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                  <text>i&gt;:-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 26, 1978

Rural areas c~uld get assistance
COLUMBUS- Rural areas
lacking primary health
facUlties could receive
Uststance in getting them
through a new program of
cooperation recently started
by the Fanners Home Administration (FmHA) and the
Department of Health ,
Education and Welfare,
according to Gene R.
Abercrombie, FmHA's Ohio
State Director.
·Assistance is now available
under a new cooperative
agreement recently signed by
secretary of Agriculture Bob
Bergland and Secretary of
HEW Joseph Califano. The
program arose from the
Ca rt er

Administration's

concern with improving rural
health.
· This effort concentrates on
creating more prima ry
health facilities, according to
Mr. Abercrombie. It will be
concerned with the construction, renovation , and
improvement of health
clinics, doctors' offices and
other facilities for ma in-

taining and improving health ...
The cooperative effort calls
for FmHA to provide funds
for ·structures to house health
facilities. HEW will provide
manpower to staff the
facilities
and provide
operating capital over the
tenn of the loan.
"Fanners Home has set
aside $25 million for this
nationwide program this

fiscal year," Mr. Abercrombie said. Our District
offices will receive special
training in preparing applications for facilities which
meet primary health care
needs. These applications
will be funded on a priority
basis from loan funds held at
the Washington headquarters," Abercrombie added.
HEW officials estimate
nearly 300 primary health
ce nters
will
receive
assistance during the four
years · of
the initial
agreement. The FmHA-HEW
agreement is part of a larger
Administration drive which
also includes a Department of

Meigs historical notes

·············iii·~~

~- - :

·CEstate·:•
Today :

ilv
Willis T. Leadingham.

•

Realtor

•
:

•

•

•

•
•

By Morgoret Porker
Meigs Museum Coorldluator '
The Meigs History Book
committee Is releasing
names of some of the families
who have thus far submitted
stories to them for printing in
the book.
If your family name is not
listed, then we don't have
your story. If you have not
written your story yet, and
somerine else by the same
name has, then it is their
story. Your family will
probably not be represented,
unless YOU write your own
story.
Names
of . families
received: Adams, Barber,
Barringer, Beaver, Bentz,
Bowles, Brewer, Carpenter,
Cole, Cook, Darst, Davis,
Downing , Gerlach , Henderson, Hill, Howell, Jewett,
Johnson, Jones, Karr, Kelton,

•
••

DON'T HELP RE8.TOR SELL

•
0'\e of the best ways to
a move your house off the
market In a hurry is to keep
out of it when it is being
• shown! Y.ou should first tell

show ing the em ot ional •
involvement which co uld ,• .
APPOINTMENT MADE
put the seller at a •
.KANSAS
CITY - Richard
d isadvantage .
e
There are times when • C. Ohlinger, of Mason, W.

• should know abou t . the
1 house, especial ly umque
-4111
features, and then let him

tween buyer and seller
ha ve
e I I m i n ate d •
bargaining
effectiveness •
and even lo st sa les. Not ·•
often - bu t it can and has •
happened. Wh y take the 1e
chance?
•

·e

• the Realtor everytbing he
11'

dolfth~o~e ~nis't

·•

be around
when the house is being
• shown, greet the prospect
• grl:'cious ly ,
take
the
'e children and the pets and
.
• retIre.
e Thi s may sound l1ke
uncharitabl e advice but,
believe me, it's sound . The
Realtor is a sk illed

1•

·=
•

negotiator ; he has the

•

experience and know-how
to bring a buyer to an
acceptable price without

e

II

personality conflicts be- • Va., V.F .W. Post 9926, has
been appointed by V.F.W.
Nationa I Commander-inChief Eric G. Sandstrom, of
Tacoma, Washington, to
;erve as a National Aide-deCamp for 1978-79.
:e
Sandstrom, ·head of the 1.8
••
million
member organization
yth'
· .. ·
If there is an 1ng Wr: e of overseas veterans comcan do to help you in the e mented, "It is because of the
field of real estate please - •
phone or drop in at • tireless efforts of civi c
LEADINGHAM REAL '
minded citizens like Mr .
ESTATE , 512 Second Ave., ·• Ohlinger that the veterans
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699. • il"d communities the V.F. W.
We' re here to help.
•
serves have ben affected in a
posltive manner.

• •.......................•.•
•

~

five percent.
" Individuals
or
organizations interested in
developing . or improving
primary health facilities n
their communi.ties should
contact the FmHA District
Director serving their area,"
Abercrombie said.
Offices are listed in local
telephone directories under
U. S. Government, Department of Agriculture, Farmers Home Administration.

Labor · program to train
disadvantaged -rural
residents as health support
workers, such as nurses
aideo, clinic clerks, health
educators and for other
positions.
FmHA makes loans to local
government agencies and
non-profit institutions for the
construction of community
facilities , including health
facilities, in towns with up to
10,000 population. The interest rate on thP~P loans is

•

Longsworth,
Martin ,
Matlack, Noble, Orr, Parker,
Schultz, Smith, Stiles, Surfa ce, Thomas, Throckmorton, Wolfe. Many of these
families of the same name,
have different ancestors, so
the only way you can be sure
yours is included is to write it
and maU to Meigs History
Book, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
We don't want anyone left
out. Your descendants in
future generations will thank
you for taking the time to
write your story.
Deadline for submission of
stories and ordering your
book is December 5.

Area six health
session slated
MARIETTA - The PLan
Development. Committee of
the Area Six Health Systems
Agency , Inc. will meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, November
29, at the Hotel Lafayette, 101
Front St., Marietta. The
meeting is open to the public.
Major agenda items include review of the Draft
Health Systems Plan and
consideration of policies for
the Annual review , amendment, and uwate of the Plan.
Area Six Health Systems·
Agency , Inc. Is · ~ conditionally designated and
funded Health Systems
Agency for 18 eastern and
southeastern Ohio counties.
The primary purpose of the
agency is to promote effective health plaming and
health resources development within its health service
area.

·-=~~~~~=~~~~~~---•••lill•llll!••••••••••••••••••,

r DOC

. SAYS

• • •

We Take the Fear Out of Buying A ~d Car. Our Cars Are Better Because:
one owner .new car trades.
1•. Most....
'J
2. No auction cars.
3. 100% Warranty on late models.
Modem Senrice

1978 CHEVROLET

MONTE CARLO
Pl atin um exte r ior with ·beaut if ul
carm i ne cloth interior . Loa ded with
options l ike air conditioning , po":e r
win dows, power door locks, cru 1se
cont rol, ti lt whee l, AM· FM 8 t rack
stereo, Rall ye wheels. This stunning
cou pe is super sharp inside and ou t.
Only 12, 060 mil es .

'5995
1975 CHEV. MALIBU

CLASSIC
Sliver finish wi th burgund y cloth
interior and a matching landa u top.

Equi pment Includes air con ditioner ,
cruise control , AM with a.t rack
stereo, rall y wheels and radial ti r es.
New Grand Prix trade.

1978 CHEVROLET

1978 PONTIAC

CAM·ARO ·

TRANS AM

This sports model Is sure to catch
your at1entlon. Carmine exterior

and black bucket seats with air
conditioning, automat ic tran .

smlsslon, AM-FM radio and sport
styled wheels.
Priced to se ll

'5995
1977 BUICK REGAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP

Finished in Maya n red with white
bucket seats. This Trans Am has it .
all. Ai r conditioni ng, cruise control,
t ilt whee!, AM· FM B track, Rallye 11
wheels and raised white letter tires.
T hi s new Bonnevi lle trade is a loca l·
ly owned automobile. Only 4, 1971ow,
low mi les.

1977 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
with Blue cloth lhrtii\inor, cruise
control, tilt wheel. rally wheels
and much more. If you are
looking for a sharp one, see this
one . Now.

PRICED ACCDf!DINGLY

'2495

'5495

1975 FORD RANGER

1978 PONTIAC

F-150
Th is truck ha s the long wide bed ,
two-to ne
pa int ,
aut omatic
transmission, power steer ing, power
brakes, V-8 engine, chrome m irrors,
rear step bumper and sport wheels
with Goodyear ra ised wh ite letter
tires . Locally owned. Pr iced to se ll.

'3595 .
I

GMAC AND BANK
FINANCING

SUNBIRD
Th is sporty compact is f inished
Chesterfield brown and has tan
bucket seats. Equi pped . with an
economical 4 cyl"inder automatic
transmission, power steering and

AM radio. Only

beauty -

10,755

miles on th is

We sold it new.

·•4995
1978 BUICK CENTURY
CUSTOM 4 DR.
M id night blu e exterior wi'th
contrasting cloth Interior. This
. locally owned new Buick trade Is

equiP.ped with V-B engine, air
conditioning, tilt steering wheel. AM
radio and radial tires.
Compare at

'3995

'5395

Sundar Shoppers Welcome
TO CHOOSE FROM Come In &amp; Browse Around
40 MORE

BUICK
PONTIAC
1911 Eastern Ave.

Phone 446-2282

Peeps. •

Gallipolis -

Pomeroy-Middlenort. -Ohio
Mondav . NovP.mber 27, 19711

•

e

•

at

enttne

Firteen Cents
Vol. 2!l, No. 157

Ill}. '1111 1·:1. /'l·:f/'!&lt;

GALLIPOLIS - Furresl Sullivan Borden, the new president
of the Gallia County Senior Citizens Center, was one of the 37
people who attended last Sunday's meeting of the Gallia County Historical Society inS!. Peter 's Episcopal Church.
He read thai "memory d~pa1tment " piece in tile Peeps coiwnn-Nuv. 12 at the bottom of Page A-2 , in which A. Don Pupe of
CARL CAMERON drew this picture of J . Samuel Peeps in
Florida wrote about Kid-&lt;&gt;-me-bub. Pope asked, " Who knew the act of peeping over a table top :
his real nam~ and where he lived'"
.
Bc•den, a nine-year-&lt;&gt;ld hoy at the time, knew Kid-orne-bub,
and cam~ up with the answers : the 11ame was John Hampton, TAXES SPURT
home values have risen
and he lived by the railroad tracks in Kanauga.
HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) - sharply. .
.
A recently completed state- Expected to be hardest hit
DONALD L. WINTERS is project manager for Ashland Oil mandated reappraisal every are Fairfield School District
Chemical division in Columbus. He went to college at Oberlin. six years shows Butler property owners where
Dun's.sister, Margi Rosales, is a school teacher in Durham, N. County property tax billa will voters approved two tax
C. Earl Dallas Winters is chemist for Bell Telephone increase about 25
levies totaling 7.45 milia in
laboratories in Allentown, Pa ., holder of the Ph. D. degree with the
the November election.
from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Young Ea rl was
one of two in Ohio who got the Standa rd Oil scholarship, which
paid his tuition at Ohio Wesleyan University fur four .years,
and then, on his own, be went on toM. T. for another six years.
These are the children of Earl T. Winters and Mrs. Winters,
whose home is across US 35 from the Sohio station, which is
.
located outside Gallipolis. Not as far outside the city as Crown
Ci ty, true, but still outside.
·
Not too lung ago old Earl and his wife visited Don in Germany, where Don was stt:Jlion ed at Wurms. Earl rented a car
and drove ali over Central Europe, a total of 3700 miles, in two
weeks' time,
Earl T. has made a living from his Sohio station and enough
to help three children through college and pay for a cation in
Europe, besides.

All 912 cult victims'
bodies returned home
DOVER AIR FORCE
BASE, Del. (UP!) ~ The
bodies of aU 912 victims of the
mass murder - suicide in
Guyana are back in the
United Sta tes - stacked
inside a freezing warehouse
- but the long process of
identification continues.
. Only 17 of the bodies, including that of the Rev. Jim
Jon es, Peoples Tem ple
leader, have been identified:
Army Maj. Brigham Shuler
said the identification
process will probably take
three weeks.

ELBERFEL

GIVE HIM . AROBE THIS YEAR

TIMOTHY HEMSWORTH , 26 , who was graduated from
Ohio's Miami University in 1974 , was the Gallipolis Blue
Devils' Most Valuable Player on the 1969 football team and
-rated aii.SEOAL tackle. He lettered at Wibningtun College as
a frestunan . Tim majored in businellS administration and now
is division manager of Prudential Insurance Cu., Cincimali.
He was un the UPI and AP second team all-Ohio in high school.
He is married to the former Ginger Elcessor.
Tim's sister TaJTuny , 19, is a sophomore at Ohio State
University, majoring in. education. AI Galli a Academy High
Sehoul she was .a varsity cheerleader for four years .
Their · parents . are Dun E. and Nonna Jean Harrison
Hemsworth.
· · ARMSTRONG IS A GOOD family name in the Crown City
· Rankin family. You find it in four generations. According to
. l:lardesly 's, the first was Armstrong Rankin, born 1797, died
1849. He and his wife, Hannah Dilley Rankin, died the same
ilay, July 18.
.
His son was Hiram Rankin , who came to Gallia County at 22
years uf age in 1840, was a fanner , cuunsc!ur-at-law, fur six
years justice of the peace, and for another six years mayor or
Crown City . Among the children uf him and Susan Drwnmund
Rankin was Vinton Armstrong Rankin, born 1843, died 1900.
This Vinton A. Rankin was a Civil War veteran.
\(in ton A. 's son was John Rankin, born 1872, died 1921.
His son was Vinton Armstrong Rankin , born 1896, died 1933.
The current, living Vinton Armstrong (Bub) Rankin was
born April21,1922. He, his father, and his greatgrandfather all
ht:Jvc the same name, Vinton A.'·Rankin.
Bub married Margaret Capper, granddaughter of John R.
Burcham, for years mayor of Cruwn ~i ty. A n i ne-~ear..uld '
grandson, Terry Michael Rankin II was born Aug .. 23; Terry
Michael! was born Aug. 24; and Basil C. Bailey, Jr., age 9, was
born Aug. 25. The Terry Michael Rankins; including threeyear-old Tommy, live at Gaha nn a. All the others reside in
Crown City : Cha riolie and her 9 year old daughter ' Lori Jo;
and Conni e Rankin Bailey, and her husband and two sons, one
of whom is William Vinton Bailey,...._age 7.

___

COMMUNITY TREE - The Community Christmas
tree is now in place in the upper Pomeroy parking lot. The

?f/edJta

e..

~·~

For-Eoslern Elegance ....... The wrap of luX\.JfV.
Van Heusen·s plush kimono lobe is a soft. machine wash end dry fabric of 80%Arne I· triacetate.
20% nylon. Smartly styled wllh contrast trim . One
size fils a ll. s22 .00 -Big selection· of colors.

.
I

Be sure . to see our selection of men's Van
Heusen pajamas
flannels, ·c otton
polyester blends-all sizes.

.

• Elberfelds In Pomeroy·

i

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••
••
I
•I
I

1

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L--······~---·····-J

Ude\fPress IDteruatloaal
Thirty-eight people were
killed in traffic accidents
around Ohio during the 102how-. ThankSgiving holiday
weekend - highest traffic
death toll during a holiday
weekend in the state this
year .
In addition , three people
died in a house fire in
Uhrichsville du ri ng the
Thanksg iving weekend ,
which began at 6 p.m .
Wednesday and ended at
midnight Sunday.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
said this weekend 's death toll
was double the number killed
during the July 4th ·holiday
weekend this year, which also
lasted 102 hours.
The victims died in 28
accidents, including one
triple fatality mishap and
.'eight doubles.

•

meetmg
conducted
The Alternatives Advisory
Board met. Nov. 20 at the
GaUia County Mental Health
Center, GaUl polls. Pat ArChairperson,
of
nold,
Pomeroy conducted the
business meeting.
There were seven board
members present including
one member from Jackson
County, one fr om Meigs
County and live members
from GaUia County. The four
Alternatives Staff members
· were also present. The group
was pleased to have as a
guest Andrew Gilmore who ls
a member of FOCUS, a local
civic organization of Gallia
Couniy.
Much of the meeting
consisted of disc ussion ,
centered around current
projects in progress. The
Alternatives Staff of the
Gillla - ·.Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center is available for
various presentations to local
organizations; information
packets outlining these
presentations
were
distributed to the Board
members.
Since the board will not
meet during the month of
December,
the · next
!ICheduled meeting will be on
January 15, at 7:30 p.m. at
the GaUia Community Mental
Health
Center.
Area
residents are welc-ome .

.

'·

KINGSBURY
HOMES PARTS
&amp; ACCESSORIES CENTER
~IATURINCi:

major thrust of one of the
most obvious parts of this
mission is over. "
He said activity at the air
base now will focus on the
huge mortuary.
The identification process
is being conducted mainly
through fin ge rprin ting,
Shuler said. So far, 441 bodies
have been fingerprinted as
the mortuary team rushed to
get prints befo re the bodies
decompo sed too badly.
Timot hy Washin gton, a
New York 8uto mechanic,
traveled to Dover by car
Sunday to try to find the

As of today , students of the for payment and the financial mittee to study lhe facilities
Sout hern Local School and activity fund statements. of the distriet in compliance
District are entitled to one A more "reasona ble" policy with rehabilitati on act
excused personal day during ·on high school attendance requirements in regard to
a school year.
was adopted upon the handicapped students.
This perso nal day for recommendation of Principa l
Necessary transfers ano.
student s was approved James Adams.
activity fund budget was
Friday night when the board
:rbe board approved a leave approved.
met in reg ular session. of absence for Mrs. Pauline
'lbe next regular meeting
Principal approval will be Hill , a teacher, for t ne was set for Dec. 19. Attending
required prior to the persomil remainder of the school year. were Dallas Hill , president ;
day taken by each student.
Mrs. Lee Lee and Mrs. Davie Nease, vice president,
The board approved bills Stephanie Ash were added to and Shi rley John son and
the substitute teachers list Betty W&lt;;I gner , members.
and Kirk a nd Charles
Willi3ms were a pproved as
PARADE TONIGHT
tuition students.
:rbe annual parade lo
Supt . Bob Ord was
SQUAD RUNS
weleome In lbe Christmas authorized to form a com·
The
Pomeroy emergency
season will be held at
tree was donated by Scott Folmer, Rl . 3, Pomeroy. Ughts
squad
answered a call to
Middleport .Ibis evenin~. .
and decorations are scheduled to be placed on the tree by
West
Main
St., at II :55 p.m.
Unils will move at 6: 3&amp;
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce in the near future.
FIFE
TRANSFERRED
Paul Dodson
Saturday
for
p.m. from tbe Gateway
Steven
Fife,
Middleport,
who
was
tak
en
to Veterans
parking lot through the
in
a
hunting
where he
seriously
injured
Memorial
Hospital
business section. SanIa will
accident near Dexter Friday was admitted as a medical
be In the drive lbrough
patient.
section of tbe Citizens morning has been moved to
in
Children's
Hos
pital
Just after that call, the
National Bank to distribute
squad
moved· fr om the
treats to youncsters Columbus from Veterans
Lorail\: J ames F. Love, 75,
to
the home of Mrs.
hospital
LOnnie L. Buttera, 22, Mingo
Memori•
l
Hospital
where
he
following tbe parade.
Junction, killed when hit by a and Eva A. Love, 64, both of
wa
s
taken
following
the
Homer.
Cooper,
Mulberry
Foliowlng tbe parade
Heights. Mrs. Cooper was
vehicle on Ohio 43 in Wakeman, killed in a two-car
accident.
He
is
th
e
son
of
Mr.
Middleport merchants will
crash on Ohio 303 in Lorain
Jefferson County.
moonUght sale of- and Mrs. Roscoe Fife, taken · to Holz er Medi ca l
slage
Center.
Middleport.
Uhrichsville : Cindy Harig, County .
fering special bargains for
Friday
8, brother carl, 5, and sister
the evening.
Columbus: Thomas Fallon ,
Sozy, 18 months, in a fire at
19, and Barbara Spurlock, 29,
their home .
both
of Columbus, when the
Akron: Joseph Klein, 20,
car
in
whlch they were riding
Akron, when his car hit a
utility' pole on South Main plunged over a bridge on
Street just outside the Akron Columbus' south side.
city limits.
Bellefontaine : Merr il
Lima: Willie J. Reeder, 18, Tevis, 23, and Vernon Epley ,
Lima, in a two-car cr(;JSh on a 2, both of Lakeview, and
Nicole
Ostrander,
20,
Lima street.
Members of many families numerous other fa milies who
Warren: Irwin G. Haney, Elkhart, Ind., in an auto
The · Meigs County REACT today tend to "do their own share their enthusiasm for
79, Warren, in a two-car collision on U.S. 33 in Logan team will be accepting new thing" and as a result
the hobby .
mishap on a Warren street. County .
members and renewing old individuals many times go in
Folmer uses his garden
Montp e li er: John memberships at a meeting to
Columbus : Th omas C.
opposite dir ectio ns. An tractor to do every day yard
Holiday, 26, Columbus, in a Armstrong, 22, Blakly, in a be held at 7:30 _p .m. Friday
exception,
in
today ' s
two·car collision on a car crash on a Williams at the Senior Citizens Center thoroughly modern life style, chores and generally does
these chores on tl)e day
County road .
Columbus street.
in Pomeroy.
how ever, is the James preceding a competition just
Saturday
Anyone who is 18 or older Folmer fa mily of near to make sure his equipment is
Warren: Ronald A. Bash, who is a C.B. radio operator
Pomeroy.
functioning well. His tractor
38, Warren, in a one-car · may sign up at the center
The Folmers &lt;~do their own is capable of dragging some
acc ident on a Trumbull Friday evening.
thing ," fortunately, their 4,400 pounds.
County road near Warren.
Beginning Jan . I, all thing is tractor pull ing
At times, Mr. and Mrs.
Lancaster : Peter A. Karsh- members will be covered by a competition. The reason they
Folmer
find themselves
ner, 25, Lancaster, in a one- new liability insurance like the hobby is that it is an
competing
with each other
car accident. on a Fairfield coverage plus each member
activity in which each family and at times he has lost to
¢ County road.
can obtain a personal group member can participate.
her. But, what the heck, it's
\
Springfield: Jack P. acci dent insurance for a
The Folmers started in aU in the' family!
~ Manns, 30, Springfield, in a
small fee. Members would be garden tractor competition in
Tractor pulling is divided
one-auto crash on a city covered if they were insured 1972 when their daughter,
into
various classes and there
street.
doing REACT work.
Cheryl was only five. Not only are three kinds of pulls. A
·Dayton: Sandra L. Brooks,
Dues for membership are have they won 16 trophies in
29, Centerville, and her son $5 a year for men ; $3 for their travels to the various "tug" is when a weighted sled
. Shawn, 7, in a three~ar pile- wives a nd $3 for others in the events, but they've ·met is pulled from a dead stop. In
DAYS TO
the "western style ," weight is
. up on U.S. 35 in Montgomery same household. AU dues for
CHRISTMAS
(Continued on page 10)
membership are sent to
headquarters in .Chicago.
In
the
past
year ,
monitoring station homes
received hundreds of calls
and have helped many who
were in need on the highways
as well as in other locations.

Ohio had 38 traffic deaths
VAN HEUSEN ®

A team of mOrticians and
fipgerprint experts worked
around the clock Sunday to
process the bodies as hundreds of relatives called,
trying to find their family
members.
A C-141 landed Sunday
from Georgetown, Guyana,
with the last 183 bodies which
were unloaded from the belly
of the plane and stacked
ins ide
the
freezin g
warehouse.
Shuler said with the arrival
with the last shipment of
bodies from Guyana "the

Southern board okays
student personal day

'

ILLUSTRATED HISTORICAL and Business Review of
Meigs and Gallia Counties , Ohio , for the Year 1891. That's the
full title of a paperback bOok own.!~ by Edith Gilkey. While
we're gving full names, Edith's is Edith Marie Ables Gilkey.
The date of this book is the year her mother, Nellie Victoria
Capehart Ables, was born. Jan . 15.
Pages one through 182 are about Meigs County._Pages 183
through 221are about Gallia County.
Page 207 .has a four·paragfaph History of Tlu· f ;;,1/il'"/i.~ .hwr""'• "first issued in the year 1818,' then caiie&lt;jthe Gallia Free .
Press, edited by Joshua Cushing." J ames Harper, Sr., changed the name to The Gallia Gazette prior to 1831..
Page 97 tells the story of journalism in Middleport, starting
whh the first issue of the \liddf,.1,orl I ;ll:f•llr • Nov. 1, 1865, D. D.
W. Davis the publisher,
Page 75 gives the biography of Elmer S. Trussell , editor and
proprietor of the u,.;,l..'.~ t:,.,u.,_
,. "J', . ,,,~-tr"''"· However, this
biography does not give the date this Pomeroy newspaper was
started.

SAVE$$$ . Advisory
Stunning Midnight Blu• Finish .

Firethorn wi th m ntchi ng landau
top, AM FM tap!', cr uise control
c, nd dr iven only 11 ,354 mi les . Ex ·
pee l th e best .

A r.-allivolis Diary

•

TWO ASPHYXIATED
Two Gallla County brothers
were found. dead Sunday
afternoon at their home on SR
233 near Cadmus. Dr. Edward Berkich, acting Gallia
County coroner, · r uled
Woodrow q,apman , 45, and
Gerald Chapman, 31, died
from axphyxiation from
fumes from a gas stove.

