<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15305" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15305?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T00:04:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48427">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/57883338097370d57fff376d9da5d911.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e701a6172c1586cae302b02d37fdb30f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49123">
                  <text>..
•

Carter honors .WW t!,ead buried on Normandy beache3

Wednesday,Jan. 4, 1918

16 - TheDaUy

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

-'
.,-JII:LIIH TIIOIWl
llPI Willie
Reporter

1tlousan&lt;b 'of people - ·
American and French
a.' OMA -HA
BEACH, veterans and men, women
and children from the
Normandy, France (UPI) Preliclmt Carter ~ a surrounding ·villages pilgrimage today ID the waved French and American
Normandy beaches where O.ga and altouted "Jimmee,
V.S. troopa lllontted uhore .Tunsnee" u Carter and his .
IIIII died In tbe 1944 lnvulm wife Rosalym landed by u.s.
l1f Ewope, Work!" War· II's Air Force helicopter at 5:10
a.m. EST.
IMptt ~y.
Carter is the first
To tbe· muiDed beat l1f
Incumbent
American ·
ckuma, he laid a wreath In the
president
to
v.lslt tit~
cemetery • where 9,318
NormandY
battlefields
and
American aoldlers lie burled
cesnetery.
IIIII paid hornace to ''the
'!be Carters were met In
brave men and w&lt;men of the
put who ~ve lnstred our cold but "sU1111Y weather by
.President Valery Glscard
predou freedom IOOay." .

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
BEGINS-THURSDAY, JANUARY 5.TH AT 9:30 A.r.,.
Special Clearance Sale prices all over the store - All sales final- No exchanges
No refunds - Sale prices llm.Jt•d to stock on hand.
January Clearance

10 Only Men's $26.95

January Clearance
Little Girls'

SALE I

SNOWSUITS
Good selection of styles &amp; colors.
Sizes 6 to 24 months and 2 to 4.

Reg. S17.00 . .•... .... . ... . Sille S11 . ~0.
Reg . s 18.00· •..•• . .•. . •.. . Sale $12.60
Reg. $21 .oo .......... .. .. Sale $14.70
Reg . $23.00. .............. Sale 516.10
Reg. 527 .oo......... ;_, ... Sale $18.90
Reg. S28.oo .............. Sale 519.60
Reg. $29 .oo .... .......... Sale $20.30
Reg. 536 ..00 ............... ~ ' le $25.20

COORDINATED
SPORTSWEAR ·
REGULAR sg;oo TO 25.00
1

SALE PRICES'
FROM $629 TO

$1749

MEN'S CORDUROY
SLACKS AND JEANS

GIRLS'
TOPS

A good selection of styles in sizes
29 to 46 · lengths · 30 to 36 . Solid
colors - straight and flare legs.

Save .30% on any

Men ' s $14.95

of our tops for
little girls

r.ordurov Slacks ........ Sale $10.15
115.95
Corduroy ~lacks ..... . .. Sale $10.85
Men's

30%0FF
ry Clea ranee Sale!

Men' s Sl6.9S

.

Corduroy Slacks ........ Sale $11.55
Men' s Sl1.9S

·

Corduroy Slacks .......~ Sale $12 .15
Men's $18.95

Corduroy Slacks ........ Sale $12 .85 .
January ·

MIEN'S

SPORT COATS
OUr entire stock of men's sport
shirts on sale. Siies S, M, L and
XL.

Men's U.95

Soort Shirt~ ............... Sale S4.93
Men's S8.9S
:.oort Shirts. ......... .. : •.• Sale $6.33
Men's S10.95
Sport Shirts .. : ............ Sale S7.73

ranee Sale

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Long sleeve styles in sizes S, M, L
and XL. You' ll really save.
Men's S5.95
Knit Shirts· .- ... -. ... . •.•. Sale 53.85
Men 's S8.95

Knit Shirts ................ Sale $5.75
":'en's S10.95

Men's s :2.9S

Knit Shirts... .............. Sale $7 .15

Sport St;irts .............. Sale $9.13

Men's 512.95

·

Soort Shirts,, .... ; ...... Sale $10.63
Men's SJ6.'1'5

.

Sport Shirts ....... .'..... Sale S12.03
Januarv,Clearance Sale!

MEN'S
. WESTERN SHIRTS

True Western sty I ing . · long
sleeves · solid color and patterns.
OUr entire stock 1nduded .
Men's S12..!.5
•
Western Shirts •. : •.. ·•· ·· Sale $9.00
Men's- S13.9S

Western Shirts .. -........ Sale 59.70
Men's $14.95
·
We$tern Shirts .......... Sale $10.40
Men.'s S15',95
Western Shirts .......... Sale $1 L 10
Men's 117.95
Western Shirts .. ...... .. Sale $12.50
January pearance Sale

MIN'S

\

WINTER JACKETS

Sizes 36 to SO - wool plaids · nylon
cotton blends - and denims . OUr
entire stock on sale.
"""'s $21.95
Winter Jackets ........ : ...... $16.00
Men's S24.95
Winter Jackets............ ; .. $18.20
Men's 529-.95

.....

,

Winter Ja.c kets ...'. .......... . 521.85
'Men's S39.95
Winter Jackets............... $29.15

Men's 15t.95
~
1'\
Wint~ Jac.k ets ............... $43.75
Men's Sl9.95

Winter Jackefs ...... ... :: .... s65.65
January Clearance Sale!

BOYS'
SWEATERS
Coat

style$ ·and SlipovetS ..

Sizes 8-20 - Good Selection.
BOYS '8.95 SWEATERS .... . '4A5
BOYS '9.95 SWEATERs.......•4.95
BOYS '11.95 SWEATERS.. ....•5.95 .

Knit Shirts ........... .. ... Sale $8.45
Men's $14 .95

-~

Knit Shirts ... , ........... Sale $9.75

1 Reg. S749 2 pc. Rust Tweed Early Am.
1 Reg. $849 2 pc. Brown Floral Early Am.

MATCHING ANKLE LENGTH

1 Reg . S489 Sqfa only green-gold matelesse,
Traditional ·
•
Slle $369
1 Reg . S629 Sofa only gold brown "elvet,
Contemporary
Sale $489
1 Reg. S879 2 pc. blue-brown beige velvet '
Contemporary
Sale 5669
1 Reg . S695 Sofa only multi-t;olor floral , jacquard Sale

KNITTING YARN
Good selection of solid colors variegated colors, sparkle colors.
Buy what you need and SAVE!

lh·-

$469

.

'

· 1 Reg . S624 Sofa only, rust velvet Con1em_porarv

Prices Start At Only $6.66

$699
1

Reg. $955 Sofa &amp; love Seat, mod~rn flora I

SHIRTS

Sale S699o

1 Reg. $898 ·2 pc. Early Am. Nylon floral
Sale $69f
1 Reg. 1595 2 pc. Suit, inllll colored plaid ·
Sale Sl99
1 Reg. S96i Sofa &amp; ~ove Seat, gold, grey, beige
Sale
5699
.
1 Reg. 1624 Sofa only, Wear Dated, gold velvet Sale $449
1 Reg . $624 Sofa on tv, Wear Dated rust velvet Sale S449

1,Reg. $614 2~c. Rust, gold green multi-color Sole 1499
1 Reg. 1970· Sofa &amp; Love Seal, green velvet
Sale 1699
1 Reg. 11089 3.pc. section• I w-bed, gray velvet Sale1199
1 Reg. $767 Love Seal &amp; Chair, vinyl patch
Sale S499
1 Reg. 1739 i pc. green tweed Early American Sale S~49
1 Reg. $749 2 pc. green tweed Early American Salel549

'

\'

. 1 Reg. 1979 2pc. velvet floral Early Am. · · Sale 1749
1 Reg. 5:864 2 p..:. brown , green, gold plaid Early

Am.'

Sale 5649

1 Reg . $8JS 2 pc. Velvet Floral Early Am .
Sale S612
1 R~ . $1049 2 pc. velvet floral Early Am .
Sale $799
1 Reg. S1D9B Sofa &amp; Rocker Early Am., gold floral Sale

$849
I Reg. 19912 pc. velvelfloral Early Am. .

Sizes medium ( 15-15112), large ( 1616'12) , and extra large (17-17112) . 2
pockets - long tails - 100 per cent
cotton presh'r unk . Colorful plaids.

1 Reg. $720 2 pc. gold rust

multelassie CDntem.

·January Clearance Sale!

January Clearance

BOYS'
WINTER JACKETS

MUSIC DEPT. SPECIALS

Boys 524.95

Our entire stock of dresses and
pantsuits. Sizes months lhru 7 to
14.

25%

Prices start as low as $4.501

.

JACKETS ... .... ................ 114.97
Bo
.
.vs m.95
llJ 97
JACKETS........ .. .............. ·
January Clearance Sale!

AM-FM stereo radio, 3 · speed record
changer, 2..wood finish speakers. . ·

SALE •229
Reg . 5179.95 Panasonic Thruster Speakers,
8 inch woofer - 8 inch radiator, 21f&gt; inch
tweeter - 30 watt.

SALE '155 PR.

Long sleeve styles In solid colors
and patterns. Sizes 8 to 18.
Boys $4.95
Sport Shirts ........ : .......... $2.75
Boys $5.95
Sport Shirts •.•••••••••••••.••.•• $3.25
Be·~ 56.95
Sp, rt Shirts .............. ..... $3.85

Reg . $ 90.95 Wardrobe ............ Sale $72.95
Reg.~ 75.95 Wardrobe. ............ Sale 560.95·
. Reg. S 59.95 Wardrobe ...... \.. ... Sale 547.95
Reg. S 74.95 Utility.... ............. Sale $59.95
Reg . $ 64.95 Utility................. Sale $51.95
Reg.$ 54.95 Utility................. Sale $43.95
Reg. 5109.95 China..... . ....... ; ... Sale $87.95
Reg. 5102.95 China. ................ Sale $82.95
Reg.$ 95.95 China. : ............ , .. Sale 576.95
Reg . s 75.95 Base................... Sale $60.95

. January
, WOMEN'S

nee

SPORTSWEAR SALE

Si2es 28 ~hru 46. Solid. printed or
plaid styles.
Reg. $7.oo ..... ...... .... ,.. Sale $5.25
Reg. S9.00. ................. Sale 56.75
Reg. m.oo. ............... Sale $8.25
Reg. su.oo .............. . Sale $9.75
Reg. $16.00............... Sale $12.00
Reg. $18.00 ............... Sale $13.50

Reg. s 9.oo .............. .Sales 6.75
~eg . 512.00 ............... SaleS 9.00
Reg. $18.00 ........... .. . Sale $13.50
Reg.$26.00 ............ ~. Sale$19.50
Reg. $32.00 .............. Sale $24.00
.Reg. 548.00.............. Sale $36.00

MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

METAL CABINET SALE

~'

.

Choose regular or e~tra sizes of
quality sportswear such as
· Devon, .D ouglas M.arc, Bradley or
Jane .Colby'.
. .

January Clearance

January Clearance

HIDE-A-BEDS AND

COAT SALE

January Clear1nce

BOYS'
SPORT SHIRTS

· Reg.$4.00 ... .. .. ; ........ . SaleS3.00
. Reg. $5.00................. Sale $3.75
· Reg. 57 .oo ................ Sale $5.25
Reg. s1o.oo.......,........ Sale 57.50
Reg. 512.00 ...... : ......... Sale $9.00
Reg. $15.00 .............. Sale 511.25

BLOUSE
SALE

-SALE •299

DELPHOO, omo - A SPOKFStiAH for the American
Agriculture Movement, ·the fon» behind the nationwide
Iarmer's strike, said Wednesday night consumers are wrongly
blaming the Mlerlcan farmer for high food prices.
Alan Ranoom, a fanner fr;im Georgia, told a meeting of
about 175 DOi thweltem Ohio farmers here, that .Increased
p-ocery pr1ceo oouid be attributed to other. Items sold at
fli'OCei"Y 1114re8, such as cigarettes, which the consumer
purchu111'and adds to his shopping budget. Ransom urged the
,farmera to refuse to ae11 their products until Congress and the
Carter admlnlltraUon work to provide farmers with 100
perlll!llt parity for their products.

Blanket sleepers, robes, gowns
-and footed pajamas.

January Clearance

Reg. 5349.95 Panasonic Amplifier, AM-FM
stereo receiver, S-track player-recorder.

.30%0FF

By United Prell lnlenlatloDal '

CHILDREN'S
.SLEEPWEAR SALE

DRESS SALE
REDUCED

'

Jan!'ary Clearance

Litlls Girls'

Sale

Reg.~~69.95 Panasonic Component Syste,;;,

'

SLEEP OR·LOUNGES

:t-$339.00 .
~leep or Loflllle ......... ,, ... $249.00
1-1389.00. ..~ .
·.
'
Sleep or Lounge. ~ ............ $299.00
1-1444.00

OUr entire stock of ' women's
. winter coats In junior. missy and
half sizes.
·

.

SAVE

Sleep or Lounge Love Seat.... Sale
$299.00
1-$648.00
Sleep or Lounge ............ $449.00

30%

1-$649.00

Hide A Bed.····· ·· ··~········S449.00
1-$1001.00

Sleep or Loung~
w-matchin!J Chair .... .. Sale 5699.00

Sale prices start at only $25 .19

------·--~-·--·--~--~~--~ ----~~----~-l~---~------·---~·--·~-~---·~------~---------~~--·----·----~--~1

OPEN. FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8:00

-..•

E.LBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-

.•

Well, If the Palestinians
choose King Hussein, 1 shan
agree."
The Jordanian monarch
and the shah of Iran will visit
Egypt next week for .
consultations with Sadat.
Hussein is not eager to
assUine responsibility for the
Palestinians he drove out .of
Jordan in a bloody civil war
1n 1910.
Cl!rter said the . parties
Involved ·1n the Middle East
conmct "must recognize the
legitimate rights of the
Palestinian people and
enable the Palestinians to
participate · . In
ihe
delermination · of thelr
·
future."
In Jerusalem, Israeli
Prime Minister Begin said he
was glad Carter had not used
the term "Palestinian state"

warned Israel would ...,ver
agree to Sadat's request that ·
Israel accept the right of
Palestinians to "selfdetermination."
"We don't beat aroWld the
bush' " he sa~'d. ''The term
seHdetermination means a
Palestinian state, and we will
not agree to such a mortal
danger to Israel."
Israel is concerned that a
Palestinan entity, whether
linked to Jordan or independent, would be used by
Moscow and Arab radicals as
" sprmg
· boar d
f or
a
·
'
'
·
•
th
aggresston
agams ~
e
Jewish state.
·
The next step in the Middle
East peace effort comes Jan. ,
I~&lt; with th e mee tin'g of two
Egyptian-Israeli committees,
' .
·m
one on po'lit'teaI tssues
On
J erusaIem and the Other
.

A Meigs County man with
an apparent great hate for
rural mall boxes - especially
if they belong to someone else
- laces two counts of theft
and-or damaging such
propllrty and of resisting
arrest.
Eyen so, Bruce Fleming,
Rl. I, Long Bottom, laken
before county court Wed·
nesday, was pennitted to post
a recognizance bond and go
free.
Fleming was arrested ·
Wednesday afternoon on a
U.N.
REPRESENTA· ' warrant charging him with
TIVE Is a very Interesting
the destruction 'of a mailbox
owned by · Z~Ua Goppick.
participant lo the Egyp.
When Lt. Mike Zirkle and .
tlan-Israell Cairo tal lis,
Investigator Gary Wolfe of
Secretary-Geoeral
Kurt
Waldhelm believes, but 11
would be IDapproprlate for
him lo cbsilr the COD•
ference, as participants

the Meigs Sheriff's Department went to his Bald Knob
resideqce to serve the
warrant, Fleming ran Into a
trailer, locked the door. and
refused to come out. Deputies
had to forcibly enter the
trailer. Fleming was then
transported to the sheriff's
office, charged with resisting
arrest and damaging the
mailbox.
Meanwhile, orficers obtained a search warrant for
an outbuilding at the Fleming
resldence In Order to recover
a mailbox that had been
stolen from near the , in·
tersection of CR 28 an~ SR 124
owned by Mrs. Paul Bearhs,

Rt. 3, Racine. Exec uting the
sean.t. warrant Wednesday
afternoon were Sheriff James
J. Proffitt, Lt. Zirkle. In·
vest lgator Wolfe, ond investigator Mike Mullens of
the l'OUnty prosecutor's of-

fice .

·

The mallbox was recovered

and Fleming !Pwas charged
· with theft In this case.
Wednesday at 5:50 a.m.
Carole S. Bush, Rt. 3, Racine.
driving on SR 7 struck mod
killed a deer approximately
I&gt; mile south ol Tuppers
Plains. There wus moderate
to heavy damage to the grille
of her auto, and she was
uninjured.

·'

Retailers giving only
~~Briefol-iemeepting•~i~:::: ~: ~~~ mild help to farmers

Save 30 Per Cent on our
reniaining 'stock of coats for little
boys and girls. Sizes 2 to 14.

Janu;~ry Cle;~rance

Sale S749

1549
1 Reg. $619 lpc. gold tweed Early Am.
Sale 1479
1 Reg. $698 2pc. gold-rust jaquard Conlemporory Sale
IS49

JACKUS ...................... .. '8.37
Boys $21.95
.
.
JACKETS ....................... 113.17

WINTER
.COAT.S

1 Reg . $961 Sofa&amp; Love Seat, modernflamestitch Sale

1 Reg. S879 Sofa &amp; Love Seat, green rust iacquard Sale

Boys $13.95

. CHILDREN'S

FLANNEL

Sale

S469

$649

A GOOD SELECTION IN
SIZES 8-20

January Clearance

January Clearance Sale
Men's $7.95

S-a le

1 Reg . S829 2 pc. iust, green, gold plaid Early Am . Sale

PRICE

v., OFF

1 Reg . Sll06 Sofa &amp; Love Seat, gold tweed Earfv

Am.
Sale S995
1 Reg. l1203 Sofa, ~ove Seal, Chair, tan naugahyde Sale
S895
1 Reg. l523 ~ove Seal, tan naugahyde
Sale U99
1 Reg. $638 2 pc. Floral Early Am.
. Sale S488
1 Reg. 1595 2 pc. multi-color Plaid Early Am. Sale U99
2 Reg. S779 2 pc. brown tweed Early Am.
Sale1599

·Palestinian card" to Carter.
By MAURICE GUINDI
Sadat i5 pressing for the
ASWAN, Egypt (UPI)
creation
of a Palestinian
President Anwar Sadat, '.in a
major policy ahlft, says he homeland on the West Bank
,.ould support Jordan's King of Jordan and the Gaia Strip,
Huaeeln as leader of the which 1..-ael captured in lhe
Palestinians rather than 1967 Middle East war. In an
Yasaer Arafat 's Palestine attempt to ease Israeli fears,
be is proposing that such a
· Ubefatlon Organi%8tion.
homeland
be
under
Sadat said Wednesday
Jordanian
control
at
least
for
after meeting President
Carter for 45 mlnuteli that , the time being:
Interviewed following
''lor sure" he would support
Huueln, . abandoning his Carter's departure, Sadat
longtime support for the PW was asked if the peaceu the sole representative of making process would be
facilitated if the Palestinians
the E'alelllnlans•
The Syrians. and PLO in)· threw their weight behind
mediately assailed Sadat's Hussein Instead of Arafat.
"For sure, yeS, for ·sure,"
parley with Carter as a new
step In the "sellout" of the Sadat replied. "The PLO has
Palestllllans. The PLO said In shown &lt;eallrresponsibllity In
a atatement In Beirut that the last lew weeks especially
Sadat had "offered up tbe after my visit to Jerusalem.

Choose from two large racks of
coordinates · Pre-teen slacks,
bi'ouses, skirts. vests, tops and
sweaters.

_.,;

$599

. WHILE lHEY lAST

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

sl49 WINTUK

profoWld will for peace alld
freeedoot ... We are ready to
work in peace with all those
who want to see freeds&gt;m
spread over the world."
The two prellidents then
strolled along the cliff
overlooking_ Omaha Beach
and walked among lhe 9.386
white marble cro8l1ell ·and
Stars of David, which stand
row on row in the grassy
cemetery bordered with
white pllpiars still In leaf.
Carter was scheduled to
wind up his visit to America's
oldest ally as guest of honor
at a state banquet at the
Grand Trianon In Versailles
REBECCA SMITH
tonight. The president has a
Rebet!rli Smllh, daughter
sevenUt and final stop on his
world trip in Belgiwn Friday . of Mr. and Mrs. CarToll
Smllb, Route 1, Mid·
During his ~irst day in
Paris, Carter referred . dleport, who enlisted In the '
w.. t Vlrgtola NaUooal
several times to the special
Guard,
March 18, 1917, wiU
friendship ·between France
leave
for
Fort jackaon, S.
and the United States anll in a
C..
oo
Jan.
· 15 for lour
speech at the Palais des
months of basic and A.f.T.
Congres Wednesday night
pledged that America 's trallllog. Sbe Is a 1973
commitment to the defense of graduate of Meigs High
· School.
Europe Is "allsolute."

Man held on two
mail box ·counts

Yasser Arafat_'s PLO
may lose Sadat suppo

January Clearance

Sole 1995

1 Reg . $624 Sofa only, gold velvet Contemporary

e.n ttne

at y

-THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977
PRICE FIFl'f~N CENTS
NO. 184 POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
------~------------------------------------~----~~---

EASY TO INSTALL

January Clearance Sale!

Before me ar:e more than
9,000 white a-osses erected in
memory of those who died
here:..
'
"We now have about 200,000
American fighting men In '
Euro!)ll sure that this threat
i5 never before liS again ...
"We are proLII of what we
have done togetber. We are
sure thai our friendo;hip w.ill
be everlasting." ,
Giscard replied, In French
and th~n in Engiish.'"FJ:ance
expresses its gratitude to the
families of all fltese men who
have fallen foc ber freeoom .
"Today, our two peoples
stand together in their
11

•

•

1 Reg. S130l Soli Love Seat, chair, brown floral Early

5529

Carter was greeU.d by an
honor guard of the U.S. 1st
Infantry Division and troops
of Ute French 50lst Annored
Regiment.

The two presidents stood at
attention as a blll!ler sounded
"·T aps" ~-the traditional
farewell bugle call - and a
military band played tile
Marseillaise and the StarSpangled Banner.
Carter, wearing a topcoat ,
recalled In a brief speech that
in June of 1940 ''General de
Gaulle, leader of the French
Resistance forces , ·said the
flame of the French
Resistance would not. die.
FoW' ye~rs later oo the 6th of
June 1944 the Allied forces
came to the beaches ... to
begin a heroic action leading
to the liberation of EW'ope ..

VOL XXVIIl

BY WATER ' PIK

While They Last.

1 Reg. 1779 2 pc. rust tweed Early American Sle 1599
l ·Reg. $878 Sofa &amp; Love Seat, hi-back, Cont. Sale $649
1 Reg. S420 Sofa only Early Am ..rust tweed
Sale 1299

DRESS COATS

-

BOTTOM
'

Germany.',

•

e

SHOWER
MASSAGE

.

1 R&amp;Q. 51098 2 pc. Section,a I beige w-rust,._ blue So.le 5899

JUST 8 MEN'S
s49,95 AND '65.00
FUR TRIMMED ·

REGUlAR '24.95

ZIPPER FRONT TOP AND

Sale S569
Sale 1629

Am.

January Clearance Sale!

JOG SUITS

LIVING
ROOM
SUITES

Slacks - Skirts - Blazers - Vests Tops · Sweaters.

January Clearance Sale!

January Clearance Sale!

Men's S14.1r5

January Clearance

Omaha beach, ''he said, "Of
the 25,000 who came ashore
about 2.000 died, American
Rangers had to scale a
vertical 1oo.foot clllf whUe
the Gertnallll above coiled
down grenades upon them.
On Omaha Beach hundreds of
our troops lay dead and the
sight was so impressive that
the German commapders
thought, until too late, that
victory was won by

d'Estalnc and his wife Antle·
Aymone, who had arrived by
helicopter live · minutes
earlier.
·
The landing zone wan fi!W
hundred yards from the
American Cemetery of Saint·
Laurent. jhe cemetery
.overlooks Omaha Beach,
scene of the fiercest fighting
and heaviest Allied loSBeS of
[).Day, June 6.
Carler, looking tired on the
eighth day of hia nine-day,
seven-nati.on tour, recaUed
.some of that fightilig.
''The 1St and the 29th
·American divisions were the
ones who iaqded near here on

I

0

Geaeva conference on the
1\tldeast.

ret.; ...e thlaS y· e· ar
.

.La

·

.

County board
f ed
'
-b dg d . ed.
et a

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - StaU!
Rep. ·A.G.·· Lancione, DBellaire, the dean of the Ohio
General Assembly with 31
years of service, announced
today. he will not run for reeIecUon this year and will
retire at the end ofthe se ssl on
· Dec he
m em r .
... OOLUMBUS - AN UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN fell or
Lancione; a · former House
Speaker who wl!1 be 71 next
,jumped ID her dealh WednesdaY·' afternoon ..from atop Ohio
·Stadllan, Ohi9 Slate University police said. Authoritlea month, said he wants
. ....,to
devote more time to hIll wue,
nsceived a report at 3:48 p. m. 'that someone had fallen,
Madel lne, and to spend more
1111111fe1111y fn1m a caner who had seen a WOIJI8I1 seated on a
1aw prac11 ce.
time WI'th L•ledge at the IDp of lhe stadium, Officials found her body on the
'd h,,.,.
· sup
· port'mg no
H
e
881
e
Ill
pev-t nen ID lhe.IJI.foot-tall alhletlc'facillty. . ·
particular Democrat ID take
The woman was treated ,at· thei scene 8Sld taken to
overhia
99th District sea\, but
Un!Vel'llly Hoapltal's Emergency l\OO!n, wherei ,abe was
will break his retirement vow
pronouit~ dead about an hoJI!" .later. ·Pollee -iald they
If fonner U.S. Rep. Wayne L.
IUIJ)8Cted Do fotlllplay. '
. ' ' •
.
Hays of Flushing seeks the
.. ,
'
seat.
·
OOLUMBUS - PAUL LANGOON, AN 0ffiCIAL of an
In
that
case, sald'Lancione,
organization that clalml to be the only national anti-busing
he
will
run
against Hays and
P'O~ In lhe m~mtry, Wedneiday night was. elected president
beat
him.
'11f the Oolumbu Board of Educatloit. Langdon, a 22-year
"Thirty-two years al oite
veteran of the-board, wu cbolen on a~ wte. ,
He wu elected ID the Board of DireCtors of the NaUonal political 'job is . quite 'a
· .AIIoclatlon of Neighborhood Schools In Aupst. NANS claima career," said the five-foot..to have cbsi~ In virtually
city that ~ been touched two-inch Lancione, who
became Democratic floor
by delegregatlon. Only two ollter school board members ln·the
naUon are on the NANS board.
· leaderonlytwoyearsafterhe ·
joined the House In 1947.
"I am proud of my tenure
NEW YORK- RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL, home of the
In
lhe House and I am sure I
. Rocketlal and a top tourist attraction In New York City for 46
could continue my 'legislative
)'earl, pianl to clole lladoon after alavlah Easter show, It was.
'learned -ly today. A IIPOkamast for Mayor Edward Koch ' accomplishments, t.!t thia ls
l1lld Altm G. Manhall, Cent.- prealdent, lu1d lnfonned the a good time to step down . I
...w mayor l1f the ball'a planned cw.lag laS.. Wednesday. am 70yearsold'&amp;lid, although
kller Wedneaday, Marlball tearfully btlarmed union bealthy, I am not getting any
younger.'.'
offldall.
'
.
"Lance," as he ls known to ·
. 'lbe center opened Dec. 17, 1932 and baa attracted throlll!h
close
friends, was born !n
.ibe yean1 DM1ft lblm 2110 million IOW"II!I.frCliD all over the
Cementon,
Pa., the son of an
.c:ountry to aee the blgh«epppng Rocbtlea, the emavagant
·ataae pro&amp;.etiolis and family lllma. Attendance bepn to slip
In 1872, Ito-, and In 1117&amp;, Radio City 1011 an estimated ,1.3

.
By DAN. CIIISZAR
United Press IDtematlooal
Striking fanners begin!ling
Ute fourth week of their
national boycott have
mustered only non-&lt;!Ommital
support from supllnnarkets
and food distribution centers,
who offer encouragement,
but refuse to shut down in
sympathy.
Leaders o1 Amer ;can
Agriculture, the group
heading the strI"..e, tods y
prepared tor . a Friday
· Om aha, Neb.,
meet ing tn
where fanners wlll present
deman.ds to Agrtcu
· It· ure
secretary
Bob Berg 1an d .
" 1 h
utt e ope was heid. for th e

.

