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

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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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CJie f

S'PECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE!

Big.Shetand Regular French :
Fries :

Only$J.OQ.!
.'I r"

"1i?ir.
Each coupon req uir es separate purChase·.

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

Hamburger and Salad Bar. :
:

1

I

!
"lDr.

.

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

I'
1
1

~-------------------~------·--------------------------~
I
I

I

1

:

i

Super

Regular French 1
Fries :

$l.Of!

I
co upon requires separate purc hase
I
Present co upo ns whe n ordering.
I Coupon expires Dec. 9, 1978

Regular French"
and 16 oz. Drink

,

l

Only

If your. clothes need more help to loqk
their smoothest try the extra smoothing
pc;~r of new Playtex® EXTRA Control
Top Pantyhose. A superb fit and eXtra
control for a smooth look under clothes!
And, if you're not completely
satisfied Ploytexil GUARANTEES it with

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Now$599

No~$329

Only$1.00 l

I

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Extra Control Top
Sheer Support Leg
reg . sugg.
price 6.95

Extra Control Top
Sheer Leg
reg . sugg.
price 3.95

On~$} •. ,

..

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T~

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DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BAC
(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
,·

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'"

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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
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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

:
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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.
·;

�3- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-_!'arneroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 21, 1978

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

COMMENTARY
~

Pollsters fluff a few

Donald F. Graff

By Martha Angle and Robert Wallers
WASHINGTON ( NEA 1 - The most appropr iate cosm et ic
for the nation's political pollsters, in the wa ke of this year's
elecllons, is that old favorite - egg on the face.
Republican, Democratic and independent survey s pecialists showed an equal facility for error this time as t!ley
sought to read the tea leaves in the days and weeks
immediately before the election . A fe w choice examples :
Patrick Caddell, President Carter's pollster and s upposed whiz kid among Dem ocra tic survey experts, had
New Hampshire Sen. Thomas Mci ntyre out in front by a
two-to-one ma r gin less tha n two weeks befor e the election .
Mci ntyre lost, 51-49, to Republican Go rdon Humphrey.
Caddell also showed Colorado Sen. F loyd Ha skell in a 44- ·
t4 dead heat with Re publica n William Armstrong eight
days before the actual ball oting. Haskell lost by a
thumping 59-4 1 percent margin .
Robert Teeter . premier Re publican pollster , ha d a
super b track reco r d this year - except for one race . Two
days before the election, Teeter's surveys showed Sen .
Edward Brooke, R-Mass ., ahead by 4-5 points. When the
ba llots were counted, Domocr a t Paul Tsongas had won 5545.
Two of the nation 's most respected newspaper polls, in
the Minneapolis Tribune a nd Des Moines Register. were
eq ua lly fa r off the m a rk . The Trib's Minnesota Poll tile
Sunday before the election showed Gov . Rudy Pe rpich
ahead by 4 points and Sen. Wendell Anderson in a virtual
dead heat. Perpich lost 53-46, while Anderson was
clobbered, 57-42. The Register's Iowa poll of the same date
. showed Sen. Dick Cla rk ahead by 10 points; he a ctually
lost, 52-48 .
This . was , ak the pollsters are quick to tell you, an
unusually volatile year. Single-issue politics cut deeply in
some sta te s. !'ike Iowa and New Hamps hire, while the
vagaries of turnout a ffected the results in others. But aU
the exc uses really prove is the wisdom of tile old adage the only poll tha t counts is the one on election day. ,

Some bothered to vote
Speaking of turnout , it looks a s though the downward
trend tha t has marked every election s ince 1960 continued
apace this year . It will be weeks before official canvasses
a re compl eted, but the Washington-base&lt;! Committee for
the Study of the American Electorate has already done a
preliminary analys is based on unofficial returns.
According to director Curtis Gans, 1.8 to 2 percent fewer
vote rs participated in this yea r 's elections than in the 1974
balloting, the last non-pres idential contest. Which would
m ean, if the figures hold up once the official returns are in,
that only a bout 34 perc ent of all eligible voters bothered to
participate in congressional elections this year, and about
37.3 percent of eligible cast ballots in statewide races.
The picture was not universally gloomy. Turnout was
actually up over 1974 in 16 states, although the gain was
minimal in most of those. The biggest jumps came in
Minnesota, with its two fiercely contested Senate races

a gubernatorial contest; Florida, where an unsuccess·
r.ullusgambling
initiative drew a crowd ; and Missouri, where
a right-to-work initiative boosted tilrnout.

GOPs add black vote
The two-year campai~n by GOP National Chainnan Bill
Brock to crack the traditional Democratic stranglehold on
black voters paid handsome dividends in selected races
this month and produced at least modest success nationally.
Surveys by the Associated Press and the New York
Times indicated the GOP drew 15 percent of the black vote
across the country - up from the 7.8 percent garnered by
President Ford in 1976. A handful of moderate-to-liberal
Republican candidates did far better , by their own
calculations, at least.
Richard Tbomburgll, for instance, claims to have
captured 58 percent of the black vote statewidde in winninll
the Pennsylvania governorship. Illinois Sen. Olarles
Percy polled just under 50 percent of the black vote In his
state, while Illinois Gov. James Thompson and Michigan
Gov. William Milliken each drew about 30 percent of the
blaek vote in their races.
Brock now plans to launch a similar campaign neld year
to garner Hispanic support for the GOP.

Peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK
United PressiDternatlonal
RAUCOUS CAUCUS: The welcome wasn 't entirely heartwarming, but Indira Gandhi is accustomed to the vicissitudes
of politics, so she kept her cool as she re-entered India 's
Parliament under a barrage of jeers. The former prime
minister, ousted from the political scene 20 months ago after a
siege of iron-handed rule, won a Parliament seat Nov. 7; and
she took it Monday in New Dellii in defiance of detractors who
shoUted ~'The evil has come !" and ''The fountain, the source of
corruption is here! " Unfazed , she was sworn in before the 400
members of the house while about 70 of ller supporters
poWlded on their desks and shouted "shame on you" at the
hecklers.

TOGETHERNESS: Robert Blake describes his relationship
with "Hampster of Happiness" costar Barbara Harris as long
distance . Says he, "We got this deal. Whenever she wants to be
in LA, she sends me a ticket to Baja California. Wllenever I've
got to be in New York, I send her and her mother tickets to
Palm Beach." Oo the JolmDy Carson show, in Burbank, Calif.,
he called her "one crazy lady," saying she could "empty a
loony bin all by herself" then , shouting, " Barbara honey, if
you're listening, I love ya .. . and I never wanna see you again."
Deadpa nned Carson : "There's a closeness, a warmth among
show business folk that lay people just don't unde~and ."

Especially in America
By Don Graff

"You dumkopf! ... It's rallied! "

Jonestown is every evil thing
everybody .thought, Javers says
By RON JAVERS
Copyrlgbt, San Francisco
Cbroolcle
Dislrlbu~ by UPI
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico
(UPI) - Jonestown' is every
evil thing that everybody
thought - and worse.
We knew that before the
·
shooting started.
The slaugllter began at 4:20
p.m. Saturday while we were
standing beside the twinengine airplane that had
brought us to Port Kaituma,
miles
outside
seven
Jonestown, on Friday and
had returned to pick us up.
I was waiting between Bob
Brown and Don Harris, the
two NBC men who were
killed. We bad beeome close
friends during the course of
our ordeal .
The firing erupted from
guns close by.
I was hit first. I was
knocked to the ground by a
slug in the left shoulder,
apparently from a .38-&lt;:aliber
weapon.
I crawled behind the right
wheel of the plane.
Bob Brown stayed on his
feet and kept filming what
was happening even as the
attackers advanced on him
with their guns.
incredibly
He
was
tenacious.
While I was trying to decide
whether to stay where I was
or risk the 100-yard dash
across the close-cropped
grass field to the jungle, I saw
Brown go down.
Then I saw ·one of the
a tickers stick a shotgun right
into Brown's fa te - incbes
away , if that.
Bob's brain was blown out
of his head. It spattered the
blue NBC minicam.
I'll never forget that sight
as long as I live.
I ran, and then I dived !lead
f1tst into the brush.
I got up ani scrambled as
far into the swamp as I could.
I was about 150 yards from
the airstrip and up to my
waist in water,
I pushed through the rain
forest, walking parallel to the
runway, trying to figure out
what had happened.

I C&lt;luldn't see much. I bad
lost both pairs of glasses I
had witll me .
But there was silence.
Apparently the party of
attackers, which must have
included four, five or six men
with guns, had fled .
I was far down the field by
the time I returned to the
airstrip.
And then, like the other
survivors, I returned to the
crippled plane.
Leo Ryan was on his back
in a blue cord suit ly.ing in the
mud in front of the right
wheel of the aircraft.
His face had been shot
off.

Don Harris lay alongside
the middle of the plane.
Brown was at the tail of the
18-passenger Otter ..
Pattie Parker, one of the
people who bad asked us to
help her escape from Jonestown, was lying at the foot of
the plane's stsirs.
Greg Robinson, the San

Francisco

Examiner

pllotographer at the scene,
was at the left wheel , his body
crumpled almost in half.
There were four Guyanese
soldiers at the far end of the
field . .
They told us they hadn't
been able to shoot at the
attackers during the assault
because they were afraid
they would kill still more
people.
The ooly policeman at the
field, carrying a single-sheD
shotgWl, had been disarmed
the moment the men from the
People's Temple began firing
from their truck and trailer
while we were getting ready
to board the two planes - our
own craft and the smaller one
that was sent to carry away
the fugitives from Jooestown .
As nearly as we could tell,
about haH the attackers were
white, and half were black.
Those of us who had
survived were still terrified .
We took our most seriously
wounded to the soldiers' tent,
and then we retired into Port
Kaituma , the settlement next
to the airstrip, and went into
a Sl!lall cafe called a rum
house .

Berry's ·World

BANDWAGON : You don't have to he on the ballot to find
backers in Cllicago. Witoess Mike Boyko, Mickey and Minnie
Mouse, Donald Duck, Porky Pig, Muhammad AU and God . All
received write~n votes in the Nov. 7 election - Porky for
sheriff and Donald and Minnie for state and county tr easurer
posts . The Almighty took three write-ins for University of
illinois trustee and one for appellate court judge. Newspaper
columnist Royko was favored for U.S. senator, county clerk,
county assessor , sheriff and circuit court judge. One voter
wanted Ali to head the county board of conunissiol)ers. Others
thrust onto the ballot : Howdy Doody, BuUwinkle Moose,
Rocky Squlrrel and Cllicago newscaster Fahey Flynn.
WHO WASHES DISHES?: Dorothy Perry doesn't just
preach her Cllristian faith . She lives it, and 150 homesick
dinner guests will be thankful for the fact this Thanksgiving.
For 34 years, the San Antonio, Texas, missionary's widow has
cooked Thanksgiving dinner at her home for 50 basic trainees
from Lac kland Air Force Base, :;o foreign students and :;o
students from San Antonio College - guests who otherwise
would have to take their turkey in mess hall or cafeteria. She 's
undismayed by the voliDile of&lt;ber guest list, says, "Every
home sllould have one of these'yowig people for Thanksgiving
dinner , especially those who don't have children. They just
don't know the joy it brings until they've tried it."
GlJMPSES : Joanne Woodward has been added to the cas(
of David Mamet and John Weidman's "The Neighborhood ,
Playhouse at Fifty : A celebration ," on Dec . 3 in New YOI'k ...
Dick Smotben, costarring with brother Tom in the musical "I
l.Dve My Wife," celebrated Ilia 40th birthday Monday backstage at the Ethel Ba!TYIIIore Theater. IIAIIemary u.rrU will
be on location in La Junta, Colo., this week !01' her role in the
CBS.TV six-hour miniseries "Chlaholms," costarrlng Robert
Preston and Brian Keltb
4,

~ 1978 by NEA,Inc.~ fZII~A-_
'

~~-·~~

" Did you know that every time you mention
the new risk of r~ession , YOU TWITCH?"

The local Guyanese knew
they were risking their own
safety by letting us stay,
But they were extremely
kind to us.
·
We stood watches during
the stormy night - taking
turns standing guard in pairs
outside the police hut where
our wounded were lying .
The heaV)&lt; tropical storm
made movement difficult and
uncomfoctable - not only for
us but those who had chosen
us as their quarry.
The rain may have saved
our lives.
Every time we heard a
noise, especially whenever
we heard a truck along the
Port Kaituma road, we
thought we would be attacked
again .
Of course none of us had
any weapons.
And time moved slowly,
infinitely slowly.
When we first reached
Jonestown oo Friday night,
the atmosphere was lively
and cordial. We found
ourselves getting a real
Cook's tour from the People's
Temple inhabitants, with
everything arranged for us.
There was great rock music
from the Jonestown band and
entertainment during dinner.
And while we tried, vainly
at first, to get away from the
organized fun , we were told
how happy everyone was.
But beiore we left for an
evening's drive through footdeep mud to Port Kaitwna, a
young ma n slipped Don
Harris of NBC a message
written on a child's slate
saying, " Please help me get
out of Jonestown. "
It had four signatures.
Ba ck in Port Kaltuma,
where the entire group of us
spent Friday night in a tinroofed disco - a small beer
parlor with a pllonograpll and
a few rec ords - local
Guyanese began telling us
horror stories.
They told us about one man
who had escaped from the
colony last summer, ooly to
he captured by guards from
Jonestown and then beaten.
When we returned the
morning
to
following
Jonestown , we were not
surprised to see Jim Jones'
~ar efully
stage-managed
productioo start to crack.
Edith Parker, one of the
1,200 followers trapped in
Jonestown, approached
Coogressman
Ryan and said
I
· she wanted to leave with !tim,
The list grew .
About an hour bef&lt;re it was
time for us to leave
Jonestown, nine people said
they wanted to go.
Then 12.
Finally abouf 20 got up
their courage to defy Jones.
There were too many of us
for ooe truckload. The reporters and cameramen were told
we would go out in the first
batch, but Congressman
Ryan would walt to leave in
the second.
We were relieved to be
going.
Jones had struck us as a
madman. We watcbed !tim as
be kept taking pllla Wltil he
seemed dazed by them.
He listed a whole catalogue
of diseases be said were
afflicting him, starting with
cancer.
But he did agree that the 20
people wllo wanted to could
leave with us. He even said he
thougllt they might be "better
off" SOOJewhere else if they
no longer wanted to stay in
Jonestown.

Suddenly there was a
commotion in the central
building that serves as the
colony 's meeting place - a
large structure with tin roof
and packed dirt floor .
A cheer rang through the
crowd.
· Then a young white man
made a direct IWlge at Ryan
·
·
with a knife .
The blade was at Ryan 's
throat when Mark Lane and
Charles Garry, Jones'
law yers and long-time
supporters, grabbed the
weapon .
The attacker was cut
before he could be disarmed.
And Ryan 's shirt was
drenched with the attacker's
blood.
Ryan ran to the truck at
that point, and we lumbered
off through the mud to the
airstrip.
Shaken by what he thought
was his successful narrow
escape, Ryan told us as we

reached the airstrip,

11

1

wouldn't he alive if it was not
for Mark Lane ."
Ryan lived only a few
minutes longer.
After the violence of the
attack at the airstrip, we still
had .to walt f&lt;r rescue.
It was getting dark, and
there was no chance for a
rescue plane until morning .
We spent the night listening
to the stOI'ies the 12 fOI'mer
residents of Jonestown had to
tell .
They corroborated every
evil story about the place that
we had heard.
They told us how Jim Jones
had led the entire colony into
making a maniacal suicide
pact with !tim.
They talked about stores of
weapons in the so-called
peaceful jungle nilssion.
, And whenever there was a
crisis, they recalled, Jones
had assembled the whole
colony into a huge, circular
.assembly and mesmeriZed
them into agreement.
We understood then why
there had been an ominous
cheer from the Peoples
Temple reside.nce back at
Jonestown bef&lt;re the yoWig
knife-wielder charged at
Ryan.
Daybreak - which we
never expected to see finally came.
At 6:30a.m. the first batch
of Guyanese troops arrived at
Port Kaitwna .
,
They had flown to a landing
fleld at Mathews Ridge,
about 30 miles away, and
transpocted by truck about
halfway from the ridge to
where we were walling.
Then , to Insure themselves
against being ambushed in
exposed · vehicles, they
completed their march oo
foot.
Still more troops arrived.
There were enougll at last
to secure the perimeter ol the
Port Kaitwna air strip. It was
still , f~irly early in the

moorilng,

While 80 soldiers marched
to Jooestown to make sure no
more marauders could sweep
nut from the deadly
settlement, rescue fllgllts
arrived to take out the
survivors.
were
hi
Soon
we
Georgetown and aboard an
American -C-141 Hercules
hospital plane oo our way
home to safety.
Five in our group were
critically
or
severely
wounded .
Tim Reiterman, repocter
from tile EJ&lt;IIminer - with
two bullet WOWida In the left

Now is the time for a ll good commentators to consume
endless columns of newsp rint in analyses of the nation's
latest electoral orgy.
.
,,
Are the voters trending to the left or r~ght of the pohllcal
spectrum •
Do referenda results .show the electorate on a . taxtig htenin~ rampage?
·
·
What will be the impact of Republican gains of s ome 300
state legislative seats on congressional redistricting
followin g the 1980 Census ?
What about gains or losses for blacks, women and
representatives of other highly visible minorities?
·
How will GOP Senate and House gains affect congressional attitudes toward a probable anns-limitation agreement with the Soviets, labor law refonn, federal funding
for abortions, the legalization of streaking ?
Should ·a nswers to the above true , false or don't know?
Many aspects ofthe Nov . 7 vote are, of course, of genuine
analytical mterest. But too much a11alysis may obscure the
most important points about the election : The fact that it
occurred, and the scale on which it occurred.
An American national election, evert in a off-presidential
year when it is considered no big deal, is among tile most
massive participatory even~ in the experience of man, on
a nume rical par with the Crusades and the mass
migrations of the early _c enturies of the Christian era .
By rough preliminary count, this time about three out of
every eight of the more than 155 million Americans of
voting age went to the polls. This minority turnout is
lamented, as is customary after each election, as evidence
of the public's political apathy. But look at it this way :
Freedom is freedom - to vole or not to, as the individual
prefers. And it still works out to nearly 60 million
.
Americans exercising the franchise.
It Is not only the number of voters that impresses,
however. There are also the offices voted on. This year, in
addition to the 36 governorships, 35 Senate seats and 435 in
the House on which attention focused, thousands of
legislative seats and many more thousands of judicial
posts, state offices and local positions have been filled. All
told, the American electorate in its periodic trips to the
nolls selects more than · half a million officeholders for
more tllan 80 thousand agencies of government, from the
presidency . and congress down to scllool boards and
sewage conunissions.
Sucll thoroughgoing democratization of a S&lt;&gt;Ciety is
approacbed nowhere else, not even by our close associates
in Western Europe . When you come right down to it, any
American election is by definition a very big deal indeed.

