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24- The SundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. I,197S

•

••

News highlights of the
past year in Gallia Co.
reviewed for readers of
The Sunday Times-sentinel

Nation's biggest liar
had quickie hamburgers
BURLINGTON,Wis. (UPl) ~ InOdon,lnd ., it got so
hot last sununer "you could take a fa&lt;ozen hamburger
patty out of the freezer, toss it into the air, and when it
came down you had one that was cooked well done." •
That was the barefaced lie that ,won Charles Porter
of Odon the ~tie of ''World Champion Uar for 1977"
from the B\ll'lington Uar's ClUb Friday night.
·
W. R. Ancler'son, of Chicago, won an h'onorable
mention in the annual event with a story about some
skyscraper elevators.
"The elevators are so fast ," he said, "that in going
up to the top floor, the watches of Jll!&amp;sengers lose !pur

.••

•
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+++

• 1
AS has be en our custom t he past!5 years, toda y s co umn
is devoted to outstanding news events which occurred in Gallia
'County during the past 52 weeks .

destroyed by fire .

Hotel • farm pond near Raclue ..

10- 0hlo

2.C- Water level reaches
criti cal po int second t ime In

Gov.

James

Rhodes discusses city , county
problems with local leaders.

Probe launched into

..

Youn.g father slain in Middleport

destruction 'of tugboat
ELEANOR. W.Va. (UP! )
- A U.S. Coast Guard
investigation has been
launched iQ an effort to learn
the cause of Friday's fire that
destroyed a tugboat as it
!"lshed six barges on the
Kanawha River.
·.
,..Flames enveloped " The

.

explosion in the fire, since the
barges were hauling salt
brine .
FireJllen
were
hindered by the lack of small
boats with which to keep ihe
burning tug stationary .
Firemen spent about 2~
hours battling the blaze
before bringing ·ll under

A

VOL XXVIII. NO. 182

By United Press lntemadonal
NEW YORK - PRICES OPENED THE NEW YEAR
mixed Tuesday in active trading of N"'l' York Stock Exchange
issues. The Dow Jones industrial average, which gained 0.78
point Friday, was off 0.87 point to 830.30 shortly after the
opening. The Dow, whlch gained 1.30 points overall last week,
feU 173.48 points last year .
Advances led declines, 182 to 166, among the 518 issues
crossing the tape In the early going. Turnover amounted to
about 910,000 shares. The market was closed Monday for the
New Year holiday.
Investors have shown little response to the government's
rep«! that its leading economic indicators fell 0.2 percent in
November, the first slide in five months. The news, taken with
tile recent decline in automobile sales, indicated the economic
oudook was uncertain·.
BISMARCK, N. D. - THE BUREAU OF INDIAN Affairs
has announced that .t he Devils Lake Sioux Indian Tri~e has
been paid $8.35 mllllon by the u&lt;s. government for land taken
from the Fort Totten lndl8n Reservation.
Earl Asher, Aberd!!OD, N.D., said nearly $6.69. million of
the setdement was paid to 2,673 enrolled members of the
lrlbe. Ee,.ch member got a payment of $2,500. A001rdlng to
Asher, the tribal council in~sted about $1.66 million in order to ·
finance future tribal p-ojects.
·
A ~wsult was IUed earlier on behalf of the SissetonWahpeton bands of Siou:i Indians for the taking of nearly
171,000 acres of reservation land between 1880 and 1890.
BOMBAY ,INDIA- THE INDIAN NAVY TODAY ordered

its oceanographlc survey ship into shallow, muddy waters off
Bombay tooaearch for the wreckage of an Air India jumbo jet
liner that crashed Sunday, killing all 213 people aboard,
including two Americans. Airline and rescue of(idals haye
given up hope that any of the 190 passengers and 23 crew
members 11board the plane slirvived the crash, the third worst
in aviation history.
Air Indian spokesman said 13 bodies had been recovered
by navy and pollee boats and helicopters: Anxious relatives
contln11ed a vigil at the Bombay morgue, where the bodies
were laken. All but 11 of those aboard tbe huge Boellng-747
were Indian. of the 11 fodeigners, spoke8men said, 9 were
citizens of Middle East nations and two were Saudi Arabianborn Americans living in Dharan.

PROSPERITY

OUR BEST TO EVERYONE.

1976 Grand Prix•••• ~.}4695

HAPPY NEW· YEAR FROM ALL THE

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
· OF ' GALLIPOLIS

'

John Halliday
Janice . Hanna
Judy Hartenbach
Janice Hively
~rlln Kerns
Ltwls Lutton
Mackenzie .

ao;

Pat McDaniel
Mary PUllins
Dana Rance
Debbie Rhodes
Sue Richards
Linda Roe
PaHy Skidmore

u

.1974 Scout 11 .•.•.•... ~. s2895
Travel top, 258 cU. ln. 6 cy l. engine, auto. trans ., like
11ew tires. radio, 2 wheel dfive.

.
Rosalie Bostic ~
Ruth Casto
Patty Clark
De Iores Coffee
Barbara CUrnutte
Tina. Day
Jerry Hack lor

102 inch clb to axle, extra good, 825x20 tires, 15,000 lb .,
· 2 speed, rear axle, 292 cu. In engin·e .

Roma Smith
Sharron Smith
Ruth Stanley
Evalene Thacker
Joan Thacker ·
Harold Thompson

1974 Chev. 8'•..•• ~ .• :.~ s3495
Fleetsi,de :::heyenne cab, , full chrOme trim , · step
bumper, 454 engine, automat ic power steering &amp;
brakes, rally wheels, air condition ing, color white, real
sharp.

I

'

Huny In For AGood Deal

3 LOCATIONS 10 SERVE YOU!

Special of the Week
Tuesday, Jan. 3 thru Saturday, Jan. 1

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS

...

CHEESE OOG
(Meat sauce an!l melted cheese)
Reg, 6oc
SPE.CIAL
PRICE

4Qe

Footleng Cheese OQg
Reg. 95c

I

·'

· SPECIAL
PRICE

I

60C

·This special is offered to acquaint rou with the
goodness of our Government Inspected wieners
and our homemade sauce.
'
No limit to quantity of purchaSe. Offer good for .
Drive-In or carry.Out Service Only.
·

MAIN BANK\ SECOND AVENUE
THIRD AVE. BRARCH - HURD AVENUE
VINTON BRANCH ·- VINTON •
"Your Full Service People To People Bank 1'

·POMEROY MOTOR· CO.
'92-2126

"Your Chevy

'

'

~aler."

_

Pomeroy

' Open E"venings Untit• P.M..

..·'..

~ .

t '

the AII.SV ~C Dream team
and was named · Kyger
Creek's Best Defensive

Lineman.
Funeral services wlll be
held at II am . Wednesday at
the Ra wllngs-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev . Olester
Lemley officiating . Burial
will be In the Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8 this
evening.

'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Investigated
three accidents over the. New
Year's weekend .iu whlch one
person was injw-ed and two
arrested.
.
The first accident occured
at 1:14 a.m. Sunday on Union
Ave. when 'Randy L. ·Ran. dolph, 18, Rt 2, Pomeroy,
traveling west went off the
road on the right side and·
overturned. • Randolph '·was
transported to Veterans
Memortal Hospital by private
auto.
•
The second accident occurred at approximately 4
a.m. but was not reported
untll 9 a.m. on Nease Hollow
Road In Sutton•' Township
approximately fo\11' tenths of
a mUe east of OR 28.
James Lee Allen, :16, Portland, traveling east on the
narrow townahlp t'oad got hili
'76 Olda In ao(t berm and the
vehicle went to the right,
overturned on Its top in a
creek that was 712 feet below
the level of the road.
The vehicle overturned on a
natural gas line and ruptured
a tine owned by Eugene
Ervin, Rt. 3, Racine. Allep
wu cited to M~gs County
Court for expired operator's
litense.
·
The third accident occurredSunday at'l:30 p.m. on
SR 7-1:14 at ths ·Union Ave.
Intersection. Shelby Dye,
MCArthllf,lraveling south on
SR 7-1:M, waa turning left onto
Union when Homer Lee
lf;vana, a, Ravenswood, ' w.
fa., atarted pasaing and

collided l!'ith the Dye vehicle. ·
· Deputy Dana Aldridge who
was on patrol came upon the
accident. He arrested Evans
for OWl and placed him in the
· cruiser. When the wrecker
arrived on the scene to
remove the vehicle, Deputy
Aldridge got out of the cruiser
to Ialli to the wrecker driver,
and Evans jiUDped out of the
cruiser, got In his pickup
truck and lied the scene.
Aldridge gave pursuit and
fiual!y stopped him near the
Texaco Station below HObson. ·
.
Evans has been charged
with reckless operation,
, eluding an officer, and
driving while under the inHuence. He posted bond and·
was released pending hearmg
in Meigs County Court later
this week.
Brooks Sayre, . Syracuse,
~nd · Burdell McKinney,
Middleport, reported that
sometime Saturday ni.ght or
early Sunday they had six
sets of harness and related
items stolen .from a horse
bam at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. The value was
set at between $1500 and
$2,000.

Weather
Fair tonlglit, lows in the
teens. Cloudy Wedlieaday,
highs in the upper 30s.
Probablllty of precipitation
30 pet. today, near zwo pet.
tonig .. t, 10 pel. Wedthday.

,,,, ~iii~~,i~';~;':~,~~;,:,:/· ·

~~l~~~d~f:a;;i:·:·~~~ .

rafu or suow Saturday .
Hlgho will be iu the 30s
Tburoday aud Friday and
1u the upper 30s or low 40s
Stha tu rd a,y. Lows will be iu
0 208

;:':':':':':':':·:·:':&lt;·:':·:':':':':':-:::::':':':':':':·:·:':':·,·:·:·:·:·:
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) President Anwar Sadat today
sald President Carter should
!"lt pressure on Israel to
make additional concessions
for Middle East peace,
especially on the deadlocked
Palestinian issue ; But IsraeU
'Prime Minister Menahem
Begin said such pressw-e
would be 11incmceivable."
Sadat said he would ask
Carter at their . meeting In
Aswan Wednesday to take a
more active ~ole in medl.!'ting..
the deadlock between Egypt
and
Israel
over
the
Palestinian iSsue.
Carter arrived today In
Saudi Arabia where much the
same poSition W"!! expected
to be expressed by Saudi
Arabian· leaders. The Saudis
have given Sadat's peace
efforts 111ly quiet support,
preferring to maintain · their
role as medlstor among the
_ various Arab factions.

"With friendship and
respect, I would like to say
that I never asked the United
States government to use
pressure on Egypt," the
Israeli prime minister said.
"Therefore, I may ask
President Sadat not to appeal
for American prOSllure on
Israel," Begin said in
Jerusalem.
"Pressw-e is inconceivable
to - turn
fairness
into
unfairness," he said.
Sadat, in sta~e~pents pub·
llshed by Cairo newspapers
today said, "Ainerica should
mo~t pressure. on Israel-,
par+Jcularly regarding the
Palestinian question, which is
,the core of the problem."
Sadat repeated Egypt's de. mands that israel withdraw
from all land it occupied
during the 1967 Middle East
war and the establislunent of
a Palestinian state. But
without going into detail,'·the

Horten Brown is dead
Dept., until his retirement in
1970.
. Survivi!lg are his wife,
Lera R.
Browni
two
daughter'!&gt;- Mrs. George
(June) F~y. Columbus, and
Mrs. Richard (Eleanor i
Quelette, Worthlngton;. four
granddaughters and four
great:grandsons .
· Mr. Brown was a membjlr
of the Linworth United
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be
held at 1:30 p.m. W~esday
at the Rutherford-Corbin
Fune.ral HQme, 515 I'Ugh St.,
Worthlngton. Burial will be in
Kingwood Memorial Park,
Worthington.

Three ·auto accidents reported

1977 Monte Carlo•••••• s6100

1975 Chev. 60 Series ••s4395

u rg'ed to
p re s sure .·I· sraeI

Horten Brown, 13, of Ill E.
Beechwold Blvd., Colilmbus,
a former Meigs County and
l,fiddleport Village official,
died Saturday at Riverside
Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Brown was former
HONG KONG -CAMBODIA SAID today there could be no
negotiations with Vietnam to end the border war between the deputy probate judge in
two countries until Vietnam with!lraws its troops . . The Meigs County and was a
govenunent-run Radio Phnom Penh was answering on appeal · former clerk of courts in the
by Vietnam Sunday - the day after Cambodia severed county. He was a former
· relations with ita Communist neighbor - to work out the mayor of Middiepprt and
border dispute "ill a brotherly spirit."
during hls residency here
"Democratic Cambodia ablolutely refuses such friendship also served on Middleport
and solidarity," the Phnllll Penh radio broadcast said. "Now Village Council.
again Vle.lnam has launched a large-scale offe1111ive on
He managed the Meigs
Democratic Camllodla and has pretended to ask Democratic Motor Co. in Middleport
. Cambodia to hold tall\s. "This is another' attempt to mislead before moving to Columbus
world Pllblic opinioil and also another attempt to deceive where he was associated with
Democrati~ Cambodia."
the State of Ohio, Use Tax

DURING THE COMING YEAR.

EMPLOYEES OF

TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1978

r ~ews. . • •~n Briefsl Cart~

WE HOPE THAT YOU WILL

'

A PROSPEROUS ONE.

and mother4n-law, Mr. and
Mrs .
Leslie
Hawley ,
Middleport, and several
aunt.!, uncles, nieces and
nephews.
.
Mr. RUe was employed at
Cromaloy Steel Co., Bucyrus.
Rife enrolled at Kyger
Creek High School In 1m
after hls family moved back
to Gallia County from
Columbus. He played football
for the SVAC champion
Bobcats.
In 1973, he was named to

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORl, OHIO

r;:;w.&lt;:·.¥1.~;;~~'&lt;,%%&lt;..%&lt;..~&amp;~'..%'lli'&gt;'&gt;'*'-'~'*--'~'%.~"-'$

Happy New Year!

WE HOPE, TOO. THAT WE MAY
PLAY A PART IN MAKING IT

Mr. RUe was 'born April 24,
195S at Gallipolis, a son of
Herb R. and Betty Sturge111
Rife of Hendel'!llll , W. Va .
&amp;lrviving bedies his parents
are his ..Ue, DeniSe Hawley
Rile; a daughter, Penni
Dawn, and a son, Chip Alan,
at horne; three brothers,
Michael Rife, Cheshire;
Ularles and Jeff, and a sister,
Terry, all of Henderson; his
grandparents, Mr . .and Mrs.
Raymond Rife, Rt . I,
Gallipolis; hls father-ln~aw

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

HAPPY NEW

1977 Chev. Impala ••••• s5495

Incident ,..,.e U . George
Mlller and Capt. Sid Utile of
the
Middleport
Pollee
Department and Deputies
Ron Hollon and Duane Wlll of
the sheriff's department.
HawleN was arrested
following the shooting and
was rele8oed shortly later
under• $50,000 bond. The
charge was s eported as
voluntary manslaughter.
Polipe Chlef J . J. Cremeans
said,
howe.vel",
the
investigation is Cllltinuing.

e

···~····················~·~

FIND PEACE ·

whlch was in a ditch in an
l!lley between Broadway and
High Sl,l.
Police said that Rife had
been~t with a .32 ea1lber
-plato! the back yard of the
Hawle residence. Hawley Is
a fa er4n~aw ol the Rife
who ·was taken to Velera1111
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad.
Officials were notHied that
Rife died at 11:44 a .m ;
. Assigned to investigate the

·-

k

.MAY YOUR DREAMS COME
TRUE AND 1978 BRING YOU.
.A .GENEROUS HELPING OF
GOOD HEALTH AND
HAPPINESS.

argument

Bucyrus, .ln Middleport Ill
N~ Year's Day.
_
At
4:20
a.m.,
the
Mlddl'eport
Police
Department answered a call
to the borne of Les Hawley,
459 Broadway, Ml.Weport,
where an argument was
rep&lt;rted undenlay. l?olice
said RUe, shot in the
stomach, apparently tried to
leave the "!C"Re In his car

····~r~
CE:stat&amp;.•

HAPPY NEW YEAR

family

resulted In the gunshot death
ol WWiam Alan Rife, 22,

+

Today ••
•••
A BEITER BUY
••

•

•

less than a month .
13- John and Rosebud
MARCH
Baker killed in auto mishap J effers on ," a Cincinnati ~ control.
3--City Water supplr, down near Wellsv ille, Ohio .
based craft, but no one was
However. Bill Reed, a
to 63 Inches In reservo r from
20- G r a c e
U n I I e d · injured.
m
ember of the Eleanor
++ normal capacity of 12'1a feet . Methodist C~vrch hit by
Volunteer
firemen
rowed
Volunteer
Fire Department, ·
FOR ·ita ·drama and news worthiness with a continuing Leaks continue . Three per- S780,000 fire .
sons , Phyllis Owens. two
26-WYPC .FM stereo goes the crew members of the said the fire appeared to have
effect on nearly every resident of the city and county, the children d ie In . Rt . 2, on air following dedication GNC Towing Co, to safety started · in the front, in the
" Winter of '77" Is our&gt; top choice,. From Jan. 6 through early Gallipoli s fire .
ceremonies at Buckeye Hill s after the fire ·broke out below engine room beneath the
March, city and county residents suffered through sub-uro
13- WJ E H Radio ah · Career Center .
seconds."
.
cabin .
weather, 26 lnches of snow, and an energy crisis due to the nounces 5150,000 expansion
27- Walt e r Rife , retired the Winfield Locks .
There was one dog story and one cat story among the
There was no danger of ·
project .
county educator, succumbs .
' honorable mention winners.
shortage of natural gas. Roads, streets and highway~ were all
!4- Leak In cltr water
JULY
"My hunting dog is so slow he was.-crushed to death
but destroyed by tne area's · worst winter in modern system found. bu traffic
2- Pam McMahon crowned
tirnes. Schoolsandbusinesses.wereforeedtodose,automobile mishap at Th ird and Pine 1977
Gal li polis
River
in a turtle stampede," said Mel Hart, Waynesburg, Pa .
THREE KILLED
· h
d h dr ds f
lin
d for ces city to continue
Recreation Festival Queen . Betz as 8,621 Gall ia ns go to
uff
ed
" A cat was playing with a ball of yarn and swallowed
:NEWARK, N. J, (UP!) owners s er rug tmares an un e o water es an
emergency use
.
4- Jaycees Independence poll s.
it," said Mildred Malmquist, of Burlington . ...The next
pipes were frozen . Numerous ruptures in the city's water lines
APRIL
Day
parade
attract s
9- R lo Grande Red men Three people were killed
day she had nine ldltens and they wer.e all born with
t- Th irtr ·three persons
thousands to Old French City . defeat Republic of China Friday night in a fire that
forced city commissioners to declare an emergency in
February a s water in the main reservoir dropped from its attend fina public hear ing on
6--Silver Memor ia l Bridge basketball team 92·89 before destroyed a 75-year-&lt;Jid hotel ·
sweaters."
. he
tw diff
t
l
A OOM Park District project. cl osed for repairs.
2, 4001ans at Lyne Center .
j
st63
al
2
r
norm 112 eetto u
lllC son o eren occasons.
4- Tom 's StereoCenler hit
8'-00MParkDistrictsign s
10- Paul Pope , -Rt. 1. housing mostly transients,
near panic • touched off by a blizzard Jan. 2S will be by th ieves, more than $3,000 optlonlobuy643acresofland Patriot, named Gall ia's authorities said. Fire officials
remembered here for years to come .
worth of items stolen .
in Perry and Green Twps ..
OJtstanding Conser'w'ationist. said additional bodies might
+++
. . ._
6-0id Holzer Hospital
10- J ones Bo ys strike SEORC honors Or . Thomas he found inside the four-story
•
underway .
Morgan a s Gallio 's " Man of Lucerne Hotel, but only one
OTHER top ·news stories 00 the local sc.ene included a building sold to Judge Ron
Calhoun and wife. Ohio River
18- Mercu ry hits century the Year .' 1
$780,000 fire which destroyed the Grace United Methodist . crests here at 47 .2 feet. well
mark here first ti me this .
13- Andrew Lemley named body was removed Friday
Chw-ch sanctuary on June 20 ; the Feb. 20 blaze which below flood stage .
summer .
Distric t Deputy Grand night because firefighters '
destroyedtheoldQueenBeeHotel ; Gallipolisswimmingpool
7- Ric hard Mills an ·
2o--City School s Supt. Don Master for 12th Masonic feared parts of the building
crisis (fQC the first time in nearly 40 years the city had no pool nounces resignation as city
Staggs awarded 5· year Di st rict .
. would collapse. Workers
·
manager . Kiwanis Club contract.
"
15~B i ll Qu ickie assumes
because the old tank failed to pass a state health department observes JOih anniversary .
23-Gallia teachers, board duties of Ohio Bell Teleppone hoped t o remove the
inspection and the new poolattbe recreation complex was still
14- S EO EMS
awarded
resume negotiations :
· Co. business office .
remaining bodies today.
EAS contratt .
2&gt;--Ciyde Ramey . Terry
17- S2 .5
million
GS I
under constructiori ).
+++
19- M. Harold Brown
McCune
charged
with building project in full swing .
appointed city manager for
murder of Albert Thompson ,
22-Ground broken for new
THE 1977 primary and general elections created lo.t s of remainder of'vear .
Rt . 2, Chesh.ire. Ma ssiv e SJOO,OOO Dr . S. L. Bossard
HOLD IT!
»-Joel Oennjs to heed water teak repaired at Meniorial Llbrary .
interest last year and in November, Gallii Countians used a
By
WASI'UNGTON (UP!)
!"lOCh card type voting system for the first time ever. The OOM Park District .
Womeldorff &amp; Thoma s
25- Rio Grande Lions host
Willis T. Leadingham
Hardware.
annual holiday tournament at
Gallia County Teachers Association strike and the miners . Jo-Bo!J Spears found not
Take one deep breath before
'Realtor
guilty of robbery complicity .
26-Grant Lang , veteran Lyne Center . Right.of-way
you s hout "Happy -New
strike in September and December created local news
MAY
·
Gallia lawman, dalmed by purchases for completion of
- 1978 will arr.lve one
Year"
headlioes. And the annual July Fourth celebration, Gallla . &gt;-City commission favors
death .
Rt . 15 begin .
AUGUST
27- Roger L. Nibert , 18, second later than you think.
County JWlior Fair and Bob Evans Fall Festival round out our annexation of upper Rt. 7
In this sense, real estate • top 10 news ·stories of 1977. There were many others, including territory ·
The Commerce Department
Sure mortgage Interest
1-Gallia's first six day tal r Ga 11 ia' 5 e ighth highway
Is
the
most
worth
.wh
ile
.•
·
8Mrs.
Arnold
Glassburn
,
5o h vidlm .
·
r ~ t es are hlgh~r than they
said time will stand stlll for
fires; eight highway fatalities and drownings, plus ground- B•' dwell,
named
begins
.
Pam
Miller
of
ut
·
30Terrl
Short
named
Were, but so are the market Investment you can make, • b ak .
· foc new 1ac11
·1·t·1es thraug hou t the Cl·ty an d "Mother-of-the-Year." 1977
eastern
crowned
19]7 junior Na II on a I 4· H winner. G'tnny
one second· on New Year's
re mgeeremomes
fair queen
.
).!a lues of&lt; homes and land . and your best protection •
eve
so
ole
world's
county
.
14$1.6
million
Pinecrest
3-City
applies
for
federal
.
Powell
named
·
Ohi~
winner
.
Please believe me when 1 against Inflation . And don't •
timekeepers
can
adjust
"+
+
+
Care
Center
dedicated
.
and
state
funds
on
recreation
OECEMBE
the
priceless •
say that even at today's forget
17. More .than . 200 attend , "Omplex
.
l-· Or, .· Geor'Qe
. h rna de
HERE is a b.rief summary of activities wh1c
•
d
t Greaves
'th 648 clocks with a "leap second"
infla1ed pr ices and l.nterest . dividends your family will •
spe~t~! Se~mr Citizens Day ...
ll - E iahty Gallia Coun - restgns tn espu e wt
to coordinate them with the
rates, real estate Is a better e'nioy as you live· in your e headlines during 1977:
acttvdtes tn Public Square.
tians tile petitions for board .
earth 's spin, which slows one
GAHS
t
fJ t S.EOAL
J...... Yule parade launches
buy than anything else you growing investment.
~
JANVART · c.ap _ures rs .,
November elect ion .
1977 Chr.ls tmas season .
can go after with borrowed
•
second each year .
Montgomery
.17- EIE!drlc off In city 21!2 tenms htle. .
, 18.-&lt;:ity school board , CEA
1- James
takes
over
as
Gall
ia
County
hour$
after
power
failure
.
18Herb
Rtfe
found
guilty
agree
on
terms
.
James
Dieh
l
Ga
vin 's three mines closed .
dollars.
e
Record loW of minus 15 on complicity in aggravated
named SEOAL president. .
\l -One-half mill ion dollar
Financing for other
• Sheriff . Michae l HarrisOn
Gallla County baby of degrees recorded here . Ice robber.y ch.a rge. gets 4-25
2o-Arth ur J . Fooce, 33 ~ Rt . enterpr ise to be built in
purchases often costs twice ·
• first
t;:logs river . Activities gr ind years m Oh.•o Pen.
2, Patriot. drowns in Oh io Kanaug~
for
selling ,
as much - and these things
e 1977.
5- Taxpayers suit . filed to a halt.
22-0ftlc•als report new
River while fishing at Up · rerairing
re c reati o n
depredate while a house
..
• against
county
com 19- City water ~ t critical , swidmming pool won ' t be
stream Public Use Area ..
wal3~c$rla, 36. 3 , 311 sou' ght '•n
L·irna , named new ·city
.
' point after tw·o ruptures .
rea y for 1977
24 s
t
t k
usually grows in ~alue .
If there .Is anything we •
I
manager.
ss•oners
.
'
26-~allia
snowfall
totals
25_.:_01d
s·
w
..
lmmlng·
pool
area-.
.
evere
s
orm
.
s
n
es
·
judgment
suit
a~a
.
inSf
city
.
m
Check the trade·in val_u_e of can· do to help you In the. •
....,
5 G
db
f
6- Snow blamed in five of
. 27-Dr.. Francls W. Shane
26 Inches for month , falls state health inspection .
SEPTEMBER ·
.1 - roun ro en ._or new
YOI.!r car when yOu tu.rn it In field . of real ~estate please • seven area mishaps.
ann01.~nces retlrment.
aFour
.
below
zero
establ
ishing
a
new
all
-time
City
may
not
have
Mthing
school
te·
a
(:hers
CR1o
,
Gr~.
nde
CCol
County
1ege
·
for a new one. "'I so for the phone or drop In .at e
7
2a- Rio Careers Center
t d dl · It
markforacc!Jmulation .
facilities this summer. Tom
trike
·
.om':"un1ty
ol 1ege
past .ten years, real estate LEADINGHAM . REAL e
28- New
storm
hits Cable , ·21, G$1 . res ident.
s 9_ c:), 10 Va lley Publishing· Technical . Car:eer_s . Center . deed ls sl.gned .
values have doubled !he ESTATE, 512 Second Ave., . • re,g~~lnnt;r Y· onslaught
Jo-New city commission ,
continues, schools rema in .~ Buckeye state.
drowns in Qnio River .
Co . bfcomes
parf of
19-Famlly of four m P~_rry
InCrease in the Dow Jones Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699 .
solicitor and municipal fudge
29- Cri'sis eniergency plan
26- Kyger Creek High
Multimectia. County teachers Twp . left homeless after f~re.
average.
~e'rt here to h~lpl
• closed .
·1 4 - Fresh snowfall
ready in Gallla as resul1 of School baseball team. ad ·
end' strike .
C. P. Morris, 47, native of sWorn in .
blankets area .
energy crisis.
vances to Class A Reg1onal
ll- Gallipolis firemen host
Jo--Roof at Ga'lllpolis Boat tournament. Dr . John H.
Hocking Valley Training
Club.collapses, causesS10,000 Budd , ,Pt esldent .elec.t of
School in ali-day session .
- TWENrYYEARSago,fromthefilesoftheDailyTribune
damage to boat doc k Am e " ·can
MedIC a I
14-Jones Boysstrike ends . and weekly Gallia Times ... Dr. Ella Lupton called oldest seal
facilities.
Associat1on, guest speaker
16- 0on Cox elected to
i 1
-GSI
FEBRUARY
during fiflh anniversary
Galli a County Junior Fair · saler in United States at age 95. , . Dr. R. A. N P e, 47, ex
2- Store hours cut . bac~ celebration of Holzer Medical , board .
. staff member, dies in Columbus ... Ethel Armstrong, director
18- Gilbert Beard, · 71, of Holzer School of Nursing, says 13 graduates pass state
here due to gas shortage . Center .
Schools remain closed .
JUNE
retire-d banker , dies.
examination .. . Noel Houck, 66, Bladen farmeti, claimed :;·.
4-Break In weather shor1.
1- $600.000 loan approved
21 - Carter &amp;· Evans low Dr. Jay Bradshaw to head Gallipolis Youth Canteen . . .,D. 0.
lived , Flood Insurance plans . tor Buckeye Rural Electric
bidder for !'leW library
. ..
approved by ctty com . Improvement projects ..
. project .
..
Taber in charge of Gallia County Historical Society actiVIties
3- Sgt. Joe OWns of city
28- Thompson. murder trial . . . RobertS. Betz sworn in as new county court judge,
mission . Thieves busy despite
.
.
natned
begins
. OCTOBER
·------~~~~!"'~~~~~~~----,
freezing
weather.
public
force
12- Armed rObbery probed . " Lawman-of-the-Year ."
,.
at Stock yards.
7'- Recreatlon program In
3- David T. ·Evans named
u ..:.. Riq Grande ColleQe jeopardy folloWing'. loss of
assistant prosecuting at ,
captures Mid -Ohio Con - swimming pool revenue.
torney .
Frank ~orter , 7J,·. drowns in
4- Federal Mogul an .
terence basketball title .
nounces eKpansion project .
· 6- Gallipolis Com .
missioners oppose State Issue
2.
10- Aut omat ic traffic
signal sought at Silver Bridge
•
Plaza Shopping Center .
May we thank you for all our
12- City receives petition
for Upper Rt . 7 annexaJion ..
dealing the past year. Stop in
14- Bob Evans F"arm
Festival underway . GAHS
golf team advanc;es to state .
today and inspect and driv.e
tournament.
17- City observes !87th
~NO
·anniVersary.
our. fine selection of cars and . ...:
20- Ci·t y , county to get
$260,750 for park and
·trucks
recreation comp lex . Mike
Fenderbosch named Gallla
Crime Alert Coordinator.
23- City receives $15,000
gift for new swimming pool.
29-Five persons kil led in
4 dr., 11,000 miles by careful owner. Beautiful white
plane dash at Green Couoty
over dark red finish, 305 V-a, ·automatic, P.S.. P.B., air
Parachute Club , Bidwell .
conditi_oned. spare never used, showr~)m clean . S'a ve.
Thomas Clothiers buy s New
York Clothing firm .
31- F. B. Cornwell , 77 ,
Bidwell, killed in auto ac ·
Red with White vinyl top, carefully driven and loaded
cident .
NOVEMBER
with every option Inc. air, tilt whe:eL speed and cruise,
!- Concrete apron installed
full power . COmpany" car, never titled.
around new
municipal
swimm ing_pool. .
.
a- James Bennett unseats
. Mur icipaJ JudQe RobEirt s .
sPort wheels, air, cri,Jise, tilt power ~lndows, cloth .
interior, bucket seat. AM-FM radio, coiCJr silver with
matching landau top: A really clean sharp car .

