOR
regtstered cocke r span iel.
•·' Mr. Bill McKenzie and nervous and defmilely won 't
Blo ck' and ton . Clarksdale
:, daughter, Jozie, of Gallipolis funct to n wel l.
lines . Showqu·ality J &amp; D Ken
spent SWlday afternoon with CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
nels. 742·3162.
You ' re harbortng an urge to
:. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
splurge today . A prod from a AKC REGISTERED pek ingese pup·
·~ · Mr. Marvin Berger of Rota, free-spending friend may be
pies. Phone (304) 882 268J.
" Spain spent Tuesday and your undoing
RISING
STAR Kennel . Boarding .
Wednesday with Mr. and VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) Being
Indoor
and outdoor runs .
tmpattent with those who don 't
' . Mrs. Dale Hart.
Grooming all breeds . Clean
act as efficiently as you do
~·: Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart could get you into some arguChe5h1re
sanitary faci lities
Phone (614) 367-0292.
·~· received word that their ments today Use tact, not
AKC REGISTERED pek.ngnese .
• ; grandson, Don Laird, son of tantrums .
LIBRA (S.pl. 23-0cl. 23) If
(30. ) 882-2b83 .
• Mr. and Mrs. James Laird of people
take advantage of you
· • La Mesa, Calif. underwent a today , It ' s probably your own
.' · facial operation in a hospital fault. You tend to agree before
•' • and is reported satisfactory. you cons ider who wants what
and why •
•· Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart SCORPIO
(Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) In''· : and Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart stead of weigh ing things care~, spent Thursday evening with fully as you usually do , today
.,.. Mr. and Mrs. John Branch you may shoot from the hip. A STARCRAFT FALL Sole . Mini·
dangerous game. Your judg... and daughter at Belpre.
motors, 20' and 22'. TraVel
ment isn'l that accurate
Trailers. 18' 5" $3 799. 25 ' 7"
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher
CNEWSPAPEFI ENTERPRISE ASSN )
Bunkhouse
$.4 .875 . Fold -down.
·. • of Uniontown came Sunday
Sl ,700 up . We sell serlfrce and
afternoon and visited her
quality .• Open Sundays . Camp
THE ALMANAC
: ' father, Mr. Henry Roush and
Conley Starcraft Soles. Rt. 62.
United Preulntematlooal
N . of Pt Pleasan t.
_:,' Dale and Mr. and Mrs. Unley
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 22 , 1972 ARISTOCRAT 18' Trove !
, Hart. They also visited Mr.
Tr ailer . EJ:cellent condii ion.
,, and Mrs. Mason Fisher and the 326th day of 1977 with 39 to
$2 ,400. Coll992·3580.
f. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser at follow.
,•,. : Minersville. They were
The moon is approaching ST ARCRAFT WINTER Sole on
Minis. !railers . and fold -downs.
~
•(~ enroute to Florida with their ils full pllase.
Used units in stock . Open Sun·
., •• camper and left here
The morning stars are
· doy . Camp Conley Store raft
Mars, Venus, Jupiter and
Tuesday morning.
Sol1n , Rt. 62 N of P! . Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch Sa tum.
1969 BANNER 19· comper . Sleeps
The evening star is Merspent SWlday and Monday at
6. Self · contained. Furnace.
,'192-7276
.
Bellevue with their son, Mr. cury.
Those bom on thls date are
"- and Mrs. Bob Birch and
Wider the sl1111 of Sagittarius.
': daughters.
French statesman and at that time the most
::
Mrs,
James
Brace
and
1
·, • children of Crown City visited military leader Charles de powerful nuclear submarine
·· '·
::; Mr.' and Mrs. Frank WallaCE · Gaulle was bOrn Nov. 22, 1890. in the world.
American composer Hoagy
•.. Sunday.
In 1963, President John F.
Cannichael was born on this . Kennedy was assassinated in
:·' •
d!!te
in 1899.
Dallas. Lee Harvey Oswald
'
On this day in history:
.
was arrested and laler
:··
In 1950, a wreck on a Long named by the Warren
A thought for the day : John Island Railroad train as it
:.; F. Kennedy, 35th president of pulled out of a tunnel from Commission as the man who
fired the fatal shots. Vice
,•·the
. United States, said, "Let New York City killed 79 President Lyndon Johnson
.' us never negotiate out of fear persons.
was sworn in as the nation's
.; but let us never fear to
In 1960, the U. S. Navy 36th chief executi~;:e a sllort
~j negotiate."
"'
laWJched the_,"Ethan Allen," time after the shooting.

1975 FORD VAN. Fully cu stomrz ·
eel P S., P B., TV . plus more
$4 .500 . Phone 992 ·7258
1973 ~O NTE CARLO A C . P S
P B . AM tope Good gas
m il eage Excellent r'ondrtion
742.2020, after 6
1975 CHEVROLET MONTE Carlo .
P S . P.8 , A C . tape player
Phone 992 2628.

1972 VW SOUAREBACK . SUOO.
241 Bee&lt;h Stree t. Middlepor t.

992-6357

saso

1971 FORD LTO Wagon .
best
o ff er . 9q J. 5756

COAL limeslone end colctum
chlor•de ond lOICium bnne fo(
du!r;l control end 1&lt;pe&lt;•ol m1 .. 1ng
soh f or formers hcels•or Salt
Works Ma1n Streel Pome•or
Ohio o! phone 992 3Bql '

992-5•77

.

sont. W Vo . beside Heck s.
1973 Broadmo.e 14 • 64 2
bedroom
•
1973 Oar ran 14 x bO 2 bedt oom
1972 Victorian 14 oo: 67 3 bedroom.

2 both
1972 co .... entry 12 Jl 65 3 bedrao.m
1969 Statesman 12 ._ 60 2
bttdroom .
1976 SUZUKI RM 125. E:~~cellent
cond1hon . 247·3861 .

SWAIN
AuiGinatic
Tr~nsmisMR

Stmce

PARTS -LABOR
- GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
.
RATES 1'11. 37U210
h...itt.,0.
1-17-TfC

Residential

FOR SALE
Co .Op

and

water

5ofleners, model VC -SIIt.
Only S279.95
Save 550 .00 an a new

1 Now 20 cubic fl . Chest

ns.oo Olscoun1

Freezer

Co.

or 949-2860

FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please

.Ru lne! 0 ,

11 11. 1 mo .

1970 TCVOTA. Hi·Lu x . Prckup.
$850 Fiberglass topper , $150.
0! 4·378·6.3 11 .

Jack~s

STORM
WINIIOIIS I Dt!Ot!S'

REPLACE liEN!
IIINIIOIIS
!UIIIINUM

Septic

PENTAGON:

11 10 1 mo.

8, 10; News 20.

SIDING-SOffiTT

11:30-Johnnv Carson 3,4,15; Movie 'Where Have Atl

HFY, 'i 'Yci•J-j~

HAV!i t

~FAR 1..

TOl-D l{()U
AE'D.JT I.OMIIJ0
!110M{; WITH

~"f\lv ' FUJR-L~Tl£1&lt;

WORD I t.EAIIJlED ~

Home·
•Mobi le
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tie -Downs
• Awnings - Carports
•Insurance
Repairs

Wood Stoves

FOUR ROOMS and both . Adu lts
only No pets . 992 5908.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Por k
Route 33. rorth of Pomeroy
Lor ge lots , Coll992-7479

wn.,.

lncrechble !
pay hrgh eleclfiC
b11l s , this wtnter? Let us pay
them ~o r you ! One bedroom
from $1 30 now 011orlable
Vill age Manor , H 11rd and M rll
Streets Mrddleport Telephone
992-7787 . Equal Housmg Op·
portunity .
12 • 60 MOBILE HOME Good con·
d1t~on
l arge yard
1 mile
Roc1ne
5858.

m

TO LEASE OR Ren t OI..J Pro vico
building' ~2 · 3677 .
FURN ISHEO GARAGE apar tment .
South 4th Street . Middleport ,
1 Ohio . No children or pelS
THREE BEDROOM house . Con fur ·
nish stove and relr rgerator , rf
necessary . 992·3090 .
SIX ROOM house for rent rn
Pomeroy. lnqu1re at 796 South
3rd , M1ddlvport
EFFICIENCY HOUSE for rent . Completely furnished . To co nstruc fton men Cal! oher 4 om .
992·7791

1JWQ CQMPLETE d1o.r k•ls . 12
yards of fobr rs $ 175 ... alue for
$60 Taking macrame orders
for Christmas 992 · 7075

AUCTION SALE ~ every Tues . and
Fr i. at 7 pm . New and used
merchandise at Ohio River Auc·
lion , Meigs Plozo Middleport .
Ohio , Home Phone (304]

196S FORO FA1RLANE 500. 47 ,000
actual miles. Real good con dition No rust , 40 e l o~totor for
' gram or hay . with motor. Gon. tad Delber t Law son , Eagle
R1dge Rood
SHOT GUNS · 2 model 10 Rem·
rngtons , I wr th ~ xlra deer bar ·
rei. 3 model 12 Wmchesters .
Sw1Vel &amp; sl1ng seh for most
s~tguns
Deer slugs $1 49
Brenneke 'slug s 22l R . 82 1 • 22
mag, $2 90. Torgel shotshe!ls
$3 .10 box . $68 50 case Hrgh
powered shot shells wholesale
shot $9 89 per bag 200 new
ond used guns, discount on all
Will
trade tor mini·bikes
motorcycles . Gravelys , trac ·
tors . boots . motors. powpr
tools or what hove you . Fife's
St reet.
Middleport .
3rd
992·7494 .

