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

l"ht' !\urui;t~ Tlllll':,-&amp;.•ntuw l. Sundd ~ . Dt•t• 18, 1977

:

Peace on earth?

Area Dth
ea S

I
I

1

MERLE J. CARSON

POM E ROY
Merle J
Car son , 82. Route 'l , C~l('n ,,
Ohro dred Fnd,l y .a lter a long

(

il lness
A f ormer Me igS County
res iden l. t he son ol th e l&lt;" ie
Harnpt on and Mon~ Wilsorl
Carson he was a r et 1red
far mer and school bus dr iver
Survivi ng a re h 1s wi fe, i hf'
former An na Hvll er ; a son
ond daughter in law , Roy ilnd
Edn~ Ca rson of Wes le rvi lie ·;
tw o q r and c h ll dr en , BPt tv

.

:~Mood
Cont inued from pa~r
amt tux reform .

~­

''

Kr renke o f An 1on~1 c:1 nd Roge r
Carson ~f Te ll: as ; Sill: grea t

u andchll dcen. one br nth rr .
lh arsort' t a t. t.Mon g
o om
ree s s e rs , r s
fVId e SIJiesol Ken t; Mrs. Da le

Bertlan

e~rE'

qn

D-1

tilt' record. the s t•m or

starr

memb~rs

were

n·luclomt IH bl.i.Jlllt.' l'un ~rcss

fur l'arler 's troublt·s. But
pn\'&lt;Jtely,atleastunC( tf ltu.·m
Rhodes o l New Br 1g hton, Pa ·
used expletives in rcferrin~
a nd Ru th Tucker 01 Racr nc
to members of C'onhrress.
Funeral serv1ces wil l be
St. ff
I f
I
he ld at 2 P m today at th e
a crsda so rt.'ttec: over
De Vor e Fu neral Ho m e in the nee
to ea st&gt; the
Sunbur y. Burial will lak e paperwork load on C~nter ,
pl~ce 111 th e Hu lem Town
~ho t~as bern putting in an
sh•P Cemeter y near Gil lena average of 70 hour s H week .
OORSEL RIEBEL
" We
all
ft•e l
a
COOLVILLE · Oors~l C. · rl'sponsibility, a l'nllcetivc
~"ue•l . 65. of 605 PhillipS responsibility to ~nd less
Belp re. a form er
,
h'
1 .. 't '.
~ e ,e o s.ville r esi dent , d ied
paper to
llll llll e~s 1 ~
Ill

Appoml.lnl·nts Sen l'tary Tiru
Kruft
When r arter cook offi ce.
Kraft said. lte pl1111ned to
sch edule a 55-hour work
wrck . based on live !% our
da ys &lt;.md a half-day on
Salllrday . That ballooned tu
iO hour s. not including time
spent studying issues
But 'in sum , Watsrn1 1:1 aid,
''the stilff is l'onfident of our
individuul and l'Ollectl\' e
ability . And we're certainly
eonfi rhml uf the president 's
aiJihty "
RAKt~ RIES JAMMES
LONDON i UPit - British
housewive s, fearing tt bread
sh urtuge dU e t o n work

NAIROBI. Kenya i UPl l Two American congressmen
say Ethiopia's securit y forct.'s
are publicly exeeuting oppone"nts to the Marxist
governmen t an d dumping
their bodies on thC' st reC'ts as
a wanting to the ~1p u latimi .
Reps. Paul Tsongas, DMass . and Don Bonker. DWash., said the y sa w nine
bodies - some with their
hands tied behind their ba cks
and others with notes pinned
to their bodi es - on a drive
through Addis Ababa Fr ida y.
'' It was a very disturbing
and disgusting experience ,'"
they said in a stat ement to
reporters on arri va l from the
Et hio pian ca pital. "Y ou
could see fear on the faces of
the people."

,.,f
t

.&amp; ~'
)' .., :....•,.:w

~

~ "'

J
l

.

'

VOL. XXVIII NO. 173

State Rt. 325 So .. Towards Southweslern
High School.

• e oeo
'f iG
ee
fl
.
Pomeroy Landmark
fJ Proudly AnnouncesThat They Are Your New General Electric
8
Television Dealer. Many, Many Sizes and
Styles In Stock. Stop In Today.
e
A ,Christmas ·Gift
the HJhole Family
Will Enjoy For
Years To Come.

• erFormance
•

CORNING, lOWA - DAVID P. KOZISHEK, 41, Williamsburg, is the new secretary of the National Farmers
OrganizatioQ.
Kozieshek iS the first Iowan to hold the post in six years and
the third Iowan in the organization's history iAJ be secretary of
the group. His advancement came after the death of Art
Phillipa, Hillsboro, Ohio, in October.

'

•

POMEROY. LANDMARK
.

.

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Drive A Llt,t le and Save A Lot-Free Delivery Within 75 Miles-Yes! We Service At Your Lo(al
'
Hotpolnt Dealer.
..
\

'

Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30- Mill Closes at 5:00 P.M. -Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties

e

oe

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

~airo

helps out for
Yuletide party

President Sadat bad ordered
his delegation to keep up the
momentum of the conference
until he could meet with
Prit:ne Minister Menahem
Begin, and Pattir said the
Israeli delegation
has
received new instructions
from tile foreign ministry in
Jerusalem.
Sadat and Begin were
expected iAJ meet in the Suez
Canal city of Ismailia "no
sooner than 1'h\11'sdaY and no
later than next Monday,"
sources at the conference
said.
The Egyptian spo)&lt;esman,
Morsi 'Saad El-Din, said the
parley is awailing the SadatBegin summit which, he said,
uwill accelerate and give
more momentum iAJ the Cairo
meeting."
• He said progress is being
made ·on an fronts, but
conference sources said the
rema1n1ng problems
SAMPLE ACCORD Is
what Prime Mloisler · represent a considerable
Menabem Begin hopes to
difference between the two
reach with Egypt. Begin
sides.
said his government wanls
Today's
session
got
to reach an aggreemeot on
underway in the mirrored
principles during lhe C~Iro
conference of the Mena
coofereoce that "will be a
House botel but the delegates
sample for the peace
had little to disct.WS before
.trealles to he signed with
Sad&amp;! and Begin hold tbeir
all our neighbors."
second summit. The first
both sides have been in touch ·
with their governments since
then.
Egyptlan sources said

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday lhrough
Friday, a chance of rain or
snow Wednesday aod
Thursday
and
soow
Friday. Highs Wedoesday
aad Thursday wUi be between 35 and 40 and lows
wUI be near 30. IUghs
Friday wUI be betweeo 30
aad 35 and lows wUI be In
lhe mid 20s.
:::: :::::::::~::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:=
:·::

eoeeee

whiskey on them, because
that's a dr)' state . They (state
police1 &lt;·an get a John Doe
warrant and searCh your car.
U you got whiskey, they can
get you fo r bootl egg ing .
We 're going to go peaceful , no
vi olence whatsover ,"
Nunley said most of the
large mines picket ct in lJMW
Distric t 30 in Eastern
Don Nunley, caravan Kentucky la st Monday
organizer and former UMW remained shut down .
"Everybody in District 3l
District 6 board member,
said miners at the Wilkesvi lle is praising you,'' he told th1
meeting "passed the hat" to Wilkesville gathering. "The:
buy food and gasoline for the are callin g you Robi t
' Hoods."
trip.
11
" You 're going into some
If we can get a goo'
bad country," Nunley told the contract, we can try to ge
meetin g. "I don 't want them (non-UMW miners ) ir
anybody to have any our union . lf we can gel then
firea rms on them . I don't in our union , we can bt.
want anyone to have any stronger, " Nunley said.

150 miners at Wilkesville,
Ohio, Sunday made plans for
a second auto..caravan swing
thro u g h Kentuck y ' s
coalfields. They agreed to
gathe r on U.S. 52 ne ar
Chesa pea ke, Ohio, earl y
Tuesday and to remai'n on the
road for a few days. About
half of Kentucky 's mines are
non-UMW.

:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· ;.;. :·: .;;;.;;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·=·=·=· =·:·:-:-:. =·:·: ·:.:. :-: ·=·: -:;:.:-:.; -::=·: ;:·:;:·:;: .:;::::::::=: :;:·:;:;: ::. =·~;_

.' New 6-10 day report ,

:···

:

on the weather has

::

{

In
•
meetmg

!. !

good news for most

·.·.

:::·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The National Wea ther
;:;: Service, issuing its first 6-to-10 day forecast, had good
::;: Christmas season news for the West and bad news for
;::: the East.
=~

.: ~£~~=~!~1:~:~:~~~tft:~~:~~a~:
110

:',:',:_; : beThlowe st artmal.
emen t covered th e per1'od from Sa turday
'
:;: Dec. 24 througjl Wednesday Dec. 28.
:_,_:_:
It called lor temperatures to average above normal
' in central and southern portions of the Plateau region
:::; and Rocky Mountain ~taU:s and in. northern New

:;:
::;
:::.
-:-:
~

!!:
::.,,:.
:':
;:;
,.•:,:_,,._'