Here she is again, folks
Still speaking of elections, it appears that Indira Gandhi
just possibly may have India to kJCk around again.
The former prime minister has been returned to
parliament as the representative of a remote south Indian
district where, not being adept In the local language, she
had to campaign via an interpreter.
'
She is still burdened with criminal suits and a tarnished
iniage from the authoritarian ex~esses of her last years in
power, but the parliamen_tary victory is being widely
mterpre~ as the beginning of a comeback.·
Of partjcular interest Is the similarity lletween her
triumph and that of the opposition which overthrew her
regJIDe a year and a llalf ago. The present government
exerted every effort to block her - altllough stopping
considerably sbort of the harsh measures of emergency
rule she had employed.
·
But afain it was the pe&lt;&gt;ple, not the politicians, who had
the !ina word. And that was that they wanted Mrs. Gandhi
.
·
back In national politics.
A nice thing about democracy is that when It Is allowed
free play, an encouraging aspect can be foWld to just about
·
any election outcome.

L
I
II

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Library

~

......''
'i¥.~!'-

Letters

Tina Rae Smith
Route 2
Clleshire, Oh. 40020

•

With just two returning
lettermen, rookie varsity
coach Don Saunders will be
rebuilding the basketball
program at Hannan Trace
High School .
Saunders, who served as a
junior high coach last year,
has taken over !he head
coaching reins from th!l
veteran Dan Cornell who
stepped-down 'from the
coaching profession. Cornell
still teaclles at Hannan Trace
and operates his own
business in Crown City.
Returning Wildcat lettermen are Ron Pack, &amp;-1 senior
forward and Mike Webb, 5-11
senior guard. Pack was the
sixth man 'last year while
Webb, a varsity sub, should
help the offense as a point
gua rd and improve the
defense.
Others vying for starting
berths are Carlos Campbell,
6-2 junior ; Jonny Saunders,
Tim Beaver, 6-0 junior
forward ; Ely Hite, 5-9 guard;
Paul Shaffer, 5-11 senior ;
Tom Caldwell, 5-8 junior
guard; Charles Hineman, 6-0
junior; Ed Whitt, 5-9 senior
guard and Rodney Pack, 6-1
sophomore forward.
Graduation IOS80s include
AU VAC players David Swain
and David Campbell, steady
guard Frank Mooney, Steve
Beaver and Randy Neal.
Coach Saunders said the
team
lacks
overall

PtJI.o .. .-.et~~Hy excepl Salurddy
' by The Ohio Valley Pu bli shing
Com pll ny·Mllllimedi a, In c.,
Ill
GJurt St ., Pom eroy, Ohio 4.5769.
Busines.s OHice Phone 992· 2156

Edilori al Phon e 992-2157.
Second class postage puid &lt;1
Pomt!roy, Ohio.
•
National advertising represen~
lative, Utndon Assodutes, • 3101

Dear Tina :
I'm very pleased to be able to welcome you to the staff of the
Pomeroy and Middleport Ubraries.

, Euclid Ave., C1cvclund, Oh.io 44115.
,
SuOOcriplion rates: Delivert.'d by
' carrier where avai!abl~t 75 t•tmts per
week. By Motor Route where Cll rrier
service not available, One mo ntlt,
$3.1.5. By ma il in Ohio and W. Va. ,

CETA and the Community Action Agency have (ll'ovided us
with several excellent staff members in recent months and
they have helped us to give better service - not only by
serving our patrons directly, but also by helping us with some
of the behind-tbe«enes tasks which must be done If library
service is to continue on the high \eve! the county had under
Susan Fleshman.

On e Ye1:1r, $22.00 ; Six munllu ,
$11 .50; Three months , $7.oo,
El.sel't'here $26.00 year ; Six mon lhii
$1 3.50; Three months, $7.5q
~u b!llc ription prkt' i nd ud ~ Sunda~
Time~-Senti nt; l ~
'

experience and it should iake
awhile for the players to
come around. Sauoders said
the league should be pretty
even with Eastern and Kyger
rated much stronger but
added the old cliche
"Anybody ca'n beat the other
on a given night."
Wild cat reserve players
include Craig Cllapman, 5-IO,
sophomore ; Richard Jones,
~10 sophomore ; Todd Sibley,
5-9 sophomore; Lee Mooney,
5-4 sophomore ; Paul Sanders,
5-9,.sophomore ; Kelly Petrie,
5-4; Toby Sheets, 5-4 ; Mike
Waugh, 5-10 ; Greg Webb, 5-9
and 5-11 Randy Daniels, all
freshmen.
· Hannan Trace opens its
1978-79season Nov . 28 against
Fairland.
Here is the Wildcat
schedule :
Wildcat Schedule
Nov . 28 -

As I told you befOI'e, we currently have preschool story hours ~

for 3~-li year11-0lda at both Pomeroy and Middleport,
programs in the thinking and planning stage for the junlOI' high ·
school crowd, and·an mgoing Saturday afternoon program for ·
the 4th, 5tll, and 6th graders (at Middleport Ubrary ). So I
very pleased you and Brian Bauer will be doing Saturday
.prograinS for the kindergarten through 3rd grade set. If 1 ,
understood Ruth Powers correctly this will mean at first 'tllat ·
the younger elementary school children will be expected to ·
join the older elementary school children fOI' the 2 o'clock ·
Middleport program; later, they will split off from the older
children ani have their program, with the time to be
announced when you and Brian have completed your planning.

am '

I think _most elementary school children, regardless of age,
will be mterested in the programs coming up : a policeman on ·
ooe Sautrday, a fireman the next, and a magician after that .
With all that and movies too, how can they resist the urge to
come to the library?
·
So welcome , Tina. I hope you will enjoy library work as much
as the rest of the staff do!
Sincerely,

•

Ellen Bell, Director
(Serving aU Meigs County)

arm - and I witll my
shoulder wound were amoog
the lucky ones.

In 1938, Nazi forces
occupied the western regions
of Czechoslovakia and '
declared au peraona In those ,
areas German citizens.

WORKING HARD - Pomeroy's alumni has been
busy working hard for Thursday's annual bruising battle
with the Middleport'salumni. Hard at it are Clluck Faulk,

Rick Johnson , AI McLaughlin and Rick Phlllips. Back
row, Don Swisher, Dave Williamson Ray WillfOI'd Coach
Bub Stivers and Wally Hatfield. '
'

Dec. 12 · Dec .. 15 -

At Southern
Eastern

Dec. 18 - AI North Gallia

Dec. 28 -

Southwestern

Jan. 9 - AI Kyger Creek

Jan.
Jan.
Jan .
Jan.

13 - At Wah.!!lma
16 - At Southwestern
19 - Southern
23- At Eastern

Ja n. 30 - Sy mmes Vall ey
Feb. 2 - Kyger Creek
Feb. 3 Feb. 6 -

At Fa irland

Wahama
Feb. 9 - North Gallia

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - A
neurological team at Mercy
Hospital Monday reported results of brain scans on injured
Pittsburgh Steelers' . rookie
Randy Reut er shan were
favorable but he remairied in
and
critic al condition
unconscious for the fourth
straight day. A spokeswoma n
for the hospital said
Reutershan's vital signs were
good .

Reutershan, 23, a member
of the Steelers' specialty
teams, was injured when his
car ran off a rain-slick
highway in suburban South
Fayette Township, sheared a
utility pole and overturned in
a field , pinning him in the
wreckage .

SMOKING POLICIES ARE BEING
STRICTLY ENFORCED AT
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
PATIENT'S

RIGHTS

REGARDING

SMOKINGA patient 's rights regarding smoking will be
honored at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Effective this date, Smokers · and Non·
Smokers are not to be admitted to the same
room .
To insure the effectiveness-Of this policy the
persons involved are to adhere to the
following procedure:
(1) Admitting physician will note or\
admission orders whether patient is a
Smoker or Non-Smoker.
(2) Admitting clerk will note on face
sheet whether a patient is a Smoker or NonSmoker.
.
(3) Admitting nurse will check
physician's orders .along with patient's face
sheet. to make certain a Smoker or NonSmoker are not admitted to the same room .
SMOKING For the benefit of the patient, smoking is
prohibited except in the hospital's lobby.
Smoking is not permitted in any patient
corridor and only the patlemt may smoke in
his room . Smoking is not permitted ~nder
any circumstances In a•room wher~ oxygen
is being used .

OFF ENSIVE PATTERN - Pomeroy 's alumni is shown in an offensive set led by
former Marshall signal caller Don Swisher . Othe rs in the action are center , Rick Johnson ;
right guard Dave Williamson and left guard Ray Willford.

GIVES INSTRUCTIONS - Middleport alumni coach Dave Ashley is busy giving
inst ructions to the alwnni preparing for Thursday 's annual Turkey Bowl game. Kickoff
time is 2p.m . on the Meigs Junior High field in Middleport.

Fairland

Dec. 1 - Chesapeake
Dec. 5 - AI Symmes Va lley

are .

Some ol thOBe tasks which we will expect you to help us do
weeding out and discarding books which are no longer being ·
used (which we hope will be sold by the Friends of the Meigs
County Lltraries in another successful book sale), ordering
and processing books (with a special emphasis on those books
patrons have specifically asked for) , and providing programs
for all the people of Meigs County.

Quillen, and Chip Haggerty . They will be lugging the pigskin Thursday during the annual Turkey Bowl between
Middleport Alunmi and Pomeroy's Alumni.

Wildcats have
two lettermen

TilE DAILY SENT lNEL
,DEVOTED TO THE
· INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MASON AR EA
ROBERT HOEfLICH
f"'Jty Editor

•

'I

BACKS READY- Returning for another year in the
Middleport backfield are Terry Whitlatch, Perk Ault, Ron

Annual Turkey
Bowl Thursday
The annual renewal of the gridiron rivalry between alumni
of Middleport and Pomeroy schools is scheduled for 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Junior High football field .
Game balls a re being donated by Farmers Bank and
Savings Company and the Pomeroy National Bank.
· Here are the rosters for both squads :
Middleport Yellow Jacket
Player - School
Ht. Wt. Yr.
Cllip Haggerty, Meigs
:;..a 155 71
Kenny Youn g, Meigs
&amp;-1 165 78
Pe rk Ault, Meigs
5-10 175 75
Ron Quillen , KC
5-11 180 69
John Singer, Middleport
6-0 170 61
Cllarlie Marshall, Meigs
:;..a 150 76
Jim Howard, Meigs
5-10 160 77
Terry Wllitlatch, Meigs
5-10 175 75
l.Du McKinney, Meigs
6-0 205 75
Manning Baumgardner, Middleport
5-11 180 62
Mick Cllilds, Meigs
5-10 180 71
John Lehew, Meigs
5-10 190 74
Steve Bachner, Meigs
5-10 170 77
Dennis Ault, Meigs
5-1 0 190 66
Dave Miller , Meigs
&gt;-10 175 77
Ted Lehew, Meigs
5-1 0 185 72
K. C. Wyant, Meigs
6-0 205 76
Larry Vance , Middleport
&amp;-1 180 66
Don Hartung, Meigs
&amp;-2 265 72
Larry Gladwell, Middleport
6-1 185 66
Bill Moodispaugh, Middleport
6-1 210 65
John Blake, Meigs
&amp;-2 215 77
Don Roush , Middleport
&amp;-1 250 61
Stan Starcher, Meigs
6-0 200 77
Mick Davenport, Meigs
6-2 175 76
Tom l.Dwery, Meigs
6-0 160 75
Rich Gilkey, MeiRs
6-0 180 69
Scott Reuter , Meigs
&amp;-1 170 77
Fred Robinson , Middleport
6-4 225 66
Bill Halley, Middleport .
6-0 225 66
Coach Dave Ashley ; Asst., Frog Wayland ; Managers,
Richie Long and Nick Bush.

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling lanl!s
Early S.undav
Mixed League

Nov. 12, 1978
Team

Pts.

Tom ' s Carr y Out
Jack's Dair y Ba r
J In One
Roya l Crow n
Gibbs Gr ocer y

64
56

so
44

40

Meigs Inn

34

Hi g h ser ies - Ed Voss 559,
Debbie Hawley 516 ; John

Tyree 551, Ma ry Voss 505 .
H igh ga me -

Ed Voss 206,

M ar y Voss 18 3; John Tyree

197, Debbie Hawley 178.

Team ser ies - Jack 's
Da ir y Bar 2021.
Tea m ga me - Tom's Carr y

Out 720.
Early Wedn esday
· Mi xed League

Nov . 18, 1978

Team

P1.

Sm i th-Ne lson Motors

Long Shots

Young 's.Market

Zide's Sport Shop

59

52
46

39

Headq ua r ters
35
No . J
33
High ser ies - Larry Dugan
583, Isabelle Couch 509 ; A. L.
Phelp s, Jr. 535, M ax in e

Dugan 501.

High game -

Larr y Dugan

222, Isa be ll e Cou ch 207;
Richard Russell 220. Pa t
Car son 199 .
Tea m seri es - Zide's Spor t

Shop 2023.

Team ga me - Zide's Sport

Shop 717.

Tri-County League
Nov . 14 , 1918

Team
Columbia Na l. Life
Roach Gun Shop

Eagle s Clu b

Pomeroy Cem ent Block

Bill 's Body Shop
H S. R Firestone
High Ind . ga me -

Pts.
58

. Player - Scbool
Pat O'Brien, Meigs
Mick Ash , Meigs
Bob Werry, Meigs
Don Swisher, Pomeroy
Terry Qualls, Meigs
Jack Oiler, Meigs
Clluck Faulk, Meigs
Rick Ash, Meigs
Allen Stewart, Meigs
Allen McLaughlin, Meigs
Ron Couch, Meigs
Dan Buffington, Meigs
Ron Coates, Meigs
Andy English, Meigs
Dave Wllliamson, Meigs
Rick Johnson, Meigs
Wally Hatfield, Pomeroy
Cllarles Neece , Meigs
Robert Birchfield , Meigs
John Wolfe, Pomeroy
Randy Faulk, Meigs
Ray Wilf&lt;rd, Meigs
Lamie Coates, Meigs
Rick Philips, Meigs
Melvin Cremeans, •Meigs
Robert Qualls, Meigs

6-0

:;..a
5-11
5-9
&amp;-2
5-8

:;..a

5-10 .
6-1
6-0
&amp;-2
5-g

6-0
6-0
&amp;-1
&amp;-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-2

1975
CHEVY
CAPRICE
ESTATE
WAGON

'3495

Karr &amp; VanZandt

42

Jl
30
Jack

Ward 225; M ose Norman 213 ;

Henry Clalworlhy 208.

High ind . 3 gam es - M ose
Norman 558; Henry Oatworthy 547 ,· Dale Davi s 547 .
High team game - Eagl es
Club 864 ; Pom eroy Cement

Eag les Club 2440 ; Bill 's Body
Yr.
Sho p 2423.
1970
1974
1971
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
1967
Morning Glories
1975
Nov. 7, 1978
1975 Team
Pis.
1973 G. S. J . Auto Pa rts
63
Ka rr S. Van Zandl
48
1972 Newel.
l Sun oco
40
1977 Sea rs
34
1974 Cleland Really
28
1974 Gibbs Grocery
27
ind . gam e - Connie
1977 HyHigh
sell 174, 161.
1977
High ind. series - Connie
1974 Hy sell 495; Thelma Osborne
1976 440.
High tea m game - Sears
1977 81 2.
1961
High tea m ser ies 8 sSears
1974 226~
1974
Friday Night Ladies
1967
' Standings
1974 T
Nov . 10, 1978
Pis.
1977 · K~~::'y's Angels
54
1976 Bill's Quality Body Shop 49
1973 Don's Uph olstering
42
Mine No .3
39
Parker's A. I. Service
32
175 1974 Honaker
c: B.
24

Wt.
170
160
190
160
175
230
192
170
225
170
170
175
170
175
225
170
210
200
200
250
280
220
175
170

CLEVELAND (UP ! ) - A
judge has continued until
a
t emporary
Monday
restraining order allowing
USED CARS
CI NCINNATI (UP! ) -:: The the NBA Cleveland Cavaliers
bidding for free agent Pete to operate out of the Coliseum
Rose apparently has topped in suburban Richfield, 'Ohio.
$600,000 a year.
Extension of the previous
Rose said Monday that a injunction issued last week
couple of teams have offered was continued Monday by
him better deals than the Cuyahoga County Commoo
twoyear, $1.2 million pa ckage Pleas Judge David 0 . Matia,
reportedly being readied by who sc heduled a hearing for
the Cincinnati Reds.
9:30 a.m. Nov . 27.
A Cincinnati newspaper reIt means the Cavs-Phoenix
ported over the week end the Suns game scheduled for
Reds were ready to offer such tonight will be played at the .
a package, but Rose , in a Coliseum, where t he cavs
3 sea ter, power wi ndows,
telephone in te rview from and building management
power sea t, power door
locks , air, am -fm r adio,
Japan, said he knew of no are embroiled in a lease
new tires. Luggage r ack
such offer .
dispute.
Anyway , added Rose, the
rumored Reds' package
"would not quite compare to
a couple of other offers we
In 1977, Egyptian President
ha\•e rece ived."
Anwar Sadat returned to
Rose and the Reds return Cairo from his historic peace
their
four-w eek mtsswn to Jerusalem ,
You'll Like Our Quality
fr om
Way of Doing Business
J a panes e tour Wedn esday pledging ''no more wars"
GMAC FINANCING
and Rose said Reds ' with Israel , and was greeted
992
-5342
Pomeroy
Pres ident Dick Wagner by wild ly ent hus iastic
Open Evenings 'til6 :00
wants to talk with !tim upon Egyptian crowds ..
Til5 p.m . Sat.
his return .
Rose said Wagner told him,
"Let's get together when we
get back to Cincinnati. You
give me a call. "

45

High team 3 games Pom eroy Cem ent Block 2461;

Hl
5-11
5-7
6-1
5-ll

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL '

58

Block 855; Bill 's Body Shop
840.
Pomeroy

Judge continues
r estraining order

Latest offer
to Rose is
not enough

Individual hi gh game Dotti e Nelson 165; Pauline
Fields 158; Pear l Ru ssell 154.
Individual high seri es Pauline Field s 437; Lorie
Moore 432 ; Etta may Norton
417 .

