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                  <text>$105,000

0.12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sund•y. Nov , 19, !978

Three persons
hurt in wreck .

Special train rides
_o ffered by railroad ·

'

NELSONVILLE - The passengers wann in the old prepaid.
Hocking Valley scenic time coaches and hot
Details can be obtained by
Railway aMounced its Third chocolate and coffee will be telephoning (between the
hours of 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. I
.f.MJ18l Santa Claus Special available on the train.
Trains. Special Trains will be
During the Christmas Time (614) 451-7863 or by writing:
run December 2nd· and 3rd ride, passe ngers will be The Hocking VaUey Scenic
and again on the 9th and lOth treated to a special narration Railway, 2366 Shrewsbllry
with trips at 12 noon, 2 p.m. . on Christmas in the Monday . ,Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43221.
The Hocking Valley Scenic
and 4 p.m. with a steam Creek VaUey. There will be
locomotive, and old time treats for the kids from Railway is a non-profit aU
passenger cars complete with . "Santa" himself! Each trip . volunteer operation drawing
a red caboose, regardless of will be limited to 175 _its memberahip,., from railweather conditions. · ·Pot passengers and will be by fans and rail historians from ·
bellied. stoves will keep the reservation only and must be aU over the United States.

........•••••.•..•

cueal
!...~ ·
Sta
. od'ay
l

~

•
•

dream s
be
apartment

a
or

cozy
a

• comfortable home, large
•
•

•
·•

e

·•
. :

,.
,-•
•
•

enough

house

Three mishaps ..

:e

Mason , went out of control

and passed off the right side
of the roadway while attempting to stop for a vehicle
Th is
expense
could e
con ceiva bl y cost you every • ahead, which had stopped in
penny you thought you
traffic.

your

were saving by paying less •

The Winston auto struck a

pro jected number ol
offsprings ?
Stop and reflect these
alternatives. Apartmen t
rents are cl im bing as
available space lessens. On
top of this, the monthly rent

for smaller quarters.
•
Either way you decide ~ •
have a happy honeymoon! e
•
•

parked pickup truck parked
at R&amp;N Auto Sales. The force
of the Impact pushed the
pickup ln.to a parked auto.
Both vehicles are owned by

checks

to

One ot her Consi deration

is the cost of household •
moves each time you s1air. •
step to la rger quarters. •

represent

•
If there is anything we' •

money

:

that Is gone forever . On the can do to help you in the
other hand , mortgage
payments are a form of field of real estate please
forced savings and actually phone or drop in at
build an equity tor you. LEADINGHAM
REAL
Also you can probably look ESTATE, l12 Second Ave.,
forward to a profit when Gatlipolio. Phone 446,7699.

•

you eventually sell .

We' re here to hel~.

Te e • ·• • • • • e e e e • • • • • • e •

.•.

R&amp;N.

Winston and a passenger,
Rhorida Young , 16, Clifton, W. ·
• ,
• Va., were transported by the
GaUia Volunteer Squad to
• Pleasant Valley Hospital
•
where they were treated and
. •
released.

e••••:

Winston was cited on

'

.

RIDES OFFERED - The Hocking VaUey SceniC Railway will begin its third annuai
special train ·rides Dec..2. During the Christmas ride, passengers will be treated to special
Chrilltmas music.
·
charges of assured clear
distance .
An auto operated by
Thomas Rowley, 47, Rio
Grande, was demoliahed in a
two~vehicle collision on
Second Ave., at the intersection of Locust St., at
6:18p.m.

We Take the Fear Out of Buying A Used Car. Our Cars Are Better Because:
1. Mast~ one owner new car trades.
2. No auction caiS.
3. 100% Warranty on late models.
4. Backed
Semce

Pl ati num exterio r with beaut iful
carmine c loth inter iOr . Loaded with
options like air conditioning , power
wifldows, power door locks, c rui se
control, tilt w hee l, AM· F M 8 tr ack
ster eo, Rallye wheels . Thi s stunn ing
coupe is super sharp inside and out .
Only 12,080 mil es.
·

Th is sports model is sure to catch
your attention . Cal"mine exterior

and black bucket seats with air
conditioning, automatic tran -

smission, AM-FM radio and sport
styled wheels.
Priced to sell

'5995

SAVE$$$

1975 CHEV•.MALIBU
CLASSIC

1977
REGAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP

1977 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

.,.

F 1rC'It10rn wi t h !'n &lt;lt t l l nHr 1~1 nrlr~u

10 1) , /\ M FM t n pf' . r ru1 sr c ontro l
,11\(1 c1r 1vf' n onl y / t ,J .'l.l tn i iC'S . E)(
pt •r t t h t' hrs t.

'5495

1975 FORD RANGER
F-150

1978 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD

This tru ck has the long w ide bed,
two-tone
paint ,
automat ic
transm ission, power steering , power
brakes, v.a er:lgine, chrome mirrors,
rear step bumper and sport wheels
with Goodyear raised white letter
tires. Locally owned. ·Priced to sell.

Th is sporty compact is finished
Chesterfield brown and has tan

bucket seats. Equipped with an

economical 4 cylinder automatic
tr ansmission, power steering and
AM radio. Only 10,755 miles on this
beauty - We sold if new.

Mid nig ht blue exterior with
contra sting cloth interior . This
locally owned new Buick trade Is

equipped with V-8 engine, ·a ir
conditioning, tilt steering wheel , AM
radi o and radial tires .

'3995

NEW 78 PONTIACS

1978 CHEVROLET
MONZA 2+2

LEFT OVER
2 GRAND PRIX's

GMAC AND BANK
FINANCING

Flrethorn exterior with
white Interior .
This Sports Model has 1ne
econom ica l 4-cylinder engine ,
automatic transmission, power

steering, AM radio, bucket se~ts
and styled wheel covers. Only
5,911 miles on this Beauty.

s

5

••'
' 1911 Eastern Ave.
I

8931 ''"'._BROIDERED
RUFFLED KNIT
Soft! Pretty·! Fully
•
fa s hioned , long sle,eve;-"'
8921 - LOOP STITCH
slipon of 100% Aery!
VEST
. knit.
Ruffled
100% Acrylic des ign
nec kline, s leeves and
ed with four knit but· · tunic · plus Hand Em ·
ton trim flaps. Cal ·
brolder.e d design in
ors : White , Bone
front .
Sizes S, M , L
Colors:
Natura 1,'
Black

{.J~!~2~1

8915NOVEL TY ?LI PON
100% Acrylic knit V·
neck slipon. Excep·
tiona I design!
~ -- Slit s ides, panels of
stitch
for
tex ·
and
!;lands
of con·
asti ng color .
Colors : Bone· Brown
Bone · Navy
Sizes S, M, L

~toorp

8916
KABUKI
SLEEVE SLIPON
IOOo/o Acrylic knit .
Split sides and i ac ·
quard knit pattern in
color contrast.
Colors : Beige comb.,
Grey comb.
Sizes S, M, L.

8947' - POINTELLE
· V· NECK VEST
lOOo/o Aery lie knit, 24inch length, 6: Butt0n
front, and two patch
poc,kets .
Rib -knit
bands outline front,
hipline and sleeve
area .
Colors: White, Black,
Navy, Brown,
J . Red .
Sites S, M , L.

Sundar Shoppen Welcome
•o MOll
TO CHOOSE PROM . Come In &amp; Browse Around

BUICK
PONTIAC
.