came when Slldat visited
Jerusalem last month .
In Saudi Arabia, the state- ·_:_
.' .:,_:·,:·
and northern portions ,of the Great Lakes (
owned Riyadh radio said the
Temperatures
are expected iAJ be helow normal in
,:::.
latest Israeli proposals :,:,
the
middle
and
lower
Mississippi
Valley
and
eastward
·
which call for eventual selfrule but not a Palestinian :;: iAJ Tthe
Co;'.'t. h
homeland on the West Bank ._::. nor:f."ra ures e ew ere are expected to he about
- were insufficient.
" As long as Israeli occupa:,:
tion of Arab territory and ·:.''.•
normal
ln
the
northern
Rockies,
Great
Lakes
region
·
Jerusalem continues, there is
j'[
no room for optimism," the :.: . anE d Middle Atlantic states and below normal in the
ast.
..
broadcast said.
:::::::::;:::::;:::::;:::;:;:;:::::::::~~::::;.;:::::::::::::::::8:~;;:::::::::::;:;:::;:::;:;.' ;:;:;:;:;:;:: : ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::t;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:~·

~~~~~~d

Atla~tic

:,' ::_!:!:

~Ji~~ta!o~~s~s':~~ ~~i~ ~~~v~~:~:~t~~!~~

!I

•
,...
•I

Pickup is

crowded

Union Ave.
Charles R. Mash, 26, RD 2,
Pomeroy, would like to lind
the driver of a car who
crowded him off Union Ave.
into a guardrall Saturday
morning.
Mash reported to Sheriff
James J. Proffitt's Dept. the
car coming west forced him
to take ,his pickup truck onto
soft benn to avoid a collision.
The benn forced him into a
guardrail. The car that was
left of center never stopped.
Not only is Mr. Mash
looking for that driver; so is
the sheriff's department.
. Damage to Mash's truck
was estimated at $150.
The, department also is
investigating a
report
Saturday by Tom Wilson,
Flatwoods, that his residence
· was entered some time
Thursday evening.

METERS FREED - Pomeroy's parking meters were freed for this week by town
The Pomeroy Emergency
officials.
Above, Mayor Clarence Andrews stands beside one of the hooded me ters covered
Squad was called to Midover
the
weekend
by members of the Meigs Chapter, Order of DeMolay , Originally, it was
dleport at 7:~ p.m . Saturday
iAJ cover the meters, although free parking was granted throughout thi~ week.
not
planned
WASIITNGTON COURT HOUSE, OHIO - A sick_.,.ll for Lawrence Stewart who
Mayor Andrews this morning extended thanks and compliments iAJ the Pomeroy Cham her
walkout by the 20 members of the city police force continued was ill. He was taken to
of Commerce for the extensive holiday decorations in town this year .
lciday, with only one officer and the police chief reporting to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
duty in the Fayette County IAJwn of·12,000 people. The officers Pomeroy took the call in
did not report for the 4 p.m. shift Friday and almost all of the order not to lnterrupt a
Christmas party of the
town's Ioree called ln sick throughout the weekend.
Wage negotiations between the city and officers were · Middleport unit Saturday
stalled for weeks, and apparently prompted the sicko0ut. iiight.
DETROIT (UP! ) - A nonfatal poisoning and one the defendants arising from ·
AI 1:12 a.m. Sunday, the
Washington Court House firefighters staged a simUar walkout
federal judge today granted a count of conspiracy against the .government's persistent
Bethlehem
Steel
COrp.,
one
three weeks ago. The City Council has offered a raise iAJ the · Pomeroy suqad was called to
new trial iAJ two Filipino Filiplna Narciso, 31, and misco nduct preve nted the
after
Wheeling.
firefighters to brlng them up to the level of the police officers, the fonner Chester !Wad for day
nurses
convicted of poisoning Leonora Perez, 33.
jurors from receiving the
Mary Garnes, who was · ill. Pit~burgh announced it
but has not offered raises iAJ police.
patients
at the Ann Arbor
Pratt said the conduct. of case free from taint,! ' Pratt
would
increase
sheet
steel
She was taken to Veterans
Veterans Administration the government during its said.
prices an average of 7
TOLEOO,OHIO-CHARLESF. D.RUFF, the last man iAJ Memorial Hospital. ·
HOspital in 1975.
two-year investigation and
"The interests of justice
serve as Watergate special prosecutor, IDid graduateS of the
At 8:26 a.m., the squad percent, today announced it
U.S.
District
Judge
Philip
the. marathon trial was ·and judicial co nsc ien ce
will
raise
prices
512
percent
University of Toledo Saturday that every law school should went to Wyllis Hill for Alfred ,
Pratt strongly criticized the unforgivable and denied the demand a new trial in this
require a course in legal ethics. Ruff, a Cleveland native, wbo Biggs, who had suffered a on most of its rolled steel,
govenunent
prosecutors who women a rigjlt to a fair triaL
(Continued on pqe 12)
held the special prosecutor's (l&lt;l8t frcim 1975 until the office )JV&amp;'lible stroke. He was taken structural shape and tin mill
succeeded
in
getting
"The court linds that the
products.
closed June 20, told lbe winter-&lt;jllarter graduates that the to Holzer Medical Center. At
convictions on fiye counts of overwhelming prejudice iAJ
A Bethlehem spokesman
saddest moment in' the job came when interviewing the 8:12 p.m. Sunday, Mildred
president of a major company about illegally giving corporate Withee fell at her home near said the rolled steel increase
Pomeroy. She was taken to will become effective Feb. I
funds to political campaigns.
..
NOW YOU KNOW
Ruff said when asked if the company lawyer knew of the Veterans Memorial Hospital 1111d the increases on the other
It takes 50 hours to thaw a
Two suits for money and an 1917 . The amount asked is
'deal, the executive said, "He's the one who dreamed it up." If by the squad. '.
'frozen 10-pound turkey in the
(Continued on pqe 12)
action
for dissolution of $19,700.
.
lawyers maintain the .view that their· job "is ·a learned and
refrigerator . .
marriage have heen filed in
Farmers Bank and Savings
noble profession, some day others may see us in th.e same
Meigs County Comrmm Pleas · Co., Pomeroy, filed suit in the
JUDGING TONIGHT
way," said Rt.WS, now an inspector-general in the federal
The Christmas home
Court ,
amount of $2,614.22 plus eight
'Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
KNIGHTS TO MEET
Carl and Kathryn Gardner, . perel!nt inlerest from Aug. 4,
decorating contest being held
Occasional rain or snow
Ohio Valley C&lt;lmmandery
BOARD TO MEET
Middleport, and ·&amp;xie Oiler, 1971. The defendant is Julius
in Middleport will he judged likely tonight and Tuesday. No . 24, Knigjlts Templar, will
PARTY IS TUESDAY
The Southern Local Board
Middleport,
are suing the Preston, Jackson . Randall R.
tonigjlt
.
Residents
are
asked
The Christmas party and
Lows tonight 36-35, highs hold a special meetlng at 6?30
of Education will meet in gift exchange of Ohio Eta Phi to ligjlt their decorations Tuesday near 40. Probability p. m . Wednesday for the Fanners FA.ie Insurance Co., Carpenter, Middleport , and
regular session Thursday, · Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi before 6:30 as at that time of precipitation 20 pet. today,
visit to the county York. Pa., for destru'*ibn of a Linda Carroll Carpenter, Rt .
Dec. 22 at 7:30 p. m. in the Sorority will be held at 7 P- m: judges will begin their in- 50 pet. tonight ,' 70 pet. annual
infinnary. All Sir Knigjlts are house and contents and I , Middleport , filed for
cafeteria at the high school. Tuesday at the Meigs !nil.
spection tour .
shrubbery by fire on June 3, dissolution of marriage.
Tuesday.
invited.

Bethlehem to
hike prices

COLOR
TELEVISION.

.

MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1977

Pomeroy unit

P TELEVISION
.

JUST IN TIME
, FOR CHRISTMAS
GIVING.

Prout said the miners were
particularly upset over
reports
the
contract
negotiawrs were discussing
possible penalties for wildcat
strikers.
"There were also a lot of
questions about Kentucky
coal," Prout said.
Prout said some of the
miners planned to travel iAJ
Kentucky to picket non-UMW
mines even though it ''wouJd
be an expensive trip."
At another meeting , about

enttne

at

CAIRO ( UPI) - Egyptian
and Israeli delegations to the·
Cairo peace conference IAJday
issued an unprecedehted joint
briefing that
reported
progress
in
their
second
By United Press International
but
,
conference
meeting
,
PARIS - THE uNITED STATES AND VIETNAM today
said
major
opened a new round of talks aimed at establishing normal sources
·
diplomatic and commercial relations . Police broke up a differences remain.
fn the briefing after the 50demonstration by a dozen Vietnamese refugees outside the
Vietnamese Embassy and tore up posters demanding hwnan minute session of the closed
cooference, the Egyptian and
rights in Vietnam.
Inalde the. embassy, talks began promptly at 10 a.m. A .Israeli spokesmen said a
State Department ,spokesman said last week in Washington legal committee reported on
that the ·most immediate issue to he discussed would be the its work in trying iAJ agree on
case of ihree Americans.being held by Vietnam on the grounds an agenda lor the lull
conference.
' L
they sailed their yacht into Vietnamese wa~rs.
The spokesmen said the ·
FRUIT HEIGH'i'S, UT All - A UNITED Airlines DC8 agenda group had not yet
, cargo jet carrying Christmas mail from California to Illinois agreed on the subjects. w be
slammed iniAl a canyon wall ln the Wasatch Mountains early discussed and the three-man
&amp;mday_and burst into flames, killing its crew of three men. coJIUllittee will meet again
Military fliers from Hill Air Force Base sighted the wreckage Tuesday night.
The spokesmen said the
at the 7,50(goot elevation in the mou1tains east of Fruit
formal conference itself will
Heights.
adjourned
u,ntil c
unm wreckage was scattered for more than a quarter~ be
Wednesday
at
11
a.m.
(
4
a .m .
mile up the mountainside," said Deputy Sheriff Doug
Lawrence, who flew over the scene. '"The largest intact piece • EST).
of the plane was the tail section . There was no possibility of
Israeli spokesman Dan
anyooe surviving this. The plane went straight in ." UAL Pattir said the Isra;}
spokesman Marty Leaver identified the crew as John Fender, delegation will make ' a
49, the pilot, Philip Modsitt, 46, COi&gt;ilot, and Stephen Simpson, . special visit Tuesday to the
34, second officer. All three lived in the Chicago area.
birthplace of President
Sadat" - the Nile Delta
WASHINGTON - FORMER PRESIDENT Gerald Ford village of Mit · Abul Kom,
says Americans, overcoming historic and emotional north of Cairo.
attachments, gradually are coming to supporl the Panama
Both spokesmen, agreeing
Canal treaties. A change in the nation's mood began about siic with each other on every
weeks ago when arguments in favor of ratification began iAJ point, said there had been no
make inroads with a growing number of Americans, Ford told sharp exchanges during the
second session. Conference
a news conference Sunday.
. Ford supports Senate ralificatlon of the treaties negotiated sources reported such
during the terms of four presidents and signed by President ' exchanges in the' first full
Carter in September. Ford is in Washington for a round of talks meeting last Thursday, but
with government officials includling Carter Tuesday_ Ford
spent the better part of his working day Sunday conferring
with a bipartisan group of treaty supporters.

SAVE
OPEN SUNDAYS

'·

with the negotiations."

•

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

secon

BUY AT THE GREENHOUSE AND
AMSTERDAM - St. Nicholas doesn't fly through the
ski es on a sleigh like his En glish-speakiilg cOunterpart.
• Instead the bid fellow mounts a white horse to deliver toys
tn good Dutch girls and boys.

ganizer, said they were
"angry miners dissatisfied

•

REO--WHITE- PINK

e
e
e
fJ

, BROWNIES HELP

e

HOME GROWN POINSmiAS

.,

With negotiations stalled in
Washington , impatient
striking United Mine Workers
members decide d during
peaceful weekend meetings
iAJ step up efforts to shut down
non-UMW, soltcoal
operatiO(ls, esp"ecia lly in
Appalachia .
Contract talks between the
UMW and the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association
aimed at ending the strike by
1~, 000 miners in 22 states,
which began Dec. 6, were
sc heduled to resume in
Washington today after a

Little Beaver Greenhouses
'

weekend recess .
While UM W President
Arnold Miller Friday would
not disclose the one item he
said was impeding progress
in the talks, the most
troublesome issues have been
health benefits and the
UMW's demand for a limited
rigjlt to strike.
In one of several weekend
meetings, an estimated 200
coa l miners from UMW
District 6 met at Bellaire,
Ohio , iAJ discuss picketing
activities and the progress of
the Washington bargaining.
John Prout, District 6 or-

United Press International

The Toys for Tots n~·--•~·­
at Veterans Me
Hospital got help when
Brownies of Girl Scc&gt;ut
Troop 1271
coloring
books
a
crayons to Wini
Marcinko, R.N., mn·&lt;ir"'
supervisor, as
special Christmas project.

lie in streets

HOME - Crowds gather each Christmas to ~limpse Pope Paul Vl impart his ''Urbi et Orbi" b l essin~ from St.
l-\[fr ·s Bas1lica.
.

Miners will intensify
Appalachia shutdowns

Nurses granted new trial
.

.

Court actions ask for money

Weather

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

'

'

�3-Tite Datly Senh~el, .l.'tddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday:Dec.l9, 1977
.'-The Dail)' Senbnel. Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Mooday , Dec. l9, 1977

Marauders
go 78-57
over Fales

Saudis, Iranians will press for p:t;.ce freeze
:.:,: :-::-:,:·-:.:·, :-:·-:-.

Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel

.. .
:;

..

.;.

will increase prices 7%

•

·.
:·
..

PITISBURGH I UPI I - Wheehng-Pittsburgh Steel
Carp .. which has lost more than $20 million in the hrst ::
ru n~ months of I9ii, SA) S it w1ll inCrease sheet steel ..
prtces an a\erage i percent as of Jan . 3
..
It satd It needs the pnce mcrease to offset higher

guarded by a virtual army of
5,000 troops and se&lt;·urity
nurusters are arriving m agents for the meetmg
Venezuela for tallts aimed at begrnnmg Tuesday
A patrol boat was anchor«!
setting 1978 prtces and most
observers predicted Saudi off the beach, helicopters
Arabta and Iran would wm took off and landed at an
their ftght to unpose a freeze . Impr ovised heliport and
The mmisters arrtvmg armored cars patroll«&lt; the
Sunday were whtsked from nearly deserted grounds w
the a~rport to the Hotel Melta assure agamst any repetition
Canbe along a beachfront of the terronst raid on the
CARABALLEDA,
Venezuela tUPil - OPEC oil

cartel's December 1975
meetmg m Vtenna .
In the Middle East, the
Qatart news agency reported
President Carter and Saud1
Arabian King Khaled sent
messages to the ruler of
Kuwatt, apparently urgmg
his support for a moratorium
at the current Jl2.70 for a
barrel of basic crude .
The authontauve Mtddle

East Economtc ~urvey
predicted that despite
dtsagreements amon~
members of the Organizallon
of Petroleum Exporting
Countries, a price freeze for
next year IS a near
certrunty.
"There is likely to be plenty
of fierce argument ... but the
final result does not seem to
he in doubt," the pubhcatlon

{'Ost s of enC'r gy ma tenal and labor
The pnce move b! the co untr~ ·s nmth la rgest produ-

l"t'r . arm ouneecl

&amp;meta~.

came desp1te the fact the

Shutdowns are forced in fo-u r states

lb•p! essed stee l mdustr: 1s seektng Wh1te House ,.

support agamst n smg un ports President carter angnl; responded m August "hen the mdustry
announced htgl'IE'r pnces
Sheet steels, used by the auto and appliance
Industries . ha&gt;e been sellmg strongly tn recent
months. but foretgn producers ha'·e been gaining a
larger share of the sheet markets
Wheelmg-Pntsburgh, which ts btddmg for $100
million m vanous forms of government atd, srud the
pnee mcrrase \'111 affeet hot-rolled , cold-rolled and
galvamzed sheet steels - or about 78 percent of lis
shipments
The pnce actwn had been expected, and other
comparues were expected to follow WheelingPittsburgh's lead
Uruted States Steel Corp. Prestdent Davtd M.
Rodertck said two weeks ago cost mcreases dictated
pnce mcreases ·m the near future "

By DAN CHISZAR
United Press International
Striking farmers trymg to
persuade the federal government to guarantee them
·. breal&lt;even prtces for thetr
·.·. products have pursued their
goal wtth sporadic and brtef
of
food
.· shutdowns
dtslnbullon mtddlemen tn
.. Texas, Kansas, lllinms and
Gwrgta
.. Leaders of American
Agriculture , the group
heading the stnke, satd

Stiversville News Notes
Mr a nd Mrs Harold
h nMeter, Columbus. Mrs
'na Van Meter a nd Rtchte,
Heedsv tll e. Leota Btrch
I•1Cal. were Sunday \'tsttors of
~Irs Ada VanMeter
\Irs Lmda Haynes and
d uldren. Newark. Davtd A
Bryant , Dunbar, W Va , Mrs
Htida
Olms tea d, J udy
Bllchanan
and
Dentse
Tal bott. ca lled on Mr and
" Mrs B1ll Bryant and famtly
rhumg the past week
Mrs Betty Ward was
hustess for a Tupperware
part; at her home Thursday
P\ emng
Vtctor Durst, The Plams,
and Robert Rttchte. Belpre,
vtstted Mr. and Mrs R R
Durst. recently
Mr and Mrs Mtke Ev ans
nrtd famt ly \loere Sunday
ca ll ers at th• home of h1s
I.Jrot her , Mr and Mrs Terry
E \a ns
and
daughter
1

Pom er oy

IVIrs Fanme Durst spent
several days last \loeek at the
daughter~ Mr
anrt Mrs. Tllll Wtlkmson.
Sh awn and Kevm, 1n

home of her

Co luinbus
Mr and Mrs Robert Euler
and cht ldren , Elkvtew, W
Va ., and Leota Birch, local,
were diMer guests at the new
home of Mr and Mrs Harold
Roush. Racme. on Sunday m
celebration of Mrs Roush's
buthday
Mrs Barbara Talhott and
Dentse shopped m Athens on
Wednesday
Mr and Mrs Juruor Pauley
and fanuly of Portland spent
Sunday wtth Mr. and Mrs. W.
S Long

EVANSVILLE , lnd (UP!)
The moment of silent
- On the basketball eourt prayer was ind~d stlent, but
sober elders lamented 24 · the toughest moment was
deaths
when UE President Wallace
In the seats were mourners Graves read the list of 24
ll1Stead of cheermg fans.
names. Many in the audience
There were eulogtes and ·wept.
hymns, and there was
"We shall never overcome
weeping. Occasional Silence the loss of these wooderful
may have been the strongest men They are precwus and
statement of grtef. however, Irreplaceable,'' Graves satd.
at a Sunday gymnastum
But he promised: "Out of
memorial serYlce where the the agooy of thiS hour we will
Umversity of Evansville rtse . Out of the ashes of a
mourned its loss in Tuesday 's deSSlcated dream we shaD
29-fatality arrplane disaster. build a new basketball team,
About
4,000
persons stronger, more valiant than
DA YCO REPORTS
attended the servtce m ever before. That was the
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)
Roberts Muructpal Stadiwn, mtss1on of our fallen
The board of directors of the
home court of the umverSlty's brothers Thetr dream will be
Dayco Corporation have basketbaD team. The varSity
declared a regular quarterly team of 14 and tis head coach fulfilled ."
He promised the audience,
divtdend on common stock of were among those killed m
mcludmg !50 or so frtends
12 5 cents per share, payable the crash.
and families of the deceased,
Jan 26, to shareholders of
At least 200 persons sat that the uruverstty wtll break
record Jan 10
qutetly m the stadlwn the the grip of despair to burst
The directors satd Frtday a Aces have used for 2Q years
forth ''more sensit1ve to
divtdend of $1 06 on the $4 25 fully an hour before the 2 p m.
hwnan needs , more resolute
converttble preferred stock services.
m purpose than ever before."
wtll be payable Feb. 15 to
The uruversity has pledged
shareholders of record Jan.
to build a new team m the
Loc~
31
National Collegiate Athletic
POMEROY LANES
Dayco 1s a dtverstfled .
Association's
U!p divtston. It
Sunday Mmers
manufacturer of mdustr1al
had entered DiYlstoo I only
Week of December4, 1977
products
W L this year.
Hot Shots
73 47
Lewts Spry, an NCAA
Sunday Duds
71 .49
offictal,
satd the tragedy
Alley Cats
•• 54
mcluded a personal loss for
Country Bumpk tns
65 55
Team 5
54 66
him,
because Athletic
Team 3
31 89 Busmess Manager Robert W
Men's H1gh Game - Rtck
Marfln 193, Ralph G•bbs, 167, Hudson was a good frtend
E. Lamb, M.D.
Spry announced a $10,000
Ralph Biggs, 161
Women ' s Htgh Game NCAA gtft W UE and satd the
Ann Morrts 175, Sue SEarles
assoctation
hbped the gift
128, Sheryl G•bbs 127
would
encourage
the
Men's H1gh Series - R1ck
Mart in 481 , Ralph G•bbs 472. urnverSl\y's otl'!er frtends w
Charles Searles 440
,
help m this bme of mourrung.
you would not regret it. The
Women's High Sertes ftrst step to a proper solution Ann Morn s 388, Sue Searles
ts to ftrst tdentify correctly 341, luette Martin 329.
Team High Game- Alley
what your problem really ts.
Cats 322, Team 3 and Hot
Because of the complextly Shots, 277 .
Team Htgh Senes- Alley
of this area, I think you
Cats
should try to go to a universt· 3 782 797, Hot Shots 788, Team
ty medtcal center psychiatnc
department That wtll ensure
_ 'l{eek of Nov . 27, 1971 ~ - L
a center Wtth a multi·
Duds
69 43
disciplinary approac't that Sunday
Hot Shots
67 4S
WAS!flNGTON (UPI) can be used if mdicated
Country Bumpkins
65 47
Sales of powdered protem
If you are a candidate for a Alley Cats
60 52
lutve dropped amtd pubhc
46 44
sex change operation, they Team 5
concern over hqllld protem,
Team 3
29 83
wtll put you on fePlale hor·
Men ' s Htgh Game - Rick
and makers of the powdered
manes Often, after takmg Martin 203. Ralph G•bbs alternative feel unfa1r
female horrrlones awhile, 184 Charles Searles 180
treatment by the federal
Women ' s High Game some centers reconunend
government
may be a reason.
Gibbs 142, Rhonda
that the pallent then adopt a ""Sheryl
Gibbs t 37, Ann Morris 135.
Confusion about • the two
life style of bemg a female to
Men's Hlgh Senes substances apparently has
see how the patten! will adapt Charles Searles 513, Ralph contnbuted to dechnmg
lo this. If this goes well and B1ggs 474. Rick Mart1n 460
sales, mdustry offiCials say.
Women 's H1gh Senes the indtvtdual sllll wants to Ann
Morrts 380, Sheryl G1bbs
A dectston by the Food and
make this change, then the 379, Sue Searles 370
Drug Admmtstration to
next step ts surgtcal.
Team H lgh Game- Team
require warning labels on the
The male genitalia are 5, 303 , Team 5, 303. Alley dry and well as hqutd dtel
Cats
2'15.
surgtcally removed, but parts
Team H1gh Sertes- Team
products hasn 'I helped either.
are used m the reconstructton S, 883, Alley Cats 805. Country
A federal mvestlga tion is
process to build female Bumpk1ns 767
under way inU! the deaths of
analomy It should be obvtous
39 people who were usmg
to you that 1t ts easter to
liqutd protein
surg tcally go from male to
"We are coUnting on
female anatomy You can
adverse publicity about liquid
reverse the effecls of female
protems" to help sell
honnones, but reversmg the
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle powdered varieties, satd a
surgery IS another matter. Of and Mr and Mrs. James spokesman for the J B
course! females do Wldergo Ctrcle of New Haven, W.Va., Williams Co., a substdiary of
the sex change to males, but were at the home of Mary Nabisco that makes Gertlol
~he procedure IS more dtf·
Ctrcle on Sunday.
and has- started a new
ftcult and often less satisfacMr and Mrs. Hayman powdered protem product
tory All of this is to say you Barmtz of Pomeroy were at called PVM.
and your doctors both want to the home of Eunie Brinker
Nattonwtde advertismg for
be pretty sure about what ts one evenmg last week.
PVM is to begin at the end of
best for you before you get to
William Carleton, Racine, December.
the surgtcal stage.
was at the home of Eunie
"We wtsh the FDA had
The trachea area (voice Brmker and Betty Van Meter been a little more crisp m
box ) can be shaved so that on Wednesday evening
focusmg on the liqutd
the male neck ts not present.
.Mr . and Mrs. Edson Roush products."
Impotence IS a symptom, called at the home of Mr and
The two diet products lire
not a disease II always Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna vastly different.
deserves medical evaluatton and Wavle, on a recent
Liquid protein ts made
to determme what causes tl. Sunday evemng
from animal hides, horns and
Readers who want more in·
hooves to produce a brokenfonnation on lhls subject can
down protein. A dieter using
send 50 cenls wtth a long,
the product can cut calorie
stamped; self-addressed
intake
to 300 calories a 'ilay.
A thought for the dayenvelope for The Health Let·
Powdered
protein is
ter nwnber 3-12, to Dr. Lamb Gennan philosopher Arthur different. It Is a weight·
said,
m &lt;.are of thts newspaper, Schopenhauer
"lnteDect
is
invisible
to the control product extracted
P.O Box 1551, Radio City Sta·
from dried milk, soy and
man wbo has none."
tion. New York, NY 10019
eggs. Two types are

Bowling

Complex question
II; La" renee Lamb, M D.

lli•:AH DR LAMB - I am a
2!i r ear-old male who has
iiL1E' fl

dmngc

constdermg a sex
f01 a num ber of

y c~~ r~

\

Wha t l would hke to know
JS, JS 1t possrble to take a hor~
mune dr-ug, pill , or whatever
tn 11d m:self of my body hatr
as' well as make me appear a
little :nore ferrumne?
) .. a hze 11 must be a com·
pltcated procedure, but I'm
prepa r eCI to undertake
whatever meas ures are
necessary to fmally come to
gr tps wtth my true feelmgs.
J would apprectale tl if you
would recommend a doctor oc
medtcal center that ts tnvolvl~i m thts area , and a ny tn·
fo mla lwn you mtght have m
tht s area
DEAR READER - It ts
hat d for me to be obJeCtiVe
dhout s uch a request as I am
b&lt;tswally oproscd to any proL!'d urc that mutilates the
human body I am not conVHH.:ed that such pr ocedures
.1r e the best answer for people who ha ve problems of
gender tdenttltcatton J say
Uus reahzmg full well that not
e'" ryone wtll agree wtlh me.
It IS not a moral quest10n, but
a sctenllftc one as to what the
problem really ts and what is
the best solulton I JUSt wtsh tt
were posstble for !he nund
and tls emoti onal contents to
be easily reprogrammed to
enable people to solve such
problems
In any case, you wtll have
to see a psychiatrist No
reputable phystctan wtll treat
von m the way you would likl
to be managed or consider a
se x. change procedure for you
wtless you ha ve had a
tho1 ough psychtatric evaluation, One good reason ts to
fmr' out wha t your real tdenUf rtwn IS, and what ts the
best course ftr you before
elllbarkmg on a program that
you mtght regret later,
egardless of how convmced
; ou may be at present that

•

•

Sunday sumlar action was
planned for this week
"There will be one heck of a
ptckehng,"
lot
more
organizer Ketth Thomas satd
Sunday at na tiona! Amertcan
Agriculture headquarters m
Sprmgfield, Colo
" We·re expechng to
negotiate for cooperation
with major food dislrtbutors,
who, we hope, wtll support
the strike by shutbng down
voiWJtarily "
Picketing Georgia farmers
blocked the entrances to a

Moultrte, Ga , packmg plant coo rdtnate
pickeltng
wtth 50 tracwrs Sunday man acUvlttes statewide
Farmers Sunday wtthdrew
attempt to stop a shipment of
hogs from bemg delivered pickets from a large food
A convoy of six trucks was warehouse m Liberal, Kan .,
scheduled to reach the Swtft allowmg 1t to reswne regular
&amp; Co. plant today The food dislnbution to chents In
farmers S8ld they would try southwest Kansas and the
to convmce the truekers to Oklahoma Panhandle.
honor theu- ptcket lmes, as
Amencan Agriculture Satd
mdependent truckers already trucks of Nash-Fmch Foods
could resume deliveries
have agreed to do.
"We've JUS! about got the today.
"Amencan Agrtculture
state of Georgta closed
down, " srud Jun Parnsh, a feels their goals at Nash·
farmer who is helpmg Fmch have been achieved, "
the group satd " American
Agrtculture
demonstrated
thetr abiltty w stop food
distribution , showmg . what
could happen if agrtculture
Some of that help IS cannot continue production
scheduled Dec. 29-30, at on the family farn1 "
Evansville's mvitattonal
The national boyrutt began
holtday basketball last
Wednesday
wtth
tournament. Southern Illinois partictpaltng farmers saymg
will stand m for the Aces as they would stop producing,
host team to Murray SUite, purchasmg and sellmg
Mercer, (Ga.), and New agncultural products unttl
Orleans.
100 percent panty ts
Those schools will draw promtsed
Parity, the
only expenses for the U!urney government support price for
to benefit UE
farm products based on
Spry
extended
the certain periods m the past, Is
sympathies of the member currently at about 60 percent.
colleges of the NCAA He satd
More
picketing 'Was
the tragedy unfortunately planned today in Illinois. but
was not the ftrst for the Amertcan
Agnculture
assoctabon - "We hope and leaders m Mount Pleasant,
pray 1t wtll be the last."
m., declmed wcite locations.

Gym filled by mourners

HEALTH
Lawrence

Carmel News,
By the Day

•

Weekend ptckets halted all
overland gra m shtpments
from southern Ilhn01s '
largest ~am elevator and
processmg fact lity, Bunge
Corporation's Catro faciltty.
Farmers in Illinots were
trymg to hgure out a way to
halt harge shtpments at CB.lro
at the confluence of the
MiSSISSlppt and Ohio rl vers,
sa1d stnke leader P L.
Parr.
"We mtend to start closing
down elevators and sale
barns within the next week m
central Illinois," satd Wayne
Allen. who farms at Oconee,

Yeganeh satd before
leaving for Venezqela a price
freeze had become necessary
"U! help economic recovery
by the industrial and Third
World consumers" and
because otl from new sources
outside OPEC was already
forcing existmg prices down.
Venezuela and Indonesia
head a facbon favoring a
moderate pnce increase of 5
percent to 8 percent and
radical Libya and Algeria are
pressmg for a steep hike of up
to 23 percent.
Most mformed sources predicted etther a freeze or at
most a moderate mcrease.
In a ny case, all three
groups have pledged to
maintain the uruty of OPEC
and avoid the two-tiered
pricmg system, under whtch
moderates rrused pnces 5
percent and the tnaJortly by
10 percent in the first half of
thts year
Conferenee SQUrces satd
ooe posstble compromtse to
prevent another such split
would be to defer the issue
until July - a de facto SU&lt;·
montlt freeze

WAS!flNGTON (UP!) PreSident Carter wants a
more prectse urhan pohcy
and will not ask Congress w
mcrease federal atd for the
nation's ctties until he has
one, aides report .
Carter apparently ts not
satisfied Wtth the extent of
the policy mapped out w
restore the health of U.S.
cities, an a1de said. The
president has told hts staff he
pljtces priority on solving the
plight of cities as the best way
w cut into the national
unemployment rate,
particularly among blacks.
But Carter wants extstmg
programs unproved before
expanding inU! new areas, the
White House aide satd.
Carter, foregmng h1s

available.
One supplements regular
meals. II can be sprinkled on
cereal or rruxed wtlh jmce.
The second type is
marketed as a diet product,
wtth users urged to eat one
regular meal a day and two
others consistmg of the
powder mixed in jwce or
milk. Total calone mtake
under such a plan ranges
from 900 to 1,200 calortes a
day.
Imtially, the FDA actton
addressed only the liqutd
protem fad. But • 1t later
proposed that warning labels
required on liquid protem
also be required on powdered
protem.
U the decision stands, powdered products used for
weight reduction would have
to include labels saying
"ser1ous illness or death" can
result from very low calorie
protem diets
"Consumers have tended to
asswne that the FDA was
gettmg at all protem
products," said Annette
D1ckmson of the Counctl for
Responstble Nutritton , an
industry-backed group,
Powdered protein makers
want the FDA to drop the
requirement.
No decision to drop the
labehng requirement has
been made by the FDA

Th e evenmg star is
Mercnry.
Those born oo this date are
under the sign of Sagittarius.
Brttish arctic explorer William Perry was born Dec. 19
1190.
'

regular Cabinet meebng, was
w meet today Wtth members
of his Economic Policy Group
4
' to dlSCUSS variOus economic
matters ," a White House
spokeswoman satd The
group consiSts of top ftseal
and domestic advisers.
Carter also scheduled a
meeting wtth Sen. Edmund
Muskie, D-Maine, to d1scuss
economic policy, the theme of
a
luncheon
meettng
afterward w1th various
congressional leaders.
Carter, who will spend
Christmas in Plains, Ga., and
leave on an eight.&lt;Jay
internalional trip Dec. 29,
must subnut a federal budget
proposal to Congress by Jan.
23. He has been trying w
clear his desk of most of the

Game ball goes
to Bum Phillips

LltESTER L. TANN'EHllJ..
Enc&gt; Ed
ROBERT HOEFUCH

City EdJtar
Published dluly elet:"pt Saturday
by Tht Ohio Vallty Publlilhiny
B~lness Offl(.'e Phont&gt;

budgetdetads before leavmg.
The budget will approach
half a trillioo dollars
Part of the budget-making
procedure mcludes setbng up
a list of tlems the
administration will tackle m
1978, and assigning a priority
w each.
Whtte
House
press
secretary Jody Powell, after
a meeting last week between
Carter and black leaders,
said the prestdent dtd not
believe
the
federal
government could buy tis
way out of the urban
problems.
U Carter does not ask
Congress for boosts m federal
funds for ctties 11J1mediately,
he could subtmt a request for
higher funding when he asks

992- 2i56

Editorial Phone 992 zm
Second class postage paid at
Pon.~oy

Ohio

National

adverti!llng represen-

tative Ward • GMfhth Company,

Inc, Buttmelli and Gal.!Agher D1v.
757 llurd Ave , New York, N Y
10017

Sub&lt;leripuon ra\ell Debvered by
earner wherr available 75 cent! per
week 8~ Motor Rouk where earner
lltrvlce not auilable, One month.

~ 25 B) mail U1 Oh10 and W Va ,
One Year f22_00, Sis mootM,
Sll 50
Three months S7 00 ,
Els ewhere $'1£ 00 year S11 monU15
$13 50
Three m on ths, S7 50
Subscnption price Includes SWJdKY
Time!J-Sentincl

~p

now

Congress for supplemenlBI
funds 1n March, 1t was
pomted out
The New York Ttmes
Sunday reported mstders
quoted Carter as saytng,
"Don't tell me we'll spend
more money all around and '
then we'll call tt an urban
policy."
Carter has developed a
reputation for U!king a hard
line on budgeU!ry matters,
especiaDy in areas he views
as wasteful, an aide satd.
Although he has not dtsclosed
any specthcs about the
budget he wtll submit, the
president has indicated 11 will
include htgher spendmg for
defense and sctentihc
research

..c)'',,,,:,:,:,:,:,:·: : ·-:.,' .....·.. ·.· ... ............ ... ... .. ·. ' ...., ' . . . . . : :. ' ........ ····· ... ... ,. ' ,.. ......... ····· .. \&lt;
~-

:•.

·:

·.

HONAKER HI TS FROM OUTSIDE-Kelvin Honaker
(24 ) of Wahama, shoot one of hts two held goals on the
evemng. Trymg to bl()('k the shot Is Meigs ' Ken Young (5)

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON A.REA

Company Multimedia. Inc , Ill
Cow1 Sl , Pomeroy, Oltio 45769

,;j

l

Relaxed living in Batavia about to
change drastically when Ford comes

:;

...

..·:
.,.·

,•:

By RICK VAN SANT
BATAVIA, Ohio (UP!) -All the talk on
Main St. the past couple of days m this southwestern Ohio rural village has been about the
btg Ford plant commg into wwn.
"Big?" Well, residents say 11big" really
doesn't even begm to describe JUSI how h~ge
all this is going to be
It all started up in Columbus tilts week
when Gov . James Rhodes and some Ford
Motor Co. people announced that Ford had
dectded to build a $500 million transmission
plant oo the outskirts of BaU!vta.
And, as if the $500 million construcbon prtce
tag wasn't btg enough, the Ford people sB.ld
the plant would be employmg 3,500 by 1980
and then the governor piled 11 on by figuring
up to 8,000 people may eventuaDy have JObs at
the plant.
Most of the talk around town, of course, has
he en favorable because you just don 'I get jobs
popping up everyday in this day and age.
But some townspeople are quick to add a
note of caution about this btg windfaD. You
see, this little town Is 163 years old and some
people have gotten used to living in a close·
kntt community of 1,800.
Although a lot of residents work in nearby
Cincinnati, they're happy whe able w come
home and gel away from the btg ctty sprawl.
Now, with Ford wheeling in, they're
woodermg just how much BaU!Yla IS gomg to
change.
"This is prohably the biggest thing ever to
hit this area," says Mam St. jewelery store
owner Willtam Stratman. "But I don't think
we really can antictpate just what all is going
w be involved in this.
"Anythmg that creates JObs, you think
unmedtately of its good pomts, but I can see
many, many problems rm sure we'll have
another shoppmg center soon and there'D be
more trafftc and I'm wondering what's going
w happen to our leisurely pace of life.
"I'm a rural boy myself and I just hale to
see the picture change that much. And no
doubt, this IS going to cause a drastic change.
I'm not so sure everythmg about our so-caDed
progressive ctvilization Is all that good.
"I'm JUSI a one-man operation here and I'm
con~nl to make a liVing. I'm not looking for

I

droves of people to come down the Main St. of
Batavta to patronize me. I've been on Mam
St. 30 years and the building I'm in has been
here nearly 150 years. I apprectate things like
that.
"But, maybe all this sounds a little sellish. I
know you have to think in terms of what's
good for the general area. And a JOb
opporturuty like this has got to be important.
"Still," added Stratman, "I'm wondermg
what we'll all be saying about this 10 years
from now ."
The mayor of Batavia also happens to be
general manager of the Clermont National
Bank and naturally from his choice Main St.
perspective he sees good things ahead .
11
The economic advantage is obvious with a
$70 million a year payroll," Mayor Charles
Schaeffer says of Ford's anticipated initial
payout. "It can't help but improve the
economtc climate of the vtUage.
"There are some misgivings that we might
lose our rural, small town atmosphere that
we've enjoyed for years, but there are some
advantages in losmg that. We're going to
become more sociaDy aware, become more
rusmopolitan.
"It's going to take some psychological
adjustment for us, but.111e 're gomg to have to
learn wadjust. Almost everybody I've talked
to so far is all f()l' It and I'm certainly 100
percent for it.
"We're excited and enthused and feel that
Batavta is where the action Is and where the
action will be for the next five or 10 years. We
hope thai F()l'd will just be the ftrsl of many
comparues to move into the area."
The kids are talking about Ford coming into
town too
"About everybody at school thinks it's
great," said high school senior Paul Breving.
"Some of us are worried ahout jobs after we
get out. I'd sure like to get a job helping build
the Ford plant an&lt;j then I'd like wwork there
when tt starta up.
"We should get more population because of
it and I think that's good. There's nothing bad
about more people moving in. More schools,
more places to go. I think tt's going to give
Clermont County a better name ."

Monday
San Otego St at Toledo
Eastern
Kentucky

SAN DIEGO 1UPl I - The
Houston Otlers eouldn t hdve
given the Pittsburgh Steelers
a better Chnstmas present
The Otlers presented Pillsburgh wtth a trtp to the NFI.
playoffs Sunday "hen illey
beat the CutcJMalt Bengols
21-16
The Steelcrs beat the San
Otego Chargers 1()..9, but the
outcome of that game h~1d no
bearm g on t he play off
pt clure When the fmal score
of the Houston~Cincmna t t
game was &lt;mnounccd tn the
fu st quarter of Pittsburgh"s
game w1t11 U1e Cha rger s, the
Steelers ""' e AF'C Central
champ tons

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

In Saturday evenmg's
preliminary contest the Little
Falcons of Coach Lewis Hall
saw a stx-point fourth quarter
lead dwmdle down to nothmg
as the baby Mauraders won
the race for the wtre to
emerge vlctor1ous by a 55-47
score.
After bwlding a slim four
poml margm In the openmg
stanza Coach Ron Logan's
varsity crew went to work
defenstvely to limtl the Whtte
Falcons to just nine second
quarter pomts m buildmg a
confortable 36-22 lead at tn·
tenmss10n
Kenny Young and Chock
Follrod did most of the
damage dunng the first
sixteen mmutes of action with
Charlie Zuspan and Rtck
Barmtz trymg to help the
White Falcons cause.
Metgs blew the game wide
open in the thtrd stanza when
they put 29 pomts on the board
with the locals managmg just
12 markers The cross-r1ver
foe's held a commanding 30
pomt bulge after three
quarters of play at 65-35 with
the fmal period bemg fought
between substtlutes from hoth
teams
Wtth the lopstded score
gomg mto the fmal quarter,
Coach Preece mserted some
of hts backup men one of
which tncluded sophomore
Vmce Weaver who stole the
show by scoring etght pomts tn
less than four mmutes of play
but the lead was to large to
overcome with Coach Ron
Logans crew claimmg a 78-57

Pttls bur gh quarterback
Terry Bradshaw summed up
U1e Stce1er~· apprectatton of
Houston's victory "We gave
Bum Phtlhps the game ball,"
Bradshav. sa1d m reference
to th e Otlers head coach.
The Steelers used a held
goal from Roy Gerela "tth
l H left m the third quarter
to beat the Cha rgers. San
Otego led 9~ at halftm1e on a
2-yard touchdown run by
Clarence Wtlhams and a 3&amp;ya rd held goa l by Rolf
Bemrsehke The conversJOn
attempt on the touchdown
failed
Ptttsburgh 's touchdown
was set up by a 46-yard pass
fr om Bradshaw to John
Stallworth. \\ ho was brought
down on the !-yard line.
Stdney Th ornton earned the
ba ll m for the Steelers
Bradsha w suffered a neck
mjury m the Uurd quarter
and was forced to leave the
game The InJUry was win
descrtbed as a cervtcal
Metgs placed three men m
spram, and the Steelers'
twin
figures wtlh Kenny
quarterback ts expected to •
Young's
23 tallles leading all
play m the playoff opener
scorers
for
game high honors.
Saturday against Denver.
Young was followed by

~~~~~~~~~~~---.:.__ _ _ _ __, Follrod wtth 16 and Greg

-

'Ibday Fred Parham works

Becker with 10
Waharna was paced by 6'1"
senior center Charlie Zuspan

as a technical illustrator.

Be used to work in a foundry.

At the age of 40, he was injured
in a foundry accident, w1able to walk
or rAt urn to his old job. "The first
thin g:· says Fred, "was to regain the
use of my legs . That look two years:·
Then, with only a ninth-grade
education, Fred went to technical
school and took up illustration. He
got the job he holds now as soon as
he graduated. "For me:· he says.
"going back to school was like being
reborn:·
Over a million such technical
jobs are waiting to be filled. And
usually it takes only two years of
technical training to qualify.
If you feel you could benefit by
a technical caree r, take a tip from
Fred: "You can be more than you are.
Write to 'Careers' for a free recordbrochure full of entertaining, unbiased
information that'll tell you how:·