Wednesday"Night ·
Cleveland: Mat hew L.
Gaudreau, 21 , Cleveland,
when the car he was riding in
collided with a train at a ·
suburban Brook
Park
. railroad crossing.
Ri c hmond Hei g ht s :
Pamela Diehl, 17, Ashtabula,
in an Ashtabula County
·
automobile crash.
Thursday
Toledo ; Cecil Quint.enilla,
21, Toledo, in a two-car
accident on a Toledo street.
Columbus : Sam Tayror Jr.,
29, Columbus, in a onevehicle crash in Columbus.
Findlay : Rene Mosley, 18,
Toledo, and Dan L. Frantz,
29, Arlington, in a two-vehicle
crash on U.S. 68 in Hancock
County.
Steubenville: Carl J .
Tiziani, 30, Bri lliant and
SQUA D CALLED
The emergency unit of the
Middleport F ire Department
was called to the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene at
7:41 p.m. Sunday for Mrs.
Nellie Cox, Laurel Cliff, who
.was tak en to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
At 10 :15 p.m. Sat urday, the
squad was called to Maple St.
for Tonya Will who was ill.
She was al$o taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

MOBILE HOME HEATING SYSTEM
WOODBURNING CIRCULATORS

React team
accepting
new members

bodies of his 83 -y ear-old
mother, a brother, sister, and
three nieces and nephews,
but returned home after Air
Force and State Department
officials told him it was too
soon to know if his relatives
were am0ng the 912 dead.
Shuler said the mortuary
team , composed of FBI
fingerprint specialists and
civilian and military mor·
ticians, called on the Air
Force mortuary office in
Washington, D. C., and Ft.
Lee, Va., for help. The Armed
Forces Institute bf Pathology
also sent patholog ists to
assist and the full team now
numbers more than 100.
The task of fingerprinting
the
bodies
sometimes
requires team members to
remove the skin from l he
victim's fingers slip in on
their own gloved hand, ink it,
and press it on two cards .
After fingerprinting, the
bodies , encased in green
viny l bags, are placed in
eig ht refrigerated truck s
parked behind the Dover Air
Force Base Mortuary - the
largest on the east eoast.
Shuler said Jones' body is
in a van and ha s not been
emba lmed yet and State
Depa rtment officia ls said the
bod ies which cannot be
identified may be cremated
instead of embalmed.
Sh uler said he has been
trying to maintain the dignity
due the dea d and their
relatives.
"I'm not thinking bodies,
I'm thinking people," he said.
The cost of shipping the
bodies from Dover to their
hometowns must be born e by
relatives of the victims.
CLOTHING DAY SET
Gallia -.Meigs Community
Action will hold its free
clothing day for low income
persons on Thursday, Nov .
30, from 9 a.m. until noon.
The agency clothing hank is
loca ted in the old high school
bu ilding in Cheshire.

Folmer family loves
tractor pull events
added while the sled is being
dragged and the 'speed pull"
involves a weight transfer
with the tractor moving at
full tilt.
Mechanical fail ures do
happen. One season, the
Folmers lost three rear-end
tra nsmissions. However ,
they keep a tractor in reserve
in case of such mishaps.
The family has taken part
in competition at the Gallia,
Noble,
Mason .
Wood,
Washinglon and Noble
County Fairs as well as pulls
at Lost Creek, W. Va ., Dart,
Ohio and other locations.
Belie ving ,
to o,
in
community service , Folmer
for several years, has pulled
the various parade entries of
the Five Points Star Stitchers
4-H Club.

Weather

PWS: MANY HOME ACCESSORIES

Occasional rain tonight,
mixed with or
changing to snow nurrles by
Tuesday. Lows tonight will be
in the low 30s. Cloudy, windy
and cold Tuesday:
be~omin g

• Window sealer
-• Tub sealer
• Faucets
• Oversize load signs
• Storm door Hdwe.
• Windaw cranl(s
. • Roof jaclls
~ Bathroom accessories
• Electric furnace
·• Water heating elements
• Furnace filters
• Duct tape
• Roof coating
·• Anchors &amp; straps
• Awnings by Urban
• Ughts ·
0
::H~ea;.,t_t_a..:pe_s_ _ _ _ _..,
• Clutch head screwdr-r:...:iv..:e::..rs=-----::~

S~PIN
]
•ECT.MOBILE HOME OWNERSII

l

KINGSBURY HOMES PARTS
&amp; ACCESSORIES CENTER
Located in the Former OVI's
Eg~s Building in Minersville,

sPECIAL FOOTBALL AWARDS- Ellstern's SV AC ·
ci\Bmplons were honnred at the school's•banquet Saturday ·
niRht. Special awards were presented to Mike Hayman,
oul8tanding Uneman ; Randy .Keller, most improved

player; Dan Spencer, captain's award and Randy
Browning , outstanding back. They. are flanked by head
coach Joe Mitchem. See story and pictures on Page 3.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through
Friday, cold ani\ a chance
of snow Wednesday, with
hlgba ranglug from the
middle 30s to the lower 4ls
and lows from the upper
teena to the mid 20.. A Utile
warmer and a chance of
snow Thursday and
Friday, with highs from the
upper 30s to the upper 40s
and lows from the middle
211!1 ' ' the lower 30s.

FAMILY HARDWARE - Mr. and Mrs. James Folmer and da~hter, Cheryl, are
shown with the 16trophies they've won in garden tractor pulling contests in the area .

�2--The Daily S.ntinel, Mitldh•p" rl -Pomcroy. 0 .. Mmnlay . Nuv . ~1. ln7R

showed.
THISTLEDOWN
'
Call Me Country and Hasta -~
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
lUP I ) - Jockey Bennie Larista returned $209.60 on ·'•
Am the 2-2 daily double, and there. *•
Feliciano
guided
•
Reasonable to victory in were 11 winning tickets on the
•
6-7-3
grouping
of
Snapy
Boy,
•
Sunday 's featured ninth race
Mytato and Harbour Boss in
at Thistledown .
.:.
Am Reasonable, in picking the ·lOth race trifecta - each · ;.
up her second straight win at worth $6,761.70.
'"'
Attendance. was 5,264 and
the track, covered the six
furlongs in I : 12 3-5 over a the handle totaled $678,199.
muddy oval to pay $13.20,
BEULAH
$8 .60 and $6.20. Swirlin Sue
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!)
pla ced and Wittle Away - Tmi's Toi won the $5,800
'}ahanna Handicap for 2.---------"'l' yearolds at Beulah Race":ay .' "'
TIII&lt;:.I&gt;AILY SENT IN EI.
~nday , coming from behind
O&gt;CVOTEOTOTIIF.
O catch the leaders and
INTF.RESTOF '
MF.lc.s-MASON ,\REI\
eaving Pete 's F'1rs t I "7'
lt(IHtCRT IIOEI'I.ICII
lengths l)ehind .
t:il\' Editor
·
1 DeLa
il ted
l 'u hl 1 slw~l · .laily exl'C IJl S..t ur~u~·
Kimber Y
w:a P 0 .
' '
u~ Tlw Ohiu VHtlt·y Puhll!!l mlg
Toni 's Toi over the SlX
6 tll {panv-Mu ltilm&gt;tll a, Ilk: . ,
It ~
furlon gs in 1 : 11 3~5, for
Cum·t St., Pumcl'uy, DhltJ ~57ti!l1
d
.'
H usm l·~s Offk-u Phtmc !¥11· 2\ati.
payoffs of $6.60, $3 .40 an
F:tlltu•·l al Pholll·Wt·l l57
$2 80 Scioto Kid came jn
s ,.1 untl d uss posta~:c pcwJ ill
thll': d·.

II WASHINGTON

How top

..••

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

NEW YORK ( UPI) -

Wh1te's tack lacks tact
lly Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA J · A simmering rebellion by grass-.
roots activists could blow the lid off the Democrats'
nudterm conference in Memphis next month unless party
leaders agree to relax the procedural constraints they
have put on the conclave.
As presently constituted, both the rules and the agenda
for the Dec. 8-10 mini-convention virtually preclude any
efledive challenge of President Carter's programs and
policies by the 1,261 voting delegates. ,
.
Indeed, the procedures and schedule are so tightly
drawn that there will be only a few hours set aside for a full
conference debate on issues and resolutions, with little
chance that any proposal not cleared in advance by party
leaders can win approval on the floor.
The Democratic National Committee leadership, under
the dire;ction of President Carter's hand-picked chairman .
J ohn White, quietly rigged the Memphis fonnat earlier this
year while party reformers were busy lighting a separate
battle over 1980 delegate selection procedures.
By the time the liberals woke up, most of them were so
deeply involved in various 1978 campaigns that they had
11etther tune nor energy to worry about Memphis. But
since the elections, the reform activists have started to
loc us on the mid-term conference, and they don't like what
they see.
11te Democratic · Conference, a loose-knit umbrella
orga~ization of va':i~us unions and Iibera] groups, is
seckmg enough petition signatures !rom Memphis delegates to force a showdown with the DNC -over the
conference fules and agenda.
A separate but similar. coalition, the Democratic
Agenda, is likewise collecting signatures in an effort to
assure a floor debate over resolutions that would reiterate
the Democratic Party's conunitment to a number of
. programs and policies tbat lvere in the 1976 party platform
but have been ignored or modified by Carter and Congress.
As the rules now stand, the only way to obtain floor
consideration of a resolution that has not been previously
approved by the DNC executive committee is to submit before the start of the Memphis conference - petitions
sig11ed by one-fourth of the delegates.
It would be relatively easy to gain that many signatures
once all the delegates have assembled in Memphis; it is
much harder to collect them in advance by mail. But even
if the dissident coalitions succeed in obtaining the
necessary signatures, their proposals will be the last order
of business at the conference - on Sunday afternoon, when
most delegates will be rushing to catch {Ilanes home.
Smce no resolutton can be passed wtthout a majority
vote of all delegates, not merely those present when the
balloting begins, Carter loyalists can easily prevent any
embarrassment to the president simply by leaving the
hall .
Democratic Conference leaders have tried to persuade
White and other DNC officials to loosen the rules and
schedule voluntarily, but White thus far has declined, ·
insisting that party members who want a chance to debate
issues will have ample opportunity to do so.
" I want this to be a substantive, party-building conferent'C, not a forum for every frustrated loser from the last
election,'' White said in an interview. ''I don't favor seeing
lhis thing turned into a wrangle of speeches , an exercise in
rhetoric."
Given the ideological disarray within the Democratic
Party, especially among liberals, the prospects are
actually remote that Memphis delegates would agree on
any kind of resolution that repudiates or even embarrasses
Carter.
But 10 years of party refonn have left their mark on the
·Democrats, and accustomed most ol them to openness and
relative freedom in their offiCial gatherings.
A good many delegates with no great interest in
challenging Carter or his policies may take umbrage at
White's efforts to forestall such challenges by procedural
restraints and rebel against the chainnan on those grounds
alone.

Health Review
By Dr. Lamar Miller
OU ColleJle ,o f Osteopathic Medicine
.Usoclate Professor of Family Medicine
Ohio University College of Osleopathic Medicine
CARCINOGENS -PART I
During the decade ol the 1970s there has been an
increasing amount of scientific research -and resultant news
stories- about environmental causes of cancer. Because of
the large number of these studies and an unwillingness .or
inability on the part of the news media to differentiate those
which indicate a serious threat from those showing only the
most marginal link with cancer, the general public has been
left in a state of confusioo . Many people have reacted to this
confusion by simply ignoring aU reports about chemical
carinogenity. What, though, should an intelUgentperson do? In
the next few weeks l'U try to suggest a few of the answers.
Question: Are we really living in an envirorunent
con taminated by cancer producing agents?
Answer : UnfortU118tely, the words of the late F .D.R. best
swrunarize my attitude regarding this subject. "The biggest
U1 ings we bave to fear is fear itself." ,u frequently as we hear
of Ute multiple fadors which can produce cancer in the air we
breathe and the food we eat, it is certainly easy to understand
U1e root ol many misunderstandings. A person should only be
burdened with real fears - based on scientific probability .
Unfcctunately , most noo.medical and even non-research
medica l people are not able to decide which carcinogens really
puse a significant threat and which do not. Furthermore, even
a reliance on sound statistics can be misleading. For instance,
ooly ooe out of every 25 Americans who died in 1900 died of
cancer, and by 1976 about one in every five was dying of the
disease.
It is also true U!at one out of ·every four people now living
will develop cancer sometime in his or her lifetime. From
Utese statistics it might be assumed that cancer was on the
increase. However, there is another side ol the story. Life
expectancy has climbed from 48 years in 1900 to 68 years for
males and 76 years for females in 1976. People in the early 20th
century died ol scarlet fever, diphtheria, TB, and pneumonia
before they were old enough to be in the cancer-prone years.
Remember, the incidence of cancer in most cases increases as
we grow older. Also, contemporary diagnoses are able to
del&lt;!ct cancer much earlier and more accurately due to more
sophisticated and more readily available meUiods. Though the
incidence of many cancers has increased, C811Cer of the uterus
and cancer of the stomach have actually decreased. Cancer of
the lung has more than counteracted this statistic, however,
because of Its rapid increase. This increase most probably is
due to the horrendous increase -In cigarette smoking since
World War I.

I

!

J

Questloo : I have heard that 00 to 90 percent of cancer is
envirorunentally induced. Is this true'
Answer: This figure ha~ been placed at anywhere from 60
to 90 !"'rcent. However, this percentage includes smoking and
improper dietary habits which cause 60 to 70 percent of all
cancer deaths. Other envirorunental !actors include alcohol ( 1
to 3 percent), poot sexual hygiene (I to 5 percent), as well as
sunlight and alomic testing rlldiation (I to 5 percent). Simple
arithmetic Indicates that not much is left for "other
carcinogens." I would not wish to encoutage a false sense of
security, however, sL"lce there are proven slrong carcinogens
in our environment which we can do something about. I will be
discussing these In the next couple of articles.

weekend , Nov . 2.4 -25 :
1. Penn St . (JJ .QJ

•-

I

2. Alabama (9 · 1l was idle .
3. Oklahoma ( 10-1) was
idle .

4. So . Calif . ClO -ll
Notre Dame 27 -25.

h.

F.uditL\ vr.,Clevcland ,Ohiu44ll5.
Subsenption rates: Ddivl'rl'tl by

~·ut't1l' r wlll'l'l' ;walliiblt• i'S n ·nts 1~1 '
Wl'l'k. By Mutur H11ulr when.• Cii l'!'ler

"Sire! The gentlemen from the Hill wish to bargain on your legislative
program ... What is your pleasure?"

.-«.•rvll'l' not &lt;JY:Iih•Llll', One ll'l{.llltl\,
$:1.;!5. Ry m Ul l in Ohio ~mJ w. Va.,
OIW YCHI', $2'.!.00: SIX llliJIIlhs,
Sll .SO. TIH't'&lt;' munths, $7.00:
f.lst•wltcru $2~ .00 yea r : St."&lt; muntll::i
$1.1 .50; T hr ee munlh .~.; $7.5Q,

Ohio State 14 -3.
7. Nebraska (9 ·2· was idle .
8. Notre Dame (8 -3) lost to

So . Calif . 27 ·25 .

SulJ sl'riptil lll vrit:t: md mles Su nda}'

~

Tunt:;..&amp;ntinl'l.

Have you submitted your story???
By Margaret Parker
2143; Pat Lochary, 992-2802;
Meigs Museum
Mrs. Duane Stanley , 742-3127;
Coordinator
Ben Philson, 949-2771 ; Don
Have you submitted your Ad leta, 992-6040 ; Charles
story to the Meigs Hist ory Blakeslee , 992-2 304;
Book' If not, the deadline is Margaret Parker, 992-2264;
only a little more than a week June Ashley, 247-2344; Mrs.
away. We need your story, Howard Knight, 985-3936;
now!
Mrs. Wilber Parker , 985-3890 ;
Special
pages
for Mary Lew Johnson, 247-2152 ;
memorial, tribute and Ernest Wingett, 949-2441; or
business are available for Mrs. Fred B. Smith, 985-3360.
purchase in the book., Gift
These pages, memorial and
certifieiates lor a copy of the tribute, can tell in detail the
book when it is published story of a particular relative
would make wonderful who has played an important
part in your family 's history .
Christmas gilts.
If you are interested in any In your family story, you will
of these, contact a township be telling about yourself,
representative, or a member your children, parents, and
ol the book committee listed grandparents; but you may
as follows : Rosalie Story, 992- not have the chance to say as
5944 ; Keith Ashley, 985-3897; mu ch about the special
Mrs. Clifford Hayes, 985-3503; person( s) as you might like .
A memorial or tribute
Mrs. Mendal Jordan, 6932282; Bill McKelvey , 843- page(s)
. provide
the
2111 ; Eula Wolfe, 247-3638; • opportunity to tell this
Norma Newland, 667-3271 ; person's full story.
Leona Hensley and Mae
Thousands ol people will be
McPeek, 985-3320; Agnes Hill, reading this book since it will
667-3183 ; Vernon Weber , i42-

be handed down from
generation to generation .
These memorial pages will
allow us words and pictures
to memorialize our. loved
ones.

Tributes can be written
about any living relative or
friend. You will want to tell
the
person ' s
about
accomplishments, and tell
why this person is special to
you or your family's history.
These pages are an excellent
way to surprise your mother
or father, or a sister or
brother by writing tribute to
them and sharing with others

SANTA'S MOONLIGHT SALE

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Press lateroatloual
King Edward VIII of England abdicating to marry American
divorcee Wallis Simpson. Never mind that it all happened 42
years ago - it'sstill a hot topic in Britain, and the former Mrs .
Simpson says she 'll publish ber old love letters now in defense
of her honor. The 82-year-&lt;!ld Dutchess of Windsor is upset over
a London TV series her Paris lawyer says portrays her as "a
cheap adventuress" who became the king's mistress before
their marriage. Says attorney Suzanne Blum, "The king did
not want a mistress and if he had, no doubt he would not have
abdicated ." Expect publication of letters purporting to prove
Utat within a year.
ANOTHER KING ABDICATES: At 35, she's considered the
''Old Lady " of pro tennis, and Billie Jean King finally is buying
the tiUe . She says after this season, she's through. Ms. King
told UP!, after a weekend match in Sydney, Australia , she's
quitting because, ''I am sick and tired of all the surgery I have
been through. " That includes major operations on both koees,
with another coming up on her left foot, which was heavily
taped for Australian action .
DOLLY NOT PARTIN' :'It's a long way from Tennessee to
the City of Light and Dolly Parton wanted to look her best for
the visit. So she boarded an Air France flight lor Paris last
week in Amsterdam with a garment bag full of her big city
duds - only to be told she'd have to stow it in the baggage
compartment. Unflapped, the country music queen bought
another ticket ·and the precious bag became her traveling
companion - strapped into the seat beside her. First class, of
course. She still has a silll:!oncert tour of Britain on the
calendar, but don't head roc London . There isn' t a seat left
Utere.
TINSELTOWN PARADE : More than 300,1100 people lined
Hollywood Boulevard Sunday to cheer grand marshall Bob
Hope as he led the 47th Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade
with a casting echo of the old road shows. Just behind him rode
his favorite leading lady, Dorothy Lamour. Among star
clusters in and around the 28 floats - Connie Stevens, Ernest
Borgnine, Sugar Ray Robinson, Danny Thomas, Dan
Haggarty , Charo, Aretha Franklin, Angie Dickinson, Don
DeFore, Jackie Cooper, Margaret O'Brien , Steve Allen, Jayne
Meadows, Jack Klugman, Lindsay Wagner, Earl Holliman,
Ben Vereen, Cindy Williams, Ida Lupino, Janet Leigh, Patty
Duke Astin and dozens more ~ including, ol course, Santa
Claus .
GLIMPSES: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis threw a joint
birtbday party for daughter Caroline, 21, and son John , 18,
Sunday night at New York's Le Club, with invitations for
family members only ... Mary Frances Crosby, 19-year-&lt;!ld
daughter of the late Bing Crosby, married 27-year-&lt;~ld music
publisher Eb Lottimer Friday in front of their new beachfront
home in Malibu, Calif ... The rock group Grateful Dead was
forced to cancel a New Haven, Conn., concert Saturday after
lead singer Jerry Garcia came down with pneumonia ...
Richard Harris says in Johannesburg, South Africa, he'll file a
multimillion dollar countersuit. a~ainst film director Andre
Pieterse who is suing him for $1.6 million, accusing him of
being drunk and tying up production on the film "Golden

American historian
Charles Beard was born Nov .
27, 1874.
On this day in' history :
1901,
the
War
In
Department authorized
creation of the J\,nny War
College to instruc~ commissimed officers.
In i945, President Harry
Truman named Gen. George
Marshali
specia!
representative to China.

..

......
••
'
.

SHOULD HAVE READ
6:30 PM TIL 9 PM

· ~

IN SUNDAY'S .PAPER

The Heritage House

.....

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LOT OF
EXTRA
SPECIAL
GIFTS!

Hayman, Randy Browning, Don Eynon . Back row, Dan
Spencer, Randy Keller, Bryan White and Greg Guinther .
Greg Bailey photo.

By Greg Dalley
EAST MEIGS _: Three
team champions were
honored Saturday night when
more than 300 persons packed

Eastern High School's dotes, speaker Robert Mills
gymnasium for the fall sports praised the SVAC champion
banquet.
Eastern football team, the
In a brief pointed talk, sectional finalist girls'
spiced with humorous anec- volleyball team, and the

junior high football team that
went 6-0 on the season.
After a smorgasbord-type
meal of ham and roast meal,
Mills presented his talk

By Greg Bailey
The Eastern Eagles operi
their 1973-79 cage campaign
tomorrow night by entertaining the Waterford
Wildcats.

Head Coach John Boston, in
his first year at the helm of
the Eagles, has an optimistic
outlook on this year's team .
With six lettermen and
three starters back !rom last

will take the SV AC crown. In
the league preview last. week ,
Eastern fell to Hannan Trace
24-23, but scored 11 field goals
to Hannan Trace's 6.

year's 1-17 squad, the Eagles
could be as strong as anyone
in the SVAC.
Boston looks for a balanced
league this year and !eels the
team which wins on the road

Rio ·.Grande captures second
straight Lions Tournament
Rio Grande's tenacious
defensive play and clutch
free throw shooting by 5-&lt;i
sophomore guard Vincent
Phelpa carried the Redmen to
their second consecutive Rio
Grande Lions Invitation
Tournament championship at
' Lyne Center Sunday af,ternoon .
The host team, down 40-38
during the halftime intermission, came storming
back In the second half to post
an 86-78 triumph over the
PlkevUle, Ky. College Bears.
In Sunday's consolation
battle, Dyke College captured
third place honors with a 10186 victory over West Virginia
Tech.
Rio Grande gained the
finals Saturday night by
edging West Virginia Tech,
8G-85. Pikeville won its
Qpener, downing Dyke, 75-58,
in Saturday's nightcap .
Rio Grande held a 47-37
halftime lead over Tech
Saturday night and maintained anywhere from a five
to seven point advantage
until the final minute ol play.
Dale Royse's two charity
tosses with 11 seconds left
In that coolest gave the
; Redmen an lli-83 lead. Tech
, scored at the buzzer.
·For Rio Grande, Dan
Purchell dropped In 27 points,
Dan Bise 18 and Vince Phelps
14. Will Hall led the losers
with 23 markers.
In Sunday's championship
contest, the lead exchanged

hands eight times and the
score was tied on 12 different
occasions before the Redmen
went on top to stay.
The Bears' biggest advantage was ei~ht points 34-26 - with 3:57 left in the
first hall. Rio's pressing
defense forced Pikeville into
a number of turnovers,
permitting the Redmen to
knot the count at 38-all on two
charity tosses by Mark Swain
with 29 seconds left in the
half.
David Rowe's goal at the
12-second mark gave the
Bears a 40-38 halftime lead.
Swain opened second half
scoring with a driving layup
and Purcell popped in a long
jumper from the corner with
18:58 left to put Rio on top to
stay. The Bears tied it at 48all with 16:40 left, but then
fell behind by nine - 58-49 with 11:31 showing on the
clock after Purcell's jumper.
That was Rio's bigg est
spread.
· The Bears pulled to
within one point, 62-61, on a
goal by Mike George with
7:22leflln the game. II was
66-S5 with 4:OS left and 68-67
at the 3:45 mark before
Phelps began stepping to
the charity line.
Phelpa hit six of eight free
throw attempts during the
final three minutes ol play.
Driving layupa by Royse, and
Purcell, and free throws by
Swain and Purcell put the
game out of reach in the final

Bobcats lose
~opener, 52-47

I

. Portsmouth Notre Dame eight at the foul line . Ports)lurvived a late third period mouth N. D. hit 22 of 70 from
rally . by Kyger Creek theJL~r . and 10 of 19 at the .
Saturday night to down the charity line.
;visiting Bobcats, 52-47 In a
Junior guard Greg Smith
lion-conference battle.
was credited with 11 assists
,.; Trailing 32-23 with 4:53 left for the Bobcats.
'1n the third quarter, Coach
Notre Dame took the
Keith Carter's Bobcats ·reserve tilt, 55-25. Joe Miller
:icored eight unanswered netted 16 for the winners
,'POints after going Into a man- while David Sanda had 10 for
~o-man press. The game
the Bobkittens.
:continued to be a one-two
Tuesday night, Kyger
:Point affair until Kyger Creek Creek goes to Southwestern
·was forced to foul in the for a non-conference game.
closing minutes.
Box Score
' Von Taylor, 5-11 guardKyger Creek 147) - West'torward led all scorers for the fa ll 2-0-4; Taylor 12-1-25 ;
:&amp;beats with 25 points. Steve Smllh 1-0-2; Van Sic kle 1-0-2;
'Harris and Jim Schmidt Springer 1-0-2; Thompson 6-0·
Totals 23-1-47 .
::topped Notre Dame with 16 12.Portsmouth
N. D. l5 2l 1and 12 points respectively. Mantell 4-1-9; J. Schmidt 4-4·
t Jon Thompson, 6-6 Bobcat 12; King 2-2-6; Harris 8-0-16;
~ter, scored 12 points and Fisher 3-2·8; P. Schmidt 0·1-1
Ferguson 1-0-2. Totals 22·
:(p'abbed 13 of the 'Csts' 35 and
10-52.
:rebounds,
By Quarters :
· Kyger Creek sank 23 of 53 ·KC
12 8 13 14- 47
floor attempts and only one of Ports. N.D. 13 16 6 17- 52

'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT STREET
POMEROY, 0.
PHONE 992-2156

[fj~~~~~ ·~
,,
J

'

M ichigan U -3.
15. UCLA. (8 -3) was idl e .
16. Maryland {9 ·21 was idle .
17. M issouri [7 .4) was idle .
18 . Sto!lnford (7 ·4) was id le .
19. Pu r due 18 -2-11 beat
Indiana 20 ·1.
20. Iowa St . lB 31 was idle .

