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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday , Nov. 14, 1978

Two steelhauling rigs hit by.gunfire today
By JOHN T. KADY
United Press !Dtemailonal
Two steelhauling ·rigs were
struck by gunfire early today
in northeastern Ohio and 14
trucks were hit by l,lricks
thrown from overpasses in
Ohio and Pennsylvania in a
strike by
independent
steelhaulers.
The
strike by
the
Pittsburgh-based Frat~rnal
Association of Steel Haulers
Started at midrlight Friday
and has since spread

throughout Pennsylvania and
Ohio and into Indiana,
Alabama and Maryland. It is
being defied by the giant
Teamsters Union .
However , the nation 's
major steel producers report
only minor inconveniences
caused by the strike.
A steelhauling truck was
hit by ·a shotg\in blast. near
East Liverpool, Ohio, tOOay
and another rig was struck by
b~llets from a high powered

rifle in Mahoning County,
Ohio. Five other trucks were
struck by bricks near Warren
and twoby-fours with nails
were also thrown optq. a
highway iti northeastern
Ohio.
Pennsylvania State Police
said nine trucks were
damaged by rocks and bricks
thrown from overpasses
along the Pen·nsylvania
Turnpike early today.
In Ohio Monday night a
trucker r ecei\' Pti ·A f1 e~ h

rate investigation would be
needed to determine if one of
the bodies is that of John . He
said all he knew about the
find was what he read in the
newspapers.
AI Abram, which originally
broke the story Monday,
carried a second article today
announcing the discovery of
the second body below the
church at the 1,600-year-old
St. Makar Monastery, 60
miles northwest of Cairo.
AI Akh bar today quoted
·Father Youhanna , the No. 2
man at the monastery, as
saying the bodies of John the
Baptist and the prophet
Elisha were discovered two
years ago "intsct, undecayed
and unccrrupted by time."
The discovery was kept
secret
until
proper
preparations were made, the
priest was quoted as saying.
The bodies were found
during renovation work on
the ancient mOJlaslery, the

collective bargaining for
independent truckers. It also
wants independent drivers to
be able to work for major
steel shipping firms, without
.having to join the Teamsters
Union.
"The handwriting· is on the
wall," F ASH President BUI
Hill told a group of
independent truckers In
Cleveland Monday night,
... Either we correct it now or
we're going to die off slowly.
We're I!Oing to get ·in a

position to have our own
trade . W)ion and give our
people
co II e c t I v e
bargaining."
.
" Hill is asking Teamster
members to engage in an
Ulegal strike," a spokesman
for the 140,0IJO.rnember Ohio
Cooference of Teamsters told
UP!. "Hill is engaging in
extraocdinarly irresponsible
actions. The Teamsters
deplore this violence and the
only one who stands to gain .

Sheriff gipes
information
Mei~s
County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt advises his
department has received
requests wanting to know
what color of lens are legal
for auxiliary driving lights
used on four wheel· drive
'pickup trucks.
The Ohio Revised Code and
the specifications and
regulations prescribed by the
Director of Highway Safety
specify that only white,
yellow or light amber can be
used, sheriff Proffitt reports.
Any other color would he in
violation of state law.

SI.!U AD RUNS

The Emergency Unit of the
Middleport Fire Department
answered two calls on
Monday. The squad went to
Brick St., at 3:12 p.m. for
Debbie Deren berger who had
received an ankle injury in a
fall.
She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Af 10:02 p.m. the squad
went to 334 Palmer St. for
. James Haggerty who was
taken to Holzer Medical
· Center.
SPECIAL MEETING
A special meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM,
Olester, has been set for 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Work will be
in the Master Mason Degree
and aU Mater Masons are
invited.

HOSPITAL NEWS

School

Cable•••

1•

,.

...

._.._.._.._..~._.

MONEY

THE CAVALRY

DOESN'T GROW
ON TREES! ...

WITH US

IS RIDING
NOW.

In fa ct, Christmas trees and everything that goes with them take more
cash than you need at any other
time of the year. That's why you
need something to back you up
•
Our Christmas Club account makes
sure you have money when you
need it mo~t'

No w w e can cover your
insurance territory better
tha'n ever, because now, we
can provide you with fine
products from the Kemper
Insurance Companies . We'll

find the right auto ,
homeowners , bu siness and
other insurance coverages

to meet your needs .

Walk-Up Teller Window
And Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m .

Re~resenting :

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

THE FRIENDLY BANK

l:ilitens l'alional Ba·~...

,.,

f

t

DAVIS
INSURANCE

Social
1 Calendar

AGENCY

Bill QuickiC

!( Across

from

the ,

thouse in Pomeroy ''
UU ' I . ,J, 7"J

WONDER COAL
WOOD OR COAL BURNING HEATER

ONLY

a

Joanne Starcher

Member F. D.t .C. Deposits Insured ID$40,000.00.

I

Weather

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FOR EACH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES
49 PROMPT WEEKLY PAYMENTS, THE
BANK WILL MAKE THE 50TH PAYMENT.

&amp;b'

headquaitered l~
Middletown, Obi(); the
Wheeling-Pittsburgh steel
Co. ; and ~ Weirton steel
Corp . in Weirton, W.Va., all
said there had been no letup
In shipments of steel.
The·Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
headquartered
in
Philadelphia, said steel is
being lillpPed in reduced
quantity and production had
been trimmed at its plant In
Baltimore, Md.

cour ·

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC ST.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

(

' \

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 15, 1978

at y

/

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 150

Strike violence spreading
United Preos International
The impact of a violencepunctuated
strike
by
independent, steel-hauling
truck drivers, now in its fiftll
day, continues to spread. Two
more steel companies report
a drop in deliveries.
Representatives of the
Corp .,
Republic Steel
Cleveland, and Armco Steel
Corp., Middletown, Ohio, said
delivedes were lower than
normal Tuesday because of
the walkout.
A Republic spokesman said
shipping was reduced for
plants in Ohio, Chicago and
Buffalo, N.Y . Long-haul
shipments were particularly
lower than normal.

Non-union mine
will be target

W~RAW

! Area Deaths l

newspaper quoted Father
Youhanna as saying.
"What made us confident·
that the grave contains the
body of John the Baptist is
that the old fathers, in their
manuscripts, said this grave
was marked by a small pillar
on top of it as a distinguishing
sign," he said.
"We ascertained that these
are tlle bodies of ·John the
Baptist, the prophet Elisha
and some other saints," the
monk said.
John the Baptist was
believed beheaded between
25 and 30 A.D.

from the violence is Hill."
Pickets turned hack shipments from a U.S. steel Corp.
plant near Phlladefphla
Moo day, but production at
the plant continued. Pickets
also appeared Mooday at the
entrance to · the U.S. Steel
facility in Birmingham, Ala.,
but a c&lt;mpany spokesman
said the F ASH pickets did not
affect the plant's operatioos.
RepubUc Steel Corp., headquartered in ·Cleveland; t})e
Armco
Steel
Corp . •

ORDERED
NAffiOBI, Kenya (UPI.
·- President ldi Amin
today ordered the Ugandan
army
to withdraw from
I
,
I
captured Tanzanian
Roush, Aurora, Ill.; two
MARYS. ROUSH .
territory, Radio Uganda
Mary Shain Roush, '84, grandchildren · Joey and
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Olarleston:
said. ·
"The union can only
Route 2, Racine, died Monday Courtney Roush; her father.
"I wlsb to Inform your . (UPI• - An ·underground
evening · at
Veterans. Fred Shain, Racine: an . excell~ncies I ba"e ordered
coal mine in Mingo County, respond as their duty,"
uncle, John Joseph Shain,
Memorial Hospital.
where workers hlive spurned MaSsey said. "That's their
my army to withdraw to
Mrs. Roush was a member Racine; three aunts, Gretta
the
United Mine Workers, Is calUng card- to organize aU
tbe recognized borders of
of Racine American Legion Carnahan, Mary Circle and
expected
to become the non-union mines."
Uganda .. and Tanzania,"
The 100 or so employees at
Post 602 Ladies Auxiliary and Hattie Powell, Racine, and
of
a
fierce recruiting
target
tbe broadcast quoted AmiD
the
Marrow Booe mine·deslre
several
nieces
and
nephews.
the 8 and 40. She was a
drive by the union.
as saying.
Funeral
services
will
be
non-union
. status because
member of the East Letart
UMW President Arnold
AmiD's de-.lsion set the
they
get
higher
wages, bigger
held
at
I
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
United Methodist Church
Miller told The Huntlngtoo
stage for a quiet ead to the
benefits,
an
incentive .
Ewing
Funeral
Home
with
·
Women's Group. Mrs. Roush
HeraldDispatch Monday that
111-day-old war whfcb at
program,
and
a
better ·
the
Rev.
David
Harris
ofwas preceded in death by her
he just couldn't stand to see a
times threatened to piUDge
retirement
system·
,
Massey
ficiating
.
Friends
may
call
at
husband, Virgil, her mother
nonunion mine operate within
· the entire area Into a wider
the funeral home from 2 to 4 confiict.
20 miles of the union's told 'the newspaper.
and a sister.
Massey warned that the
international organizing
She is survived by two ·sons and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
Marrow Bone mine might
and daughter-in-law, Mashall Burial will be in the Letart
office.
The drHt me, owned by turn into another StearnS· "H
and Debbie Roush, Racine, Falls Cemetery.
LOCAL VISIT SET
and Terry and .lAcqnPlyn
Marrow Bone Development · the union has anything to do
TIFFIN - Alice A. Mit- Co. mine, is located just east with II."
chell, an admissions coun- of Naugatuck.
"Because," he said,' "that
selor for Heidelberg College
Is
the on)y way they (UMW)
"We know what they're
here, will visit the guidance doing down there," Miller can get people who have a
counseling office of Meigs told the Herald-Dispatch. free choice - violence and
High School, Pomeroy, at "We're ready." .
intimidation. That is a simple
Holzer Medical Center
Veterans Memorial Hospital
8:30 a.m. Wednesday, ·Nov.
statement of filet."
The
UMW's
international
Discharges, Nov. i3
ADDMITTED Earl
22.
Massey said the mine · is
ocganizing office was moved
Lucille Bearhs; Jenna
Griffith, Middleport:
Miss Mitchell will tell · to the . WUliamson ·area last expected to increase its
Catherine Mees, Pomeroy; Berkley: Bertha Combs; counselors
and
pros- year as a boost to its payroll to 250 miners mce
Alice Kautz, Pomeroy; Rctha Criner: Della pective
stu- ocganizing effocts.
college
operations
reach
full
Evelyn Wood, Long Bottom; Hughart; Hazel !son; Mrs. dents about Heidelberg's
projectioos. N~ year, It
"That
nm-union
mine
is
in
Esther Smith, Racine; Lena Mark Moyer and daughter; academic programs, ad- my home district (l'i)," should produce 500,000 tons of
Howard, Pomeroy; Betty Maudle Persinger; Edna missions procedures, Miller groused. "I won't steamgrede coal, and 1.2
Rollins ; Maggie Rosenkranz;
Bailey, Vinton.
financial aid packages, off- tolerate that kind of insult." million by 1980.
Howard
Roush; VernnerSee ;
DISCHARGED - _Gladys
campus study progri!Jlls, and
If an organizing campaign
Nicholson, Paul Nease, Pauline White.
social opportunities. Heidel- takes shape, there exists the
Births, Nov. 13
Clement Cooper, Emma
berg is in its 129th year as a
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hols- co-educational liberal arts possibility o{ tension similar
Hoffner, Dorothy Wright.
to that which has occurred in
inger, son, Ray.
college. It offers about 25 a three-year standoff at the
'
.
majors
and
10
pre- mue Diamond Justice mine
(Continued from page I)
professional
programs in Stearns, Ky., scene of
Man's skeleton found near road
by
the ·
with wide options for in- numberous acts of violence .. established
male aged 18 to 23, was found dependent study, internships,
CHARDON, Ohio (UP!) legislature.
It
should
E. Morgan
Massey,
The skeleton of
an near the end of a road at the and off-campus study op- president of Marrow Bone's recognize the differences in
unidentified young ·man was . partially completed portunities in the United parent, A.T. Massey Coal Co., the·cost of educating various
found Monday in a new development . The county States and abroad.
Inc., pointed out that the student levels, including
housing development in coroner estimated that the
issue was ralaed by a news kindergarten, grades1·12, the
Munston Twp., Geauga victim had been dead for 12 to
reporter last week in handicapped, vocational and
disadvantaged.
··
County Sheriff's deputies said 15 months.
PICTIJRES TAKEN
Foul play is suspected and
'•In other words," the a,..
today.
David Keller Produ~ions
soc!Btion stated, "a district
They said the body, investigative help from the
could receive more mooq
described as that of a white CUyahoga County Coroner's were in Pomeroy Monday
making movies of the Ohio
SQUAD CALLED
office has been requested.
per pupil because of •
River and buildings of the
The Pomeroy Emergency pupil-weighted formula."
community in conjuction with Squad was called to West
Acmnbinationof~lll
TilE COURIERS
a film being prepared for the Main St. at 9:15p.m. Monday local funds would ,.,.Y .. .
"The Couriers", a gospel Ohio Historical Society.
·.for Jeff Hawley who had
costs, with ~
(Continued from page
singing group, will be presenPomeroy will be one of a facial lacerations apd districts not having . .
Mullen voted no.
ting services at the Rock Spr- number of towns and cities abrasions. He was taken to
lt is expected that a ings
United Methodist included in the film which Veterans Memorial Hospital. much on local r
taxes.
representative of the cable Church, Thursday, Friday, will in time be avilable
At 8:40 a.m. Tuesday the
At the heart of the p~
firm will be present at the Saturday and Sw1day even- through the Ohio Historical squad went to Mechanic St.,
is
the 20 mlll millimwn with
next session.
ing, 7:30p.m. Thursday noon Society.
for Shane Petrie, who was Ul. each district having the
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene they will perform at Southern
He wss taken to Holzer authority to vote tax
Grate read a letter from High School, and Friday marMedical Center.
increases to provide for
Ashland Oil noting that as of · ning at Meigs High School.
education
beyond that
Nov. 2, all grades of gasoline That afternoon they will have
defined
as
meeting
state
MARRIAGE
LICENSE
increased one-cent a gallon a program at Meigs Junior
minlmUiliB,
the
assoclatioo
Olarles
Eugene
Smith,
19,
and the report of Mayor Fred High School. The Rock Sprsaid.
Hoffman for October showing ings Church is located on old Route . 1, Middleport, and
JOINT SESSION
John s. Rue, chairman of
Terri
Lynn
Vining,
18,
a collection of $2,174 in fines Route 33 near the Meigs
The New Haven Rotary the Cincinnati Board of
Rutland.
and fees and $110 in merchant County fairgrounds.
· wUl meet with the Education,'&amp; finance
.._...._ Club
police collections for a total of
Middleport-Pomeroy, Rotary committee, was among the
$2,284 was approved.
Clqb Friday evening at Heath delegates who drew up the
Mayor Hoffman reported
United Methodist Olurch in proposed plan. He said there
he and · Councilmen Martin
Middleport.
·
would be no further need for
Showers or thundershowers
Kelly, Allen King and Dewey
additional'
local school tax
Horton had met with today, ending this evening,
levies.
Pomeroy Village with highs near 70. Mostly
The 20roUI base plus state
BAKE SALE
representatives regarding cloudy and colder tonight and
aid
would 888111'e achoola of
The
Women's
Auxiliary
of
TUESDAY
the two communities joining Wednesday, with lows tonight
keeping
doors open since
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
MEIGS
High
School
Open
to apply for HUD grants. in the upper 30s and highs
many
districts
that need
will
hold
a
bake
sale
beginHouse,
7:30
p.m.
to
9
p.m.
Mayor Hoffman said he has Wednesday between !iQ and
addltiooal
funds
mUll now
ning
at
9
p.m.
Friday
in
the
Parents,
patrons,
the
public
secured an appointment with 55.
tap local taxpayers, or go
basement
of
Trinity
Church,
jo
meet
the
teachers
invited
the Ohio Director of HUD
with9ut, he said.
Pomeroy.
and tour the building.
Dec. I. Representatives of the
EXTENDED
FORECAST
two towns have set a meeting
Thursday through
for Nov. 30 for Middleport
Saturday,
rain Thursday,
and Pomeroy Village officials
ending
Friday,
wllh partly
to nail down their plan for
.
.
cloudy
weather
Saturday.
making the HUD application.
Highs
will
be
In
tbe
mid
or
The mayor extended a vote
upper 40s Thursday and
of thanks from the fire
Friday and In the upper tts
department to council for
to the middle 50s Saturday.
help given in passage of the
Lows will range from the
fire department levy at the
Nov. 7 election. He described · upper 20s to the middle 30s
Thursday and In the mid
.an auction of State Highway
Department equipment held ZOs to near 30 Friday and
*THERMOSTAT CONTROLLED
in New Philadelphia recently . . Saturday.
Council refused to approve
a request for a c-1 license to
* FIRE BRICK LINING
sell beer and wine at a
carryout operation on Locust
* HEAVY CONSTRUCTION
St. Council requested a
hearing with the Ohio
JAILER REHffiED
* POWE IFUL 2-SPEED BLOWER
Department of Liquor
MEDINA, Ohio (UPI)
Control on the matter. The Medina County has rehired
refusal to approve the former Sheriff Steve G. Helli,
request stemmed from the who resigned this fall aa the
closeness of the establish- county's chief jailer after the
dismissal of charges of
ment to two churches.
Council President Kelly sexual battery lodged against
brought up the dangers iitvolved in truck parking near him by two female · jail inmates.
Hell!, 60, lileriff of Medina
comers In the toWr! and
passed along a request for the County from 1956 through
grading of an alley between 1964, will receive $10,000
Hamilton and Lllcust Sts.
·year as a security officer.
Officials attending the County Commissioners Mark
meeting were Mayor Hoff- Whitfield and Charles Clark
man, Clerk-Trt·asurer Grate, voted to hire him Monday.
and Councilmen William . Commissioner John
Walteh, Charles Mullen, Oberholtzer was not present .·
Dewey Horton, Carl Horky.. at the meeting.
Allen King and ·Kelly.

--------------------------

Monks open coffins
By W.G. KffiOLOS
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!.
Egyptian newspapers said
today monks at a remote
monastery unsealed the
coffins of St. John the Baptist
and the prophet EUsha and
found the bodies "intact,
undecayed and uncorrupted"
by almost 2,000 years.
At least one of the bodies
stiU is attached to its head,
discounting the possibility it
is the remains of John, the
beheaded hermit who prophesied the COOling of Jesus
and then baptized Him, the
newspapers said.
However, the
Cairo
newspaper AI Akhbar said
the monks recognized the',
other coffin as John the
Baptist's by a distinguishing
mark clearly described in
ancient Christian
manuscripts.
In Vatican City, Monsignor
Giovanni Papa, a Vatican
· histocian said today an accu-

wound when he was hit by a
small caliber bullet in Huron
County in Northwestern Ohio.
The powerful Teamsters
uqion is bitterly opposed to
tlle strike and has ordered its
cjrivers to continue with scheduled deliveries but Ill
exercise caution, avoid truck
stops and drive in caravans
where possible.
FASH has laid down a
series of 10 demands,
including the right nf

•

Republic transports !iQ per- Corp. said their shipments
cent of its steel by rail , which are being restricted .
has not been hampered by the
At· least 80 pickets at the
strike.
\
U.S. Steel plant· in Fairless
At Armco' s Butler, Pa., Hills, Pa ., Tuesday stopped
plant , shipments have all shipments.
dropped and some customers
U.S. Steel's Lorain; Ohio,
are hiring rigs to transport plant also reported shipment
steel tllat would have been reductions . A company
carried by the independents. spokesman said the firm will
Although both companies use rail transportation to
report a drop in deliveries, make up for them .
tlle reduction has not been
Bethlehem Steel said
se rious enough to cause Tuesday shipments from its
produc t ion slowdowns. Baltimore plant
were
Pickets were not at any curtailed.
Republic or Armco factories
The strike was called last
Tuesday.
Friday by the Fraterna·l AsBesides Republic and sociation of Steel Haulers, a
Armco, the U.S. Steel Corp. Pittsburgh-based
and the Bethlehem Steel organization of drivers who

own their trucks. At stake is .a
series of demands, including
the right for independent
operators
to
bargain
collectively and not be forced
to join tlle Teamsters union .
The Tea msters, whi ch is
opposing the strike, has told
its driver s

to continu e

deliveries but to do so with
caution , warning them to
drive in caravans whenever
and
avoid
possible
truckstops .
Incidents of shootings, tire
slashings, intimidation and
vandalism have occurred on
highway s
in
Ohi o,
Pennsylvania and Indiana.
The
latest occurred

Tuesday in Indiana. Police
said three FASH members
and as many Teamsters were
involved in a confrontation
wit h guns at a Gary
truckstop.
Three men, who identified
themselves as Team sters
busine ss represe ntati ves ,
said th ey wer e held at
gunpoint by the other trio .
One claimed the F ASH
members sla shed t heir
automobile tires.
The tires were cut, but none
of the three F ASH members
were carrying guns. Police,
however, said they found
guns in a search of their car
but did not make any arrests .

Citizen
march
planned
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Pledging to "march to the
plant gates" if necessary, a
labor-citizen group coalition
is
launching
a
campaign
in
23
states to prevent utility
companies from shutting off
heat to consumers who
cannot pay their biUs this
winter.
At least 200 people have
died in recent winters after
their gas or electricity was
shut off, the groups contend,
and thousands more suffer
silently, some going without
food or medication to pay
ever higher utility bills.
The "Citizen-Labor Energy
Coalition" demanded
Tuesday tlle Department of
Energy implement the Public
Utility .Regulatory Policies
Act of 1978 which, it said,
provides that each state
public utility commission
should
adopt
policies
l
forbiddlng shut-offs - during
NEARING COMPIETION-{;onstruction on the 1,000 ft. smoke stack at the Kyger
severe weather. The law also
Cceek Station of the Ohio Valley Electric Corp. near Oleshlre is expected to be
gives tlle energy department
completed,by the end of this month. Work on tlle structure, which currentlv .tanri• at. 700ft..:
the power to make sure tlley
be(lan on Aug. 25. When completed, smoke from the three towers pictured to the right will
·do so, it said.
be channeled into the single 1,000 ft. stack. Except for the operation of the control rooms
The
coalition
said
which are located at the base of the towers, use of the three original stacks will b~
Wisconsin, Maryland and
discontinued. Pulhnan Power Products serves as contractor for the new structure. (Larry
Rhode Island already have
Ewing Photo). ·
banned winter shut-offs.
William Hutton, director of
Eastern board
the National Council of Senior
Citizens, said, " I think some
of the utilities are going to see
meeting Friday
us marching to the plant
gates" unless shut-off
The Eastern Local Board of policies are changed.
Education . will meet in
Many older people are
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP! ) - Syrian forces and Olristian special session at 6:30 p.m. being forced to make "life
militiamen exchanged machine-gun, mortar and rocket fire Friday _'at the high school. and death economic choices
today in downtov'll Beirut and its southeast suburbs, leaving Members will be discussing ... in fact they've had to make
six persons dead in one of the heaviest !!refights since a cease- financial matters, con- the cruel choice of heating or
sidering a letter of eating in many cases, "
fire in mid-October.
The Beirut independent daily An Nahar quoted a security resignation from tlle Chester Hutton said.
source as saying that six people were killed and 18 wounded in special education teacher,
He said the figure of 200
acting on the matter of ap- deaths, ·which came from
the clashes during the past 24 hours.
poi.nting Debbie Rose as press reports, is probably
Clerk-custodian of the "just the tip of the iceberg. "
school's activity accounts He Sllid in 1976 there were I
VATICAN CITY (UP.. -The Vatican mails said today and ·considering any other million
senior
citizen
they will issue a series of stamps commemorating the 34-&lt;lay business that may come households with annual
before the board.
reign of Pope John Paul I.
incomes of less than $2,000
It said 1.45 miiUon series of four stamps each will be put on
who "spent over 50 percent of
sale starting Dec.ll. The stamps, worth 70,120,250 and 350 Ure
their income on winter ruel.~~
(8,14, 30and 40cents), wUI show the late pope sitting in throne,
Bernard Veney, executive
Lows tonight in the lower director · of the National
smiling, walking in the Vatican gardens and blessing. They
Probability
of Clients Council, which
w.ill bear the dates of his reign, Aug. 26, 1978 through Sept. 28, 40s.
is
90
percent
precipitation
1978.
represents lowincome people,
today and 80 percent tonight
(Continued on page 12)
and Thursday.
•

••

...

'

~-

1--

-

~~..:;_,_rh_e_w. . o......rl_d_T_od_a_y_

. Gunfire.excJ:tanged today

Pope John I stamps coming

Weather

Otase eligible for parole

AWHITE ELEPHANT ~??-Residents of the Bedford
community will meet Nov. 24 to discuss what should be
done with the concrete block building once used for a

Bedford Center has problems
By Bob Hoenich
The Bedford Youth Center
has turned into ·a white
elephant, and at this point , no
one knows what tc• do about it.
The 40x90 concrete block
· buUdlng- located on fOl'ITl~r ·
Route 33 was constructed in
1959 through the hard work of
Bedford residents who staged
all sorts of money-raising
activities over a long period
to establish it. The operation

The Middleport Poli ce
Department is receiving
numerous complaints
regarding the dumping of
diesel fuel, kerosene, motor
oil and other substances into
the sewers of the town, Police
khief J. J . Cremeans said
today. Those substances are
causin g strong od ors in
basements, bathrooms and
kitchens resulting in complaints, the chief stated. He
warned that an accumulation
of these fwnes could be explosive.
Chief Cremeans said his
department will check with
all gara ges and service
. stations in an effort to

COLUMBUS (UPO- Documents filed in Franktin County
Common Pleas Court claim Cuyahoga County Republican
Chairman Robert E. Hughes' consulting firm received $18,300
from ·a partnership mentioned in a law suit chaUenging the
award of Ohio Lottery contracls.
The charge was made in papers filed by attorneys for
Scientific Games Inc., of Atlanta which bas claimed favoritism
and· political innuence played a part in awarding $2.3 million
cootracts to MCA Games lnc., of Westport, Conn.

Experts begin investigation
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) - Egyptian experts have begun
investigating the reported dlacovery of the rema~ of St. Jqhn
the Baptist and the prophet Elisha, but they say It's too early to
offer any conclusions.
One scientist, Abdel Rahman Abdel Tawab, examined one
of the coffins In a cave below !Ill ancient monastery 60 mUes
northwest of Cairo where Coptic monks say they have
dllcovered the bodles of the two reUglous figures.
NEW BUSINESS- New to the area is the Kingsbury M·•h1le Home AccessorieR store
· located in Minersville in the old Provicn Feed und ov1 ·s i-: 1·~ , ''Uildlng.The ac~ssory store
WASI:IrnGTON (UP!)-Attorne~ foc the NAACP asked wUl 'offer a complete line of mobile home accessories P1ct~red IS the 1nterwr With
the SuJI'eme Court Tuesday to reject an appeal by the
salesperson Sherry P•tterson holding he1 &lt;t a u~hter, Mindy PatterS&lt;•n. .
J,
(Continued on page 12)
It
I

tJ

For the past several years,
the structure has been rented
during the surmiler months
by the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly which owns the
nearby Bedford Scool
bullding. The Assembly has
utilized the former youth
center as a part of the
summer camping facilities .

However, the utilities and
upkeep on the structure are
gradually gnawing at the

•
warning regarding d umpmg

Otarges finn rec~ived funds

sough~ ·

went well, when there were

funds to function. There were
dances , roller skating,
ba sketball and other activities for the young people.
And then, apathy set in.
c.veryone lOst Interest. Tbe .
building was often locked and
it was difficult to get a key to
open it. Rather than hassle
getting
a
key,
over
sometimes the building was
forcibly entered. ·

Middleport chief issues

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - A Worthington man, who pleaded
guilty tO tlle 1974 slayings of his mother, father and brother, is
eUgible for parole because he has already served 1,747 days in
jail for an earlier conviction on tlle same charges.
Clifford Chase, 23, was sentenCed Tuesday in Franklin
County Common Pleas Couri to seven to 25 years in jail on
three counts of manslaughter. Due to time already served,
CUffocd Qlase,.23, is Immediately eUglble for parole. He was
coovicted in 1975 of one count of murder and two counts of
voluntary manslaughter.