BROWNING MARK Ill Golden

992-2530.
SIX MATC HIN G ont 1que oalo. drn·
ing or k rtc hen choirs Stra 1ght
bock
$25 each . , Phone
992 ·2413
VERY GOOO hay. $ 1.50 per bo le
(6 14) 667 ·3368 , Tuppers Pla1ns.
OhiO .

loa ted In

on heating cost
Experience and

MEIGS PLAZA

h.1Uyinsured
Frte Est.

l.t:

~ ·.
cr - 22

11 -9-tfc

75 per cent of your
Col~lege tuition free,
Co ege
Level
Exa 1jnallon
Free,
An ASsociate Degree
through
the
Community College
of the Air Force, 30
days paid vacation, 7
paid 3 day weekends,
good starling pay and
m' uch
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-86

EFEL

~

I WI SH ~E'o GRASP 1}18

STEERING WHEEL A

LITTLE BETTER··· HE

NEARLY HIT A TRUCK
THIS MORNIMG ·•·

4

·------

TROMBONE. GOOD condition .
$ 100.
Brice fiort . Ra cine.

949-2S93;_.- - -

Print answer here.-

2.

STORV 3 .bedroom frCJme
house , F.A . furnocw . storm win·
dows , Hr.eploce in Middleport
Phone 992 .3.457 or 992 -5867 .

Broker

1071f, Syco more St.
Pomeroy,Oh}o

PHONE 992-6)33
OHicei!Gurs: 9 A.M. to 4
P.M.
Close Thursdays
5aiturdays at noon.

and

New 4 bedroom, 2500 sq. ft.
living space, 2lf2 baths, 12
room ranch brick . Located
3 miles from Rt. 7, up West

Shade River . Call for an
appointment.
1112

Acre
approved

SMALL form fo r sale , IO'Y. down .
owner f monced. Monroe Coun ty , W Vo Phone (304 ) 772.
3 102 or (304) 772-3227

MOVE INTO the sunny state ol
Florida . I hove 3 acres of land m
the little village of Deland Spr ·
ings on Are~gon A venue Write ·
Dale E.. Wolfe Rt . 1, Box 1~ · C .
Reeds ... ille.

COUNTRY farmland with seclud·
ed woods. water and good o c
cess in Mon roe County, W. Vo .
$1 ,000 down . call [304 } 772

ALL ELECTRIC 3 bedroom home
w ith util ity room end larg e kit·
chen olum rnum siding, otto ch·
ed goroge. 2 storage buildings ,
garden spot, established yard
wrlh trees ond shrubs . All on 1
ocre Tuppers Plai ns. Ohio.
{614 ) 667-30'16.

wooded

for

and

sewage,

seclutted,

· located .07 of a mile off of
Summerfield road near

Tup.pers Plains. Oh io.
Prlc~ to go at $4,000.00.
Pletlty of acre

Wildwood

lots at the

Estates

Addition, Flatwbods Road,

zoned and all ufllltles
We have need of listings,
all types, homes~ land,
commercial, etc. I

Cheryl Lemley
Assocj4te
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.

Assoclote
Hom_, Phone 949-2589

3102 o' 13o4l 772-3227.
Commerci al property oppr ox . 17
acres . level land. located o t
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Rou te
7, Phone (614) 667·6304 ,
VA-FHA , 30 yr . financing . lrelond
Mortgage . 77 E. Slate, Athens ,
. phone (614) 592·3051.

. - - - - - - -TEAFORDID
REAllOR
VIRGIL 8. TEA FOliO, &gt;R.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
tShut out
I Oregon city

business

JUST ·LISTED new

Just

Large liVIng· room with

with

room for
expansion . City water, on

State Rl . 124 In Rulland .
$35,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 4' unit

building with
good income . Partly rented
now, but still gives you
$50.00monthly income over
your payment . Excellent
location .

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Com·
plete Se1wrce. Pflone ' 949·1487
or 949 2000 Ra eme, Ohio , Cr11t
Bradford

ELWOOD :.cB:-0:-:W~E::R:::S--:R:::Ec
PAIR -

Sweepers , toast ers, 1rons. aU
sm all applron ce!&gt;. Lawn mower,
ne ~ l to Stole H1ghwoy Goroge
on Ro u te 7. Phone l61A) 985·

382S

3 Cave
dwellers
4Some
5 Reprieve

'Murder!'" B; 1:01)--Tomorrow 3,4;

corner

fireplace.

3

bedrooms, . balh, dining

room, lovely kitchen has 32
ft.

cabinets

and

,.ange.

Carport &amp; storage space . 1

EXCAVATING. dozer . loader and
backhoe work . dump tru ck!&gt;
and lo·boys lor hire . will haul
fill dirt, to soi l. limestone and
gra Yel . Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
t ers, day phone 992 7089 night
phone 992 -3525 or 992· 5232 .

level acre. $35,900.00.

JUST LISTED- Lovely 2
yr . old home. 3 bedrooms,
bath , utility, nice kitchen.

lots of cabinets and cooking

OOWERY
AND MARTIN E~ ·
co"'otlng, septic sy ~ le ms,
dozer. backhoe, dump truck .
limestone, grovel , block lop
polfing, Rt . 143. Phone I (614 )
6q8-73J1 .

lot.

l~trigue

bedrooms, bath, nee&amp;s a
little finish work on Inside.

PREFERRED LOCATION

Some timber . HERE IS A
REAL BUY FOR YOU .
S20,500.00.
JUST LISTED - About S
yrs . old . Beautiful 3

WINDOW CLEANING. Cammer ·
coil - Resident ial New Con ·
slruction Cleanup Real . Clean
Window Co . Phone 992 -7018.

you . Extra nice
fancy oak trim, shiny
floors , hot water heat.
large formal dining room,
and 2 car garage . 135,000.
New 7 room tri-level
home. llf2 , baths, family
room, gar.age, and one acre
of land . Nice carpet and
-

4

bedrooms, 2 boths, natural
gas central heating , nice
carpeting, full basement,

garage , 3 lots. S27,500.
2 FAMILY HOME - Lei
the rent buy you a home.
Natural gas, city water,

near stores.

()tly $9,600.

NEW LISTING
bedroom stt~cc:o

3

home .

.Natural gas floor furnace,
city water , - utility room,
patio, and about one acre.

$20,000.
MOBILE HOME LOT - In

water, e'ld electric: .

NEW LISTING - You
finish this 3 bedroom home
with full basement, 2 acres ,

back balcony, and large

living room .

This rests just

out of town for $30,000.
Helen L. Teaford
Gordon B. Teaford
Associates

unit. Utility room, finished
garage.

Very

large

S25,900.00.
JUST LISTED - 20 acres
wllh S yr . old home. 3

bedroom home . Modern
bath, dining area , lovely
kitchen , utility room ,
hardwood
floor~
with
carpeting over, carport &amp;

'

2•

Pass 2 N.T. Pau 3a
Pass 4 •
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead - 2 •

t

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY
featuring Ashley!&gt; and com·
plate selection of cool , gas .
wood circulating he oten.
Carpenter . (b14) 698· 7191.