I,

VOLLEYBALL RECOGNIZED - Trophies were presented to senior members of the
Eastern girls volleyball squad. Seniors receiving trophies were Dawn Sorden, Vida Weber,
Janet Brooks and Lauri Matthews. Absent was Debbie Barringer .

awards t o the junior high
cheerleaders.
The
senior
hig h
cheerleaders were presented
awards by •Avis Jackson who
also presented special cheerleading awards.
Receiving the trophy lor
most o ut standing chee rleade r was Betsy Rillle ,
Karen Probert received the
most spirited award, Sherrie
Starcher received th e most
Starters back from last
improved varsity cheeryear are play maker guard
leader award, and Jan Smith
Jeff Goebel, junior guard
was presented the trophy for
Brian Bissell and senior
most improved reserve.
forward Dan Spencer. The
In the absence ol Coach
center post is really the only
Su sa n Thompson , a thletic
spot vacant from last year. It
director
Joe
Mitchem
will be filled by one ol three
presented awards to the girls'
candidates:· 6'1" senior Keith
volleyball team that comWolfe, 6'2" sophomore Jue
piled 11~ record, 9~ in th e
Bowers, or 5'11" senior Don
SVAC. The reserve foot ball
awards were than presented
Eynon.
Starting Tuesday night's
by Coach Arch Rose .
game will probably be Goebel
Head Coach Mitchem
and Bissell at the guards,
presented his SV AC champion football team that was 9Spencer and Eynon at the
1 on the year. That team had
forwards, and either Wolfe or
Bowers at center.
the best defensive average in
Sophomore forward Brett all of southeastern Ohio and
Matthews is expected to see the second best offensive
lots of action off the bench. average. The Eagles were
The Eagles expect to play a
rated 14th in the state by the
man-to-man defense and will AP a nd 19th by the UP! .
probably press much ol the
Team member Randy
Browning was recognized as
time.
Although the team is small, the most outstanding ba ck,
its good speed and experience Mike Hayman was awarded
will definitely keep them in the outstanding li ne ma n
any ball game. Eight of last award, Randy Keller was
year's losses were by seven presented the most improved
points or less.
trophy, and Danny Spencer
Although four of the six was given the ca ptain's
players mentioned played award .
Browning
and
foothall, with a few games Hayman
were
also
under their belts, the Eagles recognized as MVP' s in the
could win any game on their SVAC. Rev. Eldon Blake
schedule. Coach Boston feels gave the benediction.
Among the honorees we!'c:
that to win the Eagles will
1978 -Fooiball Awa rds ~
have to play good defense and
Ou tst andi ng Lineman cut down on the number of
Hayman .
fouls . I think they will do Mike
Outstandi ng Back - Randy
both, and if fans will support Browni ng .
Most fmproved Ran dy
them, the Eagles just might
have an SV AC crown. Keller
Honorary Captain - Danny
Following is a · schedule and Spencer
.
roster .
1978 Cheerleader Awards
before the awarding of
trophies . Coach Ed Cromley
presented his junior high grid
squad trophies followed by
Sonia Blake, who presented

Eagles open season Tuesday

seconds of play.
Swain led the Redmen with
32 points. Four other Rio
players finished in double
figures . Bise had 16, Royse
16, Phelpa 10 and Purcell 10.
Darius He nley led t he
Bears' attack with 19 points.
Rio connected on 30 of 60
field goal attempts for 50
percent. The Redmen w.ere 26
of 33 at the foul line for 78
percent. Rio had 28 rebounds,
nine by Bise and six by
Royse. The Redmen had 13

NFL Standings
By United Press International
American conference
East
W. L T. Pet.

10
8
7

New Englnd
Miami
NY

Jets

3
5
6
8
9

s

Balt imore

assists, six by Phelps. The
winners had 15 turnovers:
Following Sunday's games,
Joe Blazer, president of the
Rio Grande Lions Club and
Earl Thomas presented the
winning players with jackets
and second and third place
teams wlth tournament
mementos.

·

0 .769
0 .615
0 . . 538
0 .385
0 .308

4
central
W. L T. Pel.
10 2 0 .833
Pittsburgh
9 4 0 .692
Houston
Clev eland
7 6 0 .538
Cincinnati
I 12 0 .077
Buffalo

West

w.

L. T. Pet.

8 5 0
8 5 0
7 6 0
670

Oa k l and

Denver
sea ttl e
SM Diego

.615
.615
.538
,46 2

3 10 0

Kansas City

.231

National Conference
East

W. L. T. Pet .
9 4 0 .69 2
8 5 0 .61 5

Dallas
Wash ington
Ph ita

8

5 0

.61 5

5 8 0 .385
4 9 0 .308

NY Giants
SL Louis

Central
W. L. T. Pet .
Green Bay
7 5 I .583
Minnesota
7 S I .583
Tampa Bay
5 8 0 .385
D etroit

5

s

8 0

.385

8 0

.385

West

A PUBLIC SERVICE OF

bea t

13. Pittsburgh (8-31 lost to
P enn 51. 17 -10 .
14 . Ohio St. 17 3- I J lost to

Chicago

·... That \ what\ waiting for 1·ou downtown! We've ~ hopp e d hi g h and
low to brin g vou th e hest sel ec tion of Chri stma s gift s and the bes t
\'a lu es eve r. You ' II find a II of the popular gifts of l he seaso n, and many
one-of-a-kind it e ms too! Thi s Cht· istma~, do all your shoppin g downtown!

(8 .2)

Eastern's sports teams honored at banquet

STORE HOURS

A HO... HO.. WHOLE

Rendezvous'' ...
The Almanac
United Press Internatlonal ·
Today is Monday, Nov. Zl,
the 331st day of 1978 with 34 to
follow .
The mooo is between its
last quarter and a new phase.
The morning stars ate
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Mars.
Those born bn this date are
under the sign of Sa gittarius.

12 . Arkansas
SMU 27 -14 .

SENIORS HONORED - Eastern seniors honored
~lng Saturday's annual banquet were left to right, Tim
Dillon, Russell Starcher, Jeff Goebel. Second row , Mike

• •a

"

Peopletalk

10. Cle mson ( 10-1) bea r
So uth , Car'o t i na 41 -23 .
1 1. Georgia { 8· 1-1) was idle .

.

CORRECTION

how your loved ones have
influenced your life.
So seldom do we slow down
enough to say 'I love you"
and share with our living
loved ones how very deeply
we feel for them. This is your
chanceJ o tell others who read
the story now and in the
future about this person .
A good tribute example
be
a
church
would
congregation paying tribute
to their pastor , Or students
could surprise their favorite
teacher. Check with a field
committee member for
prices of these special pages.

9. Texas ( 7·3) lost to Bayior
38 · 14 .

A 3-1-4 trifecta in the first .
rth $(. 1'22 60 and
race was wo
I
• •
a
lO th race tnfe cta
combination of 4-J.-6 paid

$5,385.60.
Jockey Perry Ouzts won
d
h
s d to
aboar tWO OfseS Wl ay,
raise his total for the seasOn
51
dt
I an all-time
to , an 0 equa .
track record set m 1957 by
Jack Fieselman.

beat

5. H ouston (8 ·2 1 lost t o
Texas Tech 22 -21.
6. Michigan (JQ. JJ beat

.
.,

N&lt;tliullal &lt;nlvei' IIS III~ . rcpr_l'~cn~ ,..
[;1ti ~·c ] .audnn ibsUCII:I(t'::i, J\01

beat

P ittsburgh 17· 10.

..

Pumcn1~' . OhiU.

How

th e top 20 uP 1 college toot ball
t eams fared during the

~

•

~
;j

teams fared

W. L. T. Pet .

Los Ange les
10 3 0
At l anta
8 5 0
New Orleans
s a o
San Francisc
1 11 0
Thursday's Results
Detroit 17,

Denver

,769
.615
.385
.083

14

Dallas 37 , Washington 10
Sunday ' s Results
Cleveland 30, Los Angeles 19
Buffalo 41, New York Giants
11

New York Jets 24, M iam113
Atlanta 20, New Orleans 17
Kl!lnsas City 23, San Diego 0
Chic ago 14, Tampa Bay 3
Philadelphia 14, St . Louis 10
Houston 17, Cincinnati 10
Minnesota 10, Green Bay 10
(ot&gt; ttiel
New England 35, Bi!!ltlmore

'' Seattle

. 16
17 , Oakland

Today's Game

Pittsburgh at San Francisco,
9p .m .
Sunday, December lrd
Atlanta at Cincinnat i, 1 p ,m .
Baltimore at New York Jets ,
1 p .m .

Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 1
p .m .
Miami at Washington , 1 p.m.
Lo s Angeles at. New York
Giants, 1 p.m .
.
Buffalo at Kansas City, 2
p.m .
Detro it at Sf . LOUIS , 2 p .m ,
Philadelph ia at M inneso ta ,

2.

p.m.
San Francis co at New Or ·
leans, 2 p.m. ·
New England at Dallas, 4
p.m.
Pittsburgh at Houston, 4 p .m .

Cleveland at Seattle, 4 p.m.
DenVer at Oakland, 9 p.m .
Monday,

December 4th

r·m

Chicago at San Oil"QO, 9
Saturday, December
B., lti more at Pittsbu rgh.
p.m .
Minnesota at Detroit, 4 p .m .

Rio Grande is now 2-1 oo
· the year. PikevUie is 1-1.
Dyke lell Lyoe Center with
a 3-2 season mark. West
Virginia Te~h is Q-5 oo the
year.
Rio Grande's next outing is
Wednesday, at Wheeling, W.
Va. against the University of
Pittsburgh, beginning at 9
p.m.
On Dec. 1 and 2, the Redmen will play in the
Williamsburg Optimist TipTournament
with
Off
Cumberland, LincolnMemorial and Tillin.
Next home game is
Saturday, Dec. 9, against
Heidelberg. It will be the
annual homecoming game.
Box scores:

Most Outstand ing -

Name-Pos.

Ht. Yr.

17; Pr ice 2-1·5: John son 2-0-4.

TOTALS 38-25-101 .
WEST VIRGINIA TECH
186) - McClinton 8-3-19; Hall
5-2-12 ; Meadows 3-3-9 ;
Watson 7-3-17; Morgan 3-1-7;
Morrison 2-0·4; Johnson 2·0-4 ;

Peterson 1-2-4; Lake 1·1-3;
Maynard , 1-2-4; Smith 2-0-4.
TOTALS 35 -16-86.
(Championship Game)
RIO GRANDE (86) - Blse .
'6-4-16 ; Clark 0-0-0; ·Dorsey 0·
2-2; Phelps 2-6-1 0; Purcell 4-2 ~
10; Royse 6-4·16 ; Swain 12-8·
32 ; Washington 0-0-0; West, 00-0. TOTALS 30-26-86.
PIKEVILLE (78) ~ Henle y
9-1-19 ; Nolan 1-0-2; Rowe 7-1·
15 ; Wes15 -2-12; Tilford 2-0-4;
Chambers 5-0·10; Newsome 0·
0-0; George 7-0-14; Haggers 10-2. TOTALS 37-4-78.
Halftime score-

40, Rio 38.

Pikevlll ~

12

6· 1

x-Keilh Wolfe, C
6-1
FIRST ROUND GAMES
x-Jeff Goebel, G
5-9
(Saturday)
x-Joe Boyles, G
5 ~ 10
RIO GRANDE (86) Lawrence Pool er, G 5· 10
Swai n 4-0-8; Purcell 10-7-27 ; ' x- Don tvnon, C
5-11
B i se 7· .4 · 18 ; Royse 3· 2-8 ; x-Brian Bissell, G
5-10
Phel ps 7-0-14 ; West 2-2-6; Leonard Myers, F
5-11
Dorsey 0·0-0; Washington 0-3 - Joe Bowers, C
6-2
3; McCormick 1-0-2. TOTALS Brett Matth ews. F 6-10
34-18-86.
Gene Cole, G
5-9
WEST VIRGINIA TECH Greg Wigal , G
5-9
(aSl - McC iinlon 70-1 4; Hall
X - Lettermen
11 -1-23 ; Meadows 4-3-11 ;
1978-79 Schedule
Watson 1-0-2; Morgan 8-6-22 ; Nov. 28 - Waterford
Morr ison l -0-2 ; Johnson 1-0-2; Dec . 2- Fed. Hock .
Haywood 0-1-1; Lake 3-0-6; Dec. 12 - Kyger
Sands 0-2-2. TOTALS-36-13-85. Dec. 15 - H. Trace
Halftime score - Rio 47 Dec. 16 - Waterford
Tech 37.
Dec . 19 - Southwestern
Dec. 29 - Miller
PIKEVILLE 175) - Rowe Jan. 5 - Southern
4-0-8; Henley 8-6-22 ; Wes15·1- Jan . 12 - N. Gallia
11 ; Newsome 2-0-4; George 4- cJan . 13 - Fed . Hocking
4-12 ; Chambers 3-0-6; Tilford Jan. 16 - Wahama
4-0-8; Gulley 1-0-2; Haggers 1- Jan . 19 - Kyger
0-2. TOTALS 32-11-75.
Jan . 23 - H. Trace
DUKE {58) - Tale 6-4-16 ; Ja n. 26 - Southwest ern
Neal 1·4-6; Whitsett 4-0-8; Jan . 30- Southern
Lighty 4-0-B; Fishel 3-0-6; Feb. 6- N. Gall Ia
Azeez 2-2-6; Lambert 1-0-2; Feb . 9- Wahama
Wil liams 2-0-4; Johnson 1-0-2. Feb. 10 - Mil ler
TOTALS 24-10-58.
(Consolation game)
lSondayl
DYKE {101) - Tale 7-0-14;
Neal 8-2-18; Whitsell 2-0-4;
Lighty 6-6-18 ; Williams 4-3·
11 ; Azeez 3-4-10; Lambert 4-9 -

Juniors
xx - Brian Bissell, xx . Tim
Di llon. xxx · Don Eynon, xx Greg Hayman. Scott Hill , xx Mark Nort on, Joe Stout .
Sophomores
Steve Browning, x . Dennis
Durst, x - Rodney Ke l ler,
Tony K enned y , x - Ken
Larkins , G r ~g Scarbrough,
xx · Greg W1gal .
Freshmen
Nick Leonard , Charles
M assar, Todd Nor ton , Johnny
Ri ebe l , Joe Sayre, Ray
Spencer, Virgil Tay lor, Dave

Wol le.

1\1\anager s - x. Ed Werry ,
x - Elmer Young .
Statisticians
John
Boston, Lawrence Pooler .
x - Ind icates years let .
lered.
Girls Volley ball
Seniors
Vida Weber - xxxx, Debbie
Durst · xx, Lauri Matthews xxx, Dawn Sordon . x, Janet
Brooks.

Juniors
Son i a Carr . xx, Teresa
Hannum . x.
Sophomores·'
Pebbles Blake . xx, Laura
Eichi nger . xx, Kathy Pool er ,
White ,
Rhonda
Den i se
Ho lsi ng er
x,
Carla
Chichester, Kathy Whitl atch.

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

Mike

Swi~rP.r

992-7155

149 S. Third St.
Middleport, 0. ··
110 11

. ....

SU I! HRittl MijiUl l
o\.lll)ll(lbllr, l" ~~· ~ nc ~ Collltan•
~()l!'f
t .. , " " . . . "

()th( •

Blom,•tnCl' :lll

lllt~OI!

Freshmen
Pa tty Edwar d s, Sarah
Goebel - x , Cassie Sheets ,
Wendy Elkin s, Vel vet Elkins ,
Carrie Cheva li er , Dee Durs t.

Coach - Susan Thom pson .
1978 Records
11 ·6 Over a II
9-0 SVAC
Sect ional Finalists
x - Indicates yea r s let tered.

Prevention is
the best policy ...

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
Young men and women
often ask why they have to
pay
more
for
t he i r
au tomob ile insurance.
Drivers in their teens and
earlier t wenties cause far
more than their share of
traffic accidents . Report s
the
Na t ional
Safety
Council: 21.8 percent of all
motor ists are 2&lt;1 yea r s of
age or under , yet these
youthful operator s are
involved as drive rs in 38.6
per cent of all accide_
nts
and 37.3 per cent of all fa tal
m ishaps.
A great many young
peop le
are
ski ll ed,
responsibl e
d r i ve rs .
Obv iousl y, th ough, quite a
few are not .
There'·s no substitu te tor
developmen t com petence
and the right attitudes,
in cl ud :ng
a
po si tive
approach to de fensive
driving .
Our agency pro lliCII!S
financial prote cti'on and
service in case of accidents
Involving young dr ivers ...
but
many
of
thes e
accidents
can
be
prevented . That 's why we
say - prevention isi the
best poli cy-.

DALE C. WARNER
992 -2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

Betsy

Riffl e.

Eastern Eagles
X· Oan Spencer , F

x - Bryan White.

Cust~m

12
12
12
12

11
11
11
10
10

10
10

Most Spirited Karen
Probert .
Most Improved Rese r ve Jan Smith.
Most Improved Vars ity Sherrie Starcher.

Varsity Footbal l
Senio rs
xx . Randy Browning , xx ·
Greg Ginther ,)(. - Jeff Goebel,
XXX • M ike Hayman , XX ·
Randy Kel ler, xx'x · Dan
Spen ce r , xxx · R ussell
Star che r , xxx - Rusty Wigal,

H

A
H

A
A

H
H
A

A
H
H
A

H
A
H
H

A
A

TARPON SPR[NGS, Fla.
(UPI ) - Tracy P hillips of
Tulsa, Okla., won the boy's
title and Jenny Lidback of
Baton Rouge, La., the girl's
championship Sunday in the
American JW!ior Cl.assic Golf
Tournament.
The 15-year-&lt;~ld Phillips defeated Jodie Mudd, 18, of
Louisville, Ky., 1-up in 19
holes in the final rowtd of
match play over the
Innisbrook resort course .

full

In one or rno daus

Our staff of den ti sts and

technicians will make your
custom dentures
economically

quickly and ,

One or two day full
denture service,
partials &amp; relines .
From Anywhere In Ohio

Dr. Ronald ERlvier~
•Dr. A J. Staehli•Dr. C. W. Bea1•Dr. G.J . Stombaugh
•Dr. W.O. K.imball•Dr. J .C. Murphy •Dr. J. Ochman

The Riviere Cen1er
949 E. livi ngston Ave. Culumbu s

·• ·
U

D

The Department Store

Of Building
Since 1915

�GARS d efieats

4- The Daily Sentinel, Mic..ldlPport-Pnmt·ro.. - . o .. Milll&lt;IHY, Nnv. 27 1978
mlnl51rators , and or assigns
Of May Qu i'lley, the unknown
spouse. i f any , of May
Qu ivtoy , name and addreu
unknown .
R I CH A R 0
OENSMOR: E , whose last
known address I s Gallewav ,

SHERIFF'S SALE
For 'h e l Jrd of December at
lO : OOA .M . ontheCourtHouse
steps .
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
In Tht court ot
Common Pitas,
Mei gs; County , Ohio
HOT ICE
0 F
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND

~~~o~nUn~J.Z~n~~i;~,-dde;:i~~~~ :

