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•

16-The DailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Dec. 13, 1976

'

HOSPITAL NEWS

Jane Pfeiffer

Kidnaped minister asks

\ ConUnued from page I)
Veterans Memorial HO.pttal
Holzer Medkal Genter
of 'his Cabinet selections are subject tD confirmation by the ·Saturday Admis•ions I Births, Dec. IO)
Myrtle Rhodes: Point
Senate .I
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy
Pleasant; Floyd. Bush, New Stewart, daughter, AllensCarter's first caller this make this week.
Haven.
worth; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
morning was Rep. Bob Ber·
Carter and Mmdale spent
Saturday Discharges - ' Rece, da ughter, Gallipolis;
As a result ol lbe
ooly ooncern Ia my family
MADRID, Spain (UP!) gland, O.Minn., a farmer the night at the bome of Bert James See, Larry Holsinger,
kidna
ping, ri ght-wing
widely re ported to be Lance, AUanta banker slated Grace Roberts, William Mr. and Mrs. Verne Ord, Antonio Marta Orlol, Spain's whom I love more than extremi8ts telepboDed deatb
anytbtng
in
the
world.
The
daughter, Pomeroy.
fourth-ranking government
Carter's
choice
for to
be
the
new
1Births, Dec. 11)
official wbo was kidnaped by moot important Is to keep the threats to oppos!llon
agriculture secretary.
administration's budget Boring, Leora Strom, Elshi
Decker, George Deem, Roy
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edward
left-wing urban guerrillas, faith since our destinies are politician s In cluding
At 9:45a.m. ESI'., Carter director. Lance, talent scout Rutter , Osclir Johnson ,
Christian nemocrat leader
arranged to see Sen. James HamiltDn ~ordan , and senior Evelyn Young, Donna Good. Russell, son, Middleport; Mr. has sent his .wife and seven in the hands of God."
Joaquin RuJi.Gimenez.
Oriol,
president
of
the
an~
Mrs.
Gregory
Dalton,
children
a
note
asking
them
~land, [).Minn., chairman adviser
Charles Kirbo
Ma rcelino Camacho,
Sunday
Admissions
Council
of
State,
was
son,
Jackson;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
.
to
"keep
the
faith,"
family
of
Senate
Judiciary attended the meeting. ,
Janice Roush, New Haven ; David Payne, daughter, sources said today.
·leader
of the C«n"'•ntsta
bducted
from
his
office
'
.
Committee, which must
The new team Interviewed
Oscai"JmbOOen, Minersville; Vinton.
·
· Oriol's message was saturday by ii fi ve-man domln a ted Wo.r ke r s' ·
~~~MNL,~~;J~ Iapprove ·any nominee _for prospective appointees tDday Bernadette W~lfe, Portland ;
· relayed by his captors tD a Commsnd&lt;l team armed with Comm issions labOr Union, , .
ll
attorney general, and retired . in. the eohurined mansion . Edith Burton, Middleport;
Madrid newspaper which submachine guns. Pollee appeared with two lawyers
federal appeals court Judge where- Carter Uved while
PLEASANT VALLEY
Bonny
Allen,
Racine;
Sue
turned it over to the family Sunday identified the ''Oct. I beflre a court magistrate
Griffin Bell, a close friend of Georgia governor from 1971
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Sunday night. It was the first Anti-Fascist. Resistance today to lodge a complaint ·
Payne,
Harrisonville;
VIcki
Carter's.
to 197~. Carter used the
Clifford Schools, Point
At II am., Carter was mansion
for
similar Proffitt , Portla nd; Mindy Pleasant; Robert K!!app, Jr., sign that the 63-year-old Groups" (GRAPO) as · the that be was bdng followed by
unknown meri.
Hill,
Portland;
Ellen
Tucker,
president of the Council of kidnapers of Orlol.
seeing Franklin ThOIIllls, a interviews last week.
Clifton; Mrs. Samuel Ben· State was atill alive two days
Pomeroy.
black, head of the Bedford·
Through Press Director
nett, Gallipolis; Cha rles
Stuyvesa nt Development Rex Granum, Carter said late · Sunday Dischar ges - Varian, Clifton ; Phillip after his abduction.
In a covering note, the
Corp. of New York, 'followed Sunday he would announce My rtle Rhodes, Denver Roush, Red House; · Mrs.
guerrtllas
renewed their de·
Blake,
Evelyn
Mundry,
by Robert Embry, director of "at least two and pcsslbly'
Jack
Roach,
Point
PleaSI!nt;
mand
that
the government
Emily
Kuhn,
W
oodrow
Kuhn,
housing
and
urban th r ee , Ga blne t -l evel
.
(Continued from page I)
Mrs.
Patricia
Sheets,
Crown
W
ilbur
Whaley,
free
15
Jl'iaoners
jailed for
development in Baltimore. appointees this week."
City, 0 .; Thomas Gardner, terrorist acts. The abductors was identified by dental records after a day of anguished
At 4 p.m., Carter will see Granum earlier ruled out any
Bidwell, D.; Roy Sutphan, St. have threatened to kill Oriol uncertainty for his friends and his focmer wUe, _Shirley Jones. '
federal Judge Frank JohllllOn announcements today.
The blaze swept the four-6tory, Sknit apartment around 6Albans; Mrs. j ames Cooper, unless the authorities
J..:= :.__:..____-1 ofthe5thU.S. CtrcuitCourt of
Carter has said his next
Point Pleasant; Genevieve comply, Government sources a.m. and.IOO tenants of the 33-unlt building in a fashionable;
Appeals, well knoW. for his appointments will be In the
Warn er, Arbuckle; Honey said there was no chance the section of West Hollywood were evacuated before firemen ,
Install s anywh ere car. tlu ck,
rulings in racial integration vital national security and
or home Keet)S you m touch
Ma
lezewski , Ga llipoli s; government would give in tD found Cassidy's bQdy on the living room floor near a couch.
cases and for his scathing economic areas. Granum told
with se~ t e t v .
The fire department said exact origin of the fire was unlmown
Mabel
Marsh,
Point blackmail.
report against condilions In reporters after the president·
. .
Pleasa
nt
;
Ga
ry
W
arner,
The sources swruned up but that the apartment was littered with cigarette butts,
• Mih i ·s L ~e- Ma:.Halk power
Alabama jall$.
elect attendet!l "the Plains
Gallipolis Ferry and James Oriol's brief note, written in apparently after a party.
• Oynam1ke with AF Ga1n Cont ro l
, Pl ug -in Jack
Carter's last visitor will be Baptist Church Sunday that
Cassidy's wallet was folDld on a dresser and his slgnet·rtng_
Lewis, Vanceburg, Ky.
apparent haste and called
• E&gt;te onal Sp"'"'
Prof.
Ray Marshall, the interviewees would come
00 COC
and
a religious 1bracelet were found on the bQdy. At lint,
authentic
by
police,
as
• All 23 channels mclud1ng
professor or economics at the from " a pretty wide ra n ge of
however, the coroner 's office could not even determine
follows :
Em ergency Channel9
Unl
1 fT
areas."
• Compl ete with br acket
vers ty 0 exas.
DETROIT (UP! ) - United
whether it was a man or woman.
"In
the
present
moment
my
• Weoghs onl v 2 2 tbs.
Sources close tD Carter said
Carter'S pre-presidential Auto Workers President
Thomas
was
being relationship with members of Leonard Woodcock has called
y '
considered for the post of Congress, and his other state- for creation of a inodem
secretary of Housing and ments and activites, won Civilian Conservation Corps_ (Continued from page I)
Urban Development and good. marks Sunday from to give jobs to young persons. Appeals before the Electoral
Embry. for the No. 2 spot in Thomas P. O'Neill, who will Wo odcock, s peakin g College resulls are sent to
Was Sll9.9S
HUD ·
become House speaker and s unda•.
at the com· · Con gress for verification Jan.
'
1-r;rm'Trrl"t'T'
Th e HI' avo
Marshall, the 9ources said, wWhoshsa
in
. gto
id In ~ tinterhi-:tew he
ln mencemenl ceremony for 6.
a
. n "'a w 1e ·
University. of MI'chi' ga'n · 'The a ttorne'y said he
th e t ruc .&lt; e r~ was under consideration as a
I
us-e!
member of the . tnnuential oresees good re latIons graduates from the Dearborn thought it "unreasonable"
presidential Council of between Carter and Congress campu•, urged estab"-"-ent th t h
-·•·ed
~b
f
tim "th
bl
ill
"
""'""
a e was re~-. tD prove
PAMPER ahd PLEASE WITH
~
ra • . Economic Advisers.
or a e, e pro em w of a national youth service tD fraud on the part of state
Carter flewto Atlanta from be holding it together as Ume provide jobs for the unem· election officials.
Plslns, Ga., late Sunday and goes along."
ployed under 25 years of age
"It seems tD me that if
met with his vice preS!' dent·
A . Louis
Harris
polld oo conservat1'on pro]'ects on there were 20,000 unproper
·
h
d
s
d
h
Si zes A (Sma ll), B ( Medium). C (Large), and D (Extra Large) .
elect, Walter Mondale, and pthubl18 e un faly s odwule peblic land.
votes, whether or not the
Cotton pol yester blends. Good selection of neat patterns - plus solid
three top advisers _to decide
at 61 peedr cent 0 th,330 a 18 Such a service would be officials had knowledge of
Middleport • 0.
which annnouncement to contact across e country similar to the Civilian tilem, that tt would have
colors. Coal style top and adjustable wai st bottoms .
. ~==~=:;;;;:==~::.:::::::..:.,.expect Carter tD do a. good tD Conser,vation Corps created swayed the election and
1
excellent
job in the White by President Frankli'n everyooe who voted legally
H
ouse.
lloosevelt to give jobs to the had their vote diluted," said
TWO KINDS OF APPETITES
The Washington Star unemployed during the 193il'l. · Reichel.
reported Sunday that leaders The new· CCC "must have
·
TWO KINDS OF FRIED CHICKEN
He said his
group's
for var Ious Ca b! ne t P0 st s bas t e saf eg u a rd s ·
tt
· 1 d Re Bob B 1 d
mves gators would be
mc u e p,
erg an • incorporated into it," working
to
uncover
D-Minn ., agriculture; Dr · Woodcock said.
additional evidence for use in
Har~ ld B:own, Johnson "It should, for example, he any appeal.
admmistration Air Force s~· truly open to all young people
cretary, defense; . Bendix with special attention paid to
ch a i r ma n Mi chae l those with few skills and
Blume ~thal _and Johnson limi te d edu ca t ion,"
w
•
adminiStra ti on Budget Woodcock said
~
Director Gharles Schultze, "The . work must be teenager set
~
treasury; and Rep. Ba rbara meaningful and needed by
~
Jordan , D·Tex ·• former the community and it must
Amb assa dor Pa t ri cia not take away existing or
~
Roberts Harris . and U.S. potential jobs that would be
Funera l services for W
D!Str_!Ct
Judge
Leon required if the program did Robert Brian Holstein, 1~. W
Htggmboth am, all three not exist. ·']'he feder al Syracuse, who died Saturday. II!
black, attorney general.
minimum wage must be paid afternoon as the result of II
as well."
accidental shooting wounds W
Woodco.ck said today •s received on a hunting ex· W,
PARTY PLANNED
"new lost generation" is the peditlon, will be held at 2 p.m. W
Preceptor Beta Beta more than four million Tuesda y at the Ewing II!
Sorority will hold its Christ· Americans who want to work Funeral Home with the Rev, I(
Some fol ks lik~ the Colo nel's Or1ginal Rec •pe best. Ot hers like our
mas party for members and but have been unable tD find Richard Jarvis officiating. W
E ~tr&lt;~ Cr1spy !ned ch1c ken wh •ch IS !Onder on the 1ns1dc, cru nchy
husbands Friday, De.c. 17 at B jobs.
on the OUlSidC. You cnn please everyone -"M11o; 'n mat ch" and
The Southern High School W Also a fine selection
ge t some ot each.
p.m. at the home of Mrs. " This rate of un· freshman was a member of W of men's Angel Tred
Eleanor Thomas.
employ ment far exceeds the Asbury United Methodist
slippers to give with
We're the place in lown for two k ihds ot chick.en
anytn mg thaI ·can be Church in Syracuse. Born
your pajama gift.
explained or accepted by Aug. 19, 1961, he was
"its flllllerlickm' gooo·:
May Cancel Flights
society," Woodcock said.
preceded in death by · his ·
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
father,
Robert A. Holstein.
decline in riders during the Handicapped Conference
'
Surviving
are his mother,
holiday sea5!&gt;n may force COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
®
Mrs.
Emmogene
Edwards
Lake Central Aviation to halt James A. Rhodes will
SANTA CLAUS
Holstein
;
three
sisters,
Mrs.
its
flig hts
between address toda y's opening
will be ·in Toyland on the 1st
Michigan's Upper Peninsula session of the White House William Gail) King, Buffalo,
W.Va.;
Mrs.
Homer
(Diana)
floor
Tuesday evening 7 to 8.
and Port Columbus until after Conference on Handicapped
Mills, Syracuse; Miss Teresa
Wednesday
evening 7 to 8.
the first of the year,
Individuals.
Airline President P. K. The two-day conference is Holstein,' at home; a grand'
Bring in the children to see
mother, Mrs. Rosa Holstein,
POMEROY, OHIO .
him .
992-5432 ' Mondo! said he would like tD Intended to identify the prob· Syracuse,
·and 'several aunts
!e m s con fr onti ng and uncles.
·
::::::::::::::::::::;~ Mich.,
continueto Columbus
th e Houghton,
run, but handicapped Ohioans.
Burial
will
be
in
Gilmore
sa ys the dec line " in About 700 delegates are
passengers during th e expected to attend the state Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time.
holidays may make a service convention.
curtailment mandatory.
Already , 55 local and
He said if the holiday· district forums have been
season nights are halted, held to discuss health ,
they will resume Jan. 3.
educational, social, economic
and special concerns of the
handicapped. Sjxteen persons
will be selected at the Ohio
Pollee Chief Suspended
meeting to represent the
JOHNSTOWN, Ohio \UP! ) state at a national conference
- Pollee Chief Charles White in WashingtDn next May,
has been suspended for 6Q .
days
because
of Workers to Return
COLUMBUS (UP!)
insuhordlnation and neglect
Members of the International
of duty.
The Johnstown VIllage Union of Eleetrtcal, Radio
Council voted 4-2 vote Friday and Machine Workers local
night to suspend White, after here and in Bluefield, W. Va.,
finding him guilty of three of were expected back on the
12 charges fil ed against him job today after they approved.
by Mayor John Haines.
a contract offer from · the
. . .
/
:National Electric Coil Go.
,__ _ _ _ _ _ __, during the weekend.
'
The union had been on
strike since last Monday, The
contract calls for an
inunediate 13 ·per cent pay
WITH TRUNKMOUNT ANTENNA TO BE GIVEN AWAY FREE
hike and cost-of-living
increases.
MONDAY, DEC. 20, 10-411
The strike affected 800
' workers here and 200 in West
(Individual Retirement Account)
Virginia.
If you' re nol covered by a Retirement
a~d
NOW YOU KNOW " '
Program af your place of employment then
William Pitt the Younger
a Tax Free Farmers Bank IRA is for you.
. bec~me
Prime Minister of
England for the first time in
Stop in now and ask about the Farmers
-Enloy three sizes of your favorite pizzas
Ban k IRA Today.
~::::::::: 1783 at.the age of 2•4.ilii'-. .

his family to keep faith

News •• in Briefs

New CCC

ged by
w d k
ur
·.

Appeal

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9

INGELS
fURNITURE

kchitect decision. delayed·
Representatives of ar·
chlleclural · firms intereated
In deslpinc the propoeed
muJU.purpooe building to be
erected near Veterans

Memorial Hospital were
Interviewed Monday by the
Meigs
County
Com·
missioners, Maxine PIWIImer and Ray Pickens of the

Hearing set for
·feeder road ·tO
new Meigs bridge
•
COLUMBUS - Proposed
rerouting ~I Ohio 124 to
overlap 5. 71 miles of eJ&lt;lsting
Ohio 3311 In Lebanon Twp.,
Meigs County, Improvement
of a portion of rerouted Ohio
124 and COJ!Siructlon of a
connector highway to the new
bridge to 1&gt;- ·•&gt;rtructed over
Jb6110hlo h ., or .. ,ar Ravens·
wood, W. Va . will be
dlscuased during an ohio
Depar ..,~•t of Trans·
pcrtallon pu~lic hearing, Jan.
12 in Pomeroy, ·
The 10 a.m. hearing will be
conducted by ODOT District
10 Deputy Director Glenn A.
Smith, Marietta, in the
Common Pleas Courtroom,
Meigs County Courthouse.
The .57-mtle connector to
lbe Ravenswood bridge, to be
added to 11\e stale highways
system .as Ohio 824, will
eztend eastward from the
Improved .45 mile portlon of
rerouted Ohio 124, 2.2 miles

south of the existing, most·
easterly Ohio 124 - Ohio 338
junctioo.
Proposed abandonment
·and vacation of portions of
ex!sttng Ohio 124 and Ohio
338, '" associated with the
Improvements, will also be
discussed during the hearing.
Further information is
available at the district of·
flee.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Tburaday through
Saturday, fair through the
period escept for a chance
of showers o_orll!easl
Saturday. Highs Thursday
wiD be In the 4\11, warming
lo. the upper 50s or lower.
IIGs by Frlclay and cooling
to the t0t1 Saturday. Lom
wiD be In the upper 20s to
the mid lOs.

Jacbon • GaWa • Meigs reported !'hal has been dooe
Mental Health Center, and on an environmental study on
Eleanor ·Thomas, 9 ecutive the access road to be built
director of Meigs County leading to the mullt-pulll08e
Council on Aging.
bu ilding.
Pete Simpson met with the
Questioned were Prof. Dr.
Pedro L. Koe-Krompecher commissioners in regard to a
and Laszlo · G. Koe· grant that has been approved
Krom~e cb e r , Athens; lor pollee radio equipment in
Sc hooley ·Cornelius and the amount of ' 19,111.
Assoc., Columbus, and
VIllages recelvjng radio
Wrtght-Keske • Krltchgan • · equipment will be the
Rosen • Buchanan, Inc., · sheriff's departmen( Racine,
ColumbUs. A decision on who Pomeroy, Middleport and
wiUbe given the contract will h uUand villages. Cost to each
be made Isler.
village will be five percent of
Also meeting with the the cost of the equipment they
commissioners was Boyd receive. Total cost for the
Ruth of the Meigs county and village's accordCounty Soil and Con· ing to Simpson, will be $956 of
servatton Service who the $19,111, making the total

at y
NO. 168

· VOL. XXVII

·'

CHOW'S STEAK HOUSE

:

ELBERFELDS

THE MONEY TREE

Meigs Inn Pizza $hack
WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 15 THRU 18
.

'

. HEY GOOD BUDDY!

Now you can watch your
· money grow too, with
a FarmeFS Bank IRA.

MEIGS THEATNE
CLOSED FOR
VACAnON

GET ATICKET ON A FREE 23 CHANNEL CB RADIO
Come in and see the all new rustic intericr

climb
· the spiral staircase to the main dining ioom.

WATQi .FOR

OPENING DATE

(FoJ Farmers Bank
t

n

$

a

,

POMEROY, OHIO

•

- Try our delicious Subs while you sip your

•

.

'

'

favorite suds.
EAT IN OR CARRY OUT

OFFICE
to 5 {CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT

PHONE 992-6304
'

•

.(

...."•.

en tine

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, lc976

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ATLANTA (UP! ) - Prestdent...olect Jimmy Carter has
tapped Bendix CorP. President Werner Michael Blumenthal as
Treasury secretary and Mrs . Jane Cahill Pfeiffer to be the first
feDIIlle Commerce secretary, sources said today,
'
He called a 2:30 p.m. ESr nationally televised news con·
terence to make the appointments and boost the number of his

r"h~~r.,;::::-::;~~~~~t:::?ic;;;5lNS:~_:;_ca~b~l!'=et:a;p;po;:in:t:ees;:to:;thr:;:eel, He plans to name two more on

Weather
!

'I

Fair tonight and Wed·
.. nes_day, Lows tonight will be
in the mid to _upper 20s and
highs Wednesday will be In
the mid to upper 40s.
Probability of precipitation
will be near zero per cent
today , tonight and Wed·
nesday.

Thurliday.
Blum&lt;111thal, 50, lives in Ann Arbor, Mich., and is a former
Kennedy administration international trade negotiator, He Is
a former Princeton professor, a refugee from Nazism and
speaks with a slight German accent.
Mrs. Pfeiffer, 44, is a former vice Jl'esident of International·
Business Machines and lives in Greenwich, Conn., where she Is
a coosultant on government relations for IBM and other ·
corporations. Her ·husband, Ralph Pfeiffer, is a senior vice
Jl'esldent of IBM.
•r
The selection of Mrs. Pfeiffer is In keeping with carter's
strong promise to name women and minorities to high govern·
men! posts In his administration.
·
·
Carter Press Secretary Jody Powell said today the
president..olect plaris anothe~ news conference Iii Plains, Ga.,
Thursday, when he is expected to name Gallfornta !ll\)'slclst
Harold Brown as Defense secretary and Brookings Inslltiltion
economist-Charles 1,. Schultze as chairman of tbe President's
Council of Economic Advisers.
Earller, in his first cabinet nomination, Carter named Cyrus
Vance to replace Henry Kissinger as secretary of state. At the
same time, he picked Atlanta banker Bert Lance to be federal
. budget director. All of the nominations must be aJlllroved by
the Senate.
·
II! for today's annoW!cemeilts, Mrs. Pfeiffer would be the

•

Meters .frl!ed
~Ohio Po~er in Middleport
h
d
'

I WfG • &lt;N II ... IO IGIUWI

~

·

By Ullled Preu IDterllatloaal

In cooperation with the
arge ·too Assn.,
Mi~dlepo':' Retail Merchants
Middleport Village
Gouncll in regular · session
little m' 75 theMonday
night voted to ''free"
town's parking meters

C

'

only. He also said that
merchants will pollee the free
paliting to see that employes
or others do not take ad·
vantage of the situation. The
merchants will pay the
village $350 In lieu of
revenues the meters would
have produced.
Baker said he feels the free
parking Is a good public
relations gesture and helps
Middleport's businessmen
compete with shopping
centers.
Council approved the third
and final reading of an or·
.

dtnance to increase village
employes salaries as of Jan.

DOHA, QATAR_ MINISTERS FROM 13 OIL exporting
l.
countries met under strict security today for a crucial priceEmployes with five years
111!11q seMion, with Saudi Arabia 'apparently finn in Its
or more experience will
demands for a moderate Increase of 110 more tilan 10 per cent.
receive 10 percent wage
The meeting, which In effect holds the key to the world's
from today through Dec. 24.
hikes, those with less than
~spertty, will open Wednesday in the Gulf Hotel, turned-Into
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Edison Baker, representing
five years a five percent
a virtUal armed camp to prevent' a repetition of last year's Environmental Acti9n the merchants, asked council
increase."Those less than a
year will receive no increase
terrorist attack on VIenna headquarters of the Organization of Foundation said the · Ohio to follow in the tradition of
Petrolemn Exporting Countries.
Power Co. in 1975 past years and free the
but the raise Is so structured
undercharged ita customers meters to shoppers for the
thalli will go into effect In
for federal income taxes by holiday period. Baker said
1977 for all employes moving
MOUNT POCONO, PA. - SHIVERI~G DRUG over $6 miWon.
that the meters will be
into a different lime bracket.
enforcement agents huddled under blankeiB to ward off bitter
United Presa International cover'ed with covers in·
Counetl approved the
cold and 1110w for90 minutes, but their perseverance paid off in errooeously reported Monday dicatlng the free parking
November report of Mayor
the blggeat drug bust In Pennsylvania history. The 24 agents · that Ohio Pmr had over· privilege Is for two hours
(Continued on page '12)
watched an old DC8 propeller plane land on the little-used charged Its customers by
Mount Pocono airport In a imowatorm early Monday. However, over $6 mlilloo for federal
·
0
they did not go into action until a group of men had nearly
lln!S!ed unloading the cargo, Colombian marijuana, into lhl'ee
rented trucka.
tered in WashiD8ton, said
.f".f"
Eight men were arrested and the marijuana conftacated.
Pollee said It was the largest batch of marijuana ever seized in
Pennsylvania and one state policeman described it aa "top
llheH marijuana, your Ghlvas Regal, ao to speak." Agents aald
"The EPA doellll'l realize
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UP!) - work here are coMected with
lbe lour..oncine pline had picked up the cargo, worth at least
the problem we've got," said
'!be president of District 6 of coal."
$12rnillloo,inGotombta and made a direct flight to the eastern
Charles Grimm, a field Guzek. "They have a job to
the United Mine Workers
Ptnnsylvanla airstrip.
•
representative
for Diatrlct 6, do. But they doo 't realize
union
aaid
today
if
the
Dhlo
.
what they're doing to us.
Environmental Protection eChoed Guzek's warning.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD called RepubUcan
"When the government
"We don't have low sulfur
Agency puts restrictions on
.and Democratic leaders of Congress tO separate White House
an
Idealistic coal in the state of Ohio that
the burning of low sufur coal · made
m~s today to dlscusa a $10 bUUon tax cut and curbs on
to can be mined ecooomclally.
"they're putting us out of commitment
fecleralspendinghewiU propose In his final days In offlce.
environmental
Improvement
H they put regulstlons on us
business."
A spolrl!llllllll said Ford, conferring lint with fellow
OOLUMBUS (UPI)- State
John
Guzek,
who with the Clean Air Act of 1970, they're putting us out of
Republicans, scheduled the seul0111"to ta11t about a variety of
JegiJlaU.e mailers" sure to Include a tax reduction and his Treasurer Gertrude W. Do- represents 16,000 coal miners It unintentionally almecl a business."
Guzek aald if western coal
forthcunlng reconunendaUon for a federal budget in the 1978 nahey reported today that aa In Eastern Ohio and the bullet directly at the
of November 30, state Northern Panhandle of west economic heart of the continues to be Imported,
fiJca1 year.
.
revenues were l'1IIIJIIng f113 VIrginia, said minera would American communities that 16,000 coal miners joba and a
WASHINGTON - , A FORMER EMPLOYE saYii the miWoo, or almost 10 per cent, testify at four upcoming are dependent on the mining multlmiJ!Ion dollar payroll
Nuclear Regulatory GonuniMion Ignored and "repeatedly ahead of last year's figures · hearings to be held by the of high sulflD' coal for their would be In jeporady.
"I don't feel that they (the
hindered" his efforta to ~nl nuclear safety ll'Oblems. lor the corresponding five- Ohio EPA on the burning of economic backbone and
high sulfur coal.
social progress," said EPA) should put reguattons
~ M. neuggl!, formerly a reactor engineer with the month period. ·
Thll was an Increase of
The hearings begin Grimm.
on untU they C&lt;lllle up with ·a
NRC's syatema safety dlvlsloo, told a hearing Monday of the
almoll f/0 mUIIon, or more Thursday in Cincinnati and
Guzek said a laW requlring way to deal with the sulfur
Senate Govenunent Operations Committee:
than3 per cent, alnee October will also be held In Cleveland
uUUUes to burn Jll'OC!!ssed content " he said.
,(Conuiiued on jiage 12) ·
Income was reported.
Columbul and Steubenville: coal would allevlste port of
Mra. Donahey said ~ Guzek said some iitlliUes the problem.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::~
"lfpower companies were
state income tax produced have already started
_, miWon In ·November, Importing low sulfur coal
•
~
NO ONE HURT
compared with $40 ll!illlon In · from westem states to avoid
No one was injured or cited October, boosting five-month l n s t a Ill n g ex pen sl v e and acrenened, we could whip
T-e Mtll• Goanty
in a minor traffic accident collections to $228 ~oo . equipment anti-pollution hall our p~oblem," he ,aatd. Jay~ are again •JIGII'
cMondqy on SR 7 at the junc- Thll was $37 mtlllon, or 19 per equipment needed before low "A lot of the power planll are
1oring frail baakell for ~e
tion to the Addlson..J!Ulaville ~t. above the figure for sulfur coal can be burned H ' burnlng raw coal \halls full
ueedy. Lui year over 2fO
Rd.
flacal 1978.
· the EPA ·Imposes stringent mud ond everything else • .. people were llelped th-cb
The Gallta • Melgs Post
Sales tax collectio111 for a1r pollulloo regulatiolll.
That causes a probln, II the effortl of tile Jaycee~~.
State Highway Patrol said an November were ftl3 miWon
"H westem coal ta brought pull a lot. of ash and llll)Oke
Everyone wllbing to make
auto driven by Lula Kitchen, compared with $96 miWoo In Into Ibis area an&lt;! ~ lirea out of lbe smoke stack that a d-11011 or coatrlbattca
211; Rt. 2, Galltpolla, stopped October, railing the five- coallan't burned, we'D have a shouldn't be there. There la a1ked to eaU Ralpb
to malte a left tum and was· month figures In that ghost town in the whole should be a law requiring Werry at IH-5480 er 1ead a
struck in the rear by an auto category to'* miWon. Thta eastern part of Ohio beca111e !ham to burn proceNed coal.
poot ~rd 1e P. 0. Box 104,
operated by Mellsaa K. Rizer, wu 1117 mllll.cln, or '12.7 per the Easlel:n part of Ohio 111 Washing the coal would take POIIH!roy, In care of the
21, Pomeroy. There was very cent, abow the amount for coal," said Guzek. "All the out 23 per cent of the sulfur. Mella Couty Jay~ .
Ught damage.
the prevlolll fiJca1 year·
businesses and people that
~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::: :::::::::::;:,:,:.:.:;:::::;:,:~

~ef=don.heaclquar· Mzne
::~~6 =ora1~~

Ohio

'

fourth-woman cabinet member in history and the first to head
the Commerce ~rtn\ent, established In 1913.
The others were t'ronces Perklns, secretary of Labor during ·
the Franklin Roosevelt era i Oveta Culp Hobby, secretary of
Health, Education and Welfare in the first Eisenhower
administration, and Carla Hills, current secretary of Hou.stng
and Urban Development.
Former Labor Secretary John Dunlop was Carter's ltrst
caller at the Georgia Governor's Mansion tDday .
Dunlop has the strong backing of the AFL-Cib to be na med
to the same cabinet ~t in .the Carter administration but he
fa ces stiff opposition from black and women leaders who have
criticized his failure to endorse affirmative action program.&lt;
while he headed the Labor Department and at Ha rwrd
Unlveritty, where he Is a profesaor.
Others being mentioned as Jl'ospecttve Carter choices include Rep. Robert Bergland, DMinn., a farmer, to be
secretary of agriculture, and Colllinbta University profes8er
and former State Department policy planner Zblgniew Brze·
zlnskt as national security affairs adviser.
Others mentioned In the ruMing as· possible Cabinet
appointments are Rep . Brock Ada!Dfi, O.Wash., as secretary of
tranaportatlon, and Franklin Tliomas , president of the Bedford
Stuyvesant Redevelopment Corp. in New York City to replace
Mrs. Hilla as head of HUD.

Names drawn for

...

~- ·· ~·
~'1/r.:f,l.:'f\' ~·

OI OW ti O 1 0 &lt;U

::l

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Treasury Secretary Darned

Services for

Ktatuek, fried ChiektK

CHRISTMAS QUEEN CANOIDATES -; One of these three attractive young ladies at
Southern High School in Racine will be crowned "Chrlatmas Queen" at the Tri·M Christmas
dance oo Dec. 22. Froot to back are Lisa Allen, Darlene Duncan and Bobbt Chapman. The
dance at the high schoo l from ~p . m. tomidnight is open to the public. Admlsaion is '1.50 per
per!llll , The student body will vote on the queen candidates.

•

MIX AND MATCH
nd try some of eac

for Tuesday

grant $18,1~.
Simpson , project coor·
dinator, said thai when the
new equipment is received
local fire departments will
not be able to use the new
frequency , He therefore
asled that the old frequency
be kept and used as the only
cost would he ·changing of
crystals.
The commissioners asked
Simpson to get the exact coSt
and report the amount to
them as soon as possible.
Attending were Henry
Welts, Warden Ours, and
Bernard Gilkey, com·
missioners, Wesley Buehl,
engineer . and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

workers onnose ban
burning low sulfur coal

mcome

ahead 10%

'• .

=.::v:t

m:::::::

Baskets again

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

•

•

Meigs jury duty
Fifteen names were drown

for possible grand jury duty
and 65 names for petit jury
. for tbe January term of court
Saturday morning in th e
office of the clerk of courta,
Larry Spencer.
Attending were Freeland s.
Norris, Lauren E. Hoffman,
jury commissioners, Common Pleas Judge Joha c.
Bacon, Nellie Brown of the
clerk of courts, and Randall
Carpenter of the Sheriff's
department.
Names drawn for the grand
jury were :
Wilson Carpenter, Naomi
Donahue, Betty Sayre, June
Baker, Nina Sanders, Guy
Sargent, Norman C. Will,
R0se Ellen Carson , Opal
Eichinger, Lawrence J.
Stewart, Don Belzlng, Don E.
Mullen, Clara Wllliama, Jeff
Werry, Carrie E. Roush.
For Petit jury:
· Mildred Zeigler, William
H. Cleland, Janet Bolin,
Phyllis Harrla, Kay Sayre,
Louts Osborne , Rodney
Pierce, Shirley Balaer, Clara
Lightfoot, Alah Holliday,
Jean ette Davis, Ruth

Erl ewlne, lona Brtckles,
Delbert A. Romlne,Bonnle
Willford, Delores Holter,
Mary Lee Maxey, Elmo F.
Smith, Wanda Wolf, Ava nel
Halliday, Haze l Sell ers,
Dorothy Ca shdollar, Nola
Swisher, Gene King, Dennis
G. Marcinko, Ethel CoMer,
John T. Blake, Mildred Karr ,
Barbara Gruese'r, Okey
Connolly, Ruth · Holma n,
Jtnn~ Amott, Leonard Bass,
Opal Kloes, Reva L.
Vaughan, Jean Kennedy,
Arnold Johnson, Wilma Van
KaMeU, Karl F. Culp, Gay
Fields, Carol Diddle, Gladys
Dillon, Lanora Davit, Leora
Sigman, Cathy Davis, Robert
Sloan, Martha Lou Beegle,
Thersa VanMeter, Evelyn
Holter, Dorothy Brow1•
Clifford Hayes, Rich
Gress, Marie Blrchf l ,...
Patricia. Carson , .I •. ·i
Darnell, Russell Cull ( .n.
Ronald Logan, Marie B.
Thomas Darst, Arnold D&lt;
Sharon Boyles, Le
Chasteen, Jo ann Clar.
Kathleen Francia, Mary L
Crow.

Under 24 folks ·
to be shot again
Meigs Countlans under 24
yean of age•who received a
swine Ou lnnoculatlon during
• the recent pubUc clinics mu.il
have a second shot according
to a dlreetl.e received by the
Melga County Department of
Health from the Ohio
Department of Health.
Thla group may visit the
health department offices
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon and
from 1 to 3 p.m. any Monday
or Friday to receive the
second shot.
Mrs. Mary Myers, R.N.,
eounty health nurse, reported
that during the cllntca several
hundred per10111 were ad·
vised IJ!,at they. too will need
a secood shot. These people
are also to report -to the

health department
on
Fridays or Mondays from 9
a.m. to 12 noon and from 1
p.m. to 3 p.m.
A limited number of swine
flu vaccine shots are
available through the Meigs
County Department of
Health. There were only 325
such shots in the first pia ~ ·
and liM! SUJllllY is running out
However, more can be ac~pled at this time. The
children's shoi Is for
fOUngsters from three
through 7. Parenti wiahlng
lheir children to have the
lnnoculatlon are to take them
to the health . department
offtces from 9 to 12 and 1 to 3
p.m., _Mondays or Friday.!

�..

•

2,- The DeUy Senllnel, Mlddleport-Pmleroy,'O., Tueadav:Dec. l4. i976

Dayton found baffling maze
of how taxpayer money spent
WASIUNGTON (UPI ) Critics have claimed lor
years that the federal
government is a baf!llng

maze.
Not so well known Ia the
fact that when federal, alate
and local programs cornt
together in one !llllall part of .
the COIU\tr)l the result Ls even
more complex and confusing.
Now for the first time a
thorough study bas been
made of how these three
levels of government spend
taxpayers' money in one
metropolitan area : Dayton,
Ohio, and its surroundings.
A copy of the study,
cooducted by Community Research Associates, a non- •
. profit group based in st. Paul,
Minn., has been given w
Jimmy Carter's advlaera and
could play a role In his plans
for federal government
reorganization.
U nothing elBe, it demonstrates the complexity of any
reorganization plans.
The study makes clear that
organizing government,
deciding priorities and
getting the most lor the
taxpayers' money are alate
and local as well as
Washington problems.
The fact that it took a
three-year, $350,000 research
project to find out how
government ,money Is spent
in one area is in itself a civics
lesson.
DOOald B. Glabe, head of
t!le research group, aays that,
despite the age of comP!Iters,

"in no American community
do governmental officials and
civic leaders even know the
total volwne of governmental
funds expended, much less
how different pieces of the
whole are involved in the
~e problem areas and to
what extent."
The
study
covered
Montgomery County,
population 600,000, which
includes DaytDn and most of
its suburbs. Slxty-&amp;x local
.government jurisd'itions
spend money in this area .
They include the county. the
city of DaytDn, 15 smaller
cities, 13 towriships, 7 villages
and numerous school and
special purpose dlstrlcla.
Taxpayers' money also Ls ·
spen~ there by 55 state
agerides, Tl federal agencies
and
through
122
rxingovernmental
organIzations.
In 1973 ail of these 'federal ,
alate and local bodies spent
billion in public funds in
lhe county, three times what
local government planners
bad estimated.
Of this, f643 million was
spent
on
"national
problems," mainly by the
Pentagon under defense
contracts.
The study dealt with the
remaining 1787 million, which
was spent on problems of the
area. A breakdown shows
how big the federal role in
local affairs has become :
- Only .47 per cent of the
$787 million was spent

•u

through local government!.
The researchers expected
thi.s percentage to be higher.
Some 14 per cent was spent
directly by the state, 36 per
cent direcUy by the federal
goveriunent on community
problems and 3 per cent
through non-government
groups.
- When the analysts looked
at the original sources of this
money the local role was even
illllaller : 34 per cent came
originally from
local
revenues, 19 per cent from
state and 47 per cent from
federal reveJ!ueS.
- About three-fourths of
the federal money was spent
direcUy by the federal
government in the area. The
rest was channeled through
state, local goverrunenls and
non·government groups .
Federal money accounted lor
23 per cent of what the state
spent in the area, Tl per cent
of what local governments
spent and 89 per cent of what
oongovernmenll!,ro ..s spent.
The study showed that 80
. per cent of the mCJ!Iey spent
on community problems was
in a broad category ·of
"human resources , "
Including aid to Individuals,
health, education, recreation
and culture.
Amore detailed breakdown
of priorities raised many
questions in the minds of the
researchers:
- Nearly half went lor
subsidies to meet financial
problems of individuals and

families - including Social
Security, welfare and
Medicare . Are
these
programs the best lor this
purpose, the analysts asked,
or would others such as a
negative income tax, raising
the
retirement
age,
government creation of jobs ·
br
Intense
economic
development be better?
- Were" priorities in the
DaytDn area set Intentionally
or did they just happen?
Should housing be at the
bottom of the list? At a' time
when people are concerned
about unemployment should
more than 1 per cent be spent
on improving the economic
base to provide joba?
~ Was it intentional or
accidental that six cities
south of Day!Dn · together
spent $5.9 million lor "traffic
safety" but only 7 million
on "crime and delinquency''?

'1.

• The study suggests that
savings could be made
through consolidation of
programs: for example If
,Dayton's small mental health
program were merged with
the county's larger one,-or If
several smatl localities got
together to set up joint
personnel or vehicle repair
services programs.
Glabe says the methods .
- used In his study could be a
· model for other COmmiU\itles
'to keep track on a continuing
basis of how money is spent in
their area.
He also suggests that if

Ohio should shift hmden
off p~perty court told
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The state of Ohio llhould oot
continue u.sing property tax as a balla of IIU(l(llrtlnC
grade and high achools, the llupl!rinlllndent of Toledo,
Oltlo's, flnanclallytroubted school 1JY11em contends.
Frank Dick describes the property tax syatern aa
"the shakiest foundation we could have."
· Dick testtlled Monday In Hlrnilton County COIIUIIOit
Pleas Court on behaU of the Cincinnati Board of
Education, whim bas filed a lawsuit agaiMI the alate
and Ls seeking to revise the state method of lll()l)OI'Iing
schools.
Cincinnati school olllclals complain they are being
hurt because lacal votera are umrilllng t'o approve ·
property taX l""les.
''The state of Ohio IIIUllt assume more responstbillty
lor # inancing_ -elementary and secondary pubUc
schools," said Dick, noting that Toledo voters have
rejected school lt!VIes three times in the past year.
Toledo schools have been forced to closle this month
to save money, but are scheduled to reopen Jan. 3.
However, flick said that when tbe 197~77 school year
begins next September, there will -only be enough
money to keep Toledo schools open lor about a month.
Dick recommended that the alate pay at least half
the cost of operating local schools. The alate row picks
up about onethird of Cincinnati's school tab.
·
Dick also said it was more c0sUy to operate urban
schools than rural schools, citing expenses for burglar
alarms, monitors to maintain dl.sclpline and replacing
stolen equipment.
MeanwhUe, in a related development In aoother
COurt Monday, HamUton County Common Pleas Court
Judge Robert Wood responded to a taxpayers' lawsuit
and issued a temporary restraining order preventing
the Cincinnati Board of Education from paying private
lawyers.
However, John A. Uoyd, handling ' the school
financing suit for the school board, said be would
continue .working without pay on the case which Is
expected to last several months.

Jimmy Carter's federal reorganization is going to be more
than an "abstraction" more than moving some
"llries ,and ho&lt;es on the

organizational charts" - the
entire, complex federal-statelocal relationship must be
l"'}lled at.
-d·~JH

'Jl J&gt; (j

entirelf'tn Hughes' hand giving it legal staridlng even
without witilesses.
Attorney Jaines Dilworth,
representing
three Texas
thumbprint Is not Melvin
relatives
of
Hughes,
told a
Dummar's ..."
Dummar ~ld his only con- Los Angeles Superior Court
necUon with Hughes came in judge Monday that the FBI
1968; when he gave a ride to identified Dummer's
. Las Vegas to a shabbily fingerprint on the "will's"
dressed, bleeding old man he envelope, and (In a book and
found beside a lonely desert magazine containing samples
authentic
highway. The man said he of Hughes'
handwriting.
was Howard Hughes,
He said the prini.s were
Dummar said.
found
at Webet Sta~ College
The fight over the
in
Ogden,
Utah - where
document's authenticity
became a battle of Dummar had attended
handwriting
analysts, classes - on a copy of
centered on whether the will "Ho!lx," about Clifford
phony
bad in fact · been written Irving's
"autobiography" of Hughes,
and · a 1971 Ule magazine
article, "The Elusive Howard
Hughes as Revealed Through
his
Letters."
Pages
containing samples of
has been appointed prlncipai Hughes' writing were torn
investigator for the project. out, he said.
Razor previously worked
"It's been our belle! for
with the environmental months that Mr. Dummar
consulting firm of A.M. was, and had to he, involved
Kinney, Inc., and with Miles in the forgery of thLs will,"
Laboratories.
DUworth said. 1

Hughes' Mormon Will is close to rejection
By JACK V. FOX
LOS ANGELES (UPI) ' - The purported "Mopnon
Will" of Howard Hughes,
carrying a windfall of wealth
for a desert "good
Samaritan," was on the
verge of destruction today by
a fingerprint that may bring
down criminal charges as one
of the biggest attempted
swindles in history.
If so, Hughes' $2.5 billion

Ford calling
in Monarchs
and Granadas

·'

fortiUie could go to relatives
he saw utile of in life . ..
The legal sponsor· of the
disputed will, attorney
am-old Rhoden, ·planned to
ask a Las Vegas, Nev., judge
today to suspend probate
proceedings and demand the
Nevada attorney general's
office turn over evidence the
uwlllu is a fake.
He promised to withdraw
the document if the reports
are true.
. Rhoden, and attorneys for
·Hughl!l!' relatives fighting the
will, · told a Los Angeles
Superior Court judge Monday

that the FBI, at tile request of
Ne~ada',
identified
a
fingerprint on the will's
envelope as that of Melvin
Dummar, a Willard, Utah,
gas station operator.
Dubbed the "Mormon Will"
because it appeared mysteriously on a desk in Mormon
Church headquarters in Salt
Lake City thr.ee weeks alter
Hughes died, it left Dummar
one-sixteenth of Hughes' fortune or more than $100
million .
"There are , potential
criminal charges here." said

Nevada Attorney Gimeral
Robert List about the
flngerprlni. "What they are
and who they might be !Ued
against, I'm not going to say
at this point. ~ '
.
He would not discuss the
fingerprint, but Nevada
sources corifinned it bad
been lonnd.
In Ogden, Utah, Dummsr's
lawyer, Roger Dutson, said
"we simply deny that
Dummar ever handled that
letter fit· had anything to do
with tlie writing of Howard
Hughes'
will.
That
'

Study tmderway to remove River chemicals

By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A · quality of drinking water that Protection Agency is
UPI Auto Wrjter
twoyear study Is underway to comes from the river.
providing grant monies to see
DETROIT
(UPl )
find ways to remove organic
"The project Is aimed at' the work to fruition. "
Defects involving safety hell chemicals in Ohio River developing practical methods
Bill G. Razor, 39, a chemist
and suspension systems have water treated lor drinking, for
removing
these and environmental enlfilleer.
forced the Ford Motor Co. to the Ohio River Valley Water substances from drinking
begin recalling more than 'Sanitation Commission water," said commission
100,000 cars involving 1976 announced Monday.
officials. "Water utilities
THEDALVSENTI'NEL
and 1977 model Ford
Conu'lli!loion olllciala aaid uaing the Ohio River and
Granaadas and Mercury ·· the project, called "Organic some of the major tributaries
D~~~~ri:E
l'ttEIGS.MASON AREA
Monarchs.
Substances In the Ohio River as a supply source ·are
CIIESTERL. TANNEHILL
, Ford said 66 600 cars are ··and · Associated Water strongly endorsing and Eu1.·. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Involved In th~ aafety hell Supplies," is "in rl!!lponse to funding the project, and the
Cllf Editor
recall and 36,100 in the publlc concern" about the U.S . Environmental
PublishetJ ~.bu l)' CJtn~pl &amp;ltqrday
lly The Ohto V11lh!YlPublishinM CUI~l­
suspension system recall. II
llny, 111 Cuurl St., Pumeroy, OhiU
said the total number of cars
Wl1Ulers
4S769. Bllllin~ss Offkc Pl]one 992Involved was not known since
,
21 56. Editorial Plmnt! 992-21$7.
Si:t.'Ond chtss J)O!IU! gt! pair! at
many of the cars, par-· Winners in the latest mark; Reona King, Jr., New
Pt1•11er uy, Ohio.
ticularly two-door models. Christmas Gold Star Give- Haven, Francis Florist ;
National ad\'ertlslng n:prescuare included In both safety Away and the store where Marie Root, Coolville, J&amp;R ; Liilive W11rd - Grlflith Company,.J n- By Polly Cramer
;~nd Gu llagllt r DiY .,
cam~igns .
their $10 gilt may be picked Rollin Dill,
Pomeroy, c.757, Buu.inelli
Third Ave., New York , N.\' .
POLLY'S PROBLEM
10017.
AFord spokesman Monday up are:
Marguerite's, Anna Cornell,
DEAR
POLLY - Our new
Sulx;cripli
on
tales:
Del
ivered
by
said owners of the affected
Martha Bland, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Pomeroy Flower currier where I:IVIIiiHble 75 c~ nt.s ~r
sink
has
marks on it from
cars will receive separate PQ!lleroy, Goessters; Naomi Shop; No)a Swisher, Mid- wt-ek. By Motor Roo~ whe re c11rrier
aluminum
pots and pam. I
scr:vil'f
not
Hvailable,
One
month,
notices and repairs will be Brinker, Racine, Swisher &amp; dleport, Elberleids ; Irene
:tl.25. By mail in Ol1iu and W. V11.,
was
told
not
to use harsh
made by dealers at no charge Lohse; William Zerkle, Baxter, Pomeroy, Land· One Year, $22.00; Six munllas,
abrasives
like
cleansers,
to the owners.
Syracuse, Chapman Shoes; mark ; John R. Hunnei, $1 1.53; Three months , $7 .00 ;
Elsewhere $26.00 y~ll r ; Six montlas
since
they
would
wear
away
There have been no ac- Sherman R. Vteret, Mason, Pomeroy, Stilfier's; Debbie $13.50 ; Three months , $U O.
the
enamel,
vihich
is
what