Team hi9h game Up holslenng 480 ;

Dan's
Bil l' s

Qual ity Body Shop 452 and

444 ; Kenny's AnQels 440.
Team hi9h senes - Dan' s
Upholstertn g 1325 ; Bil l 's

Qual ily Body Shop 1321;

Par ker 's A. l. SPrv ir.:a l ?RA.

See lltl

OlilfS~-.:...::~Ie~~:siJ"".r:i~

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Mi

o.

&lt;

'

'

�.

.
5- Tile ~ily Sent~!, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0., Tuesday ' Nov. 21. 1978

4- Tile DaUy Sent!JV&gt;l,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 21, 1978

Atlanta's Horner 'Rookie of Year'
NEW YORK (UP!) - Bob
Horner, who walked right off
the campw1 of Ariu&gt;na State
to become ooe of the most
feared power hitters in
baseball,
was
named
Natiooal League Rookie of
the Year Monday by a slim
margin over San Diego's
Ozzle Smith.
Horner, the No. I selection
in the summer free-agent
draft, joined the Atlanta
Braves immediately after
c-ollege, where he set home
run recocds that lrought him
All-America status.
"I kind of had an inkling I
was going to win," admitted
Horner, who received 12'»
votes from a 24-man
committee of the Baseball
Writer's Association of
America. "Ozzie Smith and
(Pittsburgh pitcher) Don
Robinson were pretty stiff
competition, though. I was a
little apprehensive waiting
for the announcement."
Smith,. the Padres' young
· shortstop, picked up 8'» votes
while Robinson, who was
instrumental in Pittsbw-gh's
frenzied but futile pennant
drive,
garnered
the
remaining three.
Horner, a second baseman
in college, found himself
starting for the Braves at
third base one week after
making the final out in
Arizona State's loss to
Southern cal In the finals of

the College World Series. He
set NCAA records by
slamming 25 homers In 60
games for ASU last season
and 56 homers In his threeyear college career.

Campbell sparks
Houston victory
HOUSTON (UP!) - What
Earl Campbell has done for
the Houston Oilers can be told
in the story of the simple slip
screen pass play.
Back in 1973 Oilers'
quarterback Dan Pastorini
was trying to SW'prise NFL
defenses with the slip screen
- a pass thrown across the
field w a wide receiver who
has stepped back behind the
line of scrinunage.
"We used it a lot, probably
too much," Pastorlni said.
"But it was a potent play. We
used it even though it didn't
work half the time."
Then came Campbell, who
is after 12 games the NFL's
leading rusher with 1,143
yards and the eighth rookie in
NFL history w gain more

than 1,000 yards aground
" Before, people didn't
respect ow- running,' ~ Oilers
wide receiver Ken Burrough
said. " ... When you have a
back like him, the slip screen
is almost unstoppable."
The Miami Dolphins would
not disagree after their dis·
heartening 35-30 loss of a
Monday -night thriller in the
Aslrodome. campbell ran for
199
yards
and four
touchdowns, and a hall-dozen
slip screen passes to
Burrough, Rich caster and
Mike Renfro worked every
time for good yardage .
Eigl!t-year veteran corner·
back Willie Alexander said
the Oilers, a possible playoff

team now, have never won a

bigger game against a
tnugher opponent.
"Give credit to (Miami
Coach) Don Shula for making
night a track meet,''
Annual Thanksgiving supper held jointly my
Alexander said. "He's one of
the greatest of all time. His
The Golden Rule Class and treasurer.
game plan was magnificent.
Plans were made to We didn't know where they
the Young Adult Class of the
Middleport First Baptist decorate the church for were coming from next."
Church held their annual Christmas on Dec. 14.
The Dolpins appeared to
Attending were June and bave enough to win the game
Thanksgiving supper in the
church basement Thursday Manning Kloes, Fran and when defensive end A.J.
Cindy Parker, Joan and Ran- Duhe made a spectacular
evening at 6:30p.m.
The Rev. Mark McOung dy Hayes, Marilyn, Marc and sack of Pastorini in the end
had the blessing. Devotions John Fultz, John and Kathern zone early in the ·fourth
were given by Kathern Met· Metzger, Fred and Pauline quarter for a safety and a 23zger followed by group Hoffman, Mark and Mary 21 lead. But the Oilers'
singing with Mary Ann Mc- Ann McClung, Dan, Kathy defense, despite being riddled
and David Riggs, Judv and for aimost 500 yards, held
Clung at the piano.
Officers elected for 19'19 for John Pat Riley, Dreama Hud- Miami after its free kick was
the Golden Rule Class were son, Fred and Martha Klein , returned into its territory.
Houston's offense took
Martha Klein, president ; Kenneth and Sue Imboden,
Mrs. Metzger, vice presi- Edna and Don Wilson, strength from the defensive
stand and pounded 80 yards in
dent; Eqna Wilson, Chuckie and Susie Metzger.
secretary; Betty Denny,

Variety club elects officers
Officers were elected at the
Thursday meeting of the
Bradbury Variety Club held
at the home of Mrs. Dixie
Sayre.
Elected were Mrs. Carolyn
Searles, president; · Mrs.

Sayre, vice pr.esidenl ; Mrs.
Arline Davis, secretary; Mrs.
Bernice Wino, flower and
card chairman ; and Mrs.
Virginia Whitlatch, publicity.
Mrs. Wino presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Sayre giv-

Program given on CROP
A program on CROP was
given by Dottie Maull of
Chillicothe at the Thursday
meeting of the Episcopal
Church Women of Grace
Church held at the home of
Miss Fleanoi' Smith.
A donation was made to the
Children's Hospitall in Cin·
cinnati, and Mrs. Jean Moore
reported on the convention
she had attended. A report on
World Community Day
observed by Church Women

United of Meigs County was
qiven by Mrs. Ada Titus.
Pecans are for sale and
orders may be placed with
Mrs. Freda Hartinger.
Mrs. Nancy Reed for devotions gave a history of the
UTO. Mrs. Edith Reed of
Athens was a guest. Other
hoste.ses for the luncheon
were Miss Marie Bichman
Mrs. Hartinger, and Mrs:
Helen Hayes. Next meeting
will be at 12:30 p.m. on Dec.
14 at the parish house.

Middleport Garden club
to host annual·dinner
The Middleport Garden
Oub will meet for its annual
Christmas dinner on Monday,
Dec. 4 at 6:30 p:m. at the
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Charles Kuhl, regional direc·
tor, OAGC, will be a guest.
The biJsiness meeting and
program will follow at the

r---------1
I

I

I
Ij

Soci"al 1
.
Calendar
I1'
.

TUESDAY
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesdsy night at the Colum·
bia Gas Co. office, Mid·
dleport. Kathy Johnson and
Beth Dawson to have the
cultural report, Libby Sayre
and Jane Bourne, hostesses.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
AUXILIA
. RY,
FjaneyBennett Post 128, Mi
port,
7:30 p.m;, meeting
ed
by a 6:30p.m. potluck supper.
Dues payable.
• AMERICAN LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport, 6:30 potluck
followed by 7:30 meeting.
Dues payable.

•

.,

games- tied with teammate
Jeff Bw-roughs fer the team
lead in home runs with 23:
Horner also drove In 63 runs.
''This caps off quite a
year," Horner said with a

Major league pitching did
little to quiet Horner's bat. In
his first pro game, he
homered off Pittsburgh's
Bert Blyleven and finished
his abl&gt;reviaW&lt;I season - 89

home of Mrs. William Morris
in Middleport. Mrs. Carl
Horky will present a slide
program entitled "Christmas
in Williamsburg" prepared
by the Colonial Williamsburg
Foundation. Mrs. Arthur
Skinner will display an ar·
rangement using a madonna.
Members will exchange
gifts, and gifts will be col·
lected for patients at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
Hostesses will be Mrs .
William Morris, Mrs. M. J .
Fry, Mrs. Paul Haptonstaii,
and Mrs. B. B. Zeigler.

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. J. Daniel
Riggs, 875 Flood Road, Mid·
dleport, are announcing the
birth of a son, David Alan,
born on Nov. 10 at the Holzer
Medical Center. The six
pound, five ounce, infant is
Mr. and Mrs. Riggs first
child ..
Patemal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard L.
Riggs, South Point, and the
maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Delvin Harford,
Rllynelle, W. Va. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. E. F.
Harford, Raynelle, and Mr.
and Mrs. Oayton Powell,
Huntmgton, W. Va .

•

ing the devotions. For roll
call, mem bers nam ed
something for which they are
thankful.
A Thanksgiving potluck
dinner preceded the meeting
with Mrs. Rose Ca rson giving
the grace. The afternoon was
spent on making Clu-istmas
favors for the patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The annual Christmas din.ner will be held on Dec. 14 at
Crow 's Steak House. The
members will then return to
the Winn horn e for a gift ex·
change and dessert. Allendine the meeting besides
those named were Amy
Searles.

shake of his head. "It's really
quite an honor, right up there
with any honor I've ever won .
"The thing I really need w
get now is experience
because there's a lot of things
I definitely need to learn. By
no means do I know alii have
to kmw about baseball."
In addition to adding a
potent bat to Atlanta 's

.Field selected for
DivisiQn II crown

MISSION, Kan. (UP!) 12 plays for the go-ahead The NCAA has chosen an IItouchdown. campbell's 12yard run capped that drive,
and then moments later
following an interception he
took a pitch o~t and fted down
the right sideline for 81 more
•
•
yards and a clinching score.
"Earl won't listen to
SHIZUOKA, Japan (UP!)
instructions," an obviously
delighted Phillips · said. " I - Champ Summers belted a
told him to just get the first solo homer and Vic Correll
· down and run out the clock." and George foster drove in
Miami, with the loss, fell one run each Tuesday, pacing
one game behind New the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-2
England In a competitive victory over the Yomiuri
championship race in the Giants in the last game of
AFC Eastern Division. The their 17-game tow-.
The Reds wrapped up their
Patriots are 9-3 and Dolphins
11-4 with four games to play. series with Japan by winning
Houston, 8-4, remained two 12 straight, good for a 14-2-1
·
games behind AFC Central record.
Correll singled home the
leader Pittsburgh but
remained solidly In position Reds' first run In the third
to vie for a wild card playoff inning and Summers belted
his homer, his fifih of the
berth.
tour, in the fifth. Foster
EAST RUTHERFORD, knocked in the eventual
N.J. (UP!) ~The New York game-winner by lofting . a
Giants
Monday · fired sacrifice fly into left field in
offensive coordinator Bob the sixth after shortstop
Gibson, who called the Junior Kennedy singled and
controversial play that moved to third on Johnny
resulted in the Philadelphia Bench's single.
Japan's home-run king
Eagles' last-second 19-17
victory over the Giants Sadaharu Oh smashed a solo
homer, his second in the
Sunday.
The Giants lost the game series in the sixth to narrow
they seemingly had clinched the Reds' lead to 3·2.
when quarterback Joe
Pete Rose was hitless in his
Pisarcik fumbled trYing w five trips to the plate,
hand off to fullback Larry marking the first time in the
Csonka. P hiladelph ia series the third baseman did
cornerback Herman not hit safely in a game ..
Edwards scooped up the loose
Tom Hume, who was
ball and raced 26 yards for a relievE!d by Doug .Bair after
touchdown with 20 seconds two men were out in the ninth
left. Andy Robustelli, the inning, picked up his fifth
Giants '
director
of victory in five appearances.
An estimated 20,000 fans
operations, said Gibson was
dismissed because the ' saw the game played at
offensive team could no Shizuoka Stadium, about 150
longer be expected to have miles west of Tokyo.
The Reds are scheduled w
confidence in their offensive
leave Tokyo for home
coordinator's calls.
Wednesday.

Young Adult
class enjoys
potluck dinner
A potluck dinner was enjoyed by the Young Adult
Class of the Laurel Oil! Free
Methodist Church Thursday ·
evening at the Meigs County
[nfinnary .
During th e business
meeti ng, Mrs. Michael
Wright discussed the annual
Christmas program. Prayer
was by Robert Barton and the
Rev. Floyd Shook.
Attending were Oifford
and Mildred Jacobs, Janice
and Charles Mash IJI, Randy
and Darla Hawley, Bob and
Patty Barton, Dick and
Sharon Folmer, Bobby and
Ilnda Fosler, Leona Martin,
Betty Will, Etta rae Ellis,
Josephine Mowery, Carol
Lunsford, Franklin and Ida
Mae
Martin,
Joan
Weyersmiller, Diane Ash,
Sharon and Mike Wright,
Brenda and Ernie Haggy ,
and the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
Shook.
In 1963, President john F.
Kennedy was greeted by
cheering crowds in San
Antonio, Houstori and Fort
Worth, Texas, with no portent
of the tragedy to befall him as
his ,motorcade moved
through Dallas the following
day,

BANQUET SET
Eastern's fall' sports
banquet for boys and girls
will be held Nov. 25 at 6:30
p.m. In the school gym. It will
be a buffet style meal with
awards to follow.

previously anemic lineup,
Horner played a big part in
stoppinl! Pete Rose's quest
for an NL record 4~ame
hitting streak. Horner made a
diving stab of a line drive by
Rose and turned it intn a
double play. The Cincinnati
third baseman eventually
went hitless in the game.
"Nobody's ever come into

Summers belts
solo homer
mwm

team field for the 1978
Nationa! Collegiate Division
II Football Championship.
First-round games will be
played Satw-day, with the
semifinals following on Dec.
2. The Division 0 finals will
be played Dec. 9 in Longview,
Texas.
Top-seded Winton.,Salem,
N.C ., (10-0) will host
california Polytechnic-San
Luis Obispo (7·2) in its first.
round contest. Third.,.eded
Delaware ( S-3) will host
Jacksonville, (Ala. ) State, (7·
2). in the other game.
In the other bracket,
secondseeded Youngston
(Ohio) State, (9-1), will host
NebraskaOmaha, (11-2), and
fourthranked CaliforniaDavis, ( 8-2), will meet
Eastern Illinois, (9-2), at
home.

·the majors and dooe what
he's done," said a happy Ted
Turner, owner of the Braves.
"So all he Is is the best there
ever was."
"This kid is going to. make
it big," added Atlanta
Manager Bobby Cox. "What
can I say? He is one of tbe
major cogs in our offense. He
has one of the bi.st swings

Previous
NEW YbRK (UP!)
National League Rookie of
the Year winners :

1978 - Bob Horner, Atlanta
1977 - Andre Dawson,
Montreal
1976 - (tie) Pat Zachry,

I've ever seen. He makes it
easier lor everybody - for
Burroughs,
for
Gary
Matthews, fer our pitchers ...

for me."

"I had confidence and high
hopes right from the start,"
said Horner. "You don't know
how you're going to do and
you have no idea how well
things are ever going w turn
out."
Things turned out pretty
well.

WE'LL GUARD
YOUR HOME
••• FOR ALL
IT'S WORTH

Cincinnati , and Butch Metz-

ger, San Diego

1975 -

John Montefusco.

San Francisco

1

1974 - Bake McBride, St.

Louis

1973 - Gary
Francisco

Matthews, San

Montreal
1969 - . Ted Sizemore, Los

Angeles
19~8

Cincinnati

1965 - Jim Lefebvre, Los
Angeles
1964 - Richie Allen,
Philadelphia
1963 - Pete Rose, Cin·

ci nna1i

1962- Ken Hubbs, Chicago
1961 - Billy Williams,

The Kemper Dwelling
Approximator is a simple,

free pamphlet that lets you
see· what your home is

worth today.
Make sure your coverage

measures up.

Chi cago

1960- Frank Howard, Los
Angeles

ANAHEIM, calif. (UP!)Warren
Spahn,
the
winningest left-bander in
major league history.
Monday was named· the
California Angels' minor
league pitching instructor.
According to the Angel
announcement, Spahn will
rove among the club's five
minor league affiliates after
supervising the pitching
workouts in spring training at
Holtville, calif.
Spahn, 57, an off-season
resident of Hartshorne,
Okla., retired from baseball
in 1965 after winning 363
games, all but seven dW'ing
his 20 years with the Boston
and Milwaukee Braves. He
won 20 or more games 13
times, a major league record
for southpaws.

1959 - Willie Me Covey, San

Francisco

1958 -

R~esenting :

Or lando Cepeda,

San Francisco

1957 - Jack Sanford,
Philadelphia
1956 - Frank Robinson,
Cincinnati ·

1955

Louis

1954 -

1947 -

Brooklyn
x -

INSURANCE

COMPANr-Y-...,

•

Wally Moon, St.
·

1953 - Jim Gilliam, Brook·
lyn
1952- Joe Black, Brooklyn
1951 - Willie .Mays, New
York Giants
1950-Sam Jethroe. Boston
1949 - Don Newcombe,
Brooklyn
1948 - x-Aivin Dark.
Boston

FEDERAL
KEMPER

Bill Virdon, Sf.

Louis

x-Jackie Robinson,

Cflly

one

major

league player won the Rookie

Award In 1947 and 1948.

Players from each · league
were named starting In 1949.

The annual open meeting of
the Winding Trail Garden
Club was held recently at the
Meiqs Museum with Mrs.

