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                  <text>Meigs
Property
Transfers

Carnage on highways
is less than expected
l niled Press International
1

'llle great feast is

nt.l\\'

lefto\'ers. the football gmm:-s

are over. Lhe tinsel has bt•t•n
\'acuumed off the

:\J n~rh:a

returned tO work
today from tilt&gt; long ho liday
weekend .
Buses. tra ms and pl anes

fltHlf .

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 713-5536

knock out each other's entire
arsenal of long..-ange nuclear

weapons surh as ICBMs , seabased missiles and strategic
bomber s.
" As a r esult. the U.S.S.R.
woultl be deprived of weapons
that co uld reach United
Slates territory," he said .
.. At the same lime lU .S.
nuclear weapon's) ... would be
reta ined in ... close proximity
to Soviet frontiers ...
The general said the U.S.
forward bases in Ew-ope
should come into play in any
st rate gic armS limi tation
nego liations .
" Co uld one ... solve the
problem of limiting the anns
ra c e without tak ing into
consideratlon advance·bdse
nuclear fc'lcilities:" he ·s aid.
" Of course not. "
Simonya n
said
Washi ngto n's dec ision to
develop the cruise missile
was dangerous in itself. but
was aggravated by U.S. plans
lo ship the missiles lo Europe
"and to hand them over to
NATO member countries ."
Simonyan also criticized
U.S . deve lopment of the
neutron t&gt;Jmb - which kills
people but spares buildings but warned &lt;~ neither cruise
missiles nor neutron born bs

Hare ! L Barnhill. Parcels,
Orange .
Paul Ray , Ralph Wells,
Diana Wells to Bonnie Sue St
Cla 1r . one and 30 160 acre,
Ol i ve
Cla ude M
Rupe . Lena
Rupe to Willard Paul Adkin s.
Martha Louise Adk ins, 80

governm ent offices that
stayed closed Monday were
open a~a in .
For hundreds of families.
the holiday ended tragically,
in traffic accidents, fires and
plane crashes .
The
National
Safety
Council had predicted 380 to
480 persons would die oo the
roads during the wrekend .
which began at 6 p .m . Friday
and ended at 12 :01 a .m.
today.
or ot her ne w types of
Texas and California
weapons can mtin1idate the repocted 31 fatalities each .
Soviet Union."
Georgia had 20 and Florida
The article foll owed a and Misoouri 18 each .
st a te ment bv President
A truck driver involved in a
Leonid Brezhnev last week triple-fatality accident was
that MoScow is willing to charged "ith thrre co~mls of
nego tia te a U.S .-Soviet vehi cular
homicide
in
agreement on s:rategic anns . Georgia . Mary Brooks, 33,
limitation, but Washington and her sons - Olarles, 13,
should take more positive and Andrew , 2 of
rr.u. ~" toward a settlement. Savannah, Ga ., were killed
cr..: ... mev stressed one of Monday in the crash of their
his prime concerns was the car and a tractor-trailer on
development of the neutron Interstate 95 near Savannah .
bomb, which he called an
The driver and another son ,
"inhwnan weapon.''
Alvin,12, survived the wreck .

w1loaded thell' swarms of
holiday passengers, and rush
hmu· . . . ., only a phrase on
Momtav - was back to its
us ua l ·c rawl. Stores und

La ura Krebs to Columbus &amp;
:&gt; oulhern Ohio Elec. Co.,
Easement, Columbia .

ALFRED BIGGS
Funera l services were held
Monday at 11 a.m . for Alfred
S. Biggs . 59. of Pomeroy who
died Friday at St. ~rys
Hosp i tal in Huntington . The
services were held at Ewing
Funera l Home with the Rev .
W . H . Perr i n offic i ating .
Bur ial was in Meigs Memory
Gardens,
Mr . Biggs was born Jan . 2.
1918 . He was preceded in
dea th by his par.Ents , James
and Olive Pu ll ins Biggs ; two
si~ters and three brothers .
Surviv ing are his 'Wife;
Opal Birchfield Bigg. s ; one
daughter , Mrs . Char·les
Ba i le y ,
Pomeroy ;
t wo
grandchildren , Chuckie and
Sandy Bailey ; three brothers,
Na than and OorseL bot h of
Pomeroy . and .Norman of
Oayfon, and a sister , F ranees
Adkins of Pomeroy .
WALTER L . WALKER
Funeral ser vi ces were held
Monday f or Walter
L.
( Shorty) Walker, 81. of Route
J , Pomeroy , who died
Saturday mor.nlng at the
Arcadia Nursing
Home .
Coolville. at J p.m . at Ewing_
Chaj:&gt;el With the Rev . James
" Corbett otflclat l ng . Burial
was
in
Rock
SpringS
Cemetery .
.
He was born Jan . 6, 1896,
the son of the late W i lliam

and Anlll Tucker Walker . He
is survived by a sister , Mrs.
Ernest ine Triplett of Toledo :
t h ree brothers , Oscar of
Parkersburg ;
Lloyd · of

Keep passing the buck on

CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

to

Ga l l ipolis.

and

Ralph of

Toledo ;
a
half . sister ,
Charlotte Sayre. Gallipolis ;
one step .davghter, Edna·
Howefl of Columbus and two
step.daughte r -in ·laws ,
Thelma Dill of Syracuse and
Goldie Dill of Ra cine.
He waS a veteran 'ot WW I
and a member of the·
Pomeroy American Legion

and DAV .
JOSEPH WALL
Funeral
ser_.lces
for
Joseph Wall, 85, who died in
St . Nt.ary 's Hospital on Dec .
23, wereheld 10: 30a .m . today

.

Rupe. Parcels , Pomer\)y .
Edith Joanne Williams .

NEW C OF C DIRECTORS, PRESIDENT- Newly elected members of tbe Point
Pleasant-Mason County Chamber of Commerce board of directors are shown with 1978
president. Jimmy Joe Wedge , during a luncheon meeting last week . Pictured are front row,
from left, Mario Uberatore, Wedge and Richard Sayre. Standing , Robert Wingett, Jim
DeLooze and Mike Sellards. Absent was William Hockenberry, elected to serve as vice
president during the nert year. Other officers are Uberatore, secretary and Sayre,
treasurer.

HOSPITAL NEWS

I

at

Miller ' s
Home
tor
Funerals .
He was born May 30. 1892,
in Athalia, son of the late
David Monroe Wall and
Frances M i ller Wall.
He had resided in Ga lli polis
since 1957 .
His w ife preceded him i n
death in 1959. One san . Ear l,
preceded him in death in 1962.
Surviving
are
one
daughter . Mrs. Helen Large,
Proctorv i lle .

Several

grandchildren survive .
Burial was
i n Rome
Cemetery in Proctorville .
Max Cleveland , Hunt ington ,
officiated services .

RALPH P. BROOKS
TUPPERS PLAINS

Ralph P . Brooks, ll, Tuppers
Pla ins , died Su nday af ternoon at Camden Clark
Hosp i tal in Parkersburg .
Mr . Brooks was born at

Sparta, N. C. . Feb. 12, 1926, a
son of the late Tyree Books
and Faye Evans Galyean of
Galax, Va ., who survives .
Mr . Brooks was employed at
Mariett~ w tth the Oravo
Cor'p . as a crane operator . He
was a member of Local Union
168 , Plumbers and Pipefltters.
Surviving in add ition to his
mother are his former wife ,
Donna
Ha lsey
Brooks ,
Tuppers Plains ; three step·
sons ,
Thomas
Watson ,
Dether j a ,
.Ohio ;
James
Wa tson, Tuppers Pla ins ; Ray
Watson , Fort Knox , Ky .
(where he is stationed with
the Army) ; a step.daughter ,
Mrs . Reta Barr , Parkers burg ; his sfep. father , Ether
Galyean , and two sisters,
Mrs . Bla nche Ri·chardson,
and Mrs. Marie Choate, both
of Sparta, N. C.
FUileral services will be
held at 11 a .m . Wednesday at
the Church Funeral Home in
Sparta . Bur ial will be at
Laurel Glen Cemetery, also
at Sparta . Arrangements
were made by the Vaughn
Funeral Home in Parkersburg.

THE MONEY TREE

II ,:I

James F . Arnold. Ruth B.
Arnold to Richard Rupe , Ann

!

I

Veterans Memorlat Hospital
Saturday Admissions Dennis Clark, Pomeroy ;
Lucy Shultz, Tuppers Plains:
Kathryn Dennison, Middleport; Glenna Little,
Middleport; Larry Spencer,
Racine .
Saturday Discharges Deborah Whitlat ch, In ez
Stivers, Kenneth Stewart,
Helen Smith, Kenneth Keiser,
Annette Pierce, John Fry,
Jessie Young, Neva Grimm.
Mitchell Craycraft, Milford
Frederick, Roscoe Cozart,
Darien~ Barrett, William
Zerkle, Birtie Wyatt. John
Hinkle, LAlri Cornell, Charles
Cornell, Dennis Clark .
Sunday Admitted - Clara
McMaster, · Minersville;
Danielle McNeil , Shade ;
Carrie C. Judson, Hartford.
Sunday Discharged Allen Warden .
Monday Admissi9ns Julia Laudermilt, Mid·
dleport ; Joseph Stewart ,
Bidwell; Marie Custer,
Pomeroy: Lucy Spencer,
Syracuse! Anna Crislip, LAlng
Bottom;
Billie Bailey.
Rutland.
Monday Discharges Schultz ,
Bernice
Lucy
Mollohan:

Palestine
(Continued from page 1)
consider that, from his own
viowpoint,
he
made
concessions. But in my view ,
he has not. n
'
And
Israeli
Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan,
laking a far less optimistic
view than Begin, said he was
"very worried" by the wide
gaps that developed at the ·
summit.
HThe question is how tAl
avoid rwming aground or
hitting a dead end," Dayan
said on the flight home from
Cairo.
In Warner Robins, Ga .,
President Carter said Begin
called him Monday to report
that his talks with Sadat were
~&lt;very successful." Carter
said the United States would
do ''alJ we can" to keep the
peace momentum going.
Sadat and Begin had hoped
to annoW1ce an agrrement on
the "principles
peace n
during tbeir summit in the
Suez Canal city of Ismailia,
near the Egyptian president's
r""t home.
But Egyptian officials said
Sadat refused to announce a
surprise Israeli offer for total
withdrawal [rom the Sinai
Peninsula, because he
thought it dodged the sharp
differences that remained on
wider issues in a Middle East
settlement.
Key among these was a
Begin 'rejection of Sadat 's
demand for establishment a
Palestinian
state,
the
oUicials said . They said
Begin's Sinai offer also
masked refusal of an
Egyptian call for Israel to
withdraw
from
other
captured Arab territory as
well .
The two leaders did agrre
to establish two Cabinet4evel
committres to discuss the
military and political aspects
of a peace settlement. The
committres will meet Jan. 15,
one in Israel and the other in
Egypt .
Sadat and Begin also
agrred to upgrade the IsraeliEgyptian conference in Cairo
to the minis! erial level. The
conference has taken a backseat role to lhe talks between
the two ,leaders.

Holzer Medical Center
1Dls&lt;·harges Dec. 231
Mrs. Patrick Bailey and
son, Kevin Butcher, Jodie
Ferrell,
Roy
Gilkison ,
Melinda Howell .· Gladys
Huntington , Rosa. Jones ,
Nona Massie, Frank Mills
Jr., Larry Nanna , Callie
Roberts, Donna Ross, Harold
Russell, Reba Sarver , Helen
Saunders, Ester Wamsley,
Alden Wed e meyer . Byron
Williams, Paul Wyatt .
(Births, Dec. 23) ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Cheva lier , a daughter ,
Gallipolis.
(Discharges, Dec. 24)
Gene Boyer , Cecil Burnette, Olarles Burt, Joshua
Cardwell. Minni e Clark,
Mary Drurrmiond. Maggie
Freeman, Theodore Frey,
Hea ther Ha stwell, Jerry
Henthorne, Mrs . J ohn Henzmann and daughter, Lucina
Howard, John Jackson·.
Catherine LAlwery, Gladys
Miller , Virgil Roberts Sr ..
Caroly n Robinson, Mrs .
Randy Russell and daughter,
Randy
Taylor,
Minnie
Walker , • lrene )Yasmer,
William Whealdon , Torres
Williamson.
(Births·, Dec. 24)
Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Colwell, a son, Vinton. Mr .
and Mrs. James Waggoner, a
daughter, Sandyville, W. Va.
(Discharges, Dec. 25)
Nora Beatty, Catherine
Bowles, Treva Caldwell, Mrs.
Delbert Clark and son, Mrs.
Paul
Cremeens
and
daughter, Angelia Garrett,
Olristie Halley, Steven Hill,
Lora Knighting, Denver
McFann , Mrs . Chester
McGuire and son, Elsie
Pleasant, Mrs. Cecil Roach
and daughter, Charles Sheets
Jr .
(Births, Dec. 25)
Mr . and Mrs. William
Peck, a son, Cheshire. Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Strele, a son,
Wellston.
(Discharges, Dec. 26)
Paul Hall, Golda Helm,
Hilbert Hoff Jr., Mary Layne.
(Births, Dec. 26)
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Friend,
a son, Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs. William Hapney, a son.
Bidwell. Mr . and Mrs. David
Jeffers, a son, Mason, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Metzler, a daughter, Oak Hil).

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday
through
Saturday, a chance of snow
Thursday. Fair Frlday and
Saturday. Highs Thur1day
will be In the middle %0s or
low 30s, warming to the
middle and upper 40s by
Saturday.
Low
tem·
peratures will be between
10 and 15 degrees early
Thur1day and between 30
and 35 degrees early
Saturday.

TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Letart Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m.
on Dec. 30 and on Jan. 2 at the
home of the clerk, Darrell
Norris at Letart Falls.

WALK-UP WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRIDAY EVENINGS 5 TO 7 P.M.

"THE

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Now you can watch your
money grow too, with
a Farmers Bank IRA.
(Individual Retirement Account)
II you're not covered by a Retirement
Program at your place of employment then
a Tax Free Farmers Bank IRA is lor you.
Stop in now and ask about the Farmers
Bank IRA Today.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporati on
DEPOSITS INSURED T0$40,000

(Fs)

Fanners Bank

t • , ,u

S40,000 Max1mum Insurance for Each Depositor.
Member FectPrttl OP.Dosit lr'!,surance Corporation .

formerly
Edi th
Joann
Ru ssell. M ick ey Williams to
Mel'll in R Van Meter . Nancy
K . Van Meter . Lot. Pomeroy .
Nell ie Tewksbary . Adrah
Tew ksbary , Pauline Bennet1 .
Eva B. Struble to Everett

Micha el.

•

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses have
been issued to James Keith
Ables,. 23, RD, Minersville,
and Edna Mae Stevens, 28,
Syracuse; Anna Crislip, Long
Thomas, 54, Rt . 2, Racine,
and Dorothy Y. Stafford, 61,
Rt. I, Middleport, and to
LAlwell Thomas Collins, 43,
Shade, and Jo Ann Lucille
Wolfe, 34, Syracuse.

CONCLAVE SET
Ohio Valley Commandery
24, Knights Templar, will
hold a state conclave at 7:30 .
p.m . Wednesday . All Sir ·
Knights are invited.

RIO GRANDE Rio completion a year from now.
Final action on the deed
Grande College's Board of
had
been held up temporarily
Trustees Tuesday night in a
until
the Ohio Attorney
special meeting accepted the
General's
oHice gave final
deed, as amended by the
approval
on
the
suggestion of the Attorney
General's office, which trims- . arrangement.
The Center, the first to be
fers land from Rio Grande
College to Rio Grande built by the Community
Colleg~. and the first new
Community College.
The trustees also approved building to be constructed on
all the necessary resolutions the Rio campus since 1971,
for the release of funds so will house 10 current and
technology
that construction can begin planned
irrunediately on the Com- programs offered by Rio
munity College's $1.8 million Grande College and ComTechnical Careers Center . munity College.
The 35,000 square foot
Paul C. Hayes, Rio Grande
building
will include classpresident, said that with this
room
and
laboratory space
action the Ohio Board of
for
accounting
, secretarial
Regents will release the
science,
electronics.
health
funds and construction will
te
c
hnol
og
les,
mining
,
start at once. Gro undbreaking ceremonies for the manufacturing, automotive,
Center Were held Dec. 14. The diese), food service and law
Center is scheduled for enforcement education
programs .

•

at

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 179

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sadat wants Carter to put pressure on Israel
United Press lnternallonal
Sadat said war between Begin and Sadat.
Israeli Prime Minister Egypt and Israel was now
"You can asswne 1t's sigMenahem Begin said today "unthinkable ." Earlier, be nifica nt, "
said in
there was " no chance" his ·predicted a Middle East . Jerusalem , noting that
army would pull back from peace settlement within two Carter and King Hussein are
the occupied West Bank of the wreks.
visiting Iran next week.
Jordan and the Gaza Strip but
An Israeli official disclosed Dayan's absence from a
Egyptian President Anwar that Foreign Minister Moshe cabinet meeting Tuesday
Sadat said be would ask Dayan flew to Tehran gave rise to speculation he
President Carter to put pres- Tuesday lo report to the Shah had left the country on a
sure on the Jewish state to on the Christmas Day secret mission.
reverse its stand.
summit meeting between
Begin, outlirting the peace
plan he presented to Sadat in
Ismailia, Egypt, told the

he

18 HOUJrCOMFORT

-.

---------- --·-

Style

11

Reg.
Retdil

·-.-~ - ~-,

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41
43
220
201
9 50

23
2672

2678
2690
2693
2697
2629
2608
2616

$7.95
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16.95
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25 .95

-Sdle
Price

-a~~"».~::~~O:::.~:::::o...::-:~,,. ~:~:i:::::::~:·:::::::~:::::::.-:::::..-&amp;.~,'::~~,~~

$6.95
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INews. . •in Briefsl~

~

By Unfted Press Internatlooal
ALEXANDRIA, KY . - KENTUCKY STATE POLICE
have not given up hope . of finding a 5-year-old Northern
Kentucky boy missirtg since last Wednesday. Conceding that
all leads in the case have so far proved negative, Detective
Philip Harney of the state police said authorities were
continuing an intensive investigation into the disappearance o[
Keilh Holliday .
Keith, a 4-foot, 45-pound boy with strawberry-blond hair,
was wearing a dark blue coat, blue jeans, ski mask and gloves
wben he was last seen. He had left home to watch workers
building a house nearby.

MEMPIUS, TENN.- A YOUNG COUPLE walked irtto St.
Jude. Children's Research Hospital Tuesday, plunked down
$11,000 in twenty-dollar bills and left without identifying
lhemseives or asking for a receipt. Carl Simmons, hospital
administrator, said the money immediately was taken to a
bank and verified. He said he did not try to trace the
anonymous donors.
"When someone gives you $11,000 in green money, you
don't argue with their motives," Sinunons said . 11 Knowing
they wanted to be anonymous, I didn 't pursue it. I was sort of
honoring their wish."
··.
"They just said St. Jude had blessed tbem with soine
favors," said Sandy Vogel, an ·actministrative assistant, who
had received the $550 $20 bills.

Tuesday, Dec. 27 thru Saturday, Dec. 31

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS

NEW YORK -SEN. WlWAM PROXMIRE, a frequent
.
critic of New York City's spendirtg practices who has hinted his
Senate Banking Committee might not approve extension of
federal loans to the city, paid a surprise visit early Tuesday to
swing garbage cans with sanitation workers. Sources said tbe
62-year-old WiSfOnsirt Democrat wanted to,investigate charges
that too many people were employed iii unnecessary tasks by
lhe Sanitation Department.
·
Dressed warmly in woolen Clothes, Proxmire caught three
sanitation workers by surprise at 7 a .m. They sremed
mystified by. the notion that aU. S. senator wanted to come to
New York to collect garbage in the cold.
"We didn't know what he had In mipd. He just loa&lt;led
garbage wllh us. He also took a ride to the dump and found out
how that worked," said Louis CardeUa, a truck driver, who has
collected garbage for lhe city for 24 years.

American Dog-(Slaw Dog)
Meat Sauce &amp; Slaw
SPECIAL 40~
PRICF.
Footlong American Dog

Reg. 60c

SPECIAL 60~
PRICE

This special is offered to acquaint yOU with the
goodness of our Government inspected wieners ·
and our hq,memade sauce.
~
'
No limit to quantity of Purchase. OHer good for
Drive-In or Carry-Out service Only.

~"'!;_~~~~l#JII#JL#it.:]l;Jl,;jl.:Jl:iC,"¥ ..·

'

December 1978, the Center will house the college's
technology programs and be located below Paul Lyne
&lt;lenter on the Rio campus.

'

.

Israeli
parliament
he is unthinkable ."
proposed autonomy for the
Schmidt repeated his
Arabs on the West Bank and unqualified support for
Gaza Strip but a continued Sadat's peace drive ""d said
Israeli military presence to he shared his optimism. But
assure security for Jews.
he sai~· Bonn - with close ties
"There is no chance we will both to Egypt and hardline
remove our army," he said. Arah parties opposiqg Sadat
"Let all who want peace with - thought it was crucial to
us hear this armoW1cement. bri(lg the holdout ' Arabs as
"With the close . of the well as the Soviet Union into
Ismailia mretings we have the current peace process .
done our part, and now the
"l believe that a meeting of
second side has the floor." • all parties involved in tbe
But the official Cairo daily conflict is rea~y necessary,"
AI Ahram said Sadat had the chancellor said.
enlisted Carter's backing in
In Beirut, two l eftist
reversing Israel 's refusal to newspapers said hard~ine
accept Egypt's key demand Arab leaders would hold a
for the creation of a second anti-Sadat summit
Palestinian state.
meeting in Algiers next
"It is for Prime Minister month to chart their strategy
Begin to tell his people to re- • against the Egyptian peace
evaluate the whole situation, mov~s .
especially after my (NovemBut Sajiat, in a broaqcast
ber) visit to Jerusalem and interview Tuesday, said
his visit to Egypt," Sadat said Begin offered to withdraw
at a joint news conference from Egyp\'s Sinai peninsula
with. visiting West German captured in the 1967 Middle
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. East War. The Israeli leader
He
added;
"l told confirmed that today, saying
Chancellor Schmidt war now the pullback would be

gradual, with some areas set
aside as buffer zones and
.others as " limited forces
zones."
Sadat said he beld off
accepting Begin's offer to
keep the pressure on Israel to
withdraw from the West
Bank of Jordan and ""'"w.~:reation o[ a
state.
Despite this
disagreement,
Begin negotiated "fairly and
openly" and predicted speedy
progress toward a full Middle
East peace .
" Premier Begin yesterday
said about three months,"
Sadat said in an interview·
with ABC. " I say two."

FINED $10, COSTS

Jaffies N. Morris 1 22,
Minersville, was fined $10
and co,ts in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night when
he appeared on a disorderly
manner charge.

TERESA BUCKLEY

New packer''·;;;:::'' ';;;~''' R~edsville
•
truck may in coal talks woman m
be bought
Rose Bowl
WASHINGTON (UPI)The head of lbe Bituminous
Coal Operators Association
appeared optimistic today
The Meigs County Comthat agreement can be
missioners Tuesday night
reached on a new contract
decided
to
draw
up
with 130,000 striking
specifications for a new
mlDers wbo walked off
sanitary landfill packer
tbelr jobs tbree weeks ago.
truck .
Josep.h
Brennan,
It was the consensus of the
president of tbe BCOA,
board that the old truck
showed up for tbe opening
should be kept as a back-up.
of the talks. He seemed ·
The landfill truck has not
optlmlslte that some
been operating for a week
agreement would even·
and wiU not be back until
tually be reached but told
Dec. 29.
reporteh It was "ImJohn Rice, county expossible to estimate" how
tension agent, asked the
long It would take.
board to provide fW1ds to hire
"We're going to get a
a 4-H agent. The matter was .
good
contract that wlll take
tabled for further study. Rice
Us
lllto
the next century,"
was asked to submit a breakhe
sat
d.
(aee Page %earlier
down of his departmental
report.)
operating budget.
Attending were Henry ;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Wells, Rich Jones and Jim
TRADE DEFJCIT .DOWN
Rnush, commissioners andWASIDNGTON (UP!) Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
The United States narrowed
its trade deficit with foreign
nations to $2.1 billion in
November, indications the
nation will sustain a record
deficit of about $27 biUion for
the
year,
Commerce
Department data showed
Retail and automotive today. The annual deficit will
fall below administration
sales tax receipts in. Meigs
projections of a $30 billion
County were both up for
deficit
and suggests there
November, according to tbe
may
be
further
immonthly report of Mrs.
provements in 1978.
Gertrude Donahey, state

Sales tax take
up last month

treasurer.
Retail sales tax receipta for
NEWARK, OHIO - LAST •WEEK wholesale florist
William Brun was running out of coal to protect his plants November, this year, totaled.
woril1 $150,000- one of the first victims of the current United $78,619 .56 cbmpared to
Mine Workers strike. This week, after an article appeared in receipts of $75,212.69 for
the Columbus Dispatch, Brun said he has had so many offers of November, 1976, an increase
a•·ailabie coal that be may go into the coal brokerage business. of 4.52 percent. Motor vehicle
"I've gotten about lOcallsfrom haulers, brokers and otber sales tax receipts for the past
people with coal available in Ohio and Kentucky," Brun said . November totaled $40,286.13
"I got so many calls I may set up mv own task force and pass . compared to receipts of
along tbe Information to the state energy office." Brun uses a $39,696.69 for November,
coal-fired furnace to keep several acr" s of grre!Jhouse plants 1976, an increase of 1.48
percent.
1
(Continued on Jl811e 12)
•

fOod food~

'lW

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1977

1=\..AYfi:: X

THE ARCHITECT'S DRAWlNG of the new $1 ,8
million Technical Carrers Center at Rio Grande College
and Community College. Scheduled for completion in

know how much longer it will be before it can be put into
operation again . Meantime , an effort is being made to
haul the accumulations o[ trash [rom the several
collection points to the land fill, using dump trucks .
However , the trash and garbage is winning . County
workers have been unable to keep up with the
accumulation using dump trucks .

en tine

LINGERIE DEPARTME8T - 2ND FLOOR

Special of the Week

"fllteie aie

UNSIGHTLY, UNHEALTHY - Dark Hollow Road
residents 'Tlear Pomeroy' are complaining about this
accumulation of garbage and trash near their homes :
Several large containers are full and this pile has
accumulated. Normally, the containers are emptied by a
lin-vehicle of the county. However , it lias been out of order
~nee Dec . 18 and is in Athens for repair . No one seems to

Careers center
deed is signed

Mabel Michael.

Par cels. Salisbul'y .
Mildred Van Horn, Frances
Parrish . Donald Parrish ,
Emma Elizabeth Lyons ,
Alfred H Lyon'S . Frances M
Pi cl\ens, Will iam N. Pickens.
R~na
Fi tch. Oscar Fitch .
Nel lie Tewksbary . Adrah
Tewksbary , Pauline ,Bennett ,
E va B Struble to E'lleretf
M ic ha.el. Mabel Michael ,
Pa r cels, Sa lisbury

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Reg . 9Sc

•

open ·and broke out some as no tools were stolen from
panes of glass.
the auto mechanics section
Desks and files were deputies said.
ransacked . If the cabinets
Serious damages at a
and desks were locked they Racine Service Station was
were forced open . There was · avoided Tuesday afternoon.
heavy damage to the locked The sheriff's department said
desks and cabinets.
Unda S. Parsons, Rt. 3,
In the main office area five Racine had been at a station
locked filing cabinets were and purchased gasoline. She
heavily damaged after being thought the attendant had
pried open .
taken the nozzle from the
Some money was taken . tank and she pulled out fro!"
Apparently the intruders the station, pulling the pump
w~e looking only fo~ money
from the island.
A deer was killed Olristmas eve when it ran into the
path of a car traveling south
on SR 7 near Five Points
driven by Judith Sargent, 23,
Pomeroy.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

or

.. . for the finest services offered
by any bank. Visit us today for
more information about our
checking and savings account
plans. We will be happy to serve
you .

Persons unknown - their
number also unknown wrecked and ransacked offices and rooms at Meigs
High School causing heavy
damage in an apparent
search for money Friday
night or early Saturday
morning, Sheriff James J .
Proffitt's Dept. disclosed
today.
The building was entered
through a double rear door.
After entry was gained the
Intruders pried other doors

acres. Rutland .

,-------------------------~1

: . Area Deaths

hit at school

Carl J Barnh ill. Hazel L.
Barnh ill to Carl J Barnhill.

Soviets cite presence of
nuclear weapons in Europe
By OOUGJ..AS STANGLIN
~IOSCOW (UP! l - Th&lt;'
&amp;met Union has the right to
question the presence o[ U.S.
nuclear weapons ln f,ur ope
beca use they give the West an
Wlfair advanta ge in the eyent
of nuclear war, a Soviet
general said toda y.
Gen . Rair Simonyan , H
OOctor of military science,
sa id in the officia l Pravda
newspaper that U.S . nuclear
weaponry in Europe - kn oY.'Tl
as ··a dvan cebase nu cle a r
forces" -- are " more than
enough lo raze the whole of
Western Europe ."
Simonyan
said
the
inequa lit y is cleat in a
situation where the United
Slates and the Soviet Union

Desks, files

TABLE COMPLE'I'ED
A recent explanation by
Meigs
County
Auditor
Howard Frank in regar!!. to
residents figuring their own
real estate taxes did not include the tax rate and the
reduction factor for Columbia
Township. That rate and
factor have now been
determined as $40.60 and
.!1521809.
.J

REEDSVILLE Miss
Teresa Buckley, Rredsville,
left today from Columbus by
air for the Rose Bowl with the
Ohio State Fair Youth Choir
Alumni Assn.
A student
at
Ohio
University and a graduate of
Eastern High School, Miss
Buckley toured last year with
the all-state youth choir and
Ibis year has been rehearsing
with the alumni group for the
California trip.
Miss Buckley and her
group will have dinner at the
University of Southern
California tonight and on
Thursday participate in the
NBC parade review. On
Friday, Miss Buckley will
tour Universal Studios . and
lunch there, then in the afternoon visit the Hollywood
Bowl,
Mann's
Chinese
.- Theaters, Beverly Hills arid
oth~r points of tou'rist interest.
On Saturday, Miss Buckley
will visit Disneyland and take
part in the Disneyland
parade. She will attend a New
Year's Eve party that
evening. SW1day will include
a rehearsal sesson, a tour of
the parade area mcluding the
area where ' floats for the
, Rose Bowl Parade are
ronstructed.
Monday Miss Buckley will
go to the parade formation
area at 5:45a.m. and will be
parading with the choir which
will use voice packs so that
their music will carry along
the parade route. Part of
Miss Buckley's group will
return to Columbus on
Monday evening and part on
Tuesday .