cldenla or lnjurie~ aa a resuH Fabric Shop; Frances Young, Pomeroy, Crow's Subscription price includes Sun~&lt;I Y
happened
to
my
old
sink.
I
Tim ~Y"Senth1el .
of eithe~ problem.
Nelson, Rutland. K&amp;C; Uoyd Steak House; Ruth Grindhave
tried
several
products
Jenkins, Pomeroy, Land- staff, Racine, Sltlfler's.
on this one, but nothmg
budges those marks. El1iiE.
DEAR ElSIE -When you
were told not to use cleansertl
on the sink, you sbould have
asked what they recommeaded. I have always
eleaued an enamel sinll with
a mUd powdered household
cleaner and rubbed with a
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. affected by this in any way away: Your early treatment Children can be affected spnoge or cloth to ' remove
D't'AR DR. LAMB-I need even though I am O.K. now? . may bav~ made it possible during birth by a woman with such black marks. Of coill'fle,
an answer badly to a question Also can It ever recur again for you to be a mother.
active, untreated gonorrhea. ha111b ones would dull the
that has been bothering ·me without any reaso11?
· One of the blg dangers of
I should take this occasion · glaze.
lor sometime. I don't know
DEAR READER - I un- gonorrhea Is that It will cause to remind all young people
Some who say not to use
how else to phrase it so here it derstand how desperate you Inflammation of the tubes that gonorrhea Ls a con- cleanser! reeommend dishi.s blunUy.
mast feel. The blood test done and cause them to become tagious illness. You can get It Washing detergent or a few
About. a year. ago I was for marriage examination is blocked with scar tissue. In from anyone who Ls infected drops of ammonia on the
unfortunate enough to con· not a test lor gonorrhea and effect a gonorrhea infection If you have sexual relations damp cloth. II might also be
tract a Severe case of your previous infection wJll may do a tubal sterilization of with them .
whitened by putting soem
gonorrhea. I went to my not be detected by the test. the woman. I hasten to add
In women there Ls a fairly bleaeb in water in the sink
gynecologist, and with time The blood test H only for that the tubes can become high incidence of asymp. and let, stand lor about live
and medication I was given a syphiliS.
blocked. from many ·other tomatic gonorrhea. The minutes, Tue rinse well. clean bill of health.
.
Tests are being developed causes, and just because a change in normal secretions POLLY.
I am now going with a lor gonorrhea, but they are woman has blocked tubes may not be enough to warn
wonderful man and we have stlil in the research stage. ·does not mean that she has her that she is infected. This
DEAR READERS - Irene
dl.scussed marriage. I have .The diagnosis of gonorrhea is had gonorrhea.
also hai'Pens in men but not and Mn. G.S.O . .wrote that
never mentioned this incident stili made by identllying the
No, since you had the good · nearly as often. Birth control · they used Emma's pointer lor
to ·him lor it is somethi~g I organiillllfrom a smear taken judgement.to see your doctor. pills, IUDs, • and the removing spots and stains
preler.to forget. When I go for with ·a swab or by sinplar and gel early treatment there withrawal technique wltl not from nu111es' unlfonns with
my blood test, I am petrified techniques. That is one is no real danger that the protect a person from cream of tartar, and were Iell
that perhaps due to some reason why it is more difficult disease will recur. II you venereal disease . The con~ with wrinkled while slacks.
chemical reaction the test to diagnose gonorrhea and have gonorrhea again it will dom will help some if It is Wring a thin soft pressing
might show some evidence develop .more effective ways be from a ~ew sexual part- used properly. This same clolli out of half water aad
thai 'would ·tndicate that at of eradicating it.
ner, not from one in the past. Information also applies to haU while vinegar, place Ibis
one time I had V.D. I have
You did the right thing, and
Your children will not be some people not' so young. over the wnnkles, press with ·
heard that this Ls possible. Is l want to commend you on affected wHh the disease now Germs don't care how old you a hot Iron and have no more
it true? Can our children be going to your 'ioctor right _ that you have been cured. are - 9 or 90.
wrinkles. I have even used

Gold Star ,

announced

Mild cleanser fine
for enamel sink

DR. LAMB

Gonorrhea can be fully cured

t

..

L

•

3- The DeUySenllnel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec, U. 1976

Sandwich end~
hunger strike -~;.
By KEN OONNAUGHTON
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)

- Gary GUmore munmed on
a cheese and baloney
SBI!dwich in hLs prlaon cell
late Monday, ending a . .Y
hunger strike, apparently
sall.stfied that he will finally
be allowed to die before a
Utah firing ,quad.
The U.s. Supreme Coart
siamped tla approval 111
GUmore's demand that the
State of Utah carry out his
death sentence and after a
2-ho..- strategy session with
hLs lawyers, GUmore called
lor leii!d, guards atUtah State
Prison saicl.
It was ll:30 p.m,, well past
the supper hour, but Gilmore
Willi given the sandwich and
an orange In his Isolated cell
in the hospital infirmary.
••He wanted more, but we
wouldri'l give it to him- we
didn't feel he was ready for
It," a spokesman said. "He·

Athens Frosh
in 49-27 win

•

rm,

J~!&gt;t hUDgry apia aboulla.m. :;:~
and we ga.. him 1011111 more "'
orqa llld milk."
:t;
GUmorebad bepn bilfall, ~
· taking only llquidl, to protelt .:;.]
the refulal ol autborltlll to:;;'
allow him to contact hla...,;~
glrUrlend who WIIUcceulully;:::~
tri!ld to commit llllicide In her;~~
Provo apartment at tbe ume!.t
baur Gilmore toQt pllla in an
effort to end"hla own life. ·
r..!
~
1"

""

ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses were . ,
Lssued to Leo Francis Layne;''·
21, Racine, and Karen Jane,,,
Clark, 20, Racine; Woodrow.. ..
William Call, III, 19,
Pomeroy, and Christy Kay .•.
Hook!~, 16, Rt. 4 Pomeroy; ~~
'James Ronald Pooler, Sr., 32,0;
Middleport, and Beverly,,_
Marlene Hall, 24, Mason; ,.
Timothy Ralph Helton, 18, Rt.--"
1, Dexter, and Kathy L)'m:.~
Rupe, 18, Rt. I, Dexter;
Timothy Ray Cundiff, 1V,, ;
Pomeroy, and Debra Lynn_,,
Call, 21, Pomeroy.

,.
The host Athens freshmen
,.
buUI up a J.S-:10· lead, then Leona Beckley
f-:1
went on to defeat the Meigs ·
'"
lrosb, 49-T/ Monday night.
••
The Athens fro&amp;h are 1-1 in died on Sunday '"
league play. Meigs dropped
to 1).2. Mrs. Leona Mae Beckley',
For the winne.S, Randy M, Logan, Ohio, a native of ;
ll{lbo had 10. Red Ross and Meigs County, died Sunday irt'"
Allen Meyer each had eight. Hocking Valley Hospital
For the UtUe Marauders, following a long Illness.
,,~
Tim Faulk and Dan Thomas
She was
May 1Jl, 1896·:
each bad eight points.
in Meigs County, daughter of
Athens Is at Wellston the late William and Mirandll' • .
Thursday. The Meigs fi'Osh HUtton Patterson.
-"' "'
will host Logan. ·
Her husband, John R! ,;
Beckley, a retired mail
carrl~r in the l!lwtngton area; "
SEOfm~h :' surVives
along ·With several'"'
I'
; I ' , · · , "I
nephews·· and ' nieces, In•"
eluding William Patterson of•
Logan, with - whom they
SEOAL FRESHMEN

oom

.

standingS

TEAM
Gallipolis

W L P OP

reSided.

"':"~

·

Also surviving Is a brother,
Waverly
Noah Patterson ·of Kl.sstn...••
Athens
Logan
1 1 86 86 mee, Fla. The Beckleys :
Jackson
1 1 84 92 lonnerly lived In the WUkes11. •
Wellston
o 2 80 93 ville area.
Meigs
0 2 54 97
Funeral services will b4!' •
TOTALS
7 7 573 573 held at 2 p.m. Wednesday•'
Monday's results:
frilm the Jenkins FuneraF
Logan 50 Wollston 47
Chapel in Wellston with Rev.
Athens 49 Meigs 27
Waverly 59 Jackson Al
John M. Taylor olflciating!u
Gallipolis - 'Open
Burial will follow in Casto!" •
Thursday's g11mes:
Cemetery
in Meigs County.:~
Logan at Meigs
Visitation will be held at the'?
Waverly at Gallipolis
Athens at Wellston
funeral .home after 2 p.rn.
Jackson - .Open
today.
'
~. ~
'

2 0 87 63'
2 0 98 76
1 1 84 66

•

-

..
h

;~:::::*::::::::::;:::::::::--&gt;::~:::;:;:;::~:s»"!:s».::::~~~~~a~~:*.::x

!!

Generation Rap

:·:·'•'

By Helen and Sue Botte_l

:-:·:.;·

::::

Dayto!f, five romps over New Orleans, 82-68

Love-Me Love ijy Avo!mlpols?
'"
Rap :
I ~~~·('! ,..,.
' -;,
"'
..
I'm engaged !J!1g iP!Y ~1adore but I'!JI not Sll\'~',j!e loves me ;~
He's always nagging me aoout losing the 70 pounds I've put 01).1
since ll!let him. He won't take me places. He'd rather be with
his friends.
He ~xpecls ine to snap my llnge!J and the pounds will go. t.
try talking to him about it; he get! mad and stamps out.
.: :
When I tell him I'D leave him So he won't be ashamed, he
. begs me to stay. I even tried killing myseU. He was nice for a
whUe alter that.
I thought love was seeing the beauty .in the Inside, not ~i
outaide. I lost ten pounds, and he didn't even notice. Should ~;
just take a walk?"- OVERWEIGHT AND LOVESICK :o

·'I
white ~~egar alone when 0 and I.S,
·
.
"
1
wrlnkler were on the stubTake that walk to yoru famUy doctor's office! A large u
born side. This i• alao greal to sudden weight g. . could mean a medical or psychiatrl~ ,
remember now that •o many problem. Physical and mental therapy may ground your
are letting hems down a bit balloon ride, where your fiance's nagging "hot air" will oiJ!y,
and lind tbe crease line Ill proloog 11. - HELEN
manytbl ·fatobrlca alrnost halm·
:H+
;:
JIOIIS e
remove. 1 ve
NOTE FROM SUE: YoU said, '1 even tried ldlllnc:
never bad II faU. ,Motbenl myself!" Correction: Unless you melt those pounds and keep,.
"ith. growing daugblertl have Utern off; you're STILL tr)llng to conunit suicide -the alo'l'•
told me It has been a !He way.
,.,
aaver, or I sbonld oay a
As for seeing the beauty on the inside, could you honestly
clothe• saver, lor them. love your fiance as much if there were some 100 more pounda·;
~~
•
of~
•
' DEAR POLLY - The .
'
·
"'
.
B+
.
~;
laundry tub is great for Dear Rap:
.:
bathing small dogs. Put a
Tom and 1 agreed we'd have an open marriage - wi.J.'~
rubber mat In it to keep the limits. That Is, we enjoy many friends of the DPIJ(Jiite sex,
dog's feet from slipping, and free to go places without the other, aometlma in mixecl.
a plug of steel wool in the company. But there'&amp; oo fooling around - jlllt lots of trust ••
drain opening to collect any Which Is good t&gt;ecause we're both in college and .have Jobs:
loose hair. It Is easy to That means lots of 'separation.
,
_,
remove and throw away _
But b(1W.do you get It acl'081 to certain guys you aren't oo:;
when the bath is over. Fill tub . themskejustbecauseyouUketheir company? I )ike talking~ .
with lukewann water half men, maybe picking theil' brains, but some of them ~
way up to the dog's tummy becauaeldon'tclingtoTml,I'maftersomethlngelae.
and use a good shampoo to
Isn't it pnsslble for men and women fD be friends witho~
rubsudsintothecoatstartlng one or the other gelling ideas? -MARRIED ''FREEDOI'tl,;
at the back. Wash gently FIGHTER"
'
·around the head last and be ·
·
careiUJ not to get the smapoo near M.F.F.:
:r
Into the pel's eyes and ears.
Yes it's possible for a min and woinan to be jusl.friendsFor extra caution a -cotton · espedaUy H tbey're upfrmt about the relationahlP from the ~
ball can be put in each ear start. But fm- some, "~posite aex" means conquest-time, an4.
during the bath. Rinse with a there's litUe . y~u can do to change them.
..
flexible shower head atLet these "ldea.guvs" know they've read your sipali"
!ached to the faucet, ualng wrong. II they still cm1e on strong (or think you're playin(
lukewaf!D water. Blot pen bard to get), avoid 'em. Perhaps they're the type wbo figure-'
dry with a large old bath brains aren't Cl•'l1patible l!ith females. - HEU:N
.:;
towel. - JANET K.
· +++
Polly wUis~nd you one ol her M.F .F.:
'"
"peacby" thank-you eards,
It's hard to suppress male-female feellnp entirely in alt
ideal lor framing or ,placing ~polite aex friendship. But Wlleu the guy Is over 50 per cent'
ID your family aerapbooll, if male cbaU1(inlst, he'D accept your cloeed-end open marriage It;
she uses your favorite you take the trouble to expiafu.
c.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
That doe~~~'l mean he Wllll'l try a good-11atured pBt!&amp; of
her column. Write · PollY'• two,crlbatyou'lhuppreaaUyourfUrtlnginltincts. But you'll'
Pointe111 in eare ollbti new• both understand about keeping acUons within bounds ... wbic!l'
paper.
Is the main thing, right? - SUE
•
&gt;::1

tee1:

'1

By
United
Prell
IDtel'lllll!IUI
Deyton coach Don Donober
· was given some added
encouragement Monday
night Bt! the unbeaten Flyers
·launmed their biggest week
of the young basketball

_Today's

Sport Parade
.

-

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI SpoiU Editor
.

.

.

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Tlltl Seaver was waiting around to
have hia car serviced when the fellow who runs the place, a
man he bas known fir some time, asked him how come he
hadn't played out hLs option and gotten himself a quick two or
llu'ee mWion the same way a IIUDber of other playeni bad,
''That's the same question my lather asked me," said the .
Mets' llu'eHlrne Cy Y&lt;~~q · Award winner.
"I'D tell you the same thing l told him," Seaver aald to the
auiomobUe man. ''There's something called loyalty. My
milther agreed with me."
Seaver bas a good contract with the Meta, one of the best
there Is, In fact. He gets better than J220,000 a year lor three
years and bas a conditlooal clause enabling him to trip even
that. Good as ·IU Cllltract Ls, he's fUlly aware be could've
gotten himself even more llloney had he not signed back on
with the Met! last spring after a long, sometimes bitter
exchange between him and the club during salary
negotiations. · ··
·
"I feel that I have to have some sense of loyalty even though
I question my own judgement when I think back to last spring
and remember how the Melll said they were considering
·trading me because of my salary negotiatiOill! with them,"
Seaver aays. The Mets' ace wW be 32 this Friday. He bas been a 20-iJame
winner four times in 10 years and although he bad onir a 14.11
log last season, 111ly two others were able to better his 2.69
ERA and he led the National League with 235 strikeouts. It was
the fifth time in the past seven years he did that and the ·ninth
straight year he struck out 200or more batters. No other major
league pitcher has ever done tha! .before. '
Under the way things are set up now, Seaver will be able to
play ol!l his option with the Mets when his current contract
eqds two years from now.
•'1don't want to ·play out my option," he says, "but I'll cross
that bridge when I come to it. I'm not being an angel about it;
I'm being a realist." 'Seaver knows what fellows like Reggie Jackson, Joe Rudi,
Il{ll Gullett and Bobby Grich received to sign with new duba
as free agents and be bas heard how some feel all this sudden
free spending in baseball Is getting ool of band.
.
.'.'Generally, you only hear one side of the story," he says.
"What about !be other side? For the first time in history,
bo!llplayers ~¥tvesome say in the direction bliseballls going, in
their game. That's good, but they also have to recognize their
own responsibility in all tbls."
·Jloes he have some personal reaction to all t!le millions being
S]ient on ballplayers?
Yes, he bas; and he goes back to the negotla"ons of last
·spring, the ones between the owne111 and Mal'Vin Miller,
representing the Payers' Association.
."1 think back to those negotiation sesaiom when we were
talking across the table, and the owners told Marvin 'we need a.
raserve clause.' Marvin said, 'why? To protect you from
yourselves?' I remember those words very dl.stlncUy. In that
fMlRB!!, he was postively prophetic."
What Torn Seaver Is saying Is that if anyone Is at fault for all
lliis lavish spending, It's the owners, not tbe players, and of
course, he's absolutely right. Not only does Marvin 1-filler say
the same thing, s0 does Charlie Finley and all the other
owners.

·The owners all want to win, but they don't wish to pay the
titce. Unfortunately for them, winning doesn't come cheaply.
'It's _so expenalve, that even spending a great deal of 1110ney
c!Qesn't automatically guarantee victoi'y.
·
:. Seaver's club, the Mets, were interested in some ol the free
isents like Jackson and Gary Matthews, but .they weren't
_aggressive enough. They didn't wlah to alter the salary
S!ructure of the entire club, an Idea which bad merit providing
~er clubB were willing to do the same thing. So the Mei.s hung
back a little too long, and in the end they wound up getting none
of the free agents. Seaver ratber wishes they bad.
''Our ball club has as good a pitching staff as you can find
anywhere," he sayj,' "But we need help. I was certainly
hopeful we'd get some, but it's their money lind they spend it as
tliey see fit." ·.
'
·

"·

.

--

The Flyers, off to their bell
start in eight years, upped
their season mart to ~ with
an 82-118 win over New
Orleans.
During the' weekend
Donoher said he was

\"ACATION EXTENDED
, TIFFIN, Ohio (UPI) Hetdelherg College has
O}itended its Christmas
vacation lor studenta by 10
diys becauae of a llhortage of
natural gBI!.
College Presl~ent Leslie
Fischel said Monday the
vacation will last from
li'iiday until Jan, 24. The
students had hMt lcbeduled
to return Jan. 14. He said the
cold wealb• in October and
made the school
use about 75 per cent more
IJII:I than It did last winter

*vember

Pam Vaughan 9-2-20; Burdette 1~2; Pat Vaughan 1·24; Howard~; Meadows 1).
0-0. Totals 1U-34.
In tbe ·Eastern contest,
Meigs was plagued with tumovers, but soother line offensive performance by Pam
Vaughan with -25 points
overcame the costly errors as
Meigs held on to win, 33-27.
Eastern's problem seemed
to be its cold shooting, from
the field, hitting just 19
percent llhots although the
girls sank II ol19 at the foul

Jr. High squad
SplitS 2 games
The Meigs eighth 'grade
basketball team defeated
Shade 6th grade 48-33 Monday
night at Middleport while the
seventh gr~de was defeated

0-32.

-

In the eighth grade action,
Britt Dodson _pwnped in 18
points; steve Ohlinger, II and
Joim Staats, 10. Ohlinger led
with 14 rebounds followed by
Staats :with II. Meigs had a
bad third quarter, only
scorlngtwopointa. They blew
· the game open In the fourth
quarter, however, outscoring
Shade IU.
.
For Shade, Dan Guthrie
bad 17 and Gerald Hawk, 6.
Meigs' record is ~- In the
seventh grade contest, Bob
Ashley was the big gun lor
Meigs chipping in 24
markers. Roger Kovalchik
lor Meigs had six points.
Scoring lor Shade were Lee
with 10; Moore, 8, and
Skinner and Whaley, 6 each.
The seventh grade's record is
1).2.

hil~quad's

bustle but he wanted to
reoerve judgment of·the t~
111til after this week.
That's understandable beca..., Friday and Saturday
niehts the Flyers are
acbeduled to host the U of D

Invitational with seventh·
ranked Alabama, Virginia
Tech and Oklahoma State
also participating.
"I'll llnow more after the
tournlmenl," Donoher said.
"It's too early fD tell anything

yet."

.

'

.

But 06noher bad to dlllked
what he SIW Monday night as
lour of his players acored in
double figures and the Flyers
lhot 52 per cent from the
field .
Sophomore forward Jim
Pauon pumped in a glllle-

Winless clubs meet in ·M orrison Gym
The 11 battle of winless" floor game.
takes place tonight as the
Meigs wW have to hold
,t,thens · Bulldogs Invade down the Bulldogs' Arnie
Larry R. Morrison Gym· Chonko -on the 'boards.
nasium to tangle with the Although he didn't score In
Meigs Marauders of Coach double figures Fnday as he
Ron Logan. The Bulldogs are usually does. he contributed
0-5 on the year while the
Marauders are D-3.
Last week both teams
showed that they can be
strong as they scared title
contending ·Waverly and
Ironton. After leading most of By GREG AIEIJ.O
the game, Athena waned in UPI Sports Writer
the last five minutes to fall to
The heart of Kentucky's
league-pick Waverly 61-66. basketball team has been
Meigs' score against second_, playing together for three
place-pick ironton wsa nearly years. South CaroUna 's
the aame, 61-M, as the Meigs young team found out
crew gave up a first half lead Mmday night how good the
and got cold, second-hall
.
shooting. Both teams are now
1).2 inside the SEOAL.
Meigs had some bright
spots in their loss. Senior
center Allen Stewart heg~n to
assel'\ himself and use his
strength to score eleven
points and collect seven
rebounds. A strong, inaide
P,erformance is what the
Marauders need.
BY KEN ROSENBERG
Leader Steve Randolph got UPI Spo!'ls Writer
hot finally and zipped the nets
NEW YORK (UPI) -Twolor sixteen points. High· time Helaman Trophy winner
scoring
Seniors
Dale Archie Griffin may not of
Browning and Alan Dodson impressed everyone with hLs
were held down to eight 1\Dd alatistics . during his first
seven points, respectively, professional season which
but Dodson alayed out of foul ended SIU\day but his attitude
trouble, a good sign. Look lor bas drawn praise from teamstrong performances from mates and coaches alike.
both of these cagers against . "I think a guy in his
Athens.
position coml!l! in with twoAnother bright spot was and-a-l)all strikes against
once again the Mrauder htm," Clnclnn•ti Bengals
bench. Junior KeMy Young captain Bub Johnson said of
again contributed with a fine his rookie teammate. "He
defensive game and six was so well kDown that guys
points. This time he was were ready lp take a potshot
joined by Brian HamUton
with lour._points and a good

with nine of his team's
twenty-five rebounds.
Athens bad a 'balanced
scoring attack as they placed
three men in double ligures.
Ed Pennell led wlU•l7 points,

Bob Meek' netted 14, and
Mark Wallace caMed 12 as
the Bulldogs shot a cool 40
percent II'Dm the 0001'.
Up until last season, Meigs
bad won just one game from
an Athens quintet. bu! alter

two straight wins over the
BulldOf!s last season, the
series record stands at 3-16.
Athens will be wanting to turn
the tables this season, 110 it all
adds up to an exciting night.

Wildcats humble Gamecocks 98-67
I

Wildcats have beciJJie.
Third-ranked Kimtucty
routed South Carolina 9U7,
the worst beating the
Gamecocks ever suffered at
Carolina Coll.sewn since it
opened In the 1968-79 "'.ason.

.

South Carolina's worst defeat
at hiXlle belire Monday night
was a seven-point lou to
Notre Dame last year.
"These kids are now junl&lt;rs," aatd Kentucky Coach
Joe Hall . "They have

Archie looks like money

in the bank for Bengals

MALE RING .BROKEN'
NEW YORK (UPI) - In
a year dominated by
oulslalldlng performaneeo
bY women albleteo, tenals
aiar Cbrts Even reigns ao
'
queen.
•
The %!-year-old Evert
beat out a long list of
Olympic gold medalists
and eraeked a prevlonsly
male·domlnated elrele
Monday when sbe was
named Sportswoman of the
Year by Spol'll Olastrated

againsi him, jump on him
whenever he made a mlatake.
"But he never said more
than a · few words-'hubbahubba, let's go,' that sort of
thing-and he · always had a
illllUe on his face and words of
encouragement fir the guys.
I don't think anybody who
won two Heis!llan Trophies
could have come in and
gotten accepted as well as
. Archie did."
After a ·slow start, due
parUy to an Injury suffered
while preparing lor the
College AIIStar game, the 21year-old Griffin finished with

Pac-8 ;moving
toward Pac 10
. -

improving athletic budgel.s
and
despite · the apparent
UPI Sports Wnter
reluctance
of the conference
SAN FRANCJSro (UPI) - ·
It'll soon be the Pacillc-10. members in the Pacific
The already prestigious Northwest.
UCLA Chancellor Charles
Paciflc-3 Conference Monday
formally extended Young, speaking lor the Pac•
membership invitations to 8 President's CouncU, said
m~gazlne.
Arizona State and Arizona of the Invitation Ia valld until
the
Western
Athletic May I, 1977, when the Pac-8
council holds Its next
Conference.
Following announcement of meeting.
In Soothing the feelings of
the Pac-8 decisioQ, ASU
four
Northwest
President Dr. John Schweda · the
and his University of Arizona universities - W!lllhlngton,
oounterpart, Dr. John P. Washington State, Oregon
Schaefer,
were contacted in and Oregon State - Young
line. Meigs shot 31 percent
Arizona
where
they added, "It Ls the conviction of
from the fioor and 7of12 from
·all members of the
expressed
delight.
the charity stripe.
Schweda repeatedly cooference that lbl.s is not a
Beth Vaughan cleaned the
move in any way to realign,
boards for the Marsuder gtrla emphasized the invitation
but to add two new
with seven reboiU\ds while must still be lonnally members."
accepted by the state Board
Cathy Meadows had six.
A
spokesman
for
Eastern _put a real scare' of Regents, who meet Friday. Washington
aald
prior
to
the
ASU and Arizona also lace
into the hosta the first quarter
four-$y conference meeting
the
threat
of
a
WAC
lnatltuted
as the girls of Coach Sue
saying be was opposed to
Thompson were fired up and sUit that would require them expanding because he felt the
to
fulfill
football
led 7·2 at the first buzzer.
Northwest IJnlversities,
Then again at the third commitments drawn up four
the
weakest
link in the
through
the
1981B.
buzzer It was 23-22 Meigs, but
cooference, would be cast
"Naturally,
we
are
very
the last canto saw the bosts
aside.
outscore the Eagles 10-5 lor pleased," eatd Scbwada. "We
Under the guidelines ap.
the win. Vicky Epple'a twelve feel we Will be a valuable proved by the presidents, a
points led the losers while addition to that conference, mintmwn
of
seven
Teresa Edwards tossed in and we wW give the Invitation cooference games must be
full coosideraUon."
eight.
'"11ll.s concludes a long played to qualify for the
Meigs- B. Vaughan 1~2;
conference football
Pam Vaughan 10-5-25; series of negotiations," said championship with ASU and
Schaefer.
"We
welcm1e
hoth
Burdette z.o-4; Pat Vaughan
the challenge and the Arizona becoml!tg ellgtble lor
~2-2 . Totals 13-7-33.
the Rose Bowl .in 1978.
opportwllty."
Eastern - Edwards 1-6-3;
Eventually, the conference
The
Pac-adeclsion
was
cast
Ambrose 1).1-1; Epple ii-2-12;
With an eye toward hopes to w&lt;rk up an eightBatey 2-2-t. Totals ~11-27.
game schedule.
.
The admlaslon requ~ent
also stated that If the Arizona
•
universities cannot comply
with the required minimum
sevengame football schedule
until 1982.- they will be
allowed to enter conference
The Eastfm Jwllor High cold first hall was the competition In other sports.
dropped two games over the downfall for the local team as
All an added incentive lor
weekend, losing to Waterloo's they scored just live points in conference members
lievenlh grade lt'&gt;-22 and to the each quarter before catching lukewann to the Arizona
eighth grade 27-38. In the first fit'e to score twelve in the admlsalons, the tftsldenla'
contest, Waterloo's Mike third to pull wlthiri one. But coundl said the 50-50 spUt of
Riley proved to be the dtf· Waterloo's big John Brooks gr018 recetpla in football will
lerence as he caMed 17 of hl.s was too much as he got fifteen be retained .
team's points.
on ·.the night to lead all
In basketball, an l&amp;«ame
.Coach Arch Rose praised scoreri. .
,
'
coafel'1lllce schedule will be
his boys for good defense, but
Greg Wigall led the l011ers played on a double rollld·
their offense was cold, hitting with ten polnta, while Bobby robin, hline-and-bome basla.
on just 13 ~rcent of their Barringer had .ltv~ points, The baseball schedule' calla
shots and COMecting on just five _steals, and a big 14 lor a divisional North-$oulb
12 percent of. their free rebounds. The Eaglettes alignment
with
the
throws. John Riebel led the camed just one of four free conf·erence seeking
losers with live points and throws while biting 26 percent . aul.on)atic qualification lor
most of his team's rebounds. from the field.
winners in the NCAA
In the second contest. a /
.
Tournament.
By GORDON SAKAMOTO

-(i-irls divide pair, of games
In recent Meigs High Girls'
basketball competition, the
Marauders drnpped a 51-34
contest .to state-champion
Parkersburg Catholic, but
then got revenge Saturday by
copping a 33-27 win over
visiting Eastern.
'Meigs coach Joy Bentley
said Parkersburg i.s one of the
strongest glrls'.teams she bas
ever seen as they seem to do
everything well - pass,
diibble, shoot, and rebound.
Mary Ostrowski led the
winners with eighteen
n'iarll'ers, but Meigs' Pam
Vaughan outshone that
performance with her twenty
points although she sat out
the entire third period due to
!qui trouble. Miss Vaughan
' was bot as she canned 9 of 15
aitempts. Beth Vaughan
added eight points.
Meigs shot a coot 24 pel'Cent
from the field, 14 ol118, while
the victors zipped 211 of 58
.tlirough the hoop for 34
p'ercent. Meigs netted 6 of 12
from the charity stripe while
~rkersburg got 13 of 21. ·
scoring:
Metes scoring . B.
Vaughan 3-2-t; Brown ~;

(

encouraged with

a respectable 625 yards on 140
carries for a 4.5 average. The
highlight of an otherwise
dlaappointing season was a
139-yard performance
against Kansas City, which
inclooed a 77-yard touchdown
burst.
"We're mainly a passing
team so Ididn'tcarry the baU
as much as J wanted to," ·
Grllfln said. ':Early in the
seaaon I niade mlatakes, I
guess you could call them
rookie mlalakes. I bad ID
learn the system. But as the
seaaon moved along, I got to
know the game better and
became real confident in the
thinga I did. At the end of the
.1\e&amp;BOn, I wasn't hesitating.
The Kansas City game gave
.me a great deal of
coolldence."
Despite the two Helamana
and despite the lict that he
bad' gained more than 100
yarda in 31 consecutive
games at Ohio State, GrHfln ·
was ptdted 24th in the college
draft because a large number
ol scout! belieVed he was too
small to withstand the
physical demands of the .pro
game.
"I think I dl.sproved all the
critics," the 5-foot-t, 191pound Griffin said. "It didn't
bother me · when all those
teams drafted other players.
I knew that whichever team
picked me up, it was goO. to
be the best thO. lor them. I
only willh I could've caught a
few more passes; but overall
I'm satlslled with the job I

did."
Cincinnati coach Bill
Johnson, who al.so completed
his first season Sunday with a
42-3 victory over the New
Yirk Jets whim gave the
Bengals a IQ.I record for the
l4!cond straight season, also
was pleased with Griffin's
progress and desire.
, "He's a super kid ,"
John1011 said. "He just ~epa
on working. Experience Ia the
big thing. In time, he'll ttl into
our passing game and he'll be
a raal star. He wu burt aome
early, and I'm sorry we didn't
p\ay him enough in the
exhibition garnet, but he

never gave up."
"I just can't watt for next
year," said Griffin, who will
begin wort on hLs ~
degree iJ) Industrial relationa
at Ohio State in the oilseason. "I'm just beginning
to know the guya better. I'm
just beginning "' tit in with
our bloclters. I'm looldng
forward to next year
' already."
.
.
So are a lot of other pebple.

-·

matured in front of our eyes.
They are more and more
coming to dominate good

tearns."
I1f winning its fifth game
without a loss and 14th
straight since last season,
Kentucky jumped to a I~
lead and a 52-34 halftime
margin. South Carolina,
which returned only two
experienced players from ·
last year's 18-&amp; team, didn't
score untU Jackie Gilloon hit
two free throws 3:13 Into the
game. The Gamecocks did
not scire from the field until
(38 had elapsed, When Golle
Augustus scored to make the
score 14-1.
"We shot 67 per·cent in the
first hall and played good
defense, too, " Hail said.
"There aren't a lot of teams
that can keep upe.with that."
Junior Jack l.ilvens led
Kentucky with 26 points,
followed by junior Mike
Pllillipa with 23. Senior Larry
Johnson added 16 points and
freshiDan Jay Shidler bad 10.
Gillcon scored 17 points and
freshman center Jim
Graziano 16 lor South
Car\)llna, now 1-3. In other
action, Bob Elmore's 22
points helped Wichita State
band Loog Beach state Its
first defeat in six games, 6378; Illinois edged Cleveland
State 'n-70 to gain ita fifth
victory in six games ; Carl
McPipe scored 25 points to
lead Nebrasu to an 118-53
triumph liver Northwest
Missouri State; Matt Hicks
had 26 points to ipark
· Northern I!Unols to lin 81-&amp;7
victory ·over Wisconsin;
freshman Dean Uthoff scored
22 poinls and grabbed 19
rebounds to power Iowa State
to a 71-70wln over California,
and Ron Jmes scired, nine
points In the final five
minute~ to help Texaa-El
Paso hold of! New Mexico
State 112-00.

high II points for the Flyert1
while freshman guard added
17 and junior forward ll'v
Giddings and sophomore
guard Doug Harris each bad
12.
Dayton atarted out lllrong,
gaining a 23-4 advantage
eatly in the game but New
Orleans fought back to
narrow the deficit to 43-11 at
balttime. . .
Ea,rly iQ the second haU
Dayton pulled away and two
back-to-back breakaway
lhotsby S-O center Tony Wella
put the Flyers up by 13 points
and they maintained that
lead the rest of the way .
Elsewhere Mondl!y night.
winletla.Cleveland State put a
scare in llllnois before
howlng 'n-70 at Champaign.
Guard Anch Battle ticked
off seven straight points in
the ·rtnal minute to pull
Cleveland State within two
before time ran out.
Cleveland State managed
to take a 22-12 lead with 1:114
remaining in an error-tilled
first bali. The Winl, however,
scored three straight baskets
in the last S7 seconds to give
them a 36-30 baittime lead.
Dtlnols upped lis sea110n
niark to li-1, whUe Cleveland
State dropped to Q.l.
In other game.s, Kenyon
downed Mt. Vernon Nazarene
96·80, Otterbein defeated
Dyke 94-84 and Wright St.
th111T1ped Indiana Central 8066.

Tonight, the red hot Toledo
Rockets tangle with MidAinerican Conference foe
Western Michigan QO the
road; Mt. Union travels to
John Carroll; Bethany
(W.Va). plays at Denison ;
Malone goes against Ohio
Dominican at Columbus, and
Urbana will he at Bluffton.
ThiS W..n Special

USED CARS

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..992-3629

Phone 992 -6304

EaStem drops two contests

~~R~y

IXMNING4tllDS MiENCY INC.

Middliport, Ohio
992-2341

..

�..

•

2,- The DeUy Senllnel, Mlddleport-Pmleroy,'O., Tueadav:Dec. l4. i976

Dayton found baffling maze
of how taxpayer money spent
WASIUNGTON (UPI ) Critics have claimed lor
years that the federal
government is a baf!llng

maze.
Not so well known Ia the
fact that when federal, alate
and local programs cornt
together in one !llllall part of .
the COIU\tr)l the result Ls even
more complex and confusing.
Now for the first time a
thorough study bas been
made of how these three
levels of government spend
taxpayers' money in one
metropolitan area : Dayton,
Ohio, and its surroundings.
A copy of the study,
cooducted by Community Research Associates, a non- •
. profit group based in st. Paul,
Minn., has been given w
Jimmy Carter's advlaera and
could play a role In his plans
for federal government
reorganization.
U nothing elBe, it demonstrates the complexity of any
reorganization plans.
The study makes clear that
organizing government,
deciding priorities and
getting the most lor the
taxpayers' money are alate
and local as well as
Washington problems.
The fact that it took a
three-year, $350,000 research
project to find out how
government ,money Is spent
in one area is in itself a civics
lesson.
DOOald B. Glabe, head of
t!le research group, aays that,
despite the age of comP!Iters,

"in no American community
do governmental officials and
civic leaders even know the
total volwne of governmental
funds expended, much less
how different pieces of the
whole are involved in the
~e problem areas and to
what extent."
The
study
covered
Montgomery County,
population 600,000, which
includes DaytDn and most of
its suburbs. Slxty-&amp;x local
.government jurisd'itions
spend money in this area .
They include the county. the
city of DaytDn, 15 smaller
cities, 13 towriships, 7 villages
and numerous school and
special purpose dlstrlcla.
Taxpayers' money also Ls ·
spen~ there by 55 state
agerides, Tl federal agencies
and
through
122
rxingovernmental
organIzations.
In 1973 ail of these 'federal ,
alate and local bodies spent
billion in public funds in
lhe county, three times what
local government planners
bad estimated.
Of this, f643 million was
spent
on
"national
problems," mainly by the
Pentagon under defense
contracts.
The study dealt with the
remaining 1787 million, which
was spent on problems of the
area. A breakdown shows
how big the federal role in
local affairs has become :
- Only .47 per cent of the
$787 million was spent

•u

through local government!.
The researchers expected
thi.s percentage to be higher.
Some 14 per cent was spent
directly by the state, 36 per
cent direcUy by the federal
goveriunent on community
problems and 3 per cent
through non-government
groups.
- When the analysts looked
at the original sources of this
money the local role was even
illllaller : 34 per cent came
originally from
local
revenues, 19 per cent from
state and 47 per cent from
federal reveJ!ueS.
- About three-fourths of
the federal money was spent
direcUy by the federal
government in the area. The
rest was channeled through
state, local goverrunenls and
non·government groups .
Federal money accounted lor
23 per cent of what the state
spent in the area, Tl per cent
of what local governments
spent and 89 per cent of what
oongovernmenll!,ro ..s spent.
The study showed that 80
. per cent of the mCJ!Iey spent
on community problems was
in a broad category ·of
"human resources , "
Including aid to Individuals,
health, education, recreation
and culture.
Amore detailed breakdown
of priorities raised many
questions in the minds of the
researchers:
- Nearly half went lor
subsidies to meet financial
problems of individuals and

families - including Social
Security, welfare and
Medicare . Are
these
programs the best lor this
purpose, the analysts asked,
or would others such as a
negative income tax, raising
the
retirement
age,
government creation of jobs ·
br
Intense
economic
development be better?
- Were" priorities in the
DaytDn area set Intentionally
or did they just happen?
Should housing be at the
bottom of the list? At a' time
when people are concerned
about unemployment should
more than 1 per cent be spent
on improving the economic
base to provide joba?
~ Was it intentional or
accidental that six cities
south of Day!Dn · together
spent $5.9 million lor "traffic
safety" but only 7 million
on "crime and delinquency''?

'1.

• The study suggests that
savings could be made
through consolidation of
programs: for example If
,Dayton's small mental health
program were merged with
the county's larger one,-or If
several smatl localities got
together to set up joint
personnel or vehicle repair
services programs.
Glabe says the methods .
- used In his study could be a
· model for other COmmiU\itles
'to keep track on a continuing
basis of how money is spent in
their area.
He also suggests that if

Ohio should shift hmden
off p~perty court told
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The state of Ohio llhould oot
continue u.sing property tax as a balla of IIU(l(llrtlnC
grade and high achools, the llupl!rinlllndent of Toledo,
Oltlo's, flnanclallytroubted school 1JY11em contends.
Frank Dick describes the property tax syatern aa
"the shakiest foundation we could have."
· Dick testtlled Monday In Hlrnilton County COIIUIIOit
Pleas Court on behaU of the Cincinnati Board of
Education, whim bas filed a lawsuit agaiMI the alate
and Ls seeking to revise the state method of lll()l)OI'Iing
schools.
Cincinnati school olllclals complain they are being
hurt because lacal votera are umrilllng t'o approve ·
property taX l""les.
''The state of Ohio IIIUllt assume more responstbillty
lor # inancing_ -elementary and secondary pubUc
schools," said Dick, noting that Toledo voters have
rejected school lt!VIes three times in the past year.
Toledo schools have been forced to closle this month
to save money, but are scheduled to reopen Jan. 3.
However, flick said that when tbe 197~77 school year
begins next September, there will -only be enough
money to keep Toledo schools open lor about a month.
Dick recommended that the alate pay at least half
the cost of operating local schools. The alate row picks
up about onethird of Cincinnati's school tab.
·
Dick also said it was more c0sUy to operate urban
schools than rural schools, citing expenses for burglar
alarms, monitors to maintain dl.sclpline and replacing
stolen equipment.
MeanwhUe, in a related development In aoother
COurt Monday, HamUton County Common Pleas Court
Judge Robert Wood responded to a taxpayers' lawsuit
and issued a temporary restraining order preventing
the Cincinnati Board of Education from paying private
lawyers.
However, John A. Uoyd, handling ' the school
financing suit for the school board, said be would
continue .working without pay on the case which Is
expected to last several months.

Jimmy Carter's federal reorganization is going to be more
than an "abstraction" more than moving some
"llries ,and ho&lt;es on the

organizational charts" - the
entire, complex federal-statelocal relationship must be
l"'}lled at.
-d·~JH

'Jl J&gt; (j

entirelf'tn Hughes' hand giving it legal staridlng even
without witilesses.
Attorney Jaines Dilworth,
representing
three Texas
thumbprint Is not Melvin
relatives
of
Hughes,
told a
Dummar's ..."
Dummar ~ld his only con- Los Angeles Superior Court
necUon with Hughes came in judge Monday that the FBI
1968; when he gave a ride to identified Dummer's
. Las Vegas to a shabbily fingerprint on the "will's"
dressed, bleeding old man he envelope, and (In a book and
found beside a lonely desert magazine containing samples
authentic
highway. The man said he of Hughes'
handwriting.
was Howard Hughes,
He said the prini.s were
Dummar said.
found
at Webet Sta~ College
The fight over the
in
Ogden,
Utah - where
document's authenticity
became a battle of Dummar had attended
handwriting
analysts, classes - on a copy of
centered on whether the will "Ho!lx," about Clifford
phony
bad in fact · been written Irving's
"autobiography" of Hughes,
and · a 1971 Ule magazine
article, "The Elusive Howard
Hughes as Revealed Through
his
Letters."
Pages
containing samples of
has been appointed prlncipai Hughes' writing were torn
investigator for the project. out, he said.
Razor previously worked
"It's been our belle! for
with the environmental months that Mr. Dummar
consulting firm of A.M. was, and had to he, involved
Kinney, Inc., and with Miles in the forgery of thLs will,"
Laboratories.
DUworth said. 1

Hughes' Mormon Will is close to rejection
By JACK V. FOX
LOS ANGELES (UPI) ' - The purported "Mopnon
Will" of Howard Hughes,
carrying a windfall of wealth
for a desert "good
Samaritan," was on the
verge of destruction today by
a fingerprint that may bring
down criminal charges as one
of the biggest attempted
swindles in history.
If so, Hughes' $2.5 billion

Ford calling
in Monarchs
and Granadas

·'

fortiUie could go to relatives
he saw utile of in life . ..
The legal sponsor· of the
disputed will, attorney
am-old Rhoden, ·planned to
ask a Las Vegas, Nev., judge
today to suspend probate
proceedings and demand the
Nevada attorney general's
office turn over evidence the
uwlllu is a fake.
He promised to withdraw
the document if the reports
are true.
. Rhoden, and attorneys for
·Hughl!l!' relatives fighting the
will, · told a Los Angeles
Superior Court judge Monday

that the FBI, at tile request of
Ne~ada',
identified
a
fingerprint on the will's
envelope as that of Melvin
Dummar, a Willard, Utah,
gas station operator.
Dubbed the "Mormon Will"
because it appeared mysteriously on a desk in Mormon
Church headquarters in Salt
Lake City thr.ee weeks alter
Hughes died, it left Dummar
one-sixteenth of Hughes' fortune or more than $100
million .
"There are , potential
criminal charges here." said

Nevada Attorney Gimeral
Robert List about the
flngerprlni. "What they are
and who they might be !Ued
against, I'm not going to say
at this point. ~ '
.
He would not discuss the
fingerprint, but Nevada
sources corifinned it bad
been lonnd.
In Ogden, Utah, Dummsr's
lawyer, Roger Dutson, said
"we simply deny that
Dummar ever handled that
letter fit· had anything to do
with tlie writing of Howard
Hughes'
will.
That
'

Study tmderway to remove River chemicals

By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A · quality of drinking water that Protection Agency is
UPI Auto Wrjter
twoyear study Is underway to comes from the river.
providing grant monies to see
DETROIT
(UPl )
find ways to remove organic
"The project Is aimed at' the work to fruition. "
Defects involving safety hell chemicals in Ohio River developing practical methods
Bill G. Razor, 39, a chemist
and suspension systems have water treated lor drinking, for
removing
these and environmental enlfilleer.
forced the Ford Motor Co. to the Ohio River Valley Water substances from drinking
begin recalling more than 'Sanitation Commission water," said commission
100,000 cars involving 1976 announced Monday.
officials. "Water utilities
THEDALVSENTI'NEL
and 1977 model Ford
Conu'lli!loion olllciala aaid uaing the Ohio River and
Granaadas and Mercury ·· the project, called "Organic some of the major tributaries
D~~~~ri:E
l'ttEIGS.MASON AREA
Monarchs.
Substances In the Ohio River as a supply source ·are
CIIESTERL. TANNEHILL
, Ford said 66 600 cars are ··and · Associated Water strongly endorsing and Eu1.·. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
Involved In th~ aafety hell Supplies," is "in rl!!lponse to funding the project, and the
Cllf Editor
recall and 36,100 in the publlc concern" about the U.S . Environmental
PublishetJ ~.bu l)' CJtn~pl &amp;ltqrday
lly The Ohto V11lh!YlPublishinM CUI~l­
suspension system recall. II
llny, 111 Cuurl St., Pumeroy, OhiU
said the total number of cars
Wl1Ulers
4S769. Bllllin~ss Offkc Pl]one 992Involved was not known since
,
21 56. Editorial Plmnt! 992-21$7.
Si:t.'Ond chtss J)O!IU! gt! pair! at
many of the cars, par-· Winners in the latest mark; Reona King, Jr., New
Pt1•11er uy, Ohio.
ticularly two-door models. Christmas Gold Star Give- Haven, Francis Florist ;
National ad\'ertlslng n:prescuare included In both safety Away and the store where Marie Root, Coolville, J&amp;R ; Liilive W11rd - Grlflith Company,.J n- By Polly Cramer
;~nd Gu llagllt r DiY .,
cam~igns .
their $10 gilt may be picked Rollin Dill,
Pomeroy, c.757, Buu.inelli
Third Ave., New York , N.\' .
POLLY'S PROBLEM
10017.
AFord spokesman Monday up are:
Marguerite's, Anna Cornell,
DEAR
POLLY - Our new
Sulx;cripli
on
tales:
Del
ivered
by
said owners of the affected
Martha Bland, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Pomeroy Flower currier where I:IVIIiiHble 75 c~ nt.s ~r
sink
has
marks on it from
cars will receive separate PQ!lleroy, Goessters; Naomi Shop; No)a Swisher, Mid- wt-ek. By Motor Roo~ whe re c11rrier
aluminum
pots and pam. I
scr:vil'f
not
Hvailable,
One
month,
notices and repairs will be Brinker, Racine, Swisher &amp; dleport, Elberleids ; Irene
:tl.25. By mail in Ol1iu and W. V11.,
was
told
not
to use harsh
made by dealers at no charge Lohse; William Zerkle, Baxter, Pomeroy, Land· One Year, $22.00; Six munllas,
abrasives
like
cleansers,
to the owners.
Syracuse, Chapman Shoes; mark ; John R. Hunnei, $1 1.53; Three months , $7 .00 ;
Elsewhere $26.00 y~ll r ; Six montlas
since
they
would
wear
away
There have been no ac- Sherman R. Vteret, Mason, Pomeroy, Stilfier's; Debbie $13.50 ; Three months , $U O.
the
enamel,
vihich
is
what
cldenla or lnjurie~ aa a resuH Fabric Shop; Frances Young, Pomeroy, Crow's Subscription price includes Sun~&lt;I Y