••
••
•••
••
•••
•
••

TODAY is the first day of 1978, with 364 more to follow .
Happy New Year ! .. :

2o-&lt;Jveen . Bee

= --

Deputies also are investigating the entry of the
Jake Lee home in Racine.
The Lee family had been

vacationing in Florida. The
entry was discovered Mon·
day afternoon . The case Is
still pending.

BI·ssell
h eadm•g
h oar
·d

MEIGS COUNTY TUBERCULOSIS NUHSE Jane
Brown, R.N . was given special rtoco~nition at the recent
community se rvice recogniti on program or the Modern
Woodmen o£ America. She is ·pictured here with he r
husband , Russell . They live iD Pon1cr oy.

Service ·marked
•
to communzty

Egyptian pr"'!ident also said
he was ready to re-evaluate
the security guarantees
demanded by Israel.
Community service WlHI cnmrl membership post While Carter has warmly ·
•
(ecognized
when the Modern marked in 1921 . Pam ela
endorsed Sadat's peace ·
Woodmen
of
America , Cump HundCrson, ' nursing .!!uperinitiative, he told reporters· on
10900, Christmas party held visor at Veterans Memoriul
the eve of his overseas trip
at the Senior Citizens Ha ll in ·'Hospital, Pomeroy, rc,!!eived
that
he
opposes
an
her 25 yea r membership ph\.
Coolville.
independent Palestinian state
.
Honored
were
Jane
Brown
,
Presented a gift wu~ Ml•s
in the area, prompting a
Anne Walden, II.N., Coolville,
EAST
MEIGS
_
The
R.N.,
tuberculnsis
nurse
£or
, strong respoose froin Sadat.
retired,
with the record. of
Eastern
Local
School
District
Meigs
County
ami
director
or
Sadat will meet Carter for
having
cured
rnr 28,000 bubies
Board
of
Ed.
u
catiop
Meigs
County's
Tubl!rculosis
45 minutes Wednesday in
·
durlng
her
ycHrs
of service In
organized
and
cmiducted
Clinic
wHich
is
Paid
£or
anri
Aswan, in the shadow of the
the
nursery
ul
St. JoNe51h:
business
Monday
:
operated
from
thc
T.
B.
levy;
huge Soviet-built Aswan ·!lam
HospilRI
in
Pnrker sbur~ .·
Deryl
Well
and
James
·
Phyllis
C.
Jackson
,
R.N
..
that· became a symbol oT
. Th e Woodm en's pledge
Soviet prosence in Egypt in Caldwell, new board mem· Athens City-County ilcnilh
service
was c•ondu¢tt!d by
hers,
and
Dorsel
Larkins,
Dep.artrncnt,
and
.
L
or
et
iu
the 1950s and 1960s.
Egyptian officials said reJected, were given their Hedd Auvil, M.D. with orri&lt;'es Charles Woodc und ·C. ·IA.'e
Sadat was certain tO urge a oath of o£fice by Eloise in Parkersburg. W. Va . a nd · Henderson . Aflc1' the dirutef
Cl1rist1n.a s (.'nrols wetc sun~ ·
Coolville.
more active American role in Boston, clerk-treasurer.
led by Mrs. Myrl Cuoklcy ·und
The
board
reelected
Doug
A
"Hal£
Century
Club"
pin
the Middle East peaceSnntu
distributed treats rmd
Bissell
president
£or
tlie
next
.
and
membership
certifi
cate
making process.
year and Larkins was named were awarded to Arthu r presents to children. A {'hct!r
·
.· vice president. Regular Shanks, Coo lville , who group dcHvcrcd r Cf rc Nh·
meetings will be at 7:30p .m . displayed to the g~oup his 56- .. ments and trcuts tt.J shut·tn
(Continued on page a}
on the second Tuesday of year~ld MWA invitutlu11 1lo
each month with pay to be $40
a month for new members
'
e
and $20 for old members.
Mrs. Boston was given a four
year appointment as clerk,
treasurer.
,
During
the
regular
meeting, Mrs. Boston was
Mayor Fred Hoffman said authorized to secure an adtoday income derived from vance draw-on local taxes or .
his court and administrative, borrow money i£ necessary to
WASHINGTON iUPI ) ]u'diciary ."
fees during 1977 totaled meet the January bills. Julia ·Sen. Robert Dole asked the
A cow-l s t&gt;okestnan said the
$25,868.50 which is more than Vaughan was named a Supreme Court today to Issue reque st would be considered
half of what Middleport's substitute
te,acher. an emergency order blocking by .Juslic't! Byron White, who
total operating budget was 30 Graduation was set for June 4 llie return of the historic is responsible for the lOth
years ago.
with baccalaureate at 2 p.m. Crown o£ St. Stephen to ·u.s. judicial Circuit in which
Biggest source of income and commencem~nts at 8 Hungary .
h qie originated his suit .
was the mayor's court which p.m .
"The transfer of the Holy White may re£er the " petition
produced $11,484.40 In fines,
The board approved a CroWn or St. Stephen is ;i for emergency relief" to the
$2,~.60 in costs, and $9,226
substitute driver for the route r.natter of sl).ch international full court to decide or he may
In forfeited bonds.
of Frank Upton, driver and significance tha.t it may only acl on the rLaques~ ~ himself,
Other sources of income, mechanic, during the rold
be accomplished pursuant w' U1e spokesman said .
all of which goes into the . months. Dennis Eichinger a treaty" requiring approval
Dolo has joined effortB by
• was nalned assist.ant ju'nior:,- by a . two-thirds vote of the anli-eornmunist · HUh~arian­
general fund, were:
T~xi ' licenses, $112 .50; . high basketball coach .
Senate ,
the
Kansa s Arncricaos to prevent return
zoning permits, $62; bilUding
The board authorized Republican argued.
u! l he l ,OOO.year&lt;&gt;ld c rown to
permits, $229.50i parking transportation for one han·He asked the court to issue Budapest, but all of his
permits, $270; · merchant dicapped student. The board · an order "restraining the appeals to a series of l'Ourts
police, $1,544; demolition joined the Ohio State School president ·and all of[icecs, have only resulted in brief
permits, $14;
accident .Boards Assn., and purchased employees and agents of the de lays, He said Monday he "
reports, $84.50; turnkey fees, liability insurance for board United States acting under was " rlot all that optimistic"
· $95; soliciting permits, $20; members. It was agreed to his direction from dispos ing ~bout his chanc-es £or success
trash hauling permits, $50; secure rot\! repair estimates. or the crown .. , until \he in the Supreme Court.
poster permits, $30, and Bills wete approved for underly.ing · cons titutional . Secretary o£ State Cyrus
miscellaneous, $60.
conflict ... is resolv\'(1 by the Vance now plans to deliver
payment.
the crown to Budapest
Friday, breaking away !r~m
the presideniial trip in Paris,

Mayor puts
$25 868.50

in treasury

Dole says crown
of treaty

~eight

Saudis welcome •American .President

Log home razed
by fire Sunday

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia :Marharji Desai. The accord
(UPI) - President Carter said the ·spread'-of nuclear
arrived today in Saudi Arabia weapons muSt be halted, but
for some of the more did not specify a means to
important talks of his seven· that end.
.,
nation tour.
There were no crowds at
Carter was greeted at the the airport, and women were
airport by King Khaled alter conspicuously · absent - a
!lying here from New Delhi tradition of this desert
where he signed a joint U.S.- kingdom of oil and Islam Indian ·declaration with , and there will be none at .the
state dinner hosted by the
Indil'n Prime Miinister
.

king and Crown Prince Fahd. be unto you," Carter prepa~ed to press for more
At the airport, Mrs. Carter responded. "The primary U.S. arms sales and to ask
walked a respectful six . feet purpose of my trip and this Carter to apply pressure on
behlnd her husband as is the ..visit Is peace .
Israel for a Middle EBSt.:
"The first meeting between settlement and to ooften his ' 'f. two slory log home at
Moslem tradition.
Bald Run was destroyed by,
"Mr. President, I welcome the leaders of Saudi Arabia stand on the Palestine issue . fire
Sunday morning at 2:13
you In our country as a great and the United States was . Carter wa~ unlikely to Will' a .m. Charles Legar Pomeroy
friepd and I thank you for when President Franklin D. open Saudi endorsement or , Fire Chlel reported .
your eH&lt;rta in finding a just Roosevelt came to the Gulf of Egyp~an Pre:nd~nt. An.w ar
Legar said the horne was
and lasting solution ... in .the Suez and met King · Ibn Sadat s ~ace mitiative smce ., engulfed in flames when the
Middle East," the king said. Saud," Carter "'!id.
the ·~Udis prefer to act as firemen arrived. It is
"Salaam Aleikum, peace
Saudi Arabia is the world's mediators between . the believed that the fire ·started
largest sow-c~ . of oU and It moderate.• and hard.Jmers. ·either in the laundry room or
was
Instrumental
in
Ind1a Carter and h1s the kitchen.
. ·
.
.
preventing a prlce.rise for at W1fe, Rosa lynn, strolled, ,· Firemen feared there may
least six months attlie recent · . ~mong .
th~, . so-&lt;:!'lled . be bOdies in the house as the
untouchables m the v1llage , "alarm was called in by a .
meeting of the Organization
of Petroleurp Exporting of : Daulatpur-Nas~rabad IS ·passerby . It was later
A count by United Press between 300 and 400. persons Countries in
Caracas, mileseastofNewDelhl. They discovered that the family
International at 5:30 a.m. could be killed in traffic
did so alter Desai urged him , was in Carrolton, Ohio. The
Venezuela. ,
EST showed at least 304 accidents during the 711bowpeople died In traffic mishaps holiday weekend, which to Caask~twthouelteezbee ~=:::: to see rural India, wrn;re 80 home wsa owned by David
perc:ent of the country s 625 . McEwen .
during the holiday weekend. began at 6 p.m . local time indefinitely as a means of million ~pie hve.
'
A breakdown of accidental Frtday and ended at bolstering the faUing dollar
An American Em)lassy
deaths:
midnight. ·
,
abroad but agreement on this staffer described Carter' s
304
Last year, 339 persons died . could be difficult. The U.S. · visit to India as "a huge love · ' E-il. UNIT CAlLED
Traffic
Fires
51 in traffic accidents during the balance of payment deficits feast" and Carter agreed . The PomerQy Emergency
Planes
)3 New Year's weekend, faF are blamed on the billions of · with the description .
'"'squad answered a call io
'
368 below the National s8fety dollars the . United ~tates
Toial .
Carter was. driven in a Beech st. , at .6:23 a .m.
California reported 31 • Council estimate .
. must P!'Yfor imported oil and motorcade to the memorial to Monday for Roy Reuter who
traffic deaths and Texaa 25.
A safety council spokesman . this driVes the dollar down in Mohandas Gandhl, architect was taken to Veterans
No fatal .aecldents were said Americans traveled less w.o rld markets. The Saudis' Qf India's independence from Memor~l Hospital where he
reported in Alaska, HawaU, last New Year's ·&gt;weekend annuallncomeof$40billion in · Britain 30 years ago, and said .was admitted. At 10:18 p.m ..
Idaho, NO!'th Daliota and the than In
past years. U.S. dQ)lars could face a loss !ater Gandhl's prlnciples . of Monday the fire department
District of Columbia.
Americans ~ppeared to be
U the dollar problem is not nonviolence shaped th~ went to' the home of Mrs.
The
National ·· Safety cmtinuing that trend last solved.
phi10110phy of the late Martin Norma Wilson, E. Mair!!lt., to
Council had ~i estimated weekend.
Khalelt .and Fahd were Luther King Jll:
extingulii a grass flrf.

!"

It's back to work fu a new year
Uulled Presolntematloaal
The calendar said the new
year began Sunday, but for
mllllons of Americans today
marked the first day of work,
school or shopping in• 1978.
The Holiday season, which
began with Thanksgiving and
stretched through Christmas
and New Year's Day, has
ende(l. Government offi~s.
· stores and schools re\UI1led ro
JlOrmal sesai111s and revelero
fP,t away their hata and horils
undl Dec. 31.
Hallday weekend travelers
poured 111to the highways late
Monday In a last-minute rush
homeward .

,

.

�-

•

•

..
2- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'uesday, Jan . 3, 1978

;

•

Community service

Approve appropriation

:·

(ConUnued ~ ..,, I)
Spara,, Parkersburg; lJ&amp;o :
Henderson and Gene Griffin, ,
members of !be camp.
Guysville;
LOri and LeeAnn •
1978
offi cers
electRobinson
,
Alfred ; Neff :
ed wer e C. W. Hen·
derson, Council ; W. lf:"Carr, Norman , Toronto; Kathy ~
advisor ; Charles Woode, ' Cavlnee, Malaga; Kathy
watchman ; Vernon Swartz, Pullins and John Glenri '
sentry ; Hobart Swart•, Hawk, Reedsvllle ; Susan
escort, and Gamer Griffin, RBder, steve Caudill, Inez
Clarence L. Henderson, and Bentz, Anne Takach, Tobin
Workman , Leslie Sturm, •
Myrl Coakley, trustees.
Thelma
Henderson, Kay •'
Contest prizes were won by
and
Nina ~
Don and Valerie Dunfee, McPherson
•
Robinson,
Coolville.
Little Hocking; Roxanne

cents per mile each w~y iiir for. single employees and
..tlte._J hree new.ly elected $36.87 for families under the
memhers.
. hospital benefits afid $16.74
During the eounty board for families under the
session, the board ap- surgical benefits. .
p ro prp ia tions
totalin g
Major medical rates are •
$221,006.27 were approved. $2.16 per month single rate
New bOard member Jimmy and $6 .11 family rate. Gbio
D. Hill was named to fill the National Life of Cincinnati
unexpired tenn of Bruce &amp;. was the low bidder for group
Stout to the Gallia·- J ackson - tile insurance. The board will
· Vinton Joint Vocationa l pay $6.28 per year for $3,000
Board of Edtrcation.
worth of life insuraneti for 337
Ouring the local boa rd employees.
session , Vicki Burnett was
•
employed on a limited con•
tract for parttime em ployment as a tutor for
HILO TEMPS
students at Gallla County's
NEW
YORK (UP!) - The
Children Home at the rate of
leadership role Indeveloping ~
WASI:UNGTON (1:/Pl) highest temperature reported
)6 per hour.
programs, disseminating •
Use
of
computers
and
wandEducational adies hired Tuesday· to the National
information, and researching j
like
scanners
at
supermarket
were Regina Cremeims, R,t. Weatller Service, excluding
checkout COWlters across !be future opportunities for u.se of '
2, Crown City for Hannan Alaska and Hawaii, was 78
United States has gained electronic checkouts and ;
PHYLUS
.ll\cKSON,
R.N,.
of
the
Athens
Cli;y-County
Trace Elementary; Lawana degrees at Coral Gables, Fla.
consumer
acceptance and seaMing in supermarkets," ~~
Healtll
Department,
Athens,
was
among
thi&gt;se
recognized
Marie Moore, Rt. 2, Vinton, Today's low was 20 degrees for dedicated community service at the Modern Woodmen
·
·"
will become more common In Aders said.
for Bidwell-Porter and Anne below zero at Worland , Wyo. of America 's ·community service ·recognition program. ·
Aders said use of !be '
1978, an industry offlcial
J ohnson , Patriot , for the
systems in 1977 in some 200
says.
With her is her husband, Willi!lm W. Jackson.
Children 's Home.
Robert 0 . Aders, president supermarkets nationwide
Th e board approved a
of the Food Marketing foWld "growing evidence of :
motion by Hill that all adInstitute,
said
his
ministrativ e ' personnel be
organization wlll assist ~n':~t':"r accentanc!s:fs:~ .. ,
~
present at board meetings
According to the Gallia - made 301 arrests including 17
Larry Davis, 21, Rt. 1, converting the nation's ~~~~ko!!l . "
"Consumers Who , have ,
when agenda items Include Meigs Post . State Highway for DWI ; issued 568 war- Patriot, was hospitalized slipermarkets to electronic
in
a
hand9bn
experience with '
checkout
operations,
matters concerning . their Patrol, seven traffi c ac- nings, inspected 544 motor following his accident,
schools. Prirlcipals .are to be ci dent s were investigat ed vehicles and . assisted 356 Monday on SR 775. Davis lost move that could help hold them have responded so
notified 24 hours In advance over the New Year's Holiday, motorists.
control of his car which ran down labor costs and rising positively ll!at we see a
.
·
competitive momentum
of the meeting.
none causing serious perM
A breakdol)'ll of the ac- off the left side of the highway food prices.,
building,"
he said.
Superintendent Th.omas . sonal injury . .
Supermarkets
do
more
cidents shows 96 were in- . into a ditch and overturned.
Hairston was authoriZed to . During th e month of vestigated in Gallia County The accident · is still ~under than $100 biUion in businellS a ' Not only have the systems
year, with ·labor costs boosted sales, Aders said, but
have h•s agenda prepare: l December, the patrol .in, and 48 in Meigs County.
investigation .
and matted at n'?"~ Tuesday, vestigated 144 accidents
Carl L. McMillan , 20, representing nearly 70 "we ore on the threshold of
Mishaps on Monday were:
four days praor .to the
.
·
'
Columbus, escaped injury in percent of the operating exploiting vast potential in
meeting.
savings'
a single car accident at 12 :30 expense in food distribution, 'soft
BIDS AWARDED
improvements
Aders
said.
in
a.m. Monday on SR 554, at
Blue Cross of Central Ohio
Supermarkets
using
management
controls
and
Wheaton Rd. The patrol said
received the contract for
McMillan, going west, lost electronic checkout found systems Q!et scanning can
group hospitalization, group
control of his car which ran improvements iq bring to tlle industry."
surgical and major medical
off the roadway .into a tree. productivity, Aders said.
insurance during a special
There was niinor damage and Conversion costs were more
meeting Saturday·.
than offset by increased
' MIAMI (UP!) ' - Police involved in Miami sporting no charges were filed.
The board will pay the rate arrested three men Monday circles, was found dead in his
sales,
reductions in labor
Ivy pavement was b)amed
of $1l.ll per month for single night and ch{lrged them with apartment Saturday night
costs
and
increased
hospital benefits, $6.68 per the New Year's Eve robbery af!er missing a ·dinner on an accident at noon productivity, he said.
Monday on SR 588, five tenths
month for surgical benefits and murder of Milt Ellis, tbe engagement with longtime.
Electronic cbeckout operaof a mile east of milepost 4.
69,year-old retired sports friend David Wolf . •
tions
include modified cash
The patrol said Sheryl L.
editor of tlle Cleveland Plain
connected to
registers
Police said Ellis had been
Robert's, 29, Columbus, going
Dealer.
computers
that
keep track of
robbed and beaten, but died
west, lost control of her Car
"We've solved the case ," · of strangulation when he was
inventories,
as
well as
on the icy pa.vement. There
homicide Sgt. l&gt;fike .Gonzalez bound and gagged by tbe
checkout
wands
tllat
scan
was moderat~ damage to her
said. ~~ we' ve recovered some burglars:
·specially
marked
panel
on a
vehicle.
· Ugited PreiS lnlernalioual
. of the stolen goods."
package to register the item
"This. was a planned rob·
Violence · resumed in tbe Wlion miner employed by the mine . ··some 150 miners
Charged with first degree bery,", Gonzalez said, "and
and its cost.
Appalachian -&lt;:oalfields over · ·Stearns Coal Co. and wrecked seeking representation by the murder,
robbery
and the beating and murder were
·Supermarket executives
the New Year holiday as tbe six pieces ·· of heavy UMW have been. on strike burglary were Thomas Ray incidental to the robbery ,"
.
told
an industrx conference in Pomeroy Bowling pnes
Bookmobile schedule }n
bitter .·United Mine Workers equipment at a non-union since JUly i976 and .there has Hollings, 21 , of Miami, and
Atlanta
electronic checkout ·. Early sunday MIXed.
Gonzalez said officers
Meigs County:
·League
strike entered its fifth week . strip inine in Martin County. been repeated violence.
,Chester Williams, 18, and recovered a television and
systems boosted productivicy
Det.l5, 19n
Thursday
,
Jan·
.
5 atld contract neg-otiations , Kentucky authorities refused
The .second explosion , Earnest Bradley, 22, both of stereo set and some jewelry
standings
Riverview Elementary, 11- 15 to 35 percent, Aders said.
to speculate whether the apparently caused by Hialeah.
. remained deadlocked .
"Our
information
indicates
Team
Pts6
tllat had been taken from
11 :30 a.m.; 12:30-1:45 p.m.;
Tw o
explosions
in blasts were related to 'the dynamjte, blew· up shortly
tllat
these
'
hard
savings'
R.
C.
BottlingSCo.
6
EUis, who retired as sports Ellis, who joined the Plain
Letart, 2:45-3 ;15; Antiquity,
, .
Jack's Dalry ar
before dawn Monday and editor of the Plain Deater in Dealer in 1929 and became
Kentucky may signal the UMW strike.
6
should
more
than
]Ustify.tbe
Tom's
carry
0\JI
3:40-4; Racine - Wagner's
2
resumpticrn of efforts by
The first, Sunday night, . caused an estlmated $244,000 1965 · and quickly became the newspaper's sports editor
Hardware , 4:15-5:15; Bank, cost of investment in tbe Town Kiln
2
UMW miners to shut down caused at .·least $2,000 in in damage to heavy earthcomputer.:Ussisted
Gibbs
Groc:ery
.
in 1946.
2
·
5:15-6:15
;
Syracuse
oon-UMW operations. No one. damage to the trailer home of moving equlpm~nt at a strip
checkout-" Aders said
·Cline's Construdlon . John'
Swimming
Pool,
6:3(h'l,
and
'
. .
Hiah ·men's aame ~
was injured in the blasts.
Donnie Watters, who lives mine operated by the Davella
"One of the great Tyree 217 , Sill ·wnlford 212.
Minersville Hill, 6:15-8:4.5.
The explosions damaged several miles from the Coal Co. in Martin County.
c h a 1'1 e n g es fa c i n g women's high game 1 Friday , Jan . 6
tlle trailer home .0 1 a non- Stearns Coal Co.'s Just~
The UMW has vowed to _
management
in our business Belly Smith 211; Mar ene
Harrisonville Elementary,
throttle the nation's coal
today
continues
to be how to wr;;.on, 19 ~igh series - Bill
9:30-11 :30 a.m.
production, but so far has not
improve productivity while Will~~~ 593 , John Tyree 574.
significantly cut into nonIaber . cost
Increases . women's high . serleslene
consistently exceed the rate Betty Smith 560. Mar
union output, which accounts
for half the coal produced in
of inflation," Ader~ said. . · W~~':,SC:.lgh game- Jatk's
the nation.
. The orgamzatton . will Dairy Bar 735.
"continue to play· a strong
Team high series - R. C.
Union President Arnold
..,
Bottling Co. 1995.
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
Miller called it a "tough new
CALGARY, Alberta ·(UPI)' gallons of water used in
year" for nearly 190,000 strikRed Adair, the famed oil quenching the fire.
.
ing miners.and their families,
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
tom, not a disease. The doc- who drew . their last well troubleshooter,
"Theheatwastremendous.
DEAR OR. LAMB - My tor's job is to find out what is
successfully
.capped
and
shut
)I was like a steam batll out paychecks Pee. 23 but are
husband, aged 38, is i)npo- . causing the sympto\11. qut he eligible for food stamps.
off a runaway gas . well tllere wben ·they poured the
tent . .We have been having has to know about it and have
WILLOUGHBY , Ohio
However, Miller predicted Monday that has . been water on it. Most ofthesteam
problems with this off and on · an opportunity to do jjthe UMW will prevail" in spewing up to 30 million cubic has dissipated now, . but the (UP!) _ The Willoughby •
for approximately . seven something about itfirst.
the strike, which began Dec. feet of natural gas a day since groimd is extremely scggy . E a s 1 1a k e . Tea c h e r s
By KENNETH R. CLARK
months. He has had a
If your husband is a 6.
Dec 6
Work c.rews had to lay planks A
· 1·
hed
·
The
·Texan
snuffed
out
a
to
,L
ll
th
ld
ssocta
ton
reac
surprise
United
Presslnlernatioual
duodenal ulcer for years . Our diabetic, .he could have imFederal mediators said spectacular fir
. e at tbe well up
"'e we so ey cou · agreement .Monday night on a
. new doctor pul him on PrQ- potence from its effects on talks between the union and
JOHN'S KIDS: Johnny Cash came lip with the cash Monday
get a good footing to remove
d ·
Sunday, tben filled the shaft the debris from the two-year contract unng a - $15,000 worth - for a house to be donated to his favori~
ban thine twice daily and Don- the nerves that control norBitwninoi!S Coal Operators ·
me~ting which had been
natal four time~ a day . He mal ecection. It could be Association
· called 10· autllorize a strike charily; an orphanage in Montego Bay, Jamaica. Wife .arid
were recessed with heavy fluids and mud to wellh~ad," he said,
look both medications for psychological as you mention
The spokesman for Amoco , against the 14, 000 student fellow country-western singer June Carter snipped a red
indefinitely in Washington. stop the leaking gas on
four months .
and, once the problem starts, Each side blamed the other Monday .
ribbon dedicating the structure to SOS Children's VUiage and
part owners of the well, said school system Tuesday.
Aller about three months fear of failure takes over and for the collapse.
·visiting
evangelist Billy Graham .was on hand to bless it. Over
"This means it's all over, be could not estimate the loss
About 400 of .the 578
on the medications, he istherealcause.
the
years,
Cash has drnated several thousand dollars toward
·
. cleanup to the company.
members of the association
accused the industry except . -for
started having problems. Our
The other most likely cause ofMiller
·
dailv
uokeeo
of the orohanaae.
4
which
are
taking
He
noted
a
$1.5
million
met
in
Willoughby
following
operations,
' callous behavior' '. in
·-previous doctor where we us- is all that alcohol. It is qwte·
lace
now,'
'
said
Dave
drilling
rt
·
g
was
de~rm;ed
P
0
rdusing to discuss a Union
day-long negotiations beed to live warned him about true that alcohol may release proposal on health and McAsey, spokesman for because it could not be 'puled • tween
OUT OF THE WRINGER: rt a student's famiiy is poor, he
the association and
the side effects of Proban-·. inhibitions, causing a person p e n s i o n b e n e f i t s.. Amoco Petroleum Canada to safety when the fire
usually ean land a college scholarship. If his family ts rich be
thine, so he i:.now taking just to want sex, but it also takes Management said its negotia- Ltd. "The well was capped erupted. The amount of gas o(ficiais of the Lake County doesn't need one. But If he's "middle class," he may be ou't of
school board.
the Donnatal 'four times a away the ability and is a frewith a blowout preventer, and flowing ,from the well could
The new cont
ipulates luck. Hollywood fUm executive Lew R. Wasserman ls out to
tors
walked
o.
u
t
because
the
__ day. Things have not improv- . quent caU5e of impotence. union was backing away from · mud was pumped down lbe have supplied the dally
change that. He's setting up' a $100,IJOG.a-year scholarship fWld
demands of a city with a that a pay r
new at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., for the children of
ed, and he's heen off Prohan- Your husband drinks entirely tentative agreements already hole. "
Adair and his crew will population of 100,000.
teachers from $9,807 a
r to ·middle-class families who, Wassennan aays, just don't have
thine over three months.
too much.Anyone who has
including remain in the area unW tlley
reached • $10,500
a
year
is
contingent
on enough money to cover a college education, despite the
He has'a high tension job, is an ulcer should not drink provisions to eurb wildcat
0
are satisfied the he'avy fluids
ad9ption of an additional appearance of their gross income. Says he, "These families
very competitive, has . a ' ANY alcohol ·at all. Alcohol strikes..
and mud have COWlteracted
property tax sometime this are caul{ht.in tile wriruzer of escalatiruz costs." ·
history of family diabetes (he stimulates the stomach to
Burdette Crowe, president
year.
. .
has no symptoms , but has produce increased amountS of UMW District 31 in West . th epressure 0f t he ~ISihg
gas,
Willoughby voters twice
never been CQecked ). He is of acid dig-estive juice, the Virginia, called for a be· said. But McAsey ~id
MADAME PR&amp;'IIDENT?: The first lady says she thinks the
The rnoon is between . its · last year narrowly turned
about30pounds overweight.
Wlderlying cause of ulcers. bargaining council to let there ":85 still a danger Uiat last quarter and new phase. down additionailevy requests time Is ripe lor the United Stales to elect a woman to the'
He has one martini before He should not have even ONE striking miners know where pressure from the well could
presidency. That comment came Monday in New Oethi,lndla,
The morning stars are of 6.5 mills and 6.4 miUs.
• dinner, one or two glasses of drink, let alone a consump- they stand.
as
Rosalynn carter fielded questions fr(ll) five Indian
force the mud out and reopen • Mars Mercury Venus and
The new contract generally
wine with dinner, and one to tlon worthy of an alcoholic. · · ~'We ' re being left in the the gas ~ream .
correspondents.
Asked if she thinks lt "111llmiginable" that a
-~ Satln~l.
''
covers non~conomic issues
fourbrandiesafterdinner.
Your sex life, marriage, and
He
satd
there
also
were
The
evenlilg
star
is
Jupiter
d
k
·
•
w(ll)an
might
succeed
to the White House, she said "I don't
lurch and we .should be •
He has promised to go see his ulcer will all do better if ·appraised as to what's going fears of fire .bee_au.se of • Tho- born on this date ar~ an rna es senio'rity the think it ts unimaginable. I think it is just ma.tter ~I time.''
f1
bl
ill
h
major consideration in
his doctor, but keeps putting· he stops drinking entirely. He on,' ' he said.
amma e gas, st 10 t e WJder tlle sign of Capricorn. teacher reductions in force. Asked about press reports ''that you speak softly but' you carry
it off. H~ hasn't been since he • is getting a lot of calories
area of the well.
a big stick,'' she said, \'Maybe I do speak softly and maybe I do
· originally got the prescrip- from alcohol, and stopping
~
About 20 to 30 miliion cubic
have some influence with my husband. Maybe that is the big
111E DAILY S.t!:NTINEL
lions.
drinking may· also help hbn
feet of natural gas a day has -o;
sfick.It
,
DEVOTED TO DIE
INTEREST OF
I've read that impotency lose some weig~t.
been
streaming
out
of
the
MEIGS-MASON AREA.
before age 50 is usually
I am sending you The
well since it hlew Dec. 6.
CHESTERL TANNEHILL
DEBAKEY BURNED: Heart specialist Mfebael E.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - M0re include the $2.4 . million
'
bec.Ed.
psychological. This is very Health Letter number 3-12,
The well, located 65 miles than 31,000 Ohio consumers, expected from the settlement · DeBakey is listed .in good condition at a Houston hospital
ROBERT HOEIUOI
discouraging and dishearten- fmpotence, to give you a
southwest of Edm~nton, upset over everything from of a suit . Brown brought wbere be's being treated for smoke Inhalation and supe~~l
Clly Ectltor
ing for both of 'us. What can I more complete review of the
ignited Dec. 24 and became a troublesome de.ntures to against General Motors for burns suffered New .Year's Eve wben an ember frQm the
·· Published daily except Saturday
by 'llle Ohio Valley Publl8hing
do to help?
·
' various ways this can occur. Company-Mullimedill,
several
hundred foot high Chevrolet engines in their substituting engines in fireplace ignited a rug and the Christmas tree at his home. The
.lnc.,
111
DEAR READER -His im- Others who want this in- Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 457•.
inferno.
69-yearold pioneer of coronary bypasa surgery got bJs wife and
oldsmobiles, called the state various GM cars.
potence is not caused by Pro- formation can send 50 cents Bulinela Office Phone m.. 2156. . Adair put out the fire attorney general's office to
The attorney general said 10-montll-oid child out of the 1koom house but went back
Edilurliol Phonoi!02-2157.
banthine. He has been off the with a long, stamped, selfSunday using a steel-plated, complain during 1917.
Second class )KlfiLige ' Pllid at
automobiles were tlle main inside to make !ure no one else was trapped there. Damage to
Pon.a-oy. Ohio.
medicine long enough that if addressed envelope for it to
tracked vehicle with a
is listed. as heavy.
Attorney General Wllliam cause • of
consumer the home
r NatiOnal
advertlslng
represen.
it were the cause, he would me in care of this newspaper,
protruding. bOom to lower J . Brown said Monday his complaints, accounting for
tative Ward • Grifflth Company-,
long .since have made a com- ' P.O. Box 1551 , Radio City Sta- Ioc ., BottlnellJ and Ga\)llgller Div.,
some 350 pounds of dynamite . Cons~er Fraud and Crime more than a quarter of the
GLIMPSES: Jean Marsh returns to New · York ·from
'm Third ~ve ., New York, N.Y.
plete recov~ry. It is true that lion, New York, NY 10019.
into
the
burning
gas
stream.
Switzerland
next week for rehelll'il81 of "Fallen ...,.els" with
Section
handled
more
calls
received
.by
his
10017.
Probanthine rarely has ·this
You should.encourage hbn
The massive P.xplosion cut off consJill)er_Cllmplaints__anLemployees.
Subscription rates : Delivered by ,
Sandy Dennis .•• Jimmy Col!non and Cbrtl EYert are dona lin«
carrier when! available 76 cents per
side effect- usually· it doesn't to see a doctor. Meanwhile,
the ol)ogen supply.
.
returned more mor ~y to Ohio
Mail ordefs and home im- tennis rackets and Boll Rope and Arnold Pabner have
week. By Motor Route where carrier
McAsey
said
cleanup
in tbe amounts commonly us- you. can belp by being
aenrlce not t,vaJllbie, One monlh,
consumers in 1917 than ever provements were the next promised pullers in the Jan. 14 celebrity auction to benefit the
f;US . By man in Ohio and w. Va .,
operations were being slowed before.
ed, but clearly your hus- Wlderstanding and being
.
.
leading causes of eomplalnts.' Assistance League of Palm Springs, Calli., Deaert Area ..•
Ote Y~r. ~.00 ; Sis: ~montha,
band's problem is more com- careful to sho.w an interest in
by the presence of poisonous · rn answer111g thetr com•
'IUO; Three mo~ths , '7.00 ;
Persons with a consmner Cllrlalopber Plammer is in New York after flnlsblng MGM's
plicated than that.
sex. but not to be demanding
Elsewhere $2fi.OO yNr; SIJ" monthJ
hydrogen sulphide in tbe plamts, Brown · said, \is complaint can contact the "International Velvet/' but he'll return to London at the i!nd of
$13.50; Three . months, $7.50.
escaping gas and swampy depa~tment returned $417,(100 attorney generals office at the mrnth to begin filming "Hoover Street" ... EDclebel:t
His case js a good example or 111 any way challenging his
$ubscr1Ption 'price lnclude11 Sunday
of il)lpotence being a symp- abilily.
conditions· at the well site to the P&lt;;&lt;&gt;.ple of Ohto.
Tlm,.SenUnel.
.,
tllis toll-free number : 1-800- Humperdlnck opens at the .Plaza In New York Saturday fo1e~a
•.
v
•
resulting (rom millions of
four-4iay stand....
That , ne added, does not 2ft2.«i15.