Officers Hawley (left) and Manley

No end is in sight
to Hawley's troubles
Robert Hawley , Pomeroy, employe of the
Pomeroy Police Department, retired from the U. S.
Navy, on July 29 this year was admitted to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. This was only the beginning of
Hawley's problems.
On Aug. 5 he was transferred to Riverside Methodist
Hospita.where he underwent surgery on Aug. 17 where
vertebrols in his neck were removed and replaced,.
He was sent home and on Oct. 28 was again admitted
to Riverside until Nov .1, for infection of the bone . He
was readmitted for the s;pne thing on Nov. 11 through
the 22. He now wears a neck brace and if the infection
reoccurs more surgery will be required .
All this hospitalization takes money and the MeigsGallia Fraternal Order of Police started the ball rolling
when they gave Hawley $100 to help on his expenses .
Ray Manley, secretary of, tbe Meigs-Gallla FOP
wrote to the police 136lodges in the state and told them
of the situation.
.
'
Thus far nine lodges have responded with donations .
They are Warren County FOP 103, Lebanon, County
Une Lodge 101, Mogadore; South Euclid Lodge 80,
South Euclid, West Lake CoW1ty 116, Willowick ,
Southern Ohio Lodge 55 , Athens, each with a donation
of $25; Austintown Lodge 126, Austintown, and Lake
Geauga County 16: Mentor, $50 each; Western
Cuyahoga Lodge 25, Lakewood, $100.
AB of this date Hawley's bills total $14,000 witb him
having to pay 25 percent. He is ever so grateful to the
Meii!S-GaUia Lodge and the others for their ponations .
~

'

'

1.~

S~sidy

is at
$200,000 plus
The three local school
districts of Meigs County
received $20,4,058 .96 , after
deductions for employes
retirement,
in
the
distribution o[ the State
School Foundation subsidy
payments for December.
'Eastern Local received
$47,281.41; Meigs Local,
$1!4 ,778.07, and Southern ,'
$41,999.48. In addition the
Meigs County Board of
Education received a direct
allotment of $14,478.84 .

ONE MAN FINED
Fined in the court of
Pomeroy May...,..Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night on
reckless operation charges
was Dennis Clark, Pomeroy,
$250 and costs. Forfeiting a
$250 bond posted on that
charge was John Jordan,
Parkersburg, while Basil
Haynes, Pomeroy, forfeited a
$5C bond posted on in·
toxication charges.

'

.

�•
3- The Dally Scnllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Dec Zll, 1977
:! - Th£&gt; Oath

~nunt"' , ~1tddlt&gt;port - Pomero \ .

.:: .·: ~.-: . ·:·:•,•, ~= •, . ::

0 ...... · ' .

~· Mason County
..

•

• ' • . ·;

•

..

•

......

•

• •

0. Wed.nt~sdm
•

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•

News Notes

(

Soft coal bargainers return for .n egotiations
8 ) ELMER W. LAMMI

:-&gt;FII IlAVE :\ - A fa mill gathenng " as held on Chnst ·
mast'\ l'rHIII! at the home of Mr and Mrs H.oss Kmg and Mtkt&gt;,
U1 Nt"" H~\ en Those t'nJ O' mg the dinner and gtft ex.change
mcluded \lr and Mrs Herbert Ktng Letart . Mr and Mrs
Hobert Roush and son. Bobb) Jot', Jefferson. Texas. ~olanda
Kmg. Parkersburg. Mr an d Mrs Lester J ohnson. Clifton. and
hosts Mr and Mrs Kmg and ~hkP
Tiwse eallmg latrr m the e\ emng tncluded Mr and Mrs
Gaq K tng and sun M~1Uhe " , Ne\\ Ha' en , Mr and Mrs
()J

:m.t977

\llle Bush H&lt;utfon l

CL!F fON - ~ChriSt mas Da) famul) gathenng took place
at the home of Mr and Mrs Harold Rickard, Sr Otnner guests
mcluded Mr and Mrs Harold Rtckard, Jr of New Haven, Mr
and Mrs Robert Rickard and sons. Bob and Char he, J D and
Matthe\\ of Chfton. Mr and Mrs Danm Rickard and sons,
Kent and Rodne) of r\e• Ha&gt;en. Mr and Mrs Lester Johnson.
Mr W1lllam Rickard. all of Chfton
Mason and area personals
Mrs '\anc' VanMeter entertamed on Sunday \\ tth a
Chnstmas dmnt'r Attendmg " ere Mr and Mrs Elmer
Vd nl\1eter Tim , MISt) cHld E n c of Lesage, W Va Mr and
Mrs James H~1rns l.JSd , Terr~ a nd J a rrue of Calhpohs Mr
a nd Mrs Ra nd\ VanMeter and Mat t of Clifton
Sunda\ dmner guests o(

M r~

Lau rene L ew iS were Mrs

Clinedda Austm Valene and Angle Mrs Elame Grogan,
Susie Wallace Greg and Theresa
Sunda1 guests of Mrs Ehzabeth Jeffers were Mrs
Mildred Castle , Mrs Grace Kisamore. Mr and Mrs La rr)
Belcher all of Nel' ark, OhiO
Mrs Doroth) Po\\ ell of Chiton \1SIIed Saturda y and
Sunda) " 1th her da ughte r and son·m·law ~1r and Mrs Robert
Greer Pt Pleasant
Mrs Fred Spencer spent the Chrtstmas holiday with her
son .md daughte r.m-law, Dr and Mrs Edwa rd Spencer and
da ugh ters Oa\\ n and J o) at Bluefield . W Va

Mrs Bever!) Correa l and children of Chalk Hill , Pa , Mrs
Ka thy Canterbur y an d children of St Al bans \1Stted Mrs
Correal a nd Mrs Canterbur y s grandmother , Mrs Doroth)

Po\\ ell at Cltft on Thev a !so VISited Mrs Nann VanMeter
Mrs Helen Wtliianis spent Chmtm.; eve 1uth her
daughter an d son-I n·la" , Mr and Mrs Joe Scttes and son,
Dean a! New Haven Mrs Wtlllams spent ChriStmas da) with
Mrs Clara Wtlllams and 111 tile evemng vtstted her sister, Mrs
George Bumgardner m Mason
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Ault of Fort Lauderdale, Fla
11s1ted durmg the hollda)s " 1th her sister and husband , Mr
Md Mrs Lester Johnson
OAK GROVE - Attendmg the Oak Grove Uruted
Metilod!St Chnstmas fellowshtp dmner and gift exchange Dec
18 were Re&gt; Bobb) Woods Ruth , Eddie and Craig, Hazel
Fn end, Ro1 and Martha Fn end, Raymond, Norman and
Bruce . Pa t, Mark and M1ke Frtend, Clarence and Naomi
Yeage r Glona Roush and Zoann , Holllce Thompson , Paul and
Alice Randolph, Stella Krebs a nd Stacie , Laura Gibbs, Ray
and Jo Robmson, Florence Cu llen, Bill and Lucy Cullen , Tom,
Jack and Terry, Joann Lipscomb, Ethel Rayburn, Glenn and
Sue lcenho" er, Allen and Amy, Vtrg1l and LouiSe Adkms,
Nellie and Lester Adkins , Florence Love, Milton and Debbie
Roush, Sarah Knapp
Harry Thompson. age 94 a long time member of Oak Grove
Church. died on December 8 A trustee of the church and a
fa 1tilful member , he w1ll be missed

~HWTH
~~

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Fat in dairy products
B1 Law rence Lamb.M D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
confused about butter fat I
thought from one of your col·
umns that It was h1gh m
sat urated fats but accordmg
to the dairy compa ny I wrote,
It 1s over one·th1rd un

vasc ular disease You should
also kno" that the tolal fat
eonsumpt1on - both I) pes of
un satu r ate d fa t
plu s
saturated fat - should be
llm1ted to no more than 35
percent of your total ea lone
mtnke
sa tu re~ ted fat Doe!:i thi s m ean
To g1ve ) ou more mforma) ou c.an use butter mstead of llon a bout da1ly products, I
poh unsaturated margarine ? am sendmg you The Health
DEAR READER- You ca n Letter number 7·2, M11k Prouse \\ hat you wa nt, but the ducts Good and Bad Others
truth 1s that butter IS a !ugh who want this mfonnatton
satura ted fa t product The tn· can se nd 50 cents wtth a long,
fonnatton )OU have been sta mp ed, se lf-addresse d
given IS trusleadmg Butter IS envelope for 1t to me m care
19 percent \later by wetght It of this newspaper, P 0 Box
IS 46 pe rcent saturated fat, 155!. Radio C1ty Statton. New
accordmg to the U S Depart· York, NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB - Bemg
ment of Agnculture hand·
book ( o• er hall of the 81 a college student hvmg tn a
grams of food matenal after donmtory, I am fmdmg 1t
the " eight of water ts sub- necessary to wear ear plugs
tracted , For a general rule, Is there any possibility ,of
or
even
thmk of butter fat as ove r 50 phy s 1cal
psychologiCa l damage w1th
per~.:e nt sa tu ra ted fat
The Inte1 .Soctety CoiTimlS·
.s Jon fu r H ea rt D1sease
Resources 1econ1n1ends that
you lum t you r satura ted fat
mt.ake to no more than 10 percent of the ca lon es for your

total dietary mtake Clearly
If )OU use mu ch butter fa t,
you Wi ll quickly exceed the
recommended 10 percent
It ts misleading to tell peopl e tha t butterfat 1s high m
unsetura ted fats The tmpllcatwn 1s that all unsaturated fa ts a re good for
you There are two types of
unsatura ted fa ts, monoun·
saturated fats a nd polyun·
sa tura ted fa ts Only 2 percenl
of butter IS linoleiC ac1d, the
polyunsaturated fat that 1t
con lams The rest of the un
saturated fat 1s monoun·
saturated fat And, accordmg
to the USDA values, that
represents 29 percent of the
wetght of butter
I rtught add that current
tlunktng IS that a small
li!JlOUiit Of polyunsa turated
lat IS unportant m the dwt,
but the I e IS no reason to think
tha t mcl udmg monouni.aturated fat IS of any benefit
Whatsoever It IS not constdered as IITlporlant as
Saturated fat as a factor m
ra1smg your body's produc·
lion of fatty-cholesterol particles •tdenllfied v.'lth heart

these?

WASHINGTON tUPi l Negotlators for the soft coa l
mdustr) and 130 000 strtkmg

mmers are

back at the

barga uung table after a hveda) ChriStmas reress amid
some mdtrat10ns of progress

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporla Editor
DALLAS t UPI l - Bud Grant. the Mmnesoia Vtki ngs lo"
key but htghly percepuve coach. !Sn 't easy to stampede w1th
quest1ons He gene-raJI) answe rs them at h1s o " n even pace
and that s what he was was dmng no" ta lking about Sunda)'s
upcommg NFC IItle game \l ith Dallas' favored Cowboys
Grant \\hose unde rdog V1kmgs upset the Ran1s on a muddy,
che¥. ed·up f1e ld tn Lus Angeles Monday, was conung tn fr om
Mnrnea pohs 0\er one of those amphfted spea ker phoneS

answermg quesllons bemg put to him by a group of footba ll
JOUrnaltsts
ll the Vtkmgs can get by the Cowboys. \\hich tsn't likely.
they II be JOurney m~ to the Super Bowl for the fifth ttme The)
have gone out the re four times before and have lost .-er) ttrne
With such old hands as Jun Ma rsha ll. 39, Mtck Tingelhoff , 37,
Carl Elle r and Paul Krause. both 35, and Alan Page, 31,
forrrung the nucleus of h1s ba ll club , Grant was asked if he felt
th"v still were hungr} enough to wm
'The hungn est pia) ers on any team are tile oldest players."
said the Vtkings· roach ·The older pla)ers ha ve a better
a ppreciatiOn of what something hke all this IS worth, not only
m oneyw1se , but v. hat tt's v. orth otherw1se to be on a wrnrung
tea m The) 'r e the ones you never ha ve to worr) about
The plaj ers \Util whom you may have t r ouble gettmg
ac ross wha t the gam e m eans and what the playoffs m ean are
generally ) our younger playe rs because "he n they com e mto

football today, they're cornmg mto an affluent operatiOn It
takes a while for them to apprec iate what this all means "
Bud Grant was referrmg to hts own ~mn esot a Vtklngs
Without realtzmg 1t, he also was mcludmg someone hke Roger
Staubach, the Cowboys' veteran ~)e ar -o ld quarterback
Staubach, who performed so superlatively agamst the
Cht cago Bears In Monday 's 37-7 crusher ts not only a fme
player on the fteld. but tile type mdi\1duaJ everybody likes off
11 as " ell Staubach ts football's counterpart of baseball's
Brooks Robmson Frtendly , eastly approachable, down to
earth a nd pleasant to talk with He s sllll hungry , eager as ever
to wm , but he 's not lookmg to devour eve rybody along the way
A local datry ftrm honored hun Tuesday for betng voted '
"Favonte Cowboy of th e year by Dallas fans The Cowboys
quart erback polled nearly twice as man} \'Ote s as runnerup
Drew Pearson , and 1t was the f1fth bme he f1m shed on top m

the ballotmg
FolloWing Monday's contest w1th the Bears, many of them
also praised Staubach for the wa) he handled the Co• hoys, but
some felt , that m v1ew of the 3Q-po1nl margin , possibly he
m1ght have run 1t up more than a bsolutely nec essary before
Tom Landry removed him four mmutes rnto the fma l quarter
with Dallas m front, 37.{)

Without shoWing any resenbnent, a nd more m adrruratwn
tham m a nger , Gary Fenc1k, the Bears' second year
safetyman, noted that most other teams would 've been content
to lay back and eoast a httle after pulling as far ahead as tile
Cowboys did
"The Cowboys weren't satisfied to s1t on tile lead they had,"
Fenc1k commented "They turned on the killer mshnct to
embarra ss us , and they d1d I don't thmk we have any reason to
feel embarrassed though We did the best we could I was
commg up the tunnel after the game and the reporters looked
more down than we did I looked at them and satd , 'C'mon ,

guys, you can smtle It's not the end of the world you know " '
After rece1vmg his award Tuesday, Staubach dented that he
or any of the other Cowboys were trytng to rWl up the score on
the Bears
'
" We weren't tr]tng to embarrass them," he satd "It 's only
that when you're m a ball game like that, you ftnd yourself
thmkmg what eould happen I call&gt; remember some games
when we got 11 pretty good from the other team , too A number
of years back Mmnesota beat us, 54-13, 1n a regular season
game I went m With the score ~7 and all they did was keep
rushmg the passer It was very frustrating "
Obvtously, Landry didn 't thmk the Cowboys were runmng tl
up unnecessarily etther Questtoned as to when he first felt hts
team had the game wrapped up, he struled and sa1d
"When I took Roger out Anytune you take Roger out. you
feel reasonably safe "

TV •••in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Television Wrner
NEW YORK (UP!) - In what deserves an award for the
wetrdest schedulmg of the year, NBC has chosen New Year 's
Eve to broadcast "Come Back, Little Sheba "
On the mght when people are celebrating having survtved
the old year and lookmg forward wtth hope to tile new, along
comes a masstvely downbeat story of degradation and despatr
And on the one mght of the year when anyone whose
consctence and constttutton pertrut will be 1ndulgmg mat least
a token wast - that's the mght NBC dectdes to explore
alcoholism It's enough to tempt a v1ewer to drink
It's also a shame because th1s tsa classy rend1hon of Wtlltam

DEAR READER - If you
are exposed to a lot of loud

Inge's play, whtch ongmally starred Shirley Booth and Sidney

music they may even protect
yo ur ears from no1se

Booth w1th Burt Lancaster

damage The plugs will not
harm you, but I would su~·
gest that you keep them clean
and be sure they are dry
before you msert them to
avotd any poss1ble fungal
contammatwn of your ear

ca nals
The nmse problem m college dorms appears to be
Widespread Perhaps th1s Is
an mdiCatwn that a lot of peer
pie go to college for some
other rea son than to obtam a n
education

•

THE ALMANAC
United Press International
Today 1s Wednesday, Dec.
28, the 362nd day of 1977 with
three w follow
The moon IS bel\\'en Its full
phase and last quarter
The mormng stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and

Saturn
The evenmg star IS Jupiter
Those born on this date are
under the stgn of Capncorn
Woodrow Wtlson, 28th
prestdent of the Umted
States. was born Dec 28,
1601)

Bla ckmer on Broadway , and m the movte vers1o11 teamed Mtss
The lead roles m the televtston versiOn are taken by
Laurence Ohv1er and Joanne Woodward , w1th Carne Ftsher
asststmg The productwn IS llle second m the sertes ,
" Laurence Ohvter Presents a Tribute to the Amencan

Theater," and nms from 9-11 p m , Eastern time
Oliver plays Doc Delaney, a man whose ltfe has been a
downhtll shde - a for ced marnage, a dead chtld, a rmned
medtcal practtce, a wasted mhentance aod, above all, the
battle with alcohohsm.
Overwhelmed by guilt toward hts loving, Irrtlating,
hopelessly adolesceot wtfe, Doc watches the attractive college
coed (Miss Fisher) who boards wtth them He tdollzes her,
perhaps as a way of keepmg hunsell at a proper distance
Even thts mnocent passton ends m bitter disappomtment and
m the end Doc agam must turn to his madequate wtfe with her
wilted dreams of romance and youth long gone tv sloth
The w1(e (MISs Woodward), whose babbling desperation IS a
match for her husband's pentup despair, has fared no better m
life As alcohol was her husband's relief from reality, hers lies
m remembering a youth that never was Even her httle dog ,

Sheba , has wande red off

The play IS done as a '40s penod p1ece, whic h Is the era m
which 1t was wntten The scene IS the Midwest and the aetmg
IS superb If you are wa1tmg for Lord OhVIer 's accent to shp
mto Bnt1sh, you 'II be disappomted because OliVIer JUS! doesn't
miSS
The trouble 1s that a good deal of the potentia l a udience for
"Corne Back, Little Sheba" 1s gomg w miss tins productiOn
because of 1ls New Year's Eve programrmng
The obVIous concluston many network ~watchers v.lll draw IS

thl\1 NBC dtd not think htghly of the play's ab1hty to draw a
goolt..I.ed'audience and so scheduled for a low v1ewmg mght
The A.C NteiS.n Co raungs of the top netWork television
programs for the week ending Dec. 25 are not yet available
becaUSI! of the short holiday week.

ln add111on to the mmero
that struck at the end of the
three year co ntract, the
walkout also Idled another

Waverly box . ..

Georgetown wrecks

WAVERLY (68) - Fielder
306
Dcwena 6 2 14
R1ck
Thomas 3 3 9, Crace 9 0 18,
T Frederlck 1 '2 4 , Thompson
4-5 13 , Gordon 1 0 2 . Arnet1 0

2 2 TOTALS 27·24 68

WASHING TON C H 164) 52 12 , Elliot 51 II.
Lamberson 3 0 6 Pntchett 8
4 20 Dennen 4 5 13 . Turner 1

40 ,000 to 58,000 uruon mem-

Disc uss ions to end the a nd wtll become eligible for
bers, mcludmg ronstruction three-week walkout resumed food stamps Jan. 6 Tuesd.tly
crews, who do not work under Tuesday a nd were scheduled was the hrst day many
the mam l'Ont ract
agam today under ccntmued strikers were able to apply
supervlSlon of federa l for food stamps , and welfare
.mediators
authonlles m West Vtrginla,
Light ptcketmg - but no Ohto and Kentucky reported
vtolence - was reported heavy turnouts
Tuesday 1n Kentucky, where
Davtd !go, 26, of Cedar
about one-hall of the state's Grove, W. Ya , said he and
eoa l1s produced m non-uruon ot her mmers will need the
mmes
grocery bonuses. " I've still
Str1kmg Umted M1ne got a baby on the bottle," he
cludtng a house and $9,600 m Workers members recetved said
By LEONARD CURRY
stocks Mcintyre owns one thetr last paychecks Dec 23
WASHI NGTON tUPI)
Although Chrtstmas money
Pres ident Carter's budget share ofi BM and a $2, 100 car
was scarce this year, !go
Lance lived m fashiOnable
offtce has retumed to rela tive
sa1d, his three children "had
owned
a
obsc unty smce- Bert Lance's Geor geto wn,
a pretty good Chrtstmas, but
flash m the pubhc consclOus- summer horne on Sea Island,
11 wasn't what I would have
ness dunng late summ e r Ga and a manston caUed
hked "
Lance's succe-ssor, J 1m "Butterny Manna." McinMclnt) re. hopes to keep 1t tyre sold his Georgta home
that way .
"he n he joined the ad·
ACTS2 ·l8
I plan to stay more m· mmtstra tton and now Uves Man y ye ar s I spe n t i n
darkness
vo lved
tn
day· lo·day with h1 s wtfe and three
th
mg I was m t he ltg h t,
dectstons and workmg w1th da ughters m suburban Oh.mkbul
now I see the d 1f
details of OMB," Mclnt) re V1rgm1a He Just fm1shed
tere nce
sa1d Tuesday a few hours buildmg a three-stall barn si nce God gave to me my
Sight
aft er he wa s a ppotnt ed with his own hands
thmgs
will
But
some
dirertor of the Off1ce of
It w as wnt ten there bef ore
re mam t he s ame L1ke
Management and Budget
me,
OMB 1s a small offi ce tn the Vance , Mcintyre 1s a w ntten down fo r all to see
While House, employing m e mber of the Georgia I tnank Jesus Chr ist m y
Ylo r ,
ahout 650 persons But Its establishment Both served m bySaH1
s tru th I ve been set
power 1s enormous smce 1t IS Carter'sv gubernator1al adfr ee
th e lmk bet wee n th e mlmstratwn and both are•
United Pms International
pres1den t
and
th e relattvel) young, although I ' m so glad m y eyes were
Like a mtghty, prectse
Mcintyre IS constderably I fopened
burea ucr acy
machine, the Portland Trail
ound out before too late,
Mcintyre was asked to )Om more youthful at age 37
that th e only r oad to h ea ven
Blazers have bedazzled
Mcintyre has known the JS by Acts 2 38
a Whtte House meeting today
teams and fans around the
w1t h the president to com· president for more than 10
league thiS year at a record·
God can o~.n a il the b lind
plete fmal detatls on the !979 years, but has bee n on
setting pace
eyes
budget request due on Capitol famthar terms for only tf we 'll only seek and pray
But Tuesday mght m
seven . Durmg Lance's tenure He has set a path to follow . Chicago ,
Hill m January
while
the
Lance was budget dtrector at OMB. Mcintyre as deputy 1f we II let H1m lead the way
temperature dipped to eight
fo r almost mne months director was the chtef He w l il never ever leave us degrees outside and the wmd
before hi s flamboyant technical operallve. He has 1f we ' ll let Htm be our gu1de, swept hard around Chtcago
banking past and his fatruly 's been actmg dtrector s~nce by Hts word He II safely lead Stadium packed with 19,999
us,
practice of wntmg checks Lance's res1gnat10n
fans , the Blazers lost - for
on l1fe s other s1de Mcintyre's selection Im· over
that exceeded his ba lance by
only the fifth tune thiS year Carolyn VanMeter , Clifton.
hundreds of thousands of medtately won pratse from
w Va , Dec 22, '77
115-100, to the Chicago Bulls,
dollars led to h1s res1gnat1on Ca bmet officers who worked
and saw thetr seven.gamt
w1th htrn preparmg the 1979
Sept 21
wmnmg streak snapped.
While Lance owed millions budget
PorUand sttll eastly has the
Pentagon chief Harold·
of dollars but had millions of
best record m the league, but
I the Bulls, whose win gave
dollars m assets and owned Brown satd he was pleasedu I
shares tn scores of major by the appomtment He said
them a tie for ftrst place m
corporal tons , Mcin t yre Mcintyre IS " forceful ,
the NBA's Midwest Division,
operates on a more human cooperative and easy to :Nork
showed they have enough
N BA S1anomgs
scale Hts net worth n Wlth"
talent to chal\l!nge for the
By Un1ted Press 1n1er-nat1onal
January was $100 139 In·
NBA title this year
E.stern Conference
AtlantiC Olvts•on
Wtloor Holland helped the
W L
Pet GB
Bulls
to a strong fmisQ, w1th a
Ph tl &amp;
20 11 645
New Yor~
17 15 531 3''" career-high 36 potnts agalJlSt
Buffalo
13 18 419 7
Boston
10 22 313 10 1 1 the NBA 's top defense
New Jerse y
8 25 242 l3
Holland was supported by
C~ntral Dtvts1on
center
ArtiS Gilmore 's 25
W L
Pel GB
pomts and Mtckey Johnson's
Wshngln
19 12 613
Clevelnd
18 13 581 1
22
18 16 529 211-:1
WUISVILLE, Ky (UP!) The Cardinals have fatled w San Anton t
Surprtsmg support also
Atlanta
16
11
485
4
- Fresh from 1ts u~et of No wm the tournament only once New Orii"'S
I~ 19
421 6
came
from 22-year-old
Houston
12 19 387 7
2 Marquette last week, m tts ftve year htstory.
rookte,
Mark
Landaberger,
Western conference
Lo Uls vtlle enters 1ts own
Midwest Drv1110n
who scored etght pomts and
holtday tournament today
W L Pel GB grabbed 10 rebounda m his 22
DenYer
19 13 59-4
w1til a bit of apprehenston
nunutes of play, matching the
Chtcago
19 13 594
uThere's a tendency to let
MtlW
20 16 556 1
rebounds
by Gilmore
Detro t
14 17 452 41!,
down after a btg wm like
Bulls'
Coach
Ed Badger
lndtana
13 16 .448 4 h
tilat," satd Loutsvtlle Coach
Kanss Cty
13 19 406 6
srud he wasn't sure how long
Pactfic Dlvls1on
Denny Crum, whose team tS
W L
Pel GB Landsberger would play, but
now ranked SIXth m the
the rookte proved himself m
Portland
25 5 833
country •&lt;r hope our players
Phoent,.;
20 12 625 6
the floor
Golden St
IS 18 455 lJ ih
realize that any of the tilree
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) 'He
determmed
the
Los Angels
15 18 -455 11 1J2
teams here can beat us and The OhiO State Buckeyes took SeaHie
16 20 444 l2
amount of tune he stayed m
Tuesdily's Results
will if we don 't play well "
today off from pracl!ce and
by the way be played," sa1d
Mtlwaukee 108, Buffalo 105
The Cardmals meet wtll sWitch to afternoon drills
New Orleans 113, Cl eve 102
Badger " He's a good
Chtcago 115 Portland 106
LaSalle m the second game of for the remainder of thetr
rebounder and ltstens ....: does
lnd1ana
96,
San
Antonto
89
toda) 's openmg sessiOn Ohio Sugar Bowl workouts
what he IS told "
P1'10en111: 131 Seattl e 105
Team spokesman Stephen
·State plays Georgm m the
Los Ang 123 Golden St 82
Lucas led Portland wtth 26
Wednesday's Game:s
first
contest
The Snapp said Tuesday 's
pomts,
but the Bulls held
lndtana at Atlanta
championship
and practtce was strenuous and
Portland at Oetro1t
guard Lionel Hollms w siX,
8\Jffalo at Wash1ngton
consolal!on game Will be spirited
etght below hts average
Golden State at Denver
played Thursday rught
"We had our next-to4ast
Chtcago at Phtladelphta
Walton had 15, five under htS
Loutsville, now fl.!, w1ll rough workout m tenns of
Thursday's Games
average.
Boston at Mtlwaukee
throw a balanced attack con tact,'' team spokesman
Elsewhere, Los Angeles
Kansas Ctfy at Phoen ! K
Stephen Snapp satd of
agamst the Explorers
New '(ork at New Jersey
handed
Golden State tts worst
Cleveland at Hous•on
Guards Darrell Griffith and Tuesday's practtce
loss of the year, 1~2; New
Rtck Wilson are both "Starting With Thursday's
Orleans whipped Cleveland,
averagmg 16 pomts per practice, we'D taper off aliUe
113-102, Milwaukee edged
NHL Standings
game, With forward Bobby blt "
Buffalo, 1011-105, Indiana beat
Bv Untted Press lnternahonat
Ohto State meets Alabama
Turner adding 14 4
Campbell Conference
San Antomo, 96-89, and
Patnck DIVIStOn
m
the Jan 2 Sugar Bowl m
LaSalle, 3-3, IS led by 6-7
Phoerux rtpped Seattle, 131W L T Pts
sophomore Michael Brooks, the Louts1ana Superdome It Philadelphta
22 6 4 48
100
19 8 8 46
who 1s averagmg 21 3 pomts w11l be the Buckeyes' first NV Islanders
Laken
123, Warrlon 82:
NY J;~angers
12 15 7 31
and 12 rebounds a game.
mdoor game, but Alabama's Atlanta
10 lA 10 JO
Adrian Dantley scored 19
Smythe Dtvls1on
Ohto State features the seeond m the Superdome
pomts and Charlie Scott,
W L T Pts
The Buckeyes Will practice Ch1cago
youngest and perhaps tallest
makmg his first appearance
11 14 10 32
team m the tournament. The m the dome Saturday and Vancouver
10 15 B 28 as a Laker, added 12 for Los
Colorado
8 16 6 22
Buckeyes average 6-9 across Sunday.
Minnesota
9 21 4 22 Angeles, whtch won 1ts fifth
"The weather factor or the St LOUIS
the front lme Freshman 6-11
7 23 4 18 game In the last seven Tile
Wales Conference
center Herb Williams paces lack of tt IS probably one of
loss was ooly the third for the
Norrts Dlvtsion
the Buckeyes w1th h1s 21 the btggest thmgs you don't
W L T Pts
Warriors at home thts season
pomts and 13 5 rebounds per have to be concerned wtth," ~ontreal
23 1 4 so Jazz 113, Cavs 102:
Los Angeles
16 11 5 37
Snapp said.
game
Pete Maravtch poured in a
Pittsburgh
10 16 1 '17
He
also
satd
a
report
of
nu
Oh10 State has lost only w
Detrott
11 17 4 '16 season-htgh
42 pomts i
6 21 6 18
spreadmg among the team Wash ington
Vermont m seven outings
mcluding 18 of New Orleans'
Adams DIVISIOn
Georgia brmgs a 3-3 mark was exaggerated
W L T Pts
29 fourth-pertod points and
22 7 5 49
mto the tournament Center
"The flu thing ts really not Boston
Len Robinson scored 25
Buffa
lo
21
1
5
47
Lavon Mercer leads the Bull· a problem at all," he said. Toronto
20 8 -4 4-4 points and grabbed 20
dogs, averagmg 14 2 pomts ~~we've got about six or seven Cleveland
10 21 3 23
rebounds Walt Frazier
Tuesday's Results
players who've had tt the past
per game
topped
the Cavs wtth htS
Oetro1t 5 Colorado 2
Lowville captured the title several days It's really kind
Montreal 5, Cleveland 3
season
high
of 29 points.
Boston 6, Washington J
last season with a double of pretty much run tts
108,
Braves
105:
Bucks
Chicago 4, Atlanta 2
overtime wm over Cretghton course''
~1nnesota 1. St Louts o
Dave Meyers and Juruor
Reserve offensive Iackie
NY lslndrs 4, vancouver 2
Brtdgeman spearheaded a
Wednesd.Jy's Games
Tim Burke suffered a knee
Toronto at Chtcago
fourth-quarter
Milwaukee
,__TH_E_D-AI_L_v_s._N_TIN_B_L_ _.,. stram m Monday's practice
Boston at Cleveland
charge
that
overcame
Billy
Wash 1ngton at Ptttsbgh
DEVOTED ro TilE
and will miSS the game,
Kmght's
season-high
41
P.h
lla
at
NY
Ran,gers
!N'fERESTOF
Sn
d
NY Islanders ef Los Ang
MEIGS-MASON AREA
app Sat
pomts
Meyers
scored
11
of
Thursday's Games
CIIESTERLTANNEIIIIJ.
The team beld morrung
his 15 pomts in the final
Mlnn at Phtladelph ta
ROB~~J"~cn
prachces durmg tts ftrst
St Louis at Atlanta
period and Bridgeman tacked
Pittsburgh at MMtreal
coy Ed""
week m New Orleans The
on 10 of his 24 as the Bucks
Detro1t at Buffalo
Pubhshed dtuly er.:cept Saturday
remainder of tbe practices,
Los Angeles at Colorado
rallied from an BU2 defteit w
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
~
Thu sd
will be
Cumpany·Multimedaa Inc , lll
uegmnmg
r ay,
square thetr road record thiS
Court St , Pomeroy Ohi o 46769
held m the afternoon to
season at !!'.!
B"""" Dff1ce Phone m 2156
prepare for the 2 p.m. (EST)
Editona l Phone 992.-2167
Pacen H, Spurs 89:
WHA Standings
Second class postage patd at
kickoff
Earl Tatum netted 20
Bv United Press International
Pon "oy Ohio
"The players have enjoyed
W
L
T
Pts
points,
whtle Ricky Sobers
National advertl.!llng represenNew England
22 8 3 47
tative Ward
Grit'ftth Compu.ny,
themselves,' ' Snapp said
in 18 w lead the
chipped
Wmnlpeg
21 t2 1 ~3
Inc Bottinelli and Gallagher DIY ,
"They've seen ffiOSt Of the Quebec
16 12 1 J3 Pacers w thetr stxth win in
i~"Thlrd Me , New Vock, Nv
sights on Bourbon Street and Edmonton
15 15 1 31
the last eight games. The
13 15 2 28
Suh&lt;lcnpl10n rates Delivered by
most of the Sights around the Houston
Spurs,
highest seortng team
B1rm1nc1ham
13
16
2
28
earner where available 75 cents per
ctty That's pretty much Clnclnnntl
12 18 1 25
y,oeek By Motor Route where c~ rrter
m the NBA, equaled thetr low
9 19 -4 22
~rvtce not available On e month
taken care of and ROW tl 's Indianapolis
of the season.
Tuesday's Results
l.l ~ By maU u1 Ohi o 11nd w V11 ,
time to buckle down.
New Eng 8, Birmingham 1
Suns 131, SuperSonic&amp; 105:
On e Year 5Z2 00, Su: month!!
Edmonton 9, Quebec 3
$11 50
fhree munth:s $7 oo .
"The weather has been
Ron Lee came off the bench
Wednesday's Games
El~ewhere $2600 year , SLI month!!
delightful for practice, just
w score a season-high 30
Indianapol is at C.ncl
U 3 jO Thr ee months, 17 :w
b l.sk
SUbscription price mcludes Sunday
r
enough tO keep the
SovlefS e1 HouMon
points. Lee's total headed a
Thursday's Game!
Time&gt;-Sentinel
players really mottvated,
7(1.point effort by the Phoenix
HOU\ton at tncltanapolts
really playing."
Blrr111ngham at Cincinnati
reserves