~~~ES, ~~ AC~Ig~N~~

TREASURER OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO .
Public Notice is hereby
given lhal on the .ffh and 6th
day of October, 1978, the

~~~g:yv, TJ~~~u~~·ora ~~~~

plaint in the Court of com mO"n Plus of MeiO.l-'!ounty ,
Ohio, at Poi'T'\.WO'V. for the
tore cl oS.\U'-e of liens for
de l-t rfQ u en I
taX e 5 '
tB Sess men fs , penalties , and
charges against certain real
property sitya ted in su.ch
County as described in said
comp la in t .
The object of the action is to
obta in from the court a
judgment foreclos ing the tax
liens aga inst such rut estate
and ordering the sale of such
real esta te for the satisfac tion of the fax liens thereon.
suc h action is brought
against the real propert y only
3nd no persona l judgment
sh all be entered therein .
The permanent parcel
number of each parcel ineluded in such acfion, the lull
st reet address of the parce l. i f
available, a description of fl'le
par cel, a statement Of the
amount
of
taxes,
assessments, penalties and
ch an~es due and unpaid on
such parcel, and the name
andaddressofthelastknown
owner thereof, as such ap pear on the general ta x l ist,
all as more fully set forth in
the com plaint, are as follows :
CBT -0 4, Columbia Town ship, Melns county' , Ohio, Lot
"
No . 6, 20' w side of N 1J2 , T . G.
Clay , address unknown ;
Bertha
Clay,
address
un known ; the unknown heirs,
devisees,
legatees ,
ad -.
ministra tors, executors, and
or assigns of Bertha Clay, if
deceased ; the unknown heirs,
d evisees,
legatees ,
ad m inistrafors, executors, and
or ass igns ofT . G. Clay , If
deceased ; $113 .07, Ser. No . 78
DL T 15.
SUT-01 , Sutton Township,
Meigs CoUnty, Ohio, 5 .47
acres in N 1h Sec. 2, T .2 R . 13,
Ohio Company's Punhase,
Lewis Hudson, if living ,
address
unknown ;
If
(jeceased , the unknown heirs,
de'llisees ,
legatees,
ad minis lratorsexecurorsandor
assig ns of Lewis Hudson ; the
unknown spouse If any of
Lew is Hudson ; Annie Hud son . if
living,
addre-ss
Unknown ; If deceased, the
unk nown heirs , devisees,
leg atees , admlni~trators,
exec utors, and or assigns of
A nnie Hudson ; Dave Hudson,
if l iving , address unknown ; If
deceased, the unknown heirs,
Ieo a t ees , .d - .
devisees ,
ministretors , executors and
or assigns of Dave Hudson,
dec ., $28.00, Ser. No . '8-0L T
16.
RT -02,
Rutland
Twp ,,
MetgS county, Oh lo. 2 acres,
10 rods , 5 .3, T . 6 R . l.f , Ohio
Compa ny ' s
Purchase ;
Rvtt and Township , Meigs
County , Ohio, 1 acre, S. 23, T.
6, R . 14 , OhiO Company's
Purchase: Fred P i nkston, If
living, address unknown ; if·
deceased , the unknown heir~ .
devisees,
l egatees ,
ed .
ministrators, executors; , and
or assigns of Fred Pinkston,
dec .; Hallday Hvnlt. if
livino. address unknown ; If
deceased the unknown neir!s,
devisees ,
legatees ,
lid·
ministrators! exftcutors and
or assigns of Haliday Hysell,
7 DLT
dec., S39 ..f1, Ser. No . 8
·
17 ·
.
11
SUT -02 , OVT -02 , 5 u on
Twp., Meigs Cou.n ty, Ohio,
Oi l , gas and other m inersals,
EXCE PT coat, underlying
100 acres more or tess, in 160
· acre Lot 1219, T , 2, R . 12, Ohio
company ' s Purchase ; Olive
Twp . , Meigs coun!y, Ohio ;
Oi l , gas and other minerals
underl ying 95 A. in 5.29, T · 3,
R , 11. Ohio Company ' s
Pu rchase : The mining In teres ts In 60A . i nS . 29, T . 3, R
11 , Ohio . Company's Purchase ; 30A.,S.29,T.J,R.11,
Ohio Company's Purchese;
10 A . S. 29, T. 3, R. 11, Ohio
Com pany's Purchase; 70 A.,
s . 29, T. 3, R . 11, Ohio Company's Purch,se , ·coAL
underlying 16 A ., S. 29, T . 3,
R. 11, Ohio Company's
Purc.hase;
EDNA
0.
CORYELL, If living, 2430
Channing Way·, Berkley,
Calif . ; I t deceased , the
u nknown he i rs, devisees ,
l ega tees. edmlnistraton and
or assigns of Edna Coryell ,
dec.: the unknown spouse If
anv ot t;:dna Coryell ; B. F .
Putnam, If living, whose last
know n eddrtS1 Is Marlette ,
Ohio, If deceased, the
unk nown l'le i rs, devisees,
legatees, admin istrators ,
exec utors and or aatlgns of B.
F . Putnam, dec . ; RUDOL..PH

W. GLASNER,

!

If living,

address
Unknown;
If
deceaud , the unknown heirs,
devisees ,
legatees ,
ad ministrators, executors end
or assigns
of Rudolph W.
Glasner, dec.; JOHN D .
A MES , If living, address
unknown ; If dec:eued, the
unknown heirs, devisees,
legatees, administrators,
executors, and or nsluns of ·
John D . Ames , dec., U71.09,
Ser. No . 78 DLT
14a ;
$1,192 .25, Ser . No . 78 DL T 1•h
RV -02, R:utlan-d VIllage,
Meigs County, Ohio, Lot 2
Fallon's Addition · Rutland,
ex . 20 teet of E side, &amp;
triang le of w side . ;
Clara
C harl eto n ,
address
unknown ,; it deceased, 4he
unknown heirs, dev i sees,
legatees. administrators,
exec utors and or assigns of
Clara Cherleton , d~c . ; th_e
unknown spouse, If any, of
Cl ara Charleton . S36.82 ; Ser
No. 78 OL T 18.
.
RU -03, Rutland VIllage,
Meigs county, Otllo, 15 .2
acres sw corners 26, T. 6, R .
14. ; JAMES PHELPS , whose
last
known
address
is
Rutland. Ohio •. 1!.. liv ing ; If
deceased , the unknown heirs,
dev1sees,
legatees ,
Bd ·
m inistrators and or assigns of
Jamtl Phelps , dl( ,, the
unknown spouse. If any, of
Lester Phelps, dec . CLAUDE
ASHLEY , whose l•st known
address Is Middleport , Ohio ,
if liv ing ; If deceased the
unknown heirs , devisees,
legaten , edmlnlstrators end
or assigns of Claude Ashley,
the unknown spouse, If any , of
Clau de Ashley, name and
address unknown . WILBUR
ASH LEY. w,.,ose last known
address is Middleport. Ohio.
it li'lling ; it deceased, thft
unknown heirs , devisees,
legatees , adm lnlstretors and
or assigns of Wilbur Alhlev .
the unknown spousr, If any, of
Wilbur AShley , name and
address .unknown . MAY
QUIVEY, Wt'IOSt l•st known
address Is 151 Mill St . ,
Athf!ns. Ohio, It living ; If
deceased the unknown heirs,
devisees,
legatees ,
ad ·

Blue Lions

legatees , administrators lind
or ass igns of R Ichard Den ~mort ; the unknown spouse ,
if any , of Richard Densmore,
After getting over first
n.!l me and address unknown .
FLOSSIE PHILLIP'S, whose game jitters Saturday night,
ll!list known address is Logan,
d lh
Jim
Osborne ' s
Ohio, i t l ivi ng , 1t decease
e Coach
unknown he 1rs, ~ev i sees ,
Blue
Devils
rallied
Gallipolis
legatees , administrators and
or ass igns of Flossie Phillips , from a four.point deficit early
in the third period to defeat
the unknown spouse , If anv of
Flossie F'hlllips, name end
host Wasblngton Court
address unknown . REVA
SMITH, whose lut known
House, 56-43.
address i ~ Logan , Ohio , lf
It was the season opener for
liv ing ; if decused , the
unknown heirs, dev i sees,
both teams.
legatees, administrators and
Coach Gary Shaffer's
or assj gns of Rev a Smifh; the
If
f
Blue
Lloas led 13-12 after
unknown spouse ,
any, o
Reva Smith, name and ad one period and Z&amp;-25.during
dress unknown . HAROLD
the hlilltlme Intermission.
PH ILL 1PS , whose last known
addren is Marion , Ohio, if
Washington Court House
d
th
l ivi ng ; tf decease ,
e upped its lead to four points,
unkn own heirs, devisees,
legatees, administrators and
29-25, with 6:22 left in the
or assigns of Harold Phillips ;
third stanza. Then . the Blue
the unknown spouse, if any , of
Devils
carne to life.
Harold Phil ips, neme and
address ·unknown .
DALE
Jeff
Cameron, IHi junior
PHELPS, whose last known
center, tapped in a loose ball
adctrns is Rt . 1. waynesburg,
t
at the 4:48 mark. E. V.
Pa . , if living ; if deceased , he
unknown heirs . devisees,
Clarke, 6-3 senior focward,
legatees, admin istrators, and
1
lh
scooped up a loose ball and
or ass gnsot Dale Phelps ; e
unknown spouse. if any , of
dribbled the length of the
Date Phelps , name and ad court for a twln.pointer with
dress unknown . BESSIE
SIDERS. whose last known
4:22 left in the period. On the
address is Rutland, Ohio, if
d
d
th
ensuing
in-bounds play,
living ; i f
ecease'
e
Jimmy Harris, ~9 senior
unknown heirs, devisees,
teoatees, administrators and
guard, stole the ball for an
or ass igns of Bessie Siders.
easy layup with 4:20 showing
tht unknown spouse, If any , Of
Bessie Si ders , name and
oo the clock. Just like that adrets .unknown: ELVIRA
within a span of 28 secoods BARR , whose · last known
a'ddress 15 LanvsvWie, Ohio, if
li'lling; if deC:tilfd the GAllS had the lead, 31-29.
That slx11olnt outburst
unknown heirs, dev~eu .
legatees, admlnlttr•tors.a_.nd
orassignsot.,E!IvlriBarr;fhe
unknown SPOUI!I'.' It any, of
Ehlra · Barr, name •nd
a dress unknown :· . HELEN
S-ARLES, whose lnt -known
address is Hamden , OhiO, If
d
th
living ; if dec: ease '
e
unknown heirs , devisees,
legatees, admtnistrators and
or nslgns of Helen Barles,
theunknownspouse,lfany,ot
CINCINNATI (UP!) Helen sarles, name and
Pete Rose broke off final
address unknown ., $71.83 ;
Ser . No . 78 OL T 19.
talks with the Cincinnati
2 V'll
f •
PV ·O • ' age o .-omeroy, Reds Sunday, ending any last
Meigs Countv , Ohio, T . 2, R .
13, Lots 124 and 125. Also lot hopes the 37-year..,ld slugger
20 x 80ft. ROGER OAVID ·
SON, P. . o . Box 54·, Pomeroy, would remain with the club
OhiO,
CLARA he began his pro career with.
4 57 6 9;
DAVIDSON, . if living , whose
Rose's agent Reuven Katz
lut known address Is c -o
Pauline Harless, U70 Maple said, "Reds President Dick
Street, Clearwater , Florida
Wagner wished Pete well and
331 51; · it deceased, the
unknown heirs, devisees, Pete wished the Cincinnati
d
Reds well and that's the end
legatees, administrators an
or assigns of Clan Davidson , of the negotiations with the
dec. ;
ERNEST
W.
Cincinnati Red&lt;!. It's a fmal
DAVIDSON.
aka
RINK
DAVIDSON , If living, whose
last known address .11 113 decision now, Pete will go oo
Ebenezer Street, Pomeroy, and negotiate with other ·
Ohio -45769,; If deceased, · the
unknown heirs , de&gt;rlstes,
The 37-year..,ld third baselegatres. admlnlstraors and
or assigns of Er'nest W . man who bas never played
Davidson,
•ka
Rink
anywhere but in Cincinnati
Davidson , · deceesed; the
unknown 'he irs, devisees,
said he hopes to pick his new
· 11 1
d
leg a ten, admln s n ors, an
team by the time the annual
or assigns of CATHERINE
winter baseball meetings
E,BERSBACH, deceased; the
unknown spouse, It any, ot begin Dec. I.
Roger Davidson, whose name
In the recent free agent
and addr4!ss are unknown ;
the unknown spouse, If any, of draft, Rose was named by 12
h
Catherine Ebersbech, w ose
teams interested in signing
name
and
address
II
The star slugger bas
unknown ., S-436 .08.
Any person ownln; or
refused to name any
claiminG llny right , t itle or
"frontrunners" in the bidding
interest in, or lien upon, any
parcel of real property above for his playing services, but
listed may flit an answer io
be's dropped some hints.
such action setting forth the
nature and amount of Interest
The Yankees and the
owned or claimed and any
Rangers
don't seem too
defense or ob(ectlon to .-the
interested, be's said, but
foreclosure. Such answer
must be filed In the office of
" Atlanta gave me a
the undersigned Clerk of
Court, aRd 1 copy · thereof tr e mendous
offer . ''
served on the county
Pittsburgh
Pirate
team
Prosecutor on or b•tore the
21st day of Nevember, 1911. owner John Galbreath Invited
If no an,wer If flied on or
him to his Columbus farm to
before the date specified as
talk 'contract.
the last dey for tiling an
enswer, e (udgment of
A!llO interested are the
foreclosure will be taken 'by
Cardinals,
the Pbillies, the
default as to any parctlllsted
in the complaint as to wi'IICh
Mets and the Dodgers.
no answer has bnn flied . Any
The Reds, retained their
parcel as to which
1
foreclosure Is taktn by
rights to negotiation with
default u.au ·be told tor the .
Rose in the free agent draft,
sat is faction of the taxes.
assenments , penalties ,
but failed to keep him in the
charges, and costs Incurred
Queen City, said Katz

Pete says
goodbye

teamS."

bini.

'" rn.e torectosvre ther are

dut and unpaid .
At
time prior to the

'"¥

filing o an entry of con firmation of sale, any owner
or lienholder of a per&lt;:el listed
In the complaint may rltdum
such parcel by tendering to
the County Treasurer the
amount
of
taxes ,

assessments, penalties, and

charges dUe and unpaid on

such parcel, together with all
costs which have bern In curred In any proceeding
Instituted against such parcel
under Section 57'21.18 of the
Rev ised Code. Upon the filing
of any entry of confirmation
of sale, there sh11ll be no

further eQuity of redemption .

Any

penon

thereafter

claiming any right , title and

Interest In , or llen ·upon , any

such parcel shall be forever
'barred and foreclond of any
such right, title, Interest in .
lien upon , and any equity of
redemption in, sucl'l parcel.
LARRY E . SPE .. CER ,
Clerk of Court or
Common Ple•s
ly :
Marlene
Harrison,
Depu'y Clerk
Mtlll Conntw . Obit.
( 11 ) 27, { 121 .4, 11. 3fc

·Girls Ohio High
School Volleyball
United Press International
Saturday's State
Championship Results

Class A
Archbold 10· 15· 15, Fairbanks

Pritchelt led the losers with
· 19 points. He also picked off
11 reboWJds fur the Blue
I joos. The losers had 17 turn;
overs.
GAHS ltlt 24 uf 45 field

because of an "honest
difference of opinion between
the Reds on one hand and
Pete on the other as to Pete's
worth and whaf be should be
paid."

The offers of the other
teams, Katz added, were
closer to Rose's ideas of his
wocth .
The highest the Reds would
go, according to reports, was
a two-year, $1.2 million
package.
The Phillles have offered a
three-year contract figuring
out to $600,000 a year. The
Mets offered a three-year
pact totaling $1.5 millioo. San
Diego would offer only a oneyear contract.

l o•ij,~ \ , oii 1M~ 1• '" '" 11i.1hk

53 . from the field for a cool 28
perce nt, The GaDian:s were
percent. At the fool line, the
8 ul13 at the foul line lor 61
Blue Lions were 13 of 16 foc 81
pe rcenl, GAHS had 14
percent. The losers had 16
personals .
personals.
Washington CH hit 15 of 52
Gallipolis will travel to

g11al

auempts

.
Class AA
Ci n Madeira 15· 15, Bexley 6·
12
Class AAA
Ketlering Fairmont W 15· 17,
Whitehall 9· 15
Saturdiy•s Colleee Basketball
Aesults
Bv United Press International
Tourn·aments.
Seawolf Classic
Anchorage, Aluka
Te,;as A&amp;M 54, Indian a 49
N·. Caro St . 91, Pepperdine 62
. Brown Tip-Off Tournament
Providence, R.I..
New Hampsh ire 58, Brown 56
Siena 75, Northeastern 10
. Vlrglnit Tlp.Otf Tournament
CharloHesvlllt, Va.
James Madison 82, Geo . Wash Ington 62 ·
Virginia 81, Va .. commonwea lth
60
.I

.,

Wittenberg 76

Ee~rlham

ln.

69

Grove City { Pel 67 Mt. Un ion
57
Da'll iS &amp; Elkins (W Vll) 78
Steubenville 67
Wilberforce 13 Thomas More
(Kyl 64 ,
Manchester Clnd) 96 Cedar .
vllte 87
Rio Gr•nde Tournament
Rio Grande 86 West V Irginia
Tech 85
Pike vil le (Ky) 75 Dyke 58

~6

(Across from the Nazarene Church)

SALE STARTS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27th
.2 P.M. TIL 8 P.M.

.
.-. '

'~

'

•

(CLOSED SUNDAY)

.;

REMODELING COMPLETED- This is a before and
after photograph of the newly. opened Juanita's beauty
Saloo, located on State St., Gallipolis. Leon and Juanita
Saunders did extensive remodeling work on both the
inside aod the outside of the building.

Radfords entertain with holiday dinner
Mr. and Mrs. William fuldford entertained Thanksgiv·
ing Day with a family dinner.

Jeff and Ahcia, Indianapul i !:~,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gilmore,
Athens : Mr. and Mrs .
William R. fuldford, Marie!·
ta :_¥irgil Glaze, Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Romine,

Their guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Pullins, Colum·
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Ron Reed ,

~mington.

Rock Springs, and Mrs.
Grace Glaze who is
recuperating at the home uf
her daughter and son-m-Jaw,

Mr. and Mrs. William. fuld·
ford.

MODEL-1100
12·16 AND 20 GAUGE.
AUTO lOADER-FIELO.
PLAIN BARREl

:!:'::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:·:;.;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:,:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:·:;:;::·::·::·::;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:;:·:;:·::·::·:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:·:·:::-:-:J

:*~: Generati·on Rap ::. Evangeline Missionary
.:·.·.[
for a Christmas g~~~
a special ring to~

without surgery

.yourseIf.~mled

seh~urpmQ.~

.. 10"

Thts Chnstm&lt;e&gt;. w 'I
h '4ery own
with a ~peoal phone ~~f~~se: o~:s to choos~ frorn Ea~h
We ha\IC so many I ' ' nd character tO ex pr c~.s t e
with Its own untque sty t! a
h~ve m mind. You II be
and persona!1ty) you
erson (
n too

,~lo

by the chooce o&lt;
i:h;;"m"' !'I' th&gt;&lt; say•
So 11 you"rc sea.rcht ng or a excitln" phone col\ec·
1 omc see our
to
someth1ng s.pem · c
TE Phone Mart soon
tton for yourself ~t the G I , whole new way to see
The GTE Phone Mart t s a

~

yocr phone company.

at

16 West Washington, Athens

.

pHone

the(!ii3 maRT

i!

RAP:
I'm 15 but look and ad older. I'm seeing a guy of 20. We sa id
we'd never keep any secrets from each other, but I found out
he has an ex-(! think 1 wife and child. He said he was afraid
he'd lose me if he told.
Once before he broke up with me because he never had time
to see me, but we got back together. Now he says I don't trust
him and was gone again, but we made up last night.
Mom wishes he'd call it off as we're geU.ing lou seriuu.s. r
really love him, but what should I do?- N.A.
DEARN. :
If you loved this fellow enough, you wouldn't be writing,
"What should I do ?"
We agree with your mother : You're getting too serious about
an all-too-secretive man. -HELEN AND SUE

..
Just buy a medium size Pepsi·Cola at BURGER CHEF " and
you'll get to keep one of six exciting Disney character glasses.
Besides Mickey, you can collect his best friends, too-=:---"
Donald, Pluto, Minnie, Uncle Scrooge and Goof&gt;\
all on 16 oz. glasses.
There's a different glass each week, so collect the
whole set and enjoy Mickey's Happy Birthday all year.

Buy A.
Medium Size
Pepsi For

And Keep
The Glass
PLUJO~

Collect The Whole~
at BURGER CHEF®!
while supplies last)

698 W. MAIN ST.
PC)MEROY, OHIO '
Character Illustration• © 1978 Walt Disney Productions
Pepsi-Cola and Pepsi are regtetered trademarks or Pep1iCo, Inc., Purchase, N .Y.

--

The aruma! Thanksgiving
dinner a nd meet ing of
Evangeline Missionary Society of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ was held recently at
the home of Mrs. Eileen
Bowers.
There was a silent prayer
e nd a prayer by the president
preceding the 'dinner served
by Mrs. Bowers.
Mrs. Bettv Spencer presid·
ed at the meeting opening
with the reading of Psabn
100. Prayer was by Mrs.
Evelyn Smith and there was a
reading, "A Thankful Heart"
by Helen Steiner Rice, given
by Holly McArthur.
Secretarts report was
given by LaDonna Clark, ·and
Mrs. Trudy Andrews gave the
trea s urer's report. Mrs.
Clark also reported on the
nower fund . A report on the

SAYRE
HARDWARE

molher·daughter banquet
was given by Mrs. Bowers
and a fi:lther -sun banq uet to
be held in the future wa s
discussed.
Mrs. Bowers introduced
Mrs. Mary Russ, whose hus·
band is manager of the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly
camp. She talked on the camp
program and showed slides.
Mrs. McArthur closed the
meeting with the reading,
" Nut Only On Thanksg ivi11g

Day" with scripture from
First

Thessalonians

and

prayer.
Others attending were
Janet Venoy, Eva Dessauer,
Helen Miller, Gertie Bass,
and Pauline K-ennedy . Next .
meeting will be a Christmas
party to be held at the home
of Mrs. Spencer with Mrs.
Bass ·a s t:u -hu s te ;s.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Painless heart attacks
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB :- I
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
would
like some information
This guy I've been scheming on fur three months finally askon
a
blocked
artery to my
ed me to the big Christmas Sno-Ball.
heart
on
the
left
side. My doc·
But I found out he'd asked another girl first and she turned
tor
found
that
I had a
him down. Should I settle for being- SECOND CHOICE?
blockage a few months ago
DEARS.C. :
Of course! How will you ever make it to first choice if you when I bad an electrocar·
diogram. I've never had any
don 't start somewhere? -HELEN
pain or sign of any heart problem .
S.C.:
I am 70 years old. I am 5
Look at it this way: Out of all the girls he miglllllave asked,
feet 5 and weigh 125 pounds. I
he chose you second . Enjoy! -SUE
feel fine .
· I a m now takmg Per·
santine. My blood pressure
has been real good so far, on·
ly 134176. My doctor didn't
say I should be on any strict
diet but just to cut out the fats
and avoid egg yolks and use
low-falimilk. I have eaten an
William Mayer, Pomeroy, prize and won by Frances egg each morning as long as I
urtist and wood carver, Roberts.
can remember and my
Read at the meeting was a breakfast isn't complete
discussed his crafts in a program Tuesday night at a letter from the Columbus without it. I wonder if I should
meeting of the Alpha Eps;lon Chapter inviting members to have on~ of your Health Let
Chapter of Alpha Delta Kap- attend its annual luncheon at ters on what f should and
pa held in the Riverboat Monka 's in Columbus. A shouldn't eat. I have been
Room of the Athens County devotional program on tested for cholesterol and its
Savings and Loan Co., Meigs Thanksgiving was given by O.K.
Nonga Roberts, and Lucille
DEAR READER - It's
Office.
.
Mayer showed slides of his Swackhamer, chairman of pretty hard to be certain that
work in progress and ex· ways and means conducted a person has a blocked artery
on the basis of changes in the
hibited pictures and carv· the birthday dues collection.
The group voted to donate electrocardiogram alone.
ingS. A wooden ''wise owl' '
was given by Mayer as a door $25 to the Canter's Cave 4·H Sometimes the wave patlems
building fund for their holi- that doctors see on an elecday altruistic project.
trocardiogram which resem·
Refreslunents were served ble an old heart attack can be
~Y Maxine Wingett and Edna caused by other things as
Price from a table decorated well.
in the Thanksgiving motif.
This is always a difficult
Next meeting will be a problem for the doctor when
Christmas dinner at the such a puttern shows up in a
Meigs Inn, Dec. 19.
person like you, who has no
history of any pain or, as you
Shukrs .visit here
say, no sign of heart proMr. and Mrs. Ren Slusher, blems. I can tell you, though,
Alexander , Va . "spent that a third of the heart at·
Thanksgiving weekend here tacks that occur are painless
with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. or at least they have caused
Slusher, Pomeroy.
On Thanksgiving Day they Greg Gliders and son , and the
·
joined Mr. and Mrs. Meade hosts.
On Saturday, Mr. and Mrs.
Kayser at Guysville lor a
family dinner. Others allen· Ren Slusher and Mr. and
ding were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Arthur . Slusher took
Robert Basset and family, Mrs. Meda Altizer, 98, to Hud·
Dayton, Mrs. Meda Altizer, son, to see her homeplace and
BUY NOW AT:
Mrs. Catherine Slusher, Mr. visit with friends. The
and Mrs. Rodney Quivey and . Slushers returnc&lt;l to Virginia
!laughters, Mr. and Mrs. Sunday morning. The Robert
Leslie Slusher and daughters, Bassett family of Dayton
'
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lawson, viSited witli the Arthur J .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spr· Slushers here on Thanksgiv·
inger and son, Mr. and Mrs. ing Day.

William Mayer, local
artist, speaks to group

----&lt;

Scoiety held dinner

SPECIAL
PRICE

~:

NOTE FROM SUE: I sint'&lt;!rely hope you are!

Burger Chefis
Celebrating MickeyS
.with16oz.
glasses.

. --

By llelen and Sue Bottel

CAN UNWED DAD HAVE HIS BABY?
HELEN AND SUE:
My girlfriend is having a baby. AI first she wanted an abortion but I tulked her out of it. I was all for marriage, but Nan
broke up with me last month and says she 's going tu adopt the
baby out.
I'm pretty sure she's being paid to "sell" my child.
My parents have offered to care for him (or her) until I
graduate and can take over. Lots of single fa thers raise kids
these days, and I really want mine!
· Nan is aguins! this. From things I've heard, I gather she
wants the black market money .
Doesn't a father have rights? -CARL .
DEAR CARL :
If your lawyer can prove Nan is trying to sell her child, you
and your parents can probably get custody. But it will mt~an a
court battle. Are you ready for that? -HELEN

Sundoy

Rio Grande 85 P i keville ('Ky)
78
Oyke 101 west Virginia Tech

POMEROY, OHIO

ENDS MONDAY, DECEMBER 4th

Now there is an exciting new cosmetic
that can temporarily smooth away
wrmkles for up to 8 hours It's called
Secret Miracle and its scientific blend
of unique beauty ingredients works
Within mmutes to smooth over wrmkles. crow's-leet and under eye
puffiness New Secret Mrr acle w111
keep your skin practically l1ne free
all day or all night. Secret M1racle
costs S5 and is sold w1th a str1ct
money back guarantee by the manufacturer. So before you cons1der that