SOMETHING SPECIAL This fine old home will

Cards do all the work

SEWI NG MACHINE Reporrs service , oil makes, 992 .228.4 The
Fobr 1c
Shop .
Pomeroy
AuthOrized Srnger Sa les end ,
Service We sharpen Scis sors

BATHROOMS AND Kitchen !&gt;
remodeled . ceramic hie, plu m·
b1ng , carpentry, and general
maintenance
13 years e~·
perience . 992·3685.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
to

WINNIE
OF MIL£&amp;

l. GUESS lHAT

ANN
DAILEY 'S Uphol stery.
Portla nd, Ohio. 843·2542

WAS TI'E SMART
TI'ING 1D DO. ·

MY KINGDON\
FO~ A FISH!

FOUND: GOLDEN-BROWN dog

$14,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT -

Older

but nice , off st. parking, 2
fireplaces,
bath , nice

neighborhood . SEE AT
JUST Sl3.000.00.
,
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
REAL:TOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
; 992-2259- 992-6191

FHDFZH

UDDMVHUM

t1T1 KJna Peal!Uel

I JEST MAILED OFF
TH' DOCTOR BILL.

SERVICE

DIDN'T SEE ANI{
POLAR BEARS, HUH?

We have enlarged our

Phoft!! 992 -21811

MDXH

HSH K

MHHX

VD

Syndtea~e.

A 'Utah reader wants to
know what we think of the
weak (11-14 point) notrump.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We feel that lf a conven·
tion
a good one a good
· One of the most important manyisreally
top players will
things for declarer to learn
use
it.
As
far
as we know
is to give the cards a chance. there . is no top
player in
Take this Terence Reese
who employs this
hand from the Bridge World America
bid today, although we think
magazine as an example. one
or two do use it not
Three notrump is a much
vulnerable
against vulnera·
better contract than four ble opponents.
spades, but there Is also nd
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
problem at four spades.
East wins tile first trick
you have a question for
with the ace of diamonds thorooexperts?
Write • Ask the
and returns the queen. Jacobys
• care of this newspaSouth's king is ruffed by per. The Jacobys wilt answ.r
West and a trump led.
Individual questions II
Declorer has lost two stamped, self-addressed enve··
tricks and has no place to lopes are enclosed. The most
put his last two diamonds. interesting questloris wm be
Does he have to go down used In this column and will•

one?

Even

lookin~~:

•

at all the

Inc.

BARNEY

A~PLIANCE

....

N W VI

C

PIANO TUNING . Lo ne Domels
New phone number, 992·258 1:
If no answer , ca\1992·2082

Pomeroy landmark
9 .. - Jack W. Cars~y, Mgr

CRYPTOQUOTES

ZQG HCCM . UEMMWQK
FUDSHUJ
Yeetenlay'l Cryptoqaote: WHY NOT GO OUT ON A LIMB?
ISN'T THAT WHERE mE FRUIT IS?- FRANX SCULLY

WILL CARE far the elderly in our
home . Phone 992·7314 .

s~rvice department and '
Will service Hotpoint and '
·
'o ther brands.

hints. Each day the code letters are different.

VI H W U

Been he re lor a month . Found
at3.44 South 'Jrd .

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes. the length and form ation of the words are all

· F!5H.'

slorage . GOING AT JUST
$24,500.00.
NICE OLDER HOME ..:..
Wood -burn ing
fireplace ,
fenced yard . 3 bedrooms,
carpellng and remodeling ,
lots of features . JUST

2 : 1~News13 .

BRIDGE

REMODELING , Plumbrn g, heating ·
ond all types ol general repo rr
Work guoronleed 20 years ex·
perrence. Phone 992·2409

WILL
roolmg , construct ion ,
plumbing and heat in g. No job
too Iorge or too sma ll . Phone
742·2348

home .

Angels 6,13; Theater In America 33; To

Movie Cllonnet 4 7 Rainbow
s &amp; 7 P.M. - Burnt Offerings ( PG)
shape
9&amp; 11 P.M. -Dog Day Afternoon !Rl
8 Actor,
Cable Cllonnel 5 Keye6:30P.M. - Testimony Time
I
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fllness
9 German
Yeetenjay's Aaswer
7:30 - Marshall ·Football
river
Z4 Epoch
37 CUsiOOian of 10:00 - 700-Ciub.
10 ·Bare
Napcileon
14 Bowling , Zli "Brother -"
Tuesday, Nov. 22
za Aflcio38 "As alley
nado's shout
Golni to
lBFrench
Z8 Tlrist
St. lves"
painter
lJEuropean 30 By - of ·
3S stopovers
Oswald and Jill'! Jacoby
3Z Earnings
41 UWe
river
33 Old oath
EdmlDid
ZOLegal
fraternity :14 Theater bo1 4! Sub's
35 Kind of
weapon:
Z1 Wallach
cards 1t is hard to find a way
abbr.
zz Nonaensel drW
22
to make the hand but If a
'IORTH
very astute declarer gives
• 742
the cards a chance he can
• Q too
get home.
• 86 43
South simply draws
• Q J2
trumps·; cashes the ace of
clubs and heart!!. Then he
WEST
EAST
leads the· four of hearts and
• 98
• 10 6 3
finesses dummy 's 10. He
Ill JB732
1/196
needs ·to find the jack of
• 2
• .0: Q J 10
heart• in the West hand .
• K 10 8 6·4
• 9 7 53
Now South leads dummy's
SOUTH tOt
queen of clubs and discards
•AKQJ5
his king of hearts after East
Ill A K4
follows.
t K 97 5
- West lakes his king and
•A
has to put dummy back ln to
Neither vulnerable
cash a heart and a club for
two diamond discards.
West~ :'\lorth East South

dcr.

completed

Na NaB; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan' s
ls. 15; Daniel Fosler M.D. 20; Big Green Magazine
33.
7:30-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na4; Match Game PM 6;
Family FeudS; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge 1D; Thanksgiving That Almost Wasn' t 13;
Wild Kingdom 15.
B:oo-Grlzz(y Adams 3.4.15; Eight )s Enough 6.13;

Be A Man 20.
10:()()-Baretta 6,13; George Burns 8,10; News 20.
1D : 3~Woclehouse Playhouse 20.
11 :OQ-News 3,4,6,8,10113, 1~; Dick Cavett 20; L.illas
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 : 3~Jollnny Carson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"Arrivederci. Babvl" 10; 12;0Q-Janakl 33.
12 : 4~Myslery of the Week 6,13; Movie "She Cried

~tUs.--6td'

EXCAVATING, dozer . backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R Hot·
f reld , Bo ck Ho e Service.
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 742 2008

MAIN
' POMEROY, 0 .

6:00-News 3,.,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :~NBC News3,4,1S; ABC News13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Frlel)ds 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:0D--'Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Sha

Charlie' s

llollllo lmiUlOn

NEW HOME , 1 m1le tn bock of
Portland. 4 rooms an d bath 2
o.:res Contact Delbert l awson
Eagle Rrdge Road .

•

Once Upon a Brothers Grimm 8,10; Nova 20,33.

., .. Ori~..,.,

HOMESITES l or sal&amp;, 1 ocre and
up. M rdd l&amp;port, nea r Rutland
Call992-7481 .

6:45--o--Mornlng Report 3.
.
6:50-Good Morning , Wlfsl Virginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
7:()()-Today 3,4, IS : Good Mornlng America 6, 13; CBS
News B; Buitwlnkle 10.
B:OII-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9 :oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8,10.
9 : 3~Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffith 8; Price I&amp; Righi
10.
10:oo-Sonlord &amp; Son 3,4, IS; Big Valley 6; Price Is
Right 8; Mike Douolas 13 .
10: 3~Hoitywood Squares 3,4,1S; Joker's Wild 10.
1t :OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3, IS;HappyDays6, 13; Marcua
Welby, M.D. 4; Match GameB,10; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :30-Knockoul 3,1S; Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
B.1 0; Sesame S. 20,33.
11 :55--CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:0Q-Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; To Say The Lea•t
IS; Divorce Court 8; Midday 13.
12 :3~Ryan's Hopo 6,13; Bob Braun 4: Chico &amp; lhe
Man 15; earch lor Tomorrow 8, 10; Elee, Co. 33.
1:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; RestlessiO; Not for Women Only 15.
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,1S; As The World Turns
B,10; 2:()()-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2 : 3~0octors 3.4,IS; One Life to Llv~ 6,13; Guiding
Light B,10.
3:oo-Ano1her World 3,4, 1S; .Ohio Journal 20.
3:15-General Hospltal6,13; 3:3~All in The Family
8, 10; Llllas Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:00.Mister Cartoon 3; Little Raocats-OOr Gang 4;
Gong Show 15: Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan 's Is. 8;
SesameS. 20.33) Gomer Pyte, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4 : 3~My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch B.IO; Little Rascals 15.
s:oo-Bonanza 3; Mr Three Sons 4;Gunsmoke B; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's Heroes 10;
Emergency One 13: My Throe Sons 15.
5:30---0dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 1S.