Mcintyre has
low profile

Blazers

toppled

by Bulls

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

1

: Pro
\
:Standings \

Louisville to
host tourney

Bucks switch
to afternoon
grid drills

1

Bath

Holy Cross, 79-65
UPI Sports
After wtnnmg s1x straig ht
games and earmng the No 9
spot tn the college basketball rank1ngs, Hoi) Cross turned
to stone Tuesday mght' when
Georgetown blew by, 79.j),'j, m
the opentng round of the 26U1
annual Holiday f'estlval m
New York .
• Derrtck Jackson scored a
game-htgh
22
potnts,
mcludmg 16 In the second
half, as the Hoyas put up a
tough wne defense and pulled
away from a 37.J2 halftime,
lead
'They beat us up and down
the fioor ," satd Holy Cross
Coach George Blaney "I
thmk 1t was more what we
didn'tdo thamwhattheyd!d "
What the Crusaders failed
to do was get back oo defense
and keep the Hoyas' runmng
game tn check
Georgetown, which meets
Alabama m Thursdays
champiOnship game, brought
the ball up qutckly and made
the most of tis shots The
Hoyas htt at a 56 percent chp
and that was more than

enough for the second-half
burtal
John Duren added 20 pomts
for Georgetown and Cra1g
Shelton scored all of his 8
po mts m the second ha lf w go
along w1th a game-/ugh 8
rebounds
Duren and J ackson applied
heavy pressure to Holy Cross'
guards and helped hm1t bal·
lyhoo ed sophomore Ronrue
Perry w!9 pomts, 7 below hiS
average Mike V1eens had 14
and ChriS Potter 12 for the
Crusaders
Elsew here tn the top·
ranked games Tuesday, No ·5
Marquette bea t Texas, 65-56,
to wm the Mtlwaukee Class1e,
Ctn ct nnau edged Fl orida
State, 77·75, Provid e nce
dumped Lafayette, 7().59, m
the first round of the Ram ho w
Classic a nd Nebraska beat
Oklahoma Sta te, 70·-58, m the
first round of the Holiday
tournament
Marqu ette
won
liS
Milwaukee Classic for the
lOth straight year as J erome
Whitehead fired m 21 pomts
and captured the to urney's

Most Valuable Player award
as the Warrwrs beat Texas
Steve Colher hit a 22·foot
jump shot at the buzzer as
Cmcmnat1 squeezed by
Flon da State m the operung
Metro 7 Conference ga me fo r
both teams Flon da Stnte, g.
I, was sparked by Harry
Davts wtth a game-high 22
pomts Bob Miller and Pat
Cumm~ngs each had 20 for
Cmcmnatt
Dwtght W1lllams scored 25
pomts as the Frta rs raised
tileir record w 1.{) with thet r
vtcto ry m 14th annual
Ram how Qasstc Phil Ness
had 24 pomts for Lafayette
Nebraska ~as paced by a
career· hi gh 24 pOin ts by
B11an Banks m 1ts \l ctory
ove1 Ok lahoma Sla te Andie
Smtih added 14 and Carl
McP1pe
13
for
the
Cornhuskers, who have now
won 10 m a row Olus Holde r
led Oklahoma Sta te, 4..J, wtth
23 points
In other ftrst-round tourna·
ment games, Anzona State
defeated Oral Roberts, 82~.
and Boston College beat Ok.

lahoma City, 77·71, m the All·
College tournament m Ok·
!al10ma C1ty Indiana downed
host .lacksonv!lle, 69-59, and
~'lo nda took St BonaventUJ e,
88-75, m the Gatm Bowl, and
Alabama edged Prmceton,
~5 . m the Hollda) Festiva l
Seton
Ha ll
stopped
Fairleigh D1ck1nson, 71-66,
and Rutgers belted St
Peter s, 93-55, m the New
Jersey ClassiC, Oregon State
whipped R1Ce , 75·-58, m the
Far Weot Classtc m Pm tland,
Ore . and Kansas State
topped Colorado, 82·72, m the
B1g Etght to urnament 1n
Kansa ~ C1ty, Mo
In fmaJ.round tournament
actwn, DetrOit M n the Motor
C!tyC!assiCb)' blastmg East·
ern Michigan, 109·71, while
H&lt;Irva rd tripped l.tmg Island
U, nm, m the consolation
ga me Eas te rn Ken t ucky
took th ir d place m the
Milwaukee ClasSic "'th a 79·
7t tnurnph over Army
Elsewhere 11 was Baylor
97, Drake 87, Sa n Jose Sta te
76, Cahforma 74 and Uta h 98
Weber State 88

Falcons take Tornadoes
BY GARY CLARK
The Wahama White Falcons
used a tenacious defense to
pull off a suprtse upset over
Coach Carl Wolle's Southern
Tornadoes Tuesday night by a
76-71 margin for their second
consecutive win m the young
1977-78 cage campaign
!..elvin Honaker and Phil
Hobbs carne off he bench to
spark a spirited Falcon Rally
that helped to produce the
· Wahama victory The two
senior forwards teamed W1th
sophomore guard Rick
Banutz and senior center
Greg Blessing for scormg
honors on the Whtte Falcon
squad
Barnltz ripped the nets for
18 markers followed by
Honaker wtth 17, Hobbs wtth
14 and Blessing With 13
However Southern's Jun
Brinager emerged with game
high scoring honors wtth 19
points on seven flelda goals
and five of six free throws He

Tri-County
Sport
Shop
• Ftshmg Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloadtng
• Ba II Gloves
Catnpmg
Equtpment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gift
Cerhficates

was followed by Kelly
Wmebrenner and Jun D'Bnen
wtth 14 and 12 tallies
respectively for the Meigs
Countalns
Bleutng, Barnltz and
Honaker paced the local attack in the opemng stanza as
Wahama broke away from a
12·12 tie to post a 19·16 first
period lead.
Southern's Jdhn Sayre
began to connect
m the
opemng mmutes of th~ second
quarter to qwekly erase the
White Falcon advantage and '
gtve the Tornadoes a short
lived 25·23lead, but successiVe
gaols by Hobbs and Blessmg
vaulted Wahama back ~nto the
lead Brinagers' 15 footer
from the corner knotted the
score at 3l.Jl but the Whtle
Falcons netted the fmal SlX
pomts of the half to take a 37·
31 lead tnto the dressing room
at mtennlsslon
Wahama
upped their
margtn to etght points at 45-37
early In the third periOd but
Southern kept eommg back
and trimmed the lead to three
at the quarters end at 5~1.
In the fmal eight nunutes
Bnnager's bucket cut the
advantage to one at 54-63 but a
White Falcon surge netted 11
straight points to gtve them
their biggest spread of the
night at 65-63 wtth 4 45 to
play Southern pulled back to
wtthin ltve at 72.f&gt;7 but tune
ran out givmg Waharna a hard
fought 76·71 wtn
Shootmg percentages were
pretty even for both teams
with Wahama holding the
edge by canning 48 percent on
29 of 61 attempts Southern htt

NOW OPEN

601 Matn St.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

VISA'

'-j~~-jf~rom Courthouse

GINO'S

OF MASON

PHONE
675·2988
Open Sunday 1 p m. 6 p m
Monday lhru Saturdav;
9a . m toap m

PHONE 773-5536

NOW APPEARING

OPE·N

ROAD

0 2 TOTALS 26 12 64

76~71

Score by wua r t ers
Wa verly
18 14 ~ 16--68
Wash C H
12 21 21 10--64
R eserve
S co r e ·
Washmgton C H 52 Waverly
50

In 1869, Wilham Semple of
Mount Vernon , Oh1o, was

granted a patent for ehewmg
gum.

Our Interest os
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
SKETBA:Li: NOT BALLET -

lhe way Waha ma's Rtek Barn1tz (30) and
pos1t10n afte1 a
fteld goal try, tt w would appear they are rehea rsmg a dance routm e On the contra ry, the
Tornadoes and Falcons dueled man excttmg cage clash Tuesday ntght at Wahama with the

Southern's Dwight

(15) are m a neuvermg their arms as they work for

hosts comm g out on top, 76-71

•

CLEVELAND ( UP! I Sam
Rutigliano, the f1fth
record now stands at 1·1 on the
head
coach
m the Cleve land
)ear
Br
owns'
3Z..year
h1stor y, says
lromcally both teams next
h1s
1
l
years
se
rVlce
1n pro
opponent will be the Eastern
foo tball wlll ser ve h1m well a s
Eagles w1th Wahama JOUr·
he tn es to lead the struggling
neymg to Chester on Tuesday
team back to U1e the top of the
Januar y 3 and Southern NFL
m ovmg m on Fnday, January
Rut1gha no was g1ven a

on 27 of 63 tries for 43 percent
At the free throw hn e the
Tornadoes held an advantage
of 65 oercent m of 261 to 56
percent (1 8 of 32 ) for
Wahama
The Whtte Falcons controlled the boards wtth 43
rebounds to 34 for Southern 6 to open the new yea r
three-yea r cont ract Tuesday,
but comm1tted 27 turnovers to
replacmg Forrest Gr egg, who
22 bobbles for the vlsttors
was fired two weeks ago to
' Indt v idually
Kelvin
the day and five da ys shy of
Honaker was the games top
completmg his tilird season
rehounder with 15 while Greg
as head c~a ch and fourth
Blessmg grabbed 11 O'Brien,
•
year "1th Art Modell's club
Brmager, and Wmebrenner
Ru!lghano, 45, who for the
pull ed down se ve n for
pas t tw o se a sons wa s
r ece1ve r coach wtth the Ne w
Southern
Sports Transa ctions
Orleans Samts. sa1d he would
Wahama made It a complete By Un1
fed Pr ess l nt er n at. onAI
Tuesda y
na me hts e 1ght ass tsla nt
sweep over the Tornadoes
Pr o Ba sketball
coa
ches withm a m onth when he Ltttle F alco ns
Bos ton Trad ed
guard
md1catmg
that none of the
defeated the Baby Tornadoes Charh e Scotl to Los Angeles for
gua rd Don Cha ney an ot forward
nt
Browns'
c oac he s
c
urre
by a 59-54 score
·
Kerm1t Was h mg ton
\\
ould
be
retamed
because
h1s
H ockev
Vmc e
Weav e r ,
Gary
In d an a p 0 I ts IW HAJ
list
of
prospects
"1
s
five
deep
Richards and Tun Roush all Tr aded de f enseman Bryon Bal
h1t m double ligures for ll m ore and center H t.~gh Ha r r is at every posltton "
"! don 't thmk that you can
to CtnCt nn atl for def en seman
Wahama With 18, 14 and 12 G111es
Ma rotte an d r.ght wmger
be
successful unless you can
pomts, respectively whtle Bl a m Stoug h ton
have the n g ht cheJm str y
Pro Football
Teaford, Foreman and Duffy Clevela nd - Named as head betwe en the own er ship ,
netted 18, ·13 and 11 points coach Sam R u t1 g l a no an mana ge ment
and
the
aS'S ISi an l W1 t t1 the New Orlean s
respecttvely for Southern
coachmg staff," he said ' I
Samt s
The Wahama res•!rv•.s
thtnk the electrtclty between
the til ree peopfe there, and
certamly with the people that
have been successful m the
NFL, have e\'ldenC'ld that "
Modell sa id he first met
Ru!Iglmno fi ve years ago In

Meigs Co. Branch

been m some s1tua t10ns

where the bulletS started to
fly thmgs happened and I
learned a great dea l m so me

for coaching ab1hty I wanted
somebody who was offe nse
onented - geared to offense
- but also gea red to the
knowledge of defense Sa m
has had hoth backgrounds to
a great extent H
Modell ca lls Ru!1ghano "a n
a sststant w1th a pr ove n

..@

adverse s 1tuahons whtch I
thmk 1s gomg to help me m
my present pos1l10n "
ho w eve r ,
Rutq?; l lo n n,
dec hned to g1ve his t1 ue
opmton of t he Browns, who

Tfl e Ath en s Collnty
Sav tng s &amp; Lo a n Co
29 6 Sec v n d St
Pom eroy Oh•o

i!Ytl'

ftm shed the 1977 campmgn 68 ( wmmng 18 and losmg 23
under Gregg )

record covermg all phases of

football ,"

Sports

transaCtlOnS

Denver when the

A sub st a nt ia l pe na lt y tS
tnv ok !"d on a ll cer t tltcat e
acco un ts Wi thdrawn prt or
t o th e da re ot matunt v

he said " It Obi10US!y \I OU!d
have been great to have been
Wi th t1 teams that wen t to the
Super Bo\\ Ill tunes Bu t I've

Browns have
new coach

Browns

played the Broncos
' He's the prototype I was
lookmg for " Modell sa1d

addmg

tha t

' there's got to be a m1x' of
pe r sonahlles t o a c hi e ve

success and tile new head
coach ts ' 'som ebody who ca n

rei? te to today s athlete "
' It 's a little diff erent from
yesterda) 's athlete, ' Modell
noted "I found myself ha\1ng
great difficulty re!a tm g as I
would hke w
Rutig li ano,

coach ed

who

i::tl so

the

New

w1th

Eng land Patnots a nd New

York Jets, says he doesn't
have any particular style of
coachmg philosophy but does
kno" what he expects from

his players
You have to have
productive talent ," he sa1d
l

'You ha ve to have a
philosophy that IS understood
and accepted and d early
defm ed
by
e very one
mvolved Another thing 1s
character - character that

LIVE IT UP
\Vi~I~I;in~ you ha(t(ty

iinU's imlay. tomorrow
ami throughout the
wt~lconw New Year!
Thanks all.

. .,t;;•-·
..J ...~

• .
• .t r

whe n a t eam meets adve rstty

tt can n se above that
adversity a nd t he true
character shows "

He says hts t1 years m the
NFL w11l serve hun well
My cha racter wtll serve
Jne well m my new postton ,"
j

.$..

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

"I'm a ftrm behever tha t the
head coach must come from

the league
" You don t want him for
name \ alue You want hun

Dorsett and
Duhe rookies
of the year
CANTON, Ohw (UP!)
Tony Dorsett of the Dallas
Cowboys and A J Duhe of the
Mtami Dolphms Tuesday

••• IN THE

NEW YEAR

were named wumers of the

NFC and AFC Rookte of the
Year awards, respectively,

m

the NFL by the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
Dorsett, the
former
He!Sman I'rophy wmner from
the Umvers~ty of Pittsburgh,
became only the second
Dallas runnmg back m
history to gain more than
1,000 yards rushmg as he
•~ helped lead the Cowhoys w
the NFC East title The 5·foot·
11, 192-·pound runrung back
also
scored 12 touchdowns
BWCKJNG SHOT - Wahama's Phil Hobbs (32)
and
caught
29 passes
•
comes across the anns of Southern's Kelly Wmebrenner
Duhe, a 6·4, 247·pound
(43) In a sueeessful effort to stop Winebrenner's effort for
defenstve end from Loms1ana
a two·pomter on a drtve down the key durmg Tuesday
State, took over the regular
mght's hard·fought encounter that was won , 76·71, by the
defenstve end slot vacated by
White Falcons
form er all·pro Btll Sta n·
fill
and
wa s
a
major fa ctor
1n th e
Dol phin s'

4 Piece Group
From
Parkersburg, W.Va.

5 75 per ce nt paid on
90 day Certificates of '
Depos1t
Sl .000 00
Mt nt mum
Inte re st
Payable Quarterly

Let us go forward to greet'
the New Year with
proud thoughts ofthe
future. Thanks fpr letting
us serve you.

reJuv e nat e d

defense He led the team m
quarterback sacks With seven

and \l as credited w1th 83
tackles, md udmg 48 solo
stops
W1de receiver Billy Wadd)
f1mshed second w Dorsett m
the t.allotmg ,for NFC top

WEDNESDAY THRU
SATURDAY
10-2

rook1e honors and

'I

d~fens 1 ve

FRO M ALL OF US AT

tackle Bob Baumho-rer of
M1arm was runnerup to Duhe
The votmg, sponsored by
th e
Arnert can
Chtcle
Company, was conducted of
the Board of Selectors of the
Pro Football Hall of Fame

lHE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0 .

'''

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W.VA.

'!

•

•

�The Da~y Sentmel. ~llddleport - Pomer&lt;&gt;), 0 .. Wednesday , De&lt;.'. 28, 1977

l

Lakers unload Washington and Chaney
l.NGLEWOOD . Calif. I UP I I season and h1s sixth 1n the
In a final effort to put their NBA. It 's bt't'n a stormy
~ .· : un together in ume to
rar~r ~md ht&gt; has bt•en
n•ake the playoffs , the Los lab&lt;'led a; a player "itl1
·\ngelcs Lakers we-nt out attitud\' problems .
I u•sday
and unl oaded
"f:\·er}one has a nght to bt&gt;
'uspended forward Kermit judged b) the people working
Wash ington and agmg guard Wltll lum , twt u1 S\ltllt."\mt&gt;
Pun Lbaney on .the Boston

else 's eyrs,"

Wes~

saHI \\ht'n

live with ."
He was asked if he felt he'd
been made a scapegoat for
Boston's _poor sta r t and
replied . " Not at all . I can
honestly say as long as I was
a Celtic. I played as hard as I
could . I can relate to Red's
t Auerbach l thinking he made

a•ked
~bout
Stott's
repu tation . "C harlie· s
l'Otllmg to a new place, a new
sit uation where he might fit
m bett er than he did in
&amp;&gt;ston."
Said Seott, " l don't think
an) body likes to be traded .
But 1t's some-thing you learn

10

a great deal - two players
for onE"."

In a fight at the Forwn Feb.
9. Washington smashed
Houston's Rudy Tomjanovich
in the face and broke his jaw
and nose . The 6-foot-6
forward, a live-year veteran,
was f ined $10,000 a nd

suspended at least 60 days by
Co m m'iss i one r
N BA
La wrence O'Brien.
Howe1•er. Tomjan ovic h
just returned In Texas from
an Inglewood hospital and
faces more surgery. Although
Washington could be eligible
w play with Boston Feb. 9,

there is co njec ture hi s
suspension will run as long as
Tumjanovich is out . and that
could be, the remainder of the
season .
"For me, this is good," said
Washington . "If they trade
you, it means they didn't need
you as much as the person
you were traded lor . So it's
better to go somewhe re
where you're wanted and
needed."
Asked if he thought the
Tomjanovic h light and

' ,•Jt ics for Charlie Scott. an
•.·Ht J:!,matic guard with a
r,·putatlon for being a trou1!t'make r .
!'hen they went out and ,
· ittl Scott coming off the
l .•nch and getting t2 pomts,
1 ullc~l over the Golden State
\ •.1rriors. 123-82. at Oakland .
··we han• a lot or' new
''lest said, "but they're good
players and I believe good
J•l3yers ean adjust w any
:-;Jtuation . Charlie gives us

I
I
I
I
I

that has been a

p. Ll blem

area for us in
our
l· •tkcourt ."
Seutt, a 6-loot~ guard, is
I' 1ying in his eighth pro
4i! ll'kness

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP I l
- A sellout crowd of 19 548
showed up Tuesday nighi to
watch Pete Maravich and the
NBA 's leading scorer didn't
let them down.
" I love w play in front of
big crowds," said Maravich
wbo poured in his season high
of 42 points to spark the New
Orleans Jazz to a 11:\.102

Jiffy
E

""'"

®

WI. IUIIVI THIE ltGHT TO l&amp;MIT QIJAN·

E'ASKETBALL

Salad Dressing

1

c·
•
•

--

TOOIAUIS .

victory over tlle Cleveland
Cavaliers.
Alter the Cavs cut the New
Orleans lead to 84-32 alter
three periods, Maravich went
w work, flipping in 18 of the
Jazz's 291ourth1)eriod points.
He hit on seven of 10 play
action shots and dropped in
four of four from the line.
"We played like a team

12

I
I
t

2

.

tonight . We got the shots we
wanted.'' said Maravich.
adding, "When you score a lot
and win, it's great."
New Orlean Coach Elgin
Baylor, who has watched his
players lose 11 of their last 13
games, was pleased with the
win that sent the Cavs back
one game behind the leading
Washington Bullets.

" It was nice to be in tbe
situation of having the lead in
the fourth period," said
Baylor. " We got people
involved and Rich Kelley did
a fantastic job at center."
Kelley , usually relegated w
24 minutes of action per
game, logged 47 minutes
because of t1re- flu that
sidelined Joel Meriweather.

He used the time to toss in 14
points arxl grab 16 rebounds.
The Jazz led from 10:19 of
the first period and opened up
a nine-j)Oint lead with 1:M left
in the third period. The Cavs
tied the acore twice early in
the fourth period on a pair of
jumpers by Bobby Smith an\1
Walt Fra~er .
Frazier tossed in his season

-

I
-lb.
I
Pkg.
I
I LIMIT 2 PKGS. WITH
AND $7.50 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(EXCLUDING THIS ITEM)
I
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMtl Y
I
I Of

COf'YitGH1' 1m- THI KIOGII ,0, ITEMS
AND IJI'ICES GOOO MONDAY PiC IMlER
2• • \f77 THIU SATVlOAY OICIMall S1 ,

Daily Sentinel, Midtlleport·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Dec. 28, 1977

Maravich nets season high 42 points in win over Cavs

VARIETIES
EXCEP' liEF AND STUFFED PEPPI It$

•·'nyers," Laker Coach Jerry

!'. 1mething

~ - The

suspension brought about his
trade , Wash ington answered,
"Frankly, no. I heard about
tllis before tlle incident. Some
friends in tlle East called and
told me tlle Celtlcs were
trying to trade Charlie Scott
for me and someone else."
Chaney , 31, a 6-loot~ de!en· ·
si ve specialist, is returning to
tlle Celtics, with whom he
spent seven seasons before.
jumping to the ABA in 197~ .
He was with the !..akers the
past two seasons.

I
:i

I
I
I
:1

-~~
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

I
I
I
I

1

: 32-oz.
1 Jar

:a

.I UIIT ONE JAR WITH COIIPON AND $7.51 ADDITIONAL PIRCHASE
(ElCLUDING THIS ITEM)
:II

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o:
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liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMll Y

- - _ , , - l t. llll-loi-!,IICllllllll, llll
OF
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• OPEN MONDAy I JANUARY 2ND
AT 8:00AM

----·
•

fiiPPUCIIIJ. ITln ILICAL TUU

·~---

St4u ~~ .

• OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY
SUNDAY, JANUARY 1ST
10:00 AM TILL 7:00 PM

Ci

I

United P!'&lt;!ss Intemallonal
"We felt we might be able
to burn them inside/' said
Cincinna ti Coach Gale

• OPEN SATURDAYI DE_
CEMBER 31
TILL 6:00 P.M.
.

I
I
I

t'l!.-_

Co llege Basketba l l Result s
·· y Unite d Press Internat ional
&lt;Firs t Round )

All -Colleg e Tour nament
Oklahoma City , Okla .

\riz St 82 •. 0 . Robe r ts 66
!}OS IOn COli. 77. OK . City 71

Applesauce

Gaf!)r Bowl
Jac:ksonvill e, Fla .
tnd 69 , JackSMI 59

•

Fl a 88 . 51 Bonny 75
Holi da y Festiv al
New York City
Geotwn 79, Holy Cross 65
Al a 68 . Pr ince ton 65
New J ersey Classic
N ew Brunsw ick, N .J ..
.
Seton Hall 71 , FrlghDcknsn 66
Rutgers 93 , St . Peter ' s 55
Far West Class ic
F'ort land, Or e.
1) t e St . 75 , Rice 58
VIll anov a 78, Wa sh. 73
~ig E ight Tour nam ent
Kan5as Ci"ty , Mo.
Neb. 70. Okl a . St . 58
!&lt;.. an . Sl. 82. Col o, 72
Ra inbow Class ic
At Honolulu, Hawa ii
Pro 11 70 . Laf ayette 59
Milwau kee Classic
Milwa ukee , Wis.
Champion:ship
f/-Mquette 65 , Texas 56
Consolation
Esn Ky . 79, A r my 71
Motor City Classic

Detroit. Mic h.
Championship
Uet ro it 109 . Esn . M ich . 71
Consolation

CHOICE
,U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE .

16-oz.
Cans

' CUT

89
,.$1

:rbn;!st
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U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

U~;~;i;;;ED
$2 69
Loin Strip Steak .. lb . .

$179

Boneless Top

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, 3-4-LB . AVG.

Round Roast ...... .lb.

B.;~~i;;;y;p·

East

Whole Boneless
Beef Tenderloin
Bone In Loin
StriD Steak

$169

.

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lb.

U.S . GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE

S1rlom Butt .-- ..... lb ..

f\r d gp t 86 , Oneonta "'f7
1...C NY 73, Corne ll ~ o
Col g a te l;l, SUNY Bflo 71
HMiwick 84, Br yant 68

$

$

USDA

U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE ,

Har vard 73 , Ll U 67

.

Big K
Soft Drinks

Stokely

ltJesda y' s To u rnament Re sults

Midw est
t!tt yldr 97 , Drak e 87
Cen t Mich . 91 , Wis. Milw 89
Ci n~ i 77 , Fl or ida St. 75
West ..
Cui Poly 111·, La vern e 68
Cll am inade 9 5 , H y wr d " S t ~ 91

.SJ99

BUY ONE l·LB • .-"'...,

Del Monico
Elbow Macaroni

28-oz.
Btls.

59c

Country
Oven
potato Ch1ps
• . ............
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,.g.

~~

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$ 9
7
~~r:! . . ... . 2i!~ 5

Van
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3~:: age iia'~keye Peas .. 4 1t;:~$1
'J
3
$1
Stokely Sweet Peas.J ~;;_~J 1 Salad Greens . .. ~~;:~
59c
Star· K•IS t Tuna ...,.,,.••.69c Scot Towels .. ....... ...
$388
Stokely Catsup ... 3 ~.:;.~· SJ Instant Coffee . ~~:: ..
2 $l
Stokely Com ..... 3't::·a9 Scotties Tissue . :';~ .
STOKILYtUT

Green Beans .. .. .

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AT REGULAR PRICE OF 53c

GET ONE FREE

14D~SPliiOU

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49
Detergent ........ so~
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WHOLI KRNII. CHI CftAM.SJYLI

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Pr tlnd St 100, St. Mr y's

S ~n Jose St. 76, Ca lif . 74
';nt a Clara 72 Co l umbi a 65 .
Ut ah 98 , Weber Sf . 88

------BOWLING

Pomeroy Bowlin~ lane s
Tuesday Triplicate
December 20, 1977

Standings
Pts.

r~a nl

Onc. kt es. Gen . Con tractor

6

ft\ ~1

6

k V

Sha rnr ock Motel
4
Ro-y al Cro wn Co la
4
Roya1 Oak Park
2
r I '!ncis Fl orist
2
High ind ividual game
:1everly Hensl ey 198. 192:
He len Phelps 173.
Hi gh series Be ver l y
rle ns ley 528 ; Pat Carson 457 ;
P.·: lly Sm i th 449 .
ream high game - Royal
~o w n Cola 533.
~e a m· fligh series - Royal
( r•.wn Co la 1384.

Dec . 18, 1971

:-ea m

Standings

Pts .

orn' s Carry Ou t
84
iJck 's Da ir y Bar
84 ·
Town Kil n
82
:1. C. Bottli ng Co.
59
Cl ine's Construct ion
53
Gi bbs' Gr.o cer y
46 ,
High men's game - Jerry
Ji ne 19 7, Ed Vo ss 192 ;
women's high ind . game ~~'"'1 r y Voss 187, Bett y Smith
'15.
.
Men's high ser ies - Ed
'.Jess 54 1. Jerr y Cline 518 .·
.vorn e., ·s high seri es - Betfy
Smi th 502 , Mar lene Wilson
.!78.
Team high game - Cli ne 's
Cons truction 690.
Team hfgh series - T own
!"'i n 1887.