$5,000 face lifl . consrder the $5 filer native ... new Secret M1racle lemporary Wrinkle Smo·other.

(offer good

100 UNION AVE.

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WRINKLES
SMOOTHED

NELSON 'S DRUG STORE
Pomeroy, Ohio

EDWARDS
GUN SHOPPE

AMMO

Steve Pritchett, 6-3 senior
·center, tied the score at 31-all
with 4:02 left in the period.
Cameron's driving layup at
the 3:31 mark put GAHS
ahead to stay,
The Blue Devils led 39-35
after three periods of play.
In the final canto, GAHS
outscored Washingtoo CH 17- ·
8 to win going away.
Osborne played 11 of the 14
mue Devils dressed for the
contest. Veteran senior
forward Jeff Lanham sat out
the ·game with an elbow
injury, along with Nick
Robinson, f&gt;.9 junior guard
who is still recovering from
an ankle injury.
Gallipolis placed three
men In double figures In
· scoring. Clarke and Harris
each tossed In · 16 points.
Big Jobn Armstrong, 5-9
junior guard, added 11.
GAHS controlled the
boards, 32-28. Cameron
picked off 11 caroms f&lt;r the
winners. Clarke bad seven.
The Blue Devils · had 19
assists and 11 steals.· Harris
had six assists while Mark
Smith, 6-0 senior focward was
credited with five. Armstrong
and Nate Thomas, 5-10 senior
guard, each had three assists.
GAllS had 18 turnovers.

(lndl

Webster 85 Ca lv in (M'IchJ 71
Cl!pltal 66 Ur.bana 46
Mar l etta 92 M t. Vernon
Nazarenf 81
He idelberg 68 Findlay 60
Wilmington 54 Robert Morris
(Pal 51
Central St 72 West Virginia St

SMITH &amp; WESSON,
S&amp;W, SUPER X,
REMINGTON,
CCI, FRONTIER,
HORNADAY,
WINCHESTER

UI II Oo,l IIL' ,I'

Ohio College
Basketba)l Risutts
United Pren lriternatlonal
Safurdar
Butler 87 Oh io St 86
Iowa 111 Kent St 76
Detroit 67 Toledo 6"'
Ar my 83 Ohio Northern 59
Xavier 100 Otterbein 68
Ashla nd 117 West Liber ty St
(W Val 98
Clevela nd St 75 Baldwin ·
Wallace 58
John Carroll 75 Case Western

73

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pomeruy, 0., Monday , Nov . v. 1978

waverly Friday night for Its
1978·79 Southeastern Ohio
League opener, The B!ue
Lions will travel to Circleville
Tuesday for their South·
Central Ohio League opener.

aU but did the Blue Uons

73

15.9·1

for

so few symptoms that a person doesn 'L even recognize
that anything serious has
happened to him.
In you r age group, you undoubtedly do have some
changes in your arteries and
it IS prudenl of your doctor to
manage you along those
lines. The Persantme that
you are taking is an WJusua I
med icine in that it helps to in·
crease the oxygen supply to
the heart muscle without increasing the circulation to the
whole body or increasing the
work that the heart does.
It's commonly used in pa·
tients that need increased oxygen to the heart muscle, fur
example, those who have
chest pains from the heart
associated with exercise .
Your very nonnal blood
press ure is a good sign. I am
also happy to hear that your
blood cholesterol is normal.
All of these things suggest
that there is a limited amount
of steps that should be taken
in your case simply ~cause
of an electrocardiographic
finding.
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 1-3,
Diet
Pr e venting
Atherosclerosis . ·Jt will provide you some general
guideli'nes on what you can do
about your diet to help pre·
vent the buildup of fattycholesterol deposits.
Other readers who want
this issue may send 50 cents
with a lung, slnmped, selfaddressed envelope for it.
Send your request to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, fuldio City Station,
New York, NY 10019. You can
ea t a good normal healthy
diet this .way and still avoid
the excess fats .
Noting your liking for eggs,
might 1suggest you try one of
the egg substitutes that you
can buy which contain no
cholesterol at all , if you still
want the taste of eggs for
breakfast and want to limit
your cholesterol intake.
Other than the general
guidelines that your doctor
lws given you, fiS long as you
feel healthy and arc a hie to bo
Hdive, yQu should continue to
Uo so wtthout being tnn t•t m;
ct•r·nt~l nver ~o ur l w;~lth .

HUNTING

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FOR TRUCKS

'J\gtolt~
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WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF
USED GUNS ....: SALE PRICED.
(MANY MORE ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST)
AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR COLT, REMINGTON, WINCHESTER,
MARliN, RG, ITAHICA, MOSSBERG, SAVAGE AND INTERARM,
H&amp;R, LUGER, RUGER AND S&amp;W.

EDWARDS
GUN SHOPPE
100 UNION AVE.

PHONE
992-2593

POMEROY, OHIO

I
\

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~u ...u .... , .o~h""\.IJtiJVll.· .c vuu:£

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• u.h. "' ' , ' "l u

Meigs Garden Clubs plan Christmas flower show
With the annual Christmas
flower . show of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs
Association coming up this
weekend , the chairmen, Mrs.
Twila Buckley and Ms. Sally
Ingels, extends a special invitation to residents to enter
the horticulture classes.
The chairmen emphasize
that anyone can enter, since
membership in a garden club
is not required to exhibit. In
the show schedule they have

included one section. whit'h is
restricted to senior citizens,
and the classes there are for
hanging planter t'Ontaining
one or more plants ; flowering

houseplant, one specinoen;
foliage plant, one specinoen ;
and evergreen display , three
or more varieties, 12 to 24 inches in length.
There are also four classes
for juniors (16 years old and
younger ) in the .horticulture
division. They are broadleaf

evergreen,

narrowlcaf

evergreen, 1&gt;\lrried branch,
all one branch, 12 to 24 inches
long , and foliage plant , one
•-pecimen.
The other horticulture
classes are dried or treated
plant material with the
categories being, fan tail
willow, cork screw willow,
glycerined foliage , and dried
· or treat&lt;? plant display of six
or
more
varieties;
houseplants, the Christmas

cactus , hanging

plant~r

con-

taining on ~ or more plants,

flowering houseplant. and
foliage plant : and Christmas
greens including bruadlead
and narrowleaf evergreens,
and berried branches, one
branch in each class 12 to 24
inches long.
Ms. Ingels says that anyone
having a niee housephml,
either blooming or foliage,
should. enter it. All they have

members were in their new
royal blue robes and the table'
was covered with royal blue
and gold felt. Explaining the
ideals of the society which
are scholarship, character,
leadership and service, and ·
tapping the new members

were society members, John
Thompson, vice president;
Cathy Baler, secretary, who
also gave the charge to the
new members and presided
at the signing of the constitution and the presentations of
pins and certificates, Judy
Darst, treasurer , and Ruth
Coleman, news reporter.
Charlene White, president,
had charge of the induction
ceremony which was a
candlelighllng affair.
Inducted were Gloria
Amos, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Luther Amos, Route 1,
Cheshire, who plans to attend
.-..-.~.-.----

'
1

Social t
1·Calendar

'. I

I

,
~

t

I

' f

II
I.
I

'

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush

Price - Roush wed
•
zn ceremony
M:r. and Mrs. Charles N.
Price, Jr., Belpre, are announcing the marriage of
their daughter, Gayle Louise
Price, to Vernon R. Roush,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon R. Roush, Sr., Mason,
W. Va. on Sept. 16, at
Rockland United Methodist
Church in Belpre. The Rev.
Maurice E. Bailey officiated
in a double ring ceremony.
Given in marriage by her
parents and escorted to the
altar by her father, the bride
wore a formal gown of white
organza and raschel lace
covered bodice dotted with
pearls. The neckline was
Queen Anne and the sleeves
were shepherdess of organza
and m~ tcri ng lace. The full
A-line .. &lt;l • was of white
organza with accents of
raschel lat-e and pearls. The
back of the skirt featured a
bustle effect with the double
flounce continuing around
bottom of skirt and chapel
train. The back of the dress
had a large organza bow at
the waistline.
The veil was a matching
walking length mantilla with
a blusher of silk illusion and
had a wide band of raschel
lace around the edge. The
bandeau - type cap was
covered In the same lace and
accented with pearls.
The bride wore a double
strand of pearls that were a
wedding gift from her grandfather to her grandmother
when. they were married 52
years ago.
She carried a bouquet of
sonya roses with small white
roses, baby's breath and
stephanotis.
Maid of honor was Judy
Price, sister of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Guyla
Roush, sister of the
bridegroom,
and
Sue
Gilmore, Parkersburg. Flower
girl
was
Trlcia
Kremple, cousin of the bride.
Best man was Thomas
Roush, brother of the bridegroom. Groomsmen were
Tony Ramella, Charleston,
W. Va., and Rick Carpenter.
Ushers were Danny Price,
brother of the bride, and Rick
Carpenter. Ringbearer was
Travis Bishop, cousin of the
bride.
Richard Smith was the
soloist with Nan Blake as the
organist.
Sally Carpenter, sister of
the bride, registered the
guests. Jenny Price, sister of

the bride, and Kelly Biahop,
cousin of bride, assisted with
passing out the rice.
The reception was held in
the social room of the church.
Assisting
were
Linda
Vaugbn, Jenny Wharton, Ann
Dolittle, Karen Tuell and the
Rebekah Circle of the church.
The bride is a 1974 graduate
of Belpre High School and
1975 graduate of the Wood
County Vocational School of
Practical Nursing ..
The groom Is a 1973
graduate of Wabama High
School, Mason, W.Va. and a
1976 graduate of Parkersburg
Community College. Both are
employed at St. Joseph's
HospitaL
Alter a wedding trip to
Florida, the couple will, reside
at Rosemar Terrace, Vienna,
W.Va.
Out of town guesta attending the . wedding Included : Mrs. Robert N.
Butcher, Sr., grandmother of
the bride, Mt. Vernon, 0.;
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr.,
grandparents of the groom,
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
Forest Bishop, Jr., Kelly and
Travis, Mt. Liberty, 0.;
Joelym Price and Danica,
Omaha, Nebrsska; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Gallogy aftd
Rachel, Mt. Vernon; Mr. and
Mrs. Wllliam Kremple,
Tracia and David, Mt.
Vernon; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Carpenter, Jr.,
Jeremy, Davisville, W. Va.;

Michelle and Stephanie
Durbin, Mt. Vernon; Bets)'
Banner, Mt. Vernon.
Mrs. Wenonla Wyant, Mt.
Vernon; Mr. and Mrs.
William Bamer, Mt. Vernon ;
Mr. and Mrs. Riggleman,
Mrs. El«1ofa Banbury, Mlinsfieid, 0 .; Mr; and Mrs.
Robert W. Butcher, Jr., Mt.
Vernon; Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Riley, Sr., Mason,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. David
Riley, Glenville, W. Va.; Mrs.
Charles Walker, Sr., McConnelsvllle, 0.; Mrs. Gene
Bland, Letart, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Walker, Jr.,
Heath, Allison, Joahua,
Stoekpj)l't, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Patton, Ft. Wayne,
Indiana;· · Mrs. Josephine
Martin, Ft. Wayne, Ind.;
Mrs. Ted Riley, Jr., Middleport; Mrs. John Patrick
RUey, Middleport; Mt. and
Mrs. Carl Romella, Sr.,
Huntington;
Mr.
Carl
Romella, Jr., Dunbar, W.
Ya.; Barry Halfhill, Whipple,

·,

TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
AUXIUARY, Racine Post
602, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Those who ylan to aile'!!' the
Christmas party are to conlad Mrs. Julia Norris.
THE MEIGS Athletic·
Boosters will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday In the high,
school. All Interested parents
and residents are urged to
attend.
OHIO VALLEY Grange
2&amp;12 Letart Falls, special
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at hall. Potluck refreshments.
PAST
MATRONS,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
7:30p.m. Tuesday at home of
Evelyn Lanning.
REVIVAL through Dec. 3
at Racine Bethany United
Methodist Church with Rev.
Chester
Lemley
as
evangelist. Special singing.
Rev. Steve Wilson, pastor,
invites public.
· FREE BLOOD pressure
clinic, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Tuesday sponsored by
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club at town hall; public
invited.
PARENT TEACHER
FORUM, 7:30 Tu~ay at the
Meigs Junior High School.
Carl Hysell, Meigs County
juvenile officer, will speak on
drugs. All parents, seventh
and eight graders and others
are welcome.
omo ETA PHI chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday night at the Meigs
lm.

business

college ;

Butl er unsets

ly, that is, the dead leaves ed. Merit ribbons may also be exhibitors may make as
and blooms should be remov- placed in certain classes by numy entries as they desire.
c'tl and the conta iner should the judge who is an ac- For the exhibitors acbe clean and suitable fur the credited judge of the Ohio cumulating the most points in
type of plant growing in it. Association of Garden Clubs. the judging , a sweepstakes
In the horticulture division , award will be presented.
Flowering plans, Ms. Ingels
reports, must have at least
. one bloom.
class.
r
The rules specify that all :.-------------~----------'1
Ms. Ingels does sugge;1
some tip s fur bett er entries must be left in place
showmanship . She says· the until 4 p.m. on Sunday. The
plant should be groomed nice, judging which is done orally I
OPTOMETRIST
will begin at 1 p.m. on SaturOFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to S (CLOSE I
Lu do IS bring it Saturday mor ~

day and in each . class one

business coll ege; Julia
Poleyn, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Donald Polcyn, Route I,
Gallipolis, who will majo1· in
art at Ohio University; Kim
Kern, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Kern, Route 3,
Pomeroy, who will attend

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumer·oy, 0 .. Mund~ y. Nuv. 27, 1978
paced by sophomore center
Bucke~es Herb Willia.ms who tossed in
r .
"' . 17 and JUDIOr guard Kelvm
·
Ransey who a'~ded 16.
UDited Press,International . the second half, including 10
Elsewhere Saturday night,
"It's a shame to lose a in the final three minutes. He Iowa overwhelmed Kent
'basketball game like that." ended the night with 19 State, lll-76; Detroit edged
Those were the w&lt;rds of points.
Toledo, 67-64; and 'Army
Ohio State Coach Eldon
"We just broke down de!en- topped Ohio.Northern, 83-59.
Miller Saturday night after sively in the second half, "
At Iowa City, reserve
Butler battled back from a 2(). said Miller. "We gave up 29 center Steve Krafcisin had 14
point deficit to grab· an 87-ll&amp; points In the first half and 48 points and eight rebounds to
victory ov.er the basketball in the second half, and that lead Iowa to its victory over
Buckeyes on a :!().foot jumper was the big difference."
Kent State in the season
by Butler senior guard Tom
The Bucks led 46-29 at the · opener for both schools.
Orner with jus! two seconds intermission.
The Golden · Flashes '
remaining_.
"We relied too much on our leading scorer was reserve
The Buckeyes, playing perimeter shooting," Harvey Daniels with 20
theirfirstgame oftheseason, explained Miller. " In the points. Kent State was aiso
held a 62-42 lead with 13:08 second hall, we didn't get the ' l!acked by Burrell McGhee
left in the game, but the ball Inside enough. We didn't with 18, Kevin Smith with 13
torrid shooting of Orner and attack the basketball at all." and ·Jino Smith with 12.
an effective Butler full court
Butler's Joe Maloney took
Opening the season at
press · turned the game game-high scoring honors home, Detroit got 18 points
around . .
with 22, including 16 of.JB free and eight rebounds from
Orner tallied 14 points in throws. The Bucks were freshman Jerry Davis in its

ning sometinoe between 10
a.m. and noon to the Pumttroy
Elementary School and a
collUnittee will be there to
receive the pl ant and be sure
it gets entered into the right

Induction held for National Honor Society
Induction . ceremony for
new member's into the Kyger
Creek Chapter of the National
Honor Society was held
Wednesday as a part of the
Thanksgiving assembly program.
For the ceremony the

.. ' --

~

l . N. W. COMPTON, O.D. ·
l1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT II

blue, one red, one yellow and I
one white ribbon will be plac-

H-· POMEROY.

· •

,

. --- ----··--""'!'':""'-~------------

rangements, the gift of Mrs.
Howell Edwards, a teacher at
the school, and a Gallia
Academy National Honor
Society member.
Sherbet punch, decorated

..

. I

SENIOR
CITIZENS.

ca ke, mints and. nuts were
served. Alumni assisting with

the . reception were Bob
Fife, daughter of Mr. and Fulton, Mary Ruth Sauer, Liz
Mrs. Mrs. Raymond Fife, Jr., Hood Ruml ey , Kim Reynolds,
Route I, Cheshire, who plans Carol Coleman, and Pauline
to seek employment following· White. Mrs. Mary Fulton, a
graduation; and Sherrie Har- former teacher was also pre·
rison, daughter of Mr. and sent. Mrs. Fay Sauer is adMrs. Howard Harrison, visor.
Cheshire , who Will enter a
Speaker for the Thanksgivtechnical school.
ing service was the R ev .
Following the induction, Daphane Hesch of the Little
the annual reception honor- Kyger
Co ngregational
ing all senior members, Chu rch. Her theme was
alumni members, and "Thanksg iving is Thanks Livparents and teachers was ing." The high school chorus
held in the music auditorium. sang the Alma Mater, "Bless
The table was covered with This Land" and " Both Sies
lace over blue and centered Now" w1th Elaine Ward as
With a blue and gold ar- accompanist .

Urbana 46; Marletta 92,
Mount Vernon Nazarene 81;
Heidelberg 68 Findlay 60.
Also ,

,
.
·
Wllf!I!Ogton

Stale 12:

Steubenville 67 ; Wilberforce
73, Thomas More {Ky. 1 64;

and Manch ester (l nd ) 96
viii 87
·
'
ar
e
· .
Saturday RIO Grande
topped West Virginia T ech~
85 and Pikev ill e ( K .)
downed Dyk 7«• . Yth
.
e &lt;I""VfJ m
e
openmg roWid of the Rio
Grande
Tourn a ment
Sunday, Rio Grande defeated
Pik ·11 86 78
.
_ev1 e - lotake thetJtle

Ced

while, Dyke lopped West Virgtma fe ch 101-86 to earn third
place
·

i

P. M.

Thurs. 10: 00 A.M. Iii
12:00 P.M. Friday
and Saturday.

ADOLPH'S

See Us At the

DAIRY VAllEY

Pomeroy

h

Uiuh

SC 00

fl"'o,
·

J caue scores

Hudson 47 Kent Roosevel t 45

(o l)
lnd1.an Valley

e.

N

.
73 Ma ssil lon

Chrrst 63
Kenton 58 Ridgem ont 51
·
Lima Sr 86 Dayton Fa'1 .
55
n11 ew
Ljtlle Miam i 61 Wa ynesvi ll e
49
Madison Plains 62 London 59
Mansf ield Mad ison 68 Shelby

Clea r Fork 78 Mansf ield
Malabar 61
Cloverleaf 74 Rittm~n 58
Col Ac.a demy 45 Millersport
44
Highland 60
Col Briggs 82 Amanda Clear. Ant~ony Wayne 56 Holland creek 62
Springfield 53
Col Easlmoor 69 Westervi lle
Arcadia 66 North Baltimore
N 54 .
62
Col Linden 95 Col Sl Charles
Ashland 64 Ga lion 59
75
Bedford 66 Brunswic k 51
Coldwater 95 Arcanum 69
Berlin Hiland 58 Danvi lle 51 . c;ov~ n t r y 66 Doyle~to wn 64
Bloom Carrol l 49 Col Wehrle Coymgton 47 Tr 1 V1 llage 45
41
Cnstus Attucks (lnd) p Day
BuckeyeCentral40 Norl hmor
Dunbar 75
Jr
Cuyahoga Fal ls 86 Lyndhurst
Canal Winc hes ter 75 Liberty
Brush 60
Un ion 68
Danbury
Lak esi d e
58
Carl_isle 68 Mi ddletow n
Frem on t Sl Joe 54 K.id.ro_n
74
Mad1son 64
Ea s l
Knox
·Celina 69 To t Boshwer 54
Ch ri st ian 69
Chill icothe Flagel 68 Zane Fayelle 50 liber ty Cenler 33
Trace 66
Fmdlay 81 Col Waln ut R1dge
Cin Mc Nic ho la s 62 Milford 35 54
Ci n Princeton 78 Cin Bacon 76 Goshen 79 Blanchester 77
Ci n Summit Day 61 St Ber . G ~ove City 77 Fr~nklin Hi s 57
nard 43
High land 56 Manon Pleasant
48

United Press Internat ional
Akron E 64 Ca nton G!enOak
55
Akron Ellet 81 Ravenna 77
Akron Hoban 67 Medi na

53
Marion Elg in 67 Mt Gilead 48

Marion Local 73 Ayersville 44
Maumee 59 Perr ys burg 39
Medina 57 Clevelr1nd S 55
Med ina Buckeye 70 Bl a ck
River 60
M ia mi E 51 Wes t Millon 49
Midd letown Fe n wick 66
Eaton 52
Millbury Lake 61 Bow l•ng
Green 52
MI . Vernon 70 Lancaster 57
Na varr e Fairless 73 Tuslaw
51
New
Philad elphia
73
Marling ton 6A
No rt h Canton 66 Green 55
Orr ville 79 Norwayne 71
Otlawa Glandorf 48 p afr ick
Henry 39

..

Superior

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From Vaughan's
L
A PersonaL
Congratulations To
Russell Starcher, ALL SVAC
An Employee

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TOMATOES ............................ 'g~~·
FRESH LIKE

sroAEs • cAROINAl FOODSTORES

Ea.

GENERALMILLS

•

~

l omll 1...0 wot h r m.rpon

o~e et~&lt;J pou

-a

per tamUy

2

·'

7 -m

Bo11.es

z

h pues 1212/18

~

Cans

XIJ1e]I]J 1 ]ZI

- - - - - --- ,,

BUGLES

A beautiful design to complement the superb sound! A welcome
addition to any stereo system with features you 'd expect to pay
much more for . Convenient 19'/.ox11 V2x9Vs" size, yet it delivers
solid bass down to 30 Hz. With 8" acu ustic suspension woofer.
3" tweeter. Wrapped in a genuine walnut veneer case with ·
molded latticework grille . It's sure to please any music lover on
your gift list. 40-4019

19&lt;

BETIY CROCKER

MAXWELL HOUSE

7995 Ea.

lb

'

PEANUT BUTTER ................................ .'~;~· lis'

Reg.

69&lt;

MEDIUM SIZE

BORDENS

Good II

Ca r don~ !

09211700

R oy a l 8 1uH Si tll@ &gt;
00 ]0 O'&gt;

~

CA RDI NAl\ ~

Vo S10RE S

c

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
UTERARY CLUB, home of
Mrs. Dwight Wallace with
Mrs. Emerson Jones to
review "Final Payments."

BUTTER CHIPS ..................... .':;:~ 1109

90 MINUTES WITH
THE BOSTON POPS
STEREO LP

~

~

CHARGEIT
{MOST STORES)

50·2040

DETERGENT.

499
51-1015

Arthur Fiedler

5TH AVENUE CANDY BAiS ............... ~:; 691

$.. 79

.

MILKY WAY , SNICKER$ OR

CHEER5:~~tLABE~
-U SOFt
99~

CASSETlE

399

THURSDAY
TWIN-CITY SHRINETTES, 7:30 Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Mary Stewart.
Chester Road.

~1 - 1017

N

in stereo.

3 MUSKETEERS CANDY BARS ......... ~;: 491

3

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNER ................ ·

KRAFT

oz.
..•......•..•••.
J3

'

u.nl~ on_
t wnt-o ooupon '
~

STUDENT NAMED
WASHINGTON ' (UPI)
Rebecca S. McMahan, a Kent
State ~Diversity senior from
Loveland, has been named
national field representative
with the College Republican
Natiooal Committee.
Miss McMahan, a political
science student, is vice chairman of the Ohio League of
College Republican Clubs.
iA!e will inoplement plans of
the cunmlttee, the official
student auriliary of the
Republican
National
Committee.

OMISSION NOTED
Mrs. Janice Gibbs, Mrs.
Beulah White, and Mrs.
Gwinnie Whit e were
hostesses for a recent
meeting' of the Busy Bee
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church. They were
not listed as hostesses in an
earlier account of the class
meeting.
0.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Smith, Elizabeth, w. va.;

AM/FM 'STEREO RECEIVER
CASSETTE SYSTEM CUT uoso
.,

A QUALITY STEREO SYSTEM
AFFORDABLE AT noso OFF

SAVE
25°/o

SAVE
21%

24 -oz.

49;

Pkg . ·

I

ORUBE
JIHCE

32-oz.
Carton

•·••

SOUR CREAM DIPS ........................ .c.'"" 49

c

(

SWEETMilKor BUTTERMILK

PILLSBURY BISCUITS ........ .. ..... 2 :;::~ 39

VELVEETA CHEESE FOOD .........2 ,~;, 12 2'
CARDINAL

l ·Lb.

SOFT MARGARINE .......................... Bowl

Stereo Receivffi C•ssette
;

49(

• CARO INAlF OODS TOR ~S

LIOUIDLUX

SNACKS. &amp; BEVERAGES

on• coupon fi e• l1moly

22 -ot.
Bottle

!
89( ~
~

0

C

KEEBLER SHINDIG&amp;

SNACK CRACKERS ......................... ... 69

*

TM of Dolby Ulbs, Inc.

NABISCO

·

ESCORT CRACKERS ....... ................ ;~: 69

SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY ... MOST STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS 'TIL CHRISTMAS!

MOST STORES OPEN SUNDAY /4FTERNOONS TIL CHRISTMAS

SILVER B " IDG'E PLA. zA-

Di n1;. I OR

8

$1

.8 Bottle•
,·.....

o•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

.'REG. PEPSI -COLA

Mrs. Floaale
Allensworth.
Evelyn
Grueser,
Grace
Hawley, aU of Middleport;
Mrs. Debbie Moore, Little iiiAIDIIIVIIiSIIOiiNiiOIFITIAiiNDiiYIIIIiCiiOIIIRIIIPiOjjRAIITIIIOiliN•········
Hocking, 0.

(

09

PLUS DEPOSIT

or CAIN KL£ CUT
TREAT

FRENCH FRIES .................................... 2

'
Lb.
Pkg.

•

49C

lLOYD J . MARftiBS

BLACKBERRY PIE ................................. .':;.:~ s1,'

lLOVDJ. MARftiSS

CHERRY PIE ......................:.............. ,...... .':;~ $139
VALLEY BEll

SHERBR .............. :.......... : : ~~~- ..
,.

- - - - - ---

~·-

lom il OM ~IIi liOltQOn

• R~Mistic LAB·55 Ch•nger
With B•••· Dust Co~~e1
$17. 95-V•Iu• M•g. C•~tridg•

·

jij"e]i)::lt):J

DElERGENT

·gal 149
CHOC. MILK................. :.. ..
$

VALLEY BELL

Recorder with Dolby• FM; r.,,
• Two Nov•-6 W•lnut Venur
Bookahelf Spe•kefl

h•m•IY

UTE MAID FRESH CHILLED

IIOIWEi'l!'

• ReMistlc SCR- 1800 AMI FM

• Re•lis~ic STA -528 AMI FM
SttJreo Receiver
• Two Nolla -6 W•lnut Veneer
BooJcshelf Spealcers
• R,,Jistic LAB· 53 Ch•nger.
with B•se . Dust Cover ·~d
Di•mond M•gnetic Cartndge

1&gt; ~•

••.••
CREAM ................................... .c."'"