9:oo-Movle "The Last of the Mohlclans." 3.4.15;

992-2206 or 992-7630

cel lar. located rn lon~ svi lle .
$6 500. Phone 7•2 ·2965

kitchen. $41,000.
FAMILY ROOM -

Lot Surveyed ,

(Answers tomorrow)

and~- THE OCEAN

Roult l, r......,, D.

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths .
oil elec ., 1 acre, Middleport .
close to Rutland Phone '19'1·
7481

2•1, acre lot w1th ga roge and

apartment

GeorgeS. HoblloHer Jr.,

r

ENVOY ' BEETLE IRONIC
Answer: Sb1ctly apeaklng, this Ia betweon the Brttlah

• mwill

corner lot. Now has sma11

REALTY

Dr I I I J

· I Jumbles . HEAVY

2H·l mo

Pomeroy with sewer , city

FIREWOOO. Any lengths or any
omou.nt, De h . . ered or may
pickup . Phone 9.. q.2563 ,

WH'f ISN'T tiE A
BIG SHOT~

Carpel• UpllobteiJ
Phone Mike Youn&amp;
At

10· 18· 1 mo .

BUSINESS SITE - Larg.

available. 12500. per acre.

1977 PASSENGER VAN. A.C . Extra
seat. 3 .000mile . 992·5770.

rrvc~~

Pll. 992-2174

Lakin , W.Va.

IS SUCH A
Bf\LL OF FIRE,

Young's
Carpeting

Service, , _ tM
or 11111'4.•.,.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Now arrange the c~rc!ed letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug.
gested by the above cartoon.

IF MAX

Superior
Steam Extraction

'*•·

~
•

RNR
773-5955

HEATI.FU£

WHAT LIFE I
BE
WHEN 'YOU HAVE
EVERYTHING- AT
'r'OUFI: F1N6ERTIP5,

I

I.I

Yesterday's

EXPERIENCED
ler_..t

rJ

DIMPEE

Cill66 7-6479
11141mo. pd.

Mlddleporl , Ohio

.... .. ,., to tt..

Phone 992-3325

HOBSTE'ITER
$8,100 for education,

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

Pomeroy, Ohio45769

773-5471 .

OPPORnJNITIES

~
··

I AMOAM

TWO REGISTERED Polled Heretord
bull!.. I Polled Her eford steer .
Good club project. 992 5565 .

197 4 KAWASAKI MOTORCYCLE .

992-6344.

ITOVIIANO

Phone 992-2181

Eagle 23 channel AM bo se sta tion CB . Best one OYer $250
tokes it 949-2322.
FOR SALE or Rent · Trailer with
large bu ilding lo t 1n Syrac use

CAITI'ON

Cl••n.,n..a...pl•.._ .. ...., _ _,

BEPSIC

Cellulosic {wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pel. to so pel

Radiator~

,.-,C'P
::· ~; :: ·

J&lt;OIOF

I I I
I

JIM KEESEE

fa HARIMARE

Phone 992 -7034. 10. 29. 1mo .

9 .. -Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

1971 KAWKASAKI 100 Dirt Bike
Street or tro 1l, $150 Phone
742·3077

'yat-\n:
hBJMINI&gt;llLE
Sl'KJWMAN

Blown Insulation

instructions.

Streef, Pomeroy, Ohio or

YOHNP

TH.A-TZ

J&amp;L

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLtDVINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
by step

See us at 1100 East Main

I Good Used Hotpolnt·
Refrigerator
$125

iii(

ye·ti\yet-e·,

\OORDS Ui&lt;.E

Kinpbury
Home Sales

byHenriArnotdandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles .

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-lfc

r~. 992-J99J

~ THATSCRAMBLED WORD GAME

l..!!J ~~ ®

a·ne letter to each square, lo lorm
tour ordtnary words.

8A.M.Io4:30 P.M.

SyrKIIW. Ohio

rn'il

1})1ji~

~

Pomeroy 992-,212
or 992-62'3

LARRY LAVENDER

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

Perspective on lhe News 20.
li :OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13.15; Olck Cavett 20: Over
Easy 33.

300Moln ·SI.
Pvmeroy. Ohio

liUTTUUWNINiiS

Tank Service
Box 34

Pomeroy Landmark
3 AND A RM. furnished ond un ·
Phone 992 ·
lu rn1shed opts
543-4 .

a·Jo-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.

9:oo-Mulllgan 's Slew 3,4,15 : Three's Company 6, 13;
Ma•h B, 10; Health Care: Your Money Or Your Llle
33: Georgia O' Keeffe 20.
9 : 3~Soap 6: One Day At A Time S,10; Mary Tyler
Moore 13.
10: oo-PoliCe Woman 3,_4, IS; Family 6,13: Lou Grant

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

FinMKinl A&amp;Ubll

ftn.1 Into Wats I AHic:s

and

Anydoy, anytime.
Phone 985-3106

$225

I lancaster Chain Saw S.7S

Fltzpatricks 8,10; Jacques CousteL'Iu 33; Eyewit-

A $Til0&gt;JG Pl-UG AT THE

Ill Good Refrigerator S150
Upright Freezer

6 :30--News Conferente • : News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;

ness 20.

CARTER

linn
lnSIIItiDft Sttticts

Call for "
estimate. 24 hour service.

Landmark
soften &amp; condition y-our
wa1er and Co-op water

New

Sidi~g

3: Let's Go To The Races 8;
Hollywood Squares 4; Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33: Price Is Right 10: That's
Hollywood 13; Music Clly 1S.
8:oo-Man From Allantls 3,4,15; Happy Oays 6,13;
CAPTAIN EASY •
EA$Y. I INTEND TO GIVE
YOUil "$HE·DEVI1- " FI.;; HTER

•

WEDNESDAY,NOVEMBER 23,1971
5:45-Farm Reporl ·13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10: 6:25--Chrlstopher Closeup 10.

fectlveness 33.
7 : 3~Hollywood Squares

Be the opening ol the indoor seirsQn for you with
vour old furniture re upholsttred In braullful
warm colors &amp; pi!fttrns
from Bob 's . If you are
looking lor uvlngs it will
PlY you to pay us a visit.
Located in back of the Sew
N ' Sew Outlet on Ma i n Sf .,

General Contractors
Phone 949-2801

commercial.

Pomerov

Let us test your water Free

TUESDAY , NOVEMBER 22, 1977
7:()()-Trulh-or Con•. 3: Liars Club 6; Pop Goes The
Country 8 : To Tell The Trulh 13; News 10,
Gilligan's is. 1S; French Chef 20; Parent El·

TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

FREE ESTIMATES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER ?
•oflener, Model U~ - SVt :
Now Only •279.95

Bis!ell

5 &amp; 7 P.M. - First Traveling Sates lady !Gl
98. II P.M. - I Will, I Will For Now (Rl
Cable Chonnel 5 - ·
6:30P.M. - Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fl1ness
7:30 - Home Digest
B:30 - Celebrity
9:30 - Consullallon
10:00 - 700 Club.

'!!'

BOB'S UN:JSLSTERING
And

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

Movie Channel 4 -

10 : 3~Biack

1970 VW BUS rebu1ll eng. Gas
heater. Rodrolt1re!&gt;, .same rusl
24 mrl es per go~~'2.. 992 · ~9~ . •

Let

')

Let The Opening

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES. Pt . Plea·

Hotpoint Refrigerator
or
or

-··-

ECONOMY TkACfOR wii h ot( CJt ·
lachments , Li~tt new, 01krng
$7250. Phone (614) 698 ·3290 .

1970 FORD F 750 Custom 17 SOx
14 00 t.r•s w rnc h Only 14, 01X)
mL Heade rs CB Tope d&amp;ek
O~&lt;&amp;r $3,000 1n ex lr O!&gt; Serious
ca lls only alter 12 noon
096· 1072 $6 .800.

YEARS. HOW ABOUT ASKINCi THE
CiOVERNOR TO PARDON I-IlM TOO?
OTHERWISE, WE'L.L. TEL.L THE COPS

'

3290.