happened
to
my
old
sink.
I
Tim ~Y"Senth1el .
of eithe~ problem.
Nelson, Rutland. K&amp;C; Uoyd Steak House; Ruth Grindhave
tried
several
products
Jenkins, Pomeroy, Land- staff, Racine, Sltlfler's.
on this one, but nothmg
budges those marks. El1iiE.
DEAR ElSIE -When you
were told not to use cleansertl
on the sink, you sbould have
asked what they recommeaded. I have always
eleaued an enamel sinll with
a mUd powdered household
cleaner and rubbed with a
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. affected by this in any way away: Your early treatment Children can be affected spnoge or cloth to ' remove
D't'AR DR. LAMB-I need even though I am O.K. now? . may bav~ made it possible during birth by a woman with such black marks. Of coill'fle,
an answer badly to a question Also can It ever recur again for you to be a mother.
active, untreated gonorrhea. ha111b ones would dull the
that has been bothering ·me without any reaso11?
· One of the blg dangers of
I should take this occasion · glaze.
lor sometime. I don't know
DEAR READER - I un- gonorrhea Is that It will cause to remind all young people
Some who say not to use
how else to phrase it so here it derstand how desperate you Inflammation of the tubes that gonorrhea Ls a con- cleanser! reeommend dishi.s blunUy.
mast feel. The blood test done and cause them to become tagious illness. You can get It Washing detergent or a few
About. a year. ago I was for marriage examination is blocked with scar tissue. In from anyone who Ls infected drops of ammonia on the
unfortunate enough to con· not a test lor gonorrhea and effect a gonorrhea infection If you have sexual relations damp cloth. II might also be
tract a Severe case of your previous infection wJll may do a tubal sterilization of with them .
whitened by putting soem
gonorrhea. I went to my not be detected by the test. the woman. I hasten to add
In women there Ls a fairly bleaeb in water in the sink
gynecologist, and with time The blood test H only for that the tubes can become high incidence of asymp. and let, stand lor about live
and medication I was given a syphiliS.
blocked. from many ·other tomatic gonorrhea. The minutes, Tue rinse well. clean bill of health.
.
Tests are being developed causes, and just because a change in normal secretions POLLY.
I am now going with a lor gonorrhea, but they are woman has blocked tubes may not be enough to warn
wonderful man and we have stlil in the research stage. ·does not mean that she has her that she is infected. This
DEAR READERS - Irene
dl.scussed marriage. I have .The diagnosis of gonorrhea is had gonorrhea.
also hai'Pens in men but not and Mn. G.S.O . .wrote that
never mentioned this incident stili made by identllying the
No, since you had the good · nearly as often. Birth control · they used Emma's pointer lor
to ·him lor it is somethi~g I organiillllfrom a smear taken judgement.to see your doctor. pills, IUDs, • and the removing spots and stains
preler.to forget. When I go for with ·a swab or by sinplar and gel early treatment there withrawal technique wltl not from nu111es' unlfonns with
my blood test, I am petrified techniques. That is one is no real danger that the protect a person from cream of tartar, and were Iell
that perhaps due to some reason why it is more difficult disease will recur. II you venereal disease . The con~ with wrinkled while slacks.
chemical reaction the test to diagnose gonorrhea and have gonorrhea again it will dom will help some if It is Wring a thin soft pressing
might show some evidence develop .more effective ways be from a ~ew sexual part- used properly. This same clolli out of half water aad
thai 'would ·tndicate that at of eradicating it.
ner, not from one in the past. Information also applies to haU while vinegar, place Ibis
one time I had V.D. I have
You did the right thing, and
Your children will not be some people not' so young. over the wnnkles, press with ·
heard that this Ls possible. Is l want to commend you on affected wHh the disease now Germs don't care how old you a hot Iron and have no more
it true? Can our children be going to your 'ioctor right _ that you have been cured. are - 9 or 90.
wrinkles. I have even used

Gold Star ,

announced

Mild cleanser fine
for enamel sink

DR. LAMB

Gonorrhea can be fully cured

t

..

L

•

3- The DeUySenllnel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec, U. 1976

Sandwich end~
hunger strike -~;.
By KEN OONNAUGHTON
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)

- Gary GUmore munmed on
a cheese and baloney
SBI!dwich in hLs prlaon cell
late Monday, ending a . .Y
hunger strike, apparently
sall.stfied that he will finally
be allowed to die before a
Utah firing ,quad.
The U.s. Supreme Coart
siamped tla approval 111
GUmore's demand that the
State of Utah carry out his
death sentence and after a
2-ho..- strategy session with
hLs lawyers, GUmore called
lor leii!d, guards atUtah State
Prison saicl.
It was ll:30 p.m,, well past
the supper hour, but Gilmore
Willi given the sandwich and
an orange In his Isolated cell
in the hospital infirmary.
••He wanted more, but we
wouldri'l give it to him- we
didn't feel he was ready for
It," a spokesman said. "He·

Athens Frosh
in 49-27 win

•

rm,

J~!&gt;t hUDgry apia aboulla.m. :;:~
and we ga.. him 1011111 more "'
orqa llld milk."
:t;
GUmorebad bepn bilfall, ~
· taking only llquidl, to protelt .:;.]
the refulal ol autborltlll to:;;'
allow him to contact hla...,;~
glrUrlend who WIIUcceulully;:::~
tri!ld to commit llllicide In her;~~
Provo apartment at tbe ume!.t
baur Gilmore toQt pllla in an
effort to end"hla own life. ·
r..!
~
1"

""

ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses were . ,
Lssued to Leo Francis Layne;''·
21, Racine, and Karen Jane,,,
Clark, 20, Racine; Woodrow.. ..
William Call, III, 19,
Pomeroy, and Christy Kay .•.
Hook!~, 16, Rt. 4 Pomeroy; ~~
'James Ronald Pooler, Sr., 32,0;
Middleport, and Beverly,,_
Marlene Hall, 24, Mason; ,.
Timothy Ralph Helton, 18, Rt.--"
1, Dexter, and Kathy L)'m:.~
Rupe, 18, Rt. I, Dexter;
Timothy Ray Cundiff, 1V,, ;
Pomeroy, and Debra Lynn_,,
Call, 21, Pomeroy.

,.
The host Athens freshmen
,.
buUI up a J.S-:10· lead, then Leona Beckley
f-:1
went on to defeat the Meigs ·
'"
lrosb, 49-T/ Monday night.
••
The Athens fro&amp;h are 1-1 in died on Sunday '"
league play. Meigs dropped
to 1).2. Mrs. Leona Mae Beckley',
For the winne.S, Randy M, Logan, Ohio, a native of ;
ll{lbo had 10. Red Ross and Meigs County, died Sunday irt'"
Allen Meyer each had eight. Hocking Valley Hospital
For the UtUe Marauders, following a long Illness.
,,~
Tim Faulk and Dan Thomas
She was
May 1Jl, 1896·:
each bad eight points.
in Meigs County, daughter of
Athens Is at Wellston the late William and Mirandll' • .
Thursday. The Meigs fi'Osh HUtton Patterson.
-"' "'
will host Logan. ·
Her husband, John R! ,;
Beckley, a retired mail
carrl~r in the l!lwtngton area; "
SEOfm~h :' surVives
along ·With several'"'
I'
; I ' , · · , "I
nephews·· and ' nieces, In•"
eluding William Patterson of•
Logan, with - whom they
SEOAL FRESHMEN

oom

.

standingS

TEAM
Gallipolis

W L P OP

reSided.

"':"~

·

Also surviving Is a brother,
Waverly
Noah Patterson ·of Kl.sstn...••
Athens
Logan
1 1 86 86 mee, Fla. The Beckleys :
Jackson
1 1 84 92 lonnerly lived In the WUkes11. •
Wellston
o 2 80 93 ville area.
Meigs
0 2 54 97
Funeral services will b4!' •
TOTALS
7 7 573 573 held at 2 p.m. Wednesday•'
Monday's results:
frilm the Jenkins FuneraF
Logan 50 Wollston 47
Chapel in Wellston with Rev.
Athens 49 Meigs 27
Waverly 59 Jackson Al
John M. Taylor olflciating!u
Gallipolis - 'Open
Burial will follow in Casto!" •
Thursday's g11mes:
Cemetery
in Meigs County.:~
Logan at Meigs
Visitation will be held at the'?
Waverly at Gallipolis
Athens at Wellston
funeral .home after 2 p.rn.
Jackson - .Open
today.
'
~. ~
'

2 0 87 63'
2 0 98 76
1 1 84 66

•

-

..
h

;~:::::*::::::::::;:::::::::--&gt;::~:::;:;:;::~:s»"!:s».::::~~~~~a~~:*.::x

!!

Generation Rap

:·:·'•'

By Helen and Sue Botte_l

:-:·:.;·

::::

Dayto!f, five romps over New Orleans, 82-68

Love-Me Love ijy Avo!mlpols?
'"
Rap :
I ~~~·('! ,..,.
' -;,
"'
..
I'm engaged !J!1g iP!Y ~1adore but I'!JI not Sll\'~',j!e loves me ;~
He's always nagging me aoout losing the 70 pounds I've put 01).1
since ll!let him. He won't take me places. He'd rather be with
his friends.
He ~xpecls ine to snap my llnge!J and the pounds will go. t.
try talking to him about it; he get! mad and stamps out.
.: :
When I tell him I'D leave him So he won't be ashamed, he
. begs me to stay. I even tried killing myseU. He was nice for a
whUe alter that.
I thought love was seeing the beauty .in the Inside, not ~i
outaide. I lost ten pounds, and he didn't even notice. Should ~;
just take a walk?"- OVERWEIGHT AND LOVESICK :o

·'I
white ~~egar alone when 0 and I.S,
·
.
"
1
wrlnkler were on the stubTake that walk to yoru famUy doctor's office! A large u
born side. This i• alao greal to sudden weight g. . could mean a medical or psychiatrl~ ,
remember now that •o many problem. Physical and mental therapy may ground your
are letting hems down a bit balloon ride, where your fiance's nagging "hot air" will oiJ!y,
and lind tbe crease line Ill proloog 11. - HELEN
manytbl ·fatobrlca alrnost halm·
:H+
;:
JIOIIS e
remove. 1 ve
NOTE FROM SUE: YoU said, '1 even tried ldlllnc:
never bad II faU. ,Motbenl myself!" Correction: Unless you melt those pounds and keep,.
"ith. growing daugblertl have Utern off; you're STILL tr)llng to conunit suicide -the alo'l'•
told me It has been a !He way.
,.,
aaver, or I sbonld oay a
As for seeing the beauty on the inside, could you honestly
clothe• saver, lor them. love your fiance as much if there were some 100 more pounda·;
~~
•
of~
•
' DEAR POLLY - The .
'
·
"'
.
B+
.
~;
laundry tub is great for Dear Rap:
.:
bathing small dogs. Put a
Tom and 1 agreed we'd have an open marriage - wi.J.'~
rubber mat In it to keep the limits. That Is, we enjoy many friends of the DPIJ(Jiite sex,
dog's feet from slipping, and free to go places without the other, aometlma in mixecl.
a plug of steel wool in the company. But there'&amp; oo fooling around - jlllt lots of trust ••
drain opening to collect any Which Is good t&gt;ecause we're both in college and .have Jobs:
loose hair. It Is easy to That means lots of 'separation.
,
_,
remove and throw away _
But b(1W.do you get It acl'081 to certain guys you aren't oo:;
when the bath is over. Fill tub . themskejustbecauseyouUketheir company? I )ike talking~ .
with lukewann water half men, maybe picking theil' brains, but some of them ~
way up to the dog's tummy becauaeldon'tclingtoTml,I'maftersomethlngelae.
and use a good shampoo to
Isn't it pnsslble for men and women fD be friends witho~
rubsudsintothecoatstartlng one or the other gelling ideas? -MARRIED ''FREEDOI'tl,;
at the back. Wash gently FIGHTER"
'
·around the head last and be ·
·
careiUJ not to get the smapoo near M.F.F.:
:r
Into the pel's eyes and ears.
Yes it's possible for a min and woinan to be jusl.friendsFor extra caution a -cotton · espedaUy H tbey're upfrmt about the relationahlP from the ~
ball can be put in each ear start. But fm- some, "~posite aex" means conquest-time, an4.
during the bath. Rinse with a there's litUe . y~u can do to change them.
..
flexible shower head atLet these "ldea.guvs" know they've read your sipali"
!ached to the faucet, ualng wrong. II they still cm1e on strong (or think you're playin(
lukewaf!D water. Blot pen bard to get), avoid 'em. Perhaps they're the type wbo figure-'
dry with a large old bath brains aren't Cl•'l1patible l!ith females. - HEU:N
.:;
towel. - JANET K.
· +++
Polly wUis~nd you one ol her M.F .F.:
'"
"peacby" thank-you eards,
It's hard to suppress male-female feellnp entirely in alt
ideal lor framing or ,placing ~polite aex friendship. But Wlleu the guy Is over 50 per cent'
ID your family aerapbooll, if male cbaU1(inlst, he'D accept your cloeed-end open marriage It;
she uses your favorite you take the trouble to expiafu.
c.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
That doe~~~'l mean he Wllll'l try a good-11atured pBt!&amp; of
her column. Write · PollY'• two,crlbatyou'lhuppreaaUyourfUrtlnginltincts. But you'll'
Pointe111 in eare ollbti new• both understand about keeping acUons within bounds ... wbic!l'
paper.
Is the main thing, right? - SUE
•
&gt;::1

tee1:

'1

By
United
Prell
IDtel'lllll!IUI
Deyton coach Don Donober
· was given some added
encouragement Monday
night Bt! the unbeaten Flyers
·launmed their biggest week
of the young basketball

_Today's

Sport Parade
.

-

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI SpoiU Editor
.

.

.

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Tlltl Seaver was waiting around to
have hia car serviced when the fellow who runs the place, a
man he bas known fir some time, asked him how come he
hadn't played out hLs option and gotten himself a quick two or
llu'ee mWion the same way a IIUDber of other playeni bad,
''That's the same question my lather asked me," said the .
Mets' llu'eHlrne Cy Y&lt;~~q · Award winner.
"I'D tell you the same thing l told him," Seaver aald to the
auiomobUe man. ''There's something called loyalty. My
milther agreed with me."
Seaver bas a good contract with the Meta, one of the best
there Is, In fact. He gets better than J220,000 a year lor three
years and bas a conditlooal clause enabling him to trip even
that. Good as ·IU Cllltract Ls, he's fUlly aware be could've
gotten himself even more llloney had he not signed back on
with the Met! last spring after a long, sometimes bitter
exchange between him and the club during salary
negotiations. · ··
·
"I feel that I have to have some sense of loyalty even though
I question my own judgement when I think back to last spring
and remember how the Melll said they were considering
·trading me because of my salary negotiatiOill! with them,"
Seaver aays. The Mets' ace wW be 32 this Friday. He bas been a 20-iJame
winner four times in 10 years and although he bad onir a 14.11
log last season, 111ly two others were able to better his 2.69
ERA and he led the National League with 235 strikeouts. It was
the fifth time in the past seven years he did that and the ·ninth
straight year he struck out 200or more batters. No other major
league pitcher has ever done tha! .before. '
Under the way things are set up now, Seaver will be able to
play ol!l his option with the Mets when his current contract
eqds two years from now.
•'1don't want to ·play out my option," he says, "but I'll cross
that bridge when I come to it. I'm not being an angel about it;
I'm being a realist." 'Seaver knows what fellows like Reggie Jackson, Joe Rudi,
Il{ll Gullett and Bobby Grich received to sign with new duba
as free agents and be bas heard how some feel all this sudden
free spending in baseball Is getting ool of band.
.
.'.'Generally, you only hear one side of the story," he says.
"What about !be other side? For the first time in history,
bo!llplayers ~¥tvesome say in the direction bliseballls going, in
their game. That's good, but they also have to recognize their
own responsibility in all tbls."
·Jloes he have some personal reaction to all t!le millions being
S]ient on ballplayers?
Yes, he bas; and he goes back to the negotla"ons of last
·spring, the ones between the owne111 and Mal'Vin Miller,
representing the Payers' Association.
."1 think back to those negotiation sesaiom when we were
talking across the table, and the owners told Marvin 'we need a.
raserve clause.' Marvin said, 'why? To protect you from
yourselves?' I remember those words very dl.stlncUy. In that
fMlRB!!, he was postively prophetic."
What Torn Seaver Is saying Is that if anyone Is at fault for all
lliis lavish spending, It's the owners, not tbe players, and of
course, he's absolutely right. Not only does Marvin 1-filler say
the same thing, s0 does Charlie Finley and all the other
owners.

·The owners all want to win, but they don't wish to pay the
titce. Unfortunately for them, winning doesn't come cheaply.
'It's _so expenalve, that even spending a great deal of 1110ney
c!Qesn't automatically guarantee victoi'y.
·
:. Seaver's club, the Mets, were interested in some ol the free
isents like Jackson and Gary Matthews, but .they weren't
_aggressive enough. They didn't wlah to alter the salary
S!ructure of the entire club, an Idea which bad merit providing
~er clubB were willing to do the same thing. So the Mei.s hung
back a little too long, and in the end they wound up getting none
of the free agents. Seaver ratber wishes they bad.
''Our ball club has as good a pitching staff as you can find
anywhere," he sayj,' "But we need help. I was certainly
hopeful we'd get some, but it's their money lind they spend it as
tliey see fit." ·.
'
·

"·

.

--

The Flyers, off to their bell
start in eight years, upped
their season mart to ~ with
an 82-118 win over New
Orleans.
During the' weekend
Donoher said he was

\"ACATION EXTENDED
, TIFFIN, Ohio (UPI) Hetdelherg College has
O}itended its Christmas
vacation lor studenta by 10
diys becauae of a llhortage of
natural gBI!.
College Presl~ent Leslie
Fischel said Monday the
vacation will last from
li'iiday until Jan, 24. The
students had hMt lcbeduled
to return Jan. 14. He said the
cold wealb• in October and
made the school
use about 75 per cent more
IJII:I than It did last winter

*vember

Pam Vaughan 9-2-20; Burdette 1~2; Pat Vaughan 1·24; Howard~; Meadows 1).
0-0. Totals 1U-34.
In tbe ·Eastern contest,
Meigs was plagued with tumovers, but soother line offensive performance by Pam
Vaughan with -25 points
overcame the costly errors as
Meigs held on to win, 33-27.
Eastern's problem seemed
to be its cold shooting, from
the field, hitting just 19
percent llhots although the
girls sank II ol19 at the foul

Jr. High squad
SplitS 2 games
The Meigs eighth 'grade
basketball team defeated
Shade 6th grade 48-33 Monday
night at Middleport while the
seventh gr~de was defeated

0-32.

-

In the eighth grade action,
Britt Dodson _pwnped in 18
points; steve Ohlinger, II and
Joim Staats, 10. Ohlinger led
with 14 rebounds followed by
Staats :with II. Meigs had a
bad third quarter, only
scorlngtwopointa. They blew
· the game open In the fourth
quarter, however, outscoring
Shade IU.
.
For Shade, Dan Guthrie
bad 17 and Gerald Hawk, 6.
Meigs' record is ~- In the
seventh grade contest, Bob
Ashley was the big gun lor
Meigs chipping in 24
markers. Roger Kovalchik
lor Meigs had six points.
Scoring lor Shade were Lee
with 10; Moore, 8, and
Skinner and Whaley, 6 each.
The seventh grade's record is
1).2.

hil~quad's

bustle but he wanted to
reoerve judgment of·the t~
111til after this week.
That's understandable beca..., Friday and Saturday
niehts the Flyers are
acbeduled to host the U of D

Invitational with seventh·
ranked Alabama, Virginia
Tech and Oklahoma State
also participating.
"I'll llnow more after the
tournlmenl," Donoher said.
"It's too early fD tell anything

yet."

.

'

.

But 06noher bad to dlllked
what he SIW Monday night as
lour of his players acored in
double figures and the Flyers
lhot 52 per cent from the
field .
Sophomore forward Jim
Pauon pumped in a glllle-

Winless clubs meet in ·M orrison Gym
The 11 battle of winless" floor game.
takes place tonight as the
Meigs wW have to hold
,t,thens · Bulldogs Invade down the Bulldogs' Arnie
Larry R. Morrison Gym· Chonko -on the 'boards.
nasium to tangle with the Although he didn't score In
Meigs Marauders of Coach double figures Fnday as he
Ron Logan. The Bulldogs are usually does. he contributed
0-5 on the year while the
Marauders are D-3.
Last week both teams
showed that they can be
strong as they scared title
contending ·Waverly and
Ironton. After leading most of By GREG AIEIJ.O
the game, Athena waned in UPI Sports Writer
the last five minutes to fall to
The heart of Kentucky's
league-pick Waverly 61-66. basketball team has been
Meigs' score against second_, playing together for three
place-pick ironton wsa nearly years. South CaroUna 's
the aame, 61-M, as the Meigs young team found out
crew gave up a first half lead Mmday night how good the
and got cold, second-hall
.
shooting. Both teams are now
1).2 inside the SEOAL.
Meigs had some bright
spots in their loss. Senior
center Allen Stewart heg~n to
assel'\ himself and use his
strength to score eleven
points and collect seven
rebounds. A strong, inaide
P,erformance is what the
Marauders need.
BY KEN ROSENBERG
Leader Steve Randolph got UPI Spo!'ls Writer
hot finally and zipped the nets
NEW YORK (UPI) -Twolor sixteen points. High· time Helaman Trophy winner
scoring
Seniors
Dale Archie Griffin may not of
Browning and Alan Dodson impressed everyone with hLs
were held down to eight 1\Dd alatistics . during his first
seven points, respectively, professional season which
but Dodson alayed out of foul ended SIU\day but his attitude
trouble, a good sign. Look lor bas drawn praise from teamstrong performances from mates and coaches alike.
both of these cagers against . "I think a guy in his
Athens.
position coml!l! in with twoAnother bright spot was and-a-l)all strikes against
once again the Mrauder htm," Clnclnn•ti Bengals
bench. Junior KeMy Young captain Bub Johnson said of
again contributed with a fine his rookie teammate. "He
defensive game and six was so well kDown that guys
points. This time he was were ready lp take a potshot
joined by Brian HamUton
with lour._points and a good

with nine of his team's
twenty-five rebounds.
Athens bad a 'balanced
scoring attack as they placed
three men in double ligures.
Ed Pennell led wlU•l7 points,

Bob Meek' netted 14, and
Mark Wallace caMed 12 as
the Bulldogs shot a cool 40
percent II'Dm the 0001'.
Up until last season, Meigs
bad won just one game from
an Athens quintet. bu! alter

two straight wins over the
BulldOf!s last season, the
series record stands at 3-16.
Athens will be wanting to turn
the tables this season, 110 it all
adds up to an exciting night.

Wildcats humble Gamecocks 98-67
I

Wildcats have beciJJie.
Third-ranked Kimtucty
routed South Carolina 9U7,
the worst beating the
Gamecocks ever suffered at
Carolina Coll.sewn since it
opened In the 1968-79 "'.ason.

.

South Carolina's worst defeat
at hiXlle belire Monday night
was a seven-point lou to
Notre Dame last year.
"These kids are now junl&lt;rs," aatd Kentucky Coach
Joe Hall . "They have

Archie looks like money

in the bank for Bengals

MALE RING .BROKEN'
NEW YORK (UPI) - In
a year dominated by
oulslalldlng performaneeo
bY women albleteo, tenals
aiar Cbrts Even reigns ao
'
queen.
•
The %!-year-old Evert
beat out a long list of
Olympic gold medalists
and eraeked a prevlonsly
male·domlnated elrele
Monday when sbe was
named Sportswoman of the
Year by Spol'll Olastrated

againsi him, jump on him
whenever he made a mlatake.
"But he never said more
than a · few words-'hubbahubba, let's go,' that sort of
thing-and he · always had a
illllUe on his face and words of
encouragement fir the guys.
I don't think anybody who
won two Heis!llan Trophies
could have come in and
gotten accepted as well as
. Archie did."
After a ·slow start, due
parUy to an Injury suffered
while preparing lor the
College AIIStar game, the 21year-old Griffin finished with

Pac-8 ;moving
toward Pac 10
. -

improving athletic budgel.s
and
despite · the apparent
UPI Sports Wnter
reluctance
of the conference
SAN FRANCJSro (UPI) - ·
It'll soon be the Pacillc-10. members in the Pacific
The already prestigious Northwest.
UCLA Chancellor Charles
Paciflc-3 Conference Monday
formally extended Young, speaking lor the Pac•
membership invitations to 8 President's CouncU, said
m~gazlne.
Arizona State and Arizona of the Invitation Ia valld until
the
Western
Athletic May I, 1977, when the Pac-8
council holds Its next
Conference.
Following announcement of meeting.
In Soothing the feelings of
the Pac-8 decisioQ, ASU
four
Northwest
President Dr. John Schweda · the
and his University of Arizona universities - W!lllhlngton,
oounterpart, Dr. John P. Washington State, Oregon
Schaefer,
were contacted in and Oregon State - Young
line. Meigs shot 31 percent
Arizona
where
they added, "It Ls the conviction of
from the fioor and 7of12 from
·all members of the
expressed
delight.
the charity stripe.
Schweda repeatedly cooference that lbl.s is not a
Beth Vaughan cleaned the
move in any way to realign,
boards for the Marsuder gtrla emphasized the invitation
but to add two new
with seven reboiU\ds while must still be lonnally members."
accepted by the state Board
Cathy Meadows had six.
A
spokesman
for
Eastern _put a real scare' of Regents, who meet Friday. Washington
aald
prior
to
the
ASU and Arizona also lace
into the hosta the first quarter
four-$y conference meeting
the
threat
of
a
WAC
lnatltuted
as the girls of Coach Sue
saying be was opposed to
Thompson were fired up and sUit that would require them expanding because he felt the
to
fulfill
football
led 7·2 at the first buzzer.
Northwest IJnlversities,
Then again at the third commitments drawn up four
the
weakest
link in the
through
the
1981B.
buzzer It was 23-22 Meigs, but
cooference, would be cast
"Naturally,
we
are
very
the last canto saw the bosts
aside.
outscore the Eagles 10-5 lor pleased," eatd Scbwada. "We
Under the guidelines ap.
the win. Vicky Epple'a twelve feel we Will be a valuable proved by the presidents, a
points led the losers while addition to that conference, mintmwn
of
seven
Teresa Edwards tossed in and we wW give the Invitation cooference games must be
full coosideraUon."
eight.
'"11ll.s concludes a long played to qualify for the
Meigs- B. Vaughan 1~2;
conference football
Pam Vaughan 10-5-25; series of negotiations," said championship with ASU and
Schaefer.
"We
welcm1e
hoth
Burdette z.o-4; Pat Vaughan
the challenge and the Arizona becoml!tg ellgtble lor
~2-2 . Totals 13-7-33.
the Rose Bowl .in 1978.
opportwllty."
Eastern - Edwards 1-6-3;
Eventually, the conference
The
Pac-adeclsion
was
cast
Ambrose 1).1-1; Epple ii-2-12;
With an eye toward hopes to w&lt;rk up an eightBatey 2-2-t. Totals ~11-27.
game schedule.
.
The admlaslon requ~ent
also stated that If the Arizona
•
universities cannot comply
with the required minimum
sevengame football schedule
until 1982.- they will be
allowed to enter conference
The Eastfm Jwllor High cold first hall was the competition In other sports.
dropped two games over the downfall for the local team as
All an added incentive lor
weekend, losing to Waterloo's they scored just live points in conference members
lievenlh grade lt'&gt;-22 and to the each quarter before catching lukewann to the Arizona
eighth grade 27-38. In the first fit'e to score twelve in the admlsalons, the tftsldenla'
contest, Waterloo's Mike third to pull wlthiri one. But coundl said the 50-50 spUt of
Riley proved to be the dtf· Waterloo's big John Brooks gr018 recetpla in football will
lerence as he caMed 17 of hl.s was too much as he got fifteen be retained .
team's points.
on ·.the night to lead all
In basketball, an l&amp;«ame
.Coach Arch Rose praised scoreri. .
,
'
coafel'1lllce schedule will be
his boys for good defense, but
Greg Wigall led the l011ers played on a double rollld·
their offense was cold, hitting with ten polnta, while Bobby robin, hline-and-bome basla.
on just 13 ~rcent of their Barringer had .ltv~ points, The baseball schedule' calla
shots and COMecting on just five _steals, and a big 14 lor a divisional North-$oulb
12 percent of. their free rebounds. The Eaglettes alignment
with
the
throws. John Riebel led the camed just one of four free conf·erence seeking
losers with live points and throws while biting 26 percent . aul.on)atic qualification lor
most of his team's rebounds. from the field.
winners in the NCAA
In the second contest. a /
.
Tournament.
By GORDON SAKAMOTO

-(i-irls divide pair, of games
In recent Meigs High Girls'
basketball competition, the
Marauders drnpped a 51-34
contest .to state-champion
Parkersburg Catholic, but
then got revenge Saturday by
copping a 33-27 win over
visiting Eastern.
'Meigs coach Joy Bentley
said Parkersburg i.s one of the
strongest glrls'.teams she bas
ever seen as they seem to do
everything well - pass,
diibble, shoot, and rebound.
Mary Ostrowski led the
winners with eighteen
n'iarll'ers, but Meigs' Pam
Vaughan outshone that
performance with her twenty
points although she sat out
the entire third period due to
!qui trouble. Miss Vaughan
' was bot as she canned 9 of 15
aitempts. Beth Vaughan
added eight points.
Meigs shot a coot 24 pel'Cent
from the field, 14 ol118, while
the victors zipped 211 of 58
.tlirough the hoop for 34
p'ercent. Meigs netted 6 of 12
from the charity stripe while
~rkersburg got 13 of 21. ·
scoring:
Metes scoring . B.
Vaughan 3-2-t; Brown ~;

(

encouraged with

a respectable 625 yards on 140
carries for a 4.5 average. The
highlight of an otherwise
dlaappointing season was a
139-yard performance
against Kansas City, which
inclooed a 77-yard touchdown
burst.
"We're mainly a passing
team so Ididn'tcarry the baU
as much as J wanted to," ·
Grllfln said. ':Early in the
seaaon I niade mlatakes, I
guess you could call them
rookie mlalakes. I bad ID
learn the system. But as the
seaaon moved along, I got to
know the game better and
became real confident in the
thinga I did. At the end of the
.1\e&amp;BOn, I wasn't hesitating.
The Kansas City game gave
.me a great deal of
coolldence."
Despite the two Helamana
and despite the lict that he
bad' gained more than 100
yarda in 31 consecutive
games at Ohio State, GrHfln ·
was ptdted 24th in the college
draft because a large number
ol scout! belieVed he was too
small to withstand the
physical demands of the .pro
game.
"I think I dl.sproved all the
critics," the 5-foot-t, 191pound Griffin said. "It didn't
bother me · when all those
teams drafted other players.
I knew that whichever team
picked me up, it was goO. to
be the best thO. lor them. I
only willh I could've caught a
few more passes; but overall
I'm satlslled with the job I

did."
Cincinnati coach Bill
Johnson, who al.so completed
his first season Sunday with a
42-3 victory over the New
Yirk Jets whim gave the
Bengals a IQ.I record for the
l4!cond straight season, also
was pleased with Griffin's
progress and desire.
, "He's a super kid ,"
John1011 said. "He just ~epa
on working. Experience Ia the
big thing. In time, he'll ttl into
our passing game and he'll be
a raal star. He wu burt aome
early, and I'm sorry we didn't
p\ay him enough in the
exhibition garnet, but he

never gave up."
"I just can't watt for next
year," said Griffin, who will
begin wort on hLs ~
degree iJ) Industrial relationa
at Ohio State in the oilseason. "I'm just beginning
to know the guya better. I'm
just beginning "' tit in with
our bloclters. I'm looldng
forward to next year
' already."
.
.
So are a lot of other pebple.

-·

matured in front of our eyes.
They are more and more
coming to dominate good

tearns."
I1f winning its fifth game
without a loss and 14th
straight since last season,
Kentucky jumped to a I~
lead and a 52-34 halftime
margin. South Carolina,
which returned only two
experienced players from ·
last year's 18-&amp; team, didn't
score untU Jackie Gilloon hit
two free throws 3:13 Into the
game. The Gamecocks did
not scire from the field until
(38 had elapsed, When Golle
Augustus scored to make the
score 14-1.
"We shot 67 per·cent in the
first hall and played good
defense, too, " Hail said.
"There aren't a lot of teams
that can keep upe.with that."
Junior Jack l.ilvens led
Kentucky with 26 points,
followed by junior Mike
Pllillipa with 23. Senior Larry
Johnson added 16 points and
freshiDan Jay Shidler bad 10.
Gillcon scored 17 points and
freshman center Jim
Graziano 16 lor South
Car\)llna, now 1-3. In other
action, Bob Elmore's 22
points helped Wichita State
band Loog Beach state Its
first defeat in six games, 6378; Illinois edged Cleveland
State 'n-70 to gain ita fifth
victory in six games ; Carl
McPipe scored 25 points to
lead Nebrasu to an 118-53
triumph liver Northwest
Missouri State; Matt Hicks
had 26 points to ipark
· Northern I!Unols to lin 81-&amp;7
victory ·over Wisconsin;
freshman Dean Uthoff scored
22 poinls and grabbed 19
rebounds to power Iowa State
to a 71-70wln over California,
and Ron Jmes scired, nine
points In the final five
minute~ to help Texaa-El
Paso hold of! New Mexico
State 112-00.

high II points for the Flyert1
while freshman guard added
17 and junior forward ll'v
Giddings and sophomore
guard Doug Harris each bad
12.
Dayton atarted out lllrong,
gaining a 23-4 advantage
eatly in the game but New
Orleans fought back to
narrow the deficit to 43-11 at
balttime. . .
Ea,rly iQ the second haU
Dayton pulled away and two
back-to-back breakaway
lhotsby S-O center Tony Wella
put the Flyers up by 13 points
and they maintained that
lead the rest of the way .
Elsewhere Mondl!y night.
winletla.Cleveland State put a
scare in llllnois before
howlng 'n-70 at Champaign.
Guard Anch Battle ticked
off seven straight points in
the ·rtnal minute to pull
Cleveland State within two
before time ran out.
Cleveland State managed
to take a 22-12 lead with 1:114
remaining in an error-tilled
first bali. The Winl, however,
scored three straight baskets
in the last S7 seconds to give
them a 36-30 baittime lead.
Dtlnols upped lis sea110n
niark to li-1, whUe Cleveland
State dropped to Q.l.
In other game.s, Kenyon
downed Mt. Vernon Nazarene
96·80, Otterbein defeated
Dyke 94-84 and Wright St.
th111T1ped Indiana Central 8066.

Tonight, the red hot Toledo
Rockets tangle with MidAinerican Conference foe
Western Michigan QO the
road; Mt. Union travels to
John Carroll; Bethany
(W.Va). plays at Denison ;
Malone goes against Ohio
Dominican at Columbus, and
Urbana will he at Bluffton.
ThiS W..n Special

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Open Evenings '1116 :00
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THE INN PLACE
·wednesday Night Special

Visit Our Salad Bar

Fish and French Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy,'O .

..992-3629

Phone 992 -6304

EaStem drops two contests

~~R~y

IXMNING4tllDS MiENCY INC.

Middliport, Ohio
992-2341

..

�4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'I'Ueoday, Dec. 14,1978

Auxiliary holds Sunday party

.iVIary Ruth Sauer
feted with shower

The traditional holiday dJn..

ner party of the American
Legion Auxiliary' of Drew
Webster Post 39 was held
Sundsy afternoon at the hall.
A large Christmas tree and
Chri.stmas arrangements on
the.piano and mantel were
'featured in· the decorations.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart
had grace. Following the dinner there was reading uf the
Christmas story, carol
singing and games. Mrs.
Mary Martin, Mrs. Marjorie
Goett and Mrs. Pearl Knann

RUTLAND - a shower
honoring Miss Mary Ruth
Sauer, bride-elect of Dr.
DQuglas P. ~cker, was held
recently in the social room of
the Rutland United Methodist

was centered with a huge red
candle surrounded by
greenery. Two cakes, one
baked by Mrs. Edwards and
inscribed " Best' Wishes,
Mary and Doug", and the
Church. •
other being a double wedding
HOstesses were Mrs. ·hell replica marked Mary
Marga rut Edwards, Mrs, and Doug and baked by Mrs.
Loi.s Walker, Mrs. Ruth Walker, were · served with
'Erlewi ne, Mrs: Janet Morris. punch, coffee, nuts and
Mrs. Catherine Colwell, Mrs. mints. Mrs. Fay Sauer, ·
Ann Webster and Mrs. Ethel mother of the bride-elect,
Chapman. A gold, green ano poured the punch, and Mrs.
dark red color scheme was Colwell presided at the coffee
carried out in the decora- service.
tions. The refreshment table
Hearts in gold, red and
green all edged with gold,
•
hung above the gilt table.
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Morris and .Prizes were
won by Mrs. Grace Weber,
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, and
Mrs. Sauer.
Assi.sting Miss Sauer In
opening her girts were Mrs.

TUESDAY
MEIGS CANCER Society
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in new office located In for. mer Meigs Children's Home
building, Mulberry Heights.
Committees will be completed; public invited.
. MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
' 53 DAY Tuesday at DAY
· home on Butternut Ave.,
· Pomeroy, 7:30p.m. Refresh·
ments. District nine com. mander, Arthur L. Leach of
Jackson , will attend.
. SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday,
· 7:30 p.m. at the school.
Fathers night will be observed. Carl Wolfe will be
. guest speaker.
. HARRISONVILLE CHAPTER, O.E.S. regular meeting
. Tuesday, 7:30 'p.m. at the
Temple . Practi ce for in·
• stallation will be hel d
following the meeting.
AUXILIARY OF the
Racine Fire Depa rtment
L'hristmas party at Craw's
Steak House. Members are to
meet at the fire house at 7
p.m. Following dinner a gift
exchange and election of
officers will be held at fire
house .
WEDNESDAY
ROSE GARDEN Club,
, Tuppers Plains, Christmas
1

'

party at Wilm ar Cafeteria,

Parkersbur g, Wednesday
, 6:30 p.m. Members are to
: : meetal5 :45 p.m. atthehome

' ; of'Mrs. Harold Massar, Bring
$3 gift exchange. Judging of
wrapping of pa ckages will be
&gt; held.

. •

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HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club, annual Christmas potluck and gi ft exchange, Wednesday, 6 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Elementary
School.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Cl ub , Wednesday , at the
home of Mrs. Na ncy Collins.
Annual Christmas party with
a potluck din!ler at 6:30p.m.
and a II gift exchange. Prizes
for the best wrapped gifts.
Me mbers are to wea r
homemade corsages which
will also be judged.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club Christmas
potluck supper, Wednesday, 6
p.m. at Harrisonville
Elemen tary School ; gift
exchange.
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY Club, 2 p.m. at
home of Mrs. Nan Moore,
with Mrs. Everett Hayes to
review "Iberia."
'POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
F. and A.M., Wednesay, 7:30
p.m. for special convocation
to confer the royal arch
degree. All companions
urged to attend.

Edwards and Mrs. Jeanne
Slawter. Presenti ng gifts
were Mae weber, Mrs. Marie
Birchfield, Mrs. Audrey
Hayes, Joy S~uer, Marjorie
and Ellen Rice, Marcia
Deni.son, Ullian Pickens,
Grace Colwell, Ann and Mary
Colwell, Fay Sauer, Maxine
Whitehead, Grace Weber,
Jeanne Slawter, Kay Logan,
Coda Slawter, Rose Pattersun, Gladys Meredith,
Margaret Parsons, Hazel
Hill, Margaret E:dwards,
MargaretBelle and Donna
Weber, Lois Walker, Merle
;mJ · Mona Johnson, Ruth

Erlewine, Iva Howell, Janet
Morris, Catherine Colwell ,
Jeannie Grate, Barba ra
Welsh, Marjorie Milhoan,
Ann Webster, Ethel Chapmail, · Margie Sk idmor~,
Juanita Wa!llllley, Pearl Lit·
tie, Marie Bishop, -Edna
Davidson, Nita Conde, Helen
Bndimer; .Virginia Hubhard,
Jane Brooks, Mrs. Sam
Gibbs, Goldie Carson and
Cindy Mills.

January meeting wiD be by
. Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, dvil
defense chainnan, and Mn.
Pearl Knapp, nalionalleCUI'ity chairman.
Mrs. Pratt thanked the
members of the decorating
committee, Mrs. Marge
Reuter, Mrs. Fay Wilder·
muth and Misa Smith.
Guests were ,Mrs. stella
Kloes, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs. Edith Lanning, Mills
Jeanne Hines, Adam Edgar
Martin ahd SherrfMarshall.

IG
PRICE
REDUCTIONS
NTIMEFO
HOLIDAY...5 OPPING

Children enjoy yule gathering ·
SYRACUSE- The nursery Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lisle, Todd and Scott, Mr.
and kindergarten class .of the Harmon, .Wendi and Crystal, ;md Mrs. Roy Jenkins and
Asbury United Methodist Mrs. Terrie Miller and Tony, Kimberly.
'Church of.Syracuse had it an- ·Mr. and Mrs. Hilda Weaver,
Another practice for the
Brian and Amy, 'Mr. and Mrs. Chri.sbnaS program to be
nual
Christmas
party
Sunday
CHRISTMAS GIVING - Part of the Melga Couinty Girl Scout program inyolves the joy
John Powell and Jason, Mrs.
of giving. These !ray favors were made by Middleport Junior Troop 39 lor the Holzer night at the church. During Judy Williams, Jane Ann and beld at 7:30 Sunday evenin&amp;
the
evening
the
children
at the church was planned for
Medical Center through the chaplaincy program headed by the Rev. Arthur Lund, formerly
Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. John Thursday evening at 6p.m ..
practiced
for.
the
Christmas
of Pomeroy. The scouts made ~of the tray favors. ThlB Is their second year to participate in ·
the program. Here with aome of the favors are Kathy Arnott, left, and Beth Wolle who were program. There was a gUt
recently invested into the scouUng program. With them Is their leader. Mrs. ,Mary Wise, exchange and refreshments
of sandwiches, co.okies,
recently recognized for 10 years of leaderahtp in tbe scout program.
·
MR. FLUGG
by Jon Peter1on
potato chips, and Kool-Aid.
The teacher presented each
ofthe children a homemade
ornament.
Attending were Mrs.
Shirley sayre and Stephanie,
Mrs. Jean Allen and Mark,
rE:l.l- YOUR
Mrs. Brenda Wolle, Tara and
WIFE: NOT
Shelly,. Mrs. Judy ?ape,
Kristen
and
Cheryl,
Mrs.
DEXTER
Table scripture from John 1:1-4.
TO ~TA~ir:H
Mary Lou Wolfe and Darcy,
arrangements for the Athens Members gave the club
Mrs. Judy King, Kevin and
Mental Health Center were prayer, creed and collect.
'lOUR. TIE~
Kri.sten, Mrs. Peggy Stout,
brought by members to a Legends · of Christmas were
Chris and Robin, Mr. and
meeting of the Star Garden read and refreshments •
Mrs. Mike Fry, Wendy and
Club held · recently at the served. There was a gift
Stacey, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
home of Mrs. Lawrence exchange. The hostess gUt
Buckley and Tanuni, Mrs.
Chapman.
was won by Mrs. Robert
Angie
Harden and D. T., Mr.
It was noted that Miss Ruby Holliday. The traveling prize
and
Mrs.
Barry McCoy,
Diehl won the horticulture was awarded to Mrs. Atkins .
Mtc~elle
and
Barry, Shannon
sweepstakes award at the
Christmas arrangements
Slavin,
Brian
Weaver,'Sherry
recent Meigs County Christ· were displayed and jUdged
'
mas flower show. Mrs. Virgil with Mrs. Atkins taking first,
Atkins took a third place with Mrs. G. A. Radekln , second,
.her arrangement.
Mrs. Robert Holllday, third,
, MEMBERS MEET
Devotions were given by and Mrs. Robert Jewell,
Members of the White Rose
" MISTE~ GRUESER
Mrs. Chapman who used the fourth.
Lodge met Wednesday at the
PARTY HEW - Mn.
topi c, I "Sonlight" with
American Legion hall in
Thelma Grueser and her
Middleport
for a holtday
daughter, Melanie K.,
dinner.
The
tables were
entertained recently wltb a
.
.decorated
with
holly and
party for ·Mlstee D.
candles.
A
brief
business
Grueser, at their 105 Plum
St. home to Pomeroy, ln meeting wsa held tollowing
A ceremonial was held at of the Shrine assisted. .
celebration of her elghtb the turkey dinner. Attending © 1976 by NEA. Inc.
the Friday night meeting of
were Mrs. Sadie Turner, Mrs.
An Invitation was read to
birthday. Following a
t,he White Shrine · of attend a ceremonial of
dinner, a cake decorated Ill Cecile Kincaid, Mrs. Isabelle
Jueusalem, Mary Shrine 37, Lafayette
Shrine
44,
a batierina theme was Winebrenner, Mrs. Eva Hartat the Pomeroy Masonic Gallipolis, Dec. 21 , at the
GUARANTEED TO BLOOM
served wltb tee cream. ley, Mrs. Emma Wayland,
Temple.
Mrs.
Bea
Robson,
Mrs.
Alma
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. Present were Glenn
Flve candidates were Reported ill were Allen
Graeser, Mr. and Mn. Miller, Mrs. Dorothy Morris
THROUGH THE HOLIDAYS!
present to receive the Hughes, Evelyn Gr.ueser,
Larry . Hudson and Lari, and Mrs. Freda Mitch.
degrees of the White Shrine of Pearl Reynolds and Barbara
Rodney Grueser and the
Jerusalem. Presiding were Dugan.
hosteoaea, Mtstee'i motber
Mrs. Helen· Pickens, worthy
Refreshments were served
and grandmolbe~. She also
high priestess, and ThOmas in the dining room from
received a gUI from Mrs.
ORGANIST NAMED
Edwards, watchman of tables decorated in the
T. W. Bengel and the Rev.
Mrs.
Hazel Thomson was
shepherds. During the holiday theme.
and Mrs. Dave FeUds, Jr. installing.
organist for the
ceremonial all of the officers
'
Installation of officers of
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mitch of the Eastern Star, held
CASH 'N
Wheeltng, W. Va. were recently at the Middleport
weekend guests of his Masonic Temple. Her name
CARRY
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople , parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry was omitted from an earlier
account of the installation.
WHITE
~=~, Mitch.

Table arrangements
bought for center

Ceremonial held Friday

WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS of
Drew Webster 39, American
Legion Auxiliary, annual
Christmas party at the home
of Miss Erma Smith, 7:30
Wednesday.
THURSDAY
BUSY BEE Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. Christmas
dinner at the church.
CU B SCOUT Pack 245
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
~erlcan Legion Post In
Middleport.
HARRISONViLLE Chapter OES, installation of
ofOcers, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
with all members to take a
covered dish for the social
hour.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 11:30 Thursday
at the Rock Springs Church
for a Christmas party.
Members are to take cookies
and candy for the shut-In
trays. There will be a gift
exchange, and also a grab

had charge ol the program
with Mrs. Catherine Welsh at
the piano.
There was a gilt exchange
and a brief business meeting
during which time a report
·was given on the recent vWt
to the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital by Mrs. Genuna
Casei. Mrs. Grace.Pratt,
president ,appointed Mrs.
Casei and Mn. Edith Sauer
as hostesses for the January
meeting.
The program for tile

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STINGS LIKE Tt\£Y
I
'T PAY NO MIND.
8UT THEIR BL,O,B MIGHI
HUH OUR FUND·I?,O,ISIN'
WH,O,T/ IF )1JU HOLD THE
BREI\D .SO T&gt;1ERt;
.
BE NO MISUND£i&lt;~TANDIN'

BUY YOURS
EARLY. •

Compl~te

lnsuranq! Service

bag . •

FRIDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
Sorority Christmas party for
·members and husbands
Friday, 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrli. Eleanor Thomas.

CHRISTMAS TERRARIUMS

3 ONLY
'

l

Reuter-Brapt lnsurne
214 E. Main

""-

Draw weights at 28". Handle is hond finished morb lewood . Pistol grip.
Center ~h ot 5ie]h,t window and mohair quiet carpet arrow rest. Recurve

•
HECK'S REG.
$99.11

Weo there~f · Conve r1o ·Acce5sory insert , F!J ture ·

wood o~erlay ~ o;, ti ps ond th ree· ply ' F ~"t u rewoo'd
..... . . .~~----- o ~erlays on bock o/.' ho.ndle fo, added str e ngt h
and beouty, found only on Bt;or bows . hand ·
contoured grip with thum b rest , No . 70 50 Univer ~o l Temper Strand Blo c~ Dacron ' Bow~t ring .

99( EA.

,BEAR FI~LD ARROWS

":'Economicdl~tiali.ty Port Orford Ceder Arrow for be'
· ginners. Assorted color shafts.

HUNTING ARROWS
Port Orford cedar arrows ore for the novice and for
the expert. Spine-matched to five-pound tole rance.
on tou ti; cedar shaft. Helical
Colorful cresti
fl~ched in

''

-

1n

:1$, .

'

i

-~-

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20 OMll

EACH

(G)

$2.22 EA.

\O oMll

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- - 'a

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- , ! , -·

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,.••-•

..........

economical. Offers ·th e versatility needed for both do~e in and
moderote long range~ . Nearest th ing to on all -purpose, all·
aro und fixed power scope .

'

'

