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14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedne~y, Dec. 15,1976
Deer killed by car
study program and a letter from Robert Morris, principal, was
. acknowledged concerning weekend abuse of the Middleport
A deer was killed In a
COO l.V II .I.E - Albert viUe; one sister, Mrs. Cora
Elementary School playground llY adults. The pollee will be Davis,
traffic
accident Tuesday on
Coolville, died Benedum, Macon , cia.; five
asked to chec~ more tr"''•cntly 011the playgroond and 10 make Tuesday 86,
!Continued from page l)
SR
124
one mite east of
evening at Camden grandchildren, five great" We Do Have Some Problema"
arrests of persons involved. Children have been injured at the
According to the ,
·Racine.
Supt. Dowler commented, "we do have some problems" school - wthe extent of having to have stitches wclose their Clark Hospital, Parkersburg, grandchildren and several Gallia-Melgs Post State
nieces and nephews.
and Mrs. Sheets questioned why they had not been mentioned wounds - as the result of bottles being broken on the grounds. following a brief illness.
Born in Doddridge County, · Funeral services will be Highway Patrol, the animal
Beverly Gaul, high school teacher, was granted a leave or
before.
. ran into the path of a car
Triplett commented that evidently his employment has absence until sometime in January and the board formally w. Va. to the late Felix and Friday, I p.m. at the White operated by James C. Smith,
been discussed previously rut that he had never been advised. approved paying the work-study program of reacher Sam Martha Gaskins Davis, he Funeral Home , Coolville, 19, Rt. I, Portland. Tliere was
was also preceded in death by with burial in the Coolville
Following a recess of about 10 minutes, the discussion on Crow :;ocents a day for students, plus free lunch.
•
one
daughter, Loraine; one cemetery. Friends may call moderate damage.
the motion resumed wilh Triplett stating that Dowler had
Dowler discussed the allocation of natnral gas w the
A
second
mishap
occurred
!Biked wboard members about him. He asked why he was not schools and said !hat each school receives an allocation but brother and six sisters. A at the funeral home alter on Rt. 35, one tenth of a mile
allowed to be present, and why no one ever mentioned any !hat !he allocaUon.s can be pooled. So far, the district schools member of the Big .Flint noon Thursday. Masonic rites east of Mitchell Rd. where an
are doing well, but Dowler said that care will have to be Baptist Church, Coolville and will be conduded Thursday auto driven by Ernest N.
problenn.s to hiin.
Triplett said be had worked hard, had been honest with the exercised because the gas can be turned off if the schools go Coolville .Lodge 337, li&amp;AM, at 7:30 p.m. by Coolville Wiseman, 79,
he had resided in Coolville the . Lodge 337.
board and felt thattbe least members could do ~as to give blm over the alloted figure .
turned into
an expinnlltlon. When he got few BOIWen, Triplett remarked
The board agreed to advertise for bids on a slake truck past 30 years. He owned and
that he could not understand why no answers were forth- which will be used haul trash from the schools and to trans- . operated a general store in
com.lllg from the board, At this point Hoover advised Triplett pori equipment from schooliO school. A transfer of ~.ooo was West Union, W, .Va. for
that there wollld probably be 110 auswers coming from buord made from Ute bus fund wUte legal services fund and a special several years, was a guard at
members became they had no attorney present.
meeting was planned before the end of the year 10 make other the Point Pleasant TNT plant
during WW II and had owned
Again Mrs. Sheets spoke, slating that the clerk is the direct necessary transfers.
and
operated a filling station
The board discussed the kindergarten bus drivers, 8ome 14
responsibility of !he board of education in contrast to the
in
Huntington and a
'reacher who is responsible 10 the school principal.
now, in regard wholiday pay .Jt was decided that the driver on
restaurant
in Coolville until
duty
the
day
before
a
holiday
and
the
day
after
will
receive
the
"We should have gone 10 him," Mrs. Sheets said.
Attorney Foley reenforced Mrs. Sheets' statements when holiday pay since drivers are now alternating on the his retirement.
He is survived by 'his wife,
he said the clerk works for the board of education and not for kindergarten routes. The driver can divide the pay with his
tile superintendent. He suggested that the board get in touch partner driver but drivers must work out that aspect of the Emma Ford Davis; three
daughters, Mrs. James R.
with counsel so that they would feel free to talk.
payment.
Mrs. Sheets reprimanded other board members for not
Asst . Supt. Dan Morris U&gt;ld of his work on attempting 10 (June) Dawson, Belpre; Iris
BE SURE TO SEE OUR
get the Meigs Uigh School roof repaired and of plans for A. Davis and Mrs. Glen
speaking out.
(Nancy
)
Reed,
both
of
Cool"ll a teacher requesiB an open heanng you have to tell resurfacing the high school parking lot probably next summer.
He discussed the elementary basketball program along with
him, " Mrs. Sheets commented.
EXCELLENT SELECTIONS
Supt. Dowler stated !hat he had put the discussion of the Johll Arnott who heads !he program and it was decided that the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
clerk's position on last night's agenda upon the request of more basketballadivity will be open to both boys and girls.
Admitted - Phoebe Lee,
than one board member and said that he had talked to all of the
Bus routing was discussed by Morris who said a slate
members about the matter prior to last night's session. Dowler survey will be forlhcoming with recommenda lions on how Middleport; Lydia Davis,
said he had also discussed the metter with Triplett for an hour • improvements' can be made. He also discussed work being Pomeroy; Draina Brown,
or so Tuesday, prior to the meetlf18.
done in .an attempt In receive funds for some seven new buses. Pomeroy; Ida Dudding,
Morris commended the Middleport Police Department for Mtddleport.
Started Last June
Discharged - Trevor Dye,
Supt. Dowler said there are problems between him and the solving several breaking and entering offenses at the juriior
Raymond
Lambert, Pearle
clerk but not on a personal basis. He said !he problenn.s started high school.
Sigman,
Hobart
Templeton,
last June or the first of July when Triplett went 10 california
Snowden complamed again.st damages done tn the seeding
for three weeks, one week longer than his allotted two weeks at the new athletic field near Meigs High School. Cars were Charles Cohen, Bonny Allen,
vacation.
driven onto the area . Snowden, who donated J8days of work w Susan Clark, Golda Lawson,
The pant suit pictured is a stripe and solid
Harland Greene.
Dowler said that Triplett had adviSed him that he was not the project, said the acts have been "irrespon.sible."
combination by Hag Windsor - 100 per
coming back from california, but he did return. The timing
The annual organizati onal meeting was set for Jan. 3 at
cent polyester. Sizes 10 to 20 in blue and
was bad because an impasse with the teachers was developing 7:30p.m. and Dowler was asked to send holiday greetings w
wheat or corral and wheal.
and a budget had to be prepared, Dowler stated.
THREE FINED
the district's employes.
Dowler rt1!0rted that Triplett was given a $5,000 ratse
The board employed James R. Sheets In serve as a MathRACINE - Three defend·
before !he impasse came about and shortly after he returned Chemistry reacher at the high school beginning in January for ants were fined in Racine
There are many other styles in our
the remainder of the school year. lt was also reported there is Mayor Charles Pyles court
from california.
holiday
selection- all names you know
Dowler further recalled Triplett was extremely late in a vacancy for a Spanish teacher at the high school.
Tuesday night. Arresting
- Flutter Bye - Hay Windsor · Berkshire getting Form 25 completed for the State Depariment of
Dowler also outlined plans for the formation of a levy officer was Chief of Police
City Scene · Toni Todd · Lady Laura Education. Dowler then read a letter from the exeuutive committee to promote passage of an operating levy renewal Alfred Lyons. They were
'committee of I!Je Meigs Local Teachers Association next year. He said that also plans are being made to use the Terry Lynn Smith, Rt. I,
Vicki Vaughn · P. B.J. · Hob Nobber.
expressing displeasure at the release by Triplett of each "Apple Cart," a van of the teachers cor(ll, for a reading Racine, $34 .70, speeding ;
teacher of Ute district and the salary of each followin g the project and he IO!d of discussions he and Dan Morris, assistant Dale L. Lawson, Rt. I,
There are Junior Sizes 3 to 15, Women's
sup!., are having on curricula changes.
'
strike.
Ra cine, $28.70, speei:ling;
sizes 6 to 20 and half sizes 6 to 20.
The letter said that the teachers were anxious to forget the
I
Harry W. Pickens, Jr .,
strike and the release caused by the re-opening of wounds.
Pomeroy, $31.70, speeding.
Slop in on the second floor ~ select
The letter also charged that the release was erroneous.
the dresses and sportswear you'll be
Dowler charged also that the public relationS of Triplett were
w needing f~r the Happy Holiday.
bad because he .was late in getting the tuition figure, up
PROGRAM SET
considerably lllis year, to parents of tuition students.
(Continued from page 11
!Continued from page 11
A Christmas program will
Trouble With Form ZS
'
Co
llms,
vice-c
hair
man;
a
Jist
of
supplies
for
be
held at the )\lorning Star
Triplett responded, "That everyone in this room
Chester
Buckley,
member;
vocational
.
Agricultural
United
Methodist Church
knows · !he
trouble
I
had
with
Forrn
0
.
J
Pennington
,
fir
st
program
as
recommended
by
Monday,
Dec. 20 at 7:30 p.in.
25" (dealing with tuition). He said that he was
alternate;
Carl
Findling,
the
Vo-Ag
advisory
comThe
public
ts invited.
not really aware of who the tuition students were at the
mittee .
start of the school year. On !he release of tile teachers and ihe second alternate.
Rutland-Salem, Joe Bailey,
Dallas Hill and Patricia
salaries of each, Triplett commented at !he Ume he had
Clare
nce
E.
chairman;
Adleta
were placed on the
positive reaction from board members on the release.
T~and
I
Might,
vice-chairman;
Carl'
substitute
teachers list. The
Dowler denied that it was his idea to have Triplett
removed but indicated that he agreed with the board of Shenefield, member; John f . board agreed to participate in
Colwell, first alternate; Oris the Tille IV program which
education.
provtdes money for library
Mrs. Sheets speaking again commented that, "everyone" Roush, second alternate.
Sutton, Charles Theiss, books. Attendmg were Orts
did things during th~ teachers strike for which they should be
forgiven. She added that she lhought the California trip of chai rman; · Davtd Nea se , Smith, president, Dave
•
vice-chairman; Gene .Yost, . Smith , Dorothy Calaway,
Triplett was a forgotten matter. ·
The motion not to rehire Triplett was brought w a vote member. Harry Holter, first Doug Bissell, Dorsel Larkins,
J?oston,
Chester
with Mrs. Sheets voting against the motion and Hoover, Bob alternate; james Carnahan, Mrs.
second
alternate.
Gooding
,
principal,
Mrs .
Snowden, King and .Or. Keith Riggs voting in favor .
The
county
convention
will
lletnz,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Francis
Following the vote, Mrs. Sheets said she hopes that other
problenn.s which are indicated existing in the central office of be held on Monday, Dec. 20, Benedum and John Riebel ,
!he district are discussed so that a situation such as Triplett's at 10 a.m. at the Meigs superintendent.
County ASCS Offtee, 221 West
will not be repeated.
Second Street, Pomeroy , to
Other Board Business
The board accepted the resignation of Marilyn S. Meier elect one county committee·
who has been employed as a hall time worker in the clerk's man for a three year term
office and agreed to send Mrs. Meier a commendation and two alternates for one
year terms, as well as
resolution.
chatrman,
vice ~chalrman
It was agreed to pay $1,258.57 as Meigs Local's share of the
and
a
regular
member of the
county psychologist's salary and Eva Mae Christian, Delbert
county
co
mmittee
for a
J. Heasley, David King, Randy Michael, Franklin Molden,
-. ·
James Jones and Kenneth H. Morris were employed as period of one year.
ASC Committee elections
substitute custodians.
Dallas Hill, vocational agricUlture, and Patricia Adleta, are held without regard to
visual arts, were added w the substitute teacher's list and it race, color, reJigion, sex, or
was agreed to pernut an addttional cable television outlet at na tiona! origin.
llle Pomeroy Elementary School.
The board approved the tuition payment of $42.58 a monlh
for students living outside the district. A letter from Charles
Knight of the Prosecuting Attorney's office indicated that
tuition is mandated by law and not by a board of education.
Supt. Dowler told of a meeting of school board representatives,
WISEMAN FINED
parents of tuition students, hirnsell and Paul Woods, area
Dave Wiseman, no ..age or
coordinator, on the subject of tuition. Woods advised that the address listed, has been fined
state provides a form In go by for setting tuition and that form $50 and costs in the court of
was followed. Parents had protested because of the raise in Middleport Mayor Fred
tuition rates from about $19 wthe new $42.50 a month figure . Hoffman on conviction of
Supt. Dowler advised the hoard !hat the CETA Program resisting arrest. Forfeiting· a
has been refunded for !he next llknonth period beginning in bond in the same court was
Janwiry. This Is the adult ml!"' mechanics class and. the William McKnight, no age or
instructors were rehired pending Ute official notification or the address listed, posted ·for a
Deluxe Amana Radarange microwave
disorderly manner.
oven cuts cooking lime by as much as
75 percenl ... so you save time, energy
and money! And since you cook on
paper. glass, china .. . even plastic.
cleanup's a breeze. Come In for a free
demonstration and see the magic of the
" Revolutionary" Amana Radarange.

Albert Davis died Tuesday

Triplett fired ·

...•

;,

near Racine
driveway to turn around and
pulled into the JII'Ul ol a ·car
operated by Betty M. Perry,
55, Jackson . There .was
mode,ate damage.

••

Yamani 's oil stand assailed

"
•
:
:

DOHA, Qatar (UP!)' Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani,
Saudian
Arabian
Oil
Minister, flew home to Jedda
for consulatations today after
Iran assailed his call for a
six-month freete on oil prices
as "absolutely unheard of."
The Saudi delegate' s
SUdden departure came as
officials of 13 oil producing
countries got down to the
hard bargalqlng of how mu~h
Utey are going to increase the
price of the world's oil.
Yamanl made no comment
about when be will return to
the Qatar deliberations of the
Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
When Yamani arrived in
Doha Tuesday he said Saudi
Arabia wants a six-month
freeze on oil prices. But all
other
12
countries
represented here are
· demanijlng some kind of
increase ranging between
about 10 and 2S per cent.
Qatar! sources said the
discussions at the conference

.~

!

CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy Emergency :
Squad answered a caU to •
Silver Ridge. at 9:27 p.m. •
Tuesday for Tom Gaspers
who was taken to Holzer
Medical

w

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TIL 9:00

Holiday Dresses

•

at y

SANTA CLAUS

Will Be In Our
1st Floor
Wednesday, ThuiSday and
Friday Night from 7 to 8

CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH FOR

(

Thursday Night SpeciJJl

•
ONLY

$499

Ninety dly lnttrflt Ptrtetty
If

wlthdnwn

bttart

m•tvrily dltt. ·

Meigs Co..&amp;and!

Visit Our S'alad Bar
Pork and Sauerkraut
Little Brown Potatoes
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, lea or" 'Milk

..@
Th• Athens County

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

PIZZA SHACK

Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992-6304

S1vings &amp; L.e11n C:o .
2,. SeconctSt.

P'om•• oy, Oh io

fAfrl

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'

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Model RR4·D

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OTHER MODELS

oven is the.fastest
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·
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START AT

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CHRISTMAS!

FURNITU~E
,·.

'.•

:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

TO BE SENTENCED
DAYTON, 0hlo (UP!) Neal B. Long, 49, Is scheduled
to be sentenced' In U.S .
Distrld Court her~ Dec. 27
for the Sept. 19, 1975 murder
of Charles A. Glatt, 48, a
school desegregation
workers.
Glatt , a professor st Ohio
state University, was shot to
death while working in his
office in the federal building
here.

The vote was a victory for Premier Adolfo Suarez, 44, who
is engineering the delicate task of turning the dictatorship
established by the late Generalisshno Francisco Franco into a
democracy.
The outceme was a crushing defeat for Francois!
diehards, the only political force to urge rejection of the new
laws. They got 2.6 per cent of the vote while 3.2 per cent of the
voters cast blank or void ballots.

THE INN PLACE

00

MADRID, SPAIN - SPANIARDS HAVE given a
resotmding vote of confidence to King Juan Carlos and !tis
gQvernment by approving democratic reforms that op~n the
way to the nation's first free elections in U years.
In a referendum Wednesday , 94.2 per cent of the voters
approved constitutional changes scrapping key Institutions of
the Franco regime and establlshing a Westerno!ltyle
democracy, a~rding to official and almost complete reslllts

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday, fair Saturday, a
ehaoce of showers Sunday
and partly cloudy Monday.
Highs wW be In the mid to
upper 10. Saturday aod ID
tbe upper 3lls or low IDs by
Monday. Lows •vU! be ID
the low to mid 30s early
Saturday and in the early
20s Monday.

t¢ay.

ONLY

On Certificates
Of Depmit
'1.000 Minimum
1 Yr. Tenn

':';:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:

By United Pn!Ss lnternallooal
NEW YORK- THE LARGEST CORPORA~ merger in
!he nation's history was overwhelmingly approved Wednesday
by shareholders of General Electric Co. and Utah
International Inc.
The merger thrust GE, which has been primarily a
manufacturer ol electrical equipment, into the natural
resources field and dramatically increases its standing as an
international corporation. "Companies that limit their
horizons to one country are restricted in their stra legic
potential," GE Chairman Reginald H. Jones told a New York
news conference after the voting.
The corporate marriage was approved by 98 per cent of
GE's shareholders voting at Stratford, Conn., and more than 99
per cent of Utah's shareholders voting in San Francisco.

.IIIIIL

INTEREST

fl~ures.

WASHINGTON - AGITATION FOR ADDITIONAL
Information on Americans still missing in Indochina seemed
certain today despite findings of a special House committee
that Ute men probably are dead. After a Iii-month investigation
here and across Indochina, the ~elect House committee
concluded Wednesday "No Americans are still being held as
prisoners as a result of the war in Indochina."
The committee recommen~d the Defense Department
review thelrtafus of 728 American MIAs, reclassifying them to
killed-in-action.' This would result in a significant reduction of
benefits to their wives and dependents. Carol Bates of the
National League of Families of American Prisoners and
Missing in Southeast Asia promptly called !he report "inept" ..
and "incompetent,'' and said it was insensitive to release the
report just before Christmas...
·
CLEVELAND -CUYAHOGA COUNTY Engineer Albert
Porter, once considered to have the most secure job in
Cleveland pollti&lt;;s is free on bond after pleading innocent
Wednesday In 117 counts of grand larceny, theft in office and
perjut'y. Porter, 72, saw his career of lhree decades end last
month when be was unseated by the city engineer from East
Cleveland in the general election. Then last Friday the county
grand jury Indicted him in connection with his alleged employe
kickback fund.
Indicted with Porter \fere his secre!Bry, Mrs. Gladys
'Hebnund, and two other U&gt;p ~ides . Robert Vannice, his deputy
engineer, was scheduled In be arraigned to day on 31 counts of
theft. Mrs. Helmund faces arraignment Monday on 102 counts
of theft, 5 counts of perjury &gt;nd 17 counts of grand larceny.

· ·. ATTR"AcriVEIJECORATEir WINDOWS - The windows on the second floor of Pomeroy Elementary
School sixth grade class of John Arnott have a stained

gla8s look. The windows have been attractively painted in
keeping with Chrllll!ias. ·The work was done by class
members.

.

GARY.HOLTER, BEVERLY WIGAL and Becky Kimes, back,! tor , are David Yoong,
Mark Holter and Jeff Newell. See page 9for other pictures by Bob Hoeflich:

IN POMEROY

OPENING DATE

oil billions.
'fhe increase dem and!
ranged from lhe 10 per cent of
the majority tothe 15 per cent
of Iron , OP EC: s second
largest producer, to the 25 per
cent of Irati
Any price setting decision
must be unanimou !l' and
expert betting was that the.
final figure wou ld be
somewhere around 10 per
. cent. This would add 112
· billion to the world 's oil bill.
at'eordlng to ofricinl U. S

en tine

The home of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Madden , Jr., Sliver
Run, was damaged by fire
detected about 2:50 p.m.
Wednesday.
The Mjddleport Fire
Department was called to the ·
scene and was later joined by
the Pomeroy Department for
backup. Firemen reported
that the fire was caused by a
faulty flu . Damages were
confined to the attic and one
room of the five room frame
hOme. There was no insurance. and the estimate of
·da"'mages has iiot been ser.
At 6:58p.m. Wednesday the
(Continued on page 12)

I'!
I'!

MEIGS THEATME

The OPEC decision will
have a major lmJII'ct on the
cost of heating a home,
driving a car and operating a
factory in nations around the
world.
Conference sources said
Saudi Arabia, the ca rtel 's
largest
oil
••porter,
remalt\ed the only holdout for
PO increase at all, with all
other participants demanding a hike to counter the
effect of Western inHatlon on
the purchasing powe. of their

Madden
home hit
by fire

a

Committee Lambert

euctly how much he wants
beyond commenting it means
"not very high and not very
w- something which is not
going to affect the upswing of
the recowry in the developed
countries."
· He said It is not OPEC's
intention to "rrush" the Industrial world's economy ,
because OPEC countries are
dependent on Western goods
and techllology for th ~ir own
development.
Amour.egar contested
Western figures that inflation
has only gone up 6 to 7 per
cent in the past year. He said
this referred only to the
domestic inflation rate for
"hot dogs, tram tickets and
rent" and not to the rate for
exported capital goods which
he alleged has increased
sixfold since 1973.
The 13 ministers were in
their second day of closeddoor debate inside the posh
Gulf Hotel behind steel
shutters and guarded by
Qatar's entire army.

Saudi Arabian oil minister
Sheik
Ahmed Znki Vamnn i
CHARGES DROPPED
said
earlier
that although hr
LOS ANGELES (UPI )
Charges of credit card favored a siK·Inonth price
f org~ry
against movie free1e because of the slow
producer Sol t' lelding and pace of world economic
former Dallas ''moneyless recovery 1 his position was not
millionaire "
socialite rigid .
Iranian oil minister
Margaret Medders were
Jamshld
Amuzegar snld he
dropped by the district ultorNATIVITY SCENE - ANativity scene will be one of the presentations in the Christmas
was
seelripg
a figure betwoon
ney's office Wednesday for
program this evening at Bradbury Elementary. Left to right are Johll Blake, Charles
the
utremes,
and tho stn~c
li'ck of evidence.
Landers and Melviii VanMeter, the Kings; Allan King as Joseph; Laura Horsley, the angel;
thus
seemed
set for com·
Mrs. Medders, 58, and FielCheryl Riffle as Mary and Brian George, Keith Scott and Earl Wines, the shepherds. See
ding, 68, were accused of promise at around the 10 par
Pa~e 2for other Bradbury pictures by Katie Crow.
Ullcll use of an Americnn cent mark .
•
Despite the difference in
Express card, which Carroll
Sinclair, a Dallllll precious their stated posi tion•.
metals dealer, reported Yamanl and Amuz o~ar
disappeared from bls home appeared pers.onally close
and at one sta~e were seen
after a visit by the couple.
Mrs. Medders was the wife walking arnt in arm down the
or the late Ernest Medders, marbled lobby of he C:u!l
an Ulltera te mechanic from Hotel.
The OPEC uenchmnrk
Tennesee who obtained $3
million in credit and lived like prlre of $11.51 for a barrol of
a millionaire in Texas in the Saudi Arabian light crude oil
VOL XXVII NO. 170
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS early 1960s by clabntng to be has not risen since October
1975.
- - - - - - - - - . . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - : . . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __::..__~----------.;...-- _ an heir to an oil fortune .

-e

and Sportswear

revolved around 15 per cent
· but it appeared that
agreement would he reached
around 10 per cent.
. An Iranian diplomatic
source said .it might be less
than 10 per cent.
Earlier
Irani an
Oil
Minister Jams h l d
Amouzegar denounced
Yamani's proposal for a sixmonth price freeze.
"We don'! go along wit!'
whatever country who eomes
in and proposes a freeze.
That's absolutely unheard
of," Iranian Oil Minister
Jamshld Amouzegar said in
an Interview with Qatar
radio.
Saudi Arabian Oil Minister
Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani,
whose nation is the cartel's
largest oil exporter, called
for the six-month freeze on
his arrival ut the OPEC
meeting to avoid damaging
the world economy.
Amouzegar earlier
proposed a "mnderate" price
increase, but declined to say

'

County, township roads want names
Houses are getting
numbers but county and
U&gt;wnshlp roads will switch
from numbers to names if
present thinking is carried
out in the Rural House
Numbering Project of Meigs
County.
How to do that, and why,
was discussed last Friday at
a meeting ca~ed by Meigs
County Township Trustee
Asan. President Gary Dill,
conducted by clvll engineer
James A. Page of Flemlilg,
Page, Stolte Inc., Marysville,
Ohio who Is directing the
county-wide rural house
numbering project in Meigs
County.
Page explained that road
names will be utilized as part
of the new rural address. He
said the postal service
prefers
rural · house

numbering projects, but
desires Ute use of road names
· versus road numbers for mail
sorting simpllflcatlon.
Page said county officials
(and others) think road
naming is a reasonable
request since many roads are
known by names already.
Page asked lf the trustees
objected to road naming. No
objection ·was raised.
Middleport Postmaster
Paul Casci, wbo asked about
the numbering sequence, was
told ·the county would be
numbered from the west
county line east and the
southerly county line north.
Several trustees asked if
road sign money Is available.
The engineer explained that
some counties have tried to
obtain money through the
HUD program which is

financing
the
bouse
numbering. He had little hope
road signs would be eligible.
But he had no other
suggeatlon at this point.
The engineer offered the
trustees several suggestions
for naming their respective
township roads. These
suggeati01l8;
- Keep existing names or .
long established names
whenever p088lble.
- Avoid naming roads
after peraons on the road
(unless already established)
whenever possible to prevent
arguments among residents
on the road.
-Keep names short, since
residents wiD be writing them
often on !heir 1118ll.
- Avoid names that some
persons
may
find
objectionable.

...

St~ locomotives, railroads and History
By Dave Goloweoskl
With the bicentennial year winding to its starspangled conclusion, we are reminded the "Freedom
Train" is still chugging Utroogh the countryside. The redwhite-and-blue train consists of a dozen 'l" so cars
crammed with exhibits of American memorabilia that
range from Jack Benny's violin to Matthew Brady Civil
War photographs, 'the train is whistleo!ltopping the
country as part of the bicentennial celebration.
One need not enter the exhibits to appreciate the best
bit of American history there because it is already in full
view as the train slides into any town or city which it
visits. The best exhibit of the train is the steam locomotive
that pulls it.
There is an entire generation growing up who have
never heard the thunder or seen the billowing contrail left
by a passing steam engine. There are youths Ulday who
have never smelled the ndd combination of steam and
burning coal or who have never stood under a shower of
hot hail that blew oul the smokestacks of one of the black
giants as it galloped bf .
Steam 'locomotive were replaced by diesels some 15
years ago, but it is a fact that the efficient, quieter diesels
cannot match the majesty of their thundering
predecessors. I don't know of any man alive today whp
does not admit to having watched a. steamer go by as a boy
and to having marvelled at what a great job it wollld be to
pilot one of the monsters.
As a boy,! ofum walked !he tracks near my home and
wondered where they led and where they cami&gt; from. I
wondered what it would be like to engineer one of those
iron horses, and I wondered how the coontryside looked to
!he engineer as it slipped past his unique vantage point .
No train could ever pass me without
wave
to the

mightly big man when my gi-eeting was returned by one of
the gentlemen with the odd hat and with the red
handkerchief dangling from his neck.
The trainmen were heroes because every kid knew
from history books and cowboy movies what a great part
the st:eamers had taming the West and lxllldlng thls
natlon. And every kid knew the story of Casey Jones and
the Wabash cannonball.
There were other "passengers" on those locomotives.
Hoboes - 0r buins - they were called. I talked to one once
who came down to a beach near our home to spend the
high sununer niRht drinkin)l wine and counting the stars.
The beggar took the opportunity to teD me and a group
or youngsters about places and cities that we had only
read about or seen on television. We were both amused
and awed by this unusual character·~ ramblings. We left
him that evening and came back early next morning. But
he was gooe, an empty white port bottle lay on the ground,
llle only evidence of his having been there.
One doesn't often see these vagrants anymore, but 15
years ago, when trains passed by in the summer, it was
sort of a hobby to count the number of bUDlllhey carried.
They were a colorful group with their straw hats and shiny
suits. And I regret to say they often served as moving
targets of a few small boys throwing poorly-aimed stones.
There are hoi sununer evenings that . make one
mindbl of the good times that childhood was, and
sometimes, when I'm waiting in my car at a railroad
crossing whilea!rain passes,! think about \he hoboes and
steam locomotives and !he smells and sounds of
yesterday. And I even sometimes get this crazy hope the
train will slowdown enough so I can hop on.
Because I've got this idea Uta\ if I can ride that train
down the
it can take me U&gt; the whlslle.,U&gt;ps where

·

hav•·

- Coord ina le road names possible since actuai bOuse
in the U&gt;wnahlp wlUt adjacent numbering wlll begin within a
townships if the road passes few weeks, and lack of road
lhrough more than one names may delay the project.
township or county.
Page said a public meeting
- Contact resldenta in the explaining all aspects of the
township for road name house numbering project wlll
suggestlOIIB.
be held soon and field' work
' - Be extremely careful will commence shortly.
with road name spelling;
The meeting was attended
After township trustees by 30 persons including
complete qalnlng their roads County Commissioner Henry
Ute names are to be Wells, Assistant Prosecutor
submitted to the County · charlu Knight,
Ef18lneer Wesley A. Buehl for representatives of the .
county-wide listing.
Chester fire department, and
The engineer urged the of most townships .
trusteeiJ\to work as rapidly as

Stobart named
to Toledo job
TOLEDO (UP!) - Charles
R. "Chuck"
Stobart,
offensive coordinator at the
Unlverslty of Michigan, was
named head footbal coach at
the Unlverslt&gt; of Toledo
today to succeed John
Murphy, who resigned in late
November.
The 42-year old Stobart, a
member of Ute Michigan
coaching staff since 1969, was
chosen by the university's
athletic Board of Con troland
by Presidenn Glen R. Driscoll
after a search committee has
screened more than 60 applicants and had intervlwed II
of them.
The announcement was
made today at a news
conference by Athletic

Director Vern Smith.
Smith said that the final
selection was between
Stobart and Pordue assistant
coach Jack Ellis after earlier
elimination of Ohio SUite
Assistant Dick Walker and
Wayne State head cooch Dick
Lowry.
Stobart is a native of
Middleport and received his
bachelors and masters
degrees from .Ohlo University
where he won five letters in
football and baseball .
He coached high school ·
football at in Sugar Grove,r
Gallipolis, and at Mt. Vernon. ·
His record at the three high
schools was 111-16.
. His entire college coaching
experience has been as a
quarterback and offensive
backfiel&lt;l coach. He served in 1
!hat capacity under Charlie
Snyder at Marshall in 196:i,
under Chuck Studley at
Cincinnati In 1966 and under
Bo Schembechler first at
Miami of Ohio in 1967-68 and
!hen at Michigan since 1969.
The Rockets posted a 3-ll
record last season.

. .

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS
....

NOW YOU KNOW
The freezing point of
gasoline ranges somewhere
between 180 and 210 degrees
below zero.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 16, 1916

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

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddle_port-PII!leroy, 0., Thursday, J;&gt;ec. l6, 1976

.

HARRISBURG , Pa. !UP!)
- Pennsylvan ia health
r
officials say the possible link
betwee~ phosgene gas and
U,e "Legionnaires' Disease"
is uie ''the first really !"lid
\
I
clue" in ritore than (our ·
months 'of searching for the
- ca use of the mysterious
illness.
State Health Secretary Dr.
Leonard Bac hman satd
Wednesda y a
special
toxirological research team
will examine tile tlleory that
tile lethal gas could have been
produced by Fll, a chemica l
refr igerant used in air
PORTRAY NORTH, EAST, SO!ITII AND WEST - Portraying North, East, Soutll and
conditioning systems, coming
·West
are, front, 1-r, Karen Goggins, Paula Swisher, SUsie Pooler, J immy Pooler, Brent
into contact witll other subGeorge; back, Joyce Stewart, Ctaig Darst, Charles Davis, Tamil Hart, Margie Miller and
stances or heat.
Anita Aeiker.
·
A Heal th Depa(tment
spokesman said Investigators
were aware of a leak In tile
air conditioning system at the
Bellevue Stratford Hotel
· where all the victims stayed
or visited during a state
American Legion convention
· in late July.
The disease has been
blamed for killing 29 persons
and sickening 151 others.
Bachman 's announcement
Jeff Couch ; second, Mark Mitch, Laura Hoover , Teresa
PLAY CAST - Members of tile Junior class of Meigs
came one day after the
Van~eter, Cindy McKinney, Brent Arnold, Sheba
High School will present tile two act comedy , "The Boy
Na tional Resource and
Sargent ; back, Katlly Blaettnar, assistant dtrector, J~ne
Who Changed the World " Friday at·flle 'school at 8 p.m.
Protection Agency in New
Sisson SIL~ an Wt ight, Page Smith, Velvet Swisher, Trma
under direction of Celia McCoy. Taking part are front , 1-r,
York said it was investigating
Gibbs 'antl Calia McCoy. Absent was Kevin McLaughlin .
&amp;;ott Warner. Carl Gheen. Robert Naka!lloto, Ron Casci,
the pl.ssible link between
phosgene, a lethal· gas used
by the Germa ns ~uring World
War l, and tile mysterious
illness.
"This is tile first really
solid clue tllat we know
about, " the sta te Healt h
Department spokesman said.
" At least it 's so methin g.
Before tills, the investigation
COLUMBUS. Ohio ( UPIl - funeral in St. Paul, Minn. Her was a very strange setup," Agency officials and Indiana was a( a blind end ."
"I had no idea at all about family lives in St. Paul and
Mr s. Sharp was not State troopers sifted through
the wreckage . and found
any of this," said Mrs. Hel en Mrs. Sharp said she would available for comment. ·
Michigan
and Ohio driver's
Sharp of suburbann Gahanna star there until after. the
Hnroltl Niebols, field engilicenses
both
bearing Sharp's
after learn ing her la te holidays.
nee ring manager
for
picture
and
two Social
husband had- two wives and
Autllonties in Grosse Point ,Doe11tel's office here, said
The Pomeroy Emergency '
security
cards
bearing Squad was called to the office
possibly four. "It's all news to Park saitl Mary Louise Sharp Sharp ·was "kind of a
me.n
was
" stunned"
when personal fri end of mine and Sharp's name but different of Dr. R. E. Boice at 12 :&gt;6
F r a nklin C ounty informed of the man's deatll . it's kind of a shock to numbers.
p.m. Wednesday for Mary
The Michigan license was Radcliffe, Syracuse, who was
Prosecutor George Smith
Virginia DiLuigi who lives everyone who knew him.
TAKING PART - Others taking part in til is evening 's Christmas program are front,
said Joseph Gordon Sharp, a nea r the Sharp -fa mily in
Nichols said Sharp worked issued to a Gordon Sharp and taken to Veterans Memorial
Chris Burdette, drununer boy; back, 1-r, Kim Fraley, spirit of music, &amp;ott Pickens, king
computer specialist for the Grosse Point Park said she cl osely with the field listed his date of birth as Aug. Ho spital where she was
winter, Cindy Crooks, spirit of Christmas, SUsanna Wise, Cindy Parker and Paula Horton,
Docutel Co., a Dallas, Texas knew Mary .Louise Sharp and e n g in eer s in s talling 18, 1924. The Ohio license was admitted. At 5: 10 p.m., the
pages.
based computer fir m, was her children well.
equipment and traveled issued to Joseph G. Sharp squad went to former Route
married to Helen Sharp and
When told of Sharp 's heavily to serve accounts In witll a date of birth listed as 33 for George Eastman who
to Mary llluise Sharp of apparent double, marriage , Ohio, Micltigan, Wisconsin , March 13, 1925.
was taken to Veterans
Authorities said they also Memorial
Grosse Pai n ~ Park , Mich.
she said she wa s shocked but Minnestoa, Dlinois, Missouri
Hospital, acfound numerous airline and cording to a report from
Smith said Sh arp had two "not rea lly surprised.
and Canada .
" The Spirit of Christmas" will be
children by his wife in
"He never came home
Sharp died in tile crash of a gasoline credit cards beating village hall.
11resented
at Bradbury Elementary this
Gahanna and two more by his except maybe four to six private plane Friday in In- a munber of variations of
evening at 7;30 p.m . tnider the direction of
wife in Gross,e Point Paark. tifnes a yea1· ,'~ she said. " rt dian a . Federal Aviation Shafp's name and various
addresses.
voca l music teac,her Mrs.· Roy Milier.
"We have confinned at
least two families and we are
·Assisting with the Chris tmas program are .
NAME CORRECTED
invest igating tile reports of
Don Hanning, principal, Joann Corder, Teresa
A surviving daughter of
two more," said Smith.
Casci, Robert Meier. Sabra ·Morrison, Betsy
John 0. Arnott, Racine, who
Smith saitl Sharp , believed
Horky. Phyliss Dugan and Betty Hutchison.
tn be 51 , worked out of
By HELEN THOMAS
Robert Bergland , D-Mlnn., to Leadeshlp Conference In the died Monda y, was Mrs.
Do cutel's Columbus office
PLAINS, Ga. IUPI )
he agriculture secretary.
early 1960s and helped the James [Virginia ) Rees, Jr.,
but was employed by the Jimmy Carter has tabbed
Young told a synangogue dr.aft 1964 Civil Rights act and Raclne, not Mrs. Reeves, as
firm's marketing division in bla ck Georgia Congressman men's club meeting n Atlanta the 1965 Voting Rights Act. was reported.
Toledo. He said two women, and form er civil righ ts Wednesday night he had
Young rf!;ently said on
one from Chicago and one activist Andrew. Young as decided to accept the U.N. job returning from an African
from Montreal Canada , U.S. amba ssador to the and would be in Plains today trip that bla ck African
BIRTHDAY.CONFINED
It was standing room only presented a Christmas and Jeff Buell, student
called Docutel Tuesday to United Nations.
when Carter made the U.N. nations were extremely
teacher_ The large crowd on
Lloyd
H.
Hoffman,
Rt.
3,
at
the Meigs Junior High concert.
Inquire about Sharp.
Carter scheduled a 2:30 announcement .
pleased at Carter's victnry in Pomeroy, a patient at Holzer School
hand gave the concert a nice
Auditorium
Tue.
s
day
lHrection
of
the
young
He said the woman from p.m. EST news conference
Young, H, a former the presidential el ection .
Medical
Center,
room
505,
reception. On behalf of the
night
when
the
ju~ior
high
people
was
by
Bobby
R.
Hunt,
Montreal identified herself as today and sources close to the lieutenant of slain civil rights
He earlier resisted taking a will celebrate his birthday · school choirs and bands · bands; Paige D. Hunt, choirs, eighth grade chorus, Mrs.
Wendy Sharp and claimed to Presidentelect said he would leader Martin Luther King position in the Carter
ednesday, Dec. 22, at the
Hunt was presented roses and
be Sharp's wife. The woman a nnoun ce
Yo u ng' s Jr . and one of Carter's administr a ti on, tellin g W
hospital.'Cards may be sent
a gilt of jewelry by Linda
from Chicago said only that appointment.
strongest supporters, would reporters
on
several
Eason, chorus president.·
Sha rp's marriage to th e
There were reports Carter replace William Scranton as occasions he felt it would he to him in caie of the hoSpital.
The seventh grade choir
Gahanna woman would had also decided on Johnson the nation's representative to better to serve In Congress.
presented,
j'Fum, Fum,
11
Cause some ser ious adm ini stration federal the United Nations.
The U.N. pos t carries
Fum",
"African
Noel" with
DEADLINE
SET
problems."
budget dir ector Charles
The two~erm De!llocratic Cabinet rank.
Friday
is
the
deadline
for
special
instrumental
effects,
" I just donjt know what's Schultze to cha ir the congressman from AUanta
Carter has already named ordering fruit baskets from
"What
Child
Is
This?"
and
going on," said Helen Sharp president's Co uncil of was an executive director of his secretaries o'f state,
"A
Merry
Christmas".
InMeigs
Hi
gh
School
Band
after attending her husband's Economic Advisers and Rep. the Southern Christian lreasury and transportation .
strumentalists
members. The one-haU peck
were
KriBtln
BONN , West Germany graduated deterrence (and) Anderson, Patrisha Kunatll,
hasket is $5, and tile peck
(UP!
) - The presence of no one can be interested In Jeff Nash and Fred Youn_g.
ha sket is $7. Delivery will be
American
military forces in having a situation arise In
made early next week.
The eighth grade choir
Europe remains essential tn which nuclear weapons would presented "0 Come All Ye
West German and European he employed as a substitute
"C~rol of tte
security, Chancellor Helmut · for conventional forces and Faithful",
Drum"
,
~~sweet CaroUne",
tllus
increase
the
danger
of
RA CINE
Racine Sctunidt said today.
"Do You Hear What I Hear?"
American Legion Post 602
Outlining his policy for the an atomic war.''
and
" Silent ·Night". Inwill hold its Christmas dinner next four years, the newly re.
strumentalists
were Elora
Friday at 6 p.m. at the post elected Chancellor told parFaulkner,
Jayne
Hoeflich,
home. Turkey and ham will liament, "We know that the
Jean
Horton,
April
King,
be provided by Legion. United States will continue In
Veterans Memc•ial Hospital Beth Petrin, Andrea Riggs
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. commonly associated with a about the size of an English Some urologists clatm a 25 Members are to bring table tile future to do justice tn its
ADMITTED - Joseph and Camille Swindell with
DEAR JR . LAMB - A hiatal hernia rhernia of the pea, and the doctor has per cent success in restoring service and a covered __dish. special responsibility for the
Stewart,
Bidwell ; Nellie
person I know has an in- stoma ch throu gh the assured me that it is nothing fertility by re-operating on
security of the Western Lemley, Portland; Denver Linda Eason directing
usweet Caroline".
flamed esophagus and also a diaphragm ).
to be concerned about. Do you the vas and · rejoining it.
world.
Bush, Pomeroy ; Mary
Numbers by the seventh
hiatal hernia and cann9t keep
Alcoh ol inc reases th e foresee any complications ? Success is not sucr.ess unless
CANTATA SET
''The presence of American Radcliffe, Syracuse ; Ruby
grade
band Included "Royal
food down. Do you think formation of acid digestive In tile event I should desire to sufficient healthy sperni cells
SYRACUSE - The choir of armed forces in Europe
smoking ci ga rettes or juice and makes matters sire a child , cou ld an are released to enable the Syracuse Asbury United cannot be replaced either Brinager, Racine ; Gregory Fireworks", "Two Airs" ,
Tyree, Middleport ; George ' 1The Candy Man", .,March
drinking alcohol is advisable worse. Coffee and all cal• operation reverse my pre gnancy. Recently Methodist Church wlll politically or militarily ."
Young, Pomeroy; Robert
for thi s person ? I kee p feine -contalning beverages sterility? Or could sperm be microscopic operations; present the cantata , "Joyous
Schmidt has had a close Jacks, Rutland; Gerald of the Men of Harlech", "I'll
Be Home for Christmas"
nagging that they are harm- also make it worse .. Cigarette withdrawn for an artificial perfected by a few surgeons, News of Cl)ristmas," at the relationship with President
Wilkinson, Pomeroy,
ful. I would greatly ap- smoking has not been shown insemination ~
. and "O Christmas Tree'\
have been credited with Sunday morning worship Ford and his aides say he
DISCHARGED ' - l' Failtida
, preciate any answer in your to Increase acid form ation,
DEAR READER - A better results.
service at 10:30 a.m. Mrs. hopes to continue such ties Wood, Ellen Tucker, €arrle "'The "eJghth' grade band
column .
but it may affect the normal small lump or nodule can be
Withdrawing sperm by a Ann Sauvage is the director witll President..,lect Jimmy Swartz, Floyd Bush, Oscar played '"fl''' eome All y,
DEAR READER - The G~&gt;ntra ctin g acti on of th e many things, including a needle after a vasectomy has and Mrs. Judy Pope pianist. Carter .
Faithful", "Air" from Tht
Imboden, ·Sue Payne.
person you know is his own stoma ch
which
may small cyst filled with sperm · heen perfonned may not be
Me!!Siah, "Tunes of Glory".
Sctunidt expressed concern
worst enemy and deserves to aggravate ·the situation.
"Deck
the Halls," "Salol
cells, ,or the scar tissue that successful. Sometimes the
that t'some NATO members
be nagged. Unfort una tel y
To help you help that may have formed around a testicle stops forming an
Nicholas
Suite" and "Joy It
are finding it Increasingly
nagging may not do any good. - person you know I am sen- . small amount of blood adequate amount of viable
the
World".
difficult to maintain sufPLEASANT VALLEY
PROGRAM SET
Through centuries
of ding you a copy of The Health assoc iated
with
the sperm cells after the vas is
ficient ' conventional forces
DISCHARGES - Marie
CHESTER - A Christmas (although l conventional Harris, Point Pleasant ;
relations between men and Letter number 4-ll, Hiatal operation . In any case you did tied. Sperm hanks have been
women, nagging has proved Hernia, Esophageal Reflux. the right thing. Anyone who used to store frozen sperm program will be presented at forces
remain - the Russell Thomas, Letart ;
to be very poor medicine. If Others who ·want this in- has a lump or nodule of the before a vasectomy is per- the Church · of God here prerequisite for a strategy of Junior Tucker, Grimms
you will forgi ve my formation can send 50 cents testi cle should have an formed but these are not well Sunday at 1:30 p.m. There
CHESTER - The Chester
Landing ; Cathy Plants,
e&lt;aggeration think of aU the and a long, stamped; self- examination as soon as regulated in every instance will be two plays, recitations
Volunreer
Fire Departinent
Gallipolis; Evelyn Adams,
healthy husbands tllere would addressed envelope for it . . possible. In some cases it is a and no one can guarantee you and special . singing. Th'e
wlU
stage
a public dance
Galllpplls Ferry; Mary
he if nagging resulted in good Just send your letter til me in mali gnancy and early how hmg the frozen sperm public Is invited.
from
.
9
p.m.
to rRldnlght
Jeffries, Evans; and Ralph
health.
care of this. newspaper P.O.· diagnosis may save a per- will really be usable.
Saturday
·
at
the
Chester
Davis, Robertsburg.
Elementary
I presume from your Box 15ol, R~dio City Station, son's life. Don't delay as
School.
Muale ·
I don't think you need to
BIRTHS - · A daughter to
remarks that the person you New York , NY 10019.
ASK TO WED
some of these tumors spread worrY. about that lump since
Partly cloudy tonight with Mr. and Mrs. John Chick, will be by the Dana Baker
know has an irritated lower - DEAR DR. LAMB - I had very rapidly .
A . marriage license was lows near 30. Fa ir Friday Middleport ; a daughter to group of Point Pleasant.
you have had your doctor
e s o ph a g us be c a u se a vasectomy three years ago.
You shoul d co nsid.er a examine it, but your chances issued to James David with highs in the r:'id to upper Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Mc- There will be round and
acidigestive juice leaks back- A hard nodu le has form ed in va!'icctomy as permanent at of re~aining fertility arc not B~~rrett , 26, Middleport, and 40s.
Probability
of Daniel Cheshire and a son tn square dancing. Procuds
ward out of the stomach into the scrotal sac. The nodule is the time yi•u ho v&lt;· it tlonc. outstanding.
Margaret Ann Griffith, 18, precipitation is 10 per cent · Mr. a~d Mrs. Terry Gray will go tn fire department
the lower esophagus. '"''is is
Rt. 1, Middleport.
today, tonight and Friday. Letart.
' projects. ·

After building up a 5~
halftime lead over host
Walsh, visiting Rio Grande
College held off a late
C,Ovalier rally· tn pOst a
thrilling 89-86 Mid-Ohio
Conference victory at Canton
Wednesday night.
It wu tbe lea(Ue opener for
Coach A!1 Laalwn's Redmen. Tbe meu ol C.eb Mark
LaMoreau drypped to 1-J,In
MOC play.
On the year, Rio Grande,

I

with its filth straig)¥ win,
upped its mark tn "6:'1. The
Cavs dropped to 3-!i overall.
The Cavs stormed back
from an elght-polnt halftime
defl!']t to knot the count at 58, all 011 Jim Walker's goal with
14:28 left in the game:
The score was deadlocked
at 62-all wltll12:28 remaining
and 64-64 with 11 :58 showing
on the clock.
Jim Noe'• goal put Rio
ahead 66-64 with 11 :01

remaining. The Redmen for the Redmen.
Greg James ·hit a free
were never headed.
Walsh, how ever, never throw with six seconds left
gave up. The Cavs, after and
Ed
Ungas h ic~'s
falUag ·heh!Dd seven points desperation shot at the boner
la1e ln the game, uarrowed split tl)e cords to make tile
lbe gap to two points, 8.1-79, on final.score 89-86.
Rio Grande placed three
a goal by Don Caiola, with
men in double figures In ·
3:0. showing on the cloek.
Walker's twin-pointer with scoring. Jimmy Noe Jed the
28 seconds left made it 86-84 way with 26 points. Gil price
before Rio's Gil Price canned added 25 and Greg James 11.
Jim Walker, 5-8 'guard,
two charity tosses with 19
seconds, left to Ice the victory paced the Cavs with 20 points.

Aidmen called

A·t Bradbury this evening

Young picked for UN job

Concert well received
Schmidt says

troops ess.ential

DR. LAMB

Bad habits hurt hiatal hernia-

Dance planned .

Weather

I
JC .