r:f!ll

~~~

• "'"I"" ~........ a~

;r; =~&amp;,.,

"CAREERS"
Hnx 111
Washington, D.C. 20044

"ho npped the nets for 15
markers on 1 field goals and
one of four free throws He
was followed by sophomore
guard Rtck Barnilz who found
the nets on five occastons for
ten pomts.
The Whtte Falcons had a
poor shootmg mghl both from
the floor and from the chanty
stnpe Although field goal
statistics were unavarable
the bend area team shot a cool
42 percent at the foul hne by
convertmg JUSt 9 of 21 free
throws
Meigs CO!lllecled on 18 of 28
charity losses for 63 peccent
In the preliminary bout the
Ltttle Falcons were outscored
by a 2IHi margm m the fmal

Dayton at Loutsv•lle
Potnf Park (Pal at Baldw in

Wallace
H tram at Ashland
Wnght St at lnd tana Purdue

Cedannlle at Mercy (MIChl
Ohm Northern Tourney

Tuesday
Oh10

GUARANTEEI

SAYRE
HARDWARE
BALL-Wahama's
Todd. Rawling sends this
potential field goal through
the air from way outstde
The ball miSsed gomg
through the basket

Complete upper &amp;

lowe~

two days.

$225

One or two day lull

denture serv1ce,
partials &amp; relines

at

Southern

Oak land (Mtch) at Ashlan?:l
Ttffln a t Urbana
Bellarmme (Ky ) at Youngs

Bowlmg Green at lndt ana
Classtc
Ot terbem a~ lndt ana Central
Tourney
Capt~a l Ct ty Classtc
Otuo\ Northe rn Tourney

Wednesday

West Vtrgtnta at OhJO St

BACKCOURT CONTAINMENT- Wahama's Greg Blessmg (40) tnes to keep Meigs'
Ken Young {5) contamed m hts own backcourt Never-the-less Young came away as the
game's top scorer with 23 pomts

Bengals disappointed
a nd they co uld throw
everythmg at LL'3 It wasn't a
good s1tuatwn to be m "
On the Otler s' ftrst
offensive play of the game,
wtde recetver Billy Johnson
ran an end around reverse for
31 ya rds. On every Bengals'
pa sst ng
s ttuat1 on,
particularly m the fu- st half,
Houston sent a linebacker or
defensive back (or both)
bhtzmg at quarterhack Ken
Anderson
" We d1dn 't do anytlung

differe nt," Otl ers Coach Burn
Phtlhps smd after Ins team's
highly satJSfymg 21·16 vtctory
handed the Pitt.sbrgh Sleelers
the AFC Centra l DtvtsiOO
playoff berth Ptltsburgh IS 95 and Cmcmnatt and Houston
ftmshed the season at 8-6.
" We had to bhtz Anderson
We 've always rushed a lot of
people at them, 1t JUSt so
happe ned that the people
rushing dtd a good JOb ," he
satd,
Phtllips see med to spea k
for h1 s team , the New
England PatriOts and the
New York Gtants, all of

Highlanders win
60-58 over KC

fill I.,LACIMI

Nf.W HAVEN,
W.VA.,_

Univ

MethodiSt

HOUSTON
(UP ! )
Members of Jwo NFL teams
stared mto lhetr televtston
sets Sunda y, watching therr
playoffs chances dtsappear
But the Cmcumalt Bengals
had to suff er th10ugh therr
disappomtment m person
"TI1ere was no companson,
e1Lher, I want to tell you,"
satd Bengals rookie offenstve
guard Glen n BUJ noch "! 'd
rather have control of the
SituatiOn and not have to
depend on anyone else. But
havmg lost 1t yow·seif makes
1t tougher ''
quarter whtch turned a stx·
Cmcmnatt, 2-4 to start thiS
point lead mto an etght-pmnl season, had rall1ed to wm stx
loss
of 1ts last seven games and
Fred Smtih, sophomore move mto the env~able
guard for Coach Lewis Hall 's postliiJn of wmnmg a fmal
charges led all scorers wtth 19 ga me Sunday tn the
pomts on mne ftelders and one Astrodome m order to
free throw. Sm1th was the lone capture a playoff spot The
scorer in double hgures for Ch tcago Bears and Ba ltunore
the locals whtle Metgs placed Colts entered the day m the
three men over the mne pomt same sha pe and both barely
the btte
mark wtth Dodson nettmg 16, escaped
of
Ohlinger 13 and Yeauger 12 und erdogs
"It hurt us," satd_Bengals'
Wahama will now have a
rookte
defensive tackle
full week to prepare for thetr
Wtl
so
n
Whitley. " That
next engagement due to the
Houston
had
nothing to lose
cancellatiOn of Tuesday mghts
regularly scheduled meetmg
between the Whtte Falcons
and Eastern The contest will
be rescheduled for a later dale
when the
Eagles reswne
schoolsomettme after the first
of the year
Wtth the cancellatton the
White Falcons wtll be tdle Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Htghlanders
unttl Fnday mght when they Southw estern
journey to Duval to meet the Jumped mto a t7-9lead at the
end of the ftrsl pertod then
Yellow Jackets.
held off a late rally to edge
host Kyger Creek, o0-58
Saturday mght
The game was won at the
foul lme where Southwestern
sank 14 of 30 attempts The
Bobcats hit only etght of 21
The Htghlanders JUmped
off to their btg lead behmd the
htttmg of sent or Larry Carter
and JUntor Jamie .Jordan.
Carter had stx points while
Jordan dumped m four,
However, the clutch pomts
came 1n the fourth quarter
when Mark Carter, a 6-2
semor, came off the bench to
score ftve pomts, two came
on reverse layup
Coac h Ke1th Ca rter 's
Bobcats
began
thetr
comeback 1n the second

NO ftMiliMif

112·2525
126 Main

at

Cleveland 51

town St

For Coach Homer Preece his varsity coachtn g debut
ended in bitter dlsappomlment Saturday mght as the Wahama
White Falcon basketball squad fell vtcttm to the vts th ng
Metgs Mauraders 78~7 m the season opener for the Mason
Count1ans
One shght consolation to the Wahama team mtght be the
fact that for Metgs it wasthetr sixth game of the season while
Wahama was still expenencmg hrst game Jitters

DE\'OTEDTUntE

In Nebraska , Mtke Hanson
of the Omaha Ltvestock
FoWJdatloo satd the farm
stnke has "posstbly had
some effect " Total slaughter
hog recetpts at the II maJor
market terminals were down
Friday for the second day in a
row . Hanson S8ld there would
be a better indicatiOn today
and Tuesday when the bulk of
livestock normally ts sent to
market.
Texas farmers, who brtefly
closed several bakertes and a
meat slaughter plant m the
Panhandle last week, satd
they were pleased with the
first four days of thetr stnke
and slowed therr activity
Sunday to study future plans

Umted Press lnternattonal

BY GARY CLARK

111EDAlLYSENTtNEL

m.

Urban policy must be shaped

Powdered protein
sales are down

..

srud
The move for a freeze was
led by Saudi Arabta, the
United Arab Emirates, Qatar
and Iran, which t&lt;&gt;gether
control more than half of the
cartel's output of 30 milhoo
barrels a day.
In Tehran Suoday, Iran's
Oil Mimster Mohammed
Yeganeh came out with hts
nation's most fortlmght prtce
freeze demand

Ohio college
cage schedule

period Semor forward
George Wtlhs led the way
wtlh etght pomts.
In the second hall, tt was 6-5
JUmor center J on Thompson
pactng the host team
Thompson took game scormg
honors wtth 26 points, 18 of
those came m the second half.
Durmg the fourth quarter,
Kyger&gt;Creek got wtthm four
pomts, but could not over~
come the Htghlander lead.
Wtlhs and senior Fred Helsm
were the other Bobcats htl·
tmg double ftgures with 14
and 10 respecttvely
Pa ctn g the Htghlander
attack were JUntor Gene
Layton and semor Monte
Blanton wtlh 13 potnts each
Carter fmtshed wtth 12 pomts
Southwestern won the
reserve ga me, 33-24
· Kyger Creek ()..3 goes to
North Ga lha Tuesday whtle
Southwestern 3·2 travels to
Oak Htll
CSONKA TIRED
Box score
East Rutherford, N J
(U P! ) - Larry Csonka, the
Southwestern (60)
New York Gtants' $3 million Carter 52 12, Jordan 2 0 4,
fullback satd Sunday he Blanton 5313 Ja ckson 2 3 7,
Lay ton 53 13, Carter d l 9
might not be back next year and
D Baker 0 2 2
"I'm going to talk to Mr .
Kyger Creek (58) -Taylor
Mara and Mr. Robustelb and 022 , Smtih 204 Willi S 70
then make my declSton," satd 14 Helm s 4·2· 10 , Thorn pson
11 4 26 . Westfall J.o 2 Totals
Csonka. "" I've never walked 2s
a sa
out on a contract and I
By Quarter s
wouldn't now, but it looks as Seuthwestern 17 14 17 12--60
if I'm going to sit on the bench Kyger Creek 9 ll 14 15- 58
next year aod tf that 's the ~----•
case, maybe we can work
something out n

HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
ht ghest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Servtce, excludmg
Alaska and Hawau, was 85
degrees at Alice , Tex as
Today's low was 6 degrees
below zero at Ely, Nev

•

whom played the role of
spotlers Sunday He dtsputed
that hts team had nothmg w
play for
"We had a whole lot to
lose ," he satd "We S&lt;:Jtd after
our flrst game m Cmcmna h
that we were betle1 than they
were In order for us to prove
tt, we had to wm today ."
Baltunore ove rtook New
England 30-24 lo wm the AFC
East playoff over Miamt.
Clucago scored wtth le ss than
a mmute left m overtime to
wm the NFC wtid card
playoff berth.
The fallout from what lutppened to Cmcmnati could be
felt m the vmce of head coach
Btll Johnson
"It 's very difftcult to talk, "
he satd "So many lhmgs
didn't go like we mtended
them to go It 's damned
disappmntmg for us."
For the second statght
sea son the Bengals lost a
playoff berth on the final
regula r seaso n weeke nd
t\nderson satd tt hurt just as
much as last year
Johnson, the 5-9 wtdc receiver, dealt the Bengals' hopes
the worst blow by amassmg
263 yards on 14 plays. He
caught stx passes [or 138
yards, nm seven kicks back
94 yards and ran the reverse
31 yards
"1 duln 't try to play any
differently ," Joh=n satd,
"but I dtd want to end the
season well 11
Clncmnatl conU!ined the
kamakazi 01lers' pass ruSh
only a htlle better than U1ey
conta med Johnson Houston
sacked Anderson five tunes
and, until Cmctr~a,ti scored
tis rnly touchdown ea rly m
the fourth quarter, the
Bengals had lost as many
yards passmg as they had
gamed
There was one vmce m the
Oilers locker room who spoke
of an ultenor motive m what
his team dtd. Linebacker
Gregg
Btngham
satd
Cl nctnnall 's 1J '0 victory
over Houston :- "' rh~r m the
yea... ··,as an 0 1le1, victory tf
' -~. •.:ree had not ma:le a

"Call me for
life insurance."
,....---.
........... Like a good netghbor,
State Farm ts there.
Sla!t Farm Lole nSoJ•ance ,:omDI!nv
'io!T'e D ~ tf aoom.na1~n linn·~.

'.

'Wd be preparmg for
the pr ..fs tf the guy hadn't
blown
" l;mgharn satd
" Even L . .tgh Cmcmn-&gt;lt had
nothm g 1o do w th the
mtstake, I van ted to show
them tl.at
are not to be
fooled WI'

Ausltn Peay at Cmcmnal t
M tamt at Purdue
Akron at Toledo
Xavter at Cleveland St
Muskingum at lndtana St
I Pa l
Dyke a t Baldwm Wall ace
Bowling Green at ln d1ana
Class1c
Otterbem at lnd1 a;na Central
Tourney
C:::apttal Ctty ClaSSIC.
Thursday
No games scheduled
Frtday
No gam es scheduled
Saturday
No games scheduled

PLAYERS ARRIVE
ORLANOO, Fla (UPI)
F'londa State players arnve
today, but the Texas Tech
Red Ratders are already m
town, spendmg thetr ftrst day
at a tourist attraction before
begtnning to prepare for
Fnday's Tangerme Bowl
Raiders Coach Steve Sloan
said hts team would prachce
m the mornings for the next
three days and v1s1t tounst
attractions m the afternoons
A mghl pracltce ts scheduled
for Thursday, the day before
the claSSIC

Prevention is the
best policy. . .
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES
You can help cu t down on
cnme losses
losses that
d1re ct ly
affect
you,
whether they happen to you
or not
Take the cnme of arson.
You ' re
pay1 ng
an
1ncreastngly hea vy su bs1dy
for del tberately se t t ires
thr ough you r 1n s uran ce
prem1ums
I nsurance
costs
adverse l y a ffe Cted
burgtanes, robber ies
ca r thefts
plu s
countless C B rad 10s
bicy&lt;les that turn

are
by
and
th e
and
up

miSSing

One thmg you can do IS to
support
program s
prov1d 1ng st 1tfer penalties
for
wrongdoers
and
proposals for st rength ened
en me mveshgat1on e1for ts

·

You can a lso make 1t
tougher for crooks Use
good , strong locks Mark
possess1ons wdh your
socia l secunty number
Our
agency
provtdes
t 1nanetal protectton and
serv 1ce when cnm e losses
occur
but rna ny can be
prevented Tha1's why we
say - prevention 1s th e
beSt pol ICY

DALE C. WERNER
INS.
992-2143

\02

w. MaiO

Pomeroy

-~===~

• THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
DECEMBER
18-24th

SLOPPY JOE
FRENCH

~IES

j'34
•.

TRY OUR

ALL
NEW

HOT
CIDER
DRINK

For Complete lnfonnanon
F&lt;ee, Anywhere 1n Oh10
Out Of S1:11c Ca ll Coii{'C! t6!4) 252 \I HI

1-S00-282-6410

Call

Dr.RooaldE
Dr A J . Stathli ~
Dr C. W. Real Dr. G. J . Stombaugh •
1\\t'

Colurnh u~

Culltudul fnr
11/W

Locust St.
Middleport,
Ohio

frn topy

Dt RntrrY'1

R g •,ler frw your chanc e at as foot Santa stuffed toy
Dra'v1ng Will be Dec 23 at 1 30 p .m . No purchase
necessary

�4-The Dail .. &lt;.entonel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Mooday, Dec. 19, 1977

High schOOi
cage results

"College scores
College 8.nketball Ruulh
By Uni ted Prtss Internationa l

Saturdi'Y

Tournamf'nt RPsuu s
AU . Amer.can C•t v Tourney
Owensboro. K v

Ctlitmptonsh tp
.Valdosta St as 1/1. PST Ga

Consolilflon
l&lt;y Westyn 9S Gt'OloY.n 80
B.t)' OU C lil SSI(

Bilton Rouge. La .
Cham ~)lonsrup
SW La ~8 Oh 10 U 81
consol.at.on
,.._
Grrnblng 65 B •sone 64

B• r m.ngl'l.am Cta ss.•c
Btrm, ngham , Ala .

F la

Champ i on shi P
St. 82 Navy SS
Consolat 1on

Te~e

A&amp;M 106 Samtrd 91

Bluebonnet ClaH1c
Houston, Texa~
Champ i gnsh1p
Hou!.tn 137 N

Te~o.

51 'i'.i

Consolillton
Xav •er 65 R •c e 58

Dayton Cla ss•c

Dayton , oruo
ChamJ;JIOnsh •P
Dayton 65 Ga Teen o3

Con-solatton

Ore 9t Sano ,ego S1 89
Golden Gate Clau'c

San Franct sco. Cal1f.

Champtonsh •P
98 Say lor 91 ·
Conso1a1 10n
Pdc Cal 9J Ida no JS
Kent ucky Invi tat io na l
L.ex j ngton , Kv .
Chjtmp10nSPI 1p
Ky . 10:1 , 51 Jno NY 12
Consolat ton
Prtlnd St 82 , Sedttle 16
Sun Bow l Ct ass +t
El Paso, Texas
Chaml) tonsht p
MemphtS St. 77 , Army 76
Consolatton
UTEP 67 , KaP 51 63
Volunteer Clautc
KnoKville . Tenn .
cnamp ionsh tp
Utah 85. Tennessee 80
Consolation
Tex . Tech 63 Parlmlh 51
East
Amer 1can 78 , R1der 11
Cal P a 97 . LaRoche 56
F OU 75 , 51 Fr~n NY Tl
Howard 89. Va . St 86
Lncln Pa 65 Qe l St 52
Mdlrsvl 63. E. Strdsbg 47
N1ag a.ra 86, can 1s1US 80
Penn 78, LaSa ll e- 75
Pr inceton 68 , Rufger s 57
S't . V ince Pa . 93. P t Pk 83
Scr anton 70, King ' s Pa 61
Seton Hal l 108, CCNY 72
TE'mple 69, Manh aTtan W
W. Chstr St . 81 , Drexel 1 1
Yeshi\la 68 , N J Teen 62
.south
Augusta 93 , Ga. Sthrn 81
Bll armne 103, Campbl ls\11 97
Berea 10 1, Pike\l ille 89
Cl~ rn son 93, Appy St. 88
Eastrn Ky . 107. Ga Coli 65
Georgia d2, La . Tec h 3J
Hrdn Sl mmns 72. N.W La . 69
L ivngstn Sf 62, Mrra y 57
Marshall 108 , Dav 1dson 80
Md 9.s , Long ISland 6J
Nichlls St . 98, N . Ala. 84
N C. St . 106, E Car . 80
N .( .. (har 70, S. Fla . 68
N C Wilm BO, Mer cer 60
S. Ala 87 , Tex . Arl 79
Te)(as 105 , Cen t enory 73
Va . Cmnwlth 73 , Old Dom 67
Va Tech 88 , New Ham p 66
Va Wslyn 111, Br idgwtr 81
W . Ky. 72. Cal Poly SLO 50
San

~ran

Orake \08 N D St !It
Dvk~ 86 Onto Don~rHtn 7J
~erqs 51 18 Stubn.,.J 13
!II St 93 New Orlnl 86
lnd1ana 56 SMU 51
lnd St S I. E M Ch 7~
Iowa 101 0('n.,.e-r M
Kansas 85 51 LQu 5 OS
lo..arnv S! 83 NI'O Om 1 ~
Lmcoln "9 Wn~ Penn S3
MarQIIP 86 BwlnQ Grem 54
M tC h 91 C M tthogan 79
Neb 80 M ISS ISS IPP I 70
Nrthrn Ky 1S AJ...ron 7:1
St'law 100 Geo Vorms. 70
Toledo 76 Loyota 75
w 111 \00 St Jos 79
Yngstwn 68 W Vit Wslyn 61
Sou thwest
Ar l( 51 63 Mo Rolla 51
Cent Ark 81 NE 0"-la 61
Hend£Orson 91 J Brown 88
N Mel( 111 A!slo..a Anch 101
~ M H l ndS 90 ACln'S 51 89
Ok (II, 85- St Mry '$ 7"'
du,ttChtfrl 65 S F AUSln 56
w N M 83 , F"t Lew 1s 65
West
Ar 1z 8.1 Hc.rvard 60
Artl 51 81 LA Sl 76
Cal•f 102 Iowa 51 7)
Colo 78 Nnl"lrn Colo 58
Colo St 101 W Te-x Sf 70
Cretgnton 11 Montana 67
F"~lrtn St 1 ~ Bot se Sl 57
McNet&gt;se 8.1 Hawa ii 71
,\,ont St 101 5' Cloud 90
on o St 19 wash St 1J
ore St 7J. wener St n
Pac Lutn88 St Mrln 's 76
Sf Mry's Ca t 66 , Frsno 55
Sll le Pac 83 , w Mont 61
Sthrn Cal 96 . Lng 8th St 85
So Col Ql, Lubbclo.. Chr is 7.1
UCLA 71_ UC Sta Barn 55
Utah Sl 91 WaShington 85
warner Pac 80, E . Ore 7J
Wvo 100 , Eastern Wash 69
Sunday
East
Geo1o wn 61 . St Jos 55
lnd Pa 7J Bflo St 70
St T Aaurns 98 Domncn 76
SOLlfh
L a SL 83, Tulane 7J

Ada 92 Hard in Nortt'lern 58
Akron N 87 Cle John Hay 52
Al...ron

70

,------------,

:I

Final NFL Sl.indi ngs
By United P.ren International
Amencan Conference

Pa i nesv i lie

Ashtabula
Harbor
59
Ashtabula St John 53
Bella ire St Johns 73 Wheeling

!W Val Linsly 53

Bellefontaine 53
Kenton
Ridge JJ.
Big Walnut JJ5 Col Br i99s 81
Bloom Carroll 55 Circleville

49
Can ton Glen Qak 69 Jackson
&lt;18
Canton Tlmk.en 81 Cuyahoga

\I

lStandings \

S 74 Canton McK inley

Ashtabula 79
R: i.,.erside 63

Pro
ea~t

W L.
10 .s
10 ..
M•am •
New EnQiand
9
NY Jets
3 11
3 11
Buffalo
Central
W L.
lC P ittsburgn
9 ~
C1nc1nnat 1
8 6
8
6
Houston
6
8
Cleveland
West

x 8alt1more

s

T

Pet .

0 7 IJ
0 114
0 .643
0 214
0 21J
T Pet.
0 .643

0

571

0
0

. 571
429

W L . T . Pet .
Denver
12 2 0 857
Falls 65
y Oakland
11
3 0 186
San D1ego
7 J 0 . 500
Chagrin FaJis 83 W ickliffe 49
se-attle
5 9 o 357
Cin Xa'.'ier 60 Oak H il ls SJ
Kansas Citv
2 17 0 1J3
Cle East 69 Perr 'f 65
Na, to nal Conference
Cle Joh n Adams 94 Canton S
East
6•
W L T . Pet .
Col
Mar io n Franklin
88
12 2 0 857
" Dallas
Cambridge 76
. WaSh1ngton
9 5 0 6H
St LOU IS
7 7 0 500
Conneaut
70
Ashtabula
NY G1BnlS
5 9 0 357
Edgewood 44
Ph iladelphia
5 9 0 3S7
Coshocton so Wooster 67
Central
Danville 74 Centerburg 66
W L T Pet .
Dayton Roth 88 Cle G lenvil le
I( M innesota
9 5 0 6.:13
86
v Chicago
9
5 0 6J3
Elyr1a Cath 92 F irelands 70
oerro it
6 8 o .429
Elyria W 64 Brunswick 5 1
Green ' Bay
4 10 0 286
Tampa Bav
2 12 0 143
Feder a l Hocking 76 M iller 66
west
Gene\la 41 i\1\ad ison 40
W L T. Pet .
"Genoa 5~ Rossford 57
:.; .Lo s Ange l es
10 4 0 71 J
Greenan
63
Spr i ngf iel d
Atlanta
7 7 0 500
Shawnee 48
San FrancisCo
5 9 0 357
Guernsey Cath 79 Caldwell 64
New Orleans
3 11 0 214
Huron 85 Port Clinton 77
)( ·clinched di \'ision title
v ·clinched wild card pla)' off
L an caster 76 Athens 66
berth
l andmark Christ 69 M.ar.on
Saturday ' s Results
Eastern 61
Wash 17 , LO S A ng~IE'S 1J
Lockland 67 St Bernard 65 (2
M iami 3L Bu ffalo 1.1
ot)
Mtnnesota 30, Detroit 21
Logan E lm 56 M i llersport 54
Sunday ' s Resu lts
Chi 12. N v Giants 9. ot
Mass illon 63 Canton Cent
Ho ust on 11. Cinc i nnat i 16
Cath 49
Ph il adelph ia 27 , NY Jets 0
Massil lo n Chr ist 67 Kidron
Atlanta 35, New Orleans 7
Central 49
Tampa Bay 17 , St Louis 7
Newbur y 45 Cl e Lutheran E
Green Bav 16, San Fran lJ
42
Balt imo re 30, New Eng '24
Normandy 66 Lakewood 64 •
Dallas 14, Den \ler 6
Pa int Valley 73 Hun ti ngton 60
Seattle 20, Cl eveland 19
Oa~· land 21 , Kan Ctty 20
Pa r kersburg ( W Va l Ca t h 67
Ptttsb urgh 10, San D 1ego 9
Be l pre 47
Playoft Games
Me1gs 7B Wahama 57
f All T imes ESTl
Portsmouth 62 Ch i"ll1 cot he 54
Satu·r day
South Webster 67 North west
Oaklnd at Ba ll, 12 : 30 D.m
55
Pitlsbgh at Denver , .I p m
Summ i t Country Day 67
Monday
Covington (Ky) JA
Ch icago at Dallas, 2 p.m
M inn at Los Ang , 6 p.m.
Tiff in Columbian 56 Fostoria

Vikings
defeated

by Green
Synunes Valley , an 84-&lt;&gt;0
winner over North Gallia
Friday night, had a bad
shooting night Saturday ,
losing to the Green Bobcats,
51-36, in a non-league en·
counter.
Crace and Bradley paced
the winners with 14 points
each.
Brent Millet topped the
Vikings with 12 points.
The loss left SV with a 2-3
record.
Box score:
Sym . Valley 12 8 9 7-36

.M.

46

Van Buren 84 Riverdale 78
We irton (W Va l 77 W in ter s·
vi lle 64
Wheelersburg 50 Col M i fflin

N BA Standings

By United Pres s Interna t ional

Eastern Con fe re nce
A tlantic Division
W. L PeT . GB
48
Ph il a
19 10 .655
Zanes\lille Rosecrans 66 ' New York
16 13 552 3
Newcomerstown 41
Buffalo
1:1 14 .462 5 1 7
Boston
10 Hi .357 8 1 '
New Jersey
7 :13 .233 121 ]
Girls Basketball
Ce ntra l Oh:ision
Ada 130 Ar li ngton 25
W L Pet. GB
Coal Gr ove39 Fairview ( Ky )
WShngtn
17 II .607
34
ClevelnO
16 12 .57 1 1
Soutll Point 56 Iron ton 55
Sa n Anton i
16 13 .552
11 ~
Westlake· 42 OlmSted Falls 3~
Atlanta
IS 13 .536
1
~ew Orlns
12 18 .J.OO 6
10 17 .370 6 1 •
Houston
Green Twp.
10 10 10 21-51
West ern Confer ence
Midwest Di\' ision
Symmes Valley (36) W. L
Pet . GB
Da\l ls 1· 0· 2; Ing l es 4· 0·8 ;
18 II .621
Denver
Midwest
Pa yne 4· 0·8; Wiseman 0· 2·2;
17 11 .607
I~
Chicago
BYU 86, Bradley 79
Miller 4·4· 12 and Flack J.Q,2.
17 14 .5&lt;18 2
M i lw
Capital 6J, lnd Cen t 51
Totals
14
·6-36
.
12 17 .414 6
Kanss Cty
Cle\le St . 81 . Kent St . 65
Olio St 79 Was~ St. 73 lot
Green (5 1) - Crace 7·0-14 ;
11 16 .&lt;107
6
Indiana
Creighton 71. Montana 67
North Carolina 67 Cincinnati
Osworth 1·0·2; Bradley 7·0·
Detroit
10 17 .370 7
Defiance 105, Mnchslr 83
59
Pac if ic Oi.,. ision
14 ; Knapp 3·0·6 ; Moore·J-1-7;
DePau l 83. NrlhWSTrn 79
w. L Pet. GB
Marquette 86 Bowl ing Green
Detro it 103,. Ba ll ?t. 70
Neal 3·0-6 and Waltersl -0.2.
Portland
22 J. .8&lt;16
54
Totals 24 -3-51.
Phoen i x
17 10 .630 51?
Toledo 76 Loyola (I ll! 75 !otl Golden
St
13 16 .448 10' '
Clevela nd St . 81 Kent St 65
Seall le
14 18 .438 1 I
Wittenberg. 57 Hira m .46
LOS A"'nge iS
12 17 .41.!. 11' 2
Findlay 72 Ha nove r 56
.Saturday ' s Re sul ts
Dyke! 86 Ohio Dominican 73
New York 112, Ch1cago 103
A nderson ( lnd ) 111 BlufffO!l
Phila 129, Cleveland 116
GIIT ANNOUNCED
PhOenix 101 , Houston 97
92
Bflo 126, Detro it 122, 2ot
MISSION , Kan . (UP!)
Ferris St 78 Steubenville 73
Kan City 115, New Orlns 93
The National Collegiate Def iance 105 Manchester
Portland 117 , Washngtn 104
lind) 83
Athletic Associalio~ Sunday Capital
Sunday's Result s
64 Ind iana Centra l 51
Atla 134 , Phoen i x 129. 2ot
annoUnced it is contributing . Rose · Hu lman ( ln d) 6 1
Clevelnd 101. Golden St. 95
$10,000 to the University of Kenyon 50
Detro it 117, New Orlns 108
.Kan City 115, lndiarta 114
Evansville to aid the school in WilmingtOn 81 Earlham ( lndl
M ilw 111 , Buffalo 110. ot
meeting expenses resulting 78
Los Ange l es 104. Boston 97
Malone 83 Cedarville 77
Seattle 111 , Wash 109 . ot
from a plane crash that killed Wooster 69 Den ison 53
Monday's Games
.........,._ _ _ _ _ _.. 29 persons last week .
Youngstown St 68 W. Va .
( No games scheduh~d )
WE?sleyan 61
·
Tue sday' s Gam es
Otterbein 79 Ash land 74
Houston et Buffalo
Phoen ix at New YorK
N orthern Kentucky 75 Akron
=
Oetroif at San Atitonio
72
Atlanta at Chicago
I
Adrian (M ich) 81 Hei delberg
Washington at Los Ang
67 .
Boston at Portland
Sa lem ('J.; Va) 80 ~rietta 77
Den ver . at Seattle
FICE HOURS: 9: 30 lo 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
Wheeling 92 Rio Grande 81
NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT 1 Mt Union 84 E cker d ( F i a ) 79
NHL Standings
Grand Valley St 79 Cen tr al St
By United Pre ss International
POMEROY.
.
64
Campbell c onference
Patrick Di vis ion
.
W . L T. Pts.
Ph i ladelphia
21
S 4 46
NY ISlanders
16 7 B 40
NY Rangers
11 15 6 28
Atla n ta
9 13 9 27
Smythe O"ivision
.OPEN
\
W. L. T. Pt s.
Vancouver
10 1:1 7 17
EVERY
Chicago
9 13 10 28
Col orado
8 1:1 6 22
NIGHT
Minnesota
7 20 4 18
St . Lo uis
7 20 3 17
Wales Conference
TIL
Nar ris Di vision
W. L. T. Pts.
8:00 P.M .
Montrea l
20 7 4 44
L os Ahgeles
13 11 s 31
Detro i t
10 15 4 24
Pittsburgh
9 15 6 24
washington
5 20 5 15
Adam !i Division
W L . T Pts.
Ovr blazers . of polyester double
Buffalb
10 7 4 4.4
knit. t e xt urized . wool, or
Bos ton
19 7 s 43
ca mel s hair are avai'labte in a
Toronto
19 6 3 41
wi de range of colors to br ighten
Cleveland
10 18 3 23
Saturday 's Results
up your holiday season .
Cleve J , NY Rangers '2
NY lslndrs 4, Boston I
Philadelph ia 4, Alia 3
TO
Pittsbgh 5, Mon tr ea l 3
Detro it 3. St Louis 2
Buffalo S, Vancouver S
Toronto 7, Chic ag o 1
Colo S, Minnesota 1
To Complete Your ?vttit
wa sh :1, Los Angeles 1
SLlnday's ResLllf s
1
NY Rngrs 6, Detr01t 2
To 1
Montreal 2, Phil a 0
. Ch1cago 3, Atlanta 0
Bos t OII 2, Cleveland 1
Monday 's Games
St . Louis at Toronto
•JOHNNY CARSON
Vancou\ler at Los Ang
•PALM BEACH
Tuesday's Games
Colo at NY Islanders
•SEWELL
Atlanta at Vancou ... er

Ohio college
cage scores

$-The Daily Sentonel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Dec. 19, 1977

Wildcats absolutely brilliant
Uolted Press loternatlonal
with the kind of mental
If there were any doubts as sharpness I was loOking for ,"
w Kentucky 's claim to the said Hall. "It isn't often you
No. I ranking in colle ge can get a team as well~
basketball, they would coached as St. John 's out of
appear to have been its offense, but we did it
disspelled this past weekend. early, and did some things
The Wildcats, who had very, ver)' welL "
Led by center Mike
incurred the wrath of Coach
Joe HaU for lethargic effort ill Phillips' 20 points. Kentucky
earl) games, won their own pla~d five men ill double
Kentu cky
Invitati onal figures and connected on 36 of
Tournament in overpowering _67 shots from the floor and 30
fashion Saturday night by of 33 from the free throw line .
humbling St. John 's (N.Y.I, Phillips, who didn't play in
102-72, to boost their reeord to last year's tournament
bec&amp;use of a suspension,
S-0 .
.
1
' The team is out of the
canned 10 of his 14 shots arid
doghouse ," an ecstatic HaU was named the most valuable
announced to a sellout crowd player in the tournament .
of 23 ,500 foll owing the
"I think it is fairly obvious
Wildcats ' triumph .
th~t they showed they are the
"We put 1t all together, but best," Coach Lou carnesecca
more importantly, we played of St. John's said about !be
1

Wildcats.
In other games involving
the top 10 ranked teams, No. 3
Marquette downed Bowling
Green, 86-54, No. 4 North
Carolina whipped No. 8
Cincinnati, 67..&gt;9, No . 6 UCLA
topped Sanlll Barbara, 71~,
and No. 7 Indiana State
downed Eastern Michigan,
81-72.
Ulice Payne scored IS
points and Butch Lee added
13 in leading defending NCAA
champion Marquette w its
fifth victory without a loss.
North Carolina had to
resort to its famed fourcorners offense lo hold off
Cincinnati and score its sixth
victory in seven slarts. The
Tar H,eels spreBd out their
offense with about se~en
minutes left and lroke open a

Laker·s edge Celtics 104-97
United Press lnlernatlooal
The Los Angeles Lakers
defeated the Celtics Sundav
night, but remained in t~
cellar of the Pacific Division
of the Natioroal Basketball
Associaitoro .
The Lakers, behind a 32point performance by
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar. won
oroly their fifth game in the
last 15 starts with a 104-97
triumph.
Celts' owner Irv Levin and
General Manager Red Auerbach traveled with the team
on its first stop of an eightgame road trip . Levin last
week asked Auerbach to step
ln to rep lace Tommy
Heinsohn as coach for the
remainder of the season, but
he refused .
The game pivoted oo a
showdown between two of the
game's best centers, AbdulJabbar of the Lakers and the
Celtics' Dave Cowens. Both
scored 32 points, but Olwens