Phone 446-2282

Gallipolis

~~~::~ Program
1977
crowns
winners of the I978 Southeast 0
Sunday afternoon at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport. From the left are Miss Taylor, Cindy Patterson, South
Meigs County Junior Miss, and Lori Chapman, North Junior Miss. Miss Patterson, the
daul!hter of Mr. and Mrs. Corbett Patterson, Syracuse, also won tbe awards in the Creative
and Perfcrmlng Arts ~petition, the Youth F~tne8s Aw_ard and Poise and Personality
Aw.ard besides being named one of the two top Wlllllers. Mtss Chapman is the daughter of
Mr. and· Mrs. Robert Chapman, Syracuse. $he and Miss Patterson will represent Meigs
County at the state event at Mount Vernon In January. The nine contestants were judged on
interviews, scholastic st~ndings, poise arid personality, youth fitness, and a talent
presentation. Ralph Werry was master of ceremonies and the Meigs High Jazz Band
directed by Randy and Alan Hunt, presented severar well received selections during th~

Pomeroy-Mi~dleport,

Ohio
Monday, November 20, I978

e

PAGEANT WINNERS - These are the six winners of
the Southeast Ohio Junior !&gt;fiss Program beld Sunday
afternoon at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport.
From the left are Janis Carnahan, Southern High School,
first runner-up South Meigs County; Sherri Riahel, Vinton

•

at y

ZA.H~~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

" Projects of this type are
the result of needs identified
by continuing studies and
forecast /' Parker said . "This
allows us to plan for orderly
growth within a given area."
Tele phon e's
Gene ral
Pomeroy exchange serves
more than 5,400 customers in
an 84-square-mile of Meigs
Co unt y. ·

C,unty High, first runner-up, North Meigs County : Lori
Chapman, Southern High, Miss North Meigs County:
Cindy Patterson, Southern, Miss Southern Meigs County:
Dollie Rousey , Meigs High School, scholastic award
wirurer, and Bunni McGraw, Southern High, second
runner-up .

•

enttne

F iftee n Cents
VoL 2ll. N 0 . 15:1

Religious fanatics victims of mass suicides
GEORGETOWN, Guyana
(UP!)
A Guyana
government official said
today the hand of Am,erican

religious fanatics who
massacred a California
coogressman and four members of his party had begun a

wave of .mass suicide and
murder that left 400 persons
dead and 600 missing.
Guyana
Minister
of
Information Shirley FieldRidley, who at first reported
the mass suicide, · sa id
Guyanese troops today
captured the headquarters of
111111
the Peoples Temple in the
j)mgle city of Jonestown and
found · tha t some of the
victims apparently were
murdered.
WASIUNGTON (UP!) - According to newly released
Mrs. Field-Ridlex told a
Census Bureau statistics, 18 of the nation's 25 biggest cities news conference that some of
have lost population in the past ·six years. Hardest hit by the the victims "ahowed sings of
pOpalatlonlhift were Clevebind, which has seen !6.-7 percent elf violence, including preSumed ·
.··. lkr.ea&lt;llm!4l~t'W)P70;. St.,Y,!!_i.s, ~.!J\j'JII6.5 pe;:cent, and gunshot wounds,"which -were
Deb'olt, down 13.2 percent. .
·
· not consistent with suicide."
Between 1970 and 1976, the only major cities to register She sai(i some of tbe victims
population gains were San Jose, Calif., with the largest - 19.6 showed no signs or' violence
)l!!t'Cellt; Phoenii, next with 13.3 per cent; Houston, which and were presumed to have
· anne.:ed some' surrounding areas, 11.7 percent; San Diego ;
San Antonio, Texas ; Memphis, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Fla.· been poison victhns.
She said a man who fled
from
the
religious
community headed by a
Californian, the Rev. Jim
FOGGIA, Italy (UPI)-Poiice said a truck lost control and
plowed Into a smaU Fiat carrying seven members of a gypsy
f4mily in a highway accident near the southern Italian city
Foggia Sunday. Five of the gypsies, Including two men and an
infant, were killed Instantly while two others are in critical
coodltlori In a Foggla hospital. Officers said they found more
than $2,000 sewn Into the skirt of one of the victims.
SPEEDWAY, Ind. (UP!)The driver of tbe truck and another man also were The bodies of four young
hospitalized In serious condition, police said. They said the employees abducted from a
accident stopped traffic l&lt;r two hours along a narrow highway Burger Chef restaurant
that runs along the Adriatic seacoast.
during an apparent robbery
of less than $500 were found
late Sunday in nearby
Johnson County.
U. S. Oistrict Court Judge Louis Rosenberg will hear
State police and authorities
motions in his Pittsburgh courtroom today from six major from Speedway, a suburb of
steel firms seeking .to reactivate a permanent 1971 injunction Indianapolis, released few
preventing Independent steel-haulers from disrupting details and did not disclose
Interstate conunerce. .
the cause of the deaths. They
. The legal proceedings follow a successful attempt by said
an
" intensive
Youngstown, Ohio, area steel concerns Friday to limit the investiga lion is under way ."
-strike activities of the Fraternal Association of Steel Haulers.
The bodies of Jane C.
I

]..__rh_e_w_or_ld_._ro_d_a_y_

Motions will be heard today

NEW 78 BUICKS
LEFT OVER
2 SKYlARKS
1 REGAL CPE.
1 leSABRE CPE.

ser v ice manager. The new

cable, which is being buried
where possible, will help
upgrade service and keep
pace with future gro\\th in
the residential areas along
Flatwoods Road, he added.

JOnes , reached a poli ce
station in tbe jungled interior
of Guyana Sunday and
reported that leaders of the
sect were preparing for a
mass suicide by poisoning.
Jones, 46, variously called
himself the "prophet of God"
and "father" and preached a
flamboyant mixture of oldlime faith healing, racial
intergration and socialism.
Mrs. Field-Ridley said,
"soine of the bodies were
found in homes , some were
found in clearings in the
foresl.\l, hilt no live persons
were found ... The troops are·
searc hing for. them . We
estlma te some 600 persons
may be·mif1Sing."
It was· not Immediately
known if they had fled lntn the .
.jungle surrounding the
Peoples Temple 150 miles
west of Georgetown near the
Venezueiari border or if they
were dead.

crazies" - to make a suicide
pact with him and predicted
aU 1,200 members of the sect
would die.
Mrs. Kathy Hunter , a freelance writer from Ukiah,
Calif., who is familiar with
the Peoples Temple sect, said
a Guyanese parliament
member had told her in a
telephone conversation that
Jones had committed suicide
- a fate many cultists had
predicted for the bizarre
figure .
Mrs. Field-Ridley said U.S
la wyers Mark Lane and
Charles Garry were in
Georgetown and not in
Patricia Park , 18, an custody. They had been at tbe
American settler.
settlement when the shooting
Mrs. Field-Ridley sa id incident occurred. She said
troops had been unable w she did not know where they
locate Jones, a former . San were staying.
Ga rry
Lane
and
Francisco Housing Authority
direcwr but refugees said he accompanied Ryan on the
investigative
trip
as
had forced his followers known as " a bunch of attorneys for the religious
The bizarre case blazed
into violence at 4:20 p.m.
Saturday when an ambllah by
members of the sect at a
jungle airp&lt;irt killed Rep. Leo
J. Ryan, o :caiii., and iour
other Americans when ttyan
was leaving with 20 members
of the sect alter investigating
reporta that many Americans
were being held against their
will.
·
Killed with him were NBC
television rep orter Don
Harris, 42 ; NBC cameraman
Robert Brown, 36, both of Los
An~eles, San _
F rancisco
Examiner ·pMtographer
Gregory . Robinson, 27, and

Kidnapped victims found dead

----v

Compare at' .

'3595

Give her ho liday warmth
neat
co llection o f th e most-wanted
sryles iust lor her . .. l~rtles,
cables, cardigans . .. seel

... sweaters! W e hove a

."''·"-

. CUSTOM 4 DR.'

More than $105,600 is being
spent to place the cable in
service, according to Jim L.
Parker of Athens, customer

18 cities have lost people

looking for a sharp one, see this
one Now.

1978 BUICK CENTURY

A major telephone cable
addition to serve customers
in the northeast section of
General Telephone Co. of
Ohio's Pomeroy exchang e
has started, the firm an·
nounced today .

J:

Stunning Midnight Blue Flnloh
with Blue cloth Interior, cruise
control, tilt wheel rally wheels
and much more. If you are

'4995

announced

Gypsy family traffic victims

PRICED ACCORDINGLY

'2495

driven by Geneva F. Bays,
36, GaUipolis.
There was moderate
damage to ·the Bays auto,
slight damage to the
Clevenger vehicle.
Clevenger was cited on
charges of failure to yield.

Fi nished in Mny~n red w ith wh ite
buclc;e t sC'n t s. rn1 s rr~1n s A m has it
a l l. Alr ro nclition inq , r ru ise control ,
t ilt wheel, A M F M H tr ack, Rallye 11
wheel s and raised white letter tires
Thi s new Bonneville trade Is a ioca l ·
ly owned automobile. Onl y 4, l971ow
1
low miles .

'5995
Silver fini sh wi th burgundy cloth
interior and a matchi ng landau top.
Equipment includes air conditi oner,
crui se controL AM with S-track
stereo, rally wheels ..and rad ial t ires.
New Grand Ftr lx trade.
·

At 2:49 p.m., police were
called to the scene ·of a twovehicle accident on Second
Ave., at Pine St.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Debra D.
Clevenger; 18, Gallipolis,
turned onto Pine from Second
into the path of a vehide

· '99''-.Jt.,t.(j

1978 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

1978 CHEVROLET
CAMARO .

Officers report that an auto
operated by Joe A. GuUey, 22,
New Boston, 0., turned from
Locust onto Second Into the
path of the Rowley vehicle.
Gulley was cited on
charges of failure to yield.
There was moderate damage
to the Gulley auto .

Meigs - Jackson - Vinton
Counties Bookmobile
schedule for Meigs County is
as follows:
Monday, Nov. 20
Pomeroy Ele., 9.:30 a.m.2:30p.m. ; Snowville, 3-3:30;
Pageville, 3:45-4 : 15;
Harrisonville Store, 4:30-4i;
Wolf Pen, ~ : 15-5 : 45.
Tuesday, Nov. 21
. Racine Elementary, 9-11 :30
a.m. ; Portland Elementary,
· 1-3 p.m.; Portland Post Office, 3:15-3:45; . Racine
Wagner's Hardware, 4:155:15; Racine Bank, ~:I:Hi : 15;
Syracuse Swimming Pool,
·fi :3!HI; Minersville Brown's
Trailer Crt., 8:15.f:30.
Thursday, Nov. 23
Happy Thanksgiving.

.- EL ERFELD
theCtristmasclassics...
~l/flgliers
' .
S

DOC SMITH SAYS •••

1978 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

were transported by the
·GaWa Volunteer Squad to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
where they were treated and
released.
Mitchell was · transported
by .the Volunteers to Holzer
Medical Center where he was
treated and released.
Both · vehicl~s incurred
severe damage. Barker was
cited on· charges of left of
center. .
The Gallia-Melgs Post
investigated two other accidents Friday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-vehicle
collision on Lincoln Pike,
three miles south of SR 141, at
8: 1~ a.m.
According ·to the patrol, a
south bound auto operated by
Roger
Randolph,
31,
GaUipolis, and a north bound
vehicle. driven by Larry
Collins,
32,
Northup,
sideswiped on Lincoln Pike.
Collins was cited on
charges of failure to yield
one-half the roadway.
There was severe damage
to the Randolph auto,
moderate damage to the
Collins vehicle. ·
Officers Investigated a twovehicle colliBion on SR 218,
near milepost 9, at 11 a.m.
According to the patrol, a
north bound auto operated by
Ronald Cochran, 35, Crown
. City, and a south bound
vehicle driven by John
Gilbert, 36, West Jefferson,
0 .. sideswiped on 218.
Cochran was cited on
charges of left of center.
The
patrol
reports
moderate damage to the
Cochran auto, slight damage
to the Gilberl vehicle.

Bookmob;le
..
schedule ·

'

._:

BY .

'

Barker, and a pa5senger,

GALLIPOLIS - GaUipolis
• City police investigated three
accidents Friday.
Two persons were treated
: for injuri es following an
accident on Eastern Ave., at
·•• 3:21 p.m.
•
Officers report that a south
• bound auto operated by
• Gregoo A. Winston, 19,

DECISION FOR NEWLYWEDS
Congratulations! You 're

.141.

:probed Friday

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

· • engaged to be married .
• Decision time is coming .
• Sha ll the first den of your

'

GALLIPOLIS - Tpree
per110ns were treated for
injuries foUowlng a bead-on
collision Friday at 4:40 p.m:
on SR. 14'1. at milepost 9,
The Gallla-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports a
west bound auto operated by
Cathryn Barker, 17, Patriot,
and an east bound vehicle
driven by Coleen Cox, 18,
Patriot, coUided head-on on

~e e

.

.T

,.

•
proJect

Request bill be vetoed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Tbe American Civil Liberties Union
of Ohio has caUed on Gov. James A. Rhodes to veto a bill that
would provide $1.25 milllon each to the Democratic and
Republican candidates fer governor In 1982.
The ACLU said the measure which passed th.e Democratdominated General Assembly last week "arbitrarilv
discriminate aj!ainst minor political party candidates,
Including even those who may receive enough support to
legaUy quallfy f&lt;r positions on the statewide baUot."

Hind estimated at $86,()()()
. NEW YORK (UPii - Thleves In Queens picked up everything they'll need to start large laundromat- except the soap.
Pollee said Sunday thieves stole a trailer containing 116
KenJD(I'e waahlng machines and dryers, worth an estimated
~.Ooo. PoUce said the owner of a tractor-trailer had parked
the truck 011 the street and was plaMing to deliver the
· machines to a Sears store in New Jersey Monday. ·

·Murder suspect jailed
'

SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio (Ufl) - Cedric Wynn, 19,
Cleveland, charged with aggravated murder In tbe. ahootlng
death o1 Otarles Feathers, 50, Parkersburg, W. Va. , has been
arrested and is being held in City Jail.
'wynn, beUeved to be ooe of' lour members of a gang
l'elpOOIIble for 24 major crimes in Cleveland and other
lllburbl, was arrested after he walked Into the pollee station
Saturday to obtain a release lor a car that had been towed.

NlCIJrB(fll4ns leaving country
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) -'-A streain of Nicaraguans
pol&amp;'ed out of their troubled country today In cars and trucks,
111 foot and dmkeys, In anticipation of a resumptlOIJ of civil
war ·wttbln t8 hours. ·
.
"In the past 30 days I bave given out about 15,000
!IUIIJCII1a tbree times the normal amount of )18S8pCll'ts in a
given ~Y period," sai4 an omclal In the Immigration
n.partmentof Managua, wberelong lines form every day. ·

Friedt, 20, assistant manager
of the last-food restaurant ;
Daniel Davis, 16; Ruth
Shelton, 17, and Mark
Flemmonds, 16, were found
Sunday night east of Indiana
Highway 37, a few miles
south o( the Indianapolis
area.
State Police Sgt. Charles
Hibbert said the victims were
clothed and were discovered
"in a wooded area by the
property owner." He said
exact cause of death and time
"had not been determined."

"We are asking anyone
with any information to
contact Speedway city police
or the Indiana State Police,"
Hibbert said.
Hibbert Said police found
no evidence of a struggle near
the bodies and specula_ted the
four were killed elsewhere
and their bodies were
dumped in the wooded area.
Pollee said the victims
probably were forced to leave
the last-food restaurant in a
car owned by Miss Friedt.
The · car was found early

Saturday in Speedway. All of
the victims were believed to
have been wearing their
bro wn and orange uniforms
when they vanished. .
An off-duty restaurant employee, Brian !{ring, 1-7. told
police he discove~ed the res·
taurant's back door standing
slightly open when he passed
it at 12:15 a.m. Sab.!rday.
NormaUy, he said, it would
have been locked from 11
p.m. on.
investigators said Kring
told them be found \he cesh
drawers and Miss Shelton's
jacket on the floor and the
manager's office ransacked.
Two empty currency hags
and an empty roll of adhesive
tape lay next to an open sale
in tbe manager's office when
police arrived. Probably less
than $500 was taken in the
holdup, authorities said.
None of the families
received ransom demands
and no wilnesaes to tbe
abduction were found .
" It just doesn't make any
sense . They have got their
money and they made their
eseape. Now why the devil ·
don't they give back our
children?" Carolyn Friedt,
Jane's motber, said earlier
Sunday.

Applications
being accepted
Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens announced today
that the viUiage is taking
applications · lor operation
Green Thumb. Applicants
must be ov~r 55 and must
meet
certain
income
qualifications.
Those interested are to
contact Pickens or Councilman, John Arnott.
Mayor Pickens and council
GOEBEL SCORES , Jeff Gobel, iMI guard for the Eas\ern Eagles scores on a ahorl
members
commended the
j11mper during the Annual SVAC Cage Preview Saturday night at Rio Grande College.
children
lor their line
Hannan Traee wm the two quarter contest, 24-23. Closing in are Eastern's Brett Matthews .
the
behavior
durin g
( 20) and the Wildcats' Carlos Campbell (41 ). Also shoWn is Hannan Trace 's Ely Hite ( 13) .
HaUoween
season.
See page 3 fer more pictures aoo story.
'

leader. Lane wrote Ryan an
unfriendly letter Nov . 6
threatening
"di r e
consequences n
if
the
American government continued w harass the Peoples
Ryan 's
T_e mp le,
administrative assistant Joe
Holsinger
said
in
Waahirigton.
A ahort lime before the
massacre on the airstrip,

Ryan had escaped a knife
attack by a young cultist in
the Jonestown compound .
The congressman , whose
shirt was drenched with his
assailant's blood, credited
Lane with saving. his life at
that time, but he lived only a
few minutes longer.
Mrs . Field-Ridley said one
suspect, Larry Laywn, 32, an
!Continued on page 8)

Plane crash cause sought
SPENCER, W.Va . (UP! ) Federal investigato r s
searclied today for the cause
of a small airplane crash on a
Roane County farm Saturday
which killed the lone
occupant.
Harley B. Diamond, 49, of
Columbus, Ohio, was on a
return trip from Lewisburg,
W.Va.
to
Columbus ,
according io West Virginia
State Police.
Diamond was piloting a
Cessna 150 owned by the
National Flyers Association

Weather
Partly clo udy today and
tonight and mostly cloudy
Tuesday. Rather cold with
highs today from the mid to
upper 40s and Tuesday from
the low to mid 40s. l&lt;lws
tonight will be from the upper
20s to low 30s.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday throu gh
Friday, mosliy cloudy wilb
showers .possible Wed·
ncs day through Friday.
Highs will be from lbe mid
40s in the north to the mid
50s In the south. Lows will
be mostly in tbe 50s.

of Columbus.
The , airpl ane struck a
hilltop and plunged into a
.-avUle on the George Linger
fann about five miles south of
Spencer shortly after dark
Saturd ay . The body was
thrown clear of the wreckage .
Th e
National
Transportation Safety Board
and th e Federal Aviation
Administration
were
investigating the crash.
The crash occurred about
four miles south of the
private Slate Run Airport,
according to Department of
Natural Resources off icer
Kenneth Mccaughan.
" If he'd gone north about
lour miles, he could have
seen
the
airport .."
Mccaughan said.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

Man extradited
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports 27year old Theron P. Steiniger.
Texa s, has bee n ordered
released to the State of Texas
following hearing on his
extradition Sat urday in
Meigs County Court .
Steinieer was arrested
Sept. 6, while hitchhiking on
SR 7. i..ater deputies learned
he was wanted in Texas on
charge of unauthorized use of
a motor vehicle.
Steiniger refused to waive
extradition to Texas, Potter
County. Texas offi cials
be ga n
extradition
proceedings and had set
Governor's warrant to Ohio
requesting that Ohio . Gov.
J ames Rhodes order hi s
return to Texas.
The Ohio Governor's
warrant wa s received
Saturday morning . Final
hearing on the extradition
was held and Judge Buck of
Meigs County Court ordered
Stelniger to be released to the
proper officials from Texas.
Steinlger was represented
by Court ~ppointed attorney,

Pat O'Brien while the State of
Ohio was represented by
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney Frederick Crow,
lll.
Steiniger is · being held in
Meigs County jail pending
arriva l of deputies from
Potter Co unty, Texas.
A deer was killed Saturday
when it Ran into the path of
an auoo driven by Lorraine P.
Aeiker, 28, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
The accident occured on SR7
at Five Points at 6:50 a.m.
Sunday at 3:25 , p.m.
deputies investigated an
accident on CR 30, Forest
Ru11 Road.
Rodney
Neigler , · 22,
Rt .
2.
Racine .
was
pickup he was driving went
off the road on the right over
an embankment and struck a
large tree.
Neigler was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and
released. The vehicle was
demolished.
Neigler WI!JI
cited to court on charges of
· · OW!.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo_rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov . 20, 1978

II

3-The ~aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , u ., Monday, Nov 20, 1!J7H

l'~Po.KE Ul' Yd.J\&lt; Mt\.lt' ..
.YoU ~D YoU Wfl.NTED

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

/&gt;..

Preview has close contests

·COMMENTARY

NeW Go\1£. RI'IKr:.~T.

: . Donald F. Graff

Holiday turkey

By Martha Angle and Robert Waltera

By Doa Graff

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The outcome of this year's
elections appears to hav&lt;t-,prolonged - and perhaps
exacerbated - the decades-long struggle waged by
opposing ideological factions for the heart and soul of the
Republican party.
The most striking gains in this month's balloting were
registered by the GOP's liberals - who vigorously eschew
that label and prefer to be known instead as "moderates "
"progressives" or " ~roblem-solving Republicans."
'
The conservatives victories were far more limited, but
the right wing of the Republican party (like the left wing of
the Democratic party ) traditionally has compensated for
its lack of actual strength with extraordinary zeal and
detennination.
The conservatives, especially the aggressive "New
Right," won just enough contests to convince the true
believers of the efficacy of their continuing crusade to
purge the GOP of anyone to the left of fonner California
Gov. Ronald Reagan.
The New Right's most notable successes toppled
incumbent liberal Democratic senators in what probably
were the year's two biggest political upsets.
In New Hamrshir e, Sen. Thomas J. Mcintyre, preswned
by virtually al observers to be assured of winning a third
tenn, was unexP."ctedly defeated by airline pilot Gordon
Humphrey, a nulitant conservative.
In Iowa, Sen. Dick Clark suffered the same fate at the
hands of New Right businessman Roger Jepsen, a fonner
lieutenant governor.
At the same time, however, the New Right lost the New
Jersey senatonal campaign, the race that was supposed to
be the centerpie~ of a banner year and the contest into
which it poured the most money.
Jeffrey Bell, a leading conservative theoretician, defeated liberal Republican Sen. Clifford P . Case in the
Garden State's GOP primary earlier in the year, but he
was beaten'" the general election by Democratic nominee
Bill Bradley.
Others with nght-&lt;&gt;f-center voting records also were
victorious, but they generally are of the traditional school
of conservatism, not overly strident in their demands on
fellow Republicans for ideological purity.
In that category are Reps. William L. Armstrong of
Colorado and Thad Cochran of Mississippi , both of whom
moved from the House to the Senate.
At least five progressive Republicans were elected to the
Se"''te for the first tune: David Durenberger and Rudy
Boschwitz of Minnesota, Nancy Landon Kassebawn of
Kansas, William S. Cohen of Maine and Larry Pressler of
South Dakota.
In the gubernatorial contests, however, the moderate
Repu~licans .scored even more significant victories,
secunng a hold on the chief executive's seat in every state
rmgrng the Great Lakes from Pennsylvania to Wisconsin.
R~lected were Govs. William G. Milliken of Michigan
James R. Thompson of Illinois and James A. Rhodes of
Ohio, as well as Robert Ray of Iowa.
JolDln!! them this year are three like-minded governorselect : Richard L. Thornburgh of Pennsylvania, Albert H.
Qme of Mmnesota and Lee S. Dreyfus of Wisconsin.
The Northeast and Midwest long have been the centers of
moderate, traditiOnal Republicanism while the New
Right's strength in recent years has co~e from the "Sun
Belt" of the South and West.
This year's political map clearly show~ that GOP gains
m the former regions surpass victories in the latter. But .
that hardly augurs an end to the intra-party ideological
warfare that dates back to 1912, was revived with a
vengeance in 1952 and erupted again in 1964.
Both Sides have won their share of those battles, but the
war IS far from over. Each faction received just enough
encouragement at the polls this year to become emboldened to take on the opposition in the upcoming contest for