NOW OPEN

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Sweet Peas .... 39e
29-0Z. Dll MONTI YILLOW CliNG

Peach Slices .. 69~

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•

( ot)

Berea Midpark 78 Berea 54
Buckeye North 68 Cad Iz 64
Buckeye Valley 6t Big
Walnut 43
Centervil le 56 Hamilton
Garfield 50
Chardon 61 Berksh ire 41
Chllllcoihe 57 Worthington 39
Col Wehrle 73 Lancaster
Fisher 53
Col Westiand 67 Groveport 52
Conneaut 88 . Er ie ( Pa .l East
74
Continental 84 Lincoln View
Defiance 56 Kenton so
Delphos St. Jo~n 82 Newark
52
Eastlake North 52 Lyndhurst
Brush 46 (ot)
Edgew ood 64 Middletown
Fenwick 51
Elyria 79 Fremont 50
Ely ria Catholic 71 Cle Holy
Name 47
Elyria West 7t lorain
Catholic 65
Fairborn Baker 61 Lebanon

58

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Firelands 65 Columbia SS
Frontier 57 Wilterford 46
Gahanna 76 Westerv ille S 53
Greenan 82 Fairborn Park
Hills 68
Greenville 62 Millon Union 45
Hi lliard 52 Delaware 47
Lebrae 82 Warren West
Reserve 77 (oil
loudonville 63 Hillsdale 61
Massillon 77 Zanesville 70

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'

OF MASON

•

Ohio H'igh School
Baskelball Results
United Press International
Akron Hoban 86 Kenston 74
Amherst 66 Southview 64
Archbold 79 Bryan 64
Bedford 75 Maple Heights 71

58

ITH PARTY TRAYS

Early Sunday Mixed
League

Catlett, arid his Bearcats did
just that Tuesday night as
center Bob Miller and
forward . Pat Cummings
scored 20 points apiece as
Cincinnati downed Florida
State 77-7~ in the opening
Metro 7 Conference game for
both teams.
" It was U&gt;ugh to play .
them, "
said
Catlett,
"because tl!ey hadn't lost a
game yet and they believe in
tllemselves.
"We felt they were a super·
pressure defensive team
arotu1d the perimeter, but we
might be able w burn them
inside. I didn't feel they had
anyone In control Miller and
if they doubled on him,
Cummings would hurt
them," he said.
The 11th-ranked Bearcats ·
played without starting
sophomore guard Eddie Lee,
whom Catlett suspended
afrer he was late for practice
Sunday night.
"He was suspended for one
game,"
said
Catlett.
Discipline comes before all
else.
Unfortunately it
occurred, but those are the
rules and be knows it."
Lee was replaced by junior
Bobby SherlO&lt;.'k.
The game was won when
Steve Collier hit a 22-loot
jump shot at the buzzer and
Flordia State Coach Hugh
Durham, whose team was
ranked 15tll going into the
conrest, did not think tlle shot
should have counted.
"It appeared to me/' said
Durham, "that he had the
ball on his hip when the
buzzer sounded. But I can't
argue witll the officials."
Durham said he was
"pleased that our team htulg
in there" alter falling behind
by six points late in the game.
"They could have guit, but
Continu.ed on Page 9

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York and Philadelphia before
returning home Jan. 5 to face
the N.J . Nets.

Bearcats slip past foe

ALL KRdGER STORES

I
I
I

Cottonnelle
Tissue

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I'
I

The Cavs take oH on a four·
game road trip with slops in
Houston, San Antonio, New

high of 29 and canned a pair
of foul shots with 3:09
remaining to cut the New
Orleans lead to 101·100.
Len Robinson took a pass
from Maravich and hit a !().
looter that gave him a 21&gt;point night and Maravich
followed with a pair of free
tllrow to put the game out of
reach.

Mayfield 62 Willoughby South
57
McNicholson 72 Marymount
51
Mentor 57 Euclid 55
Middletown 80 Franklin 72
Miller City 59 Holgate 46
Mt. Vernon 53 Reynoldsburg
36
.
New Breman 51 Bodkins 49
New
Philadelphia
80
Marllnglon 72
North Olmsted 79 Avon lake
66
Olmsled Falls at Medina ,
ppd .

Pa inesvil le Riversi de 58
Wickliffe 55
Patrick Henry 69 Napoleon 59
Rand 9t Waroen Harding 72
Sandusky 70 Admiral King 64
Skyvue. 81 Shanandoah 47
Spring. Local 55 Canfield 46
Spring!. N. 62 Bell fontaine 51
Spring!. Cath 90 Sidney lehm an 67
:ruscar~was Cen. Cath 74
Tusk y Valley 62
'·· Uhrichsville Clay mount 71
East Canton 59
Vinton County 71 Jackson 43
Wahama
(W.
Va .)
76
Southern (Meigs County l 71
Wapakoneta 60 Piqua 47
Wayne Trace 106 Paulding 62 •
West Holmes 77 Highland 57
Whitehall 70 Westerville N. 63

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

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�7- The Datly Senttnel, Mtddleport-Pmneruy, 0 ., Wt&gt;dnesday, !)(&gt;(·. 28, 1977

6 - The Dati) Sent mel. Mtddlepo.&gt;rt -Pmneroy, 0 ., 1\'ed!ll's&lt;la) . !)(&gt;(·. 28. 1977
WF.DNESDA \ '
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 2~ . Km~hts Tem·
plar . reg uliir m~llng , i·30
p.m. \\'l"d rwsday at templr:
all Str K nt~hts tn\' tt&lt;.'d

Calendar
· W F.D~ESD .\ Y
~II

D D I.E I' 0 K T · P 0 ~l ­

EROY l.lons
\\'t.'ilne~day &lt;it

rlub.

tht.•

m\\•n

~h'a.:s

Inn .

On th1s day in history :
In 1832. John Calhoun, at
odds ~ uh Pre&gt;;tdem Andrew
Jarkson. became the first
\l rP president to resign .

Gilmores
Lewis home site for
make visit
Christmas dinner party

MASON - Chnstmas was
the theme of the Mason
Extension
Homema kers
Christmas
dinn e r
and
prog ram held Dec, :ro. at the
hist one I.rwis home on
Brown St.
Mr s . Les te r
t La ura 1
Johnson was in cha rge of the
program on Christmas. Its
Customs, Legends and Old
Beliefs. Mrs. J ohnson read
Lukr 2nd chapt er; 2-14 verse
and the group sang, " Silent
Nig ht " and oth er ca rols
aeeomp.anied at the piano by
Mrs. Dorothy Powell .
A duet was presented by
Nann•
Van Met er
and
Laurf.ne Lewis entitled,
-- star of the East." Laurene
Lewis sang ''Silver Bells,"
and Nancy VanMeter sang ,
'' White Christmas. ''
Mrs . J ohnson said the date
of the celebration of Christmas va ried during the early
ce nturies oi Chri stianity.
because there is no historical
record of the exact date of
Ciuist's birth . In so me
ch urche s it was observed in
Dece mber , in others in
January.

A.D. thefixed
Church
Rome336
definitely
the
::::::~==::==~~~~=~~;~~~" of25thAbout
day of December as the

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S ,j fe:~ s:ta r'(

S,lle:y

birthday of the Lmd . The
actual origin of caroling as
part of the Christma s
ce lebration
is
really
unknown . It is said that St.
Francis and his brethren
Sllng simple carols at the first
presentation of a li!Nized
representation of the Nativity
scene in 1223. The idea of
caro ling spread to all parts of
Europe. To inspire greater
religious feeling and help in
the interpretation of the story
of th e .birth of Christ, St.
Francis of Assisi conceived
the idea of building a lif.,_
Sized represent ation of the
Nativ,ity scene.
The Pope gave him the
permission needed and in
1223 he built a full-sized
stable next to his church in
Graceia , a village near Assisi
in Italy . In it he created the
Nativity scene with living
people and animals.
From this beginning the
idea spread all over Europe-.
The creche was
in
homes also.
Mrs . Johnson spoke abo ut
the Three Wise Men, Santa
Cla~s or Saint Nicholas, The
Christmas Tree, holly, ivy
a nd mistletoe a nd told why all
are used . She told how the
Yule Log · was used in early
Christian times to symbolize
Christ as · the Light of the
World.
She told why candles were
used, as they were considered
a sy mbol of the enlightenment Jesus brought to earth,
a nd of the use of bells, the

u.Sea

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SALE PRICED

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Son born

pre1•ious meeting during the
absence of the secreta ry,
Mrs. George Carson .
Hostesses for the January
meeting arc Mrs . Clara
Williams and Mrs. Laurene
Lewis .
Attending the potluck
dinner were Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs . Hazel Smith,
Mrs. Dorothy Powell, Mrs.
Nancy VanMeter , Mrs.
Ca th erine Smith, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs. Roberta
Young,
Mrs . Gertrude
Pr.st on , Mrs. Elizabeth
Jeffers, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright, Mrs. Laurene Lewis,
Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mrs.
Lester Johnson and Mrs.
Alma Marshall .

ad\'ent wreath, and fl owers.
Mrs . Johnson closed her
program by saying ;
--our beautiful season of
Christmas IS a result of all
these c ustoms and legends,
but most especially the true
Bible account of the Christ
Child's birth in a manger in
Bethlehem of J udea."
The members sang many
carols and Nancy VanMeter
re&lt;ited The Night Before
Christmas. A gift pxchanp,e
was held.
A brief business meeting
wa s held with Mrs . Laurene
Lewis, president, presiding.
Club projects for the coming
year were chosen. Mrs. Sarah
Spencer read minutes of the

Mr . and Mrs . Joe Gi~nore
i:lnd daughter, Shannon , Lake
Villa . lll. , here for a holiday
visit with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Giln1ore . Jr.,
cmd Mr. and Mrs . Garner
Weh rung, left Tuesday.
They spent Christmas Eve
at the home of Mr . a 11d Mrs .
Elza Gilmore where they
we r e joined for a holiday dinuer by otlter members of the
family itkludiug Mr. and
Mr s . Ri c k Gilmore,
Reedsville; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Roger Gilmore, Athens ; Mr.
and Mrs. Mik~ Gilmore,
Rutland, Mrs. Nora Gilmore,
Mrs. Marjorie Kapple, and
Mi ss Louise GilmQre,
Pomerov. Gifts were ex·
changed during the evening .

Stella Stevens likes the hard
life in Washington wilderness

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

To tell the truth
By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER
About six months ago my
wife and I !tad a terrible
shuck. We found out we eannot hcwe child.ren. My wife
w.ants a child so much that we
decided to adopt, But I Will go
along only unde r one condition - that the child never
lea rns the truth.
I think it's possible but my
wire is not so sure. I a m convinced that our future happiness depends on the decision we make now. By the
war. we have a cha nce to get
a baby boy with our color,
ing ....
DEAR RE.ADER - Look
with me into the future .
Your chi ld is 6. A . few
children at sc hool tease him,
say ing that he's adopted. He
co mes
to
you
for
reassurance. What do you
• say?
Your child is 7. Friends are
comparing baby books. He
wants to see his birth certificate . What do you say ?
Your child is 9. He is learning the facts of life. When he
wants to know his birU1date
and birthplace, what doyou
say?
·y our child is 10. He finds a
letter from a r'elative referr.i!'g vaguely to the nice
''choice" his parents made
when they picked him . He
asks for a n explanation. What
do you say?
Your child is 12. He
overhears a private talk with
your wife. He hea rs the word
""adopted" and asks if vou

were talking about him. What
do you say·~
These questiotiS suggest
how difficult it is to control all
the information available to
an adopted child as he grows
up. Therefore, it is impracttcal - apart from the ethics
involved - to attempt a
lifelong deception
When you a ns wer your
child's questions about his
origins, will y'ou lie and risk
U&gt;e chance he may learn the
truth from someone else? Or
will your answers I:M! vague
and confusing'/ He wtll pr&lt;&gt;bably stop asking the potentially " dangerous" questions
bot he may conclude that
there ( s something wrong
with being curious about his
origins . Or even worse, he
may deduce that there is
something wrong with him.
Either way your com·
muni ca tion with yo ur
adopted child will be troubled
and open to distortion. One
Philadelphia study fow1d that
adopted children were better
adjusted when their parents
accepted their own roles as
--adoptive" parents .
Perhaps you hope to forget
your infertility by adopting a
child - and then covering up
the adoption. Time might
help you recover from the
shuck you s uffered when y.ou
discovered yuu couldn 't con·
t-eive children of your own ,
Adopt only when ;-ou are
ready to accept the .rea lity of
your situation .
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, New
Yurk, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
mail pro hibits personal
replies, but questions of
general inte rest will be
discussed in future colwnns .

works regularly in movie and view of snow&lt;:a pped peaks in
television projects. But she the distance . A stream and a
prefers the simple joys of the river flow through the
property which is surrounded
frontier .
.Her nearest neighbor is by primitive gove rnment .
several miles away . And if owned land.
Stella craves social life she
" It's one of the most
can drive 17 miles to the beau Wul places on· earth,"
metropolis of Twisp, a north- Stella said on a trip . to
central
Wa s hington Hollywood for a new TV
cot1llllunity of 754J souls.
movie .
Her 101 acres of woods ~nd
" I live there because I
alfalfa fields are located in think it is really a better Way
rolling hill country with a oflife . The air and water are
crystal clear. It makes you
happy just to get up every
morning, even if lt means
ENTERTAIN GUESTS
chopping
wood and carrying
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
water
in
a
pail.
Ebe r sbac h entertained
Christmas Day with a !ami!~
dinner. Their guests were Mr.
and Mrs . J ames Ebersbach,
Brian Tood, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Siley, sons,
A number of awards wer~ gola ana a silver arrow to
Richard and Matthew,
presented when Middleport Billy Weaver ; a bear patch ,
Marietta , and Mrs. Nora
Cub Scout Pack 245 met for a nd two silver arrows to Scott
Mills. In the afternon the bir. Gheen .
its December session .
thday of Richard was
•
Den mothers, Donna Gheen .
Receiving the bobcat
cel ebrated . A white cake
award were David Shuler, and Marilyn Poulin were
decora ted with blue clowns
James Buskirk , David honored with corsages a nd
and inscribed , " Happy Birthboys
Dodson, Daren Brenner, Trey certificates . The
day, Richard'' was served.
Gaveze , Scott Haning, Jef- presented parents with gifts
frey Nelson, Donald Stein , which they had made and
DAUGHTER BORN
Edward Baer ; the wolf patch there were several skits and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cum- went to J ohn Epple ; a wolf games. Santa Claus made a
mins, Letart Falls, are an- patch and a gold arrow to surprise visit and there was a
nouncing the birth of a n eight John Arnold ; a wolf patch, gift e&lt;ehange. Candy canes
pound, four ounce daughter, gold and silver arrows to were given those present
Tassaca Noelle, on Dec. 2 at Da ren Wolfe; a bear patch, a including guests.
O' Bleness Hospitalln Athens.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Brown, Minersville, and Mr , and Mrs. Floyd
HAVE GUESTS
Cummins, Letart Falls. Mr.
Christmas Eve guests of
and Mt·s. Cununins have two Mr. a nd Mrs. William Radother Children , Todd , 16, ri nd ford were Homer Radford,
Missy, 13.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Romine,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
SEEN VISITING
Roger Gilmore, Athens, and
Christmas gu&lt;!Sts of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. BiU Radford
Brooke, Marietta .
and Mrs. Hennan Ohlinger and
were Mr. and Mrs. Terry Ohl- Christmas dinner guests
inger , Jay, Jon and Joshua, were Mr. and Mrs. Rollin
Duncan Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Radford, Sally and Judy, Mr .
Bill Ohlinger, Debbie, Kim and Mrs . Douglas Little, Coland Steve, Mr . and Mrs. Phil umbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Uses 50 pet. to 7-5 pet . less electr ici t y than
conven tiona l cooki ng - Coo~s in one.fourth
Mr. and Mrs. George Ohlinger, Laura and Phil, Gilmore, Athens, Homer
conven tiOna l tim~ , 675 watts of cooking power
Chambers and son, Clip! a nd Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sisson, Col- Radford, and Mr. and Mrs.
at " high " S:etting . Touc h Panel con tr ols
Larry Romine.
daughter, Emily , East Pomt, wnbus.
Separate star t -stop -def rost cont rol s Ga ., are houseguests of Mr. ~----------~ ~----~
Ultramaf ic Power Se lector to choose a
variety of warm ing and cooki ng speeds . ~u ll ­
and Mrs , Denver Rice.
down door - Large oven Capacity - Stainless
On Christmas Eve they
steel interior . Rem ovable glass oven tray were joined a t the Rice home
dishwasher safe . Timing -----0 to 99.99
by Mr. a nd Mrs. Chester Rice
m inutes-digital display - Interior light . Seeof College Park, Ga., guests
through oven door - Automatic digital clock
of Mrs. Eula Rice for the
O..eraleson ordinary 115holidays, Mrs. E ula h R'ce,
CHAIN SAWS
Mrs . Mabel Green, Mr. and
285CD
Mrs . George DeWeese of
Husqvarna's " Upper Midd le ass" saw. Compact
Athens. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
ha ndy wi th enough power to com pete with the really
Harris of Minersville also
big saws. A divided cylinder cove r makes ·air f ilter .
joined the fam ily for
clea ning simple. Slim and trim styli ng and an idea!ly
Christmas Day. Tuesday Mr.
located center of gravity spa re yo ur back . (Swed-0and Mrs . Chambers went to
Mat ic chain brake optional.)
Akron for Ginger James who
Wilkinson Small Engine Sales Service
Will also be visiting with Mr.
Middleport, 0 .
and Mrs. Rice this week.
498

By VERNON SCO'IT
HOt.LYWOOD (U P! )
Stella Stevens has forsaken
the plush life of BP\•erly Hills
for the rigors of an isola!&lt;.'&lt;!
ranch in the state of ·
Washington , li\'ing in a cabin
without plumbing .
Unlike Elizabeth Taylor,
who gave up one pampered
lifestyle for another on a
man icured Virginia farm,
Stella abandoned her lavish
home in {;()!diVa ter canyon to
rough it ir) the wilderness .
Stella
lived
in
a
comfortable home with thick
carpets, modern furniture,
air conditioning, gleaming
bathrooms, a swimming pool
and all the a ppurtena nces of
wealth a nd luxury.
More tha n a year ago she
turned her back on what, in
Hollywood at least, is considered the good life. She wanted
to rough it.
Now Stella lives in a tiny
ca.biri without electricity ,
running water or telephones.
An outhouse replaces the
powder room.
She chops down .t rees , cuts
the logs for firewood to heat
the cabin and to feed the
woodburning cookstove. She
delivers wa ter to her
domicile by bucket from a
spring and nearby creek. If
she wants a hot bath she must
heat the water on the stove .
She has no refrigeration .
At night stie relies on
lanterns and candlelight. She
grows and cans her own
vegetables and bakes her own.
bread .
Stella could afford more of
life 's comforts. She leases out
her Beverly Hills home and

Scouts have awards session

&amp;

PH EBE ' STORE
Thursday . Dec. 29 through Saturday, Dec: JJ
Right Reserved To Lin1it Quant'ities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday

GOLD -MEDAL

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25 LB.$~
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Saturday 9: 00-9 : 00

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

'

._~.:1
·. .

··~·······-·.·.·....~&lt;l~ ....v.~~-

f
f

~~

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Guests uf Mr. a nd Mrs.
Usby Martin and Adam 011
S&lt;!turday were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Martin, Stephi:.inie Htld
Stephen, Allian&lt;.:e . On
Christmas their guesL"i were
Pat Martin . Columbus;
Ea rline Stamsel. Frank
Kelton, Houston , Texas; Mr .
.and Mrs. Robert Jon es, Ra ndy and Cathy, Gallipolis, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Martin, son
Mike and daughter, Susanne,
her hus band and son, BriC:Irt,
Che, tc r, and Mrs. Ruth
( ~usner, Middleport.
Mr . and M1:s. Patri ck
l..m.: hary spe11t Christmw;
Day visiting in Amesville
with her brother (llld Slt~ler­
in·l&lt;Jw , Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Hcn"!'y .
Lt. and Mrs. Michael Borin ~ are spending the holidays
here with their pare uts, Mr .
and Mrs . Robert Mills,
Pomeroy, Route 3, and Mr .
and Mrs. Grant Boring of
Reedsville . They will return
to Hancock Air Force Base in
Syracuse, N. Y. on J a n. 2.
Mr . and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger
had HS their Christma s Eve
gucsl'i following the program
at the Enterprise United
Methmlist Church Mr. w1d
Mrs. C harlc~ Wart11, David,
Dan·in, and Amy, Mrs . Bernice Evans, Mr . and Mrs.
Don Hunnel C:~ nd nrtie.
La ura Ohlinger and Pa uletta Si gman are in Col umbus
£or a scverill days' visit with
Mr, and Mrs. Ed Sisson.
Mr . and Mrs . Me lv in
Bonec utter were in Irvine.
Ky. for Christm as with Mr.
and Mrs . Bi ll Curn utt a nd
ch ildre n. Their granddetughtcr, Paige Curnutt, acc.:m npa nied them home for .CI
VI .Sit.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Sat., Dec. 31st _

FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM •••.••••••':. ~~- s1.19
HOME MADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••. 99~
CUT UP FROZEN FRYERS-~"~~ .. ~ •••••••••••••• 59~
24 oz. BROUGHTON

COTTAGE CHEESE ........... 89'
. 2lb35~
1 lb. TEEN QUEEN 1 ,
·
NEW CABBAGE .......
:.
MARGARINE... _... .- ~.~ .. 2189'
30 Count
39~
6 oz . KRAFT
Singles
PIMENTO CHEESE. ____ Pkg . 69' CALIF. CELERY.?.~?.~~..
.

POLLY·s POINTERS

\,

• ,

59~

Jumbo Roll

49~

12 oz.

Blue , Bonnet

gg~

2 lb. Bowl

EYNOLDS FOIL •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~:.97~
MIXED FRUITS ••••••••••••••••••••
$1.09
1.7
ROYAL PRINCE YAMS ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 59~
BOUNTY TOWELS•. ~ •••••••••.••••••• ~ •••••• ~.k.9~.87~
TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~: . 57~

BOLOGNA
TRAY SLICED

2 LB.

'1.39

·········B·a·x·

RING

TASTEE

oz .

BOLOGNA
•

'109LB.

2 Roll Pak .

2 Roll Pak SOFT WEAVE

Gal. Rich 'n Readv

ORANGE·DRINK•••••••••••••• :.~ •••••••••••• :.u:•.99~
SALAD DRESSING •••••••••••••••••••••••• /::•.$1.19

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Morris

••

For Chips

2/79~

JACKSON

BOLOGNA
LB. S139

JOWL

DEAR HE LEN :
For the past !0 years my hus band has lived with another.
woman. They have two r: hildren. He supports me ond our five
children, but we have no life wi th him.
At 45, don't you think I've waited long enough for him to
come to his senses ' - UNDECIDED WIFE
DEAR WIFE :
You 've waited at least nine years too long ! Break free and
start a new life for yourself. -H.

,.

HAVING GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs . Fred
Guegle ir1 enterta ined at thei r
Huck Springs home wl'th a
holiday dinner t•ecently.
Their guests were ,Mr . a nd
Mrs. Phillip Stolp of Indiana polis , Ind .; Mr. a nd
Mr s.
Dellun Hu g hes ,
Virginia, K&lt;:~ren and l.isa, a nd
son, Bill, Lancaster ; Mr . a nd
Mrs. Cla rence Ka rr, Mr. a nd
Mrs. Robert Ka rr, daughter,
Stacey, and son, Tomy, Mr .
and Mrs. James Karr a nd
sons, Aaron and Todd, all of
Millersport.

~

NEW
YERR
As we gef off to a fresh start
we wish you bright and
shining tomorrows .

Thanks for past favors.

WATCH FOR OUR ANNUAL SALE

"HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
In th e Upper Block
Pomeroy, 0.

NO OBLIGA JION

ro auYf

EARLY BIRD

DEC. 27 THRU 31
STARTING AT 8 A.M.

50% OFF
1/3 .OFF
20% OFF

•

Children or adults
posed individually or
in groups

•

Limit one free
portrait per fam ily

•

Choose your ll x l4 from
severa l poses

ALL PIECE
GOODS

Excellent quality
• color
reproduction

8:00a.m .12 : 00 Noon

Portrait• will be
• delivered
to our

store

FROM
12:00 NOON

THRU

5:00 O'CLOCK
All
SINGER
SEWING
MACHINES

p

BACON

DEC. 29, 30 &amp; 31

12 oz. BAKERS

CHOCOLATE CHIPS•••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••• :.k~~.89~

Sorry, no lay a ways or charges .

10 oz . MAXWELL

INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~::. s4.59
CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .•••••••••••••••••••• ~:~.49t

~

••· "; n c " • " •• 01

]L

By

The Fabric Shop
McCa ll' s, Kwic k -Sew,
Simplicity Patterns
11 ~ IV . Second
Pomeroy

DA.ILY 10:00
TO 4:00
THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.
MIDDLEPORT STORE ONLY

-'

.I

make your own l'Ompound by
using any brand of toothpaste
a nd a little baking soda . I
have never had it hann any
fumiture bllt you might test
in a n inconspicuous place.
Dampen a cotton cloth and
squeeze out any excess
mbisture, put a little of the
mixture on th e rag a nd rub
the spot until it disappears. It
may take from three to 15
minutes depending on how
deep the spot is. Use a clean,
dry cotton cloth to wipe away
any compound that is left and
then buff for luster. - MRS.
S.E .R.
DEAR POLLY - I think I
have help for Bonnie who has
mildew on a bed sheet. When
I have mildew on any clothes
I soak that area overnight in
milk and then was~ as usual.
I have never had to do this
often but when I have it has
worked . - KAYE.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you newspaper coupon clippers if she
uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her
co lumn . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS, in care of this
newspaper,

32 oz . MIRACLE WHIP

1St;, oz. DEL MONTE

Valley

,

'~ ....w '~

JJ

,

Juining Mrs. Grace Glaze
and son, Virg'i! for Ch r istmas
wete Mrs. Donna Glaze and
daughter, Cindy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Mtke Stewart and
chi ldren, Syracuse.
•
Pat and Mike Gress of Colmnbus spent Christmw. . with
thei r· pitrents, Mr . and Mrs.
Richard
Gress .
Mr s.
Molculrn Roller juincd the
f&lt;:tmily for dinner.
Mr. &lt;::tnd Mrs. OC:Jle K.
Roush and daughter, C~ lh y,
Apple Creek, spen t the
weekend before Christmas
here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. B. F . Turner. They
also visited in Racine with
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Watson.

Suitcase smells musty
POLLY 'S I'HOBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
suitcase that was stored in
the attic and has a musty
smell I have not been able to
get rid of. Any suggestions ?
Also, I would like to know
what will take ink off a white
pu rse. - LOLA.
DEAR LOLA - You might
fill your suitcase with .
crumpled up newspaper and
leave closed for a couple of
weeks . Other suggestions are
a nylon stocking filled with
cedar shaving s 1from a
lumber-yard 1 or baking soda
in an open contalner.
Sorry you did not say ~· hat
-~-.mwamt~&gt;erial was used to make
your1*1-rse. Hair spray should
remove ballpoint tok from
at the bride's table which Pa rkersburg Beauty School vinyl, cuticle remover from
fea tured a two tier wedding a nd is employed at Ruth' s leather 1or rubbing alcohol if
It Is safe for the material) , .
cake topped with minia ture Bea uty Shop, Mason .
Mr . Morris graduated from Test anything fir st. Our
bride a nd groom . The colors
Wahama High School and answer mu si necessarily be
were pink and lavender.
For the bride 's weilding • attended Jackson Technical on the vague side as was your
trip she wore a brown dress, School. He is a carpenter at question , - POLLY.
and ma tching accessories. Philip Sporn . They are
DEAR POLLY - When my
The bride graduated from resi ding a t Clifton, W. Va .
sponge
mop needs to be
Wuha ma Hi ~h Srhnnl a nd
replaced I le t it . dry
thoroughly and t hen with
safety pins I secure two terrytype dish rags to the base of
the rnop. This gives me a
perfect waxer for the liquid
waxes
and makes waxing as
Helen Hottel
easy as mopping.
When painting indoors I
save those wooden stir sticks
Ls it a Threat to Womankind?
that so many paint stores
DEAR HE LEN :
provide and when the job is
I've read there a rc seve ral hundred thousand ''completed"
done
I dip_t he remainder of
trans-sexua ls · surgically changed to the opposi te sex - in the
the
stick
into the paint. Along
U.S. Most are men made into women.
with
colored
bread twists
Add to this nwnber the vasi amount of male homosex uals,
these make great hold-ups for
a nd you begin to wonder : Do women have a chant:e '! With men
preferring men, or wanting to be women so they ca n attract my pla nts. Just stick stirrer
men, I foresee a nation of spinsters who rise to the top in the in pot a nd fasten plant to it
with the twists. - MRS. R. M.
business world beca use they don't have anything else.
.
DEAR POLLY - I got rid
Rtght? -SEER
of
roaches by putting a coffee
DEAR SEER:
ca
n in the garage close to the
· Wrong. Homosexuality a nd confused sexual identity have
door a nd was sur'
kitchen
always been with us. · I doubt percentages have increased
prised
at
the roaches . in the
drastically : lj's just that these people have come out of the
can
in
the
morning . Fill can
closet. (And why not? They've been persecuted far too long. )half full of water and they will
H.
,
drown ui a few minutes. ANNA.
DEAR HELEN :
DEAR POLLY To
. My husband ami I live in a high-rise, and he has hiS offices in
remove
white
water
rings
a professi onal complex downtown .
Eac h year we are expected to give Christmas gifts to and spots from furniture
dounnen , building managers, maintenance people. elevator
operators, garbage colledurs, mailmen , janitors, maids, ·. TI1e so lor co rona . the whiteparking attendants, you name them, we hand out 111oney. It hot halo or Luminous gas that
amounted to near $000 this year.
is most visible when the moon
You ca n say, if you ca n't stand the outstretc hed palms, get blocks the sun' s dazzling face
o.ut of the high-rent district, but we must ljlaintain a certain du ring an eclipse, thrusts
standard or my husband's business is affected. Tlllit 's the str eame rs m or e than 5
snobbery of cot1llllerce.
million miles into space .
Most of these people earn adeq uate salaries. Our doorman
enjoys two overseas holidays each year; that's more than we
can afford. Yet.if we don 't tip them regularly and hand out $25
checks al holiday time, we can expect poor service and guiltproducing treatment.
When and where will it e nd ? - VICTIM OF THE SYSTEM
DEAR VICTIM .
We-e,ell, you could move to the s uburbs (where saved handout money would be spe nt on commuting ), or to Russia where
tips a re forbidden (and su tS free ente rprise) . other than that ,
a p.artlal solution is an agreement among renters that
gratuities will be kept within reason . At $25 per person, it'S no
wonder you feel squeezed.- H.

J :

Ml

Polly Cramer

11 oz. MORTON'S T.V. DINNERS. __............... __ ... _.. ,each 69'
BIRDSEYE 9 oz. KOOL WHIP. ....................................... 69'
11 oz . DEL MONTE

$139

LB .

L.B .

u.