Margaret P~rker and Mi.s written by her mother, Mrs.
Patty Parker as hostesses.
Grece Gloeckner "God 's
Mrs. Ruth Moore gave Gar~en" and "Thanksgivdevotwns using two poems Ing. Thank you notes were

~nd

Loyal Men

Women to donate $100

·The Loyal Men and
Women's Oass of the Middleport Church of Christ
voted to continue its annual
holiday project of sending
$100 to the Grundy Mountain

Mission in Grundy, Va. and
the Mt, Healthy Christian
Home near Cincinnati al a
meeting Thursday night at
the church.
Mrs. Martha Searls
reported thai the Grundy
Mission is still saving Campbell soup Ia bels and urged the
members to contribute
theirs.
. Mrs. Grace Pratt '
president also noted that the
American Legion Auxiliary is
saving greeting cards for the
TUESDAY
Veterans Hospitals in Ohio.
COUNTY OFFICERS
Mrs. Oscar Roush had the
Grange meeting, 7, 30 Tues· love gift Thanksgiving offering reading first a hwnorous
day gat Hall
the Rock Sprinqs poem, " Tha· nksg
'
G
· 1ving
on Fri· ·

Glaze accompanied bv
Clarice Erwin sang "Love
Was When ." It was noted that
the thanksgiving offering project of the class was begun
many years ago when Mrs.
Maude Graves was president .
and she presented each
member with a piggy bank
for their dimes.
As the thanksgiving gifts
were presented, Mrs. Roush
read different scriptures on
the love topic.
Mrs. Pratt opened the
meeting with Mrs. Alice
Robeson giving prayer. Mrs.
Eleanor Lohse had the devotions and was assisted by
r:~J'sBURY PTO Tues· · da( _then " Let _the Sunshine Mrs. Mildrc&gt;d Riley in reading
..
' '·· .- . In and a prayer. Beckv Thanksgiving meditations.
day, 7 p.m. room VISitatiOn; .
7:30p.m. program by Meigs l.J
.J
Cou_nty juvenile officer, and
busmess meetmg.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
A wheelchair, walker
history book to be publishCitizens Club
regular
a
nd
commode
were
ed
and asked members to
meeting and Thanksgiving
donated
to
the
Laurel
Cliff
assist
in writing up the
observance, Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Better
Health
Club
for
loan
history
of the club. Games
in the town house at
to
those
who
need
them
by
were
played
with prizes be·
Harrisonville. Pumpkin pie
Mrs.
Bertha
Parker,
it
was
ing
won
by
Mrs. Frick,
and coffee to be served.
noted at a recent dub
Mrs . Goelt and Mrs.
ANNUAL - Thanksgivitog
meeting held at the home of
Jacobs. Next meeting will
dinner of Drew Webster Post
Mrs. Madeline Chaffin.
be a holiday potluck at the
39, American Legion, at post
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs,
home of Mrs. Goett with a
home 7 p.m. followed by
president, conducted the
12
gift exchange.
meeting.
meeting which opened with
The
birthdays of Mrs.
ALPHA EPSILON Chapter
devotions by Mrs. Chaffin
Della
Curtis and Mrs.
of Alpha Delta Kappa
and prayer by Mrs. Polly
Leona
Karr
were
meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
Eichinger. Members told
remembered.
A
decorated
at Riverboat Room, Meigs
what they ~re thankful for
cake, sandwiches, potato
Branch, Athens County
in response to roll call.
chips , and punch were
Savings and Loan.
Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
served by the hostess io
Ruby Frick, and Mrs.
Mrs. [rene Wellman and
WEDNESDAY
Eichinqer
reported
on
Mrs. Millie Lingerfelt,
THANKSGIVING
can·
flowers for Lydia
guests, and Mrs. Donna
dlelight and communion
Ebersbach.
Gilmore, Mrs. Ann Mash,
service, 7:30p.m. Wednesday
The
club
members
decidMrs. Iva Powell, Mrs.
· at Long Bottom United
ed
to
have
yearbooks
made
Goetl,
. Robin Campbell,
Methodist Church with Rev.
up
with
Mrs.
Marjorie
Mrs.
Frick,
Mrs. Curtis,
Steve Wilion guest speaker
Goett
to
gel
the
informaMrs.
Parker,
Mrs. Amber
and special music.
tion together and have
Lohn, Mrs. Jean Wright,
POMEROY·
them printed.
Mrs. Doris Shook, and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT LIONS Club,
Mrs. Jacobs talked about
Eichinger.
noon Wednesday a the Meigs
the new Meigs County
Inn .

,------··
-,
.
Social
I
I

Mrs. Alice Thompson and
read from Faye Pratt, Dora
Heaton and Iris Kelton for Mrs. Pal Thoma reported on
corsages presented to them deaning the infirmary pllin·
on the 30th anniversary of the' ling area and pulling in tulip
bulbs.
club.

1
Calendar 1

Prayer was by Mrs. Searls.
The flower and gift report
was given by Miss Frances
Roush. Reported ill were Carrie Smith, Bessie Ashley.
Pearl Reynolds, Ida Childs.
and Helen Reynolds.
A friednship circle dosed
the meeting with Mrs. Chi lds
giving prayer. Hoste sses
were

DAVIS
INSURANCE
AGENCY
Bill Quickel
Jeanne Starcher
"Across from the

Co.u'rthouse, Pomeroy ,o."

,92-4677

When you get your
~lectric bill, its easy to forget
. JUSt how much you get for what
you pay for.
Especially lately,
~
with the way inflation has
raised the cost of everything.
~.
On the other band, how much can
- . ; · you get for $ LOO at the supermarket, gas station, or drug store these days? But you can get even more for your
electric dollar if you practice a little conservation. ·
And we have some free S.AYE. booklets that can show you how you can conserve
and become part of our Save A me rica'S Valuable Energy
Program. Stop by any of our offices for your copies.

L ()()k What You
;-..
.
U
a
t
abO
d
0
0
can 1J 00
'
d
*
a
::Jv.
$

have
ino,ugh hot water
for all your
washing, bathing
and cleaning.
Plus dry
your laundr'y.

Mr s.

Vocalists to appear
Vocalists appearing at the
First Church of God,
Syracuse, Thursday, at 7:30
p.m. will be Dennis and Linda
harasty, Virginia Beach,
Virginia and Terry and
Debbie Williams of Drexel,
N. C.
They have been singing for
almost loW' years and are on
the road 10 and one-half
months a year holding
revival,

concerts

and

providing music for youth
rallies and conventions.
The public is invited to
attend.

ecptcd. An invitation was
read from the Extension uf·
fice to a holiday meeting on
Nuv . 28. The Christmas
fl ower show e~nd partidpation

was discussc&gt;d. Members will
take s~ndwiehes a nd cookies .
New m em be r s hip was

discussed and several will be
invited to attend the next
meeting.
A guest fur the meeting was

Mrs. Pal Holter, county
~ad

cha irman . Mrs . Mary

Patty Parker wer e welcomed
as new members . The travel·
in~ prize brought by Mrs.
Alice Thompson was won by
Mi.s Parker.
Slides on the Willi• msburg

arrangements were shown

along with slides of Me1gs
County . Arrangement of the
month was "Anythin g Goes"
with Mrs. Pa1·ker , Mrs.
Thoma, Mr s. Thomp son
receiving blue ribbons. Mrs.
Parker used a cornicupla
te~bl e

arrang eme nt,

Mrs.

Thoma , a coffee t•ble Ooral
pieee , and Mrs. Thompson, a
fireside arrangc1nent. Mrs.

Parker and Patty served a
dessert course to Mrs. Robe 1t
Lewis, president, Mrs . Jackie
Brickles 1 Suzan Thuma .

Hulide:.1y e~dJ vities were
planned C:.tl the recent meeting

uf the Catholic Women 's Club
of Sacred Heart Pm·ish held
at the church.
ArranJ4cments were made
to give frui t trays to shut1ns

Sutherland fur a hospital
rcint:mbrance.
Mrs. K unzelmcm reported

thai 11\s had been scntlu Mr.
and Mrs. Elbert Robinson,

Sutherl•nll. Mrs: Mitch , and
Mrs. Smith.

50th

·w ~ddin g

(:l lln iv e rs~:II"Y :

Barbara Mullen cmd Mrs.

Mrs. Mildred Wells, Mro.
Oia11e Rartels. sympathy;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Me·

.Jane Frymycr tu take care of
the pre p&lt;:~ ration and delivery

smy: Tum Ables. Clemente

for Thanksgiving with Mrs.

this week. For Chri slm"s the
shutins will receive cookie
travs and \'·:ill have a candle
IJur:ning in church fur them:--..A.,
tlunotion w&lt;:~s also made to St.
J ohn''s Villa, the ,,rphanage in

Carroll.
The club 's Christmas party

Prayer closed (he meeting
and refreshments wert! Sl!rv~
l'd by Susan Baer, Mrs.

Clain , 25th wedding anniverMenchini and Chn st ine get\\'t' ll L'anls; and Mr . and Mrs.

Rubert Dmilh, Mr. • nd M1·s.
F:merson Hei ghton, Mr. and
Mrs. P1:1 t Mullen , &lt;:tnd Mr . and
Mrs. John E va ns, baby eongriitulotions .

GOSPEL SING
A gospel sing will be held
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Mt. Moriah Church of God,
Racine, feat uring Dan
Hayman and the Country
Hymn Timers and the
Heavenly Highway Trio.

was set for Occ . fi at the

Meigs Inn and will fo llow the
fi p.m. Mass at the church.

There wi ll be a gift exchange .
Reservations are to be in by

Dec. I to either Mrs. Elsie
Sutherland or Mrs . Barbara

Smith.
Appo i nte d

to

th e

nom ina ting committee

\\o'Crc

SHOP

Mrs. Catherine Welsh. Mrs.
Mitch, Mrs . Vera
Ruchunan, Mrs. Gemma

Cecelia

AND

C"sci. and Mrs. Carol McCullough.
Mrs. Sutherland presided

SAVE

at the lllt!cliltg whid1 upcued

wi th

pra yer

the

by

mode rator, the Rev . Fr. Pa ul
Welton. Off ice r s· report s

were given and thank \ 'UU
notes were n•ad from ·the
Hl'\;. Fr. Fr;mci s Brown fur a
donation toward the scppl t&gt;ment to the Steubenvill e

Hegisler. A thank you note
was

re ad

fr urn

AT

DUTTON DRUG CO.
N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Ka r L'II

Who really foots the bill
for health care? ·
,:)

,:

on county road 82 through
Nov. 26, 7:30 p.m. nightly.
The Rev. Richard Jaymes,
Bellefontaine, evangelist.
Special singing eael) evening.
The Rev. James Leach,
pastor. The public is invited.
REGULAR MEETING,
Ohio Valley Commandery,
7:30 p.m. Wednesdsy at the
temple in Pomeroy.

-:::
;:::
(
·:·:
/

Generatt·on Rap :'.· .:·

•

B.YH.elen and' Sue n·ottel

!'Oil·

Mitchell, Mrs. Jo Wiles. and

!j[:"::::&gt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,::::::::::::•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:j;]:

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield, Ohio visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Circle, Verna and
Wavie.
Mrs. Dwight Swepston,
daughter Jana and Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Swepston of
Columbus, 0 . spent Sunday
here at the Lee home.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Johnson and daughter,
Sandy, of Middleport visited
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Johnson and family
and Betty Van Meter.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
of New Haven, W. Va. spent
Sunday at the home of Mary
Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Orvy Gainer
of Hebron, Ohio, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Gainer of
Barberton, Ohio called at the
home of Eunie Brinker on '
Saturdsy evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Jobnson and Sheryl LeAnn
called at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Jobnson of
Racine on Saturday.
Mrs. Thelma Walton of
Spiller visited Mrs. Douglas
Circle Thursday.
Callers at the Douglas
Circle home were Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ables of Bald
Knobs, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Tuttle and son, and Mrs. Ray
Johnson of Eagle Rjdge, Julie
Rose of Bashan and Mrs. Jim
Patterson and sons of Racine
R.D .• Kim Follrod of Racine
and Mrs. Charles Deem,
local.
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas
Circle attended a birthday
dinner Wednesday evening
by Rocky Pitzer of Bashan at
the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clint Pitzer.

P lus watch

Lohse,

The resignation of Mrs.
Marjorie Wa lburn was ac-

at~~~~:;~.lnB~~~~~~

Carmel News,
By the Day

Preserve all your food and beverages
in a refrigerator/freezer.

Mrs .

Searls, Mrs. ·Riley , and Mrs.
.Evelyn Murray .

11ealth at'dS uonated

1972 - Jon Matlack, New
York ·Mets
1971 - Earl Williams,
Atlanta
1970 - Carl Morton,
- Johnny Bench,
Cincinnati
1967 - Tom Seaver, New
York Mets
1966 - Tommy Helms.

Catholic Women 's Club plans activities

Wtndtng Trail Garden Club holds open meeting

·,

'

~.:'

J•
t

:&lt;;

:·:

:;:;::
•··

HE DIDN'T PASS PREGNANCY TEST!
'RAP:
A bunch of us girls were ta lking about a friend who got preg·
nant and her guy dumped her. I said my boyfriend would never
do a thing like that, and another gi rl said would I bel on it?
So I decided to prove he was a good person. That night I told
him I was pregnant (which I'm not) . He acted worried and
sympathetic and said he'd take care of everything. I figured
I'd tell him in a couple of days it was a false alarm, but he
dido 't give me the chance. He just dropped out of my life.
Finally I called his apartment and his roommate said he'd
taken a job in another city, "he didn't know where."
I guess he just panicked, but how can I find him to let him
know the truth' I really love him.- FOOLISH DIRTY TRICK
PLAYER
DEAR FOOLISH :
You certainly are foolish if you mourn a fellow who thinks
running "takes care of everything." Be glad he's gone.
-HELEN
FDTP:

Here's~ case where a lie proved the truth about your former
boyfriend. Doesn 't it also prove you shouidn 'l be so trusting ~ SUE

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've heard there's a hotline where you can gel information on
all kinds of things, from government regulations to grants for
college education . How can f find out the number? - COLLEGE STUDENT
DEARSTIJDENT :
We doubt there's a single hotline for general information,
but over the past few years the federal government has
established a nwnber of loll-free lines to inform U.S. residents
(except those living in Hawaii or Alaska) about such subjects
as educational grants, automobile recalls, federal crime insurance, and many other concerns.
If you want a list of these free hotlines, send a self-addressed
stamped envelope for each copy lo Hotlines Public Citizen ,
Box 19404, Washington, D.C. 20036. -HELEN AND SUE
RAP :
I like a guy who lives across the street. We're both 14. He lik·
ed·me, too, but now he just treats me like a sister. You see, he
was honest and told me that a boy bet him I wouldn't kiss him.
Well, he lost because even though I wanted to I just couldn't
wlien they were belting on me.
,How can I prove I'm - NOT HIS SISTER?
NHS:
I'll bel there never was a bet : it was a shy boy's way of ask·
ing for a kiss. Tell him you're sorry he "lost" and see what
happens.- HELEN

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS

You do. There are a nwnber of
reasons why health care costs are
going up. One, is that some people
think they can be careless with their
health. Modem medicine will patch
them up. But that means higher
health care costs. Costs that get
passed along to you. Because
whether you pay for health care
protection through payroll
deduction... whether your employer
is paying with dollars that might have
gone into your pocket ..
its your money. Your

Blue Cross and
Blue Shield
plans are working to hold down
these costs. One way is by
developing positive health care
programs ... aimed at helping people
stay healthy. That way we \\Dn't
need as many expensive new hospital
beds, it could mean fewer trips to
the doctor's office. And, it means
added value for your health care
dollar. That's important .. for all of
us ... because the real news here
is that we're all footing
the bill.

IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

Plus cook breakfast, lunch and dinner for the family.

Ohio Power Company·

BAKE SALE-BAZAAR
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter oi
Beta Sigma Plil Sorority will
hold a bake sale and Olrist·
maa bazaar from 9 a.m. to 4
· p.m. Saturday in the
baBement of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.

Working together is the only way.
•Daily cost of using an electric dryer, water heater, range, rerrigerator/freezer and color TV is actually 89j based on average uaage statistics
from Edison Electric Institute u.nd our average residential kilowatt·hour OOBt for the 12~m·onth period ending June, 1978. 1

·'

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:

Mon .. Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30ti15:00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until8 P.M.
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va.
773-5592

'·

Blue Cross
Blue Shield

Value added.

(li' AIQIS1ered MarkS Bille Croll AIIOCIItiOI't

\!i) ' Regis1ered S.rtlc• Me.ru ol the National
Assoct!ltiOM 01 8 1ioJ8 Shield Plant . •

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Nov. 21 ,1978

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~'{J~JJrm
V l:J~wwlf1mv
November 22, 1978
. Your des1res for independence
are apt to grow stronger than
usual this coming year You ' ll
be your own person - and be
happier - w 1thout offending
anyone m the process

SCORPIO (Ocl.

24-Nov . 22)

Someone who knows how to
rnampu late you and your generous nature may try to pull
someth1ng rather sh r ewd
lo d ay . Forewarned IS
forearmed. Find out th e
secrets of getttn y along w1th
other s by send1ng for your

co py of Ast ra-Graph Letter.
Ma1l 50 cents tor each and a
tong, self-addressed ,· stamped

envelope to As tra-Graph . P.O
Box 489 , Rad iO C1 ty Stat1on .

N.Y 10019. Be sure to specify
birth sign .

SAGITIARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec .
21 ) It's not likely you'll a chi eve
all you set o ut to do today ,
becaus e you ' ll be tripp m g over
yo u r ow n feet. Be more deliberate, less 1mpuls 1ve

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Ca ution and se lf-doub t are not
one and the same. a ltho ugh
today yo u co uld believe th em
to be so Tread wan ly , but have
hope in your hear t.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
Normally you ge t along with
JUSt about anyone when you

apply yo urself. Today . howev·
er. 101n t vent ures could cause
c ompl icat1on s you're better off
Without.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It
may be n ecessary to do a l1ttle
app le po l1shm g w 11h th e bos s
Ie day , even thoug h h e is in t he
wrong After a ll , i t' s his Signalu r e t hat makes you r payc h eck
casha ble .

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Yo u
tend to m ake prom1 ses t oday
that yo u ' l l h ave di ffic ulty 1n
delivering . Don't 'te ll someone
you ' re going to do something
for them if yo u know you c an't.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
wa ry today o f plac1ng too muc h
tr ust in unreliable i ndividuals.
The y co uld c re ate co mp lex
pro blems wh ic h you will have a
hard tim e unw indi ng .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A
major fracas cou ld erupt at
hom e tod ay 1f yo u bnng up an
1ssu e on whic h you and your
mate are poles apart Se lect
dmner tabl e c onvers ation to pics wise ly

CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
key to havmg ot h e r s treat yo u
con si d erately today 1s to treat
them 1n a li ke m anner . Being
dic tatorial w ill o nl y earn you
unpleasa nt r e t orts.