-

~~~.r-!!~o~li~ ~a?.,~~f~d~~?~~pocl,

'•

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HECK'S REG.

BEN PEARSON
PRACTICE ARROWS

j
••

-·&lt;&lt;

JIF CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

•

ODIAKBOW

''
''

'

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BEAR

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We've been growing
since 1863

~11.62

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..

20% (ff

POMEROY

HECK'S REG.

.

~~

1

ENJQY IT
NOW.

"QUALITY and
SER.VICE"

SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday at the church.

BEN PEARSON BOW

!

.i

'

.'
Cash 'n Carry

·' ••

•

PINK
RED

"The Insurance Store"

1

SPORTSMAN

'
..
•

POINSETTIAS

£V£ 1i&lt;YO I~E

FOR THE

!

CHECK THESE
SPECIAL PRICES

I

$6888

.,

'

A
'

HMIICTOI PIIMP SHOTGUII MODELI7D
r'I&gt;"'P CJ('Ioo n

~g""

'" Col&lt;)rlod g OUgtl

~p«ool ~~"""9'""

p&lt;O&lt;&gt; I

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Ro&lt;l"t&lt; modo lrom .do:i 1\rcl IO !&gt; moiiN (.,~weoHent ,:,O ~h .. &lt;r o.,buh

•

KOUNTY KIST

CORN ............... ~ ..............4.~~s
ARMOUR

DEVILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 b1ls 89~

PHEBE 'S STORE
Rlgtrt Reserved to Lim iT\oluant!Ties.

We Ctadly Accept Fedr Food Stomps
Monday t hr u F rlday

9:00to7 :oo ·
Sat,urd&lt;sv 9 to 9

...'•

'

•••

.,.. '
.. ,

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~~ ·

'

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WHITE

CUBE STEAK

F

'

CUBE PORK

'

WIIICIIISTII SIIKLI SHOT SIIOTGUIJJA
~t~~6uH·•o.on6 ~~~~~. lcltallo. "piOfl d'IO'"•flrd ...,.,Ju.r

•oggod d ut&lt;&gt; tOUr

~"'"' '~ •1'&lt;10•
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$4988

REDfiELD 4 POWER SCOPE

SOFTENE~ ••••••••••••••••• ~~. 89~

DUNCAN HINES BLUEBERRY .

REGISTER
FOR CHRISTMAS GROCERY BASKET
WORTH $25,$15, or $10
Dr a wing 4 P.M., D.1c. 24
PRODUCE .

MICM' UII,
lltt.ll

HIU'SUQ ,

A· I BLEACH ··•··~·········~ ••••••••• ~~!-W~.· 79$
MUFFIN MIX ••

·

·

uo ••••••••••

~~.~~.~~. 69~

The most popular fi~r:ed power Widefield model. Comp act , ·
economical. Offers the ver$Oiility needed for b9th clo5e.in and

TASTEE BOLOGNA

a!ound fi ~r:ed power sco pe.

2 LB. TRAY

BROWNIE MIX •••••••••••••• .l;~·~z.~z;.~t89~
'

POTATOES .......... .J~.~...~~t 79~ PRINGLES •••••••.•••••••••••.!l!!~~.~~~. 89' ,
ON IONS........ .'.............. ~.~~·.. 39~ .VAllEY BELl MILK 2% ............................. gallon 11.39

LB.

•••• •••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••

'1"·

DR. PEPPER
8 PAK
16 OZ. SOmES
\

PLUS TAX AND DEPOSIT

8 PAK
16 OZ. BOmES

age

PLUS TAX AND DEPOSIT

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- ~68 18

moderate long ronge1 Neorell thing to on oll-purpo". oil- HECK'S REG. $99,81

DUNCAN HINES

.
3-LB CAN '1" ·
CRISCO ····················~·············

$5481
ltiCI'UIO.

..... tJ

$12811

, BIG VALUE

FABRIC

WIIICHISHI SIIIGLI SHOT SHOTCUII
lOUTIIMOIIl SIIOTGUII

•

.

•1 00

E.

CkooWI from ouorted oouget . Mode l J 7A

PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••••••••••••••~~.~~. '1 39
'.

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l&lt;l hllr . Molal I:&gt;Hdh o"tli glr" , Rt-&lt; 01l fiiJd

HECK'S REG. $99.11

$12288

·

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WIICIIESTII PIIMI' SHOTGUII MOIEl I ZOG ·

Ho,.;.,.,._,,...., lovilrla•a iU•timoq l ,t.oaiin vr""'""'• hor,•n&lt;l1 oli r. lrom
Wilt mv ule. llo• ...... ••·•~ mohtcl ..,., o"' 11\..,~, ,""'"'d ro P'OOdo
' ..,......,. will\ lho "'&lt;&gt;~' looc.o•M r h;n;,t. ' '' "' "
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W- h li lb o ~. ~ ~~ koll l &lt;""l and !li'9 otul don ~loo• ~qfolo ,
11 ~"1;1 ( lot l ~l'fld ~poo•• ~Ol d~~~

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••••••

HICI'UIQ ,

�4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'I'Ueoday, Dec. 14,1978

Auxiliary holds Sunday party

.iVIary Ruth Sauer
feted with shower

The traditional holiday dJn..

ner party of the American
Legion Auxiliary' of Drew
Webster Post 39 was held
Sundsy afternoon at the hall.
A large Christmas tree and
Chri.stmas arrangements on
the.piano and mantel were
'featured in· the decorations.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart
had grace. Following the dinner there was reading uf the
Christmas story, carol
singing and games. Mrs.
Mary Martin, Mrs. Marjorie
Goett and Mrs. Pearl Knann

RUTLAND - a shower
honoring Miss Mary Ruth
Sauer, bride-elect of Dr.
DQuglas P. ~cker, was held
recently in the social room of
the Rutland United Methodist

was centered with a huge red
candle surrounded by
greenery. Two cakes, one
baked by Mrs. Edwards and
inscribed " Best' Wishes,
Mary and Doug", and the
Church. •
other being a double wedding
HOstesses were Mrs. ·hell replica marked Mary
Marga rut Edwards, Mrs, and Doug and baked by Mrs.
Loi.s Walker, Mrs. Ruth Walker, were · served with
'Erlewi ne, Mrs: Janet Morris. punch, coffee, nuts and
Mrs. Catherine Colwell, Mrs. mints. Mrs. Fay Sauer, ·
Ann Webster and Mrs. Ethel mother of the bride-elect,
Chapman. A gold, green ano poured the punch, and Mrs.
dark red color scheme was Colwell presided at the coffee
carried out in the decora- service.
tions. The refreshment table
Hearts in gold, red and
green all edged with gold,
•
hung above the gilt table.
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Morris and .Prizes were
won by Mrs. Grace Weber,
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead, and
Mrs. Sauer.
Assi.sting Miss Sauer In
opening her girts were Mrs.

TUESDAY
MEIGS CANCER Society
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in new office located In for. mer Meigs Children's Home
building, Mulberry Heights.
Committees will be completed; public invited.
. MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
' 53 DAY Tuesday at DAY
· home on Butternut Ave.,
· Pomeroy, 7:30p.m. Refresh·
ments. District nine com. mander, Arthur L. Leach of
Jackson , will attend.
. SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday,
· 7:30 p.m. at the school.
Fathers night will be observed. Carl Wolfe will be
. guest speaker.
. HARRISONVILLE CHAPTER, O.E.S. regular meeting
. Tuesday, 7:30 'p.m. at the
Temple . Practi ce for in·
• stallation will be hel d
following the meeting.
AUXILIARY OF the
Racine Fire Depa rtment
L'hristmas party at Craw's
Steak House. Members are to
meet at the fire house at 7
p.m. Following dinner a gift
exchange and election of
officers will be held at fire
house .
WEDNESDAY
ROSE GARDEN Club,
, Tuppers Plains, Christmas
1

'

party at Wilm ar Cafeteria,

Parkersbur g, Wednesday
, 6:30 p.m. Members are to
: : meetal5 :45 p.m. atthehome

' ; of'Mrs. Harold Massar, Bring
$3 gift exchange. Judging of
wrapping of pa ckages will be
&gt; held.

. •

·•

'·.'

'

'

,.

HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club, annual Christmas potluck and gi ft exchange, Wednesday, 6 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Elementary
School.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Cl ub , Wednesday , at the
home of Mrs. Na ncy Collins.
Annual Christmas party with
a potluck din!ler at 6:30p.m.
and a II gift exchange. Prizes
for the best wrapped gifts.
Me mbers are to wea r
homemade corsages which
will also be judged.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Club Christmas
potluck supper, Wednesday, 6
p.m. at Harrisonville
Elemen tary School ; gift
exchange.
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY Club, 2 p.m. at
home of Mrs. Nan Moore,
with Mrs. Everett Hayes to
review "Iberia."
'POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
F. and A.M., Wednesay, 7:30
p.m. for special convocation
to confer the royal arch
degree. All companions
urged to attend.

Edwards and Mrs. Jeanne
Slawter. Presenti ng gifts
were Mae weber, Mrs. Marie
Birchfield, Mrs. Audrey
Hayes, Joy S~uer, Marjorie
and Ellen Rice, Marcia
Deni.son, Ullian Pickens,
Grace Colwell, Ann and Mary
Colwell, Fay Sauer, Maxine
Whitehead, Grace Weber,
Jeanne Slawter, Kay Logan,
Coda Slawter, Rose Pattersun, Gladys Meredith,
Margaret Parsons, Hazel
Hill, Margaret E:dwards,
MargaretBelle and Donna
Weber, Lois Walker, Merle
;mJ · Mona Johnson, Ruth

Erlewine, Iva Howell, Janet
Morris, Catherine Colwell ,
Jeannie Grate, Barba ra
Welsh, Marjorie Milhoan,
Ann Webster, Ethel Chapmail, · Margie Sk idmor~,
Juanita Wa!llllley, Pearl Lit·
tie, Marie Bishop, -Edna
Davidson, Nita Conde, Helen
Bndimer; .Virginia Hubhard,
Jane Brooks, Mrs. Sam
Gibbs, Goldie Carson and
Cindy Mills.

January meeting wiD be by
. Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, dvil
defense chainnan, and Mn.
Pearl Knapp, nalionalleCUI'ity chairman.
Mrs. Pratt thanked the
members of the decorating
committee, Mrs. Marge
Reuter, Mrs. Fay Wilder·
muth and Misa Smith.
Guests were ,Mrs. stella
Kloes, Mrs. Rose Ginther,
Mrs. Edith Lanning, Mills
Jeanne Hines, Adam Edgar
Martin ahd SherrfMarshall.

IG
PRICE
REDUCTIONS
NTIMEFO
HOLIDAY...5 OPPING

Children enjoy yule gathering ·
SYRACUSE- The nursery Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lisle, Todd and Scott, Mr.
and kindergarten class .of the Harmon, .Wendi and Crystal, ;md Mrs. Roy Jenkins and
Asbury United Methodist Mrs. Terrie Miller and Tony, Kimberly.
'Church of.Syracuse had it an- ·Mr. and Mrs. Hilda Weaver,
Another practice for the
Brian and Amy, 'Mr. and Mrs. Chri.sbnaS program to be
nual
Christmas
party
Sunday
CHRISTMAS GIVING - Part of the Melga Couinty Girl Scout program inyolves the joy
John Powell and Jason, Mrs.
of giving. These !ray favors were made by Middleport Junior Troop 39 lor the Holzer night at the church. During Judy Williams, Jane Ann and beld at 7:30 Sunday evenin&amp;
the
evening
the
children
at the church was planned for
Medical Center through the chaplaincy program headed by the Rev. Arthur Lund, formerly
Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. John Thursday evening at 6p.m ..
practiced
for.
the
Christmas
of Pomeroy. The scouts made ~of the tray favors. ThlB Is their second year to participate in ·
the program. Here with aome of the favors are Kathy Arnott, left, and Beth Wolle who were program. There was a gUt
recently invested into the scouUng program. With them Is their leader. Mrs. ,Mary Wise, exchange and refreshments
of sandwiches, co.okies,
recently recognized for 10 years of leaderahtp in tbe scout program.
·
MR. FLUGG
by Jon Peter1on
potato chips, and Kool-Aid.
The teacher presented each
ofthe children a homemade
ornament.
Attending were Mrs.
Shirley sayre and Stephanie,
Mrs. Jean Allen and Mark,
rE:l.l- YOUR
Mrs. Brenda Wolle, Tara and
WIFE: NOT
Shelly,. Mrs. Judy ?ape,
Kristen
and
Cheryl,
Mrs.
DEXTER
Table scripture from John 1:1-4.
TO ~TA~ir:H
Mary Lou Wolfe and Darcy,
arrangements for the Athens Members gave the club
Mrs. Judy King, Kevin and
Mental Health Center were prayer, creed and collect.
'lOUR. TIE~
Kri.sten, Mrs. Peggy Stout,
brought by members to a Legends · of Christmas were
Chris and Robin, Mr. and
meeting of the Star Garden read and refreshments •
Mrs. Mike Fry, Wendy and
Club held · recently at the served. There was a gift
Stacey, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
home of Mrs. Lawrence exchange. The hostess gUt
Buckley and Tanuni, Mrs.
Chapman.
was won by Mrs. Robert
Angie
Harden and D. T., Mr.
It was noted that Miss Ruby Holliday. The traveling prize
and
Mrs.
Barry McCoy,
Diehl won the horticulture was awarded to Mrs. Atkins .
Mtc~elle
and
Barry, Shannon
sweepstakes award at the
Christmas arrangements
Slavin,
Brian
Weaver,'Sherry
recent Meigs County Christ· were displayed and jUdged
'
mas flower show. Mrs. Virgil with Mrs. Atkins taking first,
Atkins took a third place with Mrs. G. A. Radekln , second,
.her arrangement.
Mrs. Robert Holllday, third,
, MEMBERS MEET
Devotions were given by and Mrs. Robert Jewell,
Members of the White Rose
" MISTE~ GRUESER
Mrs. Chapman who used the fourth.
Lodge met Wednesday at the
PARTY HEW - Mn.
topi c, I "Sonlight" with
American Legion hall in
Thelma Grueser and her
Middleport
for a holtday
daughter, Melanie K.,
dinner.
The
tables were
entertained recently wltb a
.
.decorated
with
holly and
party for ·Mlstee D.
candles.
A
brief
business
Grueser, at their 105 Plum
St. home to Pomeroy, ln meeting wsa held tollowing
A ceremonial was held at of the Shrine assisted. .
celebration of her elghtb the turkey dinner. Attending © 1976 by NEA. Inc.
the Friday night meeting of
were Mrs. Sadie Turner, Mrs.
An Invitation was read to
birthday. Following a
t,he White Shrine · of attend a ceremonial of
dinner, a cake decorated Ill Cecile Kincaid, Mrs. Isabelle
Jueusalem, Mary Shrine 37, Lafayette
Shrine
44,
a batierina theme was Winebrenner, Mrs. Eva Hartat the Pomeroy Masonic Gallipolis, Dec. 21 , at the
GUARANTEED TO BLOOM
served wltb tee cream. ley, Mrs. Emma Wayland,
Temple.
Mrs.
Bea
Robson,
Mrs.
Alma
Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. Present were Glenn
Flve candidates were Reported ill were Allen
Graeser, Mr. and Mn. Miller, Mrs. Dorothy Morris
THROUGH THE HOLIDAYS!
present to receive the Hughes, Evelyn Gr.ueser,
Larry . Hudson and Lari, and Mrs. Freda Mitch.
degrees of the White Shrine of Pearl Reynolds and Barbara
Rodney Grueser and the
Jerusalem. Presiding were Dugan.
hosteoaea, Mtstee'i motber
Mrs. Helen· Pickens, worthy
Refreshments were served
and grandmolbe~. She also
high priestess, and ThOmas in the dining room from
received a gUI from Mrs.
ORGANIST NAMED
Edwards, watchman of tables decorated in the
T. W. Bengel and the Rev.
Mrs.
Hazel Thomson was
shepherds. During the holiday theme.
and Mrs. Dave FeUds, Jr. installing.
organist for the
ceremonial all of the officers
'
Installation of officers of
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mitch of the Eastern Star, held
CASH 'N
Wheeltng, W. Va. were recently at the Middleport
weekend guests of his Masonic Temple. Her name
CARRY
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople , parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry was omitted from an earlier
account of the installation.
WHITE
~=~, Mitch.

Table arrangements
bought for center

Ceremonial held Friday

WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENTS of
Drew Webster 39, American
Legion Auxiliary, annual
Christmas party at the home
of Miss Erma Smith, 7:30
Wednesday.
THURSDAY
BUSY BEE Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. Christmas
dinner at the church.
CU B SCOUT Pack 245
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
~erlcan Legion Post In
Middleport.
HARRISONViLLE Chapter OES, installation of
ofOcers, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
with all members to take a
covered dish for the social
hour.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, 11:30 Thursday
at the Rock Springs Church
for a Christmas party.
Members are to take cookies
and candy for the shut-In
trays. There will be a gift
exchange, and also a grab

had charge ol the program
with Mrs. Catherine Welsh at
the piano.
There was a gilt exchange
and a brief business meeting
during which time a report
·was given on the recent vWt
to the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital by Mrs. Genuna
Casei. Mrs. Grace.Pratt,
president ,appointed Mrs.
Casei and Mn. Edith Sauer
as hostesses for the January
meeting.
The program for tile

...

..

r
'•
)

'

!'
I

''
'

STINGS LIKE Tt\£Y
I
'T PAY NO MIND.
8UT THEIR BL,O,B MIGHI
HUH OUR FUND·I?,O,ISIN'
WH,O,T/ IF )1JU HOLD THE
BREI\D .SO T&gt;1ERt;
.
BE NO MISUND£i&lt;~TANDIN'

BUY YOURS
EARLY. •

Compl~te

lnsuranq! Service

bag . •

FRIDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
Sorority Christmas party for
·members and husbands
Friday, 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrli. Eleanor Thomas.

CHRISTMAS TERRARIUMS

3 ONLY
'

l

Reuter-Brapt lnsurne
214 E. Main

""-

Draw weights at 28". Handle is hond finished morb lewood . Pistol grip.
Center ~h ot 5ie]h,t window and mohair quiet carpet arrow rest. Recurve

•
HECK'S REG.
$99.11

Weo there~f · Conve r1o ·Acce5sory insert , F!J ture ·

wood o~erlay ~ o;, ti ps ond th ree· ply ' F ~"t u rewoo'd
..... . . .~~----- o ~erlays on bock o/.' ho.ndle fo, added str e ngt h
and beouty, found only on Bt;or bows . hand ·
contoured grip with thum b rest , No . 70 50 Univer ~o l Temper Strand Blo c~ Dacron ' Bow~t ring .

99( EA.

,BEAR FI~LD ARROWS

":'Economicdl~tiali.ty Port Orford Ceder Arrow for be'
· ginners. Assorted color shafts.

HUNTING ARROWS
Port Orford cedar arrows ore for the novice and for
the expert. Spine-matched to five-pound tole rance.
on tou ti; cedar shaft. Helical
Colorful cresti
fl~ched in

''

-

1n

:1$, .

'

i

-~-

.,

~--

.

~

~

.•

20 OMll

EACH

(G)

$2.22 EA.

\O oMll

"'

- - 'a

, _

- , ! , -·

-,

,.••-•

..........

economical. Offers ·th e versatility needed for both do~e in and
moderote long range~ . Nearest th ing to on all -purpose, all·
aro und fixed power scope .

'