PHONE 773-5536

pink and white daisies . She
wore a white hat trimmed in
mateh1n~
flowers, and
l'arTied a pmk rose .
Chester Youn~ of New
llavt'n WM S best man.
ll1e bride's mother wnrl' u
noor length dress of blue
polyester and corsage uf blue
eamations .
The groom's mother wa ~;
attired in a pink floo r length
dress of polyeste r . Her
eorsagc was pink canwtions .
The reception was held
following the we~ding a t the
Assembly of God. Mrs.
Robert Mills and Mary Mills,
both of Chester, 0 ., presided

75 Ft.

Bordens

Racine,

OF MASON

PHONE 773-5536

BETTER FOOD VALUES

5th &amp;Pearl

GINO'S

GINO'S
OF MASON

RUTLAND - Mr . and Mrs.
Jerry Coleman are anno unci ng the birth of a son ,
J eremy Ga il, on December
17, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The baby weighed 7
pounds, 12ll.s ounces. Mrs.
Colema n is the former Susan
Loper .
Grandparents are Mrs. Sue
Hall, Rutland ; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Gene Co leman, Rutland .
Great-grandparents are Mrs.
Dorothy Queen, Mason ; Mr.
and Mrs. Gail Miller, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Bethel
Colema n, Albany, Ohio;
great-great - grandmothers
are Mrs. Elizabeth Jeffers,
Mason, and Mrs. Henrietta
Burton Shaw, Cleveland, and
Mrs. Maude {;()Ieman.
---- - - -- - - - - -

Sunshine

'Jlw bride IS lht• dau~::hter c)(
M1·. {lnd Mrs. Ct~rl Schw&lt;Jrz,
MHS4JO , and the gruom is the
son of Mrs. Waynt• Capeha rt,
cmd Mr . r;eorgc Morris , New
Haven .
Gl\'£'"11 in nwrriage by h('r
father, the brid&lt;• wore a white
floor length gown with se lf
lram . The ~own of white
tmdal satin featured a v
Jleeklin e, long full length
shet• r slel•vcs. Whil e lace
funned th e cuff of the sleeves
a rld ci r cled the skit1 of the
go wn. The bride's headpiece
JJf whitr bridal s~ilin was
attached to a sho ulder length
vr il. She carried a bouquet of
white ruses and her mot her's
Bible.
Sue Sehwarz, sister-in-Jaw,
a nd the bride's attendant,
wore a Ooor length gown uf
-polyester whtch featured a
pink sk irt and white bodice.
'l1lC bodice WilS trimmed in

NOW OPEN

NOW OPEN

Rice family
have guests

CHEESE Americana

MASON Mi ss Jane
Schwarz
and
Steve
Mo rris w ere united 111
marriage on Q(·tober 14
at
the
Assr mbly
of
God Church , Mason . The
Hevrrend Chestf'r Tennant
officiated at the double ring
ceremony ,
Ca th)' Hoffm an , nr~l:lnist ,
played traditional wedding
music.

I Personal
Middleport I
Notes· ,
.~~.%.d!

\

and

�•

•

Dec . 28,1977

0.

Dailv Sentinel,

For Thursday , Dec. Z9 . 1977

IN THE

COMMON

~LEAS

COURT

ASTRO•GRAPH

OF
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
LOU IRENE ROSEBERRY ,
Pl•lntlff ,

...

Bernice Be de Osol

~ \Jww~

HARVEY
EUGENE
ROSEBERRY ,
Addren Unllnown,
et 11. ,

Dete-ndlnts .
-

No . 1,,.,~

•

SERVICE BY

PUBLICATION -

TO

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DECEMBER 31, 1977

4 PORK LOIN •••••••••~·.

1

CENTER CUT

..·

$139

RIB PORK CHOPS••••L!·...
COUNTRY STYLE

SAUSAGE •••••••••••••• ~~.
WIENERS!~2~

GROUND CHUCK ••••• :~·

You are h ereby notifed that
a c ompla in T has been f iled In
the Common Pleas Court of
Me igs County , Oh io, CiJi se No.
16.662. demand ing part ition
ot the tono..-lno described
real estate. to ·w it :
The f ol low ing real est11 te
sit v ated in the TownshiP of
Lebanon , County Of Me igs
a nd State of Oh i o , and
bounded and described as
fo l lows :
The north half ot the west
~ i ghty acres of the southwest
qUMier Of Sec t iOI'l 3 4, Town 3,
Range II , of the Oh io Com ·
pany 's Purchase, be the sa me
more or less .
Also
e ig h t a c res
(8 )
descr i bed
as
follow s :
Prev iously
entered
fo r
li!l)(i!ltion in the name ot
Samuel Baker . Range 11.
Town 3, Section 34J Lot 640
No . 34 . acres 90 value ·100·
quarter E . part of sou thwest
one ·fourth . The said eig h t
acres being a part ot the
above descr i be&lt;J lot to be lai d
off by metes Md bounds in
the northwest corner of said
tract In as near a S(luare form
as practicab le. Be ing also
tw9 rods in width , begiM ing
at the northeast corner of the
north halt of the southeast
quarter of Section 4, Town 3:
Range l2 , situate i n Chester
Township , Me i gs Count~ .
Ohio, and running west to the
coun t y road leading from
Adams Mill to
Ra ci ne ,
supposed to contain about 28
rods be the same more or
leS!L
Reference Deeds : Vol. 268 ,
Page 263, Vol. 231 , Page 327
and deed from Bonn le Sue
Roseberry to Lou _ Irene
Roseberry , dated August
15th , 1977 , and left to be
recorded on December 2nd .
1977,
You are notified that ~ou
are requ i red to answer the
Complaint within twenty .
eight deys after _ th e tas t
publi c ation .
The
last
publ ic at io n wil l be made on
the 18t h da~ of January, 1978 .
L arr ~ E . Spencer ,
Clerk of Courts ,
Meigs Couni'J' , Ohio
( 12 ) 7, 1•. 21.28 (1) 4, ll , 18 , }I

( 12 ) 28,

CUBE STEAK••••••••• ~.~~ •• · ..

Dec. 29,1977
You will make a pracl1ca! alliance thiS commg ~ear that IS
based on ulll•tanan needs . H
w111 be a goOd un•on that w•ll
tu1n out Ia b~ bene fic•al for
bo th parlles
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan .19)
Reser11e tudgmen t on anything
tha t •s told to you toda y . Only
by domg th•s can you expect to
!earn th e true fa cts so yOLJ can
ac t w1sc1y H&lt;tving lroLJb le se lect•ng a car eer ? Send for yo ur
cop y of Astra-Graph Letter by
mall1ng 50 cents for each and a
long , self -addressed , stamped
envelope to As tra -Graph , P 0
Box 489 . Aad10 C 1ty Station,
NY 1001 9 Be sure to spee dy
your b1rth s1gn
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.19)
You can en lighten a fr •e nd
today wh o can ' t seem to see
th e fo res t for th e trees . It's not
ev• den t now . but your a•d co uld
pay o ff later
PISCES (Feb.20·March 20) Pea·
pie apprec•a te yo ur conce rn f or
tt1e1r weltar e today , beca use
you liS ten and ta lk to th e m ,
rathe r th ar1 at lhern A rare
quality
ARIES (March 21·Apri119) Don 't
waste your talent with small
potatoeS today . You could be
very adept al puttmg toge th E;H
big deals . so why play wtth
peanuts ?
TAURUS {April 2Q-May 20) To·
day you're lucky at th mgs that
have a sl•g ht eleme nt of
chance Th• s does n ' t mean that
you should e mb race lar·o ut
sc hemes .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Tak e
a .hard St;!cond to'o k at any
ven ture th at could mean some.
lhlng 10 yo u •n a material
se nse You rn1ght be able to
l•nd a way to make 11 pay o ff
CANCER (June 21-July 11) All
things have a good and a bad
si de to them Today you shou ld
conc entrate on pos111ve as pects II ~au want to come ou t

on lo p

Manning D . Judge
Judge
Court of c ommon Pleas ,
Probate Division

$149

BUCKET

DEFENDAN T

NOTICE OF
ACCOUNT
Case No . 22 , 257
Estate of REED GANDEE
Detu sed .
Notice is hereby g i ven tha t
Fred W . CrOw of Pomeroy ,
Meigs County , Ohio , h as befn
Ou ly appoinled Adm inistrator
With the W ill Annexed · of the
Estate of Reed Gandee ,
deceased , tate of Midd leport
Vlllage . MeigS County , Oh io .
Cred i tors are required to
tile the ir claims with sa id
fiduciary , witt'lin
three
months .
Dated th is 25th day ot
December 1977.

SUPERIORS

FRANKIE

THE

ABOVE NAMED :

•lJnlN1illi~\J

~e l gs Count~ ; Ohio
(1) 4 , IL 3tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereb y given tti a t
tile annual meeting of the
stockholders of Th e Farmer s
Bank &amp; Savings Company of
211 West Second Street ,
Pomeroy , Ohio, will be held
at the off ice of sa id Ba nk in
Pomeroy , Ohio , according to
its by -taws , on the th i rd
Wednesday of January, 1978,
at 4:00P .M . fo r the purpose
Of electing directors and the
transactio n of suc h other
business as may properly
come before sal~ meeting .
Paul E . K loes , •
Sec r etary
{121 28, (1) 8, 11. 16, 4tc

LEO (July 23-Aug .22) The day
may s tart ou t slowl y tor you.
bu t what beg•ns as a tr• ckle
may Iur n tn lo a slr e am d you ' re
pa t•en t and pe rse vering
VIRGO (Aug . 23' Sept 12) You
ar e rea l•.stic abou t your goals
toda y
Yo u $la nd a good
cha nce o l reach1ng th e m .
You ' ll be ·very p ra c tical in yqur
approach
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c!.!J) 8 • net· .
ther ' obvio us nor dev•Ous abou t
your in l entions today . Th e for mer w111 t1p you r hand to th ose
wh o envy you ; the la tter wou ld
cause loss o f respec t
SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov. 22) If
there 's some th •n g pote ntially
beneficial that you're involved
•n today, don' t play a lone
hand . Share wi th as many
fnen ds as you c an
SAGITTARI~S (Nov . 23-Dec .
21) Save your trump card s If'
pla y when yo u rea lly need
the m •n all si tua ti ons t od ay 11
you can adh e re to th is, success will c ome your way.
!NEWSPAPE R EN TE RPRI SE ASS N )

In 1945, Congress officiaUy
recognized the "Pledge of

Allegiance" to the flag of the
United States.
A lllought for llle day:
British novelist Aldous
Huxley said, ''There's one

corner of the uniyerse you
can he certain of improving,
· and that's your-own self."

FLAVORiTE HOT DOG 0~CT
HAMBURGER BUNS••••__..

2I

~

"YLAND CHUNK.

DOG FOOD

C_OUPO N

25 LB.

$299 W/C

Lin'lit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer

;t~; ~c;; ~rf !

LOVIN' SPOONFUL

6~CANSoz.

6/'$1

1

WJC

Limit i Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Dec. 31. 1977

I •••••••••• ••••••• ••

oz.

• ••••••••

All meat cut under USDA Inspection,
Prices eHedlve thru SaturdaY, Dec. 31

Call now for appointment
for processing your home
lcllled beef and hogs.

j

PRINT

TOILET TISSUE

CAT.FOOD

CHUCK ROAST ................. .......'!'.-.. 69'
STEWING BEEF........................t.b;. 'l.l9
GROUND CHUCK ••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• !~~.. 89'
RIB STEAKS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .u•• _11.89
SHORT RIBS BEEF ................... !~:. 79'
BOILING BEEF ....................... .'~; •• 59'
SMOKED JOWL.. ..................... ~~· ••• 79'
RATH WIENERS ................ ~.1 -~~:.'!~L 99'
BOLOONA .••••••••••
!~·.... '69'
HOT ITALIAN SAUSAGE ............... .';;., 11.69
LINK SAUSAGE ........................ ~~-.. 11.39
SMOKED BACON..................... !~·.... 79'
PERCH Flu.ETS ••• ••.•••••••••••••••• ~~· ••••.$9c
CHIPPED HAM .. :.................. !~: ..11.99

COTTAGE CHEESE ••1!.o;.

~

4 ROU
PAK

59'

W/C

Limit 1 Per I..USTomer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 31, 19n

TEA BAGS
48 CT.

Per Month :

TO WH OM IT MAY CONCERN :
Pursuar'lt to the requiremen ts of Sec ti on 4909 .19 of theRe·
'o' ised Code of Ohio, the Columbus and Sou thern Ohio Electric
· Company hereby gives notice that on June 30 , 19 77 , it f iled
wi th the Public Uti lit1es Commission at Ohio, an Appllcat !on f or
au thority to amend and increase it s electr ic rate schedules which
are undor the JUr isdic tiOn o f the Publ ic Uti lit ies Comm ission of
Ohio .

69~ W/C

Limit 1 Per c::ustomer
Good Only at Powell's
Off1er
Dec.
1977

20

Yow of Experienced Meat Cuttors To Cut and

Serve Meat To Your Speclflutions. .
- .

'OpoM ; OO-'WO Mon. thru

Fri., Soot. B:OOto I :00

We Gladly Atcept Food Stamp s

F irs~ 30 KWH
Ne)(t 40 KWH
Next 130 KWH. - ...... ·r.,
Over 200 KWH ... .

Electric Water Heater Equfpment
Capacity in Gallons

30 to 49 ..

.PROPOSED RIDER NO . ;!
ENVIR ONME NTA L COST AD JUSTMENT

INC LUDABLE COSTS

Includable envir o nmental pollution con trol costs shall be th e
o~r ation ar1d mein tenance expenses directly incurred and the
amor tization of th!l costs o f eQuipm~nt used in reduc i ng or re·
moving sulfur and oi her pollu tants from fuel or staCk gases and
diiPOSing of related ·w astes. but shall exclude th ose costs related
t o the inst al lat.ion _and operation oi eleCtros tatic or mechanical
preciprta tors an d any return on investmen t. Th e Includable Cos ts
shal l be thn tOtal includable erwironmental pollu t io n control
costs f or t11e first thr E!e o f the im med ia tely pr eceding four cal en·
dar mon tll s.
B INCLUDA.Bll: KILOWAiT .HOU RS
Includable Kil owatt ·Hours shall be the total k. itowatt·hour
sates of the Company 'f or the first three of the imrnedi&lt;Jtely pre·
ceding four billing inon ths.

CHARGE

The above tar i ff is net if ful l payment is received within 15
of bil l. On al l acco un\~ nb t $0 paid, an additional ch arge of
five per cen t (5%) of the total amoun t bil led , but ·no t less than
f ifteen Cen ts [151!) will be made.

d~ys

The residential ra te' in Frank li n County has been modifi'ed
and inc reased and a new schedu le has been added for small use
customers . Customers in this area formerly st:rved under Sched ule A· R wil l be served under modi fied Schedu le A ·A and new
Schedu le A·A· 1, a small use load managemen t ra te &lt;:~vailable to
consumers wh o no~mally do not use mo re than 600 KWH per
month during the summer period .
P r~sently,

aU res iden tial customers in Franklin County are
served under Schedu le A·A. ·

PRESENT RATE - SCHEOUL E A-A !FRANKLIN COUNTY}

First
Nex t
Next
Next
Over

30
170
600
700
1500

Winter
Summer
(Nov . thru May ) (June t hru Oct.)

KWH .
KWH ....
KWH .
KWH ..
KWH . .

9.25&lt;1
3.50ol
3.00ol
2.621
1.50ol

9.25d per KWH

3.50ol
3.00d
3.00oi
3.00d

""'
per
per
pe'r

KWH
KWH
KWH
KW H ,

$5.00
3.60ol
1.50ol

$5.00
3.60ol ""' KWH
3.60d per KWH

PROPOS ED RATE- SCHEDULE R-R-1 (FRANKLIN COUNTY)
Winter
Summer
(Oct . th ru May). (June thru Sept.)

$2.75

Customer Charge :
Energy Charge :
First 200 KWH .
Nex1 soo•KwH .
Ne)(t 100 KWH .... _.
Over 800 KWH ..... .

Winter
Summer
IOct . thru May I (June thru Sept.)

Customer Charge·

$5.50

Energy Ch&lt;:~rge .
First 800 KWH .
Ne)(t 700 KWH ....
Over 1500 KWH ..

3.90ol
1.90d
1.50&lt;1

$5.50
3.90d per KWH
3.90ol ""' KWH
3.60ol pe' KWH

Minimum Charge: Customer Charge

PROPOSED RATE - SCHEDU LE R-S·1 (OUTS IDE FRANKLIN
COUNTY)
Wi nter
Summer
(Oct . thru May) (June thru Sept.)

Per Mon th :
Customer Charge;

$2 .75

Energy Charge :
First 200 KWH . ,
Nex t 600* KWH
Next 100 KWH ,
Nex t 700 KWH .
Over 15:00. KWH .

4.05&lt;1
3.45&lt;1
3.45&lt;1
1.90ol
1.50ol

$2.75
4.05&lt; pe'
3.45f per
N/A per
N/A per
N/A per

KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH

3.5o&lt;
3.1 5&lt;1
3.1 5&lt;1
1.50ol

$2.75
3.50oi
-3. 154
N/A
N/A

per
per
per
per

KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH

* In any summer b illing month , if usage exceeds 700 KWH ,
billing will be rendered that month under SchedUle A-A and
thereafter for all subsequent months through the four months
of the nex 1 summer per_iod .

Prese ntly, all residen tial customers in t he territory outside
Frankli n County are served under Schedu les A-S, A-S·D, and

An e~tperlmenta l residential load management rate, Schedule
RLM, has been introduced. This ra te is available at the Campa·
ny's option to a limited number of customers 1or the purpose of
de termining the effectS of de!Tland bill i ng on consumer load
management.

PROPOSED RATE - SCHEDU LE RLM {SYS TEM WID E)
Per Mon th :

Demand Charge .
First 4 KW or less of Billing Demand . . .
Over 4 KW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Energy Charge :
A ll KWH . ,, . .. ,, ...... ...... ,, .. .

$ 19.00
$ 4 .75 per t&lt;W
1.00C ~er KWH

Minimum Charge : Customer. Charge plus Demand Charge
Determinati on of Billing Demand : The- Billing Demand will
be the ma)(imum one (1) hour integrated kilowatt demand re ·
cordi ng of an integrating demand meter during th e summer
mon th~ (June through September) w ithin the past twelve f12l
month period ending with and including tile current billing
mon th .
The General Service-Small-Secondary rate has been mou ifled
and increased. Those customers fOrmerly se!"..cd under Schedu les
GS-1, GS-1 -D, and C-S-8 will be served under modified Schedule
GS·1.
Presen t ly, all general · serVice small -secondary customers are
served under Schedules GS- 1, GS-1-D . and C-S·B.

Winter
Summer
(Nov. thru May) (JlJne thru OctJ

Per Mon th '

Demand Cllarge :
First 6 KW or less of Max. Demand - Included w ith Energy Chg.
0"' 6 KW . . .
. . . . . . . . . . $2.2D
$3 .20 per KW
Energy Charge :
30 KWH
First
Next
370 KWH
Next
600 K.WH
Ne)(t 4,000 KWH
Next 15,000 KWH
Over 20,000 KWH

.
. . , , ..
.
. .•...
... . . _ . ..
.
. .. _..
., .. .. , ..
.

_
.
.
.
.

9.25ti"
5.00ol
3.20ol
2.35&lt;1

2. t 5cl
1.95&lt;1

~ . :zsd• per KWH

5.0Qt
3.5Cit
2.651!
2.45&lt;1
2.25ti

per
per
per
per
per

KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH

*14.254 per KWH on Schedule GS-1-D
Minimum Charge :

S3.00 per mon th - Schedule GS- 1
$4.50 ~;~er mon th - Schedule GS- 1·D

PRESENT RATE - SCHEDU LE C-S-8 (POMEROY I
Per Month :
Kilowatt-hours equal to 50 times the kilowath of mon thly
Bill ing Demand :
FirSt 30 KWH .
Over 30 KWH .

7 ,275&lt;1 P" KWH
5 ,57~ per KWM

t&lt; Howatt-hours equal to 150 times the ki lowatts of monthly
Billi ng Demand :
3.4 7~ per KwH
2. 1/Si per KW~

First 3,000 KWH .. .
Over 3,000 KWH •.

K i lowatt-hours in excess ' of 200 ti mes the ki lowatts of monthly
Billing Demand . . . . . . , . • . .
1.57&amp;i per KWH

PROPOSED RATE - SCHEDULE GS-1 !SYSTEM WIDE I

I O.OOoi '
4,05&lt;1
3.30oi
3.001
1.50ol

10.1XW ""'KWH
4.05&lt;1 pe' KWH
3.30¢ per KWH
3.3a.t .per KWH
3.00¢ pur KWH

Per Month:

Winter
• Summer
lOct. thru May) (June thru Sept .)

Customer Cllarge :
Eneryy Charge :
First 400 KWH! .

$2.75
6.001

$2 .75
6.00ol ""' KWH

• 12.00d per KWH on Schedule R-S· D

*Plus 160 KWH per KW in excess of 6 KW Max imum De·
mand In summer months and 110 KW H per KW in excess of
6 KW Maximum Demand in winter months.

Minimu m Charge· $3.25 per month · Schedule A-S
S3.85 per mon th' · Schedu le R·S· D

Next 600 KWH ....... , , , .
A ll additional KWH. , .. .. _ .

..

'

p~~ge

Collier gave Cincinnati a
73-71 lead with 1:00 left, but
the Seminoles tied the game
twice in the last 40 seconds
with Kris Anderson hitting a
tip-In and Mickey Dillard
matching a field goal by the
Bearcats' Bobby Sherlock
with 7 seconds remaining.
Florida State's Harry
Davis had a game high 22
points.

5

they didn 'I and I was proud of
lllat. We have a good team
and we can play with' anyone
in the conference," he said.
The win extended the Bearcats' home winning streak to
69 games, and left them at 7-1
on the year. Florida State
suffered its first loss in 10

games.

The Maximum Demand in any month shall not be less t!lan
the greater of (a) the Maximum Recorded Demand for tile 'cur·
r ent mon th or (b) the Mi~ im um Billing Demand, if any , specified
in the service "contract or (c) 60% of the ' high est demand
recorded In the last eleven ( t1 ) months or (d) 8006 of the h ighest
demand recorded in the last eleven (11 I months during the
summer period .

3.55ol
2.60ol

3.75&lt;1 ""' KWH
2.80d Per KWH

YEAR END SALE
TODAY THRU
DEC. 31, 1977 AT
NOON I
WE WILL MOUNT TIRES
SOtD DURING THIS SALE
FREE OF CHARGE.

CASH ONLYI

Meigs_Tire .~~ter, Inc.
John Fultz, Manager
Pomeroy. 0.
Ph. 992 -21 01

700 E. Main St.

than 100,000 KWH ,as fo llows :
First 50,000 KWH , , ... , ,
Nexl 5D,OOO KWH .. .... .
Over 100,000 KWH ...... _

1.33;
1.081

Next 200 KWH per KVA of
Ma~&lt;imum Demand , but not less
than 100,000 KWH . . _.. ...

.68¢

.98¢ P&lt;l' kWH

Over 450 KWH per KVA of
Maximum Demand , but not Jess
than 200,000 KWH ....... .

.48¢

.78¢ per KWH

1.63&lt;1

1.93&lt;1 pe' KWH
1.6Jct per KWH
1.38¢ pe' KWH

Per Month :

Per Month :
Demand Charge :
First 50 KW or tess of
Ma)(imum Demand ... .
NeJ&lt;t 950 KW .
Ne)(t 2.000 KW .... , .
Over 3,000 KW . . __ .
Excess t&lt; VA Demand Charge

$110.00
1.90

1.80
1.70
.35

EnergY Cllarge·
First 250 KWH per KW of
Maximum Demand, bu t not
less than 50.000-KWH, as follows :
First
5,000 KWH . . .
2.43C
Ne)(t 15,000 ' KWH .......
2. 13C
Next 30,000 KWH . . . . .
1Jl3ol
Next 50,000 KWH ,., .,, .
1.63C
1.33C
Over HXl,OOO KWH .. _ .

$147.50
2.65 pel' KW
2.55 per KW
2.45 per KW
.35per KVA

per
per
per
per
per

KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH
KWH

Ne)(t 200 KWH per KW of
Ma)(imum Demand, but not less
than 50,000 KWH _ . . ...... .

.93&lt;1

1.23&lt;1 pe' KWH

Over 450 KWH per KW of
Ma)(imum Demand, but not less
than 100,000 KWH. . . . . . . . .

. 73&lt;1

I .03&lt;1 ""' KWH

Demand Charge':

Winter
Summer
(Oct. thru May) (JLJne tllru Sept .)

'

On-Peak Hours
Pirst 50 t&lt;W or less of
Ma)(imum Demand .1.. . .. ·
Next 950 KW .. , ...•..
Next 2.000 KW .. .. . , _ .
Over 3,000 KW . .. _ .... .
Excess KVA Demand Charge

$160.00
2.90
2.75
2.60
.35

$210.00
3.90 per KW
3.75 per KW
3.60 per KW
.35 per KVA

1.50

1.50 per KW

Energy Charge :
First 200 KWH per ·KW of
Maximum Demand, but not less
than 50.000 KW H , as follows:
First 20,000 KWH .. , ..
Next 30,000 KWH,.,,, . .
Over 50,000 KWH . .... .

2.70ol
2.40ol
1 90ol

Next 250 KWH per KW of
Max imum Demand, but not less
than 50,000 KWH ..... ... .

1.20ol

Over 450· KWH per KW of
Maximum Demand, bu t not less
than 100,000 KWH.

Winter
Summer
{Oct. thru May) (June thru Sept.)

Demand Charge :
On -Peak Hours
First 3,000 KVA or less of
Maximum Demand.... .
Over 3,oo6 KVA. .. ...
Off-Peak Hours
Excess Demand . .. .... .
Energy Charge
First 180 KWH per KVA of
Ma)(imum Demand . .... . •
NeK I 220 KWH per t&lt;VA , •
Over 400 KWH per KVA ..

$6,000.00
1.75
.90

1.30ol
.90ol
.48¢

$9,000.00
KVA

2.10 per

.90 per KVA

I .60ol per KWH
1 .2~ per KWH
.784 per KWH

Off-Peak and On-Peak Hours, Determination of MaXimum Demand, and Excess Demand : See Pr oposed Schedule GS-2.
2.73rt
2.43&lt;1
2. 1311
1.93;
{ .63rt

2.90ol pe' KWH
2.6011 per KWH
2. 1Ott per KWH

1.50t' per KWH

Minimum Montllly Charge : The applicable demand cha rge
app li ed to the Ma Ximu m Demand.

PRIVATE AREA LIGHTING SERVICE RATES - SCHED·
ULES AL·1 AND AL·2 {SYSTEM WIDE)
The A L· 1 Schedu le has been altered to reflect the fo llowing
increases: 3511! in the base rate of the 100 watt lamp, 40ot in' the
base rate of the 175 watt lam~. 6~ in t he base rate of the 400
vvatl tamp, 15¢ for e&amp;eh additional pole and span of wire, and 5C
for each 150 foot span of wire. The A L·2 Schedule has been
altered to ref lect a 75rJ increase in the base ra te of the 175 watt
lamp, and a 5d increase per un it of underground circ uit.
INTERR UPTIBLE POWER RATE- SCHEDULE I·P (SYSTEM
WIDE)
•
The minimum av~ i lable vo ltage has been Increased from 3 4.5
kilovolts to 138 kilovolts. A demand charge of $2.00 per KW per
moMth has been introduced; the energy charge has been reduced
from .8251t per KWH to .48d Per KWH , and a credit ·of .2U per
KW per hoUr of Interrupt ion ha ~ been added .

SPEC IAL PROVISIONS APP LICABLE UNDER SPECIFIE D
CONDITIONS TO SPEC I FIED SCHEOULES- SUPPLEMENT
NO. 14 (SYST EM WIDE)
The pro\lisions relating to Daily Off-Peak Service and Electric
Furnace Service have been deleted. The minimum monthly
charge for Breakdown Service ·has been increased from $2.25
to $2.50 per KW of service req uirement. The minimum monthly
charge under Seasonal Service has been set at no less than
$2.75.

OPTIONAL UNM ETERED COMMERCIAL SERV ICE FOR
SMA LL FIXED LOADS - SUPPLEMENT NO . 16 !SYSTEM
.
WIDE)
The energ y charge has been increased from 4.. 2751/ per KWH
to 4.5Qd per KWH ,

0.50ol

0.80fper KWH

Off.Peak and On-Peak Hours:
Off-Peak. Hours shall be defined as all of the hours of Su ndays, New Year's Day. Presiden t 's Day, Memorial Day , Independence Day , labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day,
and the hours between 10:00 P.M. of each day and B:OO A .M . of
the follo wing day for all days. On -Peak. Hours are all hou rs not
defined as Off-Peak. Hours.

SPACE HEATING - HEAT STO RAGE SERVICE !SUPPLE ·
MENT NO . 201 (SYSTEM WIDE) .
This Is a new schedu le in which service is limited to wecl fied
Off-Peak Hou~s and the charges are as follovvs : Customer
Charge - $5.00, Demand Charge - $1.00 per KW, and Energy
Charge - 1.()()i per KWH .

Determination of Ma x imum Demand :
For consumers whose Measured Demand is determ ined during both On-Peak and Off·Peak Hours, the Ma)( imu m Demand In
any month shall be the greater o1 (a) the Measured Deniand dUring On-Peak Hours of the cu rrent month or (b) the Minimu m
Billing Demand , if any, specified in the service contract or (c)
60% Of the highest Measured Dema nd during On -Peak. Hours in
the last eleven (11) months or ld ) 80% of the highest Measured
Demand in t he last eleven (11) mon ths during the summer
period . For all other consumers, all hours are considered as Qn.
Peak. Hours.
Excess Demand :
Excess Demand in any mon th shall be the amount by which
the Measured Demand during Off-Peak Hours of the curren t
month excef'ds the Maximum Demand for the month .
tf and when the Excess Demand is greater than the Maximum Demand for the montti, each KW of E)(cess Demand that
e)(ceeds the Ma)(imum Demand will serve to increase the Ma ximum Demand by 0 .5 KW for purposes of calcu lating the Energy
. Charge.

Minimum Monthly Char~-:
TilE! epplicab le demand charge
applied to the Ma)(imum Demand.

The General , Service-l arge-Transmi ssion rate (Schedule G-4)
has been modified and increased. A provision ha!S been added
which allows 1or excess demand at a reduced rate during off·
peak hours.
Presently, all general service -large-transmission custome rs are
served under Schedu le G-4.

PRESENT RATE- SCHEDULE G·41SYSTEM WIDE)

Per Month :

Winter
Summer
(Nov. thru May) (June thru Oct.J

'Demand Charge:
First 500 KVA or less of
Maximum Demand .
Next 500 KVA. ..
Next2,000 KVA. . .
Qve, 3,000 KVA .... , ...

$660.00
I .30 ,

1,20
1.15

$1,0 10.00
2.00 ""' KVA

I .90 ""' K)/ A .

It is est imated that the average residential customer's bill
w ill be increased annually based on the te·st year by· 9 .97%, the
average general servic e customer's bill by 17.23%, and -other seNice by 17,49%, if t he increases sought an;~ granted .

ANY PERSON , FIRM, CO RPORATION, OR ASSOCIA·
TION MA Y FI LE, PURSUANT TO SECTION 4909.10 OF THE
REVISED CODE, AN OBJECTION TO THE INCREASE OR
INCREASES PROPOS ED BY THE COMPANY WHICH MA Y
ALLEGE THAT THE COMPAN Y'S A PPLI CATION CONTAINS
PROPOSA LS THAT ARE UNJUST AND DISCRIMINATORY
OR UNREASONABLE.

The Company 's Application and Comp lain t and Appeal states
that the rate of re turn on the value of t he p ropert y affected is in·
adequate, unjust, unreasonab le and irlsuHicient to yie ld just
compensa ti on and tha t the rates proposed will not produce
more than a fair return on sUch property and are necessary for
the assurance of adequate service, improvement of earnings and
1inancial soundness.