Pro

: Hayes
I
I

_1•
, L'lh•nn1ngs

1

Nati on•• B;uk etball Assod at•on ...

Stand1n9s
By Unit e d Preu ln t ~ rna t i on al
Eastern Conferenct'

explodes
.
for 45 points

By FRED IJEF
UPI Sports Writer
Elvin Hayl!s, a sensitive,
p,
Bibl"'&lt;!uotlng
~enUeman , let
4
Don Caiola a.dded 16 and Ed
S
fort h with the fire and
Robinson 13.
5' ,
brimston ~ Wednesday night.
Rio Grande hit 34 ol68 field
W L Pet . GB
'111e 6-foot-9 star for ward
goal attempts for 50 per cent. Ctcvete nd
16
Y 6-SO
expl!l((ed
for j5 .points to lift
15 9 .615
1~
The Redmen were 67.1 at the Houston
W
ashington
to a 104-100
NcwOrtoan s IS I J 536 2' :
charity llne. Walsh hit 39 of 88 San
Antonio
14 14 soo
3' ,
victory
over
U&gt;e
Kansas City
field goal attempts for «.3 w ash ington 11 1"3 · '4ss J' , Kings, running off hls highest
6'
per cent. The Cavs were All ant wl'l ester n co11 nf 11er en.393
ce
regular season point tntal In
61.5 from tile foul line.
M idw est O i"Jh ion
five
seasons with tile Bullets.
W L Pet . GB
Both teams picked off 42 Derwer
"I felt like I wus back in
18 8 69'1
rebounds . Noe and James Det roj t
16 17 .571
3
college ," smiled tile 31-year14 IJ .500 5
each had 18 snags for the In diana
old Hayes, an All-American
Kansas Ci ty
12 16 .J'J9 7
winners. Ed Robinson and Ch icag o
} 15 318 9
at tile University of Houston.
4 15 . 138 15' ·t
Mark Kounouzelis each had M il wa ukee
He was :l().for-32 from the
Paci f ic Di'olisio n
!5 for tile losers. Rlo had 22
·
w. l Prt . GB floor.
turnovers, Walsh 15.
Por tlan d
19 8 70 4
"I'm
just
glud
we
p~1yed so
Angel es
15 12 55o
4
Tbe Redmon are Idle until Los
well," said Hayes, who hopes
Gol den Sta te
13 12 .520 5
Monday night when the Se ~t ttl e
15 14 517 s
to become a minister when he
11 13 458 6'
Lanham men take part In the P hoeni x
retires .
. Wc dncsdlll y's l? es utt s
annual Marietta College
Elo ston .l 29 MiiWo!I Ukf'e 1'15
The Bullel•. languishing in
Phll " delph l&amp; 97 ,Phoeni 'll. a.7
Shrine Tournament at
fi
fth
place in tho NBA's
Johnson Field House In 105Los Angele s 115 N ew Orl ean s Central Division witll an U-13
Marietta.
Wa sh ington 10J Kansas Ci ty
record, hnve not heen nble to
In tile . first game of the 100Detr oi t 136 Golden ,S tel e 116
find the right combination
S_hrine Tournament, Marietta
lnd irma 116 Srm ·Anton io 10?
under newCoach Dick Motta.
Dcny cr 11 7 sea" ll ll' 103
will take on Ald erso n"That was probably the
!on l y gitm e&amp; sch cdult•dl
Broaddus at 7 p.m. The
Th ur sdOJ V'S Ga m es
firs,t ti me all year, we
Ind iana a t Cle-ve l and
Redmen will meet Glenville
consistently got the ball tn the
A tlant a a! HOuston
State College at 9 p.m.
open mJtn, " Motta sa id .
NY Ne ts at Kansas Ci ty
Winners of Monday's games
!on ly games sch ed uled)
"Tonight that man was 'E'
F riday ' s Gam es .
will clash for the cham(Hayes ). And with (Ph il )
N Y Knl c k.s l'l t Bos ton
pionship. Tuesday night.
Wa sh ingt on al Bulla te
Chenier out, Elvin picked a
Mii Wl'I Uk ee ll l N Y Nets
Here's Wednesday's box
good time to do it.'' The
Golden State at Ph i ladelph ia
score :
.
Bullets, playing wltllout their'
Atl ant a a t N ew Or leans
RIO GRAND E ( 891 Se n An ton io at Chi Cago
leatllng
scorer, Chenier , also
Swai n , 3 1 8: Roy se. 1 0 ? :
Indiana a l Detr oit
received
17 poin ts from Len
Pr ice . 8 9 ?5 ; No e, 11 J -16 ;
Pho en ix at Los A ng'c l es
Ja mes, 5 1 11; F il1palri ck , 'l
Den v er at Port land
Robinson.
0 .1; R obinson , 7'2 6 ; q ibson .
tonl y games scheo utee! )
Rrlan Taylor led tile Kings
0 'l 7. : Vi ckr oy , 'l -l 5. TOTALS
with 20 polnta. Ron Boone and
14-1 1-89.
W A.LS H (~6 ) - RObi nson . 6
Wo r ld H o c k ~ y Association rookie Richard Washln ~ton
1 13 : Lu th er , 1 57 : M oo re . 8
Stand ing s
had 19 each.
0 16 . Caiol a , 9ot H; Cha ncy ,
By Uni ted Press Internat io nal
0 0 Q;
Wa l k er .
9 1 10 :
Elsewhere In U1e NBA ,
East
K ounou7e lis .
3 0 6;
W L T Pi s . GF G A Bos1on toppetl Milw aukee
Pri d em or e. 1 0 ? : U nga shi c k .
Queb ec
19 12 1 39 \42 117
'l 0 •I. TOT ALS 39 -9-86 .
Cinc inna ti
17 tO 1 36 137 98 129-125, Detroit whip pe d
H a lft i m e score Rio .'12 · lndianapl s 16 11 ? 34 97 107
Go lden State 136-llB,
Wa lsh 4~ .
MinnesOta
12 14. 4 18 9 1 97 Philadelphi a took Phoenix (11New Eng lnd 12 15 4 18 10 1 11 1
Bl r minghm 9 23 1 19 109 135 81, Indian a downed Sun
. W&lt;tst
Antonio 116-102, Los Angeles
W 1., T Pt s. GF GA
Winnipeg
18 11 1 J 7 ·145 105 defeated New Orlea ns 11 6-105
San Diego
17 12 2 36 10 7 9Q and Denver . stopped Sea tUe
Houston
1.t II 4 32 96 87 117-10.1 .
.
Phoenix
13 17 'l 28 101:1 1.:tJ
Ed mont on 13 18. I '1.7 681 18
Celtlca 129, Bucks 125
Calgary
11 16 2 '2 4 87 91
Charlie Scott pumped In 29
Wedn es day 's Results
points,
Inducting 12 straight
Ci nci nna t i 5 M innt•sol a 0
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Phoen ix 6 Birmingha m S
midway through tile fourtll
(Onl y games schedu led ) Blg Ten was expected to
period, to spark Boston P!ISt
Thursday 's Gam es
announce a penalty on
·Edmonton at San D iego
Milwaukee and offset a
Michigan State supporting a
Minnesota a t Ind iana polis
c a ree rhigh , 41 -polnt
(o nl y games sc h ed uled )
three year prohation levied
performan ce by Junior
Fr iday 's Games
on the Spartans last January
Edmonton a t PhOenix
Bridgeman. It was the Bucks'
In dian apolis at New E ngland .
by the National Collegiate
seventh straight defeat and
Quebel! a t Hous ton
Athletic Association for
Ci nc l n" l'l li at Winnipeg
16th consecuUve loss on the
ronl y gem es sc hedul ed )
recruiting violations.
road. Sidney Wicks had 25
The Big Ten scheduled a
pointsand'21 rebounds for the
news conference called for
~Ne~t~~~a~,~~~~;s
Celtics, while John Havltctk
2:30 p.m. CST.
By Un•ted Press International
and JO Jo WhJte scored 20
The NCAA has barred
Cil!lmpbell Conference
apiece. Gary Brokaw added
Patrick Division
Michigan State from football
W L T Pts. GF GA 27 for the losers.
.
television and post ~eason ~~~il~sci:rg~s -~: ; ; ~ ~ j~~ . ~ ~ . Pistons 138, (;olden State 11•
games until Jan. 18, 1919. A ttant a
15 9 7 37 1o" 88 ' Kevln Porter scored 23
Coach Denny Stolz was Jlred NY Rangers \J 12 1 33 123
11 0 points and had nine assists
as a. result of tile penalty,
Smythe Division
and slx other Detroit players
. GF GA
With Darryl Rogers replacing s1. Louis 12W15L T, Pis
28 ' ' 113 finished in double figures as
him last season.
10 1a 3 l3 •• 120 the Pistons ran up their
Chicago
Col or ado
B 16 5 71 BJ 100
A penalty by the Big Ten M
innesota
6 IB 7 19 B1 I J.! highest point total of the
supporting tile NCAA penalty vancou11 er 8.21 J 19 B6 176 season. Bob Lanier and
Wal es Conf erence
had been expected since the
Norris Oi'olisfon
Ralph Simpeon each had 20
NCAA acted, but repeated
w L T Pts GF GA points for Detroit, while
appeals by the Spartans Mon&lt;rea&lt; 24 5 ' 52 160 72 Jamaai Wilkes had 16 and
os Angeles 11 12 10 37 108 103
caused a delay in the action. LPi«sburgh
12 13 5 ' '
'' 100 Rick Barry IS tn lead the
Detroll
9 16 4 22 78 102 Warriors.
Atlanhc Oivis•on

W L P~l .
P h l lt~ d elp h i ~
16 10 615
Boslon
i 4 I I S60
NY l(n loks
12 14 .462
N Y NtliS
11 IS 473
11 16 407
Buffa to
Central 0 i YI$iQn

GB

1

Spurs.
Lakers 115; Jau 105
Kar~em
Abdul-Jabbar
scored 35 points, Luch'" Allen
26 and Cawe Russell 21 to
power Los Angeles past New
Orleans. N•'W Orleans was
led by Freddie Bayd wltll 24
points. Pete Maravlah had 15
first-llalf point s before before .
forced from the ga me witll a
sprained ankle in U1e third
period.

1

'

Late husband of Ohio woman
may have had 3 other wi·ves

·,

:

Rio holds off late rally,
trips Walsh Cavs, 89-86

Phosgene
•
gas IS
new clue

Spartans will

SOUTHERN'S BASKETBALL SQUAD - Front, 1-r,
Eric Dunning, John Sayre, Steve Baker, Perry Hill, Thim
!!'oren; baCk, Carl Johnston, Joe Brown, Dave Roush,

Scott Soll&lt;ler, Kelly Winebrenner, Rick Findley, Richard
. Teaford. Absent were Wayne Satterfield and Chip Brauer.
-and Carl Wolfe is tllecoach. The team is undefeated witll a
~ ~ecord .

Fat purses will
Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (l:fPl) -You look at Dave Winfield, and he
doesn't strike you as being a ballplayer. He's big enough, all
right, 6feet 6, 21Jl pounds and the kind of build·that gives pretty
good assurance he's going to get done most anything he ha:s a
mind to; but looking at him with those horn-rimmed glasses
and conservative clothes he wears, you figure him for some
other line of work.
When he talks with you, Dave Winfield doesn 'I particularly
sound like a ballplayer, either. Not so much because of the soft,
gentle way he speaks,. but more because of tbe w'y he puts
things and the marked tendency be has for always placing
someone else first and himself second. Not many ball players
do ilia t tnday.
The San Diego Padres realize tile kind of ballplayer tlley
have In their big, unassuming 25-year-old right fielder who
could wind up MVP Qlle of these years. They realize it so well
that Johnny McNamara, tlleir manager, never had to stop and
tllink lor even a second alter the Padres got slugger George
Hendrick from Cleveland at the baseball meetings In Los
Angeles last week and someone asked McNamara where he
\vas going tn play.
"CenW field," said the Padr~s' manager. "We don't wanna
mess with Dave Winfield. He'll stay In right field."
Throwing a baseball isn't the only thing he can do. He also
can hit and he can fly. ·
'
A freak Injury kept him out the last five weclio of tile season
after Giants' pitcher Charley Will,;ams hit a nerve In his leg
when he whirled around and tagged him witllout even having
the ball, but Winfield still wound up leading the Padres In
pracUc.~Dy every single offensive category.
He was first In slugging percentage witll a .431 figure; in
1Dtal bases, 2I2; runs seared, 81; hits,l39; doubles, 26; homers,
13, and stolen hases, 26. His .283 battlrig average was topped
only by Mike Ivie's .291 8llli John Grubb's .284, and his 69 RB!'s
were second only to lvle's 70.
Chief problem, as far as the Padres, were concerned, was
that they had no other real big hitter tn give Winfield a hand.
"I'm naked out there, John," Winfield would say more than
once to McNamara.
·
NextseBBOn, it should be different. Dave Winfield won't be so
naked. He'D have some help in fellows like HendriCk, wbo had
81 RB!'s and 25 homers 'l!ith the Indians, and Gene Tenace,
who had 66 RB!'s and 22 hamers with tile A's and was signed as
a free agent last montll along witli reliever Rollie Fingers.
Dave Winfield's consuming ambition Is tn be part of a
winner.
In his three-and.a.balfyears witll tile Padres, he hasn't come
close, but he doesn't consider that Johnny McNamara's
fault.
.
.
"I feel kind of bad lor him," says Winfield. "He's gotten so
much oitt of the ballplaxers we have. I don't think we're one of
the better. teains. Eve.,.body seems to give one hundred
percent, yet we haven't finished any higher Ulan we have."
The Padres fmlshed fifth in the National League West last
season.
Winfield never played a day in the ri:linors. He was drafted tn
three dlflerent sports '!Iter graduating !~om the Univeristy of
Minnesota, by Minnesota of the NFL, A~nta of tile NBA, Utah
ol the ABA and by the Padres. Six days after competing In tbe
College World Series, he was in a .San Diego uniform playing
left field against the Houston Astros.
He had ooe single In' four .trips off Jerry Reuss in his 'first
game, and.alter hho second game in which he homered off Ken
Forsch and added a pair Of singles, he said to himself, "mayhe
Ibis isn't that h!lrd."
..
Dave Winfield laugha about that, saying be has discovered it
Is. He hasn't received anywhere near the recognition he would
have were be playing In places like New York or Los Ailgeles,
but he feels good about the friendships and relationships he has
built with his fellow players in San Diego.
·
"We've got Buddhists, cowboys, coimtry boys and city
slickers," Says Winfield, smiling. "All I hope. now is we can
Win. Whatlwoul&lt;ln'tgiveto"bewithawlnner." .
·

come to horses
Six
additj o nal
COLUMBUS (UP!) champions)lip
events will
Purses totaling an estimated
also
be
featured,
Including
.$1. 7 million will be offered to
tile
Rising
Sun
threeyear.()ld
Ohio-bred and Ohio-owned
harness horses next year In colt trot valued at' $:io,O.OO a\
tile Ohio Sires Stakes, it was . Nortllfield Park on Aug . 9;
tile $08,000 Appleseed twoannounced Wednesday.
The purses and dates for year-old filly pace at
tile races in tile second year Raceway Park· on Aug . 28;
of the program were tile $49,000 capital tllreeannounced by Philip B. year.()Jd filly trot scheduled
Drake, chairman of the Ohio for Raceway Park Sept. 5;
Standardbred Development tile Carnation three-year-old
fily pace, wortll a total of
Fund Committee.
The eight championship $55,1100 at Lebanon Raceway
event series has been Oct. II, the $62,1100 Cardinal
scheduled at Ohio 's four three-year.()ld colt pace .at
parimutuel race !racks at Nortllfield Park Oct. 12 and
. Scioto Downs in Columbus, tile $55,000 Ladybuug twoNorthfield Park ne ar year-old filly trot slated for
Cleveland, Lebanon Raceway Lebanon Raceway Oct. 14.
The Ohio Sires Stakes, ·
near Cincinnati and Raceway
under
the auspices of tile Ohio
Park in Toledo.
Standardbred
Development
The 1971 program will be
Fund
Committee
and the
highlighted by tile secondOhio
State
Racin g
renewals of the $120,1100 Ohio
Pacing
Classic,
a Commission, was established
chaiT'~i~n~bi?
t.wro-year-old In 1975.
Al011g v.;:h ~'&gt;! ~. Oii million
colt pace to be raced at
Lebanon Raceway Sept. 11, Ohio Fair Funds Program,
and the $100,1100 Trotting Ohio-bred two and three. Classic, a championship two- year-old trotters and pacers
year old colt trot to he of both sexes will compete for
contested at Scioto Downs over. $3.75 million in stateSept. 9. Both events are the funded events at Ohio's
two richest harness races for racetracks and state and
·age, gait and sex in the world . county fairs this coming
year.

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - shape and that he Is currently
The Pittsburgh Steelers will more comfortable throwing
apparently have a healtlly the ba U than he was In the
Terry Bradshaw Sunday Dec. 12 game with the
when they play the Colts for Houstnn Oilers.
the American Football
The Steelers held their first
Conference championship In iull workout Wednesday in
Baltimore.
·preparation for the SUnday
The
28-year - old game.
quarterback suid his right
Defensive tackle Ernie
wrist seems to be in good Holmes did riot participate In
,...--- - - - -- ---... tile practice because Of a
THE DAJ .VSF.NTINEI.
chronic bleeding nose that is
DEVOTED TO THE
not considered serious.
INTER EST OF
MEIGS.MASONAREA
Rookie running hack Jack
CIIFSTERL. TANNEHILl
Deloplalne
was also absent
Ex!.!t'. Ed.
and definitely won't play in
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cily Editor
the playoff opener due ·to a
Pultlil!hOO W.jly e~ ('f.!llt Saturday
sprained
right knee sustained
by The Olrtu Valley Publi!lhing Com·
any, Ill Court St., PomcrcJy, Ohio
In tile Houstnn wln .
45700. Business Office Phone 992·
Regular guard Sam Davis
21::.6. Editurlal PIHmt 9!12·2157.
Stocoml ch1ss !)lb'lltge ))tlld lit
returned to practice after
Pumuroy , Ohili.
missing the entire week witll
~ati u n ~t l ll d\'e l·~ i~i iiH t·epr e.~ell· ·
an eye injury suffered in the .
latlvc Ward · Gr lfhl1 1CLilllp:lll)'lo-ln·
c., H1•llin elll .iJ nd G~:~ llugher DiV.,
Tampa Bay game two weeks
7~7 Third Ave., New Ym·k, N. Y. '
ago. He has been fitted with a
10017. .
Sull'll'l"ipthm l'll l.e~ : Dd lvt! retlby
spec'ial pair Qf goggles to
cal'rler where HVttii111Jle 75 cc1lls ~··
protect his eyes.
11o·etk. By Motol' Ruute where t:H ITiH
scn •it'tl not avu i111 ble, One, month,
Special team standout
$3.25. By m11 il in Ohio ami W. Va.,
Donnie
Shell, who sustained a
Or1c Yc,ur, $22.00: SiM munUl8, ·
charlie horse in tile Houaton
$1 1.50; Till'C U TnUI Ilh ~, 17.00 :
l ~l~: whc rc $Zli.OO Yl't~ r : S i \'"' 1 nu nU ~
game , worked lightly
S l ~ .f1U :
Tlwcc 111u11t h~ . $1 .50
Wednesday but is expected to
Sub.'ICI'iftlillll pt'ic:l' md11 1~ · s Su11day
'J'u I lt'h':it! hll i1t'l.
be ready lor Baltimore.

~

VAGABOND
26t'ouring bicycle

09-02· I 02 . 7

09-02·10J 5
A !i (tlt(/som l' ~~· , ~ li.~J h ·
,o;,y /i- hil,'t' / 0 1' /f· i~ lll'f'ly
1

touri11 g.
• Dt-pl•ml a hiP t·omif.t•r

hrukf'
• Li g ht w~,, i ~· ht fm tm•
• Ch nmw pi nt('(( wlwPI."l
• ~[i x I :Y,-inl'h
li g hl w(·i ~ httlt·t •!-;

• M t·•n's nr

Lud it&gt;~·

be pwrlshed

Bradshaw fit, ready

.....

EATHERWEIGHT

BANKS TO HALL?
NEW YORK' [UP! )
Ernie Banks, who hit 512
homers during his career ana
is · one of two National
Leaguers to win two consecutive Most Valuable
Player Awards, appears for
the first time on the list of
players to be considered this
year for election to the Hall of
Fame.
Others up for election for
the first time are Jim Bunning, Curt f'loud, Harvey
Kuenn and Camilo Pasr.ual.

Wash ington 8 18 J 20 83 175
Adam s Division
w L T PIS. GF GA

76ers 971

SWls

87

AVANTE

VAGABOND
10-speed

26" bicycle

09·02·30 3-8

A w cin11 bil'yc/e wh irh

d£•li ve r~; l!O ~w in
and ~,·,•a t look-;

,,:,Jir1J:

- 23-lnch diamond frame
- 10 speed derailleur gear s
- St em. shifter s, 26 ~ 1 n c h
w hee l s

Julius Erving scored 25 - Sa hara sand fi nish
BoSion
"
9 2 40 1'' · 93 points and George McGinnis
Buffal o
17 B J 37 97 68
Toron&lt;o
" 11 ' J4
10&lt; added 20 to lead Philadelphia
Cl evel and · 9 15 7 25 87 i07 pa ~t Phoenix to retain its grip
Wedn esda Y's Results
Los Ange(es 3 AUanla I .
on first place In tile Atlantic
Montr eal B Color ado 7
Division. UoydFree added 19
~~~~~'t~n~ .o~~~~~~
points and Collins 18 for the ·
lonlv games schedul ed I
76ers, while Alvan Adams led ·
Thursday ' s Games
Ph 1 j•• M in'·
NY Ra ngers " Buffalo
oen X w "' " po ...
Chicag o at Philad elphia
Pocers 118, Spurs 102
Cleveland a1 Pil&lt;sburoh
Wil Jones totaled 26 points
Vancouv er at Dei r olt
S!. Lours a1 Boston
and 19 rebounds and Dave
Brake Svrvlce
lon&lt; vga messc hedul edl
Roblsch 18 points and 12
Front
End Alignment
.
Friday's Games
NY Jslen der s at Alle nta
rebound s to lift Jndl ana over
600 E. Main 51.
997·1094
Toron&lt;o at Washlnglon
San Antonio. BUly Knight
Pomeroy , 0 .
(onl y ga mes schedul ed )
scQred 20 points for Indiana.
while Billy j'aultz and Allan
HOUSTON (UP!) - The
Brislow had 22 each for the
University· Of Houston that "the exama are over,"
football team began its Yeoman told his team .
Cottnn Bowl preparation "Maryland Is ooe of the
We(lnesdayin the Aslrodome:· nation's finest teams."
Coach BUI Yeoman sent the
The Cougars wUl work
team 1hrough an hour and a . Thursday and Friday and the
hall nan-contact workout, the first three days of next week
team's first since closing out before departing for tbeir
a 9-2-0 season on Dec. 4.
. homes for Christmas. They
"We've just got to get our will meet again In Dallaa oo
minds back on football now the afternoon Of Dec. 26.

1"

J,

?·

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

•Sun Beam &amp;
•General Appliances
•Fry Pans
•irons
•Cooker -Fryer
•Mixers
•Can Openers
•crock Pots

• Black &amp; Decker
• S&amp; R Socket Sets
• Cresent Wrenches
• Remington Guns
• Winchester
• Harrison &amp;
Richardson
• Hunting Jackets
• Hunting Pants

Here•s my new State Farm office, where I can serve
you with the best value in car , home, life 'and health
insurance . I invite you to call or drop in any time.

BILL FLETCHER '
149 S~ulh Third, Middleport, Phone 'l'll-71S5
llll

""""u.;

Sri• F1rt1 if Nit.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110 W. Main

~ 7 3Q8 . I

Pomeroy. 0.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 16, 1916

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

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddle_port-PII!leroy, 0., Thursday, J;&gt;ec. l6, 1976

.

HARRISBURG , Pa. !UP!)
- Pennsylvan ia health
r
officials say the possible link
betwee~ phosgene gas and
U,e "Legionnaires' Disease"
is uie ''the first really !"lid
\
I
clue" in ritore than (our ·
months 'of searching for the
- ca use of the mysterious
illness.
State Health Secretary Dr.
Leonard Bac hman satd
Wednesda y a
special
toxirological research team
will examine tile tlleory that
tile lethal gas could have been
produced by Fll, a chemica l
refr igerant used in air
PORTRAY NORTH, EAST, SO!ITII AND WEST - Portraying North, East, Soutll and
conditioning systems, coming
·West
are, front, 1-r, Karen Goggins, Paula Swisher, SUsie Pooler, J immy Pooler, Brent
into contact witll other subGeorge; back, Joyce Stewart, Ctaig Darst, Charles Davis, Tamil Hart, Margie Miller and
stances or heat.
Anita Aeiker.
·
A Heal th Depa(tment
spokesman said Investigators
were aware of a leak In tile
air conditioning system at the
Bellevue Stratford Hotel
· where all the victims stayed
or visited during a state
American Legion convention
· in late July.
The disease has been
blamed for killing 29 persons
and sickening 151 others.
Bachman 's announcement
Jeff Couch ; second, Mark Mitch, Laura Hoover , Teresa
PLAY CAST - Members of tile Junior class of Meigs
came one day after the
Van~eter, Cindy McKinney, Brent Arnold, Sheba
High School will present tile two act comedy , "The Boy
Na tional Resource and
Sargent ; back, Katlly Blaettnar, assistant dtrector, J~ne
Who Changed the World " Friday at·flle 'school at 8 p.m.
Protection Agency in New
Sisson SIL~ an Wt ight, Page Smith, Velvet Swisher, Trma
under direction of Celia McCoy. Taking part are front , 1-r,
York said it was investigating
Gibbs 'antl Calia McCoy. Absent was Kevin McLaughlin .
&amp;;ott Warner. Carl Gheen. Robert Naka!lloto, Ron Casci,
the pl.ssible link between
phosgene, a lethal· gas used
by the Germa ns ~uring World
War l, and tile mysterious
illness.
"This is tile first really
solid clue tllat we know
about, " the sta te Healt h
Department spokesman said.
" At least it 's so methin g.
Before tills, the investigation
COLUMBUS. Ohio ( UPIl - funeral in St. Paul, Minn. Her was a very strange setup," Agency officials and Indiana was a( a blind end ."
"I had no idea at all about family lives in St. Paul and
Mr s. Sharp was not State troopers sifted through
the wreckage . and found
any of this," said Mrs. Hel en Mrs. Sharp said she would available for comment. ·
Michigan
and Ohio driver's
Sharp of suburbann Gahanna star there until after. the
Hnroltl Niebols, field engilicenses
both
bearing Sharp's
after learn ing her la te holidays.
nee ring manager
for
picture
and
two Social
husband had- two wives and
Autllonties in Grosse Point ,Doe11tel's office here, said
The Pomeroy Emergency '
security
cards
bearing Squad was called to the office
possibly four. "It's all news to Park saitl Mary Louise Sharp Sharp ·was "kind of a
me.n
was
" stunned"
when personal fri end of mine and Sharp's name but different of Dr. R. E. Boice at 12 :&gt;6
F r a nklin C ounty informed of the man's deatll . it's kind of a shock to numbers.
p.m. Wednesday for Mary
The Michigan license was Radcliffe, Syracuse, who was
Prosecutor George Smith
Virginia DiLuigi who lives everyone who knew him.
TAKING PART - Others taking part in til is evening 's Christmas program are front,
said Joseph Gordon Sharp, a nea r the Sharp -fa mily in
Nichols said Sharp worked issued to a Gordon Sharp and taken to Veterans Memorial
Chris Burdette, drununer boy; back, 1-r, Kim Fraley, spirit of music, &amp;ott Pickens, king
computer specialist for the Grosse Point Park said she cl osely with the field listed his date of birth as Aug. Ho spital where she was
winter, Cindy Crooks, spirit of Christmas, SUsanna Wise, Cindy Parker and Paula Horton,
Docutel Co., a Dallas, Texas knew Mary .Louise Sharp and e n g in eer s in s talling 18, 1924. The Ohio license was admitted. At 5: 10 p.m., the
pages.
based computer fir m, was her children well.
equipment and traveled issued to Joseph G. Sharp squad went to former Route
married to Helen Sharp and
When told of Sharp 's heavily to serve accounts In witll a date of birth listed as 33 for George Eastman who
to Mary llluise Sharp of apparent double, marriage , Ohio, Micltigan, Wisconsin , March 13, 1925.
was taken to Veterans
Authorities said they also Memorial
Grosse Pai n ~ Park , Mich.
she said she wa s shocked but Minnestoa, Dlinois, Missouri
Hospital, acfound numerous airline and cording to a report from
Smith said Sh arp had two "not rea lly surprised.
and Canada .
" The Spirit of Christmas" will be
children by his wife in
"He never came home
Sharp died in tile crash of a gasoline credit cards beating village hall.
11resented
at Bradbury Elementary this
Gahanna and two more by his except maybe four to six private plane Friday in In- a munber of variations of
evening at 7;30 p.m . tnider the direction of
wife in Gross,e Point Paark. tifnes a yea1· ,'~ she said. " rt dian a . Federal Aviation Shafp's name and various
addresses.
voca l music teac,her Mrs.· Roy Milier.
"We have confinned at
least two families and we are
·Assisting with the Chris tmas program are .
NAME CORRECTED
invest igating tile reports of
Don Hanning, principal, Joann Corder, Teresa
A surviving daughter of
two more," said Smith.
Casci, Robert Meier. Sabra ·Morrison, Betsy
John 0. Arnott, Racine, who
Smith saitl Sharp , believed
Horky. Phyliss Dugan and Betty Hutchison.
tn be 51 , worked out of
By HELEN THOMAS
Robert Bergland , D-Mlnn., to Leadeshlp Conference In the died Monda y, was Mrs.
Do cutel's Columbus office
PLAINS, Ga. IUPI )
he agriculture secretary.
early 1960s and helped the James [Virginia ) Rees, Jr.,
but was employed by the Jimmy Carter has tabbed
Young told a synangogue dr.aft 1964 Civil Rights act and Raclne, not Mrs. Reeves, as
firm's marketing division in bla ck Georgia Congressman men's club meeting n Atlanta the 1965 Voting Rights Act. was reported.
Toledo. He said two women, and form er civil righ ts Wednesday night he had
Young rf!;ently said on
one from Chicago and one activist Andrew. Young as decided to accept the U.N. job returning from an African
from Montreal Canada , U.S. amba ssador to the and would be in Plains today trip that bla ck African
BIRTHDAY.CONFINED
It was standing room only presented a Christmas and Jeff Buell, student
called Docutel Tuesday to United Nations.
when Carter made the U.N. nations were extremely
teacher_ The large crowd on
Lloyd
H.
Hoffman,
Rt.
3,
at
the Meigs Junior High concert.
Inquire about Sharp.
Carter scheduled a 2:30 announcement .
pleased at Carter's victnry in Pomeroy, a patient at Holzer School
hand gave the concert a nice
Auditorium
Tue.
s
day
lHrection
of
the
young
He said the woman from p.m. EST news conference
Young, H, a former the presidential el ection .
Medical
Center,
room
505,
reception. On behalf of the
night
when
the
ju~ior
high
people
was
by
Bobby
R.
Hunt,
Montreal identified herself as today and sources close to the lieutenant of slain civil rights
He earlier resisted taking a will celebrate his birthday · school choirs and bands · bands; Paige D. Hunt, choirs, eighth grade chorus, Mrs.
Wendy Sharp and claimed to Presidentelect said he would leader Martin Luther King position in the Carter
ednesday, Dec. 22, at the
Hunt was presented roses and
be Sharp's wife. The woman a nnoun ce
Yo u ng' s Jr . and one of Carter's administr a ti on, tellin g W
hospital.'Cards may be sent
a gilt of jewelry by Linda
from Chicago said only that appointment.
strongest supporters, would reporters
on
several
Eason, chorus president.·
Sha rp's marriage to th e
There were reports Carter replace William Scranton as occasions he felt it would he to him in caie of the hoSpital.
The seventh grade choir
Gahanna woman would had also decided on Johnson the nation's representative to better to serve In Congress.
presented,
j'Fum, Fum,
11
Cause some ser ious adm ini stration federal the United Nations.
The U.N. pos t carries
Fum",
"African
Noel" with
DEADLINE
SET
problems."
budget dir ector Charles
The two~erm De!llocratic Cabinet rank.
Friday
is
the
deadline
for
special
instrumental
effects,
" I just donjt know what's Schultze to cha ir the congressman from AUanta
Carter has already named ordering fruit baskets from
"What
Child
Is
This?"
and
going on," said Helen Sharp president's Co uncil of was an executive director of his secretaries o'f state,
"A
Merry
Christmas".
InMeigs
Hi
gh
School
Band
after attending her husband's Economic Advisers and Rep. the Southern Christian lreasury and transportation .
strumentalists
members. The one-haU peck
were
KriBtln
BONN , West Germany graduated deterrence (and) Anderson, Patrisha Kunatll,
hasket is $5, and tile peck
(UP!
) - The presence of no one can be interested In Jeff Nash and Fred Youn_g.
ha sket is $7. Delivery will be
American
military forces in having a situation arise In
made early next week.
The eighth grade choir
Europe remains essential tn which nuclear weapons would presented "0 Come All Ye
West German and European he employed as a substitute
"C~rol of tte
security, Chancellor Helmut · for conventional forces and Faithful",
Drum"
,
~~sweet CaroUne",
tllus
increase
the
danger
of
RA CINE
Racine Sctunidt said today.
"Do You Hear What I Hear?"
American Legion Post 602
Outlining his policy for the an atomic war.''
and
" Silent ·Night". Inwill hold its Christmas dinner next four years, the newly re.
strumentalists
were Elora
Friday at 6 p.m. at the post elected Chancellor told parFaulkner,
Jayne
Hoeflich,
home. Turkey and ham will liament, "We know that the
Jean
Horton,
April
King,
be provided by Legion. United States will continue In
Veterans Memc•ial Hospital Beth Petrin, Andrea Riggs
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. commonly associated with a about the size of an English Some urologists clatm a 25 Members are to bring table tile future to do justice tn its
ADMITTED - Joseph and Camille Swindell with
DEAR JR . LAMB - A hiatal hernia rhernia of the pea, and the doctor has per cent success in restoring service and a covered __dish. special responsibility for the
Stewart,
Bidwell ; Nellie
person I know has an in- stoma ch throu gh the assured me that it is nothing fertility by re-operating on
security of the Western Lemley, Portland; Denver Linda Eason directing
usweet Caroline".
flamed esophagus and also a diaphragm ).
to be concerned about. Do you the vas and · rejoining it.
world.
Bush, Pomeroy ; Mary
Numbers by the seventh
hiatal hernia and cann9t keep
Alcoh ol inc reases th e foresee any complications ? Success is not sucr.ess unless
CANTATA SET
''The presence of American Radcliffe, Syracuse ; Ruby
grade
band Included "Royal
food down. Do you think formation of acid digestive In tile event I should desire to sufficient healthy sperni cells
SYRACUSE - The choir of armed forces in Europe
smoking ci ga rettes or juice and makes matters sire a child , cou ld an are released to enable the Syracuse Asbury United cannot be replaced either Brinager, Racine ; Gregory Fireworks", "Two Airs" ,
Tyree, Middleport ; George ' 1The Candy Man", .,March
drinking alcohol is advisable worse. Coffee and all cal• operation reverse my pre gnancy. Recently Methodist Church wlll politically or militarily ."
Young, Pomeroy; Robert
for thi s person ? I kee p feine -contalning beverages sterility? Or could sperm be microscopic operations; present the cantata , "Joyous
Schmidt has had a close Jacks, Rutland; Gerald of the Men of Harlech", "I'll
Be Home for Christmas"
nagging that they are harm- also make it worse .. Cigarette withdrawn for an artificial perfected by a few surgeons, News of Cl)ristmas," at the relationship with President
Wilkinson, Pomeroy,
ful. I would greatly ap- smoking has not been shown insemination ~
. and "O Christmas Tree'\
have been credited with Sunday morning worship Ford and his aides say he
DISCHARGED ' - l' Failtida
, preciate any answer in your to Increase acid form ation,
DEAR READER - A better results.
service at 10:30 a.m. Mrs. hopes to continue such ties Wood, Ellen Tucker, €arrle "'The "eJghth' grade band
column .
but it may affect the normal small lump or nodule can be
Withdrawing sperm by a Ann Sauvage is the director witll President..,lect Jimmy Swartz, Floyd Bush, Oscar played '"fl''' eome All y,
DEAR READER - The G~&gt;ntra ctin g acti on of th e many things, including a needle after a vasectomy has and Mrs. Judy Pope pianist. Carter .
Faithful", "Air" from Tht
Imboden, ·Sue Payne.
person you know is his own stoma ch
which
may small cyst filled with sperm · heen perfonned may not be
Me!!Siah, "Tunes of Glory".
Sctunidt expressed concern
worst enemy and deserves to aggravate ·the situation.
"Deck
the Halls," "Salol
cells, ,or the scar tissue that successful. Sometimes the
that t'some NATO members
be nagged. Unfort una tel y
To help you help that may have formed around a testicle stops forming an
Nicholas
Suite" and "Joy It
are finding it Increasingly
nagging may not do any good. - person you know I am sen- . small amount of blood adequate amount of viable
the
World".
difficult to maintain sufPLEASANT VALLEY
PROGRAM SET
Through centuries
of ding you a copy of The Health assoc iated
with
the sperm cells after the vas is
ficient ' conventional forces
DISCHARGES - Marie
CHESTER - A Christmas (although l conventional Harris, Point Pleasant ;
relations between men and Letter number 4-ll, Hiatal operation . In any case you did tied. Sperm hanks have been
women, nagging has proved Hernia, Esophageal Reflux. the right thing. Anyone who used to store frozen sperm program will be presented at forces
remain - the Russell Thomas, Letart ;
to be very poor medicine. If Others who ·want this in- has a lump or nodule of the before a vasectomy is per- the Church · of God here prerequisite for a strategy of Junior Tucker, Grimms
you will forgi ve my formation can send 50 cents testi cle should have an formed but these are not well Sunday at 1:30 p.m. There
CHESTER - The Chester
Landing ; Cathy Plants,
e&lt;aggeration think of aU the and a long, stamped; self- examination as soon as regulated in every instance will be two plays, recitations
Volunreer
Fire Departinent
Gallipolis; Evelyn Adams,
healthy husbands tllere would addressed envelope for it . . possible. In some cases it is a and no one can guarantee you and special . singing. Th'e
wlU
stage
a public dance
Galllpplls Ferry; Mary
he if nagging resulted in good Just send your letter til me in mali gnancy and early how hmg the frozen sperm public Is invited.
from
.
9
p.m.
to rRldnlght
Jeffries, Evans; and Ralph
health.
care of this. newspaper P.O.· diagnosis may save a per- will really be usable.
Saturday
·
at
the
Chester
Davis, Robertsburg.
Elementary
I presume from your Box 15ol, R~dio City Station, son's life. Don't delay as
School.
Muale ·
I don't think you need to
BIRTHS - · A daughter to
remarks that the person you New York , NY 10019.
ASK TO WED
some of these tumors spread worrY. about that lump since
Partly cloudy tonight with Mr. and Mrs. John Chick, will be by the Dana Baker
know has an irritated lower - DEAR DR. LAMB - I had very rapidly .
A . marriage license was lows near 30. Fa ir Friday Middleport ; a daughter to group of Point Pleasant.
you have had your doctor
e s o ph a g us be c a u se a vasectomy three years ago.
You shoul d co nsid.er a examine it, but your chances issued to James David with highs in the r:'id to upper Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Mc- There will be round and
acidigestive juice leaks back- A hard nodu le has form ed in va!'icctomy as permanent at of re~aining fertility arc not B~~rrett , 26, Middleport, and 40s.
Probability
of Daniel Cheshire and a son tn square dancing. Procuds
ward out of the stomach into the scrotal sac. The nodule is the time yi•u ho v&lt;· it tlonc. outstanding.
Margaret Ann Griffith, 18, precipitation is 10 per cent · Mr. a~d Mrs. Terry Gray will go tn fire department
the lower esophagus. '"''is is
Rt. 1, Middleport.
today, tonight and Friday. Letart.
' projects. ·

After building up a 5~
halftime lead over host
Walsh, visiting Rio Grande
College held off a late
C,Ovalier rally· tn pOst a
thrilling 89-86 Mid-Ohio
Conference victory at Canton
Wednesday night.
It wu tbe lea(Ue opener for
Coach A!1 Laalwn's Redmen. Tbe meu ol C.eb Mark
LaMoreau drypped to 1-J,In
MOC play.
On the year, Rio Grande,

I

with its filth straig)¥ win,
upped its mark tn "6:'1. The
Cavs dropped to 3-!i overall.
The Cavs stormed back
from an elght-polnt halftime
defl!']t to knot the count at 58, all 011 Jim Walker's goal with
14:28 left in the game:
The score was deadlocked
at 62-all wltll12:28 remaining
and 64-64 with 11 :58 showing
on the clock.
Jim Noe'• goal put Rio
ahead 66-64 with 11 :01

remaining. The Redmen for the Redmen.
Greg James ·hit a free
were never headed.
Walsh, how ever, never throw with six seconds left
gave up. The Cavs, after and
Ed
Ungas h ic~'s
falUag ·heh!Dd seven points desperation shot at the boner
la1e ln the game, uarrowed split tl)e cords to make tile
lbe gap to two points, 8.1-79, on final.score 89-86.
Rio Grande placed three
a goal by Don Caiola, with
men in double figures In ·
3:0. showing on the cloek.
Walker's twin-pointer with scoring. Jimmy Noe Jed the
28 seconds left made it 86-84 way with 26 points. Gil price
before Rio's Gil Price canned added 25 and Greg James 11.
Jim Walker, 5-8 'guard,
two charity tosses with 19
seconds, left to Ice the victory paced the Cavs with 20 points.

Aidmen called

A·t Bradbury this evening

Young picked for UN job

Concert well received
Schmidt says

troops ess.ential

DR. LAMB

Bad habits hurt hiatal hernia-

Dance planned .

Weather

I
JC .

Pro

: Hayes
I
I

_1•
, L'lh•nn1ngs

1

Nati on•• B;uk etball Assod at•on ...

Stand1n9s
By Unit e d Preu ln t ~ rna t i on al
Eastern Conferenct'

explodes
.
for 45 points

By FRED IJEF
UPI Sports Writer
Elvin Hayl!s, a sensitive,
p,
Bibl"'&lt;!uotlng
~enUeman , let
4
Don Caiola a.dded 16 and Ed
S
fort h with the fire and
Robinson 13.
5' ,
brimston ~ Wednesday night.
Rio Grande hit 34 ol68 field
W L Pet . GB
'111e 6-foot-9 star for ward
goal attempts for 50 per cent. Ctcvete nd
16
Y 6-SO
expl!l((ed
for j5 .points to lift
15 9 .615
1~
The Redmen were 67.1 at the Houston
W
ashington
to a 104-100
NcwOrtoan s IS I J 536 2' :
charity llne. Walsh hit 39 of 88 San
Antonio
14 14 soo
3' ,
victory
over
U&gt;e
Kansas City
field goal attempts for «.3 w ash ington 11 1"3 · '4ss J' , Kings, running off hls highest
6'
per cent. The Cavs were All ant wl'l ester n co11 nf 11er en.393
ce
regular season point tntal In
61.5 from tile foul line.
M idw est O i"Jh ion
five
seasons with tile Bullets.
W L Pet . GB
Both teams picked off 42 Derwer
"I felt like I wus back in
18 8 69'1
rebounds . Noe and James Det roj t
16 17 .571
3
college ," smiled tile 31-year14 IJ .500 5
each had 18 snags for the In diana
old Hayes, an All-American
Kansas Ci ty
12 16 .J'J9 7
winners. Ed Robinson and Ch icag o
} 15 318 9
at tile University of Houston.
4 15 . 138 15' ·t
Mark Kounouzelis each had M il wa ukee
He was :l().for-32 from the
Paci f ic Di'olisio n
!5 for tile losers. Rlo had 22
·
w. l Prt . GB floor.
turnovers, Walsh 15.
Por tlan d
19 8 70 4
"I'm
just
glud
we
p~1yed so
Angel es
15 12 55o
4
Tbe Redmon are Idle until Los
well," said Hayes, who hopes
Gol den Sta te
13 12 .520 5
Monday night when the Se ~t ttl e
15 14 517 s
to become a minister when he
11 13 458 6'
Lanham men take part In the P hoeni x
retires .
. Wc dncsdlll y's l? es utt s
annual Marietta College
Elo ston .l 29 MiiWo!I Ukf'e 1'15
The Bullel•. languishing in
Phll " delph l&amp; 97 ,Phoeni 'll. a.7
Shrine Tournament at
fi
fth
place in tho NBA's
Johnson Field House In 105Los Angele s 115 N ew Orl ean s Central Division witll an U-13
Marietta.
Wa sh ington 10J Kansas Ci ty
record, hnve not heen nble to
In tile . first game of the 100Detr oi t 136 Golden ,S tel e 116
find the right combination
S_hrine Tournament, Marietta
lnd irma 116 Srm ·Anton io 10?
under newCoach Dick Motta.
Dcny cr 11 7 sea" ll ll' 103
will take on Ald erso n"That was probably the
!on l y gitm e&amp; sch cdult•dl
Broaddus at 7 p.m. The
Th ur sdOJ V'S Ga m es
firs,t ti me all year, we
Ind iana a t Cle-ve l and
Redmen will meet Glenville
consistently got the ball tn the
A tlant a a! HOuston
State College at 9 p.m.
open mJtn, " Motta sa id .
NY Ne ts at Kansas Ci ty
Winners of Monday's games
!on ly games sch ed uled)
"Tonight that man was 'E'
F riday ' s Gam es .
will clash for the cham(Hayes ). And with (Ph il )
N Y Knl c k.s l'l t Bos ton
pionship. Tuesday night.
Wa sh ingt on al Bulla te
Chenier out, Elvin picked a
Mii Wl'I Uk ee ll l N Y Nets
Here's Wednesday's box
good time to do it.'' The
Golden State at Ph i ladelph ia
score :
.
Bullets, playing wltllout their'
Atl ant a a t N ew Or leans
RIO GRAND E ( 891 Se n An ton io at Chi Cago
leatllng
scorer, Chenier , also
Swai n , 3 1 8: Roy se. 1 0 ? :
Indiana a l Detr oit
received
17 poin ts from Len
Pr ice . 8 9 ?5 ; No e, 11 J -16 ;
Pho en ix at Los A ng'c l es
Ja mes, 5 1 11; F il1palri ck , 'l
Den v er at Port land
Robinson.
0 .1; R obinson , 7'2 6 ; q ibson .
tonl y games scheo utee! )
Rrlan Taylor led tile Kings
0 'l 7. : Vi ckr oy , 'l -l 5. TOTALS
with 20 polnta. Ron Boone and
14-1 1-89.
W A.LS H (~6 ) - RObi nson . 6
Wo r ld H o c k ~ y Association rookie Richard Washln ~ton
1 13 : Lu th er , 1 57 : M oo re . 8
Stand ing s
had 19 each.
0 16 . Caiol a , 9ot H; Cha ncy ,
By Uni ted Press Internat io nal
0 0 Q;
Wa l k er .
9 1 10 :
Elsewhere In U1e NBA ,
East
K ounou7e lis .
3 0 6;
W L T Pi s . GF G A Bos1on toppetl Milw aukee
Pri d em or e. 1 0 ? : U nga shi c k .
Queb ec
19 12 1 39 \42 117
'l 0 •I. TOT ALS 39 -9-86 .
Cinc inna ti
17 tO 1 36 137 98 129-125, Detroit whip pe d
H a lft i m e score Rio .'12 · lndianapl s 16 11 ? 34 97 107
Go lden State 136-llB,
Wa lsh 4~ .
MinnesOta
12 14. 4 18 9 1 97 Philadelphi a took Phoenix (11New Eng lnd 12 15 4 18 10 1 11 1
Bl r minghm 9 23 1 19 109 135 81, Indian a downed Sun
. W&lt;tst
Antonio 116-102, Los Angeles
W 1., T Pt s. GF GA
Winnipeg
18 11 1 J 7 ·145 105 defeated New Orlea ns 11 6-105
San Diego
17 12 2 36 10 7 9Q and Denver . stopped Sea tUe
Houston
1.t II 4 32 96 87 117-10.1 .
.
Phoenix
13 17 'l 28 101:1 1.:tJ
Ed mont on 13 18. I '1.7 681 18
Celtlca 129, Bucks 125
Calgary
11 16 2 '2 4 87 91
Charlie Scott pumped In 29
Wedn es day 's Results
points,
Inducting 12 straight
Ci nci nna t i 5 M innt•sol a 0
CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Phoen ix 6 Birmingha m S
midway through tile fourtll
(Onl y games schedu led ) Blg Ten was expected to
period, to spark Boston P!ISt
Thursday 's Gam es
announce a penalty on
·Edmonton at San D iego
Milwaukee and offset a
Michigan State supporting a
Minnesota a t Ind iana polis
c a ree rhigh , 41 -polnt
(o nl y games sc h ed uled )
three year prohation levied
performan ce by Junior
Fr iday 's Games
on the Spartans last January
Edmonton a t PhOenix
Bridgeman. It was the Bucks'
In dian apolis at New E ngland .
by the National Collegiate
seventh straight defeat and
Quebel! a t Hous ton
Athletic Association for
Ci nc l n" l'l li at Winnipeg
16th consecuUve loss on the
ronl y gem es sc hedul ed )
recruiting violations.
road. Sidney Wicks had 25
The Big Ten scheduled a
pointsand'21 rebounds for the
news conference called for
~Ne~t~~~a~,~~~~;s
Celtics, while John Havltctk
2:30 p.m. CST.
By Un•ted Press International
and JO Jo WhJte scored 20
The NCAA has barred
Cil!lmpbell Conference
apiece. Gary Brokaw added
Patrick Division
Michigan State from football
W L T Pts. GF GA 27 for the losers.
.
television and post ~eason ~~~il~sci:rg~s -~: ; ; ~ ~ j~~ . ~ ~ . Pistons 138, (;olden State 11•
games until Jan. 18, 1919. A ttant a
15 9 7 37 1o" 88 ' Kevln Porter scored 23
Coach Denny Stolz was Jlred NY Rangers \J 12 1 33 123
11 0 points and had nine assists
as a. result of tile penalty,
Smythe Division
and slx other Detroit players
. GF GA
With Darryl Rogers replacing s1. Louis 12W15L T, Pis
28 ' ' 113 finished in double figures as
him last season.
10 1a 3 l3 •• 120 the Pistons ran up their
Chicago
Col or ado
B 16 5 71 BJ 100
A penalty by the Big Ten M
innesota
6 IB 7 19 B1 I J.! highest point total of the
supporting tile NCAA penalty vancou11 er 8.21 J 19 B6 176 season. Bob Lanier and
Wal es Conf erence
had been expected since the
Norris Oi'olisfon
Ralph Simpeon each had 20
NCAA acted, but repeated
w L T Pts GF GA points for Detroit, while
appeals by the Spartans Mon&lt;rea&lt; 24 5 ' 52 160 72 Jamaai Wilkes had 16 and
os Angeles 11 12 10 37 108 103
caused a delay in the action. LPi«sburgh
12 13 5 ' '
'' 100 Rick Barry IS tn lead the
Detroll
9 16 4 22 78 102 Warriors.
Atlanhc Oivis•on

W L P~l .
P h l lt~ d elp h i ~
16 10 615
Boslon
i 4 I I S60
NY l(n loks
12 14 .462
N Y NtliS
11 IS 473
11 16 407
Buffa to
Central 0 i YI$iQn

GB

1

Spurs.
Lakers 115; Jau 105
Kar~em
Abdul-Jabbar
scored 35 points, Luch'" Allen
26 and Cawe Russell 21 to
power Los Angeles past New
Orleans. N•'W Orleans was
led by Freddie Bayd wltll 24
points. Pete Maravlah had 15
first-llalf point s before before .
forced from the ga me witll a
sprained ankle in U1e third
period.

1

'

Late husband of Ohio woman
may have had 3 other wi·ves

·,

:

Rio holds off late rally,
trips Walsh Cavs, 89-86

Phosgene
•
gas IS
new clue

Spartans will

SOUTHERN'S BASKETBALL SQUAD - Front, 1-r,
Eric Dunning, John Sayre, Steve Baker, Perry Hill, Thim
!!'oren; baCk, Carl Johnston, Joe Brown, Dave Roush,

Scott Soll&lt;ler, Kelly Winebrenner, Rick Findley, Richard
. Teaford. Absent were Wayne Satterfield and Chip Brauer.
-and Carl Wolfe is tllecoach. The team is undefeated witll a
~ ~ecord .

Fat purses will
Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (l:fPl) -You look at Dave Winfield, and he
doesn't strike you as being a ballplayer. He's big enough, all
right, 6feet 6, 21Jl pounds and the kind of build·that gives pretty
good assurance he's going to get done most anything he ha:s a
mind to; but looking at him with those horn-rimmed glasses
and conservative clothes he wears, you figure him for some
other line of work.
When he talks with you, Dave Winfield doesn 'I particularly
sound like a ballplayer, either. Not so much because of the soft,
gentle way he speaks,. but more because of tbe w'y he puts
things and the marked tendency be has for always placing
someone else first and himself second. Not many ball players
do ilia t tnday.
The San Diego Padres realize tile kind of ballplayer tlley
have In their big, unassuming 25-year-old right fielder who
could wind up MVP Qlle of these years. They realize it so well
that Johnny McNamara, tlleir manager, never had to stop and
tllink lor even a second alter the Padres got slugger George
Hendrick from Cleveland at the baseball meetings In Los
Angeles last week and someone asked McNamara where he
\vas going tn play.
"CenW field," said the Padr~s' manager. "We don't wanna
mess with Dave Winfield. He'll stay In right field."
Throwing a baseball isn't the only thing he can do. He also
can hit and he can fly. ·
'
A freak Injury kept him out the last five weclio of tile season
after Giants' pitcher Charley Will,;ams hit a nerve In his leg
when he whirled around and tagged him witllout even having
the ball, but Winfield still wound up leading the Padres In
pracUc.~Dy every single offensive category.
He was first In slugging percentage witll a .431 figure; in
1Dtal bases, 2I2; runs seared, 81; hits,l39; doubles, 26; homers,
13, and stolen hases, 26. His .283 battlrig average was topped
only by Mike Ivie's .291 8llli John Grubb's .284, and his 69 RB!'s
were second only to lvle's 70.
Chief problem, as far as the Padres, were concerned, was
that they had no other real big hitter tn give Winfield a hand.
"I'm naked out there, John," Winfield would say more than
once to McNamara.
·
NextseBBOn, it should be different. Dave Winfield won't be so
naked. He'D have some help in fellows like HendriCk, wbo had
81 RB!'s and 25 homers 'l!ith the Indians, and Gene Tenace,
who had 66 RB!'s and 22 hamers with tile A's and was signed as
a free agent last montll along witli reliever Rollie Fingers.
Dave Winfield's consuming ambition Is tn be part of a
winner.
In his three-and.a.balfyears witll tile Padres, he hasn't come
close, but he doesn't consider that Johnny McNamara's
fault.
.
.
"I feel kind of bad lor him," says Winfield. "He's gotten so
much oitt of the ballplaxers we have. I don't think we're one of
the better. teains. Eve.,.body seems to give one hundred
percent, yet we haven't finished any higher Ulan we have."
The Padres fmlshed fifth in the National League West last
season.
Winfield never played a day in the ri:linors. He was drafted tn
three dlflerent sports '!Iter graduating !~om the Univeristy of
Minnesota, by Minnesota of the NFL, A~nta of tile NBA, Utah
ol the ABA and by the Padres. Six days after competing In tbe
College World Series, he was in a .San Diego uniform playing
left field against the Houston Astros.
He had ooe single In' four .trips off Jerry Reuss in his 'first
game, and.alter hho second game in which he homered off Ken
Forsch and added a pair Of singles, he said to himself, "mayhe
Ibis isn't that h!lrd."
..
Dave Winfield laugha about that, saying be has discovered it
Is. He hasn't received anywhere near the recognition he would
have were be playing In places like New York or Los Ailgeles,
but he feels good about the friendships and relationships he has
built with his fellow players in San Diego.
·
"We've got Buddhists, cowboys, coimtry boys and city
slickers," Says Winfield, smiling. "All I hope. now is we can
Win. Whatlwoul&lt;ln'tgiveto"bewithawlnner." .
·

come to horses
Six
additj o nal
COLUMBUS (UP!) champions)lip
events will
Purses totaling an estimated
also
be
featured,
Including
.$1. 7 million will be offered to
tile
Rising
Sun
threeyear.()ld
Ohio-bred and Ohio-owned
harness horses next year In colt trot valued at' $:io,O.OO a\
tile Ohio Sires Stakes, it was . Nortllfield Park on Aug . 9;
tile $08,000 Appleseed twoannounced Wednesday.
The purses and dates for year-old filly pace at
tile races in tile second year Raceway Park· on Aug . 28;
of the program were tile $49,000 capital tllreeannounced by Philip B. year.()Jd filly trot scheduled
Drake, chairman of the Ohio for Raceway Park Sept. 5;
Standardbred Development tile Carnation three-year-old
fily pace, wortll a total of
Fund Committee.
The eight championship $55,1100 at Lebanon Raceway
event series has been Oct. II, the $62,1100 Cardinal
scheduled at Ohio 's four three-year.()ld colt pace .at
parimutuel race !racks at Nortllfield Park Oct. 12 and
. Scioto Downs in Columbus, tile $55,000 Ladybuug twoNorthfield Park ne ar year-old filly trot slated for
Cleveland, Lebanon Raceway Lebanon Raceway Oct. 14.
The Ohio Sires Stakes, ·
near Cincinnati and Raceway
under
the auspices of tile Ohio
Park in Toledo.
Standardbred
Development
The 1971 program will be
Fund
Committee
and the
highlighted by tile secondOhio
State
Racin g
renewals of the $120,1100 Ohio
Pacing
Classic,
a Commission, was established
chaiT'~i~n~bi?
t.wro-year-old In 1975.
Al011g v.;:h ~'&gt;! ~. Oii million
colt pace to be raced at
Lebanon Raceway Sept. 11, Ohio Fair Funds Program,
and the $100,1100 Trotting Ohio-bred two and three. Classic, a championship two- year-old trotters and pacers
year old colt trot to he of both sexes will compete for
contested at Scioto Downs over. $3.75 million in stateSept. 9. Both events are the funded events at Ohio's
two richest harness races for racetracks and state and
·age, gait and sex in the world . county fairs this coming
year.

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - shape and that he Is currently
The Pittsburgh Steelers will more comfortable throwing
apparently have a healtlly the ba U than he was In the
Terry Bradshaw Sunday Dec. 12 game with the
when they play the Colts for Houstnn Oilers.
the American Football
The Steelers held their first
Conference championship In iull workout Wednesday in
Baltimore.
·preparation for the SUnday
The
28-year - old game.
quarterback suid his right
Defensive tackle Ernie
wrist seems to be in good Holmes did riot participate In
,...--- - - - -- ---... tile practice because Of a
THE DAJ .VSF.NTINEI.
chronic bleeding nose that is
DEVOTED TO THE
not considered serious.
INTER EST OF
MEIGS.MASONAREA
Rookie running hack Jack
CIIFSTERL. TANNEHILl
Deloplalne
was also absent
Ex!.!t'. Ed.
and definitely won't play in
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cily Editor
the playoff opener due ·to a
Pultlil!hOO W.jly e~ ('f.!llt Saturday
sprained
right knee sustained
by The Olrtu Valley Publi!lhing Com·
any, Ill Court St., PomcrcJy, Ohio
In tile Houstnn wln .
45700. Business Office Phone 992·
Regular guard Sam Davis
21::.6. Editurlal PIHmt 9!12·2157.
Stocoml ch1ss !)lb'lltge ))tlld lit
returned to practice after
Pumuroy , Ohili.
missing the entire week witll
~ati u n ~t l ll d\'e l·~ i~i iiH t·epr e.~ell· ·
an eye injury suffered in the .
latlvc Ward · Gr lfhl1 1CLilllp:lll)'lo-ln·
c., H1•llin elll .iJ nd G~:~ llugher DiV.,
Tampa Bay game two weeks
7~7 Third Ave., New Ym·k, N. Y. '
ago. He has been fitted with a
10017. .
Sull'll'l"ipthm l'll l.e~ : Dd lvt! retlby
spec'ial pair Qf goggles to
cal'rler where HVttii111Jle 75 cc1lls ~··
protect his eyes.
11o·etk. By Motol' Ruute where t:H ITiH
scn •it'tl not avu i111 ble, One, month,
Special team standout
$3.25. By m11 il in Ohio ami W. Va.,
Donnie
Shell, who sustained a
Or1c Yc,ur, $22.00: SiM munUl8, ·
charlie horse in tile Houaton
$1 1.50; Till'C U TnUI Ilh ~, 17.00 :
l ~l~: whc rc $Zli.OO Yl't~ r : S i \'"' 1 nu nU ~
game , worked lightly
S l ~ .f1U :
Tlwcc 111u11t h~ . $1 .50
Wednesday but is expected to
Sub.'ICI'iftlillll pt'ic:l' md11 1~ · s Su11day
'J'u I lt'h':it! hll i1t'l.
be ready lor Baltimore.

~

VAGABOND
26t'ouring bicycle

09-02· I 02 . 7

09-02·10J 5
A !i (tlt(/som l' ~~· , ~ li.~J h ·
,o;,y /i- hil,'t' / 0 1' /f· i~ lll'f'ly
1

touri11 g.
• Dt-pl•ml a hiP t·omif.t•r

hrukf'
• Li g ht w~,, i ~· ht fm tm•
• Ch nmw pi nt('(( wlwPI."l
• ~[i x I :Y,-inl'h
li g hl w(·i ~ httlt·t •!-;

• M t·•n's nr

Lud it&gt;~·

be pwrlshed

Bradshaw fit, ready

.....

EATHERWEIGHT

BANKS TO HALL?
NEW YORK' [UP! )
Ernie Banks, who hit 512
homers during his career ana
is · one of two National
Leaguers to win two consecutive Most Valuable
Player Awards, appears for
the first time on the list of
players to be considered this
year for election to the Hall of
Fame.
Others up for election for
the first time are Jim Bunning, Curt f'loud, Harvey
Kuenn and Camilo Pasr.ual.

Wash ington 8 18 J 20 83 175
Adam s Division
w L T PIS. GF GA

76ers 971

SWls

87

AVANTE

VAGABOND
10-speed

26" bicycle

09·02·30 3-8

A w cin11 bil'yc/e wh irh

d£•li ve r~; l!O ~w in
and ~,·,•a t look-;

,,:,Jir1J:

- 23-lnch diamond frame
- 10 speed derailleur gear s
- St em. shifter s, 26 ~ 1 n c h
w hee l s

Julius Erving scored 25 - Sa hara sand fi nish
BoSion
"
9 2 40 1'' · 93 points and George McGinnis
Buffal o
17 B J 37 97 68
Toron&lt;o
" 11 ' J4
10&lt; added 20 to lead Philadelphia
Cl evel and · 9 15 7 25 87 i07 pa ~t Phoenix to retain its grip
Wedn esda Y's Results
Los Ange(es 3 AUanla I .
on first place In tile Atlantic
Montr eal B Color ado 7
Division. UoydFree added 19
~~~~~'t~n~ .o~~~~~~
points and Collins 18 for the ·
lonlv games schedul ed I
76ers, while Alvan Adams led ·
Thursday ' s Games
Ph 1 j•• M in'·
NY Ra ngers " Buffalo
oen X w "' " po ...
Chicag o at Philad elphia
Pocers 118, Spurs 102
Cleveland a1 Pil&lt;sburoh
Wil Jones totaled 26 points
Vancouv er at Dei r olt
S!. Lours a1 Boston
and 19 rebounds and Dave
Brake Svrvlce
lon&lt; vga messc hedul edl
Roblsch 18 points and 12
Front
End Alignment
.
Friday's Games
NY Jslen der s at Alle nta
rebound s to lift Jndl ana over
600 E. Main 51.
997·1094
Toron&lt;o at Washlnglon
San Antonio. BUly Knight
Pomeroy , 0 .
(onl y ga mes schedul ed )
scQred 20 points for Indiana.
while Billy j'aultz and Allan
HOUSTON (UP!) - The
Brislow had 22 each for the
University· Of Houston that "the exama are over,"
football team began its Yeoman told his team .
Cottnn Bowl preparation "Maryland Is ooe of the
We(lnesdayin the Aslrodome:· nation's finest teams."
Coach BUI Yeoman sent the
The Cougars wUl work
team 1hrough an hour and a . Thursday and Friday and the
hall nan-contact workout, the first three days of next week
team's first since closing out before departing for tbeir
a 9-2-0 season on Dec. 4.
. homes for Christmas. They
"We've just got to get our will meet again In Dallaa oo
minds back on football now the afternoon Of Dec. 26.