outrebounded the Jabbar, J:&gt;12.
"Defensively, it was encouraging, " commented
Laker Coach J erry West. " In
tight games you usuaUy win
with key defensive plays late
in the game. We made them

tonight and we won ."
Elsewhere, Atlanla took
Phoenix in double overtime,
134-129, Cleveland edged
Golden State, 101-95, Detroit
topped New Orleans, 117-108,

Kansas City nipped Indiana ,
115 - 114,
Milwaukee
overtimed Buffalo, lll-110,
and Seattle overtimed
Washington , lll-109.

Hawks 134, Sum 1.%9:
A 20-foot desperation
baseline shot by guard
Charlie Cr.iss with 24 secoods
left in the sec'OC!d overtime
helpert th• Hawks to victory

W

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In the AFC play off s
Saturday, Pit tsburgh , the
Central Champion, will be at
Western Champion Denver
andOakland , thewildeardor
best runnerup, will be at
E as t e r n
c ha m p i o n
Baltimore .
In the NFC playoffs next
Monday , Cen tral champion
Minnesota will be at Los
Angeles, the West cttampion,
and Chicago, the wild card ,
will be at Eastern champion
Dallas.
The winners meet on Jan. 1
for the coroferenee championships and a berth in the Super

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a 99-ya rd drive but the
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Baltimore, C hi cago,
Pittsburgh and Minnesota,
disappointment in Cincinnati
and Washington and much
bitterness in Miami.
Miami Coaclo Don Shula
and hundreds of Dolphin fans
who lit up television and
newspaper switchboards like
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over a call which enabled
Baltimore to defeat New
England, 30.24, and capture
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TOe National Foo tball
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the 3final weekend of the

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WHA Standings
By United Press Inter national
W. L. T. Pts.
New Eng land
20 a 3 43
Winnipeg
17 12 1 35
Quebec
16 10 1 33
Edmonton
IJ 14 1 .27
Houston
11 1d 2 24
Birmingham
1l 15 2 :14
Cinc i nnat i
n · 17 o 22
Indianapolis
9 17 4 :1 2
Saturday's Results
Winnipeg 6, New England ~
Soviets 5, Cinc innat i 4
Sunday ' s Results
Birming ham t Edmon ton 2
Winn ipeg 7, New l::ngland 3
50'-.lie t s 4, Ind ian apol iS 3'
Czechoslov ak ia 3, Hous 2
Monday's Games
{ No games schedll led l
Tuesda)' 's Games
Edmonton at Houston
so ... iets at W•nnipeg
Cze,clloslovakia at Cinci

1

Host Wheeling handed Rio
Grande Olllege a 91-32 noncon ference setback Saturday
night.
Coach Art Lanham's crew
was minus the services of
sophomore guard Greg
James, who is still recovering
from an ankle Injury suffered
In last Monday night 's game
against Walsh College.
The Redmen, now 5-2
overall, were led by 6-li
Ironton Sophomore Dean
Fitzpatrick, who tallied 23
points and II rehounds.
Mark Swain finished the
game with 22 points and Gil
Price 14.
Ed Graham paced the
Cardinals, now 3-5 overall,
with 31 points.
The cards held a 43-33
halftime advantage.
Wheeling shot 34 of 62 from
the field for 54.8 percent. The
winners were a sizzling 23 of

goal, a 23-yarder with 6:33
left, enabled playoff-bound
Oakland to salvage a will
over Kansas City.
Eagles 27, Jets 0:
Ron Jaworski and Wilbert
Montgomery plunged for 1yard TDs in a 17-point first
quarter
that
carried
PhUadelphia past the Jets ill
a steady downpour . The
Eagles sacked New York
quarterback Richard Todd
sq,mething,"
seven times.
The Patriots also were hit Falcons 35, Saints l:
for two key penalties during
Haskel Stanback ran for
the winning drive . One was a two TDs and a career-high
holding call on Raymond 129 yards a nd Steve
Clayborn . which gave Bal- Bartkowski passed foc two
timore a first down on tbe more to carry Atlanla over
Pats' 30, and the other was a New Orleans Saints, 35-7. The
pass interference call, which Falcon defense set a record
gave the Ollis a first down at for a 14-game season by
the six.
allowing the fewest points,
Shula watched on television 129.
in Miami and said he felt Bucc&amp;Deers 11, Cardinals l:
Jones fumbled.
Tampa Bay, which lost its
" .. .It was evident that first 26 games, made it two
Jones fumbled and New wins in a row . Gary Huff
England reeovered.
passed 61 yards w Morris
GOES TO STUD
"I just feel so bad for our Owens roc ooe TD and hit
LOS ALAMITOS, Calif.
players, our coaches a~~d Owens with a 62-yard pass to (UPI) -Dash For Cash, who
their farnilles, after living - set up a field goal th.at wound up with $505,000 in
through the disappointment provided an upset or st. career earnings and probably
they lived through wnight." Louis.
will be quarter horse racing's
Minnesota made the Seahawks 20; Browns 19:
world champion for the
playoffs on Saturday with a
Jim Zorn's !:&gt;-yard TDpass second straight year , will
3().21 victory over Detroit and · to Steve Largent with 52 now go to stud at Frisco,
Washinglm stayed ill the wild secOnds rallied Seattle over Texas.
card race by upsetting Los Cleveland. The Seahawks'
The 4-year-old stallion,
Angeles, 17-14. But the fivewinsarethemosteverby which has been syndicated at
Redskins' hopes died with a secood-year expansion club $2.S million , captured the
three seconds left in overtime ill the NFL.
$100,000
Champion
of
Sunday when Bob Thomas, Packers 16, t9ers lt:
Champions Invitational for
who missed two previous
Willie Buchanon scored on the second year in a row
field goal · attempts in a 29-yard interception return Saturday, winning ·by a
overtime and had an extra to give Green Bay the lead ill length and a quarter. He
point try blocked, hit a 28- the second period and t~ earried $50,000for owner B.F.
yard field goal that lifted the Packers held on to defeat ~n Phillips.
·Bears into the playoffs for tbe Francisco.
first time ill 14 years.
Walter Payton's bid to
break O.J . Simpson 's NFL
single-season rushing record
of 2,003 yards fell well short.
The Bear star needed 199
yards oot got just 43 on the
rain-&amp;~aked,
sleet-covered
field .
Cincinnati needed only to
beat for a playoff berth
Houston but the Oilers came
By MILT~ RICHMAN
up with a superb effort to
UP! Sporll Editor
upset the Bengals, 21-16, and
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . (UP!) -Sin~ he's only 25, Bob
hand Pittsburgh the AFC Thomas can't possibly tell you anything about the way the New
Central title. Billy Johnsoro York Giants out-&amp;ifked the Chicago Bears 43 years ago by
accounted for 263 yard. oro SUddenly coming up with a whole new shipment of sneakers in
reeeptions, runs and kick the middle of the game to win the NFL title ill a swirling
snowstorm.
·
returns to spark the win .
But since he used the same idea himself Sunday, fuUy aware
"call it fate or whatever
but we feel extremely nobody kicks too many field goals with wet feet, the
fortw18 te," said Pittsburgh resourceful, little soccer-&lt;~tyle kicker for the Bears can tell you
quarterback Terry Bradshaw all about how he earned them their first playoff spot in 14 years
after the Steelers edged San and the right to go against the Cowboys in Dallas next Monday
Diego, 1IJ..ll, in a meaningless merely by having the foresight to bring an extra shoe along.
game. "We gave (Houstoo
Thai's right, ooe shoe, not two. One dry shoe was all:J'homas
Olach) Bum Phillips the needed.
game ball." ·
"See this right shoe of mine," he said, pointing to the one
steelers 10, Chargers 9:
respoosible foc his 28-yard field goal, which gave the Bears a
Roy Gerela's 27·yard field 1v.J victory over the Giants with only three seconds left in
goal 1n the third period lifted sudden-death overtime on a treacherously wet, slippery, snowPittsburgh past San Diego. encrusted field. "ll's made of cowhide, a special kind that's
Trailing, 9-0, Pittsburgh ,.hard w soak throug.h and stays relatively dry. I brought it
stormed back in third period along from Chicago on case the weather turned out to be bad
m Sidney Thornwn's 1-yard and put it oo at ball-tinu\ after }he other one I started the game
TD run.
with got all wet."
Cowboys 14, Bnmcos 10:
Thomas' left shoe, the one providing him with such traction
Roger staubach threw two as he could get oro the slushy turf, was completely soaked
TD passes and rookie Tony through also, and the ooly reason he didn't change il along with
Dorsett gained 50 yards wgo the other one was because it still was gripping the ground well
over the l,()()()..yard rushing enough to suit him.
~k in Dallas' win over
The weather wasn't bad at Giants Stadium Sunday, it was
Denver, which left both clubs horrible. or the.76,626 fans who purchased tickets, anxious to
at 12-2.
see whether Ch1cago's Walter Payton could break O.J . SimpRaiders 21, Chiefs 20:
Errol MaM's third field

Sport Parade

-----= ···--·

OPTOMETRIST

" I was trying w get down
when I was hit and I'm not
sure when my knee touched,"
said Jones.
"I hit Jones and the ball
popped out," said Zabel.
"The official said he was
down. I'm not saying there
were had caUs by the officials
but we need to do something
to evaluate matters. Pete
Rmelle (NFL Commissioner)
or somebody should do

More

LARGE SELECTION

Family size room
Good fuel economy
Outstanding ride and handling
Availa ble as 2-door and 4-door sedans
a nd 4-door wagons

The Vikings, who upped their reeord to 4-2, were led by
Franklin Edwards with 18 points and Greg Cobb with 17. The
Golden Flashes, now !..&gt;, were paced by Burrell Mc(;hee with
18.
'
In other games Saturday, it was Toledo 76 Loyola (IU.) 7S in
overtime; Marquette 86 Bowling Green 54; Wittenberg 57
Hiram 46; Findlay 72 Hanover (Ind.) 56; Dyke 86 Ohio
Dominican 73; Ander.50n (Ind.) lll Bluffwn 92 ; Ferris State
(Mich. ) 78Steubenville 73; Defiance 105 Manchester (Ind. ) 83;
capital &amp;!Indiana Central 51; Rose-Hulman (Ind.) 61 Kenyon
50; Winnington 81 Earlham (Ind .) 78; Malone 83 Cedarville 77;
Wooster 69 Denison 53; Youngstown state 68 West Virginia
Wesleyan 61; Otterbein 79 Ashland 74; Northern Kentucky 75
Akron 72; Adrian (Mich.) 81 Heidelberg 67; Salem (W.Va.) 80
Marietta 7'1 ; Wheeling 92 Rio Grande 81; Mount Union 84
Eckerd (Fla.) 79; Grand Valley State (Mich.) 79 Central State
64; and Southwestern Louisiana 98 Ohio University 81 in the
finals of the Bayou Classic.

Wheeling tops R edmen

Today's

PHONE 773-5536

--..
----------r N. w. COMPTON. O.D.

m the Cats for failing wgo after the ball when North carolina
went into its spread offense.
Dayton captured its invilational tournament with a 65-83 win
over previously Wlbeaten Georgia Tech.
The Flyers held a 34-26 lead at halftime and increased the
advanlllge to 14 points midway through the final period. But
Tech battled back to puU within two with 16 secoods left.
The Engineers had a chance to tie the score in the final
seconds but Lenny Horton; who lied Dayton 's Jim Paxson for
game-high scoring honors with 19, missed a jumper with three
seconds showing oo the clock.
•
At Houston, Gary Massa scored 20 points and Nick Daniels
added 19 to lead Xavier to a 65-58 victory over Rice in the
consolation game of the Bluebonnet Classic.
Rice led 32-30 at halftime and trailed by only one, 51..&gt;0, with
6:41 remaining. Then Xavier scored eight consecutive points.
At Kent, Cleveland Slate led aU the way in posting an 81-&lt;15
win over Kent State.

••

992-5776

i
I

i

By GENE CAD DES
stretch, but we didn't go beserk. We were never out of the
UPI Sports Writer
game plan mentally. We hung in there. That was essential to
Ohio Sta~ 's YOWlg basketball team did a lot of growing up our having an opportunity to win."
S.nut-day ought, some 3,000 miles from home
Senior Mike Cline came off the bench w lead the Buckeyes in
After leadiJ1g by'l4 points at halftime, the Bu ~keyes, now 5-1, scoring with 21 points, while S-11 freshman Herb Williams
found themselves outscored 19-1 to start the final 20 minutes added 18 and Ransey 14, including eightin the overtime period.
and trailing. 49-45. But they held their poise, battled baak and
While Ohio Slate came home a winner, eighth-ranked
w~~Ad up With a 79-73 overtime victory over Washington State. Cincinnati came close bul wound up on the short end of a 67..&gt;9
. It w~.s a super.wm for our team," said a happy Coach Eldon loss at fourth-ranked North Carolina. But Bearcat Coach Gale
Mtller. We didn t rea lly play that well although we dld some catlett thinks the best team walked off the court the loser.
things weD . Staying wilh our game plan 'was probably the most
" Dean (Smith ) is a good coach and (Phil) Ford is a super
unportant factor on the game."
player, bull don't think the best team won," said Catlet. ·
The Washington State surge, which overcame a: 43-29 deficit · North Carolina, which handed CinciMati its first loss in
was: helped alm1g by fiv~ consecutive technical foul con: seven games, settled into its four corners sllllllng offense with
verSions by the Cougars. Four o{ U1em came on two bench about seven minutes to play.
tecllnicals called on Miller , while tile other was whistled on
" If carolina had played ball in the final seven minutes
gu4'd Kelvin Ransey .
instead of·the four corners, we would have won ," contended
"J.Iter that rather ·ridiculous episode we played pretty · catlett, unhappy with the officiatinlland a technical foul &lt;Riled
weJ1." said Miller. •· we hurried a couple of shots in that

HUAARD'I
REENHOUII

~ 1!0111!0111!1011!0111!0111!011""' 1!0111!011""'"'"' ""'1!101 " " - - ...... -"""""' " " ' - -i ~lsoOS
Price Good tnru o.c. 23, "n
WhileOuanfitinlJst
W

Bucks battle back to ·win 79-73 in OT

tight gamo lo slap lht
Bearcats with their lint lola
In si• games.
Guard Raymond Town.ld
hit nine for nine from the
noor ID lead UCLA (1-1) put
Sanlll Barbara and !&lt;rWIIrd
Larry Bird, the nation's
leBding IIC&lt;rer, !Dued In 31
jl&gt;lnts to spark Indilma Stale
(7~) to victory IJVf!l' Eaotem
Michigan.
.
In other acllon, San
Francisco defeated Ba)'lor,
911-93, Utah edged Ten-,
85-80, Kansas Wmped St.
111uis, ~. and Maryland
!lipped Long lsi~: · K44 ..

29 at the charity line for 79.3
percent. Wheeling picked off
37 rebounds.
Rio Grande hit 33 of 63 shots
from the field for 52 percent.
The Redmen were 16 of 23 for
69.5 percent. Rio had 38
rebounds . Dan Bise and Gil
Price each had eight caroms.
The Redmen will be idle
until next week's annual
Shrine Tournament at
Marietta . Rio will open
against Ohio Conference
representative Oberlin on
Dec. 28. Rio Grande is
defending
tournament

champion.
Here's Saturday's box
score:
RIO GRANDE (82) -

Blse

3-0-6; Swain 7·8·22 ; Pr ice 7-0·
14; Royse3·1-7; P~elps 1-0-2;
Fitzpatrick 8-7-23,· Johnson 10·2; Gibson 1-0-2; Purcel l 2-0·
4.

TOTALS 33-16-82.
WHEELING
(91)

Graham 11 .90 -31 ; Thompson

4-0-a; Ferguson 3·0-6; Riley J2-8;

Renowicz
5-2 -12 ;
Mu l holland
-4 -5- 13 ;
J.
Ferguson 4·0·8; Harkins 0-5-5.

TOTALS 34 -23-91 .
Halftime score- Wheel i ng
43, Rio JJ.

son 's single season rushing record and whether the Giants
could knock the Bears out of the playoff, only 50,152 showed up ,
meaning there were 26,474 no-shows.
With the field being as it was, Payton never had a chance. He
needed 199 yards to better Simpson's 2,003 ill one season, but
got ooly 47 yards il115 tries, and considering the conditions, he
was lucky to get that much.
Payton dld have a hand ill setting up the clincher for the
Bears, though, by grabbing Bob Avellini's 14-yard swing pass
to put the baU oro the Giants' 11 just prior to Thomas' dramatic
three""Pointer.
Thomas started out the bleak, hone-chilling afternoon with a
32-yard field goal that put the Bears ahead less than five
minutes after the game began, but after Joe·Danelo tied it up
for the Giants with the first of his three field goals, a 30-yarder,
three minutes later, Thomas suddenly went cold.
·His 2J.yard attempt near the end of the first quarter had too
much English on it, struck the left upright and bounced back
onw the playing surface, and he was wide with a 29-yard try
before the first hall ended with the score still deadlocked al 3all.
.
.
That's when be went into the dressing room and changed
that right shoe.
Danelo put the Giants in front for the first time with a J!j.
yard field goal early in the fourth quarter, after which the
Bears went ahead again on Robin Earl's four-yard rush off
tackle for tbe game's only touchdown. George Martin, tbe
· Giants' big defensive end, jumped ill to block Thomas'
cooversion try, leaving the Bears in front,~. and it looked as
if it wouldn't matter until Danelo squared things again with 41
seconds left in regulation time.
But Thomas wasn't through yet, and his last-&lt;~econd heroics
with the help of a dry shoe reminded some old-timers of how
the Giants changed into dry sneakers at the halftime during
their 1934 title game at the old Polo Grounds, and buried the
Bears, 3().13.
"! was conscious of that before this game began," said
Giants' owner Wellington Mara after it was all over.. "!said to
myself, 'Wouldn't it be something if the Bears changed to
cleats and beat us today?' They did put •em on, too, didn't
they ?"
Many of the Bears did. And Bob Thomas was one of them.

NEW HAVEN

BEN
FRANKLIN
STOP IN &amp; SAVE!
OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TIL CHRISTMAS

Discover

ri\BEN _.F...
RANKLIN
liJWe bring variety to life!

.,.~~Ross..:_}- r.
.

ng .deals from you·r

H
A
Fri~,

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PRINTS • ORIGINAL ART • FRAMING
GIFTS FROM $5.00 UP .
Be sure to shop our Jewelry Department!

i:NGEL'S FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

R
D

Dec. 23 and Mon. , Dec. 2'6

/m

\

Christmas Holidays

day

••

.Ytave a nice

Col~

w
A

R
E

HO!

! HO!

Santa Has Emptied His Bag of Appliances
and Power Tools At Cross Hardware.
• Crock . Pols
• Coffee Pols
• Broiler Ovens

• Mixers
•Saber Saw
• Circulator Saws.· 0 $ocket Set
• Bench Grinders

CROSSOpenHARDWARE
Mon. thru Sat.
9:001oS : OO

.71 N. 2nd Ave .

�&amp;-Th~

Datly Senunel. ~l!ddl~pon-Pomeroy. 0 .. ~londn~ ,p,-..·

1~.1~;;

Death toll at
19 in jet crash

-

l.JSBO:-\. Portugal! UPI1
A Chnstmas holiday je-thner

the but tom 1&gt;f the plane ·lut the
• ater and the roof cral'kW
opt•n ··

pickPd up 2.5 s urn,·ors and

"Sl'1lH.'(Ine ga\'e- me a ltfe
Jfll'k~t

Th~

Swiss-eharterw Cara·
1·elle with 52 passeng~rs and
a cre Y.' of fin•, was on,a flight
from Gene\'a, -undershot a

runway at Funchal Airport-

feared by pilots as one of the
world's most dangE.'rous

MIXE BAKER . 15. Rt. t. Long Bottom. baggw an 11
point buck the ftrst day of deer season wtth a gun.

and

to duub

(_JUt

esca pe hatches .

P"' ked up 25

satd the)

NOW

WATCH THE J:l~PER
TOI&gt;IORI&lt;DWI IT'LL

AVAILABLE

ANSWER

AT OUR
STORE

t,WR

ALL

,\

CXJESnCNS )

\.Y

SW'\'l\·ors and 19 bodies in a

rescue op~ratwn watched by
thousands of i landers fro m
the shore.
" fishing boats are all
aroWld 11 the -plane 1 and
pulling people out," an
airport official said. They
kep! up their sea rch today for
the m1ssing.
It was ·the second air
disaster at Funchal in less

than a month . In the first , a
Portuguese TAP airliner
oversh ot the runway and
plunged'off a cliff. killing 131
of the 164 persons aboard on
l\ov . 19.
Pilots complain the airport
is one of the most dangerous
in the world . It stands on a
stretch of land overlooking
the Atlantic with steep bluffs
dropping into the sea on three
sides and a mountain looming
on the fourth .

A control tower official said

the reason for the Sunday
crash was a mystery .
Although it was dark, he said ,
the air was clear and there
was litile wind .

Ubraries in Pomeroy and
Middlepon will be closw fo r
the Christ mas holiday on
Dec. 23, 24, and 26. They will
also close on J anua ry 2 fo r
the New Yea r.
Ot herwise, regular libra ry
hours will contin ue, with
Pomeroy libra ry being open
from 10:30 to 8 every week·
day , 10c30 t o ~ on Saturdays ,
and 2 to 4:30 on Sundays .
Middleport Library is open
10:30 to 5 si &lt; days a week.
New books at the libraries

includ e Kr eskln 's Mind
Power Boo k, Twelfth Ma n in
the Hu ddle, The Lincoln
Con spira cy, The Sund ay
Hangman , My Life With
Elvis, Welding: Princi ples
and Practices and I Am Eve.
IN THE SERVICE
ALAMOGORDO, N. M. Gary M. Russell , son of Mr .
and Mrs. Lester R. Russell of
Mason, W. Ya ., has been
promotro to senior ainnan in
the U. S. Air Force. Ainnan
Russell, an lnstrwnentation
mechanic, is assigned at
Holloman AFB, N. M., with a
unit of the Air Force Systems
Command. The airman is a
\973 graduate of Wahama
High &amp;hool. His wife, Carole,
is the daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Charles Kuhl, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.

" We could see it was

said .

Hospital spokesmen said
most of the survivors - two
of whom were crew members
- sufferro only minor burns.
or other light injuries and
exposure. Others we re
covered by a light slick of oil.
Th e PoNu guese-r uled
Madeira Isla nds are about
550 miles west of Casablanca,
Morocco. The capi tal is
Funchal on Madeira island.

RIO GRANDE COLLEG E and ConunWlity College received a gra nt to aid the college's
accounting program. Left to right are Mrs. Carol Easley, assistant professor of accounting:
Dr. Paul. C. Ha y~ s. preside nt of RGC-&lt;::C;; Wallace McCoy, Educa tional foundation of the
Oh io Society of Cer(ified Public AccoWJtants; Dr. Krishna Kool, associate professor of
economics .
""

Rio .receives cash grant
Certifiw Public AccoUnta nt
with
Swedlow
a nd
Krisiewica. Columbus, said

an associa te degree in ac·
count ing technology and a

the Foundation receives gift s

maj or in acco unting leading
to a bachelor of science
degree.

Wa llace McCoy, fo un·
da tion Boa rd of Trust ees
mem ber , presented the grant
to Rio Presi dent Paul C.

from a variety of industri es

and busin esses , as well as

by Gill Fa•

\

a

NOTICl
Evening Cl ass Starting

WIT!) CHRISTMAS A SHORT TIME AWAY , children
anx iously await Santa's visit. They drea m a bo ut all those
brigh t. shiny toys, hoping Santa won't forget the ones they
especia Uy want. For children there's scar ce ly a joy equal
to what they will haw around the tree Christmas
morning. It's a n experience eve ry child should ha ve. The
S&lt;llvation Army, with the he lp of many community
1·olunteers. provide free toys to mahy families who would
miss the lu.xury of Santa ·s vis it. Volunteers wrap the gifts,
inten·iew parents to determine need , and prepare a large
assortment of toys which pa rents can choose fOr their
children By remembe ring The Salvation Army at Christ·
mas you wil! be r(!rnembering that fam ily who needs a
helping hand. Sharing is Caring~

5.
Enroll now for business
class~s at the colte g~ leveL

SOUTHERN HIUS
SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS

F1SCHER f EU DS ON : Chess champ Bobby Flscher has a
couple of writers on the receiving end of a lawsuit. He is suing
Leona rd and Margaret Zola for invasion of privacy and fraud .
fischer says in Los Ange les he agreoo to be interviewed , but
on ly if not hing was recordoo , and none of the results was
pu blished-without his permission. He says the Zolas publishw
the story anyway, along with a picture of him sitting on a
shower bench, clad only in a towel. Fischer says that's an
embarra ssment only an award of $3.2 million will assuage.

Thomas C. Br eech ,
Director
414-2nd Ave.
St . Sd. No .
0585 8

Attention Dog Owners

ON THE FENCE : Margaret Trudeau and her Canadian

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1978 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH . TWO
DOLLARS fll ,OOI PENALTY IF LI(EN5E IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE .
FOR YOUR CONVEN IE NCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COU RT HOU SE NOW. FEES ARE
TWO DOLLARS (12.001 FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE .

prime ministe r husbam;l, Pierre, have been separated since

May, a nd she's still on the fence alxout the future. Says she, in a
New York interview with People magazine, " Pierre and I
haven't even discussed divorce ... Sometimes I think there's
every chance to reconcile and sometimes I think it's all too
late ." But she confirms tlle rumored turmoil her split
triggered - says, "Pierre was furi ous about the JXIblic disgrace and humiliation I caused .him. If I had gone more
gracefully, he would have been more forgiving .. . He's a proud,
tou~h man. which I like."

.

To obta in license by mail, fili in and mail this form to HOWARD E. FRANK,
COUNTY AUDITOR , MEIGS COUNTY. POMEROY , OHIO.
Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price ot license .
Ma le Dog $2.00-Spayed Female S2.00- Fema le $2 .00- Ke nnel License $10

NAME

ADDRE SS

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GINO'S
OF MASON

Stop In
and Order '

PHONE 773-5536

EXPECTING
COMPANY?
Any Special
Cuts Of
Meat You

~
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.. -

COLOR
Blk White Gray Brindle Tan Brown Ye llow

Breed Fees
Long

Short

If
Paid
Known

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Howard

E. Frank

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County Auditor of Meigs County
license muSt be obtain~d no t laTer tf1an Jan. 20, 1978 to avoid paying penalty . After
this date pena Jty will . be S2 .00 for single tag and S5.00 for kennel license.

SWIFT

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FLORIDA
CITRIS

GLOBE GIRL : Nex t year's Miss Golden Globe is the 26yca r-o ld dsughter of actor Hoben Stack. That doesn't mean
Elizabeth Stack gets a Qolden Globe Award. It means she will
present the awards Jan. 28, when the Hollywood Foreign Press
Association stages its nationally televisro program in Beverly
Hills, Calif.
. GLIMPSES: Oly mpic decathalon champ Bruce Jenner and
forme r Brooklyn Dodger great Roy Campanella highlighted a
1\'ew York benefit Sunday for the Munich Eleven Memorial
&amp; holarship F'und, in memory of the 11 Israeli athletes
murdered by terrorists at the Olympic Games of 1972 .. : The
audience first app!a udoo conductor Anhur Flooler for his
performance in the Boston Ballet production of "The
Nutcracker Suite" Sunday, then sang him "Happy Birthday "
- his 83rd ... Sen. Edward Keonooy, ().Mass., \Viii take a long
just about the whole family whe n he tours Japan and China,
beginn ing Christmas Eve , in a quest for normalization of SinoU.S ..relations ....

~N ···················...........~~·.. 129

NOW

J

.

CARDINAL

Desire,
Stop In

The Daily Sentinel

'

I

'

BOWLS
and
BASKETS

li~~~~ ~~~[:]~~ jf]