the 1980 Republican presidential nomination.

HEALTH
lawrence E.lamb, M.D.
Silent
heart attack'!

attacks.
As a matter of fact, in a
survey my colleagues and I
did on the U.S. Air Force flyDEAR DR. LAMB - My - ing populatwn, we found a
wife has been under a doc- reasonable percentage of the
. lor 's care for several years pilots who had experienced
for diabetes. Recently, while heart attacks did have the
packing to move to another silent form.
city, she had a dizzy spell.
Your description of your
The paramedics were called wile's dizzy spell is rather
and responded quickly. When luruted, but if you really
they found out she was a meant " dizzy" m the sense of
diabetic, they gave her huge lamtness, that can be caused
amounts of orange jmce, by a heart attack and it may
-believing she was going into be the only indication of the
shock.
heart attack. That's one
Later, at the hospital, our reason why when a person
family doctor examined her famts, and there doesn 't
and stated that she had suf- seem to be any reason for It,
fered a heart attack. Now we It is a good Idea to take an
are puzzled as the only symp- electroca rdiogram along
tom she experienced was diz- with the rest of the evaluauness. She did not experience lion.
Diabetics, and that inany pam whatever.
My Wife does n't have any eludes diabetic women, are
previous history of heart more prone to have heart atdisease. However, she is tacks than non-diabetics. In
overweight. She IS on a fact,
women during
weight-re ducing program childbearing years seldom
and taking med1cme for a have a heart attack unless
heart condition. Is II possible they are diabetic, have high
for someone to have a heart blood pressure , · or kidney
attack without pain ?
disease leading to high blood
Friends think we should pressure .
consult another physician to
To give you more informabe sure the diagnosis Is cor- lion about heart attacks I am
reel, but with the ·cost of sending you The Health LetmediCal care, we hesitate to ter number 2-10, Heart Atincur additional expense.
tack, Myocardial Infarction ,
DEAR READER - There Angina Pectoris. Other
are a lot more silent heart at- readers who want this issue
tacks than you would guess. can send SO cents with a long,
Probably as many as one out stamped ,
self-addressed
of three heart attacks are not envelope for it. Address your
associated With the classic request to me in care of this
pain that is usually descnbed newspaper, P .O. Box 1551,
with a heart attack.
Radio City Station, New
The attacks may be York, NY 10019.
painless, or whatever
Regarding tbe wisdom of
discomfort does occur is so giving orange julce to your
minor or so vague that the wife, it is clear that the
person doesn't recognize that paramedics felt that she
anything serious is wrong. A might be having low blood
person may just feel weak sugar, or an insulin reaction.
Whenever a patient is &lt;lizand, later on, it may be found
that the cause for the zy, or wbenever a diabetic
weakness was an unrecogniz-1 shows signs of faintness or
shock, and it IS impossible to
ed heart attack.
We know this on the basis of know whether II is diabetic
repeated electrocardiograms coma (too much sugar) or
(electrical tracings of tbe low blood sugar, the better
heart) and from post-mortum choice of action is to save the
st~•!ies from people wbo have
sugar or orange jwce unl11
no history of having had heart the patient's condibon can be

•

•

•

•

If the annual SVAC cage
is an indication,
things should be close this
season in the loop's standings. Southwestern, HaMan
Trace and North Gallia
posted
close victories
Saturday night during the
preview at the Paul R. Lyne
Center at Rio Grande
pr~view

J' ,

GOP factions at war

.

The bad news this Thanksgiving is that the price of
turkey is up sharply.
Some more bad news is that even if shoppers are willing
to pay more, there could still be some difficulty in find.ln8 a
•
·
bird, at least one the desired size.
Turkeys are in less plentiful supply this holiday season
for a nwnber of reasons, a major one being the success 6(
growers in persuading the public to include them on the
menu more often during the rest of the year.
·
Where a full .80 percent of U.S. turkeys used to be
collSumed during the Thanksgiving-Christmas-New Year
period, at least a third of all sales now occur during the
- first half of the year. Also, the whole bird is no longer the
whole story. There is increased demand for turkey parts
and processed products, accounting for just over half of
last year's production.
Rising meat prices are also a factor. At around half the
price of hamburger, turkey is a protein bargain.
While there isn't anything like a widespread shortage of
ttll'keys this season, they no longer are a holiday bargain
and smaller birds especially are at a premiwn. Growers
are marketing fewer under·Hl-pound models since big
birds are more profitable in the processed food market.
For those who can take their tradition or leave it, the
answer this year may be more chicken and specialty
poultry on holiday tables.
ahead to stay.
play.
berg, 9-4-1, into a semifinal
Ualted Press International
And at last we come to the good news. At the very least,
,.oledo, which finished with
Wittenberg junior Steve matchup next Saturday
Cincinnati Coach Ralph
that ought to .take care of the leftovers problem.
Staub knew about Miami's a U overall mark and 2-7 in Jefferies booted a 24-yard against
Minnesota·Morris.
Greg Jones, but his Bearcats the MAC, scored twice in the field goal with ten seconds to
Jefferies' winning kick, his
were just too busy trying to fll'st period, on a two-yard go in the game to lift the second field goal of the game,
harness the Redskins' Mark run bY Maurice Hall and a 6i&gt;- Tigers to their 6-3 win over came four minutes after
On the subject of Thanksgiving, some Chicago food
Hunter.
consultants
have calculated that the typical holiday dinner
yard punt return by Scott · Ithaca.
Ithaca's Tcm Darling had
The Cincinnati defense did Alexander.
this
year
will
contain more than 2,000 calories, compared
The win advaftces Witten- lied the contest at 3-3 with a
to an estimated 575 calories per celebrant back in 1621.
Flashes
took
After
that,
the
22-yard boot.
a fine job against Hunter,
Optimists no doubt will see in that an example of how we
Miami 's junior tailback, control, holding Toledo to just
hav~ prospered over the years, pessimists as further
Local
Bowling
balding him to 56 yards in 22 68 yards in the rest of the
evidence of the national penchant for inflation.
carries.
game. Toledo had 119 yards
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
busters 859 , Team No . 6 820;
But Jones stung the overall while KSU had 368,
Early Wednesday
Country Bumpkins 801 .
Mixed League
Bearcats fll' 197 yards in 20 314 on the ground.
Nov. 1, 1978
tr'
· 1 d' 64 d 6
d
Akron closed the season Team
The holidays just wouldn't be the holidays without the
POMEROY LANES
Pts.
tes, me u mg an 7-yar
:ieiman-Marcus catalogs for some people, both those who
Frtday Nile Mixed
52
touchdown runs that sparked with its tOOth win in the Smi1h-Nelson Motors
November 10, 1978
46
actually patronize the exclusive Dallas store and those who
the R.edskins to a 28-24 win in Rubber Bowl and a th1 overall Long Shols
Young's
Markel
,
44
W L delight in its annual innovations in conspicuous conswnpConference
the 83rd meeting between the Mid-Continent
51 29 tion.
Headquarters
34 Capehart's
two Southwestern Ohio record and 4-lleague record. Zide's Sport Shop
51 29
33 Young's Carpeting
This year's edition includes the usual run of ultra·
rivals.
Freshman tailback Terry No.3
44 36
31 . Young ' s Gu ll Sta.
expensive
fashions, jewelry and amusing little items of no
Coleman's
42 38
The win was the eighth in a Cameron, in his first start for
High series- Larry Dugan
practical
purpose, such as gold·plated barbells for
possible
Team
4
38
42
592,
Carolyn
Bachner
511;
row for Miami and capped an Akron, scored a record five
10 70 the executive who wants to "raise prestige and drop
S-2-l season for the Redskins, to~chdowns Saturday night to John Tyree 547, Isabelle T.. m6
inches." (On this item, the catalog errs - they are
Team High Series
who lost their first two lead the Zips to a 39-28 win Couch 476.
High game - Larry Dugan Young's Carpeting 859;
dumbbells, but it's nice to know N-M copywriters can be
225, Carolyn Bachner 188; Young's Gull Station, 786;
this human.)
over Northern Iowa.
games.
11lis year's superglft, the piece of easy resistance for
Two of Ohio 's NCAA Larry Dugan 207, Maxine Team 4, 776.
Cincinnati scored the first
Team High Game Dugan 17.4.
most
of us, is a pair of His and Hers security vaults set into
touchdOWI) in the game, but a Division
III
playoff
Team series Smith - Young's Carpeting 306;
the
granite
of a 9,000-foot Utah mountain. Just the place
blocked conversion attempt partieipants , survived first Nelson Motors 1969.
Young's Carpeting 394; Team
th~
security·minded
affluent are assured, to store ~
put the Bearcats behind the round play Saturday.
4
287.
Team
game
priceless work of art, that vrntage wine or irreplaceable
Men's High Series - Butch
eight ball the rest of the
Baldwin-Wallace over- Headquarters 709.
Roush 4W Mike Capehart personal records. At a $90,000 for a 50-year lease.
game. Miami led all the way whelmed St. Lawrence
423: Terry Seldenabel 392
More tempting in several respects, however, is the
Sundav Miners
Men 's High Game- Mike chocolate Monopoly set. At $600, the idea is to polish it off
Oct. 22, 1978
af~r Jones' 67-yard run, (N.Y.) 71-7 and Wittenberg
Capehart 162; Butch Roush
Standings
which came only 20 seconds got by Ithaca (N .Y.) lhl But
as the "greatest finale to a dinner party ever conceived."
w. L. 160 ; Mike Capehart 155.
after Tim Morris' touchdown Dayton lost an overtime Team
The New York Times, taking editorial note, decrees the
Women's High Series 50 22
toss to Mike Cuswnano the affair to Carnegie-Mellon Hot Shofs
offering
an outrage, contradicting the Ieason the game can
Alley Cats
42 30 Marlene Wilson 467; Edith
properfy
teach children - thrift.
Bearcats a shortlived IHl (Pa.), 24-21.
Hall392;
Margaret
Wyatt
366.
Team No.6
37 35
margin
Baloney,
to keep this in terms of comestibles. What
Women's High Game Quarterback Joe Surniak Pinbusters
32 40
Monopoly has always taught is acquisitiveness. He who
Ohio Universii scrambled passed for three touchdowns Country Bumpkins
32 40 Marlene Wilson 180; Marlene
fr
beh' d · y the f' 1 and ran for another; all in the Sunday Duds
amasses the most property and holds up his fellow players
23 49 Wilson 147; Marlene Wilson
om
m m
ma
Men's high game - Ralph 140.
for the hig~est rents walks off ~th the spoils of the game..
quarter to hand Bowling first half, to lead Baldwin· Gibbs 190; Les Gibbs 183 ;
COIISlderrng that Monopoly IS real estate oriented and
POMEROY LANES
Green Its first straight loss. Wallace to its romp over St. Rick Martin 172.
Wednesday Earlybirds
fUirther considering what has been happening to pri~es of
Men 's high series - Less
Quarterback Mike Scunaca Lawrence.
November a, 1978
late, the edible game may actually be an accidentally apt
465 ; Ralph Gibbs 464;
W L comment on one aspect of the economy today. The stock
Surniak passed 17 and 13 Gibbs
scampered 35 yards. for one
Kenny Riggs 427.
Royal C;own
59 21
market m~y have soured, but there's only one way to
fourth-quarter touchdown yards for touchdowns to Matt
Women's high game New York Clothing
46 34 describe the situation of a substantial owner of real
and later added a game- Degyansky, hit Jose Tirado Gwen Mart in and Ann ~rris Swisher and Lohse
41 39 property.
wirming one-yard run to give with a 32-yarder and also ran 156 ; Marty Riggs 155; Sheryl Riebel's Used Cars
38 42
How sweet it is
Jack's Club
30 50
the Bobcats a 19-15 Mid- 37 yards for a score on his Gibbs 151.
Women's high series - Ann
King
Builders
26
54
American Conference win. only carry of the game. He Morns 416; Gwen Martin 401 ;
High Ind. Game- Melanie
Scimaca
scored
the did not play in the second Marty Riggs 380.
Barnett 190; Candy Brothers
wirming touchdown five plays half.
Team high game - Pin · 181 ; Pauline Fields 178.
High Ind. Series- Melanie
after his 48-yard pass to
B-W, now ~I on the year, busters 304; Alley Cals 301;
Hot Shols and Country Bump. Barnett 482; Debbie Hawley
Faron Volkmer gave the meets Carnegie-Mellon in the klns
296
473 ; Betty Whitlatch and
Bobcats the ball on the BG 13. semifinals.next weekend.
Team high series
Hazllee Riebel 454 .
BY KENNETH R. CLARK
The victory was the third
Dayton and Carnegie- Country Bumpkins 834; Hot
High Team Game - Royal
Ualted Press lntematiOIUII
Crown 764; Royal Crown 760;
overall for the Bobcats Mellon finished in a 14-14 Shots 827 ; Al ley Cats 810.
New
Y(ll'k
Clothing
730.
... : Carrie Cavett
WHO'SBEENSLEEPINGINMYBED?
against seven losses and regulation time deadlock
Sunday Miners
High
Team
SeriesRoyal
fell
like
Mama
Bear
of
the
Goldlocks
epic when she
must
have
upped their MAC record to 3- the Flyers drove 76 yards in
Oct. 29, 1978
Crown 2207 , New York called her Montauk, N. Y., home during the weekend,
4. BG finished its season wit.li the final 2'h minutes fir a
Standings
Clothing 2084 ; Riebel's Used
expecting talk-ehow husband Dick Cavett to answer. The growl
Team
W. L. Cars 2004.
a 4-7 overall mark and 3-5 in touchdown.
Hot
Shots
50
30
at
the other end of the line definitely wasn't his, so she hung up
the ccnference,
The two teams went into Team No.6
45 35
and
dialed again. Tbe same voice quickly said, "This is
Kent State, paced by sub the overtime period in which Alley Cats
42 38
TUESDAY TRIPLICATE
Muhammad
All and I'm in your bed watching your TV." The
quarterback Bill St. Pierre, each team was given a crack Plnbusters
40 40
November·l4, 1978
champ
was
in
New York to film an upcoming television special
Country
Bumpk(ns
40
40
edged Toledo 17·13 to get out at scoring from the opposing
Pis.
23 57 Royal Oak Park
72
which Cavett will narrage, and Cavett -an old friend -asked
of&lt;the MAC basement.
team's 15-yard line, with the Sunday Duds
Men's high game - Ralph · Router-Brogan Ins.
60
him to be a houseguest. He just forgot to tell his wife. Says he
St. Pierre came off the first team to score and then Gibbs 191 ; Kenny Riggs. .,167c, ; Royal
Crown Cola
59
"I'll probably put up a plaque over the bed that says 'To;
bench when regular Tom hold to be declared the 161.
Doug's Marine Sales
40
greatest
slept here.' "
Men's high series - Ralph · Friendly-Tavern
37
Delaney was inJured to direct winner.
Gibbs
491
;
Kenny
Riggs
454
;
Robert
Roble
Con
st.
20
Both scored touchdowns on
Kent State to a touchdown
Rick Martin 434.
High lnd Game - Mel
FAMIUAR FACES: The taping of an "Ali.Star Tribute to
and a field goal.
their first possession and C·
Women 's high game Barnett 206 ; Pat Carson 184;
Jimmy
Stewart," fll' airing on CBS-TV Dec. 7, turned into an
He took over early in a M's Danny Postulka kicked a Sheryl Gibbs 155; Ann Morris Debbie Hawley 180.
all«ar
cocktail party during the weekend in Hollywood and it
High Series - Debbie
third-period scoring drive, 17-yard field goal to give his 152 , Marty Riggs 139.
Women
's
h1gh
series
was
well-titled.
Guests included Steve Allea, Jaae Allysoo
Hawley
513;
Mel
Barnett
496
;
and engineered a grouncj team a 24-21 lead.
Sheryl Gibbs 419; Ann Morris Betty Sm1lh and Bev Hensley
tarol
Burnett,
Kathy
Crooby, Barbara Edea, Ji'amb Fawe!ett:
attack which led to Dave
The CMU defeMe then put 410; Rhonda Gibbs 368.
450.
Glen
Ford,
Peter Graves, Sblrley Jones, Ted
:lfaj&lt;rs,
1
Bolden's seven-yard scoring the game away by recovering
Team high game - Pin ·
Team High Game- Reuter
lmight,
Art
IJnkletter,
Lee Ma_jon, Diet Marlla, Sagar
busters
328;
Country
Bum
Brogan
Ins
.
504.
run which put the Flashes a fumble on the Flyers' third
Ray Robinson, Elke Sommen, Collllie Sleve111, Elizabetal
pkins 291, Plnbusters 283.
Team High Selres Team h1gh series - Pin· Reuter - Brogan Ins. 1403.
Taylor and Wayne. Also mimic Rich Little, who seaMed
the crowd and.gasped, "God, my whole act is here.''

Jones claws Bearcats

Colle~e.

Coach Wayne Bergoll's
Southwestern
Highlanders
defeat Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek Bobcats, 29-24;
Hannan
Trace
edged
Eastern, 24-23 and North
Gallia topped the 1977-78
defending champion Souther
Torna!loes, 32-14.
Each varsity tilt was
preceded by a junior varsity
contest. In those games,
Southwestern topped Kyger
Creek,I3-6 ;·Eastern defeated
Hannan Trace's reserves, 188 and Southern's reserves
overran North Gallia's J 'Vs,

25-14.

KCSOUrHWESTERN
Greg Nelson dumped in 12
points to pace Southwestern
to its 29-24 win over Kyger
Creek. Gene Layton, senior
guard, had six points.
Pa cing the Bobcats was 6-6
senior .center Jon Thompson
with 10 points Von Taylor,
senior guard-forward, had six
points. Southwestern held a
10-61ead at the end of the first
period.

Paui Shaffer led the
Wildcats with seven points.
Ron Pack had six a nd Carlos
Campbell five. Jeff Gobel,
senior guard, led Eastern
with 10 points. Dan Spencer
had seven.

--

NG.sOUTHERN
--~--

North Gallia showed it
must be reckoned with this
season as the fast-moving
pirates defeated Southern, 32·
25.
Eastern-Hannan Trace
'Pacing mterim coach Ted
In the closest game of the Lehew's squad were Sam
night, Coach Don Saunders' Smith with 15 pomts and
Hannan Trace wffctcats Stacey Wmston with six. Tim
jumped into a 15-13lead at the Brmager, senior forward, led
end of the first period then Carl Wolfe's Tornadoes with
held on to defeat Eastern, 24- six points.
23.
Officials donating their
At one pomt, the Wildcats time were John Mil)loan, &amp;n
had the ball and a three point Ellis, Tom Hardy , Paul
lead but saw Coach John Leffingwell, Don Wilson,
Boston's Eagles cut the lead Chuck Malone, Bill Haines,
to just one point. Eastern, Dick Doty, Mel Carter, Bob
actually had a chance to win. Taylor, Dave Ridenour and
but jump shot fell short. Keith Murdock.

under Medicare must he that claimants always have
submitted within certain time
at least 15 months to submit
limits, Edwin Peterson , Medicare Claims.
For doctor's services
Branch Manager of Athens
Social Security Office said received between October I,
1976 and September 30, 1977,
recently.
Many people become · tbe claim must be submitted
concerned near the end of by December 31, 1978.
December about the time However, claims submitted
for services between October
1, 1977 and September 30, 1978
must he sent in by December
TilE DA.ItY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
31, 1979. People have untO
INTERE'Sl'OF
December 31, 1980 to submit
MEIGS.MASON AREA
ROBERT IIOFJ'LICII
claims for doctor's services
~lly F.dlklr
received between October 1,
Publlahed~ll)' except Suturd11y
1978 and September 30, 1979.
by Tht: Ohio Vulley Publl.!illitlg
Company·MuiUmediB , Inc ,
Ill
Peterson also explained
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio 4~4
that
many people are
8W:IIRe!lt:l Office Phone m 2156'
Editonwl Phone992-:U57 '
unaware of the carryover
Second clallll post.Mge paid 11l ,..
rule. If an individual's
Pomeroy, Oh1u
'
covered medical expeoaes In
14i~:!~o't..n=e~!~ta~~.e;~gf the last three months of a
Euclid Ave , Cleveb.nd, Ohio 44115
Subst-npUon rates Dellvertd bf
year can be counted toward
c&lt;tm l:!r where llVMilable 75 t.'tnt.s per
$80 deductible for that
their
w~k . By Mutor Route wht!re ct~rri er
year, it can also be counted
.servtL't! not available, One montll,
S.1 2S B.Y null! m Ohio cmtl W v~ .•
toward the $80 deductible for
One Year, 122.00, Sue: munlhti,
the next year. 'This carryover
, $11. 50 , Three munth!l, $7 00 ~
El!lt'whert $26 00 yt!ar ; Stx month¥
is true .even if the total
1$13 50 , Three munths, S7 . 5~.
covered expenses for the year
i Subscnpllun price Includes Sundt~Y
TwwlhSentmt:l .. _
are less than $80.
Those people needing more
definitely ctetennined.
information
on
filing
Allin all, it sounds like your Medicare Claims are urged to
wife has received good atten- contact the 1 Social Secartty
tion for a difficult disease Office, 221 'h Columbus &amp;a1
With its complications.
in Athens.

I

TRACK STAR: As far as veterana of the ~ay are
ccncerned, Paul Newman missed his calling when be opted for
matinee idol rather than race car driver. That's the word in
New York from the pros as polled in the December IBaue of
,Sport magazine, Says 31-year veteran Doll Ke..aey, "If Paul
NewmaJlhaddecided tobearacecar driver at 21 instead 6( an
actor, the man would have been a world champion.' ' lllau
Mart111 is equally-effusive- says, "There's no way he should
be out m the track dr!vlng as well as he does at 53. He's jlllt got
talentcOOlingoutofhis ears." Newman took up the sportaiter
· maldng a race film in 1968 and won a national championship in

1976.

BEYOND BREAKFAST: British cunic Dudley Moore had
a weighty problem when he unexpected landed a movie role.
Say~ the fonner "Beyond the Fringe" cutup, "I didn't expect
to be doing another film until next year 10 I badn't been paying
much attention to my weight." But for the lead In "10" _a.
romantic cm~edy - II was imperative that Dudley dwindle
His crash diet, Moore told a Hollywood Interviewer cona1sts
a breakfast of ... honest ... butterfish, bruaae'ts sprouts,
broccoH, green beans, chinese peas and albbage, allllprinkled
with powdered Mweed. ''Once I've gone through that Jot I'm
set up for the day.I don't eat again, and the weight jult
off me." He sals the diet peeled off 12 po!11M)s'tn 12 days.

oi

-

.

.

drops

·

(f) 1978byNEA,Int

~~

"OH YEAH!? Well, MY family is eating lower
on the food chain t(lan YOUR family["

~

GLIMPSES: Glen CampbeU wiU perform Wednelday In
Los Angeles on NBC-TV's "Diet aut•a Live Wednellday"
Gres..-y Peek will attend a White H001e ceremony
Kennedy Center pia boncring Martu Alldenoa, Fnc1
Altlllre, George B"enehtne, IUcbUd Roqen and Arllir
Rubinstein Dec. 3 ... Dlua RIQ Ia ~In London in Peter
Wood's productton of "Night and ,Day" ... Jolla Fenydle has
joined AI Paclu and director NoniiiD Jewa in Baltimore
Md., for !be lllmlng rl.lhe Columbia film "And Jllllke Fo~
All" ... S.U, Stra!Mn, wbo p!IIyed Gloria on "AD In the
Family." wiU lin 1 l'e8dlng of poetry by llnell and Arab
ehlldren Dec. 3 u part of 1 Nrles on art In l.lrael, at !be Las

mid

1....------------------J Angeles County M1111eum of Art ...

II

Nelson , 4-4-12 ; Newberry , 0-4

4, Baker, 2·0·4, Russell, 1 1-3
and Lay ion, 2·2·6. Totals 9-112'1.

Eastern (231 - Spencer. 3

1·1: BisselL 1-0-2. Gobel. 5 o

10 ; Matthews, 2-0·4 Totals
1·23
Trace

Hannan

(24

11

-

Shaffer, 0-7·7 : Campbell, 2·,15; Webb, 1 0 2, Pa ck, 2-2-6;
Beaver, 1-2-4. Total s 6 12 24.
Southern (251- Findley , 11-3, Dully, 1-0-2; Hill , 2-2-6;

RESERVE ACTION - North Gallia's Jeff Smith (15)
goes m for a lay-up during Saturday 's NG.Southern
reserve game of the Annual SV AC PreVIew . Lookmg on

10

Hayes looking for roses

s 25.

North Gallia (321 - Smith,

7·1-15 ; Win ston , 3-0·6,

McComas, 2-0-4; Peck, 0-1-1:
Little, 0-2-2, Glassburn, 1 - 0 ~ 2
and Lewi s, 1-0 2. Total s 14-4·

East

w

T.
0
0
6
0
5 7 0
3 9 0
central
w L T
10 2 0

New England

M1a m1
NV J e ts
Baltimore
Buffalo
Pittsburgh

Houston
Cleveland

9
8

7
6

C1n c innatl

Wes1

8
8

Oak land
Sa n Di ego

6
6

Sea ttl e

Kansa s C1ty

i:ii:Ai&gt;SII?'A:iffilitEAK-

•

Cardinals wm fo·u rth
contest in row~ 27-17
By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Writer
After an 0-8 start under new
Coach Bud Wilkinson, the St.
Louis Cardinals captured
their foUirth straight victory
Sunday,
upsetting
the
Washington Redskms, 27-17,
in Washington. They now
have beaten three NFC East
rivals
Washington,
Philadelphia and the New
York Giants.
Washington, now 8-4, is JUSt
crawling along as they head
into Thursday afternoon 's
NFC East showdown at
Dallas.
Sunday, the Redsklns came
out flat and an early Cardinal
scoring blitz did little to
shake that lethargy.
"We weren't looking ahead
to Dallas," maintained
Redsklns Coach'
Jack
Pardee. " We were prepared
for this game.''
St. Louis opened with
Willard Harrell's 70-yard
punt return for a touchdown
following the Redskins' first
possession, and Jim Hart
passed 21 yards to reserve
tight end Dave Stief for a
touchdown after the ball was
tipped by wide receiver Mel
Gray .
Hart added a 4-yard pass to
tight end AI Chandler and
Jim Bakken followed with a
32-yard field goal for a 24~
lead 10 minutes before
halftime.
So much for preparation.
Bakken later kicked a 27yard field goal to take over
second place on the all-time
NFL scoring list with 1,367
points.
Redskin quarterback Joe
Theismann threw scoring
passes of 13 yards to Mike
Thm~as and 42 yards to ·John
McDaniel and Mark Moseley
kicked a :;o.yard field goal.
In ccntrasl to the Redskins'
embarrassing running game,
which finished just five yards
ahead of the team record low,
Wayne Morris ran for 123
yards on 36 carries for the
Cardinals.
The final quarter of the
expanded 1978 NFL season
wiU have a difficult time
matching the excitement and