~~~~~~~~~i~~u

Items
Price
599"'
Regular
separate

«MJpon

' BORDENS

$319 $469
Regular Separate
Items Price 429 110

-.

.. •.

GROUND $149
. ~~~~~ ..........~~-..~139 FRANKIESLB.89¢
CHUCK .......~~·... · ~~~:R . . . . . . . ~: 79¢ CORNDOGS ... ~b~.~l

10 ;00
11 : 00

West

Virginia State 69 · Grove City
t' U .
( p ) 67 M
a..
•
?Un
mon 57 ;
Dav1s &amp; Elkins (W.Va .) 78,

BONELESS ROLLED

25% Off Purchase,
Just Present Your
Golden Buckeye Card
When Ordering.

54,

Robe rt Morns ( Pa.) 51 ;
Cen tra l

GOOD USDA CHOICE

· SALE

Brenda

win over Toledo:
Toledo, 6-1, was led · by
junior forward Jino Swaney
with 19 points and junior
forward Dick Miller with 12.
Army had five scorers in
double figures and shot 68
percent frotn the field in the
second half in easily
defeating Ohio Northern at
Ada .
ONU, now 1-1, was led by
Pat Koester with 20. It was
Army's first game of the
season.
In other games Saturday
nighl it was : Xavier 100,
Ot~rbeln 68; Ashland 1)7,
West Liberty State (W.Va.)
98; Cleveland State 75 .
Baldwin-Wallace 58 ; John
Carroll 75, Case Western 73;
Wittenbe rg 76, Earlham
(Ind.) 73; Wooster 85, Calvin
(Mich.) 71; Capital 66,

gg~

.~·

-

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nuv. 27, 1978

•

8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday . Nov. 'll. 1978
For Sale
condition . saoo 992-7583.
1971 WW Horse trailer 1800.

742-2844.

Yard Sale
IF VOU hove a service to offer

wa nt to buy or sell someth 1ng:
oe look ing for work ... or
whatever ... you' ll get results
tos1er w1th o Sentinel Wont Ad .

Co1 1992·2151&gt;.
NOTICE OF SALE

Pursuant to an Order ot
Sa le, issued by the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio, 1 w i ll offer for
sa le . at publ iC auct ion , on the
16th day of De c ember , 1978,
at 10 : 00 O' Clock AM , at the
front door of the Meigs

follo w ing

estate

described

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Notices

1970 FORD PICKUP . Good

Co un ty
courthouse,
Pomeroy , Ohio, 45769 ,

DICK TRACY

at
the

rea l

Siluate '"S ection 4, Town 2.

Range 12, Sutton Township,
Me1gs County , Oh ~o. and
being part of 160 Acre Lot No .
1204, an'et being more tull y

NO HUNT ING or trespassing on
my property w1thou1 permi ssion . Judv McGraw .

.

.

-

.

GUN SHOOT . Racine Gun Club.
~verv Sunday I pm . Foctor v
choke gu m. only .
GUN SHOOT . Rac ine Volunteer
hre Depl Every Saturday b :30
pm at the1r bu1ld1ng 1n Boshon.
Factory c~ok e gun.s ~nl_y ._ . .
NO. HUNTING or tre sposs1ng doy
or ntght on the Charles Yost
and the Ivon Well Forms .
PHYLLI S 'r'OUNG wil l be work1 ng
full time now thru th e Holidays
at Koy s BeautySalon . Coli
992:2725 fo r on appointment
- -- . . . . . CHRISTMAS BAZAAR D&amp;eember
I . 2. Me•gs Coun ty Humane
Soc1ely across from Or Conde
1n M1dd leport
Hand -mode
ilems., house pla nts, hand
po1nted lamps , Ami5h food ,
and much more.

------

-~

NO HUNTING or trespassing on
the Charles Price property
without permission.

------- ---NQ HUNTING OR trespass ing on

WANT AD
CHARGES
I) Wtu \L~ or

f &lt;~ sh

J ''" 'n&lt;
2d&lt;a
:lt\41~.....
lid.i1~ 1'i

1977 MO NTE CAR LO Good cond i·
lion , P.S., P B , A.C. , AM· FM
rad io, tilt stee rmg Price $5000
Coll q92 :181:11 .

Umkr
f.ha r~l'

25

l (10

I

l.!ifl
I Nl
.1 00

I !10
1: 25
,\ 75

1972 !-=ORO Club~o;on \Jon. 301
a uto ., P.S 992.71:17b.
bUfORD lTD. $295 997·2429
1q74 PONTIAC$ 1500. 94 9·'122'.l
For Sale

A1b

dil)'s wtll bl.• l'han.wtl at \111.• I tluy

ratt·
In lllt'llll!l y Curd of ThHnks ;JiltI
OtJnu,n y 6 t'l'lltN l.k r wtJfd, $:\00
uunimum "tot.~h m &lt;HI\Iallt't'
Mtlbllt' Hullll' suit s a1kl Yard sa les

wiLI1 t•asll With
un it•I·. 25 l 't'lll d1a1 ~~· fu1· :uls l'&lt;tiT} UI~ Ru11 Nmnlwr in Ccwt•IJ[ Tilt' &amp;n-

Mrt'

ltl't'l'Pit'tl

011\y

tlllt'l

'

Till' Pullli ~ ht'r n •sel'\lt"S Lht· tl)!ht
rt')L'l1 any ads dt'CIIlt'd olr

t o t·tht ur

jt&gt;diUnal. Tilt' PuiJittiht.•t' W\11 nut btt

Eldon Morris ' properly, Bailey
rcspou~ 1lllt' fur 1nurtt tha11 om• Ult'tll·
described
as
fol lows :
Run
Commencino at a oni,t ;...
rt'(.'t m st&gt;rtitlll .
Phunt•992-2!56
the N E corner Of said
ATTENTION DEER HUNTERS. Hove
Section 4 ; thence S. along the
your trophies mount ed . Colt
E . line of said Section,., Town
33'-'.- 2, Range 12 , Sutton Township __Terry Brown . 985· 38.:.
and theW Lin@ of Section 3A,
KATHRYN · I loved you in
Town 2, Range 11. Lebanon
19-411, I tove yo u more In 1978.
Township, 1320 feet more or
Happy Anni¥ersary, 30th .
less to an iron pin In t he
John
grantor's N . E property
corner and theN E . corner of
said 160 Acre. Lot No . 1204
REDUCE SAFE and fast
and the real point of begin ·
with GoBese Tablets &amp; E Vap
n ing for the land herein
"wa ter pills ." Nelson Drug .
descr i bed ; thence S. 0
degrees 00 ' 00" w. cont in u ing
Munduy
. .a.JQ.ng said tine and the
Noon on SatuniHy
grantor's E PppertY li ne and
Tueodey, Nov. 21
the E . line of 160 Acre Lot .
Tut"s00y
No . 1204 and theW . line of 160
tluu Fru..l i!)
Acre Lot No . 1181 and pass ing
&lt;PM
an iron p in at 782.83 feet a
Lht• I.Wy bt'fun· pullhl'utl ul\
totaiUfstance of 813 .78 teet to
a railroad spike In the
Sunday
ex isting centerline of State
Bernice Bede Osol.
4PM.
· Route No 12A ; thence nor .
Pnday aftcr'llOOJl
thwestwardty along
the
existing center I ine of State
Route No . 12.4 and with the
arc of a curve to the left
Wanted to Buy
having a radius of 636.62 feet
for a distance of 193.8o4 feet to
CHIP WOOD . Po les max
a railroad spike, the long
d1ameter 10" on largest end .
chord of said arc bearing N .
Sl2 per ton . Bundled slob, $10
November 21, 1971
&amp;A degr~es 07' 41" W. 193 .09
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
feet to said point; thence s. 87 This will be a year when many
Pollet Co., Rt 2, Pomeroy .
degrees 08' 57 " w. continuing transitio ns will begi n to occur
'1'12·2689.
along said line 166.62 feet to a
·railroad spike; thence south - So me you 'll want , others you
might not, but they a ll can be TIMBER POMEROY Forest Prowestwardly coQtinulno along
happy and successful with dillducts Top price lor stond 1ng
seld li ne and wrth the ar-c of a
cune to the left having a gent atte nti on by you .
saw timber. Coli 992-5965 or
radius of 460 .1 5 feet for a SAGITTARIUS ~Nov. 23-Dec.
Kent Hanby, 1-446-8570.
distance of 171 .93 teet to a
railroad spike, the long chord 21) You'lllearn ot something by OlD FURNITURE, ice boxes , brass
of said arc bearing S. 76 acc ident today . You'll know
beds , iron beds , desks , etc ..
degrees 26' 44" w 170.93 feet how to put it to good use. The
com plete households . Write
to said po in t ; thence south · obv1o us might have eluded oth· ·
M .D . Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
westwardly continu ing along ers. but not you . Find o ut more
col l992·77b0.
said li ne and with the arc of a
curve to the left having a about yours elf by sending for Oto COINS, pocket watches .
radius of 286.48 teet tor a your 1979 copy of Astra-Graph
class rings , wedding bands
distan ce of 134.47 feet to a Letler. Mail 50 cents tor each
diomonds
. Cold or silve r. Call
railroad spike In the gran . and a long, self-addressed,
Roger Womslev . 74:2·2331'
tor ' s W . property line and the stamped erivelope to A-stroex isti ng center11ne of County
WANT TO buy : old 45 and 78
Road No. 35, the long c:hord of . Graph, P .O. Box 489, Radio City
phonograph records . Call
Slallon
,
N.Y.
10019.
Be
sure
to
said arc bearino S 52 dearees
992·6370 or Contact Marlin Fur·
47' .l2•) w. 128 .37 feet to said
specify birth sign .
nitur e
pain(; thence N . 6 degrees 25' CAPRICORN ~Dec. 22-Jan. 11)
17 " E . along the grantor ' s W. A succ essful departure from
propertv line and the existing
centerline of County Road you r usua l style of doing someNo . 35 , A9 .88 teet to a railroad lhlng might surprise others .
Pels for Sale
spike ;
thence
north · .Actually , 1t won ' t be rash beeastwardly continuing along havior on your part - long
HOOF
HOLLOW
Hones Buy . sell
said li ne and with the arc Of a
trade or lroin . Ne w and used
curve to the left having a hours ot s tudy went into lt.
saddles Rut h Reeves , Alba ny .
radius of 700 .56 feet for a J.QUARIUS ~Jan. 20-Fab. 19)
(614) 698·3190
distance of 99 .83 feet to a Snap up an opportumty to team
railroad spike. the long chord up wlt h one who usual ly works
RISING STAR Ken nels . Boord1ng
of said arc bearing N , 2
and groom1ng , oil br'eeds .
degrees 20' 20" E 99 .75 feet to alone Your goals will be in
Cheshire 367·0292
said point ; thence N. I degree complete a ccord . There'll be
44' 36" W. continu ing along no problem with the associa3 YEAR old Silent dog , Si50 ~wo
said tine 652 .74 feet to a ti On .
bmonths old Bl ue tick Elkhound
railroad sp ike ; thence nor . PISCES ~Feb. 2Q.March 20) You
thwestwardly,
continuing
pups . lawre nce Donohue ,
along said line and with the may be ask ed to make a se742-3049
rious
decision
today
,
but
ye:u
ere of ~ ve to~Je11.
Mavln Q a radius of 639 .23 feet won ' t be at a loss. Past experifor a distance of 99.80 fee t to a ence and knowledge will aid
railroad spike, the long chord you in mak1ng the right move
Give Away
of sl!lid arc bearing N . 6
ARIES
~Morch 21·Aprll1t) SudTHREE FEMALE puppies . m1xed .
degrees 12' 57" w. 99. 70 teet
to sa id point; thence N . 10 den c hang es or c hallenges
mostly collie. 8-10 weeks old
degrees 41' 18" W continuing requiring qu ick actio n won ' t . After 5. cotl 992·b359
along said line 13.52 teet to a faze you today . You 're up to
railroad spike in the gran - meeting and overcoming the BLACK LABRADOR Retnever .
tor ' s nort h propertv li ne and
mole. Good watch dog. Friend·
the north line of said 160 Ac re most d1ff1cult problems.
ly w1th children . Giving owo~ to
Lot No 1204 and the M~uth line TAURUS ~April 2G-Moy 20) An
good home because we hove
of 160 Acre Lot No . 1203 ; old pal who always seems to be
dnother Iorge dog. Phone
thence N. 89 degrees 28' 29" around when you need her
997 .73 12
E . along the grantor's north
won'l tail you today . She 'll
property line and the north
THREE
PU PS Mother is Beagle
line of s~Jd 160 Acre Lot No . come Into the pic ture rlghl on
991.27 17
cue
.
120" and the south line of 160
Acre Lot No . 1203 and resslng GEMINI ~May 21-June 20) Al- TWO DOGS. yellow and while.
en iron pin at 25 .AO tee a total lhough you most-often prefer
992·b351
distance of 650.4.t teet to the being where the act1on is ,
po int of be;inn ing and con ta ining 11.721 acres , Subject today you 'll be happiest by the
to all legal ,highways and tlres1de. Even domestic chores
For Rent
el!lsements of record .
will be tun .
Deed Reference : Volume CANCER ~June 21-July 22) An COUNlRY MOBILE Home Pork .
253, Page 731. Meigs County unexpecled o pportunity will
Route 33, ('lorth of Pomeroy
Deed Records .
Lor ge lots . Co11992·7•79
present
Itself
to
dis
cuss
with
a
Terms of Sate: Cash in
hand on uay of sale for not friend something that 's been 3 AND o4 RM. furniShed and un·
less than two .thirds of the on your mind tor a long time . It
furn1shed
opts . Phone
appra ised value. The ap. should do you good to a1r the
992-543&lt;1 .
pra ised value of the real
matter .
esta te Is $61.000.00.
TWO BEDROOM, kitchen fu rn1sh·
LEO ~July 23-Aug. 22) A lamlly
ed , opt Coli before 8 om
James J . 1'-roffitt member (o ne you ' d least sus992-2288
Sheriff of pec t) could make it possible
Meigs County / Ohio Ieday for you to obtain some- RENT ERS ASSISTANCE for Sentor
Cifi tens. You mby be able to
thing you've wante·d for a long
111 1 13 , 27 (121 1. 3tc
live in our apartment for less
time .
than $50. Village Mono r.Aport .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 22) Probme nts . 992· 7787,
lem-solvmg Is your cup of tea
FURNISHED
ROOMS ranted week·
today . Whal you tack le you'll
POMEROY LANES
ly . Maid service. Exceptional
handl e with the firm ness and
Eorly Wed. Mixed
neighborhood . 992-3o489 aft er
persistence necessary to ef·
November 15, 1r71
5.
Pts. fee t a successful conc lusion .
Smith-Nelson Mtrs
67 LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today , TWO BEDROOM furn is hed opt. in
Long Shots
56 when you need them the most,
Middleport .
992· 3129 or
Young's Market
50 the seeds you've planted bear
'1'12 5&lt;:.:3:.:•:_
· - - -- -- He~~dquarters
41 lrull wll h a bountiful harvest.
Zlde' s Sport Shop
39 You may have lo ng-since given
No. 3
35 up receiving a return .
Help Wanted
High Series. Men - A. L. SCORPIO ~Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Phelps, Jr ., 551 , Bill Porter, Your pract1ca1 approach to a PAYROll AND 1nvo1cing clerk for
field cOnstruction site at Moun·
5&gt;45.
situation that has been bugging
to ineer Plant , Ne w Hoven , WV
High Series, Women everyone e lse brii')QS you to the
Send resumes to Resume , PO
Carolyn Bachner 482, Helen
tore today . ll would be an honor
Box 478, Parkersburg . WV
Phelps, 479 .
well-earn
ed
26101.
High Game. Men - Larry
Dugan, 193, A. L. Phelps, Jr.,
192.
High Series, Women, Pat
PROBATE COURT OF
C..rosn 178 , Isabelle Coach,
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
177.
ESTATE OF MELVINA
BARNHART, DECEASED .
HI~ Team Series
CISI NO. 22416
Hea uarters 1928.
On Novemb~rr 22, 1971, In
Hlg1
Team Game
the Meigs County Probate
Headquarters 673.
Court. Case No . 22.t96 Patrick
for
H . O ' Brien , 100'12 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio o4S7•9
Eorly Sundly Mixed
was appointed •dmlnlstr•tor
NoVember 19, 1971
of the estate of Melvina Barn .
Pts hart , deceased, late of Rt . 1,
Tom's Carry Out
66 Middleport, Ohio .
Jock's Dairy Bar
62
Apply in person
Manning D. Webster
Royal Crown Bottling
52
Probate Judge -Clerk
111 Court St.
31n01e
50 (11 ) 27, {12l 4, 11, 3tc
flomeroy, Ohio
Gltibs' Grocery
48
Meigs Inn
·
34
High Series Men - Jerry
PUBLIC NOTICE
Auto Sales
R0 ught 550 , Darrell Dugan
Chester Twp . Revenue
501 .
Sharing date tor Fiscal Year 1965 fA LCbN 2-door , std . shift.
High Series Women July 1, 1977 . June 30, 1978
Stephanie
Rought
572 , mey be viewed at my home · Good work car . Runs good
bod'( r~u~~.: 992: 2~~ ·- __ _
Max lne Dugan 504.
. for public l~spectlon.
High Game Men - Jerry
1%8 CHEVROLeT IMPMA . Reol
Frederick M . Tuttle,
Rought 199, Oerrell Dugan
-~&lt;!_ohal'!.. ~· 70'J!l -· -·---Clerk
196.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
Rl
.
3
1974
MUSTANG II. 4 c~l. . 4·speed ,
High Game Women new tires. Must sell immediateStephanie
Rought ' 241. (11) 27 , ltC
. _l.v.·- ~·7685
f10axlne Dugan 191 .

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

ASTRO·GRAPH

COAL . LIMESTONE . sand, gro ~o~e l .
colctum ~: hl o nd e , fe rt il ize r, dog
food , a nd all types of solt ~ X ·
celsior Salt Works I n c ., ~ Mom
St ., Pome roy. 992-389 1.

-

1976 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1 1, both unde rpin ning, $1500
and assume loo n 949-2b83 or
843-,33\l

LUMP HOUSE coo t del1vered . $35
pe r ton cosh Col i any! me
992 7l2b .

-

------

-~---

'1 H·78.1 5 wheels ond ti res. $50 .
M1xed hov
949 2413 or
949 ·2849.

...

-

POMEROY
lANDMARK
Christmas
Headquarters
tor all your G.E. T.V.'s &amp;
Hotpoint Appliances.

.,..

~\\

it
' ·

&lt;t

•
I

hav .

HELl' WANTED

'

~-:18-Jk., I

992-3325
216 E . Second Street .

9854 137.

1959 ~~. TO;C;N
c;-:F-o,- d:-w
--:;,:h -,o-o-,1-,b-ed
-:
and wr ecker boo m. 992·b229
19b7 CHEVROLET PICK UP. $350 o'
best offer. 992 5514 .

SNOW
TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
.
ONSALEAT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVIt"E STATION

Pomeroy landmarll
9 .. ~ck W. CorHy, Mgr .
. . . . . Phone 992-2181
A 1978 Honda Hawk 400 cc motor·
cy cl e 1200 mil es S1 100 or best,
offer Coli afte r 7pm , 742-2028
NEW IDEA lwo row pull type corn
pic ker and McCurdy grav ity
box . Al bert Po rker, 2 miles
north of Chester, Ohio.
NANNY GOAT . 3 years old $35 .
992· 5382
~·-----

Hubbard's Greenhouse.

NE.W LISTING - Large 3
bedroom older home near
stores · and shopping . 8
rooms , l'h baths. full
basement and new nat . gas
furnace. $25.000.
NEW LISTING - Would
you like five acres wlth dug
well, lots of firewood,
electric avai lable on a good
mail and schoo l bus route.
57,500.
COUNTRY HOME - l'h
acres 1f good garden land .
Room for farm animals,
has
T . P.
water,
J
bedrooms. bafh, gas heat,
nicely located. $1&amp;.000.
RENOVATED
-,
3
bedrooms, bafh, new F .A.
furnace. carpeting , LC .
water. and 1.23 acres neer
town . $23,000.
NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms
with plenty of closet space.
Bath, n ice kitchen, dining
with glass doors tot he wild.
Carpeting, T. P . Water on
one acre. 535.500.
BUILDING &amp; TRAILER
LOTS - Several locations
and prices . Acreage II
wen ted .
DON'T BUY BY PRICE,
BUY ON QUALITY AND
LOCATION. TRUST A
REALTOR
FOR
GUIDANCE . CALL 9923325.
VIRGIL 8. AND GORDON
CERTIFIED
B. ARE
APPRAISERS. HELEN L.
AND SUE P. MURPHY
ARE
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES.

-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

CAS H HJR junk cars. Wrecke ·
serviCe. Frye's , Rut la nd . Oh1o.
742-2081 .

Syracuse, 0 .

$10.00
Foliage PI ants
3" to 10"
SOc to SS. OO
HANGING BASKETS 4" IO
10 "
1

1.25 to '5.00

~HOUI..D &amp;ET

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Now arra nge the ci rcled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

Answer here: A ..

KXI X ] r X XXXXr

(Answers tomorrow)
Satu,day 's l Jumbles · LOW LY S HEAF GALLEY FINITE
Answer· A kmd of " art" yo u mig ht be s urpn sed to f1nd
In amov1ng p1cture-" S TILL" UFE

BUT LOOK AT THE
EDITORIALS "·THEY' RE
ALL FOR YOU,

EXCAVATING, · dozer , looder and
backhoe work. dump trucks
and lo-bovs for hire. wi ll haul
fill dirt, to soil. limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, day phone 992-7089. night
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

CeUulosic !wOod' fiber)
T~erma I insu~tion

..

r'·

sav~ 30 pet. to 50
on healing cos
Experience ond
lu lly Insured

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

·rJ11r::'J.-'!#i2
BRADFORD, Auctione er, Complete Serv1ce Phone 949·2487
or 949·2000 . Racine, Ohio , Critt
Bradford. ,
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
small appliances . lawn moWer
next to State Highwov Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·
" 3825 .

___,::.lilp~

"'".o!.l:c..lllll.__L__

WEiLL , ~AI..ILI&lt;
Wf.lo\T f.IAVE ...OU
FOUND?

\

ALL RJGHT, 00P, :t:M
READY NOW! COME.

A WAY 10 iHE ROOF! GIVE

Me ilME!' '10 SECt.JRE 1HIS
LIN!', ~EN -.otJ AND iHc
~

Af.ICAD!

CAN JOIN Me!

I

1
19 Greek

G ~ .,.........._

11 - :2. 1

river

L__-----'---"----''------'-~21 Weathe r

word

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
Service. Phone 992·2o47B.

As low As

2 Leave
a margm
3 Stupefy
4 Brightest
s tar
5 Russian
ci ty
6 Attached
7 Direc tion
on s hip
8 Parsimonious
9Cake
10 Australian
soprano
16 Asian river

Yesterday's Answer

20 Various

27 Narcotic

21 Sanford's
relative
23 Volcano's
top
24 Famed
Florentine
family
25 This instant

28 Blustered
~

Rosalind's
refuge
30 Cloyed
33 Gossip
31 Boundary
37 Golfer
Finsterwald

..... ~":r.;
9' and 12' YIIIJI

FURNACE CL EANING . Coli
992·5587 .
FROSTV'S CB radio equipmen t
Everything ,i n two-way radio
antennas and acces . Phone
Portland 843·2181. Open even·
ings t1U 8:00; Sunday 2 00 till
6·00.
HONAKER'S CB a nd' electronic
equipment . Rt.33 506 2nd St.,
Mason , WV 25260.

Floor Covering In

Gold Cup master play
NORTH
• 10 8 6 2
• Q6 2
+ A J 10 7
+ AK

1own &amp; Counby
_Pomeroy la~dmarll ,

.