By Dale Rothgeb
$313,821 ; Operation of School.
The Gallia County local . Plant , $140,000; Maintenance,
•
Board of E ducatlo~ · Monday $34,000; Special ·service.o ,
in special session approved $3,100,730; Supplies, $501,331;
its · 1978 appropriations Material For Maintenance,
totalin g,
$5,813,859,
a $101 ,869 ; . Equipment
· decreas..-of ~9 ,227 .86 from Replacement , $274 ,22 3;
the 1977 appropriations. The Contract and Open Order
new budget will be generated Service, $238,075 ; Fixed
by 15.90 mills of loch! Charges, $727 ,037 ; Con·
taxation.
tingenl , $100,000; Capital
The Gallia Local Board of Outlay, $91,670 ; General
Education does not receive F\Jnd Debt Service, ,204,262.
st ate · funding. It does ,
Board Reorganl•e•
however , recei ve federal
Following the oath of office
monies from title programs. by board clerk Mrs. Naomi
The
ove rall
budget Beman to incumbent board
. represents an extension or . , member J . E. Cremeens, and
present prog rammin g or new· members, Jimmy Hill
plann ing , including such and David Carman, the board
fact ors as inflation, t he gas named James V. Blevins, Rt.
shortage situation, and in· 2, Bidwell, president for the
creased maintenance costs 1978 school year. Blevins,
which could require ad- assistant administrator of the
justments in the expenditure Holzer Medical Clinic, is
accounts.
beginning his third year on
Under tci'JilS of the "boartl- the board·.
t ea c h e r n e g o I i at ed
Dr. David R. Carman was
agreeme nt sig ned . last elected vice-president. The
September, the minimum board set its meeting dates
starting teachers' salary will for the second Saturday of
•
move from $9,000 to $9,500 each month. Beginning with
Aug. 23 1978.
the February meeting, all
The Roard's budget funds board sessions will be conare as follows:
ducted in the various county
General, $5,339,200; Bond, school buildings. ·
$33, 790 ;
Lunchroom,
The meeting schedule is as
$439,706 ; Permanent lm· follows : Feb. 11 at Southprovement Fund, $1,163.51. western High School; March
All Funds total $5;813,fti9.51. 11, North Galli a High School ;
· General ·fund receipts :will April 8, Kyger Creek . High
include $4,589,200 from . local .School ; May 13 , Hannan
real estate taxes ; a $500,000 Trace High School; June 10,
carry-over from 1977; Centerville Elementary ; July
$50 ,000 in interes t from 8, Bidwell-Porter; Aug. 12,
certificate of deposits and an Addaville; Sept. 9, Hannan
anticipated $200,000 the board Trace Elementary; Oct. 7,
will borrow.
Cadmus; Nov. 11, Vinton and
Here is a breakdown of the Pee. 9, Cheshire-Kyger
budget
by
various School.
categories :
Board compensation was
Administration,
$89,990; set at $20 per regular meeting
fn stru c tion, $2 , 434 , 119; plus 12 cents per mile for the
Coordinat ed Ac tivities , holdover members and $40
· $28,000; Auxiliary Agencies, per regular meeting plus 15

'

Scam;ters popUlar
in supennarkets

Seven autos go wrong on highways

Three held in murder,
robbery of ex-editlJr

Coal violence resumed

a

RUnaway
well · capped

HEALTH

'-

..

-

3-tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Jan. 3,1978

BOWLING

Teachers. hinge
raise ori

vote

for tax hike

.pe.o pletalk

l•
•

NOW

N'S

AVAI•.AIU

#AT OUR
STORE
OOUNTRY CURED

STORE HOURS

•HAMS
•FRESH

MOM. lHRU SAT. 9 .AM 10 9 PM

r

OYSTERS

~ffice plenty h~sy

M

,

•

u . s .o .A.

CHOICE BONELESS

_ _

,

[

FISH :

JowL.....................59

j

~-9U
s $119

See
Us.

REGULAR. SAGE or .HONEY BEE

.

SLICED BACON ·······"'""'
,.,, """ I+H•e•

$159

A::f."~

ALL

PURPOSE '

Any Special
Cuts· Of
··Meat You
Desire, ·
Stop In ·
or Call
and Wtt'll
·Cut It
To ·Your
Satisfaction
Small .

POTATOES_
50

~B.

·

BAG

.
ALE DATES

•2••

." .
.
. ~~·...'1 49
BONELESS
BE EF STEW.................
· .
BEEF CU ~ED . STEAK ......................t.~. ~ 1 69

ROME BEAUTY

MATOES

APPLES

49¢

RED - · . .
GRAPES ............. ~~: .
I

FRESH .

5 'LB.

FLORIDA ORANGES...~~~ .•.
YELLOW
ONIONS •.. •

...

FANCY

.

GREEN PEPP~S......

·

ggc
·· ¢

~ .,;·~·L·Bf

39~

KRAF T

CiiAPEJAMORJELLY
.