RUGS , WALL Hangrngs
and
olgons . N1ce lor Chr1stmas
Reasonable (o11992·7214

TELEVISION
Vlb'WING

WE HAVE A BROTHER WHO'S DOING

Business
Services
-·

CAMPER . $600. Also . horse
trailer . $450. 1-'hone (614} 698·

APPLES . FITZPA 1 RIC;: Orchards .
Stole Route 08q ~ Phone
Wilk•sv1lle . 609·3785.

5

the People Gone?" 6,1 3; Columbo 8; ABC ,News 33;
Movie " Or. Jekyll &amp; Mr . Hyde" 10.
12 : ~Janakl33 ; 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 1: I~News 13.

, ..
1

f"''-.

~(:))-

~
. -

THAT5 A GOOD IDEA ..
TR'r' THE OTHER
DIRECTI.ON ...

PAW--SPECIAL

DELIIJERY

URIAH
CLAIMED
lT WUZ.
SORT A
SPECIAL

recoivo

coplos

MOOERN.)

of

JACOBY

�-

..

~ ~,

,The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov, 22. t977

News •• in Briefs

Tammy Miller

(ConUnued from PIC• I)
Administrative Services has been authortzed by the state
Controlling Board to purchase an extra ~.000 tons of coal to
have on hand in case of a prolonged coal strike.
In approving the request Monday, the board added a
requirement that purchases he restricted to Ohio coal .unless
the department "after due diligence" .is unable. t~ fmd an
adequate supply within the state. John K1g~r. ad~1;nstrator of
state purchasing in the departrnenr, sa1d Oh1o s 26 ~tate
institutions have stockpiled 140,000 tons, which he said Is
enough w withstand only a 90-day coal strike .

in council chair
Tammy
Miller ,
15,
daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Miller of
Willard E .
Pomeroy, and president ol
Explorer Law Enforcement
Post 230 in Meigs County, has
been elected
Explorer
chairperson ol !lie Tri.State
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
America.
Exploring is a division of
the Boy Scouts ol America
with lo cal headquarters
located at Huntington 1 W. Va.
Exploring is under adult
supervision, age group H
years to 21 years ol age-,!
Exploring is run by the
youths who put emphasis on
six
experience
areas,
vocational, outdoor adventure, citizenship, social ·
service and personal fitness.
Meigs County Post 2:Jo in
Pomeroy is sponsored by the

· ·Jo ;o.; K'ARSCHN1K of The Farmers Bank and Savings Co., left. and Mrs. Maxine
riffit h of the Pomer oy National Bank, present checks from their respective banks to
''h; u·Ies Hamilton, president of the Meigs Athletic Boosters . The Boosters are sponsoring
ci:e fourth an nual football games between Pomeroy and Middleport High Schools alumni to
1&lt;'h&lt;'IJ at 4 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day at the Meigs Stadium in Pomeroy. The money will be
useU fl)r thL' ga me footballs .

IIOSPITAL NEWS

Hussein
(ConUnUIICI fiun [)lge 1)

chpatrick and da ughter,
\' eter nns Memorial Hospital
AD MI TT ED ~ William Wendall Grate, Chasily Gray,
Watson, Reedsville ; Larry U.uise Green, Mason Grinun,
Pa tterson , Jr ., Racine; Clark Ruby Harper , Elizabeth
!hie .
Racine ;
Adeline Hicks, David Hill , Paula
King, Clyde Law , Mrs .
Hei lman ,
Pomeroy;
George
Lewi s and son ,
Adrienne French, Pomeroy;
Rohert Miller, Jea n Moore,
William Ca pehart , Shade;
'cllie Hanson, Middleport; Ella Mutzig, Anna Stephens,
Rolland Smith, Middleport. Carla Tobert, Cynthia Whitt ,
DISCHAHGED - Daniel . Mrs. Robert Williams and
Thomas , Lucy Spencer, son , Mrs. Ronnie Wolford and
Jimmy
Kil\g,
Gladys son, Robert Yates , Sally
Young.
Nicholson .
(Births Nov.%!)
Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Horsley,
a
daughter,
Holzer Medical Center
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. David
1Discharges Nov. 21)
-·Shafer, son, Cr own City: Mr: ·
Jean Ca rtwr ight , Roger and Mrs. John Sheets, a son,
Davis, _ Mrs. Leonard Fit· Pomeroy.

since Israel was founded in

1948.

"It 's very important not to
let the momentum get lost ,"
one said. " We now have the
best prospects lor peace in 30
years , but they must he
nourished to overcome the
doubters, the cynics and the
opponents of peace. "
At Ben Gurion Airport in
Jerusalem and in other major
Israeli centers , workmen
began pulling down Egypt's
falconcrested , red, white and
bliack flags that highlighted
the Sadat visit.
Off came the 'huge
11
Welcome Sadat" signs that
greeted the Egyptian leader
and his entourage wherever
they went .
Israeli officials also
attempted to shake oil the
euphoria created by Sadat 's
and assess its
visit
implications:
shelter as the ·new storm
Israel's Defense Minister
brushed past the western . Ezer Weimlan said in a
coast, floodin g parts of television interview : "This Is
Kerala state , and roared something tremendous, a re·
north.
markable turning point." ·
The lull magnitude of the
Officials
expressed
disaster that struck a 25(). satisfaction with the mutual,
mile section ol the southern unwritten public pledge the
coast over the weekend was two countries made to shun
not irrunediately known.
war .
14
We have decided no morewar between our nations,••
Begin said at the official
residence of President
Ephraim
Katzir, with Sadat
TAKENTOVMH
at
his side.
seated
The Pomeroy E·R Squad
"
We
shall
have no,. more
answered a call tQ E. Main
St., at 2:12 p.m . Monday lor wars," Sadat replied . He put
Addie Heilman at the Victor forward two slogans for the
Young residence . Mrs . future : " No war" and
Heilman was taken to "Security for all the nations
Veterans Memorial Hospital of the region ."
Sadat, in a lreak with his
where she was admitted.
Arab allies , recognized
Israe l' s right to exist ,
terminated the long-standing
state ol war against the
Jewish state and promised w
guarantee its security.

.

Thousands die
NEW DELHI, India (UPI)
Rescue teams worked
tm.lay to reac-h more than
100,000 people left homeless
by the worst St1irm to hit
India in more than 100 years
- a devastating cyclone that
killed more than 6,000 people
a_nd. washed away scores of
\'illages.
Whil e the southe rn .st ate ol
Andhra Pradesh w·as still
r eellng from the cyclone and
the st orm -spa wne d tidal
'.l.·a ve that smashed the
:;out hern coa.st over the
wt :•KenJ . a nother cyclone ~
Indi&lt;-1 's third in the past week
threatened the coast north
of Bntn bi.l y.
"~""he
Born bay weath er
!n,reau re port ed '' g reat
·~1u:-m s1gn.:I!s": a nd warned
coa sta t r ~s nl e nt s to seek
-

6P€1D€L
-Di.gitakWatch.

The

Weather
Chance ofShowers tonight,
low between 40 and 45 .
Clearing, chance of showers
Wednesday. High to upper
50s .
Probability
ol
precipitation 50 percent today
through Wednesday.

You'll feel good getting one:
You'll feel good giving one.

EVERYBODY

Shops the ·
WANT AD WAY

Meigs Co unty Sheriff' s
Department. Its institutional
representative is ,Sheriff
James J . Proffitt .
Tammy,
live
other
representatives and Post
Advisor Deputy M. L. Hysell,
went to the South Point
Holiday Inn Nov . 19 and 20 to
part.iripate in the first Expl orers Leadership Conference of the Tri-St ate Area
Ccuncil.
Training seminars were on
pro gram planning, lund
raising, motivation and 't
recruiting . The hi ghlights ol
the weekend were a disco·
dance and campa ign and
election of the Explorer
Pr esident
Ass ociati on
chainnan . Post 230 made Jl
tour of the Lawrence County •
Sheriff 's De partm ent in
Ironton on Sunday .