The Company prays that the Comm ission (1 ) approve the
proposed Notice for NewSPaper" Publication; (21 fix a date fo r a
hearing; (3) 1ind that the pre!Eint rates, prices. char ges and other
proVisions of the schedules affected by such Application and
Complaint and Appeal, including the ones contained in Columbus Ci t y Ordinance No. 881 ·77, are unjust and unreasonable l!lnd
insufficient to yie ld just compensation for the service rendered
thereunder; (4) find that Columbus City Ordinance No . 881·77
is unlawfu l; (5) find and determine that the rates, pricM, charges
and other provisions of t he schedules tendered f or filing are just
and reasonable, and approve such schedules in the form tendered
and make such schedules effective as soon ~s it is practicable to
do sq ; (6) fix and determine the just and reasonable prices and
cha rges to be charged and collected by . the Company for · the
utility service wi thin the City of ColUmbus; and 171 grant to the
Company such other· snd further rel ief t o which it may be
entit led .

I .80 pur KVA

Energy Charge;
First 250 KWH per KV A of
MaJC imum Demand, but not less

;&gt;
•

•'
••

.•
~:

I;•
•
.•'
.
.
.

Presently , all general service-medium customers are served
under Schedule GS-2.

Winter
Summer
(Nov. thru May) (JlJne t hru OcU

..

'

PROPOSED RATE- SCHEDULE G-4 {SYST EM WI'OEI

PRESENT RATE - SCHEDULE GS-2 {SYSTEM WIDE)

.•..
•&lt;

The General Service·Medium rate {GS-2, System Wide) has
been modif ied a11d increased . A provision has been added which
allows for excess demand at a reduced ra te during off-peak hours.

Of1-Peak Hours
Excess Demand .. . _, ....

$ 5.00

Customer Char ge:

'Minimum Charge : $2.50 per month

First
30 KWH . , ... , . . ..
Nex 1 170 KWH.
Ne)( t 600 KWH . ..... , ..- .
Ne xt 760' KWH .
Over 1500 KWH .. ..... .. .

Continued from

Per Month :

PRESENT RATE - SCHE DULES R·S AND R-S·D !OUTSIDE
FRANK LIN COUNTY I
Per Month :

Bearcats in close win

Minimum Charge . Customer Charge

~ -S -9 .

Winter
Summer
(Nov . thru May) (June thru Oct.)

James A. Rhodes.

PR OPOSED RATE- SCHEDULE GS-2 (SYSTEM WIDE)

M i nimum Charge : Customer Charge
The residential ratis e~pp li cable in th e territory ou t side of
Frankli n County have been modified and increased and a new
schedule ha's been added for small use customers. Customers in
this area 1formerly served under Schedules A-$. R..S-D, and A-S-9
will be served under modified Schedule A-S and new Schedule
R-S-1, a small use load management rate available t o consumers
who normally do not use more than 600 KWH per month 'd uring
the summer period.
'

by the Legislature last May
over the objections of Gov.

* In any summer bil ling month . if usage e)(ceeds 700 KWH ,
billing will be rendered thil!t month under Schedule A-S and
thereaher for all subseQuent months through the four months
of the next summer period.

PRESEN T RATE - SCHEDULES GS-1 and GS-1-0 !SYSTE M
WID E}

. Minimum Charge: Cus t om~r Charge .1

Per Month :

PROPOSED RATE - SCHEDULE R·S (OUTS( DE FRANK LIN
COUt&lt;TY J

•

Win ter
Summer
(Oc t. thru May) (June thru Sept.l

Energy Charge:
First 800 KWH ........ .
Over 800 KWH ..

In no even t shall the above rate apply to the first 200 KWH
during any month .

co nsum ~

Per M onth :

The Environmen tal Cost AdJustment to be charged in the
curretl t mon th under rate schedu les that specify Environmental
Cost AdJustmen t shall be t he average cost per lo:ilowatt-hou r for
the first three of th e immediat ely preceding four calendar
rnun ths det!!rmined b y dil.dd ing the Includable Costs by the I n·
cludable Kr loweHt·Hours. described in Paragraphs A and B,
below. pius a~uli cab le eAcrse ta xes.

Per Mon th .

last 240 per mon t h.
Last 360 per month .
Last 520 per month .

75 o r over .

'
The Env. ronmen tal Cost Adjus tmen t Aider and th e Dela yed
Payment Charge Clause, Which are shown below, ere included in
a.l l proposed rate schedules.

~AYMENT

KWH to which
1.575G applies :

50 to 74 ...

registered on election day
last Nov. 8, but the program
immediately ended as voters
N!pealed the plan authorized

Min imum Montllly Charge : S2 .50 per KW of Maximum De·
mand , but not less thim $2 .75.

Water Heater Stlrvice : 1.575i per KWH as, apecified below.

ti of'J fi led on June 30. 1977 , is as tallows.

PROPOSED DE LA YEO

7 .2754 per KWH
5.975&lt;1 per KWH
.3.3754 per KWH
2.1254' per KWH

Minimum Charge: $2 .50 per month

The substance of the rat~ revis 1ons pn.:iposed in the Applica -

A

election day registration last
November.
And he says he wants to use
part of the $450,000 that was
earmarked for neil June's
primary for investigative
work and eiiJ)enses in con·
nectlon with other methods of
registration.
Brown's office released
nearly completed figures
Tuesday showing that claims
for election day registration
costs by various county
boards of election totaled
$373,759.
James R. Marsh, assistant
secretary of state, said that
with 19 counties stUI to be
heard !rom his office has so
far agreed to pay out $257,122
for election day registration
costs.
Some 328,000 Ohioans

PR ESENT RATE - SCHEDULE A-S·91POMEAOYI

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO
THE ~UBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
FOR AN 'I NCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES

Customer Charge.

BORDE.N'S

COUPON .

THese Include, Attracting
Birds in Ohio, Hulled Grouse
In
Ohio,
Management
Squirrel Management In
Ohio, Tree ana Shrub
Planting Guide, Squirrel Den
and Wood Duck Nest Boi
Plans, •Wildlife Habitat
Planting Stock Sources, and
Odd Area Management for
Wildlife.
Winter Is a good time to
determine wildlife food and
cover needs on the land, say
Wildlife olficia!B. Woodland
borders, fann pond areas,
permanent fencerow--s,
correction strips in contoul'
stripped cropfields, and odd
shaped field comers are aU
potential areas for improving
wildlife food and cover by
planting trees and shrubs.

Per Mon tll

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

JS1 FROZEN PI11.A

COLUMBUS - -Wildlife
habitat trees and shrub
planting stock are available
from the Division ol Wildlife
to qualifying rural landowners at no cost. Several
varieties or conifers, shrubs,
and smaU trees are included.
This planting stock is
provided to improve wildlife
food and cover.
Applications for habitat
plantbtg stock are available
from your local game
protector or Wildlife D!Btrict
Office. Januarf 31, 19781s the
deadline for submitting
applications for delivery or
plantbtg stock next spring.
Wildlife mAnagement
leaflets containing helpful
Information are available
from the Division of Wildlife.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalebou,e Reporter
COLUMBUS (llPI)
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown will have to return
more tlum fl mUllan of his
1978-79 budget to the Ohio
General Assembly lor
reappropriation because It is
• no longer needed for election
day voter registration.
Brown's office received
$1.8 million last · June to
implement election day
registration and ensure
honest and fair elections
under a liberalized system
eno cted
by
majority
Democrats in the General
Assembly.
Brown has allocated
$359,240 for reimbursing
.fOUOly boards of election for
their costs of conducting

PROPOSE D RATE - SCH EDU LE A-A (FRANKLIN COUNTY}

FRESH
TOMATOES ••••••••••••L!·.
13

More than $1 million to be· returned

Trees, shrub planting
stock still available

Minimu m Charge : $3 .00 per month

HEAD
LETTUCE •••••••••••••••

DEL MONTE
TOMATO JUICE •••4!.o;.

9- The Daily Sentinel, MidiDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Dec. 21, 1977

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OH IO ELECTR IC COMPANY
BenT . Ray, President and Chief Operating Of1 1cer

'

.

.•
.'

�10 - ThP

Dailv Sentinel. l'&gt;lirldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wt&gt;dnesday, Dec 28, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash --·...
Business Services

WANT AD
CHARGES
J$ WOI"'ls or Uadtr

ca.h
! day

100

ChlrKt
12&gt;

1.00

2.2&gt;

I"'

2days

3dllys

100

100

6 dlys

3 . 7~

E.l ch " onl U\'l'f the mmumun l$
words· r.s 4 t'l'nl.5 Pf'r" word pe-r da)

nuuung othrr than l'OI\Sf(!ij.Li\•t

Ads

dilys will bt C'lw.ried Mt UK' 1 da)

""(n memorr .

Card olTblln.U and
Obttwur s' t"t'nts ~r word. $3.00
nununum Cu.h m adVant't'.

Mobl.lt tiomt' sales and Yard Slllf$
art' ~fd onl)' Wllh cash Wllh

I w1sh to thonlo. everyone wh o was
so l..1nd and thouQhtlu l oher the
di'oth ol m-,. -~1 Sit01 r Mobel
Wolle I espeoou., w•sh ro
!honk Rew Bdl P(&gt;rnn the E...
lf"!g
Funeral Home
the
orgon.,.r K~la Allen oil of our
mony lnends and nr1ghbor ~
v.ho sent food and flowers ond
anyone else who helped .n
orlywoy
S1ster Mrs. Bern1cP Grue$er

orde r . ;!!! ctnt chllrgt for ads Clil/1')'·

Vlg 8oJ. Number In Care ol. Tt-.1&gt; Sen·

&lt;mel
· ~ PubliSher re5erves

thto n ght
to «111 or rt'Je&lt;.1 any iiids det&gt;nlfd ~
)«'tiona\ Tht&gt; Publlslwr w1 ll not bt&gt;
responsible for mON' t.han ont mror·
rect uuertJ.on.
PhOne :J92..Zl!i6

HOOF HOllOW HorsN Buy ~r&gt;ll
u ado Ot 11 Oil\ N('w and used
,oddl~'i Ruth Rc~vt'!t Alban~
o1.a o98 3290

1976 OOOGt: ASPEN 4 d1 A C
P S P B l ow mtleoge Wrll
con\•der ollller co• 9Q2 57K6 ·

AI\C RCGISTEREO p~~u ngesE' pup
p·~~~ PhorH• (304) 88'1 2683

RISING S1 .6.R K""""'l 8oord"19
lndoN 011~ ou ldo01
runs
Groommg oil breeds Clean
~on.rory
fot, i111es Chesh1re
Phone {614l 3o 7 ON2

RA CI NE GUN Club hos d1scon
tlllUE'd gun shoot1ng un trl Jon
8 1978

AK ( RI::GIST EREO Bn llor\)' Spomel
b1rd dogs
·8 wee k s old
Q92 Jl 'lb c p lf tff lt:o

Bell y s (orr yout now open lo1
busiMess 3 m1les sou th ot M 1d
dlepor t on Rt 7

FOUR LONG HAIRED kt llens
port maed beogiP 7 1 months

$1 25
REWARD f or
t emale
Aus. tr od •on (otlle Dog lost on
Sou thern Athens Co. Color
blo ck ho 1red wllh v. f11 te
We1ghs appr o -.: 35 lb. Call col
lec t 614 - 5 93 · 827 &lt;~ .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Elcommo ou tomohc PS ond
PB 011
new pamt
t1re\
croger$ wdl sell 01 trade car of
equal va lue Coll 9-1 9 7800

73 Old&gt; Delt a 88 5200 00 down
and tok e Ovpr poynH~111'i See at
lb72 L1n\oln He1ghts

ho·~· Phone992 73 14

PH 985 3808

We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

G1ve owott to good home all
whde tom Co' olmo'l 2 years
.old
See at
1671 Li ncoln
He1ghts Pomeroy

Tuesday
thru rrlday
4P.M.
1M da y btfo ~ pbblicaoon

Los t Mole l t~ s h SeHer 1 year old
Col o r has l oke ..... aod phon e
number Los t 111 M1Ji ber1y Hgts
area Coli 997 ·5917

Sund.H y

-tP.M.

-

-

lf~Wim~

Frida y afternoon

-=-=

WOMAN OR cou ple to live w1th
m1dd le ·oged lody m Pt . Plea ·
sen t W, Vo Salary negotiable
Phon e 1·304·b75-b999

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,

MEIGS COUNTY , OH IO
CHAPMAN ,

·V S ·

MRS . RUSSELL MORFEY ,

et a 1. ,

lmmed •ole openl/lg for 3 to 11
sh1fl
for LPN w 1th Phor,
rn ocolo gy Con!oct Non cy Von
Meter RN
Pmecr est Care
Center 446·711 2.
·

De f endants .

NOTICE FO'R SERVICE

w..

·e~~n~~~sea~~ac~a~~gres! ~ ~~~
reasonable •dil i gen Ce be
as certa i ned ;
T o r S~ra L o u .Me r r i t t ,
whose l ast known address is
G iraid Rd ,. Columb.us, Oltll o,
and whose exact address is
unk nown and cannot wi th
reason~b l e
d i ligen c e b e
ascerta ined ;
To : Helen Ashworth Hyne ,
whose last known address is
La nc as t er , Oh io , and whose
ex act--address is unknown ana
c an ri ot
with
reasonabl e
Cl iligence be ascerta ined ;
To : The unknown hei rs and
de vi sees of Donald Jeffers ,
de ceased ;
To : The unknown heirs and
de v i sees of
Pa u l Carl.
de ce ased ;
To : The unknown hei rs and
d ev i sees of Clyde Carl ,
dec eased ;
To : Th e unknown heirs and
d evis ees of J esse Carl,
dec eased ; ·
Yo u are hereby not ified
1t1at you have been named
de f en dants in a legal action
enti t led Helen Carl Chapman ,
Plain ti ff , vs . Mrs . Russell
N orf ey, et a l. , Defendants .
This acti on ha s been ass igned
C a ~e No . 16 , 296 , i n the
Commo n Pleas court of
Me !Q!. Co u nty , Pomeroy ,
Oh iO, 45769.
The Ob i ec t ·of the co mpla int
is to part 1ti on t he fo l low ing
reel est ate si tuated in Sc ip io
Town sh i p, Mei gs county ,
Oh io :
The fo llo ·,•l l n 9 described·
prem i ses Si1u ated in the
Townsh ip of Sc 1p lo . county of
Meigs , and State of Ohio, and
in the sou the ast q uarter of
section No . 2, To wn No , 7,
Range No . 14 of t he Ohio
compen y's
P IJ rc hese ,
bounded and desc ri bed as
fo l lows , to .w it : B egi nning at
the southeast co rn er of
Sect ion No . 2; the !"'ce north
along said sect ion lr ne to the
center of the sou theast corner
of Section ·No . 2; t hence w est
49 rods ; thence south 7 r ods ;
thence west 17 r od s , then ce
north 7 rods ; the nce west 16
rods , 15 links ; t he nce sou th
along Mary A . D a v is' east
llne ; thence a lo ng sai d
section line to the place of
beg i nn i ng, co:onta ining 40
acres. more or less .
You are required t o an&lt;; wer
the complelnt within 28 da y s
after the last publicat ion ot
this notice, which Will be
pub.liSheCf Onc"iebch wee k t or
six consecutive we.eks. Th e
last publication will be mad e
on January 11, 1978, and th e
28 days for answer will start
or1 that date .
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as rt&gt;Quired bv the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure , j udgmen t
by default will be rendered

WILL DO typ111g , Monu scnph
stot,s !icol res umes etc . Call
992-3827 ev en ings ah er 6 ond

TRU CK CAP S S199 up. Tru ck
camperS?
Don I ll1 1S S ou~
we e ke n d ~
spec t.o ls 1 See them today at
Codner s Cam pers on Ra inbow MOBil E HOME repa irs . 992-5658 .
Rtdge Oil Rt 7 toke Me 1gs 28
10 32 to Bas ho n ond l ol low
s1gns. Owner Rober t Cod11~r :
l on g Bott om Ohio.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992 706p .
CASH pa id for ell mak es an d
models ol mobde homes. .
Phone oreo code 61 4·423 -9531
TIMBER
Pomeroy Fores1 Pro ·
duels . f op price lor standin g
sawtimber Coli 992 ·59b5 or
Kent Honby 1·446-8570
COINS CU RRENC Y tokens old
pocket watch es ond chai ns,
sil ver ond go ld We need 1964
and ol der sil . ,. er co ins . Buy sell .
Or !rode Call Roger Wa msle y.
742·2331
OLD FU R.:.
N-:cii::U:;R:;E~.-" 7e:;b-o-,.-,- ,:;b-co-,
beds 1fon bed s. etc . co mplete
hou seholds Wri te M D. M iller ,
Rt . 4. Pomeroy . Ohio or coli
992 ·77 60.

-----------NO ITEM TOO l ar ge or too sm all .

Will buy I piece or complete
hoiJSehof d . New used or anti ·
qu Eis .. Mor t ins Furn itur e, 20 N .
2nd Sr. Middl eport . Phone

Phone 992 -2181

PIANO TUNING
l one Don1cl s
New phon e num ber 997·2581
If no ar1 swer coll 992 ·2082

21 FOOT TERRY 1976 Equ1pped

No , 16,29 6

BY P(/, BLICATION
To : Oor• s Car l Heal es .
w hose last kno w n add r ~ s s is
Bo"x 742, W illcox , Ar izona ,
and w hose ex a c t addr ess is
unknown and canno t w it h
re as onab l e d il igen ce
be
as ce rra ined ;
To : R ich ard Car l , wh ose
add r ess i s u nknown a nd
c ann ot
w i th
reasonab l e
d i l igen c e be ascerta ined ;
T o : M artha J ea n Ca r l
Burton , w hos e address is
u nknown and c ann ot w i th
r e asona bl e d i l 1gence
be
asc erta ined :
To ~ Dona ld Car l , whose 1as t
kn own addr es s is 4150
B r oad St reel. Colum b us ,
Oh io , and Wh os e ex act ad
d ress is unkno.wn and cann ot
w i th r easonable d i l igence be
asce rta ined :
To : Vi l'gene M el r agon .
who se l ast knOwn addr ess is
Fa i rfa)( Dr i ve , Co l u m b us ,
Oh io , a{'l d whO ~ e exact ad
dress is unknown and canno t
w i·th reas on ab le d i l igence be
as c er I a ined ;
To : G old i e Ar cher , who se
address i s Unknown and
c an n ot
w it h
reasona b le
d il igenc e be as certa ined :
To :
Myrt l e As hw ort h,
w hose last kn ow n ad dress is
Curren Dr iv e, A th ens , Ohi o ,
and whose ex ac t address is
unknown and cannot w i th
r e asona b le d i l i gen c e be
asc e.rta ir'led :
To : W i l m er Carl , Jr .,
whose last known add re ss is
1800 Br in·wood C t. , Columbus ,
Ohi o, a nd whose ex act ad dress is unknown and ca nnot
w ith reasonab le d i l igen ce pe
asce r t ained ;
To : W illard Carl , whose
last known addr ess is 6220
Br o oklyn
Rd .,
J a c:~s on ,
M ich igan , a nd whose exa c t
a d dress i s unknown a nd
cannot
w it h
rea sonabl e
d ili gence be asc er1a ined ;
To : J ames Sowards , w hose
last kn own address is 14
Lo is iana , DefrQ i t , M ich i gan .

'fl. ~Jack W, Carsey , Mgr .
~

We

-- =
3 AND 4 RM . turn1shed and un·
furmsh~d op ts. Phone 9925434

have enlarged our
service departmen1 ind
will service Hotpoint and
other brands. ·

~

FO UR ROOMS and both . Adults
only . No pe~..:. ~· 5908
COU NTRY MOBIL E Horne Pork .
Route 33 north of Pomer oy.
Lorge lots Call 992 ·74 79.
HOUSE FO R lease on L1ncoln Hill
in Po meroy. 5 bedroofnS .
Deposi t required
99 2·3489 ,
ofr~ r 5 p.m .
Tro ile1 space tor rent . Counlry 4
miles fr om town . RL 7 N. Phone
61 4 · 2 4 7· 29 22 ~

CO Al

limestone ond cal c1um
c h l ot~ d e and calcium brine lor
dust con trol ond spe cie I m1xm g
sol! for fo rmers , Exce lsior Soh
Work s. . Ma in Stree t, Pomeroy .
O hio or ph one 992· 3891 ..

992-6370.

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _Jack W . Carsey, Mgr.
:Ail. Phone 992 -2181

_

- --·
_, __
~~.,_ ~

-

=-

IF YOU hove a s.ervice 19 otte r .
won t to buy or sell something .
ae look ing for work
or
w ho t e... er . . you 'll ge t result s
fo ste r w1 th a Sen tine l Wan! Ad .
Call 992·2156.

softener, Model UC-SVI.
Now Only •279,95
Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992 -2181
AUCTION SALE , ever y Tues. and
Fri . ol 7 pm . New and used
merchandi se at Ohio Ri"er AIJC tion , Me ig s Plaza , M iddlepor t,
Ohio . Home Pho ne (304)

773·5471.

APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchards.
Sto le Rout e 689
Ph o ne
Wilkes... ille. 669 -3785.
RUG S, WAll
Hangings end
algon s. Nice far Chris tmas.
Reason able . Call992 ·22 14.

aga ins!
y ou
for
re l ie f
demanded in the comp la int .
Larry E . Spen cer ,
Clerk ot Cou rt
Common P leas Court
Meigs Cou nt y , Oh io
(1 2) 7. 14, 21. 28 ( 1) 4, 11 , 61 C

1976 FORO F·250 Cus tom . 17.50 ~
14.00 ti r es · w inch. Only 14.000
m i. Header s. CB. Tope deck .
O ve r S3 .000 in e xt ras. Serious
co ils , only after 12 noon:

696· 1072. $6.800.
8 &amp; S MqBILE HOMES, Pt. Pl ea ·
sent , W . Va . bes ide Heck 's.
1973 Broodmo re 14 x 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dorio n 14 • 60 2 bedroom
1972 Vi ctor ian 14 )( 67 3 bedro om ,
2 both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 State smen 12 x 60 2
bedroom .
CUSTOM FRAME hi tch for late
model Chevrol et or G .M .C.
truck . 992 ·7066.

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
INSURANCE

COMPLIANCE

T h e
IJ n·d e r s i g n e d ,
SUPERINTENDENT
OF
IN S URANCE
OF
THE
ST A T E O F OHIO . hereby
c ertifi es · that
GAMBLE
ALDEN LIFE INS CO of ST
LOUIS ' PAR K, Stale of
MINNESOTA has comp l ied
w ith the laws of this Stale
applicable to it lind is
au thoriz ed during the curren t
¥.ear to transa c t in this state
1IS appropriate busin.ess of
insura nc e .
T "HIS
CERTIF I CATE
MUST BE PUBLISHED IN A

NEWSPAPER

GENERAL CIRCULATION
I N MEIG S COUNTY AND
FILED IN THE OFF I CE OF
THE RECORDER OF SAID

COUNTY .

Its Financial co ndit ion is
shown
by
Its
a n nua l
statement to have been as
fol lows on December 31. 1916 :
Admitted
$79,805 ,21!9.00
Liabil i ties
69,259 ,734 .00
Surplus
9,045 ,555.00
In come
42 ,939,144 .00
Expenditures
39,803,427 .00
Net Assets
10,545,555 .90
Cap i tal
1,500,000.00
IN W I TNESS WHEREOF ,
1 have hereunto subscr ibed
my name and caused my sea l
to be affixed at Columbus ,
Ohi o , this day and elate.
D EC 06, 1977
Harry V . Jump
Su per intendent ot
Insurance of Ohio
( 12 , 78, lie

m

ANTIQUE BATHROOM fi xtutes.
Coll 992 ·7123 .
Polled Ch orl ois 11 mas old 713
s toc k .
pu r ebred .
Phon e
9Q2·5358. Norman Gruese•
'I

Blood se'm intol bulL Su per~o r
an1m on , 6 14-84 3·2653 .·

12 11 · 1 m o .

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

RT. 7 HOME

-

New 3

bedroom s, 21 2 baths, 2
por ches . st orm door s and
win d o w s ,
e q u i pp e d
k itchen . co pper pl umb ing ,
2 car garag e and 1. 4 ac res .

Service~

1 '"""' the .. ,,.., Tr• oo- •utl4o•
1 h4 .. tot

S70,000 .

On Rt.
33. A spl it .l evel home of 3
bedroom s, bath, fu rn ished
k it che n , Lee a x w at e r .
garage, and J .a a cr e f or
on ly S2 1,500.

GeorgeS . Hobstener Jr. ,
Broker
107% Sycamore St. ·
Pomeroy , Ohio

PHONE 992-6333
OHice Hours: 9 A.M. 1o ·•

P.M.
Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon .

an(

New 4 bedroom , 2500 sq . ft
living space , 2112 baths, 1:
room ranch bri ck . Locat~
3 miles f r om Rt . 7, up Wes·
Shade River , Ca I I for a1
appo intment .
We have need of listings,
all 1ypes, homes, land,
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate

Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associa1e

Home Phone 949-2589

IN

YOUR HAIR,

G~S

-

n&lt;e AIJDIENCE' SA5iPS It; STIJIJNEP
DIS&amp;Iii.IEF A!J THE ONCOMING PLAIJE
&amp;RAKES TO A SPLIHIECOIJD HAL.T
It-S MID·AIR ...

•

on one fl oor , J bedroo m s, 6
cl'ose t s, 2 b a th s, large
li Vi ng , equ ip ped k it chen ,
inter ·co m to all room s,
natural gas furna ce , and
fen ced ba c k yard . A real
nic e fu r nished hon-.e for

11 10 1 mo .

Home Service

•
'

"'

SHOP
CLOSED FOR WINTER·
SpKial Orders or Showino

Only .

Elec . ,
plumbing, ,,
carpenter
wor k , ,
painting,
paneling, ·~
any job that needs to ~ !
be done around your '
home .

PHONE
992-5705

Phone 949-2814
Dave Parsons,
Owner

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

12-7· 1 m o .

llltiiNl ID'il

BORN LOSER

WH'i CMT

l(XJ

U:U. !(X)

~HI{

HAve:·AIWS€~ l'li..
'iJU OOT HA'I!:'
I&lt;AI&lt;?e, ..

''The OritinJtors
Not Tilt lmfbiDB

Box 34

FREE ESTIMATES

GET
READY
FOR
SPRING , LIST YOUR
HOUSE NOW. CAL~ •92 ·
3325.

,

lj)-30 -c

I~Lition

Finncilr A•1illble
~Hies.

B.,w11 Into Wills '

Helen L. Teaford
C. Bruce Teaford
Rea It or ,Assoc iafes

s,rkuse, Ohkl

Ph. !92·399.3

,•

A t-ID 11 VE sn LL GOT
MAX HER( ... NOT MI SSIN '
A THING ... I 'M TRAPPfD,

••

~0

12 · 1~- 1

S:t"'ART - the New Year
right in th is wonderful 3
Bdrm . home! I t features a
charming w .b . fireplace,
modern kitchen , and many
other features . 5 years old ,

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

ranch . $31 ,500.00.
1978 CAN - be your best

lltJ

ALLEYOOP
"!Ht:lll PEOPlE HAVE
CROS6&amp;P OUR
FIIONTIER, AND
EllEN N()W PRESS
INWAR:P AGAINS"T'

Jl'O

year · yet , living on this 20
ac res in the country. 5 y r .
old , 3 Bdrm . ranch type
home, Celli today , this one
wo n' t last long . ONLY

We're in Carpenter just off

Rl. 143. Phone 698-7191.
12· 1-1 mo.

$20,500 .00 .
RESOLVE - to see thi s
well kept older heme . 3
Bdrms ., formal d i ning .
garage with storage space ,
almost an acr e with p lenty
of e.lbow room . ONLY

SWAIN
Automatic
Transmission Service

S19,500.00.
WELCOME IN - the New

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Year . in this c ozy little
place. Only 5 rooms to keep
up. Ideal for single person
or co uple . 11h stories, level

lot . $11.000 .00.
NEW YEARS SPECIAL -

HAVE A HAPPY NEW
A N D
REMEMBER - WE'RE
HERE TO SERVE YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
ASSOCIATES
992-2259, 992-2568, 992-6191

Har1ford

I

Henderson

882-2175
67S-1582
UNION OPERATED
12-2· 1 mo .

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELtNGS
GUTTERS&amp;DOWN
SPOUT
Eosy
step
by
step

Why worry about the high cost of

.t1eating your home, outside lights, heating your water ,
drying your clothes , etc . We'll sel l you your own gas ..
well . Not on l y that we' ll throw in a good 1112 !tory house
and 3 bedrooms and bath, nice dining room and full
basement , also over 50 acres of land with a large
beautiful pond stocked with fish . Call for appointment.
Pr iced for quick sale at $37,500.00.

Price 115,900 .
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
bath. Two more small bedrooms could be finished
upstair S. Also garage, storage bu flding, strawberry
.patch and garden spa ce . Driveway is electrl,c heated .
Ni ce Ohio River view. Furniture can be bought extra .
Price for
sa le. House and fot , $12,600 .

M AT 949.2388

l

1 Curse
5 Hammell

Pomeroy , Ohio
Pomeroy 991-6282

13 Locale
14 Fly
15 Japanese
statesman
I&amp; As written:
mus.
t7 Conunon
article

or 992-6263
8 A.M. to 4:30P.M.

'

GASOIJNE ALLEY

SALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9-ttc

do I tell
which is which?

..ACE HAAIMARE
ME.IGS PWA
Middleport, Ohio
11-9-Hc

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweeper s. rooster s. irons . all
small appliances. lawn mower ,
nex t to Stole H1ghway Ga rage
on Reule ·7. Phone (614 ) 985 ·

3825 .
REM00ELING, Plumbing, healing
and oi l types ol general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience . Phone 992 ·2409 .
SEWING MACHINE Repoir s, s.e r·
vic e. a ll make$, 91)2·2284 The
Fab r i c Sh op , Po meroy .
Author ired Singer Sole s ond
Service . We sharpen Scissor s.
EXCAVATING . dorer , !coder ond
backhoe work : dump tr ucks
and lo -boys for hire; wilj haul
till d irt , to soil , lime stone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fer s. doy phone 992 ·7089. night
phone 992-3525 or 992 - 5232 .
- - -·

742-2348 .
HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex cove ti ng , septi c systems ,
darer , backhoe . dump truck .
limestone , gravel , bla cktop
paving , Rt. 143. Phone 1 {614 )

698·7331.
BATHROOMS AND Kit chens
remodel ed , ceramic tile . plum bing , carpentr y. and general
maintenance . 13 yea r s ex per ience . 992·3685.
PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Complete
Ser vice . P ~,b ne 992·2478.

•••••
••

U Enclosure

SALON

r:--r::--r.-'"T."'-

23 Accumulate
25 Reque~
reciplent

1;;;-+-t--t-

::.!lflt,;

OPEN

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum
Siding

....-;:---------------------------..,33

Storm Windows
Ca IJ Professiona I
Builders

..•

I.R.S.-- AUDIT DIV.

Z fi~D IT J.IA~D

IJ"o S!L.Itvt THAT

•'

Bissell Siding Co. .
General Contractors

"

0\/ERES,.IM~,.ING

THE'
NUMSill ol PE:oPLf:
IN YOul2 . FAMILY IS
lfN HONf:ST MI~AI'f.

