<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15272" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15272?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T02:32:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48394">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/6ef47de780b20a74480481936a5f0e22.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8acb1cf74a52a159d7d10d9b9e734e62</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49024">
                  <text>' • ..
•
[)..12 The Sw1da\ Tltlh':i..St•ntlnd , ~und;n , \ ,l\ ~;. 111~7

Vertical take-off jet jn tr.o uble
H arner~

al n· :u l~
in
:'l.taru u: ,m flt'l'l
Tht&gt; ~tamu·~ i.lrL.'llt" that

By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON tUPll
The Ma rine Corps is w
for a crash·pl aguro \'ertiral
takeoff jet ·it C'Cmsidt•rs the

ldnd fr llt1l

futu re , PE'n tagnn Mficials

t• l f&lt;llU'

said Saturday.
The offi cials sa1d Navy and
Marine CqrpS hrass spent an

an

htlur l'l•mpmrd 10 llflC for
n' t' n 11 u n a J pI a n t ' s
atta l' klrlg {rom n~~ular

f&lt;trlhl'r

nmwa~ s

to persuade a skepti&lt;'al
Defense Secr etary Harold
Brov.11 to retain fund ing for
the plane in tile defenst&gt;
budget now being drafted. ·

.nra~

v:nu:~._'&lt;i

ft.1 rnt'r 1iwdrls WtlU\li

st·rn· as thr1r mam cl~lSe Uir
s upp urt \\f'.tpnn r~l r tht•
1980s.
Of the 110 British-made

adv ised Brown to delay ~1 r
ev e n scra p thE' coveted
air craft program, and tht&gt;
off icials said Brol' n made no
decis ion in his Fr iday

nu"ldt&gt;ls

alr~ady

me('ting with Navy Sec retary
W. Graham Cla;1or. Marine

fmKint g. · tJw t'11rps wuuld
t.·nntmuc tn ~t·t 4llllt•r rH jt'ls
Wllll tlw Nan':-; F18 gnt•s into
pn1durt1•tt1 . wHh a mud.Jfa_
-ct
n~rswn f lll' Mar.J rlt.' use ~ 111
the 1980s.
(\ 1st st udit.•s urdl"'n:d by
Hr0wn Sh4 .\wd t11c llfl'-&lt;'Yc1e
exp...•nse- of a :~60-p\ am• Man ne
f1eet Willll!l aJ I\1.1\ uit to abt"IUt

tt'&lt;"IUHQUt.':,.'
rth..'rc

a\:,t' haw bt·t•n Sl lJIW
parts anet nwmtenatH..'('
dt•I H ~ s, ami 5(1 tht' Marint•s
H •l \\
are st•r king tilt'
-.po~l't'

c.,rp.

.

tu P t.• ntag o n

.-.. l UITt.'~. BrP,\tl ear lier madt&gt;
a Lt·nti.l tin~ deCision t11 de-lay

do ubts ~~bnut vertica l ta kenff

furtlwr dt&gt;vehlpment llf the
r\ \ ' 813 by rt.'hhl\' i ll!; the

.;urcraft. and t•onsid er ed
t·uttmg rrsear ch money for

pn ,~r&lt;illl

m0ney fnnn the
bud!-!.\'t that got'S t o Congress

be('n itlSt 1n r r ash('s - S&amp;l lllt'

pers uad ed

Tht.• Marines ,

planes VSTbL planes
that would go mtn ser vice
an&gt;w1d !990. H&lt;• partially
Navy

h~n.n~ , ·e r.

Brown

restored th1'se fu nds aft~r the
NH \"Y appenlcd.

tn

Meany sees support for treaties

Co rps co mm a nd ant Lou is
Wil so n and Adm . J a mes

WAS H! :&gt;GTON

Holloway, the chief of naval

t UPll

-

AFL rC'IO Prestdent Georgt:o

opera tions.
The plane ln question is the

Meany sa1d Saturday that as
reasO n replaces emotiOn. the

AVBB

Amertcan 'people

Harrier vertical tak eoff jet.
an advanced American-built

Will

support

the Panama Canal treaties.
In a signed l'diton al in the

version of the British AVM

l ~ bo r

· group 's

monthl y
mag a z in e,
·' Th e
Frderation ist. " Meany ca lled

the treaties "a so lid ple('e of
::,"ta tesmansh i p. ''

He sa id the treat ies will
gua ra ntre ri ghts of workers

in the Canal ZoJle. including
both Panamanians and U. S.
dtiz.ens; insure the security
of the canal as a waterway
for sh1ps of all nations. and
will im prov e hemi sph e re
relations.
rea son repla ces
emot io n in thi s debat e,"
Meany said, ·• we are eon·• A s

~ fident the

treaties propose.d

by Pr esident Cart er will

Special of th e Week

CLEVELAND 1UP ll

A

Mahoning to unt y nwn
charge-d Wi th viola tin~ the
Hob bs Ar t , in volvi ng Hn
ex.tnr1ion attempt af:a inst a
financ ia l institution, faces
arraignment Mnn day before
a U, S. mat.:lstrat e.

Ro bert J . Ze li nka . 29.
l.owell vi lle. was arres ted
Friday aft er he allegedly
att empt e&lt;l to extort $50.000
$1 2 billion fur eithtor the from the Lowellville Savin gs
and Bank ing Co .. according
Harnt•r nr till' F ·18.
Brown IS knnwu to ha vr to Sta nley S. Oza rnecki .

ath dth.'t'd .\ VBB model Umt
Wtl U\d bi' built m this l'llUn l n
by the ~kllonnell· Duugla's

m Janua ry.

ar sen~ll s.

n~ rt1ntl

"tth
la ndm g
and

t~tke n f(

:'l.t anne
hmrt"\'er . 2ti lun·e
111

r('('onsldt•r &lt;~n a p~iil.
If tht&gt;\ lnst• th(' VSTOl.

plhlt

lu

,\ t'l'n n h ng

Tht' ~1 Mmes ~&gt; UH:' &lt;td-

Pentagon aides have

mi lll on-a -co py

l,)lt11lbl0g !lliSSI•lllS

t.'ll

hour and a half Friday tf)1ng

$7

sq u;u't'

nwtal paJs la1d dll\\rl nght
bdund lht' lmes. cnuld n~ up

battlefield txnnb&lt;&gt;r of the

.•

i:!-f t~&lt;l t

dtlfi iJUh•tl

uu•xpt•nt&gt;m ' t '

ttw

S(l-t•.lllt&gt;d \ ' .STt)l. JUillP·UP
jets. "lm h \.'an t.akt• &lt;tff ami

dan~er of losinK budKPI fw1ds

Other

tlw

receive the support of th e
American pt:'oplc."

agrnt in

rh:~ rur

nf tl1r

l:w~\

BEEF &amp; BEAN

BURRITO
MILD OR SPICY
SPECIAL
REG. 95' . PRICE

one of ·nati onal
pride ,' " Meany said.

COLUMBUS iUPI ) - AI·
th ough there will be no fl oor
FB I offiee.
sessions of the Ohio General
7A·li nka . bemg held in the Assembly this week, a pair of
Mahumng County Ja il. fa ces conference committees will
a maximum SI O,OOO Hne and get together to .try to resolve
20 years in prison if con- differences on two subjects.
vieted .
A confere.nce committee oo
. Cza rn ecki said Ze linka charitable bingo is to meet
contacted the bank president . Monday in an attempt tn
John G. Starkey . aod told him reach agreement on the
Starke)" s wife would be held provisions for conducting
ho•1age until payment of the that game.
money was made. Th" bank
And a panel negotiating
official 's wife was not. in fact , industrial tax relief has sche·
kidnapped or hann ed in any duled a 2 p.m. meeting for
way. Czan1ecki said.
Monday.
Both panels will be aiming

B U ~:SNS

AIRES. Argen·
tma !UP]) - A 33-)'ea r-old

supply:· a hospital spokes-

Cordu ba woman Friday gave

Olga Silva de Sosa , the
mother, wa s in satisfactory
condition.
J
Isidore Sosa . the father, is a
railway worker who recently
lost his job due to recent

birth to quintuplets. four bo ys
and one

~1rl.

Doctors at Cor do ba's
university hospital said the
quintuplet s were in guarded
conditi~n .

,

-- ·we)
ar e
fi ghtin g
desperately to save their
lives, gi\·ing them treatment
inr(udin g Hfl

streamline the railways. The

couple has
daughters.

two

other

m1ifir i AI O'lf\' l!l' n

Guerrillas to keep up fight
LOS

.~NG ELES

iUPl l -

Rh odesian Premier l an
armouncement ac·

Shlith 's

Smith at his word ," said the
Rev . Ndabaningi Sithole of
the Zimbabwe African
National Union , one of the
two moderate black groups
Smith said he would talk
w1th . "They will go on
fighting until one-man, onevote has been implemented.
Once this is done we are quit e
confident the war will end."

issue

the goodness and econom y of our homemade

"We believe the American
people would have much to be
proud of in the fa ct that their
countrv does not want to

Mexican food .

becom'e a colonial power,

This special is oHer~ to yo u to acq ua•nt you with

clut chin g a cloudy se mi soverei gnty on~ r a narrow
strip of land like some faded
banner of past glory "

No limit to quantity of puq:hase . Offer_goo~ for
Orive. ln or Carry. Out ServiCe Only

East, Gulf ports near agreement
Un ited Press International
Handling of containerized
cargo at East and Gulf coast
pons could return to normal
by mid-w eek if striking
lon gshoremen. approve a
three-year ma!ster contract
and local agr eements dunng
ratification votes Tuesday.
In Baltimore , where a
general stnke against aU

FLAHERTY QUITS
WASlliNGTON !UP!)
shipping began Wednesday,
Deputy U.S. Attorney the do ckWorkers bega n
General Peter Flaherty taking work orders Saturday
announced Saturday he will
resign from his Jt~stice
llepartment post to explore
lhe possibility of running for
DALLAS (UP!) - The
Pennsylvania governor .
yo ungest
of
eight
semifinalist s, Leslie Griffith s
of Anchorage. Alaska. Friday
night was crown ed Miss
Teen-age America 1978.
Miss Griffiths. I~. has been
perfonning the piano since
age 6. She played a piano solo
- excerpts from ·'Toccata"

and were expected to return

to work on non-container ized
cargo at 7 p.m., according to
John Kopp, international vice
president of the International
Longshoremen's Association.
Baltimore
and
Philadelphia had been the
holdouts as the ILA and
shippers butted heads over
the guarant""d annual in·

come provisions. Agreement
was reach&lt;\~ at both ports
Friday.

Youngest wins teen-age title

Doc

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

Smith

.

•

1977 BUICK REGAL
2 DOOR
DEMO ~~AI.
Firethorn finish.~ - '&lt;;_h ing vinyl

interipf___....sQ
... ~ft.
equi~ml

,ll

vinyl top ,
.yheel, AM

radio wi
... ereo, chrome
plated w • ...-t5 . Speci al ly priced at

77 OlDS CUTlASS s.
4 DR. SEDAN
Fin ished in sterling sliver with a
blue vinyl roof with matching cloth
-interior. This General Motors
factory executive' s car Is fully,
equipped . fam il y sized and priced to
fit anyone' s budg et .

77CHEVROI.ET

MALIBU
Dark blue fin ish w ith matching clo1h

Interior. This 2 dr. hardtop is
equipped with air conditioning,

power steering and power brakes.
General Motors factory officials'

automobJie. Priced to seH at

'5795

'4995

•3995

77CHEVROL£T
MONZA 2x2

76 atEVROLET
PICKUP·

77CHEVROLET
VEGA HAtafBACK

This compact Hatback is finished In
Glacier Blue with black vinyl bucket
seats. '_quipment Includes 2.3 litre 4
cyll,.. .er engine , automatic trans .
mls.~ion , sport mirrors, Raliye
wheels, body side mouldings, AM
rad io and white striped t ires . Only
80S actual miles .

'3995
76 VW DASHER
STATION WAGON
This hard to find model is finished in
Agate brown with saddle leatherette
seats. Equ ipped with automatic
transmission, radia l ply t ires and
AM radio, dr iven only 18,000 careful
miles . New Pon tiac trade this week .

'4695
74 PONTIAC
BONNEVIU£
This new Pontiac trade Is finished in
turquoise with · black vinyl top .

Equipped with air condition ing ,

power steering &amp; brakes, only 31,129
careful miles. Showroom Clean .

This Scottsdale model has the red
and white two.tone pa int . Special
Bonanza Package and custom trim .
Equipped with 6 cylinder engine, .
standard t ransm ission, rear step
bumper, long wide bed and only
16,873 miles.

•

Finished in Nautlcus blue metallic

with block vlnyl interior . This 3,129
mite compact IS sharp throughout.
Equipped wllh the 140 cubic Inch •
cyllnder engine and 4-speed trans ·
nlission ." Ptenty of economy here.

EXTRA SHARP

'3795

'2995

1975 FORD MA1ERICK
This oh~ Of a. kincJ...r 'lft-&amp;c-t' O~fers
you plenl y of V'": ( \ \d comfort.
Equipm~fl.._. ~· t\_\
'·-cylinder
eng ine . &amp; ~\j~ o~g . Must be
seen to a -;, . t:. Dr iven on ly

y

18.061 mi l...

'

EXPECT IT TO BE NICE

•2895
74 OLDS CUTlASS
SUPREME
This 2 doof ;:,ucce:.!:i car from Oldsmobi le is f inished tn Ivory white with
a black vinyl roof, equipment ln.
eludes air conditioner and rear
window defroster .

Locally owned and prlc.cl to sell.

'2995

76 BUICK REGAL
Burgundy flnlsh with matching
landau vlnyl roof hlghllghted by
Firetllorn vlnyllnterlor. Equipment
Includes air conditioning, AM· FM
radlo, chrome pta led wheels and
radial tires. Driven only 27,198
miles.

DOUBLE SHARP

'4695
1973 BUICK APOUD
Finished In Bu,.-nt orange with a

black vinyl roof, complemented by
S&lt;lddlt vinyl inter ior . Thl• Hatchback model will surely catch your

eye. Equipped with small \1 -8
engine, automatic transmission,
power steering. 1nd new Premium
'White si~-wall fires .

We Sold It New ,

OFFICIALS BICKER
VIJAYAWADA , India
(UP!) - A week after a
cyclone and tidal wave kUied
thousands of people unofficial estimates range up
to 15,000 - federal and state
officials bickered Saturday
over who should be helping
homeless survivors. Jn
squalid
relief
camp s,
thousands of refugees ex·
pr essed increasing anger
over aid being given to urban
and semi-urban areas while
rescue workers have still not
yet reached some villages
devastated by the storm.

••

:;::
;:;;
::;:
{
:;:;
:;:;
:::;
::;:

by lhe owners of the parlor or
the hall is leased tn another
group.
House
and
Senate
Democrats are at odds over
the terms of legislation·
offering
Ince ntives to
Industries to modernize and
expand operations In Ohio.
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr .• D-New Boston, and
Senate
President
Pro
Tempare Oliver Ocasek, DAkron,are In meet Monday to
give direction to the majority
members of the conference .. ~
committee.
Ocasek and other Senate
Democrats are opposed In a
reduction in. the tangible
persopal property tax on oew
machinery and equipment
unless local school districts
and the state are relieved of '
the biU'den of any revenue
losses.
..
House Democrats, anxious
for expanding industries, are
saying economic growth wUI
more than make up for the

{

'::;
:;:;
::;:
::;:
;:;;
::::
;';'
;::;

Witt I• T. Loodi09hlm
Realtor

'

Roger L. Nibert , 18, Rt. 3
Gallipolis, a 1977 graduate of
Gallla Academy lligh Sehool,
became Gallfa Couniy's
eighth traffic victim of the
year Sunday on snow-slicked
SR 588.
.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Nibert died of Injuries In a
colll8(on at 2:30p.m. 900 feet

..,•·'
• ·

t

•

•••
.:...

LET A"PRO" SEll,IT
hOme.

His techn ical skil l.
business experience . list of
bona , f ide
prospects.
contacts with financial
1n s t I ·t u t Ions.
and
profess iona l reputation are
all at your disposal to
expedite the sa le of your
home at tne best possible • .
pr ice. Th is i s the r-ea50n
why - nllt lonal ly 75
~ percent of all homes are : :
sold through professionals .
•
•

• assi stance in selling your,

•••..-:

••
•·
.:
••
·~

Deficit
biggest
- of
a
ll
-

•r••'

If there is onythlng w.
can do Ia help you in lhl
lltld of rtol tslott piNH
phone or

drop 'tn

at

•

e·
tl

e

LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE, Jll second Ave.,

•

We're htre to htlpl '
·

1• '

Golllpolls. Phont 446-7699 . •

.
.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.

~Sweaters ~~:a~:;s~~~a~a:ea~m~~ol
~

·

·

~

'.

collection of the most-wanted ·
slyles just for her ... turtles,
cables, cardigans . . . see!

~

~~
~ l.f h
w.

41&gt;-

?I
~

?I
?I

?I
?I

?I .
?I
?I
?I
?I
w

w
?I
w

Two injured in
auto oollision

?I

~
~

w

w
?I
?I
~
~

~ We u·rge you to make you.r selections ear·

ly- Use our convenient lay-away plan-

u; credit service . or cash . Women's swo•ato•rs :
~ are on the 2nd floor. Look at all the other

\a

fine gifts - luggage . hosiery . robes - slips ..
sportswear · coats ·· ~reSse~.

IS:' - iewelry -

U:. Visit the Music Department · children s
wear . Revlon and Coty cosmetics - and
W many , many more-. Make Elberfelds your
ttl one ston Christmas Shopping Center.

i

f,(

WASHINGTON (UP[) The United S!Btes registered
a $3.1-billion foreign trade
deficit in Oclnber, the highest
in history. the goverrunent
said today.
Americans exported $9.2
billion in goods In foreign
nations last month, the lowest
since March 1976. The main
reason, , according
to
govenunent officials, was the
longshoremen's strike on
East Coast and Gulf Coast
docks.
bnport.s tntaled $12.3 billion
in October,. slightly lower
than in September. but still
the fifth consecutive month
that goods received from
overseas have tnpped the $12
billion mark.
The resulting $3.1 billion
deficit, the Commerce
Department said, exceeded
the previous monthly high of
$2.8 billion in JW!e and was
the first time ever that the
deficit had reached the $3bllllon level.
, October ·was the 17th
conoocutive month that the
U.S. trade ledger has been in
· deficit, a sltualion where the
value of imports exceeds the
value of exports.
Commerce Department
economists said that lor the
first 10 months of 1977, the
deficit has tolaled .22.4
billion. The previous high lor
any one · fuU year was $6.4
billion In 1972.
In six of the 10 months, the
(~llnued IIII._PIII!e I)

~

~

"'

are making about 40 to 50
cents for each dollar they

s-:¥!T~~S!i ~l~~~~~::i~ I~§j~~
DAMASCUS, SYRIA - SYRIA IS MOUNTING a
twofold effort to thwart Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat's mini-i!ummlt in Cairo, which Damascus sees
as a move toward a weak and separate P.,ace
settlement with Israeli.
Foreign Minister Abdel Halim !&lt;haddam was
flying In Moscow today In m""t with Kremlin leaders
and "put forward Syria's opposition to Sadat's .
initiatives toward Israel.'' an official source said.
PresidentHafez Assad also will lead a Syrian team
In Ubya to a bard-line Arab summit opening Thursday.
The meeting is designed to counter Sadat's visit to
Israel and his invitation In all parties to the Middle
East conflict to talk peace in Cairo.
Syria and the Palestine Uberation Organization
Sunday reiterated their rej eetion of lhe Cairo me('tlng,

TEL AVIV - PRIME MINISTER Menahem Begin
said although Israel is ready to go to Cairo for talks on
a Middle East peace settlement, to continue the
momentum begun with I&gt;gyptian President Anwar
Sadat's visit to Jerusalem , "No Israeli delegation will
negotiate in any way, at any place with the so-called
PLO, wbether it is in Genea, Cairo or even on the
moon."
He called the Palestine Uberation Organi2ation a
"Nazi-like, murderous, terrorist organi2ation."
Despite that, if the Egyptians invited the PLO,
"that is not our affair.'' Begin tnld reporters Sundar..
Begin said Israel is ready In talk with the Egyptians
even if no other delegation takes part in the talks,
which Sadat announeed on Saturday and said could
slllrt as early as next Saturday.

}.
::::
;:::
:;:;
;:;:
{
}
;:;:
::::
::::
:::;
}
::;:
::;:
·::;:
.;;:;
:':'·

at

e

spend.

"U a fanner works two·
and-a·haU days In one day,
he'll get justasmuchasa guy
in a filling station gels ill one
day or work," he said.
Jenkins told the crowd of
more than 3,000 at a rally at
Gross Memorial Colisewn to
put pressure on their
congressmen to find out more
about grain transactions with
foreign countries.
"Let's raise hell until we
find out who gave the crop
away we just finished
harvesting.'' he said.
Jenkins said there is wide·
spread support for the nationwide farm strike, deapite
claims by Secretary of
Agriculture Bob Bergland the
(ConUnuetl on page 8)

finished harvesting," and
said demand for 100 percent
parity is not unreasonable.
" We' re not asking for
nothing out of line," said
Alvin Jenkins, a Colorado
fanner and a founder of the
American Agri cu 1ure
movement. "We want a
dollar for a dollar."
The organization has
threatned a nationwide fann
strike Dec. 14, unless their
demand for 100 percent
parity Is met .. Jenkins, who
said he works part time at a
Colorado gas station to meet

expenses, said farmers now

•

en tine

Fifteen Cents
VoL 28. No. 232

Miller
wants to

D

~ theOrist:mas classics...·
.

HAYs. Kan . (UPI &gt; _
···· leader of the American

Headon collision
fatal to man, 18

ELBERFELD$ IN POMERO

W

~

. il ·

;J

losses .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~!~l~l~l~l~l~l~l~l~l~!~l~l~l~!~!·l·19f

~

WASHINGTON - WHITE HOUSE PRESS
secretary Jody Powell said today President Carter is
"trying to be in the position of being supportive" of the
Cairo meeting proposed by Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat.
Powell said the administrati'on is discussing the

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio
Monday. November 28, 1977

To()ay
:~
By
e

•

Prime Minister Menahem Begin told the Knesset
- parliament - the invilation from Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat was conveyed thrqugh the
Egyptian and Israeli ambassadors to. the United
. Nations, a direct move that eliminated lhe United
States .as an intermediary .
· The invitation was addressed to Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan, who is now in Geramny , and was signed
by Egyptian Acting Foreign Minister Butros Ghalli,
Begin said..

farmers' goal

1:·.

::~~\::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : : :: : :::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::: : : :;::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::: : : ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : : ::::::::::::~: ::::: =:::=:;:=::::::::::::::::;:::::::):~:.'

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

by Aam Khachaturian
during _the pageant.
She will be awarded the e home - probably your
Charl es R. Me eker Jr. e most valuable asset ;- is
professional -way. Just
SchfilarShip award , a $15,000 •e the
as you would go to a doctor
scholarship to the college or
dl 1
university of her choice and a e or a lawyer form~ ca or
legal ald. you wlll want to
minmum guarantee of '-'·000 e
e go to a Realtor for
for persona) appearances.

I ~~~1r.;QE;2

~al ~
Cf:statet

:
Selling
your
home
• yourself
is no easy
• undertaking . Bas i cally, 11
means attracting the r ight
• prospe c;ts - people wh o
• are read y. willing. and
• f inancially able to buy. Not
• those who are curious to
• see what your furniture
• looks like fr om the inside.
•
You can attempt to make
th is sale yourself , or you
• can have someone else
• handle
the
diff icult
• negotiations. Frankly , the
• be st way to market yo,ur

Begin of Israel formally.accepts Sadat's invitation to
participate in Cairo mini-s~mmit talks for peace

····

;

••

••
•••
•••
••

~i

whether they are cooducted

man· said .

moves by the government to

1 1:

at getting settlements ready
for a vote when the full
Senate and House recooveoe,
probably Dec . 6.
The main point ol
difference on the bingo bill is
' the number of games allowed
per week. Bingo operators
are holding out for lour
games in a single l&gt;all.
The limit in the bill is two ,

Doctors fight to save quints

cepting the pri nciple of
majority rule could lead to an
The AF'L-C IO execullve end of dvil war there, ih e
council voted unanimously
head of a black nationalist
Aug. 30 lo urge the Senate to group said Friday. but black
ratify the treaties.
"Demogogues . in an effoct guerrillas will keep fighting
to reap personal and political unt il majority rule goes into
effect.
gain from opposition to the
"The guerrifias wOn't take
treaUes , seek to make this

Monday. Nov . 281hru Sunday . Dec . 4

Panels to argue bills

Extortion suspect facing
arraignment in Oeveland

•
IS

_.;;I'

~
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TIL 8
~
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
~B¥9a~Ba~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~i:II·I~I~IMIMIMI•t~!-lal•t~~~~-~-~-~-~·~·~~
I

SYRACUSE r Two per·
sons were inj)ll'ed in a tw()o
car acclden! Sunday ap·
proximately at 4:30 p.m. on
SR 124 In Syracuse Chief
Milton Varian said.
Injured were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles R. Wolle, Racine,
who were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Syracuse E-R -Squad.
Varian' said Mrs. Phillip
(Betty) Donovan, Syracuse,
was traveling east near
umdon Pool when she lost
control on the snow covered
highway in a curve and slid
Into the W91fe vehicle which
was traveling west.
There was moderate
damage to both vehicles. No
citations were issued.

west of Bob McCormick Rd.
when his auto slid out of
control headon Into a pick-up
truck operated by Jacqueline
R. Dodson , 36 , Rt . 3,
Gallipolis.
Dr. Donald R. Warehime,
Gallla County Coroner, said
death was due to massive
chest Injuries. Mrs. Dodson
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center at 3:25 p.m. and '
treated lor facial lacerations.
She was released at 6:45p.m.·
Two persons were Injured
in one of 18 other traffic
accidents investigated after I
p.m. Sunday . It occurred at
3: 30 p.m. on SR 7, one tenth of

Crown City. was charged
with failure to yield from a
private driveway following
an accident at I:10 p.m. on
SR 7 near Crown City .
The patrol said the Capper
vehicle pulled into the path of
an auto operated by Jon
Allen , 24, New Lexington.
There
was
moderate
damage. Gallia and Meigs
Co Wity highways were in
better condition this morning
due to Sunday night's rain·
faU.
Patroimen stationed at the
Gallia·Meigs Post were busy
during Sunday's snow stonn
Investigating the 18 traffic

a mUe south of milepoSt 6 in

accide1;1ts -

Ohio Twp. The patrol said
that Retha Criner, ~B. ·
Gallipolis, observed another
vehicle driven· by Patricia
Daniels, 42, South Point, in
trouble. Mrs . Criner's car ran
off the right side of the high·
way to avoid a collision;
however. her car slid so as to
hit the Daniels vehicle
headon. There was heavy
damage. No charge was filed.
Herbert H. Capper, 81,

minor - assisting stranded
motorists, · and pushing
vehicles out of the way in
order to maintain traffic
flow.

talk on
HUNTINGTON , W.V a.
(UP!) United Mine
Workers President Arnold
Miller. who has said a strike
against bituminous coal
companies is Inevitable, Is
encouraging independent
·talks belw""n the union and
three coal firms.
Miller said this weekend
the talks between the UMW
and three firms unhappy with
past contracts negotiated by .
the
Bituminous
Coal
Operalnrs Association might
encourage other BCOA
operators to seek resumption
of
negotiations
in
Washingtoo .