F1ITY YEARS FOR OSCAR : Composer Nelson Riddle is no
strange r to the Academy Awa rds. He won one in !974, for the
music in "The Grea t Qatsby," and he's a five-time Oscar
nom inee. Next year , he'll be on the other side of the sho w.
Riddle has been namoo music director for tbe April 3
prese ntation -:- the Academy's nationally tl!levisoo Golden
Anniversary show in Los Aru!eles.

·•,·

Age

NOW OPEN

WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

THES"asOris S&lt;Zst
BUTIERBALL
IN FOODVALU
TURKEYS

FRUIT

992~13 .

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Press Internationa l
SC HUSSBOOMER KID : The nation's fir st family will split
ranks for a while this Christmas. While President Carter and
wife, Rosalynn, em bark on a six-day trip through Europe, ·
da ughter Amy plans to try her hand on the ski slopes at
Crested Butte , Colo. Lillian Carter, the president's 79-year-&lt;~ ld
mothe r, says Amy will do her skiing with Carleton Hicks, of
Brunsw ick. Ga .. an old fish ing buddy of her father's.

You may tak e one or two
subjects. Classe s Wil l nieet
each Monday cind· Thursda y evenings .
Please visit or ca II 440-2239
for infor mation on classe s.

OWNE~ ' S

and was sworn in.

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER • M-IDDLEPORT
GROCERY CARRY OUT

10 LB. AND UP

Holidav"weekerid blackened
by ice and snow last night

peopletalk

Date Changed to January

FDDD STORES

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PlAZA

STORE HOUR5
MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

FRESH

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

In 1968, Norman Thomas,
si xtime soc-i ali st party
presidential can didate , dfed
at the age of 84.
In '1972. the splashd own oi
Apollo ' 17 ended America's
moon exploration program .

Hayes.

McCoy, wh,o is also

In 1974, Nelson Rockefeller
was confirmed by Congress
as vice president after a six·
hour debate in the House . He
then took the oath of office

Pla ns a re being made to
show free films for school.age
children every second Friday
a t the Pomeroy Library
during the winter . These
evening programs will start
at 7 p.m. and last one hour.
Three or four short movies
will make up each program.
The first movie night will
be January 6. The fUrns
shown will be Lentil. The
Lady and the Owl, The Five
Chinese Brothers and About
Zoos . Children and their
parents are welcome. For
more infonnation people can
call the Pomeroy Ubrary at

four -yea r com prehensive

individual CPA 's, which are
usw to help support business
and accounting programs at
many different colleges . .
Acco untants.
McCov said this was the
Ca rol Easley, assista nt first . tu;,e Rio Grande has
professor of accounting and received such a grant.
business administ ration at
The college off ers both a
RG C·CC, sa id t he grant two-y ear program leading to
would be used to provide
professi onal
acco untin g SIDE GLANCES
literature fo r student use and
to update the college library's
cu rr e qt
acco un·t i n g
publica tions.

•HAMS
•VEAL
•SALT FISH
•FRESH
OYSTERS

Holiday hours announced for two libraries

coming in too low and tried to
radio a warning to the pilot
just before the plane hit," he

RIO GRAND£ - " cash
grant, which will be used to
help expand the account ing
techrology program at Rio
Grande College and Com·
mWlity College rRGC-CC I,
hils been presented to t he
school by the Education al
Foundat ion of the Ohi o
Sodety of Cen lfi ed Public

'S

•

COUNTRY CURED

~,·errthing

hnppened and I found myself
Ln tlH? wntt.•r." she said.
Ai least 10 bua(s raced to
the t'ripplt&gt;d · plane, whtch
bobb&lt;.&gt;d on tlir water long
enough for many passengt'rs
Hospnal and harbor off iei0:1 ls

A 25-yrar.old Portuguese
woman on her honl'yrnoon

~o
['C :

s~ud the pth't was telling
P'lssenge-rs to prepart'&gt; for
IJndU11! wht.-n "SudJ.enh· J ft•lt

r rasllt"d mto tht" Al\anu t·
Oc~an off the ~l ade~ru
Islands SWlday. killing at
least 19 people. fishing lx&gt;ats

searcflro today for more.

Judy, Joe and the Ho-lio-Ho
.-,..,::,."': ::&gt;)
C M0N. KID5 ~ BEN l-1t&gt;5
S£:'-1
AN IDEA~ "TELL (,{)JR
uL'1NL1
IV'OTHER AND DAD TO

'S .

.

WE WILL SI!ND A CHRISTMAS CARD

CARD~AL

WITH EACH Gin SUBSCRIPTION

FOOD STORE
-.

"'

2

B 01 .

Carton

CRI$CO

cans

2

29 oz. 89~
cans

.

$ &amp;9

St:tORTENING •••...•••••~.~~·.~~- ••
79~ INN MAID

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1

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VALLEY FARM-GRADE

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CANNED
PINEAPPLE......................

316 oz. 99~

4

BROWN &amp; ~ERVE

CARDINAL BUNS •••••••••••••••••••••••••
MR. BEE POTATO CHIPS •••••••••••~:~:!~·.. 99~

L. J. HARRIS

PUMPKIN PIES
26

oz.

89'

L J. HARRIS

CHERRY PIES
26

oz.

sp9

LADY VELVET

ST OIUS •

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BORDEN
QUART

~0

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&lt;O U' O" 1•0
,

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Fl NAL.TOUat

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EJCplres 12· 24·77

79~

VALlEY BELL
,•

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Great For Christmas or

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r•:__•12-24·77

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S~ES ~IOA!IDI.Al~

�If-The Daily Sentinel, ~1Lddleport·Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Dec. 19. 1917

rHcl:;~H:i;--1 Mandy

: US
·;:
;:;

.
By Helen Bottel

•

•

•

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. Dec. 19, 1977

Sisson installed as queen

i!~ asM:o~~;~·~~.;:~~~!t11h~ H~~:r;t~~C:sm'!~~
~;;
;;;;

CHILD SUPPORT TW().WA Y STREET?

DEAR HELEN :
,
The non.,ustodial mother who wrote recently stated that the
children were ~ving with thei r father and Ius new wife • no
trawnas. no guilt on her part. and no child support pa)'ments
from him. She says she is "laWJched on my career and hap-

Mrs.
62, International Order or Mabel Goeglein and Mrs.
J ob's
Daughters,
in Betty Roush . The guardian
ceremonies held Saturday rouncil is romposed of Kathy
ni ght at the Pomeroy Johnson. guardian ; Bill
Masonic Temple.
Quickie, associate guahlian:
Other officers installed by Lois Pauley, guardian
Lon Wood, retiring honored secretary ; Audrey Wood.
queen , were Jeruiifer Wise, guardian treasurer ; and
sen·ior
princtss ;
Joni Mary Wise, directress of
Murray, junlor princess, music. The associate gua r~
Ruth Blake, guide , and' dian coWJcil is made up or
Susanna Wise, marshal , Carol Sisson, promoter of
elected . officers,
and sociability; Barbara Murray,
Stephanie Radford, chaplain; custodian of paraphernalia:
Julie Byer. recorder ; Brenda Sue Starr. promoter or
Chappalear, treasurer: Lori hospitality ; and Donna Byer,
Woo d, musician; Robin director of finance.
Herald. first messenger;
Carried out in the
Toni
Pope ,
second decorarions for the inmessenger: Dollie Rousey, stallation were the honored
third messenger; Kathy queen's rotors. lavender and
Blake. fourth messenger; pink. Her emblem is the star,
and Zandra Vaughan, fifth her flower the pink carnation,
messenger: Teresa Starr, and her theme, "Faith, Hope
libraMan: Angia Houchins, and Charity." Her motto is I
senior custodian; Stephanie Cor. 13, verse 13. " And now
Houchins, junior custodian: abideth faith . hope an d
Betsy Herald, outer guard; charisty these three, but the
and Jeanna Pauley, irmer greatest of these is charity."
guard, appointed o!fi~rs.
The program included
Also installed were the several presentations of gilts
choir members, Valerie and a tribute to the past
Jeffers, Tracey Jeffers·, honored queen, Lori Wood.
Janet Horky, Shelia Horky, The program was dedicated
Susan Zirkle, Barbara to Mrs . Johnson, Bethel
Cha ppalea r, a nd Cindy gbardian: Bill Quickie,
Parker.
associate guard ia n and
Assisting Miss Wood in the chapter advisor of the Order
installation were Angie of DeMolay ; Tom Edwards.
Sisson, guide; Merri Ault, honorary member of th e
marshal: Barbara Fultz, Bethel
past
associate
chaplain: Paula Eichinger, . guardian. and Knight of the
senior custodian; Irene · York Cross of Honor, and
Barnes, junior custodian ; Paul Darnell, hon ora ry
Lisa Morris, recorder; Laura member of Bethel 62, and a
Hoove r, musi cian; Cathy pasiassoeiate guardian o!the
. Workman, flagbearer ; Paula Bethel.
Eichinger, soloist ; and Laura

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Back to work -

DEAR DR . BLAKER - It a stressful change in lifestyle.
has been 13 years since I gave
2. Hold a family meeting.
up a very satisfying job as a
to your husband and
Explain
social worker to'raise my
~hild
ren
that you need a
three children. While 1 enP' ."
load
, Accept their
lighter
joyed being a mother and
·It 's obvious that she pays her ex-husband no child support.
3.
Abandon
the role of
help.
housewife I always wanted to
Why not ~ In these days of equal rig hl• it would seem onlr fair
supervisor.
As
a
full-lime
return to my career.Three
that she aid in the cost of raising her children, just as do
housewife,
you
probably
ago
I
finally
took
the
months
thousands o! divorced lathers across Ute country.- MARRIED
plunge and now I am a b- made c'frtain that evcrytlting
~HN
solutely
miserable. I have got done . But now you shou ld
DEAR MA."' :
.
terrible
hillldaches
and trou- try to overlook - not oversee
Her husband mav not have asked for child support, but other
-household chores.
ble catching my breath.
men who asswne. responsibility sometimes do ; and if cir4. Act like you are definiteMy
husband
and
children
('umst.ances warrant. thev "ln their cases.
do help me around the house ly goi ng to continue working
It 's only !atr that if an-ex-wile is a solvent wag~arner lO r
but Uta! doesn't help relieve -despite your inner doubts.
otherwise moneyed I she should provide financial aid for her
the pressure. My husband This might help your family
child[en no matter with whom they live.· H.
tells me to quit, that I was accept your new career and
happier when I was at home. stop any e!!ort.s to get you
DEAR HELEN :
I want to keep my job but I "ba'ck home ."
Your conunent to C.E. regarding the cha racter of her fiance
5. Identify specific stresses
can't stand the stress.
illustrates the attitude I and other women in the same situation
in
your. life. Break them down
DEAR READER - It
ha,·e been up against for too long. You asked :
into
resolvable - or !II least
sounds
as
though
you
are
"Would he have gained custody of his son had his wife not
-components.
manageable
ready
to
quit
your
job.
Clear·
been a rWJ..aroWJd who didn't want responsibility'!''
If you are
For
example:
ly
that
would
give
you
imThe idea persists that in a marital dissolution, the wife
you are
troubled
because
mediate
relief
from
the
automa tically will have phrsical custody of the children,
behind
in
social
work
,
pressure.
But
don't
do
itnot
unless:
yet. Your career was rewar- literature, spend one evening
1. She is a run-around ; 2. An alcoholic ; or 3. She is mentally
ding 13 years ago and it still a week in the library for the
unbalan ced or ph) sically handicaJ?ped.
might prove to be. II you quit next two months. If you ar1 am none of these. Allowing my "two pre-teen children toreMANDY SISSON
now without understanding rive home too late to have
main with their father was a difficult decision made lor sound
the reasons why you are dinner ready on time, teach
reasons with their abilitv to weather this very great crisis in
upset. you may handicap the children to cook - or go
tlletrliv~s firmly in mind: Please, Helen !! - LINDA
yourself with the feeling that out !or hamburgers once a
DEAR LINDA:
you are no longer week. II you are too tired to
1 stand accused. Though the case in point was true : the man
employable. Change itself in- help your children with their
gained custody bec&lt;~use he.proved in court his wife was. not a
duces stress and you certain- homework, ask your husband
proper parent. I shouldn't have implied all non-custodial
ly have made ij dramatic to get progress reports from
mothers fit that label.
in your life in the last their teachers. Maybe they
change
Ten lashes with your typewMter Mbbon, Helen ! - H.
three
months.
Why not give don't need help.
·- Polly Cramer
Remember that it 's ex·
yourself
six
more
months
DEAR HELEN :
before deciding how well you citing - as well as stressful
My sister and I are just a few years apart, both in our 40s.
-to res ume u career.
have adjusted?
She thinks I'm an old Iuddy-duddy, and I say many mothers of
In the meantime, these sug- Remember too that you are
teen-agers try over-harrl to compete with them on clothing.
Christmas. When receiving gestions may help : I. Have a now prepaMng your own
POLLY'S PROBLEM
language, manners, etc.
Examples : she writes on the outside o! her envelopes,
Dear Polly- Several years gilts of small appliances such physica l examination. Find future lor the time your
"Babe," then the complete address; or "To the Honey of Col,
ago my ·husband painted a as watches, toasters and even · out what is causing your children leave home to build
lege, " or "To the Sexpot at (address)" or other colloquialisms
picture lor me in oil paint and toys, irrunediately take the headaches and shortness or their own lives .. Write to Dr.
or endearing phrases. I say this just confuses the mailman,
it is soiled as it was never address of! the box or breath. Don't asswne it's just Blaker in ca re of this
and might embarrass the addressee. An inside envelope with
placed behind glass in a warranty ca rd and put it in stress. There is a direct but newspaper, P 0 . Box 489,
the endearment is better. She pooh-poohs my idea. Who's
frame . Can you tell me if this your address book. When complex relationship . bet- Radio · City Station,. New
•
Cont
ributions
toward
the
Bass.
can be cleaned and, if so, repairs or parts are needed ween stress and many serious York, N.Y. 10019. Volwne of
right'- MRS. R. E.
of
gilts
lor
the
purchase
the address is close at hand. diseases. One doctor who mail prohibits personal
The meeting there was how ? - MARY K.
DEAR MRS.
elderly
a
nd
shut-ins
were
treats people undergoi ng life replies, but questions or
R, E.: You'd win the "proper etiquette" vote. But look, Mrs.
preceded by a·holiday potluck
DEAR MARY K. - Indeed - LAURELLE.
DEAR POLLY - All year c rises suggests monthly general interest will be
E .. your sister likes her breezy style, just as you prefer a more made in lieu of a gift ex· at the home of Barbara and an oil painting can be cleaned
traditional approach to life. Why not accept one another as dif-, change among the members Jerry Fields. Dessert was and often the change is long I keep a special·no[ebook checkups for a year !ollowin~ · discussed in future columns.
when the Golden Rule Class served at the Bass home. astoWJding but it is not a job with WISH BOOK printed on
ferent but eqUal and get o!! the "reforming" kick?· H.
of the Pomeroy Church of John and Holly McArthur had to be done at home. Take your the outside. Inside there is a
Christ met recently at the the devotions. Mrs. · Fields painting to a professional for page lor each member of the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley presided.at the meeting. Mrs. cleaning. Your local art family with the name at the
Eileen Bowers will have the museum will doubtless give top. Any time any of us thinks
next meeting, with Mrs . you the name. of a trust- of anything we would like to
Carolyn McDaniels to have worthy person in your have (regardless of use,
price, etc. ) we list the item
devotions. Christmas or- vicinity. - POLLY.
with
color, size and
naments
made
by
Mrs.
Bass
DEAR
POLLY
I
have
Bernice Bede osol were presented to each of the two Pet Peeves . The first is whereprice,
A Christmas dinner party Symphony" by Mrs. Ben
it can be bought under
was
held at the Meigs Irm Philson: "A Chri stmas
members. A game was with the fliers that come the right name. II at some recently by the Bend 0' the Message" by Gretta Simpplayed with McArthur advertising sales and give no time we receive one of the
Gtfts. for patients at the is sponsored by the Mid·
son: "A Star of Bethlehem "
River Garden Club.
Athens Mental Health Center dleport Garden Club and the
.~
lo)fl
winning the prize. .
dates for starting and closing. things as a gift or decide we
by Mrs. Esther West: " Bits or
For
devotions
Mrs.
Ben
were brought by members or Middleport Amate~r Gar~
I.!JUO'iJ
Attending besides those The other concerns packaged no longer want it the item is
Philson read an article on Wisdom at Christmas Time"
the Middleport Garden Club deners. On the committee are ·
named were Bill ~Daniels, meat that has all the excess crossed out. This book is most Peter Marshall entitled by Mrs. Ernest Wingett; and
Dee . 20, t971
to their recent Christmas Mrs. Roller, chainnan ; Mrs.
Janet
Venoy ,
Naomi fat and skin tucked on- useful lor reference when
"Christmas Wl!lh lor All or
party held at the home of James Arnold , . Miss Judy Overlook no opportuni ty lhiS Ohlinger, Evelyn Smith, .derneath the meat so the · buying birthday. Christmas " Imagination and Creativity
You" by Mrs. Grlrrun.
i
J
;1
God's
Kingdom."
Memor any other gilts. It is so
Mrs. Carl Horky.
Arnold, · Mrs. Rita Hamm. co m1ng yea r to gam addi11onal Thelma Osborne, Pauline bu.yet cannot see it.
There was a ~ift exchange.
When the elasHt: on my much nicer to give something bers gave a personal ChristThe meeting with Mrs. Mrs. William Morris and lo:nowledg~ 1n vour · Chosen KennedY, and a guest, Eva
field Prope r preparat1on cou ld
mas tradition in res-pQnse to
Horky was preceded by a Miss Nellie Zerkle.
1a1er lead to advancement
Dessauer.
pantyhose is too tight .J..?."t one knows is really wanted. roll call. The program,
turkey dinner at the Crow's
A dessert course of candies SAGITTARIUS 1Nov .23-0ec.21) 0:&lt;.~.
U::OU:::U.O::Ii!.J!"S'e· through the elasti
Y the -MRS. F. M.
DEAR POLLY - My "Christmas ls for Everyone"
Steak House. The program a nd coo kies prepared by He lpers may be hard to come
seam and it does ot run and
0
fo r the evening was presented Sheila and Janet Horky was by If you tr eat them diSdainfully '
is much more comfortable. husband's lunch hox always was given by Mrs. Bert
with
each
member
Grirrun
Also this helps mark the front stays neat, since I use those
b)· Laura Hoover, pianist, served. Mrs. Sibley Slack today . Remember. Santa keeps
elves ber.ause he makes
small oblong boxes that presenting her favorite
and her mother, Mrs. Wen- presided at the silver coHee hiS
them feel importa nt . Find out to
' and back. - MATILDA.
Christmas poem or readings.
Mrs. &lt;:urtiS l:autnorn en·
dell Hoover, vocalist , with se rvi ce.
The
table whom you ' re romant rc ally
DEAR POLLY - As the jewelry comes in for
"Christmas
These
included
tertained
with a dinner in
organizers.
I
~ut
his
gwn,
selections including· "Ring arrangement was of holly, SUI led by sendmg for you r copy
holidays approach I make a
by
Mrs.
Ruth
Everywhere"
honor
of
Mrs . Margaret
toothpicks
,
acid
tablets,
~It,
the Bells," "I Wonder As I pine and red candles made by ot ASiro-Graph Le ller . Mail 50
calendar for the small im·
Barnitz;
"St.
Francis
and
the
Nesselroad,
Reedsville
pepper,
sauce,
~tc.,
in
them.
cenlS
lor
each
and
a
long.
sellpatient
children
that
they
can
Wander, " " He Shall Feed His Mrs. Fred Kessinger . Guests
Story"
by
Mrs.
Christmas
Postmistress,
on
her biradores
sed
.
stamped
envelope
MONDAY
comprehend.
For
Christmas
I
MRS.
B.
M.
.
FloCk," and "S weet Little were Miss Hoover, Mrs .
"Christmas
Eileen
Buck;
thday.
Guests
were
Mr. and
lo
Aslro·Graph
,
P.O.
Box
4~9
.
MEETING
OF
the·
Meigs
make
a
Santa
face
with
a
Polly
will
send
you
one
of
Jesus Boy. "
Hoover , Mrs. David Bowen,
Radio Ci ty Slalion, N.'i t00t9 . County Churches of Christ
Members excha nged gilts and Mrs. Paul Haptonstall. Be su re 10 specily your birth Men 's Fellowship, Monday, · paper chain that has each day her signed ,thank-you news- Carol" by Dickens, Mrs.· Mrs. Nesselroad, Mrs.
srgn
numbered on a link in the paper coupon clippers if she Wilson Carpenter; " 'Tis the Phyllis Larkins, Mrs. Eralter M.os f ;over judged the
CAPRICORN tDec.22-Jan.19) In 7:30 p.m. at Zion Church of chain. Each day tl)e children uses your favorite Pointer, Season to be Frantic" by nestine Hayman of Long
most o, ·, nding wra pped .
Andrew
.Cross; Bottom, Mrs. Dorothy Cashdealing With yOungsters today
Christ .
remove the link marked with Peeve or Problem in her Mrs.
package to 0o the one brought
"Christmas
Customs
in
Other dolllir, Mrs. Ray 'i oung, Kila .
you could run in to a bailie ol
JOLLY BUNCH Sewing that day and they can COWl! column. Write POLLY'S
by Mrs. Malcolm Roller.
CoWJtries"
by
Mrs.
James
wills.
If y-ou lee! your position is Club, Monday night at 7 th
·
·
1' k
d
k
and Joe, Mrs. David Smith
POINTERS in care of this
Final plans were discussed
tair and just . st1ck to your gun s.
e remammg m san
now
"
The
Christmas
Diehl;
RACINE
Students
of
the
and
Deedee, Mr. and Mrs.
AQUARIUS (Jan .20· Feb .19) p.m.Q' p. with Mrs. George how many more days until newspaper.
ro·r •.he Christmas lighting
Smith, Darlene Barton
Garth
Racine
Elementary
S..hool
Schedule domest1c chores, es· Hackett.
co .. test for Middleport
making
a
grade
of
"B"
or
and
Alison and Abigal
pec1ally
unpleasant
ones
.
early
TUESDAY
Village. Judglng will take
in
all
their
sdbjects
to
in
the
day
.·
Otherwise
you
'll
CHESTER
COUNCIL
323,
above
Cauthorn,
all of Reedsville.
place tonight at 6 p.m. when
never
quite Catch up .
D
ht
f
Am
·
6
"
Mr.
and
Mrs. Garth Smith
be
listed
on
the
honor
roll
lor
the judges will be taken on a
PISCES (Feb.20-March 201
aug ers 0
er1ca, '""
second
six
weeks
grading
recently
visited
with Mr. and
in
patient
at
Grant
Hospital
and
Mrs
.
David
l&gt;arst
Christmas projects were
Check carelully anylhrng 1n p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
tour of the town. The contest
Mrs.
Howard
Young
of Paden
period were as follows:
Columbus.
durlng
a
meeting
of
·
following
a
dinner
at
the
planned
writing before you send it off Members to take a covered
Grade 1: Tarcy Beegle, today . You could err through dish and their own table S&lt;:r- the Hearthstone Class of the Steamboat Irm, Racine.
Mrs. Paul Smart reported · City, W. Va. The Smiths and
.Shawn Diddle, Chris Jewell, haste , and change your in- vice. $2 gift exchange.
Mrs . Willis Anthony for the nominating com- Youngs also visited with Mr .
Middleport First Baptist
GROUP II, United Church at the home of Mr. presided at the meeting mittee with the officers now and Mrs. Dennetb Durm and
Elizabeth Smith and Melanie lended meaning .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Presbyterian Church, MidVan Meter.
opening with a polem, " Have se..Ving to continue another Mr. and Mrs. Joe Congrove of
When shopping today , be
Grade 2: Angie Bostick, aware
a Good Day.'; Darst had year. They are Mrs. Anthony, Beaver Falls, Pa., and Mr.
ol your bank balance . dleporl, Tuesday night at the
Annette Cardone, Patrece You have an unfortunate predi· home of Mrs. David Cwmndevotions on the theme "How president; Darst, vice and Mrs. Russell Buckley of
Circle, Marty Cleland, Tina lecti0!1 for spending too laYish· ings with Mrs. Paul Hapto Keep Christmas" ending . president; Mrs. Freda Milton New Brighton, Pa., and Mrs.
Sloter, and Joy Stobart.
with prayer. A card had been Hood, .s ecretary ; Milton Gladys Benson of Fairview,
ly.
tonstall c&lt;rhostess. Mrs. Carl
TAURUS
(April
20·May
20)
DoH
ky
t
ha
d
Grade 3: · Legina Hart, mestic situa tions will not be
sent to Herbert Gilkey, a Hood, treasurer, and Mrs. Pa.
0 ve evotions, Bior
Mr. and Mrs . Delbert
Heather Hobbs, Matthew exaclly to your liking today , but ble study book to be comSmart, cards and flowers.
Bissell
and chlldren of
Jewell , Deborah Murphy , they're not as bad as you may pleted, $2 gift exchange, and
The class will assist in the
Columbus
spent a weekend
Lisa Pape, Richard Parsons, make them . Curb &lt;mpu lses to thank offering to be taken .
nursery during January.
Rachel Reiber, Diana Simp- oYerreact .
Mrs. Allen Hughes will be the with Mr. and Mrs. Don
MIDDLEPORT
W[)GE
son, Tamara Theiss, Tamara GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Norfor
January, Brewer and Timmy.
A holiday potluck was held teacher
malty you·re not one to keep 363, F . and A. M . wlll meet at
Mrs. Ermaleen Johnson
Wolfe, and Wendy Wolfe.
February
and
March,
and It
by the Laurel Cliff Better
lhrngs to yoursell il something 7:30 Tuesday night at the
Grade 4: Lori Adams, Dixie annoys you . Today you could Middleport Masonic Temple . . Steve Eblin hosted a recent Health Club at the home of was decided that there will be has returned home alter
....
meeting of the Light and Ufe
Dugan, )\Iandy Hill, Lisa be frustrated because yo u ' re
Mrs. Marjorie Goett Friday no class meetings durlng the being a patient at a
WEDNESDAY
,
Men 's Fellowship of the
--.·'.
Charleston, W, Va. Hospital.
Parsons, Kelly Rizer. and too secretive .
evening. Mrs. Dello Curtis next two months.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) How
XI GAMMA MU Chapter, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist bad the blessing.
Mrs. Llnnle Crary has
Rebecca Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. Darst served
Grade 5: Lois Ihle, Alan liberal you are with a dollar Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will Church.
d~ssert course following the returned home after being a
a
The
the
program
Christwill largely be governed meet Wednesday night at the
Prayer by the Rev. Fioyd
patient at VeterallS Memorial
Crisp, Sandy Deem, Sandy today
·
by Ihe company you keep or home of Mrs. Jennifer Ander- Shook opened the meeting mas readings wer.e given by meeting.
Hospital, Pomeroy.
Harden, Debra Holter, David who you /eel you have to keep son. Mrs. Judy Crooks and
Attending
were
Mr.
and
the
members.
Mrs.
Polly
TRACY PICKETT
and devotions from the lOOth
'
Powell, Lori Simpson.
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mr.
TURNS ONE - Tracy
Psalm were given by Mike Eichinger read "What and Mrs. Yfillis Anthony, Mr.
·
~~;(~~ly
23-Aug.2
)
Today
you
·
Mrs.
Debbi
Buck
will
present
2
Gnde 6: Chris Hobbs ,
Christmas
Is"
;
Mrs.
Patty
Michelle Pickett, daughter
ACTOR DIES
Lind: Proffitt, and Laren may be in for a rude awaken ing ~e cultural report ~nd there Wright. The financial report Hysell, " What Christmas and Mrs. Harold Chase, Mr,