'

-

~~~.r-!!~o~li~ ~a?.,~~f~d~~?~~pocl,

'•

(f)

HECK'S REG.

BEN PEARSON
PRACTICE ARROWS

j
••

-·&lt;&lt;

JIF CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

•

ODIAKBOW

''
''

'

'-

•

BEAR

,,

'
..•'

We've been growing
since 1863

~11.62

'

..

20% (ff

POMEROY

HECK'S REG.

.

~~

1

ENJQY IT
NOW.

"QUALITY and
SER.VICE"

SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday at the church.

BEN PEARSON BOW

!

.i

'

.'
Cash 'n Carry

·' ••

•

PINK
RED

"The Insurance Store"

1

SPORTSMAN

'
..
•

POINSETTIAS

£V£ 1i&lt;YO I~E

FOR THE

!

CHECK THESE
SPECIAL PRICES

I

$6888

.,

'

A
'

HMIICTOI PIIMP SHOTGUII MODELI7D
r'I&gt;"'P CJ('Ioo n

~g""

'" Col&lt;)rlod g OUgtl

~p«ool ~~"""9'""

p&lt;O&lt;&gt; I

""I

Ro&lt;l"t&lt; modo lrom .do:i 1\rcl IO !&gt; moiiN (.,~weoHent ,:,O ~h .. &lt;r o.,buh

•

KOUNTY KIST

CORN ............... ~ ..............4.~~s
ARMOUR

DEVILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 b1ls 89~

PHEBE 'S STORE
Rlgtrt Reserved to Lim iT\oluant!Ties.

We Ctadly Accept Fedr Food Stomps
Monday t hr u F rlday

9:00to7 :oo ·
Sat,urd&lt;sv 9 to 9

...'•

'

•••

.,.. '
.. ,

I

~~ ·

'

..,..'

WHITE

CUBE STEAK

F

'

CUBE PORK

'

WIIICIIISTII SIIKLI SHOT SIIOTGUIJJA
~t~~6uH·•o.on6 ~~~~~. lcltallo. "piOfl d'IO'"•flrd ...,.,Ju.r

•oggod d ut&lt;&gt; tOUr

~"'"' '~ •1'&lt;10•
~'" "" ' 'o&gt;&lt; l a n~

w....:llo"'' , ,..,, Sro ..

I"'""'"'.

bfl.,..

t.r.,. r,~or,., r

$4988

REDfiELD 4 POWER SCOPE

SOFTENE~ ••••••••••••••••• ~~. 89~

DUNCAN HINES BLUEBERRY .

REGISTER
FOR CHRISTMAS GROCERY BASKET
WORTH $25,$15, or $10
Dr a wing 4 P.M., D.1c. 24
PRODUCE .

MICM' UII,
lltt.ll

HIU'SUQ ,

A· I BLEACH ··•··~·········~ ••••••••• ~~!-W~.· 79$
MUFFIN MIX ••

·

·

uo ••••••••••

~~.~~.~~. 69~

The most popular fi~r:ed power Widefield model. Comp act , ·
economical. Offers the ver$Oiility needed for b9th clo5e.in and

TASTEE BOLOGNA

a!ound fi ~r:ed power sco pe.

2 LB. TRAY

BROWNIE MIX •••••••••••••• .l;~·~z.~z;.~t89~
'

POTATOES .......... .J~.~...~~t 79~ PRINGLES •••••••.•••••••••••.!l!!~~.~~~. 89' ,
ON IONS........ .'.............. ~.~~·.. 39~ .VAllEY BELl MILK 2% ............................. gallon 11.39

LB.

•••• •••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••

'1"·

DR. PEPPER
8 PAK
16 OZ. SOmES
\

PLUS TAX AND DEPOSIT

8 PAK
16 OZ. BOmES

age

PLUS TAX AND DEPOSIT

z

•
i

...

.

····"

- ~68 18

moderate long ronge1 Neorell thing to on oll-purpo". oil- HECK'S REG. $99,81

DUNCAN HINES

.
3-LB CAN '1" ·
CRISCO ····················~·············

$5481
ltiCI'UIO.

..... tJ

$12811

, BIG VALUE

FABRIC

WIIICHISHI SIIIGLI SHOT SHOTCUII
lOUTIIMOIIl SIIOTGUII

•

.

•1 00

E.

CkooWI from ouorted oouget . Mode l J 7A

PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••••••••••••••~~.~~. '1 39
'.

,,,,a,n

Hlti'UIG .

l&lt;l hllr . Molal I:&gt;Hdh o"tli glr" , Rt-&lt; 01l fiiJd

HECK'S REG. $99.11

$12288

·

D

.G.

WIICIIESTII PIIMI' SHOTGUII MOIEl I ZOG ·

Ho,.;.,.,._,,...., lovilrla•a iU•timoq l ,t.oaiin vr""'""'• hor,•n&lt;l1 oli r. lrom
Wilt mv ule. llo• ...... ••·•~ mohtcl ..,., o"' 11\..,~, ,""'"'d ro P'OOdo
' ..,......,. will\ lho "'&lt;&gt;~' looc.o•M r h;n;,t. ' '' "' "
'"'"G"'"" '""""''
lowy. r ...,, •• ~.bl. ~con,
., Oo;r ''"•ocl on , b tlvl ;.l
ff Dflt leoc~IAt 11\r-hhlt ftofle• ~~t ·lll!'...a' wl lo ,.,..,.., h q61oclon;d".,;rt,o ra
barrtl,
•

'""'""'"!MI........,.&lt;....

'"'"'ll'"lil·
....

ltiCIUIO.
• 1149.11 .

liKE I l2 AUTOMATIC IIFLI
W- h li lb o ~. ~ ~~ koll l &lt;""l and !li'9 otul don ~loo• ~qfolo ,
11 ~"1;1 ( lot l ~l'fld ~poo•• ~Ol d~~~

Sl..9 !lwh .1.

~4581

••••••

HICI'UIQ ,

�· PLENTY

OF FREE

OF FREE

'

.

•

•

DAISY

..

PUMP

B B RIFLE
Fa vo r it e fo r over 50 years.
Stod , Deluxe molded ; check·
ered pistol grip, white spacer ,
ste e l butt plate . Fo re arm ;
Mold ed pump grip. Recei ve r,
Eng raved bl ue steel. Action , ·
Pump. Sights , Post romp front ,
fully adjustable open rear.

635

COLEMAN
3 LB. SLEEPING • BAG
33"X75" WITH POLYESTER FIBER
FILLING &amp; !00 PCT. COITON

COVER

Hecks Reg.

$25.99

.$

99
$15

8S

18

lS

PISTOL POUCH
$177

IERNZ:-0-MATIC

399
HECK 'S REG .
$7.99

SPOITS DEI'T.

SPOITS DEPT.

SI'OITS
. DEPT.

BOOTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHER

Coleman Camp

Mo t plates, gas burners, Features ad·
iu~to ble steel bake roclt and eCiy to
reod thermometer . Fol d~ float for
easy carrying and storage.

s 11
HiCK 'S
REG .

'.

.~

L:
."* '
~

__ ,

~"-/

.

"

..
-... _;'

DEXTER

STANLEY

ENTRANCE LOCK
SET

TAPE RULE

'

·

$43 99

HECK'S lEG.
$32.96

HECK',S REG.
$53.96

FRY PAN

ftoMt" ~""p-....-le&lt;,J ""~
handle - lian o. 1...-norwtilo ,._;~, bccly oOO hd tio PLAh ..,_,"""
p&lt;oto. tjtclor • lmpro,..d ! o l io~ II' r&gt;On ohcl r. oo o.h .

HECK'SREG.
•. $28.96

$24"
.

JEWRIY DII'T.

.

GE
4 SLICE

$ 566

K::IOI

ARGUS

KAKO
AUTOMATIC
FOR35MM
·CAMERA

TOASTER

DE/IT.

LEVER TYPE

HECK'S REG.
$29.96

$5.U

AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

6" WEN BENCH GRINDER

Svrloc e mounh or co n·
vt rtl to flu1 h ~ov n t . 2 hicomplian' e ~ - speaker~

EXCLUSIVE FEATURES INCLUDE COG BELT
'
DRIVE, DYNAMIC BRAKE, BREAK RESI$TANT

with 10 '} Ol mogneh . 8 .
ohm, lor al l ~!ere o to~

HOUS~~~K'S REG. $54.66

$3888

HARDWARE DEPT.

.

NAIIDWAIE IE/IT.

SPEAKER SET
d t~: k l

3"

CAMERA

,

/

99

l &gt;&lt;oghloqlo ..
td
CO Yt' fO (le -

bu!I Oil ·

w t! l.

75 l lt! Otrt vt-n lo lor

Bct1 er

" on •n &lt;J

HECK'S REG.

$15.9_9

DE/IT.

&lt;! &lt;t! (&lt; loi'&lt;

..

II~ (Ht '

$1311
.

.----

Micro -Twin ~no~inq" head ~ one 1ide lor
ltlili. the other for vnderorm1. Remo~oble
head fo r ea·ly deonong. Smooth -till wong
tulop 1hope i1 eo oy to hu ndloe . Soft white
fin i1h with &lt;o lorlut woldfl ower (e nrer de
li 91'l

-k
.,' - ~_· .:f-1 :,;,;.'.•·.
· -,~:,..I!NI, " U

~~;-

$

3988

lrh to n• S p ooy

1('\U it '

.

,. ".

~

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~f-5J::.'}

:.-: .-'.. :: :'):- .....__
.. ,!:,

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:/\ .~•'" , ·~
916o
,.--~

- , ....

.
~5~~B.~I;Y~ft~~T.~.~~~ . ... +'

• -4- ..

JIWB.IY DE/IT.
~·'

HECK'S REG.
$47.96

D&lt;y I. 51t' Cl tr S!:' l lln (j\ Wo

O p fru l t- • on

•er W.nd ow.

LADIES' SHAVER

7 oz.

~ h u 11ct ,

f-92

SlUM-SPRAY IRON

SUNIEAM

'

de v11lop No peelinu, no lt t le r oud no tur\l nQ A I OOn tu ty &lt;i rrlt d ot loroce fo nder hel pt ~ov locu1 lo o&lt;11 J 11 lee! to 25
lilt~ I. Yo u 'Jt! t \ ll! to mul•c e .•J)O H/ t ~ s_pnh o l w td t Nt eiKtrti l'! it

G.E •

HECK'S REG.

..

:-- , .. --

~

#

I

./

f

t"

$ 3· 99

NAIIJWAII--·
DEPT.
7·2995 .

GENERAL ELECTRIC

THRESH.OLD

SET

HECK'S EEG.
$7.88

AUTOMOTIVE DE/IT.

HECK'S '
REG.
$2.66

$144

100COUNT

EXTENSION CORDS
S COUNT SCHICK
DOUILIIDGI

6FT.

t FT.

12FT.

'

NAIDWAIE IJIIIT.

POLICE SCANNER

WNITI 01 IIOWI.

NAftWAH,.T.

'

HECK'S REG.
$4.49

,.,

. coSMEftt
...

5UPE.I CHROMIUM

. BLADES
HECK'S REG.
94' .

46~

tOSIIITIC, . ,

WITH ~M-FM RADIO

CM-11

TYLENOL

SJ19
HECK'SIEG.

' $t.69
toSIIITit , . ,
-1, -

"(/)~ 1D

. .__

~

$RlwliUJ- ?j.oJL 8RihA."

•

•

PEPSODENT
.TOOTHPASTE

FOG LIGHTS
•
CHROME PLATED
C.LEAR OR AM BER

*'.

Pu oh !he thu lle r b utton, turn o 0011 k {11\ d wo t(h thtl pic tvr11

HECK'S REG.
$6.37
..

$1]77

AUTOMOTIVE
DE/IT. ,

$17

..
·+
..

NEW INSTANT

SEALED BEAM

and rod io1 .

HECK'S REG;
$19.95SEr ·

· KODAK

The pocket C:omera that hos on
f/9.5 opt ical gloss 3 elemeni le ns
for dearer . $harper pictures .end
real ly fits your pocket!

JEJta•r
JEJIBI Y IE/IT.

~~+&lt;::..

POCKET ·
CAMERA
KIT

$22.99

SJ49

GREASE GUN

"(i

AHII
SK3

STROBE

EFFERDENT
DENTURE CLEANER
$

JEWEliY DEPT.

Ro c~l~ ~rylec! 'Wol~ r ~,.., G•ool

96COUNT

,HECK'S
REG.

$32.56

$2·799

HECK'SREG.
$29 .96

HECK'S REG.
$34.96

AM/ FM. AIR. PB ond WEATHER

DE/IT.

$ ]44

24

G.E. HI-DOME

SINGLE CYLINDER
LOCK .
HECK'S REG.
$7.11

Heck's
Reg.

99

5127

JEWB.IY

HECK'S REG.
' $5.99

m~lhp~&lt;obon i ~'"'"'~ . l o"""",." ' cloa• ' ""'

Mr. Co flee II f re!~h · brew~ your fa-.oorile col·
fee at preci~el y th e corre&lt;f b re wi ng' te m·
perature, ~o it i~ ne.,er bitfer. Unique 3
positi on ~wiich con t ro l ~ both tirewing cycle
end watmer plate .

Fo~hionobl e
~hovlder 5tr o p for eo i y cqrrying .

,.

SPORTS DEn.

fOR BULK OR

e

( ...,1111111

&gt;o +l h&gt; , ooo i Ha•odtut"otiiiMr-tlol I DI'II OI,.,.. tltnc~l lot'&gt; l•
,t,~ t ~ '0'"t , plnlli: tolm. r,11.., ('OIIIttd

SBAND
PORTABLE
RADIO
pod ded leothererte cme. A

25.96

CARTRtpGE GREASE

8-dyll•qO&lt;&lt;I &lt;ryo1&lt;0&lt;l ,opl"' Ull" ' l~n g~lyi "Tf&gt; 5qu&lt;l oc
•COC I &lt;&lt;&gt;lt "lc;o""" • ~ l.o r/c&gt;d~ ·•~ &amp; ~'""""' rok d &lt;UOo n

5

1

,

·

"l• tn " " " -.,_,... G!~- ...... l loo ,..Jfloo- Oii lo ..I'd

GRAND PRIX

.· .

DEXTER

_

SP3632

.

9 ~peep •li.de control lo r eYer y mi• ing
r;eeJ . 2 polition turnta ble. 1 qt. and 2 qt .
glou bowil ; pu~hbu!lon b ~o l~ r r:1ec-lm :
lor9r: chrorm;o·p lu red bf'olt&gt;rs · o o w~ rlvl

WAFFLI GRILL

DRIP-0-LATOR

.JEJIB.I Y DEPT.

~'
'
I II
·~
uL

,$588

NAIDWAIE .....
Dl/11. · :t,1

S/IOITS
DII*T.

.

FOOTBALL, PUMP ·
AND "T" KIT

INTERNATIONAL
CAL~ULATOR

FE32-A

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

.

AMFVOIT

STAND MIXER

IIFLON

MR. COFFEE II

en ,

Wprk ~ on Col~mon stoves, electric

·

· "THIN MAN"

.... ~tJo d

'

CAMPoOVEN
..

cuoo
· GIIIIRAL ILICIIIC

l or .e&lt;1p10&lt; ol c al o ~llliiO n . ~"""" 8"' 11-•n '"'"''~bit .
Nl C o~boMoo" ' • ~{ A&lt;io~lt •r O••• !II• &amp; Nultbo&lt;&gt;l 11110

7''

IERNZ-O"MATIC

SPOITS
DEPT.

'

'

.

SHARP

·DELUXE

150-.,..al t motor.

NAIIDWAIE DE/IT.

$14 .99

'

$

COLEMAN

. HECK'S REG.
$7.99

.

HECK'S REG.
$12.99
~~

$ 66

... ...

PROPANE
TORCH KIT

9 EYEL

5
' .

PORTABLE
8-TRACK
TAPE PLAYER

.

.\1KUIIflt.l

HAMILTON lEACH

GENERAL ELECTRIC

SI'NTSDIIT.

. STADIUM SEAT

ILI030

3-5501 /2

HECK'S
REG.
$2.19

24&lt;

HE.CK'S REG. 36'

AMFVOIT
BASKETBALL

$1''·

'1.99
SPOITS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$26.48

t•

VOLT iANTERN

HECK'S IUI:l&gt;.l

BB
SHOT

.. .

1

I

�· PLENTY

OF FREE

OF FREE

'

.

•

•

DAISY

..

PUMP

B B RIFLE
Fa vo r it e fo r over 50 years.
Stod , Deluxe molded ; check·
ered pistol grip, white spacer ,
ste e l butt plate . Fo re arm ;
Mold ed pump grip. Recei ve r,
Eng raved bl ue steel. Action , ·
Pump. Sights , Post romp front ,
fully adjustable open rear.

635

COLEMAN
3 LB. SLEEPING • BAG
33"X75" WITH POLYESTER FIBER
FILLING &amp; !00 PCT. COITON

COVER

Hecks Reg.

$25.99

.$

99
$15

8S

18

lS

PISTOL POUCH
$177

IERNZ:-0-MATIC

399
HECK 'S REG .
$7.99

SPOITS DEI'T.

SPOITS DEPT.

SI'OITS
. DEPT.

BOOTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHER

Coleman Camp

Mo t plates, gas burners, Features ad·
iu~to ble steel bake roclt and eCiy to
reod thermometer . Fol d~ float for
easy carrying and storage.

s 11
HiCK 'S
REG .

'.

.~

L:
."* '
~

__ ,

~"-/

.

"

..
-... _;'

DEXTER

STANLEY

ENTRANCE LOCK
SET

TAPE RULE

'

·

$43 99

HECK'S lEG.
$32.96

HECK',S REG.
$53.96

FRY PAN

ftoMt" ~""p-....-le&lt;,J ""~
handle - lian o. 1...-norwtilo ,._;~, bccly oOO hd tio PLAh ..,_,"""
p&lt;oto. tjtclor • lmpro,..d ! o l io~ II' r&gt;On ohcl r. oo o.h .

HECK'SREG.
•. $28.96

$24"
.

JEWRIY DII'T.

.

GE
4 SLICE

$ 566

K::IOI

ARGUS

KAKO
AUTOMATIC
FOR35MM
·CAMERA

TOASTER

DE/IT.

LEVER TYPE

HECK'S REG.
$29.96

$5.U

AUTOMOTIVEDEPT.

6" WEN BENCH GRINDER

Svrloc e mounh or co n·
vt rtl to flu1 h ~ov n t . 2 hicomplian' e ~ - speaker~

EXCLUSIVE FEATURES INCLUDE COG BELT
'
DRIVE, DYNAMIC BRAKE, BREAK RESI$TANT

with 10 '} Ol mogneh . 8 .
ohm, lor al l ~!ere o to~

HOUS~~~K'S REG. $54.66

$3888

HARDWARE DEPT.

.

NAIIDWAIE IE/IT.

SPEAKER SET
d t~: k l

3"

CAMERA

,

/

99

l &gt;&lt;oghloqlo ..
td
CO Yt' fO (le -

bu!I Oil ·

w t! l.

75 l lt! Otrt vt-n lo lor

Bct1 er

" on •n &lt;J

HECK'S REG.

$15.9_9

DE/IT.

&lt;! &lt;t! (&lt; loi'&lt;

..

II~ (Ht '

$1311
.

.----

Micro -Twin ~no~inq" head ~ one 1ide lor
ltlili. the other for vnderorm1. Remo~oble
head fo r ea·ly deonong. Smooth -till wong
tulop 1hope i1 eo oy to hu ndloe . Soft white
fin i1h with &lt;o lorlut woldfl ower (e nrer de
li 91'l

-k
.,' - ~_· .:f-1 :,;,;.'.•·.
· -,~:,..I!NI, " U

~~;-

$

3988

lrh to n• S p ooy

1('\U it '

.

,. ".

~

. ·~ ·-" --

~f-5J::.'}

:.-: .-'.. :: :'):- .....__
.. ,!:,

. tr, ·f +;f,'....

1

••

~~

•

_,,

:/\ .~•'" , ·~
916o
,.--~

- , ....

.
~5~~B.~I;Y~ft~~T.~.~~~ . ... +'

• -4- ..

JIWB.IY DE/IT.
~·'

HECK'S REG.
$47.96

D&lt;y I. 51t' Cl tr S!:' l lln (j\ Wo

O p fru l t- • on

•er W.nd ow.

LADIES' SHAVER

7 oz.

~ h u 11ct ,

f-92

SlUM-SPRAY IRON

SUNIEAM

'

de v11lop No peelinu, no lt t le r oud no tur\l nQ A I OOn tu ty &lt;i rrlt d ot loroce fo nder hel pt ~ov locu1 lo o&lt;11 J 11 lee! to 25
lilt~ I. Yo u 'Jt! t \ ll! to mul•c e .•J)O H/ t ~ s_pnh o l w td t Nt eiKtrti l'! it

G.E •

HECK'S REG.

..

:-- , .. --

~

#

I

./

f

t"

$ 3· 99

NAIIJWAII--·
DEPT.
7·2995 .

GENERAL ELECTRIC

THRESH.OLD

SET

HECK'S EEG.
$7.88

AUTOMOTIVE DE/IT.

HECK'S '
REG.
$2.66

$144

100COUNT

EXTENSION CORDS
S COUNT SCHICK
DOUILIIDGI

6FT.

t FT.

12FT.

'

NAIDWAIE IJIIIT.

POLICE SCANNER

WNITI 01 IIOWI.

NAftWAH,.T.

'

HECK'S REG.
$4.49

,.,

. coSMEftt
...

5UPE.I CHROMIUM

. BLADES
HECK'S REG.
94' .

46~

tOSIIITIC, . ,

WITH ~M-FM RADIO

CM-11

TYLENOL

SJ19
HECK'SIEG.

' $t.69
toSIIITit , . ,
-1, -

"(/)~ 1D

. .__

~

$RlwliUJ- ?j.oJL 8RihA."

•

•

PEPSODENT
.TOOTHPASTE

FOG LIGHTS
•
CHROME PLATED
C.LEAR OR AM BER

*'.

Pu oh !he thu lle r b utton, turn o 0011 k {11\ d wo t(h thtl pic tvr11

HECK'S REG.
$6.37
..

$1]77

AUTOMOTIVE
DE/IT. ,

$17

..
·+
..

NEW INSTANT

SEALED BEAM

and rod io1 .

HECK'S REG;
$19.95SEr ·

· KODAK

The pocket C:omera that hos on
f/9.5 opt ical gloss 3 elemeni le ns
for dearer . $harper pictures .end
real ly fits your pocket!

JEJta•r
JEJIBI Y IE/IT.

~~+&lt;::..

POCKET ·
CAMERA
KIT

$22.99

SJ49

GREASE GUN

"(i

AHII
SK3

STROBE

EFFERDENT
DENTURE CLEANER
$

JEWEliY DEPT.

Ro c~l~ ~rylec! 'Wol~ r ~,.., G•ool

96COUNT

,HECK'S
REG.

$32.56

$2·799

HECK'SREG.
$29 .96

HECK'S REG.
$34.96

AM/ FM. AIR. PB ond WEATHER

DE/IT.

$ ]44

24

G.E. HI-DOME

SINGLE CYLINDER
LOCK .
HECK'S REG.
$7.11

Heck's
Reg.

99

5127

JEWB.IY

HECK'S REG.
' $5.99

m~lhp~&lt;obon i ~'"'"'~ . l o"""",." ' cloa• ' ""'

Mr. Co flee II f re!~h · brew~ your fa-.oorile col·
fee at preci~el y th e corre&lt;f b re wi ng' te m·
perature, ~o it i~ ne.,er bitfer. Unique 3
positi on ~wiich con t ro l ~ both tirewing cycle
end watmer plate .

Fo~hionobl e
~hovlder 5tr o p for eo i y cqrrying .

,.

SPORTS DEn.

fOR BULK OR

e

( ...,1111111

&gt;o +l h&gt; , ooo i Ha•odtut"otiiiMr-tlol I DI'II OI,.,.. tltnc~l lot'&gt; l•
,t,~ t ~ '0'"t , plnlli: tolm. r,11.., ('OIIIttd

SBAND
PORTABLE
RADIO
pod ded leothererte cme. A

25.96

CARTRtpGE GREASE

8-dyll•qO&lt;&lt;I &lt;ryo1&lt;0&lt;l ,opl"' Ull" ' l~n g~lyi "Tf&gt; 5qu&lt;l oc
•COC I &lt;&lt;&gt;lt "lc;o""" • ~ l.o r/c&gt;d~ ·•~ &amp; ~'""""' rok d &lt;UOo n

5

1

,

·

"l• tn " " " -.,_,... G!~- ...... l loo ,..Jfloo- Oii lo ..I'd

GRAND PRIX

.· .

DEXTER

_

SP3632

.

9 ~peep •li.de control lo r eYer y mi• ing
r;eeJ . 2 polition turnta ble. 1 qt. and 2 qt .
glou bowil ; pu~hbu!lon b ~o l~ r r:1ec-lm :
lor9r: chrorm;o·p lu red bf'olt&gt;rs · o o w~ rlvl

WAFFLI GRILL

DRIP-0-LATOR

.JEJIB.I Y DEPT.

~'
'
I II
·~
uL

,$588

NAIDWAIE .....
Dl/11. · :t,1

S/IOITS
DII*T.

.

FOOTBALL, PUMP ·
AND "T" KIT

INTERNATIONAL
CAL~ULATOR

FE32-A

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

.

AMFVOIT

STAND MIXER

IIFLON

MR. COFFEE II

en ,

Wprk ~ on Col~mon stoves, electric

·

· "THIN MAN"

.... ~tJo d

'

CAMPoOVEN
..

cuoo
· GIIIIRAL ILICIIIC

l or .e&lt;1p10&lt; ol c al o ~llliiO n . ~"""" 8"' 11-•n '"'"''~bit .
Nl C o~boMoo" ' • ~{ A&lt;io~lt •r O••• !II• &amp; Nultbo&lt;&gt;l 11110

7''

IERNZ-O"MATIC

SPOITS
DEPT.

'

'

.

SHARP

·DELUXE

150-.,..al t motor.

NAIIDWAIE DE/IT.

$14 .99

'

$

COLEMAN

. HECK'S REG.
$7.99

.

HECK'S REG.
$12.99
~~

$ 66

... ...

PROPANE
TORCH KIT

9 EYEL

5
' .

PORTABLE
8-TRACK
TAPE PLAYER

.

.\1KUIIflt.l

HAMILTON lEACH

GENERAL ELECTRIC

SI'NTSDIIT.

. STADIUM SEAT

ILI030

3-5501 /2

HECK'S
REG.
$2.19

24&lt;

HE.CK'S REG. 36'

AMFVOIT
BASKETBALL

$1''·

'1.99
SPOITS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$26.48

t•

VOLT iANTERN

HECK'S IUI:l&gt;.l

BB
SHOT

.. .

1

I

�(

a-

The DaUy SentineL

t-Tho DaUySenUnei,Middleoort·Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday, Dec.l4.1976

"

'

~1111111. Touchmatic .

"d}lt_f j F!fJt'f',fN!-Jrmtlijtt/(r;
with , ..,.,r Cl.ri&lt;tn"u 11ifl of"/..,,.. Cl.c.• l.
Th r· ln1

l'! ; r' rlf ! /1 ' 1/f,

t'

dw1l .· f t '., till'

IIIII\ /

'j 'fri I (.' /11 i1/I W/\' IL'I' II III'/' (/I I i1 11 t Jfi 'IW fl' l ' (/,'J,Wfl 1/U.'II f

r!/IH' (J II/ ij ll/ ' f !l/1'\, a/1 {i11i.1/wr/ iu jim • f"li/Ji ii ('IIVIH irf.\ 1n1~/
Jiu l'lf rl itlr {r'riJ!. IWr / r n l t-rt lf/r C: w i l/!1 11 tf1 iuk nf o ·

•BOOTS
•BELTS
•SHIRTS

.
•

-~_.-...--:M;;;W:;;tVEN

.

)
The annuai\Christmas din·
ner party of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trtmty
Church was held Friday
night at thechurc~.
The turkey dinner was
served from tables covered
with white and centered with
f:~~~[!:!in • sterling bowl
by red tapers. Mrs.
Meinhart had

SIJdCs of variou.s thurch ac·
li\'ilies the past year were

~

-

its

Kt~v .

e

J
Following the dinner, Mrs..
Rose Ginther opened the prl&gt;'
gr"'n with prayer. Devotions
were by Mrs. Date Smith and
Mrs. Freda Duffy was at the
piano for group singing of
sever~! carols, including
"Silent Night" which which
had ~ach verse followed by a
Christmas meditation. Miss
Erma Smith read the
Christmas Story, and a

(:enevievt! Swart ~ was in lhc
rule of S.nlll. Gifts from the
etas.&gt; were presented to the
Rev. and Mrs. w. H. Perrin,
t.awrent't Hoffner ~ nd Mrs.
Rose Ginther: Agift of money
was also made to the church
treasury.
Gueo;ts at the dinner were
Mrs. Grace Pratt and Mrs.
Iva Powell. The evening cuneluded with ice cream, cake
and coffee being servc'll.

'

• Hand Bags
• Billfolds
• Belts

n~i~~~; , pins, buHons ,
!tc
&amp; tapes.

Jl

DAN'S
Open 9-.S Mon .•Sat.

FEAST YOUR EYES

Dan Arnold

Middleport, 0.

•

•

. SUPER MARKET • Open Daily ~ to 10
"
Sun. 10 to 10
..• ..}$.1:}. ~ We Aecept
Feder~[ Food Stamps ~ ~ ~
...
•

OPEN TIL8 P.M., FRI. &amp; SAT.

b

~

~

Corne~ Mill and sOCond Sis.

'

•'

.· .

PHONE 992-3480

.

••
•

, MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Middleport, 0.

We

.

rese~e the right to ttmlt quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

SUPERIORS
SEMI-BONELESS

"

7NirH
,

100% SoliCJ"State

CI~IIROMAtOll.O-II
lf':.'2~~0RATOR COMPACT TV
The ELLIPSE I
H1950W
I

Thi s g ift season put a littl e
e11.c itement on her wrist . Give her
a wa tch that's l m a g ln atl v~ and
practical, too . Like one of these
total l~, ne w 17 jeWe l creation s
from ou r hig h fashion Cara velle
collection . Designed to plea se
her; pri ced to please yo u. '

Simulated grained
American Walnut
cabmel. Pic l ure
Con trol. Aut omatic
Fine-tuning Control.
lllumlnaled Chan nel
Numbers. P10vi sion
for cabl e or ma·ster
ant enna connecti on.
VHF an d UHF
Anten nas

•

--...
.-.
,.

I

IDEAS

REGAL
TIES
New Shipment 'Just In Time For Xmas!

$4

W' Variable Speed
Reversible Drill
Versatile! Set, speed for
wood, ·metaL masonry,
glass; drives and removes
. &gt;crews. Double-reduction
gears. 0123 -4150.
$29.$9
____.-¥•:,.'....
' ~Ingle Spef!d Dri II.
0124·4100
$12 .99

.

$6 50

TO

• EVG - Eie ctromc Video Guar d Tuning System

• One-knob VHF and UHF Channel Select1on

MAKE THE NEXT TIME
MORE EXCITING

• 100% Solid-Stale Chassis

GOESSLER'
S
JEWELRY
Pomeroy, 0.

RIDENOUR

• POWER SENTR Y Vol1 age Regulating Syslem

Racine , 0 . 949-2020.

TV &amp; Apeliance
Gas Service
Chester , o. 985-3307

See the new zipper ready-tied
always a perfect knot.

ties,

NEW YORK

NG HOUSE

Pomeroy,

o. ~

(WHOLE OR HALF)

~·

ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL

Clip-Ons, Too!
Asymmetr ica l bra ce let watch . Rho.di um f inish Sil ver
mirror d ia l. SS9.9S

HAM

•

FANTASTIC
NEW SELECTION

'12~

HAM STEAKS

•'

'';

.

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

'•

•'

-

~bevy Van

conver5ions.

j

•n~ruh_.,

ntu.

$23.95
TWO QUARTONL v$29.99
Open Every Night Until 8 Til Chr~tmas

'

'

LB.
FRESH &amp; LEAN

THE TR ULY EXCE PTIONAL GIFT
On ly n pe rfec t diamond 'c un r·c n ~ct maxi mum
bea ut y n nd b ri ll ia nt;c f or l as ti ng p rid e iin d
sati sfact ion. With you r Kee ps ak e, yo u will
rcrcivc a wriltL:n guarantee of perfect da rity , ·
fl nc w hit ~; colur ami cnrrcL:t modern cut. as well
as pcrnwm:nt rcg istr&lt;tt ion. tr:tde-in va lue and
protec tion :l g; tin st loss. K eepsake, th ere L~ no
fin er di •unond ring.

MOORE'S AUTO PARTS

K&amp;CPomJEWELERS
o.

Pomeroy

'I

'••

Chevrolet

Open Every Night Til8 p.m .

heritage house
Middleport, o.

GROUND GROUND
·cHUCK
ROUND

•

Other Fine Footwear for Sports Available,
Too.

'

i

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992·2126

"Your Chevy eeater"
Pomeroy,

:•

o.

FRESH &amp; LEAN

•••

-

2 pah

PRODUCE

DAIRY
.· BROUGHTON'S LOWFAT

!

R&lt;11istered Diamond Rings

ONE QUART

39C
PIE SHELLS •.••••..•....•....•........·...•.
BIRDS EYE
·
· ,
9 oz. size 59C
COOL WHIP............................ .
SCOT LAD
·
GAL '1 29
ICE
MILK-•.•..•..•..•.•.••.•••..•.•....
.......

PET RITZ . . ..

(5 LBS. OR MORE

i

Sizes
6'12 to 13

Keepsak~

stul. 1 · uu lUI·

•

j

9

.

ICE CREAM ......................~.~a!'~~ .. 7 c

Ground Beef

SUEDE
Ald~ln's

SCOT LAD

FRESH &amp; LEAN

....... a Otevrolet
und~r your
Ouistmas tree

NATURAL

FROZEN FOODS

'14~

•

923 South lrd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

Pro-Keds
,
Staltle' tllirmu Nfl If

BONE IN

BONELESS

Famous Stanley Thermos
by

ON THESE

•

THE SEWING CENTER

INGELS FURNITURE

'

•••

Now Amana Cookmallc Power Shifl -puts you In full
contrOI.of everything you cook.
Ask to See a demonslral io n of the perfect gill! Amana

Touchmatic Radaranqe Microwave Oven .

g1·amlmother.

invited.

'

..,

for

ac tu al ly " re'members" and displays lh e time of day
In lights!

Lane·
'..Jr ,., ( Ji.,
BAKER FURNITURE

p.m. Sunday . The public is

HOLIDAY FOOD BUYS

~ o sh ut it sel f _
oil and ca ll you for dinner. Then th e ti mer

Lav Aways ·. Gift Cer ti fica tes

Guy A. Russell of Middleport,
Ruulc I, ~nd Mr. and Mrs.
PROGRAM SLATED
John Ha1Tisun of Middleport
The Eagle Ridge C..m- ' arc the grandporcnt.&gt;. Mrs.
munlty Church will hold its Nora C.mllron. Pomeroy,
Christmas program at 7:31! Houl e . ~ . is a grca l-

•

J

how long to d'e frost. "Remembers" I10w
long to cook with split second acc uracy . ''Reme/'flbers' '

Nc&lt;:tl ) Miss Juhne

. three uunces. Mr. ttnd Mrs.

lnissory note ,
Roo Rouda said Mooday
that he would ~ek dismissal
oo groWlds Sinatra faUed to
appear at his lawyer's office
in Los Angeles to give a
courtordered deposition ln
the case oo Oec. 8, The
lawyer said Sinatra informed
him he was too angry at &amp;lhl
to appear. to gl ve the
deposltioo .

'

-'

own car rying

Thimble holders
10 ·Compartments

Mrs.

the Holzer Medit~l Center.
1l1e b&lt;lby wei~hed 10 poumlli,

.=....~---~~--.........--------------~~---

17 Standard tllread holders
Large thread holders

·-MR.

BOYS SHIRTS......... 14.95

llc. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
SHuler&gt;, Mr;. Mike Zirkle,
Mrs: Thelma Ketler, Mr&lt;.
Mabel PellrmHn, Mrs. G&lt;~&gt;'
Shllffrr, Mrs. !.uta Shaffer,
Mrs. TereSI! Shaffer, Mrs.
Manda Eastman, Mr_ and
Mrs. Carl Nottinghain, Jim·
my Casto, Mrs. Ruth Gosney ,
Mrs. Ann Bailey, Mrs. Mae
ft!ason, Mrs. Alice Priddy,

Moodispaogh and Mr. and
Mrs. Tum Kelly.

.

12 Bobbin holders '

.Insulated Safety Toe Boots

STlNLIY

shown fiy tilt Rev. William
Knittle ala dinner party held
al the borne of Mr" and Mrs.
Tom Kelly for members of
the I.adies Auxiliary of the
Middl epo rt
United
Pentecostal Church and their
husbands.
.
Following the ham and
turkey dinner there was a n
exchange of gifts, Atlendmg

were the Rev . and Mrs. Knil~

·•

M

by Lerner

with

~

'

·.· FEATURING:
" Foldaway carrying han1dle1
Antique white
S@parate organizer tray

•HATS

JUSTIN

Slides shown on activities

~

the first mic;rowave oven
with a memory.

/ J IIfll~ illr l/1! I ' II IH J / 11 I'll !/ " { {Il l'!' !JII II t'"

mu fo '

"

-_MELWOOD
SEWING BASKET

.~_A..n_h .n.A7.n_..e....:;

}ll'f,&lt;.t •rwf. l'l•, •ri,;·fwd llil't'l'
flf (!ll'llit;m . .didl r·r'n 011 n . .·\ /,!.i ft .~/ t 'I'Jrt'll ii1 l 'l'lllllrft•.l·
uf mHull ll"r' 111111 /r :L;!' rul , 11 lrrrdi f ir 111 tlwt J.!.rnw.~· ill it ~· ·, ·/i rmu

WESTERN

. · ; d prayel'
by t he
W, II. Per·
1 wns.
rin
dosedtcvu
A
10111
I
nnua. dtnner ts enJ J
·
~·or the gi ft c&lt;change, Mrs.

.

SAHL'S NOTE
SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) •
SON BORN
An
attorney for Mort Sahl Is
Mr. and Mrs, Anthony
seeking
dismissal or suit !Ued
ll11'&lt;Sell of Middleport, Route
by
Frlll\k
Sinatra against tho
I, are nnnouncinKthe b1rth or
cqnedlan
over a ~.000 proa son. John Todd , Dec. 10 at

c

·

.

.

' GAL~ ••$}49
ChocoI.ate M'lk
1 ..........
.
BROUGHTON'S

PLASTIC

2% MILK .......... ~~~~q~..

BROUGHTON'S

$.

l

REO DELICIOUS

APPLES .... ~..~~.~~ 00

49

g~

'

.

HOMO MILK .....'~z.~~~~..7

BANANAS
5 LB.

•1 00

EOON
TISSUE

. .

4 ROLL PAK

POWER TOOLS
FROM

5-QUART

CROCKER
COOKER/FRYER

'1'

SPECIAL

..
.......

"' ......

WHIL-e THEY
LAST I

•••

• Aslow cooker -a regular cooker

t.
I

· - a deep fryer
• Crockery vessel plus low heat
settings lor versatility
• Removable crock can be washer
· in dishwasher

992 --2811

110 Main St.

99451

100 o

1

. 600-watt microwave
oven with def1·ost cycle
Was SJ79.9S

NOW

'279.95

~ Auft)oriz~d Catrifog Sales Merchant

, EBERSBACH HARDWARE

•
JIGSAWS

~

Pomeroy, Q.

220 E. Matn 992-2178 Pom eroy , 0 .
Owned &amp; Operated by Lou Osborne

it

'•
•

a

•

Serving Meigs, ~·:IIIia
and Mason counties.
Jock w. Carsey, Mgr.

•

SAN.DERS

STORE
' .'

'
••

Phone !'2-2181

•

STORE HOURS:
Store Open 8:30·5:30
Mill cloHS all p.m.

•

POMEROY lANDMARK .

CHESTER, 0.

...

••
•.•,
•
••
•
"
••

HOTPOINT MICROWAVE OVEN Willi .
TWO POWE~ LEVELS. NOW YOU CAN
THAW &amp; COOK!

\F INiSHING &amp; ORBITAL

BAUM'S

a

Model 'R E924 T

BELT SANDERS

TRUE
VALUE

LB

•

VARIABLE SPEED

*

,

'••

Roc:;kwell International

11/l' CIRCULAR SAWS

PORK

- .CHOPS ............. ~
'

•••

ONLY

REVERSIBLE DRILLS

FAMILY PAK

,,

~

.:
••
'

.•
'

HOMEM4DE
.

PURE PORK .

SAUSAGE·
99~.

RC COLA'

LOIN END

8 PAK 16 OZ. BOTTLES

·- -~ ·

PORK
ROAST
I

99~

COke
r=

5 'QUA~TS

8 PAK

16 OZ. BOTTLES

DIET RITE
8 PAK
16 OZ. BOTTLES

,.

�(

a-

The DaUy SentineL

t-Tho DaUySenUnei,Middleoort·Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday, Dec.l4.1976

"

'

~1111111. Touchmatic .

"d}lt_f j F!fJt'f',fN!-Jrmtlijtt/(r;
with , ..,.,r Cl.ri&lt;tn"u 11ifl of"/..,,.. Cl.c.• l.
Th r· ln1

l'! ; r' rlf ! /1 ' 1/f,

t'

dw1l .· f t '., till'

IIIII\ /

'j 'fri I (.' /11 i1/I W/\' IL'I' II III'/' (/I I i1 11 t Jfi 'IW fl' l ' (/,'J,Wfl 1/U.'II f

r!/IH' (J II/ ij ll/ ' f !l/1'\, a/1 {i11i.1/wr/ iu jim • f"li/Ji ii ('IIVIH irf.\ 1n1~/
Jiu l'lf rl itlr {r'riJ!. IWr / r n l t-rt lf/r C: w i l/!1 11 tf1 iuk nf o ·

•BOOTS
•BELTS
•SHIRTS

.
•

-~_.-...--:M;;;W:;;tVEN

.

)
The annuai\Christmas din·
ner party of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trtmty
Church was held Friday
night at thechurc~.
The turkey dinner was
served from tables covered
with white and centered with
f:~~~[!:!in • sterling bowl
by red tapers. Mrs.
Meinhart had

SIJdCs of variou.s thurch ac·
li\'ilies the past year were

~

-

its

Kt~v .

e

J
Following the dinner, Mrs..
Rose Ginther opened the prl&gt;'
gr"'n with prayer. Devotions
were by Mrs. Date Smith and
Mrs. Freda Duffy was at the
piano for group singing of
sever~! carols, including
"Silent Night" which which
had ~ach verse followed by a
Christmas meditation. Miss
Erma Smith read the
Christmas Story, and a

(:enevievt! Swart ~ was in lhc
rule of S.nlll. Gifts from the
etas.&gt; were presented to the
Rev. and Mrs. w. H. Perrin,
t.awrent't Hoffner ~ nd Mrs.
Rose Ginther: Agift of money
was also made to the church
treasury.
Gueo;ts at the dinner were
Mrs. Grace Pratt and Mrs.
Iva Powell. The evening cuneluded with ice cream, cake
and coffee being servc'll.

'

• Hand Bags
• Billfolds
• Belts

n~i~~~; , pins, buHons ,
!tc
&amp; tapes.

Jl

DAN'S
Open 9-.S Mon .•Sat.

FEAST YOUR EYES

Dan Arnold

Middleport, 0.

•

•

. SUPER MARKET • Open Daily ~ to 10
"
Sun. 10 to 10
..• ..}$.1:}. ~ We Aecept
Feder~[ Food Stamps ~ ~ ~
...
•

OPEN TIL8 P.M., FRI. &amp; SAT.

b

~

~

Corne~ Mill and sOCond Sis.

'

•'

.· .

PHONE 992-3480

.

••
•

, MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Middleport, 0.

We

.

rese~e the right to ttmlt quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

SUPERIORS
SEMI-BONELESS

"

7NirH
,

100% SoliCJ"State

CI~IIROMAtOll.O-II
lf':.'2~~0RATOR COMPACT TV
The ELLIPSE I
H1950W
I

Thi s g ift season put a littl e
e11.c itement on her wrist . Give her
a wa tch that's l m a g ln atl v~ and
practical, too . Like one of these
total l~, ne w 17 jeWe l creation s
from ou r hig h fashion Cara velle
collection . Designed to plea se
her; pri ced to please yo u. '

Simulated grained
American Walnut
cabmel. Pic l ure
Con trol. Aut omatic
Fine-tuning Control.
lllumlnaled Chan nel
Numbers. P10vi sion
for cabl e or ma·ster
ant enna connecti on.
VHF an d UHF
Anten nas

•

--...
.-.
,.

I

IDEAS

REGAL
TIES
New Shipment 'Just In Time For Xmas!

$4

W' Variable Speed
Reversible Drill
Versatile! Set, speed for
wood, ·metaL masonry,
glass; drives and removes
. &gt;crews. Double-reduction
gears. 0123 -4150.
$29.$9
____.-¥•:,.'....
' ~Ingle Spef!d Dri II.
0124·4100
$12 .99

.

$6 50

TO

• EVG - Eie ctromc Video Guar d Tuning System

• One-knob VHF and UHF Channel Select1on

MAKE THE NEXT TIME
MORE EXCITING

• 100% Solid-Stale Chassis

GOESSLER'
S
JEWELRY
Pomeroy, 0.

RIDENOUR

• POWER SENTR Y Vol1 age Regulating Syslem

Racine , 0 . 949-2020.

TV &amp; Apeliance
Gas Service
Chester , o. 985-3307

See the new zipper ready-tied
always a perfect knot.

ties,

NEW YORK

NG HOUSE

Pomeroy,

o. ~

(WHOLE OR HALF)

~·

ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL

Clip-Ons, Too!
Asymmetr ica l bra ce let watch . Rho.di um f inish Sil ver
mirror d ia l. SS9.9S

HAM

•

FANTASTIC
NEW SELECTION

'12~

HAM STEAKS

•'

'';

.

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

'•

•'

-

~bevy Van

conver5ions.

j

•n~ruh_.,

ntu.

$23.95
TWO QUARTONL v$29.99
Open Every Night Until 8 Til Chr~tmas

'

'

LB.
FRESH &amp; LEAN

THE TR ULY EXCE PTIONAL GIFT
On ly n pe rfec t diamond 'c un r·c n ~ct maxi mum
bea ut y n nd b ri ll ia nt;c f or l as ti ng p rid e iin d
sati sfact ion. With you r Kee ps ak e, yo u will
rcrcivc a wriltL:n guarantee of perfect da rity , ·
fl nc w hit ~; colur ami cnrrcL:t modern cut. as well
as pcrnwm:nt rcg istr&lt;tt ion. tr:tde-in va lue and
protec tion :l g; tin st loss. K eepsake, th ere L~ no
fin er di •unond ring.

MOORE'S AUTO PARTS

K&amp;CPomJEWELERS
o.

Pomeroy

'I

'••

Chevrolet

Open Every Night Til8 p.m .

heritage house
Middleport, o.

GROUND GROUND
·cHUCK
ROUND

•

Other Fine Footwear for Sports Available,
Too.

'

i

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992·2126

"Your Chevy eeater"
Pomeroy,

:•

o.

FRESH &amp; LEAN

•••

-

2 pah

PRODUCE

DAIRY
.· BROUGHTON'S LOWFAT

!

R&lt;11istered Diamond Rings

ONE QUART

39C
PIE SHELLS •.••••..•....•....•........·...•.
BIRDS EYE
·
· ,
9 oz. size 59C
COOL WHIP............................ .
SCOT LAD
·
GAL '1 29
ICE
MILK-•.•..•..•..•.•.••.•••..•.•....
.......

PET RITZ . . ..

(5 LBS. OR MORE

i

Sizes
6'12 to 13

Keepsak~

stul. 1 · uu lUI·

•

j

9

.

ICE CREAM ......................~.~a!'~~ .. 7 c

Ground Beef

SUEDE
Ald~ln's

SCOT LAD

FRESH &amp; LEAN

....... a Otevrolet
und~r your
Ouistmas tree

NATURAL

FROZEN FOODS

'14~

•

923 South lrd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

Pro-Keds
,
Staltle' tllirmu Nfl If

BONE IN

BONELESS

Famous Stanley Thermos
by

ON THESE

•

THE SEWING CENTER

INGELS FURNITURE

'

•••

Now Amana Cookmallc Power Shifl -puts you In full
contrOI.of everything you cook.
Ask to See a demonslral io n of the perfect gill! Amana

Touchmatic Radaranqe Microwave Oven .

g1·amlmother.

invited.

'

..,

for

ac tu al ly " re'members" and displays lh e time of day
In lights!

Lane·
'..Jr ,., ( Ji.,
BAKER FURNITURE

p.m. Sunday . The public is

HOLIDAY FOOD BUYS

~ o sh ut it sel f _
oil and ca ll you for dinner. Then th e ti mer

Lav Aways ·. Gift Cer ti fica tes

Guy A. Russell of Middleport,
Ruulc I, ~nd Mr. and Mrs.
PROGRAM SLATED
John Ha1Tisun of Middleport
The Eagle Ridge C..m- ' arc the grandporcnt.&gt;. Mrs.
munlty Church will hold its Nora C.mllron. Pomeroy,
Christmas program at 7:31! Houl e . ~ . is a grca l-

•

J

how long to d'e frost. "Remembers" I10w
long to cook with split second acc uracy . ''Reme/'flbers' '

Nc&lt;:tl ) Miss Juhne

. three uunces. Mr. ttnd Mrs.

lnissory note ,
Roo Rouda said Mooday
that he would ~ek dismissal
oo groWlds Sinatra faUed to
appear at his lawyer's office
in Los Angeles to give a
courtordered deposition ln
the case oo Oec. 8, The
lawyer said Sinatra informed
him he was too angry at &amp;lhl
to appear. to gl ve the
deposltioo .

'

-'

own car rying

Thimble holders
10 ·Compartments

Mrs.

the Holzer Medit~l Center.
1l1e b&lt;lby wei~hed 10 poumlli,

.=....~---~~--.........--------------~~---

17 Standard tllread holders
Large thread holders

·-MR.

BOYS SHIRTS......... 14.95

llc. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
SHuler&gt;, Mr;. Mike Zirkle,
Mrs: Thelma Ketler, Mr&lt;.
Mabel PellrmHn, Mrs. G&lt;~&gt;'
Shllffrr, Mrs. !.uta Shaffer,
Mrs. TereSI! Shaffer, Mrs.
Manda Eastman, Mr_ and
Mrs. Carl Nottinghain, Jim·
my Casto, Mrs. Ruth Gosney ,
Mrs. Ann Bailey, Mrs. Mae
ft!ason, Mrs. Alice Priddy,

Moodispaogh and Mr. and
Mrs. Tum Kelly.

.

12 Bobbin holders '

.Insulated Safety Toe Boots

STlNLIY

shown fiy tilt Rev. William
Knittle ala dinner party held
al the borne of Mr" and Mrs.
Tom Kelly for members of
the I.adies Auxiliary of the
Middl epo rt
United
Pentecostal Church and their
husbands.
.
Following the ham and
turkey dinner there was a n
exchange of gifts, Atlendmg

were the Rev . and Mrs. Knil~

·•

M

by Lerner

with

~

'

·.· FEATURING:
" Foldaway carrying han1dle1
Antique white
S@parate organizer tray

•HATS

JUSTIN

Slides shown on activities

~

the first mic;rowave oven
with a memory.

/ J IIfll~ illr l/1! I ' II IH J / 11 I'll !/ " { {Il l'!' !JII II t'"

mu fo '

"

-_MELWOOD
SEWING BASKET

.~_A..n_h .n.A7.n_..e....:;

}ll'f,&lt;.t •rwf. l'l•, •ri,;·fwd llil't'l'
flf (!ll'llit;m . .didl r·r'n 011 n . .·\ /,!.i ft .~/ t 'I'Jrt'll ii1 l 'l'lllllrft•.l·
uf mHull ll"r' 111111 /r :L;!' rul , 11 lrrrdi f ir 111 tlwt J.!.rnw.~· ill it ~· ·, ·/i rmu

WESTERN

. · ; d prayel'
by t he
W, II. Per·
1 wns.
rin
dosedtcvu
A
10111
I
nnua. dtnner ts enJ J
·
~·or the gi ft c&lt;change, Mrs.

.

SAHL'S NOTE
SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) •
SON BORN
An
attorney for Mort Sahl Is
Mr. and Mrs, Anthony
seeking
dismissal or suit !Ued
ll11'&lt;Sell of Middleport, Route
by
Frlll\k
Sinatra against tho
I, are nnnouncinKthe b1rth or
cqnedlan
over a ~.000 proa son. John Todd , Dec. 10 at

c

·

.

.

' GAL~ ••$}49
ChocoI.ate M'lk
1 ..........
.
BROUGHTON'S

PLASTIC

2% MILK .......... ~~~~q~..

BROUGHTON'S

$.

l

REO DELICIOUS

APPLES .... ~..~~.~~ 00

49

g~

'

.

HOMO MILK .....'~z.~~~~..7

BANANAS
5 LB.

•1 00

EOON
TISSUE

. .

4 ROLL PAK

POWER TOOLS
FROM

5-QUART

CROCKER
COOKER/FRYER

'1'

SPECIAL

..
.......

"' ......

WHIL-e THEY
LAST I

•••

• Aslow cooker -a regular cooker

t.
I

· - a deep fryer
• Crockery vessel plus low heat
settings lor versatility
• Removable crock can be washer
· in dishwasher

992 --2811

110 Main St.

99451

100 o

1

. 600-watt microwave
oven with def1·ost cycle
Was SJ79.9S

NOW

'279.95

~ Auft)oriz~d Catrifog Sales Merchant

, EBERSBACH HARDWARE

•
JIGSAWS

~

Pomeroy, Q.

220 E. Matn 992-2178 Pom eroy , 0 .
Owned &amp; Operated by Lou Osborne

it

'•
•

a

•

Serving Meigs, ~·:IIIia
and Mason counties.
Jock w. Carsey, Mgr.

•

SAN.DERS

STORE
' .'

'
••

Phone !'2-2181

•

STORE HOURS:
Store Open 8:30·5:30
Mill cloHS all p.m.

•

POMEROY lANDMARK .

CHESTER, 0.

...

••
•.•,
•
••
•
"
••