Appeal' rejection

youth recreation center. Presently the structw·e is not
used and has been hit by thiev es. Financially, 1ts upkeep
is depleting funds set aside for its operation.

remedy the situation. The
chief points out that residents
are sweeping dirt in~o the
sewers and this practice is
also ca usi ng bl ockage
problems. He requested
resident s refrain from
sweepin g any ma terials
whatsoever into the sewers.
The department is also
receiving calls opposing
parking that is occurring at
the village garage during
business hours at a local
auction sale.
Chief Cremeans said the
garage must serve on a 24
hour basis at a refueling
location for fir e and
emergency vehicles as well
as other village vehicles.
The chief warned that
warrants will be issued to car
owners who block the garage
and pumps. The area is
clearly
marked
" no
parking, " the chief con cluded.
Cremeans reported 58
arrests were made by his
department during the month
of October.
Heading the list was
disorderly manner with 12
arrests, while driving while
intoxicated was second with
10 arrests. There were nine
arrests for speeding, three
for no operator's license,
three for rwming stop signs,
two for assault , three for
criminal trespass, two for
disturbing peace, two for bad
ctJecks, and one each for
reckless operaton, assured
clear distance, possession of

controll ed substance, and
A.W.O.L. Five cases were
dismisse d;

two

cases

transferred to county court
and one case had dropped
charges.
Parking meter collections
for the month totaled $700 and
the police cruiser was driven
4,370 miles during the month.

small reserve funds set aside
by the tr~stees of the center.
The time has come when

som e action must be
forthcoming . What action
becomes a bit of a problem! A
public me et ing has been
called for 7:30p.m. on Nov. 24
at the center at which time
residents are to offer their
suggestions.
The trustees who have not
elected officer s in a nwnber
of years have consulted an
attorney and have been
advised that if the buildlng is
to be sold, proceeds should be
used in some way to benefit
youth-si nce the structure
originally was built for young
people.
Bedford residents serving
on tne board ot trustees are
Elmer Bailey, Ralph and
Sadie Carl, Helen and Hilber
Quivey, Russell and Addie
Cullums.
Denver
and
Florence Well, Leota Hawk,
Ola St. Clair, Donna Morris,
Kenneth
Chaney ,
Joe
Stanley, Sy lvia Midkiff,
Helen Swartz. Olan Harrison,
Robert Pickett and Audra
Well.

Five injured in
four-car mishap
l

Five persons were injured
in a four-vehicle accident
Tuesday in Meigs County on
SR 7, at the junction of SR
124, at 4:20 p.m.
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, reports that
a north bound auto operated
by Jacki e Frederick, 29,
Middleport, had stopped in
traffic on SR 7.
A seco nd north bound
vehicle, driven by Diana Lee,
18, Pomeroy, was unable to
stop and struck the Frederick
auto in the rear.
The Ioree of impact pushed
(he Frederick vehicle into the
path of a south bound auto
driven by Earline Wilson, 23,
Parkersburg.
The Wilson auto went left of
center and struck a vehicle
operated by Ralph Saunders,
62, Chesterland, 0 ., head-on.
Lee was admitted for
treatment to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A
passenger, Cathy Lee, 15,
Pomeroy, was treated and
YULE PLANS TOPIC
released
at
Veteran's
Tbe Middleport Chamber of Memorial.
Commerce will discuss plans
Frederick was treated and
for the Olrlstmas holiday released at Holzer Medical
observance when it meets at Center.
6:30 p.m. "Thursday at the
Wilson was treated and
Meigs Inn. The chamber will released
at
Veterans
have a dinner and following Memorial.
the liusiness session will sack
Saunders was treated $nd
candy in preparation for released at Holzer Medical
Santa's visil tr. ~he town.
Center .
. llj.

The accident is st ill under
investigation.
The Gallia - Meigs Post
investigated two other accidents Tuesday.
David Davis, 17, Rutland,
was treated for injuries
sustained in a one-vehicle
accident on SR 124, one-tenth
of a mile west of milepost 15,
in Meigs County, at 4:45p.m.
Officers report that an east
hound auto operated by Davis
went out of control on 124,
passed off the right side of the .
roadway and struck a bridge.
Davis was transported, by
a family member , to Holzer
Medical Center where he was
treated for a mild strain in
the area of the right elbow,
and released.
The patrol reports heavy
damage to the Davis auto. No
citation was issued.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-auto collision
at I:3fi p.m. on SR 160, one
and four-tenths of a mile
north of U.S. 35.
According to the patorl, a
vehicle operated by Donovan
James, 52, Sciotovllle,
traveling north, had stopPed
in traffic on 160.
A second north bound auto,
operated by Ray Shockey, 19,
Rio Grande, was unable to
stop and struck the J &amp;mtl
vehicle in the rear.
(Continued on page 12)

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�-------2- Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Nov . 15, 1978

L

IN WASHINGTON

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

..•
•
..
w

.-..
....
..
-~

Big bang

Healthier GOP emerges
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters

'
WASHJNGT0)'1
tNEA I - It 's a wfully hard to know what
:o make of Election 'iS. but one thing at least seems clear .
Reports of the demise of the Republican Party, like Mark
fwam 's famous obituary, are decadedly premature .
Des pite relatively modest numerical gains in Congress
md the states. the GOP is nol only alive but surprisin g ly
&gt;ealthy . Indeed, t he number of Rep u'blican victories may
&gt;e less tmportant than what they won - a nd where .
True to pred ict ions, the powe r of mcumbency pretty
nuch prevailed in House r aces ac ross the country , sharply
imiting GOP gains and leaving the dominant Democrats
trm\y in control. Even m open seats . whe re Rep ublicans
lad hoped to make mroads, the Democrats reta ined their
nassive advantage
But in statewide races - for governor a nd the U .S.
Senate - Republican incumbents fared slightly bette r
:han Democrats , a nd the GOP gained ma JOr ground in
:&gt;pen seats.
Perhaps mos t significant for the future of the minority
party, the GOP made stun ni ng ga ins in state leg&gt;slatures,
th e tratmng ground for natiOnal candidates. Hea dmg m to
the elections , they controlled both houses of the state
legislature in only four states - Colorado. Ida ho , South
Dakota and Wyoming.
When the dust cleared , they had tnpled that numbe r winning control 'of both chambers in New Hampshire,
Vermont , Indiana , Kansas . North Dakota , Utah, Arizona
and Iowa . They also won con trol of eithe r the house or state
senate in at least four other states - llhnms , Montana,
Alaska and Washmgton - and he ld their ground e lsewhere.
Crossland pointed out that
By LEE LEONARD
At all levels . the GQP gains were perhaps most
UPI
Stalehouse
Reporter
the
checkoff and Wle of tbe
Impressive - and most important - in the Midwest, once
money are voluntary.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
the very heart of the Republican Party but a reg1on that
had tipped inc reasingly Democratic in the past decade .
"This will reduce the effect
Sponsors of a controversial
The Republicans held eve ry one of their Midwestern bill setting up public of big contributions and make
governorships and picked up four to boot - in South financing of gubernatorial our elections more fair and
Dakota, Nebraska, Mmnesota and Wiscons m . They lost campaigns were to make competitive," be said .
Senate seats in Nebraska and Mic))igan, but gamed two in another try today to get the
But Rep. Michael Fox, RMinnesota, one in South Dakota and one in Iowa . They he ld
measure
over
Its
final
Hamilton
, called the proposal
their own or gained House seats in ever y state in the region
higislative hurdle
and a "fraud and a cancer" which
except Michigan, where they lost two.
The Democrats , in general, and President Carter, in forwarded to Gov. James A. would grow into public
particular, - cannot afford to s hrug off the Republican Rhodes .after a struggle financing of aU elections.
inroads in the Midwest - not when you re-exa mine the 1976 !.Sting 22 months .
"We're
talking
about
electiOn results .
The bill appeared headed incumbency protection," said
Carter only carried four states 1n the r'egion - M1ssouri , for Rhodes' desk Tuesday, Fox . ''We're creati~g a
Minnesota, Wisconsin and Ohio - but they were cruc1al to but it became stalled in tiM! monster."
his victory over former President Ford . All but Missouri , Ohio House because of heavy
And Rep. Alan E . Norris,
which had no s tatewide contests this year, have now shown
RWesterville
, said public
absenteeism
and
some
a distin ct hit towards the Republicans.
is a
financing
of
campaigns
opposition
from
both
parties.
Furthermore, the Republicans held onto the1r already
"
clever
euphemism"
for
was
to
Th
e
House
good position in the West and scored major victories in
vote-rich Pennsylvania a nd Texas. two more states that reconvene at 1:30 p.m. today, "foccing taxpayers to pick up
were v1tal to Carter in 1976.
one-half hour later than tbe the tab for those expensive
Not a single one of the poss ible GOP presidential Senate.
advertisements we
contenders for 1980 was elirltina ted in last week's balloting.
Another prime item oo tbe politicians use to inform tbe
Indeed, both Senate Minority Leader Howard H. Bake r Jr., House calendar was a Demo- people in depth about what
R·Tenn ., and GOP Gov. J a mes Thompson of Illinois, the cr a ti c-s ponsored bill we stand for.
two most promine nt prospects who were runmng this year,
.. For example," said a
liberalizing workers '
won handsome re-election victories.
sarcastic
Norris, referring to
·
compensation
benefits
one
· The Congress remains overwhelmingly Democratic, but
the
campaign
just ended, "we
of
the
main
goals
of
the
post·
the Republican influence will be more noticea ble come
learned
that
Gov. Rhodes
election
session.
January- especially in the Senate, whe re the GOP finally
The House failed Tuesday once directed lhe All-()hio
got over the 40-se~t mark for the first time since 1972. Put
tl Republicans ( if all returns hold up) together with any 10 by three votes to concur in Youth Choir, and that Dick
conservative Democrats and you've got a voting majority Senate amendments and send Celeste has trouble tying his
on some issues . It won't happen often, but the extra three the public financing measure necktie and keeping his
seats can make a considerable difference on tight votes in down to Rhodes as only 83 of shirtsleeves buttoned."
the Senate.
Rep. Charles R. Saxbe, R·
It's going to be a long road back from Watergate for tl)e the 99 members answered tbe
Mechanicsburg, argued in
GOP, but Republicans have taken the first real steps in rollcall .
" We'll try again tomorrow favor of lhe bill, calling it "an
that direction this year.
·a nd I'm sure we'll have tbe experiment" and a model for
votes," predicted Rep. Peter other states.
"This will assure that tbe
N. Crossland, D-Akron, chief
sponsor of tbe measure which governor's contest depends
has been traveling between on tbe ·issues, and not how
the House and Senate since much money is raised," be
said.
January 1977.
..
The proposal, similar to
By KENNETH R. CLARK
The Senate approved bills
one in operation in 13 states,
United Press lnteroaHonal
allowing
voters to take away
would establish a voluntary
TO 11IE RESCUE: Lindsay Wagner, who plays the
liquor
licenses
from
. "c heckoff" box on state
"Bionic Woman" on television, helped save a life off screen,
establishments
that
have
income tax returns, through
aided by a non-bionic man. A young woman stood on the roof of
violated
Ohio's
liquor
laws
which taxpayers CQuld send
the 20-iltory Sheraton Universal Hotel In North Hollywood
and
changing
financial
$1 ( $2 on a joint return) to a
Tuesday, threatening to jump unless she could speak to the
gubernatorial
campaign agreements in proceedings
"bionic woman." Miss Wagner agreed to help and was flown to
involving the Independent
fund.
the site by helicopter from the Malibu sheriff's station near ber
placement
of children for
Major party teams of
home. While Miss Wagner talked to the woman, hotel engineer
adoption.
would receive the
Lee Wyatt, who had been doing the talking earlier, grabbed tbe candidates
The liquor license bill
money in equal chunks of
wouJd.be suicide and dragged ber to safety .
allows
voters in a precinct to
LOSr AND FOUND: JOE Namath can have his Super $1. 25 million starting in 1982. remove the liquor license of
Use of the public mooey
Bowl ring back -minus the diamond it once sported - if he
would be optional, but an establishment if it has
gets in touch with Delbert Cearley at his pawnshop in Enid,
candidates choosing to use it violated lhe state liquor laws
Okla . Cearley bought the ring from a friend and wants to
could not raise or spend within the previous year and
return It to Namath. Says he, " My friend only asked for $50,
money from private sources. if 35 percent of the registered
but I offered him $100. I didn't want it to get into the wrong
The procedure would be voters in tbe precinct sign a
• hands." The ring- inscribed "J . Namath, Jets 16, Colts 7,"
similar to the federal petition to put the issue oo the
and emblazoned with a Jets football hebnet with the number 12
checkoff system used for the ballot .
-was stolen from Namath several years ago. Cearley says
Sen. Jerome Stano, D·
fir st time in 1976, when
it's in good shape, except that a glass setting replaced the
Panna,
said, " What bothers ·
Jimmy Carter used tax
diamond somewhere enroute to his hockshop.
me
Is
that
just one violatloo
KID POWER: Tbe wife of U. N. Ambassador Andrew dollars but President Ford could destroy a guy who ))as
Yollllll has a new crusade -on behaH of kids' rights . Jean opted for private. financing. been in business for maybe 20
Crossland
said
the
Childs Ymmg - mother of four and chairman of the U. S.
legislation would have years."
Commission f&lt;r the International Year of the Child in 1979But the bill's sponsor, Sen.
"significantly affected" tbe
says in Chicago children aren't getting a fair shake because
Anthony
Celebrezze Jr., J).
1978 gubernator!al election,
the world isn't oriented to their needs . And she has an apt
Cleveland,
said, "We have
whe re Rhodes outspent
example. Says she, "Our 5-year.old son can 't get up to our
built
safeguards
into tbe bill.
42nd-floor apartment alone. The elevator buttons are arranged Democratic challenger That's why we require the 35
Richard F . Celeste.
vertically. Unless an adult is in the elevator, he can only reach
uercent v&lt;U tn nut it on the
the loth floor ."
BRITCHES BANNED: Coed A. Lavon Bryan thinks
Brigham Young University's dress coqe is slightly cockeyed.
It frowns on blue jeans, bu.t panties under a raincoat are just
fine. Miss Bryan says she was refused admittance at a test
because she was wearing jeans - "So I turned to an expedient .
alternative . I ran into a nearby library bathroom and removed
'by pants. I then buttoned up my long coat and walked back lo
the testing center where I was admitted without question."
Gerald Dye of university standards on the Provo, Utah,
campus, says the employee who barred ber was right - the '
dress code bans jeans. But, fumes Miss Bryan, " Is it vital that
we expose the lower haH of our legs ?" Dye is unimpressed says "she sounds like an extremist."
1338 Jefferson Ave.
QUoTE OF TilE DAY: Lee Harrlngton of the U.S. Forest
Huntington, W. Va.
Service in Washington, commenting on headaches involved in
.November a
efforts to cull old , diseased and often dying urban trees: " You To: Ruth Powers
try to cut one down and you may find it surrounded by a lot of Pomeroy Public Library
pregnant women ."
200 E. Second St.
GUMPSES : Jack Valend, president of the Motion Picture Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769
As8ociation of America, was honored Tuesday night on the loth
anniversary of the flbn·.-atlng system at a Beverly Hills, Dear Mrs. Powers:
.
Your letter of Nov . 1 was received last week. I am glad
Calif., recepdon attended by Angle Dlckettson, Kirk Douglas,
AU MacGraw, Carl Foreman, Howard Koch, Sidney Polder, that you wa nted the copy of the History of your county.
.
Stepbeo Spielberg, Michael Caine, Johnny Carson, Mille
My grandparents; Edwin R: Hunt and Mary Jane
Doaela•, Gregory p..,t and Barbara Rosh ... Rep. Barry McKnight were married In Salem, Ohio Sept. 28 1885 by Rev.
Goldwater Jr., R.Calif., flied suit in Los Angeles ~esday for a Alia M. Ba!'fett. Grandmother wu born Feb. 22, 1843 in
dlv&lt;rce from his wife of six years, Suaan ... A rna mage license Rutland, lilhlo. They lived at Mountain Cove near Anstead, w.
wu tasued In Santa Monica, Calif., Tuesday to 19-year-old Va., both are buried there. My father, William Scott HIUlt was
Mary Frances Crosby, daughter of the late Bing Croeby, ar1d their first son .
'
27-year.old composer Edmund Preston Lottlmer ·:·. Storm·
I am Zona McKnight Hlint George. I thought lillflle of y• &lt;Ur
downed power lines fell oo AU McGraw'• car on Pacific Coast older citizens might be interested In gr1111dmother's book .
lflghway north of Los Angeles last Saturday, doing about
!have sold my home and will move to another city in West $5,000 damage, but neither Miss McGraw nor producer Larry Virginia soon. - Sincerely, Zora Hunt Gear? e.
Spf111er. who 't'" driving, were lrurt ... ~' 1
Book will be _,.iled in a few days.

nn
' '"•

Spon.sors try
again today

•

Most scientists today believe our entire universe I or
time as we know it) "began" with what is commonly
referred to as a "big bang: •
Now the two Bell ·Laboratory scientists who discovered :
the seemingly conclusive evidence - quite by accident, of
course - have just gai ned s ignificant recognition for their
•
•
work : the Nobel Prize for physics.
·
Recipients of the $165 ,000 award were Arno Penzias, 45,
head of the rad io physics division of Bell Laboratories in
New Jersey, and HIS colleague Robert Wilson , 42, a
member of the technical staff.
1They share the 1978 honor witt. Soviet Physicist Piotr · -~
Leontev1ch Kapitsa, 82, the " Don Quixote" of Soviet
science. He risked his life by refusing on moral a nd
personal grounds to work on the atomic bomb. )
·
The discovery in 1964 by Penzias and Wilson ·of cosmic
microwave radia tion - a faint signal pervading all space
- is said to confirm the theory that an explosion created
the universe more than 18 billion years ago ..
Penzias a nd Wilson had been using a sensitive a ntenna
ror resea rch in radio astronomy and satellite conununications when they made the surprising discovery. Before that
the " big bang" theory had been well·known, but they were
the first to verify that the re was radiation left from the
.
suspected ~x plosion .
No(es Wilson : ' 'The next question is: will the whole thing
I the universe) stop and collapse or does it keep expand·
ing '?''

For some, the question .goes even deeper than mere
science.

By Clarence
Miller
to be
racially
In a classic example of agency
discriminatory or which
regulatory overkill and
or
subwas
created
throwing the baby out with
stantially
expended
at
or
the bath water, the Internal
about
the
time
of
public
Revenue Service has injected
itself into the school in- school desegregation in the
conununity and have little or
tegration issue and proposed
no minority enrollment."
to revoke the non-profit
Schools which fall within
status of private schools
which cannot prove they are this category and do not have
what IRS determines to be an
not racially discriminatory.
Aimed at private schools appropriate percentage of
which were set up or ex· minority students (at least 20
panded to avoid racial in· percent of the percentage of
tegration, the regulations minority school age children
should require many other in the community) must meet
private schools with few or no certain otber IRS criteria.
minority students to prove These include scholarships;
they are not discriminatory •minority recruitments ;
teacher
em·
or lose their charitable minority
ployment
;
and
other
such
status. The tax &lt;leductibiliity
of contributions made by things.
The proposed regulations
supporters also could end.
The move could cost many could do grave harm to the
schools thousands of dollars. traditional and legal prin·
The IRS is trying to justify ciples of separation of church
the action on the grounds that and state, presumption of
the law requires that IRS innocence until proven guilty,
regulate
charitable and freedom of education
organizations and on a court under parental control.
A private school formed or
decision which supposedly
expanded
during a period of
says that a school which is
public
school
desegregation
discriminatory
Is
not
is
not
automatically
guilty of
charitable. As with other
racial
discrimination.
The
bureaucratic initiatives,
proposed
IRS
regulations
some observers think that the
IRS planned the move then seem to assume the school .is.
looked for justification later. This arrogant attitude is
If it is a political gesture, it is totally foreign to America's
at the expense of educational traditional value of fair play
and justice.
quality and diversity.
Since
the
proposed
According to the IRS guidelines the proposed change in regulations apply to church·
revenue procedures will related and church-operated
affect private elementary schools, as well as other
and secondary schools private schools, the IRS is
"which have been ad· about to overstep the prin·
j udicated by a court or ciple of separation of church
and state. Parents concerned
about tM• lack of moral
values and discipline in their
ballot
and
why
the
local public schools should be
establishment must be In
given the right to choose a
violation ."
school that best serves their
The bill passed~ and was children .
returned to the House for
The proposed regulations
concurrence
in
could move Washington one
amendments.
step closer toward eventual
The adoption bill makes
government domination of
independent adoption
school curriculum, per·
agencies
financially
sonnel, programs, and ex·
responsible for children tracurricular activities.
placed in their care until the
I have voiced my strong
child Is adopted by a family.
opposition to these proposals,
The agencies are liable for and have urged that they be
the child's financial weHare
withdrawn. If necessary we
for a maximum of 90 days.
will take additional steps to
The bill passed 24-7 and was
see
that the proposals are not
sent back to tbe HoWle for
adopted if they extend beyond
concurrence in amendments.
dealing with a simple
discrimination situation.

·Peopletalk

Berry's World

Library
Letters

~~CJ1978byNEA.Inc.

I
j

' "Price-earnings ratios are only N_EAR historic lows- tl)ey 're not AT an historic low!"

.,

Penzias said the ' 'big bang" explanation was not
incompatible with the religious view (for instance: ' 'Let
there be light ") thot the beginning of the universe occurred
at a definite time. And that it was a specific event.
The scientist admits : " Western religion deals with
progress, and progress to some extent is purpose. The
theologians seem to have won this time ...

Foreign aid
In a world often still bitter (and sometimes with good
reason) about the " Ugly American," Uncle Sam has set ,
aside another $9.1 billion for foreign aid .
Under its main headings, the new foreign aid packagesigned by President Ca rter after passing in the closing
hours of Congress- provides :
- $3 .9 billion for economic a nd military assistance .
- $2.7 billion for the Peace Corps, refugee aid programs
and u s .-backed international bank projects .
- $1.8 billion for the International Monetary Fund's loan
program.
- $654 million for foreign military credit sales.
Refl ecting U.S. peace efforts, much of the aid is slated
for Egypt, Jordan and Israel. A controversial provision · '
authorizes Carter to give Syria up to $90 million in aid if he
believes the money Will help ease Mideast tensions.
Other a id is provided for Turkey and Oreece, also the
object of U.S. efforts to arrange a peace settlement in
Cyprus.
And money is included · for resettling refugees from
several pa rts of the world, including Indochina, where the
United States' reputation s uffered .

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb,

In 1492, tbe firl!l recorded
reference to tobacco was
made
by
Christopher
Columbus. He noted In hla
journal lhe use of It by
Indians. he had found In tbe

RmJdy BroWDIDg
. SVACMVB
ALLSVAC

Two members of the 1978
SVAC champion Eastern
Eagles were named the
league's most valuable
players Tuesday night when
coaches picked the 1978 SVAC
All League Team .
Randy Browning, a 155 lb.
senior tailback, was named
the league's Most Valuable
Back while teanunate Mike
Hayman, a 150 lb. senior, was
chosen as the league's Most
Valuable Lineman.
Browning rushed for 706
yards in . 114 carries while
scoring 12 touchdowns and
four extra points in eight
games. He caught 10 •passes
for 125 yards and returned
kickoffs for another 192 yarda
and one TD. Defensively,
Browning collected
27
tackles.
Hayman recorded 105
tackles on defense, blocked
three punts and grabbed 11

America.

Hornet
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•
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,.
-:;
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:'
:
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WT. YR.
'155 4

NAME - SCHOOL
Randy Browning. Eastern
Mike Hayman , Eastern
Russe l l Starcher, Eastern
Rust y Wigal, Eastern
Brian Bissell. Eastern
Da11 Spen cer , Eastern
Jim Barnes, N. Gallia
Roger Cremeens, N . Ga ll ia
Tim McComas. N. Gall ia
Stacey Winston, N. Gallla
Tim Howell , N. Gallia
Rick Cla ry , H. Tra ce
Todd Sibley. H' Trace
Kerr y Ours, H. Tra ce
Jay Bray . H. Trace
Sherman Potter, SW
Steve Raw I ings. SW
Gene Layton . SW
Paul Lasseter, K. Creek
Bruce Gilmore. K : Creek
Ed Smi th, Souther n
Tom At len. Southern

150

190
180

.::1

4

160

4
3

190
180

3
3

160
165

160

4
4

150
155

4
3
4

170

3

165 -

3

170

155

2

155

3
4
4

165

3

135

3

240

160

4

190

4

HONORABLE MENTION

Eastern - Greg Hayman and Don Eynon
North Galha - Chip Kirby and Marty Glassburn .
Hannan Trace - M ike Webb and Archie Meadows.
Southwestern -Scott Russel l and Barry Jenkins
Kyger Creek- Victor VanSickle and Bru ce Gilmore.
Southern - NONE .
'
Most Valuable Back - Randy Browning, Eastern
Most Valuable Lineman - Mike Hayman, Eastern .

two each. Voting were the
league's coaches, Joe Mitchem, Eastern; John Blake,
Gallia;
Larry
North

Cremeens, Hannan Trace ;
Bob Ashley, Southwestern;
Jim Sprague, Kyger Creek
and J ohn Dudding, Southern.

coaches felt it was too late to
League schools, following a
change sites.
report from Dr. David Miller,
Action begins at 6 p.m . Kyger creek prin cipa l,
when Kyger Creek's reserves t urned down Hannan 's
meet Southwestern . The request to enter the SV AC.
varsity will play shortly Miller and members of his
afterwards. Hannan Trace evaluation committee, John
and Eastern are scheduled to Blake, North Gallia and John
meet at 7:30 p.m. and Boston , Eastern ; toured
Southern plays North Gallia facilities at Hannan, W. Va.
m the finale at 9 p.m. Ad· Tuesday.
miSsion is $2 for adults and
Because of the condition of
their facilities , the league felt
$1.50 for students.

NEW YORK (UPI) Where's Willis Reed'
In the Madison Square
Garden program for Tuesday
night's gsme against Denver,
pages 51 and 52 were missing .
The table of contents said a
feature ·entitled " Reed's
DOubts are Gone" was slated
for that space .
But with Reed's dismissal
Friday night, the story was
no longer needed.
"We had to get somebody
who could handle a razor in a
hurry,'' a team spokesman
said.

CINCINNATI (UP!) Pete Rose doesn't have a loek
oo sports talk In the Queen
City after all.
Although
Rose
has
dominated local sports news
since leaving the Cincinnati
Reds for free agenthood,
attention Tuesday turned to
running
the .stumbling
Bengals next season when
coach Homer Rice denied a
published report he already
has been hired as coach for
1979.
Cincinnati Post sports
editor Pat Harmon told
readers in a Tuesday coluDUJ,
"You will see a lot more of
Homer Rice around here . He
has already been promised
the head coaching job for
1979. It's a cinch!'
But R1ce, who took over .
when Bill "Tiger" Johnson
resigned following a loss to
hapless San Francisco,
flnnly denied the story . Rice
said be and General Manager
Paul Brown have not yet
discussed next year.
"No, I have not (been hired
as coach for 1979)," Rice said
in a phone interview. "Paul

Brown and I mutually agreed
I'd be head coach to the end of
the season, and we'd talk
about the future at that
tiine."
Rice , who resigned as
football coach and athletic
director at Rice University to
coach
the
Bengal
quarterbacks this season , has
led Cincinnati to a 1-5 record.
The Bengals were 0-5 under
Johnson .
It was not the first time
Rice 's future with the
Bengals was brought up in
the media. Before the loss to
San Francisco , a television
sta lion sports director in
Cleveland reported former
Cleveland Browns coach
Forrest Gregg was in line for
Johnson.'s job. When Johnson
resigned, Rice immediately
was boosted to the head
coaching spot.
.
Harmon reported Tuesday
Rice will remain there next
season, despite wbat may end
up as the Bengals' worst
season ever.
"Homer Rice bas been
hired as coach of the Bengals
for 1979," Hannon wrote.

"PICK UP ON SAVINGS
FROM OUR HORN-OF-

PLENTY"

..

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5 QUART ELECTRIC
COUNTRY KmLE

~
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.

it best that the school not be
admitted. However, it was
agreed to check the facilities
at a later date.
Miller reported t hat
Wahama, Federal Hocking,
Miller and Waterford were no
longer interested in jouung
the league at this time.
Berne-Union would like lo
join in football only .
The next meeting was set
for the latt er part of
February.

team Rice denies hiring rumor

North Gallia'• Pirates
defeated Coal Grove, 103-101
in five of six quarters during
a controlled cage scrimmage
Tuesday night.
Pacing the Pirates were
Sam Smith with 22 points;
Jim Barnes, 18; Steve Little,
14 and Buddy Howell, 12
points.
The Pirates were coached
by Ted Lehew who is serving
in an interim capacity
following the resignation of
Ron TJVYman.