.

federal government to yield their tractors.
Farmers encircl ed the
to the farmers' demands for
breakeven prices on their t'en ter with 200 tructors when
products.
Safeway olficluls rcht.;c..t t&lt;i
American
Agriculture cl&lt;ise the center. The officials
farmers in Colorado were ioffered
to ·
place
promised support by two adverti se ments in newssupermarket chains and a papers a~y in~ lhey were
· meat wholesaler, but won no "sympaU1etic" with farmers
sympathy shutdowns.
c':111eem•, and would allow
Two fanners were arrest ed the Ameri ca n Agric ulture
In a scuffle w1th poli ce movement to distr ibute
Wednesday
during
a 'pellllons In Safeway stores.
demonstratton
· . in whi c h
The farmers, who drove
striking farmers blocked tractors and piclcup truck.•
en tr ances to Saleway sto r•;•s from Colorado. WyominK and
·
Nebraska to the ce nter,
Inc.'s regiona1 d'lslr lbulll\11
1
D
Th
center n
enver .
e Ita Ited food deliveries to a
fanners iater were re1ea sed flve-!llate w-ea for only about
( ConUnu~ on page 1,0)
whe n they · agreed to move

inunlgrant cubi miner. His
famUy moved to Bellaire in
1910, and young Lancione 0
. UC8ti0D
graduated from high school
at 16 and went on to Ohio
U
Opt
State, where he earned ·a law
degree.
.
At age 21, he was one of the
A budget Of $285,369.39 for
youngest ever admilled to tbe
1978
Was adopted When the
Ohio Bar. He served as
·
Meigs County Board of
assistant prosecutor tn Education met Tuesda·y
Belmont Cowtty and was in night.
the Army during World ·War
Included in the budget are
n. Then he came to the antt'clpsted
expenditures for.
Leglsl
. ature, when there were
·ew
special
education
n
only 16 Democrats and I23 four
cia••••
wht
'
ch
may""
started .
Republicans.
~
Tf
·
.
G
be)
during
1978.
·
1
· A.G. ( or Atner1cus a
has been Speaker Pro
County Supt. Ri&gt;hert E.
Tempore, Democratic .whip .Bowen swore in 'the four
and Democratic floor leader. members returning to new
He served as Speaker In 1913- ·terms on the county board,
74, t.lt was ouimaneuvered . Oria Smith, RDbert Burdette,
by his close friend, Rep. Harold Lohse and George
RACINE
Male members f:ID for regular · ;Methodist Church wlis
Vernal G. Riffe. D·New Perry. Harold Roush, chauvinism may have ended meetings. Law provides· that authorlr.ed to use {he junior
Boston, for the top spot tbe holdover member, was Wednesday in the ad· members can now receive $40 high audilorium from I to ~
following session.
elected president and Oris . ministralffln policies of the but It was the consensus of p.m . on Saturdays and
I.ancione has been senling Smith, vice pre~ident.
Sputhern Local Board of the board that the payment Sundays, January through
as chainnan of the Rules
A payment of $40 a meeting Education when three women should remain at $2AI due to April, for games. The Junior
Commiltee and was given a was established for board were sworn as new members the financial condition of the high boosters were given
seat on Ute state Controlling memb·ers, payable for a of the board.
district.
permission to use the junior
Board and his own private maximuin of 12 meetings a
Beginning .new tenns were
Liitd~ Spencer was given a high gym on Jan. 7 during the
office in relurn for stepping year and the . boa&lt;d · Janet sue Grueser, Shirley two year appointment a! evening hours. Tammy
aside for Riffe without a authorized a payment of 15 Jolmson and Be\ty Wagner. clerk-treasurer and It was Bradlo.rd was accepted as a
fight.
cents a mile for traveling The fourth member receiving agreed to purchase alxind for tuition student. '!be January
Lancione
has
l;teen expenses in 1978. Regular an oath was Gene Yost.
her through the v. D. Ed· meeting was set for the 24th
responsible for supporting meetings we,re set for 7:30
The board chose Oanas Hl11 wards Insurance Agency. It at 7:30 p.m.
legislation to cQIDbat coal p.m. on the first Tuesday of . as president for lhe new year was voted to join the Ohio
miners'
"black lung" each monlh.
and Gene . Yost, vice School Board Association.
disease, of which he Is • Bus driver certificates president. Regular meetings UabiUty insurance for board
convinced his father died.
wer~ issued to Patricia Pape, will be held on the lhird members was purchased and
He said he wil,l continue to Jerry Blaclt and Hilton Wolfe, Tuesday of each month at aservlce fund for expenses of
take an active role In Ohio Jr., and liability insurance , 7:30 p.m. In the high school board members to meetings
. Democratic politics.
for board members were cafeteria. It was agreed to · was eStablished at $1,000 .
purchased:
continue P.BYing all board·. The
Racine
United
Pomeroy
Pollee
In·
vestigated 30 accidents an4
m!llloo.
.
made 26 adult arrests and two
of juveniles In D&lt;:Cember
1 according to a report sub,
.
!WITL\00, CHilE- PRESIDENT AUGUSTO Plnocbet, '
mltted by Chief of Pollee Jed
·bolsterecl by ' an ov....-helmlng vote of confidence ln(lila
UDited Pre111lnle1'118Uoaal foW'-weeko()ld strike and sehd traveled through western In Madisonville Wednesday. decline in anllclpated . Webster to Council 'l)lesday .
.'JIIUituy regime, hu told the Ctllean people to forget about
.eJectloal· llltll 18111.. .
Tenalon quietly heightened 188,000 UMW niembers In 22 Kentucky for the second Anwnber of UMW-members demand for coal, plus a drop nigh!.
straight day, bUt disbanded were at lhe ooildlng the off in coal car traffic.
The depaljment issued 888
,
Plnodlel racked up a n-ly 4-1 margin Wednellday In a
In the Appalachian coalfields states back to !heir jobs.
:pet«-no ballot on wbelher Chilean• IUf1IIOl"l his rll!ht-wlng Wednesday as weapon·
Authorities in Eastern after six hours.·State police. previous day, protesting
When those cutbacks are parking tickets, collected
iDillWy regime lg&amp;lnlt a U. N. cbarle d. maulve human
wleldln&amp; roving United Mine Tennessee today conttnued who monitored the caravan, alleged
slowness
In made next •eek, a $3,031 from the parking
·
said
there
were
no
spokesman said, a total of meters, and drove the crulser
Workers
pickets
marched
their
cloae
watch
m
tbe
processing
food
stamps
for
[rlabta vkllatlona.
through eutern Tenneam . movement of 110me 11011 out-of- controntallons.
qoo Norfolk &amp; Western 4,150 miles.
miners and their famUies.
The area of concentration
Arrests and kinds made·
State pollee at Hazard, Ky., employes will be oUt of work
WASHINGTON- AN AUTHORl'I'Y ON THP! So~et KGB and caravanii containing stale pickets reportedly
.
were: operaUng under
IIPJ IIIIICJ lllld tllday the manber l1f Ruulan and Communllt lllllll'eds of miners IWI!pt . anned With knives, guns, ax in KentuckY .las the . non· reported a coal-dumping lnci· In 14 states.
bloc IDIIIIIgtaci Cllrlc:en operating n tbe United. Slates bail
through weottern Kentucky, handles and baseball bats, mionPyroMinlngCo., where dent just over the Letcher
In Diinoia, the. American suspension I, reckless
1w .., by f1J1111b1f 110 pe1 cenc to IIIII' since the dawn of aD threatening to J:1ose noo· · who .were apected to roam a burned wooden raUroad County line near Pound, Va., Electric Power ,Service Com- operation 3, fleeing an offlctr
trestle last mooth forced the Wednesday.
pany's Cook coal-loading 1, left of center 1, 'a ssauh 4,.
. liMite Ill trl2.
. • UMW operatlona.
their region again,
Julm a.rran, authclr of a lr14 book on the KGB, which li
In Metropolis, shut leaving scene 2, lntoxlcaUon ·
terminal
Meanwltlle, lhe recesii"COD·
A deputy said the pickets finn to truck out it:l coaL
· Also in Virginia, Norfolk &amp;
James Hawkins, vice pres!· Western 1\Bllway In Roanoke down by violence involving 2, splledlng I, passing on
reprdld UI!IDOIIIIbe 11101t definitive on tbe subJect, laid In · tlnued In Washington w&lt;re their weapons plainly In
an article In 1111 JanUI1'1 illulll1f the 1\eader'a Dlgllllt that so negotiations beiween the ~ew Wednesday, but ·without dent o,f UMW Dlittrict 23, said said Wednesday it will ~lose abou.t 300 miners Dec. 14, double yellow line 1, .
no pick.U returned ID the Its West End Car Shop next resumed opera.tions disturbing the !)~lace 5, faUure'
'IIIIIIJ Scm.t iplll are Cll*"atlna in Amlrlca, U.S. COIIIter· UMW and the Bituminous Incident.
A caravan of 11early :110 Kentucky Department for Tuesday and furlolll!h 300 Wednesday with supervisory to yield 2, disorderly conduct
lrHP'I•ctoftlcenare-bletok"P Inset d. them. ''Today Coal Operlkn AYoclatlon.
t11ere are _ . p!Gf I Nl OmnnmW IDiel at work In No date bas '-t set lor lhe cars and trucks carrying Human ResotD"ces Building employees because of a and security per110nnel.
I, asaufed clear distance 1,'
and destructloo of JH'operty I.
l'eii!Jllptlon f!( ta1lts to end the some 800 striking . miners
t Ulllanued on pq1. 10)
·,

Ladies in majority ·on b.oard ~

every

30 accidents

investigated
in Pomeroy

War closer in Appalaehia coal fields

\\I

A

...

.

�•
2 ~ The

David Sch"ii~ider named

School money problems under study
Jiy LEE LEONAIUJ
lmnlediately from the viewUPI StatehoUS!' Reporter
points of educa\YJn, state
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The appropriatloos an'8 taxatioo.
Ohio House and Senate have
Senate President Pro Temofficially embarked on pore Oliver Ocasek, 0-Akron,
separate courses of study of - said the Senate Educatioo
the · s)ate's school funding Committee would work
dilemma .
·
exclusively oo a solutioo to
· Legislative leader~ say 'the· Cleveland
school
\hey are hoping for some financing problem.
He said Ohio 's current
answers in a few mooths , bill
are promising no permanent school subsidy formula would
solutions
before
next be looked at by the state
Novembef.•s importarit Department of Education lUid
statewide· election~.
the Education Review
House Speaker Vernal G. Committee, a joint panel of
Riffe Jr., D-New Bqston, the General Assembly .
Wednesday directed the
Rifle said the study, and he
chainnen of three staniling emphasiud it is not an
committees to begin hearings investigation, would involve

normal sc~ool operating does not start until July 1979.
Riffe directed tlle House
costs and would not get into
Finance Committee to find
desegregatioo .
"This l5 a •why~unt ,' not a out why some four dozen Ohio
wilch-hWll," he said. "We school districts have either
want to lind· out why schools closed, or have been on the
are having to close when verge of closiing, despite the
we've increased aid to them trebling of state aid to public
by more than 200 percent schools in the last seven
years.
since 1971."
He instructed tlle House
Riffe set no timetable for
coming up with answers. " We Ways and Means Committee
intend tAl have some by to hold hearings on a
November," he said in proposed constitutional
amendment which could shill
response tAl questions .
" As far as a comprehensive the burden of school support
solution is coocerned, we from prop~rty taxes to
might very well be into the lltcome taxes.
· And he called on the House
next budget period," said
Riffe . The next budget period Education Com mill!!" to look
~'

House.reargues criminal
By LEE LEONARD ,
Wednesday , UJe House added
UP! Statehouse Reporter
an amendment allowing the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The immediate expungement of
Ohio General Assembly has indictments and charges ii
adjourned for the weekend they are dismissed en: if a
after a tw&lt;r&lt;lay work \Yeek, defendant is found innocent.
its first of 1978.
·
But tAl ensure approval,
House
briefly Rep. Arthur R. Wilkowski, OThe
rekindled an old fire Toledo, the chief spoosor, had
Wednesday in passing tAl take another amendment
legislation calling for the · preventing the exppngement
erasure of criminal records of violent felooies such as
after
20
years
of murder . rape and assault.
demoostrated good hehavior . The amendment, termed an
The criminal record " escape
hatch"
by
"expungement" bill cleared Wilkowski, cleared by one
over the objections of vote.conservatives, but not before
As passed, the· bill would
it was watered down to , allow a previous offender,
exclude the erasur.e of who has not been convicted of
records of violent felonies. anything other than a traffic
The vote was 55 to 36 violation for 20years after his
nearly identical to the tally in discharge from confinement,
1975 when a similar bill was tAl apply to a court of common
passed and UJen buried in a pleas for expungement of his
$enate committee for the prior record. He would have
next 20 months.
tAl pay a $50 application fee .
Prior
to 4 . passag. e
Under the amendment

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcxneroy, o., Thursday, Jan. S,l!rn

'

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan . 5, 1978

rec~rd

inserted by Rep . Terry L.
Tranter , D-Cincinnati,
dismissals and innocent
verdicts would have to be
erased at 0nce upon
of
the
application
defendant.
Rep . Richard G. Finan, R·
Cincinnati, complained this
provision would make it "an
organized crime bailout bill"
with technica l dismissals
being expunged.
Current law allows a
convicted felon tAl apply for
expungement three years
after his final discharge from
prison. Those convicted of
misdemeanors must wait one
year.
wTlkowski made an impassionedplea that "we expunge
from UJe hearts of man the
last ··vestiges . of vindic·
tiveness."
He said ex..:onvicts who
have built new lives over a 20.
year period deserve erasure

'

Leadt?d. gasoline ~heaters
face c~ackdown by EPA

issue

of their records so they can
hold public office, receive
promotions and pursue
professional careers.
But Rep. Donna Pope , R·
Parma, disagreed, saying the
"public wants a·.tough stance
on crime."
" What is the purpose of
expungement?" ·asked Mrs.
Pope. "Is it to help the ex-&lt;:oo
get a job and community
standing? If he hasn 't done it
in-20 years, he's not going tAl
do it by Iosiing his records."
And House Minority Leader
Charles F. Kurfess, R.Bowling Green, expr~~ concern that expungement
· would "put us all on the .same
level as a convicted felon"
because prosjlective
employers would always be
wonderil!&amp; if a job OP,plicant
had a past record.
" How do you prove that you
did not have a felony?" asked
Kurfess. "There is a
difference between those who
have embezzled and those
who have not, especially tAl
the banker."

· Into the" constitutional
requirements of school
funding, now under questlM
in the courts, ·and to examine
a bill earmarking tax
revenues lor primary and
secondary education.
"I cannot promise anyone
that we will have aU the
answers to educatioo 's fiscal
problems," said Riffe. "I can
promise everyone that we

will work to carry our part of
the shared responsibllty of
public education ."
"We're going to find out if
the equal yield formula is
worth it, and whether any
'frills ' that have been
mandated by UJe state are
causing the schools tAl close,"
said Riffe .
The equal yield subsidy
formula, which was adopted
to furnish an equal amount of
state assistance to school
districts . with equal local
needs and taxing effocts, will
not be fully funded until 1979.
It has been declared
unconstitutional
by
a
Hamilton County Court and is
now under appeal.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,
D-Bourneville, chairman of
, the Finance Committee, said
be would begin the week of
Jan . 16 to summon officials of
school districts in financial
difficulty before his panel to
find out what they hav~ done
with their money.

TAXES RETIJRNED
' Slate Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
of
the
distribution
$1,101,102.21 in 1977 intangible
taxes on financial institutions
and securities dealers to 70
Ohio
counties.
Meigs
County's portion of the total
was $721.26.

TV•• .in· Rev.iew

By JOAN HANAUER
when they require wtleaded cost of leade,d gasoline
By EDWARD K. DeLONG
to
be
the
reason
car
UPI Television Writer
appears
fuel . is . the . target of an
WASH)NGTO,tt (UPI) owners
have
enlarged
gas
NEW'YO!p{ (UP!) _"Laverne &amp;Shirley" was in first place
The apparently widespread Environmental ·, Protection
lank wenlngs on vehicles in the ' Nieisen ratings for the last week of 1977, and Sir
practice ·of illegally (illing Agency crackdown.
EPA officials say the lower designed for unleaded fueL Laurence Olivier in "Come Back, Little Sheba " ranked 58th in
cars with leaded gasoline
Once gas tank openings are a list of 58.
•
·
enlarged, the cars can accept
Before leaping tAl conclusions about the base tastes and low
tlle larger nozzles of pumps
1 ·
dl
hedul
e for the
delivering ,cheaper, leaded mentality of th e te evislon au ence, give the sc
week
along
look
and
blame
NBC
for
pulling
the
drama
on New
gasoline.· ·
Year's
Eve.
.
.
.
The practice has become so
In Ute same time period CBS and ABC settled for reruns of
popular that Enon is now regular
programming _ "The Jefferl!ons," "Tony Randall"
including warnings in credit- and "Kojak" oo CBS and "Siarsky and Hutch" and "Love
card billing notices. Surveys Boat" on ABC. NBC chose this night of alcoholic merriment to
in eight states showed ahout
hedul
g1 1
e a tra c pay ahout an aging alcoholjc. The show had
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
10 percent. of the cars sc
required to use unleaded an 8.3rating and a 17 per cent share of the andience.
As the year ended, the race for second place in the Nielsen
gasoline actually were helng
ratings continued hot- there Is no race for first beCause ABC
refue led
with
leaded has it all sewed up. In what promises to be a seesaw, CBS was
gasoline, officials said.
in second place so far this season, with NBC at the bottcxn.
cars built during or after · In the ratings for the week, ABC in a rare event this season
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'd Losing Diet. It is a. balanced 1975 have catalytic converter lost tAl CBS, again with NBC in . the celliu. That's without
like your comments on diet you can use as a basis for antipollution devices that by Nielsen including the CBS' high scoring National FootbaU Cona continued balanced diet · law must burn only unleaded ference NFL championship game program on New Year's Day
fasting as a means of losing
in its list of top shows.
weight. I have heard that it after you have reached your gas.
desired
weight
level.
Others
Just
two
tanks
of
leaded
.
Nielsen did not rank the Dallas-Minneoota game, which ran
can be harmful and even
dangerous to one's health. who want lois issue can send gasoline in a car with a from 6-8:40 p.m. Eastern time, because it began 6 p.m., which
50 cents with a long, stamped, catalytic converter can
Also, should one's age he
is not prime lime. CBS is mad because it claims Nielsen should
sell-addressed envelope for it wreck the anti-pollution
considered before attempting to me in ca~ . of this device and add to air have ranked the portion of Ute game that ran from 7-8:40 p.m.,
(prime time on Sunday njghts begins at 7 p.m., Eastern time )
to reduce this way?
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, pollution, EPA officials say, whichwouldbaveuppedCBS'totalfortheweek.
DEAR READER- J don 't
Radio City Station, New
"We are concerned that
How CBS put together its high score ior the week 1s easy to
think anybody should try York, NY 10019.
some drivers are asking' see -five of the top 10 Shows 10 of the top 20 bore the CBS
f~sting to lose weight on his
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a gasoline station operators tAl brarut.
'
' ·
.
own. A single· dsy of a 21-year-old male wlio looks · put leaded gas in their cars,..
·css has reason too to feel good about Carol Burnell who
complete fast will cause like a 16 year old. 1 have a which require unleaded
has
been scoring 'poo;ly on Saturday nights oppOsite Asc's
weakness, loss of water and baby face and have very little fuel, " says Marvin Durning, slit:cessful
"Love Boat "
salt which the ' body needs, facial hair. I have heard that tlle EPA's deputy chief of
The
Burnett
show ~ been switched to Swiday nigllt, where
and may start causing
I could take male honnones enforcement. .
it
did
very
nicely
in Its time period and ended up in a tie with
chemical imbalance of the
to
make
me
look
older.
If this
" This is a violation of
the
ABC
Sunday
movie,
"Serplco/for 9th place 1n the listings.
body. The secoild '. day of a is true, 1 definitely want to federal law and may subject
The
good
news
for
ABC
was the 33 share of the audience that
complete fas~ is worse . have it done, but 1 was the station operator to a
television
movie
"The
Macahans'' received, since that
its
Headaches, faintn.ess and wondering what exactly $10,000 line. Customers and
served
as
a
pilot
for
its
upcoming
series, "How the West Was
increa.sed weakness is would it do?
station operators alike should Won,. ---~---common.
·
DEAR READER- If you be aware of UJ!s penlllty.
Under mediCal supervision, are just talking shout hair,
"Drivers should kno.w that · The 10top network television programs for UJe week ending
some pe&lt;iple can fast safely to that can be an independent putting leaded gas 'in a car
lose weight. T)1ey will ·1gse lam iii a I char a cterlstic. designed for unleaded will not Jan.!, according to the A.C. Nielsen Co., were :
\ 1: 11 Laverne &amp; Shir1ey"; 2: liHappy Days"; 3: "60 Minu·
body muscle fro11) fa:rtlng .
e n g i n e "tes"; 4: "Three's Company": 5: "Alice"; 6: "One Day at a
Remember that the North i m P r 0 v e
The large, rapid weight loss American Indian has little performance, fuel economy
is because about half of the facial hair. You may. resent or any other driveabilily Time"; 7: "Barney Miller" ; 8: "BIII'Jiaby•Jones"; 9: (lie)
uSerpicou and ''Carol-Burnett."
calories supplied !o run the
factor ."
lookin_g
young
now,
but
later
In
a
notice
issued
body durh\g the complete fast
comes from bodf"''JII'b'tebi. it may be a .definite ad· Wedne.sday, Durning· urged
' ·
Those gaunt human skeletons vantage.
If the problem is more than maj(r oil companies to join
that you may have seen
Exxon warning customers
pictures of from prisoner of ha ir, and you are concemed that a service station
your masculine
war camps from World War about
development,lhen you should opera!Or can be fined for fuel
D are an -·example of the
first see your doctor and have law violations and he praised
ultimate in the body's use of an examination. There are a Enon for its Initiative. •
its. own muscl~s to provide number of medical conditions
Stepped-upinenforcemen!'ls
March I - .....
lanned
1978,
a.
,.,e Meigs basketball team won a spot In
energy.
P
"·unty
Board
of
Elections district tourney play. ,
Individuals with a numher that can decrease masculine spokeswoman said . ·Past ""
,
1\'Iarch 7- Groundbreaking
of
medical · disorders appearance, musculature EPA lines or citations for came. to a 2·2 split vote on
defjpitely should not fast . and strength. These can alleged violations have voter registration for t~e ceremonies were held for the
new quarters of the Meigs
'
Older people who ne~ to range from decreased . involved the . U.S . Postal county.
March 2 - Petitions .lor Branch of the Athens County
:keep their· muscle mass production of male hormone Service, Yellow cab Co: and
to
more
complex
endocrine
the
cities
of
Houston,
primary
electlol" became · Savings and Loan. Pomeroy
because 'it is harder to
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Chicago, Findlay, Ohio, and . available.
develop mus(,Jes again should problems,
It
Y9U
simply
have
a
Waltlla
M
March
3The
department
expressed
his concern u to
not fast either.
m,
ass.
f
Sh
Iff
J
Pr
Ifill
d
why
·
Pomeroy
and
I would say to the deter· decreased amount of male
EPA officials said using o ,er
ames o
a~
mined do-it-yourself dieter hormone, then taking ,.ad- leaded gas in 10 percent of all all f1re and emergency wuls Southeastern Ohio do not do
that if anyone insists on dltlonal honnones may cause cars requiring unleaded fuel , were busy about the county well on HUD grants.
March 9 - Authorities
fasting, it should.. not be an increased growth or would cause a 70 percent - checking schools after
prolonged for over one day. A thic~ening of facial hair and Increase in hydrocarbon and several bomb threats were oought the identlficatloo of a
male body found• along the
prominent hair carbon
monoxide
air received.
better way is to eat lightly ' more
Ohio River in Letart Towndistribution.
It
,
may
cause
pollution
and
an
in
ease
.
March
4
Volunteer
ooe day, and eat a nqnnal
ship,
your
voice
to
deepen
and
it
•
lead
pollutioo
levelscr
'
/
workers
prepared
for
the
balanced diet the second day.
March 10 - The Middleport
EPA experts are W.Certain annual
Meigs
Cancer
The problem with fad diets may stimulate the, muscular
Board
of Public Affairs took
growth
If
you
.
are
also
whether
the
10
percent
Crusade.
is that you don't correct the
steps
to
free Its water system
p~ystcally
acttve
.
.'
Male
violation
figure
applies
March
5-:::-.
Robert
Wingett,
basic dietary problem that
of
some
of the natural
hormones
may
a~
rncrease
·
nationwide
because
most
of
.
Syracuse;
'
Charles
Legar,
caused the obesity in the first
. place. If you want to lose your aggressive tendencies. the Initial attention focused · Pomeroy, and Pete Shields, elements ·which cauaed pipe
weight and stay at an optimal If you are already producing 00 self.,service stations the Letart Township, were corrosion and impoao!d a 26
'
. named to receive Pomeroy cent charge per customer to
level you have lo learn to ~at a nonnal amount of male spokeswoman said
right. To help you I am hom1one, taking additional . But she added, "lbere are Chamber of &lt;;?mmerce "Man pay for the improvement.
Mal'dlll - Announcement
sending you The Health amounts may have. lillie, If going to be more surveys of the Year awards. carl
was
made of the first woman
any
effect.
.
conducted
in
...
Wolle's
Southern
High
Letter number 4-7, Weight
1978

HEALTH

Fasting a .had -answer

a

Buckeyes open league play ·against Badgers

(7- T division manager
.

Sport Parade

.

PORTSMOUTH - David the dlvillon. These Include
B. Schneider of Marion hal speaking engagements,
been named public ~afrs presentation of lnfonnational
manager
of
General programa and llailon work
Telephone Co. of Ohio's with area news media.
The division serves more
soli'lhern division
headquartered here, the · than 128,000 customers.ln 81
company announced today: exchanges. District offices
Schneider, a General are maintained in Athens.
employe since 1969, is filling Circleville, Georgetown,
Portsmouth and
'~ the vacancy created by the Jackson,
•,
Wilmington.
death of Billy L. Bauer last
A native of Zanesville,
Nov. 4.
Schneider'
started with
Joseph C. Sharp, general
l
as
pu~lic
In·
General
manager, said Schneider will
.
be responsible for public · formation assistant. He wu
David Schneider
affairs activities throUghout promoted to internal com•
muni.cations manager in 1971
and'· served In that position
!.ellen of opi.ql011 are ·welcomed. they should be 1 wttil being named to his new
less than 310 words loq (or be aubjeet to re..,ctloo b)' 1 post.
lbe editor) aDd mllll be llped wilb the slpee's ad· I
Before joining the com·
dress. NatSies maY be wltbheld upon [llhUcaliOil. I pany, he worked at "The
However, on requeol, aames wiD be dlsel•ed. Letten I Western Star" in Lebanon
and . the "Ashland Timesshould be Ill gOod ~te. adcJressiDg Issues, not per·
·
SOilalltles.
•
1 Gazette."
Schneider
Is
a
195ii
.I
I graduate of Zanesville High
I School. He earned a ,
I bachelor's degree in jourI nalism from Ohio University
I in 1959.
I
A U.S. Army veteran, he
holds
membership
In
Dear Sir:
Lebanon Masonic · Lodge 26,
To the pel'90n who cut down one of my trees for a F . &amp; A.M., and Marlon
Christmas tree, I wish you a Happy New Year, too.
Chapter 62 of the Royal Arch
Mter all, we raised it from a sapling. - Mr. and Mrs. Art · Masons.
Glhnore.
Schneider also Is president
of the Columbus chapter of
the International Association 11
of Business Communicators,
a member of the General
Telephone Credit Union
'
board of ditectors and past
president of the WArren
County branch of the South·
Ohio
Heart
delive'ry on tllal grain which western
CAMPO, Colo. (UP!) Association.
Striking farmers plan to was not grovm."
manipulate wheat prices at
the Chicago Board of Trade in
their attempt to achieve 100
percent parity, accordiing to
an American Agriculture
spokesman.
Wheat farmers are being
encouraged not to plant crops
By KENNETH R. CLARK
and instead to purchase grain
Uulted Press bllerutioDal
ONE FOR THE ROAD: Betty F'1111101s says she's sorry she
from the commodities board
at the going price, said Gene played bartender to a group of students during a recent
Schroder, who added (he segment ol NBvTV's "Today" show, and has apologized to
demand will drive prices up school officials in Hartsdale, N.Y. MlBs Furness served a 30.
and fanners can sell the proof strawberty-flavored "Malcolm's Hereford Cow" drink
to a group of children aged 12 to .14, asking them, "Would you
grain back at a profit.
"Riglit now it's cheaP.,.. for drink this rather Ulan a shot of scotch at home?" The kids Uked ·
farmers to sit doWI!, not plant the booze and said they would. Miss Furness says thai's jWit
anything and then purchase the point- the attractive danger such sweet alcoholic drinks
crops from the board for less pose foc children. The school board isn't mollified - says it
than he can produce it for," may rue a criminal comolaint.
'd Schr 0 de
sru
r·
sAME TIME, SOON: When Kathy Cr~by was lf 23-year-old
Schroder said the added
starlet
two decades ago, she shelved a show business career to
demand will drive prices up
marry
Bing
Crosby. But Bing is gone now, and Kathy is taking
wttil the figure reaches 100
tllal
career
out
of mothballs. She opens Jan. 13 in Greensboro,
percent parity, the amount
farmers must invest to N.C., in a road show production of "Same Time Next Year."
produce a crop. Parity is now She's rehearsing it in New York and says It will play "most
everywhere in tlle South." Says Kathy of the play, "It's so
about 64 percent.
·
sitper.
I saw 11 in the flt:st two weeks . (on Broadway) and
Federal law . requires
to myself, '1\vanttodothat play."'
thought
dehvery on gram. ~chased
· from tbe co~odittes board,
a regula~10n Schroder · EL MACHO: Gloria Stelnem says "deep down" Presldeat
predicted will pose problems carter is a male chauvinist. The .feminist leader bases the
because the market sells charge on Carter's failure to protest when his wife, Rolal;,aa,
more gram than farmers was excluded from a staie dinner in Saudi Arabia, where such
affairs always are stag. Ms. Steinem says the S:audls sliD
pr~'t!';·
od ced 2 "barter" w001en -that carter probably would have protested
bill' ~:r iswe/~ u b 1 had Jews or blacks been barred, but, says she, " ...there was ·
the~~n was 1~ b~on a~.'!s not one wocd of comment ahoul the exclusion of wcxnen."
1r· d d, h said "Ali th
a e • e
·
ose
people w.11° have be~n · {ILIMPSES:. Richard Rodgen will be awarded Stereo
manlpulallng tlle · gram Revtew's c_;erlificate of Merit. Jan. 12 in New York , .. Leaa
~Jl!"'kel With paper bushels _Hor·:e begms rehearsals next mooth in Los Angeles for the
willh~~etAlcomeupwtthtllat Feuer. and Martin pr~clion of "Pal Joey," lljlder the
grain.
.
direction of Gower.Champion . .. Dick Van Dyke will be in St.
As of Jan; 17, ~ter wheat Petersburg, Fla., next week to tal!" "~htsof the Ringling
farmers will begrn plowmg Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus for. NBvTV ... VIce
wtder 5 percent of thefr crop President Walter Mon~le celebrates his 50th birthday today
each week until 100 percent .... Doctors in Tel Avtv say former Israeli Prime Minister
pa_rity I~ r~ched, Schroder Golda Melr, wh? has been battling a severe case of flu, will be
srud. H~ satd those farm~rs out of the hospttal by t)le weekend ....
also wit! begin purchasrng
co~odity wheat.
AB of now, a f~er
cannot produce anytlling and
Wednesday night.
MUNSON HONORED
then purchase his crop from
Munson, who batted .308 for
CLEVELAND (UPI)
the hoard for less than it New York Yankee catcher the World Champions last
. wotdd cost him tAl produce Thurman Munson was named season, will receive the
it," he said. "But the price ProiJ!SIIional of the Year by award at SMACO's first
will' riae when we all d~mand the Sports Media Associalloo awards dinner Feb. 13 at the
of Cleveland and Ohio Cleveland Plaza.