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
when you discoYer the world is will be a secret stster ex
was
given
by
Edgar
Van
CHICAGO
(UP!) - CapWoll ,
ma rching to a dillerent change. CiHtostesses with Inwagen. Plans were made Means to Me"; Mrs. Amber and Mrs. Edison Baker, Mr. tain Hook iB dead. Cyrll '
Pickett of Letart Falls,
and Mrs. Paul Smart, Mr.
drummer lhan you are. Chan.ge Mrs. Anderson will be Mrs. for the men to stencil the 'Lohn, " The Night After
celebrated her !lrst birthand Mrs. Milton Hood, and Ritchard, who charmed
Christmas"
;
Mrs.
Mildred
day on Dec. 13 at the home
. PARTY PLANNED
~7~~~e;~ug. 23·Sepl. 221 Hear- Carol McCullough, Mrs. names of the church on the Bowen, "Christmas Is" :, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. David Darst. millions of chUdren with hls
of her parents. Attending
PPERS PLAINS_ The say in/ormation . co uld upset Carolyn Grueser, and Mrs. new chairs. Prayer by Nonna Hysell, "Christmas
television portrayal of the
TU
were Mr. ond Mrs. Charlt'll
you needlessly today . Don ' t Sue Zirkle.
Clifford Jacobs closed the
villainous
pirate chief opSON BORN
Community Club members, push the panic button till you ·
Michael, Chuck and Becky,
meeting which was followed Blessing/' and Mrs. Goett~
posite
Mary
Martin's Peter
"Shepherds Heard.''
firemen and their families know th e fact s.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Triplett
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
by group singing and refresh·
died
SWlday
at NorthPan,
Members exchanged gifts. of Richland, Va. are an~
will have a Christmas party . LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct.23) You 'll
PROGRAM HELD
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Roush
ments.
Others
attending
were
western
Hospital
in
Chicago
Wednesday night at6:30 p.m. be oul ol your elemenl rn Joint
Mrs. PattY Hysell and Mrs. rlt&gt;Wlcing the birth of a son,
Sunday evening the armual
and Cindy Roush, Letart;
at the Tuppers Plains fire ven tur.e s today il you 're in- Christmas program was Uoyd Wright , Ernest Powell, Gilmore won the game Gregory Michael. The 10 of. cardiac' arrest. He was 79.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Pickett
James Gilmore, Larry Clark,
d vo lved with someone more agprizes, and Mrs. Iva Powell pound, three ounce Infant was
statlon. Meat, potatoes an
gressive tha n yoo He could presented at the Laurel Cliff and Otto Lohn.
and ·Linda, and Regina
won
the door prize. Mrs. born on Nov .. 16. Mrs. Triplett
drink
will
be
furnished
and
make
you
a
sacrificial
lamb.
Free Methodist Church with
Shaffer, Crown City. Gills
Goett
served Christmas iB the former Judy McKnight. Mrs. Franklin Triplett,
those
attending
·are
to
take
a
SCORPIO
(0ct.24-Nov.22J
De136 ' persons attending.
were presetlted to the
cookies
and
candy during the The couple have another son, Hollywood , Fla . Greatcovered
dish
and
dessert
and
cisions
made
under
pressure
Recitations were given by the adult and senior choirs,
honored guest. Sending a
th
eir
own
table
~serv ice . today will not be your best. nursery,
evening.
The
Goett home was Brian, age three. Grand- grandparents are Mrs.
primary, 'in- and a skit by the teen class.
gilt was Mory ADD HudStall before commttllng yourt
decorated
for the parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lllllan Gress and Don
extensively
F ~milies with children are O self unti l you have time 10 think termediate, and teen classes. The closing prayer was by the
dleston . Refre shments
holiday
season.
Leon McKnight and Mr. and McKnight, Rutland.
take
a
gilt
lor
each
one.
it
over
There
was
special
music
by
Rev. Floyd Shook.
were served.

Give him the
TIMEX®of .his life!

The
SP€1D€L

Use Our C.&gt;nvenient Lay-away Plan

VILLAGE PHARMACY

THE TRULY EXCEPTIONAL GIFT

.with

Only a perfe ct diamond c:an rei ect ma x1mum beputy
and brillance for lnstlllg pnde find satis faction . W1th
your Keepsake . you w1ll rc ce1vu a wr1\tcn guarantee
of perfect clan ly. l1ne wt1t1C colo r .:md cor rect moder n
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and protection aga1nst loss Keep sake. th ere is no
finer diamond nnq

• CHAIN BRAKE
AUTOMATIC OILING
• ANTI -VIBRATION

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Goessler's Jewelry Store

Middleport, 0 .

New Haven, W. Va .

SANrA NA.

The Speidel OigJtal Watch •s an
extra special gilt Because 1t's not
just a gitt ot time, it's an elegant
gifl of jewelry too.
There are 2 women's !.CO's, with
I he time always sttowlng. Both are
a unique blend ot delicate jewelry
and sophisticated electromcs,
The Speidel Oig1 ta1wat ch Isn't 11
\1me you look a look at one?

Time will tell yo11 it's a TIMEX ®!

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main St.

992 -2164

Pomeroy

The store with All Kinds of Stuff .

Pomeroy, Ohoi

992·2960

-&lt;

..........

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Middleport, Ohio

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'

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RUTLAND,

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..

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Reedsville
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Christmas·pr(!iects planned

Eblin hosts
men's
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..

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You'll teet good
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Museums clean old art

SoCl•a1

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Contributions made
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POLLY'S POINTERS

Mrs. Horky hosts ASTRO·GRAPH
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THE ALL NEW

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Potluck enjoyed

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RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rutland, Ohio

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" Remembers" how long to defrost. " Re~.embers" h o~
long to coo k with split second acc uracy. Rememb~rs
to shut itsel f off and ca ll you for dinner. Th~n the t1mer
actually " r~members" an,d

displays th e

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...•

�I!)- Tile Dailv S&lt;&gt;ntinel. Middleport -Pome r oy. 0 .. Monda). De&lt;· 19. 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD

CHARGES

TELEVISION'
VIEWING

U Words or Undtr
C.uh

J day
2daJ'1
3da)'1
6d.lys

1.00
l.l&lt;l
1.10
3.00

Notice6

Eadl word 0'\fti' Ulll! nununum lS
...or4a it 4 cents per word prr dly
Ads runmnc othrr- than f."Qfl5a"Ulin
dlly• ...W b. char-Jj,ed at Uw l dl~

......

1n memoey, cant ct Thaw and
ObitiW')': I Cftlts per r.·ord. II 00
n'W'Iunwn. Cash in a dv~

Mobile Home saioes and Yard salr;5
are ~ only Wlth cuh -,nth
crder. 25 ~nt charxe for ads carry·
in&amp; BoJ,: Nwnber ln Clrt rX Ttw Sentinel.
'The Publi!her

the nghl
to ~it or rto)ect any ad! dee11lt'd 00.
jectlona l. Tbe Publlshtr w1ll not br
rtir-l"'ml

~b~ (or I1'IOn

Lhan ont' lllC'(N"·

re::t inRrtlon.

Sto;A TE A WAY
ANNOUN CES
Chr1~1mos
Party
f tr
Dec
13rd 1 30 10 00 roct"S p1 11N
bollor.:m~ N~w Vee r s E~e Pa r
ty Sar Dec 3 1st 7 30 12 30
hots horns
nol ~emol..ers
E-very one \Vi! lrome
Open
Wed
Fo Sot mtes 1 30
10 00 Avo •lo b l~ for pn . . ote
part 1es M on
lues
lhurs
n•ghr10 or Sot or Sun ah ... r
noons
Phone 985 392Q or
985 9'V96 for resel\0110n~
WANT£0
LAND lor hunru1g
I 100 cue~ East ol Pomeroy T

Pey ton B o~~: 1273 Charleston
W Vo ' 2531S
~ACINE
llllUed

?hoot !192-ZI!I&amp;

CU N Club has d1scon
gun shootmg unt.l Jon

B 1978

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

REWARD FOR ony mformorron
leodlflg to conv•c tron ol anyone
breokmg mto my propertv or
cor Nor"'o w.lson Pomeroy ·

Help:Wa

-

.

Mondoy
Noon oo S.turday

1

tP.M.
tnt day before publication
Sunday

JQ76 ASPE N ful powe' w•ll trade
lder
cor
tolo.e over
for
payments 94'2 b110

COAL l.mestona ond colnum
chlor•de and cak1um bru\t&gt; lo1
duit con1rol ond spec1ol m1x1ng
salt lor lorrne•s E· cei!IIOI Soil
Wor k s Morn Stree t Pomero v
Oh•o or phor)E, CW2 JBQI

1Q71 MERCURY MON TEGO Good
(.Oildi iiO!l I I 300 Call alter S
pm 9.49 2540

19o6 FORD ST ATI ON Wagon
-good $hope; .$295 992-5786

sx 007

1975 VEG A GT Good cond1t1on
Sandy Sorgl:'ont , 992 7312
1970 CHE VE lL MAL IBU lq7J
Cen tur y 949· 21 .. 9

B u~ek

y~

WI TH o 1970 V W
mo'tor S275 or be st o ffer Coli
&lt;&gt;&lt;l1 3866

1966 V W

19ba CHEVHLE 327 Damaged
rear end Runs good $250 Ph
985·3378

SA WY ER FOR aulomohon sow
mdl Good pay Po1d ¥OCOt1on.
Coll61 • ·667 .3131

olPM.
Fnday afternoon •

Office Hours : 9 A.M . t o ·r

. . . _Jac k W. Carsey , Mg r .
.....

Phone992 - 2181

RA Y S USED Fur rliture Addison
Oh10 Ph 1 367 ·0637 Oak ro&lt;k ·
mg cha rr SJ5 4 oak fol ding
chorrs $5 each. Gas heater
$20 Coff ee tab le $3. Gas
ronge SJS Fuel o• l heorer $35
Ches t , 530 N1ght sta nd $10
POtt ery and gla ss ware .

~ ~-=
AUC liON SALE . ever y l ues and
Frr at 7 pm New Ond used
merchar\dise at Ohio Ri\ler Au c·
t 1on Me igs PlolO M 1ddlepor1 ,
Oh1o . Home Ph on e {304)
773·5471

Let Pomerov Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-op water

softener, Model
Now Only

AGENCY :
Federa l
In surance
Adm i n i s t r eH on,

HUD

ACTION :

Prop osed

r ule .

SUMMARY :
Technical infQrmat ion or
comments are sol ic ited on the
proposed base (1 00 y ear l
flood elevations l isted below
for seleCfed loca t ions i n the
Vi llage of M idd lepar1. Me ios
County ,oh io.
These base {1 QQ.year ) flood
elevations are the bas is for
the flood pl a i n management
measures tl'lat t he co m·
mvnity is reQu ir ed to either
adopt or show eY idence of
being . already in effect in
order to qu.,litv or rema in
qualified for part ici pat ion in
the National l=lood Insurance
Program { NFIP J.

DATE S

Th e per iod for comment
will be ninety (90 1 days
f ol l owin g
the
second
pu ,b l ication of thiS · propose d
rule in a newspaper o f local
circul a tion i n the above ·
named community .
ADD RE SS ES :
Maps
a nd
Other
in for m at ion
showing
t he
detailed outlines of the floOd ·
p'rone areas and the proposed
base
{ 1QQ .vear )
f lood
elevafions are a va i lable t or
rev i ew a t Vil l age Ha ll.
M iddlepor t. Oh i O. ~
Sen d comments to : Mayor
Fre d Hoffman , Vi llage HaiL
237 Race St reet . M idel leport.
Ohio 45760 .

FOR
FURTHER
!~ FORMATION
CONTACT o

Mr .
Richard
Kr i mm 1
Assistant Administrator
Otfice of Flood Insuran ce
{2Q2l 755 ·5581 or Toll Free
Li ne ( 800 ) 42.4 .8872
Room 5270
451 Seventh Slr~et , SW .
Wash ington, D . C. 20410
SUPPLEMENTARY
IN FORMATION :
The Federal I nsura nce
Administrator gives not ice ot
the pr opo sed d eterm inat ions
of base ( 1QQ . yea r ) f lood
eieYat ions for the V i llage of
M i dd l eport , Ohio., in ac .
cordance wi1h secll_on 110 of
the F lood D isaster Pro tection
A ct of 1973 (Pub . L . 93 · 234), 87
Stat . 980, w hic h add ed secti on
1363 to the Na t ional Flood
Insurance Act o f 1968 ( T itle
X II of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1968
(P u b , L. 90 ··UB L 42 U .S.C.
4001 .4128 ,
and
24
CFR
1911 .4la l. ·
These eleyations , tog ether
wi t h
the
f l ood
p le in
management
measures
eau ired by Sect Ion 1910.3 of
·•he ;:~rogram regulat ions , are
the
minimum
t hat are
reti 'J ired . They should not be
c onstrued to mean the
community must change any
eKist ing ordinan ces that ere
more stringent in their flood
pla i n
management
reQ uire ments . The com ·
munity mey at any time
enact str ict er requirements
on i ts own , or pursuant to
pollc i es established by other
_ Federa l. St~te , or regional
ent ities . These proposed
elevations will also be used to
calculate the apprOpr i ate
flood in su ran c e premium
rates tor new buildings and
their contents and for the
second layer of insurance on
eK iSting buildings and their
co n tent!. .
The proposed bas e (100·
year) flood elevations for
selected locations are :
Source of F"looding - Oh io
R iver
L ocati on lntera ti on of
Second Street and Mill Street
E le v at ion , t eet, Nat ional
Geodetic Vertic a l Datum 576 .
Location - Intersection ot
E l m Stree t and Broad Way
St reet
Elevat ion , teet, Nat ional
Geodetic vert i c a l Datum 576
.
'

"I12) 19, 20, 21c

CASH pa rd for oil rno kes an d
models o f mobile homes
Phon e or eo code 614-413 9531.
TIMBER Pomeroy For est Pro·
ducts. lo p pnce lor s1ondmg
sawtimber , Coli 992·5965 or
Kent HOnby 1-·U 6 -8 570
COINS, CURREN CY tokens old
pockei watches an d chains,
s1lver end gold . We need I Q64
and old e.r s1lve r co•ns . Buy . sell .
or trade' Co il Roger Wams ley .
7~2 · 2331

OLD FURNITURE , 1ce bo.:es brass
beds . 1ron be-ds , elc . com plete
households . Wr ite M . D M ~ll er
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh1 o or call

992 -1760
NO ITEM' TOO large or too smal l.
W 1ll buy I piece or complete
household . New , used . or on l 1·
ques. Mar tin's Furn iture , 20 N.
2nd St., M1ddleporL Phone

CASH FOR Jur')k Cars. Frye s Tr uck
and Au ra Wrecl..er Servi.ce .
Phone 742·2Da l or Pennzoil
Rutland 742 ·9575 .

New Co ·OP water and
softeners, model VC -SVI.

J~UCK

CAPS $199 up. Truclor
cornpers ? Don 't mi ss our
spec ials I See them tado-,. at
Codner 's Campers on Ra inbow
Rrdge . Off Rt . 7. take Meig!&gt; 28
to 32 to Bo shon and ta llow
s1gns . Owner Rober t Codner
long Bo ttom . Ohio .

Pomeror Landmark

9. -Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
~ Phone992 -2181 _

21 FOOT TERRY 1976. Equ ipped.
992 ·7066 .

CUSTOM FRAME hitch l or late
model Che11r olet or C .M, C.
tr uck . Q92. 7066 .

MIXED HAY . $1 .25 bale 1.3 1
row Powell plant se ller i $200.
1-cyl. Chevrolet mo tor, 4·speed
3 AND 4 RM . furnished and un
tr uck trans mission . 247·219'2 ._
furnished opts. Phon.e 992 5434 .
USED REFRIGERATOR and electr.ic
~love .
Alm ost new 12.:12
FOUR ROOM S end both . A dult~
linoleum
~2 - 6030 .
anytime
only . No pels . 'V92 -5908 .
offer 5.
COUN TRY MOBILE ·· Home Park .
Route 33. north o f Pomeroy .
Lorge lots . Coli 992· 7.479.

WIL.l PAY cosh for good gun s.
rnini ·bikes . motorcycles go· COUNTRY HOME . remodeled .
kor ts. tract ors tillers bench
carpeti ng , 3 or 4 bedr oom ,
tools , or what hove yo u, Will
modern kitchen . 2 bath s Iorge
e¥en buy br oken guns for
f ish pond , scenic and pri ..ate.
ports , extra barrels . e tc. Fife 's.
About 4 miles west o f Harrison Rt. 7 South , Moddleporl .
ville , Ohio toward Oe• ter .
992·7494.
Deposit req uired _Rent $150 per
mhnth . For information , coli
AUTO BODIES and scrap metal .
502· 439· 5331 between 7 om and
Rider's Sal va ge . 992-5468 .
10 om , Mon . throug~ $ot.

1 BEDROOM trailer , adu lts only_.

9'12-3324 .

CAMPER . $600 .. Also . ho rse
trailer , $4 50 . Phone (614 ) 698·

REDUCE SAFE &amp; fos t w ith GoBese
Tablets &amp; E·Vop "woter pills" .
~3~2~90~·~-=~~~~~c-­
NelSon Drug.
EcoNOM Y TRACTOR with all ol·
tochments . l ike new . asking

INTME
COMMON PlEAS COURT,

12250 . Phone [614 ) 6QB·3290 .

PROBATE DIVISION
MEIG_S COUNTY, OHIO
IN
THE
MATTER
OF

APPLES. FITZPATRICK Or chords.
St ole Route 689 . Ph one
Wilkesville , 669·3785

COURT , MEIGS
OHIO

COUNTY ,

Accounts and v ou chers of
the
fo l low-i ng
named
t iduc iarie! haye bee r. f iled In
tt1e Probat e Court , Me igs
County , Oh i o , for approya l
and seltleme, t :
CAS E NO . 21163
F ina l
Accovnt of Mar•or ~ e M .
Walb urn , Gua rd ia r1 of Dana
R . Ha mm , a n inc om petent
person .
CASE NO . 19365
Eight h
and Fina l *ccounl of Joan
Wolf e. Guard i an of the
Guardianst1ip
Estat e of
Christy K . Jones , a Minar
CASE NO . 21834 F irst and
Final Acco unt of Robert R .
Re inhart , Ad mi nistra tOr of
the Estate of William Porter
Reinhart, De cease d .
Unless except ions are fi led
thereto , said ac co unts will be
tor hear i ng bef ore said Court
on tt1e 17th day of Januarv ,
1978. at wh ich time said
a cc ounts will be cons idered
and continued from day to
day until f i nally disposed of .
Any person interested may
f i le wrilte n exceptions to said
a ccoun ts or to matter s
perta ining to the execution of
the tr ust , not less tha n fiye
days pr ior to the da te set t or
h ear ing .
s . Mann i ng 0 . W ebs t er
JUDGE
COMMON PLEA S COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS CO UNTY , OHIO
( 12 J 19, ltc

NOTICE OF SALE

Manning D . Webster ,
Judoe
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Divis ion

112) 12 , 19, 27 , 3tc

•

PlAN O TU NING · Lohe Daniels .
New phone number , 992·2581 .
If no answer , co i1992·2082 .
WILL DO typ ing . Monu!&gt;cripts,
statis tical . r esurrles , etc: Call
992 -3827 ..ewen ings after b ond
weekends .

fi!UGS , WAll H o11gi ng ~ and
ofgons . Ni ce for Christmas .
Reo t.o nabl e. Coli 992.22 • 4.
1976 FORD F·250 Custom . 17 .50 •
14.00 tire5 · winch . Onl y 14,000
mi. Headers. C8. Tope deck
Over 53 ,000 in extras. Serious
calls only after 12 noon

Offers will be r eceived at
the offices ot Fultz and
Knight, AttOrneys at L aw ,
P om eroy
Nat ional Ba n"B ul ldlng , Po meroy , ' Ohio ,
until Wednesday , December
28, 1977, at 10 :00 O'Clock
A .M ., for the sale of the
Frieda Faeohnle res idence ,
loc afed at 50.4 S.. Th ird
Avenue, M l ddleport , Oh io.
Se a led offers may be sub ·
mitfed or offers may be
submitted at the ti me set
forth above . The r ig ht is
reserved to reiect any or all
offers . The residence Is a t wo .
story, three . bedroom. on e
and one . half · bath fram e
house, with gas cenfral heat
and a separate garage .
Bernard V . Fvltt
Executor. Estate of
Fr ieda Faehn le ,
deceased
(11 \ 19, 20 , 22 , 24, '11 , 5tc

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

.-..;

Phone 992·2181

WILL DO wo rk on· Dotsuns . Some
po rts f or sole . Call after . 5:30
pm . 742 ·2097 .
WILL

BABYSIT

IN

my

home.

992-6309.

8 &amp; S MOBI LE HOME S. Pl. Plea·
sent , W. V o. beside Heck 's.
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
bedroom
1973 Do rion lA .: VJ 2 bedrOom
1972 Victor ian 14 x 67 3 bedroom .
2 both
1972 Coven try 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 x 60 2
bedroom .
FIREWOOD .. spi lt ond deliyered .
$45 o cord . Al l hardwood .

843-2Q33 .
CHRI STMAS TREES for sole _ Main
Street , Rutland .
1977 DODGE l(. ton Club Cob .
Auto .
Pr ice d re asonably .
949·2801 .
WILL PAY co sh for guns , go.karts ,
mini and motorcycles or what
ho"'e yoli . See od under wonted
section Fife 's. 992· 7494 .
GOOD USED cha in sows Or wi ll
trade l or who! ho "e you. Fife 's.

9'12-7&lt;94 .
FIREWOOD · seasoned ~a r d ·
. 'fYOOds , split aMd deliyered.
741·2131 ,
COLLECTOR BOTTLES . seals· on -

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands.

· Pomerov LandmarK

9a -.tack W. tarsey , Mg •.
.Jiil Phone 992 ·2181

NEW

TRI · LEVEL

NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 borhs.
oil .elec. , 1 ocr'e , M iddleport;
dose to Rutl and . Phone 992·
7481 '
SMAll form fqr $Ole . 10% down.
owner financed . Monroe Co un ·
tv. W . Vo Phone (304) 772·

3102 or (J04 ) 7?_::
2·__:3;::
12::.7.c_.~~-

Mason , W . Vo .
COUNTRY for rr lond wi th sedud·
NEW YAMAHA guitar wilh case .
ed woods , .J.lo1er and good pc ·
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
(614) 667 ·3920 ._..
~"':-"-::":-:'='-"'=·-~-.,.-:c-:-' · $1. 000 down . coli (304 ) 772(;ARRY·OUT 6'Y. Beer and Wine
3102 or (304 ) 772.3227 .
Store. Hilchln' Post., 564 locust
Street , Middleport , 992·3152 .
POINSETTIAS . S3. By Twin City
Shrine Club. Clifford Hill Form ,
1st hou se abo ve R.ocine Dam .

~27 . 500 .

2 APARTMENTS --

3

rooms a11d bath up w ith
efficiency down . Located in
town nea r stor es . Want

on ly S9,600 .
ON RT-. 33 - 6 room block ,
w i th J bedrooms . ci t y
water , natural ga s furna c e
an d a l m ost
an acre .

SELL

-

New 3 bedroom home in the
woo ds with 2 acres , full
base m en t with garage .
Equ i pped
kitchen ,
e)(cellent condition and
loc.at lo n .
Red uced
to
S27 ,000 as a real bu y .

HAY FOR SOle: O;chord Gross,
olfollo· mixed A· l quality , Iorge
round boles, $25 each. Orchord ~
grass m i)jed hoy, 1st and 2nd
cuttings , square bole~. $1 .50
each. Straight olfolfo square
boles , $2 each . Royal Ook
Farm ,
Pome r oy .
O hio .

6 14 -985 -33&lt;1 .

General Contractor!.
Phone 949·2801
or 949 -l: tl60

'

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

FREE ESTIMATES

" SINCE 1947

No Sunday Calls Please
1l ·21 · 1 mo.

12 11 1 mo.

Let The Opening

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

BOB'S UN"bLSTERING
"--.n~
TRIM
SHOP IN RACINE
Be the opening of the in ·

Service~

•rom the ._,..... Trvd!. « ht'"-•
h4•tof to

c-•.

door season tor you with
· your old ~urniture re upholstered in beautiful
warm colors &amp; patterns
from Bob ' s. H you are
looking for saYings it will
pay you to pay us a visit .
Located in back of the Sew
N ' Sew Outlet On Main St .,
Raci'ne , 0 .
11 10 1 mo .

Henderson

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
slop by
stop

ftfli}N't ie)lt

iMfructions .

~

Ia HARIMARE
MEIGS PLAZA

HERE'7 LOOK!~
AT 'IOU, KID !

Middleport, Ohio
ll ·9·tf c

IIXIIt 3, ' - · _0 . .

LUSTYS

,.-._HOLEIJ UP

Blown
lnsulltion Stnic•

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Fin~ncinl

Save 30 pet. to 50 pel.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
WHAT A GIFT! Christmas
is coming &amp; you ca n be the
Santa of the ce ntur y . This

$26,600.00.
SANTA CAN -- Come down
the chimney into t his
home 's hearth centered
I ivi ng room . 1112 stories, 3

Bdrms . Only $14,000.00 .
GIFT WRAP - thi s ni ce
li ttle 3 Bdrm . home .
.Basement, n ice kitchen &amp;
carpeting.
A SK IN G

LARRY LAVENDER
Syrac.ne, Ohio

HOWERY AND
MARTIN Ex ·
covoti ng , sep t ic systems ,
dozer , backh oe . dump tr uck
limestone, gra.,el , blacktoP
po11 ing . Rt .• 143. Phone 1 (6 1.4 )

698-733 1.

c::-c":""-c--

PULLINS EXCAVATI NG . Complete
Ser vi ce . Ph one 992· 2478.

SAVE ON
CARPETING
Candy Stril&gt;
Rubber Back
Regular sus
Save 14.88 Sq. Yd.

992 -2259--IJ92-6191
'SIX ROOM hou se. all electric ,
~orpeted , cor port . $16,000 . Ar·
row Camper , $600 . 9'V2·7885 . 1P
om to 6 pm . No Sunday ca lls.

12 and 11ft. width Carpet . ,
rubber back.

14,88

21.3 ACRE S ON leading Creek
Road . 992·7066.

so, vd,

Reg. S6.95.nol installed
30 rolls of carpel in stock.i
Good selection all on. Ylo.
InStalled with padding, no

extra to pay.

room, carpeted throughout, a II rooms
paneled, carport, built-in kitchen . 5 min .
drive to Pomeroy, Middleport or Mason.
This home located on Union Ave. , 240 fl .
lront. along highway. Must see to
appreciate. Shown by appointment only.
Selling lor $28,500. Call 1-614-992-5306 .

:

...

Call/42-2 211
TALK TO
WENDE~L GR.ATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-22' 1

EXCAV A Tl NG , dozer , backhoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hotfie ld , Bock
Hoe Serv ice ,
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 742·2008 .

HOOF HOLLOW Horses. Buy, sell
trade or train. New and Used
saddles. Ruth ReeY es. A lbony .

·(614 ) 6Q8-3290 .

BA THROOMS AND Kitch ens
remodeled . ceramic tile. plum·
bing . carpent r y, and general
maintenance . 13 years ex ·
perience. 992.3685 .

MERRY CHRISTMAS!
FROM ALL OF UL TO
ALL OF YOII
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
RY KATHY &amp; LEONA
ASSOCIATES

6 yr. old home. 3 bedrooms, large living

GOOD HEAVE NS, I:&gt;SC"'R!

11·2S· 1 mo.

Rutland

MEIG S COUNTY Humane Society ,
Core line and adoption Service.
992·7680, 742·3 162, 992·5&lt;127
AKC REGISTERED pekingese pup·
pies. Phone (304 } 88 2-2b83 .
RI SING STAR Kennel , Boarding .
Indoor ond outdoor runs .
Grooming all breeds . Cleon
sanit ary locilities. Cheshire.
Phone (614 ) 367·0292 .
J 8 0 Kennels , oi l breed dog
groom ing . Make appointment
now for Holiday Season . Coli
742·3 162.

••••••
•••
••
•••
••

DOWN

Chester, Ohio

10-30-c

party
%Apportion
3 Yule "hall
deckers":

17 &lt;llemical

7 Sly -

zo Get It?

Z3 Crucif!K

2% -livelY!

t

•.. ...........,._

Ttl .., ....... _ •• ,,.,..,.

11 -25-1 mo.

~

BRAUtl.mU , Aucr1oneer , Com plete Service . Phone q49·2487
or 949· 7000. Recine , Ohio , Critt
Bradfor d .

NORTH
•

2.S~EIIC:H

3825.

~~

REMODELING , Plumbing. heating
and oil types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yeo rs e• ·
perien ce . Phone 992. 2409 .

[!)

31 Before
32 Suit -

34 Bullet
31 Irish
Island
37 Test for
horses

'&gt;OU r e&gt;IRDIE ?

NWQL

JND

te t
1

I

t t t •

ARNOLDGKAI"E

RUTLAND

t 't I t t t .t t t t t t t _t t t LU

•·••
•
•t

tJ

MVQL

CNLA

SDCNVS.M.-

Thursday 8 ti I noon

i/OU WON'T
' MIND...

MIND WHAT?

WE'r&lt;E ALL our OF

DOG FOOD 50 I
MAOE i/OU A SANDWICH

East

Pass

6 N.T. Pass

South
I

Pass

Opening lead Nine o f dia ·

to work

It:

JND

I ;lEE
ELVINEY AN'
LUKEY HAD
ANOTHE
SPAT

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald : "Terence Reese

has a new book entitled
'Begin Bridge with Reese' .
II starts out with some very
simple hands, but as one
would expect from a Reese

book tile later bands all show
some basic principle of

play."

NWQL

WRR

. JVCNNDRT

'NVSTB

ZGDQLGX

Yesterday's Cryploquote: WHILE OUR HEARTS ARE
PURE OUR UYES ARE ·HAPPY AND OUR PEACE IS
SURE.-WJLUAM WINTER

I 1-!dPE

North

mond s.

CNVSMH .

•'
•

West

Pa ss

CRYPTOQVOTES

.C N LA

Jimo "Declarer mightjusl
as well attack hearts, nght
away. If be leads the ten ,
West covers with the king
and East's nine of hearts
will keep South from scoring
four heart tricks."
Dswaldo "If South leads
the four of hearts to
dummy's jack followed by
the seven, West will bave to
play the king and South will
have the ten of hearts for a
fourth heart trick ."

Vulnerable: Both , Dealer :
Soulh

tee : 2 wds.

One letter simply stands for anotber. In thl1 sample A 11
used for the lbree L's, X for lhe two O's, otc. Single let.ters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word• are all
binls. Eacb day the code letters are ditlerent.

r

able."

' 10 7 4
+
A6 3
ofo AQJ4

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
I M AWFULL)'
R)ND OF \'OU

E~ST

,986 2
.9874
+Q JS
ofo862
ofol0 53
SOUTH
• AJ 3

town
ZIILeut

Osward ; "As you can see,
Terence has placed · the
spade queen where declarer
can 't do anytbing about it,
but the heart king is finess·

• 10 7 2

'Kl

I

EXCAVA TING , dozer . lo ader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo·boys lor hire ; wil l haul
fill dirt , to soi l, limestone ond