LEO (July 23-Aug. Z2) Your
desires to buy greatl y exceed
yo ur means toda y, so steer
cl ear of th e expensive
bouliques. Shopp1ng sho u ld be
rest r ic ted to s mall c ash sales .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Bemg
yo ur own person and doing
th ing s yo ur way IS not w ithou t
me nt , prov1ded no one JS hurt
1n the pro cess. Coopera te
to d ay, but don ' t use o thers .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) In
ord e r to ge t alo n g with anothe r
today you m a y agree to something which i s opposed to yo ur
best tnte rests Be friend ly . not
foOliSh .
(NEWSPAPER ENTER PRISE ASSN)

More and more, pumpkinheads are seen the yearro und rather than jw;t at
Halloween time.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF RICHARD
DONALD BROOKS AND
TONYA RENEE BROOKS .
No . 22 ,524
- NOTICE BY
P UBLICATION Donald R icha rd Walker ,
whose last k now n address
was
Riverv 1ew
Dr ive,
Albany , Georgia 31701, but
whose address and place of
res i dence are o t herw1se
u nknown , Will take notice
that on the 27t h day of Oc tobe r , 1978, W lll 1am P erry
Br ooks , filed a Petit ion tor
Adopt1on of R ic hard Donald
Walker II and Tanya Renee
Wa lker , and for a ch ange of
their name t o R 1chard Donald
Brook s an d Tonya Renee
Brooks . lf has been a ll eged in
the pro cee d ings that you have
failed w1t h ou t j u stifia bl e
cause to communicate with
rne sa1d mmor Childr en and to
p r ovi de for th em the mam ten an ce and suppor t as
requi r ed by law and that
lheretore your consent to the
adoption IS no t r eQuir ed . T h1 s
Pet1tion w ill be heard in the
Prob~tte
Court of Meigs
Coun t y, Ohio, at the Court
House in Po mer oy, Ohio , at
10 . 00 A .M . on the lOt h day of
January , 1979 . You are
re qu 1r ed to answer t his
Pet 1t10n Wlth m t went y e1 ght
days
after
the
last
publi cat1o n .

-~....,..,~-~--

- _ _ l_n ~ e_!11_o

WANT AD
CHARGES
lj

C'.t~h

l 'll.ttl-:t'
I :l:i

I 1Kl

!tb~ ..

1.[141

I d,n ,
l; da)~

I HO

i 1111

2 15

.!

I~ )

:115

r:,wh 1,1,111'11 tt\'t•r 11w uHmuwr11 Ja
lltoid' I' 4 L't' III S 111'1 WIIH I fll'l' d ,t~·
,\tl~ 1'1111111 111! Ulht'l lhttll I IIIISt't ' lllL~'t'
tl;11~ ~o~tiJ 1.&gt;1.·. diiHI!t'ti at Uw 1 tl.n
l ,th'
.

Ill llll'llllll'\'. C.11d t•f Th.111ks .md
Obiltl,tl\' .ll .t'L'II\:; jll'l' Wt•l tl. ~100
llllll lltlLIIll C&lt;tsll llt atlv;uwt•
\o1Pilllt• Hmnt• 11.tlt•s .md Y,u tl.);,tll'"
:11'1' iH('I'flh 'tl Ulll\' Willi t'CI:,h With
t•rdt•r 25tt'l ll dta1·gt• fur
111~

11ux
lilld

atl.~

t'iiiT\ -

\J u m~·l lnL&lt;~ I e ofT IIt'St•n­

Tit•· PuUhslll'l' rt•st•l'\lt•s tht• n,tdll
' " • till"' rt•Jt't t .m~ .Hb dt't' lllt'tl oOJt du•nul Thl' Pu bhsht·l will 11111 lw
lt'SIMI/ISI IJ!t• fur lllllt't' tl iltll Ullt' lll( 'UI'Il't'ILIIH'I ( W/1

Phum 99'.!-:lJ;}ti

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

ll1rUFt1dav
&lt;p M
tilt' tla~ bt·fmt• publlt '&lt;!lltllt

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Snlldi.l\

For Rent
COUN TR Y MOB ILI: Home Pork
fl:oure 33 . nor th of Pomeroy
Lar ge lot s Coll992·7479 .

- -

-

-

3 AND .d RM fu rn1shed and un·
lurn 1s h e d
op l s .
Ph o n e
992 5434 .
TWO BI:DROOM Krtchen fu rnish ed. opi . Coli belore H om

992 2288.
fi:I::NTt: HS ASS ISTA NCE for Senter
C1 lizens Vou moy be able to
l1ve tn our o porlm en t lor le!&gt;s
than SSO VII loge Manor .Aport ·
menl s 99'J.· 7787 .
J.:ARM HOU SI:: l o renl . o good ren t
on Tonner s Run . Roc me Oh1o,
IH 2 3 bedrooms Insulated
home , o tl fu r nace gara ge.
garden . ru mpus roo rn . Ior ge
bosemen l , both . hot and co ld
wo l er spring, dr il led we ll
Avarlobl e about De c. 1 197H
~ e nt $ 125 per monl h 1n ad
van ce Al so sec unl y depOSit o f
$125 To see . cl ol Mrs t:sther
West Rl 1 Phone 949·2889

NO HUNTING or lresposs1ng on
my property w1th ou 1 perrn1s ·
s1on Ju dy McC.row
GUN SHOOT Roc tne Gun Cl ub
!::very Sunday 1- pm ~ o c t or y
choke gun s onl y
GUN SHOO T fl:o cin e Vo l unteer
h re Dep t . ~very Satur day 6 JO
pm ol 1he1r budd1ng m Ba sh on
~oc t ory choke gun s on ly
NO HUN TI NG or lresposs mg day
or flight on the Charles Yost
ond th e Ivan Well form s

Special

Body Penn
'12.50
Now Thru Dec. 2

Kay's
Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport
992-2725

Competitive salary. excellent benefils, shift
differential.
and tuition
assistance
program .
Conlact: Holzer Medical Center. P.O. Sox
280, Gallipolis, Oh. 446 -5105 .
An Affirmative Action
Equal Opportunity Employer

Trout to Rosella Burchfield,
.22 acre, Columbia.
Dale Bachner, Garnet
Bachner to Larry D. Ed·
wards , Margaret A. Edwards, 57.998 acres, Rutland.
James Hoyt to Roger
Adams , Right of Way ,
Bedford.
Etha Warner, Arthur T.

Warner,

Janet

Warner,

Clarence Z. Roy,lnez Warner
Roy to Roger Adams, Right
of way, Letart.
Otis W. James, Affidavit.
Sara W. Willis to Sybil
Ebersbach, Lot , Pomeroy.
Sybil Ebersbach to Ann
Williams, Sarah W. Willis,
Lot, Pomeroy.

CHIP
WOO D
Po les
max
drometer 10" on largest end ,
Sl2 per ton . Bundled slob , S10
per lon Oel tvered to O h10
Pol lel Co. Rl 2, Pome roy .
992 -2b89 .

vs.

BARB~RA

G . PHILLIPS,
Defendant .
No . 11002
- NOTICE FOR

PUBUCATION -

Barbar a G . Phillips, whose
last known ad dr ess was Bo x
92 , M iddl ep or t , Ohio , w ho
may ha ve be en res iding in
care of Ed na Jor dan , Di gen
Street , Jacksonville, Flor ida
32 05 , wh os e add r ess
Is
oth erwi se un known will take
no t 1ce that on the 14th day of
Oct obe r , 1978, R ichard
Phillips, as Plaintiff , fil ed a
co m pla int charging gross
neglec t of dut y and ex t re m e
cruelty agamst her in Wh 1c h
the r ei ief de mande d is a
d i \lorce and other r el ie f and
that this case may be heard
twenty -e1g ht da ys after t h e
last publi ca ti on of not ice
which wilt be mad e on the
28th day of No vembe r , 1978,
and that th e f inal hearing h a s
been set tor 9 : 00 a .m. on
D ecember 30, 1978 .
You are r eq uired to an swer
th1S co mpla int by no t later
t han
t wen t y . elght
da ys
follow 1ng the last pub lication
of this noti c e or judg m ent by
default may be take n agains t
you .

e

Larry E. Spenc er ,
Clerk of Co ur t
Common Pleas Court ,
Me igs County , Ohi o

ICU/CCU/08/MED. SURG.

A lba

Yost

HI::N S ~ O N so le 843 1353
TWO NEW l3U bu McCurdy gra v1
ly boxes on l 0 I on runn1119
gea r ~ wtlh ex ten dabl e tongue s
ann 11l llotol lon tnplem ent
11re s 1 new \9 ~ bu M cC u rdy
grovt!y bos One 9 / 1 Joh n
Deere rl1 sc Gahl 90 grmd er
mu. er Two 19/4 1972 fo rd
f .:JSO pt cKup s 1 1974 ~o rd f 250
pickup 1 19i'5 ln1er not 1onol '~
ton ptck up. One 1904 lnlerno·
t10001 2 IOn With co llie rocks
Case 4 lO bollom pl ows . Mi nn ·
Moline com sheller . Porloble
rol ler mtll 985 ·334 1

on

No Contract Too Large Or

Too Small
25 Years Experience

All Work Guaranteed

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 742· 2029

-

-·

Christmas

1970 fOR D f ·350 ca ttle rocks, 10'
b ed . 20 ,000
m rl es . Co li
949 2273
19b2 f ORD • .. I on truck , S225 Se t
o f a xles wrlh trres, S35 . 1905
Come r st otr onw a gon lor por ts .
$20 . 1948 I ' 1 I on lnternotronol
tru ck for po r ts S35 Coal sl ave.
$45 N ew roc lo.i ng dr arr $4 5
Hopki n s ond A llen s1ng le sho t
r ifl e onllque $150 Hl90 Wlf'l ·
ches ter pump 22 nflc ont1 que
$500 992·7330.

Headquarters

for all your G. E. T.V.'s &amp;
Hotpoint Appliances.
Sale Prices·

LUMP HOUSI:: coa l de l 1ver e ~ . $35
per ton cosh Col i ot t lme
9927 120.

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

OlD COINS. pock et welc hes
clo!&gt;s r 1ngs. wedd l!lg bonds
diamonds Gold or sli ver Ca l l
~~:.r ~ ~~s i!Y.:. 7~:1~2~3~
_
WAN T TO b uy old 45 an d 78
phon ogr aph
records
Call
992 6370 or Conl oc l Martm J= ur
n1ture

A S I orn qu111mg fomring I' m s.ell mg ~0 Model Mosse y ferguson
1us1 been overhauled . New 5 fl
brus h hog . new d1 sc. new 6 It
b lad e an rl se l o f 14 tn ch p lo w s
All lor $4500 Nole Vanaman
on New l1mo fl:d
Ph one
74',1 270 1 StrowS 1. 25 bal e.

I!= VOU ho ve o serv1ce lo off er .
wont to buy or sell somethi ng. 1973 CHI:: VROLET ' 1 lon Y·8 4spe ed sld. trans Also, 9 mo
ae look mg lor work
or
old heder . Bl oc k· Angus Poll ed
whatever . . yo u II get re sults
H ~re l ord Cross 9r12 282b.
fo ster w 1lh a Sen tm el Wont Ad
Coli 99:1 2156
2 H·7B· 1S wheels and ti res. $50
M 1)(ed hoy
949 24 13
or
949 2849.

Real Estate for Sale
fA!(M ~OH sol e House 2 bor ns .
lro tler Large pon d 10 acres or
fl:J acres 74'J. -2Sb6
~ t Al

I::S TAH l OANS. CA N'T f iND

MOR TGAGI:: MONf::Y ? We have
pl enly at co mpetrl1ve rol es w1th
lerrn s to 30 y e ar ~ Veterens
ond non·ve ler ens VA &amp; fHA
loons ore av a il abl e IR ElAND
MORTGA GI:: CO .. 77 1:: . Slo le
S1.
A r he'ns .
Ph o n e
6 14 ·59'-·305 1

0

AND women s -g ~l l c lu~ .
new ond used Joh n Teo ford
61 4·985 3901

1977 MON ZA SP't"OI::R 305 eng1ne
Power ~leering i"ower brakes
AM-FM radio More extras Co li
742-2826 .
1909 OLDS CU TLA SS CONVI::R·
TAHLI:: . P S , D B pu sh bullon
l op control. In c1o sh faclory 8·
!rock ro pe pl ayer Good ru nn
1119 cond111on Coli alt er Spm

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay 53.99

ou' \.oil oil 'c.&lt;r.. ~

992·2995

1974

DODGE CHAlltNGER 3H1
eng . 2·door hord lop , ou l o. on
the lloor . B oo~ "' clu e $2 I00.
will sell for $1450. 19b9 Dodge
M onlego 4-door serto n auto ,
oir . $800 9920124

1975 PONTIAC LI::MA NS. l::xce ll ent
S 1500
Ph one
corr di 11o n
949·2222 .

camping Equipment
19'17 9
l oo t
247 -203 1.
11,

l ruc K comper

-- - --- - Wanted lo Rent

WANT TO RI::NT l or Roc1ne or
Syracuse oreo with 2 ch ilclren
247 -3303 .

(10 ) 17, 24,3 1 (11) 7, " · 21, 28,

71

\. ~~gal.

347

1'170 Am her st 501( 12 2 HR
1970 Ch omp1 on 0(1)(12 2 B~
1905 Genero l 60x 1'1 'l ~R
I %6 PMC 5'J.x 12 'l ~R
1955 Prai rie Schoon et 2C!xt! 1 BR
1973 Royal l::mbo ss y bBw 14 3 BR
1959 Slor 50x10 2 BR
1973 Slor b0x14 2 Bfl
1908 Slor b0x12 2 BR
19'10 Sylva 60x I :1 2 HR
I GibE:! Vt) lages 60)1 I 'J. '1 HR
t904 Wi nd sor SI x 10 2 HR
19·10 Kirlo. wood ) 2,..00 3 BR
B&amp; S MOBi l o HOMo SA l oS
PT. PLE ASA NT W.VA

I'll . 992-2848

12 x (l(J mob1/e home
near Dex ler 992 5858 .

19b7 TO TAL ELECTRIC mob1l e
home, lurni shed . 3 bed r
washer ond dry er A rr co nd1·
lioned. 1 lo l 2 10 It fr on tage
S 1:1 OUO Ph one 742· :ll.l:fb
.
- .
- - . 1403 10 X 52 ON!:: BI:: OH OOM
W1nd so r tro tl er Gas furna ce
lur n1sh e d
Unrt e r p tnnrrr g
.992· ~8~7 _of! e~ 5_w:e lo. ~o ~s .

.- ·
llliiil

TRU CK TO P PI::~ msuloted . panel·
ed . SISO :147·,2&lt;J31
l .

t~ n- t ldlb~cT s~iSo

Ru ns reol good 992 -5191 .
- .
- -- I.UGISTEREP Qua rt e r
h or se
Ge lding Can be shown or con·
tes ted. Reg1 slered Appa loosa
mares to foo l 1n April 18 rn o
ond b mo
reg islered Ap·
polooso colts Good co lor.
Phone 1-593· 7390

-

-

OlO SINGI::H sewing machine ,
treadle type , about SO years
old . Good sh ape. 992·b028 .
. - -

- --

~-

WANTED
CHIP WOOD

TiRE SALE

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Poles Maximum Diameter 10" On Largest
End. 512 .00 Per Ton. Bundled Slabs $10 .00
Per Ton.
DELIVERED TO:

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

-

SNOW

OHIO PALLET CO.

Pomeroy Landmark
.

ock W. Carsey, Mgr ..
Phone 992-2181

.

'

Pomeroy, 0 .,
3- 15-lfc

payroll
I'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;1 11 the
Albanian

15 Before

olWOOD HOW oRS RoPA IR Sweeper s. looslers. irons. all
smoll 'opp l ton ce'i&gt; lawn mower,
nex l t o Slole Hr ghwoy Garage
on ~ou1 e 7. Phone (614) 985·

HOUSE

TALKS

GASOUNE ALLEY

- - - - ---

I can't qo H.,,,.,,
wilh lh1~i~~-;:::
It
won't
wo r ~!thllt::'.:'A:~'--1((1..

-

po' b'reave

I can handlethetwo oafs!
The snoop4 dame is 40ur

chile ain't had
t '1 me t: clean '

problem!
I

1-,,

------ - ---

BATHROOMS AND
Kllchens
remodeled . ce ram ic hie, plum ·
bing carpent ry. and gen9f'af
main tenance . 13 years ex ·
peri ence. 992·3685

$29.500.00.
DOLLARS AND CENTS -

Why p ay r ent ? House and
mob ile home. Li ve in the
hou se and re nt th e tr a11e r .

11S,500.00.

$2S,OOO
Mt DOLEPORT -

3 la rge

bedrooms, bath , n atu ral
gas hea t , c ity water , nice
b ack yard , a nd 2 c ar
garage $15,000.

NEW LISTING - 3 apart ·
m ents,

all

r ented,

with

LOOK -

$265.00 a month income . Ci ·
ty uti li ti es, $25,000.

$9.SOO.OO.

frame
home,
lot s of
remodeling , bath , c ity
w a ter , gas furna ce, for on ·

Here is a 2-story
ho m e, .:1 b edroom s, bath ,
natura l gas hea tin g, por c hes, w orkshop , 4 lot s. Just
A FRAME -

2h acres,
r ecreation r oom . 11h baths,
central hea ting and air c on ·
ditio ning ,
own
water ·

ABOVE FLOOD - 6 room

ly $17,000.
NEAR RUTLAND -

tO

room ho m e, 4 b edroom s,
bath, carpet ing , na t ural
gas, c arport, on h ard road .

system. New 137,500 .
OVERLOOKS RIVER -

CONDOR STREET -

Lovely 3 b e droom, natural
gas furnace, storms, b ase·
ment, 2 ta r garage, 5
acres . $32,000.00.

bedroom home on ex tra
lar ge
lot ,
basem ent,
natural gas heat, pa r king
an d
above flood . Only

II'S THE "LITTLE BIT
MORE" THAT COUNTS .
YOU GET THIS FROM
CLELAND
REALTY ,
WHETHER BUYING OR
SELLING.
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland
H enry E . Cleland, Jr .

REALTOR -ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland

Kathy Cleland
992·22S9 - 992·6t 91

&amp;
'

''

3

$9500.
NEW LISTING - 41h acres
o f land . 6 r oom house,
natura l gas h eat, rur a l
water , and 2 car garage.