1"

J,

?·

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

•Sun Beam &amp;
•General Appliances
•Fry Pans
•irons
•Cooker -Fryer
•Mixers
•Can Openers
•crock Pots

• Black &amp; Decker
• S&amp; R Socket Sets
• Cresent Wrenches
• Remington Guns
• Winchester
• Harrison &amp;
Richardson
• Hunting Jackets
• Hunting Pants

Here•s my new State Farm office, where I can serve
you with the best value in car , home, life 'and health
insurance . I invite you to call or drop in any time.

BILL FLETCHER '
149 S~ulh Third, Middleport, Phone 'l'll-71S5
llll

""""u.;

Sri• F1rt1 if Nit.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110 W. Main

~ 7 3Q8 . I

Pomeroy. 0.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 16, 1976

Harness horse of year

Tarkenton,
Foreman

won Little Brown_Jug
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Key- . sophomore on five-&lt;!ighths
stone Ore, winner of 11 stake and half mile tracks in the
races during 1976 including swrt's history and the alltile UtUe Brown Jug and the time two-minute mile
Cane Pace, has been voted champion during a single
tile harness horse of the year. season with 21.
Keystone Ore, trained and
The 3-year-llld bay son of
driven by Stanley Dancer, Bye Bye Byrd-Oregon 's Tiny
was an overwhelming choice h•s season's earnings of
for tile honor, PQsting a 131i-Jl $539,762, ranking second only
margin O\'.er runnerup to Albatro:;s' aU-time record .
Keystone Pioneer.
Keystone Ore, whose threeThird in tile horse of the quarter of a length loss to
year
voting
was Windshield Wiper cost him
Harribletonian winner Steve three-year-old pacing's triple
Lobell, who received 25 votes, crown , won the Ba!Ue of
while 13 otiler trotters and Saratoga in a world record
pacers received mention.
1:56 2-0 over a half-mile
Keystone Ore ended the track, and his heat victory of
season as the fastest racing

1:56 in lbe Adios was also a
record for a five-&lt;!lghths mile
track, a mark tied In The
Adios finals by Armbro
Ranger.
Other category honors as '·
voted by members of li1e U.S.
Harness Writers Association
included :
Pacer of tileyear, Keystone ·
Ore ; two-year-old pacer ,
Jade Prince; 3-year-old
pacer, Keystone Ore; aged
pacer, Rambllng Willie;
lrott£r of the. year, Sreve
Lotiell; 2-year-old troller,
Jodevin ; 3-year-&lt;Jid trotter,
Steve Lobell ; and aged
trotter, Keystone Pioneer.

Bearcats bite Miami 79-68
College Basketball Roundup tile country and th•l 1s my
By
United
Preis . idea of a ranked team.''
United Press International
Ohio
State,
whose
Gale Catlett knew what basketball fortu nes have
kind of a basketball player sunk in recent years, was
Gary Yoder was. Darrell beaten 57-05 by Ball Stat£
Hedric found out Wednesday when sophomore Dave
night.
Weimer scored with 14
Yoder, a 6-1 senior guard, seconds to go. Ball Stat£
was just about perfect in overcame a six-point deficit ·
leading
ninth
ranked midway through the second
Cmcinnati to a surprisingly half to win for tile second
easy 79-68 victory over Miami time m five . games. Robert
of Ohio, scoring 26 points,
Sims of tile Cardinals had a
"Gary Yod•· is just an game-high 16 pOints. '
excellent guard ," . said
Detroit got 28 PQints from
Catlett, afl£r his club bad John Long in beati ng
notched its six til win without Michiga n State 99-94 and
a loss over tile previously upping its record to !i-1, Bob
unbeat£n Redskins .
F'alk's 17 points led Wisconsin
Hedric, who was Impressed over Loyola of Chicago 71-68,
~Y the whole Cincinnati
squad 1 was surprised by

Yoder, saying, "he is a better
basketball pla ye r than I
tilough t."
Yoder hit 9 of 12 from the
floor, mostly on short
jumpers, and. was perfect
from the free throw line in
•
eight attempts.
EAST MEIGS ~ Archie
He had ample support from
Rose,
coach, has announced
Brian Williams with 16
the
schedule
of games
points, Bob Miller with 13 and
remaining
,
and
the player
Steve Collier wUh 12.
roster
of
the
Eastern
District
" It is important to get
Junio
r
High
basketball
ahead in any game and
Miami is a tough team to squad.
The roster , 7th grade, . is
jump out on," said Catlett,
Greg
Cole, John Riebel, Ed
whose club pulled away late
Rlffe,
Scott SkiMer, Rob
in the first half with eight
·Smith,
Rod Spurlock, Mike
straight points for a 41-31
Baker,
Brian Barringer,
halftime margin.
Mike
Bissell,
Kevin Brooks,
The Bearcats then pu t the
Larry
Patterson,
Brian
game away midway through
the second half, scoring nine Connolly, Todd Nortnn, Jeff
in a row for a l9i&gt;oint !mlge Jones, Nick Leonard, C. J.
which
Miami
never Morlan and charles Masaer.
The 8th grade roster is Bob
challenged.
Barringer,
Joe Bowers, Gene
"We just got beat by a fine
Co
le,
Greg
Wigal , Brett
basketball team, " said
Mattilews,
Rick
Long, Tony
Hedric. "They certainly are
Kennedy,
Jerry
Davis,
Gary
worthy of their high ranking.
Griggs,
Ray
Werry,
Randy
UC can play with anybody in
Staats and Dean Hawk.
The schedule :
Dec. 16, Southern, Home,
4:30 (all p.m.).
Jan. e, Fed. Hocking, Home
. 4:30.
Jan. 6, Bidwell, Home, 5:00.
Jan. 10, K. Creek, Away,

and Emmet Lewis scored 14
PQints to help Colorado defeat
Long Beach State 71&gt;-70.
Elsewhere, Georgia got ~
PQints apiece from Waiter
Daniels and Lavon Mercer to
defeat Funnan, whose freshman Jonathan Moore scored
34 points, 97-&amp;'l , and Georgia
Tech beat Davidson 59-44
behind 21 points by Tico
Brown . Wyoming beat
Eastern Washington 'IS-&lt;i6,
Southern Illinois ripped Cal
Polo-San Luis Obispo 79-50,
St. Bonaventure crushed
CCNY 116-76, Harvard
defeated Dartmouth 53-44,
Long Island University
topped St. Peter's 611-01 and .
Xavier of Ohio stopped
Evansville 89-79.

on "All-Stars
NEW YORK (UP!) - Minnesota 's record-breaking
backfield tandem of Fran
Tarkenton and Chuck
Foreman bead up United
Press International's 1976
National Football Conference
all~ar team.
Tarkenton became lile.first
quarterback to throw for 300
career touchdown PasseS thla
season when be tosaed 17 In
raise his lkeason tntal to
308. He already holds lhe
NFL career records in pass
attempts (5,637), completlons
(3,186) and yardage (41,801 ).
Foreman was the lop vote
getter with 40 from the 42man board, composed of
three wriiA!rs from each of the
a NFC cities. He set a VIking
club rushing record with 1,155
yards this season, led the
team in pess receiving with
55 catches for 567 yards, and
scored an NFC-hlgh a louch-

1-Tbe DallySenllnel,Mlddleport-Porneroy, 0., Thuraday, Dec. 16,1976

AT HOJ,fE 8A1URDAY
RACINE - Tile Sou them

Hl&amp;k Sobool buketb•ll
team wm pLoy the Kyser
,Creek Boboall Frlday
eveolq at KC. Salllnlay
eve.blg, the squad will h•t
SymmH Valley.

grabbed two of the 0\her
defensive openln~ · with linebacker Chris Hanburger
strong safety Ken Houston.
The remainder of the
defense iricluded end Tommy
Hart of San Francisco, tackle
Wally Otambers Of Oticago,
middle linebacker . Bill
Bergey of Philadelphia, free
safety Cliff Harrill of Dallas
and punter John James of
Atlanta.

LADIES &amp; GIRLS

Wednesday 's Col lege Ba skefba ll
Res ult s
By Un i ted Pre ss .l nt ernat io na t
Eilst.
Ade lphi 7~ John Jay 60
C'nge Tch . 93 B' ldwn Wa ll ace

"Har vard 53 Dartmouth

.&lt;1~

Hofstra 95 St Fr n I N Y J 9d (ot l

Ro~es

ATRJGHT,aboveisMlchaeiSalser, Racine, who bagged this!Opoint buck weighing IDS ·
pounds. At left Ia Gene C~ney, Route I, MinerSville, who made his first hit in four years of
hunling, bagging this eight point buck. Both kUla were made on the la.st week of !be deer
season.

Tarkenton and . Foreman
were two of six Vikings
named In the all star team,
joining rookie wide receiver
Sammie White, offensive
linemen Ron Yary (tackle)
and Ed White (guard) and
defensive tackle Alan Page.
Chicago's Walter Pa)'lol\,
the NFC's leading rusher
with 1,390 yards, joined
Foreman in the backfield
while the Dallas Cowboys
claimed the two other
receiver SPQts with Drew
Pearson selecred at .flanker
and Billy Joe DuPree given
the nod al tight end. Pearson
led the NFC with 58 catches.
The offense was rounded
out by !he St. Louis
Cardinals, who placed three
offensive linemen - center
Tom Banks, guard Conrad
Dobler and tackle Dan
Dierdorf - along with
kicking speciallst Jim
Bakken. St. Louis also placed
Roger Wehrli ill cornerback
5:00 . .
on
the. de!enslve unit.
Jan. 13, Belpre, Away, ~ : 00.
.The
·Los Angeles Rams had
Jan. 30, Vintnn, HQllle, ~:00 .
three
.
members of the
Jan . '1:1, WaiA!rloo, Away,
defensive
unit, end Jack
~ : 00 .
Feb . 3, Fed. Hocking , Youngblood, linebacker Isiah
Robertson and cornerback
Away, 4:30.
Feb. 7, Southern, Away, Monte Jackson, whUe the
Washington Redsklns
4:30.
Feb. 10, Bidwell, Away, Bacon Bengals'
5:00.
Feb. 14, K. Creek, Home, 'most valuable;
5:00.
CINCJNNA11 (UP!) - Coy
Bacon, the veteran defensive
end who gave the Cind11118ti
Bengals the pasa rush they
desperately needed, today
was named the team's most
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio valuable player for ·1976.
(UP!)- Denny Stolz is back. .· Bacon sacked opposing
Stolz, who resigned as head quarterbacks 26 times this
football coach at Michigan pest season, the best in the
State University after the NFL, and just one less than
NCAA discovered violations the entire Bengals team
by the school's athletic ad- managed last year.
ministration, Wednesday
night was named the new before a Big Ten press
head coach at Bowling Green conference· in Chicago,
State !Jniversity.
reportedly called to aMounce
The naming of Stolz the conference's penalties to
ironically came just hours be levied against MSU.. •

;

MEIGS HIGH GIRLS - Girls basketball ill off and
running at Meigs High with this squad of vell!ra
working hard . Front, 1-r , are Mel Snouffer, Tracy

GffiLS ARE LEAPERS TOO - Earlier this ,week
Eastern and Meigs High eirls tangled in a basketball
g1110e. In boys' play, the "leapers" are sought out by the
coach. It's no different with the girls. Above Pam
Vaughan of Meiga (10) is going up with a shot and Becky
Windon (45) of Eastern is contesting her. -: Gary Sisk .

1971&gt;-77 WHI'IE FAL(ONS - Front, 1-&lt;, Jack Smith,
Bob Barnitz, Charlie Zuspan, Jerry Roush and Don
R~ll . Second row, head coach Jim SCherr, Rick

Buzzard, Todd Rollins, Jerry TUcker, Kelvin Horiaker,
Phil Hobbs, Greg Blessing, Bob Nicewander, Tim Davia,
Mike Goldsberry, Tim Smith, Tlm Sayre and asalstant
coach Homer Preece.
/

Howard 66 Rober! Morr is M

"

Sh!!ph er d 7~ Ott er bei n 6 1
Al lent own 65 Juniata 63
Bryant 95 SE Ma ss . 85 (o t l
Cheyney 77 Bloom5 burg 68
Haverford 83 Ursin us 6'1
Mercy hur5 1 107 Tiff in 78
R.I. Col . 104 WOrcester St . 98
W. Cheste r 85 Mille r s'.'ill e 71
Concor d 85 W. Virg-in ia St . 81
Midwest

Ball St . 57 Ohio St at e 55
Cincin nat i 79 Miami {Qhio l 68
Defia nce 102 Earlham 70
Mount Union 79 Wi l mington 54
Akron 71 Wright St . 59
SIU -Cbn'dale 79 Ca l P ol SLO 50
Xevler (Ohio ) 89 Evansv i lle 79
Wisconsin 71 Loyola . fIll. ) 68
Detroil 99 M ichigan St 94
Kan .Newman 79
St
Mary
( P'nsl 59
Southwester n ( Ka n . ) 64 Bet hel

&lt;3

l

.

South
Radford 85 B'dgewater fV a . J !!7
Geor gia Te ch 59 Da vidson 4&lt;1
Geor gi a 97 Fur man 83
Lander 107 Clalltn 84
N L -Ashevit le 7!! Augus ta 77
Ky . W'slyen 88 Tenn . W'slyan

83
Southwest
Aus tin P . Sl. eo Or a t R'bts 76
51. Mar v 's (Tex . J 75 SW Te~~: 57
West
Co lorado 76 ~ong Beach St . 70
Wyom ing 75 E. W-'Shington 66
Sheppar d, w . va . 7l ot
terbeln 61
Calvi n , Mich 81 Ashland 8o
Central S tate 11'4 Detrolt ln St .

0;1~

Northern 7-9 Adr ian .
M lch 76
wmenberg 81 Point Par k ,

c:..~ eJ;2e

Mellon 93 Baldw in
Wa ll ace 14

Yo un qs tow n St. 95 A lli a n ce ,

Pa . 68
M cr c:yhu rs.t. Pa 101 T i ffin 7fl

stand at $42tl277

r~-~~~·n••n~I&lt;:H&lt;=r.:&lt;~r.~
w
.

Gill

Certificates
Available
In Any
nil

~

Middleport Village Council semen! made totaling $3,I06. ~ SE!: BAHR'S FOR·-::;.··-had .$42,276.56 in spendable
The balance on obligated VJ FINEST FASHIONS MADE
funds as of Nov. 30, according funds of the Board of Public 111
to the month report o~ Clerk- Affairs as of Nov. 30 totaled ~ OPEN EVERY NIGHT t-.- ;;:--Treasurer Gene Grate given $189,025.56 With re cetpts, . r.l'
to council members Monday di sburse ments and the W
TIL 8 P.M.
night.
.
~lance of each, _respectively, '11:
A community Christmas
Receipts, disbursements mcludlng. samtary ·sewer, Ill f
program will be held at 7 p:m.
from each fund during the $3,989.13,$4,227.02, $37,055.61 ; ~ .
on Dec. 22 at the communitv
month and the balance in sanitary sewer escrow, $60, r.l
........,..
Clothing For
tree on the upper parking lot
each, respectively, as of Nov. no disbursements , ~
Men and
in Pomeroy by the Pomeroy
30 include :
$13l,llli5.09; water, $10,196.69, VJ
Women
Citizens Action Committee.
• Gen eral , $7,883 ,50, $7,042.45, $13,421.56; water 11!
During the program Santa
$5,230.70, $24 ,3 42 .06 ; meter trusts, $175, $166.61, u~*il
will be on hand, there will be
cemetery, 1309, 1794.28, $6,893.10. Receipts into the ~
""'"'"'
treats for the children, and
u
. fir e equipment board's obligated fund s W
Lay -A\Yay Pli~n - Bai~k•~meri•tar'd .....•.. L .. 1u~-=
360
42
there will be singing by the
1300, · S287 .71, $195.30; during the month totaled W
OPEN 'TIL 8 P.M. EVERY N
"Voices of Liberty" Choir
swinuning pool, $1.R?, $8.90, $14,4211.82 compared lo ex- 11ll'l
~~ -H
direcled by Mrs. June Van
$2,936.68; planning com- penditures of $11,436.06.
1o1
Vranken.
mission, no receipts, $134,
The bonded lmlebtedness of
N
$80.40; street maintenance, the town stands at . W • 2nd Ave~ Middleport, 0.
:
992-2351 fi
$801.13, $2,8!6.50, $2,600.34; $1,377,566.25 or $494!81 per
,
VI
fed era I revenue sha rlng , capita·
i ~&lt;:~1&lt;0(17:0:&lt;"" ~~I&lt;:&lt; !:&lt;I&lt; 1&lt;::1 1&lt;::1 ~ I!S::t~&lt;:&lt;!&lt;¥ ~ ~ l:&lt;l&lt; !&lt;:Ill*~&lt;= 1:&lt;1&lt; ~ lj;JII&lt;:II&lt;:I ~ 1'!:&lt;~\!ji¥Y,
$672, $378.96 , 1110,761.16 .
Receipts into the expendable
Arrests totaled ·,
funds for the month totaled
To Have Your Child's Picture Taken
$1,967.30 compared to expenditures of $!!,11lii.IO.
With ~nta At The
Village Council's obligated .
Kiddie Shoppe In
28 in November
funds stood at 132,395.92 as of
Middleport.
Nov . 30 with no receipts
during
the month of .
Twenty-&lt;!ight
arrests
were
ENCLOSED IN. A CARD
made during November by November but one · disbllr·
the Middleport Poli ce
Department according to the
monthly report of Police
Fri., Dec. 17 6-8 p.m.
Chief J. J. Cremeans.
Special
The biggest single offense
Pre-Christmas
Offer
. Sat, Dec. 18
was speeding, with eight
arrests on that charge ;
2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.
second was driving while
intoxicated and possession of
marijuana, three each, and
Santa will be
FACTORY DIRECT
di sorderly manner , four .
Walking in town every
There were two arrests for
SHIPMENT
Afternoon except during picture taking
running
a
stop
sign
and
·
o
ne
time! ..
Exhibiting an array of sea
each for failure to ,yield the shells !hilt might be the envy
Open Til 8 p.m. Each Night Until Christmas.
right of way, unsafe vehicle, of professional collectors,
failure to have vehicle un~er Mrs. Gamet Ervine of Racine
control and a~ured clear held the attention of and
distance . Three cases were. kindled an interest in the Gulf
dismissed.
of Mexico side of the Florida
Parking meter colleclions Pennsula when she spoke to
for the month totaled $804.50 Mrs. Hysell's fifth grade of
while the police cruiser was Pomeroy Friday.
driven
some 5,321 miles
1 7~ N SECOND AVE t MtDOlEPORT. OH 45160
Mrs. Ervine has spent the
during
the
month.
""one (614) 992 ~~90
last 15 winters on Anna Marla
Island of the Anna Marie
Keys off the west coast of
Florida . She described the diagonal
Colol'ltak System
physical features of the
"thinks in color."
island, mentioned the Royal
• Automalical ly tracks and corrects
Palm tree which looks like a
the color .signal.
tree with a cement trunk,
" • New RCA Super AccuFilter picture
having leaves on the top.
tube sharpens contrast.
Another tree described was
For The Lady In Your Lile
• Flesh tones stay natu ral.
the Australian pine that bears
• Colors slay In lifelike balance.
tiny cones which are In great
SILVER &amp; GOLD
• Picture brightn ess adjusls automal·
demand for craft work
ically to changing room light.
among islanders.
Agricultural differences
between southeastern Ohio
And Matching Purses
and ihe Florida area ·were
evident as she told of large
dairy fanns which consist of
such herds that the milking Is .
done around the clock. There
By Connie,
Miss Wonderful,
Thom
MeAn
is no need for shelter because'
I
.
.
•
ofthe mlld weather, so there
~ ~ ~~ 1'1 ,...
are no hams.
•
women's Lined
The truck gardening industry Is a thriving business.
There are "picking your ·
.
.
,t
t own" tomatoes in January
l for $3 a bushel. The surfing
diagonal
sport is so popular that one
often looks out to see as
as 75 surfers appear
. disappear in games with the
big waves.
Leather and Urethane
Among the many shells she
exhibited were the sea urchin, eat's eye, king's crown,
Gift Certificates
By Angel Thread
sand
dollar, baby 's ear,
Available!
And Miss. Wonderful
starfish, tulip, Chinese
alpbahet, coral, ·olive, lacy,
Open Til 8 p.m. Every Night until Christmas!
coolie-hat Iippe!, c:am shell
and worm. The "hit" of the
992-5321
391 N. 2ND AVE.
exhibition was an octopus
preserved In formaldehyde 1
MIDDLEPORT; OHIO
~
Mrs . Ervine wa s orC&lt;Jmpanied by Mrs. Susan
M!1dleport, 0.
Oliver of the R.S .V.P. staff.
The annual Christmas
program of the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church will
be held at 7:30 p.m: Sunday.
Recitations and songs will
be pre•ented by children of
It is also reported by the the church and the adult choir
com mittee that work l)y will sing two songs, "0 Holy
students of Ohio University Night" and "Do You Hear
will he displayed in Pomeroy What I Hear?" l'ineteen
business houses during young people of !lie church
December including graphic . will present a Christmas
desi gns influenced by ca ntata, " His Lo•e stylistic characteristics of the Reaching" which will include
1890s portraying Pomeroy as six soloists and narrators: A
an Ohio River community candlelight ceremony will
and municipal symbols conclude the cantata.
designed for Pomeroy village F'oilowing the program Santa
offices and organ izations. ·
will make a visit to the
church.

Ouistmas program planned

t

f

R CL ·

31fz"x5" .

coaching at BG

s~ shell
collection
came from
Gulf island

'200

EASTERN GIRLS TEAM ~ A strong baeketball
campeign ill expected from this group of Eastern High
School girls this season. Front, 1-r, Tammy Fitch, Becky

Allergic reactions blamed on foods

Market Report

Spendable funds

"I 8 Every Nile Til Christmas

COLOR PHOTO

Stolz back in

but for those who are allergic, there is really no cirt-andthis most festive of seasons drled series of definitive teats
holds hidden dangers."
that can be made," he said.
He warned that perUes
lbe pelient's personal and
with rich , gaily colored famlly history can provide
cookies and cakes can be a
problem for those allergic In
mllk, wheat, eggs or artificial
colorings. Egg nog, nuts and
even turkey dressing can be a
hazard for the hypersemitlve
pertygoer.
There alao are plenty of
SALES REPORT ·
nonfood pertis during the
Oblo
Valley UvHtock Co.
holiday season for the
·Gallipolis,
Oblo
allergic person.
Deeember
11,
lt'lt
Some people are sensitive
STOCKER
CATTLE
tn Chri.stmas trees, or to the
STEERS
~ 250 to 300 lbll. 26
mold that accumulatea on
their branches, especially if to 31.50, 300 to 400 lbll. 27,50 to
the tree was cut several 36, 400 to 500 lbs. 28 to 36, 500
to 600 lbll, 28 to '!1, 1100 to 700
weeks earlier.
lbs.
27 to 34.50, 700 lbs. and
"'An open fire Is a
over
27 to 35.50.
traditional part of the holiday
HEIFER
CALVES - 250 to
scene, hut wood smoke and
300
lbs.l8
to
25, 300 to 400 lbs.
fumes can apell disaster for
19
to
27,
400
to
500 lb!l. 21 to 29,
the allergic, eapecially those
500
to
600
lbs.
20 to 30, 600 to
whose allegic symptoms take
700
lbs.
21
to
28,
700 lbs. and
the form of rhinitis or
over
18
·to
36.50.
asthma," Frazier said.
STOCK COWS &amp;: BULLS
· Even the gifts under the
(By
the .Head)- Stock Cows
Chrialmaa tree can be a
130
to
210, Stock Cows and
problem. Stuffed animals
Calves
115 to 275, Stock Bulla
harbor dust and the dust
150
to
280,
Baby Calves 8 to
mite. Finishing materials in
new, unwashed clothing can 42 ; (By the pound) CaMers &amp;:
cause allergic reactions. . Cutters Cows 19.50 to . 23,
Scented soapo, perfumes and Holstein Cows 21.50 to 24.10,
has ruled out more the like are out for- some and Commercial Bulla 23.50 to .
d
potentially serious an more tbe glue used to assemble 28.50 (1,000 lbs. and over) .
e&amp;siJ,Y recognized problems, model cars or planes can
LAMBS - Tops 90 lbs. to
no
38 to 44.50, Seconds 75 lbs.
tbink of food allergy."
cause allergic symjMOI.
to
80
28 to 34.
1l1e Christmas holidays, he
Frazier said food allergies
said, ar-e partlcularJy can appear at anytime of life, . VEAL CALVES -: Tops 220
diffiCUlt
for
children although they most often lbs. to 250 12.50 to 70.50,
suffering from allergies.
Medium 200 lbs. to 300 45 to
develop at an early age.
"Oiristmas is 'no doubt the
80,
l'ulla 4S down.
4When It comes to 1118klnl
high point of any child's year. a diagnosis of allergy lo food,
PinS - 7 to 18.

Church plans
Sunday
program

.

Burdette, Kathy Howard, Pat Vaughon; back row, Kim
Grueser, Kelly Burdette, Pam Vaughan, Betil Vaughan , ·
Cathy Meadows, Glenda Brown, Mary Boiii!S, and Cooch
Jo Bentley. - Gary Sisk picture.

LAST 2 DAYS!

L I U 68 St . Peter 's 51

Jersey C. St . 68 B' klyn Co l 54
L ehman 91 Ba ruch 87
Ru)ge r s Camden 8 1 Del. State

Jeans
Sportswear ·
S!f\'~at Shirts
Caps &amp; Hats
r Tube Socks

doWIL'!.

Windon, Klm ,Batey and La uri Matthews, Coach Susan
Thompson; back row, Teresa Edwards, Janet Ambrose,
Teresa Hannum and Vickie Epple. - Gary Sillk picture.

valuable clues, but Frazi~r
S81d. skin teats conunon m
detecting other fonns of
allergy are unreliable and
may be misleading in
searching lor causes of food
allergy.
He said the surest wa~ to a
diagnosis and cure 1s a
petlent's meticulously kept
food diary, and an
ellminatioo
diet which
off with water
and starts
bMic
nutritional needs. After a
couple of weeks oo that diet,
foods are added one by one to
see H symjMOI appear·

' Gmtrihutors to lighting _fund listed
There are 63 more
&lt;;ontrlbutors tn the Chrlatmas
lighting fund sponsored by
the Pomeroy Chamber of
cOmmerce. 'They are Judger
Manning Webster, Veterans
Memorial Hoopltal Fabric
Shop, Stlfflers Stor~, Melga
Inn, Bernard Fultz, Brown's
Tractor Sales, Dairy .Valley,
Meigs Autn . Parts, Nancy
Chapman, Ken Fuller,
Harold Conner, Jack Hesson,
Vic Derito, John M, Pape, c.
o.
Dorothea
Fisher,
BettyCore,
Baronlck,
William
T. ·
Soulaby, Dave Campbell,
David Ohlinger, Kenneth
Stewart, Don w. Mills, Carl
Jennings, Kate Welsh. J. B.

liP I

WE'VE GOT YOUR KIND
OF DEALI

G78x14
G78x15 .

O'Brien.
Betty
Ohlinger,
J.
B. O'Brien, C. R. R.
Woods Co., Dick Oiler,
John Roas, Mary Colmer,
Orlen Colmer, Charles ·
Hudson, Harold F. Jeffers,
Bob Daniels, Fern Daniels,
Betty Christopherson, Ray
Hudson, Mary L. Johnson,
Bruce Johnson, Brian
Johnson, Shirley Johnson,

Don Johnson, Virginia A.

Wheeler, Scott R. Wheeler,
Nancy Konicer, Cheryl
Kooicer, Mary Kay Konlcer,
Nancy Reed, Betty Fultz, sue
Eich, Paul Eich, Bill Elch,
Eleanor R. Smith, Roberta
O'Brien, Phyllis Mullen, Mrs.
R. R. Cutler, Ethel Shasteen,
Ellzabeth Lohae, Mrs, Fred
Blaettnar, opal Goble and
Grace Eich.

J---·::::;;;:::;:;-;-::·-=-=--

26.95

. 52.55
&amp;

F.E.T.
llalanted Fr-.
SEE BOB OR NORMAN

GENERAL TIRE

'65000

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•

By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UP! Seience Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
One of every four or five
Americans is allergic to
something and a North
Carolina specialist says
many allergic reactl.ons are
caused by food.
Dr. Claude A. Frazier said
doctors understand how
pollens, mold, animal
danders and house dust
produce allergic illnesses,
but he said food Is a different
matter.
"It is my conviction that we
do not fully recognize the
nature of the extent of all
allergy symptoms caused by
the foods we eat and the
intentional and unintentional
addiUves. used jn much of our,
food,'' Frazier said in a
report in the current isaue of
the doctor's magazine, Drug
Therapy.
j'razier, a practicing
allergist in Asheville, N.C.,
and author of several books
on the subject, believes a lot
of the vague symptoms that
are dlsmisaed by peopie or
their doctors are actually
caused by food allergies.
. I'M
d .
I
,Y a VICe .. 0 my
COlleagues in medicme ls that
when differential diagnosis

BOYS

For One-Stop Shopping-

K ings Pt . Hll Queens 97
NY Tech 81 Monmouth 71
51. F r ~ncis 79 India na 1Pa . 1 62
51. Bona vent ur e 116 CCNY 76
Witten ber g Bl Point Pa r k n.
Yeshiva 60 NY Pol y 58
Y.lown St. IOh . ) 95 Alliance 68
Dowling n Yor k 65

Gloves
Shir.ts &amp; Ties ,
Socks
Boots

&amp;louses
• Slippers
Lingerie ·

rosters, games noted

basketball

MEN

Coats .
Dresses

Eastern's Junior High

College

l

.

VALLEY l!JMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
992-2709
923 S. lrd Ave.

Middltted,

HOURS
.
I
7:00toS:OO ~nday thru Fnd•Y. ·
7: OG to 4:00 S.turday

.

o.
'

ColorTrak

WINTER .BOOTS...

19"

PURSES

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

heritage ho_
use

I
I

,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 16, 1976

Harness horse of year

Tarkenton,
Foreman

won Little Brown_Jug
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Key- . sophomore on five-&lt;!ighths
stone Ore, winner of 11 stake and half mile tracks in the
races during 1976 including swrt's history and the alltile UtUe Brown Jug and the time two-minute mile
Cane Pace, has been voted champion during a single
tile harness horse of the year. season with 21.
Keystone Ore, trained and
The 3-year-llld bay son of
driven by Stanley Dancer, Bye Bye Byrd-Oregon 's Tiny
was an overwhelming choice h•s season's earnings of
for tile honor, PQsting a 131i-Jl $539,762, ranking second only
margin O\'.er runnerup to Albatro:;s' aU-time record .
Keystone Pioneer.
Keystone Ore, whose threeThird in tile horse of the quarter of a length loss to
year
voting
was Windshield Wiper cost him
Harribletonian winner Steve three-year-old pacing's triple
Lobell, who received 25 votes, crown , won the Ba!Ue of
while 13 otiler trotters and Saratoga in a world record
pacers received mention.
1:56 2-0 over a half-mile
Keystone Ore ended the track, and his heat victory of
season as the fastest racing

1:56 in lbe Adios was also a
record for a five-&lt;!lghths mile
track, a mark tied In The
Adios finals by Armbro
Ranger.
Other category honors as '·
voted by members of li1e U.S.
Harness Writers Association
included :
Pacer of tileyear, Keystone ·
Ore ; two-year-old pacer ,
Jade Prince; 3-year-old
pacer, Keystone Ore; aged
pacer, Rambllng Willie;
lrott£r of the. year, Sreve
Lotiell; 2-year-old troller,
Jodevin ; 3-year-&lt;Jid trotter,
Steve Lobell ; and aged
trotter, Keystone Pioneer.