.,

r ----------'"'

I

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

peopletalk

'•

)

v

"'
.

""·•

,'

'"'

..

•l•·

.•.

'" '

&gt;'..1•

"'

Thursday's Games
Phoenix vs . Boston
et Hartford
New Jersey at Cle~Jel&amp;nd
New Orleans at Milwaukee
Friday'' Games
san Antonio at New Jersey
LosAng at Philadelph ia
Mi lwaukee at Houston
Atlanta at New Orleans
lndil!lne st washington
New York at Chicago
Detroit i!llt G;olden State

Rednten drop 72-62
non-league battle ..

NHL Standings
By United Press lnternollonal

l

NOW OPEN

••

GINO'S
OF MASON

••

'

:••
••
••

•
•••

..•

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincinnati Stingers veteran de·
fenseman Pat Stapleton
entered Christ Hospital late
Wednesday with a possible
ulcer and will undergo tests
today.
Stapletoo became ill in the
early part of Cincinnati's
game against New England
Sunday night and did not
return to the ice.

PHONE 773-5536

•

A

•

•
••
,,'
"

and

building
materials
•
'·

'

•

,,

"Offensively we did a good
job," said ·Nichols. "We
moved the ball well. We
probed. We may have moved
Portlend
29 5 .853
it as welL as we've done all
Phoenix
22 U .611 8
seattle
19 20 .487 12'1&gt; year, but I question the job
Los Angels
17 19 .472 13
we did on defense." ·
16 20 ·444 "
GoldenWednesda•(s
St.
~e
vt'ctory was· the flrst.in
Results
.u1
Buffa lo u, Los Angeles 93
the conference for Toledo,
New Jersey 115, Phoenix 83
Which dropped a one-point
Ph i\a 108, Cleve land 93
Houston 10-i, Ind iana 96
decision to Central Michigan
Denver 119 . San Antonio H4
early in the season.
Detroit 111 , Atlanta 97
Gold.m st. 115, Chicago 94
It was WilUams, a 6-5
Seattle 116, Kan City 110
senior wh. o put the Hurons

Coach Art Laoham's Rio
management I've ever seen."
·
Grande College Redmen gave
When will aU this utterly ridiculous spending stop, though?
t•;:',:.~,~~ 'l;~~~~~~=~ce
host Central State a good
"God knows," says Corbett.
·
w. L. T. Pts
tile-before falling 72~2 in a
"Maybe it won't stop until we owners say tllis is as far as ~~ 1 fs~:~J~~s
~t
~~
non~conference
contest
we're gonna go, we're not goona go another step further, we're Atlanta
12 ts 11 35 Wednesday night.
gonna call a strike. Do you think we have the guts to call one? I NY Rongers
13 16 9 35 ·' The Marauders, defending
wonder.
·
·
smythe Dl~.·l~n t . Pts. District 22 NAiA champions,
"We're idiots if we tllink college baseball is going to provide Chicago
12 16 10 34 led by two at halftime, 24•22 ,
us an automatic farm system. That'D never happen. We're not ~~~~~~~~"
1 1~
over . the injury-riddled
too bright either if we sit back and believe UJaltelevision is Minnesota
· • 23 4 22 Redmen.
going to keep offering us manunoth contracts, and we're
st. Lou~ales confer~n~! 4 20
Mark Swain paced Rio
deloding ourselves if we think the fans will sit still for
Norris
Division
Grande's
attack with 31
increased ticket prices. So where will this whole thing stop?
Montreal
V:;
L.
T;
Pt;i
points.
Don
Bibson added 12
7
You teD me.
·
Los
Angele~
11
13
6 40
for
the
Redmen.
"llitimately, I think the law of sutiply and demand will Pittsburgh .
12 18 8 32
Rio Grande ·outscored the
prevail," he says, pulling it another way. "We have to draw 1.6 Detroit
11 18 s 27
Maraud
b
fi ld
B 21 8 24
ers Yone e goa,1
million this year to break even. I think we'll do that because we washington
28-27, but the winners caMed
have a tremendous ball.&lt;:ll.ltl.~ · All the money I have was hard Boslon Adams Division
V:;
L .7 T6 Pt;4 · 18 of ~ free throws (69.2
earned, but if we win this year, which I feel we can, I'll drink Buffalo
21 7 8 so percent) to wrap up their
my first glass of champagne in Fort Worth and toast the whole Toronto
22 10 4 48
·-• let
in ·
Cleveland
tO 24 ·4 24 SlAIJI v ory
ijlne starts.
world .
Wednesdo.v's Re•ulls
Rio dropped to 7-4 on the
"Ali the money I spent won 't matter one bit," Corbett adds,
NY Rangers 5 Minnesota 3
year.
his eyes glowing over the very thought of a world championMontreal -4, Atlanta 1
wash
4,
Los
Angeles
o
ship, "I'll be the happiest man in the whole universe be.cause
Pi1tsbgh 8, Vancouver ·3
tllat's what
rta is all about."
Boston 3, Chicago o

•"

..:·•

.

J

Wtulams.

away after tbey had gotten to
'. within four points late in the
game, hilling four straight
points.
Williams finished the night
with 11 field goals in 18 attempts, and his ?:1 total was
the lowest he has had in the
last four Rocket games.
While Toledo was handling
Eastern Michigan, Miami got
off on the right fool in the
conference with a 85-66
decision at .. home ,over
struggling Bowling Green.
Rick Goins' 20 points Jed
the Redskins, who held a 41-:&gt;.:i
halftime margin and were
never seriously threatened in
the final 20 minutes, leading
by 2:i on three ·occasions.
," I'm very satisfied with the
way we played;" said Miami
Coach Darrell Hedric, "Our
intensity was the key. We're
playing very well against .
zones. We're .taking percentage shots.''
In another MAC contest,

;:

..

,

•

1977 News· Highlights m Meigs County

.

· way until the year 2004 when he'll be pushing 60, is no longer
Corbett's concern.
The Pirates must wrestle with Blyleveri's contract now and
obviously they aren't unduly concerned because.they knew aU
about it when they dealt for the Dutch-born righthanded
lastballer.'
"I know one thing: you don't win a pennant on paper, you win
It on the field, " says Corbett. "I think we have one helluva club
now. Look at our pitching staff with Matlack, Perry,
Alexanger, Medich, Ellis and Jenkins. And we've got a kid
reliever by the name of Barker who puts the lights out. He
throws bullets.
·
"Theestabllshment keeps getting on me for spending money
and !laugh at 'em. I don't care. They don't pay my bills. Look
aroWld at some of these other owners. They were dancing a
long time before I came along, arid then when I did, I was
paying the fiddler. I don't have the money some of these guys
have, but I'm gonna fire my shot. How can they get on meior
what I'm doing? I didn't start It, tlley did. Baseball is the
greatest game in America, but it has Ute most il)ept

wins conference.

By GENE CADDES
UPISporlsWrlter
Toledo's Bob Nichols is
having a hard time finding
fault with the way his team is
playing. ·
The Rockets made Eastern
Michigan their
eighth
· straight victim Wednesday
night, handing the Hurons a
77-67 Mid-American Conference spanking at Cen~
tennial Hall behind a 27-polnt
.
perfonnance by forward Ted
·

•

••
•
'•'•
••
•••
••&lt;

...
......

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?
SEE US FIRST AND COMPAR.E OUR
PRICES•. QUALITY MATERIAL AT .
REASONAB.LE
PRICES. .
'
.

-

CASH&amp;CARRY
. PRICES .

WE
DELIVER

: l:

TorontO 5, Colorado 0
Thursday's Games
Los Ang at Philadelphia
Toronto at Detroit
CoiQrado at Buffalo
Friday's Games
Philadelphia at Atlant~ ·
Vancouver at Cleveland

WHA Standings
By United Press International

NEW YORK (UP-I) -The
w. L. T. Pt5 . firs! major move Red Miller
New England
24 9 3 51
made upoo taking over as
Winnipeg
21 12 1 43
coach of the Denver Broncos
Queb!c
18 12 . 2 40
Edmonton
lti 16 1 33
last year was acquiring quarHouston
16 15 3 35
terback Craig Morton .
Birmingham
14 19 2 30
Cincinnati
13 20 2 213
"We made the trade
Indianapolis
10 22 4 2A
because
we wanted someone
Wednesday's Re5ults
Houston 5, Cincinnati 3
with exPerience." said
lndpls 4, Birmingham 1
"We
wanted
Miller.
Quebec 6, New England 4
something you can 'I draft. I
Thursdav•s Game
(No games scheduled)
· always felt Craig colf.ld throw
Friday's Games
tlle haD as weD as anyone and
Hou!.fon at Birm ingham
that's what you look for first
Quebec at Cincinnati
Wlnnepeg at Edmonton
· in a quarterback."
The Broncos got more out
THE.DAR.Y SKNTJNE{;
of Morton than anyone
DEVOI'Eii.101111!
exliected and today the 34-.
INTERES'I'O~
year-old veteran, who led
MEIGS-MASON AII&amp;A
etm!TE1I L T-IIILI.
Denver to a Super Bowl berth ·
Eue.Ed.
after being drummed out of
ROBERTHOEFUCR
New York as a failur'e, was
Publl.obed ~cept Saliu1lay
named · American Football
by tbe Ohio Valley Publtshlrur:
Conference Player of the
Ccxn~}'-Multlmt!dia, Inc.,
111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio ~M.
Year foc 1971.
B..,_ Offlco .... 1116.·
MortAln, a favorite of booing
Editorial Pllone 911&gt;-2117.
.
'
Second cl111 poatage pakl at · , fans when.he played wiUt the
Pon.~, Ohlo.
.
New York Giants, . went to
' Nallonal advenloin&amp; _......
tatlvt Ward • Grifflth ~ Company,
Denver in an off -Ilea soil trade
Inc., BottlnoW and Gallaiher DIY.,
for quarterback Steve
7$7 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
Ramsey and a No. 4 draft
,J0017.
1 Sublctiption rates: DeUvered by
pick. Morton finished as the
blrrler where available 7t een.tl per
No. 2 passer in the AFC,
..... By Mobw Roo" wher&lt; corrier
lervice not avallaMt, One monlb, ' ' helped UJe Broncos to the best
J!,21, By n&gt;aU In Ohio and W. Va,
~ Yur, tz2.00; 81:1: I'IKftlhl, 1 record in the NFL (12-2) and
ihle~~r!hree montha, ,7.00;
then sparkled in postseason
Ell
t:II .OO year; Sll. montha
play as he brought Denver
'IUO; Three inontba, '7150 ..
:;U-.,tlon price InC!,._ Sllndoy
the first Super Bowl berth in
lf!Jn~enttnel. .
-· .• Its history.

...."
.......•
....•
...
..••
•

•
••'

FRANKLIN FIREPLACES

Gil Price, Dean Fitzpatrick JIJI! Lewts !9 points. Ben
and Dale Royse , three Fowler tossed in 13 and Steve
regulars, missed last night's Bayless added l:t
contest due to injuries and
Rio Grande had 18 tu~1:
illness. Price and Fitzpatrick overs ln Wednesday s
should be able to see action contest. The Marauders had
agaiiist league rival Malone only stx tu~overs.
.
Saturday at Lyne Center.
Saturdays big ga1!le wt!h ·
Royse, who suffered a broken MOC rival M~lone wtll begin
bone in his wrist Monday at 7:30 P· m. rn Lyne Center.
night, will be sidelined at . Wednesday's il!Jx:
least five weeks.
RIO GRANDE 1621 "':'
1
31
1
1
Last night, Rio hit 28 of 68 ~i.~ ,"' 2 n; (; 1 ~~::;,~'·A i~ :
field goal attempts for 41 Purcell, 1·0·2; Phelps, 2-0-4.
percent. The Redmen were TOTA~S 28+62.
slxof13atthefoullinefor47
CENTRA~ STATE 172) Ri
h
d
bo
d
Bayless.
5·2·12 ; Fowler, 4·5·
32
percen1. o a
re un s, 13; Javls , 3-2-8 ; lewis, 8·3· t9 :
14 by Greg James.
Morrow, 4·1-9; Gray , 0-1· 1;
• Central Stale had 47 Crawford, 1·0·2; Bryant, 1·0·
rebounds. AI Javis picked of£ 2; Hayeo, 0·4-4 ; Rogers, 1-0·2.
.
TOTALS 27·18-72.
12 for the Wlnners. The
Halftime ScOre - Centra l
Marauders hit 27 of 72 field 24 Rio 22.
goal attempts for 37 5 per·
•
•
·
.cent. The WJnners were led by

Morton was named on 32 ol
·the 56 ballots cast by UPI's
panel of pro football writers,
four from each conference
city. Miami quarterback Bob
Griese was second with 16
votes and no other play~r
broke into double figures.
He also is the second
Bronco to be honored In post·
season, joining Miller, who
was named AFC Coach of the
Year. Morton became the
first Bronco player ever to be
chosen AFC Player of the
Year.

WE'VE LOWERED .
THE COST"OF
CARPET CLEANING

Decorative, Useful •nd EhV.to.lnstall Anywhere.

'78

Ideal tor den ! and
vacallon homes .
lhe F ranklin Is ll
firepla c e with the
doors open , l'l n
en ergy
saving
wood be ater wit h
the doors CIO $ed

You

c an

' even

cook on It with I he
sw lng-ovt beanpof
and
grl!l
ac
cessorles I
The
l l r·e
Is
eu ll y
controlled with a
da m p er on t he
f lue vent f or the
enlo ymen t a t ll
roar ing t ire or
modest l v g low ing

SPECIAL

coals .

Reg.l390.90... . Ut5.90

.5413.90 ... $338.90 1wilh Gfus Door·)
Both units complete with grate. Boot and spark
arrester .

STOP IN TODAY

WilKINSON SMAll ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
~98

Middleport, 0 .

Locust St.

We Challenge
the Competition
to Match us on
Quality, Luxury,
and Price.
.

CONCORD
:78 CONCOI\D 2-DI\. D/l

'78 CONCOI\D HATCHI3ACK

'78 CONCOI\D 4-DI\. D/L

·7e

CONCOI\D 4-DI\
D/l WAGON

I

l

1

.'

i

••'
"

\

Morton niuned·
'Player of Year'

&lt;

'

squad, finds room lor
ln1provement.
" I think we should be
undefeated," said Ra'*'Y·
"I'm not really satlsfled. l 'm
glad we're winning, but we
can get better." .
Ohio State's losses have
been to VermMt (7&amp;-TI) and
Georgia ( SUO in overthne),
but the Big Ten will provide a
much oougher lest than the
men on this year's Buckeye
Buckeyes have faced .., far .
"There is not il team in our
.
league which isn't capable of
beating anybody In the
n e r united S4lles ," said MUier.
O p eMiller made a couple of
changes in his starting lineup
Tim Joyce poured in 2l grabhed n 48-25 halftime lead·. followin~ the loss to Georgia
The 6-fo ot·9 · Cummings in the opening round of U1e
points, Bucky Walden added
14 and Steve Skaggs 12 to lead topped Ci ncinnati scoring J.ouisvU!e Invitational. He inOhio University to a 73-119 with 20 points. Substitute serted freshman Kenny Page
Marcus Penny had 14 and 12 and senior Mike Cline for
road win over Kent State.
rebounds.
All 13 Cincinnati freshmen carter Scott and ·
OU Jed 30-21 at in- ·
scored.
Jim Smith.
players
termission, but Kent fought
Tulane was led by carlos
Page, a 6-3 sharpshooter
back on the scoring of Burrell
McGhee, who had a game- Zuniga with 14 and Eric from Staten Island, N.Y.,
high 22 points, to pull within Dozier and Clarence James, respooded with 24 points and
who had 13 poinis and eight 11 rebounds in a vicwry over
three at 51-48.
LaSulle. Miller plans to use
But the Bobcats then rebounds each.
The · ga~e wa s delayed the same starting five ugalnst
outscored Kent State 18-2 In a
five-minute span 10 put the about 2ii minutes when a Uu) Budgers, also including&amp;support holding up the back· II Jlerb Williams , the leading
game away .
In New Orleans, Pat board broke nea r halftime. It Buck scorer with a 20.3 mark ,
sophomore
Jim
Cummings outscored the was fixed quickly, but then 6-7
entire Tulane team during workmen had to straighten Ellinghauseri and· Ransey .
Wisconsin Cbach Btll
the first 10 minutes of the the Iop.sided ba sket.
In other games Wednesday Cofield, whose Badgers were
game, powering Cincinnati to
a 102~7 vlciory over Tulane. · night , it was Youngstown 4-4 in preconference plaf, will
Cummin gs, a forward - State 71 Clarion State, Pa., start tlle game with h!s two
center, had six consecutive 63 ; Central State 72 Rio top scorers, James "Stretch"
points to open the game and Grande 62; Wittenberg 94 . Gregory and Wes Matthews,
12 in the first 10 minutes, Denison 62; Muskingum 62 on the bench.
Mattllews, a 6-1 freslunan
while Tulane scored only Ohio Wesleyan 57; Baldwin·
eight during the same period. .Wallace 88 Rochester 71; b'UUrd, and Gregory, a 6-8
Cincinnati led by as much as Wooster 81 Heidelberg 71; sophomore center , came off
2!i in the first half and Ohio Northern 87 Kenyon 69 ; UlC bench in the last game
Oberlin 70 Mt. Union 68 ;
ugainst Northern lllinois to
Defiance 68 Olivet, Mich. 45 ; soore 22 and 16 points
Oklahoma Clly 94, Cleveland respectively to lead the
State 67 ·and Otterbein 70 Budgers to a one-point win
Marietta' 68.
over the Huskies.
·
quite a ways since their
open.lng 99..'12 victory ove~!Cal
State Hayward, but MlHer
doeSI\'t know just how far .
ioJt's hard to measure," he
SBid, "We're 'better, but I
don 't know how much better.
if you have a young team, you
notice it more."
Ransey, who as a
sophomore is one of .the old

sea!IXIas far as I'm Cllllcer· seatlnthe!J,497....,a1St. John
ned,'' said Ransey, a &amp;-I Arena has been filled lor the
oopliomoce from Toledo and first five home games and
the second leading scorer oo tonight's game is also· sold
the Buckeye team. "Coach out.
doesn't get excited about
'"Our crowd is a great
anything. I've never seen him motivating factor," said
excited."
Miller , in his second year as
One thing that does gel Buckeye head man. "Playing
Miller excited ' Is UJe fan before 13,497 every &lt;light
support which the Buckeyes help5 tremendously."
have received so far . Every . Miller's highly-publicized
.
young Buckeyes have come

l

1J

Fa:rnters to play
on whe~t prices

T:

P ro

m:

I

=

Big Ten opener against
Wisconsin.
To Miller, It's just amther
game . To Ransey, it's
"another season."
" It's no more important
than UJe second Big Ten
game," said Miller. ''AU
games should be approached
the same . The game of
should be the
1 basketball
motivatioo."
"The ~ig Ten is another
I
.

:standings .\Toledo

,i~(

house numbering project plannltig commlasion.
March ?:1 - Meigs County
progressed. James R. HID,
Letart FaDs fanner, killed in Girl Scouts observed In·
an auto accident on Stale ternatlonal Thlnldng Day at
Route 338.
the Chester Elementary
Mal'dl 20 - Mark casto, School.
oon of Gertrude Casto and
March 28 - Middleport
Franklin Casto, received the · Village Council .went on
rank of Eagle Scout.
record to support the
March 21 Robert establishment of a State
Snowden resigned from UJe Highway · Patrol Post In
Meigs Local Board · of Meigs County.
Education. n.e Meigs Local
·March 29 - The Pomeroy
Board of' Education passed an ' Chamber of Commerce dug
appropriation resolution deep into plana for the annual
totaling $3,718,622.50 for the Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
1971 calendar yesr.
March 30 - A public
Mal'dl 22 .- Jayne Lee hearing wu held In Pomeroy
Hoeflich was named Meigs to alrlhe requests of Portland
County Spelling B~ winner area aubacrlben of The
at the Eastern High School. General Te1epllone Co. lor
March 24 - Meigs Coun· addltlol!li extended service.
tia111 were asked to upress - March 31 - Curtis ·
op1ni0111 on the use of county BeniiOil, Columbua, was ldlled
money for capltai lm· in a lingle "car accident on .
provements by the regional Route 33 near Darwin.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporll Wrleer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Slate Coach Eldon Miller and
Kelvin Ransey , his star
oophomore guard, are at
odds.
·
Well, they aren't really at
odds, Iiut they disagree about.
Ute significance of tonight'~ .

B7 MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
· ARLINGTON, Texas ( UJII) -Nobody relishes being labeled
an "idiot ." Some of his fellow owners have referred to Brad
Corhett that way f&lt;r spending the kind ol money he has on
ballplayers, and he says that's like Ute pol calling the kellle
black.
•
.
" We're all idiots foc doing what we're doing," says the I
gregarioWI, outgoing Texas Rangers' owner. "Last year's idiot
was Ted Turner in Atlanta, who happens to he my dear friend .
Today he may prove to be the smartest man in baseball
NBA Shmdlngs
hecause he has made up his mind to go with the kids. Maybe
By United Pr..s lnternationll
this year's idiot' is Brad Corbett. We'll see."
Enlern tonloren~e
Atl11ntic Division
No matter what his competitors say about him, or what be
w. L Pel. Ga
sometimes says about himself, COrbett isn't so shallow Philo
23 11 .676
upstairs oc so free-handed with his money that he's simply
~~lf.'fgr•
~ ~
throwing it away.
.
Bost0!1
11 23 .324 12
He has spent a lot oo players, sums Uke f2.8 milUon for New Jersey
v 26 .257 14112
Centrlll DIVISIOn
outfielder Richie Zisk, $1.1 million for shortstop Bert
w.
L
Pet. Ga
Campaneris and $750,000 for pitcher Doyle Alexander only
~
l~ 2
because he felt he had to in order to keep the Rangers ~~~~~onl
c~evelnd
11 11 .su 2'h
competitive with the other clubs in their division.
Atlonto
17 20 .459 4'h
What caused the other owners to single him out as "the one Houston
1-t 20 .412 6
New
Orlns
u 21 ,400 6'h
who opened up UJe flood gates" was his signing of Zisk as a free
. western conference
agent for nearly $3 million on Nov. 7. Zisk was Ute first one .
MloweSIW.DiviSion
L Pel, C)B
signed of ~ll those in the 1977 re-&lt;!n\I'Y draft.
Denver
23 13 .639
~ ·rve made some mistakes,'' Corbett confesses. ''I acted too
Chicago
20 11 .So41
l lf2
qui~kly on oome of the Jongterm contracts I signed with a
Mllw
20 18 .526 ol
I
11 18 .486 5'1•
couple of players. Bert Blyleven could've been one. He could Detro!
lndl~na
15 18 .455 61h
turn out to he tlle best piicher in baseball, but he still has to Kanss Ctv
13 •23 ·361 10
Pacific Division
prove it."
w. L Pet. GB
Blyleven's long..-unning contract, which pays him all the

I

member - Mrs. Edith Sisson
- Into the · Meigs-G~tllia
Fraternal Order of Police.
. March 14 - Clarence R.
Koeb!et:,.., 72, . died in a fire
whlch Ql!stroyed his Orange
Township home.
Mar,ch 15 ·.- Bruce Cleland
wu· named "Legionnaire of
the Year" at ·the annual
birthday party of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion,
Mardi 16 - Dwight Goins
was named to a new post,
• admin181ratlve assistant in
the central office of the Meigs
Local School District.
..JMarch 17
President
EdiJon Hobstetter annowtced
the employment of Joseph A.
Young as lnstalbnent loan
officer at the Pomeroy
National Bank. ·
.
March 18 - Naming of
roada of the county in a new

.../

VALLEY lUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

and ger proresslonal ·
f8BUIII

..FULL LINE NOW IN STOCK"

923 S.. 3rd Ave.
Middleporti 0.
992·2709 or 992-6611
··
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 l\lllln. thru Fri.

''

' •'

.,

RIVERSIDE AMC- JEEP

STAR SUPPLY CO.

. UPPER RIVER RD • .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
446-9800 .

949-2525

7:00to3:00 ~turdiy

I

Racine, 0 .

•

~

,,

•

II

I.

"

'·

�-

.
n
l
.
•
ar ee s ln

• -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 5, 1978

~

79-77 ,victory
United Presslnlernallooal
Well; the AUantic Coast
Cooference basketball se~son
is ooe night old and the
prediction of North carolina
Coach Dean · Smith : a
dogfight for the title is in the
offing.
The Tar Heels needed overtime for a 7g...77 victory over

&lt;-1emson Wednesday night at
Clemson, Maryland fell to
Duke in ()Jllege Park , 88-78,
while
Wake
Forest
succwnbed to Virginia, 67-60.
In the ooly non-eonference
game, North Carolina State
trounced Biscayne, 7&amp;42.
•·we're fortunate to have
won the game," said Smith ..
" J was so

very

much

ilnptessed with Clemson's
aggressive defense,
aggressiveness on the boards
and their outside shooting."
Regulation ended, 72-72,
after . a last-secood shot by
Stan Rome of Clemson, 9-2,
missed .

The Tar Heels,· 11-1, were
down 77-76 with 52 seconds
left in the overtime, when
they went to their four
corners and Tom Zaliagiris
made a threepoint play to put
the game away .
"l don 't think any one play
cost us the game, n said
Clemson Coach Bill Foster .
"but the ones toward the end
tend to linger in your mind a
lot. '1
Duke, 9-2, also will have
something to say about the
title .
· The·Blue Devils led most of
the second half and pulled
within one JX.Iint, 6~, on a
basket by AI King with 5; 39
remaihlng, then executed the
delay game to perfection, led
by Jim Spa nHrkel , whn

scored 3J points, and
freshman Gene Banks.
A field goal by Banks with
5:15 remaining put Duke
ahead by three points and
Spanarkel followed with ·a
layup with 4:33 remaining .
Alter that the Blue DeVils hit
11-&lt;Jf-14 from the foul line.
Virginia, ~. remained the
ooly undefeated team in the
league , Steve Casiellan, who
led the Cavalier scoring with
15 points, hit a basket to put
the team ahead for good.
In other games, sevenlli-

ranked Indiana State ·SCOred
a 66-58 win over Southern
llljnois and third-ranked
Arkansas topped Hofstra, 9070.
Forwards Harry Morgan
and Larry Bird combined for
44 poinls to lift Indiana Stale
in the Sycamores' debut in
the
Mi ssoqri
Valley
Conference.