REG. 125.39 SALE

..
;:

$2195

Dan Spencer
ALL SVAC

lADY SCHICK-WARM
AND CREAMY FICIAL KIT.
Reg. '19.95 ACE

e

SALE $1595
~~~~

"A• for these four cbu.. ~J

dren God gave lhem 1mowl&lt;
·edge and otlllln 1111 le81'111D&amp; "
ud wt.dom: ... Alld Ia ail ;
matters of wlldom and ;
aaders&amp;aodlna:, lhllt die ~ "
eaqulred of tlaem, be fo
.; '
lbem 10 limes bet&amp;er 11uua1
aD lhe magiclaas ud estro- ;
locer• lhllt were Ia all bla •
realm. " - DaD. 1:17, 10
:

~~-....

Tom Allen
ALL SVAC

HUN TINGTON,
W.Va.
( UPI ) - The dismissal of
Ohi o
State
form er
quarterback Frank Ellwood,
who was an assistant coach at
three major colleges until
named Marshall head coach
in 1975, drew mixed reaction
by fans and protests by
players.
Some thought his dismissal
poorly timed .
Ellwood was notified at the
beginmng of the week of
Marshall's fmal game - at
East Carolina - that his
contract is not bein g
renewed Marshall stands 1-9
in the late stages of Ellwood's
fourth straight losing season .
" Making
t h e
announcement before the last
game - that's sort of low,"
said Betsy Sturgeon, 18; a
Marshall freshman .
Marshall ta ck le Howie
Harris Jr: of East Bank sa1d
he is .. shocked."
" I don't think they (the
administration) went about
this in the right way," the
junior lineman claimed.
"They could have wa1ted
until the season ended. Coach
Ellwood is a good man. I hate
to see him go."
Tim Williams, a sophomore
wide receiver of Oak · Hill,
Ohio, said :
" They really pulled tbe
floor out from under him,"
Willia ms descri bed the
action. " Coach Ellwood gave
four years of his life to the
program, and look what they
gave him in r eturn. "
The Huntington Advertiser
said most of 25 people quizzed
about the dismissal felt it
badly timed, but some sa1d

they were glad to see the
l'Oach leaving.
"The material was out
there," Stanley Daniels, 63, of
Huntington, maintained . " It
just wasn't being used. ''
"The change will be a good
thing, sa1d Greg Ziegler, 29,
of Huntington . " They need it.
They've got a pretty good
team.
1
'Th ey need a winmng
coach.''
James Casey, 29, of Pomt
Pleasasnt said Marshall had
to do something about its
sagging football prog ram.
11
It 's in the pits right now,"
Casey offered.
· "There are some goo d
players on the team, " said
Kim Watts, 19, a sophom ore.
"They're not using them
right. 11
Some blamed the players.
"Keep the coach and hre
the team," said Marshall
senior Vernon Martin, who .
has viewed every home game
this season and feels the team
keeps losing because of poor
players.
"They should know how lo
tackle," Martin mtoned .
Melanie Copley , 26, of
Chesapeake, Ohio, said Marshall's problem is ineffective
r ecruiting for football.
"Marshall is going lo have
trouble until they get some
fu nding, until they get some
talent," Melanie said .
" It's pretty poor when you
play like you did in high
school , "
sa-id
Steven
Buttrick, 23, a second-year
graduate student. 1 '1t's
obvious the boys didn 't know
the fundamentals . You can't
lay the blame on just one
individual."

Don Eynon
Honorable Mention
ALL SVAC

Lebanon results

Dave Cowens named

" Official sources - the
Bengals front office - will
deny this. They will say no
decision has been made
formally on tbe 1979 setup
with the Bengals' coaches.
That is their usual method keep the mouth shut until an
BOSTON (UPI ) - Daveofficial statement is made .
Co
wens had never coached in
"But the word bas leaked .
his
life and the 6-foot~ center
Homer Rice, wben he was
to kriow what to exwanted
hired by the Bengals and
.pect
should
·he la nd the job of
given lhe title of quarterback
to
prevent
the Boston
trying
coach, was told he would be
Celtics
from
drowning
.
the next head coach as soon
He
called
his
high
school
as the job opened ... "
ball
coach
for
som e
basket
" That is why he gave up a
adv1ce.
He
also
turned
to
his
secure position. as athletic
l'OIIege
coach,
Hugh
Durham,
director a nd football coach at
Rice University. He could the man who credits Cowens
have stayed at Rice and given with starting the Florida
up the footb a ll job and State program on a fast
remained
as
athletic break.
Then the Celtics made the ·
director.''
off
er firm . Co wens was
Harmon said Rice accepted
named
player-coach Tuesday
the assistant coaching job
of
a
2·12
team that resembles
with the Bengals "because he
Celtics teams in
the
old
glory
was promised the head
name
only
.
coaching job.
Durham, an easy - going,
" It was anticipated he
dr
awling South erne r, now
might move into the job
coaches
at the Univer sity of
between sel!SOns, taking over
He and Cowens
Georgia
.
in 1979. The Bengals situation
for
more than 30
talked
became acute when Bill
minutes.
Johnson was losing , and Rice
"I !old him it was a
took over ahead of schedule.
''Monday night's game, a tremendous compliment to
34-21 loss to Oakland, did him as a player," he sa1d in a
nothing to discourage 'Paul telephone interview. "! told
Brown 's opinion of Rice, him it won 't be easy for
people to measure up to his
except that he lost."
Rice said he has a two-year standards. And I mentioned
contract with Cincinnati, but what a tremendous ch allenge
emphasized he has not been it will be."
Durham arrived at Florida
promised the head spot for
State
in 1966, on~ year before
next season .
the redheaded farmer's son
from Newport, Ky ., came to
the Jacksonville campus.
TilE DAILY SENTINEL

Greg Hayman
Honorable Mention
ALL SVAC

Celtics new coach
" He got our program off on
the right.foot ," Hurham said,
"and I think he' ll make an
excell en t coach. He 's a
student of the game and he
knows the fundamenta ls. But
I told him the posit tOn he's in
1s not an easy one."
Cowens replaced the tired
Tom Sand er s, who was
retained as a scout and public
relati ons worker. Sanders
agreed with Durham's
assessment of Cowens.
"I think the knowledge is
there, " Sanders said. 11 He
always thinks abo ut the game
and plays it year round. The
head is there, and that's
important.''
The Celtics a re hopin g
Cowens' credential s and
inspiration will make him a'
fiery leader . The 30-year-old
vegetarian, the third Celtics
coach in 11 months, is a six~
time all star, the 1973 MVP,
and a co-rookie of the year.
"I never envisioned myself
as a coach," Cowens told a
news confere nce . " But I
would rather play for myself
than have someone from
outside the Celtics' lamily
come in. We'll have to be
strict, we'll have to be fun ·
damental and eliminate the
small mistakes that have
kept us from wmning."
The
appomtment
of
Cowens, who zea lous ly

lEBANON, .Ohio (UP! ) La verne E 0 grabbed the
lead at the three-quarter pole
Tuesday night and pulled
away to an easy eight-l ength
victor y in the featured $1,000
ei g hth race at Lebanon
Raceway.
The winner, driven by Tom
Prickett, covered the mile in
2: 06 a nd returned $18.40, $6.80
and $5.20. Go I(len Dollar, the
favorite, finished second and
kicked back $o .60 and $3,
while Sarah's Kiss showed ,
paymg $5.
Hurriga n and Amazing
Mazie teamed up for a 3-l
ni ghtly do uble combination
that was worth $127.40.
A crowd of 1,201 wagered
$129,585.

• Fishing Tackle
an d Rods
and Reel s
• Gun s and
Reloading
•Ball Glove s
Camping
Equipment
• Arch e ry
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gift
Ce rtificates
601 Main St .
Pt . Pleasa nt . W.Va .

shields h1s private llfe, came
two years after he left the
club for 63 days because he
could not endure the special
status accorded to athletes . It
a lso co ntinued a Celtic
tradition of hiring Carmer and
present player s to coach the
team.

VISA'

~~~1;;-;rom rn;trlhouse
PHONE
675-2988
Open Sunday I · p .m ,-6 p.m .

Mondav thru Saturday
9;:~

,,.

•.,a.,.m.

IT'S NOT
TOO LATE!
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES
STARTING OCT. 30, 1978
Classes being offered can be applied
toward your diploma . G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind . We can
give you the training that you need
to qualify for the job of your future .
We have more calls from employers
in the area for our graduates, than
we have graduates.
Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll at G. B. C., receive your
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you .

DEV OTED TO THE

INTEREST OF
MEIG8-MASON ARE ,\

HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA
992-3662
STORE HOURS
~ M/S

12-6 Sun.
\,

· Ed Smith
ALLSVAC

Dismissal draws
miXed reaction

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND .
VISIT US AT THE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

ROBERT HOFSUCH

The original Quiz Kids '.;:
were Daniel, Shadrack :!:
(Hananlah), Meshak
( Mishael) and Abed-nego ·
(Azariah).
~

•

1978 All-SVAC Dream Team

Pirates edge

;:

Wednesday

passes from his offensive end
position good for 214 yards,
four touchdowns and three
extra points.
Browning won over the
North Gallia Pirates' running
back Tim Howell while
Hayman was selected in a
vote run-off with Hannan
Trace lineman Rick Clary.
They were the only players
nominated by the coaches.
The old adage, " To the
victors belongs the spoils,"
could describe Eastern's
domination of the all league
squad.
Continuing the selection
process conducted the past
two years, SVAC g rid
coaches named six Eastern
starters to the 22-man squad.
In order of finish , North
Gallia was permitted five
starters; Hannan Trace,
four ; Southwestern, three;
Kyger · Creek and Southern,

Brian Bissell
ALL SVAC

Rusty Wigal
ALL SVAC

Russell Starcher
ALL SVAC

SVAC cage preview Saturday

. "New World" of North :
I

Mike Hayman
SVAC MVL .
ALL SVAC

Eagles dominate
ill SVAC squad_

Although disappointed by a
$223 rental fee, officials of the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference Tuesday night
voted to stage the annual
SVAC Cage Preview At Rio
Grande College's Lyne
Center.
It was the feeling that the
price was too high, however,
since the event is slated for 6
p.m . Saturday, league

M.p.

from your body tissue.
In the process, an excess
amount of a chemical called
ketones is .produced. Acetone
is one example of these, and it
has an odor very much like
alcohol.
Individuals who are on such
diets, and are in a state of
ketosis, then will go around
breathing out an alcoholic·
like breath. If y(m arec'ertain
they haven't been drinking,
you can pretty well pick out
the person who is on such a
severe fad diet.
My best advice to you
would be to follow a sensible
weight control diet that induces a slow weight loss and
is still a balanced diet. That
will prevent upsetting your
body chemistry.
The other point you should
consider is ·to depend more on
exercise on a long-term basis
to help you lose weight. You
may not lose very much actual fat tissue each day, but if
you exercise an adequate
amount daily for an entire
year, even if we are ,talking
about just' a nice long walk
each day, you will be surprised how much fat tis.•ue you
can eliminate.
You can find out if your bad
breath is caused by a lack ol
carbohydrates in your diet by
going on a diet that still provides an adequate amount of
carbohydrates in it. If you
can diet that way without
having bad breath, you will
have solved your problem.
You don't need a low carbohydrate diet to lose weight
- you need a low calorie diet.
Any &lt;liet tbat eliminates con·
centrated sweets and star·
ches and fat will usually fill
the bill if you stick to it and
exercise regularly, too.

Fad diets and
had hreath
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
dieting again, but I am ex·
periencing the same problem
that I have had each time I
change my food intake. I
can 't understand why but I
get a terrible breath odor and
an awful taste in my mouth.
Sometimes it is so annoying
that it causes me to eat
anything available just to get
rid of the taste and odor. 01
course, this goofs up my diet.
Can you explain why this hap·
pens? I have tried brushing
my teeth, but tbat seems only
temporary. and lasts just a
short time.
DEAR READER - Remember that when you
breathe alr out, it comes from
your lungs. If you have been
drinking alcohol , alcohol
fumes will be in the air you
breathe out, and It will be a
source of the smell of alcohol
on your breath.
Any time your body
chemistry is disturbed, abnormal chemicals may come
out through the lungs as you
exhale. Brushing your teeth,
using mints or mouthwashes
reallly won't solve this problem because the source of
tbe odor is your own body and
is coming from your lungs.
Only when the basic condi·
lion in your body is corrected
will the abnormal odor go
away, and stay away. It's just
like a person who drinks too
much alcohol. The odor of
alcohol will leave when his
body
has completely
eliminated the alcohol.
Why would your dieting
upset your body chemistry? I
can't say for certain without
knowing what kind of diet
You are on, but I suspect you
are on a diet tlu\t severely
restricts carbohydrates. For
that reason, I am sending you
· The Health Letter number
2-2, Low Carbohydrate Diet
Fads, which' explains fully
how such diets can be bad for
your body, and how they can
create bad breath.
Others who want this issue
can send 50 cenls with a long,
stamped,
self-addressed
envelope for it. Address your
request to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio · City Stalion, New
York' NY 10019.
.Certainly, if you are on a
severely restric.ed car·
bohydrate ·d iet, your body
will need to use Increased
aQ&gt;ounts of fat, wbelher those
are {nts In your tliel or fats

:i:

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~
Cily Edllur
Pullh!hcdlf'ja• ly c~ct!p l &amp;llunlay
1uy TI1c Olli l!l Vall!!)' Publishing
Culll!Mily·Multimedia , Inc,
Ill
Cuu11 St , Pum t~ rny , Ohiu 45769,
RusmeSl'l Ofr1ec Phur1e 99'.!· 2156]
P.di lt ll"ittl Phone 992·2157
,
St~o ml d&lt;~!!S po~ t1:1gc pt~ ld 1:1 t
Pumt·J·uy. Ohju. ·
Natamul udvert1sin,1! n•presen~
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week . Ry Motm Ruulc whc1t' lat 11!'1
ser vice nut UViilliiblc, Om· l!l&lt;~lltl l
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$i 11!1:

tlfl fl! \tar !'II X munllu;
l'hn· ·m· •nths . $i :,+t.

E l .~· l'ihere

~l::.f11l ,
Sull:~ehpllllll • I•
I f ll lll' ~-Sl' lill

llll' llllli~S Su11d,1}

,.r

Reg. No; 75.02-04728
' .

�$-nieDally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneaday,Nov. 15,1978

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov. IS, 1978

Major ·

Hoople•s
Football
Forecast
By Major Amos B. Hoople
Original Man in Motion
F:g~ d . friends, do we have some games fur you this Saturday 1 For starters , how about Purdue vs , Michigan in Ann Arbor fur the Big 10 title, and UCLA vs. Southern California in
"The &amp;ttle of Los Angeles " for the Pac1fic 10 title. And - kaffkaff - riding on the outcome will be the Rose Bowl
ass ignments for both leagues.
Then how about these greybea nd - heh-heh -matchups:
Georgia vs. Auburn (their 82nd meeting 1; Mississ ippi Slate vs.
J.SU . (72nd renewal ); Texas vs. TCU !64th repeall: Texas
A[M vs . Arkansas (52nd for this ); Kansas Slate vs . Kansas
!76th lime ); and Oklahoma Slate vs . Okl~homa 173rd contest l.
In THE GAME , Harvard enterta ins my beloved Yale in the
95th renewal of this Ivy League classic- Boo!~. Boola!
Getting back tu the top, Purdue's Boi!el'lnakers, sliooling for
their first Rose Bowl appearance since 1967, have the dubious
pleasure of playing before 104,000 wi ldly cheering Michi gan
adhe1'cnts in the Wolves' stadium. The noise level b something
like having an SST take off in your kilcheq - hak-kaff !
In a classic pairing of premier passers - Mark Herrmann of
Purdue and Rick Leach of Michigan - the Hoople slats favor
Herrm ann . Yas, dear readers 1 the BoilermHkers wi ll prevail,

28-24- har-rumph !
Some 2,000 mih!s away , the UCLA Bruins will play host to
cross-town rival Southern Califomia before a capacity crowd
of more than 93,000 in the L.A. Coli sewn .
This matchup features UCLA 's Theot1s Brown , holder of the
Br4ins all-lime rushing records, and USC's Charles White, the
third leading ground -ga iner in Par 10 history. Jove ! That's
quite a feat !
We look for a typically bruising, "lhi'Ow the season records
out the window "-type performance - with Mo Mentwn, football's most elusive pe1iormer, showing up on the Trojan's side
to he lp them loan uphill31-28lriwnph -um-kwnp~ 1
In those traditional contests, here's how we rate them:
Georgia 35, Auburn 15 ; l.SU 28, Mississippi Stale 17; Texas F.
TCU a; Arkansas 26, Texas A&amp;M 22; Kansas 22, Kansas Stale
15 ; and Oklahoma 38, Oklahoma Stale 17.
Would that your faithful correspondent could spare the lime
from other duties to run up to Harvard Sladiwn to see THE
GAME . But, alas, that cannot be. 'Twill be a great day for the
Old Blue as Pal O'Brien (a name lo rememben will quarterback Yale to a satisfying 27-20 lriwnph- Boola, Boola (again 1!
This will be an important Saturday, too, for four more learns
with bowl aspi rations. Georgia Tech will entertain Notre
Dame al Allanta. And Florida Stale )-Viii be al home in
Tallahassee lo the Navy stalwarts.
The Irish seem lo be growing stronger each week and should
lake the measure of a fine Georgia Tech crew by a 35-22 count.
And lh.e Middies , sporting their best team in years, will slip
past an excellent ~minule aggregation, 17-15.
They 'll be playing for all the marble~ at College Park, Md.,
when the Maryland Terps lake on Oemson in a shoot-out for
the Allan lie Coast Conference crown . The Clemson Tigers are
reac hing their peak and will defeat the Terps 33-27 in an oldfashioned barn burner !
Now go on with my forecast:
SATURDAY, Nov . 18
WashSt 38 Ariz 14 (Ni
Ark 26 Texas A&amp;M 22 fN i
Georgia 35 Auburn 15
Syra cuse 21 Bust Col14
Ohio U 10 Bowling Gr 7
Stanford 19 Calif 15
Colorado 28 Iowa Sl 22
Colo St 24 W Va 19
Brown 36 Colwnbia 12
Penn 28 Cornel!6
Delaware 39 Colgate 14
E Caro 33 Marshall 17 (N j
Navy 17 Florida Sl15
Notre Dame 35 Ga Tech 22
Yale 27llarvard 20
Rutgers 42 Holy Cross 28
OhioSl42 Indiana 21
Wisconsin 22lowa 6
Kansas 22 Kan Sl15
Kent St 28 Toledo 24
F lorida 33 Kentucky 28
Clemson 33 Maryland 27
Miami F 26 SDiegoSI12 f Nl
Cincinnati 21 Miami !0 ) 20
Purdue 28 Michigan 24
Minn 21 Illinois 13
LSU 28 Miss Sl17
Nebraska 42 Missouri 21
New Mexico 14 Pacific 10
NoCaro 15 Virginia 12
NoCaro St 33 Duke 7
Memphis St 24 No Tex St 8
Ball St 35 No fll 12
Mich Sl42 Northwestern 14
Okla 38 Okla Sll7 ·
Ariz St 41 Oregon St 28
Pill :!~ Army 20
D-drtmouth 20 Princeton 17
Baylor 35 Rice 21
Richmond 22 Wm &amp; Mary 21
SoCaro 17 Wake ForesiiO
SoMiss 26 Louisville 11 (N)
Mississippi 20 Tenn 18
Texas47TCU 14
SMU 32 Texas Tech 21

USC 31 UCLA 28
BYU 49 Utah 26
Vanderbilt 14 AForce 12
Va Tech 22 VMI 19
Cept Mich 24 WMich 20

HOUSTON
(UP!)
Houston Astros reserve
catcher Reggie Baldwin
underwent s uccessful
surgery to repair a damaged
right shoulder in a Colwnbus,
Ga. , hospital Tuesday, an
Aslros spokesman said.
" Dr . James Andrews
removed loose cartilege fragments from the front of the
shoulder and also removed
adhesions
from
the
shoulder," the spokesman
said.

LOS ANGELES (UPI) All-America linebacker Jerry
Robinson of UCLA has been
selected as Southern California 's athlete of the month for
October by the Citizens
Savings Athletic Foundation,
it was announced today.
Robinson, a 6-foot-J, 21().
pound senior from Santa
Rosa, Calif., leads the Bruins
in tackles witll 126. in nine
games. He missed one game
for tlle 11-2 Bruins with an
ankle sprain.
He wUllead the IStll-unked
Bruins against No. 5-rated .
University of Southern California Saturday in the
deciding game for Pacific-10
title and Rose Bowl berth.

Nets end 76ers
winning streak
By FRED IJEF
UP! Sp&lt;~rts Writer
It 's reaching the point
where you don 't gellhe New
Jersey_Nets angry.
After claiming they were
robbed of a ballgame in
Philadelphia last week, the
Nels struck back Tuesday
night when they ripped the
first-place 76ers 124-1()8to end
their ninegame winning
streak.
" We wanted the game
more .than they did ,11 said
New Jersey's Ed Jordan .
"We blew them out and made
up for that game that was
taken away from us last week
in Philadelphia ."
On Nov , 7 the 76ers
defeated the Nets 137-133 in
double
overtime
in
Philadelphia. In a chaotic
finish, New Jersey' s Bernard
King and !Us coach Kevin
Loughery were ejected when
each received his second
technical foul from referee
Richie Powers. But when
King and Loughery refused to
cool down, Powers hit each
witll another teclmical.
However, league rules do
not provide for a third
tec hnical to be assessed
under any circumstances .
And therein lies the Nets'
protest , which is still
pending.
"If this · protest is not

upheld," Loughery. said, " tbe
NBA should not allow
protests anymore."
And so the Nets played witll
a vengeance Tuesday night.
King finished with 37 points
and AI Skinner 17. And Ed
J ordan and Phil Jackson
combined for 20 points in the
last quarter to bury the 76ers.
" In the fourth period it
seemed like every time we
came ·down the court we
either missed or ttlrned the
ball ovet," said Julius
Erving, who scored 26 points.
TheNets, who finished with
the worst record in the NBA
last year, are now 11-6 and
lied with Los Angeles foc the
most victories in the league.
The 76ers remain in first
place in the Atlantic Division,
l'h games ahead of New
Jersey .
Elsewhere in the NBA, New
York beat Denver 106-100,
Washington
took
Cleveland 122-106, Los
Angeles dumped Milwaukee
137-119, San Diego lopped
Indiana 109-106 and Portland ·
downed New Orleans 123-103.
Ray Williams scored 26
points and Bob McAdoo 25 as
New York won its second
game in a row under Coach
Red Holzman. The Knicks,
who were joined by Earl
Monroe for tlle first time this
season, were also backed "by
Toby Krugh! who had 7 of his

-NCAA grid statistics
MISSION, Kan . IUPll
NCAA
Division I·A Individual leaders released
Tuesdav:

16 . points in the fourth
quarter . David Thompson
had 29 points and George
McGinnis 28 for the Midwest
·
Division leaders.
B~llets 122, Cavaliers 106
Elvin Hayes had 26 points,
Bobby Dandridge 25 and
Kevin Grevey 24 . as
Washington sent Cleveland to
its five straight loss. The
Cavs, who trailed 57-41 at
halftime, were led by Campy
Russell with '!I points.
Lakers 137, Bucks 11!1
Los Angeles rolled to its
lOth s traight victory as
Adrian Dantley scored 34
points, Kareem AbdulJabbar 30 and Jaril.aal Wilkes
24. Marques Johnson had 26
points far Milwaukee.
CUppers 109, Pacers 106
Kermit Washington scored
a career-high 29 points ..:... 22
in the first half- and Uoyd
Free added 26 to help San
Diego break a three-game
losing streak. The Pacers,
losers of low- straight, have
dropped 23 in a row on the
West Coast since joining the
NBA last year.
Trail Blazers 123, Jazz 103
Maurice Lucas, Tom
and
Mychal
Owens
Thompson combined for 60
points to lift Portland over
New Orleans. The Jazz, who '
led 5D-43 early in the second
period, were paced. by James
McElroy with 21 points.

I

•

".
••
•'

•l•
POWDER PUFF CONTEST - Junior ~nd Senior girls from Meigs High School will
·meet in head-I&lt;Hlea!l combat Saturday in a Powder Puff Fo.otbaU Game to be played',at 2
p.m. at the Meigs Jr. High School Stadium. Kim Seth, a junior, and Julie Kitchen, a senl.or,
practice their glaring in preparaUon for the ·game. Coaches Bob Oliver and Johri Bentley
report that enthusiasm is high in practice this week. Tickets for the game are $1 and may be
purchased from any junior or at the g~te.

Previous

1941
Dolph Camilli, 1936 . Carl Hubbell , New York
1935 . Gabby Hartne tt,
Brooklyn
1940 . . Frank McCormick, Chicago ~
1934 . Dizzy Dean, St. Louis
Dave Parker, Pitl- . Cincinnati
1939 . Bucky Walter , (in. 1933 - Carl 'Hubbell , New York
1932
Chck
Klein ,
George Foster, CJn. cinnati
1938 . Ernie Lombardi, Philadelphia

Atlanta
San Anton io

ners :

League MVP Award win-

1978 .
sburgh
1977 .

ci nna tl
1976 . Joe Mogan, Cincinna t i

1974 - S.teve Garvey. Los
Angeles
1973 . Pete Rose, Cincinnati
1972 ' Johnny Bench, Cin.

Cincinnati

1937_· Joe Medwick , St. Louis

Sweet Brier

Thursdav, Nov. 16 through Nov . 11
we l&gt;ladiV Accept Fed. Food Stamp•
· Monday lhru Fridav
9:001il7 :00
Saturdav 9:00-9:00
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

·

RUSSET

7

BUTTERM ILK .. ~.~.A!;

·

2y.,

g~

POTATOES
10

LB.

$}19

POTATOES
4 LB.

99~

6 .538

7 .533

New Or lens

llf2

3 1f~

4

9 .4100

1f2
lf2

2'h

Detroit
6 10 .375
Cleveland
5 11 .313
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet,

GB

Denver

9

6 .600

Kansas City

8

7 .533

1

Indian•
Milwauke

5 9 .357
6 12 .333

11
10

4 ..733
s .661

9 5 .6&lt;3

Portland
9 6 .600
san Otego
7 12 .368
Tuesday's ResuHs

3
4

Jlf2

4'h

'h
l lf:r

2

21f2

61ft

New York 106, Denver 100

New Jersey 124, f'hlladelphla

Louis

108

Washington 122. Cleveland 106
Los Angeles 137, Milwaukee

119

Francisco

San Olego 109, Indiana 106
Portland 123, New Orleans

1964 . Ken Boyer, St. Lou is
1963 - Sandy Koufax, Los
Angeles
1962 . Maury Wills, Los
Angeles
1961 . Frank Robinson ,

103

Cincinnati

1960 . Dick Gro.at, Pittsburgh
1959 . Ernie Banks, Chicago
1958 - Ernie Banks, Chicago
1957
Hank
Aaron ,
Milwaukee

1956 . Don Newcomb.e,
Brooklyn
1955 . Roy Campanella,
Brooklyn
1954 . Willie Mays, New York
1953 . Roy Campanella,
Brooklyn
1952 . Hank Sauer, Chicago
1951 . Roy Campanella ,
Brooklyn
1950
Jim Konstanty,
PhiIadelphia
1949 . Jackie Robinson,
Brooklyn
1948 . Stan Musical , St. Louis
1947 . Robert Elliott, Boston
1946 . Stan Musial, St. Louis
1945 . Phil Cavarretta,

Power House BATTERY

Wednesdi¥ 1 S Games

Denver at Philadelphia
Milwaukee at Washington
Los Angeles at Detroit
Chicago at Houston
Phoenix at San Anton io
Atlanta at Kansas City
New Orleans at Seattle
Thursday's Games
New York at CleVeland
Golden State at San ·Otego

Was~

NHL Standings

Atlanta
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
Philadelphia

12
9
9
7

Chicago

16 4 .t
6 10 1

vancouver

St. Louis

Colorado

Pomeroy, 0 .

·

GOODI'iEAR

1943 . Stan Musial, St. Louis
1942 . Mort Cooper .- ST. Louis

26
21

21.

3 3
s 4

11

3

16
13

9 4

10

2 11 4

8

Wal11 Conference
Norris Division
W. LT.

John F. Fultz, Mgr.

992-2101

3 2
3 3

Smythe Division
W.. 1.- T. Ph.

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

Montreal
Detroit
Los Angeles
Pittsburgh

Ph.
10 • 2 22
5 6 &lt; u
1 7 0 ·U
3 9 3
9

Washington
3 10 3
Aclams Division

W. L T.

Boston
Toronto

3 4
7 7 2

B

9

Pts.
20
16

Buffalo
~
5 5
13
Minnesota
5 7 2
12
Tuesday's Results
Colorado 2, N.Y . Islanders 2
(tie)

Washington a, Atlanta 7

Lo• Angeles ;, St. Louis 2

Wednesday's Games
Chicago at N.Y . Rangers

Buffelo et TorontO
Washington at Minnesota
Montreal at Colorado
Thursday's Gam11

Chicago ot Phlloctelphlo
St. Louis ot Buffalo

Toronto at Boston
Montreal at Los Angeles
Pittsburgh at Vancouver

SMART SHOPPERS

~~

Quebec
New England
Winnipeg
Birmingham

Edmonton

Indianapolis

Pts.
19

7 1
~ ·3
6 7 2
6

6 1

19
19
u

6

8 0

12

9
8

13

2 9 2
6
Tuesday's Result
New England 5, Birmingham
· Wednesday's Games

s totl
New England
at Clnclnnoll
Winnipeg
at Quebec
This may not
be exactly as .
pictured.

PICKENS HARDWARE
Mason, W.Va.

PORK CHOPS
END CUT

1

CENTER CUT •

'139"
.

LB.
Superior

BACON ····~·········~~~~ ....•.•.~~.$1
HALF or WHOLE .

SEMI-BONELESS HAMS ••••••••~~:.
WINESAP

Jta.69C

$

39

]9
1.

~ICN.IC HAMS. ...............!~~.79~
........•• 79~
BRAUN
'

(

.

lb.

~

' Thursday's Games

(No

189
164
107

George Foster. Cin .
Greg L uzi nski, Phila .

104

48

Gay lord Perry, San Diego 45
Willie Stargell , Pi"•·
39
Dave Winfield , San Diego

37

Pete Rose. Cin .

15

Local Bowling

Burt Hooton , LA

Garry M addox, Ph il a.

Enos Cabell , Houston
Bob Boone, Phlla.

2
1

Points awarded on basis o f
14 points for first pi !!Ice vote,

nine for second, ei ght for
third, et c.