tension that characterized
the last quarter of Sunday's

two games involvmg the New
York teams.
"In all my 25 years of
coaching rve never seen so
horrifying a finish to a
game,11 muttered New York
Coach John McVay, after he
stood helplessly on the
sidelines watching
Philadelphia cornerback
Herman Edwards scoop up a
fumble and run 26 yards for
the game-winning touchdown
with 20 seconds left as the
Eagles stunned the Giants,
19-17.
The Giants apparently had
the game won as the clock
ticked away the game's final
seconds with Philadelphia out
of timeouts, but on what
should have been the game's
!mal play, a handoff between
Joe Pisarcik and Larry
Csonka was mishandled .
Edwards raced in with a TD
that keeps Philadelphia , 7-!),
in the fuzzy playoff picture.
Twenty-five miles away, at
Shea Stadium, the score was
the same - only the names
were different.
David Posey took hero
honors and Pat Leahy tried
on the goat horns as the New
England Patriots, 9-3, took
over sole possession of first
place in the AFC East with a
19-17 triumph over t he New
York Jets.
"! missed it, I missed it, I
missed it," said Leahy, after
the NFL's leading scorer
missed a potential gamewinning 33-yard field goal
with 31 seconds remaining.
Posey connected on a 24yarder with 2: 30 left to pull
out the victory for the
Patriots, who saw a 16-10 lead
evaporate
when
Matt
Robinson - subbing for the
reinjured Richard Todd connected with the fleet
Wesley Walker on a 56-yard
TD pass in the final quarter.
Todd, starting for the first
time after missing seven
games with a broken
collarbone,
broke
the
collarbone again and is out
for the season .
Horace Ivory, a part-time
running back, scored his
ninth and tenth TDs for the
Patriots, who lead Miami by

a halfgame.
In other NFL gam~.

Cleveland 45, Baltimore 24 ;
Chicago 13, Atlanta 7; Seattle
13, Kansas City 10; Dallas 27,
New OrleallS 7; Tampa Bay
31, Buffalo 10; San Diego 13,
Minnesota 7; Denver 16,
Green Bay 3; Pittsburgh 7,
Cincinnati 6; Los Angeles 31,
San Francisco 28 ; and
Oakland 29, Detroit 17 .
Houston hosts Miami Monday
night.

Bnan S1pe passed for a
career-high 309 yards and
four touchdo'T"s, •three of
them to running back Calvin
HilJ., to pace Cleveland over
Baltimore, which played
without injured quarterback
Bert Jones. Hill tied a
Cleveland club record of
three TD receptions with
catches of 53, 37 and 23 yards.
Bruce Herron blocked a
punt to set up a touchdown
and Bob Thomas kicked two
field goals to help Chicago
snap an eightgame losing
streak and end Atlanta 's fivegame winning streak.
Efren Herrera kicked two
field goals and David Sims
added a 11}-yard TD run to lift
Seattle over Kansas City for a
Seahawk club record sixth
victory.
Butch Johnson's 56-yard
kickoff return opening the
second hall set up Dallas'
third short TDdrive and gave
the Cowboys a share of the
lead in the NFC East.
Mike Rae passed for two
TDs and Ricky Bell ran for
another
before
being
sidelined with a knee injury
as Tampa Bay snapped a
three-game losing streak.
Dan Fouts threw a Jl}-yard
TD strike to rookie John
Jefferson and San Diego held
Minnesota scoreless for the
final three quarters to post Its
road win. The Chargers, now
6-6, won their fourth straight
while the Vikings, 7-!), ended
a four-game winning streak
Rob Lytle, with 133 yards
rushing entering the game,
ran- for a career-best 110
yards and one· touchdown to
lead Denver over Green Bay,
keeping the Packers tied with
Minnesota for first place in
the NFC Central.
.
Rocky Bleier's !-yard TD
It was plunge in the second quarter

L
3
3
6

4 0
6 0

1 11 0

w

Den ver

Brett
(20) Eastern guard goes up for~a:~;;:--;;;;'r.::':
against the HaMan Trace Wildcats in action during Saturday's SVAC Preview at
R.
Lyne Center. Trailing the play are Hannan Trace 's Mike Webb (25) and Jonny Saunders
(35) and the Eagles' Jeff Goebel (12) and Brian Bissell (14). Hannan trace won the two
quarter contest, 24-23.

are Southern 's Tom Roseber ry 130) and Robm Fortune
110) and the Pll'ates' Mark M1 Ue r 14:1 ). Southern won the
contest ~H

Rees , 1-0-2 ; Bnnager, 3-0-6 .
For eman, 0-2·2 ; Teaford, 1 02 and O'Brien , 1 0-2 Totals

NFL S1andings
Bv Umted Press International
American Conference

The taste of the game

:a~~:nc~~u ~~~~ p:~~e:~ined ,B_e_r_r_y~'_s_W~_o_r_ld______,_ _,

BOX SCORES
Kyger Creek (24)
Gi lmore, 1·0·2 ; Smllh, 1-0·2.
Thompson, 5 0-10 , Tay lor , 3
0-6; Spri nger, 2-0 4. Totals 12
0-24.
.
Sou thwes 1ern 129 I

32.

Postscript

Peopletalk

Also donatmg their time
were ticket sellers and door
keepers from various SVAC
schools, John Scott, official
timekeeper
and
Dale
Rothgeb, Jr . officia l scorer.

Pet
.750

727
.500

m
250

Pet
833

636

500
083

L. T . Pet.
4 0
667
4 0

6

0

6 0

2 10 0

6t7 champwr Clemson.
500
But Ha) cs IS lookmg lor500 ward to the trip to Los
167

Angeles next month, one the

National Conference
East
W L T Pet.
Dalla s
8 4 0
667
Wa shi ngton
8 4 0
667
7 5 0
Ph il.!!delph 1a
583
417
5 7 0
NY G1ant s
St L OUIS
4 8 0
333
Central
W L T . Pc1.
Green Bay
7 5 0
583
7 5 0
M1nnesota
583
5 7 0
All
Tampa Bay
4
Detro1f
8 0
333
Ch1cago
4 8 0
333
west
W L T Pet
Los Angeles
10 2 0
833
i Aflanta
7 5 0
58 3
New Orleans
5 7 o
417
San Franc1sc
1 11 0
083
Sunday's Resu lts
Tampa Bay 31, Buffal o 10
New Engl and 19 , N Y J ets 17
Phil a 19, NY Giants 17
Sl Loui s 27, Wash 1ngton 17
San Diego 13, M1nnesot a 7
Ch1cago 13, Atlanta 7
Cleveland 45 , Balt imor e 24
Dalla s 27 , New Orleans 7 7
Seattl e 13, Kansas C1 t y 10
P1ttsburgh 7, C.nct nnatl 6
Oak l and 29, o etro1t 17
Den ver 16, Green Bay 3
Lo s Ang 31 , San Fran 28
Monday' s Game
M1am1 ar Hous ton , 9 p m
Thursday, Nov 23
Denver at Detro1t. 12 30 p m
Wa sh at Dallas, 3 30 p m
Sunday, November 26
Los Angeles at Cleve , 1 p m
NY G1ants at Buffa lo, 1 p m
NY Jets at M1am1 , 1 p m
New Orlns at Atla, 1 p m
Cinc1 at Houston . 2 p m
M1nn at Green Bay , 2 p m
Ph il a at St LO UI S, 2 p m
San Otego at Kan C1ty, 2 p m
T am pa Bay at Chicago. 2

pm
New Eng at
pm

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - As
far as Woody Hayes IS concerned, he's lookmg toward
only one bowl game and
that's the Rose Bowl.
Ohio State and Mi chigan
will hght It out m Columbus
Saturday , for the Big Ten
championsh ip and the n ght to
meet Southern Cal in the
&amp; se Bowl on Jan. 1.
The . Big Ten Saturday
announced that t he conference runnerM
up, the loser
of the Ohio State-Michigan
game, will go to the Gator
Bowlm Jacksonville, Fla., on
Dec. 29 to face AtlantiC Coast

Balt1more ,

Sea ttl e at Oakland , 4 p .m
Monday, November 27
Pittsbgh at San F ran , 9 p m

Buckeyes haven 't taken the
The Buckey es edged Indiana 21-18 Saturday , while
Michigan thumped P urdue
2H to set up the showdown
which is gettmg to be an
almost annual event between
the t wo arch-n vals.
Indiana Coach Lee Corso
sa1d Sunday he ts p1ckmg

Warriors,
Badin meet
in finals

semifinal ww over Ne w
Concord John Glenn.
St, Mar y's halfback J eff
Cisco, the game's lead1ng
rusher, scored the two touchdowns for the Rough R1ders,
wbo bowed out with a 10.1
record.
Ulmer scored on a 1-yard
run late in the second penod
to give the Warrtor s a 7-0 lead
at halftime He added scoring
runs of three and eight yards
in the thi rd and fourth
periods.
New Concord. bowmg out
with a 11}-1 record, su!!ered
from too many t urnovers, as
it had numerous s corm g
opportunities throughout the
game. It drove to the Badm 5
in the last half only to lose the
ball on a fumble, and drove to
the 14 another time only to
have a field goa l attempt
blocked . Three other times it
penetrated
inside
the
Hamilton 30, only to lose the
ball on fumbles and pass
interceptions.

Custom full
In one ar too days
Our staff of denti sts a nd

technicia ns wi ll make you r
custorn dentur~ qutckly and
economica ll y

One or two day full
denture serv tce,
&amp;

beaten Wolvermes.

trnprovmg team and those

Corso thought h1s Huu1sers
gave the Buckeyes a ll they
could handle Saturday and
Ha)es agreed

are the ones that can sneak

"I've never had an ln d1a ua

team play that well, that
long , and und er th at much

pressure," said Corso "]am
very d1 sappomted, but nol In
my players. How long 'las It
been smce you' ve seen an
Ohio State team happy the

game was over.··

one.
"'lll ey kne w ~ e wct e gu mg
h a~ e

up un you
The Bucke) es scor etl t w1ce
m the tlurd quarter Li nd
luo ked hke Uw; '"''ere go mg to
put the game on 1ce.
I-l owever, lndJant~ kept
f1 ghlln~ back
They d1d a great JOb m
the t hird quart er ,'' . sa 1d
Co t su
1-hstor) has shown
the v've

a h \iJ) S

beaten us

111

the ttnrd quarter

"They played very, vc1;
well," sa 1d Haye s. ''Thc11·
qu1ck k1cks desll oyed our
field position . Nu. our kids
\\ei en't looking be) ond this

to

" lndt.tn&lt;l ho s an

a tough ball game.''

" \V f'

ktds

111

\\anted to keep fr esh
and we felt the only

•"av tu heat them was wtth
nu;nbers," satd Corso

"We've tned ever yt hing e lse.
We tned cverythmg, reverse
pass, quick · kicks ·
ever ything ."

N BA Standi ng s
By U n1ted Pre ss 1ntern at1 on a1
Ea stern Conf er en ce
Atla nt 1c DI VIS IO n
W L Pet . G B
Phtla
12 3 800
Wshngln
11 7 t,ll
21 ~
New Jersy
11 8 579 3
New York
10 8 556 3' 1
Boston
-1 12
250 Bl -;
Centra l DI V I Sl(ln
W l Pet
GB
Hn us!on
8 6 571
A tl anta
8 ! 533
'2
SanAnt on 10
8
9 47 1
11 ~
New Or le n s
6 12 333
4
De lr 91 l
6 1? 333
&lt;l
Cleve land
5 13 &lt;'78 5
Western Conf e n~ nc e
M idwest DI\IISIOn
W L Pet
GB
K anss Ct y
10 7 588
Den ver
9 9 500 11 :1
ln d 1ana
5 11 313 ,p,
M1lw auk e
6 14 300 51,
Ch,ca go
4 14 222 6' ,
Pac1f1c OtV ISIOn
W l Pet G B
Seat t le
13 J 81 3
Los An ge ls
14
4 77 8
Phoen 1x
12 6 667 2
Portland
10
7 588
3' ~
Gol d en Sl
10 7 588 31,
San D i ego
9 12 429 6 1 ,

You c an help cu r doun on
losse-s that
drre c tly
allec1
you,
whet her they happen to you
or not

cnme lu'&gt;&gt;:&gt;e s

Take th e cnme ot arson
You 're pa y1nq a n tn
creasrngly heav y sub st dy
for deliber ately se t l1re&gt;s
thr ou gh you r 1nsu r ance
premrums
I nsurance
adverse l y

The Riviere Center

._.-:

LIVing:~ton A"e__c~l~~~u_s_ 1_

.....::..c;::..;_

·'

are
by

robber es
ca r • hefts
plus
countless C B rad1os
bt c yciP &lt;; th at tyr n
m1 ssing

and
tr e
and

burgtane s

up

One thm g )OU can do IS to
suppo rt

p~ogr ams

provr d rng sf1ffer penalt1es
for
wronqdoers
and

Person to person
health insurance
It can help pay
soaring hospital
and surgical bills. ·
Call me. .

Mike Swige
992 -7155

Sll' !
'-..·~~b

.....

You can also make 1t
tougher tor crooks Use
good stron g lo:: k s A'\ark
po~sesstons
w1th
your
soc1al secun t y nu mber

Our

agen cy
P"ovrde5
frnan c1al pr o tecti on an d
se rvt ce when cr1me loss es
occur
but many ca n be
preven1Pd That s why we
say -- preventton rs the

best polr cy

149 S Th1rd St
Middleport , 0 .

""'"

proposals for strengthened
err me 1nves1•ga11on e1for ts

URt.~

MUI UA!

IP 1,'"' ~"'~ 1on~•" •

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

~¥"' (l"•te
flj~,p,~. ~~"'

9922JtlJ

102 W, Mam

Pom eroy

Saturday's Results
New York 102, Mil w au kee 100
Wash1 ngton 119, Denver li &lt;J
Atta 124. Ph1lad elph 1a 116
Bos ton 92 , Cleveland 90
Ph0en1K 119, Delro1t 105
Ho ust on lUi, Scm Ard on10 110
Ka n C1 ty 114 , New Jer se y 100
Golden St 11 2, sea tt le 104
Porfl and 123, lnd 1ana 111
San D1ego 11 4, N ew Orln s 111
Sun da y's Result s
Los An g el es 104, Ch1cago 95
Seattl e 88, Porlla nd 85
Monday's Game s
( No g a mes sched ul ed )
TU CSCIJY ' S Gam es
Detro1t ai New York
Gold en Si at Phdadelph1a
Phoen1x a \ Cl eveland
New Jers ey at New Orleans
Port land at MII WC! ukec.
l nd1an a at San An ton 10
Atl anta at San D1 ego

STANLEY

braci(Clts a1-3oo

• The perfect
companion for
your bow saw,
hand saw, and
chain saw.
• Folds for easy
carrying.
• Makes base for
picnic table.
• Does the work of 2
sawhorses.
• Holds 50-gallon
drum.

SAYRE HARDWARE

•Dr. A.J Staehii•Dr C W, Beai•Dr G.J Stombaugh
•Dr W.D K1mbaU •Dr. J.C. Murphy •Dr J 0\:hman

c.r;1s l s

a!fecied

rt~ lm es

DtRooald ERiviere
949 E

sa 1d Ha) eS

last two years.

Umted Press lnternatwnal
Brookfield, 10--0. w1U meet
Hamilt on Badin, 11-0, in
Dayton this weekend for the
Ohio High School Class AA
football champiollShip .
Brookfield advanced to the
finals Sa turday night m
Berea when sen ior halfback
Darwin Ulmer scored three
touchdowns to lead the
Warnor s to a 19-14 wm over
4 St. Marys Memon a l.
In Dayton Saturday, a 68ya rd
second
quarter
to uchdown drive
gave
Hamilton Badm a 7-0

proved to be the game's only
touchdown and Pittsburgh
linebacker · Ja ck
Ham
re cove red a fumble at
midfield in the final minute to
pace the Steelers over
stubborn Cmcinnati.
Rookie Frank Corral 's 24yard field goal with two
seconds remairung gave Los
Angeles a narrow victory
over San Franc1sco and
increased the Rams' firstplace lead to three games
over Atlanta in the NFC
West. The 49ers' Paul Hofer
scored on three !-yard
plunges and rushed for 105
yards.
Mark van Eeghen scored
on two !-yard smashes and
added another score wben he
ran 1 yard with a fumble
recovery to lead Oakland
over Detroit. The triumph
kept the Raiders, 8-5, in a
firsti&gt;lace tie with Denver in
the AFC West.

Ohio State to upset Ihe once-

Prevention is the
best policy. . .
FOR CURBIN
CRIME LOSSES

NEW HAVEN, W. VA,
•

�4-Tbe Dally lienlinel, Middleport-t' omeroy, U., lvtonoay, l'ov. zu, mo

·junior Am~rican Legion Auxiliary
makes Christmas favors for donations
Chriatmas favors were
made for the vet~rans at the
Chillicothe ·Veterans
Hoapltal, the Athens Menllll
Health Center, and the Ar·
cadis Nursing Home at
Coolville at a recent meeting
of the Junior American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, held at the
home of Mrs. Veda Davis, advisor.
At the meeting flags were
presented to the teachers of
the fifth and sixth grades at
the Rutland Elementary
School.
Mrs. Davis gave a review
of Educalioo Week noting
that the observance was
start~ d in 1921 by the

junior president at the New
Washington Post405.
Thank you note was read
£rom Mrs. Elea nor· Ullwn
thanking the unit £or 525
name tags for patients at the
Dayton V. A. Hospital.
Pam Powers and Mrs.
Coett were re]&gt;Orted ill. The
juniors ··adopted" · Mi ss
Dorothy Lei£heit o£ Orient as
their handicapped person,
Mrs. Ellen Couch as their
grandmother, and' Bill Rovnak as their shutin. They will
be remembered on their bir·tlJday, Christmas ami_ · all
holidays. Mrs. Couch has
assisted the junior program
for the past 10 years and has
attended district and depa rt-

American Legion, who was
joined by the PTA in 1938. She
reported on a trip to Arcadia
Nursing Home on Od. 30 and
presenting trick-or-tr.eat
baskets to the 14 veterans
there ami birthday gifts to
Bill Rovnak. She also noted
that on Nov. 9 a party had
been held for ·the ·five
veterans at the Athens Mental Hea lth Center. The
Juniors rurnished the mint
cups and game prizes, and
sent along 150 Christmas
name tags.
1\1rs. Davis reported that
she and Mrs. Marjorie Goelt,
and Robin Campbell attended
a reception for Julie
Ehresman. deprtment

Meigs Retired Teachers install officers
New uffu:e rs wen• clet'tl'll

at tht• Saturday luncheon
meeting of the Meigs County

menl conferences with her

granddaughters _
Pen pHls were diseussed

and naml!s will be sent tu

Mrs. Gnett, who will send
them on to the natiomli chairman. Thanksgiving cards
were signed for Miss Leifheit,
Ruvnak, Mrs. Guett , Dollie
Hayes, and Mrs. Couch.
Of£icers installed by Lori
Wood were Rhonda Reuter_,
president; Annie Wiles, vice

Hctired Teachers Association
held at the Meigs fnrL
Mrs. Thelrn&lt;l Dill presided
at the m'eeting with Miss
Mildrl·d Hawley, Mrs. Gn-:~cl'

Hawley and

Mrs.

F.dith

Forest of the nominalinc
committee presenting the offi cers elected by ~he associatilll• They are Mrs. Dill,
, president; Mr s . Bcrtlul
Smjth , first Vil'c presi dent :

Mi" Lucill e Smith, second
vice pre•ident; Mr•. Mary
Hugh~s. ~ccretary,

and Mrs.

president; Robin Campbell , Nan Moure, treas urer .

se&lt;..Tetary-treas urer. Ptim
Puwets is ehaplclin, .Jenn ie
Ct mch, .serget.~nl-at -arms, 1:1nd

Charlotte Lehew, historian.
Mrs·. Davis presented the
girll:i with a pin with ~ uxiliary
emblem. Mrs. Davis st:!rVt!d

chips, dip and Koul Aid.

It wa!'i r epurtet.l during tlw
meeting that Mrs. frem:
Branni,Jn, district diredur tif

Dis!l·ict 8, has been appu111ted
EQ.stcrn vice president of the

ORTA. M1·s. Dill stressed the
need fur new members I::IJHI it
w;;~.s

noted that 1:1ll retired

t ecwhcr:-; of Mejgs County an•

United Methodist Women hold Thanksgiving dinner
The United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run
Church met there recently for
their annual Thanksgiving
potluck dinner.
A special thank offering
was taken during the .speci al
eeremony by Mrs. Edith
Sisson before the dinner .
Opening song was "Count
Your Blessings" and devotions were by Mrs. U. S.
Nease uaing Psalm 100 and a
meditation, " Thank You
God." Mrs. John Scott gave a
reading "In the Spirit of
Thankfulness"; Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger, "Thanksgiving on
the Farm"; Mrs. Harry
Wyatt,
"Thursday
Forecast"; Mrs. Mary K.
- Roush, "Thanksgiving";
''God'$ Autumn of Beauty"
by Mrs. Vernal Blackwood ;

"This is Thanksgi ving" by
Mrs. MaryHolter.
There was a duet ,;lt Is No
Secret"' by Mrs. Ann Watson
and Mrs. Betty Blackwood.
Mrs. Erma Roush read ··The
Weaver"; Mrs. Harvey Koeh,
'"The Stonn Clouds"; Mrs.
Edith Sisson, ··Qui nces";
Mrs. Edison Hollon, ··This is
November. " The closing song
was " Bringing in the
Sheaves.''
During th e busi ness
meeting the minutes were
read and the love o£fering
wa s eollecte d. Several
mem bers atte nded the
meeting at the Chester
Church. Twenty-seven sick
and shutin calls were
reported. Guests attending
were the· Rev. Harvey Koch
and his mother.

Lutheran Women make
plans for adding more
chrismons to ~hurch
•
Plans for adding more
chrismoils to the church
Chiistmas tree- were made
when the American Lutheran
Church Women of Sl. Paul
and St. John's Lutheran
Church mel recently in
Pomeroy church.
The chrismons will be
made in a workshop on Dec. 5
beginning all p.m. A tree wll
be purchased for .the SHnt~
tuary. Mrs. Margaret Blaettnar presided at the meeting
and will host the annual
Christmas party to be held
Dec. 12 at 7:30p.m. Members
are to take cookies and can·
dies to make traYS for
shutins.
It was noted that the recent
rummage and bake sale was
successful. Thank box offer:
lngs will be collected on Nov .

----,

rI

Social I
l Calendar\
I

WEDNESDAY
THANKSGIVING
candlelight and communion
aervtce, 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at Long Bottom United
Metbodllt Chureh with Rev.
Steve Wllaon guest speaker
and special mualc.
POMEROYMIDDLEPORT !JONS Club,
noon Wednesday a the Meigs
Inn.

· Chatur Club met
Mrs. Charles Spires and

Mn. Floyd Harrison were
hostesaes fot a meeting of the
ChatW Club held at the
Spires home.
Mrs. Carl_Roach presi ded
at the meeting with Mrs. Don
Harrison and Mrs. Bob
Stewart as guests.
Games .were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Nathan
Biggs, Mrs. Don Harrison,
Mrs. Roach, Mrs. Wilbur
Young, Mrs. MJ!rie Leifheit,
Mrs. Larry Cleland, Mrs.
Mary
Starcher .
· Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to those
named and Mrs. Alfred Biggs
and Mrs. Linda Van Meter.
PRODUCTS P~TY
A ho~hold prod , party
will be h'eld Tuesda . ight at
the Pomeroy Masonlc Temple by Bethel 62, Interna·
tiona! Order of Job's
OaUjjhters. For further information or to place orders,
residents may telephone Mrs.
Mat'Y Wise, guardian,
992-2675 . .

26. Installation of of£lcers will
take. place at the regular
meeting in Jan .
Pastor Willi am Middl eswarth conducted the Bible study on "Motif and
Moods in Worship." Miss Erria J esse served refreshments
of cookies and coffee for Mrs.
Janet Hill. Others attending
were Mrs. Elva Cotterill,
·Mrs. Virginia Thoren, Mrs.
Wibna Mees, and Mrs. Barbara Fry.

Apple Grove·
News Notes
By Mra. Herbert Rousb
:J)k, and Mrs. Bill Miller of

.·.·
-:-:
::;:

•

)

• By Helen Bottel![
·.

Does Helen Follow Her Own Advice?
By Helen !lotteI

DEAR HELEN :
Honest now, would you always follow for yourself the
·
advice you give to others? - J. S.
DEAR J:
Honest now: not always.
Let 'ssay I'd w.ant to follow my own advice, but I might not
have the nerve .
For example, I tell women that "equality" fosters risks : If
you and he seem compatible, don't wait £or his phone call take the inliative! And should he turn you down, shrug, as men
have been doing lo these many centuries.
Were I single (and thank the Lord I'm not) I'd probably
just sit there wishing - and nagging myself for cowardice.
I also insist : "Stand up for your rights! " when I'm more
the type who apologizes if a clerk overcharges me.
On an assertiveness scale of one to ten, I'd rank about £our,
which for me, is a great advance; and I can thank the column
here. Suggesting how others might better handle themselves
has shown me where I can improye.
I often 5ee mvseiLI!!_my correspon?ents, so my words
are aimed partially at me. And I suspect that r heed them more
often than they do.
But...not always . Okay? - H.
DEAR HELEN:
You told a former male prostitute (at age 16) that his past
was really dead, why bother his fiance with the sordid details,
10 years later?
Would you have given the same advice to a woman if she
was a "reformed" hooker? Maybe a future wife needn't know
everything in her husband's past, but a man should certainly
be informed that he's getting very used merchandise. -ONLY
·FAIR.
DEAR O.F.:
Oh ye of double standards!!
Yes, I would have given the same advice to a woman had
she been a prostitute at 16, out of the life at 17, and nonpromiscuous for the past 10 years, and - this is important - if
she felt her fiance might suffer from the confession.
However, if either person kept quiet through certainty that
truth would end the engagement, then I'd say he or she is
marrying the wrong partner. This kind of silence leads to
blackmail - or divorce, should an ex-patron titlli.-li:

Clifford Thomas III

invited tu become members

of the Meigs Chapter.
. New members wckomcO
wt.·rt.• Paulin e Myers, Nellie
Parker,

Elm a

Fran ces

Robert s.

Jr·ene

r··---·--·-----:--------~

l

Social Calendar .

MONDAY
CHESTER PTO meeting,
7:30 p.m. Monday at school.
Representative of H. &amp;
R. Block will be present.
SOUTHERN
Athletic
Boosters, Monday, 7:30p.m.
at high sehool in Racine.
MEE TING .of Candyst ripers
o£
Vet erans
Memorial Hospital scheduled
for Monday evening is
cancelled.
MEIGS
BAND
Boosters,7:30 p.m. Monday in
the IJ(J lld room .
JEWELRY FASHION
show sponsored by Constant
Builders Class, Ra cine
Wesleyan Methodist Church,
7:30 p.m. Monday at church
annex; public is invited.

1

TUESDAY
COUN TY OFFICERS
Grange meeting, 7:30 Tues-

day "t the Rock Sprinqs
Grange Hall .
SA I.!SB URY PTO, Tuesday, 7 p.m . room visitat ion;

7:30 p.m . program by Meigs
County juvenile officer, ami
business meetinf!.

Heard the Owls Call My
Name :· Th e book by
Margaret Craven dealt with
the life of Mark Prrce, a
vow1g minister who went to
ihe island of King Kum on the
western Pacific coast, to
minister to a tribe of Indians.
The story told o£ how his
life was changed by his
mi nistry and ur how the lives
o£ the Indians were changed.
Following his initial resentment, and after the church
and parsonage had been
cleaned, repaired and opened
fur use, he became beloved
by the rndiarlS. At his death
after a time or railing health ,
he was buried in a cemetery
there .

w. COMPTON, O.D.

ROASTING CHICKENS....~.~~·.~~~:79¢
4 IO 6 LB. AVERAGE
ARMOUR STAR .
POUND $109
ARMOUR STAR
DUCKS ········•
TURKEY BREASTS......•.....~~~~~. $}49
BIGGEST SAVINGS ·IN TOWN ·

~mot

_&lt;;;c;&gt;v T.

Ed Donley, w1th a party given
by his au nt , Linda Donley,
and w1cle, M1ke Donley .
Altendi ng were his grandpa rents , Scott , Brian, Mike,
Linda and Shawn Donley and
hi s parents. Sending gifts
were his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clif£ord Thomas,
Kevin Ada Rob and Mark
Thoin~s. J~yce a~d .Jenn i£er·
and Bill Shannon, and a great
aunt and uncle. The house
was decorated with a Donald
Duck theme and balloons
were lied to his high chair. A
Donald Duck ca ke \\'(JS serv-

ono ""' fom ;ry

INSPECTED

SWIFT
BUUERBALL

CV CALIFORNIA PASCAL

CELERY

·

I FARM FRESH PRODUCE I

49;

u.s. NO . 1 SO UTH ERN

YAMS

5

Lb• .

~I

00

LB

BAN&amp;NAS ........................... 4

LBS.

$} 00

Bunches

69~

lbs.

$}29

RADISHES .;........................ 3 6pkgs.oz. ·3'·gt

. '.".-".".".-.'. '3

s 49;

ONIONNs~~~~

~:;

ONIONS

QIRANOGIES ......... -......... _.. ~·-··· 5

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

I

lF 1rs

~"")SAUCE

IrS GOT TO BE GOOD

15-oz.
Can

69~

,PLUMP JUICY RED

CRISP REO

.

U .S. N0. 1 YELLOW COOKING

UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, QHIO

L ' - I ......

.. .

EMPEROR GRAPES ................. :...

St8lk

BORDENS

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

limit two with $ 10.00 pur chase

1

49

BOROENS

SALE DATES NOVEMBER