Sidney Moncrief scored 29
points and Marvin Delph
added 24 '[or Arkan sas.
Moocrief sank 12-&lt;lf-16 from
the floor and hii all five of his
free throws while, Delph ·
landed !1-&lt;Jf-15, including L().
of-11 in the openjpg half.
Elsewnere,
it
was
Mississippi
State
73,
Mississippi 48 ; Tennessee 80,
Auburn 76; Georgia 57,
Florids 54; Alabama 70, LSU
67; South carolina 90, East
Carolina 72; OklahQITla City
94, Cleveland St. 67, and Penn
State ·81, Rutgers 79.
Also, it was Pittsburgh 71,
West Virgirda 66; St. John's
87, Seton HallOO, in overtime;
VM! 72, Siena 61 ; Cincinnati
102, Tulane 67; Loyola 94,
Cornell 58, and New Mexico
102, Puget Sound 89:

BASKETBALL
C~lleg• Pren
lukftbaH Rt5ult5
1nterna11ona t
East
Am U, 58, Prelt.tl 57
Army 68, Lycoming 63

8y United

Bsn Coli 81 , Sf .' JOS . Pa . 79
Bu cknell 85, Morav ian 65
Del . 102, Glssboro Sl. 79
Kings P l. 87, Queens Colt 75
Lafayette 84, N .Hamp 64
Nlagra 81. St . Peter 's 79
Okla . City 9~ . Cleve SJ . 67
Pace 85, Baruch 75
.

Penn Mate 81 , Rutgers 79
pitt 71 , West Virg in ia 66
·St. Jno . 87, Seton Hall 86
St, Bonny 108, Howard 74
VMI 72, Sien~ Coli 61
Wstmnstr 84, Mercyhrst 82
South

Alabama 70, LSU 67
Aogusta 91, M Harvey 67
Clnci 102. Tulane 67
Duke 88, Mryland 78 ~
Fla . Sthrn 79, Sr. X'olr 61 ,
S. Fla .·64, Ga . SL 62
Georgia 57 , Florida 54
Lvngstn- 70, Mntevllo 57
Miss . Sr . 7J, MiSS . 48
Navy 89, Muhlenberg 65
N .C . St . 76, Biscayne 112
So . Car . 90, E . Car . 72
N . Car. 79, Clemson 77
Roanoke 63, Aver eft 57
Sthrn Tech 100. J . Wsiy 77
SW La 12-4. Ark -LR 85
Towson 81 , Adelph i 70
lrnsyl\lnia 84, Berea 80
Va .-76, Wake FOrest 60
Va . Un ion 88, Hmptn ln . 11
Xav ier 73, 111 . Tech 63
Midwest ·
Ball 51 71 , w. M ich. 58
Cent 51 0 . 7'1. Rio Grnd 62
Frnkln 82, Ind . c en t 71

Gr .VaiSt . 66, N. Mich . 62
Gusta vus 83, Bethel 56 ·
Hllsdte SA. Wyne 51 , 47
Ill . Wslvan 82, Ml lokn 76
l_nd . St. 66. So . Ill. 58
Loyoli.'l 911, Cornell 58
M iami 85, Bwlng Grn 66
Muskngm 62 , 0 . Wstyn 57
"!O . 1.11. 82, Cent Mk h , 80
North Park 65. Wheaton 59
No. Oak . 59, N .D . 51 . 55
Oakland 97 , Northwood 83
Ober li n 70, Mt . Union 68
0 . Ndhrn 87, Kenyon 69
0 . Univ . 73. Kent St . 59
Oltrbein 70, Marielta 68
Sf . Thorn . 65, Mt ai Str 54

west

King nets 44 as Nets jolt Suns
-

Davis,

. King·•s
major
competitiOJI for the Rookie of

Dawkins hit oo all si~ of his Warrton 115, Bulls N:
shots from the floor in the
Golden State overcame a
the Year award.
fourth quarter to break open season-high 39i&gt;&lt;Jinl eff&lt;rt by
Th~ Phoenix Suns were
King, pla)'ing his first a close game am send the Mi.;key Johnson behind
handed their worst defeat of
the season Wednesday night . game since a one-game cavs to their fifth consecutive Sonny Parkers's career-high
with \ lhe help of the New suspensiQII for breaking team defeat. Julius Erving finished 26 points . Robert Parish
Jersey Nets ' Bernard King. ·rules, ·sank 12 straight field with 21 points and Dawkins 18 added 19 points for Golden
King, a rookie out of the goals in Ule second-half to lor the Sixers. Austin Carr led
Unive·rsity of Tennessee, help turn the game into a Cleveland with 22.
Pistulis 111, Hliwu t7:
scored a career.IJigh 44 points rout. ·
52-13,
at
the
half,
Leading,
Detroit won i Is third
to power the Nets to a 115-83
the
Nels
outscored
the
Suns,
straight
game when Johri
victory over, tbe Suns, which
34-21,
in
the
third
quarter
Schumate
and Gus · Gerard
got only 14 points from Walter
with King hitting four baskets led a third-period outburst
in less than two minutes in that brought the Pistons from
IS NOT A HIGHWAY GAME
th~ period. He converted 2Q. a 70-71 deficit to an 84-79 lead .
Spol"t5 Transactions
By United Press InternatiOnal o£-29 field goal attempts and Bob Lanier topped Detroit
Wednesday
grabbed.l3 rebowxls .
with 28 points and John Drew
Baseball
Howard Porter cootribuled led AUanta with 24.
Baltimore Signed third
baseman Doug De Cinc:es to a 20 points for New Jersey and R11&lt;kets 104, Pacers 96:
three -year contract e:xtendlng
Kevin Porter 17. Only two
Houston moved out of the
through 1980.
College
Suns scored in double figures Central Division cellar for the
Marist Callege Named
first lime since Nov . 19 on 29
M i ke Male! as head football - Paul Westphal with 21 and
coach .
Davis with 14.
points by Galvin Murphy and
University of the South ·King's 44 points equal"!! a 18 each by Moses Malone and .
Announced the ret irement of
Robert Reid. Mike Bantom
Shi rley Majors as head footba ll club record in the NBA.
coach .
Guard Bubbles Hawkins, . led the Pacers with 25 points
Newber'r y College - Named
while Rickey Sobers added
Reed Charpia as head footba ll since released by the learn,
coach .
scored 44 last year against 20.
FIQrlda Named Charlie New Orleans.
Nuggets 119, Spurs 114:
L.yle of lo·wa State as defens ive
fn other games, Buffalo
Brian Taylor scored 23
secondary football coach .
...
Soccer
edged Los Angeles,' 94-93, points and Dever capitalized
Cosmos - Signed Yugoslavi ·
an midf ie lder Vladislav Bogi . Philadelphia beat Cleveland, oo 29 San Antonio fouls
cevic to a three -year contract.
108-93, Detroit downed Wednesday night to defeat
Atlanta, 111-97, Houston the Spurs . Bobby' Jones
topped Indiana, 104-96, cootribulejl 21 points for ,(he
· cord plies . ,
4
Denver defeated San. Antonio, Nuggets . George Gervin
119-114, Golden State dumped paced San Antooio with 36
Uni1ed Press International
15/32 inch tread deplh
B7t-13
Ba ld win-Wallace 88 . '
Chicago, 110-94; and Seattle points and Larry Kenon bad· "· .
Rochester 71
rallied to top Kansas City, 28.
i Tread molded to recalvv
po:1=.,.1
Central. St. 72 Rio Grande 62
116-110.
Cincinnati 102 Tulane 67
metal
traction
studs
+
su2 F.E.T•
Defiance 68 Olivet, Mich . 45 Braves 94, Lakers 93:
Your
"
Extra
Touch"
. M ia mi 86 . Bowling Green 66
!IBndy Smith's two free
Wide, open two groove ·
Florist Since 1957
Middle Tenn . St. 84 Urbana 48 throws with 10 seconds left
Musk lngum 62 Ohio Wesleyan
tread design
halted Buffalo's five.garne
57
.
losing streak. Smith, who
Oberl in nl Mt. Union 6B
Modern "78 Sarles" ,.;,.;.,.,1-;~:.!:1~~+~:::-1
Ohio Northern 87 Kenyon 69
paced all scorers with 30
Oklahoma City 94 CleVeland
points, was fouled by . Lou
St. 67
Hudson
while driving for the
Otterbein 70 Marietta 68
FLOFIIST
basket.
. Kareem Abdul·
Toledo 77 Eastern Michigan
67
Jabbar and Adrian Dantley
PH. 992·2644
Wittenberg 94 Denison 62
scored 19 points each for the
Wooster 81 Heidelberg 71
!..akers.
Youngstown St. 71 Clarion
352 E . Main, Pomeroy
Sixers 108, Cavaliers 93:
St., Pa . 63
Philadelphia's Darryl
By GREG AIELLO
UP! Sports Writer

.

PARLIAMENTARY PROCEDURE team from
Racine FFA first row,l-r, Dave Nance, Bob Lee; second
row, Deanna White, Becky McGraw, Albert Holman·
l'llrry Smith. Third, Rich Flagg, Ed Roush , Ray Canter:
Herb Ervin and Bill Harris. Absent were John Holman
and Tammy Smith.
LICENSE PLATES
COLUMBUS(UPI) -Slate
Rep. James L. BaumaM, [)..
Columbus, Wednesday introduced a bill postponing from
next Jan. I to Jan . I, 1980, the
date for starting a staggered
autQ registration system in
Ohio.
Baumann, author of th.e Jaw
computerizing the stale
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
operation, said the bureau
could not implement the new
system in 12 mooths and
would have to have a delay.

GINO'S
OF MASON

. . ·~

PHONE' 773-5536

OF MASON

'LADIES
REDUCED 30

PHONE 773-5536

Kenneth McCullOugh, R. Ph.
,1

Charles RiHle, R. Ph.

Ronald Hanning, R. Ph

Mon. thru Sa1. 8: 00a .m . to 9 p. m .

Sunday IO :J01o 12:'Jo and5to9p .m.

'PRESCRIPTIONS

Friendly Service ·

E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
Open Nights till'

·,

PH, 992·2955 ·

PRICE

ALL MERCHANDISE

FRO~

REDUCED 20%
small to XL 13 onlyL

Mens leather Jackets

LADIES DRESSES

Sizes 361o 48

REDUCED 30,-.

Mens Winter Jackets

LADIES SLACKS

•. Wools, polyester kn its, e1c.

REDUCED 20%

20%

1 Rack of Blouses
BY

Knit Shirts

Lady. Mariha.t ten, Jan'tz en,- Catalina, Lori Lynn

Mens Cardigan

l Rack of Ladies Skirts and Gaucho
. ~dies Leat~er Coats and Jackets

126 E. MAIN STREET

U2.-.l--~dies Lotig
Skirts
Mens ·Hats, Diliress-.an~d""!Cas_ua_l--1
5(1

ily Stel5on B: Adam

REDUCED 20,-.

1 Rack·of tidies Jackets, Dresses and etc.
REDUCED 30 TO 50%

Mens

Short Sleeve.

REDUCED 30%

SPORT COATS

'.

NOW IN PROGRESS
SAVINGS. Of UP TO

.,...

COCA-COLA

Mens Vest and Sleeveless Sweaters

Sizes 35·5n.

REDUCED 30%

Reduced 20%

NEL

NO LAY-AWAYS-NO APPROVALS

OFF

All. SALES CASH &amp; FINAL

heritage·house
OF SHOES
Open Moil!lay thru Thursday &amp; Saturday
9;30105:00
Frid·a y 9: 30 to 8: 00

N.2NDAVE.
I

t

..

&gt;1ron~ly supportcct), which If
enuctcd, would cnt·ourt~gc

REDUCED 20%

POMEROY, OHIO
·I

The key to solving the
unemployment problom

Mens Dress

..

•

'

REDUCED 20%

Racks of Ladies Blouses
and Knit Tops and Sweaters

"

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

JANUARY

·Me.ns Pullover Sweaters

REDUCED 20%

'

•

FFA chapters

REDUCED 20%

REDUCED 30%

1 Racll of

S, M, L, XL Turtle n~ck!&gt;. Crew + 4 button

REDUCED 30%

% PRICE

OUR REGULAR STOCK

I,

Mens LOng Sleeve Sport Shirts

.. By Berkshire, Hobnobler &amp; F:orever Young.

Large Group Levi Pre Wash Jeans ....................... :.... :...... 25% OFF
Entire Stock Leisure Suits ..............................................:.... Y2 OFF
.
.
All Boys Wear ......: ................. -......................... ~ ................. Y2 QFF
Florsheim &amp;Jarman Shoes Reduced ....................... 20% to 60%

SUITS .&amp;SPORT. COATS
-

MENS

REDUC.ED 20%

Sport Shirts .Reduced ..... ;.......................................... -~ ..... :... , 20%
SUPER VALUES
Group Men's Dress Shirts .............................................. % .PRICE .

· GROUP OF MEN'S

TilE EASTERN CHAPTER OF FFA
a district
contest at Warren High Scpool. The three categories in which they spoke were
selections, prepared, and extemperaneous. Left to right, are Larry Harris. wh&lt;1 recited Uw
creed, bronze medal; Rocky VanMeter, honorable mention on prepared speaking, and J lm
Jackson , bronze mednl for e:xtemperaneous speaking .

Recruiter will do interviews ·

Kni1s

.Neck size

1 Rack Jantzen Parit Suits and Dress Suits

Dress Hats &amp; Neckwear .Re~uce&lt;L ........................................... 20%

Ambush ·Tabu • 20 Carats

Wools and Pol yeSter

REDUCED 20%

·Ladies' Wear Reduced .......................................................... 25%

DANA SPRAY COLOGNE .

Coats

REDUCED 20%

1 Rack Ladies Heck Suede Car Coats

Sweaters Reduced .....................................................:.. _....... 20 o/.

SPECIAL

Sale ' 28.00 to '68.00

REDUCED 20% to 40%

Outerwear (Leather Coats included) ReducecL. ........................ 25%

YOV fAV£ $9.!J5

to 185.00

. Top Coats and All

FINE FURNISHINGS &amp; SPORTSNEAR ENTIRE STOCK
Dress Shirts Reduced ............................................................. 25%
Topcoats · All Weather .Coats Reduced .. ,...... :.......................... 25%
·Dress·Slacks Reduced ............................................... 20% - 25%

when you buy 288
'25.90 value ... onlly 1 '15.!~51

ft\~~tP.!~~~s~~oiTS
. Reg.

REDUCED 30%

SPORT COATS
REDUCED 20% TO 50%

Vlulti-Vitamin Multi·Mineral Supplement
FOR T!IESE SPECIALS IN 01JR STORE•

Sen, Sam Speck, R-New
Concord, introduced a bill
prohibiting unfair campaign
activities dealing with ballot
issues.

Three Future Farmers of questions from a panel of four
this cupUal fnrmullnn tmd
America (FFA). chapters judges following the speech. pemumently is contained in
s timulot ~ real. prorlu ct ivc
two
words
:
"CAPITAl.
worked hard through the
·Parliamentary prol-edure
jobs thai can only be provided
."
Just
as
FORMATION
month of December with contestants from all .three
by the frcc'..cntcrprl Hc sector
various FFA activities. schools placed bronze at the families put nside money in or our economy ;
savings
or
burrow
rrom
Eastern, Southern and Meigs annual ProGedure. contest
(1) CUT TAXI':S - l~ nn cl n
chapters •. Future Farmers of held at BUckeye Hills Career lending institutions to buy a
pCm1anent and sul.&gt;:illlntiul
house
or
car,
so
private·
in ~
Ameri~a, completed their
Center, Rio Grande, Ohio.
· Dui"in g the month of dustry needs to have ex tra acro~s-the·bon rd wx cut ' to
major money-making ac·
put more money In the hands
tivities which included the January, the FF A chapters mon~y (form capital) in
of
indiviclt!-als und bu~ii ~1css t~.,~
order
to
expand
its
busines:;
ann ual citrus fruit sales. plan on preparing degree and
stlrtmlalt~ the econom y.
to
create
new
jobs.
In
effect,
Over 1,300 boxes of fruit were proficien cy award ap" Tax: Rcdudion Act of
·SOld to residents of Meigs plications for
District capital formation is job 1977" - redu ces all in ·
cre8tion.
County . Fruit included Naval Evaluation to be held at
Today it costs more than dividunl tux rutcs. nn nveru~t·
and Hamlin oranges, pink · Southern Hi:g!. School.
$30,000
to provide one · of .3.0 11en:cnt OVt!~ lhret! -ycurs
and white grapefruit and
Pictures of the following
manufaCturing
job
in and corporate tn~t!s rrom 4U
tangeloes.
Meigs Chapter participants
percent to 45 percent over
An1erican
industry,
double
Public speaking was also In did not "tum out" but they
ycnrs. a1id lmmc&lt;liutcly
three
what
it
cost
10
years
ago.
In
the ~~;ctivities. So uthern and were, parliamentary team,
chungc the co rporutc surtHx
.the
U.S.,
the
civilian
labor
Meigs each placed a student Richard . Basham, Steve
c·xcmptlon
for
!-!mul l
In a sliver rating while five
Kenzii, Bill Dyer ; second force is exPected to rise from businesses from f50,000 tu
93
miliion
in
1975
to
103
other count)' FF A · students · row. Mike Drehel, Lee Lewis,
$100,000.
rated bronze in the creed, Gary Holiday and ·Paul Rupe, million in 1980, and 110 (2) HEDU CJ': l:OVI':I1N million
by
!985.
For
the
extemporaneous
and
and public speaking, Jeff
:MEN'l' BUHEAUCilA CY
prepared speeches of three to !11oore, Patty Dyer and Biit ecOqomy to absorb these new
workers, . huge amounts of AND HEGU(.ATION -· Stop
five minutes in length with Dyer.
capita l must be made the ever-cK_pumlin~ g.ruwll1 of
ava ilable to lhe free en- government burcmu.: rucib
terprise sector to purcha~ by ending thos~ government
nel'l equipment and expand progr·ams not needed . 'l11is
· would enable government to
its operations.
Where does thia necdml cut spending und bu lancc the'
A job corps recruiter will of the job corps project will investment capital come budget. "Sunset Act of 197'/"
be in this area next week to be available for interview at : !Tom? It cornea principally - automatically tcrrrdnate~
interview · potential ap- City Hall , Council Chambers from personal savings and each rederul prn,gru m, .
plicants for a federally 2nd floor, Pomeroy, 110 business profits (retained covered under lnW . every rive
fund!"! program designed to Second St., Tuesday, Jan . 10 earn ings). How do we get )'ears · unl ~ss specifica lly rcbetter qualify young· people from 9-5 p.m. and Wed- more money in the hands of aulhorize'd by Congress.
(3) CUT GOVEHNMENT
·for employment.
nesday, Jan . 11, 9 to 3 ·p.m. COnsumers to spend as· they
• ·.- The program is open to
see £it in order to increase SPENDING - Alter the
demand for various goods budget .process to require .
persons 16. through 21 years
and serv ices · which help disclosure of the impa ct of
old. Enrollees will be ·EQUAL RIGHTS
COLUMBUS (U P!)
create more jobs? And how proposed legislation on the
assigned to a training center .
Travel
pay
·
for
state
do we get more money 'for economy. Also , limit the
away from home to learn a
employees visiting states people to put into . their growth of federal spending on
skill or vocation for em~
which have not adopted the savings accounts which . a systematic i)usls. Today,
ployment.
Equal
Rights Amendment to businesses can borrow in taxes toke over 40 percent of
While in job corps, persons
the
U.S.
Constitution might order to expa nd their total personal income, as
are paid while learning, gi'ven
not be approved under operations and create these compared to 15 J~rcent in
free food, housing, medical legi slatio n offered
1930. Unless present trends
care, clothing allowance and Wednesday in the· Ohio needed jobs?
The following are five ar~ reversed, by 1985 the
spending money. Job cOrps
House.
important steps (with . the government will take around
trajns males and females for.
Rep. .David Hartley, D· specific mcu~ures we have li4 cents !rom every dollar of
job skills such as auto Springfield, introduced the
(Con!inued on page 10)
. sponsored, co~sponsored , or
mechanic,
keyp .u nch,
resolution urging the state
·bricklaying, nursing skills, Emergency Board to refuse ·
welding, office skills and. such payments.
many more.
The resolution was referred
A field staff representative to the Finance Committee.

Sale •4T.OO to '144.00

1 Rack Ladies Car Coats

ENTIRE STOCK .JF MEN'S

1/2

Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, RPort Clinton, proposed a
constitutional amendp\ent lo
guarantee that inserting
appropriations will not
preclude public referenda on
laws.

EN'S

1 Lot of Ladies Pant Suits

.s210 SUITS ..........·................................·............... ~ .......... '157.00

2oz.
size

BAlLOT.lSSUES
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Two
Republican stale senators offered legislation Wednesday
related at least indirectly
with State Issue I on last
November's ballot.

busy with projects,
activities last month

'105 SUITS ......·............ ,........................................... ,...... •84.00
1
135 SUITS ...... ,................ ,............................................. '1 01.00
1175 SUITS ........... ,....................................................... '131.00
SI95 SUITS .................................................................... '146.00

FREt BOTTlE

'·

FF A OF EASTERN HIGH sold 600 boxes of citrus fruits. ·

,.----~-J-A_N_U_A_R_Y
_ _ _ ____,Meigs

HART-SCHAFFNER MARK • JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEACH • SEWEU SUITS

GINO'S

-

NOW OPEN

By Jantzen, C~lalina: Coddington &amp; Lori Lynn.

NOW OPEN.

-l'UBIJC SPEAKING cohtestants were Becky. McGraw.
. honorable mention, prepared
speech and Bob Lee, gold rating, creed.

A sale of quality men's appar that you cannot afford to miss.
Come in early while our select"
is at its best. Listed here, are just
a few of the fantastic savin s awaiting you.

Tt 's a nice place for me to

start my comeback. I don't
know lf I can wln this ·week .
Maybe that would be asking
too much.... But I • am
encouraged by . the way I
played the course in these .two

•

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE

titles the previous two years.

01

.

~
L-.~~~~~t

TUCSON, Ariz . (UP!) rounds. ! hope I can do as well
Johnny Miller, who literally , when the bell ririgs."
has made a living out of
Bruce Uelzke, il)e young
winning the Tucson Open, man who finished · strong a
seems to have his game ba ck ye~r ago to create a tie and
together again, and if so, he is then beat Gene Littler on the
the one to beat in the $200,000 fourth hole of sudden death
event which starts lc)day to
with an incredi~Je 9Q.fool
launch the 1978 PGA Tour. birdie putt, and Tom Watson,
Miller hasn't won a tourna- the PGA Player of the Year
. men! title since the Bob Hope for 1977, look like the chief
Desert Classic nearly two challengers along with
. years ago after wirming 12 Miller .
Tuesday , while playing a
(lfadice rowxl on the long but
fl at Tucson National Golf
Course, Miller shot a 6-underpar 66 . Wednesday, in the
proarn prelude, he had a 67.
" I've always pl~yed well &lt;111
this course," Miller said.

•

j

'78 golf action hegins

•

$

_.._.._._._.._.._..1

Miller one to beat as

11

.
3472

*

Cage Scores

Yngslwn St. 7l. Ctrion Sl 63
Wittenberg 94 , Den ison 62
South
Ark , 95 , Hofstra 70
Austin Colt 69, Bired~e 55
H . Payne 95, St . Ed' 61 .
New Mew. . 102, P uge Snd 89
SW Okla 9 1, USAO ( kla .l 79
l,IT -Arl 9 1, Cal San Diego 75
Colo . St . 90, DePauw 60
N . CoiQ . 100, Lewis U. 84
Portland St. 97 Ore . Tch 1J
Whittier 95, Westmont 87
. Wyoming 67, Denver 66

State as the club 111apped a
, four.garne losing streak.
Sonl&lt;s Ill, KlDp 110:
Fred Brown hit10 of Ilia 20
points in the fourth ~r to
check
Kansas ,fltty's·
comeback bid. The loss was
Kansas City's sixth in a row
and was the Sonics' 14th
victory in 17 games.

'

.

\

or
SPRITE

8-16 oz. bottles

PArS 'MARKEl
Open Monday thru Saturday
Til6:00 P. M.

CLOSED SUNDAY
SyracuSe, Qhio

MIDDLEPORT,O.

.,

.,

�6-'l'hl' OaUy Sentinel. M;rtrtleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 5 1978
-DEAR POLLY - 1 am
answering Florence who has
the creeping Orientals 011 her
wall-to-wall carpet. The only
way to have your cake and
eat it, too, is to have the same •
'!ize area as the rug cut out &lt;i
•
the
wall-to-wall carpet and
Po!IY Cramer
. then the rug sewn in that spot.
The waste carpeting can be
a sheet of foam that can reused in a foyer or clo.set. Of
A iob for the pros buy
be put under · such rugs. It course, if there i.s any fringe
does the trick under all my on the rug it would have to be
POLLY'S PROBLEM
cut off. It is advi.sable to
DEAR POLLY- How can I throw rugs.- MRS.G.R.S.
DEAR POLLY- My bus· select a carpet of comparable
resilver a three-by-four foot
thickness as the area rug and
mirror at home• Thanks. - band is a carpet installer and only an experienced installer
· he recommends that
JOSEPH
should Perform such an in·
DEAR JOSEPH - Sorry ~ Iorence buy a liquid · latex stallation. Only on' flat level
oot resilvering a mirror is a from a carpet shop that is loop.or conunercial carpet do
job strictly for professionals. made expressly lor her pur· area rugs have a chance of
pose. Paint the back of the
-POLLY
· not creeping. But no one
DE AR POLLY - With rug with this ~nd when it should 8\Uirantee they will
dries
the
rug
will
have
a
refe re nce to Florence's pr&lt;r .
not.- BARRY
blem with an Oriental-type rubber-like coating on the
DEAR READERS - '!be
not stick to the
area rug that she puts on lop back tliat
above
answers prove that
of her wail-!4&gt;-wall carpeting, carpet. Her problem should even those in the b!L'liness dif·
I would recorrunend thai she be solved.- MRS.C. B.

·POLLY·s POINTERS

will

ANUARYCLEARANCECONTINU
GROUP OF LADIES &amp; CHILDREN'S SHOES
•3.00

Pair or

2

1 GROUP
LADIES'
SHOES
1 Group -

Pr. For 15.00

1 GROUP

PURSES
1 Group -

Men's

Men ' s

WEYEJo:IBERG

WEYENBEI?G

DRESS SHOEs,
AND BOOTS

30

1 Group -

&lt;:

fer greatly in their opinioos
Barry's stationery shows he:
like Mrs. C. B.'s hiL'lband is a
professional. Should anyone
want to try Barry's suggestion I would advise against
cutting the fringe off a gonuine Oriental rug as its
value woWd drop to nil. POLLY
DEAR POLL¥ - I am a
newspaper clipping fiend and
never t)lrow a paper out
without first cutting out what
I call ipJportant articles to
enclose in letters to my
relatives and friends. I have
several large envelopes all
addressed and ready to go
and stick in each one the
things I think would be of lit·
teres! to that particular per·
soo. '!be clippings are not
ca!L'ling clutter since they im·
mediately gointq the proper
envelopes. - GLORIAN
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newsJlllper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POI.NTERS !n care &lt;&gt;I this
newspaper.

0/ OFF DRESS
SHOES
/0

$}Q99

Values to $30.00

All Ladies'
Leather High
Fashion

Men's

DINGO
BOOTS

BOOTS 20%

0
FF
NANCY BI\OWN
SEi.ECTED - Nancy

WOMEN'S SHOES- NATURALIZERS.
AUDITIONS • VOGUE • JOLENE •
' ALL FROM REGULAR STOCK

Miss Putman weds '
Connie Corlene Putman
and Jerry Lee Saylor were
united in marriage in a dou·
ble ring ceremony at the St.
Paul United Methodist
Church in Tuppers Plains on
Oct. I, at2 p.m.
The candlelight ceremony
was perfonned by the Rev.
Richard Thomas.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs . Mary Putman .
Coolville, and the · Jate
Woodrow Putman. The
groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Saylor of
Guysville.
The church was decorated
with a large vase of Dowers
and two s even-branch
candelabra decorated with
white bows. Music was pr&lt;&gt;vided by Mrs. Sue Matheny
with selections including,
"Love Story", " Wedding
Prayer", 11 Let It Be Me", and
"I Love You Truly." •
Escorted to the altar by her
brother, Jim Putman, the
bride was given in marriage
by him and her mother. She
close a , fonnal gown of
polyester knit with Venice
lace accent. It was fashioned
_with a scooped neckline, long
sleeves and a skirt which fell
from an empire waist and
'flo•wed into a chapel train.
Her veil of illusion fell from a
headpiece which matched
gown. She wore a diamond ·
necklace, gift of the groom,
and . carried a bouquet of
white dai.sies, baby 's breath
and red roses tied with red
and white ribbon.
Matron of honor was Mrs.
Dorothy Lance, sister of the
bride. She wore a floor length
polyester knit blue ~own with

-Wyatts host
family dinner

Brown, a meoiber of the

Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwell, Route 3, Pomeroy
hosted a family ])uffel and
gift exchange on .Christmas
Eve. During the evening San·
Ia made a surprise visit. At·
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Chadwell, Polly, Kim,
Chris, and P. J ., Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. David ChadweU
and Charlee and Mr. and
Mrs. James Chadwell and
Bryan, both of Success Road.
.Other holiday visitors of the ·
Chadwells were Mrs. Charlee
_Crumbaker; ZanesviU~, and
her son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Crum·
baker, St. Clairsville.