Ftinds asked
(ConUnued from Pl&amp;e I)
Verna Evans, now teaching in Ga!Upolis, was named to the
high school English post.
The rates of pay for non-teaching personnel substitutes
were adjusted effective immediately . The changes are: bus
drivers , $14 a day and $7 a balf day from $12 and $6;
kindergarten and miniitg bus drivers to $3.50 from $3.02 an
bour; cooks, $2.65 from $2.40 an hour ; custodians. $2 .75 fr om
$2.50 an hour; secretaries, remaining at $2.77 an hour :
mechanics remaining at $3.10 an hour ; aides, $2.50 an i hour
from $2.25, and maintenance workers, remaining a t $2.95 an
hour .
Jim Sheets was named wrestling coach for the remainder
of the year and it was agreed to create the position of assistant
girls basketball coach at $500 a year and advertise the post.
The budget for the girls athletic program was approved.
First grade teachers at Rutland, Harrisonville, Middleport
and Pomeroy were given one-half day professional leave to
observe a reading project for first graders taking place in
other schools and granted leaves of aboence were Mont Vance,
bus driver, Nov. 21 to Dec. 2, and Verbna Douglas, cook, Nov.
21 to remainder of the semester or until she is able to return to
work.
The board agreed that the superintendent will carry out
the same policies of the past in the work sch.edule of 12 month
employes during holiday periods such as Christmas and New
Year's.
Dwight Goins, ~istrator assistant, discussed with the
board the possibilities of purchasin g a modular building to be
used for the oveffliii. ol students at the Salem Center School. A
number ol such classrooms are available, having heen used at
Xenia until schools were rebuilt following a wrnado.
Goins and Supt. Charles Dowler were asked to investigate
the availability and price of such a building . Goins also
ouUined aspects of an environmental protection study at the
Salem Center School where concentrated efforts have been
made to conform to E .P.A. standards . A decision is expected
soon from the E .P .A.
The board approved the expenditure of $7,725.75 fr om the
lunchroom fund for the district to receive some $30,900 worth of
· new luncheoo equipment at various schools of the district
through a state program and approved the attendance of the
Meigs Local bus drivers team to the bus rodeo at Hocking
Tech. Donna Daniels placed sixth and will he taking part in
regional competition and the Meigs team placed third. The
drivers were a ccompanied by Goins who was commended for
his interest.

A THREATENED GENERAL STRIKE AT THE
SOUTHERN Ohio Correction Facility at Lucasville never
materialized Monday. A letter from a group calling itself the
" Nov. 21st steering committee' ' wa s delivered !0 , ~he
Cincinnati Post last week saying a •:general wildcat strike to
protest conditions at Lucasville would be called for M~n da~ .
But superintendent Arnold Jago said, "Everythmg IS
normal here . Nothing out of the ordioory ,"

•

Ben Rife was employed as a custodian for the remainder of
the school year and the status of the Rutland gymnasium was
discussed. Goins reported that it cost the board approximately
$1,600 to heat the gymnasium last year. There bave been
several requests for use of the building Including the use of the
structure for housing some of the trucks of the Rutland Fire
Department. The board wak no action stating that it Is hoped
that the building can be ~d as an educational facility.
Mary V. Price, district nurse, was authorized to attend a
hearing workshop in Logan and George Glaze to proceed w
establish safety patrols at the Bradbury and Middleport
Elementary Schools in cooperation with the building
!"'i!lcipals.
High School Principal James Diehl was given pennlsaion
to transfer ~!left by the class of 197'1 without designating for
what it was expended into the general fund at the high school
lor replacement ol a microphone a nd the purchase of a copying
,
machine.
Morris outoined an in-service program to he held in the
Meigs Local District Monday for staff members. On hand to
address the staff during the morning hours will be Dr , Charles ·
Galloway, Ohio State University non-verbal communication
specialist. Workshops will be held during the afternoon hours.
The board agreed to provide additional pay for cooks at
schools serving lreakfast based on the number of students
served, Two parents were present to request relaxed bus
discipline for rural students who have to spend much more
time on school buses !ban others. Goins will study the r~:quest.
Attending the meeting in the junior high building in
Middleport were Dowler, Goins, Morris , of the central office ;
board meinhers, Mrs. Sheets, Joe Sayre, Wendell Hoover , Dr,
Keith Riggs and Virgil King; board memher elect, Carol
Pierce ; Charles Downie and Rita Slavin of the teaching staff,
and principals, James Diehl, John Mora and Robert Morris,
The ooard conferred with Hershel McClure on his request
for lease or purchase of a Sll)all piece of land behind his new
drive-in restaurant on East Main St. , in Pomeroy, but took the
matter under advisement .

Juveniles

Wild and woo.l y
winter hit northent
midwest and south

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
\
STORE
992-2920

Pomeroy, 0.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

You' I I
t ract it down
much faster
with a

Middleport, Ohio

WANT AD

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November. 23. 1977

•

at y

~ ,..

t"

#

..

•

&lt;t"

... ..

.

..

,

••

••

upright at a

'

• •

'

89.90

1

Complele with D•·
luxe 6 -pc. $at of At·
t1chment1 ·

ELBERF

IN POMEROY

I

"Don't pull out of the state of Ohio," the business leaders
were told by White. "We'll take care of you. " White agreed
that,with deregulation, modest growth in natural gas supplies
.
sbould continue well Into the next century.

And check these other
more-for-your-money
features you get with

HOME FURNISHINGS 1ST FLOOR
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 8

'·'

FREMONT, OHIO - COLUMBIA GAS of Ohio Inc. Board
Chairman Marvin E. White Tuesday night told industrialists
from the northwestern section of the state not to leave because
of anticipitted energy problems . White told the group that if
some f&lt;rm of deregulation is approved by Ccngress, the
company's natural gas supplies should e&lt;ceed demand by

1980.

)

he looked over this year's colorful toys preparatory to
making out that list lor Santa. This rocking horse was
among the toys to catch Tommy 's eye.

By UDlted Press International
WASHINGTON - THE FARMER'S SHARE of the
consumer food dollar, which has been declining steadily since
1973, is beading down again this year and may drop w a new
record low within a few more years. An Agriculture
Department food economics specialist, Henry Badger, said
today while final estimates are not available, it appears likely
the farm share willdropfrom 40 cents of the food d ollar in 1976
w between 38 and 39 cents this year.
In 1978, Badger said, current forecasts of probable !arm
and retail food prices suggest that the Iarmer's share figure
will slip a little further, probably to around 38 cents .

special price. ••

o 4-WAY DIAL·A-NAP • CLEANS
ALL CARPETS BEnER 1dju1t1 to
111 pile helghtl •.• low nap to
Ihick 1h1g.
• HUGE TOP-FILLING DISPOSABLE DUST BAG unob1trucled
1uctlon •• . nndi fewer big
ch1ngea.
• TRIPLE·CARE CLEANING POW· ·
ER with power-driven Dlilurbule·
lor • that de,p-cleana, groom•
carpale.
• LIFETIME LUBRICATED MOTOR ·
• DUAL-ACTION EDGE KLEENER •
carries strong aide auction up to
Ihe baseboards.

enttne
•

In

Firteen Cents
Vol. 28.• No. 156

'81

A 2.8 mile link of lour-lane
limited access highway
connecting US 33 with SR 7 at
Five Points is in the five year
plan ol the state's highwa~
system with construction
tentatively proposed to begin
in1981.
That's the way Glenn Smith
Gallipolis,
district
of
engineer with the Depart·
ment ol Transportation,
described the department's
plans for highway development In Meigs County to the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce folfowing lun~
cheon at . the Meigs Inn
Tuesday. The project is pne ol
440 retaineq by the department statewide, down from
925, for which funds are
expected to be available in
the next five years.
"The project from Rock
Springs to Five Points is one
we thought we could build,"
Smith· said.
He said there will he a
public meeting on Tuesday,
Nov. 29 from I to 7 p.m. atthe
Meigs County Museum.
Smith urged all interested
residents to come as the state
wants the opinions ol people
a bout the project.