~~~~~'~ "~' ~'~:. 89¢

20th~25th,

1978

BOROENS

~~~~K. . . .~ .~:. ~ }&amp;9

KELLO GGS

CROUTETTES .................. ~::

"!11 ..../1,

STORES • CARDINA L FOOD STOR ES

BETTY CR OCKE R

HRS : 10:00
11 : 00 P . M.
12 : 00

EL MONTE

P.M . . Friday

and Saturday.
Pomeroy ·

FRUIT
I TAIL

29!oz.
Can

See Us Allhe

DAIRY VAu.EY

WHO LE

Bend

DREAM WHIP

TOPPING MIX

ed. Party hats were given to

the guests and pidures were
te~ken .

.\:~.

fv

L""' ' tw o wo lrii&gt;OO.il";;"..
0o 1~ ~~~•H&gt;u" r&gt;ft"&lt; 'tJ!'"

·, ·

2 ' 89
·•

}

1 1 -oz.

~5

~
"

•

Pkgs.

.I".

r

·$'f· ,.0_; ._, ..• _.-;:...,.;

18-0Z. VAC PACK or 23 -0Z. SVAUP

TAYLOR SWEET POTATOES ...

c.,

c•.:· ;'~/. 6qir.. ) t /2fJ/ 7fl

591

i/

~·~.('i$0-:fl.i•r M o ~ar Btu• Sto•e5

~

0

C

~I!C!~:l!ll:::l:
~

09:.117700

~.Jn qoR ES

. I

OIJ ·JO 0 5
CARDINAL
\-~r§

~fo• .

6 oz. box
~

'

ROYAL PRINCE YAMS ............. '~;~· 69c

1!!:
_ _ lliJjleJ;I

PIE CRUST MIX ~

--=====

n.-

Thurs. 10 :00 A.M. til

ADOLPH'S

10 LBS.

TURKEYS ....... ~o::d.

'

SALE
25% Off. Purchase,
Just Present Your
Golden Buckeye Ca1d
When 01dering.

ARMOUR STAR

BASTED
TURKEY

'

VAUGHAN'S

CRANBERRY

SENIOR CITIZENS

grandparents, Mr. ond Mrs.

c

EYS.............
18 LBS.
AND UP
POUND

BORDENS

TUESDAY ONLY

Clifford Scott Thomas m,
son or Clif£ord and Patty
Thomas, Vine St. , Middlep0rt. celeb rated his first
bi rthday at the horne of hi s

BAKERS ANGELFLAKE
:~o;;

COCONUT

$} 09
38-oz.
Bottle

CARDINAL CREAMERY FRESH$

BOnER Q~~~~rs

09

2.9 -oz.
Can

I DAIRY VALUES
COTTAGE CHEESE....., _... ,..~'. ~:: ..~

115

li!l'it one with 510.00 purcha s&amp;

.·~~~o STORES

•

CAROl~~~~~ STO RE S Xl\e)l)

:ft•l:l

~

"'
PILLSBUR

FLOU

~

"'z

~ -'429 ~

Can

~

~
~

tio -60-05

Limit one wi1h coupon

. Looking for a Christmas g~~
wftb

SUPPLIES

yourseIf

u HOME IMPROVEMEN,.,...

.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

,

The Department Store -

person (and person a ttY Y
dau.led by the cho•ce at colors to;:mtmillli 1ft that says
So if you're searchmg for ~&lt;; exdttng ~hone collecsomethmg spec•al, come ~~e Phone Mart soon.
t•on for yourself at thHe G It's a whole new way to see
your phone comfl3:~Y-

16 West Washington, Athens
'·

DIET RITE OR

someone you 1ove
ThiS ChnstmilS. why not surpnse
r her very own.
With a special phone~~hiSe~t ones to choose from . Each
We haYe so many I e\cr d character to express the
with Its own umque s.ty an
nd ~-u'l l be
KJ
I. ) ou have 1n m•

The GTE Phone

Of Building
Sin~e 1915

··. ·.· · .

aspec$00°fOr

at the (

an

ne

RC 8''"btt.S} 09
6 VARIETIES
KEfBLER DIP EM '

SlACK CRACKERS ............... •••
CAADINAL

22-oz.
Bottle

Plus Deposit
·

NSERVE ROLLS2 ~~-~~

13• OFF LABEL
HEAVY DUTY

.

REYNOLDS FOIL........... ~ ..........-. z•-••69c
Roll
8' OFF LABEL
FABRIC SOFTENER

ij t =- Gra'Jn

DOWNY .................... ~............... ~~~~~~ 99c

I .

1

'

~

CARDINAl iG

Lb .
Bag

Ct.

V)

~

0

Pkg.

Dam.

t'

SLICED BACON ••••••••• :~g~ ..

ARMOUR GOLD -BAND

·---~-----------------~--~

DEAR HELEN :
!;Deed a joint replacement in my hip so that I can walk
without suffering and sleep without pain. The specialist [ was
referred to won't wait for Medicare payment. He insists on his
money before the operation. I'm borrowing it-luckily I could
put up my house as security. But what about those old rolks
who don 't have an extra dime? Must they be denied needed
surgery because doctors won't handle Medicare delays ? F.P.E.
DEAR F.:
.
They must find surgeons who will wait for Medicare f.·
payments - and also for the 20 percent not covered by
govenunent insurance. They're plentiful, but they aren't
always patients' first choices, though perhaps they 're just ·as
good ... U not better. - H.
P.S. The Social Security Administration tells me that some
25 percent of doctors want their money right now - the rest
are willing to wait.

oBUILDING

1-Lb- "=?

WRINKLES
SMOOTHED

1 N.
I

59

It

CARDINAL EXTRA FANCY .

HARRISONVILLE Senior
regular
Citizens
Club
meeting and Thanksgiving
observance, Tuesday, 7 p.m.
without ~urgery
in the tow n house at
Now 1here tsan eKctl ing new cosmetic
Harrisonville. Pumpkin pie
that can tempor anly smooth away
and coffee to be served.
wnnkles lor up to 8 hours. It's called
ANNUAL Thanksgiving
dinner o£ Drew Webster Post · Secret M1r aGie and its scientific blend
of umque beauty Ingredients work s
39, American Legion, at post
wrthm
mrnute s to smooth over wrin home 7 p.m. followed by
kles,
crow's-tee
t. and under eye
meeting.
ou1fmess.
·New
Secret Miracle witt
ALPHA EPSILON Chapter
~eep your skin practically line: lree
C IINDYSTR ! PERS, of Alpha Delta Kappa
all
day or all night Secret· Miracle
Veterans Memorial Hospital, meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
costs
S5 and is sotd Wi th a st ri ct
7 p.m. Monday at the hospital at Riverboat Room, Meigs
money
back guarantee by the manu cafeteria. All members Branch, Athens County ,
facturer . So before you consider that
should attend, new members Savings and Loan.
$5 ,000 lace lilt, consider the 55 alter Glre•welcume.
natllle new Secre t Miracle Tem MEiGS COUNTY SALON
Our neighbor's idea of a
porary Wnnkte Smoother.
710, Eight and Forty·, M•mday
seven--course dinner is a sixat the home of Mrs. Harry pack and a pretzel.
NELSON 'S DRUG STORE
Pomeroy, Ohi o
Davis, 7;:10 p.m. Take sun·
shine items and rood for a
basket fur a needy £amily :~--------------~---------,RACINE Elementary PTO
I
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
school. Parents of sixth I
OPTOMETRIST
. .
graders will serve refreshOFFICEHOURS : 9:30tol2,2to5(CLOSE 1
ments and babysitting ser- 1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I
vices will be provided.
I ST., POMEROY.
I

Turns one

Ga!llpolis visited Margie
Hunt Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley
and children and Heidi
Taylor of Columbus visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Findley a recent
Saturday.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Bell have included
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Grueser
of Pomeroy, Joe Fenderbousch, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Russell,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Ervin, Paul Ervin,
Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can
Bash an Rd.; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hart, Mr. and Mrs. talk it over in her column if you write to Helen Bottel, care of
Allen Cunningham and this newspaper.
children, Olevia and Zach,
Racine. Local callers were
Mrs. Nora Cross, Mrs. Betty
Morris, Mr. and Mrs .. Bert
Grimm, Mr. and Mrs. John
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Richard Hill, George Hill afld
Mr. and Mrs. James Robert
Burnem.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush visited Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp and Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hupp at Portland a
recent Sunday.
Mrs. Anna Wheeler is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital due to
pneumonia.
Mr . and Mrs. William
Wickline, Scott and Kyle, and
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt wereweekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burri at Bolivar
Mrs. Frankie Foster and
children of Delaware spent a
weekend at the home of her
mother, Mrs , Anna Wheeler
and visited Mrs. Wheeler at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs . Norma Morris and
daughter, Rachel, Bowling
Green also spent the weekend
here and visited with Mrs.
Wheeler at the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Bass
and daughters were dinner
guests of his mother, Mrs.
Katie Bass, Clifton, W. Va.,
on Sunday.

Louk s,

Parker and Herbert Parker Co nl.s were signed for seVertJI
ill members.
Miss Ann Brad~ury of
Gallipolis was present to give
a revi~w or a book entitled ··[

'

�•

'I-

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo_rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov . 20, 1978
IN TH E
PUBLIC NOTICE
COMMON~LEASCOURT ,

NOTICE

PROBATE DIVISI ON
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

In accordance w 1th Section
307 .86 of the Oh io Revised
Code, se;, led bids will be
receiv ed by the Meigs Count}'
Board of Commissioners , in
their off ice located i n the
Court House , Pomeroy , Ohio
4.5769 , until 12 noon Nov . 30,
1978 · the bids will be opened
at 1: 00PM Nov . JO, 1978 and
read aloud for a new lig h t o il
forced , draff steam heating
system, installed in place, at
the County Highway Garage ,
located at the Meigs Countv
Fa.rgrounds . Each bid to
meet the m i n i mum con
dit ions and spec ifications as
follows ·
1 B idder Shall furnish
and Install a new l1 ght oi l
forced draft boiler for steam
hht hav 1ng an input of 11 20
G .P .H . and an 1 equals B
equa ls R rating of 963, 900

IN THE MATTER: OF THE

Accounts and vouchers of
the
following
named
fiduc i ar i es have been filed in

Probate

Court ,

Me igs

County , ' Ohio , tor appro~Ja l
and sett lement :
CASE NO . 19816 Second and
Final A cc ou n t .of Margaret

Parsons . ·T rustee of the Trust

created by It em Two of the
Will of George W . Wells ,
Deceased
CASE NO . 22276 F1 rst.
Final and 01Sff lbU!I\Ie At ·

co unt of Ina Van Meter ,
Guardian of the Person and
Estate of Eroc Va n Meter , a

Minor .

BTUH

CASE NO 22182 Final and
D is tnb u tive Account of Paul
Paynter . Amm . WWA ot the

'1 - Boi ler · (Al The boi ler
shall be co n st ructed of cas t
Estate of Grace Paynter , iron •n accordance with
A S.M E r equirement s for
Deceased .
low pressure heati n g bo i ler!&gt;
CASE NO . 22342 Fina l an d
and
bear
the
A . SM . E .
Distributive Accoun t of Lena
symbol. Each section shal l be
Ethel
Gu thr ie ,
Ad ·
factory tested at 2 1h times
ministratrix of lhe Es t a t e of
maximu m working pressure
Milo
Emerson
Guthr i e,
of 15 l bs . steam. (BJ Boiler
Deceased .
shall ha'w'e I equals B equa ls R
Unless except 1ons are f1led
ra t1 ngs . ( C ) Boiler sections
thereto , said accounts will be
sha ll be constructed so that
for hearing before said Cou r t
the water 11ne tor steam
on the 19th day of D ecember ,
boi lers shal l be above the
1978 , at which t1me sa1d
tmttom of top nipp le ports to
accounts will be consi d ered
i nsure proper water cir ·
and con tinu ed from day to
cu lat lon between sections.
day unt i l' f inall y disposed of.
(0) Boiler flu e passages sha ll
An y p erson •nter este d may
be ve r ti cl e wit h pinned
file written exceptions to said
surfaces ( E l To 1nsure gas
accounts or to matte r s
tight integ r 1t y all boiler
pertaining to the execution of
sections sha ll be sealed with
th e trust, not less tha n five
days prior to t h e date set for
elastic seala n t" -cOrll"Pou n d .
heari ng
(F) Boller sh al l be con .
structed so as not to require a
Mann1ng D . Webster
combust1on chamber (GJ
J uDGE Boiler sha ll be equ ip ped With
COMMON PLE AS COURT , t an Kiess hea ter having a
PROBATE DIVISION , rating of 0 G P .M .
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
3 - Burners shall incl ude
(111 20, He
co ntro l s as herein descr1bed .
A - cast 1ron ver tical flu e
PUBLIC NOTICE
des1gn with elastic sealant .
The 1978 General Reve nu e
B - Contro ls mounted on
Sharing Sur vey has been
the front of the boiler for ease
completed , and the document
m adjustment and main
may be ex am ined by the
tenance
ge ne ra l
publ •c
at
the
C - Burn er plate w1th ~
Auditor's off ice in the Meigs
co mpr essed insu lat1on seal
Countv Cour thou se.
b etwee n burner mount1 ng
pl ate and front sect1on an d a
PUBLIC NOTICE
fla me observa t ion shutter
T he 1978 R S· 9C Report has
type sig ht glass .
been com pleted , and the
0 - F lange mou nted li ght
ex p e nd i ture s for t he an
o il burner , with a 2 stage fu el
tirecess1on are as fo l lows :
un it. labora to ry tes te d f or
Contract services
$l1 ,329.0 7
matched p er forman ce 1n
Sa laries
3,873 .31
b oi ler burn er un1t , fa ctory
Supplies
1,014 . 16
installed Cad Cell. Br ac k et
T his , r ~port
ma y
be 1 ar.~d leads R818 5~ l ight
reviewed at the Audito r 's , sensing pr imary co ntrol or
o ff ice in the M eigs County• equ i va l ent,
V4046B
1n
Co urth ouse
stentaneous oi l valve or
eq u iva lent el ect roni c time
J
delay , mo tor vo ltag e of l ight
H owa rd E . Frank
011 burn er 11 5·60 ·1.
M ei gs County Auditor
E - Must be of wet base
.
thermal pu mp co n struc tio n
(11) 20, ltc
, ll , _ or equ 1v a lent
'"'
~- - Fuel c anop y must be
_ _ _...;..
' ..;·;..
-_
· ,.----.....:;
'~
... ~ - cons tru c ted of aluminized
u ~"~ sferl for long life with re in
fo rc ing ch ann el s and w elded
PUBLIC NOTICE
seams or eQUI Va lent .
The
Federal
Revenue
4 Steam PA 404 A
Sha r i ng Fund Report fo r
pressure trol or eq ui va lent ,
Sc1pio wwp .
ASME Sa f ety Va l ve, Guage
Toft~ I R ece1pts
$3, 047 .57
G las s
Ass e m b ly ,
Dra1n
E)(pendltures
2.68·2. 18
Pre ss ure vacuum
Balance
5365 .39 , Valve,
gua9e .
Books are open fo r publi c
5 - One new cond en sate
i n sp ec t io n a t the Cl erk's
ta nk and pump c apabl e ot
ho me
serv i c1ng th is system .
G lenn E . Jewell , Clerk
6 - One new regis ter w1 th
Sc ipio T w p .
separate temperature cont r ol
R t 2 A l bany , Oh io
dev 1ce 1n parts r oom .
111 1 20, lt c
7 One separate tem
perature contro l dev ice in
outer office .
B One separate tem ·
PUBLIC NOTICE
perature co ntrol device in
Or an ge Township Revenue
1n ner office.
Sha ring d ata f or the fis c al
9 - Su ccess ful bidder will
yea r between Jul }" 1, 1977 and
be re sp on si bl e for connecting
Ju ne 30, 1978 may be viewed
the furnace to the fuel supply .
at m y h ome for publ ic in Bidder to fu rnis h thei r own
spection .
b id forms , and subm it th eir
N ina Robinson , Clerk
bid list1r'Jg b•d pr 1ce as •n ·
Rt 2 coolvii"l e, Ohio
dica ted on the line item ,
1111 20. 1tc
sp eci ficat io n sheet as ad ·
vertised .
Delivery and installation
. _ -·
Tuesday, Nov. 21
., ;,- ...,... ~Je.,Jle made by the suc .
cessful bklder 4 weeks after
tt
is awll rded , or
is

ASTRO •GRI

g ..

,n

:=::::=::=::=:::::=::===~==
-

Bernice Bede Osol

-·

~\!JU

lt1A[]l]~~i.i\T7

L:JIJ

b ~d

T he Meigs county Com
missioners ma y accept the

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22l
Co m merc ia l or career matters
should not be cond u cted in too
chu mmy a manner tod ay . Keep
everyth i ng bus •nesslike so
those yo u ' r e dealing with know
you ' re sen ous . F ind out more
about yourself by send .ng to r

your 1979 copy of Astro-Graph
Letter Ma•l 50 cents for each
and a long , self-addressed ,
stamped enve lope to ·Astra-

Grap h , P.O'. Bo• 489, Rad10 C1ty
Slation , N Y 10019. Be s ure to
,speCify .b1rth s1gn

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) Let yo ur opti m ism overrul e
your se lf -doubts today Yo ur
hopes c an be realized . T h1 nk
and act ltke a wmner and you
wi ll be one .
.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19l
In a JOin t ven ture today , something nei ther you nor your
cou nte rpart ! aoticipated cou ld
pop up. Keep coo l heads and it
rWill be sa ti sfac torily resolved .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t9l Al l
the aspects must be ca r e full y
co nsidered In making major
~ecisions today . Once yo u appre ciate Y.Our alt ernatives. you r

;judgments w]\1 be wise ones.
PISCES (Fe&amp;. 20-March 20l Big
thi ngs could be in store for you
today , but there's a danger
going off o n tang ent s Lock -In
on yuur ambitions . Don ' t let
anything distract you .
·

?'

even thoug h you ' ll be bril liant

no .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22l Second
effort is exlremely importan t

loday . You may suffer an une•pected setback . Try again The
vic tory will be a g rand o ne .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22l Instead o f trying to impose yo ur
tdeas on others today, make it
a poi nt to be recept ive to
theirs You cou ld be pnvy to
some exceptional co unsel.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23l For
lhe sake of your budget, select

JUNK BATTERIES , $2. Copper
3Scper lb. Clean alum inum l5c
per lb .. no can s. For llm1 ted
hme only. Riders Salvage, SR

114
phonograp h record!l
Ca l l
992·6370 or Con tact Marlin Fur·
nitur e.

·----

pipsqueaks,

however ,

co uld

cause you some frustrations .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your
chMces for personal acquisi,
lio n are·good today, but not in
lnstanc. ~~ ..where ypu 're gam~,~"~ '~

I,

,,

in Ult' lllt.ll')'. Ctml nf Tlloi:ln~ ami
OIJHUai Y' . li ('t! ll lll pt'l' WHI'\.1, $:! f)ll
miHimum Cash 111 t~d va nt 'l'

Valley Drive
PI . Pleasant. W , Va , 25550
Phone (304) 675-3430
Equ a l Oppor tunit y ~mployer

l llll'l

Thu Publt~ht•r rt•st•n.•t•s tlw l'lghl
It &gt; t•thl ur tt•jl- L' I a11~· a•ls llt·t It led ulo·

Jt•t•tlulwl . Tht• PulJh:-;ht·r wtllnul bt
l'l'SJXI/\SilJit• f tlf' 11\UI t' ti1&lt;m Ulll' llll'tll ·

Contact : Holzer Medical Center, P . O. Box
280, Galli p olis , Qh , 446· 5105 ,
An Affirmative Action
Equal Opportunity Employer

Sw 1d a~

' pM
fl'ltlll)' il fki'!IUIUI

Notices
NO HUNTING or tr e!ip ass~ng on
my property wi thou t permi s·
s1on. Judy McG re w

CAR HOP and waitress at once.
Apply 1n person (row's Family
Res touront Pomerov . Ohio.

HELP WANTED

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

-- - -·

GUN SHOOT. Racm e Gun Club
Every Sunday l p m Factory
cho ke gum only.

GUN SHOOT. Racme Volunteer
F1 re Oepl. Every Saturday 6 30
pm of their building in Bo shon.
Factory choi&gt;le guns only .

POMEROY LAD Y will sit wi th po·
flents 1n home or hosp1t ol.

---~ ------

BARTENDE R WANH:O E~ p er i ence
preferr ed but not necessar}".
We ll paid lnterestit']g occ upation . Pleas'Jnt atmosphere w1th
best cl1en tele. App ly 1n person .
Me1gs Inn .

--

for

THE

DAILY SENTINEL

-

992-6198

Apply in person
111 Court St ,
Pomeroy, Ohio

Services Offered

. Lost and Found
lOST: SLACK and white l emole
Walker in ROcin· Portlon d area
Coli 9.49·2281 or 949·2 129
Would the person that co iled
please cal l ba ck?

WILL CARl: lor the elder ly
home. Phone992·7314 .

1975 MONTE CARLO Excellent
cond1t1on. Lots of e)(trcs, $2700

992 -7689
1969 OlOS CUTlASS CONVE R·
TABL E. P.S. D 8 . . push bu tton
top con trol. In dash factory B·
track to pe player Good ru nnIng con dition Coli after 5p m ,

9'12-1995
1974 DODGE CHAllENGER 38 1
en g , 2- door hard top , auto. on
the floor. Book va lu e $2100
w1ll sell for $1450. 1969 Dodge
Mont~o 4-door sedon. auto .

Oi [. $80Q. 9'12-6124.
1975 PONTIAC LEMANS l::)(cel lent
co ndit ion .
$ 1500 .
Phone

949-2222.
Camping Equipment
1974 STA RCRAFT GAlAXY. fold
down , hard top camper. Slee ps

o ur

WATER WEL L dnllmg. W1ll 10m T
Grant . 742·2879.
.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Auto Sales
1977 MONZA ~PY OER 305 engme .
Power steering . Power brake s.
AM· FM rad1o . More ex tras Ca ll
7.42-2826

1n

Headquarters
for all your G. E. T.V.'s &amp;
Hotpoint Appliances.

~ ·-

For Rent

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr,
Phone 992-2181

Mobile Homes for Sale
1970 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1' ', both underpinn 1ng. 51500
and a ssume loon 949.2683 or
843-33 11

------ - 1970 Amherst SOx 12 2 BR

-

-

1970 Ch ampron bOx 12 2 BR
l9b5 Generol6lJ•12 2 BR
19b8 PM C 52x l 2 2 BR
1955 P ra~rie Schooner 28x8 1 BR
1973 Royal Em bossy 68x 14 3 BR
1959 Sto r SOx 10 2 BR
1973 Sto r 60x 14 2 BR
19b8 Sta r bOx 12 2 BR
1970 Sy lva bOx 12 2 BR
1968 V11lages 60x12 2 BR
19b4 W1ndsor 5 ))( 10 2 BR
1970 K1rkwood 12x60 3 BR

APPL I::S FITZPATRICK Orch ard
Stole Rt. 689 Phone Wi lk esv1l le

609 -3785
i976 FORD F-350 ottle rack s 10'
bed . 10 00
mile s
Ca ll
949-2273
1969 CEHVROLI:T DUMP truck .
Also, 1967 Chevrole t pickup ,
$350. Co ll992 5524 or 992 3917.
LUMP HOUSE coa l del1 vered. $35
per ton cosh Coli onyl1 me

991-7116
15 CU. FT freezer . L1 ke new.
992-7639

Pels for Sale

949-2634.

CHIP
WOOD .
Poles
mo x
d1ameter 10" an larges t en d,
$12 pe:r ton . Bundled slob , $10
per ton Deli .... ered to Ohio
Pallet Co ., Rt . 2, Pomeroy.

992-2089.

~

_

Poles Ma)Cimum Diameter iO" On Largest
End. $12.00 Per Ton , Bundled Slabs $10.00

P

er Ton ,
DELIVERED TO:

OHJO PALLET_ CO •
_
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2689

1-----------------------1
'

HENS FOR sole. 843-2353
TWO NEW 230 bu. McCurdy grovi ·
ty boxes on 10 ton runn1ng
gears with extendable tongue s
and 11 L flotation inp lemen t
tires . 1 new 195 bu . McCurdy
gravity bas. One 9 ft . John
Deer e d isc Gehl 90 gnnder·
m1xer . Two 1974 1972 Ford
F·250 p 1cku ps I 1974 Ford F·250
piCkup . 1 1975 l nl er nationo l lJ,
ton p icku p. One 1964 Interne .
tron ol 2 ton with catt le rock!l ,
Case 4- 16 bottom plows . Minn .Maline corn shel ler . Portable
roller mill . 985 ·334 1.
1962 FORD lj , lon truck , $225 . Set
ol o~~: l es with tires , $35. 19b5
Come t stationwogon for ports ,
$20 . 1948 1 'It ton Internat ional
truck for parts. $35 . Cool stove .
$45 . Ne w rockm g ch oir, $.t5.
Hopkins and Allen s1 ngle sh ot
rifle ontique , $150 1890 Wi n·
chaster pump 22 ri fl e ontiqu ,-.

$SOO 992 -73.30.

I

New or Repair
Gullers and
Downspouts

on heating c:ost
Julty Insured

·ca~m21~h

I

I.

'

11 -3-1 mo.

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

For Free Estimates

11 -9-1 mo.

CEllULOSE
INSUlATION
f6.50 per bag

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair·
Phw:le 992 -5682

'

FURNA CE
992-S587

ClEA NIN G

Call

FROSTY 'S C8 ra dio equ ipment.
everythin g . in two· way radio ,
antennas and acces. Phone.
Port land 843-2181. Open even
mgs till 8 00, Sunday 2 00 tdl

bOO
Real Es.late for Sale

TliOUSANDS 0' KIDS
WITH ~0 PARENTS .. ,

FARM FO R so le House 2 barns ,
trader. Lorge pond. 10 ceres or
82 acres . 742-2566.

llill

.- ·

Phone 992-2181

1973 CHEVROLET 1tdon V·8. 4 ·
speccl Std. Irons. Also . 9 mo.
old he1f er . Bla ck Angus Polled
Heref ord Cross
~--:---:-:::­

WARM MORNING cool stov~ . $55.
lt. long , 32 high camper
shell S155 742 3114

e

TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. ~ck W, Carse~~· Mgr ..
llill Phone 992- 81

-·

WH ITE ENAMEL N h1rlpool Par·
tabl e dishwas her. Hardly b een
used. 992 7315 or 367-7216.
DUNCAN PHVFE ta bl e ond six
choirs' Mohogonv . good . $175

9&lt;12 3332.
1 · COAL LAUNDRY stove. 2 plate .
antiq ue, $55 , I · big iran bell ,
ont1que. $65. 992-7330 .
-- 1... -

-

MODERN

RANCH -

3

bed ro o m s,
ca rpeting ,
paneling , nat gas furnace,
sto rm s. p atio, garage, ufili ·
t y, porch , lovel y yard. E x ·
ce l len t at ju st $25,500.00.

HOUSE

TALKS

DUTCH - Love ly 2 stor y
frame r em Od eled h ome .
Natural
gas
furnace,
storms, fir ep lace, en cl osed
fr ont
porches,
2 car
garage ,
a nd
stor age
building ,
1. 17
ac r es .

$29,500.00.
DOLLARS AND CENTS Why pay ren t ? H ouse and
m obil e home. live in the
house a nd r ent the trail er .

LOOK - Here is a 2-story
home. 4 bedroom s, bath,
na tura l gas hea ting , porches, WQrkshop , 4 lots. Jus t

$9,500 00.
A FRAME 2'h acres,
rec reation r oom, 11!2 bath s,
centra l heat ing a nd a~r con d i tion mg .
own
wa t er
sys tem . New $37,500.

OVERLOOKS RIVER

CONDOR . STREET -

$9500.
NEW LISTING - 41h acres
of l and B room house,
n atu ra l gas h eat, rur a l
water , and 2 car garage.

$27.500.
IT'S NOT WHAT YOU DO
THAT'S RIGHT, IT ' S NOT
WHAT YOU SA:.' BUT
HOW ,
MAKE .
NO
MISTAKE CALL 992-3325
FOR A TEST,
GORDON B., HELEN L.,
AND SUE P . MURPHY ,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES.

Housing '
Headquarters

Henrv E . Cleland
Henry 6 . Cleland, Jr.

REAL TOR -ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland

Kathy Cleland
992-2259- 992-6191

r

Com-

.

~El,:cW:..0-:=::
0-::D=B::O::W::E;:R:;:S-:R:::E:;:PA:C::
I RSweepers . toasters irons, all
sma ll appliances . Law n mower,
next to Stole Hi ghway Garage
on Route 7. Ph one (614) 985-

3825.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

G AllO LINE ALLEY

No outsiders

be
allowed
at the

DRIVE ALlffiE

will

&amp;
SAVE A LOT
All carpet Installed will&gt;
paddinq at no charge,
Expert tnstallation. ·

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4.88

d4in'

VInyl

wish!
FRANK &amp; E RNIE

ye.s,

~UNNaNC.

iODV AWARE:NE:SS::
PA~ Of ME' H~T'

~II 74%-2211
' 'I'ALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grato
or Gtnt Smllh

T'HAT

11 -lO

•
I CANT 8EUEVE

YOU CALLED OUT HiS
NAME ... SEVE~L
llMEB!

• THAT (;'I(EAM YOU HAD
LAST NI6HT. .. IT WAB
AOOUT YOUR HUSBA~D

VctJ'RE SERIOUS
ABOUT GOING

MCK TOC£NTMLCiiY TO

BILL, WASN'T IT?

30 Gray·white - I!Jb!eral
33 Streetcar
in Blighty
35 Pinder
_product

BRIDGE

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

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

The Jacoby Transfer bid
NORTH
+ K 10 9

11-20

diamonds. ''

t K QJ
+ K74

Alan : " Playing Jacoby
transfer, South responds two
hearts . This is an artificial
bid to show spades. North
dutifully bids two spades,
South jwnps to lour and
North is going to make at
least four odd since East is

WEST

EAST
+J 3
• J 9:;
t A 10 7

... Q 10 7
tlilll!

+ AQ963

+JIO

SOUTH
+ AQI71S
'P

on lead.''
Oswald: "The transfer bid
doesn't always work. It just
will produce an average of
at least half a trick extra
when used year in and year

K 43

• 6
• 8 :; 2

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : North
West Nortb East
I NT Pass
Pass 4+
Pass

out."
S.ulh

3.

Pass

Pass
I .

CRYPTOQUOTE- H ere's h o w to work it :
Is

Opening lead : • J

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One l etter simply stands f or another. I n thi s sample A is
used for the thr ee L's, X for the tw o O's, et c. Singl e l etter s,
apostrophes, the length and formatic;&gt;n o f the wo rd s ar e .all

hints: Each day the code letters are d1fferent

STAY.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Alan : "We d iscussed the
Siayman convention last
N J G K D X G K N week, Let's go a little fur·
R XI K
GMNKEQ
X
ther into notrump bidding
X
'\' G and show the Jacoby trans·
U D
OGXLYUEK
YOIXTK ,
fer bid, which is now In
almost Wliversal expert use
D "~;C XHR
JQ
X D · - I and which has spread to a
great majority of tourna-

z

Oswald : " The bidding in
the box is what transpires
without a Jacoby transfer ,
South plays iJ\ four spades
and is very unlucky indeed,

THAT 01.: JALOPY

OF DOC PRITCHART'S
A11\I'T SAFE !!

t REMEM6ER WI-lEN
'

0\RISTO HUNG THE VALLE!(
CURTAIN IN COLORADO

REAl ESTATE lOAN S. CA NcT~FlN D
MORTGAGE MONEY? We hove
plenty at competit ive rates with
terms to 30 years. Veterens
and non -veterens VA &amp; FHA
loons ore avoilable. IRELAND

MORTGAGE CO . 77 E. Stole
Ph one

614-592-3051.

1,
'

..
~

'

. -.

..

...

. .

.

"

.

... .
'

. .. '

TH' HEADLIGHTS

DON'T WORK -TH' TIRES ARE
SLICK AS GLASS

West opens his jack of clubs
and the defense gels three
clubs and the ace of

'P A 8 6 2

1-+-+-il + 4 2

32 Parvenu
34 Sacred
Jewish notes
36 Are you
- out•
37 Musical
works
38 Miracle
site
DAILY

News 33.

J2:3G-News 8; l : DO--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

ment players.''

Largest Selection In The Valley

A t he n s .

24 Underfoot
items
25 Spwned
26 Meal

New Klan: Heritage of Hate 20 .
9 30-Taxi 6,13; Film Makers 33.
10 :00-Dean Marlin 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 ; News
20: Student Aflairs Inquiry 33.
10 :30-Like II Is 20; Area Showcase 33.
11 :DO-News 3,4,&amp;,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20 : Over
Easy 33.
11:30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Photoplay Awards &amp;.13;
Gunsmoke B: Movie " Fantastic Voyage" 10, ABC

CRYPTOQUOTES

~ult.nd

15 IN STOCK

St..

~ NE:;.vi!(Z E:.vaN

l'N!w !)C.aS"'"f:P!

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

A SOFA THAT
MAKES A '
BED FOR
YOU
SEE _OUR
RED I

HA:S

~YI~SEPMY

fi

and see what you're gelling
-Good selections "- Fully
stocked,

742·22t1

22 Toothed

23 Rich man

SWlshine"

Floor Covering In Sroq
Buy where you cen comt

21 Science
28 Gennan
dealing with
painter
heredity
29 Kiel, e.g.

My

~ql:.;

9' and 12'

I

Yesterday 's Answer

~

1=::::

8,10 .
2:00-0ne Life to Live 6,13; 2: 3Cl-Dodors 34,15;
Guiding Lighl 8,10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,1S; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3·3Cl-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Dick Cavett 20.
4:0Q-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle ot the Planets 4; Merv
Grifli n 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33:
Batman 10; Dinah 13: Hollywood Squ•res 15.
4.30-Bewitched 3; Gilligan's ts. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15 .
5.00-Star Trek 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10:
Emergenc y One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3Cl-News &amp;; Santord &amp; Son 8: Elec . Co. 20,33:' Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6; Feeling Free
20.
6·3Cl-NBC News3 ,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett&amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7.00-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,1 3; Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10; Love ,
American Sjvle 15; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
Economically Speaking 33.
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3, Dating Game 4 ; Let's Go
To The Races 8: Candid Camera&amp;:: Price Is Rlg~t
10; Donna Fargo 13; TV Honor Society 15; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33.
8'00-Greatest Heroes of the Bible 3,4,15; Happy Days
6,13; Paper Chase 8,10; Soundstage 20: City
Notebook 33 .
33.