IDQst of them

Weather
Cloudy tonight, lows In the
IDw 30$. Rain beginning early
Tuesday afternoon with highs
in the low 40s.· Probability of
)l(ecipltation 10 pet. today\
and tonight, 80 pet. Tuesday.'

OUT OF THIS
-Vinton County's Vikings (in
black) gave the Marauders more \hail they could handle
Saturday evening, winning 76-70. It was the Vikes second
win in two starts; Meigs was playing its first game.

Identifiable for Meigs are Brent Stanley, 6-1 senior (42);
Ray Andrews,~Mljunior (24),and Gene Halley, 5-!0 senior
(20). For Vinton, are John Prater and Steve Haggerty,
with their hands on the ball, and Mark Altman (33),
foreground . In the distance is David Wallace.

Portsmouth woman's car rammed repeatedly
on SR 7 .i n harrowing 20-mile highway ra~e
'

The Meigs Countr Sheriff's
Department is seeking the
driver of a dark colored jeep
with gold vinyl top and
wooden planks as bumpers
following the repeated
ranuning of an autn on SR 7
Friday about 11:30 p.m.
Lucinila A. Sehultz, 26,
Portsmouth, told officers she
was driving south on SR 7
from Parkersburg. Just south
of Coolville the jeep came up
behind her. She believed it
was just at the county line
when the jeep first ranuned
her auto. She said she
became frightened when the
jeep kept coming up behind
her vehicle.

Negotiations

to

resume Tr.iesdJJy
The United Mine Workers
an~ the Bllumbious Coal
Operators Association
have agreed to meet
'l,'uesday In Wasfllngton In
~ASHINGTOI'j ~UP1)

She tried to outrace the
jeep but couldn't. ·Finally,
after approximately 20 miles
of the harrowing race, in the
vicinity of TaU Timbers Night
Club outside of Pomeroy, the
jeep again· rammed the
vehicle in the rear, and
nearly knocked it off the
highway.
The jeep was last seen
heading south on 7-33 at the
Beacon Station at Pomeroy.
The incident is under investigation.
•
Friday morning about 12:15
a.m. Roberl Miller, Rt. 2,
RBcine was traveling north
on SR 338 and lost control of
his · vehicle In the curve of
the Racine American Legion
Hall. His vehicle struck a

Two accidents
are reported
~omeroy

Pollee
in·
vestlgated two traffic ac·
cidents Sunday. At 1:10 p.m.
at the intersection of Main
and Lynn Sts., MariaiUle
resume negotlaUons on a McGuire, Columbus, pulled
from Lynn and struck a car
nationwide contract.
Tbe
meeting
was driven by Carolyn McCoy , ·
requested by the Federal Syracuse.
There were no Injuries and
Mediation
and
Con·
only
minor damage. McGuire
clllaUon Servlee on Sun·
was
cited
to court fpr failure
d~y. The FMCS said the
two parties would meet at to yield at an intersection .
At 3:25 p.m. on Pomeroy
10
a .m.
Tuesday.
UMW President Araold. West Main Danny Darst,
Mtller
broke
off Rutland, In , making a left
negotiations with the coal tum, had his car struck in the
· !JM!ustry on Friday nfgllt, rear by one driven by Mark
saying a nationwide 1trlte Rowlands, Worthington. The
on · Dec. I was all but streets were snow covered.
There were· no injuries or
Inevitable.
arrests. There was medium
damage to both vehicles.

utility pole and road signs.
but Miller got his auto started
and left the scene. Racine
Marshal Allred Lyons
stopped Miller in the vicinity
of the Pennzoil Station in
Racine. Sheriff's deputies
took Miller into custody for
hlt·sklp and disorderly
·conduct.
Miller posted bond after
spending the night In county
jail.
Thanksgiving Day atl0:30
a.m .• James Allen Bean. 27.
Rt. 1, ReedsviUe was Injured
while riding a mud trail on a
motorcycle. Bean lost control
going down a slick embankment. fell off the
cycle and struck a tr"" off the
Success road In Olive Twp .
The Racine E-R Squad
responded . The victim was
transported to VMH for
treatment.
·
:.::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::: :::: :::::::: ::::::: :::~::::::: :::::::::::

EXTENDEDOUTWOK
Wednesday through
Friday, moderate lem·
peratures Wednesday
through Frfday. Rain
Wednesday and Thursday
and fafr Friday. Highs wlll
be from the mid tO. to the
low 50s and lows In the 30s.

Also Thanksgiving Day
around 4:30 p.m. Herbert S.
Hackney, 16, Rt. 2 Murrays·
ville, W. Va., said he was

coming out of the fairgrounds

.

'

.

but he missed the dogs.
At 2 a.m. Thursday on US
33 just .Outh of the At~ens·
Meigs County line, Daniel A.
Crabtree , 21 , Washington,
Michigan was traveling north
: : and falled to round a sharp

when two dogs ran into his
path. He swerved to miss the
dogs but went into ditch and
struck a culvert. There was
moderate damage to his auto

l~.-~~~~~~'\.&lt;.&lt;&amp;.~~'\';.%';:jli.,~~~'I)·~·~·S$.);\U)

IJVews. • •in Brief~
'

United Press International
LAS VF;GAS, NEV . -BOTH SIDES IN THE trial In
determine whether the so-&lt;:alled Morman will was really
written by Howard Hughes have prepared their opening
arguments.
·
District Judge Keith Hayes said be would allow three days
for the oilening procedures beginning today, and then wanted
In start calling witnesses In the trial, expected In last six In
eight months, to decide whether the threeil"ge, hand-written
document is _real or. a forgery .
LONDoN -BRITAIN'S STRIKING FIREFIGHTERS are '
vowing to hold out past Christmas if necessary in their already
two.week-old strike for a 30 percent pay increase. . .
"Our- members see this as a fight to 'the death," union
leader Dick Foggie said Sunday. But political sources said the
striking firefighters, on strike for 1~ days, may soften their.·
demands when their pay l'UJl5 out at the end of the month.
The firelighters, who have never before walked off the job,
have no union strike fund, and the political sources S81d thlS
week could be a turning point In the walkout.
MEMPHIS, TENN. - THOUSANDS OF SOMBER fans

curve.
Three passengers In the
auto and Crabtree . were
removed
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital with
sllght
injuries.
The
passengers were David
Franklin, 20, Detroit; Billy
John, 20, Montpelier, Ohio.
No citation was issued. The
Pomeroy E· R was on the
scene.
Deputies are investigating
the vandalism to two mailboxes in the Letart Falls
area. The mailboKes , owned
by Albert Blackwell and
Colter Shuler, were damaged
Friday night, apparently
being run over with an auto.
James Argabrlte, 20,
Belpre, was transported last
Wednesday to the Ohio
Correctional &amp; Reception
Center to begin his tenn of 2
to 1~ years for robbery at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

filed quietly past Elvis Presley's grave for the first time

, ('ft

Sunday ,leaving behind a Sprinkling of damp flowers and tears
ii) the ''meditation garden" of his mansion.
·
(Conllnued on page 8)
::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Loss heavy in home on Hysell Run ·...-""--··"''
Losses were set at $30,000
when fire destroy_ed the home
of James Ferguson, Hysell
Rtrn, Pomeroy.
· Pomeroy firemen were
called at 3:53 .a. m. today.
Tankertrucks from Rutland
and Middleport were also
called to the ilcene.

There was insurance In the
amount of $15,000. It Is .
believed the fire started in
the utility room.
At 6:02 a. m. the Pomeroy
squad was called for Mr.
Ferguson, ~2, who had suf·
fered a possible heart attack.
He was taken to Veterans

Memorial Hospital.
The fire department also
was called at I ;;ail a.m. today $ ·
to the Gene Swan residence at \,..),
llexter where fire caused $500
damage. The fire was
believed to have started in
the area of the fireplace.

There was insurance.

:S,. .." ~&gt; ..l' &lt;i&gt;.J '

...:

"If they want to get their
mines in operation and
accept the fact that $3.25 a ton
profit is pretty good profit,
then it might.'' the UMW
chief said.
On Sunday . it was
announced the UMW and the
BCOA had agreed In meet
Tuesday In Washinglnn at the
request of the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation
Service.
The BCOA's talks with the
union bogged down last week,
and with the old contract
expiring Dec. 6, Mlller has
said a strike is inevitable.
The indepdendent talks
that begin tnday in Logan,
W.Va ., involve Gilbert
Imported Hardwoods and
reportedly also include
Chafin Coal Co. of Huntington
and Amherst Coal Co. of Port
Amherst.
"I have always been an
independent cuss," said
James H. Harless, president
of
Gilbert
Imported
Hardwoods. "I didn't like
having someone else tell me
what I had In do all the time.
"I think the BCOA has
made a lot of trouble and
mistakes over the years: I
didn't want to have to be a
party to any more they
made."·
BCOA president Joseph
Brennan downplayed the
importance of the exodus of
the th~ee companies from the
associalion's fold .
"You must keep in mind
that in any trade association,
you have people who are in
and out," Brennan said.
"Companies leave and
companies come in. It Is not
anything unusual ·and It has
happened before on a regular
basis " '
However.
the
three
operators alluded· to two key
issues which the BCOA has
resisted and which they are
inclined to discuss
restoration of the miners'
health care benelilll and a
limited right to strike. Bo,!h
have spawn.ed massive
strikes in the coalfields In
recent months .
·
"We've always settled ow:
grievances and we 've never
taken them to arbitration,"
said John C. Chafin,
president of Chafin Coal.
" Our men neve~ go out and :
picket other companies. We
feel like, hell's fire, a right to
strike on a local issue would
help Chafin, not hurl Chafin."

0-..l·; .

. DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

.

�3-The Daily Sentinel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Nov 28 1977

r------------,
:I
Pro
iI
:standings!

Nov 28 1977

All-coal energy policy
would sink major cities
BECKLEY W Va l UP!) - Adopt on of an a .roal •
ene g pol "' could lead o a 200-foot r se m oceans
o erthe n&lt;xt 150)earsand turn doommajorcrtes
to fl "'d ng
The theor) .. as ad anced n a weekend s t b) Dr
Pete Fong of Emor) Un verSJty
Fong exp a ned ha tile carbon d10x de and "as e
Jea produced bv burnmg roal "ould 1 ell the eartlr s
polar ce caps thereby rars ng the water leve and
caus ng t e coast to flood
Fong s heo y ssuppor ed by a Nauonal Academy of
&amp; ences stud) wh ch found an all-&lt;:oal energ) pol cy
1\ ou d rarse the te nperature of the earths a mosphere
b 11 degrees " th n tile next 200 years
\1 e ha e a problem and son eth ng can and should
be done about
the VIS ng phys s professor Iron
Mlanta Ga sa d People must cons der th s when an
all coal energ) pol ) s adop ed
Fong sad New Orleans 1\0uld be Wider water n 60
vears Bos on and M an m 90 Wash ngton n 140
Houston m 170 and Ph !adelphia 225 )ears
Areas~

lth e eva lions oF o e 200 fee are safe for at
eas 200 ) ears he sa d

peopletalk
B) KI:.J'INETII R CLARK
Uruted Press In ernatiooal
FINALLY ASf AR The Hoi ywood Walk of Fame has a new
s ar
th s tliTle for Lee S rasberg H s star
tire walk s
was mplanted Sundav between those of lngnd
1 691st
Bergman and Fran Allison The 75-year-&lt;Jid Strasberg won
fame for h s co-foWld ng of the Group Theater n New York
and Actor s Stud o where he has taught three gene rat ons of
actors and actresses H1s own f 1m debut- n Godfatlrer !I
-came ate but won him an Oscar nommat on
MELODY REMEMBERED It s posstble that onl) Helen
Hayes re nembers the 1\ ords to G bS&lt;ln Bathmg Gtrl -the
song she sa ng when she made her stage debut at the age of 5
She sang t agam Sunday n gh a a dtru1er and ball m Boston to
rarse funds for the Massachuse s Center Repertory Company
Arthur Fiedler conductor of the Boston Pops was guest of
honor a the bene! t "htch me uded an ellh btt of costumes
from Broadway s Z egfeld Fol es
NlGIITI\lARE REVISITED Israeli Fore1go Mluister Moshe
Dayan stepped back mto the n ghtmare of his people SWJda) VIS tmg the former Nazr death camp at Bergen Belsen north
of Hanno er m West Germa ny He then attended a reception
m hts honor m Hamburg to begm a fow--day VIS t n West
Germany m whtch he II confer wrth Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt and other governmen off c als
GOVERNOR WEDS rooGE Oklahoma Guv David Boren
at 36 tire nation s yoWJgest chief state execuuve- has a new
ftrst ady and shes one who should be able to lay down the
law Boren marned former Judge Molly W Shl SWlday m a
pr vate doub e..rmg ceremony at the governor s mans on The
new Mrs Boren was the ftrst woman ever to serve on the
Ok ahoma Bar Foundat on board of trustees In 1975 she was
named spec al distnct Judge at Ada
a post she resigned
Fr day It s the second marr age for both
GUMPSES 1960decathalon champ Raler Johnson was 1977
ce ebr ty chatrman of the 3rd annual Thanksg vmg spectal
0 l mp c Bowl over the weekend n Founta n Valley near San
D ego Henry The Fonz Winkler JOmed conductor Zubln
Mehta soon to be w th t he New York PhilharmoniC to narrate
Pe er and the Wolf Sunday at the Hollywood Bowl Actor
Hal Linden star of the ABC Telev s on comedy ser es Barney
Mil er s hosp1tahzed m Harr s N Y for exhaustion and a
bronchial nfectton Among celebrtties at Hollywood s 46th
annua Santa Claus Lane parade hosted by Lee Strasberg
we e A Pacm Earl Holliman Robert De Niro and singer
Stev e W nder Junmy Stewart was grand marshal
Paul
Satterfield co.&lt;fi •ctor of Ute rnovte Fantasta was honored
Sunda) at he Horror anaFantasy convent on m Los Ange es
where he ece ved tr bute from Bob Clampett creator of Cec I
the Seas ck Sea Serpent

Lawrence E Lamb M D

'No cholesterol' cereals
By Lawrence Lamb Ill D
DEAR DR LAMB I have
tr ed to f nd cereals that have
no preservat ves food color
illS or artif1c al flavormg I
began eat ng the Quaker
1'-(at ura l Ce ea s
but
discovered that they used the
term vegetable 01 as one of
the r ngredients I wrote to
the company askmg them if
this was coconut otl and n
deed tt was They sUite that
no cholesterol 1s present n
Natura l Cereal Does this
mean that t s aU nght for me
o contmue w th these cereals
even though they do conU! n
coconut o I
DEAR READER I am not
fond of the gururuck used by
many food compames to state
a food has no cholesterol
wh en they are us ng
saturated fat m the rec pe It
JS true that ~oconut o I and all
vegeU!b e products conta n
no cholesterol but saturated
fat may be even more
dangeroUB Many sctent sts
think that a high saturated fat
mtake IS a major factor n
stunulatmg your own body to
form fatty-cholesterol par
tides that tend to lodge m the
arter es and cause heart and
vascular disease
And I filld rt equal y
distasteful to see a food label
of vegetable o I which
1111sieads many buyers All
too often the buyer thinks he
ts gett ng a vegetable fat low
m saturated fat when m fact
t rs coconut otl To f1ght back
I recommend to my readers
Ural If the product says
vegetable o I and doesn t
specify what k nd or tell you

how much saturated fat t
contams JUS! boycott I That
wrll help to brmg the food m
dustry around
As the letter you sent me
really admits the food ill
dustry likes to use coconut oil
not because tIS good for you
but because t unproves the
shelf hfe of the product they
are selhng I rrught add that
sometunes 11 s cheaper
In defense of Quaker s product I II have to agree that
tire amoWJt of fat 11 contams
rs relatively small A httle btl
of saturated fat IS m almost
all foods that conta n any fat
at all even n safflower ml

According to the Quaker
I gures n the letter you sent
me a half cup servmg con
ta ns 4 2 grams of saturated
fat That translates mto about
38 caiortes and if you were
eat ng 2 500 calortes a day 15
per cent of your datly
saturated fat allowance The
Inter..Soctety Corruruss on for
Heart D sease Resources
recotrunends that we lurut
our saturated fat (not total
fat) mU!ke to 10 percent of
our total calones About
Urree-and.a half cups of the
Natural Cereal would use
your entrre da ly allowance of
saturated fat
Ltke many other fOQds that
you can t eat m abWJdance
you can eat some So if the
rest of your menu s based on
lean meats fiSh and poultry
abundant amounts of
vegeU!bles wtthout added
saturated fat and other
cereals and fru ts wrthout ad
ded saturated fat and low fat
da ry products you can Sllll

Suspect
ClEVELAND UP!)
Tl e
ao a u•ed
f
k1dnapp ng suburb n
Cie eland s cho I teacher
Jnda Sharpt&gt; and hold ng her
n Ins rented n oble hone n
Flor da (or 12 da\S was
dent fed SWlda) b the FBI
m Cle e and as R chard Alan
Wr ~I t an escapee of the
Oh o
Refomat or)
n
Ma •fte d
A spokesman for the FBI
sa d that Wr ght escaped
from the reformatory March
3 1976 He had been servmg a
o 30 year sentence on
k dnapp ng
a d
rape
conv cuon m n d 1973
He escaped from the Oh o
Reformatory after stabbillg
and ser ously woWldmg a
pr son guard
The FBI spokesman sa d
Wr ght was listed as a federal
fug)t ve and had a pr or
record for buglary grand
larceny and possess on of
counterfett mone) He was
conv cted of k dnappmg and
ape m n d 1973
Wr ght w11l be arra gned on
F ortda
charges
of

•

IS

k dnapp1ng
burglaq
res st g arrest and assault
'" a pol r off ce n P nellas
Co unt) F lor da tnday n
con nee t n 1\tlh U e k dnap
p ng o! M ss Sharpe 28 " ho
was abducted fro her ho e
No 13
M1ss Sharpe es caped
friday by aler ng a store
e k that she 11as betng held
aga 1St her w
The FBI sad Wr g~t was
n a r ed and was formerly a
es de of N U 0~ stead
Oh o He worked Wider his
assumed 1arne for a butlding
construct on compan) n
North R dgev lie Ohio
M ss Sharpe spen n ost of
Sunday n bed est nt: from
her ordea She returned to
Oh o Sa w-da)
I m exhausted real y ex
hausted she sa d I m so
gratefu Just to be ahve
M ss Sharpe a teacher a
Cha es A Mooney Juruor
Htgh School ill Cleveland
was qu est oned br efly n
M ddleburg He ghts after her
ar al She then left the

a rport w1th her parents f r
the bon e near To ed
Tarpon Spr ngs pol ce sa d
M ss Sharpt&gt; told Ute1 she
was attacked
n her
apa tn ent the afternoon or
No 13 and was dragged to a
car m a arge canvas bag
They sa d she sa d she was
drt en nonstop o Florrda
She sa I sl e knew she was
I eaded south because t was

n
cold and snow ng
Cleveland and she felt the
riliTlate change Sgt M ke
Theodore of Tarpon Sprillgs
sad
Wr ght was arrested when
he took her w th him to Ben s
Bottled Gas Store Frrday to
buy gas for the house trarler
he had rented M ss Sharpe
whispered to a store clerk
tllat she was berng held
against her wtl
Mrs lynch called the
pohce and after a scuffle
Wrrght was a rested
Pol ce sad they found a
9trun p stol burgla y tools

and women s underwear
other than M ss Sl arpe s

when they searched Wright s
lril er
They sa d M ss Sharpe told
Uren Wnght kept her hand
cuffed n the bag n the back
seat of h1s car a ld put tape
over her eyes so she e&lt;&gt;uld not
e whel"e she was gcmg

Pol ce sa1d M1ss Sharpe
was repeatedly beaten dw- ng
ne f rst week of her
capt vrty The) sa d she was
handcuffed to a bed at Urnes
and was under the Utreat o[
berng shot when she was not
res ra ned
Miss Sharpe said she could
have tr ed to break away
several tm es but tire bottled
gas store offered the best
chance
I think there was no other
t n e I could have done t
w1thout putt ng my I fe n
danger sl e sa d
Tarpon Sprmgs pol ce ch ef
Bla ne LeCour s sard Wright
had a book deta lmg the
rnoven enls of 30 won en n
the Cleveland and Tampa
areas He sa d the book
coota ned the addresses car
1 cense numbers places of

Killer suspect was just angry
OMAHA Neb UP!) Ulysses I Cr1bbs den til ed
as the man who calm l
walked n o a crowded
rughtclub and began pump ng
shots from a shotgun mto the
crowd has been charged w th
killmg a sherrff s deputy and
wowrdmg 25 other persons
Clad tn pajamas and
relaxed rn f ont of h s
televrs1on Cr bbs 32 qwetly
sw-rendered to law off ce s
early Sunday Charges of
f rst-deg ee murder and
Urree coWlts of shoot ng w th
mtent to kill wound or maun
were f led agamst him
I w sh to God I knew why
he d1d t sa d Hom1c1de Sgt
Charles Parker I w sh to
God we could f nd out
He JUSt sa d he was ang y
that s ali he sad sad
Poltce Lt Foster Burchard
one of those who quest oned
Crbbs
W tnesses sa d Cr bbs
entered the foyer of he Club
89 and rn a cool and calm
manner pumped a roWld
each from a 121lauge shotgun
mto a man standing by the

Workshop theme
on uses of coal
ATHENS Ohto UPI ) - A
sertes of work shops and
conferences related to the use
of Ohto coal opens Wed
nesday at Ohio Umverstty
W o rksh ops
and
conferences will be held
durmg the next two and one
half months a nd w II follow
tire theme of Gettmg the
Most from Oh o Coal
lndtvtdual programs w II
focu s on research and
development m Ute areas of
coal
re sources
coal
preparatJOn converson
technology labor relat1ons
and ma npowe r requtrements
and trammg
OU Professor Robert
Savage ts d rect ng t he
workshops m the program
sponsored by the Ohto
Energy Research
and
Development Agency and the
Oh o Env r o nmental
Protection ,&gt;,gency
111E DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO TilE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
t11ESTER L T ANNEHD.J..
E1ec Ed
ROBERT HOEFUCH
Cttf Ed o
Pub tshed da y x ep Saturday
by The Ohio VaUey Publishing
Company Mu lmedia nc
l
Court SL Pomeroy Ohio 45 69
8\L'IIness Of e Phone 99'2 2 56
Edi ona Phone 992 2 5
Second class postag pa d a

Pomeroy Ohio

NaUona ad ertuung epresentati e Wa d
G Iff h Company

Inc Bottlne U and Ga leghc 0
~

ThirdAe

Denver stuns Baltimore

escaped kidnapper, rapist

door and the 1&amp;-year-&lt;J d coat
check gtrl then ftred lout
rounds of bucksho nto the
audtence
One of the blasts tore mto
the head of Capt Denn s
Lipari 39 the father of SIX
killing him and nto the face
of Lipar s w fe Ruth who
mav have been blmded She
was among nme persons

normal self Parker sa d
Sunday
Parker sad poltce have
not one shred of evtdence to
prove he was n there after
anybody
Burchard sa d Cr bbs who
"as ordered to a MWltctpal
Court hear ng th s afternoon
told mvest1gators he was
unemployed a V etnarn

veteran and re ce v ng a
pens on
One pol ce n est gator sa d
t was a mrracle U e coat
check hostess Dorene Grey
She
of Omaha surv ved
was shot a t po nt blank
range he sa d How she
she came out of t God only
knows