Bearcats bite Miami 79-68
College Basketball Roundup tile country and th•l 1s my
By
United
Preis . idea of a ranked team.''
United Press International
Ohio
State,
whose
Gale Catlett knew what basketball fortu nes have
kind of a basketball player sunk in recent years, was
Gary Yoder was. Darrell beaten 57-05 by Ball Stat£
Hedric found out Wednesday when sophomore Dave
night.
Weimer scored with 14
Yoder, a 6-1 senior guard, seconds to go. Ball Stat£
was just about perfect in overcame a six-point deficit ·
leading
ninth
ranked midway through the second
Cmcinnati to a surprisingly half to win for tile second
easy 79-68 victory over Miami time m five . games. Robert
of Ohio, scoring 26 points,
Sims of tile Cardinals had a
"Gary Yod•· is just an game-high 16 pOints. '
excellent guard ," . said
Detroit got 28 PQints from
Catlett, afl£r his club bad John Long in beati ng
notched its six til win without Michiga n State 99-94 and
a loss over tile previously upping its record to !i-1, Bob
unbeat£n Redskins .
F'alk's 17 points led Wisconsin
Hedric, who was Impressed over Loyola of Chicago 71-68,
~Y the whole Cincinnati
squad 1 was surprised by

Yoder, saying, "he is a better
basketball pla ye r than I
tilough t."
Yoder hit 9 of 12 from the
floor, mostly on short
jumpers, and. was perfect
from the free throw line in
•
eight attempts.
EAST MEIGS ~ Archie
He had ample support from
Rose,
coach, has announced
Brian Williams with 16
the
schedule
of games
points, Bob Miller with 13 and
remaining
,
and
the player
Steve Collier wUh 12.
roster
of
the
Eastern
District
" It is important to get
Junio
r
High
basketball
ahead in any game and
Miami is a tough team to squad.
The roster , 7th grade, . is
jump out on," said Catlett,
Greg
Cole, John Riebel, Ed
whose club pulled away late
Rlffe,
Scott SkiMer, Rob
in the first half with eight
·Smith,
Rod Spurlock, Mike
straight points for a 41-31
Baker,
Brian Barringer,
halftime margin.
Mike
Bissell,
Kevin Brooks,
The Bearcats then pu t the
Larry
Patterson,
Brian
game away midway through
the second half, scoring nine Connolly, Todd Nortnn, Jeff
in a row for a l9i&gt;oint !mlge Jones, Nick Leonard, C. J.
which
Miami
never Morlan and charles Masaer.
The 8th grade roster is Bob
challenged.
Barringer,
Joe Bowers, Gene
"We just got beat by a fine
Co
le,
Greg
Wigal , Brett
basketball team, " said
Mattilews,
Rick
Long, Tony
Hedric. "They certainly are
Kennedy,
Jerry
Davis,
Gary
worthy of their high ranking.
Griggs,
Ray
Werry,
Randy
UC can play with anybody in
Staats and Dean Hawk.
The schedule :
Dec. 16, Southern, Home,
4:30 (all p.m.).
Jan. e, Fed. Hocking, Home
. 4:30.
Jan. 6, Bidwell, Home, 5:00.
Jan. 10, K. Creek, Away,

and Emmet Lewis scored 14
PQints to help Colorado defeat
Long Beach State 71&gt;-70.
Elsewhere, Georgia got ~
PQints apiece from Waiter
Daniels and Lavon Mercer to
defeat Funnan, whose freshman Jonathan Moore scored
34 points, 97-&amp;'l , and Georgia
Tech beat Davidson 59-44
behind 21 points by Tico
Brown . Wyoming beat
Eastern Washington 'IS-&lt;i6,
Southern Illinois ripped Cal
Polo-San Luis Obispo 79-50,
St. Bonaventure crushed
CCNY 116-76, Harvard
defeated Dartmouth 53-44,
Long Island University
topped St. Peter's 611-01 and .
Xavier of Ohio stopped
Evansville 89-79.

on "All-Stars
NEW YORK (UP!) - Minnesota 's record-breaking
backfield tandem of Fran
Tarkenton and Chuck
Foreman bead up United
Press International's 1976
National Football Conference
all~ar team.
Tarkenton became lile.first
quarterback to throw for 300
career touchdown PasseS thla
season when be tosaed 17 In
raise his lkeason tntal to
308. He already holds lhe
NFL career records in pass
attempts (5,637), completlons
(3,186) and yardage (41,801 ).
Foreman was the lop vote
getter with 40 from the 42man board, composed of
three wriiA!rs from each of the
a NFC cities. He set a VIking
club rushing record with 1,155
yards this season, led the
team in pess receiving with
55 catches for 567 yards, and
scored an NFC-hlgh a louch-

1-Tbe DallySenllnel,Mlddleport-Porneroy, 0., Thuraday, Dec. 16,1976

AT HOJ,fE 8A1URDAY
RACINE - Tile Sou them

Hl&amp;k Sobool buketb•ll
team wm pLoy the Kyser
,Creek Boboall Frlday
eveolq at KC. Salllnlay
eve.blg, the squad will h•t
SymmH Valley.

grabbed two of the 0\her
defensive openln~ · with linebacker Chris Hanburger
strong safety Ken Houston.
The remainder of the
defense iricluded end Tommy
Hart of San Francisco, tackle
Wally Otambers Of Oticago,
middle linebacker . Bill
Bergey of Philadelphia, free
safety Cliff Harrill of Dallas
and punter John James of
Atlanta.

LADIES &amp; GIRLS

Wednesday 's Col lege Ba skefba ll
Res ult s
By Un i ted Pre ss .l nt ernat io na t
Eilst.
Ade lphi 7~ John Jay 60
C'nge Tch . 93 B' ldwn Wa ll ace

"Har vard 53 Dartmouth

.&lt;1~

Hofstra 95 St Fr n I N Y J 9d (ot l

Ro~es

ATRJGHT,aboveisMlchaeiSalser, Racine, who bagged this!Opoint buck weighing IDS ·
pounds. At left Ia Gene C~ney, Route I, MinerSville, who made his first hit in four years of
hunling, bagging this eight point buck. Both kUla were made on the la.st week of !be deer
season.

Tarkenton and . Foreman
were two of six Vikings
named In the all star team,
joining rookie wide receiver
Sammie White, offensive
linemen Ron Yary (tackle)
and Ed White (guard) and
defensive tackle Alan Page.
Chicago's Walter Pa)'lol\,
the NFC's leading rusher
with 1,390 yards, joined
Foreman in the backfield
while the Dallas Cowboys
claimed the two other
receiver SPQts with Drew
Pearson selecred at .flanker
and Billy Joe DuPree given
the nod al tight end. Pearson
led the NFC with 58 catches.
The offense was rounded
out by !he St. Louis
Cardinals, who placed three
offensive linemen - center
Tom Banks, guard Conrad
Dobler and tackle Dan
Dierdorf - along with
kicking speciallst Jim
Bakken. St. Louis also placed
Roger Wehrli ill cornerback
5:00 . .
on
the. de!enslve unit.
Jan. 13, Belpre, Away, ~ : 00.
.The
·Los Angeles Rams had
Jan. 30, Vintnn, HQllle, ~:00 .
three
.
members of the
Jan . '1:1, WaiA!rloo, Away,
defensive
unit, end Jack
~ : 00 .
Feb . 3, Fed. Hocking , Youngblood, linebacker Isiah
Robertson and cornerback
Away, 4:30.
Feb. 7, Southern, Away, Monte Jackson, whUe the
Washington Redsklns
4:30.
Feb. 10, Bidwell, Away, Bacon Bengals'
5:00.
Feb. 14, K. Creek, Home, 'most valuable;
5:00.
CINCJNNA11 (UP!) - Coy
Bacon, the veteran defensive
end who gave the Cind11118ti
Bengals the pasa rush they
desperately needed, today
was named the team's most
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio valuable player for ·1976.
(UP!)- Denny Stolz is back. .· Bacon sacked opposing
Stolz, who resigned as head quarterbacks 26 times this
football coach at Michigan pest season, the best in the
State University after the NFL, and just one less than
NCAA discovered violations the entire Bengals team
by the school's athletic ad- managed last year.
ministration, Wednesday
night was named the new before a Big Ten press
head coach at Bowling Green conference· in Chicago,
State !Jniversity.
reportedly called to aMounce
The naming of Stolz the conference's penalties to
ironically came just hours be levied against MSU.. •

;

MEIGS HIGH GIRLS - Girls basketball ill off and
running at Meigs High with this squad of vell!ra
working hard . Front, 1-r , are Mel Snouffer, Tracy

GffiLS ARE LEAPERS TOO - Earlier this ,week
Eastern and Meigs High eirls tangled in a basketball
g1110e. In boys' play, the "leapers" are sought out by the
coach. It's no different with the girls. Above Pam
Vaughan of Meiga (10) is going up with a shot and Becky
Windon (45) of Eastern is contesting her. -: Gary Sisk .

1971&gt;-77 WHI'IE FAL(ONS - Front, 1-&lt;, Jack Smith,
Bob Barnitz, Charlie Zuspan, Jerry Roush and Don
R~ll . Second row, head coach Jim SCherr, Rick

Buzzard, Todd Rollins, Jerry TUcker, Kelvin Horiaker,
Phil Hobbs, Greg Blessing, Bob Nicewander, Tim Davia,
Mike Goldsberry, Tim Smith, Tlm Sayre and asalstant
coach Homer Preece.
/

Howard 66 Rober! Morr is M

"

Sh!!ph er d 7~ Ott er bei n 6 1
Al lent own 65 Juniata 63
Bryant 95 SE Ma ss . 85 (o t l
Cheyney 77 Bloom5 burg 68
Haverford 83 Ursin us 6'1
Mercy hur5 1 107 Tiff in 78
R.I. Col . 104 WOrcester St . 98
W. Cheste r 85 Mille r s'.'ill e 71
Concor d 85 W. Virg-in ia St . 81
Midwest

Ball St . 57 Ohio St at e 55
Cincin nat i 79 Miami {Qhio l 68
Defia nce 102 Earlham 70
Mount Union 79 Wi l mington 54
Akron 71 Wright St . 59
SIU -Cbn'dale 79 Ca l P ol SLO 50
Xevler (Ohio ) 89 Evansv i lle 79
Wisconsin 71 Loyola . fIll. ) 68
Detroil 99 M ichigan St 94
Kan .Newman 79
St
Mary
( P'nsl 59
Southwester n ( Ka n . ) 64 Bet hel

&lt;3

l

.

South
Radford 85 B'dgewater fV a . J !!7
Geor gia Te ch 59 Da vidson 4&lt;1
Geor gi a 97 Fur man 83
Lander 107 Clalltn 84
N L -Ashevit le 7!! Augus ta 77
Ky . W'slyen 88 Tenn . W'slyan

83
Southwest
Aus tin P . Sl. eo Or a t R'bts 76
51. Mar v 's (Tex . J 75 SW Te~~: 57
West
Co lorado 76 ~ong Beach St . 70
Wyom ing 75 E. W-'Shington 66
Sheppar d, w . va . 7l ot
terbeln 61
Calvi n , Mich 81 Ashland 8o
Central S tate 11'4 Detrolt ln St .

0;1~

Northern 7-9 Adr ian .
M lch 76
wmenberg 81 Point Par k ,

c:..~ eJ;2e

Mellon 93 Baldw in
Wa ll ace 14

Yo un qs tow n St. 95 A lli a n ce ,

Pa . 68
M cr c:yhu rs.t. Pa 101 T i ffin 7fl

stand at $42tl277

r~-~~~·n••n~I&lt;:H&lt;=r.:&lt;~r.~
w
.

Gill

Certificates
Available
In Any
nil

~

Middleport Village Council semen! made totaling $3,I06. ~ SE!: BAHR'S FOR·-::;.··-had .$42,276.56 in spendable
The balance on obligated VJ FINEST FASHIONS MADE
funds as of Nov. 30, according funds of the Board of Public 111
to the month report o~ Clerk- Affairs as of Nov. 30 totaled ~ OPEN EVERY NIGHT t-.- ;;:--Treasurer Gene Grate given $189,025.56 With re cetpts, . r.l'
to council members Monday di sburse ments and the W
TIL 8 P.M.
night.
.
~lance of each, _respectively, '11:
A community Christmas
Receipts, disbursements mcludlng. samtary ·sewer, Ill f
program will be held at 7 p:m.
from each fund during the $3,989.13,$4,227.02, $37,055.61 ; ~ .
on Dec. 22 at the communitv
month and the balance in sanitary sewer escrow, $60, r.l
........,..
Clothing For
tree on the upper parking lot
each, respectively, as of Nov. no disbursements , ~
Men and
in Pomeroy by the Pomeroy
30 include :
$13l,llli5.09; water, $10,196.69, VJ
Women
Citizens Action Committee.
• Gen eral , $7,883 ,50, $7,042.45, $13,421.56; water 11!
During the program Santa
$5,230.70, $24 ,3 42 .06 ; meter trusts, $175, $166.61, u~*il
will be on hand, there will be
cemetery, 1309, 1794.28, $6,893.10. Receipts into the ~
""'"'"'
treats for the children, and
u
. fir e equipment board's obligated fund s W
Lay -A\Yay Pli~n - Bai~k•~meri•tar'd .....•.. L .. 1u~-=
360
42
there will be singing by the
1300, · S287 .71, $195.30; during the month totaled W
OPEN 'TIL 8 P.M. EVERY N
"Voices of Liberty" Choir
swinuning pool, $1.R?, $8.90, $14,4211.82 compared lo ex- 11ll'l
~~ -H
direcled by Mrs. June Van
$2,936.68; planning com- penditures of $11,436.06.
1o1
Vranken.
mission, no receipts, $134,
The bonded lmlebtedness of
N
$80.40; street maintenance, the town stands at . W • 2nd Ave~ Middleport, 0.
:
992-2351 fi
$801.13, $2,8!6.50, $2,600.34; $1,377,566.25 or $494!81 per
,
VI
fed era I revenue sha rlng , capita·
i ~&lt;:~1&lt;0(17:0:&lt;"" ~~I&lt;:&lt; !:&lt;I&lt; 1&lt;::1 1&lt;::1 ~ I!S::t~&lt;:&lt;!&lt;¥ ~ ~ l:&lt;l&lt; !&lt;:Ill*~&lt;= 1:&lt;1&lt; ~ lj;JII&lt;:II&lt;:I ~ 1'!:&lt;~\!ji¥Y,
$672, $378.96 , 1110,761.16 .
Receipts into the expendable
Arrests totaled ·,
funds for the month totaled
To Have Your Child's Picture Taken
$1,967.30 compared to expenditures of $!!,11lii.IO.
With ~nta At The
Village Council's obligated .
Kiddie Shoppe In
28 in November
funds stood at 132,395.92 as of
Middleport.
Nov . 30 with no receipts
during
the month of .
Twenty-&lt;!ight
arrests
were
ENCLOSED IN. A CARD
made during November by November but one · disbllr·
the Middleport Poli ce
Department according to the
monthly report of Police
Fri., Dec. 17 6-8 p.m.
Chief J. J. Cremeans.
Special
The biggest single offense
Pre-Christmas
Offer
. Sat, Dec. 18
was speeding, with eight
arrests on that charge ;
2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.
second was driving while
intoxicated and possession of
marijuana, three each, and
Santa will be
FACTORY DIRECT
di sorderly manner , four .
Walking in town every
There were two arrests for
SHIPMENT
Afternoon except during picture taking
running
a
stop
sign
and
·
o
ne
time! ..
Exhibiting an array of sea
each for failure to ,yield the shells !hilt might be the envy
Open Til 8 p.m. Each Night Until Christmas.
right of way, unsafe vehicle, of professional collectors,
failure to have vehicle un~er Mrs. Gamet Ervine of Racine
control and a~ured clear held the attention of and
distance . Three cases were. kindled an interest in the Gulf
dismissed.
of Mexico side of the Florida
Parking meter colleclions Pennsula when she spoke to
for the month totaled $804.50 Mrs. Hysell's fifth grade of
while the police cruiser was Pomeroy Friday.
driven
some 5,321 miles
1 7~ N SECOND AVE t MtDOlEPORT. OH 45160
Mrs. Ervine has spent the
during
the
month.
""one (614) 992 ~~90
last 15 winters on Anna Marla
Island of the Anna Marie
Keys off the west coast of
Florida . She described the diagonal
Colol'ltak System
physical features of the
"thinks in color."
island, mentioned the Royal
• Automalical ly tracks and corrects
Palm tree which looks like a
the color .signal.
tree with a cement trunk,
" • New RCA Super AccuFilter picture
having leaves on the top.
tube sharpens contrast.
Another tree described was
For The Lady In Your Lile
• Flesh tones stay natu ral.
the Australian pine that bears
• Colors slay In lifelike balance.
tiny cones which are In great
SILVER &amp; GOLD
• Picture brightn ess adjusls automal·
demand for craft work
ically to changing room light.
among islanders.
Agricultural differences
between southeastern Ohio
And Matching Purses
and ihe Florida area ·were
evident as she told of large
dairy fanns which consist of
such herds that the milking Is .
done around the clock. There
By Connie,
Miss Wonderful,
Thom
MeAn
is no need for shelter because'
I
.
.
•
ofthe mlld weather, so there
~ ~ ~~ 1'1 ,...
are no hams.
•
women's Lined
The truck gardening industry Is a thriving business.
There are "picking your ·
.
.
,t
t own" tomatoes in January
l for $3 a bushel. The surfing
diagonal
sport is so popular that one
often looks out to see as
as 75 surfers appear
. disappear in games with the
big waves.
Leather and Urethane
Among the many shells she
exhibited were the sea urchin, eat's eye, king's crown,
Gift Certificates
By Angel Thread
sand
dollar, baby 's ear,
Available!
And Miss. Wonderful
starfish, tulip, Chinese
alpbahet, coral, ·olive, lacy,
Open Til 8 p.m. Every Night until Christmas!
coolie-hat Iippe!, c:am shell
and worm. The "hit" of the
992-5321
391 N. 2ND AVE.
exhibition was an octopus
preserved In formaldehyde 1
MIDDLEPORT; OHIO
~
Mrs . Ervine wa s orC&lt;Jmpanied by Mrs. Susan
M!1dleport, 0.
Oliver of the R.S .V.P. staff.
The annual Christmas
program of the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church will
be held at 7:30 p.m: Sunday.
Recitations and songs will
be pre•ented by children of
It is also reported by the the church and the adult choir
com mittee that work l)y will sing two songs, "0 Holy
students of Ohio University Night" and "Do You Hear
will he displayed in Pomeroy What I Hear?" l'ineteen
business houses during young people of !lie church
December including graphic . will present a Christmas
desi gns influenced by ca ntata, " His Lo•e stylistic characteristics of the Reaching" which will include
1890s portraying Pomeroy as six soloists and narrators: A
an Ohio River community candlelight ceremony will
and municipal symbols conclude the cantata.
designed for Pomeroy village F'oilowing the program Santa
offices and organ izations. ·
will make a visit to the
church.

Ouistmas program planned

t

f

R CL ·

31fz"x5" .

coaching at BG

s~ shell
collection
came from
Gulf island

'200

EASTERN GIRLS TEAM ~ A strong baeketball
campeign ill expected from this group of Eastern High
School girls this season. Front, 1-r, Tammy Fitch, Becky

Allergic reactions blamed on foods

Market Report

Spendable funds

"I 8 Every Nile Til Christmas

COLOR PHOTO

Stolz back in

but for those who are allergic, there is really no cirt-andthis most festive of seasons drled series of definitive teats
holds hidden dangers."
that can be made," he said.
He warned that perUes
lbe pelient's personal and
with rich , gaily colored famlly history can provide
cookies and cakes can be a
problem for those allergic In
mllk, wheat, eggs or artificial
colorings. Egg nog, nuts and
even turkey dressing can be a
hazard for the hypersemitlve
pertygoer.
There alao are plenty of
SALES REPORT ·
nonfood pertis during the
Oblo
Valley UvHtock Co.
holiday season for the
·Gallipolis,
Oblo
allergic person.
Deeember
11,
lt'lt
Some people are sensitive
STOCKER
CATTLE
tn Chri.stmas trees, or to the
STEERS
~ 250 to 300 lbll. 26
mold that accumulatea on
their branches, especially if to 31.50, 300 to 400 lbll. 27,50 to
the tree was cut several 36, 400 to 500 lbs. 28 to 36, 500
to 600 lbll, 28 to '!1, 1100 to 700
weeks earlier.
lbs.
27 to 34.50, 700 lbs. and
"'An open fire Is a
over
27 to 35.50.
traditional part of the holiday
HEIFER
CALVES - 250 to
scene, hut wood smoke and
300
lbs.l8
to
25, 300 to 400 lbs.
fumes can apell disaster for
19
to
27,
400
to
500 lb!l. 21 to 29,
the allergic, eapecially those
500
to
600
lbs.
20 to 30, 600 to
whose allegic symptoms take
700
lbs.
21
to
28,
700 lbs. and
the form of rhinitis or
over
18
·to
36.50.
asthma," Frazier said.
STOCK COWS &amp;: BULLS
· Even the gifts under the
(By
the .Head)- Stock Cows
Chrialmaa tree can be a
130
to
210, Stock Cows and
problem. Stuffed animals
Calves
115 to 275, Stock Bulla
harbor dust and the dust
150
to
280,
Baby Calves 8 to
mite. Finishing materials in
new, unwashed clothing can 42 ; (By the pound) CaMers &amp;:
cause allergic reactions. . Cutters Cows 19.50 to . 23,
Scented soapo, perfumes and Holstein Cows 21.50 to 24.10,
has ruled out more the like are out for- some and Commercial Bulla 23.50 to .
d
potentially serious an more tbe glue used to assemble 28.50 (1,000 lbs. and over) .
e&amp;siJ,Y recognized problems, model cars or planes can
LAMBS - Tops 90 lbs. to
no
38 to 44.50, Seconds 75 lbs.
tbink of food allergy."
cause allergic symjMOI.
to
80
28 to 34.
1l1e Christmas holidays, he
Frazier said food allergies
said, ar-e partlcularJy can appear at anytime of life, . VEAL CALVES -: Tops 220
diffiCUlt
for
children although they most often lbs. to 250 12.50 to 70.50,
suffering from allergies.
Medium 200 lbs. to 300 45 to
develop at an early age.
"Oiristmas is 'no doubt the
80,
l'ulla 4S down.
4When It comes to 1118klnl
high point of any child's year. a diagnosis of allergy lo food,
PinS - 7 to 18.

Church plans
Sunday
program

.

Burdette, Kathy Howard, Pat Vaughon; back row, Kim
Grueser, Kelly Burdette, Pam Vaughan, Betil Vaughan , ·
Cathy Meadows, Glenda Brown, Mary Boiii!S, and Cooch
Jo Bentley. - Gary Sisk picture.

LAST 2 DAYS!

L I U 68 St . Peter 's 51

Jersey C. St . 68 B' klyn Co l 54
L ehman 91 Ba ruch 87
Ru)ge r s Camden 8 1 Del. State

Jeans
Sportswear ·
S!f\'~at Shirts
Caps &amp; Hats
r Tube Socks

doWIL'!.

Windon, Klm ,Batey and La uri Matthews, Coach Susan
Thompson; back row, Teresa Edwards, Janet Ambrose,
Teresa Hannum and Vickie Epple. - Gary Sillk picture.

valuable clues, but Frazi~r
S81d. skin teats conunon m
detecting other fonns of
allergy are unreliable and
may be misleading in
searching lor causes of food
allergy.
He said the surest wa~ to a
diagnosis and cure 1s a
petlent's meticulously kept
food diary, and an
ellminatioo
diet which
off with water
and starts
bMic
nutritional needs. After a
couple of weeks oo that diet,
foods are added one by one to
see H symjMOI appear·

' Gmtrihutors to lighting _fund listed
There are 63 more
&lt;;ontrlbutors tn the Chrlatmas
lighting fund sponsored by
the Pomeroy Chamber of
cOmmerce. 'They are Judger
Manning Webster, Veterans
Memorial Hoopltal Fabric
Shop, Stlfflers Stor~, Melga
Inn, Bernard Fultz, Brown's
Tractor Sales, Dairy .Valley,
Meigs Autn . Parts, Nancy
Chapman, Ken Fuller,
Harold Conner, Jack Hesson,
Vic Derito, John M, Pape, c.
o.
Dorothea
Fisher,
BettyCore,
Baronlck,
William
T. ·
Soulaby, Dave Campbell,
David Ohlinger, Kenneth
Stewart, Don w. Mills, Carl
Jennings, Kate Welsh. J. B.

liP I

WE'VE GOT YOUR KIND
OF DEALI

G78x14
G78x15 .

O'Brien.
Betty
Ohlinger,
J.
B. O'Brien, C. R. R.
Woods Co., Dick Oiler,
John Roas, Mary Colmer,
Orlen Colmer, Charles ·
Hudson, Harold F. Jeffers,
Bob Daniels, Fern Daniels,
Betty Christopherson, Ray
Hudson, Mary L. Johnson,
Bruce Johnson, Brian
Johnson, Shirley Johnson,

Don Johnson, Virginia A.

Wheeler, Scott R. Wheeler,
Nancy Konicer, Cheryl
Kooicer, Mary Kay Konlcer,
Nancy Reed, Betty Fultz, sue
Eich, Paul Eich, Bill Elch,
Eleanor R. Smith, Roberta
O'Brien, Phyllis Mullen, Mrs.
R. R. Cutler, Ethel Shasteen,
Ellzabeth Lohae, Mrs, Fred
Blaettnar, opal Goble and
Grace Eich.

J---·::::;;;:::;:;-;-::·-=-=--

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&amp;

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•

By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UP! Seience Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
One of every four or five
Americans is allergic to
something and a North
Carolina specialist says
many allergic reactl.ons are
caused by food.
Dr. Claude A. Frazier said
doctors understand how
pollens, mold, animal
danders and house dust
produce allergic illnesses,
but he said food Is a different
matter.
"It is my conviction that we
do not fully recognize the
nature of the extent of all
allergy symptoms caused by
the foods we eat and the
intentional and unintentional
addiUves. used jn much of our,
food,'' Frazier said in a
report in the current isaue of
the doctor's magazine, Drug
Therapy.
j'razier, a practicing
allergist in Asheville, N.C.,
and author of several books
on the subject, believes a lot
of the vague symptoms that
are dlsmisaed by peopie or
their doctors are actually
caused by food allergies.
. I'M
d .
I
,Y a VICe .. 0 my
COlleagues in medicme ls that
when differential diagnosis

BOYS

For One-Stop Shopping-

K ings Pt . Hll Queens 97
NY Tech 81 Monmouth 71
51. F r ~ncis 79 India na 1Pa . 1 62
51. Bona vent ur e 116 CCNY 76
Witten ber g Bl Point Pa r k n.
Yeshiva 60 NY Pol y 58
Y.lown St. IOh . ) 95 Alliance 68
Dowling n Yor k 65

Gloves
Shir.ts &amp; Ties ,
Socks
Boots

&amp;louses
• Slippers
Lingerie ·

rosters, games noted

basketball

MEN

Coats .
Dresses

Eastern's Junior High

College

l

.

VALLEY l!JMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
992-2709
923 S. lrd Ave.

Middltted,

HOURS
.
I
7:00toS:OO ~nday thru Fnd•Y. ·
7: OG to 4:00 S.turday

.

o.
'

ColorTrak

WINTER .BOOTS...

19"

PURSES

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

heritage ho_
use

I
I

,

�Santa visits party

Social
Calendar
'
THURSDAY
BUSY BEE Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. Christmas
&lt;1iMer at the church.
CUB SCOUT Pack m
Thursday , 1 p.m. at !he
American Legion Post In
Middleport.
HARRISONVli.LE
Chapter . OES, · insta llation of
orflcers, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
with all members to take a
covered dish for the wclal
·
hour.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, II :30 Thursday
at the Rock Springs Church
for a Christmas pa rty .
Members are to take cookies
and candy for the shut-in
trays. There will be a gift
exchange, and alw a grab'
ba!O(.

·

Mrs. John Newell, Jeff, Sccit
By Clarice Alleo
CHESTER - A visit from and Milly, Mr. and Mrs. Jalln
Santa was the higbllght of the Wickham, Mr. and Mrs .
Cbrlltmas par(y given by the Hobart Newell, Mr. aild Mrs.
Ladles Autlllary of the 'fire Robert A. BIUey, Mr. and , FROM TH_. STORE ·
department Sunday evening Mrs. Kirk Olevaller, Mr. and
WITH
Mrs. RDss Clellaitd, Mr. and
at the firehou.te .
EVER'(THING
A covered dish dinner and Mrs. J. M. Gaul, Mr. and
baked ham, pun~h and coffee Mrs. RDy Ouillty, Mr. and
AND MORE! .
lurnlahed by the Auxlllary , Mrs. Victor Bahr, Mr. and
All Mahogany
was served at 5:30. Blessing Mrs. Harold Newell, Louann,
And Wood I
was asked by Hobart Newell. Kathy , Kenny and Jtm.
The tables were decorated in ' Mr. and Mrs. Errol!
keeping witjl the seeaon and Cc!lroy, Mr. and Mrs. ~
under a decorated tree ·were Van Meter and ,Aivinli. Mr.:
piled gifts and candy treats and Mrs. RDger Coats and
for Ule children. After the son, Mr. and Mrs. Bill .White
2 End Tables &amp;
daughter,
Pearl ·
dinner, games were played and
Coflee Table
with several receiving prizes. Edwards, Becky, MafY., John .
Members
a~d
guests and David, Mrs., , Opal
attending were Mr. and Mrs. Eichinger and. Laq.,a, Mrs.
Clayton Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Mabel VanMeter, Mrs; Pam
&amp;bert Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman , Christie and
l'rou Must See This
Bob Bailey, Mr. and Mr,. Michael, Mrs. Larry Clark,
' Quotlty Item I
Arthur Orr, Mr. and Mrs. Tamra, Penny and Wendy,
RUBSell Well, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs. Ada
Anthony Westjohn, Mr. and VanMeter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bruce Myers, Leonard .Larry Cleland, Greg and
and Bruce Allen, Mr. and Mary Hibbs, Mark Hall,
Mrs. Marvin Taylor, Mr. and David Gau), John Ridenour
Pomeroy, 0.
.
Mrs. Ralph Keller, Mr. and and Virgil Ta'yior:

UVING .ROOM
· TABLE SET

SIMON'S

GIFT CENTER

·

MIDDLEPORT CHI.LD
Conservat ion Leag ue ,
Thursday,
6: 30
p.'ln .
Chri stm'as dinner at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. offi ce. $3 gill
exchange. Mem bers to be
there by 6 p.m .
FRIDAY
AMEETING on black lung,
2to 4 p.m. Friday at the lunch
room of" the Senior Citizens
C~nter

to
be Sund4y
TOYS FOR TOTS - Colorful stuffed toys were made
by the girls of Junior Scout troop 1100 and presented
Tuesday afternoon ID Mrs. Teresa Collins, R. N., for the
children confined ID Veterans -Memorial Hospital. Making
the !Dys was a special Christmas project of the troop.
They alw made up·a quanUty of Christmas candy and

in Pomeroy.

CHR ISTMAS prog ram,
7!30 p.m. Friday at the
Rutland Community Church .
PRECEPTOft BETA Beta
Sorority Christmas party for
mem ber s

and

hu sba nds

f 'riday, 6 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. E:Jea nor Thomas .
RACINE LEGION Post 602
Christmas dinner Friday 6
p.m. at Post Home. Turkey
and hom prov ided by post. ·
Bring own table service.
XI GAM MA MU Chapter,
'leta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Jnnual Christmas dinner £or
coupl.s, '1: 30 p. m. at the
Meigs Inn.

·\r,~;,:,::~;Z''' ' ·l:· Christrhas

SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE. Saturday at Chester Elementary
School , 9 p. m., sponsored by
Chester Fire Depa rtment.

of parents and friends Tues-

SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS PLAY, "The
G~ te of the Inn" , 7: 30 p. m.
Sunday at Mt. Hermon U.B.
Clmrch; public invited.

CHRISTMAS Prog ram,
Carleton Church, Kingsbury
'Road, 7:30 p. m. Sunday.
Santa will vis.it; pu blic
welcome.
·
·
ANN UAL Christm a s
· program at Eag le· Ridge
Community Church,- 7:30 p.
m. Sunday; public invited.
HE ML OC K GROVE
Christia n Church holiday
prqgram, 7:30p. m. Sunday,
featuring reci tat ions and
song's by children, sele&lt;;tions
by adult choir and cantata,
"His Love, Reaching" by 19
young people: visit from
Santa. Public invited.
SANTA CLAUS will be at
th e Syracuse Municipal
Building Sunday, 2 p. m.
Treats will be given to the
children of the village, age 12
•nd under.
SANTA CLAUS in Racine
at fire house Sunday, 2 p.m.
Trea l• for children 12 and
under who reside in area
served by lire department.
BRADBURY CHURCH of
Chris! adult and youth choirs
to present a play, "For Those
Who Sit in Darkness"' · at 7
p.m. Sunday evening at the
church. The public Is invited.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, 7 ~30 p.m.
Sunday at the church.

~.·

«

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.
VA .- Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Dale Siders of Gallipolis

- Announcement is made of

the birth of a six pound 12
ounce daughter, Annindia
Marie,to Mr. and Mrs. John
R. Schlotterbeck, Jr., Marietta.
The baby was horn Dec. II
at Marietta Memorial
Hospital. Mr. and Mrs.
Schlotterbeck have a son,
John Ray III, 20 months old.
Armindia Maria was named
·.after her grandmother, Mrs.
Dorsel Biggs, and her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Inez Randolph, Pomeroy.
Grandparents are Mr. ·and
Mrs. Dorsel D. Biggs, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jolm R. Schlotterbeck, Sr.,
Marietta.
·
MONDAY
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
CHRISTMAS program at Darrell Dugan of Racine are
Morning
Star
United announcing the birth of a
Methodist Church Monday, daughte~ Oct. 30. The eight
7:30 p.m. Public Invited .
pound, II ounce infant was
named Erica Dawn.Paternal
grandparents are the late
JoSeph and Grace Dugan,
Rutland. Maternal grand!Jl!rerits are Mrs. Inez Hill,
Racine, and the late .rulian
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Dugan
have a daughter, Kimberly,
14, cmd two sons, Richard, II
""d Kevin, nine.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver E.
Sayre, Jr. are announcing the
A Christmas progr,arn will birth of a son, Oliver Ill, horn
bepresented Sunday evening on ~- .3 at the U. s. Air
at tile Laurel Cliff Free Force Hospital at Scott Air
Methodist Church at· 1:30 Force Base, O'Fallon, Ill.
p.m.
The baby weighed seven ,
The Young Adult Class will pounds,. I~ ounces. Mr. and
do a play entitled " A Kmg Is Mr.. Sayre have a daughter,
Born" narrated by Mrs. crysta1Renee, age four.
Shqron W1·1ght. The music
Maternal grandparents are
will include " \Vllat Child 'is Mr. m1d Mrs. Cheste1· Wells
Tlus I", "Joy to the World;'' . ' and the maternal great''We Three Kings," and "0 granwno
·•- th cr 1·s Mrs. El1en
1
Holy Night. " The children's Wells, all of Long Bottom.
Sunday School classes will Paternal grandparenls are
also present a program under Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bailey,
U1e direction of Mrs. Shirley and the patc 1 ~na l greatFriend and Mrs. Donna gmndparcnts arc Mr. and
Gilmore.
Mrs. Clint Johnson, Portland.

Program·set

for Sunday

band concert brings
enthusiastic audience response

Ferry arc annuum:ing the

birth of a son, Kenneth Dale,
J1·. Dec. 14 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The infant weighed
seven powtds, one ounce.
Grandparents are Mr. E.
Randolph, Jr ., Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Siders, Marietta.
Mrs. Inez Randolph of
Pome ro y Is a greatgrandmother. Mr. and Mrs.
Siders have a daughter,
Christina Ann, five.
SYRACUSE-Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Honaker, Jr., Syracuse,
announce the birth of a six
pound, nine ow1ce daughter,
Lisa Kay, Dec. 9.
Maternal grand!Jl!rents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles SmiU1
o{ Middleport, and the paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Honaker, Sr.,
Mason , W. Va . Gr eatgrandparents arc Mr. and .
Mrs. Carroll Johnson ,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Kilrl
Kloes, Syracuse, Mr. and
Mrs. C. D. Gallagher, College
Park, Ga., Roy Simpkins,
Point Pleasant, and Winifred
Hu na ker. Great-greatgrandparents are Mrs. Gertrude Kloes, Middleport; C.
P. Gallaher, Georgia, and F.
L. Little, Pomeroy.
MARIETTA

cookies alld delivered them to the Angel of Mercy Nursing
Horne at Albany. At the hospitai!D present thelt toys were
front, left to right, Kim Belin, Teresa Pratt, Sandy Hoyt,
Shawn Johnwn, and Katie Klein; second row, Rhonda
Jeffers, Dixie Eblin, Angie Pratt, Georgia Joh"-"on, Ruth
Ann Fry and Kelly Clark.
·

.The Christmas concert of
the Meigs Junior High School
choirs and bonds was given
an enthusiastic reception by
the nearly filled· auditoriwn
day night.
Mrs. Paige D. Hunt, vocal
music teacher, presented the
seventh grade choir singing

" Fum ,

Fum,

Fum ,"

Eigi)th Grade Choir was to
--o Come Ail Ye Faithful"
with Camille Swindell at the
piano. Elora Faulkner and
Andrea Riggs played for
singing · of "Carol of the

"African Noel," "What Child
Is This ]" and ·'A Merry
Christmas." Pianists wei'C
Jeff Nash and Fred Young,
and other instrumentalists
were Kristin Anderson cnld Drwn," Jean H;ortun · for
·•sweet Caroline," ileth PerPatrisha Kunath.
·
· The processional of the . rin for "Do You Hear What I
Hear]" and Jayne Hoeflich
'
lor the concluding nwnber'
"Silent Night." Another instrumentalist was April
King, and directing one of the

Judging of the Christmas
decorallng contest in Middleport will be held Sunday
evening: ..
Residents are asked tp
have their decorations
lighted at 6:30 since that is
the ttme the judges will begin·
· their .tour · of tile town. No
registnation i ~ requirCd for
!Jl!rlicip&lt;ition in the contest.
Judging will be in twQ
categories, overall decorations and window or door. ·
There will be a first and second prize in eachcategory.
The contest is sponsored by
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners with a. contribu-·
lion toward the prizes from .
tile Middleport Garden Club.
After the judging is completed the judges. and the
civi~ cortunittee will r~turn
to lhe home of Mrs. Everett
Taylor for a social hour.

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
ALL BANKS IN
MEIGS COUNTY
WILL CLOSE AT
DECEMBER 24, 1976
Citizens National Bank
Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
-Pomeroy National Bank
Pomeroy-Rutland-Tuppers Plains
Racine Home National Bank

CANTATASUNDA'Oo
The · caotata, "Love
Transcending" will be
presented . by lbe adult
choir tl tile Middleport
Fl~t Blplill Church at
7:30 p. m. Sunday. The
director Is Mn. June Kloes
and Mro. Dorothy Aotbooy
Ia orgaalat. The public fl
Invited.

OSU FEE HIKED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio State University board
of trustees Wednesday
approved a $15 increase in the
undergraduate student
acceptance fee, effective nellt
Summer quarter.
The increase from $25 to $40
will help provide more
efficient and effective preenrolbnent orientation and
advising services, John T.
Mount, vice president for
regional campuses and dean
of the University College,

s8id. .
The one-time fee Is
assessed
all
new
undergraduates and tranSfer
students enrolling in one of
the degree-granting colleges
or schools in the University
College or at 1any of the
branch campuses.

POSTMASTERDIES
JEWETT, Ohio (UP!)
Jewett Postmaster Joseph D.
Conner, ~2,. was shot and
killed by his wife, who then
killed herself, authorities
said Wednesday.
The Harrison County
Sheriff's Department said
Conner and hls wife, Dorothy,
were foWld dead Tuesday
night. Conner . died from
gunshot wounds of the head
and chest.

Grange, delegate to Ohlo
State Grange was present
and gave her report.
The . Junior Grange will
meet each lllOI)th on the third
Thursday at the hall. The .
literary program was by the
lecturer, Mrs. Florence
Smith, who used as her
theme, "Christmas Music
through the Ages." Readings
were "How ID Keep the Spirit
in Christmas," by Bertha
Robinson; " A Christmas
Wish" by Mrs. Doona Wolfe.''·
"A Husband's Dilemma,"
Herbert Roush; "Christmas
Day," Florence Smith.
Carols included "0, Holy
Night,'' "Hark the Herald
Angels Sing," "0 Come All ·
Ye Faithful," "Silent Night,''
We Wish You A Merry
Christmas.''

PARTY SLATED
The Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will have
its annual Christmas dinner
party Tuesday in the EastWest Lounge. The potluck
dinner. will be at 6 p.m. and
there will be a $2 gift exchange. The doctors and
their wivllll and Scott Lucas;
hospital administrator and
Mrs. Lucas have been Invited.

.

At the conclusion of the
Eighth Grade Choir's . per-

''·

Hunt a bouquet of red roses
and a gift.
Seventh grade bond selec- ·
li ons were " Royal
Fireworks," "Two Airs'\ "'
·'The Candy Man," :'March
of the Men of Harlech," I'll
Be Home for Cln·istmas",
and " 0 Christmas Tree."
The eighth grade band
nwnbers were"O Come All
Ye Faithful," "Air from the
Messiab/' 11 Tune.s of Glory,"
''Deck the Halls," " Saint
Nicholas , and •·Joy tu the

A Christmas caniata,
"Wondrous Love," a mounlain coral drama of the
nativity written by Eusebia
Simpson Hunkins of Athens,
will be presented at the
Pomeroy United Methodist

Church at ?:p.m. Sunday. .
The combined choir~ of the
Pomeroy, ChesterandE~terprise United Methodist Churches have joined for the cantala under the direction of
Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken
with Miss Lori Ann Wood as

HOSPITALIZED
The
Rev .
Frank
clieesebrew of Shawnee, a
former Middleport resident,
has been a patient lit- the ·
IN HOSPITAL
Holzer Medical Center for the
Mrs. Dwight 'Logan ,
past four weeks. The Pomeroy, is confined to
minister suffered a second Veterans Memorial Hospital,
heat:( attack Saturday.
Room 119.
""

.:

FREDiS
CB SHOP
Big Discount Prices

RINGS:

SIGNET,
DIAMOND, MASONIC,
PRINCE GARDNER LIPPO &amp; WINN LIGHTS TIE TACKS &amp; CLASPS
BULOVA: ACCUTRON,
CARRAVELLE, POCKET
WATCHES.
WALDEMAR CHAINS
WATCH FOBS
MEN'S

on All Radios
· in Stock
Between Now
And Christmas
Phone (304) 882-2428

'
MEIGS COUNTIANS

what a
way to
wake upl

•
'

.

'IUS

9.99

WllM COoUI"OH

!!-~~~§~~~~,~,~,~~~

l iMH.

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

needs situations,
within eachfor praying
world
urgent
n oup.

~

given
of and
the
village to12 youngsters
years of age
under.

I
I

A~orican . L..ther

SANTA COMING
SYRACUSE - Santa Claus
will be at the Municipal
Building here Sunday, Dec.
19, at 2 p.m. Treats will be

COLOGNE FOR MEN
"'"- '2Jl

Bunte
\.G~
CHOCOLATE
l.~.fll .
CREME DROPS
l.,l,~
l· l,;. 'I~'~
79'
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WIIH coui'V"
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I
1
1
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- - --- - - -

5

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Bunta
LAOY CHARLOTTE /
CHOCOLATES
.

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LAFF- A - DAY

12DL

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tOt

}~piece

CORNING WARE
SET
Rq. Ull

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Wf'm OUUJ:'I.)N

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''An' Mom says to pick up a loa:
or bread on .your way home! '

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t.4 oz.
PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE

I·
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19'

SPECIAL
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liMH 1

---

Presidential
"OVER THE CALF"
MEN 'S SOCKS
• Or~• oh o
lt~u tor

•

tilt

111

'"'*' ,,; '"•Hh tH
•4.99 ,.., 0101:~ •• . 'l.OO i*'
.,.,,u, cooroo
t.m11 2 1mtn

=---------t--=----:. -.- ----------·"'1!

TWO TABLES

·Via
GIFT ITEMS FOR
· WOMEN

Tuck
CELLOPHANE TAPE

POLYESTER
KNITS

Village Blacksmith
HEDGE TRIMMER

Luelle
WINDOW SCRAPER

;a

My

Do not let loose objects lie.
around on stairways or
· traffic areas in the home.
Turn on the llght when you go
into a room that Is dark.
Fasten carpets and rugs
securely tD prevent tripping,
slipping or lalllng . Keep
shiny or waxed floors dry by
wiping up any spills
Immediately. Always open
the bathtub drain BEFORE
you get up and out of the tub.
Use EXTREME CARE If you
smoke. Avoid possible fires
by keeping all electric
appliance cords in good
repair. Even If you feel
sure-footed be sure to always
use the stairway handrail.
Follow your doctor's orders
and directions for taking any
medication, Always be alert
when walking or driving in
traffic. - CONCERNED.

~

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VELOUR

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Manpower
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DEODORANT SPRAY

29~

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WITH COUPON

LIM' I

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Open Fri. And
Sat. UntiiB p.m .

~

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IMPERIAl, DECANTER
lltii"M 111111!'1.,. In

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FEMININE SYRINGE

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~f'll The quality goes irt before the name goes on~.._,_,_

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alarms to wake you AutOm ati c Freque~cy Coiltrol o.n FM .

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OPEN EVERY
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THROUGH DEC. 23 .

POM~ROY

, . , . 1n.t 1.-n

-~~-~----------~~-~
,Love's
...
w
.

PRI!ItCESS GARDNER • .lADY SPIEDEL J~ES- ' . i!. • _
.
BULOVA WAtCHES: ACCUTIIOHS, CARAVELLE
- CHARMS - MOTHER'S PINS AND
'
NECKlACES

113 E. COURT,

wl1~

49'

DEAR POLLY - My
mother could never get the
vacuum bottles for our lunch
boxes thoroughly clean, until
she started using a baby
bottle brush. It works
wooderfully. - SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
)!
- Full grain lea ther
Peeve is with those ladies
upper
'il
who dress up to go out some
- Lea·ther lined
place and then the minute
- Steel Shank
- Neoprene sole
they get home change into an
w
- Goodyear
welt
old thing and put on old shoes.
I
construction
Husbands like tD see their
- Color rustle brown
wives looking n~1 all~ the
w
time. It does nof'COSI imy
more to always look nice and
is no more trouble. These are
the ones who get jealous If the
nice looking ladies get the
attention. -MRS. R.S.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answer! ng Blandean who
w
dyes · the feet of white
pantyhose beige so there is oo
panty line ID show when she
wears white slacks. It would
I
he much simpler II she would
just wear tan or skin colored
pantyhose . .They.work under
pastels and whl\8 pants and I
could not beUeve it until I
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
W
tried it. - BERNICE.
.
SPECIALS
W
How right you are, Bemlce.
II!
1
Group
Boys
Shoes
were
$13.49
Now
57.00
W
• I find It elfmlnales the
1
Group
Youths
and
Little
Gents
Shoes
W
P
problem completely. POLLY.
Values to S10.99 Now 55.00
DEAR POLLY - Perhaps 11 Mens Specials 55.00, 57.00, $9.00
It is because I have had a
Womens Specials $5.00, S8.0U
~
preventable mlshap that, I fi 1 Group House Slippers $1.00
feel the need to remind our
increasing nwnber of senior
citizens to be more safety
consciolL'I. I hope my list of
rrecautioos will cause others
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ID share theirs with the rest of
us .

Pierced. Earrings, Lockets, Pendants.

GOESSLER JEWELRY

Tlllf IIIOQ

iftOhM lilllt

• Pltl.d

Scrapbook suffers
from musty odor

rfinu:r;
hard to read them. I put moth
. balls in some and even
perfulilebetween .thepages of
ano!her, but neither worked.
Most of the things in these
books were fastened in with a
paste made of flour and
water. Being out in the sun
and wind did not help either
- MABEL.
DEARMABEL-Nodoubl
the odor Is from the paste.
. Why tiot put these boob In a
box that eao be lightly
las teaed. Stoff crumpled
neWipapers ai'OWid the side
and between the boob and tn1
the top and bottom of lbem.
Newsprint absorbs many
other odors, U this· !ioea· Dol
work try doog tbe same wllb
charcoal beillg put iD the
tlgblly closed bo1. Also you
coald even try baklDg soda
sprlnkled between the pages.
-POLLY.

BIRlHSTONE:

,

• t :l

a

DIAMONDS:

Admiral
AM/ FM RAPIO

CHRISTMAS STOCKING

·WELLINGTON
BOOTS

Rings, Pendants, Pierced Earrings.
Watches.

to.l

Friday, Dec. 24 - The
Prayer Vigil Service wlll be
held-at the church from 9-1 0
a.m. For more than 25 years
a Prayer Vigil has been a
vital element in the observance of Christ's birthday
in congregations ol th e
Church of God. For most of
these years groups in other
countries have joined in the
vlgU. Twenty-lour hours a
day for ·12 consecutive days a
bond of prayer is maintained
around the world - lor the
chu rch's mission, for critical

By Polly Cramer
DEA" PO' LY -

Soloists wm be Allen
Downie, Rodney Pullins, Jennie Maehir, Teresa Buckley
and Paula Eichinger. ,

Bobby R. Hunt, band director, was assisted indirecting
the concert program by his
studerit teacher, Jeff Buell.

POMEROY CHAMBER .OF COMMERCE

\

•

urganisl.

World" .

FRED W. CROW, PRESIDENT.

' '

l~aders .

In . various paHerns and
R09. S3.98.

·at Pomefiiji"·uM-cliurc!r-,.!f;~~-~~~n:

fonmuwe, Miss Eason , choir
president, ,presented" Mrs.