1
H

•

•••••••••• •

•

~~~·69'

KRAFT

1"1.-,L\IU UNPEELED OR WH OLE '"ULED.

MONARCH APRICOTS ................... ·~~": 49'

MIRACLE WHIP

.32 oz..JAR
Limit One with $10.00 Purchase Excluding
Coupon Item, Beer, Wine and Cigarettes.

MONARCH PEAR HALVES ............ H.'~;": 39•
OCUNif'~AY

CRANBERRY JUICE .

!:;:.: 69'

. ·········· H.

BOROEIIIS CRIMORA ........

THANK YOU

.CHERRY PIE FILLING.-.... .'~;-;:S1
49
~HROOMS ....... .'~;:'2:
~Mii!GI.-.NTSLICEDORWHOLE

· ,.

39

lUG

49

2/ 29c

~

•

·KIDNEY BEANS

PEAS ..........................4 '~;~: 100

11EEFARONI OR LASAGNA .................."::;:: 11"

' ""''
'""' ...r. , ""'"'"
•
.

u

....

'"'" ' "'"""' ...! l•lill"

,.
Q

•• •

4 . $·1oo:.
'1 •111

~

'

. l!iu•"•

7

~

ct.

flU11100

Q s r n ~r s

'

COFFEE

'~.~' 1 1" ~
. • IIJ' ~·

••••••••

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

............ - .. _

~

JIFFY CORN MUFFIN MIX ............ ......';:: 19' (ELECT DRIED NAVY lEANS ........ 2 ,',!', 99' ~

lla&lt;&gt;&lt;l ..

·

.:-::: &gt;M•

ll'f• l . ,.., ,,.,,..

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PUlEX BLEACH ....... ...............................~;~~.:'55•
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NABISCO COOKIES ....... .

TOWELS_

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Excluding Cooporlltem, ~~.
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JANUARY 2-7, 1978

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�1- The Daily SenUnel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 3.1978

TV•••in Review
By JOAN HANAUEr
UPI Televllliua Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Narnia is a magicallarxl discovered
by four children as they wander through the back o( a
wardrobe closet in an old English country home.
• In Narnip the children meet a heroic lion named Asian who
seeks t.ofree Narnia from the speUofthe evil White Witcll.
C.S. Lewis, who ordinarily coocentrated on more mature
themes, wrote seven books that make up."The Chronicles of
Narnia" and became a children's classic.
He also said, "! am almost inclined to set It up as a canon •
that a children's story which is enjoyed ooly by children is a
, bad children's story. The good ones last."
Children's Television Workshop, the folks w)lo gave us
"Sesame Sb'eet" and "Electric Company," now will be
turning the first book of the Narnia series, "The Uon, lhe
W~tch and the Wardrobe," into two hQur-long anima~ special
to be broadcast in early prime time on CJ!S.TV in 1079,
spollSQred by Kraft, Inc.
This is CtW's first move into priine-tlme commercial televi·
sion, and its first experiment with lull-length animation.
D3vid Connell, CTW's vice president for production and
e&gt;ecutive producer for the first "Narnia" show, believes the
show wUI be a huge success with the whole family. ,
"I first became aware of the books 10.12 years ago when I
was visiting a friend for a drink in his New York apartment,"
Connell said in a telephone interview from Cillifornia . "He
banded ioe this book and told me I had to read it. 'It's a fairy
.
·
tale,' I said, and he said, 'Shut up and read it."'
Connell read the whole series lor enjoyment, and it wasn~t
until three or four years later that he began I09king with a
professional eye into the rights to the books.
To further back his argument he points to !lie fact that "The ·
Chronicles" American· pubUsher, Macmillan, has sold 6
million copies of !lie books in this country in tbe last fiv.e years,
perhaps half to college age youngster.
"I am at this moment three blocks from the UCLA campus,"
Connell said, "and the bookstores aUaround the campus have
huge displays of 'The Oironicles.' Think about those kids who
were in college seven or eighty ears ago- they are likely to be

..

Jt

...

Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1978
•

1977 News Highlights ·i n -Meigs. &lt;;ount~

January
schools · were closed. The
Jan. I ~- H. E. (Pete) county fought with the nation
Shields announced his to conserve energy.
retirement from" the U. S. · Jan. 6- Residents showed
Department of Agriculture creativity by making all sorts
following . over 40 years of snow people and animals.
service. Cilrson Crow became · The Big Bass Anglers Club
assistant prosecuting at· named
Jim
Crow,
torney and Rich Jones was "Fisherman of the Year."
sworn as cDunty com·
Jan. 7 - The sheriff's
missiorler .
department began in·
Jan. 2- The retirement of vestigation of the ripoff of
State School Supt. Martin saddles and tack from horse
Essex, former superi n· barns at the . Rock Springs
tendent of Middleporl ·Fairgrounds.
Schools, was announced.
Jan. 8 - The Ohio Senate
Jan . 3 - The Meigs County honored L. . W. McComas,
Commissioners approved 2() Middleport, for his out·
percent of the year's budg_et standing contributions to
until they had time to study educatioo.
the rest of it. Mrs. Jane
Jan. 9 - A new snow storin
Wagner, Racine, was em- in Ohio broug!Jt about five
ployed as clerk-treasurer of inches more snow.
PRIME MINISTER
the Meigs Local School
Jan. 10 - Due to the snow
MelUihem Begto of Israel is
District and Larry Powell, and cold, schools were closed
a man . eaught In the
Pomeroy businessman, was [or the fourth consecutive
· middle. He must maintain
sworn
in as a new Pomeroy da_y. Henry . Wells was
·momentunl. toward a peace
Councilman. Robert Sayre reelected president of the
s·e ttlement with E'gypt,
was elected president of the co unt y commissioners.
while assurlnJ! his country·
Southern Loca l Board of Middleport Council adopted a
men that he Is not
Education and Ralph Werry $420,644 appropriations
negotiating away too
president of Pomeroy Village resolution and ·reelected
mueh. Nevertheless, Begla
Council.
Marvin Kelly president.
- like Egyptian President
Jan. 4 - Harold Roush was
Jan. II - A temporary
Anwar Sadat - expresses
again named to head the budget of $3,305,785 was
confideo&lt;e
that
an
Meigs County Board of adopted by the Meigs Local
agreement can be reached
Education and workers Board · of Education. Ryan
between the two countries
battled the cold weather to Daniel Buckley, son of Mr.
by spring. •
raze an auto storage building and Mrs. William L. Buckley,
on Uriion Ave., making room Route 3, Pomeroy, was
young .p3rents now.
for a new housnlg complex. winner " of The Daily Sen·
"I think 'Narnia' could become one of the true classiC. of
ENJOYS HOLIDAYS
Jan. 5 - Heavy snow tinei's t977 Baby Derby. Oris
family entertainment, watched every year the way 'The
POMEROY-Mr. and · Mrs.
caused
tough driving and Smith was elected president
Wizard of 'Oz' is watched."
Aaron Kelton spe nt
The. show is being done in animation because the special Christmas Day with Mr. and
· .effects of - for example - turning Narnia from eternal winter Mrs . Austin Kelton ,
into heautiful spring, would t~~ke an urllimited budget in the Gallipolis. Joining them for
1
$25-30 million area .
dinner were Mr. and Mrs. · Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson Mrs. Marvin McKelvey, Mike
!nst•ad, with a reall~ excellent animation specialist like Larry Kelton, Lori and Ter· entertained Christmas Eve and Jay, Debbie Griffin, Long
Chuck Jones ("How The Grinch Stole Christmas" and "Rikki- rie , Mr. and Mrs. John Dillon with a family dinner party. Bottom, and Brian and Bruce
Tikki-Tavi") as producer-&lt;iirector, the art work can be and Chris, and Willard Hero. There guests were Mr. and Johnson. On Sunday t he Don
spectacular and within budgetary bounds. ·
TI1e Keltons also visited in the Mrs. William A. McKelvey, Johnson family joined Mr.
afternoon with David Kelton Bruce McKelvey, Mr. and and Mrs. Thereon Johnson
for dinner.
at Bladen. It was the first ;•;·;···;-.···:..:.·;.:v:o.:.:.::«"!llli(i'~~ill·
~ews
Monday dinner guests of
-x- ·~ -·-·~~. . . .\«o.~o;
.
time in 40 years thatthe three
Mr.
and Mrs. Johnson were
ByMrs ..HerbertRoush
Johnson and family, ·Rodney Kelton brothers had heen
Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Konicek,
Chtistmas Day guests of Neigler of Racine; Valerie together at Christmas time.
Nancy
and Cheryl and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Findley Johnson of Rio Grande; Jerry
HAVE GUESTS
Irene
Konicek, Parma
were Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Johnson, Jr. of ' Glenville
Heights, Mr. and Mrs. Scutt
·
POMEROY
--C
hri
stmas
Jack
~hase
of
Dayton
is
Findley, son Ronnie · of College, Glenville, W. Va.;
Wheeler, Mary, Kathy and
Lancaster ; Mrs. Shirley Martin Cu nn ingham of guests of Mr. and Mrs. Simon here for a visit with his Laura; · Wheelersburg, and
Johnson and family were Mr. mother , Mrs. Eliza beth
Findley , Vicki and Scottie, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
and
Mrs. Clifford Might of Chase, and other relatives..
Ilk. and Mrs . Charles
Christmas Day guests of Vinton;
Mr. and Mrs.
Jotn,ason, Racine.
Michael, liec~y and Chuck, Mr. and MrS. Dallas HiU and Clarence Might and son,
Miss Kathryn Philson
Mr. and. Mrs. Roger Roush, Deah were· Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, David, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Edith Hayman
spent Christmas witll Ruth,
Mrs. Et hel Beauchine of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Jr ..
ENJOYS MEAL
Columbus, Mrs. Linda and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Metheney and son Jane and -Grace Ellis of
POMEROY-The
choir of
Jarrell, Mark, Mike; and Marshall Roush, Joey and Jeremy, Ewington; Mr. and Columbus.
!he
Enterprise
Uni.t ed
Mr. and Mrs. William A.
Marshall.
Gortney, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Donald Yost of Rutland,
Methodist
Church
hosted
a
K1
d s0 n,
Bruce
, spaghetti supper Thursday
Christmas Eve guests of . Darrell Norris an~ Tracy, Art Mr. and Mrs. Simon Johnson, Mceveyan
Sharon and Andre a, spent Christmas Day with
Mr. and Mrs. wuie Pickett Hill.
.
night at the home of Mr. and
and Tracy were Mr. and Mrs. ·
Bruce Hart of Columbus Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. .Mr. and Mrs. Marvin · Mrs. James F. Will.
Max Pickett, daughter Lynn, and ' wrna Bell were dinn.er Angelo McDaniel and son, McKelvey and family.
Attending were the Rev.
Mike, Clifton, W. Va . Calling Other guests ere Mr. •and
Regina Shaffer, all of Crown guests of Mr, and Mrs. Don~ · in
and Mrs. James Corbitt, Kay ,
the afternoon was Randy .
City, Mr. and Mrs. Charles ·Bell Christmas Day. Mr. and McDaniel, grandson Qf the . Mrs. George Schneidef' Gaii, Shellie and Mark; Mr.
Michael, Becky and Chuck, Mrs .' Paul Ervin, Mr. and
C Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grimm and Mrs. Dale Davis, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs . .Roger Roush. Mrs. Wayne Ervin of Bashan , hosts. Another son, PF.
Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, !;aura
C)lristmas
Eve
and · Rd. were 'Sunday evening Robert E. .Johnson of Hawaii and Christy, Columbus and Ohlinger, Beverly and Brian
called to wish his parents ·a Mr. and Mrs. Steve Grimm
Christmas Day guests of Mr. · visitors of the Bells. ·
Will, F;reda Lieviog, Beulah
of Cambridge, spent the
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp and
Christmas Day guests of Merry Christmas.
Utterback, Patty Edwards,
weekend here visiting Mr. Kelly Wilson, Emmalou
Rockey and Mr . and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and
Mrs. Bert Grimm.
Eddie Hupp were Mr. and were. Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Davis, JoYce Davis, and Mr.
In
1972,
American
Mrs. Charles Hupp and Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Charles industrial leader Charles
and Mrs. Dan Cotterill.
CAROLERS TREATED
children of Marengo; Mr. and Michael, Becky and Chuck, Wilson died a t the age ·of 85.
Twerity- t wo pe r.so n s
Mrs. Kenny Bass, Corinna Mrs. Iva Orr, Cindy Roush,
representing the Middleport
and Kenda of wuisville, Ky.; Edward Roush.
United Pentecostal Ch urch
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp, · Mr. and Mrs. Don . Bell
. ·went caroling Friday evening
. Jimmy and Billy, Mr. and visited Raymond-Bell at the Cheshire.
Mrs. George Hupp, Mr. and Arcadia Nursing Home,
Spending Christmas Day to several homes in the
Mrs. Jim Knighting, Racine . Coolville Christmas Day and with' Mr . and Mrs. Roy . county, giving special atMr. and Mrs. Greg Davis of attended church serv ices Pear,son, Sally and Robin, . · tentfon to the Meigs County
North Carolina visited Mr. with Mr. Bell in the afternoon were Mr. and ·Mrs. Junior Inlirmary and the Veterans
Salser, Mr. and Mrs, Cljw&gt;(es Memoria 1 Ho s pita I.
. and Mrs. Eddi~ Hupp Christ· · at the home.
mas Eve.
Mr . and · Mrs. Edward Matthew and Marcy, Mike Doughnuts, pop and coffee
Oiristmas' Day guests of Cross en tertained With a Salser, Shelia Crouch, Mrs. were ser-ved to the carolers in,
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross party at their hom&amp; Christ· Betty Theiss and Barby, Beth the basement of the church
were Paul Cross of Colum· mas Eve. Attending were Mr . Theiss and Mark.
upon their retum.- ....
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Edward and Mrs. Andrew Cross; Mr.
Cross; Mrs. George Hill, and Mrs. Don Bell, wrna Bell
Eric, Mandy -and Teressa, and Bruce Hart.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Casto of
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Roush
Evans, W. Va .; Mrs. ·Eva · of Aurora, Ill. a re spending
., Carver of East Uverpool ; Christmas ·and the holidays
Paul Cross · is spending his with Mrs. Mary Roush and
vacation from Ohio State family . They also visited her
University with his parents, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
·
•.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross . . Jones at Shade, 0 . Chl-istmas
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Ables dinner guests of Mrs. Roush
of Groveport,
and were
. Mrs.
Ronnie Ohio,
Ables,.Mr.Vicki
Roush,Mr.
· Mr .and
andMrs.
Mrs.Terry
Mar- .
Abies of Canal Winchester shall Roush, Joey and Cort·
spent the Christmas weekend ney, Fred Shane and John
with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables Shane. ·
and Paul..
Marshall Roush took Mr.
Mrs. Larry Foster, Mr. and and Mrs. Herschel Roush,
Mrs. Bill Wheeler of Mrs. Leora Young to see their
Fremont, Mrs; Ed Morris, brother, Darrell Roush at
bowling Green, visited Mr. University
Hospital,
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Columbus.
Christmas Day · guests
Christmas Day guests of
of Mr . and Mrs. Bob Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
Spencer ~nd ·Tracy were and family weM Mr. and
Do uglas Barnette, Mr. Mrs. Don Riffle and children,
an d Mrs. Paul Bow· Mr. and MrS. Dick Smith, ,
ers, David, Mar) Meth, Middleport; Mr, . and Mrs.
Katie May Bowers of Jim Connolly, Shelly and ·
Every day is·· Dairy Isle Day
Parkersburg, Mr. and Mrs. Brhin of Syracuse; Mr. and
Bub Barnette, son Jeremy of Mrs. Roger Manuel, Amy ·and
b~cause
every , day. we
Parkersburg were weekend Angie, Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
spacialize
in
delicious
guests of the Spencers.
Gary Roush and children.
sundaes, shakes, floats and
Christmas Day guests of
Mrs. Till Webb spent
cones. All kinds of marvelous,
Mr. and Mrs.· Robert Smith Christmas Eve with her
Sr. were Mr. and Mrs; Jerry daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
mouth-watering coricocti 0ns.
James Fife and family at

Jobnsons host family dinner

Apple Grove

Notes

of the EiSttrn weal Board of
Education.
Jan . 12 - Linda Spencer
wa·s named clerk-treasurer of
the Southern ·wca) School
District Board ol Education ~
A masked armed robbery
took place at the Five Points
Grill.
Jan. 13 - Eastern and
Meigs ·schools remained .
closed for the !jl!venth con·
secutive day. More snow fell
and, temperaturlJS dropped '
well below zero.
Jan. 14 - David W. Fox,
East Letart, was named new
executive director of the
Meigs County Agricultural
Stabilization and Co.nservat1'on Serv1'ce.
Jan. 15 - Residents
welcomed a rise in t he
temperature which for the
first time in 12 (jay~ clinibed
to 34.
-. Jan. 16 - Imperial Electric
Co. of Middleport announced
it would move into a 10-hour,
four.day_week work program
to conserve energy. ·
Jan: 17 - Martin Luther
King Day was observed at the
courthouse and other govern·
mental offices. All schools
closed when a power outage
occurred and , the weather
· remained extremely cold. ke
clogged the Ohi6 River and
the M.eigs Jaycees tried their
liand at creating a public ice
skating rink .
·
Jan. 18 - All · schoo.ls
remained closed with temperatures ra nging to 14 below
zero.
Jan . 19- Another inch and
a half of snow fell and schools

t' l i
• li
• •

Pomeroy ·
~~ Personal Notes

conditions.
"
Jan . 28 - Stores and •
businesses in Pomeroy and ~ .
Middleport closed at noon due •
to a severe snow storm but • ·
Meigs County missed a great •
part of the worst. ')'he Meigs :
County Emergency Agency ;
was formed to cope with
weather
and
energy .1 ·
problems.
Jan. 29 - Schools of the ;
Meigs Local District were •
closed indefinitely because of t
the natural gas curtailment. :
Jan : 31 .,. Schools of :
Eastern and Southern weal ~
· reopened. Personnel of ':
business houses wore coats, :
hats and gloves as the energy :
·
· :
conservat10n
program htt
home.
,
·
•
(To be continued)
'

_USDA
CHOICE

BEEF

CHUCK
STEAK

•

NOW OPEN
•

bugs had a field day
photographing snow rolls
created ·in the county's hills
and fields b~ unusual weather

LB.a9~
.

GINO'S
OF MASON

.

PHONE 773-5536
••

••••

··1 0000

.,

On All Living Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE

r.emained closed.
Jan . 20 - Schools were

U

0

Meigs County was presented
to the Meigs Pioneer and
,Historical Society.
Jan. 21 _ Pomeroy Council
. rejected aU bids on a tractor,
backhoe and loader. .
• Jan. 22 _ Organizations
postponed regular meetings
as the bitter cold continued.
Jan . 23 _ The election of
Robert Johnson as Racine
'&lt;Fire Chief was announced.
. )an. 24 - Another inch and
a half of snow fell and
schools, scheduled to open
today, remained clos~..
School teacher Dewey Horton
was named to fill a vacancy
on Middlep()rt CounciL C. E.
Blakeslee was reappointed
' t or of th e
execu t'tve d .rec
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. ,
Jan. -25 - The Meigs
County Commissioners approved a budget of . over
$1.500,000. Schools remained
cldsed with most of them
having been ·closed since Jan.
5,_
' Jan . 26- The Meigs Local
School District laced new gas
cutbacks.
Jan. 'll - Local camera

closed for the remainder of
the week. The election of .
Gary Dill, Chester Township,

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat·8:30 til 5:00 Thursda¥ Til 12 Noon

as president of the Meigs

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

County Assn. of Township,
Trustees and Clerks, was
announced. A new history of

· Herman Grate ·
Mason , W. Va .

773-5592

=

~

PRICES·GOOD TARU
SAT., JANUARY 7TH
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

"' No· DfALERS PLEASE!
·Open Monday thru Saturday
9amto9pm
Open Sunday 9 am to ~ pm

' 'H
.

A
R

REPLACEMENT

D

w

w,

L-o-:llr

GUA-ANTEEI

BUY NOWI

A
R
E

.,. · AT

SLICES OR HALVES

,CROSS HARDWARE

29

9: 00jo5 :00

Middleport

4

STARTS WEDNESDAy
MORNING .AT

~~0

I

L
••

NO. 325

~IZE

••• • •··· • • •• ...... • • • • •••• ... • ••• • • •• ,, thru 2$"
LENGTH•••••••••.•••••• 6'4", 7'8", 8'6", 11' and 12'6"

PAY BY MEASUREMENT OR WEIGHT
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•

6- The Daily Sentll)!l, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1978

.

.

Is it Notre
.

Today's .

s~~ri f!!!ade
UPI Sporia Editor
'
UPI )- Notre oT."\&lt;!'S[!ghling Irish are h.&gt;ollerinlt!
.
'reNo. today, and alter watching the way they tore
Texas, they're oot going lo gel any light from me.
They convinced me - positively and completely. Not only
me, but millions on television and 76,701 others in the·Cotton
!Jowl, who sat and stared dumbfoonded Monday at the a!moot
ridiculous ease with which the fired-up Irish utterly humillated
the previously unbeaten Longhorns, 38-10, in a contest that
wasn't actually that close .
The Longhorns came in~ the game favored, and why not?
They were the top-ranked team in the nation and had won aU II
ol their regular seasons games. The Irish, ranked fifth, showed
a I().I record with an early season I088to Mississippi their only
blemlsl&gt;.
· ·
But by the .t ime Notre Dame was 'through with Texas, and by
the time half back Vegaa Ferguson scored tlu'ee louchdowns
and fullba'ck Terry Eurlck had added two more, there wasn.'t
much question anymore over who was really No. I.
Oh, sure, Arkansas can make a lot of nol!e over Its lopsided
31-6 upset 9l Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl and Alabama can
also point to its~ shellacking of Ohio State in the Sugar bowl.
Neither, however, can claim they beat the best college football
team In the cmmlry , which vlrtuaUy everyone agreed Texas
was Wllil It ran head on into Notre Dame.
" I doni think anybody in the country can beat&gt;us," said Notre
Dame's Coach Dan Devine, alter the manner in which his team
manhandled theJ.onghorns. "l may be stating it stroogly, but I
' ·
feel it strongly."
. Fred Akers, Texas classy coach, heard what Devine and his
players had to say and responded this way : "I dont blame
them. What can they lose by feeling that way?"
He smiled when he said that, possibly the only time be did
during a long, wretched afternoon. In h!J heart, Ulough, Aiters
felt his Llnghorns still were No . I.
"Their record is not any better than ours," he said. "I still
think were the best. We had a bad day and that's not like us."

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But at least lour coaches disagree with it.
Bear Bryant wants No. I alter hill Crimson Tide smashed
Ohio State, ~. in the SUgar Bowl and. Lou Holtz lee!J the
same way after Arkansa.! shocked second-ranked Oklahoma,
31_., in the Orange Bowl. Joe Paterno of Penn State and Fred
Aker ol Texaa abo want consideration.
All finished the season at 11-1.
. In the ooly suspenseful game ol the day Washington held off

. ··--"-·. ' .................. ..._
.... .. _.
:·

.

)'•

;

By JIM COVR ~
UPISporll Writer
PASADENA, Cali!. (UPI )
.,... There was a time when !llg
Ten football clubs came into
the. R09e Bowl and virtually
gobbled up Pacific Coast
teams.
Not any more, thooglt...:rhe
worm has reaDy turned.
Washington ·performed
Monday llke anything but a
two-touchctown uiiderd0g in
the 64th Rose Bowl and,
although Bo Schembechler's
Woiverines made it exCiting
at the finish. tile ·Huskies

.

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team in lhe country tonight."
" In my mind, I think we are No. I, but I don't have a vote,"
satd Holtz in. the Arkansas Clresaing room. "We have a great
football team . We can play with anyon~. Even the Knights ol
Columbus sent me a telegram telling us we should be No. t;•
. The Rose Bowl wasn't a factor in the chase lor No. I, lll!tMichigan Coach 80 Schembechler would have enjoy.O
wiMing anyway. He is now 0-4 at Pasadena and O.S in bowla.
"We'D be back," Schembechler said lamely. "We'll have il, ·
good team·next season and we hope to come back and win Ol!\.
here." ,
Washington's victory - in its first Rose Bowl appearance Ia ·
14 years- was the fourth in a row by lbe Pac.- over the Jlijj "
Ten and its eighth in the last ninf meetings. The Big Ten's lead
since the series started oow bas dwindled lo 18-14.
"We've got to go home and go recruiting oow, " Washington
Coach Don James Said. "I hope to. come up with 30 good
loothall players from this game."
James, 45, had his tongue in his cheek. He'll have 18 of 22
starters back from. his Rose Bowl championship learn.

..

Pac-lloverthe Big Ten and its
eighth In the last nine
meetings. The Big Ten's lead
since the series started now
has dwindled to 18-14.
"We've got to go home and
go
recruiting
now,"
Washington Coach Don
James said, longue· in cheek.
He'D have 18 of 22 starters
back from his Rose !Jowl
championship learn.
But one of the players he'll
Jose is Warren Moon, who
was
selected. as the
outstanding
player
of
M(llday's game.

Gym to:p.I·ght '

Bulldogs ·m· Mo"rr.l·son

Its lb·o., Floyd Nibert,
Chuck Wbltliogton.
liZ lba., John Ebltll.
.
lit lbs., Jack Humphreys,
Jeff P""llham, Rick Baker.
IZ6 lba., Scott McKinn~y.
i32 lba., Herb Noel, Mark
Rfll•· Charles Stone.
138 lba., Gary Priddy .
!Uiba., levin MciAugblln.
1551ba., Van Wilford, Jerr)'
Howard.
181lba., Roberi "Nakamoto,
Bob Cbappalear.
175 lba., Bob Seelig.
115 lbs., Steve KtozeL
Uollmlled, Dave Davia.

Moon scored a pair of
touchdowns on short runs in
the opening half as the
Huskies rolled up a 17-0 lead
against
the
stunned
Wolverines.
Alter
.a
tremendous goal~ine stand
by theWashington defense; in
which noseguard Clill Bethea
stopped Roosevelt Smith for
M gain on a fourth-and-one
situation on the Husi!Y · 3,
Moon drove his team 97 yards
in 12 plays for a ~lead with
9:39 ~one in the second half,
hitting S!&gt;ider Gaines with a

.,•
.

.
28-yard..rtiuchdilwn strike.·
With 1:21 to go, linebacker .
Passiflg lor 195 yards B(ld Mik~ Jackao~ came up with
two touchdowns in the second an mterception of a Leach
half Rick Leach rallied the pass on the Washington 3. '
Woi~erines and almost pulled With 32 seconds r~ining, '
it out. But he couldn't quite do Nesby Glasgow p•cked off·
it as the Huskies ·came up another Leach pass on the
with two big interceptions in Husky 7.
he.
the final minutl'-&lt;md-a.half.
Leach refused to credit t
For the game, Moon Washington defense.
completed l:l&lt;Jf-23 passes for
"I don't lee! they stopped
188 yards and me lollchdown. ,us," he s,~id. · "We '!Stopped•
He had one intercepted. His · ourselves.
more
publicized
rival
· quarterback, Leacb •. was 14for-27 for 239 y'!l'ds and two
touchdown~
with
two
interceptions.
"This is the ultimate, the
day I 've always wanted,"
~

I

.
I

Moon said. "Warren Moon is

Becker will join- Elkins at the is a winner."
guard. With Meigs coming on
Leach teamed with Curt
strong, fans could be in for · Stephenson for a Rose Bowl
some excitement tonight.
record 7S.yard bomb lor his
llrst touchdown pass. at 10:29
ol the third. qua~ter for
Michigan 's first points.
And the Wolverines could
have won the game with a TD
and a two-point conversion in
the fourth . B.ul the Huskies
had things goiug their way .

Eastern teams
,go at it· again

a

Hall of F

Jan. Zl, Federal Hockhig
(Boys), Away.
Jan. 23, Kyger Creek
(Junior High), Home.
Jao. 23, · Haonan Trace
(Girls)\ Home.
Jao. · 24, Haonao Trace
(Boys), Away. _
Jao. 25, ,Southern (Juolor
High), Home, 5 p.m.
Jan. 26, Southwestern
(Girls); Away. ·
Jan. 27, Southwestern
tBoys) , !lome.
Jan. 30, Haonan · Trace
(.tuolor High), Home, 5:15
p.m.
, Jan. 30, Hannan Trace
(Girls), Away.
Jan. 31, Southern (Boys),
Away.
Feb. 1, Wahama (Junior
. High) , Hooie, 5:30 p;m.
Feb. 2, Federal Hocking
(Junior High) Away, 5 p.m.
Feb. 3, Harlem All States,
Home,
Feb. t, · Southwestern
(Boys), Away.
Feb. 7, Waterford (Boys) ,
Home.
Feb: 8, Southern (Girls),
Home, 5:30 p.m.
Feb. 8, Hanoan Trace
(Junior High), Away, 5:45
p.m.
Feb. 10, Kyger Creek
(Boys), Away.
·
Feb. 14, Waterloo (Junior
High), Home, 5 p.m.
Feb. 17, Haonan Trace
(Boys), Home.
Feb. ZO, Gallia Academy
(Girls); Home.
Feb. 20-25, · Sectlooal
(Boys) . .
Marcb 1·4, Secllonal
(Girls)·.
March 1-4, l)lstrlct (Boys).
March 6-11,
District
tGirls) .
March 6-ll, Regional •
(Boys).
March 13-18 (Slate (Boys),
Marcb 13-18, Regional
Wlrlsl.
,
March 20-25, Slate (Girls) .

'

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PHONE 773-5536

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three when Bryant calle&lt;l {o~ momentarily b)' the Uli(d .•&gt;;.-. il~yes, {ho was je&amp;rEI!l!lld ..&lt;"tor the Sugar Bowl.
a touchdown play o11 foljlith ,(:ri mson
T,lde
score . taW! ted b~ Alabama fans
"A lot or our guys really
and goal, and Rutled~e was (i.larterback Rod Cerald hit as he strode · in down.to the dldn't want to crune here in
stopped at the line of Jim Harrell ~itli a 38-yard· dressing room altl'rwurds, the first place because we lost
scrinunage.
· pass lor Ohio Statl''s 10110 was hwnbled. He pr•isc'&lt;l to
Michigan,"
said
· The next two marches score.
Alabama highly .
quurWb.ck Gerald.!
started at Ollio State:s 24 and
If it was a lhreat. ti10ugh.
·'They outplayed us in
Offensive tackle Joe
Rutledge led lhe ·Crimson Alabrun• squelched it quickly almost every area ," he said . Robinson a~rel'&lt;i motivation
Tide to touchdowns on holh . with two more TD's la te in "niey,moved the footbllll oo was p.1rt of U1e Buckeyes'
He hild passes · of 29 ~nd 9 U!e fourth quarter - a 1- us about as well as any tenm I problem .
yards before Tony Nathan yarder by Major Ogilvie and can remember in a long, long
-"We're not us«llo going lo
dove qverlrom the one lor the a :;.yard burs! by second ' time."
a S&lt;'«•nd-rato bowl, " he said.
first score, then caughi·Bruce ·team Alillmerica fullbac k
'Hayes
"ngied
out .,·_.___...;,_ _ _ _ _ •.
Belton alone in the end rone Johnny Davis .
lluliedge, a 6- 1. 19SVound
Iron\ 27 ya rds oot for -the
Alabama , playing in its junior from liinninghlllll .
second.
19tll const.ocutive bowl game, ·
,;Be got 'em uut of trouble
)lutled ~e. who played on1y
moved the bail almost at will. several times." H;lyes SHid .
three quarters before going ·rumbles were virtually t h ~ "He was the· right rilan al ·thr
oullor Alabama'ssecond-and · ooly mistakes by lhe Tide, right time , He jllayl'&lt;l v1•ry
thirdstrin gers, made the and eig ht of U1e 10 were good lootbnil."
score 21-G with a 3-yard pass recove red before Ohio State
Alabama iosl .on ly Olll", lA!
to Rick Neal late in lhe third got anywhere""'" tllem .
Nebraska , during its 10-1
quarter .
In addition to the 109 season. Ohio Slllte lost twice
The Buckeyes. wt10 t!u'eat- passing ya rds, Alabama - with a 14-ii loss to Big Ten
enedonlyonce \n the lirst hai! marched well on the ground, rival Michigan in the lnst
but lost the ball on lou~h Led by Davis with 95 yards in game of U1e scnson ~ 1\•i n g
down at Alabama 's ·:;.yar(l 24 carries,lhe Tide rushed for Michigan li s trip tn· UIC Hose
line,
wer e . riled
up . 280 yards on 68 a ttempts.
!Jowl while Ohio Stale sell!c'i

MIAMI (UPI)- If you ask
never really let up. Their first for three quarters . The
the folks in Miami, they'll ~n
touchdown came on the Sooners finally scored early
you Arkansas is the No. I
game's fifth · play from in the fourth qliarter on an Bcollege football team.
yard pass frilm De~n Blevins
scrimmage.
Coach Lou Holtz's RazorA quick, swarming defense, io tight end Victor Hicks . .
backs, three-touchdown ' led by tackle' Dan Hampton
underdogs ,
reared
up and middle guar~ Reggie
Monday11nd pounded second- Freeman ,
shut
down
ranked Oklahoma, 31-6, the Oklahoma's feared wishbone . AWAITS ARRAIGNMENT
.
44th Orange Bowl Classic .
Fullback Roland Sales and
CLEVELAND ( UPI) "In my mind, I think we are quarterback Rori Calcagni William H. Seawright awaits
'
No. 1, but I don't have a
provided the offense.
arraignment
on
new
vote," said Ho)tz in the
Sales churned to an Orange CUyahoga P,unty grand jury
Arkansas dressing room . Bowl record 205 yards oo 22 indictmentli stemming from
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::::::::,::::::;:::::::::::::::: · " We have a great football carries
and
scored gambling charges filed
tl'am. We can play with IDuchdowns of I and 4 yards. against him and 15 . other
anyooe . Even the Knights ol Two runs of 38 yards and people last July.
Columbus sent me a telegram another of 35 set up three of
Original indictments
telling us we should lje No: 1." the surprising Razorbacks' against him were dropped
Oklahoma Coach Barry four touChdowns. ·
last Tuesday by Common
Switzer, whose Sooners had
" He · r'lll north and south Pleas Judge James Kilcoyne
thought they had an excellent and.. did everything he had to at the request of the county
chance a·t the national do . J. wasn't surprised by his pro~lor'soffice because of
championship witll a win in performance I was a technical error.
Orange
Bowl , shocked," said Holtz, who
the
Seawright and his coUnited Press International
complimented Holtz for "a can't resist cracking a joke defendants were reindicted
When
you're
from fantastic job ."
. every other sentence or so .. last week lor engaging in
Wisconsin, you don't want to
" We might have played the
Sales said he was surprised organized crime, gambling,
go to Kansas to find out about best team in the country when he heard his yardage.
possession of gambling tools
cheese - as in Lynbert tonight,'' he said. ~~They gave figure .
and operating a gambling
"Cheese" Johnson.
us a thorough, thorough
"I felt I had a hundred house .
So Marquette Coach Hank whipping ."
yards, but I had no idea I had
Raymonds had his lourtliThe Razorbacks took 200 .' ' said the 192-pound
ranked Warriors put the control immediately and sophomore from Fort Worth,
damp on Wichita State's
Tex. " All the plays we
"Oleese" and the move paid
worked on for a week just
policy~
off handsomely.
.
worked." ·
·
,L.
Marquette utilized a stiff
His first tou~down came
zone defense and came away
after -Oklahoma's Billy Sirnil
with a 76-56 victory to raise
..
fumbled ori the third play of
its record to 8-t ·
You can help cut down orr
the game and' tackle Jimmy
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cin•. Walker recovered. Calcagni
"We wanted to jam up the
crime losses ... losses. that
middle and and try to keep clnnati Reds standouts was next to score lor tbe
directly
affect
you,
the ball away I rom 'Cheese,'" George Foster, Pete Ro:ie Razorbacks, pushing over on
whetner t~ey happen to you
or not .
Raymonds said. "We didn't and Tom Seaver will be a sneak from the !-yard line
reaDy care who shot from the honored Jan. 21 at the at the end ol a 58-yard, sevenTake the crime .of arson .
outside if we could keep Ballplayers of Yesterday's play drive highlightl'd by one
You're · paying
an
Johnson from killing us 36th annual dinner-dance .
ol Sales' 38-yard rambles.
Increasingly heavy subsidy
inside."
The group is composed of
for dellberately set fire~· '··
After leading 14&lt;l · at the
ButCh t:ee had 21 points foe major and minor league llalf, Arkansas scored on Its
through · your iris,urance
Marquette, whose only loss players and friends ol first two possessions in the
premiums.
thb year came at the hands of. . IJaseball.
·third quarter, first on a 32Louisville Dec. 22.
. Foster won the National yard field goal by Steve Little
Insurance
costs
are
advers~ly ' · affl;!cted
by
Lee hit 11-ol-15 shots from · League's ·Most Valuable and agafn on -: Sales' 4-yard
burglliries, robberies and
the floor and was backed by Player Award this year,
'
cor thefts ... . plus tne
Jerome Whitehead with 13 hitting 52 home runs and burst.
Finally, senior Barnabas
countles.s CB radios and
.points and Cary ~senberger driving In 149 runs. Rose While raeed in from 20 yards
bicyGLes that turn up
and Oliver Lee with 10 each. batted .311 and pushed his out to wrap up the Rawrback
missing . ·
Whitehead also bad game- career hit total to within 34 of scoring .
the · coveted 3,000-mark .
high !6 rebounds.
One thing Y,OU can do Is to
Meanwhile,
Hampton,
"Butch Lee played another Seaver won 14 of 17 decisions Freeman,
support
programs
Walker and
providing stiffer penalties
super game; just displaying in a Reds uniform for a 21-6 company were holding a
for
wrongdoers
and
his AII·Amerlea status in fine record and 203 career stuttering
Oklahoma
proposals for strengthened
' fashion,'' said Raymonds, In victories.
wishbone out ol the end zone
crime invest igatiOI) efforts .
his first year as .the Warriors'
. coach. "Jerome Whitehead
You can also · make It
was abo very instrumental."
tougher . for crooks. Use
For Wichita Slate, Ray
good strong locks. Mark
Shirley had . 16 points and
posses~iol)s with
your
~ohnson 14.
social securltv nt.,~mber .
Meanwhile, in Lexington,
Our agen cy
provides
Ky., the lop-ranked Wildcata
financial protection and
put away a cold-llhooting
service wn·en crime lo~seS
Vanderbilt, 72-59, in a
occur ... but many can be
Southeastern Conference
prevented . That's why we
opener.
say - prevention Is the
Before a sellout crowd of
best policy. ·
23,464, Kentucky did not look
partlculatly sharp but its .
pressure zone was more than
enough ' for Commodores.
ln-2143
"We pl~yed like I thought
102 W. Maih
Pomeroy
we would and hoped we
wouldn't" said Kentucky
Coach Joe Hall said. ·
.
.
Kentucky, coming off a
tough game against Notre
'
.
Oame, raised its record to 90. James Lee had 17 points
t :·.ADLII&lt;IE FOR PURCHA$EOF 1978 DOG LfCEI&lt;ISE IS JANUARY 20TH TWO
and Jack Givens 15 for the
DOLLARS (52.00) PENALTY IF LICENSE IS "PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE
Wildcats, who led by 12 at the
FOR ·YOUR CONVENlENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND
ball.
.
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW. FEES ARE
Vanderbilt; using a full
TWO DOLLAR_S l$2 .00) FOR-EACH DOG, MALE OR FEMALE .
court zone press in the S.oond
To obtain license by mail, filf In and mail this form to HOWARD E FRANK
half, came within 10 points,
COUNTY AUDITOR, MEIGS, COUNTY, POMEROY, OHIO,
.
'
·but the Wildcats' starters reentered to seal the victory.
Rick Robey added 12 points
Enclose- self-lddressed stamped envelope and price of license.
for
Kentucky
while
Vanderbilt was led by
Male Dog $2.00'-Spayed Fem~le $2.1l0-Female$2.0Q-Kennel License SIO
freshman guard Mike Rhodes
·' with 16 and Charles Davis
OWNER'S NAME----~--~--~------------~~------~
with 10.
In the only other game
· ADDR E$5------------------------------------~--Involving a top-l'anked learn,
beaten by
Cincinnati
Gegrgia Tech, ~­
TOWNSHIP'---~-~-----------------------------Clnclnnatl led, . 35-26, at
halftime, but with 12:20 left
Age
Sex
a-gia Tech drew even.
COLOR
Breed Fees
stanley Drummer with a
Yr . Mo. M F Blk White Gray Brindle Tan Brown· Yellow Long Short
total ol 25 points, then scored
three lllraight jump shots to
bury the Bearcats.
Pat
Cummings
led
Cincinnati with ~ points .
Elsewhere, it was St. Bona,
.yenture 93, looa 87; Alabama
65, Miaidsslppi 62; Auburn 76,
a-gia 69; Duke~. VIrginia .
Tech 79"; Florida 92,
Tennessee 79; South carolina
68, Tennessee Tech 5l;
County Auditor of Meigs County ·
Dlinoia Stale M, Bradley 83;
Texas-EI Paso 51, Loulstana
'
License must be obtained not later than Jan. 20, 1971 to avoid plying ·penatty. After
Tech 45; Utah · 91, Fairleigh
this dote pona~y 1jll be 12.00 lor single tag lnd $5.00 lor kennel tlc:enae.
.
.j))lcklnson 68, and Oregon 78,

a

•'·

Dr.A. I.S...~H

s0. 0 n ers thumped

Titree Reds to
recei"ue honors

One or two day full
denture service,
· panials &amp; relines .

yve're here . to see you get the BEST
onsurance at a fair price. And we'll see that ·
you receive fast. fair settlement of all
claims.

•

Prevention is the

' CUARANTEEI

NOW OPEN

I

U.yes, a lot more subdued
and a little . more hesitant,
still CO!Iceded the cp1estioq .
" I haven 't.seen those other
teams play," he said. " But on
the basis of what I saw today ,
(Alabama) would be No. 1.
You coulm't ask a team to do
more to us than they dld ."
Rutledge look the Crimson
Tide on tong drives its first
three possessions. The first
drive ended on Ohio State's

oil Page 10

a quarterback. Warren Moon

last year, the 'Dogs are games . KeMy Yo.ung, the
rUMing a laster game and team's leading scorer, will be
are pressing more. Their big tea~ed with Chuck Follrod at
guys can also hit from out- the forward slots. Greg
side, so ,Meigs will have Its
hands fuD.
But the Marauders have
been coming up with a lew
surprises of their own. Aller a
very slow start in. which the
offenses just couldn't get
going, Meigs surprised
Jackson and Wahama lor
their two wins, and came
very close to upsetting unBy Greg Bailey
defeated Waverly. Coach Ron
Aller being out of action
Logan has been getting
since the- first week ol
balanced scoring attack from December, the Eastern
his crew, and Coach Giboon . Eagles wiD be back In cage
and his boys won't take the action. All · Eagle teams Marauders lightly as they too girls, boys and Junior high are at 2.-.
were forced to discontinue
Coach Logan will be action when the schoob were
starting the same crew that closed due to financial
has been successful for h!m.of problems.
late, with the exception of
But . starting tonight,
Tim Coats who has J~ had a regular play will resume with
battle with a flu· bug . Coats many ol the missed games to
will be available, but may not be made up. Tooightthe boys' ·
be at luU strength. Billy varsity basketbaU team will
Elkins will liU that starting try lor their first victory ol
spot at the guafd.
the season when they enBrent Stanley will be back tertain the. Wahama While
at center after showing much Falcons. Wabamal! fresh o.ll
improvement in recent ' a .tlu'illing upset win over
powerful Southern during the
holiday break. ·
Following is a rev.ised
.schedule ol Eagle basketball
.(aU teams):
·
J,an. 3, Wabama (Boys),
Home.
Jan. 5, Wabama (Ju"lor
8Dle'
High), Away, 5 p.m.
Jan. 5, Southern (Girls),
Away:
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Jan. I, S011them (Boys),
Former Ohio University
Home.
baseball Coach Bob Wren wW
Jan. 7, Wabama (Boys),
be Inducted into the
Away.
American Association of
Jan. 9, Kyger Creek
College Baseball Coaches
(Junior Hi&amp;b), Away.
Hall of Fame Jan. ·7, in
Jan. 9, ~ymmes Valley
Atlanta, Ga.
(Girlo), Home. •
In 24 years at OU, between
Jan. 10, Woterford (BOys);
1948 and 1972, Wren never Awoy.
·
suffered a loslnli seaso~. He
Jan; 1%, .Federal Hocking
compiled a 464--1~ record
(Juator·Hfgh), Away.
and helped the school to ll
Jao. IZ, North Galli&amp;
Mid·American
Conference
(Glrla), Away. ·
baseball championships.
Jao. 13, North Gallia
Under Wren's tutelage, 54
(Boys), Home. •
Bobcat players . signed
Jan. t, Syinmes Valley
professional contracts. He
(Boyt), Away.
has also been Inducted Into
.lao. 11, Belpre ( Juolor
the Ohio Univer$ty Hall ol
High),
Away, 4:30 p,m,
Fame In 1961 and Into the
Jan.
19, Soothern ( Juolor
Ohio High School Baseball
Hllb),
Away,
5 p.m.
Coaches HaD In 1974.
·
[ao.
lt,
Kyger
Creek
In 1972, Wren Joined the
(Girlll),Away.
,
.
Philadelphia Phillles as an
Jan, %0, Kyger Creek
Instructor · and manager .
!Boys),
llome.
After 2111 years, he returned ·
lo Ohio University as
assistant
director
of
admissions.

nine
yards
and two who was' chosen most
touchdowns.
valuable player in the Sugar
It was 8 repeat of last 8o1!'1.
year's Liberty Bowl when
Bryant and U.yes both said
Alabama, playing 8 UCLA they thought the lopsided
team which had preferred the score)llade Alabama the best
Rose Bowl, woo 36-9.
team in the COWltry.
"Coach Bryant said th~
" I have one vole with
weeks ago the team that United Press International ,"
impressed the writers most in said Bryant. " Unless 1 see
. the bowl games would win the . something to change my
national championship. We mind, I am going to vote lor
did our jo~.'' said Rutledge , us ."

More sports

in only one or two days.

=~'::.::=..~:... ·-::~';'!'-'7:.;:...

••

victory.
"We'll
be
back,"
Schembechler satd l!lmely.
"We'll have a good team nell
season and we hope to coine
hack and win out here."
But what else could the
Michigan coach say? He's
bad great success in his nine
:seasons at Ann Arbor but he's
now 0-4 at J'asadena and o.s
In bowl games.
Washingtoo •s victory - in
its
first
Rose
Bowl
appearance in 14 years- was
the fourth in a row by thfo

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) The difference in the Sugar
Bowl was motivation.
Alabama was motivated by
an outside shot at the national
championship. Ohio State
was unmotivated, with
several Buckeyes admitting
they'd rather he in the Rose
Bowl. ·
The thtr&lt;kanked -Crimson
Tide, a OOe-{lofnt favorite
because ot the motivatioo
factor, shoved the point down
the Buckeyes' throats
Monday, overcoming 10
fumbles ' with precision
passing bY Jeff Rutledge lo
humlllate eighth-ranked Ohio
State 35-6.
·.
Rutledge completed eight·
passes in 11 attempts,
lhcludlng several while he
·was dragging Buckeye
defenders wlth him, lor 109

lahoma Coach Barry Switzer. " We might have played the best

DON1 GAMBLE

~.

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...
'
~me away with a 27-2ll

·

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Michigan, 2'1·31, in the Rose Bowl.
"I stW think we are the best football team in the country,"
satd Akers . " But we weren 't today ..That was obvious."
Alabama's Jeff Rutledge . completed eight passes in • ll ..
attempt&amp;, including several while he was dragging (!'efenders,
for 109 yards and two touchdowns.
'
Noone on the Alabama squad was chanting, "Notre Dame is
No. !," either.
•
"Coach (Bear) Bryanl.,s,ald tlu'ee weeks ago the team that
Impressed the writers most in the bowl game~ would win the
national championship. We did our job-,'' said .Rutledge.
Bryant and Ohio Stale Coach Woody Hayes both .said they
thought the result made Alabama the best.
"I haven'lseen those other teams play," said Hayes . "Bu\,
oo the basis of what I saw today, Alabama would be No. I. You
couldn't ask a learn to do more to us than they did."
On paper the Orange Bowl game looked like a mismatch,
even though Arkansas Coach Lou Holtz had suspended three ol
his lop players.
"They gave us a thorough, lhorough whipping,'' said Ok-

·s chembechler -now'. 0-5 in .howl .competiiion

L.,,,.,

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Wren going into

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 3, !978

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showdown."

Stev~ Cinon.

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Barna or Arl{ansas? ·Bucks humiliated -by Tide.::JS-6 Sugar ~ Bowl

By lJIIII..t Prao llllemalloa.al
Mmday, Notre Dame, Alabaml, Arkansu and WuhlrtgtM
all won their football bowl gamea wbUe Teu.s arid Oklah&lt;lma
lost - and the IICI'amblef&lt;rthenatlonal college tillels on.
Dan Devine of Notre Dame thlnka he knowl who II No. 1.
"We are," the CIHICh said afle£ his lrilh rlpped:{_exas, 31-10,
In lhe Cotton Bowl.
And llinceTeua was ranked No.- 1, lhe claim might be valid.
"I think we are the best team.IJ! the COWltry,'' Devine said,
"regardless ol whatever ebe nilght ~ppen, I don't think
anybody can beat our team. We would welcome anybody in a

Cary Priddy in the 138 lb.
Saturday; Jao. 14.- Metga
class, and Dave Davis in the at Pbllo Toul'llllment
unlimited . . Van "Willford,
Saturday, Jan. Zl- Meigs ··
grappling at ISS, took a third. at Locan (wtlb Ironton;)'
Tomorrow night .Meigs
Tbunday, Jao. Z6- Meigs
traveb to Point Pleaoant to at Trimble, 1 p.m.
resume mat action . Point Ia
Wedoeoday, Feb. I - Point
supposed to have one of the Pleasant at Meigs, 7 p.m.
strongest mat teams in the
Saturday, Feb. 4 - Logan
area. Following Is a roster at .Mefgo, 7:38 p.m.
and schedule for the 1978
Saturday, . Feb. 11 Ma.rauder Wrestling Team: Trimble at Meiss, 7 p.m.
· SCHEDULE
Wedoeaday, Feb. 15 Wednesday, Jan. 4- Melt• Melp at Warren L&lt;J&lt;al, 7
at Point Pluaa.a t 7 p.m.
p.m.
Tueoday," Jaa. tO ·- South
WreslliD&amp; Roster
Potllt, at Melp, 1:15 p.JII.
98 lba., Scott HarUoaer,

The Meigs High wrestling
season got underway over the
hOlidays in a match at
Chesapeake in the annual
Holiday Tou"mament.
· South Point finished fn first
place while Coach Jim
Sheets' Meigs team did well
by bringing home fourth in
the eight team field.
Two Meigs mabnen taking
firsts were Roilert Nakamoto
in the 167 pound class and
Johnny Eblin, 112 pound
class.
Two .Meigs boys brought
home second places, being

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Meigs matmen fii!ish 4th

,,.. ,

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D~me,
.

Maybe it wasn't, but even Akers couldn't deny the Irish had
outshone his team in every possible department. On defense as
well as on offense and oo anything else you could name.
Joe Montana , Notre Dame's quarterback, played rings
After a long layoff for the
Christmas break, the Meigs
around Randy McEachern, his opposite number. Earl Campbell, the Longhorn's Helsman Trophy winner, rushed for 116
Marauders gel back into cage
yardsin29triesbutneverwaamuchofalactorallday.
action tonight with a tough
test against the Athens Bull·
And Texas' ce1ebrated defensive tackle Brad Shearer, the
dogs In Morrison Gym·
Outland Trophy winner as the outstanding linemap In tile
nasium.
natiOn, ran into a stone wan In Ernie Hughes, Noire Dame"s
rock-hard offensive guard.
Athens, coached by second·
The matchup between Hughes and Shearer looked like the
year mentor fred Gibson,
game itself in microcosm. Hughes felt" he had something to
could be one o! the surprises
· prove agaiMt the much more publicized Shearer and prove it
of the SEOAL this season
he did, so effectively in"fact, thai one professional scout in tile
despite its current 2-&amp; record.
One ol those wins was an
fans was moved ID remark, " He's earillng himselU!OO,OOO out
there 'w·day."
upset over highly toute d
" Shearer seemed lo think he could run over me,:• Hughes
Ironton, and the Bulldogs'
sai&lt;!. ""e thought he could c&lt;IDe right through me and out.
leading record !J 2-3, their
other win coming over the
muscle me . He's a good player but I think he made a mistake
by saying aome of the things he did about me belore the game. strong Wellston club.
The Athens roster lists lour
He said he dido 't think I was much ola guard."
Dave Huffman, Notre Dame"s huge articulate · center,
starters back from last year.
explained in more detail what Hughes waa talklng about. The sjze ol this year's squad
"Brad Shearer was quoted in the newspapers as '!Hying Ernie . is an advantage over the
Mara11ders with sophomore
Hughes wasn't any good . He said Ernie wasnt a good blocker
center Matthews leading the
and tool lie had played ag•inst. better guardS.
"Ernie said Shearer made hlin look ltke an ass In the
board attack at 6'4". At ttie
ne~
_ peril andhewasgoil\gto pay him back." .
·
·
forward spots will be Chimko
•nd AI Walton, both right at
· ll the Notre Dame players, none explained more clearly
wh,j; e Irish should~ ranked No. I than Hl!flmandid.
6'3", WaDace is a starter
"Look at II this way,'' said the pleasant ·2G-year-&lt;Jid junior,
hack from last year; he
pumped tn 30 points in that
who makes his home In Dallas. " Arkansas and Oklahoma both
lost 1o Texas; A:abama beat Ohio Stale, which had two losaes
upset over Ironton.
going in; Michigan played a four-tinte loser (Washington) and
Joining him at lhe other
guard post will be Bentley or
still lost. We played the team rated No. I in the country by both
the coaches and the presa and we beat 'em soundly.
possibly Topping.
•
, Coming off a J..l6 seasoQ
"Now I ask you hmestly, doesn't thalmakeus No. I ?"
Dave Huffman wm 't get any argument frqm me there.
.

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f

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t,.

·Howard E•.Frank ·

...
J

Pom.eroy, 0. •

•'

Vermont 57.

__.

122. N. ..2nd.
..... A\lE.
~·

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MIDDLEPORT .0.

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\

111e DaUy Sentinel, Middleport.Pomertl)l, 0., Tuesda71 . .Jan. 3.1978

&amp;--

~The Da.Uy l!':~!illel,_Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Jan. 3, 1978

~:.

.roCK ·rRA" •

-

·christmqs Eve program held .

POLLY'S POINTERS
.
.

-

~~-

... ..::. .. :;u:.='-'*~'"%~"%'1:'"':\', ...-

1Helen Help
~

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~111$$MIMii.wliiiWIIMIItiiiiMIIi

. Social
Calendar
'"

POMEROY-Reci tations · th!· Bells" and " Litlle ' Baby presented "The Birthday ol
by the children and a Jesus. "
Darrin Warth a King." Frankie Runnel
, Polly Cramer
Helen Bottel
musical · by the choir sang, "Away ina Manger ."
had a solo along with
•
members and youth
The junior · high clase-·-several members of the
.
'ruESDAY
fellowship were included in presented a pantomime en- youth feUowshlp. Speaking
MIDDLEPORT LODGE
GENERATIONRAP·BYHELENANDSUEIIOTI"EL
the onnual Christmas Eve tilled "The Church of the parts . were taken by Dale
363,
F . And A. M., 7::.l Tues·
SHE WANTS AWECONDCHANCE
service of the Enterprise Lighted Lamps" with Davis, Kenny King, Karyn
dsy
night at the Middleport
Brian Will, Jeannie Von · Davis, Jennie Warth, and RAP :
POLLY'S PROBLEM
over them. In less. than five United Methodist Church.
Masonic
Temple.
I went with Ollie sii months, then broke up with him, giving
DEAR POLLY - HELP!
minutes they look like new. I . Mrs . Tom Bentz was Meter, and Terry Smith Valerie Simpson. The
XI
G·AMMA
MU
While burning a scenled can- . rinse them lhoroughly in emcee for the program and . having the parts and Karyn benediction · w~s by the all sortS of excwes. I know now the ~I reason was !love him.
He told me constanUy he loved me bull wouldn't listen.
Cl!API'ER. Beta Sigma Plji
dle some of the Jlol wax drip- ,dear Water and leave in the extended a welcome and Davis narrating. The of· Rev . James Corbitt. ·
Now he 1.! engaged to another girl.
.
.
gave the opening prayer. feralory prayer was given
Laura Ohlinger played
Sorority, 7;:.l :ruesday olghl
ped on my carpet and harden· sinklodry. -MRS.R.H.
It's
been
•
year
since
we
dated,
bull
know
he
sUll
cares
.
I'm
Recilations
were
given
by
and
·
the
offering
designated
"The
Christmas
Song"
and
at the Columbl.ls . and
eel. I would like,. to know how
·DEAR POLLY - Other
· to get this up without harm· plant lovers know what a · Jeremy Heck, Eric Heck, • for the. Midwest Homes. Becky Ohlinger Cottertll .sure even aner he's married. if we' re alone, anything can hap- Southern O hio Electric Co.
.
Cultural report to be given by
ing the pile of the carpel. mess one can have when Jason Hall, Amy Warth, . ' There was congregational play&lt;?, " Here Comes Santa pen. When we meet, it stili shows .
HOPELESS .
watering hanging plants - and Oleta Joyce Davis of • singing and lhen the youth · Cil•us as the g1fts were ex- · My darn pride won't let me tell him how I feel, and my Karen Stanley and Texarulll
friends say he'~ the same way. Do I just give up? - liURTING
Well ; hostesses , · Marilyn
puddles on the floor . and the nursery · class, and fellowship and the ch01r "fhanged.
DEAR POLLY - When I
HURTING :
Anderson and Carolyn Salter·
' was burning ·a large candle carpeting. I solved this very Chris Davis, Joan Simpson,
tell him : better to break up an engagement than a mar- field .
the melted wax overflowed · simply, When watering time Traci Casto, Valerie Van
riage;
thai is, if the two-way spark is still there. But don't be
POMEROY CHAPTEI1 186,
and ran down on my comes I put a plastic bag Meter , and Amy Beth
surprised
if he teUs you it's no longer m~tual, ~year is a long O.E .S., 7:45 Tuesday eve nill~­
who
alSo
sang
a
Brothers
sculptured carpEl. Please around the container and
time. -SUE
at the Pomeroy Musonil'
tell me how to remove it. fasten it on with a clip solo, of the kindergarten
Temple.
classes.
and
first
grade
ANNA.
clothespin. After watering it
DEAR HURTING :
The Morning Glories had
DEAR HOPELESS and is left on until I am sure all
WEDNF.SDAY
FOJ1!ive me, but do I detect a bit of "Dog in the Manger"
ANNA - Rub an ice cube the excess water has dripped a skit entitled · " The
MIDDLEPORT Literary
MIDDLEPORT--Several ner all helped sack the here? Perhaps it isn't so much that you want Ollie as ills that
briskly over the wax so that it off. The hag is then removed Greatest Gift: with Billy new: members were welcom- Chrislmas treat given out on
Club, home of Mrs, Nnn
becomes brittle enough to be and saved for the next water- Brothers, Darrin ' Warth , ed at the recent meeting of \he day before Chrisbnas. the other girl has him .· HELEN
Moore, 2 p.m. Wednesduy .
picked off. Blot with a paper ing. I h~ve no mess and no Dave Warth, Artie Runnel, the American Legion AuxAnnual business mt.:.&gt;clinK.
Gifts were prepared 'for the 13 DEAR RAP :
and Valerie Simpson havtowel so jhe carpel does not drips.- MRS.E.W. ·
iliary of Feeney;Bennett Post patients at the Meigs County • Helen, you said the subconscious is " the real you." Not so. Mrs. Dwight Wallace tu
become wet from the drippDEAR POLLY - . When . ing roles. All three of the 128. . .
review ''Special Peoplt~ . ''
Infirmary, and for the 16 The real person is the one exercising control over whatever the
to sing "Ring
ing ice cube. Dry cleaning making pie crust from class
UNITED METHODIST
Welcomed •into · member- veterans at Arcadia Nursing subconscious is trying to put' over· on him. · NO SLAVE TO
fluid · should remove any scratch I use the electric mixWomen,
l..etart Falls Church,
ship were Mrs. Marjorie Home.
''SUB''
stains that might be left. - er instead. of cutting the
1
;30
W
ednesdsy at the home
Caton, Lisa Prater, Georgena
Reported ill were Della DEAR NSTS :
shortening into the flour. Set
POLLY.
of Mrs. Inez Hill, Racine .
Lipscomb, and a junior Stahl, Edith Spencer, Velsia
Let' me clarify ; Your s ubconscious is your real feelings Mrs. Ernest Shuler to ha ve
DEAR POLLY - I use it on low and find this is much
member, Mildred Parsons:
Roush , Etta Will, Freda (whether they're true or not) under the layers of shoulds and the program and Bible Study.
strips _of moleskin on the quicker and l!asier !han using
Preceding the meeting the Krautler, Alma Newton, musts your conscious spreads around. · HELEN
underside of my lace-up a pastry blender. - LORET·
THURSDAY
Auxiliary members, both Marjorie Caton, Roscoe
·
EVANGELINE
Chaptc1·
shoes to keep the metal TA
junior and senior, joined the Fowler, James Clalworthy, RAP :
eyelets from causing rust · DEAR POLLY - I have
}72,
Order
of
the
Eastcni
Post members . for a holiday and Bill Lewis.
How do you get people to stop badgering you about "when Star, 7:30 Thursday at the
spots on my feel or hose. I do · discovered an easy and less.
turkey dinner. After f.ht• rlin~
are you gett,ing married?" I don't feel I'm ready for the big Middleport Maso~d c Temple.
wish the shoe manufacturers tiring way to read \he
step
ye\.
would use plastic eyelets in- newspaper than holding it by
20, do not live at home, and have been going wiU1 Joim
I'm
both
sides
when
itis
unfolqed.
stead of metal ones. three years. (He's 21. ) Since he wants marriage, too, you can 1:
SATE;l.UTE Mli:NU
Before I open the pa(l&lt;lr I cut.
JEANE
see these constant questions could cause trouble between us.
The
Senior . Citizens
DEAR POLLY - I still a strip from the folded side
And I don't wan Ito lose him.· BADGEREE
Sotelllte open at the
hang my clothes outdoors to · and then I read one page at a
•
dry when the weather per· time. This would help ar·
Reorganized Church of Jesus
BADGEREE: ,
Tactless questions deserve forthright answers. Tell these Christ ol Latter-nay Saints
mils as this saves energy and thritis sufferers and others
people to slop badgenng you. -SUE
(Old Town Flats), RacineI like the fresh smell of with just plain tired anns. clothes dried outside. Often I HELEN
Portland Road, offers COAl)
.
Polly will send you one of
get carreless and leave my
POMEROY--Mrs . Edna and Mrs. •Robert Murphy, DEARB.:
Senior
Nutrition Menu for
And tell John to"stop (am I right? ) putting them up to th~•·
clothespins on the line and her signed · thank-you
Swrunerfield entertained on Amy and Tracy, Mr. and
Jan.
4 through Jan. 6, W7H :
they turn black and leave newspaper coupon clippers if
Cljristmas Day with a gather· Mrs. Rexal Swrunerfield, questions. You 'r~ wise to wait until you:re sure . · HELEN
Wednesday - 'Meatballs In •
marks on the clean clothes. she uses your favorite
ing of her family.
Reedsville, R. D.; Mr. and
gravy,
baked potato, buttered
When this happens I bring the Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Carter, Jeff and RAP :
green
beans, jeilicd lruit
The dumbest thing I ever did was make up a boyfriend. Now
pins indoors, put them in the her colwrin. Write POLLY'S
·M rs. Herbert Parker, Jon, Rocky Mount, N.C.; Mr.
cocktail
salad, yellow sheet
TURNS SIX
sink or a plastic container POINTERS in care of this
Julian
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Vernon Swartz, the kids want to meet him. What'lll do? · BOYFRIENDLEss cake, iced, bread, buller,
UAR,agel3
and pour pure liquid bleach newspaper.
Scott HiU celebrated his
Robert Parker, Kelli and TeDa and Rena, Robin, Rexie
"
milk.
B.L.
:
.
.
siith birthday Christmas
Bobby, Marietta; Mrs. Roger and Roger Coolville; Mr. and
Thursday
Sopp beans
If you only knew how many kids make up these phantom
Day With a party at the
Adams, LA}ri j Nicholas, and Mrs. Ger~ld Swrunerfield,
canned
.peach
wiihJ!am
bits,
home of his parents, Mr.
Ryan, Racine; Mrs. Cecil Amber and Michael, and boyfriends or girlfriends, you wouldn't feel so guilty. Let hinl and pear salad, ~hocolute
"move away," and then come out of your daydreams and look
and Mrs. Roger E. Hill,
Caldwell, Mr, and Mrs. Ken· Mrs.
Velma
West , for a live one.· HELEN AND SUE
pudding with· vanillo wafc1·,
Racine.
Enjoying
a
bunny
•
neth Caldwell and Kenny, Mr.
Parkersburg,
W.
Va
.
cornbread,
buller, milk .
•
replica cake and ice cream
Frklay - Fried fish,
with him were his sister,
escalloped potatoes, bullcred
Heather RBeAne, Mrs. Inez
.peas, apple cobbler, bread ,
DAUGHTER BORN
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry A.
butter, mUk .
RUTLAND-Mr. and Mrs.
Powell, Mr. aad Mrs.
Calfee , teo, juice 811!1
of
Rutland,
are
Greg
Stewart
RACINE -The Children's pr.esented Christmas Eve at Austin · Wolfe, Jerry aDd
butlennilk served dally.
announcing
the
birth
of
a
Christmas program was the church.
Aimee. Also presenUng
'
daughter, Cynthia Dawn,
·
given at the First Bap_tist
gilts to S~olty were Mr. aDd
Church Sunday, Decembe~
Junior
B. Y .F. Mrs. Andrew MaDDing, ~Jr.
The
18. After the prelude, opening Christmas party was hOsted and Mrs. Oval Diddle, Mrs.
prayer and. congregational by Mr. and Mrs. 'Alan Cun- Ruth Tuck~r. and M.r. and
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart'$ first
··
kinder· ningham with 15 meinl)ers Mrs. John Murphy and
hyn:m .
Th.e
child. Grandparents are Mr.
POMEROY--A nativity Pullins;. "A Time of each child.
garten
class
pre- present on Pee. 20'. They · Chris. The yonngster was
Mrs. Louise Radford was
and · Mrs. Lawrence M. scene by the children was a . 'p eaee" by Clarissa Pierce; ·
. slmled ."The Bells ..... of enjoyed games, a gift ex- also SJ(tprised with a blrt•
Ste~art, Middleport, and
feature of the Christmas "Jesus Loves Them All", by organist and the nursery
.t.:hrtsttnas. '' Teachers were change and refrestunents .
day party at his
Mrs. Charlotte Erlewlne, , Eve program of · the Rock April Clark: "Prayer .1for and primary teachers
Lil Hart and Marilyn
kiadergarteo class. Guests
Dexter. Greai-grandparents . Springs United MethoeliAt Your Son " by Rhonda working on the program
Williams, followed by . a
The kindergarten class, at the party were Mrs.
are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Church .
Zirkle; "The Shepherds" were Judy Humphreys,
congregational hymn, a with 22 present taught by Lil Roger Hill, Mrs. Marilyn
Karen Sloan, Susanne
Murray, Middleport, Md Mr.
Taking part in the scene by Dee Dee Henderson.
special by Donita and Robin Hart and Marilyn Williams, Powell, Heather Hill, Mar·
Karen, Angie and Timmy Richmond, and Marlha
and Mrs. Lawrence Stewart, · were children of the
Manuel and ''The First Noel'' enjoyed a party Dec. 16 with cy HiD. There was a visit
Chester.
nursery and primary Sloan sa.ng '' You're King .
by Becky Van Meter. "Love games, a gift exchange and irom Santa Claus.
classes, Marsha King as Something Special" and
Divine,'' a nativity . pageant,
Mary, · Jay Hwnphreys as Jay Evans and Doug, Dixie
was presented by the refreshments.
Joseph ; Timmy Jeffers, and Kim Eblin sang
primary class; teachers were
The primary class also
Michl King, and Neal Rich- "Christmas."
Diane lhle and Theresa Van
mond, shepherds ; .Lisa
There was a play by the
Meter, and narrator, Becky
Darst, Tracey Eblin, Gail junior class with Mrs. L
Van Meter.
lhle and Theresa Van Meter.
Pierce, Tara Humphreys, Lois Ann Evans, Kim and
'
RIO GRIINDE - Middle strations; then they will
A congregational hymn
and Brooke Ra$1ford, the Dixie Eblin, Doug Eblin,
preceded a special' number
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shain eastern dancing )lliU be participate in actual middle angels. The carolers with Jay Evans, Crystaf Sisson, ·
. REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE .
by the youth choir directed by entertained with a Christmas taught again at Rio Grande eastern dsnc!rig themselves. lighted candles were Beth, . Timmy Sloan, .Scott
Janice Salser and VIcki dinner. Guests .were Mr. and College· and Community · "Tabla" said she has been Clarissa, Teresa, · Angela Pullins,, and Freda Eblin .
How does the cnt'! val~e in 1 lift insurance pollcv
accumulate? Are vou able to borrow the full amount of
Cummins. ' Songs were Mrs. Thomas Reed and College (RGC-CC), beginning active for thfee years in the and Mary Pierce, Lisa taking part. The Rev. and
·fhe cuh value?
"bldest styliZed, continually
"There Never Was a Sherri Jo and Theresa of Thursday, January 5.
Pullins, Angie Sloan, April - Mrs. Corbitt sang a song,
pra'ctic·
e
d,
fiile
.
art
in
The
course,
also
called
Christmas/' i!The Miracle," Logan; Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Clark, Sally &amp;dford, Dee and the Rock Springs choir
Cash value In a 'life Insurance policy accumulates as
"Christmas," 11 Happy Birth- Shain and Jason and Mrs. beliy dancing, proved so histOry."
Dee Henderson, Tammy presented
several
the
premiums are paid Into the policy. . The
popular last time it was of·
"Middle eastern dancing is Eblin, and Rhonds Zirkle.
day," and "Merry Christ- Garnet Ervine, local.
numbers. •
accumulation
Is the reserve ... equity ... whi ch build ~ in
fered that the continuing a physical interpretation of
mas."
A recitation on the ll)eanAnother play entitled
your policy over the years. A policy on which you would
education
department life and its beauty," she said.
The message by Pastor
pay the prem iums In 20 years will usually have a more
ing of Jesus was given by "The Christmas Star" was
decided to make the class
The course wUI meet each Jay Humphreys, Marsha presented by Tracey Jef·
Don
Walker
and
a •
rapid accumulation than one on which you pay
avai1able again to area week, 11-10 p.m., in room 225,
congregational hynili closed
premiums to age 65 or for life . You ean borrow the ful l
King, Lisa Darst, Tracy fers, Susan Zirkle, Jackie
residents.
Anniversary Hall, on the Rio Eblin, Gail Pierce,- Brooke Zirkle, Michl King, Timmy
accumulated cash value . For e&gt;cample: Your 'llsh
the program.
. va luJ has accumula.ted to $1,000 and your contractura I
1n 1967 Jack Ruby, who
Mrs. Brittina Green, whose campus. Registration fee is &amp;dford, and Dale Eblin. Jeffers, April Clark, Paul
Interest r.,te 011 the policy loan Is 5 pet .... the Interest
fatally
shot
presidential
profeSSional
nam~
'is
Tahia,
$25
and
.
the
·
instructor
A cantata, "The Miracle of
There were also a couple of · 'Rice, and Judy RBdford
for
your loanofSl.OOOwould beSSO.OO. This Interest will .
Lee
Harvey
Oswald,
·
will
leach
the
.
eight
week
assassin
stressed
that
the
class
is
open
Love" by the choir with Rev.
songs by the nursery in· with the carolers being
come
due on the anniversary date of vour poiJcy ~ach
.class, which is designed to. to anyone interested in the art eluding "Up oil the Scott Pullins, Timmy
Walker, . narrator, was .· died of cancer In Dallas.
·year until you have repaid the loan.
help participants develop and of dsncing.
Housetop."
Sloan, Karen Sloan, Dixie
enjoy muscle control and
Those interested may
•'
The primary recitations Eblin, Kim E~lin, Jay
proficiency in middle eastern register by phone by calling
,,
were "Chri~lmas" by Tim Evans, and Doug_ Eblin.
d!lncing.
245&gt;5353, ext. 299, or in person · Jeffers; "No Palace" by Wendell Jeffers had the
Participants will learn in the continuing education Michl King; " So Fair" by closing prayer, and the
The lnsur•nce Store
""' .....~.- ..
.. . . . . . ............
_,_, ..........
992-5130
Pomeray, O.
basic str•etclling
office, Allen Hall, RGC-CC. Neal 'Richmond; "Holy congregation sang "Hark
- --~--·
-··
......
.....,.....,_.,...
, ...,_c . 0., .., ..,,..,., " " " ' " " " ' - - .. _., ,., '"'·0 - 1 .,.,.,
by Mary the Herald Angels Sing"
Night"
"No
_,.....
.....
,_
,_
..
...
..
.
.
.....
Pierce;
"One
.
·song"
by and " 0 Come All Ye
.. ... ..........
................ ......,
Angie Sloan;
"Special Faithlul" belpre the or·val of Santa with a gift fm:.
Love" by Teresa Pierce;
"No Belter Way" by Tam·
.. ,...............
_, .....
,,_
ho.:~-:.:.
"::'" ,_,
my
Eblin;
"
Let
Us
Wotship
•..
.......
. ,, "
..
...... ,
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
Him"by Angela Pierce;
' '
'
.
"'
.
.
"For
Your
Gift''
by
Sally
..
'
Radford; ''A Candle'' by
.. .
Beth Pierce; '" Merry
' A MESSAGE
Christmas" by Lisa

~ US~

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By

Help for wax on rug

THE

IS 0111! McKE'E'

INDUSTRISS'
"5HEi·DEVIL." VS.
THE' FREiMOIIIT

AND OUR OWN CAM!!IIA PLAt.JE'6
FILMING THe WHOLE; 015/ASTEIU ...
. ;l;.w(J)Ifr! NOW WAAT!S !MY UPTOl

•.•AIJD LrAVES THe PENTA90N

WAIT'LL THE; PU81.1C
5E~, THI* ON THE
5VrNIN6 NEWS!

&amp;RA55 IN A .STAT!! OF SHOCK!
YOU REAmE HOW
THIS WILL MAKe OS
LOOI&lt;, GENI?RAL.!

"FALCON':. PRIOE

OF THE PENTAailH!
... 80TH FH!'&gt;HTE~S
• TAKE' OFF
sn;ePL.Y ...

New members
join auxiliary

•

!Vfrs. ·Summerfield
entertains group

•

_,

LimE ORPHAN ANNIE COMIC STRI~S DELAYED IN MAIL

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Christmas prpgram
given' December 18

Rock Springs _UMC
J p
p~esents yut-e · ~ogram

~iel·.·t~~:!if:~~~~!

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

OF MASON ·

THAT'S FUNNY. Mi!5 PICTURE 15

Wrn-1 A LITTLE
LUCK-' I M119HT
REA'-'H :n1AT
15LAND e,y

MI551NG' FROM 11-1E IMNTI£.

PIJ)NE 773-5536

·Middle Eastern dancing
~~~~db~ ~;~~:: b:'a~~ slated ·as colkge course