Gallipolis Christian Church
and a student al CIDcbulati
Bible College, bas been
selected as otie of 33
students for the 1978
"Come Alive" program.
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Brown,
RL 1, BldweD. Naucy will
be traveling 13 weeks
sharing Christ with people
ID more than 20 states 'lbili
coming s11Dlmer,

Luckeydoos
.
.
entertain ~
Mr. and. Mrs. Roger
Luckeydoo of Middleport
entertained with an open
house on New Year's Day. A
feature of the day was a
blessing of the ho!L'le, the
former Ohlinger property at
the corner of Walnut and
Fourth Sts., by the Rev .
Robert Bumgarner, pastor of
Heath United Methodist ·
Church.
·
. Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo, New
Haven, W. Va. and Mrs.
. , James Brewington of Mid·
dleport, assisted with the ser·
ving. SiX year old Amy
J..uckeydoo played the piano
lor guesili. Neighbors and
friends called during the day. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Luckeydoo
have two daQghters, Amy and
J..ee Ann, age three.

.1,511 VOVR "' 0 PERSONAL
Pl-iARMACISlS I~ YOU HI\\'(
.I,"'V01JE&amp;TIQNS .-.BOUT
'tOU~ PAE SC AIPIIOf.l wE
'II'OUR MEDICIN ES,,.

ANCI Pf'lOPEAlv

DEARRAP: 'niEYP!tOmON'I'HEDEAD!
1 want to complain! Ever since Elvi.s' death, ~e've heard
loud ~Itches, to seD his rerords, mementos, bracelets, pen·
dants , ~res a TV screamer on every hour pushing a Preslev
sa1e. Its gruesome. .
•.
'
NextAndcame Bing Crosby's death, and the same thing happens,
now Guy Lombardo.
If _people can make millions 011 someone's dying how 1
:
killing big performers so
•
·
uuoiS the most tasteless thing that has hap~ned to TV; why doesn't the FCC investigate it inStead of get·
ling 80 worked up over "sex and violence." Profiting on death
IS worse I · FURIOUS
,DEAR FURIOUS :
Wcke aFgcrcee : Profiting on death is a mi.serable way to make a
00 ·
·lake note. ·HELEN AND SUE
.P.S. Perhapa by the time this column reaches print, lhe ads
will have di.sappeared. We hope·so!

~::i,~othinkr~U..:t~rt

...

DEARHELENANDSUE :
.
A bunch of!L'l went to the beach last fall. No one was around
and my younger sister said she was going down to the shor~
~hil~ the rest of us fixed dinner.
I fUIBlly sent my boyfriend to look for her
. We ~eard him_yell, _and then we saw her, ~11 brui.sedand c .
mg, With her swun su1t tom to pieces. She'd been taped
ry
She made us swear.not to tell our folks , but my brqther told
the~ anyway. Mom IS so nervo!L'l she cries at anything, and
Dad IS st1U ready to kill. They never found the rapist.
The. worst part is Christine can't get over it. She runs
upstalrs crymg every lime the doorbell rings. She won't go to
high school and has nighbnares. Her fear seems to get worse
She can't talk about it.
·
How can I help• - OLDER SISTER
DEAR SISTER:
·.Christine needs professional counselinli. She m!L'lt learn to
talk about the attack, see it as part of her past which can no
longer effect her future.
Your folks too should attend therapy sessions. Their fear and
rtXr may be adding to her mental problei!'".• HELEN AND

Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Saylor

-HOM£ IS WffER£ YOU WANT IT..•

~~!~.~.M08Ilf HOME
For a wide selection of late model,
clean, used mobile homes traded in
on houses
·
See or call'

GINO'S

KINGSBURY
·HOME SALES, INC.

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

For the Finest in ManutaciUre housinq" .
1100 E.
Call 992-7058

OF MASON
PHONE' 773-5536

·u:
AUTTLE AND SAVE ALOT

• ••

LOWEST PRICES EVER

..

~-------GOING ON NOW

Come In and look over ou•
sale table. SHOES FOR THE
WHOLE FAMILY.

.

enjoyed

BOX

THE

BASSEn 3 WAY............_
· ~i~i ' . '149"
4&gt;···························

SALE STARTS TODAY

.

2ND FLOOR LADIES READY TO WEAR!

LADiES AND JR'S FAMOUS BRAND

Rl!G. $249.95

QUEEN.:..LADY QUEEN-DEVON LAQY DEVONAILEEN-RED· EYE

.. .
REG. $299.91 '17995
RECLINERS ......... :~~-~~....... ..

BASSm ROCKER RECLINER..~~-~:~~~:~: .. ~188
Vi~YI

4

~ ~ ""' SII\Olq

W'1111Ptt
t.tlg ' LISII10 e5

!7.36

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Middleport, Obio and New Hawn, W. Va.

COORDINATES

COLLINS BIG JOHN.......... :~~-~~ .........~179 95 .

.

-

CLOTH.~~-t-~.....·... ~. 199 95

.

.

.

.

.

REG. $269.95

$239.95

ALL STYLES AND COLORS - LOWEST PRIC
. MANY MORE TO CHOQSE fROM

BLOUSES

,

2--BASSm WALL-A·WAY. .. :.~~-~~......... ..

50% Off

All LADIES
Items In EvelY
Department

Reduced For
This Sale!

.

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHI045760
. PHONE: 992-7161

25% TO 50%OFF

LADIES FAMOUS BRAND

RE~~~"

2-COUINS VINYL ............... ~~~-~ ......... .. 18995
5
95
2-NYLON GOLD IECLINER)~;~-~~~~:~ -~J 39
R~G .
'14995

' STOP IN &amp; CHECK OUR PRI

SPORTSWEAif

00

REG. $250.00

·

W!Nr,.II SVS~O'I

and keep boys for Christ.
Rev. Nethers' work lor the
Lord began in 1953 upon
graduation from Bible
.college. He pastored for
seven years in New Jersey,

then

ministered

in

evangelism ·in the mid west.

He and his family now reside
in Columbus after several
years of ministry in Ohio. His
full time devotion .to Royal
Rangers lakes him over
30,000 miles each year--in
promotion, training and
speaking.
.
'!be public is invited to
come and hear this in·
formative, inspirational,
instructional and challenging
message. Sunday SChool is at
9:30 a. m.. and special ser·
vices at-10:30 a . m. and 7 p.

ATHENS,
Ohio
· Physicians, dentists and
nurses in ·southeastern Ohio
may view a tw.,.week series
of satellite telelecture
programs on health .care
begiming Jan. 10.
'!be series will be broad·
cast by the Ohio Valley
Medical Microwave
Television System and may
he viewed at the Athens
Mental Health. Center, the
Galllpolls·Holzer Medical
Center and the Columbus·
Ohio State · University
Medical School, Medical ·
Administration Buildtng. '!be
medical television system is
operated by Ohio University.
'!be videotaped lectures by ·
health professionals from the
Medical University of South
Carolina will erplore such
·topics as Drug Interactions,
. Recognizing the Depressed
Patient and Neonatal In·
lensive Care. others will
cover Assertive Behavior In
Nursing, · lntraveno!L'l Con·
sclous -Sedation
for
Periodontal Surgery, The
Language of Caring, Vaginal

m.

Son born

to Stanleys
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Stanley,
Route 4, Pomeroy, are an-

REG~ RECLINER., .. :........ ;............. : ~~~;.·.....'.. ~ 16995
COLLINS

2-COLLINS NYI.ON

"ONE-STEP·AT·A·TIME"

Rev . N. B. Nethers, Ohio
District- Royal Rangers
Commander, wiU he featured
as the guest speaker •I Light
House Tabernacle Assembly
of Gocj in Gallipolis on Sun·
day, January8. Rev. Nethers
will speak in the morning and
. evening services preSenlit)g
the challenge of Roxal
Rangers.
·
The
Royal
Rangers
program began in 1962 and at
present is serving men and
boys in 39 countries of the
world. Some !l\0,000· boys are
involved in various phases of
the program. Each year
approximately 17,000 bOys
accept Christ as their per- .
sonal saviour and about half
that number . receive the
infilling of the Holy Spirit.
The overall goal 0 f the Royal
Rangers is to reach, leach,

239 95

2--BASS
m

WE HAVE
ACOMPLETE
STOCK NOW
Of MUD AND
SNCM TIRES

Rev. Nethers to speak
al Lighthouse Tabernack

tJAnUARY CLEARA CE
RECLINERS • WALL-A-WAY. ·ROCKERS
AND ·!WAY STARTING AT.......................~.95 UP

WINTER COATS
REDUCED FOR .

lHIS CI.EARA~'
()pen
Fri. and Sat.

•

Middleport, Ohio

lil 8 PM

.

'

CHESTER- lnsteUaUon of
lifice!"' for 1978 highlighted
the Tuesday night meeting of
Che s te r Co un cil 323 ·
Daughters ot AmeriCll, held
at the ball.·
Installed by Mrs. Elizabeth
J-layes, counall deputy, were
Mrs. Eileen Martin, row!·
cilor; Mrs. Ada Bissell
associate junior past roun:
cilor; Mrs. Mae McPeek ·
· junior past rouncilor; Mrs:
Charlotte Gra nt , associate.
councilor; Miss Julie Rose
associate vice councilor :
Mrs. Leona Hensley, vice
council or ; Mrs . Marcia
Keller, warden ; Mrs. Mary
Hayes, conductress; Mrs. Inzy Newell, outside sentinel;
Mrs. Ethel Orr, treasurer ;
. Mrs. Ada Van Meter, linan·
ciaI secretary; Mrs. Zelda
. Weber, assistant financial
secretary ; Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle, recording secretary ;
and Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie,
assistant financial secretary.
'!be flag bearers escorted
the associate junior past
rouncilor, Mrs. Bissell, and

Thelma White was reported
ill, and il was noted that Mrs.
Mary Newell luis a new son.
Mrs. Hallie Frederick sent
word tQthank the council for
her Christmas gift and the
members {pr cards sent dur·
ing the hoUday ·season. It was
announced that the Past
Councilor's Club will meei at
the hOme of Mrs. Jean
Frederick on J an. 11 , 7:30
p.m.
The 1978 conunittees were
appointed by Mrs. Martin.
They a re :
Good of the order : Dorothy
Ritchie, Mary K. Holter,
Doris Gruese r, The lma
White.
Ways and means: Mae
McPeek, 1\da Bissell , Joe
Bissell, and Leorili Hensley.
Home and orphans: Betty
Roush , Charlotte Grant,
Dorothy Lawson, and Jean
Frederick.
Resolution: Ethel Orr. Er·
11111 Cleland, lnzy Newell.
Misc ellaneous: Marcia
Keller, Helen Wolf, ElizaheU1
Hayes, The~na McMannis,
the junior past councilor, and !Ia Fae Kimes.
Mrs. McPeek, to the altar
Delinquent : Ada · Van
where Mrs. Hayes presented Meter, Ethel Orr, Zelda
each one with a past coun· Weber.
News reporter : Mary K.
cilor's card. A pin was also
presented to Mrs. McPeek. Holter, Margaret Tuttle.
Flower committee : Mary
M&lt;s. Hayes complimented
Mrs. McPeek on her year as · Hayes. Goldie Frederick,
rouncilor and each . spoke Doris Koenig, Sadie TnJSSeil.
br iefly.
Pia nist: Cla rice All en,
Mrs. Erma Cleland read Helen Wolf.
the auditing report which was
Flag bear ers: Dori s
accepted bv the council. Mrs. Grueser, Goldie Frederick,
assistant; Dorothy Myers,
El'lll8 Cleland, assistant.
l'eani Captain, Dorothy
Ritchie.
Council Captain : Mary K.
Holter.
·
Kitchen : January, Erma
Cleland, Ethel Orr, Dorothy
Hysterectomy Simplified, Myers, and Kathryn Bawn ;
-Endocrinology and Diagnosis ~'ebruary, Goldie Frederick,
and Coping with Downes Mu ry Huyes , and Mae
Syndrome.
Spencer; March, Eileen Mar·
The ten sessions will be tin, EUzaheth Hayes, Theima
aired over a two·week period McMannl_s, and Beulah Max·
on Tuesdays from 7a.m. to 12 ' ey;_ April, Theima While,
noon, Thursdays from 6:45 io Julie Rose, Mary K. Holler ;
8:45a . m. and7to8p. m. and Mlly, Helen Wolf, Mary
Saturdaysfrom6:45to8:45 a. Showalter, Fern Morris;
Jun e , Sadi e Truss ell,
m. and 7 to 8 p. 10 .
Two-way,
Jive video Margaret Tuttle, d Charlotte
discussion between health Grant; July, J oe and Ada
professionals in Charleston Bissell, Leona Hensley, Mae
and Spartansburg, s.
will McPeek :. August, Elizabeth
follow each lecture. A toll- Hayes, .Jean Frederick,
free telephon'e Uoe will he Goldie . Wolfe ; September,
available at eachview~g site Esther . Ridenour,. lnzy
for questions to program Newell, Laura Mae N1ce; Oc·
instructors.
lobeF, Betty Roush, Ada Van
'!be Ohio Valley Medical' Meter, -Eileen Martin;
Microwave
Television November, Zelda Weber,
System is participating in one
of the first interconnections
of 30 medicai television
networks reaching about 300
individual medical facilities .
It is headed by Ronald A.
Black, associate dean for
program development at the
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine and
project director of the
system.
Mon., Tues.,

Health care series
to be aired locally

Circl~ family

to relocate

Early American · WOod Trim- ·'

BE' PREPAAE'D
FOR THE FIRST
SNOW!

DANCE PLANNED
The Belles · ' and Bea!L'l
Western Square Dance Club
will sponsor a dance Slltur·
day night at Royal Oak Park
8 to 11 p.m. Guest caller will
be Keith Rippetto. Club
!"embers are to. take
relreslunents. All Western
Square Dance Clubs are cor·
dially invited.

· REV. N. B. NE111ERS

NCM OPEN

FRIDAY
P OMONA- GRANGE,
Friday, 8 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Racine
Grange will he host.
MONDAY
UNITED METHODIST
Women , Heath United
Methodist Church, 7:30 11-m.·
Monday ·evening at the
church. Annual prayer and
self-denial service to be rondueled by Mrs. Nan Moore.
Program · by Mrs. Euvetta
Bechtleon ·•women in World
Hunger." Hostesses will be
Mrs. Pauline Horton, Mrs.
Clara Criswell, Mrs. Maxine
Philson, and Mrs. Betty
Fultz.
'

mf

-S~t's the harm? II a guy likes his looks, let him fla,;;,t •em.

LESSONS TO START
Square dance lessons · will
begin tonight at the Royal
Oak recreation building
under sponsorship of the
Belles and Bea!L'l Square ·
Dance Clpb. Classes will be
held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. with
instruction by Cecil Sayre.
The lessons are lor interested
couples only. For more In·
formation contact 992·7471 in
Ohio or 882-2283 in West
Virginia.

111URSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern
Stsr. 7: 30 Thursday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.

RIO GRANDE - How the • p.m. each week in the
stock market works is the meeting room above Price
subject of a new w ntlnuing and Sons Pharmacy • Second
~ucati?n class to be offered and State, Gallipolis. A $20
m Gallipolis by Rio Grande tuition fee will he charged
College and Community and the class Is open to any
::uege (RGC.CC) beginning interested person.
onday, January 9.
Smith who has his
Accord~ng to Instructor bachelor\s degree in business
Bryce Smith, the seven week administration from Ohio
course ":ill provide basic ·University, has · five years
information about various experience in the securities
kinds &lt;&gt;f \"vestments related . field and is currently
to.~ocks and bonds. ,
Gallipolis branch manager
'!be rourae won't be over for '!be Ohio Company
~yone's head," Smith said,
RGC·CC will a'ccept
but will help anyone who is registration for the class b
inter~sted understand the , phone (245-5353 ext
workmgs of the ' stock p rt ' 1 1 '
·
·
market."
a 1c p~n s may a 1so
'!be class wUI meetfro 7-9 register rn ~rson at Allen
m
Hall on the RIO campus.

RAP :
What d? yoo think about a guy who Silk screei)S his own pic·
lure on hi.s T-shirt? He also has big posters made of his "mug
.
shot" photographs.· DISGUSTED
DEAR DIS:
Well, he'll never be without a best friend: himself.-HELEN

GINO'S

dinner
.' •

!he mon~

'

NOW OPEN

Family

· Mr. and Mrs. James C. Bir·
chlield of Rutland hosted a
Christmas dinner at their
home on Dec. 22.
Attending were their
children Jeffrey and Jyl Bir·
chlield, Mr . .and Mrs. Mike
Conkle, . Michelle and
Heather, Mr. and Mrs. James
Conkle, Nina Wyatt, Robert
Conkle, Stanley Searles, all of
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield, Rob and
SALE NOW ON
. Kimberly, Mr. and Mrs.
RACINE
Racine RIL'lSell Little, Middleport,
Elementary PTO is selling Route I; Mr. ahd Mrs. Homer
llg~t 'bulba. Orders may be Cline, Pomeroy. The evening
placed by calling 949-2449 or was highlighted by a visit
949-2328.
from Santa.

ARE !1ERE Hf HEL_" ,,;;;;·;.)~~,

blue velvet trim, arid carried
a single yellow ro.se with
baby's breath and white
streamers. Miss Carla Clem,
cousin of the bride, was the
bridesmaid. She was in a
floor length pink gciwri &lt;i
polyester knit and also car·
ried a single yellow na and
baby's breath. Miss Laurie
Lance, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Lance, was the
flower girl and wore a long
blue and while gown.
Assi.sting with the bridal train
was Miss Sherrie Putman,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson Pubnan, and she wore
a long pink and white dress.
Keith Putman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Putman, was
the ring bearer. Serving as
best man for the groom was
his brother·m·law, Dale Put- .
man. Groomsmen were Jimmie Putman, Jr. and David·
Putman. Guests ' were
registered by Mrs. Donna
Reed, niece of the bride.
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Putman chose a
street length dress of green
knit and wore a carnation
corsage. Mrs. Saylor wore a
blue cotton street length
dress and also had a carna·
lion corsage. During the wed·
ding the bride presented her
mother with a single red rose.
A reception was held im·
mediately following the
ceremony in the church basement. Mi.ss Dorothy Runyon,
Miss Belinda Jackson; and
Mrs. Donald Putman served
the cake, nuts, mints and
. punch. The three tiered cake
decorated with red roses and
loppOd with the traditional
bride and groom· was baked
by the bride's sister·in·law,
Marlene Pubnan.
Mr. and Mrs. Saylor reside
at Route I, Guysville.

market class
SOcial D .of A installs officers for 197B
to be offered by ~io Calendar

.nouncing the birth of a nine
powtd, t~o ounce SOD 1 Gary
J..ee, oh Friday, Dec. 16, at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
in Athens.
Grandparents are Mt. and
Mrs. Felix Alkire, Route 4,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Alice
Staniey, PagetoWIJ. Great·
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Kaptelna,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Blanche ·
Staniey, Albany. Mrs. Mary
Diehl is a foster great·
grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley also
have another son, Mark
Allen, 3.
·

.•..
'

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Circle, the former Patricia
Blakeslee, and children
Marianne and Mark, of Wor·
lhington, are moving ·to
Wichita, Kansas. Mr. Circle
left Tuesday to hegln hi.s
employment there this week
with the Wichita Hilton Inn
and will be joined there later
by his family. He is the
general manager of the Inn.·
During the family's recent
vi.sit here two dinners were
held in their hOnor. Mrs.
Mary Circle entertained on
New Year's Day with other
guests being Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Circle and Mr. and Mrs.
George Circle' New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. James Butcher
,Jeff and Julie, entertained
Jail Friday night for the fami·
ly of her sister, and were joined by Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee.

c.

Nearly Everything In lbe Store!
Open 9:30 to 8
Mon. thru Fri.
Sat. 9:30-5
Closed Sunday
and Monday

.

I

(: OUNTY :. M EIGS
PUBLI C NO T I CE

The

lollowlng

992-3586

documents

wert received or prepa r td by
The Oh i o Env lronmtntal
Protf'ct/on Agtncy Gurlnu the
previous wtek . The effective

date ot e a ch fin a l Be llon
stated, th e l$suance date
each propoud ectlon
Silled . A.nvone aggrieved

ls
of

Is

or

adversely affected by • final

a cti on to lnue , d env . mod"!fy ,
revo ke, or renew a perm It ,
llcenu , or v a rl~nc:e ; or to
approve or dlsa pprovt pl&amp;ns

and s ptclflcallons , mev me
Brt

appeal

with

Tht

En

viron me n t a l
Boerd . of
Review , Su ite . 305 , 3f 5 f .

Bro ad St ., Col u mbu s, Ohio
d216, w it hin th irt y lJOl dllfS
of the effec tiv e d a te·, pur .
uun t to Ohio Revised Code
Section JH5 .07, ~o.m t eu such
f in al acflon wn prece ded bv
the sam e or subste n1!e. ll v the
same propo!l&amp;d liiC11on . All
such t ina ect lons ~~re so

~\

·:
...
;

~~"c."J~!~d . ;~ch 8pdfr~~Ji..':1~-~

•

f'! ea r lnO before The Ohio EPA
...
on a propose d a c t ion to Issue ,
•
der,y , mod ify , revoke, ' or
renew a permit , lice nse , o·r
va r Ui nce ; or to e pprove or
•
dlu pr, r o ve · p l a ns
and
speclr ca llon s, w ith in th lr&lt; ly
"'
130 1 da ys o r t he lssun nce
~
da t e. o~c J7AS :07 does not
provI d e lor ad 1udlca l ion
hea r ing r equests or tt ppet~~ls
on or ders, ve r irled com
pl l!l l,p t!, or
enfo rcement 'lo
co mp ll&amp;nce sc.h edu te let t ors .
~
W l tl)l n 30 davs. o f pu bt lc:AIIon
In a newspftper In t he lll ltec ted
;
co unt y, .'lilY person rn av al$0 :
Ill SUbiT! II Wr11ten COOl!Tl'l.!n fS
rela ting to &amp;C' Il.ons. propotSed
ac. t Ions, ve r It led com pt l'Jin IS ,
or enforcemen t .compliance
s&lt; h ed uht lett er s ; OJ reques. t

~rg~0b51~~ ~~~~~~ ;~~~~d l(~~

r eq u est notice o t turt ner
actions or proc:ee d itlQS . All
r eQues t s t o r adjudi c a t ion
h ee rlng s
·a n d
' pub l ic
m eetl nljls , lind o ther com
mun lce t lons'
,conce r nl n ~
pu blic: m ee t i n gs ~ a d judiC all on
co m
hea r l (lg s , veri f ie d
pln ln t s, a nd r egu ti'tlon s ,
sh ould be addr esse d to Th e
L egll l Reco r ds ·sec tion , Ohio
EPA, P . 0 .
B ox 1049 ,
Gotu mbu s, Oh io ' 432 16, ( 614 )
.. 66 . 60 37 , Ur1 1ess o t herWise
sta ted In pertlculer no t ices .
ll ll ot he r c;omrnu n lce tl o n s
ln c tu Qi ng
cbm nient s o n
propo sed II CI Ion s, Shoul d bt•
Add ressed e ith er to The Ai r
P ermit s a nd Co m pll ll nc~
M onit orin g
D iv i sion
or
Perrn ll &amp;nd Ap pr o v a l Section ,
whi chever Is l'l pprpprla lc , l'l t
Tht Oh io EP A , P . 0 . , BOx
10.49 1 Col umbus, O h iO &lt;132 16 .
Proposed
l ssu l'ln c&amp;
or
perm it to In sta ll
Oh io Pow er C o mpt~ ny
~li cl n e, O hi o , I ssUe · dil l e
12·28·17
F&amp;c iltl y
deu r lp tl on :
W ast ew a ter
Ap p!lcatlon N o , 06 -JtiO .

Was t Wa t er

=
.-

'

.:!
"

:
"'

r:
t
..

~

1

"'
~·

,.,.
,...
;
"

tr e: etm e nt

t ac l'!il les
tor
R aci n e
H ydr oelect r ic P r o let t , Rou t.,
33 8. Rl'l cl ne, Ohio .
(II

s, li e

'10000

TRADE-IN

On All Living Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE

REP COMING
A representative from
Congressman Clarence E.
Miller's office will conduct an
open door session from 10
a.m.-12 noon in the courthouse in Pomeroy on Jan.ll.

W8d. &amp; Sat-

•

·8:30 til $:00 Thuisdav Til 12 Noon

· FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

Herman Grate '
Mason, W. Va .

•••

..•.

STOREWIDE

January Clearance
BEGINNING FRIDAY 10:00 ·A.M.

...•

FALL .AND WINTER MERCHANDISE
REDUCED

%
10

,

·INCLUDING COATS, SNOW-SUITS,
SLEEPWEAR, DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR,
PANTS, SHIR·TS
. .
ALL SALES

SHOPPE
.KIDDIE
Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street

'

••••

-·SALE

CONTINU.ES
1,4 •
• 1h OFF

Dorls Koe nig, Do rothy
Lawson; December, DorothY.
Ritchie, Marcia Keller, and
Doris Grueser.
Mrs. Allen was pianist for
the meeting.

FINAL

Pomero'y ,-o.

NO
LAY·A·WAYS
CMII.DIIIN'I PAIMIONK

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

'f

.,

,
•t
•
i

�8 - The Da1ly Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan 5, )978

Let .The Want Ads Turn Unwtylted Items .I nto Cash

WANT AD

CHARGES
1~ Wcr4'i or

Under

""'"1.00
1.50
...,
3.00

I &lt;by
2dllya
3days

6dilys

I

Ctwrxe
1.2&gt;
1.90
1.1&gt;
3 .7~

EMch •ord o\ler the rninimwn 1$
words La 4 cent:~ per word per d&lt;.Jy.
Ads rwmlnM other Own etmsecutiv~
W.y1&gt; will be ctwf'Ked at the I tlay

raw.

•

Mobile Hume uleti and Yard lloale.H

11re ¥l-cepted only with cash with

order. Z5 cenl ctwrge for acb carry!
ilfg Boa Nwnber In C&lt;m! uCTht Sen-

tinel.
Publ ls~ r

reserves the rll!,hl
tu t!dit or rejed any Hd!l tl~rned 00.
jt:cllurwl. 'I'fw Publill~r w111 nol be
The

responaible for more lhan one· tnl.'(lr•

fed insertion

'

Phofw 992·21!16

IN tdV1NG memory of my deo1

husbond , Homer Howktns . who
poued away Janua ry 5 1«n2 .
Gone but not forgotten .
Sadly missed by his wife , l oUise
Howkimi

CASH paid lor oB makes and
models o l mobile homes.
PhMeoreo code61 4 423 q531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fores t Pro':"
ducts . Top pnce fot s tand ing
sow! im ber. Coli 992 · ~965 or
Kent Honby . 1-446·8570.
COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket wotche.s and chotns.
silver and gold . We need 196-4
and older silver co1ns . Buv se ll,
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley.
74'1·'1331

-·

-

RACINE GUN Clu b has d1scon ·
tinued gun shooting unlil Jon .
B. t97B

-

-

IN COME JA)( Serv•ces . Federal
and State Taxes . Wenda Eblin .
9'12 2272
AAA DR IVERS Educat io n Clon1n
will beglll Tue!odav January 10 .
For ml or mot• on coli : Sen
Slawte r at 742·21 70 between
0 :00 and 8 00 pm

NOTICE
FOUND SMALL male Pomera·
n1 on . 992-6134

COAl llmMione', and colc1um SIX SHEPHERD puppieJ . Anorted
colors Coll7 42·2334
chloride and cok•um brone lor
dusl control end speCial miMing WILL THE lady who got "Swoter" ·
s,olt lor form ers , Ew cet•ior Salt
please coll992·5552.
~ ·~
Worl..s , Mo m Street Pomeroy .
FEMALE
BLACK and white temer
Ohio or phone 992 · 389 1.
type dog
Female port
CA.Y,PER. $bOO
Also. hone
Schnouzsr. Male 1, to ll ie o11d
Holler . S450. Phone (614) 698·.
' J
English setter . '1 female
32'10
Oolmat ion puppies . :J yello w
and while mole cots. 742·3162
ECONOM'I' TRACTOR with oil at·
tochments L1ke new. asking
_12250; Phone l61 • l ~8·3290 ,

-

------

OLD FURNITURE. ice boxe~ . brass
bed!&gt;, iron bel:fs, efc , co mplete
hou~ehold$ .-W nte M 0 . Mill er.
Rt. 4. Pomeroy Ohio Of coli
94'1'1· 716lJ
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small .
Wil l buy 1 p1ece o r complete
hou!oehold New, used , or anti·
que-s. Morl 1n s Furmlur e . 20 N
2nd St. Middlepo rt. Phone
992·6370.