HOTPOINT MICROWAVE OVEN Willi .
TWO POWE~ LEVELS. NOW YOU CAN
THAW &amp; COOK!

\F INiSHING &amp; ORBITAL

BAUM'S

a

Model 'R E924 T

BELT SANDERS

TRUE
VALUE

LB

•

VARIABLE SPEED

*

,

'••

Roc:;kwell International

11/l' CIRCULAR SAWS

PORK

- .CHOPS ............. ~
'

•••

ONLY

REVERSIBLE DRILLS

FAMILY PAK

,,

~

.:
••
'

.•
'

HOMEM4DE
.

PURE PORK .

SAUSAGE·
99~.

RC COLA'

LOIN END

8 PAK 16 OZ. BOTTLES

·- -~ ·

PORK
ROAST
I

99~

COke
r=

5 'QUA~TS

8 PAK

16 OZ. BOTTLES

DIET RITE
8 PAK
16 OZ. BOTTLES

,.

�to _ Tile D&amp;lly sentinel. MlddleDOrt-POIM'oy, 0 .. Tueldav. Dec. 14. 19'16

AstraGraph

W4NT ADI
INFO-MATION
DEADLINII

S P .M .
Day
BtfQ rr
Publica tion .
·
•
cor~ e-c
Can ctlllt lona.
t lons a ccep t ed f ln t dav of
publicat ion .

Bernice Bede Oao1
· &lt; -EGUL4TION5
For Wednoldoy, Dec. 15, 117'....' he Publi sher reser ves
' he ri gh t to tdlt or. rt ltct
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 11) A a ny ads deemed Ob ·

rather harmoni ou s day. You're a
JOY to be with smce you k now

l t ctlona l. T h e p ub lis h er
w ill not be rnpons lbl t tor
m ort" than on e In cor re ct
ln 5e r tlon .
RATES
For Wanl Ad Strvlct
5 cen11 ptr wpr d one
insert ion .
•
M in im um Charge $1.00
l.t cenrs per word thrtecon secut l'lt In sertions
26 cen ts r,e r wotd six
conse cutl'lt nsert tons
25 Per Cent Ol scoun i on
pa id eds lnd ed s pa id
w rthln Hl days .

ho w to em p loy the prope r
per spective .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don't hesitate about taking on
several task s tOd ay. You'll be
a ble to juggle them an d dazzle

onlookers with. the p_eo rformance.

GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) You
c an acc:om plish more today by
b usying you rsel t with those ta$ks
th at you en joy as opposed to the

1

JObs yo u reel you must do. Those

CA~D

OF THANKS

&amp; OBITUA~ Y

can wail until ano ther day

U .OO for
50 word:
!
!Jm
~
==
CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22) Th1s rllJ!IJ,lll~u
ac a
onirWOrCf l

should be a most enjoyable day
becau se tho se under you r wing
will respond to your care and

cen ts .

OFFICE

in what you

VIRGO (A•g. 23-Sapl. 22) To- ,
1

li!HIA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) The
to you r pr ogres s ha'le
ro d(! I Yo u can now gain the
1• .':!-:. you desire . All 11 tak es Is a
..tQJ.\ heart and determination .
~.;, r 1u r~

SCO RPIO (Ocl . 24-Nov. 22)
Wh ere you are not a leade r today, you can be of great value by
be i~g the S1rong. s11ent pow~r ,
behmd the throne .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc .
21) To f ind your se lf . Immer se
yo urse lf m group acll\ll lies tod ay
Bei ng of ser'I+Ce m ak es you
awa re of yo ur tr ue value as a
human

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

18)
There are many avenu es to t he
top . Chan ces ar e. you 'll be
aware of mo st of them today .
V1c tor y looks well -assured u nless you re ally b uck th e tide.
~ OUAR IU S

I T MA Y

CO N

Nolice is htrCb'll qrven tha t
on Decem bc r Z1 , t916 , a t 10 00
1\ M a oubllc sale Will be hrld
a t Pomf'r o y Moror Com p any .
Pomer oy . Oh io to se ll for cash
lhe follow ing CCIII41N lll. 10
wil tV6 7 M er cur y M on ter ey
o;;.-r i&amp;l No 1Z.H H S8 44 91 . Sllid
co ll &amp;t erllt bt 1n g tl e td ...~8lo
sec ur e lH'I obtlgit1ion ar ls ln ~
un der a r ~t a i l i nst&amp;lm ~ nt
o;cc urlty a gr eemf'nl held by
Gf'ncral M o tor s Acce pt ance
Cor por a tion as S ~c ur ed pa r tv
(. i'l i d pub l ic sal e is to be con
ouc+c d acc or dmg to th e t aw s
at th e ~t a t e of Ohi o Ge ner al
Mol ars
Acct: p tan cc
Cor
pora tlon r es er ves th e r lqh t to
h id at th is sa le
Ttl e col la t er a l rs pr esently
st or ed and me y be sf' cn a t
Pome r o y M o t or C om p.z~n y ,
Po mf'r oy . Ohio

(Jan. 20-Fob. 19)

Yo u work well w+th peopl e tod ay :
es peci ally if there is so meth ing
o f mut u el b en e f it at sta ke .
LIS tening to others Will pay

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
Busin ess prospects: are goOd today. but the actton c om e s~more
fr om p eop le you know than fr o m
w h a t 'fO U ,c an ac co mpli Sh
yourse tt. Cu ltiv at e mllu ential
fnends

~Your
~Birthday
Dec. 15, 1976
Yo u had better ge t yo ur calend ar
ord er The commg year is gomg to be a b usy one socia ll y
Many new pe&lt;J ple and activities
will en ter your li fe

1n

copy send 50 cents and a se/1addressad. stamped envelope to
As tro-Graph. P 0 . Box 4 8~ .
Radio C1ty Stat1on, New Yor/(,
N. Y 100 19 Be sure to ash tor
Sag/rtarlu!; Vo lume 1 J

pacer, trotter
are selected

24

hour

Doptndobla

1971 AMC HORNET
13195
Sportabou1, 6 cyl., au1omatlc. power sleerlng, deluxe
equlpmen1, whl1ewall fires, luggago rack, dark green
fi nish . ,less than 9.000 miles, showroom clean .

Oil or O.s Bur-s

1975 CHEVEL~E
14295
Eota1e Wagon . locall owner cor. while radlalllres. air
conditioning, V·8, oulomatlc, power steering and
brakes, rad io, dark red finish. blk . vinyl ln1erlor .
ClasSi c, 350, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes: rallv wheels, radi o, black and very aHractlye.

PICKENS

f!IOTICES
ATTN .: !!
A'LL HOUSI!WIVES
All Yard Sates , Rummage ,
Porcn and Basement Por ch
and Batemen t Sales , etc .
must tJe peld tn ad"'anu .
Get yours In ea r ly by
stopping by our offlcc._.,:,t
The Dally Sentinel . HI
Court Sf . or wr itin g Box
729, Pomero y , Ohio .t5769
w ith your r em l ttanc e

HDr~E.

Portlond. 0.

THE RACINE Fire Depor tme nt will
ho11e o gun shoot Saturday at
6.30 p m. at th&amp;ir building In
Bos hon
NOW accepting plano studen ll .
beginners . intermedia tes, ad. \.onced st udents. Call
992·

2'270.

----- ----

Christmas Trees
•

'

UoUedPressluteruatloDII
n....
Today is Tuesday, UC\.:. lt,

PERSON s BODY Shop, 26 Railroad
St .. Middleport would l1ke to
remmd customers that Oec 31
IS the la sl day to tok e od·
~ontoge of the pomt robs · oil
O'ler in , 1 color, $100. 2 lone
$125 wllhoul body work . Stop

the349thdayol1976with17to

;n or phone 985·&lt;17&lt; lor op-

follow.

pomtmen 1.__

:~~()(10

is in its Uist
The morning stars are
Mars and Satum.
-rftft
M
'11le ev.,...--e ltarl are er-

cury, Venus ard Jupiter.
'Ibose born on thla date are
under the algn of Sagittarius.

James "Jinuoy" Ooollttle,
Amer(can hero Oyer of World
War II, was born Dec. 14,

. ~:;::~mi~.;~~~-==~~=

~

REWARD FOR red . white and blue
billfold taken 1n Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drug Store. Please leave
at Doily Sentinel olf1ce.
FOUND . ;;-e bird ; h; nting-doQPlease coli and 1dantify. Phone

9'12·3165.

Kit,~~~~
COAL , llmastone. ond colc lum 1969 Nova, extra sh11rp, new
point bucket seats , air shocks,
chloride and calcium brine for
mo_g~ ·! hone9 '!_9·2_.~· ___
dust control and spec1al miMing
salt for farmers . Moin Street. 1968 BONNEVILLE PONTIAC.
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992· . Phpne 992-5535

3891.

1976 MUSTANG II t;obro, olr , oil
1971 HONDA Cl·450, 12,000
power rad io and tape . 1974
rrules, S ISSY bar , crash bars,
Jeep Renegade V·8 standard.
pull bock handle bors . new tire
Phone 7&lt;2·30
:::_:
72:;_.-~~-ond seals, ' Scramb ler 1idtt
1973 PINTO Run-A -Bout. 4 speed,
p1~!.s: ~ · c~~..!4.~:~~-·-­ low mileage, t11 cellen t condi ·
POTATOES ond pumpkins C. W
lion , real shar p
Phone
Proff1tt, Port land, Ohio . Phone
'192·2386.
8~3-2254

COAl for sole , Open 6 days per
week and e'lenings For further
informo.t.lo~~~ o~ !62_4) 36~:?338 .

1971 LTD. olr conditioned , p.b.,
ps. eKcellent. condition . Phone

9'12·3&lt;42.

1969-- CADILLAC Sedb;- o;;ille
four door, white stdewoll tires ,
power steering. power brakes .
power seats , om &amp; fm rodio,
climate control. bceHent con ·
FULLER Brush Product s for sole .
dition. l ocol owner . Phone
Phone 992-341 0.

APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
W1LKESVILlE, (61&lt;) 669-37&amp;5

. ~- W~$~~&lt;.&lt;&lt; .

CAMPER , $600. Also , horse
trailer . $450 Phon~ (614) 698 · 1970

DODGE

---

POLARA.

Phone

992-5&lt;78.

3290 .

·---------

PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bose sta · I HAVE o 1972 van for sole. Equ1p·
ped for company . In number 1
lion Phone 247·268&lt;1 after 5
sha~e . Phon!_!il2~
-330
~5::.·_ __
p.m.
FOUR CEMETERY plots at Me1gs 19b8 three ·fourth ton JEEP truck ,
36 in cop, bunks, cook stove
Memor~ Garde ns, Will sell
ref . trlr . package , $2150. Will
separately Phone 985 4146.
-- 1
!rode . Phone 985 -4227 .
. . . . _, ..
CHRISTMAS TREES . Mo1n St ,
Rutland
--~

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?
Pomeroy

Let

soften &amp;

Landmark
condition your

w•1er UC-XVI
ONLy '279,95
Let us
"' Free.

test

your

IF VOU ho11e o Service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell somethmg ,
ae looking for work . . . or
whatever . , you 'll get resUlts
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

Col l992·2156.

·

!Willi..

1

water

3 AND 4 RM turnished end ur'l•
furn ished
5434.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

CHRISTMAS TREES Beautiful Pion ·
totlon grown Sl:oft h Pine, white
Spruce. Norway Spruce , Col·
orodo 8h.1,e Spruce. 5 to 10 feet ,
o few
l arge r .
Pr~ced
reasonably. Areas btnt selec·
t1on. 12 consecutive y~ors of
tree selling Bob 's Market, ius t
across Th~ bridge in Mason
Ph&lt;1ne (304}773-4721 .
FANCY CITRESS fruits
no..., el
oronges
tangerine s .
tongeloe5 , 6 variety of opples
m any quon1t'f red, blue and
white gropes, auorted bulk
Chnstmas candy and nuts
Also . lor o Christmas gift sug·
gesl1on : eKtro ·fami ly frull
baske ts. ~ con..enient sizes to
fit your needs . Quonity d1s·
counts ovolloble Bobs Market .
Jus t of ross th8 br1dge , Mason .

opts

Phone

992 -

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt .
33, ten m1les north of Pomeroy .
large lots with concrete patios ,
Sidewalks , runners and off
s!r~el po~k~n~ :. Pho.!2.!._~9~
FURNISHED two bedroom apt .,
odults on ly. No pels . Mid·
dleport . Phone992·3874.
A,VAILABLE ot Ri~ersi de Apart ·
menls, 1 bedroom, $100 per
month . 2 bedrooms. $133 An
Equal Housing Opportunifv .
Phone 992-3273.
ONE BEDROOM Aph . at VILLAGE
MANOR in Middleport for $104
manlhly plus elec . or $130 in·
eluding elec . LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS Convenient
to shopping on Third and Mill
Sis . 1n Mtddleport. Brand new
high quohty apartments. See
the manager at Apt. 28 or coli
992·7721 . An Equal Housing
Op~!_tunify . --.,..__......._
2 BEDROOM MOBILE home, adults
o_~I LPho'!_! 992 -5535. - - 2 BEDROOM

mobile home in

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS,.INC.
n. tl2-2174

P-.j·

~====~
RACINE
I'IDPEf
SHOP
"1'1\

t K9 4
... It 75

tA l

lnsulationStnkes

F-irriAroiloilo

'6.95

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

~ --~·--- - -~~--.

furnace, storm doors and

makes des•gns, monv other
windows, porch . $12,500.00.
stalres this ;year, including
&lt;aps._C~II~-720 1 or_m-3309 .
foo1u.r•• · i•" like now. ~ISTINGS WANTED IN
the Hamblelonian and
CONSOLE STEREO-RAOIO comOrig1~ol pr;,,_ 1549.'15. mus1
EVERY SECTION OF
1:.,..
Yonier! Trot. He finiahed
brnotion. om,fm radio. Bolohct
sell. only 1129.95 . Cosh or THe&lt;COUNTY.
second ln three heall of the "But I'm no( looking lor a go- S103.&lt;6orlerms.Coll992-3965.
lerms . Co11992-51&lt;6.
'HENRY E. CLELAND
Kentucky Futurity, all by getter, Ralph. I'm looking for .VEST!RN FlYER 10 speed bike. 27 HOUSE LOTS for oole . Near Meigs L-....!21:.:!2801iR!.JOIIK:JE!R1:.21~-J
margins of a neck or less.
an already-gotter ."
in&lt;hes . like new. Coll 992-3289
Mines I Phone 7.t2-2746 .

POINSETTIAS now
CHRISTMAS.
6000

3 bedrooms. 1'1, baths. Iorge 11'1·
ing room , dming room and kit ·
chen , fully .(Orpvted. Phone
992-3129. or 992 ·5434 . ·
59 acres b room house, both ,
partlv carpeted
two out·
build1ngs, dug basement ,
· one-third tillable . minerol
rights located near Danville.
Reduced for quick sa le ,
$23,500 Phone 74')..'17_:66:::·_ _

pet

off on

bedroom house, family room ,
· fireplace , 2 baths, d1shwosher .
range . garbage disposa l ,
corpet, sun deck , lorga lot .

.J~1&gt;.500 Phone(614) 667-63Q.I.

LITTLE

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992-3325
COUNTRY SPOT - Nice
brookside lot with 3
bedroom

residence. Also

hes garage wllh v, bath,
and bedroom . Drilled well.

AND

MARTIN

Ex·

cavoting , sept1c sy stem s,
dozer. backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone , gro11el , blackt op
pavmg, Rt. 143. Phone 1·(614)

hme to have tho se kit che n
cabinets built into your house,
We hove good carpenters to !oy
them out ond build them in .
Call Guy Ne1 gler . 949·2508

~

--..

·- -

~-~

~~
~ ~~:.::c.~
--·-

----·

--

--

-

Wdl do odd 1obs , roofing. poi'l ·
tmg . gutter w ork. Phone 992·

7&lt;09.
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER$ lak--........,....-~ ~

-

Ing r'eservot1 ons for all ni ght
and hourly silting for New
Yeor's Elle. For mformol1on ,

coil '192-7092 .

DRAPERIES, mode to order . Phone

'9&lt;9-2202.

15 ACRES forced air

OLD furniture, ice bolies . bra ss
beds , woll telephones and
. parts. or camp lee hou sehold s.
Wr1te M . 0 Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Coii992-7761J.
CASH po1d for all makes and
model s of mobile homes.
Phone oreo code 614·423·9531

CASH!!! for iunk cars. Frye's
Truck and Aufo. 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE ! Phone
7&lt;12 -208 1
BUYING RAW FUR . No . I,
Muskrat $.4 .75 : Coon . $15; Mole
m1nk , $1 5.
Phone Gea
Buckley , (614 ) 669-4761 after 5

p.m

NEAR TOWN - Cozy 3
bedrooms, nice bath ,

09Ef?ATI~~

· Brodfo:::rd~-~-"----­

BOWERS REPA1R ~

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
v1ce, all makes , 992-228.tl . The
Fobr1 c Sh o p, Pomeroy .
Autho rized Smger Sol es and
Service. We sharpen Scissors . '
EXCAVATING , do.zer, loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo·boys for htre; will haul
fdl dirt , to so1l, limestone and
grave L Call Bob or Roger Jeffers , do~ phone 992·7089,
night phone 992·3525 or 992 -

areas.

WE I-lAVE TI-lE HOUSE
,FOR YOU,' DROP IN AND
see IT.

We hlvt now moved t.o_our .
new location ot 214 Eas1
secon~ . 51., Pomeroy.

(Do you have a question
for the e•perrs? Wflle "Asl&lt;
th e Jacobys .. care of thfs
newspaper. rhe Jacobys wlff
answer ind;vidual Questions ·
if stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are encfosed. Ths
most interesting questions
wifl be used in this co lumn
and will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.I

=,..,.,..,

mountains

39 Pop
40 Rind
DOWN

BORN LOSER

FEMEMB~R

t&lt;XlTBAI.\. 1 FCOTB!;U...
~~

R~~LW~ THAI 'IJ/'6 THE
DA~ l.()l) tfrJZ/J.. K~~D

lj()() C:OOT !?JBf.l

11.1. L{)() ~liB~
"llii»KM?lJf iS
-

COR

"lli~ FI~W bOAL 111/&gt;--T

l.lleDDIJ,V;,
DATB!

THt; RAMS!

5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and Q1 tcher Charles R Hot·
... field . Back Hoe Sar'llce .
Rutlan d, Oh1o Phone 7~2 · 2008 .

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sont ta110n , 992 -3954 or 992·

2428.

--- - -~

WILL do ' roofing. construction,
plumbing and heohng. No tob
too larg o or too snioll. Phone

742-2348 . - - CAR'PENTE'R." flooring. c9111ng .
. ponel1ng . Phone 992-2759.
DOZER work ond welding Contact JameS Porsons . Rt. 1,
Raeme, on Carmel Rood

992·585B.
ElECTRONIC T.V. CLIN1C

New
T.V sho p, Electronic T.V. Clin ic
Service coli , $5 95 Cqlor, 8 &amp; W
antenna systems stereo•, etc.
572 South Third , Middleport
Phone 992.6306. Co rrv in and
so'le money .

12:30-M ovle " The H ou nd of the Basker vll les" 8.
1:QO-Tomorr ow J.• ; N ews 13,

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1971
6:QO-Sunrlse Sem ester 10.

6: 15-Engllsh 3; Farm Rporl 13.
6 : 2~No1 for Women O..ly 13.
6 : 3~AG-USA •· News 6 ; Sunrise Semesler 8;
Christopher Closeup 10
6:•5-Mornlng Repor1 3.
I&gt;:SI}-Good Morning , Wesf Virgin ia 13.
6:55-Good Morning , Trl Slate 13.
7: 01i--Todav 3,4,15; Good Mornlna. America 6.13; CBS
News 8; Chuck Wh ile Report• 10.
7:05-Bug s Bunny S. Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8 : oo-~assle6; Coplaln Kangaroo 8,10_; Sosame 51. 33.
8:Jo-Big Valley 6.
9·oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; Lucy Show 8: Mike
D9ugt os 10.
9 : 3~Cross - WIIs 3; One ~lfelo Live 6; GOQd Day B.
IO :oo--Sonford S. Son 3,&lt;,15: Price Is (llghl 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10: 15-General 1-fospltal 6.
10:31&gt;-'-Hollywood squares 3.4.15.
11 :Oii--Wheel. of Fortune 3,15; Weekday .i; E d~e ot
Night 6; Double Dare B,10; Morning wllh O.J . 13;
Elec. Co. 20.
11 : 3~Stumpars

3,&lt;,15; Happy Days 13; Secret San1a

6; Love of Lifo 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.

li :S5-Take Kerr 8; Ms Flxl1 10..
12 ·oo--News 3,B,10: Don Ho 13 ; Bob Braun 4: SO Grand
Slam 15 .
12 : J~Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 13 ; Search fo1
Tomorrow 8-10 .

12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:Oii--Somerset 3; Ry0 n's Hope 13; Concentration 8;
Young &amp; lho Restless 10; Not' For Women Only 1S.
1:30-0ays ot OUr ~lves 3,4,15; Family Feud 13; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:otl-l20,000 Pyramid 13.
2 · J~Ooctors 3,&lt;,15 ; One ~lfe to Live 13; Secret Santa
Continues 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
J ;oti-Anolher World 3,4,15; Allin The Family 8, 10; On
Aging 20 .
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3 : 3~Malch Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:01i--MI•Ier Cartoon 3; Marcus WElby, M.D. 4;
Somerse1 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Sesame St.
20.33; Movie "1-fostlle Guns" 10; Happy Prince 13.
4: 3~My Three Sons 3; Afterschool Spacial 13; Parlrldge Family 8; Flintstones 15.
5:!»--Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch 8:
Mister Rooers 20.33: Star -Ttek 15.
5 : 3~Secrel Santa Continues 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adem-12 13.
6:00-News 314,8,10, 13,15; Zoom 20; Teaching Children
33!
6:3~NBC News 3,&lt;,15; ABC News 13; News 6: CBS
News 8, 10; Hodgepodge ~odg 0 20: Lilias YQga &amp;
You 33.
7:oo-&lt;)ral Roberts' Chrlolmas Dream 3: To Toll tho
Truth 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; .. Pop Goes tho
Country 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My ThrH
Sons 1S; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Sportspege 33.
7 ; 3~$100,000 Name That Tune 4: Match Game PM 61
$25,000 Pyremld 8; MacNeil-Lehrer 20,33; Break
the Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
'"8:01i--John Davidson 3,4,15; Bionic Woman 4; Gunsmoke 8; No-. 20,33; Good Times 10; ROdeo 13.
8:30-Jeflersons 10.
9:01i--Dean Marlin 3,4, 1S; Borella 6; Movie "The
Ge1away" 8,10; Dance In America 33; Soundstage
20 .
10 :00-Mec Davis 3,4, 15; Charlie's Angels 61 News 20;
To Be Announced 33.
10 :30-Book Beat 33.
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,13,15; MocNell · ~ehrer Report 33.
11 ; 3~Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Rookies 6,13; News 8, 10;

.ftftllrul ID'il

DAILY CRYPT9QUOTE- Here's h?w to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X ror the two O's, etc: Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and (ormalion ol the word1 are all

hints. Each day lhe code letters are diflerenl.

~ THATICRAIIIL!D WOADQAirll
byHenriAmOidar&lt;IBoblle

I
.'WELL1 Fll&lt;:;f OF
AL L LE:T'&amp; Nor

USIWGJS

GJYSW

CY L!

WGP

I CATHY
KIJ

~HYROWj

CRYPTOQUOTES

A I MZ

WI

USIWGJS .

WQP
BGJSJ

WHERE YOU MIGHT

FINe::' A CA~ET
ON A FL16HT.

PANfC! TH ERIO

HilS

MilSon. w. Y1.

·-

lD~E

VKWP

A WAYOUT...

IA

- ....

ZBJMMT,

RIZ

KT

WGJ

WGJSJ . -

VJYNJ

BGKWWKJS

Now artango lhe drclld """" 10
fonn the aurprile aniWef. u sug-

gealod by Ihe above cartoon .

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : A FOOL CAN NO MORE SEE HIS
OWN FOLLY THAN HE CAN SEE HIS EARS.~ WILLIAM~
MAKEPEAcE THACKERAY
. ·

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

f) 1976 Klnl Fealuns SyDdiCIU.. Inc.

BARNEY

LISTEN TO THE

-SWAP SHOP

7 PM

- WMPO • 92.1 FM
92 in the Country

•

.four ordlnaty worde.

2545.:.·~-~

Htnnln
Gtate
,.

Perspecllve on lhe News 20.
I1:Oii--News 3.4.6.8. 10,13, 15; MacNeil -lehrer Report
33.
11 : 30- J oh nny Carson J.-4, IS ; Movie " Sirange
Homecoming: • 6,13, Kojak 8; Mar y Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.
12:!»--Movle "Sirange Cargo" 10; Jano kl 33.

~ ~ ~~~~
Unacrarnblo lheao four Jumbl...
one letter to each IqUiri, to form

THURSDAY TIL 1211100N

773-5592

Switch 8, 10: News 20. Great Perform ances 33.

10 : 3~ Bi ock

1:00-T9morrow 3,.tl.

Mon ., Tues., Wed . ~ Sat.-t:JOtiiS:OO

•

Pops in

2: !~News 13.

WILL TRIM or cut trees and shrub·
bery. Phone 742 -3167' or 949·

·MASON FURNrTURE

Bost on

12:01i--Movle "Gunfight a1 lhe O.K. Corral" 8; Mary
Hartman 10; Janak! 33.
12 :311-Movlo "Trea•u~e of San Gennaro" 10.
12 : 4~Mys1ery of 1ho 'iY0&lt;1k 6,13 .

--- ~--~-

FRIDAY' UNtiL 8 PM

'Tom Sawyer " 8, 10;

Hoi l.ywood 20.33.
9;01i--Police Woman 3,4,1S; John Dehver 6,JJ; M·A-S-H
8.10.
9:JG-One·Doy AI A Time 8, 10; Miracle on JSih Slreet
201 World War I 33.
10:!»--Po llce Story 3,4, 15; Barbaro Walters 6,13;

ARC: N~~&lt;w !t 3.1 .

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..
plumbing and heot1ng. Phone

STORE HOURS

POMEROY ~ 2 bedrooms,
bath, furnace, basement,
.and furnllure. All for only

BUILDING LOTS - Rock
Springs and Five Polnh

•KJxx•xx t x :&lt;4Anxx.

Your partner has opened one
diamond and rebid on e
nolrump after you responded
one spade.
The answer is that you
should pass. One notrump
ought to be a very satisfactory
contract. Your partner has
shown a minimum type opening and there is no reason to
explore further .

38 Greek

level lol. $22,000.

SIMoo:

A Michigan reader wants to
know if you make a second bid
with :

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MASON FURNITURE

natural gas F .A . furnace on

RIVER PROPERTY
New 3 bedroom all elec .
home. Nice kitchen, dining
wllh glass sliding doors .
$37,500.

~ ~~~

Pass

~AAW'IUl!f"

3825
Ri 'Mo DELING , Plumbing, heating
and oil types of general repair .
Wor k guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience, Phone 992-2409.

I N. T.

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
West 's one heart bid is what
may be described as a
nuisance overcall . He does not
expect that his side will play
the hand unl.,s it turns out
that North doubles him and he
has to struggle for his life at
one heart doubled .
He hopes that maybe h1s bid
will inhtbit his opponents or
that if North does become the
dectarer he will have told his
partner what ro lead . Mbst of
the time these nuisance bids
don 't affect" anything. This
time the bid had a bad effect.
It told South how ro play the
hand .
After West opened the six of
hearts and East played the
queen, South had a p,robiem
He could due(( and ho(d back
his ace until the third lead of

Sweepers , toasters , 1rons, all
small app l i&lt;~n C es . loY'I n mower,
neKt to Slate H1ghwoy Garage
·on Route 7 Phone (61.4 ) 985-

·-

Gas well.
furnace, 3

bedroom renovated home
and 2 car gar .ot(le . $32,500,

ARE CLEAR -HOW VIE CAN

SPEAK SENSE - ·

BRADFORD Auctioneer . Com·
ple te Service. Phone 949·2.. 67
or 949·2000. Rac ine . Ohio, Critt

EiW-000

t•

3 N T. Pass

SEPTIC Syslems installed by
licensed instoller. Shepard
Contract ors Phone 7.tl2 · 2~09 .

hookups. Wan t only $5500.
COUNTRY HOME - 3
bedroom,, mod . bath, fuel
oil F.A. furnace , nice eat-In
kitchen. Screenad-ln porch
and large large. $19,500.

FINE - THE
MAtH. WOR'CIH65

IT MAY BE LOHG
i!ei"ORe ~IS l&lt;IIND
IS ClEAR I\IID H1S
TONGUE WIU AG A!tl

HOWERY

t•

S.Uib
I t

Opening lead - 6 •

~

Syracuse, Ohio

North Ea11

Pass
Pass

1-1~1

Phone 992·5716

__

VIrgil B. Sr., Rul1or
216 E. second Stree1

GU!!IIIUIII!INGS _

IJTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

2 ACRES OF land ot Wildwood
E•tates, $-4200. Phone 992-3273 .
~·
TIMBER , Pome'ro~ Forest Pro·
150 K 200 LOT for sole in
ducts. Top price for standing
Syracuse. Phone 992 - 371~ .
sawt imber Call Kenl Hanby,
2 1/, ACRES level land, •; , mrle
I-446-857·C'OC::. -:::---c---c:
from Rutland on New limo
COINS , CURRENCY, token s, old
Read. Phone 7.42 -2930 or after' 5
pocket wotches ond cham s.
Sliver and gold . We need 1964
Pc."'_~=====:;
ond older silver c&lt;1ins. Buy, sell,
or trade ' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
742-2331 .

TEAFORD

We st

10 or more.

NEARLY new at elec. home , full
basement, for so le by owner .
Rutland area . Phone 7.t2-2531 .

TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO. Three

g=m

to

698-7331 .
EXCAVATING.,
BACKHOE S.
SMALL form for sole, 10,.., down ,
DOZER
.
TRENCHER
. lOWBOY .
owner financed. Monroe CounDUMP TRUCKS . BILL PULLINS .
ty , W. Vo Phone (304 ) 772 ·
PHONE 9'12-2478. DAY OR
_3_1~or I304L~2~~227 '--~
NIGHT .
COUNTRY farmland with secl ud·
N
EIGLER
8UilD1NG SUPPlY . Good
ed wood s. water ond good oc·

7. Phone (61&lt;) 667·6JO.I.

.

Both 'IUiner able

tor

________ ----.......-,.-----·-

Commerc1ol property opprox 17
acres, level land, located ot
Tuppers Ploin~ on Ohio, Route

WIIIIIOIISliiOOIS
REPIJCl,EIIT
WIIIOOIS ·

FOR GIFTS In red, wh i te

Square Yard Installed
Dlvld Parsons, Owner
949-2114
11-4-1 mo.

__ ...
7481

tQJI06 2
• A Q4

FOR

an• pink . sJ .oo ro ,, oo. 20

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
all elec ., 1 acre, Middleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992·

sfun

YOUR HOME In pMs end
hanging Daskets from 75c

BACK CAR PETING

HOMESITES for sole, 1 9cre or.d
up. Middleport, near Rutland.
Coll992·7481 .

iolillllllllli&lt;t

=

choose from . PE~FECT

furnace . Full basement
with washer - dryer

••w•
knits , outornolic, b•Jtton holvr.

-

L--..!T!!tii:!I:_:::OO::O:_F:.,or~id::a~ys:.._-'-'. (.__ _:.:Ph::.:.

FOLIAG~~~£~5

• 10 6 3
SOUTH iDl
• 83
.. A J 2

LARR!~~~DER

ASSORTED RUBBER

l

-------

9 ,~~:5~~-:~,Y

to ss.oo. Also. lay away

twer

·-

P1. Pleasant

EAST
•J 142
•Q9 3
t8 &gt;3

• J 982

fancy prints, accessories.'

•"•il1e, 0111•0
R,.._

IN TOWN ~ 2 bedrooms,
mod . balh, na1. gas F.A.

Pomeroy Landmark ·

•

w;;;--s;;;.t::::~ QIRE~1 ~!~\~JALES'

3102 or (:to&lt;) 772-32'27 .

-~~.

Ford or Chevrolet thr•e·fourth
ton trv&lt;k with stainless hub·

•71

6 0T ME-

• K I0 865

Volve1s, nylon prints,
llerculons, vinyl solids, and

cess In Monroe Count~ . W. Va .
. $1 .000 down, coli (304) n2.

Pomeroy Landmark

It

-- ~-

·-

Sophia Hanover won si•

REA~ ~Y

WORR IED, CARO"!

WEST
•QIO

Silts.

c*Hed

--

YOU' VE

•

7;oti-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling For Dollars 6; ~el ' s Go To The Races 11
News 10; To Tell The Trulh 13; My Thr.. Sons IS;
Cooki ng with a Conllnenlal Flavor 20; American
Issues Forum 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3. Night Before Chrlstmos "4;
~ e1 ' s Deal With 116; M al e~ Game PM 8; MacNei l·
~ehrer ReP.,r t 20,33 ; In Tho Know 10: A Chrlslmas
Slory 13; Nashvil le on lhe Road 15.
·
8.!»--Boo Baa Black Sheep 3,4; Year Without A So nia
Claus 6, 13; J ulie Andrews Chrlslmas Special IS;
Mov ie

the suit. That duck play would
insure his success provided
E as t he td th e ace o f
diamonds. It would tead to
failure if West held thai all
important card.
After the nuisance overcall
South had no problem. It was
almosl a certa inty that West
wou(d hold that missing ace.
So South grabbed the first
heart trick and knocked out
the ace of diamonds . West
was in and had no way to keep
South from maleing four
notrump . Ac luaiiy , West
made the desperation lead of
the heart king and South made
five odd .

14

_ 10-17-l_mo (f'!ll

, -For sofll, Cllarr c hlons:
mo11resses, peddlng. Ideal
f~r c.ompers. Variety of ,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) GUARANTEED JOBS-LOC4T10N TWO MOTORCYCLE helmets with
Racine Area . Phone 992-5858.
. -·--.......$374 40 single. $502 .80 mar· ·· shield. like new , $20 each.
The annual U.S. Trotting
In
1799,
George
3
BEDROOM
, 2 story house: com ·
ned . Army Recruiting. Co li Col · ~,.ehone 742·2211 . Ahar 5 p.m.
AssociBtlon-U .S. Harness Waahlngton, Revolutionary
pletely ramodeted . new carpet ,
lect (614 ) 593·3022 or 385·6318.
&lt;~2- 2201
Writers' Association poll War commanding general
- - -- ---- - ··-kitchen , etc . ~ miles north of
FOUR ~HEVELli.rolly wheels 14 x
Pomeroy on St. Route 7, $225
pte ked Keystone Ore as the ~ and first prelident of the
7 . $75. One new G -70KU
month plu s utilities . Phone
year-old pacer of Ure year United states, died at his
Goodyear Polyglass l ire , $25;
985 -3341
and Steve Lobell as the ~ Mount Vernm hmle after
one pa1r of Monroe MoJC ie air
THIS
year-old trotter of year asklng hia doctors to '1et me
shocks, almost new. Will tit
ONE!.
most Chrysler cars for $40.
l"rtday.
go off quietly."
Got FU~~ pay and
Phone 9~9 - 2181 or 9.49-2631.
Keystone Ore, tbe fastest
In 1819, Alabama was .ellowances while we
provide
lop
training
In
~acing sophomore on five· admitted to the Union aa tbe
axcltlng field of your
r-el~hths and half-mile tracks 22nd state.
choice. If you're 18 to 31
'-in the sport's history and the
In 1972, Apollo 11 . years old and can quell tv.
I ' ali-time twCHDlnute mile utrooaull Gene Ceman and we'll g\Jarantee offer In
One good used Remington
Cham Saw
$$0
l .;:hamplon during a single Harrison Scluoltt bluted of! writing. Sign an now and
gel current liberal G.l. l One good used McCullough
~ season, won by a ~1 margin the moon for the return trip to
Bl~~ btneflh. ~II or Itt
Chi in SaW
S7S
the other six horses earth,
your Navyman at:
One good· used Homellte
221 Columbua Rd.
Chain saw
S150
\~eceivlng votes.
In 1974, Preooldent Ford
New co -Op water Sof At!Mfis,OH
The Bye Bye Byrd- arrived in Martinique in the
POMEROY
,_alrvlew
teners
PH: S9Hl66 (tellecll
l'Oregon's Tiny colt received French West Indlea lor two
model VC · l&lt;VI Only S279.95
Hts. Lovely brick vene-er, 3
One good us.ed Gibson Side·
!192 votes compared to 37 for days of Ialka with Frmch
bedrooms. bath. modern
by -Side Relrlge-r•tor n~o
:runner-up, 011 Burner. President Valery Ghrcard
kitchen, utltlly room,
carpeting, g!ragel storage
'Wlndahleld Wiper was third. d'Eatalng.
PLEASURE HORSES ond pontes,
bldg .. porch, chain fence,
: Steve! Lobell, tied 88 the
olso will buy hones ond
about 1 acre. Almost new.
....
~
A
·
thought
for
the
day:
Jock
W.
C.rsty,
Mgr
.
; fastest eophomore trotter of
pon1a1 . Phone (614) 698·3290.
Phone m-2111
: all time with Super Bowl American poet Henry WadaRuth Reeves.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
-----~
~-' after hia 1:li6.2 victory in thla worth Loogfellow 88id, "The All white
lol. 3 bedrooms, 2 ba111s,
Germon Shepherd Pup·
GOOD USED r•lrigerotor , i&gt;9ught
'year's Harnbletonlan, tallied grave Ia but a covered bridge
utility R., dining R.. some
p1es , f1ne blooded . Sea Richard
new. side by side, reason for
S1orage or office
carpeting.
182 votes. Ills stablemate, leading from light to light,
Gilkey , Clifton . W . Vo ..
sell ing. Phon$ ~.47 - 3S~l qfter ~
bldg., lots of shrubbery,
'Quick Pay, collected 22 to through a lrlef darkne88." • 31:W ·773·5%2or 773-5775.
pm . .
nalural gas heat, excellent
----- -place second in the vote
5 MONTH OlD Reg1stered lnsh
f1REWOOD . PHONE 7&lt;2·2131. neighborhood .
Setter
for
sa
le.
S50.
Phone
standings.
------.... ~-· -·--- --- RUTLAND - About 4
'192·3565.
FIREWOOD, $20 pickup truck load
{ World champloo 1ma Lula 1
acres In town. Older home
delivered: SIS, you pick it up.
~ llnlshed third.
_ P~~·J30•l aa2-3205 . ~--·- hu 3 bedrooms, dining R.,
'' ' The Stanley Dancer·
beth, alum. siding, out
Fur Sale
ROBYN BASE C.B. rodlo . (rube cellar, s1orage bldg ..
trained Keystone Ore waa the ·
LA FF A DAY
typa) with D-104 power mike.
natural gas heat . Jus1
like new . Priced reasonable.
nation's top mooey earner .--=~-- -------, lARGE ELECTRONIC organ ond
115.500.00.
Phone 949·2322.
this year with $539,762 for 22
bench. 2 keyboards , L,.l;,
POMEROY
wins, nine seconds and a third
Speaker . beautiful cabinet .
ANTlOUE DINING room ou;1e, 6" RECREATION CENTER
Also . 35 m.m. camera, 1:1.5
-~~~s.:!._h~~!?:.6008_t~~e.!:_ - long established doing a
in 33 starts. .
len' eJCtro telephoto lens and
The WUllam Haughton· .
flosh ollo&lt;hmonr. Gail Miller. ELECTAOLUX SWEEPER . complftte. very ' good' bull ness. Low
trained Steve Lovell led all ~
phone 992·3196.
ly rebuilt with all new at·
Investment EKcelfenf
tochments , $54.95. Also Hoover
return .
CHRISTMAS PONiEi.. io; &lt;hil~;.;,~,
year-old trotters with
sweepers. tonks or uprights ,
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,
earnings of $388,770 for 10
Co! l (61&lt;) 6911·~290 . _ _ . __ • 118.
Phone992-51&lt;16 ·
bath . basement, dining
wins in 28 starts.
8EEF CATTLE. 30' eo&lt;h . good hoy SINGEir"fioid;;;-To~~h--N.- s;~, room, u1111fy space, hardThe son of Speedy Count·
roke. Also set of 16 .5 r ims for
Does it all. Zlg-r:ogs ,
on
wood floors, natural gas
~-

NOW! 5TOP l HAT! ...

HEY,

ChHftr,Oiolo

·~i~M~ffr1·
FA~R

Phone(30&lt;)773-4721.

1896.
On this day in history:

NORTH
•AK9 6S

,.

CO PR O R/I TI ON

~~! -~=~~·-:-.:.. _·--.:~:~~

WIN AT BRIDGE
Nuisance bid aids play

(614) 915.. 115

Frae Est .
Work Guar.
Rullond 12-9·1 mo. m-ma

ABC N ews 6; Zoom 20 ;

6:30- NBC News3,• .15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; lT V
Ulll lza11on 33.

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

"Wt C.rt"

111 1 14. lie

INTERVIEWS wll l.bt held Mndoy .
Nov . 22, 197() starting ot 11 :00
a .m. o 'clock 1n the office of the
Meigs County Commi SSioners,
Cou rt House, Pomeroy, Ohio
lor orchite&lt;:h who ore on tha
NOTIC E ON FILIN G
appro" ed list of State Ar·
OF INV E NTORY
chitects (Public Works Stole of
AND APPR A I SE MENT
Ohro}
for the proposed multi·
Th e Still e ot Oh10 , M ('i q s
purp ose facility for Meigs
Count y . Co urt ot Comm on
County . Pleose coli for cppoint·
Pl!:!il !o, Prob o1 fP 01V i5t00
T o the E~C ec ul o r' or Ad
95~--~
ment, 99~!2;c·2~8::
m 1n1 str a tor ot th e e s t tlt ~ . to
PIANo
INSTRUCTIONS.
Cl-uldren 's
o;uch o f t h e fot lo wi nq a~ ar r
end adu lts. June VanVranken,
r esi d en t s of l t"~ c &lt;&gt; rat e of Oh10,
v i1
th e su r 'l 1v 1nq spou sf' .
9'12-2270.
th e
n ('XI
of
k (n ,
lhr
ALTH.OlJGH
Birchfielcf's Ta xider·
bc nef ic iar i(.• S und er lh(' Wi ll .
my ha s burned , work STILL Will
.m d 10 +he all orne y or at
BE DONE ill temporar y
tor ncy5 r epr escnt lnq any of
ttl c a for em ent ion ed per son s
quarters. Ho'.'e your troph ies
'&gt; iirah
A
Koe h l er.
mou nted todoy and treasure
Drceascd . Pomer oy , Oh ro .
them tomorrow. BIRCHFIElD's
&lt;'. a t1sbu r y To w ns h ip . N o
TAXIDERMY, eost of Rut land
~ 1 9~ 7
mile on Rt . 124 . Phone
You ar c her eb y noli l 1cd th&lt;+ l
7&lt;2·21 78
and
!\ p
th e
I n ve n to ry
p ra1 semcn 1o t lh e rs ta l f' ot l hr
GUN SHOOT &lt;1! the Roci n• Gun
illor c m c nllon c rt .
drcr a srd
Club every Sundoy . 1 p.m
la te ot sa id Coui1 t '{ , wA s t ilr rl
AssorteP m_!Oh.
in l h1S Cou l' l 'ia 1d lnvi'ntory
and App r ai5C mC'nl Wil l pc f or
hcll r in9 b efor e t hi !i Co url on . - - -- - - - - - - . ,
lhe ?e l h day o f Dcc cm b ('r .
1976 . a r 10 00 o'c l ock t. M
t.ny p ~;!r!ion dcs 1ri nq lo 1110
f':o: cc pl ion s th (' r e +o mu sl f ile
lhern a t lcil st f iv e p ays pr1 or 10
lh(' da le se t tor hcar in q
Gi'lfm und er my ha nd and
sc a r of sa1d Cou r 1 11115 1Qi h
Cume and tag your Xmas
day of DeC ember IQ7e.
tl"ft at 111e Charles A.
M ann ino (l Webs ter
Sargent residence 311:1 m.
Judge
north of TuPIIOI'S Plains, 0.
By fl n n A w"' tson
on S. R. 681. Bring 111e
Dr pu l y Clf'rk
ehildren for the old fashion
r 171 Lr ? I 'J ·c
thrill of cutting your own
tree .
Phone 915·4167

'·
Tbe Almanac

Aerl1l
Commercial
Scl!ools
Weddings

3. ~.8 . 10 ,1 3, 1 5 ;

Consumer Exper ience 33.

PHOTOG WHY

AL TROMM CONST.

14)-2115

S3995

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Protect , vour lnv.,1mon1
plu$ add to the valua Of
\'OIW homo. Trust 111oso
nectsury fix-It, room
'ldcltltan and ramodellng
jobs 1o your lrltndly,
neighborhood, q~_ollfled
buildtr.
.

GE NER AL MO T OR S
ACCE PT A NCE

(Are you 8 Sagirtar1us? Bermce
Osol has wntten a special AstraGra ph Letter fo r you For your

Year's best

6:0G-News
Furnace Service.

1975 CHEVY E~ CAMINO

TUESDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1976
5-:oo-- Big Vo lley 3; Merv Griffi n 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 2&lt;!.33; Slar Trek 15.
5 : 3~ News 6; Famlly Affair 8; Eleclrlc Company
20,33; Adam ·12 13.

PROFESSIONAL

·.

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

1:1\ 2 SIGNS POMEROY