R am
• commgm
•
•

hosp tal zed
Pohce satd the bloodbath
lasted about ~0 seconds
Cr bbs then casually walked
out of th e restaurant told two
bystanders to call the pol ce
United Press Interoatlonal
temperatures dur ng the
p aced he shotgWl m the
The snow has ended for
per od Ra n s expected
back of h1s car and drove most of Ohio and rarn s on
Wednesday and Thursday
awa;
the way
w h fatr weather on Frtday
The ela ves we ve talked
A late autumn snow storm H ghs wtl range from the
w h who sa11 the suspect swept across the Buckeye mid 40s or the low oOs wtth
Saturday sa d he showed no State Sunday and left from overn ght lows rn the JUs
s1gns of bemg other than h s two to four nches of snow n
most areas
Dr vmg was reported to he
Saturdiiy s
extremelv hazardous durmg
Oh o College
th e snow storm and a
Basketball Scores
travelers adv sory continued
Un ted Press nternat onal
today
for
extreme To edo 98 Oak and M ch 43
nor th eastern Oh o where C nc nnat 9 Ak on 8
Dayton 8 Ca S Hayw a d SO
three more nches of snow s Youngs
own S 68 Sag naw
expected
Va ey M ch 67
The wnd s gvmg us C eve and S 83 John Car o
problems now sa d Chuck 66
de be g 05 De a nee 9
Uolted Press Inleruational
Pan co a Lake Cbulrty He
Ba dw n Wal ace 94 Case
Law enforcement off ctals depu ty sheriff n Pamesvrlle
Weste n 82
speculate the rnclement
The wmd 1s k cktng around Tay o 80 W m ngton J
weather that gr pped much of and JUst mak ng hfe Pu du e 90 Xav e 82
Moun Un on 86 G ove C ty 68
the nation may have helped m serable
V rg n a Tech
04 Oh o
hold Thanksg v ng traffic
In Ham !ton County 1n No ·lhe n 73
deaths close to the m oliTlurn southwestern Ohio Shertff s Ea ham tnd 102 Ceda v le
predtcted by the Nat onal Deputy Len Parker sa d most 96
Clemson Tourney
Safety Counctl
oads were pretty good
Oh o U 78 Texas Ch s an 64
People JUst can t get gomg a though cy n spots
cons
fast enough to make them
The mam roads are fme
Fa rmont St Tourney
ser1ous
Ill nors state JUSt beaut fu) JUSt like lfl Cap a 92 Coasta Ca o na 90
o ) cons
trooper J m Warren sa d of June Parker sa d Parker
State lnv tahona
the mrnor fender benders sard the area got from three WWnght
lenbe g 85 W gh Sta e 80
wh ch pla gued the Ch1cago to f ve nches of snow
o l ch
area durmg Sunday s ali-day
Wmds throughtout Ute sUite Wes V g n a Wes 89
snowstorm
were eported to be vPrv Ba t mo e 81 cons
Tourney
As the four-&lt;lay hohday strong early today gustillg to B uff onGoshen
7 Be he 65
ace dental death coWlt by 32 m1l es per hour at
H llsda e Tourney
Un ted Press International Cleveland s Burke Lakelront H I sdale 94 T ff n 60
drew to a close at least 455 arrport and up to 30 miles per R o R o Grande Tourney
R oGrande 75 W Va Tec h 59
perS&lt;lns had been kil •d m hour at the Akron Canton champ
traff c acctdents reported by reg onal a rport Those Steubenv e 65 W Va S 6
6 a m EST The count wh ch strong w nds have dropped cons
Calv n College Tourney
began at 6 p m last Wed wmd-&lt;:h II factors ill many
Obe I n 93 Conco d a II 63
nesday ended at m dntght areas to below zero
champ
A lar ge hi gh pressure
local lliTle
Bellarm ne Tourney
The breakdown of ac system now over MisS&lt;lurl Bel a m ne Ky 82 Oh o
c denta deaths
will be movmg across Ohio Wes eyan 70
Sunday
455 today but a storm rs formmg
Tra!f c
Be larm ne Tourney
F res
47 m Texas and wrll reach Ohio Oh o Wes eyan 90 lnd ana U
Planes
r
20 by Tuesday The Nat onal Southeaste n 80
Total
522 Weather SerVIce has forecast
Ca l fornra by far out
a n over the entire state by
Central Coletg ale
distanced the remamder of Tuesday rught
Hockey Scores
the nat on ill traff c death
The Oh o Extended Outlook
Umted Press lnternat anal
Saturday Nlghl
totals w th 59 New York for Wednesday thr ough
Bowl
ng
0 Ve mont 5
followed w1th 24 lllmo s 23 fr day calls for moderate W M ch Green
1 W s Super or J
and Oh1o 23 each Georg a
Sunday N ghl
Indiana and M ch gan 21 each
Pennsy van a 4 Oh o S 2
St Lou s 8 A r Force 2
and M1ssour 20

Dangerous

conditions
saved lives

"'

Nets snap losing streak

work and t mes the wo nen

ca ne and went

Cage

standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L POP
Wash CH
0 5 &gt;3
p P easan
o 0 0 0
Ravenswood

0 0 0 0

Wave ly
Weston

0 0 0 0
0000

ackson

0 0 0

Po tsmou h

Logan

0

Gal po s
Me gs

0

60 63
53

o
0
o

A hens
o ton

0

23 107

2

Saturday s results
Wash og on CH 57 Ga

57

70 76
55 82
a 12
po

s

53

Po tsmou h 65 ronton 40
Ma on F ank n 82 A hens 55
V nton Coun y 76 Me gs 770
Tuesday s games
Jackson a M nfo d
Wave y a Po smouth West
V nton County at We s on
C c ev e a Wash ngton CH
Fr days games

Me gs at

United Press International
had
to
happen
ca rr e whe e a allab e 5 ents pe
week By Mo or Route whe e carr
somet me
serv e n a ailabe On m nth
Only Sea ttle Superson c
$3 25 By nail ir Oh o a d W Va
One Ve1:1
$22 00 Stx mo ths
coach Bob Hopkms didn
S 50 Th ee mon hs S 00
want to happen to hiS team
Elsewhe c S26 DO yea Slx mon hli
We wanted to challenge
'350 Th ee monhs S 50
Subscription p ce Ln udes Sunday
sa d a
George
J ohnson
Times-Sentine
chagrmed Hopkins alter t he
hapless New &lt;Jersey Nets
meet the overall dieU!ry defea ted h s eve n more
recommendat on of limiting hapless Son cs 99 96 Sunday
your total saturated fat m mght for the Net.'! f rst road
take to no more than 10 per VIctory s nee the r move to
cenl of your total calor es
the Garden State
Tog ve you a better dea of
The win also ~napped an
the proper dietary recom e1ght1&gt;ame loSJng streak for
mendat on s abo ut fats the Nets and ra sed thetr
saturaled fat s
and record to 3-16
cholesterol I am send ng you
I feel we a e not liS bad as
The Hea th Letter num)Jer our record ndicates sa d
13
D1 et
Prevent ng Nets Coa h Kev n Loughery
Atheroscleros s Others who
We have guys who work
want th s ssue can send 50 hard You cant ask for
cents w th a long stamped anythmg more
self.addressed envelope for t
Jol nson the NBA s eading
to me n care of this shot blocker swatted away
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
e ght Son c shots rncluding
Radto Ctty SU!tton New two m the hnaJ mmutes as
York NY
the Nets thwarted Seattle s
e ed by

It

efforts to score ms de
Johnson p ~yed a great
game defens vely espectally
m the last few mmutes w th
his shot blockers Loughery
sa d And when you have a
prem1er play maker I ke
Kevrn Porter t makes things
a little eas er
Porter
sparked
the
fastbreak w th 23 pomts and
had 10 assrsts even though
his pFoductt n came m the
second half as he sat out most
of the frrst half w th three
fouls
For Seattle now 5-!6 guard
Gus W II ams sco red 36
pornts h s career h gh
In other NBA games Port
land downed Los Angeles
100-93 New Or ea IS topped
Kansas C ty 115-106 and
Phoen x defeated Denver
115-97
Blazers 100 Lakers 93
The defendmg NBA cham
p ons recorded thetr f fth
stra ght v ctory as forward
U yd Neal pumped n 33

po nts m h tting 15 of 19 shots
from the f1eld Neal start ng
n place of the nJured
Maur ce Lucas also h t three
of low- free throws
Jaz~ 115 Klngs 106
Ptstol Pete Marav ch
dumped ill 41 po nts for the
second t me th s season
grabbmg 27 poillts ill the
see&lt;&gt;nd half to lead the Jazz to
Urelr ftfth stra ght vtctory
Teammates Leonard
Truck Robmson and Gale
Goodr ch both added 18
po nts whtle Otrs B rdson
scored 23 po nts for the Kings
Suns 115 Nuggets 97
Paul Westphal set a club
smgle1&gt;ame scormg record
with 48 pomts to lead the Suns
past tire Nuggets Westphal
hit 20-for-30 from tire floor
and sank e1ght of 10 free
Urrows Teammates Alvan
Adams Walter Dav s and
Curtts Perry scored 13 pomts
each while Dav1d Thompson
scored 24 po nts for the
Nuggets

BY GREG BAILEY
Us ng a s zzl ng f st
quarter to jun p out to a 24 12
lead the v slltng V nton
County V killgs held on to
defejlt B stubborn never say
die Me1gs H gh team 76 70
Saturday n ght at Morr son
Gymnasium in that m t al
period the V1kmgs sank II of
13 f eld goal attempts at
onettme mne m a row
But the Maraude s of
Coach Ron Logan dldn t g ve
ill By the end of the f rst half
they had narrowed the

We lston at Jackson
A hens a Wa e y
Ga po s a Logan
Russe at Portsmou h
Mad son P a ns a Cou t
House
Saturday 5 games

Ma etta a Athens
Ne son

e Yo k

a

Logan

Tuesday Novembe 29

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A'{Jwrm
\i;JJ GJnwlbdJruiJ
No•

29 1971

Aoma ce s ke "' n you

e

h s om ng yea
you a e
una ached a p esen
Fo

hose who a e a eady rna ched
he e cou d be a mu ua
ek nd ng o at ec on

up

SAG TTARIUS tNov 23 Dec
21 The e may be someone you
adm
bu you ge nowhe e

t

by k ep g
o vou se
Cha
s a e h s pe son ee s
he same way abou yo F nd
ou o whom you e oman
ca y s ed by se d ng o you
copy o As o G aph
e e
Ma 50 cen s o each and a
ong se add essed s amped
en e ope o As o G a ph P.O
Bo 489 Rad o C y S at o
N Y 00 9 Be su e o spec y
you b h s1gn

~~;;iJ;~~~!:$:ij~

~

PICKENS

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan

19)
n pa ne sh ps s ua o s o
any one o one e at onsh ps
you ea y sh ne oday You ac
as he cohes e o ce o b nd
hem age he
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19

ARDWARE
MASON W VA

Yo
s o g a eas oday a e
hose whe e you can dem on
s a e you c ea e o a s c
ab ty 0 ec you e fa sa ong
hese

e o

P SCES (Feb 20 March 20J You

hose you ave a e secu e and
happy
You
conce n h s
home

OPEN
Mon Thurs. &amp; Sat.
8 00.5 30

esc es he

e e

o

and a

an

es

gu de o he s oday w h bo h
w sdom and g ace No one w
be o end ed o ee n e o by
to ow ng you ns uc ons
ARIES (Mach 21 Ap 19) You
w ake g ea pa n s o see ha

TAURUS (Apr

20 May 20) n

dea ng oday w h anyone wh o
s b usque o ab as e coun e
w h a camp men You cha m
w
be s o ge
han he
asse veness

DAV 0
WE R
0 RECTOR
Rc

a

3

Fnday
8 ()0.8 00

C NeTtCE
ONEITA
BAKER
HUTTON whott est known

TO

PUlL

eddreas s Akron Ohio

you se oday You do h ngs
o
hem w tho u ex pec ng
hem o ec p oca e
V AGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) You
m x except ana y we w h
peop e
a wa ks o fe Th s
w be ave y o tuna e day o
you n any dea ngs w h he

pub c

LIBRA Sept 23 Oct 23) Ca ee
and f nances a e unde sa u a y
aspec s o you oday Some
h ng may dove a o b ng you
good o tune n both a eas

SCORP 0 (Oct 24 Nov 22) A
ph osoph ca a t tud e and a
ch good humo sand you n
good s ead oday t s doubt u
any h ng w a se you can
hand e

tKecurort eno or .ss1gns or
A~VARETT

FRYMAN

E

cfec WhOit II known ld
d'rts.s I\ R•dntr Oh a

dtCIIUd

lkl

E

lddrtll II 2203 W Third St
Pov1on Ohio and NETT E
BAKEl\ docened
Aob11r

ant

led
,II nt ff

VI

Hutton

tt 1

c

1

Ont ta

ar en

0

Blk.,..

Th ••ct on hal boon u1 ;ned

Cllt No 16619 In ht Com
man P 111 Cour of Meigs
County Oh o Pomeroy Oh o
45769
Tht oblec ot he

comp alnt 1 to part

on and

quat t t e to raa estate
s tuattd n 0 ve Townsh p
Mt os Countr Ohio wh ch s
dncr Dt&lt;l u Nt ow1
It ng
n Fr1ct on 35
Sect on 27 Town • flange 1
beglnn ng at the sou htut
corntf' of sa d tract on

nt of

nQ east

wnt

to tht

atctton
tf'ltnct south 106 rods to the
south lint Of said rnctlon
Wftt

SIICI

bq nnlnt

tf'ICI

place

Of

11 II bt!'oby ntondta to
convoy ttl tho ooiG land 1out~
Of IIIG dlv lion lnt I I
aforeu Cl w th th• txctptlon
of thtt p1r1 out of tht north

tilt part ;clttded to Samuel

Wtrd

Rtftrtnct Vo ume 1:Z page

341 and Volume 22 page 28f
Milas C:ou~ly DHa Records
You.,... required to 1nswer

Iho comptolnt with n 21 days
titer the ut pub cat on ot
lillY riDI Ct WhiCh Wflt be
'jiuilt IMCI one• tlch w01~ tor
slit" corrs•cut v• wHks Tht
'''' pub lett on will be mtdt

By c a o yn G Thomas

2 5 2c

Depu y C e k

Bait more
Coach Ted
Marchibroda sa1d We had
good fteld p&lt; s1t on all day but
JUSt not enough execut on
Morton who entered the
game the AFC s fourth
leading passer completed ~
nf 14 attempts for 171 yards
Baltimore at 9-2 remamed
m f rst place m the AFC East
m front of M am by one
game
Fair ns 17 Buccaneers 0
At Tampa Bay Haske!
Stan back scored on a pair of
I yard touchdown runs and
Fred Ste nfort k eked a 26yard fteld goal as Atlanta
keept 1ts slmn playoff hopes
alive Tampa Bay dropped ts
25th strarght game

I
I

I want to mp ove my E Q Please send me a free
~opy of the book et ai&gt;out our econom c system

aa requ

1

I

rtd by tf'lt Oh o Aufn
Of C v Proctdurt udgmtnt
by default w I bt rtndtrtd

I

Atmtndtd n tht co plaint
Larr,~
t
k coo

1

vou

for

rtl

ef

Mtlt1 6u~ty Oh o
iO) 31 Ill) 7 U 2 21 12
5 6c

t;iame'~----~--------

--------

C IY' -- - - - : -Stat:e__ _ ___LIP•- - -

""'li'
I~'-/

Brent Stanley and Young led
the rebounders w th seven
each The Marauders shot a
respectable 25 of o7 from the
floor for 43 percent while
h tt ng a hot 20 of 27 from the
char ty str pe
Me gs opens ts SEOAL
campa gn at Ironton Friday
agamst Coach Buddy Bell s
tough T1gers defendtng
champ ons aldready Ironton
s 0-2 v1ctuns m a weekend
tournament of Ashland Ky
06-41 Fnday and o[ Ports
mouth 65-40 Saturday
Vrnton w th the v ctory
became a team to watch on a
2-11 record Vmton defeated
Alexander Fr day n ght 66-93

VINTON COUNTY
FG A FT

M A man
G

24

24

1

0

Pat1e son
J P ate
Wa ace

8 5

26
49

7

5

6

00

Hagge y
J K uge
L MeN ck e

0

2

5

8
20

23

cen•

2

2

2

2

34

3

2

0
00
0
0
00
0 0
26 55 24 39 46 23

Young
47 pe

6

4

8 6
2
2
42246320

G aves

4 2
25

San ey
Young

3

0
0
76

69

4

00

4

0

2

44

24

Coats

22

And ews

36

44

10
10

Bake
Haw ey
Ha ey
E k ns

00
00

00

00
4

7

C e end
A an a
Sa n An on
New 0 ns
Wash ng n

2
2
6

GB

Mw

Kansas c
nd ana
De o

2
2

y

5
5
5

and
Phoen x
Go denS
Los Ange

Po

es

2
0
0

23

00
24

2

25 57 10 17 19

4

32 70
06

24 4
12 25

8 20-76

0 23 70

Reserves tagged 34-25
The Meigs basketball
reserves of Coach Bruce
W lson gave a good showing
of themselves but a cold
third quarter saw them score
just three pomts to fall
Saturday ntght to Vmton
CoWlty 34-25 Vmton took a 1116 lead at the end of the first
per od and never let go
Chris Yeauger led the baby
Marauders with 10 pomts
whtle BUI 0 Brien had five
Metgs shot only 20 percent
from the I eld (19-43) but d d
a I ttle better from the foul

3
5

New Yo k
Bu a o
Boson

line where they were 7 13
Vmton was led by Adam
MeN ckles wtth 18 Three
Vtkmgs had four poillts each
The vtsltors shot fair from
the f eld at a 13 of 41 pace
Vinton Co
10 10 6 8-34
Metgs
6 5 3 II 25
Meigs - Yeauger 4 210
Ohlinger 24-4 0 Brien I 3-5
Dodson I 2-4 Thomas 1.()-2
Totals 9-5 25
Vmton
R Kruger 24-4
Prater 11-2-2 A McNtckuls ~
2-18 Tackett 2-0-4 Wright 1 2
4 Dearth 0-2 2 Totals I:HI-34

CLAIMS TITLE
Oh o
WESTERVILLE
UPI) - Cincmnati Mother of
Mercy
Milford Center
Fa rbanks and Bexley woo
Oh o Htgh School girls
volleyball champ onsh ps
Saturday mght at Otterbem
College
Cmcmnat1 Mother of Mercy
defeated Whitehall 1fHI ~15
15-11 for the Class AAA
crown
Milford beat Mmster 15-12
4-15 15-9 n Class M play
while Bexley beat Clyde 1!iIO
15 12 m Class A
compel!lion

Marshall plays OSU tonight
COLUMBUS Olno (UPI)Ohto State Untversity basket
bali coach Eldon Miller
wasn t sure of what imeup to
use for tonight s game
agamst Marshall A second
stratght seii-&lt;Jut crowd ts
Co ege Basketball Results
By Un ted P ess nternatlonal

Situ day
F nal Round Act on
ptay Tournament

Championship
C emson 82 RhOde s nd 75

consolat on

Oh o u 78 Texas Ch s 6•
Lapch ck Tot~rnament
Championship
s Jno NY a 0 d Omn oo 5

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

L-- -------------- J

expected
But one thmg s ceria n
Whatever lrneup he uses 1t
will be young Miller s 14man squad includes only two
semors co-captams Terry
BurriS and Mtke Cline
ona 90 S La w ence 8
Mor s Harvey 76 P
'2
P Pe k 92 Esn Naz
P nee on 80 Co ga e 53
Sf FanPa96FDU66
Se on Ha 07 Lowe U 83
Sy acuse 88 Co ne 6
s ony B ook 69 Baruch 58
Wagne 1 Pace 08

South

Oav dson 06 Wofford 88
Duke 95
Hopk ns 49
Consolat on
E K v 80 N Kentucky 73
Lafaye te 7 N aga a 6Q
Fu man 9-4 P esby 65
New Or eans Class c
Ken uc kv 0 SMU 86
Champlonsh p
Ky ws yn
Campb sv 8
New d ns lo Tenn ~ ha 66 Ma sha 9 R M o s 80
Consolat on
M ch aa11 8 Wsn Kv 8
La Tec h 66 E M ch 63
No ca 94 0 e s 63
Sp de C assic
N L ::1 9 Appy 9
ChampionshiP
N E a 90 N Ch S S 75
S Jos Pa 69 Wm &amp;Me y 60
s ca 62 M nneso a 55
canso at on
SE La 66 Tenn Mt~ n 62
Va Cmmnw h 79 R chmn d 62
SW La 89 S e son B.S
VrgniaTpOff
Tenn Tech 72 Vnd b 7
Champ onsh p
va Tech 04 0 Nrthr n 73
Va 90 VM 0
wake Fo es 83 N c w m 9
consolat on
M dwest
Mad son 84 Roano ke 57
Ad an 76 Hn ng n 72
East
Ca p a 92 Cs Ca 90
B oomsbg 70 Lck Ha v@n 39
Cent Co B N hWS n 6
B ook yn Co
oM T 68
Cent M c h 82 And e son J
Conn 73 Fordham 62
c nc nna 9 Ak on B

of th e be

f eld goal and then pial ed
ball control the second half to
rWl out the clock
The cold could have both
e edus !wed let t he sad
you have to put It out of your
m nd Clev eland s a n
explos ve offe s e tea n and
our defense played super
He allowed three illler OR
t ons by co nerba ck R n
Bo ton sn app ng a str nK of
106
consecut ve
pa ss
atten pts w thou! a p ck-&lt;&gt;ff
but JOked Bolton wa s w de
open 1 was taught alwa) s to
throw to the open man
I he Browns mustered nly
three r rst downs and 40
oflensrve yards n the f rst
half but bega n to move he
ba I bette
after 1
nterm sston for ba k 1
passer DaVId May s wh
suffered a sl u de
near the e d uf U c gii c

offc ns vc t e ms

we ve fa ce d th s yea
Bu
on
sue e.s
Everybody p a) ed a
per pos ess o s n th
game
h f th e B own s
~
Quarterback Pat Haden d
Jl opped b) a furnb e an
reeled two ong scenng mlercept on an nter cep on
dr ves m Ute f rst ha f go ng a fumble mrd an mte cep on
86 yards on Los An~e cs f rst Haden alS&lt; chewed up ha f
possessron
for
John the lo w th quarter w th a 7'1z
n nule n n-sc u g dr ve to
Cappel ett s 7 ya rd
touchdown run and 80 yards help run the hone team ou of
for Rafae Sep en s 1~ya d tme

VVyorning
cop A, AA grid titles

GB
Ph a

story of the gam e was no
offense by us a d ,good
defense by Urem
Knox adm tted I wa s on
cerned throughout the game
even near the end when t "as
only 9-11 I was ver) pleased
w th the tearn because 11 wa s
a must game for us although
we are st l no the earn "e
were a yea ago
Defens ve end Jack Y ung
blood who " th re e ve
Harold Jackson re ce ved
game balls sa d of he 25
degree
weather
w th
pers sten ght snow We
wore long cleats and were
prepared for t
Any I me you shut some
body out m the NFI you ve
done a super JOb Th s s our
th rd th s year S&lt;l we mus be
dotng so ne h ng r gl t he
added The B owns are one

Crooksv~e,

Den e 27 Ba mo e 3
Da as 4 Wash ng on 7
San D ego JO sea e 28
San F an '20 New 0 ns
Monday s Gam e
Bu fa o a Oak and n gh

Oenve
Ch cago

0 7
4 0

Me gs

sbu gh 23 NY e s 20
on 34 Kansas C y 20
M nneso a 3 G een Bay 6

GB

Fo rod
Becke

43 pe cen
Qua e s
V nton County

P

Hous

2

ME GS

Totals

CLEVELAND (UP!) The Los Angeles Rams
dr vmg for the NFL playoffs
NFL Stand ngs
B't' Un ed Press n e nat ona
for t)re f fth straight season
Arne can Conte ence
under coach Chuck Knox
East
W L T Pet
played champ1onsh1p football
9 1 0 s 8
Ba moe
m Sunday s 9-11 vtctory over
8 J 0 72
Mom
740636 the Cleveland Browns
New Eng and
280200
Buf a o
They dom nated
the
2 9 0
83
NY Je 5
stal!st cs as well as the
cent al
W l T PC
scoreboard to rWJ thetr NFC
740636
P sbu gh
6 5 0 545 West D vrs on record to 8-3
C eve and
6S0545 wh1le kn ocking
Hous on
he 8-5
650.545
C nc nna
Browns out of a ftrst place t e
Wes
W L T Pet
m the AFC Central Ute game
Oenve
0
0 909 poss bly fatal to tire Browns
Oak and
8 2 0 800
San D ego
6 s a .545 playoff hopes
Sea e
3 8 0 273
The Rams led 24-11 n f rst
Kansas C y
2 9 0
83
downs
80 51 m offensive
N1t onal Conte ence
East
plays 363-181 m offens ve
W l T Pet
yardage and 39m nutes to 21
Da as
9 2 0 B B
S Lou s
1 4 0 636 mmutes 10 poss~sston thanks
Wash ng on
6 S 0 545 to the r bali control offense as
NY G an s
4
0 36-4
Ph ade ph a
3 B o '1 3 orchestrated by quarterback
Cent a
Pat Haden
w L T Pet
And
the
defenders
4 0 636
M nneso a
Ch cago
6 5 0 545 reg stered the r thrrd shutout
De o
5 6 0 455 of the seaS&lt;ln onI) the I ftll ill
83
2 9 0
G een Bay
Tampa Ba
0
0 000 Browns team htstor) and
West
now have allowed an average
W l T Pet
of
less than 10 po nts per
os Ange es
8 3 0
2
A t~n a
6 5 0 545 game
San F an sco
5 6 0 455
Cleveland head coach
New 0 eans
3 8 0 273
Sunday s Re su ts
For rest Gregg summed up
A an a
Tampa Bay a
the defeat by observ ng
Los Ang 9 C e e and 0
When you hold them to n ne
C nc 30 NY G an s 3
New Eng 4 Ph ade ph a 6
pomts you should wm The

Ga

ARb PI Tp

Metgs actually had more

1 ~ks;

) Address,_ _ _ -

IQt nst

wtn

The American
Economic System
We should all learn more about 1l.
r------------ ----,
Pueblo. Colorado 81009

on Otctmbtr 5 t77 and thf
21 dtys tor answer w start
Dn tr.at dttl
tn c*" of vour ftllurt 1'0
antwtr or othtrwl.. respond

Totals

ANSWERS 1 ((IS !J)d l 11

htnc:t tilt 134 rOds ta the
southtllf corner of Slid

frtctlon

two
M1kestarters
PattersonMtke G II and
The second half started
wrth just as much excrtement
w th the lead traded unt I the
4 34 mark of the thtrd
quarter Ttm Coats gave the
hosts their last lead at 43-42
by s nkillg a short jumper
Vmton went on to build a 06-47
lead at the end of the third
per od
But by the five minute
mark of the last quarter the
f1red up Maraud ers had
narrowed tt to two at 61-59
But then the taller and h ghly
to uted Vtsttors found the
range and went on lor the

If you found these quest ens tough your
Econorn cs Quotient your E Q could prob
ably stand some Improvement
A speetal booklet on our Amencan
Economic System can help you do JUSt that
Its fact ftlled easy readmg and free
For your copy JUSt mall the coupon

01'1 o company s Purchase

run~

fouls than rebounds 32
perS&lt;lnals to 23 for t he win
ners and 29 caroms to a b g 46
for the V killgs PatterS&lt;ln
was the b1g man on the
boards wtth 16 wh le J Prater
had 12 Prater and Wallace
led the wrnners with 20 pomts
each wh1le PatterS&lt;ln chtpped
m w th 18 The team of Coach
Dave Wtlcoxen shot a good 47
percent from the floor (26-55)
and cannmg 24 of 39 free
throws
Me1 gs showed a strong
po nt by plac ng four men rn
double f gures Guard Kenny
Young led all scorers wtth 24
points whtle co-&lt;:aptaill Chuck
Follrod ch pped m 14 Coats
and Andrews each go n