Pfs .
58
48

46

Royal Crown Botti ing
42
Gibbs Grocery
40
Mei9s Inn
30
H1gh series - Ed Voss
537, Betty Whitlatch 558 ;

Letters of oplnlon are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long Ior sub jed to reduction by the editor )
and mWll be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld ~pou publication. However, oo request,
uames will be disclosed. Letters should be In good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

Bv United

8
a
7
5
4

Pomerov Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Nov. 5, 1978
Jack ' s Dairy Bar

IS
12

Bru ce Sutter, Chicago

Eagles Club 846; Columbia
National Life 843.
High team 3 games Columbia National Li fe 2585 ;
Eagles Club 2399 ; Pom eroy
4ment Block 2372.

3 in One

23
16

Davey Lopes, LA
Phil Niekro, Atlanta
Bill Bu ckner , Chicago
Jeff Burroughs, Atlanta

Colum bia National Li fe 901 ;

Team

Bench, Foster
clout homers

P'n~ s !i International
Tu esda y
Ba sketball
Boston Named ·oave
Cowens as p layer coa ch and
reass igned Torn Sander s as a
scout.
New York Signed Bulch
Beard as an assistant coach
and scou t.
Pro Football
Phila d&lt;!lph ia -'- Placed tight
end Keith Kreptle on th e
inju red rese r ye l ist and re .
placed him w ith Bi ll L erson.
Houston Pl aced r unni ng
back Rob Carpenter on th e
inj ured reserve i is t .
Tampa Ba y Placed wide
r eceiver
Ka rl
Farme.r on
in iured rese r ve and signed
ou tsi de l inebac ker Pau l Harr is .
Hockey
Buffalo
( NHL )
Sen t
goaltender
Bob
~ au ve
to
Am er ican
of
tt"le
Hershey

Coach thanks supporters

TOKYO (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds slugged lour
home runs - including back- Leag ue .
to-hack shots by Georg e
Baseball
Los Angeles - Sig n ed utility
Foster and Johnny Bench in man
Derr el Thomas, a fr ee
tile first inning - as they agen t fr om San Di ego .
Soccer
coasted to a 7-2 victory today
Seattl e ( N ASU - Resigned
over a combined Tokyo Co ach Jimm y Gabriel lo a one . ·
Giants-Hiroshima Carp team year contract .
al Hiroshima .
The victory, bel ore a crowd
of 20,000 at Hiroshima
People's Stadium, was the
Reds' eighth in a row during
·their 17-game lour of Japan.
Their overal l record now
stands al 9-2-l.
The Reds reached Manabu
Kilabeppu , the 21-year.()!d
starter from the Carp, for

Fridov Night Ladies
Nov. 3, 1978
TEAM
Pis.
Kenny's Angels
52
Bills Quality Body Shpp . 41 John Tyree and Jerry
Mine 3
37 Rought 518, Ellen Rought
Don's Uphoslsterlng
36 496.
Parker's A. I. Service
26
High game - Ed Voss
Honaker C. B.
24 201, Betty Whitlatch 227 ;
Individual Hloh Games Jerry Rought 199, Myrtl e
Pearl Russell 169; J'tlamay St.
Clair 193.
MISSION, Kan. (UP!) Norton 168 ; Dollie Will 164.
Team series
Gibbs
Individual High Series -a Grocery 1930.
Nevada - Reno, 1~, held its
Russell 429; Dollie Will
Team gam e
Gibbs
top spot in Division 1-AA and Pearl
four runs in the first inning,
395; Ettamay Norton 389.
Grocery
708.
Winston· Salem, N. C., 1~.
Team High Game including a two-run homer by
repeated as No. 1 In Division Kenny's Angel 493 ; Don' s
Pomerov Bowling Lanes
Fosler and a solo blow by
Tuesday Triplicate
II in this week's football poll Upholstering 476; ParkerJs
Bench. It was Bench 's
Service 439.
league
of the National Collegiate . A.l.Team
seventh
home run in Japan.
-High
Series
Nov. 7, 1978
Athletic Association released Kenny's Angels 1288; Dan's
The Reds added another
Standings
Upholstering 1279; Parkers Team
today.
Pts. tworun homer in tile fifth
Winston - Salem, No. I for A. I. Service 1260.
Roy a I Oak Park
64 from Ken Griffey and scored
Reuter· Brogan Ins .
54
the · seventh consecutive
their final run in the eighth on
Royal Crown Cola
51
week, and No. 2 Youngstown
Pomeroy Lanes
a
solo homer by Mike Grace.
40
Doug 's .Marine Sales
(Ohio) State, 9-1, have been
Friendly
Tavern
35
Hiroshima outfielder Jitsuo
Wednesday Afternoon
se!C~:ted to compete in the
Robert Roble Cons I.
20 Mizutani got his side on the
Triplicate League
High Individual game
national Divison II chamNov. 1, 1978
scoreboard in tlle sixth inning
W. L Debbie Hawl ey 235; Bel ty with a two-run homer off
pionship. Six more teams will Team ·
Whillolch
223.
55· 25
be selected Sunday to com- W.M.P.O.
High series - Debb ie . Reds starter Tom Hwne.
The Ossi es
48 . 32 Hawley
527 ; Bett y Whi lla tch Hume received credit for the
plete the eight • team field. State Farm
38 -42 510.
Winston - Salem and Larry's Mkt. (lie)
34 · 46
win - his fourth in Japan Team high game - Re uter
Youngstown State
host Hanning Honey's (tie) 34 . 46 . Brogan
although he departed al the
Insuran
ce
554.
31 ·49
first round games Nov. 26. Pullins Excavating
end of the sixth inning.
Team high series - Reuter
High Ind. games . Pat - 177
.
Brogan
Insurance
1430.
The title game will be Dec. 8
High ind. series . Pat . 482
in Longview, Teus.
High team games
Nevada - Reno, top-ranked W.M.P.D. · 539
High team series
for the third straight week in
W.M.P.O. 1586
Divlsion 1-AA, was followed
by No. 2 Jackson (Miss.) .
Tri-Countv League
State, 9-1, and No. 3 Florida
· Nov. 7, 1978
A&amp;M, 7-1.
Pis.
Selections for the first four- Team
Columbia National Life
52
team Division 1-AA cham- Rooch Gun Shop
52
41
pionship will be made Eagles Club
Pomeroy Cement Block
38
SALE STARTS THURSDAY MORNING
A.M.
Tuesday, Nov. 21.
&amp; R Firestone
28
The championship game H
Bill's Body Shop
23
will be Dec. 16 In the Pioneer
High game - Rufus Jewell
Bowl at Wichita Falls, Texas. 238 : Dale Davis 225; Ron
Minnesota - Morris, 1~. Toler 219.
High three games - Dale
was rated No. 1 in last week'~ Davis
552; Blaine Carter 545:
final Division Ill poll. The Bert Bodimer 531.
High team game
Cougars and seven other
TERRY
With tnek, Key
teams were elected for the
wASH 5 YEAR
division championship jih'.;~
earlier this week.
CLOTHS DIARY
The top 10 In Division 1-AA:
1, Nevada - Reno, I~; 2,
for
~;~·
6
Jackson (Misa.) State, 9-1; 3,
Florida A&amp;M, 7-1; 4, Western
Kentucky, 7-2; ~. Northern
BOYS SWEAT
Arizona, 7-2; 6, South
SHIRTS
BOYS QUILTED
Carolina Stale, 8·2-1; 7,
Flee-ce li ned Crew neck .
Made In U.S.A Mc5tly ligh t
STADIUM
Rhode Island, 7-2; 8, Eastern
ccl or i Sla 10 to 16
Kentucky,
7·2;
9,
Regul11r \~ .49
COATS
Massachusetts, 6·3 ; 10,
Montana State, 8-2.
The top 10 in Division Ill:
I, Winston- Salem (N. C.),
Complete
I~; 2, Youngstown (Ohio)
State, 9-1 ; 3, Delaware, 7-3;
t, California - Davia, 7-2; 5,
Stock Reduced
Eastern llllnots, 8,5; 6.
Nebrllllka - Omaha, 11-2; 7,
for this Sale
Jacksonville (Ala.) State, &amp;2; 8, California Poly State, &amp;MENS THERMAL
2; 9, (tie), .American In·
ternatlonal (Mass.), 6-2-1,'
SHIRTS
and Puget Sound (Wash.), 8OR
ORLEANS SILVER
1.
DRAWERS
Stalnle11 Steel

November 13
I would like to take. this opportunity to thank all the o.
parents, fans and teachers who have supported the Meigs Girls
Volleyball team this season. The girls had a very successful18
and b record and won their sectional tournament. I would
especially like to thank the parents who gave ·their time, effort,
and moral support throughout the months of practice and
matches.
I am very proud of these girls and all the accomplishments
they have made lhis year . I am also looking forward loa very
successful year in 1979. - Thanks, Karen Walker, Meigs
Volleyball Coach.

This Week's
Dairy Valley

SPEI:IALS

PIZZA
BURGER

PIZZA BURGER
&amp; FRIES

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
HRS.d, IO ,OOA.M. tilll :00 P.M. 5un.- Thurs. 10:00 A.M. tii 12 ,00 P.M. Friday and

Sa tur ay .

will

See Us AI the Pomeroy Bend Bridge

eooPRE

o aa

1jC!iNNIIN~ECONDS

REG. 34'
WHITE COTTON

MENS
HDKF'S illrrantl•m en

Fri.:-5;t:-

l

SPECIAL!

. LOOSE

SALE! Save '1

IDRIED

Pt. Pleaunl Only

5 SJ

1;2 PRICE
SJDO 5 for SJ
suPERS~A~v;I;N;c~s~~~,l-USH_9_'_"c~H~-:;ir
ANIMAL
RADIO

!I MATERIALS

._.,,..._,.,a II w'•
-..o® WATCIIIS

10%0FF

I

WHA Standings

W. L. T.
9 .5 l

194

Larry Bowa, Phila . (3)
Reggie Smith, LA
Jack Clark, SF

Kent Tek ul ve, Pitts .
Rollle Fingers. San Diego

OUIIIOULAR
LOW LOW PIICI

INCLUOES
SWISS WATCHES
IN POINT PLEASANT
STORE ALSO

%

·

games scheduled )

· International
Hockey Leogue
United Press tnltrlllllonal
North
w II pis. gf ga
Port Huron 7 6 1 15 68 SO
Saginaw
4 5 3 11 51 53
Flint
5 6 1 11 53 52
Kala.
3 7 3 9 &lt;13 59
Muskegon
0 I0 1 1 2~ 70
.
South
wltpls. gfga
10 1 o 20 .56 33
Fl. wa~ne
Grand Rapid! 9 2 2 20 63 43
Mllw.
6 5 3 15 55 59
Toledo
~ 6 2 10 &gt;16 50 ·
Tunday's Gamti
No gam11 scheduled
Today'• Games
Saginaw at Fort Wavne
Flint at Toledo
Thunday't Games
No games scheduled

~~
L.s'.~~~~;J

HOUSTON (UP!) - The
Houston
Oilers-Miami
Dolphins game next Monday"
night in the Astrodome Is a
11ellout and will be televised
locally, an Ollera spokesman
said.

ID

S}

pr i nt s .
W i th
dowell lind s iri ng
M11 ller p.:~ c k11ge

49$

REG.
'1.39

HtiiYY

SJOO

Ro1ulor
'1.99

MENS WASHED
DENIM
JEANS
fro111 EniJday Stock!

LIONEl

027 GAUGE

ELECTRIC TRAIN SET
WOrkln' 011 the Rall ro.ad
Model. Slum locomot ive, 2
, .,., , J buildings. •nov;h
"kk
" mo"
.,.. . ,9ll..
tlgure eight.
lnc l lldlng

*SEWING

Wtlsl site 28 to

Jt.

dtgru cra nOYtr . Fnur

REG 147 11

$3499
'

eGAMES ePUULES
eDOLLS •PLUSH ANIMALS
•TONKA TRUCKS •T.V. ITEMS

'

""'

*SHIRRED DRESS
FABRIC

·ns w. 2nd,

,,

ELECTRIC
BLANKET

SET

PATTERNS

THE FABRIC SHOP

AUTOMATIC

And CHAIRS

*KWIK SEW

Sale Ends Nov. 25, 1978

-

CHILDRENS
TABLE

IDGD~IIIIDIDIIJIIODSdd

Aldermen Tuelday night

-

f.HJ \ 'I I l l \ :

Visit Our Toy lnd
You'llliko our uleetion
buy on loy·AwaJ.

MACHINES

Only a Small
Deposit wi II
Lay-a-wav
Your Singer
For Christmas

99$

POINT PLEASANT or MASON

Slrled 11nd b.lslc II!MS. FlAre
1~ . Includes tome 61g Yank.

111111&amp;1111

wtlghl.

tlor tl deSign on

"""lie groond.

Lay-Away Plan

PIECE GOODS

lhau PRICE ·

HAND
TOWELS

Use Our New

*All

voted 6-6 to rename a 1111jor

CUIIu Cay.
The name change wUI
' llffect Walnut Street.

For

Lira• Seno11
Lido!, Spoons

SALE
ANNIVERSARY
(ff

:;.::. 4

SET

HI Fnhton ( o!or

Etc.

1 •

20%

GIFT
TOWELS

TABLEWARE
Knlwn

jr.=========~~~~~==~~==~·
191H

.. LQUJ8VILLE, Ky. (UP!)
_ Tile Louisville Board II
downtownlllreet Muhamlllld
All llou)evUd In hciiOI' of the"
world heavyweiSbt bolin8
c:hamplon, . the former

· Clrcvler knll. Long sleeve
to_,, an kle tengt~ dr11wers.
Slle~ 5 M L XL.

SALE!
WOMEN$
PULLOVER
SWEATERS_

CALENDAR

Off

av United Press lnternatlanll
Cincinnati

Steve Garvey , LA

Tom 's Carry Ovl

I

Detroit at Atlanta

eBICYCLES
eWAGONS
eTRICYCLES

ct yds td ctpg
Petzke •. No Ill
78 1009 10 8.7
Tolberl, SMU
54 94.1 10 6.0
Henry, Lng Bch Sl
4.1 831 4 5.6
Beasley, Appl chn Sl
55 919 3 5.5
Carney, Air Fee
ss 857 8 s.s
Total Offense
all yds avg .ypg
Ford, SMU
385 2497 6.5 277.4
Dl(s, 'Stnfrd
442 2621 5.9 262. I
Spriggs, N Mex-st
429 2573 6.0 257.3
Smith, Mich 51
263 1921 7.3 2&lt;10.1
Wright, Bwlg Gr
417 2274 5.5 227.4

320

33

10

W. L. T. Pts.

Other Batteries at a Comparative Price

Receiving

Dave Parker, Pi"s 1211

Vida Blue, SF

(?

By United Press International
Campbell Conference
PatriCk OIYIIIOO

SAVE 110.00

Chicago
1944 . Marty Marion, St . Louis

APPLES

1

7

Golden Stat

1966 · Roberto Clemente,
Pitlsburg h ·
1965 . Willie Mays, San

size

WHITE
SWEET

8 .SOO

8
6

LOS Angels
PhoeniK

1969 . Willie McCovey, San ·
Francisco
1968 · Bob Gibson, St. Louis
1967 . Orlando Cepeda, St.

PUMPKIN .................................................... 4gt
JELLO REG. PUDDING ...... ~.~:~!':'!.~'~.v.o;.s. 4/ 11.00
or DIET.~.~~?:.~~.~·.:.:!~?.~~~ &amp; Depo•lt

?Ji.f B.E.'S STORE

Valley Bell

·

Louis.

ci nnat i

2.69
GOLD MEDAL5 lb. A.OUR.~.e.g:.~: .~.';~r.'~~~? .............. 79'
.TUNA STARKISl ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••~~~2.?~; .. 79'

··5th
&amp; Pearl.
.

MIX ......... , ................ ~~.~~~.

St.

1 .533

Chicago
2 13 .133 7
· Piclflc Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Sea"le
10 2 .833

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE................... :~.~~·.~:'.'... '3.69

COCO

1931 . Frankie Frisch,

6 .647

11
a
8

ppg
9.6
9.6
9.2 .
9.0
9.0

P lr~yer Award w ith fir st plac;e
\IOtes in parentheses :

repeat

GB

2 12 .143 9
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Houslon
7 5 .583

Following is a list of National

Martha Wh ite
1
A.OURSett·Rlslng_, , , ....................... 25 lb. bag 2.99
Cheese, spaghetti,
,
BErn CROCKER MUG A LUNCH. beef&amp;noodle .... .. 59

SWISS MISS

New Jersv
washinatn
New York

Boston

cinna tl

NEW YORK (UP!)- Dave busy thinking about catching helped bring the Pirates from
Parker, already regarded as tlle Phiilies in the pennant 11 12 games back to witihin
one of baseball's most prized race. Now, I'm rejoicing one game of first place in the
commodities and reportedly about winning the MVP and I NL East. "The big tlling after
set to test the free agent can't really comment about that was being able to play
market next year, further it.,,
without fear. The most
enhanced his bargaining
Parker led the league in satisfying part of this whole
power with the Pittsburgh hitting this season with a .334 thing was that I was able to ·
Pirates Tuesday by becoming average, collecting 32 come back like I did."
only the third player in the doubles, 12 triples - tied for
San Francisco right fielder
team's history to win . the second in the league - 30 Jack Clark finished fiftll in
National League 's. Most homers, il7 runs batted in - the voting with 107 points, ·
Valuable Player Award.
also second in the league - followed by Cincinnati
The 27-year-old right and 20 stolen bases.
outfielder (and last year's
fielder, who won his second
"I felt! had a good chance winner) George Foster (104),
consecutive NL batting tiUe to win it (the award), " he Philadelphia left fielder Greg
this season, was a runaway said. "I had a real productive Luzinski (48), Cy Young
MVP winner, collecting 21 of year considering tlle injury Award winner Gaylord Perry
a possible 24 first-place voles (a broken cheekbone) I had of San Diego ( 45), Pirate first
to easily outpoll Los Angeles during the .season. I came baseman Willie Stargell (39)
Dodger first baseman Steve back pretty well and had a and San Diego outfielder
Garvey in the balloting by the good season but of course you Dave Winfield (37 ).
members of the Baseball had Larry Bowa and . Steve
In breaking
string of
Writers Association of Garvey and other guys three straight Cincinnati
America, 32().194.
throughout the league who MVP winners - Joe Morgan
Larry
Bowa,
the had good seasons as well." in 1975 and 1976 and Fosler
Philadelphia Phillies~ slick
Parker suffered tlle broken last year - Parker joined
shortstop, collected the tllree cheekbone in a June 30 Dick Groat ('l960) and
other first place votes, but collision with New York Mets Roberto Clemente (1966) as
finished third with a total of catcher John Stearns but that the only Pirate MVP winners.
189 points. Los Angeles didn't deter him. Only two
Dodger right fielder Reggie weeks later, he returned to
Smith was fourth, 26 points the Pirate lineup, wearing a
behind Bowa.
football-type helmet when he
"It's a super feeling," said ran the baseS.
Parker upon learning of the
In 1806, explorer Zebulon
"I was lucky to come back
news at his Pittsburgh home in two weeks, 11 said Parker 1 Pike sighted the 14,1J().foot
Tuesday night. "This is the whose torrid hitting over the Colorado Rocky Mountain
biggest thing tllat's.happened last two months of the season peak that bears his name.
to me in my career. I'm a
little woozy right now and I
have some butterflies in my
stomach. I'm really happy
about it. "
Parker and the Pirates
have been negotiating on a
new contract and, if the two
Right for Any Cutting Job
sides don 'I get together, tlle &amp;foot-li, 235-pound slugger will
Built with plenty of power, ease of
handling , intended tor light
be allowed to join the free
professional
agent market after next
use or around the home or fa rm . Equipped with an
season.
anti -vibration mounted front handle to help dampen
"It's coming along well,"
vibrations and a large effective silencer . The 65 is a
Parker- said Tuesday of the
lightweight yet power:ful chain saw. (Hand guard is
negotiations. "There were
optional.)
SEE OUR SELECTION
talks today between my agent
and the Pirates. There was a
Wilkinson Small Engine Sales &amp; Service
lot of talk about it at the end
St.
of the season but I was too

Standings
EaStern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel.
Philo
10 2 .833

NEW YORK IUPII -

Poole, Lsvlle
Sims, Ot&lt;la
Bahr, Penn St
Holland, Cornell
Cribbs, Auburn

.

N BA

wznners

td xp ig pis
16 0 0 96
16 0 0 96
0 :z9 21 92
12 0 0 72
12 0 0 72

------------,
1 Pro I Division
!Standings I leaders
I

By United Pren inltrnlllonal

•

1971 . Joe Torre, St. Louis
1970 . Johnny Bench, Cin·

Parker named NL's
Most Valuable Player

a

· Rushing ,
all yds avg Ill VPV
Sims, Ot&lt;la
201 1550 7.7 16 155.0
Graves, Fllrtn St
226 1532 6.B 9 153.2
Ivery, Ga Tech
216 1300 6.0 8 1«.4
Holland, Cornell
235 1133 4.8 12 w .6
While, Soca 1
2&lt;1 1258 5.2 10 139.8
Passing
an cmp yds inttd cpg
Oils, Stnfrd
358 228 26&lt;6 15 21 22.8
Ford,SMU
327 187 253'1 16 15 20.8
Halda.S[)gSt
263 148 1566 10 9 18.5
Smith, Mch Sl
238 14.1 1902 7 16 18. I
Luther, S JsSt
313 161 1847 21 11 16.1

Scoring

NEW YORK IUPI I Vollnq on the National
League 's Mos l Valuable

r-------------------------

Sports
transactions

Here's voting on MVP Award

S .\\

f:

P.V.C. VINYL
LEA THIR LIKI

MENS
JACKETS

"AURORA" AfX IOAO ATLANTA

HO SCALE RACE SET
tMt ot ract trK~ . W1111 p.11k tren.
l lor"mK. v erl lblt !lflMd mnlro11er• wltll

n

pi""'•· Tt&gt;e clowtt thing to rut r041!1

$1,K..5aa

lEG. 'Z%.99

Steel ru tll' conttruc tlon.
arighT c11rome or br11u
tlnlsh CYsll lon !~ c 11~1 .

Bt

M~rn

Cn..tts

RI&amp;UIIF '11"
Pt PINY"'$

;·,0 s.u

1199

XL.

$1600

e

,";:~~ws

1044_

-

SALE! Save
CHILDiiNS

MUSIC BOX

!WI.

EVERY
NIGHT

PLEASANT or

,,

He' l

Hn mirror In li d. Mel 11
ttnea . Will '"'lloht tnr

OPEN

Voluts To '22.99

Pomeroy, o.

. _

Kunn .

WHb Oaoclol
laillrioa

PILE liNED

.t.s plchlt KI or H lttd modtl .
Hlp I"'O'h or bombtr . 8rown,
ttn, ru.t. black . Situ 5-M·l.·

Bv

wr iting Mst. • clll(k, e
draw ing board 11nd
much . much mer•.

�6- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov. 15, 1978

Tickets available
for 'Tobacco Road'
design and technical effects.
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. The play, adapted . from
Reserved seat tickets for the
Marshall University Theater Erskine Caldwell's novel of
· production of " Tobacco the same name, is an adult
Road" are still available, drama, according to Keams.
according to Dr. William G. " It was one of the first to
Keams, associate professor portray the harsh realities of
life in the rurat· South in the
of spe~h and production.
late
193(b," he said.
The show, which features
Tickets
at $2 each may be
television actress Conchata
purchased
throu11h the
Ferrell , will open Wedtheater
box
office,
located in
nesday, Nov. 15, for a fourOld
Main
107.
The
box office
day run with performances
is
open
weekdays
from
1 to
scheduled at 8 p.m. in Old
4:30 p.m. Telephone reser·
Main Auditorium.
. Serving as assistant to the vations may be made by
director is Susan Morton, calling 69&amp;.2306 and tickets
Hun tington junior. Bruce will be sold at the door prior
Greenwood, MU technical to performance. MU students
director, is in charge of set with valid Activity Cards will
be admitted free.

Marshall needs Artist
Series tickets urgently
scnoers were to go in the
mail Friday. "If anybody has
'Nutcracker' tickets they
don 't pian to use, we're
asking that they telephone us
at the Artists Series office
and we'll arrange to have
them picked up, " Mrs.
Hindsley said, "and we'll
give them to student whose
names are on a waiting list
we've established."

HUNTINGTON, W.VA. _
Got any Marshall University
Artists Series tickets you
don't plan to use? If so;
Marshall has an urgent need
for ,them .
Mrs. Nancy P. Hindsley
.coordinator of cultural event~
at Marshall said she has run
out of tickets for the Nov. 20
Art ists Series performance of
"The Nutcracker" by the
Pittsburgh Ballet - and
students requests for tickets
are stiU pouring in.
Since some of the 1,200
" Nutcracker" tickets held by
sea son membership subscribers in the area may not
be used, Mrs . . Hindsley is
mak ing an urgent appeal to
the Series members to return
the tickets they do not plan to
use in order that they might
be given to students. .
Letters to the season sui&gt;-

j'Nutcracker" is one of four

To tum four
will celebrate her fourth birthday Wednesday. She is the
granddaughter of Mr. and
\Irs. Elza Gilmore and Mr.
and Mrs. Gardner Wehrung,
Pomeroy, and a great·niece
of Miss Louise Gilmore ,
Union Ave.

POlly Cramer
tell Fran how I remove car
By Polly Cramer
r,rease from polyester pants.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLIN - An inex- Rub butter I salt-free 1 on the
pensive planter can be made grease spots before the ga·rfrumpiastic margarine 'con- ment is washed. After spots
tainers. The lid can serve as are removed, wash in soapy
theplanter saucer. Be be sure water. I use a mild liquid
to punch some holes in the soap. •MRS. O.E.S.
DEAR POLLY- We travel
bottomof the container to
extensively. I have used the
assure good drainage.
What is the best way, 1f following 111ethod for packing
any, to remove body odor for many years and' would not
from cotton blends ~ Many of do it any other way. I always
my shirts have' no ;1.ains but put all sets of lingerie, shirts,
have an odor even after blouses, etc. in . separate
plastic bags. As needed, a
washing. -JOE
DEAR JOE - One well- bag with its contents can be
known maker of washing easily taken from my suitmachines suggests spraying · case without disturbing other
fresh perspiration ;1.ains with packed articles. This keeps a
anunonia and old ones with neat traveling bag and
. white vinegar: For a persis- eliminates the frustration of
tent odor, you might try constantly repacking a
sponging areas with a col- disheveled suitcase. When
completely unpacking a bag,
orless mouthwash.
Shirts with stains could be such as on my arrival home, I
soaked in warm 'or cold water · put the plastic bags back in
with an enzyme pre-soak for the empty suitcase so they
half an hour. Rinse and then are ready to be used for the
launder in the hotte&gt;1 water next trip. -EVA
Polly will send you one of
that is safe for your particular fabric. If ;1.ain stiH re- her signed . thank -you
mains, dampen and then newspaper coupon clippers if
sprinkle with meat she uses your favorite
tenderizer. Leave for about Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
an hour, brush off and then her column. Write POLLY 'S
launder. Good luck! - · PO!r POINTERS in care of this
LY
'
newspaper.
DEAR POLLY - I wan I t n

disorders of eyes and eyelids.
He disc ussed how these
disorders are treated and
how cataract surgery has
advanced over the past 10 to
IS years. One no longer has to
look forward to the ordeal
tjlat parents or grandparents
went through for cataract
operation. He also corrected
many popular misconceptions concerning eye
problems and their treatmimi. One of these is the
common idea that the laser
beam is used to remove
cataracts. The laser is used
only to treat diabetic bleeding
in back of eye to preserve
sight. As with other treat- ·
ment this is most effective

Local resident 's story
appears in 'The War Cry' .

prog~ams seheduled this year
on the Baxter Series, the'
community segroent of the
All 1,200
Artists Series.
season
memberships
available to the public have
The Nov.ll edition of "The .
been sold. Six hundred seats
in the 1,800-seat Keith-Albee War Cry" of the Salvation
Theater are reserved for
Marshall students and this
number has been more than former resident.
adequate in the past. Not so
The story entitled, "The
with "Nutcracker. "
airVJ.eW
"The response to the Pitts·
burgh Ballet has beeb ·
overwhelming and we are
By Mrs. H,rbert Roush
delighted," Mrs. Hindsley
Mr. and · Mrs. Milo
said. "We're especially
pleased at the interest being Richardson of Michigan are
shown by the students. At the visiting at their fjlrm. Mrs.
same time, we're aware that Richardson and Mrs. Lewis
some of our season sul&gt;- Ours visited Mr. and Mrs.
scribers may not be able to Gerald Hayman Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs, Bob Durst
attend for various reasons, so
we're asking them to donate and family of Springfield
their unused 'Nutcracker' spent the weekend with Mr.
tickets to the students It and Mrs. Ralph Durst and
would be a rear shame to sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
have a single empty seat in
the theater wllen there are so spent Sunday with Mr. and
many students who want to Mrs. Don Rifne and fanlily at
Wheelersburg.
see it."
Michael and Mandy Roush
Because of the demand,
Mrs. Hindsley attempted to were weekend guests of Mr.
negotiate a second local and Mrs. Russell Roush and
performance by the ballet family.
Cindy and Edward Roush
company. "Logistically, they
just were not able to work it spent Tuesday evening with
out for us at this late date," Mr. and Mrs . .Roger Roush
and Kimberly.
she said.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush spent Saturday
PAUL SIGMON
FORT HOOD, Texas - evenil!g with Mr. and Mrs.
Paul E. Sigmoo, !On of Mr. Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Mrs. Gloria Manuel visited
and Mrs. Paul G. Sigmon, 361
S. Front St., Middleport Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel
recenUy was assigned as ~ Sunday.
gunner and loader with the
2nd Armored Division at Fort
Hood, nxas.
Sigmon entered the Army
in June of this year.
The private is a 1978
graduate of Meigs High
School in Pomeroy.