\CI ~ ,Mot-:or Co.

Noon Sa tur da y .
P.h one toda y '19 2·215 6

ca n do with you r brain , not your
b r awn . Tod ay you can prove t ha 1
the 11on 1s k m g beca use he.
knows first how to use his inte llect

day and tomorrow hol d p ar!lcut ar prom 1se m aterially Zero, 1 J\l any situ ation th at can tu r n
ea into doll ar s

TO W HOM

11 - TIIe D&amp;lly Senllnel, Middleport..Pcmeroy, o.. Tuesday, Dec. l4,19'16
DICK TRACY

Auto Saleo

Cf RN

HOU~S

8:30 a .m . to 5:00 p.m .
Dally , 8:30 a m . to 12:00

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
li e ~

NOTIC E OF

PU BLIC SA lt

Add ition al 25.c Charg e
per Adver tisement .

gUid!ln ce ·:ou'll b e ap prec1ated .

great streng th

BLIND ADI

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel C,lass:ifie~s .

I SHORE
WISH 1 HAD
HE SAID TO THE ZOO

KEEPE~." I'VE 60T SOME
GOOD 6NU5 FOR ~OU AND
SOME BAD 6NU5 FOR ~ou 1 "

ANOTI-IER ' C ,\l iNUS " !

SOME

EXCITIN I
NEWS FER
LOWEEIV'S

TEA PARW,
BUT--

6LORV 8E!!
WAIT'LL SHE
-HEARS A60UT
THIS!!

-

�to _ Tile D&amp;lly sentinel. MlddleDOrt-POIM'oy, 0 .. Tueldav. Dec. 14. 19'16

AstraGraph

W4NT ADI
INFO-MATION
DEADLINII

S P .M .
Day
BtfQ rr
Publica tion .
·
•
cor~ e-c
Can ctlllt lona.
t lons a ccep t ed f ln t dav of
publicat ion .

Bernice Bede Oao1
· &lt; -EGUL4TION5
For Wednoldoy, Dec. 15, 117'....' he Publi sher reser ves
' he ri gh t to tdlt or. rt ltct
ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 11) A a ny ads deemed Ob ·

rather harmoni ou s day. You're a
JOY to be with smce you k now

l t ctlona l. T h e p ub lis h er
w ill not be rnpons lbl t tor
m ort" than on e In cor re ct
ln 5e r tlon .
RATES
For Wanl Ad Strvlct
5 cen11 ptr wpr d one
insert ion .
•
M in im um Charge $1.00
l.t cenrs per word thrtecon secut l'lt In sertions
26 cen ts r,e r wotd six
conse cutl'lt nsert tons
25 Per Cent Ol scoun i on
pa id eds lnd ed s pa id
w rthln Hl days .

ho w to em p loy the prope r
per spective .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don't hesitate about taking on
several task s tOd ay. You'll be
a ble to juggle them an d dazzle

onlookers with. the p_eo rformance.

GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) You
c an acc:om plish more today by
b usying you rsel t with those ta$ks
th at you en joy as opposed to the

1

JObs yo u reel you must do. Those

CA~D

OF THANKS

&amp; OBITUA~ Y

can wail until ano ther day

U .OO for
50 word:
!
!Jm
~
==
CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22) Th1s rllJ!IJ,lll~u
ac a
onirWOrCf l

should be a most enjoyable day
becau se tho se under you r wing
will respond to your care and

cen ts .

OFFICE

in what you

VIRGO (A•g. 23-Sapl. 22) To- ,
1

li!HIA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) The
to you r pr ogres s ha'le
ro d(! I Yo u can now gain the
1• .':!-:. you desire . All 11 tak es Is a
..tQJ.\ heart and determination .
~.;, r 1u r~

SCO RPIO (Ocl . 24-Nov. 22)
Wh ere you are not a leade r today, you can be of great value by
be i~g the S1rong. s11ent pow~r ,
behmd the throne .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc .
21) To f ind your se lf . Immer se
yo urse lf m group acll\ll lies tod ay
Bei ng of ser'I+Ce m ak es you
awa re of yo ur tr ue value as a
human

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

18)
There are many avenu es to t he
top . Chan ces ar e. you 'll be
aware of mo st of them today .
V1c tor y looks well -assured u nless you re ally b uck th e tide.
~ OUAR IU S

I T MA Y

CO N

Nolice is htrCb'll qrven tha t
on Decem bc r Z1 , t916 , a t 10 00
1\ M a oubllc sale Will be hrld
a t Pomf'r o y Moror Com p any .
Pomer oy . Oh io to se ll for cash
lhe follow ing CCIII41N lll. 10
wil tV6 7 M er cur y M on ter ey
o;;.-r i&amp;l No 1Z.H H S8 44 91 . Sllid
co ll &amp;t erllt bt 1n g tl e td ...~8lo
sec ur e lH'I obtlgit1ion ar ls ln ~
un der a r ~t a i l i nst&amp;lm ~ nt
o;cc urlty a gr eemf'nl held by
Gf'ncral M o tor s Acce pt ance
Cor por a tion as S ~c ur ed pa r tv
(. i'l i d pub l ic sal e is to be con
ouc+c d acc or dmg to th e t aw s
at th e ~t a t e of Ohi o Ge ner al
Mol ars
Acct: p tan cc
Cor
pora tlon r es er ves th e r lqh t to
h id at th is sa le
Ttl e col la t er a l rs pr esently
st or ed and me y be sf' cn a t
Pome r o y M o t or C om p.z~n y ,
Po mf'r oy . Ohio

(Jan. 20-Fob. 19)

Yo u work well w+th peopl e tod ay :
es peci ally if there is so meth ing
o f mut u el b en e f it at sta ke .
LIS tening to others Will pay

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
Busin ess prospects: are goOd today. but the actton c om e s~more
fr om p eop le you know than fr o m
w h a t 'fO U ,c an ac co mpli Sh
yourse tt. Cu ltiv at e mllu ential
fnends

~Your
~Birthday
Dec. 15, 1976
Yo u had better ge t yo ur calend ar
ord er The commg year is gomg to be a b usy one socia ll y
Many new pe&lt;J ple and activities
will en ter your li fe

1n

copy send 50 cents and a se/1addressad. stamped envelope to
As tro-Graph. P 0 . Box 4 8~ .
Radio C1ty Stat1on, New Yor/(,
N. Y 100 19 Be sure to ash tor
Sag/rtarlu!; Vo lume 1 J

pacer, trotter
are selected

24

hour

Doptndobla

1971 AMC HORNET
13195
Sportabou1, 6 cyl., au1omatlc. power sleerlng, deluxe
equlpmen1, whl1ewall fires, luggago rack, dark green
fi nish . ,less than 9.000 miles, showroom clean .

Oil or O.s Bur-s

1975 CHEVEL~E
14295
Eota1e Wagon . locall owner cor. while radlalllres. air
conditioning, V·8, oulomatlc, power steering and
brakes, rad io, dark red finish. blk . vinyl ln1erlor .
ClasSi c, 350, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes: rallv wheels, radi o, black and very aHractlye.

PICKENS

f!IOTICES
ATTN .: !!
A'LL HOUSI!WIVES
All Yard Sates , Rummage ,
Porcn and Basement Por ch
and Batemen t Sales , etc .
must tJe peld tn ad"'anu .
Get yours In ea r ly by
stopping by our offlcc._.,:,t
The Dally Sentinel . HI
Court Sf . or wr itin g Box
729, Pomero y , Ohio .t5769
w ith your r em l ttanc e

HDr~E.

Portlond. 0.

THE RACINE Fire Depor tme nt will
ho11e o gun shoot Saturday at
6.30 p m. at th&amp;ir building In
Bos hon
NOW accepting plano studen ll .
beginners . intermedia tes, ad. \.onced st udents. Call
992·

2'270.

----- ----

Christmas Trees
•

'

UoUedPressluteruatloDII
n....
Today is Tuesday, UC\.:. lt,

PERSON s BODY Shop, 26 Railroad
St .. Middleport would l1ke to
remmd customers that Oec 31
IS the la sl day to tok e od·
~ontoge of the pomt robs · oil
O'ler in , 1 color, $100. 2 lone
$125 wllhoul body work . Stop

the349thdayol1976with17to

;n or phone 985·&lt;17&lt; lor op-

follow.

pomtmen 1.__

:~~()(10

is in its Uist
The morning stars are
Mars and Satum.
-rftft
M
'11le ev.,...--e ltarl are er-

cury, Venus ard Jupiter.
'Ibose born on thla date are
under the algn of Sagittarius.

James "Jinuoy" Ooollttle,
Amer(can hero Oyer of World
War II, was born Dec. 14,

. ~:;::~mi~.;~~~-==~~=

~

REWARD FOR red . white and blue
billfold taken 1n Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drug Store. Please leave
at Doily Sentinel olf1ce.
FOUND . ;;-e bird ; h; nting-doQPlease coli and 1dantify. Phone

9'12·3165.

Kit,~~~~
COAL , llmastone. ond colc lum 1969 Nova, extra sh11rp, new
point bucket seats , air shocks,
chloride and calcium brine for
mo_g~ ·! hone9 '!_9·2_.~· ___
dust control and spec1al miMing
salt for farmers . Moin Street. 1968 BONNEVILLE PONTIAC.
Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992· . Phpne 992-5535

3891.

1976 MUSTANG II t;obro, olr , oil
1971 HONDA Cl·450, 12,000
power rad io and tape . 1974
rrules, S ISSY bar , crash bars,
Jeep Renegade V·8 standard.
pull bock handle bors . new tire
Phone 7&lt;2·30
:::_:
72:;_.-~~-ond seals, ' Scramb ler 1idtt
1973 PINTO Run-A -Bout. 4 speed,
p1~!.s: ~ · c~~..!4.~:~~-·-­ low mileage, t11 cellen t condi ·
POTATOES ond pumpkins C. W
lion , real shar p
Phone
Proff1tt, Port land, Ohio . Phone
'192·2386.
8~3-2254

COAl for sole , Open 6 days per
week and e'lenings For further
informo.t.lo~~~ o~ !62_4) 36~:?338 .

1971 LTD. olr conditioned , p.b.,
ps. eKcellent. condition . Phone

9'12·3&lt;42.

1969-- CADILLAC Sedb;- o;;ille
four door, white stdewoll tires ,
power steering. power brakes .
power seats , om &amp; fm rodio,
climate control. bceHent con ·
FULLER Brush Product s for sole .
dition. l ocol owner . Phone
Phone 992-341 0.

APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
W1LKESVILlE, (61&lt;) 669-37&amp;5

. ~- W~$~~&lt;.&lt;&lt; .

CAMPER , $600. Also , horse
trailer . $450 Phon~ (614) 698 · 1970

DODGE

---

POLARA.

Phone

992-5&lt;78.

3290 .

·---------

PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bose sta · I HAVE o 1972 van for sole. Equ1p·
ped for company . In number 1
lion Phone 247·268&lt;1 after 5
sha~e . Phon!_!il2~
-330
~5::.·_ __
p.m.
FOUR CEMETERY plots at Me1gs 19b8 three ·fourth ton JEEP truck ,
36 in cop, bunks, cook stove
Memor~ Garde ns, Will sell
ref . trlr . package , $2150. Will
separately Phone 985 4146.
-- 1
!rode . Phone 985 -4227 .
. . . . _, ..
CHRISTMAS TREES . Mo1n St ,
Rutland
--~

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?
Pomeroy

Let

soften &amp;

Landmark
condition your

w•1er UC-XVI
ONLy '279,95
Let us
"' Free.

test

your

IF VOU ho11e o Service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell somethmg ,
ae looking for work . . . or
whatever . , you 'll get resUlts
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

Col l992·2156.

·

!Willi..

1

water

3 AND 4 RM turnished end ur'l•
furn ished
5434.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

CHRISTMAS TREES Beautiful Pion ·
totlon grown Sl:oft h Pine, white
Spruce. Norway Spruce , Col·
orodo 8h.1,e Spruce. 5 to 10 feet ,
o few
l arge r .
Pr~ced
reasonably. Areas btnt selec·
t1on. 12 consecutive y~ors of
tree selling Bob 's Market, ius t
across Th~ bridge in Mason
Ph&lt;1ne (304}773-4721 .
FANCY CITRESS fruits
no..., el
oronges
tangerine s .
tongeloe5 , 6 variety of opples
m any quon1t'f red, blue and
white gropes, auorted bulk
Chnstmas candy and nuts
Also . lor o Christmas gift sug·
gesl1on : eKtro ·fami ly frull
baske ts. ~ con..enient sizes to
fit your needs . Quonity d1s·
counts ovolloble Bobs Market .
Jus t of ross th8 br1dge , Mason .

opts

Phone

992 -

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt .
33, ten m1les north of Pomeroy .
large lots with concrete patios ,
Sidewalks , runners and off
s!r~el po~k~n~ :. Pho.!2.!._~9~
FURNISHED two bedroom apt .,
odults on ly. No pels . Mid·
dleport . Phone992·3874.
A,VAILABLE ot Ri~ersi de Apart ·
menls, 1 bedroom, $100 per
month . 2 bedrooms. $133 An
Equal Housing Opportunifv .
Phone 992-3273.
ONE BEDROOM Aph . at VILLAGE
MANOR in Middleport for $104
manlhly plus elec . or $130 in·
eluding elec . LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS Convenient
to shopping on Third and Mill
Sis . 1n Mtddleport. Brand new
high quohty apartments. See
the manager at Apt. 28 or coli
992·7721 . An Equal Housing
Op~!_tunify . --.,..__......._
2 BEDROOM MOBILE home, adults
o_~I LPho'!_! 992 -5535. - - 2 BEDROOM

mobile home in

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS,.INC.
n. tl2-2174

P-.j·

~====~
RACINE
I'IDPEf
SHOP
"1'1\

t K9 4
... It 75

tA l

lnsulationStnkes

F-irriAroiloilo

'6.95

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

~ --~·--- - -~~--.

furnace, storm doors and

makes des•gns, monv other
windows, porch . $12,500.00.
stalres this ;year, including
&lt;aps._C~II~-720 1 or_m-3309 .
foo1u.r•• · i•" like now. ~ISTINGS WANTED IN
the Hamblelonian and
CONSOLE STEREO-RAOIO comOrig1~ol pr;,,_ 1549.'15. mus1
EVERY SECTION OF
1:.,..
Yonier! Trot. He finiahed
brnotion. om,fm radio. Bolohct
sell. only 1129.95 . Cosh or THe&lt;COUNTY.
second ln three heall of the "But I'm no( looking lor a go- S103.&lt;6orlerms.Coll992-3965.
lerms . Co11992-51&lt;6.
'HENRY E. CLELAND
Kentucky Futurity, all by getter, Ralph. I'm looking for .VEST!RN FlYER 10 speed bike. 27 HOUSE LOTS for oole . Near Meigs L-....!21:.:!2801iR!.JOIIK:JE!R1:.21~-J
margins of a neck or less.
an already-gotter ."
in&lt;hes . like new. Coll 992-3289
Mines I Phone 7.t2-2746 .

POINSETTIAS now
CHRISTMAS.
6000

3 bedrooms. 1'1, baths. Iorge 11'1·
ing room , dming room and kit ·
chen , fully .(Orpvted. Phone
992-3129. or 992 ·5434 . ·
59 acres b room house, both ,
partlv carpeted
two out·
build1ngs, dug basement ,
· one-third tillable . minerol
rights located near Danville.
Reduced for quick sa le ,
$23,500 Phone 74')..'17_:66:::·_ _

pet

off on

bedroom house, family room ,
· fireplace , 2 baths, d1shwosher .
range . garbage disposa l ,
corpet, sun deck , lorga lot .

.J~1&gt;.500 Phone(614) 667-63Q.I.

LITTLE

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992-3325
COUNTRY SPOT - Nice
brookside lot with 3
bedroom

residence. Also

hes garage wllh v, bath,
and bedroom . Drilled well.

AND

MARTIN

Ex·

cavoting , sept1c sy stem s,
dozer. backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone , gro11el , blackt op
pavmg, Rt. 143. Phone 1·(614)

hme to have tho se kit che n
cabinets built into your house,
We hove good carpenters to !oy
them out ond build them in .
Call Guy Ne1 gler . 949·2508

~

--..

·- -

~-~

~~
~ ~~:.::c.~
--·-

----·

--

--

-

Wdl do odd 1obs , roofing. poi'l ·
tmg . gutter w ork. Phone 992·

7&lt;09.
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER$ lak--........,....-~ ~

-

Ing r'eservot1 ons for all ni ght
and hourly silting for New
Yeor's Elle. For mformol1on ,

coil '192-7092 .

DRAPERIES, mode to order . Phone

'9&lt;9-2202.

15 ACRES forced air

OLD furniture, ice bolies . bra ss
beds , woll telephones and
. parts. or camp lee hou sehold s.
Wr1te M . 0 Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Coii992-7761J.
CASH po1d for all makes and
model s of mobile homes.
Phone oreo code 614·423·9531

CASH!!! for iunk cars. Frye's
Truck and Aufo. 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE ! Phone
7&lt;12 -208 1
BUYING RAW FUR . No . I,
Muskrat $.4 .75 : Coon . $15; Mole
m1nk , $1 5.
Phone Gea
Buckley , (614 ) 669-4761 after 5

p.m

NEAR TOWN - Cozy 3
bedrooms, nice bath ,

09Ef?ATI~~

· Brodfo:::rd~-~-"----­

BOWERS REPA1R ~

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
v1ce, all makes , 992-228.tl . The
Fobr1 c Sh o p, Pomeroy .
Autho rized Smger Sol es and
Service. We sharpen Scissors . '
EXCAVATING , do.zer, loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo·boys for htre; will haul
fdl dirt , to so1l, limestone and
grave L Call Bob or Roger Jeffers , do~ phone 992·7089,
night phone 992·3525 or 992 -

areas.

WE I-lAVE TI-lE HOUSE
,FOR YOU,' DROP IN AND
see IT.

We hlvt now moved t.o_our .
new location ot 214 Eas1
secon~ . 51., Pomeroy.

(Do you have a question
for the e•perrs? Wflle "Asl&lt;
th e Jacobys .. care of thfs
newspaper. rhe Jacobys wlff
answer ind;vidual Questions ·
if stamped. self-addressed
envelopes are encfosed. Ths
most interesting questions
wifl be used in this co lumn
and will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.I

=,..,.,..,

mountains

39 Pop
40 Rind
DOWN

BORN LOSER

FEMEMB~R

t&lt;XlTBAI.\. 1 FCOTB!;U...
~~

R~~LW~ THAI 'IJ/'6 THE
DA~ l.()l) tfrJZ/J.. K~~D

lj()() C:OOT !?JBf.l

11.1. L{)() ~liB~
"llii»KM?lJf iS
-

COR

"lli~ FI~W bOAL 111/&gt;--T

l.lleDDIJ,V;,
DATB!

THt; RAMS!

5232.
EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and Q1 tcher Charles R Hot·
... field . Back Hoe Sar'llce .
Rutlan d, Oh1o Phone 7~2 · 2008 .

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sont ta110n , 992 -3954 or 992·

2428.

--- - -~

WILL do ' roofing. construction,
plumbing and heohng. No tob
too larg o or too snioll. Phone

742-2348 . - - CAR'PENTE'R." flooring. c9111ng .
. ponel1ng . Phone 992-2759.
DOZER work ond welding Contact JameS Porsons . Rt. 1,
Raeme, on Carmel Rood

992·585B.
ElECTRONIC T.V. CLIN1C

New
T.V sho p, Electronic T.V. Clin ic
Service coli , $5 95 Cqlor, 8 &amp; W
antenna systems stereo•, etc.
572 South Third , Middleport
Phone 992.6306. Co rrv in and
so'le money .

12:30-M ovle " The H ou nd of the Basker vll les" 8.
1:QO-Tomorr ow J.• ; N ews 13,

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1971
6:QO-Sunrlse Sem ester 10.

6: 15-Engllsh 3; Farm Rporl 13.
6 : 2~No1 for Women O..ly 13.
6 : 3~AG-USA •· News 6 ; Sunrise Semesler 8;
Christopher Closeup 10
6:•5-Mornlng Repor1 3.
I&gt;:SI}-Good Morning , Wesf Virgin ia 13.
6:55-Good Morning , Trl Slate 13.
7: 01i--Todav 3,4,15; Good Mornlna. America 6.13; CBS
News 8; Chuck Wh ile Report• 10.
7:05-Bug s Bunny S. Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8 : oo-~assle6; Coplaln Kangaroo 8,10_; Sosame 51. 33.
8:Jo-Big Valley 6.
9·oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; Lucy Show 8: Mike
D9ugt os 10.
9 : 3~Cross - WIIs 3; One ~lfelo Live 6; GOQd Day B.
IO :oo--Sonford S. Son 3,&lt;,15: Price Is (llghl 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10: 15-General 1-fospltal 6.
10:31&gt;-'-Hollywood squares 3.4.15.
11 :Oii--Wheel. of Fortune 3,15; Weekday .i; E d~e ot
Night 6; Double Dare B,10; Morning wllh O.J . 13;
Elec. Co. 20.
11 : 3~Stumpars

3,&lt;,15; Happy Days 13; Secret San1a

6; Love of Lifo 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.

li :S5-Take Kerr 8; Ms Flxl1 10..
12 ·oo--News 3,B,10: Don Ho 13 ; Bob Braun 4: SO Grand
Slam 15 .
12 : J~Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 13 ; Search fo1
Tomorrow 8-10 .

12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:Oii--Somerset 3; Ry0 n's Hope 13; Concentration 8;
Young &amp; lho Restless 10; Not' For Women Only 1S.
1:30-0ays ot OUr ~lves 3,4,15; Family Feud 13; As
The World Turns 8, 10.
2:otl-l20,000 Pyramid 13.
2 · J~Ooctors 3,&lt;,15 ; One ~lfe to Live 13; Secret Santa
Continues 6; Guiding Light 8, 10.
J ;oti-Anolher World 3,4,15; Allin The Family 8, 10; On
Aging 20 .
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3 : 3~Malch Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:01i--MI•Ier Cartoon 3; Marcus WElby, M.D. 4;
Somerse1 15; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Sesame St.
20.33; Movie "1-fostlle Guns" 10; Happy Prince 13.
4: 3~My Three Sons 3; Afterschool Spacial 13; Parlrldge Family 8; Flintstones 15.
5:!»--Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch 8:
Mister Rooers 20.33: Star -Ttek 15.
5 : 3~Secrel Santa Continues 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adem-12 13.
6:00-News 314,8,10, 13,15; Zoom 20; Teaching Children
33!
6:3~NBC News 3,&lt;,15; ABC News 13; News 6: CBS
News 8, 10; Hodgepodge ~odg 0 20: Lilias YQga &amp;
You 33.
7:oo-&lt;)ral Roberts' Chrlolmas Dream 3: To Toll tho
Truth 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; .. Pop Goes tho
Country 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My ThrH
Sons 1S; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Sportspege 33.
7 ; 3~$100,000 Name That Tune 4: Match Game PM 61
$25,000 Pyremld 8; MacNeil-Lehrer 20,33; Break
the Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
'"8:01i--John Davidson 3,4,15; Bionic Woman 4; Gunsmoke 8; No-. 20,33; Good Times 10; ROdeo 13.
8:30-Jeflersons 10.
9:01i--Dean Marlin 3,4, 1S; Borella 6; Movie "The
Ge1away" 8,10; Dance In America 33; Soundstage
20 .
10 :00-Mec Davis 3,4, 15; Charlie's Angels 61 News 20;
To Be Announced 33.
10 :30-Book Beat 33.
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,13,15; MocNell · ~ehrer Report 33.
11 ; 3~Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Rookies 6,13; News 8, 10;

.ftftllrul ID'il

DAILY CRYPT9QUOTE- Here's h?w to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X ror the two O's, etc: Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and (ormalion ol the word1 are all

hints. Each day lhe code letters are diflerenl.

~ THATICRAIIIL!D WOADQAirll
byHenriAmOidar&lt;IBoblle

I
.'WELL1 Fll&lt;:;f OF
AL L LE:T'&amp; Nor

USIWGJS

GJYSW

CY L!

WGP

I CATHY
KIJ

~HYROWj

CRYPTOQUOTES

A I MZ

WI

USIWGJS .

WQP
BGJSJ

WHERE YOU MIGHT

FINe::' A CA~ET
ON A FL16HT.

PANfC! TH ERIO

HilS

MilSon. w. Y1.

·-

lD~E

VKWP

A WAYOUT...

IA

- ....

ZBJMMT,

RIZ

KT

WGJ

WGJSJ . -

VJYNJ

BGKWWKJS

Now artango lhe drclld """" 10
fonn the aurprile aniWef. u sug-

gealod by Ihe above cartoon .

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : A FOOL CAN NO MORE SEE HIS
OWN FOLLY THAN HE CAN SEE HIS EARS.~ WILLIAM~
MAKEPEAcE THACKERAY
. ·

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

f) 1976 Klnl Fealuns SyDdiCIU.. Inc.

BARNEY

LISTEN TO THE

-SWAP SHOP

7 PM

- WMPO • 92.1 FM
92 in the Country

•

.four ordlnaty worde.

2545.:.·~-~

Htnnln
Gtate
,.

Perspecllve on lhe News 20.
I1:Oii--News 3.4.6.8. 10,13, 15; MacNeil -lehrer Report
33.
11 : 30- J oh nny Carson J.-4, IS ; Movie " Sirange
Homecoming: • 6,13, Kojak 8; Mar y Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.
12:!»--Movle "Sirange Cargo" 10; Jano kl 33.

~ ~ ~~~~
Unacrarnblo lheao four Jumbl...
one letter to each IqUiri, to form

THURSDAY TIL 1211100N

773-5592

Switch 8, 10: News 20. Great Perform ances 33.

10 : 3~ Bi ock

1:00-T9morrow 3,.tl.

Mon ., Tues., Wed . ~ Sat.-t:JOtiiS:OO

•

Pops in

2: !~News 13.

WILL TRIM or cut trees and shrub·
bery. Phone 742 -3167' or 949·

·MASON FURNrTURE

Bost on

12:01i--Movle "Gunfight a1 lhe O.K. Corral" 8; Mary
Hartman 10; Janak! 33.
12 :311-Movlo "Trea•u~e of San Gennaro" 10.
12 : 4~Mys1ery of 1ho 'iY0&lt;1k 6,13 .

--- ~--~-

FRIDAY' UNtiL 8 PM

'Tom Sawyer " 8, 10;

Hoi l.ywood 20.33.
9;01i--Police Woman 3,4,1S; John Dehver 6,JJ; M·A-S-H
8.10.
9:JG-One·Doy AI A Time 8, 10; Miracle on JSih Slreet
201 World War I 33.
10:!»--Po llce Story 3,4, 15; Barbaro Walters 6,13;

ARC: N~~&lt;w !t 3.1 .

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..
plumbing and heot1ng. Phone

STORE HOURS

POMEROY ~ 2 bedrooms,
bath, furnace, basement,
.and furnllure. All for only

BUILDING LOTS - Rock
Springs and Five Polnh

•KJxx•xx t x :&lt;4Anxx.

Your partner has opened one
diamond and rebid on e
nolrump after you responded
one spade.
The answer is that you
should pass. One notrump
ought to be a very satisfactory
contract. Your partner has
shown a minimum type opening and there is no reason to
explore further .

38 Greek

level lol. $22,000.

SIMoo:

A Michigan reader wants to
know if you make a second bid
with :

by THOMAS JOSEPH

MASON FURNITURE

natural gas F .A . furnace on

RIVER PROPERTY
New 3 bedroom all elec .
home. Nice kitchen, dining
wllh glass sliding doors .
$37,500.

~ ~~~

Pass

~AAW'IUl!f"

3825
Ri 'Mo DELING , Plumbing, heating
and oil types of general repair .
Wor k guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience, Phone 992-2409.

I N. T.

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
West 's one heart bid is what
may be described as a
nuisance overcall . He does not
expect that his side will play
the hand unl.,s it turns out
that North doubles him and he
has to struggle for his life at
one heart doubled .
He hopes that maybe h1s bid
will inhtbit his opponents or
that if North does become the
dectarer he will have told his
partner what ro lead . Mbst of
the time these nuisance bids
don 't affect" anything. This
time the bid had a bad effect.
It told South how ro play the
hand .
After West opened the six of
hearts and East played the
queen, South had a p,robiem
He could due(( and ho(d back
his ace until the third lead of

Sweepers , toasters , 1rons, all
small app l i&lt;~n C es . loY'I n mower,
neKt to Slate H1ghwoy Garage
·on Route 7 Phone (61.4 ) 985-

·-

Gas well.
furnace, 3

bedroom renovated home
and 2 car gar .ot(le . $32,500,

ARE CLEAR -HOW VIE CAN

SPEAK SENSE - ·

BRADFORD Auctioneer . Com·
ple te Service. Phone 949·2.. 67
or 949·2000. Rac ine . Ohio, Critt

EiW-000

t•

3 N T. Pass

SEPTIC Syslems installed by
licensed instoller. Shepard
Contract ors Phone 7.tl2 · 2~09 .

hookups. Wan t only $5500.
COUNTRY HOME - 3
bedroom,, mod . bath, fuel
oil F.A. furnace , nice eat-In
kitchen. Screenad-ln porch
and large large. $19,500.

FINE - THE
MAtH. WOR'CIH65

IT MAY BE LOHG
i!ei"ORe ~IS l&lt;IIND
IS ClEAR I\IID H1S
TONGUE WIU AG A!tl

HOWERY

t•

S.Uib
I t

Opening lead - 6 •

~

Syracuse, Ohio

North Ea11

Pass
Pass

1-1~1

Phone 992·5716

__

VIrgil B. Sr., Rul1or
216 E. second Stree1

GU!!IIIUIII!INGS _

IJTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

2 ACRES OF land ot Wildwood
E•tates, $-4200. Phone 992-3273 .
~·
TIMBER , Pome'ro~ Forest Pro·
150 K 200 LOT for sole in
ducts. Top price for standing
Syracuse. Phone 992 - 371~ .
sawt imber Call Kenl Hanby,
2 1/, ACRES level land, •; , mrle
I-446-857·C'OC::. -:::---c---c:
from Rutland on New limo
COINS , CURRENCY, token s, old
Read. Phone 7.42 -2930 or after' 5
pocket wotches ond cham s.
Sliver and gold . We need 1964
Pc."'_~=====:;
ond older silver c&lt;1ins. Buy, sell,
or trade ' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
742-2331 .

TEAFORD

We st

10 or more.

NEARLY new at elec. home , full
basement, for so le by owner .
Rutland area . Phone 7.t2-2531 .

TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO. Three

g=m

to

698-7331 .
EXCAVATING.,
BACKHOE S.
SMALL form for sole, 10,.., down ,
DOZER
.
TRENCHER
. lOWBOY .
owner financed. Monroe CounDUMP TRUCKS . BILL PULLINS .
ty , W. Vo Phone (304 ) 772 ·
PHONE 9'12-2478. DAY OR
_3_1~or I304L~2~~227 '--~
NIGHT .
COUNTRY farmland with secl ud·
N
EIGLER
8UilD1NG SUPPlY . Good
ed wood s. water ond good oc·

7. Phone (61&lt;) 667·6JO.I.

.

Both 'IUiner able

tor

________ ----.......-,.-----·-

Commerc1ol property opprox 17
acres, level land, located ot
Tuppers Ploin~ on Ohio, Route

WIIIIIOIISliiOOIS
REPIJCl,EIIT
WIIIOOIS ·

FOR GIFTS In red, wh i te

Square Yard Installed
Dlvld Parsons, Owner
949-2114
11-4-1 mo.

__ ...
7481

tQJI06 2
• A Q4

FOR

an• pink . sJ .oo ro ,, oo. 20

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
all elec ., 1 acre, Middleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992·

sfun

YOUR HOME In pMs end
hanging Daskets from 75c

BACK CAR PETING

HOMESITES for sole, 1 9cre or.d
up. Middleport, near Rutland.
Coll992·7481 .

iolillllllllli&lt;t

=

choose from . PE~FECT

furnace . Full basement
with washer - dryer

••w•
knits , outornolic, b•Jtton holvr.

-

L--..!T!!tii:!I:_:::OO::O:_F:.,or~id::a~ys:.._-'-'. (.__ _:.:Ph::.:.

FOLIAG~~~£~5

• 10 6 3
SOUTH iDl
• 83
.. A J 2

LARR!~~~DER

ASSORTED RUBBER

l

-------

9 ,~~:5~~-:~,Y

to ss.oo. Also. lay away

twer

·-

P1. Pleasant

EAST
•J 142
•Q9 3
t8 &gt;3

• J 982

fancy prints, accessories.'

•"•il1e, 0111•0
R,.._

IN TOWN ~ 2 bedrooms,
mod . balh, na1. gas F.A.

Pomeroy Landmark ·

•

w;;;--s;;;.t::::~ QIRE~1 ~!~\~JALES'

3102 or (:to&lt;) 772-32'27 .

-~~.

Ford or Chevrolet thr•e·fourth
ton trv&lt;k with stainless hub·

•71

6 0T ME-

• K I0 865

Volve1s, nylon prints,
llerculons, vinyl solids, and

cess In Monroe Count~ . W. Va .
. $1 .000 down, coli (304) n2.

Pomeroy Landmark

It

-- ~-

·-

Sophia Hanover won si•

REA~ ~Y

WORR IED, CARO"!

WEST
•QIO

Silts.

c*Hed

--

YOU' VE

•

7;oti-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling For Dollars 6; ~el ' s Go To The Races 11
News 10; To Tell The Trulh 13; My Thr.. Sons IS;
Cooki ng with a Conllnenlal Flavor 20; American
Issues Forum 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3. Night Before Chrlstmos "4;
~ e1 ' s Deal With 116; M al e~ Game PM 8; MacNei l·
~ehrer ReP.,r t 20,33 ; In Tho Know 10: A Chrlslmas
Slory 13; Nashvil le on lhe Road 15.
·
8.!»--Boo Baa Black Sheep 3,4; Year Without A So nia
Claus 6, 13; J ulie Andrews Chrlslmas Special IS;
Mov ie

the suit. That duck play would
insure his success provided
E as t he td th e ace o f
diamonds. It would tead to
failure if West held thai all
important card.
After the nuisance overcall
South had no problem. It was
almosl a certa inty that West
wou(d hold that missing ace.
So South grabbed the first
heart trick and knocked out
the ace of diamonds . West
was in and had no way to keep
South from maleing four
notrump . Ac luaiiy , West
made the desperation lead of
the heart king and South made
five odd .

14

_ 10-17-l_mo (f'!ll

, -For sofll, Cllarr c hlons:
mo11resses, peddlng. Ideal
f~r c.ompers. Variety of ,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) GUARANTEED JOBS-LOC4T10N TWO MOTORCYCLE helmets with
Racine Area . Phone 992-5858.
. -·--.......$374 40 single. $502 .80 mar· ·· shield. like new , $20 each.
The annual U.S. Trotting
In
1799,
George
3
BEDROOM
, 2 story house: com ·
ned . Army Recruiting. Co li Col · ~,.ehone 742·2211 . Ahar 5 p.m.
AssociBtlon-U .S. Harness Waahlngton, Revolutionary
pletely ramodeted . new carpet ,
lect (614 ) 593·3022 or 385·6318.
&lt;~2- 2201
Writers' Association poll War commanding general
- - -- ---- - ··-kitchen , etc . ~ miles north of
FOUR ~HEVELli.rolly wheels 14 x
Pomeroy on St. Route 7, $225
pte ked Keystone Ore as the ~ and first prelident of the
7 . $75. One new G -70KU
month plu s utilities . Phone
year-old pacer of Ure year United states, died at his
Goodyear Polyglass l ire , $25;
985 -3341
and Steve Lobell as the ~ Mount Vernm hmle after
one pa1r of Monroe MoJC ie air
THIS
year-old trotter of year asklng hia doctors to '1et me
shocks, almost new. Will tit
ONE!.
most Chrysler cars for $40.
l"rtday.
go off quietly."
Got FU~~ pay and
Phone 9~9 - 2181 or 9.49-2631.
Keystone Ore, tbe fastest
In 1819, Alabama was .ellowances while we
provide
lop
training
In
~acing sophomore on five· admitted to the Union aa tbe
axcltlng field of your
r-el~hths and half-mile tracks 22nd state.
choice. If you're 18 to 31
'-in the sport's history and the
In 1972, Apollo 11 . years old and can quell tv.
I ' ali-time twCHDlnute mile utrooaull Gene Ceman and we'll g\Jarantee offer In
One good used Remington
Cham Saw
$$0
l .;:hamplon during a single Harrison Scluoltt bluted of! writing. Sign an now and
gel current liberal G.l. l One good used McCullough
~ season, won by a ~1 margin the moon for the return trip to
Bl~~ btneflh. ~II or Itt
Chi in SaW
S7S
the other six horses earth,
your Navyman at:
One good· used Homellte
221 Columbua Rd.
Chain saw
S150
\~eceivlng votes.
In 1974, Preooldent Ford
New co -Op water Sof At!Mfis,OH
The Bye Bye Byrd- arrived in Martinique in the
POMEROY
,_alrvlew
teners
PH: S9Hl66 (tellecll
l'Oregon's Tiny colt received French West Indlea lor two
model VC · l&lt;VI Only S279.95
Hts. Lovely brick vene-er, 3
One good us.ed Gibson Side·
!192 votes compared to 37 for days of Ialka with Frmch
bedrooms. bath. modern
by -Side Relrlge-r•tor n~o
:runner-up, 011 Burner. President Valery Ghrcard
kitchen, utltlly room,
carpeting, g!ragel storage
'Wlndahleld Wiper was third. d'Eatalng.
PLEASURE HORSES ond pontes,
bldg .. porch, chain fence,
: Steve! Lobell, tied 88 the
olso will buy hones ond
about 1 acre. Almost new.
....
~
A
·
thought
for
the
day:
Jock
W.
C.rsty,
Mgr
.
; fastest eophomore trotter of
pon1a1 . Phone (614) 698·3290.
Phone m-2111
: all time with Super Bowl American poet Henry WadaRuth Reeves.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
-----~
~-' after hia 1:li6.2 victory in thla worth Loogfellow 88id, "The All white
lol. 3 bedrooms, 2 ba111s,
Germon Shepherd Pup·
GOOD USED r•lrigerotor , i&gt;9ught
'year's Harnbletonlan, tallied grave Ia but a covered bridge
utility R., dining R.. some
p1es , f1ne blooded . Sea Richard
new. side by side, reason for
S1orage or office
carpeting.
182 votes. Ills stablemate, leading from light to light,
Gilkey , Clifton . W . Vo ..
sell ing. Phon$ ~.47 - 3S~l qfter ~
bldg., lots of shrubbery,
'Quick Pay, collected 22 to through a lrlef darkne88." • 31:W ·773·5%2or 773-5775.
pm . .
nalural gas heat, excellent
----- -place second in the vote
5 MONTH OlD Reg1stered lnsh
f1REWOOD . PHONE 7&lt;2·2131. neighborhood .
Setter
for
sa
le.
S50.
Phone
standings.
------.... ~-· -·--- --- RUTLAND - About 4
'192·3565.
FIREWOOD, $20 pickup truck load
{ World champloo 1ma Lula 1
acres In town. Older home
delivered: SIS, you pick it up.
~ llnlshed third.
_ P~~·J30•l aa2-3205 . ~--·- hu 3 bedrooms, dining R.,
'' ' The Stanley Dancer·
beth, alum. siding, out
Fur Sale
ROBYN BASE C.B. rodlo . (rube cellar, s1orage bldg ..
trained Keystone Ore waa the ·
LA FF A DAY
typa) with D-104 power mike.
natural gas heat . Jus1
like new . Priced reasonable.
nation's top mooey earner .--=~-- -------, lARGE ELECTRONIC organ ond
115.500.00.
Phone 949·2322.
this year with $539,762 for 22
bench. 2 keyboards , L,.l;,
POMEROY
wins, nine seconds and a third
Speaker . beautiful cabinet .
ANTlOUE DINING room ou;1e, 6" RECREATION CENTER
Also . 35 m.m. camera, 1:1.5
-~~~s.:!._h~~!?:.6008_t~~e.!:_ - long established doing a
in 33 starts. .
len' eJCtro telephoto lens and
The WUllam Haughton· .
flosh ollo&lt;hmonr. Gail Miller. ELECTAOLUX SWEEPER . complftte. very ' good' bull ness. Low
trained Steve Lovell led all ~
phone 992·3196.
ly rebuilt with all new at·
Investment EKcelfenf
tochments , $54.95. Also Hoover
return .
CHRISTMAS PONiEi.. io; &lt;hil~;.;,~,
year-old trotters with
sweepers. tonks or uprights ,
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,
earnings of $388,770 for 10
Co! l (61&lt;) 6911·~290 . _ _ . __ • 118.
Phone992-51&lt;16 ·
bath . basement, dining
wins in 28 starts.
8EEF CATTLE. 30' eo&lt;h . good hoy SINGEir"fioid;;;-To~~h--N.- s;~, room, u1111fy space, hardThe son of Speedy Count·
roke. Also set of 16 .5 r ims for
Does it all. Zlg-r:ogs ,
on
wood floors, natural gas
~-

NOW! 5TOP l HAT! ...

HEY,

ChHftr,Oiolo

·~i~M~ffr1·
FA~R

Phone(30&lt;)773-4721.

1896.
On this day in history:

NORTH
•AK9 6S

,.

CO PR O R/I TI ON

~~! -~=~~·-:-.:.. _·--.:~:~~

WIN AT BRIDGE
Nuisance bid aids play

(614) 915.. 115

Frae Est .
Work Guar.
Rullond 12-9·1 mo. m-ma

ABC N ews 6; Zoom 20 ;

6:30- NBC News3,• .15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; lT V
Ulll lza11on 33.

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

"Wt C.rt"

111 1 14. lie

INTERVIEWS wll l.bt held Mndoy .
Nov . 22, 197() starting ot 11 :00
a .m. o 'clock 1n the office of the
Meigs County Commi SSioners,
Cou rt House, Pomeroy, Ohio
lor orchite&lt;:h who ore on tha
NOTIC E ON FILIN G
appro" ed list of State Ar·
OF INV E NTORY
chitects (Public Works Stole of
AND APPR A I SE MENT
Ohro}
for the proposed multi·
Th e Still e ot Oh10 , M ('i q s
purp ose facility for Meigs
Count y . Co urt ot Comm on
County . Pleose coli for cppoint·
Pl!:!il !o, Prob o1 fP 01V i5t00
T o the E~C ec ul o r' or Ad
95~--~
ment, 99~!2;c·2~8::
m 1n1 str a tor ot th e e s t tlt ~ . to
PIANo
INSTRUCTIONS.
Cl-uldren 's
o;uch o f t h e fot lo wi nq a~ ar r
end adu lts. June VanVranken,
r esi d en t s of l t"~ c &lt;&gt; rat e of Oh10,
v i1
th e su r 'l 1v 1nq spou sf' .
9'12-2270.
th e
n ('XI
of
k (n ,
lhr
ALTH.OlJGH
Birchfielcf's Ta xider·
bc nef ic iar i(.• S und er lh(' Wi ll .
my ha s burned , work STILL Will
.m d 10 +he all orne y or at
BE DONE ill temporar y
tor ncy5 r epr escnt lnq any of
ttl c a for em ent ion ed per son s
quarters. Ho'.'e your troph ies
'&gt; iirah
A
Koe h l er.
mou nted todoy and treasure
Drceascd . Pomer oy , Oh ro .
them tomorrow. BIRCHFIElD's
&lt;'. a t1sbu r y To w ns h ip . N o
TAXIDERMY, eost of Rut land
~ 1 9~ 7
mile on Rt . 124 . Phone
You ar c her eb y noli l 1cd th&lt;+ l
7&lt;2·21 78
and
!\ p
th e
I n ve n to ry
p ra1 semcn 1o t lh e rs ta l f' ot l hr
GUN SHOOT &lt;1! the Roci n• Gun
illor c m c nllon c rt .
drcr a srd
Club every Sundoy . 1 p.m
la te ot sa id Coui1 t '{ , wA s t ilr rl
AssorteP m_!Oh.
in l h1S Cou l' l 'ia 1d lnvi'ntory
and App r ai5C mC'nl Wil l pc f or
hcll r in9 b efor e t hi !i Co url on . - - -- - - - - - - . ,
lhe ?e l h day o f Dcc cm b ('r .
1976 . a r 10 00 o'c l ock t. M
t.ny p ~;!r!ion dcs 1ri nq lo 1110
f':o: cc pl ion s th (' r e +o mu sl f ile
lhern a t lcil st f iv e p ays pr1 or 10
lh(' da le se t tor hcar in q
Gi'lfm und er my ha nd and
sc a r of sa1d Cou r 1 11115 1Qi h
Cume and tag your Xmas
day of DeC ember IQ7e.
tl"ft at 111e Charles A.
M ann ino (l Webs ter
Sargent residence 311:1 m.
Judge
north of TuPIIOI'S Plains, 0.
By fl n n A w"' tson
on S. R. 681. Bring 111e
Dr pu l y Clf'rk
ehildren for the old fashion
r 171 Lr ? I 'J ·c
thrill of cutting your own
tree .
Phone 915·4167

'·
Tbe Almanac

Aerl1l
Commercial
Scl!ools
Weddings

3. ~.8 . 10 ,1 3, 1 5 ;

Consumer Exper ience 33.

PHOTOG WHY

AL TROMM CONST.

14)-2115

S3995

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Protect , vour lnv.,1mon1
plu$ add to the valua Of
\'OIW homo. Trust 111oso
nectsury fix-It, room
'ldcltltan and ramodellng
jobs 1o your lrltndly,
neighborhood, q~_ollfled
buildtr.
.

GE NER AL MO T OR S
ACCE PT A NCE

(Are you 8 Sagirtar1us? Bermce
Osol has wntten a special AstraGra ph Letter fo r you For your

Year's best