Fay Carpenter led in prayer.
Members then joined in the
singing of several Christmas
carols and circle prayer was
led by Mary Kelly .
Attend l n~ were: Bon nie
Fields, Becky Reed, Sue
Erwin, Sarah Gibbs,· Mary
Kelly, Orpha Field&amp; and Iva
Capehart.
Roberta Maynard ,· Susie
Wolf, Kay Grueser, Manha
Grileser, Lufema Weaver,
neiores Taylor and Thelma
Grueser.
Fay Carpenter, Patty
Maynard, Norma Greene,
Susie Bess, Margaret Dodson
and Grace CUMingham.
The members presented
the president, Orpha Fields, a
Christmas gift. She thanked
the committees for making
the dinner a ·lovely evening
enjoyed by aU attending.
Activities for the Christmas
seawn have alteady begun at
the First Church of God.
Sunday, Dec, 19, 9:311 a,m.
- The aMuai Christ's Birthday offering will be received.
Delores Taylor will be the
leader. Chirstmas treats will
also be' distributed and gifts
exchanged.
Sunday evening , Dec. 19,
7:30 p.m. - The annual
Christmas program will be
presented . A play , " God
Created Christmas," will be
presented by the Youth
Fellowship.
Wednesday, Dec. 22, 5:30
p.m. - A Christmas dinner
will be held lor the
congregation
In
th e
Missionary Building.
Thursday, Dec. 23 - The
Youth Fellowship will go
Christmas carolin g and
distribute Fruit Baskets. Ttm
Davis is the president of the
group. Kay, Grueser and
Patty Maynard are the youth

Polly's Pointers

+++

Can!4ta planned Sunday

nwnbers was Lintla Eason.

llle Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce is
attempting to raise funds for Olristmas
lighting. We know that all residents of
Pomeroy and residents of Meigs County are
interested in making Pomeroy, your county
seat attractive to outsiders. Won't you
.contribute to helping P"meroy achieve this
goal. Your tontrihutior. lo the Christmas
Lighting Fund or information pertaining to
the Chamber of Commerce should be
submitted to Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. P.O. Box 526 or phone 992-SOOS.
You need not be a businessman to join the
Chamber of Commerce, any citizen in the
county may join and help make Pomeroy
the number one village in Southeastern
Ohio.

annual Christmas dinner in
the Missionary Building
During football season, my guy was either practicing, Thui-sday evening.
The room was beautifully
playing, restricted by hLI coach, or asleep. The few times he
decorated
in keeping with the
came over, he'd be muring befqre 9 p.m. Wf never went
holiday
season.
The i.naywhere.
voeatlon
was
given
by
With basketball C&lt;lming uP, It will be the same. Then
there's balleball, golf, swimming, fishing, even wresUing. Delores Taylor. Following
· the dinner, a gift exchange
"Whatever's phyllical, Barry's into it.
. Which leaves no time for ME! He 'd· rather be with the was held with Sarah Gibbs
guys. H,e toOk mefl8blng once and we were both bored silly. To being in charge. The door
teU the truth; I hate ,11p011a, but I love him, so I pretend. I'm prize w.on by Iva Capehart
· was a ceramic snow boot
interested when he t81ks of nothing else.
.· ·
made by Becky Reed. ,
How can I get him outofthlsrut? - SPORTS WIDOW
A short business meeting
s.w.,
was condu cted by · the
Take away Barry's sports and you might have nothing left. president, Orpha Fields, who
Since heevidea!IJ 1/Nes for ~hat you hate ,I'd ~uggest you drop reminded members t.o bring
the pr'etense'lUidllearn to live witliou, ·hllii.:You're not a well- gifts for a Pl!Uent at Lakin
State Hospital.
matched pair! - HELEN
A skit was presented by
+++ .
AWORD FROM SUE : How can you love a guy whose talk Becky Reed and Gra ce
Cunningham Introducing the
b6res you silly? Really, physical attraction Isn't enough.
A jock needs a special kind of long,..,fering (or avid, new Penny-a-Day Calendars
sports-minded) girl, and yout letter says loud and clear : you · for 1977. She reminded
aren't. the one!
members to say a prayer for
the missionaries and their
+++
Dear Helen :
·
work as they give their
How could you S8Y ."Erica" was "together " when she's a pennies each day. She also
selflsb, ambltioUII female who competes with men and refuses reported that money had
the womanly role of wife and motherhood?
been sent for Christmas gills
Something is mentally wrong with a dame who insists she to the Home Mission Station
enjoys her single way and doesn't want a "permanent man." in Brooklyn, New York. Each
Not many housewives with children would trade for her year church of God locals
slick, phony "career" life, whlch will end in lonely old a~e . send Christmas gifts · or
with no one to·Jove her. Besides, she's taking a good-paying . money to the Home Missions
job away from some family man who needs thli money! -_ , _s. throughout the United States.
(A SATISFIED MRS.)
Spiritual Life Director
Delores Taylor reminded '
I. S.:
.
members that the Christ's
I said Erica was "!Diletller" because she has chosen a way Birthday offering will be
of life for which she is happily suited.
received on Sunday, Dec. 19.
So too have you. But there's a blg difference: Erica didn't The theme Is "Fear Not:. I
condemn wife and motherhood - she stmply said it wasn't for Bring You Good News." The
her.
'Prayer Vigil Hour for the
H you aren't a wee bit jealous, I. S., then why are you so local will be observed at the
vlncictive? - HELEN
, 1
~burch on Friday, Dec. 24,
+++
from 9-10 a.m. Around-theDear Rap :
World and around-th~lock
How did "Senior Prom Dropout" figure he could get by for for 12 days prior to Christonly 50 clams? At my Senior Prom, between my tux, iny girl's mas, thousands of Church of
dress, tickets, corsage, pictures, dinner, and the next day at God congregations unite in an
the shore, we spent abnost $:1l10.
unbroken chain of prayer.
We earned It aU ourselves through working for neighbors
The meeting closed with
and having two garage sales. You kno\v something? HI had it
•. to do again, I sure would I
Kids who think formal proms are a waste of money don't
!mow what they're m!Jslng. This was one of the best memories
· of our Uves. - SENIOR PROM ATTENDER
A 111gb School Sporll Widow ...

Rap:

devotions giv~ n by Delores

The New Haven Women of Taylor. A resp(insive reading
the Church of God held their was taken froin M8th. 2:1-10.

FOR COPIES OF "What Is a l;:I'Wih,'' "First Love ,"
''Getting to Know Yourself," send a stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Helen and Sue, care of this newspaper.

Grange enjoys party
LETART FALLS - Ohlo
Valley Grange 2612 Letart
Falls met at the hall Thursday evening at 6 p.m. for its
regular
meeting
and
Christmas party.
A poUuck dinner was
served and a $1 gift exchange
held.
The hall was decorated in
keeping with the Christmas
season . Grace was given by
Mrs. Florence Smith.
Worthy Master E_arly
Roush presided at the
meeting due to the Illness of
Herbert Shields . Miss
AvenWe Halliday of Laurel

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. -

By Helen and Sue Bottel

"

0.

�Santa visits party

Social
Calendar
'
THURSDAY
BUSY BEE Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. Christmas
&lt;1iMer at the church.
CUB SCOUT Pack m
Thursday , 1 p.m. at !he
American Legion Post In
Middleport.
HARRISONVli.LE
Chapter . OES, · insta llation of
orflcers, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
with all members to take a
covered dish for the wclal
·
hour.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, II :30 Thursday
at the Rock Springs Church
for a Christmas pa rty .
Members are to take cookies
and candy for the shut-in
trays. There will be a gift
exchange, and alw a grab'
ba!O(.

·

Mrs. John Newell, Jeff, Sccit
By Clarice Alleo
CHESTER - A visit from and Milly, Mr. and Mrs. Jalln
Santa was the higbllght of the Wickham, Mr. and Mrs .
Cbrlltmas par(y given by the Hobart Newell, Mr. aild Mrs.
Ladles Autlllary of the 'fire Robert A. BIUey, Mr. and , FROM TH_. STORE ·
department Sunday evening Mrs. Kirk Olevaller, Mr. and
WITH
Mrs. RDss Clellaitd, Mr. and
at the firehou.te .
EVER'(THING
A covered dish dinner and Mrs. J. M. Gaul, Mr. and
baked ham, pun~h and coffee Mrs. RDy Ouillty, Mr. and
AND MORE! .
lurnlahed by the Auxlllary , Mrs. Victor Bahr, Mr. and
All Mahogany
was served at 5:30. Blessing Mrs. Harold Newell, Louann,
And Wood I
was asked by Hobart Newell. Kathy , Kenny and Jtm.
The tables were decorated in ' Mr. and Mrs. Errol!
keeping witjl the seeaon and Cc!lroy, Mr. and Mrs. ~
under a decorated tree ·were Van Meter and ,Aivinli. Mr.:
piled gifts and candy treats and Mrs. RDger Coats and
for Ule children. After the son, Mr. and Mrs. Bill .White
2 End Tables &amp;
daughter,
Pearl ·
dinner, games were played and
Coflee Table
with several receiving prizes. Edwards, Becky, MafY., John .
Members
a~d
guests and David, Mrs., , Opal
attending were Mr. and Mrs. Eichinger and. Laq.,a, Mrs.
Clayton Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Mabel VanMeter, Mrs; Pam
&amp;bert Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman , Christie and
l'rou Must See This
Bob Bailey, Mr. and Mr,. Michael, Mrs. Larry Clark,
' Quotlty Item I
Arthur Orr, Mr. and Mrs. Tamra, Penny and Wendy,
RUBSell Well, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs. Ada
Anthony Westjohn, Mr. and VanMeter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bruce Myers, Leonard .Larry Cleland, Greg and
and Bruce Allen, Mr. and Mary Hibbs, Mark Hall,
Mrs. Marvin Taylor, Mr. and David Gau), John Ridenour
Pomeroy, 0.
.
Mrs. Ralph Keller, Mr. and and Virgil Ta'yior:

UVING .ROOM
· TABLE SET

SIMON'S

GIFT CENTER

·

MIDDLEPORT CHI.LD
Conservat ion Leag ue ,
Thursday,
6: 30
p.'ln .
Chri stm'as dinner at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. offi ce. $3 gill
exchange. Mem bers to be
there by 6 p.m .
FRIDAY
AMEETING on black lung,
2to 4 p.m. Friday at the lunch
room of" the Senior Citizens
C~nter

to
be Sund4y
TOYS FOR TOTS - Colorful stuffed toys were made
by the girls of Junior Scout troop 1100 and presented
Tuesday afternoon ID Mrs. Teresa Collins, R. N., for the
children confined ID Veterans -Memorial Hospital. Making
the !Dys was a special Christmas project of the troop.
They alw made up·a quanUty of Christmas candy and

in Pomeroy.

CHR ISTMAS prog ram,
7!30 p.m. Friday at the
Rutland Community Church .
PRECEPTOft BETA Beta
Sorority Christmas party for
mem ber s

and

hu sba nds

f 'riday, 6 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. E:Jea nor Thomas .
RACINE LEGION Post 602
Christmas dinner Friday 6
p.m. at Post Home. Turkey
and hom prov ided by post. ·
Bring own table service.
XI GAM MA MU Chapter,
'leta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Jnnual Christmas dinner £or
coupl.s, '1: 30 p. m. at the
Meigs Inn.

·\r,~;,:,::~;Z''' ' ·l:· Christrhas

SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE. Saturday at Chester Elementary
School , 9 p. m., sponsored by
Chester Fire Depa rtment.

of parents and friends Tues-

SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS PLAY, "The
G~ te of the Inn" , 7: 30 p. m.
Sunday at Mt. Hermon U.B.
Clmrch; public invited.

CHRISTMAS Prog ram,
Carleton Church, Kingsbury
'Road, 7:30 p. m. Sunday.
Santa will vis.it; pu blic
welcome.
·
·
ANN UAL Christm a s
· program at Eag le· Ridge
Community Church,- 7:30 p.
m. Sunday; public invited.
HE ML OC K GROVE
Christia n Church holiday
prqgram, 7:30p. m. Sunday,
featuring reci tat ions and
song's by children, sele&lt;;tions
by adult choir and cantata,
"His Love, Reaching" by 19
young people: visit from
Santa. Public invited.
SANTA CLAUS will be at
th e Syracuse Municipal
Building Sunday, 2 p. m.
Treats will be given to the
children of the village, age 12
•nd under.
SANTA CLAUS in Racine
at fire house Sunday, 2 p.m.
Trea l• for children 12 and
under who reside in area
served by lire department.
BRADBURY CHURCH of
Chris! adult and youth choirs
to present a play, "For Those
Who Sit in Darkness"' · at 7
p.m. Sunday evening at the
church. The public Is invited.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM,
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse, 7 ~30 p.m.
Sunday at the church.

~.·

«

GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.
VA .- Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Dale Siders of Gallipolis

- Announcement is made of

the birth of a six pound 12
ounce daughter, Annindia
Marie,to Mr. and Mrs. John
R. Schlotterbeck, Jr., Marietta.
The baby was horn Dec. II
at Marietta Memorial
Hospital. Mr. and Mrs.
Schlotterbeck have a son,
John Ray III, 20 months old.
Armindia Maria was named
·.after her grandmother, Mrs.
Dorsel Biggs, and her greatgrandmother, Mrs. Inez Randolph, Pomeroy.
Grandparents are Mr. ·and
Mrs. Dorsel D. Biggs, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jolm R. Schlotterbeck, Sr.,
Marietta.
·
MONDAY
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
CHRISTMAS program at Darrell Dugan of Racine are
Morning
Star
United announcing the birth of a
Methodist Church Monday, daughte~ Oct. 30. The eight
7:30 p.m. Public Invited .
pound, II ounce infant was
named Erica Dawn.Paternal
grandparents are the late
JoSeph and Grace Dugan,
Rutland. Maternal grand!Jl!rerits are Mrs. Inez Hill,
Racine, and the late .rulian
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Dugan
have a daughter, Kimberly,
14, cmd two sons, Richard, II
""d Kevin, nine.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver E.
Sayre, Jr. are announcing the
A Christmas progr,arn will birth of a son, Oliver Ill, horn
bepresented Sunday evening on ~- .3 at the U. s. Air
at tile Laurel Cliff Free Force Hospital at Scott Air
Methodist Church at· 1:30 Force Base, O'Fallon, Ill.
p.m.
The baby weighed seven ,
The Young Adult Class will pounds,. I~ ounces. Mr. and
do a play entitled " A Kmg Is Mr.. Sayre have a daughter,
Born" narrated by Mrs. crysta1Renee, age four.
Shqron W1·1ght. The music
Maternal grandparents are
will include " \Vllat Child 'is Mr. m1d Mrs. Cheste1· Wells
Tlus I", "Joy to the World;'' . ' and the maternal great''We Three Kings," and "0 granwno
·•- th cr 1·s Mrs. El1en
1
Holy Night. " The children's Wells, all of Long Bottom.
Sunday School classes will Paternal grandparenls are
also present a program under Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bailey,
U1e direction of Mrs. Shirley and the patc 1 ~na l greatFriend and Mrs. Donna gmndparcnts arc Mr. and
Gilmore.
Mrs. Clint Johnson, Portland.

Program·set

for Sunday

band concert brings
enthusiastic audience response

Ferry arc annuum:ing the

birth of a son, Kenneth Dale,
J1·. Dec. 14 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The infant weighed
seven powtds, one ounce.
Grandparents are Mr. E.
Randolph, Jr ., Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Siders, Marietta.
Mrs. Inez Randolph of
Pome ro y Is a greatgrandmother. Mr. and Mrs.
Siders have a daughter,
Christina Ann, five.
SYRACUSE-Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Honaker, Jr., Syracuse,
announce the birth of a six
pound, nine ow1ce daughter,
Lisa Kay, Dec. 9.
Maternal grand!Jl!rents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles SmiU1
o{ Middleport, and the paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Honaker, Sr.,
Mason , W. Va . Gr eatgrandparents arc Mr. and .
Mrs. Carroll Johnson ,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Kilrl
Kloes, Syracuse, Mr. and
Mrs. C. D. Gallagher, College
Park, Ga., Roy Simpkins,
Point Pleasant, and Winifred
Hu na ker. Great-greatgrandparents are Mrs. Gertrude Kloes, Middleport; C.
P. Gallaher, Georgia, and F.
L. Little, Pomeroy.
MARIETTA

cookies alld delivered them to the Angel of Mercy Nursing
Horne at Albany. At the hospitai!D present thelt toys were
front, left to right, Kim Belin, Teresa Pratt, Sandy Hoyt,
Shawn Johnwn, and Katie Klein; second row, Rhonda
Jeffers, Dixie Eblin, Angie Pratt, Georgia Joh"-"on, Ruth
Ann Fry and Kelly Clark.
·

.The Christmas concert of
the Meigs Junior High School
choirs and bonds was given
an enthusiastic reception by
the nearly filled· auditoriwn
day night.
Mrs. Paige D. Hunt, vocal
music teacher, presented the
seventh grade choir singing

" Fum ,

Fum,

Fum ,"

Eigi)th Grade Choir was to
--o Come Ail Ye Faithful"
with Camille Swindell at the
piano. Elora Faulkner and
Andrea Riggs played for
singing · of "Carol of the

"African Noel," "What Child
Is This ]" and ·'A Merry
Christmas." Pianists wei'C
Jeff Nash and Fred Young,
and other instrumentalists
were Kristin Anderson cnld Drwn," Jean H;ortun · for
·•sweet Caroline," ileth PerPatrisha Kunath.
·
· The processional of the . rin for "Do You Hear What I
Hear]" and Jayne Hoeflich
'
lor the concluding nwnber'
"Silent Night." Another instrumentalist was April
King, and directing one of the

Judging of the Christmas
decorallng contest in Middleport will be held Sunday
evening: ..
Residents are asked tp
have their decorations
lighted at 6:30 since that is
the ttme the judges will begin·
· their .tour · of tile town. No
registnation i ~ requirCd for
!Jl!rlicip&lt;ition in the contest.
Judging will be in twQ
categories, overall decorations and window or door. ·
There will be a first and second prize in eachcategory.
The contest is sponsored by
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners with a. contribu-·
lion toward the prizes from .
tile Middleport Garden Club.
After the judging is completed the judges. and the
civi~ cortunittee will r~turn
to lhe home of Mrs. Everett
Taylor for a social hour.

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
ALL BANKS IN
MEIGS COUNTY
WILL CLOSE AT
DECEMBER 24, 1976
Citizens National Bank
Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
-Pomeroy National Bank
Pomeroy-Rutland-Tuppers Plains
Racine Home National Bank

CANTATASUNDA'Oo
The · caotata, "Love
Transcending" will be
presented . by lbe adult
choir tl tile Middleport
Fl~t Blplill Church at
7:30 p. m. Sunday. The
director Is Mn. June Kloes
and Mro. Dorothy Aotbooy
Ia orgaalat. The public fl
Invited.

OSU FEE HIKED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio State University board
of trustees Wednesday
approved a $15 increase in the
undergraduate student
acceptance fee, effective nellt
Summer quarter.
The increase from $25 to $40
will help provide more
efficient and effective preenrolbnent orientation and
advising services, John T.
Mount, vice president for
regional campuses and dean
of the University College,

s8id. .
The one-time fee Is
assessed
all
new
undergraduates and tranSfer
students enrolling in one of
the degree-granting colleges
or schools in the University
College or at 1any of the
branch campuses.

POSTMASTERDIES
JEWETT, Ohio (UP!)
Jewett Postmaster Joseph D.
Conner, ~2,. was shot and
killed by his wife, who then
killed herself, authorities
said Wednesday.
The Harrison County
Sheriff's Department said
Conner and hls wife, Dorothy,
were foWld dead Tuesday
night. Conner . died from
gunshot wounds of the head
and chest.

Grange, delegate to Ohlo
State Grange was present
and gave her report.
The . Junior Grange will
meet each lllOI)th on the third
Thursday at the hall. The .
literary program was by the
lecturer, Mrs. Florence
Smith, who used as her
theme, "Christmas Music
through the Ages." Readings
were "How ID Keep the Spirit
in Christmas," by Bertha
Robinson; " A Christmas
Wish" by Mrs. Doona Wolfe.''·
"A Husband's Dilemma,"
Herbert Roush; "Christmas
Day," Florence Smith.
Carols included "0, Holy
Night,'' "Hark the Herald
Angels Sing," "0 Come All ·
Ye Faithful," "Silent Night,''
We Wish You A Merry
Christmas.''

PARTY SLATED
The Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will have
its annual Christmas dinner
party Tuesday in the EastWest Lounge. The potluck
dinner. will be at 6 p.m. and
there will be a $2 gift exchange. The doctors and
their wivllll and Scott Lucas;
hospital administrator and
Mrs. Lucas have been Invited.

.

At the conclusion of the
Eighth Grade Choir's . per-

''·

Hunt a bouquet of red roses
and a gift.
Seventh grade bond selec- ·
li ons were " Royal
Fireworks," "Two Airs'\ "'
·'The Candy Man," :'March
of the Men of Harlech," I'll
Be Home for Cln·istmas",
and " 0 Christmas Tree."
The eighth grade band
nwnbers were"O Come All
Ye Faithful," "Air from the
Messiab/' 11 Tune.s of Glory,"
''Deck the Halls," " Saint
Nicholas , and •·Joy tu the

A Christmas caniata,
"Wondrous Love," a mounlain coral drama of the
nativity written by Eusebia
Simpson Hunkins of Athens,
will be presented at the
Pomeroy United Methodist

Church at ?:p.m. Sunday. .
The combined choir~ of the
Pomeroy, ChesterandE~terprise United Methodist Churches have joined for the cantala under the direction of
Mrs. Harvey Van Vranken
with Miss Lori Ann Wood as

HOSPITALIZED
The
Rev .
Frank
clieesebrew of Shawnee, a
former Middleport resident,
has been a patient lit- the ·
IN HOSPITAL
Holzer Medical Center for the
Mrs. Dwight 'Logan ,
past four weeks. The Pomeroy, is confined to
minister suffered a second Veterans Memorial Hospital,
heat:( attack Saturday.
Room 119.
""

.:

FREDiS
CB SHOP
Big Discount Prices

RINGS:

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PRINCE GARDNER LIPPO &amp; WINN LIGHTS TIE TACKS &amp; CLASPS
BULOVA: ACCUTRON,
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WALDEMAR CHAINS
WATCH FOBS
MEN'S

on All Radios
· in Stock
Between Now
And Christmas
Phone (304) 882-2428

'
MEIGS COUNTIANS

what a
way to
wake upl

•
'

.

'IUS

9.99

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!!-~~~§~~~~,~,~,~~~

l iMH.

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

needs situations,
within eachfor praying
world
urgent
n oup.

~

given
of and
the
village to12 youngsters
years of age
under.

I
I

A~orican . L..ther

SANTA COMING
SYRACUSE - Santa Claus
will be at the Municipal
Building here Sunday, Dec.
19, at 2 p.m. Treats will be

COLOGNE FOR MEN
"'"- '2Jl

Bunte
\.G~
CHOCOLATE
l.~.fll .
CREME DROPS
l.,l,~
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LAOY CHARLOTTE /
CHOCOLATES
.

...

LAFF- A - DAY

12DL

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CORNING WARE
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Rq. Ull

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''An' Mom says to pick up a loa:
or bread on .your way home! '

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PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE

I·
I

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SPECIAL
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liMH 1

---

Presidential
"OVER THE CALF"
MEN 'S SOCKS
• Or~• oh o
lt~u tor

•

tilt

111

'"'*' ,,; '"•Hh tH
•4.99 ,.., 0101:~ •• . 'l.OO i*'
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t.m11 2 1mtn

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TWO TABLES

·Via
GIFT ITEMS FOR
· WOMEN

Tuck
CELLOPHANE TAPE

POLYESTER
KNITS

Village Blacksmith
HEDGE TRIMMER

Luelle
WINDOW SCRAPER

;a

My

Do not let loose objects lie.
around on stairways or
· traffic areas in the home.
Turn on the llght when you go
into a room that Is dark.
Fasten carpets and rugs
securely tD prevent tripping,
slipping or lalllng . Keep
shiny or waxed floors dry by
wiping up any spills
Immediately. Always open
the bathtub drain BEFORE
you get up and out of the tub.
Use EXTREME CARE If you
smoke. Avoid possible fires
by keeping all electric
appliance cords in good
repair. Even If you feel
sure-footed be sure to always
use the stairway handrail.
Follow your doctor's orders
and directions for taking any
medication, Always be alert
when walking or driving in
traffic. - CONCERNED.

~

l~&amp;- 'IJ 9

'9.95 _.... ~-

liMI!

WIIH COUPON

~

I
I

I
_ _ ___
-------------------T---------~-------.
I
--.
II ' l'ol.
'I
1 oz.