F

Shannon Gilmore

Gilmore, Wa lworth, Wlsc. ,

POLLY·s POliTER$

GALLIPOIJS- The Gal11a
Co unty Homemakers Extension Club met. Nov. 8 at
10:30 a.m; at Mental Health
Center for their monthl y
meeting.
The meeting was opened by
group singing, "Count Your
Blessings." Devotions were
given by Mary Jo Shaver on
the church, who also led in
pledge to flag.
Lillian Thomas announced
that she would teach the
group to make choir boys at
the December meeting.
Ja ckie Graham said the
Christmas workshop would
IMi held at ExtenSion . Office
Nov. 16, at 10 a.m. Jackie also
read an article on safety. The
president, Mary Jo Shaver,
announced ·there would be a
silent · auction of handmade
gifts or white elephant articles at December meeting.
The secretary's report was
given by Gladys Amsbary
and treasurer's report by
Helen Wood.
Kay Swisher of the Charm
Beauty Shoppe had morning
program on Care of the hair
and styling.
Potluck lunch was served
atnoon by Centenary and 588
group.
The aftern&lt;&gt;-)n program
was by Dr. Harry L. Amsbary , eye physician and
surgeon on staff at Holzer
Medical Center and Pleasant
Valley HospitaL
Dr. Amsbary used a model
eye to teach eye anatomy and
showed slides of common

Secret Garden" is highly
recommended by Mrs.

wolfpen

Joyce Shannon
surprised by shower
\

Joyce Lynn Shannon was
honored Sunday with a surprise Layette shower. She
was presented with a pink
and bue corsage at the
shower held at the home of
Pat Thomas. A three tiered
cake topped with two blue
and one pink sleeping baby
angels was served with sandwiches, relishes, nuts, mints,
punch and coffee.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Delong and Ruth,
Mrs. Ed Donley and Scott,
Jackson; Linda, Donley and

Shawn of Bidwell, Evelyn, Ed
and Monte Amos, Haydenville; Linda and Quentin
Cadd, Logan, Marget, Clifford, Mark, Kevin and Ada
Thomas, Stockport; Jennifer,
Bill and Joyce Shannon, Vienna, W. VA.
Winning . prizes were
Eleanor . Donley, Jennifer
Lynn, Ada Thomas and Bertha Delong.
Following the show~r. gifts
were presented to Clifford
Scott Thomas III in celebration of his first birthday, Nov,
17.

RUnAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Sat., November 18th
6 to 8 lb. average lb. 79'
FRENCH CITY CALLI HAMS
.
··········~·······
French City

SLICED BACON.•••••••••••••••••~~c.~~~••••• l~)1.39
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD••••••••••••••• ~·~:. s1.09
MARGARINE ......1.~:.

3 lb. Rome or

Mrs. Dorothy Shaw of
Gallipolis, a lecturer and
writer, was guest speaker at
the Friday meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the Daughters of the
American Revolution, lwld at
the home of Miss Eleanor
Smith, Pomeroy.
Introduced by Mrs. Gene
Yost, Mrs, Shaw talked on
Thanksgiving and related exPeriences of . the ea rl y
Aplencan settlers. She said
that America is recognized
around the world for its in- .
novative ways of life. The
ajins of our forefathers
religious. freedom, she said:
has largely given way to the
pursuit of pleasure. She talked of the pilgrims and of
R_og~r Williams, a young
rrumster who helped establish
free worship and worked with
the Indians in language
translation. Mrs . Shaw
d~scribed Williams as a bold
t~il)ker on political liberty,
•.~d an advocate of separatiOn of church and state. She
w}ls pr.Sented .wilh a gift
f~llowing her talk.
,Mrs. Paul Eich, regent,
w.as assisted in the opening
by Mrs. James Brewington
acting chaplain. Mrs. Eich
· read the president general's
message from the National
~AR
Magazine
on
Thanksgiving. Mrs. Emerson
JJJnes gave the national

!r.~ES ......••........•...~.~? 7!r

2/
gg~

• •

it is a "must" for everyooe in
love, all teenagers and their
mothers and those betrothed.
A copy oft he inagi'zine can
be secured at us Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy or by calling,
992-5472 or 992-7480.
·
Major Rummel points out
that residents also may watit
to read of E~her Henderson
Abbott, nationally known
photographer and dahcer
who, after 50 years, kept a

vow to check into The
Salvation Army to see why
the Army liad such dedicated
followers in New York and
California. The magazine
features many other interesting stories and pictures
, Major Rummel
reports.

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Ranson
and Chad of Chesapeake
spent the week with Mrs.
Irene Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. David Lucas,
Jason and Jessica of
Chesapeake, W. Va. spent the
week with Anna Davidson of
Pomeroy.
Vickie Wa!Ten spent the
week with Mrs. J. R. Murphy
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Batten
and George Draper stayed
the week with Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp and sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ralison;
Mandy and. Candi spent the
week with Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson and family.

THANKS
TO THE VOTERS WHO VOTED AND
SUPPORTED ME IN THE NOV. 7
ELECTION

GILES SMITH

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Try our sport boots
for the fun of it.
note the fashion . .. the
quality . . . the veroatility .
We could go on and on ...
but why don'.t yoj go on and
tiv them? Lug·so ed style in

mort! planes, more s hips , and .

better training faciii.tics. She
sa1d that the ri~hts of
dangered today by too much

12"

X

Mis s Lucille Smit h
reported that a history of the
chapter has been sent to the
stale organization . Delegates
to the stale conference were
elected and indudc Mrs.
Eieh, Mrs. Yost, Miss Smith
and Mrs. James O'Brien.
Delegates to the national conference named were . Mrs.
Eich, Mrs. Lillian Henderson.
Mrs. Eich reported that
Mrs. Ruger I.uckeydoo and
Mrs. Heidi Ashley Smith will
serve as pages at the stale
DAR meeting. A report on the
history being compiled by the
Museum was g1ven by Mrs.
RoU.rt Ashley.
Guests were Mrs. Lois
Gerlach, Tuppers Plains, Mis
Mary Stalder and Mrs. Edith
Reed, both of the Nabby Lee
Ames Chapter, Athens. A
note of thanks was read from
the French Colony Chapter
for the invitation to the October meeting.
Refreshments were served
by Miss Smith, Mrs. Clinton
Fisher, Mi ss Lucille Smith
with Mrs. Gerald Powell ~
contributing hostess.

REYNOLDS FOIL WRAP.-••••.•••••••••••••• ~:. 39~
29

ORANGE DRINK•••••••••••••••••• :••••••••••••• 89~
29 oz.
DEL MONTE PEACHES •••••••••••••••••••~~~ •• 69'
181h oz.
Duncan Heinz
CAKE MIX .................................... ~:•• 79'

Janet Lee' Neal

The open church wedding
of Janet Lee Neal , daughter
of Ithmcr and Mona Nea l.
Middleport , and Jeffrey Arthur Russell, son of Mrs.
Dorothy J . Russell, Pomeroy
will be held Saturday at 7::JO
p.m. at the First Church of
God in Syracuse.
Music will begin at 7 p.m.
The wedding will be performed by the grandfather of the
bride, the Rev. George Oiler,
Middleport.

I

WEDNESDAY
MEETING AT Meigs
County Mu.Seum, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday
to · advise
representatives of all Meigs '
County c ivic clubs and
organizations on how they
rrught have their club or
or.ganizational story in Meigs
HIStory Book; all interested
group
representatives
invited.
ANNUAL INSPECTION of
Boswort h Council 46 Royal
and Select Masters Wedn esday . AU companions invited
to attend. Work in select
master degree.
MIDDLEPORT Litera ry
Clu b, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Rubert
Fisher, Middleport.
THURSDAY
GRACE
EP IS COPAL
Church women mee ~ing . at
home of Miss Eleanor Smith
Thursday, with a luncheon at
12:30 p.m. and the program

lb.

CONF. SUGAR. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~:•. 39'
lb. med. Diamond
ENGLISH WALNUTS •••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~: 99'
1

DALE'S KITCHEN

CENTER, INC.

TAN BARK
'HISTORY

VANITY SAL.E

SALe·PRIC.EP

MUSHROOM
OR

November 15 Thru November 18

35% OFF MARBLE TOPS
IN STOCK
ANY BASE IN STOCK
OR ORDER BASE OF YOUR
'CHOICE 25% OFF LIST

$
ONLY

•

Riviera &amp; Kemper
Kitchen Cabinets

.

HUR~~

WHILE PRICIS IS RIGHTI

SHEET

'I

. RUHGF.H CHEF provided hamburge rs and soft
Sd10ol followi ng their Halloween party .
destro):ed by f;rc. 7::!0Saturday night at the Pageville
Town Hall . Cumm unit v

The - bride-elect is a 1975
graduate of Meigs High
School and is employed in the
office of Dr. John H.
Ridgway , Pomeroy. Her
fiance is a 1976 graduate of
Wahama High School and he
is employed w1lh CSMS W.
v A. National Guard, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
Following thei r wedding,
the couple will reside at 648
Osborne St., Pomeroy.

Social Calendar

''

I

'

Check Our Extra
Savings On Do It
Your Self Kitchens

For The Cold

DALE'S KITCHEN
CENTER, INC.
,_

2199 Jackson Ave. Poini Pleasant

675-2318
Home Of Beautiful Kit~hens
1

show er .
needed .

hous ehold

it em~

MF:II.S COUNTY Ret ired

·--------...,

I Middleport \
I Personal Notes I

Tea chers Association, Satur-

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mileh
Inn. uf Wheeling were wee kend
I .ttrH·Iwon , bu siness m eet ing guests of his parents, Mr. and
and guest spcCikl!r, Miss Arm Mrs. Perry Mitch.
Bradbury, Ga llipoli s. Re:-~cr­
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miller of
VGttium; to be mmlc by Tues- Colum bus we1·e weekend
da y al992-5:145 or 992-512:!.
~ uest s · of hi8 m oth er , Mrs.
SAI.!SBURY PTO annual Gertrude Miller.

day noon at the

M~ i gs

ON ALL MACRAME, ART
SUPPLIES, DECOUPAGE,
BEADS, ETC.

Stop In and

Register To Win
SALE. PRICES GOOD THRU
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22

fall caruival. St:!r v ing t o begin

a t 5 p. m. Sa tu rday. t:o untr v
stun..' ami bazaar tu open at 'o

1&gt;.111. wHI games at 6::10 fUlL

I

SUNDAY
REORGANIZED CHURCH
of Jesus Christ of J.atter Dav
Saints. potluc k dinn t; r inillll'diately following. the wor-

by Mrs. Dottie Maull of the
Episcpai Churctr Board.

ship
scrvi ec Su nd av .
Members a rc tu takt• · &lt;:J

MA GNOL IA
CL UB
meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at home of Cora Beegle,
Raci ne.

STOREWIDE
SALE PRICES

dnnks fur the chtldr en of the Harrisonville E lemenla t·y

Neal, Russell plan
to wed Saturday

SALE!

l.ayawar Now

"Next to Elberfelds
In

J

CHRISTMAS

uppers,

I

;

SAVING

~~~~! N~~!~R PUMPKIN •••••••••••••••••. 2/89~

the

t

MONEY

oz.

hamburger and soft

;~

WATCH
~OR OUR

25 ft,

H

RTA TO MEET
The Meigs County Retired
Teachers Assn . will meet at
12 noon Saturday at the Meigs
Inn for a luncheon and
bu~ine s s session. ReservatiOns are to be made by
calling 992-5345 or 992-5l2J.

Games were

I·

INSTANT N.ESCAFE COFFEE ••••~~~~!i~i!.~&gt;}3.79

and Bria n

th~ children retUrned to tilt'ir

home l'oums.

government t•ontrol.

.
I
r ··-··-··-·-·-··-------------~

also black cherry leather '

CHAPMAN SHOES

served

Americans ore being en-

30 Count Calif.

.

~ rade :

drink donated by
Pomeroy Burger Chef.

COLORED PUFF TISSUES ••••••••••.~~f .•• 2/s1.29
oz.

grade: Robin Butcher. secund g re~d e : Tinuny Chad

Kenda Donohue, fourth, fifth
and sixth grades. After the
contest each student was

count

10

Cu. donated the prizes which
went to Rodney Butt:" her. first

Gibbs, Tereset Jarvis and

BRINGS YOU

I ight brown suede or leather ·

Weather
Ahead

tla HaiiJSOilVil h• F:lcml'llta ry

Sl'hool With prize' ~II III)( t11
I ht· !x~sl costumed .
Mrs. F:lhcl Ha1t of the
Mode rn Woodmen In.sur·am:e

def~nse report using i:tt1ides

9 OZ. · BIRDSEYE
11
MORTONS KOOL

CAREFREe

just
for the
sport of it

f~t~~l u ~~~·n. pe~ r. ty wa.' llc ld &lt;1 t

calhng fur a more adequate
defense of America with

DUTTON DRUG CO.

SWEET POTATOES .......':~-. 2f

. . H '' H H I~ 0 NV 11. 1. F. -- t\

Gaus, third

•

esap

Harrisonville Elementary hosts party

Dorothy Shaw gu.est
speaker to DAR ·.

=~ca.:;ie1:e!o'ka"!?::. ~=~~~~%~~~~0~~~:~: News N0 tes I•CO:-TT~AG-::E=CH~E!:'ES~E~.·~··~··~·•··~~~.;C:E;.;LE::.:R~Y.;·~··,;,;·;,;.··;.;,·~··,;,;·;,;.'·;.;,··;.;,~ .~ ~·;,;.~ ;.;,··;.4;,;9';.

.

Shannon Lyn Gilmore,
daughter of Joe and Linda

Homemaker Club met

7- 'l1le Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday' Nov.

'

WRITING WORKSHOP for
anyone with questions about
writing a family history for
the Meigs History book, B
p.m. Thursday at the Chester
Elementary School.
BRADBURY PTA , 7:30
Thursday, at the school. Program on drugs by Carl
Hysell, Meigs juvenil e offi cer. Children are encouraged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Cunse1·vation League, 7:30
Thursday Coiwnbia Gas Cu.,
with Betty Newton giving

eovered dish.
COUNTY WIDE pray er
meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian Union with Glen
Bisse ll , class leader.

RACINE GRANGE
Raeine Grange 2606 will
have its annual ThHnksgiving
turkey dinne1· on Saturday
mght at 6::!0 p.m. The public
is invited . Those a ttending

ar&lt;' to take a covered dish
their own ta bl e servic e,

e:~ml ~ .

gift fur patients at the Athens
Mental Hea lth Center. F:nterlairunent will include the

traditional pig-in-a-puke.

Crafty
Ladies

~andicraft

804 West Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2298

cooking demonstration. Ann

Colburn , program ; Helen
Rlackston, devotions.
EMMA SMITH CIRCLE,
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
7:30 Thursday at the RacinePortland Branch &lt;:hurcl1.
THE ROCK SPRINGS Bettel· Health Club , 1:15 p.m. at
the Rock Springs Church,
.Thursday . Mrs. Mary Schaeffer, hostess; Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner, pro · ram , Mrs.
Susie Pullins, contest.
Riverview Garden Club
ho~e of Mrs. Denver Webe;
for a Christmas workshop
conducted by Mrs. Gene
Wilson and Mrs . Lyle
Balderson . Each member
bring a salad plus a recelpe
for exchange.
Gifts for
Athens Mental Health Center
"Operation Santa Clause':
are to be brought to this
meeting.
FRIDAY
WRITING WORKSHOP for
those with Q.'!es~ ions about
writing family history for the
Meigs History book, 7 p.m.
Friday iri the Long Bottom
Methodist Church basement.
MARCHING . BAND Concert Friday, 8 p.m . in
Southern High
School
auditorium, Racine ; public
invited.
REVIVAL
AT
MT.
HERMON u:s. Church 7:30
p.m. through Nov. 26., Rev
Richard James, Bellefontaine as evangelist. Special
music by Gospel tones and
others. Rev. James Leach,
pastor. invites the public.
BAKE SALE ~inning 9
a.m. Friday at Trinity
Church,
Pomeroy,
by
Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
SATURDAY
SPECIAL MEETING,
Shade River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
Work in Ma ster Ma son
degree and ·a ll . Ma , l• ..
Masons invited . ·
!VIISCF.I.I.A .mou:-. Sh"" ,.,
for ,Jim (1 1 , Y1ary \\·y ;c 111
Hanim'.
! ~n nH · 11 :t;.;

m

SaveiO&lt;:
on libby's

New Chunky
Mixed Fruits.
TO GROCER: Libby, Mdileill &amp; Libby, Int.
will r111dl!em this coupon for lace walue
plus 5C for ~ an dlinl , pro~ided (1) it is
reuiwed from a reid customer in putial
payment lor product(s) spec:ihed herei.n
and (2\ i iOI:er mails il to libby, McNeill

IOC

&amp; libby, Int. - P.O. Boa 169(), Elm City,

" .t . Z7B!J8. (Redemption will not be hon·
ored in anJ other way or throut h outside
arencies, brokers, etc.) Costomer must

pay any nln tu . Cash redemption utue
1/lO ol 1 cen L fhis otter void wherner

tued , prohibfled or restricted.
FRAUD CLAUSE: lnvolcu prov in&amp; pur·
chnes within the lnl 90 days ol s uHi·
citnl stod to tover coupons prestnted
lor redemption mnl be shown upon re·
quest. Any otlttr 1pplicati0f1 ol this cou·
pan , other l~aunder the terms sltled
ltertin, con slit
lrtud tnd •iol•lo!S wil
be prostr:ut . .fr•udu lenl coupons will
not be redeeiMd . Uu ot the mails to re·
deem lr1udullnt r:ouponl will be reported
Ia Posl•llnstttclort .

l
j

.

OffertXSlires March 31,1978

665

IOC

�•

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Nov. 15 , 1978

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 15, 1978

Philathea Women
dOnate torys fiOr .
• d Cht•ld111'/Jn
hOSJlt•taltze

THOSE FAR, FAR OUT ARGUMENTS!
MRS, BO:rTEL:
You a pparently advocate ERA and women's li b. I say they
stink ! Equal means identical , which males and females are
not !

Equality would mean co-ed reslrooms. Are you prepared to
utilize facilities with a 240-pound sexual psychopat
It would also give homosex uals the right to gel marriage
licenses : the beginning of the end for family life .
It would void husbands' obligations of support, send women
jnto battle, force every school and college, including all their
activities, to be co-ed and would give federal govermnent complete control of our private lives. Look at the mess they 've
already made of school busing.
But enough of that.
What rea lly concerns me is abortion. If welfare a bortions
!murders) had been around 2,000 years• ago, Mary's family .
upun learning that she was pregna nt before her ma rri age to
J oseph, might have forced her to get one. Then where would
we be ? -WILUAM
DEAR WILLIAM:
Starting with your statement •·equal means identical." I
could argue many puinl..s with you. But I'd only be wasting my
typewriter ribbon.
In a vague sort of way you remind me of the man who wrote :
"Without legalized executions, we would have missed out on
Christianity, J esus dietl on the cross, therefore became the immortal Christ. Had he lived out his full life he would have been
like any other man.
" If capital punishment gave us our · religion, then capital
punishment is good enough for me, and I'm voting for it ! - IN
FAVOR"
The logic of his statement somehow eludes me, but - to each
his own and that also includes you , William - H. - - DEAR HELE N:
I agree with " Knows Better Now": An abortion has deep
pschological effects.
I was 16 when l turned up pregnant. My well-t&lt;Hlo family
"had the problem taken care of. " It bothered me terribly at
first, bull filed it away in the back of my mind.
Six years later I married and we had a baby. When I held my
son for the first time, all the guilt came rushing back. He is
abnost a year old now and when .we're alone and I'm rocking
him, I still cry because .of the life l took so long ago. -IT
NEVER GETS EASIER
DEAR HELEN:
,
Not all women who have abortions are racked by guilt. I still
think, as I did then, that my teen-age abortion was the only
thing to do under the circumstances. Of course if l had avoided
pregnancy it would have been better but my boyfriend and l
were pretty dumb.
I'm now ma rried (to another ma n ), have two children - and
no regrets.
You don't call a fertilized hen's egg a baby chick, so why
should you think ·of a fertilized human egg as a child. -S.!..
NOTE TO READERS: Letters on a bortion are equally divided
pro and con . Sol give them equal space in the colwnn. - H.

cake, ice cream, mints, nuts, .
punch, tea, coffee , cookies ..
and fudge were served.
Games were played with
prizes going to Lisa Smith,
Laura Smith, Brenda NeutzJ.
ing, with Lillie Hubbard win·
ning the door prize.
Others attending were
Glennis Musser, Vicky Hoff.

FUNNY BUSINESS

REVIVAL SERVICES - Rkvival services will begin
Thursday, and contimue through Sunday, at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene. Arnold (Doc) and Garnet Sexton
of Ashland. Kv. will be the soecial workers. Services will
be nightly at 7:30 .P·'"· and 10:30 a.m. Sund~y morn~ .
The public is invited.

janet Lee Neal honored
A miscellaneous brid al
shower was held on Ocl. 21 for
Janet Neal, bride-elect of Jeff
Russell. The shower was
hosted by Becky Drenne1·.
A green and yellow color
scheme was carried out in Ihe
decorations. The ti ered cake
was baked and decorate'&lt;! by
the hostess. Games were
played with prizes going to
Genia Walburn , Eulonda
Haley, Delores Tyree and
Mary Fallon with J udy Pape
wiMing the door prize .
Attending were Mona Neal.
Teresa Davis. Narsa Van

Meter, Fona Taylor, Diane
Hawley, Janet Hinkle, Patsy
Oiler, Reggie Wright and
Crocket , Judy Pape, Vi vi~n
Phillips, Peggy DeWeese,
I
Pauline Tilli s, Rul onda
man, Barbara and Becky Haley, Louise Johnson, Janet
Smith, Avis Hartley, Betty Werry, Sally .Savage. Joan
Kalinowski, Sue Smith, Tina Ferguson, Corky · Werry.
Smith, Pauline and Tami Hof·
fman , Ellen Smith, Cr.:mie
and Jason Black, Brenda and
Missy Neutzling, Maude
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Smith, and Eloise Smith.
'others presented gifts to volunteer fire depa rtment
Mrs. Hawk were Carolyn met Wednesday evenin~ at
Bachner, Mary Smith, Muriel the fire ho,use. President
Young, Janet Biggs, Maxine Karla Chevalier opened the
Moore, Teresa Cremeans, meeting with The Lord's
Blanche Gilkey, Sis Buskirk, Prayer. Roll call was an·
Audrey Haley, Lizzy Geary, swered by Clarice Allen,
Linda Peterson, Shirley Margaret Christ y, Erm a
Smith, Dena Larkins, Bessie Cleland, Clara Conroy, Karla
Baughman, Geraldine Hawk, Chevalier, Betty Newell,lnzy
Ethel Cales, Donna Byer, Newell, Sheila Taylor and
Beverly Hoffman, Sadie Opal Wickham. The minutes
Tnrner, Ella Holter, Dollie of the previous meeting was
read by Clarice Allen and the
Spires, and Debbie.Musser.
treasurer's report by Opal
Wickham. Plans for the
annual Christmas dinn er
which will be held at the fire
house on Dec. 10 with a·
covered dish dinner at 5:30,
.J. j
'1Jwere discussed. It was an.
'.l' nounced that the kitchen
curtairis had been made and
with gold and black trim and would be put up soon. More
yellow roses.
recipe cards were ordered for
Rese·rvations for the annual sale and the Christmas cards
C hri s tma s pa rty for have arrived. Committee
members and their husbands reports were given. Th e
was aMounced for Dec. 9 at December meeting will be
the American Legion Hall, 8 held at the horne of Clf rice
p.m.
Allen on Dec..6 at 7 p.m: and
Reva Vaughan presented there will be a $2 gift exthe program on Virgo. The change.
traveling prize was ,donated
Mrs. Etta Will , Mrs.
by · Nellie Brown, and Audrey Rowan and Mr. and
refreshments· were served by Mrs. Robert llerry, Belpre,
Mrs . Vaughan, Mrs. O'Brien, spent Wednesday afternoon
Mrs. Ohlinger, and Clarice with Denze l Cleland and
Krautter. Mrs. Rupe presided Cla rice Allen.
at the coffee service.
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Frank
called
on Mr. and Mrs. Arby Roger Bollen
thur Orr Wednesday evening:
Mrs. Marlene Thompson,
Columbus, spent the weekend
WE

Bernice Bede Osol

~17l!JITm

·VUl~wlliillm\1

f
f
~..
A variety o toys or Rose ReynoluS,• Mrs. Clara
d1ildr en a t Ve te r an s Conroy and Mrs. Coleen Van
Memori al Hospital were Meter a nd a duet by Kathy
brought by members to the . Erwin and Becky Glaze ,
Thursday night meeting of · "Bless This House"· Prayer · National Association of Bank Women met
the Philathea Women held at was by Mrs. Van Meter .
'/
Mrs . Be tty McKinley
The· S~ut hea st e rn Ohio from Security Central Nathe Middleport Church of
Chrisl.
presrded at the busrn~ss Group of the Nationa l tiona! Bank, Portsmouth, was
Plans we re made for the · rneetrn~ wh1ch opened wrth Association of Bank Women completed.
annual Christmas meeting to the Philathea song. Reports he ld their regular fa ll
Those representing banks
be held on Dec. 14 with a $2 were g1ven by Mrs .. Roach, meeting at. Burr Oak Lodge, in Meigs County were Mr.
gift exchange.
.
secretary, Mrs. Fan e Cole, Glouster, Nov. 4 and 5. The and Mrs. Mick Williams, Mr.
A Thanksgiving theme was treasurer, and Mrs. Grace Lake Region vice president, . and Mrs. John Karschnik,
carried out in the devotions Hawley, flowers. Thank you Jerry Marston , was the Fanners Ba~k and Savings
and program with Mrs . Lena card was read from Mrs. Ed- speaker on Saturday evening. Co., Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
McKinley giving the scrip· na Fvans. Reported 111 were o n Sunday morning a study Charles Griffith, Pomeroy
lure . There were readings by Cy nthra . Gohrrng, Carne module on decision making National Bank ; Mrs. Rose
Mrs. Clari ce Erwin, Mrs. Srn1th, J1rn Buchanana, Ida and risk taking under the Reynolds and Mr. and Mrs.
Ch1lds! Grace Glaze, and direction of Clare Feldman Kenneth M.cEihinny, Citizens
·Mrs . J1m Hawley.
National Bank.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses, Mrs . Clari ce
Erwin, Mrs. Reynold~. Mrs.
l.ena McKinley, Mrs. Conroy,
and Mrs. Van Meter. others
;:.,
meeting .,
attending
Sunday School attendance
besides
those
named
above
on Nov. 5 was 60, the offering
were Mrs. Margaret Butcher,
$35.67.
Wor ship service
at · Mrs. Mary Bailey , Mrs. Ger·
tendance was 36 with Rev. trude Miller, Mrs. Beulah ·
Richa rd. Thomas speaking Roush. Mrs. Dorothy Jenkin·
from l Corinthians 2:1-10, and 80n , Mrs . Margaret Jones,
th e Comm union Message Mrs. Dorothy Baker, Mrs.
be in g " Ex pe r ie nc in g Bea Stewart, Mrs. Evelyn
Murray, Mrs. Reva Beach,
Calva ry. "
The young peoples class at Mrs. Margaret Lallance,
Alfred t aught by Myrtle Miss F rances Roush, Mrs.
Fla nders and Ruth Brooks Mabel Walburn, Mrs. Martha
sponsored a yard and bake Childs, Mrs . Audrey Swell,
sale on Friday and Saturday Mis Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
with proceeds exceeding over Clara Gilkey, amd Amy Erwin and Jennifer McKinley.
$100 .
'
The North east '!Cluste r
Hymn Sing at Tuppers Plains
Nov. 25, also a Thanksgiving
dinner on Nov. 20 at 6 p.m. at
St. Paul's.
Alfred's pra yer se rvice .
begins at 7: 30 p.m. on
Wednesday evening. Alfred
UMW will meet at the horne
of Genevie Guthrie, Nov. 21 at
8 p.m.

Cassie Hall , Mary Fallon and
Justin , Dorothy Russell, Elva
Dai ley , Delores Tyr ee ,
Stephanie Ash, Phyllis Haley,
Sandy Wright, Dorth Little,
Genia Walburn , Mrs. Dren-.
ncr and Susie Tillis.
Sending gifts were Betty
Ash , Tom and Terry Hawley,
Cheryl Pape, Helen Stewart,
Ta mm y
a nd
Da n
Kirkpatrick. Jun and Judy
Farley , Hyllia Eblin, Doug
a nd Shirley Lambert, Geneva
Wise, Shirley Tyree, Betty
Batey , Bobby Rous h, Kit and
Carol Neal, Ruby Nicinsky,
Kristen Pa pe, Karen Werry,
J an Jenkins, Sharon and
Gene Wise, Dr. and Mrs. John
Mr . and Mrs. J o.hn
Ridgway , Selma Call , Betty
Wickham
and George Smith
.Hawley, Sharon McMillion,
were
in
Huntington,
W. Va.,
J enny Russell , TrinH Davis,
Clarice Carson, and Randy , Thursday.
Mrs. Karl Kloes and Mrs.
De mari s and Sha una
Bill
Eichinger, Syracuse,
Crawford.
called on Denzel Cleland,
Friday afternoon.

Otester News
Notes
.

"BEATL.ES' ?. . OH, I'M SORE
CARRY Tt-!ElR ALBUMS! ... Tt-IAT

WQ)LD BE' MICK iJ'~f&lt;, ., Pitr.'iHT..,

were Mr. and Ml'll. Marion
O~r, Mr. and Mrs . Allen Or~,
!Jnda Graw, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Gavpr, son, Adrian, Mr.
and Mrs . Starlmg ?rr, M~.
and Mrs. Jack Andrr, Jackie
and Jason Klegg, Mr. and
Mrs. Edwm Orr, Mr. and
Mrs. Maurice Orr, Mr. and
Mrs. John Orr, Tom, Sheri
and Marc Atwood, Mr. and
Mrs . Alba Orr, Robrn Orr,
Attending the cet'ebration · and Pau10rr.

November 16, 1978
Throug h rather circuitous circumstance s you may be drawn
into a beneficial situation th is

con;ti ng year that som eone else
has already started . The two of ,
you will work ex trerh ely well

logether.
SC.ORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22)

Tread warily in joint ve ntures
today. Be sure y.,our counterpart · shares eq uall y in all 1lhe
riskS and expe nses. Don' t be

to Asl ro.Graph, P.O. Box 489. ARIES (March 21·April 19) Be
Radio City Statio n. N.Y. 10019 . wa ry today of basing important
Be sure to specify birth sign .
decis•ons on wishfu l lhink ing.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov: 23·Dec. Don't fear to ask questions it
21 ) A heap of fru strations Cafl you feel you haven 't got all the
be avoided today if you stee r answers.
clear of teaming up with one TA URU S (April 2D·May 20)
who doesn't appreciate th e Doing business with strangers
could be risky today. particuvalue of col lec tive effort.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) larly if they make ou tlrl ndish
Continui ng to postpone atJend- prom ises. Get th em to put it in
ing to a res ponsi bility clamor- writin g.
ing lor attenti on will not pu t th e GEMINI (M ay 21·Ju ne 20) 11 il's
matter to res t. Tackle -it today up to yo u to make th e soc 1al
and be don e wit h it
arrangeme nts today· don ' t inAQUARIUS (J an. 20·Fe b. 19) vile fri ends who wo n't blend
Normall y you behave very dem- harm onio usly. They'd spoil the
oc ra ti cally a t Qa th e r ings , fo n for all.
Tod ay. however, you may pl ay CAN CER (June 21· July 22)
·favori tes and hurt som eo ne's You' ll eilh e r look to oth ers to
fee lings in th e proce ss .
perf orm your tasks today or

with Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Wolf.
Mr. and Mrs . James Bailey
visited Friday evening with
Mr. 'and Mrs. George Abbott,
Mt. Herman.
Mrs. Mildred Collins ,
Canton, and Mr s. Zelda
Weber, local, spent an afternoon wi(h Mrs. B. K.
Ridenour.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert
Allen, Westerville, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller
were overnight guests of Mr.
and Mrs. T. G. Nelson at
Blufft on and spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Don Williams and family,
Columbus.
Mrs . Cleo DeTray ha s
ret urned horne after spending
several days in Washington,
D. C. with her daughter, Alice
Peacock, wh o ·underwent
major surgery at Walter
Reed hospital.
Mrs. Mary Jane Efaw ,
Athens, recently called on her
aunt, Mrs. Letha Wood.
Mr. and Mrs .. Clyde Burke
and son, Akron, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Burke. .
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs . Dorsel Babcock in
Coshocton.
.
Mr . and Mrs. Oris
Frederick left Sunday for
their horne in Winter Haven,
Fla ., where they will spend
the winter.

Attendance at the Free
VIR GO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) It' s . Methodist Church was 107.

li kely your ambi ti ons wi ll be
satis fied today , but the way yo u
get re sult s could cause others

Choir membe' s present was
12. The morning service was
lo speak unfavorably of you. condu ct ed by the Men' s
You won 't lik e wh at they say.
F e ll o w s hip.
J ose ph
LIBRA (Sept. Z3·0 c t.23) You' re H .
b th
d L
1gg en o am an
arry
.l
·· h
a b1 more sens111ve t an usua 1
where your ideas are co n- Clark each sang a solo.
cerned today . You cou ld overMr . and Mrs. J oseph

reacl if lhey are challenged. Higgenbotham,
Keep an open min d and you
may learn something .

vi sited over the weekend with
Rev. and Mrs. F loyd Shool.
M r . an d Mrs . RusselJ

In 1977 , demonstra tions
broke out near thee White
House as the shah of Iran

Jackson ,· Bellview, recently
called on Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mr . and Mrs. Ernie Wells,
M'ddl
rt
II
.. d
1 epo • r ecen Y VISI1e

OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY
~~­
STOll POll
'"NTAIJJC IAvtMGI
' OtiiiUIOGIIIIANI)

Reopen 8 AM Friday Nov. 24 And
Remain
Open Regular Hours
•

_,.n·

UlfiG lllOW All IUif
ANWIXAW~U

Wi II Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Matlingly

Hearing Aid Specialist
. BELTONE COnsultant Who WiD Be At:
Meigs Inn

Thursday, Nov. 16

Pomeroy, Ohio

9 a .m. to 12 noon

An yone who ha s trouble hearing is wel come to have a
hear ing test usi ng the let est el ectroni c equipment tO
determi ne If his loss Is one which may be helped . Some
of the causes of hearing loss will. be e,.; plained and
diagrams of how th e ear work s will be shown .
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aid s.
Batteries and Supplies .For All Makes F'Jr Sale.

Ca II the Hate' for a hom e

I
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The Photo Place
( Bob Hoeflich )
109 High St .
Po m e roy

16-oz.
Can

I
I
I

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham

Bag

$ ;3 9

..........
L PRE MIU M
VVI 15ft....
as Traditional
astbeDay
SWI FT S

I

U.S. GOV'TGRADEDCHOICE

Tail-Less T-Bone $,teak. lb .
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
tO· I HI. AVG . WHOLI

BonelessSI.ICED
Beef
Rib Eye .. lb.
fREE

$2 69
$2 99
'

·

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED GRADE A KROGEI fROZEN
IEGUAI IO·LIS. AND UP

Wishbone Young Turkeys lb.

f;;;;;AH~~sPT~;ko~~~

AV·G · .. lb.

KROGEI U.S.D. A. INSPECTED FROZEN GlADE A
'IE·IASTED ANY SIZE

Wishbone Ye1~t1g Turkeys lb .
KROGER fiOZEN U.S.D.4 . INSPECTED GRADE A
.IEGULAR 5·7·11. AVG .
-

Wishbone Turkeys.. ... .. .. lb.

Brown 'N'
Serve Rolls

AVONDALE

·Peach Halves

c

29·01.

$

Con

U.S.D.4 . INSPECTED GRADE 4 MARVA!
OF VIRGINIA . ANY SIZE

Country Fresh Turkeys .. .. lb
U.S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE . BON£ IN

s

I
I

I'

Pears

gc

~::::·· lOWfATMU K.

Crisco
Shortening

In

Ice Cream ... .. ...... .. . .. ..

burgundy leather.

•

Can

f~MIL

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER
y
COtiP111,10DSiiDA1.11VUIMtiiUTIIDATH¥ 15, 1t 71
&amp;llntT Tllll'n!CtiLl lUTE I lOCI\ Tli(S ,

Df

I

'

'

I

sgc
97c
sgc

Oven Roasted
Turkey Dinner

. $
2·GaJ.$1519

Ful l y Cook~ fwrk • r
Dhm•r lnclud.t 4 t - ll).lb
A~ • ro11• 't'o11n1 Turk"• p

With Not1.1rGI Jul c•• For

~, • .,,. l"lut 2• -G ll. Old
""•hi011N DrHt irll And •

9

..~19

16·ou . Cranb.rry Seiad

..

s. ...... , l ·l ·or. S.n- lne•
.t.ll You Doh lrow, &amp;

~;::

'/,

ctn .

Virginia Baked Ham ...... lb.

~.

$2?!

LB. S3 .l ,

$J19
Pumpkin Pie ... ........... ...
99
Pecan '-ie ................... each$
59

fRESH BilKED

Amish Cheese ..... lb.

·

2
$2

Fresh Crisp
Celery
•

l ·lb.

Fresh Cranberr1es ......... Pkg .

~

Fresh Yams .............. .. .. .. l b . 1 9 C

('

~.
L

0 :
I

87 c
79C

Ea ch

In deep
burgundy,
leather.

I
H

appointm ent.
. __ _ _ _..;,;Pho
;;;";;,•.,.
..2;.;
·3iiio','-..""""--..,.:·

I

LIIIJT I CAN WITH COUPON AND $7.50 AODJTIONAL PURCHASE
(EXCLUDING IHIS ITEM I

s.LB. WHOLE OR 2·1/ H B. HAl f BAB Y

'~
~
~
~

I
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-lb.

OA&gt; Pl ASTrCCT N ..

NATURAL FLAVOR

I

SAVE
50'

3$ 49

Gal. J59

Cream Cheese .....:.

t UI'OII I:(KID mDA I IG~ IJ 111MUTIID.I110t l~ . 1111
UIJICT 1(1 ~ ~ lUlU STITt &amp; l OUt TAilS

KIHEI COST CUTTEII COUPOI

Lowfat Milk ......... __ ... Pra~~~r~~.

AVONDALE

C·..

l iM IT ONE COUPON PER FAMILv

t•F

:

I
II

99

Loin
Strip
Steak .. .. .... .. .. ... ......lb.
KROGER2', HINU

I
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LIMIT I lAC WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDlTIOUL PURCHASE
(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM I

I
I
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I

I
I
I
I
I

c

-lb.

I

I
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I

SAVE :

5

~J;

to fit your style.

EliCTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

fro m

Pillsbury
Flour

Q\ (J'

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRIOZ!E~
18·LBS . AND UP

Can

Yes, we have Jarman shoes to fit the
style of every man on your gift list - what·
ever his age or fashion preferences. And
in any pair he will get the careful
detailing, pleasant comfort and long·
lasting quality that generations of
American men have enjoyed .

Forever
With a Portrait

I

I
I

fUlt SElECTION AVAILABLE

tyleto it

and punch were served. The
next ineetiiig Will be at the
home of Ms. Margie Goett .
This will be the Christmas
party.
Mr. and Mrs . Wya tt
Schaefer , Mt. Vernon, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Perry, Athens,
Fritz Stahl. New Marshfield
and Paul Stahl, Columbus,
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Schaefer.

I

HEN

HEARING TESTS SET
FOR MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

If you cann ot come in -

SAM TIL 6 PM

LOOl JOII , . . IIOAIIt

16-oz.

I~
i

Keep Smiling

m ents of sandwiches, cake,

Will Be Open Regular Hours ·Til Midnight Wed. No,. 22

As your County commissioner I look
to
being of service to you. I appreciate the confidence
you have
In my ret~· · ec·tlon

~ Gift ldias ~·

I

Columbus,

Mrs. Madlyn Chaffie was
A thought foc the day :
hostess Thursday evening to British statesman William
16 mem ber s of the La urel Pitt said after the American
Cli ff Health Club. Three colonies had won their
guests, Mrs. Ira Wellman and independe nce
in
the
Ms. Mill ie
Longerfelt , Revolution ary War, ·" I love
Cheshire, and Miss Robin Americans bec~use tbey love
Ca mpbell, Pomeroy were liberty." He also said : "You
present. Mrs. Della Curtis cann ot' conquer America."
and Mrs. Leona's birthdays
wer e celebrated. Refresh·

YOUR KROGER STORE