. .
WEST

E AST

• J 10 8

• K 7 43
----

----

+ KJ 4

'

'

•

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

+Q!09153

------------------------------------;::~~rr----------~------------------~--., 40 ofegg
We nt

••

StoQ

::t

Go"r t.l'/"(

•
.
•
0

\NAL.L~

C.Aua.H,.

{

IN A flE.vOt..VINu
~ HR~E

-

AC.GOUN.,..

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : West

out
of fashion
4 1 Suit
fabric

West

Pass
Pass
Pass

DAILY CRY I'TOQUOTE - Here's h ow t o work it :

&lt;

A 95

+K5
+ 74

kind

'Is

Pass

Nortb East
I+
Pass
2+
Pass
4+
Pass
Pass Pass

AXYDL B AAX R
LONGFELLOW

Opening lead:

IRUnAND
FURNITURE

One letter si mply stan ds for another. In this .sample A is
u sed for the t hree L's, X fur the IWO o ·s . ele . Sm gle le tt ers,
apostrophes, t he le n gt h and f or m at~ o n o( the words are all
hin ts . Each day th e cod e letters are d ifferent.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

CRYI'TOQUOTES

742-22i1

YQGUDYM

DF

TWGGWN

NON WHO IN

C NEFGNRGDQY

CQN

Oswald: " We have .used
GUR Y hands from the American
magazine, Popular Bridge ,

LRSDY M

7HAT BE?

on many occasiOns. This
week we will use s ome from
the British magazine with

EH

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT
MAKES A '

eck W. Carsey, Mgr.

.

COOPER SINGlE drum swabbing
rig with 1800 lt . of three-e•gths ·
in, sand line mou nted on 1968
f -600 Ford tru ck , $7000 . Coli
385 5638 between 9 30 om and

~o~k~t-~td;.

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE
•

.

.,~"-

GUW

PQYFPDWYPW .

the same name. ••

Alan : "Today's hand was
played in a n early match in
URFSDYF
F
--=• U W Y N Z
the Gold Cup whic h is
~ Yesterday's Cryptoquole: A DIET OF FOOD GIVES US England's major team
"": BODILY HEALm, A DIET OF PEOPLE GIVES US
event. It is played with IMP
TRANQUILLITY OF THE SOUL. -BERNARDIN DE ST . .. scoring as are nearly all
major tournaments ."
PIERRE
Oswald : "At table one the
South player decided to
BARNEY'

HAVE I(E
GOT A
LITTLE
FRAME?

.

15 IN STOCK
Ll!rgest

.

-

•J

c

"

TARNATION CAN

CALL 992-2342
EVENINGS 992-2449 .

11-21

SOUTH
+ AQ9753

. Coiii74H211
' TAlK-TO
.Yenclellar Horb Gntt
or Gene .s mtlll ·

-

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

8QIIi432
+ J 82

Buy wllere you con come ·In ,
•nd- wh•l you're lOlling ~
- GoodHiedlaM :;.._ Fully
shH:kod.

ATTENTION : HOME' owners. End
your pointtng wotrtes let
Gollio Home Improvement in ·
stall solid vinyl siding on you r
home with the omozing Styro
Foom Insulation . Comes wit h 40
veor worrenty . Free estimates.
Coll367·0209. Gall •po hs Ohio.
-·- --- ---

BRIDGE

;;-+-+--t--t

Rubber Back Carpet

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? Lo st your operators
ltcepse? Phone 992-2143.

3,4 ; 1 :3G-News 13 .

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1978
5 ·4$--Farm Reporf 13; 5· ~PTL( I ub 13.
5 :5&gt;--Sunrise Semesler 10.
6 .oo-PTLCiub 15; 700 Club ~8 .
6 :25---Concerns &amp; CommenTs 10; 6 :31)..--Focus on
Col umbus 4.
6 :4&gt;--Mornlng Report 3; 6 :5o--Good Morning, Wes1
Virginia 13 ; 6:5&gt;--Chuck White Reports 10 ; News
13.
7 :00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News B; Jetsons 10.
7 : 1&gt;-Weather 33 ; 7 : 3G--Schoolies 10.
8 ·oo-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St 33
9 :00- Merv Gr iff in 3; Phil Donahue 4,1 3, 15 ;
Emergency One 6; Hogan ' s Heroes 8; Match Game
10.
9 3()-Brady Bunch 8; Family Altair ·10.
10 ·00-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6: All In The
Family 8,10. Da ting Game 13.
10 :3o--Jeopa rdy 3,4,15; Andy Griffith 6; Price is Right
8,1 0; $20.000 P yramid 13.
11 oo-- High Roll er s 3,4,15: Happy Days 6.13; Consumer Su rvi va l Kit 20.
11 :3o--Whee l of Fo rtun e 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13 , News
4: Love ot Life 8, 10 .
11 · 5&gt;--CBS News 8; House Ca ll 10
17 :00- Newscenter 3; Bob Braun 4; News 6,10; Midday
Magazine 13, America Alive 15; M usic 33 .
12 :3G--Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; for Tomorrow 8,10.
1·00-Bew;tched 3; All My Children 6,13. News 8;
Young &amp; the Re stless 10 ; Not For Women Onl y 15.
1· 3(}-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10.
2 OO--One Life lo Live 6,13 ; 2 :3G--Oocfors 3,415 ;
Guidmg Light 8, 10
3 00-Another World
J :oo-Another 3,4, 15; Genera l Hospital 6, 13; Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3:3()-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10; Di ck Cavell 20
4.0o-Specia 1Treat 3,41 ,5; MervGrlltln 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Fnends 8; Sesame St 20,33; Batman 10 ; Dinah 13 .
4 3()-G illlgan' s Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10.
5 00-Siar Trek 3,4; Beverly Hi ll billies B. Mister
Rogers' Neig hborhood 20,33: Gomer P y le . U SMC
10 ; Emergency One 13 ; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3G--News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co . 20,33 ; Mary
Ty ler Moore 10. Odd Couple 15 .
6 :QO--News 3,4,8,10, 13 .15 ; ABC News 6; Fee ~ing Free
20.
6 :3G--N BC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7·oo-Cross·Wits 3; PM Magazln ~ A; Newlywed Ga m e
6,13; Pop Goes The Counfry 8; News 10; Love,
America n Style 15 ; Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel 20 ;
Economically Speaklnq 33 .
7 3o--Hollywood Squares 3: Let' s Go To The Races 8;
Daling Game 4 ; Candid Camera 6; Price IS Right
10; Donna Fargo 13; TV Hono r Society 15; Mac Ne il Lehrer Report 20, 33.
8.00-Movie " Patton" 3,4, 15 ; Happy Days 6, 13, Pape r
Chase 8, 10: Soundstage 20 .: City Notebook 33.
8 :3()- Laverne &amp; Sl hlrlev 6,13, WhenThe Boaf Comes
In 33.
9.0G--Three' s Company 6,13; Movie "High Ba llin"
8,10 ; Every T ub On lis Own Bottom 20 .
9:30--Taxi 6,13 ; Film Ma ke r s 33 .
lO .oo-Starsky &amp; Hutc h 6,13; News 20 ; Sfude nf Aflalrs
Inq uiry 33 .
·10 Jo-Like 11 As 20 ;, An~a Showcase 33 .
11 :()()-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15 ; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33.
1l:JG--Johnnv Carson 3,4,15; Movle" Nighlmare In
• Badham County" 6, 13 ; Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "The St. Valentine's Day Massacre" 10.
12:3o-News 8; 1 :oo- Tomorrow 3,A; 1 :Jo--News 13.

::--n--r.--r.--,

22 Tally
21 Fictional
attorn ey
- Spenlow
30 Novelist
Any a
31 Duffer's
fantasy
32 Ve nerated
311ntellcct
35 Color

DRIVE AUTILE
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT
All c•rpe1 lnll•lled. wlltl
podding 11 no chorge.
Expert lnst•ll•llon.

was one

6 G andhi's
reg imen
Adviser
Rega rding
Bear

SAVE ON
CARPETING

BATHROOMS AND Kit&lt;:hens
remodeled ce ramic tile, plumbing , carpentry , and general
maintenance. 13 years expenance . 992-3685.

OOWN
1 St. Peter

Fever' ' music

"

HOWERY AND MART IN Excoveting , sep tic svstem s ,
doter, backhoe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel , blacktop
paving , Rt. 11113 . Phone 1 (61 4)
698·733 1.

ACROSS
1 "Saturd ay
Night

· ALLEYOOP

~§~~]1~~:!!.2.~-J

EXCAVATING, dozer . backhoe
end ditcher Charles R. Hot·
f1e ld , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 742-2008.
WILL do roof 1ng , const ruction,
plumbing a nd heating No iob
too Iorge or too smal l. Phone
742-2348.

Ranch style 3 bedi=oomhorlie l ocated one block from
school. Nice neighborhood. Just what a young couple
with a small child needs. Plenty of ground- Almost an
acre. Financing available. 1181$00 Full Price.

\: ~~~gal. .

. ~pm : -- -MAN'S SEIK-0 9'12 · 70'15 .

IT

FROM iH I5 .

:oo- Tomorrow

•

rfl\_o~~ ,c."- $3fl

'

IF AN AI:TEFI:AIION
15 REQU IRED, YOU

.,

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why proy $3.99

\

IRAF&amp;g

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

SEWING MACH INE Re po1rs . ser·
vice, oi l makes . 992·2284 The
Fabri c Shop , Po mer o y
Authorized Singer Soles a nd
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

ANTI -FREEZE

Phone 992-2111

I I

Jumble Book No. 12, containing 110 puzzles, is avallablefor$1 .75postpa ld
!romJumble, c/o this newspaper, So.-; 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1nclude your
na me, address, zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooks

;l-3-l .rno:

FOR
---SALE
-- -

1974 DATSUN PICKU P. 37 ,000
miles Truck mi rrors, step· up
bumpe r, auto trans ., AM-FM
radio , heater. flow th rou gh
ve ntilalion . Phone 992:7b12 .
AUTOMATIC WASHER , $75. 2
dryers · I gas, 1 electric . $50
each . 949-2780 .

KIDS,TOO\

J&amp;L

11 ·17·1 mo.

REAL ESTATE LOANS. CAN'T FINO
MORTGAGE MONEY? We have
plenty ot competiti ve rates with
term s to 30 years . Veterens
and non·veterens VA &amp; FHA
loons ore ovadoble. IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E. Stole
St. ,
A the ns .
Ph one
614 ·592·3051.

LEETan

1

FROM THB Ol\JEf.

~DIFI~Rt;lf.lT, SOI.l!

mo.

sw:JIJD 0RADf; '
WP6 DIFFt;~f.lT

"GIVE US A TR'I'"
Reasonable Prices
References Avallabla
Phone 742-2029 ..
11 ·16·C

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING

FARM FOR sole. House 2 barns,
trai ler Lorge pond 10 ocres or
8:2 acres. 742·2566.

Headquarters

Potted Poinsettas
$1.00 to $6.50
Hanging Poinsettias
Tubs, 30 plus blooms

r-o,...c,;

'CUIWJRI.S !
Dm lOBe;

ANNIE - ~ ·

THREE BEDROOM frame home in
Middleport. Coll992·3457 .

Housing

llOT CUTIIf.lb

Construction
Maintenance

.,
'• ·--~----.----:~

o.

IX), '(XJ'RE

Carpentry, Electrical,
Painting

Pomeroy, 0.
I'II.Hl·217t
3-15·1fC: ' .: '

Pomeroy,
JUST LISTED- Need an
oversized garage? This
home has II. Also 3 nice
bedrooms. Formal dining
room . Full bosemenl with
rec.
room . Lots of
remodel ing done here.
$23,500.00.
DON'T FENCE ME INHere we have 2 lots each
50x152. Close to school . 3
bedrooms. Carpeting,
drapes,
porches,
lull
basement. $27,300.00.
DIG THIS, DAD 1
oversized bedroom, 2
regular size. Lot 50x200.
~great for kids) some
panefing and carpeting,
basement, other le~~tures .
Just $11,000.00.
GENUINE RANCH - '.4
acre. 3 bedrooms, very nice
kitchen . Fireplace, family
room. Many other features,
$20,500 .00.
MOBILE
HOME
Located on lot. Use your
own furniture, patio and
storage building. $7,500.00.
WE'RE PAID TO DO
YOUR WORRYING BUYING OR SELLING
SEE US NOW, OR CALL.
REALTORS .
Henry E. Clelond Jr.
Henry E. Clel•nd
Associate Relators
K•thy Cit land
Laona Cltland
992-2259, 992-6191, 992-25418

BORN LOSER

RadIatorC:::::!!::::.., ·J. R. Constructioo
ServiceCo.
,.._,.._._....,..............

Muffler
Brakes .•
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~~~~ ®
byHennArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to lorm
four ord1nary words.

Phono992-6144
,92-7547

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

1

'I}Jt\JNf fii}l} W

!!;')

EXPERIENClD__

for sole, 1 ocre and '
up Middleport , near Rutland .
Call992.7481.

WOOD FOR sole. 525 and $35
pickup truck load , depe nd• ng
on mileage Mosrlv Hickory and
White Oak Coli Carl Fmdlmg .

DAILY SENTINEL

'

Auto&amp; Truck
· ~epair
'ilso Transmission
Repair
PhDA:Ie 992-5682

Real Estate for Sale

169N. 2nd
Middleport
992-2725

lHE'.

I

Sf. Rl. 124 tpviard Rutlond,

HOM~SITE S

Kay's
Beauty Salon

WA~E17

UP WITH A
RATTLESNAKE
TEMPER!

..

0.

MOORE'S

I'll. "2-2848

A KICK-- SUT

EASY HAS

All
Type
l~dus,1rlol
Commercial and . Home
Building
. ~y Type lmprovemon,l s
To Existing Structures
All Type Concrete Work
No Controd Too Largo Dr .
Too Small
,25 Years E~perlence
'All Work Guaranteed

:.:;... 18-1

Now Thru Dec. 2

MOlOR ROUTE ·
DRIVER

I

NEW THREE bedroom home .
F1reploce. sun deck 1 )'• acre
wooded lot b67·3890. Tuppe rs
Plains .

THE &amp;OYS WITH

Moummg and
Price Buildels

, GARAGE

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

A SALTY LOOK IN' r-------.,-----, OH! 'I' WANNA
CUSS FOOLISHLY 1-:::::..--·
PLA'I P.OU6H•
TRIED TO R:OIJSE
HUH-~!

chester, Ohio
10·30·c

BoX 3

'II&lt; milo oH Rt. 7 by:P.ss on

-

CAPTA!N EASY

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

ROGER HYSELL

SALES REP.
FOR
SUN DINS HAMMOND
ORGANS
Racine, Ohio
Phone 949-2111
AlterS P.M.
11-26· 1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

Body Penn
'12.50

------

I

' .

'

11 -3·1 mo .

PETE SIMPSON

' - - - -- -

R,Sidenllal ond commer·
cial. call tor estimate. 2'
'
Hour Service. AnY day,
''
anytime.
Phone 915-3106
I
Jack Ginther 985-3806

PHONE 992-2772

HAMMONO&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
(NEW&amp; USEDJ

1970 Amherst 50x 12 2 BR
1970 Champion 6~hd2 2 BR
1965 Gene ral 00x 12 2 BR
1968 f&gt;MC 52:w:l2 2 BR
1955 flro ir~ e Schooner 28x8 I BR
1973 Royal Embassy b8x 14 3 BR
] 959 Star S0xl02 BR
!973 Star Wx14 2 SR
19b8 Star Wxl2 2 BR
1970 Sylva b0x12 2 BR
19Ml V•lloges OOxl 22 BR
1964 W1ndsor 51xiO 2 BR
1970 K1-rKwood 12xb0 J BR
BBS MOBILE HOME SAL ES
PT PLI:ASANT. W VA

Special

992-5776

I

..11 -9-1 mo.

19b3 10 • 52 ON~ BEDROOM
Windsor tra de r Gas fu rnace,
furni shed
Unde rpinn ing .
_992 . ~897 _o~e~ s_~_e~~~o_ys.:__ __

MEN"S AND women s go lf clubs.
new and used . J ohn Teaford
.. ~~~_. 98~5· 3_
9 ~~-­
fiR~WOOD $25
p1ck up load .
992· 7084
I
CO NDITIONED
991· 7201 .

Mobile Homes for Sale

1961 TOTAL ~l~CTRIC mobile
home . fu rn •shed . 3 bed r ,
washer a nd drye r Air condi·
tioned I lot . 210 fl frontage
$12 ,000 Phone 74:2-2826.

JACKW.
.CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

M I X~ O

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0. .
Coll992-7013
For FrH Estimates

J&amp;L INSULATION
. JIM KEESEE •

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING-

near Dexter 992-SBSB

SALE PRICES

t:

ElliOTT ·
APPUANCE II

'}4 7 3303 .

I ' , ACR E 12 )( bO mob•le home

CEllULOsE
INSULAnON
'6.50 per bag

Armstrong Carpeting

wanted to Rent

N LTA TIRES . Quality a nd pe rforman ce. On sol e no w
742-1328.
APP LES. FITZPATRICK Orchard .
Stole Rt . 689. Phone W1lkesvdle
1&gt;18· 3785.

Your Headquartels For

CfRTI FIEO BABY sitter. Mon . Fri.
Hom to ?. Contact ol 329 ' , N.
3rd Ave ., Middleport.
TA Xn)fRM IST WORK . Smoll
a nim a ls and deer' heod .
1·304 273-9b41 .

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1971
4 ()()-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle ot the Planets 4; Merv
Gri ff in 6; Pprky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame Sl . 20,33.
Batman 10; Dinah 13 ; Hollywood Squares 15 .
4:3G--Bewlfched 3; G;lligan ' s Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15 .
s: oo-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mlsfer
Rogers 20,33 ; Gomer P y le. USMC 10: Emergenc y
O ne 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5!30--News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co .20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Cou pl e 15 .
6 .()().-News 3.4.8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoo m 20 ;
STud io See 33 .
6 :3G-- NBC News3.4 ,15; AB C News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
F ri e nds 6, CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33 .
7·00-C ross·Wits 3; PM Magazine 4 ; New lywed Game
6,13 ; Marty Robbins ' Spotlight 8; News 10; Lo ve.
America n Sty le 15; Almanac 20; Know Your
Schools 33 .
7:3G--That Nashville Mus ic'J; Paling Game 4; Muppet
Show 6; Ma tch Game PM 8; Wild Kingdom 10; $1 .98
Beauty Show 13; Nashville On The Road 15:
Ma cNeii · Lehrer Report 20; College Basket ball 33.

..

.

B 00-Litlle House On The Prairie 3,4 ,15; Lucan 13;
Unknown War 6 ; While Shadow 8, 10; Evening at
Symphony 20.
9 :00-Movle "And I Alone Survived" 3,4,15; NFL
Football 6,13; Mash 8,10; The Long Search 20.
9 :30-0ne Day Af A Time 8, 10; Rock Sonata 33 .
lO .oo-Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20; Evening at Symphony
33
10 :3G--Crockelf's Victory Garden 20.
11 ·oo-News 3,4,8, 10 ,15 ; Dick Cavetf 20; The Long
Search 33.
11 :3G--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Gunsmoke 8; Movie " AI
Capone" 10.
12 :()().-News 6, 13; 12 :3()-FBI 6; News 8; Ironside 13 .
1 :()()- Ironside 13.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.

Business Services

WILL 8A8't'SIT in our home i.
Po rtland . 843-41:1,03 . I hovt.
refe ren ces.

BURROUGHS S~NS I · MAT I C oc
coun t ing ma c hine . Phone
992 1156 , The Daily Sent1nel
I l l Courl Stree l. Pome roy.
Oh1o.

\j/1 ITJnlMb~m\7

..

WILL CARl: lor the elde rly 11' our
ho me Phone f/92 ·73 14
WATEH WELL dr dhng . William T
Grant 742 2879 .

WANT TO RENT: for Rocme or
Syracuse oreo, w1th 2 ch1ldre n.

A'll0Jrm

I

- -- -

.

-

-

.

t5

F.~t h wunl U\' l' l' tht• !IUIIilllum
wt•nlo,; l :!o ~ t t"llh fk ' l ' wun! pt'l' day
•·unmna! utllt'r thun t'II L'&gt;I.'t'UI!Vt'

.

_ _______

- Services
..
Offered- -

Auto Sates

•

.

Stltctlon In Tbt V1llty

&lt;

Rodney Downing-Realtor
BiH Childs, Manager

r

,

make one mild s lam try and
bid thr ee h ea rt s . North
m a d e a mild acce ptance by
bidd1ng four clubs, but South
s ig ned off at four spad es."
Alan · "South d etided that
West would not have led
!tom the hea r t king, pla yed
low from dummy and won
w1th h1s ace. Then he played
his ace of s pades, Jed a club
to dwnmy, played a s p a d e
toward his hand and made
five odd."
Oswald : "At the other
table South merely jumped
fr om t wo spades t o four. The
same jack of hearts was led
a nd South decided to go after
ove rtr ic k s by playing
dununy's queen. East cove red with the kin g , South
won with the ace and made
that same play of th e ace of
trumps. After that start , the
whole ha nd collapsed. When
East got in with the king of
trwnps he led a h ea rt to
Wes t . Wes t cash e d two
hearts and led a diamond
which Eas t ruffed for the
setting trick ."

.;U!dll;,) ~ :H.t}:j
A Misso uri rea der asks if
there are any systems . that
use both one-dub and onediamond op e n ings as artifi·
cia! and forcing.

Yes, there are, but we
r econunend
alone.

leaving

them

\ NE:WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

(For a copy of JACOBY MOOERN . send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge ,' ' care of this newspaper. P.O Box 489. Rad&lt;~ City
Station, New York. N Y. 10019.)

•

�; 10- The Daily Sentinel, Miuulep.,rt-Ponwroy. 0 .. M"ndoy. Nov . 27, 1978

I

Suitcase puts another twist to·bizarre tale
GEORGETOWN, . Guyana
·(UPI) - A suitcase stuffed
with mmey and stashed in a
chicken coop .put · another
twist tliday in the bizarre tale
of the Rev . Jim Jones and tbe
mass suicide of his 908 blindly
loyal followers .
The U.S. troops who stuffed
the blackened, swollen bodies
into green plastic sacks and
sent them back to the United
States in aluminum cases
burned their possibly contaminated uniforms and prepared to return to their home
bases tliday.
· According to the Pentagon,
;the body retrieval operation
Cost U.S. taxpayers approxi·
mately $9 million, which
figured out to about $10,000
' per body .
Despite the end of the
cleanup operation, there was
a growing list of mysteries
surrounding the stunning
events that began late
Saturday afternoon, Nov, 16,
.at the People's Temple jungle

commune
150
miles
northwest of Georgewwn .
Tim Carter, wlio described
himself as a public relations
specialist for the cult, told
reporters that he, his brother
Mike and a third man were
given guns and a suitcase
containin g $500 ,000 and
walked past the death temple
even as their friends were
collapsing from · cyanide
poisoning.
Carter said he, his brother
and Michael Prokes were told
to take the suitcase to an
unspe cified embassy . The
sultcase later was found to
contain a letter to the Soviet
Embassay.
U.S. Graves Registration
teams finiahed bagging the
bodies Saturday and cheered,
shook and slapped hands as
the U.S. Air ·Force helicopter
took off with the final corpse
- at least the last one !bey
could find .
At Georgetown's Timehra
airport Sunday , the .u.S .