NIGHTfALL'

...

IISUI·MI!IOI RB

'

FRANK
tnd

ERNEST

INCOME ~ TAI&lt;S
LTAMTS

[

:!
ruesday, Jan. 3

;.,onaay, Jan. 2

BRIDGE

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Sontag saves 3NT contract
··

·

NORTH
• 7

l /2·A

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Another use for Blackwood

notrump. It is a fairly nor- .
-mal contract, but he had a

cided to pass rather than
rebid at the three level. ·
Now North came up with a
brUiiant or maybe a not so
brUUant bid. He.called three
hearts in the hope that hla
partner could bid three
notrump, butSout~ ·a dehla

to~hproblemattricktwo.''
fi3 ·A '
NORTH
. J101: "East look hls ace of
• J 10 6 3
· hearts and shifted to the .
, .A B ·
,
jack of spades. If Alan cove
+AKJ97
WEST
'
EAST
ered with the queen, West
• B5
• A K83
• •J 10 2
would take his k1ng,lead low WE•T
EAST
correct call of fo u' nearts.
' 8 53
' A96 4
to the ten and the defense • 2
.Q987 ·
J 64
Q7 5
would have five tricks."
He was old fashioned enough
• 7
.. J 97
. +642
Oswald; "Alan ducked : JI06532
to thtok that four trwnps to
SOUTH
that jack lead, but covered ·
86 4
the king-queen was good
'OJ ARE all~ AIJD
.. KQI!0642 support.
the len on the next lead. As .. A 9
• Q 9 6 54
he explained later, ' that
SOUTH
What was North to do? He
I~~ '01\Jil'U.
/
: ·K
would have lost the hand if
• AK 5
could
five diamonds, but
A 983
,,
West held the ace-kil)g and
~ A!JjWH!:Rf ltJ·'0115 •.
could VISualize some more
'KQ 94
.. Q 8 3
ten, _but he came tO· the
heart bidding by South.
Q 10 3 2
WMPAm l)lTI~ 1'01.1 ltJIO#J
conclusion
that East held
Finally, he figured a way to
• 73
Vulnerable : East • West,
both jack and ten. His reaUP!
get. out of .hla troubles. He
Dealer, East, Opening lead.: soning
was based on that
bid a Blackwood four
•
•
Three of hearts.
indefinable thing known as Vulnerable ; ~orth - South, nolrwnp . . If South showed
\table presence... He , waS Dealer: South, OpEmjng lead: two aces he would hOpe to
· West North East
South
there
a,nd knew what to do." (\oe of clubs,
become dummy at six diaPass
Pass
monds,
but South held just
Pass
Pass
AS::!®9~·
· one ace and bid five diaPass
PasS
2NT
Soulh monds to show It.
.
West North East
Pass 3NT Pass
A lady from Milwaukee·
Pass
North breathed a sigh of
held ;
Pass
Pass
PaSs
relief, pas8ed and watched
•-6•·10976543+ ·7 · - • 1 ,.Pass 3 •
4.
Pass
his partoer make the game
5t
with the aid of a successful
Pass 4NT Pass
K 84 2.
BARNEr
By Oowald Jacoby &amp; Alaa
spade finesse .
Pass Pass Pass
ASK&lt; THE EXPERTS
; .,..~.==~~==~--~---,----~~-.---------------=~~--~~~--~~~~SoDUol
Q:swald ; "We're starting
Her
right-hand
o(fponent•L--~-.,.-~-----'
A
New York reader wants ,
'fO'RE PLUMB
PAW, NEVER
the thirtieth yeaf of the
o~ned one diamond and she
,.
to know what we think of'
THANK'/ FER
Jacoby colwnn with an
b1d three hearts. She wants By Oswald Jacoby &amp; Alaa playing a jwnp re11p011se to .
WELCOME,
MISSED IT
to
know what she should Soatoog
show a bad tiand such as
added
starter.
•Alan
Sontag
LEND
IN'
ME
'lORE.
•
· ELVINEV·· •
of New York1 who is14 years
have bid.
bidding two spades with ;
F.
O
OTSTOOL,
'
'·
'•
Not vulnerable we think
younger than you and 44
The -B lackwood convenE
_·
years younger than mej wiU · her bid might web keep her tloli is a great help In slam • • Q J 1~ 9x x •· x •· x x x
• LOWEEZ'I .
opponents from thejr best biddl
l•t
ha
th
+• x x x
.be C&lt;Hiuthor of the co umn
. contract but her hand is a
. _ng.
can
ve 0 er
: f'1,_...,..T',
with me from 1\0W on, ' 1
uses also.
trifle weak for any action.
The . game was nlatch ' in response to partoer's
Still if it worked, more points and North responded heart Ol&gt;imlna:.
' Jim : "Alan has been just
· about the moat successful
power to her.
one spade in the hope of . If you wanft'o Wle preempAmerican player the last
j NEWSPAPER E..NTERPJUSE ASSN:)
getting to a major su,it or Uve jwnp respon.eesyou will
Jew years and bas also com·
(Fora copy of JACOBY MOD- notrump.
.
get some good resultaj but
pleted a fine book on bridge .
ERN. send $1 to: 'Win at
Nothtog bad was likely to will lose the otrong ump'
He wW be a great addition."
Bridge," CJJre of this newspa- ha:f.pen as a result of, that response , which Ia a most
Oswald: "Today's hand
per.. P.O. Box 489, Rad•o City . bl but East fired a three- valuable bid.
shows ~~ian at th r~ "
c;t~rmn. Nv~"' Y"m; rv/ 1001!1) cllf'b bi~ at ·South, who de-- (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE fBSN.)
' Q J 10 7 2
K .10 2
• A K 10 5

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a•

REufER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

I+

1

I

'
;
!

1·=--

, ·
· demonstratesonedailcemovementtohetaught ·
, • in Rio Grande College and Commnnity CoUege's Middle'·
· · Eastern Dancing class. '!be class is open to anyone
. interested and special costwnes are not required.

I'

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ll-14-77

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'76 Volkswagen

me for

A thought for the day;
British satirist Jonathan
Swift said, "There is nothing
in this world constaill but
inconstancy.''

life iDSUraJ~Ce."

1

•

'£"'
H'ttiiUNcl

' •

Like a good neilhbor,
State Fann is there.
Sille f.,.m lJit lniu!lfiOI ~
ltlmt Ofl.ce. !lloblninglun, Jllql

·
j

r···;t·;r~ooirfoN:·o.u~·-·1·

.
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i)PTOMETRIST ..

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, fto S !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.! - EAST COURT .
ST., POMEROY.
. .,;._ • .

--------~----------------·--

Kombl Bus, A sp., , e~u1o,
tape player, rear window
defogger , roof vent &amp;

' lights. curtains, s•ats,
converts Into bed, white

blue. stripe, 14,500 mi .

.·

The Meip Tire Center, Inc.

Special/

""

'
'

FROM .THE PEOPLE OF

USED CARS

'

~

....

ABRIGHTER
. MOR.ROW
TO
·.

:":,;".::

W·
·

'5495
·Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll UlceOIIrQuaHty

Way of DolngluslnHs
GNIIIC FINANCING
m-5:142
•
""meroy
Open~-~ ... '1116;00
Its p.m. Set.