'

Phone 949-2801
or 949-:ttl40

FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please
11 ·21 -1 mo.

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

:
e

TIL 8 PM

:

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742·2211

ARNOLD GRATE"

RUTLAND

••
••
•:•
e

... AND HE WAS VEQY
ClOSE ID HE/2... 50

I APPQECJATE

t ••• ~••J••••J•••·········~·
I

West

Pass
Pass

\
D

0

FEATHERl./ ...
GENTLE ...

0

0

a

DON'T FORGET
'' SNEAK'fi'

0

0

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

0

0

0

0
0

Rutlond

0
0

0

0

0{!

SOUTH

North East South
1 NT
3NT Pass 6 NT
Pass Pass

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

QFSRK

WMFDXG

JHZFCH

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

DKNBX

ZBZNE,

NMR!C-

MRUH

NMBCNE,

NHG

Cl 19'77 Kinl Pt&lt;atures SJ"ndlc•te, lac.

0

+

Vulnerable: Both, Dealer:
South, Opening lead : Jack of
spades.

TRWM
Ji:&gt;CIH

Yesterday'• Crypioqaole: MONEY ISN'T EVERYTHING
BUT IT HELPS STEADY mE NERVES. -JOE E. LEWIS

a SOFT ... WHiTE ...
FLUFFlf.. .

"" 10 7

' A92
+A 8
... KQ6

35 Isolate
37 Bovine
beasts
38 ChaUqed
39 Consonant
tO Singer

RZNHC

0

... J 9 8 3

+ AQ654

JHRDNE

HOW WOULD l./OV
SNOW?

' 10 7 4 3
+
K 10

Wooden
core

R

30 rolls ol carpel In stock.
Good seleclion all on sole.
Installed with padding, no
eKira to pay.
Call742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARP~&lt;T CONSULTANT

0
0

sure tricks - four ,spades,
three . hearts, one diamond

.K82
' J 65
J 76 42

.Jl09

spade suit because

~E

HONOR!

'

Q8

and three clubs. The 12th
would come if clubs broke 3·
3 or if a squeeze could
develop.
This time the squee~e
worked. Not that it was a .
difficult one.
South cashed three hearts
and the ace of diamonds .
Then he played his last two
spades. The . last spade
squeezed poor West . He had
to chuck a club in order to
hang on to the king of dia·
monds. The queen of dia·
mends was thrown from
dummy and the clubs were
all good.
South admitted he was
lucky, but also pointed out
that if North played notrump
a diamond lead would beat
him.

South got away ,with the
One leiter simply stands for another. In this umple A Ia · year's greatest example of
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le lettera, egomania with today's hand.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the worda are all He elected to bid one nohints. Each day the code letters are dlllerent.
trump with his 1!1-point hand
that included a five-card
CRYPTOQUOTES

OOT IT WA&amp; HIS MOTI&lt;EIZ'$

SAVE ON
CARPETlNG

73

• Q9 53
... A 54 2
EAST

WEST

Helen

WINNIE

742-2211

'K
•

Ia

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I'LL .TOTE '10RE BOOKS
TO SCHOOL FER l.fE,
SAMANTHV-··

1:()()-

suit so he led back a low
spaae at trick two. West won
and had nothing better to do
than to lead a third spade.
Now South could count to 11

NORTH

I

UOnthe

••

"The

Some egomania never hurts

leaf

name

DAILY

Movie

Oswald and Jim Jacoby~--­

Parseghlan

Reg. S6.9S-not installed

•

27 Cure
Z9 Compelled
to

capital
31lmogene's
partner
37 Palm

34 Coach

1oRFtvr · sll~. luT

33;

31 Crete's

28 Swiss
river
29 Apostate
32 Man's nick·

'4.88 SQ. YD.

f:VERY NIGHT

as a play

27 Peel

''

News

Wed nesday, Dec. 28

26 Faithful

T MR CS

•

weed

ABC

0

Yesterday'• A111wer
2Z Osawn
30 Aclreu
Z3 Put on,
Papu
24 Handler
Z5 Dreadful

1% Touchdown
16 Withered
19 Biblical

exchange
ZO Newman

12 and 15 ft . width Carpet .
rubber back .

Je

•••
••
•

~onnally

· film

Candy Stripe
Rubber Back
Regutar$6.95
Save$4.88 Sq, Yd.

••
•

11

Z2 Dastardly

Til 18th, 1978

Will do roofing , construction .
plumbing and heating . No job
too large or too smalL Phone

7 Friend: Fr.
8 The unavoid~
abies": 3 wds.
9 Rave about,

IBPo~

Closed Jan . 10

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
ond dilcher . Chorle$ R. Hal·
field . Bock Hoe Service .
Rutla nd , Ohio . Phone 742·2006 .

to lake

place
6 Old court dance

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
Pomeroy. Ohio
Change of
IP11(1flle Number
Phone
992-7608

Located In

ouffix

5 Due

8;

Defector" 10; 12 :oo-Janakl 33.
· 12:4D-Fonda: An American Legacy . 6,13;
Tomorrow 3,4; 2: 1D-News 13.
Mavle Ctu~nnel 4 s &amp; 7 P.M.- Buffalo Bill &amp; the lndl.a ns (.PG)
9 &amp; 11 P.M.- Stay Hungry (R)
C..ble Channel S 7:00P.M. -Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30 P.M. - Coach's Corner
10:00- 700 Club.

3 NCISiree! :
4 wds.
4 Chemical

sleuth

"

"Notorious"

I Fwldamental
2 Giri''o name

10 PresenUy
11 Jeremiad

•

EASTERN DISTRICT - 1'11 acres of level land, nice
12x64 311 carpeted mobile hOme with 2 BRs, living
room , kitchen and bath , 2 rooms built on, nice family
room w ith fireplace, plenty of garden space, some fruit ·
tree s. Large workshop and block cellar. City water and
septic tank . Nice country seH ing on County Rd . 78.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

"Tl-IE EMPlR:E!

Corner Union Ave .
and St. Rt . 7

Y E A R !

Five

~tHMCDtd"'

CAP"TURE CONSTANTINOPLE ITSELF!

NOTICE

instructions.

Ph. l7!Ai250
5-27-TFC

111? story frame , 3 Bdrms .,
good
location
in
Middleport . $7 ,000 .00.

.. . ~EY ~VE :3WO'tN 10 CONTINUE:
Wl'll&lt; "Tl-116 MADNESS UNTIL "Tl-&lt;EY

300 Main 51.

WETHERALL CONCRETE

Jumbi;:..BisoN GRIEF AMULET· EXHALE
AnSWM: Out In ·- 1-·exrr·

The 11t~t JUMBLES 111 hefe In JUMBLE BOOK 110
J~M,~E
BOOK 111. A~lllable for St35 EACH 1 poetl)ald trom Jum e, o .. ~
newt.p.lper, P.O. 8oJ13(, ·NCNWood, N...r. 07648. Make Chlekl ~

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

"Get A Load Of This"

(An....,.lomouow)

.I

Yesterday •

CARTER

Appalachian
Stove Company

Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33 .
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Gong Show 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 1S; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
7 :»-HollywOOd Squares 3,4; $100,000 Name That
Tune 6; $25,000 Pyram ld 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33; That's HollywOOd 10; Nashville on the Road
13; Marty Robbins' Spolllght 15.
8:ro--chlps 3,4,15; Welcome Back, KoHer 6,13;
'.'{allons 8, 10; Once Upon a Classic 20,33 .
8:3D-What's Happening!! 6,13.
9:DO-James at 15 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii
F lve-0 8, 10; Right Out of the Blue 20; A Good
Dissonance Like a Man 33; 9 : 3~arter Country
6,13; Wodehouse Playhouse 20.
10:ro--class of .'65 3,4,15; Redd Foxx 6,13 ; Barnaby
Jones 8,10; I, Claudius 33; News 20.
10:3D-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; 11 :DO-News
3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick CaveH 20; Over Easy 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13; Movie

Now_.riiOOI&lt;I,

PHONE
742-2570

11 -25 · 1 mo.

6 : 00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 33;,20.
6:JO.....NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC .News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

Answer:'tixxx u-rn" rn AWAY

0' PAPER ...

.

E.

O.

A S EVfR " '

eooze.

Now arrange the bircted letters 10
form the surprise answer, as suggesled by the above cartoon.

HARK ··· A STRANGER
TAL KIN' TO MAX ·-- HE'S
HANDIN ' MAX. A PIECE

GAS-OIL- COAL

Dave Parsons
Owner

GHOeff DID WrrH

IHE

~

GUTTERs.IIININGS

WHAI ii&lt;E THIR5"TY

1

ORPHAN ANNIE--PEEP SHOW

Boilers, Furnaces, Heat
Pumps &amp; Aufo. Controls.

Racine, Ohio

LARRY LAVENDER

IJ'ITI .E ORPHAN ANNIE

.

Third Str"t

SIOING-SOffiTT

.

0

CONTINUOUS
GUmR SERVICE

STORM
IIINOOIIS I DOORS
mlAClMENT
IIINOOIIS
ALUMINUM

I SEEBIDb
tx_

OHIO
:
HEATING
SERVICE I ~
.
REPAIR &amp;SERVICE r~

Sfl)p

SetYices

ITTYEb
I K:
•

RACINE CARPET

Blown

'C ••n.,.,..o....•- ....___

on huting cost
E•perience and
fully insured
Free Est.
Call : 667·6.479 or 991-UU
11 · 15· 1 mo.

Chester, Ohio

2 ~31 me

I

NOPER

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pet. to SO pel.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

992·2206 or 992-1630

old 3 bedroom home wi th
ba t h , F . A . heat , T . P .
w ater , carp ort. fam i l y
room and 2 lots . S.:t5,000 .

HERE -

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

Blown l11,q11ation
JIM KEESEE

Phone 985-3806

7:DO-TOday 3,4, 15; GOOd Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7:»-Schoolles 10.
8:ro--capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:()()-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13; 15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affai r 8; Match
Game 10; Once Upon a Classic 33.
9:JO.....Edge ot Nlghl6; Andy Grlftlth 8; Family Affa1r
10.
10 :()()-Sanford &amp; Son 3;4,1S; Big Valley 6; Tattle tales
8; .Joker' s Wild 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :3o-Hollyw00d Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10;
National Geographic 33.
11 :DO-Wneel of Fortune 3,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4.
11 :3D-Knockout 3, 15; Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
8,10; Sesame St . 20; Arvilla 33.
11 :5s--cBs News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:DO-Newocenter 3; News 4,6,10; To Say The Least
1S; Divorce Court 8; Midday 13; James Michener's
World 33.
.
12 :JO.....Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4·; Gong Show 15;
Sea.r ch for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 :DO-For Richer; For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 i
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Merry Widow 33.
1: JO.....Days ol Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:D0-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:JO.....Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:DO-Another World 3,4, 15; Antiques 20; In Per.
formance at Wolf Trap 33.
3: 1.5-General Hospital 6,13; 3:3D-AII In The Family
8,10; Lllls Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals-Our Gang 4;
For Richer, For Poorer 15; Merv Grllfln 6;
Gilligan's Is 8; Sesame S. 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; D1nah 13.
4:30-My Three SQns 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch .8,10; LIHie Rascals 15.
5:DO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers 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.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~.!~c.!h
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

J&amp;L

Residential
and
commerciaL
Call for
estimate, 24 hour se-rvice.
Anyday , anytime.

Phone Mike Young
At

$38,500.
'
NEAR RACINE - 6 yea rs

LOOK

'IOU Wl.IATI C! THE OFFICIAL "'EW$
W~AT'f' THe
~ELIOA5iE 5iAYS VOLJ'R&amp;
MEOA&gt;JIN5 OF HEllE TO CHECI&lt; OLJT THE
T~ISl
WORW'STOP I

N' hw Outlet on Ma i n St.,

of Carpets by Appointn1tnt

Young's
Carpeting
... " 3 p.,...,,0.
Carpet &amp;Upholstery

MIDDLEPORT - 7 roo ms

MAIN
POMEROY,

...THE.N DE7CENOS Gfo'loJTL.Y
IN FRONT OF THE AIR:· SHOW
V1eWINI3 STAND!

Rac i ne , 0 .

RACINE CARPET

Superior
Steam Extraction

$36 ,000 .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
KIDS

C:AP'l'ATN F.ASV

"5

ac res of it . Old 7 r oom
. house , 4 be droom s. large
b a r n a nd f r uit tr ees .

6

TRIM SHOP IN RACINE .:

11 ·25· 1 mo.

seclud·
ed woo ds. wa ter and good OC ·
cess 1n Monroe County . W. Vc .
$1.000 down , call .{ 304) 772·
3102 Of {304 ) 772·'E27.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

....,_,

An~

See us a1 1100 East Main
StrHt, Pomeroy , Ohio or
Phone 992· 70J4 . 10·29-l mo.

"992·2174

-----COUNTRY l ormlond w ith

Commerc,o l proper t.y appr o" I 7
acres . level land. located ot
Tuppers Plo ins on O hio , ROute
7. Ph one (614 ) 667·6304.

1

7:DO-Truth or Cons . 3; Cross-Wits 4; Llors Club 6;
News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gllllgon 's Is. 1S;
Dan iel Foster. M.D. 20; Big Green Mogaz lne 33.
7:JO.....Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
Fam ily Feud 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33; TheJudge 10; In Search ol13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8:oo-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; E@.t Is Enough 6.13;
Good Times 8; Sugar Bowl Preview 10; Nova
20; ,33.
8:3D-Szyszynk 8; 9:DO-Biack Sheep Squadron 3.4,15;
Charlie' s Angels 6. 13; Movie " Tarantulas: The
Deadly Cargo" 8. 10; Cinderella 20; Dance In
America 33.
10:()()-Pollce Woman 3.4.15; News 20; Snow White 33.
10 :30- Wodehouse Playhouse 20; 11 :00- News
3,4,6,8. 10.13. 1S; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias. Yoga &amp; You
33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie "Dr.
Goldloot and the Bikini Machine" 10.
12:DO-Janakl 33; 12:4D-Mystery of the Week 6.13;
Kojak 8; 1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 2:1D-News 13.
Mavle Ct..nnel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M. -Whiffs (PG)
9 &amp; 11 P .M. - Alex and the Gvpsy (R )

pen ng "

Be th e open lnu of the Indoor suson for you witt!
your old furniture n ·
upholstered In beautiful
w~rm
colors &amp; p1tterns
from Bob '... _i f you are
look i ng for sa vi ng s it w i ll
ply you to pay us • v i sit.
Louted In back of tht Stw

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1977
5:&lt;15-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; S:SS.....
Sunrise Semester 10; 6:DO-PTL Club 15.
6 :2S.....New World 10; 6:»-Doctors on Ca114; News 6;
Sunrise Semester 8; 6:&lt;15-Mornlng Report 3;
6 : ~Mornlng, West Vlrglnla13) 6 :55--Chuck
Whit• """"rts 10; News 13.

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER28, 1f77

BOB'S uNtlSLSTERING

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEAR SHADE -

NEED ACREAGE ? -

to 1M

c..•.

"-

FREE

BURRO UGHS SENSI·MATIC oc ·
cou nt ing machi ne . Has been
under service co ntract and in
good cond itio n. Con be seen ot
Th e Doily Sen tinel , I l l Court
St .. Pomeroy . O.~H:c·_ _

" SINCE 1947

P.hone •92-3325

BUDGET . 3 Bedroom, lbvety carpeted living room ,
with sliding glass doors. family room with fireplace,
nice din ing room , kitchen with lots of cabinets . All
remodeled Inside &amp; out. Corner lot . Close to schools &amp;
shopping area. A " steal" a.t $21 ,500. Shown by
appointment only .

· 25 " co lor TV , floor model , True·
Tone, 3 mo . o ld , $275. Com ·
pound bow , regu la r $59 .95. Still
in bo w. $30. Con be !&gt;een ot 149
~2.''2._A ve .,_M i~~ l!port . ____

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

216 E . Secontl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

MIDDLEPORT - SPACIOUS HOME TO FIT YOUR,

OF

INSULATION
SERVICE

TEAFORD L.J:::!

bedrooms, nice Jl/2 story house, large living room w i th
shin ing oak flooring , large kitchen with d i ning area . 2
full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs. Completely
insulated with F .A. nat . gaS furnace . Large porches &amp;
garage . Lac . in Chester . Price $19,800.

CERTIFICATE OF

RACIN E, 0 .

LetT e

Kingsbury
Home Sales

RACINE
PLANING MILl

NEW 3 bedroom hous'e 2 baths
g il e le~ . 1 acre Midd leport
close Ia Ru tlan d Pho11e 9Q2
7481

SMALL farm tor sale . 10 °'~ down
owner fi nanced. M onroe Coun·
ty . W. v.O. Ph one (304 ) 71 2·
3102 or ( 30&lt;~ ) 772 ·3227 .

CHIP
WOO"D . Poles
max
d1ome ter 10" on lar ge st end, $6
per ton . Bundled s.lob $6 per
ton De livered !a Ohio Polle t
VA·FHA , 30 yr. linoncin g . Ireland
CAMPE R
SbOO . Also _ horse
Co , Rt . 2. Pom eroy 992·2689 .
Mortgage 77 E. Stat e . Ath ens.
traile r $450 . Phone [614 ) 6~8 ·
phone (614 ) 592·305 1,
CA SH FOR Junk Cors Frye s Trud o;
3290:~·~~-----~
end A u to Wrec ke r Service
1.3 ACRES ON l eading Creek
Phon e 74 2·2D81 or Penn zoi l ECO NOMY TRACTOR w ith all a! ·
Rood . 9q2.7066.
rachmen
ts
.
like
new
ask
ing
.
Ru t lend 74:.t ·9575
$2250 . Phone (614) 698-3290.
SIX ROOM house , oil elec!ric .
AUT O BODIES and scrap metal .
t orpeted , cor por i . 526 ,000. Ar ·
Rider 's Sal \l age . 992 ·5468 .
row camp er . $600 . 99 2· 7885. 10
om to 6 pm . No Sunday coi ls .
G OOD
USED tr ac t or
wilh
h-; dr aiJ iic . 3 p1 . hitch . 74 2·307 4.
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co-op wa1er

Mle

HOMES11ES tor sole I ocre and
up M1ddlepor1 near Ru tland
Coll992 7481

-

.-~-

•

VIRGIL B. TEAFOIID. SR,.
REALTOR

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

ST ARCRAFT FAl l Sale M mr .
,,,.,tors 10 on d 1'1
TraVe l
Tr aders 18 5 S3 79't 25 7
Bunk house SJ 875 Fol d·dow n
Sl 700 up We sel l ~er"''e an d
qiJc li! y Op en Sunday s Camp
Conl ey Sto rcroft Soles Rt b2
N . ol Pt. Pl easant.

•

At lOR

RJEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

9 rno old Doberman
Lo ngs..,. I li e · Dexter oreo Block
of'ld Ton Re wo rd 742·3054

Noon Qll Saturday

H e ai i&lt;A;ta tr {or

Senice Offered
Wil l ( AR E lor the elderl y In our -

•'

BRADfORD Au('honrer Corn
plt•lu St:&gt;• •.-.ce PhonP '1 49 1481
01 Q49 1000 Ronne Oh10 (11 t
8rodlotd

1'~72

L O ~T

MonWoy

~

1q7 .1 FORD PI NTO Wogan In good
condil1on CN'} bl34

G1ve away to good home mu(ed
b11Jed pups Phone 965·424 4

NOTICE

HELEN CARL
Pia intifL

Auto~""

C..bto Ct..•nol s 7:00 P.M. - Paul Gaudino ·Fam il y F itness
7:30 - Marshall Basketball
10 :00 - 700 Club.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

'•

rem (o r Sal&lt;!

MCIG) COU NI V Hvmont&gt; Solti't~
Car('lln e- and adopli Otl SCt\&lt;Ke
Q~/7b80 H13167 'N7 :;J27

11-The 11AIIv Sentine), Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wt&gt;dnesday, Dec. 28, 1977

wants to, know if Mrs. Ely
Culbertson was a better
player than Mrs. Hal Sims.
Mrs. Sims was a good
player, but Mrs. Culbertson
was one of the. two bes!
women players of the early
days of contract.

he

wanted to play the hand if
his side ended up notrump.
Then.- when h1s partner
raised tp game he shot ·o n to
a slam based on his extra
point and extra confidence
in his own dummy play.
West opened the jack of
spades. East played low and
South took his queen. He
needed to set up ·the spade

!NEWSP,.\PER ENTERPRISE ASSN. !

(For a copy or JACOBY MODERN, send St to : "'Win at
Brld(Je," care of this newspapar, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station. New York , N. Y. 10019)

·-IF l.fOU'LL TOTE MV

REPORT CARD HOME

,,

�12 - The Daily Sentmel, ~liddlt•ptJrt-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesda y. IX'&lt; · :!8. 1977

_________ - - - - - ________ - - - - - I

·!

---------------------------,
Letters ol oplnloo are welcomed. They should
1 · Notice~,
he

lest !han 300 word.o long (or be subject l&lt;l reduction by
the editor ) and must be signed wilh lhe signee's address. Names may be withheld UP&lt;&gt;D pubU(adon.
Ho~rever, oo request, names will be discl08ed. Leners
should he In good taste, addr&lt;oslng lssuea, oot per·
sonalltles.

I
I

I
:

I

local briefs Ml;sEC~~~t::Bog;h~n~6J. a M~~;\T/t.~~~r:t:l~~·:.
S¥ RACUSE

-

Syracuse

1 Church of the Nazarene and
1
the M•ddleport Church ot the
I Nazarene will hold com b ined

speci al watch n1ght serv ices
a t the Syracuse Church
Sa tu rday from 9 p m unt il
m 1dnight Feah.,1 red w ill be
the Gospel Tones of Chester
The publi c is mvited

A wafch ntght serv 1ce will
be held at t he Pomeroy

Dear S1r
a song called , " Yes, We Have No Bananas" ?
I don't recall where tt ranked among Ute song htts of tis
dar. but one Uting sure it could ne,er qualify for today 's hil
parade and stay within the bounds of propriety.
Why ' Because tt's becoming mcreasingly evident the
whole cockeyed world is bananas!
Just when our sense of values swapped ends, I'm not sure,
oot seemmgly ever)1hing is traveling tn re,·erse.
Nowadays, personal charm is measured by the amount of
Remember

times one passes up the barber or hatrdresser Old blue jeans
wt1}1 patches located at strategic spots arr among the most
fashionable ttems m town I'm no good at hleroglyph!Cs, but
tt's obvious the patch arrangements are mtended to transmit

Wesleyan Hol1ness Church
Saturday begmnmg at 7. 30
p m There w1l l be different
speakers and s1ngers dunng
the eventnQ The pa~tor
Dewey King el&lt;tends an 1h.
v1 tat ton to the publtc
M 1ss An, a Frank , daughter
of Mr and Mrs Howard
Frank , Racine , IS f1ome on a
Chnstmas break from the
Hocktng Technical Scf1ool 1n
Nelsonville Miss Frank was
named to the dean' s llst of the
school w1th a grade average
of 3 5
Chester
wrll meet
7 30 p m
care of
bus mess .

some lype of message. Guess 1'm too old to break the code.
On televisJOn the policeman. more often than not, is
deptcted as a bigger dtrty ral than the rat he's. pursmng ,
prostllution as litde less than an honorable prolesston and
coun terparts of Arllta Bryant as moralisttc odd-balls.
Recently, a Chtcago judge sentenced a man to 1,000 to 3,000
years in prison. C&lt;&gt;nvtcted of a double murder, the man
doubtlessly needed the book lhrown at him But. why the whole

Township Trustees
at the town hall at
Thursday to take
the end of year

There will be a watch
meet1ng at the M iddleport
Free Wi ll Bapttst Church .
Ash Street , Saturday at 7 30
p m The public 1s '""'ted .

library ?

There wil l be a watch night
serv1ce at 7· 30 p m at the
Middleport
Independent
Holmess Church at 4th and
Lincoln Sts , Middleport
Guest speakers will be Rev
Oav1d L1ght and Rev Gene
Nott s. Everyone is wel come
O'Dell Manley is the pastor

Anybody knows !hat unless the fellow's a throwback to
Methuselah or comes up with some miracle cure for old age, a
much lesser sentence would have been suffictent. Bul, the
sentencmg JUdge satd he wanted to tmpress any parole board
Utat mtght exerose the oplion of setting him free, thus, the
lengthy sentence
Now [or the bananas Accordtng to nimms Jaw, the man
"ill he eligtble for parole tn ftve years Stnce he has already
served four years awalling trial , 1t's conceiva ble he could be
back on the streets, rounding up other \OCttms wtt.hm months
If the board turns " thumbs down" , tt's a good bel he will be
made quite comfortable he hind the walls. lrunates tn our penal
mstutions are now orgarJzmg and demandmg everything from
sex to sauna baths. Officials, under the ready guns of pressw-e
groups, are hard put to meet aU the demands, but they're
havmg a go at tl.
Some of our elected officials wonder why people lose failh
m our government al!d its leaders. It's really no mystery .
Lincoln's words should be changed to " . Government of the
people for Ute people, by the butducrats " ·
A prime example is forced busing. If one can believe the
polls, the vast maj ority, black and white, oppose it. U one can
belteve Ute polttlClans, a majority of Congress oppose 1tt. At
least two Presidents have been opposed to it. Yet, lhe practt ce
continues to gain momentwn, propelled by a few who proclaim
to know best .
Of course, contradiction, mdecision and out-right
skullduggery m government has become a large part of our
daily fare. While the yellow gas-guzzlers log m!lhons of extra
miles, the cittzenry Is ever reminded that repnsais may be tn
lhe offing for he who strays from strict energy conservatiOn.
While Ute mass of the people continue to call for capttal
punishment, court and Congress fiddle over the cruel and
unusual purushment issue and as to whom, if any, the death
penalty should apply
. For years, we'vbe been schooled m the phtlosophy !hat
hwnan nghts supercede all others. Yet, we 've been recenUy
informed that a bomb IS under development that will have a
potential of wiping out humaruty while preserving property.
As to property, it seems the best excuse advocates of the
CJnal Zone giveaway can muster ts that, if we don't present it
to Senor Torrujos, he may become very angry and thiS ought
necessitate the deployment of a certam number of troops to
protect it against sabotage. When did protecting your own
property go out of style ? Are we now obligated to protect only
the property of others, i.e., Germany, Korea, Israel?
It's hard to visualize anyone wanting to deprive our lovely
womenfolk of their just and equal rights. And if the ERA is
necessary to guarantee those rights, I say, go, gals, go!
· However, 1t does sound rather ludicrous to hear some of our
female gender calling for the privilege of marching into battle,
paymg alimony ·and standing in the cross-town bus.
As to total equality, such can never be. There's no way to
equate the sexes. If woman ts man's equal, why can't she
change a flat tire 7 If she can change ~ t . but has persuaded man
lhroughout lhe years to do It for her, this proves she's more
intelligent than man . Thus, the two are again, unequal
Some of the "old salts" have cried foul at blending boy and
girl sailors aboard naval vessels, contending that such close
quarters foster, what they tenn, "hanky panky." "Not so,"
respoods a panel of noted psychologists, "Such close
confinemenl creates buddtes, not lovers."
Bananas, anyone? - David H. Ctunings.

! Lottery bosses charged as

Area Deaths

RUTLAND - Wa tchn1g ht
serv1ces will be he ld a t the
Rutland Community Church
beginn1ng at 8 Saturday
ntgh t Speakers will be Da niel
Roush , Rutland. and F red
Shapley, Crown C1ty Mus1c
wt II be by t he Gospel
Messengers
Quartet
of
Manon Communion will be
held at m1dntght The public
is welcome

CHESH IR E -

The Ga ll1a-

Me1gs Commun i ty Act 1on
Agency wi ll hold 1ts free
cJo th 1ng day Fnday from 9
a , to 2 p m for area low
income persons The agen .
cy's clothing bank IS located
in t he old high school build 1ng
at Cheshire

ASK TO WED
Marriage li ce nses have
been issued to James Allerd
Patterson, 2.5 , Rt. I , Middleport, 'and Jacqueline Lee
Smtih, 2l, Galltpohs ; Wtlham
R. Thoma, 54, Rt. 2, Racme,
and Dorothy V. Stafford, 61,
Rt. I, Middleport.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admttled - Della Stahl,
Pomeroyi James Meadows,
Long Bottom; Lmda Lam·
bert , Pomeroy ; General G

McCune, Mtddleport; Ava
Gllkey ,

Harns o nvtlle ;

Darlene Barrett, Rutland;
Linda Watson, Ractne.
Discharged
Susan
Glasgow, Clara McMaster,
Julia Laudermilt.
Holzer Medical Center
&lt;Discharges, Dec. 27)
Mrs. !Wbert Chevalter and
daughter, Lenna Johnson ,
Michael Mtller, Mabel
Shirley.
•
(Births, Dec. 27)
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Austin, a son, pt. Pleasant.
Mr . and Mrs Erskme
Blandon ,
a
daughter)
Thurman. Mr . and Mrs.

Danny
Dobbms,
two
daughters, BtdwelL Mr. and
Mrs Gary Mitch, two sons,
Mtddleport.

rn•ss•onary for more than 30
years in At n ca, was k• l led
Satu~day 1n an auto acc•dent
1n N1amey, French Afr ic a.
Formerly a res•dent of 841
fv\anon Pik.e. Coal Grove,
Miss Dil lon was a m•ss•onary
under the sponsorsh•p of the
Zoar Bapt ist Church of Coal
Grove She was buried 1n
N1amey , where she started
and operated an orphanage
A memonal ser'llice In her
honor wil l be conducted
Thursday at 1 p m at Zoar
Baptist . Church, 1009 fv\a non
Pike, accordmg to Pastor
Rev . Jenn1ngs Deeds
Rev
Deeds !&gt;aid the
d1rector of the Evangelic
Baptist Missions board , Rev .
David MarshalL will speak at
the serv1ce
Mrss Dil lon worked bnefly
m a shoe factory In Coal
Grove before jo 1nl ng the
m•ssion force '" 1946. The
orphanage wh1ch bears her
name was opened In 1960, and
cared for about 11 chil dren ,
Rev Deeds sa 1d
He said
M1ss
Oilton
returned to the United States
only every three years. She
went back to Africa las t
September follow 1ng a one.
year sabbatica l.
Area surv•vors Include
three brothers, William , John
and Rev Fred Dillon , all of
Coal Grove , and two s1sters,
Mrs Clara Sites of Coal
Grove and Mrs Jack sm 1th of
·
Cottageville, w va
Contribut ions in lieu of
f lowers should be sent to the
Evangelic Bapt 1st M 1ss 1ons
for the Dil lon Home, P 0
Box 2225. Kokomo, Ind. 46901.