0 0 (1 ) In 1975 Federal state and local
governments spent about $7 500 per
household
0 0 (2 ) Today the US ranks thtrd n
mternat1onal trade
0 0 (3 ) Less than four per cent of the
U S labor force are agncultural workers

dtftndan s

and wast thence

Jud ge

With less than four mmutes to
play
I nebacker
Tom
JackS&lt;ln ntercepted ~ Jones
pass and raced 73 yards ror a
touchdown A few mmutes
later cornerback Lours
Wrrght mtercepted Jones for
the third t me and ran 59
yards to set up Morton s
clmchrng 7 yard TO run on a
bootleg play
Baltmnore chipped away at
tire lead ge I ng a 40-yard
f1eld goal from Ton1 l~nhart
m the sec"Ond quarter and 10
po nts n the Urtrd per od on
L nhart s 43 yarder and
Jones l!i-yard TO pass to
Lydell M tchell
We re Just go ng to have to
go back to fundamentals

rna gm to 38-37 Meigs took
the cue and got hot on lis own
m the second pt&gt;r1od reelmg
off ftve straight I eld goals
w thout a m ss at the end of
the pt&gt;rtod
To start the second quarter
Ray Andrews came off the
bench and sank two free
throws and a field goal before
30 seconds had exp red
Andrews fmtshed that pertod
w th e ght mportant points
Meanwh le the Me gs
defense went to work w th a
press and forced Vmton mto
ten second per1od turnovers
wh Ie allowrng only two f eld
goals one to start the quarter
and one to end It W1th I 31
showmg on the clock Metgs
lted the scor e at 35.all when
Dave B ake sank two free
throws Me gs bnefly took the
lead 37 35 when Atldrews
stole the ball and put through
two
But a free throw and a last
millute fteld goal allowed the
V kmgs to regam the lead
The vrs tors went mto the
locker room w th four fouls on

True False

You are hereDy notlf N
that you have bttn nlmtd
dtftnd•tits n 1 legal act on

Wllllm Oib9rn

Mann ng 0 Webs e

We re not rn the playoffs
yet and we don t want to talk
abou tt until we re there
sa1d Mot ton who passed for
two touchdowns and ran for a
thtrd This s somethillg we
never antictpated
Aga n 1t was the Denver
defense which played a large
part m v ctory W th the
Broncos leadmg only 14 13

&lt;Economtcs Ouo~ent)

G

OSIORN whott 11t known

htnct north. to 1 ne made 11
I CllV I on II"' Dy JOhn HOik
2CI Surveydf between the
11 d Stmuat O••orn ond

me
Oh o
No

season

TEST YOUR

end

the unknown he s dev see$
IIQitttS
a.:~m 1'\ strators

ROXANNA .A LEV
O.UIIId WhOII liSt knawn
GEM Nt (May 21 June 20) Th s .OCifHI
1• Rt(nt
Oh o
s a good day o seek avo s Al.LEN OSBORN
dtctUt&lt;l
People a e anx ous o do h ngs
w • OSBORN WhOSO
o you espec a y hose o ·-·
last known. addrtSI s tOA E
whom you e been k nd n he Fifth St
Dayton
Oh o
past
ARTHU~
OSBORN
oko w
A
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Pop a•~utd
OSIORN whose ut known
u a y and he adm a on o
I 190.. t: F fth Sf
othe sa e you due oday You .addrtll
Cayton
Oh o
EMORY
can e by he way he c owd OS BOA N dtCtiSt&lt;l aka E
ga he s a o nd you a soc a
E OSIORN wholt ut
af a s
known add us 1 Coo vii e
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) You Oh 0 EOSON OSBORN
hough sa e ce n e ed mo eon
hose you ca e about han

Bail more Colt.'! was between
the teams w th the NFL s
best remrds So Bert Jones
threw the ntercepttons
Cra g Morton threw the
Uluchdown passes Denver
won 27 13 and the Broncos
cont nued
the
most
astound ng story of the

Vikings top Marauders 76-70

on ton

New V k NY

100 1
SUbsc p on rates De

By GREG AIELW
UP! Sports Writer
When the Denver Br" cos
traded for Cra1g Morton ast
March 1t seemed a RCrfect
case of a pa r of losers who
deserved each other
the
quarterback who cou dn wm
go ng to the tea 1 that never
had won
But t turned out to be he
needed touch
Togethe C a g Morton
and the Denver Broncos have
won more than any earn tn
Ute Nat onal Football League
Utts year Just I ke they teach
m math class a pa r of
negatives rea ly can equal a
pos live
The Broncos game Sunday
In Denve agatnst he

Rams blank Browns

M11ler went w1th three
sophOmores
and
two
freshmen n Frtday mght s
seaS&lt;ln opener agamst Cal
State Hayward
The
Buckeyes
behtnd
the
strength of 8-11 freshman
center Herbie Wtiliams and
his 34 pomts downed the
Califormans 99-32
Mtller put h s squad
through a 75-mmute workout
Sunday and viewed films of
the Cal State game
Miller also knows what
Marshall has m store for
ton ght s smce smce the
Thundertng
Herd was
scouted 10 its 97-30 win over
Robert Morrts

AKRON
(UPI)
Crooksv li e quarterba ck
Greg Rosser may have best
descr bed what tt took to
surv1ve the weekends state
high school football playoffs
m the frtg d and snow
covered Akron Rubber Bowl
You just got to suck 11 up
and give tt all you got sa d
Rosser a 5 9 165 pound
sentor quarterba ck who
gu ded C)-ooksvtlle to an ~7 \
VIctory over Ashtabula St
John tn the Class At tie game
Saturday afternoon
The Class AA t tie went to
Wyom ng
wh1ch ended
Elyr a Cat hoi c s 18 game
wtru1mg streak w th a 26-14
w n over the Cowboys behind
quarterback ChriS Dolle
While Fr day n ght Crncm
nati Moeller captured tts
th rd stra1ght Class AAA title
wtth a 14-2 wtn over Canton

Spr ng n expla n ng h s team s touchdo vns on uns ot
dec ston to go for two po nts one one and f ve ; ards and
although early m the game also starred defens vely
That 8 7 makes a b g
difference
Prevention IS
Spr ng satd the sl ppery
the best poltcy
cond Irons altered our plans
somewhat We were go ng to
try to utI ze our qutckness
But you can t cut as we I It
took away from us a nd 1t took
Young men and women
away from Urem
o en ask why hey ha ve o
A dejected St J ohn Coach
pay
mo e
fa
he
Paul Kopko whose team
au ornob e nsu ance
[ msh ed 9 2 los ng both
D e s n he teens and
ea e t wen es cause a
games by an ~7 co unt sa d
mo e han he
sha e a
he dtdn t Urmk Crooksv lie
a
f c ace den s Repo s
could have scored on h1s
he
Na ona
Sa e y
defense
Cou nc
2 B pe cen of a
But you ve got to g ve
moo sts a e 24 years o
age o unde
ye
hese
them al the cred t
he
vauthfu
ope a o s a e
added 'when we can t run
nvo ved as d ve s n 38 6
the ba li we re rn trouble
per cen of a ace den s
Kopko who ftn shed as
and 37 3 per cent o a a a
Cllfss A runnerup for the
m shaps
second stra ght year and had
A.grea1 many you ng peop e

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

McKinley the 36th straight

a veteran team returrung

wm for Moeller
When the Class A started
Saturday on a snow covered
f1eld Ute temperature was 23
degrees and a 25 mile per
hour wmd dropped the wmd
ch1ll factor to mrnus e ght
degrees
Rosser gtven a second
chance after an mte ference
call on St John hit the key
two pornt convers on l or
Crooksv lie ftr ng a str ke to
a well..:overed Bryan Wolfe
The Ceramtcs had scored
their only touchdown w th
4 26leftillthesecondquarter
when Rick Buckley scooped
up a fumble by Herald
quarterback Btli Taggert and
raced 16 yards for the score
St John s only TO carne
early m the contest on a 711yard punt return by Tom
McCoy and then the game
turned nto a defens ve
struggle With ne ther team
able to moWJt a cons stent
offense on the snow-cove red
and
extremely
sl ck
AstroTurf f1eld
We felt we m ght not be
back down there agam sa1d
CrookSVIlle Coach era R

sard Uris ts the one we were
shootmg for
The Class AA t tie match
was mu h more I ke football
alter the Rubber Bowl f eld
was swept between games
and tire heaVy snow which fell
earl er subs ded to llw-r es
Wyommg ranked second to
the No 1 Elyr a Cathol c
team m th e !mal UPI Board
of Coaches rat ngs groWld
out two sol d f rst half
touchd owns for a 14 0
mterm ss10n lead and was
never headed
Dolle a 6 I 175 pound
sen o quarterback who also
plays soltd safety for the
Cowboys scorer! three of h s

M1ke Swiger
992 7 55
149 S Third 51
M ddfeport 0

"Call me for
life insurance!'

a e ~k ed
espon b e
d ve s Ob ous y hough
queafewaeno

The e s no subs tll e o
deve opmen

and

he

com petence

ghl at tudes

nc ud ng

a

app oach
d v ng

o

pas t ve
de ens ve

Ou
agency
p ov des
f nanc al p of ect on and
serv ce n case of ace den s
nvo v ng young d ve s

but
man y
ace dent s

a
t hese
ca n
be
p evented Tha s why we
say - prevent on s th e
best po cy

DALE C. WARNER
992

21~3

W Ma n

This Week's
SPECIAL
NOV 27 THRU DEC 3

LONG
HOTDOG
&amp; FRENCH
FRIES

Reg '1 05

Like a good neighbot:
State Fann tSthere
ra

am

le

urnceuO

llome Of1JCe BIO'Jm nvton

upper &amp; lower

nttJres

Try Our
Chick 'N'