~~~~~~~~~~~l:S~~:tl:~~~"J·

~

f .a m·d Cl i' ff

lriends loday. mak ing eac h lee!

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) else yo u mi ghl leave e very· began an official visit to the
left hold ing th e bag . like 10 lind There's a chance you co uld thinQ to the last minute. In United .states .

MY SINCERE THANKS
TO ALL FOR YOUR
SUPPORT ON
NOVEMBER. 7

Pd. Pol. Adv.

wit h Mt. and Mrs. Rich J ones
and family.
Mrs. Betty Ann Jaco bs
spent the weekend with her
mother, Mrs. Tina Jaco bs
and attended the Sunday
morning service ai the local
church.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Herman
Kasper, Da yton, visited
Sund ay with Ms. Bertha
Parker and Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Arnold. .. ·
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Ba uer, New Phi lad el phia ,
spent the weekend with Mr .
and Mrs. Dick Karr.
Mrs. Isabell Winebrenner,
Middleport, visited Saturday
..lit h her brot her, Hu gh
Leifheit, an~ Wayne Leifheit.
Mr. Leifheit had a cow to die
recently that was 17 years
old.

he or she is th e victor.

Social Notes

Exemplar, silver circle
rr'h da
degrees awarded urs
The exemplar and silver
circle degrees were given to
members when the Preceptor
Beta Bela Chapter of Bela
Sigma Phi Sorority met
Thursday night at the horne
of Mrs. Roberta O'Brien.
Receiving the exemplar
degree were . Betty Ohlinger
and Lillian Moore. The ritual
was performed by Mrs. Norrna Amsbary assisted by
Velma Rue and Rose Sisson.
Nellie Brovm and Ann Rupe
received the silver circle
degree. The ritual table
featured white satin . cover

. The wedding anniversary
of Perry and Jessie Orr of
1621 Jludson, Columbus , was
c-elebrated Sunday with a sur·
prize gathering at their
home.
Married on Nov. 13. 1920·
and former residents or
Meigs County, the couple
have five sons two who served in the Army', and two in the
Navy .

either case. you 'll get your self
m a light bind .
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) You.have
. tbe knack tor arbitrating volalil e
issues between dissent ing

Alfred

Layette shower held
A layette shower honoring
Mrs. Steve (Robin ) Hawk
was held recenllv at her
home with Mrs. Virginia
Duckworth and Miss Debbie
McGuffin as hostesses.
For the decorations, fall
colors were used with oink
and blue baby items. The
table centerpiece was a white
baby bear and a flower arrangement. A baby replica

1 c;..

·

Anniversary celebrated

out more· about yoursel l ? Send sour someth ing good you have
lor your 1979 copy of As tra - going tor you by tippmg your
Graph Letter by mailing 50 hand lo th e wrong person.
cent s for eaqh and a long , self- Don' t spill th e beans to one
add ressed . stamped envelope wh ose si ncerity is doubtfu l.

Thursdoy, Nov. 16

YOUI CHOICE

HARTLEY'S

Mo,n~i.hm";::'
. .F&amp;,,.5."'·
... ..,rp:.umP~!"

.

Closed Sunday ·

.

~~S~8~9:\?4:tl:S~~~~~-

'

Tangerines or Tangelos

IOUNDTO,

"MIDDLE DF UPPER BLOCK IN POME,ROY, 0."
i'

.

Kroger 20.~oz.

White Bread .~ ...... ... .
•

20·o• .
LVI .

1'5SJ

VOUI CHOICE SHELLED ENGLISH
WALNUTSOI

Shelled Pecan Halves .... lb.
I

2
For

$ 99
·

GENUINE

.

.

10 SJ2 9

Idaho Potatoes ...

lb

io~

\

�.'
10- The Daily Sentiriel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 1~, 1978

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov. 15, 1978

Want -Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
-

I du~
:!. tlan:

Ita
1 ~~~~
:.!:!:J

'""

.I i ;)

:1,{~1

_For _sa le_

F..ad1 wurtlu\'t·r tht· nm1unmn I:&gt;
Ymnb IS ~ nnt:. 1"-'1' 1\'urtiJH'r tla,\ .

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay 53.99

011\_o~ o~

ntlt•.

446-5105
An Affirmative Action
E qual Opportunity Employer

~

tim•!

Tlw

PuOii ~ ht•r rt•StTVt'S

Ilk· l'll!hl

tot•tbt ur n •jl'l'l any &lt;~ ds dt"t'llll'tloiJ..
jt't'IIO I~&lt;~L Tht~ Pu!Jhstwr w1ll aot l&gt;t' .
rt'SJkms illlt- fur mun· llmn one mn•r·
n •(·l rnser1ion.
'

Phunt' ~l-215fi

NOTICE

-

__ , -- - ·- - ---·Card of Thanks

NO HUNliNG or lr ewassi ng o n
my pro p e rly without pe r mis·

Muntlay
:.loon llll ~ lu nl:. ~·
TuPstbt\'
lhru Frui:.~\'
-! P.M . .
l lw day lwfun• p u lJik&lt;~tlul l

pm at t heir b uilding in Boshon .
~o c t ory chok £" guns on ly .

Sumla~

4 P.M.

Special

Frill&lt;~ )' a ftt: l'l ltiOil

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF
EVERETT
ASBURY
T U RNER ,
DECEASED
Case No . 22537
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 10, 1979, in
Me ig s County Probate
court , case No . 22537 , R .
Mar ie Turner, 29645 Br ia r
Ridge Road, Langsville, Oh io
was appointed E)(ecutrix ot
the Estate of Everett Asbury
the

Body Penn
'12.50
Now

Langsvi ll e , Oh i o .

Thru Dec . 2

Kay'~

Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport

A~t:

D. Webster
Probate J udge •

Mann i ng

Clerk

YOU tro ubl e d wilh w ild
an im al s? ~o:.. . min k . racoon .
opo ssum . beaver , e t c? Coli the
trappe r , 98~ · 3984 . W ill conloc t
in person for sign ed pm mi ~
~i on .

Carpenter·
Personals

PART TIME . o p po r tunity avai labl e
l or house wi l e. N eed ing hours
l or inlerviews. Co li 944 -2!::10:1 .
'
.
.
NO HUN TI NG or tres pa ssi n g day
or n iQht on my-p roperty w ithout
wri tt e n permiss ion

Carl f indl ing .
POMI::ROY LADY will s it wilh po·

a

-

-

*

•

-

Auction Household Sale
Thursday, November 16th.
405 Front Street

Middleport, Ohio

$3 ooo oo worth of new maple .kitchen wall and base

ca'bl~h, llvlt19 room set, bedroom set, kitchen table
and cfleln, g11 refrigerator, limps, dllhn, pots and
~ns, stoM lan, garden 1nd yard tools. Lots of what
Mh . . . ..._, IIIIKelleneous.

Owner: Viraina Belz
A·udioneer: Howard Beasley
Not rnponslble lor Acddenh.

•

••

Pomeroy Landmark

PAYROLL Cl t RK l or co r1 str uc t ion
office at 1he M aun!oin eer
Plant .
N ew
Hoven . Send
res um es .
PO Bo lO 47l:l , Parkersburg . WV
20 101 .
CA R HOP and woi!rc ss ol once .
Apply in pe rson . C row· ~ ~ emily
Re ~ tauranl. Pomeroy . Ohr a .
O ~ PENDA B LI: 1:\AR help . Mu st be

a va il a bl e
night s
wee k ends
occ as iona l
Five Poin t s Gri ll. Rl. 7

and
day s.

HARTI::NDt:R WA NTtD. h~per i e n t: e
prefe rr·ed but n ot ne cess ary .
We ll paid . In teres ting o cc upo 1ian . P. leo sont atmosphere wilh
be sl cl ie nt ele . Apply in per so11
Meigs Inn .

Homes
- Mobile
- - - ---- - -lor-Sale
-li.J/6 NASHUA 1&lt;1 )(OS 3 bed roo m

Mgr.
~ Phone 992-2 181

-·

MIXW

·

HA Y

for

sol e .

Phone

61Jtl -t:IUT:i
APPL ~~ - ~ ITZ PATRICK O rc hard .
~ t oi J? Rt. bllf! . Phone Wi lk esvil le

M4 -37H5
H I:CT RA LP Red S unb~,Jr st wi th '1
hurn burking s. Hand case . ~ x ­
ce ll en t
condi t ion .
JU4 - b 'l~ - 6:ri'b . Roor'n :.!3H . .

sns .

11.,1'/J ( HtV ROUT ', ton . V-8 : 4speed Iron '&gt; Al ~o ni ce 9 rn a .
o ld Hei l e, · Bl oc k A ngu s · Pol l·
ed Her el ord Cross. Ph one
Yl11 -t&amp;1bohe r Spm . .
tUDUCl-- sAn 8. f ast w ith GoBese
Tob lel s lt f. -Va p " wa ter pill s".

19'/0 Amher st ~Olf 1'1 '1 HR
1970 Champion fl0lf 1:i 'J BR
I %~ Gener al b0)(1'J 'li:\R
I ~b8 PMC S:l)O l :l '1 BR
I 9~5 Prairi e Sc h oone r J' ij)(ij 1 BR
19/J Royal bnbo ssy b&amp;x 14 3 BR
19~1.,1 Star SOx 10 'l BR
197J ~ lo r OO x 14 'l BR
1'170 ~ylva b0xl'l2 BR
1968 Vi llages bOx_l'12 BR
190A Windsor Sh10''1 BR
11,170 K ir lo.wood l 'J)(b()J BR

~

H OM~ SA L~S

1967 TOTAL H KTR IC mobil e
home . furn ished . 3 bedr ..
w asher and drye r . Air condi ti oned 1 lot . '110 ft _ frontage .
S1'J .OOO . Phone 742-4!8'10 .
HO LL YPARK MOBIL I: h om e . S
h . tip o ut bt&gt; x l'J . !J92·bb37 . 9
ti l 4 week days , aft er 4:30
weekends . C ol(614 . 367 · 7 1 ~0 .

I~-;:;

1974 SC HtJ LTl l:txb~ . Totol elec·
I ri c. f-=ully f UI ni shed . Household
f urni shings. For sole S8500.
Con be seen at 825 S. 2nd .
A ve .. Middl e oart .

to Buy

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Pn(r·'i

Mqr.
Phon •· "97 7 181
WATER Wl:ll drilling . William T.
Gron1. 742· 2879 .
DUSTHSS FIRI:PLACl: and chim ney
clea ning . Th e Ch i mney Sweep .
Coli b1A . J'f3 -6057 .

Auto Sales
1977 MONZA SPYDER 305 engine.
Power steeri ng . Po wer brak es.,
AM ·f-=M radio . Mor e e)( ira's. Col i

1Y67 CUTLA SS . goad co ndit ion .
$300 or be's! o lf er . 992 -57H4.
.
.
.
l Y70 GA LA XIl; 500 2-door sedan .
Ai r condi1ioning . P.S., P.B., AT .
Good cond ition in side and o u1 .
h cetl enl go!&gt; milea ge. Good
ti res . Mu s! dri ve to apprec iate .
Call ofte ~ 5~~ - ?9~ - '1995 . _

GA!olAGE SA LE . Wed . a nd Thurs.
10 lil l dark . lent , e l ec tric
heater . mi sc.. clot hing . Turn
r ight at M emory Gcirden s
Cemetery , turn righ t o! next in _l ersect!o~~- ,2n~ ~o_u s~ ~ n *rl~h~.
YARD SALt , 2 fami ly , at lewis
Hudson res idence . o n !.:og le
~idge Rd ., Cou nty Rd . 31 . from
M emory Gard en s Ce mete ry ,
:ird house on right. Winter
clothe s. exce ll en t co ndit ion .
boo t s,
shoes . clo thing and
m isc. item s. Wed . 9 11114 .
YAR O SAU . Rain or sh in e ot 324
Beec h St. , M iddl epor t , Ohio.
Wed . 15th , lbth . 17 th . l Oam .
705 SPRING A VE . 2 fam ily Yard
Sa le . Thursday . Fr iday and
Saturday . Pomeroy , Ohio . Star ·
_, ~ ~g _N ~v _1 ~. 1q78

_ _ _.Y.!J Ciion _ _ __
BIG CHRISl'MA S Aucti on . fr i.
bpm . Bi g l rucH toad a ll new
11uar ont ecd nome bra nd toy s
011d o t her gilt 1term a t Ohin
R111'e r Au cti on . 5~7 H igh St .
Middl epor t , Ohio . N o' sol e on
.So t u rdoy_ni_g~t. .

for Sale
- --Pets
- --·- --·. -··
HO I LOW Horses . Bu y &lt;..P il

tr cde or lrout N!;!w oml u ... Pci
~a ddl e~ .

Rut h R f'CY£'~
{iJ l~) 698-321K.\ .

I ~69 OLUS CU TLA ~S CONVt f.l ·
TABLE. P.S., 0 .8 ., push bu ll'on
l op con,rol. In d o sh factory 8track tap e p layer. Good runn ·
ing con dition . Co li alter 5pm ,

•

1975 DATSUN PI CK UP. Good con·
ditian . low mileage. Step
bumpe r . Truclo. mirrors. Priced
to sel l. 985-39n .
1%8 FORD 4-doo r sedan . Good
wo r k cor . $495. 992 -2429.

If-= YO U ha'&gt;~e a se rvice to off e r .
wont to buy or sel l someth ing ,
oe loo k ing for wo rk
or
whatever .. . you' ll get resu lt s
foster with a Sen ti nel Wont Ad .
Col l 992 -2156.

HOO ~·

1972 SCOUT 4-w heel dr .. new
Iron ~. Very good shape . S2300
or bes t otter . 9~1 - 571:!4 .

1\, lhany .

~-

--

--

gas

new

furnace.

Pomeroy, 0.
3·15-tfc

BoXJ

doors.
WE HAVE NO OTHER
SIDELINES. ALL OF OUR
TIME IS SPENT SELLING
PROPERTY. IF YOU
WANT IT SOLD TRY US
AT 992-3325 .
VIRGIL B. SR. AND
GORDO!'!
B.
ARE
REALTORS
&amp;
APPRAISERS. HELEN L.
TEAFORD AND SUE P.
MURPHY
ARE
ASSOCIATE REALTORS.

ROGER·HYSELL

.· .. GAMGE

'I• mile oil Rl. 7 by-~ss on

t.ute &amp; Truck

I' .

IUAL tSTAH lOANS . CAN 'T !-=I NO
MORTGAGt MONEY? We hove
plent y at compe ti tive ra tes w ith
terms 10 30 yea rs . Veteren s
a nd non · 'lle teren s VA &amp;. FHA
loan s ar e availab le . IREL AND
MORTGAGE CO., 77 ~. ~to t e
St .
Alh e n s.
Ph o ne
6 1A-59'J.J05l
NtCl: O LDt H HOM!.: in good
' neighborh ood
in
Pomeroy.
Some recen t remode ling . Ce n tral hea ti ng. J or 4 bedroom s.
992· '1074 .

Housing
Headquarters
NtW THRH bedroom hom e.
1-=ireplocs. sun deck . P. ocre
wooded lat . 667· 3890, Tu ppers
Pl aim.

'
GeorgeS. Hobsletter
Jr.
Broker
Complete Real Estate
·service. Call us for what we
have available. Listings of
all kinds wonted. Homes,

.
Repair
'Also Transmission

.
Repa1r
Phooe 992-5682

SUCCESS STORY
We announced the opening of our
new Real Estate office a week ago
Sunday. We received our first listing
Monday and SOLD it Thur~day. Of
course we cannot promtse you
results this fast. However, we do
promise you the effort. Give us a
call.
OFFICE 992-2342
HOME 992-2449

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER
BILL CHILDS, MANAGER

~---·

1976 PLYMOUTH VOLAR ~ Road
Hunner _992 -572 4.

-- - -· · -

1978 Z21:l Camara . Red , Carmine
vi nyl , autom ati c. co nso l e, Cr'a ig
AM ·FM stereo 8 . style trim .
Ru s!proofed . 985·3928, Gar f ield r~s i den ce

HWOOD 80WtRS RtPAIH Sweepers. toasters. iron s, al l
sma ll appliance s. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Rou te 7 . Phone (b1 4) 985·
~B7~ .

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. ser·
vice , all mak es , 9Y:i-2284 . The
robric
Shop ,
Po meroy .
Authoriz!i!d Singer So les and
Serv ice . lf!e s horp~n-Sc i s~o~s ~
EXCAVA TI NG . dozer. loader and
bac k hoe work : dump tru ck s
and l o-boy s for hire : will haul
fi ll d irt , t o soil , limes t O'ne and
gra ve l. Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef fers . day ph one 992 ·7089, night
phor:e ?9? - ~5?!&gt; _or_~2 ·_ S~3~ .

Real Estate for Sale
HOMt:S.ITES for so le , I a cre- and
up. M id d leport , near Rut lan d.
1. _, _ ____ . - - ·Co ll991-748-THHtt BH&gt;ROOM frame home in
Mid~ le_Por ! : C_ol ~ 9~2_.:.3~5~~ _
FA RM FOH s o l ~ . House . 2 bar ns.
trail er . Lorge pond . 10 acres o r
82 acres. 7 42· 25b6.

THE 6ANt;'~
ALL HERE!

THE CROOI&lt;ED POLITICAN-- AND
THEIR MOBSTER. BUDDY!

ft\11}~ ID~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

J&amp;L

Un scramble these tour JUmbles.
cine letter to each square, to form
four ordinary wOrds .