I
I

Woodcrafter
FURNITURE POLISH

I

I

..,_ 7r

~~~¢eouPON

VELOUR

~

LtMrT l

Manpower
.
DEODORANT SPRAY

29~

'•·'1.311

WITH COUPON

LIM' I

~

Reg . SJ.98

Open Fri. And
Sat. UntiiB p.m .

~

... ''

35'
I

liMIT 2

COU PON

"-

Emeraude

IMPERIAl, DECANTER
lltii"M 111111!'1.,. In

f or

&lt;!Mift~t

ptff.et

tlfl·t~ "'l ·

RANGER
RANCH

-

--IlL

Faultlatl
FEMININE SYRINGE

""'

F1lbargo

~tt,.~~~AOULOGNE

• ''tlrty .kll' '

;

, . ~5!

COU&gt;OOI

.... '7.00

I
I
I

UMtfl

BABY SOFT COLOGNE

'.111111 2

--LADIES'

8AFETY RAZOR

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

·~ .. ~lhajt , nOI

....,"

'1.49
OMTH COUN:l!Ot

Idyllwild • Model F462W

!

Automatic Gain Control on AM ·and

GIFTS FROM THE HEART

FM. Precision ~ernie r Tu ning .

.

i

Ill.

·Johnson &amp; Johnaon
BABY POWDER

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

• t . ... .. ......... . ... ...... .

• ,.,. •" ""...t ,...... ••r•

;· \
.

69'

i

WlfH COU ~O N

1
i

lt&amp;-'127
UMit 1

! THE SHOE BOX I~ Dutton's Drug Co.

~f'll The quality goes irt before the name goes on~.._,_,_

..

I
I

14

Little
WOOD
ASSORTMENT

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

-Th~

,.

INGELS FURNITURE .

l

Middleport

N. 2nd

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

.I

-·

'

I
----: - ... ----------------~--------- ~ --------I
Plastic
I
"TOTE
BAG ,
I
Lustre Creme
1/ trUIIII !!It C~.. 1ft""~
I
LIQUIO SHAMPOO ·
ol ool.,t1
I
..._w
I
39' .

•
•

.

I

'"' •""'I'M' ~ ~~~· yeu 11 ·~··

Oeaert Flower
SPRAY COLOGNE

I
I

Contemporary st~ling ln Walnu t color with White him or
Black with Silver color trim. Illuminated digital cl ock. Sleepswitch fOr lulling yo u to sle ep, Radi o and Radio·Buizer
alarms to wake you AutOm ati c Freque~cy Coiltrol o.n FM .

992·2920

It~-

1

I

OPEN EVERY
NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.
THROUGH DEC. 23 .

POM~ROY

, . , . 1n.t 1.-n

-~~-~----------~~-~
,Love's
...
w
.

PRI!ItCESS GARDNER • .lADY SPIEDEL J~ES- ' . i!. • _
.
BULOVA WAtCHES: ACCUTIIOHS, CARAVELLE
- CHARMS - MOTHER'S PINS AND
'
NECKlACES

113 E. COURT,

wl1~

49'

DEAR POLLY - My
mother could never get the
vacuum bottles for our lunch
boxes thoroughly clean, until
she started using a baby
bottle brush. It works
wooderfully. - SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
)!
- Full grain lea ther
Peeve is with those ladies
upper
'il
who dress up to go out some
- Lea·ther lined
place and then the minute
- Steel Shank
- Neoprene sole
they get home change into an
w
- Goodyear
welt
old thing and put on old shoes.
I
construction
Husbands like tD see their
- Color rustle brown
wives looking n~1 all~ the
w
time. It does nof'COSI imy
more to always look nice and
is no more trouble. These are
the ones who get jealous If the
nice looking ladies get the
attention. -MRS. R.S.
DEAR POLLY - I am
answer! ng Blandean who
w
dyes · the feet of white
pantyhose beige so there is oo
panty line ID show when she
wears white slacks. It would
I
he much simpler II she would
just wear tan or skin colored
pantyhose . .They.work under
pastels and whl\8 pants and I
could not beUeve it until I
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
W
tried it. - BERNICE.
.
SPECIALS
W
How right you are, Bemlce.
II!
1
Group
Boys
Shoes
were
$13.49
Now
57.00
W
• I find It elfmlnales the
1
Group
Youths
and
Little
Gents
Shoes
W
P
problem completely. POLLY.
Values to S10.99 Now 55.00
DEAR POLLY - Perhaps 11 Mens Specials 55.00, 57.00, $9.00
It is because I have had a
Womens Specials $5.00, S8.0U
~
preventable mlshap that, I fi 1 Group House Slippers $1.00
feel the need to remind our
increasing nwnber of senior
citizens to be more safety
consciolL'I. I hope my list of
rrecautioos will cause others
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ID share theirs with the rest of
us .

Pierced. Earrings, Lockets, Pendants.

GOESSLER JEWELRY

Tlllf IIIOQ

iftOhM lilllt

• Pltl.d

Scrapbook suffers
from musty odor

rfinu:r;
hard to read them. I put moth
. balls in some and even
perfulilebetween .thepages of
ano!her, but neither worked.
Most of the things in these
books were fastened in with a
paste made of flour and
water. Being out in the sun
and wind did not help either
- MABEL.
DEARMABEL-Nodoubl
the odor Is from the paste.
. Why tiot put these boob In a
box that eao be lightly
las teaed. Stoff crumpled
neWipapers ai'OWid the side
and between the boob and tn1
the top and bottom of lbem.
Newsprint absorbs many
other odors, U this· !ioea· Dol
work try doog tbe same wllb
charcoal beillg put iD the
tlgblly closed bo1. Also you
coald even try baklDg soda
sprlnkled between the pages.
-POLLY.

BIRlHSTONE:

,

• t :l

a

DIAMONDS:

Admiral
AM/ FM RAPIO

CHRISTMAS STOCKING

·WELLINGTON
BOOTS

Rings, Pendants, Pierced Earrings.
Watches.

to.l

Friday, Dec. 24 - The
Prayer Vigil Service wlll be
held-at the church from 9-1 0
a.m. For more than 25 years
a Prayer Vigil has been a
vital element in the observance of Christ's birthday
in congregations ol th e
Church of God. For most of
these years groups in other
countries have joined in the
vlgU. Twenty-lour hours a
day for ·12 consecutive days a
bond of prayer is maintained
around the world - lor the
chu rch's mission, for critical

By Polly Cramer
DEA" PO' LY -

Soloists wm be Allen
Downie, Rodney Pullins, Jennie Maehir, Teresa Buckley
and Paula Eichinger. ,

Bobby R. Hunt, band director, was assisted indirecting
the concert program by his
studerit teacher, Jeff Buell.

POMEROY CHAMBER .OF COMMERCE

\

•

urganisl.

World" .

FRED W. CROW, PRESIDENT.

' '

l~aders .

In . various paHerns and
R09. S3.98.

·at Pomefiiji"·uM-cliurc!r-,.!f;~~-~~~n:

fonmuwe, Miss Eason , choir
president, ,presented" Mrs.

Fay Carpenter led in prayer.
Members then joined in the
singing of several Christmas
carols and circle prayer was
led by Mary Kelly .
Attend l n~ were: Bon nie
Fields, Becky Reed, Sue
Erwin, Sarah Gibbs,· Mary
Kelly, Orpha Field&amp; and Iva
Capehart.
Roberta Maynard ,· Susie
Wolf, Kay Grueser, Manha
Grileser, Lufema Weaver,
neiores Taylor and Thelma
Grueser.
Fay Carpenter, Patty
Maynard, Norma Greene,
Susie Bess, Margaret Dodson
and Grace CUMingham.
The members presented
the president, Orpha Fields, a
Christmas gift. She thanked
the committees for making
the dinner a ·lovely evening
enjoyed by aU attending.
Activities for the Christmas
seawn have alteady begun at
the First Church of God.
Sunday, Dec, 19, 9:311 a,m.
- The aMuai Christ's Birthday offering will be received.
Delores Taylor will be the
leader. Chirstmas treats will
also be' distributed and gifts
exchanged.
Sunday evening , Dec. 19,
7:30 p.m. - The annual
Christmas program will be
presented . A play , " God
Created Christmas," will be
presented by the Youth
Fellowship.
Wednesday, Dec. 22, 5:30
p.m. - A Christmas dinner
will be held lor the
congregation
In
th e
Missionary Building.
Thursday, Dec. 23 - The
Youth Fellowship will go
Christmas carolin g and
distribute Fruit Baskets. Ttm
Davis is the president of the
group. Kay, Grueser and
Patty Maynard are the youth

Polly's Pointers

+++

Can!4ta planned Sunday

nwnbers was Lintla Eason.

llle Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce is
attempting to raise funds for Olristmas
lighting. We know that all residents of
Pomeroy and residents of Meigs County are
interested in making Pomeroy, your county
seat attractive to outsiders. Won't you
.contribute to helping P"meroy achieve this
goal. Your tontrihutior. lo the Christmas
Lighting Fund or information pertaining to
the Chamber of Commerce should be
submitted to Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. P.O. Box 526 or phone 992-SOOS.
You need not be a businessman to join the
Chamber of Commerce, any citizen in the
county may join and help make Pomeroy
the number one village in Southeastern
Ohio.

annual Christmas dinner in
the Missionary Building
During football season, my guy was either practicing, Thui-sday evening.
The room was beautifully
playing, restricted by hLI coach, or asleep. The few times he
decorated
in keeping with the
came over, he'd be muring befqre 9 p.m. Wf never went
holiday
season.
The i.naywhere.
voeatlon
was
given
by
With basketball C&lt;lming uP, It will be the same. Then
there's balleball, golf, swimming, fishing, even wresUing. Delores Taylor. Following
· the dinner, a gift exchange
"Whatever's phyllical, Barry's into it.
. Which leaves no time for ME! He 'd· rather be with the was held with Sarah Gibbs
guys. H,e toOk mefl8blng once and we were both bored silly. To being in charge. The door
teU the truth; I hate ,11p011a, but I love him, so I pretend. I'm prize w.on by Iva Capehart
· was a ceramic snow boot
interested when he t81ks of nothing else.
.· ·
made by Becky Reed. ,
How can I get him outofthlsrut? - SPORTS WIDOW
A short business meeting
s.w.,
was condu cted by · the
Take away Barry's sports and you might have nothing left. president, Orpha Fields, who
Since heevidea!IJ 1/Nes for ~hat you hate ,I'd ~uggest you drop reminded members t.o bring
the pr'etense'lUidllearn to live witliou, ·hllii.:You're not a well- gifts for a Pl!Uent at Lakin
State Hospital.
matched pair! - HELEN
A skit was presented by
+++ .
AWORD FROM SUE : How can you love a guy whose talk Becky Reed and Gra ce
Cunningham Introducing the
b6res you silly? Really, physical attraction Isn't enough.
A jock needs a special kind of long,..,fering (or avid, new Penny-a-Day Calendars
sports-minded) girl, and yout letter says loud and clear : you · for 1977. She reminded
aren't. the one!
members to say a prayer for
the missionaries and their
+++
Dear Helen :
·
work as they give their
How could you S8Y ."Erica" was "together " when she's a pennies each day. She also
selflsb, ambltioUII female who competes with men and refuses reported that money had
the womanly role of wife and motherhood?
been sent for Christmas gills
Something is mentally wrong with a dame who insists she to the Home Mission Station
enjoys her single way and doesn't want a "permanent man." in Brooklyn, New York. Each
Not many housewives with children would trade for her year church of God locals
slick, phony "career" life, whlch will end in lonely old a~e . send Christmas gifts · or
with no one to·Jove her. Besides, she's taking a good-paying . money to the Home Missions
job away from some family man who needs thli money! -_ , _s. throughout the United States.
(A SATISFIED MRS.)
Spiritual Life Director
Delores Taylor reminded '
I. S.:
.
members that the Christ's
I said Erica was "!Diletller" because she has chosen a way Birthday offering will be
of life for which she is happily suited.
received on Sunday, Dec. 19.
So too have you. But there's a blg difference: Erica didn't The theme Is "Fear Not:. I
condemn wife and motherhood - she stmply said it wasn't for Bring You Good News." The
her.
'Prayer Vigil Hour for the
H you aren't a wee bit jealous, I. S., then why are you so local will be observed at the
vlncictive? - HELEN
, 1
~burch on Friday, Dec. 24,
+++
from 9-10 a.m. Around-theDear Rap :
World and around-th~lock
How did "Senior Prom Dropout" figure he could get by for for 12 days prior to Christonly 50 clams? At my Senior Prom, between my tux, iny girl's mas, thousands of Church of
dress, tickets, corsage, pictures, dinner, and the next day at God congregations unite in an
the shore, we spent abnost $:1l10.
unbroken chain of prayer.
We earned It aU ourselves through working for neighbors
The meeting closed with
and having two garage sales. You kno\v something? HI had it
•. to do again, I sure would I
Kids who think formal proms are a waste of money don't
!mow what they're m!Jslng. This was one of the best memories
· of our Uves. - SENIOR PROM ATTENDER
A 111gb School Sporll Widow ...

Rap:

devotions giv~ n by Delores

The New Haven Women of Taylor. A resp(insive reading
the Church of God held their was taken froin M8th. 2:1-10.

FOR COPIES OF "What Is a l;:I'Wih,'' "First Love ,"
''Getting to Know Yourself," send a stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Helen and Sue, care of this newspaper.

Grange enjoys party
LETART FALLS - Ohlo
Valley Grange 2612 Letart
Falls met at the hall Thursday evening at 6 p.m. for its
regular
meeting
and
Christmas party.
A poUuck dinner was
served and a $1 gift exchange
held.
The hall was decorated in
keeping with the Christmas
season . Grace was given by
Mrs. Florence Smith.
Worthy Master E_arly
Roush presided at the
meeting due to the Illness of
Herbert Shields . Miss
AvenWe Halliday of Laurel

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. -

By Helen and Sue Bottel

"

0.

�•

.

i - The DaUy Sentinel, Mtddleport-PIX!Ieroy, 0., Th~ay, Dec. 16,1976

•
Manley in
landslide
•
vrctory

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, Dec.

others for a probable new
tAltal of 11.

The new alignment would
give Manley, a supporter of
C'uba's Fldel llastro, a 31keat
majority, more ·than double
the margin his party enjoyed
in the former smaller house,
which had 3!i PNP members,
15 JhP, two independents and

II!

IC

W

1
~

~

t

100% DENIM
PRE-WASHED

W
II!

'

'"

a state of emergency .in June.

Issues in the campaign
were Manley's close ties with
Communist Cuba and his
programs to provide low
income housing, redist ribute

land, expropria te 'industry
and incr c:"e the tax on
bauxite, the island's major
economic act ivity along wiU1
tou"ism.

I
1

VALUES TO

'22.00

II!

~

ll

W

1
II!

ll

W
~

i

·

SIZES 5 lo 15
and 8 to 18

LARGE
SELECTION
.OPEN SUNDAY

NYLON
QUILTED
AND

I PM TO 6 PM

Transfers
~)Fay n e Kennedy, Esther
Kennedy to Wa)nc Kennedy ,

Eb1her

Ktn:-1~dy.

7-75

SPORl~WEAR

BRUSHED

acr~s,

NYWN

Rutland .
.,_ Lillian Rose ',&lt;c. dec. to
NOQ!!a Le9bra Tassian, Rose
Lee "CilJ:rlfe, cert. of .trans .,
Sutton, Racine.
Darlene Nora Cassidy,
Raymond Clair c;assldy to
Pomeroy Forest Products,
Inc., 38'1, acres, Timber.
Olive.
John Raymond Berry, aka ,
Joho R. Berry, Goldie Marie
Berry to Clarence Baker,
Rita Baker, Larry Baker, 40
acres, Olive.

ROBE
SALE

'

eSPECIAL SALE eFAMOUS BRAND NAMES
eSKIRTS eBLAZERS eTUNIC TOPS eBLOUSES eVESTS
•PANTS eSWEATERS eSHIRT JACS
eDENIM JEANS eDENIM SKIRTS

TO

LARGE SELECTION

SIZES

ENTIRE STOCK
OF LADIES

REGULAR

,

......._.-'1!'14.00 &amp; '18.00

COATS

Thereon A. Johnson, Mary

Lew Johnson to Kathryn M.
Philson, .3.911 acres, Letart .
Curtis Wolfe, Golda Wolfe
to Lloyd Wolfe , Marl ene
Thompson, Howard Wolfe,
Donna VanMeter, Nora
Hartman. parcels, Chester.
David Koblentz, affidavit,
Chester.
David Koblents to Richard
Koblentz, parcels, Chester.
Ethel Williamson to Helen
Boster, lots, Pomeroy.
Helen Boster, Clarence
Boster to Billy J . Spencer,
Mary K. Spence r, lots,

20% to
33%% OFF

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

re~ect

ALL CHILDREN'S

• REG.
175.00

COATS

$3999 .

by CORNING
20 pc. Service for 4,
in one of 3 patterns.

ONE SIZE FITS ALL

Vincent J.' Da&amp;o, Emma
Jeanne Dabo to Marian J.

KIMONO
ROBE

Taylor, lot, Pomeroy.

LARGE SELECTION

•24

REGULAR '16.00

NOW

'9"

PI.AYTEX
.18 HOUR
BRA &amp; GIRDLE
SALE

HANDSOMELI GIFT BOXED
RED GOLD WIN£ RUST
MINT BROWN CAM EL GREEN .

TWIN
SINGLE

acres, Pomeroy.
H~len Coast Hayes to Col. &amp;
Southern Ohio Elec. Co. ,
parcels, Lebanon.
Clarence A. Bradford,
Lillian Ruth Bradford to
Clarence A. Bradford, Lillian
Ruth Bradford, 25 acres,
Lebanon, Racine.
Richard A. Griffin ,
Geraldine Griffin to Bulah
Fay M a ~ey,, I&gt; acre, Orange.
Ruth Pdeyampert to
Eugene B. Postlewaite,
minerals, Lebanon.
Adrward A. McMillion to
Wilma McMillion, parcels,
Olive.
·
Albert R. Eastman, Doris
Eastman to Charles Eastman, Robin Eastman, 20
acres, Bedford.

LEATHER
JACKETS

LIVING WARE

Syracuse.

Mont Vance, Joyce Ann
Vance, Jack Vance, Dorothy
M. Vance to Sybil Ebers bach,
parcels, Scipio.
Sybil Ebersbach to Jack
Vance, ~ Dorothy M. Vance,
parcels, Scipio.
Pomeroy Motor Co. to
Pomeroy Cliffs, L.T.D., 3.556
acres, Pomeroy .
· Pomeroy Cliffs, LTLD.,
Prime Bid. of Ohio Partner to
Village of Pomeroy , .146
acre, Pomeroy .
JalJ1ar Coal Co. to Pomeroy
Cliffs, LTD, Int. in 3.556

OFF

Core lie

Never has a sel of dishes done so
~.W~much for so little!

Pomeroy.

DeMis Palmer, Jessie · L.
Palmer to Thomas Cross, lot,

20%

7 ONLY
LADIES
SPLIT COWHIDE

CONTROL

~,0.
'

-.

DOUBLE

SINGLE
CONTROL

'22..

ELECTRIC BLANKETS
.
by: ,1\•bRTHfRN .
. Jir\~

0

M-'!II'If

DOUBLE

DUAL ,
co NTiiOL

2 ..
'6

LEISURE
SHIRTS
7'3 TO

lfz OFF

"lll~p1aof ,.rid ftOfto~ertlflll,

'

' 2 'f :. tuer~'~'"·

•..,.,.,uilltl/U 11111....0'"""• Qf!IIW

,

ENTIRE STOCK

SAMSONITE
.LUGGAGE
NEW SHIPMENT
., BIG CANNON
'

BATH TOWELS ·

J FOR

~00

lrr. of 3 &amp; 4 Values
1

1

MEN'S FAMOUS. BRAND

VAN HEUSEN
DRESS SHIRTS .

~.tv,.....,.,

"100'N. N'tiOf\ " IMftllo ·

I

'
NOW
GOING
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S

25% OFF

$900 ro ·

'1800

88

HAN DBA
'800 to •2•uu

FREE
CHRISTMAS
.Gin
WRAPPING .
RIVAL

CROCK -POT

$1699

-lor lowRi'iol '&gt;.-qt.

~rocl&lt;·

cociktnv. Enhiii&lt;OS
· the flavor of foodo.
Grtlt tor IOMng too.
Stonoftore with gl,.,

~···

.SUITS
IIGUL~LY

110.00

NOW

SALE

5
Just
In
tfme for
Christmas! We made a
special purchase fram a
famous maker of fine

quality suits to sell -of this
very modest price. Choose
. your favorite fall; color .

Sizes 38 to 46. Regulars
and longs.

c~arerice

Mil1er

•,

,,
t

~Hturullt.l' l

for dq.~11 111

und cr.,ta nd ...
(1\..,l i iH' Iillll

'11!11

tk ...,l, .,.

U!,ld l'f l'll h'.., a

!-.Jh'' ' inl look li H' l'\'l' lli11g .
F~.· mlnin ~,.· ... Oult~.,·fill ,~ u nd full (d'
~ ruce und chnqn I• ; "l'(' yi 111 !lll'un g lt

1\ll' ll igh t.

GOLD or .
SILVER

Policies are
reaffinned

:~

especially afier the witlldrawal of the last American
troops, I have received many
letters opJ)osing amnesty of
any kind. These letters tell of
the tragedy of the wounded
and crippled in our veterans'
hospitals, the sorrow of losing - r
a son or loved one in Vietnam.
· tile lives and careers that
were permanently changed
because.ol service during tile
war. These letters are almost
unanimous In their opposition
to amnesty of any sort to
those who deserted their
country with words of contempt in her hour of need.
Even though we oppose the
blanket pardon approach,
this does not indicate a lack of
CAST IN.ROLES of an orphanage, which is the setting for much of the Riverview School
concern for those who have
operetta
, are.these pupils, front, I til r. Mark Jones , Ann Jones, Anita Reed , Mike West,
erred. There were many
Brian
Reed,
Scott Kessler ; back, Mike Jones, Scott Trussell, James Nutter, Scott Upton ,
avenues available for
Scott Foster, Angela Collins.
legitimate conscientious
objectors to escape actual
combat on religious grounds.
President Ford has also
provided an opportunity for
evaders to redeem themselves through public service
work.
Those individuals who have
not availed themselves of the
exceptions to the conscription
laws must accept the ·consequences tllat must be faced

LAS vEGAS, Nev. (UPI) Rick Manzie, husband of
actress-singer Barbara
McNair, was found sl10t til
deatll In their Las Vegas
home Wednesday, two years
aJter two associates, reputed
mobsters,
were
slain
gangland style in Chicago,
Miss McNair, weeping and
distraught, flew home from a
nightclub engagemenl In
Chicago.
Manzie, 36, was found in a
pool of blood In tile dressing
area of tlleir 20-&lt;'oom house,
wearing only a T-5hirt. He
had been shot once in the
head, detectives said:
There was no sign of forced
entry, burglary or a struggle,
pollee said. The house was
·not ransacked and all the
doors and windows were
locked.
Manzie, who married Miss
McNair about five years ago,
reportedly
was
once
associated with two reputed
Chicago organized crime
figures, Sam Marcello, an
alleged loan shark, and
Joseph Grisale, described as
a . 6-foot-6, 270 pound
WlderworJd ''enforcer.''
The bodies of Grisale and
Marcello were found in :wgallon oil drums on the
northwest side of Chicago in
July 1974.
I
Police said they had no
Information that Manzle had
any more recent connection
with
tile
Chicago
underworld:
The body was found by
Miss McNair's brother,
Horace, 41, who said Manzle
was alive wheq he left the
house at 4 a.m. til buy
groceries.
Miss McNair did not
appear to know, when she
arrived at tile airport here,
tllat her husband ..had been
shot to death. She looked
startled when questioned by
reporters, and said she
tllought he had died of "some
kind of Ulness. Officers led
her away in tears to be
questioned.
Miss McNair, a former

For The Holiday Party Season

r rr 1·

as . citizensJ of a nation

governed by laws and not of
men. The political religion of .
this Nation must be respect
for the law.

Husband of
actress found
shot to death

NOW

REDUCED

By

.

I have joined Congressm;n
Sonny Montgomery (DMisslsslppi), wno serves on
teh Armed Services Committee, Veterans Affairs
Committee and chairs a
special comm'ittee on MIA's;
In asking the President-elect
to reconsider his stated policy
providing lor a blanket
pardon for draft evaders. We
oppose this wholesale pardon
or amnesty approach for
various reasons.
I believe that the rule of law
must never be undermined.
All civilized naUons exist
upOn reverence and i'espe.ct
lor the laws. Whether or not
one agtess with a ,particular
law at a particular time Is an
Irrelevant consideration once
the
Jaw
has
be en
legitimatized
by
the
representatives of the people.
The law must be obeyed until
repealed or changed.
I agree with Abraham
Lincoln who said, " Let
reverence for the laws be
taught in the schools,
seminaries, and in colleges;
'et it be written in primers,
spelling ' books a'nd in
almariacs; let it be preached
from the pulpit, proclaimed
In the legislative halls, and
enforced in the courts of
justice. And, in short, let it
become the political religion
of the Nation."
Throughout tile period of
the Vietnam war and

ll

!ask would be til solve the
problem of violence, which
has killed more than 200
persons since January and
resulted in the declaraiion of

Moonlight
inoodmaker

•

KJ;l!:OI;VI UE - Add the nmnal excitement of the
Christmas season at a school to the presentation of the annual
operetta and it makes lor a pretty exciting atmosphere.
Thai's the way it Is at the Riverview Elementary School
where students undei the direction of Mrs. Maxine Whitehead
will present for the fourth time at 8 this evening the operetta,
''Davy's Star." Matinee performan~ have been given
already for Chester and Tuppers Plains Schools as well as the
non-participating students at Riverview .
· Pupils have been well rehear~ed for tho presentation by
·Mrs. Whitehead; with·tile help of the facUlty, arid mothers of'
the children nave created a variety of excellent costuming for
the operetta which carries out a holiday theme.
The accompanying photos show the costumes and children
taking part.

I Wash~gton
I
Report
i

JEAN
SALE

~::;:;:;:::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=:~=:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~-:::.-::&amp;:~

ll

_gr ime minister , sa id his first

Aieshia Holsinger, Pam Aliliouse, Keith Stout, Angela
Young, Sibyl Foster and Amy Yo 1111g.

TIUS GROUP OF STUDENTS are .the "giits" in tile
Riverview School operetta. Left til right are Tony Gillian,

JEANS
II
FAMOUS
~
one vacancy .
W
BRANDS
The latest count in the ~
popular vote gave the PNP
•h.i.s.
57.8 per cent of the tlltal, up 111
from 55.9 per cent in the last •
elections in 1972. The JLP had I · •FADED GLORY
42.2 percent, down from 43,0 1
per cent in the last election. 111 •XTROVERT
The voter turnout in the
hotly contested and often
violent electior was about 80
per cent.
Manley, 52, a fiery speaker
and son of former Jamaican

• •

excztzng tzme

leading in another seven for a

I

NATURALIZH

Operetta time,
•

KINGSTON. Jamaica
(UPI ) - Leftist Prime
Minister Michael Manley has
won a landslide vicwry in
Jamaica's general election.
guaranteeing five yea rs of
. socialist rule on this lush
Caribbean island.
. w'tth almost a ll ·voles ·
counted fr om Wednesday's ·
election, Manley's People's
National party won 42 of the
60 seats in the House of
Representatives and was
likely new tAltal of 49.
The moderate Jama ican
La bor party, led by !lddie
Seaga, won just seven seats
and was leading in four

16, 1976

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
board of directors of the .
Public Employes Retirement
System at its monthly
meeting Wednesday
reaffirmed its policy of
dealin g with brokerage
houses who give the best
service and commissions.
That policy had been questioned at last month 's
meeting by board member
Philip
S.
Hamilton,
representing the Department
of Administrative Services.
Hamilton had suggested
that priority be given Ohio
brokeage houses in th e
purchase of securtles by the

BAGS TO
MATCH

PERS.

A report prepare.; and
submitted by Robert . A.
McLaughlin, investment
officer and assistant direcwr
of PllRS, showed that present
purchase · policies has

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
..
Betty Ohlinger

102 E . Main

resulted ln an estimated
savings of $3.1 million.

Pomeroy , 0 .

TIMEX
More peopl e buy TimeK
th an any olher walch
in the world.

THES!l ARE THE PRINCIPALS of "Davy's Star" at the Riverview Elementary
School,) til r, Diana Smith, Scott Justis, Sheila Harris and Brian Collins, tho two lea&lt;ls; Carl
Swain, Rhonda Riebel and Beth Berkhimer.
·

UCLA medical student,
became a star in 1963 by
following Diahan Carroll intll
the lead role of the musical
"No Sirings," and had her
owri television show for a
while, In recent years she has
concencrated on nightclubs
and movies.
She and Manzie were
arrested at the Playboy Club
in McAfree, N.J. in 1972 by
investigatllrs who said she
tllok delivery of a package of
heroin sent from Las Vegas.
Miss McNair insisted she
never used drugs and tho
charge against her was dropped. Manzie, who pleaded
guilty to a charge of
attempting to possess horoin,
was lined $1,000 and placed
on a year's probation.

Hospital News

JODI SMITH, RIGHT, plays the guardian angel in the Riverview School operetta. The
stars, from the left, are Jody Barring, Malinda WeUs and Beth Hayman.

Timex watches available in wind,
self-wind and eleeteic models, some
with calenders, leather and metal
straps.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Dec. l5)

Michael Baker, . Michael
Barcus, Thomas Campbell,
Stacy Clarke, Paula Conley,
Hazel, Coy, Helen Davis,
Jerry Denney, Arvina
Donahue, Wilma Greer,
Jallt't Hammerstone, Paul
Holtlngs~ead, Esther Kissell~
Gerald Krebs, Jr .., Mrs.
Charles Luman and son,
Carolyn Martin, Ruth
Maynard, Geraldine Mayo,
Joan Miller, Melissa Nance,

•SNOOPY

•CINDERELlA

•LUCY

•DONALD DUCK
.•MICKEY MOUSE
•MINNIE MOUSE

Louise Neal, Jennifer Ours 1

June . Pickens, Marga ret
Pistelll, Luther Pitienger,
Clyde Porter, Marga ret
Schilling, Julia Shawver,
Herschell Sheets, Mrs.
Thomas Stewart and
·daughter, Michael Terry ,
Gregory Thivener', Coetta
Thomas, Emory Waugh,
(Birlhs, Dec. IS)
Mr . and Mrs. Melvin
Sargent, daughter,
GaiJipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Patterson, daughter,
Vinton; Mr.
and Mrs .
Stephen Wolverton,
daughter, Gallipolis.

SWISHEH

LU~St

Pharmacy
\

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Chortas RIHia, R. Ph.
Ronald Honnlng, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sot. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 10:30to 12 :30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
THE "SNOWBALI.'l" and gremlins of the Riverview operetta pictured Include :
gremlins, front, I tor, Jeff Johnson, Trent Upton , Joe Young ; snowballs, Ginger Hayman ,
Maralyn Barton, Amy R1ggs , Amy Berkhimer, Traci Newlun, Caralyn Barton Cristy
Newlun.
'

'

PRESCRIPTIONS

-"H.MAIN .

PH . 992-2955'

Friendly Servico
OponNightstjt9 __

... . . .. .

POME~OY,O ..

�•

.

i - The DaUy Sentinel, Mtddleport-PIX!Ieroy, 0., Th~ay, Dec. 16,1976

•
Manley in
landslide
•
vrctory

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, Dec.

others for a probable new
tAltal of 11.

The new alignment would
give Manley, a supporter of
C'uba's Fldel llastro, a 31keat
majority, more ·than double
the margin his party enjoyed
in the former smaller house,
which had 3!i PNP members,
15 JhP, two independents and

II!

IC

W

1
~

~

t

100% DENIM
PRE-WASHED

W
II!

'

'"

a state of emergency .in June.

Issues in the campaign
were Manley's close ties with
Communist Cuba and his
programs to provide low
income housing, redist ribute

land, expropria te 'industry
and incr c:"e the tax on
bauxite, the island's major
economic act ivity along wiU1
tou"ism.

I
1

VALUES TO

'22.00

II!

~

ll

W

1
II!

ll

W
~

i

·

SIZES 5 lo 15
and 8 to 18

LARGE
SELECTION
.OPEN SUNDAY

NYLON
QUILTED
AND

I PM TO 6 PM

Transfers
~)Fay n e Kennedy, Esther
Kennedy to Wa)nc Kennedy ,

Eb1her

Ktn:-1~dy.

7-75

SPORl~WEAR

BRUSHED

acr~s,

NYWN

Rutland .
.,_ Lillian Rose ',&lt;c. dec. to
NOQ!!a Le9bra Tassian, Rose
Lee "CilJ:rlfe, cert. of .trans .,
Sutton, Racine.
Darlene Nora Cassidy,
Raymond Clair c;assldy to
Pomeroy Forest Products,
Inc., 38'1, acres, Timber.
Olive.
John Raymond Berry, aka ,
Joho R. Berry, Goldie Marie
Berry to Clarence Baker,
Rita Baker, Larry Baker, 40
acres, Olive.

ROBE
SALE

'

eSPECIAL SALE eFAMOUS BRAND NAMES
eSKIRTS eBLAZERS eTUNIC TOPS eBLOUSES eVESTS
•PANTS eSWEATERS eSHIRT JACS
eDENIM JEANS eDENIM SKIRTS

TO

LARGE SELECTION

SIZES

ENTIRE STOCK
OF LADIES

REGULAR

,

......._.-'1!'14.00 &amp; '18.00

COATS

Thereon A. Johnson, Mary

Lew Johnson to Kathryn M.
Philson, .3.911 acres, Letart .
Curtis Wolfe, Golda Wolfe
to Lloyd Wolfe , Marl ene
Thompson, Howard Wolfe,
Donna VanMeter, Nora
Hartman. parcels, Chester.
David Koblentz, affidavit,
Chester.
David Koblents to Richard
Koblentz, parcels, Chester.
Ethel Williamson to Helen
Boster, lots, Pomeroy.
Helen Boster, Clarence
Boster to Billy J . Spencer,
Mary K. Spence r, lots,

20% to
33%% OFF

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

re~ect

ALL CHILDREN'S

• REG.
175.00

COATS

$3999 .

by CORNING
20 pc. Service for 4,
in one of 3 patterns.

ONE SIZE FITS ALL

Vincent J.' Da&amp;o, Emma
Jeanne Dabo to Marian J.

KIMONO
ROBE

Taylor, lot, Pomeroy.

LARGE SELECTION

•24

REGULAR '16.00

NOW

'9"

PI.AYTEX
.18 HOUR
BRA &amp; GIRDLE
SALE

HANDSOMELI GIFT BOXED
RED GOLD WIN£ RUST
MINT BROWN CAM EL GREEN .

TWIN
SINGLE

acres, Pomeroy.
H~len Coast Hayes to Col. &amp;
Southern Ohio Elec. Co. ,
parcels, Lebanon.
Clarence A. Bradford,
Lillian Ruth Bradford to
Clarence A. Bradford, Lillian
Ruth Bradford, 25 acres,
Lebanon, Racine.
Richard A. Griffin ,
Geraldine Griffin to Bulah
Fay M a ~ey,, I&gt; acre, Orange.
Ruth Pdeyampert to
Eugene B. Postlewaite,
minerals, Lebanon.
Adrward A. McMillion to
Wilma McMillion, parcels,
Olive.
·
Albert R. Eastman, Doris
Eastman to Charles Eastman, Robin Eastman, 20
acres, Bedford.

LEATHER
JACKETS

LIVING WARE

Syracuse.

Mont Vance, Joyce Ann
Vance, Jack Vance, Dorothy
M. Vance to Sybil Ebers bach,
parcels, Scipio.
Sybil Ebersbach to Jack
Vance, ~ Dorothy M. Vance,
parcels, Scipio.
Pomeroy Motor Co. to
Pomeroy Cliffs, L.T.D., 3.556
acres, Pomeroy .
· Pomeroy Cliffs, LTLD.,
Prime Bid. of Ohio Partner to
Village of Pomeroy , .146
acre, Pomeroy .
JalJ1ar Coal Co. to Pomeroy
Cliffs, LTD, Int. in 3.556

OFF

Core lie

Never has a sel of dishes done so
~.W~much for so little!

Pomeroy.

DeMis Palmer, Jessie · L.
Palmer to Thomas Cross, lot,

20%

7 ONLY
LADIES
SPLIT COWHIDE

CONTROL

~,0.
'

-.

DOUBLE

SINGLE
CONTROL

'22..

ELECTRIC BLANKETS
.
by: ,1\•bRTHfRN .
. Jir\~

0

M-'!II'If

DOUBLE

DUAL ,
co NTiiOL

2 ..
'6

LEISURE
SHIRTS
7'3 TO

lfz OFF

"lll~p1aof ,.rid ftOfto~ertlflll,

'

' 2 'f :. tuer~'~'"·

•..,.,.,uilltl/U 11111....0'"""• Qf!IIW

,

ENTIRE STOCK

SAMSONITE
.LUGGAGE
NEW SHIPMENT
., BIG CANNON
'

BATH TOWELS ·

J FOR

~00

lrr. of 3 &amp; 4 Values
1

1

MEN'S FAMOUS. BRAND

VAN HEUSEN
DRESS SHIRTS .

~.tv,.....,.,

"100'N. N'tiOf\ " IMftllo ·

I

'
NOW
GOING
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S

25% OFF

$900 ro ·

'1800

88

HAN DBA
'800 to •2•uu

FREE
CHRISTMAS
.Gin
WRAPPING .
RIVAL

CROCK -POT

$1699

-lor lowRi'iol '&gt;.-qt.

~rocl&lt;·

cociktnv. Enhiii&lt;OS
· the flavor of foodo.
Grtlt tor IOMng too.
Stonoftore with gl,.,

~···

.SUITS
IIGUL~LY

110.00

NOW

SALE

5
Just
In
tfme for
Christmas! We made a
special purchase fram a
famous maker of fine

quality suits to sell -of this
very modest price. Choose
. your favorite fall; color .

Sizes 38 to 46. Regulars
and longs.

c~arerice

Mil1er

•,

,,
t

~Hturullt.l' l

for dq.~11 111

und cr.,ta nd ...
(1\..,l i iH' Iillll

'11!11

tk ...,l, .,.

U!,ld l'f l'll h'.., a

!-.Jh'' ' inl look li H' l'\'l' lli11g .
F~.· mlnin ~,.· ... Oult~.,·fill ,~ u nd full (d'
~ ruce und chnqn I• ; "l'(' yi 111 !lll'un g lt

1\ll' ll igh t.

GOLD or .
SILVER

Policies are
reaffinned

:~

especially afier the witlldrawal of the last American
troops, I have received many
letters opJ)osing amnesty of
any kind. These letters tell of
the tragedy of the wounded
and crippled in our veterans'
hospitals, the sorrow of losing - r
a son or loved one in Vietnam.
· tile lives and careers that
were permanently changed
because.ol service during tile
war. These letters are almost
unanimous In their opposition
to amnesty of any sort to
those who deserted their
country with words of contempt in her hour of need.
Even though we oppose the
blanket pardon approach,
this does not indicate a lack of
CAST IN.ROLES of an orphanage, which is the setting for much of the Riverview School
concern for those who have
operetta
, are.these pupils, front, I til r. Mark Jones , Ann Jones, Anita Reed , Mike West,
erred. There were many
Brian
Reed,
Scott Kessler ; back, Mike Jones, Scott Trussell, James Nutter, Scott Upton ,
avenues available for
Scott Foster, Angela Collins.
legitimate conscientious
objectors to escape actual
combat on religious grounds.
President Ford has also
provided an opportunity for
evaders to redeem themselves through public service
work.
Those individuals who have
not availed themselves of the
exceptions to the conscription
laws must accept the ·consequences tllat must be faced

LAS vEGAS, Nev. (UPI) Rick Manzie, husband of
actress-singer Barbara
McNair, was found sl10t til
deatll In their Las Vegas
home Wednesday, two years
aJter two associates, reputed
mobsters,
were
slain
gangland style in Chicago,
Miss McNair, weeping and
distraught, flew home from a
nightclub engagemenl In
Chicago.
Manzie, 36, was found in a
pool of blood In tile dressing
area of tlleir 20-&lt;'oom house,
wearing only a T-5hirt. He
had been shot once in the
head, detectives said:
There was no sign of forced
entry, burglary or a struggle,
pollee said. The house was
·not ransacked and all the
doors and windows were
locked.
Manzie, who married Miss
McNair about five years ago,
reportedly
was
once
associated with two reputed
Chicago organized crime
figures, Sam Marcello, an
alleged loan shark, and
Joseph Grisale, described as
a . 6-foot-6, 270 pound
WlderworJd ''enforcer.''
The bodies of Grisale and
Marcello were found in :wgallon oil drums on the
northwest side of Chicago in
July 1974.
I
Police said they had no
Information that Manzle had
any more recent connection
with
tile
Chicago
underworld:
The body was found by
Miss McNair's brother,
Horace, 41, who said Manzle
was alive wheq he left the
house at 4 a.m. til buy
groceries.
Miss McNair did not
appear to know, when she
arrived at tile airport here,
tllat her husband ..had been
shot to death. She looked
startled when questioned by
reporters, and said she
tllought he had died of "some
kind of Ulness. Officers led
her away in tears to be
questioned.
Miss McNair, a former

For The Holiday Party Season

r rr 1·

as . citizensJ of a nation

governed by laws and not of
men. The political religion of .
this Nation must be respect
for the law.

Husband of
actress found
shot to death

NOW

REDUCED

By

.

I have joined Congressm;n
Sonny Montgomery (DMisslsslppi), wno serves on
teh Armed Services Committee, Veterans Affairs
Committee and chairs a
special comm'ittee on MIA's;
In asking the President-elect
to reconsider his stated policy
providing lor a blanket
pardon for draft evaders. We
oppose this wholesale pardon
or amnesty approach for
various reasons.
I believe that the rule of law
must never be undermined.
All civilized naUons exist
upOn reverence and i'espe.ct
lor the laws. Whether or not
one agtess with a ,particular
law at a particular time Is an
Irrelevant consideration once
the
Jaw
has
be en
legitimatized
by
the
representatives of the people.
The law must be obeyed until
repealed or changed.
I agree with Abraham
Lincoln who said, " Let
reverence for the laws be
taught in the schools,
seminaries, and in colleges;
'et it be written in primers,
spelling ' books a'nd in
almariacs; let it be preached
from the pulpit, proclaimed
In the legislative halls, and
enforced in the courts of
justice. And, in short, let it
become the political religion
of the Nation."
Throughout tile period of
the Vietnam war and

ll

!ask would be til solve the
problem of violence, which
has killed more than 200
persons since January and
resulted in the declaraiion of

Moonlight
inoodmaker

•

KJ;l!:OI;VI UE - Add the nmnal excitement of the
Christmas season at a school to the presentation of the annual
operetta and it makes lor a pretty exciting atmosphere.
Thai's the way it Is at the Riverview Elementary School
where students undei the direction of Mrs. Maxine Whitehead
will present for the fourth time at 8 this evening the operetta,
''Davy's Star." Matinee performan~ have been given
already for Chester and Tuppers Plains Schools as well as the
non-participating students at Riverview .
· Pupils have been well rehear~ed for tho presentation by
·Mrs. Whitehead; with·tile help of the facUlty, arid mothers of'
the children nave created a variety of excellent costuming for
the operetta which carries out a holiday theme.
The accompanying photos show the costumes and children
taking part.

I Wash~gton
I
Report
i

JEAN
SALE

~::;:;:;:::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=:~=:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~-:::.-::&amp;:~

ll

_gr ime minister , sa id his first

Aieshia Holsinger, Pam Aliliouse, Keith Stout, Angela
Young, Sibyl Foster and Amy Yo 1111g.

TIUS GROUP OF STUDENTS are .the "giits" in tile
Riverview School operetta. Left til right are Tony Gillian,

JEANS
II
FAMOUS
~
one vacancy .
W
BRANDS
The latest count in the ~
popular vote gave the PNP
•h.i.s.
57.8 per cent of the tlltal, up 111
from 55.9 per cent in the last •
elections in 1972. The JLP had I · •FADED GLORY
42.2 percent, down from 43,0 1
per cent in the last election. 111 •XTROVERT
The voter turnout in the
hotly contested and often
violent electior was about 80
per cent.
Manley, 52, a fiery speaker
and son of former Jamaican

• •

excztzng tzme

leading in another seven for a

I

NATURALIZH

Operetta time,
•

KINGSTON. Jamaica
(UPI ) - Leftist Prime
Minister Michael Manley has
won a landslide vicwry in
Jamaica's general election.
guaranteeing five yea rs of
. socialist rule on this lush
Caribbean island.
. w'tth almost a ll ·voles ·
counted fr om Wednesday's ·
election, Manley's People's
National party won 42 of the
60 seats in the House of
Representatives and was
likely new tAltal of 49.
The moderate Jama ican
La bor party, led by !lddie
Seaga, won just seven seats
and was leading in four

16, 1976

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
board of directors of the .
Public Employes Retirement
System at its monthly
meeting Wednesday
reaffirmed its policy of
dealin g with brokerage
houses who give the best
service and commissions.
That policy had been questioned at last month 's
meeting by board member
Philip
S.
Hamilton,
representing the Department
of Administrative Services.
Hamilton had suggested
that priority be given Ohio
brokeage houses in th e
purchase of securtles by the

BAGS TO
MATCH

PERS.

A report prepare.; and
submitted by Robert . A.
McLaughlin, investment
officer and assistant direcwr
of PllRS, showed that present
purchase · policies has

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
..
Betty Ohlinger

102 E . Main

resulted ln an estimated
savings of $3.1 million.

Pomeroy , 0 .

TIMEX
More peopl e buy TimeK
th an any olher walch
in the world.

THES!l ARE THE PRINCIPALS of "Davy's Star" at the Riverview Elementary
School,) til r, Diana Smith, Scott Justis, Sheila Harris and Brian Collins, tho two lea&lt;ls; Carl
Swain, Rhonda Riebel and Beth Berkhimer.
·

UCLA medical student,
became a star in 1963 by
following Diahan Carroll intll
the lead role of the musical
"No Sirings," and had her
owri television show for a
while, In recent years she has
concencrated on nightclubs
and movies.
She and Manzie were
arrested at the Playboy Club
in McAfree, N.J. in 1972 by
investigatllrs who said she
tllok delivery of a package of
heroin sent from Las Vegas.
Miss McNair insisted she
never used drugs and tho
charge against her was dropped. Manzie, who pleaded
guilty to a charge of
attempting to possess horoin,
was lined $1,000 and placed
on a year's probation.

Hospital News

JODI SMITH, RIGHT, plays the guardian angel in the Riverview School operetta. The
stars, from the left, are Jody Barring, Malinda WeUs and Beth Hayman.

Timex watches available in wind,
self-wind and eleeteic models, some
with calenders, leather and metal
straps.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Dec. l5)

Michael Baker, . Michael
Barcus, Thomas Campbell,
Stacy Clarke, Paula Conley,
Hazel, Coy, Helen Davis,
Jerry Denney, Arvina
Donahue, Wilma Greer,
Jallt't Hammerstone, Paul
Holtlngs~ead, Esther Kissell~
Gerald Krebs, Jr .., Mrs.
Charles Luman and son,
Carolyn Martin, Ruth
Maynard, Geraldine Mayo,
Joan Miller, Melissa Nance,

•SNOOPY

•CINDERELlA

•LUCY

•DONALD DUCK
.•MICKEY MOUSE
•MINNIE MOUSE

Louise Neal, Jennifer Ours 1

June . Pickens, Marga ret
Pistelll, Luther Pitienger,
Clyde Porter, Marga ret
Schilling, Julia Shawver,
Herschell Sheets, Mrs.
Thomas Stewart and
·daughter, Michael Terry ,
Gregory Thivener', Coetta
Thomas, Emory Waugh,
(Birlhs, Dec. IS)
Mr . and Mrs. Melvin
Sargent, daughter,
GaiJipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Patterson, daughter,
Vinton; Mr.
and Mrs .
Stephen Wolverton,
daughter, Gallipolis.

SWISHEH

LU~St

Pharmacy
\

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Chortas RIHia, R. Ph.
Ronald Honnlng, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sot. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 10:30to 12 :30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
THE "SNOWBALI.'l" and gremlins of the Riverview operetta pictured Include :
gremlins, front, I tor, Jeff Johnson, Trent Upton , Joe Young ; snowballs, Ginger Hayman ,
Maralyn Barton, Amy R1ggs , Amy Berkhimer, Traci Newlun, Caralyn Barton Cristy
Newlun.
'

'

PRESCRIPTIONS

-"H.MAIN .

PH . 992-2955'

Friendly Servico
OponNightstjt9 __

... . . .. .

POME~OY,O ..

�lO-TMAS;~:e:·:::O. , Thurtday.~F~r
1"1
Grap
a..

b, ·..

Bernice
Oaol
For FridiJ, DK. 17, 1t78

ARIES (f..rch 21·Aprll 1t)
Unless you're very care ful today
you are apt to come ou t on the
shon end in b usi ness snuat1ons.
Do n ' t t a~e u n necessary

In Me mo ry of VtO ia Lo ulu .
who wtnt awl'tl Dec . u .
1961 . F ift een vt ar s hne
now pa n ed Sl f'IC f Viola
w ~ nt

ye o1 n

TAURUS (Aprii20· Miy 20) This
15 not one ol your better Clays for

we had vou ,

th l'
and

le it ve th e re n to God.
Never se fl fa ith short ttle
love and rur ptra sure thil
hom e aton e afford s. L t fe is
li ke a flo wtr . th e ros e how
sa d wh en fad ed and gone.
Sh e

gambles

away , We Dlr u

l e ft

b eh i nd

a

monum ent of vi rtu e that
th e storm s ot t i me cannot

destr o v all a r e dr eam s onl y

memo ries of th e pa st.
Family
an obst inate perso n Neither of 1-- -- - - -...:C:.:::.::..C...J
stnk1ng bargains. es peci ally wilh

yo u wlt l b e will ing to co m ·
pro mise.

Audiun

GEMINI (M8~ 21 · JUnl 20, Don't
tall behind in you r duties and LAST CHRIS TMA S AU CI ION Sole
Lots ol ne w fl'Crt honi d!itt toys
responsjblll tles, or you r wor k wlll
and g1lt s. l hunday n1ght . &amp;·30
pt le up ana m ake 11 dl fllcult lo r
p m at th9 Auc t ion Hause, Hor·
you to get ahe ad.
tan 51. . Mason . W.l/o.

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Play
thi ngs close to the vest 19day
Spen d only tor essentials or you
m ay be ask ing for problems.

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) T1m1ng is
o f utm ost impo rt ance tod ay
whe re you r major mt erests are
concerned. Don 't try to ru sh
th i ng s to a conc lu sion
pre m atu rely

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·fab. 11)
Goals can on ly be ac hieved to·
d ay II you're willing to p ay the
pnce pe rsona ll y Don't expect
all ies to carr y th e ball.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Be PISCES (Fob. 2D-ro!.lrch

2~1

Comp lication s wnl res ult today if
realistiC tod ay, but don't view the
you twist simPle iss ues into
wo rld nega tive ly. If yo ur outlook
so mething mo re complex. Make
is too pes Sifmstic it w11 1 co nno mountam fro m mol ehill s
'rlh ute to yo ur deteat

l iOHA(Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) For the
ue .. :

days kee p a tight re1 n
011 ~ •J\.of purse. Be '.le ry prud ent
a r1 ri \l&gt;ll:ty we ll Within yo ur bud get.
l~w

:lCORP IO (Ocl.

~4·Nov.

22)

~Your

~Birthday
Dec. 17, 1176

four ctf lcie ncy will be somewh at Th1s yea r . your be nefit s will

o~l~te d

today b eca use you'r e apt
to s pread yourselt too thm Tak·
mg on more than you can handl e
will only be frl! Sirat mg

come from that for which you 've
already la1d sO lid toundatlon
Finish wha t yolfve started before
seekmg gree ner pastur es.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.

(Are you a Saglfladus ? Bernice
Os ol has wfl tten a spec1al Asfro·
Graph. Leuer lor you For your

21) Pro bl em s toda y are lik ely to

be ol you r own making Don ' ttr~
to sh1ft the blam e for your mi S- copy send 50 cents and a self·
t a ~ es
addresse d, s /amp ed emmlope to

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Astro -G raph , P.O. Box 489.

A fr 1en d mig ht try to blame yo u Radro Clly Stat10n. New York,
lor someth ing to d ay that yo u're N.Y. 100 19 Be sure fo ask fo r
no\ enti rely respon si bl e lor The Sagtffanus Vo lume I}

Aulu ~"lt.•8

WANT APS
INFORMATION

DEADLINES

P .M

OI V

P ubl 1' 1t lon .

C•nctllatl ons,

Bt fort

., ne

RATiS

For W•n1 Ad Service
S ce nts per word one
IMSt fl iOn .
Mtnl mum Cherv·e 11 .00
1 ~ cents per word three
c: on secut.fYe Insert ions .
76 cen1 s pet word si x
r onsecut i ve Insert Ions .
75 Per Cent D iscount on
pa 1d ads and ads pa id
w i th in 10 davs .
CARD OF THANKS

u .oo

tor

50

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
WASHINGTON (UP!) Years ago, The New Yorker
magazine ran a cartoon that
showed Mayor Fiorello La·
Guardia arriving at City Hall.
The next couple of paneiB
showed the old building rock·
ing, rolling and nearly
jwnplng oil 118 foundations.
The laat showed it collaf"'lng
limply as Hizzoner departed
for tile day.
Something of that sort
would be approprla te for the
Democratic National
Committee
upon
the
departure of Robert L.
Strauss, il8 chairman from
December, 1972, through
January, 1977.
Much has ~n written
about the accompli.shmenl8
of the Dallas lawyer-banker
who took over the debt-r idde~
Democratic Party after itS
worst electioo defeat and
brought it back to solvency
and victory in 1976.
There are some who might
argue that the Democrats
could have won the
presidency this year with a
candidate other than Jinuny
Carter, but few who watched
the political scene In tile four
years just past would
maintain that the party could
have come back withoqt
Strauss.
Strauss did not restore
unity to the Democratic
Party . It still has factloos
that do not speak, and It still
!)as djsagreemenl8 that can
raise the roof without noUce.
What Strauss did was make
tile warring Democral8 sit
down together and try ID
work together. In this, he
accomplished a feat of
mediation worthy of Henry
Kissinger.
Strauss did not refonn the
Democratic Party. He was
lltuck with reform when he
Jook . over the chairmanship
and he would never have
lasted In the job had he
seriously attempted to return
party goverrunent to the top·
down system that [)l"evalled
In tile past.
· What Strauss did was make
~y reform work so that the
Democral8 · could open their
rank.s ID groups previously
shut out and still go·about the
business
of
electing
candidates for public office.
Strauss did get tile party
out of the red. It was about t9
million In debt after the 1968
electioo, and aa treasurer and
then chalrmim, strauss got
most of the bills settled. As
part of this effort, he
developed the political
telethoQ to raise money.
Buying costly national
televtaion air time to solidi
funds wu a gigantic risk, but
II wcrked alid it probably will
be a permanent feature ol the
political scene.
Strauss did all tlliB with a

NOTICES

ATTN .: !!

ALL HOUSEWIVES
A ll Yard Sales , "ummage ,

Porcl'1 and ·easement Porch
and Basement Sa les, etc .
m ust be paid In advan c e.
Get yours in early by
Slopping by OUr Office r•t
The Dail y Sentinel ,
ll
Co urt S l o r wr l ling Box
729 . Pomeroy , OhiO 457 69
wt t h your rem i t),l'ntc .

Notices
THE RACINE Fire Department wi ll
hav e a gun shoot Saturday at
6·30 p m ot their bvi lding in
Boshon
NOW occ: ept mg ptono students .
beginntt r5, u, termvdioles, od·
vanced st udents. Call
992·
INTERVIEWS wi ll be held Mndoy ,
Nov 22 197b sta rling ot I 1.00
om . o c:,lock m the officv of the
Meigs County Comminionen.
Court House , Pomeroy , Ohio
tor orcht tects who or e on the
approved lii t of Sta1t1 Ar ·
chttecls (Pubh c Works Slate ot
Oh10 ) f or lhe proposed multi pvrpo se foe~hty l or Meigs
C o unt~ . Pleoose Call lor appoint.
ment 992·2895 .
PIANO INSTRUC rt ONS Ch ild ren 's
and ad ul t!&gt; . Jvne VanVranken ,

qn.n7o

zest and energy that seemed
Putting
a
limitless.
Democratic whlstlestop
campaign train on the track.s
was one of his fondest
personal projects, and he
worked for two years to get it
done.
After aU the complicated
details were worked out and
the train finally got under
way In New York, Strauss
alighted at every stop ID
warm up the audiences and
Introduce the local politicians
and
the
presidential
candidate. He and his wife
Helen also served snacks ID
the reporters between stops.
His work for the first 14hour day of the ·trip was just
about finished as the train
neared Pittsburgh. Strauss
celebrated by blockading the
aisle of the VIP car and
leading a loud and raucous
slng-a~ong all the way miD
the station.
'
strauss will be a hard act to
follow. But whoever Carter
selects will find It an eaaier
job to do because of the
remarkable Texan who filled
it last .

The Almaaac
Ualted Preoslnternatloual
Today Is Thursday, Dec. 16,
the 35lst day ol1976 with 151D
follow.
The moon IB between 118
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mer·
cury, Venua and Jupiter.
Thlll!e born oo t.hiB date are
under tile sign of Sagittarius.
· English actor, playwright
and c1111pooer Noel Coward
WBS born Dec. 16, 1899.
On tills day In history:
In 1773, protesting the
Brltiah tax on tea, some 50
American patrlo18 dllgulsed
as Indians dwnped 342 cheata
of tea Into Boston harbor In
what history records as "TM
Boston Tea Party."
In 1835, ooe of history's
· worst fires swept over whole
dl;y blocka In New York City,
razing 600 buildings and
callled damage estimated at
mere than $3) mlllloo.
In 1944, the Gennans
launched a great counter·
offensive In the Ardennes
Forest of Belgium, In what
was caUad '"lbe Battle ol the
Bulge."
In 1960, 131 peraona were
ldlled when two airplanes
collided over foggy Nei. York
harbor and crashed.
A thought for tile day:
English playwright Noel

Coward said : "Mad dogs and
Engliahmen go out In the

rnlddlly sun."

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

PROFESSIONAL

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

13995

Classic, 350, V-8, automatic, power steerlrtg and
brakes, rally wheels, radio, black and very attractive.

1915 LUV PICKUP
S3295
With topper, low mileage, radio. w·w tires, clean.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1976
6:oo-New&gt; 3,4.8.10.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 10:

EXPERIENCED

UPHOLSTE.IlY.
- FAIRII":

Velvets, nylon prlnh, 1
herculolls, vinyl solido, and
fanty prints, ac:cenorl~• .

(6U) 985·4155
Ch..ltr, Ohio
10-17·1 moiPd)

GUN SHOOT ot lhe Racine Gun
Club ev ery Svnday . I p.m.
Assorted meals

FREE ES IM TES
Blown

Insulation Services

fioJncinJ Anl~ble
Blown iniiWih &amp;Allia

·
1969 Nova, extra ,harp , new
Point bucket utots, air shocks .
mags . P~onv 949 · 2&lt;4 80
1968 BONNEVILLE
Phon&amp; 992-5535

PONTIAC .

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
• "32"8 Main Strati
Pl. Pleu•nt

Ph.675·3469
9:30·5:00 Dally
Tltl8:000 F_rldays

new !I re s, 6 cyl. standard wtll
sell or trod!il lor second cor .
Phone (61 ,.) 593.b8 17 after 6
p .rn
19bS CHEVELLE 2 door hardtop,
v.a good condttton. $495
• Phone 378·0349.
1969 -4 DOOR hardtop Delio 88 .
h
p s , p.b , ot r con d itioning T is
cor IS tn eMce ll eM I cond1lion .

Oh.

NEW YEAR 'S EVE Donee 9 till 2
p . m.
Rv tlond
Gym ,
refreshments, B. V.O .B. live
bond R. J Browntng $ 10 cou ·
pie Reservollons by phon ing
992·b1bJ 992-6020 or 992·7366.
Sponsored by UMWA Su p·
porter 's Club . Rese rvations con
be mode by moiling nome , od ·
dress and phone nvmber to
Mrs . Rita Maust , SQM 59,
langsvtlle , Ohio 45741. Thes
The se tickvts con bv pi cked up
01 the door Ttckel s sold also at
the door

Luot and Found
FOUND · one bird or hunting dog.
Pleo~e call and iden11 fy Phon e
992 -3165
F OUND ,
GOLD
fra m ed
eyeglasses m upper Monkey
Run area
Contact larry
Hoschar . 992·2523

Help Wanted
GUARANTEED JOBS-LOCATION ,
$374 40 ~~nght , $502 .80 mar·
ned. Army Recrulflr~g . Co li Col -

lect (61&lt;) 593 - 302~ o' 385·6318
GUARANTEED JOB$· locarlon .
$.374 40 single $502.80 mar·
ned . Army Recruiting , (6 14)
593·3022 . call collect

Wanted to Buy
OLD furn i ture , ice boxe! , bros!
beds, wolf telephones and
paris, Q,r comp lee households
Wnte M . D. Miller , At . 4,
· Pom eroy. Ohio. Colt 99'J. .776lJ
CASH po1d far all makes and
models of mobile 'homes .
Phone area code b14 ·,.23·'9531
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
dvcts Top price for standi ng
~owtimber . Co li Kent Honby ,
1·-44&amp;·8570 .
COINS CURRENCY , token! , old
pocket watches and chains.
s1lver and gold. We ntt&amp;d 1964
ond older si l ver coins. Buy, se ll ,
or trade ' Coli Roger Womsl&amp;y.
74'2 2331
CASH I l l lor junk cars . Frye 's
Truck and Auto . 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE &gt; Phone
742·2081
BUYING RAW FUR
No. 1,
Muskrat $4 .75: Coon , SIS: Mole
mink , $15
Phoue · Ge o
Bu&lt;.kley . (61-4) 669-..761 aher 5
pm
10 C()C')D pig~ . Jv to60 lbs. Phon~~t
Bill Kautz , 985·3831 .

hrdSalc

PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sto·

GUITIIUWIINGS

LARRi,1'J.fh~DER
Ph.991·39!13 "4-ln.; mo

lens &amp;Mira telephoto lens and
flash ottoc:hment . Got I Miller
phone 992 .319b.
CHRISTMAS PONIES fo r child ren

Coll (614)698-3290.

t'orRcnt

BEEF CATllE . 301 eoth good hay
rak e. Also set of 16 5 nms for
Ford or C h e ~ r o l et three ·fourth
lon lrucloi w1 th slo inless hub·
cops . Co11992 7201 or992·3309.
WESTERN Fl VER 10 speed b1ke. 27
mches. Like new . Call992·3299.

One good used Remington
Chain Saw
sso
One goOd used McCullough
Cha1n Saw
S7S
One good used Homelite
Chain Saw
!II SO
New Co -Op Water Soflerters
model VC · XVI Onl y $'279.95
One good used Gibson Side·
bY ·Stde Refrigerator
n~o

AVAILABlE at R1vers1de Aport .
ments , I bedroom , $100 per
month . 1 bedrooms. $133 An
Equol Housmg Opportun1ty .
Phone 992·3273.

ONE BEOROOM Aph at VILLAGE .
MANOR in Middleport lor $1D.e
monthly plus elec . or $130 In·
el uding elec:-. LOWER RATES lor
SENIOR CITIZENS Conven1en t
to shopping on Thi rd and Mill
Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Sts in M tddleporl Brand new
Phone992-2181
high quol•ly opo,lmeflls . See
the manager ot Apt . 28 or call
992-772 1. An Equol Housing SINGER golden Touch N ' Sew .
Opportunity .
Does it oil Z1g·zogs sews on
km!S . outomotlc , button haler .
2 BEDROOM mobile home m
makes designs many other
Racine Areo . Phone 992 -S8S8.
fea tu res . jvst lik e new .
3 BEDROOM 2 story house. com ·
Original pnce $549.q5 . must
pletely remodeled , new carpet ,
$ell . only $129.95 . Cosh or
kitchen . etc. 4 miles north ol
terms. Coli 9n·5146
Pomeroy on St. Route 7, $225
month plus ulililles. Phone HOUSE lOTS fo1 sole . Near Meigs
M1nes 1. Phone 742·2740 .
985·3341

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _
Ai11L

TRAILER FOR rent , odvhs only . CHRI STMAS SPECIAL: Turquo•se
jewlery, 20 percent off l ong Ri ·
Phone992·318 1
lie Shop. 248 Rivervtew Drtve ,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3090.

l'cts fur Sale
PLEASURE HORSES and ponies ,
also will bvy horses and
pomes Phone (61A ) 698·3290 ,
Ruth Reeves .
All whtle German Shepherd Pup ·
pies, fine blooded. See Richard
Gi lk ey , Cltlton , W. IJo ..
3().-4. 773 -5962 or 773.sns

l'ur Salt•
CHRISTMAS TREES . Beautiful Plan tation grown Scotch Pine, while
Spruce, Norway Spruce. Col ·
orodo Blue Spruce, 5 to 10 feet ,
a
le w
larger .
Priced
reasonably . Areas best selec ·
hon . 12 cornecutlve ytors. of
tree !elling Bob's MOrkel , just
across the bridge~ In Mason .

Phone(304)773-4721 .

FANCY CITRESS fruits, navel
oranges .
tangertnes .
long&amp;loe!, 6 variety ol apples
in any quonily red . blut and
white gropes, ouorted bulk
Christmas tondy ond nuts.
Also , for o Christmas gift sug·
geslion: extra family fru it
basket! 4 c.on~o~enlent sires lo
f it your needs . Ouonlty dis·
counts ovotloble Bob's Market .
Just across the bridge, Mason .
Phon.• (3&lt;W) 773·4721 .

15 CU FT. chest type freezer. 2
years old, $150 Rem ing ton
model 66 automatic 22 rifle .
$45 Pair of OOy!. 1ce skates.
sir:e 7, new, SS. Phone Betty
longenette , 985-3qBs
APPLES ,

CIDER, Romes , Gal.
Deht~ous , Winesap . F1tr:palnck
Orchard , State Route. 689
W il ~esvi lle .
Phone
(014)

609-3785.
REDUCE SAFE i lost with GoBese
Tnblets &amp; E·IJop " water pills "
Nelson Drug.
SET or mud n' snow tires . H·7815,
$25. Phone992·2759 .

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?

L~t
~

I

_ ANTIQUE DINING room suite , 6
c ho•r~ Ph01le 991·6008 to se'e .
IF YOU hove a service to oller,
~an t to buy or '-o tl ~ome th ing . ElECTfi'OLUX SWEEPER. complete·
ly rebuill w11h all new Qt.
ae look ing for wo rk .
or
tochments, $54 95. Al!io Hoo11er
whatever ·. . . you II get resu lts
) weepCJ~ . tOt l lo.~ or uprights,
foster with o Sent mel Wont Ad .
SI 6 Pho11P. 992-51 olb
Coli W1·1156.

test

your

R~nl

ReaJ Eslale for SaJc

126.500 Phone(614)667-6J04 . ·

MAIN
POME.ROY,

0.

OR

plus add to fhe value of

MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot . 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
utility R.• dining R., som e
carpeting . Storage or office
bldg ., lots of shrubbery,
natural gas heat, el&lt;cellent

neighborhood .
RUTLAND -

W1ll do odd jobs, r oof 1ng, pain·
lin g, gvller work . Phon e 992·
7409
EXPER IENCED BABY SITTER $ tok ·
1ng reser vot mn s lor oil night
and hourly sillmg lor New
Year's Eve For mlormol1 on,
col l 992-7092 .
DRAPERIES mode to order . f' hone
949 2202.

Aboul 4

acres in town Older hom e
has 3 bedrooms, dining R.,
bath , alum . sid ing, out
cellar .
storage bldg .•
natural gas heal . Just

$15,500.00.
P ,O MEROY
RECREATION CENTER
- long established doing a
very good business . Low
Investment Excellent
return .

POMEROY - 3 bedrooms.
bath , basement, dining
room, utility space, hard ·
wood floors , natural gas
furnace, stor m doors and
w indows, porch . $12,500.00.

LISTINGS WANTED IN
EVERY SECTION OF
THE COUNTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

1975 CASTlE 12' x 60 2 bedroom
woodgiom ex tenor, boy win ·
dow, tota l w rap Foom·Cor . lui ·
ly
furnished .
Fro stfree
relngerotor , carpe ted thru out ,
l1ke new Pnced n ght . Con be
5een at Ki ngsbury Hom e Soles.
100 E Mom St Pomeroy, Ohio

your

friendly,

HOMESITES for sol 9, I acre ond
up Middleport . neor Rutl and
Co ll q92·7481 .
NEW 3 bedroom hovse . 2 baths .
otl elec , 1 ac re M1ddleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481
SMALL form for sole , 10°/~ down ,
owner f monced . Monro e County ·W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·