m only one or two days

Out

One o wo day fu
den u c: ser ce
par als &amp; el nes

For Complele lnfonnauon

Call F ee Anywhere m Ohio

l

DIV\l8" ~AlO
-vvu- M""'U'9

WE HAVE
DELICIOUS

HOT CHOCOI?Aft

~dalry1sle I
Street

992 5248

Mtdd

Pome oy ~

�4- Th• Datlv Sentinel M~tldkport-Pomero\ , 0 .. Monda&gt;·, No'' 28, 1977

~~~:~;:: : : : : : : : : ::o:~:: : : : : ::i'~'::' :;':'!iii:: : : :;Ii;:::f:~.: -:':'~:~:~: =: : : : =: : ::?,11

Rio .Grande captures Lions
tourney with 75-59 victory

..

Coach Art Lanham's RIO
Grande Co llege Redmen
c-.tptured the second armual
R1o Grande Lwns Thank s·
giVIng Holiday Tournament
foll owm~ a 7"-59 victor)' o\'er
West V~rg m1a Teeh at Lyne
Center Saturday night
In the conso lation game,
Steubenvill e edged West
Virgmta State. 65-&lt;il, for third
place honors
The Rcdmen built up a 38-28
halftime advantage , and
maintamed a 10-pomt spread
until the def end1ng champion
Colden Bears rut 1t to five . 5i·
52, "ath five minutes left m
the contest.
At this pomt. Gil Pnre,Jone
senwr In R w' s startin g
lineup. took charge and the

Redmen had IS turnO\•ers.
Jark McClmton led the
Golden Bears w1th 17 potnts.
Don Meadows added 12 and
John Morgan 11.
Tech hit 27 of -18 field goal
attempts and was five of 12 at
the foul line. The Bears had 25
rebounds, nine by McClinton,
and 16 tumo\'ers.
'
RIOand Tech players were
presented jackets following
the game by the Rio Grande
Lions Club.
The Rcdmen wtll be idle
until Dec. 3 when po\\ erful
Pikevtlle . rolls mto Lyne
Center.
Rio Grande ts 2-0 on the
year. West VIrgmia Tech
dropped to 1-2 o\'erall.
Here are Saturday's box
scores :

Rrdmtn v. on going away .
Pnc£'. who hmshed the

mght "1th 22 pomls, tallied 16
of those markers m the flnal
half of pia) , mcluding etght m
the final three mmutes .
R10 t;rande hit 28 of 63 held
goa l att empts or 44 percent .
The Redn1en were 19 of 23 at
the foul hne for a sizzling 82
perct'nt.
R10 p1 rked off 3l[ rebounds,
13 b) Greg James, etght by
Pnce and seven by Dean
Fitzpatnck.
Mark Swain tossed in 16
points and James added 16
while Fitzpatrick tallied It
markers for the Redmen
R1 o had 19 assiSts, f1ve by
Dale Royse and Swam .
Fitzpatrick had four. The

'

Gallians._u pended big

.
'
North Gallia ran mto a the half. and won gomg away
buzz-saw Saturday night at w1th a 32 pomt third stanza .
Pacmg the attack was
Eastern Htgh in Pike County
where the P1rates were Arnold King w1th 22 points.
outrun and outgunned 97-53 in Mark Saltsbury was the only
other Eagle getting double
a no11-league game
Coach Don Cantrell's figures wtth t9 points.
Eagles Jumped into a 20-15
BOX SCORE
lead at the end of the first
North
Gallla !53 ) - Justtre
penod. extended it to 4'-27 •t
3-5-11, Mtnnis 4+ t2; M~­
Comas 2-8-12: Smith 3-0-6;
Winston 0-0-0; Siewert 1-1-3;
Shaw t-2-4; Phillips 1-ll-2;
Glassburn 0-1-1 and Peck 0-11. Totals 15-23-53.
Eastern Pike {97 ) - A
Kmg 9-4-22 ; Salisbury 9-1-19;
Palm 0-2-2; New 3-3-9 , M1ller
3-1-7; M. Kmg 3-1-7; Wllltams
WONDERING
~ . Stone 3-2-11; Southworth
3-3-9; Lawhon 1-2-4 : Adkms 1at To Do With 0-2 : and Osborne 1-ll-2 Totals
39-19-97.
Your Lawnmower,
By Quarters
15 20 10 t6- 53
atio Furniture. Rake, NG
20
25 32 20---97
EP
Ho se. Wh ee lbarrow,

hovel , 8 i' kes . 1-lotorcycles, etc .. etc.?

ehave
the answer

STURDI-HOUSE
Portable Storaqe
Buildings.

See Our D1splay at ...

STUROI-HOUSE
Manufactunng Co

United Presslatematioaal
Mason &lt;County
University of Cincmnati
A1rport Road
675 -4079
Reserve Score: Mar 1o n -basketball coach Gale Catlett
spread his basketball plans
L - - - - - - - - _ J ~ Frankl in 49, Athens 43
on the Bearcats home court
Saturday night as his eighthranked team stopped Akron
91~1 for their 61st stra1ght
wm on their home court.
"What you saw l&lt;lntght is
what we're gmng to do most
Mail Box. Lawn,
of the year," smd Catlett,
Lamposl Markers.
" We d1dn 't hide anythmg ."
All Alummum
What the fans saw was a 25Nilh Reflecting
pomt effort from jumor
Pring While on
forward Pat Cummmgs .
Black.
Cummings sat out last SEason
with a Foot inJury, but as
CALL FOR REPRESENTATIVE
Catlett said, "Pat picked up
992-35D7 or 992-2502
where he left off."
Although Catlett got all hts
OR WRITE
players in the game, there
FUND RAISER
were some disappOinbnents,
too
683 Chestnut Street
"I'm dtsappomted m 25
Middleport. Ohio 45760
turnovers and defense," he
said. ''We didn't contain

CHURCH FUND RAISER

people"

'1
•'

j

'If

·' ' .
COBRAZl
23-CHANNEL MOBILE

A compact value. Installs vtrtually
anywhere Car, truck, boat, snowmobtle, home. Includes Dynamike
Gain Control, butll-m speaker, switchable notse lirilifer and adJustable
Squelch Weighs only 3 •;, lbs ·
fCC type-~c~epted ,

Was 1179.95

NOW
. and shop our
' ·
Come m

complete !me of Cobra CB
2-Way radios.

TOTALS 26-

Halftime
score
Steubenville 31 State 27
(Championship game)

W VA . TECH (S9)- DaviS
1 0 2. Ha ll4 1 9 ; Maynard 1-02. McCl inton 8-1 17 , Meadows
6012 .
Morga n
S- 1-11 ;
Peterson 2-2-6 ; Watson 0 0-0

TOTALS 27-S-St.
RIO GRANDE

(IS)-:

Bise

F1tzpatnck 5- 1 11 ;
James 5-6-16 , Phelps 0 2-2 ,
Pr •ce 9-4-22 . Royse 2 2 6 ;
Swam 7-2-16. TOTALS 28-19

02 2 ,

IS.
R1o 38

Halftime s.core Tech 28

coat·h Bill Johnson was
altenng his game plan ,
" It was a rn1serable day, so

Beraust· nl tile bl~, early
lead, Anderson needed to
throw unlv fnur times u1 the
first half.· And he completed
all fuur lor a total of t55
~'ards All but one went for

touchdowns
Jt was the Bengals' fourth

at u1e end 01 each half Joe
Pisarcik threw a :;.yard TD
pass to Jimmy Hobinson will•'
&gt;4 seconds left 10 the first half
•

Ken

close the season with ptvotal

Anderson rifled l1rst half

games agamst Pittsburgh

tnuchctd'wn passes o[ 58, 30

and Houston .

and 47 yards

p;:~st

the slippmg

Meanwhile, the Giants'

and shding Giant defenSive
backs to literally put the
game m the freezer by
halfttme.
"Those early scores
certamly helped," Sa1 d
Anderson. " In stuff ltke that
(snow) the DBs {defenSive
backs\ can't stand ."
Cincy's l1ttle runmng back
Archie Griffin, who trudged
through the snow for a gameh1gh 83 yards rushmg,
acknowledged that Johnson's
pre-game pep talk was dll'eel

record sltpped 1&lt;1 4-7 alter
Sunday's "Snow Bowl" loss.
Although only 32,70&gt; of the
57,252 ticket buyers braved
the snow, a 25 degree
temperature'an d a wind-&lt;;hill
factor near zero, they were
treated to an entertaining
ftrst half.
On Cincy 's first play,
Anderson teamed with fleet
w1de receiver B11ly Brooks on
a 58-yard TD bomb. On the
Bengals' f1fth play, veteran
fullback
Boobie Clark

and sunplc.

crashed 10 yards for a second

"The coach sa1d we gotta
put

pomts

on the

TD. On Cmcy's lOth play,

board

Anderson con nected Wllh

early," sa1d Griffm
Indeed, the early bombs
won the game for Cincy As
the snow got deeper and
deeper m the second half ,
only one field goa l and one
wuchdown were scored.
Lamented Giants' coach
John McVay, " We dug a hole
real deep and real wide m the
first hall. We gave them too

Brooks agam, thts ttme for a
30-vard TD toss.
All this happened within the
first 10 mmutes of the first
quarter. '{o top it off in the
second period, Anderson hit
rookie Jim Corbett with a 47yard TD pass that made 1t
Cmcy 27, New York 0
''Thev had 1t m the1r game
play th~y were gmng to hit us
qmek, noted Jim Stienke,
one of the G1ants' beaten
defenSive backs. "And U1ey
did hit us w1th that qu1ck
stuff "
The Gtants, who managed
just two ftrst downs their ftrst
Sl~ possesstons, scored only

much, too early

11

" I didn't feel they'd do 1t to
us, but they d1d," added

McVay, who used to coach at
the nearby Umvers1ty of
Dayton "l thought Anderson
threw miraculously m the
first half ."

Toledo coach Bob NIChols
also used his entire squad as
the Rockets overpoWered
Oakland (Mich.) 911--13. Senior
center Btl! Gleason, his
backup man Jim Swaney and
Dick Miller lead the way with
13 each as the Rockets led all
, t,l)e way in their first game of
the season.
'
Cal State-Hayward found
Ohio unsuitable this weekend.
After losing its season opener
to. Ohio State m2 Friday
rught, the Pioneers fell 87~
tO Dayton,
,
Jtm. Paxson tossed in 37
pmnts as the · Flyers
dominated the entire game,
their ftrst of the season. ·
In other"games Saturday
night, Purdue downed Xavier
m2, V1rgmia Tech overwhelmed Ohto Northern 10+
73; Youngstown State edged
~~inaw Valley (Mich.) 68-S7,
~evcland State downed John
Carroll 83-66; BaldwinWallace stopped Case
Western 94-82; Heidelberg
beat Defiance 105-97; Mount
Unio~ got by Grove City
(Pa.)· 86-68; Taylor (Ind.)
~owned Wilmmgton 80-73 and
beat
Earlham
(Ind.)
CedarVIlle 100-96.
In tournament act10n:
OhiO Umvers1ty wun

~

·

these days .
"If they're all hke th1s, I'll
Jose my hair," the Brums'
coach said alter Saturday
night's 75-73 sque0::1ker over
Brighan1 Young
There was good reason for
Cunnmgham to be oo edge. It
wus h1s first offictal game as
UCLA's l"ach, and losmg a
seaso n-OpeJJer at Pauley
PavJlhon is as good a reason
as 1my to skip town and bolt
for U1e Mexican border.
Reserve James Wilk es
saved Cunmngham the trip
W1th the score tied, 73-73,
Wilkes was awarded a basket
at the buzzer on an
interference call to g1vc the
game w UCLA.
More than one mmute
passed before ,the offlctal
allowed the tip-in which was
interfered by BYU center L..omsville was idle.
In other weekend games
Alan Taylor Wtlkes, a
uwolving
top
teams,
sophomore who was scoreless
S)•racuSE
defeated
Cornell,
until then was credited w1th
the bask~l tl1at came after 88-61; M1ch1gan downed
Roy Hanlit on's short bank Wester n Kentucky , 67-81;
Maryland defeated Bucknell,
shot rolled off the rim.
95-112,
and American, 78-65;
UCI.A , ranked No. 6 in the
Wake
Forest topped N.C.pre...,ason rattngs, led 73-05
Witmington,
83-79 ; St. John's
lead w1th 2:16 left, but the
ct~reated
Lafayette,
6&amp;-60, and
Cougars got two quick
Old
Domm10n,
81-75,
1&lt;1 win
baskets from freshman Dan
Aing and a pa1r of free throws the Joe Lapchick Memorial
from Scott Ruma , wh o then Tournament: Indiana State
hit a jumper with 2!l seconds thrashed Westmont, 88-54,
and Kansas State trippped
remaimng to tie it 73-73.
Hamilton led the Brums Northern Illinois, 7&amp;-74.

'I
'

South Jrd Ave, Middleport-Nov. 301)&gt;-7 ;30 Nightly
Evan . Rev. Steve Dyson, South Haven, Mich.
Spec11l singing, lotal Junior Choir. Transportat!on ·
"1-6309. Pastor William Kn1Hel Invites the public to
attend.

Penn Sf, lS Pitt ll
W1dener JJ Albany St 15
Alabama 48 Auburn 21
Fta. 31 Miami, Fla 14
Ga Tech 16 Georgia 7

Gramblng 55 Sthrn U, 20
La St . 66 Wynming 1
Tenn . 42 Vanderbilt 7
Va Tech 27 VMI 7
Midwest
Wabsh 37 Minn -Mrr.s 21
Southwest
Baylor .48 TCU 9
BYU 68 !JTEP 19

Houston 51 Rice 21
41 Utlth 24

Tex A&amp;M 28
west

Boise St. 44 Idaho 14

Colo st 1J utah St. 10

1bennostat Control

Hawaii 24 So Car . 7

Jacksnvl St 35 No Anz 0
L Bch Sf. 29 Bowing Grn 28

"

'

······---------------------------~

N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON, O.D.

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON TH'URS.) - EAST COURT
,1 ST., POMEROY.

:
J

1
1
I

·---------------·-----------------·

Dab cologne on light bulbs

DEAR POLLY - r can
remember that my mother
used to spray liqmd incense
on light bulbs tn a quantity
that was just enough to make
the house smell good. I would
like to know if there 1s such a
thing on the market and
where 1t could be purchased.
J S.

DEAR J .S. - I really do not
know 11 you could buy liqUid
mcense but would unagme
that if 1t is available you
would fmd 1t m an Or1ental
shop and there should be
many of those m your part of
Cabforma. In lieu of thiS try
dabbmg a bit of cologne or
perfume on your light bulbs. I
know th1s works well as I
have done 1t. Also there are
now many candles With
lovely scents and when
havmg guests I hght one and
let it burn all eventng POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I had the
same problem Pauline has
w1th cat odors and tried
wa~hing, usmg a diSmfectant
and so on but nothtng did any
good unltl I remembered how
cat litter kills odor so I
sprmkled some clean !mer on
the spots (very thickly) and
lefttt for several days. II the
first tune does not work
repeat tt. When I vacuumed 11
up the odor was gone. HARRIET.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve involves people,
mothers and fathers particularly, who hold small
chtldren by the hands, lift
them bodily to allow them to
)wnp curbs and swing them
along the street or the
seashore m this manner, I
have seen th1s hundreds of
limes. Evidently these people
do not realize they can pull
the children's anns out of the
sockets causmg excruc1atmg
pain and agony unttl they are
gotten to a doctor or hospital.
1

I have also wttnessed thi ~
several times.' Once witnessed , never forgotten,
believe me. - CAROLYN.
DEAR POLLY - For
s tiffening cro c heted
snowflakes to hang on the
Christmas tree dissolve equa l
amount of ,white glue and
water and mix Y&lt;Cll D1p
snownakes into this and then
shape on a flat surface such
as the bathtub, top of the
washer, etc. Let them dry
thoroughly and they will have
lastmg stiffness. - JACKIE.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer IS for dog and cal
lovers. When I open a can of
tuna or other canned fish I
save the oil and put It on the
cal or dog's drv food. Your
cat wtll really enjoy the fish
flavor and II also helps to get
nd of hair balls or con·
sttpat1on. MRS. G.B.
DEAR POLLY- You d1d a
good Job tellmg the reader
how to make purses from
plastic tubs but I would !tke to
suggest the use ol key punch
to make the holes in the
plasttc. It leaves a clean hole
whtle the rough one made
with an ice pick might fray
the wool. I make such purses,
too. - LUCY.
DEAR POLLY - I put all
my little pieces' of leftover
soap m a two-quart jar as
they accurrunulate and add
water and some household
arrunonia. Let thtS stand fpr a
few days and use for all
clea ning purposes . Keep
adding soap, water and
ammonia as it 1s used. LEONA.
· Polly will send you one of
her
Signed
thank-you
newspaper coupon cltppers tf
she uses your favorite
Pomter, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS m care of this
newspaper.

Lower your thermostat in winter.
Each degree below 68°F can save three
percent of the ener~ ~ee.ded for_heating.
If you have air cond1ttomng, a htgher

thermostat setting will also save energy
in summer.

Hot\\9ter Use
You can save up to 5% a year of the
energy needed to heat water if you turn
your water heater t.hermostat down to
120 degrees and take quick showers
instead of baths.
Fix leaky hot water faucets promptly.
And wash clothes in cold water, if you can.
. Washing and drying only full loads
of clothes and dishes is more economical, too.

AppJiance Efticiency
If you're in t.he market for aJ;lpliances
and equipment, look for the new energy
saving features on refrigerators, freezers,
and dishwashers. Choose an Energy
Efficiency Ratio (EER) of 8 o~ higher on
room air conditioners.
While there are a lot more ways
to save electricity, these are the ones that
will rp~ke the biggest impression on
your bilL

"

I
16 West Washington
Athens

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.

.
'

Karen Blaker PhD.

POLLY.$ PO~NTERS

you think.

6 to 12 inches of insulation in your
attic could save yot~oreal money each year.
You' ll save even more if you insulate
your walls, heating ducts and hot water
pipes.
Caulking, weatherstripping, storm
windows, shades and drapes also help
keep heat ihside in winter, and outside in
summer.

••

,,

DEAR HELEN :
1 read once that the youngest son in the family is more apt to
become alcoholic than any of his brothers and sisters, this
especially if he is the jast child in a large group.
The reason gtven' was that the youngest is babied more than
the others, thus becomes more dependent But a "man" is supposed to be independent, and a perso~lity confllct develops.
Alcohol is often his outlet for tenswn. Is this true? YOUNGEST (WORRIED) SON
DEAR YOUNGEST:
I read this university study back in 1971. Even then, the
stattstics were a bit fuzzy .
Times change. Theories change. Perhaps next year someone
will " prove" youngest sons are the greatest achievers because
they must ftght so hard for their independence. Not to worry,
YWS.-H.
P.S. I've never bought the ~~youngest," Holdest," "middlechild" syndromes. Family placement bas as little to do With
success or failure as -well- well· your horoscope.
How your parents raise you- and how you react to that raJs..
mg- are what counts.- H.
DEARHELEN:
'
I'm a very religious person, and raised our daughters in the
church. Our oldest, age ?:/, has taken up another !IIK!alled
religton. She says it's based on the Bible, and she's still a
"Christian " but I can't accept it. I had a nervous breakdown
because of'her new beliefs. The doctor says I'm all right now,
but I'm on tranquilizers to stop worrying. How can I save her?
-MRS.J.W.T.
DEARMRS.T
You're both adults. Neither has the right to rule the other.
Accept your daughter's new religion as simply a different
route to Heaven. II you're both good, honest, upright, noncondemning people, would God discriminate?- H.

By Clarence
Miller
In an effort to help solve the
cuiTent energy-gas shortage,
Congress and the President
are g1vmg the go--ahead for a
mass1ve
trans-Canada
ptpelme system to deliver
thousands of cubic feet of
natural gas from Alaska's
Prudhoe Bay to the lower 48
states by the mid 1980s.
The "Aican" pipelipe will
be built by a consortium of
American and Canadian
ltnns. With a price tag of at
least $10 btllion, it promises
to be one of the largest civil
engineering feats ever attempted.
The 4,500 mile pipeline almost six times the length of
the Alaska Oil Pipeline- will
carry the gas south from
Prudhoe Bay to Fairbanks,
where the ptpelme route will
tum southeast, paralleling
the Alcan highway through
Canada . In Alberta, the
pipeline will split into two
legs , one going to a site near
Chicago, Illinois, and the
other to California. Because a
large part of this gas will be
routed to the mid-western
states, Ohto should stand to
profit from the AI can project.
The ptpeline will deliver an
estunaled two billion cubic
feet of natural gas per day
when tt reaches its full
capactty in the mid-J980s.
The suppltes, equal to
roughly 5 percent of
proJected U. S. natural
consumption, will last lor
about 25 years.
Two other routes competmg for the approval of the
Prestdent . and Congress
dropped out of the competitiOn . . The Arctic Gas
Trans-Cahada pipeline withdrew when it was denied
certtfication by the Canadian
go\'ernment for environmental
reasons.
The
Canadian government was
concerned about going
directly through the Arctlc
National Wildlife Refuge
whtch they claim is the most
unspoiled Arctic wilderness
remaining on the contlnent.
TheEl Paso-LNG (liquified
Natural Gas) system withdrew after President Carter
announced his support lor the
Alcan project. The El Paso
project would have built a
pipeline parallel to the
present Alaska Oil Pipeline.
At a point in southern Alaska
tt would have liquified the gas
in a large facility and then
· shipped it to a Southern
Ca lifornia regasilicati.on
' facility tn LGN supert~nkers.
The Alaska Natur~l Gas
Pipe1me proJect has been
under design for several

years, and iS long overdue. I
will contbue working with
the Administration and my
colleagues in COngress to see
that we do not experience the
same delays with this
pipeline system as we did
with the Alaska Oil Pipeline.
It Is time to get this natural
gas to where It is needed:
especially Southeastern Ohio.

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
TOPS CLUB OH 570, Tues·
day efening 6:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Baptist Church
social room. Anyone in·
terested is welcome to attend.
COUNTY Officers Meeting
to be held at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall, 7:30 p,m. Tuesday.
Apple Grove
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norris
flad a very pleasant surprise
Monday by having a cousin,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Day
Norris of East Uverpool visll
them. Mr. Norris was reared
at Antiquity and reports he
takes the Dally Sentinel and
enjoys
reading
about
hometown people. They also
attended church services at
the United Brethren Church
at Letart Sunday and visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Riffle
and farnUy have moved from
the Jarrell residence to the
Hall resldenc_e at Fairview.

,

-,

-

•

CHOICES

By Helen Bottel

sp01 ts are als, emphaSized at ltll'reased to $94! or $986 wtlh
SHE'S " LITI'LE GffiL" TO MOM
the 90-day· school, located ·dependents
DEAR HELEN :
AddillOnal 1nformatwn ' I'm a capable, competent married woman who manages
near San Antont o, Tex . /
about
OTS and ot her A1r home and fanuly very well At least my husband has no comWhile attending OTS,
Force
opportumtles
can be plaints.
trainees without dependents
obta
med
f
rum
the
Atr
Furce
receive $707.20 monthly in
Why then can my mother reduce me to " little dwnb
recruiter
or
atthe
Air
Fm
ce's daughter"
pay and allowances. After
status? She IS very stnct and cornmandmg. When
commissioning. as a second toll free number 1-800-447- I'm around her, everything goes wrong, which of course pro, the monthly pay 4100.
ves to her that I'm sltlllO years old.
,
Wtll there ever be a time when we become fnends and
equals and she'll stop telling me how to raise the children,
clean ~y house, arrange my days- even reminding me to eat
my vegetables and put on my galoshes? -PERPLEXED
DEAR PERPLEXED
Wtth some women, the Btg M never stops, even when their
daughters reach age 65. But you can neutralize your mother's
Polly Cramer
_
bossmess with a long-overdue declaration of independence.
I'm sure your husband will help! -H.

You have more~
over your electric bill than

Insulation

Army ' 17 NIVY lli
Holy Cross 35 Bsn Coli 20

Us.

I.

South

East

Texas 57

Neva Bolyard, Clayton C.
Bolyard lo Zella M. Coppick,
Lol 19, Behan's Add ., Middleport .
Cathy Sue Sigler to Natalie
Sigler, Parcels, Rutland.
Philip Jon Weaver, Karen
Weaver to Ronald A. Hanson ,
1.1 acre, Rutland .
David R. Lannigan to
Juanita L. Lanntgan, 72.17
acres, Lebanon.
Thomas H. Campbell to
Rodney E. Walker, Diane
Walker. Parcels, Rutland.
Carl Sauvage, Amondal
Fay Sauvage to Betty Wilson,
1.96 acre, Chester.
Gtlbert J . Celedonia, Diane
T. Celedonia to Richard S.
Kern, Donna J . Kern, Lot 6,
Chester.
Edna Reuter, Charles W.
Reuter to Sybtl Ebersbach,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Sybil Ebersbach to Charles
W. Reuter, Edna Reuter,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Thomas J. Scott, Geraldine
A. Seott to James W. Clifford,
Faye F. Cliffora. I acre, ~.
acre, bedford.
r
George E. Morris, Mary
A
thought
for
the
day :
Elltabeth Morns to Robert
Prestdent
Ge
o
rge
Stanley, Pt. Lots 145, 146,
Washington
satd,
"The
basis
Middleport.
Walter D. Arnold to Patrick of our political system is the
E . Wtlliams, Bertha J right of people to make and
their
form
of
WUI!ams, 911&gt; acres, Bed- alter
government,"
lord.

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

Mass 23

By Un•ted Press International

Me~

Meigs
Property
Transfers

with 22 points and sophmno~e
forward Kik1 Vandeweghe
had 16.
sUndny's game was a little
better.
David Greenwood dropped
in 21 points and Hamilton 16
as UCLA blew by Seattle, 10&amp;73, to lift its record to 2-11.
Greenwood hit 7-&lt;Jf-12 shots
from the floor whtle reserve
Darrell Allums added 13 for
the Bruins Jawann Oldham,
Seattle's 7-foot center, led the
Chieftains w1th 22 points.
Elsewhere in the top 10
over U1e weekend, co-No, 1
Kentucky routed Southern
Methodist, 110-U, C()-NO. I
North Ca rolina whipped
Oregon State. 944)3, No. 3
Marquette was idle, No 4
Notre Dame swamped
MISSISSippi, 111-02, No. 5 San
Francisco handled San
Francisco Stale, 100-67, No . 7
Purdue defeated Xavier
tOhwl . m 2, No.8 Cincinnati
beat Akron, 91~1 . No. 9
Arkansas dumped Southwest
Missoun, 65-47, and No. 10

Training School (OTS )
RecrUiting Servtce Officials
said more than 1,600 openings
for OTS are avatlable.
Selected applicants who
successfully complete the
three-month OTS cou!Se will
be commissaoned as secund
lieutenants 1t1 the Air Force
More than 650 people with
scient ift c, mathemaltcal,
engi n eeri n~ ,
physacs,
meteorology and computer
science
baccalaureate
degrees will be needed fur
entry into OTS before July
1976, officia ls · said . Appllcations should be submitted ea rly In order to be
considered lor available
o penin gs. Howev e r ,
Recr uttln g offi cia ls antteipate
a
con tinuin g
requirement wtll exist
throughout next . year for
people holding these degrees.
This year, . some 250
openings are for traming as
·A,. Force navigators.
Other opemngs avatlable
mclude weather, a1r traffic
control, communications •
electronics, SCientifiC,
computer technology, and
dev~l o pmental and civ il
engineer pfficer positions.
Applica nts selected for OTS
will study communicative
skills, leaderShip ,
managem e nt , military
history, customs and courtesies, world affa~rs, and
other subjects destgned to
ease the tranSition to the Air
Force way of life. Physical
conditiomng and orgaruzed

REVIVAL

No matter what we do to help keep
your electric bill in line, there's one thing
we have no power over.
The amount of power you use.
So we'd like to point out the most
significant places where only you have
the biggest opportunities to save.

College Football Results

New

COLUMBUS - College
seniors or graduates may
now apply for the Air Force
commission thro~gh Officer

~

r

coosolatwn honors m the ~
Clemson Tow-nament with a
78-64 wm
over Texas
Christian University; Cap1ta1
went mto overtune to take
consolatton honors of the
Fatrmont State (W. Va.)
Tournament, 92·90 over
Coastal Carolina; Oberlin
won the Calvin (Mich.)
Tournament with a 93-03 win
over Concordia (Ill. ) ;
Bluffton won the consolation
game of the Goshen (Ind.)
Mennomte
Tournament,
beating Bethel 71-65; Tifftn
took second place m the
Hillsdale (M ich )
Tournament, droppmg the
title game to the hosts 94-60
Wittenberg went tnl&lt;l overttme to defeat Wrtght State
115-80 for the title in the Wrtght
State Holiday Tournament.
West Vtrgmia Wesleyan won
the consolation game W1th a
89-81 win over ll;tltimore.
Rio Grande won its ""'''
tournament with a 70-59 win
over West Virgmaa Tech,
while SteubenVIlle came m
tilird witit a 65--51 win over
West Virgm1a State m the
consolation game.
Ohio Wesleyan dropped tis
ftrst game in the Bellarmme
(Ky.) Tip-{lfl Tournament
Saturday night 82-70 to host
Bellarmme, but Sunday
downed Indiana UniversitySoutheastern 90-80 for
consolation honors.

Lehigh 30

needed to fill Air Force commissions

Bruzns n u de.UP
rzgh am 0 ung

we figured going in we 'd (fv ,,ctory Ill the last five games B
•
to throw early," disclosed and boosted their record to &amp;Johnson. " And, as the 5, keeping them in the tluck of
conditions got worSE , 11 paid the jammed AFC Central
off. "
division title race.
Ry FRED UEF
So, throwing the bomb
Cincy, Cleveland and Hous- UP1 Spo~rts Writer
early and often, the Bengals wn, all \\ ith &amp;-5 records, truil
It IS already beginning lor
quickly turned the New York division leader Pittsburgh, 7- Gary Cunmn ghanu the
Giants 1nto snowbound 4, by only one game. After tension, the anxiety and all
dwarfs Sunday and skiled to playmg at Kansas City ned the ulcerated pleasures that
an easy 30-13 wm.
Sunday, the Ben gals will go along with roachmg UCI.A
Preriston-passmg

Hundred~ of new specialty officers
.

and then P1sarcik scored 'ii ··
meanlngklessak l-thyajr~
quarterbac sn~ Wl us
15 ~nds left 111 the game.

Bearcats extend
home string to 61

Manon Franklin
22-1 9-16-25--81
, Athens
15 14 11 15- 55