Recovery Task Force sent
the last 184 bodies ba ck to
Dover Air Force Base, DeL,
aboard a C-141 transport
plane.
For health reasons they
burned their unifcrms, boots,

gloves and tents and anything
that came into contact with
the body remains or fluids of
the cultists.
The final shipment of 184
corpses was carried in 63
aluminum transfer cases. ·

"That means there were a
hell of a lot of children in the
last ahipment ," said one U.S.
officer at the Georgetown
airport.
" Picking up the bodies of
the children was the one thing
that really got to me," said an
exhausted soldier, trying to
sleep in the shade of a
firehou se. " I'll remember
that forever. "
For the record, the cold
nwnbers were 914 members
of the People's Temple sect
dead . These included 908

Americans and one Guyanese and his two companions holding their babies - pe&lt;&gt;ple
citizen who died at obtained guns and escaped crying.
"I saw my wife holding mY
J.he mass suicide.
Jonestown, three of them As they walked away, he son who was dead ."
including Jones - of gunahot
The Carter brothers and
wounds, and the rest told reporters , the lethal
apparently from cyanide doses of potassium cyanide Prokes opened tbe suitcase in
and Kool-Aid began taking the commune chicken coop,
poisoning.
effect
on the communicants Tim Carter said. They found
Four others were Sharon
35 to 40 pounds of money and
of
the
suicide .rite .
Amos and her three chUdren,
After four to live minutes, a letter to the Soviet
killed at the People's Temple
headquarters in Geocgetown. convulsions raCked bodies, Embassy.
The Carter brothers said
The last was a would-be sect foamed filled mouths and
they stashed the money in the
defector, Patrica Parks, 4li, a flowed down chins.
Carter said he saw coop. Guyanese authorities
native of Springfield, Ohio,
killed in the massacre at Port "mothers kneeling down later confiscated it. .
Kaitwna: alfstrip, 5 miles
from Jonestown along with '-----------~-------------.
I
Rep . Leo Ryan, tJ.caUf. and
J.hree American reporters.
The appalling toll appeared I
I
to have cleared up 9ne
SURVIVORS NAMED
mysterr. - the whereabouts BERTHA M. EBERSBACH
Mrs. Bertha M. Ebersbach,
Survivors of William
of hundreds of sect members
who seemed to he missing 93, former Pomeroy resident, Pooler, Sr., ·67, who died
after
the
Guyanese died Sunday morning at the Wlexpeciedly Friday mor·
govenunent's initial, grossly residence of her son·in·law ning at his Rt . 3, Pomeroy
inaccurate count of 400 dead and .daughter, Mr. and Mrs. home include his wife, Inez
James Clatworthy, High St ., Pooler and his mother Lena·
at Jonestown.
'
But it was still unclear how Middleport, with whom she King Pooler.
made
her
·
home.
carter, 28, of Boise, Idaho,
Mrs. Ehersbach was born
CLINTON E. JOHNSON
June 26, 1885, a daughter of
Clinton E. Johnson, 74,
the late Joseph and Catherine Portland,
died Saturday at
Schlaegel Baer. Besides her Holzer Medicla Center.
parents, ahe was. preceded in
. Mr. Johnson was born July
death by her husband, Albert 20, 1904 In West Virginia son
H. Ebers bach, in 1964 and two
the late Jtuben and Daisy
sisters, Can-ie Gilmore and of
Wolfe Johnson . He was also
Clara Baer.
preceded in death by one
Surviving
are
her
brother, Benny Johnson.
daughters, Emma K. CiatSurvivors include his wife,
worthy with whom she Ethel
A. Waid Johnson, five
resided for the past eight sons, Clyde, Roger and
years, and her son-in-law,
aU of Portland;
James Clatworthy, · Mid- Everson,
James,
Dallas,
and
dleport; a granddaughter, Gary of Phoenix,Texas,
Ariz:, four
Mrs. TwUa Childs and her
husband, Mick Childs, daughters, Doris Bailey,
Portland; Mary Gillilan,
Middleport; a brother, Ar· Chester;
Betty · Combs,
thur II. Baer, Tipton, Ia. ;
Brookpark,
Ohio, and Carol
four nieces, Mrs. Darwin
Gillilan,
Canton;
five
(Helen) Bryan, Columbus;
brothers,
Raymond
aild
Mrs. Virgil (Mildred) KirkLuman,
both
of
Parkersburg;
patrick, Westerville; Mrs.
Floyd (Dorothy) Anderson, Ralph of Jl"armington, Mich. ;
Kankakee, Ill.; Mrs. Sheldon Henry of Tacoma, Wash., and
of Torch, Ohio; four
(Eloise) Smith, rock Island, Seldon
sisters, Augusta Applin,
Ill. ; two nephews, Leo
Calif.; Georgia
Gilmore, Pomeroy, and Sundland,
Weekley, New Jersey; Cleo
Lewis A. Baer, Waukee, Ia.
Mrs. Ebersbach was a· FerguSon, Huntington, and
member of Heath United Freda Fox, Parkersburg.
Methodist Church in Mid· There are 31 grandchUdren,
1i great • grandchildren and
dleport.
several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Funeral
services will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
held
Tuesday
at I p.m. at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Ewing
Chapel
with
the Rev.
Home with the Rev. Robert Steve Wilson officiating.
Bumgarner officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove Burial will be in Meigs
Cemetery. Friends may call Memory Gardens. Friends
at the fWleral home from 2 to may call any time.
4 and from 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

1

Area Deaths

1

Northern Ohio getting snow
Northern Ohioans are is J.he first of the season in the
-getting their ftrst real taste of Buckeye State, as is the
winter weather tday, witb a . travelers advisory .
As 7 a.m., ·Findlay and
heavy snow warning posted
for northwestern. counties Cleveland all reported about
and a travelers advisory up two inches of snow on the
ground. Youngstown and the
for the nortbeastern area.
And snow flurries are fore- Akron -C anton 'Regional
cast f« tbe entire state Airport reported about one
inch of snow.
tonight and into Tuesday.
Temperatures early today
. That heavy snow warning

were in the upper 20s to the
lower 30s in the snowy areas ;
in the low . or mid 30s in
central COWl ties ; and in the
low or mid 40s in southwest
Ohio.
A low pressure sy~tem is
now over western Kentucky
and moving slowly to the
nor.theast. That low preSsure
is expected to be over
western Pennsylvania by

SANTA'S

TONIGHT

6:00-9:00 PM
PARADE6:30
PM STOP INI

As Carter told his story to . "II seems tunny," Parks
reporters on the veranda of a said, "that we had to escape ·
ramshackle hotel In the heart witb our lives at stake, and
of Georgetown; Gerald these tbree guys walked out
Parks, 45, of Ukiah, Calif., witb $500,000 and guns."
Parks was the husband of
who with his wife, two
children and mother defected Patricia Parks, who was .
from
the
commune, killed with the American
overheard Carter's remarks. coogressman and newsmen
Parks said Tim Carter, at P«t Kaiturna.
"How did you get guns
brother Michael, 20, and
Prokes, 32, of Modesto, Calif. when we couldn't get guns?"
were "part of the leaderahip another survivor of the
clique , part of tbe elite suicide spree shouted is the
crowd" surrounding Jones. Carters talked. "Tell me
that? You're lying."

HOSPITAL NEWS

Meigs deputies
probe incidents

M~igs County Sheriff ~ Friday or early Saturday
· James J. Proffitt reports morning.
Later Saturday morning,
deputies are investigating a
Meigs
County sheriff's
hit-skip accident that occurred Saturday evening on deputies received a call from
Eastern High School parking tbe Wilkesville pollee !bat a
lot between 6:30p.m. and 9:30 pop maChine bad been found
at the Wilkesville Legion
p.m.
According to the report, Grove. The Legion Grove Is
Donald R. Eynon, 18, Rt. 3, located In Meigs County near
Pomeroy, parked his vehicle the county nne.
The pop machine had been
at the Eastern High School
and was inside attending the broken open and the money
football banquet. When he hox taken. It appeared the
returned, he discovered tbe large machine bad been
rear bumper and trunk lid hauled away in a van or
had been caved in by anotber pickup truck !ben dumped out
vehicle. The other vehicle bas at the Legion Grove.
Jeff Knighting , Racine,
not yet been identified. ' The
incident ia under in- reported sometime early
Saturday morning mufflers
vestigation.
Saturday morning, were stolen from his car
deputies investigated the · ))IU'ked at his trailer.
theft of a pop machine from Knighting advised !bat the
the Salem Center market. mufflers were brand new. All
The theft occurred liometime incidents are under investigation.

IN HOSPITAL

Albert Keaton, Minersville,
has been returned to tbe
Holzer Medical Center. Cards
may be sent to him at room
511.

GET LICENSE
A marriage llcen~e was
issued to William Ray Bar·
her, 22, Rt. 1, Reedsville, and
Rebecca Irene Nelson, 20, Rt.
I, Reedsville.
ACTIONS Fll..ED
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court a suit in the
amount of $1,315.00 was !Ued
by Montgomery Ward and
Co. , Inc., Charleston, against
Alva H. Rowen, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.
Melvin R. Ritchie, Cool·
ville, and Rita Marie Ritchie,
same address, filed for
dissolution of marriage and
Sandra L. Schultz, Racine,
!Ued for divorce against Carl
Schultz, Racine.
A notice of appeal was !Ued
by Imperial Electric Co.,
Akron, against Marjorie
Snider, Pomeroy, and Robert
Daugherty, administrator of
Bureau of Workmen's
Compensaton, Columbus and
Industrial Commission of
Ohio, Columbus.
MEET TUESDAY
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
will
meet
Tuesday at noon at Meigs
Inn.
--------Births: Oct. 25, a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Watson, Crown City. ·

WEEKEND MEETING
There will be a weekend
meeting at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church
starting Thursday and
running through Dec. 2 witb
the Rev. Bill Beagle,
Cheshire, speaking. The
services will start at 7:30
each evening and are open to
tbe public, the pastor, Leland
Haley reports.,

SOUP SUPPER SET
A soup supper 'Will be held
at tbe Eastern High School
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday preceding the
Waterford game. The supper
which will feature chili,
vegetable soup, bean soup,
hot dogs, sloppy joes, pies
and beverages is being
sponsored by the high school
Future Homemakers of
America.
MEET WEDNESDAY
The Long· Bottom Community Association will meet
Wednesday, Nov. 29 at 7:30
p.m. at the Community
BuUding.
NOW YOU KNOW
The highest price ever paid
for a printed book Is $2,400,000
by the University of Texas on
June 12 for one of tbe 21
existing complete copies of
the Gutenberg Bible, printed
in Malnz, Germany, in 1455.
Hl-WWS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alasks and Hawati, waa 87
degrees at Corpus Christi;
Texas. Today'a low was 5
degreea below zero at
Houlton, Maine.

Good things come in little packages" and this little ·
package from the parade in Middleport Monday night is
Misti Dawn King, daughter of Danny and Cindy King,
Route 2, Pomeroy .

•

enttne

Santa scores
another~ hit
By Bob Qoefllch
Santa . always a most popular fellow, scored another hit
Monday' night as Middleport ~elcomed in the Christmas
holiday season with the annual parade sponsored by
Middleport merchants.
,
A cold drizzling rain stopped, as if on cue, to aUow the
parade io move through the business section, lined with
hundreds of residents.
Headed by Miss Candy Ingels representing the Middleport
Chamber of C&lt;mmerce, the parade was led by the Middleport
Police Dept. and emergency units. It featured the Me1gs
and Kyger Creek bands and lots of pretty girls including Mar;:
Mora Meigs Junior Fair Queen; Cindy Patterson and Lon
Chap.:Oan, the new Junior Miss Program winners; Judy Hall,
Meigs Homecoming queen; Jarus Carnahan, Southern
H&lt;mec&lt;ming queen, and Meigs High cheerleaders.
The Glo-&lt;!ttes and the Royal-&lt;!ttes baton groups were on hand
along with Little Mis5 and Mr. Meigs County Fair.
.
There were entries by the Me1gs County Humane Soc1ety,
the WeStern Boot C.B. Club, the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency Headstart, the Big Bend C.B. Club. In addition
the Pomeroy and Middleport fi~e trucks were there. There
were girls from Girl Scout troops of Middleport, Pomeroy,
Syracuse Harrisonville, Chester and the Racine area.
Bringtk up the rear was Santa who again .made his
' appearance on a lighted float complete w1th re1ndeer,
artificial- and live ·elves.
.
·
Following the parade, Santa personally met hundreds of
youngsters in' the drive-through facility of the Citizens
·National Bank presenting each with candy treat.

D

'Middleport's council
Cwrunings resigns PUCO post
turns down increase
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Howard Cummins has sent a letter
to Gov. James A. Rhodes and speculation is that it contains his
resignation from the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Cummins was appointed to the PUCO by Rhodes and has
been serving on it since Sept. 12. However, his credentials as a
Democrat and his beliefs about utility regulation came under
fire during Legislative hearings on confirming his appointment.

Impersonation charges .filed
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pedro Romanski was under arrest
today oo a series of charges including criminal impersonation
- of Santa Claus.
An alert transit police officer spotted the 33-year.,ld
Manhattan man standing by a red cardboard Volunteers of
America chimney, soliciting money from passersby in a
subway station below Macy 's department store 1~ Herald
Square. It was Romanski's costume - or lack of 1t - that
tipped Officer John Novak to the fact that somethmg was
amiss.

I

,

All items will be known
·wASIDNGTON (UP!) -

ELBERFELDS IN

sacrosanct" and every dollar spentfor defense as well as other
programs will be carefully scrutinized.
The preSident made the pledge in a speech to the National
League of Cities convention in St. Louis M~nday .

Brown losi:Dg groUlld

•

·

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Kepuolican Secretary of State Ted

w. Brown bas lost ground to Democrat Anthony J. Celeprezze
Jr

with the official count from the Nov. 7 election for

~etary of state 94 percent completed.
Election counsel Lee Wurster said Monday official reports

EROY

'
I ',

President Carter says no aspect

of his forthcoming airtight budget ''will be sacred or

SAllJRDAY NiGHTS TIL 8

I

''

advance of August and the 0.5 percent increase of September .
Grocery prices jumped 0.9 percent after leveling off during the
sununer, prlmarly because of large increases in meat costs.
- Housing costs rdse I percent, also the largest since J une,
as home prices and mortgage interest rates continued to
climb.
- Medical ca re costs rose 1.1 percent, the biggest increase of
1978.
- Entertainment costs doubled from the prev1ous month ,
rising 0.8 per cent.
The Labor Department said the overall 0.8 percent increase
last month meant prices were 8.9 percent higher than in
October 1977. If prices rose over the next year at the same rate
they did last month it would mean an annual inflation rate of
9.6 percent.
President Carter's anti-infl ation program has a goal of
bringing inflation down to between 6 and 6.5 percent in 1979, a
developmen t which most private economists believe is highly
unlikely.
The increase ln grocery prices - 0.9 percent - was more
than double September 's 0.4 percent gain. Grocery prices were
unchanged in August and bad actually declined in July.
The main culprit was meat, which rose 2.1 oercent after

The World Today

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The state Controlling Board has
come to the rescue of two more financially strapped school
districts both of them in Highland County, granting them state
loans to' remain open this year.
Tlie boalld Monday awarded $75,488 to tbe Fayetteville •
Perry Local School District, while. Lynchburg-Clay schools
recelved $110 901. Both were to have closed immediately
witbout the ~ooey, and state education officials described
them as operating at minimum or below average levels.

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND

By JAMES HILDRE'l11
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - Led bY sharp climbs in food and
housing costs, consumer prices surged 0.8 percent in October
and have now more than doubled in the past 11 years, the
government reported today.
The hefty increase last month matched the September advance and offered a vivid demonstration that inflation remains
deeply embedded in the nation's economy despite government
efforts to bring it under control.
The Labor Department said its consumer price index for all
urban consumers, which covers about 60 percent of the
population, stood at 200.9 last month.
That statistic means goods and services which cost Americans $100 in 1967- the base year for such calculations -cost
$200.90 in October. Or put another way, $100 today would buy
less than hall of what it did 11 years ago.
1rt another bit of discouraging news , t!)e department also
reported that individual purchasing pbwer in October slipped
below year-ago levels for the fiftli consecutive month.
The newest inflation report contained these price developments for October :
-Food and beverage costs jumped 0.8 percent, the largest
gain since June and considerably ·above the 0.2 percent

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

falling in the previous three months .
Pork prices rose 3. 7 percent, the first gain in five months.
Beef prices climbed l.B percent following an 0.4 percent gain in
the prev1ous month and poultry prices, which declined in both
August and September, rose 2.5 percent.
.
Prices also increased for fruits and vegetables, eggs, dairy
products and cereal and bakery products.
On the other hand , prices for sugar and sweets fell for the
fir st time this year and the downtrend in coffee prices - which
began in mid-1977 ..., continued .
In the housing category , home prices rose 1.4 percent and
mortgage interest rates jumped 0.7 percent, about the same as
in September. However, the measurements were compiled
before the government's Nov. 1 dollar-rescue pian was
announced. Since then, mortgage rates have soared
dramatically.
Heme maintenance and repairs were considera bly more
expensive in. October than in recent monl.hs while fuels and
other utilities rose 0.7 percent, more than in each of the three
preceding months.
The 1.1 percent rise in medical care costs was almost double
September's 0.6 percent gain as increased charges by doctors,
dentists and hospitals were near double-digit annual levels.

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

Two school districts aided

the perfect wav to express your penonal holiday wish
- Make your selections t!ilrly.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1978

Consumer prices climbed sharply

NEW YORK (UP!) -One of the largest tankers on the
East Coast ran aground on a small rocky island in the East
River today and began leaking thousands of gallons of light
heating oil into the waters off the mayor's mansion, the Coast
Guard reported.
James Fleiahell, the Coast Guard 's captain of the port,
said the Cibro Philadelphia , carrying 180,000 barrels of No. 2
oil, hit MUI Rock, a small island, just before 1:30 a .m., tearing
a hole in the tanker's No . 4 hold.

Remembering and being remembered . That's one of
the special joys of Christmas . In our collection of
beautiful Hallmirk boxed Christmas Cards you'll find

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

VOL. XXIX NO.
158
•

GallonsofoilleWdng

. PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges: Mrs. Roger
Browning, Point Pleasant;
Berton
Peters,
Point
Pleasant; Harry Dotson, Red
House; Patrick Rymer,
Leon; Rhonda Langdon,
Mountain, W. Va.; Mrs. Bill
Kelly and son, Bid weD; Mrs.
Clyde Hammack, Letart;
Lucille Moreland, Point
Pleasant; Charles Neal,
Crown City; Mrs. Furman
Hughes, Gallipolis Ferry; .
Okey VanMeter Sr., Mason;
Mrs. Leslie Edwards and son,
Henderson·; Kelli Schultz,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Joe
Markins, Point Pleasant:.
Shirley Sydernstrlcker,
Leon; Bessie whitt, Pliny. ·

HCJ..HO-HO - First to receive his candy treat from
Sanw following Monday night's Christmas parade in
Middleport was Kurtiss English, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William English, Middleport.

Santa with his smallest elf, Michael King, standing next to him made his appearance on a lighted float at the ·
annual Middleport Christmas parade Monday nigh!.

· from 63 of the 86 counties, place the. difference at 8,009 votes.
Reports have not been received from Cuyahoga, Lucas,
Jef¥rson, Ross and Sandusky counties.
· 11

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport Village Council,
meeting in regular session
Monday night, discussed at
Iength for the third time a
proposed rate increase by the
PoinTView Cable Television
Co . It turned down the first
reading of an ordinance
which would have put the
price bike into effect by a 4·2
vote.
Paul Gerard, company
representative, discussed the
rate hike and services which
the company plans to offer
the village.
Under the plan, Channel 4,
Columbus, will be removed
from the stations, two local
type stations will be com·
bined and the village would
be offered (wo 24·hour
stations, one a Christian
Broadcasting Station. and
Channel 17 out of Atlanta
The company had asked to
· increase the rates from $6 a

month to $7 a month and from
$4.50 to $5.25 a month for
disabled and senior citizens.
In a letter to coWJcil members, the company pointed
out that while the increase
was more than the recommended percentage by
President Carter, when
figured on the basis of one
year the overall increases the
company has had in Middleport over the years would
amount to only less than fiv~
percent.
Councilman Charles
Mullen said he fel t the
television cable company is
like any other business and
that COWlCil should not have
the control over its rates.
However, COWlCilman Dewey
Horton disagreed on th~ basis
.. that a busmess Wlth a
. monopoly should. be a con·
cern for regulatiOn by the
council . .
Councilman Allen King

Three accidents
probed in Meigs
Meigs County sheriff's
deputies
Monday
in·
vestigated a truck-deer ac- '
cident at 6:30p.m. on SR 124
in Salem Twp.
Deputies said the eightpoint buck ran Into the path of
·a truck operated by Donald
Tripplett, Chesapeake. There
was moderate damage.
·
Earlier, deputies in·
vestigated a deer accident on
SR 33,just north of Darwin. It
ran into the path of a vehicle
operated by Linda Fisher, Rt.
' 3, Racine. There was
moderate damage.
Meanwhile, the Gallia •
Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol investigated one
Meigs County
mishap
Monday.
Officers were caned to the
scene of a oneavehicle ac-

cident on CR 16, six-tenths of ·
a mile west of CR 3, at 9: 50
p.m.
The patrol reports an auto
operated
by
Charles
Teschler, 42, Columbus, went
out of control on the wet
pavement, ran off the right
side of the roadway down an
embankment, and came to
rest in a field.
There was moderate
damage to the Teschler auto.
No dtation was issued.

RETIRING SOON
Bob Clark, superintendent
of Ohio Department of Transportation, Meigs CoWlty, will
retire from his position
Thursday, Nov . 30.
l

sa id he is in favor of the new
services of the company , but
questioned the rate of in·
crea se for senior citizens. He
commended that he could not
support the increase from
that standpoint .
Co uncilm an Carl Horky
was 1n opposition because of
the removal of Channel 4,
Columbus, commenting that
cabie television was accept ed
in the community in the first
place beca use of the Ohio
stations being offer ed. He
said co uncil has no assurance
that other Ohio channels will
not be removed.
Voting against acceptance
of th e ordinance to provide
the rate in cr ease were
coun cilmen Marvin Kelly ,
Horky, Horton and Kin g
while MuUen and William .
Walters favored the first
reading of the orpinance.
Durin g the di sc ussion
Gerard pointed out hi s
company has always been
considerate of senior citizens
and stated that a 25 percent
reduction is given them while
other
merchants
and
businesses ·do not generally
give such discoWltS.
Council members indicated
they would reverse thei r
stand and vote in favor of th e
ordinance if the public indicates it does want the new
services · and the additional
price hike.
The cable company has
indicated that Middleport
subscribers will have two
blocked out channels when
the changeover to the new
stations is made since the
rate increase was not aJr
proved.
CSOE Letter
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate read a letter from the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. indicating the
company will file · an application for a rate increase
with th e Public Utiliti•s
Commission on March 11next
year. The company said that
its operating costs had in(Continued on page 81

Reds fire
Anderson

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Satorday, a chance of rain
or snow Thursday and
Friday, but fair Satorday
except a chance of snow

flurries in the north. Highs
will be in the 40s Thursday
and range from the upper
30s to the middle 40s Friday
and Satorday. Low tern·

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The
Cincin nati Reds today fired
manager Sparky Anderson,
::·:::::::·:::::::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: who led the team to back-tohack World Championships in
1975 and 1976, and replaced
him with John McNamara ,
former manager of the
Oakland A's and the San
Diego Padres ..
McNamara , a coach with
Six true bilis were returned the California Angels iast
wh en the Me igs Coun ty season , was signed to a one·
year contract by the Reds.
Gr and Jury conve ned
Reds President and
recently.
Indicted were Ro bert Genera l Manager Dick
Radebaug h, possession ; Wagner flew to california
Timot hy E. Dav idson , Monday and met wit h
forgery; Robert L. Riffl e, Anderson at his Thousand
uttering a forged document ; Oaks, calif., home to inform
David L. Darst, breaking a r~d him of the Reds' decision.
Anderson will be paid for the .
entering and grand theft;
final year of his three-year ·
Michael Pierce, escape ; John
contract.
Wayne Fleming, perjury.
''The decision we made was
Serving on the grand jury
were , Roger E . Weave r , not a hasty one ," said
David R. Riggs, Patricia L. Wagner. "Our club won in
1975 and 1976 and by that I
Craig, Robert F . Morris,
Emerson Pooler, Margaret mean won it aU. The past two
Gl oeckn er, J ane Walt on, years have been good ones by
Clyde Kuhn and Donna the standards of most clubs,
but we are determined to set
Vance.
a higher standard.
"It is our decision that the
m ove we have made is in t he
JURY SELECTION SET
best overall interests of
. Drawin g of juror s (or
making
the Reds a better
January term wili be held in .
team
,"
said Wa gner.
the office of the Clerk of
"Sparky
Anderson
served us
Courts on Saturday, Dec. 9, at
welL I don't want tD get into
10 a.m . .
the specifics with regard to
the move we made.
"Let's just say it's time for
a change," said Wagner,
"and just as in 1970 when the
situation may have been tbe
time for Anderson to take
over the club, it's our feeling
now the situation calls for a
new approach.''
Anderson said he did not
want to tell of his firing
~
I , because "I had taken an
t.
.
6ath" not to mention it until
:· :;&gt;_-" .:::- ••: J '"' ~ ••: ' ~~ - · ' &lt;-&gt;- ...: ~ the Reds did.
"The thing about me I'm
proudest of is my honor,"
DAYS TO
said Anderson . "I came to the
CHRISTMAS
Reds with it, I want to leave
peratures will be betwee n

the upper 20s aud lhe low
30s .

Six people
indicted

~

SPARKY ANDERSON

with it. The game is bigger
than anything else.
" It was a decisi"!' made by
the front office. That 's all I
want to say, " said Anderson.
"It 's funny , I feel a little bit
now like I did when I first got
the Reds' job as m a nager , a

strange tingling sensation . I
have a great feeling for the
players, the club and the
or ganization.''
Anderson said he has no
plans for the future as far as
baseball is concerned.
"Ali I am going to do now is
play golf," said Anderson .
Wag ner said only two
members of the six man
coaching staff - Ron Plaza
and Russ Nixon - would be
retained.
Wagner said pitching coach
Larry Shepard, batting coach
Ted R;luszewski and coach
George Scherger have been
offered jobs in the Reds
organization and third base
coach Alex Granunas, a close
friend of Anderson 's, had
been fired .

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