$27,500 .
.
IT'S NOT WHAT YOU 00
THAT'S RIGHT, IT' S NOT
WHAT YOU SAY BUT
HOW,
MAKE
NO
MISTAKE CALL 992-3325
FOR A TEST.
GORDON B., HELEN L.,
AND SUE P. MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES.

Hous ing '
H eadquarte rs

%.'M I&gt;R1\11Nt:-

'ri·U: AIR FoRce
N«J,..S WtrH MY

PULLINS EXCA VATING . Complete
Serv1ce Phone 992·2-478 .
AUTOMOBill:: INSURANCE .been
cancelled? Los t your ope ral ors
l1c ense? Phone992-2 1-4J .

f.URNACE

t UANING

f~IS&amp;f:E ~

Call

992-5587.

~ROSTY ' S

CB radio equipment.
Ellerythi ng in two· way radio,
antenna s ond occes . Phone
Portland 8-43 -2181 . Open even Ings till 8:00; Sunday 2:00 til l

o·OO

WINNIE

HONAKI::R'S CB and electronic
eq u1pmen t Rt .J3 506 2nd Sl .,

YOtl ARE! GIVIN6

lf&gt;_o s_on:. ~:'_2~2~'---

UP SHGW BUSINESS ... GOING
• I

Services Offered
Will CARE for the el d erly
home. Phon e992·73l 4.

1n

HOME IN
DEFEAT...

NOT GOINI7
HOWIF IN DEFEAT.
THE SHGW WAf;
A HIT. I GOT

EXCELLENT
NOTICES !

our

WATER WELL drilling . William T.
Gr ant. 742·2879 .
Will DO bobysitmg w ith pre ·
school ch ildren, experienced .

Broken Wi ngs 33; Ohio Project 20.

8: 30-Jeffersons 8,10; 9: DO-Charlie's Angels 6. t 3:
Movie " The Pirate" B, 10; Gr eat Performances 33;
Prisoner 20.

I Chevy
of comedy
2 Opponent
3 Redolence
4 Skin problem
"
5 Granted
Yesterday's Answer
6 " Where
18 Box-&lt;&gt;lfice
27 Jose Gar·

- you?"

receipts

10 ,0D-Steve Martin · A Wild &amp; Cra zy Guy 3,4,15: Vegas
6,13, Every Tub On Its Own Bottom 33; News ZO.
10 :30-Tur nabout 20 .
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8. tO, 13. tS : Olck Cavell 20 ; Lil ias
Yoga &amp; Yo u 33.
11 3Q--Johnny Carson J,4,1S; Pol lee Wor:nan 6,13 ;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie "Fathom " 10 .

1

12·30-News 8; 12 :4D-SWAT 6,13 ; 1:00-Tomorrow
3,4; 1:50-News 13.
Tuesday, Nov.

BRIDGE

reras, e.g.

"

Opening lead : • 2

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it: By Oswald Jacoby
ls

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

FEMALE IRISH SeHer . 992·3287 or

992-2490.
fi::MALE COL liE ond 5 oollie·tyr.e
pups. 3 mole ond 2 fema e.

742 2714 .
fRI::E PUPPIES, six weeks old. lab
Sett er - Shephard mi x. Good
Chri stma s g jh s. Call eVenings.
690· 1067.

+ AK Jx

and Alan Sontag

• AQxx
t J. X X

When you use the Jacoby
transfer ( JTB) you must
remember that the tw&lt;Hiia·
mond response to an opening
notrump is artificial and
forcing . It s hows nothmg
about your hand except that
G K A K you hold a \least five hearts. •
UVJ
F T WJ C
The opener will rebid to
1/'AYBE I'VE SUDDEN- HR
ENA
two hearts and you go on
LY GROWN UP. A
ENA
T H C N E from there.
UAVJK,
CAREER ON &amp;TA6E
THCNE
1
Similarly, the two-heart
DOEBN T SEE!JI :70
F
T
W
J
C
response
shows spade~ and
ENA
HJ
GLAMOROUS 1D
FW TBK
1
is a transfer to that sUit.
ME ANYMORE •
·v o
sN H J A K A
K V 0 H J C
The transfer bid has sevF
· SELF SOMETIMES era! advantages. The first
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I GIVEINMCYAPABLE OF TAKING one is that the notrwnp
,":(.:::::!::::==:~ ADMIRABLE ADVICE , BUT I AM
'!i!
.-LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU
© 1978 King Feature11 S;rnd1cat.e, Inc.
\.==~