FOR HELP WITH
COBRA CB RADIO

ll-OS.

WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE (57)
jg-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
PLAYER- Pas.
6 20
7-8
2
17
3' 19
Jol1n Oenen, f
4-10 2·2
2
7
2
10
Terry Wilson, t
3-9
3S
3
5
3
9
Steve Pr~tche1. c
0-3
00
2
1
2
0
Jell Ell iolt . g
6 13 3-6
3
6
4 15
Tom Bath, g
14
2-3
4
6
I
4
Dal Justice, g
' 20-st 17 -24 16
42 15 57
TOTALS
GAHS BLUE OFVILS (53)
FG-11 A FT-A PF RB TO TP
PLAYER-Pas
5
0
4
1-8
11
1
Jeff Brown. f
2
0
8
49
0-1 5
Jeff Lanham , f
I
0
0
0-0
0-0
I
E V Clarke, c
8
2
14
5 15 4-5
5
Terry WaiL g
0
2
10
56
0-1
3
J1mmy Harr is G
9
1
9
J.cj
3-5
4
Brad Abels, c
01
o.o 2
I
0
0
Mark Smith, f
0
2
8
36
22
0
Bil l Armstrong , g
26
7 SJ
21-49 11 -16 21
TOTALS
Score by quarters .
16 16 7 18-57
Court House
12 11 16 14- 53
Gallipolis

MARION -FRANKLIN (82 )

Score by quarters

Randall 10 1 21 . Hulchings 4

0 8 , Thurman 4-0 8 , Hilll 0 '2 ;
Collins 5 0-10, Anderson 5-7
12 . TOTALS 29-3 61.
STEUBENVIUE US) Duerring 13- 1-27 , Jones 2 0-4,
Hall 2-4-8; Roglch 4-6-14 ,
Scott 5·2 12; Thomas 0 0·0,

AII-Ohto forward John over host Gallipolis Saturday
Denen canned two fr ee rught
It was the season opener for
throws w1th » seconds
remainmg and single free .both teams. '
Coach Jm1 Osborne 's Blue
shots by Tom Bath and Steve
Devtls
fell behind by 12 points
Prtt'chet with nine and SEven
mid-way
m the second canto,
SEconds left carried visitmg
28-16,
and
trailed 32-23 during
Washington Court House to a
the
halftune
intermission.
hair-raiSi ng 57-53 non conference basketball victorY.

- C!eammons 5- 4-14, Da YIS
S-1-11 , Syers l-0-2; Marshal l
13 1 27 : Williams 2 0-4 ,
Carr eker 4-0-8 , Fraley 3 4 10 ,
Gore 2 0-•L Graves 0 2-2
Walton 102 , Brun ing 5212 ,
Sm.th 0 2 2. Mathews 57 17.
Wallace 1 4 6, Edwards 0 1 1;
Dailey 1 0-2, Toppmg I 0 2;
Bent ley 2 0-4. TOTALS 18-1955

( Consolati.on game)

Blue Devils lose

Athens defeated

TOTALS JS-12-82
ATHENS - Chonko 2 J 7,

CINCINNATI(UPI) - Just
about
thr
lime
a
groundskeeper was buildin~
a snowman along the
sulehnes,Cincinnati Bengals'

W. VA . STATE (61)

Ferguson 0-0-0

g

\f

Never too late
DEAR DR. BLAKER After three unhappy years
together, my·wile and I have
de&lt;:tded to split. We both
know the marriage was a
mistake and - though we're
not sure why -we wanllo put
it behind us as fast as possible, Our problem is that our
family and friends think we
should see a marriage
counselor before we make a
final decision. We can't
understand why they think
it's so important to save this
marriage. Besides, we have
already made the final dectston. Can't they see that
we're unhappy together?
DEAR READER - Is it a
fact, or are you merely
assuming that your family
and friends want you to see a
marriage counselor in order
wsave your marriage? It is
true that some couples on the
verge of divorce seek professional help in order to give
the marriage one more try
under the objective eye of a
counselor. However, many
couples like you, who have
definitely decided to divorce,
also arrange a few visits with

Apple Grove

News .Notes

a marrtage coW15elor.
Some go to appease friends
and relatives who would say
that they hadn't done
everything to save their marriaoe unless they had seen a
counselor. They want to av01d
criticism.
· Others want to work out
specific arrangements
(money, living quarters, personal possessions, etc.) for a
separation or divorce . For
thOSE couples plannmg to
bandle their own divorce with
one of the new popular
'divorce kits' (Which could
save a lot of money ), a joint
resolution is essential.
Many couples feel that telling the children is the thorniest issue and they seek a
counselor's advice on the best
way to deal with this sensitive
area.
Even when bolh partners
want to tenninate thetr relationship, they may still need
to resolve the accumulated
feelings of fatlure and gmlt
assoctated with divorce. To
most people divorce still suggests failure. Counseling sesSIOns can reduce these pamlui feelings and help to
smooth the transitton.
Among
the
more
psychologtcally
sophisticated, the most common reason for seeking out
counseling at this time, is to
prevent the chance of making
the same mistake a second
time. Although second marriages tend to last longer than
first marriages, they too are
influenced by subjectiVe evenneurotic or unhealthy -

By Mn. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Hayman of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Hayman and
daughter of Syracuse, Mrs.
Lewis Ours, daughter
Virginia, Mrs. Gladys
Richardson of' Port Huron,
Mich., Mrs. Sidney Carpenter
of Wellsvllle visited the MUo
Richardson~ and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Ours and attended Sunday School at the
local Methodist Church. They
are all children of the late
George and Mae HaYI11an and
were reared in the com·
munity.
William Jackson and son
Billy of Leetonia, 0., spent
Tuesday with Mrs. Mlldred
Spencer. Mrs. Spencer will be
spending Christmas and the
holidays with the Jacksons.
DaUas and Clifford Hill
returned home Friday from a
nine days' vacation with Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Hlll at Moore
Haven, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. DOn Bell
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ervin,
Bashan Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Bell
visited David Hlll at Holzer
Medical Center Sunday af·
temoon and Mr. Bell's father,
Raymond Bell at the Arcadia
Nursing Home, Coolville.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hlll
took Mrs. Dolly- WoUe to
Columbus Sunday where she
attended the christening of
her great-grandson, Timothy
Carl Dye, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bell Dye at the Presbyterian
Church in Colwnbus. They
also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Casper.
Butch Shane left Wednesday for service in the
United States Anny after
spending a leave of absence
with his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Shane. Butch
will be stationed In California.
Blll Jackson, son·in·law of
Mrs. Mildred Spencer,
Leetonia, visited with Ralph
lbane Tuesday while spend,ng the day with Mrs.
Mildred Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush
Sunday. other guests were
Mrs. Patty Michael, daughter
Becky, Mrs. Louise Pickett,
daughter Tracy.
Mr. and Mrs. Blll Hoback of
Great Bend visited Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Hill Sunday.

needs.

Actually, instead of marriage counseltng, this process
of seekmg help m ending a
marriage might more accurately be tenned "divorce
counseling." No matter what
you call it, it's never too !ale
for counseling when you are
considering divorse.
(Write to Dr Blaker m care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Due to
volwne of mail she cannot
reply personally, but questions of general interest will
be discussed in future colIDllllll.)

KING
BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.
OPEN
MONDAY-SATURDAY
I:OO!o5:00
Convenient Free

Parking
405 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

'

DON'T BLOW
A FUSE
.
.

·-CROSS.-1

CROSS ltARDWARE HAS ALL THE

·H
A

R0

w
A
R

E

...

NECESSARY ITEMS REQUIRED TO
INSTALL NEW ELECTRICAL SERVICE
OR REPLACE YOUR-PREStNT SYSTEM. ·
100·200 Amp Fuse Boxes and Breaker Boxes.
Wire of all sizes. Prepare your electric circuils
for the winter workout,

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

�S-The Daily Sentin~l.

Middleport-Pomeroy,

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday , Nov .

u ., Mo naay, 1\m·. 28, 1977

DICK TRACY

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CH,ARGES

zB, 1977

'

I day

SAID VVE
l

100

2diys
3days
6days

'hom:"

~~

150

190

110

l iS
J15

""

Eaeh word o \'~ W muurnwn 15
wunb "' 4 t't'nts JWi" • ·oN Pf'r d.)
Ads ruMlnl: othi!r lhlln l 'OOiei.'\IU\'t'
a.rs will bf&gt; chirl(..-d 1111 ll'"Me I d•t

'""~

memory, cant cl ThaW .11nd
IJ 00

Oblt~ary · 6 t"¥nt.s pPr -.ord.
ITWHmwn. Cuh Ulllldntnn.•

Mobllt- HUO'le' Min and 'r11rd .stild
IU'f l('('tpled onl)' Wllh {'i.Sh Wl\h

ordeT. 1!1 t-ent· chllr!olt' for 1d.s l'arry·
inK Boa Nwnber In Cart&gt; ol Till' Stnun~J .

The PubliShe-r reser•es lhl' n~h1
to edit or n~jm any 11d!l ~RW'd 00.
jectionMt The PubiiShtor 'A'I\J not btI'\'SPOflllblr for OH.K't' Uum Oflt' u•~·ur·
rect mstru on.
Pflooto 992-!1~

~t

~nices Offered

BDd found

LOST OR 'St ol ~ n 3 dog&gt;t B'ue r.t lo.
!~mol~
Wol lo. er
1,al€.'
L ~a d b etr e r fomol e Alv1n M or
us Rt 1 Ref! ds.,olte Oh10
Nom e plat es ore on th,p dogs
FO UND MAtE Sf-ogle · Bad. tS
block All four feet a rE" wh11e 4
mo oldor ~ o u n ger 992 5115
FOUND IN Rock Spnngs or eo Dog
re!iemblmg coon ho un d Has
collor or1d !leo collar Co li
CJ92 . ~881 o r QQ:Z-7511 to tde tl r
t 1 f~

lOST ON , Sy co mo r ~ 0 1 Beech
· St reet tn Mtddleport
fan
bttlf old y.&lt;oth Holzer Hosp1tal
cord "license Soc Secuq ly
card Blu e eyeglasses lleclo.ed
w1th bro wn llnted lens 'Sdver
wo!Ch wtth chain
Brenda
Johnson 949 1113

NOTICE ·
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
~fundi:!)'
~oon

on Saturday

Thesday
t.hru FridJ y
i P.M .
th'e day bdor.: pubb\'lltlon

~!em

iPM.
f ri d.Hy afternoon

t 'WF -.

HOOF HOLLOW Ho rses Buy self
rrad.e or rrorn . New and used
saddles . Ruth R£"eves A l~o 11y'
loi• Jo9B -3290 .
ME IGS COU NT Y Hu ma ne Socrety
Corvline an d ad option Serv1ce
991-7680, 742-31 b1 99~ 5427

AKC REGISTE REO pekmgese puppies Phone (304 ) 8B2-2683 .

-

GU N SHOOT . Rocin'e Gun Club
e"'ery Sun . after noon . Foetor

only .

A s~o rted

THERE Will be no huntin g . no
trespas s1ng , and no except ions
on my property . Bob McG raw .

THE RACINE Vol unteer Fire
Oepu rtm enl will sponsor o gun
shoo t e very Saturday at 6 p.m.
a t the ir buildi ng in Bosh an . Foe·
tory cho ke gum only .
TIMBERLAND OWNERS . Do you
need help in man ag in g your
woodlands 011d marketing your
t im ber ? Mead's staff of profes·
sionol foreste rs is O\loiloble to
offer you onistonce at no cos t.
~ead con as sure you at diver ·
sif ied market s. co mplete
limber ut ili.tot ion includi ng
whole-iree chipping ond super..
IJis'ed harvest ing programs
designed to protect your lands
and . promo!~ timber growlh .
For deta ils. coil collect or write :
MEAD PAPER . Wood &amp;
Woud londs Dept .. PO Box 391,
Jodo.son ,
Oh io
.45640 .
Te lephone ; 6 14-286·2868 .
S~W

S SEW Outlet in Rac ine just
recei 'lled new shipment of
p.o lves ter double knits , $1.9B &amp;
$2 .69 yard . 225 ya rd spool
polyester. thread . 5 lor $1.00 .
~wik -Se~ po1terns . The fast
and easy way tor you to sew
knits or ho"e vour sewi ng done
by Denise . for the greatest fit

NO HUNT ING doy or night or
trespaSs in g on the following
forrns: R.H. Boatwright , Jr.
Hu nr, Go ry Dill , John Ginther.
NO HUNTING or trespouing and
no e'~"cept ions . Alma Peter son
or:~d Sam Beller fo rms.
f'IOHCE •TO Hun ters : Please note No- ... un ting or tresposs in·g on
the Wallace Amburger form ,
Nease Settlement , Minersville,
Ohio . Includes oil game.
DEER HEADS
9B5 3B33.

Mounted .

Coli

NO HUNT ING on tt1e following
properties : Guy Rose, Warren
Rose. Robert lee . Winston
varney . Carl Offutt Char les
BU:sh and Carl Morri.s.

RI SI NG STAR Kennel , Boardmg.
Indoor and ou td oor runs
Groom'ing all breeds _ Clean
son rro ry focil itte s . Cheshire.
Phone (614 ) 367-0191 .
TO GIV E owO~ : Dog '&gt; . I IS p~rt
,beagle 6 mo. old. I is
Norweg ian EJkhovnd ond Iris h
Se!ler. 10 mo. o'ld . 9B5 -3B08
oiler 6.
J &amp; D Kenne'Js oil breed dog
groomin g. Make appointment
now fo r H ol 1 do~ Season . Coli
742-3162

COINS, CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches and Chains ,
silver and gold . We need 1964
and older silver coir:os . Buy, sell ,
or trade' Call Roger Womsle~ .
7.42-2331.
OLD FURNITURE . ice b9xes . brass
beds , iron beds , etc. , complete
households . Write M. D. Mi ll er .
Jh , 4, Pomerov. Ohio or coli
9'12-77b0 .

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small.
Will buy 1 piece or complele
household . New . used , or anti queS . Mart in's Furn iture, 20 N.
2nd St., Middleport.. Phone
992-6370.
CHIP . WOOD
Po lln rno11 .
diameter 10" ori lqrge'il end, $8
per ton. Bundled slob, $6 per
ton. Deti ... ered to Ohio Po ll et
'Co ., Rt . 2, Pomeroy . 992· 2689 ,
CASH FOR Junk Cors . Frye's Truck
and Auto Wrecker Service.
Phone 742 -2081 or Penn1o'i!
Rutland 742-9575.
WANTED TO bu_y
Phone 742 -2790.

Deer Hider.

NOTICE Oi=

APPOINTMENT
Case No . 22258
Estate ol HAZEL R. REED
Deceased .
Notice is hereby give n tt1at
Nancy C. Reed of Front
Street , Middleport , Ohio, has
been
duly
appointed
EKecutril!: of the Esta te of
Hazel R . Reed , decea sed, late
of Midd lepo rt . Meigs County,
Ohio .
Creditors are requ ired to
tile thalr cla ims with sa id
fiduciary
w ithin
three
months .
Dated this 16th day of
November 1917 .
Mann ing 0 . Webster
Judge
court of Common Pleas,
Probate Divis ion
(11) 21 , 28, ll2) s . Jtc

rn

our

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We have en larged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
o.ther brand s .

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _Ja c k W . Carse y Mg!"
~

1971 SALEM 12 x 65 2 bedt oom.
p, ont den model Furn 1shed
Hooked up to ut.lit 1e s ot Cou ntr v Mo bo iEt
Ho m e Pork
l: v er~ l h1ng I! lf1 the den ready
lor a l1 1eplo r::e ,.,, wood-burning
.-,!O \'e
SO 000 fum
Coli
991 ,7034 or 992-7071 a lte r 6.

1

flibone99 2-2T8 1

PIANO TUNING - lone Oan1els
~ew phone r1Umber 992 15BI
If no an swer col1 992 -2081 .

We Are Now
Taking N ew
Cuslomers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CAU US
Pomeroy Landmark

filii'-. ~Jac·k W. Ca~rsey, Mgr .

6jl.:

U()JIH!!; tor Sale

Mobile

flihone 992 ·2.181

For Sale
COAL l1m'e stone and c.oloun1
chlor1de and colc tum bnne f6r
·d ust cont rol and spec1ol ml)ong
salt for lormers fxcelstor Sol!
Works Mom Street , Pomeroy ,
Ohio o r phone 992- 3891 .
CAMPER
S600 . Also
horse
trailer $4 50 . Phone (61._J 69B3290.

3 AND 4 RM . furnished and un ·
furnished upts . Phone 992·
5434

FO UR ROOMS a nd both . Adulrs
on ly . No pets . 992 .5908 .
COU NTRY . MOBILE Home Po rk.
Ro!;l fE! 3.3. ·north of Po meroy .
Lo'r ge lots . Call992-7479.
Incredible! Why pay high ·electric
bills this win!er? le t us pay
them for yQu ! One bedroom
from $130 now ovoiloble.
Vi llage Manor', Th ird ond Mill
Streets . Middlepor t. Te lephone
~2 - 7787 . Equa l Hou sing Op·
por tun it~.

12 J( 60 MOBILE HOME . Good condit ion. Lorge yord . 1 mile
Racine . 992-S858 .
TO LEASE OR Rent : Old Provico
3b;::7.c7.:..~--­
buildin g 992-.:C
SIX ROOM house l or rent in
Po~J~e r oy . Inquire ot 796 South
3rd. Middleport.
Cd'UNTRY HOME , remodeled ,'
ca rpeting , 3 or 4 bedroom .
modern kilcher . 2 baths . Sceni~
and pr j"o.te. About4 mileS west
of Harr isonvi lle . Ohio . Cell
742 3159 .

EXP ERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and
op'plia nce serviceman. Pa id
ho lidays
IJ o co tions
and
hos p it al izat ion .
Gol li o
Refr igerator Co .. 611 :)rcj Ave :
Galli polis. Ohio .

-

THE NAVY
l.t 's Not Just A Job .,
It 's An Adventure.
Order No. 11 -CT-84

COUNTRY . HOME , remodeled ,
car peting, 3 o r 4 bed room , HOUSEKEEPER · COOK to live in .
to §ha re home w ith eld~ rl y
modern k i t~hen , 2 baths . Scenic
lody . Middleport Hil l. Small
and pri'll ote. About 4 miles. wes t
salorv . 992-5764 :
of . Harr isonville , Ohio . Coli
742-3159 ,
JOB OPENING - land mark Ser\lice
Stotion . App ly by appl icat ions
TRAILER LOT for ren t in the lower
ot thelandmor k Office.
end of Middlepo rt. 992-7276 .
SOMEONE TO li\l e in and dri~J e a
c.o r. 790 Mup le Street. Mid dle port , 992 -2936 .
FOR SALE or Trade : Trailer ond
lot . Sell .on land contract.
located · obcl'&lt;e Jone s Boys.
$4 ,BOO. Jock Neal. (614 )
446-01 57.

JOB OPENING: Tra ining per son·
ne l for head start tra ining of·
fice in the Southeast Distric t ol
Ohio . Salary : $10 .500
to
S12,b00. Ouolificotions : Administrati ve abilit ies . ·n eeds
awareness of early childhood
educat ion in rural o re a s. ab ility
to coo ridinote and pr o~;ide
training . abi lity to relocate a nd
be free to trave l. degree
perferred. knowled9e of the
Child Development Associate
Credent ial through the Na tional Consort ium . Sebmit
resume of educofionol and
work experience , including
relere·nce , to . Mic hael McPher so n ,
Program
Direct or ,
Southeosl Ohio District' He ad
Start Trainign Offir::e . Bo11 71,
City Build ing. Wellsto.n, OH
-4S692 . Applkolions mus t be
pos tmarked by December 2,
1977 .

OPPORTUNITIES
$8,100 for education.
75 per. cent of your
. College tuition free,
College
Level
Examinalion
Free ,
An Associate Degree
through
the
Community
College
of the Air Force, 30
days paid vacation, - ?
paid 3 day weekends ,
goad slarting pay and
much
more ..
Interested?
Contact me, Vernon
Zeger, your Air Force,
Representative .
•
For an appointment
in the Pomeroy or
Alhens area phone ·
592-4592 Collect.
,
Order No . 9-ct-86

________..---

RUGS
WAtl Ha ngtng s and
afgons Nic: e lor Ch ns tmas .
Reasonable Coll992-211 4
1976 FORD F·150 Custom 17 50"
14 .00 tires · winch Only 14,000
rn i. He ad ers. CB To pe dec k
0\ler S3 000 in ex tras . Serious
ce lls on lv aft er 1'2 noon
6Q6 1072. S6 800 .
. I

&amp;.S

MOBI LE HOMES. Pt fi;a .
s_ont W. Vo . beside Heck 's .
1973 Sroadmore 14 ll 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dorio n 14 x bO 2 be dr oom
1972 Vic tor ian 14 JC 67 3 bedroom
1 both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Stotelmon 1~ J( 60 2
bedroom

FIREWOOD Any lengths or ony
amount De lt\lered or may
~k~_P · Phone 949-1563.
BROWNING MARK Itt Golden
Eogle 2j ch an nel AM bose stolion CB Best one over S2SO
to'kes it . 949 -1312.

-----

--

---~

VE RY GOOD hoy . S1'.59 per bole.
(614) 667 -3368 . Tuppers Plains .
· Ohio

ROBYN C.B.
sx 007
SJ9.95
Complete
with
all
accessories . Yes , we will
layaway for Christmas.

Pomeroy Landmark

9.- _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

6jl.:

Phone 992 · 2181

TWO WROUGHT iron fire place
sc reens . Folding type $7 . Flush
fitt in g typ e with wire cu rtain s
and andirons . $1 0. Both in good
condi tion . Call 992 -5666 between 4.30 a nd 6:30p.m .
1976 V.W. BU S Compmobile.
13.BOO miles . Still under war ·
rent~ . AM·FM ster eo ca ssette
player. 55 ,500 . Coll991-5933 .
1972 DODGE CHARGER . 1972
Olds 350 e ngine . 400 Olds
transm iss io n , heoiJ~ duty . 391
rear end . Set of An!ien wheels
and fires . Col1742-2450.
FIREWOOD , s plit and · deli~Jered.
$45 o cord. All hOrdwoop .
843 · 2933 .'
.
TWO. TWIN beds, complele . I
chest . 1 Webcor S-trock tope
player . 992-5523.

•279,95

let us test your water free

SALE

FOR
New Co -Op wafer and
softeners, model VC. SVI.
Only$279 ,95
·
Save $50 .00 on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest
freezer
525.00 Discount
( 1) Good Refrigerator SUO
Upright Freezer
5225
Good Used Hotpoint ·
Refrigerator
S125
1 lancaster Chain Saw S75
1

Phone992.2181
A POLlED He reford Herd Bull. 5
~ears o ld . Ros Victor Plato I.
TrQsk bred . both sides. Pa ul
Korr . Chester , Ohio .,'9B5-3538 .
NINE BlACK Ang us Cow~ with
ca lves . Co li George Frecker ,
985·3827 ever .ing s.
1976 YAMAHA YZ 125 X. Ex·
celle nt condit ion. Ma n~ extras .
991 -30 I··- -,-.,---,O NE Trombone, 1 flute , both !ike .
new. Wom en's 10.speed bike ,
hardly ridde n . 992-7621 .
15" color • te levision .
w ri stwatch . 843-2645.

TirneJC

~-----

Burger Chef Is
Going Places

. REDU CE SAFE &amp; lost with GoBese
lo bh~ts ll E·Vop "wate r pills".
Nel so n Drug .
ONE CLARIN ET in exCellent condition . $75. 992-5786 .

Why Not Come

Along
'

Equal Opportun ily Employer

NEW HOME . 1 mile in bock of
Por tla nd , 4 room s an d both. 2
ocres ..Contact Delbert Lawson
__ Eag le~idg!_ JWot!:_ _ __

SWAIN
Automalic
Transmission SeRite

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERVICE

PARTS -LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Ret6s'fillt, 0.

.
.

Ph. lll-6250
52/IFC

MAIN
POMEROY,

0.

FARM 70 acres nice
laying la nd . Nice home
w ith 2 bedrooms, dining
-~room, bath , l11rge I ivi ng
w itt1 f ireplace. carpe ting,
full basement &amp; garage.
Large
hog
h.o use.
a utomat ic feeders . Pond ,
other bUi ldings . S38,5DO.OO

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

POMEROY 13 ;oom
older hotne , 212 bath s,
larg e kitchen &amp; d in l('g
room , hot water heat, part
ba seme nt. garage, walk t o
shop. S16,500.00 .
RANCH TYPE - 12 years
old . Close in, 3 bedrooms .
bath , dining room. forced
air N.G . heat, insu lat ion.
h ardw oo d
f loors .
carpet ing , other features .
$26 ,600.00 .

• M o .b i I e
Home·
Underpin"ing
• Roof Coaling
• Tie - Downs
• Awnings - Carporls
•Insurance .
Repairs

All ELECTRIC 3 . bedroqm home

VIRGIL 8, TE/IFONO, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio4S769
Phone 992·3325
WILL TRADE In a
family neighborhood at a
fa_mily price . 3 bedrooms,
1112. baths, and large yard .
Just outside of town .
"$12,000.
EXCELLENT
Very
large newer home witt1 3
bedrooms and 2th baths.
Has 1 car garage and 1.4
acres . Central heating and
air conditioning with large
stone fireplace .
CARTHAGE HILLS 3
bedroom ranch home with
bath , electri c baseboard
heat , rural water, n ice
kitchen and good coun try
road. Only $16,500.
RT. 33 - Near Shade . A 3
· ~droom , split level home
with nice lot , Garage and
~killed wells. A good buy at
just 521.500 ,
HORSE FARM - 145acres
with house, barn, cellar
at1d outbuild ing . House Is
high for ni ce view of the
land . 536,000.
·
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rooms ,
3 bedrooms. l lf-2 baths,
d ining . l iv ing 22'x24' ,
intercom ,
stove ,
refrigerator , and large
fenced lot . $38.500,
40 ACRES Some lays
nke. Has all the minerals
and
small barn. Good
Hunting .
RACINE ' AREA - Large
li vi ng , 3 bedrooms, bath ,
F.A . furnace, fam ily room
and carport on over sized
lol .
CURE Y·OUR HOUSE
NEEDS, SEE US OR CALL
992 -3325.
Helen. L, Teaford
C. Bruce Teaford
Associates

a

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builde rs

Rou~ 1, ~omefO), 0.

CAPTAIN EASY

I&gt;J WA.!IHINoTOIII
TO SELL Mct&lt;EE
INDUSTR IES' IJEW
;JSHTEP. PLIINE··
EASY TALI&lt;S ~I~H
TO HIS CO~G~655 ·
WOMAN ...

Bissell Siding Co.
General 'c ontrllclors
Phone 949-2801 '
or 949 ·'td60
FREE ESTIMATES ,
No Sund;~y Calls Please
11 . 21 - 1 mo.

T~LL

1,\E .-

HOW MAfoJY
EK·GEtJERIILS
AND ADMI~ALS
DO YOU HAVE ON
YOUR I!OARO OF
DIRECTOR!&gt;?

Radiator~

1TIElMfl

,.._ th• i-f,.ff Trvd.
hlll .. tar t~ lh•

Carpeting

M

'ftfl\iNf fiU'il ~ THfT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

IIIII~··•

[!!.) ~ ~~ ~

C.r•.

·

Phone Mike Young

SMITH NELSON

992·2206 or 992-7630

MOTORS, INC.

UPYTT

I K)

PIL 992-!114

you I

bI

JCllm ..,. .... c..._,_ 411 ....,.-....

ALUMINUM SIQ.ING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
'GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
.
· Easv
step
bv
step
instructions.

ACE HARIMARE
Located In

See us at 1100 East Main

MEIGS PLAZA

Street , Pomeroy , Ohio or
Phone 992-7034 . 10 - 2~ 1mo .

Middleport, Ohio
11-9-tfc

I· []

POUMI

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
5

CLOSED. FOR WINTER

;

Special Orders or Showing
of CarpetS by Appointment
Only ,

ISTURME

~----~--------------J ·
U1'fLEORPHAN ANNIF

------ -01

ORPHAN AMNIE-"DARK HAZARD"

lfi\PIN':·LIZARDS 1"MA&gt;!'
MR . PUDDlES CKAUFFEUR
AND BUTlER , .. SOME·
80D'f SHOULD BE

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons ,
Owner
11 ·25-1 mo.

10

I

MAY OPEN
$U~PRIGIN6

CIRCUM5TANq:05. ·

IHUNCAL I [J
I I I

HARK! BETWEEN US AJII.D
TH ' WAY OUT 0' TH1S OLD
ABANDONED WAREHOUSE

-·DoN'T MOYE, SA.NDY ··•

Now arrange the drcled teners to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by lhe above cartoon.

'TOlD"''

Prlnranswerhera:
SEPTIC TANK

FREE ESTIMATES

CARTER

lnsul.ltian Services

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

llown

fin~ncin1 Anilb'i!

Residential
an ·d
commercial . Call
for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anvtime.
Phone 985-3800

Blown Into WbHs &amp; Attics

SIORM

WINDOWH DOORS

REPLICEMENI
WINDOWS
AUIMINUM ;

.Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Bot~: 34

byHennAmoldandBobLoe

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

. . . . , • • DI'

~..

''The Oritinators
Not The tmitalof!

SIOINI&gt;SOfflll
GUIIfRs.AIININGS

LARRY LAVENDER
Srracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992·l!l'll

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

REMODELING. Plum bing . heoting
and all types of general repair.
Work gua rant eed 20 years e x·
perience . Phone 992 -2409 .

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

~tMMf~tli'
by THOMAS JOSEPH '

jQO Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992·6182
or 992 ·6263
8 A.M. to4 :30 P. M ,

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex' covoti ng , septi c svstems .
dozer , backhoe . dump truck ,
lime '5 to ne, gro ... el . blacktop
paving . Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614 )
698-7331.

Plenty of acre lots at the
Wildwood
Estates
Addition, Flatwoods Roiid ,
zoned and all utilities
available . . $2500 per acre .
We have need of listings,
all types, homes, land ,
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associate
Home Phone 949-2589

STARCRAFT FALL Sole. Mini ·
motors. 20' and 22'. TroVe I
Traile rs. 18' 5" $3 ,799, 25' 7"
Bunk'house $4,B75. Fold-down ,
$1 .700 up . We sell service and
qualit~ . Open Sundays . Comp
Con le-y Star croll S.o les , Rt , 62 ,
N, of Pt . Pleasant .
18 FOOT se ll - co ntain~ Smokey
Trailer . $1 . 600 .
Phone
742·2_14._.9.,_._ _ _ _ _ __

• Tiitth; Chin.

Kazan
12 Adhere

5 Kicked a

(to)

Likewise

Let The Open ng

14 Reed of

BOB'S uNRtLSTERING
Aod
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

. cinema

field goal

6 Ethan or
_lrwin

British

15
16
17
18
20

Be the opening of the in door season for vou with

your old furniture re upholstered i n beauTiful
warm colon &amp; patterns
from · Bob 1s. If ~ou · are
looking for savings it will
pav YDU to pay us a IJis it .
Louted In back of the Sew
N' Sew Outlet on Main St.,
Rac ine, 0 .
11 . \0 .J mo.

. - - - --... ~--..._--........,-..,---:--;-.-..,,,, 21

GAS'OUNE ALLEY

Does

Yes? ~peak
Quiet.
1
ch'tld • up.man! Don't
Someone mutter!

no
voice!

hear

LJ OU

ear's rinqln',

.

no b0 d4 a

hear

but
1
·

742-2211

Be at fault

4wda.

22 - Q.

much :

Trampled
One daytime: 2 wda.
Regretted

%3

9Turned
Inside out
10 Notched
16 European

riVer
19 Two in

29 Greek

Nilsson
N.J.

island

30 Thrash
31 Pyroman. iac's crime

city

. '

%4 MoUusk
Z5 Father
27 Oakland

tune

36 BasebaU
league :
abbr.

37 Kiss
38 Egyptian

Extra thought pays off

b.--+-+--

28
.~ORTH

• J 73

1\"I::ST

.

•KQJlO
t lO 7 52
t 8
•Q985
4AJ7632
SOL'TH 1 Dr
•AQ 1098
• 9842
t KQ 3

FRANK &amp; ERNIE
39 Soglow
Cartoonist
;.;.:.:.::.:.:.::.::.,:;:;,.....;....________________________

40 Hunting

Z'r LOOI'S lAD.
WHeN .Z A.Sf(tD ltE:fl
fo~

THE IALoANCE I~
MV C:Hf:c:f'.ING RCC:OUN,.,

41

dog
At what
time?

o~oK

.DOWN
lThe
Tin M~nl~t-t-lr-t-1-­

East,. West vulnerable

wanted one
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

SHe -rtliiNSfE~D Me T'O
'rHE loGAN DfPAft'r"MI:N,..

'

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEtLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

WINNIE

l THCXJGHT YOJ AND
BIRDIE WERE TAKINGIN A MOVIE TON IGHT.

OH? ElUT I WA:;
J.OOKINC7 FORWARD
1 10 eABY·51TnN&amp;
WITH -LI'{TLE

TIMMY.

l SEE ! WELL/I'S GOOD

THAT BHE'e IMKING'
NEW FRIENDS;

6ETTINGOUT

OA

0

.
VWNR

QWSFH,

oc

0

JFVJUD

VWSFH

OF THE HOUSE ...
JCH

WGDQSNOXU,
GP

ZU

FJ&gt;X

RCWVC

J C H

P

D ·O FPC Q

11ZIMBLEI TO

OOTHAT