MRS . IVA

FIND~ING

COOLVILLE - Mrs. Iva
M Findling , 93, of Ro1-1te 2,
Coolville, died Tuesday af .
ternoon at P ine Crest Care
Center In Ga l l ipol is followmg
an extended illness
She
was
born
at
Burl1ngham 1n Meigs County ,
the daugh ter of t he late John
0 . and Mary Swartz Hawk
Her husband, Herman, d1ed
1n 1929
She was also
preceded in death by two
brothers and one sister
She was a member of th e
Orange Ct)ristian Church.
Surv1v1ng are three sons ,
Carl Ma r qu1 s, of Reed sville ,
Shir.ley Russell , Route' 2,
Coolville. and Har ry , Carrol l ,
two daughter s, Mrs Bell e
ReeVes, Route 2. Coolville,
and
Helen
Ftn d lin g ,
Columbus , a brother , Arthur,
Phoen•x. Artz .• one s1ster,
Mrs Murlle Russell. Cam
brtdge, and fou r g ran d
chtldren and fou r gre a t
grandchildren .
Funeral serv1ces wtll be
Fr ida y at 2 p .m . at t he
Orange Cf1ris tia n Church
with the Re v. George F.
Pickens off1c 1atmg. Bur1al
will be i n the church
cemetery
Fr iends may c&amp;fl at the
While Funeral Home 1n
Coolvil le after noon Thurs day. The body will lie In state
at the church one hour before
services

CHARLES A. HILTON
PORTLAND - Charles A.
H11ton, 69, of Portland. died
Tuesday
at
Veter ans
.Memoria l Hospi tal .
A veteran of WW II , when
he served 1n the Navy. Hi lton
IS survived by h1s wife, Cora
810$ser Hilton ; a brother,
Theo of Camden, N . J. , three
Sisters, Sylvia Story of
Lowell , Mary Jackson of
Mari etta , and Irene Hupp,
Letart Falls, 1 and several
nieces and nephews .
Preced tng h tm in death
were his parents, Steve and
Ina O' Nei l Hilton and rhree
sisters, Ruth Cozart , Golda
Johnson . Florence Hilton
Funeral services will be at
1 p m . Fnday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with t he Rev
Steve Wilson and the Rev
Freeland Norris offiCiating
Bunal will be In the Bard
Knob Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home at
any time after 7 th •$ evening

I
.0.

724 Mimosa Drive. S•keston.
N\o •• formerly of Pomeroy ,
d•ed Monday, Dec 19, at her
home .
She was born Aprtl 76, 19J7.
•n Pomeroy. a daughter of
Mrs
Bernadme Sauders
N\e•er and the late Ph1ll lp
t'-h1er On Jan 9, 1960 she
marned Robert H. Mather ,
who surv l\leS
Mrs Mather , employed as
a reg 1stered nurse at Dexter
t'Aemonal Hospital , formerly
was the school nurse for the
1un1or high school In Sikeston
She was a member of the
American Nurses Assn , and
St. Francis Xav 1er Catholic
Church . She was a graduate
of Pomeroy High School and
the St . Joseph School of
Registered Nurses. Parkers burg . W. Va . Prior to her
marnage she was employed
as an 1ndustr1al nurse at the
Kaiser Aluminum Plant at
Ravenswood .
Other surv1vors are two
sons , James and Stephen
Mather , at home ; four
daughters. Annette, Paulette,
Collette and Jeanette Mather ,
at home ; a brother , Phillip
(Bob) of Pomeroy , and thr ee
s•sters ,
Mrs
Patricia
Suchova , P1ttsburgh 1 Pa ;
Mrs Phyllis Knopp . Mason,
W. Va . and Mrs Carolyn
Podbesic. Cleveland
Funeral Mass was held at
11 am Wednesday, Dec 21.
tn St Francis Xavier Cathol•c
Church with the Rev . Amel
Sh1bley Offlctat•ng . Bunal
was 1n the Garden of
Memones Cemetery .

sloppy handlers of money ;
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Audilor Thomas E. Ferguson
today asked Gov . James A.
Rhodes to intereede with the
Ohio Louery Commission and

Joppa News
The Joppa U.M.W met
Monday evemng Dec. 19 at
the home of Mrs. Lavina
Brannon with ten members
and one visttor present .
Cards were signed for sirk
and shut-ms. Final plans
were made for fruit trays to
he sent to elderly and shut-ins
which w'ere delivered later in
the ~·eek by Janice Davis and
Glenda Benedum. Donations

were also made for groceries
and toys to be sent to needy
fanulies
Mr. and Mrs Harold
Brannon and Mr. and Mrs.
Jtm Brannon and family
spent Christmas weekend in
Mansfield,
Ohto
with
relatives.
Chrtstmas dinner guests at
lhe home of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry

Ha rns

and

family

were Mr. and Mrs. James

Scullin and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Casto and Chris of

require it to upgrade ils fiscal the problem "threatens the
accounting methods.
ability of the Auditor Of
Ferguson charged in a , State's office lo perfonn ita
letter to Rhodes that the statutory duties ."
commission lias nol main·
Ferguson further said that
tained current cash balances the lack of " fiscal responand has been " unwtlling or sibility" at the commission
unable to expend the required made It impossible to conduct
effort to post ledgers m order a quarterly audtt, as required
to reflect correct fmancial by state law.
statements, noc even exer·
" It has been the auditor's
c1se rudimentary accoWtting position thai criticlsm of the
control
measures
and lottery commission's ac~
procedures.''
counting system should be
If the governor didn't tempered with the knowledge
rectify
the
situation, that to criticize could
Ferguson threatened lo ''seek jeopardize the operation of
legal action to command such the gaming system," wrote
a change."
Ferguson
Ferguson said he had to
Ferguson said the ac·
countmg problems had date
refratned
froril
persisted since the com· crthctsm, but now the "utter
misston's mcept1on and that disregard" of the commission
toward proper accounting
procedures had foreed his
hand
with a publlc statement.
CLOTHING DAY SET
"Therefore,
I am now
CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
requestmg
that
you
exercise
Meigs Community Action
your
authortty
as
chief
Agency will hold its free
executive
officer
of
the
state
clothing day Friday from 9
...
to
intercede
to
the
end
that
a m to 2 p.m lor area low
commission's
operations
the
mcome persons. The agency's clothmg bank is located comply with state law and
accounting
m the old high school building proper
procedures,"
said Ferguson.
at Cheshire .

Parkersburg, W. Va.
WILLIAM WI LLIAMS
Wtlham R. { Bill ) Wi ll1ams ,
a nat1veot Gallipolis and a
res1 dent of 1655 Brown Rd .,
Colum bus, d1ed in Mt . Car mel Hosp1tal T uesd ay at
II 30 a m He was a retired
state employee .
He had been 1n fa lling
health for some time. Mr .
W illiams •s survtved by hts
wife, Sylv1 a , a nd four
children· Robert and Larry
Wi llia ms, Flonda ; Mrs . Allee
Wing and Mrs Ja net Bngner ,
Grove C1ty
One brother,
John Willia ms, Columbus,
and fwo sisters, Mrs Bla nche
Stevers, and Mrs
Brady
!Darlene} Sheets , Eureka
Star Route, also surv1ve
Funeral servi ces will be
held t 30 p.m . Friday al
Frank Rd. Church Fnends
may cal! at the SchoedingerNorr l s Funeral Home m
Grove C1ty on Wednesday
and Thursday afternoon and
even1ng

ro,

Weather
Snow flurrtes probable into
tonight. Lows tonight lo 15
above . Warming trend
Thursday , htghs to low 30s.
Ftfty pet. chance of snow
tonight and Thursday.

HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Tuesday to the Nattonal
Weather Servtce, excluding
Alaska and Hawati, was 78
degrees at Brownsville,
Texas. Today's low was 12
degrees below zero at
Bozeman, Mont.

Weekend guests of Mrs.
Opal Harris were Mr and
Mrs. Harlan Webb and Carrie
of Mansfteld, 0. Jouung them
for thetr traditional Christ·
mas dinner were Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny Hams, Mike,
Timmy and Cmdy, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Grossmckle,
Patty and Mark. local, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Grossnickle. Also vtsiting
dunng the day were Teresa
Browning and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Harris, Larry, Jr. and
Keith.

Local
Bowling
-.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

News •• in BriP;fs
(Continued

In 1846, Iowa was admitted
to the Union as lhe 29th state,

CHICAGO - BUSBOY BRIAN CARlSON thought briefiy
about a new car and a winter trip to a warmer climate, and
!hen turned the $22,061 he had found while cleaning lables over
w state pohce . "An honest citizen" one police invesligator
described the 17-year-&lt;Jid high school semor.
Carlson, of Des Plames, found the money stashed in a
black shaVlng kit while cleamng up tables at the Howard
Johnson's restaurant at the Northwest Tollway's Des Plaines
oasis Monday. Joseph T. Faust, of Marathon, Fla., told state
police he forgot the money during a stop at the restaurant proceeds from a real estate deal he had wrapped up in
Wtsconsin. Police returned the money to htm TQesday, saying
he had proved himself its nghtful owner.

Dec. 21 , 1977

ELBERFELD$

StandinGS
T,am
Pfs.
Zide's Sport Shop
S2
Sm1 th Ne lson M otors
72
71
Tenth Framers
Eagles Club
68
Young 's Super Mkt
66
Nelson Drug Co
49
High indi'111dual game
men , Tom Sm1th 195, women,
Carolyn Bachner, 180 ; men ,
Larry Dugan 191, w omen ,
Bettv Smith. 1976; m en . A,. L
Phelps Jr 188, women, Pat
Carson 175.
H1gh Senes - men, John
Tyree 529 , women , Pa t
Carson 506 , men, A. L.
Phelps Jr . 524. women, Betty
Sm1 th 505 , men, Bill Porter
497. Carolyn Bachner 486.
Team h1gh game - Eagles
Club 652
Team h1gh serJes - Z•de's
Sporl Shop 1862

Good
News
Cable!

DOTTY MANN

Tri. County League
Dec . 20, 1977
Standtn~s

Beautifully
proportioned
cardigan has cable
destgn front and back !Such luxury()
· Of 100% Orion® Acrylic Wtntuk'
yarn . (It's washable!) Generous 27 -inch
length . Long sleeves with cuffs
White or Bone . Sizes 36-40

Team
Pfs
Eagle Club
87
Coi!Jmbta Nat. Life
76
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

Women's Ready- To-Wear 2nd Floor

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

January 14th Deadline Set
For Water User Agreements
An early deadline has been
set for signing Water Users
Agreements on Sand Hill
Roa,d, Rayburn Road, Route 2
and Greer Road.
A Mason County Public

.

(

Be the htt of the season in
your flowing new formal !
Find one or many to take you
a ll through the holidays.
We' ve all the glamoiu-ous
looks you'll want to enhance
a formal wardrobe!

GILilAN'S

••Q · uo • . • o
0

·~

': o •
0 .

• • ·0

.

0

•.

'·

FASHION CENTER · ,,.. """·....;..~
oW.
On the Tin Middlewrt
~· e.,tr · • oo .. o. a. f, re~ o . ,
0

,

c.

•

•• •

the Agreements Is required in
order to meet requirementa of
the West Virginia Public
Service C&lt;&gt;nunisslon.
Persons receiving Water
Users Agreements on Sand
Hill Road are Lloyd Mayes
and Robert Drain; on
Rayburn Road, VIrginia
rtaybunt ; on Greer Roail,
Mrs. Billy Casto and Marvin
R: Austin.
The Public Service District
office at 105 Main Street Is
open from 10:00 a.m. Wltll
noon dally for those unable to
contact Ute persons above.

*
·ill:

0 co •• • •

1•

•

Hallmark
Chrisbnas

Plates

Hallmark

Wrapping,

Seals

Napkins

Table Cloths
Hallmark

Christmas

Mason County Motor Co.
"The Guys Wnh The Buys"

·•. '
••

Service District represenlatlve has announced that
January 14, 1978 has been set
as Ute deadline lor receiving
completed Water Users
Agreements for service at a
connection charge of $75. The
connection charge of $75 may
he paid after the agreement Is
signed, but before constructlon Is completed past the
property of the potential
customer. For taps after
construction Is completed past
the potential customer's
property, Ute lee will he $150.
The earlier
for

CARDS

••, .
Sl

ALL OTHER
CHRISTMAS
ITEMS

'P-iis
c.~ ,
TRU~l

VOU CAN
Viand Street
o75-3375
Pt . Pleasant. W.Va.

. DUTTON DRUG CO.

122 N. SECOND AVE.

TEMPORARY CROSSING - MotorisL• travelmg on
U.S. 33 near Bw-lingham, about 10 miles north of

•

at y

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 29, 1977

MIDULEPORT, 0.

reconvenes next week.
But apparently the machinery to
solve the problem won't be set in
motion tmmediately. And a · final
solution seems remote while a
statewide campaign lS in progress.
" In 1978, we're going to study the
school fmance problem," said
Senate President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron. "But if you
think we're going to solve it, you're
wrong."

Pomeroy, soon wtll be usmg this temporary brtdge being
conslrucled by the Ohio Department of Highways, while
the concrete bridge (m the background) is being r~built .

Paying for schools
top 1978 problem
Ocasek S8ld he wants various
committees to work independently
because "the senators are going to
have to come up wilh a plan that is
satisfactory to them ."
Accordingly, Ocasek said the
House Education Committee should
have its own hearin~&gt;S and the Senate
Education Committee should do
likewise. He satd the Education

Ocasek candidly coneedes !hat the
politics of an election year will
foreclose a permanent solution to
the problem, which will reqmre an
alteration of the state's tax
structure.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr ., D-New Boston, srud he wtll be
ready the first or second week of
January to name a committee to
study the school rmance dilemma .
But even Riffe and Ocasek
disagree over how the Legislature
should deal wtt.h the problem.
Riffe sa1d he would prefer a
spectal joint House-senate committee because any legislation must
go through both chambers.

Review C!lmmittee, a special

committee set up by the Legislature,
should do its own work on lhe
project.
"I thmk tt's high time we took a
look at what is causing lhls," said
Riffe, referring to several dO'len
(ConUnued 011 p-.e 10)

en tine

Firteen Cems
Vol. 28, No. 180

Jordan, Egypt reject West Bank plan

11'0111 PIC• I)

Early Wednesday
M1xed league

Ct1ne 's Canst Co
S6
H &amp; R Firestone
52
Bill's Body Shop
51
Hiqh ~ndi'llidual aame - A
L Phelps Jr. 229 ; Ray Roach
215; Ed Voss and Jack
Peterson 204
High series - A. L. Phelps
Jr 581 ; Ed Voss 570; Ray
Roa ch 539
Team high game - Eagles
Club, Cline ' s Const and
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
86 1.
Team high series - Eagles
Club 2555

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (U PI ) - Ohio's
school financing dilemma will
occupy a top spot oo lhe 1978 agenda
as the General
Assembly

from freezing.

62

NOW YOU KNOW
Had the federal govern·
ment invested Social Security
taxes in the stock market m
the 1930s and 19Ws, It would
now own most major
businesses.

Solution not
close admits
Mr. Ocasek

•

Carter on goodwill mission
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGWN (UP! ) PreMdent Carter today promised to reaffirm the United
Stales' dedlcatton to peace as
be left on an 18,000-mile
goodwill trip to stx nallons.
"It is a rapidly cha nging
wocld, a world m which the
old tdeological labels have
less meanmg Ulan ever,"
Carter Sald in brief remarks
oo the Whtte House South
Lawn before leaving for
Andrews Air Force Base,
Md. , and his flight to Poland.
He sa1d the varymg
makeup of the nations oo hlS
schedule reflects the broad
interests of
his administration . During the next
nine days, Carter will vis1t
Poland, Iran, Indta, Saudi
Ara~ii!JXrance and Belgium.
Vice President Walter
Moodale and Secretary of
Slate Cyrus Vance stood
behind him as the prestdent
spoke.
"In aU these places, we will
be reaffirming OW' dedicatton
to peace and our support of
justice and of human nghts, •'
the president sa1d .
Air Force One, carrying

Carter, his wtfe, Rosalynn
and aides, departed from
Andrews at 7:58 p m . EST.
He will return to the Uniled
States Jan . 6.
'~We undertake Uus tnp to
exp ress our own views
clearly and proudly, but also
to learn and to understand the
opimons and the desu es of
others," he said at the Whtte
House.
•
Moodale srud he wtshed
Carter well as he "undertook
t.hts most important mission
oo behalf of our nation ."
On Wednesday , Carter
called energy the central
theme of his trip .
"There 1s no doubt that
wherever I go on this trip to
Eastern Europe, to Western
Europe to the Mide•ast, to
India, what ow- natton does
wilh energy will he a prime
questwn," Carter said in a
nationally televised mtervtew
with the major networks
Wednesday night .
"We are the leader of the
world," Carter sa1d. "We are
one of the major otl
produ cers. We are the
greateSt conswner, and unttl
C&lt;&gt;ngress does take action on
lhe energy proposal t.ha t I put

INe;~~
By United Press International
COLUMBUS - ONLY 1,072 OF AN ESTIMATED 43,000
victims of violent crimes m Ohio applied for financial aid
during the first year of the state's crime victim compensation
program, state Attorney General William Brown satd
Wednesday . Tbe program, funded by a $3 increase in cow-t
costs. for crimmal cases, provides monetary help for crime
victims or their families who suffer financial loss as a result of
personal injury or death.
" lt'sunfortunate !hat more people did not take advantage
. of !he program," said Brown. Of !hose who did apply and were
granted compensation under the program, Brown satd the
average award was about $3,400. Persons should apply for the
program through local clerks of courts or through the Ohio
Court of Claims in Columbus.
SEOUL, SOUTII KOREA - THE UNITED STATES and
Korea have reached a fmal agreement on the retw-n of alleged
influence peddler Ton~&gt;Sun Park wWashington to testify in the
''Koreagate" scandal, government sources sa1d today .
"A joint announcement on the case will definitely he made
tomorrow (Friday) in both Seoul and Washington, one Foreign
Ministry source said. In Washington, a Justice Department
spokesman said an agreement to end the diplomatic tug of war
that has strained U.S.-Korean relations for four months
"possibly could be nailed down by the end of the week."
Park, a former Washington-based rice buyer for Seoul
finns, has been indicted on multiple charges of paying bribes
and giving gifts to U.S. congressmen in a bid to influence their
votes OJt issues affecting Korea.
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - HELOISE BOWLES, whose
"Hints from Heloise" was one of the top three syndicated
colwnns in the country, died shortly before midnight
Wednesday at Baptist Memorial Hospital. She was 58.
Hospilal officials did not reveBilhe cause of death, but the
King Features Syndicate columnist had been undergoing
treatment foc a heart aliment for several days. Her column, a
compendium of household shortcuts, consumer tips and
shopping advice, appeared in nearly 600 newspapers . The
colwnn first appeared in 1959 in the Honolulu Advertiser.

COLUMBUS, GA. - MRS. GEORGE WOODRUFF, 7~
year-&lt;Jld widow of former University of Georgia football coach
George C. Woodruff, was found beaten and strangled in ber
borne Wednesday and aulhorities beheve she may be the fifth
victim of Ute "stocking strangler." Mrs. Woodruff's family is
well-known in Georgia and a son, George C. Woodruff Jr., is a
former head of the C&lt;&gt;lwnbus Chamber of C&lt;&gt;mmerce.
Like lhe oUter victims, Mrs. Woodruff lived alone. Her
home was within a mile and a half of the other tow- victims, all
wtdows who were residents ol a fashionable C&lt;&gt;lumbus
neighborhood . The tow- previous kilhngs took place within a
mile radius. But there was no evidence of a stocking, tbe
article which wa.&lt; reportedly used to strangle the other
·victims, officers said.
'
I

~

forth last April, and which the relaltvely wilhn g to give
thetr
religious
House of Representatives people
freedom
and
t.helf
mdivtdual
passed m August, that cloud
wtll
hang
ove r
the freedom "
- Jran ; "A ve;y close milidetermmation and leadership
tary ally of ow-s, a strong
qualities of ow- country."
"So I am disappointed trade partner with wbom we
s hare politt ca l
about that," he added.
Administration officials de- respon s1bihties. ''
- India: "T he biggest
scnbe
the
trip,
the
in the world , one
democracy
president 's most ambitious
that
in
recent
years has
journey,
as
overseas
turned,
perhaps
excessively,
recognition thai lhe world
toward the Sovtet Uruon , bul
now consists of many
mdependent nations a nd under its new leaderstup has
JX&gt;Wer centers and IS no turned back wward us and
longer dominated by the has assumed a role of
Uruled States and the Soviet neutral1ty.' '
-Sa udi Arabia . "O ur
Uruon
Each natwn Carter vtsits 1s maJor supplier of imported
not only important to the oil, a nation which works
region, officials said, but also closely with us in many parts
of the world ." ·
m the world forum.
-France: "A histone ally,
Carter discussed the counkeystone
of Europe."
tries he will vistt and
-Belg~um:
"We 'll discuss
explained the reasons for his
our relationship with the
stop in each:
- Poland : "A \!OUil\ry wtt.h European communities and
close ties to the Soviet Umon, NATO."
( ConUnued on pace 10)
but also close lleS W US .. .

Sheriff's log
Sheriff James i Proffitt 's
Dept. IS tnvestigating lhe
theft of plywood and nails
from the construction site of
the new Shenang Springs
Night Club on SR 7 northeast
of Pomeroy.
Thursday morning deputtes
were Informed by Leroy
Fryar, Callaway Rtdge, that
sometime during the night
the door glass on his auto was
shattered. It appeared to
have been shot out by a pellel
gun.
Wednesday Freda Middles·
wart Proffttt was returned by
Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty Deputies to the
Marysville Retonnatory for
Women to continue her
sentence for the murder of
her husband, WUiiam Mid·
dleswart. She returned to
Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty to testify at the
John Fleming trial last week
in Meigs County C&lt;&gt;mmon
Pleas Court.

Driver cited
after mishap

Sheriff Proffitt offers this
operation crime alert tip :
"The best lock in"the world
isn't worth a nickle if tt isn't
locked. Even if you're only
going out for a few mmutes,
close and lock all doors,
windows and garage doors.
Protect your home and
property by makmg it too
tough for the burglar."
Deputies investtgated a
minor accident at Antiquity
early today . About 1:30 a.m.,
Virginia Sayre, Rt. 2, Racine,
trying to lum her vehicle
around at the driveway to the
Antiquity Church, failed to
make the driveway and ran
her car into a dttch, blocking
part of the northbound lane of
SR 338. Charged and jailed
for driving whtle under the
influence, she wtll have a
hearing in county court
Frtday morning.

Bonus deadline
is SaturdJJy
19, to Ohio veterans

James B. Rile,
Cheshire, was cited to
Gallipuhs Municipal Court
for failure to stop within the
assured clear dtstance
Wednesday following a
traffic accident at 12:18 p. m.
on SR 7 at Little Kyger Rd.
According to the Gallia·
Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Rife's car slid into the
rear of an auto operated by
Jennie G. White, 30, Cheshire.
There was moderate damage
to the White car and severe
damage to the Rife car .
No one was cited m a two
ca r colhsston at 10:50 p.m. on
Deer Creek Rd. off SR 32.5.
The patrol said_ an auto
operated by Kathy Bias, 22,
Ewington, struck an east·
bound vehicle operated by
Ricky L. Harris , 21,
Springfield . Harris com·
p\ained of minor mjurtes but
was not treated.

Eligibility rules to receive
the Ohio veterans bonus were
explained 1 again today by
Wallace Amberger, Meigs
County Vete•ans Service
Officer. The deadline lor
filing is Dec. 31.
.
Amberger smd any veteran
in Vietnam or Thatland from
1961• until Aug . 5, 1964 Is
eligible for the bonus. Ariy
veteran ts ehgible for a bonus
also who served from Aug. 5,
1964 unit! July, 1973, the
differ,ence being that those
who served in the states will
receive $10 a month and those
out of the country $15 a
month Those who served in
Vietnam during the period of
Aug. 5, 1964 to July, 1973 will
receive $20 a month.
Any
person
having
questions should call the
Veterans Service Officer.

Russians enter stage
to accuse Sadat of
sharpening tensions
United Press lnternatlooal
Jordan joined Egypt today
in
rejectmg
Israel 's
proposals for the occupied
West Bank of lhe Jordan
nvtr. The Soviet Union
denounced the IsraeliEgyptian peace negotiattons
as heightening tension in the
Middle East.
The Jordanian rejection
was announced as Sadat said
Egypt definitely cannot
accept Israel's insisfence on
keepmg troops in the
oc cupied
West
Bank .
President Carter in a
television 1n~ rview
Wednesday mght sided wiUt
IsraeL He said he opposes
creahon of a " radtcaP '
Palestinian nation in the
heart of the Mtddle East.
In Israel, a powerful bomb
apparently set by Palestinian
guerrillas exploded near an
open-atr market in the
Mediterranean coastal town
of Netanya, killing two
peroons and wounding five
others, one ol them critically.
It was the fiflh such blast in
Israel since
Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat made
his historic visit to Israel last
month.
Jordan's cabinet met for
late
several
hours
Wednesday to review the
proposals announced
Wednesday in the Israeli
Prime
parliament by
Mmister Menahem Begin.
The Begm plan offers
autonomy to the West Bank
and the Gaza strip, but
stresses that "public order
will he the responsibility of
the Israeli authorities.' '
Begin said an Israeli
military presence on the West
Bank and the Gaza strip were
"an unnegottable part of
Israel's peace plan."
The Jordanian cabinet,
sununing up its deliberations,
announced today, "There is
nothing in the plan which
differs from the Israeli
posttion of the last 10 years.
"Jordan rejects, and will
not cooperate with Israel in
any peace offer under which
we are called upon to hand
over Arab land to them," a
cabinet statement said.
In Moscow the Soviet Union

said the Egyptian-Israeli
negotiations were dividing
the Arab world and were
tightening the knot of Middle
east tension. Two official
&amp;lVlet newspapers, Pravda
and Izvestia, said the IsraeliEgyptian negotiations served
only to give Israel an upper
hand and delay a settlement.
"Cairo hoped much for
Israeli concessions which
would show that direct
separate talks of Israel with
each of Ute countries it had
attacked could lead to
positive results," Pravda
said in an editorial.
"The results proved to be
negative," Pravda said.
"Opening talks with Israel
without consultations with
the allies, without support of
the Arab countries, Egypt
had weakened tts position at
the talks ... "
Begin met today with representatives of Jewish
settlements on the Gull of
(Continued on page 10)

Fleming
•
gomg
to prison
John Wayne Fleming, 45,
Rt. I, Long Bottom, was
sentenced this morning to 15
years to life in a state penal
institution by Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty
C&lt;&gt;mmon Pleas Judge John C.

Bacon.
On Dec. 22, a jury of four
men and eight women found
Flemmg gullty of murder in
the deaUt of William C.
Mtddleswart who died in
Veterans Hospital at Cin·
cinnati on July 4.
Fleming and Mrs. Freda
Middleswart, Stiversville,
had been charged with
aggravated murder in August
after Mr. Middleswart died.
On Oct. 25 Mrs. Middleswart
(now Mrs Proff!tt) was
sentenced to 15 years to life
when she was pennitted to
enter a gullty plea to a charge
less than aggravated murder.

Baby Derby time again
More than 30 big bend merchants will purtJclpute In
the 1918 Daily Seutlnel Bab~ Oerby.
Parents of Meigs CoiD!Iy's fil"lll baby of the new year
will receive a number ol gilts preoented by the
partlclpotlog business eslabUshments.
According to rules of the contest, parenta of the first
baby of 1978 must he legal residents of Meigs County
although the falher may be In the armed forces aod tbe
family stationed a! a distaol point.
The exact time aod date of birth must he specified Ina
written siatemeot from the attending physician. The
statement of birth must be received at the Dally Seolloel
Office, lil Court St., Pomeroy, no later than midnight on
Jan. 10.

Full probe of
finance.s-2sked
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State Econonuc Development
Director James Duerk . said Wednesday the Ohio Highway
Patrol should launch a full investigation of the activities of the
independent Ohio Development Financmg Conunlssion whose
chairman Is Theodore Reed, Pomeroy banker.
Crown Hill Industries of Urbana, which had borrowed $1.7
million from Ute conunission, recently filed bankruptcy and
this action apparently triggered Duerk's call for an
investigation.
The state &lt;:OntrOiling begin a direct-loan program
Board,
dominated
by m cooperation wilh banks and
&lt;Uemocratic legislators, has local
community
the llnal say on releasing development corporations.
special mvestigation funds The Legislature this year
for the Highway Patrol. The voted $5 million for starters
board is not scheduled to to give Ohio the jump on
meet until Jan. 9.
competing Industrial stales .
Duerk Wednesday released
State Auditor Thomas Fercopies of a letter to Gov. guson, whose examiner ,
James A. Rhodes, saying the Stanley Baber, recently
Highway Patrol could help completed a report oo the
determine whether there has ODFC, called Duerk's
been any ' 'wrong doing" in proposal "redundant as wen
connection with ODFC- as somewhat specious."
guaranteed bank loans to
ODFC,
chaired
by
industry.
Theodore Reed, a Pomeroy
Several weeks ago ODFC, banker, voted three weeks
of which Duerk is a non- ugo to hire Baber away fromvoting member, hired an the auditor and give him a
outside lawyer, Charles $2,600 raise . Ferguson
on
Duerk's initfally approved the
ShankHn,
recommendation, to protect transfer, but later said no.
the state's interests in the
On Dec. 16 Ferguson critiCrown Hill matter.
cized Duerk lor trying to
Ten days ago Duerk called promote an Investigation,
oo the ODFC to freeze all loan contending that as an exactivities, investigate itself officto member of ODFC
and submit to a complete Duerk was supposed to know
review by Shanklin.
what was going on.
ODFC in March hopes to
"It also seems odd !hat
both the news articles
regarding questionable
commission actions
BOARD TO MEET
The Meigs County Board of regarding guaranteed loans
Education
will
meet and your puj)llc comments
Tuesday, January3, at 7130 p. followed so soon after our
m . to organize for 1978. 'A examiner held a 'post-audit'
regular session will follow.
(Continued on Jill• 10)

Negotiators keep mouths shut
By ELMER W. LAMMI
WASHINGWN (UP! )

Ji;XTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through
Monday, a chance of rain
or soow Saturday and a
chance of rain New Year's
Day aad Monday. Highs
will he Ia the mid 30s or the
low 40s Saturday and In the
40s by Monday. Lows will
be between 15 aad Z5
Saturday and In the 30s by
early Moa4ay.

With striking coal miners
becoming eligible for food
stamps
next
month ,
negotiators lor miners and
lhe soft coal industry are
tight-lipped about their talks.
Striking union members received their last paychecks
Dec. 23 and will become
eligible for food stamps Jan.
6.
Negotiators
for
the
industry and 130,000 striking
miners met again Wednesday
- with federal mediators
. apparently not taking purl and had little to say
afterward.
Represenlatives of both

subcommittee meetings to
discuss
issues
for
presentation later to all
negotlai&lt;Jrs.
When the subcommittee
meetings broke up, unioo
negotialm"s apparently met
separately,
raising
speculation Utey might he
considering a proP&lt;&gt;sal by, the
operators.
But !here was no cooflrmation by spokesmen for either
side that an offer had been
made.
Talking briefiy wtt.h repor·
ters, President Joseph
Brennan of Ute Bituminous
Coal Operators Associatioo

appeared optimistic. "We' re .
going to get a good cootract
!hat will take us into the next
century," he said.
A United Mine Workers
spokesman said UMW President Arnold Miller was "oo ·
the
scene"
bul
not
participating in the sessions
regularly .'
Health and safety, not
wages, are major issues In
the talks that resumed
Wednesday after a five-day
Christmas recess.
The walkout also has Idled
an&lt;~her 40,000 to 58,0110 unloo
members, including
coostructloo crews.

s1des mt:L in at least two
I

&gt;

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