groYe l. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffer s, da y phone 992·7089 , night
phone 992·352S or 992· S232 . ·

e,!

WEST
• Q9 6 5

38 What's
left

SEWING ~ACHINE Repairs , ser Yice, all makes , 992· 228-4 . The
Fab ric
Shop , Pomeroy .
Au1hor ized Singer Sales end
SerYice . We sha rpen Scissors.

19

I( B 4

' A QJ S
+
K 10·2
ofo K97

larboard
side
Ninlonnal
farewell
27 Belgian

nobl:!

WELL I KNOW
'TlMMY HEIZE LIKES
ME ... l-ION AOOUT

.

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Lead low for finesse

~'T'l"'"r:-""T-:"-

florid

IDIMf$1

News 2C;

BRIDGE

proslt
33 Before: Lat.
35 Mae West
role

300ra -

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers . toasters , irons , ott
small appliances . lo wn mower
next to State Highway Gorag~
on Rou te J . Phone (614) 985 ·

~

742-2211

Mantovllnl 33.

10:00-NBC Reports 3,4, 1S; Soap 6, 13;
Christmas All Around Us 33.

%8 Make
irritable
%8 Oleers or

!SOn the

Dave Parsons
Owner

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Things

cousins

Close Saturday At 5 P,M,

•

Horde
rider

UCB'ers

FRIDAY TIL 5

•

8: 31)-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9:00-Laugh-ln 3,4,15;
Three's Company 6,13;
Mash 8,10; In Performance at Wolf Trap 20.
9:30-Flsh 6; GE Theater 8, 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13;

NGolden

19 "UtUe

coated

BARNEY

,..•
••
.•

lSHad
debts

foa: 2 wds.
Mean-''
2Z Overfill .
8 Yule purchase : 2 wds. Z3 Bugle
9 Gridiron
call
scores
UWeU
12 Precip..
Z5 Certain
itous
Firlnll .

suffix

CONTINUOUS
GUITER SERVICE

Yesterday's Aaawer

' Go -- over
5 Laced
&amp;Frost-

Z1 Tyke's
Yule gift

20; Nutcracker 33.

3 wds.

18 "Johnny-Note"

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

7:31)-Let's Go to !he Races 8; Hollywood Squares 4;
Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Price Is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13; Music City
15.
. 8:oo-&lt;:huck Barris 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13; Fllzpalrlcks 8, 10; ,Chrlslma~llme with Mlsffer Rogers

1 Swinging

sidewa)'ll

Three Sons 4; Gunsrrtoke 8;

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5:30-0dd Couple 4; News 6; E lee. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6 :00-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:31)-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20,33 .
7:oo-&lt;lral Roberts Christmas Special 3; Cross.Wits 4;
Liars Club 6; ; Pop Goes the Country 8; ; News 10;
To Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan' s Is . 15; rench Chef
20; Mime Dreaming of a White Christmas 33.

Moore
to See 2 Down

14 Turkish
hostelry
15 Greedy guy

My

S:OQ--Bonanza 3;

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Mary -

10 Drooping
11 l.oogings
13 Move

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Mon., Tues .• Wed ,
8:001il S:OO

Gilligan' s Is. 8; Sesame s. 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4o31)-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8;, 10; Little Rascals 15.

~.~,.,r
Rwn&lt;IO&amp;ked
cake
5 Religious
pamphlet

Phon• m -J806

..

4 :QO--Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals-Our Gang 4;
For Richer, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6;

Jumbleso FAITH CABIN RITUAL GROTTO
Answero Could be "alrlal" lor the lne-"&gt;nced
cowboy-A "LARIAr'

... WHERE WE" CAN START
ALL OVER AGAIN 1 ..--~"-'
FROM SQUAII:E ONE·

l'T MEANS DOC
IF '!\&lt;IS IS A.D. 376, DO MISSED "'ll&lt;E MARK
..OW REALIZE WHA'T
8Y I¥.RN NEAR
'Tl&lt;A'T ME'A~S ?
50 YEARS !

Resid entia I
and
comftlerciaf.
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour s-ervice.
Anyday, anytime.

~)0· 1 · -

' - - - - - - - - - · -.

WILl do rooting. construc ti on ,
plumbing and healing. No job
too Iorge or too sm all. Phone
7-42-2348.

2112 st or ies, in Pom eroy.

FOR SALE

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons.
Owner

Ph. 991-3!193

I I I )

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 wUh 110 puzzln II avail·
able to r $1 .35 postpaid from Jumble, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo~e 34~
Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your name, address, t ip cOOe and m•e
checks payable to NEtWspaperbooks.

Racine, Ohio

Free Est .

rI

Putnam County Christmas ' 77 33.

3o15-General Hospital 6,13 ; 3o31)-All In The Family
8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Kanawha County
Christmas '77 33.

(Answ·ers tomorrow)

TAKE YEARS!

Third Street

on heating cost .
Experience and
fully insured
Ca II : 667·6479 or ~JO, .'\RIS
11 ·15- 1 mo.

NEW 3 BDRM. hom e has

Aqii1bll

Ilion lnlollolls l Allies
STORM
WINDOWS l DOORS
I!I'IACI:M!NT
WINDOWS
AWMINUM
SIDING-SOffffi
GUI!Us..I.WNINGS

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

he l p w i t h financing to
make your New Year
brighter in this 3 Bdrm .
ranch type home. Near
Pomeroy .
Ca ll
t oday

Print answer here:

18 Defrosted

FREE ESTIMATES

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gesred by the above cartoon.

WORKS ! THAT CblJLD

CLOSED FOR WINTER

2·1J.J mo

J&amp;L

WILL -

I~RAMKE I

r-iOVJ AY..EL SAYS HE 'S GOIN '
TO STAY TILL HE FIGGERS OUT
WHY HIS MESSENGER GOT TH'

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Box 34

L.IVINCS GUAR'TER$.

- - - - - . I I I_ 0

See us at 1100 East Main
Street, Pomerov, Ohio or
Phone "2 -7034 . 10·29 -l mo.

992-2206 Of 992·7630

12·7· 1 mo .

HEL.P 'IOU TO

5EC:URE

• Awnings - Carports
•Insurance
Repairs

At

Nat Tht lmiiiiDB

I

~Tie- Downs

Phone Mike raang

3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St . 20 .
11 :41f-Cabell County Christmas ' 76 33; 11 : 55-CBS
News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; To Say The Least
15; Divorce Court 8; Midday 13; Putnam County
Christmas '76 33.
12 o31)-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show IS;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:00-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; No_! For Women
Only 15; Kanawha County Christmas ' 77 33 .
UI)-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13
Cabell County
.Christmas '77 33.
2:31)-Doctors 3,4,15; One l..lfe to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10; 2: 41)-Wayne County Christmas '77 33.
3:00-Another World 3,4, 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20;

[j

I I I

•Mobile
Home'
Underpinning
• Roof Coating

Carpet"' Uphii!SttiJ .

'1ht l:kitin1ton.

11 : 30-Knock~l

RILCY

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

C~rpeting

byHenriArnoldandBobl_e e

I
I I [)

I'Jln\
BUTT5RMicK!

l

Young's

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDOAME

\.9 ~~ \Pi

Mornlng Report 3; 6: 50-Good Morning , West
VIrginia 13;, 6 :55-Chuck White Reports 10; News
13.
7o00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7o31)-Schoolles 10.
8ooo-&lt;:apt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33;.
9 o00-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; Family
Affair 8, 10; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
Game 10; Cabell County Christmas '71 33.
9:30-Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair
10.
9o41f-Cabell Co. Christmas '77 33; 10 :00-Sanford &amp;
Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6; Tattletales B: Joker's Wild
10; Mike Douglas13; Putnam County Christmas '77
33.
10 o31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price ~s Right 8,10;
·
Cabell Counly Christmas '76 33 .
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Wayne County Christmas
'77 33 .

GINOR

PLE:~, tJOf

Kingsbury
Home Sales

Supe1ior
Slum Ext11clion

6 : 25-Concerns &amp; Comments lOi 6:30-Focus on
Columbus 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8; 6 :&lt;45--

Unscral'(lble these four Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

Located In

'""'""

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1971
5: 45-Farm Report 13; 5 :50-PTL Club 13; 5 :55Sunrlse Semesler 10; 6 oOO-PTL Club 15.

'

Spe-cial Orders or Showing

PU92-2114

PHONE
992-5705

VA -FHA , 30 yr . f inancing . Ireland
Mortgage. 77 E. Stole. Athens .
phone (614 ) 592"3051 .

~

"f,- WLADEK
I UNOER?TAND,
...LQOI(,

CALIFO~"'IA &lt;COULD 1 HAVE
FIR!H-·UIJLESS ~ A WORD WITH
1 wA~TED TO
HER'!'
LOSE TISH!

12 ·2· 1 mo.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Elec . • plumbing.
carpenter
work,
painting,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
home.

G . Bruce Teaf~rd
Associates

only $35,900.00.
THE OWNER

I

I HAD TO
FLV OUT TO

SHE'S WITH WLAD~K
AT H1E YACHT
MAFliNA!

of Carpets by Appointment
Only .

Home Service

DO YOU HAVE..,. NICE
HOME THAT YOU WANT
TO SELL. CALL 992 ·3325 .
Helen L. T!!aford

Rt. 338.
HEAT PUMP and orr conditioner
unit . $150. Hugh Rowsey , 138
Butternut Avenu e, Pome(oy.

Hartford

8B2·211S
675-1582
UNION OPERATED

w'

y·
'I'T HAFTA
CA•• TI?H ADAIR.,.

2

baths , na tural gas F .A .
furnace . full basement .
fa mily room . por c hes ,
larg e lot. and garage .

$20 .000 .
ANXIOUS TO

RACINE , 0 .

INSULATION
SERVICE

Bissell Siding Co.

-

FOUR BEDROOMS -

992. ]978

CAPTAIN EASY

WETHERALL CONCRETE

Ph.l7Ull0
S-1HfC

RACINE
PLANING MILl

Storm Windows
Call Professiona I
Builders

$18,000.00.
HOLIDAY SPECIAL ONLY $6,800.00. 4 Bdrms ..
HOMESITES far sale , I acre and
up . Middlepor t. near Rutland.
Co11 992·7481.

Rotds&gt;lllt, 0.

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-lfc

Fa mily room , shop. or
of f ice room , 3 bedrooms .
111 baths, garage and one
nice acre fn· the country .
$4 1, 000 .

many features . Warm your
footsies at the fi reside 1or

696-1 072 . 16.800.

~RATES

8 A. M. to 4: 30P.M.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

9.: ~~ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE

300 Main St.

Cqmrner ciol prope'rty oppro ;o~: . 17
acres level land , localed at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , ~ c ute
7_Phone {bl 4) b67·6304.

WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

Autom1tic

Transmission Strvite

Pomeroy , Ohio
PomeroY 9'12 -628'2
or 992,42'3

MOBILE HOME repoi.rs . q92 -5858 .

broken . Call (304) 773·5651 ,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cue No . 22280
E1tate of CHARLES E .
BURDETTE Dec:eaud .
Not ice. is hereby given th~t
Beu l ah B . Jones of M id·
dleport , Ohio, tHIS been dul y
appointed Administratr ix of
the Estate of Charte1. E .
Burdette , deceased, late of
Middleport , On i o. M ei gs
County, Ohio .
Creditors are required to
fi le their ·cla i ms w i th !laid
within
thre e
' f i eluciary
months .
Dated th i s '6th day of
December 197.

Will CARE for the eld..,r ly in our
home . Phone992 ·731 4.

IF YOU hove a serv.i ce to
HOUSE FOR lease on l 1ncoln Hill
in Pomeroy . 5 bedrooms .
wont to bu y or sel l sorner•hir,g .
Deposit requ ired . 992·3489 ,
ae lo oking for work
or
after 5 p .m .
, w holeYer ... you 'll get resul ts
foster wifh o Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coli Q9'l -2156:

~~TJ~~"2 ~ N~ R ~FB A ~'E

Hotpoint ·

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
P.hone IJ92. J3?1i

Ro ute 12J. L arge 9 r oom
home w ith 2 bath s, furnac e.
city- water .
equipped
kitchen , double garage and
2 busi n ess rooms . $&lt;10.000 .

Used

SWAIN

''Get A Load ut lllis"

VIRGIL B. TEAFO-D, &gt;R .
REALTOR

CORNER LOT -- On Slate

Refrigerator
$125
1 Lancao:h•r Chain Saw S75

CARTER

'~L TOR

Only 1279.95

1 Good

We're in Carpenter just off
A:t . 143. Phone 698-7191.
12 · 1· 1 mo.

12-18 1 mo .

.,,
'llfJ

Save S50 . DO on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator
1 New 20. cubic ft. Chest
Free1er
S25 .00 Discount
(1) Good Refrigerator $ISO
Upright F.ree1er
sns

197b TA URUS CAMPER. 20 ft .
tandem .
Self -c o n ta i ned .
53 ,400. Phone 9&lt;19 -2042 .

9'12-6370.
CHIP WOOD . Po les
mo11 .
d1orneter 10 · on largest_end $8
p"'r ton . Bundled sfab, $6 per
ton . Delrvered to Oh 1o Paller
Co . Rt. 2. Pomeroy. 992·2689.

FOR SALE

STARCRAFT FAll Sole . Mm1·
motors 20' and 22 . TroVe!
Trorle rs 18 S" $3.799 25 7"
Bunlorhouse $4 .675_ Fo ld·down.
$1 ,700 up . We sell ser¥ice onct
quol1t y Open Sundays. Corpp
Conley Starc roh Sole s Rt. 62.
N of Pt . Pleasant .

PHONE
742-2570

Associate
Home Phone 949 -2589

UC-SVI.

Let us test your water Free

GAS-OIL- COAL

Hilton Wolfe , Sr.

FEAFORD

A complete selection
of Coal &amp; Circulating
Heaters at low prices.
Fully stocked.

Boilers, Furnaces, Heal
Pumps &amp; Auto -Controls .

We have need of listings,
all types , homes, land,
commercial. etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Hom t Phone 742 -2003

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•279.95

PROPOSED FLOOD
ELEVATION
DETERMINATIONS
FOR THE VILLAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT ,
MEIGS COUNT '( , OHIO

Thursdays
anc
Saturda~· s at noon .
New 4 bedroom , 2500 sq. ft
l i v ing spa ce , 2' 1 baths, 1·
room ran c h br ick·. Locate&lt;
3 m iles from Rt , 7, up We s
Shade River . Cal l for at
appointm ent.

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 2C,33 ; Emergency
One 13; My Three Sons 15.
SolO-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6oDO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6o31)-NBC Ne.ws 3,4, 15 ; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33;
6oDO-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6o31)- NBC News34,15; ABC News 13; Caro l Brunett&amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:01)-Tiuth or Cons. 3; Cross-W its 4; Liars Club 6;
Marty Robbins' Spotllghl 8; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan' s Is. 15; P rime Time 20; Know
Your Schoo ls 33.
7o31)-That Nashville Music 3; New Truth or Cons. 4;
Muppet Show 6; Ma tch Game PM 8; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
Camera 13; Nashville n The Road 15
8oDO-Bob Hope 3,4, 15; San Pedro Beach Bums 13;
Emergency One 6; Julie Andrews 8; Evening at
Symphony 20,33; Logan' s Run 10.

Appalachian
Stove Company

OHIO
HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp;SERVICE

Cl os e

P'omeroy Landmark

cellen t condot1on
O~r
tdt
wheel new !ires 41 000 ortuol
mde~ S I 300 ~ 2 )606

5:00-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons o4 ; Gunsmoke 8;

P.M.

Complete
with
all
accessories . Yes , we will
lavaway to r Chnstmas.

MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1971

REALTY
PHONE 992-6333

'79.95

In

Business Services

HOBSTElTER
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr .,
Broker
1011 i Sycamore St.
Pomeroy . Ohio

ROBYN C.B.

1Q7 .a BUICK 1 door A pollo p S
P B A .C 8 tr ock E•cellent
cond111on S2 695 9911529

·~

WOMAN OR cou ple l o live Wr l h
m•ddle·oged lady in Pt. Plea ·
sen t W Vo So lory nego troble :
Ph one 1 304 · 67 5 - 6~9 . ~

Tu.sday
thruFriday

fme

1972 OLDS DEl lA 88 Royale E.o:

RACI NE GU N ClUB meermg
Thursdo.,. n•ght Dec 22 Elec
ttof1 ol olilcers Pay 1978 dues

NOTICE

1969 CHEVROLET IM PA LA
tondrt•on 55q5 H1 2359

9oDO-Movle "Wilma" 3,4, 15; Liberty Bowl 6, 13;
Maude 8,10.
9:31)- Betty While 8; Woody Hayes Pre-Bowl Report
10; Elizabethan Christmas Celebration 2C; Fall of
Eagles 33 .
10 : 00-Swltch 8, 10; News 20.
10 o31)-Farm Digest 20; Jacques Cousteau 33.
11 oOO-News 3,4,8, 10, 15; Dick Cavett 2C; 11 : 31)-Johnny
Carson 3,4, 15 ; Movie "All My Darling Daughters'
Anniversary" 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie "A Dandy In
Aspic" 10.
12 o00-News 6, 13; Janak I 33 .
12 o31)-FBI6; lron_slde .13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1 :3DNews 13.

Jim o "The basic principle
in today's hand Is that in
general it is right to lead a
l~w card wben intending to
finesse. Soutb is in ·a border·
line

six-notrwnp

contract.

He can bring it home if he
can collect either four heart
tricks or tbree spade

tricks .''

A Vermont reader held :
.AKxx . xx tAK xxx
ofo X X

He

responded

one

dia-

mond to his partner's one
club whereupon his partner
rebid one spade. He wants to
know what he should have
bid then.
The correct rebid is a
jump to four spades. This
jump to game Ls one that
asks partner to bid again
wltb a strong opening bid.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . )

(For a copy ol JACOBY

MODERN, sonc/ S1 to: "Win ar
Bridge,'' clo this newspap•r.
P.O. Box 489, RocJ/o City Slot/on,
New York. II. Y. 10019}

�'
12-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Monday. De&lt;. 19, 1977

ltOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Dec. li l
Mary Basham, Carl Bright.
Timothy Casto. Anna Church.
Mrs. Mark Clark and son,
Horace Clark, Jackson
Cochran, Faith Dillon, John
Evans , J osep h Frazier.
Roberta Fulks. Sha•·n Ingels ,
Phlllip King. Jeffrey Krv&gt;tts.
Amy Lauderback, Glenn Lee ,
Charles Ungerfelt, William
Martin, Michael McWilliams,
Sylvia
Mooney,
lvor
Morehouse , Jane Ratcliff,
Homer Rees , He(bert Simnls,
Ethel Watson , Dorothy
Whited.
(Births, Dee. 161
Mr. and Mrs . Anthon)'
Adkins, a son, Vint on. Mr.
and Mrs. DaMy Bright. a
daughter, Henderson. Mr .
and Mrs. Roy Jenkins. a
daughter, Pomeroy.
(Discharges, Dec.l7 )
Joey Clark, Robert Collins.
Hallie Cross, Amy Elkins.
Leonard· Fields, ·Stephen
Foster, Barbara Hayes.
Frank Johnson Jr .. Chauncey
Lucas, Timothy McComas,
Wylodine McCormick, Ann
McGuire. Mrs . Jeffrey Neal
· and son. Mrs. Darrell Shaffer
and son, John Smith, Edgar
Vaughan. Mrs. Rick Young
and daughter.
(Births. Oec. 17 }
Mr. and Mrs . Mitchell
Collins, a son , Lucasville. Mr .
and Mrs. Kenneth Griffith, a
daughter, Jackson . Mr. and
Mrs. Vaughn Mlller, a son,

Racine : Mildred Withee,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges Thelma Salser. Gladvs
Bosworth. Shirley Evans ,
Chad Granen, Thomas
Hendrix.

Rio Career Center may be in trouble
A report that could not be College--Community College
pinned down by presstime has hit a snag, at least
today was that the new ·$1.8 temporarily.
million Technical Careers
Only last week ground was
Center at Rio Grande broken for the bix building,

Multiple charges have heen
Two assault and battery asked Wheeler to come back ran over and along with his
filed in Gallipolis Municipal warrants,A a charge of to the store to talk about it. brother, struck Rothgeb and
Court and Gallia Co unty shoplifting and one warrant . Wheeler said. "No. I'm not pulled his hair.
Juvenile Court in shoplifting charging physical damage to going."
After the melee was
sprees early Sunday morning , property were filed against
Rothgeb and Sydenstricker stopped, store employees
at Kroger's Super Store Orin Douglas Wheeler, 20, Rt. each got hold of Wheeler's took Wheeler to a conference
located in the Silver Bridge I. Gallipolis. Assault and arms and started to take him room inside the store. During
Shopping Center.
the session. some stor e
battery charges are expected back inside the store.
Wheeler then yelled for his property was damaged .
to be brought against his 17In another shoplifting in·
brother, who was sitting in
year old brother.
According to one source, the ir ca r . The younger cident Saturday evening at
Wheeler, a member of the Wheeler came up to the trio Kroger's Store, an employee
United States Air Force, had saying, " Let's talk about was threatened with a .357
been seen taking a carton of this." The younger Wheeler , magnum.
then
allegedly
struck
According to the Gallia
cigarettes.
He was foii owed outside .the Sydenstricker from behind County sheriff's department,
a woman was seen shoplifting
store by Kroger 's stock several times.
Another
store
employee
and was followed outside into
employees, David L. Rothgeb
who
saw
what
was
hapthe
parking lot. An employee
and Richard Sydenstricker.
pening,
came
outside
·
and
attempted
to stop her but she
They asked Wheeler to stop.
grabbed
Sydenstricker.
In
entered
a
car. The man
They asked if he - had
something in his possession the meantime, the juvenile driving the vehicle pulled the
that did not belong to him.
Wheeler said, "No, I didn't
steal anything ."
At that point, a carton of
cigarettes
feU
from
Wheeler's coat. Rothgeb then

Bethlehem

Roger Stapleton, a son.
Wellston . Mr. and Mrs.
James Wausley , a daughter,
Leon.
(Discharges, Dec.l8}
David Cwmingham. Goldie
Dill, Adrian Gibson. llea ly
Harrison, Robert Hoff Jr .,
Tereasa Honaker. Larry
Hudson , Jody Imboden ,
Carrie Ingles, A. A. Jal&gt;barpour, Gilbert Johnson ,
Elaine Kiskis, Mrs. Bobby
Lambert and daughter, Mrs.
Donald Miller and daughter,
Raymond Mullen , Edna
Neville, Lawrence Robinson ,
Glenna Soulsby, Edna Trace,
Mrs . Truman White and
daughter.
(Births, Dec. 18)
Mr. and Mrs . Patrick
Bailey, a son, Crown City. I

NEW AIRPORTS may be
rare during tbe next few
years,
according
to
Transportation Secretary
Brock Adams. Tbe current
emphasis, be says, (s on
Improving efficiency ol
existing airports and
getting federal approval of
new facllllles of aay. sl2e
will be "exceedingly dlf·
flcult ".

(Continued from page I)
products will go into effect
March 1.
Both Bethlehem and
Wheeling-Pittsburgh, the
country's ninth largest
producer, blamed higher
energy, material and labor
costs for the increases.
The price moves came
despite the fact the depressed
steel industry is seeking
White House support against
rising imports. President
Carter angrily responded in
August when the industry
announced higher prices.

CORVALLIS, Ore: (UP! )WiD the race for energy
independence
through
reUance on coal and other
. fossil fuels lead to an
environmental disaster?
At Oregon State University,
W. Lawrence Gates works
with complex mathematical
formulas to simulate the
cllmate. Using a hlgh-6(leed
computer, he attempts to
forecast the cllmate of the
future based on projections of
variables in the atmosphere.
From what Gates' figures

..

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davison,

ROMA E. DOUGLAS
Rom a E . DoLJglas, 91 , of 541

Jo nesboro

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Golda Smith, Reedsville;
Betty Brooks, Albany; Allan
Wander, · Shade; Jessie
Young, Middleport; Misty
Zimmerman, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Gertrude Woods, Joseph
Hoff, Velma Winebrenner,
Lenna

Len.z,

Margaret

Bishop, Richard Kesterson
II, AlUla Hartenbach, Charles
Neece, Marcia Spaulding,

Misty Zimmerman.
Sunday Admissions Helen Smith, Gallipolis;

• Mary Garnes, Pomeroyi
Angela McCoy, Shade;· Mark
Gilkey, Clifton, . W. Va .:
Carolyn
Roush,
West
Columbia; Grace Stobart ,
Pomeroy ; Walter Garnes ,
Dexter; Okey Pullins,
Coolville; Birtle Wyatt ,
Middleport ; Everett Roush,

Road ,

N.W.,
Washing ton C.H., a former
reside ni of Meigs and Athens
Counties, died Sa t urday n ight
at the res fdente of her
daughter, Daisy M . Van Dyke
in Washington C. H.
Mrs. Douglas, born at
Sooy.'vllle, was a daught~r of
the late William D. and
Amanda Blackwood Stanley .
She was ·a member of the

Snowville United Methodist
Church and a l ife member of
Albany Grange .
She is survived by a
daughter, Mrs . Otis (Sidney)
Simpson, Arlington, Texas ; a
son , Ray Douglas , Mid dleport ; 15 grandchildren.
and 14 great-grandchildren .
She Was preceded in death by
her parents, two sons , Clifford and Millard, two sisters
and two brothers .
Funeral services will be at
l p.m . Wednesday at the
Hughes Funeral Home in
Athens with the Rev . Earl
Ru_ssetl offic i at ing . Burial
Will be in Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m . today .

THE MONEY TREE

warming ."

He speaks with some authority. He heads the university's Climatic Research
Institute. He explains:
Carbon dioxide interferes
with the radiation balance of
the atmosphere. Ndrmally,
incoming radiant energy
from the sun is balanced by
outgoing energy from the
laild and oceans.
But carbon diolride traps
some of the outgoing energy.
The atmosphere must
increase its temperature to
overcome this energy

OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK
14ARKETREPORT
Prices ta~en from the auction
of Saturday, Oe&lt;.l7, 1977.
Trends - Feeder calves
steady.
Cows and bulls steady
I
to &amp;1.00; Veal calves stro 0g;
Hogs steady to 25c higher.
MARGARET L. OtLCHER
Margaret Lucille Dilcher,
Total head: 984.
53, of Mil ler Ave., Columbus ,
CATTLE: Slaughter
BLOOD140BILE .
a former
Harrisonville
resident. died Sunday at St. Steers: 29.7~ to 38 . 7~ ;
POINT PLEASANT - The
Slaughter Heaifers, 26.50 to
Anthony
Hospital
in
December Bloodmobile will
Columbus.
33 ; Feeder Sieeril: (Good·
be at 2900 Parrish Ave.,
Mrs . Dilcher was ·born
Choice) 250 to 300 lbs., Tl to
April ts , 1924. She was 36.75; 300 to 400 l!&gt;s. T/.25 to Wednesday from 2 to 6 p.m.
preceded in death by her
The Point Pleasant Junior
37; 400 to 500 lbs. 27 to 37.50;
father, Eldon Reeves. and a
Woman's Club is sponsoring
half -brother, Darrell Wells.
500 to 600 lbs. 26.50 to 36; 600
this month's Bloodmobile.
She was a member of the
to 700 lbs. 26 to 35.75 . .700 and
Pleasant
View
Bapt'ist
over 30 to 35.25.
Church in Grove City and of
E-RCALLED
Feeder Heifers: (Good and ,
Amarath Lodge In Colum bus.
The
Middleport
Choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 22 to
She is survived by her
31.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 23 to Emergency Squad answered
husband, Clyde; one son ,
33.25; 400 to 500 lbs. 24 to a call to 4 !la'Uroad St. at
James, of Lancaster ; a
32.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 23.75 to 12:14 a. m. Monday for
daughter,
Donna
Kay
Gilmore, Columbus ; her
31; 600 to 700 lbs. 22 to 30.25; Virginia Pierce who was ill.
mother , Ethel Reeves Clark,
She was taken to Veterans
700 and over 21.75 to 38.
Albany ; two sisters, Alice
Memorial Hospital.
Bulls:
(Good
and
Feeder
Russell, .Pomeroy, and Rhea
Choice)
250
to
300
lbs:
23
to
Norris, Albany : nine grand children, and several nieces
32.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 23.75 to
AS!{ TOWED
and nephews.
23.25; 400 to 500 lbs. 24 to
A
marriage
license .was
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1 p.m. al 34.75; 500 to 600 lbs~ 25.75 to issued to John Bradford
30.50; 600 to 700 lbs. 25.50 to Shuler, 26, Pomeroy, and
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Curtis Sheets of 34.50; 700 and over 25 to 33.50. Brenda Sue VanMeter, 21,
flci~ting . Burial will be In
Slaughter Bulls (Over lilOO Pomeroy.
W~lls Cemetery. Friends
lbs.)
26.25 to 30.25 .
may call at the funeral home
Slaughter
Cows : Utilities
after 7 this evening.
CAR TURNED OVER
24.25 to T/.2il; Camer and
The Ohio State Patrol