We are beginning" a new year. ·
The 1978th year since the Christ
was born in Bethelehem . Will
this year be any better than the
other 1977 years that h~ve
passed? If they are better days,
you and I and God wi 11 .have to
work together to make ' them
better. Let us determine, now,
. to m·ake this the best year ever
for a II people by giving our best
to the Master in all ways. Each
one going out to win one for
christ, each one helping
another along life's · way e~n
make a dlf·flir••"""-

�D

•
1.._The Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday , Jan 3 1978

11- The Dally Sentinel Middleport.P&lt;meroy o Tuesday Jan 3,1977

Redmen winners over 'Jackets Broncos eager
•

Greg Jame! added 16 Dale
Royse and Don G1bsdh each
had 14 and Dan Btse tossed m
10
Eroc Mounts led the
VISitors now 3-8 overall and
0-2 mSide the league wtth 24
pornts
Wednesday Rio will play
Central State University at
Xema Saturdsy the Redmen
w111 host Malone m another
MOC contest
Last noght lbe Redmen
playmg Without the serv1ces
of starters Gil Pr1ce and
Dean FitzpatriCk ( Pr1ce ts
still recovering from a head
mJury rece1ved in the
Mar~etta Shrme Tournament
last Wednesday and Fltz
patnck has been til the past
week ) cruised to a 33-13
advantage early m the first
half before the VISitors closed
Ullilt'd PrHs ID\trnatlooal
Cincmnatl center Bob the gap to nme 42-33, just
Miller thmks he know why before the halftime '"
Georgl8 Tech be~ the 13th
ranked Bearcats Monday
rught Tech wanted the wm
more
I
I
I was surp1sed Miller
srud after the Yellow Jackets
wm 59-$ Tech played over
NHL Standings
our heads and we played
Press lnternattonal
under ours I guess they By Untted
Campbell Conference
wanted 11 more than we d1d
Patrtck Ot\1 sum
W t:. T PIS
Tech s Sammy Drummer
Phllade ph la
24 7 4
52
put his team ove r the lop NY I slander s
20 9 8
48
12 14 11 35
when he scored three Atlanta
s
12 16 9 3J
unanswered jump shots m tbe NY Ranger
Smythe D 'ils on
fmal mmutes of the Metro 7
W L T Ph
cago
12 15 10 34
Conference game at AUanta Ch
Vancouver
11 15 9 J1
Druinmer s 25 porntsled all Color ado
B 7 B 24
Mmnesot a
9 22 4 2'
scorers rn the game
Sf LO U s
B 24 4
20
Cincrnnati was ahead 35 26
Wa les Conference
Norr S DIVISIOn
at the ball and the Bearcats
.# W L T Pts
extended tbat In 37 26 on a Mont rea 1
25 7 4 54
jump shot by Miller In open Los Ange es
17 17 6 40
P tl sburgh
11 18 8 30
the second pertod
Delro t
18 5 27
But Tech held on and wtth Wash nglon
7 21 8 22
Adams 01 v slon
12 20 In play drew even on
W L T P.ts
ftve unanswered fteld goals Boston
23 7 6 52
21 7 8 50
all from 20 feet and beyond Bu ft a o
Toron to
21 10 4 46
Cincmnati regamed the lead C
e\le and
10 2J 4 24
but Drummer s s1x pomt
Mol'ldpy s Result
Wash ngton J P tts.burgh 2
surge put the Yellow Jackets
Tuesday s Gart1 es
on top to stay
Vancouver at NY s ndr s
Cle\le a t Pn ade ph a
Pat Cummmgs led the
Montreal at Sl Lou s
Bearcats wtth 2Q pomts
Wedn esdaY s Gam es
NY Rangers at M n('le-!o ta
Elsewhere Monday mght
Montrea a Atlanta
Malone and Milligan College
Los Ang at Wash ng on
of Tennessee were both
Vanco uv er at PI sburgh
Boston at Ch cago
VICtOri OUS ln first round
Color ado at Toronto
actioo at the HaU of Fame
Bu fl a oat c e\leland
ClaSSIC Ill Csntnn
Tom Volarteh dumped rn 25
pomts In lead Malone In a 9283 come.from behtnd v1ctory
over Walsh m the rughtcap
and Milligan downed West
Vlrgm•a Tech 69-59 m the
first game wtth a 3+pomt
combtned effort from
forwards William Lewts and
Harry Huggms and center
Mike FuUer
Tuesday
Malone and Milligan will
Findlay at Ohto Domlnlcl.l!n
square off tnmght m the tiUe Cleveland St at S ena ( NY)
game
followmg
the Tourney
oonsolatien match between Hall of Fame Classic
West V1rgtn1a Tech and !Canton)
Wednesday
Walsh
Ci ne nnatl at Tulane
In other games South Bowltng Green at M ami
Florida bested Bowhng Eastern Mlch1gan at Toledo
Green 88-79 Dyke topped Oh o Unlvers ty at Kent Sf
at Western Mtchlgan
Clar1on State (Pa ) 90-91 Rio Miami
Anderson (lnd) at Xavier
Grande whipped Cedarville Claron St ( Pal at Youngs
83-$ and Valdosta State town St
Rio Grande at Central St
(Ga ) edged Tiffin 78-76

R1o Grande College built up
an early 20-pomt advantage
over VISiting Cedarvill e
Monday n1ght then held off a
second half comeback by the
Yellow Jackets to post an 8368 M1d OhiO Conference
basketball trmmph
The Redmen 7 3 overall
and 2~ tnSide the MOC
placed fiVe players In double
figures led by mark Swam s
19 poUltS

Bearcats

whipped

by Tech

termwlon
Rio malntamed anywhere
from an e1ght to 12 pomt lead
until the Yellow Jackets
pulled to within four 7~
w1th three mtnutes left The
Redmen pulled away agam m
the fmal mmutes of pla y
Rto h1t 34 of 68 fteld goal
attempts for 50 percent The
Redmen were IS of 22 at the
foul lme for 67 percent Rio
ptcked off 40 rebounds 12 by
Dan Blse and 11 by Greg
James The wmners had 20
turnovers
Cedarville bit 23 of 55 f1eld
goal attempts for 43 percent
and was 22 of 28 at the foul
hoe for 79 percent The
Yellow Jackets had 37
rebounds etght by Ron Sch
wenke Cedarvtlle had 26
turnovers

ltio may have lost tile
services of another play~r for
a month or so Guard Dale
Royse may have suffered a
broken bone m h1s wrist late
m the game
In Monday s prelunlnary
tilt Roo Grande s JVs downed
Cedarville ~I
Box score
CEDARVILLE - J Reep
2 2 6 Short 1 3 s Allen 3 I 7
B Reep 1 0 2 Mounts 7 10 2A
Potter o 1 1 Ricker 0 0 o
Walters 1 J S Strletmatter :2
1 S GreveOOO Lant1 000

Schwenke 6 1 13 TOTALS 23
22 68
RIOGRANDE -Swam91
Royse SA 1A James 6 4
16 Gibson 1 0 14 Fitzpatrick
0 0 0 B se 5 0 10 Johnson 0 2
2 N1day 0 11 Purcell 2 3 7
19

Phelps 0 0 0 Lee 0-0 0 West
0 0 0 TOTALS 34 15 8l
Halftime score -

Cedarv lie 33

R o 42

r-----------.., Falcons' Bennett

l Pro
l
lStandings !

.

This week's

AFC top coach
By GREG AIELLO
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - No
one env1ed the tas k of
Leeman Bennett when the
young Los Angeles Rams
assistant was named head
coach of the AUanla Falcons
last Feb 3
The Falcons had suffered
through three straight losmg

Wildcats
hold top

years and hred coaches

m1dway lhrough two of those
seasons They had lost their
last two games of 1976 by a
combined fl3.14 score They
had g~ven up 313 pomts last
season and scored only 172
But Bennett at 39 the
NFL s youngest head coach
tnok over the floundermg
Falcons and gutded them In
the NFL s best defens1ve
showmg m 45 years while
compilmg a 7 7 record The

0

NEW YORK ( UP I) The
U n t e d Prl'!ss
nternat onal

JX)mts and won seven games

after 3 II 4 10 and 4 10
f1mshes the three prevtous
years Bennett bel:ame the
hrst coach from Atlanta In
capture the award
The Falcons rook1e head
coach recetved 24 of 56 votes
by a panel of sports
tiers four from each of the

Ohio coIIege-vst

BB schedule

"

Reds to tQUr
Japan in '78
CINCINNATI (UP[) - The
Cmcmnatt Reds announced
Monday they had accepted an
mv1tatlon by one of Japan s
leadmg newspapers to make
a four week
good w11l
exhib1t1on tour of Japan m the
fall for a ser1es of games
agamst Japanese teams
Tbe 1nv1tahon was ex
tended by Mttsuo Mutal the
PreSident of the Yomiur1
Shunbun and accepted by
Bob Howsam PrsSident of
the Reds
The Reds w11l he the f1rst U
S MaJor League team m four
years to go to Japan The tour
will hegm In late October and
match the Reds against the
Yomtun G1ants based m
Tokyo as well as other teams
throughout Japan
The Reds have been one of
the dommant teams In U S
Major League baseball
durmg the 1970s wmnlng
World Championships m 1975
and 1976 as well as four
National League pennants
and f1ve western Division
titles

MURDER ARRAIGNMENT

CINCINNATI (UP[) Ursula Saxon 2S a Toledo
nattve was to arraigned
today on charges of
aggravated murder m tbe
fatal shooting Nov 30 of
Umverstty of Clncmnat1
crurunologist Gene carte
She was arrested at her
Cmcmcmnatl apartment
Saturday by city hm~lctde
detectives who are also
for Y two other

=&amp;

c1t1es

Bennett edged Dallas Tom
Landry who gUided the
Cowboys In an NF&lt;Jlest 12-2

Rambling Willie
is horse of '77

Ust

Dr. Jackm:an to

Capital at Ohio Wesleyan
Musklngum at Den son

receive honor

COLUMBUS - Dr John
Wittenberg at Otterbein
Jackman the Ohio acclauned
Baldwin Wallace at Oberlin
Ohto vet erma nan horse
Mount Umon at Hei delberg
and consultant has
owner
Kenyon at Urbana
Wooster at Ohio Northern
been chosen to receove the
Manchester
(lnd )
at Meritorious Award g~ven by
Wilmington
the Ohto Cbapter ol the U S
Btuff1on at Defiance
Findlay at Anderson ( lndl Harness Wr1ters:..Msn to the
Mercy (.NY) at Cedarv ille
tndiVIdual who has exhibtted
Dyke at Pomt Park (Pal
outstandmg service to bar·
Malone at Rio Grande
neu racmg o~er a two decade
Walsh at otlio Dominican
span
Wilberforce at Tenn 5t
Chapter President Chuck
Case Western at Wash &amp; lee
(Tourney)
Stokes announced that Dr
Sunday
Jackman wUI recetve the
Tiffin at 'St Leo (Fia)
plaque denotmg the honor at
the 6 30 p m Horsemen ~
Banquet for D1strlct One of
Carte was ltllled durmg an the U S Trottmg Assn , to be
attempted holdup at a Walnut held on Wednesday Jan 4 at
Ilills abortion clinic He and the Sheraton Columbus
his wife bad stopped at the Motor Hotel m downtown
clmlc In •liver some papers Columbus, Ohi"'

I I I

~

Jedl"'"' ""' Pub-.

gested by the above cartoon

"r xrx xx xr

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110puzzl81 hs.val~·

able for $135 pottpaid from Jumble c/0 th 1 newspaper P 0 Box 34,

Npon ooSituniay

Rose

Dyke 95 Clar on 51 !Pal 91

Hall of Fame Class1'
F1rst Round
Mtlhgan 69 W Va Tech 59
Malone 92 Walsh 83

In 1961 the Uruted States
severed d1plomat1c relatwns
With Cuba after Fidel Costro
admitted to hemg a Com
mumst

F riday afternoon

• successful steel
bulldtng comp1ny We are
looking for 1 Hlf st•rtmg
m•n 1n your 1ru to be our
local Representative You
can share In the profits af

on established compony
while being your own boss
You will be Pllrf of the
rop1d growth In the

HOOF HOLLOW Hor5es Bu y 5ell
trade or tr01n New and used
saddles Ruth R&amp;eves Albany

~ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

3 ~Another World 3 4 1S Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 ts- General Hospital 6 13
3 3()-Aii In The Family 8 10 Consumer Survival Kit

Commercii f Building
Boom
Building
background prelerred but
not newssary Interviews

w111 be held In Ohio on
Friday
&amp; Saturdoy
January 6 &amp; 7 Catl the
Lane Corp 517 263 8520

A'iJrJJm
'W' O~wlli~m\7

20
4 DO-Mister Cadoon 3

little Rascals Our Gang A

Merv Griffin 6 Gilligan s Is 8 Sesame St 20 33
Gomer Pyle USMC 10 Dinah 13
4 3()-My Three Sons 3 P!l[lridge Family 4 Brady
Bunch 8 10 Little Rascals 1S
~Bonanza

3

My Thrt!e Sons .4

Gunsmoke 8

Mister 'Rogers Neighborhood 20 33 Hogans
Heroes 10 Emergency One 13 My Three Sons 15
5 3CI--Odd Couple 4 News 6 E ec Co 20 33 Hogan s Heroes lS 6 ~News 3 4 8 10 13 1S ABC News 6
Zoom 20 33
6 3()-NBCNews3415 ABCNews\3 CaroiBurnetl&amp; •
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10 Over Easy 20 33
7 ~Goln Home 3 Cross Wits 4 Liars Club 6 Pop
Goes The Country 8 News 10 To Tell The Truth 13
Gilligan s Is 15 French Chef 20 Treasures of
Tutankhamun 33
7

Jo-That Nashville Music

3 Let

s Go To

The Races
8 Hollywood Squares 4 Wolfman Jack 6 Mac

Nell Lehrer Report 20 33 Price Is Righi 10 That s "
Hollywood 13 Music City 15
8 ~NBC Reports 3 4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Fltz
pafrlcks 8 10 Jacques Llpchllz 20 Evening ol
Championship Skating 338 3.._Fish 6 13 9 ooThrees Company 6 13 Mash 8 10 Edelln Con
vlctlon 20 33 9 3D-Soap 6 One Day At A Time
8 10 Mary Tyler Moore 13

Scene 6

PTL Club 15

saturday's Answer
27 Minimize
29 Fragment
30 Punt
31 Exptate
32Taglia
voru e g
3S Deplane
37 Whale herd

6 25-

are not that set In your ways
today If someone approaches
you with a workab e plan you II
have an open mtnd

Morning Report 3 6 50-Good Morn ing West
Virginia 13 6 55--&lt;:huck White Reports 10 News
13
7 CIO-Today3 415 Good Morning America 613 CBS
News 8 Bulfwlnkle 10
7 3o-Schoolles 10 8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame
Sl 33
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3 Phil Donahue 413 15 New
Mickey Mouse Club 6 Family Altair 8 Match
Game 10
9 3.._Edge of Night 6 Andy Griltlth 8 Family Altair
10
10 ~Sanford &amp; Son 3 4 1S Big Valley 6 Tattletales
8 Jokers Wild 10 Mike Douglas 13
10 3.._Hollywood Squares 3 4 IS Price Is Righi 8 10
11 ~Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Happy Days 6 13
Marcus Welby MD 4 Elec Co 20

GEMINI (May Z1.June 20) A
supenor wtth an eye to emp re
bu ld ng may approach you
wtfh an dea that he s ear
marked for self aggrand1ze
ment Do it w I ng ly fo h s
ltttle plot may fatl

CANCER (June 21 July Z2) L

beratlon allow s us gals to take
the bull by the horns today If
the guy you yearn for has been
rettcent lnv te h m out nstead
of wa t1ng for the phone t()r ng

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) The best
1deas you have today are of the
productive vanety that deal
w1th you r wo rk or c areer Th s
s where you should d1rec t your
co ncentrated effort s and ener

Jo-Knocl&lt;uut 3 15 Family Feud 6 13 Love of Lite
8 10 Sesame St 20 33
11 5,5-CBS News 8 Loving Free 10
11

"

12 3D-Ryan s Hope 6 13 Bob Braun 4 Gong Show ll
Searchfor Tomorrow 8 10

Eh~c

Co 33

I CIO-For Richer For Poorer 3 All My Children 613
News 8 Young &amp; the Restless 10 Not for Women
Onlly 15
1 3.._Days ol Our Lives 3 4 15 As The World Turns
8 10 2 Of}.-$20 000 Pyramid 6 13
2 3D-Doctors 3 ~ 15 .One Life to Live 6 13 Guiding
Light 8 10
~
3 ro.-Another World 3 4 15 Lilias YO!Ia &amp; You 20
3 Is-General Hospital 613 3 J.._AII tn The Family
8 10 Ohio Journal 20
• OD-Mister Cartoon 3 Little Rascals Our Gang 4
For Richer For Poorer 15 Mer-v Griffin 6
Gilligan s ts 8 Sesame 5t 20 33 Gomer Pyle
USMC 10 O~nah 13
A 30-My Three Sons 3 Partridge Family 4 Brady
Bunch 810 Ll)tle Rascals ll
5 oo-Bonanza 3 My Three Sons 4 Gunsmoke B
Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20 33 Hogan s
Heroes 10 Emergency One\3 My Three Sons 15
5 3CI--Odd Couple 4 News 6 Elec Co 20 33 Mary

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFElLOW
One l etter s1mply stands for another In lhts sample A Is
used for the three h s X (or the two 0 s t tc Sm glc l etters
apost r ophes t he l e ngth and f ormation of the wnrd9 are all
hmts Each day t he rode l et ters arc differe nt .,.

CRYPTOQUOTES
CGK
BTO

6 oo-News 3 4 8 10 13 IS ABC News 6 Zoom 20 33
6 JO-NBCNews3 41S ABC News 13 Carol Burnell&amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10 Over Easy 20 33
7 CIO-Hee Hew Honeys 3 Cross Wlls 4 Liars Club 6
Sna Na Na 81 News 10 To Tell The Truth 13
Gilligan s Is 15 Country Cor~er 20 Big Green
Magazine 33
7 3()-Funny Farm 3 Match Game PM 6 Family
Feud 8 MacNeil Lehrer Report 20 33 The Judge
10 In Search Of 13 Wild Kingdom 15
8 00-Grizzly Adams 3 4 13 That Thing on BC 6 13
Good Times 8 10 Nova 20 JJ
8 30-Szysznyk 8 10 9 ®-!!lack Sheep Squadron
3 4 15 Charlie s Angels 8.13 Movie The Great
Scout and Cathouse Thursday 8 10 Dance In
America 33

CACGIGGC

Showdown at the Hoedown 20

,---.&lt;.;

10 OD-Pollce Woman 3 4 15 Borella 6 13 Newo 20
Eyewitness 33
NGDGCIB
G A P U I
I U G1 10 3.._Wodehouse Playhouse ' 20 11 oo- Newo
3 • 6 8 10 13 15 Dick Cavett 20 Lilias Yoga &amp; You
JORREG GSAITHN
33
11 3.._Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Pollee Story 6 13
Yestenllly'a Cryptoquole MAY YOUR NEW YEARS EVE
President Carter s Trip 8 ABC News 33 Movie
CELEBRATION BE JOYOUS AND FRIENDLY AND, ESPE·
THe Slender Thread 10 12 ®-Jenokl 33
CIALLY SAFE - THE CRYP!'OQUOTER
12 40--Myslery o ol the Week 613 1 OD-Tomorrow
(I 1977 KJntFutur~tsSyn d ~ate In~
1 3 4 2 1\)-News 13
I

Anyone who feels you can be
eastly bluffed today IS bark ng
up the wrong tree They II know
the truth when the y tramp on
yot.r toes and w sh they hadn t

TAURUS (April ZO May ZO) You

45-

12 O~Newscenter 3 News 4 6 10
To Say The Least
15 Divorce Court 8 Midday 13

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb fBI

Break your routine today and
do somethmg out of the ordt
nary You II probably meet
someone very mteres tmg in a
place you ve never been
ARIES IMorch Z1 April 19] Put
your ent re force beh nd thmgs
1n wh1ch you have a vested
interest w lh another today It
you go full steam ahead btg
th ngs can be acc6fn plt s hed

6 Sunrise Semester 10
Chrlstopher Closeup 10
6 3G-News Conference 4 Sunrise Semester 8 6

Radio Cily Statoon N Y 10019
Be sure to spec fy your btrth
s1gn

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)

10 0()-Family 6 13 Lou GraQI 8 10
11 ~News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Over Easy 33
11 J()-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Movie Electra Glide In
Blue President Carters Trlj) 8 BC News 33
Movie The Cool Ones 10
12 0()-Janakl 33 1 oo-Tomorrow 3 4 1 4&gt;-News 13

6 oo-Nashvlfle

Get yourself mvolved 1n o rgan
tzat tons that espouse causes
yo u can be l eve n tht s com ng
year Be ng part of th em wtll
open doors for you that you
d1dn t th nk possible
CAPRICORN (Oec Z2 Jan 19)
Tn1s tS a day when you meet
people eas ly Your ope nhand
edness in tt gues them and
th~y w 11 be Impre ssed and
want tO know you better F nd
out more about yourself by
sending for your copy of Astra
Graph letter Ma I 50 cen ts for
each an d a long
se f
addressed s tamped enve o pe
to Astra Graph P 0 BO)( 489

gy
VIRGO (Aug Z3 Sepl ZZ) Ea1ly
n the day you may be sober
an d preocc upted Lat e r your
fun Side co mes forth and you
enJOY yourself and en ven
those around you

LIBRA (SBpl 23 Ocl 23) Fman

c ai

aspecls co nltnue to be
favorable fo r you today w th
one pass ble exceplton avo1d
entanglements w t h fnend s
who expect to rea p what yo u

sow
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov ZZ) To

coot Left at demons trot on
type po ty
n Mtddleporl
so,met me n post coup le of
monlhs
Anyone know ng
whe reabouts
please CCI I
992

2038

WOMAN OR couple to I II&amp; w h
mtddle aged lady n Pt Plea
sont W Vo Salary nego t able
Phone I 304 6 75 6999

AUCTION SA LE every- lues ond

Fr at 7 pm New and used
merchond seat Oh oR ve Auc
I on Meigs Plaza M ddlepo t
Oh G
Ho me Phone (30&lt;1 )
773 5471
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Oh o Depa rtmen t of
Nat u ra l Resou r ces through
the D \1 son of Parks and
R ec reat on pursuant to and
n accordance w th the
prov s on s of Sect on 150 1 09
and 1501 091 of the Oh10
Re v sed Code proposes to
contract for t he operahon of a
m ar ne and m sce llaneous
re fr esh m ~nt
concesston at
Forke d Run State Park
located
n M e gs County
Ohio
Off c al b1d proposals w II
be rece ved n the off ce of the
Depar t ment
of
Natural
Resources D v son of Parks
and Recrea t on Concessions
Un t Bu !d ing C Th rd F oor
unt1l 2 00 p m January 20
1978 B ds wll be pub ely
opened thereafter by the
Ch ef or h s author zed agent
The r ght s reser\led to reject
any and all bids
The con tra ct w be tor a
ter m of four (4) years and
eleven ( 11) months from
February
1
197 8
to
December 31 198 2
The 0 \liS on of Parks and
Recreat o n
will
fur n sh
docks on e b u ld ng a p
pro xl rnatetv 32fee tby 20 feet
15 rowboars w th oars and
one ref r gerated ce ho use
Th e Con cessi on ai re w II
furn sh a other equ pment
mer c ha n d se
mater a ts
ut 1 t es
l ab or
etc
necessa ry to operate th e
co n ce ss ons t o approved
standards
t sha ll be th e nte nl of t he
contract that the seasop of
operat on fo r the marna at
Forked Ru n St ate Park wl l
be from April 15 to October 1
The abo ve da tes are n
ten d ed to estab Ish o nly
m i nim um
guidelines
regard ng
seas on
of
operat on
Certa n
c r
cu m st ances may necesslta e
ex te nd ng or shorten ng the
operat ing season s for the
var1ous fact t ie s I n any
e\l en t season and hours of
operat on w II be subject o
annvel rev ew
Requests for b d prop o ~a l
forms snou d be makj! to the
Departm e nt
of
Natural
Resources 0 v1slon of Parks
and R:ecreat on Con cess ons
Un11
Fountain
Squar'f'
Bu ldtng C Third F l oo r
Col u mbu s
Oh1o
43224
Telephone 61.4 466 3277

ROBERT W TEATER

D rector

(12) 27 {1) 3

soltener MOdel UC SVI
Now Only •279.95
let us test your water Free

(0 .. )098 32'&gt;0

992 7680 7&lt;2

FREE TO good home
Mole
beagle ApprolC 3 yeo s old
992 3702

J AND 4 RM furni she d ond un
!urn shed op ts Phone
5434

10 11 4t c

FOUR ROOMS and bo th Adults
only No pets 992 5908
COUNTRY MOBIL!= Home PClrk
Rou le 33 north of Pome oy
large to ts Call992 7479
HOUSE FOR lea se on L ncoln Hill
n Pomeroy
5 bedrooms
Depos t req u red
9:92 3-4S'il
offer 5 pm

1972 Elcomtno au1 omot c PS and
PB o1r new pont I es
crogers w II sell o trade co of
equal val ue Co11949 2880
1968 DODGE POLARA Good run
n ng cond t on Good t es
992 uss
1976 GRAND PRI X SJ Atl &amp;let as
low m leo ge Tom Anderson
992 3348 offer -4 pm

Mn
TraVel
Talers 18 5 $3799 25 7
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fold down
$1 700 up We sell serv1ce ond
qual ty Open Sundays Camp
Conley Slarcroft Soles Rt 62
N of Pt Pleasant
21 FOOT TERRY 1976 Equ pped
992 7066

TIMBER Pomeroy
ducts Top pric e
sowt mber Call
Kent Hanby 1 -446

Forest Pro
for stond1ng
'il92 59~5 or
8570

COINS CURRENCY token s old
pocket watches and cho ns
s lver and gold We need 1964
and old er s lver co ns Buy sell
or tr.ode Coli RoQe Wamsl&amp;y
74:2 2331

RUGS
WALL Hong ngs and
ofgans N ce for Ch s mas
Reasonable Coli 992 '1214
1976 FORD F 250 Custom 7 50 .:
14 00 11res w nch Only 14 000
m Headers C8 Tope deck
O~er $3 000 n elCtras Se ous
co Is only cite
12 noon
6961072 $6,~000
=~~~~B 8 S MOBilE HOMES P Plea
sen t W Va bes de Heck s
197J B oadmore 14 x ~ 2
bedroom
1973 Oar an 14 IC 60 2 bedroom
1972 V ctor on 14 lC 67 3 bedrop n
2 both
I 'il72 Covent y 12 1e 65 3 bedroom
1969 Sl otesmo
12 x 60 2
bedroom
CUSTOM FRAME h tch fo r late
model Ckevrole o r G M C
t uck 992 7066
BURROUGHS SENSI MA TIC oc
count ng mach ne Has been
unde serv ce contract and n
good cond I on Con be seen at
The Do ly 'Senl net 111 Cou t
St Pomeroy OH

POMEROY

lANDMARK
For All Your
General Electnc TV ' s
and
Hotpomt Appliances
Sale Pnces
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone992 2181
WILL CARE for lhe elderly n ou
home Phone992 73 14

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

state

meetlnp have been set for
WedJI.eaclay In ~Jphoo and
'nlui'lday In Wapakooeta

By Carolyn G Thomas
Deputy Clerk

(1)

3 10 2tc

' I

(61&lt;) 378 6311

THREE ELVIS recordr. co llectors
tem5 Can be seen at CI fton
W Vo osk for Roger Kle n
ONE GAS range I ke new $75
1974 250 CR Huskv e,.;cellent
'tend t on never raced Ex
cellent motocrou b ke Pr ced
\l&amp;ry reasonably 9A9 2692 or
949 2028

FIREWOOO
SPLIT
del '&gt;~e ed
stocked $25 per Iorge p ckup
load 7A2 2256

by

Aul9mollc
TransmiSsiOn Semce

step

PARTS · lABOR
GUARANTEED

ACE HARIMARE
Middleport Ohio

r~

1111FC

Ca11992 748 1

Vinyl &amp; Alummum
S•dmg

CHEMICALS

We Strip Paint Varni1hts

MAIN
POMEROY, 0
BEHIND THESE DOORS
- you w II hnd feat ures
galore
Lovel y modern
k i tchen 3 or 4 bedrooms
insulation storm wtndows
&amp; doors nat gas hot water
heat
c arport
Asking

131 915 00
NEAR BASHAN

About

Wood Metal Plastics

available $13 000 oo
NEAR ~EW HYDRO
UNIT - 2 nice lots with
r v e r fro ntage 2 s tory
fram e home J bedrooms
bath
2 f i replaces
coal
furna ce Just S6 800 00
YOUR DREAM come true
3 yrs old l m le out lo-vely
equipped
kitchen
J
bedrooms 2 baths storms
storag e bldg
1 acre

$37 300 00
JUST LISTED

RACINE 0 .

SERVICE
WOOD AND WOOL FIB ER
SIN CE 1947
·
l'l-111mo

FREE ESTIMATES

No Sunday Ca lls Please
11 ·21 1 mo

.

RACINE CARPET

OHIO

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERVICE

Bollen
Pumps

Th~rd Street
R~c1ne Ohto

Furnaces
Heat
Auto Controls

&amp;

GAS-OIL- COAL

PHONE

Dave Parsons
Owner

12·18-1 mo

mE:_

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
t

OD Moln Sl

PQmeroy Ohio
Pomerov 992 6282
or 992 U'l

UMio430PM

742-2570

11_:_2~1

CARTER

·

HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

SHOP

SALES ANO SERVICE
II 9 tf c

3

$1720000
PUT ii'OURSELF IN OUR
HANDS
WHETHER
YOU RE
HOUSE
HUNTING SELLING OR
BOTH
YOUR
INTERESTS ARE OUR
INTERESTS!
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK KATHY &amp; LEONA
ASSOCIATES
992 2259- 992 6191

Kin~ury

Home Sales
"Get A Load Of This''

WElHERAU CONCRETE
Hartford

12 2 1 mo

SMALL form fo sole 10% down
owne f no need Monroe Coun
ly W Vo Phone (304) 772
:} 02 or (304) 772 3227

Blowo lnlo Wolh I AHles
StORM
WINDOWS I DOORS
REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS

Phone 992 2181

lnulat10n StniCIS
Fin .. anl AnHtblt

AJEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

bath
ga s

Phone 992 2181

WILL DO typmg Monusc pts
stat s1 col resumes etc Coli
992 3827 even ngs after 6 and
weekend s

::.=:·.=-. : ..

HOBSTETTER
107V:a Sya~more St

Pomeroy, Ohto

PHOlitE 992 6333
OH1 ce Hours 9 A M to

PM
anc

New • bedroom 2500 sq It
lt-vlng space 2 V2 baths l
room ranch brick Locate&lt;

3 mlleslrom Rl 7 up Wes
Shade River Call for a1
appointment
We have need of llsftngl
all lypes homes
land,.
commerc111 ete

Cheryl Lemley
Associate
t{ome Pllono 742 2003
H1llon Wotn Sr
Associate

Home Poone 949
2589
-I

Chester Ohto
10 30 c

LISTING

-

loulll ftomefl)' 0

Corpel &amp;Uphotsle!J
Phaae Moke YDUn&amp;
At

992 2206 or 992 7630
ThJ On(lnaton

For this 2

bedroom frame home near

stores All city ut ilities
40 ACRES - Woth all
minerals some of the land
lays nice that coufd be sol d
m S acre lots Small barn

45 ACRES - In the sticks
with water tap sept c tank
and electric All th s at a
price that anyone can
afford

NOW IS THE TIME TO
SELL THAT BIG FUEL
EATING HOUSE
Helen L Teaford
G Bruce To ford

Commerc ol properly opp ox 17
ocres level land locot~ at
Tuppers Plains on Oh o Route
7 Phone (61•) 667 630A
VA FHA 30 yr f nonc.ng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E Stote Athens
phone (614)592 30S1
1 3 ACRE S ON Leading Creek

Road 992 7066

SIX ROOM haute all electnc
carpeted car port $26 000 Ar
row compe $600 992 ~ 885 10
~o 6 pm No S~rmdoy t~ll s
THREE BEOROOM hoth o
Total electr c \ Brick
Carpeted 1 acre a"tio
ced
for qu ck sole PH 992 3667 o r

992 3312
TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame
kouse FA turnace storm w n
dows fl eploce In Middleport
Phone 992 3A57 or 992 5867

We re tn tarpenter Iust ofl

Rl 143 Phone 698

7191
(
12 1 1 mo

lB- mo

PUlliNS EXCAV.-.T NG Complete
Se v ce Phone 992 2478
EXCAVA T NG doter loade and
backhoe work dump t ucks
and Ia boys for h re w haul
f II d r t to $0 I I meslone and
g ovel Coli Bob o Roger Jef
fers doy phone m 7089 n ght
pi-lon e 992 3525 or t/92 5232

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

~!".!' !~. r.Jl!!l!!!l

.......... the

WILL do roo ~ canst uct on
plumbmg and'heol ng No JOb
too lo ge o too s.m oll Ph one
7A2 2348

SAVE ON
CARPETING
COnely Stripe
Rubber Back
Regular 14 95

Save 14 U Sq Yd
12 ond 15 " Width Carpet
rubber back
Reg

'4.88 SQ. YD.

s. 95 not insloiled

Ce llulos•c (wood l1berl
Thermal lnsulalton
Save 30 pet to SO pel
on heattng cos t
Experience and
tully tr1sured
Free Est
Call 6676479or991 l8 1 ~
11 15 1 mo

Home Senice
Elec
plumbtng
carpenter
work,
paontmg,
paneling
any JOb that needs to
be done around your
home

PHONE

997-5705
12 7 1 rno

RACINE CARPET
St«JP
CLOSED FOR WINTER

&lt;-•
Spec tal Orders or Sf)owing

EXCAVATING dozer bockhoe
Cho les R Hot
and d tche
held
Bock Hoe Serv ce
Rutland Oh o Phone 742 '1008

Realtor Assoctates

ond w th sedud
ed wood$ water and good llC
ce ss n Monroe County W Va
$1 000 down coli ( 3~) 712
3102 ., (304) 772 3227

A complete seleclton
ol Coal &amp; Ctrculatmg
Heaters at low pnces
Fully stocked

Not fhelr.1btor1

3

bedroom home In Pomeroy
out of t lood area 2 baths
&lt;t ntng
roQm
full
basement
natural gas
central
heating
and
garage $27 500

110 500 -

Appalachian
Stove Company

Young's
Carpeting

-

Broker

Tank Service

Box J4

Supenor

COut

S HobsteHer J r

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon

Jack's Septic

Slum Extroctton

ci ty water natural
central
heating

NEW

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmalk
·~ ::~ack W Carsey Mgr

George

JIM KEESEE

216 E Second Street
Pomeroy Ohto 457"

bath natura l gas furnace
ci ty water
alum num
s iding and cor n e r lot
As k mg Sl6 500
,.
S7 500 - 2 bedroom f rame
home being overhauled
F ireplace
c istern
:2
pclr ches a nd large lot of
almo st an acre

We Are Now
Takong New
Customers For

-.