------

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

•

APPLIANCE
SERVI.CE

We have enlarged our
service department and
wtll service Hotpoint and
other brands.

• SPECIAL AUCTION . Sot .. Jan . 7
7 ·00 p m , Close-o ut on
Chr i1tmos to~s and other gifls
and m1sc At Ohio River Auc·
tion. Me1gs Plaza Middleport,
Ohlo

•

Pomeroy Landmark

Jr.Ja

-------

--- .

---- ------

POMEROY
lANDMARK

As'Ro GRAPH

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

jooo.oo.

2 79.95

Pomeroy Landmark

d i
••

· CALL US

Ponieroy landmark

9~ .:.~ack

AiiiL

-------

~ I

L-----~----------------------~ 1

THURSDAY, JANUARY S.lm
o:»-A\y Three Sons 3; Partridge •emily 4: : Brody
Bunch 8. 10; Little Rascals 15.
5 :oo-Bonanza .3; My Th·r ee Sons 4; Gvnsmoke
M loter Rogoro' Neighborhood '0.33; Hogan ' s
Heroeo tO; Emergency One 13; My·Tnree Sons IS
5 , 3(}-{)dd Coupie 4; News 6: Ele&lt;:. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogen' s Heroes 15.
6 :0D-News 3,4,8.10,13, 15; II.BC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6 · 30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC New• 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
F~lends 6; CBS News B. 10; Over Easy 20.3l .
7 ' oo-Sororlty '62 3; Cross. WIto., Liars Club 6 ; Gong
Show ' 8; News 10; To Tell The Trulh 13 ; Gilligan' s
Is. 15; Hocking Valley Bluegran 20; Book Beat 33 .
7 : 3~Hollywood Squares 3.•; $100,000 . Name That .
Tune 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8: MacNeii ·Lehrer R~rt
20,33 ; That' s Hollywood 10; Nashville on The Road
13; Morty Robbins ' Spotlight 15.
8 :oo-&lt;:hlps 3,~.15; Welcome Back , Kolter 6, 13; Wellons
8, tO; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
8 ,30-Whot' s Hoppenlng I ! 6, 13; Wodehouoe PlayhOuse
20; Hollywood Televlolon Theolre 33.
9 :0()-JarT)es al 15 3,•. 15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Hawoll
Flve-0 8,10; Hometown Saturday Nlghl 20 .
9:30-Carter Country 6.13 ; 10 ,011-Ciass ol '65 3 , ~.15 ;
Redd Foxx 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10; I, Caludlus

-.

a:

· ...;.~

RACINE
PlANING MILL
991 .3978

CHEMICAlS

We Strip Paint· Varnishes ,tc.
.wood-Meta !· Plastics
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering service
Custom • Profess ional
Refinishing · - Repairing .
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-2798
100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy , Ohio

RACINE, 0 .

INSUlAnON
SERVICE
WOOD AND WOOL FIBER
"S INCEJ947

..---------.
:~
OHIO
.,
HEAnNG SERVICE ..•
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE ...•

I

CARTER

FREE ESTIMATES

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

lnsololiott SttYi&lt;11
Financinl Ad ~able
Blown Into Walls &amp; Attits
STORM
WINDOWS I DOORS ·
RII'IACEMUT
WIIIOOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOffiTT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

PHONE

or992~6263

SALESANO SERVICE
11 ·9·1fc

•

·'

-·
•
...
..
.
...
•

OH· OIH L001&lt;5

:1

li KE HE'S CI~CliNt;

DOWN FOR ANOTHER
PASS~

•
•

~·

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

itflifN} ID~ ~ THATSCRAIIILEDWOADOAME
~ ~ ~~ ..
by Henri Arnold •ndBobLH
Unscramble these tour Jumbles,

....•

ooe letter to each squaJe, to form
four ordinary words.
BORNbOSER

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Box 34

A9 T~E ORDER.'!&gt; TRANSMITTED A&gt;JD
ONE POOR.COME' DOWN ...

--.....
...

$EPTIC TANK
. CLEANING
Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Any~ay , anytime .
Phone 985-3806

SJrKuse, Ohio
Ph. 992·3993

~UT

INC!r.DI&amp;I.E ~ A
THAT HOT••
vET Hf'.HANP.ES IT
AS CASUAllY AS
A KIPP IE·CAII!!
FI6~TER.

12 ·18· 1 mo.

LARRY LAVENDER

BA.M. to4 , 30P.M.

'

742·2570

....,

300 Main St.
Pomeroy / Ohio
PomeroY 992-628l

'

Boilers, Furnaces 1 Heat
Pvmps &amp; Auto· Controls.
GAS-01 L-COAL

12' 11 ·1 mo .

Chester, Ohio
10·30·c .

'

..

\VHAT"&gt; IT

A ~RP'MI~.
fAA.!-; HA·HA ...

~

.,'

Home Service

Superior

Steam Ex!taction

Elec .. plumbing,
carpen'ter
work,
painting,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
home.

Young's
Carpeting
R011t 3

~omtrtl), 0•

Carpet &amp;UphOlstery
Phone Mike Young

992-2206 or 992-7630

992-5705

''Tht Oti1inators
Not The lmitatan

NOTICE
SRAOFORO, Auctioneer , Com ·
plete Se rv1ce Phone 94'1-2&lt;1B7
or 949 2000 Racine, bhio . Critl
Bradford
BOWERS

REPA IR

I

Service
,,_ th•

'

I

,,,'

~'

lldltltor to the
C.ro.

rEEDAMI

I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

' I

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON
Corner Union Ave.
and St. Rl .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Change of
Phone Number

-

Sweepers, toos'ters, lfOns , all
small opplio nces. la wn mower .
next lo Stole Hi g hway Garage
on Reule 7 Phor1e '(61 4) 9853925 .

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

J K) 0
k-.A(IXIJ[XII XXJ

LITTI .E ORPHAN ANNIE

PU92·2174

REMODELING Plumbing. heot tng
and all ty p43s of ~enero l repair .
War~ guaran teed 20 years e~~:·
penence Phone 992-2409~ •
S~ WING MA CHIN E Repo1n , ser·
vice, otl makes , 992 ·2284. The
Fob11c ' Shop , Pb m eroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service We sharpen Scissors

JUMBLE BOOK 111 wllh 110puzzlea 11&amp;'1111·
able for S1 .35 postpaid from Jumble, c/o th is newapal*, P .O . Box~.
NhorwOOd , N J . 07&amp;48. Inc lUde your nlf!'1e, addr11e, ,tip 'iode and makt
c eckl paylble to NewaQaperbOOkl.

6l£UM~t!l"'
by

MEIGS PLAZA

.,

.

•

~

~'

n
tJ

..

':·:

1

LOW GRADE LOGS.
11

31ZE. ·• ••• •• •• •·• • • • • • .. •••• ••• • • • • • • •• •• 4 thru 25"
LENGfH ••••• , •••• : ••• • 6'4", 7'8" , t1'6", 11' and 12 '6"
PAY BY MEASUREMENT OR WEIGHT
S110.00 Per Thousand Ft. or $12.00 P~r Ton

JACKSON PALLET CO.
2 Miles West of Wilkesville on St. Rt. 124
, CALL 669-4734 BE FORE 11\AKING DELIVERY

..
'

status

••
''..
"

what
it's
costinq

-'

that's
all!

I

1" :
•

j

22

~....

Z3 BOxwood·
yielding
tree

know

·992-2259~,2 -6191

Sport wheels, air, cruise, tilt power windows, cloth
Interior, bucket seat, AM- FM radio , color silver with
matching landau tqp. A really clean sharp car .

me.

12 Instant
16 Choir
boy's
coUar

19 Shortly
22 Hateful
person

Z3 Under·
ground

· systelllB

24 Suaa citl·
zen of yore
25 Coin
27Hlred
Zlllnscribed

38Pronoun
37 Psyche

element

,. :. .__.;...--------------,34

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Kibitzer's logic fails
should have thrown one cl ub
and one diamond from
NOR Til
• 3
' 52
+ AK962
• AQ108~
EAST

"'=--+- +--

.74

WEST
... 8 6 52
9 K .I 9
' Q 10 B 7 3
Q 10 7 3
J 8
. H5Z
"'64
SOU Til
... AI&lt;Q .J 10 9
'A64
+ 54

grillee

•

volcano

Vulnerable : Easi ·'Wes l ,

West
Pass

OAJLY CRYPTOQUOTE -

•
j

-.

is

..

1974 Scout 11 ...••...•.• $2895

WRONG, DIANA&lt;'
YOU IDOK

Travel top, 258 cu. ln . 6 cyl. engine, auto. trans:, like
{lew tires, radio, 2 wheel drive.

JU5T 1&lt;EAC~ED A
VERY DIFFICULT
DECie&gt;ION!

TI!OUe&gt;Lf:D 0'

1974 Chev. 8'..•••••...• $3495

'·

Fleefslde Cheyenn~ cab, fu(.l chrome trim, step
bumper, 454 engine, automatic power steering &amp;
brakes, rally wheels, air conditioning , color w~ite, real
shprp .

Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
4
•

s•

Pa"

East
Pa!:i-o;
Puss
Pass
Pass
Pass

So ulh
2•
3•
4
NT
7•

singleton or doubleton.
..
The kibitzer's analysis .
was wrong as is usually the
case wlth kibitzer;. If they
played better they wo ulll be
playing and not watching .
Without going into all the
probabilities it had become
apparent by trick four that
East held the majority of the
clubs and di amonds .and It
was more like ly that h e
would hotd fou r .or each
rather than three diamonds
and fiv e c lubs .

.W1! 'lli '-' '~
.,. ·~it:!3.1
"'" '~&gt;.••
~
2

A Maine' reader wants to
khow what we open when
holding :
"· A Q " · J 2 • • A Q 7 6 4 ., .

A 9 8 4.

One letter simply s t a'nd s for another In this sample . A t• '------ - - - - - - --...)
We open one diamond
for the t.hree I.' s, X for t he {wo O's, ('l(' . Sin glt letters, By Oawald Jacoby &amp;: Alan
since we consider it poor
apostrophes, the len g th anrl for mation of the wo rds ~re all Soolal
tactics to open one notrump
hints Endl day the rmle le t t ers arc different.
with two doubletons in our
hand .
South wasted no lime at all
CRVPTOQUOTES
tn making the grand slam .
( NEWSPAN~ H Jo: NTEitPJUSI-: ASSN . I
He took his ace of. hearts ·
FH
HEFJ\A drew trumps with four leadS
GMSVEM
NOAA
JVC
(Do you have a ques tion for
while chucking a heart and
the experts ? Write ' 'Ask the
S
V
B
K
·I
V
A
A
0
B
L
J
V
C
·1
F H
two diamonds from dummy .
ENpfJrtS · care o f tillS newspaThen he went after clubs.
,per. Individual questwns will
i.IMFK
"
FH
'
JVCI
One losing heart went on the
TMHOIM ;
FH
be answered if ' ccompa nied
queen ; another on the fiftb
by stamped. self·addressea
club after he ruffed out
FHYOIFKOVB
envelopes, The mos t interestT'{EOBFBK
East's Jack .
.
mg questions wi/J be used m · '
th~s column and Will receive
A kibitzer criticized his
UFEMH
FAAMB
cop1eS of JACOBY MODERN.)
play and said that South
Yesterday's Cryplequote : RESOLVE THAT WHATEVER
YOU'i&gt;O YOU WILL BRING THE WllOLE MAN TO IT.~.S.
MARDEN ·
Ill 191'1 Kl n1 Fuhlttt SvridiUlt. lnr .

I AM,.WINNIE. L

WHAT1~

L 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

It:

North
It

dununy and the n played
thtee rounds of diamonds.
This line would huve foil ed
but it would have s ucceeded
If diamonds had broken 3·3 If
clubs had broke n J.:l or 1f the
jack of c lubs had dropped

u ~ed

WINNIE

•

Here's how tow
. ork

A X V D L B A A X R

.

K7

Decl~ : N o rth, Opening
lead :
~ n of h ea rt s

38 Addison's
coUeague
39'Equlpment
40Went
astray

'•

+

+

Part of
RSVP
35 Forttine
37 SicWan

•

.,

BRIDGE

pluBr -· ...
38Ultimate
31 Blaze

33 Make

FRANK &amp;ERNIE

102 in c h cab to axle, extra good, 825x20 t ires, 15,000 lb.)
2 speed, rear axle, 292 cu. in engine .

'
'

-....'
Hu...:ny;...ln_For..;.;A~Good~Dea;.;;;.:..l___.f j
I

Yesterday'• Atull'er

3l; Newo 20.
10 : 3~Lock, SIO&lt;:k &amp; Barret 20.
11 :OD-News 3,.,6,1, 10, 13,1 5; Dick Cave" 20; Over
Eaoy 33 .
,..
11 : »-Johnny Carson 3,4; 15: 'Starsk &amp; Hutch 6, 13 ;
Presldenl Carter' • Trip B: ABC ews 3J; 12 :0()Janakl 33.
.....
" ·, ,..
12 : 4~Toma6, 13 ; t :OD-Tomorrow3,4 ; 1: SI)- Newo13.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1t71
S : ~Farm R0port 13; 5 ;50-PTL Club 13;
5 ' 55News ~ S unr ise Semester 10 : 6 '1»-Nasnvlllo
Scene 6; PTL Club 1S.
us-Societies In Transition 10 . 6 ' J0-&lt;0IU"1bUS
Today • : Sunrise Semeotor 8; 6 :•5-Mornlng
Reporl 3; 6 , 50-Good Mor~lng. West VIrginia 13;
6 :SS-Chuck White Rports 10: News 13.
7,0()-TOday 3,4, 1S; Good Morning Ameri ca 6, 13 ; Good
Morning America 6,13; CBS News 8; Bullwln kle 10.
7' 3~Schoolles 10 ; a ,oo-Capl . Kangaroo a, 10; Sese m e
St . 33.
9:oo-Merv Grllfln 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; New '
M ic key Mouse Club 6: Famlllly Alfalr 8; Match
Game 10.
9 :3~E dgo ol Night 6; Andy Grllllth 8; Family Affair
10.
10: oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4, IS ; Big Valley 6;T atlletaleoB :
Joker ' s Wild 10: Mike Douglu 13 .
10 :31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3.4.15; Pri ce Is Righi 8, 10 .
II : DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 1S; Happy Days 6 ,13 ;
Mar c us Welby , M.D. 4; Elec . Co . 20.
11 : 3~Knockout 3,1S : Family Feud 6, 13 ; l,ove o l Lite
8,10; Sesame 51 2D.33.
·
11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10 .
ll :oo-Newscenter J; News -4.6, 10; To Say The Leas t
IS; Midday 13 .
•
12 ' 3~Ryan 's Hope 6, 13 :' Bob Braun 4 ; Gong Show IS;
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co . 33.
1' DO-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 ;
News 8, .Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only IS.
I : 3~Days ol Our Lives 3, • . 1S; As Tho World Turno
8; 10; 2·0()-$20.000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2 ' 3~Doctors 3,4, tS; One Ule lo Live 6,13; Guiding
Light a, 10.
3 :0()-Another World 3,4, 15; Lil ia s. Yoga 8. You 20:
Nova 33 .
•
3: 15-General Hospllal6, 13 ; 3:3D-AII In The Family
8,10 1 Crockell's Vlclory Garden 20.
4' 0()-Misler Cartoon 3; Little Rasca ls .Qur Gang 4;
For Richer , F or Poorer 15; M er'v Griffin 6,
Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame St 20,33 ; Go mer 'Pyle.
USMC 10; Dinah 13 .
4 : 3~My Thr-ee Sons 3; Parlrldge Fam il y 4; Brady
Bvnch 8, 10 ; Little Rascals 15 .
5:QO-Bonanza 3; My Three St&gt;ns 4 ; G unsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. 20, 33 : Emergen cy
One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5 :3lf-Odd Couple 4; New s 6 ; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mory
Tyler Moore 10 ; Hogan 's Heroes 1~ .
6 :DO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friend• 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 ,33.
7:0D-Next STep Beyond 3; Cross. WI! . . ; Liars Club 6;
Muppel Show 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13:
Gilligan's Is. 1S: Almanac 20; Avilla 33.
7: 3~Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4 &gt; Candid camera
6 ; Price Is Right a: MacNeil. Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
Family Fud 10; SIOO,DOO Na me That Tune 13; Pop
- Goes i~e · Country 1S.
d , oo-CPO Sharkey 3; Donny s. Marie 6, 13; In Search
ol4; College Baskelball 8, 15; W ashlnglon Week In
Review 20; Wonder Woman 10: So The Peoole May
Know 33 .
8 :3(}-(hlco &amp; the Man 3,4 ; Wall Slreel Week 20,33 .
9 :0D-Rockford FllesJ,4; Movie "Parl2 Walk ing Tall "
6, 13; Movie "Forever" 10; Say Brother P8yS
Tribute to Webster Lewl1 20,33 ,
10 :00-Qulncy 3,4, 1S; Celebrity Concerls 8; News 20 :
Fall of Eagles 33.
10:3(}-Mpnly Pylhon'o F lying Circus 20 .
11 ,oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; Olck Cavell 21!; Lilias,
Yoga S. You 33.
.•
·
11 : JG-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15 ; 8aretla 6, 13 ; Pre!tldent
Carter's Trip 8: Movie ''The Eyes of Charl es SMd''
10; . Monty Python's Flying Circus 33
t2 ,0D-Janakl 33; 12 : 3~ .•
,·
12 : ,.o-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; • Irons ide 13 ;_ 1:ooMidnlght ·special 3.4.15; Movie " The Giant
Behemoth " 10 .
2:3~ News 3; 3 ' DO-Movle ''The nlghl ollhe Following
Day" 3; S :OD-Movle "My Little Chickadee" 3:
6 :0D-FBI 3.
Jan
Thursday ,

!,.,....+- +--+-

Z"' Jwnp over
28BankroU
Z9FsreweU
gathering:
2wds.
32 Ostrich·
like blrd

';A

1975 Chev. 60 Series ••$4395

•

JiU

26 Author of
"Herzl"

Red with white vinyl top , carefully dr iven and loaded
with every optio n Inc . air; tilt wheel , speed and cruise,
full power . Company car, never titled.

BEHIND THESE DOORS.
- you w ill find features
galore. Lovel y modern
kitchen , 3 or A bedrooms,
insulation , storm windows
&amp; doors, nat. gas hot water
heat, carpor t . Aski.ng
$31 ,915.00.
NEAR BAS HAN - About
10 nice laying acres on
blacktop · road . · Water
available . $13,000 .00.
NEAR
NEW · HYDRO
UNIT - 2 ni ce lots with
river . frontage . 2 story
frame home . 3 bedrooms,
bath , 2 fi r eplaces, coal
furnace . Just $6,800.00 . •
YOUR DREAM come true .
3 yrs . old, 1 mile out, lovely
equipped
kitchen ,
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, storms,
storage bldg . 1 acre .
$37 ,300 .00.
JUST
LISTED ~
3
bedroom home, equipped
kitchen,
. level
yard ,
carport, electric baseboard
heat. many other features .
$17,200.00.
PUT YOURSELF IN OUR
HANDS.
WHETHER
YOU'RE
HOUSE
HUNTON!&gt;, SELLING, OR
BOTH
YOUR
INTERESTS ARE OUR
INTERESTS!
HENRY E . nELAND
.
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; L'EONA
ASSDCIIITES

WendeU or

25

1977 Monte Carlo.•...• $6100
1976 Grand Prix........$4695

A!ba·

core, e.g.

.

'

offering
5 More
heroic
6 Forecaster's
aid
7 U.S.S.R. city
8 Jan de
Hartog
play : 3 wds .
9 Feminine
lead

mouse

"

• I

1977 Chev. Impala ...•• $5495

MAIN
POMEROY, O.

4 Ore h.

17 Coxcomb
18 Bannan·
20 Lubricant
21 Church·

When I flip a switcn or
turn a tap I want

,'

4 dr ., 11 ,000 miles by careful owner . Beautiful white
over dark red finish, 305 V-8, automatic, P .S., P . B., air
cohdifloned, spare never used, showroom clean . Save .

16 Topsy's

GASOLINE ALLEY

..........~---...
...-~~
BETTER DEALS YET!
!

u Cling
15 Before
playmate_

.,

"'

patnter

%Greek
market·
place
3 Any bore,
e .g .: 2wds.

'

q
t, , { t

'

DOWN
I French

13 Carol

.'
••
-~

WANTED

bearing

st.ate : abbr .
5Soup
10 Girl·watch
11 Thick
slice

•I

.

41 Heraldic

I Old Colony

- ~-~ .."'·~

~
WILL CARE for the elderly in our MOBilE HOME repo~r s. 992·5858.
hom e . Pho ne 992· 7314.
PIAN O TUNING--Lone Oon •els. 13
PIANO TUNING · Lane Ooniels
years of se rvt ce. New phone
New phone number , 992-2581
number , 992 .2581 .
If no answe r, coii992-20S2.

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

..•

Middleport, Ohio
· 11 -9-tfc

'

WILL do roofing construc tion.
plumbmg and heol1ng No 10b 1
100 Iorge or too small. Phone
742 ·2348 ,

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Service. Phone 992-2478

·'

I

(Answers tomorrow)'
Jumbles· NOISE WALTZ BLUISH OXYGEN
·
Answer How the shoemaker flnelty produced the
enormous shoes - AT LONG LAST

NEW- JUSTOFF. PAESSI

•

Located In

Closed Jan. 10
Til1ath , 197B

EX CAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and d1 tcher . Cha r!es R Hoi ·
ltel d . Bock Hoe Ser vice.
Rutland , Ohi o Phone 742-2008.

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled ceramic tile. plum ·
bing, carpentry . and general
momteno r)ce . 13 years e~~: ·
perience, 992·3685.

Y esterday s

ACE HARIMARE ·

992-7608

EXCAVA TIN G . dozer . loader and
backhoe work . du mp tr ucks
and lo bo y5 for h1re. will hou l
f1ll dirt , to soil , i1mestone o nd
grovel Ca ll Bob or Roger Jel ·
lers , ~oy phone 992 7089 , n ight
phone 992·3525 or 992· 5231.

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E.IC ·
cavating , · sep tt c systems ,
dozer. backh oe , du mp truck .
limestone , gro..,e l. black top
pavmg, Rt . 143. Phone I (b14 )
699·7331.

LimE ORPHAN ANNIE COMIC STRIPS DElAYED IN MAIL

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIOING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp;DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
by
steP
instructions.

Phone

IJ

I KJ

12-7-1 mo .

llJI mo

ELWOOD

'

. ''
.,

PHONE

At

TEAFORD[B

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.

Business Services

---

..

'

9- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, Q., Thursday, Jan. 5, 1978
T1tACY
.