Cutters 18.50 to 24.10.
reported a traffic accident oo
Veals: Choice and Prime 51
CR 39, south of SR 681 at 5:20
to 62; Standards and
p.m. Saturday involving one
14ediwns 30 to 49.
car driven by Lewis E.
Baby Calves (by the head)
Humphr~y, 18, Pomeroy.
13 to 45 .
Htunphrey, going north, weni
HOGS - Hogs: No. I,
off the right side of the road
barrows and gilts, 200 to 230
into soft berm and rolled his
lbs., 42.25 to 43; Butcher Sows car over twice. The driver
33.75 to 38.26; Butcher Boars ·
and a passenger, Robert A.
Tl to 30.10; Pigs (By the Vennoy, suffered minor
head) 12 to 40.
injuries, They were treated
SHEEP
Slaughter and released ·at Veterans
Lambs 48 to 41; Feeder Memorial Hospital. There
Lambs 42 to 44.
was no citation.

Area Deaths

!

indicate, he says just such a
disaster might be occur. ·But
be also notes possible benefits
of a significant change in
climate .
. "Every time we burn fossil
fuels, carbon dioxide is
released into the atmosphere
and this tends to cause

!

PHONE 773-5536

Monday, ' Dec. 19 thru Saturday, Dec. 24

(Individual Retir&gt;ement Account)

If you're not covered by a

Retirement
Program at your place of employment then
a Tax Free Farmers Bank IRA is for you .

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS

Farmers Bank

•• • •

POMEROY, OHIO

Regular Mea.t Sauce Dog
Was 55c ·
SPECIAL
PRICE
Footlong Meat Sauce Dog
SPECIAL
Was 90c
PRICE

the
earth 's
mean
temperature would result?
Cooservative estimates are
degrees
two to five
Fahrenheit. Even that, Gates

says, · is a very large
1

temperature change."
"If we were to exhaust aU
of tbe sources 9f fossil fuel,
then we would increase the
level of carbon dioltide by a
factor of six or eight.
" This would cause a
climatic catastrophe because
the temperatures would go up
about 10 degrees Celsius (18
degrees Farhenheit) which is
incredibly larger than
anything ever observed .''

For comparison, the difference between the No~thern
Hemisphere temperature
now and what it was in tile Ice
Age, 18,000 years ago, is only
about 5 degrees Celsius.
"So if we're toying around
with a few degrees Celsius,
perhaps up to io, depending
upon our consumption
strategy, it would have an

•
•
..

"

•

Two hurt in collision
MASON, W. Va . - Two
drivers were injured, in·
eluding a Mason policeman,
in separate weekend traffic
accidents here.
· Treated at Pleasant Valley
Hospital and later released
were Ptl. Johnny David
Pearson, 34, 14ason, and
Robert James Doss, 50, 6U
First St., Point Pleasant.
Pll. Pearson. was involved
in a two-car accident
Saturday at 6 p.m. on Rt. 62
by the Mason-Pomeroy
Bridge. The other driver
involved was Janet Ruth
Smith. 38, New Haven.
According to Mason County
Sheriff's Deputy E.F. Crump,
Pll. Pearson was clocking an
'unidentified vehicle as it was
traveling south on Rt. 62. Pli.
Pearson reportedly pulled out
in pursuit of tbe vehicle when
it collided with the Smith car
which was traveling north.
Estimates of $400 and $350
worth of damage resulted to
the pctice cruiser and Smith
car, respectively.
· The accident involving
Doss occurred Sunday at I: 50
p.m. on Rt. 62 near Poinr
Pleasant, according to
Deputy C.L. Walls. Joey R.
Hall Sr., 34., Point Pleasant,

"

was identified as· tbe other
driver.
According to Deputy Walls,
Hall was attempting to tum
off the roadway when his car
was struck from behind by
the Doss car.
Estimates of$!, 700 and ..,00
worth of damage resulted to •
the Doss .and Hall cars, •
respectivelv.
STATE OF OHIO

DEPARTMENT OF

NATU~ALAESOURCES

Dlvhlon of Rtelli'nltlon
Fountain Sqyere
Columbus. Ohio 43224
L.E GAL NOTICE
ABANDONED MINED

LAND

PAOP,QSAl

RECLAMATION

As required bv .Section
1Sl3.JO ot the OhiO Revised
Code , the Chief of the
Divis io n ot Reclamation
hereby makes public notice of
the proposed Mined L&amp;nd
Reclamation prolect being
conslderec:l tn Meigs county .
The bandonec:l m lne silt ,
belnt considered Is located In
,Y.elgs
county ,
Scipio
Township, Section 24 . The
project site Is 87 acres ot a IS,. ,
acre tract whJch Is owned by
the State Of OhiO.
The Chief of the Division of
Reclamation will tormall\1
present th~ .above prbposed
project at the Board on
Unreclalmed Strip Mined
Land meeting to be held on
January 9, 1978, at the State
House in Columbus, Ot11o.
If vou have any QuestiOns ,
feel tree to contact this office
al I6W •66-4850.
12) 11, ,,, 20, 21, 22. ll .... c

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 8

·~id~ld
~.;f),/
WJ/{)

Ynl. ~*,1,

· c&lt;-·

VISIT OUR CHILDREN'S
DEPT. ON THE
SECOND FLOOR

'

United
Press
International
About· 100 striking United
Mine
Workers
union
members from Ohio and West
Virginia met today at.
Chesapeake, Ohio, and went
into eastern Kentucky in an
attempt to close non-union
mines in that area .
Lawrence County Sheriff
James H. Howell at Ironton
said "two or three" non-union
operations that had been
working in Lawrence County
cloaed early today when the
roving pickets came into the

By

~

The Ohio Highway Patrol
area. He said there were no
at Ironton said "there have
incidents.
"The coal docks have been been no incidents at all on this
workirig hard ," said Howell. side of the (Ohio) river."
"They've been getting about
In Washington, meanwhile,
300 to 400 trucks a day. The talks between the UMW and
Bituminous ' Coal
coa l is coming in from the
Kentucky and Ohio both.
Operators Association to end
"They shut down when the the liklayold strike by 188,000
miners come through, then miners in '22 states resumed
they open up again . They will Mooday after a weekend
probably open up tonight .
recess . The two sides offered
" When they get to · differing assessments or
Kentucky though they will be progress.
playing with some different
Don Nunley, organizer of
people. They all carry guns the first caravan and former
'and it might get rou~ ."
UM W Distric t 6 board
member, said most of the
large mines picketed in UMW
District 30 in Eastern
Kentucky last week remained

TOYS PREPARED- This work crew from the Meigs Jaycees put in
a busy Monday evening preparing toys for distribution to . under
privileged children in Me~ Countv. Tonight, Jaycees workmg at
Pomeroy Village Hall, will prepare food baskets for needy .persons . .

School now can stay open
HARRISONVIlLE, Ohio (!]PI) - A Meigs Local
school district elementary school that was in danger of
closing because it ran out of coal can now stay openthanks to the work of several United Mine Workers
Bill Cray, vice president of UMW Local 1957 at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. Racoon mine in Vinton County
and Gene Oiler, president of Locall886 at the Southern
Ohio Meigs County mine delivered 14 ton of coal durmg
the weekend to the Harrisonville Emelentary school.
"We don't want people to suffer because of the
strike," Cray said Monday .

..

.

•

•

• B • fi :a
~ 7\Tews e e elR
rze :d
~
~~
~'M ... :e:.~'%-.&gt;":o.';:;%~:;s«;&gt;~')'!:::;&amp;:::;.'S,m~~'%~'%""~""-.l

~
lll

'f •

By Uolled Press International
MOSCOW .- PUBUC HEALTH OFFICIALS WHO
vaccinsted millions of Russians against the Asian flu earUer
this year are now facing an epidemic of a different fiu th~~ has
been dormant for 2il years. "This was a btg surprose, Dr.
GregoryP. Nikolayevsky,deputydirectoroftheEpidemiol?gy
Depariment of the Ministry of Health, sa1d m an mterVJeW
Mooday.
Western diplomats are speculating President Leonid
Brezhnev, not seen in public since Dec. 8, may be one of the
victims of the long-dormant flu known as type A1 and
described as moderately severe. Nikolayevsky said the flu was
first spotted a month ago in the far eastern port city of
Khabarovak and was expected to hit 39 million Russians -.
about 15 percent of the population.

A motion for a mistrial, made by .Joseph Vanity, Athens,
"defense attorney on behalf of his client, John W. Flenung

whose trial on aggravated murder charges got underway
Monday , was overruled by judge John C. Bacon in the 14eigs
County Common Pleas Court Tuesday
.
.
Yanity asked for the mistrial because, he sa1d, the ftrst
four state witnesses Monday placed before the jury charged
that his client was a wife beater, carried a gun, was. a thief,
and was involved in the death of Ralph Brewer.
Vanity said that even though the witnesses had ·been
admonished by the court he felt that the statements by the
witnesses before the jury would nollead to a fair trial.

mo~rung.

•

en1e

DETROIT- A NEIGHBOR SAID THE HOUSE belonging
to Council Graharn, his wife and their five children was so
covered with Christmas lights that it "looked like
fantasyland ." The fantasyland turned into an inferno Monday,
killing all five children trapped inside the blazing home. There
was no indication the Christmas lights were responsible for tbe
fire. The cause was under investigation.
Graham, 26, aod his wife, Victoria , 24, escaped by
climbing out an upstairs bedroom window and jumping from
the perch roof of the tw!Hitory frame home, fire officials said.
Trapped amt killed were Walter Vraham, 1, his brothers,
David, 6, and John, 7_,and sisters Michelle, 2, and Kimberly 4.
WASillNGTON - A WINTER TRIP TO PANAMA
appears to be increasingly popular preparation for sneators
making up their minds oo the controversial canal treaties .
Members of the Senate Foreign Relation Committee have
decided to "unofficially" visit Panama before the influential
panel resumes deUberations on the agreements in January.
And a pair of treaty critics, Sens. Robert Dole, R-Kan., and
Paul Laxalt, R-Nev .. also are planning an orientation trip to
the Canal Zone t,his month.
CLEVELAND - SAM RUTIGUANO, ·WIDE receiver
coach of the New Orleans Saints, was interviewed Monday
night by owner Art Modell and general manager Pete Hadhazy
as a top candidate for the Cleveland Browns' head coaching
vacancy.
· Rutingliano, before going to Saints, served on the staffs of
the New York Jets, Denver Broncos, and the New England
Patriots, where he was.a friend of Hadhazy. Modell indicated
he has narrowed the field of candidates to three, that he
expected to interview the other two this week and would pick a
succes&amp;Jr to Forrest Gregg before tbe end of the year.
140SCOW - TWO . SOVIET COSMONAUTS wenl for ,a
walk in outer space early today to inspect and repair the faulty
docking apparatus on the Salyut 6 space station. Cosmonauts
Yuri Romanenko and Georgy Grechko spent one hour and 28
minutes on their space walk outside the station, then began an
eight-hour rest period. . ·
·
"The maiti purpose of the exit from the Station was to
(Continued on Pill' 12)

Judge Bacon acknowledged that the four witnesses were
obviously hostile to the defendant but that the jury had been
instructed to disregard statements that were not pertinent to
the trial and he said he believed the jury would abide by his
instruction.
.
He then overruled the motion.
Keith Hardy, Columbus, supervisor of the W':"tern
Telephone Co. installation department, was the ftrst wttness
Tuesday morning. He explained time records kept on
employes. Vanity acknowledged that Fleming was employed
by the company and had been in Zanesville in July, 1977 and
that he was accompanied at least on one occasion by Freda

Middleswart whose husband, William C. Middleswart, died of
poisoning oo July 4, this year. Mrs. Middleswart is serving
time as a resultofthe death and Fleming is also being charged
with aggravated murder in the case.
Alfred LeCocq, manager of a motel in Zanesville, was on
the stand just before 10 a.m. and explained his records on
customers at the moteL A registration form showing·that John
Fleming and one other person were at the motel on July 26. The
second person was not identified. Tbe car registration on the
form was for a 1974 Nova with a Ucense number of Z-54U:. The
identity of the car owner was not brought out out ih the
testimony.

'

The jury trial of John W.
Fleming, 45, Route I, Long
Bottom. under indictment for
aggravated murder , got
underway late Monday afternoon in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
The major part of the day
was spent in selecting a jury
for Fleming who along with
Freda Middleswart, 40, Route
1, Portland, was indicted in

the alleged poisoning of Mrs.
Middleswart's
husband,
William C., last July. The list
of jurors was exhausted
Monday afternoon and the
names of 16 additional
possible jurors were quickly
drawn and the remainder of
tlie jury was selected from
the last group.
Making up the jury ·are
Vivian Humphrey, Elizabeth

Fisher, Wilma Reiber, a sentence on the muro.er was exhumed Irom lts site at
14ildred Diehl, Violet Dillon, charge. Mr. Middle swart the Sistersville Cemetery and
Ellen Arnott,
Edward died shortly after his arrival removed to the Hamilton
Humphrey, Howa.rd Ervin, July 4 at the Cincinnati County Coroner's office for a
14arjorie Keebaugh, Ralph Veterans Hospital. An pest mortem investigation.
Edwards, G.~ne· Grate and autopsy was refused by his Middleswart was found to
have died from arsenic .
Pam Diddle. An alternate widow at that time.
However,
.
later
Coroner
.
poisoning.
juror is George Amott.
'Ray
Pickens
contacted
The two attorneys in the
Mrs. Middleswarl was
the
.
physicians
who
atcase,
Joseph Vanity, Athens,
given a 15 year sentence in 1
tended
the
victim
and
Prosecutor
Rick Crow,
the Marysville Reformatory
and
on
Aug
.
2
the
body
presented
their
opening
on Oct: 25 and is now serving
statements beginning about 3
p.m. Monday. Vanity claims
that Fleming is inpocent and
was · implicated by Mrs.
a cost of $4,000. They also tenance of $5 per year for a Middleswart wh.om, he
described, as a "woman
increased the ciJst of the use five grave lot.
·scorned."
Chief
Webster
thanked
the
of the machine from $15 per
Vanity said that he will
test to $20 per test ~ The mayor and council for the
machine is used to test fine cooperation given the · show that Fleming also had
police department stating traces of the poison in his
persons for DWI.
Davis suggested that 0 We never had any better." body when he underwent a
Jack Krautter of the street physical examination
people owning lots at Beech
\Continued on page 12)
Grove be billed for main· '(Continued on page 12)

Garbage service increa.sed for some.
OOllSTIAS

P. MORRIS

City manager

is employed
ChristiJin

P.

(ChriS}

Morris, 47, a naiive of LUna,
Ohio, was named Gallipolis
city manager during Monday
night's . special meeting of
city commission in the
Municipal Building.
Morris,
currently
a
resident of Dothan, Ala .
comes to the Old French City
with more than 10 years
experience in administrative
work, having served as
mayor and chief ad·
ministrator of Lima for eight
years.
In Dothan, Morris served
as city manager from March
15, 1974, to June 29, 1976.
Dothan has a population of
42,000 and operates on a $30
million budget with more
(Continued on·page 11)

Garbage
service
in
Pomeroy for residential
customers, except people on
fixed incomes, will be in·
creased 50 cents per month.
This action was taken by
Poineroy Council Monday
night at its laSt meeting of the
year.
Meeting with council was
Basil Haynes who ha• the
garbage pickup in Pomeroy.
Haynes asked council to
renew his contract and for a
50 cents a month increase. He
explained persons who are on
fixed incomes, such as social
security and disabled per·
sons, would not be affected.
The present rate is $3.50
which wiU be increased to $4.
Senior citizens and disabled
persons pay $3, this will not
he changed.
Also meeting wiih council
was John Yates, director of

Southeastern Ohio Regional
Crime
Laboratory
at
Nelsonville, who asked for

flnancial

assist{lnce

to

continue the operation of the
crime lab until a grant can be
obtained.
Yates asked for 10 cents per
person living in the
jurisdiction of the Pomeroy
police department, or a total
of $280. Cllief Jed Webster
told council that it was a fine
organization and he has had
100 percent cooperation from
them: Council, upon Wel&gt;ster' s
recommendation,
granted the request.
In other business council
appointed Harry Davis, who
served his last time on
council Monday night, to the
Board of Public Affairs.
Davis did not run for
another seat on council in the
last election and Charles
Legar who has served on the
Board of Public Affairs did
not run for a seal on the board
in the last election, therefore
making a vacancy on the
Board of Public Alfairs.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
said the new cruiser wlll be
arriving any time and a new
light for the top is needed.
The light wlll cost $150.
Council agreed to purchase
ihe light.
Council also approved the
purchase of an intoxalyzet at

Suh ·teachers' pay raised

and granted · Tim Flesher
permission to attend a
meeting at Chanute Air Force
Base, Illinois, Feb. 22-24, in
conjunctionwith his work in
counseling.
Closing of schools on Dec. 9
for ice was approved arid the
board added to the substitute
list Gayle Salyer, Randy T.
Sinunons, Edward Schaekel,
Jr., and Judith vaughan. The
board accepted Rebecca Ann
Dempsey as a tuition student
at the high school and Ida
Martin, Ernestine Hale and
Jerry Black were hired as
substitute bus drivers for the
remainder of the school year
pending certification. Don
Barnett was employed as a
regular bus driver for the
remainder of the year.
The annual organizational
meeting was set for Jan. 3
and it .was agreed that hoard
members can be paid a
maximum of $40 a month.
This would affect only board
members who will start ·new
terms in January. A number
of fund transfers within the
To all interested Citizens of Pomeroy and Meigs County : budget were approved and a
As you know. the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce is letter of thanks was read
beginning to improve the appearance of Pomeroy with the from the Laurel Cliff Fr,ee
addition of new Christmas Decorations. We collected
approJtima\ely n40Q last year, but we are JlOW runnin(j OUt of
mooey to complete final Chrt.stmas decorations. We sorely
MEETING CALLED
need additiooal mooey in order to have lights on the Candy
Meigs County 4-H and FFA
Cane Ornaments oo SeCond, Lynn, Court and Sycamore members plaMing to sell
Streets. As of thia dale, we have twenty large Christmas Tree · animals at the l978 Meigs
Ornament.s oo Main St. and thirty Candy Cane Ornament.s on County Junior Fair Uvestock
other streets. We would like to have additional lights on other Sale are encouraged to attend
streets in Prmeroy next year .
.
a meeting of the sale com·
We hope that you wUl aee the need to make additional mittee Thursday, Dec. 22 at 7
contributiona so the town will glow with pride. Make all p.m. at the County Extension
contributions payable to the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. Office. Items to be discussed
Pomeroy and Meigs County should be very grateful to Jim include the weighing-in of
Frecker, Ed Kennedy, O!uck Mullen, John AndersoQ, Ernie steers on Dec. 31 at Rpyal
Sisson, John Ughlfoot and Bruce Reed. - Fred Crow, Oak Farm, plans for 1976, and
president, Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce .
any rule cha~es necessary.
•
•
Payment to substitute
teachers was increased
Monday night when t~e Meigs
Local School Distri(\l Board
of Education met in regular
session at the junior high
building.
In accordance with an
agreement approved by the
14eigs I.oca!Teachers Assn.,
substitute teachers will now
get $28 a day; $30 a day
beginning the 11th day in the
same assignment and the
regular salary schedule
beginning the 21st day in the
same assignment. The in·
crease is $5 a day in the first
two categories.·
The board employed
Glenna Sprague as girls'
reserve basketball coach at a
salary of $500 for the
remainder of the school year

Chamber President
Fred Crow writes:

Girls Blouses and Sweaters

'

Russ Girl Sportswear
Denim Jeans for Girls 7 to 14
sizes

Bib Overalls and Jumpsuits
Deafer Bags
Baby Blankets and Comforters
And Many, Many . Other Gift
Items
Bring the · children to see
Santa Claus Tuesday or
Wednesday night, 6 to 7 P.M.
- lrd floor.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

·Jury sele-c ted in Fleming
murder
·
case
.

2 to 6x
Toddlers and Girls Dresses

'·

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 19'77

ot1on or m1str1
•

Wrangler and Legs Jeans In sizes

and our hOmemade sauc::e.
No limit to quontity of purchost. OHer good for
Drive-In or tarry-Out. Service .Only.

enttne

at

Buster Browh Knitwear .

This special is offered to acquaint you with the
goodness of our Government Inspected wieners

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 174

Distribution wlll be on Wednesday. Glen Enslen, chairman of the toy
project, expressed \banks for the group for the many contributions of
toys. Many are new and others were in excellent condition. From the left
are J . T. Rue, co-&lt;:hairman of the toys for tots; David Jenkins, Enslen,
David Fox, Rick Knapp, and Bill YoUN! , Jaycee president.

•

e

wtion officials.

Girts PaJamas and Robes

S40,000 MIKimum Insurance tor Each Depositor.

Member Federot Deposit Insurance Corporolton.

carbon
dioxide
concentration .''
How much of an increase in

The women were convicted
July 13 after nine women and
three men jurors &lt;leliberated
15 days on evidence
presented during more than
three months of testimony.
An innocent verdict was
issued oo another poisoning
charge and the only murder
count in the case.
Both
women
later
underwent presentencing
tests at a federal priaon for
women in Alderson, W. Va.,
and are awaiting sentencing.
They were foond guilty of
injecting Pavulon, a powerful
muscle
relaxant,
into
patients at the hospital in
July and August, 1975. More
than 50 breathing failures, a
dozen fatal, were recorded
during a three-weft span at
the institution.
The women were charged
with nine of the pobonlngs.
After the verdict WBI -amounced, federal proaecutors, who
had admitted their case was
based on circumstantial
evidence,
said
they
considered the entire VA
hospital matter closed.
Numerous rallies have
been held in support of the
nurses. Supporters from as
far away as the Philippines
asked President Carter to
intervene oo behalf of the
women.

Striking miners
invade Kentucky

-.r-...

Stop in now and ask abo.ut the Farmers
Bank IRA Today.

(Fs)

absorpuon and reach a new
balance.
Of various projections into
the future of this carbon
diolride concentration, Gates
says, "Almost all of them, by
early in the next century,
project a doubling of the

•.

'

granted."

You'll find a lot of fine
ideas for babies - toddlers ·
boys and girls. Special sale
prices now on boys andc
jackets - infants
l\tr•rtrtlers snow suits. ,:,~_~f.!~
in, look around gladly help you find wn;n~
you want.

Special of the Week

Now vou can watch your
money grow too; with
a Farmers Bank IRA.

gun then drove off.
An unknown quaptity of
cigarettes was taken .
Meanwhile ,. William R.
Lewis, 22, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
charged with shoplifting
'16.44 worth of merchandise
Saturday at the G. C. Murphy
Store in Gallipolis was fined
'lllO and costs and sentenced
to 30 days in the county jail
this morning in Gallipcli~
Municipal Co urt.
Acting Judge James
Bennett continued the case of
Anna Lee Lusk, 55, Syracuse,
who was granted a con·
tinuance on a shoplifting
charge filed by Boyd Siever
of the G. C. M~rphy Store at
the Silver Bridge Plaza. Her
case will be heard Friday,
Dec. 23.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

(Continued fnllll Pill 1)
case. The defendant.s' motloo
for a new trial Is therefore

Grande College has been
denied.
Telephone calls to Einon
Plummer, chairman of the
Community College Board of
Trustees. to Dr. Max J .
Lerner, in charge of tw.,.year
schools with the Ohio Board
of Regents, and to Dolph
Norton, chancellor of Higher
Education in the stale of
Ohio, were not completed by
press time.
Pr. Clyde Evans, provost of
the college, said that he, too,
had heard such a report . Or.
Evans tried futilely to reach
Dr. Paul C. Hayes, president,
who was in Akron for the
weekend for the marriage of
a daughter . He is expected at
home this evening.
Bob
Evans,
newest
member of the Ohio Board of
Regents, said he had learned
over the weekend that the
Technical Careers Center
project would fall without the
signature.
Possibility of the $1.8
million going to some other
project, such as a community
college at Ironton, • is in the
background If the report
turns out to be fact . Another
possibility Is conversion of
Rio Grande College into a
branch of Ohio University,
should It tum out that there is
substance to the report.

Environmental disaster
possible in energy crunch

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

a son, Crown City.

and at that time everything perhaps permanently.
A reliable source said a
seemed " go" for the edifice.
However. today 's report required signature on the
indicates that the building is lease of the building from the
Community College to Rio
" gone" for the time being -

Charges filed in shoplifting sprees

New Haven. Mr. and Mrs.

Nurses

the Meigs Junior High Auditorium in Middleport. A
variety of Christmas music will be featured. From the left
are Cathy Biaettnar, secreiary-treasurer; Laura Hoover,
president; Susan Wright, vice president, and Toni Pope,
librarian. Direction is by Mro. Paige Hunt. ,

CONCERT TONIGHT -Officers of the Meigs Senior
High School vocal department took time out from

rehearsal to pose with this eve;green arrangement wliich
will be P.fr1 of the backdrops for a concert by the senior
and junior high vocal departments at 7:30 this ev'll'\',ing in

....-

•

Methodist Church for per·
mitting the church to use the
Sallsbury School when the
church was badly damaged
by fire in October. The
necessary paper work for two
foreign students, one last
year and one this year, was

approved.
Dan Morris , director of
curriculum, reported that
application has been made
for another grant through the
Division of Vocational
Education. The grant would
be in the neighborhood of
$11,000.
Attending the meeting were
Supt. Charles Dowler,
assistant

administrator ~

Dwight Goins ; Morris, boird
members, Wendell Hoover,

Jennifer S)lects, Virgil King,
Dr. Keith Riggs and Joe
Sayre. Thanks was extended
to Sayre who has served on
the board for the past few
months filling a vacancy.
Others present were Prin·

cipals James Diehl, John
Mora and Bob Morris, and
Charles Downie, president of
the teachers association.

�</text>
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