I'D LIKE TO BUY SIX
OF 'lORE BIDDIES,LUKEY

CHEEP

Give Away

~~~
A Pennsylvania reader
asks what we bid as dealer.
We hold :

9'12-63:c0:.:9.:..- - -- - - - Will 8ABY SIT in our home in
Portland . 843 -4803 . I have
ref erences.

~~

Mo.re on transfer bidding

I::XCAVATING , do ze r. loade r and
backhoe wo rlo. dump truck s
and lo·boys lor hi re. wd l houl
ldl dir t. to soil . l1 mes tone and
'
-- -- grovel. Cal l Bob or Roger Jef THRI::I:: BI::DROOM fra me home rn
f ers, doy phone 992· 7089 night
__M ~d~l epor l . C ol~ 9C}.2_J~5~. __
phon e 992 ·3525 or 992 5232.
- - - -- - - NICE OlDER HOM!:: in good I:: XC AVATING . dozer, baclo. hoe
1n
Pomeroy
ne1ghborh ood
and rlit cher. Charles R HotSome r.ecenl remodelrng (en·
fi eld , Bo ck Hoe Ser v tce.
trot healing. 3 or 4 bedrooms
Rutlan d Oh1o. Ph one 7 42 · 2008
99'1 7074
WilL do r oofing construction.
NEW THRE I:: bedroom hom e ·
plumbmg an d heotmg , No 1ob
1
f irepla ce sun deck 1' • acre
t oo large or l oo sm all. Phon e
wooded lo t 667 ·3890 , Tup pers
/42 -2348 .
----Pl ai ns
HOWI::RY AND MARTIN 1:: )(·
co valmg . se pti c systems .
doler . backhoe. dump lruck
limestone . gra vel. bl ack top
po11mg. Rt 143 Phone I (614)

up
wlth bath, na tural ga s fur ·
n ace,
full
basement,
garage, equ 1pped k i t chen ,
nex t to bu s ine ss section .

FICKLE

Shrin k from a business deai- '' CONTRACT''

Batman tO: Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15.
4:3D-Bewllched 3: Gilligan 's Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10:
Petli coat J unction 15.
s,oo-S1ar Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
to ; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
S· 30-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8: Elec. Co . 20,33 : Mary
Tyler Moore 10: Odd Couple IS.
6:0Q-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 30-NBC News3,4,1S: ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Froends 6: CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7 00-Cross-Wits 3: PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha Na Na 8: News 10; Love, American Style
1S: Coping With Kids 20: Big Green Magazine 33,
7·3o-Oolly3: Dallng Game A: MalchGame PM6; The
Judge tO: That's Hollywood 13: Wild Kingdom 1S.
s ,oo-Grealesl Heroes of the Bible 3,4, 15; Eight Is
Enough 6,13: Bugs Bunny 8,10, Wild Horses.

16 Make lace
7 Warriorlike 21 Fleming's
29 Make believe
17 Joy
8 Still a
hero
30 Think
-------==-=~=-=~=--=--,...---19 F irst-person
sinner
22 Cardigan, e.g. 31 Strong point
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
contractwn
9 Unsteady 23 Italian
32 Mock
zoKnack
ucard
innkeeper
37Candlenut
21 Jethro in
game
24 Boss
tree
TV reruns
15 Colleen's
25 Arizona
38 Treasurebidder gets to play the hand
with the opening lead com·
22 Took the
land
lake
hunter's need
NORTH
ing up to his strength . The
• 7 52
floor
second
is that somehow or
•KJ8111
Mildewed
other
when
you respond wtth
+B
26 Undulate b-+-+--+a normal weak two hearts
• 64 3
with a hand s uch as that held
27 Dec:alogue 1-..--1--l-lf.EAST
WEST
by North the opening hidder
+ J B6 3
• A Q 10
tends to' want to bid again
• 9. 2
• A3
a nd fr equently does just
• J 932
=-+.......J~-1 t A 10 6 4
that.
• Q 10 9
• J 7&gt;
With today 's hand either
SOUTH
North or South can make
• K 94
two hearts. Neither one is
• Q 10
likely to make an overtrick
+KQ 75
although with South as de+ AK 82
clarer West might get off to
a lead that wtll give him nine
Vulnerable : Both
tricks.
Dealer: East
The heart lead is not one of
North East South
those leads. South is going to
!NT'
Pass
lose a trwnp, a diamond and
Pass
z•
three tricks in the black
2
t
Pass
Pass
suits.
Pass Pass

3825.
SI::WING MACHINE Repair s, servtce . oi l m o ~ es. 992 -2284 . The
fobnc
Shop.
Pomero y .
Authom ed S1nger Sol es and
Service We sha rp en Sc1ssors .

' ..
'

capital
12 Poet's river
13 Disinclined
14 Rick's piano
player

HOMI::S ITES l or sol e. 1 ocre and
up. Middleporl . near Rul lond
Cal l 992· 748 1

992-3325
2i6 F &lt;;econd Street
BRICK - 6 roo m s, 3

Jumbles· SAVOR TYING OCCULT

I Answer

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
II French
I Bird's crop
historian
5 Rang e
12 Equal
10 Put on
DOWN

I.

BRADfORD. Aucl10nee r. Comple te Serv1ce. flh one 9-49 -7487
or 949·20CIO J.lacine O h io, Crilt
Bradf ord

-

X X X]''

~.'61:4

Business Services

I ' 1 ACRE

Now arrange lhe ci rcled leners to
form the surpnse answer , as sug gested by the above cartoon

Jumble Book No. 13,conlalnlng 110 puzzles, lsa.ailablelorS1,75poatpald
I rom Jumble, c/o this newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. 1nclud•your
name, address, dp code and make checks payable to Newspaperboolta.

I
I

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Bi!llery.
Installation Service

.d :OG--Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4; Mer v
Gr'ff'" 6 ; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8: Sesame St. 20,33:

(Answers tomorrow)

S ~OOP AROU ND?

MOORE'S

3

DUTCH - L ovely 2 story
f r ame r e modeled home .
N a tur a l . gas
furn ace,
storm s, f 1repla ce, enclo sed
front por c hes, 2 c ar
gar age,
a nd
s t or: age
b uild i n g .
1 17
a c res .

9-.l_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

-

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2689

THIS

· Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark

19oi FORo.

RANCH -

b e dro oms ,
carpeti ng ,
pane l in g, n a t gas furnace,
st orms, patio, ga rage, utili ·
t y, porc h , lovely ya r d. Excellent a t j ust $25,500.00.

T He PAFI:.i OF
A WOOL.SN SOCl&lt;.
'YOU CAN 50MEiiME5
555 TH~OU0H.

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At .

1976 NASHUA 14 )( b5 3 bedroo m
1' 1 both , u nderp1nn mg $1500
and a ss ume loo n 949 2bt:l3 or
~AJ 3311.

t2·3D-Ryan's Hope 6,13: Search tor Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec . Co . 33.
1·oo-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News B: Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women
On ly 15.
I :30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8.10
2: ilO-'One Life lo Live 6, 13; Z: 30-Doctors• 3,4,15;
Guidi ng Light 8,10.
3:00-Another World 3,4, 15: General Hospita l 6,13:
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3·30-Mash 8: Joker's Wild 10: Over Easv 20.

tJ

Print answer hare: " [

696-7331.
MODERN

ANTI-FREEZE

News 6,10: Young &amp; !he Reslless 8; Midday
Mag azine 13 .

I I I I J
Yes terday's

--

- - - -A
c--u-ci- -:S::-a- l=e--s- - -- . MEN'S

12 :00-Newscent er 3; Bob Breun .t ; America Alive 15;

ISTYLUS I
(J I I

Ph. !1!12·2174

Real Estate for Sale

1 · CO Al l AU NDRY stove , 2 p lo te.
an t ique. $55 I b1g tron bell
onlrque . SOS. 992·7330.

I I I

BlfT COULD N' T
ortE 0' lH' GUARDS

b09 3785

POMEROY
LANDMARK

BLEEL

,

Mobile Homes for Sale

Thomas Remembers 20.

11 :30-Whee l of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love
of Life 8. tO. News 4; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55"--CBS News B: House Call 10.

I

BORN LOSER

tl · I6·C

For Sale

I(
\

r

I I

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

" GIVE US A TRY "

Mac Neli -

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

c....

Construction
Maintenance

c

m'\l

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

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

Painting

S~clety 15;

6,13. Paper Chase 8,10; Soundstage 20. City
Notebook 33 .
B 30- Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 : When The Boat Comes In
33.

EXPERIENCED _
Radiator~
Servicel 'rMitH ...... Irvdr:
.,..._- I

Carpentry, Eleclrica I,

Honor

B DO-Grea test Heroes of the Bible 3,4,1S: Happy Days

11-3-1 mo.

J. R. Construction
Co.

Chester, Ohio

~O~h~:;r;:e~;f~6,;'3 ~v

-SO TH EY SLIPPED THE
DRAW IN60. INTO S HI PMENTS
TO THE MAII-J PLANT- TRYIN6
TO TIP US OFF T-:-WASH-;

'iljf~N}

PHONE 992-2772

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
10-18-t mo .

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Oo.JL'/ THE MOB DIDN'T S&amp;ND 'SM... I'LL
i!&gt;ET THIOY CAME: FROM LOCAL FACTORY
WORKSRS WHO WERE TOO SCilRED
T' TALK OPENLY-

~ ~ ~~ ®

J&amp;L INSULAnON
JIM KEESEE

All Type Concrete Work

-

~ -

Home

Any Type ImProvements
To Existing Structures

Jack Ginlher985-3806

10 ~ 30

l~du s trial

20;

Barrel

T o The Races B; Candid Gamera 6; ; P rice Is Right

CEllULOSE
INSULATION
'6.50 per bag

Building

Resident ia l and commercial . Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
· anytime.
Phone 985·3806

sox 3

Type

Commercia I and

St . Rl. Tl4 tpward Rutland,
0.

COAL . LIMESTONI:: . sand. grovel .
co lc 1um chlo rtd e . ferlr lt zer. dog
20 CU . FT chest freezer 1 year
l ooc1 ond a ll ty pe s at salt b ·
old 5 pc drum outfl l blue
cels 1or 5oll Wo r lo. s Inc . 1:: M om
I 9lb Red Pace r
3 speed
Sl . Pomeroy 9'}1.JH9l
. .
.
i' A'l ltrtd
BUH ROUGHS SE N SI·MATIC oc·
WARM MORNING coal stove, $55 .
cou nlin g rn ocht ne
Pho ne
H It long . 3:1 h1 gh c ~m per
992·2150, Th e Daily Senti nel ,
shel l $ 155 "142&lt;.1 114
•
111 Coun Stree t, Pomer oy,
.
OhiO .
WH IH t.:NAMH Whi rlpool po r
loble dt..,hwos her Hardl y been
DELTA TIRE S. Oual11y and per.
use rl 99'17315or367·7216 .
for monc e· On
sole now
742 ·2328
DUNCAN flHYfE table ond s1x
choi rs' Mah ogany . good $ 17 5.
APP LES f.=ITZPATHICK Orchard.
992 .3332
Stole Rt b89 Phone W1 lkesvdle

Ellcellenl salary and fri nge benefits. Shift
diHerential. charge and supervisor
di ffere ntial.

Valley Drive
Pl . Pleasant. W . Va. 25550
Phone (304) 675-3430
Equal Opporlunity Employer

'I• mile off Rl. 7 by-pass

11 ·9· 1 mo.

mo .

Price Builders
All

NOPE - I'D SA'Y JUST THE
OPPOSITE, WASfi - I "lfiiNK
THOS\0 FIRST S HAR K DRAW·
tNGS WERE MllANT FOR
OUR EYES~

WEDNESDAY , NOVEMBER 22, 1971
S:45-Farm Report 13 : 5:50--PTL Club 13: 5:55Sunrlse Semester tO .
6:00-PTLCiub 15; 700-Ciub 8; 6:25-Chrlstopher
Closeup 10.
6 30-News Con ference A; 6:45-Mornlng Reporl 3:
6:SO-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55Chuck While Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Jelsons 10.
7:15-Wea1her 33; 7:30-Schoclles 10.
8:00-Cap.t . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame St. 33.
9:00-Mer v Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,1S; Hogan's
Heroes 8: Mafrch Game 10.
9:3o-Brady Bunm ch 8; Family Affair tO.
10 :00-Card Shar ks 3,4,1S: Edge of Nigh! 6 ; All In The
Fam ily 8,1 0; Dating Game 13.'
10 : 30-Jeopardy 3,4, t5; Andy Grlflllh 6, Price Is Right
8,10: 120,000 Pyram id 13 .
11 IJO-.;High Rollers 3.4.1.1; Happy Days 6,13; Lowell

7:30-Hollywood Squa res 3; Oatlng Game 4: Let's Go

CAPTAIN EASY

For Free Estimates

Mourning and

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

For Sale

TIMBI::R . P OM~ R OV f orest Pro·
duel s Top pme for sto ndmg
sow l 1mber . Ca ll 992 5965 or
' .K ~n t_H~ ~by_ ~ 4~b,- B57ll
O LD fURNITUfi:E . 1ce boxes . bro ss
berls . 1ron bed s, desk s e tc ,
Wril e
complele househo lds
M 0 Miller , Rl 4, Pome r oy or
ca ll 9Q2-TlbO

Yard Sale

IN THE
COMMON PLEASCO.URT
OF MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
RICHARD E . PHILLIPS,

11 -17· 1

11 -3-1 mo .

AulD &amp; Truck
Repair
Atso Transmission
Repair
Pholle 992-5682
4-311-IIC

Apply in person
111 Court 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio

so le

.fully insured
Free Est.
·call992-2772

American Sfyle 15; Lock, Stock &amp;
Economically Speaking 33.

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0.
Ca 11992-7013

Free Esti mates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Experience and

DAILY SENTINEL

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

I

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Cellulosic (wood· fiber) .
Thermal insul~lion
Save 3D pcl.to SO pel.

News 33 .
12:3~News 8; 1 :00--Tomorrow 3,.t; News 13.

Emergency One 13, Brady Bun ch 15.

S·30-News 6: Sanford &amp; Son B; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Ty ler Moore tO; Odd Couple 15.
6 DO- News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Feeling Free
20.
6 30-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News t3; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friend s 6: CBS News 8, 10: Over Easy 20.
7:00-Cross-Wits 3: PM Magazine 4; Newlywed G~me
6. t3; P op Goes The Country 8; News tO: Love .

Armstrong Carpeting

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

on heating cost

THE

Hf::NS ~O R
449 :1034

'
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21,1978
5:00-Star Trek 3: Beverly Hillbi ll ies 8: Mister Rogers'
Nei ghborhood 20.33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10;

Your HeadquarteiS For

H. L WRITESB.
ROOFING

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Help Wante d

-~Wanted to Buy

IMMEDIATE OPENING

REGISTERED NURSES

LOS l BLACK and wh1 te l emo le
Wolk e1 m Hoc1n·Port lancl area
Coli q49 :12~1 pr 'jJR 'J.1')q
Would the pe r~l· cal led.
p lea se call back?

-

Plaintiff,

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

---- -·-

Notices

George Hackett Jr. Residence

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

Lost and Found

4 P.M:
f' t itl&lt;!) &lt;tfll' t IIHH/1

-

.

J&amp;L

l:lAI-lTtNOER WANTI::D Expemmce
pre f erred bul fl O I necessa ry
· IN l OVI NG memory of our lol her .
Well po1d . Int eres ting occupo.
Lawrence Wh tllo tc h who po ss·
110n Pl eoson l a tmosphere with
erl away Nov :11 1905
besl cl tcn tele App l y m person.
Peac ef ully sleeplllg, res ltrr g ol
Metgs Inn
lo st
The world 's weary t roub les an d
lnols ore po sl
tn silence he suffered . 1n pollence
he bore
Ttll God call ed h1m to sull 10&gt;r no
more
Sadly mrssed by chrl dren and
gra nd chtl dren, Mr ldred Hud·
so n.

I WOU l lJ hlo. e lo lhanlo. everyon e
for lhe co rd s flowers and
pray er s. wh 1le I wa s a po l ien t 1n
Holze r Medrcol Cen ter Al so
l he docto rs . nurses en d ot cies.
A speCia l t han Ks lo th e several
Ch urches whtch held pray er
'i&gt;er vrces Again lhonk s
Paul me Mor k1n s.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

-- -

L------------------'------------------.-11

RI SING SlA!l Kennels Boorrltng
and groon&gt;ulg , all breed s
Che!. h11 e, :Jbl 0'192

Card of Thanks

Tutstlu~

F.u rn1ture i11c,l uding .beds , :&gt; chests , dresser, range,
dtnette set, ch'"a cabmet, dtshwasher, chairs , lamps,
s.ofa s, at~ deer and moose heads, glasswear, dishes,
lmens, kmckknacks , clothing and much more.

Ne..-. and used
~eeves . Albany

for

Murtda,·

93 SEVENTH AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25TH
BEGINNING AT 9:00A . M .

1rorle 01 lrotn
sodciles Hu th
{614 ) b4H 3190

I

9:00-Three's Company 6, 13: Movie " Tho Pirate" 8,1 0;
New Klan : Heritage of Hale zo.
9:30-Taxi 6,1 3; Film Makers 33.
10:00-Dean Mar11n 3,4, 15; Star sky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News
ZO; Sludenl Affairs Inquiry 33 .
10:30-Like II Is zo: Area Showcase 33.
11 :00-News 3,4, 6.8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett ZO: Over
Easy 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3.&lt;, 15; Phoioplay Awards 6,13:
Gunsmoke 8: Movie "Fanta stic Voyage" 10; ABC

'

DICK TRACY

Business Services

HOO ~ HOLLOW Horses Buy . se ll 1

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

NOTICE

N~tou on S.tl im la~·

SALE

MI::MOR'1' Of Char les H.
Mullen 0(1 13 l!UlH Ia N ov
19. 1948 )on ol James B. onct
Jenn1e Mumaw Mullen Mor
flerllo Helene Hyr 11e . doughier
o f Erl onri Nellie Hyrne .
Prrnter s dev il bus mes s rnon
po li t 1co l
leade r
and
Pos rmas 1er. Preced erl 1n dea1h
by three mfo nl ch1ldren and
followed tn cteol h by wife and
one son Charles J Mull en.
MD
Mtssed by sons Don anri Haworrl
Daught ers· in low
Barb onrl
Phylr ss , grand l hi ldt en Sea n .
Chuck . M tchoel Po lrrck . onrl
Br1on Mu llen · greal grand·
children. Kell1 c . Kcrn e Cou rt
ney
Jacm do . and Potr tck
Mullen

HELP WANTED

( 10) 3 1 (11 ) 7, 14 , 21,28 (12) 5,
12, 7t

Robert Marcinko, Maxine
Marcinko to Angela L.
Marcinko, Robert A. Mar·
cinko, .53 acre, Salisbury.
Herman C. Michael,
Maxine Michael to Robert A.
Marcinko, Angela L. Mar·
cinko, Parcel, Salisbury.
Delbert F. Mitchell to
Altheirs Oil, Inc., Right of
Way, Rutland.
Lynn E. Shuler, Johnanna
S. Shuler to Richards and
Son, Inc., .31 acre, Letart.
Coulter M. Shuler, dec. to
Elsie M. Shuler, Cert. of
trans., Letart .
Elsie Shuler to Richards
and Son, Inc., 14 acres, I
acre, Letart.
Richards &amp; Son , Inc. to
Elsie Shuler, 24.10 acres,
Pomeroy. ·
Edward F . King, Leona 0 .
King to Colwnbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Elec. Co., Easement,
Salisbury.
George C. McCleary,
Sherry S. McCleary to Junius
Marks, Josephine D. Marks,
20 acres, Scipio.
Emmet McCasbey, Evelyn
McCa sbey to H. W. Drilling,
Easement, Rutland.
Kenneth Wolfe, Anna T.
Wolfe to H. W. Drilling,
Easement, Rutland.
Lillie Markins, Lillie Rupe,
nka Elden D. Markins to
Carolyn Trout, John Trout, 'I•
acre, Pomeroy.
J ohn W. Trout, Carolyn

~ ~,Pets_for _sa_l_e___ _

•:.L _

IN

Wnul"lfl IJndt'l

I tl.t\

Mann ing D . Web s ter,
Judge a nd E x Offic io
Cle r~ , Proba te Court
o f Meigs County , Oh1o

Roy L. Jenkins, Rose Ann
Jenkins to Mary McAngus,
Lots, Pomeroy.

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 21,1978

For Best Results Use Sentinel .C lassifieds

IN THE

Wedntsdoy, Nov. 22

CHEEP CHEEP
CHEEP c~EEP cHEEP

•

X X

We open one heart, hut'
have no criticism of a spade·
opening . We would not pass:
under any circumstances. ·
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) .

(Do you have a question for
the experts ? Write '' Ask the
Expe rts, " care of this newspaper. Individual questions will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes. The most intftresting questions will be used In
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

THEY'RE
CHEEPIER
BYTH'
DOZEN

�. ....

..

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 21, 1978

Electric

409 bodies, gold recovered

VIOLENCE REPORTED
Pennsylvania State Police
said today the strike by in·
dependent steel-haulers is
"still pretty active" and
reported 31 violent incidents
in a 24-hour period ending
early today, including the
shooting-up of five trucks.
However , the nation ' s
major steel producers say
they are stlll shipping steel
with only minor disruptions.

WOMAN ADMITTED
Sharon Smith, Pomeroy,
was admitted to St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, early
today as a medical patient.

MEETING CON CELLED
A public meeting which had
been called for Friday
evening to discuss the
disposal of the former
Bedford Youth Center has
been concelled and will be
rescheduled later.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •
•
•
••
••
••
•
••
••
••
•••
••
••
••
••
••
•
GEHL~ ~--- •
••
••
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•
•
••
••
••
•
Flail Chopper
•
••
•
•
•• Mower Conditioners
••
••
•••
••
•
•• Gehl Tax Saver Sale! •
•
un
e
•
e
sel~ted
~
••
o•
e
•
e
FARM EQUIPMENT

1200
800

. . .. .. .. .

• ..

..

700 . .. . .. .. ..

. $325

.

$275

. .

. $225

$150

12 .

7701680

. . $200

...... .

. $200

107011090 . . .. .

•

•

You
you

""Ye monev AND hiiKOS II
nowl
F1r1!. llop 1n 1nd we'll nu~ke our
BEST Dt:Al on 1 new Genl lorage
lla11
naNester, m010;er condohoner
bll)l

~:hopper

Se-cond,~, Gen l win send J'OU 11 CASH

•

•aNUa ol " ' to $3251

Tnud you II oe tllglblo ltu H 1.,.,_

•
•
•
•

.

lnfHIJMnt CNdh ott

~ 01.11

'78

ta.es Vour , ombinGd s.a~mg• could
btl StOOD.-11400-·or mONt

A.nnougn 11 dOI:Illn'l ~pply to hM
Salll!r Sale pUicnes.es Gehl Hl~o
of!c1 s WIIYerol FtMnce unul June 1
1979 on
equ1pment

•

Slop 1n and we 'll g1ve you all lh!!
detailS

Shinn• Tractor
I
Sa ••• Inc.

•
•
•

h

e

P one 4Sa.1630

•
. .
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
8ulhurry • Theoller•sgoodonlyfro m

Oct llllhru OIIC. 3f. 1971

LEON W VA

'

•

Be a
hough
Santa ..
BULOVA

part in the mass suicide
ritual. Only a dozen survivors
have emerged.
Police reported a woman in
Georgetown in radio contact
with the commune 150 miles
away slit her three children's
throats and then her own to
fu !f:ll her part of the mass
suic1de pact.
The mass suicide took
place Saturday night, after
Temple members massacred
Rep. Leo J. Ryan, D-Calif.,
and four other American
visitors on a fact-finding tour
the
commune
in
to
Jonestown .
The body of the 41&gt;-year-old

The best time of all!
Th e good lime sla rls

when you give a
Bulova Accutron ..
the watch thai g1ves
proven electroniC

accuracy-24 hours
a day-with np
wind ing, ever.

See how handsome
dependable watch
can be. Shop now
while our select1on

Is complete
Stainless steel.

Sllvertone dial. S121.GD
B. Pol ished goldtone case.
Champaine diaL $11.00

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

Hooyer resigns

Area
Death

Inflation was .higher
during summer

.

sf

Create Your Own Decoration
With Hallmark Candles

'

Visit Baker's Budget
Shop For Inexpensive
New Furniture l

e

Insurance coverage should be reviewed . These are the
11mes to make good use of your Insurance ~gent and his
knowledge by Inform ing him of your pions and
financial circumstances.

© 11178 Hallmark Cards

--

214 E.

Main

The Insurance Store
992-5130

Pomeroy,O.

\

Vol. 2!}, No. 155

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.·.· ·.

..·.·

·.··.·
.. ::
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.·.;. :.:

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' ··.
.·.··.

:.:::'

Made in America

Christmas spirit
hits Meigs area
Ready or not, the Christmas holiday season is about to
move in with Middleport the first community to get the
"spirit" Monday evening.
At 6:30p.m., the annual holiday parade sponsored by the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce, highlighted by the arrival
of Santa and his elves, will move from the Gateway parking
W.
.
Miss Candy Ingels is heading this year's parade. Bands
participating wiU include Meigs, Eastern, Southern, Kyger
Creek and Wahama. The Gl~ttes and the Royale Kadettes
will be among the marching units. There will be appearances
by the Meigs Junior Miss winners, Meigs and Southern
Homecoming queens, Meigs cheerleaders, the Big Bend
Reg,tta queen, Cathy Blaettnar and others.
Sanl&amp;will distribute treats Ill th~ youngsters at the drivethrough facility of the Citizens National Bank.
Meanwhile, the annual Christnias parade sponsored by the
. Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce kicking off the Christmas
season will be held Sunday, Dec. 3, at2p.m .
Parade units will form in back of the former junior high
school and proceed down Main Street. The arrival of Santa will
be the highlight of the parade.
Persons wishing to participate may contact the chamber
office at 992-liOOli on Monday, Tuesday and Friday from 9to 4 or
Pa~l Simon, president at 992-3830. Jim Freck~r is parade
chalrll1an .

The World Today
Won't release locations
MARION, Ohio (UPI) - Marion County sheriff's deputies,
heading a search for two of three convicts who escaped last
Friday, said Tuesday they will no longer tell where they think
the men are located.
A spokesman for the sheriff's office said authorities
believe the two fugitives have been monitoring newspapers as
well as radio and television news broadcasts for details of the
search.

Assistant -provost selected
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) - The State Board of Higher
Education Tuesday selected the assistant provost for medical
affairs at Kent State University In Ohio to be the new president
of Southern Oregon State College.
Dr. NataieSicuro, 44, will succeed Dr. James Sours, who is
leaving the Ashland, Ore., campus at the end of the year.
Sicuro wa s chosen after a selection process starting with a ISmember college screening committee looking into the
qualifications of 180 applicants.

Board votes to close school