'''""'; f

HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre and
CHI P WOOD . Poles mox .
up Mu1dleport , nea r Rutl and
d•ome te&lt; 10 ' on lo&lt;g••t end , S8
Coll992 · 7481 .
per 1on . Bundled slob. SO per
kw c
ton Delivered to Ohio Pollet
c
· ar5ey , Mgr. NEW 3 bedropm house . 2 baths
IN THE
Co .. _!t_. 2_. P_o meray. 992·2689 . _ 1.L' :==:__P_ho_ne_m
_ .l_1_8_1-:.J
oil elec .. 1 ocre. M1dd leport
tOMMONPLEASCOU~T ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
dose tci Rut land Phone 992 CASH FO R Junk Cars Fr~e · s Tr uc k
~
ROBERT A. MUNNEL ,
74BI.;__ _
Monda y
end
Auto
Wrecker
Service.
B
&amp;
S
MOBILE
HOME&amp;
Pt.
Plea
PLAINTIFF
Noon 011 Sll turW. y
Phone
742
.2081
or
Pennzoil
son!.
W
Va
bes1de'f.teck's
.
SMAL
L form for sole . 10~. do wn ,
vs
Rutland 742 -9575
JUNE SAFRA~EK , ET Al ,
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
owner fmonced Monroe Coun ·
Tu-y
DEFENDANTS
bedroom
tv , W. Va Phone (30A) 772·
thru Fr1day
A UTO 8001fS and sCiop metal ,
NO . 16 ,638
1973 Oonon i 4 ~~: 60 2 be droo m
4P.M.
_2_102 or (304 ) 772·3227 .
_R•d~~t
v
oge
.
992-5468
PUBLIC NOi'ICE
the dl:ly before publlclllion
1..972 Vic toria n 14 ~~: 67 3 bed room
TO
FRED KAPT! NA. GOOD USE:O he ctor w1th
COUNTRV lonnlond wi th seclud·
2 both
whose last known address 1S
ed woods, wafer and good oc
Swnlay
~~dr~~c
3
pt
l·utch
742-3074
·
1972
Co..,entt
y
1
'2
11:
65
3
bedroom
601 Wood St reet , Zephryhills ,
cess in Monroe Co unty , W. Vo
4P.M.
F lo rida , 33599 whose e11a ct
WAN T TO Buy : Mobile Hom'e wit h 1969 Statesman 12 x 60 2
Friday afternoon
$1 ,000 down , coli (304) 772·
address 1S unKn ow n and
bedr oom.
') or 3 bedrooms O lder type .
__:l l02o&lt;(JO•P72-3227.
"
ca nnot
w•th reasonable
742
3074
.
CUSTO
M FRAM E h itch for !ole
dil ige nce b e ~tscertained :
model Chevro let or G .M C. Commewol prop e r!~ appro~~: . 17
• - PUBLIC NOTICE _..:...
TO EMMA MAE KAP
acres . leve l lond, loca ted at
truc k. 992 · 7066
Efrain
Per ez
whose
TINA , an incompetent per .
Tuppe rs Plmns on Ohio, Route
resi d e nce 1s unknown, but
son. whose la st known ad
BURROUGHS SENSI·MATIC ac ·
7 Phone (614) 667·6304 .
whose last known address
dress 1S New Washington ,
counTing machine Has been
Oh•o and whose exact ad
IF YOU hove o service to 'O ffer ,
w as 1710 Chester Road ,
dr ess •s unknown and ca nnot
un der serviCe contra ct and in VA .FHA, 30 yr financing. Ir eland
wont
lo
buy
or
sell
some
th
ing
,
Mor tgage, 77 E. Slate. Athen ~ .
Pom ero ~ .
Oh io, . w. i~l tak.e
.
..:·......
good
condi tion . Con be seen ,QJ
notice thiit an the 6th 'ftay of
w •th F' o::&lt;ni!ti'ab le 'diltg e ne:e be
ae loolo. 1ng fo r work
or
phone (614)5~2 · 3051.
Th e Do• ly Sentme l, 111 Cou n
Decem ber , 1917 , that Pam ela
a scertai ned
whot e\ler ... ~ou ' ll get rosul ls
St Pomeroy , OH .
M. P e re z, Pla int iff , f lied her
TO
THE
PERSON ,
1.3 ACRES ON Leoding Creek
fo
ster
w1th
a
Se
nt
inel
Wont
Ad
6UAR D IA N
OR
IN
Road. 992.7066.
Comptamt agai nst h im in the
STITUT ION h,Htng the care
Co11 992-2156.
Common Pleas Cou rt of
and control of Emma Mae
SIX ROOM house . all electriC .
. Mei gs Coun ty , Oh10 , Case No
Kt~ pt 1 na
a n Incompetent
carpeted, ta r port. $26,000. Ar ~
16,664. praying for di\J Orce
person . W•lose ide nt•t y and
row camper $600 992·7885, 10
upon t he g roun ds of gross
whereabou ts are unk_nown
om to 6 pm . No Sundoy co ils .
neglec t of du ty and e~~: tr eme
and cann ot wt th reasOnable
HOO F HOLLOW Horses . Buy, sell
cruelly , for custodv of the two
d •l:gence be asce rta ined :
trade or tram New and used
THR EE BEDROOM bo th •.md '11,
m inor children , for al imon y
Yo u a r e hereby not 1fied
Total electric. Brick Iron! .
and suppo rt , and will furth er
sadd les. Ruth Rce11cs . Albany .
ta~e not ice that lh ls c aus e
Tha t you ha ve been named
Curpeted I acre of,lond. Prtced
1614)699 3290.
For
All
Your
·
can be heard at anv n m e
defenda nt s 1n a lega l action
for qu1ck sole. PH 992-3607 or
entit led Rober t A Hunnel,
fol lo w ing tw enty ei ght day s
ptai ntill vs June Safrtlne k. e t MEIGS COUNTY Hu rnone Society, General Electric T.V.'s
~92 · 3312 .
Core l1ne ond ado ption Sendee
al Th1s action has been
from the date of the last
and
THREE ACRE for m . 5 roo m house .
publication of th is notice an d
assi gned case No . 16,638 in
992 7080 742 3162. 94'12 ·5427 .
tha t the las t pu bli ca t ion will
the Com mon P leas Court , of
Pa rtial bath Clly water 9 mil es
Hotpoint Appliances
be m a de on the 19th day of
MeigS
cou nt y,
Ohio . AKC REG IST ERED peMinges e puplrom town $4 ,500 . Owner has
p•es Phon e.(3041 ) 882 2683
Sale Prices .~ Janu.ary , 1978
Pome roy . Oh10 45769 ,
lo leave area because of
Larr y E sren cer,
. The Obj~~t of th e cor:n ptaml RISIN G STAR Kennel , Boo rd.ng
employment Ph 992·2989 for
Clerk 0 Co urts
•s to parl11•or and qutel 111 1e
appointment .
Indoo r and outdoor runs . . Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.
Meigs Co unt \I . OhiO
to the r ea I es la te s il ua t~d-in Grooming att.:-breeds .- Cf9an
THR EE Y~AR old . 1 1h story , ranc h
Phone
992-2181
112) 8 ll2 2 29 ( l )5 12 19 li the V1ilage of Pomeroy ,
so'11 1tor y facilities Chem1re .
' .. · ' ~
' · ·• - ·CounT y of-·Melgs and St ate of
s tyle home . 4 bed roo ms. 2 cor
Phon e (614 ) 367 0292
For Friday, Jan. 6 1978
Oh 10, and b C1 ng Lot No . 78
garage. cemen t dr iveway . I A
-=--===7=~·=-~~...,-, begi nn ing at a stone c orner of
ground . $33 ,900 . Pr i..,o te
AK C REG ISTE RED Dober man LARGE ROUND Bole feede n
north ecly s.d e ot Condor
mode of square tub1ng . $76
owner. Seen by appointment.
pup!&gt; . 843-3053 alter 5.
•
St&lt;e e t . !hence wes terly al ong
Vermeer Io rge round baler
949 ·2801
th e nor lher ly side o f Condor
$250 • Discount until Feb 15
Stre e t 40 feet to a s ton e .
1na.
1
Woodmas
ter.
cabinet
ce ba ck at r igh t a ngl es
Bernice Bede Osol 'then
wood heaters. thermos tat . ash
W1 tt1 s a id street 100 feet
pan . hinged top for cOoking.
thence easterly wi tti fi r st line
t976 GRA ND PRI X SJ All utras
torty {40 ) feet , then ce 100 fe e t
bm k·lined , $242 Coolmoster
l
ow
mileage
.
Tom
Anderson·
to the begi nn ing .
~ om e as obove but Shaker
992
)348
,
after
4
pm
Also a s t rip a long the west
grate lo r cool , $264 , Blower lor
side ot sai d lot, desc ribed as
1972 FORO G ftAN Torm o Station
ellher, $48. Merrill Chose (61 4)
IQIIows , be ing about Jhr ee
Wogan 351 eng1nl;! A C , a uto
698·302 1
feet mo r e or tess on Condor
51 .000 miles . $1 .300 . 949-2062 .
Str eet . th e nce runnln b back
HAY . $1 25 end Sl.SO pe r bale.
Mos t of the geod 1h tn gs that 100 fee t and be1ng 14 fe e t
GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.,
1971 F6 RD TOR INO Station
(614) 378-6311 .
you are blessed with th •s com- more o,. less on the ba ck en d
Broker
Wagon
.
302
mofor.
P.S.
Good
mg yea r will be bro ught abou t thereo f, and be ing the same
cond1t1on . Wh1te $250 Call THREE ELVIS reco rd s, co llec tors
107lf"J Sycamore St.
premises
on
wh1
ch
Carol
ina
items . Co n b&amp; 51j19n ot Clil to n
by · doers·, not talk ers S tay Kalb form e rl y re si ded and
(614) 667.3252 .
Pomeroy, Ohto
W Vo . ask for Roger Klein.
· close to those you se nse wilt '\:Onveyed to her by John
PHONE 992-6JJ3
~ F·150 :Y. ton 1973 Ford P1 ckup 4·
say little and accomp li sh mu ch . Pen ce and Cordelia Fran cis
Oftice Hours : 9 A.M. 1o .,
speed P S , P.B Wh1te. $1 ,200. FIREWOOD . SP LH , de li vered,
CAPRICORN 1Dec. 22·Jan .19) Pen ce .
stocked $25 per largl! p~ekup
1614)
667·3252.
P
.
M.
Reference
1S
·
mad
e
to
Working behtnd th e scenes
lo ad . 742·'1256.
Cer t•fl cat e of Tra nsfer from
Close Thursdays ant
1966 V.W. wit h 1970 V.W. motor .
Ieday is your for te . but you Robe rt B Hunne ll , de c.
GOOD
USED
TV
's
Color
a
nd
saturdays
at noon.
Al so lwo new snow lt res
labor mat nl y 1n the interes ts of
You are required to answ er
Block and Wh1te . Harriso n's TV
moun ted on V.W. nm s . Bes t of
oth ers Seek no acco lades
the Complaint wllhin 28 day s
NEW LISTING
3
276 Sycamore Street. M1d ·
hn Co ll992·3866
only their success Like to ltnd after the last publication of
•...c...,:.,:.:.:.._ __
bedroom, 11!2 ba ths, dining
dlepo rt, Oh1o. 992-2522.
lh1s
notice
,
which
will
be
out more of what lies ahead for
1971 VW SUPER Beetle $1 .300
area. kitchen has built-in
pub liS hed once each week for
yo u? Send lor your copy of s1x
Exce llent co nd 1lto n
1970
consecut ive weeks . The
oven and range , one car
Aslr o--Gr~ph Letter by matll ng
Chevelle $500 . Podded bor
last pub li ca tiO n w il l be mad e
garage, family room. New
50 c ents fo r each and a long , on Jan . 5, 1978 and the 28 da ys
stoo ls, $300. 992·2987 .
total eledric home on an
for
ans
wer
wi
ll
star
t
on
th
a
t
self-addressed , stamped enve1976 MONTECARLO
Excellent
ac'r e lot . S-41
Located
lope to Astra-Graph , P .O. Box date .
cond1tion. P.S.. P.B.. A.C
In case of you r failu re to
Let Pomeroy landmark
on the Crow Sub·division ,
489 , Aadto Ctty S tat ton , NY. answer
or ot herw ise respond
·crUise control. AM - ~M lope
soHen &amp; condition your
near Five Points.
10019. Be s ure to spectfy yo ur as r equ 1re d by the Oh'10 Rul es
many more ex tras . $3 ,695 .
water with Co-op water
birth sign .
of ( l VII Prod cedu re judgment
New 4 bedroom, 2500 sq. ft
992·6243
softener, Model UC-SVI ,
AQUARIUS 1Jan .20·Feb.19) The by default will be r ende red
liv
ing space, 21J1 baths, 1:
you
for
re l ie f
1975 PLYMOUTH OUSTER , 2-dr ..
mhere nll y good Qualities you ag ai nst
Now OnlY ,
room ranch bric~ Locate&lt;
dema
nde
d
1n
the
co
mplam
t.
auto
Slan
t
Silo:
,
dork
g
reen
w1th
have are magnifie d today Its
Larry E Spe nce r
3 miles from Rt. 7. up Wes
while vmy l top. P.S.. rad io fair .
res ult s m your pic king up a ne w
Cle rk of Court
Good
condit
io
n'
1
owner.
(304)
Shade River. Call for ar
fan c lub o f ad m1re rs and people
c om mon Pleas Cour t
Let us test your water Free
773·5977
appointment.
wtth " clo ut "
Meigs Covnly , Onio
PISCES 1Feb.20-Morch 20) ( 12 ) L 8, 15, 22. 29 , (11 s. 6t c
We have need of listings,
Should your dete rmlmHton be
Jack W. carsey , Mgr.
all
types, homes. land,
awakened today , there ts no
Phone 992-218 I
commercial, etc,
mountain you can ' t climb or
STARCRAFT FALL Sole .
Cheryl Lemley
wall you ca n 't breac h Keep
moto rs , 20' end 22 '. TroVel
thisin mi nttif yo u' refacedw tth
PUBLIC . NOTICE
Associate
Tr oi len , 18' S" $3 ,799, 25' 7" CHARLOIS BULL calf. 10 mo s. old
an obstacle .
·
Se a led b ids will be rece 1ved
Home Phone 742-2003
by the Vi llag e of Middleport
Bunkhouse $.4 .875 Fold ·down ,
Seven ·Eighths §lock Norman
H1lton Wolfe/ Sr.
A~IES ~March 21 ..Aprll ,9) O~ i o , Me igs county, at the:
Sl 700 up. We sell ser..,ice and
Grueser , 992·5358
Some type of vtgourou s act1vlty VIllage Hall , 237 Race Str eet
quo l•ly Open Sunddy s Comp
Associate
$25 de live re d .
1s in o rder for you today Don ' t M id dleport , Ohio until 4:00
Conley Storcroft Soles . Rt. 62 . FIR EWOOD
Home Phone 949 ·2589
get m to thing s that you d o solo , P .M . January 23 , 19 78 for the
949·2358 or 9:;
95:.·.::3S6
:;:o,:7:_
. _ __
N. of Pt. Pleosont.
follow ing et;~ulpment :
but rather an exercise that
1978 Modeol , 4 door sedan to 21 FOOT TERRY 1976 Equ1pped . NEW HOLLAND mowe r 451.
invo lves tw o or more , like m- be use d as Po lice Cr u•se r
Kowo sok• 90 motorcyc le One
992.7066.
door tenn1 s .
.
100 amp
heavv dut y
Arab1on mare . 992-7084 .
21 FOOT TRAVEL tro ller. Self ·
TAURUS (April ZG-May 20) A alt e rnator
5
FOOT
brus h hog $200 Two 14 "
con tained Tandem wheels. e:oo: ·
change you 've been reluctant
soo amp h~a..,y duty ba t tery
snow tires on whee ls. 742-2761.
tr
o
mce
.
992·5254
.
to ma ke could be feasible
2 hea..,y duly s pot llgnts,
today . You' ll have both the inside operated
1972 ARISTOCRAT
TRA VEL EIGHT FEEDER pigs 40·45 lbs $25
~EA. L t OR
each .
T u ppers
Plo 1ns .
coura ge to actandtheimagtna·
350 c u . ln . VB En.gine or
Trai ler . 18'. $2 .200. Coli
614-667·3368.
lion to look ahead.
. equ!valenT
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
9'12·3590
A.r Co ndit io ned
GEMINI (Mau 21~June 20) It's
216 E. Second Street
9 PIGS . 11 week ~ old . Co li
. '
Power Brakes
very ltk e ly that your mat e will
Power Steer ing
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
985·3565
have . the Ideas that are most
Heavy Duty S uspen sio n
Phone 992-1125
RAIDER 100 watt lmeor . $125.
tmagtnatlve today You . howe..,. System
q49
·2322
.
er, will have th e mec hant ca t
5 firs t Ime tires
3 ' LOTS - 7 room house,
~nowledge to make th ings
Auto matic
transm iSSi on
1970 12 x 65 mobile home w1th HAY FOR !iale. Pt't . 949-2388 .
bath , ci t y water , natural
w k
Col or - Wh ite
,
24 ' porch and awn•ng. Ex - ·
or ·
Electr.c Door lock!!
ga s
ce ntral
hea ting .
cellent cond1t1on l o t for rent,
Delivery ml!de within sixty
CANCER jJune 21 ~July 22) Il ls
$16, 500 .
'
an unu sual gift. but you have It " da ys from the da te bid is
Co li ~95 · 3979 .
·
We Are Now
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms,
today You are able 1'0 &amp;cc~pted .
bath , natural g,as furnace,
Ta.king New
maneu~er th e abtltty of anoth er
With or W lthout 1976 4 door
city water, aluminum
to at1ain what'he or s he want s lm1pala C::hevrolet trade -in
Customers
For
.
,
he VIllage res e rves the
si d ing , and corner lot .
arxt tn the e nd obtam exactly right to reiect any and al l
Ask ing $16.500.
what you desi re .
bids .
·
$7,500- 2 bedroom frame
LEO !July 23-Aug.22) You are 1n
3 ANb 4 RM lurn1shed and un·
home being overhauled .
Vi llage of
yo ur element today , th e take lu rni shed op ts . Phone ~2Fireplace ,
cistern.
2
Middleport
charge type o f person who ha s
5434 .
Gene Grate,
porches, and large lot of
th e know-how to do anylhtng
Clerk T reasurer
almost an acre.
FOUR ROOMS and both Adults
that needs to be done with n ) 5, 12 , 21 c
NEW . LISTING
J
only
.
No
pets
.
992-5908.
class and s uccess .
bedroom hom e In Pom eroy
CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
VIRGO 1Aug.23·Sep1.22) ' Nol
COuNCIL LIAISON
out of flood area . 2 bath s,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
on ly becau se you are privy to
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
dining
room,
full
Lorge lots . Call ~ -7479 .
confidenl tal info , but because
W. Carsey, Mgr.
basement, natural gas
Mayor DeMis J. Kucinich
you have the des ire to do it for
MOBIL E HOME for rent in Racine.
Phone 992-2181
central
heating ,
and
dependen ts , vou ' ll be ab le to has named f orme r W JW
Albert Hill. 949-2261.
garage . $27,500.
radio
newsman
Dean
Griffin
wrap up a lucra tive deal today .
For this 2
$10,500 TWO BEDROOM Troiler . Adults
' LIBRA 1Sept.23-0ct.23) Don ' l as his liaison with Clev~land
bedroom, fram e hOme near
12 GAUGE 40 1nch bbl longtom
on ly. 992-3324 .
sd on profitable ideas you Council · at annual salary of
QUfl , In excellent condition. Coli
stores . All city utilities.
know you ca n 't get olf the
742 ·2334
$24,000_
40 ACRES With all
ground today Take them to
minerals,
some
of
the land
"
Council
and
the
i976 Suzuki RM 100 MXER . 4 mo.
ot hers yOu know can imple·
lays nice, that could be sold
~ld , 0 hour's on engine, new
ment them and you ' ll ga in too. administration mus ( work
In 5 acre loh. Small barn .
APPl ES. FITZPATRICK Orchards .
parts' needs assembled . $200.
SCORPIO 10ct.24·Nov.22' Sev· together and Dean, with hls
1977 Suzu.k i RM 125 B MXER , ex- · 45 ACRES - In the slicks
Slate Rou te 689 . Ph o ne
e rat ways may occur to .yo u . experience and understandin ,
with ~water tap , septic ta nk,
Wilkesv ille . t:.69·3785.
tras. extellen t cond itio n, $675.
today to your resources Si t will make \hat hoped-for
and e lectric. All this at a
_ P..P.:_ 992·,:.
308'7'2.'-=-- - - , - - ·
back and analyze them and you
RUGS
,
WALL
Hang
ings
qr,d
reality ,"
pr ice ttJat an)·::. ·, c ca n
may see that more than one is cooperation a
ofgons Nice 1 for Chnstmos . HAY FOR sole . Roun d boles . PH ~
afford .
Kucinich
said
Tuesday.
app licabl e
8&lt;13·2524 ,
,
Reasonable . Call992-2214 .
NOW IS THE TIME TO
Griffin, 46, covered City .
SAGITTARIUS 1Nov.23· D•c.i1)
1976 FORO F·250 Cus tom . 17 .50 I( 8 N FORO Troctor, new -;i'r;;- ~nd
SELL
THAT BIG FUEL
This is a restless day , but your Hall and other beats for
1 ~ .00 fires · winc h. Only 14 ,000
rfrns. eK"cellenl met honko l con·
EATING HOUSE .
restless ness is. very. well chanr WJW, North. Royalton, for 11
mi. Headers . CB. Tope deck
dition . Al so , 1 Hollev car ·
Helen L. Teaford
neled. Rather than making oth·
Over $3 ,000 tn exfros . Se rious
~ureter , 1 S1nger Z•g Zag s.ew· ·
years. He was fired by the
G Bruce Te•ford
ers nervous , you'll inspire
calls only offer 12 noon :
mg machine with button haler
station 's· new management
Realtor Associates
them tp be as ac u~e as you are
PH 9~2· 7201.
696· I072 $6,900.
·--'~~
!NEWSPA PE R ENTERPRISE ASSN )
thr"" months ago.
.

WANT-AD

.

f'odiale

In mfffi()ry , Card or Ttianlul wnd
Obllwu·y 6 cents per word, $3.00
nuntmum CMshinMdVImce.

.

-.

.

,,

.Nii

._I_ _

'

Chevrolet

.,
'

·POMEROY MOTOR CO..

60NNA

"Your Chevy Dealer"
•
Pomeroy
Open Evenings .UntiiB P.M.

992·2126 '

OKA'(, 6EAUTIFVL, GET
OfF THE IG:E!! WE'RE

'

..•
••

~

HOCKE'{!

HOW WOULD YOU LIKE
10 6E FORCE-FED A
PAIR OF GOALIE PADS?!

I'M GITTIN'
PLUMB TIRED
OF STANDI(\)'
HERE AT THIS

DADBURN

GOSSIP FENCE
EVER'
BLESSET DAY,
ELVINEY

··50
SAIRY
SEZ.

TOME 1
SHE

SEZ.··

�•

' .

.
,,,,,,,,,,~~Y~~~~:~

~

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 5,1978
~-- - -------~-------------.---:

Area Deaths

1
I

.

Hospital News

: v.~m~.. MemorlalH~Ita'
I

RAY ALLEN
Prospect Church. Funeral
Ray Allen, Akron;1ormerty· servlceswill~heldtnerear
of Lefort Falls, died Wed· 2 p.m. Friday , the Rev . Ted
nesday, Jon, 4, at Akron Giassburn officiating, with
General Hospital.
in t erment
in ·talvarv
He Was preceded In death cemetery at Rio Grande. The
by his wile, VIrginia Sayre body will be taken to the
Allen and brother-ln .taw, church one hour before the
Charles Skeels . He Is sur-

se~~i~~~~s may call after 5

vived by t wo daughters,
Marilyn Deiss and Vlrglnfa
Sayre, one sister , Kitty Allen
Skeels , and nine grand -

p.m. today at Miller's Home
for FuneralS..
• ""
children.
SYR,.fc~~~':._W~!~e Wise,
Funeral servtcn Will be
held Saturday .!t the Prentiss
forme rly of Syracuse, died
Funeral Home, Akron.
Tuesday at St. Luke' s
Hospital In Columbus.
He was the son ol the tate
JOHN O'DELL NEAL
Solomon and Bessie Ogden
l John O'Dell Neal," 7.4, was ...Wise. He was also preceded
found dead in bed at his home
In death by his wile, follna .
on
the
Harrisburg ·
Surviving ore a brother,
Adamsville
Rd .
(Rt.2.
John
; • nephew, David Wise,
Bidwell) at 6 a.m . Wednes· and 1 niece . Jane W ise
day . Whl l ~ he had hact a · Schultz, Funeral services will
history of heart t rouble, he be held In Columbus on
apparently_~ wa s feel ing all
Friday.
right Tuesaay , when he workedonh iscar .
A farmer earlv in his l ite,
he was employed on the c [0
ra ilroad, from which he
retired several years ago,
and ·· th en he worked aS a
carpenter.
He was born Marc h 26,

E-R CALLE~

Pj)meroy E·R .squadmen
went to New St. at 10 :38 a. m.
Wednesday for Letha Quails
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital as a
medical patient. At 10:53 a.
m. the fire department went
to Clifton, W. Va., to assist
the Mason Fire Department
at a fire in a building.

1903, in Cabell County, W.

Va ., one of five children of
Robert and Vallora Leadman
Neal. Two brothers and a
sister survive : Leroy Nea l,
Milton, W. Va .; Elvin Nea l,
Ft. M yers, Fla .; and Mrs. A.
c .. (lnez) Beckett,- Ft. Myer s,

Fla.

He was f irst married to
Eleanor Cart, Milton, w. va .,
fr:om whom he was divorced .
She still liv.es. He is survived
by thr ee sons•and a daughter :
Emme1t Neal , Wheelers ·
burg ; Roy Neal in Ca liforn ia ;
Dona ld Neal , Rt . I , Bidwell;
·and M.rs. Ralph · (Idella)

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
Frank · B.
issu ed to
Samatowitz, Jr., 43, East
Hampton, Conn., and Ruth
carolyn Barr, 32, of Mid·
dleport ; John James Evans,
19, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, and
Teresa Ann Edwards, 18, Rt.
1, Reedsville.

Meadows, Ft, Myers, Fla . ·
His second marr iage wa s to
Lula Smith, Huntington, who
survives with his seven step ·
children.
Though he was a member
of Mt. 'Olive Church, John
O'Dell Neal attended Pro·
spect Church with his son
Donald, who is a leader in

Shop Baker Furniture
Name Brand Furniture
and Floor Coverings
eLane
e Frigidaire
• Samsonite
• Hoover

THANKS ...

West Virginia has 20,000 ponds now

Amerleu dollv rauted oa _
iateraauo .. l mini ey
in the Mountain State. AI the
POINT PLEASANT
Admitted - Roger Manley,
markell W.y bl rettpon~
end
of the feMI'alllacal year,
West
V~inta;
ortglnaUy
a
Jr., Middleport ; Pamela
to
a
V, S. COVft'IIDielll. land without·lalt:es, now has Sept. 30, scs had aaailted
Imboden , Pomeroy;
more than 20,000 ponds, with 20,088 completed ponda
Lawrence Stewart, Mid- ' ~IIIH le oapport lbe
aeUvely
Ia
a
bid
cretllbaek
dleport; Letha Quail~.
thanks to ita landowners and siru=e the late 1930's, Craig M.
to bait a year-IGDJ declille.
a cooperative program with Right, scs state con·
Pomeroy; Maggie Gilmore,
Ia
Tokyo,
lbe
dollar
announced
ooil conservation agencies. servationist,
Racine ; Viele Wi!Hams,
today.
.
aeored
a
dramaUc
raUy
Cheshire; Kenneth Mullirur,
, Late laot summer, the
aplllll lbe JapaDele yeo,
Right said that pinpointing
:lll,oooth pand assisted by the
Oteshire; Marjorie Walburn ,
elotlaJ al.%41.%0, up INtn
20,000th pond would be
the
U. S. Soil CoMervation
Middleport ; Perry Beebe, · Z3'1.18 Wednesday.
lmpo"lble
because 10 many
Set'vice
(
SCS)
was
completed
Cheshire; Joyce McCienan,
Langsville; Mary Me ~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::;
Callister, Middleport ;
Juanita Conde, Reedsville;
Roger Grindley, Minersvl!le, ·.
-(Continued from page 1)
Gwinnie White, Middleport.
Discharged Ronald
&amp;yor
W8 Washington than there are American agents awilabie to
.
watch them," he said .
DilJon , Sr., Cannen Jones,
.
·
Betty l!rooks;·'Lucy Spencer,
Three defendants were
BAT'I'LE CREEK, MICH. - A CONVICfED forger with
Earl Clark.
fined and two forfeited bonds
in the court of Pomeroy four days left to serve of his prison term has been charged with
PleasantV.Uey Hotpltal . Mayor Clarence Andr ews first-degree murder In the 1978 ambush slaying of actor Sal
Mineo. Mineo, who •arred in the movie "Exodus" and
Discharges - Sheila !!Upp, Wednesday night.
Patriot; William Mattox Jr.,
Fined were Roger Me· appeared with James Dean In " Rebel Without a cauae," was
Point Pleasant ; Noah Me· Daniel, Albany, $250 and . stabbed to death in February 1976 In the garage of his
Dade, Frazier's Bottom; costs, reckless operation, and Hollywood .apartment house near the fabled SUIIIIOI Strip.
An extradition hearing was 110t !Qr today In Mar$1aU,
John Utchlieid, New Haven ; flOO and costs, .fleeing a
Mich.,
for Lionel WilllamB, 21, who was charged with murder
Melvin Freeman, Cheshire, pollee officer ; Tom Quillen,
WedneSday
in a complaint l.uued by Los Angeles District
0.; Raymond Duncan ll, Middleport, $50 and costs,
Attorney
John
Van de Kamp. AnthQrlties said there were
Point "Pleasant ; Mark cltaorderly conduct, and Roy
indicatiorui
that
WilllamB was acquainted with the slain actor
· Hurlow, Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Boggs, Middleport, $50 and
and
Los
Angeles
County Sheriff Peter Pllcheas conceded there
Jack Woodall , Gallipoils ; costs, intoxication.
Mrs. .Larry Brumfield,
Forfeiting bonds were had been "speculation" that the slaying had hi&gt;moaelDUII
·
Ashton; Randy Gardener, Therlll Randolph, Reedsville, overtones, but he did not elaborate.
Gallipolis; Brad Hensley, $200 posted on an· assault
Poi nt Pleasant; Laura charge; and Thomas McKay,
COLUMBUS-INSURANCECOMPANIEScannotdeduct
Kennedy, Point Pleasant; 29, Racine, $50, posted on a . trom their uninaured motorist coverage settlements any
Sara Flores, Pomeroy.
charge of driving while l\llder medical payments an injured party receives although the
suspension .
policy provides for such deductions, the Ohio Supreme Court
said Wednesday. The unalllmous ruUng waa a setback for
Motorists Mutual lnBurance Co., headquartered in Columbus.
Holzer Medical Center
Barbara Shearer, Leslie Horne and James Bright llle'd
Discharges Jan. 4
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
separate suits after Motorists Mutual deducted medical
Garcia Adams , Verna
MUd wttb a ehance of
payll)ents they were to receive for Injuries suffered In
Blankenship, Howard Boggs
sbowers
Salutday
and
accidents
involving drivers who did not have iruturance, The
Jr., William Bowman, Mrs.
medical bills reached $500 for Shearer, $1,000 lor florne and
Micha el Cremeans and Sunday . Cooler wltb a
$560 lor Bright.
daughter, Larry Davis, Janet chaace 01 showers Dr snow
Durrtes Moaday. Uaytlme
The policies held by the three contained a provtston that
Duffy, John Francis, Robert
said Motoriots Mutual was not obligated to pay amounts
bJcho Ia the too Saturday
Hoff Jr ., Walter Jones,
recovered for medical services. In its rultzlg, the Supreme
Bonita Manley , Verona aDd Sunday and ill lbe 381
Court said unirutured motorist coverage, which IIZider Ohio law
Moasman, Ronald Newsome, Monday. Overnlgbl lowi
must he offered, "cannot be diluted or diminished."
Carol Pierce, Flain Ratliff, from the m.ld !h to lower
30s
Saturday
and
Sunday
Ivan Stephenson, Earl
CANTON, OIDO - AN UNAUTHORIZED WORK
Sturgon, Velma Tabor, aDd ill ZOo Monday.
Martha
Ward,
Ermei ,,.............................................·.·.-.·.························ stoppage by teachers in the Canton school district continued
...........·.·····················································,,·.·········· today in defianCe of a court order directing the ieachers back ·
Woodyard.
to the classroom and their negotiators back to the bargaining .
Blrtbs Jan. t
table . Negotiations between school board and .teachers'
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
representatives resumed. Wednesday, but only for six minutes
Canter, a son, Wellston ; Mr.
Highs Friday to mid 40s,
and Mrs. David Richards, a low tonight to lower 30s. before t.eachers' representatives walked out.
A teachers' spokesman said board representatives
son, Pt. Pleasant.
Probability of precipitation demanded that teachers return to the classrOOJD and halt
30 percent today , 40 percent
pi~keting before serious bargaining began - and that
tonight and Friday.
triggered the end of the talks.

Three fined by
M ' Andre
.

Weather

For Terrific Buys and
January Savings

,,

Bre:zhnev shows
himself again

TWO GIVEN HELP
The Middlep&lt;lrt E-R Squad
answered a call to 186 North
Secon\1 Ave., at 6:54 a. m.
today for George Voss who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and at
9:04p. m. Wednesday to 1179
Vine St. for Lowell Price who
had a tootlipick caughf in his
throat. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
At 10:t5 a. m, Wednesday the
fire department went to
Powell St. to extinguish a fire
in the back of a trash
oollectlon truck.

The ofiicialB Tass news
agency said Brez.l)nev, 71,
presided at a Kremlin
ceremony in WJilch six high
government, party and
milituy leaders were
honored for their services to
the state.
·

WILL SHOW FILM
The film , "Or. Carl Jung"
will be shown at 2 p. m. Jan. 6
at the mental health center in ·
Pomeroy, 2:)6 W. Main , free
of charge to everyone in·
terested. Dr. Jung was a
· pioneer in psychutherapy. ·
the terms, coUective uncon~ious complei, introvert
and extrovert are derived
. from his studies and writings.