ReSidenttal
and
commerctal
Call for
esflmate 24 hour serv1ce
Anvday anytime

GUITU$.AWIINGS

VIRGIL B TEAFORD SR

See us a.l 1100 East MttJn
Streel Po111eroy Ohl6 9r
Phone ~2 703• tjl2'l lmo

. J&amp;.L .
BlOwn Insulation

!'hone 985 3806

ll'ocuse Ohio
Ph 99139!3

•Mobole
Hom e
Underpmnmg
• Roof Coat•ng
•T•e Downs
• Awnmg s - CarporB
•Insurance
Repatrs

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

LARRY LAVENDER

516 500
SYRACUSE - 3 bedroor11s

::::~-:.:·

Be the open in g of th e In
door 1eason for you with
your old furnitu re re
11ptloht•red n beautiful
warm colors &amp; patterns
from Bob s If vou are
tooktn'OI for uvlnps It wll4
pay you to ply us • vis it
t.ocated In b•ck of the Sew
N Sew Outlet on Main St
R•clne 0
11 10 1 mo

Blawn

t..f/o. 1011

9-. _Jack W Carsey Mgr

~~-

Henderson

FREE ESTIMATES

3 LOTS - 7 room hQuse

Ail

I

675 1582
UNION OPERATED

882 2175

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 bo hs
oil elec 1 ocre M ddl&amp;po t
d ose to Ru and Phone 992
7.481

TEAFORD(B

•

INSUlATION

Gener1l Contractors
Phone 949 2801
or 949 4:~ 60

100 Kerr St
Pomeroy Oh1o
12 JO 1 mo

"

PlANING MILl

Bissell Siding Co.

Phone 992 2798

10 nice laying acres on
b la ck top road
Wate r

RACINE

Storm Wmdows
Call Profess ional
Buolders

Ant1ques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Service
Custom
Professional
Reftnl5hing
Repatrlng
Anl1ques Bought &amp; Sold
Dtck Seyler

Phone 992 3325

...

!71-6250

119ttc

HOMESITES for sole I acre ond
up Middleporf neor Rut land

-

REASONABLE
RATES

Located In

MEIGS PlAZA

Pomeroy Landmalk

REALTY

HAY $1 25 and $1 50 per bole

SEWING M,.A,CHINE Aepo n se
viCe oil makes 99'1 2'18A Tke
Fobr c
Shop
Pomero~
Authom:ed S nger Soles and
Ser\llce We sharpen Sc ssors

SlOIJIC.SOfflTT

I

LARGE ROUND Bole feeders
mode of square 1ub ng $76
Vermeer Iorge round baler
$250 0 scount unttl Feb IS
1978
Woodmosler cob net
wood heaters thermostat ash
pon h nged top for cook ng
bnck I ned S242 Coalmoster
some as above but Shaker
g ate for cool $2~ Blowe[ fttr
ether ~8 Merr II Chose (614)
698 3021

Eny st•p
tnstructlons

AlUMINUM

We have enlarged our
serv1ce department and
wtll service Hotpotnf and
other"" brands

992 6370

WANTEO OLD p1anos any condl
ton Pay ng SIO and S25 each
F1rst floor only expert mov ng
Fully nsured company Wr te
g v ng dtrec1 ons
W tlen
P enos Box 188 Sord1s OH
43946 Phone614 4831605

SALON

SWAIN

home equi pped
level
yard
car~rt e lec tric ba se board
heat many other reatures

W II buy I p ece or complele
household New used or ant
ques Mort n s Furn lure 20 N
2nd St
Mtddleport Phone

day you re what ac to rs call a
qu Ck study
If someone

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY

MSIDING
LStDING
SOFFIT &amp; LINGS
GUTTER
DOWN
SPOUT

bedroom
k it chen

NO TEM TOO lClrge or too small

CASH FOR Junk Cars Frye sTruck
and Auto Wrec ker Serv1ce
Phone 742 2081 or Pennzo1l
Rutland 742 9575

NOTICE

etc

OLD FURNITURE Ice boxes brass
beds 1ron beds etc comp le te
households W te M D M liar
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o o call
9927760

CHIP WOOD
Po es ma le
d ometer 10 on largest end $8
pe ton Bundled slob $6 per
ton Del vered to Ohto Pollet
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 2689

&lt;:. - - -

REMODELING Plumbing heat ng
and all types of general repo
Work guaranteed 20 yeo s ex
pe ence Pho e 992 2409

ECONOMY TRACTOR w th o at
tochments L ke new osk ng
$2250 Ahone (6 4) 698 3290

21 FOOT TRAVEl
a ler Self
con a ned Tandem wheels ex
tro n ce 992 525.4

CASH po d for ol makes and
models of mob le t'!omes
Phone area code 614 423 9531

3825

3290

(614 )667 3252

AUTO BODIES and scrap metal
R de s Salvage 9'il2 5468

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
I h an d eaorpan
comes upwt
ANDAPPRAISEMENT
you can evaluate tf Qutck Y and
The Stele of Ohio ,elgs
correct ts fault s
county court of common
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec 21)
Pleas Probate Division
Those who m~ke demands ol
To the Eltecutors or Ad
you wtll turn you oft completely
m lnlstrators of the estetes to
such of the fo lowing as are
·'· d b
tod51y II you are mane
Y res 1dents of the State of Oh o
yo Ur o wn sl mpatco however,..,..-,. z - the surv1vlng spouse
you could be gene rous td a
the next
of
k n
tl:le
fault
beneUclar les under the will
and to the attorney or et
torneys representrnp any of
the aforement oned persons
Reed Gandee !No 22257)
Middleport Ohio
STRIKE OFFICE
General J Hat (No 22270)
SPENCERVILLE Ohto R 0 2 Raci ne Oh o
vola trene Cundiff ( No
(UP!) - The Amertcan 22240)
Syracuse Oh10
Agriculture Movement has
Max Manuel
Jr
(N o
Rae ne Ohio
set up a statewide strike 22065)
You are hereb y notified
office In Spencerville to that the Inve ntor es and
coordinate efforts by Ohio ApJ;~ra sements of the estate
the
aforement oned
farmers seeking higher food of
deceued late of sa d County
prices through federal were flied In this Court Said
Inventories
and
Ap
leglslalloo
pralsements will be for
Bob Risher, the organlza. hear ng before this Court on
the 13th day of Januerv 1978
lion's
secretary, said at
1 00 o clock P M
lhe movement In Ohio has
Any person deslrlno to file
grown
quickly
since exceptions thereto must file
at least fiVe days prior
Informational meetings in theT
to ttie date set for heerlng
northwestOhiolastmonthtn
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court this 29th
explain the nationwide day
ot December 1977
fanners strike
Mann i ng 0 Webster
Judge
Rlaber sald two other such

CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
tale $450 Phone (6 14) 698

1971 FORO TOR NO Sta t on
Wagon 302 mote P S Good
cond ton Wh1te $250 Call

{614 )667 3252

REPAIR -

SOWfRS

Sweepers toasters rons all
small oppl once5 lawn mowe
nul to Sto e H ghwoy Goroge
on Route 7 Pkone (614 ) 985

Phone 992 2181

1972 FORD GRAN Tor no Sta t on
Wagon 351 eng ne A C o~o~ o
51 OOOm l4:1s $1 300 949 2082

F 250 l • ton 1973 Ford P ckup 4
speed P S P B Wh te $1 200

ElWOOD

Jlck W Carsey Mgr

3162 992 5&lt;27

RI SING STAR Kennel Boord ng
Indoor and outdoor runs
Groom ng all breeds Clean
san tory facilit ies Chesh re
Phone (614) 367 0292

Business Services

BRADFORD Auct oneer Com
plele Serv ce Phone 9.19 2'487
or 949 2000 Rac ine Oh a Crill
Bradford

Pomeroy Landmalk

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc ety
Corel ne and adopt on Sorv ce

&amp;

LOST Lodtes good block w nter
· ~~~~~~~~~~~

TUESDAY JANUARY3 1978

R o Grande 83 Cedarv l ie 68

Valdosta St !Gal 78 Tlfhn 76

IUHTOPU

as

Lost Mole I sh Setter I Jeor old
phone
Color has lokewoo
number lost n Mulberry Hgts
area Coll992 5917

4PM

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Green 79

W &amp; J at Marietta

MEKMBN

We need a Few good men

m

Swodar

South Flor ida 88 Bowling

KAI U

NOTICE

the day before pubUcation

Mondays results
Georgia Tech 59 Clnclnnah 56

NI M B

Betty s Carryout now ~n for
business 3 m let'TiJiJth of M d
dleport on Rt 7

MIXED BEAGLE pups 8 mo old • COAL I mestone and calcium
chlortde ond rok1um br ne l or
985 31108
dust control and ip4K ol m x 19
5o II fo formers Excels or Soh
WorJ.. s Motn Sl eel Pomeroy
Oh o or phone 992 3891
IF YOU ha\le a serv ce to offer
want to buy or sell somet~ung
oe look ng for work
or
whatever
you II get results
laster w th o Sent nel Wont Ad
Let Pomeroy Lilndmark
Coll992 2156
sotten &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water

~lor
4PM

Tyler Moore 10 Hogan s Heroes 15

M CS

RACINE GUN Club. hos d ~eon
t nultd guo- shoot ng unhl Jan
8 1978

Agr l culturall

Monday

..

5

I UG

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

!

Ellen Carson to R Gene
Brasel R W Rulland
Clyde 0 Harrtson Nancy
Harrtson to R Gene Brasel
R W Rutland

NIMH I

wtll ......
rwtpOMIWe for more th.n one lncorred lnlertion
l!honttn.%151

Norwood N~,._07648 Include your name addreat .zip code and make
checks payab1e to Newapaperbooka.
;t

ho++-t,...--f-1-

QTB

Number (n Ca~ ol The Sen-

' n.e Publllbtr reeerves the rt~hl
to edit or reiect any tlia deemed ob-

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug

(j

fHEYAE NOT

Ill b
, llnd

Jumbles RAVEN ERUPT PUNDIT SAILOR
Yesterday s Answer They dldn t quite win lhe hill climb- THE
RUNNERS UP'

jokesters

BGM H

WHY ONE 151 NOT

(Answers tomorrow)

and-

EGI

: Mobile Harne 11lel and Yard saW!:!
; ""' occept&lt;od ..,. with c.uh wilh
&lt;J'der 115 cent chllrae for ada carry

APT TO I'E 150R:Et;&gt;
IN THE COMP'ANY
OF NUD15T"S.

(J

sa1d

41 Minstrel

PLANNING GRANT
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
$2 2 mtlllon grant for
continued family plannmg
serVIces rn 01110 has been
released by the U S
Department of Health
Education
Peter Ross administrator
of
the
Ohio health
department s famlly
plannmg and adolescent
health un•t said the grant
would provtde money for 25
local projecll! throuHhout the
state
Ross srud the senvtces are
deSigned In help pr001ote the
health of mothers and
children

j

IJERIG~

Z8 Before
Z9Wnte
30 !Dpster
33- Avov
34 Quarantine t;o-t-,-t36 Concepts
311 Ever

a tot

F...dl1t'ord OYer . . n:wumwn 15

•

[) I

- up

39 card
holding
441 Warning to

1n

: In metnOI'7 CUd ol 'I'hanU and
ObltiUU')' I &lt;:enll por wonl 13 00
&gt;~mininum Cub in ldvanct

ISEWBOTI

Gene Brasel

21 Cherrucal
suffiX
22 Kind of leaf
23 Overseers
24 JtU or John
25 Colton
fabric
26 Diminutive

uo

lJO

2.25

....

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 4 1978
5 45-Farm Report 13 5 .50-PTL Club 13 5 55-News

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Bambt s
IItalia s
pals
capttal
DOWN
5 Maxuns
I Wtld lime
II Depraved
2 Sbeeplike
12 Greek lunar
3 Erroll
detly
Garner
13 Stgned
tune
4 Wmglike
passport
If Valiant or
5 Have hopes
Cbarles
6 Libyan port
15 Board the
7 Moslem
Melrollner
name
17 Craggy
8 Chrtstian
hiD
9 Curtain
18 Romaman
caUs
com
10 Lose one s
19 Author
cool 2 wds
Levm
16 Assistant
20 Rage
21 Th•rsl
quencher
22 Absconded
23 Penalty
25 Tall tales
26 Skin
aperture
27 G1ve a

uo

110

•

R W Rutland
Carscn

ear.oo ~

, .... 114 etn1a per -.on~ per day
;..;to Nllllln,t ...... lloon ....,_,g••
.diJ1; wiD be claried ll the I day

Robert V Kmg Lillian B
Kmg and Frank Orehel Jr
Line Agree Rutland
Gordon Proffitt Freda M
Proffitt to George J Moore
Frances E Hew1tt Frances
Ann Hew1tt I% A Lebanon
Charlotte A Brown Jerry
E Brown to R Gene Brasel
R W Rutland
Harold E Sauer Fay M
Adrean A

U.WordlrrUadtr

ldo,a

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Sauer to R

,.,.
........,.,.
lo.-

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

,
/--'~;_

loUrordonaryWOtds

Dallas Coach Tom Landry
whose team will be playmg m
tts fourth Super Bowl
Cratg IS capable of
beatmg you and right now hts
team has a lot of cooftdence
They feel they can beat the
world

of

~THATSCRAIIBLEDWOADCWIE l
IIY Henri Amold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these tour J1,1mt&gt;Mts
one letter to each square to form

~

COLUMBUS - Ramblmg p;J.tlens by a margm of over 7
Wtllle the s ulky sport s to I Mlssoun T1me an aged
nejl'est mllhonatre wtth Ide- pacmg mare and Travalon
tune earnmgs of $1 066 437 Tom a promtsmg freshman
Dentson at Wtttenberg
hae been named Oh10 Horse pacmg star tted for thtrd
Otterbein at Marietta
Muskingum at Ohio Wesleyan
of the year for the third rankmg m the ballotmg
Rochester
at
Baldwin
Rambling Willie was the
straight season
Wallace
sport
s richest aged per
Already
honored
as
the
Heidelberg at Wooster
natton s top aged pacer also former of 1977 w1th hts
Kenyon at Ohio North ern
Mount Unton.,-t Oberlin
for the third year running seasonal bankroll of $397 921
Olivet (Michl at Def iance
That earnmgs mark was alSo
Tiflin at Mlam
( Ffa l Ramblmg W1lhe rece1ved hts
a record for a geldmg durmg
newest
honor
1n
statewide
Christian
ba llohng of U S Trottmg a smgle campatgn m the 171
Cleveland St
at
Siena
Tourney
Assn members OffiCial yea r history of the harness
ThurSday
presentation ol the annual sport
Wisconsin at Oh o Sf
award
wtll be made Jan 4 at
The son of Rambling Fury
Kenyon at Xavier
Ashland at Roanoke {Val
the USTA Dtslnct One Meadow Belle this year
N Ca roli na Char lotte at
banquet to be held m the posted world records for
Dayton
Sheratnn-Columbus
Motor geldmgs on m1le (I 54 3
Eastern Illinois at Wright St
Hotel 111 downtown Columbus Meadowlands) and f1ve
Ohio Dom nlcan at Mt
e1ghths
m1le
(I 54 3
Ohto
Vernon Nazarene
Wilmington at Urbana
Purchased for a bargam Brandywme ) racetracks Hts
Fnday
$15 000 m 1972 by !ramer mne two mmute wins thts
Cedarville at Wal sh
season boosted his lifetune
Tlflln at Edward Waters Robert Farrmgton for hts
wife VtVIan and Paul Set bert total to 36 second only to
(Fia)
Case Western at Wash &amp; Lee of Cincinnati Ohio the 7
Albatross on the aMime
(Tourney )
The Cmderella story of
year
old
pacing
geldmg
Saturday
Rambling
W1lhe mcludmg
topped
48
other
horses
m
the
Iowa at Ohto St
votmg Wtlhe received 113 of the generous donations hthed
Louisv lie at Ctnctnnatl
Ball St at Oh10 University
the 274 ballots cast He by owner Farrmgton from
Toledo at Bowling Green
defeated
his closest roval the her share of Wtlhe s ear
Kent St at Central Mlch
3-year-old pacmg filly 1m mngs were the feature ar
Dayton at Xavier
tlcle m the October 1977
W Illinois at Ak ron
Ashland at Radford ( Va )
ISSUe of Hoof Beats
Wright 51 at Central 5t
magazme
the of(lctal
Campoell !NCl at Cleveland
monthiy
pubhcatwn
of the
51
USTl\
Steubenville at Youngstown

St

when he was w1th us

Coaches
co ll ege
ral ngs w th won los t
records through games of
Su.nday Jan 1 and number of
I rst place 'w'O tes n parentheses
Team
Pomh
1 Ken tucky (32 18 0)
34?
2 North Ca r o na ( 10 1)
262
J Ar ka nsas 12 (9 OJ
230
4 Marquette (7 1)
20 1
S UCLA (9 11
119
6 Notre Dame 17 21
166
7 ndanaSt (1)(80)
130
8 Syrac,..use (10 I
71
9 LOUS \If.l~ (72)
61
10 lnd ana (8 1)
60
11 Ka nsas( 10 2l
42
12 Maryland (9 1l
2B
13 C nc nnat (7 1)
26
14 v rg n a (7 OJ
22
15 Geor g.etown (8 21
13
16 ( t e) Utan s t (B 1)
12
16 (I e) M ch Sl (8 1 l
12
18 ( te l Hol y cross (7 1)
10
18 (t e) Pro\1 dence (8 1)
10
20 San Franc1sco 19 3 )
1
Note By agreement w th the
Am er can Basketball Coaches
Assoc at on teams on probat on
by the NCAA are nellg be for
lop 20 and nat ona champ on
sh p cons derat on by the UPI
Board of Coaches Those team s
cu rrent y on proba t on for 1977
are C en ten a r y Clemson
Hawa M nnesota Nevada La s
Vegas Western Carol na
Board

Bennett tbe tttle of Umted
Press lnternattonal NFC
Coach of the Year for !977
Under Bennett the Falcons
gave up a modern record !29

14

M!Mesota so &amp;!per Bowl XII
willlje a match of two Dallas
Cowboys quarterbacks ooe who stayed behind and
one wbo went elsewhere In
create one of the most
successful comeback stones
the NFL has ever seon
Morton and Staubach
battled f&lt;r years to be the
successor to Don Mered1th as
Dallas quarterback
Slaubach eventually woo
and Morton wanting to play
somewhere was finally
traded In the New York
GUUlts From there he went
to Denver
Cratg
ts
a
fine
quarterback JUSt like he was

bas ketbe~lt

surprlSmg turnarmmd won

conference s

Ualttd Prt11 lattrnatloiUII
After 18 years of the
frustration of losing, the
Denver Broncos have earned
a berth m the Super Bowl and
Bronco delenstve tackle Lyle
Alzada said hts teammates
aren t about In relax now
When we get down to the
Super BowjJ_Jan 15 at New
Orleans) yo'lfare gotng to see
a beehtve bunting for some
honey said Mtado after the
Broncos 20-17 ~~~~over Oa~
land m Sunday s AFC cham
ptonslnp
Our team is not an
emottonal team
ho satd
You won t see any
letdowns
Alzada was a major factnr
m the Broncos• hmthng
Oakland s rushmg attack to
94 yards and forcmg the
Raiders out of tlletr game
plan
The 6 foot 3 260 pound
veteran had ftve tackles and
two asststs desptte havmg In
play agamst Ra1der offenSive
tackle Art Shell
Let me teU you if Lyle
Alzada has a weakness 1t lS
Art Shell satd Alzado But
what helped me was the way
(linebacker) Toni Jackson
would flU the hole when Shell
would take me out
Denver will face Dallas a
~ vtctor over stubborn

lt'iJ\lNliD'il

~ ~ ~~ a

•

•

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12- The DaUy sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday,Jan. 3:.!~~------------------ - - - - - - I

andals hit!
KC school

SYLVIA. JEFFERS
Sylvia Jelters, 81.

rooms.
According to Principal
Robert L. Lanning, the school
was entered between 11 :30
p.m. Monday and ~ a.m.
today. The. achool's security
guard had left the school at 11
p.m.
The intruders appa rently
used a sharp instrument to
'break windows out of the
main office and a door en~
tering Lanning's office.
File cabinets were opened

,.

and papers were thrown
about the floor. Apparently
nothing was taken .
The GaUia County sheriff's
department credited the
school guard at Green
Elementary School with the
:apprehertsion ()( two men
charged with petty larceny In

Ron Erskine and Sam Rogers
were on routine patrol at
Mountain State Chry sler
Plymouth at 11:47 p.m. when
two. cars, traveling south,
drove recklessly off the
Shadle Bridge.
·
The· patrolmen slopped the
cars, at which time, the
driver of one vehicle, Tom

Phillips, Rt. 2, Bidwell, said
the driver of the other car
was after him.
At that time, it was
reported, the driver of the
second car, Clementes,
pointed a gun at the
policemen and shot. He then
proceeded across the Silver
.Memorial Bridge.
The. Henderson officers
radioed the Mason County
Sheriff's Department for
assistance.
In tum. the Gallia County
Sheriff's
Department,
Gallipolis City Pollee and
Ohio Stale Highway Patrol
were called. CJementes drove
to the former ferry landing irt
Kanauga then aba.ndoned his
car behind the Southwestern
Ohio Equipment . Company.
At I a.m. Saturday, the
departments gave up the
ch~se . Later, mementos gave
himself up to the Mason
Count~ Sheriff's 'Department.

the theft of gasolin~ from city
owned school buses.
Joseph Franklin, 24, Rt. 2,
GaUipolis, and Bryan Robert
Evans, 19, Gallipolis, were
booked for petty larceny.
Sheriff'.s deputies also
participa\ed Friday night in a
six area law enforcement
agency chase involving a
Point Pleasant man.
·
Keith Clementes, 18, Point
PleaSllnt, was charged with
brandiShing a firearm after
ASK TOWED
turning himself in to Mason
A marriage Ucense was
Gounty authorities.
· issued to Rober! Lee Reeves,
According to the police Zl, Pomeroy, and Marjorie
report, Henderson patrolmen Marie Gillilan, 23, Pomeroy.

un .ted Methodist Church.

and the Gallla County Health
Board .
,

field, Calif., and Rev . Nor.

man L. Sheets 8ellu ry , Gray ,
Ga. and four grandchildren
survive.
Graveside services will be
held at Mound Hilt Cemetery
1 p.m. Thursday. Friends
may call at Miller's Home for
Funerals from 7 until 9 p .m .
Wednesday .
~
The family _ requests no
flowers and that c on t ributi ons be made to the
American Heart Association.

SHERMAN GORDON

Sherman (Eagle) Gordon,
75, a resident of Gall i polis,
died In Holzer Wledlceil Center
at 10 :45 p.m . Saturday .
Mr. Gordon was born Nov.
6, 1902, in Gal li polis, son of
the tate James F. and Vern ie
Lewis Gordon .
: He was one of two children
born to that union, A brothel' ,
Frank , preceded him in death
18 years ago.
.
·
. He married Melessla Lee in

1923 in

G.alllpolis. The

following ·children were born ·
to this union :
Bobby , Roderick
and

Rudolph, all of Gallipolis:

Frank , Columbus; Mrs .
William · ( Paulmenla) Hutch in son , ·Black fork; Mrs.

ATHENS - Florence E.
Houck'. 78, ol .tO Mapelwood
Drive, Athen•. died Sunday

Harrlsonvltle, died Saturday
evening
at
Veler~ns
Memorial Hospital.
,
Mrs. Gilkey was born ,at
Har risonv i lle, the daughter of
the la te .Ric.hard Monroe and
Phoebe Hewitt Frel'lch . She

u·n lverslty . She was a
member ot the First United

her husband, Floyd Cllrdon
Gllkey ; two grandsons ,

School and allended Ohio
Mel hod lsi Church In Athens

r.m. at lhe .(Lola) Clark, Pomeroy ; Mrs.'
Funera Home. In · ·eon (Eleanor) Updegraff,

Thursday at I

Hughes
Athe·ns wl"th the
Rev . . Birmingham, Alabama; Mrs.
Waldemar Hautt officiating. Fred
(Alice)
Whaley.•
Burial will be In West Union Clearwater,
Fla .;
Mrs .
Street Cemetery . Friends Rober"t (Frances) Alkire.
may cal l2 tl.ll 4 and 1 titl9 on Harrisonville ; two sons,

Wednesday.

Three sons died In Infancy.
Mr. Gordon was employed

F. S. MORRiSON

Wade,

!Madge! Claridy, Xenia.

at the TNT plant and cit)"

J lmmy Gilkey and Mlck

and a 55 year · member of the . Nelson Clark, and two sisters
·Athens Chapter 175 of and three brothers .
Eastern Star.
Mrs. Gilkey was a member
•--survivors Include her of
the
Harrisonville
husband , Orlan G.; one Presbyterian Church , a
daughter, Mrs. Robert (Anna retired school bus and truck
Belle) Hartung of Col umbus ; driver, member of the
one niece, Miss h\argaret E. Harrisonville Lend-A -Hand
Burt of Athens ; one nephew. Club, and she also wrote the
James Burt of Houston, Harrisonville news for The
Texas.
Daily Sentinel for a number
She wa~. preceded In death of years.
by two brothers.
S ~e Is survived by four·
Funeral services wilt be daughters, Mrs . Robert

Columbus and Mrs. William

Sandy '(Thelma)

wasalsopreceded In death by

Frederick S. Morrison, 84,

died Fr iday at Chrlslion

Anchora·ge
Retirement
Center . He was born In

McArthur Nov . 21, 1893, the

Cllnlon Gilkey. Albany, and

Howard
Day
Gilkey,
Columbus ; one nephew,
Robert Bl i zzard , Denver ,
Colo .• several othl!r nieces
and nephews ; 13 grand children, and 15 great .
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1 p.m . at the
Harrisonville
Presbytertan
Church with the Rev . Herbert

Grale ofllclatlng. Burial will

son of the late John Sherman be In Wells Cemetery .
and Emma Satters Morrison. Friends may call at the
He was a farmer In Athe.ns Bigomy .Jordliln
Funeral
Home in Albany any time
He was a member of Paint County .
today. The family will
Include
~;~
Creek . Baptist .church ol . Surv l vQrs
Gallipolis where · funeral brother ,· J . Emmett, of receive friends from 2 to 4
services will be held 2 p.m . Gallipolis ; one sister. Mrs. and 71o9today . The body will
Wednesday with Rev . Grover Edward !Nellie) Culiums of be taken to the church one
hour Prior to services.
Turner, Rev . Elbert McGhee · McArthur.
Graveside s&amp;rvlce·s were
and Rev . John King ofWARREN E. BAKER
held Sal urday at Elk
f iciating.
REEDSVILLE - Warren
The bOOy will lie in state at Cemetery In McArthur wlth
the church one hour prior to the Rev. Howard Shavely E. Baker, 54, Rl. 1, Reedsville, d ted Monday at
officiating .
services.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Burial will be In Pine Street
fo llowing an extended Illness.
Cemetery .
Mr. Baker was born at ·
· Friends may call at
Coclville the son of the late
Miller's Horrie for Funerals
Warren and Martha Kibble
this afternoon and evening .
EVELYN FRAYER
Baker. He was also preceded
Pallbearers will be James
Evelyn Fryer, 79, Rt . 2. in death . by one son. Oal'
Howard, Billy Howard, Rodle Gallipolis.·
died at 6;30 a .m. Eugene.
,
Gordon, E'a gle Whiteous, S~nday at her,home
She had · He w~s a memoer . of the
. Wade and Edward been In falling heallh. the
past Baptist Church,
Drew
. two years.
.
Webster Post, American
Sll~ wa1 born Sept. 5, 1898,
LP.tJinn . former emolove of
al Rock Ll&lt;k, W. Va., the U.S. .CorPs of Engineers,
DALE GLEASON .
Dale GleaSon, 71, a resident ·daugt"lter of the late Lilburn and lor the past -seven years
of VInton , died In Holzer McKinney and Melvina Wall was employed at ~ancaster
McK inney .
Glass Co. He was a yeteran of
Medical Center around 10: 30
She .was twice married. W . W. II.
.
p.m . ~nday .
to
Robert
S.
Mr. ·Baker Is survi ved by
He ~as born Sept. 30, 1906, first
In 1916. He his wife, Wilma Rood Baker ;
on Rt . 2, VInton, son of the Aldr idge,
late Frank and Etta Holcomb preceded her in death In 1939. two sons, · Marvin, Pompano
Her second marriage was to Beach, Fla ., and Roger,
Gleason .
He married Verna Card- Richard L. Frayer In 1942. He · Okeechobee , Fla .,; three
well In 1931 In Calleltsburg, preceded ller In death in 1966. daughters, Nancy; Brewer
The followl~g . c~lidren and Mary Ann Baker,
Ky . Stte survive$, along with
survive ~ Mrs. George Edna)
Okeechobee and Ruih Ann
two daughters. Mrs. Ted
(Helen) Harder, Columb.us ; Davies, Kalamazoo; Mich.; Golden. Cannonville, Ohio;
Mrs. Joan Johnson, Wilkes- Mrs. Robert (Gall) Spaide, two step -sons, Lawrence
ville i one sister, Mrs. Faye Bucyrus, Ohio; Mrs. Worth Rood, Lancaster, and Donald·
Sandllne,
Fort Rood 'a t home; a stepCaton , COlumbus . Four (Aii.~el
Sulpher, La .; Mrs. Clifford daughter, Julie Rood, Lan.
grandchildren su"rvlve.
.ThOrntOn. ·caster: three slsfers, Opal
Mr. Gleason wa·s a retired (Margaret )
lumberman . He was a Gallipolis. Two children died Randolph and Edith Young,
.
R~edsvllle,
and
Betty
member of the Vin ton In Infancy .
E Ieven grandchlldr.en an~ Dickens, Little Hocking; two
Masonic Lodge No ~ 131 ;
Vil"tton OES No. 375·; Vinton 18 great.gr~ndchlldren half-sisters, Lej)ma Hall.
surv ive.
Coolville:
and
Louise
The follOwing brothers and
sisters survive: otto, Foster,
W. Va .; Tracy, Florida; Mrs.

stall which buill lhe
Gallipolis Roller Dam in the
mld·l930.s.