" We would like to listen to parking in. Pomeroy frum
the people's thOughis what Dec. 19 through Dec . 23.
they like and dislike," Smith
The chamber agreed to
said.
furnish the meter hoods
The proposed highway link which will allow two hour free
will cost approximately $5 parking during th e week
million.
hefore Christmas. Merchants
There are many surveys to are urged to d·i scourage
be made in cl uding a employes parking in the free
historical survey. Smith sa id spaces as the free parking is
70 percent ol the funding will to encourage shoppers. ·
be federa I money. The
Pomeroy village . will
connecting link to Five Points provide police to patrol the
is expected to be part of a streets during the free
,plan to reroute US 33 later parking week. Bill Quickel
from Five Points acros~ the will serve as chalnnan in
southeastern underbelly ol covering the meters using .
the county to Great Bend members ol DeMola y to
where a new bridge to assist.
Ravenswood, W. Va . already
It was reported that
is tmder c.onstruction. ·
Pomeroy firemen are
Smith indicated SR 124 covering the new. Christmas
around Rutland also is in the lights with tinsel. The . new
planning stages.
lights will be placed on Main
Fred Crow, president, said Street and the old lights on
in his opinion the proposed Second Street. The lights will
project would be an im- be turned on Dec. 4.
provement to the county. He
The annual Chri stmas
added that following the · parade will be Sunday, Dec. 4
public meeting on the 29th the at 2 p.m., assembling at the
Chamber would consider old Pomeroy Junior Higti.
endorsing the project.
Meeting with t~e chamber
were Mayor Clarence ·An·
drews and councilman Lou
Osborne t o talk about free

meetmg, they were attacked
bY mercenaries and English
and Dutch. The Indians were
ordered from the building
and as they came forth they
were shot down. The rest
were burned alive in the
building," Newell said.
Dr. James Deetz, an an.
thropology professor at
Brown University in Rhode ·
Island and visiting professor
at the College of William and
Mary in Williamsburg, Va .,
said Thanksgiving began in
1621 at Plymoyth Plantation .
That doesn't ji'lie with the the
viewsofVirginiaits, including
Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr .
They claim the first festival
was on Dec. 4, 1619, at
Virginia • s
Berke I e y
Plantation on the James
River.
The only massacres this
Thanksgiving,
however ,
could be on the football field .
The Chicago Bears, eyeing

the NFL playoffs alter an
upset win over Minnesota,
meet the Detroit Lions in
Pontiac Mich . and the
intense ;ivalry between the
Washington Redskins and the
St. Louis Cardinals will he
renewed
along
ihe
Mississippi riverfront.
A half-million spectators
are expected for the 45minute Thanksgiving Day
liarade in Detroit. HU!Idreds
of thousands will be out to
view
the
Mary 's
extravaganza in New York
and millions more will watch
it on television.
And American service
families around the world are
expected w consume more
than 2 million pounds of
turkey slightly more than
onepoa'md!oceachofthe 1.78
million so ldier s sailors
airmen and Ma~ines ami
their families.
'

The Gold Star Christmas
give-away will start the next
day, on Dec. 5.
It was pointed out that
trash is being removed !rom
the property owned by Amy
King sla nd Jones. Mayor
Andrews stated that th e
village Christmas ,tr ee was to
he put up Wednesday.
Introduced were Maxine
Grilfith of the Pomeroy
National Bank and . Bill
Nelson ol Smith Ne lson
Motors.
Attending were Cro w,
·smith , Bill Grueser. Stan
Houdashelt, Jim Frecker,
Ma xine
Griffith,
Dale
Warner, Lou Osborne, Mayor
Andrews, Bill Quickel, Blll
Nelson, Phil Ke lly , Bill
Mayer , VIrgil Teaford ,
Vernon Weber , John Anderson,
Hank
Cleland ,
Thereon Johnson, Joe Young ,
Leo Vaughan, Ted Reed , C.
E. Blakes lee , BarbaraChapman, secreta r y, Beulah
Jones and Katie Crow.

Parade comes
JN_;;;,,:,,,.,,,.:,., ,.:,T;;·:;·Ji;i;/;1 Than~sgiving Holiday: the greatest! Monday night
TIME FOR TOYS - Christmas is com ing and fiveyear-&lt;&gt;ld Tommy Jaspars, Racine, son ol Nancy Jaspars,
was having a ball at the toyland ol Stiffler' s in Pomeroy as

'

95
'64
only

•

33-7 link

..
••
' .. • •
..

.'

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~

REG.

'

See our inside pages
for valuable notices
.
from ar~a .· business
•
places zn this annual
Holiday Gift Guide -

if· .. ... "

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

MODEL
'

memories that will color all the coming Thanksgivings, particularly
those ol our c hildren.
It makes us pause to consider what kind of memories we are making
for them, what kind of family life , what kind of attitude toward the world .
We celebrate Thanksgiving in good and not so good ~ear'S'. In the
latter, 'concern for what the future holds can cast a pall over the
festivities.
But there is always reassurance in the example ol the first Thanksgiving. It was festive, yes, but all the more meaningful because it was
held In perilous times. The future was not at all certain for those pioneers ..
in a harsh wilderness, and there was no guarantee that they would
survive for another year.
Yet a spirit of hope and confidence so infused that first Thanksgiving
that it has reached down over the centuries to us. No sense of impending
and Inevitable doom should sit a t America's Thanksgiving tables today .
There is concern fat the futur e, of course, but along with that concern
goes a determination to make sure there is a future for us and for our
children.

a

HILOTEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highesttemperature reported
Monday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 90.
degrees at McAllen, Texas .
Today's low was 20 degrees
below zero at Havre, Mont. ,

'

Thanksgiving· day is here again, which in itself is something to be
thankful lor . It's a quiet, family day that centers about the traditional
" groaning board ." It's an unhectic, unhurried day (except for those in the
kitchen, but for most of the results are well worth it), a day that can he
enjoyed lor itself alone.
Sometime today, probably after we re treat from the scene of
devastation wroug ht upon the turk ey or Ute ham or what have you, we'll
take a lew moments to look back over the pa st year in a spirit ol thankfulness .
We'll reflect on the good things that have come our way ; to us
personally, to 0\!1' loved ones and to our fellow men at large. The
disappointments , the frustrations, even the tragedies we may have
known, will fade Into the background as we relax in a sense of gratitude
just for the mere fa ct of being a live.
·
But Thanksgiving is more than a once-a-year review or balance sheet
of the previous 1% months. It's a collection of memories of many other
similar holidays. It 's the sum of all the Thanksgivings we have ever
known .
,
Thinking on th is, we realize that today we are buildi n~ part of the

COLUMBUS OHIO - PUBUSHER LARRY FLYNT,
after having bee~ cooverted to Christianity, saye he will not
close down his men's magazines because " pronography IS just
a symptom of what 's wrong with our society, not the cause ."
"You don't take the bottle from the alcoholic, you t.ake the
r....~llltl!lllio-- • alcoholic from the bottle," said Flynt Monday in a n exclusive
interview with SCPO-TV (Cincinnati ) newsman Larry Sellers.
Flynt 's wife Althea said her husband has become a more
TAMMY MILLER
loving husblind, a better father and a more understanding boilS
in the few days since his religious conversion at the hands of
President Carter's sister , -1·...
•
Flynt, 41, U&gt;ok the pulpit Sunday at the Braeswo.od
Assembly of God Church in Houston with evangelist and fa1th
healer Ruth ,Carter Stapleton. He promised to c hange the
(ConUnued from page 1)
format of his magazine !rom raunchy sex to healthy sex plus
attempted t o enter the other topics.
building by breaking out a
" I will he making Jots of changes in the magazines ," he
pane in the window ol a door said. "For instance, we are going to change " Asshole of the
on the west . side ol the ·&lt;Month' to "Hypocrite of the Month ' and use a turkey lor the
building. This lime the hol e symbol."
broken in the glass wa s too
high for them to reach in to
unlock the door.
The inciden~ is still under
in ve~tigation. Th~ juveniles
were turned over to the
parents. Charges are pending
in J uvenilC Court.
Sheriff's
office
has
received a repOrt that be. tween 8 :30 and 9 p.m. Sunday
someone shot through the
Mrs . Highey said .
UDlted Press Intertllltioaal
A Wyoming Highway
.side window of the Hiland
Blizzar\ls paralyzed parts
Church. The complainant of the northern Rockies and Patrol dispatcher described a
advised that had people been upper Midwest and drenching trail ol abandoned trucks
sitting ir1 the seats lor ser· rains soaked wide sections of al ong Interstate 80, between
vices they would have likel y the South Monday as the Laramie a nd Rock Springs .
been struck.
''ll one were able ' to get
weather held a wintry grip on
Monday evening deputies ·most of the· nation .
through, one would be a ble to
investigated deer acci.dent
see
ghosts oll8-wheelers," he
" It was horrible, just plain
on SR 7 just north of Chester . old horrible.l've never in my said.
Donna J . Powell, Rt. 2, li!e seen anything like It The blizzard was due to
Pomeroy, was trave ling and l was in the blizzard ol blow out ol the northern
south on Rt. 7 when a buc.k '49," said Betty Higbey ol Midwest and inw the Hudson
that ran into the side of her Evanst on,
Bay area ol Canada, the
Wy o.,
who
ca r was killed . There were no referred to an Oklahoma National Weather Service
injuries, but only slight blizzard 28 years ago.
predicted . In its wake, snow
damage to her car.
was
piled 17 inches deep at
Mrs . Highey was caught
Bemidji,
Minn. and , Fargo ,
a long with hundreds of
N.D.
Drifts
were as high as 5
motorist s on Wyoming
feet.
highways, where the blizzard
Winds clocked at 00.'10 mph
stretched the normal threeacross the western
blew
hour drive from Cheyenne to
Great
Lakes, forcing traffic
BANK ROBBED
Rawlins to a seven-hour
SOUTH EUCLID, Ohio journey. · Vehicles were curbo; on the iknile Mackinac
(UPI) - An undetennined strewn along a 21-mile .Bridge across the Straits ol
amount of . cash was taken stretch east of Rawlins . Mackinac hetwl'en upper and
l'Y!onday from a National City Trucks were jackknifed and Lower Michi gan.
Temperatures plwnmeted
turned on their· sideS.Bank ol Cleveland branch by
" lt blew one big camper off w '!:/ below zero in Wyoming
a gurunan who lired at the
fl oor and demanded cash
the road and turned it about and Montana and below zero
from three tellers , then half way over . I couldn 't even in Nebraska Monday. The
pistol-whipped one of them count the nwnber of semi's cold fanned out across most
before fleeing, police said. turned over on ·their sides," of the upper two thirds of the
nation.