3101 0 ' (30&lt; )772·3127 .
COUNTRY larmlond with secl ud·
ed woods water end good oc·
ce ss m Monroe County , W Vo .
Sl ,000 down , coli (304 ) 772 ·
3102 or (304 ) 772·3227

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Slree1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
COUNTRY SPOT - Nice
brookside lot with 3
bedroom

residence .

"We Care"
Est.
Work Guar.

in

2' , ACRES lev~l land. 1 , mile
from Rutland OM New l !mo
Roud Phone 742·2930 or alT er 5
p .m.
Pho11c

LITfLE ORPHAN ANNIE

ANNIE-END

BRADFORD Auctioneer . Com·
ple le Service Phone 9A9·2A87
or 949 2000. Rac ine. Ohio, Crill
.Stodlord .

IT IS \HE BAD AtR ··
THE 0 '.(Y6EH IS 60ING
FI\ST·· REST, SAHiB -·
I CA~ 0\RRf 0~ A
LtnlE LOH~fR'-

ntAl GATE

Also

has garage with '" bath,
ond bedroom . Drilled well.

Commercial property opprox 17
ac re5 level land, located ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
·7 Phone(614)667·6304.
3 bedrooms. 11ft baths , large 1;~,~ .
ing room , dmlng room and kit ·
chen fully carpe ted . Phone
qq2·3 129. Of 9'92 · ~34

hookups . Wanl only $5500.

59 acres, 6 room house, both,
portly carpeted , two out·
build in gs, du g base ment ,
one ·th1rd t il lable , mmerol
rights located neor Danville.
Reduced lor qu1 ck sole ,
SLJ,SOO Phone 7.;2.2766.

COUNTRY HOME - 3
bedrooms, mod . balh, fuel

NEARLY new ol elec. home , lvll
basement . for sole by owner .
Rutland oreo . Phone 742·2531 .

IN TOWN - 1 bedrooms,
mod. bath, nal. gas F.A.
furnace. Full basement
with
washer - dryer

with glass sliding doors .
537.500.
POMEROY - 2 bedrooms,
bath, furnace, basement,

-·----

SEPltC Sy stems installed by
licens ed
insta ller
Shepard
Contrac tor s Phone 742·2409.

WILL do roof ing, construct ion,
· plumbing and heot1ng . No jOb
1oo Iorge or too sma ll. Phone
742-2:146

-

-

-

--~

--------

CARPENTER, floori ng, ceil ing,
p.on.!li~g .. ~-~~ ~.2~· ~-5_9..._ __
DOZER work and we lding . Canloci James Pa rsons, Rt , I ,
Rocme, on- Carmel Rood .

--·---- .............--··MOBilE Home Repair , Elec.,

plum b ing and heating. Phone
W2 -5858

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

Ex·

cavat1ng , sepllc 5~5tems. ,
dozvr , back hoe, dump truck .
li mestone
grovel, blacktop
paving, Rt , 143 . Phone 1 (61-4;
6qa.7331

•.."""' '.. c•·-•·-

rLI~L-A.;.B_N_E_R_ _ _ _7-:-~::-::---:-:-;""o;----lr;::::::-:;,::--;-:-~;::-;;::;:::;:-;:::-::-:-;:::-y,:;;:;::-;:;;uo:;:"\,
WHUT CO AH
DO NOW

2

DON'T HANG ARa.JND AND
uc: 6 0 r v--uE

~=~:_:_.;"'Co r:

n-..JIV&gt;

NEW OFFICE
BILL FLETCHER
149 South Third
Middleport, 0.
Phonem.m5

e&gt;UI LDINB

To sales oriented persons with previous
sales experience, Montgomery Ward offers
the . opportunity to qwn ''""'' operate a
catalog sales store. lmme&lt;.., ~te opening in
these stores.

Write. W. A. Borowski· Giving full personal
qualifications.

MONTGOMERY WARD

We haVe now moved to our
new location at 216 East

Monroe St.
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

1r

that

• Kx:ox 'l Ax . M.., /\ K.I xx

answer

of

ts

11.0()-Whee l ol Fortu ne 3, 15. Weekd ay ·I; Edg e of
Night 6. D oubl e D ar e 8, 10 , M orn ing wi th 0 J 13
11:Jo-Stump er s 3,4, IS; Happy On yc; 6, 13: L ove of Life

th~!

waffling type. We open one
club or one spade depe nding

8, 10, Sesame Sl. 20.JJ.

on what ou r partnN likes . ln

1 1 · ~ 5---T a ke Ker r

general you bid the h1gher
r ankmg of two f1 ve·coud :s uat s

12·0G- New s 3,6 18,10;
G r an d Slam I S.

f trst. but y ou rnay make an exc eption wath spades and clubs.

hi s

AFTER US I

WANTB
SITE...FOR A
INCOME HOUSINC"7

DEVELOPMENT! !

W/1/,&lt;t•. .

N

wPA u s R

lor Tomorr ow 8, 10.

11·Ss- NB C News 3.15.
l ·Oo-Som er set 3; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13 ; Conce nlrf'l llon 9;
Y oung &amp; Restless 10; Nol F o r Wo m en Only IS

1:3{)-Days ol Our Lives 3,4 ,15; Fa mily Feud 6,13: As
The W orl d Turn s 8,10

2.00-S10,000 Pyram id IJt Dlnoh 6.

2:3G-- O octor s J. d, 15; One Lit e t o Li ve 13; G uld ~ ng

Llahl 810.
·
3·0()-1\ nolher Wor ld 3,4,15, Al l In The Family 8,10;
Croc kett ' s VI c t ory Ga rden 20.

3 15- G ener a l Hospltal 13

3·J()-8ewll ched 6; Malch Ga me 8. 10; ; Lil ias. Yog• &amp;
You 20.

d 0()-Mister ( Qrtoo n 3, M a r cus W elby M.D. A:
Som er set 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mick e y Mouse C lu b
8; Sesame St . 10, 33, M ovie "S pani sh Attal r " 10;

Dinah 13.
4.3(}-My Three Sons 3, Em er ge ncy On e 6 : Partr \dge
Fam i ly B; F llnf stones 15.
5 oo- B ig V a lley 3; Mcrv G riffin 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Roger s 20,33; Star Trek IS

u o- News 6; Fam ily Atlal r B; Elec. Co 20,33: Adam·
12 13.
6·oo-N ews 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6: Zoot'n 20,33.

6 3{)-NBC News 3,4.1l . ABC News 13; Andy Grlltllh 6.
CBS News 8.10; ~odgepodg e Lodge 20; VI lla Alegre
33.
.
7:0{)-Trulh or Cons . 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollors 6: Andy Williams B; New! 10; To Tell the
Truth 13: My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal20; Bl3ck

Yesterdu)•'s Answer

9 Ennoble
12 Ecstalic
16 Aoania s
19 Affiliations
22 Bucolic
dance Site
23 Silver
pieces
12 wds.)
24 Its capital
IS Yerevan

25 Lamenla·
tion
29 Br itiSh
wc1ght
unil
:lO Tclcgmphed
31 One

Perspective on the News 33.
7.Jo-Porter Wagoner J, Break 'the Bank 41 Candid
Camera 6;

'
WSMANY
FWCAM

y

H
HZ

Frosty th e Snowman 8, 10; WashlnQton Week In
Review 20,33 .

8:3{)-Chlco &amp; lh e Man J,4,1 l : 'Twas lhe Nlg~l Before
Chrl slmas a, 10; Wall Slreet Week 20,33.
9:0{)-College Baskelball 3: Mov ie " Young Pioneers
Chrl slmas" 6: Rocklord Files 4,15: Movie " Pockel

32 Watchful
37 Dafl
38 Swab

a,

10,00-Serplco 4, IS; News 10 ; Pul Nuchlms 33.
11 :00-News 3.4,8,10,1 J.1S; MacNeil -Lehrer Rporl 33.
11.3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; SWAT 6,13: Movie
" Who's Minding the Sore?" 8; Mary Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.
'
12 :oo-Movle " Lady In lhe Lake" 10; J anakl 33.
12:4{)-Mod Squad 6: Ironside 13.
1:00-Midnlghl Speci al 3,4, 15.
1:4{)-News 13.
1:3D-News 3.
3:00-Movle " Fea r No Evil " 3.
4.3Q-Movle "Criminal Lawyer "

3.

6:00-FBI 3.
ftlt\l~~ft ~THATSCRAMBLEDWOROGAME
\.9 ~~ 411 by Hanrl Arnold and aoc Lee

- +-4f--l I!!)

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

FEE 0;
EIAZWZF

K

wM

s

P T S

SE

YHNMA

KAZUR

ZAVLHZ

.

Fi!•Lwll!l Srndiettll!, Inc.

r

I....,.....I

._ ~ ,

TE l EGA~PHY

EXAM

II

....... .., l of"'o ._

I I I

,._M_A_U_L_T=E,-..,~

1 rJ

\

YARPER!

I. KJ

WHAI HE FEeT

[J

1

WHEN HE
FORGOT THE COt'E..

·

I . ·0

Anewer here:

11

Now arrange the circled letters to '
form the surptlse answer, as aug· ,
gested by the abOve CBrtoon

ITJ-[ I I I l J"

(Answers tomorrow)

jumbles: FLANK AWARD MODISH tlAMBIT

Yestorday·s

I

Ana-: Put 011 to"'hl~e·· malf&lt;s of ownership- ·

'

... BRANDS

BARNEY

LOWEEZ'I·· HOW IN THUNDER
DO 'IOU AN' SNllFF'I Gil BV
WIF NO VISIBLE MEANS
. . OF SUPPORT?

-·-"

UGSIE

wz .
ws

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A POEM IS THE VERY IMAGE
OF LIFE EXPRESSED IN ITS ·ETERNAL TRUTH . 'SHELLEY
t'J 1976 Kln1

MacNeil-Lehrer

Money "
\0 ; D o cumentary Showc ase 33; Co llege
Basketball 13; Documentary Show case 20,

sK E T F

NWPAUSR . - BEKZ

Treasure Hunt 8,

Reporl20,33: Andy Wll iloms 10: Name Thol Tune
13: fop Goes the Counlry 15.
8,0{)-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4,15: Donny &amp; Mari e 6,13;

dinin~

co~~~~~~~;~~~::r.,nt
E

8; MS-. Flxlt 10
Don H o 13, Bob Braun &lt;1 , SO

IU {)-Gong Show J, IS: All My Chi ldren 6. 13; Sea rch

roo you have a quesrion
for th e e ~t per ts? WrJ te · Ask
the Jacob ys ·· care of thiS
n ewsp aper The Jaco bys w1/l
answer llldi VI dua l qu es /1ons
r1 stamped. sell -addressed
enve lope s are enclose d file
mos t 1n ter es rmg ques 11on s
will be used rn lh 1s co/lJfnn
and w11f rece1ve cop1es o l
JAC OBY MODERN 1

ACROSS
40 Heavy blow
I Plunder
Isl I
5 Do pen a nee , 41 Sard further
wrth ·•for ·• 42 Saucy
10 Tennis star
llOWN
II Esprit de ." I Dieter·s
corps
dish
13 Nobleman
2 United
II Charles - .
1:r wds. J
Charle·
3 Item often
magne's
exchun gcd
grandfather
12 wds. )
IS Black
I Sheep tick
euckoo
5 .lordan ·s
16 Stnplmg
capital
17 Yellow
6 Sycophanl
bugle
i Hockey
18 Fate
name
20 Brewer 's
H Creche
tank
sight
12 wds.J
(Sp. J
22 Morsel
23 More
subdued
Married
26 Elizabethan b-+-4-and
Christian
27 Jazz great,
Kid _Mornings
t abbr .)
29 Por( in
Wales
33 Vin's
descriptive
34 Stannum
35 Presidential 6-+-!nickname
36 Bewitch
38 Boundary
39 Albanian
capt tal

hin" Each da y the

&gt;WHY, THEY
'M ME'D IHE

RIPLEY - RICHWOOD • RAINELLE

Wtth ·

Our

4, 13 .15; L ucy Sho w 8;

Mike Douglas 10 ..
9:3{)-Cross-WIIs 3; One Llle lo Live 6; Good Day 8
10 :00-Sanlor d &amp; Son 3. 4,ll , Pr ice Is Ri ghi 8. 10, Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :1 General Hospllol 6.
10·3{)-Holly wood Squares 3.4, 15 .

One letter simply stands f or ano th er. In thi s sample A is
u sed for the three L 's, X f o r t h e tw o O' s, etc. Single l ett er s,
apostrophes, the l ength an d formation of t he wo r d s are all

UIIUIANC

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

9·00......A M. J; Ph i l Donahue

O.AILY CRYI'TOQUOTE - !le1·e's how t o work it :
AXYDLfiAAXR
is L 0 N G •• E I. I. 0 W

191G6E5T TEN ANT. "THAI'S

WE ~AVE THE ~OU SE
FOR YOU, DROP IN AND
SEE IT

\

_,_

- --- · - - ELECTRONIC T.V. CliNIC. New

T.V . shop, Electronic T.IJ. Cl inic
Se(vi ce cci!l , $5.95. Color, B &amp; 'N
anten na system s stereos, etc.
572 South Thi rd, M 1ddleport.
Ph'one 992-6306. Corry in and
so ~e money .___ __,_ · - - __

B 3{)-Big Val ley 6.

know the correc t opening bid

(~;.tVVc~~~~~~~Sl~~~~~~~~~~~~~)21Aunt

m . .,

2428.

7:3{)-Schoolles 10.
8 :00--L assle 6 ; Cap!. Kang ar oo 8, 10: Sesa m e St 33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and d1t cher Cherie! R. Hat·
fi el d, Bo ck Hoe Serv ice,
Rutland , Oh10 Phone 7-42 -2008.

---

Reporls 10.
7.05- Buas B unn y &amp; Fr iends IU

~

-···

--·

Morn lng , Amer l c ~ 6,13; CBS N,ews 8, Chuck Will ie

0

would hold th e mtS sing one

EXCAVATING dozer , loader and
bock i;loe work , dump trucks
and lo boys for hire; wil l haul
fill dir t , to soil, l1meslone ond
grav el. Ca ll Bob or Roger Jeffer s day phone 992·7089,
mght phone 992 ·3525 or 992·
52~2

or

A Quebec reade r wants to

"""'"''' didn' t have t wo aces
chances w e r e that Ea st

---

-

Company training- minimal investment

Second St., Pomerov.

Pass

He reasoned

,::.~~==---======;::::j&gt;o:e;;;ur::n::;oc:;;1H:;;:E:-r;:--&lt;;:;r;;:~;;:n~"r; ;'s\1111i:iFE ME11N- 1Ti.iru;(;i'iiNi~iBE:c;i;iE

1000 5.

P ass

Pass

OUT JF IT WAS

SEWING MACHINE Repotrs , ser·
v1ce oil makes, 992·22BA The
Fobr 1c Shop . Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sole5 and
Sefv te e. We sharpen Sctssors.

.and furniture . All for only

Sl2,900.

Pass

wasn·t too happy about his
hand . ThiS didnt deter South

AWAY OUT· ·

· 6' 45-Mornl ng Report J.
6·5{)-Good Morning, Wesl VIrgin ia 13.
6:55-Good Morning , lr l Slale 13.
) ·oo-Today 3,4,15, GoodMorn lng , Ame rlca 6,13, Good

~ ~~~

Pass

to pa ss and mdicate that he

REMODELING. Plun1blng, heating
and a ll types of general repair .
Wor k g uaranteed 20 years ex·
penance. Phone 992- 24~.:__

Cozy 3

!liVER PROPERTY

14

GAVE ME HOPE ··

Sweepers, toas ters, Irons, all
small opptionces . lown mower,
next to Slat e High way Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614} 985·

Gas well.

level lot. S22,DOO.

North E as t

Report 13

6:2
N of For Women Only IJ .
(» :3D-Columbus Today 4; New s 6 : Sunri se Sem ester 8;
Over sea s Missi o n 10.

to his hand by ruffmg ai)Otht,r
heart. played hi s king of clubs
to pick up F.asf" s queen and
claimed.

,.

F~rm

6:15-Englls h 3,

last small spade ; carne back

Northls ftve -club call was a
tremendous overbid. but he
was forced into it by West's
' '
jump to four spades.· It jusl
!;eemed to him that a pass was
too much of an underbid .
MA N--------.r-~· South 's five-spade cue bid
,.
was fully justified and when
West doubled Norlh was able

801 lictti· 1'/E'LL NEvER

6:00--Sunri se Semes ter 10.

hiS jack of hea rts ; ruffed a
hea rl in hrs hand , ruffed his

in etther directto n

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
SoMttation . 992·3954 or

lt~al Estate for Sale

• II. H6 4

By Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
Aggressove defensive bid·
ding 1s something like a two
headed rattlesnake II can bite

Trust those
fix .it, room

FRIDAY , DECEMB ER 17, 1976

did lead

an d k ing

33.

:oo-

diamonds in order to get ri d of

• Opemng lead - Deuce A

3825.

Fairview
Hts . Lovely brick ve neer, 3
bedrooms, bath, modern
ki tc hen,
utility room,
carpeting , garage, storage
bldg ., porch , chain fence,
about I acre . Almost new .

dummy·s ace

Protect your investment

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

POMEROY -

areas.

I .

DAY

CHRISTMAS SPECIAl · Sewing
Machmes cleaned , oiled and
od ju sled
$4 .98
Sewmg
Cente-r, M1ddleport , Ohm.
'

608 E.

150 x 200 LOT for sole
Syrocvse. Phone ~2·3714 ,

Douville.
q92 .7791 oiler 4 p m

DUMP TRUCKS . BILL PULLIN S.
NIGHT.

BUILDING LOTS - Rock
Springs and Five Points

1n

DO ZER . TRENCHER, lOWBOY ,
PHONE 992 -2478,

2 ACRFS OF land at WHdiiVood
Eslotes, $4200. Phone 992·3273.

ACR£~

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Fr~

Business Scrli~s
EXC AVATING .
BACKHOES .

4Q 10
SOUTH

It

Pass

Rutland 12·9·1 mo. 742·2328

Portland, 0 .

• •1 54

s...

AL TROMM CONST.

PICKENS HOWE.

home. Nice kitchen , dining

bedroom house, fam ily room ,
fireplace , 2 baths, d ishwasher ,
range , garbage dtsposol ,
carpet, sun deck , Iorge lot.

West

builder.

843·2165

EAST

4/I.K9 87 52
OSCA!&lt;', IS 1HE~ A
81&amp; TARP. CR PIECE
OF CANVAS, IN
THE LAB~

6,13: Kojak 8: Mar y Har iman IQ, ABC News 33 .
12· oo-M ov le "The Bishop' s Wife " 10; Janak!
12 : 3(}-M ovl e " Sapph ir e' : 8.
12: A(}-0 Bn August 6 ~ 13
1
To m orrow 3 ,4 .
1· SO-- News 13

that spa de. South ruffed in
du mmy a nd proceed ed to
make the gra nd s la m by
carefu l play li e carne back to
hiS hand with the ace of clubs :
ruffed a second spade. Cashed

• Q J Y17 :1
• !\ ti 3

Neither v ulnt!rab lt•

Phone 992-5176
Syracuse, Ohio

jobs to

NEAR TOWN -

TUPPERS PlAINS. OH IO. lh&lt;ee-

I~

Square Yard tnstatted
Owner
949-2814
11 ·4·1 mo.

• 11 · 3o-J ohnn y Car son 3,4,15, Street s of Sarr Fr ttn c lsco

~ure e no ugh , West

¥J
• 7

neighborhood, qualltled

bedroom s,
nice bath,
natural gas F .A. furnace on

£state for Sale

·ALLEYOOP

and 1 car garage. 132,500.

Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

WEST
10 52
¥Q9 754
e Q 9 H2
• K

PERFECT

f orced air furnace , 3
bedroom renovated home

Pomeroy Landmark

a

at Home w i th the Ki ng

10:3{)-Woman 10.
11 :00- News 3.&lt;.6,8, 10.13.15: MacNeill.ehrer Reporl
33.

and that West would probably
le ad a spa de in any case . So
South bid the grand slam.

lti

• K 10 2
t II. K 10 6 3

addition and remodeling

15 ACRES -

w1t1r

·-

NORTH 1111

to

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

your home.
nece$Sary

New 3 bedroom al l elec .

FIREWOOD, 120 pickup truck load
delivered: SIS.. you pick II up.

type) w•th O.JO.. power mikv.
Like new. Prlctd reasonable .
Phot'!e 9-49·2322 .

ree.

L

FIREWOOD. PHONE 74'2·2131 ,

Phone(:JO.I) 882·3205.
ROBYN BASE C.B. rodto . (tube

us

THAT"S "7" HE 5 A l WAYS i /oJ
OIJE THING
rHERE PL.U&amp;61 NG··
I"VE ALWAYS
LOOKING 0 /oJ THE
W VED ABOUT
B RIG HT 5 1DE !
HIM .•. HE &gt;JEVER
LET'5 LIFE GE'r 1..--~
HIM DOW'-l!

... J6 4 3

6000

Barnaby Jones 8; Chr is tmas
Fa m ily 10; New s 20.

Oh io State L ottery 6 :

WIN AT BRIDGE

CAPTAIN EASY
5A!&gt;Y. YOU KNOW
1'/HAr A C~f!:~FtJ~ ,
HA~ D- WO~K 11.1"
GUY WA~H 1,-

pet. off ..,n 10 or more.

24
hour
Dependable
Furnace Service.
Oil or Gas Burners

oil F .A . furnace, nice eat. in
kitchen. Screened ·in porch
and large large. $19,500.

Let Pomeroy Landmark
tofttn &amp; condition your
water UC-XVI
ONLy 1279,95

from .

S~ uar es 3,4 ;

Price Is Rig ht 8: MacNei l Lehrer 20, 33; Wild
Klnadom 10; Na! hvllle on The Road 13: Dolly 15.

FOR GIFTS In red, white
and pink . $3.00 to $6.00 . 20

David Parsons,

!'

Origmol owner and guaranteed
mil eage 5950, Phor~e 992·5786
do1ly from noon til17 p.m

choose

'6.95

l ion . Phone 247·2684 after 5 , ----:::;;~:ie!il
p.m
CHRISTMAS TREES . Mom 51 .
Rutland.
LARGE ELECTRONIC o rgan and
ben ch , 2 keyboards leslie
Speaker . beouttlul cabmet.
A lso . 35 m m. co mvro, 1 1.5

CHRISTMAS.

ASSORTED RU8BER
BACK CA.RPETING

SIDING-SOFIITT

1971 LTD, air condit ioned, p .b , 1971 'HONDA CL --450, 12,000
ps. eMcellenl cond11ton . Phone
miles sissy bar, crash ba rs,
992·3442 .
pu ll bock handle bars, new t1re
1969 CADILlAC Sedan Oe\lille
and seals , Scramb ler s1de
four door . while sidewall !Ires, ·
pipes, $650. Co11949·2480.
power 5leering , power brakes, POTATOES and pvmpk ins. C. W.
power seats . om &amp; fm radio,
Proffitt , Portland , Ohi9. Phone
climate contro l. b:callent con·
843·2254 .
d1110n. Local owner. Phone
COAL lor so l&amp;, OpeM 6 days per
992 ·2413, $1·" 44 44
week and evvnings . For further
1970 DODGE POLARA . Phone
tnfor'mo'tion co li (614) 367 ·7338.
47
992 ·5 8
APPLES , FITZPATRICK O RCHARD ,
1%8 three -fovrth ton JEEP truck .
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
;)&amp; 1n . cop . bunks cook stove .
WILKESVILLE , (b14J 669·3785 .
ref . trlr . p~ckoge . $2 150 Will FUllER Brush Produ cts lor sole .
trade . Phone 985 -4227.
Phone 992 .3410 .
1970 Mustang Grandi . Phone CAMPER , $600. Also . hor se
992·32b0 or 992·bl 16
trailer , $450. Phonv (bl4 ) 698·
VAN , 197b DODGE , car peted,
3290

PERSON 's BOOV Shop, 26 Roil rood 3 AND 4 RM . furnished and vn Sl. Mtddtepor t wou ld like to
furntshed opts Phone 992 rem ind 'c vslomers lhol Dec. 31
S&lt;l&lt;
ts the lost day to to ke ad·
va ntage at the poinl jObs · all COUNTRY Mob1le Home Pork Rt.
33, len miles north of Pomeroy .
over in 1 col or. S100, 2 tone
large lots w tth concrete patio s.
$125 w1thout body wo rk Slop
~idewo l ks , runners and oil
m or phone 985·41 74 for op·
street por~ung Phone 992·7479.
po lntment
FURNISHED two bedroom opt ..
NOTICE . P r all · ~ Meat Mkt
adu lts only No pets M id·
(Pi eo5onton Meat PrCKessing ,
dleporl Phone 992 3B74.
Inc) Cus tom sloughtenng and
processing . Retail , wholesale .
No oppo inment necessary . Call
(6141 593 ·8655, hours 9:00 till
6 00 7 Pomeroy Road Athens .

COAL , lime stone . and colc1um
chloride and ca lcium brine lor
du st control and spec1al mu:ing
soli for formers Mom Street ,
Pomeroy, Oh•o or phone 9923891 ,

10,00-G ibbsvl lle 3. 4,1) ; AB C News Close Up 6, 13 :

7 : ~Hollywood

PLANTS FOR
YOUR HOME In pots end
hang ing baskets from 75c
to S5.00. Also, lay ewev
POl NSETTIAS now for

Racine, Ohio

SIORM
WINDOWSlDOORS
RIPLAClMEIIT
WINDOWS
AWMINUI

For Sale

T ruth 13; My Thr ee Sons 15; Anyone tor Te nnyson ?

10; Gelt lng On 33

NOTICE
FOLIAGE

RJ£1NE
CARPET SHOP

33.
8:3{)-Barney Miller 6,13.
9:00--Besl Sellers 3,4,15; Tony Randall 6, 13; Hawai i
F lve-0 8; Vis ions 33; Oral ~obert s' Christm as
Dream 10.
9 ·3o- N anc v W a lker 6, 13; Jeanne Wo lf W ith 20

sizes.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
r• 992-2174
r...;

6,13: Waltons 8, 10; Vlslons ?0 ; M aster p iece Theatre

6:3{)-NBC News 3,4.15: ABC News 13; Andy Grlft llh 6,
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 10; lTV
Ull llzallon 33..
7:01)-Trulh or Cons. 3: Tb Tell lhe Truth &lt;; Bowling tor
Dollar s 6; Muppel Show 8; News 10; To Tell the

sofa , cna1r C"Dshions, .
mattre..es, poddt"'. ldtal
for campers. Var11ty of
For

8:00-ciick Van Dyke 3. &lt;,15: Welcome Back, Koller

Con sum er E x pe r lence 33.

POLY.fOA.M

PHOTOGRAPHY

1975 CHEVELLE
14295
Eslate Wagon, local I owner car, white radlol tires. otr
conditioning, V-8. oulomotlc, power steering ond
brokes. rodlo. dark red finish , block vinyl Interior .

Auto Sales

Telepision log for easy viewing

Business Services

word

.minimum .
• Ea cfl addlflonal word 3
cent s
BLIND. ADS
Addit ional 2Sc Cl'large
p er Advertlsemenl.
OFFICE HOURS
8 10 11m . to 5 : 00 p m
Daily , 8 :30 a .m to 12 00
Noon Saturday .
PMone today 992 2156

•

11 - TM Dally Sentlnei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, ~ - 16, 1976
DICKTRACY
.
.

OBITUARY

2270

Strauss' act
hard to follow

OF
QUALITY

OEGULATIONS

F»ubllshtr rner~es
hf' r~ ght to ed lf or re ltc t
dn V ads
dttmed ob l ectl onel. The publ i sher
will not be respons ible for
1T10re than one tncorre ct
1nserllon

Auto S.leo

2 SIGNS

c or~ ec

• 1on s accepted f irst d• y ot
publ lut ion .

&amp;

maiJl culpr it was someone el se.

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Cla~sifieds

IF PAW'S MEANS WU2
VISIBLE WE WOULDN'T

HAVE NO SUPPORT

I

�lO-TMAS;~:e:·:::O. , Thurtday.~F~r
1"1
Grap
a..

b, ·..

Bernice
Oaol
For FridiJ, DK. 17, 1t78

ARIES (f..rch 21·Aprll 1t)
Unless you're very care ful today
you are apt to come ou t on the
shon end in b usi ness snuat1ons.
Do n ' t t a~e u n necessary

In Me mo ry of VtO ia Lo ulu .
who wtnt awl'tl Dec . u .
1961 . F ift een vt ar s hne
now pa n ed Sl f'IC f Viola
w ~ nt

ye o1 n

TAURUS (Aprii20· Miy 20) This
15 not one ol your better Clays for

we had vou ,

th l'
and

le it ve th e re n to God.
Never se fl fa ith short ttle
love and rur ptra sure thil
hom e aton e afford s. L t fe is
li ke a flo wtr . th e ros e how
sa d wh en fad ed and gone.
Sh e

gambles

away , We Dlr u

l e ft

b eh i nd

a

monum ent of vi rtu e that
th e storm s ot t i me cannot

destr o v all a r e dr eam s onl y

memo ries of th e pa st.
Family
an obst inate perso n Neither of 1-- -- - - -...:C:.:::.::..C...J
stnk1ng bargains. es peci ally wilh

yo u wlt l b e will ing to co m ·
pro mise.

Audiun

GEMINI (M8~ 21 · JUnl 20, Don't
tall behind in you r duties and LAST CHRIS TMA S AU CI ION Sole
Lots ol ne w fl'Crt honi d!itt toys
responsjblll tles, or you r wor k wlll
and g1lt s. l hunday n1ght . &amp;·30
pt le up ana m ake 11 dl fllcult lo r
p m at th9 Auc t ion Hause, Hor·
you to get ahe ad.
tan 51. . Mason . W.l/o.

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Play
thi ngs close to the vest 19day
Spen d only tor essentials or you
m ay be ask ing for problems.

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) T1m1ng is
o f utm ost impo rt ance tod ay
whe re you r major mt erests are
concerned. Don 't try to ru sh
th i ng s to a conc lu sion
pre m atu rely

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·fab. 11)
Goals can on ly be ac hieved to·
d ay II you're willing to p ay the
pnce pe rsona ll y Don't expect
all ies to carr y th e ball.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Be PISCES (Fob. 2D-ro!.lrch

2~1

Comp lication s wnl res ult today if
realistiC tod ay, but don't view the
you twist simPle iss ues into
wo rld nega tive ly. If yo ur outlook
so mething mo re complex. Make
is too pes Sifmstic it w11 1 co nno mountam fro m mol ehill s
'rlh ute to yo ur deteat

l iOHA(Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) For the
ue .. :

days kee p a tight re1 n
011 ~ •J\.of purse. Be '.le ry prud ent
a r1 ri \l&gt;ll:ty we ll Within yo ur bud get.
l~w

:lCORP IO (Ocl.

~4·Nov.

22)

~Your

~Birthday
Dec. 17, 1176

four ctf lcie ncy will be somewh at Th1s yea r . your be nefit s will

o~l~te d

today b eca use you'r e apt
to s pread yourselt too thm Tak·
mg on more than you can handl e
will only be frl! Sirat mg

come from that for which you 've
already la1d sO lid toundatlon
Finish wha t yolfve started before
seekmg gree ner pastur es.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.

(Are you a Saglfladus ? Bernice
Os ol has wfl tten a spec1al Asfro·
Graph. Leuer lor you For your

21) Pro bl em s toda y are lik ely to

be ol you r own making Don ' ttr~
to sh1ft the blam e for your mi S- copy send 50 cents and a self·
t a ~ es
addresse d, s /amp ed emmlope to

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Astro -G raph , P.O. Box 489.

A fr 1en d mig ht try to blame yo u Radro Clly Stat10n. New York,
lor someth ing to d ay that yo u're N.Y. 100 19 Be sure fo ask fo r
no\ enti rely respon si bl e lor The Sagtffanus Vo lume I}

Aulu ~"lt.•8

WANT APS
INFORMATION

DEADLINES

P .M

OI V

P ubl 1' 1t lon .

C•nctllatl ons,

Bt fort

., ne

RATiS

For W•n1 Ad Service
S ce nts per word one
IMSt fl iOn .
Mtnl mum Cherv·e 11 .00
1 ~ cents per word three
c: on secut.fYe Insert ions .
76 cen1 s pet word si x
r onsecut i ve Insert Ions .
75 Per Cent D iscount on
pa 1d ads and ads pa id
w i th in 10 davs .
CARD OF THANKS

u .oo

tor

50

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
WASHINGTON (UP!) Years ago, The New Yorker
magazine ran a cartoon that
showed Mayor Fiorello La·
Guardia arriving at City Hall.
The next couple of paneiB
showed the old building rock·
ing, rolling and nearly
jwnplng oil 118 foundations.
The laat showed it collaf"'lng
limply as Hizzoner departed
for tile day.
Something of that sort
would be approprla te for the
Democratic National
Committee
upon
the
departure of Robert L.
Strauss, il8 chairman from
December, 1972, through
January, 1977.
Much has ~n written
about the accompli.shmenl8
of the Dallas lawyer-banker
who took over the debt-r idde~
Democratic Party after itS
worst electioo defeat and
brought it back to solvency
and victory in 1976.
There are some who might
argue that the Democrats
could have won the
presidency this year with a
candidate other than Jinuny
Carter, but few who watched
the political scene In tile four
years just past would
maintain that the party could
have come back withoqt
Strauss.
Strauss did not restore
unity to the Democratic
Party . It still has factloos
that do not speak, and It still
!)as djsagreemenl8 that can
raise the roof without noUce.
What Strauss did was make
tile warring Democral8 sit
down together and try ID
work together. In this, he
accomplished a feat of
mediation worthy of Henry
Kissinger.
Strauss did not refonn the
Democratic Party. He was
lltuck with reform when he
Jook . over the chairmanship
and he would never have
lasted In the job had he
seriously attempted to return
party goverrunent to the top·
down system that [)l"evalled
In tile past.
· What Strauss did was make
~y reform work so that the
Democral8 · could open their
rank.s ID groups previously
shut out and still go·about the
business
of
electing
candidates for public office.
Strauss did get tile party
out of the red. It was about t9
million In debt after the 1968
electioo, and aa treasurer and
then chalrmim, strauss got
most of the bills settled. As
part of this effort, he
developed the political
telethoQ to raise money.
Buying costly national
televtaion air time to solidi
funds wu a gigantic risk, but
II wcrked alid it probably will
be a permanent feature ol the
political scene.
Strauss did all tlliB with a

NOTICES

ATTN .: !!

ALL HOUSEWIVES
A ll Yard Sales , "ummage ,

Porcl'1 and ·easement Porch
and Basement Sa les, etc .
m ust be paid In advan c e.
Get yours in early by
Slopping by OUr Office r•t
The Dail y Sentinel ,
ll
Co urt S l o r wr l ling Box
729 . Pomeroy , OhiO 457 69
wt t h your rem i t),l'ntc .

Notices
THE RACINE Fire Department wi ll
hav e a gun shoot Saturday at
6·30 p m ot their bvi lding in
Boshon
NOW occ: ept mg ptono students .
beginntt r5, u, termvdioles, od·
vanced st udents. Call
992·
INTERVIEWS wi ll be held Mndoy ,
Nov 22 197b sta rling ot I 1.00
om . o c:,lock m the officv of the
Meigs County Comminionen.
Court House , Pomeroy , Ohio
tor orcht tects who or e on the
approved lii t of Sta1t1 Ar ·
chttecls (Pubh c Works Slate ot
Oh10 ) f or lhe proposed multi pvrpo se foe~hty l or Meigs
C o unt~ . Pleoose Call lor appoint.
ment 992·2895 .
PIANO INSTRUC rt ONS Ch ild ren 's
and ad ul t!&gt; . Jvne VanVranken ,

qn.n7o

zest and energy that seemed
Putting
a
limitless.
Democratic whlstlestop
campaign train on the track.s
was one of his fondest
personal projects, and he
worked for two years to get it
done.
After aU the complicated
details were worked out and
the train finally got under
way In New York, Strauss
alighted at every stop ID
warm up the audiences and
Introduce the local politicians
and
the
presidential
candidate. He and his wife
Helen also served snacks ID
the reporters between stops.
His work for the first 14hour day of the ·trip was just
about finished as the train
neared Pittsburgh. Strauss
celebrated by blockading the
aisle of the VIP car and
leading a loud and raucous
slng-a~ong all the way miD
the station.
'
strauss will be a hard act to
follow. But whoever Carter
selects will find It an eaaier
job to do because of the
remarkable Texan who filled
it last .

The Almaaac
Ualted Preoslnternatloual
Today Is Thursday, Dec. 16,
the 35lst day ol1976 with 151D
follow.
The moon IB between 118
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mer·
cury, Venua and Jupiter.
Thlll!e born oo t.hiB date are
under tile sign of Sagittarius.
· English actor, playwright
and c1111pooer Noel Coward
WBS born Dec. 16, 1899.
On tills day In history:
In 1773, protesting the
Brltiah tax on tea, some 50
American patrlo18 dllgulsed
as Indians dwnped 342 cheata
of tea Into Boston harbor In
what history records as "TM
Boston Tea Party."
In 1835, ooe of history's
· worst fires swept over whole
dl;y blocka In New York City,
razing 600 buildings and
callled damage estimated at
mere than $3) mlllloo.
In 1944, the Gennans
launched a great counter·
offensive In the Ardennes
Forest of Belgium, In what
was caUad '"lbe Battle ol the
Bulge."
In 1960, 131 peraona were
ldlled when two airplanes
collided over foggy Nei. York
harbor and crashed.
A thought for tile day:
English playwright Noel

Coward said : "Mad dogs and
Engliahmen go out In the

rnlddlly sun."

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

PROFESSIONAL

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

13995

Classic, 350, V-8, automatic, power steerlrtg and
brakes, rally wheels, radio, black and very attractive.

1915 LUV PICKUP
S3295
With topper, low mileage, radio. w·w tires, clean.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1976
6:oo-New&gt; 3,4.8.10.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 10:

EXPERIENCED

UPHOLSTE.IlY.
- FAIRII":

Velvets, nylon prlnh, 1
herculolls, vinyl solido, and
fanty prints, ac:cenorl~• .

(6U) 985·4155
Ch..ltr, Ohio
10-17·1 moiPd)

GUN SHOOT ot lhe Racine Gun
Club ev ery Svnday . I p.m.
Assorted meals

FREE ES IM TES
Blown

Insulation Services

fioJncinJ Anl~ble
Blown iniiWih &amp;Allia

·
1969 Nova, extra ,harp , new
Point bucket utots, air shocks .
mags . P~onv 949 · 2&lt;4 80
1968 BONNEVILLE
Phon&amp; 992-5535

PONTIAC .

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
• "32"8 Main Strati
Pl. Pleu•nt

Ph.675·3469
9:30·5:00 Dally
Tltl8:000 F_rldays

new !I re s, 6 cyl. standard wtll
sell or trod!il lor second cor .
Phone (61 ,.) 593.b8 17 after 6
p .rn
19bS CHEVELLE 2 door hardtop,
v.a good condttton. $495
• Phone 378·0349.
1969 -4 DOOR hardtop Delio 88 .
h
p s , p.b , ot r con d itioning T is
cor IS tn eMce ll eM I cond1lion .

Oh.

NEW YEAR 'S EVE Donee 9 till 2
p . m.
Rv tlond
Gym ,
refreshments, B. V.O .B. live
bond R. J Browntng $ 10 cou ·
pie Reservollons by phon ing
992·b1bJ 992-6020 or 992·7366.
Sponsored by UMWA Su p·
porter 's Club . Rese rvations con
be mode by moiling nome , od ·
dress and phone nvmber to
Mrs . Rita Maust , SQM 59,
langsvtlle , Ohio 45741. Thes
The se tickvts con bv pi cked up
01 the door Ttckel s sold also at
the door

Luot and Found
FOUND · one bird or hunting dog.
Pleo~e call and iden11 fy Phon e
992 -3165
F OUND ,
GOLD
fra m ed
eyeglasses m upper Monkey
Run area
Contact larry
Hoschar . 992·2523

Help Wanted
GUARANTEED JOBS-LOCATION ,
$374 40 ~~nght , $502 .80 mar·
ned. Army Recrulflr~g . Co li Col -

lect (61&lt;) 593 - 302~ o' 385·6318
GUARANTEED JOB$· locarlon .
$.374 40 single $502.80 mar·
ned . Army Recruiting , (6 14)
593·3022 . call collect

Wanted to Buy
OLD furn i ture , ice boxe! , bros!
beds, wolf telephones and
paris, Q,r comp lee households
Wnte M . D. Miller , At . 4,
· Pom eroy. Ohio. Colt 99'J. .776lJ
CASH po1d far all makes and
models of mobile 'homes .
Phone area code b14 ·,.23·'9531
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
dvcts Top price for standi ng
~owtimber . Co li Kent Honby ,
1·-44&amp;·8570 .
COINS CURRENCY , token! , old
pocket watches and chains.
s1lver and gold. We ntt&amp;d 1964
ond older si l ver coins. Buy, se ll ,
or trade ' Coli Roger Womsl&amp;y.
74'2 2331
CASH I l l lor junk cars . Frye 's
Truck and Auto . 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE &gt; Phone
742·2081
BUYING RAW FUR
No. 1,
Muskrat $4 .75: Coon , SIS: Mole
mink , $15
Phoue · Ge o
Bu&lt;.kley . (61-4) 669-..761 aher 5
pm
10 C()C')D pig~ . Jv to60 lbs. Phon~~t
Bill Kautz , 985·3831 .

hrdSalc

PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sto·

GUITIIUWIINGS

LARRi,1'J.fh~DER
Ph.991·39!13 "4-ln.; mo

lens &amp;Mira telephoto lens and
flash ottoc:hment . Got I Miller
phone 992 .319b.
CHRISTMAS PONIES fo r child ren

Coll (614)698-3290.

t'orRcnt

BEEF CATllE . 301 eoth good hay
rak e. Also set of 16 5 nms for
Ford or C h e ~ r o l et three ·fourth
lon lrucloi w1 th slo inless hub·
cops . Co11992 7201 or992·3309.
WESTERN Fl VER 10 speed b1ke. 27
mches. Like new . Call992·3299.

One good used Remington
Chain Saw
sso
One goOd used McCullough
Cha1n Saw
S7S
One good used Homelite
Chain Saw
!II SO
New Co -Op Water Soflerters
model VC · XVI Onl y $'279.95
One good used Gibson Side·
bY ·Stde Refrigerator
n~o

AVAILABlE at R1vers1de Aport .
ments , I bedroom , $100 per
month . 1 bedrooms. $133 An
Equol Housmg Opportun1ty .
Phone 992·3273.

ONE BEOROOM Aph at VILLAGE .
MANOR in Middleport lor $1D.e
monthly plus elec . or $130 In·
el uding elec:-. LOWER RATES lor
SENIOR CITIZENS Conven1en t
to shopping on Thi rd and Mill
Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Sts in M tddleporl Brand new
Phone992-2181
high quol•ly opo,lmeflls . See
the manager ot Apt . 28 or call
992-772 1. An Equol Housing SINGER golden Touch N ' Sew .
Opportunity .
Does it oil Z1g·zogs sews on
km!S . outomotlc , button haler .
2 BEDROOM mobile home m
makes designs many other
Racine Areo . Phone 992 -S8S8.
fea tu res . jvst lik e new .
3 BEDROOM 2 story house. com ·
Original pnce $549.q5 . must
pletely remodeled , new carpet ,
$ell . only $129.95 . Cosh or
kitchen . etc. 4 miles north ol
terms. Coli 9n·5146
Pomeroy on St. Route 7, $225
month plus ulililles. Phone HOUSE lOTS fo1 sole . Near Meigs
M1nes 1. Phone 742·2740 .
985·3341

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _
Ai11L

TRAILER FOR rent , odvhs only . CHRI STMAS SPECIAL: Turquo•se
jewlery, 20 percent off l ong Ri ·
Phone992·318 1
lie Shop. 248 Rivervtew Drtve ,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3090.

l'cts fur Sale
PLEASURE HORSES and ponies ,
also will bvy horses and
pomes Phone (61A ) 698·3290 ,
Ruth Reeves .
All whtle German Shepherd Pup ·
pies, fine blooded. See Richard
Gi lk ey , Cltlton , W. IJo ..
3().-4. 773 -5962 or 773.sns

l'ur Salt•
CHRISTMAS TREES . Beautiful Plan tation grown Scotch Pine, while
Spruce, Norway Spruce. Col ·
orodo Blue Spruce, 5 to 10 feet ,
a
le w
larger .
Priced
reasonably . Areas best selec ·
hon . 12 cornecutlve ytors. of
tree !elling Bob's MOrkel , just
across the bridge~ In Mason .

Phone(304)773-4721 .

FANCY CITRESS fruits, navel
oranges .
tangertnes .
long&amp;loe!, 6 variety ol apples
in any quonily red . blut and
white gropes, ouorted bulk
Christmas tondy ond nuts.
Also , for o Christmas gift sug·
geslion: extra family fru it
basket! 4 c.on~o~enlent sires lo
f it your needs . Ouonlty dis·
counts ovotloble Bob's Market .
Just across the bridge, Mason .
Phon.• (3&lt;W) 773·4721 .

15 CU FT. chest type freezer. 2
years old, $150 Rem ing ton
model 66 automatic 22 rifle .
$45 Pair of OOy!. 1ce skates.
sir:e 7, new, SS. Phone Betty
longenette , 985-3qBs
APPLES ,

CIDER, Romes , Gal.
Deht~ous , Winesap . F1tr:palnck
Orchard , State Route. 689
W il ~esvi lle .
Phone
(014)

609-3785.
REDUCE SAFE i lost with GoBese
Tnblets &amp; E·IJop " water pills "
Nelson Drug.
SET or mud n' snow tires . H·7815,
$25. Phone992·2759 .

HARD WATER
PROBLEMS?

L~t
~

I

_ ANTIQUE DINING room suite , 6
c ho•r~ Ph01le 991·6008 to se'e .
IF YOU hove a service to oller,
~an t to buy or '-o tl ~ome th ing . ElECTfi'OLUX SWEEPER. complete·
ly rebuill w11h all new Qt.
ae look ing for wo rk .
or
tochments, $54 95. Al!io Hoo11er
whatever ·. . . you II get resu lts
) weepCJ~ . tOt l lo.~ or uprights,
foster with o Sent mel Wont Ad .
SI 6 Pho11P. 992-51 olb
Coli W1·1156.

test

your

R~nl

ReaJ Eslale for SaJc

126.500 Phone(614)667-6J04 . ·

MAIN
POME.ROY,

0.

OR

plus add to fhe value of

MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot . 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
utility R.• dining R., som e
carpeting . Storage or office
bldg ., lots of shrubbery,
natural gas heat, el&lt;cellent

neighborhood .
RUTLAND -

W1ll do odd jobs, r oof 1ng, pain·
lin g, gvller work . Phon e 992·
7409
EXPER IENCED BABY SITTER $ tok ·
1ng reser vot mn s lor oil night
and hourly sillmg lor New
Year's Eve For mlormol1 on,
col l 992-7092 .
DRAPERIES mode to order . f' hone
949 2202.

Aboul 4

acres in town Older hom e
has 3 bedrooms, dining R.,
bath , alum . sid ing, out
cellar .
storage bldg .•
natural gas heal . Just

$15,500.00.
P ,O MEROY
RECREATION CENTER
- long established doing a
very good business . Low
Investment Excellent
return .

POMEROY - 3 bedrooms.
bath , basement, dining
room, utility space, hard ·
wood floors , natural gas
furnace, stor m doors and
w indows, porch . $12,500.00.

LISTINGS WANTED IN
EVERY SECTION OF
THE COUNTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

1975 CASTlE 12' x 60 2 bedroom
woodgiom ex tenor, boy win ·
dow, tota l w rap Foom·Cor . lui ·
ly
furnished .
Fro stfree
relngerotor , carpe ted thru out ,
l1ke new Pnced n ght . Con be
5een at Ki ngsbury Hom e Soles.
100 E Mom St Pomeroy, Ohio

your

friendly,

HOMESITES for sol 9, I acre ond
up Middleport . neor Rutl and
Co ll q92·7481 .
NEW 3 bedroom hovse . 2 baths .
otl elec , 1 ac re M1ddleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481
SMALL form for sole , 10°/~ down ,
owner f monced . Monro e County ·W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·

3101 0 ' (30&lt; )772·3127 .
COUNTRY larmlond with secl ud·
ed woods water end good oc·
ce ss m Monroe County , W Vo .
Sl ,000 down , coli (304 ) 772 ·
3102 or (304 ) 772·3227

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Slree1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
COUNTRY SPOT - Nice
brookside lot with 3
bedroom

residence .

"We Care"
Est.
Work Guar.

in

2' , ACRES lev~l land. 1 , mile
from Rutland OM New l !mo
Roud Phone 742·2930 or alT er 5
p .m.
Pho11c

LITfLE ORPHAN ANNIE

ANNIE-END

BRADFORD Auctioneer . Com·
ple le Service Phone 9A9·2A87
or 949 2000. Rac ine. Ohio, Crill
.Stodlord .

IT IS \HE BAD AtR ··
THE 0 '.(Y6EH IS 60ING
FI\ST·· REST, SAHiB -·
I CA~ 0\RRf 0~ A
LtnlE LOH~fR'-

ntAl GATE

Also

has garage with '" bath,
ond bedroom . Drilled well.

Commercial property opprox 17
ac re5 level land, located ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
·7 Phone(614)667·6304.
3 bedrooms. 11ft baths , large 1;~,~ .
ing room , dmlng room and kit ·
chen fully carpe ted . Phone
qq2·3 129. Of 9'92 · ~34

hookups . Wanl only $5500.

59 acres, 6 room house, both,
portly carpeted , two out·
build in gs, du g base ment ,
one ·th1rd t il lable , mmerol
rights located neor Danville.
Reduced lor qu1 ck sole ,
SLJ,SOO Phone 7.;2.2766.

COUNTRY HOME - 3
bedrooms, mod . balh, fuel

NEARLY new ol elec. home , lvll
basement . for sole by owner .
Rutland oreo . Phone 742·2531 .

IN TOWN - 1 bedrooms,
mod. bath, nal. gas F.A.
furnace. Full basement
with
washer - dryer

with glass sliding doors .
537.500.
POMEROY - 2 bedrooms,
bath, furnace, basement,

-·----

SEPltC Sy stems installed by
licens ed
insta ller
Shepard
Contrac tor s Phone 742·2409.

WILL do roof ing, construct ion,
· plumbing and heot1ng . No jOb
1oo Iorge or too sma ll. Phone
742-2:146

-

-

-

--~

--------

CARPENTER, floori ng, ceil ing,
p.on.!li~g .. ~-~~ ~.2~· ~-5_9..._ __
DOZER work and we lding . Canloci James Pa rsons, Rt , I ,
Rocme, on- Carmel Rood .

--·---- .............--··MOBilE Home Repair , Elec.,

plum b ing and heating. Phone
W2 -5858

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

Ex·

cavat1ng , sepllc 5~5tems. ,
dozvr , back hoe, dump truck .
li mestone
grovel, blacktop
paving, Rt , 143 . Phone 1 (61-4;
6qa.7331

•.."""' '.. c•·-•·-

rLI~L-A.;.B_N_E_R_ _ _ _7-:-~::-::---:-:-;""o;----lr;::::::-:;,::--;-:-~;::-;;::;:::;:-;:::-::-:-;:::-y,:;;:;::-;:;;uo:;:"\,
WHUT CO AH
DO NOW

2

DON'T HANG ARa.JND AND
uc: 6 0 r v--uE

~=~:_:_.;"'Co r:

n-..JIV&gt;

NEW OFFICE
BILL FLETCHER
149 South Third
Middleport, 0.
Phonem.m5

e&gt;UI LDINB

To sales oriented persons with previous
sales experience, Montgomery Ward offers
the . opportunity to qwn ''""'' operate a
catalog sales store. lmme&lt;.., ~te opening in
these stores.

Write. W. A. Borowski· Giving full personal
qualifications.

MONTGOMERY WARD

We haVe now moved to our
new location at 216 East

Monroe St.
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

1r

that

• Kx:ox 'l Ax . M.., /\ K.I xx

answer

of

ts

11.0()-Whee l ol Fortu ne 3, 15. Weekd ay ·I; Edg e of
Night 6. D oubl e D ar e 8, 10 , M orn ing wi th 0 J 13
11:Jo-Stump er s 3,4, IS; Happy On yc; 6, 13: L ove of Life

th~!

waffling type. We open one
club or one spade depe nding

8, 10, Sesame Sl. 20.JJ.

on what ou r partnN likes . ln

1 1 · ~ 5---T a ke Ker r

general you bid the h1gher
r ankmg of two f1 ve·coud :s uat s

12·0G- New s 3,6 18,10;
G r an d Slam I S.

f trst. but y ou rnay make an exc eption wath spades and clubs.

hi s

AFTER US I

WANTB
SITE...FOR A
INCOME HOUSINC"7

DEVELOPMENT! !

W/1/,&lt;t•. .

N

wPA u s R

lor Tomorr ow 8, 10.

11·Ss- NB C News 3.15.
l ·Oo-Som er set 3; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13 ; Conce nlrf'l llon 9;
Y oung &amp; Restless 10; Nol F o r Wo m en Only IS

1:3{)-Days ol Our Lives 3,4 ,15; Fa mily Feud 6,13: As
The W orl d Turn s 8,10

2.00-S10,000 Pyram id IJt Dlnoh 6.

2:3G-- O octor s J. d, 15; One Lit e t o Li ve 13; G uld ~ ng

Llahl 810.
·
3·0()-1\ nolher Wor ld 3,4,15, Al l In The Family 8,10;
Croc kett ' s VI c t ory Ga rden 20.

3 15- G ener a l Hospltal 13

3·J()-8ewll ched 6; Malch Ga me 8. 10; ; Lil ias. Yog• &amp;
You 20.

d 0()-Mister ( Qrtoo n 3, M a r cus W elby M.D. A:
Som er set 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mick e y Mouse C lu b
8; Sesame St . 10, 33, M ovie "S pani sh Attal r " 10;

Dinah 13.
4.3(}-My Three Sons 3, Em er ge ncy On e 6 : Partr \dge
Fam i ly B; F llnf stones 15.
5 oo- B ig V a lley 3; Mcrv G riffin 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Roger s 20,33; Star Trek IS

u o- News 6; Fam ily Atlal r B; Elec. Co 20,33: Adam·
12 13.
6·oo-N ews 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6: Zoot'n 20,33.

6 3{)-NBC News 3,4.1l . ABC News 13; Andy Grlltllh 6.
CBS News 8.10; ~odgepodg e Lodge 20; VI lla Alegre
33.
.
7:0{)-Trulh or Cons . 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollors 6: Andy Williams B; New! 10; To Tell the
Truth 13: My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal20; Bl3ck

Yesterdu)•'s Answer

9 Ennoble
12 Ecstalic
16 Aoania s
19 Affiliations
22 Bucolic
dance Site
23 Silver
pieces
12 wds.)
24 Its capital
IS Yerevan

25 Lamenla·
tion
29 Br itiSh
wc1ght
unil
:lO Tclcgmphed
31 One

Perspective on the News 33.
7.Jo-Porter Wagoner J, Break 'the Bank 41 Candid
Camera 6;

'
WSMANY
FWCAM

y

H
HZ

Frosty th e Snowman 8, 10; WashlnQton Week In
Review 20,33 .

8:3{)-Chlco &amp; lh e Man J,4,1 l : 'Twas lhe Nlg~l Before
Chrl slmas a, 10; Wall Slreet Week 20,33.
9:0{)-College Baskelball 3: Mov ie " Young Pioneers
Chrl slmas" 6: Rocklord Files 4,15: Movie " Pockel

32 Watchful
37 Dafl
38 Swab

a,

10,00-Serplco 4, IS; News 10 ; Pul Nuchlms 33.
11 :00-News 3.4,8,10,1 J.1S; MacNeil -Lehrer Rporl 33.
11.3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; SWAT 6,13: Movie
" Who's Minding the Sore?" 8; Mary Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.
'
12 :oo-Movle " Lady In lhe Lake" 10; J anakl 33.
12:4{)-Mod Squad 6: Ironside 13.
1:00-Midnlghl Speci al 3,4, 15.
1:4{)-News 13.
1:3D-News 3.
3:00-Movle " Fea r No Evil " 3.
4.3Q-Movle "Criminal Lawyer "

3.

6:00-FBI 3.
ftlt\l~~ft ~THATSCRAMBLEDWOROGAME
\.9 ~~ 411 by Hanrl Arnold and aoc Lee

- +-4f--l I!!)

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

FEE 0;
EIAZWZF

K

wM

s

P T S

SE

YHNMA

KAZUR

ZAVLHZ

.

Fi!•Lwll!l Srndiettll!, Inc.

r

I....,.....I

._ ~ ,

TE l EGA~PHY

EXAM

II

....... .., l of"'o ._

I I I

,._M_A_U_L_T=E,-..,~

1 rJ

\

YARPER!

I. KJ

WHAI HE FEeT

[J

1

WHEN HE
FORGOT THE COt'E..

·

I . ·0

Anewer here:

11

Now arrange the circled letters to '
form the surptlse answer, as aug· ,
gested by the abOve CBrtoon

ITJ-[ I I I l J"

(Answers tomorrow)

jumbles: FLANK AWARD MODISH tlAMBIT

Yestorday·s

I

Ana-: Put 011 to"'hl~e·· malf&lt;s of ownership- ·

'

... BRANDS

BARNEY

LOWEEZ'I·· HOW IN THUNDER
DO 'IOU AN' SNllFF'I Gil BV
WIF NO VISIBLE MEANS
. . OF SUPPORT?

-·-"

UGSIE

wz .
ws

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A POEM IS THE VERY IMAGE
OF LIFE EXPRESSED IN ITS ·ETERNAL TRUTH . 'SHELLEY
t'J 1976 Kln1

MacNeil-Lehrer

Money "
\0 ; D o cumentary Showc ase 33; Co llege
Basketball 13; Documentary Show case 20,

sK E T F

NWPAUSR . - BEKZ

Treasure Hunt 8,

Reporl20,33: Andy Wll iloms 10: Name Thol Tune
13: fop Goes the Counlry 15.
8,0{)-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4,15: Donny &amp; Mari e 6,13;

dinin~

co~~~~~~~;~~~::r.,nt
E

8; MS-. Flxlt 10
Don H o 13, Bob Braun &lt;1 , SO

IU {)-Gong Show J, IS: All My Chi ldren 6. 13; Sea rch

roo you have a quesrion
for th e e ~t per ts? WrJ te · Ask
the Jacob ys ·· care of thiS
n ewsp aper The Jaco bys w1/l
answer llldi VI dua l qu es /1ons
r1 stamped. sell -addressed
enve lope s are enclose d file
mos t 1n ter es rmg ques 11on s
will be used rn lh 1s co/lJfnn
and w11f rece1ve cop1es o l
JAC OBY MODERN 1

ACROSS
40 Heavy blow
I Plunder
Isl I
5 Do pen a nee , 41 Sard further
wrth ·•for ·• 42 Saucy
10 Tennis star
llOWN
II Esprit de ." I Dieter·s
corps
dish
13 Nobleman
2 United
II Charles - .
1:r wds. J
Charle·
3 Item often
magne's
exchun gcd
grandfather
12 wds. )
IS Black
I Sheep tick
euckoo
5 .lordan ·s
16 Stnplmg
capital
17 Yellow
6 Sycophanl
bugle
i Hockey
18 Fate
name
20 Brewer 's
H Creche
tank
sight
12 wds.J
(Sp. J
22 Morsel
23 More
subdued
Married
26 Elizabethan b-+-4-and
Christian
27 Jazz great,
Kid _Mornings
t abbr .)
29 Por( in
Wales
33 Vin's
descriptive
34 Stannum
35 Presidential 6-+-!nickname
36 Bewitch
38 Boundary
39 Albanian
capt tal

hin" Each da y the

&gt;WHY, THEY
'M ME'D IHE

RIPLEY - RICHWOOD • RAINELLE

Wtth ·

Our

4, 13 .15; L ucy Sho w 8;

Mike Douglas 10 ..
9:3{)-Cross-WIIs 3; One Llle lo Live 6; Good Day 8
10 :00-Sanlor d &amp; Son 3. 4,ll , Pr ice Is Ri ghi 8. 10, Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :1 General Hospllol 6.
10·3{)-Holly wood Squares 3.4, 15 .

One letter simply stands f or ano th er. In thi s sample A is
u sed for the three L 's, X f o r t h e tw o O' s, etc. Single l ett er s,
apostrophes, the l ength an d formation of t he wo r d s are all

UIIUIANC

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

9·00......A M. J; Ph i l Donahue

O.AILY CRYI'TOQUOTE - !le1·e's how t o work it :
AXYDLfiAAXR
is L 0 N G •• E I. I. 0 W

191G6E5T TEN ANT. "THAI'S

WE ~AVE THE ~OU SE
FOR YOU, DROP IN AND
SEE IT

\

_,_

- --- · - - ELECTRONIC T.V. CliNIC. New

T.V . shop, Electronic T.IJ. Cl inic
Se(vi ce cci!l , $5.95. Color, B &amp; 'N
anten na system s stereos, etc.
572 South Thi rd, M 1ddleport.
Ph'one 992-6306. Corry in and
so ~e money .___ __,_ · - - __

B 3{)-Big Val ley 6.

know the correc t opening bid

(~;.tVVc~~~~~~~Sl~~~~~~~~~~~~~)21Aunt

m . .,

2428.

7:3{)-Schoolles 10.
8 :00--L assle 6 ; Cap!. Kang ar oo 8, 10: Sesa m e St 33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and d1t cher Cherie! R. Hat·
fi el d, Bo ck Hoe Serv ice,
Rutland , Oh10 Phone 7-42 -2008.

---

Reporls 10.
7.05- Buas B unn y &amp; Fr iends IU

~

-···

--·

Morn lng , Amer l c ~ 6,13; CBS N,ews 8, Chuck Will ie

0

would hold th e mtS sing one

EXCAVATING dozer , loader and
bock i;loe work , dump trucks
and lo boys for hire; wil l haul
fill dir t , to soil, l1meslone ond
grav el. Ca ll Bob or Roger Jeffer s day phone 992·7089,
mght phone 992 ·3525 or 992·
52~2

or

A Quebec reade r wants to

"""'"''' didn' t have t wo aces
chances w e r e that Ea st

---

-

Company training- minimal investment

Second St., Pomerov.

Pass

He reasoned

,::.~~==---======;::::j&gt;o:e;;;ur::n::;oc:;;1H:;;:E:-r;:--&lt;;:;r;;:~;;:n~"r; ;'s\1111i:iFE ME11N- 1Ti.iru;(;i'iiNi~iBE:c;i;iE

1000 5.

P ass

Pass

OUT JF IT WAS

SEWING MACHINE Repotrs , ser·
v1ce oil makes, 992·22BA The
Fobr 1c Shop . Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sole5 and
Sefv te e. We sharpen Sctssors.

.and furniture . All for only

Sl2,900.

Pass

wasn·t too happy about his
hand . ThiS didnt deter South

AWAY OUT· ·

· 6' 45-Mornl ng Report J.
6·5{)-Good Morning, Wesl VIrgin ia 13.
6:55-Good Morning , lr l Slale 13.
) ·oo-Today 3,4,15, GoodMorn lng , Ame rlca 6,13, Good

~ ~~~

Pass

to pa ss and mdicate that he

REMODELING. Plun1blng, heating
and a ll types of general repair .
Wor k g uaranteed 20 years ex·
penance. Phone 992- 24~.:__

Cozy 3

!liVER PROPERTY

14

GAVE ME HOPE ··

Sweepers, toas ters, Irons, all
small opptionces . lown mower,
next to Slat e High way Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614} 985·

Gas well.

level lot. S22,DOO.

North E as t

Report 13

6:2
N of For Women Only IJ .
(» :3D-Columbus Today 4; New s 6 : Sunri se Sem ester 8;
Over sea s Missi o n 10.

to his hand by ruffmg ai)Otht,r
heart. played hi s king of clubs
to pick up F.asf" s queen and
claimed.

,.

F~rm

6:15-Englls h 3,

last small spade ; carne back

Northls ftve -club call was a
tremendous overbid. but he
was forced into it by West's
' '
jump to four spades.· It jusl
!;eemed to him that a pass was
too much of an underbid .
MA N--------.r-~· South 's five-spade cue bid
,.
was fully justified and when
West doubled Norlh was able

801 lictti· 1'/E'LL NEvER

6:00--Sunri se Semes ter 10.

hiS jack of hea rts ; ruffed a
hea rl in hrs hand , ruffed his

in etther directto n

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
SoMttation . 992·3954 or

lt~al Estate for Sale

• II. H6 4

By Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
Aggressove defensive bid·
ding 1s something like a two
headed rattlesnake II can bite

Trust those
fix .it, room

FRIDAY , DECEMB ER 17, 1976

did lead

an d k ing

33.

:oo-

diamonds in order to get ri d of

• Opemng lead - Deuce A

3825.

Fairview
Hts . Lovely brick ve neer, 3
bedrooms, bath, modern
ki tc hen,
utility room,
carpeting , garage, storage
bldg ., porch , chain fence,
about I acre . Almost new .

dummy·s ace

Protect your investment

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

POMEROY -

areas.

I .

DAY

CHRISTMAS SPECIAl · Sewing
Machmes cleaned , oiled and
od ju sled
$4 .98
Sewmg
Cente-r, M1ddleport , Ohm.
'

608 E.

150 x 200 LOT for sole
Syrocvse. Phone ~2·3714 ,

Douville.
q92 .7791 oiler 4 p m

DUMP TRUCKS . BILL PULLIN S.
NIGHT.

BUILDING LOTS - Rock
Springs and Five Points

1n

DO ZER . TRENCHER, lOWBOY ,
PHONE 992 -2478,

2 ACRFS OF land at WHdiiVood
Eslotes, $4200. Phone 992·3273.

ACR£~

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Fr~

Business Scrli~s
EXC AVATING .
BACKHOES .

4Q 10
SOUTH

It

Pass

Rutland 12·9·1 mo. 742·2328

Portland, 0 .

• •1 54

s...

AL TROMM CONST.

PICKENS HOWE.

home. Nice kitchen , dining

bedroom house, fam ily room ,
fireplace , 2 baths, d ishwasher ,
range , garbage dtsposol ,
carpet, sun deck , Iorge lot.

West

builder.

843·2165

EAST

4/I.K9 87 52
OSCA!&lt;', IS 1HE~ A
81&amp; TARP. CR PIECE
OF CANVAS, IN
THE LAB~

6,13: Kojak 8: Mar y Har iman IQ, ABC News 33 .
12· oo-M ov le "The Bishop' s Wife " 10; Janak!
12 : 3(}-M ovl e " Sapph ir e' : 8.
12: A(}-0 Bn August 6 ~ 13
1
To m orrow 3 ,4 .
1· SO-- News 13

that spa de. South ruffed in
du mmy a nd proceed ed to
make the gra nd s la m by
carefu l play li e carne back to
hiS hand with the ace of clubs :
ruffed a second spade. Cashed

• Q J Y17 :1
• !\ ti 3

Neither v ulnt!rab lt•

Phone 992-5176
Syracuse, Ohio

jobs to

NEAR TOWN -

TUPPERS PlAINS. OH IO. lh&lt;ee-

I~

Square Yard tnstatted
Owner
949-2814
11 ·4·1 mo.

• 11 · 3o-J ohnn y Car son 3,4,15, Street s of Sarr Fr ttn c lsco

~ure e no ugh , West

¥J
• 7

neighborhood, qualltled

bedroom s,
nice bath,
natural gas F .A. furnace on

£state for Sale

·ALLEYOOP

and 1 car garage. 132,500.

Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

WEST
10 52
¥Q9 754
e Q 9 H2
• K

PERFECT

f orced air furnace , 3
bedroom renovated home

Pomeroy Landmark

a

at Home w i th the Ki ng

10:3{)-Woman 10.
11 :00- News 3.&lt;.6,8, 10.13.15: MacNeill.ehrer Reporl
33.

and that West would probably
le ad a spa de in any case . So
South bid the grand slam.

lti

• K 10 2
t II. K 10 6 3

addition and remodeling

15 ACRES -

w1t1r

·-

NORTH 1111

to

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

your home.
nece$Sary

New 3 bedroom al l elec .

FIREWOOD, 120 pickup truck load
delivered: SIS.. you pick II up.

type) w•th O.JO.. power mikv.
Like new. Prlctd reasonable .
Phot'!e 9-49·2322 .

ree.

L

FIREWOOD. PHONE 74'2·2131 ,

Phone(:JO.I) 882·3205.
ROBYN BASE C.B. rodto . (tube

us

THAT"S "7" HE 5 A l WAYS i /oJ
OIJE THING
rHERE PL.U&amp;61 NG··
I"VE ALWAYS
LOOKING 0 /oJ THE
W VED ABOUT
B RIG HT 5 1DE !
HIM .•. HE &gt;JEVER
LET'5 LIFE GE'r 1..--~
HIM DOW'-l!

... J6 4 3

6000

Barnaby Jones 8; Chr is tmas
Fa m ily 10; New s 20.

Oh io State L ottery 6 :

WIN AT BRIDGE

CAPTAIN EASY
5A!&gt;Y. YOU KNOW
1'/HAr A C~f!:~FtJ~ ,
HA~ D- WO~K 11.1"
GUY WA~H 1,-

pet. off ..,n 10 or more.

24
hour
Dependable
Furnace Service.
Oil or Gas Burners

oil F .A . furnace, nice eat. in
kitchen. Screened ·in porch
and large large. $19,500.

Let Pomeroy Landmark
tofttn &amp; condition your
water UC-XVI
ONLy 1279,95

from .

S~ uar es 3,4 ;

Price Is Rig ht 8: MacNei l Lehrer 20, 33; Wild
Klnadom 10; Na! hvllle on The Road 13: Dolly 15.

FOR GIFTS In red, white
and pink . $3.00 to $6.00 . 20

David Parsons,

!'

Origmol owner and guaranteed
mil eage 5950, Phor~e 992·5786
do1ly from noon til17 p.m

choose

'6.95

l ion . Phone 247·2684 after 5 , ----:::;;~:ie!il
p.m
CHRISTMAS TREES . Mom 51 .
Rutland.
LARGE ELECTRONIC o rgan and
ben ch , 2 keyboards leslie
Speaker . beouttlul cabmet.
A lso . 35 m m. co mvro, 1 1.5

CHRISTMAS.

ASSORTED RU8BER
BACK CA.RPETING

SIDING-SOFIITT

1971 LTD, air condit ioned, p .b , 1971 'HONDA CL --450, 12,000
ps. eMcellenl cond11ton . Phone
miles sissy bar, crash ba rs,
992·3442 .
pu ll bock handle bars, new t1re
1969 CADILlAC Sedan Oe\lille
and seals , Scramb ler s1de
four door . while sidewall !Ires, ·
pipes, $650. Co11949·2480.
power 5leering , power brakes, POTATOES and pvmpk ins. C. W.
power seats . om &amp; fm radio,
Proffitt , Portland , Ohi9. Phone
climate contro l. b:callent con·
843·2254 .
d1110n. Local owner. Phone
COAL lor so l&amp;, OpeM 6 days per
992 ·2413, $1·" 44 44
week and evvnings . For further
1970 DODGE POLARA . Phone
tnfor'mo'tion co li (614) 367 ·7338.
47
992 ·5 8
APPLES , FITZPATRICK O RCHARD ,
1%8 three -fovrth ton JEEP truck .
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
;)&amp; 1n . cop . bunks cook stove .
WILKESVILLE , (b14J 669·3785 .
ref . trlr . p~ckoge . $2 150 Will FUllER Brush Produ cts lor sole .
trade . Phone 985 -4227.
Phone 992 .3410 .
1970 Mustang Grandi . Phone CAMPER , $600. Also . hor se
992·32b0 or 992·bl 16
trailer , $450. Phonv (bl4 ) 698·
VAN , 197b DODGE , car peted,
3290

PERSON 's BOOV Shop, 26 Roil rood 3 AND 4 RM . furnished and vn Sl. Mtddtepor t wou ld like to
furntshed opts Phone 992 rem ind 'c vslomers lhol Dec. 31
S&lt;l&lt;
ts the lost day to to ke ad·
va ntage at the poinl jObs · all COUNTRY Mob1le Home Pork Rt.
33, len miles north of Pomeroy .
over in 1 col or. S100, 2 tone
large lots w tth concrete patio s.
$125 w1thout body wo rk Slop
~idewo l ks , runners and oil
m or phone 985·41 74 for op·
street por~ung Phone 992·7479.
po lntment
FURNISHED two bedroom opt ..
NOTICE . P r all · ~ Meat Mkt
adu lts only No pets M id·
(Pi eo5onton Meat PrCKessing ,
dleporl Phone 992 3B74.
Inc) Cus tom sloughtenng and
processing . Retail , wholesale .
No oppo inment necessary . Call
(6141 593 ·8655, hours 9:00 till
6 00 7 Pomeroy Road Athens .

COAL , lime stone . and colc1um
chloride and ca lcium brine lor
du st control and spec1al mu:ing
soli for formers Mom Street ,
Pomeroy, Oh•o or phone 9923891 ,

10,00-G ibbsvl lle 3. 4,1) ; AB C News Close Up 6, 13 :

7 : ~Hollywood

PLANTS FOR
YOUR HOME In pots end
hang ing baskets from 75c
to S5.00. Also, lay ewev
POl NSETTIAS now for

Racine, Ohio

SIORM
WINDOWSlDOORS
RIPLAClMEIIT
WINDOWS
AWMINUI

For Sale

T ruth 13; My Thr ee Sons 15; Anyone tor Te nnyson ?

10; Gelt lng On 33

NOTICE
FOLIAGE

RJ£1NE
CARPET SHOP

33.
8:3{)-Barney Miller 6,13.
9:00--Besl Sellers 3,4,15; Tony Randall 6, 13; Hawai i
F lve-0 8; Vis ions 33; Oral ~obert s' Christm as
Dream 10.
9 ·3o- N anc v W a lker 6, 13; Jeanne Wo lf W ith 20

sizes.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
r• 992-2174
r...;

6,13: Waltons 8, 10; Vlslons ?0 ; M aster p iece Theatre

6:3{)-NBC News 3,4.15: ABC News 13; Andy Grlft llh 6,
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 10; lTV
Ull llzallon 33..
7:01)-Trulh or Cons. 3: Tb Tell lhe Truth &lt;; Bowling tor
Dollar s 6; Muppel Show 8; News 10; To Tell the

sofa , cna1r C"Dshions, .
mattre..es, poddt"'. ldtal
for campers. Var11ty of
For

8:00-ciick Van Dyke 3. &lt;,15: Welcome Back, Koller

Con sum er E x pe r lence 33.

POLY.fOA.M

PHOTOGRAPHY

1975 CHEVELLE
14295
Eslate Wagon, local I owner car, white radlol tires. otr
conditioning, V-8. oulomotlc, power steering ond
brokes. rodlo. dark red finish , block vinyl Interior .

Auto Sales

Telepision log for easy viewing

Business Services

word

.minimum .
• Ea cfl addlflonal word 3
cent s
BLIND. ADS
Addit ional 2Sc Cl'large
p er Advertlsemenl.
OFFICE HOURS
8 10 11m . to 5 : 00 p m
Daily , 8 :30 a .m to 12 00
Noon Saturday .
PMone today 992 2156

•

11 - TM Dally Sentlnei,Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, ~ - 16, 1976
DICKTRACY
.
.

OBITUARY

2270

Strauss' act
hard to follow

OF
QUALITY

OEGULATIONS

F»ubllshtr rner~es
hf' r~ ght to ed lf or re ltc t
dn V ads
dttmed ob l ectl onel. The publ i sher
will not be respons ible for
1T10re than one tncorre ct
1nserllon

Auto S.leo

2 SIGNS

c or~ ec

• 1on s accepted f irst d• y ot
publ lut ion .

&amp;

maiJl culpr it was someone el se.

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Cla~sifieds

IF PAW'S MEANS WU2
VISIBLE WE WOULDN'T

HAVE NO SUPPORT

I

�1~ - 'l'he uauy sentmel, MtaruePQ:rt-~omeroy, u ., anW"ZiWWiy, ..A.

J.u, ,... u

Mr. Rayburn dead, age 41
SYRACU S£ -- Stirling W. sons , :&gt;t1rt1ng ,
Ra ybur n, 41, Rose Valley ,
S yr acuse, w as dead on
a r rival th is m orn i ng at
Ve terans Memorial Hospi taL
Born Feb . 7. 19J5 in Point
Pleasant, W. Va,. he was the
son of lhe Ia te Lonnie J . and
Hes ter Ame l ia Wall a ce
Rayburn. He was a barber.
ve ter an of the U.S. Army and
Ai r ~Pi a member of th e
Asse bl
t" God Church, and
of the
·sabled Amer icoJn·
Vc t ~ra ns .

He was preceded in dea th

by

~

daughter,

Jo h.:w na

Mane.
Sur·vJvor s inc lude his wi fe,
IVa Pe&lt;Jrl Lo:ng Rayburn; two

Jr , and
Samuel , both at home ; four
bro ther s. Marion L. 1Pon .
chol. Mason , W. Va.; Howard
R., South Amboy, N. J .;

Charte5 E.. Baltimore, Md.

and Lonn ie

x

absolved

E.. Columbus ,

Ga ., and one sister . Mrs.
Eugene ( Ellene) Handy ,
Col umbus, Oh io.
Funeral services will be
1: 30 p.m"'.' Sunday at the
Fogl esong Funeral Home
with the Rev. Chester Ten .
nant offi c iating ~ Burial will ·
be In the Chester cemetery . ~~: ~Wli::&lt; ·Wl,.li&lt;Oli•I•E:.H•B:oi!&lt;•a:n•
Friends may ca ll at the ~
IIO!,Wll::&lt;~1fi!IQI~.-.--~~IIO!

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9

SALE I

funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9