TO BEGIN WORK
RUTLAND - Terri Miller
Wl\)ker, Rutland, foZ\llerly
associated with Dorothy's
Beauty .Salon in Syracuse is
now employed at Helen's
Beauty Shop, 860 East ]t1ain,
Pomeroy. She will begin her
duties ·on Jan. 11 and wiD
work Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday. She may he
reached by calling !!92-2890.

MOSCOW
(UPI)
President Leonid Brezbnev
appeared in public today for
the first time in four weeks,
apparently recovered from a
case of inflUenza. · ·

•.

of tbe .,._..
IJI'OifiiZII. Tile It
loeal aotl conltnatlon
year, the SCS heJped lalld- dlllrlcta brla&amp; tbe I$CS
owners baBel 2M new pondl,
tbe laado......
moat of them u aources of Andanotbeu~ ofthe'U.
livestock wall!r.
s. ' Department
of
The ll,OOOtb . pond mlgbl Agrteullure, the qrleultural ~
have '-t · Will in Maul StabUiutlon ancl Con· "
County, ac.wrdlng to Olltrlct wvalioD Service (AIICS) bu ,.
Conservatiootlt Jolm Cooper bdped man,y landnWMI'I by •
of Pl. Plealllll. He Mid eiCbt paying a portion ol the eo1t1
ponda were buUt in the cowrly of pond coiiJtructlon."
•
durine the fiscal year, inDistrict Conaenlttonllt
eluding those of Edward Cooper Nld hiJ office llelpa ,
Bumga.rner, Art Hartley, local landll-. or land
Chester Stone, W. Va. users evaluate pond litel.
Departm~nt of Naturu-· SCS tedudcianl allo ·dei!Cn ·;
Resources, Jack Crank, ponds and can help 1upervlle
Harold Mynes aild Don !leU. · . oon.atructton Ill uaure that
The total number of ponda In standards of safety and
Mason County is tell.
performance are met. '11111
"This Is not just an SCS usiltaace !I available at ,
program," Right said. "In 230"1 Main Street, Pt.
the first place, chief credit Pleuant, or by pllonln&amp; 8'1&amp;- •
goes to the landowners, who mo.
~
make the decisions to buDd
Most ponds · In •••t :
the ponds and who Invest VIrginia store water ·lor ':
their own resources In thla ltveatoek. Stat•
Con·
land use change."
aervi!tlontst Right eJ:IIIalried
He added, "Two other that dlapened water auppllel
agencies are instnunentalln caUit cattle to lll'ale over :
wider areas, thuallllnlmll:lnc '
erosion.
Mmly ponds are allo tiled
for Iiiii and wUdUfe. ·Some
landowners wUd pond&amp; to
(Continued from page I)
beautify their propertlea.
five bours Wednesday.
Right Nld tblt the 11,000 ,;
Colorado strikers alsq ponda on the land beautify .
failed In trying to get King our ate.
Soopets supermarkets and
"Everywhere you ao ill :
Sigman Meat . CAl., a meat West VIrginia there are ~
wholesaler, to close in ponds," Right aald. "To
sympathy for their cause.
resUze the impact of thla :
The Associated Grocers of program, try to Imagine West :
Colorado, a Denver.based Virginia without theM 20,000 ~
wholesale grocery firm ponds. Thill's the way It' wu ~
supplying
about
600
'
independent stores in ._ only 40 years ago."
Colqrado, Wyoming,
Nebraska , Kill1sas and New
Meztco, agreed Wednesday
to support the farm strike,
but also said they could not
(Continued from page 5) '
close.
personal income.
,
AFL..CIO representaUves
Iritegrlty
Act"
"Filcal
from Colorado, Wyoming, requires over . a 20 y- .,:
New Mexico_, Kansas, period, a net reduction ofl&lt;J. : ·
Nebraaka, Texas and South perce(lt In government h- ''
Dakota met with farmers In pendltures u a percent of
Denver Tuesday and said
national income.
they also would support the
(t) BALANCE. FEDI!:RAL
strike :..: but could not order BUDGET
:..: Bring an end Ia
shutdowns by union members government produced In·
because of contracts with
.Dation by ending 1118811ve
LONDON - THE ASSASSINATION OF the Palestine managem~t.
federal deficits which reduce
Uberation Organization's representattw in Britain has
private invelltmeut.
triggered a,PLO vow to avenge the slaying and "hold Britain
"Conatltuttonal Amend·
responsible'' untl) the killer Is caught. The shooting of Sl.ad
ment"
- requires .each
Hammami Wednesday In his .basement office at the Arab
VEHICLES COWDE
budget
be ba1aneed
year's
League building' came three days after two Syrian diplomats
No one was injured or cited
(except
In
time
of war or
died In a homb blast In the same neighborhood.
'
·
in a traffic accident at9:10 a.
Hammaml, 3S, identified as a member . of the PLO m. Wednel!day on CR 18, lout- national emergency) and
executive cotilmlttee, was a mnderate who favored some aort . tenths of a mUe west of US 33 systematically repay the
of recognition for Israel, a -"difficult and dangerous thing to . in Meigs County. The Galila • nailonal debt.
(6) TAX REFORM AND .
do," said the editor of Middle East Review magazine. In Metga ·Post State .Highway
Beirut, the PLO l.uued a statement blaming the slaying on Patrol said vehicles driyen by TAX INDEXING - Cbanit
HZionist and imperialist 8 9!R'sfn8" and VOwing it "Will Brenda S. Roush, 24, tax policy to encourap inpursue the killers and those who IJiand behind them."
Pomeroy, and Dousta8 Eblin, vestment, capi\81 f.or1118Uon
q
income -thua freelnl up
34, Pomeroy, sideswiped on a and
more
znoney for job creation.
Cracks found in
curve causLog moderate End the proceu where In- ,
damage.
Dation pushes people l!lto
transit ,Prders
Sybil Ebersbech, Comm ..
hlghei'
tax brackell y- .
Thomas W. Autherson, dec.
CHICAGO
(UP!)
,
after
year.
to Roena Pearl Johnson,
Structural cracks on three parcels, Salisbury.
.
ASSISTANT NAMED
"~ob Crealionl Act ollr17"
J. William Lowe .to Sammie
CLEVELAND (UP!)
·girders supporlng the city's
- revlaea tax code in lllch a :
F'lanfs, Ruth Ann Plants, Head football coach Dick way thai Investment will be
second businest mass transit .F'.
201
acre, Middleport
MacPherson
of
the llttmulated, thus iJ1creastnc •
line forced some 133,000 Salisbury.
Everett Paul Smith, Sharon University of MBBIBchusetts e111ployment, Income, and
commuters to lind other ways
Kay ·smith to Eugene has been named linebacker ultimately tall revenuea ·
to get to work today .
Stevens, MIICtred Stevens,
The line was abut down lots,
coach of tbe Cleveland through economic upanalon.
Salisbury Hobson.
while repairmen worked · William T. Hart, Ethel Z. Browns.
"Cost-of-Living Ad·
· around the clock to shore up Hart to George G. Hart, .9885
MacPherson, t7, · Amherst, j~ Act of 1r77" :..:~
the cracked · girders with · acre, Bedford.
Mass., whose UM teams won
adjusts till ·
M. Williams to Paige four Yankee Conference automatically
tables
timber and steel, offlcta!S A.Helen
to
neutrallle
the ef••
Humphreys, Juonllo S.
said. They anticipated being Humphrey's, 4.410 acres champlonshlpa, ' compUed a fecta of inflllioD io that no.
able to. roopen the tracks Salisbury.
47-23·1 record during hla me can move llito hlsher taxJ
James · fl/1. Mills, Wanda seven seasons with the brackell unleu real
Friday.
Mills to Kenneth McCune,
lncreaA~.
·•
Stanley Starcher, 3 acres, Minutemen. His 1177 team
won
the
championship
wilb
a
Unfortunately,
none
of
the:
Rutland .
Oleva E. Collerlllto Robert 9-2 mark, but lost in the above measurea hu made It:
· V. King, Lillian B. King , ·divisional playoffs to Lehfgll through CongNa; and, u a·:
parcels, Salisbury.
Frank Glrolaml, .Karen L . University, the eventual . result, our uemployment•
rate remairut at an atarminl:
Glrolaml, to Guido J . national champion.
Glrolaml, Vldla Glrolaml.,
level. . 'Ibla is a aad
lots. Pofrieroy.
mentary on the maJoritY.:
Mary Elizabeth Morris,
party In control of
George E. Morris to George
IN HOSPITAL
E: Morris, ,.,.ry Elizabeth
James H. Seilera, Portland, which refuses to .take u.;,
Morris, parcels, Pomeroy .
eourageoua step forward to '
Goldie Lynch, formerly lB a possible surgical paUent get America "•orting"~
Goldie Wyant, Carlos Lynch at Grant Hospital, ColumbuS,
apin.
~
to Kenneth Wyant , . Lois Room 639.
were under &lt;GIIIInldkln at
the ume time acrou the
alate. AJtocetber lui fl,ocal

1M -

bulldinC

,.;.,,...to

· News •• in Briefs

,--

r

·-

Pal, For Introducing Me to
The Racine Home National Bank
Those guys were great. They showed me
how to get the most out of the money I have,
and how to plan lor my future . I love the
conveniences. You're a gem .

V~u.aJi!L.

Income.:

NEW ,

A Home Bank
.l'or
. Meigs County
People

.

o,- ~

. HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

.
'
. I

'

OHIO

-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
JANUARY a.EARANCE SALE
PANTY HOSE SALE
~ Quality Supp. Hose
...:.. Assorted styles ~ not all sizes
.·
~ Petite, Average, Med. Tall, Tall &amp; Regal

•

•

I
&lt;}

DRIES

~eg.

EASIL V - · wash eQUiD"·

·•

-

., ;

'

'

•

'5.95 ......... Paq Hose.·...~.: .. ~. Sale ......... ~ ..... '2.50
Take advantage now of all the oilier salt
prices during our Janu1,.Y Cltu1'n ce Slit.
Special buys in women's wtlr, girls' wear,
men's and boys' wtlr. You'll really save.

ment In warm , soapy weter

· SUPERIOR

WASHABILITY - ctlrt anct
finger prints wnh ort
utlly btc•u•• the- nrw

h••

1.1nsurpessed
Vanyl.lfe
w•ter rellat~nce .

Ebersbach Hard.ware
-

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE;'
POMIROY
W.MAIN

Open Friday Night Till 8 O'Clock

..

'

Open other weelc days NO a.m. to 5 p.m.

Elberfelds ·1n Pomeroy
'

f.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· -ridly, January 6, 1978

.,

.

( ..
•

.-

e

.
Ron Hoffman. a ROS$County larn1er who organized a motorcade of tractnrs and !ann trucks through Chillicothe ta.t
month, is ~tting up the meeting, .
Hoffman §lid representatives of the Farm Bureau, Nation• I
Fanners Organization, the Ohio Farmers Union B!ld the AAM,
had been invited to attend.
"We doo 'I go to many of these type of meetings but we will be
there/' said Swank.

Hoffman said he is not a member of any of the groups.
"We are asking them to remain separate entities but to begin
working toward a commoo goal and that comon goal would he
to improve the current prices,'' ·said Hoffman .
"If, we doo't have prospects of better prices by planting
time, there will be an awful lot of farmers looking at the

possibUty of not planting this spring,'' said Hoffman.
Meanwhile, about 100 farmers from northwest Ohio and
·~.uthern Michigan in a motorcade of tractors and trucks met
at the Wood County Fairgrounds in Bowling Green Thursday
and then went to the Anderson grain elevator in the Toledo
suburb of Maumee.
The fanners met with two owners of the elevator for about
two and a half hours. After the meeting , the owners said they
recognize the position Of the farmers and said the farmers
deserve either a free market or a fair price for their products.
Ron ~'arreU, a Wood County farmer, said President carter's
farm bill would cause one-half of thefamiers to go bankrupt by
1983. He satd young farmers are deeply in debt and that the
present farm bill does not help the financial sitUHtion.
•

at y

en tine

Filteen cents

vot . 28, No . 185

Israelis insult·
U. ··s. in Sinai
from Egypt in the 1967 Middle , agricultural settlements said , movement afflliated with the

United Preilsltiternatiooal
Israel today conflrllled it
plans new and permanent
Jewish settlements · in the
Sinal penirutula · it captured

East ~ar

despite American
contentions they are illegal
under international law.
The head of one of the

a house has been set aside for
Begin's retirement home In
the Neat Sinai community he
visited several months ago ,
" In the name of my wife
and myself, please accept or
thanks on the decision of the
members of your Betar
moshav (settlement) to
receive us as regular
members," Begin wrote in a
letter to the Neot Sinai
community dated Dec. I.
Betar is the youth

Hrut Party that Begin heads.
· The future of the northern
Sinai
area . remained
uncertain under proposals for
a peace agreement.
Palestine Liberation
Organization leader Yasser
Arafat met with visiting U.S.
congressmen in Damascus in
an apparent·attempt to shore
up relations with Washington,
according to a PLO news
report.

COUNCIL SWORN - Council members were sworn in
Thursday night by Mayor H~rman London. Left to right

Rural health clinic
proposed in Coolville
ATHENS - The Ohio
C.ollege
of
' University
Osteopathic Medicine is.
cooper.atjtig ,;with the YJllage
of Coolville in seeking a
$250,000 construction grant
for a new rural health clinic
that could open by the fall of
t979: .
. .
The proposed 3,500 square
foot clinic in Cooiviiie would

witfl

provide primary health care

mumties ln

for

the College of Osteopathic
Medicine. The first of. the
clinics is under construction
in Cl1esapeake. One physician
has been recruited for that

communiti es in the

eastern part of Athens County
ao d. adJa sen! areas of
Washington County. It would
be operated by the College of
Medicine, which • would
co ntribute $50,QOO toward

coo~ration

clih.ic and a second is being

sought.

construction costs, and serve

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday, turning colder
throug~ period. A chan~e of
rain or snow Sunday and a
chanee of snow Monday

and Tuesday., Highs wltl be
in the upper ..30s or lower
lOs Sunday and In the 30s
Monday and Tu esday .
Lows wilt be In the 20s or
low 30s.

Coal is
taken to .
elderly

are Larry Brogan, Eber Pickens, Mayor London, Clyde
Triplett and J ohn Arnott ·

Pickens elected
to head council
SY RACUSE
Syracuse
Co un ci l Thursday night
elec ted Eber Picken&amp;
presidenl, an d retained
Fra nk W. Porter as village
solicitor.
oCouncu · a lso appointed
JOhn Arnott ".to u: vacaiJCY on
council. There were four
·vacancies on co uncil and only

three persons ran , thus
creatin~ the vacancy.

hecn co rrected by the State
Hi ~ hwa y

Depm1mcnt.

Ma yor ~lermun London

read the report of the Police
Chief Milton Varhn'i for the

year 1977. Varia n answered
14.7· complaints, made .132

arrests, Investigated .16 accidomts, received 202 public
service calls, iss ued 155
wnrnings, collected $4,942 irl

'lines and costs, and ch'ove the
the college as ·a training •
·
Co
uncil
adop
ted
int
er
im
truiser 5,133.2 miles. ·
center for fourth year
appropriations until the
Atte nding were Ma yor
medical students.
.
Cloudy
·
with
fog
tonight,
annual
a
ppropriation
is
l~nd
on, Jimmy Joe HemsApproval by the Coolville ,
compl eted. One was $4,000 for icy, l.arry Brogun, Pickens,
• • unit
CS Village Council this week of lows t o 3S. Occasional rain
council and' another $3,000 for Clyde Triplett and Kulhryn
the purchase of land fo r the Saturday, highs in the upper
Proba biiity
of
the Board of Public Affairs. Crow , c oun cil members,
proposed clinic completed 40s.
It was reported that the Janice La wson, clerk, GeorHe
Staie , requirements for the precipii~ti o n 20 percent
NEW
LEXINGTON,
Ohio
tonight
,
50
percent
Saturday.
drainage
problem that causes Holman , treasurer, Hobert
inclusion of the project on the
(UP!) - An elderly couple in
The Pomeroy E-R Squad 1978 priority listing fo r Apwater to spill on SR 124 in the Wingett, and John Arnott.
rural Perry County received upper end of. Syracuse had
made four runs Thursday and palachian Regional (ARC)
some
bailly..,eeded coal this
early today.
Commission ·.funds. The
week
thanks
to United Mine
At 9:44 'a.m. Thursday, to li sting is compiled and
PATIENT
MOVED
Workers
Union
Local 1340.
the home of Gladys Rtimlield, recommended by the Ohio
Lonnie
LeMaster,
9,
son
of
Louis
and
Mary
LaScala,
'
near Pomeroy. She was taken Office of Appalachia.
·
Bonnie
LeMaster,
Rt.
2,
hath
In
their
80's,
of
Shawnee,
" to Veterans Mem(lriai
The project, developed by
Hospital where she was Ohio University and Cool· Pomeroy, (Darwin) has been received the ton-and-a-llaU of
admitted.
By Vatted Press InteruUonal
ville, must now be reviewed hospitalized .at St. Joseph ·coal from the non-union
At 10: t5 a.m., to Route 33 and approved bY the ARC and Hospital, Parkersburg since Shawnee Coal Co. and the
COLUMBUS - A REMODEUNG PROJECT which will
for Mrs. Mildred Arnold, who other Ohio ageJiCi es con, Dec. 28. He was transferred union local members provide hancjicapPecl persons with access to the Rotunda at the
was also taken to Veterans cerned with medical'facilities to Children's Hospital, delivered it to the LaScala State Capitol Building has be&lt;Jn announced by Gov . James A.
Columbus, Wednesday. He · liOme.
Memorial Hospital where she and public health.
Rhodes. Rhodes said the project wiU involve cutting a new
.
has
undergo ne
four
Kelly Martin, a retired entrance frOm the.' Rotimda to · an exiating elevator on the
was admitted.
Assuming approval ofthese .
At 3;19 p.m. to 270 w. Main agencies , plans could be operations for tumors on the miner who arranged the · southpast side ~f the ,capitol. ·
IDGH UP AGAIN - I roo workers again are being seen
delivery, said the LaScalas"
on the highest points of Silver Memorial Bridge making
. St. for Martha Mustain, who fmaiized in time to permit brain .
"This .project will serve as a symbol of state government's
w~re ne8111y out of coal for
repairs. This past summer the bridge was closed to make
was also taken to Veterans . construction to begin in the
deiennination to lead the way in giving handicapped Ohioans
their furna ce and kitchen access to public buUdings," said Rhodes.
SINGERS -cOMING
repairs on critical sections. This time the bridge is to re- ·
Memorial Hospital.
spring of 1979.
The Newom&gt;en Quartette stove when ·the fuel arrived.
main open and work. is expeced to be completed within 90
At 2:43a.m. to Burlingham · · The Coolville clinic would
"For too long people confined to wheelchairs or affected
dQys by the llrtstol Steel and Ironworkers Co. of Bristol,
for Audrey Sauders, who was be the second .of five rural will be featured at the First• "We had to go Ill the non- by other dis.abillties have been excluded from·this Important
Va.
taken to O'Bleness Meziwrial h~a ith ciinids built by Church of God in New Haven union mine to find the coal focal point of the State Capitol," the ~overnor said. "No~ they
Hospital in Athens.
·
southeastern~ ,_ Ohio com- Sunday, Jan. 8 at 7:30 p.m. because Peabody (Coal Co.) will he able to pilrticipate with other Ohioans in the enjoyment
has a lot of coal on the ground and appreciation of this magnificent chamber which is so
but they wouldn't let us have · much a part of Ohio's heritage.''
·
any," said Martin . "You got
to do the best you can in these
COLUMBUS - STATE AUDITOR THOMAS E. Ferguson
kinds of situations."
has reported that 577 ~overnmental units In Ohio had .delicit
Mary · Hatem, a Perry balances In one or more funds as of Dec. 31, 1978. The auditor
County social worker, said · said Thursday that while deficit spending is not permitted
the LaScalas, live with Mrs.
By HELEN THOMAS
· He spent the last morning Carter's . meeting with ''flat wrong."
Then Baudouin welcomed LaScala's two disabled under ,Ohio law, "the program is not confined to publtc
White House Reporter in Paris ·conferring with Mitterand. The meeting
education. It exists at most levelB of local government,"
Arriving a t Brussels' Carter by praising the Presi,. UPI
BRUSSELS, Belgium Socialist Party leader came after the French Zaventem airport, Carter dent's "concern for drawing· brothers, both iii their 70's. inclnding counties, townships, cities and villages.
"They were out of coal a
(VPI) _ President carter Francois Mitterand, who is Communist party newspaper . said that during his ·lour, he
"Neither the state of Ohio nor its tallpayers can afford
international relations closer week
ago, but they've been public offict.als who countenance deficit spending, regardless
expressed strong concern generally expected to become I'Humanlte said Carter's visit had been ·speaking aboUt and for spiving the !"'ObiefRS
today at prospect of a France's next premier in a . was almed ai telling people ''simple , constant thell)es,'' that ·are now causing' the trying to conserve," she said. of the goala or progrBIIlB Involved.'' Ferguson said his office
Socialist-Communist aUiance loose alliance with the how to vote.
·
"One is the demand for greatest difficulties at the "I don 'I know how cold it got will be auditing counties and·townships every two years by
in the house because they . January 1979, and clUes and villages by June 1979.
coming to power in France, Communists. While they
carter said in a Paris politiC&amp; I liberties, for basic present time."
don't
have a thennostat.
thenfiewto Belgium for some talked a protest bomb speech that the U.S. human rights, ... he said. ."On
He said his office Increased its andit activity by 60 percent
''By taking your inspiration
"They
just go around with in 1977, releasing 3,345 reports of audit compared to 2,069
blunt talk with · America 's • exploded two miles away at corrimitment to the.defense of this .question, Belgium and from the essential human
European aUies on the ailing Socialist headquarters but Europe · was :'absolute .'! the United Slates have never values which, aS' you h~ ve their ctiats on," she said. ' reports In 1976. Ferguson said examiners found 1,1130 violations
, U.S. dollar and the defenses did little damage.
White House Press Secretary differed. Fori these values we said, make life worth living,
involving $4.3 millioo in findings for recovery.
ol Western Europe.
White. House officialB said Jody Powell said he would have fought together in war you have promoted ; a
Belgium was the seventh on the 31-rninute flight from reassure NATO today that and we have always worked universal realization of the
COLUMBUS- SEN. JOHN GLENN, ~hio, warned
and last stop on his nine-day Pans to Brussels that carter any forthcoming strategic together in peace."
agairutt "nuclear blackmail" Thursday in expressing
importance
of human
tour. Carter rues back to expressed his strong cone-em arms Umitation agreement
carter said he also had rights," Baudouin said.
The Middleport E·R Squad reservations ahout President Carter's promise to sell India
Waahingtm tonight 111 face at
the
prospect
of with the Soviet Union would been stressing "the need to
carter went through the answered two early morning nuclear fuel. Glenn said at a Columbus news conference he
new mags on the Panama Communists and Socialists not &amp;lute tha ~ pledge .
resolve . conflict without airport ceremony in .35- calls today, at 5:20 a.m., to ·was concerned about Cartilr's promise inaile earllerthis week
Canal treaty. At least five teaming up in French
In his talks with European violence, to make peace degree weather without 332 Grant St. lor Eugia during the president's overseas trip because India had not yet
aenatbrs who have visited legislative elections next Common Market officials instead of war."
topcoat or hat , Mrs. carter Johnson who suffered a ratified the nuclear noniJroliferation treaty.
Panama this week .,..id thO March. PollB in Paris have The preSident faced frank
Carter made a similar promise to the government of
He said NATO and the . wore a belted, beige coat:
possible heart attack and was
·treaty would not he ratified predicted a Socialist victory · , talk about the state of the not- Common Market "represent
The President rode in\0 taken to Holzer Medical . Saudla Arabia, wt Glenn said he was not as concerned about
'.
181teas Ills rewritten.
' wlth Mi~terand becoining the so-mighty dollar, ·which has our shared hope for a secure central Brussels with King Center, apd ai 4:~ a.m., to that sale as he was about the promise made ·to India. "I've
Carter, visibly tired but next p~emter.
been nosedtving on European and peaceful and
a Baudoui'l in a black Cadillac 582 Palmer St. for Dwight been very concernod about the spread of nuclear technology
elated at his visit to France
Carter made his concern currency marketa.
prosperous future. ''
along
streets
lightly, WaUace, who was ill. He was around the world to ever and ever smaller, perhaps less
where he experienced what clear during the meeting with
During Carter's flight to
Carter an&lt;i" his wife were sprinkled with lunchtime also taken to Holzer Medi~a i respoosible, nations. One of these days no· matter how small
he called ''me of the best Mitterand, the sources said. Brussels, White . House met at the stejls of Air Force . crow ds . Their
the nation , almost every one will have ali atomic bomb.
2t-car Center.
days of my life," had one last
"I can leU you that the sources also denied "some One by King Balidouln of the motor~ade was -escorted by
"We can imagine what could happen with an ldi Amln with
At 3:36 p.m. Thursday, the
llllk with French President President did express in sort of deal has been cut" by Belgians and Queen Fabiola, police motorcyclists who squad went to the Route 7 by· an a!Dmic bomb or some similar type person tn the world,"
.Valery Gla~ard d'Estaing general terms our co~cern · the United States, Egypt and who conducted them down a turned over . their escort pass for Melissa Demoskey Glenn said, warning of " nuclear blackmail" by ar.
be!OI'e cmling to Belgium for about the possible all1ance Israel. An official said a receiving line:
·
duties near the palace to the who was hurt in an auto "irreSponsible" government leader.
lunch with King Baudoin and with . the Com10u~isis, report to this, effect following
Carter and the King stood royal cavalry escort, more accident. She was taken to
iallt&amp;wtthNATOoftlctalaand lncludmg communism m thf Carter's meeting with , at attention as '!.II army band than 100 gendarmes mounted Veterans Memorial Hospital
CLEVELAND- FORMER REP. WAYNE L. Hays, D' the European Common overall European context," a E~an President Ailwar struck up the national . on magnificent chestnut and .where she was treated and Ohio, forced out of C&lt;lQgress because of thll Elizabeth Ray sex
N-"ket.
White House source Bfd of Sadat.,earller in the tour, was anthems of bott, COWltries. (Continued on page 12)
(Continued on page .12)
releas~

E 'R

Weather

, mak

·four aid runs

Carter ·coming home tonight

in early hours

.
.

._,

"We invited about eight or nine of ti~em ( AAM members ) in
to give them a chance to ell)ll'ess what they had to say and to
kind of clairfy our posiUon," said Swank. "I think we had a
great m'l!l.ting of th~ minds.
"The thinking in Ohio seems Ill be in the way of demonstration a{ld trying to say to everybody 'we have a real problem ·
here' and we agree, farmers do have a problem," said Swank.
" But I made It clear that legally we cannot support or
endorse a strike," said Swank. "That's not legal for our
organtzaUon .
'.'But )\'e are in sym'pathy with their aims," said Swank.
Swank also said the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation would
have a representative at a meeting in southern Ross County on
Jan. 27 to discuss the problem offarm prices.
·

Two E-R trips

· Reg. '4.95......... Panty Hose ........ :--Sale ............ :. '2.00

R.API LV In th irty
m lnutn ieavinv no un,
pteastnt odor - CL E:AN

-

RACINE

· sgrav

~

our .

standing l•tex pa ll"'t made with • new Ac;rylfc.
V l l\yl Latex Polymer .
A.DAPTABI.E for ail
types of Interior walls anel
ceilings-ECONOMICAL
--one CHt cover~ most
surf11cn . use t•p · wtl~r tor
'. thinning EASY TO
APPI. Y - by brush, rolle-r ,

••

Wyant, parcels:, Scipio.

GALLON

IMPROVEO

v•NYL,JTE - an

eoacr-,

•a•s

toes."

Miller

com-:

_.;;;,.:.,

.klHN T. KADY United Preu I.Jlterutlooll
1be -live vice president of the Ohio Fann Bureau
Federatlm said today federation officers had met with
rep!" Illatives of the American Agriculture Mgvemenl and
IZpi md ''Sympathy" with the movement's goals.
However; C. WUllam Swank told United Press International
the federation could not advocate or endorse any full-acale
wltholding action of goods from the market place .
One of thoee meeting with the federation officials earper this
Week •as Bob Risher of Spencerville, the Ohio coordinator for
the AAM.
"We just wanted to get some things str~ightened out," said
Risher.."To show them we weren't stepping on anybodys
By

Retailers

Transfers

____ for 'INDOORS
VANYt::·tTE LATEX INTERIOR
PAINT
By
.
.
·.

Farmers' holdout mOvement in Ohio hits snag

.,'

,, !

•

'~

*

I '

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="799">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11442">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49125">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49124">
              <text>January 5, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="191">
      <name>allen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="736">
      <name>neal</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="234">
      <name>wise</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