'BORNLOSEH

r COJ'T ~. 6UT ~o wms I ORSALb

Blown lnsulatioo
JIM KEESEE

ABU\...1.-'( MW AT

.

dOzer , backhoe '
and di tcher . Char les H. Hat field , Ba ck
Hoe
Se r 'Jice . '

Rutl~n_:l . ?~io_. ~h~n! 7_41:__ 2_00~:..

IJITLE: ORPHAN ANNIE

WILL do ro ofi ng . construction.
plumb ing ond heating . No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone ..
742-23 48 .
--

k·i;che~ t~r ~i;h.
befo re 8 om

--· --- - -

Rt:NltRS ASSI STANCI: for S4fnior
Citi1ens. You may be Qb!e to
li ve in ou r apartment lor less
than S50 . Vi lla ge Monor.Apar t .
men I!. _ 992 · 7787 .

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug -

gested by the above cartoon.

h

--

VARN FEW

·- - - - - - -- - --- ·- ·~

Prlntanswerhere:"(

9AIIKS HAVE
BEEN S AFE

HOWE RY
AND
MARTIN
l:x ·
c o veti ng .
se plic
systems ,
doLer. backhoe . d•;mp truck , J
limestone, grovel.
blocktop
paving , Rt . 143 . Phone 1 (6 1.4 ) 1
698· 73::!1 .
- - - - - - -· - .
HATHROOMS
AND
Kitchen s
remode led , ceram ic tile . p lum·
bing. ca rpen t ry, and ge ne ral
maintenance . 13 year s ex · 1
·perience. 992· 3085.
~

Yesrerday·s

1

--

I Jumbles: FUDGE

·-~-

~

·-- -

RliEVtS TRADING Post . Pogevi l le .
Groceri es. d ry goods . hard· ...
wore , feed , tack shop . Spec ial •
25 1b . of dog food , $3 :88 .
:

ALLEYOOP
STAY R'ISkT WHel&lt;'e
UNTIL. I GET UP
OON'T CO INSIDE.1

AlnOMOBiu:--IN-SURAN-CEbeen ~
cancelled ? Last your opera tors '
license? Phon e qn.2 143 .
~

..CtEAN ING.- ca li ;
992-5587.
- - - - -- --- --- - - .,'

f UR NAC·~

~-

=---'

l-ler papa offer me
a job! I'se qoin' t'
tell'er I ain't talt.in'

I don't care wh4 4ou qoin
nuthin' ---r
t' see her?
about
~- " - - - , ~.,........... -~-1

Miss
Elva!

3 Leos
.(Dismay
5 Plalfonn
on wheels
river
6 One - time
15 Football pass 7 Sunnount
17 Have l.O .U.'s 8 Lace a round
18 Not long ago 10 Wobbling
19 "Big whee l" 12 Plains
ZO Building wing
dwelling
ZI. Unaspirated 16 Trust
consonant
21 Prop for
Terrifying
Diogenes
ZO Kind of

Yesterday's ADBwer
27 Moon
22 Flaked
goddess
23 President's 29 Bluste red
advisers
30 Greek poet
:U Vindicator
31 Slow : mus.
25 Litter's
34 Feat
littlest
36 Wallaba

.•

i •

~EGtUL.Aft

1 Cain's
victim

Cl1878byHEA, IM.,T.M. "'t. U.S. P!rl.tlll. TH~

AXYDLBAAXR

WINNIE

•you'RE Naf 'THINKING OFGIVINo
uP &amp;How eUSINES&amp;, ,..,RE you ,

. WENDY?

•

1

IT 8 CROSSED
MV MINI/.

LONGFELLOW

·"'

One letter s imply sta nds Cor anolher. In this sample A is
used for the lhree L's, X for the 1wo O's,l etc. Single letters,
aposlrophes, the length and fo r mation or the words are all
hints. Each day ti]e code letters are different .

GIVE UP NOW?

I WAS, OUT OF WORK FoR ALMOST
A YEAR eEFORE I GOT ll115
PART•. .'TI-iEN 1HE BHOW CLOSES,
AFTER SIX MON1HB. AN"' THA715
WITH GOOP REVIEWS!

INYO

PX
NP

I X'K

T WH 0 K Z . -

PGO
GXTO

NTZ

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE FIHST OF ALL DEMOCRATIC
DOCTRINES IS THAT ALL MEN ARE INTERESTING..,--- G.K.CHESTERTON
([) 1978 King Fe1t.ures Syndi~:at.e, lnt: .

SHUX- · HE'S
MADE THREE
NAMES FER
HISSELF· ·

____Givejl.wa_}l_ ___ _
SMAlL PURl: whit o pood l e puppy .
need~ go od ho rne . YY'J-'Jq l 'J
- . .
.
All WHIH lo 1.· oh iP adul t mole c ~ l
lithll tro ur o.: d Also hlor • 1 '
lens. Meigs 1 hm1onr: So• i ~···,9&lt;/'). ?597 o r 9fJ) . 'J.6_311 .
:t HH: t t lTHN ' .
I rome . 4!:J ~

t r,

qrv t:

In

9'''A'

have slam interest. Thus,
when South res ponded t wo
·clubs a nd bid three clubs
over No rth 's two hearts,
North knew that South was
North 's three-spade call
was a c ue bid that satd he
held a good notrump and

interest in a club slam .

Pass
Pass

az••

Pass

Pass

Pass

South

H

you can respond two in any

'

show a minor suit unless we

South's four diamond call

East
Pass
'Pass
Pass

When you play Stayman

SN A L 0 K E WJ P

one notrump .
We also don't bother to

West

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

TNMOH

and let our partner suffer in

Vulnerable : North-south
Dealer : North
~

Opening lead : • 2

FXKJL,

it. The second way is t o
respo nd two clubs and bid
three clubs next.
We don'tlike either m e th·
od. Ins tead we just don 't
bother to s how a club bust

interested in a slam .

Pass

CRYPTOQUOTES

BUT YOU'RE DOINGSOWELL.WHY

Oswald Ja&lt;;: oby and Alan Sontag

• 92
• A 4
• A Q8 43

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

Jl-1~

BRIDGE

+ K J 86

Is

I. '

Wednesda y, NO\'. 15

NORTH
11 ·15
• A7
¥A K 8 5
• Q 10 3
• K J 96
WEST
EAST
• Q 10 9 3
• 54 2
• J 74
• Q 10 6 3
• J9 752
• K 86
• 7 52
• 10
SOUTH

DOWN

p!NS IN

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; S:S()-PTLCiub 13.
S:S5-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:00.:.PTL Club 15; 7:00
Club 8.
6:25-For You ... Biack Woman 10.
6:45-MOrn lng Report 3; 6:S!f-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13: 6:55-Chuck While Reports 10; News
13.
7:OQ-TO&lt;Iay 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; J elsons 10.
7:15-Weather 33; 8 :0Q-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St . 33.
9:00-Merv Grilfln 3; Phil Oonahue 4, 13, 15 ;
Emergency0ne6 ; Hogan 's Heroes 8; Match Game
10.
9:3!f-Brady Bunch 8; Family Altair 10.
10 :0Q-Card Sharks 3,4, 1S; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10 :3()-Jeopardy 3.4, 1S; Andy Grlfllth 6; Pr ice is Right
8,10; $20.000 Pyram id 13 .
11 :OQ-High Rollers 3,4,15 : Happy Days 6, 13.
11 :3!f-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ; Family Feud 6, 13; News
4: Love ol Life8, 10; Sesame St . 20; Nova 33.
11 :S5-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
.
12 :0D-Newscenler 3; Bob Braun 4 ; America Alive 15;
· News 6, 10; Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday
Magazine 13.
12 :3()-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
E lee . Co. 20,33.
1:OQ-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Not For
Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Li ves 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2:00-Qne Lile to Live 6,13: 2:3!f-Doctors 34,15;
Guiding Lighl 8. 10.
3:0D-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Lil ias Vega &amp; You 20.
3:3!f-Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10; Oick Cavell 20.
4 :oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Bailie of the Planets 4:Merv
Griffin 6 : Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame Sl.20,33
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares lS.
4:3()-Bewilched 3; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 1S.
5:0Q-Star Trek 3; ,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8: Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Py le, USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunc h 15.
5:3!f-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:0Q-News 3,4.6,8.10.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3!f-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; CArol Bur nett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:0Q-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13: Family Feud 8; News 10; Love American
Slyle 15; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20 ; Consumer
Survival Kll 33.
7:3!f-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4; Cricket in
Times Square 6; Waltons 8; $100,000 Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The Road 13: Dolly 15;
MacNei !-Lehrer Report 20,33 ..
8:0Q-Lifellne 3,4, 15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13: Waltons 10;
Nova 20,33.
8:3()-What's Happening 6, 13; Please Stand By 8.
9:0Q--.Qulncy 3.4,15; Pear l 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0 8,10;
Global Paper Forum 33: Duchess of Duke St reet 20.
10 :0Q-David Cassidy 3,4,15: Barnaby Jones 8,10;
News 20 .
10 :3!f-You Bet Your Lile 20.
11 :OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dic k Cavell 20; Lil ias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hulch 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; A~C News 33 ,· Movie " Arriveder c i ,
Baby!" 10.
12 :3()-News 8; 12 :4()-SWAT 6,13.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:5!f-News 13.

A slam by way of Stayman

39 Write """'"~~-1--1-40 Occupation
41 Daze off

Dllftwell.

II ''

•''

covering

ifRV 'lb GET rr'
~,.RI\16HT, !:RNIE:
- Wi I'CE.P I HE
'rH&amp; UFr'•HAI\ID

..

'•'

2 Wa ll

33 Changed
35 Hire
37 Hemp
38 Become
complex

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

.•

•. Rulhlnii

lMaxim
9 Baseball
ploy
II Mighty
13 Lake port
14 Nebraska

Scot.

9' and 12'

'

1 "I -Camera"

rodent
%7 Hellos
%8 Actor
Vigoda
-fl//iW/11 29 Type of
library
32 Waterfall :

4.88

Floor

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

it~

Rubber Back C.pet

RUTLAND
FURNinJRE

ENGULF

Jumble Book No. 12, cont1lnlng 110 puzzles, 11 l'lliltblelor 11 .75 postplld
from Jumble, ctottllantwiPIPer, Box 34, Norwood, N.J.07648. k'lcludt your
name, 1ddren, rip code and maka check• p1yable to Newap1parbook1.

:

--

KNAVE CHALET

ITS FACE VALUE

PULLIN-S EX-cAVAT!NG. c~p , ;.~
Serv ice .' Phone 992·2476 .
..t ·

--

rn (XI I r

Answer: What a good make· up job is worth-

- ·-

-

I 1)

(Answers tomorrow)

lHAT LONG···

SAVE A' LOT

MAKES A '
BED FOR

c

II

''

ed. opt _ Ca l l

r) r

HIM~

Savt30 pct. to so pet.
on hHiing CO!I
Experiencund
.Miy Insured ·
'i ',,
: FrH Ell.
,,
·call9t2··2172
1.---· _·-_.".:.i1:;:·3:..·1:.:.m;,;o.o::.:.._. i :

&amp;.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

5:0D-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Roggers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
10; Allerschool Specia l 13; Brady Bunch 1S.
5:3!f-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co . 20.33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:0Q-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6:3!f-N BC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:0Q-Cross-WIIs 3; PM Maaazlne 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Sha Na Na 8; News1.Q; Love American Slyle
15; Coping With Kids 20; Big Green Magaz ine 33.
7:3!f-Dolly 3; Dati ng Game 4; Malch Game PM 6;
Price Is Right 8; The Judge.10; That's Hollywood
13; Wild Ki ngdom 15; Mac Neil -Lehrer Reporl20,33 .
8:0Q-Dick Clark' s Live Wednesday 3.4.15; Elaht . is
Enough 6, 13; Pean uts 8, 10; Elctlons '78 : Prelude lo
'80 20,33.

W ~ ~Ul~ ®

•

TWO S~.:DROOM.

TH~ SA5EMEt-JT!

NO--THE Fei! THESE
BUMS HAVE GOT T HE
LOCAL POLl CE CHIEF lj.J
THI:IR POCKET! &amp;UT
FIRST JUAN'LL MAKE
SOMe OTHEil. CALL7

11-9-1 mo.

DRIVE ALITTLE

-·

3 A ND 4 RM . furn ished an d un·
fu rnis h ed
opt s .
Ph o n e
992 -5434 . .

J-IOT TO MENTIOt-J THAT
LOAD OF MARIJUANA

220 E. Main StrHt,
Pomeroy,O.
Call992-7013
For Friee Estimates

NEW
.LISTING
CARPETING.
Established for many
years. Bar and restaurant
1n Middleport. 2 buildings,
several. rentals. Call for
Information . $55,000 .00.
NEW LISTING In
'' .
Pomeroy , 1'12 story, part
basement. 3 bedrooms,
'.
garage . ONLV $11,900.00.
''
RANCH 3 bedroom,
All carpet lntllllod with
large nice kitchen. 1.10 ' poddllt~ at no charge. ·
acres. Carport, e•cellent .1 Exfl'rl tnstlllatlon.
condition,
close
to
Pomeroy . V.A. $29,500.00.
FARM - 70 a-c:res, ranch
type house, . barn, other
As Low As
buildings, river fronlage.
BELOW FAIR MARKET
1
~~~
VALUE . $33,000.00.
NEW HOME - 1 acre, In
the country, family room,
Vinyl ·
dining room, deck, 1'12
baths, basement, wood
burning fireplace .
Covering In SlcQ .~
$51,500.00.
NOW
FEATURING
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
Buy wllere you can c:Ome Iii
AS A SALES AID.
and- whot you're gettl119
REAl.TORS
- Good selectlonf -. Fully
Henry E. cleland
stocked.
.;..._..._..._,
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
REALTOR-ASSOCIATES
tall742-;1211
Leona Cleland
T~lK-TO
Kallly Cleland
I;
Wendell or Htrb Grate
CALL TODAY
or Gene Smith
992-2259 992-6191 992-2561
i' •

COUNTHY MOBILE Home Pork .
Rou te 33 . n or th of Pomeroy .
Lo rge l?t ~. ~a: I ~9.? --~47_Y . __ .

-

CROOI&lt;EC&gt; LABOR 13055··

HAILt HAIL!
LOOKS LIKe

,,
~--------------------:~
SAVE ON

For Rent

997-17BB.

· CAPTAIN EASY

BRADFORD . Au ctioneer . ~om: 6
lete Sei''ll ice. Phone 949-2.487 ~
~r &lt;W-1· 2000. Racine , Ohio, Crill ~
I:Jrodford .

1972 OLOS tUTLASS '1-door hard·
top . air , AM-FM red ia with
speakers . $1000. 992 -2298 or
992-7666 after 5pm .

- --- · -

.

.OliOTT
APPUANCEII

1 .
4 -~11~
-EXCAVATING.

farms, commercial. Your

satisfaction Is our goal.
Give us a try.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
New Lima Road
Hutchinson Sub-Div .
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003

Petticoat Junction 15.

Your Headquarters For
Annstrong Carpeting

--

REALTY

WEDNESDAY , NOVEMBER 15,1978
Wild Jr. ·
4:0Q-Mister Carloon 3; Battle of lhe Planets 4; Merv
Grlflln 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13: Hollywood Squares 15.
4:3!f-Bewllched 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
3 : 3!f-~sn· s; J9ker's

Sf. Rt. 1'24 fllwnd Rutland, I . Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Therma I insu~tion
0.

Real Estate for Sale·

HOBSTEITER .

IN THE CITY?

Chester, Ohio
10·30·c

siding , storm windows and

Jack W. C,H'&gt;0Y

-

bath ,

Ph. 992·2848

dav,

Jack's Septic
Timk Service

Reasonable Prices

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

Service. Any

-anytime.
Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginther 985·3806

References Available
Phone 742-2029
10-22·1 mo.

water for you . Al.;iminum

GET.V.'&gt;&amp;
Hotpornt Appl

99J.1q9s.

POMEROY - Want a good
buy for $16.500 ..we have a 3
besement, yard outof high

TIMBtR . POMEROY rare st Pro·
ducts.. Top price for standin g
sow ti mber . Co li 99'J· 59b5 or
Kent Han by , 1-4Ab-!:J570 .

Yard Sale

ni ce k.it. with bar, din ing
the country

overlook i ng

natural

19/5 MONTI: CA RL O . t)(cell en t
con diti on . Lots ol e~~:tro s. S2700 .
99'1 -7bfJ9 .

JUNK BATHH itS. $2 . Coppe r
jScper ib . Clean aluminum 15c
pe r lb . . n o can s. ,_:or lim ited
tim e only. Hider 's Sa l vage . SR
124 .

ReSidential and commer·

Construction
Maintenance

with

beth , kitchen, natural' gas,
&amp; c ily water. Now only
$11,000 .
·IN THE COUNTRY - New
3 bedroom fashionable
home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

bdroomer,

CHI P WOOD .
Poles
ma1c
d iame te r 10" on larges t end .
S8 .50 per ton . Bund l ed sl ob ,
$6 .50 per ton . Delivered to
Ohio Pollet Co .. Rt . 2. Pomeroy .
992 -2tJ89 .

OLD COINS, pocket wo tches .
doss ri ngs , wedding bond s.
diam o nds_ Gold or silver. Coi l
Roger Wam s ley ~ 7~~ · 2331 . .

building

business

CA R~ for the e lderl y in ou r
home . Ph one ~91 .'/31 4 .

WIL L

742 -2826 .

O LD ,_:uRNITUR ~ . ice boxes . brass
bed s, iron beds, desh , etc. .
co mpl e te h ouse hol ds . Write
M .D. M ill er . Rt . &lt;1 . Pom e roy or
call 99'1 -7'/bO .

kitchen ,

and e lectricity , on hard
roads ..
.

S.lll'

I ', ACRI: . 11 lf bO mobil e home
near Oex te r . 942 -)85'8 .

eat-in

besement, and .66 of an
acre. $25,000 .
.
RUTLAND
74x80

"[ervices Offer-=e.=
d __

Drug

cial . Call for estimate. 24

MOORE'S

=

N (' l ~o n

Carpentry, E lecfrica I,
Painting

conditioned , office, loading
dock, cify utilities, and out

bath ,

'

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

equipped kitchen, 2 car
garage with shop over.
Asking $23,000 .
POMEROY - Business
building , approx. 26x80, air
of high water. Want $40,000.
RACINE Good 4
bedroom , air conditioned
home . Natural gas furnace,

....

J. R. Construction
Co.

For The Best
Price In Town
. See
Denver Kapple
At

side . Plenty of fire wood
and lots of country road .
S40,000. MiJy take less .
MODI LE HOME LOTS - 2
already lor your trailer.
Water taps, septi ~ tanks

Fur All Your

PT . PLE ASANT , W .VA .

want~d

w. Carsey,

9..,~ck

1' , bath . underpi nni ng, SISOO
and ass um e loon . 94 9-:/68J or
~4:i · 3J 11

BK S MOBIL~

bedroom brick &amp; frame.
1rh baths, natural gas heat,

PHONE 992·2772

8: 3!f-Bug·s Bunny 8.1 0.
9:0D-Movle " Bud &amp; Lou" 3,4, 1S; The Word 8. 10; Gre~t
Performances 33; Prisoner 20.
10 :0Q-Vegas 6,13: Race War In Rhodesia 33: News 20.
10:3()-Turnabout 20.
.
11 :OD-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Lilias, Yoga &amp; Vou 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Woman 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33: Movie "The Boston
Slrangler " 10.
12 :3!f-N.e ws 8; 12 :4!f-SWAT 6,13.
1:OQ-Tomorrow 3.4.
1:5!f-News 13.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DO YOU LIVE

11 -3·1 mo.

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
1,10·18-1 mo .

Hour

992-3325
216 E. Second Street .
NEW LISTING - 3 year
old 5 bedroom home .. Has 5
bedrooms, walk -in closets,
large family room . dining ,
sui1 deck and 2 ca r garage
ori large -lot . $65,000.
MIDDLEPORT
4

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Apply in person .
111 Court St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

l9b~S to r b0xl'l18R

)11r. and Mrs. Reed J elfers
tient s in home o r hospit al
'192 -b 191:1.
were hosts recently for an
.
oyster supper honoring Mr. Nl:HJ ~OOM AN D BOARD IN
PRI V ATE
HOME FOR . MY
and Mrs. T. J. Spurlock of
BHOT H ER ,
u ;O
G ilMOR E.
Albany who Will leave for
P ~I::FER RURAL HOMt . CA N
Florida soon to spend the
PAY 5190 PER MONTH . CALL
winter. Others attending
COLLE CT 1·486·6071 BETWEEN 7
AND 9 PM. HH I:N G . BR YAN .
were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan.
Lost and Found
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur .LOST: BORDER .col li e, br own and
Crabtree attended a Gideon
white . in lan gsvill e ar ea . mal e .
Phone 7 42-3014 or "/ .4 2-25'/1 .
Dinner at the Hocking Valley
Motor Lodge.
rOUN D: BLACK and whi l e you n g
Harold Gillogly is confined
d og in Pom e r ~y area wi th col·
. lor 992·1174 . J.D."
to Holzer Medical Center,
FOUNO : SMAll rnho:ed breed dog
Gallipolis, after suffering
wi th pup . Fam i ly . Hlocl-: and
back injury in a fall while
whi te wi th brown markings
employed in Jackson.
Cal l ~85 - 4 1 44
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gaston,
LOST : PAIH Poodle and pa r!
local, are arutoWiclng the
Pelo.i nese . l emole. b la ck with 4
birth of a granddaughter,
brown paws. Grey on bock . red
co llar . Chester R1. 248. Phone
Kristen Anne, born to their
~t:IS - 4 312 .
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard McDaniel LOST: SlACK and whit e l em ol e
Wa l lo.e r
in
Rac ine- Po rtl and
of Albany, at O' meness
area . Coll9_49_-2?!:J! ~ r ~4~ - ~1 ~9 .
· Memorial Hospital, Athens .
· ·Other grandparents are Mr.
Camping Equipment
. and Mrs. Glen McDaniels,
· , Athens Rt., and great· 1974 STA RCRAf=T GALAXY . fold
dow n . hard lop camper . Sleeps
.. .grandparents are · Mr. and
8. new gas furnace , 3 burne r
-. ·Mrs. G. B. McDaniels, and
range . awning and p o l es , '1 gas
Mts. Goldie Gillogly, Albany.
bo ttl es . eHe ll en t condi tion _
She has a sister, Charity.
$19~0 . '1'17·27B6.
Relatives who were called
; to Ann Arbor, Michigan
Pels for Sale
. · because of the death of Max RISING - ST AI( K;nne ls. Boordi;:;g
McCallie .were Mr. and Mrs.
and grooming , all breed s.
Che shi re . J67 -0292 .
·Clay Jordan, Mr. and Mrs.
Gavern Jordan and Jerrie
Sue, Mrs. Larry. Birchfield,
wanted to Buy
· Mrs. David Llewellyn, Mr.
WA NT 10 buy · old 45 and 78
' and Mrs. Mendal Jordan and
ph o n o graph
r eco r d s.
~ al l
· Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree. Mrs.
9"1'1 -6370 or Co ntac t Martin rur
niture
.' .McCallie is the former
Velmla Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Perry
spent a weekend in Colwnbus
· ·with relatives.
Relatives and friends in the
· · The supper at Carpenter
area attended funeral ser·
·· ·Baptist Church on Saturday
vices In Albany at the Blgony·
, · evening was well attended.
Jordan Funeral Home for
· · Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
Esther Dailey, 83, who passed
. ·Jordan and Sarah, acaway in Columbus. Mrs .
• · companied by his parents,
·Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan, Dailey lived on the School Lot
• Albany road for most of her
. spent two days travelin~ into
life and was well known in
· the mountains of West
this entire community.
Virginia.
·

.. '

DAILY SENTINEL

992-2725

Tur ner , deceased , late of
29645 Briar Ridge Road, ·

15, 22, 29, 3tc

lHE '

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

-. -.Real
- - .Estate
-- - for
·- - Sale"
- -,- ·- 1------,..-----.,-'

SNOW
TIRE SALE

for

GUN SHOOT. Ra ci ne Vo l un t eer

fir e {)ept. fve ry Sa tu rday 6::!0

Ouolity on d per ·
01r
~o l e
no,w .

I

CfiiUlDSE
iNSULATION'
l6.50 per bag
J&amp;L INSULAnON
JIM KEESEE

All
Type
l~dustrial
Comrnercial and Home
Building
Any Type Improvements
To Existing Structures
All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small
· ;
25 Years Experience
All Work Guaranteed

,. 992-2174

tX(LflfNl RIDING ho r se. H years
old . See n u~ed for 4·H. Glen
Oee ter . long t3o11om , Ohio .

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

GUN SHOOT . Racine G un Club .
!:very Sunday I r:• n . fa cto ry
chok e guns onl y.

1 Radiator~

11,170 rotw ' I to n 'o r 14b7 ,_:ord 1
1o n ~ 1ok e . ('iuol w hee ls. SIOOO
o&lt; b e~ I a lf p, ~9:t - 76Sf.? .

HELP WANTED

s ia n . Judy McG raw .

I

(11)

·

! WANT to thank every o ne w ho
though t o f me whi l e l w m 1n
the ho sp ital lor the cor d:. a nd
fl o we rs I rec e1vod . Also l or
1hose lhot v i s ited m e
lewi!'&gt; Mi ller

.

OH l'A l Jl.l f~
formo n rP
1 4/ 'J.J/!:J .

- . -

-

- - ....... --- - - - -·- Notices
--- --- - -- - --

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

·

~~ · .

Moum1rig and
Price Buildeis

! Service -

t- iRt:-WOuD u ll hardwood ~p l.t
onrl d•' l•vt•rcrl . SJS I ruc k lood o r
SlO o
rn•ci
(14'J -b'l9':J o r
H4J ')lf3:3

9..,.:!_ack W. Car.sey, Mgr.
~ Phone 992-2181

Contact: Holzer Medical Center, P.O. Box

Mubih• Honw sa les and Van\ sail'S
IUt' &lt;tt"l't.' jllt'tl uti !~· With l'Will with
tlnll't' . 25 l't•nt l'haq!t• for &lt;ul" c· arryllll-! Rux Numbt-•· In Curt• of Tht.• &amp;·n-

,r.."- $347

Pomeroy Landmark

280, Gallipolis, Oh.

·r - - - - - - - " ' 1
'
•~ EXPERIENCED

a&lt;
\ Ollll l lng
mo chrn P. Ph.o u e 1 P.-- tt..l..w-t ,,... • ..._....,
'.JI.,I'I 'Jl)b lhc Doily ~en l 111cl
.......... t• tM
111 Court ~ li CE" ! . Pomer oy . 1 c.;.,
l)l lto

Town &amp;•Country

111 nwmory. Ca rd of Thank:-&lt; &lt;mtl
OIJituarv : ti t't'II\S J,M' r wt•n t. $:\.110
mimmuin ."Ct~sh 111 atln mvt· .

~uHRouGH~ ~~Nst - M/\1 1c

\,: ~~g.l.

Competitive salary, excellent benefits, shift
differentiaL
and tuition
assistance
program .

Atl-: ru mlllllo( utl wr tl l&lt;!lll'I'IISt'l' lllin·
dct)'.S Will Ot• diitr~t·d Ill tlk· I dn~

COA l I IMI ~IO N£ ~n nci . qrovnl .
r n lt llrlll &lt;hlnr rdc . l e&gt;rl li •fp r rlcg
tnnci tin rl (rll types of ~u ll h
&lt;r&gt; l.., rC'I r ~ n i l Worlo.~ . lnc .. l. Mn111
\t Porm·r 0y 992 -Jl:ll.,l I .

DICKTHACY
I•

L_------~~--~--------~--~·

For Sale

ANTI-FREEZE

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
FOR R.N.'s AND L.P.N.'s
ALL SHIFTS ON CCU, OB,
AND MEDICAL-SURGICAL

f'll&lt;l l ' ~t·

I 511

;ttlil\•s
litla)·.!&lt;

'

Help_~anted

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wurtb m· Untk r
C&lt;tsh
100

- -

Business Services

suit except two clubs as an
attempt to play that contract. A bad hand with a club

suit is a horse of a different
color . So, how d o you show a
club bust?
One way is to use the

three.club response to show

DADBURN
CHICKEN THIEF

was a second cue bid and
enough for North . He closed
the bidding at six clubs.
South's queen of clubs cov·
ered East 's 10 at trick one
and South decided the best
line of play would be to try to
ruff two s pades in dummy .
He cashed the ace a nd king,
ruffed a s pade, r eturned to
his hand with the ace of
diamonds, ruffed his last
spade, overtook dummy's
kin g of clubs with hts ace ,
drew the last trump and
eventua lly conceded a diamond .
!NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN . J

(For a copy of JACOBY MODfRN , ·send Sf to: .. Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P.0 . Box 489. Radio Cily
Station. New York. N. Y. 10019.}

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Nov . 1~. 1978

United Press International
The dollar opened higher. on
European money markets
tOday and rallied against the
Japanese yen in a strong sign
for President Carter's dollarrescue plan and gold fell
.
sharply.
Gold opened $3.625 an
ounce. lower in London at
$206.75 and slumped $4 .~ in
Zurich to $207 .375.
"There was strong selling
pressure on gold which
helped the dollar r~main
stable and firm," a Swiss
dealer said .
The dollar opened higher
against all the main
European currencies.
It was up in Zurich at 1.6335
Swiss francs 1.6302!) Tuesday
"night and in Frankfurt at
1.8937 marks from 1.8855. The
price in Amsterdam was
2.0475
against
2.0360
overnight.
The dollar rate improved
more than two centimes in
Paris to open at 4.3450 francs
against 4.3200. In Brussels,
the rate was 30.27 Belgian
francs against 30.135 at
TueSday 's close . The dollar
opened in Milan at 840.50 lira
up from 838.80.
The dollar a lso rallied in
Tokyo, closing at 190.05 yen,
compared
with
188.65
Tuesday. Turnover totaled
$437 million , up from $311
million Tuesday.

Tokyo dealers said the
dollar was actively tradect
with buyers a nticipating its
stabilization for the time
being . There is no room for
active dollar selling on the
Japanese market, one dealer
said, because the Central
Bank is prepared to buy at
lows.

Citizen
(Continued from pa ge 1)
said " there are thousands of
persons in this country who
live in total fear that their
utilities will be cut off." So
far , he said, state-level
regulators have provided
" more
sabotage
than

assistance."
The state s where the
coalition will be working are
Pennsylvania, New York,
New Jersey , Delaware,
Georgia, North Carolina,
West Virginia, Kentucky,
Maine , New Hampshire ,
Massachusetts, Connecticut,
Montana , South Dakota ,
Wyoming, Colorado,
Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota ,
rilinois, Indiana , Michigan
and· Ohio.
One coalition member said
President Carter's approval
of legislation deregulating
the price of new natural gas
amounted to 1a " dea th
warrant"
for
many
consumers unless policies
preventing shut-offs are
pushed through. The group
said a combination of higher
gas and electricity prices and ·
the forecast of another severe
winter promises to make the
problem even worse this time
around.

7'h Pet. per year on a
4 year certificate of
deposit.
minimum
$1,000.00
deposit
A substantial penalty is
invoked on all cer1ifkate
withdrawn prior

of maturity.

POISE

GOLDE N ACCEN T

Guaranteed by Keepsa ke
lor perfe ct clarity , precise
cu t . line whit e co lor. Perman ently regis tered

Law-a-way
Plans Sufficient
For Any Type
Gift

Meigs Co. Branch
~

'CSb.
The Athens County

&lt;:l9l'

~alers

21 2 E . MAIN ·POMEROY

Annual pullers' dinner held

HOSPITAL NEWS

Dollar higher

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second At.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

-----

.Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Carol Wines,
Middleport; Jennie Williamson, Rutland ; Eugene Fisher,
Pomeroy; Billy Brewer,
Portland ;
Diana
Lee,
Pomeroy ; Debbie Davis ,
Syracuse; Marvin Tom,
Middleport.
Discharged :- Pamela
Imboden, George Warner,
Adams,
Anna
E loise
Wheeler, Debra Norris.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Nov. 14)
Sherman Bonecutter,
Merrill Brown, William
Cargo, Aiva Cook.. Terry
Dotson, Grace Blaze, Wayne
Goodn it e, Mrs. Donald
Griffin
a nd
daughter.

Michelle Halstead , Clyde
Hammon s, Gertrude
Haeberoin, Albert Keaton,
Chester Kelley, Richard
Lambert, Floyd Landrum,
Jr., Dorothy Malone, Betty
Massie, Clara McMast er ,
Sherri Nelson, Dor othy
Nibert , Charles Robinson ,
Stella Roush, Olivia Sa.ltsman, Maggie · Toppin!},
Amanda Van Matre, Mrs.
Martin Wallace arid daughter
and Heather Wood.
Births, Nov. 14
Mr . and Mrs . Frances
Secoy, son, Kerr.
Mr. and Mt s . Herman
Simms, son, Crown City.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Giles Hysell,
son, Minersville.

Negotiations
may end soon

Su utheast Ohio Garuen
Tractor Pullers held their
aMuai dinner recently at the
Mei gs Inn in Pomeroy .
Trophies were awarded in
each class to the highest point
wiMer. The point winner is
determined by the number of
hitches and winning of Is\,
2nd, or 3rd place.
High point trophy winners
were : 800 lb. class, Cheryl
Folmer; 900 lb. class, t:ts•e
Folmer; 1,000 lb. class, Jim
Folmer ; 1,200 lb. class, Jim
Folmer; 900 lb. open class,
Elsie Folmer: 1,000 lb : open
class, Elsie Folmer. ·
New officers ehicted are
David Washburn, president;
Dan Smith, vice president ;
Judity Washburn, secretary-treasurer; Elsie Folmer,
reporter.
·
Those attending the dinner
were Mr. and . Mrs. David
Washburn, Leslie Washburn,
Coolville; Mr. ·and Mrs. Dan
Smith, Tammy, and Ted,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Kautz; and Bill, Chester ; Mr .
and Mrs. Jim Folmer and
Cheryl, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Gaul, Victor, Jr.,
and Lisa, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Fry, Ruth and Sue,
Rock Springs; Mr. and Mrs.
Don Batrell, Kirk and Andy,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Donohue, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wolfe,
Racine ; and Frank Casto,
Pomeroy.
Anyone wishing to join the
club or would like to have
more information may
contact any of the officers.
New members are welcome.

three parties - Egypt, Israel
and the Unitect States - will
do some saul-&amp;earcbing and
then
resume
the
negotiations."
" We hope Israel will reconsider its position in the
resolve the "crisis" over a interests of · peace because
link between the pact and a . without a solution to the
comprehensive Middle East whole problem there can be
no peace and Israel must take
settlement.
Sadat said it was this crisis this into account," be said.
In Paris, Egyptian Foreign
that prompted him to send ·
Vice
President
Hosni Minister Butros Ghali said
Egyptian-Israeli
Mobarak to Washington the
today to deliver a message " negotiations are in a grave
and hold talks with President crisis.''
Egypt wants the treaty to
Carter.
The Egyptian leader spoke have a built-in specific link
progress
toward
in Jsmailia as Israel with
postponed a plaMed Cabinet Palestinian autDnomy in the
debate on a new U.S. peace Israelioccupied Jordan West
formula tD await the fresh Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Egyptian proposals the Sadat bas always maintained
Egyptian vice president is the Palestinian problem is
"the core and the crux" of the
carryin~ to Washington .
Before
leaving
for Middle East conflict.
Israel opposes a codified
Washington, Mobarak said a
Palestinian solution is "the link.
· In Damascus , Syrian
minimum " acceptable to
President Hafez Assad today
Egypt.
Sadat addressed a meeting again rejected the Camp
of Suez Canal University David accords and said the
professors and student Unlte!J States bas no right to
leaders at the city of impose a Middle E3st peace
Ismailia. His remarks were solution 011 · tbe Arabs. "We
carried by the official Cairo refuse to accept that one
country of the world bas the
Radio.
' ~ Although we have covered right to impose its opinion on
more than 90 per cent of the the others," A~d said in a :
road in negotiations with broadcast on Damascus
Israel (in Washington) the ffi!dio .
situation is crisi!H'idden in
POTLUCK SUPPER
regard tD the rest of the
Past
Matrons
of
road," Sadat said . " This is
Evangeline
Chapter,
order
of
what made me send my vice
Eastern
Star,
will
hold
a
president to see President
[iotluck
supper
at
6
p.m.
Carter in line with Egypt's
policy of building a durable Friday at the Temple.
peace based on justice and a Members are to take their
solution of the problem of the own table service.
Arab nation (world) with
honesty and sincerity."
SERVICE SET
"If this crisis can be
A Missionary Service will
averted, we shall move on
with all our strength," Sadat be held at the Pomeroy
said. " But if this crisis causes Wesleyan Holiness Church on
us
to
suspend
the State Route 143 at 7:30 p.m.
negotiations, then maybe the Thursday . The Rev. Leroy
Adams, Jr., will be in charge
of the service. The Rev.
Dewey King is pastor.

By MATHIS CHAZANOV
United Press International
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat said today the IsraeliEgyptian treaty negotiations
will be suspended unless
Israel changes its position to

Fined in the court · of
Pomeroy, Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night were
George McDaniel, Middleport, $50 an&lt;! costs, on an
intoxication charge and Chris
Smith, Pomeroy, $300 and
costs on an assault ·charge.
Forfeiting bonds were
Cheryl Lefebre, Pomeroy,
$30, post~d on a speeding
charge; Larry Hargraves,
Mason, $32, speeding; Ralph
Belew, Powell, Tenn. , $30,
speeding ;" Gene Jeffers, $32,
speeding; Carl Kehler, Jr.,
Mason, $2:&gt;, speeding; Steve
Peyton, Arlington, Va.,
$30,improper turn ; Terry
McCune, Rutland, possession
of a controlled substance,
$100.

ACTIONS FILED
for
monies
Actions
allegedly due on promissory
notes have been filed in the
Meigs County common pleas
court.
The suits are The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. against
David Klein, Pomeroy;
David A. and Terri I. Carsey,
Middleport , and Harry
Stewart, Route 2, Cheshire.
The bank is the plaintiff in all
three of the actions.

The SEVILLE • K25 860
Bold and massive Mediterranean
styled consol e with full brea~fr o nt
base . Concealed casters. Dark

fin ished-Oak color (G4748DE) or
Pec an color (G4748P). Ge nuine wood
veneers and select hard wood solids
on top. Front, ends and base of
matc hi ng simulated wood material.
Aut oma tic Fine ~ tunin g Control .

$5

95