PONTIAC CAT ALINA . Sears
stereo
recorde r .
Phone

FOR HER.
Mon., Tues . , Wed.
8:00 til 5:00

1973 FORD LTO 2-door hardtop.
Opera windows, low mileage.
excellent condit ion. Will trade
l or pickup truck , g ive or fake
difference . Robert Hill , Racine.
Ohio 949-2013 .
~--

1963 FORD PICKUP, 6 r::vl. Runs
good . 985-3849.
1972 El CAMINO . -A~:c-.. -P _
-S-.,P-.8-.,
new point . new Cragors &amp; tires.
63 ,000 miles. $2,000 . 949·2880.

- -- ---.- --·

---'·-

__._

GU

P A· -

. XIPON

Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

..... ....................
RUTLAND FURNITURE

~

~

GNW· t;XP

·Salurday's Cryptoquote: VISION. IS THE WORLD'S MOST
DESPERATE NEED. THERE ARE NO HOPELESS SITUA·
TIONS, ONLY PEOPlE WHO THINK HOPELESSLY. WINIFRED NEWMAN
'

.

GLORY BE!~

FRIDAY TIL 5

ARNOLD GRATE

\ orth East

Pass

2•

South

IA
Pass , 2 It

Pass 311111
Pass :4A
Pass Pass Pass
By Oswald &amp; James

Ja ro b~·

Jim : "One · of the things
t hat

transforms

a

good

player into a great play.er is
the care he takes to employ
the right technique . "
Oswald : " H e re is a hand
played some years ago by
the late Olive Peterson of
Philadelphia to illustrate
this . Olive's tournament
record included tweh•e
women's and mixed pair and .
team titles."
Jim : ' 'The biddmg was
normal although many m~
ern players would have re-bid three diamonds instead
of two spades. II
Oswald : " Olive won the
first heart . There was no

finessed.

A

second

spade had to be won in her
hand and it was necessary to
go right back to dummy ." .
Jim: " Here Is where Olive
made the key play of the
hand . She led her king of
diamonds and overtook with
dummy's ace . "
Oswald : ' ' A careless

player would have automatically let a low diamond to
dwruny's jack and wound up
wilh just three diamond
tricks."
Jim: "Olive 's play could
not hurt her , If East held
four diamonds to the ten she
would have made her con·
tract in any event. With
··• West • holding the four dia·
moncls she· was able lo pick
up his ten spol with a
finesse. ' 1

. ~~~~~
A Wisconsin reader wants
to know wlult right.; dummy
loses if he look s at his part·
ner's hand.
He loses all. rights except
that when play is over he can
tell his partner how many
tricks he made and what the
contract was. He ca nnot

claim a revoke or correct a
potential lead out of turn ,
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . l

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win lit
Bridge." c/o this newspeper,
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Station,
New York. N.Y. 1001P)

BARNEY

Thursday 8 til noon

142· 2~11 .

PZOFU

('} 1911 t4n1 Featuru Syndiut~ . Inc .

.

e

NPDSFXD . -

Wt'st

Opening lead - K 'I

One lette r simply stands for another. In this sample A is
s.
11 18 used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter_
THA,ES '
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

f~l 011

L\ST
•K65 2
W63

•• 4

rea son to duck and good
reason not to duck. Then she
. · led dummy's jack of spades

and

WA 75
t AJ964
.. 10 4

Christian

1972 ~

1973 FORD LTD 2-door hardtop.
Opera .wind:Zll ,

BRIDGE

37 Curtsy

footballer

GUESS SHE

1970 TOYOTA. Hi- lu1c. Pickup .
$850 . ~ibergloss loppe'r , SISO.
614-378-6311.

Monday, Nov. 2H

plant: obs.
34 Paddle
35 Bewailed

OOT HE I&lt; LANDLADY I MR.f;.

1975 CHEVROLET MONTE COrio.
P.S.. P.B.. A.C. , tope plover.
Phone 992 -262B .

7 : 3D-Meigs vs VInton Co. Basketball
9:00- Cable Spotlight
IO :OD-700 Club

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

exclamation
Priestly
vestment ·

AWN:XD

992 - 745~ .

12 :0Q-Newwcenler 3; News 4,6,10 ; To Say Tt1e Least
1S; Divorce Court B; Midday 13; Muslc 33 .
12 :30--Ryan's Hope 6,13: Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp; the
Man IS; Search for Tpmorr'ow 8. 10; Elec. Co . 33.
,
1 :oo-Gong Show J; Young &amp; l he Restless 10: Not For
Women Only 15 .
1 :3D-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15: As The World Turns
8,10; 2: 1l0-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2:3o-Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6;13 ; Gu!dlng
Llglght 8, 10.
3:oo--Another World 3.~.15; Consumer Su rv ival Kit 20;
3 ; 15-General Hospital 6, 13 .
3: 3D-AIIIn The Family. B, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 :00--Mlster Cartoon 3;; Little Rascals-Our Gang 4;
Gong Show 15 ; Merv Grllfln 6; Sesame St. 20,33;
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4 :3D-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; .Brady
Bunch B,10 ; Little Rascals 15.
'S :QO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 41 Gunsmoke 8;
Emergency One l3i My Three Sons TS .
5 ;31)-()dd Couple 4: News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33: Hogan's
Heroes 15.
6 :1l0-News 3,4,B,10,13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
· 6 :3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol
Burnett &amp; Friends 6; CBS News B. 10; Over Easy 20.
7:1l0-Truth or Cons. J; Cross·Wits 4: : Liars Club 6: ;
Pop Goes The Country 8: News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan' s Is. 15; French Chef 20 : Parent
Effectiveness 33.
):3D-Ho llywood Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races B;Hollywood Squares 4; Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20.33; Price is Right 10 ; That's
Hollywood 13; Music City 15 .
8 :QO-Amerlca Salutes the Queen 3,4,15; Happy Days
6,13; Fllzpatrlcks 8,10 ; Boston Pops In Hollywood
JJ ; Evewltness 20.
9 :1l0-Three's Company 6, 1.3: Mash B. 10; Jacques
Cousteau 20.
9 :3D-Soap 6: One Day At A Time B. 10; Good Old Days
ol Radio 33; Mary Tyler MOore 13 .
10 :1l0-Fa mlly 6,13; Lou Granl B.10; News 20 ,
·
10 :3D-Fawlty Towers 20; Blind Teacher In a Public
School 33. .
ILilO-News J,4,6,B, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Movie "Smash Up on
Interstate 5" 6.13: Mov ie "Night Terror" B; ABC
News 33; Movie "Two for the Road " 10.
12:1l0-Janakl 33; 1 :llO-Tomorrow 3,4; 1 :05-Koiak 8 ;
,1 :3D-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M. - Burnt Olferlngs !PGl.
9 &amp; 11 P .M . - Dog Day Afternooon I Rl
Cable . Channel 5 - '
6 :30 P .M . - Testimony Time
7:00 Paul · Gaudino Family
Flfne$S Show

33 Cereal

iC 19771Jr NEA. 111c. 1 W 'log US

Rutland

8 Talk too

22 Encourage
23 Race horse
25 Malicious
26 Border on

3%

Call"2·2211
TALK TO
WENOE~L GRATE
. CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Yeslenlay's Allswer

AlkaU
Mining find

28 Hair pad
29 Spanish

0

30 rolls of carpet in stock-.'
Good selection all on sale.
Installed with Padding , no
eKtra to pay ,

7 Six: It .

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29,1917
5:45-Farm . Report 13; 5 : 51&gt;-PTL Club 13; 5:55Su nr lse Semester 10; PTL Club 15.
~ 6:25--Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6 :3o-Focus on
Columbus 4; News 6; Svnrlse Semester 8.
6:45-MOrnlng Report 3:' 6 :5D-Good Morn ing, West
Virgin ia 13: 6 :Ss-&lt;:huck Wh ite Reports 10: Good
Morning , Trl State 13.
,
7:1l0-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning Amerlca. 6,13: CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7 :3D-Schoolles 10.
B:OD-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33; 9:®--Merv
Griffin 3 ; Phil Donahue A, 15, 13; Family Aflair 8, 1Q,
9 ;JD-Edge of Night 6; Andy Grlfllfh 8; Price Is Right
10.
.
10 :1l0-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6: Price Is
Right B: Mike Douglas 13 .
10: 3D-Hoflywood Squares 3,4,15; Joker ' s Wl!d 10.
11 : 1l0-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Happy Days 6,13 6, 13 ;
Match Game 8,1 0.
11 :3D-Knockout 3, 15 ; Fam ily Feud 6, 13; Love of Life
8,10 ; Sesame St . 20; Once Upon a Classic 33 ,.
11 :5s-&lt;:BS News 8; Loving Free 10,

~=/;~t1~ Z7R~ound

APPALA CHIAN STOV E COMPAN Y
leoturt ng Ashle ys and complete seleclio n of cool , gas,
wood circ ulating heaters
Carpen ter., (6 14 ) 698·7191 .

4.88 sq. yd.

BATHROOMS ANO Kitchen's
refl'lodeled , ceramic lile , plum bing , carp entry , and generol
main tenance. 13 years experience. 992 ·3685 .

river

handle
3Hint
5 CummerbWids for dawdlers: 4 wcls.
Director

13

SA V

Will do roofing . const ruc tion ,
plumbi ng ond heating. No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
7&lt;2 -234B .

2German

ACROSS

I Sword

GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr .,
Broker
107•12 Sycamore St .
Po-meroy , Ohio
PHONE 992 -6333
ANN DAILEY 'S Uph olstery .
OHice HourS: 9 A.M . to 4
Portla nd . Ohio . 843-2542 .
P.M.
Close
Thursdays
and
Saturdays .at noon .
New 4 bedroom , 2500 sq.,
E
living space. 2•1• baths , 7:
12:1- t -_,..::
C:-:A"""
R"'P..,E"'T='I: :N G
room ranch brick . Located
3 miles from Rt . 7, up West
Candy Strip
Sflade River. Call for an
Rubber Back
appointment.
Regular 16.95
Savel4.88 Sq . Yd.
1112 Acre lot Sur,veyed,
approved fo r · sewage,
12 and 15 II. width Carpet .
wooded and secluded,
rubber back .
lo'c ated .07 of a mile off of
Summerf ield road near
1
Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
Rev. $6.95-not installed
Priced to gO at $4,000.00,

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hot ,
fi e ld , . Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-1008.

ri x xI YJ

(Answers tomorrow)
Saturday's! Jumble• : FUDGE BRAVE DAMASK PEPSIN
Answer: What e&amp;riCiln glr1o do-; "DRESS UP"

SACES AND SERVICE
11 -9-ffc

BRADFORD, Auct ioneer . Com- YAMAHA, HARLEY-DA VIDSO N &amp; ·
plete Ser ~J r ce. Phone 949-2487
Con·Am Motorcycles. Complete
or 949-2000. Rocinu . Ohio. (rill
so!~s and fanta stic se rvice!
Br adford.
· Hou rs M·T. T 9-6: W·F, 9 .7 ; So t.
9-5. "The Mot orcycle People of
ELWOOD BOWERS' REPAIR Southeastern Ohio" Athens
Sweeper·s. toos!ers , irons. o il
Sport C,-cle$ . lnc. . 20 W. Slim ·
small appliances , Low n mower .
SOfl Ave .. Athens . bhio. Phon e
nex t to Stole Highway Garage
(614) 592-1692 .
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 9853.B25.

with utilj!y room and Iorge ki t·
chen , a lumi num siding . otto cP!~
ed ga rage , 2 storage bu il dings ,
garden spot. eslablished yard SEWING MACHINE Re pa irs . service , a ll makes . m -22B4 . The
wi th tree s end sh rub s. All on 1
Fabri c Shop . Pomeroy .
acre . Tupper s Plains., Oh io .
(614) 607-30'(6.
Author ized Singe r Soles and
_ Service. We sharpen Sc issors,
EIGHT ROOM house with both
und other bu il dings . Carpenter, EXCA VATlNG , dozer , loade r e nd
bac khoe work; dump trucks
Ohio . $9,COO . 742-2271 .
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
FIVE ROOM house, bo th. 1 '1~
fiil dir t, to soil , limest on e Ond
.a cres . IH. 33 ·corporation lim it.
grove l. Call Bob .or Roger. Jef ·
Phone 992-3689 pr 247-32721or
fers , dov phone 992-7089, night
oppo intmept .
phone 992-3525 or 9~2 - 5232 .

TEAFORD[8

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

Service

Carpet • Upholstery

5,:oo-Bonanza 3; My · Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
M ister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hog a n's
Heroes 10; Emergenc y One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5:31'-Qdd Couple 4: News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33 : Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 's Heroes 15,
11
6 :1l0-News 3,4,8,10: ABC News 6 : Zoom 20,33.6 :30...:
ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6 ; CBS
News 8, 10: Over Easy 20,33.
7 :1l0-Trulh or Cons , 3: Cross.Wits 4; Liars Club 6 ; .
Marty Robbins' Spotlight 8; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilllqan 's Is. 15 : Prime Time 20; Know
Your Sc hoo ls 33.
7: 3o-That Nasnv111e MUS IC j ; New 1 rurn or c ons. 4;
Muppel Show 6: Match Game PM 8; MacNEill·
Lehrer Report 20 ,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
Camera 13 ; Nashv i lle on the Road 15.
8 :00- llttle House On The Pra irie 3,4 , 15 ;
Honeymooners Christmas Special 6,1 3; Incredib le
Hulk B,10; Age of Uncertainly 20,33.
9 :1l0-Movle :'The Hunted Lady" 3,4,15; NFL Football
6.1 3: : Evening of Bluegrass 20 : Fall of Eagles 33,.
IO :OD-Raffe!i_'y 8, 10; News 20; Autobiography of .,..
PrlncesSr~"I.IJ .
•
10:3D-Fawl;y Towers 20 ; 11 :QO-News 3,4, 10, 15; Dick
Cavett 20; Arvilla 33 ,
11 :3D--Johnny Carson 34,4,151 McMillan &amp; Wife 81 ABC
News 33.
.
12:DO-News 6,13; Janak! 33.

EXPERIENCED

Young's

CLEANING
SYRACUSE
N ice
cottaage . 2 or J bedrooms,
bath . k itchen wi th range &amp;
ref . N.G heat . s torms .
J UST Sli,OOO,OO.
POMEROY Overlooks
the r iver, 1 f loor plan , 3
bedrooms, bath. din ing R .
Ki tchen has range &amp; r ef .,
basement ,
N.G. heat .
$1 2.500 .00 .
TO THE MAN WITH
WISDOM - YOU CAN 'T
AFFORD
TO
PASS
THESE BY .
HENRY E. CLELANO
REALTOR
HANK. KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992 -2259- 992-6191

Dave Parson s
Owner

Superior
Sleam Exlraction

Save 30 pd. to SO pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
fully insured
Free Esf .
Call661 -6419
11-14-1 mo. pd .

Kingsbu.y
Home Sales

Thi rd Street
Racine , Ohio

11 -25- 1 mo

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

RE,!-LTOR

Let Pomeroy · Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-op water
soffener, Model UC-SVI.
Now Only

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

. JIM KEESEE

Ex cellenl

W. Carsey , Mgr .

Join our rapidly growing management
team . loday.
If you
have
interest,
intelligence
and
integrity,
with
a
willingness to work hard, we have the
position for you. We offer paid vacations,
insurance benefits' and advancement
opportunities . No experience necessary.
Ca II linda Toll Free 1- 800-428-9176 Monday
thru Friday, 9 A .,M. • S P.M. for an
interview.

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house, F.A. furnace storm wr n
dows tifep l a~e rn Middleport
Phone 992-34.57 or 992 5867

-

Pomeroy landmark

Burger Chef Wants You

2.

APPLES. FITZPATRICK Orchard~ .
Stole Route 689 . Phone
Wilkesville 669-3785 .

WE'RE LOOKING FOR
PEOPLE WHO LIKE TO
LET OFF A LITTLE
STEAM.
Become a Na vy Boiler
Technician . An expert on
shipboard equipment that
produces
steam
for
propulsion engines and for
generati ng electric power
Top Na vy training and
benefits. See your local
recruiter:
221 Columbus Road
Athens, OH
593·3566 (Collect)

VA -FHA 30 V' l 1nonc 1 ~ 9 lr ,l ond
Mortgage . 77 E. S1o1e Athens,
phone (61 4) 592 3051 .

TRACTOR wt th all at·
tochmen ts . Like new , usk ing
$1250. Phone (61-4 ) 698-.3290,

..

TECHNICIAN

Commercra l p roperty opp rOll. . 17
acres le ... el land, ·loca ted ot
Tuppers Plams on Oh•o Route
1. Phone (614) 667 b304

~CONOMY

8

IF YOU hove o service to ofl ~r .
wont to buy o r sell sotTJelhing ,
ae looking lor work
or
whatever . , , you 'fl. get results
foster with o Sentinel Want Ad .
Coll992 ·2156 .

SMALL lorm for sa le 10•. down
o wr1er lrnonc.ed Moncoe Coun
t; W. Va Phone (JO• ) 771
3102or (304 ) 77 2 3117
COUNT RY lonnlo nd wr th secl ud
ed woods , water and good &lt;J&lt;
ce ss m Monroe County W Va.
$I 000 dowrJ coil \304 ) 771
3101 or (30o&amp;) 772 .J227

MONOAY , NOVEMBER 28,1977

Business Services

AU CJIO N SAlE e~ory l ues o nd HOME SHE'S for sol e I ocr o 011d
Fn 0 1 7 pm N£'w ond v:.ed · up Midd leport neoo Rutlor 1d
Coii9Q2 7• BI
merc ho ndnie o t Ohto Hwel' Auc
tton M E'I9S Ploro M • dd l~po tl
NEW 3 bed1 oom hou ~ e 2 bo t h~
O hto
Honw Phone {304 1
oil a lec 1 a cre Modd lepor l
773 541 1
dos o to Rutland Phone 992
7481
.

1976 SUZUKI RM I 25
condd10n. 2ol 7-3B61 .

CASH paid lor · oil makes and
m.o dels of mobile homes.
Phone a rea code 61-4 -423-9531 .
TIMBER , Pomero~ Fo rest Products . Top pr ice lor stand ing
sawtimber. Call 992-S965 or
Kent Hanby, 1-446-8570 .

WILL CARE _lpr the elderly
hollle Phone 992 73 14

OUOHT TO

lteall&gt;:otale for 1iale

Auction

MAN WANTS odd fObs to do ,tn
Mrddlep o rt Po me roy oreo
992 2403 .

FOR
STUD
Service
AK C
reg•stered cocker sponrel.
Block and ton. Clorksdale
l 1fliH 'Showqvoltty . J &amp; D Ken nels 742-31 62 .

Sunday

Chock guns
m fMlls .

OF

PEOPLE YOU

15 Words .w l:1.Ji'r

r ..sh

TELEVISION
VIEWING

THE
KIND

12 :JD-FBI 6; Ironside 13 .
1:00--Tomorrow 3.~; 1 :3o-News 13.
Mo•ie Channel 4 s &amp; 7 P .M. - FlrstTravellng Saleslady IGl
9 &amp; II P .M. - I Will, I W III . .•For Now ( R l
Cable Channel 5 6 : 30 P .M. - Testimony Time
7;00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
.7: 30 - Girls Ba$kttball : PPHS vs Parkersburg
10 :00 - 100·Ciub

RUTLAND

•••
••
•••

HEtf, FRANKLIN , SHE
STUCK A GOLD
L{OUR PAPER !

T~E TEACHER NEVER
STICKS A STAR ON
ANI/ a= MY PAPERS ...

I SEE
LEETLE JUGHRID
PLA'11N' TETCH
f=OOTBALL
OUT INIH'
SCHOOL
'lARD
AN'--

!.

:

~

e
~:

•

I
f'·

•

�..

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero). 0 .. Monday, Nov . 28, t977

Deficit
(ConUnued from Plllt I)
deficit has been ab01·e $2
billion .
In September, the deficit
had fallen tl&gt; $1.7 biUion as
exporters attempted to beat
the Oct . 1 start of the dock
strike_
The adm inis tration has
said the deficit ru uld reach
$30 billion this year .

Treasury

••

ll

Area D
eathS

--------------------------- 1

Secreta r y

Michael Blu ment h a l
acknowledged two weeks ago
that
the
defi c it
wa s
"worrisome" and added that
it " certainl y cann ot be
. allowed to perSist forever ."
However , he said, there is
'~no reason to panic and no
excuse for reactions in ways
that jeopardize the ?Verall
health of the U.S. economy or
that adversely affect world
recovery in general. "
The
C o mm e r ce
Department said l,J .S. exports
of $9.2 billion were 15 .8
percent below the record
$10.9 billion in September and
the lowest since March 1916
when exports totale d $9
billion .
Nine of the 10 expor t
categ o r i es r eg ist e red
decreases from September.
The four categories that fell
the most were machinery and

1

p.m . at ihe- home of Mrs.
Alfred Crow. Racine.
E·R CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called Sunday at 8:27
p.m. to East Main Street for
Marvin Darst who had fallen.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 12 :47
a .m . today they wer e ca lled
to Chester for Glen Lawson
who refused treatnient.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, 0 .
Now open for the seiiSon.

Choose-from Over
PoinseHias
75c
Foliage Plants 7Sc
Hanging Baskets
14.!0

15,000
to S10.00
to s12 .00
SI.2S to

Open Daily 91ill
Sundays 1 till

,I VeteransMemorl~I
o
_ Husp!lal
I
Saturday Adnuss10ns I

EDMUND BROOKINS
COLUMBUS Edmund
Chapman Brookms, 68 of
Columbus. d1ed at Riverside
Methodtst Hospital Sunday
evenmg
.
He was the s.on of the late
Issac and Jesse Ch apman
Brook 1ns He had be-en a
resident of Jackson , Ohio for
many years
Surv ivors incl ude wife. Ida
Will i ams Brookins , tt'lree
children ·
Wayne
of
Colu m bus · Issa c of Hilli ard,
Oh io and Mrs. Lonnie ( Joyce)
McGhee ol Bel l vtlle, Ohio ;
nine grandChil d ren ; three
brothers, Henry and Dwi ght
of Jackson
Paul D of
Gal li pOliS
one
sis ter ,
Dorothy of Jackson and one
n.iece ,
Nancy
M oeller .
Gall ipolis .
Funeral serv ices are being
arranged by
EiSn augle
Funer al Home in Jackson .

GLADYS GOULDING
NEW HAV EN - Gladys L

Goulding , 69 , New Ha ven,
died Fr ida y at her r esi dence .
Born July l 2. 1908. in
Plym outh, W. Va .. she was
the daughter of the late
George W. and Lena l . Clark
Ol iver .
Her husband . Charles S.
Goulding , preceded her in
death in 1958 . She worked as a
waHress and was a member
of the Chr1 st ia r1 Brethren
Church.
Survivi ng are a daugt'lter,
tr ansportion
eq uipment ,
Mrs. Leota Hubbard, Mason ;
chemicals, . rnan ufacturereQ
a son , Loyd Johnson , Mid·
goods, and food and live dleport ; two sisters, Mrs.
Gorma Bumgarner , New
animals.
Haven , and Mrs. Gertrude
On the import side. eight of Young , Mason ; a brother 1
the 10 ca tegor ies decreased . Chester Ol iver, Clifton ; six
Petroleum imports were grandchildren and f ive greaf.
valued at $3.56 biUion in grandchildr.en .
Funeral services wt ll be
Octl&gt;ber, a slight decrease
Tuesday at 1• 30 p. m. at the
from the $3.7 billion level in
Foglesong Funera l Home
with the Rev . James H. Lewis
September.
offlciatin'g . Burial will be in
the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
LODGE TO MEET
funeral ho me today from 2 to
Pomeroy Past Matrons 186_ 4 p. m . and 7 to 9 p . m .

will meet Tuesday at 7:30

H spital News ·

Minnie Cla rk, Middleport :
Ronald Dillon , Sr., ReedSI•ille; Nettie Randolph.
Reedsville.
Discha rges - James Bean,
Rolland Smith. Albert Hill,
SUSAN ERMA WEBSTER
Jr., Goldie Denney, .William
Time of the Eastern Star
Capehart
.
ser vices for Susan Erma
Sunday Admissions Webs ter, 87; of the Wa ter looFlag Spr i ng s Comm uni ty ,
Edith Spencer, Middleport .
ha s been changed.
Chris
Smith , Pomeroy.
The new time w llt be 7 p. m ..
Discharges
Louise
today ( Monday ) at lhe
Burbridge , Gladys Bosworth,
Waugh . Halley -Wood Funera l
Home. F ina! r ites w ill ,be as Charles Werry, Jeremy
scheduled : 2 p. m .. Tue sday at
Hendricks, Freda Henderson.
the funeral home , where
Memorial Gardens.
Friends m av call at the
funer al home aft er 3 p m . on
Tuesday .

calling hours will be 5-9 p. m.

loday .
Waterloo Chapter of the
OES will conduct the Ea stern
Star ser vices.

ROGER NIBERT

Roger Lee Nibert, 18. a
resident of Rt . 588, died ot
in jur ies r eceived i n an autmobile accident Sunday
afternoon .
He was born May 27, 1959,
in Gallipolis , son of John H.
and Reva I. Newhouse
Nibert.
He was one of three sons
born to thiS union . Surviv i ng
besides his parents are two
br others , Frederic of Letart.
W. Va . and John Arlen
Nibert, Reynoldsburg, Ohio.
One niece and three nephews
survive .
Nibert was a member- of tne
1977 graduating class of
Gall ia Academy High School.
He was em.ployed at the
Pennzoil Service Station on
Fi rst Ave .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at
Miller 's Home for Funera ls
with Rev . Robert Covin of .
ficiating .
- Bur ial
will
be
in
Cenetenary Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funera l home from 7 unt il 9
p.m . Tuesday.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Nov . 25)
Darla Angel, Buell Brown,
Betty Cade, Hilda Copley,
Mrs . Thomas Gaspers and
daughter , Lisa Gibson ,
Jacqueline Justice . Mrs.
Stanley Mayo and son ,
Vonnie Pine. Callie Roberts,
Cinda Stanaker .
(Births , Nov. 25)
·Mr . and Mrs . Morgan
Hanunond, a son, Patr~ot ;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Long, a
son, Apple Grove; Mr. and

Mrs. Junior

Massie ,

a

daughter, t;)ak Hill ; Mr. and
Mrs . JaQJes Mulford, a
daughter, Cheshire. Mr. and
Mrs . Teddy Staton, a
daughter, Bidwell.
(Discharges, Nov.%$)
Vonnie Berkley. Me lody
Berry, Winna Bonecutter,
Hurley Bordon, William
Callahan, Rhonda Conwell,
Vera Dotson, Mrs. James
Enyart and son~ Donna
Evans, Gregory Gooderham,
Naomi Gooderham, Edward
Jackson, Walter Jones, Cecil
Kirk, Arthur Miller, Wendy
Musick, Ruth Musser, Mrs.
Merrill Myers and son, Mary
JEREMY MULFORD
Ousley, Mrs. Walter Rawlins
Jeremy Buck Mulford , and daughter, Mary Roberts,
three-month-old son of Randy
( Buck)
and
Stephanie Martha Rose, Cheryl Sheard,
Whalen
Mulford ,
RD . Mrs. Raymond Skeen and
JULIA E. KERWOOD
MASON, W. Va. -Ju lia E. Ches h i re , died Saturday son, Beverly Spires, Albert
Kerwood .' 71. Mason , died evening at Holzer Medica l Stephens, Richell SydenSunday at the Holzer Medica l Center . He was born Aug. 14,
stricker, Elizabeth Thornton,
1977 at Gallipolis.
Center . ·
Surviv i ng In addition to his Mrs. David Walter and
Born Apri l 14, 1906, in
parents are his materna l daughter.
Plymouth , W. Va., she was
the daughter of the late Pete gr!3ndparents, Mr . and Mrs.
1Blrlbs, Nov. 26)
and Flora Stevens Nollge. · M ic hael E . Whalen , Pt .
Mr
.
and Mrs . Stenhen
Pleasant
i
paternal
grand
..
Survivin g are her: husband,
Everett 0 .; fou.r sons, Paul parents, Mr. and Mrs . John Cauff, a daughter, Galli'I'Olis.
E., James R. and John L. ,.al l W. Mulford , Cheshire ; great. Mr . · and Mrs . Minter
grandmothers , Mrs. 1 Ann Schartiger, a daughter ,
of Mason , and Cl arence R.,
Oak Hil l, W. Va .; f. ive Whalen, Sunnyvalle, Calif.,
Mrs. Max ine Wil liams, Pf . Middleport. .
daughters ,
Mrs ,
Helen
(Discharges, Nov. %7)
Hebr lck, of Kincaid ; Mrs. Pleasa nt ; grea t-grandfather,
Grace Ha r vey , Page ; Mrs. Ben Dav idson , Middleport ;
Scott Clark, Cliff Dixon.
several aunts, unc:les and Mrs. Larry Hunt and son.
Flora Eskridge, Deep Wa ter ;
Mrs. Iris Barker , Cleveland , cous ins .
Ohio; and Mrs . Mar y
Gra vesi de rites w ill be held Molly McWilliams, Hobart
M cGraw ,
Wenatachee , Tuesda y at 2 p.m. at the Mullins, Mrs. David Shafer
Gra vel
Hi ll and son, Betty Willis.
Wa sh .; four sisters. Mrs . Cheshire
Lottie Landers, Paden City ; Cemetery with the Rev. John
1Blrtbs, Nov. 27)
Mrs. Kati e Van Meter , Mrs. Jeffe ri es
o fficiati ng.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ricy Faulker,
Raw\lngs -Coa1s'
Funera l
Ruth Mullins, Elkhart, Ind. ,
Home is i n ch arge _of · a son, Wellston : Mr. and Mrs.
and M rs. Vi rgi ni a Lanham,
Mammoth ;
a
bro t her , arrangements .
James Gray , a son, Oak Hill.
Lawrence
S.
Nollge ,
' Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kasee,
Lakeland, Fla .; 27 Qr and .
Grace Surface BeaboUt
a son, Gallif,olls. Mr. and
ch fldren , and ·19 great Grace Sur,face Beabout, 80,
grandchildren .
Park St ., Middleport, died ' Mrs. Charles Lintner, a
Funeral, services will be Sunday mornin~ at Veterans
daughter, Ironton.
held Wednesday ti t 1: 30 p. m.
at the Fog lesong Funeral
Home with the Rev . A. A.
Sm ith officia ting . Buria l will
f ol low i n the Kirkland

DON'T FORGET

SANTA'S MOONLIGHT
SALE TONIGHT
FROM 6:00 TO 8:00 PM

Be sure to stop
in and register for a
Free Gift to-be given
away Dec. 23. No
·Purchase Necessary.

Memoria l Hospital.
She was born Nov. 12, 1897
at St . Albans, the daughter of

the late Cia rk J. and Martha
Good Smith. She was also
preceded in dea th by her f irst
husband, E. J. Surface in 1955
and her second husband ,
Harry Beabout in 1966. She
wa s also preceded In
dea-th by three brothers. ti.ve
half-brothers, two half-sisters
and one step-son . She- was a

AMC ,..
Gremlin
ONE WEEK ONLY
NOV . 28-DEC . 3
For one
week
only
Riverside AMC will sell
any new AMC Gremlin for
SlOO.OO over actual dealer
cost . Now is your chance to
get in on a great deal and
great economy.

~:~! As

$3575
RIVERSIDE AA'C

Gallipolis

Special of the Week
Monday, Nov . 28 thru Sunday, Dec . 4

BEEF &amp; BEAN

BURRITO
MILD OR SPICY '
SPECIAL
REG. 95'
PRICE 49~

446-9800

former

r·~s ident

of Charleston

. and Columbus.

/

Survivors in c ude two
daughters, Mrs. Edward (EI.
oise) S1iles, Middleport, and

Mrs. Thdmas .(Edna) Hooks ,
&lt;;olumbus ; one son, Harry C.
Surface, M i ddleport , nine
granddaugh ters, two grand sons, 10 great-grandchildren ,
one step-grandson, one s1epgranddaughter , and several
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services w ill be

held Tuesday at 2 p.m. al the
Rawl i ngs -Coats

Funeral

Home with the Rev . Middle·
;warth officiating. Burial wi ll
be in Rock Spri ngS Cemetery .

She was a member of the
First Bap'tist Church, M i d ~
dleport. Friends may call at
the funeral home at any t ime.

REVA M. COLLINS
Reva M. Collins. 60. 514 S.
•tn St ., Mldd leporf diedSunday evening at University
Hosp i tal , Columbus,
following a long Illness.
Mrs. Collins was born Sept.
10, 1917 in Gall ia County,

daughter of the la!e Hollis
and Ada Rusk Taylor.
She was married to Howard

E. Collins, who preceded her
ln. death .
She Is survived · by four
sis ter$, Mrs. Ada Canady and
Mrs. Marie Ricketts, both of
Columbus: Mrs . Margaret
Covrett, Delaware, and Mrs.
Doris Bradford, Plain City, a
bro ther , Merrill Taylor ,
Pomeroy ;
and
s~veral
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral servh;:es wlll be