~~~a~~~~/J.~ 31"You
28 Find out
-

mans'

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1171
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTLCiub 13; 5:55- •
Sunrise Semester 10.
6.00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 8; 6' 25-Concerns &amp;
Comments 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning, West
Virginia 13; 6:55-Chuc.k White Reports 10; News
13.
7' 00-Tod•y 3,4,15; Good Morning Amerlc• &amp;,13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10.
7: 15--Wealher 33.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
B:oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Dona~ue 4,13,15:
Emer gency One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game
10.
9 30-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6; All In T~e
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10: 30-Jeopardy 3,4, 15; Andy Griffith 6; Price Is Rfg~t
8,10, $20,000 Pyramid 13 .
11 · 00-H ig~ Rollers 3,4, 15; H•ppy Days 6,13; Consumer Sur vival K it 20.
11 :3Cl-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Fam ily Feud &amp;,13; News
4; Love of Life 8,10.
11 ·55--CBS News 8; Ho use Call 10.
12:00-N ewscenter 3; Bob Braun 4; America Alive 15;
News &amp;,10 ; Yo ung &amp; the Restless 8 ; Midday
13; Music 33.
l2:3o-Ryan's Hope 6,13, Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec . Co. 10,33.
1·00-Holl ywood Squares 3: All My Children &amp;,13;
News 8: Young 8. the Restless 10: Not For Women
On ly 15.

9:oo- Three's Company 6, 13; Movie "The Pirate'' 8,10;

26 Had ClulrgEl~-+-t-+of
27 Quest of
Cortez: Sp.

bur4in',
lad4!
It was

.

8: 3o-Laverne &amp; Shi rlev 6, 13; W hen The Boat Comes In

~;:~~~~~~i!~~~~~~~~~ r----~~--~--~--~~=---~~~--~llDauilia -

WINNIE

.

991 7074 .

A uctioneer.

Lovely 3 bedroom, na tura l
gas furna ce, stor m s, base
ment, 2 car garage, 5

acres. $32,000.00.
It'S THE "LITTLE BIT
MORE" THAT COUNTS ,
YOU GET THIS FROM
CLELAND
REALTY ,
WHETHER BUYING OR
SELLING,
REALTORS

An swer: "Yo u and I and no one elsei "-" OURSELVES"

setting
ttl Bridge coup
DOWN
DO '!OU STILL ii--IINK
we HAVJ: 10! ITS 'TI-lE ONLY
1 Roman
IT$ ~ CHECK· E')(IT "THOSe DANGEl' SCALYTaylor
lNG OUT?
TAILS HAVEN 'T CLOSEt' OF!=!
(Mrs. LBJl
statesman
12 Opt
2 Martini
ingredient
13 Pinafore
3 Strengthen
14 Di5coWlt
15 Abroad ;
4 Vinegar
foreig n
spice
17 Sanskrit
5 Sieve
school
6 Winning
18 Jubilant
7 Rabble
19 D:-i,-.re
8 Strawhats
20 Sherman was 9 Oregon city
l___~l:~------~======~~~~--~(_-=~~~ one : a bbr . 10 Whirled
16 Editor's
21 Football
term
TG~:r;:L?Y;:;;-:=-::-~--:-:-:::=--~
field
R' move 4er 22 Caledonian r:i--,r::-"r.""-r:rcap, Rufus! 2nabte1and
' 25 Flowerless
plant

or 949 ·2000 . Roc1ne. Ohi o, ( rift

3

bedroom home on ex tra
large
lot,
base m en t,
n a tural gas heat, parking
and ab ove f lood. Onl y

BRAVO UNSAI D SEETH E

"'---- - _.. 1 Expenditure
•5 Asian deer

ALLEYOOP

plete ServiCe. Phone 949-2487

~

Real Estate tor Sale

NEW THREE bedroom home
F1rcplace . sun deck . 1¥. acre
wooded lot . 667·3890 , Tuppers
Plain s

10

r oom h ome. 4 b edrooms,
bath, carp et 1ng, natural
gas, ca rport, on h ard road

-

NICE OLDER HOME in good
Pomeroy .
neighborhood
in
Some recen t remodel 1ng. Cen ·
tral healing. 3 or 4 b edrooms

992-2174

r ent ed, w i th
month in com e Ci ·

ly $17,000.
NEAR RUTLAND -

115,500.00.

SNOW

p~

all

a

EXULT

~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

NEW LISTING - 3 apart-

fram e h ome, Jo t s of
r emode lmg , bath , ci t y
wate r , gas fu rnace, for on -

THIS
20 CU FT . chest freezer , 1 veer
old 5 p c. drum outfit. blue .
l'n6 Red Pacer . 3·!lpeed .
7&lt;12·2874.

3 large

bedrooms, bath, natu ral
gas h eaL c1ty water, nice
ba ck va r d, and 2 ca r
garage Sl 5,000 .

I J umbles

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Irrigation

ty uli li1ies. $25,000.
ABOVE FLOOD - 6 room

'-' ~~gal.

. . . l_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

with b ath, na tur a l gas fur ·
nace,
full
basement,
garage, equ1 pped ki t chen,
ne)(t to bu siness section .

m ents,
$265.00

00\_o'll o'~~ ,c.'&lt;- $347

......

s ,odford.

6 r oo m s, 3 Up

Saturda y.s

Jumble Book No. 12, containing 110 puz.zlts, Is avallablt for S1.75potlpald
from Jumble ,c/o Ihit newspader, Box 3•, Norwood, N J 076U lncludt your
name, address, rip code en meke checks payable lo Newspaperbooh .

Service
,,_,".......,
......._

I

992-3325

OK.. . li S SA AND I WilL
HfWE ANOTHER LOAD
HERE IH TH ' MORNif't(j ...