6:0G-News
Furnace Service.

1975 CHEVY E~ CAMINO

TUESDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1976
5-:oo-- Big Vo lley 3; Merv Griffi n 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 2&lt;!.33; Slar Trek 15.
5 : 3~ News 6; Famlly Affair 8; Eleclrlc Company
20,33; Adam ·12 13.

PROFESSIONAL

·.

Television log for easy viewing

Business Services

1:1\ 2 SIGNS POMEROY
\CI ~ ,Mot-:or Co.

Noon Sa tur da y .
P.h one toda y '19 2·215 6

ca n do with you r brain , not your
b r awn . Tod ay you can prove t ha 1
the 11on 1s k m g beca use he.
knows first how to use his inte llect

day and tomorrow hol d p ar!lcut ar prom 1se m aterially Zero, 1 J\l any situ ation th at can tu r n
ea into doll ar s

TO W HOM

11 - TIIe D&amp;lly Senllnel, Middleport..Pcmeroy, o.. Tuesday, Dec. l4,19'16
DICK TRACY

Auto Saleo

Cf RN

HOU~S

8:30 a .m . to 5:00 p.m .
Dally , 8:30 a m . to 12:00

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
li e ~

NOTIC E OF

PU BLIC SA lt

Add ition al 25.c Charg e
per Adver tisement .

gUid!ln ce ·:ou'll b e ap prec1ated .

great streng th

BLIND ADI

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel C,lass:ifie~s .

I SHORE
WISH 1 HAD
HE SAID TO THE ZOO

KEEPE~." I'VE 60T SOME
GOOD 6NU5 FOR ~OU AND
SOME BAD 6NU5 FOR ~ou 1 "

ANOTI-IER ' C ,\l iNUS " !

SOME

EXCITIN I
NEWS FER
LOWEEIV'S

TEA PARW,
BUT--

6LORV 8E!!
WAIT'LL SHE
-HEARS A60UT
THIS!!

-

�u..:. '!be Dally Senilnei,Middleport·Pomeroy. 0 ., Tueoday, Oec.l4, 1\f/ti

Local news, in briefs

John Amott died Monday
'

Masonic rites will be held at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call after 6 this
evening .

RACINE- John 0. Arnott, Racine United Methodist
70, Raf!ne, retired elec· Church.

trlclan, died Monday al·
temoon
ai
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
·
Mr. Arnott wa.s born Mareh
28, 11108 a son of the late Oils
aoo Bertha Rolllh Amott.
Besldea h!a parent! he was
preceded In death by three
brothera.
A retlr~ electrician, he
belqed to the International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers local In Marietta. He
wia a qlember of Ohio Valley
Commandery 24, Knights
Templar: Bosworth Councu
18, Royal and Select Masters;
Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Masone ; Harrisonville
Masonic Lodge 411, Free and
Accepted Muons, Chapter
~. Order of Eastern Star,
Harrlso.nvllle, and of the

A Christmas program will
be presented atthe Freedom

Surviving are his wife,
Ellen Foreman Amott; three
daughters, Mrs . James
(VIrginia) Reeves , Jr .,
Racine; Mrs. Gene (lois )

minor accident Monday at

U5 p.m. at the parking lot at

Gospel Mission, Bald Knobs , Meigs Mine No. one. Robert
Saturday, Dec. 18, at 7: lO W. Welts, 21 , McArthur,
pulled from parking and
P.m. The pobl ic Is Invited.
· struck a legally parked
Marriage licenses haiJe

b.Y

Rod ·

veto rec ....... of I eltp.
ei!IJIIoye't uloa, the flnt
ouch aaloll Ill '-lor.
City COIIIItD u daya aco

News •• in Briefs

Triplett fired .by Meigs Local Board

(Contlnu~ froin pase I)
wu repeatedly hindered In my eftortll to make
'COIIliillsllon deal honeotly with lllclelr safety problau lllat ~
were robed by me and other IIIII members. I believe tile NRC
is violating Ita plibllc trust. Time and time again, the NRC bu
cov.-ed up aild brulhed ulde 111cear safety _problema," l!e
said.

.:I

1111:

ney E. Walker , Langsville. There was slight
· damage to both vehicles. No
cllollon was Issued.
volodl-ltorecopllea~lty
COLUMBUS - PRESIDENT·ELECI' JIMMY CARTER;
Weaver, Mason, W. Va., and
and
VIce Prealdent~ect Walter Mondale luive received aD II
Mn. Robert (Kenda) Brown,
RACI NE - Racine Legion employe'• a a loa.
of Ohio's electoral v~. ~~~~ 111 elid to the elcoelt
Post 602 will hold lis Christ-.
Couacll OfiiDiztd ID
Newport: seven grand·
prealdentlal election In the state lllnce IMI. 1be Electctral _
mas dinner Friday, Dec. Hot override to file mayor'ti
child...,._ live brothers, Ira,
Collece
vote threatened fer days by the uncertainty of a
Tbe
Meigs
County
Sheri
ff
's
6 p.m. ot the post home.
veto
bat
failed
with
a
~
William, Arthur and Charles,
Departmont lnvesll galed a Turkey and hom will be
recolllt
and
lawsuit, went off on schedule Monday without
aU of Racine, and Jess, of
provided by the post . Persons vote. Sill yea vole! were
incident.
are to bring their own silver- · needed lor lhe override.
)(Rochester, Pa.; four· sisters,
Tbe mly Jooae end remalnlnC wu the poulbillty U..l a
ware.
·
: The Loauster City
Mrs. Wilma R!ggs, Mrs. Zelia Veterans Memorial Hospllal
coaUtlon
headed by the u. S. Labor party might appeal'an ·
Admitted · Barbara
Taylor, Mrs. Mae Durst and
SYRACUSE
The . Employe;• UDlon receutly
unfaverable
ruling In It! attempt to lnvaUdate · Oblo'o :,
(Continued from page I) Syracuse ER Sqood Sunday reeebed a charter from the
Mrs. VIolet Bush, all of McQuaid, Lorain: Helen
presidential
voting
oo grounds of fraud. Four hoiD'I before the ;.,
at
10:
15
a.m.r
transported
Amerlua Federalloa ol
Racine, and several nJeces Rood, Racine ; Marjorie Fred Hoffman showing
Electoral
College
convened,
U.S.,Dlllrlct Coort Judge Joaeph •
Grimm, Racine: Bess Ellis, receipts of $1,393.15 In fines Oscar Imboden to Veterans State,
and nephews.
·
Coualy
and P, Klnneary d1smlued the coalition's
Memorial
Hospital,
request for a permanent
Funeral services wiD be Pomeroy ; Brett Friend, Long and fees, $144 In merchant Monday at 2: 10 P·ll'l · lhoy · MuDldpal Employes. Tbe
fnjunctloo
against
llfvlng
Carter
Cillo's
25 electoral vQteo,
held at 2p.m. Thursday at the Bottom.
police collections lor a total of transported Sterling Rayburn oDiou flleludes aU DOII- which he won by ll,llhoteaover ~dent Ford.
Discharged - Mary King, $),510.15 after paying state from Veterans Mem orial oDlformed city worten,
Racine United Methodist
Hospita l to his home In about 120 peno111.
Church with the Rev. Tim Burwell McKinney, David costs.
Syracuse.
Smith olllclaling. Burial will Deem, Juanita . Ferrell ,
Clerk-Treasurer Gene
be in Letart Falls Cemelery. Dayto n McElroy , Evelyn Grate read a letter from
Watson , David McEwen , Columbia Gas of Ohio inThomas Hart, Carolyn dicating that a .1927 cents
THE ARNOLD~ ·
Davidson, Clolse Badgley, increase per 1,000 cubic feet
(By N. Est• Arnold, Morlan. Otllo
Sterling Rayburn , Regina of gas will go into effect in the
Reuno, Oh, ye Arnolds, and the occoslon en loy It,
For lime makes great changesand old age oft destroys if
Adkins, Janice Roush .
town as of the Jan. 7 billing in
But this glorious gathering from o'er the broad plain
WILKESVILLE - Samuel
Surviving are a daughter,
accorda·nce to the fuel cost
Gives welghtlo the thought that !be Arnolds do reign.
V. Pendleton, 86, Radcliff, Mrs. Bob (VIolet) Blackburn ·
clause. Grate also read a
STANFORD, Call!. (UP!) after five winning seasons, We comefrom the East. the North and the South,
died Sunday. "~venlng at the of Radcliff, several nieces,
Holzer Medical Cenl&lt;r
letter acknowledglnB the
And the West - like Nlagoro, p()urs a great volume forth,
Stanford's new head earned $29,000 annually.
Veterans Administration nephews and cousins.
!Discharges, De&lt;, 13)
village as a member of the
Walsh said he wiD name And up from the sea comes the captain's comrnand,
.foolbatl coach says he'll bike
HOII(IItalln Dayton.
Preceding him In death
Everett Carey, Ruby Ohio MunJclpal League.
new lllck In recruiting IO!Ile assistants soon, saying "Cast anchor In port, that the _Arnolds may land."
• A veteran of World War I, besides his wife and parents Carey, Mrs. Robert Chaffin
Council passed on an aplayers
- going nationwide the men he seeks must have Oh listen, ye Arnolds, to what Imoysoy_
Mr. Pendleton was born Dec. were three brothers, four and son, James Frisbee, emergency basis an amend·
Oather Helm, Mrs. Paul ment to an ordinance inslead of emphasizing the same phlloaophical ap- Of our grondfalhers, grandfathers, grandfathers' day
~. 1889 a son of Samuel and sisters and a son.
proach he has - teaching When with gun on their shoulder and ax ln.thelr hand,
Funeral services will be Honaker and daughter , providing for a category for CaUfornla talent.
Mary Ann Bums Pendleton of
"'
They felled the dense forest and plowed optheland.
"We wlli be going after the studeniB to play football.
Radcliff. Spending aU hll Ufe held at II a.m. Thursday at William· Hughes, Cecil opening graves not covered in
..•
"Stanford has world The dread of the strong, the belp of the weak,
In Raddlff until three years the Wilkesville Chapter of the Jarvis, Blanche Lemon, _Ern·a an earlier ordinance. The same people Notre Dame and
••
ago, he was a retired Walker Funeral Home with Meadows , Joseph Qh•vey, openJng is smaUer than that the Ivy League schools are reknown as an academic Stronghearted they wer ,e and yet vory meek.
A
great
combination
of
bravery
and
love
lntereated In," Jim Walsh Institution, aoo we hope to They tolled with their eyes on the fair goal above.
ratlroader aoo miner. He was the Rev. Dean Mills of- , .Carl Reekers,
Althea
required for a vault and the
.••
a member of the Radcliff flciatlng. Burial will be in Ridenour, Glenna Robmette, charge will be $50. The said Monday after aceeptlng keep that . same kind of
ChriBtlan Church. On July 7, Radcliff Cemetery. Friends Charles ~owland, Mart ha- Waller .Drane Co., Cleveland, the post left vacant by the program In our. footba11 " 'Tis the land oflhe Free and the home oflbe brave.''
··~
From Sir Edw in of England to Ra.nsome of Herve
firing of Jack Christiansen. approach."
"'
'1923, he married Ruby may call at the Wilkesville Rucker, I;eonard Smithson,
•
which is compiling orWalsh Is a graduate of San And many of the lesser lights shine here and there
"We feel .there . are
Beoolngton who died March Chapel ·from 7 to 9 p.m. Chnstopher Tripp, Hurl dinances asked for the
Westfall.
,, I
adequate numbers of student Jose State University where In the great constellation of Arnolds' brlgM stars.
18, 1975.
Wed nes day.·
council's
consideration
of
the
.
(Births, Dec.13)
athletea and If we get our· he starred as a wide receiver. And ·now may the blessings you merit around you,
omission
of
the
category.
Mr. and Mrs. James Still·
share, we can be very He held collegiate coaching And Heaven for good reasons, admire and befriend you .
Mayor Hoffman reported competitive against schools jobs at' California and May Wldsom go with yoo because.you have le•rned It,
"
ner, daughter, Oak Hill; Mr.
••
that fire ·contracts for 1977 such as Southern CalifornJa Slllnford, working three And Woallh , from the fact yoo have honestly earned II.
and Mrs. Alfred Dye,
•••
have been negotiated with and UCLA," said Walsh, who 110810ns Wlller John Ralstoo
daughter, Wellston.
And when free from earth and all eorthly communion.
"
Salisbury, Cheshire Town· spent the last year as Iii the years !~. He You start for that great everlasting. reun ion,
ships, Cheshire VIllage, the
May St. Peter, the latch of the Golden Gale thumbing
offenaive coordinator of the served eight years as an Cry,
"Clear the track, Angels, the Arnolds are coming."
Gavin plant and The Southern San Delgo Chargers.
assistant IUider Paul Brown
PLAYING NIGHTL V
l'LEASANT VALLEY
Ohio Coal Co. The contracts
Walsh, 45, sll!ned a three· with the Cincinnati Bengals •
DISCHARGES - Mrs. provide for total payment of year.
.
contract to head the and the last three at San
Timothy
McDa ni el , $3,250 to the village as
Note - Read at the flrot annual Reunion of lhe Arnolds ·
couching staff at Diego.
near Harrisonville, Ohio: Aug . 26, 1923.
•
Cheshire: Mrs. Paul Johnson, compared to $1,450 last yelir. Cardinals'
AT THE INN
approximately
$35,000
a
year.
r
.•
~~:
•
daughter, Mason: Mrs. Ollie The contracts do not include
Roach, Letart: Mrs. Basil the lee to be paid by each Christiansen, fired Nov. 19
.,
Harris, Mason, and VIctor contract holder on each lire
Roush, Pomeroy.
· From· Parkersburg
run made .to the particular
FREE CLOTHING SET
Births- Adaughter to Mr. location. Councilman Allen
The
Gallla-Meigs Com·
and Mrs. Lewis Pickett, Lee King and Carl Horky
munlty
Action Agency will
Racine ; a son to Mr. and Mrs. were named to serve on the
Gregory R ey nold s, vol4nteer fire department hold liB free clothing day lor
low income persons Thursday
Gallipolis, and a son to Mr. dependent's board.
BE SURE TO
· and Mrs. Kenneth Siders,
Mayor Hoffman made from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tho
agericy's clothing bank . Is
Gallipolis Ferry.,
these other points:
SHOP THE HOME
- An application for located In the fonner high
federal funds (or the plaooed · school buHdlng in d.eshlre.
FURNISHINGS ANNEX
work on Page St., filed with
the Appalachian Regional
CALLED TWICE
FOR EXCEllENt GIFTS ·
The Pomeroy Emergency Commission, is ranked 18th in
Squad answered a call at priority among the eight
992-3629
11 :37 p.m. ·Monday to Bailey counties ' in this area
ASK TO END IT
Pomeroy
· Might we suggest ejectric blankets .
Run Road for Vera Strom requesting lunda:
Steven Yooker, Minersville
reqolar bed blankets . bedspreads In all
- Two · public meetings aoo Scherry Yonker, Mid·
who was having difficUlty
sizes- sheets with matching pillow cues .
breathing. She was taken to have been held to define dleporl, have flied for
draperies . kitchen curtains • shMrs .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. projects for which additional dlssolulioo of marriage in
braided oval rugs . bathroom rugs .
992-6304
At 2:118 p.m. Monday, the federal funds will be sought. Meigs County Common Pleas
bathmat and toilet seat sets · chair peds •
- Jeffrey Burt of Buckeye Court.
squad went to Hobson lor
biHI pillows . furniture throws • area rugs
Carl Stewart who was Ill. He Hills-Hocking Valley
in ovals, oblongs and runners . aprons .
was taken to the Gallipolis Regional Commission was to
table covers in all sizes . dollies and
he In Middleport today to help
Medical Plaza.
dreS5er 5carves · Kersch Drapery
draw up the application.
NO MEETING
Hardw~re · window shades · bath towels
and towel sets .
- The four projects lor
Due to many other
plllll!!llli!IIIUllllr.r.r.IIIIB:Iliiiii!Sl:&lt; 1111 !lllllllltl:ltl:¥~50~"" IIO!l&lt;:!"" r&lt;:&lt; 1111 !!I::&lt; I!&lt;:! 1&gt;::&lt; 1111 ""
which $595,000 will be sought meetings being held this
include a water tank, fire month, the · Democrat
house improvements, water Committee In Meigs County
ll
line
replacement and sewage will noi meet during
will be in our ';c,v~~:~
11
~
~ line extensions.
December, Chesler We1ls,
r,~ain store.
11! . At the request of Mayor county chalnnan. said tOday.',
TUESDAY NIGHT7 to 8
It
« Hoffman, council named
. WEDNESDAY NIGHT 7 to 8
I
·
W Gene McDaniel as a pollee
II
w offiCer to work when other
THURSDAY NIGHT 7 to 8 .
It
·
officns have their days off.
TO MEET FRIDAY
Council discussed the
Your
children will enjoy a visit with
A meeting to discuss black
Santa.
~ replacement of Councilman lung will ~ held from 2 to 4
I
.
W James Brewer who resigned p.m. Friday at the lunch
11
W recently, but took no action. room at the Meigs Senior
It
W Coimcil has untH Dec. 31 lo Citizens Center In Pomeroy.
We've got the key to
I!! nameareplacement.Iflthas
11
It not done by that time, then
w
a new car - a low cost
the replacement Is appointed
111
W by the mayor. It was also
It
auto loan.
reported that Councilman
George Meinhart Is Ill.
i Council discussed a request
Loan-ly? See
lor a street 118ht in the Vine
'21:.&lt;•~ '«):f·
Us For Money
M St. area but decided against It
~
.....,. "
d
~onthe~~~the~
For Any Goo
~ would be on private property
\I
Reason ••• Now
~ and that councH would not
11 knowingly place a street Ughl
11!
on private land. Councilman
II
King complained that
~ tractor·traUers are traveling
WALK.tJP TELLER WINDOW
. AND
~ through the town and are not
u being stopped by the pollee.
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
.. W He said that an ordinance
forbidding the vehicles of this
I
FRI.EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.
W type to travel through the
W
r W· town should be enforced or
111
W dropped. Mayor Hoffman
"THE
W said he would look into King's
11
W report . .

HOSPITAL

been issued lo Douglas Paul
Becker. 25, Rio Grande, ond
Mary Rulh Sauer, 20. Mid:
. dleport ; Kenneth Stanley
Brown. 33. Pomeroy, and
Tina Mar ie Voss. 18,
Pomeroy .

car . owr-ed

VJI:TO A88UREI)
LANCASTER, O~lo
M
Ed
IUPI) ayor
Rutherford told elty
COIIIleDmemhen IDa leiter
Mollday -'•bllllat he wW
-

NEWS

a

Meters

The Poet's· Comer

Stanford recruiting

Samuel Pendleton, 86, dies

Meeting In regular ltlsion Tuelday night at the Meigs
Junior High School"ln Middleport, the Meigs Local School
Dlslrlct voted f.I acalnst rehiring John Triplett as board clerk
In 1977.
1be action was marked by general silence oo the part of
board of education members who, for the most part, would not
expreu openly reuons for firing Triplett, despite his
inaQtence at nwnerOUB Urnes during the four hour meeting .
Defending Triplett was board member, Mrs. Jennifer
Sheela, who repeatedly pointed out, \hal no one had ever
d1acusaed any problema with Triplett over the pa$t months
c
.
. .
that he baa been ~Jerk.
She said that she thought It unfair·to lire him without any
· aplanallon or reasons ahd concluded that Triplett, serving in
such a post fer the first time, should have been called in by the
board for dlarusslon If there were any complaints against him
10 thai he woold.have been given a chance to correct them .
Mrs. Sheets made a motion that Triplett be employed for a
two yell!' period. The motion died for the lack of a second.
·
board member Robert Snowden moved and VIrgil
King, seconded the motion that Triplett not be rehired . In long

Then

discussion when a Wellston attorney, Mark Foley, asked to tbe
However, shortly later the board received a letter from
meeting at Triplett's request, tried to get board members to Mei~s Coulnty Superintendent of Schools Robert. Bowen
give Triplett reasons for hll not being rehired .
indic-dtin~ that such an employment was Illegal. The letter
Howev~r, President Wendell Hoover sa id the board would
sta~ thRt a clerk could only J.. rnuned until ·the end of the
not answer many questions in regard to the situation because rurrent year alter the previous clerk had resigned . On March
they were not reprew~ted by an attorney and anything they 9, 1976, the board changed the aclion employing Triplett on!)
said might be held against them.
until January, 1977.
During the discussion, Triplett sta~ that' Hoover had
Foley said that h e disagreed with the opinion of Supt.
indicated Monday that Triplett would not be rehired and later Bowen on the legality of hiring Triplett for two years in tbe
said that it was a "public relations" problem.· Triplett also first place and also felt that tbe board had a moral obtiga tlon to
stated that Hoover a month ago had indicated that he was the two year agreement since Triplett had originally accepted
. "perfectly delighted" with the work of the clerk.
.
the clerk's .post· on that basis.
· Attorney ~'oley Sliid the board had originally hired Triplett
.
Reasons for firing Waaled
for a two year peri\]d and then chllngi1d it to the remainder of
F'oley asked the board to point out the reasons they were
the year. Foley said that Triplett had been promised the job for dissatisfied with Triplett. Mrs. Sheet! said that she would like
two years and ~ad given up other employment .and relocaood in · to linow too . Triplett remarked that no one had ever said
Meigs County on the premise that he would be In the post lor anything to him about being dissatisfied with hll work.
two years at least.
Mrs. Sheets stated that in the short lime Triplett has held
Hired For Huw Long?
the job, he has not been given time to prove himself in a job the
Supt. Charles L. Dowler said that Triplett had been hired board knew was difficult. She pointed out that In the swnmer,
by the Meigs Local Board last February for a two year period. thi' year, lhe board voted an Increase for Triplett and stated

shti did not undarstaoo how the board could now dismi5S him
such a short time later.
Mrs. Sheets said ljlal Triplett had been held up as an object
of scorn daring the fall teachers ' strllte because the board of
education had voted to give him the salary Increase.
"He Is being penalized for what we did. Now if we have
particular things we should say so, and givo him a chance to
correct these things, " Mrs. Sheets argued ,
•
"We don't do this witl1 teachers and other employes," she
added.
While oiher board members said 1•ery llltle, VIrgil King
stated that He understooil that Triplett h•d not treate!l
employes r!!SIJ')Clfully wben errOrs were made on checks. and
added that he understood there Is not a good working relation ship between the superintendent and the clerk.
Triplett countered by saying that he had always correcled
any errors without any great problems with employes of tbe
district. He pointed iJut II he had not done so, certainty some of
lhem would have ~ppeared at a board meeting.
Continued on page a

\

at y __ entine

switched to nationwide

P!)meroy·Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, December 15, 1976

Fifteen Ct•nt s
-¥ol. 2H. No. lli!l

..

"'.•
.'
~

.
j

.

.

"TIGRESS"

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 P.M.

WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
9:00 TIL 1:00
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
10:00 TIL 2:00

THE MEIGS INN
PIZZA SHACK

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! .You Con Be the
= Pro' ud Owner
of A New car

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I FOR CHRISTMAS. • •

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Meigs Inn Pizza Shack

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WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 15 THRU 18

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HEY GOOD BUDDY!

FRJE'"'DLY
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Attending
were
Mayor
Hoffman,
Clerk
Grate,
aoo
Councilmen ; Marvin Kelly,
Horky, King and William
W Walters.
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Member Fedellll Deposit lnsu!llnce Corporatior

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DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

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GET ATICKET ON AFREE _23 CHANNEL CB RADIO
WITH TRUNKMOUNT ANTENNA TO BE GIVEN AWAY FREE
. · MONDAY, DEC. 20, 10-41 I

Come in and see the all new rustic interior ~nd dimb
the spiral staircase to the ·mai~ dining room.

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MEIGS THEATHE

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CLOSED FOR

·-En loy three sizes of your favorlt.e plzzC.s

I VACATION
-Try our delicious Subs while you sip your
favorite sudL ·
WATCH FOR
fAT
OR .CARRY
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Oil nations -told greed may
work ·against their interest
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By HELEN THO~S
Plains to continue his leaders are pushing James
UP! White House Reporter
painstaking search for Schlesinger for the Pentagon
PLAINS, (la . (UP! ) - talen~ and compatible top- post which he once held until
Presid en t-ele ct Jimm y level appointees, with two be was fired by President
·
Carter says there Is progress more to be announced at a Ford.
in making most of lhe oil news conference Thursday.
Still shooting tD have his
producing nations realize He
had
no
formal Cabi net in pla ce by
By UDlted Presslntirnational
that raising prices would be appointments today.
Christmas, Carter also said
DOHA, QATAR - SHEIKH ADMED YAMANJ of Saudi "counterproductive."
His first turn-down was emphatically tha t he has ·
Arabia - the most important voice at the Organization of
Carter discussed the OPEC revealed Tuesday, when he made no commitments in
Petrolewn Exporting Countries meeting - has called for a six· attitudes at . a news told reporters that form er privabl to .anyone regarding
month freeze. on oU prices to encourage world economic conference called in Atlanta IBM . vice president Jane government posts, .90 r m
recovery. AS the conference gets under way today amid to announce the nominations Cahill Pfeiffer, reportedly in completely at liberty ...
lntenaive security, other olllfllnlsters werepressing for price · of Gennan--born industrialist lin.e for secretary of absolutely at liberty to make
blcreases ranging from 10 to 25 per cent.
W. Michael Blumenthal , commerce, had withdrawn my de cisions about the
Since any OPEC decision~ must be unanimous , Yamani's cha irman of the Bendix from consideration.
cabinet membership of the
statement appeared to signal a bard-fought debate . But Corp., to be secretary of the
Mt:s. Pfeiffer, who is in basis of merit.. ."
Yalnaill has said the same kind of thing before other OPEC treasury and Rep. Brock l.ondoo, later explained in a
'Carter also said :
m.:Otings and then gone; along witll a price hi!&lt;e. The betting Adams, D·Wash., chairman stalement that she had an · - Economic problems are
waa still for a 10 per cent Increase, which according to official of the House Budget operation for thyroid cancer · "very severe" and 1'much
U.S. eatimateswouldadd l12billlon to the world'saMual bills. Committee , to be setrelliry of last year and might lack wor1e than ~ we had
siamina for the Cabinet job, antlclpabld six months, or·
ATLANTA- ONE WOMAN , JANE CAHILL Pfeiffer, has · tramportation .
The
president-elect
andalsodidnotfeelshe
could even three months ago." He
turned down a Cabinet post q(fered by frefid~t-elect Jinuny
revealed
that
direct
and
m
,eve
from
the
New
York . said he pr*rs to sttmula te
Cw1er, Qltt at least-four- others remBin proininently on hllllst iiidlrect contacts have been area where her husband,
the
'economy
by
of poaslble choices: The announc~enl of Mrs. P!eifter's
pleiffer ,
Is concentrating on impl'oving
appointment to be commerce secretary had been expected st made with the OPEC'nations · Ralph
through Secretljry of State · headquartered as an IBM job opportunities an~ to a
Cart~:r's Tuesday news conference, but he said instead she
Henry
Kissinger and Cyrus .senior vice president.
lesser.degree oo tax cuts, His
uked that she not be considered for \he job.
·
Vanee,.
who wiD succeed him
Carter also had been economic program will be
She said later there were two reasons: Her marriage ·Is her
expected this week to name unveiled before he is sworn in
first priority and her husband would bave been unable to In the Carter Cabinet.
·
Apparently
heartened
by
nuClear physicist Harold ·Jan. 20.
ace&lt;mpany her to Washington: she had surgery for thyroid
the
surprise
appeal'
of
Saudi
Brown , President of the
- He Intends to keep his
cancer a year ago and while in good health now, Is uncerlllin
Arabian
oil
minister
Sheik
California
.
Institute
of
cominitment
to have a bashe po!ISeSses the stamina for a Cabinet job. Mrs. Pleifter Is a
Ahmed
Zaki
Yamani
for
Technology,
as
secrelllry
of
lanced
budget
at the end of
former vice president of the mM Corp. So far no other names
OPEC
to
fr
eeze
oH
prices
for
defense
·
but
has
put
off
his
four
years
in office, and
bave been reported for lhe commerce position.
six months, Carter said be announcing his choice for will be "very cautiolLS" about
feels "very good about their that iob until next week.
planning new . spending
attitude ."
Some sources say George programs until he feels be
Carter later returned to Meany and other AFIAJIO can achieve that goal.
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Link sought
in paralysis

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio expect. But it's worth
Department of Health checking Into." ·
officials are investigating a
Halpin said symptons of
posalble link between nine Gulllian-Barre syndrom
cases of a rare disease In Include a weakness or
Ohio and swine flu numbness In the . legs
vaceinactiOiis.
' spreading throughout the
Dr. Charles Halpin, chief of body. In Its most severe
the · department ' s progression, Halpin said the
Communicable Health vicUm becomes unable to· ·
Division, said an official from breathe without a respirator .
the Center fw Communlcaqle
The disease, which is not
Diseases In Atlanta had trealllble and has no cure, Is
arrived In Columbus to assist fatal in about 25 per cent of
' In the Investigation.
the .cases, said Halpin.
"Our feeling now is we
"One usually get! over It, If
certainly wiD Investigate it, you can keep the person
bull don't see any real severe breathing," he sald.... In 60 or
problem with the flu 70 per cent of the cases the
vaccine," said Halpin.
person can give you a history
Halpin said Cincinnati De· of a cold a couple l)f weeks
jJilr\lnent ol Health olfcials before. •
contacted hll office last week
Halpin cautioned that some
to report two po,sslble of the nine reported cases In
·Instances of GuWaln·Barre' Ohio may he questionable,
syndnlme, also known as since the rare disease can be
"ascending paralysis."
confused with other seldom·.
"Both the vlctlma had bad seen diseases.
swine flu' vaccinnatloos," be
Similar lnvestlgsllona were
·said. '.'One person · was 39 heiDI! COI}duc~ in nine Other
years old aoo the other was 64 states, where abput 50 cases
years old_."
of the creeping paralysis
Halpin said GuWaln·Barre have been repor~. Thirty of
syndnlm Is rare, with.about the people lnftlcted had been
40 cases a mooth repor~ In vaccinated for swine Du, .
Ohio. The natlooal frequency
In . addition to Ohio,
ol the disease Is live cases per GulllianBarre syndrom was
lllndred tliousaoo citizens. reported in Colorado, New
Alter the reports from Jer'!"Y.• Ala_bama, Minnesota,
Cincinnati, Halplit sal~ hll Maryland, Oklahoma,
olllce began lealllng neurolo· Michlgaft, Virginia and
!lists around Ohio·and dlscov· Cll!necticut.
ered seven additional
The $135-million federal
polllible cues Of the rare . swjne Due inoculatloo effort
malady.
was almost ldUed by an
"Five had had the vaccine , · lnsuranc~ controVersy that
ooe (person) for sure didn't delayed lt. for mmths. Then,
bave It, and the other three two weeks after the program
we aren't' sure," said Halpin. ' started .Oct. I, there were
" We have called most reports of elderly persons
majer (Ohio) cities so far dying following Inoculation.
uecet~t
Cleveland . We Authorltlea said, however,
haven't oeen an Increase In the deaths were not
the number of cases than connected to the nu •hots.
what we would normally
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METERS HOODED - Free parking became available In Middleport Tuesday when tl1e
meters were hooded by local merchants. Shown covering one of the meblr. are 1-r, l&gt;dlson
Baker of Baker Furnlture, assisted by David Golowenskl of the Dally ~entlnel. Parking will
be free toshoppers from now until Dec. 24.
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Diles returning
Dlie to an . excellen t
public re&lt;eplloo on Dec. 6,
Dav~ Diles, former Mid·
dleport resident and now
an ABC sportscasler, wiU ·
be at the Middleport Book
Store Saturday begiDDiog
at noon to autograph copies
•of his new book, "Twelfth
Man In the Huddle."
Wbea Diles made his
first appearaoce at the
Middleport store on Dec. 6,
the store's supply of the
new book was exhausted.
He will be · on hand
throughout the afternoon
Saturday.

Volunteers go
out 5ltimes
The Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department answered
40 first aid and ambulance
.ca lls, three miscellaneous
calls and eight fire calls
during November accordltig
to the repori for November.
In the report, filed with
village council by,C. Robert
Fisher, fire chief, it Is noted
that of the 4j) emergency calls
32 were in town and eight
were out of town. Total
manhours lor efl1ergency
runs amounted to 181.3 and
total manhours for fire only
amount to 135 hours. Miles on .
the emerg ency and am·
bulance runs totaled 1,468.2
while miles on all vehicles
amounted to 1,950.4.

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SPARKS TEAM -Junlor Gregg Witte (32) came off the bench to score 10 points and put
plenty of hustle into the game TuesdaY night at Meigs High against Athens. The Marauders
rallied from a big first quarter deficit to go ahead by halftime, then coast home with an 82-&lt;12
victory. Picture by Gary Sisk. See Greg Bailey's account of g~~me and other Slsk picture on
page 3.
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ASC committees named ·.
Results of the repent
election of Meigs County ASC
CommunJty ComJilitteemen
lor their -respective' com·
munitl es were revea led
today.,
Bedford.Satisbury, Robert
Hawk, chairman; Ernest
Wood, vice-chairman; John
Dean, member : Frank
Broderick, first alternate:
Pearl .Hayes, second niter-

nate.
Chester, Earl .• Dean,
chainnan ; Dale Kautz, vicechairman : Paul Baer,
member; Gary Michael, first
allernntc: .James ~Aeredilh ,
second alternate.
Crilumbia.Scipio, Kenneth
C. Welsl\, chairman; Reed
Jeffers, vice-chairman: Thad
Dye, ' member ;
Clai r
Wag~oner. first alternate;

James· Gaston, second
alternate.
Lebanon· Letart, Charles R.
Harris, chairman: Harold G. .
Roush , ~ice-ch airman;
Thomas D. Sayre, member:
Vir~il Roush, first alternate;
Andre"' Cross, . second
alternate.
,
0 I iv c ·0 range . Cecil
Caldl'eil, chRirmnn; r:.,n lnn
(Continued on page 141

Mayor takes
up four bonds
Two defendants were fined
and four forfeited bonds by
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined
were
Daniel
Spaulding, Middleport, $30
and costs, no headlights : L.
M. Fitzpatrick, Middleport,
.$34 and · costs, excessive
speed. Forfeiting bonds Were
Gary O'Dell, Rutland, $30
posted on a charge ofruMhig
a red light; Larry Hudaall,
Middleport, $30, speeding;
Edward Van Meter, West
Columbia. $3oo, driving while
intoxicated, and Don Reuter,
Middleport, $3f .eeding.

Council will
request grant
The Meigs County Council · - The cost to provide the
on Aging, Inc. disclosed today specialized
trnnsportallon
It intends to submit a request servi ce based on the agency·
for a capital grant under agencies service area and
provisions of the Urban Mass elderly and ha ndlcopped
Transportation Act ol1964, as ' clientele to be served .
amended to provide trans·
- · The type of contractual
porlatlun service lor the agreement that might be
eld erly and handi ca pp ed negotiated, e.g,. (I) lease
within Meigs County .
agreement if agency proposal
The grant will request one Is selected, (2 ) ser vice
14 passenger van-standard contract . usi ng oporator
type and one .g· passenger equipment, etc.
station wagon.
- The submission of u
Financing for this capita l statement lndlcn llng whether
grant Is to be 60 percent from the service that the operator
the Urban Mass Trans· provides can or ca nnot meet
portation Admlnlslrallon the special needs of the
(UMTA) and 20 percent local elderly and handicapped
agency (non·lederal) share. which the applicant, Meigs
There is no slate financing In County Council on Aging, Inc.
this program.
project proposes to address.
The Meigs County Council The statement should further
on Aging Invites comments or .I ndicate whether the operator
proposals for the providing of concurs In the applicant's
transportation service for the proposal to obtain vehicles
elderly and handica pp ed -and provide speclallr.ed
from any Interested public, transportation service.
Written comments or
private, and para-transit
operator Including taxi proposal should be submitted
operators.
to Meigs County Council on
Comments or proposals Aging, Inc. at Box 722 ,
submitted by all operators Pomeroy, atl enllon of
interested in providing the Eleanor Thomas, Director
service should Include In· and to the Ohio Department
fonnatlon relating to:
of Transportation, 25 South
- The number of vehicles Front Street, Col umbus
operatOr has equipped to Ohio, 43215, . allenllon:
transport physically handl· Program Manager, Section
ca~ped.
16(b) (2 ) Program.

Lambert retires
EAST MEIGS - The accepted by the Eastern
resignation of John Lambert, Local School Board Tuesday
a teacher In the district, was night.
.
The board-hired Mrs. Pat
Shrlverslo succeed Lambert,
Leon White as . high school
custodian untu July I, 1977,
~nd Geraldine Hawk as part
time cook.
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The board passed ii •
resolution lor Mrs. Eloise
Boston, clerk, to borrow
enough money to meet the,
Dec. 20 payroll. State mooey ·
will be receive,d to repay the
loan around Dec. 30 or 31.
Mrs .
Susie
Heine s
discussed a c~eerleadlng
problem. The board approved
Continued on page 14

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

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