•

The, S peidel Digital Watch is an extra special
gift. Because it's not just a gift of time. it's an
elegant gift of jewelry too.

Shaping of the future out of the past

PITTSBuRGH - THE STEEL · INDUSTRY is waging a
campaign against cheap foreign steel imported into. the United
States but is buying !&lt;reign coal at below domestic ·prices to
protect itself in the event of a nationwide coal strike.
With the United Mine Workers Ullion and tile Bituminous
Coal Operawrs Association bargaining to replace a wage
contract that expires Dec. 6, major steelmakers admit to
buying foceign and domestic' coal and its byproduct, coke, w
safeguard operations. Both cilal and coke are essential to the
steel making ·process.
"We're not considering a strike a foregone conclusion , but ,
oo the other hand, you have to protect yoursell," said a spokesman for U. S. Steel Corp.

'

By ANDREW A. YEMMA
United Press International
A Briton newly arrived in
thi ~ country described
Thanksgivirig this way:
"America has come up
with the greatest holiday ever
invented by man - you don't
have to go to church or
anything. You just stay home
and eat ."
Mo~e than. 200 million
Amencans Will be able to
choose Thursday from an
estimated 138 million turkeys
- the second largest crop in
the nation's history -and a
televisio~ diet of parades and
football w honor the great
American holiday .
Thai is, il it really is an
American holiday. Some
revisionists doubt it.
.Dr . Donald Scheick of Indiana State Umvers1ty clatms
thanksgivings
we re
celebrated by the ancient
Egyptians, Mesopotamians

and Greeks. The America n
Thanksgiving trappings are
myths based on folklore
rather than fact, he said .
" There is no recorded evidence that the colonists even
wak time out w say a
prayer," Shieck said.
But not to be turkey day's
version of Scrooge, he said
our
Thanksgiving
" ls
symbolic of some things in
American history we think
areveryimportantandworth
preserving
and
being
thankful for."
Gloomier yet i&amp;the version
espoused by 84-year-old
Maine anthropologist
William B. Newell. Il:e said
the first Thanksgiving was a
celebration of the massacre
of 700 Indian men, women
and children holding their
annual green .corn dance in
Massachusetts Bay Colony in
1637.
"Gathered in this place of

Flynt ·to hustle for the Lord

'Christ may 'have come into Althea, that "92 percent of
tlle Lord ."
your
life but $20 millon just the people , according to a
Flynt appeared in a taped
walked
out.'"
recent Harris poll helieve in
interview with Tom Brokaw
Mrs.
Stapleton
said she had God and . only 25 percent
on NBC's Today Show with
Ruth Carter· Stapleton, talked to her brother and told · believe In porngraphy. I told
President Carter's evanglist him not to worry about her her I have been selling the
relationship with Flynt.
'\Vfong thing."
sister.
" I called him and said I ·
Mrs. Stapleton recalled the
Flynt appeared twice at
:;:;:;:;:;·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;::::::::::::: religious rallys in Texas with .know you are reading all ftrst time she had met Flynt
WASffiNGTON - IF THE. NATION'S SOFT coal miners
·
Mrs. Staplewn and said when kinds of things," she said. "I ·earlier this fall.
Strike next mooth, United Mine Workers President Arnold
HOLIDAY FOR US
he · returned · home to said Ji!"my don ' t worry
" The first time that we
Ohio Valley Publlshillg
Miller sars union health and death benefits will halt
Col\lffibus, Ohio, he told his about what you read in the talked we met at an airport,"
frnmediaiely and pension payments . ·will be reduced in
Cu. newspapers will nut be · wife of his change.
newspapers, . what you read she said. "I thought a parade
January. Nevertheless, Miller said Tuesday, th.e UMW would
published
Thursday,
of nude women were going to
"I started talking to her," about Larry :
Thanksgiving Day, su that
not reduce its wage contract demands. The old contract
"He just laughed and said I come off the plane. Larry got
he said. "I wid her I have got
expll]es Dec. 6.
. empluyes· may jnin their
w completel,y change the am not the ieast bit worried in the ca r , talking and
Il:e warned· the Bituminous Coal Operators of Am~rica not
families over the holiday.
magazine and everytthing and I don't really believe chatting. We went to a
w believe that his announcement "pt•ts unbearable pressure" Publlcatlnn · wlll be 1 about it. Christ has come into everything I read in the country club to dinner."
oo the union . "It will not make us knucl&lt;le under to the BCOA ,"
resumed Friday.
my life. Her eyes got about . newspapers,u she said.
She said she began talking
Miller said.
·
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::; :;:;:;:;: :: :~::::::::::::::;:::::;:::; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Flynt said Jle told his wife .
that big around and she said,
Continued on A· 6
NEW YORK (UPI) Hustler Magazine Publli&gt;her
Larry Flynt, claimed today
he is "a completely new
person " since · 11Christ has
come into my life" and
instead of ''hustling sex we
are going to be hustling for

Plans for the annual Christ· Middleport.
mas parad e to be held
New officers elected during
Monday night and election of the meeting presided over by
new officers highlighted a Emerson Heighton were
meeting of the Middleport George Inge ls , pre$ldent;
Baker,
vice
Chamher of Commerce at the Edison
Meigs Inn Tuesday night ..
president; Edna Wlliti&gt;n1
The parade, headed by secretary, and Alwllda
George Ingels and Mick Werner, treasurer . It was
Childs,' will start at Gateway agreed to send a letter of
at 6:30 p.m . and move prot est to the coal loading
through the business section . facilities at Clifton, W. Va ., to
Along the parade route, the Atmy Corps of Engineers
Santa will throw candy to at Huntington.
children and· will be at the
Attending were Mr. and
CitiZens National Bank drive- Mrs. Don Wilson, Mr. and
through area following the Mrs .. Dale Dutton. Mr. and
parade to give more candy to Mrs . Edison Baker. Gill
children. Santa will also be on Moore, Ann McCoy, Dave
the streets of the business Buskirk, Joe McConahy, Mr.
section Saturday afternoons and Mrs. Mannlng Kloes, Mr.
and evenings beginning Dec . and Mrs. Dan Riggs , Mr. and
16 when merchants will begin Mrs. Emerson Heighton and
remaining open until 8 each George Ingels.
evening .
On the night of the parade
Middleport merchants will be
staging speCial sa les to be
.known as "Santa's Moonlight
Sale."
Cloudy
tonight
with
Edison Baker w11l confer showers likely. Low in the
with council on the freeing of . lower 40s. Cloudy Thu~sday,
parking meters in Middleport high n.ear. 60. Probability of
lor the Christmas shopping prec1p1tat1on 60 pet. today
seaso n. Fifty-three mer- andtomght, 20 pet. Thursday .
chants ha ve made co ntributions to the annual
Chri s tma s promotion ,
however this year business
houses will offer their own
promo tions including the
awarding of gifts.
Joe McConahy ol WMPO
and David Buskirk of The
Daily Sentinel prese nted
their advertising programs
for the holiday season · an~
McConahy announced that
the parade on Monday night
will be broadcast. Welcomed
as new members were Gill
Moore a nd Ann McCoy, of
Gillian's, a new business in

Weather

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

·'

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