~~~~:.~B~r:illiant Chromacolor Picture Tube

stoP
\n '

toda'J·

• 100% Solid-State Titan 300V Chassis
• Patented Power Sentry Voltage
Regulating System
• One-Knob VHF and ,UHF Channel
Selection
• Chromatic One-button Tuning
THIS WEEK ONLYI ENDS SAT. 18th

INGELS FURN·ITURE &amp;JEWELRY
"

106 N. 2nd Ave.

"Two In One Store"
Middleport. 0 .

Jly JOSEPH SEGERA .
COWMBO, Sri Lanka (UP!) - A chartered airliner
carrying Indonesian Moslems home from a pilgrimage to
Mecca "cam~ _down like a ball of fire from the sky "
Wednesday, killing 200 people in the worst chartered jetliner
disaster in history .
·
The ,c raab of the Iceland Airlines DC8 was a carbon copy ·of
anotber_disaster at the same Colombo airport in 1974 whtm 191
lndooesan Moslems were killed in the crash of another
chartered aircraft in the previous worst chartered disaster.
. It _was also the second worst singlei)lane aviation disasters
in history. The worst killed 345 people in March 1974 north of
Paris,
.
·
The DCB, making a refueling stop on Sri Lanka off India's

_?&gt;ast, carried 246 Oilgrims and 13 EuronNm rrr.wmf'n nn

AGE WAS 54
The age of Mary Shain
Roush; Route 2, Racine, who
died Monday evening should
have read 54 and not 84 in her
death notice in Tuesday's
edition of the SentineL
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Carl Ray Thomas, 23.,
Route I, Long Bottom, and
Maxine Elizabeth Haines, 29,
Pomeroy.
NOW YOU KNOW
. The most expensive hotel
accommodations in the world
may be found on the ninth
floor of the Astroworld Hotel
in Houston where the
"Celestial Suite" rents for
$2,500 a day .
·

EXTENDED FORECAST
Frtday lbrougb Sunday,
a chance of raiD Friday,
fair Saturday and a chance
of ralo, possibly mixed
with snow Sunday mornlng. Highs will range from
tbe tos lo the mid 50s, wblle
lows wlll be in lhe 30s or the
low 40s Friday and In the
upper 20s or the lower to
middle 30s by Sunday.

VOL XXIX . NO. 151

'

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The ~~~~rimS, aboard one of 21 airlin.ers chartered by
lndones1a s Garuda a~r lmes to take Indonesian Moslems to
Saudi Arabia, were the first group to fly back to Indonesia
Icelandic officials said.
'
Their airliner crashed when it attempted to land at the
Colombo airport in a heavy thunderstorm Wednesday night .
Reports of the disaster were delayed for more than six hours.
It was undear what caused the crash, but recent newspaper
reports have charged that the Colombo airport's instrument
system was defective and that aircraft were finding it difficult
to la nd at night.
Moslems believe they must make one pilgrimage during
the~r hves to Mecca, the birthplace of Mohammed and Islam 's
holiest city. About~Opercent of In donesians - or 116.7 million
people - are Moslem.

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16; 1978

Cost of Turkey dinner
highest ever in New York
NEW YORK (UP!) - A Thanksgiving
dinner in New York will gobble up more of
the family food budget this year than ever
before .
'
The prediction comes from the city's
Conswner Affairs Department, which said
at the same time Tuesday that the cost of
feeding a famlly of four in the
metropolitan area actually dropped .83
percent last week.
But prices for aU varieties of turkey fresh, · frozen and selfbasting - were
reported tD have climbed an average of

between 24 and 30 percent since last
Thanksgiving.
.
Yams were also found more expensive in
the department's survey - up in price 7
percent from a year ago .
Most other items in the typical
Thanksgiving dinner also will cost more
this year.
A notable exception: cranberry sauce.
For no apparent reason, the average price
of a !-pound can of cranberries will cost a
pelllly less than last year.

PRESENTED PLAQUE - Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Legar presented honoree , Mrs . Norma Goodwin,
with a plaque and flowers at Wednesday night 's Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Recognition Banquet.

CINCINNATI (UP!) Burial was today for a 21month-old boy who was
beaten to "a solid mass of
bruises.' Police, backed by an
arrest warrant, sought the
dead child's father.
Springfield Township
police Tuesday questioned
relatives of Ted Garity Jr.,
who died Saturday at
Children's Hospital from
injuries sustained in an
apparent beating .
Police obtained an arrest
warrant
for
child
endangering for the boy's
father, Ted Sr., 23. Garity
"took off" after police
arrested him last week on a
1975
complaint
and
questiooed him.
"We haven't seen him. He
just took off," Detective
Robert Price said Tuesday.
"We've made no arrests. We
have talked with several
people. We're getting closer
and closer.''
The boy, described by
Price as "a solid mass of
bruises/' turned up at his

uncle 'sdoorstep last Tuesday
and was taken to the hospital.
The uncle told police he didn't
know who left the child, Price
said.
Price said Garity is
separated from his wife,
Lucretia. Mrs. Garity bas
custody of two other children
by another marriage, and
Garity" kept Ted Jr. and a 3year-old boy, who now is in a
temporary children's home .
During questioning last
week, Garity told police he
bad asked a woman who he
met while hitchhiking to look
after the boys, according to

Price. The woman "was

KEY PRESENTED- James Frecker, second from
left, on behalf of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce and
Pomeroy Villege , presented Brigadier General James M.
Abraham, a native of Athens, of the Ohio National Guard

EMCEE GIVES AWARD - Pomeroy and-Middleport
Elementary Principal Robert Morris, left~ was master of
ceremooies and presented retired educator Robert D.
Roberts with an award from the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.

Battered ·baby buried

Smoke ca~sed
alarm to sound

supposed to be living oul of an
old, white station wagon,"
and cannot be found, Price
said.
Garity also reportedly told
police the boy looked fine
when be last saw him .

SAI,.ISBURY, Rodesia (~!) 8 Prime Minister .Jan Smith
argued today for a delay of next month's elections and transfer
to black majority rule by Dec. 31 in the breakaway British
colony .
Smith told Rhodesia's biracial government that there is not
enough time to prepare for the elections leading to a transfer of
power to blacks who outnumber whites more than 20 to I. It
was not clear how long a delay he was seeking.

Both Shockey and James
claimed injury, but were not
immediately treated.
Officers report heavy ·
damage to both vehicles.
Shockey was cited on charges
of assured clear distance.

Sheriffs deputy released
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A Montgomery County sheriff's
deputy was released, unharmed, in a suburban area early
today about three hours after be was taken hostage by a wouldbe robber in a Daytoo suburb. A search continues for his
captor .
Deputy Larry Johnson was released about 2 a.m. at a
Wyoming , Ohio, service station by the suspect.
Authorities said the suspect, armed with a small caliber
handgun, confronted three women employees of a savings and
loan company In MadiSon Township, a suburb north of Dayton,
abotit 9 p.m. Wednesday .

The World Today
' - - - (Continued from page 1) - - - - Columbus Board of Education of a colll"t-{)rdered
desegregation plan and that the plan be implemented
immediately.
The NAACF also urged the court to quash an order by
Justice William H. Rehnquist which delayed the desegreation
plan ordered last year by U. S. District Court Judge Robert M.
Duncan of Columbus.

Tentative agteement reached
·

ELBERFELD$

A Thanksgiving
"'radition

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (UP!) -Negotiators for striking
Bowling Green teachers and the board of education reached a
tentative agreement on a new contract early today, apparently
ending an eight-day-old walkout.
The teachers, members ol the Bowling Green Education
Alillociation, were to meet at 6:30 a.m. to vote on the
agreement.

.

is 86.
certificates or plaques.
!Jy Bob Hoeflich ,
The EMCEE'; Morris,
fourth
honoree
was
'l'he
Three Meigs Coun\Y":Senior
presented
Roberts' award.
James
M.
Brigadier
General
residents two from
Morris,
whose
work was
.
Abraham
of
the
Ohio
Pomeroy and one from
marked
with
humor
during
National
Guard,
honored
for
Syracuse-were honored for
the
evening
commented
it
his
role
in
the
guard's
snow
tb~ii- "Golden Rule" life style
that
Roberts
was
was
fitting
rem
oval
program
in
by The Pomeroy Chamber of
b&lt;(lng honored since this is
Commerce Wedriesday night. Pomeroy last winter.
American
Education Week.
Pomeroy fire chief Charles
A fourth honoree was a
said
Roberts has been
Morris
general of the Ohio National Legarlpresented a plaque to
his
idol.
Morris
said Roberts
Guard which helped Pomeroy Mrs. Goodwin relating her
love
to
his many
bad
given
of
influence
upon
hundreds
during last .winter's hard
over
the
years .
students
lives in the community over
winter.
Morris
ca
lled
Robert
s
her
long
business
career.
Her
More than IOQ person s
"Meigs
County's
Man
of
help
to
the
Pomeroy
attended a dinner at Meigs
IM honoring the four, Paul emergency squad and third Distinction in Education .." In
Simon, new president of the ward fire department .was response, Robert commented
Pomeroy
Chamber
of acknowledged by Chief Legar that the evening was a
Commerce, presided and Bob who called Mrs. Goodwin "an " Great honor" and added
He al so that the response of
Morris , Principal of the inspiration".
Pomeroy and Middleport presented a corsage from the youngsters to him had many
times been "His pay ~~ as a
Elementary Schools, served Pomeroy fire department.
Mrs. Goodwin said she ac- teacher.
as Master of. Ceremonies.
Robert
Wingett,
Co11he three local honorees cepted the honor "with pride
publisher
of
the
Ohio
Valley
were Mrs. Norma Goodwin, a and humility." Mrs. Goodwin
retired florist and Pomeroy
business woman for over 50
years; RQbert D. Roberts,
long-time Pomeroy educator
who was active in the training
of young athletes, and Ben
Quisenberry, Syracuse,
known in Syracuse for his
helpfulness to his neighbors.
They were presented framed

, ,

Election delay sought

(Continued from page 1)

the key to the city in Pomeroy Wednesday night. With
them are Paul Simon, new Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce president who presided over the dinner
meeting and Mrs. Abraham.

Accomplishments recognized

The World Today

Five•••

--·

Controversial hill approved

Weather

Rain tonight and Friday,
COLUMBUS (UPl) -A cootroversial bill that would allow
with
iows tonight in the
optometrists to adrninster drugs for diagnostic purpose bas
or upper 40s and highs
middle
been approved by tile Ohio House Judiciary Sommittee.
Friday
,
with lows tonight in
The bill, . which is opposed by the Ohio State Medical
the
middle
or upper 40s and
Alillociation, failed last AprU in the judiciary commi.t tee after
in the middle or
highs
Friday
It was passed by the Ohio Senate but was amended and
50~upper
approved Wednesday.

The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department was called to the
Charles Stotts home in
Burlingham at 7:38 a.m,
Wednesday.
Fire Chief
Charles Legar said there was
no fire . Smoke from a wood
burning stove had set off a
fire alarm1 instrument, the
chief said. '
The Middleport Fire
Department Tanker was
called by Pomeroy to assist,
but, returned to station when
it was learned there was no
fire.

,.

~----------i

Addre~--~----~--------------------1

Phone -------------Type of Entry _______________;_~---~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
r

9

Publishing Co., presented the
award to Quin·senberry.
Wingett sa.id Quisenberry·, a t
91 , is still helping many
people of the community.
Wingett pointed out the accomplishments
of the
honoree in his wide variety of
vocations through the years.
In his response, Quisenberry expressed appreciation
to the Chamber and com·
mented that God has been
with him to help over the
years.
General Abraham was
presented the key to the city
by Chamber official James
Frecker . In his response,
Abraham promi sed that
Pomer-oy will not be forgotten
as long as he remains in his
position with the Ohio
National Guard. He ~rged
those attending to maintain
their will to pr eser ve
America and to be more
vocal in expressing that the
United States be prepared to
defend itself.
Mrs. Abraham and Mrs.
Roberts, wives of two of the
honorees 1 were recognized.
Credited with being the man
behind last night's successful
affair was Fred Crow, past
president of the Chamber.
Invocation was by Vernon
Weber and the Rev. Robert
Graves gave the benediction.

Area stores
hit Wednesday
POINT PLEASANT - A
locai pharmacist, in the
presence of his two small
children , wa s robbed at
gunpoint Wednesday by t wo
men here .
Bernard Smith, oper ator of
The Prescription Shop, 2611
JacksOn
Ave .,
wa s
threatened and left hand·
cuffed to a refrigerator by the
ro bbers.
According to the report, $73
worth of drugs and $294 in
cash was taken .
Investigators said Smith
was writing up an order from
a wholesaler and his two
children, Andrew, age 7, and
Andrea , a ge 6, were watching
TV when a man came in to
purchase some adhesive
tape . Later, the man returned
for some gauze.
' While Smith was waiting on
the man, another man, this
one wearing a ski mask en·
tered the store and pulled a
gun. They ordered Smith to
turn over the cash and drugs .
They first handcuffed Smith
to a filing cabinet but later
changed it to the refrigerator.
They told Smith and his
children to not leave for
several minutes after their
departure or they would be
killed.
Point Pleasant police a re
investigating.
.
Meanwhile, in Gallipolis,
jewelry valued at approximat ely $30,000 wa s
stolen this morning from
Derilield Jewelry Store, 409
Second Ave.

Gallip oli s city poli ce
discovered the B&amp;E at 5:23 a.
m . The store had been
checked at 4: 15 a. m. Entry
was gamed by shattering a
front door glass . .
Thi eves broke the top of a
jewelry case a11d shattered
two sliding doors inside a
display window.

Three killed on
k

.w·~- Va. T~,~rnpike
CHELYAN, W.Va. (UP! )
- Three people were killed
and a fourth critically injured
in a two-automobile collision
Wednesday on the West Virginja Turnpike.
State p o I i c e said a
northbound car rounding a
curve skidded out of control
on the wet pavement, crossed
the center line and smashed
headon into a pickup truck at
about 1:40 p.m.
Thrown from the car and
killed were Charline Brown,
49 , Detroit, and another
woman police were unable to
identify .
Also killed was Ernest
Manning , 41 , Amelia, Ohio , a
pa ssenge r in the pickup
truck . His brother, Gerald
Manning, 39, Felicity, Ohio,
the driver of the truck, was
critically injured and taken to
Charleston (W.Va .) General
HospitaL
.
The truck was owned by
Miam i
Contractors
of
Dayton , Ohio.
·

V
Architect firm hired

Meigs
County
Commissioners employed the
• finn of Easley, Lee, Vargo
and Cassidy of Marietta as
• architects for the con• struction of a Mental
·Retardation
Workshop
:Tuesday night. . The action
· :Was taken upon the recommendation of Judge MaMing
"Webster, President_ of the
Meigs County Board of
·Mental Retardation.
·-: The county, through a bond
· Issue and state funds, has
money lo buDd facilities for
:the mentally retarded of the
:county, However, . residents
-have. ·turned dpwn tax levies ·
to operate ~ch a facility
·~everal times. · The last
· refuaal wu at the Nov. 7
eleCtion: It has been reported
th8t unless voters approve
operattns funds.
Such
monla must come from the
1en~al lund of the. county.

MIDDLEPORT CHRISTMAS PARADE
Count on us to take part in the aMual l)«iddleport Chamber
of Commerce Christmas Parade at 6:30p.m . Nov. 'J:/.

Please complett and moll to Candy Ingels; in care of
Ingels Two~n.J)ne Swre, N, Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio
45760.

.

t!1~"

of fire from the sky."
Police and Civil Aviation Department officials were
counting bodies while firemen tried to extinguish the blaze
from the plane, which was described as ·•a total wreck ."
Some of the passengers escaped unharmed from the plane's
three twisted sect ions of wreckage and walked unassisted to
th e air terminal as the twisted hulk burst into flames . About 20
were treated and released from a hospital.
··we were coming in to iand when suddenly the plane was
crashing th rough trees and started to break up ," said Maasabi
Karsa, editor of the Banjaramasi Post, one of the survivors
along with his wife .
" When it stopped I tore myself out of my seat belt and simply
walked out of the wreckage," he said .

CLEAN SWEEP -Mr. and Mrs. James Folmer and daughter, Cheryl, made a clean
sweep of high point trophies awarded at the annual dinner of the Southeast Ohio Tractor
Pullers. Cheryl won the high point trophy in the 800 pound class; Mrs. Folmer trophies inthe 900 class, the 900 pound open class and the 1,000 pound open class. Mr . Folmer won in the
1,000 pound class and the 1,200 pound class.

.

Name ____________________

night from Jeddab, Saudi Arabia, to Surabaya, Indonesia .
. The lndomisiim Embassy said the confirmed death toll stood
at 200. It said 188 of the pilgrims and 12 crew members died
when the plane plowed into coconut trees short of the runway
at Colombo a irport.
Hospital officials expeeted the death toll to rise because
many of the injured passengers were in critical condition at
·
hospitals.
Many of the victims were women and children, rescuers
said.
A Civil Aviation spokesman said the control tower was
guiding the plane through heavy rain for th e landing when it
crashed Wednesday night.
.
A witness ~aid the Icelandic airliner "came down iike a ball

e

Mayor's Court
Two defendants were fined
and three othets forfeited
bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Alfred Evans,
21, Middleport, $50 and costs,
on a negligent assult charge,
and Paul'Reeves, 44, Albany,
$50 and cost, disorderly
conduct . Forfeiting bonds
were Paul Rupe, 18, Rutland,
speeding 44 miles an hour in a
25 mile zone , $31 bond;
Donald Fisher, ~ Cheshire,
40 in a~ mile zone, $27 bond,
and Jeffrey Hawley, 24,
Middleport, $50, disorderly
manner.

200 pilgrims die in airliner crash

This is considored a .
problem in that money used
for operating facilities for the
mentally retarded could be
used f{)r other county
operations.
Racine Home National
Bank and the Pomeroy
National Bank submitte(jt
applications to serve .as
depository for $400,000 in
interim deposits of public
Racine Home
funds .
National ~~nk was awarded
a contract for a period of time
to be deslgneated by the
county treasurer at 8.6
perceot.
Bill Nease and Linsey
Lyons of the Tupper~ Plains
area discussed the formation
of a sewer district for the
Tupper Plains community.
Neas~ presented petitions
signed _by several residtnts
Indicating their desire to
have such ~ dlstirct formed .
Commissioners questioned
(~

as to where funds would come ·
from
to
provide
for
engeineering costs on the
plan of study and other
engineering fees that would
be involved in such a project.
It was pointed out that
unless the financing is
worked out in advance,
payment for the services
would result in an assessment
to the property owners of the
district.
After a lengthy discussion,
it was agreed that residents
of the district should be better
informed of all implication
that could be involved before
such a district is formed.
A public meeting for
residents of the Tupper s
Plains community, The
Commissioners,
Repressentatives of The Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency and other interested
groups )l'as discussed as a
.future possibility .

ROBERT WINGETT, co-publisher of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co., presented an a)Vard to Ben Quisenberry,
Syracuse, at last night's Pomeroy Chamber of
· Commerce Dinner .

Swimming pool earns profit
Syracuse's London Pool
bad a net operating profit of
$6,608.74 for the 1978 swimming season, it was announced today by pool
manager Herman Londori.
Receipts totaled $20,987 .11
while
expenses
were
$13,378.37.
The breakdown of receipts
foll ows:
Lessons , Sl ,150 ; ni ght
rental, $1,675 ; cuncc;sion
)

sales, $6,704.73; season
passes and gate receipts,
$ii,050 .80
and
re1m·
bursement for use of baU field
lighting fa cilities, $406.58. .
Expenses were: equipment
and supplies, $i,626.03 ;
compensation
of
pooi
manager and life guard£,
$6,161.35; lessons, $575 ;
con cessions, $4 ,302.18 and
power. 11,713.81.

TAKING -INVENTORY - Bernie and Beverly Smith, owners of the Prescription Shop
on Jackson 1\ve., Point Pleasant, (above) are lakin~ inventory of their business today to
detennine what drugs were taken in an armed robbery Wednesday night.

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