MORROW, Ohio (UP!)- The Little Miami Local Board of
Education voted unanimously Tuesday night to close schools
early next month because of a fund shortage.

United Press Interuatlonal
Tljursday is Thanskgiving
Day - offically the 189th, but
by tradition , the 359th. Either
way, the founding fathers
would stand in awe of what
the thing they started has
become.
From the ·Great Gobbler
Gallop in Cureo, Texas, to the
zoo-bound champion turkey
named Purdue Pete in
Wa shington, Thanksgiving
1979 is a far cry from the
simple spread the settlers of
Jamestown, Va., put on back
in 1619, just for the gift of
survival. Their descendants
may be praying Thursday for
the same thing, but against
different hazards.
The
National Safely
Council predict s bet ween 470
and 570 celebrants will die in

traffic crashes before the
long holiday weekend is over,
and
rail and
airline
passengers well may vow it's
their last trip.
Washin gto n
National
Airport beefed up the police
for ce and in Atlanta, where
normal traffic is 100 ,000
passengers a day , ~ holiday
increase of 30 percent was
predicted.
Amtrak in
Washington sa1d 15 trains
have been added in the
northeast ern corridor, wtth
other cars to be tacked on as
needed.

TRADITtONAL FIGURES- EMR students of Mrs. Kenneth Chaney_at the Pomeroy
Elementary School created traditional Thanksgiving figures in observance of the holiday.
Class member :Anna Jo Patrick is pictured with the class bulletin board showing some of the

'\

,.

Increases of another kind
haunt the Thanksgi ving
dinner table in a fashi on that
might have appalled out
thrifty forebear s.
Their
turkey was obtained at the
price of a little powder and
shot. Burdened by an in·
flation rate of 9.6 percent,
American t~is year will pay
around 89 cents a pound for
the traditional bird - from 33
cents in 1977.
Thanksgiving won official
· proclamation from President
George Washington in 1789 as
IContinued on pa ge 10 )

Engineer okays
township road
'

Weather

..•

The Bountiful Land

Nation prepares for
Thanksgiving holiday

A road m Wildwood Estates
Subdivision owned by George
Hol&gt;stetter has been declared
a township road by County
Engineer Wesley Buehl.
Meeting with Meigs County
Comm1ssioners
Tuesday
night, Buehl pr esented a
description of the road.
The board will act on the
designation upon receipt of a
request to do so by the
Chester Township trustees. It
was reported work on the
multi purpose building was
progressing in a satisfactory
manner. Footers are now
complete and work is con·
tinning on the parking lot
area.

Ogures.

Contrary to popular Ameri can belief, Thanksgiving &gt;s ne1ther stn cUy nor on gmally
Amertcan
Festivals of gratitude for the harvest are the custom m much of the world today , and as
far as man has been able to delve Into hts own past there are evidences of simtlar
observanc~s . An occaswn for Thanksgtvmg is, 1n fact, somethmg of a cummon denommator
of successtve and varted human cultures, a uruversal recognition of man as a part of and
dependent upon nature.
For our Western Civilization, as w1th so much else, the lradttlon goes back to the
Greeks, who annu ally celebrated a mne-day festival m honor of Demeter, goddess of
agriculture . Then as now, eatmg well was the order of the da; s. From Greece , the pract1ce
took the usual route to Rome and thence down thr ough the Inedteval centunes in various
forms to our own day.
Even m this country, there IS more to the story than the famihar Pilgrims-and-Indians
verswn . It was not only 1n New England that colonists gave thanks . In Virgm1a, for
example, a harvest cele bratwn occurred a year before the celeprated Massachusetts !east
of 1621.
·
But i.( the history of this occas10n is considerably more ancient and complicated than
our us~l version of 1t, the observance has come lo have a very special American meanlng
Th1s goes back to the very begmnmg&gt; on these shores . Much m ore than ]JUl&gt;lic
expression s of grat1tude for harvest bounty, the first 1'hanksg1Vlngs American-style were
VIctory celebrations, respites m life-and-dea th struggles w1th a new and harsh environment.
They were testimonials w the ability of men of purpose to survive m the face of immense
odds.
Thanksgiving w.as rather casually observed, a hit-&lt;Jr·mlss hol1 day through the early
years of the Republic, until Abraham Lincoln "nationalized " it during the dark days of th e
Civil War to retnfon:e a sense of national community and purpose
In the more than a century smce, this uniquely Amertcan sign ificance has broadened
and deepened until today Thanksgivmg stands as the most American of holidays , a
testunonial w all that is best m the American past and a reaffirma tion of th&lt; Amen can
purpose.

THANKSGIVING SEASON- The Thanksgiving Season lS an important holiday in the
Meigs County Schools. Here is just one of the many Thanksgtving displays at the Pomeroy
Elementary. Shown are Mary Ann Pierce, left, and Jack Norman, stud ents from Diane
Haddad 's art class, who made these Thanksgiving scenes with their classmates !rom torn
pieces of construction paper then mounted on poster paper .

,.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Fifteen Cents

··:- .

~
0

en tine

at y

::·.::-

Inc.

"'W'

•

1978 Daily Sentinel's 28-page

from paying off any lnstoltment loans, etc, your

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 22, 1978

etc ., or In suffering a financial loss Its time to look over
your Insurance coverage. As your responsibilities
change, ';'our1amlly grows and your cash outlay varies

POMEROY, 0.
992-2920

Jones - namesake of tile
town and leader of the
Temple - was found face up
among his lifeless followers .
His mistress was found dead
in bed with another woman,
investigators said.
remaining
cult
The
members ran into jungles rife
with quicksand and flesheating piranha fish . Many
who fled were hunted down
and shot with automatic rifles
by gunmen from the People's
Temple.
Officials said the bodies of
the cultists were scattered
around an altar along with
hundreds of dogs, which were

ELBERFELD$

ACCUTRON®

COURT ST.

troops said they had
recovered the bodies of 409
people who _lived at the
commune of the People's
Temple including its leader,
former San Francisco
Housing Commissioner Jim
Jones.
The search was continuing
today for about 600 . cult
members who fled inlll the
dense jungle rather than take

Kidnapper was
told to stop

END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County common
pleas court Dennis M.
Hackett , Middleport, and
Martha J . Hackett, same
address filed for dissolution
of marriage.
The marriag~. of William
David Baker and Joyce Ann
Baker was dissolved and
Kennie C. See was granted a
divorce from Bernice See.

Baronick Lou Osborne and
Harold ' Brow11, council
members, Mrs. Walton, Chief
Jed Webster , Donnie Ward
and Jack Krautter . The
meeting was opened by
prayer by Lou Osborne.

poisoned first .
Jones had a bullet wound in
his head . It was not known if
the wound was self.tnmcted
or if one of his disciples had
shot him.
Hospital News
" We keep finding bodies in
isolated places," assistant
Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Police Commissioner C.A.
Admitted - Lula Gilmore,
Roberts said.
Dexter;
Loneda Varney,
An earlier death toll of 383
Ewington;
Juanita Spencer,
was broken down to 163
Pomeroy;
George Wolfe,
women, 82 chUdren and 138
Paul
Andrews, Long
Racine;
men. All were Americans
Samantha
Hall,
Bottom
;
except for seven adopted
Re~dsville;
Paul
Clay,
Guyanese chUdren who lived
Rutland.
at the camp.
Discharged
Merle
Police searching the comEvans
.
Lena
Howard,
Etoilla
mune found BOO U .S.
passports, 30 to 40 automatic Cassell, Louis Thompson,
weapons,
hundreds
of Gary Johnson, Marvin Tom.
thousands of rounds of
Holzer Medical Center
ammunition, $500,000 in gold
Discharges, Nov. 20
bullion, another $500,000 in
Jerry
Blake, Mrs. Micheal
mixed currencies and enthere, we 've got to talk."
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!)- A over
Conte accused them of
(Continued from page I)
Caldwell
. and daughter;
velopes
stuffed
with
young couple heard the click
Heber Dixon, Mrs . David
tipping
off
police
when
they
Commencement
for
May
22
was
tabled
until
administrators
U.S.
Social
Security
uncashed
of a gun hammer and
Dodson and son; Matthew
checks, Roberts said.
spontaneously went into stopped for gas, but Hatcher investigate fully the wisdom of combining the two events into
Duff,
James French, Brian
the
In
Washington,
ooe for this year's senior class.
denied that.
action Monday saving their
Hawks, Earl Holbrook, Mrs.
Ill
A
request
from
Principal
Diehl
on
the
employment
of
an
Pentagon
said
today
three
C.
The
couple
was
forced
lives and leaving their
141 jet transports and two Gile Hysell and son;
kidnapper - a desperate and tum off onto a tnwnship road assistant wrestling coach was turned down because the
Conte
pulled
superintendent,
treasurer
and
board
president
must
sign
UH-1
Huey helicopters would Raymond Jones, Rose
and
watched
as
confused fugitive - dead
fly
Ill
Guyana Ill transport McQuaid, Lewis Mitchem,
.
the
hammer
back
oo
his
.38.
certification
that
funds
for
new
pos1tions
are
available
over
a
from five bullets of his own
bodies
back Ill the United Betty Queen, Mrs. David
the
woman
.
period
of
a
number
of
months.
They
can
be
held
personally
Without
talking,
gun.
Secoy and son; Sally Taylor
grabbed
him
around
the
responsible
for
certification
subject
to
being
forced
to
pay
States.
John Conte, 43, who spent
of
Ryan,
a
The
bodies
and Lauren Young.
the
chin
.and
$20,000,
if
the
funds
are
not
really
available.
Supt.
Dowler
said
neck,
under
most of his adult life behind
Births, Nov. 20
legislative
aide
and
three
Ilinged
for
the
gun.
he
would
sign
no
such
certifications
for
any
new
positions.
Hatcher
bars on a variety of charges,
who
accompanied
·
Mr.
and
Mrs. Munrow
newsmen
"He was sitting next to me
Paige Hunt and Dorothy Oliver were named Ill serve as
died at the hands of 21-yearhim
were
Down
to
the
United
Oak Hill,
Murphy,
daughter,
on
the
passenger
seat,
and
advisors
for
the
Drama
Club.
Mrs.
Hunt
will
produce
a
musical
old factory worker Harold R.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Carr,
States
tnday.
Hatcher
and
Victoria Vicki was in the back. He this year and Mrs. Oliver will direct a play. The board
Mark
Lane,
a
lawyer·
of
Martha
Vennari,
John
Redovian
son,
Wellston,
thumbed
back
the
hammer
approved
the
attendance
Wyzykowski, 20, both of
author who was legal adviser
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
on the gun and started to run and Tim Flesher to meetings.
Romulus, Mich., three days
to
Jones,
told
a
news
Williamson,
son, Wellston.
ROOF
DISCUSSED
toward
me.
I
thought,
'This
is
after Conte's daring break for
of
''the
satanic
conference
it.
It's
him
or
me'
and
I
went
The
condition
of
the
Meigs
High
School
roof
came
up
for
freedom.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
"I told him to stop," said for the gun with both hands." discussion during the meeting. Supt. Dowler said 1t has been 3ituation buDding up" in the
fact·
commune
during
the
saw
indicated
that
something
must
be
done
about
the
roof
within
Miss
Wyzykowski
Discharges, Nov. 20
Hatcher. "I said, 'stop! stop,
finding
mission.
two
years
or
the
damages
from
leaks
will
be
extremely
costly.
Hatcher
grab
the
pistol
and
Mrs.
Dallas Niburt, Point
or I 'II kill you!' He just kept
mission
Lane
said
as
the
"I
threw
my
arms
around
the
Cost
of
such
a
roof
project
has
been
estimated
at
$50,000.
Pleasant;
Charles Hall, Pt.
coming, so I shot him five
was leaving the camp with Pleasant; Ja~on Stover,
man
's
neck
and
squeezed
for
He
pointed
out
that
the
board
has
a
permanent
times."
disgruntled Temple members Gallipolis Ferry ; Patricia
Conte and two other all I was worth. I just held on Improvement fund of $150,000 drawing interest and that
a man sprang at the Condee, Pt. Pleasant.
of
projects.
The
balance
of
and
prayed
that
if
the
gun
interest
has
been
used
for
a
number
inmates overpowered and
congressman
with a knife,
disarmed a guard returning went off it wouldn't hit Russ the interest now stands at $33,000 and Dowler indicated he is
me
."
hopeful
that
enough
additional
funds
can
be
provided
for
the
but
was
restrained.
or
them to the Southern Ohio
Shortly afterward, Ryan
After the shooting they roof project so that the initial investment will not have to be
Correctional Facility from a
was
gunned down along with
Ill
a
farmhouse,
and
disturbed.
It
was
pointed
out
that
the
fund
cannot
be
used
for
walked
.
trial in Marion, Ohio. Conte's
other
Americans - NBC
four
told
a
resident
they'd
just
salaries
at
any
time.
.
companions Billy McKinney,
Parents of a student appeared before the boar!! and correspondent Don Harris,
shot someone and would he
25, and David Pilkington, a
that a bus driver is discriminating against their son . cameraman Robert Brown,
call
the
police.
charged
double murderer, were still
Conte
was
serving
2!&gt;-tn-125
Goins
will
arrange a meeting with the parents, the driver and San ·Francisco Examiner
at large today, apparently
for
a
series
of
crimes
administratnrs.
Goins outlined procedures followed by drivers photographer ·. Gregory
years
CLEMENTE MENCHINI
unarmed since Conte had the
Robinson
and
cult
member
the
two
in
the
removal
of
a
student
from
bus
riding
privileges.
He
including
his
part
in
guard's .38, and believed to
Rosary
services
for
Patricia Parks.
be driving a brown over Ohio Penitentiary uprisings pointed out that drivers must maintain discipline and transEight other Americans also Clemente Menchini, 87,
in 1968.
.
port cllildren safely. Goins also reviewed steps laken recently
maroon 1978 Grand Prix .
were
wounded in the baH of Pomeroy, who died Sunday
He once told a friend when a bus was in an accident in the Rutlahd area.
Police tracked the three
gunfire,
he said.
evening at the Holzer Medical
He said the primary concern of administrators and the
through stolen cars and writing a book about prison
Center will be held at 7 this
Lane
said
Jones
ordered
abducted people for the next life, "I don't want Ill die in drivers was examination and treatment of the students on the
him
to
attend
an
assembly
of
evening
at the Ewing Funeral
two and one-half days chains.! don't want Ill die like bus. He tnld how the situation was handled with all 41 of the
Home.
students on the bus being examined at tpe local hospital before
the congregation, where eight
Funeral services will be
through Columbus, a dog."
being released to their parents or taken home .
grinning men took automatic held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at
Cincinnati and Springfield.
Atlllrney Charles Knight appeared before the board in
rifles and ammunition from a th S ed H rt Ch h 'th
Sheriff Bill Bell said in
shed.
e acr
ea
urc WI
.
reference
Ill
what
is
known
as
the
"Beech
Grove
School
Lot"
in
BODY
IDENTIFIED
three
Springfield, the
"We
are
all
going
to
die,"
·
th~
Re~.
Father
Paul
Welton
MEDINA, Ohio (UP!) - A Rutland. There is a property dispute over the lot. The JD;ltter
escapees kidnapped Michael
they
told
Lane
cheerfully,
offlclatmg.
Cook, 30, and drove into body found in a motel room was referred to· the prosecuting attorney who will meet with
Indianapolis. Cook, who lives Sunday has been identified as the parties concerned and their attorneys to make then embraced him and
WON SPIRIT AWARD
headed for the assembly hall .
.
alone, was never missed until that of a man wanted in a recommendations.
Janis Carnahan, a senior at
A letter was read from Ted Smith, State Title I educational Lane and another lawyer took Southern High School, was
he called police Monday. He Cleveland Heights stabbing
consultant, complimenting Dan Morris, District Director of cover in the brush . They not only a first runner-up in
told them the men had pulled death.
heard speeches glorifying
Medina County Sheriff's Curriculum on the Title I program .
up to bin1 asking directions .
Sunday's Southeast Ohio,
Attending the meeting were Supt. Dowler; Goins, death then heard Jones shout Junior Miss Program, but she
From Indianapolis, they deputies said Monday the
"Mother" several times,
drove to Romulus, Mich. man found at the Holiday Inn Treasurer Wagner; board members Hoover, Virgil King, Dr.
foUowed
by automatic rifle won the Junior Miss Spirit
Pierce
and
Jerulifer
Sheets.
Several
education
Keith
Riggs,
at Ohio Route 18 and In·
where they checked inlll a
award as well. She is the
.
terstate 71 was Jerome association representatives were on hand along with other fire.
motel, left Cook, and split up.
"We heard people running, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
McKinney and Pilkington McCandless, 33, Cleveland. group representatives and Principals James Diehl and Bob
screaming through the brush James Carnahan of Racine.
Morris.
drove off in Cook's car at
and more firing. I counted 85
noon Sunday.
bursts or shots during the
Hatcher said he had left his
night," he said.
room. at the motel about 2
Steve Jones, 19, a son of the
NEWHI·LOW TEMPS
a.m. Monday to get a
cult
leader,
arrived
in
highestt
YORK (UPI) - The
package of cigarettes from
Georgetown
from
the
United
Mond
emperature
reparted
his Jeep in the parking lot.
Monday.
Weat
ay
to
the
National
States
"I heard a noise, turned
"We were taught to be Alas her Serv1ce, excludin
around and there was a man
loving
and non-violent," he de ka and Hawaii, was
with a gun on the stairwell.
said.
"But
for some time I To~~s ft Fort Myers, Fla.
He said, 'I am an escaped
have
expected
an element of be Y s ow was 21 degree
convict. You better do what I
going to get the recession"
insanity in the leadership." low zero at Wi!Hston, N. D~
WASIDNGTON
(UP!)
Product
the
total
output
of
say and take me where I want
Asked if he was referring to
Inflation during the July· goods and services adjusted next year.
to go.'
Okun and several other
his
father, Jones replied, "He
for
inflation
-increased
3.4
September
quarter
was
Conte tnld the couple he
private economists have
Oklahoma became a state
was
the leader."
percent
during
the
third
slightly
higher
than
wanted Ill go to Columbus to
is
forecast
that
the
nation
in
1906 with the merging of
see
a
friend.
Miss previously believed, but quarter, unchanged from the headed for a recession in 1979
the
former Indian Territory
Wyzykowski said "I was just economic growth remained orginal estimate made last because of unchecked
and
the Oklahoma Territory.
trying to be nice to this oo target with administration month .
CLOSED
FRIDAY
inflation.
of an Oriental rug is
Value
3.4
percent
increase
The
creep" and both told Conte projections, the government
The Meigs County_ Health determined by the number of
Carter
and
Federal
was
considerably
below
the
they would do anything he · reported tnday.
The worst news contained second quarter's 8.7 percent Reserve Board Chairman G. Department will be closed on knots it contains in a square
wanted if he wouldn't kill
inch.
the
Commerce growth rate, but was William Miller dispute the Friday, November 24.
them. But they said he was in
predictions. They claim the
consistent
with
the
Department's
revised
report
" not lucid" and kept talking
economy will slow down next
about "walls, fences and oo third quarter economic administration's prediction year, but not enough to
developments was word that that the economy would grow
confinement.''
plunge into a recession.
With Conte training a gun after-tax corporate profits at about a 3. 75 percent annual
"It's a tragedy of the
rate this year.
on Hatcher and Miss rose just 1.2 percent political
situation that the
As the the government was
Wyzykowski seated in the compared with an 18 percent
ooly
way
to
stop inflation is to
quar·
jump
during
the
second
releasing its econcmic in·
back, the three drove south
put
people
out
of work, stop
dicators, Brookings
ter.
on Interstate 75.
building
houses,
and stop
The department said Institution economist Arthur
"He was with us all the
Okun
said.
production,"
Pick a Hallmark candle in your favorite color. Put
time, so we never got a inflation during the third Okun was telling reporters
quarter,
as
measured
by
the
it together with a bright holiday ring , a shiny
"is
that
President
Carter
chance to plan any way of
brass holder or other accessories.
so-called
"implicit
price
escape. We tried to tell a guy
Decorate your home or create a
deflator,"
increased
7.1
at a gas station (in Toledo)
personal
gift for friends. Hundreds
percent,
a
notch
higher
than
that
we were
being
of
possibilities
are waiting for your
the
7
percent
gain
originally
kidnapped, but he didn't
p~rsonal touch .
· understand," said ·Miss reported last month.
The implicit price deflatnr
Wyzykowski, adding that she
spent the time wondering if measures inflation on an
she should try to startle Conte economy-wide basis while the
Labor Department's monthly
by spraying him in the face
Consumer
Price Index tracks
with a can of breath
only
prices
paid
by
freshener in her purse.
consumers
at
retail
ouUets.
Near Findlay, they said,
Q . When should I review my insurance coverage?
The
Commerce
they saw an Ohio Highway
Department also said the
Patrol cruiser and Conte
A. Anytime your financial sltu!tlon changes ... either
"real" Gross National
in receiving a reason~ble pay Increase, Inheritance,
panicked. "He told us to pull

GEORGETOWN, Guyana
( UPI ) - Authorities said
tnday they have recovered
more than 400 bodies and $1
million in gold and cash from
the jungle commune where
American religious fanatics
poisoned their children and
pets and then swallowed a
purple cyanide mixture from
an altar caldron.
Guyanese police and army

TROPHY PRESENTED - Phil Miller, left, Jackson
Production Credit Assn., presented a trophy to Ed. Holter
representing the Meigs High Future Farmers of America
which had the winning team at the Meigs Soul and Water
Conservation District sponsored land judging contest.
The trophy was presented Thursday night at the district's
annual meeting held in Racine ..

(Continued from page I )

Lows tonight will be in
lower 40s. Highs Thursday In
the middle or upper 50s.
Probability of precipitation
20 percent today, 70 percent
tonight and Thursday .

It was also reported that
Dr. Bloeme r of Ohlo
University w11l be present at
the Dec. 12 meeting to
present the final draft of the
new county map.
Commissioners discussed·
the construction of the access
road from Union Ave .
(Continued on page 10 )

~ - ..:-:&gt;,-~"&gt; ,

· Carter won't appeal

.... ..:&gt; , ,"" . :Z&gt; , r &lt;-:. •.;

o, 1~~---f:',',i:.'~."-~&gt;' :••:f..; ~ AMERICUS, Ga . (UP!) - Plains by 21 percent Cor 1976
,_
·;&lt;'" ·
· · · · · ··; .·::' .."' President Carter will not and 37 percent last year.
v '• ;,. ·,
~

··'

·, appeal a Sumter County tax
that boosted
\ property taxes on his family 's
"- peanut business by more than
o $3,500 - with the president
~ himself owing about $2,205 of
• the back taxes.
-:.,
., Figures released by local
f.&gt; ' -0 ..: ' ~ ~ ~ 0- ....~ ~ ..,.; -0~ tax officials a t Carter's
request Tuesday showed that
DAYS TO
the county tax assessors
CHRISTMAS
board raised the levy on the
Carter Warehouse Inc. in
•

~ reappraisal

Powell and preside ntial
attorney Robert Lipshutz
cited the compa ratively
small gaps in annual tax
assessments as proof that
Carter
who
was
campaigning or taking over
as president d~ring much of
the time involved - had not
sought Ill shortchange his
hometown government on
farm t axes.
The tax on the Carter

family peanut operation was
assessed an extra $820.41 for
the year Carter was elected
president and $1,508.41 for
1977.
Additionally , the revised
tax assessment added
$1,227.29 to this year's tax tab
- due Dec. 20 . Of the total
$3,556.11 increase in the three
years of assessments, Carter
- a 6~ percent owner of thr
fa milv business
i
responsible for $2,208.84.

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