Financipg' s A Snap!
'-J

If you've gor a new or used car
in mind for rhe future ... see
us for speedy financing! We'll
give you rhe cash you need ar
rer'!ls you can afford.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

nalf·b&lt;olllers,

Charlu

Hauber, R.eeds'(llle, and Paul
Hauber, Long Bottom . and
five gr•ndchildren.
FUneral services will be

'

Thursday al 2 p.m. at 1he

lhe Morritng Slar United
AVA MARIE GILKEY
HARRISONVILLE - Ava Methodist Church, the Meigs
Mar ie
Gilkey ,
80, County Farm Bureau, •i!ltld

afternoon at Mt. Carme l
Med ica l Center, Columbus.
Sf1e was born In Meigs
County, the daughter of the
late James H. and Emma
Ed ith Chaney Burt . She was a
graduate of Ath~ns High

Contributions may be made
to the memorial fund of the
First United Methodist
Church In Athens.

maintenance department for
several years . He al so
worked at the GS I and was a
m;emQer of tlie construction

It's Clear!

-HOSPITAL NEWS.

Gtuesencamp, Portland; tWo

Eden
United
Bretkren
Church
with
the
Rev,
Elden
Pomeroy 1 one brother, Jack
Funeral servlcts will be Handley, Allanla, Ga.; lwo Blake officiating . .Burial will
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at sisters, Mrs , Or lando be In the church cemetery .
Ga. died Saturday.
She was bcrn Dec . 16, 1896, Vinton Melllod lst Chufch (Margaret) Jurado. Wood· Siriends may call al the White
at Leon, W. ·Va. daughter of with Rev . C. J. Lei-nley and side, N. Y.. and Mrs. Carl Funeral Home In Coolville
the la te James and Eddllll Rev . John Grelser officiating. (Mary
Sue)
Michael, afler 7 p.m. this evening. The
Burial will be In · Vlntorl Mi nerva, Ohio; and several body will lie In •late at the
Grandstaff Jeffers.
churc f1 one hour prior to
She was employed by Atty. .Memorial Park . •
nieces and nephews.
Fri ends may call this'
Henry Cherrington "and Atty .
Funeral services will be servi ces.
Hollis Johnson· as a legal eve ning al the McCoy.N\oore held Thursday at 10 a.m . at
CLARK B. IHLE
secretary f.or severa l. years. , Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7· the Sacred Heart Church "In
- Clark B. lhle,
She was a graduate of Gallla 9 p.m.
Pomeroy with .the Rev . . 66 RACINE
1 Racine, died
MaSOf1IC services· will be · Father Paul Welton of.
1 • Route
Academy .
.
One brother. Charles •. held 7 : 1~ p.m. by members of flcia llng. Buria l will be In l~e Saturday al Holzer Medical
.
llle VInton LOdge.
preceded~ her In death. One
Sacred Heart Cemetery . Center.
The body wllille In stale ol Friends will be received at 'A son of the late Charles P.
doughier . Mrs . Edgar
(Marton) Ramage, Colum- the c!"turch one ho!Jr prior to Ewing Chapel after 9 a .m. on and Irma Roush" lhle, he Is
preceded In death by ·a
bus, survives. One Sister, the services .
Wednesday . Rosary servlc~s also
Mary - Stampfle . Mr.
Mrs. Lena Tracy, survives.
will be held at lhe funeral si-ster,
One n le(~ arw:t one n~phew ,
.home Wednesday at 7: 30p .m . Ihie Was a dairy farmer all" of
his life. He was a memb,er of
FLORENCE E. HOUCK
Mrs. Nara Douglas, Kemp-

a

resident of Gray arxl Lynn
'Haven Nursing Home. Gray.

Vandals stru ck Kyger
Cree k High School early
today, breaking windows to
gain entrance to the school
office and various class·

l

Area_Deaths

CAROL I,NN HANDLEY
Carol Ann Handley. 41 ,
Gall ipolis, died Dec. B1 In
Gallipolis. Miss Handley was
pretede!l In dealll by her
lather, John F. Handley.
She Is survived by her
mother, Mrs. Helen Handley,

N(M OPEN

Mabel McColgan,

was a director of the Central
Ohio Bree&lt;lers Assn .
su·rvivlflg are ....:.,~s~.wtter­

MIIdred Hellman Ihie; a
M'rs .
Jac k
daugnter ,
!Phyllis) Rely'~~! • Flint,
Mich.; a son, Charles N.,
Racine, and Mrs . Elma
Louks, Syracuse ; a brother,
John lhle , Racine , and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held

al 1 p.m. loday at the Ewing

Funera l home wittl the Rev .
Robert Bumgardner and
Mrs . Florence Smith of ·
ficlatlng . Burial was In
Gilmore Cemetery.

MARK HARTENBACH

Mark Hartenbach, 87,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Saturday at a hospital I f~ East
Liverpool when~, he had
resided the past 30 years.
He was ·a son of the late
Al~rt and Hannah Nease
Harten~ch and , was also

preceded In dealh by two
brothers and a sister. While

in PomerOy, Mr, Hartt)'nbach
was employed with the
Ebersbach Foundry and the
Ebersbach Service Station.
He was atso preceded In

death by his wife . •

Surviving are a brother,
Otto Hartenbach of Miners·

ville; a son. Ed !Happy), and

a daughter, Mabel Dawson,
both of East Liverpool.
Funeral services were held at
East Liverpool. ·

MEETING CALLED
SYRACUSE - Tbere wUI
be a meeting Monday, Jan. 9,
at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building and all
persons interested In laking
&lt;m~ergency medical training
course under the directioo of
Joe StrUble, Oris Hubbard,
ER Chief, reported.

Veterau Memertal Hitopltal
Satardoy Admluloao Emma Hood , Pomeroy ;
Jessyca Hatfield, Mid·
dleport; Patty Harmon,
Rutland ; Mary Hood,
Pomeroy ; Gladys Hood,
Minersville; Thomas Hen·
dricks, Middleport.
Saturday Dlocbar&amp;e• Danlelle McNeil, Della Stahl,
Joseph Rud&lt;Jlph, Sr., Rita
Swan, Linda Watson, Marvin
Dtlrst.
.Sunday . Admlulou
Stanley Shaver, CheShire:·
Kathryn Metzger, Mid·
dleport.
Swlday Dllcbarges - Ruby
Cooper, Hobart Raub,
Kathryn Denison.
Monday AdmlasiOill - Roy
Reuter, Pomefoy ; Otto
Johnson, Middleport.
· Monday Dlscbarcea Lawrence Wolfe, · Darlene
Barrett.
Holzer Dllchargu
Kemp Beaumont III,
Dlama Clark, Mrs. Ralph
Fisher and daughter, Ruth
Fiske, Earl Gilkey, Anthony
Uoyd, Robert Melvin, Mrs.
Gary Mitch and two infant
sons, Donald Mourning,
Debra Nourse, Tamara
Plants, Marjorie Plymale,
Patricia Porter, Jaflet Reese,
Frank Smith, Jolyn Taylor,
Mary Tracey, Betty Wagner,
Rebecca Walker, Heather
Weaver, Donna White, Mrs.
Marvin Austin and son, Leota
Beaver, Robert Binion, Mrs.
Erskine Blliriton, Jr. and
daughter, Heather Bond,
Donald Canter, Richard
crager, Eric Cr1Jmp, Mrs.
Damy Dobbins and twin
daughters, Eliza Downing,
Thomas Ferguson, Richard
FrankUn, Mrs. Carl Graham
and daughter, Barbara
Grover, Sarah Hawkins;
Randy Hughes, Patricia
James, Elizabeth Janey,
Christopher Lee, Patricia
Lucas, Allen Martin, Dennis
Martin, Sr., ROse . Miller,
Kathleen Moody, Louie
Morris,. Lisa. Neville,
Rebecca Oiler, Stephanie
Oiler, Andrea Rouse, Jennifer . Skaggs, Audra Smith,
Mrs. Jack Stevison and
daughter, Ollie Swain, Mrs.
William Tatterson and son,
Glendon Ward, Emma

Willlamo, Trocey Collins;
Doria Corwin, Mn. Francia

Cottrill al)d oon, Lilarkttte
DIUard, Mrs. David Jeffes-i
and ""'' Harvey OdeU, Mrs"
Ruuell RDse and son, Mrs
Edward Sarver and son,
Paula Spencer, Richard
Turner, Nikid Weaver, Leiter
WilliamS, Jr., Leora W~,·
Christopher
Yates ,
Christiana Dempeey, Mrs;•
Charlea Elliott and daughter~
Mrs. Jack Ga':f'elt and soiloj
Mrs .• Jack McCoy and son·
Mrs. Randy Mealge and son,•
Delbert Milam, Charlei

Miller, Marcus Moore, Mrs ..,-;
Donald
Ratcliff,
arid
daughter, Mn. Marlt: Seberlg;
and son, Mrs. Donal&lt;l
Searln8en and daughter.
~
Blrlhl
&lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Jlobert.;
Elliott, Jackson, a daughter; :
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Garrett,~
Jackson, a son; Mr. arid Mrs ..:
Jack McCoy, Henderson, W. '
Va., a' ""n; Mr. and Mrs. ·
Donald Ratcliff, Crown Clly, :
a daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. _
Mark Seberlg, Ratcliff, . ·~
son; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd, ·
Knapp, Letart, W. Va., a :
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. '
Richard Corvin, Wellston, a}
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. :
David Mohler, Rodney, a~
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs.:
Kenneth Sheets, Wellston, a;·
•
son.

-..,
I

.

Court actions
filed in Meigs ..
•'

•
Three suits for divorce aDd ~
one diMolutlm bave been ·
flied in Meigs , County !I
Common Pleas Court. FWng :
for divorce were Myrtle :
Norman, P&lt;meroy, against •
Moses Nonnan, Pomew; ~
Marilyn
Sue
Burke;;.
Pomeroy, against Michael
Thomas Burke, Rt. 3,'
Pome~oy.; VIckie Rempe(
Middleport, against Robert .
llj!mpe, Jr., New !lnlmen./
Rmald Leo Dalley, Rt. 1,'
Portland, and . Ruth Ann .
Dalley, Rjtland, fUed for ·
dlssolutim. Susan Darling
was appointed deputy 8heriff, ·

E·lberfelds In ·Pomeroy
Visit Our Warehouse on
Mechanic Street - Plenty of Free Parking.

.

See the fine selection of GE and RCA TV se1s, GE RefrigeratoJS,
Freezers, Utton Microwave Ovens, Carpet and Unole~m by the
yard, Steel Cabinets, Room ·Size Rugs

'

Elberfelds In,Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT, OH.JO
· , Member Federal Deposit insurance
·
Cor~r~ion

PHONE 773-5536

IJEPOSITS INSURED TOS40,000 '

mansvllle ; Mrs. Della Jor-

Save for the Day
Your Baby becomes · .
a..Big Wheel on Campus

Hall Jehovah Wltriesses.

Funeral s.,_e'rvlces were he1a
this after~Oon at the Waugh.
Halley-Wood Funeral Home

with

G.

C.

.

Reynolds,

mi nister, officiating . Burial
was In Centenary Cemetery.

Specia,l of the 'Week

WILLIAM SWANSON

Tuesday, Jan. 3 lhru Saturday, Jan. 1

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS
sPECIAL
PRICE
Foollong theese Dog

Reg. 9Sc

SPECIAL
PRICE
·

40C
60C
'

No lirilit to quantity of purchase. OHe·r goOd ior

Drl•.,.ln or Corrv·Out Service Only.

11 :30 p.m. Monday In Holzer

Medjcal Center.
He had been In falling

employee of Holzer Medical

This special is offered to il(quaint yo" with the
goodness af our Government inspected wieners

and our homemadl sauce.

Texas Rd ., Gallipolis, died at·
. health the 1past two years.
· Mr. Swan,son was a retired

Ct!EESE DOG
(Meal sauce and melted cheese) ·
Reg·. 60c

Life styles change, costs of living escalate,
children seem to rush through infancy
' Into adolescence at a galloping
run. Parents who anticipate rising college costs begin educational savings plans with
Farmers Bank at an early
date . Lefus help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings ac·
count that will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are .

William Swa nson, 62, Rt. 3!

·

center.
.
He was born Dec. 24, 1915,
In Huntington, .w, Va . son of
the ·1,8te Harry Swanson and
Ka therlne HaIley Swans(ln . .
He never married.
One sister, Mrs . Hazel
Guess, Gallipolis, survives.
Five brothers and one sister

pre&lt;eded'hlm In death.
He spent most of Ills life In
Galli a County. He was a
World War II veteran. having

served In the V. §, Army.
Mr . 1 Swanson

was

a

member of VFW PO!t -U6.&lt;,
and Lafayette Pool No. 27,

.'

·Far·mers·Bank

American Legion,.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Thursdli!Y at
Waugh-Hatley-Wood Funeral

Home with Rev . Frank Hayes
offlclaflng. Burial will be In

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.

· Friend• may call at lhe
fu'neral home on Wednesday

from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
Mil itary graveside rites
will be held by Post 4-06-4.

• 0

..,

POMEROY, OHIO
'40,000 Maximum Insurance Filr Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiOn

~28.499.50.

Breakdown of the proposed expenditures of the village
during 1978shows: General Fund, mayor, $2,400; clerk, $3,000;
treasures- , $360; soliciU&gt;r, $2,500; elections, $1,500; council,
.1,440; total, f11,200.
General Administration, personal aervices, $4,500; supplies
and materials, $1,300; capital outlay, 2,000; hydrant rental,
•18,000; total, f38.000.
·
SI!CilfltY of Persons and Property, ,Police· Department,
per!Olnal services, $65,000; supplies and materials; ~600;

meters, fi,OOO; cruiser, $2,01)0, total, $109,600.
Cooununity Environment, BuUding Inspection : PU..nniJu!
Commlsslon, total, $2,500.
Transportation Facilities, street Department, personal
services, $22,500; supplies and materials, , $14,000, other,
$8,500; total, $45,000.
Transportation FacUlties, Street Paving, State Highway ,
personal services, $2,000, other, $3,000, total, ~.000.
Public Health Services, Cemetery Operat&lt;on and
Maintenance, perSQnal services, $13,000; supplies and
'

materials, $2,000, capital outlay, $500, total, $1 ~,500.
Distribution of Electricity, utili y, Other, Ul,OOO. Totsl,
$23,000.
Community Environment, Water System Operations, water
pumping, other, $13,000; water distribution, per!Olnal services,
$35,000; supplies and materials, ·$30,000; capital outlay, $2,000;
other, ..,_,000; total , f80,000. Adminlstrat&lt;on, Water, debt
service, $87,282; other, ISOOi total, S87,782.
Sewer Maintenance, perS()nal services, $10,000; supplies and
materials, $18,000, total, $28,000.

.

•

at

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 185 .

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,4,dministration, Sewage, debt service, $29,000, other $\00:
total, $29,400.
General Bond Retirement Fund, payment of principal,
$4,000, payn1ent of interest , $2,887.[10, total, $9,887.50:
Federal Revenue Sharing, city improvement !und, $20,000;
cruiser, $3,000; cemetery to up date, $200; recreation, $6,000;
total, $29,200.
.
Fire Department, personal services, $4,000; supplle~ and
materials, $5,000; other, $3,630; total, $12,630. Total all
approprlaliWls, $:&gt;28,49!1 .50.

entine
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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

Dr. Brown new council president
Also meeting with council loose and ·suggested lhat the Harold Brown, Lou Oswrne:
may run in the red 1" he said.
Pomeroy Council Tuesday vacancy.
·Larry Webruog , coun- were cemetery trustees ordinance on dogs runnin~ finance committee, Lou
night elected Dr. Harold · Meeting with council were
Osborne, chairman; l.nrry
Kelton ,
Trell loose be eiJ!orced.
Brown its president and Fred members of the Board of cilman, Indicated lbal be Aar9Jl
Mayor Andrews pointed out Wehr ung, Lnrry Powell";
and'
Ja ck
Crow, Jr., W8$ retained as Public Affairs , E . F . would not approve the in· S{))(oenleb
solicitor. Council also rehired Robinson and Harry Davis. crease wilb lhe type of waler Scidenabel. Council told the that all a person hus lo do Is nrdinaru·e &lt; 'Ui fllllittt~c . llnroltl
Jack Krautter as street Robinson indicated to council being supplied to Pomeroy oi trustees that they felt that swea r out a wHrrant and an Brown , ch ulrmun , J.o\.i
cards should be mailt'&lt;l to arrest witt be ll)Bd-e. It was · Osborn e,- Larry Powe ll ;
commissioner and named that water rates will have to lhe present time.
su rety and purkl ng com·
ow
ners of lot s at th e su~e&amp;1ed thul the ordinance
Robinson admitted the
Donnie Ward his assistant. be raised soon. He said the
·
mittec, .lim Ncut~Jing,
be
revised
and
L'll!orced.
board
is
"very
disappointed"
C.metery,
asking
$5
per
year
Mayor Clarence Andrews board of public ilf!airs thus
chairmuu.
Lou Os bumc,
maintenance
on
five
grave
Mayor
An.
d
rews
re·
far
has
managed
to
pay
all
with
the
.quality
of
water,
read the' resignation of
Hurold
Brown;
utilitle! tmd
a
ppointed
Jcf
Webster
chief
"but
we
do
have
plenty,"
he
lots.
The
truStees
thought
this
bills
and
have
~
small
Rober! H. Hysell •from the
CO!t"un lttc c,
Boa'rd of Public Affairs and balance. At the present rate noted. He said when the ·a good idea and will pui it into ·. of police and named the sani t ~Hipn
.
following committees for the William Y o !ln~ . chuh·mon,
council named Dale Smith, of expenses Wlless a rate ·Stiffler fire occurred that if operation.
Ncutzling,
Lnrr y
W. N. Bellamy of the year: building cominltlee, Jim
increase
is
obtained,
"we
they
had
not
been
on
the
former
mayor,
to
fill
the
JOHN M. GWYD
present water system Columbus and Southern Ohio Larry Powell , chairman , Wchruug; mobil r homes,
William Yu un K: · Street
Pomeroy ci&gt;uld have lost the Electric Co ., presented a cost
committee,
J.nrry Wrlwung,
on
the
present
street
sheet
entire lower block.
chulnnan, William Yn un~.
Brown suggested that lighting on Main and ~ond
resea rch to improve the Streets and the parking lot
In c r easin g c loudin ess Jim Ne ulztlng.
'111c mayor's rcpo1t for
and
cost
estimates
·on
tonight
with a low in the mid
water
be
done
and
a
financial
John M. Gloyd, 44, who has 1956, and attended Franklin was an internal auditor for a past six years he has been
December
in the umount or
chang
ing
from
mercury
statement
be
submitted
to
~s . Chance of showers or
been appointed executive University In Columbus for private corporation and a with The First National Ban~
$.1,:145.20
wns
rcntl ami llC·
vapor
to
high
pressure
snow
nurrles
11Jursday'
with
council
from
the
Board
of
vice · president of the two yeats. He is a graduate of state agency for !ive years. of Warren County at Morrow,
ecplcd
.
Co
uncil
&lt;'rlt~rod Into 11
sodium.
high
tem
perature~
aboul
40.
Public
Affairs.
It
wai
noted
Pomeroy National Bank, has the American Institute of He was an assistant national . Ohio where he bas been a vice
· ICHSt' ngrCPI/ICII\. With the
·
Council
.
will
st
udy
th
e
Probability
o!
prl
"
Cipitation
!hat
there
are
1,100
users,
Banking and the Ohio · bank examiner based in president and cashier.
begun his new duties.
Reared . on a farm ' ln Bankers Assn. School.
ACtive in civic groups, half of which use the prop()sa ls . and malte a 10 percent today, 2D percent Pomeroy E ll Squml to rcmlcr
Columbus and for six years
decision later .
tonight and 31 percent scry•ic~;:s l&lt;i the v llla).{c of
Madison Counly, Ohio, Gloyd · Gloyd was employed as a ·served with The Peoples Gloyd is 'a past president of minimum.
·-· POmeroy.
The Board of Public Affairs
Wehrung said letters of · '1l1~rsday .
· is a 1952 graduate of London teller with City National National.Sank o! Greenfield, both the Warren County and
Th e rnceting wns O)Jcned bY
conunendation
is
to
meet
and
present
to
should
be
sent
High School. He served as a Bank and Trust Co. in Ohio as an assistant cashier the Highland County Bankers
to
those
responsible
!or
the
co
uncil
at
the
next
meet1ng
YOU
prayer by Lou · O•bor nc.
medic in the U. S. Navy, 1952· Columbus for four years and ~nd a branch manager. The Assn. He is a past , clerk·
.'
.
Attending wei'C Muyor All·
treasurer of the Greenfield its suggestion on the amount attractive Christmas lights
of
increase.
·
·
that
gra
ce
d
the
vlll
ag.
e
The
Jefferson
Memoria
l
in
d"rews,
· Br own , ·' Ncutzling,
~
Lions Club anrl a member of
streets
this
holiday
season
.
Washin·
g
ton,
D.
C.,
wa
s
O~ b o rn e, l.mry Powell.
The
utility
committee
are
'the Lebanon Kiwanis Club.
Jim Neutzling , councilman , dedicated April 13, 1943, the W e hruo~ and Young, connell
He is a current director of the also to meei before the next
staled that his daughter had ~h BMiversary o£ '111ornn s mernl..lt!r!i, omd June Wnlton,
regular
meeting
of
council
in
Lebanon Chamber of Com·
been bitten by a dog running Jefferson's birth.
regard to cost of utilities.
clerl&lt;.
merce .
Marrieq, Gloyd and his
wife , Nancy, have four
children, John Michael,
By liELEN THOMA!!
will be coming to Jerusalem,
Columbus; Terry L., servin~
UPJ White nouse Reporter
planning to play a very strong
in the U.S. Navy in CaliforPARIS (UPIJ - President role, working closely with
nia; ·Lori of Lebanon, and
. Carter arrived today in rain' you, ·and I . think our
Usa who Is a sophomore at
swept Par!s on a flight from consultations with the Shah
Lebanon High SchooL · Mrs.'
'J~awan, Egypt, where he and · (of Iran ), King Hussein (of
Gloyd is attending Miami ·
President Anwar Sadat Jordan), King Khaled (of
Wendell Hoover was
agreed on a compromise Saudi Arabia l and you will reelected president and Mrs. University where she is
solution to the emotional pr~re us well.
.
Jenuifer Sheets was named majoring in nursing. The
lsaue of a future Palestinian
"When we leave here I will vice president of the Meigs couple has three· grand·
homeland
call
Prime
Minister Local School District Board children.
Gloyd is presently residing
carter, in remarks to Sadat (Menahem) Begin (of Israel ) of Education Tuesday night
in
Pomeroy and wiU move ~is
before leaving, raised the on .the phone to expand your in its organizational session
family
to Meigs County next
posslbllity that he would visit good wishes and also to at the Meigs Junior High
summer.
Jerusalem at some unstated prepare
for
(words School in Middleport.
time ·in the future .
inaudible) for Jerusalem.
The board set the regular
Carter, in his second
"But the most di'amatic meeting nigh\ this year for
arrival. ceremony of the day, impression I heve is U&gt;tal the thir~ Monday of ·each
was greeted by President support for your efforts and month at 7:30 p.m. with the
Vplery ·Giscard d'Estain.g also admiration for your exception of January when
•
who expressed hopes thell' (inaudible word).
the bQard . will meet on the
two days of talks would lead
"You can tell I heve read 12th . Pay for · members
U&gt; a more brotherly' a more. the papers. I will never forget beginning new terms, Carol
·united and a safer world.
when we had a chence to Pierce and Hoover, was set
U.S.·French relations are meet for the first time ."
at $40 a month while the pay
•
at their highest point in years
After
the
arrival for those completing terms
on COI!flcil,.was named to council to flU the unexpired term
COUNCIL SWORN IN - Council members were
and Carter replied with ceremonies at Paris' Orly was set at $20 a month in
By 'PAUL WEDEL
. of the late Elma Russell and this was his first time to rw&gt;
' sworn in Tuesday night by Mayor Clarence Andrews. Left
thanks for the help France field Carter was driven accordance
with
new
lor the office. Young, Wehrung and Neutzllng nrc new
BANGKOK, Thailand
to right are Lou Osborne, Bill Young, Larry Wehrung,
gave to the United states in immediately in a motorcade legislation·
(UP!) - Elements of six
members.
Mayor Andrews and Jim Neutzling. Osborn , who has been
its war of independence and to the Arch of Triumph to lay
The salary of the board Vietnamese divisions
recalled the Allied invasion of a wreath'' at the Tomb of the clerk for the year was set at supported by tanks and
Normandy ·which Carter will Unknown Soldier. Then came $15,000 and a service fund of fighter bombers now occupy
visit Thursday.
an offieiallneeting with Gis- 50 cents a student was set for most of the " Parrot's Beak"
Carter flew into Aswan card and 1.a speech this expenses of board members area of Cambodia, Thai
from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia afternoon .. to the French in traveling to various intelligence so urces said
.•
meetings. Liability insurance U&gt;day . .
earlier today and·was greeted National Msembly.
there by several thousand
Ris talks with Glscard were was purchased for members
The ,.,urces said fighting
Emtlans chanting, "Peace! expected • ·to cen(er on and it was voted to join the was · continuing in the 8()().
We want peace!" The same economic problems including Ohio School Boards assn. . square·mile Svey Rieng ·
Supt. Charles Dowle'r was province of Cambodia, caUed
crowds cheered him off with help to Third world Nailons;
shouts of "Long live Carter, energy and the defense of named to serve as the board's the Parrot's Beak by U.l?.
the mlln of peace !'
Western Europe! They see agent to receive and expend troops who fought there
Carter talked with Sadat eye to eye ·on most world federal funds . Charles during the Vielnam War In
for only - 50 minutes but in problems although there ar&lt;! Hamilton, president of the 1970.
their brie-f summit they sharp differences over Meigs Athletic Boosters, who
ln(onilation on the fighting
• . agreed in principle that the nuclear policies with the .attended the meeting , was involving tanl!s, an estimated
Palestinians Should have the French fully as stubborn on given permission to establish 60,000 Vietnamese belonging
a Meigs Local Athletic Hall of U&gt; six" divisions, and 25,000
right to self-determination- their stand as the Indians.
an apparent shift in U.S.
Carter wiU travel by train Fame with details to be Cambodians remains sketchy
policy and one that ran into . 1biD'Sday w the beaches of worked out with the Meigs and aU sources spoke of
iml1ledlate Israeli opposition. Normandy to pay homage to Local Athletic. Boalii. Mary receiving conflicting reports.
The Paris reception was the thousands of Americans Kay Yost was reappointed to
The · fighter bombers
more restrained than the one and allies. who died there on a seven year term· on the involved, the . sources said,
In Egypt. A SO!!,gy rain was . D•Day. On Friday he Middleport
Pomer.or most likely were Ilk powerful
falling and tbe\!:ed carpet , journeys to Belgium and 'Library hoard and Bonnie propelled-driven Als left hi
squlshed as carter stood on it returns to WaShington at end Fisher was · named high · Vietnam by the United States
with the fool taller Giscard of his nine-day' trip.
school girls track coach.
· before the 1975 fall of Saigon.
for the traditlooal playing of
Vandallam in the district
In a related development,
the national anthems.
was discussed at which time the Soviet Union Tuesday for
Carter looked fit and
it was estimated that losses in the first time pablicly bltmied
tanned on this the sixth stop GARBAGE USE
the last breaking and en· its Communist rival, China ,
in bla seven-nation visit, In
CINCINNATI (UPI ) -City tering at the school will run for provoking.the l!order war
were sworn in . Tuesday night by Mayor Clarence
SWORN iN - Left to ri~t, Gerl Walton, treasurer,
contrast to the gray 81ld · officials. are considering a about $6,000 with some In- that reportedly has Cliuaed
Andrews.
ljarry
Davis,
member-of
the
Board
of
Public
Affairs,
and
soggy day that dampened the proposal to allow the city to surance coverage. lloover more than · 2,500 casualties
unlfumu1 of the armed forces dispose o£ Its garbage by and Pierce. were given their since It began last spring .
ai)d the plumed, silver recycling some of· it and oath of office by Clerk Jane
A Radio Moscow report
belmets of the ceremonial processing the rest into ' Wagner.
moniU&gt;red in Hong Kong said,
Garde Republicalne,
fuel.
- · Oth.e r board . members "The worsening relations be•
It was in As wan thai
The private firm that drew pr&lt;Jient were Mrs. Sheets, Dr. tween the SociaUsl Republic
· Carter's
remarks
as' up the plan, Ohio Energy · Keith Riggs and Virgil King. of Vietnam and Kampuchea
The Meigs · County Coni· meet ioon with department Thomas, LincPln · Hill , discussed at length and will
overheard by photographers Conversions, Inc., has asked Present · also were Supt. (Cambodia) has' o)r4ously mission Tuesday . night· representatives to discuss Pomeroy, was appointed a . be continued in a speCial
sugge1ted he may be the cijty council to give Dowler; Dwight Goins, ad- been provoked by Peking." agreed to hold iL• · annual budget problems.
citizen member-at~ large . session Thursday, Jan . ~ at
plannlni a tiip to Jei1i8alem preliminary approval before ' .mlnlstratlve assistant; Dan
Banker Thereon Johnson, Both appointments are for a 9:30 a.m . Attending were
Vietnam has received most organizational meeting
following his .. Egyptian the company begins a Morris,
director-"- of of it1 war material support Monday, Jan. 9 at 6:30 p.m. Rl. 2, Racine, w.as appointed term commencing Jan. I, Henry Wells, Richard Jones,
· otopover.
feasibility study.
,
CUrTiculum; Charles I.Jcjwnie from · Moscow,
The board discussed high- county member-at·large. to 1978 and ending Dec. 31, 1980. and . Jim Roush, com·
while
l'hotollrapbers heard him
U!Y.ler tbe project·, Klass of the Meigs Local Teachers Cambodia leans toward way
department . ap· the Meigs County Planning
County Welfare ·Depart· missioners and Mary Hobtell Sadat, \'We catmollet this and metal would be l'emoved Assn., and Bob Morris, Peking.
proprlations but came to no Commission and Elesnor menl operations and ap- s&lt;etter, clerk.
.,
'opportunit( slip away. We from R•' ·bage for recycling. • el~entary principal.
I
final &lt;jtcision. The board will
propriations for 1978 .Were
Continued gn rage 2

Gloyd new executive vic-: president

Weather

Now

Know

Board
renames
H' oo
' ver

Carter achieves
Sadat agreement

Cambodia

Chap-

Hatnor, Huntington . Four
brothers preceded her In
death. She had resided In
Gall Ia County sir1ce 1944. She
was a mem,ber of Kingdom

Pomeroy Village Council Tuesday 1\ight approved its
ltllllual appropriations ordinance for 1m in the ,amount of

•
commgm
.

mansvHie, W. Va .; Mrs.

don, Shade ; Mrs. Myrtle

Pomeroy spending to top $lhmillion

War threat

Sale Priced.

Edna Sexlon, also of Chap.

GINO'S
OF MASON

'

Commission has budget· problems

..

14

.

•

,

•

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