~~~ .1:~u~·zon~~~~;~y rites

. no..
· s·z·rz·o· n
O'P~J:'

Man charged in rape of 22
month old girl at 16th Ave. Columbus. (Now she is under
treatment for gonorrhea) and
more.

Madden ·

Frigidaire
Laundry
Pair
Wash one piece or up to
an 18-lb load In this
Frigidaire Heavy Duly
Washer. Matching Dryer
oHers a 2-posilion Fabrics
seleclor, Timed and
No Heat cycles.

(Continued frorn page 1)
Middl eport E mergency
Squad was called for ·Lewis
Lee who was ill on N. Second
St. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
The Middleport Poilce
Department investigated a
minor accident on the Meigs
Junior High School parking
lot at 4 p.m. Vehicles driven
by Eugen,e Hawkins, Middleport, and Danny L. Will,
Pomeroy, backed into each
other on the lot. There were
minor damages and no
charges were filed.

'A Christmas
of all of our

I

SALE PRICES

slacks, sizes

Nig ht Till p.m.
Unti l Christmas

WATCH .FOR
OPENING DATE

SALE PRICES

."TIGRESS"
From P_arkersburg

THE MEIGS INN
9'12 -3629
Pomeroy

•

SALE PRICES

'·'

"

•

READY TO WEAR ·

WOMEN'S
SWEATER SALE

SHIRTS
NSHIRTS

•

•
•

Large selection of
cardigans, V-necks,
scoop necks, vests and
tunics, sizes small,
medium, and large.

An e:.:cellent .selection,
all arranged for your
easy se ·le~tion , we II
known brands. all si zes
for th e men on your li st.

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

'

SALE PRICES

lj;ll\jll!l\jll! .... ........ .... lj;lljllgllj

WOMENSDEPARTMENT

WOMENS
DEPARTMENT

~

LONG DRESSES ~

CHILDREN'S
DEPARTMENT

DAYTIME
DRESSES

I

JUMP SUITS
LONG SKIRTS ~
MISSY, HALF &amp;
DRESSY
~
•
EXTRA SIZES
en1ngs
BLOUSES ~
VELVET BLAZERS ~ COTION POLYESTER
.
a BLENDS, MACHINE
MISSY, JR. &amp; a
WASHABLE
HALF SIZES ~
til••"" ~ gQtgQ!£OOI&lt;a""'~"" ........ """"' ~:&lt;&gt;&lt;"""""" ..., .... ~;::&lt; ~""'""'~ ~:&lt;&gt;&lt;"""""" -""'·""' !r.::&lt;l&lt;:&lt;~&lt;n"""",.liiitln.r'ii
FURNITURE DEPT.
W ., ~~~~~•
·~~f{? W

for

holiday

.

.

·

BEDROOM SUITES
In maple. pine, oak , cherry. pecan
or cedar .

GOWNS

AND
ROBES.
SIZES 2-6X
and 7-14

SPECIAL PRICES

.

a ~ for Gtrls 'n Boys ~
W

--;:;;:7

--:::::::

EiiVE

EJ1.1B-FA!ifiiEJNEB
GfiJBNE!iS
THIS E«RI!iTMA5i

w

Basket Balls
11.69Weaving Loom _ ~t
6 Only 114.95 Pendulart Craft
4only 118.95 Paint by Number Wall Panel
4 Only 511 .95 Make by Number Apptaque

1~.59

S5.95 Don't Spill The Beans Game

lf.t9
17.50
S!.OO

16.00

.

S4.69

5~ . 49 Tootsietoy Farm Fun or Em~rgency Rescue

Set
15.95 Catch-A-Roo Pin Ball Game

12.69
14.69
14.69

Sl .9S All American Shooting Cannon

$3,09

12.95 Hula Hoops

12.29

S4.95 Star ~rek or Space 1999 Utility Belt

$3.89

15.95 Jack -m-th-Box

14.69

Entire Slock Tricycles

CHAIR SALE ·

With 2 bar stools

SALE
PRICES

BAR AND 4 STOOLS
Reg. $249.00

~~R·-~~~~~-~~lfl:&lt;~~·~~~~BO~~!~~

SALE '199.00

FANNY FARMER

CITIZENS BAND

Ideal stocking
stuflers ,· choose
your fjlvorite
flavor and save
Boxed ready to gi\le, adjustable volu 11Je
co ntrol 211• inch speake r, 40" fj3 1esc0pic
antenna, music departm ent, 2nd fl oor .

.

•

*16

95

now .

Dining room furniture including: buffets,
hutches. corner cabinets. tables, and
chairs, pine. maple and chrome finishes.

lAMP
This Year
Give A Table Cover
~e lect

the table covers you need now _
for your.self or for Christmas gifts , a
big selection in 11lrivls anQ cloth

covers, sqt,Jares, rounds, ova ls and

SET

PRICES ON

FURNITURE
DEPY..

25$ CANDY
BARS

WALKIE·TALKJES

oblongs. SALE PRICES
HOME F
NGS ANNEX

·sALE ·
Save 20 per cent tills
weekend on tomps. Wo
have table limps, floor
lamps, de•k and plano

992-6304

11mps and swa9 lamps.

CBs AND SCANNING
RADIOS
By RCA and Johnson

Bring the children to see Santa Claus in the Toy Dept. 1st Floor Thursday and Friday evening 7 to 8 p.m. or Salurday evening 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

~~=s·~:~~=~~

is. director

f M • ACS

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Welch·
town at 7:05 a.m. Friday for
Wilbur Ellis who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At
ll :50 p.m. Thursday the
squad went to Cave St. for
James Phillips, a· medical
patient, who was also taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

THE BIRDS - - Brownies of
Troop
Syracuse, strung pOpcorn, bread cubes and
cranberries and then decorated a O!ristmas tree on the
front lawn of the Syracuse ElementarY School Thursday
evening especially for the birds. AmollS(. those working on
the P.rotect, 'left to ri&amp;ht•. were Heidi Dobb, Wendy •t-y,
Shelly Wolfe, Darla Lambert and Kin) Adams.

en tine

e

FRIDAY, DEC. 17, 1976

POMERDY-MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Mass vaccination effort staggered
by possible link with rare disease
'

'

vacCinations arc concerned ,'' the director o( U1e Scnttlc·King
Dr. Johnathan Mann.
By JOHN LESAl{
County
Health Deparbnent said.
New
Mexico
reported
15
cases
of
Guill!iin-Barre
syndrome,
Uillted Press International
Nebraska
Health Deparlment Director Or. Henry SmiU• said
none
fatal.
Reports of a possible link between swine flu vaccine and a
tlte
state's
swine
flu program would jll'Obably resume if ieder·a)
Dr.
AIU&gt;n
Cobb,
.Director
of
the
Mississippi
Healtlt
Departrare paralytic disease that has killed five persons may prove
officials
ga
ve
the
go-ahead but that, except for u few moke-up ·
said suspension of the program because of its possil!le
Cloudy tonight,. lows near Ute death knell for one of tlt.e biggest mass irrununization ment,
link to the paralysis cases "ends Ute program" In Mississippi
30 : Fair Saturday, highs in efforts in history.
for all practical purposes.
The
Center
for
Disease
Control
in
Atlanta
ordered
the
the upper 40s. Probability of
. "Unless there is an epidemic of swine flu I don't expect the season is almost over ,
precipitation 20 per cent immunization program halted Thursday pending an analysis
"We're getting down pretty close to the date where the
program
will be resumed," Cobb said.
today' 10 per eent tonight and of the illnesses-but many health officials doubt the program
practicality
af vaccinating will be past. "
But Cobb said Ute risk an influenza epidemic is far grea\A!r
will ever get started again .
Saturday.
The
Canadian
government also said it was shelving 118 swine
tltan
the
possibility
of
paralysis
following
vacclnatioh
and
said
Some state health officials are scrapping Ute program .
.
flu
vaccination
program
Jan . 1 and that a morllorium on the
Ute
program
would
be
resumed
"should
flu
QCCur
during
the
Others predict that, even if the mori!Drium is lifted, public fear
shots
wotild
be
In
effeqt,
untlllt
can be determined .whether It is
period
of
this
evaluation
."
will end the project. Still others note the flu season has arrived
safe
to
continue.
The
program
was
regarded
dead
in
New
Yo~k
City':
•
·
and continuing the program would be impractical. ·
But Lawrence Cohen, Wyoming state health and medical
"It's very unlikely that the vacclnatlor program will be
The shots were halted after reports llnked the flu vaccine to
services
administrator, said there was n9 proof of a llil~
Gtillaln-IIarre syndrome, which causes paralysis for periods of resumed ,'' said'Helen St~:me, a health department spokesman.
between
the
shots and the paralysis.
·
_
"It will be closed for four weeks because of the morltorium and
up to several months.
"It's
probably
a
greater
risk
not
to
have
the
vueeine
and risk
.BY United Press International
.
The CDC reported 94 cases of Ute disease in 14 states - 51 was scheduled to expire Jan. 14 .
influenza
than
to
have
the
va
ccine
and
risk
Gullllen-Barre
COLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES has again cases among P.'~,sons inoculated ,for swine flu witltin three
"We probably won 'I revive·Ute program even In' the even! of
parried reporters' questions about his political future , weeks of the disease's onset. There have been five deatlts.
an epidemic because It takes three weeks for the vaclne to take syndrome, ", Cohen said.
The regular immunlzaUon program had been completed In
declaring he is not ready to say whether he 'll seek re-elec\ion
Most Gullain-Barre patients recover easily and the mortal- effect," she said.
Wyoming but five "make-up clinics" for persons who hadn 't
In 1978. The governor was asked at a news conference Thurs- ity rate is only aboot 5 per cent but officials are still concerned
The situation was the same in Seattle.
'
day whether he would run again.
"In effect, I guess, we' re out of business So fa r as swine-flu yet received shots were canceled.
·the vaccine may Increase the risk of the syndrome.
We'll make no conunitment on that, I must have said that
Asenior health official in Hawaii termed the paralysis scare
300 times," replled Rhodes. "I'm just looking forward to the "straw ihat broke the camel's back as far as a viable swine .
Christmas."
· flu immunization program is concerned."
"Then why are you maintaining a campaign fund if you're
He said the latest scare, combined with previous fears over
not going to nm ?" asked the newsman.
heart attack deaths earlier in the year among elderly vaccine
"Who wants it?" replied Rhodes. "Do you want it ?"
recipients, would reduce public participation in the program
will wish them good luck.•: here rallied around Iran's 5 per cent now would be
DOHA, Qatar (UP! ) even if it inevived. He predicted Ute program is "finished "
Yamani avoided saying ca ll for a 15 per cent increase harmful for the world
Saudi Arabian Oil Minister
FRANKFORT, KY. - THE U. S. a;tNSUMER Product unless there is a II•Jjor flu epidemic.
Utis
mell!11 a breakup of the w offse t the effe cts of ec onomy," Yarnanl said.
Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani
Safety Comlilission has notified Kentucky officials a toy,
New Mexico also scrapped Ute program.
1:Hnember
oil cartel which Western Inflation, which "The world recovery now Is
called Blobo Plastic Budd-a-Loons, Is on recall because it
"The only way we will restart the program is if there Is an said todoy his nation will has stuck together since 1960. OPEC'S economic much less than It was earlier
increase
the
price
of
its'
oil
by
contains a hazardous substance.
outbreak of swine flu," said New Mexico state epidemiologist
5 per cimt Jan. r and increase The United Arab Emirates commission said had In 1976. 1'here are reports of a
The,plastic balloon, distributed by the Imperial Toy Corp.,
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
its production, a move that will join Saudi Arabia In , increase.d the price of recession . Why should we
contains benzene, a solvent found in some paint removers and
EXTENQED
OUTLOOK
would
in effect curb higher applying a 5per cent increase Industrial goods 26.9 per-cent take part tn this?"
rubber cements, due ID an error by the manufacturer, said
since the last 10 per cent oil
Translated Into American
S u n d a y t h r o u g h'
price hikes sought by other oil valid through 1977.
Shelby Johnson, director of tbe state Division for Consumer
purchasing
terms , a 5 per
price
Increase
In
Octnber,
Th~ two countries togetbef
Tuesday, fair and warmer
producers. ·
Healtlt Protection. Eating the product or Inhaling it over a
cent
increase.
would mean an
produce
about
one-third
of
1975.
Sunday and a chance ol
Yamani said his natio~ , by
period of time may cause a serious blood disorder, he said.
average
Although
Saudt
Arabia
has
Increase
of on~ cent
OPEC's
oil
and
have
a
showers and · cooler
far the largest producer In
been
In close contact with the a gallon on the cost of
capacity
to
produce
much
Monday
and
Tuesday.
the
l:Hnember
Organization
WASIUNGTON - A FEDERAL JUDGE says Richard
U.S . administration· gasoline and hea ting oil,
Highs Sunday will be in the
of Petroleum Exporting more.
Nixon and top Watergate offenders H. R. Haldeman and John
designate
in recent days, accm-dlng ID estimates by
The
other
countries
said
mid
40s
to
the
low
SOs,
Countries,.
would
lilt
all
Its
Mitchell must pay damages to former National Seeurity
Yamanl
said
Washington had U.S. Commerce Secretary
they
hike
their
prices
IS
par
falling
to
the
upper
3Gs
or
production
ceilings
·
in
Council aide Morton Halperin for bugging his telephone. U.S.
Elliot Richardson .
not
put
pressure
on him.
cent
on
July
I.
lower
lOs
by
Tuesday.
effect
driving
down
the
price
District Judge John Lewis Smith Jr. Thursday declared "a
COLUMBUS- The' Public
"
An
increase
of
more
than
The
m,ajorlty
of
countries
Lows
will
be
to
the
30s
of
oil.
subjective gOod faitlt defense is unavailable," and gave Utilities Comm!Bsion of Ohio
He predicted the 1l OPEC
opposing lawyers 20 days to submit proposals he will consider (PUC) has scheduled a public early Sunday ilnd In the
upper20s
or
lower
30s
early
nations
who have said they
ih deciding what the damages should be. Halperin sought an hearmg next Feb. 22 to
estimated $3mlllion from along list of defendants.
· · consider an application for
He was among 13 government officials and 4 reporters' extended area telephone. I~:~:~~~r:,,, :,:,: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : : : : : : ~~~t~~~s!~j~Jy~oa~~
whose telephones were tapped by the White House "plumbers" service (EAS) between the
to sustain that amount and
tltat the expected increase By HELEN THOMAS
trying to determipe the source of riews leaks on foreign policy Portland exchange, and the
with AFL-CIO Secretary Brtezlnakl to be National
decislohs In 1969. Smitlt dismissed Secretary of State Henry O!ester. exchange.
wotild be no more than 5 per UPI Wblte House Reporter
Treasurer Lane Kirkland, Security Affairs adviser.
cent.
Kissinger as a defendant. Kissinger, then head of the security
The hearlng·wm take place
During a . ni ght out at a
Yamani sa id that in
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) - who Is bringing arguments
0
council, had merely furnished names of officials who might at 10 a.m., at Council·
from
George
Meany
favoring
Fay's
trailer steak house,
eS
exchange for Saudi Arabia's President-elect Jimmy
have had access to leaked information, the judge said.
O!amber, Village Hall in
Carter said reports that he Is John Dunlop for Ute labor Carter told reporters over
Pomeroy. All interested
Extensive damage was modoration , he e~ts "an under beavy pressure on his post and .James Schlesinger dinoer that he has same 45
caused by a fire this morning appreciation" from the West cabinet choices are "greatly for Secretary of Defense. persons under consideration
1 .
WASffiNGTON - THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION persons will be heard.
The application was flied In a six-room frame home ., - progress at the North- exaggerated," then Both held those positions In for 15 top jobs in his
may order a realigmnent of agencies inside the Agnculture
two
more the Ford cabinets, but Dunlop
Department to give more prominence to export promotion by 164 Portland subscribers owned by J. Arthur Evans on South talks hetween rich and summoned
(Continued on page 12)
poor countries In Paris and a prospective appointees and a resigned and Schlesinger was
activities, a source close ID tbe Cqrter transition team says. of the General Telephone Co. Roush Rd. near Cheshire.
The hoWie was rented to solution to the Ara~&gt;;Israell · labor lobbyist today to his fired.
The source emphasized, however, ihat no decisions have seeking the establishment of
non-optional,
two-way
EAS
George DeDen, CAB Coal crisis.
·
home for talks .
been made. He said-It was not yet clear whether any major
At . a news conference Fire, emergency
The No r t h •s 0 u t h
Carter was scheduled w Thursday, Carter announced
changes would be made quickly in the way department · between their exchange and · Company at Cheshire.
According to Evans, the conference was scheduled to Interview Joan Manley, vice the selections of Rep. Andrew units called oul
agencies are controled in groops through five assistant the O!ester exchange of the
after
th~ presltlent In Charge of the Young , D-Ga., black civil
secretaries. · At present, the department's farm expor( · Western Reserve Telephone fire · originated upstairs. resume
The
Middl'eport
There was heavy smoke heat Inauguration of U.S. Prest- bclok division of Time Inc., rights leader, to be
activities including overseas food aid financing and export Co.
Legal notice of the public and'water damage. Me,;,bers dent-elect Jimmy Carter. . and Juanita Kreps, .vice ambassador to the United Emergency Squad was called
promotion programs are handled largely in two agencies, the
For4!ign Agricultural Service arcJ a General Sales Manager's hearing must be published In of the Middleport and
_Asked wha~ he would do tf president of Duke University: Nations; former Budget to 391 Lincoln St. at 7,:52 p.m.
newspapers of general 'cir- Galllpoli' fire departments od compames flood the Theyarebelngconsideredfor Director O!arles Schultze ID Thursday for Mrs. B. F .
office.
,
culation in Meigs Co~nty.
responded Gallipolis being market witlt Saudi Arabian the positions of secretaries of . be chairman of the Council of Parmalee who was taken to
EAS Is .a type of called u~der th e 'depart - crude, Yamani replied, "! commerce and labor, Economic Advisers and Veterans Memorial Hospital.
telephon e service furn- ments' mutual ald. pact.
respectively.
former State Department · At 8:48 p.in., the squad went
L•hed at monthly flat or
Gallipolis volunteer fire
He also arranged w meet policy planner Zbigniew lo a Middleport cafe for
in~ide
Richard
Hogg, Point
measured rates higher "ihan fighters were called at 7:17
Pleasant, who was Ill. Taken
those normally charged p.m. Thursday to Fruth's
' - DAYTON, Ohio (Ul'l) - million overall cost. The· permitting sub.!crlbers of a Phannacy on Jackson Pike
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital,
he was detained
An appeal has been flied 1n School for the rest of the
The board of directors of the remaining $490,000 will come given exchange to place calls · where a 1969 Ford cab owned
later
on
an Intox ication
semester
by
Dowler.
Later
at
Meigs County Common Pleas
Miami Conservancy District from Dayton's federal urban to and receive calls from one by Frank Richards caught
charge,
a
hearing
held
before
the
or more other exchange fire due to faulty wiring.
Court by Peggy Girolami by
Thursday approved a $907,000 renewal funds.
At 2:5!.a.m. ,..rlday the fire
Guido Girolami, her father , Meigs Local Board ol
· construction contract for a · The dam is expected to be areas without being .charged Damage was estimated at
$20.
.
Education
that
ezpulslon
was
department
"·"called to the
Pomeroy, against the Meigs
dam that will turn part of the completed within two years a toll rate for each call.
upheld.
The
action
asko
the
river
ban)&lt;
In
the MilLS!. area
Fire Chief Ja~es A.
Miami River into a 6CH!cre and will make Ute river
Local School Board, Meigs
where
firemen
extinguished a
board
be
-enjoined
from
Northup listed the loss at
Local School district and
lake in the ~ar downtown suitable fo• recreation.
carrying
out
the
order,
brush
fire
and
at 8:10 a.m.
COFCTOMEET
$1,850
in
a
Thursday
fire
Charles ' L.
Dowler,
area.
Officials also hope the dam
today
the
department
was
The
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Pamela
Rush,
Pomeroy,
which
dest.royed
a
barn,.
two
superintendent of Meigs
The bOard voted to assess will spur a building boom
lJ~rt
to
p.,ush's
Lane,
has
Commerce
will
meet
flied
suit
for
divorce
Dayton and Montgomery · along the underdeve)ped
sows, and 20 pigs owned by ~·
Local School District.
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs Frank Shoemaker, Rt. 1,
County; $755,000 each riverfront.
MissGieolami recently was against George F . Rush, Chesl:'. ' · fc · :Ire at the J.
· A. Evans residence.
lnn .
·&lt;
Gallipolis.
towards t~e project's $2
expelled from · reigs High Marlon.

Weather

~~~~~~;r.~~~~ ~~~~~~;~r:~ve~~:~~~~ t~: ~~~~~~ ;~·~~

Pressure not that bad

Ch hire heavy

Lake pl8nned

MUSIC DEPT.

!!::&lt;~I!IU

PIZZA SHACK

II

Fire danuige
to home in

SALE 1459.00
SALE 1469.00

Walnut fin ish with viny l padding.

Rh b H

set Feb. 22

Sale Prices

PINE OR MAPLE BARS
REG. 1559.00 PINE
REG. '569.00 MAPLE

disease that paralyzed Clara
Ruth Jarrett as Ute GuillainIIarre syndrome, they were
puzzled .. Most victims of that
disease had, a cold first, b~t
her family said .she had not.
· Neithec · had . two other
women in the Huntsv ille
area, both of whom had the
syndrome.
It was those cases that first
led docwrs to think · there
MRS. HYSELL
might be a connection
between the syndrome and
e a yse
the swine flu inocul atiori
program, Alabama State
Health,Officer Ira Myers said
Thursday.
"That's what they had In
0
e:ags
common,'' George T. Jarret~,
Mrs . Rheba HyseiV, Mrs. JarreU 's husband, said
Pomeroy, has been named after Ute in.oculation program
new executive director of' the . was suspended to investigate
' Meigs Unit of the American the relationship.
Cancer Society. Mrs. Hysell,
"They all had the flu
a long-time resident cf Meigs shots."
County, is the daughter of
Mrs. Iona Brickles, Route 2,
Pomeroy, and Donald
Brickles of Glouster.
As director, Mrs. Hysell will
be in the cancer office loca ted
in the county Infirmary,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
from 1to 4p.m. each Tuesday
and Thursday for . anyone
needing information about
any of the cancer programs. VOL. XXVII' NO. 171
Mrs. Hysell, her husband,
Charles D., and their two
sons, J ererny, 6, and Ryan, 4•
reside in Pomeroy.

beaning is

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

~-~~~---~------~--FURNITURE DEPT.

Recliners · by Berkline,
viny l
and
cl
upholsterin-g,
wall
aways, rock-o-loungers. ·
swivel
rockers ,
rec line rs .

Mrs. Jarrett, a registered
nurse and mother of five
children who had been
inoculated Oct. 26, died Dec '
7, one month after she woke
up with a sore back.
"I tltought she had pulled a
muscle or something,"
Jarrett said. "We figured · it
was nothing."
Two days later, "she got ID
feeling real bad," he said.
''Shewas aching all over, and
was in a lot of pain."
On the morning of Nov, 10
she walked into a hospital.
WiUtln two days she was
paralyzed throughout her
body, able w move only her
fingers and to talk a little.
"I'd already convinced mysell that the shots caUlled it,"
Jarrett said Th ~rsday ,
adding that doctors Wid him
of the possibie connection
-Nov. 19, almost a montlt
before the swine flu program
(Continued on page 12)

MADISON, Ala . .(UP I) -

When doctors diagnosed the

Telephone

S6.29
Save20 Pet.

15.95 Poppin Top

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) State Health Direc!Dr Dr.
John Ackerman said IQday
one of two Ohioans who
received swine flu shots and
then died, was killed by a
stroke and not Gullain-Barre
disease, a
paralyzing
ailment, as first SWipected.
i\ckennllli today identified
the· second victim as Mabel
Stephens, 64, Cincinnati.
"She died of the paraylsis,"
sai!l Ackerman, adding that
·the woman had also received
a swine flu shot.
The 'death in Ohio and
similar deaths and the
number of the victims
stricken with the illnesB has
forced Ute suspension of the
nationwide swine flu InoculaUon.
Acketrnad said a physician
fr~ the Cet!ter. for Disease
Control in Atlanta is In Ohio
ID help track down data on all
of Ute cases of paralysis in the
Buckeye State.
"I am still riot sure how
many cases we have," be
said, "it's in the vicinity of 18
or 20 cases. About14 of those
received the swine flu
vaccine. ,But all this is
fragmentary and prellminary."
Ackennan said about 90 per
cent of Ute persons who get
th e paralyzjng disease
reco:ver and he said there is
no evidence ·to directly' link
the disease with the swine flu
shots.
But, he 'said, ~~ My
·recommendation is not to get
the shots. This disease is not
like mumP,. or chicken pox.
Influenza is not occurring at
this point in Ohio and the risk
of getting swine flu Is zero
while the risk of getting this
disease is far greater."
Ackennan said if a person
does . not hav·e a reaction
within a month, then "you
have nothing to worry
about."
Ackerman said .if the
vaccine is found to be safe,
the program could go ahead,
l)ut said, "Public confidence
in Ohio is such that we
probably ·would not go
ahead." ·

Arabia holds-oil hike to 5%

frutnr~

w
SUO

•

PAJAMAS,
SHORlY
PAJAMAS,

a "\~ f:JJl 'l~ 0 '"5'\V/.§ ~
~. ~
.:i?J I V:::J1 ~ w

SPECIAL PRICES

WtDNESDAY 8r THURSDAY

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

•

•

MEN'S DRESS

PLAYING NIGHTLY
- AT THE INN

wlnte
selection of
types and colors.

SALE
PRICES

.CONTINUING
THE SALE OF

MEIGS llfEATME
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

Open Every

on all

44 waist,
colors
patterns .

57.95 Split lev.el Aggravation Game
Entire Stoc:k larger Size Dolls

*569 .

WINTER JM:KETS

100 per
double knit

I
I

I

"

SAVE ON
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

MENS DRESS SlACKS

Sl ip overs in V necks.
crew
nec ks and
Juvenile size 3 to 1 and
col lared sty les. also
regular boys sizes s to 20.
cardigans .
sizes
Sl ip aver and cardig'ans, I sma II • me d'tum , Iarge
=~~e~~~~~r:electioo of styles ~ and extra large.

·

for 24 hours."

I MEN'S SWEATERS
1· ··
·
I

SWEATERS

1

and elderly helpless will be a
bit more safe In their home~.
Here are some or the
reasons I'm Interested In
bringing up these things. 1
have no fear for . myself
much, but !Ike to think I'm
careful and cautious. I never
leave lights on at night, but,
have ways to protect myself ·
and seeing anyone, aside
from switches that turn lights
on aU over the outside and
inside; and I get mad, not
scared, if r hear someone
outside.
My grandmother used to
keep the axe by her bed (no
lights) and chairs under door
knobs ivlth locks on doors.
Her warning signals were
pots and pans on chairs on the
floor under windows. Well,
my preparation or readiness
is a bit more modern, and I
haven't many more years
anyway.
If one has several places to
sleep they should not be in
one place every night, but
wherever, ready for a signal
from the intruder.
Since I'm back on this, I
have reason for being concerned about abductors and
rapists, mainly because I
have three girls and several
granddaughters in Columbus.
And from the Disptach and
morning paper there come
these reports :
Two held in kidnap of
woman chained In unheated
hoUse, in nea r zero Weather

BOYS ·.

•

*o
1'U
d
d
.
e
0 are nee
By Goldie Clendenin
PORTLAND - l was glad
to see In the Sentinel the
request for persons to oppose
O' Hara's tr ytnj( to have
prayer, scriptu re or any kind
of rcligiou.~ program taken
from the air.
And as it states, truly, if we
don 't help by our contribution s of letters and
names against this atheistic,
Communistic infidel, we can
only blame ourselves when
this nation sinks to a still
lower level.
Most of us know of, if we
are not one, a person who
benefit s from the sermons,
song and prayer that comes
into our homes, and gives us a
lift spiritua lly, which also
hejps others physically and
mentally.
As for myself, I am able
mostly to attend church and
Sund ay School Sunda y
mornings. But wilh winter
coming o·n, especially ice and
snow, l'm · home-bound . And
these programs are a great
blessing to me as well as to
countless others.
So I do hope all who belong
to any church or other
organ izatio n
will
do
something about it. If one
person writes a letter comparable to one in Sentinel.. ..
· I have found in most cases,
prevention is truly worth a
pound of cure. A few minutes
and 13 cents is the cost. If this
is brought up more . often
befor e the public, maybe :
- Our Johnnies and Ja nes
will learn to read.
- And somehow our young

Possible link
tipped by cold

Flu shot

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

:~~~~

Appeal filed in expulsion

8

,

..

I, ,

Dayton

1

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

.f

"...

...

�</text>
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