A BEAUnFUL DREAM
COME. TRUE FOR

BRADFORD .

216 E . Second Street

"(I I XI! I XJ"
(Answers tomorrow)

GEE: IT'S WONDERFUL

TO BE ABLE TO MAKE

·
m
"F
~fAlTOil

A

Now arrange the clrded letters to

Print answer here:

11 ·1&amp;-C

c...,

5HRINK FROM
13USINEGS. DE

farm the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above canaan.

Phone 742-2029

Housing
Headquarters

AFORD

0

1

Reasonable Prices

ser·
'w'ice, oi l makes, 992.:2284 . The
Fobr 1c Shop .
Pomeroy
Authomed Smger So les ond
Serv1ce. We shar pen Scissors .

·

I

ICELFIK
I
rJ

References Available

S~WING MACH INE Repai r s

$25,000
MIDDLEPORT -

I

-·

1: 3D-Days of Our Lives 3,.4 ,15; As The World Turn s

troccuLI

"GIVE US A TRY "

10 30-c

BRICK -

[]

-

Construction
Maintenance

Chester, Ohio

VIRGILB . SR .

-

Painting

Real Estate lor Sale

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancel led? Los t yo ur operators
l1cense? Phone 992 -2143.

Sig n here'

TINGY

Carpentry, Electrica I,

l::iA THH OO M S AND Kitchens
remodeled. cera m ic til e, plu m- HOMESITES tor sol e, 1 acre and
up Middleport . near Rut land
bi ng, ca rpen tr y, and gen era l
Col 1992·7481
maintenance. 13 yeor!l ex ·
perien ce. 992·3685

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay 13.99

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark

Phone992 -&amp;144
992 -7547
10-18-1 mo .

J. R. Construction
Co.

___ ____

Complete
Serv1ce. Phone 992-2478.

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words

'

-

Will do roo fing, construct ion .
plumbmg and heotmg No iob EXCAVA TING . dozer. loader and
too Io rge or too sm al l. Phone
backhoe wo rk : dump tru cks
742·2348.
and lo-boys for hrre. will haul
fil l di r t to soi l, l1m estone and
HOWERY
AND MARTIN
Elc' ·
gravel Co li Bob or Roger Jef .
coveting
sept 1c sys t ems .
fer s, day phone 992-7089 . n1ght
dozer backhoe, dump truck ,
phone.. 992.3525 or.992
l1meslone. grove l, blackto p
- -5232
paving . Rt. 143 Phone 1 (6 14 )
698·7331

PULLiNS EXCAVATiNG

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

' All Work Guaranteed

Jack's Septic
Tank Ser'1ice

EXCAVATIN G. dozer , back hoe
an d ditcher Charl es R Hoi·
field . Bo ck Hoe Se r . . ice ,
~utlond , Ohio. Phone 742 2008.

'ft\t~ruf }i5)'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~U)!..!l ®

l~duslrial

Type

25 Years Experience

4-30-tt&lt;.

BoX l

12 :0o-- Newscen tr ter 3; Bob Braun .4 ; Amer ica Alive

No Contract Too Large Or

Phone 985-380&amp;
Jack Ginther 98S-380&amp;

11-3-1 mo.

11 30-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Famil y Feud &amp;.13 ; News
4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame t . 20,33.
11 55-CBS News 8; House all 10.

M&lt;KEEHAEXPORT'

15. News 6,10; Young 8. the Rstless 8; Midday
Magazine 13.

Tao Small

Residential and commercial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service . Any day,
· anytime .

PHONE 992·2772

INTA WOT WA5 HAPP5NIN&lt;9 AT

All Type Concrete Wor.k

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

J&amp;L INSUlATION
JIM KEESEE

we

MEANT AS A WARNING

TO US- NOT TO STICK OUR N05e5

Commercial and Home
Building
Any · Tvpe Improvements
To Existing Structures

0.

'

W~R~ TH~Y

1 STILL DON'T S AVVY WHO
5ENT 'I?M Oil: WHY!

Price Builders
All

'f• mile all Rl. 7 by-pass on
St, Rt. 1:!4 tpward Rutland,

220 E, Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0.
Call992-7013

WHAT MOUT THOSe
F/R!iT 5HAR~ DI&lt;'AWINC5.!1
SAW ... THEONES, THAT TURNeD
UP IN SHIPMEr-JT5
TO THe MAI'-l
PLAr-JT ¥

10
9:30-Brady Bunch 8: Family Affair 10.
10 OQ-Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6 : All tn he
Fam ily 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10 .30-JeopaFdy 34,15; Andy Griffi th &amp;; Price is
RightB,10; S 20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 OQ-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13; Elec . Co
20 .

Moummg and

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

ElliOTT
APPLIANCE II

CAPTAIN EASY

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
11-17-1 mo .

Experience and

I

THREE BEDR OOM fram e home in
Middleport . Col l 992 ·3457 .

ANTI-FREEZE

PT PLEASANT . W VA

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park . l '/1 ACRE 12 x 60 mobi le home
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
near Dex ter 992·5858
Large lots. Call992-7479 .
1967 TOTA L ELECTRIC mob1le
3 AND 4 RM fu rn ished and unhome, fu rn1 shed. 3 bedr
furnished
op t s.
Ph one
washe r ond dryer A ir co ndi·
9&lt;12-5434 .
tioned l lot 210 lt . frontage .
512.000 Phon e 742-2826.
TWO BEDROOM, kitchen furnis h
ed . opt . Call before B om 1963 10 x 52 ONE BEDROOM
9&lt;12-2288.
W1ndsor tr ader Gas furnoce ,
l urn1shed
Underpinn1ng .
RENTERS A SSISTANCE for Sen ior
Ci tiz ens. You may be able to --~92 . 3897 aft er 5 weekdays.:__
live in ou r apartment fo r less
than $50 . Vil lage Monor .Apart·
ments . 992·7787.

Wanted to Buy

Ouo1itv and per·
On sol e no w.

742 -1328 .
•

._

- · - -- - ----- --

BURROUG HS SI:N SI-MA TIC oc·
co unl1ng
rnoc h1 ne
Ph one
992 -2156, The Daily Sentine l.
I I 1 Cou r t Street , Pomeroy .
Ohio .
DELTA TlRES
formonce .

Sale Prices

I

-

&amp; HQME MAINTENANCE

~~-~~-

COAL, LIMESTONE, sond . grave l.
calc1um chlor1de. fertdtzer . dog
food . and oil types o f salt Ex ·
celsLo r Sa lt Works. Inc E Mo m
St Pomeroy 992 -3891

-

Christmas

\.

For Sale

-

.

9 · 00-Merv Griffin 3 ; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15 ;
Emergency One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8 : M atc h Game

ROOFING

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save30 pet. to so pel.

!

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-1 5-llc '

Ph. 992-2848

Tu t•S~la y

WANTED
c~IP WOOD
n
_

.

Competitive salary , excellent benefits, shift
differential,
and
tuition
assistance
program,

lin u F'r 1 tl&lt;1~'
' pM
tht• tlay Ut•fun• pulllit'iilltlll

:

-

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

Munda v
Numlllll S...tiu dH y

I

Muffler - Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Batlery ,
Installation Service

H. L WRITESD.

J&amp;L
·Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

I

MOORE'S

Phurw !19"2-115/i

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

&amp;:30-Columbus Today 4; 6:45-Morning Report 3;
&amp;:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
&amp;' 55-Chuck Wh ite Rporls 10; News 13.
7:00--Today 34,15; Good Morning America &amp;,13; CBS '
News 8; Jetsons 10.
7 : 15--Weather 33; 7: 30-Schoolles 10; Sesame St . 33 .
8' 00-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10.

..

ll't ' \ IIISl'l (l!lll

NOTICE

MONDAY , NOVEMBER 20,1978

·.

For TIJe Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

12 ,30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec . Co. 33.
1:00-Hollywood Squares 3; All My C~lldren &amp;,13;
News 8; Young &amp; fhe REstless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,Wl2 :0D-&lt;lne Life to Live &amp;,13; 2:30-Doctors
3,4,15; Guiding Light 8,10.
3:00--Another World 3,4,15; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Congressional Outlook 33.
3,30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Over E•sy 20; Muslc 33 ·

TELEVISION,
VIEWING

Business Services

(

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Mubilt• Humt• ~ u l r .~ illld Yard S&lt;tlc!&gt;
an• &lt;ttTl'llh•cl only w1t11 cash wllh
ultlt 1 :15 t't'tll d~tu·~t· fur ad~ t'tl ll y1111! AuK Nutnlx•l In C.. l.t' uf ThcSI•tt·

··---· ·-·- - - - - - - - ,
_

'

Excellent salary and fri nge ben e lits: Shift
d iHerential, charge and supervisor
differential ,

FARM HOU SE to rent : a good rent
on Tanner's Run , Ra cme. Ohio. HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy , sel l
trade or 1r01n. New and used
Rt . 2. J bedrooms 1nsuloted
saddles . Ruth Reeves Albany .
home. oil fu rnac e , garage,
garden, rumpu s room Iorge
I' 14 l 698,___::
31:c9.:.
0'-._ _ _-,--ba sement, both , ho t and co ld '
RISING
STAR
Kennels
. Boa rding
Wanted to Buy
wa ter . sp ring, drilled well
ond groommg , all breeds
Available abou t Dec. I , 1978
Chesh1re . 367-0292.
TIMBER . POMEROY For est ProRent $1 25 per mon th in acl·
duc ts. Top price fo r stan di ng
vance. Also secu rit y deposrt of
sow tim ber Call 992 -5965 or
$125 . To see, clo l Mrs Esther
Kent Hanby 1-446·8570.
West. Rt . I Phone94~ - 2889 .
Give Away
OLD FURNITURE, 1ce boxes. brass
beds iron beds , desks. etc ,
THREE MALE block and brown and
Yard Sale
comple te households . Write
1 fem a le bro wn pupp1 es. 6
M .D. M iller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
weeks old lo ogood home . 206
IF YOU have o serv1ce to oller
cat19'12 -7760 .
Main St . , MosonWV .
want t o buy or sell someth1ng,
oe looking for work
. . or
OLD COINS, pocke t wa tches ,
whatever . . you'll get resul ts
cl as s rings . wedding bands,
For Sale
faster with o Sentine l Wont Ad .
d1amands . Gold or si l'w'er. Call
Ca
ll992-2156.
Roger Wamsley . 742 2331 .
HENS FOR so le. Alba Yos l

matter of i mportance to yo ur

deal effectively toda y with persons who have clout. Little

Ead1 wurtlt•wr· llw lllllll llllllll l!i
"Ill d.. I!' 4 t 't'llb JM.'I" ~oj,'ttnljX' I da y
,\ds I'U illllll~ tl\lll'r tl tall t'llll:it' t 'UII\'t '
da~· ~ Will IJt• diUII!t'd Ul lht• I till\
r.tl t•

activities tod ay that are inexpensive Going the o pposite
ro ute wi ll cos t you more tha n
yo u s~ould ~ oend .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20l A

on e- to-o ne basis yo u ' re able to

'!(l(l

B&amp;S MOBilEHOME SAlES

Speculation is defin itely a no-

in other situa tion s .

famil y will foll ow you r hopeful
outlineS , prOvided you don 'liet
another try to alter yo ur program Proceed as you envision .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20l On a

REGISTERED NURSES
ICU/CCU/08/MED. SURG.

2.1[1
.I iii

(111 13, 20, 21c

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Don ' t WANT TO buy: o ld 45 and 78
beco m e immersed in material•istic areas today . You ' re li kely
to hand le them rather poorly

f&gt;da; :-

1.50

$i950 992-2786

Is likely lhi s commg , bling on an tf-com e basis

Yea r. B r eaks' pr ev iOUSly de nied
yo u will now be fo rthcoming

1.110

range , owning and poles, 2 gas
bo tll es , excel lent co ndition.

Counl y Boar d

•

ll5
100

1,11(1

DICK TRACY

- - ---H e lp Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING

IS W11nls .,, Uwlt·r
Cli tll.i!t'
Casl 1
l tla\'
:!t!Ol\':&lt;
'ld, . ~ ..