Wednesday at 1 p.m . at the
Walker Funera l Home With
the Rev . C. J. Lemley officiating . Burial w ill be in
Bradford Cemetery . .
The family wi ll receive
friends af the funeral home
Tuesday from 2 to 4and 7 to 9.
F.riends may call until time of
services.

EDWARD C. JORDAN
Memorial services will be

held Tuesday at 7 p.m. al the
Dexter Church of Christ for
Edward Crockett Jordan who

This special is offered to vou to acquaint vou with
the goodness and economy of our homemade
, Mexican food.
No limit to quantity of purchase . Offer good for
Drive- In or Carrv-Out Service Only .
-

died Noy . 8 al Roanoka , Va .
Mr. Jordan was 88 years of
age. Burial was in Roanoke.
Mr. Jordan is survived by

his

wife,

Mrs .

Helen

Lawrence Jordan; one sister,

Mrs. Anna

Belle Walthall

Hart l eY ; a brother · in · law ,
Joseph 0 . Lawrence, and two
grandctl i ldren,
Marshall

Shuff and Mrs : !lefty S. Bolt.

Lnarles 1-(ussell. pastor,
will officiate at the service.

NOW YOU KNOW
Hollywood's movie version
of the attack on Pearl Harbor, " Tora, Tora, Tora," cost
$25 million to make - 2S
times the amounl it cost the
Japanese to launch the attack
on Dec . 7, 1941.
f

News •• in Briefs
(Continued trom PI' II• I)
A steady rain that fell through m ost of a freezing day
apparently kept away the throng tha t had b&lt;:n expected for
the first pobUc opening ~f the Presley gra ves1te, but manswn
gatekeepers estimated 3, 400 \isitors wer e ushered through the
garden in large g roups .
NEW YORK - A TEAM OF NEW YORK DOCfORS has
found a surgical method to relieve pennanenlly two types of
facial neuralgia that cause severe pain to 500,000 midtlle-.aged
Americans the researchers annoWlced today Dr . Eugene J. Ratner said he and two other doctors of
Brookl)'ll yeterans Hospital found the cause of two conditions
known as ''trigeminal neuralgia '' and ' 1atypical facial pain'' to
be infection in bone cavities - either where teeth have been
polled or the bone has been damaged . Previously the ailme nts
were believed w be psychological in origin . ·

Racists will
disrupt ·s chool
~using in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ] - The
third Annual Congress of the
White
Confed eracy,
a
coalition of white supremacy
gro ups ranging from the
Nazis to the Ku Klux Klan,
ended Sunday with a call for
the "disr uption of forced
busing by eve r y legal

brown·shirted Nazi with a
swastika armba nd.

Parity

den talk.

..

Deer Season

•'

BY G REG BAILEY
•
Area hunters are reminded of changes in this year's deer
laws One of the major changes over last year IS the
requirement that all deer must be checked by noon the next
day afU.r the kill. This will keep many law VIOI~tl&gt;rs from
attempting w take more than one deer should they !1ll thetr tag
early in the week .
1
· Secondly, all deer must be tagged . fn the past, certa n
successful hunU.rs were not required to tag thetr deer, only
check it at an official station. The law now provides that all
must tag their deer where killed.
Landowners or disabled veterans and others who were not
required wtag the ~er immediately must now make a tag of .
their own and attach it to the carcass before moving It from
-where it fell. The tag should bear the hunter's name and
address and ·the date and time killed .

a

not fair .
· f' t
The Ohioans should be given the anllerless permits . Irs
and nonresidents second. Other states, such as West Virgmta,
don't give out nonresident antler tess permits, so ~hy should!''!
we follow suit ? U any of you out there agree w1th me, votce
your opinion.
Good luck, but don 't forget tl&gt; be a sa fe hunter.

·
-_
.
•
,

I
.

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

FELDS IN . POMEROY

~

legal means."

.

Gerhardt spoke before an
array of banners that in·
eluded the U.S. flag, a Nazi
standard with swastika, the
Confederate flag and the
British Union Jack . On either
side of him sat officials of the
organizations t hat make up
the confederacy including a
hooded klansma n and a

liJ!tiJ.
~~&amp;

~
~
~

AIM HIGH~

w

Proudly disptavl
yo~r gun. collec~onl

~\

·- 1n an 1mpress1vel

"SPORTSMAN" cabinet•

Aid unit busy
in Middleport
The Middleport E-R Squad
made five runs in less than 24
hours, two on Sunday and
three this morning .
AI 5:06 p.m . Sunday the
squad was called to Dock St.
for Charles Knapp, 84, who
was treated at the scene. At
6:41 p.m. Sunday they were
called near the swinuning
pool for Chris Smlth who was
injured in a fall. He was taken
to · Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
At I a.m. todav they trans·
pot:\ed Jim Clatworthy, High
St., to Holzer Medical Center.
At 1:50 a.m _ today lhey were
called to Rutland for James
Shuler. The call was given to
SEOEMS.
· At 2; 45 a.m. this morning
they were called to Sycamore
St. for Dale Hermans. No
information was available
. where he was taken.

25x 13 V. x72 " h .
maple finish

Senator dies
in his sleep
8-Gun CaiJinEI~
30 1hx13 1f.x72 "
rnaple fi
by sporlsmen
for
sportsmen

Stow it and show
in ·dustproof
· These appealing cabinets are desiiinnecli
for av id sportsmen and beginning

lectors alike . They provide attrac:tiv1f!

STILL SEARCHING
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil
(UP!)
Firefighters
searched the ruins of the
Hotel Nacional's convention
center today for more victims
of an explosion ani! flash fire
that killed 10 persons and
injured five others.
HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest lemperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 90
degrees at Santa Barbara,
Calif. Today's low was 9
degrees

below

zero

storage for guns and ammunition in

s ize perfect for any den or game ror•mlil
Handsomely styled , they 're crafted
superbly l ini s hed hardwood solids
veneers lo co mplement any style ho1meiii
Top sections , with 53" insidecllearar•c41
and lower sections lock for safety .

.- OPEN FRIDAY ~
:~~:':_,,.~·;,-_.:,:.~~AND SATURDAY
1o-Gun Cabinet
36x13'/.x72 " h .
maple finish

-· - _.-( ., N
-----G
-· ---- ·n-~L'- -HTS

1

8:

at

Waterloo , Iowa .
I

vETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ROOMMATES
- Now what could be s&lt;i unusual abo ut ·hospital roommates? What is unusual is that one is a former sheriff of
Meigs County and the other is Meigs County's present
sheriff, James J. Proffitt, seated. Roscoe Fowler, 84,
Middleport, is Proffitt's roommate. Fowler, sheriff in
Meigs County from 1934 w 1937, is the oldest living exsheriff in the county. Fowler said he was the only
democrat ever to hold the office until Sheriff Proffitt was
elected a year ago. Fowler, after leaving office in 1937
went to Richmond, Ind. and was In charge of personnel for
the Powell-Crosley Corp. After four years there he was
named personnel manager of the C,rosley Corp. which
manufactured the Shelvador Refrigerator and later the
Crosley autl&gt;mobile. He was also iii; athletic director.
Fowler and Proffitt are medical patients.

INe;~~;fo)

VOL XXVIII

,,
••
'

business."
The four regional winners represent some 3,500 of
Ohio's 70,000 farm bureau couples 30 and under . They'r e
" commercial farmers " who earn their living off the land,
he said.
·
Often times they enter partnersllips with parents but as
in the case of Craig and Marilyn Shaw, both 24, they
· bought.a 460--acre grain farm in Auglaize County without
family help.
The Shaws, who live near Wapakoneta have gone from a
no on-the-farm grain storage in 1973 w16,000 bushels.
A recent farm bureau survey showed 50 per cent of the
ymmg famers had working wives.
"Most weren't farm girls in the first place but they
seem tl&gt; be the most dedicated t&lt;&gt;ward farm life ," said
Gerber.
'
Other regional winners are: Gary McKeei ZR, and his
wife, Barbara, 27, wbo operate a W-acre grain and hog
operation in Greene County near Xenia .
Keith Dennis, 26, and his wife , Jane, Tl, who farm 1,03.:&gt;
acres in Perry County near Rushville_
David and Pam Oberholtzer o[ Medina County, who
operate a 500--acre grain and livestock farm. David is ~.
his wife, 29.
•
All a r e typical. They 're active in farm bureau and local
organizations. Their wives work, either reaching school or .

•

at

Schools
•
umque
in u.s.

in ma naging their operations.
The Shaws' have one child, the McKees, Dennis and
Oberholtzers each have two children .
" It might have been the way of live for farmers tl&gt; bave
large families years ago, but it's no longer the case now,' '
Gerber ,.Ud.
Judges selected the finalists on their agricultural
operation and management abilities based on their
teamwork in decision.making,' community and civic
involvement .
Gerber dispelled a myth that large col'porations are
taking over farms .
"Our young farmers are part of the 90 per cent of the
farms operated by families in Ohio . And the percentage
could be higher than that," he said .
He said the success of farmers depends on their
managerial abilities which explains why family-run
cor porate farms are good investments.
" U yo u own or operate your own business you're more
likely to be successful. Big profits aren't there for the
corporations," he said.

,

The Dennises are the only ·couple among the four
finalists who don't own their own land.
The couple selected for the top honor will receive an
expense-paid trip to the American Farm Bureau
Federation 'sannual meeting in Houston, Tex. in January.

-·
enttne
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1977

NO. 159 , POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press Interoalional
WASHINGTON - AITORNEY GENERAL GRIFFIN Bell
said today he expects U. S. District Judge Frank Johnson to
ask President Carter to withdraw his nomination as head of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation due to health problems .
"I expect him w quit," Bell rold reporters on Capitol Hill
before he testified at a Senate hearing dealing with another
Dr. Charles Galloway, nonsubject. Bell said that following the hearing he intended wtalk verbal
communication
with the Montgom ery, Ala ., judge by telephone about his _specialist of Ohio State
University , discussed
(ConUnued on pace 10)
changes In education in
relation to social changes
with some 30 business and
professional people of the ·
-county at a luncheon at the
Meigs Inn Mondl!v.
Dr. Galloway was in
United Press International · and no local issues can be Meigs County to speak to
About 500 mine rs struck the
identified as the cause for the teachers of lhe Meigs Local
School District who were
Ra'-"''On No . 3 mine of t he walkout.
.
Southern Ohio Coal Co . in
"They went out at about 8 having an in-service training
Vinton Cowity today .
a.m.," said Baker. " We have session on Monday.
Dr. Galloway stressed that
Local 19~7 of the United been trying to contact the
in
America today the attempt
Mine Workers Union has officers of the local ever since
Is
made to educate all
scheduled a meeting for later they went out but have been
children
of all parents, not a
today to see what caused the unable to get anybody to give
select
few.
He declared this is
walkout which occurred one us any definitive reason why
the
only
coUntry
in the world
week before the UMW con· they went out.
·accepting
this
challenge
tract wilh the soft-coal in"We have checked with
today
.
dustry expires.
other coal companies in Ohio
Speaking on classroom
Not so strangely, the and we are apparently the
walkout coincided with only one out," said Baker. changes, Dr. Galloway stated
opening of the Ohio deer "This is an isolated case and that 30 or 40 years ago a first
season (guns).
there is no apparent reason grade class of 120 students
would see only about 40 of
Officials at UMW District 6, for it."
those students graduating
which is headquartered in
" We might expect them to
Bellaire, acknowledged the go out even a few days early ·with dropouts all along the .
mine had been struck but had before the contract is up," way due to the lack of en·
no comment on the situation. ;-said Baker, " but you iorcement of school at·
Dave Baker, a- spokesman · wouldn't expect an isolated tendance. The fact that today
for the Southern Ohio Coal · mine to go out on ils own. We attempts are being made to
Co., said no complaints have still have not gotten any educate all children may
been filed against the com- reason which we believe contribute to low scores being
pany by workers at the mine would justify them to go out."
(ConUnued on IJIIIIe 10)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gas utility asks
for new increase
A rate -increase requested

by Columbia Gas of Ohio in

500 miners out
at Raccoon No. 3

Plans to help expedite a
ville, outlined progress in the
house rehabilitation program house numbering project
of the Gallia-Meigs Com- which began in November,
munity Action Agency were
1976. All houses in the rural
made and a report was given
areas of the county are exon the house numbering
peeled ' to be numbered
project by the Meigs County som!llime in January, next
Regional Planning Com- year.
mission Monday.
When the work is comC. E. Blakeslee, executive pleted a dire&lt;;tory will be
dlreclor of the planning prepared showing the names
commission, said the CAA._ and new addresses, including
had received $80,000 which is the renamed roads, of
to be used in_ improving residents.
homes of low income
Page said that plans should
families: He said little of the be made to prepare a base
Gl'ant has baen spent. It was map at a cost of $2,500 from
d~cided to offer help to all
which maps for public
organizations involved to dlstrlbulion can be made
help get the project started. A showing the location of each·
check will be made with a of the rural homes iti the
Community Action Agency county.
representative on what plans , It was suggested that since
the agency has for using the the project of the mapa would
money.
.
cost a bout $7,000 advertising
The commission went ori be sold to help defray the
record as having no objection costs. It was also suggested
to plans for improving Route that the directories be sold io
338 leading to the Ravens- help with costs lit the map
wood bridge site and which project.
A need for signs noting the
would connect with Route 124,
provided the improvement location of all of the newly
does not jeopardize a power named roads in the county
plant site being considered by was expressed but it was felt
the Columbus and Southern that funds will not be
Ohio ElectriC Co. Length of available for it. The cost
the road to be Improved is · could run as high as $50,000, it
3.25 miles with an estimated was reported.
total cost of $2,954,000. It
The entire project, Page
would be one with federal said, should be finished in
funding and state funding .
March. He urged the com·
James Page of Fleming, missinn to see if it can
Page, stolte, Inc., Marys- arra1.ge for the employment

Best young farm familie~ are
ambitious, leader types

e

·House rehabilitation
may he revived

6-Gun Cabinet

UITLE ROCK, Ark. (UP!)
- Sen. John McClellan, DArk., who had represented
Arkansas in the U. S. Senate
since 19-13, died during the
night.
A staff assistant to McClellan said the senator's
wife found him this morning .
when she went to awaken hun
for breakfast. He had died in
his sleep. McClellan an·
nounced a week ago he would
not run for rHlection in 1976.
His term would have expired
in January 1979.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio's outstanding young farm
couples are likely to be college graduates, leaders in their
communities and more ambitious than their city cousins.
They probably work harqer and much longer than their
city counterparts but are likely to be hiJppier because
their work produces nouri,shment for a hultgry world .
Their "take-home," pay is also likely w be a source of
envy with incomes for the successful couples ranging
from four
six fi gures.
'
That's the composite image portrayed by four regio!Jl!l
finalists in the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation's second
annual "outstanding young farm couples" contest, a
highlighl ol the federations annual meeting here this
week.
While no one but the IRS knows how much these couples
and other farm couples earned in the past years, farm
bureau spokesman Blake Gerber says "the finalists are
fine examples why young farm families a re choosing
agriculture as a way to earn a living ."
Gerber posed the question of income to leading fa rmers
in Ohio and came awaY "surprised ." He said ~' incomes
ranged from a deficit to several hpndred thousand pollars
as good management practices show in any kind of

w

HOW ABOUT THAT, Keith Woods ? Wasn't that some
deer ? Tbat kill should prove to skeptics that our w1ldlife
managers are doing fine job with the d~r herd.
Did you know that Meigs County IS one of the top deer
counties in the State? Official estimates pot the Metgs County
deer population at 11.1 deer per square mile.
The snow shoul.d help hunters again th':' season, but don't
be upset if you didn't get an a ntler less perffill_this year. Seems
as though the State people didn't iss~e as ma.~Y, ~ I personally
know of lots of applicants who d1dn I get a dot; penrut.___l!lll_
I'm sure the people in Columbus know what they redoing.
.
I'll take exception w that last statement. One gripe I have
(as well as other hunters) is that a lot Q! nonresidents apply for
and get a nllerless permits . I will take iJ stand and say that is

(ConUnued from pege I)
movement is not as strong as
reported. J enkins said more
means."
than four million farmers
Anti-racist pickets mar- across the count r y support
ched outside the motel where the strike movement.
SHAKY COALITION
Prior to the rally, more
the conference was held .
Police, some in plainclothes, than 500 tractors, combines,
USBON, Portugal (UP!) the International Monetarv
were stationed around and pickup trucks and other farnl
The
minority soc ialist , Fund • political sources say .
inside the motel. The pickets equipment, moved do'wn U .S.
government of · Prime Min- "The Socialists are clinging
included representatives . of Highway -183 in a parade
ster
Mario Soares will fall to a cracked branch, and
Youth Against Wa r and stretching for miles. About a
this week in a dispute over everyone seems to be shaking
Facism , the Anti-Racist dozen crop--duster planes flew
belt-tightening demands by the tree," one source said.
Alliance and the Defense over the route.
Committee Against the Klan.
John Gerhardt of Colwnbus , President of the
American White Nationalist
Party , read a statement
outlining the While Confederacy' s opposition to
busing.
Gerhardt said this included
fostering of · a "ri'tilitantly
uncompromising ~~position w
to busing in the white com·
munity" and the " disruption
of forced busing by every

i

Take home
pay to the
farm envied

• •

EDWARD HOLTER

Yotmg Holter
in Orlcago for
4-H Congress
Edward Holter. son of !llr.
and Mrs. Roy Holter, Route 3,
Pomeroy, left Saturday to
attend the National 4-H Club
Congress in Chicago.
Ed wiU be a delegate from
Ohio
representing
agriculture . He flew by
United Air Lines and is
staying at the Conrad Hilton
Hotel. His sponsor is International Harvester. He
wUI have a full schedule of
panquets, programs and
tours.
A so~homore at Eastern
High School, Ed has been in 4H club work eight years and
, has completed over 40
projects, most of · them
related to agriculture. He Is a
member of the Chester Farm
Boys 4-H Club, the Meigs
County Better Livestock
Dairy Club and the Meigs
County Junior Leaders Club.
He is president this year of
the Dairy Club and the
Eastern High Future Farmers of America. A delegate
to the Ohio 4-H Club Congress
earlier this year, last year he
won a state trip to Madison,
Wis. to attend the National 4H Dairy Conference and the
11
World Dairy Expo." He won
the county championship
with Holsteins and the Dairy
Sweepstakes at the Meigs
· County Fair.

Middleport beginning next
June was referred to committee for study when Middleport V!Uage Council met in
regular session Monday
night.
John
Koebel,
local
Columbia Gas Co. manager,
discussed aspects of a new
proposal with the village.
Koebel said the company is

asking for a 4.5 percent in- company, which would go
crease in the base rate for the ·into effect next June, are
first year and a 7.5 percent based upon 1976 costs of the
increase for the second year company rather than 1977
rusts, so it Is to the advantage
of the two year contract_
Asked why the contract of lhe viUage to start early on
would be for two years rather establishing terms of the new·
than four as in the past, contract.
Koebel said tbal tbe
Koebel said the uncertainty
of the economic future makes minimum rate would be
a two year contract more increased from $3 to $4.88 a
practical. He said also that monlb for first year of tile
the increases sought by the new contract and to $5.%8 for

tbe . second year. Council
decided lbat· II wanted to
study lbe contract and Mayor
Fred ·Hoffman referred tbe
maUer -to a committee
composed ·· of
William
Walters, Marvin Kelly and
Dewey Horlon.
Koebel said he would not
approach council again until
he hears from the mayor or
from the committee. He said,
however , that ' his company
does not expect any ' curtailments at this time and
that the company does not
even plan to implement
allocations which were sent
out
earlier to
small
businesses and schools
because the gas supply is up
and the company is in better ·
condition to serve its
customers than ducing last
year's hard

of Donna Thornton, who has
been enumerator for the
house numbering project; for
SANTA COMES "'-- Four year old Ken VanMatre, son of Harvey and Belty Van Matre,
another year so that someone
Route I, Middleport, was just one of the htu1dreds of ki~s w spend a moment with Santa in
will be on · hand to make
Middleport Monday night. Candy treats were provided by the Middleport merchants.
additions and provide any
needed information to the
public.
Page displayed aerial
maps which will now become
the property of the county.
There are approximately 120
Everyone loves a parade put the two together and it Middleport Monday night
of these. He showed samples
and everyone loves Santa, so spelled instant success in when the town officially
of letters which have been
::;:;:;::··:::::::;:::·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :·:·:::::::·:·:::=.::::::::::;:;::·::::::.;;·::·:;:.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:; ,:,.;:,·;:,·;:;:,:;:;:. welcomed in the Christmas
sent to each rural resident
season.
Maps, survey will be explained
advising them of their new
There was bumper to
addresses. He told of his work
·
··
Middleport residents, insannce men, realtors and
bumper
tr11ffic only from
with service units including
other interested persons are urged to aUend a public
Middleport
to lower Monkey
post offices in getting the new
hearing tonight at 7:30 o'cloek In the council chambers
Run
Iii
Porileroy
)1181 a little
house numbering system Into
regarding lbe flood maps aod survey prepared by Burgess
Meigs County Sheriff's
after
6
p.m
.
as
motorists
practical operation.
&amp;. Nlple as authorized by the Dept. of Housing, &amp; Urb1111
Dept. of James J . Proffilt
made
their
way
into
Mid·
The commission discussed
Development.
said today charges have been
dleport
to
see
the
annual
the Ohio River Port stydy
Officials from HUD, the Ohio Dept. of Natural
filed against an 18--year qld
parade
which
was
done by lhe Ohio Department
Resources, and the Burgess &amp; Nipl11 engineering finn
Racine woman in connection
highlighted
by
Santa
and
his
of Transportation and the U.
wUI be on haod
explain the program and answer
with the breaking and enhelpers.
S. Corps of Engineers. The tering of, the
questions.
Racine
Parking in Middleport any
study shows one port site for
Elementary School on the
place near the parade route
Meigs County. This Is the
weekend of Nov. lB. Three
Hobson area and involves
juveniles have also been
some 120 acres. It was agreed
charged in the entry. Two of
to maintain an active interest
the youths had attempted to
In the port authority st'udy
enter the building on two
work as it progresses .
· different occasions, the
Attending the meeting were
time as the owners of the company and the
Steve Little, employe of Midwest Steel
department said.
Blakeslee, Edison Baker,
employes were too far apart on wages and
Corp.,
and
president
of.
local
No.
6197,
Thereon Johnson, E .· F. atarged with petty theft
benefits.
· and criminal trespass is indicated today the strike now in progress at
Robinson, Fred Hoffman,
Litlle said that at the last negotiating
Debbie Lyons who, according Midwest steel would not be settled before the
John Rice, Wesley Buehl,
meeting
on Nov. 4, company officials wid
first
of
the
year.
to the charge, entered the
Henry Wells, Page, Miss
them
they
would get back with the employes,
to
UUie,
In
a
telephone
According
building twice around midThornton and Boyd Ruth in
bnt
as
of
today
nothing has transpired. Serey
night of the 18th and took conversation last week with plant manager
the conference room of the
was not available for commenl and would not
nolebooks and pencils and Torn Serey at Midwest Steel, UtUe was
Farmers Bank Bldg.
be available this week, a spokesman at the
informed the company was not ready for
(ConUnued on page 10) .
plant office said.
more negotiations in meetings at the present

winter.

Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate read a communication
from the Consumers Counsel
asking for representatives to
appear at a public forum on
Dec . I in Columbus against a
rate hike request from the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. No action was
taken.
Mayor Hoffman announced
a flood insurance public
meeting for 7:30 this evening
at village hall and that the
mobile office of Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum will be in
Middleport from 10:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m . on Dec. 14 for any
resident who has a matter to
bring to the senator's at·
- tention.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hollman, Grate, and
council members Walters,
Allen Lee King, Kelly, Horton
and Carl Horky.

Santa's show 'is big success

WOman charged
as suspect in
school B&amp;E

w

was hard to come by.
Heading the parade were
Mick Childs and George
Ingels on behalf of the
Middleport merchants who
staged a Santa moonlight sale
following the parade.
As usual, everyone enjoyed
last night's eveni.
nie weather was snappy
but not disagreeable. Four
marching bands, Southern,
!ConUnued on FPI• 10)

-:.,-.)".HJ''H J'"H
~

.

.

.

..,\.1

~

.) 1 ,_"':.,

Negotia.tions at dead-end I

'

. DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="796">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11331">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49026">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49025">
              <text>November 28, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6186">
      <name>beabout</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3623">
      <name>brookins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7611">
      <name>goulding</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1021">
      <name>kerwood</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1967">
      <name>mulford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="642">
      <name>nibert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6379">
      <name>nollge</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="463">
      <name>oliver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5446">
      <name>surface</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2439">
      <name>webster</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