-

-

H e l11 Wan led

WANT AD
CHARGES

8. new gos furnace, 3 burner

Mary . H obst etter,

o f Commissioners

p.. nse tn statu s . both socially
and where your career IS co n-

-

lowest bid, or se lecl the best

W ill U ~:r:s
1

November 21 , 1978
c~ rned ,

~~~d~l3.

b 1d for the intende d purpose,
~ i at~d re ser ve the right to reject
~· 'A · afw or all blds / an d .or any
pa'rt lhere'of.

rlir.·,mrJ

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

HEATING

SYHEM5 DEALERS '

SETTL.EMENT OF AC C OUN-TS,
PROBATE
COURT , MEIGS COU NT Y,
,.
OHIO

the

TO

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov: 20, 1978

-- AN'NOW TH'
TURN SIGNAL:S
BUSTED

Several readers liave
asked bnw the Jacoby transfer was invented,
Oswald Jacoby answers.
" When I got back from the
Korean war, Dave Carter of
St. Louis had introduced the
four-level transfer responses of four diamonds
and lour hearts to the open·
ing notrump. I adopted thla
bid enthusiastically, 'lben in
195:i, Richard Troxel of Wayzata, Minn., suggested using
two-level transfers and I
proceeded to develop a complete s;rstem of responle8
eniploymg these low-level

transfers."

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

(For a copy of JIICOBY MO().
ERN, send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge, " care of this news{&gt;4per, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
Sta tion , New York, N. Y. 10019.)

�8:._The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. No\'. 20: I!178

.
I
--------------------------

1

·Escapee Conte killed
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!) John Conte, 43, ooe of three
prisoners who escaped from a
guard oo Friday ll!ld the
subject of a four-state
manhunt, was shot and killed
near this nocthwestern Ohio
town by a man he kidnapped
in a Michigan motel,
authorities said.
Coote, a leader of tbe Ohio
Penitentiary riots 10 years
ago; Billy McKinney, 25; and
David Pilkington, a convicted
killer, escaped. while being
taken from a trial in Marion,
Ohio, to the state's maximum
at
security
facility
Lucasville, Ohio.
Hancock County Sheriff
Bill Bell said Conte
kidnapped a couple from a
motel in Romulus, Mich.,
early today . It was not
immediately detennined if
the two other escaped
convicts had been with Conte.
Bell said Conte forced the
young man and a woman to
drive him toward Columbus,
Ohio.
14
The young man went into
the parking lot at the motel to
get a pack of cigarettes from
hjs car and Conte approached
him from behind and forced
him to get his girl," said Bell.
"He forced them to drive
south on Interstate 75, stating

•
·he wanted to go to
Columbus," said Bell. "Near
Findlay they saw an Ohio
Highway Patrol cruiser and
Conte accused the two of
tipping off police when they
stopped at Toledo for
gasoline.
.
" He made them pull off on
a township road , pulled out a
.38 and cocked it," said Bell.
Bell said the girl apparently
started scuffling with Conte
and the man grabbed the gun.
" He man·aged to gel out of
the vehicle," said Bell, "and
when Conte came through the
driver's door, the young man
stepped back and shot him
five times point blank."
The man and woman were
not immediately identified,
said Bell.
He said authorities in
Michigan went to the Abbey
Motel in Romulus, Mich, and
found a man kidnapped in
Yellow Springs in the room .
Earlier, a Columbus nurse
who had befriended Conte
while interviewing him for a
book on prison life, predicted
he and the two other escapees
would die rather than go
back to priSon.
Marv Ann Stagakes
described Conte as a
desperate man, who felt safer
running from the law than

YOUR MATTRESS IS
LUMPYYOUR RUGS ARE
WORNYOUR LIVING ROOM
SUITE IS FADED AND
TORNTHE lAMPS ARE
D.INGYAND THE STOVE WON1 COOK

1

Area Deaths

behind bars, protected only
by prison officials who
remembered him as a prison
riot organizer.
Ms. Stagakes, whose yetunpublished book "The Seven
Judgments," deals with the
way prisoners live and
organize their lives inside
correctional institutions, said
she's seen Conte's fellow
escapees, Billy McKinney, 25,
and David Pilkington, 34, but
does. not know them .
"John is running for fear of
his life," said Ms. Stagakes,
prior to Conte's death.
"There's an extreme amount
of ra cial
tension at
Lucasville·.
"'This is always denied by
prison officials, but I have in
my possession a rulesinfraction ticket written by
the penitentiary against John
on Nov. 1 when he stabbed a
black man who'd previously
attacked a white at the
prison.
" He was put in chains and
Isolation afterwards," said
Ms. Sl2gakes. "He told me

HARRY STAHL
Harry Stahl, 86, Route 2,
Pomeroy, died Sunday at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Stahl was bo\"fl June 23,
1892 a son of the late Bergram
and Louella Bradshaw Stahl.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by four
brothers and sisters, a greatgrandsOn and a son-in-law,
Charles Jeffers.
Surviving are his wife,
Della Carsey Stahl ; a
daughter, Eula Jeffers,
Pomeroy: three grandsons,
Richard and David J effers,
both of Pomeroy, and Ronald
Jeffers, Elyria ; two sisters,
Mrs. Edna Schaffer and Mrs.
Clara Gilkey, both of
Pomeroy; three brothers,
Fritz of New Marshfield;
Wallace of Columbus and
John of Pomeroy, and seven
great
grandchildren.
Several nieces and nephews
also survive.
Mr. Stahl was a veteran of
World War I. He was a
member of Feeney - Bennett
there were many threats on Post 128, American Legion,
his life because of this . There Middleport, and the Veterans
have been a lot of other of Foreign Wars, Mason, W.
Va.
incidents like that too ."
Funeral services will be
" I don't want to die in
chains," Ms. St2gakes quoted held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at
Conte as having told her. "! the Ewing Funeral Home
don't want to die like a with the Rev. Jack Finnicum
officiating. Burial will be in
dog."
She said Conte told her the Rock Sp rings Cemetery.
prison administration hated Friends may call · at the
him for the leadership role he funeral home any time after 7
played in the old Ohio this evening.
Penitentiary riots.
" They (prison officials )
CLEMENTE MENCH IN!
would never do anything to
Clemente Menchini, 87, 309
keep me from getting hurt ," Wetzgall St., Pomeroy, died
she quoted Conte as saying.

SHOP

See

AND

Baker's In

SAVE

Middleport

AT

DUTTON DRUG CO.

FOR lHAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Mr. Menchini was preceded
in death by a son, Renzo.
Surviving are his wife, Gina;
a · daughter-in-law, Mrs.
Renzo (Jackie) Menchini,
Pomeroy ;
two grandchildren,
Ernst
Menchini , C!;larleston, W. .va.,
and '11rs. Tom (Jennifer)
Foster, Washington, D.C. ; a
great-granddaughter, Amy
Menchini, Charleston, ·and
several nieces and nephews.
Mr. Menchini was a
veteran of World War I and
was a member of the Sacred
Heart Church, Pomeroy.
Funeral arrangements are
being completed at the Ewing
Funeral Home.
SEEK LICENSE
Marriage lice nses were
issued to William ~Hen
Hensler, 25, Middleport, and
Sharon Lynn Bissell, 27,
Mason; Philip Hoseph
Custer, 32, Pomeroy and
Patricia Lee Craig, 20,
Pomeroy.
REGULAR SESSION
A regular meeting of Ohio
Valley Commandery 24,
Kni ghts Templar, will be held
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
Temple.
MEETS TUESDAY
The Middleport PTA will
meet in regular session at
7:30 this evening at the
school.

•..r......
.,.,_e

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(UP!) United Mine
Workers President Arnold
Miller insists he's not only
going In · complete his fiveyear tenn as union president,
but says he's going to seek a
third tenn in 1982.
" Let them get their horses
on line, get them on track,
heat them, thump them, drug
them, do whatever they want
to do, " Miller said of
"irrational hotheads" who
oppose him.
"I'm going to beat them,
and after I do, they can put
the horses back in the barn."
Miller's comll)ents in The
Huntingtnn Her~d-Dispatch

$~~~e;~;~':&lt;-. ~

.

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0~~~~~

.

.

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-~ e"'-c&lt; ~· •~(!,

~

Bu~er·

•

CJie f

S'PECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE!

Big.Shetand Regular French :
Fries :

Only$J.OQ.!
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Each coupon req uir es separate purChase·.

I
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Prese nt co upons when ord ering.
1 Coupon e)(plres Dec . 9, 1978
·

Hamburger and Salad Bar. :
:

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Each coupon requ1res se parate purchase.
I
PrPsenr coupons when ordering.
I coupon ex pires Dec. 9, 1978

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Regular French 1
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co upon requires separate purc hase
I
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I Coupon expires Dec. 9, 1978

Regular French"
and 16 oz. Drink

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their smoothest try the extra smoothing
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(Good on purchases made by December 17,
1978. Request for refund must be mode by
January 14, 1979. Refund limited to one per
customer.)

1
coupon requ~res separate purchase.
I
Present c:oupons when ordering.
I Coupon expires Dec . 9, 1978

ELBERFELDS, IN POMEROY
,·

I

. ....

.

'"

'

. ...

en tine

at

BY BOB HOEFLICH
appropriation, a curtaillment on purchases, closing of some
The resignation of Wendell Hoover, Jr., a member of the· title program funds, putting off one payroll by starting school a
board for five years and cu~rent president, was accepted with little later In the Fall and by the freezing of administrative
regret when the Meigs Local School District Board of salaries.
Education met in regular session Monday night.
It was stressed that administrative personnel received no
Hoover is resigning effective Jan.!, 1979 due to out of town "'--ncreases in salary when other school personnel did. It was
employment. Supt. Charles Dowler, who had high praise for alsiJ pointed out the district has done well in view of inflation
Hoover, not only as board president but as a friend, told the constantly gnawing at operations .
board it has 30 days to name a replacement. The replacement
TRACK FACILITY
will serve only
Jan. I, 1980.
.
A group of girls athletic program boosters, accompanying
If the board d&lt;ies not name the replacement within the Mrs. Joy Bentley, girls athletic director, discussed. the
time designated, then the successor would be named by the possibilities of a track facility at the senior high, and the ,
.Meigs County Board of Education .
employment of a gymnastics coach.
A financial report - much better than anticipated earlier
Supt. Dowler appointed a committee composed of Mrs.
-was given by Treasurer Jane Wagner and Supt. Dowler. It Bentley, Coach Charles Chancey, boys athletic program
was projected last spring the district would be operating at a director; Principal James Diehl and Dwight Goins,
deficit of $180,000 by the end of this December. However, Administrative Assistant, to come up with suggestions on what
according to the report last night, the district will have a should be done in priority order to develop the athletic
balance of $100,000 less some $20,000 encumbered.
faci,Iities at the high school. The need for a gymnastics coach
Mrs. Wagner and Dowler pointed out the change in the was again pointed out. The possibilities of securing a coach
financial picture was made possible through a supplemental who would be employed as an aide were discussed. The

until

possibilities of securing such an aide through Ohio University
will be looked into.
I
Beth Vaughan, Middleport, was employed as Meigs Junior
High girls basketball coach, pending certification as an aide.
The payment of girls coaches at a lower salary than boys'
coaches was brought into the discussion. Supt. Dowler pointed
out that all salaries were negotiated through the teachers'
representatives during the strike a year ago .
A request for the treasurer to secure an advance draw of
$120,000 to meet the second psyroll in November and pay bills
was approved . Various transfers to balance accounts within
the general fund were approved .
Letters from Mel Showalter, State Department of
Education, and Hugh Coffman, assistant superintendent of
Warren Schools, were acknowledged. The letters thanked the
district for hosting recent bus driver competition. It
commended Dwight Goins for his chairing the event.
Diana Eberts, county e&gt;~;tenilion agent, sent a thank you
letter for use of facilities and ·a letter from Rep. Ron James
expressing his interest in legislation which would provide
funds for maintaining buildings was read.

"

:R.acine. area youths charged
I·

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt repOrts two
Rncine area youths will be
charged in Meigs County
juvenile court on five counts
of vandalism and two counts
of theft occurring in the
Rncine area around midnight
Sunday.
Sheriff Proffitt , Deputy
Rnndy Forbes and sheriff's
investigator Gary Wolfe
began investigation of the
incidents shortly upon
. receiving a vandalism
complaint.
According to a statement
from one of the juveniles
involved, they were riding
around and had gone to Old
Town Creek. area to get
gasoline from vehicles
parked there by Kaiser
, employes.
It was reported they left
Old Town Creek area and

Patient
rights
okayed
'

.'

Action concerning the
rights of a patient regarding
to smoking has been taken at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Effective immediately
smokers and non-smokers
are not to be ailmitted to the.
same room.
According to the policy, the
admitting physician will note
on admission orders wjiether
the patient is a smoker or
non-smoker; the admitting
clerk will note on the face
sheets whether the patient is
a smoker or non-smoker and
the admitting nurse will
check the physician's orders
along with the patient's face
sheet to make certain that the
smoker and non-smoker are
not admitted to the same
room.
For the benefit of the
patient
smoking
is
prohiblied except in the
hospital lobby and smoking is
not pennitted in any patient
corridor. Only the patient
may smoke in his room.
Smoking is not perrtli~ted
under any circumstances m a
room where oxygen ls in use.

't
.

•

approved 5-J With Wehrung Zalupski meet with council.
opposing.
The request was not granted
Paul Gerard of cable TV Monday night.
meeting with council was
Council also discussed
asked what will happen if offering a section of parking
Middleport fails to pass on on the village owned lot, off
the ordinance. Gerard ad- Fourth St., for a monthly fee
vised Middleport will not be for employes in town. The
offered the two new channels matter was referred to the
and would Jose the present &gt;'!reel committee for study.
Channel 4 and the cornCouncil again discussed the
binalion of a and 13.
regulation of signs in the
Lois J . Zalupski, DBA village . It was detennined
Pomeroy Pennzoil ha s that council will have to
written a Jetter to th~ State decide what it wants and
Liquor Department for a have the village solicitor
carryout beer license. Mayor draw up the necessary orClarence Andrews directed a dinance.
letter to Zalupski ;1ating it
Mayor Andrews reported
wou ld be necessa ry that the street vibrator rented for
one week to patch streets was
a fine job.
accident in Meigs doing
Council accepted the
mayor's report for the month
25, Columbus, traveling east of October which showed
on 124, went out of control, receipts in the amount of
and passed off the right side $4,127.
of the road into a ditch.
Attending were Mayor
Snider was cited on charges Andrew s, Larry Powell, Bill
of DWI. There was moderate Youn g, Wehrung, Betty
damage to the Snider vehicle.
1Continued on page 8)

Fift een Cents
Vo l. 29, No. 154

Hoover resignation accepted by .Meigs board

I

Extra control for an extra
.smooth look under clothes

holes on the IGwer parking lot in the village of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Council at its last meeting rented a vibrator in
order to get the patching done.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November 21, 1978

NEW PLAYTEX~
EXTRA
CONTROL TOP PANTYHOSE

~--------------------------y~-------------------------,

:

PATCHING UNDERWAY - Members of Pomeroy
Village Street Department were busy Monday patching

ELBE FELDS

®

·tittle of da at
urgerChe •
:

.)v

KATIE CROW
wells. The project will cost
Pomeroy Council Monday $5,000.
night turned thumbs down on
If a new water well has to
a rate increase proposed by be drilled, it will' cost in the
the Columbus and Southern neighborhood of $75,000
Ohio Electric Company.
Wehrung reported. Wehrung
Jane Walton, clerk, read
added thai If the test well was
a letter from Columbus and
successful Federal funds
Southern Ohio Electric
may be secured for a new
regarding a proposed rate
well. The wells are located in
Increase. II was indicated
Syracuse Village.
an application would be
IWehrung also noted that
filed for the Increase In
several water lines have been
March of 1979. Council,
replaced and homes to be
without hesitation, voted no
built on Beech Street have
against any such proposal.
requested water service.
. Larry Wehrung, conn·
TV Hike Okayed
.
cilman, ·said he had met With
In other busmess, council
the Board of Public Affairs approved a rate increase for
and believed more could be cable TV. The ordinance was
accomplished if couricil
would cooperate with the
Board of Public Affairs. · Patrol probes one
Wehrung indicated he unThe Gallia-Meigs Post ,
derstood some of their
problems better since his Highway Patrol, investigated
meeting . Wehrung explained a one-vehicle accident
it is going to be necessary for Monday in Meigs County, on
the Board of Public Affairs to SR 124, seven-tenths of a mile
drill a test well, ap- west of CR 34, at 3: Ia p.m.
Officers report that an auto
proximately 100 feet from the
site of ·one of the present operated by Marion Snider,

Religious

•I h

:
:

Electric hike rejected

Velerau Memoi1al HOIJIItal. Mrs. Karl Hol!ln8er and son,
Teresa Honaker, Judy
Saturday Admissions Carrie Osborne, Reedsville; Kimball, Arthur Lanham,
Susan 'Lusher, Wyoma
Gary Johnson, Racine.
Saturday
Discharges
McGhee, Wanda Metz, Ansel
RIO GRANDE - The two ·
courses a person is required Eugene Underwood, Diana Phlllipis, Michael Phillips,
to complete before they can Lee, Billy Brewer, Martin Gertrude Vance, Robert
sit for the Stale of Ohio real Cunningham, Emma Winebrenner, and Mrs.
Dennis Young and son.
estate sales license are being Hayman.
Sunday Admissions Blrlbs, Nov. 17
offered this winter in MidDorothy Wright , Rutland ;
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Yates,
dleport.
Rio Grande CQllege and Ralph Radcliff, Syracuse; daughter, Rio Grande.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Dean Roof,
Community College will offer Delores Aelker, Pomeroy;
Real Estate Principles and Jacq uelyn Naylor, Point son, Oak Hill.
Mr. and .Mrs. Jeffrey
Practices and Real Estate Pleasant.
Sunday Discharge
Smith, son, GaUlpolls.
Law at Meigs Junior mgh
Bennie Lyons. '
~Discharges, Nov. II)
School.
Earl Buckley, Otho BurReal Estate Principles and
dette, Edmund Campbell,
Practices is an overall view
Holzer Medical Center
John Carpenter, Jr., Marthji
of real estate practices.
~Disfbargea,!Sov. 17)
Special emphasis is given to
' Brenda Adkins, Brian Ede!ma!Ul, Arthur Elkins,
Ohio real estate principles Altizer, Judy Be!Ulett, Ruth
Arthur Elliott, Mrs. Roger
Foster and daUghter, Mrs.
and preparation toward the Bowling, Amos Canter,
state exam . Real Estate Law James Coterill, Louise Crih- Leroy Gibson and daughter,
will dea l wlth the legal field, Louella Dillard, Helen , Edith Greer, Julie Hamm,
aspects ofreal estate trans- Evans, Barbara Fillinger, Virginia 1WI, James Hinactions with emphasis given · Shirley Furst, Kathryn ckley,, Wilkie Holman,
to Ohio law.
Grose, Granville Hall, Jean Glenn Icenhower, Mrs. EdBoth rourses are offered Hendershot, Virginia
ward 'Johnson and son, John
Thursdays, 7-10 p.m., Nov. 3()- Holbrook, Melvin Holley, Kerr, Shelly Mingus, John
Feb. 22. Costs' for each of the .
Mootz, Tracey . Puckett,
Melody Roberts , Gerald '
real estate courses ls $39 for
residents of Gallia, Jackson,
Rood, Christina Shriver, Jody
Meigs and Vinton Countifl!,
Smith,
Job~ Vorys, Roy
(Continued from page I )
$51 for all other Ohio American member of the Ward, and Neil Watson.
Births, Nov, 18
residents, and $169 for out-of- sect, had been arrested but oo
state r~sidents.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Registration for either of charges had yet been flied. Casto, son, Grimms Landing,
Police reported nine other
the real estate courses can be suspects
had been arrested in W.Va.
made by contacting Bernie
~Discharges, Nov.19)
with the murder
Murphy, director ·of con· coonection
Mrs.
Roger Alfred and son,
of
the
California
linuing education, Rio congressman.
Ogle Dillon, Clarence Hash,
Grande College and Com. The
minister
also Janet House, Mrs. James
munity College, 245-li353, by confirmed
that a mother and Kemper · and ' son, Helen
attending winter quarter
her three children, members . Kisor, Ethel ''S\assey, Adam
registration at Lyne Center of
the sect, were found with Meek\ Pauline Newell, Carrie
on November 27, or at the their
throats cut , in Parsons, Dorothy Rouse,
first class session.
Georgetown in a presumed · Mrs. Herman Simms and son,
murder-suicide . The . sect Mrs. Larry Smith and son,
maintained an office in Rodney Stepleton, Anita
Stevenson and Ronda Wilson.
Georgetown, the capital.
Births, Nov.19
"Nothing indicates the suiMr.
and · Mrs. James
cides at Jonestown were
Sparks,
daughter, Wellston.
ritual," she said.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Clifford
She said action In be taken
Vitiloe,
daughter,
Wellston.
by Guyanese government
"would depend upon the
decision of ·our leader/'
referred to a Beckley Prime Minster Forbes
COLLINS SPEAKING
meeting where dissident Burnham. She said a former
Sen. Oakley Collins will be
miners called for a special member of the sect was speaker when the Delta
convention to change the cooperatlnll with troops in the Kappa Gamma Sorority
constitution of the 160,000. chore of body identification Chapter meets for dinner at
member union. They want In and that a list of the dead 6:30 p.m: at the Meigs IM.'
change the dues structure, would be provided to U.S.
methods of selecting con tract media · as
soon
as
SPECIAL MEETING
negotiators and ways. to identification was made.
Rncine
American Legion,
recall International officers,
Deputy Prime Minister Dr.
Miller said he will not call a Ptolemy Reid flew by Post 602, will meet in special
-convention "just to satisfy helicopter to the site today to session Wednesday, Nov. 22
the whim of a few disgruntled head the search and at 8 p.m. Plans for the New
politicians who lost in the last identifiCation efforts.
Year's Eve Party will be
election."
A
special
State Department officials made. All members are
convention :would cost $2 in Washington said a plane Is urged to attend~
million, he said.
expected to bring the bodies
The beleaguered president of Ryan and other victims of
SQUAD RUN
has been the target of the airport massacre to the
The Middleport emergency
internal criticism since he United States this afternoon
was first elected slx years and that Guyana officials had squad answered a call to Elm
ago. An unsuccessful recall completed autopsies as St., at 8:31 p.m. Sunday for
drive during thls year's required by Guyanese law. Archie Pierce, a medical
patlept, who was taken to
prolonged contract strike
Pleasant
Yalley Hospital.
garnered 31,000 signatures on
petitions, according to recall
SQUAD CALLED
supporters.
Secretary - Treasurer Harry
The
Pomeroy emergency
Miller captured 40 percent Patrick.
.
squad
was
called to the Five
of the vote in the June, 1977
"The membership has Points area at 9:05 a.m.
election to defeat former spoken, and I will not allow
International
Executive anyooe to intimidate the mine Monday to the Bill RUSBell
Board Member _Lee Roy workers with propaganda," residence for Mrs. Clara
McMaster, a medical patient,
Patterson and former UMW Miller said.
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

UMW's Miller
•
•
runnzng agazn

~iSAVESAVESAVESAVESAVE$)t

~

HOSPITAL NEWS

Real estate
1 courses will
Sunday evening at the Holzer be available
Medical Center.

hea ded towards Racine
spraypainting several road
signs and mailboxes.
When they arrived at
Southern High School, they

·Free flu
•
vacclne
available
The Meigs County Health
Department has free flu
vaccine available to th e
public.
This vaccine ls a trivalent
vaccine containin g three
influenza strains which
recently caused disease: A·
USSR ,
A-Tex as,
BHorigKong.
One shot should produce
protective levels of antibody
against these three strains in
88 to 89 percent of adults 26
years of age or older. Two
shots about one month apart
are necessary to achieve the
same level of antibodies in
people 6 months through 2a
years of age.
Innuenza vaccine does not
provide protection against
other viral illnesses such as
the common cold.
Who should get influenza
vaccine? Because innuenza
is usually mild and most
people recover fully , routine
vaccination of healthy
children and adults is not
usually
emphasized .
However, people of any age
with chronic conditions such
as : anemia; or chronic
illness (or, medication)which
·tower the body's resistance
to infection. It is also highly
recommended for older
persons - particularly those
about 65 years old or older.
The flu shot is available at
the health department ,
Mechanic St. , Pomeroy,
during regular hours. A
special evening clinic will be
held Friday, Dec. 1, from 6 to
8 p.m. at the department
offices and a clinic will also
be held from 9:30 to II :30
a.m . Thursday, Dec. 7 at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy.
The Meigs CoUnty Health
Department
has
administered free of charge 280
flu shots this fall.
\~

backed the car upon the front released to the custody of
porch and spun out. They their parents pending
went behind the school hearings in juvenile court .
building and sprayed some
Vehicles vandalized were
words on the northwest owned by Larry O'Brien, Rl.
corner of the structure before 2, Racine, Don Manuel, Rt . 2,
going to the bus garage. Upon Racine, and Jerry Powell, Rt.
entering a spare bus they 2, Racine.
took a fire exti nguisher ,
Mrs. Walter Voss, Rt. 2,
several flares and reflectors. Racine, reported that during
After leaving the bus they sprayed
the night,
mailbox
was
withherblack
paint. It
is
went up SR 338 and placed a
lighted flare in the mailbox of believ ed · that the t wo
Awyard Jones, Rt. 2, Racine. juveniles were involved in
At approximately 2:30a.m . this incident.
Sunday the youths were
picked up at their homes and
DOLLAR DROPS
taken to the sheriff's office
LONDON (UP! ) - The
for questioning . They were dollar dropped slightly on the
Tokyo and European money
markets today but. the price
of gold also dipped.
SQUAD CALLED
Dealers said they saw no
The Racine ER was called specific
reaso n for the
to the fire station Sunday
dollar's
slide.
afternoon for Karen Sue
Tokyo marked the biggest
Boggess, 13, Rt. 2, Racine, a
drop,
where the dollar closed
medical patient who was at 194.7&gt;
yen, a sharp fall
taken to Veterans Memorial from Monday
's 196.60 yen
Hospital.
close.

Firemen save home
The excellent effocts of the Pomeroy Fire Deparbment
saved a home from being destroyed by fire Monday night.
Charles Legar, Fire Chief, reported the deparbment was
called at 8:15p.m. to the William Adkins home on Union Ave.
· Fire was contained to one room and the attic area. The fire
is believed to have been caused by a defective flu .
Pomeroy summoned Middleport's tanker truck. Damages
were estimated between $12,1100 and $15,1100 to the two story
frame .
There was insurance Legar reported. No one was home at
the time of the fire. The fire was discovered by Dave Jeffers.
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J

,

¢
'·
'
¢
,
¢

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

Mild Thanksgiving Day
and Friday, but turning
cooler Saturday, with a
chance of rain each day.
Highs will range from the
upper 40s to the upper 50s,
Thursday and Friday and
from the upper 30s to the
upper 40s Saturday. Lows
will be In the 30s early
Thursday and Saturday
and In the 40s early Friday.

In other matters, Delores Surface, a bus driver, and
Florence Barrett, a cook, were gra nted leaves of absence , The
board voted to participate in the pre-service schoo l bus driver
training program through the Washington County Board of
Education at no cost to the district.
Martha Graves , Jennifer Stephens and Stephanie Ash
were added to the list of substitute teachers. Employed as
substitutes were Ella Mae Southern. bus driver, and Ralph
But.cher and Ernest Triplett, custodians. Resignation of
Teresa Casci from the Title IV.{; reading program was
accepted and Pauline Horton was named to fill the vacancy.
Darla Hawley, Pomeroy, was employed as an aide to work
on the Apple Crate which moves from school to school in the
Disadvantaged Pupils Program. Both Hoover and board
member, Carol Pierce , questioned the value of the program
indicating the district may be involved in too many title
programs. Pierce said, " I believe basic education is the
important function of the district schools and not numerous
special title programs."
A request for SPttine Baccalaureate for May 20 and
I Continued on page 8)

Halliday, Wingett
among honorees
Twelv e out stand in g
Southeastern Ohio men will
be
honored
by
the
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Co uncil on Thursday ,
November 30, it was announced today by Bob Evans,
president of th e SEORC,
when the organization holds
its annual awards dinner at
·the Ohio University Inn in
Athens .
guests
The honor ed
represent len COW1ties in
southeastern Ohio and were
nominated for the award by
the chambers of commerce
and business groups in their
home counti es and com·
munities. According to·Evans
this will be the tenth annual
awards meeting. Honorees
i nc l ude e du c ators ,
physicians, indu str ialists,
merch ants, and newspapermen.
Awards by the council are
made on the basis of contributions to sout heaster n
Ohio by pa rticipation and
leaders hip on com munity
affairs .
Introduced to the mem·
bership for recognition will
be Dan Walton, Wellston;
George Knox, Jr., McArthur;
Judge James Stilwell, Logan;
Dr. Ralph Herendeen, New
Lexington ; William A.
Mec hem,
Nelso nv illei
Dwight Rutherford, Athens;

Weather
Lows tonight will be in the
low or mid 30s.
Probability of precipation
20 percent today, Wednesday
and 10 percent tonight .

LADDER TRUCK USED - The Pomeroy Fire
Department ladder truck was in use Monday but,
fortunately, it was not used at a fire. Instead, it was used

to put up Christmas decorations in the business district of
Pomeroy . Shown on the ladder truck is James Frecker
mounting a tree decoration , on a pole.

An early news deadline
wlll be observed Wednesday by the Oblo Valley
Publishing Co., publishers
of the Dally Tribun e,
Gallipolis, and Dally
Sentinel, Pomero yMiddleport, in order to
permit employees time to
get
home
early
Thanksgiving Eve.

)

I- ..~, ~··-'

ROBERT WINGETI
Robert L. Wingett, Syracuse;
Robert Fuller. Portsmouth;
Keith F. Molihan, Ironton:
Irwin G. Smith, Pike County;
Paul B. Mutzig, Jr., Jackson;
and John E. Halliday ,
Gallipolis.
Hopitality hour will be at
a:30 and dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Tickets may be purchased
from: Rhod Mills, Logan
Chamber of Commerce;
Bernard Fultz and Bill
Childs, Middleport; Roger
Barron, Gallipolis Chamber
of Commerce;
How ard
Thom pson, Portsmouth; Tate
Cline, Nelsonville Board of
Trade and the Wellston
Chamber of Commerce.

UNIT CALLED
The emergency unit of the
Middleport Fire Department
was called to 913 Broadway
St. at 11:03 a.m. Monday for
Lillie Smith who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center as a
medical patient.

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to Minersville at 9:44p.m. Monday for
Albert (Red) Keaton who was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center for treatment.
At 8: 13 a.m. Tuesday, the
squad made another run to
the residence for Keaton who
has been seriously ill.
·;

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